HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-09-13 - Orange Coast PilotDRANGf COAST YDUR HDMITDWN DAllY PAPIR
MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 1J. 19U2 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Plane crashes Ill flames on takeoff •
MA LAl iA, S pa111 \Al') /\
Sµar11sh dwrh•1 ic·I I'll flHllt 111
Nt>w Y111k w11h .1H:1Ii'11pk
r{'jH>rl1•d al111ard 1·1 .1 sl11·d .111d
bur:.t 111t1> ll.1111t·' 1111 tak1•oll l1ci111
th1• Mal<1gu .111pos1 lc•l..i) 1'11l1n
conr1rmt'<I <At l1·<1st I:! d1 .. ul 111 111,
burnmg ix· IO
P oll\ 1• ~aid 11111 p1•o plt w1·1 ,.
inJun-<l. 11h111y ul tlwm ln 11111·d
Thl' 1 h ,11 t1·1 1·0111µ;,111~· 1"111111
said tha l 4100 1wss1·11g1·1' o111d
crew nwrnh••rs 1·s1:ap1'<I ur1l1111 I
W1lllt''"''' .rt 1111 1111 porl ,,11d
1111· pl.1111 n ;1sh1 •d .1s 11 'ti ug~lt'll
111 J.:• ·1 .111I•11111 Wh1•11 II u .1slwd
.1 Ian ... 1;11 t<·d ,11 tl11 · 11-.11 .,r 1lw
pl.1111· 1h1·v -..11d , 11111 '"'"1
l'•''-"'11g11 s \\l ll .rlilt to 1•v.11 u.111
I h1 pl.11 11
Tiu· Sp.111"h c h.111t·1 u 111111o111 y
S p ,1 11 I ,, X -. ,, I d I I 11 Ill I I '
Ii i .1dqu.11 lt'I ' 111 11.11111.1 cir·
M.qu11 ,, th.it llw µl.11w 1'o11111•cl
:1110 p,1-.. .... ·ngc•r .... 111d ;.i c·11·w 11( 1:1,
11111 d1cl 1101 1111ml'u1<1Lt·ly 1 q.11 11 t
Clock ticks
on rush to
stop flood
This Is the second of three parts in a Daily
Piiot series on the Santa Ana River's impact on
Orange County Today. the flood threat and
steps being taken to defuse u, plus a scenario
for a ma1or flood under current conditions
By ST EVE TRIPOLI 01 the Dally Piiot Statt
It',,, Jrv l>t'<l o r n 11·k . u1r1 .trrcl "-·•ll1•r1'<I brush
atmo:.t ,,11 Y<'•Jr 1011x. wrth pt·111 .. 11., .. t11t·k1t ur
waler running h1·r1· dnd tht'rt' lnv1s1bh· 1•v1•n to its
nt•are:.t m•1ghbor., m mu{'h of Or01111:(l' County, 11
hides bt•hind f'l '>1ng (·rnhankm<'nts o f lo w
shrubtwry that bal'k tht· t'<Jlll rc·tt· lrn1·d d1annl'I
walls
th1•11 11.1t111n.d1111·s 01 1ra1111·s I l
'>il ld thl' prlol and 1·0 pilot t·Sl:aix'tl
( Ht•lu tt•tl Photo Pug•• A2 )
ll 11 h ,1 I Ill l' U !) U I l h I l' t•
't1·w,11d1·ss1•s w1·n · u11at 1•ountt•d
fm
A i I p II I t 'I \Ill I t l'::. ~ J I <.J t h I•
µa.,:wngt·r::. "'•·11· bd1t•v1·d to
111l'luJ1• rn;.ny Ar111·rr1·an:-and
< 'anadians n•tu1·11111~ homt· aftt·r
hol11fays 111 S µa1 n Th1·y said
.1rr-;m~1·ml'nt..-. w1·n · lx·111g madl'
to hav•· all 11,.., w A1rl111es &x-1ng
7-1 7 fly lht• SUf'VIV!Jf'N lllll rlt't~lillg
mto"<l11·ul Lrt•utnwnl to Nc•w York
Thl·rt· wt·n· l'Ollflit•ting n·pc>rt.:.
11hout wh,1l huppt•rwd
~pa11 wx :.did that the plant•
tTa.'>h~'<.J ;,iftn h11v1ng "1t'<·hni1:al
d1ffu:ult1t·~" Pilut Juan Pt.•11•z
rt'porL<·d a v1brat11>n in th1• planl.'
after o;ldrt111g <lown the runway
a nd said lw tra1•d to abort the•
tak1•0H, a Six1111.<1x 11ff1l'1al said
Thi• S panish rww:. agenl'Y
i.:FF., quoting rr11 II t.ary suurTt"S .i 1
th<· Malaga airport, srud tht• right
1·ng1ne failed on the takt."OH run
Rt>porls from the ffash :.e.·t•n1·
s.tld on e of th(• plane's t>ng11w..,
was (ound 111 a fal'ld Jll'ar th1·
runway
Angel f't.•rnandez, ont.> of th1•
µassengers who esc·apt'CI , s<ud the
plam· did no t appt>ar tu havl· tlw
power to take off, "e1lhto"r that or
the plan{' was carry ing t'Xl't':.i.
w1·1~h t " H <' Sl'li<i th <' pl<1n 1·
The Santa Ana R1v1•r 1-, out or '>rght and oul of
mmd for m;.tny pt'<>plP J34 '<.'ttUSl' o r th..it, It IS Oflt•n
d1ff1c·ult for them to Jll 'r<"t•1v1· th•· mag111tudt· of tlw
threat rt rt•pn-sents
But thOS<' with long nkmon1-.. of this art'<i,
th()$(' wh0&' )Ob ll 1s to know tht• rivC'r and rnany
othC'rs c·an tC'll you that nature ha.-. plaet'<I 1Lo; own
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde m our midst
Prado Dum 's huge s pillway, on whic h groups of h t'li<'o pte rs often
la nd ~ <'Cmld not stop Santa Ana River in a m ajor flood.
And th<>S<' who reduee sut:h tlung:. to :.kHl'illt~
say that th<' rna.inr flooding tht' n v1•r rs n 1pablt· of
w ould. at prf''>l'nl b e a d1 :.<i ... t1·r "t'tonci 111
TUESDAY: POLLUTION PROBED
Salt levels need attention
Cahforn1<1 only to d gn .. 11 t·.11·1hqu:ik1·1n" ue nSl•ly
populau'CI drt'<1
The• rivl•r Lh;i1 u:.u.1ll y doc•sn't flov. .it all 1.s
the grc•at<'st flood thr(·.11 "'1•s t of the• m1ghly
M1ss1ss1pp1 R1vt•r ae1·orci1ng t11 tlit· US Army
Corps or Engll1('l'N
Thc·n · W('r<' vny f1•w pt•11pl1• h1·n· in 1862
whl•n, m tht· words of Jt1ngt1mc· r 1v1•r waU:h<>r H
Georg<' Oshormo, th1• nvN tui-nt'<i mul'h o f the
county int11 "1>111· vast l:ik1 · frtJ111 lh<· foothrlls at
F'ulll'.'rton t11 th <· tlC.'t•<tn ··
Thl•n• has been floochng regularly ever since
Osborne. director of the Santa Ana R iver Flood
Prott."C.·lJon Ag1·ney, says th£' £1ooch or 1884, 1916,
rn:.n, 19:rn .md 1969 wt·n· thr m ost s1gn1r1cant
ThC' 1938 flood, as om· of tht• most r('('(•nt. 1s
w1·ll n'm<•mix'r('(i Thto"re Wt'rc hardly any serious
flood control facilities thPn , and th£' wate r s
"ovc·rwhc•lmc-<J prarllcally all thl' barriers that had
bt·en put up." said Osbornl' Th l'r e was
w1d1•spr1•ad damage• a nd 5H llvC'S lost
That flood. a small one c:ompart-d llJ the tx-st
1•sllmatc-:. or tht' 1862 flow. alarmed rl'Stdents and
off 1c1ab c•nough to rC'Su It 111 lht• lvnstrucuon of
Prado Dam wh1l·h straddh.'s the r&Vto"r JU::.t over th!'
1·uunt v ltnt• 111 H1 v1•rs1de County
Tht• main purpose of a dam rs simply to put a
barrll'r bc•t Wt'l'n a heavy flow or water and an
cin•a downstn•am Lhal w ould othl•rw1!:>(' flood
Whc·n 1t was ('(lmplcted 111 1940. officials fl•lt
:.urr that Prcidu D<im t·ould hand)(• any futun•
flooding o n th1· Sant<.i Ana Tht•y havt• s1nct•
d1scovc•rc-d that as far from the· l'<tS(•
At thl' t1mt•, the sevc•nty o f thC' IHfl:.! flood wa;,
not known, and the Wl'ath1·r cond1twn~ that
i·aus<>d It w1·n· nol l'ons1d<'n'<i rc•a'>On<1bly poss1hlP
rm this arc·a
The· fa<'l!> 110 \\ known havt' kd to a nt•w
conclusion that no one seriously drsputC's Though
Prado Darn 1s big enough to hold back watc•rs from
a flood so larg1· that 11 can tx• exp<'('t<'d to o<.'Cur JUSt
on('(• f'very 70 yt'ars (a so-called 70 yt•ar flood), .rn
1862-style fl ood 1s much larger but still C'an bt·
cxpec·ted tn happ{'n evl'nlually, Jnd 1t would
ov1•rwht•lm P rado's capacity
By comparison . the 1938 flood w;is only a
40 VC'ar flcX>d were 1t to ot'CUr now 1l would Ix•
fuliy conwincd at Prado
What this means. accordmg to Dennis Major.;
of the Army Corps o r Engineers. IS that a n
1862-st) le rlood would send watt?r rushmg ovl'r
Prado's spillway and toward Orangl.' County at a
rate of nearly I 8 million gallons pc'r Stt'Ond
SOmC' r•1ght tlmC'S the capacity or thC' river l'hannel
h<>re
Su(·h a flood c;in ix' n•a.<;0nahly <'Xpt.'<.·tc-d lo
ot'C'Ur ciboul onct' C'very 200 yl'ars· thNC''s a
(See MAJOR. Pa~e 81 I
Large 2 00-year flood would soak all
blue arc:>a~ but e ven smalle r I 00-year
flood would dre nch coast (da rk blue).
DaitJ l'llol Map
-INDEX-Blast rips four homes ID • Mesa
At Yuui S1•rv11·1·
Erma Bombc'<'"-
C'11v11lcadc•
Cl~c;.c;1f1Pd
Comies
Crossword
Dc>;ith Nolin•<;
Ed1tom1I
Entc•r ta111m1·n t
Art Ho ppe·
I lorosc>tlpc·
Ann Landc•r<;
Mov1N;
National Nt•ws
Pubht Notr e'N.
S port..q
Dr StC'&nrrnhn
Sux:k Markrt..c;
Television
ThC'alN'S
Weath«>r
-.
A•I
A7
A7
('fi. Ill
B~,
n~
C6
Afi
R4
/\ 7
A7
A 7
B'1
A:!
CH
('I !"l
A7
83
86
B4
A'l.
/\ latl' night explosion lx•m•alh
a 1·ar 1n Costa Mesa SE"nl plt'i..'l'S o f
a pip<• bomb fl y111g through th1•
air. d amag111 g four hnuses a nd
lt•aving nl'1ghbors stunnt'd and
fnght.enC'd
Pol1tr said that tht• d1•v1n',
~c;1bly a pipe l111rnh. was plac<od
by un known suspec ts late•
Saturday night lx-rwalh a 19110
Must;mg parkrd rn the· n·at allry
of 'l.">6 E 16th Plaet'
No on<' was hurt m th1• I I pm
<·xplos1on that blC'W out th(· tar 's
lo(as tank. damaged the gas line to
an adjacent apartment and sent
p1t'CCS of shrapnel flying inl<J two
Rarag~ and a living room
Antonio Tamaltzi, owner of the
damagNI c-ar, :i.aid he had no td('a
who wanted to destroy his car
Maggie O'Donnell, who w as
aslt'('p at the time. said she heard
tht> explos1nn and ran oul as soon
as hrr apartment tx•w111 fillmf( up
Wllh gas rumf'S
"I thought thC'rt' was a w ar
on ," said O'Donnrll ''I was so
scared I didn't even turn the
lights on I just ran downstairs "
The torn gas hn<' was r<'p:tired
('arly Sunday morning
Pu.'<'E'S of the pipe bomb went
1 hrough a garage belonging to Ed
and Vi vi a n H o l I 1 ngsworth .
d amaging boxes o f s to red
Chris tmas decoration s. before
entering an adjacent apartme nt
Joanie Goldsmith said s he was
watching television whe n she
h eard the explosion and ran
outside to )Oin nearby r('Sidenls
Goldsmith said s he didn 't
realize until Sunday m orning
that a three Inch pi<'ce of the
metaJ bomb had tom through her
living room wall and then hit the
celling. S he found the chunk of
metAl lying near her front aoor.
"I heard the explosion and I
thought th<' building had blown
up." said Goldsmith. "I was just
lucky that I was n't downstairs."
About nine s mall holes were
le ft in Lu Daley's garage d oor
a fte r the late night explosion
One htl th<' wh<-el frame of a
bike , but was ejected without
damaging the tire. Another was
round embedded in a chair
"All 1 could think of is what 1C
I had been out h ere emptying m y
trash ," Daley said. "This is a very
sare and quiet neighborhood.
We've never had anything hke
this happen."
HB schools eyed
Residents 1n the Huntington
Beac h Unio n High Sch ool
District will have a chance to tell
sch ool officials what they feel
should be t o p edu c ation
prioritles.
A public forum 1s scheduled
Sept. 25 from 9 a.m . to l2 noon al
the M arina H igh S c h ool
ca feteria, 15871 8pringdale Ave.
The community is invited.
Through the procea, the bowd
o{ trustees hopes to as,,ure that
district education goals match up
wit h community desires,
a cco rd i ng t o a distri ct
spokeswoman.
l'f,1i>lll'd So (jllll'kly, "lli1•11 W itSrt'I
t11111· ror .111yL l11111-:"
Thi· pl<tnt· t·1.1'>ht•d 1111 .. d lrt't'
rn11~·1 v :o.hor tl y .1r1t·1 t.1krn~ 11rr
(11>111 1h1~ 1 11 y 1111 S pa111·~
'>OUlh1•111 M1•c1111 ·rr ,11H·,111 1·oast
poll! I "tlcl
Tilt' ,1g1 'Ill y ''"" t l1t jPI Wi.1'>
11111 r1111g IH'<ll th1· ,Ill f>lll t ,JllU
alo11g-,1cJ1· tht· l'.1d11 l\.1 11 d1ma
l11ghwJ y, wh1t·h pol1t 1· hl111:kt·c.l
riff lfl ('<tSl' nf .111 1·xploswn
Airport
parking
hike?
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL 01 lh• Dally Piiot Slalf
Parking ft't~ l'hargl-<l at J ohn
Way nt· Airµorl would lll{'rcase
!>ubstant1all y und«'r a proposal
that will be 1·ons1dt•rl't1 Tuesday
by the Orangl' County Board of
S upervtsors
Under the proposal. th(' daily
rate charged at the main parkmg
lo t a djacent to th(' ;;1 1rpor t
l1.•rm1ncil wo uld d1rnb w $1 from
$5 Thl' 50 C(·rH pt•r huur rail' for
sho rt -Ll·rm US{' wou Id not t·ha ng{'.
however
Tht' daily rat1 • charg<-d in Lh e
long ll·rm parking Jut north of
th(' airport the• lot (avorc-d by
m~t trav<'ler.; would 1m·rc·asc•
to $4 per day from $'1. 50
The b1ggl'S t 1 m-rt••fal' wuu Id
re1C'f' firms wh()S(' Pmploy1>t.-s park
at employee-only parking lots
Tht· monthly rate would 1ncrl.'aSE-
to $30 from $10
The increases. 1f approvl'd by
supcrv1sors. would boost parking
revenue from $2 24 m1lhon to
$3 I m1l11on annually an
111crease of more than $860,000,
according Lo a report b y Airport
Manager Murry Cablt•
Although count y -owned.
parking lots {'On cl'ss1ons a re
operatt.-d by Park111g Company of
America.
Under a r evised agreement
negotiated by the county General
Se rvi ces Ag<'ncy, P C A 's
eompensallon w ould 1ncrC'ase
fro m 6 85 perc·C'n t of g r oss
n ·<.·c·1 pts from th<' m ain a nd
t•mployet' lots and 25 pcrC'C'nl o r
gross rccC'1pts from thc long-term
lot to a flat ratr of 9 5 pt'rl't.'lll for
all lotc; for revc>nuc• up lo $:i
m1ll1on
P C A w o u I d r e <.' {' t v t> a n
add 1t1on al :.! pPrn·n t o f g ross
rc•1:C'1pL" abov1• $:i m11l1on under
tht' plan.
Dc•pending on Lhl• numbt>r of
l·ars parked during lhC' f11-st year
u r thC' new rnll·s. PCA 's 111t'Oml'
wnuld be• b<.'lwc•t•n $287,000 to
$2 ~7 ,000 an inc rc•as e o r
betwN •n I pC'rel'nl a nd 14 5
percent over 198 l <.'Ornpcns1uon.
Cablt' said.
Cable said the• nl'w ratt.'S would
eompare with lhOSC' 1·hargl'd a t
o th er Soulh<'rn Cali forn ia
a1rporL._.
He said a rate incn •asc w as
warranted. 111 part, dul' to the
uniq ue high de m a nd -limited
ranlillC'S situation al lht• airport.
Hinckley prai es
insanity d e f e n e
NEW YORK (AP) J ohn W
Hinckley Jr says abohshtng thc-
111sani ty defen st' w o uld be "a
tr avrs t y o f Ju s ti c e " by a
v 1nd1ct1ve Ame rica to avenge the
shootin~ of President Reajlan.
Joanie Goldsmith
s Oranpo Cooat DAIL V PILOT /Monday, Sapturnber 13, 1'~82
sraelis bomb Syrian, Palestinian posts
Hi':lltllT . l.1·11,11111 11 t Al'l
, avt·i. .. r 1,1 ,ll'li Jl'l' tilltll'ko ·d
tlyr1u11 ulld l'tilt·:..l1111u11 pc~"l11111:..
flOday Ill 1>UJiUllt\t'J J lf tL~Ull..' 1111
li·ai1tern Ll·bl.inon'h Rt·k.111 V11llc•v, ~ilhn~ :m trnoµ:.. .111d g11C'11 ill.1:..
fin d sc•tl111~ :..t•vt•r.il 111111 1.11 y
~lll'<Ullpllll't\~ ablate', Lt•l>ic111111\
fl t.ate und privat.cly oWlll'd rnd111
l;tat10ns rt·porll'd
: The lef11s l V111 t•t· "' Arah
SLebanon rad to dt'MTI ht•d 1111•
~ssault as th1• "bt•1<11111l 111-l of a
e w round ur full S4.'c1lt· w.1rf..r1·
Lemmon "
It was lhl' fourth 11m1• .,111t·c·
Jv.'e dncsday that ls1 a1•l1 pl.int•:..
ruacked Syrian anll UlflTa ft
n11:..-1tl1·i. ot )).1hm ul H.11Ju, .1l111ut :.w milt·~ l'll:o.t 1,( U1·1 1 u t T hi•
b1 ;wli:.. :.;11d th1· 1111..u ki. V.1•11• 111
u •t11la1111on tor ::>yrmn tl'ttw {111•
v111lt1ttml.:!I 111 IA·banor1
Thi· bra1·h 1111llt,11 v 1111111 11011.t
hi Tl'! Aviv ~ud 11 . ., hor11l1c ·ri. hi\
Pult·~t111ia11 a11d Svn .111 po:..a t1on:..
1n tht: urcu.'l ol 1•l-Ma1.11 , ( 'hww·u
1md Oahar 1·1-Bwda
T h t• t:om1nu11d :...11d ii Syr1111l
SAM-9 lll":..tll' l.IUll\ 111 ·1 W .t:..
destroyc..-<i and 11tlwr I 'tilt•:..tm1u11
and Synan pos1l11ms Wt·n · strut:k
Israel has sa1cl 11 d1•st rnyt•d six
Sov1ct-mad1• SAM !J m1 s:..ll1·
batteries in the samt· .1r1'.• 111 f1v(•
days
Tlw utlu1 k 1·11t111· ,1 d11 y uf l1•1
),nwh P111111• M1111s1t•1 M1•1111dw111
Hl'Kll1°'> 1'(1•V1·1111111•11t Wlll llt.'d
S y r 1 u u ~ u 1 n " t 11 I I 11 w 1 11 ~
l't1l1·1111nlo11 l(lll't 11ll11s 111 Syrurn
lu ·ld t1•1 n111ry l11 l,1u111 Ii dll.1l'ks
1111 1.,1 ,1l'11 I ro1>J>1> Ill L1•l1t111l1n
'l'hl· L1·IJ IJ1h111 f1•1wrts said
lsr u1·l1 w;1rpla1wi. 1tl 1>u stagt•d
moc:k d1vl'bom h111g utt.al'ks on the
J>ul1 •.,11111an 11'I U~1· .. lUOllJ of
Budd u w 1 111• a 1 Lt• h u 11 o n ' s
111irthl•l'll I-"" t llf Tr1polt, dniwtng
anti Hll'('l'<lfl b urragl's fro111
guc•rr1 Ila pos1 ltons
Hadduw1 hous1:s more than
J ••
AP Wltepholo
Fire m e n s pray walt'r on rh.-wreckage after a pa nish cha rter jct
c rash ed a nd burst into fla mes aft er ta k eoff fro m the Ma laga,
S pain, a irport today.
Man slain
'.butside bar
Crean shells out
1 One man 1s dead and a second
elinging to life fo llo wing a
shooting outside a Buena Park
lavern during the· pre-dawn
~ours Su nd ay , polic e
for TV campaign
1 ~vestagators said
Officers saad the dead man.
~ntafaed as Roberto L Cor tez,
was sh ot twac't an thC' head as
waJked from a 9th S tn.-el bar
h e second man , Juan C
Espinosa, was reporl~dly s hot
, {our lame s tn th<' h e ad a nd
temains an critical condataon at
Anaheim Memorial Hospital
No arres ts have beC'n made
VISTA 1AP1 An a1Jc· say!>
Johnnie C rc•an , Rt>publaca n
nomant't' to Congress an the 43rd
distract. wall s pend $70,000 to
promote and produce a half-hour
campaign program on prim<•-llmt•
te le Vlsaon
Tn two rec.·C'nl polls, the S an
J uan Capis tra no businessman
was r e por11•d ·ra tling GOP
w n te·m candadati• Ron Pal·kard
and the Democratic nomtnL'<'. Pa t
Arc her <See $l0r y. PaRc B7j
Forme r NBC "Tuday" S how
host Frank Blair will be master
of ('Cr emOnlt'S for the program
scheduled the evening of Sept.
21 un KFBM·TV an San Diego.
Crcan's l'ampa1gn manager said
Friday
Thi.' aad(•, Allan Hoffe nblum.
SC11d C rean will pay $5,400 for the
TV tame and nearly $70,000 in
a ll In a series of 30-seeond
c:omml'rc1 a ls that bC'gtn this
WC'C•kt•nd.
Cloudy day
d
'J Coa stal
b COASTAL ANO MOUNlAIN
AREAS -NIOht and mornlOQ low
.J cJouda with •o0 on lower ooutat
() alop .. 1nd loc;el drlule Perlly
cloudy afternoons Windy et times
In the mounllins Continued coot a with highs from 68 10 7A a t tleK'-al'd lrom 72 10 82 Inland
'J 1teas. Lows In tile mid 509 and o 60s. Mountain highs from 62 10
75 Lows lrom 35 10 50
~ Califo rnia
•
The waalhe• p tctura tor
Southern Cellfo1n1a on luasday
includes cloudiness end d•lufe
aiono the cou1 with 1r>creas1no
wlnd1nan 111 mour11a1ns and
6-11. K<X>fdlOQ to the Nauonaf Weather S«V1Ge
Htot11 In Lot Anoetes may near
80 wllh GOHlaf hlOh• ranging
lrom 71 l o 83 Reshfenl! ol
mounl•ln commur>llles shou10
••P«I temperatures raAChlng
lrolll 65 10 75 Gusty winds
ra~ lrom 15 10 25 mph may
llCCOf't'IP8ny 1emperetur1tt1 In the
609 In northam a-ts while ll•e
tow deHrt IO<ecast pre<llcls hlOh'
In Ille 90s
8"11t1 lrom Point Concepllon
10 the Maxleen bo<der can expect
llOhl verlable winds during the
nloltt end morning h ours
tno southwesterly 11 8 to
la In lhfl 111.,llOQfl with 11 loot southWMt .-11
T11m p11rotur es uround l tte
nallon at m1d·day Sunday ranged
from 45 al Evanslon. Wyo lo 98
at Wichita falls. l e-as
mog
The Air Ouahly Management
Otstrlet pre<J•CIS good 811 Quaflly
lo<lay tor most areas 01 the Sou1h
Coast A11 Basin but unheallhlul
air l or sens111ve peo~le on the
RlverSlde San Berr>ard1no area
The Pollutant Slar>d ard Inda•
10< lhat 1eg1on is expec1e<1 10 oe
t38 The San Fernando Sanla
Ctarlla San Oabrlet and Pomona
•alleys are pred1c1ed 10 ha•e a
PSI ol 100 ,.,. .... ~ 1¥,,.~-·
All Olhet areas lhe coaslal "'l AA l !. ~· • L<'""""'""'~
rao1on m e 1ropo1.ran Los Fronts Cold -W <trm ..., Occ•uO<'O -Statoon.1r, ••
Angeles 1r>1ena Oranoe County ------------------------"""' Hemet·Elslnore Bio Bear La~e
hig h a nd low <1 ese11s and
Bann•no are e•pecle<J lo have
PSI reedonos 01 42
AOMD 1a11nos are as lollOws
Good O· 100, unhealthful lo•
sens1t 1ve pe ople t01·200
un l1ee11hlul lor every one
20 1 ·300 'lln d ha1ardous 301-500
T e 111pe rat11rPs
NATION HI lo Pep
Albany 86 50
Atbuqve 66 54 Ot
Amarillo 89 58
Ashevlfle 74 69
Allento 78 65
At111n1c Ct~ 19 85
Austin 99 78
Baltlmore 86 60
81Ulf'l09 68 47
Blrmlnohm 62 73 23
Bltmarck 66 u
BolMJ 67 50 04
Boston 76 59
Brownsv11e 97 17
B<ittaJO 84 6 1
8u111ng1on 67 55
Ce aper 6A 38
Cr..rlstn SC 82 69 •3
Charletton WV 89 6t
Ch.,llte NC 83 62
Cheyenne 80 40 32
Chicago 81 66
Clncinneu 84 69 Cl4Waland 89 82
ctble SC 85 68 02
Columbve 8• 61
O•l·F"t Wlh 95 ,,
011y1on 82 62
O.-nve• 57 "" 14
Des Mome• 85 10
De11011 87 58
Oulvlh 10 61 90
El Pas.o 8t 60 01
Fargo 58 52 29
Flagslafl 62 "' Great falls so 39
HorllOrd 87 59
Helena St 4S t<' Honolulu 87 17
Houslon 92 80
t11dnap11s 84 71
Jac~•n MS 87 74 SJ
J&CllSr>lflle 9 1 75 0 1
Kans City 86 72 Knoxville 84 69
Las Veoas 88 57
Lollle Rock 89 10 2 t
lnu1sv1lle 8S 89
lubbock 89 6S Memphis 17 74 77
M1am1 88 83 05
MllW8U~4"! 81 83
Mpts-St P 77 89 23
Nashville 8 1 88 Ot
New Orleant 9t 7A I 10
New York 86 67
Norton, 84 63
No Plalle 82 49 18
0tt1a C11y 98 70
Omaha 8 1 85 I 53
O•lando 92 75 Ot
Phlle<lphle 9g 62
Phoenl• 87 85
Pllllt>uroh 88 54
Pt11nd Ml 80 58
Piiand Ore 7 t 59 25
Prcwldence 83 82
Ral•IOh 00 82
Reno 74 38
Sell Lake 83 45 08
San Antonio 117 78
Seallle 84 54 04
~ SURf RIPORT . ;;-,;-
•wt llHf ""' .... .... ..... ...... . .,. .... ~ ... .... Dlt
Zuma I 2 12 I 2 SW
Sante 'Monlce 1 2 12 ' 2 SW
Hewpor1 BMcll t 2 12 ' 2 SW
San Olego County 3 4 12 2 3 SW
Oultooll lor T...aday l lllle ell~
•
Shrevel)Ort
S•ou• Falls
SI LOUIS St P Tempa
St Ste Mone
Spokane
Syracuse
Topeko
fucson
l ulSD
wasn1ng1n
W1ch1l8
98 7 I 07
66 57 23
85 73 0 1
91 77 e• 56 60 A6 24
83 53
66 73
81 59 50
99 72 02 87 66
93 70
CALIFORNIA
Apple Volley
Bnkerslleld
83 48
93 67
90 63 8A 52
88 31
93 65
77 66 61 53
90 59
82 52
81 88
74 87
91
BRrSIOw
Beeumonl
Big Bear
Blythe
Catalina
Eur el( a
Frosno Lanca11e1
Lono Beach
LOI Angeles
M11rysvflle
Monrovia
Montet>et10
Monteray
Mt Wllaon
Need lea Newpon S.ech
Oekfend
Ontario
Pelm Spring•
PHldllfll
Paao Rooles
Red Bluff
RedwOO<I City S11<:r-10
SellnH
Sen Bernardino
San Gebrfet
San Olego
San Franct9GO
San JoM
81nle Alla
Tides
TOOAY
81 6A
82 68
H 53
71 66
92 6A
74 87
80 56 78 80
!13 63
82 81
87 47
00 70
90 57
87 52
78 49
711 59
81 88
78 8!1
78 " M 5!1
78 07
Second hiOh 8:53 p.m. 8. 1 TUHOAY
Ftrtt low 1:69 •.m -0.1
Flrtt high 8:S 1 1.m. 4. 7 S.Cond low t:43 p.m. 1.t
8.aood high 7.411 p .. m 8 4
Sun H it 7 .03 p.m., rl .. e
Tut eday 11:315 a.m
Moon H t• 4.50 p.m , rlH t
TUNdl y 3: 10 I m
,
H,000 rt•(ug''''" 11•l{l11kr~<J with
tht• Unllt'LI Nut1111\M
f l'gurdtng 1111r d(•ploy1n1>nt
haru<-1 C'unn111 Ul(I et! to this." an
lsr111·lt 1111l1uu y c•o111111l111111ut· smd
Syno l'IH1mt•cl 11 would ke•ep
n1ll1.11g i.Jnlt 1111'1'J'alt 1111:...-.1l1•!i into
th•· Jlc•kma 1rri·Mp1"t·t1v1• of ti.nwl's
1 t·s1Joru;t· 1'1w mahwry t ommund
1n T1•l Aviv r;atd "l iirat·I a:..
d1·lt•rm111t<d 111 mind ;rnd dt'l'IKton
11111 tu a llow thf' Synans lo bring
g I II u II cl I 1 l a II' Iii Is s I h · s I n I (I
l.1 ·1>1111011 "
l11ruel smd th1· 1 u1di, w1·n · 111
r~pr i ~u~ for S y rwn {'c•u:i.1· ""'
vlolutlon s u11d al·t·w11•d th1·
Synuns ol u1d111K l(Ul'rr 11lu lrn n •:..
111 custc-111 u111I t'l'lltrul L1•h:11tu11
It stltd I :l lsrJl'lt so ld11•1 s liuv1•
bt•tm ktll<•d und io woundt·d 1n IJH
et•use (1n• v1olut111n:. in 1·aRt<·1 n
Lebanun Slnl'l' J uly :t:I. wh1·11
lsrat'lt w;,rplanes ,rnd urttl )('ry
pounded thL· Syrians llwn· lo
h alt u stnn g o f :w 1..lc1ys of
flareuµ.-;
"T ht> Sym1ns arc l'n<1bhng lht·
t1•rrorn1ts W ('fOSS ltm·s and ar1·
supplying them w ith 1nformallo n
Is rael :,,a ys at has Ul•struyt•d
roughly 30 S y r ian 1111 s 1>al1·
bcitl(•rt('S s1nc1: its 1nv<11>1on of
L1•ba11on b1:gun 13 Wl'l'ks ago
Map lot·u tt·s l!ir ueli
wurplu1w ra ids m
Lt•luuwn.
Tanke r trucks
caper reward
set at $10.,000
Two companies are Jointly
offering a $10,000 reward for
information leading to thl' arrc.>st
and conviction of two men who
stole eight oil tanker trucks in
nine month's. Orange County
sheriff's officials said
M obil Oi I Cu. a nd Evans
Trucking has lust more than
$1 00,000 in the thdL'i in what:h
truck drivers have been Bl'COSl!·d
at gunpoint in Orange and Los
Angeles counties, sheriff's Sgt
Lynn Ne hring said
Mo bil s p oke s w oman Landa
Agens said six of the htj<l('kings
occurred in Los Angeles County,
and Nehring said two occurred in
Orange County.
People who have information
and seek the reward are askt?d LO
call Orange County s he riff's
Investigator Wayne Carlander at
834-3081 or 834-3000.
Disabled • v1e
• 1n game meet
T yphoon a fte rmath
Hou5!eS a re still undt-r walt-r today in
Asaka Cit y, a ~uburb of T ok yo, a ft e r
T y phoon Judy s truc k t.•t-ntra l Ja pa n
Sunday.
AP Wlf'e9h0to
HARMARVlLLE, Pa. (AP) -
Pac-Man w as guided by breaths
of air, turns o f the head and voice
commands at the Sip and Puff
pinball tourn am ent, kicking off
National Rehabilitation Week .
Deng gains power
"h 's the samP kind of c>scapasm
for m e that tt IS for everybody
e lse," said Sand Blatt. 35. a
quadriplegic taking par t tn the
pinball tourney along with 74
other disabled people. mcludang
paraplegics. ampu tel's a n d
cerebral palsy victims
PEKING (AP) -China's top
leader Deng Xiaoping has srnr1..'Cl
a major t riumph by placing
p o ltttl'al allies in kl'Y posts.
o u s ting foes and wanning
e ndorsement o f hi s
modernizauon program. Westc•rn
diplomatic analysts saad today
H e had l o m a k e· so m e
c:om·css1ons LO the army and older
conse r vati ves but the 12th
annu a l Communi s t Party
Nataonal Congress a nd Central
Commt tlN> meeting by and large
marked viC'lories for Deng. said
the analys ts, who re quested
anonymity
•
Our luxurious came l blaze r
and Own M ak e flannel s
S uperb materials and workmanship combine
for these handsome casuals. The blazer of pure
camel hair comes on our 3-buuon model and
features Golden Fleec e embossed leather but·
to n s, $300. To complell\ent, wool flannel Odd
Trou sers from our own workrooms in brown, or
light, medium or oxford grey, $90
UTAl llSHID 1111
~~~ff.j/
CC®~iJili@:[)
l'urnishtng9 forlltn . Women ~Boys
~JO WEST Tft-i T RHF.'I: LOS ANCltil .. BS. CALIR
FASHION ISi.AND. NBWPORT 8 £ACH, CALIR
• •
I
NATION
Insanity i sue pus he d
WAS HlNliTON (AP)
Pn•s1dent RL'U8an IN u11k1n.c
CongrcliS lo make it tougher
Cor jum.>S to find defendants
innocent by reason of 1n.saruty,
the verdict t htlt e nabled
presidential assailant John W.
H1 n l'kl ey Jr to escape
conv1cuon
T he controversial legisla tive
package, a projec t of
presidential counselor F.dwin
Meese Ill. a former prosecutor,
was sent today to the House
a nd Sen a t e . C hances o f
congressional passage this year
are c..'Onsldered slim.
Nuclear arms flayed
A USTIN . Texas (AP) -
Voters in a city bond clect1on
have regi s t e r e d th eir
disapprova l of the nuclear
arms race, approving by more
than a 4 -1 margin an
un0 Cf1t'ial referendum that
calls for President Reagan to
pro pose a joint wea pons
freeze.
T he proposal was kept off
WORLD
the bond referendum ballot
bc..-cause it did not deal with a
m un icipa l m atter, but
organizers of the Nuclear
Weapons Freeze Campaign set
up a volunteer-run "sidewalk
election" outside polling places
Saturday. Voter registration
cards or affidavits of voting
eligibility w ere required to
participate in the s traw poll.
Princess' leg broken ..
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(AP) -Princess G r ace
suffered a broken leg today
when the car her 17-year-old
d aughte r , Stephanie, was
driving left the road on a
hairpin turn near here and
rolled over several times.
authorities said.
The princess. 52, is expected
to remain hospitalized for 10
days. S te phanie s uffe red
slight <.'Ontusions and returned
to t he palace afte r b e ing
treated at the hospital. Prince
Raini e r III went to the
hospital to be with his wife.
Crash kills 39 in Switzerland
PFAEFFIKON, S witz -
e rl a nd (AP) -A s ign al-
woman's failure to lower the
gates a t a railroad crossing
a pp are n tly c au se d
Switzerland 's w or s t r ai l
disaster in nl'arly a c:cntury ,
authorities say.
Al least 39 people were
STATE
killed a nd 10 injured an the
fi e r y c·u l lis io n S unday
betwe<>n a commuter train and
a busload of West German
tourists. The gates were not
down as they were supposed
to be before the bus passed
through the crossing in the
early afternoon, said a police
spokesman.
Lawyers admonished
S A CRAM ENTO (AP) -
The new preside nt of the
State Bar is highly ind ignant
about what he calls the
"h ysterical, 'soft-on-c:rime'
rantings of the assailan ts"' of
the stat«" Supreme Court.
Anthony Murray, 45, a Los
Ang e l es lawye r . urge d
members of the S ta te Bar
Sunday to defend state courts
and "de nounce these political
mercenaries who are trying to
pull down our system "
Aviation pioneer dies
S AN DIEGO (AP) -T .
Claude R yan, a pio n eer
airplane builder who founded
Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical
as well as the finn that built
Charles Lindbergh's historic
"Spirit of St Louis." is dead at
84.
Ryan worked on designs for
new aircraft up to the day
before his death . H e died
while sleeping Saturday night.
In a half-century's work, he
was credited with developing
the nation 's first r egularly
scheduled airline, the Navy's
first jet fighte r a nd the
world's first vertical takeoff-
and-Landing (VTOL) airplane.
NBC gathers trophies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Struggling NBC t ook home
the most trophies at the Em.my
awards banquet, where minor
• cate gor y and t ec hnical
achievements are honored in a
pre liminar y eve nt to
television's big awards show
next week.
A total of 31 awards were
handed Sunday night, with
videotape highlights of the
c..-eremonies to be included in
the telecast of the Academy of
Tele v1s1on Arts and Sciences
3 4th an n ual Emmy s
presentation at the Pasadena
Civic Audito riu m n e xt
Sunday ABC will telecast
that event live, with awards
set for presenta t ion in 27
ca tegoraes.
Trunked
Neena, the
elephant, uses a
trunk line to get to
know Bobby
-C.OOper or Aatorja,
Ore., during a
break in the Big
John St.rong Circua
in Astoria.
San Francisco becomes city of singles . . w
SA N F RAN C ISCO (AP) -San
Francisco has turned into a city of singles
for the first time in this century, and it may
s igna l a national trend a way from the
traditional family, according to U.S . Census
Director Bruce Chapman.
the '80s." he said, pointing out that the San
Francisco Bay area is "the extreme
statement of a national trend toward the
decline of the traditional family."
Chapman said the censua .did not tally :
the number of homoeexuala in the city, a •
figure estimated by tome offidala at about :
15 percent of the population. llownw, :
Chapman aaid the number of married
women in the city dropped from 50 percent :
a decade ago to 38 percent in 1980. • Chapman. speaking at a news conference
at a meeting of the American Sociological
Association, said the 1980 census found that
53 pe rcent of San Franc isco's 678,974
residents are living in what he described as
"non-family households."
Chapman says that , in some ways, the
change has been good for the city. He
pointed out that, while the population has
declined by 5.1 percent in the last 10 years,
the number of residents between the ages
of 25 and 34 increased by 45,523, or 40.4
percent.
A 27.1 percent drop in the under -11 :
group is evidence that a growinc number of.
single-parent families are aufferlna :
economically.
That compares to 44 perc..-ent a d ecade ago
an the nation's 13th largest city.
"The decline in marriages and the
decrease in families with children portend a
vastly different society as we move through
"The high percentage of young people
p ast the period whe re they are just
e nte ring th e job force and in very
productive phases produces a certain
amount of economic vibrancy," he said.
"Single-parent households in San
Franciaco went up by 19 percent. and ww
know that roughly half of the sm,Je-parent
families are living at the poverty lew1 md
are getting 90me fonn of family-"tance,"
he said.
Illinois towns fighting to keep doctors
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) -
Us ing bas k ets o f peach es.
baseball caps with town names,
slide shows and offers of high
salaries, 50 Illinois towns are
trying to sell themselves at a
"Doctor's Fair."
Civic leaders trying to attract
physicians to live and work in
their communities set up scores
of booths under a tent on the
grounds of Memorial Medical
School.
One of the primary goals of the
fair, run by the Southern Illinois
University School of Medicine, is
to keep Illinois-trained doctors
from leaving the st.ate, said John
Record, coordinator of the SIU
medica l sch ool 's practice
opportunities program.
Despite projections of a surplus
of U .S . doctors by the 1990s,
government studies show that
many smal l a nd rural
communities face a shortage of
general practitioners.
"It's one thing to train good
doctors and encourage them to
stay in the state . But if
communities aren't given a
chance to say what we're about, a
bi& piece o f th e puzzle is
missing," Record said.
Doctors wandering from booth
to booth will see slide shows of
co mmunity life, eat food
provided by local caterers, get
roses pinned on their lapels, and
receive key rings, balloons,
samples of fresh fruit and cider,
and Frisbee discs w i th
'Jes us tree' popular
HOLDEN, W.Va. (AP) -A
poplar tree entangled with kudzu
vines is b ringing in flocks of the
faithful w ho claim to see the
pro file of J esus Chris t in its
foliage.
The tree is on the grounds of a
former e lementary school. Local
residents say the site had been a
popular partying spot for teen-
agers.
amazing," said Ruth McNeil, who
lives down the street from the
tree.
S he said the traffic in front of
h e r house becomes h eav y
beginning just before dusk.
"It's been that way for a
couple o f weeks," she said.
"People come to see the tree.
Some of them pray, some shout,
and some do a little preaching."
community names.
"The best thing they (the
towns) offer is themselves,"
Record said.
Last year, six towns recruited
doctors as a direct result of the
fair, while 35 others said they got
"good leads" toward finding
physicians, Record said.
None of the towna is totally
without medical care, but 1eVeral
have only part-time docton fronl
neighboring communities, said
Nancy Zimmers, aP<>keawoman
for the medical 1ehool.
The communities at this year's
fair include Illinois' aecond-
largest city, Rockford, with a
population of 140,000.
The smallest town. that applied
was the Was h i ngton County
hamlet of Irvincton. with 711
people. But lt dropped out at tbe Lut minute when dvlc 1-cler1
determined that more than a
dM.en new physlduw h8d mowd
into the.,.. in recent IDOQlba.
Some comm unit)'
representatives offer to "'1
office rent. movlna expenaea
and set-up aostm.
Some offer biC IAlaria Tbe
central llllnoi1 tewa el
Beerdatown offered a .............
annual income of ll 10',000,
Reconf Mid.
The town voted to mWre up
the difference between that
amount and what the doctor
earns from patient 1 .... The
average national lDcome for a
family practitioner. ff5,000.
• ID • mine town
while drinking beer beneath the
tree. which is approximately 80
feet tall.
Since then, she said the word
has spread and people have been
visiting the site every night.
Bryant said his parenu on
Hart's Creek, some 25 mil•
away, had driven up to -the
tree.
"It's bumper to bumper around
here aft.er dark," edded a-y.n&.
"I've even seen out-of-state
lken9e plat.es."
The partying , however. has
been replaced by praying
recently. Some residents of this
southern West Virginia coal-
mining town s ay the foliage
resembles the profile of Jesus
Christ as he looked in a painting
depicting him praying In the
Garden of Gethsemane.
Shelby Sheppard, who Jives
across the street from the tree,
said two of her sons discovered
the resemblance last month
"People have been coming
from e ve r ywh e re to see the
tree." said Curtis Bryant, an ·
out-of-work coal miner who a1ao
pajd a visit to the popular poplar.
"The reason they come 't night is
that you can see it best after
dark, when the moon is shining
behind it."
Glen Bryant, no relation, U..
just aero. the street from the
tree. Like the others, be'•.._
m.de a ~up the bill. ,
3 , 700 acres scorch ed
CALISTOGA -A wildfire
rjlgmg over Mount St. Helena
shifted direction early today,
jumped a fire line and has
scorched some 3, 700 acres on
th e hill si d e above the
nor the rnmost vineyards of
Napa Valley.
M()ne)1y f t1dl, If 'f()V 00 n()i t\aY4t
yiour pepe, by ~ 30 o "' c•11 oetor1 I
om I nd yio..,r coo.,. Wtll ~ O•h"""'"°
SllUfOl'I I nd Sundr, If tou 00 rot :;-,r.:,, C:n°J .,!~, ~:;.-uC:
dett¥tttto
Although three-quarters of
the blaze has been contained,
the rest of the fire is "very
inaccessib le," s aid Tom
Rand o lph o f th e s tate
Departm e nt of F orestr y .
"We're having real problems
with that 25 percent."
The Rev . Rich ard Wilcox,
pastor of the Verdunville Church
of God, brought his flock to the
s pot for a session of gospel
singing and praying.
"The resemblance is just
We're Listening •••
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like?
Call th~ number ~low and your messa1e . will be recorded,
transcnbed and delivered lo the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answering service may be used to record Jet·
ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include
their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation
calls. please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST c1aaelhd ~ 71"'42·M7•
All ottt.r departments 142-4321 Daily Pilat
Tho mot P. Haley
Pvb41.iia1 ond Chief hecvtlve Olltc.,
Jane AmcHI
E •ecu1 .. e E d••<>f
# L. Koy Schultz
V<t ''"tdent Ol'CI 0.. KIOf ol Advettol"'O
Mkhoel P. Horvey
l>wtefOr of Morl•l"'i)
l(lfculQlionl
loymeftd Maclean
Coiwrol.r
Kenneth N. 01llll•d Jr.
Ol!tclOr °' Op.tCMloftt
MAIN OfflCI ............. c•a-.c;A, _II...,_~ ... lilt, c;_.. Mtte. C• .....
CWYrltfll .. 0r'""9t CM•t ~'*ltNfte ~. ... _....,.., llluttr .. !Mt, ....... lel ~., .. _, ... _.. ........ llWf .. ,~ ....... -..Clef ......... .,(...,,...,._
'•
"It doea look Wee ,,_.," be :
aa.ld. "lt'a a liUle spooky.'' '
our meet p:JpJlar
.s'MiOWr, meek d' thi
~2plylam~
t2V0.ilab\il. ,mrl mcmt
oanfbrtabk ond.
practic.al lbr yru:u tound.
'Mlllr:
-
• .
'
• Orang• Ooa1t DAILY PIL.OT/Mond1y, September 13, 1eaa
Computers turning students into captk'e audience
Best and brightest from Florida chool ... find pac age math more enjoyable
MIAMI L AKl':S. ~·1u (Al~)
Whl'n thl· lunc·h bell n11~~ at
Mmrm LukL'S Ju111or lhgh and'
h u 11d reds n f you Ol!t!> tl'rS
I h u111ll'r oCC to the cufl•tt•rla,
1111nt• uf tlw ISO students 1n
8 1 uec• H.u.kin's class budge-:.
Ea'·h sits entranced, quwtly
1yp1nu l'Ommands into u
t'Umputl•r tN·minal as part of o
programming l'lass for
udvanc<•d math students.
''Thl'Y never leave. We go to
lum·h and l have to push them
out the door," said Raskin, eyes
twinkling as he hurried about
lhl• windowless r oo m
answl•rrng questions and
chrt•king progrc>ss.
"When I'm involved in a
program, I don't want to gel
out of it. l want to finish tl
first," smd Ann-Marie Wong,
12
f\t~kln tc&ldl(~ llOml' or lhl'
(.•ou nty's brlghtt•t1t you11f(1Jtl·n1
i..t un nUluen\ (i('hool. Bul hl1<
1..'><p<>rlf'nce 111n't unlqu<>. &·hool
ort1c1a l1i say thouaan<la of
pupils are finding nl'w
enthusiasm for cla~work all
over Dade Coun\y whcn th •y
sit down at one of th<' mon·
than 1 ,000 h ome -s tyli•
classroom computers.
At FAison Senior High, tm
the Cringes of often-\roubled
Liberty Ci\y , t een agl'rii
crowded around to cheer and
offer help to a visitor from the
school board office who
decided to play "name the
s late" on a school computer
do 11 'l'twy vny ptttl('ntly
d t•Ncrihl· t hl· prot•t•11, and
they'rl' vury klll•runt of thelr
teacher~· mli..t:akc1 ond
lnt•pUtude "
Ril.l>km said h1.!> Junior high
k ld i. ure taking the same
let.soil.If hl• RIV~ m o groduat.e·
k•vel clas." fit Novr Unlvt•l'fdty
for tt>achers a nd they're
isurpru;si~g them ju.<1t by fooling
around in spure tlm1..·
As he s poke, his students
&trugg lcd t o tt•ach t~e
computer a dice gume callt-d
"pig." Others programmed
their computers to calculate
!U:!Laries and cornnuss1ons for an
11naginary salesman. to make
up and alphabetize words, to
<.'ount and to multiply.
Such scenes of students
sitting l'nraplured in front of
computers will be repeated this
fall in classrooms in more than
half th l' n atio n 's sch ool
d 1str1cls.
"Unbelievable -you have
to kick them out at the end of
the day and, no matter how
early the teacher comes in,
there's kids lined up outside
the c lassroom , waiting
quietly," said Marilyn Neff, an
administrator of the district's
basic skiHs program
In grade school, computers
are used for simple exercises in
reading, arithmetic, phonetics
and vocabulary. At higher
levels, there are spelling and
typing e xercises, e ducational
Rames, writing aids and
Intriguing programs that
simulate the jobs of air traffic
controllers or nuclear power
plant operators.
Mohamnuul Ois~rnn (right ).
~ W\rephOIO
eil · ndcrwood build compult'r ''hou "·"
"The projects themselves are
not really important. What's
important is the skills they
lt•arn," the teacher observed.
Some teachers are resisting the
computerization of classrooms,
but others are finding renewed
interest in teaching, Ms. Neff
said
Comput!'r use rn classroom
instruction, a relative rarity
thret• yea rs ago. has now
spread to half of all secondary
sc·hools. 14 pe r cent o f a ll
elementary schools, and 19
percent of other schools such as
vocational institutions.
It's even more widespread in
some parts of the country. A
just-compl eted s tudy b y
Carnegie-Mellon., University of
<.'l assroom compute r use 1n
Pennsylvania found that 93
percent of school districts in
that s tat e w e r e u sing
computers -most frequently
for mathematics instruction.
Advanced students like those
in Raskin's class make up their
own programs, learning h ow to
solve problems and teach th<.'
computer elementary functions
and thought processes. And the
bright kids use computers to
make up exercises to help their
s lower peers overcome
dehcienc:ies and pas..<i Florida's
mandatory assessment tests.
The 223.000-studl'nt Dade
school d1strn:t. fourth largest in
the nation, rt..'CC'ntly bought 426
Atari microcomputers wort.h
$426,000, but many principals
h ave b ee n purc has ing
machines of othl'I' makes out of
discretionary funds Cor several
years. according to Ms. Neff.
Each of thC' district's 24 high
schools, most of the 46 junior
highs a nd a numb e r of
elementary schools now have
computer labs. giving 3,500 to
4.000 pupils of all ages a chance
to l.4.lkl' ll'li.'>Om •• school officials
l>Sld
"Our ulttmaw objective 1s
comput1:r litC'rat·y." said Dr.
J ames 1'~1 l'm i n g. assis t a n t
s up e r1nt t.'ndc nt for
administrative Op!'f'al\Ons. "We
feel d1..•vc.'l o ping s kills in
com pule r l'd u ca ti o n is a s
import.m l to a student today as
readmg, writing and arithmetic
Wl'r"' a decade ago or longer."
Thl' Dl'fl•nse Department
recc•ntly bought 1,360 At.ari
compu t ers to use in its
dependents' schools outside the
U n ited StalC'S, according to
co mpany o ff 1<:1al s 1n
Sunnyvale. Calif. Othl'r b ig
l'ompuler-buying districts
include Fairfax County, Va ..
Westchester County, N.Y .. and
the states of Minnesota, Oregon.
California and Washington .
Atari officials said.
The machines a lso have
students teaching teachers. At
Edison, assistant princtpcd
Thelma Davis pledged to
.. brush up" after observing Lhl'
stude nts.
"It's a sort of role-rcv(•rsal."
Ms. Neff said . "The kids arc
showing their 1.eachers how to
"Some of them thmk it's just
a glorified slide projector
but many of them are getting
turned on again over
education," she said.
"I have a feeling this wiU be
o n e of the most se rious
:.idjustments teachers wiU have
to make," added Amell.
But perhaps the key to it all
1s the way the kid s get
wrapped up in work and enjoy
learning.
David Clark. a 14-year-old
sophomore at Norland H igh,
reluctantly turned away from
his video screen and declared:
"It's fun."
Irvine animal shelter appeals for registration of pets
By SANDIE JOY
Of Ille Delly Piiot 81ett
The economic crunch seems to
have extended to pets if fees
collected by Irvine Animal
Services are any indication.
suggested Animal Services
Supervisor Carl Pagano. "For a
lot of people, pet registration is
not a top priority in their lives.
but I believe it should be."
optional. and she ller fees also
were down during Jufy
compared to last year
The city c·ollected $6 for cat
registratio ns and $784.50 1n
shelter fees last month, 33 and 25
percent dro ps 1n r evenue,
respectively.
The ci ty collected $4,291.50 in
registration fees during July, a 20
percent dro p from money
collected during the same period
last year.
Without the registration, he
said. there's no way of knowing
to whom the dog or cat belongs.
"We have too many people in
Irvine to make guesses at who
owns an animal," he added.
"There's nevt•r that many cats
registered." Pagano said "Most
cat owners choose not to idenu(y
cats, and that's a shame. Cats, "Maybe times are tough," Cat registrations, which are
By PAT HOROWITZ
01 the Delly Piiot Staff
Insurance probes urged
DEAR PAT: How cao a person judge
these mall order health losuraoce plans that
are advertised so frequently? What should be
checked out before ooe of these policies is
purchased? Most. of tbem seem designed to
suP}>lement Medicare coverage. F.P., Costa Mesa
The Health Insurance Institute, a central
source of insurance company health insurance
information in the U.S .. has provided several
suggestions for you. Before buying a small
order health insurance policy, make sure you
know: what happens if you have any
"pre-existing" health conditions: how much
your policy will pay per day; when benefit
payments begin; the circumstances necessary •
to allow you to collect benefits; and how much
you are required to pay in premiums.
The institute pointed out that although
many policies do not require a physical
examination, many have limitation of benefits
for a medical condition present before' th~
policy was purchased.
A two-year waiting period often is
required before you can collect on these
illnesses. It also warns you not to rush into a
plan because of a "limited enrollment period."
Many companies do mass processing of
applicants and do set time limits, but don't let
thJS keep you from getting answers to all your
questions before purchase.
Study the policy provisions so you fully
understand all exclusions. limitations and
premiums. Keep in mind that the average
hospital stay for a person und"r age 65 is
about a week; for over 65, about twice that
long. Remember, too, most mail order policies
will pay only for your hospital medical ~ts.
Outside medical bills are not covered. Thjs is
why it's important to know how much these
policies will pay per day.
Swallows too messy
DEAR PAT: We have a lot of swallows
nesting ln the eaves or our ho use. I love the
birds, bat the mess they make is something I
could do without. Someone told me It's Illegal
to remove the nests once the birds have left
for tbe winter. Is this true?
J .C., Mission Viejo
Certain restrictions affecting swallows
a re subject to legal regulations. It's illegal to
take. possess, transport, seJJ or purchase them
or their parts. such as nests or eggs, without a
permit from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. It usually takes one or two w eeks to
obtain a permit.
Control meas\lres vary. Methods of nest
removals will be specified by the permit.
Exclusion (denying access to the nest site
area) such as using plastic net or poultry wire
as a physical barrier is a relatively permanent
solution. A pemtlt is not required to do this
before the birds arrive or after they have left.
Removing old nests and painting the area with
oil or latex paint may discourage re-nesting
the following year.
ingvalues.
limit two offers per 1>11Kll1St Co11P011 aood
only tor C0111t>l111ll011 •hllt/d11k ordtra
Customer p1ys all •HliCabtt ulu tu
Offer expires September 26. 1982
Pfl~ 1111y v1ry et ptr1ICIPllllll lotttlOlll,
CoullOll &ood only In Soutlltrll
Clllfom11 w111r11ou '"the mm· btnhl9 .... of tht KHt11e'1
'riff Clllcktn AHOC!lthllt.
llllllt two oll•" PVUfCllHt, COllCIOll •*
only tot ~h1ttllll •hilt/dart ord•"·
C111tOt11tr Pf1• 111 1ppllub11 Hitt tn
Oller expires Stptembtr 26, 1982
l'rl"' m1y v1ry at partlclpetllll toctll0111
COlll'Oll Sood onty In Soulhtrll Callfornl1
Wltlft 10ll ltt Ill. Mtl!lbtfllllp 1111 Of thl
l'rlc11 m11 very 1t p1rtlcloa11nc toc1t10111.
COllPOll 100d only In Southttn ~lllOrnll
wlltrt you 111 tht membe"'11P '"' of Ill• K111111c~ , tltO ClllCktll A11ocl1tlon.
9 Kt11lllC, frlt4 Cl'llehft AUOCllllOll. I ------· -COUPON --·-------&,ntuaky l'ried OhickeQ
• •
JUSL like dogs. can ~ picked up.
Unless we know who the owner
is. we can't reunite the lost pet
with its owner."
"That's a pretty good deal. We
lose money on it because ll costs
more than that to feed and house
them."
Animal Services. Pagano said.
To register a dog, he explained
the animal has to have a current
rabies s h ot. "Tha t 's more
reassuring for a person if a dog
gets out and bites someone."
Irvine has "very r easonable
fees," Pagano contended. It costs
$1 7 .50 to adopt a dog and $7 to
adopt a cat Crom the Irvine
An im al S h e lter on Laguna
Can yon R oad . "And, that
int'ludcs all the shots the anjmals
need," he said.
Dog registration costs owners
$1 a month or 50 cents a month
for altered dogs. Average dall y animal
population at the Irvine shelter
during July was 39 dogs, 24 cats
and 20 other animals including
rabbits whic h are up for
adoption.
Cat registration is 50 cen ts a
month or 25 cents a month for
spayed animals.
Senior citizens get 50 percent
discounts on all fees at Irvine
For m ore detailed information on
swallows, how to solve the problems they
create and sources of control materials, send
for an illustrated eight-page publication,
"Chff Swallows: How to Live With Them No.
21264," by sending a $1.27 check payable to
UC Regents to UC Cooperative Extension
Public&t1ons. 1422 Harbour Way South,
Richmond. Calif. 94804.
Fire escape tips given
DE AR PAT: About a year ago you
publlsbe&: Information about what a person
should do If they were ever lo a botel fire. We
are going to be speodlog our vacation lo a
bigb-rlse hotel lo Las Vegas, so I'd feel better
If you'd repeat those safety tips. F.R., Huntlogton Beach
The following advice was provided by the
National Fire Protection Association:
-If you discover a fire in the hotel,
remember that lou are res ponsible for
protecting yoursel . Call the fire department
yourselC -don't wait for someone else to do
it. Hotel personnel usually don't call the fire
department until they have confirmed that
there is a fire and by then it couJd be too late.
-Don't panic; avoid smoke. B y
remaining calm and avoiding smoke, you can
increase your chance of survival. Because
smoke rises, always crouch down close to the
floor.
-If a fire starts in your room, leave,
clOSlllg all doors behind you to contain the fire,
and immediately notify the appropriate
authorities (hotel p e rsonnel a nd fire
department).
-Ir the fire starts somewhere else in the
-
hotel, you may or may not decide to leave
your room. In making the decision, feel the
top of the door. If it's cool, open it slowly,
crouch low to avoid smoke, and crawl near the
wall to the nea rest fire exit. Make sure you
have your room key, should you have to
return to your room. Go down the s tairs,
never an elevator. and out, away from the
building. However, if hotel personnel .are
giving lnstructions, follow them, as they may
want you to go up a few floors to avoid the
(ire.
-If you can't reach a fire exit because of
too much sm oke. stay in your room and keep
the door closed. Turn off all ventilation
systems. such as heaters or air conditioners.
Place a w et towel over your mouth and nose
to filter smoke. Fill the bathtub with water;
wet towels and place them around cracks in
the doorway and in vents. Wet everything
down and ''don't worry about the mess."
-Call the front desk to let someone
know where you are. or sjgnal at the window
so that someone can see you. U there is smoke
in the room, pull down the drapes, and open
the window a little if the air outside is clear.
However, don't break the window, as safety
may ~ulre it to be closed later.
-Finally, no matter how bad it looks,
don't jump. Unless you're on the first floor.
your chances of survival are better If you wait
for help.
• Got s problem? Then write to Pat Horo-'ti. witi Pal will cut red tape, getting I.he
-
nruwcrs and action you need to MJJve Jn-
f'qUities m government and busme:ss. Mall
'your questions to Pat HorowiCi, Al Your Service,
Orange Coast D;JiJy Pllot.. P.O. Box 1560. Costa mesa,
CA 92626.
IALLA£f~BEEK
FOR CITY COUNCIL
a
Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Monday, S ptember 13, 1982
A Robinsons Sae )
MIKASA
TABLEWARE SALE
15°/o•.55~/o O~F MIKASA DINNERWARE,
MOUTH·BLOWN CRYSTAL AND STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARE.
•*1'f t ct
S1l11e1 Mist
(silver banded)
Reg S22 95 Sale $13.75
SAVE 15°/o·55°/o
ON FINE DINNERWARE
Set a wh91e new mood at your table tonight with a new dinnerware design We• v<· stHJw11 111·,1 .i
sample of the patterns available all at great savings Robmson·s Chin.i G7
Be sure to ask about our China Club Plan To crder call toll tree 1·800·345·8501 .
BLUE DAISIES
I
...... 14•·-· . ""'"' ' ... """" I
MARGAUX ANTIQUE ROSE
. .
5·p1ece place setting. Reg $30
Sale $19.95 Completer Se't
5·p1ece place setting Reg $39 95
Sale $31.66 Completer set
5·p1PCE' plaC'f• •,r•11inq n"rJ $'l(f 'JI'
Sall' S31 .66 Corrin"" 1 • •
~--.._.Reg $75 Sale $59.95 Reg $97 50 Sale $82.88. Req '!, H c;c 5 ill $82 .88.
SILK FLOWERS
5·p1ece place setting Reg $44 95
Sale $35.36
Completer set Reg $ 102 75
Sale $87.35
Emp11e S~Mlle
(golden banded)
Reg S22 95 Sale S13.75
Re<;J S1895 Sale $11 .35
FIRE SONG
5-piece place setting Reg $27 50
Sate $12.45 Completer set
Reg $70 Sale $34.95
F1owe1 Song
Reg S22 95 Sale S13.75
TANGO
5-piece place setting Reg $49 95
Sale $38.85 Completer ">Cl
Reg . $114 10 Sale $97.
MarQuis
Rt>Q S24 95 S.11e S14.95
'$19.99
~::~->:7
~~:;: SAVE 40°/o
ON CRYSTAL STEMWARE ' I
(
S·PIECE SET
"NEW BRAID" FLATWARE ,
Reg. $24.95 Includes place knife. place
fork . place spoon. salad fork and
teaspoon M1kasa·s newest design has a
twist colors Available in 1 o high fashion
colors with stainless steel accents to
match any table decor.
Robinson's Silver Flatware, 181
Exquisite mouth·blown crystal at our lowest
price ever offered Choose from six patterns
in goblets. wines. flute champagnes
dessert champagnes and cordials
Robinson's Glassware. 86 Be sure 10 ask
about our Crystal Club Plan To order , call
toil·lree 1 ·800·34~·8501.
C Im('()
A!'O $?'1 r, Salt> 11.t.95
e e .. e jj ' r~ I I r r ~ ' r 11' ....,_ .A. .,,a. . ~ ~.L ...... ....,_ .11...L •• 1 •
MAICI AN AF•OINTMINT WITH OUI CONIWANT AJ YOUI NIAlllT ROllNION'S.
WEU RECORD YOUp GIPT •FIRINCll IN MIY ITOll VIA THI ONLY COMPUTIRIDD lllVICI IN SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA .
• •
. r
. , .,
•
. • Orana• O~•t DAILY PILOT/Mond1y, 84tPtetnber 13, 1H2
Sheriff's departmen~
to face e x aniination
Th e r esi d en t s o f
unincorporated Orange County
communities probably don't think
much about the s h e riff 's
department until they have to -
when the burglar s trikes. when
the car is s tole n , whe n the
neighbors crank up the stereo too
high.
Those residen ts probably do
n ot know that the s h e riff's
department has 1,159 full-time
employees and that its budget
exceeds $50 million annually. of
which $43 million comes s traight
Crom the county's General Fund.
It is among the largest county
departments, but one that. for its
size, has escaped scr utiny applied
to many others. One reason is that
the current s heriH-coro ner, Bra d
Gates, is a skillful a nd hard-nosed
administrator. He has kept outside
influences away Crom the concrete
citadel on Flower Street in Santa
Ana.
That is about to end.
During s umm e r budget
hearings, county s upe rvisors
decided it was time that the
sheriff's department be looked at
with an objective eye.
They ordcrL-<l what is called a
m a nage m e nt a udit. To b e
examined are all aspects of th(!
sh e riff's department operation,
from the number of patrol officers
in the Cield to how food is served
in the ''Ounty jail.
Among the highest priority
items is pote ntial use of civilians to
assume duties now handled by
more costly, deputized personnel.
The study will be performed
by private consultants in
conjunction with several county
agencies, the s h eriff's department
included.
This s tudy s hould be
welcomed by a ll involved. For toO
many years, Issues involving the
sheriff's department have been
h andled in a very limited context.
Decisions usually have been based
on She riff Gates' view o f the
situation at a particular time.
Having more broad-based
information on the department
s hould assist s upervisors in
r eac hing more e nlightene d
d ecision s on the department's
current and future activities.
Pension inequities
Under current law a retired
judge who subsequently is elected
to public office sees his judicial
pension reduced by the a m ount of
the salary he d raws in the new
post.
That, the s tate L egislature
has jus t decid e d. is not fair -
specifically to two re tired judges,
Ralph Dills o f Gardena. now a
state senator, and Lionel Wilson,
now mayor of Oakland. Both have
been losing a ·substantial part of
their judic ial pens ions sin ce
winning elective office.
Dills, for example, earns $28,-
110 a year as a state legislator, but'
has been able to draw only $12,000
of his $40,000 annual pension as a
retired judge while holding the
elective office.
Now S a nta Ana
Assemblyman Richard Robinson
has won approval of a bill Lo close
the so-called "loophole" in the
Judges Retirement System and
permit judges to collect their full
p ens io n s in add1ton to their
salaries as elected officials.
The lawmake rs apparently
w e re impressed by Robinson's
argument that former public
servants other than retired judges
a re not obliged Lo sacrifice their
pensions when elected to office.
He cited, for example, President
Reagan, who draws a pension as
former state governor along with
his presidential pay, and such state
lawmakers as forme r deputy
sheriff Sen. Robert Presley and
retired police chief Sen. Ed Davis,
who draw pe nsions from those
posts in addition to their current
pay.
There does seem t o b e a
certain lack of equity in a law that
singles out on e category of public
servant, in this case judges, for
special pension treatment.
~
But the discussion focu ses
attention on what is perhaps Car
•more inequitable -from the
taxpayer's point of view. That is
the practice of handing out
pension after pension to people
who move to one public post after
another and can wind up
collecting up to half a dozen
pensions !or their previous
services, sometimes eventually
making more in retirement than
they did when employed.
A solution to all this has been
in e ffect for years in many
countries. It provides that a person
who has h eld a variety of public
offices is required, upon eventual
retirement, Lo accept the highest
of the various pensions to which
he would be entitled -and no
more.
That, from the taxpaye r's
point of view, would be eminently
fair. The chance of ever seeing it
put into practice here probably is
slightly less than nil. But it's
interesting to think about.
Bargains breed greed
The Baja California Tourism
Information Bureau normally goes
out of its way to be helpful to
Americans crossing the border into
Mexico. That's what it's there for.
Last week, an official of the
bureau was calling visiting
Americans "greed merchants and
speculators." And, unfortunately,
there was some basis for the
sudden change of tune.
With the peso tumbling
following the Aug. 5 devaluation,
visitors crossing the border were
not shopping for souvenirs; they
were loading up on suddenly
cheap groceries and hauling them
home by the carload in a flurry or
what the tourism official called
"greed buying." And since many
were carting o ff more than an
average family could use, there
was reason to suspect some of the
buyers had in mind re-selling
their purchases at a profit.
Grocery shelves were being
atripped as fast as employees could
•
r e-stock them. In one ugly
incident, buyers were loading up
boxes of cheap pasta by the dozen
and even getting down on their
hands and knees to scoop up the
contents that had spilled on the
floor during the scramble, the
official reported gloomily.
Responding to complaints, the
Mexican government issued a
directive calling for seizure of
excessive amounts of foodstuffs
foreigners try to take out of the
country. But already some Tijuana
markets were limiting purchases
of many staples to be sure there
would be enough for their regular
customers.
None 6f this would have been
necessary. of course, if the dollar-
laden visitors had exercised a little
more good-neighborliness.
Everyone enjoys a bargain, but
these bargain-hunters did little to
enhance their country 's
reputation.
Opinions e>epressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views U •
pressed on tnls page are tnose of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642·4321.
ORANGE COAST
DailJ Pilot
Tt..m .. ft. Haley
P~bl·I ....
Th.mOI A. Murphln•
[dol(lt
JoM Amotf t..cui ... (~Qt
........ Ktelllch
ldlloitdl P• (d••Ot
n.m.. McCen" Mollof'll9 l dtlOI
'Peso pack' a: political ploy
WASHINGTON -The Reagan
administration's dramatic announcement
last week of a $200 million aid program
for businessmen along the Mexican
border was an e lection-year political
ploy. nothing more.
It's not that the small businessmen in
southern Texas, New Mexico, Arizona
and California aren't being badly hurt
by the devaluation of the Mexican peso
Their erstwhile customers from across
the border can't afford to shop in the
Unite d States any more, while
Americans are bargain hunting in
Mexico, where their dollars are worth
twice what they used to be.
BUT THE FACT IS there's nothing
s pecial about the Small Business
Administration's "special $200 million
'Peso Pack• " of direct loans and
guarantees to the stricken businessmen.
The money was there all along. It is
part of what SBA had left over in funds
for this year's loan program. And one
reason it hadn't been spent is that the
SBA has been much more tightfisted in
comi ng to the r esc ue o f small
businessmen who are drowning from the
effects of high interest rates and the
recession.
There's also nothing special about the
loaps themselves . The bord er
businessmen will be paying the same
rates as any of the SSA's o ther
borrowers. Ironically, a program that
wouJd have provided low-int.crest loans
to the stricken businesses was killed by
the Reagan admmistration last year.
So how did Scrooge become Lady
Bountiful overnight?
Texas Gov. Bill Clements d aims a big
G.
-Jl-Cl-IN-D-IRS_O_N -~
share of credit for the transformation. He
issued a press release that explained:
"The SBA agreed to Gov. Clements'
proposal to make available at least $5
million in direct federal assistance to
businesses along the Texas border . . . 11
te nfold increase over the amount
available to Texas small businessmen
hard hit by the peso devaluation."
Another claima nt was San Diego
Mayor Pete Wilson. A spokesman put it
this way: "San Diego's Washington
lobbyists were checking around and not
having much luck. so Wilson went Lo the
White House for help." Presto! The loan
program was announced "in response t.o
our request to come down and give us
some assistance."
There's a certain odd truth in both
these claims. Clements and Wilson are
Republicans engaged in tough election
campaigns. Clements is currently losing
ground an his re-election bid, while
Wllson is fighting to st.op the erosion of
his early lead over Gov. Jerry Brown in
the ra<.-e for California's senate vacancy.
SO IT 'S undoubtedly corre~ -
technically -that the "Peso Pack" loan
program was announced as a reslSlt of
Clements' and Wilson's pleas for help
from the White House. Even thou the
funds were already available in th SBA
kitty, the hard-pressed GOP ffice·
seekers were obviously instrume ta1 in
having the loan money gussied p as a
new "special" program.
To make sure Texas and C fornia
vote r s got the m essage, SBA 4'
Administrator James Sanders took pains
t.o praise Clements and Wilson "{<r their
leadership in working with us to put this
effort together."
Footnote: An SBA spokeso an ad-
mitted that the $200 million wQlld have
been available anyway to tte border
businessmen "if they had gort through
the right procedures." Hf told my
associate Peter Grant that iart oC the
reason for announcing tle "special
program" was to let h e needy
businessmen know that th• money was
the re waiting. He also ~enied that
politics had anything to.do with the
credit given to Clements aid Wilson. But
if the funds were there l1 aJong. what
was there to give anyon(credit for?
Why can't we make better cheese?
How would you like t.o be putting 40
million pounds of butter. cheese and
• dried milk in your refrigerator this
week? That's what our government 1s
doing. ll put away 40 million pounds last
week and the week before. too, and it'll
be putting away about that same amount
next week. That's what it always stores
in one of its 500 warehouses around the
country because farmers are producing
10 percent more milk than we drink and
the goyemment has agreed t.o buy all the
surplus. AU the milk we don'1,. drink is
converted into butter. cheese or dried milk. .,,
TUE NATURAL Jaw of supply and
demand doesn't work in this case because
the governme nt supports a price of
$13.10 for 100 pounds of milk. Most
farmers are against governme nt
interferences in anything except when it
benefits them. That's the way it is with
most Americans.
Several months ago I suggested that
one of the reasons people aren't drinking
as much milk as they once did is that
milk isn't as good as it used to be. The
cows are producing a lot more of it but
the milk and cream are then tampered
with, altered, added to and subtracted
Crom until a calf wouldn't recognize it as
having come from its mother.
As a maker of homemade ice cream,
for example, I resent not being abll' tn
buy genuine heavy cream. Most heavy
cream has been subjec-ted to such high
temperatures to give 1t longer shelf lifl·
in the stores that the property that
enables it to whip and hold air ,..,
,~,,
-.N-DY-RO-ON-IY---~
destroyed. To put it back m, they odd
some kind of gelatinous substance. This
isn't what I want when 1 buy cream.
From that one column I got a flood or
angry letters. They were well-written
and they weren't mean or vind1ct1ve
They just told me how hard farmers
worked, how well-kept their dairy farms
were and what a conte nted life their
cows lived. They were from absolutely
the best people on earth and I was sorry
I'd angered them, but their letters didn't
persuade me that I was wrong about
milk. It may be great when it leaves
them. but when it gets to m e it's
something else.
I don't want to make those people mad
again, but it doesn't seem right for the
rest of us to have to pay $2 billion a year
for milk we don't drink. We already
Too high hopes spur divorce
Thoughts at Large:
-Modem divorce ls as much a matter
of "rising expectations" as unrest in the
developing countries; our parents or
grandparents never expected that
marrlage would bring them "happlness,"
and to were not dlaappolnted when It
failed to meet that promile.
SYDllY 1111111
-A communal cuwt.tophe, calling
for collective effort, .eema to do two
opposite thlntpt at once: it brtnp out the
t>e.t ln good people, and the wont in bad
people.
-What I call a "summation" when l
give lt la what 1 call a ''tthuh" when
you give lt.
-Public performers, far from belnc
aelf-auured, a re the molt lnaecur•
people ln the world; u Shelley Bennan1 lhe comic, once confelled: .. If D.OOo
people were lauahina wtth me, and one
aldi\'t like me, It woUld bother me.''
-,,_. ti men "'1 -. In \be
'll'ortd u.rz:;:. far u. ... ,_ u.t ~·~ ..,. .. nut .... M.UJn11ri1 to illrkt dlr•aom ...._ but no
d1rectlom .... ne.ded tor taldni poiloG.
-~a pM10n pnl8ee ''authority," . .
~. ·'
nine times out ot 10 this means he Is
prepared to exercise it rather than
submit to it.
-We are generally so vain and
Inconsistent that we even resent the fact
that we weren't invited to a party we
didn't want to attend.
-Money itself does not bring
h•pplness, for the exact reason given by
Freud: that. only t.he gratification of
childhood wishes brings happiness, and
money ls not a childhood object as such.
-l have never heard of a delinquent
who wasn't influenced by "bad
companions" -but where did the bad
companions come from?
-The crlllc who t.ends to like
everything is a greater enemy of the arts
than one who dlsllkes everythlna.
ahhough it might seem otherwise: tor
genuine art can survive harshness; what
narma lt most I• being flooded by
uni.able mediocrity.
-The wont aln committed by film and TV dramas la equatina violence with ttttrunh, when ln ftlC't violence la always
1 conlelllon of we.kneel -juat u rape
ia a oonf-1on of 1txual unattracU~netl.
-The akiWul Ratterer doee not prallt
a penon f« whllt he doel well -able
.,.ople don't requlre ... urance about
th•t -but •bcNt what he eecretl1.
--ht .. well. (llniatMn didn t need to be told h• waa • 1uperb ....... tldlln:. but ... IDV9CI to .... thet
he played the vioUr\ belier &ban he~
did.)
have $3 b illion torth of it piled
up in those wareh(il.SeS and it's coming
in faster and faser every day. The
ch eese comes to t}'i e warehouses in
500-pound barrel) the dried milk is in
50-pound bags arJ the butt.er goes to the
warehouse freelA" in 65-pound cartons.
It would ma kt all of us feel a lot better
about paying o.Jl that money for milk
pm:t.> support t we knew the food was
going not to awarehouse. but to people
who wt>r<.' tungry. I'd be a proud
American 1f ; knew the food was being
given to hurpy people anywhere in the
world. I'm not sure what a hungry
family wou.d do with a 65-pound carton
of butter. >ut we could work that out
Paying fori t and then having it stored in
refrlgeraud warehouses, where I'm also
paying f('f the electricity, makes me feeJ
lousy. ard I should think it would make
those l~ter-writing farmers feel lousy.
too.
The lhing that's piling up fastest in
govemment warehouses is cheese. Why
can's we sell aU the cheese we make out
of all that milk? Sorry to say this to you,
Farmers, but the cheese they make out
of your milk isn't usually very good
either.
THERE IS SOME good cheese made
in Wisconsin, Vermont and New York
State, but for the most part, cheese made
in America lsn't as good as the cheese
made in France, Austria, Denmark,
Swiuerland, ltaly, Australia or Hc.lland.
Will someone please tell me why our
cheese is so consistently dull and
uninteresting compared to good cheese .
from other countries? Don't we know
how? Can't we find out?
Last year the United States import(.'(f }
2,300 tons or brie from France. Can't we :
make brie? Can't we convert some of that 1•
excess milk of our own into the kind of
cheese we pay premium prices for when f
it's imported?
Cheese-makers in America ought to
stop spending so much time designing
packages and slicing cheese for us and
more time making It better so th"t we'd
buy more of it. That's what would help
dntry farmers who have more milk t}tan I
their govcrnm<•nt knows WhQ\ t.o do f
~th I
111111•
Human bodlea, unlike can. C9l\nO\ bt
replaced. So why do :.,_......, people
delJberately try '° ·~ camDVATION18T
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Mondty, 8-pttmber 13, HU,2 "1
•ANN LANDERS
•ART HOPPE
•ERMA BOMBECK
• ID • perspective World events put complaints
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I Juat picked up th
·newspaper and snw somt-pictures ol s tarving
childre n with bloated bellies in Africa, discasc-
ridden babies in Asia and bombed-out, homeless
mothers with infanL<J in Lebanon. Then, I looked at
your column and read three letters. One woman Is
complaining because her husband won't help with
the yard work -sits m has underwear dr inking
beer and watching TV. Another woman writes that
her neighbor's dog barks at night and does his
business on her lawn. The third letter is from a
teen-ager who is mad because her mother yelled at
her and insisted that she wear a skirt to church
instead of jeans. These are problems?
When one considers what is going on in other
parts of the world, Americans should get down on
t}\eir knees and thank God for our blessings. -
GRATEFUL IN KENTUCKY
.
DEAR GRATEFUL: Well Hid. Tltaakl for
remlndln1 u1.
DEAR ANN LAND.ERS: Recentlr, someone
wrote to tell you the word "chutzpah ' la in the
original S crabble dictionary. It is defined as
"supreme confidence." You disagreed, aaJd It meana
pure gall. So far, so good.
Now we movo on to "oy." The writer said "oy"
is in there, too, but no "vey," the Inference belng
that with every ''oy" there must be a "vey." Wron§.
What surprised me was that you said "oy •
meana "oh." Actually, It meana a great deal more
than that -for example, when a man gets into his
car and his keys are not in the pocket where he
usually keepe them, he la late tor work and two
people are walling to be picked up on the way. One
is his boss. The first word out of his mouth is "Oy."
Does it seem reasonable to you that the man would
say simply "Oh"?
I am under 35 and I'll bet m y Yiddish ls as good
Q _A1111_1J_4Nm_'. _a_
~~~ours nny day. -P.HlLAOELPHIA FAN OF
BOTH YOU AND PHIL FINK
DEAR PHILADELPHIA: I make no claim to
belllg u ex~rt It Ylddlala, but I am atlU adcklDg
wltb my definition of "oy."
Actually. It CID meo many tblD&•, depodlll&
OD tbe clrcum1tance1. Example: Tile I-year-old
twtna cut all tbe Iring~ off tile lampa aDd "e np
In tile Uvillg room. (We really did!) nae pareat1
come home and are horrified to dlacover wlaat laa1
been done. They exclaim In unison, "Oy."
A couple go into a rt1taurant. ney have a
lovely •il-courae meal with wine. When tbe waiter
preaeaca tbe check It 11 1lmo1t twice 11 much aJ
t•e man It.at In Illa wallet. lJpoa gUmp1ln1 tbe total,
tae groan•, "Oy."
So -one mll(bt 1ay "Oy" mean• "I 'm
dl1tre11ed" or "Tbta 11 trouble" or -after a bard
day'• work a.nd Cite 1boe1 come on tlte uuH~CS
abopkeeper sink• into Ill• favorite cbalr and 11y1
"Oy" -It call mean, "Wbat a plea1ure!"
For tbote wlto love YJddlaft, boo ltab -bave J
got a treat for you! Rualt out a.D4l buy Leo Rosteo'a
new book publl1hed by Simon and Scbatler. It's
"Hooray for Vlddlsta'' ($15.H), 10 DOllaJSlc and
dellcJoualy funny. Even Cbt Goyem wUI .,.Joy it.
DEAR ANN: A quick one: Who speaks first,
when friends meet on the 1treet. the woman or the
man? -BETTING TEN IN MURFREESBORO
DEAR MURF: Gender doe1n't figure. nae first
one to recognize tbe other abould apeak lint. Any
other approach ls stilted and 1eoseless. f ·rou1 HEALTH
DR PETER J STEINCROHN Economy hits home POT SH01S
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
Osteoporosis
overlooked
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm 60. My doctor
Is more conscious of preventing cancer than
preventing osteoporosis.
My best friend, about my age, bent over to
pick up a pin. Guess what? She fractured her spine.
Her doctor says it might have happened lf she
hadn't even moved.
Diagnosis? For years her bone's bad been
deteriorating. Nobody suspected osteoporosis.
Yet, lo my case, the doctor r efuses to
prescribe estrogen which is supposed to prevent it.
He's afraid of cancer. What does one do? Go to
another doctor? -MRS. D.
DEAR MRS. D.: At least ask for consultation.
You may find a physician who agrees with a recent
report by John J . Deller, M.D .. director of research
at Eisenhower Medical Center in Palm Desert.
He believes that osteoporosis remains largely
ignored by both physicians and women at risk.
Yet, the disease affects more than 10 million
American women -with 50 percent of those over
60 years of age having significant bone loss and 25
percent with vertebral defonnity. Osteoporosis can
be easily detected by lateral chest X -rays.
Dr. Deller says, "It is appalling that in the
sophistication of the 1980s we have let a
preventable and treatable disease blossom without
doing anything about it."
One of the greatest deterrents to diagnosis and
treatment is the fear that estrogens will increase the
risk of cancer. Yet, with proper treatment -
smaller doses balanced with progestin treatment -
there's no great risk.
I called Mordred and Malphasi.a into the living
room and asked them to sit down. "I'm a fraid I have
some rather bad news for you, Kids," I said.
"You're going to help us with our homework
again this term," guessed Malphasi.a.
"No, I'm not, Malphasia," I said, slightly
miffed. "I want to talk to you about the family
economy. The fact is that the costs of running this
AIT HOPPE
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
household are climbing out of sight. The price of
our scenic checks has doubled and your mother and
I are being forced to cancel our subscription to
Popular Neurosurgery and our membership in
Birdwatchers' Anonymous."
"I KNOW," SAID MORDRED with a sigh.
"You're going to ask us to voluntarily take another
cut in our allowances and give up a second week of
paid vacation."
"That won't be necessary, Mordred," I said.
"And before continuing, let me say what a swell job
you two have done as children and how rewarding
this relationship has been. You may have been a bit
careless at times in trimming the hedges, Mordred,
and you, Malphasfa, perhaps have broken a few too
many wine glasses In the dishwasher on occasion.
But your overall work records ... "
"Get to the point, DaddyKins," said Malphasia,
impatient as always.
"Well, the !act is that a family this size is no
longer economic.ally viable," 1 said. "And I'm going
to have to let you two go."
Mordred took it badly. "You mean to say that
after 15 years c1f faithful service," he demanded,
"you'd toss me out into the cold?"
"Now, Mordred, I never promised you a
retire,ment plan," I said soothln~ly. "And as for
seniority, some of those 10 million people in the
unemployment lines out there had up to 40 years in.
their old jobs."
• "l 'M A FAILURE AS A CHILD," wailed
Malphasia. "I've been fired."
"No, you haven't," I snapped. "Your position
has simply been eliminated due to the current
ReaganQrnic recession. It's happening all over the
country."
"But to be sent off with nothing," muttered
Mordred.
"Nothing?" I cried. "What kind of parents do
you think we are? You'll receive two weela'
severance allowance. Yo" may take Ralph, the dog,
and both budgies. And we'll do our best to relocate
· ~ou. To be perfectly candid, however, in hard times
hke these, the demand for children is limited and
you might wish to seek other work."
"Such as?" asked Mordred suspiciously.
"I'm confident there are still opportunities for
little people who are willing to be retrained," I said.
"You might consider becoming a chimney sweep,
for example And, Malphasia, what about acting?
You could well land the title role in E.T. Il." She
gave me a dirty look. "With lots of makeup," I
added hastily.
"And, no matter what, you'll both always be at
the top of our rehiring Ust."
BUT THERE WAS NO APPEASING them .
"Just wait till Grandma hears about this," said
Malphasia defiantly.
It was my tum to sigh. "Yes, I haven't been
able to break the news to her yet," I said. "And
think how much harder it will be for her to !ind
another place at her age.''
So J rose, shook hands with each firmly and
said, "If you find work, ha-ha, write.''
For I think it best these days to emulate our
president and look on the bright side of things.
"After all," I said in this regard to my wife at
dinner, "we're not losing our kids. We're gaining
two paying boarders and a television set."
SOMETIMES
I PLAY TME' ROLSL
O~ A PASSER-BY,
BUT
SOMETIMES
l'M THE ONE
WHO'S
PASSED BY.
HOIOSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OM.ARR
Tuesday, September 14
ARIES (March 21-April 19): This can be an
exciting, creative day -you'll encoun ter
individuals who provide you with opportunity to
dis play unique t a le nt.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Learn when to
walk away -transaction, business' or personal
relationship is probably finished. Avoid losing sale
by remaining after applause has faded. Message
will become increasin~ly clear. ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Stick to your own
principles -highlight original concepts, maintain
independence, be reasonable with relatives but
don't pennit yourself to be pushed too far.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You'll regain
sense of direction -you'll be consulted regarding
vocational guidance. Family member puts pride
aside, admita you were right and says, "What
next?" Financial prospects are bright.
When combined with calcium su pplements,
vitamin D and exercise, this balanced hormone
therapy can prevent the disease or at least halt the
process -lessening chance of fractures.
According to Dr. Deller, the risk of dying from
osteoporotic complications is greater than that of
dying from estrogen-induced cancer . Hip fractures
due to osteoporosis occur in 90,000 women annually
with an associated mortality of about 15,000.
Whereas u terine cancer occurs in 38,000 women
with a mortality of 3,000.
Toys tell the sto"ry
LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22): Surprise gift tops
ecenario4 Lunar cycle high, you'll be at right place
at right time. What had been delayed will be
released -opportunity for expansion is valid and
you should take advantage of it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Attention centers
on details, puzzle pieces that fall into place and
necessity for rebuilding program. Check safety
devices, locks, smoke alanns. Secret is revealed.
Therefore, elderly women are five times more
likely to die from hip fractures than from uterine
disease.
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: The blg "pimple"
on the side of my nose bas turned out to be sllin
cancer. My doctor bas recommended a specialist
wbo uus the laser Instead of the knife ln removing
tile growth. Isn't the knife safer? -MRS. S.
DEAR MRS. S .: According to a recent report in
"Geriatrics," the carbon dioxide laser appears to
offer "all the advantages and n one of the
disadvantages" of the traditional methods of
surgery.
Philip L. BaUen, M.D .. of the Cleveland Clinic,
has used the new technique in about 50 patients
during the past year -in basal cell and !jqu&mOUS
cell skin cancers.
He found that 'th e operation is virtually
bloodless, as the laser seals blood vessels as it cuts.
Cosmetic results are good and the healing process is
painless as compared to knife surgery.
Dr. Steincrohn welcomes reader questions but
is BOIT}' he cannot answer personal mail. Letters of
widest int.erest will be answered in his column.
Send your quesrions to him in care of the Daily
Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, O>sta Mesa. Calif. 92626.
Any new bab.y worth its salt these days has
two fu!Jy-equipped nurseries: one with Mom and
Dad and one at Grandma and Grandpa's. ,
F.ach one has a bed, a playpen, a potty seat,
blankets, assorted clothes and toys. The toys tell a
story.
SOON AFTER THE BIRTH of a baby, a
mother must make a decision. She knows that
throughout a child's lifetime he will receive many
toys, some more devastating to the human body
than others. She must weigh the options. Who will
house these toys? The new parents whose job it is to
discipline firmly and give their full attention to this
child? Or those two, sweet, vulnerable people in
their twilight years who are so awed by this
precious life that they blindly accept whatever you
give them?
The decision is usually quick and decisive.
Stick it to the grandparents.
From all appearances, the toys are divided
evenly between the two hoU9eS. It is only after you
watch a mother designate a toy's future that a
pattern begins to develop.
Any game that has 187 pieces, cannot be seen'
by the human eye, and screws up the vacuum
sweeper goes to Grandma and Grandpa's house.
Any doll that has a wardrobe trunk filled with
1-inch bras and blk.Jnis that get lodged under your
fingernail when you try to pick them up, is left at
,, ~
EIMA IOMlfCI
AT WIT'S ENO
Grandma and Grandpa's.
Anything that has a wheel off or needs
painting goes to you-know-who.
ANYTHING YOU HA VE TO add water to is
definitely a grandparents' toy, as is anything that
takes the top of your head off Uke whirring tope,
computer bleeps, drums, horns and sirens.
Size is a big factor In determining at whoae
bouse a toy will come to rest. Grandparents
automatic.ally get any toy that dominates a living
room (trampoline, tent, horse, indoor gym, full-siz.e
fuel rocket). Wht do grandparents put up with it? I visited a
friend o mine recently who bad just become a new
grandmother. She was perched on the edge of the
sink, held captive by a battery-driven robot that
stood three feet tall, had two b1.1g eyes, and kept
mumbling, "Phone Home."
"Every time I think of telling my daughter to
take all these toys off my hands, I feel 90rry for her.
She's stuck with the kid!"
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Member of opposite
sex makes declaration of affection, means it and
awaits your response. Lunar emphasis on friends,
hopes, desires and a stimulating relationship. Gain
indicated through written word.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ~business or
career with family member. You'll receiv e
cooperation if frank concerning requirements and
poaible sacrifices. Funding is available.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Avoid
rushing to judgment -by waiting your tum you
gain time for emotional second wind. Emphasis on
the abstract, also on justice, education, language and
spiritual values.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What seemed
far away will come within reach. Loan is possible if
proper inquiries are made at right time. Individual
In position of authority could become valuable ally.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Finish what you·
start -be aware of legal rights, permilllliona. Focus
aho on public relations, your peraonal image, your
appearance and willingness to break from losing
lituatlon. Aries, Libra natives figure prominently. \
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Maintain
Independent stance, accent original approach and
break free from those who want something for
nothing. Keep appoint.menta connected with your
health. Become more aware of nutrition.
' ~~. GOREN 011 BRIDGE . /'. \
'
Q.1-As ,South. vulnerable.
you hold:
+AJI063 iv954 OK98 +Jfl
The bidding has proceeded:
Eut Soatla We1t Nortla
1 iv P .. 1 2 iv Pau
Pa11 ?
What action do you take?
A. -Since the enemy has
ventured'no further than the
two-level, partner is marked
• with 10me high cards. Also,
he probably does not have
more than two hearta. Jt
seems u if 11. should be aare
to compete. Bid two spades.
Q.2-Neither vulnerable, as
South. you hold:
+AIU82 iv 1052 0 874 •J5
The blddln1t has proceeded:
N...O. £a1t 8o•U1
I c:i Pa11 T
•
I•
~ ____ B_Y_c_H_A_A_L_E_s_H_._a_o_R_E_N_A_N_o_o_M_A_R_s_H_A_R_IF ____ ... KA. ..............
What do you respond?
A. -Because or the quality of
your spade suit. it is temp
ting to respond one spad t .
But what would you do nut
should partner rebid In a
minor or venture t.wo hearls.
You will feel that you owe
t\im more than a more token
preference or a pus. but
your hand Is not quite good
enough. You could save your-
self all that. trouble by rat~
Ing to two heart.a Immediate-
ly.
Q.3-Both vulntrable. 11
South you hold:
•l0M2 ~83 OKJ6 •AKJ9
Aa dealer, what action do you
t.ake'I
A.-Thl• hand could, at beat.,
be described as a minimum
opening bid. However, we
feel it would be poor lactics
to pass, because you might
find it difficult. to enier the
auction at a lat.er stage.
What sways us are t.he defen·
sive capaclt.ies and the easy
rebid over any response part
ner might make to your one
club openln" bid.
Q.4-Aa South, vulnerable.
yo u hold:
•KJ95t QSJ OtH •M5
Partner o.,.nt the bidding
with one no trump. What ac-
tion do you take?
A.-1-;xperlence ahow1 that
It It a loslni tactic t.o pa ..
partner's no trump openln1
bid when' you have a weak
hand and a five-card suiL.
More often than not, the
hand wlll play better In
responder's long suit. Bid
two spades -that is a
wukness bid and opener Is
virtually required to pus.
Q.5-Aa South, vulnerable,
yo• hold:
•174 OAJl54 <>It ... +73
Partner opena the bidding
with ont no trump. What do
you respond1
A.-This hand la too strong
.for two htarlt but not quite
good enouch for • jump to
thrff hearte. The 1olullon Is
to employ the Stayman Con
venUon. Bid two clubt. U
Nor\h rebid• heart., you can
ralle to thn1• heart.a: If he
\
bids spades. you can thow
your 8 plu1 points by bidding
two no trump; and if he
denies a major by bidding
two diamonds. you can bid
two heart.I to ahow a rive·
card suit and lnvltaUonal
values.
Q.1-Both vulnerable. aa
South you hold:
+f<tt c:i AKQ74 O QJ05 +86
The biddinr haa proceeded: s .. < Wet& Nertlt Eaat
1 c:i P... I• t +
1
What action do you lake:/
A.-Oon't bid two no trump
juat becauH 1ou happen to
have a 1topper In the enemy
suit. -there,. \lme ror that
latu. By f'ffpondln1 at the
,.
two-level, parl.ner has prom
ised another bid U you give
him the opportunity. Let him
make the nut decision -
after all. he might double,
and that will certainly be to
your liking.
Have you h.• ,,...1 .. le-
&o do•ltle trHltle? Let
Cwt.• c_...., ltelp J" tt.d ,. ...... , o.,.... ''"' ....
•I DOUBLES I• ,.MltUe
....... &a11..-.rwa-.1et
Mt DOUll.£8 ...... '-....
11.15 t. -o ... o..w... ..
care ef dale .. ..,.,..., P.O.
lea 169, N ........ N.J. OTtct. Maise ....... .-,.we
c..New.,...,...._,
I
' t
'.
!1
r-
I
..
'
' .
Orange Coaat DAIL. Y PILOT /Monday, September 13, 1882
• '
FACtORY~ TO-DEALER INCENTIVES MEAN
YOUR FORD OR LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALER MAY P SUBS I ANTIAL
ON FORD
RANGER PICKUPS
ON
FORD F-SERIES
·AND BRONCOS
ON
MARK VI
OR
LINCOLN TOWN CAR
SAVINGS ON TO YOU .
$ UP TO
ON
COUGAR
XR-7
UPTO
ON
CONTINENTAL
SOR YOU CAN CHOOSE
10N CASH INCENTIVE
PbUS 11.t°/O ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RA TE
. ON CONTINEN TAL
OFFER EXPIRES DECEMBER 31 , 1982.
$ UPTO
ON
FORD ESCORT
AND MUSTANG,
MERCURY LYNX
AND CAPRI
11.PA.ANNUAI.
MRaNTAGE
RATE ON
THUNDERBIRD,
CONTINENTAL
AND COUGAR XR-7
From now through December 31 , 1982.
we can arrange a low 11 !9% Annual Per-
centage Ratet for~ualified buyers on
any new 1982 Continental, Thunderbird
or Cougar XR-7 in stock, or any 1983
Continental in stock, or ordered for
delivery by yeaJ's end.
ON
FORD EXP
MERCURY
LN7 .
FREE TWO-YEAR
WARRANTY/
MAINTBWICE
PROGRAM ON
FORD ESCORT, EXP,
MERCURY LYNX
AND LN7
When you buy a 1982 Escort, EXP, Lynx
or LN7, you'll get free scheduled mainte-
nance and a free limited warranty for two
years or 24,000 miles, whichever comes
first. Accidents, tires, driver abuse, and
fluids between maintenance intEtrvals
are not. covered. Limit one per customer.
If we didn't build them so well, we
couldn't back them so well.
For retail buyers only. tActual savings depend upon the amount financed, duration of financing and the State law. Available to
qualified retail buyers. Limit one per customer. Dealer contribution may affect customer costs. An 11.9%
finance rate. It's good for America.
Seat belts save lives.
Get it together-buckle up .
. . , ..
FORD· MERCUR¥ · LINCOLN ·FORD TRUCKS
•
.-f '1 ,.. "" ~
I
=
t
THI ClllT Ill THI caum
TIME MARCHES ON, DEPT. -Members of the
Ne wport Harbor Business & Professional Women's Club
celebrated their ~0th .annive~y of founding Saturday at
an appropriate historic locauon, the Balboa Pavilion. And
the members got re minded of a few items.
Keynote speaker Julie Arri, vice president of the
international Federation of BPW, took members and guests
back down memory lane to
1932 and those years after
the N ewp o rt Club's
~'\ founding. --------~r. "In the 1930s, there TOM MURPHINI 'kW' 1 were 26 stat~s that had , ________ .....;_Uie:..&._._ l a w s a g a 1 n s t t h e
employment of women," she noted. "Where women could
work, women clerks were given lower pay while male
clerks got promoted into managerial positions."
DURING THE LATER 1930s, the speaker recalled,
the Roosevelt Administration tried to equalize job
opportunities but actually "only went Qalf way."
~nditions persisted where wo men's jobs w ere n ot
conside red comparable work to men's positions.
"The old saying h eld that every man earns a dollar and
every woman, 59 cents," the BPW executive said. "A
secretary w ho practically runs an office doesn't make as
much as the janitor who comes in at night to clean up."
Even .whe n women began to increasingly join the work
force dunng World War II, after the war, two million
w omen w ere laid off.
· "We are having difficult times again , and once again,
w e a.re finding that women are being terminated," she said.
Julie Arri's entire anniversary message wasn't doom
and gloom for the business and professional w omen.
SHE NOTED THAT thro ugh e fforts o f BPW an
amazing law that decreed a woman could be fired if' her
husband worked was repealed. A 20·year effort, started in
1952 by BPW, strengthened laws for equal pay for equal
work.
And the F.qual Rights Amendment, first pushed by
BPW in 1924, will again be supported after its re·
introduction this July in Congress.
While Sen. Alan Cranston, D ·Calif ., strongly
supported reintroduction, not one congressman from the
Orange County area gave it that support.
"We are sending a message that w e will remember in
November," the speaker concluded.
Three for leadership: Anges B)omquist Jackie Heather, Marian
Bergeson
There we re some very evident personalities at the
anniversary cele bration, however, who g ave evidence of
how the. leadership role of women has expanded in our
ooastal region.
T hey ~ncluded Marian Bergeson, assemblywoman for
the coastlme; Carol South, preside nt of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce; Jackie Heather,
mayor of Newport Beach and Arlene Schafer, mayor of
C.OSta Mesa.
1 There w ere a lso som e people present who could
remind everybody of earlier years in efforts of women to
achieve leadership roles, like Agnes Blomquist former
president of the old Newport Balboa Savings and Loan, and
• other former BPW presidents like Dorothy Palen, Dorothy
Capalbo and Maxine Broback.
~OR THE NEWPORT chapter of BPW, it was a day of
pausing to look back over 50 years of progress with pride in
the accomplishments.
. Somehow you got the clear impression, however, that
mainly this is a group of active professionals who are
looking forward-to the next 50 years.
May they enjoy as much success in the next 50 as they
did in the first half century of accomplishment.
umlllerfest funds
inance KOCE
KOCE Channel 00, the public
:televil&on at.ation bued at Golden
1Weat Colleae in Huntin1ton
•Beach, collected $121,060 durlnc
U ta recent nlne -day
l"Summerfeat" tund·ralsln1
. drive. The donationa exceeded
! the tt.ation'a fund·ral.llni pl by
f
21 pen:ent.
Included ln the Su.mmerf eat
tot.al an pnta to oft.et station
opentJfti expeneea during the
feltJval. Thete donatlona came
from the Irvine Co., Cochrane
Chale, Li~ and Co .. the
Alp_ha Beta C.0., and ernployeea of
McDonnell Dou&taa Corp. West.
Alto included ia a $10,000
mat.china ,.-.nt from the :nuor
Foundation. .
"Once more, the Oran1e
County community has
demonl1rated conUnulnc aupport of lta _J>Ublic ~ 91-tJon ,,
aald Tom St.ephemon, 1\tlll~n
vice preeklent.
MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 1882
STOCKS
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
83
84
86
f
Litigant air dirty li11en
llllMllllllllJi ....
in public and tar
on ABC's "People's
Court.'' See Page 86.
When the wild • river runs • • •
By S'l'EVE TRIPOLI ~ .... o.-r,... .....
First will come the ralns and
perha&» snow, heavy and with
little letup, falling on areas
where runoff feeds the Santa
Ana River aa far away aa the San
Gabriel Mountains and as near as
San Bernardino, Rivenide and
Orange counties.
Afte r several days of such
precipitation warnings of a major
flood on the Santa Ana will be
issued. It ls estimated there will
be eight hours advance notice of
the water's onslaught in Orange
County. I
If such a flood, the la rgest
considered reasonably likely to
happen on the river, comes
be fore an y additional flood
controls are in place, officials say
the devastation will be enormous,
especially in Orange County.
'I'he n o rth e rn county ,
including much of Fountain
Valley, Huntington Beach and
Costa Mesa, will absorb the
damage.'
This scenario, drawn from
conversation s with several
officials and an Army Corps of
Engineers report, is considered
by them as a fairly accurate
prediction of what will happen.
As the river gushes out of the
San Bernardino Mo unta ins
northeast of Redlands and joins
several of its tributaries the flow
is already huge and swift.
In three days, about 181,000
acre.feet of water -nearly 59
billion gallons -will flow over
the boulder.strewn riverbed at
what engineers had proposed as
the site of the Mentone l>am.
The three·day flow there is
nearly twice the flow of the
entire river in an average year.
More runo ff will be added
downstream.
The steep slope of the river's
path from the nearby mountains
moves the water al speeds of 25
to 30 feet a second and faster.
Thoee who may have wondered
what force could have moved so
many thousa nds o f l a rge
boulders onto the riverbed now
know.
Nevertheless, the river does
not stray too far from its course
through San .Bernardino and
Riverside counties, though there
is considerable overflow.
The damage is great -in the
hundreds of millions of dollars -
and there is comme ns urate
s uffe ring, but the greatest
problem by far lies ahead, south
of Prado Dam, in Orange County.
At Prado the waters do not top
the dam itself, so there is no
danger of a failure that would
release the small lake behind it,
but the adjacent spillway -the
dam's s afety v alv e -is
overwhelmed.
~o .,_ lflnt ~ Titte .,_.,_Co.
Land northwest of Fairview Road in Costa Mesa is awas h in this
March 3, 1938 photo of Santa Ana Ri~r flooding.
A flow of about 1.8 million
gallons a second roars over the
top of the spillway and into
Santa Ana Canyon, filling it
wall·to·wall and ripping up
trees, boulders and anything else
in its path.
It is well beyond the limits of
the narrow concr ete channel
built for it as it enters the county.
All of the Green River Golf
Course and parts of the Riverside
Freeway are part of the river
now.
After entering Anaheim the
river really begins to run wild.
Ignoring the bend there that
curves it west toward the sea, the
wall of water heads north and,
using roughly its own channel as
a southern boundary, covers
almost everything between it and
the San Gabriel River a t the Los
Angeles County Une.
Almost all or Anaheim,
Cypress, Stanton, La Pdha, Los
Alamitos. Garden Grove,
Westminster a nd Fountain
Valley is under water. The
unincorporated Rossmoor and
Midway City areas are oovered
also.
Large chunks of Buena Park,
Fullerton, Yorba L inda and
Placentia are inundated, too.
Near the coast, only one area of
high elevation in Seal Beach and
Huntington Beach , a swath
roughly borc,iered by Beach
Boulevard, the Westminster line
and the Naval Weapons Station,
is spared.
The south side of the river has
overflowed sufficiently to flood
several Costa Mesa communities,
a small com er of Newport Beach
and parts of Santa Ana. The
Santiago Creek tributary has
overflowed in a narrow pa th
through Villa Park, Orange and
Santa Ana.
Some 110,000 acres, 500,000
homes and 2 million people are
affected.
In Costa Mesa, Huntington
Beach a nd Fountain Va lley
water depths range from 3 to 6
feet in most areas, with irolated
spots much deeper. They are
among the areas hardest hit
because the water has backed up
behind the higher ground of
Pacific Coast Highway to create
a "ponding effect."
Direct damages total about $9
billion in the county, indirect
costs such as lost work time,
increased crime in the devastated
area and flood·related h ealth
problems add perhaps another $3
billion.
The pain is worse because just
25 ,000 h o mes h ave flood
insurance.
Smaller floods could get put
Prado Dam also in the absence of.
new flood controls, and maQ..Y
wou Id spare muc h o f the
northeast portion of the county
from the damage described. ·
But the news for the Oranee
Coast is not so good. Damage
from even a IOO·year flood,::a
flood twice as likely to occur 1Ut
the on e described , would
severely impact Fountain Valle)'•
Huntington Beach and t~
sections of Costa Mesa anti San.Ca
Ana affected by the larger fl~.'
The same areas of those ci~
would be covered , with ail
estimated 70 percent of tfte
damage caused by the greater
flood infilcted. Most of the rest of.
t h e coun ty w oul d esca~
unscathed, however.
: ... MAJOR HURDLES HOLDING UP FLOOD CONTROL -. :· . . ..
From Page A1
one-ha}( of one percent chance it
will happen in any given year.
The result would be a n
estimated $12 billion damage in
Orange County and, even w ith
the anticipated several h ours'
warning, ap estimated lcm of l,
000 lives.
Such damage, and the damage
of the many lesser floods that
also are beyond Prado's capacity
to control,l can be prevented. In
the more than 20 years since the
realization that new controls
would be nee ded , a plan to
mitigate the effects of even an
1862·style flood (now considered
an example of the worst flood
that can reasonably be expected
to occur) has been devised.
In modified form, the plan is
expected to be considered by
Congress this yea r -
Washington is involved because
most of the fundlng for it would
be federal.
The plan's major features are
construction of a huge dam at
Mentone In San Bernardino
County, just below the spot
where the river flows out of the
San Bernardino Mountains, plus
a heightening of Prado Dam and
i mprovements to the river
channel between Prado Dam and
the ocean.
Tho ugh flo od control la
considered an urgent nec:emity by
the Anny Corps and the three
count.lea involved, there are
1everal major hurdles that must
be surmounted before thia plan
can be launched.
Colt la pqha&» the largest. The
estimated price tag ia about $1
blllion, and it la not yet known
how much of the bill will be paid
locally, or what percent.a1e by
elleh ot the three counti•.
Becau.e of econornlC concema
and objection• bf San
Bernardino County off tclalt
about the lmpec:t of the 2· ~-mile tons Menion. Dam ln thelr area
(they dalm tt ii not the tMln way
to control the upper riwr, that lt
wo"'ld in terfere with the ir
capture of the river for drinking
water and that it would be a
tremendo~ eyesore). officials of
the three counties have asked
that the $350 million dam be
dropped from the plan at least
for now.
Though going without the dam
or a similar flood control device
upriver means trading away
protection from floods of the
125·year size and larger, officials
view the comprom ise as a
necessary step to geuing the rest
of the work done now.
They believe that protection
from the worst flooding can be
built when it is more feasible
politically and economicalJy.
Orange County Board of
Supervisors Chairman Bruce
Nestande, who helped engineer
the compromise, said the plan
"buys some important protection
for us n ow" and improves
chan ces o f its passage i n
Washington.
Even without the dam, Orange
County's share or the remaining
improvements could go as high as
$180 million. since the Reagan
Administration is believed to be
considering a n increase in the
local share of payments and since
most of the r emaining work
would benefit Orange County
alone.
And passage of eve n a
modified plan that includes a
hefty local share or the cost is by
no means certain, Nestande said,
though he added that he beHeves
Congress sees the necessity or the
flood controls.
"The le g islative road is
uncertain. Other people want
their project.a, too.'' he said.
Even without the Mentone
Dam , con s truction o f the
modified project is expected to
take 10 years from start to finish,
a nd Army Corps officials
estima ted that it can start no
sooner than 198 7 even if
approved this year.
In the meantime, a $122,000
flood warning system that can
h elp c ut some flood losses
appears to be the only additional
Insurance to be
protection the three counties can
buy. Funding for the system wlis
recently approved, but it woil!t
be operational for at least a ye4r;
The lon g wail for flo~(f
protection and uncertain politidl
bother Carl Nelson, director Of
public works for the countts
Environmental Manageme~<
Agency. :
What is known of the river'a
destructive potential "suggest.a
that there ought to be more haate
in our present planning," he sald,
"Around he!e. where we have
infrequent flooding and lot.a of
dry weather in between, you
have difficulty convincing people
that somethin~ bad can harpen,"
he said.
The Army Corps' Majors
echoes the thought, and tbe
paradox of a river that is often
hard to conceive of as even
flowing, much less flooding.
"When it flows It flows ln ·a
rampage, when it doean't °ft
doesn't look like much of a river
at all," he said. ..
:··-a must
If you're thinking of buytna a home in a
flood·prone area of Orange County you'll
probably be required to inaure It against flood
damage sooner or later.
MOit cities and almost all lenders require
flood lnaurance for homes within the Santa Ana
Rlver't flood plain. Alona the Oranae Cout, that
lncludea almost aU of Fountain Valley, much of
Huntineton Beach and part.a of Cost.a Mesa and
Newport Beach.
Premiums vary -right now many mortpp
holden pay about 40 cent.a for each $100 of value
insured -but officials of the federal pr'Oll'am
warn that the rates are aubject to frequeni
fluctuations. The &JT!<>unt of lnaurance reqUired
al.IO varim.
Loe.I requirement.a for flood lnaurance were
rnoetly forced by the federal government, which
runa the pro«ram, becaute the government
needed a fund to J>l'Y for the burdeNOme coet of
economJc a88iat.ance to tlood-rav_,ed attu.
The mandate ta not applied evenly,
however. In moet pl8cel only thole who obt.alned
a rnol'1p&e al~ a certain date are reqUlred to
buy tmurance.
The requirement to Insure ahould be il'l
effect in all four Or~ Cou\ cities by the end
of the year. Owners wall only be required to
lnaure their tttuc\W'ell -lnaura.nce on contentl
will be optional.
One won')' la that most homeownen will
continue to remain uninsured becau" the$r
mort1a1ea wlll pr•·date th• insurance
requirement. The Army Corpe of J:natneen
ntlmat.8 that just 6 percl!nt of the 500,00fhonm
ln Or.nae County which would be affedld by a
200·YMI' flood would be COYmld. if the Oood
happened \oday.
---..
Orongo Co It DAILY PIL01 /Monday, September 13, 1982
SCR board president Eric Wittenberg, wife Cyn th ia ride gon dola.
Gondola, new goal glittering
By VIDA DE AN
()('the D.ity Pffot 81•H
Webster lists three pronunciations for
gala. But no matter how you pronoun<.'e
it, La Dolce Vita lived up to his
definition of a festive celebration and
then some.
South Coast Repertory Theatre's
white tie and tails gala Saturday
evening was an extravagant production
of food, finery, fireworks and a
surprise finale -Shirley Jones.
The 500 guests received re<l-carpet
treatment and a musical serenade as
they arrived at the Imperial Bank
Building in Town Center Park.
Mimes escorted them inside where
they were greeted by Mr and Mrs.
Philip Reilly, (she was the chairman),
SCR board president Enc Wattenberg
and his wife Cynthia a nd SCR's arustac
directors Martin Benson and Dr. David
Emmes and his wife.
Waiters awaited their pleasure
bearing trays of specifically labeled
drinks. Tables laden with hors
d'oeuvres were attractively arranged
while mandolinists and Commedia del
Arte characters provided a festive
atmosphere in the patio.
.
·Pla ywright Bernard F arrell
visits with Ca th erine Thyr en.
A gondola that once traveled the
canals of Venice and is now owned by
the John Curci family added to the
Italian theme.
T he theater's new logo was one of
the fireworks illuminated before guests
adjourned to the South Coast Plaza
Hotel's grand ballroom for a five-<X>urse
Banquet Romani amid a garden with
flowing fountains and Italian statuary
with floral artistry by Andrade/McK ee.
Jeffrey Tambor, a onetime SCR
performer with several TV credits,
acted as emcee for a cabaret production
alluding to tough times. During his
good natured routine he received free
hamburger cards from Carl Karcher
and asked Ruth Segerstrom if he could
borrow a cup of land and if she would
validate his parking ticket.
Tambor also introduced singer Toni
Tennille. a gala guest who appeared in
an early SCR show, "Mother F.arth."
Shirley Jones captivated the audience
with her medley of tunes from "The
Music Man," ''Oklahoma" and
"Carousel." The show opened with the
Clifton Dancers and music by Joe
Moshay and his orchestra.
Fonnatl!>n of a new $3 million
J
Anniversary Endowment Fund in
honor of SCR's upcoming 20th
anniversary was announced by Maury
DeWald, board vice president. He said
more than $1.4 nuUion already has
been pledged toward the fund's Ji!oal of $10 million by the end of the decade.
DeWald cited the Fluor Foundation
for its $200,000 challenge grant, and
Harriette Witmer, William Warren, the
Andrew Johnsons, John Macnab of the
Hoag Foundation, Katy Wheeler of the
James Irvine Foundation, the Wilham
Lyons, Daily Pilot Publisher Tom
Haley, the Peter Ochs, Win Rhodes and
Kathryn Thompson.
Also Peter Kremer of the Irvine
Company, PhiHp Reilly of the Mission
Viejo Company-Phillip Morris,
Wattenberg of the Wittenberg Corp.,
the Don Smallwoods, Jeff Stacks,
Ralph Clocks, Tom Peckenpaughs,
James Roosevelts, Don Christensons and
Dave Threshie, publisher of The
Register.
As guests drove away with their
souvenir champagne glasses, they found
· one more touch of elegance -a long-
stemmed red rose and a note from the
SCR board -"Arrivederd y grazie."
Gail Och s chats with
Dot Clock befo re banque t.
Mimes cavort with gala chairman Valley
Reilly and husba nd Philip. ~ven t raised $60,000.
Kae a nd Lo uise Ewing rela x amid Ita lian
garden sta tua ry. Sh e head ed first SCH gala .
Clubs off er harpist, handshakes, h e alth tijJs
It's that time of year again.
It's back to school for the kids, back to
football for sports fans and back to meetings and
projects for clubs~d support groups.
Spyglass Hllls Pbilbar monic Co"1mittee will
meet Tuesday for a musical program by harpist
Rosalee Corson, currently featured at Magic
Island.
Twelve new members will be welcomed at
the 11:30 a.m. luncheon in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Francis being arranged by Mary
Hodge and Leslie lderstine.
New officers for the '82-83 season are Pat
Stayner, president; Marcie Adler, Jackie Lokka
and Mary Schmitz, vice presidents; Anna
Hilliard and Judy Duke, secretaries; Carrie
M acMilla n , treasurer , and M a rtha Green ,
parliamentarian.
The annual autumn membership coffee of
t he w o m en associate s o f the Inte rfaith
F•uda tlon at UCI wiU be held at the Interfaith
Center from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday.
The Rev. Bill McLaughlin, who recently
· ·viaited Ireland, will have "Faith Perspective on
Northern Ireland" as his topic. The public may
attend. For more information call 833-0891.
Beverlee McLaughlin. founder and director
of the Abundant Light Foundation and the First
Start Being
The\\00\an~
w.nt coBel
~ • 1•is sustt '°'' l•r~~r po1nl! Call 01 cw lodar tor a
co111pll111enury au~sts alld
JIOlll• drsmstoa
Metaphysical Congress will be the speaker
Tuesday when the Irvine charter chapter of the
American Business Women's association meets
In Bob Bums Restaurant, Fashion Island.
McLaughlin's program will foc us on
handwriting and what It says about a person.
Interested businesswomen may call Marilyn
Cooley at 838-1022 for further details.
Lawyers Wives of Orange County plan to
meet Thursday for luncheon the Bayshore House
Restaurant at Lake Forest where they will
update projects for the new year.
New officers include Sandi Capizzi.
president; Stacy Joens, Pat Fields and Candy
Zinn, vice presidents; Gail Negri, secretary; Pat
Evans, treasurer; Becky Rlddet, social chairman,
and Janet Tonkovich, president-elect.
After the luncheon members will tour the
four historic buildings at Heritage Hill Regional
Park.
Dusty Wines will h old a member ship
reception at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, in the Mission
Viejo home of Mary Jo Wisely. Members are
former flight attendants from different airlines
who have joined for social and philanthropic
purJX>SeS.
Former attendants and those currently
flying may call Georgia Pollard, president, al
857-2538. or A nn Callahan , membership
chairman, at ~0-0241, for further Information.
Cati for tree l11fo111at1011
ORANGE COUNTY
) TOWN 6 COUNTRY,
OR ANOE
(7U) ~7-8221
.f
A few ·tickets are still available for the "By
Women for Women" seminar and luncheon
planned Thursday, by the J .M. Peters Co1 and
the C amelol C h apte r of Orange County
Performing Arts Center.
Beginning al 9 a.m. a panel of profess1onal
women from the Golden Door. Neiman-Marcus
Newport Beach, and La Prairie will be on hand
an model homes at Belcourt Hill in Newport
.Beach to share their expertise on fashion. fitness
and skin care.
Proceeds will benefit the Camelot chapter.
Tickets and further details are available by
calling Ciel Woodman at 631-5710.
I WANTED!
CLIENTS Who Are
Looking For A
TU FllEE Way
To Mal<• Their Money
Grow •.•..•.
Current lntere1t Rate
11.21%
-100~ Guaranletd S.lrty
ol Prllltlpll
-Ho Mlrtet Risl
-Ho Current lncomt Tax When
Passed To Btnthclary
-Hot An Annuity
t A Bond
FOR MORE INFO CALL
OR WfVTI
I ' '" '· ~.,I ' 11' '
-
Direct or collect.
to sub3cribt to your
hometown paptr, the ...
642 -4321
'·
Get a READY EQUITr
Credit Line and write
a check for up to
1100,000.
You can Initiate a loan for up to s100,ooo simply
by wnt1n9 a check 1f ypu have a Ready Equity credit
line use the equity in your home to estabtish the
credit ltne, and then you don't have to worry about
approvals or processing when you need the money-
Wr'1te a check and you have instant cash.
CALL (714) 644·1634
. . •• : : • . .
•• ,, .. ,, .. . ' .. .
. . . .. .. . . • . . . ~ . • • .
i
• . . . • . . . .
. . . • . . .
Orang• Co••t DAIL v Pll.OT /M d on ay, September 13, 1982
•
How's this tor a good answer : .money. Read our newspaper, a"nd
cash in on advertised values. discount coupons, food news and
consumer reports that can save you money every single week .
We also save you time. Which is important tor busy women
managing a home, children and many other responsibilities .
In the market tor tun? We cover weekend enter-
tainment and special events around town. TV and
movies. Recreation, sports. hobbies. a whole package of
interesting news and features to give you a lift! Whenever
you have the time. So if you've been feeling a little
shopworn lately , get some help. Get the paper ..
What's In It tor you? The answer
appears on every page of
• • ~
II 111
642-4321
. -
• •
·-
•• Oran~ Coa11 DAILY PILOT/Mond•y, Septembef 13, 1982 i ----------------------------------------------------------------------~---------------------------------..----------------------------------------:
Films eyed
• Actor··realizes fanta sy • piers~
'Frank Buck' role •
• ~1n
By JERRY BtJCK ,,T....._..W,_ "When Urm!9 or hard, hl'l'OCt are
back In faahlon," aaya Boxleltncr
"And I'm ln the bw.lnt.s of scUlng
heroes thla ye r . This Is• c~mpy show
about a larger-than-lifo her<>.
SAN FRANCISCO million for the city In hove been filmed.!
(AP) Ycara bcfor~ wogt'll, rent.ala, howdnH. elat>where be<:auise the
Ain •rlca'a tllm lnduatry <.'ii le ring a nd o th t> I' city lacka a giant eou.nd
1 e t u p 1 h o p I n 8 e r v I <.' t• s T h c.• 3 4 atagt.4.
Hollywood, director• produc.·Uons shot in &an "I have the J1rieat
hand -cranked their Franclaco that yc:ur sound stage in town,"
comeraa In the San lnc:luded featurt• mrr111, aald ln5fependent
Franclleo Bay area. t.elovlsaon ahows, lpt>elfals producer Crafg Sn.ar.elle,
LOS ANGELES -"The other day
I was on the Junale .et in a dugout
wreatllng bad guys and fake
crocodiles," says Bruce Boxleltner.
"I love it. I get to play Clark Gable,
!)pencer Tracy, Gary Cooper, John
Wayne and Humphrey Bogart all at
On<ie."
Boxleitner, mustachioed, his hair
·parted in the middle, wearing a pith
helmet, jodphurs and knee-hlgh
jleather boots, stars as the adventurer
·and wild animal collector Frank Buck
in CBS' "Bring 'Em Back Alive."
It's set In 1939 Singapore, where
th e real -life Buck had his
headquarters, hung out at the famous
Raffles Hotel, and caroused with h is
closest frie nd, "H .H ." (for His
Highness), the $ultan of Jehore.
Buck captured wlld tigers, wrestled
a king cobra, and once knocked out a
giant orangutan with a single punch.
In the 1920s and '30s he was a leading
supplier of wild animals to wos and
circuses. Like Buffalo Bill, he had a
wonderful sense of self-promotion
and a flair for the romantic. He
created the legend of Frank "Bring
'Em Back Alive" Buck through a
series of books and movies, as well as
b y numerous news pape r and
magazine articles.
"ThUI show's a blend of 'Hamar of
the Jungle' and 'Casablanca.' Lots of
spies, jewel thieves and smugglers. It's
no heavy deal. It's not 'Hlll Strt'(.'l
Blues.' It's just a lot of Cun. I think the
time la right for it. I think people arc
getting tired of that oiher s tuff on
television. Even the primt!-Llme soap
operas are wearing down."
Another humorous 1930s adventure
is making its debut on television this
fall in the wake of the s uccess of
"Raiders of the Lost Ark." Stephen
Collins stars as Jake Cutter, a soldJer
of fortune in ABC's "The Gold
Monkey."
"Bring 'Em Back Alive" is such
pure TV hokum that the public might
think everything in-it is phony. But
there was a real sultan of Jahore,
Buck did call him H .H. and they were
best friends.
H.H. is played by Ron O'Neal and
Clyde Kasatsu is Buck's friend and
assistant, Ali, another character from
real life.
Now, San Francisco and c.-ommcrcials. "but It's not bll eJIOUlh
offlclal1 hope they can Among the films shot to mount a large fea
1 hak e Southern In San Frandsco in film. The potential of
California's iron grip on t h l 1 m a r k ' e t 1
the movie business by tremendous, b.ut there
transforming obsolete also a tremendou
city piers lnto giant amount of Io a
sound stages. o rtunlt . "
The Son Franc is co 1iiiiii;iiliiiii;Jiiiill••••iiiiiiii1 Port Commission voted I
Wednesday to spend
$20,000 to atudy the
proposal. Labor unions
and businesses will add
another $28,000.
"I think it's a surefire
idea," said commissioner
Jack Morrison, who
made the proposaJ to the
panel.
The new waterfront
complex would feature
technologically advanced
faciJities Cor making
films, television shows
and commercials . The
study will be conducted
by the New York-based
consulting firm of
Alexander, Memishian &
Co. and sho uld be
completed early next
year. As exciting as his real ijfe was, this
series puts him at the center of action
as the British colony of Singapore
becomes a hotbe d of intrigue,
German and Japanese spies, war
jitters, and criminal masterminds just
prior to World War II.
Buck was born in Gain esville,
Texas, in 1884 and went on his fi rst
safari in 1911. In the next 25 years he
collected 25,000 animals and birds,
including two rare white rhinos and
the largest king cobra ever taken. He
died in 1950.
Boxleitner is currently appearing as
the video warrior in Disney's "Tron.''
In the fall he will also be seen in the
CBS miniseries "Bare Essence."
Under tbe plan, the
AP Wlrepholo city Would rent port land
WHO'S THAT? _ Meryl Fabricant, 17, poses to developers who would
in a Marilyn Monroe looka like event in build and operate the center. London with a poster of the famed star in her In 1980, the film
Snyder 'straight'
act stumbles
By F RED ROTHENBERG ,,T......_Wrtt«
NEW YORK -If Tom Snyder hopes to re-
establish his news credentials, it doesn't look as if
he's come to the right place.
Snyder, a former NBC newsman and host for
eight years on the late-night "Tomorrow" show,
began his tenure last week as aole anchor on New
York television station WABC's 11 p.m. newscast.
However, "Eyewitness News" degenerated
into a series of cheap jokes, guffaws and some local
news stories. National and inter1l4ltional news was
virtually ignored.
With a straight face and a serious tone, Snyder
introduced the program's lead story about an
abandoned pet store that
contained dead mice, gerbils and
snakes. Snyder's reserved
manner gave an initial indication
he was attempting to shed his
reputation 81 a joker who
couldn't play straight news.
However, it didn't last.
B e fore long, he was
laughing about his inability to
INYDP pronounce the laat name of
tennis atar Martina Na\fJ'atilova.
Then he got into a coarse exchange with a black
sport9Caster about "Uncle Tom."
There also were a lot of chuckles, fast talking
and muffed lines.
After the final story, a "That's
lncredible"-type piece on a man who pulls weights
with his teeth, Snyder grinned and said: "You've
got to be kidding."
Then he closed the broadcast by beginning to
call his new employer NBC.
"I alm08t said the Other letters,'' he said.
All in all, It was not the best way to convince
skeptics that Snyder la a serious journalist, perhaps
on the road back to a network news job.
: Before NBC canceled the "Tomorrow" show,
Snyder was involved in a celebrated duel of egos
With contributing colleague Rona Barrett. His broad
mannertsma and overalz.ed laugh, ao well parodied
by "Saturday Night Llve" comedians Joe Piscopo
and Dan Aykroycl, onlr, reinforced the image.
: After "Tomo1TOw, ' Snyder was unable to cut a
(leal for network newa jobs at CBS and ABC.
But lui mcJnth, he signed a three-year contract.
reportedly for $700,000 a year, with W ABC, ABC's
flagship station here. lt marked hia return as a local
news anchonnan, a poeiUoo he held several years
ago in New York and Loe Angeles.
. Besides his new1CaSting duties, Snyder will
reportedly host a magazine show for the five local
atationa ABC owns.
: Snyder's first neW9Ca8l Tuesday coincided with
the end of the Labor Day weekend, when summer
vacations end and television viewing returns to
higher levels.
· Sny*r'• preaence apparentl)' was too big for a
news co-anchor, the standard alignment for moet
local broadcasts. At 11 p.m., he replaces Ernie
Anaatoe and Roee Ann Scamardella, the top-rated
late-night newa team ln New York.
But Snyder la a nat.lonal name in the high-
itake9 world of news-entertainment.
"Our promotion.ala went f.O the atreet and asked
people what they thought of die guy," said Tim
Miller, director of creaUve eervices for WABC.
The word came back: Tom Snyder is
"controversial," "involved," "exciting,"
"charmln.r," "outrageous.'' "caustic" and
''emotional." ·
"He says what he think..," aaid one New
Yorker. Another abo liked him "no matter what
they aay about him."
, "In our campaign, we took positive and
negative characteriatics, and let hia peraonallty
thaw through," Miller said. "We were aeeklna Tom
Snyder'• unpredictablUty to match New ~ork'a
unpredidabWty. ''
111e J<ey to Increased
Sales · is Finding
\~~r1:l.the Right ~er.
Call the
orange Coast
Dally Piiot
today.
642-5678
"Seven Year Itch" role in the background. industry generated $50 _____ ..,;_ ________ ..::.,_~----~
..... ..
'-:tic .. ~°'"''Ill 119tUO .... rlYGN ...... wtlYM•lfH
lfW-5-ooc• AMC Or....... UA hu1 c..,...,,_ 511 ~IO 6110140 ltHHl
M.Mn8'uPl .. 1•
SU 5Jl9
"''* ..._ W11lMllltTl-ff•.,,. W_oOQo C-..... UAC<IYC.,..... '"".-C•HIW.tyJql)I, .... )St 065) ll• H I 1 H I 3693
cotYAMIU
l .... ltft t\Mtarlf f .. .,,
6>• 3501 ~':;':!ct.." L•-•&CCV!t•"'"'..--~ 494 I)"
"ONE OF THE HIGH-RANKING
SURPRISES OF THE SUMMER. IT IS A
MOVIE TO BE SALUTED!'
IMA Mal!fl llru f!Wa 529 .5339
-ht c .... " .. c.. ..-nwON<
A "'ltA..:Jl."T l'W"Tillll C........• ...U....•1.0.,~.....,. .... """'~ ......
""'""'l(ACll OAQQ( Edwns Newpon Clnodome
Ct1>ema 644 0760 534 2SS3
.. __ !
WHTMl .. Tllt
Edwatds OneN Wes1
891 3935
MIUICMI "(JO £dwa1os Yl4tl0 h"'" 830 6990 NO 'At&0 ACCUTUI •OllT"lOIGAO~
llL~ lfUll/11111 c;-?~n 70MM
Sflow1 el J1ze t n41 71J~R lilf~~~ Jll
""' Tfle Tllllt• ,... 11'" J.100 ••• ,, ·~•C l ti lftow• 1•10 l 1SI •••• t tl .._.._. lllM'_
s
*BARGAIN MATINl!l!S •
Monday thru Saturday
All Performencee before 6:00 PM
(Except Sptelll En .. ,.11111111 and Helklays)
"YOUNG DOCTO!ltt • LOYr 1111 ---"AUTHCMll AUTMCMU" !NI ---LAKEWOOD
CENTER WAlk IN
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAI• IN
"AN OfFICER AND A
GENTLEMAN""'' ,,._.., __
·..-1110,U Tttm trTH PAllT r 1111
1100 ,._ ____ _
1 NOANOUEO
8"C•I" nn ......................
foc11t1Y or Col\Cltewooo
211/Ul•tHO
"ENOAHGEMD
aNCIEI" "'> ----··-
"C ... CH 6 CHOMO Tltle08
AM TOUQH AU OYUI" "' .. u ..
"YOUNG DOCTOAI •LOW'" 1111, ---
,,.,.. 1 JO ,.., ,.,. l·O U..• l•.,. .i •u
IMPORTANT llOTIC(' CMllORUt UHER 12 fltH!
"""" ... ·-..._ Tin rrl 1-• I.ti. la. .... IM illi
COO( " $Ollllt. -Ml ""' -" -"'4«l1I •• MO w tM MOii wmo °""'°" lalUllln ...,_ ..-.; °"' '°"11&11•111J. CRMl-qOll.., -
·~ A•~I ._,..
ANAHEIM DDl\lf IN
"TMI COMCMTW olUNGU" tw1 "THS CffALUNQE" ,,_. --......,AY TH9 1'111 PAlfT r 1111 "TMI MAIT'Mo\8TVr 4111
co•1 11to11 c .. "'°""°
f!l'JJ ,.,.. ,,.p,
BUENA PARK OAl~f '"
\Jft<Off"I A•• W•tt ei4 •rtott •n•o10 -
~ ! I ~~a • .t. Vii
LINCOLN Dlll\lf IN
liMOI~ "'"• ... ., o• •rtctn
j •21-•010
... '
LA HARl?A ,, " ~
.... T. THe llmlA-fl:MlaTlllM,• !NI -~ ..... WO
WOllllAN"1N1
"TIISMeTLITTUI wt.c>M"°"'L • TIXAe" !tu
~ ....
"PAIT T9mt AT ~"'°"""'' ...,...,... Ill!
C!Nt II IOUtlO
........ ,--,;,.-·· ..
"'"9 MMT wrn." R Cllll .. _
.. ,. ,,. ~ ~8T11W.-... ----·---....... -17NIH _.. ...
.....
OJlANGE •'111.f IN
................. ...... ,_
ta4-tM1
THE
l ',\MIL \"
c1aca:1
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"Some of these ore for your homework, too,
Mommy. You hofta cover them." "Oeorv-, hev• you ever thought of gl111u?"
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
"I know why the stations keep
changlng ... Marmaduke Is chewing on the
remote control!"
\[l;(
I
l AM Pt:FtNrTELV NOi GETTING OUT O~ 8£0 TOPAV
MOON MIJLLIN8 ---~l·L YEfl??
YEH ... 'tE~ ... YE~!
~EYAIN~~!
A BLIN{)_ DAT~?
N.AW, MIKE--I
t>oN1T --uH... ,
Wor'ssu~ I.DOK L.ll<E~
ACROSS 58 Second ltam
1 Diagonal 59 Instead
I Gl1t1ee 61 Purple shade
10 Bane 62 Vlfily
IATUROAY'I
"'1ZLE IOlYED
14 Ooorkeeptf 63 Flowef genus F.E:+~
15 Key 64 Prodded
18 ClleSI sound 15 Fectlons
.l::Jil:!lJ :J:J::J~ :J!JUCJ
:.1:.:J::JJ:J :J]::J] : . .miJrJ 3]J0] J]:J] CJ[j:J[J :::Jii::JJ:J:J JO:J"J[J[](!] 17 Pieturt 68 Appear
11 CloM by 67 Aboda
19 Employlf
20 Oubs anew DOWN
22 Tll!nll WTonQ t Bustle
24 Bote 2 Citrus
OJDJ J~ . .m:J~~:.m
::J31Jl~J.J llJ'.1
.a:~u::J1 ']J~1m1 .:r~m
:.J;J~lJ .:JD'-'.JJ ~~()(] ::i:n J']J J:J .:JrJJlill
26 Gar1T1e111& 3 King of com-
27 Put up with tdy
30 o.ns 4 Nullified
31 Roman 5 hr1'1quelle
author 6 Bowltt'1 lld
32 Fund ralMfa • 7 EthniQ endlnQ
J~lJ J ::.J ].]:.JiJrJ[]
J.JJ::IJ'-'J 'JOJ.J
::lllJJ.J']iJ .:J.!U.JJ[J
:J J'l ~ .Pl J ·J -nm:!J
.JJ!JJ !1!111'.J J.J..JOlJ
:.Ill JJ .'1.J.:) J:.J:J[J[]
3 7 Doc • Biblical king-27 Crypt
31 Male• ready dom 211 Conlpilted
.0 Zodtec tlgn 9 AuNit dltP 29 Adriatic
4 1 Boc*leta tO Prim rMOfl
43 Fruit 11 Comf0f1ff' 33 Llghl rey
44 T ht SI) 12 R.tin-enow 2 WOl'ds
45 Unconnectf'd ml• 34 Olive genus
•• Purlll 13 Concfjt1ona 35 Tidy
SI Small '1 Greee. letter 3e Peevtd
llmOUllf 23 Rey 3t call
6~ Pronoun 25 rur1t1et1 :it COw '*""
414 Commotion down 42 Leu.
,
43 Foreefledow
4f8uddy
41 Dllctl'nfnenl
48 St111ona
4tHMOln
50Flftt~
53 tcemeea
55 H«bor Gtlft
SISMl'llllder
51~ eoeo-. .. "°"' tH£
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
Hu~? WHERE'S TH' GIRL 0
You Df'SC~IBED 10 >vv= mi~i:t;
ON TII' PHONE:, MIKE?
'
Orange Cotlt DAIL y PILOT /Mond1y, Stpt1mbet 13, 1982 ••
Pt:ANl'TH
SHOE
Nt\NC''
THE SWAMI TOLD ME I'D
BE A FAMOUS MOVIE
STAR WHEN I GROW t::::;:;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;:;::::::::::::::::::::::;r--, UP
BRABBLE
WW.,~IAM,~
10 ~A~.._, ~SU
AT l<UE6E~
N.8MOCK
-to ~)"qlP PAYIN FOR
CAet..e 'f\/, MY UNCL-e \).ASPeR PU-r A SA"fEL.t..rns
PISH ON OUR ROOF!
--------YOU'RE PR08A8LY
WISE JOST 10
STAV IN 8EP
bv Charles M. Schulz
! MAVE A KHOT IN ONE
OF Ht{ SHOELACES ...
.#4rw'
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
HE ASKED
FOR MY
AUlOGRAPH
~~--vi
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
1
I
1
I
i
r
c
t c
~
j
' I
{
'
\111'.'\I>:\ \
IWNIHO
1:0010 HIWI CHAM.11'1 ANGIU.I
8 0 NfL fOOTBALL
PlttlbUfgh StM4en et Da.i.
IU COW~Q
I WllD, WIU> WUT
I .WAT.
HAWAII AVE-4
Oliettt ~ Wlrfletl, °' nne 1<...aoa. "llMla ..._
• TC*IOHT,
IOAHOIHAVW
~IMO«•llflMICIMI·
n•Vlan oountri. 111tnd •
tnwlk•I 1rlt>ut• lo the GUI•
hH•l llOtoY of 8candlnavla
held 11 the MinnMpOlll
OrohH lll Hall: Ntvllle
M11trlner hOlll wl111 91*1
performer• 1ncludl110 llrglt
Nlihon. Judith 8110tf1 and
Victor Borge 0 DON OOfWILL
t :IO. Cl) HOUM CALLI
Ot. WNlhtfby andCtllflt)'
1194P eoiomon t>tNll ew•y
lfOln 1111 0-P'Oltellve
'"°'"" 9 YOU AIKIO '°" rf (C)MOVI! ••'A "Trlbull" ( 1880)
Jeck Lemmen, "obby
Beneon An lrreeponlllbll
8ro'adway pre11 agent
begin• 10 r~ret hi• wutecl
Ille and hit l~ r94a-
llonlhlp wtth hl• grown
aon. 'PG'
TUB E TOPPIRS
KNBC (4) 8:00 "Little House on the
Pralri~." Whl'n Ch arlN Jcarl\!l hi11 young
son wlll soon die h undergoes a deep
rcllglouit t?XJX!rlence.
KOCE (50) 6:30. KCET (28) 9:00 -
"Tonight Scandinnvla." Musical tribute
lo tht.> c ... uitural legacy of Scandinavia. ~
photo. ldt.
KNX1' (2) 9:00 -11M•A•S•H." Klinger
becomes company commaf\der when
officers and e nlist.ed men trade places for
a day.
KNBC (4) 9:00 -''Murder in Texas.'' A
wealthy oilman set s out to prove his
daughter was killed by her husband. Part
1.
Im a man and hll larnlly to
the point wMf'I their hvee
arl thrMtened.
•••MCMI • • "M~a At c.n1t81
Hig11• (lt1fl AMlffw I•
vane, ~ C11radlne A
0 11,1 .. de lot reveno•
btgln• "18' a prank thal
wtnl 100 flt waa pu-.o en
Iha QUlelet •ludenll by I
group ol bor•d fllOh·
KllOOI fr*101. 'R'
1:21 tC) MCMI
•Ii\ "The lplll" (IHI) Jim
Gtowt1, Ol&llann CattOll
Altw pulllng Off I big tOb·
blty. 1 oano hat trouble
CllvldlllO the money
l:IO (I)~·· AT
llVIH
Mtut..., O'Sullivan 11811
In PIUI 01bom'1 Mntltnen•
111 comedy •b0u1 lh•
!loon. dreamt and )¥1-
outlet of fOUt tld«ly •
,.,.. In a tmall Mkl-tarh
town 1n tt22
3:.48 (%) MOVIE
• •i.t "Morocco" 1111301
Oary Coopet, M1rtane
Dietrich A woman 11
tor* lo chOOM bet-
the Wdlth and ~
llorl• tti.1 one man offer•
and the love that anoUler
off••·
..... lo•~ ,_ .... .,,._, 8 MfVOWI
111,.altdown w11111 1111
f•t'*''• dr1Ylno lnflutncl
81\d the pr..-.a of 1119, IMOue b8MNll tel the ..... °' """· ca> •• * "HOW I won TIMI
Wll'' t 1Ntl ~Craw·
lord. Johrl UnftOtl, During
World WI/ II, I orouet of
bungling •1t1e11 acldlet•
we ...,iot'8d to bulld .,,
alhlellc llelCt blhlnd ~
.,_ In ,wttwn Attic. tO
llllt '"' actvanctno 8tltltl} torcee w111 h8VI a pt.ce tt(
~Cl'lcttet ~ (HJ • • • "Foul flley''
( 1071) Goldie Htwn. C
Cll-. A Nl>rfllan enlllll
Iha aid of 8'I lneClt ~
detecllYe alter •h•
~ Involved In I
blurre Mr1e8 Of murder•
and t.ldnec>plng attemptL
12:~. • • * "HewaM" (Part
t) ( tNe) Julle AMhwt.
Richard Harrie. A mlealon•
wy lrl• to Clhange ~ H....._' c;uetoma, 1>111
time and 1111 w!M'• death
change him lnltead. • O\/EAEAl't'
"AICOl\olMm" Gunt e.ny
Ford.(R)[J
G UNOEMTANDING
HUMAN llEHAVIOA
"Human PeychOlogy"
CJ) CBINEWS
QINICNEWI
CC)MOV1!
Victor Borge performs in
candinavia tribute tonight
at 8:30 on KOCE (50)
and at 9 on KCET ( 28).
10:00 8 CJ) LOU GRANT
Charlie IM18 put llPOfl
wtlln Mfl. Pynchon 0119'-
tuln hlm. BUiie unfetrly
bllmel him, and Oof'IOYan
wanll advice about hi•
IOve Nie.
•••• NIW8 G E't'I ON L.A.
tD BUllNUI AlPORT ID DOCTOR IN THE
HOUll
EvlfYOnl panic• the eve-
ning before the Royal Col-
l~ F9410Wlhlp e•ama.
11:30 9 CJ) TAAPnR JOHN,
M.O.
Goruo Gllet. a Vietnam
veteren, eppllet for • poet
at • large hoaplllll lull u
emeroancy cHH are
flooding In from • hol-4
fire (R) · a a ™E BE•T Of'
CARSON
Cl)MOVll *** "Outland" (1 981)
Sean Connery, Peter
Boyle. A IP-manll8I
lnve1tlgata1 a r&ell of my1-
terl0u8 dealha 'WflNn •
mining colony on one of
~w·• moon1. 'R'
4;JO .MOVIE
• 1't "The Blue lagoon"
111180) Brooke Shleldl,
Chrt.tOpher Atklna Two
c;u11w1y clllldren grow lo
1dolelcence on a remote,
South Pacific leland and
••patience \hi pang• of
flr1110ve. 'R'
Cl) ...... .._.lend ..
(1979) Rip Tom, Conchata,
F«rell A couraoaoue wtd·
-, ..... her young daugh·
1er ac;roaa the ptalriM In
the~ wilder.,_ or
1910.'PQ' • * Y, "Slnbad An<S TM
Eye 01 The Tiger" ( 1977)
Patrick Wayne. J-s.f-
mour The 48lhlng hero
battl• -11'1) crNtur"
and • deadly tiger to
rerno"8 1118 c.urM thet
k8891 a young ptlf'IU from
hie rightful pl8" on the
uvone 'G'
* * "Murdet Al The World
Satlft" (111781 Lynde Dey
G.orge, Klfen V•lenline.
A young m•n'a blr•rr• kld-
1'\epping ICheme Involves
five lnnc>Celll women end
111e final two g•me1 ot 11>e
baMb•ll ch1mplon1hlp
CB)MOVIE
* * 11\ "The Looney. Loo-
ney, Looney Bug• Bunny
Movie" ( 19811 Anlmetlld
Vol<lft by Me4 Bline. June
For•y. New m•terl•I II
t>lended with old In tN1
compll•Uon ot cluslc Fritz
Frlleng "Looney Tunes"
t111urlng Bug1. Delly
Duc;k, Porlly Pig. Yosemite
Sem. TWMtle Pie end oth-
"' from the c•r oon
tatle1 'G' -(J)MOVIE
• * • "The Outrege"
(1~) Paul Newman, l•u-
renc:e Hervey. Four differ-
ent ver•ton• of • rape and
murder 1tory are given u
ellldenc. In the 111111 of •
COWll!dly bandit
D MOVIE
··~"The Nor1h Avenue
1rr111ul•rt" ( 1g79) Edwerd
Herrm•nn, Blfbarl Harri•
The new minister In • •m•ll
town Ofgeniz. • group of
dotty women In his congr•
gallon to 1109 the flow of
church fund• to crlmlnelt.
'G'
IUO SI DICK CAVETT
Gueet: eclor Albert Finney
(Part 1)
Ii) SEWING POWER
(J)Q!NEWS
1:.48 CZ) CHARLES CHAMPLIN
PA£SEHT8 ...
7:00 8 CBI NEWS D NICNEWS 8 HAPP't' OA't'8 AGAIN
F onile trle• to win Ille
"Teaciler Of The Year"
awvd.
8 TI4E81JNT m M 'A'8'H
H .. "Y cuualt181 arriving
11 Iha compound crell•
-· ptOblemt f()( the unit bec:euM !hey ere
,_iy out of pentothel. •
• Q!JOK~'8 WILD ~ e lil 8UllHE88
REPORT CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE
A etunt flyer who pilOll •
12-foot mini-jet; pt8Qnant
women who work out on
NMltllVI mechlnet
CID MOVIE
• • "Fr" Spirit" ( 19781
Erle Porter. Rach-4 Rob-
ert• An Q<Pl'lanlld fox end
1 hound puppy ere r•IMd
toge!'* In perfect animal
trlendthlp. 'PG'
(%)MOVIE
* * * * "The Blue Angel"
( 1930) Merlene Oletrlcl\.
emu Janning•. A mlddie-
eg.o Pf~·· IOY8 for a
t>Muttful -· llnger lelldl him to deQIMl&tlon end
ruin.
7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN
FMtured: a v191t to Freder-
1<*'1 of Hollywood. • loolt
at hlghllght• from the
Heartt Movletone New1-
, .. i., the hlllory of Holly-
wood 0 QI FAMILY FEUD 9 LAVERNE & SHIRL.EV
&COMPAN't'
Shirley 111r11 spending
time wllh a welllhy,
10phl1tlc1tlld older men m M'A'l'H
Famlld newlCUl•r Clete
Roberti 1111111 the 4077111
tor 1 report on the IHllngs
ol the people atltloned ,,,., ..
llJ CJ) TIC TAC O()\IGH SI MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
Ii) GREAT
P£AFORMANCES
"Guella Of The Nation"
Frank ConvarH end
Estelle Parson• 11ar In a
dramatization ol Ftank
O'Connor'• ahort 11ory Mt
In lt94and In 1921 revOlvlng
arOllnd a pair ol lrlah ln1ur-
gen11 and the two c:ap-
turlld Btllllh aoldlerl mey
are ordered to guard. (R)
CID CONSUMER
RE.PORTS PMSEHTS
"The FHllng Fine ShOw"
Thi• edillon focu-on
heallh-relatad product•.
Including low-aodlum
loodl end over-th•coun-
ter eppetl1• suppr...ant•
8:00 IJ CJ) PRIVATE
BEHJAMIN
Judy. CaptaJn Lewi• end
Co1one4 Fielding are kld-
napl)tld and held tor ran·
som by moc~ terrorl111 (RI 0 QI LITTLE HOUSE ON
THEPAAIRIE
Ch1r1es undergoat • deep
rellglou• expenenc. Wl\en
he 1eem1 th•t hit young
son James 'Will eoon Ole
(Part 2) (R) 9 MOVIE
• * • "Night watch"
( 1971) Ellubeth Taylor,
Leurenc• Harvey. An
anrectlve woman cannot
convince her 1k1pllcat
husband 11111 1118 has -
a murder taking piece In
the dM«1ed hOuM acrou
lhe courtyard 8 MOVIE * * • "The Barefoot
Contesu' 1195~1 Hum-
phrey Bogert. Ava
Gatdner Flalhblldc• 11 •
funeral reveel the tragic
and waatlld Ute of a glam-
our girl m P.M. MAGAZINE
A atunt ny., wt10 pilot• •
12-toot mini-jet~ pregnant
women who work out on
Navlllul machl.-.
., MOVIE .
• • "Once ,. Nol Enough"
(19751 Kirk Oouglu, Aleida
Smith A lllm prod-.-
mll!rlft for money to u tl•
fy hi• apoll9d daUght«
•"GREAT
PEAFOAMAHCO
"duetll OI The Nation"
Frank Convert• and
Ell-418 ParlOM ltlll In a
CHANNEL LISTINGS
0 KNXT ICBSI 0 On TV
0 KNBC I NBCI l Z TV
0 KTLA llnd I .. HBO
8 K.ABC !ABC> c l(tt>t•m<t•I
0 ICFMB ICBSI • tWORI NY NV
f) ICHJ TV llnd I 11 IW'TBSI
G KCS1 IABCI ( IESPNI
CD ICHV (Ind I s IShowllmvr
Cl) KCOP TV (Ind I 0 Spo1119hl
&l ICCE T ( PBSI 8 ICabl~ Nl'W~ Nftwork)
69 ICOCE (PBSI
New hosts
Neal Cabler an d Jeffrey
Lyons (right) wi ll host PBS'
popular show, HSneak
Previews.'' T hey are to
debut in mott areas on
Thunday.
drem1llullon ol Frenk
O'Conn0<'1 tllorl atory Ml
In lrel1nd In 1921 revoMng
around a pelf of lrllh lntut-
genll and' the two cep-
tured Brllllh aoldlert they
are ordered to guard (R)
~MOVIE
• • • "Superlly" pg12)
Ron O'Naal, Can L... A
Harlem drug pu•h•r
dtcldel to lnYMI all of hit
energy In one final. maJor
deal before re11rlng from
the "bu1lnea1 " 'R'
MOVIE
• * * "The Thirty-Nine
S1ep1" ( 1978) Robert Pow-
941, David warner. A men
becom88 the quarry of
both the police end •
aecrel group of foreign
agenll operellng In Eng-
land wn.n he II framed for
a 11renger·1 murder. ·po·
~INO'SAT
SEVEN Maureen O'Sullivan 11ar1
In Paul 01born'11«1tlmen-
lll comedy 1boul the
11ope1, dream• and !Nl-
oualM of lour Mdetfy 1118-
tata In • amall Mkl-tern
town In 1922.
FMtured: a ck>M-u.p look
II airborne pollcemen; an
Interview with Moon Z&l>-
pa, e behind-I~
look at the making ol
"TRON." ID THI RIVE.A IN THE
OEIEl'T
A ltlm about the Colorado
River ... mlnet Iha Wiie<
Crill• In lhe SoulhwMI •nd
th• attllu4" and hlttorlc•I
forcee which h8\18 preclpl-
llled It. a:I IAAN!'t' MILLER
@ MOVIE • * "St. Helene" (19811
Ar1 Carney, David Huff·
m811. An 80-yMr-old man
r•fu-to IMve hi• amall
reeor1 efter a geologlll
ptedlell 8 YolCanlc dlSH·
ter. 'PG'
O MOVIE ••Yi "Beat Frie nd•"
( 1975) Rlcherd Hatch,
Doug Chapin. During e trip
to Calllornla. an emotlon-
•lly dl1tr88Md young man
trlel to dettroy hi• belt
lrlen<t'• rllatlonahlp with
hit glr'lltlen<t. 'R'
Hoit: 'Johnny Ceraon
Gue111· Sammy Davi• Jr ..
Marlett• Hartley. Bob &
Ray, M«I• Elllll. (RI 8 a:I A80 HEWI
NIGHTUNI
II MOVll *•'Al "S-t Small Of
Buccnl" (1957) Burt Lan-
cutet, Tony Curtis. With
the help ol • cringing pr-
agenl •• pow«M end evil
New York columnltl
br•lk• up hit alt1er'1
romanoe wllh a mutlclen.
• THE JUFEMON8
• LOVE. AMERICAN
tTY'-1 ID CAPTIONED A80
NIWI Cl) A0MAHCE: LOY! IN
THEDUNU
(Part 11
OMOVIE
• * "All The Marb181"
(1981) Peter Felk, 8ur1
Young. A hustling, wt ....
GrllClklng manaoer pulhl8
his t9'0 lemall wreetlen
toward the 109 'R'
12:18 CZJ MOVll!
* * "PenltentlatY'' (1980)
Leon l•••c Kenn•\lll•
Tilommy POiiard. ~ ~
black U-hie bOKlng akMla
to 10N)ve In prlton. 'R'
12:30 D QI LATE NIGHT WfTH
DAVIO LETTERMAN
Gunia: comedienne Clfol
Lelffer, actor p..,1 DooMy.
9 COUPW
• 1.0VI. AMeNCAH
STYL.£
(O)MOVIE
* * "The MOM)'" ( 1975 A
am•H-llme con ar11st ~·
up a kklnawtnG acnerne to
lml)(Ove hie llr\ancM. "R'
~:40 8 CJ) COLUMIO
1:00 8 OENE AVTR't'
•1MOVIE • * * "The &ice.,_ ..
(1958) 't'ut Srynner, Charl-
ton He1ton. Gen•r•I
Andr-Jactu1on ...,plOyl
the •kl ol the famou•
p1r11i Jean Lafitte during
1he Wt1of1812.
1:10(IDMOVIE * • "The lrlllllman" ( 1978)
A ptoud lrltlltMn refu-
10 yield to ptogr ... wtlln
N1~u•teamst•
Is thr18tened by rnotorlied
It anaportatlo'l.
4:40®MOVIE * * "SI. H...,.., .. ~1991)
Ari Carney, Davia Huff-
man An 80-yeer-old man
1eluM1 to leave 1111 am•ll
rMOrl 1l1er a geoioglll
ptlldlcl• a volcanle dlUl-
t•. 'PG'
TUf!•da11'•
Da11fl•r Mo11lr•
l:IO. * * * * "Gigi" ( 1959) Mautlcl CM\llllef. LMlle
Caron. A tomt>oy belno
groomed by her aunt and
grandmother Ml• out on
her own 10 calch a man 9:30 . * • * "Welkebout"
(1971) Jenny Aguller.
David Gulplllt. Two whit•
chlldtan we guided ectoas
Iha Aulltlllan Outbldt by
en Aborigine youth.
1:00 (%} I** "The TNr1y-Nlne
Stec>a" ( 1971) Robert Pow-
ell, 08Yld Wll/net. A man
--the quarry of bOlh lhe police and •
aecret group of fOfeigfl
agen11 operating In Eng-
land wtien he Is framed tor
a 11rar>ger'1 murder. 'PG'
2!00 cc:> * * • * "Ruhomon" ( 19501 Machlto Kyo,
T oa111ro Mltuna Througll •
aerlee of flaallblldcl. an
elOl'lth-century J~
woodcull• recount• hit
verlllOn of a ,..,._murder
to a 8uddhll1 1)(1811 and •
...-vent.
2:30 (I)* * "Hangar 18"
( 1980) Darren Mc:Ga\'ln,
Robeft Vaughn. ~ch
ert at• aaaet oo-nm.nt
lntlllllatlon ln-tlgete the c:..... of ........... aud-
den cSMt~lon. 'PG'
0 MOVIE
* * "The Blue LagOOn"
I 1980) Brooke Shleldt,
Chrlltopher Atkin• Tl#O
ce11eway clllldren gr-to
8do488C8nCe on a remote,
South Paclllo llland •nd
·~ the pang1 of
llrtl love 'R'
10: 1~(1) PLAY90't"I
PLAYMATI! AIUNION
Richard 0.-hoeta the
25th ennl\lertaty c:.lebr•·
tlon of Hugh Heiner'• meg-
u lne et the Pl•YbOY M1n-
lk>f1 w .. 1 In Holmby Hllll.
Clllllornla.
11:3&CC>~ 1:ao a a Hee NlW8
OVtJNGKT
CZ) I** "Handle With
Care" (1977) Paul L• Mii.
Candy Cta.-A man'•
ol>MMlon with hie CB
rlldlO gets him ln\IOhled
with varlou~y, oftbe&I
0 * • "TWU TM Ot1•"
( 19791 DocutTientwy. N•r-
raled by P«er U81lnoll
The Ille of a playful otter I•
tr8Qecl from hit birth In •
hOllow ''" 10 1111 eplC bat-
tle with the leader ol •
hOUnd pactt. ·a·
(%) CHAN.U CHAM PUN
PREIE.NTI ...
10:30 . INOUfHOEHT
HETWOMNIWI
• * "Honky Tonk FrM-
way" (Comedy) BHu
8ti<lgea. Beverly D' Angelo
A emall town ltf'-Florida
tak• matt•• 1n10 It• own
1181\dt when by-puMd bV
a.-hlOflwey
• GEHEAUTAY !:
10:00 Yo "lkaaker
1:30 IJ CJ) WKRP IN
CINCINNATI
• THE NVEft IN THE
DUE.RT 11:40 (8) MOVIE
• ~ "In PralM Of Olcler
Women" ( 11178) Tom
Berenger. Keren 8lactl A
Hungarian lolhatto ramln-
1-. on hit P"' romantic conque111, from hie flrll II
the age of 12 to hie Ndue-
tlon ol a hOuMWf,_ at 30
(1H0) Edward
Woochfard. Jlldc Thomp-
son. Ault,.._ oonecnpt-
ed to fight on England'•
tide Ill "' Boer Ww dec:kle lo fight the Boer
guer1n.. on their own
1erme.'PO'
~M CZ)*** "Handle Wllh
Care" (t977) Paul L8 M•I.
Candy Clatk. A man't
o~ with hit CB
redlo get• him lnYOlwd
with Vll!loul Nnny, Offbeat
horMlown IOC8k.
Herb and Jennifer ,,.
trapped In en .....,etor
wMf'I the bulldtnQ eaten.a
flra (R) m 000 COUP\.£
A film about the Colo<ado
RI-axaml,,.. Ille W818(
cr1811 1n Iha Souttiw.t and
the attlludee and 11111or1Clll
l0tc. whlctl h .... pr.c;lpi.
l81edlt.
*•Yi "Student Bodl88"
(198 t) 1<r11ten Riter,
Matthew Goldtby. A
llMY)-l>r'Nlhlng Pt~hotle
klllet ..... the fun.lo¥1ng
lludenta of • ty.,icat Amer-
ican hlOh acllool 'R'
'R'
litMOVIE
When Murray'• wtte ejecll
him from !Mir horne, Feb
1n ... 11e1 him to there
09car'• apartment
4.ti) U.8. CHAONICU:
"Can W• Afford Rellte-
ment?" TNI IOok at cur-
rent aupport eystema for
the retired Mdetfy lnC:MiM
exempt" ol altemati....t to
8ocl8I Se<;ur1ty MICtl ..
Innovative mortg1ge
1rr1ng1mentt e nd
lnoreued ernptoyn*'lt. 9 EHTERTAINMEHT
TONIGHT
12:00• INTEATAINMEHT
TONCIHT
* * "Phobia" ( 1980) Paul Mlchaet Q1a1er, Sutan
HogM A group of menlAll
p1llenll are murdered
according to their lndMdu·
allMra. 'R'
CID • * "Harry'• w ...
(1981) Edwwd Herrmann,
Geraldlnl Pege. A amell.
town poel""'l cornet to
Iha aid of 1111 .uni, wflO
-the IRS baCit tu•
'PG'
(I) ••• ''Reneom''
1:00 CID • • "Cennon1>111 Aun"
( 1981) 8ur1 R9ynolda. Dom
Dal.ulM. Varloue oddball
Ch&ractert compe4• In •
cout-t(M)()< auto ·-· 'PG'
Ii) TONIOHT,
SCAHOIMAVIAI
The leaden ol twe Sc:andl·
nevtan countrlee atter>d •
mutlul tribute to the cui.
tural legacy ol Scandln•YI•
held at the MlnMBPOl'-
Orchntra Hall, Ne'lllle
Marrlnet holt1 with gveat
perl0t1Mt• lncludlng 81(gtt
Nl!Non. Judith 81410en and
Vietor Borge cm MOVIE
* l 'h "Atk Any Glr1"
( 11159) Shlrtey MllCil.811'18,
OeYld Niven. Job end hus-
band-hut\~ occuPY the
time of a girl newlY arrlYed
In New y or1I City
(%)MOVIE
**'.i "Morocco" (1930)
Otty Coopw. Merlene
Ol81rk;h A woman 11
forced to chooM ~
the WMlth and ~
11on1 thll one man otters
end the love that enothef
offers.
t:00 8 ()) M 'A'8'H
K"nger b8COMM company
commander wMr'I Cotoll8I
Potter haa Iha oftoert and
entltted men ltlldl ~
for a day. (R)
D QIM<ME
··~ "Murd« In Te•H" (Par1 1) (1981) F.,rah
F•wcett, Kalhlflne Rou. A
-ithy Tuu o44mall Ml•
ou1 10 prove that ht.
daughter wu murdered by
h« huetland. plaltlc aur-
Q!Otl JOM Hiii (R)
U 'THATl INCMD18Ll
Fee1"'9d· the U S. Rublk'a
Cube Ghamplonahlp; 1 leg-
.... high ectlOOf athlete; •
t3·)'Hl-old maglelan: •
young water-Pier. (R)
• MVWOAtmN
"Sefety In Hollywood"
Accldenlt and lnju(IM eua.
talned during TV and film
production at• examined.
(Part 1)
(D)MOVIE **"'"The~ Con-
nec11on" (1973) 8f"°8 Lee.
Robert Bak•. A mwt\81
&rll atudent Ml• out lo
11wng9 Iha murder of hit
I~ In wNch a rtvel
ldlOOI w• lf\YOIWCI. 'A'
(%)MOW * * * "The Thirty-Nine Stepa" (1971) Robert Pow-
el, Oavkl warner A man
.,_.,_ the quarry Of
both 1118 pollCI end •
aecr•1 group of f<>teiOtl
agenll operating In Eng.
land wn.n he IS framed for
a 11ranger'1 murd«. 'PG'
11:00 e D 8 Cl>III a
NlW8 9 IATUROAY NIGHT
Hott: Buell Henry GUMI
Leon Redbonl. 8 't'OU ASKED FOR IT
F .. tured: "Ml8111me Wllll
An African S..pent" end
"The Human Dummy."
• w •A'l'H
A dltpOIHHed KOfMll
tamlly and a glfi with a GI
baby C8UM pt0blem8 fOf
Iha 4077111
• llENH't' Htl.L
Benny 11 lntervtewed by
prlyata 1n.....,1gator Nor-
man Cruddy .
"S1lety In Hollywood"
Aocldlntl and .,.,,.. .,.. ..... .,,... "' ......... pr.-..ion .,. .........
(Part 1)
• MOYll ***'"'"John And Mary" I 1Me) Du•tln Hoffman,
Mii Fen-. A men and •
womwi meet In • bar end
~ 24 hOutl together
ti.for• realtlltlo lhlly don.,
know each Olher'I "'"'418.
• MOVll **'"' "8onj0ur Tritt-" t 19511) David Nlv•n.
Det>c>rlll Kerr. A young gift
ac'*'1e8 10 ellmlnet• the
godmoll• WhO 1181 dlt-
NPllld her Mde1e •ta on
the French Rhller&.
• LOV!. AMUlllON4
STYLE
"In Slc:lu-And HMlth"
Paul 1111 a COl4 and hoPM
to •Uy II tlOfna -"' get
aome won. done.
9 MOVll
* • "Ou1r1g1" 11973)
Robert Culp, Marlyn
MalOt\. Teen-ager• terror-
UO MOVIE
• *~ "Little Oarllnga"
(1980) T•tum O'NMI. Ktle-
ty McNlchOI. Al aummer
camp, two ,..,,._. glttl
compete 10 -wflO wlll be
the hrl1 to loM her Ylfglrll-
'1._ 'R'
2:00 CZ) MOVIE * • "Richard'. Thing• ..
(t9811 UV UlfnwW'I. Aman-
da Redman 'R'
2!269 HEWS 2:30.NEWI 2:16 MOVIE **'A "Jull An Old s-1
Song" ( 1979) Robert
Hoolll, Cicely Tytc>n.
(B)MOVW
* * * "The Thltty-Hlnl
Stepe'' (Jt78) Robert Pow-
941, Da\lkl Wirf*. A men
~ the QUwry of
bOlh the palloe. and •
NCt'9I group of foreign
agenll operating In Eno-
leod wfien he " fr8IMCI tor
a 1tranger'1 mu<d«. 'PG'
JOHN DARLING
(1959) Glenn Fcitd, Donna
"-d. When h'fJO" Is kid-
napped. • ...att!y butlj.-
ne11m 1 n mull decide
wMth« to pay the raneom
Of wor'k with the police •
10:30 O * • "Nol>Od(t Per-
t.Ill" (1981) Ga.be Kapltll.
Alex Karraa. Tiit" unlikely
htfoea Ml out to battle the
red tape and bur~ecy
of city hall 'PO'
11:11(%) **'*"Mr.~ And
Roll" (1957) Chuca &eny,
Uone1 Hampton.A fabU-
lout IOok la Ulten et the
'!iOI end the beglnnlnge ol
rod! 'n' roll
12:00 G * * * "The Fabuloul
World Of ""'" v..-ne"
(199t) Louil Tod!, Er,_t
N8\lw&. A band of plf'atea
kidnap• an etomlc eden·
tlst to probe hie mllld tor ••YI to control the -.otld
by _. of atomic --
ID ***'i\"~Strill"
Out" ( 19571 Anthony Per-
lc:lnt. K8l1 Malden. Bolton
4:00 8 * • • "Permllalon To
Kill" ( 1975) ~ 8ogaf41.
Ave Gwdntlr. A W•tern
10Y tttemptt to ttymlt an
exiled INder'• plan to
rwtum to hie hOmal8nd and
ralty hi• people lo OUlt the
new dlc:tator.
• *'Al "A Sec*ate
PNoe" (1972) Pac1ter St•
veneon. Jotln Heyl. When •
prep echool lludent IVff•• • parel)'Zlng fall, ,.
roommate wrWtll8 with
hie own gull1 faallngl at>out
the acd41nt. 'PO'
4:30 CZ) ** • '"TM Confea. lllOn" (1970) V-Mon·
land. Simona Slgnore1.
Artur london'a forced
confeMlon eoct lrnprlM>n·
"*'1 ~ 4urtnO the
communlat pUt'Oe of 1951 .
1:00 aJ) * * * "ITO 5" (1M0)
J-Fond&. Dolly PartOfl.
Tllr" wortllflO women
rlt>ll egalnlt thllt 1UbJu-
oat1on by • "'* Clhau\llnlt1 bOaa. 'PG'
by Armstrong & Batluk
on 'People's Court' in session
"At fini the lack of liability an~ the chance 01 good:.~:i11 ~k!t.are good. meaty legal si~tions
frivolous complaints concerned me. says thWapn~ where I can explain pointa of law," he says. •When By F RED ROTHENBERG
A,T~Wl1*
NEW YORK -Now that Superman has Jone w the movies Robert Young hu been cann by
Sanka and ~u Grant's aubecription h~ n;tn out,
who's left on television w defend tcuth, JUBllce and
the American way? A C89e can be made for the honorable Judge
Joee h A. Wapner, who dilpel\lleS telew.ed justice
on .. frbe People's Court," while eager adversaries
tangle with trUth and .-ert the American right w
air one'• dirty linen in public. "My gut feelina la that ev~rybody'a ambltlon ii w be .een and thll It an opportunity robe-star for
a day '' ~ya Wapner, 62, a .retired Califomla. judge.
"Wha0t we have la real peo~le who prove that tcu\h
la stranger than lid.ion. We 11 never rWl out of cases.
People will always have problems."
"People'• Court." ~ ita eecond Jaear,
cull.a through the volwnlnoua pend1na small Ima ma in California and offert llttpnt.1 a chance w
\ell it u, the judge ... on TV. The aboW will air at
6:30 p.m. Sundayt, be8lnnilll Sept. 28, on Channel
7· The producers seek articulate. attractive
adverurift. They can ct.... any way ~y want. but
.,.. told ro avoid brown. which ~ t photoeraph
well. W ~ -·u-.. The uuaan• a&'ft VJ .xep\ .,.._. I I ......... ,
and th• ehow pa:)'_t &he judlclal award. plu• ·~money. &.endany, &here'• no rltk. only
the pc-'bllitv of nadonal humlllaUon.
'· I
"But how many r,eople get Judgments in e cou 1 was sitting in small claims c:ou.rt, I never coul~
and can't collect?' ,. ex lain my dedalona. We just .ent postcards wit~ The popularity of "People'• Court attests bro th: decision u, eliminate the pcmibility of physical
America'• affinity for eavesdropping on t e iol nee" . '
bickering couple next door. When the~ l.alig~ v eln ~ CMe, the defend.ant in a fender-bendef
or the cbaracten interesting. the result 18 ve y, brou&}lt Polaroid pictUttl that w~ toe> dark robe
legitimate theater. ... dilcernlble. "U he wanted w ~ his point, why Like "The Caae Of The Blrthday Stripper. didn't he take mo~ pic\ureer Another victory fol
The def endan\ hired a strippe r for her the plaintiff.
boyfriend'• birthday. The stripl>tr aued becau.e ahe Whkh 808 • UUle way toward evening TV't
wun't pe.ld. Among other thlngl, the def en~ legal 9COnCU'd al1.er yM.l'I of defenct.nt lnvtndbUi\Y,
contended that the plaintUf wore • blklnl botwm on "Peey MMon.''
rather than a lkimpler G -atrll'\I· She ~!fered pho~ "That thoW WMn'~ ...-1," ~ W!pner;. "Al
of her boyfriend and the stripper. He looka you can .-. courta aren t Nft thal way.
smUee ro me:• Ni4 Wapner.
Judpnent for the plainUff. ... A .. A. rnlde
It'• du• oommon....ente )attke ~t .-Wapner a national celebrity. with a Hollywood
atalut a)'!f\bol: hi• own fan club. The 1bow 11
~-in 131 marM\a. The ellver-Ml* wtenn of 20 )'Mn'~
bench looks like the )Jelle central e111Un1
have sent ove,r. K• INW up in Hollywood aid dae.d
Lena T\lmer. Kii !ath« wu a pr8Cdcina a\10l'IWY
on TV't "06\l'Ott'e c.ourt."
Bul WapMf dolln'l primp « down f« the cameru. "I'm not an enten&Lner. rm• Judae. P'ft
and .tmple," he •YI· "Whal you .. ti WUl ~
pt. There'• ablolutely no rehMnal. no c:d':!n ~the Jokes are no ~. It'• my fault. If the no
I
8 TINNIS
LESSONS
'20"
llllJPHlt
MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 1982
ullpen coines to
• ~ CUM' SEEDEN tM Delft Not la.ft
Tommy John basically laid it on the line for
anager Gene Mauch Sunday afternoon.
The veteran right-hander, touched by three,
Jdngles and a double in the top of the eighth inning
by the Toronto Blue Jays, told hJs manager It was
limb for someone to come out of the Angel bullpen
~d hold on to a shaky 3-2 lead.
• "I told Gene 1 would rather win the ball game
~han go nine," John said later.
A complete game would have been nice, as far
k.$ Mauch was concerned. But as it turned out, some
nifty relief work from Luis Sanchez a.nd John Curtis was a real day brightener.
1 Thanks to that duo, the Angels departed for•
cago Sunday afternoon with a 3-2 victory over
Blue Jays to finish the homestand with a 4-2
tnark and remain on e game behind American
I
Quit? Jimbo
I '1oesn 't know
• ~hat it means
' r1 .:c·~fc2!.~~y
: You'd have to have buttermilk
)nstead of blood coursing through
~our veins not to have gotten a
tousing c harge out of Jimmy
,:::Onnors' fourth U.S . Open tennis
~lctory Sunday at Flushing
p ieadow.
1 The little guy with the aching
E
ck and spindly legs s howed m. Twenty thousand spectators
ent ecstatically mad and TV
ts jwnped acr06S the land. '"'
I The aging comebacker, whom
tennis galleries once loved to ~ate, brought the crowd in the
ed stadiwn stands leaping to
eet in the final moments of
dramatic four-set triumph
~ver Ivan Lendl, the grim,
ollow -c he e k ed young
zechoslovakian, who 24 hours ~arlier had humiliated three-time ·
inner John McEnroe.
Few conceded the 5-10,
~50-pound Connors a chance
gainst Lendt, who blasts 112
ph serves and hits incessant
'ledgehammer shots off both
wings until his foe -as in the
fase of McEnroe Saturday -
p~es up in. sheer frustration.
t Hut Lendl, only 22, was not
laying McEnroe this time. He
as playing 01' Jimbo, the alley
fighter, by his own ad~ion at
the crossroads of his career at age
30, but a guy who has never
(ound the word "quit" in a
~ctionary.
League Weat Oiviaion-leading Kan.sa.a City Royala.
Sanchez entered the game In the eighth with
Blue Jays on fl.rat and third and none out. He got
pinch-hitter Hosken Powell to ground to first and
then eerved up, a perfect double play ball to Wayne
Nordhagen whlch Doug DeCinces and Rob Wilfong
executea to perfection.
Curtis emerged from the bullpen in the ninth
after Sanchez had walked Al WoOds to open the
inning, and retired the next three batters, two on
strikeouts, to earn his first save In an Angel
uniform.
Such a performance from his bullpen will
make the flight to Chicago a pleasant one for
Mauch, whose troops will begin a three-game series
with the White Sox today and then move on for
four games ~ainst the Blue Jays in Toronto.
''The thrill is winning. especially because it's
the last part of the season and when I looked up on
In the end, it was a victory for
tr it and gristle, guts and
C8ee JIMBO, Page CZ)
J immy Connors ma kes contact o n return
against Ivan Lendl in U.S. O pen Sunday.
ClASSlfllD C7
\he board and saw Kansas City waa beating
Minnesota, I said to myself, 'now you've really got
to l(et on your game and keep It in gear'," J.ohn aaid.
John retired the first nine Blue Jays he faced
before Garth lorg opened the fourth with a single.
Hls counterpart for !I'oronto, meanwhJle, found the
early going a bit tougher.
Jim Clancy, a hard-throwing right-hander, was
touched for back-to-back doubles by Reggie
Jackson and Doug DeClnces in the second inilfng
for one run. One out later, Juan Beniquez whacked
a double to make it 2-0.
Again, it was DeCinces in the third inning with an RBl hit, this one another double which scored
Rod Carew who had singled.
After that, the Angel bats were quiet as Clancy
did not allow a hJt over the next five innings. His
strong pecfonnance gave the Blue Jays hope and
they finally got to John for two runs in the el~hth.
3-2
"Thia team has three real strong pitchers and
they'll last all night," said DeCinces. "We've seen
that the last two games. We got to them early and
that was lucky because when they get into a groove,
you're in trouble."
"When he (Clancy) is on like he can be, you
have to be on your game, too," added John.
John, acquired from the Yankees Aug. 31,
responded by allowing eight h its and walking one
to earn his 12th victory against 11 defeats this
season.
Sanchez also responded it what he considered
the biggest situation in his major league career.
"f knew I had to deal with that inning. It was
very crucial at the moment," Sanchez said through
an interpreter. "l felt that wa& the turning point of
the game with no outs and a couple of men on. I just
ISee ANGELS, Page CZ)
'No killer instinct'.1
Hanis unable to hold 23-point lead
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Rams Coach Ray
Malavasi says a meaner instinct might have kept
Green Bay from what Packer quarterback Lynn
Dickey called heading nowhere but up.
"Maybe we didn't have enough killer Instinct,"
Malavasi remarked after the Packen opened their
National Football League regular season by falling
behind the Rams 23-0, getting jeered by Milwaukee
County Stadium spectators, then winning 35-23
with the help of three Dickey touchdown passes
Sunday.
"When you. get a team down, you have got to
stomp all over them," Malavasi said. ''They get paid
too, and they are a pretty good football team. They
just wouldn't say die."
DICKEY WAS BOOED at halftime after
fumbling twice and throwing two pass
interceptions.
"I played poorly mentally and physically in the
first half," Dickey said. "U I were the coach, I don't
know if I wouldn't have taken myself out."
Packer halfback Eddie Lee Ivery, having had
two rounds of knee surgery In three years, carried
17 times and gained 109 yards.
Ivery scored a third-quarter touchdown to
narrow the Rams' lead to 23-14 and llCOred the final
TD on a 27-yard dash up the middle with 3:06 left in the game.
It was in the middle where Dickey also found
tight end Paul CoUman on a 10-yard llCOring pass
with 11 :12 left to put Green Bay out front 28-23.
"They were doubling on James Lofton and
Johnny Jefferaon, so that opened Paul in the
middle," Dickey said, refering to Green Bay's two
standout wide receivers. "'that is a good play
against rnoet teams."
"THEY MADE BIG plays in the second half
and we didn't," Malavasi said.
Malavasl particularly cited Guy Prather's
recovery for the Packers on the Rams' 10-yard line
after Robert Alexander fumbled a kickoff. It set up
Coffman's go-ahead touchdown catch from Dickey
a play later.
Sunday's NFL scores
Green Bay 35, Rams 23
Raiders 23, San Francisco 17
Detroit 17, Chicago 10
Cincinnati 27, Houston 6
Buffalo 14, Kansas City 9
St. Louis 21, New Orleans 7
Minnesota 17, Tampa Bay 10
Washington 37, Philadelphia 34 (ot)
Atlanta 16, NY Giants 14
New England 24, Baltimore 13
Miami 45, NY Jets 28
Cleveland 21. Seattle 7
San Die~o 23, Denver 3
Tonight'• Game
Pittsburgh at Dallas (Channel 7 at 6)
(NFL roundup, summaries, Page CO
Alexander said the ball may have been
stripped from him by an unidentified Packer.
Whatever happened, he said, the game tempo
shifted.
"Everybody could see the momentum
changing," Alexander said. "When that happens,
vou have to get it back, and we didn't do it."
Quarterback Bert Jones, in an impressive
Rams' debut with 202 yards and a touchdown on 17
completed passes out of 31 tries. denied his club
grew lazy because of the halftime lead.
''The game plan did not change," Jones said.
"We didn't execute. I don't think it was them. We
just didn't get it done."
THE RAMS LED 7-0 on Wendell Tyler's
4-yard touchdown run in the opening quarter, and
Mike Lansford added the first of three field goals.
Connors solidifies his No. I status Es. Open champ figures to c ut back on tennis, now that he's on top
They led 17-0 on an 8-yard Jones throw to
tight end Mike Barber in the seoond quarter, and
made it 20-0 on Lansford's second field goal.
Linebacker Carl Ekern's pass interception set
up Lansford's 28-yard field goa.1 on the final play of
the first half, making it 23-0.
: NEW YORK (AP) -For Jimmy Connors, king
Fain of the U.S . Open and all of tennis, the trip
k to the top is more satisfying. And now that
y be enough.
Connors, as precise and emotional at 30 as he
._,as at 26, U8ed his entire repertoire of pinpoint
biota, bouncing them off the bounda.r1es time and
'gain to wipe out stony-faced Ivan Lendl of
Czechoslovakia, 6-3, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 in the U.S . Open
final at the National Tennis C.enter Sunday.
won the Open in 1974, 1976 and 1978. "I have to
think it out. My whole life bas been dedicated to
tennis. I've got a wife and family and a lot of
busl.neaes I'd like to get into. I may be cutting back
my tchedule."
The left-hander did a workmanlike job on
Lendl, baffling and befuddling his younger
opponent with an aseortment of ahota that time and
again landed just inside the white lines.
Connon, who celebrated his 30th birthday
during the Open, had dipped in the world rankings
the last couple of years, passed by younger playen
like John McEnroe and B/!>m Borg. "I wanted to
get back to No. l ," he sad.• I liked the view from up
there."
I The women's crown at the Open was won
$aturday by Chris Evert Lloyd, who played
textbook tennis beating Czechoslovakia's Hana
~andlikova, 6-3, 6-1.
: It was the fourth Open crown for Connors,
fibo is alto the reigning Wimbledon champion, and
eelldified his atatus as No. 1 in the computer
rankings of the world's playen.
"When I won before, everybody thought I
cSuld,'' Connors said. "When I won now, everybody
thought I couldn't. That's pretty sallalying ."
cdnnon said he may cut back on his tennis now
that he'• No. 1 again.
So he aet out on that quest and took a giant
step in that direction when he beat McEnroe at
Wimbledon, winning that crown for the third time.
''That WU my goel,'' he said, "to win Wimbledon
once more, and l did it."
"I'm at a crossroads," Connon aaid, who aho
Coming into the Open, McEnroe remained No.
1 in the world, followed by Connors and Lendl,
who had won 44 conaecutive matches after last
A.stros rotten as spoilers
l)odg ers return home still a hall-game out alter s weep
said Lillia. "We're angry now.
We've tJOt to do aomethlna·"
Le» AJlCeles, wbkh ha ltt 18
remainlna 1amea on the West
Cout, completed a S-2 roed trip
that saw the Dod1era a atn •
same on the Bravet d eaplte
1o11ina two pma to Atlanta.
''I'm happy," uid Le» An,elea
•kip per Tom Luorda. ''I waa
hoptng to 10 beck in fim p.laa!,
but how can I oomJ>lainT'
Flnt.-bueman Steve Garvey,
who knocked in thQ!e t\lDI with
a pair of llncJte, la hqpeful the
Dodi er• can contin ue t heir
wfnnlnC wa)'I In more friendly
telTiCOl'y.
"rm Just happy wtth the three rww hen," GU"V9Y laid. "And to
me.k out of t.oWn, and p\ beck
to the Wett eo.t to f1Nlh up."
Loe ~ playa 13 Pft'!9 at
home , with t h ree at San
Francis::o and two in San Dlego.
The Aalr09 took an Mrly lead
In t he fint innln 1 o n Ray
Kniaht'• ucriflce fly and Alan
Aahby'1 run-ecoring alnlle, but
the Dod1ers exploded for five
runa in the fourth lnninc.
Garvey'• two-run 1tn1le, a aacrlfEy by Mike Marshall,
and a Nil ptnch double by
JC* p ve the Dodaen
all the rww they needed and sent
Hou aton d own to ltt fourth
t'OhleC:Utive defeat.
Houston added a nm In the
tourth on an RBI alncJe by Scott
~ackl, but the Dodaen matched
that In the fifth on Garvey'•
run«U9.n1 """9· Dave Stewart, 9-7, reUeved
ttaner IUeky ~n.ht to eem \be
(IM DODOIU. .... CI>
year's Open but sat out Wimbledon. All three sailed
into the aemilinals of the tournament along with
No. 4 Guillermo Vil•s of Argentina. Connors
eliminated Vilas and Lendt defeated McEnroe,
aetting up the final.
Dickey converted eight of 12 passes in the
second half for 157 yards and three touchdowns. He
was 17-of-27 overall for 237 yards. His fourth-
quarter TD passes, of 15 yards to Lofton and 10 to
Coffman were 17 seconds apart.
In the third quarter, a 4-yard touchdown pass
to Coffman preceded Ivery's first touchdown.
Leroy l"in or the Rama ii upended aa he retum1 punt a1al111t
Packen. Green Bay rallied from a 23-0 deliclt to win.
p ••
\ Orang• Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, S•ptemb•r 13, 1912 .... ----~~~~------------....
Monday Night fans
hold services tonight·
From AP dl1patcbe1
NEW YORK -When the al
Pittsburgh Steelers face the Dallas •. •
Cowboys In prime time Monday
night, the "Rev" of the Church of
Monday Night Football will open the season
with a holy huddle in a Santa Barbara tavern.
The "Three Wisemen" la the·ABC pre$$ box
will call the plays. The "Rev" and his three
"Wise Guys" wiU baptize a few new members,
sip some "secular suds" and generally try to
observe the church's First Commandment:
"Thou shalt keep Monday night holy . . .
and tune in early."
Sports fans are a devoted lot, and more than
20 million television sets. on average, tuned in
last year to at least part of ABC's prime time
football games which posted their best ratings
ever, the network says.
There are other fan clubs, but for three
years the Church of Monday Night Football has
been one of the more devoted sects. It has set up
"parishes" in about 15 taverns and has signed
4,000 or so members, from as far away as Guam
and Saskatchewan.
Quote of the day
"It's tough for a guy who's been that
good to realize how tou~h it is for players
who aren't that good.' -San Francisco
Giants pitcher Gary Lavelle, in evaluation
of se<.'Ond-year manager Frank Robinson.
Steelers. Cowboys open season tonight
IRVING. Texas -When the [il
Pittsburgh Steelers_and Dallas ••• Cowboys collide tonight in a National
Football League opener, the spotlight
will be on a quarterback who has been to the
Super &wl numerous times and one who wants
despel"ately to take his team there at least once.
Terry Bradshaw, the 13-year Steeler
stalwart who has the rings from four winning
Super &wls, will lead Pittsburgh.
Danny White, who has twice taken Dallas to
within a game of the Super &wl as National
Conference runners-up, will guide the Cowboys.
"Bradshaw is like fine old wine . . . he just
keeps getting better," sald Steeler Coach Chuck
Noll on the eve of the nationally televised
meeting.
White, the heir to retired Roger Staubach,
said, "I won't considet my career complete until I
take this team to the Super &wl and win it.
That's my goal and will be until I do it."
Under Staubach, the Cowboys won two
Super &wls.
Washington's clutch hit lifts Atlanta
Claudell Washington lined a a two-out, two-run single off reliever
Ben Hayes to give Atlanta a come-
f ro m -be hi11d 4 -3 victory over
Cincinnati Sunday. The victory helped the
Braves maintain a half-game lead over the
Dodgers in the National League West ...
Elsewhere in the NL, Dave Kingman drove -in a
pair of runs with a single and sacrifice fly, Brian
Giles and Bruce Bocby
smashed consecutive homers,
and Pete Falcone fired a
three-hitter to lead the New
York Mets to a 4-1 triumph
over St. Louis. Despite the
setback, the Cardinals held
on to first place in the East by
• a half -game over
Philadelphia, which lost to
Pittsburgh . . . In the
WAaHINOTON Pirates' 4-2 win, Dale Berra
knocked in three runs with a bases-loaded
double in the sixth inning and Dave Parker,
returning to the starting lineup for the first time
since July 28, had three hits and scored two of
the Pirates' runs . . . Cbrl1 Spelu drove in
four runs as Montreal hammered Chicago, 11 -3,
to complete a three-game sweep of their
weekend series.
Kan1a1 City offenH In high gear
AmH Ost. drilled • lwo run •• 1tn1l• ind Hal McRae added a
eecrlfict fly durtna • three-.run 8'xth
lMiftl and KanMa City went on to
bitter Ml.M~ 18-7, bfhlnd a 20-hlt anack.
The Roy&i., w~ttalltd at ono ume durtn1 the
1ame 7-1, had four home runt In the aamc,
fncludlna two by Wlllle AlkeH, and nJn doublt.1a
. . . Kelvla Moore, Mike Heatb and Jimmy
Sexton drove In run. In the
llC!COnd Inning nd Oakland
snapped a 1rx-game losing
streak with • 4-2 victory over
Chicago, pushing the White
Sox 4 ~ games behind Kansas
City In the Westerpl Division
. . . RJck Sutcliffe fired a
three-hitter and outlasted
Jlm Palmer a nd Mike
Fl1cblln'1 run-scoring single
om in the eighth Inning broke a
scoreless Ue as Cleveland blanked Ba.ltfmore, 3-0
. . . Dwl1bt Eva'ns and Gary Allenson
knocked In three runs each to lead a 15-hlt att.ack
that powered Boston to a 10-7 win over Detroit
Roy Sm alley'• one-out, bases-loaded
single in the ninth Inning scored the winning run
as New York shaded Milwaukee. 9-8 ... Bob
Stoddard and Biii Caudill combined on a four-
hitter in Seattle's 1-0 win over Texas.
Baseball today
On this date in baseball in 1978:
Alt.er once trailing the Boston Red Sox
by 14 games, the New York Yankees
moved into undisputed possession of flrst
place in the American League East for the
first time all season with a 7-3 victory at
Detroit.
On this dale in 1971:
Baltimore's Frank Robinson belted his
500th career home run, a ninth-inning shot
off Fred Scherman, in the second game of
t he Orioles' double-header split with
Detroit.
On this date in 1936:
Cleveland's &b Feller set an American
League record by striking out 18
Philadelphia A's in a 5-3 Indian victory.
On this date in 1932:
Joe McCarthy became the first manager
to win pennants In both major leagues as
hia New York Yankees clinched the
American League flag.
Today's birthday:
Baltimore Orioles catcher Rich Dempsey
is 33.
Glider pulls away to win Boston Classic
Veteran Bob Gilder charged into l!I
the lead with birdies on the 60th and
61st holes and outdistanced the field-
with steady pressure golf the rest of
the way Sunday for a two-stroke victory in the
Bank of Boston Classic in Sutton, Mass. Gilder
fired a final-round 67 for a 72-hole score of 271 ,
13-under par ... Former U.S. Open champion
Sandra Spuzlcb fired a 5-under·par 67 to win the
top prize in the Mary Kay Classic and become
the oldest player to capture t wo LPGA
tournaments in one year . . . Curtis Strange
shot a 5-under-par ti'/ tu a course record to lead
the United States to a 1.3 victory over Sweden
in an unofficial team golf match in Malmo,
Swe den . . . Third-round leader Pete
Jzumlkawa of Japan was declared the winner of
the Suntory Open in Inzai, Japan after heavy
rain and strong winds forced cancellation of
Sunday's final round.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: vvvv excellent; vvv
worth watching; v v fair; v forget it.
9 6 p.m., Channel 7 v v v
NFL FOOTBALL: Pittsburgh at Dallas.
Annoancera: Frank Griffith, Howard Cosell
and Don Meredith .
The quarterbacks will be spotlighted for
tonight's debut of Monday Night Football. Terry
Bradshaw will direct the offense of the visiting
Steelers, while Danny White guides the
Cowboys. Dallas has won 17 straight opening day
games.
RADIO
Baseball -Toronto at Angels, 1 p.m ..
KM.PC (710); Dodgers at Houston, 3 p.m., KABC
(790).
Football -Rams at Green Bay. 10 a.m.,
KMPC (710); Raiders at San Francisco, 1 p.m .,
KNX (1070).
DODGERS • • JIMBO NO QUITTER • • •
From Page C1
pitching victory. Frank DiPino,
1-1, took the loss in his second
major-league start.
The Dodgers open a
bornestand at 7:30 tonight against
th e Padres with Bob Welch
(15-10) slated to go against Juan
Eichelberger (7-12). The Aatroe
open a three-game aeries next
weekend.
Natlonel League Weit
W L Pct. 08
Atlanta 80 63 .559
Dodger• 80 14 .sse 'II
GAMH MllAINNG
ATLANTA (19) -HOME (8): Sept. 13, 14.
16, Houtlon; Sept 24, 25, 28. San Diego. -,WAY (13): ~I. 17, 18, 19, Clnclnnetl; a.pt.
20. 21, 22, Ho11a1on: Sapl. 27, 21, San
Fflll'daco: Sept. zt. ao. ~Oct."'· i. Sin'*°°·
DC>Oo.Re (II) -HOME (13)t a.pt. 13, 14, 16, San Diego: Sept. 17, ,8, 19, HOUiton;
a.pt. 24, 25, 28. 8an Francteoo: hot. U . 28,
Clnclnnall: hot. 29, 30, Allellta. AWAY (5):
Sepl. 21. 22. San Diego; 0c1. 1. 2. s. sen Fr8"Clec:o.
Coetzee eyes crown
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
-South African h eavywelght
Gerry Coetsee hopes hla lf!IClOnd.
round knockout of Stan Ward
puta h1m in line for • third lhot
at the World Boxin1 A..odaUon
),.vyweilht erown.
c.oeuiee, who wu knocked out
by Mlkf WNWI' when \hey met
two yean aao. wanta 1 rematch
wi&h the WBA champion.
From Page C1
gambling instincts over youth,
power and iron c:Uscipline.
"I never go for the middle of
the court," Connors Mid. "I shoot
for the lines. If anybody is going
to beat me, he has to beat me
going all out."
The match was a stark oontrast
to the semifinal between
McEnroe and Lendl in w hich
Lendl's power destroyed the
artistry of the man acclaimed by
some to be the finest talent in the
game.
McEnroe never broke tervice.
He was pinned to the buellne by
Lendl's whirlwind attack. Before
the match was halfway over.
McEnroe WU beefing over line
calls, feuding with TV
cameramen, lettinl out yelps of
. disgust and u.ing flCketa.
Sis sh oulders 1lumped. Hia
head fell 1o his chest. Repeatedly
he railed his anne in delpair. He
wu so overwhelmed that If It
had been a boxing match, h
would have been etopped.
"My dad alwaya 1olcl me never
to show emotion on the court,"
said marvelou1 Chrl1 Evert
Lloyd, who won her 11.xth ladies'
cr own. "He Hid It 1ave the
opponenta more confidence."
There WM no whJnlRg from
Connon lb the men'• fl.rial. Hll
lipe ~tly aet, hll fam fl"OIM'a in
concentr1tlon, he Immediately
took the battle to Lendt and
dared the hard-hlttina Clech to
do hit wont. •
'tbe lteely Lendl took the dare
and eame out lluatna. But he
found hlmseU against a 1Crappy
old warrior who could t.ake his
hardest licks and respond in
double measure.
Grunung,acooting,scrambling
for every shot, sometimes flying
through the air, Connoni quickly
took the initiative away from
Lend). who had won 10
tournaments and 228 matches
agaiNt nine defeat.a during the
put year.
Within an hour, he had broken
Lendl'a grooved power and won '
the first two .eta 6-3, 6-2. A look
of wonder and desperation
ahowed up ln the dark, sunken
eyes of the year'• ~t successful
player.
Connon lost the third .et 6-4,
and, upetalrs ln the TV booth,
John Newcombe, a former
champion who had picked Lendl
to win, commented: "J immy
suffered back pains and near-lea
crampe in hia eemlfinal match. ft
may be a different ballgame
now."
Jimbo MYWI' heard a word of
It. U. blpn hltttna the ball all
the harcJer and teklng more
chancel.. 'Jiae l"elUlt WU furious ralU• and IOIDe of the fin est
lhot:I the old ()pm Md ever .een .
1n the 1eventh 1ame of the
fourth 1et, Lendl bit 1 1maah
directly et Connon at close
ranee. Connors upbraid~ him
and walked beick to t.M '-line
.Ull polnti"I a flnatt with the
1pperent admontUon. "You
watch out."
Never temporlllna, Connon
won the elpth pme to IO up
&-3.
Broken play
Boston's Jim Rice cores run Sunday as Detroit's Lance Parrish
drop throw. Boston won, 10-7, to pare Milwaukee's lead to three.
ANGELS BULLPEN SHARP . • •
From Page C1 . tried to pitch ms1de to those right-handers."
Curlis. meanwhile. a transplant from the
National LeaRUe who was acquired from San Diego
the same day John came to the Angels, adnutt.ed it's
too late in the season to know everything about
every hitter he's going to face. ,
"It's aU a matter of attitude and I think that's
what Gene had on his mind today," the left-hander
said. "1 really don't think I'm at any more of a
disadvantage than the hitters. They naven't seen
me, either.
"I really have no idea if these guys can hit. I
watch (Bob) &one's gJove and make the hitters
come to'me. If they get a hit, well, it's a learning
experience.'' CurtJs added. "I do feel real good
about saving the game for Tommy."
John was lrylng to record a third straight
complete game after Ken Forsch and GeoCf Zahn
had gone the distance in the first two games against
the Blue Jays.
Had he been successful, tt would have marked
the first time slnce Sept. 22-25 that Angel starters
turned in three or more complete games in a row.
Chris Knapp; Dave Frost. Nolan Ryan and Frank
Tanana were the route-goers durmg that stretch.
The Angels set a smgle-sea'Son attendance
record Sunday of 2,526,367. But the next seven
games will be witnessed by enemy Cans in the
Angels' next-to-last road trip of the regular season.
"We have about 13 players who've been in
World Series, and that experience really helps out
now," noted DeCinces. "In a pressure situation like
the last two innings today, experience hel~ you
perform. There's no room for mistakes."
While the Angels and White Sox go head-to-
head beginning tonight, the Royals and Seattle
Mariners will be opening a three-game set in
Kansas City.
By losing to Oakland S unday. the White Sox
are now 4 1h games behind the Royals, and the
Angels know they carl\drop them from the pennant
race with a good showing In the Wa.ndy City.
NFL standings
American League Weat
W L Pct.
81 61 .587
GB
Kansas City
Angela
Chicago
80 62 .563 1
76 65 .539 4112
QAMEI ftDllAtfMG
KANUS CITY (21) -HOME (11)· Sept. 13, 14. 15, 16, S..ttkt: &.pt. 27, 28. 29, Angela: Sept. 30. Oct. I. 2. 3. Oakllllld.
AWAY (9)': Sepl, 17. 18, 19, Mlnnaota: Sc19t. 20, 21. 22. Angels.
sept. 24, 25, ff. Oakland
ANGILSC20)-HOME(&)• Sept. 20, 2t, 22, KanauClty; Oc:I.
t, 2, 3, T-. AWAY (t4) Sept 13, 14, t5, Chleago: Seot. 16.
t7. 18. 19.TOfonto,Sept 23.24,25.26, TaK .. ;5epl.27.~8.29.
Kan ... City.
CHICAGO (21) -HOME ( t4) s.pt. t3. 14, 15. Angel.a; Sept
1S. 17. 16. t9, O•t9nd; Sept 24, 25. 26. Mlnneaola; Sept 27,
28. 29. Seetlle AWAY (71· Sept 20. 21. 22. 23.Seetlle: Oct. I, 2,
3. MinlMllOtL
But they're also looking for a repeat of what
they did this w eekend to the Blue Jays next
weekend in Toronto.
"Traditionally. if you can split with the team
you're really fighting -like Kansas City -that's
fine," John analyzed. "Then it comes down to the
teams you're supposed to beat." * r
ANQfl NOTES: ,_..... Jedi-. le .in.Ing from 19nd•tltll In his
lel1 wrltt and may miff tonlgllt't game with the Chic:aQo Whit• Soit.
Jedlaon. wtlO doublad and tingled Sunct-v. played wllh II& wrist heavily I~ and rec:oelYed an ln)ec:lfon attar the uama ... ,.,.. beerl bothered by
II ror about lhe lut thraa WMkt ... Illa right-field« Mid atter Illa oama . . • SacorlO baMman 1k1t1bJ Grlc:tl, IManWtlh. thould be raacfy lo
play tonight attar miffing the 1 .. 1 two gamea whlla ""'9ring trom lhe flu
. . . 8rltt lurne, who WU Kheduled lo be Iha Chicago alerter
1on1ghl. le ttlll bothered by a IOI'• arm and will ba r~ by Ndlard Dot-(11-11). Doi.on will~ 1111111• Wltt(8-5). TUMday•e gamewlll
find O.nnlt Lamp 19·7) going agalnll Geoff z.11111 (16-7). whlla
Wadneldey'1 matchup It Mf'f k-(M) ~I ktlfl f«KI\.
. • . Sunday' a gama was p)ayed with )ual llVM umc>lrW. Dellle PAltla
wee Injured Salurdey night In a c:olllllon at 11"1 btlle wl1h lhe 8lua Jays'
WllMa UpaMw . . . fommr Joftn'• 1 .. 1 Ylc:tOtY Ill Anaheim Sladlum
occurred on May 1, 1979wnenhewu11111 • m.mbar of the Yank-. In
that gama, ha pllched ~ lnnlngl In rtllel In a 12-8 Yankaa \llc:tOfY. The
Yank ... ttartar In that GlllM ... LW. TIMt, now an Angel. And 1he
olfentlve leedert for tilt Yank-In that:::;:: none Olher then ....... Jedi-(two dou~) 9nd Juan Ca IOlo home rvn)
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE w L Pct. PF PA West Dlvl1loD
Atlant.a l 0 1.000 16 14 w L Pct. PF
New Orleans 0 1 .000
Rama 0 1 .000
San Francisco 0 1 .000
East Dlvlsloa
Washington 1 0 1.000
Dallas 0 0 .000
St. Louis 1 0 1.000
Philadelphia 0 1 .000
N.Y. Giant.a 0 1 .000
CentraJ Division
Green Bay 1 0 1.000
Detroit l 0 1.000
Minneaot.a 1 0 1.000
Chicago 0 1 .000
Tampa Bay 0 1 .000
~·leotM 0.-Sey 35, "-23
7
23
17
37
0
21
34
14
35
17
17
10
10
Loe Anoe!N Raider• 23, San Frena-t7 Oetrolt 17, CNcego 10 Clnclnnetl 27, Holleton I lluflelo t4, 1(41MU City.
SI. L°"'9 21, Haw Ot-1 ~· 17. Tempe Sey 10 Weehlnglon 37, l'Mede4pllle )4 (Oii Attenle tt, N4IW YOfll Olante t4
.... EnQlend 24. 1111111-11 M1anM 41, Haw YOfll Jell H ~ 21. a..ttla 7 a... OleoO 23, o.n-a
TaM9M'•O-
PttltbllfQll et Oe11ee (Ch-1 et II
21 San Diego 1 0 1.000
35 L.A. Raiders 1 0 1.000
23 Kansas City 0 1 .000
Seattle 0 1 .000
34 Denver 0 1 .000
0 East Dlvtalon
7 Miami 1 0 1.000
37 New England 1 0 1.000
16 Buffalo l 0 1.000
N.Y. Jet.a 0 1 .000
23 Baltimore 0 1 .000
10 . Centre) Dlvtatoa
10 Cincinnati l 0 1.000
17 Cleveland 1 0 1.000
17 Pittsburgh 0 0 .000
Houston 0 1 .000
2626 Harttor ltvd., Ce1t• Me .. ..... ., ...
23
23
9
7
3
4~
24
14
28
13
27
21
0
6
PA
3
17
14
21
23
28
13
9
45
24
6
7
0
27
I
JOHNSON
&SON
presents ...
llFL ,. ......... ...
DaHa•
over
Pittsburgh
•
Orengt Co11t DAIL y PILOT /Monday, September 13, 1982
Greer's finish does it .
He wins Will Jordan tourney b y one s troke
Dally Piiot Photoe by Alch.,d KMhler
Brad Greer of Huntington Beach captured the Will Jordan Classic
golf tournament at the 16th ho le (left ) and 18th (right)
Sunday at Costa Mesa Golf Cour e.
·Marina falls froil1 top spot
Marina High's Vikings were
victorious in the their first 1982
non-league football st.art, but a
10-8 victory over unh~ralded
Newport Harbor wasn't enough
to protect a No. 1 ranking.
Servite, which was idle while
preparing for its trip to
Cincinnati Moeller, has vaulted
into the top spot, while Marina
dropped to the No. 2 berth after
narrowly escaping the upset bug
at Newport Harbor Friday night,
10-8.
It took a desperation drive in
the final seconds to get Marina
within range of a field goal ,
where Eric Karman booted a
37-yarder with four seconds left
to pull out the victory over a
junior -dominated Newport
eleven.
This week's football slate
HIOH SCHOOL
Thie week'a actMdute ,_......,.,
TMURIOAV
Ea1tncl1 vs. L.agune Hiiie II Mlaelon Vle)o s.nueoo vs Cost• MeM et Newport Herb·
Of Santa Allll ¥S.. ~ at SA Bowl
CaplatraQO Vt lley n Eaperanze •t
v~ UnlYwllty VII Tustin 11 !Nine
Lot "'amltoe at Huntington BMCh
K1tt111 va. VIiia Peril 11 La Palme Peril
El MOCllN VII. l(tnneOy II W•tem
Califomll 11 la Ribre
Newpot1 Ctwte11an et lludlley (2:30 p m I
FRIOAV
Fountlln Valley VII, Foothill II T ustln
Marina at Sin Lula Obispo
Westminster vs Pactllca at Garden Grove
L• Quinta VII Ocean v-at Westmmste<
CYI><-11 ~ H81b0t Corona dtl Mer at San Clement•
WoodbrldQe at lrvlne
MIUion Vlilto et El T04'o
Laguna tech vs Savanna at Weste<n
Dos Pueblos vs Mater Del II SA Bowl
LOyola at St Paul
8itllop Montgomery II Serra
Canyon vs El Dorado at ValenGI•
Loar• vs Anaheim at La Palma Park
Buena Perk •t Bolsa Grallde Gatdan Grove vs Orat1941 •I fl Modena
Rancho Alamitos at Ba-t
Valenc<a at Full«ton
Weste<n vs Sonora at La Habra
B•ea·OIOnd• •• Sunny HUis .. Buen• Parle Troy vs C..rotot at Gahr (Elght·mM)
lnlanCI Chrlttlen vs. Lltllfly Christian et Mlle Square Park ( 1 p.m.)
Newport Ctwltllan et ~lltey t2 30 P m I
IAT\MOAV
Edlaon at Vlate ti p.m.)
Plu• X at Oen• Hiiia ( 1 p m.)
Loa Amlg09 vs. Magnolia et La Pill<NI Park
Cotton va Santa Allll Valley at SA 8oWI 81"'°1> Amat vs. Mull al La Canida
Servi!• at MOiier (10:30 • m.)
(Elght ...... n)
Ceplatrano Valley Chrl1t1an v1. Pacific CMallen at Eagle Rod< High ( 1 p m.)
(all gem11 et 7'.30 unlMa othenw!M noted)
Edison, although extended on
the scoreboard by El Dorado
( 10-7). remains in the No. 3 slot.
one notch ahead of Foothill.
Foo thill made the biggest
jump, going from No. 7 to No. 4
off its 14-6 victory at Capistrano
Valley, which saw its stock
tumble from No. 4 to No. 10.
OnJy one newcomer 1s in this
week's Top 10, that goes to the
Santa Ana Saints. who rolled
past Costa Mesa m their opener.
35-12, and are rated No. 9.
This week's menu includes five
blue chip games, including
Servitc at nationally renowned
Moeller (Saturday. 10:30 a.m.,
PDT) Edison at San Diego power
V1 sla (Saturday , 8 p .m.),
Fountain Valley vs. Foothill at
Tustin, El Toro a!. Mission Viejo
and Capistrano Valley at
Esperanza.
FoothilJ and Mission Viejo play
host on Friday. Esperanza awaits
Capo .on Thursday. each al 7:30
p.m *
DallJ Piiot Top 10
Orange County high ec:hool football
Poa. THm, record Neirt game
I Servlta (0·0) at Moeller (elnn )
2 Merine (l--0) 111 San Lula Obispo
3 Edison ( 1--0) ti Vlata
• FoothlM ( 1--0) Fountain Valley
5 El Mooena (1--0) at Kennedy
6 ~peranza (l-0) Capistrano Valle)' 7 Meter Del ( 1--0) Oo1 Pueblos
8. Minion Vle)o ( 1-0) El Toro
II Santa Ana ( 1--0) Saddlabactc 1c Ce~trano Valley((). I) at E11>«anz•
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Oftti. Dally Het ltan '
Long driving Brod GrcH•r
birdied two of the laa\ three
hole~ t o llniah with a
I -under-par 70 over the Los
Lagos t.'Oursc at the Cosw Mt.>sa
GoU and Country Club Sunday
afternoon to win the City of
Colt.a Mesa Wall Jordan Classic
golC tournament by a single shot.
Greer finished 7-under-par al
134.
Greer, a runner-up to formc>r
U.S. Amateur champion Mark
O'Meara two years ago, let the
tournament tiUe slip away on the
final hole that time when he
bogeyed and lost in a playoff on
the first extra hole.
HIS FATE was slmlJar to that
of Paul O'Shea who finish ed
second last year when his second
shot went <>ver the green and
Into a parking lot for an out-of-
bounds and a two-stroke penalty.
"I was thinking about that last
hole all the way today." Greer
admitted arter' winning the
tou.rrtament title with a perfectly
placed 7-iron second shot to the
green, some 25 yards to the left
or the cup. He knew all he had to
do was get down In two strokes
for a birdie to win the title from
Kevin Slater of San Diego
without a pla1.off.
Greer, 0 Shea and Greg
Twiggs who was caddying for
O'Shea, discussed Greer's pull
while waiting for another shot.
"They o.sked me if I was going
fort it or not. I told them, 'no way,
I'm going to lag up'."
His lag was perfect, coming to
a stop a foot short of the cup to
assure a birdie and a victory for
the forme r Long Beach State
golfer who is attending Golden
West College at the present time.
"I 've never won a city
tournament before," Greer said.
"I've woh a couple of West Coast
Amateur events and some junior
tournaments but never one this
big.
"A LOT OF people are afraid
to win. I was two years ago but
today I hit the seven iron on my
second shot on the 18th to the
green instead of in the trap in
front like I did two years ago.
"I'm going to try for my PGA
card next year and see what
happens."
If he does move to the PGA
tour, he will follow in some
iUustrious footsteps of other past
winners including those of
O'Meara and Scoll Simpson
whose father and brother both
played this year. The elder
Simpson (Joe). has played In
every one of the 10 tournaments
in Costa Mesa and was runner-up
to Scott when he won here. He
finished In a tie for sixth this
year.
Greer used an iron off the tee
on eight of the 18 holes Sunday
but when he used the driver. he
dtd it with authority.
On the par-5 14th hole, he
drove one into the rough beyond
the turn and then put his second
s hot on the green on the
577-yard layout. He birdied this
one, bogeyed the par-3 15th and
birdied the 16th to go into a tie
for the lead.
He felt he had it won when he
California skippers
score high marks
PIRATES PLATTER
POINT RICHMOND -California
(Area G) skippers scored high in all
three United States Yacht Racing
Union junior sailing championships
here.
Ron Rosenberg of Long Beach, and
crew Chris Redman, Jim MacLeod
and Rich Palaria, clinched a decisive
Sears Cup victory after the seventh of
eight races in the U.S . Junior Sailing
,BOATING
Championship hosted by Richmond
Yacht Club.
Winds were a little more
cooperative in the Santa Monica Bay
area where California Yacht Club
Inaugurated its Harris Series with a
day race known as the Squirrel Bank
race, and Del Rey got of( its Sunday
sk ippers race, the fifth in t h e
Tannenburg Series.
&th races were around the buoys
outside Marina del Rey and finished
in time for skippers and crews to
make the bars at both clubs.
Results:
CALN'ott•A YACHT CLU8 ..,.,,.. .... .__
• (Hatn9t.ftae)
Steak & Enchilada
Dinner Special
5:00 to 6:30 Daily
• Mike Sentovich of Los Alamitos
battled through the final two races to
win the Smythe Trophy for the
Jingle-handed junior sailing
championship.
IOR -1. Co«lr di lion, Ed Hart, Kl119 Harbor
Yacl1t Club; 2. Showllme, S Ballanllne-F. Cotrell, L-.••••••••••••••••••••I KHVC: 3. Leading Lady, Hubie end Sandy Kern•. I
WlndJemmera YC.
DIVORCED? ; Eldon Harvey and Keith Andrews
of New Orleans won the Bemis
ll'rophy for the doyble-handed junior
championship.
• The Seara Cup was sailed In J-24
•loops, the Smythe Trophy was sailed In F1ying Juniors and the Bemis In
Sunfish.
· The three series are sailed by
linalista In the nine USYRU districts. ;
~Inds d•n't ,, .. ,,er•t.e
1 MARINA DEL REY -Winds were
}Jght and fluky over the weekend,
)nakina for some Jiatleaa and
.unfinished yacht racing along the
Orange Cout.
MORC -1 Ooubla Trouble, Phll and Martin
Friedman, WYC; 2 Pagaaue. Lea Sllneon, CahfOfllil
YC: 3 Cof'ulr, I( .. KUln«, Sant• Monica vc. PHRF·A -1 Oerll Star, St.ve Autlln-Paul Dallel,
CYe, 2. Hot Rum, Chrl1 81ll1r1, KHYC: 3. Mt.
Paetl'ltn, Aon M1yflelcl-Stev1 Curran. CYC.
PHRF·B -1. StrOll• e. A. T1llm1n. KHYC; 2 Scnmehaw, Jorln Manin, South Bey Vacilt Racing
Club, 3. Ruby, M. Vaugflan, WYC
PHRF·C -1 Tai Vez, OaYa Oaborn, San Fernando Valley Salling Club; 2 Sea O.eem foo.
Paul Ylln-Mlka Oeofge1 CVC, 3. Alma Two, Alma
.Jllld Take Tenltooh!t_WYC.
Dml -y YACHT CUlll ...., . ....,. ....
CAL.·20 -Poqutto, 8oti f>iltay, Santa Monica vc
8ANTANA·20 -No Big Tino. Ted Wa111. California YC
MERIT·25 -Deed Ernnt, Tom L-.Ck, eve.
PC -EcllpM, Curtlt Wood Wlndjamrner1 VC.
OLSON·30 -Liquid Galt, Howlfd Hetl\y, South
81~ Yactll AacinO Club. •
PHAF·A -Sudy IV, Ancty lodcton, eve.
PHRF·B -Mint J11tep. Bob Stockwell. Santa Mor!1ca YC.
PHAF..C -Tarrllea, JOhn 8'owr, SBYRC PHRF (non 1plnn1k1t) -Jarry Jug, Hllan
Pallllon, SMYC
IAMI SUITI
W/12 naclTI ..............
CA&l MTll.
(7'4) 141.tMa.
(lt!l.. '::''
ftlia:L ~ • 0~rof~ss1onal ~ Florist
R.OA8T 2915 Red Hiii Avenue
A-108 Costa Meta
Stone Mill Business Park 841-0810
rime Alone <bes not heal all the wounds.
DIVORCE RECOVERY WORKSHOP
~Ip, Support tnd G11ld1nce for any divorced
or 1eparatld perton.
Six Tuesday lvenln91
Sept. 21-0ct. 26 -7:30-9:30
St An*ews Presbyterian Cllurc~
New,art Baell
St Andrews Ao.d 11 15th SI.
Acroat FrO(n Newpof1 Hwt>or High
115,00 Rt01ttret10n
hll hlH Ht.'<.'Ond Khot on thf' 18th
hol •.
"AS SOON AS I hit thut 5(.'Vl'n
Iron l knew 1 hmJ won It," he said
with confidl'n<.-c. "All I had to do
was lag my pull up and get it
down in two. I knew that Kevin
(Slater) had thn~-putted just in
front of us to par and finish at
6-und<'r-par."
Grecr '.8 thrt.-e playing partners
o n the flnul round when he
posted l"w ro11 nd nf thr tfoy.
lncludt•d Greg Frcdt'rlc k o f
lluntlni;uon Beach , O'Sh4!'a of
N<'wpbrt Beach und Chris Kl'ytc
of Gardt•n Grove and a mt•mbc•r
of the Costa Mc.'88 men's club.
All tour players, ulong with
Slater, h11d played the shorter
Mesa Linda course on Saturday
In 6-under-par 64. G reer wus lht
only one to finwh under par on
S und ay, leaving him 1d
7 -under-par for the tournament
at 134
Pat 0 ' hea or Newport Beach sh ows the
a ngui h of a missed pull during the Will
Jordan Classic in Costa Mesa. . . .
Van Linge, Leach advance in tourney
Jerry Van L1nge from
Newport Beach and Dick Leach
from Laguna Beach were among
the winners Sunday in the
Pacific Southwest Seniors tennis
tournament being h eld al .the
Newport Beach Tennis Club.
Van Linge, the top seed in the
men's 35 division, advanced to
the semifinals with a 6-0, 6-3
victory over Marty Erck.
Leach, seeded second in the
men's 40 division , moved on with
a 6-0, 6-1 triumph over Bob Gos9.
In the men's 45 quarterfina~
Bob Duesler from Newport
advanced with a straight set, 6-CJ,
6-1 win over Henn Ahlers, while
Irvine's Tony Prodan was
victorious in the 65 and over
division. topping Sid Young, 6-3,
6-3.
Competition continues next
weekend with most of the finals
slated for Sunday
SUPER NAUTILUS I
AEROBIC CENTERS
405 Frwy. at
South Coat Pima
Br18tol offramp
1 bfk. IOUth to
P1ularlno
..
Orang• Ooaat DAILY PILOT/Mond1V, September 13, 1882
Allen's Raider debut a smashing success
SAN l''RANCISCO (AP) lleisman National lt'ootbull Leogut• homo gume In
their new horn(\ city until Oct. S. when
thl' Nl•w OrletlM Sfllnts vlalt lh • Los
Angclcll Coliseum.
''Tht-y us~d the 1tamo Kaldur playa.
Mtircwi just madt> more )'ard• with them.
He makes ththgt happen," Bald 49or1
Coach Bill Walsh. "I exp«t him to be the
NFL Rookie of the Year."
Chril Bahr klckro h11 third fleld goal
alter th fumble. l''rancm:o .;. yard hno and i'lunkett
pa8IM.'d to tight end Todd Chriat.en1en In
the end r.one on the next play.
'l'rophy winner Marcu11 Allen took top
bllllng, with 180 y11rd11 on offen.BC!, in the
opening of the Lofi Angeles Uaidcrs' roud
show.
''You could see his poh.'nlittl in
training camp, but I really didn't think
he'd be so good so soon. He's goinf to
open up our offense quite a b t,"
quarterback Jim Plunkett said after
Sunday's 23-17 upset victory over the
Super Bowl champion San Francisco
49ers.
In Alll'n. who 9<.'0red 46 touc:bdowna ln
hlK college career with the Southern
Callfornlu Trojans, they have a natural
drawing card. 'Based on Allen's showing
Sunday, thuy also have an exceptional
young running back.
Raiders Coach Tom Flores said,
"Marcus proved that he's an NFL bac:k.
That was a great pick for us. This was a
~reat win for us."
Allen acored his tint NFL touchdown
on a 3-yard run off left tackle late in the
flt'8t half. He loet a fumble Jn the third
period and the 49ent Cl)pltallK'<i on the
turnover by taking a 17-13 leud on Ray
Wersching'• 22-yard field goal.
The Raiders took the lead with a
60-yard touchdown drive early In the
fou n h period. A disputed pass
interference call against cornerback
Lynn Thomas, who was covering
receiver Malcolm Barnwell, gave Los
Angeles a~ first down at the San
Thomas wu in the game ae a
substitute for starter Eric Wright, who
pulled a hamstring soon after
Intercepting a poss In the second half.
Another defensive starter, lineman
Dwaine Board, suffered a knee inj\lry fn
the game.
The Raiders, who spent 22 seasons in
Oakland, are not scheduled to play a
"l JUSt. came out here today to do my
job. 1'he guys (blockers) up front did a
good job. We ran a lot of plays that we
used in practice but didn't show In pre-
season games," said Allen.
The Raiders' defense allowed two
touchdown passes, both in the second
period, by Joe Montana but 11acked the
49ers' quarterback five ,times anq forced
orie fumble by him late in the game.
"The Raiders were banged up," 11aid
the 49ers' Fred Solomon, recalling how
the Oakland Raiders went from Super
Bow l champs to a 7 .9 team
"Unfortunately, we're faced with about
the same problem now."
• NFL summaries
,-
San Francisco quarterback Joe Montana is wra pped up b y Mike
Davis of the Raiders.
Pecken SI, ... ma 23
lclore bJ Quarter•
Rama 10 13 o 0-23 Green Bay O 0 14 21-35
LA -Tyler 4 run (Lansford kick)
LA -FG Lan1f0td 32
LA -Bar~r 8 p1u from Jonea (L1nal0td kick)
LA -FG Lansford 29
LA -FG Lanelor(I 28
GB -Collman 4 pan from Olokey
(Sl-rud kick)
OB -lvety 3 run (Stenerud kick)
GB -Loflen 16 pan lrom Dlck1y
(Stenerud klok)
GB -Cortmen 10 pus from Olckey (Sten«ud kick)
GB -Ivery 27 run (S1enerud kick)
A -63.694 Teem l tat11tlc1
lA Flral downs 12
Ruehle-yards 28· 105
Paaslng yards 168
Relurn yarda 118
Paasee 17-31-2
Saeli• by 1·9
Punta 7_.2.7
Fumblw-lost 3-1
Pena1tlea-yard1 11-88
Time of Po111111on 29:40
lndhlldu.I 8tati.tlce
oil
22
36-149
228
51
17-27-3
t -38
4-44
3.3
2-16
30:20
RUSHING -Loa Angeles, Tyler 14·57,
Guman 7 -21, Jones 2-18, Waddy 1-6. Thomas
2_., Redden 2·2. Green Bay. Ivery 17-109,
Meade 9-28, Rodgers 4-14. Ellla 1·7, l'..otton 1-mlnua 4, Olc:ltey 4-mlnua 5.
PASSINO -Lot Angeles. Jonea
17-31-2·202. Green Bay, Dickey. 17·27-3·237.
RECEIVING -Loa Angeles. Miiier 3-78,
Guman 4-37, Tyler 3-32. Thomaa 4-28,
Redden 1-11, Barbe< 1·8. Dennard 1·8. GrMn
Bay, Jetleraon 8· 1 HI, Cottman 4-68, Lofton
4-59, Ellla 1·0. Meade 2-mlnua 4.
MISSEO FIELD GOALS -Loa AngelH,
Lanaf0td, 51.
Reftllln• S7, Eea'" M Scofe br Ouarlere Wunlng1on o 14 o 20 3-37
Phlladetphle 10 3 14 7 0-34 Phi -Herrington 4 run (Franklin kick)
Phi -FG Frenklin 44
Wea -Monk 6 pass lrom Thelamann
(MOMfey· kick)
Wu -C. Brown 8 pass from Theltmann
(M<>Mley kick)
Phi -FG Franklin 44
Phi -Montgomery 2 run (Franklin kick)
Phi -Montgomery 42 pase from JawOf'Skl IFranklin kick)
Wee -C . Brown 78 pass from
Thelsmann (Mosetey kick)
Wu -RIQolns 2 run (Moseley l.lck)
Wu -Fil Moseley 30
Phi -Cermlct)ael 4 pen from Jewoml
(Franklin kick) WU -FG M<>Mley 48
Wu -FG MolMlley 26
A -68,885
I,
Chargers show some ~efense
Redskins top Eagles in overtime; Falcons nip Giants
From AP dispatches
DENVER -Rolf Benirschke kicked
three field goals and Dan Fouts passed 18
yards to Scott Fitzkee for a touchdown as
the San Diego Chargers rolled to a 23-3
victory over the turnover·plagued Denver
Broncos Sunday in a National Football
League regular-season opener.
As a ligh t rain fell throughout most of
the game, the Broncos su ffered six
turnovers, four of them in San Diego
territory, including fullback Rick Parras'
fumble into the end rone after the Broncos
had reached the San Diego 3-yard line with
5:28 left in the game.
The Broncos fumbled on their first play
from scrimmage, h elping set up
Benirschke's first field goal, a 50-yarder
with 8:10 left in the first quarter. Denver
countered early in the second quarter on
Rich Karlis's 40-yard field goal, but San
Diego retaliated with a 71-yard drive later
in the quarter, culminating in a 24-yard
kick by Benirschke to give the Chargers a
6-3 halftime edge.
Benirschke added his third field goal, a
40-yarder, following an interception by
safety Bob Gregor in the third quarter.
.Redskins 37, Eagles 34
PHILADELPHIA -Mark Moseley's
26-yard field goal 4:47 into overtime gave
Washington a 37 -34 victory over
Philadelphia.
Moseley, who sen t the game into
overtime with a 48·yard field goal as
regulation time ran out, kicked his winner
after Joe Theismann had completed 28 and
27 yards to tight end Art M onk on
Washington's only 'overtime possession.
Pluladelphia lost the toss and never got lts
hands on the ball in the extra period.
Thei.amann completed 28 of 39 pa'5eS for
382 yards and three touchdowns, whlle his
counterpart, Philadelphia quarterback Ron
Jaworski, hit 27 of 38 for 371 yards and two
scores.
Falf!oas I II, Giant.§ 14
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . -Mick
Luck.hunt booted a 29-yard field goal with
58 teCOndt re~, llftbur Atlanc. to a
16-14 victory ~er the New \'ork Giants.
Atlanta c1oeed (,n on the Giants when
safety Bob G lazebrook picked up a final·
quarter fumble by Leon Perry on the
Falconi' 9-yard Une and ran It back 91
yards for • touchdown, an Atlanta record
for a fumble ~ry.
Olanta quarterback Scott Bnmner threw
for a career-best 310 yards, includiJll 33-
a.nd 19-yard touchdown Pl"" to r..me.t
Gny. -Unebedu!r Lawrence T aylor helped the
Otanc. in the final quart.er when M bloclutd
Luddlunt'• -.uempt at an extra point and
preveni.d the J'akSom from tylnc the pme
at 1"41•. •
NFL ROUNDUP
DolplJlns 4S, lets :lB
NEW YORK -Miami's Tommy Vigorito
scored on a 50-yard punt return and
comerback Do~ McNeal and safety Glenn
Black wood returned interceptions for
touchdowns to lead the Dolphins to 45-28
victory over the mistake·pron e New York
Jets.
The .vic tory ended four year s of
frustration against. th e Jets for the
Dolphins, who were 0-7·1 durinJl that span.
Cardinals :ll, Saints 7
NEW ORLEANS -Quarterback Neil
Lomax set up a first·quarter touchdown
and threw a 12·yard strike to wide receiver
Pat Tilley Sunday to lead St. Louis to a
21-7 victory over New Orleans.
Quarterbakck Ken Stabler started for
New Orleans. the first time in 12 years that
Archie Mnnning has been benched by the
Saints.
Lolr)l.X finished with~ 10 completions. in
17 attempts for 92 yards.
It was a 16-yard pass to tight end Doug
Marsh that set up a one-yard scoring
plunge by fullback Wayne Morris in the
first quarter.
St. Louis halfback Ottis Anderson, who
carried 22 times for 62 yards, scored on a
5·yard sprint in the third quarter, as the
Lomax-to.Tilley touchdown closed out the
game's scoring.
Browns 21, Seallawks 7
SEATTLE -Workhone fullback Mike
Pruitt carried the ball 30 times for 136
yards and two touchdowns S unday, lead!J\g
Cleveland to a 21-7 victory over Seattle.
A crowd of 55,907 turned out at the
Kingdome to see a game that appeared to
be in jeopardy all week. There were 8,915
no shows. ,
The Seahawks' players were upeet over
the release of player repreeentative Sam·
McCWlum lu t Tuesday, and all 54 of them
signed a peU Uon calling for hi•·
rein9tatement.
PatrleU ~4, C•ltll IS
BALTIMORE-Ray Claybom'1 26-y&rd
lntercepUon return and Don Bl.ackmon's
fumble recovery on the Baltimore 21 aet up
touchdowns that gave New England a
24-13 vktory over the Colt.a,
Clayborn lnten.-epted David Hunvn's pue
int.ended for Matt Bouza and ran 26 yuda
ln the third quarter to set up one of two TD
pa-. by New J:naland qu.n.rbeck Matt
C..vanautb -• 30-yud to. to Ken Toler.
Blackmon'• r ecovery of Cleve land
Franklin'• tumble ~arly In t he fourth
quarter •t up Robert Weathml• 1-yud TD
nm that put the pme out of reteh for the Colt.I.
Biiis I 4, CIJlels 8
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. -Quarterback
Joe Ferguson threw first-half touchdown
passes to Fk'ank Lewis and Jerry Butler to
lead Buffalo to a 14·9 victory over Kansas
City.
The Bills, going to the air in the absence
of holdout running back Joe Cribbs, took a
7-3 lead on Lewis' 20-yard reception 11
minutes Into the game. After that, Buffalo
never trailed.
The Chiefs scored the first two times
they had the ball on long field goals by
Nick Lowery. Lowery drilled a 42-yarder.
midway through the fourth quarter for the
Chiefs' final score.
BUI!§ 17, J'lklngs I"
MINNEAPOLIS -Min n esot a
quarterback Tommy Kramer passed for 131
yards and one touch down and R ick
Danmeier kicked a field goal in the final
minutes to give the Vikings a 17-10 victory over Tampa Bay.
The loss nullified the effort of Tampa
Bay quarterb ack Doug Williams, who
completed 21 of 37 passes for 290 yards.
Kramer completed 16 of 28 for 131 yards.
It was the M innesota defense th at
stopped the Buccaneers, intercepting
Williams three times an d recovering a
crucial fumble.
Liens 17, Bears 10
PONTIAC, Mich. -Detroit tailback
Billy Sims, who just ended a six-week
holdout, played sparingly but still managed
·33 yards in 13 carries and scored on a
3-yard run to spark the Lions' 17-10 victory
over Chicago.
Sima, w ho m issed t he e n tire N FL
preseaaon, entered th e game with 4:48
remaining in the fint quarter on the Ltons'
second p°'8ession and received a rousing
welcoming roar from the fans.
With the 1979 Heisrnan ·Trophy wlnner
from Oklahoma carrying the ball four timett
-including a 3·yard run on a crucial
fourth-and-one from the Bears' 11 -the
Lions marched 44 yarda in nine plays. Erle
Hipple .P8SSed the final 5 yarda to tight·end
David .Rill for the touchdown.
Ben••'" 21, Olien •
CINCINNATI -Ken Ande.l"IOn ~
tot two touchdowns and ran for another,
and Clnctnnatl'1 defe nse 1hut down
Houston'• e>Uen. for three quart.en u the 8enp1a mauled the Olien, 27-e.
Andenon, the National t ootball l.eque'1
Moat Valuable Player laat aeaeon,
complewct 28 of 40 .,._ for 3M yarda
without an lnlenlepdon • the clefmc:Un8
American Qinterenc. champion toOk a 10-0
halttbM lead and added a pa1c' of third
quarter touchdowna.
Andtnon camp)Med hit .t1nt ID .._,
~ With :: end Dm Rem' on en 11-yuct TD pem on ClndMltJ•1 flrn
II() IE 1 lllon for a 7. Jwl. . .
'·
. llldfvldual ltatletloe
RUSHING -Wutllngton Rloa!n• 20·06,
fhel•menn. 3·18, Harmon 2-Ul~~onk 1·8,
Jackton 4-8. Phlledelphl•, iMontgomery
15·83, H~rrlngton 8-31. Jewor•kl 1 ·8,
Giammona 1.1, 1-larrl• 1-1. leMHter t-1.
PASSING -WeahlnQton. Thelamann 28·39-0·382. Phlladelphla, Jaworski
27 ·38--0·3 71. .
RECEIVING -w,enlnoton. Monk 8-134,
C. Brown 5-97, Warren 4-73, Harmon 3·38, M.
Wllllam•. 3-1.t, Riggins 3·3, Welker 1·14, Jeckeon 1·9. Phnadelphla, Cermlchael
5-72, Smith 6·70, Montgomery 4·99,
Campfield ,..43, Spagnola 4·67, H•rrlng1on
3·12. Quick 1·9. Giammona 1-9.
MISSED FIE~O GOALS -None.
,....,. n , ...,, 11 ._ bJ CNartere
LA Rel~a San FrancllOO 3 10 0 10-23 0 14 3 0-17
LA -FG Behr 14
SF -Solomon 18 PH• lrom Montana
(Weracnlng klek)
LA -FO Bahr 42
SF -Clark 4 1 peu lrom Montana
(Wersct\lng klcit)
LA -Allen 3 run (Bahr klek)
SF -FG Werachlng 22
LA -Christensen 3 pass from Plunkett
(Bahr kick)
LA -FG Bahr 43
A -59,748
T .. m 8tetl•llca
LA
First Oowns 17 Ruthea-yarda 43-161
Passing yerd1 94
Retum yard• 29
Panes 10-20-2 Sect11 by 5-52
Punt• 4·49
Fumblff..lolt 4-2
Penattles-yard• t 1·102
Time of Po-.lon 33:22
lndMdual Stetletlce
SF
18
22-60 192
44 2 .. ~.1
3-29 8-.36
3.3
6-99
26:38
RUSHING -Los Angeles, Allen 23· 118. King 9·33, Hawkins 7-15, Guy 1-7, Plunkett
2·mlnut 4, Christensen 1-mlnus 8. San
Francisco, MOOl'e 7-30, Easley 5-11, Cooper
6-8, Lawrenc. 2-6, Montane 2·5.
PASSING -Lot Angeles, Plunkett 10-20·2-123. San Francisco. Montana
21-41-1·244.
RECEIVING -Lo• Angelea. Allen 4-64,
King 2·30. Branen 2·21. Christensen 2-8. San
Franclaco, Ctark 6-106, Young S..5, MOOl'e
3·22, Nehemiah 2·26, Cooper 2·21, Solomon
1-18, Lawrence 1-6.
MISSED FIELO GOALS -Los Angeles.
none. San FrancllQO, none.
Falcone 1t, Glente 14 a-bJ Ouartete
1,tlant• o 7 o 9-16
N-YO<lt 0 7 7 0-14
AU -Andrews 13 run (Luckhufat kick)
NY -Gray 33 pasa from Brunner (Deneto
klcll) NY -Gray 19 pase from Brunner (Oaneto
klcll)
All -BlaZebrook 91 fumble rec.over; (klOk
telled)
All -FG 29 Lucllhurll
A -74.286
lndtYktuel ...... "" RUSHING -A11ante, Cllln 6-27. Andrews 18~. Riggs 9-27. New York. Woolfolk 17-64, Perry 3· 14, Brunner 4-mlnus 2.
PASSING -Atlante, Bertkowakl
15·27·1-187. New York. Brunner
25·41·1·310.
RECEIVING -Atlante. Jacbon, A. ~.
.i.tlklns 3_.9, MUter 2-38, Andrews 2· 16, Caln
1-7, Rlool. 1·7, Hodge 1-6_ New Y0<tl, Mulledy
7--99, Gray 5-86, Plf'klna. 4-37, Mlsll•f, 3-19,
Heater 2·15, Woolfolk 1·17, Bright 1·13,
Merrit 1-5, Pwry 1·mlnua 1.
MISSED FtELO GOALS -Atlante, non41.
New York, Dlnetc> 56. C>anek> 33.
CardlnMI 21, a.Int• 7 ._. bJ 0-W.
St. LOUii 7 0 1 7-21
New Ofleent 0 0 0 7-7
StL -M0ttla 1 run (O'Oonoghue kletc)
Stl. -Anderton 5 run (O'Oonoghue kiOk)
SIL -Tiiiey 12 pen f rom Lomax
(O'Oonoghue kick) NO -Oucilett 23 peas from Stabler
(Erxleben klc:lt)
A -58,873 tndlvtduel ..........
RUSHING -St. LOUii, Anderson 22-62.
Morrta 8·35, Lomelt 5-7, Mitchell 1-2, R ..
Gr_., 1-mlnut 10, New Orleent, G. ROQ41f8
11-66, Wiiton 7-35, Groth 1·1,-J. Rogera 3·5.
Tyler 1-1, Sllbllr 1--0. PASSING -SI. Louis, Lomax 10-18-92.
New Orl11n1. Stabler 19-27-221, Manning
1·7-3.
RECEIVING -St. LOUii, Mwah 2-31, Tiiiey ,..26, R. Gr..i 2·9, Grey ,_., M11chell 1-22.
New Of!Nna. L Scott 6-103, Ouellett 2-36,
Tyler 4-31, Brenner S-19, Wiiton 2·14, G. Rogen 1· 10. Groth 1-8, J. Rogerl 1-3.
MISSED FIELD GOALS -SL Louis. o. New
Ofleene, EtxJeben 1·25.
Uoft• 17, ...... 10 korebrO--. Chicago 0 7 0 3-10
Oetrolt 7 3 0 7-17
Oet -Hiii 6 pau from Hipple (Thomu kick)
Cht -Sutley 2 run (Roveto k!Gk)
Oet -FQ Thomat 38 Oet -Sima 3 run (ThomH klGk)
Chi -FG ROY8to 42
A -71,337 ltldlwldu.I atatllttce
RUSHING -Chicago, Peyton 1 ... 26, Suhey
9·22, McClendon 1·2, Event 2-0. Oetrolt,
Sima 13-33, 8useey 11-14, Oanlelton 5-10,
Hipple 14, King 2·2. PASSING -~. Avetllnl 5-11-0-51,
Evant 7 • 15-0·19. Detroit. HIP?le 9•23· 1·105,
O.nleleon ,..6-0•83.
RECEIVING -Chlclgo, Moorehead 4-43, M11genim 2-211, Peyton 2-23. Eerl 2·20, Scott
1-ir, Buchnagel 1·11. Detroit. Hlh 5·55, Slmt
S-25. L Thom.,eon 2-29, Cobb 1-25, T. Porter
1·23. King 1-11.
MISSED FIELD GOALS -None.
Cf\erven n, 8ronooe S e-ttre>--.
San Olego 3 3 10 7-23
DenYW 0 3 0 0-3
SO -FO Benlnchke 50
Oen -FG Karlie ..0 SO -FG llenlnGlillt 24
8D -FG llenlftctllle 40 8D -FlllkH 18 P•U ft-om Fout•
(8enltaeflk• Ille*)
80 -Muncie 10 run (Benincl\ke klolc)
A -l'8."4 . ....................
RUSHING -I an Diego, Muncie 18·79,
8rook1 10-$1, CappetleUI 5· 1t , Oetlllt r, w1nc1er e-sa. '""" ,o.30, ~ 1-aa. ,AMING -11n oi.oo. Fouta , .. u..o-aa.
M1111C18 0-1.0-0, Otnll9r, M«tofl 11-20-1·1N,
o.e.a.•tM-11. ~ -89ft Dteeo. Ctllndllr 4-120,
Joins W t. MulMlle I-IC 0.-. Updluref't M1,Mldlr44tr ~4-H. M18llO '41\.u GOAU -Sen Dl .. o,
................ I ....... , ........ .... ...... ~ ,,.0 0-lt
..... 00 10-1
0. -flnlltt I tun lildCllCt 2!---·~ ldlll) ---:.=:~~-) A -.•.IOf
lndlYldl'81 ltattetic.
RUSHING -Cleveland, Pruitt 80· 1311,
White 14-73, Sipe 3-mlnua 9. Seattle,
Doornlnk 5-14, lllOfY 4-10, 8ml1h 4-10, Kr141g
1·4, Hugh41a 1·2.
PASSING -Cleveland, Sipe 11·~ 138--0.
Seattle, Krt41g 22-38-203·1, Smith 0·1.0--0.
REOEIVING -Cleveland, White 5-85,
Logan 2·33, Neweome 2·22, Pruitt 2· 17.
Seatti., Larg41nt 6-71, lllOf'Y 4-2&, T1Qt 4-16,
John• 2·'f2. Doornlnk 1·22, T. Brown 1-15,
Walker 1·14, Carr 1·12, Smith 11·11, Sawyet
1·5.
FIELO GOALS MISSED -Cleveland, Batr
46, 26, 42. Seatti., none.
Dotphtna 45, Jett 21
Scofe bJ Quan.re Miami 14 10 21 0-45
N.V. Jets 7 7 0 14-28
Mia -Franklin 1 run (von Sohamann klek)
NYJ -Walker 29 pase from Todd (Leahy
lllck) Mia -Vigorito 59 punt return
Schemann kick)
Mia -Franklin 1 run (von Sc
Ml• -FG von Scham1111n 2 NY J -Auguetynlak 2 run (Leahy kick)
Mia -Woodley 16 pase from Nathan (von
Schamann kick)
Mia -G. Blackwood 35 Interception return
(von Schamann kick)
Mia -McNeel 19 Interception retum (Yon
Schamann kick)
NYJ -Borkum 7 pass from Todd (Leahy
klekt NVJ -Walker 5 pass from Todd (Leahy
klek)
A -53,360 lndlvkkl., a .. tletlcl
RUSHING -~laml, Franklin, 28·103;
Woodley, 7·58: Nathan, 10·22: Vlgo(lto, 3·2•1,
Hiii, 6-18. New York Jete, McNell, 13· 116; Augustyniak, 5-11; Oief11tng, 2·9; Todd, 1-2.
PASSING -Miami, Woodley, 12-2o.1, 79;
Nathan, 1· 1·0, 15. New York Jets, Todd,
18·30-3, 233.
RECEIVING -Miami, Nathan, 3· 16; Cefalo,
2·25; Harrie, 1· 13, Woodley, 1· 15. New Yor'lt
Jets, Berkum, 4 -71; McNeil, 3-34; Augustyniak. 3-23; Welker, 2-34; A. Jones,
2·29, Gaffney, 2.21.
MISSED FIELO GOALS -None.
Petriota 2.4, Cotti 13
lcofe bJ 0--. New England 3 7 7 7-24
BelUmore 3 7 3 0-13
Bal -FG Wood 49
NE -FG Roblnton 24
Bel -Pagel 1 run (Wood klctc) NE -·Collins 16 pus trom Cevenaugh
(Robinson kick)
Bal -FG Wood 30
NE -Toler 30 pats from Cavanaugh
(Robinson kick)
NE -Weathers 1 run (Robinson kick)
A -39,055 lodh1dual 8tetlltlcl
RUSHING -New England. Colllns 21-137,
weather• 13·•7. Tetupu 3-15, van einan
6-23. Fwguton 1·5. Balllmo<e, Dixon _.7,
McMiiian 9-32. Olclr~ 8-23. Franklin 6-17.
Paget 4·11, Butler 1·1.
PASSING -New England. Cavanaugh 7-15-1-103. Baltimore, Pagel 7.-15-t -63.
Humm 7-13·1·55. Schlicf'lter 6-18-1-103.
RECEIVING -New England. CoUk\9 4-56.
Hauelbactc 2-17, Toler 1-30. Baltlmore, Butte<
2·15, Dickey 1·5, Dixon ,..80, 8ouu 6-76,
Sherwin 2-28, McMiiian 3-22, S.ach 1·15.
Henry 1·18 . MISSED FIELD GOALS -New England,
RoblnS0<1 34. Baltimore. Wood 37.
~.:~· Houston O O O II-6
Cincinnati 7 3 14 3-27
Cln -Ron 18 pus from Andeflon (8r841Ch
kick)
Cln -FG Breech 43
.Cln -Anderson 2 rvn (Breech kick)
Cln -Ale.and•r 1 pau from Anderson
(Breech kick)
Ctn -FG Breech 25
Hou -Hol1ton 38 pas from Nlelter1 (kick
felled)
A -53.268 lndtYWuel llattatlee
RUSHING -Houlton. Campb4111 20-82,
Craft 2·0, Nielsen 1-7. Cinclnnetl, Johnson 23-89, Ale111nder 7-24, M. Harrie 1-5. A.
Orlllln 1-3. Anderton 1-2. Tete 1--0.
PASSINO -Houaton. N~ 11-17-119--0.
Cincinnati, AndefsOn ~. RECEIVING -Houeton. Balley 4.31,
Campbell 4-23, Holeton 2·58. Craft 1·7.
Clnclnnetl, Ron 5-6$, Colllnaworth 4-95.
Curtis 4·52, Alexander 4-23, A. Griffin 4-28,
Johnson 4-33 M. Heme 3-40. Vflf'I« 1· 18.
MISSED FIELO GOALS -Houaton, none.
ClnClnnetl, Bn1ech 47, 43.
Ylklftge 17, lluca 10 S-brO-W. Tampa Bey 3 O 1 0-10
Minnesota o 7 7 3-17
TB -F0~51
Minn -Young 3 run (Denmeler ktcll)
Minn -s. White 22 pus from Kremer
(Denrnel« kiCk)
TB -Giies 20 Piii fTom WllliM'!t (C.,_
klek)
Minn -FG Oenmeler 33
A -58,.440 MdMd ...........
RUSHING -Tampa Bay, <>-it 12-31,
Wiider 5·18, Wlllla"'a 1-ta, Carver 3·4,
MOl'ton 1·2. MlnMeOte. ~own 12-<Se. Nelton 10·33, GelbrNth 2·5. Kr811Mf M . Young 2-3,
PASSING -Temp e Bey, W lllfem1
21·38-3·290. Mlnneeota, Kremet 141-2'-0-131.
RECEIVING -Tampa ~. Gllte 6-100,
Certer 3-53, Wiider 5-62. T. 8111 $-35. H-
2· 18, Jenee 1-17, C.-1-12 Owerll 1-3,
Mlnneto11, S. White 2.-35. GeibrMtl\ l ·29,
Nelton 2·24, SenH r 3-111, Brown 4·111.
Rulled 2-10, Young 1-1.
FIELO GOALS MISSED -Temps Bey. ~ 50, 48. Mlnneeote. o.nm.ler U .
0 3-.
MAJOR LEAGUE ITANDIN08
American Leeaue
WllTUIN DIVISION W L .. ct. Oii
Kena&• City 11 81 670
Af>9N 80 82 .583 1
Cnteego 78 86 5311 4'"' s .. 111e 87 74 475 13'"'
Oelltend 80 83 4111 21y,
Te•u 57 85 401 24 Minn.ate 50 112 352 31
IAITUIN DIVlllON Mltweukee 84 511 517
Baltimore ao 81 5'17 3
Boeton 79 82 ~ 4
New York 73 ea 511 10 Detroit 71 811 507 11'h
CleY91encl 88 72 488 14'h
Toronto 85 711 464 111
11.1ncJer'• Seotee
Aneel• 3. T 0<onto 2
New V0<1< II. Mllweukee 8
Clevelano 3, Batttmor• o
Boeton 10. Detroit 7
Kenau City 18, Mtnnesot• 7
Oakland 4. Clllcego 2
Seattle 1, T••a• o
Tonlghl'aO.-
Aneel• (Will 6-51 et Cl>leaQO (DotlOfl
11· 11)
New V«k (Howell 1-1) et Be1t1more (0 Merttnu 14-11)
Cleveland (Wlltteon 3·2 end A~IOfl
3· 1) et Botton (Boyd 0-0 end Relney
7·41. 2
Miiwaukee (Heu 11-81 •I Oetroll
(Ujdur 11·1) Teu a (Muon 0·01 et M1nneao1•
(Wiiiiams 7-71 s .. nle (Moore 7· 101 11 Kanaa1 City
(Blue 12·11)
Only g-ICl>eeluled
Nstlonel Leeaue
WHTlllN DIVl .. ION G• I '# L Pct.
A111n11 ao 83 5511 ~ 8064 5S8 .....
San f renclaco 74 811 521 S'A
San Diego 74 1111 517 8 Houlton 85 71 455 15
Clnclnnall 53 llO 370 27
EAITlllN DIV1110f1
St Loula 711 82 580
Phtlacltlplll• 79 83 558 ....
Montreal 77 65 !142 2" P1111burgh 78 88 535 3y,
Cl>IClgO 81 82 .428 19
New V0<k 58 114 400 22'"'
lllfld•r'• ac-Doclee<'a 7. Hooaton 3
PIUabutgh 4, Pl>fflldelphle 2
A llenle 4. Clnctnnall 3 New Y0<k 4, SI LOI.Ifs 1
Montreal 11. Cl>ICego 3
Onty game• schedui.d
Tonlght'e O-
S •n Otego 1£1c11e1berger 7-121 at ~(WelCh 15-10)
S t. l oula tB Forech 14 -8) at
Phlllde4pl>la (Cartlon 111-fl) • Chicago (Ripley 4·7) at Pltt1bu1gh (0.
RoblnlOfl 16-1) Houaton (J Nlekro 14· 101 el Atlanta
(P Nleluo 14-31
Clnctnnell (P11101e 8· 101 •I San
Francisco (Barr 4·3)
Only o•mw achedulecl
AMERICAN LEAOUE
Anoel• 3, Blue Je19 2
TOllOMTO CAUf'OllNtA
a1t1hbl llllrhlll
l0<g 2b 4 0 3 1 Downing II 4 0 0 0 Pt11anl 3b 3 0 0 O C81ew fb 4 1 1 O
.JohneOn pll 0 0 0 0 Baylor cit! 3 0 0 0
Pow.II pll I 0 0 0 RtJ-.IOfl r1 4 1 2 0
08alter 3b 0 0 0 0 RCl.,k rf 0 0 0 0
8erfleld r1 3 0 0 0 O.Clnoee lb 4 1 2 2
Nordhagen dh 4 0 0 0 Wiifong 2b 3 0 0 0
Hober1a II 2 0 0 0 Benlquei Cl 2 0 1 1
Woode pll 0 0 0 0 Foll u 2 0 1 0 Upelltw 1b 4 O 1 0 Boone c 3 O O O
Mer11M2C 4 1 10 Molebyc:t 4 110
Grlmn 11 3021
Totel• 32 2 a 2 Total• 29 3 7 3
leor• br 1nnrnee TOl"O<llO 000 000 020-2
Cellfomla 021 000 OOx-3
E -Barfl9<1 DP -Callfomla 3 LOS -Toronto 8. Callfornla 5. 2B -Upahaw,
Moeeby. O.Cinett 2, Re. Jaok_,, Beniquez.
S -Foll T-lo W H lllflMIO Clenc:y (l. 12· 141 8 7 3 3 2 2
~ John(W,12·111 8 2 2 1 I
Sancl!G 0 0 0 2 0 Cur11a(6,11 0 0 0 0 2
John pitched 10 4 balltltl In Ill• 811>,
Sancl'lc pllc:tled to 1 beltat In the 11111
Wf' -Cur1la T -2 11 I. -25,3114.
Angel sver9991 SAnlNG
A• II H Hll 1181 Pct.
RoJ8ClllOfl 125 14 41 2 18 321
Ctr-451 71 140 2 38 310 o.c • ._ so1 111 149 211 ae m
Lynn 424 113 124 18 7' 2112
Oown.ng 548 98 152 26 71 .280
Re Jaokson482 81 1211 34 83 .279 Bayt0< 541 68 1u 22 ~4 .266
Beniquez 1 &5 111 4 1 1 11 285
G<tcn 448 66 1 17 17 6 1 282
Boone 415 40 103 7 53 280
Foll 430 42 169 2 49 253
Ferguaon 77 11 17 2 7 221
Clark 80 9 17 2 5 213 Wilfong 1117 22 32 1 14 192
K-4-47 II 8 0 1 170
Burleson 45 4 7 0 2 158
Totals 4836 7 IS 1324 182 872 2.74
PITCHING IP H SB 10 W·L lllA
Has.rer 89'" 53 38 28 2· 1 2 47
Stetrer 111'" 17 II 12 1-0 3 44
W1tl 1511'1> 153 4S 78 8-5 3 45 ,.... 52 45 23 40 3.3 3 46
John 205 213 31 81 12-10 3.80
Klaon 109';, es 38 811 7.5 3,11
Zahn 203~ 199 58 71 18-7 3 81
Sancll92 77 77 32 22 5-2 3 112
F«acll 205v. 201 53 ea 12-10 3 ee
Renko 152 1611 « 77 11-1 4 32 GolU 66 811 7!1 37 8-4 .....
Moreno 411'"' 55 23 22 3-7 4. 7 4
Corbell 7S'i'> 611 34 411 1-11 5 2e
11en1 211¥. 39 I 30 2·2 5.71 eun11 1..... e 3 a 0-1 114
Totals 128'1'> 1257 442 850 IO-e2 3.18
Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOT /Monday, September 13, 1982
lfMttana S, OrlolM 0
8•1Umore 000 000 000 0 3 I
Cle...iand 000 000 03x-3 I 1
Palmtr, 1 Merttnel (81. St1wa11 (8)
and Oempaey, Sutctlfle and Halley,
Bando (9) W-Su1Cllfte. 12·8 L T
Mar11nei. a 1 A-1.eeo
lled ka 10, Tleef• 7 Oetroo 300 020 110-7 11 O
Boeton 250 010 20x-10 15 0
Tob1k. P Underwood (:I), Peahrnck
(8) and P.,rtall. Oenmen 8 Stanley (&)
Md 1.11en_, w -e . s 111111ey. 10-ti L-
Tobtk. 3·1 HR-Oettoll, Lemon (14)
" 25, 154
l.'a4, Whtie SOI 2
C111eago 110 000 000-2 8 O
Oakland 030 000 Ob-4 8 O
Hoyt end F10, Le nglo rd. T
Unde,...ood (81. Owchlnllo (II and M
HNth. W Langford, 11.15 L-Hoy1, 1!1· 14 S-Owchlnko (3). HR1-Cl>lcago. :~~:·,~~21. Oakland. Murphy (24 )
MWlnef• 1, ~ 0 Seat11e tOO 000 000-1 8 O
To•lllS 000 000 000-0 4 0
B Stoddlld. Caudill (9) end s-1.
Smithson, Butcher (4l end e JOllnson
w -B Stodderd. 1-1 l Sm11111on.
2-2 S -Cel.ld1N (251 1.-8.4 18
Y•nkffa I, 8rewe1• I
Mllweukff 005 300 000-8 11 O
New Yori< 00<' 003 031-11 12 O
Sulton. Easletly (71. Sleton (Ill end
S1mmon1 l.le•ende r. Frazier (31. Kaulme n (I ) end 8 Ramos W
Keufmen, 1·0 L-Eatterly, ().2 H~
Miiwaukee. C009« (301. Simmons (20),
Ogilvie 12g1, New York. M1ultll (Ill. Nenles (18}, B Ramoa Pl. Gamble (171
1.-33 252
"gale 11, Twin• 7 Minnesota 11 500 000 -7 12 1
Kansas Clly 10 323 38• 18 20 1
Havena. flllon (41. lltlle (8). R Davia (8). Pacelle (8l and eu1 .. a. R Smith.
Spllllorll Armatrong (4), Tull1 (51.
Ou•senbeny (7) and Wathen, Steughl
W-1ufla. 1·0 l-Felton. 0· 13 S-Ou1senbe11y (33) HR1-Minneao1a,
Hatchel 13). Kansas City, Aikens 2 ( 121. While (8) Geronimo (3) 1.-32.383
NATIONAL LEAGUE
DodQets 7, A1troe S
LOI ANGILml H9UITOH
urlllll •IHhlll
SSo2b 5 0 0 0 Puhl rt 5 I 1 0
4 1 2 1 ThOn u 3 1 1 0
5 2 3 0 Knight 1b 3 0 I I 4 120JCrv211 4 000
4123AM'obyo 4 011
3 o o 1 Doran 2b 4 o 1 o
OOOOAHowe3b 4 110 4 000 Louclltc:t 4 021
31I0 OIPlnO p 0000
1000 LReyph 1000
0000 leColttp 0000
I 0 1 2 W•IUng ph 1 0 0 0
0000 Roup 0000 I 0 0 0 Tolman ph I 0 0 0
0000 1110
0000
Ru .... u
Baker It
Guerrero 3b
Qervey lb Mer911811 rt
Thomel rt
Roanlcka Cl Yeager c
WrlQht p
Cey ph
Motalea ph
hveru Pl'
Slewart p
F«llet p 8'-ph
SHow9p
Tolala 34 31 3 38 7 12 7 Toltll
loot• .,, lftnln9a
Loe MQllee 000 510 001-7 Houalon 200 100 000-3
E -G.-rero DP -Hol.lalOll 2 L09 -
Loa l.ngelH 81 Ho1.1aton 8. 28 -JO.
MO< ..... A Howe, Dotan. Btodt. S8 -Tl>On 2 (34). loucka t 1). Biker (11). Guer1ero (21),
S -OIF'lno SF -l(nfoht. Merlhell.
Loa Aft9844141 iP H II Ill -10 WllQhl 3 3 2 2 t 2 S1awati(W,ll-71 W. 4 I 1 I 2
Fortter IV. 0 0 0 0 I
S.Howe I 1 o O O 0
ttoueton
DIPlno (L, I· 11 4 e s 5 3 2
4 I 1 0 1 2 I 1 0 I LeCot1• 3 Roea 2
T -2:42 I. -15.014
l"tfet•• •• Phlltlff 2 Phlladllpllla 001 000 100-2 7 0
Polltbufgh 010 003 OOx-4 II I
av.tlan80ft, Monge (7), Altamtr~8)
and B Ola.t, Anoden, Takutve (7) and"
NICOllt, T Pent W-Ahodan. 10·12.
L-Ch1l11enaon, 8-10 $-Tekulve pg1
HR-Phlledelphla. Schmidt (33)
A-19,0811
llnvee 4, llecla J
Ctne•nnato 000 02 1 000-3 s 2
l.llanl• 100 100 002-4 7 2
Herr11. Price (9). H•yea (II) a nd Trevino, Camp, Bed101 an 18) and
Benedict W -8tdro1lan, 1 ·8 L-
H11111. 2·1 HRt-Clnclnnatl. Bench
(12): 1.uan1a. Horner (31) A-15.442
lapoe 11, C1.11M 3 Montreal 042 100 301-11 18 O
C1>1Cago 200 010 000-3 II 3
Gullickton and c.rtr. Bird, Proty (3).
Stein (8~ Tld'°w (I I. Lt Smith !Ill anc1 J
Oavts. Benion W-G1.1ffiClllOfl, 11· 11 L-Blrd, 9·12 Montraal. Speier (6).
Crom11111e ( 14), Chicago, J l<ennedy (21.
Sandberg fT) Buckner ( 13) A -13,0211
Male 4. C8f'dlftale 1
New Y«I< 101 200 000-4 8 I SI louta 000 000 001-1 3 0
Falcone Md Boel>y. Mura, Rasmu-
141. LaPolnl (8), K-(71, J Mlll1in (9).
8alf (II) Ind Ten-W-Fek:ona. 1·9
L-Murt 11· 10 HRl-New Y°"'. Gllea
(2). 8oclly (1) A-28,817
Top 10
(ilffed on 400 •t bet•) AMllllCAH LUQUE
WWbon. KC
Yount. MM
Garela. Tor
Coopet. Mii Harrah, Cle
Cerew, Aneel•
E Murray. Bel
Llllsford, Ban
Rice. Ben
Bran, KC
0 A.8 II H flcL
117 501 711 171 337
137 5S5 110 180 324
1211 531 11 1811 318
13e 571 92 180 315 139 633 94 1ea 315
119 451 78 142 315
130 471 71 148 314
113 427 511 133 311 124 4g3 75 163 310
125 477 90 147 3011
HomellllM
G. Thomes. Miiwaukee, 34: lie.
.lachen, Ansel•, M: Wlnlleld, New
York, 32. Thornton, Cleveland, 30,
Cooper, Milwauk•. 30
11-Wtecllft
McRH, Kan•H Coty. 120. COOP•<. MllwaukM. 110, Thornton, Clevelend,
109; 0 Thomas. MllWIUllM, 100, E Murray. Bllllmore. 113, Winllefd, New
Yo.k, 113
•
SCOREBOARD
l'ltcJt!nt ( tt o.ctelona)
Vukovleh, M1lw•1.1kff, 11-•. PallYWll.
BaltlmO<e. 13-4: Burne, Chicago, 13'5.
Guidry, N~ Vorh, 14·1: Zelln, Ant•I•,
11-7; SutcUlle. Cleveland, 12·11. llenllo.
Aft9ele, 11-8; Petry, 0.troll. 14-8
NATIONAL LRAOW G A8 II H .. cl.
Otive<, Mii 140 537 81 180 335
Madlock. Pgh 1311 522 19 187 320
Lo Smllll, SIL 135 522 11:1 115 3111
G1.141ffffo, LA 138 520 81 18 1 310
Durllem CN 133 4111 72 151 308
... .,. LA 130 605 72 ISS 307
llucltner, CN 142 577 12 177 .307
Schmldl_i_Phl 121 443 105 138 305 Carltt, MU 135 4112 81 145 301
Hernandez. SIL 140 &Ill 71 IH 301
Home ll1.1n1 Klngmen, New Yo1k. 38, Murphy,
1.111111a. 36, Schmidt, Phll•delphla. 33,
Horner. 1.11an1a. 31. J T11omp1on, P11t1burgh. 30"1
ll1.1ne 8elled Ill
Murphy, I.II a nte, 108. Ollver.
MontrMI, 117: Buckner, Chtc.Qo. 95. J ThomplOfl, P11tsbu<gh. 95. Clark, S111
F1anc;11eo. 9!>.
.. Itching ( 1' Decl•lon•) P Nlekro. Allenta, 14·3. Rogera, MonllHI, 17-7, Cerlton. Phllad.ipnle,
111·11. Candelaria, Plllsburgh, 12·6.
Forul>, SI. Loula. 14·8. Lollar. S•n
Diego. 14·8, 0. Roblnaon. P11tsbu1gh. 15-9. .
U.l .OMn
(at New \'ortc)
IMn'a Slntlff FINI Jimmy Connot9 IU S.I def. Ivan Ltncll
1Czacho11ovakl•I. 1·3, 8·2. 4-1. 8-4
(Connol• win• $90.000)
·-·· DouMae Flnel Rolle Caaele (US >-Wandy Turnbull
(l.ullr•lla) def. Barbara Poller-Sharon
Well/I (U S.). 8-4, 8-4 Mixed DouMM FINI
l.nne Smull (U S )·Ke vin Curren
(South l.trlea) def Be<l>ere Pottar·ferdl
layg111 (U S.1, 6-7. 7-t. 7-tl. hnlof IMn'• _,.,... flnel
Fred Slolle (l.u111all1>-Panc1>0 Segura
(U S ) def Oennla Ralston-Dick S1v11t
(U S ), I-1, 1-2
Pec:lftc: Southw .. t &.nlon
(et ... wport hech Tenn .. Clllb)
Men 'I M Ovet1erllnal Slfte .. • Jerry Van Linge Clef Metty l:'rck, 8-0 6-3, Dennis Trout ~I Wayne Bryan.
1-4. e-1. &-3, Dave 8ohenon def s1-Slmon1. 1-3, 1-2. Jim C-def Larry
OaVldaon, 7 ·5. 7-5
Men'• 40 011Mtlfflnel llnglff
Hotll Rllle< del Peul Voal, 6-3, 8-0,
wry Pelch def G11111 C•1n1. 8-0. 1-1.
Mika Rebblll def Denni• eomn, 1.1.
6-4. Dlc;k lMCh def Bob GOM. 8-0, 5-1
Men'• 4S Ql.IM1erllnel Slntlff
Bob Oueelar del He<m Al>lef1. 8-0,
8-I. Jim Bud< def Ernie Schoop. 4-1
(r•llledJ. Stan a.. Clef Fred Scon. 5-2, ~;· 7 • Jim Perley def Jim Pugh 8-1.
Men'• 5S Ollart9'ftnel Slf>GIM
Ed Kaul., oer Ven JoM•·· 6-4, 8·4.
Pete W9!1h def Gii Slley, 8-2, 1-2. Robin
Wiiiner Oel Dick Farr111. 8-0. 8--0, Sam
Metdl def l ea Bergman. 1-1. 8-0 .._,. M o-tafftMI ........
Tony Prodan def Ski Young. 8-3. 8-3,
Howard Peleraon def Biii Lurie, 11·4, 7·8: Dan Walk .. del LOlen Raymond.
1-2, 8-2, 81U Smith def Dlcll Lavanert.
8-1. 8-3
·-·· JO SemlllMI llftelM 8 J Grevee def Pal Peuon-. 1-2. 8-1.
~; Damion Clef Evelyn Cardone, 6-2,
·-·· 40 0"8f1erllnel SlntllM OQiolhy Me111l1HHn def Oo1een e..ulk:I>, 6-1 8-0, Marlene l.bel def ~Al.ldrey Folden, 8-0, 8-4, Bev Win1n1
def lee Pllletier, 8-0, 8-0, Ellan Petez
def. Miily TrllonoN, 8-3, 6-1
·-·· 50 GllM19fflftal Slnglff Dome Sherbedt def Mary Mn Wlze
by dellUll. Jean RichetdlOfl def M1ty
Slnnon, 8-1, &-Q. Eater Nal-ledt def
Joyee ~. $.2. M . fran Wll<eflekl
def Boo SI .... , 8-1, 6-1 w-·• 5S Ovarterl!MI Slntlee Oof~ Clark def LOUiN l.rnokl. 6-1. a.o. Loi• Horton Clef Mae Meyer, 6-3. 6-2, Piyactlatt HUMey def Pel YOullg, a.o. 1-1. l>ofl• Hekmen det Audrey
Plowden, 6-2. 8· 1
WOftlW''I IO OllMtarllnel 8fnal4>•
Leone 'FrledMll del Caroline Turney, 8-J. 7·5. Bennett def RoMmond Hyde.
l-1. 8-4
·-·· 4S Doubtee Fine! King-Gordon def Trlfonoll-Slcnler, 8-1, 8-3.
·-·· .. Doublff Flnel l.mllng·Mlckelwalt def Davenport·
Bennett 8-0 &-0
Pomone Fw SUNOAY'8 ltHUL TS
(4tll .. 1 ... , MMtlfte)
A,,.AL009AI
flltlT llACI. 4'.t lu1long1. Olymo+ca UI Bro (Jin) 7.40 3 80 2 90
Double lndemNly (Burnt) 8.20 2 40 Double a..t (Cruz) 2 80
l.llO tac.cl. M1 Bolero Jet. Nelamelte. Hoo-No Fooling, High Bulll flme. H 31&. .. IXACTA (3-2) paid S~.00.
OUAltTIRHOltSH
MCOMD iu.ca. 400 yards.
Ktut-Lanny (Pini 27.40 1280 S 00
SUia C1abber (Mltehall) 1.80 5.20
frttn1111 (HW'I) 3 80
A/90 raced: My Ber l.dmtrlll. Might I can. OeYlna o.,_,, Emergency Room. f rlpol PYunt. IN Pay
Time 20 40.
\
TitlllD llACI. 3&o yerdl
P11t1y RebelJe (lCkyl 18 20
M.,ry W•gon (1'onk•I
OH..CllUrp N Go (H•1tl
OH·'*I M-lee (B<oolll)
Dtl·ONdheet IOI alloW
820 280 3 40 2 40
220 2 20
1.110 raceo Fo11h• Love olhonay
McKey Weat, Primoneuaa Mtn
rime 17.71
N IXACTA (5"81 paid $172 &Cl
THOHOUOHelllDI
'OUllTH llACI. 1 1111 m1le1 011'1 Ban., (Bleci<I 13 00 I 60 4 80
Oeltrmlned L•nd (Fr,.d2) 20 40 8 40
F11t sour11e (Ottao•I 4 80
AllO raced· Gt<leesen. lHha Neg1a,
Sandy Blanket, Tulle'• O.me, I.no Sall
l.wey
Time 1 41 415
l'"TH llACI. 1 1116 mllH
W11m Valentine (Clnnl22 80 II 60 5 40
Golotln I an (1:im1lh) 11 40 4 60
Kon• Hara (0.11ga) 3 20
Alao ·-Third Biid. Gold Widow Sullml. Loma a Knoc11001 Belle l.mour
Time· Ui1
SIXTH RACE. I II 18 !NIH
Mlyen (Mana) 10 60 4 80 3 20
81eck Buller (Slbllle) 3 80 2. 80 Fabulous Too (Warran) 3 00
1.1\o raced Mr McMoOH, Graal
CIOUd, Oulnl1 Raga. Sky Mllalon
Time· t·46 115 95 IXACTA (I· II paid $78 00
SEVENTH llACI. 8 hHlongS
Got<len POiiey (Cmp111J 60 I 80 4 20
Double TOY (Ron<ll II 40 5 00
Femme Flu (Spancet) ~ 40
Also rec.cl o-Joura. Our Porta
Call. Hualllng 1.nnle. Fe<1a11 E w1111
LOY9 Amy
Time 1.13 115
EIGHTH llACE. I 1116 mttaa
Ha Men Sam (Rarnnl 8 00 4 80 4 00
Slle1Wd Boy (Orlag•I II 80 8 20
Run For Buller M"k (St>ancerl 5 80 I.Ito .-cl The Big T . Rega.I Sc>o11
Pleau Be On Time, Lolly Lover.
Bangale<o
Time: 1:48 3/6 trs lllACTA (5·2) paid S t67 00
NINTH llACE. 8 furlooga
GIOve Man !Manal 8 &o 4 40 4 20
Prince Rob Lee (Estrada) 5 80 4 60
F111h Man (Sta111ng11 6.60 I.tao rac41d Palrlo1 Joe. P11oe of 11141
OrH n, Fleet Biiier. Potempo. Mr
HOUM Time 1 12 115
TINTM RACE. 6 rurlonga
Fly e Jenny (M•n•I 4 do 3.60 3 20 Ttrraal0'1 Puau (Eltl•d•) 5 40 4 20
Coulee Girl (0.legal 3 40
AllO •-Fike Fur Win-Won. Ta-ENtk>n. Cttsy JNI\. A Fe We Time. 1 11 415 18 l!XACTA (4·8) paid $68.00
ILIVENTH llACI!. 8 tvrf0091 Cool Frencny (AonCI) 17 40 I 20 5 80
Marble Cour1 (Mana) 4 00 4 20
Crou Flagl (Bladll 5 80 i\lao rlM*! Mollvtty. I.man 8'0lh81, Sucha Pleuura. Valenllna Law, Ptlro O
Jay Time. 1 09 115
TWILFTif llACI. 1 1118 m11ea
Oynaalic; Jqy (SllM(lsl 10 40 5 40 3 oc
CIOalng Trenclt (Fernandez) 3 40 2 IK
On The Prowl (Menel 2.81'. "''° r-Cyprtol Boy, 8111y·a o.,,.. Fancy Guy. Gtve Him Winge l' rlhot
Time 1 47 215 ta UACTA (5·21paid S l1800,._
Atlendance 111.040
HollJwood Ptlf1l IUNOAY'8 llHUL Tl
(ZZncl of u-....... ---•"'91 •IAIT llACE.. Ona mile pece
Scorpio G l KUClll 7 80 4 00 3 00 Dot Wave (Oasomer) 4.00 3 20
Durante (longol 5.20 AllO 11cad Jlndas lmagt. COIOHO
Taco. Treasure Hunter. El Torenro. F«-Wotn lcwe $1\altat Painter Mr
Cont en Time. 2 01 315 a IXACTA (6-2) peid $35 10
SICOM> llACI. Ona mile pa Strip~ (Wlmel12 40 a 40 4 oo Speclel Ouellly (Aubin! 5 20 3 40
Ooc1ot Don N (Grundy) 2.80
1.llO tac.cl Jannyt Lad N. Ove<I._,
Tulenakel, Roaerend Bret, Scoring
Drive, Man<larla
Time 159 41!>
TitMO llACI. Ona mole pace
Ctllenlt (l.ubln) 5 40 4 20 2 80
fortlltl (Patkerl 5 20 4 00
l.ndyt Wlneton (Grenltfl 6 20
Al90 tac.cl Unlo.getal>le Ster. l.rgo
Sier, And y• Fr•nces. Mr HOI Stull.
Ouel-Tlm9. RIMIU' lady. HC fox
Time-202 215 A lllACTA (4·71 paid $31160
'OUllTM llACI. 0,,. mite 1101
l.ncfy9 Mei-(Vlndgl>ml24 20 8 20 S 00 Kalamoun (Grundy) 3 60 3 20 o-rtut ..._ 10.-1 a oo
1.110 rectd Deer Sir, F1na1 Chip. Kimbel F, Brenoa Speed. South Wtey,
Noon Slit, Hallf
Time· 201 216
FIFTH llACL One mile ~
One Mo HHbly (S-h) 3 00 2 40 2 10
cnatmlnQ Gani (l.ckttman) 5 00 4.80 Vtncero (Parke<I 3.00
1.110 raced Papa Eddie . M T '• ExPI ..... 8encfll Heopy Hunting, C R
Farno, Midnight Mine. lmmKutale Time 1Sf318 A UACTA (4.3) peld 5'15 30
SIXTH llACI. One mite pKe.
Malter Swllell (Vtnoohm)3 00 2 80 2 40
SHck Swlk (Rfcllmond) II 00 4 40 Jvnole law (Todd) 4 40
l.flO reced Peter lo 8. 1>9'1te 1.1i.gro,
HI c Skipper. Marlo.el King, Skipper"•
FOl'oe, Hlllbllly tteeven.
Time: 2 00 II&.
• IXACTA (7·3) peid $8160
MVIHTM llACL One mile pece
The Tlllly 8'ddr (Kblr) 2.40 2 40 2 10
Ultte Brett Ruiter (A~) 13 00 5 80
llglllnln Slim (B•k.,I 8.80 Aleo raced. lna•ky Pete. Sola
Ellpedlllon, H9Pl)y Viner. TlllM f'lngera.
Jibe Ho. ~ 8Mch, Voter, Eloquent
Roy S, Prfnlmak.,
Time 1 61 115 95 llCACTA (8-101 paid S 118 50
llOHTH llACI. Ona mite pace San111 Berry (Vtndghml111 40 I 20 6 90
19 40 I X20 5110 e.-N (Longo) 11 ao 10 ao
Hedgerow Lyn• (8P•lllll•l 4 40
AllO r•c•d Nordel Try.. VHIOO
Proleaeor Greene, St0<my 1.11ack. Fred BUMI, Brageno. Hotace E HlllOYtr
Time 161
NINTH llACI. One mile pec;e
Jvnna Almh11t (Rtcn.J 16 80 7 20 4 20
PV 8<•1 tParke1I 8 40 6.20
P V Brat •Petktrl 8 40 6 20
Trendy Tryu (Todd Ill 3 40
Aleo ra.Hd On Tiie Spot. Kentucky Go Go. flower Hanover. Tempo Blue
Chip, Keeclo••· EnergellC Kid, Boorowa
Jeck
Tome 2 00
13 EXACT A (2·9) paid S 185 30
S2 PICK llX 16·4 7·8 41 paid U .·
3811 00 with aeven winning ltektts (11•
horsea) S2 Piek SI• conaolatton p11d
$677 20 Wlltl 187 WIMlng Uc~ell (l111e
hOflH)
TENTH llACI. One mite Plce
T""*'a (Otaomerl 12 20 S 20 3 20
. Henclovtl' (Croghan) 10 60 5 00
Akltn (Biker) 3 00
1.lao raoed· Mu Burnb10. Cool Gay.
Captain Padero, Noble Ring, Loyal Led.
Sllnley Tl>Or. Buck Fifty
Tlmt I SI 4/5
*3 UtACTA (._I) paid $14190
l.nendance l ,1189
loeton CleH lc
(al l1.1tton, MHe.) 271
Bob Gilder $54,000 87-67-70-67 m
fuzzy Zoeller $32,400 811-69-68-67 274
M McCull01.19h. $17,400 72-64·66·72 Gii Morgan. $17,400 72-66-68-61
275
Petti JICObWI, S 10. 170 70-tl7-M-72
R Sneed,SI0,170 66-72~11 David Gr ahem. S 10. 170 611-69-16-89
Brad Bryant, S 10. 170 88-72-84·71
John Cook. St0, 170 73·67·66-611
271
JOhn l.rcller. $7,800 66-6Ml9·73
Tom Jan111n1 S7 aoo 89-70-61-611 m Jim Co4ber1, S6.07S 72.71.66-fMI
M~ Soll. '8.076 ea-69· 70· 70
Mika Oon•ta. S8.o7S 88-69-72-61
Be<ry JMC1'e4. $6,07!1 71 ·66-70-ea
271
M8"1 lye, $4.850
Lon Honk le $4 850
71-tl7·72~
ea-72-811·811
Weyt>9 Levi. $4,850 70-68-ea-72 Jeck Newlon, $4,850 611-68-70-71 m
Forr•I Fever. S3.4115 70-tl9-68-72
John FougM. $3,495 87. 76-85-71
Joe Inman '3.411!1 72-68-70..flll
J-Renner. $3,4115 69-70· 70· 70
2IO
Mike Brannen. $2.374 71-68·611· 72
G-ge Ceola, S2,374 73-70· 70-87
Tll~8'Jftll'/· l2,374 73-67-71~·
8 Mstat, $2,374 77-116-ell-81
Tom Shew. $2.374 72. 70..eMlll
J-Ferenz, S2.374 70..fl9-71-70
M Mccumber. '3.274 89·69•71-71
211
Jim SlmO<I .. SI. 70 1 71·70-67·73
L~ Moller. $1,701 72..fl5-73-71
Allan Miiier S 1.701 70-70-70-71
Mika HOllenCI, S 1, 70 I 72·66-71· 72
Franll Conner. S 1,101 72-611·68· 72
JtN Senoer1, S 1,101 70-68-74..fl9
Ron Streck. Sl.701 68-73-73--87 az
let Elder S 1.4 10 73-611-611· 72
213 Bob E.Mtwood, S 1,230 19·72-70·72
Kanny Knox, $1.230 72·67-70·74
Biii Bunner, S 1.230 811-70-66-71 em Britton. s 1.230 111-72-71·71
B flel-11.230 72·7 t-811·7 t
POA tournament (at Dtllee)
20I Sendra SO<WCh, S23 250 :tor
Carole Cher~ S 15 190
20I C11111 John1on S 10.150
210
Lynn Adema, $7,750
211 ee-tey O.Voa-Coor .SS.I 12
Pat Rmo, $5,112
212
Pel Bradley S<l,727
J-1 co1 ... s.i.121 21'
Jo Ann Watlllem, S3,175
Shelley Hamlin, $3.875
J-1 ....... $3.875
214
Date Egg.ting, $2,597
Beth Daniel, S2,5117 J-~.$2,597
Barbare a.trow. S2 5117 I.lice Millet $2,5117
Belly King. S2 ,587
Hollls Stacy, $2,597
215 Sandra Haynie. $1.922
211 Patty H~. Sl.8111
Judy Cletk, s 1,8111
Berbera MoJ,_,, $1,Slll
Vivien Brownlff, $1,8111 Kathy Whltwoflh, S 1.1111
Sandri Pott, Sl.819
217
Ka11>y Morae, S 1.364
Mary Owy«, Sl.314
211
Sualt Mcl.llillar, S 1, t23
Beth Solomon. '1..i 123
Jllll Staphtneon. a 1.173
a.it Hllele. $1. 123
Rota J-. $1.123 M1Y Rll'lkln, s1.1~3
70-811·117
67-72-81
66-tl9-74
69-72-811
72-70-89
87·72·73
67-72-73 69-75-61
74-70-611
811-74-70
66-74-71
70.76-8
68-7IMll 74-811-71
89-73·72 73-72-811
75-611-70
61-73·73
69-76-71
11.73.72
119.72.75
89-73-74
69.74.74
75-73-88
76-70·71
Camel. Where a man belongs.
8 mg "tar'". 0 7 mg. nicoune av. per c1gare11c. FTC fteport DEC '81 I
Warning : The Sutgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
Wiii Jordan tournament
(et Coete MMe Goff Ck*)
CHAMl'IOH ...... fL.IOHT
(at Loe "-~M) ........ clwtll!PlaM .. ~~ci -lkad Gr-(Huntington 8Mcll).
135 -K9'11n Slat., (Sii/i Diego). S4·71.
138 -Greg F1tdt1lc k (H1.1n11ng1on
BHChl, 84·72. Paul O'SllH (N .... Pofl
BNcll), 14·72. Chila Ktyta (Getden 0.oW). .... 72
131 -Joe Slmpaon (Sen OleuO). ea.10.
Ray Vanyo (San Belnarolno). ee.12
139 -Dave 8N11Y (Lag1.1na Hiiie). 85·74. 140 -Jim Wood (TuaUn). 85-15; Dave
HoC>by (l.nlll>.im). 66-74
141 -Mike Perro (lat Vegatl. 85-78. AoOer1 Maoaan (WMtmlMler). 85-78. nm O'Mara (Newport Buch). 70· 71 , Ytm•
V•muelll (Gardena), 87·74.
142 -Giiian Stainer. 81-74; Bob
Anoeraon 10ownev1. 81-74; Deva srmoton
(No11h Ho lywoodl. 88-74. John Burckl•
(Cotte MMe). IS.77
FllllT AIOHT (M)
(at Loe Lleoe C-N)
128 -Vic Benaon (Loe 1.ngeltsl. 131-
Scolt Morey (Senta An•t. 132 -Mike Rltey;
133 -Hardy. 134 -Tllompton, O.enot.
Teet.,, 135 -PaUllOfl, Evant. Mllemontet,
Slo91. 138 -~r. loeller, Newton
HCONO 'U0HT t•12) (al ..... LIMM C-ff)
126 -Bonny Magente (Palm Springe), Weyna N«tlngton (Loe Angelet). Magan•• wtne on matching eco<tcerdl. 128 -Slevt11
Kleen. 127 -Welle. 121 -May, C Snl«h: 1211 -Felcenl, Roa, 130 -Peverlarl
Oengh•uHll. Adamt. ·
THlllD 'U0HT (1 .. 11)
(al ..... Llnda~M) 124 -Cl\al1M Hanlltn ( ), 125 -N1
Wiii ("1Uone): 127 -ShM. 1211 -
L.eacn. CUrry, B o Smith: 130 -Oickeraon.
llyall; 131 -BraObury, Tung, 132 -Jol\nlOfl, Ceaey.
How T:120 farM Here • how 111e 09 r-.ty 1Mlftt In
Ttl8 l.uocieled P,... college lootben
poll lerecl 1111 -1 Pill t l·O·O) bel l North Carolina
7-6
2 WHlllnglOfl (1•0-0) bMI Taau-EI Paso 55--0 3 Neb<Mlle (1-0-0} bMI towa 42·7
4 Alebama (1·0·01 but Georgia
Tech 0 ·7 6 NOfln Carolina (0-1·0) toel to Piii
7-8 8 Georgia 12·0·0) bHt Brigham Voong 17-14
7 Penn Stale (240) beet Merylend
311-31 a. Southern Melt\odltl (1-0-01 bMI TUl-51·7.
II Oklahoma (0· 1·0) loll 10 waat Vlfglnle 41·27
10 Southern Cal (0· 1-01 loet 10 Florida 17.g
11 FIO<lcla (2-0-0) bMI Southern C.. 17·11
Mletllgen ( 1-0-0) beet w1acon1~ 12
20-11
13 Nk.entu ( 1·0-01 bMI Tl.llee 31-o 21~:4 Ohio Stale (1·0-0l bH I Baylor
15 Arizona S1•1• (2-0-01 beef Ulell 23·10 18 ClemlOfl (0· 1-0) Old not pley
17 r. ... (0-0-01 did not play
18 UCLA (1-0-0) beet Long a.ec1>
Stale 4-10
111 Ml.,.,... Fie (1·1-01 _, Houlton
31·12
20. Notre D•me (0-0-01 did not ot•y
IATUllOAY'I LATE SCOllE8
HtWIM 40. Montana 0
Cat Siii• Northndg• 38, Cal Sta11
Hayw11d 37
U of Sen ~o 31, Redlenda O
Cll Lutheran 4. OcGldenlal tll
°"" ... ft•hlng Allrl LANOIHO (Newpot1 hacll)
-128 •noter• 80 bus. 167 bonllo. u s
meck.,91, 74 rocl< flllh. 26 teulpln, 14
Sl>tleptl>aed
DAVIY'I LOC::Klll (Newpot1 hech)
-214 anglers I 1>er1ec:uo1. 107 bonito.
40 c.llC:o beu. 837 m-er• 87 •-flail. Ill aenq basa DANA WltAll, -285 anglara 82
bUI. 320 bOnllo, 1173 macker91. 8 rock
llah, 1 yellow1a11, 11 aculpln, 19
l heepahtad I white aea baH 1
ceberon
ll!AL 81ACH -148 anglers 202 be11acucla. 111 bontto. 17 eetico t>eu. 3
hallbul. 2 mack., ... 35 sand bast, 3
y9110wt4Ml (taerge) -400 ll>Olet• 580 bonito, 5 cellCo beM. II halibut, 1.050 meckertl 24 ~ b .... 10 acutpkl 900
wllll• croaker. 725 q-. 111111 IAH otaGO (KAM Lendlnt) -350
angler• 803 ~lb8COf8
tar. 8 m1
C.5
I
I I I I I ~
. ... ?-
•!
Orange 00111 DAILY PILOT/Mond1y, 8tptembef' 13, 1882 ,.
trike talk anadien lllO'*I iMfW IWi CIW 11111 ll·llllT HOJICI it .......... OIVIH ,,., •nc• °' ,.,.Tiii' HU NOT1c• or o•·TH or 11\t llOwla of ,,,,.,_ ot""' COM! On Oetoe. •. 1MI •1 '' 00 I"' "" """'
... IC M>TICC
irks fans
. ·o·n O•"'"'u"llt Coll••• Dltltlal or ''"'T AMl"IC AN TITLI RUTH BAINBRIDGE Pair J I Drane• Ou11n1y. can1ornl1, wlll IH•U"ANOI OOM,AN Y. I COLE.ala RUTH I .COLE, ltCt lvt ... ltd bl4• llP 10 I I 00 Cellfornll GOfl*lllon .. l1ut1 ... aka AU'Mt COLE AHO or • m, T""411 hclMlll«* H , ti lht or~ Truet• °' luOllllUtld
l t e flurchaelng btpertm•"' of Hiii Tr11tlH. 01 lh1t 0«11ln OMd of P E T l T I 0 N T 0 am ma COll•U• dlttrlot IOClltd II U10 T11111 tUOlllld by ITIVIN A ADMINliT!R ESTATE NO.
MONTRc-"'L (AP) Ad1me Avenue, 0 0tll Mu1, ICOTT 1n 11nn1111ltcl man 111d A·lUtG•.
ClllllfllD
6 ···i--6-42--5-6-78--
'e ahawk boo d
4 CLASSIFIED ~~.~!~!!. ......... .
~ Cll lornla 11 wfl!Gh lllnt Mid bklt MARii. YN J MARIUS, M 1.111m11ti.c1
H1.iht wing Ouy L.aCI ur wwr bt public.IV opened end'""'°' women. u 101n1 t1n•n1t. 1nd 'fo •U h •lr1, bt>oof!CUitlt!t,
d C L ltUPICHAS~ Of PAINTING recOfded Octobtt a~. ttlO .. In crod~tou and COIHlngt'nl on de t'n t'mirn arry PAP£R. IPllTRUCTIDNAI. M!OIA ln•1'111111n1 No uui. In too-c: r (Id It 0 r. 0 f R u T II
th OAl\Kt;LL <:lllUSTIAN A~ lpoth Wtltet
R ob In 110 n , who had CE NllPI, ORA NGl COAST ISIOO, '• eot or Otf1G111 Aec:otd• BAINBRIDOE COLE, aka ~olntly threatened to COl.LIOt; or OflllOt COllnly, C1IU01nl1, Ind RUTH 8. 'v'L"' .. ka RUTll AM Did• .,. 10 bt In IMlCO<dlftOI IMtuenf 10 '"" C4ll1aln NollGe ol """ .,., .. oycott thtl trainlna .... 11h tht lid fO<M 1nt1ruc11ot11 tn4 0.111111 lntteut1del r«Ofded Aotll COLE 11nd JlC'nK>lll who mAY
camp of the M ontreal Cond111on .. nd8l*!llk:1Uon1whlch 22. lllH 11 ln•lrumen1 No IX! otherwltt• lntc>relJt(-d In
Canadhmi unlcH their 11• now on 111e 111<1 m1y bt tee111td U · t30232, ot 0111<:111 Recotd• 01 the will and/or _.ft'"·
2 T1 ~t~!u~~. Call
1ntheoll10toft11tP111ct11elnoAoen1 uld Oounty. w111 11ndt• and .,...,"" cont r u c t a w I th the or Mid eo1ieo. 01et11Ct 11111tu1111 10 11Jd DMd or T1u11 ... 1 A potlllon has been (lh.'<I Jim Pol<.'t.'l puffi.·d on (1 t•1gareltl' and i Urvt•yl-d
tlw Xt't•111• uround tlw Kingd<>mt· during ha lftimt• o(
thl• Clt•vt•laud St•attlt• l(:inw, tht• one• that almost
w11sn't Sunduy in Hw Nmlvn•1I f<~voibuU Lcagul'.
National Hockey League Eaoll blddef m1111 1111>m11 With ~ 11 ll\.lbllo aucuon to• c .. h. 11wl11I by--Dorolh<.'ll E. Coll' ln th{' • team We r e improved, bid • c11l'lltr'• check. cerllll•d money 01 lht u11111t1 811111 or Superior Court ol Orungl' , oht ok. or blddt•'• bond m1dt Ametloa, 1 cM11i.1't ~k peyablt agreed to terms Sunday. pay11>1e to 111e 01d" ot lh• c~•• 10 .. 1d11ut1Md11wn on•••11•01 County reque11tlng th11L ·~s The two players joined Community Cotleg• Olttrk:t Boetd n1t1on11 b11nk, 1 tt•I• or rede111 O or o th t' 11 l!;. Co I c b <' "'l'hl•rp's u linw und u plOl'l' fm' t•vt•rythir1g, and
1 don't thmk this 1s llw timt-lo be tulklng about a
i.lnkl'.'' Poll'(•t S31d or Tr•JtlH• In an amount not lest credit union. Ot a •Ult• °' l4td11al I d I ~ 8 Other S a 8 l h e 1h11n llvt Plf"Gent (&~I or th1 tum' uvlngt and loin 1uocl1flon appo nt<.' 111' personu
Ev<.'n as tht• Nf<'L st•ason openc..'\i on li<'h<.>dule,
no <me knew how long It would last.
The NP'L Players Association, d1 ... ul10t·ked in
rwgouauons with tht' NP'L Ma nagemf.'nt Council,
hm. thn•alcm·d to strike "ovt•r its demand tha t
s..1laries be' bast.'CI un a f1xNI J)ef'l'tmtage of gross
rl'Vl'llUl'S.
Can ad lens h eld their bid 11 1 gua11ntH lh•I tl'I• blddtt domiciled In 11111 ,1111.11 ih• miln rcpreeentallve w administn
first practice. following wlll tnl•I Into th• propoHd tnl11not IO Fl111 Ame1101n Tiii• l he I! 11 l u l c () f Ruth 6 Con111e1 II lh• Hm• 11 1w11dtd to lntur~ Comp1ny 10011ed 11 t 14 &lnlirldge Cole, C:0.1.11 Mesa. medical t!Xam lnntiona nlm In lh• •~• otllllture to tt11er Eu1 Flllh Sl1ttt, 1n1l'ltcHy ol 81n1• Ca 11 for nl ll ( u nd N the earlier In the day. 11110 well conlrtcl, lhe proctld• or An1, Callloml1. 11t th1t 1lgh1, 1111• lhe che<:k wlll bt lorlelled, 0t In the end lnltt"I convtytd 10 end now lndependenl Adm1n1strat1on
T h e I n C r e a S e d cut 011 bond, lhe lull tum theteol held by 11 under Hid ONd of Trutl of Estates Acl). 'Th<' ~tltior1 7 financial benefits for the wlll be lorlell•d 10 aald college In lh• prope11y 1111111ed In Hid Is set for hearing In Ot!pl.
t d1tl11CI County l/ld St•I• dteetlbld 11 two veterans were no No bidder m1y withdrew hit bid Loi 38 ol Trtct No 0372. " No. 3 al 700 Civk Center
disclosed. But the deal 1or 1 pe1IOC1 ror l0<W·ltve(46) d•Yt thown on a Mill> 1ec:01ded In Book Drive West, Sama Ana, CA
ED GARVEY, Nf'LPA t•xtoeut1ve dirt'(·tor, said
,Sunday th<> union's execullvt• C'Omm1tt.ce will m eet
• .11cx1 M onday an Ch1l·ago to set a strike deadline -
t•llht>r tht• third or fourth we<>kt'nd of the season,
St.•pt. 26-27 or CK·t 3-4
came alter intensive '"" tl'lt d1t1 Mt tor tl'lt opening 410. c>1gea 1 10 3 1oe111tl11e. 92701 on October 6, 1982 1tt 8 b lhetlOf Ml•o•fl•neou• Mept, 1ec;o1d• ol 9 30 bargaining et ween Tht Boe1d of Trull-reMl'Vts 01111g1Covn1y,C1Hl0<nl• : •.m.
Lafleur's agent, Norm 111e prlYfltot or 101ec:11ng any 111d aff E11~t1ng 1hete1rom 111 e11, gu, IF YOU OBJECT to lhl'
Cap 1 an, and Irv j n g bkl• °' lo waive •ny lrregularllln or mlnertl• and olher hydroc11bon granting of the petluon, you
Seaull• players t'Ons1dt•rcd walking o ut on their
own before the first gam<> to protest the waiving of
fur1111.•r union rt>prt'8Cnt.at1ve Sam McCullum. Not
until Friday did they d<..>t:idc to play. and then they
ll·ft oj:>{'n tht• pus.-;ib1lny o f striking next Sunday's
g•1me m H ouston
"I don't think 1l's fair to the fans," said Poteet,
.J -13· year-old t:onstrul·tion foreman who said he has
lx·(•n a ''strong ut1ton man" for 20 years.
"I U1mk tlus is all really ridiculous," said Marie
Ains lie, another Scahwawks fan. "I mean the
playe r s doing all this They're gt'tting paid quite
a bit now. ln this situation , I don't think we should
support tht>m ."
Potct't und Ainslie weren't alone in their
cl1ssa t1sf action.
WHEN TUE SRAHAWKS took the field an
hour bdore k1t·koff, they were greeted by a
rnixtur<> of boos and ch£'<•rs from the st.ands, where
no-shows ll'ft 8.915 of th<> tH.759 scats empty.
• B oos also ra ng down o n players in New
Orlt>ans. Balt1niorl' a nd Detroit when the opposing
Cea rns m<'l at m1df1t'ld for what in this labor-clouded
year has b ccoml• customar y hands hakes to
demonstrate union sohdarlly
In Phlladt'lphia. where the Redskins and the
Eagll's opened tht• SC'ason m high excitement with
an o verhme game won 37 -34 by Washington. fan
'Joe O 'Donnell scud, "I JUst hope it (a strike) doesn't
• 'hap!)('n If th£'y go out after three games, I'm not
t·ommg bat•k "
Many bas<:ball fans . of course, said the same
thing whl•n lht•1r st'ason was interrupted by a strik e
iast season. but attC'nda nc·C' is up around the major
leagues this yt•ar.
•· "Ninety-nine pcrt·cnt of the fans wiU say they
. ,will b<' making a mis t.akt'." said Al Lehman. one of
the 68,885 p eople 1n Philadelphia's Veter ans
Stadium. "If I'm running a business, I don't mind
• µaying my players Wt'll. But 1f a player tells you he
-w a nts somC' of thC' rcvt'nucs. you tell him you call
')he shoL<;."
· N o t e v e r yon e was resentful about the
poss1b1llty o f a stt1ke.
"Have al 1t. No problem," said Dick Soren.sen, a
";(lt1htv company line manager at the Kingdome,
9-'her~ one banne r rea d "Solidarity" a nd another
• d <'dared. "Ignorant People Boo."
"l'M A UNION man a nd that's all they can do
1s withhold tht!1r labor.'' S orensen said. "They
.haven't got any o the r leverage but to strike." i:, Scahawks Coach Jack Patera, whose hard-line
• polic:y against unio n demonstrations has made
·Seattll! the flash pq1nt of the labor dispute, blamed
'the s ituation for his team's 21-7 loss.
• A s k e d if the Seahawk s had a lack of
L'Oncentrat1on and if that had anything to d o with
their performance on the field, Patera replied,
"Usually tha t's the reason, and that's accurate in
this case ..
~-Players and coaches e lsewhere said they were
· thmkmR football. not strike, Sunday.
,Df ATH NDTICIS
. 1nlotm1IUIH 1n 1ny bid or In lht· eub1t1nctt lying below • deplh or should either apnoar at the G rundman, managing bidding soo r .. 1 rrom 1:ie turtece or 18id ,,_
d j rector o f the NORMAN E WATSON 1a11d, bul wllhoul lhe tlOhl or eniry hearing and state your
Canadiens. Lafleur said Sec:1e1try, upon 1ny po111on ol 1h1 tu.tee• objections or file written
the negotiatio,ns were Coat! Communny m•rk•I. mine. 1xpl0fe r dtlll ror before the hearing Your completed at about 4 a.m . Colteoe. Dl••rlet ••me ... res11\led In tld• lrom "I'm very happy," said Publlthtd 011ngt Co111 Delly Vll91nl1 Flippen Kind 1. rtco'ttJ•d appearance may be in person
8oa1d or Tru'1-•boY• • Otplh ol SOO~t 10 11k1. objections with the court
PllOI Sepl t3, 21. 1982 NoY9111bel us. 19781n 1tee1. or by your attorney. Lafleur, who scored 27 4021·82 PllOl 1919andlnBook 11 1,pago IF you ARE A
1 I h · 1920, both or omc1a1 Ree<x 1 goa s ast season, IS MLIC NOTICE Th• ,., .. , •ddreu 0 other CREDITOR or a contingent
second consecutive off-common dulgnatlon or 111d creditor of the deceased, you
year . "I didn't want to 8Ut'fN<>lt COURT M property 1• purporlid to be 35 must fUe your claim with the
h lse ., CA1MtONIA Glenn. lrvlne, CA 92714 · h p lay anyw ere e . COUNTY M ORANGa Seid 8819 wlll b• made wnn01JI court or present ll to t e
Volleyball
team plays
The United States
National men's volleyball
training team will face
the national team from
Poland in an exhibition
match at the Long Beach
Convention Center on
Thursday , Sept. 23
beginning at 7 o'clock.
The 17 Ameri can
players are competing to
represent the U.S . at the
Olympic Games in 1984
while Poland is a world
power in the sport and
Olympic gold medal
winner in 1976. Last
year, they finis h e d
second in the European
championships and were
the only team to win
games from Russia.
The Polish team is
particularly strong in
blocking.
Advance tickets are
available at the Long
Beach Convention
Center box office. Adult
tic kets are $5 and tickets
for children are $3. On
the night or the event.
tkket prices wiJI be $6
for adults and $4 for
children
MLIC NOTIC£
700CIYtoC-terDl'.W1 covenenl or watr1nly, expreH or personal representative
... .. Implied. "10 11111, poseetalon 01 appointed by the court .u:r':. ~ CA ll7Cl2 etWUmbrtncea to 1111s1y lhe unpaid within !our months Crom the :nt~ION~": IHl"LEY :i;: g~ .:~ ~o~~ r~~~I~~ date of first issuance of
MATI.OCIC wll: S39.9!)4.30, plu. 1he following letters as provided in Section "•lflONDllNT: JlfJP"IY L. tsllmated 0011•. e11p1ntea 1nd 700 of the Probate Code of MATI.OCIC 1d111ncn II lllt lime of the lnltlel C h IUfllMONI (fJAMILY LAW) publlclllon 01 1111, Nolie. 01 Silt. alifornla. T e time for CAN NO. 0-20llN St7,S05.27. filing claims will not expire
HOTICll You fleve Men Med. NOTICE TO PftOfll"TY OW.Pl prior to four months from TIM_.,.,..,..:::--..=~·~~ YOU ARI IN MFAULT UNC>eR A the date o! the hearing WltlMM ,_ -DllD OF TRUIT, DATED rov reepoM ..... .,.. ...... IEltTEMIER 23, 1HO. UNI.EH noticed above. !Min..,..........._. YOUTAXEACTIONTOfltlOTICT YOU MAY EXAMINE
W ,_, wWI le Hell IM....,_ of YOUR l'ROl'ERTY, IT MA Y IE lhe Ille kap1 by 1he court 11
•" ettottt•r '" tllit •111°'• rou IOU> AT A f'UlllJC I.AUE. IF YOU you are interested in the tllouldde .. ,,......, .. .._..,_, NEED AN UPLANATION OF THE
,..... " .......... W aftf, _, NATURll OF THE flROCHDINO est.ale, you may (ilea request
bt fled......... AOAINIT YOU, YOU IHOULD With the court to receive AV 1101 U •led ha al do CONTACT A LAWYER. i 1 · f h clt1tt111dadt. II Ulllunal P'iH• Dtled: s.c>iembtr 2. 1992 s Pe c a not 1 c e o ll e
declllf _.,. Ucl. Ml 1t1dhul& a Pini "-teen Tit.le inventory of estate assets
-... Ud. = 4Nltro lntw-COfftPIN!r. 1 and o( the petitions, accounts cit• dlel. LN lelan ... c....,,.-..oradon and repor ts described in
..... Dtill Ontltrod, A.-llecl C>mctf S l · 1 2 0 0 C l h •1 U1ltd d•H• tollcller ti 1,.. L Flfttl It. -1""""'"' e c 1 on o e -aeto • IHI llMoado a11 •le a.n1a Ana. CA mm California Probate Code. eeuato , dtberfa hacerlo (714) su.uu HARV EY, K ENNY &
...._....__ta, dt ttta -.. Publl1hed Ot•no• Coll• Coat1 GARDNER
eu ,..._ea o .... uton. !'~~ Oell'f Pllol. Sepl t3. 20. 27, 1ee2 By.· Richard w. Bucb"'Ran elguna, puade •er r6tt11r.... 1 402()-82 ...
llelltpo. l 77U Skypark Blvd. No. t. TO THE RESPONOENT: The MLIC NOTICE HO pefllloner hll filed 1 petition ------------conottnlng '/()UI mlrTlllge. If you fall T·13IOI 10 flll a rttPOOM wtlhln 30 deyt of NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S I ALE
lh• d1tt th1t lhl• t11mmont I• T.S. No, 3<4054-o7
~ on you, your default ""Y be Flit No. 1142.504 enlertd end lhl court may tnttr a YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNOER A judgment containing Injunctive or l 0 N O ~ CJ H M S E C U fl 1 f y Olhef Of~· eoncemtng dMelon of (INSTALLMENT) LANO GONIHAl.I
p1operly, tpouHI auppo11, child WITH POWER OF SALE DATED
lrvlne, CA 9%71 4
(714) H!-0212
Published Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, Sept. 13, 14. 20,
1982
4018-82
cutlody, child tupport. 1ttomty DECEMBER 12. 1975 UNLESS YOU 1------------
1-. coefl. and IUCh other rtlltf u TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR Mt.IC NOTICE m1y be grlnted by lhe c;ourt. The PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT A ------------g11nlth!Mnl of Wtgff. laklng ol PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN IC-011M money or property, or other COUit EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE NOTICE TO CREDITORS euthorlzed PfOCl.-dlngt m•y eleo OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST OF IUl.IC lltANSFU rteull. YOU. YOU SHOULD CONTACT A (lece. 1101 .. 107 U.C.C.) Oiied Merc:h t . 1982. LAWYER Notice la hattby given lo
Lee A.._.., a.ta On Stptambet 21, 1982. a1 II 00 c1edllo11 of Iha within n1med
Nettcy w.....-, o..utr o clocll a"', STEWART TITLE OF transferor lhll • bulk transfer Is Pul>llthtd Oran11• Cout Dilly CALIFORNIA, H duly appointed abou1 to ba mt<le on pereon11
Piiot, Aug. 23 30, Sept. 8, 13, 1082 Trustte under and purauanl lo Long Plooert'/ h«elnelte< deS«lbed. 3733-82 Fo1m Security (lns1ellmon1) I.end Thi nemt and business eddrast
------------Con11ec1 With Power ol Sale or lhe 1n11nded tranaleror la fltllJC NOTICE ("Co/\111cl') 1tcorded O.Cembtr PACIFIC RESTAURANT SYSTEMS.
------------19, 1975ulns1rumen1No 2209eln 1 Oentral P1r1ne11hlp. t585 FICTITtOUS IUSIHE88 Book tteoo. Page 1015 01 Olflclal Sunl1nd L•n•. Cos11 Mau.
FICTITIOUS auSM•S NAM£ STATEMENT Rtcords In lhe office of the COi.iniy Cllll0tnle 92628 NAME tTAT£MlHT Thi lotlow1no peftonS ... doing Rec:Ofdtr ol Oreoge County. St••• The loeahon In Cal1lorn1a ol lhe T lollowlng dOlng buainess H ol cahlomle. e11ec:uled by ROBERT chlel e~ec:ullve office or prlnclpal buSl~t~OUS:-;:A:: REAL Wes~~a7:~::!. ~~i~eT:i~~~.i~ ~~l~EE~~:Rtl~~~~O~ e:~7:,: f1"~!a~1 i~~.~~·r!::.
ESTATE, 3000 W. Coall Highway. CA 92680 end ELSIE W PATTERSON, ea Cotti MHI, Calllornla 92626. CA 02663 SPIRIT 0 EVE L 0 PM ENT Vendors All othe1 busln111 n1mes and
NTe ~:re.TT A MAR IE COMPANY, Gane1al Partner. 145 Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION addr•HH u1td by lho lnlendeo
FERGUSON. 30952 Cint.,l>ury SI., WHI Metn Slrtet. Suite 200. Tustin. TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH transreror wflhln lhtet yea11 IHI
L N el CA 92677 CA 92680 -(payable •• Ume ol aa1e In lawful PHI to ta1 H llrtown 10 the &gll~~u:\u GLENN HAHN , 18 Tiii• bulintn is oonducled by• money of 1he United SlllH) 11 lhe Intended t1ansleret tre NONE.
Slonelngton. legun1 Beach, CA llmlled parlnershlp. offices ol S1ew1r1 Tille ol Callf01nl1. The n1me end buslnest addreea ~2651. El Camino Perlnert, 900 North Bro1dwey. Senta Ane. ol the lnlended t11nale1ee Is:
This buslnesa 19 conducled by a a Celll01nla l.lm1ted Celll0<nl192701;(714)558-11t4. 111 JASON LEVENSON. 9473 Cenlral ~eneral pirtne,.hlp Pe11nar1hlp 1lgh1. tl!le end lnleratt conveyed lo Avenue, Monlclelre. Calllo1nle Ho111i.ue M Feiguaon By Splrll Oe11elopmen1 end now held by It und., Hid 91763.
Thi• a111emen1 was llled wilh the Company. Gene1al Partner Contracl In Iha property tllueled In Thtl the p1operly perllnent County Cletk ol 011nge COi.iniy on Wynne S Going. Jr eald County end Sltte detctlbed .. : hereto la dHcrlbtd In general u
Se 1 t982 Oen41rel Partner Loi 2 of Tract No. 853, •• pe1 Stock In Trad•, flxluru end plambtl ' · F11M.21 This 11'1amen1 was llled wllh lhe mtP recorded In Boot! 19, page 42 eq11lpman1 1nd Good Wiii ol •
Publlahad oiang• CoHI Delly County Cltrll ol Ortnge COi.iniy on ol MISGtllaneous Mept In ll'lt olllce Ctttaln Re111ur1n1 butlnMS known
P <>-1 6 13 20 27 1982 Auo 17, 1982 or !ht Covnly Rec01der ol Orange 11 Onllrlo lamppost Pizzi 1101'..,..., ' ' ' ' 3932·82 F1155t5 County. ' Re111u11n1 , being 1 porlln of PullllSlllld Orenge CoHI Dally Th• lllHI lddrtU end Othe1 Tt1nll81or'• AsSllS end •• loclled PllOI. Aug 23. 30, Sept. 6. 13, 1982. common dtllgn1llon, II eny, ol lhe •• 2467 South Euclid Avanue,
3734·82 real p1op81ly dHcrlbed 11love It Onllrlo, Calllomla. ---D-llD-•tc_llll\_Tl_C_E ___ purported lo be 2289-2297-2297\<'t The bullntU nltne uMd by Iha
MLIC NOTICE
FA y survwed by his wife Gayle STATEMENT OF A8ANDONMENT
HORACE THOMAS sons Jim and Michael, Of'UllOF
FA vt. m. resident or Cost.o parents Jack '!nd Carlee and FlCTmOUS IUStNHI NAME
Mesa Ca Passed away on brothers Eric and Fred The tollowlng pe1ton hu
~\IUL nu Peclflc:. Cot•• Meta. C1lilomle said 1r111slttor ti llld loeallon le ------------The undt1tl9ned Trutlee ONTARIO LAMPPOST PIZZA l'lCTITIOUa au ... al lsclelm1 eny lleblllly for eny RESTAURANT, 2487 South EUCiid
NAME ITATf•NT ec:tntta ol lhe slrMI eddreu Avenue. Ontario, C.hlomla
The 10llowln0 per90ns .,. doing nd olhec common dleiOMllOO, If Thll ••Id b11lk t11nsle1 la
butin.t aa. ny, thOwn ""'*"· lnlendtd 10 be oonsummaltd 11 Ille
~Septe~ber 9. 1982 He was Services will be held on :::.S~a.:' UM ol lhe 11c1111out a JCWder Cor 10 years for Tuesday• September 14. THE MILK PALACE. 940 W
Jack Fav Jewelers He is 1982 at 2:00PM at t~e 1&t11S1..Cot11..._.CA92827
Harbor Lawn Mount Olive The F1c11110111 811tlnen Chapel Services under the N•rne 1eferred 10 •bov9 wu llled In
direction or Harbor Lawn-?~oe Co11nty on Sep1emb11 2,
Mount Olive Mortuary of GERALD JAMES HARUKI.
8RANOYWYNE PROPERTIES Seid Hie will be mldt. bul olllct ol WESTERN MUTUAL
II, e Llmiled p1rll18f"lhlp, 1923 E. llhoul cowen•nl or wa,,anty. ESCROW CORPORATION. P.O 171h SI . No 102. Santa Ana, CA 7 700 Sou T · S 9270l iu>< ... 0< lmplltd, reg11dlng tllle. Bo• 5 60. th uaun l<MI,
MERRILL A MOLTZ JR An MHlon or encumbrenc... to Or1nge, C..ilomla 92667 on or 111«
I Id ,.__ • "R ay lhl 1'9mllnlno prlnclpel tum Oclobel 4, t982. ndlv ull. 683 l ...,,yon Hiiia d .. secuted bi 1ald Conltecl lo•wll The n1me end addtHI of th•
PIUCE HOTHUS
18.L HOADW A Y
MOaTUAU
110 Broadway
Cosla Mesa
642·9150
IALnlHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCUFf CHAl'EL
427 E 17th St
Costa ME>sa
646-9371
l'IUCE UOTHUS
SMITHS' MOaTUAaY
627 Main Sr
Hun1tng1on Beach
536·6539
Anaheim, CA 92907. ' _. h ......__ ....... .... THE RED BRICK ROAD 45.93e O. telel amo11nt not perton .,.,1 .. ,..,.,...,.,ms ml)'..-Costa Mesa. 540-5554. 14681 Westfall, Tutlln, CA 92680,
JOHNS This butl1-t wu CO<lducled I>'/
M RIE LO an lndlVldull A . V Al. JOHNS, G1tlld J He1u111
BUILDING COMPANY 1 Calllornle ncludlng lhe prtnclp1I b1lanC'e tiled It WESTERN MUTUAL
COtl Ilion Generll p rtner t623 pay 1b1 e on u n 4erIy1n11 ESCROW CORPORATION, P.O. por · • • ncuml>fanct(t), tubJ.cl to which Bot 5760, 700 South Tu111n Slreet, resident of Santa Ana, Ca Thlt t1a1ement wu 111tc1 with tilt
Passed away on September Coun1y Cllrl< of 01•no• County on
11 , 1982 She is survived by September '· 1982. F144nl
E. 17th St No. 102, Sanla An•. CA lht r.-1 ptopetly Will bt IOld, wllh 011nge. Calll01nla 92697 end lhe 92701· nt-1111tteon. u PfOl/ldtd In Hid IHI d1y lor filing clalm1 l>y 1ny The Red Brick Road ntr1c1. 1dvencff. II 1ny. und11 credltOf at11n bt Oclober 1, t082,
her daughters Juanita Clark, Published Orange CoHI Diii)'
Violet Edwards, Clare Pllo1. Sep1 6. 13. 20. 21, t982
Martha Smith and Darleen 31178·92
Building Co. h1 1e1m• or Hid Cont11c1, lee•, wtllch 11 tht butlnesa d•Y befOft lht Me,,lll A Moltz. Jt., hugu ind up1nsH ol the oon111mm1tlon dell 1pecllled PtH. Thlt •l•l•meni wu llled wnh the rutlM and or the ttutt• crHled by 1bove.
Jes.se, son Claude Johns, Jr.,
23 grandchildren and 26
g rea t -grandc h ild ren .
Services will be held on
Tuesday, September 14,
1982 at 3 :30PM at the
Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Memorial Chapel. lntennent
services will be held al
Laurel HiU Memorial Park,
Des Moines, lowa. Services
under the direction of
Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Mortuary of Costa Mesa.
540-5554.
Id Cont1ec1. Dated July 7, 1982. Counly Cltrk or Ot•noe COi.iniy on Tl'lt VertdO<t und8' Hid Con1rec1 , A c I ,, I c R I I T A u R A "' T P'tllt.IC NOTIC£ Septembtr 1• 19e2. etolort IXt®led and delivered IYSTflll, --~~~~~.,.,.,,.,,,..~--I F1"'30 o th"• unde11lgn1d 1 wrl11en A a.-.. flannertlllp l'tCTITIOUI .u ... 11 P111>llth1d 011nga Counly Dally liretlon of Oefiult l!ld Oem•rtd lem M. WetMft,
NA• aTAR•NT Pllol. Stpl 8• 13. 20. 27• 1992 or Seit, end 1 w1l11en Nollce ol f'od t . Cllaf!INrlalfl The foltowtng Dtreoo• 111 dotng _________ ..;3-.9.;..3_1-....;;82 111111 1nd Election 10 Sell Th• Trtnt..,.., b11ll~NY 101l: OTl .. E DONUTS. 1113 rta.JC flOTIC( nd~llgntd ceuMd Hkl Nolio. of JMon """"tOfl, lnttncled " '"' l•ult Md Eltcllon lo Sttl lo be Tr....tefM Balt81 SltHI, No. o. Coe11 MtM. L'tCTITIOU• MlllNllll ec:or~ In ,.,. county where the w .. tent MvtUll llCIOW Corp. CA 92829. ,.._ aTA~ etl prOC>ftty 11 localed. ,,0. lo• f7tt
8 AH w HA N KIM. 1 3 0 1 Tht lollowlng ~''°" •• doing At of lhe lnllltl 1>11bllcallon ol lht 700 .. T•ltft IL SUMmf'twor11'1 Pt-. Flllltfton, CA bllelntN M: oOCt of Stlt. lhe lolll lltnOUlll ol Or ...... CA t:llS7
02833. AXELROD I.EASING CO., 3121 11811"981d bllence ol the obllgallon teer-No. 10l-100l2 Hu N s 00 K KIM . 13 0 I WHI OoHI Hlghwey. No. 9·9. td by lhl PIC>PtflY. 10 be IOld, Publl•h•d 011ngt COHI Dilly SumtTlll'IWOt1h "'-· Fulllnon, CA Newport haclh, CA 02693. not Including tht-ptlnelpel bfltnce Pllol. Stpt. 13, 1982
02933 ARTHUR 0. AXELROD. 3121 1y1b1 e on u n d a r I y Ing 4025-82 Tllla buei-I• COlldUCltd by an WHI CoHI Hlghwty, No. 9·A. bnince(tl. tubjtcl lo whk:h lndMd11al. Nt¥fpon Betch, CA 92693. ht nia1 Pfoe>ttf'I wtH bt told) end
l'ACIRC YllW
MIMOatAL. l'Aa•
Cer1]91efY Mo11uary
Chape.,Crematory
3500 Pac1t1c View Drive
Newport Beach
&«·2700
Sall When Kitti 1Ne buelntte le oondllC1tCI by In Htonably Utltnll•d COtll,
DIXO Thie •l1t-t wu flltd with "" Individual. 11ptntt1, •nd adw1ncH H ol N Ooun1y Cler1c of Or"'9f COllftty on Art!M o. Alltlroa bet 2t, 1NO u lol!Owt ITA,_..,-°" wmtORAWAL
•
MtCOltMlac MOITUAlllS
Laguna Beech
494·9'415
Laguna Hilla
'16&-0933
San Juen Cepletrano
495-1776
~lo. LAWN-MT. OLIYI
Mortuary • c.,,..tery
Cremtlory
\ 11125 Giller A~ .
Cost•Meu ~~S64 D
R 0 B ER T K E N N ETH AUOUlt 11, 1082 Tllla .. .,.,,_, -flled w11t1 1t1t 01.i Utic>ald Ptlndc>el ,._ DIXON, pa1Sed away on ,*"1 CO\lnly C*1I on AllllWI 1l, 1982. Bllanot l'AlmmMI• ONRATINO Se pt e m be r 1 0 , 1 9 8 2 P11blltl'ltd 01en~t Cout 011~ ,.,.._ S4U3e oo '1CTTT10Ua ':. .. U.
S .. _ .. ....., b h '-If Shir' Piiot, Aug. 23, 30, ...,t, I , 1~ 1"2 P"bll•h-.. 01an1:, CoHt Dal~ llmaf-' ,..~,,end h w v1V"-"" Y ""W e . .ey 31;,142 .... .:: . .11 .. ~ "::3, 30, f. 9, 13, 1"'• .., ""'"' Tll• lollowlnO Parton II f So h T ..... ,,.a Ca 2 '"''" ._. ' .. ~ ... Of F0tteloluf<t• ~IWfl .. I o-'*el .,.,,,_ trom o ut _....... .• tlONI •llM.,. 111\TICC 3732.e2 . s 2.02120 .......... ....-.... -.~"" Robert Dixon of Arizona and t"-.n. nu -----------llmlltd Adv•nc:w and ,,,. _ .. _ .. ..,. ........ -~ .. ·-
Steven Dixon of South 1--P1C=miou=~1~941~.,...=::".1=--1 MllC NOTIC£ Crtdlt• of Vendor: ~~OPM~cc:A~. ~:.lr
Laiuna, Ca., daughter NAA!m ITATllllNT ACTmOUa .uWil TOTAL.: • t.949 10 AleonQuln 81111• 1. Hununoion Andre. Lancaster 0 f The IOllowtng POflOl\I at• dOlng NAMI •TATIMINT 149&t4 30 8tach. CA 02'49
L a n c a 1 t e r • C a . , 2 bull~ ':'•LK PALACE, 940 w. 1>11~11o~;:w1ng pereon 11 Clolng 011-. A8ug;i:A~T ~f:~ · · ~~'::!.0':. ~·:.:
grandchildren Keri and t91hSl .. C:O.llM .... CA92127 THE THREAD Mll.L, 288 J~ALIFOR'NIA lllednn"'-2. 11111ntMCounty Katherine, 3 tlaten Ruth JEFF E MacOONAl.O. 1 t398 H•nover Drive, Co•ll MtH, CA "Mid TruatM. llf er.,._ __ Glib of Whittler, Janette St. Platte W1y, Cypr ... bOA 90&30. Q282l. TO OUE£ I r"•·-
c.mor Of Whlltl C l YNN! w. M IC ONA LO. CHAAt.OnE Dl"NN! RUNGE. ly M N, II Full N•m• 1ncJ ACtdr••• Of Ille on er. a 11398 St. Pierre Way, Cypr-. CA 2te HIOO\lfl Orlw. co.,. MtH, CA ~~e.c!e, ..... IOll WI01cJ,....,.. aLand Glady• Sublett.,. ot 90830. HH9 eta Andlrt0n. Al>lon ~ &.. "'°9IOlt
neuter, Ca. Servlcea wiU Thlt butl-111 conduGted by tn Thie butlMel 11 conducltd by In & MINdl .. o.111'9 .... be held on Tue 1 day , 1nd1V1c1ua1. ~ne11v1Gu.1 MOO Wlllhlfi ltlvd.. II• a .... =-.::-
Sep te m be r 14, 1982 at Thi• ,1.i.fl,1_!:..M.!!,~ wlttl 1.._ Charlo111 o. Runoe 8Ultt 1700 o. _ ~ ... ,. .. -:!... _ l l:OOAM at Tho Memorial r-_,..,,., -·":l·o;-. ....,CO\ln'" ... th11 ai11-1 WH flltd with thtl Loe AnotlM. CA ""~ ....................
Cha pol at Rou K Uh ~·'Y~.1Mlanot .,Ofl CountyC1tttco10tangeC01111tyon I0010-2174 1111::-•MO
M ,-.. AUO f7 1"2 121'1 "'4HI ........ , Oil' 11141 emori•I Park, Whittier -''-.n Publlthtd Ofeng• cout Oilly ~~ .. ~_,.,. C!-'~DllY Ca RoH Hiila Mortuary P11bll1Md 01''i&' Co••• Deny ltullll•rtod Oreng• Co.11 Dall)' , Auo 30. 1e91 1. 1i, 1H2 .. _., .._. ...., "'"-., .,... dJrTCtJna. J'llol, Sept 9, 13. , tt, 1~-... Pllo4. At10 23, 30, -.Pl. I, 13, 1192 MOoMt .,.,.,_ 370Wi
..
D
A ·
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
642-5678
HOUSES FOR SAU
~n-~1,,,,,\olj
ft1tl,.t.u l'•t11fttiul• t ,,,.,u.nu f"tl•th '•°"•'•' ... , '•t• ... .. u.n. ~ ..... ~
ti IUfu
hNnttu .. VeUt)
tlunUttfH"9 n...lfft lf¥1M i..AlW~• '-•ft. t..1Wft• U1ll• •·••lilll• "••u.I ... ,,,"°" \1•)0 """E' ...,6f~ !'wl• 1 .. mrflit•
"" '-1 ............ ,.""' '41"4.t An• 't•J ttif•re. ~ ..... .,,.. ....... .,""''"' ... ._ ... Untnie• 'hU• am mm
I Auno let ~I• ".,.,,,.....,. ... '°' ,~ ... '""•"''•''" JW,,ftn, t-'rVprtrtt
f """tf'O Loh c n ...,, ~=~~·:·ft~:'~-:?~ I)
·~ ..... , t ,_.,., .... it~lv hif'4•1H4I
IMvttW f'H#pftlt IM~fl•ll1-1v..-t1>
I.uh 14)11 '"'I• M~lf'iln.r ltlr t't•\
M•N..-ft l)Jtwtl M••uu
flta':J•f 0 l'rVt; : ::;: :,, ~·:;:a~.~·~~~
H•Mh-H t•rm111 (1tcon ._,., .............. h•ftl(• Mf'at ti,A1et• ~ fftl.,.,
RENTALS
llou'i•• t urnuh~ UOU.\n l 11fwrH1tit1.-d
UOtl.t" t\un Vf l "' ( o.ndunutWum• t urn
•'ondomm1!Jmt. \ "' \ 10 .. nlwAl'lft ~"''" Tn"n~\H t ot
l)upfun futn
OupltU• l 'n' Apb l'llrn
Apo l'nfutn
A\A' •\;..-n Ot ' uf ~=' B~ud tMth Mutfh t:vHI Honw~
'Wmmn Mtnl•h
V.r1IW>ft Ht1ftl•h k•nhh lo "'•rt• t.•t•I•' fOf R•M flfhtt fttMel
lk.\lftt\\ krnt•I
tftd1."U1•I Htnttt ~:!t.t """td "11\< R•nnl•
BUSINESS. INVEST·
MENT, flNANC£
~::::!.:':~ •••"-lmitnl 'ff¥•1 • IA•f':W..._N "° •fttttd
"IJINJ II~ Ln•n _..ON') ._ 1r.1M•
'IOf'\C•Ctt T 0 ,,
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
m sONAlS '
LOST & FOUND
A""---.IW'1'"'1Cnl' C ...-Poot
"'••I 'UltC-f'it Loot • tound Ptr\Olftab• ht•I rtwta•
I °N•"tC•
SERVICES
~"ff'l~1,M<H'J
EMPLOYMENT &
PREPARATION
Yhout\ Jriurwoort Juow.,., .. ,,.
Hf'l"'A41Mrn \I Ai ..
MERCHANDISE
4l'ltt"4V4'' ApplHfM"fi~
Aut1M>fll =~r:.i:; ...... , .• ,. r.,..,.~ & t...qutpn-.trit
C.40. Lloc> .. )-ftl•\OV
fVtNhHf' (_,.,.,t 'W.Jt Honn •
tMW~t.c:ol' t•fln ~""''°"' MM'fMMf) Sllhw-•U•IM'Wit Mt\«U..,... "•nt.-111 Wi.;~•I hhtfulkfo-.1, f~f' fuU• • ~~U> ~· rt=~~~~.:· .. ~ "°"'" ... ,, ..... SlGft Kf'~tUUM ... ,
.. t,f'.Mf t0 U 1 • I -._. f"ft"O
BOATS & MARINE
EQU,,MENT
....... 1 &.h )htnl ~f\H'f
&.Mlh ~lrlM t f.VIP
&1\\ '°"" b b Rt-nl Ch.rtrt 11 ......... 1 llo••• i.!1"' IN< h =~.:"· TRANSl'ORTATION
A1trnft C1mptn ~•It ktftt
t:.i.H',flf' l'•, .. ~=·~~re:~~",. Mouw Umi .;..a. ft.At Tr•1t.;a Trn•t !~~~~;.~~'·p.,"
AUTOMOBILE U'M'•' . l'\M~\K"' l:toun H.Htf~ton \tlllftft
~~,':,~!:.~t•I'
Tr.,..h ,.I').,
A'6hl Lr•tt8C
"-W•alrd
AUTOS, IM'°RTEO c. ... ,.1
IJf• ltO""'u A,.1'
A•hn ttt•k"• llllW l ... ,..-,
Clllw. t:.I• O•hwft
t'f'H fU f'l•t r ........ ,.,, .. t
Jt'ftUft
Jc.rtlYtUI ''""'' \f!t'll'iN ..... " ........ .,.", Jill MO" tlpol PatH~·t • ··h·~ t•unc"• Huu1wll
RAii• Hyrtt1
Ho'" 1-,:Z ;,·.,.t"' ro,Oll l'ttumpll
Volb••lftti
Voho
1,w
l.IUJ .,.,, , .. ,
l'W 11><1
I""' 1 .. .
1 ... .
EOUAI. ~UllNO
OPl'OAlUNITY
h~ll1her't lttl111
All 1eal Hlllt adv•rlllfld lri lhl• new1paptr la
1ubjec1 10 lh• Feclerel
Felr Housing Act or 11168
which mlkH II Illegal 10 advertise "any prefeten-
ce. 11m11auon "' dlec11ml·
nation baaed on 1ac•. COIOI. 1ellglon. ••x 01 na110011 011g1n or 1ny
Intention 10 mike any
such p1elertnce. llm11a.
11on or dl1C1lmlnauon ..
This newsp1pe1 wlll no1
knowingly accept any
edvorualng tor 1eel etll·
le whlc:h Is In vlotaUon of
11'\e law
l ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii " ,_,_JJ ,.,, ,.,,,
l J.AJ ' .... ,.,,,
f)(fl
l~.AJ
"'"
UHU: Adverti-
sers should check
their ads dally and
report errors lm-
m e d I ate I y. The
JIW DAIL y PILOT as-~;~ sumes llablllty for ~~ the first Incorrect ~: Insertion only • ~ ................ ... :rroo
:!:HHH1 /01 S1l1 -titl&> ••••••••••••••••••••••
:O-A Ill/ £111#1 .:: ..................... .
•IW ffHll/ 1002
trN •••••••••••••••••••••• •¥•• 0)1• ....
IOO
tlm t\,\I)
Wot ..
+,11i•;
.,,,
M IO
11!)1)
llllD ~ .... _, -11116) -"°°'" P(I
"O!<)
IOU ....
IOJOI lnll
llRS CLEIN'I
HOllE
Almost 2 .000 sq II of 5queaky ciaean, clean li-
ving In lhls Mesa del Mar
c1eam puff Big. big
rooms. ell on one level 4 Bdrm, luge rear yard wllh l1ull trees and a
covered plllo Must sell
lhlt waeken<I 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
LOOK
For our new regular
weekly lealure
BOAT SHOW-
CASE
Every Selurday In the
Dally PllOI Claullleds
lt•1 · 2100 1,. Ft.
Offloa -1200 14, Ft,
ta Ltt 120l1tO
1210,000
Easltlda Costa MISI 2
Br 2 B1 home. herd·
wood flOOrs, l11ger lot,
c;ul-d•sec 11teet. $125. 000 Owner will flnenoe .
::t lltJ loCartill .. , IUtr.
IUll Ml-1121 ~ ~=====:::::::::~ --TIE
CROWN
POINT
II
SPYGLASS
HILL
Superbly consllucled
01t1d as111e on a1mos1 '"' 1c1e with tpecteculer vl-s $1,050,000
11 lltoky Ptl1t
., .. IHtiltJ 1-7 ..
(Wttll 11-1 .. ) SM l11ge Id In S11urd1y
0111)' Pilol R.E. MCtlon.
llH lltiltrattt ........
711-4"44 711-1111
IHLllH UL. ... tu11 lltp OVI Iha Mttr
Bd1 doo1 Churning 3
Bd1 home ftttura• re·
mocl1I kllchen wl1raah
compector. Olk pltnk
flooring ancs new •P-
pllancea. Many e111r11I Full prlC'• S129,000. 751-31111
-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
~. . )
Exc.pflonal vatue In this
1011•ty lour bedroom
l\ome. Attrectlve
nelg h borhooct .• wall tcrttnecs from etrett
nolH Up~ bar view
framed by two h11ge
Ir... Motlvlled Mllef
»Ot.$00
111-1•
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, September 13, U182
r=======~==============:c:::======================::::::::==::::::;==:;:::====:::::;:=========-;::;;:;;iiiiiiiiiiiii •
Real Estate -the Complete Orange Coast Market Place
...... ,,, ,,,. . .. ,,. ,,, ,,,, ...... ,,, ,,,, ..................••..•...•...••...........••......••....•........ ~ .. ~!!!. {'.~ !.~1!.... . . . !'..'.!!!!.{'.~ !.•.'!....... "ftt!f .fnr.!!r.... • ¥.'.~~!t .V~!,!l!!A'!. •• ,.,_,m. Vff 1.~~·A~ •• !'.!'.~ .f~!i!~!!'!. ..
f!!!f.!f~ ...... J.~~~ ••;;!.~llH • IHI .,l.~.~!.t .. !.ljf ~~r~o!.~ ~a'°~ '!!!'.~-.t ........ //M ~!~.~ ...... /!.¥. ••;!I"" IMI 0111111 1001 a.,.,,,, 100111•1111 IOOJ ..•••••...........••.•..••••••••.......••.••••.....•.•.....••.•••. ---·-
LIM llLI 11111 Prime Lldo Nord biyfront. ~ bdrm. ~...., bath.
Lge L.R., 2 boat all,-$1.~.000
Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bllth + l&rflt' n..-c. nn.
beam ceilings, fumiaht>d, patlos. $420,000
PElllllLI 110111
Prize West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boolll
remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000.
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, • bdrm, 3
bath, 3700 sq.ft. $1,385,000. Oceanfront.
Liiii ISLE llYFllOIT
Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom,
dark nn, den. Boat slip. Now $1 ,000,000.
IAYSllE PUCE
Spectacular baylront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Reduced-$1.500,000.
ILUFFS COIH
Single story end unit, expanded 3 br. 3 ba
on largest greenbelt & lake, $250,000.
FllllUllS UIOH
New 4 br, 4 ba, custl>m French Nonnandy
Est.ate 11"1 acre hilltl>p $1.250,000.
IYILll
Fee simple rott.age on quiet Descanso St. (in
Flats). $145,000.
COllOllH OIYS
COronado Island cust. bayYront lot. 85' boat
dock. Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/terms.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)41 Bny\1dP o .. v•· "' B 67'J blbl
LINDA ISLE-A STEAL!
LOWEST PRICE
A fabuloue VALUE for only SltS,000 and
owner ftaxlbte on terma and condition-.
Submit exchangea 0t terme 0t CASHI An
exceptlonal WATERFRONT home on lhe
lagoon with a prhtate 2·•tory rMldenca
for entertaining large groupa or dally
living In 5 bedroom• + form11 llvlng
room, large f1mlly rm. with atep-down
ber on the waler, 1paelou1 patio & much
more. C.,I for detalla & lnveet now before
the prlcH go UP. Pler/allp for large
yec:hl.
WA l FRFROI\ T HOMI ~. "l
Ill \I 11111'
,.... .. tt. ........ ..,. ••• "" r1' ""'"·•· .......
fl.1ft,' ~ O.•I IJ.u '.-•pott K.-..-h
131-1400
~·~ 't.r-lftl' "'" .......... h&..114'
873-1900
Have something you want People Who need people
to Mii? Cla111flld ada do should always check thl
It well I Call NOW. Setvlce Directory In the
642-5678. DAILY PILOT
C\assified
works
for you
when you
want to ~
I
~ ~~.~!~~~ ~
To d•vt lop rntOOOf fOf Mondov.
t·.ocf word\ ~rftPO"d•no to t'All"lbtf"\ of yo..t Z.00-bo"'1 •9' .,, ,..,. ,,_ .. ...... .,.,.._., .... __.~. -~· . ~.,,.,. ,...,.,.... J1 ..... •. .°" ·~ .... tlO.t "°'• .,._,.... ···-~==--1 :!= ... ~~=· .... ••'-11...,.._.. ,, ,,..., ., ,,..,.., .... ..""'. "...... .,.,.....,., '•°'"' .. ,.... ~»!~l!l ;:::: :::-'~ 11C... ., ... n • W•~Mff t1fo Wl-.lf ,.......... ..co.. K........, .. ,.._
pa:;.=;.:;:::--1 ~ ~ : ::0 .... -~ ,........,. M•w .,. . .....
., ,,, u oo ... .. .. •oo ....... ., ... _...,
ttG.-. .... ...
"'*"' r1ur• U"-••''"" 1•C.• .... M• """ ,., ... , ,,_
.. l .... ....... .......... .... .... .,._ ..... ........ ..... ··-· ..... ..... .,......
•Ct#!• .,, .. 1'14 ....
N«"vu.J
':: S(l!~~-4£~· = ------'9-, .. -•::-:..::-~ :: .................... , .. """"_.,,
I l(LZAI I r r I I I
~.....,...o .... A.,_M ......... A...,£__.t s' _111r_1 L SYYNL I' r r I I I i ..!".:..:.' ~m ~:! --------...,_Oft"" iwoom-. l CUllS S I .... ~=r::r::1=:1 = .... 1 .......... -1 ! ~ ~::..~=
COLDWeLL
BANl(eRO
..... , ...... "' 1nu• M•¥tee•
IAYIHlll Scot,000
Private community.
Great llnanclng. Fee land
plus charming 3 BR
home. What more c•n you •ak tor? Brick path,
dutch door, leaded gla88 a remodeled kltohen
Owner wlll carry long
term.
144-IOIO
•11 -11_ •••••••••••••••••••••• !~.1~:;1~!·~ ~:Y 0j ~T·, w~ m~ntal~. l1rfrtlt/l1hlr1 • 38r. TwnhH, nr a.c •••••••••••••••••••••• ,._ "'" llY IT llllT a;allable 'homH w / • 0 a 0/P ng. '· 2 Br. loft In excellent lo• Pl111, pool, •P•. gar. ~·RINTAL8 lllO II. Lrg 3 9, 2 I • condo. "'*"tllt In EIMfalCI hy 213•308•182 c1tlon On ltdgaw1t1r I 7 8 O mo N o P • t • l•llbf • l200 10 12000
8p•clc>ua 38r + 2~B•. OrH1 Huntington Sch 494·1840 MUI PlllT 11200/rM. 752·6822 750-3314 °'*' 7-daya
redwood P•11o & tpa, loc:atlon. Frplo. 2 c.r 0 .. 1----------Time Shere, San Cl•· ltw,..-t I Ir/YI 68r houM Ideal 4Coll Nit. ...
hanCl•ome brick ltplc, r•o•. & A.IC •mong II• EMERALD BAY m11111. l10M + groH Drive by 2001 King• Ad. atudenta or alngll• 8&0 Cuetom bullt prollNIOn·
xtra lg 2 car o•rage w/ many IH1ur ... A~aume .. 1 ... lrtde ·Joint V9nl· llarhr 11 .. •tl Y• METRO RLTV 838-7005 ally c11ed fOf 38r rock :1~18 ~ti~·~ ~r ~aSkArr;: 111, OWC 2nd. 831·7370 r:RONT AOW • F1bYlou1 ure • or H ll 11 $1 SM 3 Bdrm w/ltm-.rm, fir• lee frptc w/w c:rptng ~
••• "'""" or IM9·3648 white water vlewl Ow· w/28% dn By Owner plte ... Excellent view•. B ,_ kitchen ro7o00my garage v .. .,......,....., n • r •I P 11 n • ha v • 1·~92· 1720 2 BR 1 •. 1 ear gar, ..,...
•1200/.1000 •• VE. ohanoad • mu•1 Hll --------1 Sp•. Hcurttt',co0m. yard, I050. METRO 0RLTY 836-7005
Plana a permit• for re-••ITULI•• poof and tenn 1 280 · 873--0188 1 YH Ill model. 11,450,000 Call E , .... _Co I .. __ I I ..... leu/hflrt. ... Ill .. •• .,.,. '1 ......, r -RETIREMENT '"PT. " ._ • 2 II Ir It-· .. •aaa L1a .. /Optlon or Pureh11· 4f4.-0028. Carol Tatum, pJ1)1, 8.8 X gra.e, 40K "' ' G Cati --... YOUR new 1850 aq. Rltr. down. Price 180K. By Bdrm, clean and qulal M:~~~r~838 • .,"~ Security done. Idell for
fl (plu• dbl garage w/ OIJ owner, (303)887-2887 1oc1t1on. 1400/mo. lee kid. 8 E8T I•• flat 'tf,!;,e~.~·!~:: I~~:: fH.'!!~.~JI.~~{..!.... llWNIT 11&11 Wlttlt~~-· large 4rm l1mlly •ttrter _5_3_8_-e_1_eo _____ _
neJCt to all •hopping & -------YILLE IE CERISE UA LM&Tilll I • 1 tNtr er blt·fn NOW 300 By George I dO believe
theatet1, Incl. all amtnl· Im•• IH4 BEAUTIFUL •111... METRO RLTY 038-7005 You've got 111 28t unit •• ••• •••. •••• • •• •••••• Trl·pleJC•• & duple•••· -l/arv low move In now Ilea. Opportunity to 1tart UllOIO SU Jtltlll OLD WORLD CdM & Bal P•'l· Large lia/at•/i 3I01 I" 400 owner1hlp wJquallty TOWNHOMES 12'A-% ataum•bll loan1, •••••••••••••••••••••• FlllLY lllT METRO RLTY 638-7005 hOMe wll•x nvlnga. Townhome, 2 tty, 2 br, By Howtrd Mark Co. im1ll down. 844-7424 3 Br 2 Ba 1900 yrty. No 118 7 1 4 I 8 3 1 • 5 0 5 5 or 2Y. bl, greenbelt. Great trom I 159,000 Broker. pel• Avlll 9115. Cute & cozyt 2 + bonu1 842·2000. loc. Like new. Good •9~244 780-9355 J.R. PROPERTY le 1ew hlld B /
110111 IATI STEAL IT l8'm1. 551-8058 evf 1. J-I Lill /11 ll/1 1100 MANAGEMENT ~~~. ~ terr!:1 NOw • .. •,,t •"''.•,• ••~•
l.yl.rr, 1121,IOO #1'11Mtl ••t• -•••••••••••••••••••••• •7M173 350 If ,..,.
d bl" h 1 ··;:;:;1•1•1··•1•·11•1·1·•1••· " inn .. METRO RLTV 838-7005 2·;,;~··ar~.d,;:,;;·~: JI IRYIH Low dwn, auume I04lnl
Beautiful 4 Bdrm home In 3 Br 2 Ba/ A.gt. Fred Te-
North w o O d • nore. 831 -1288 or
Woods1ream. Mouldlng-_8_3_1_-2_1_1_1 ____ _
1 , Oak lloort, French I~% AllllUU VAi
doors & •P• S375•000 on thll 4 Bdr home and
1 1111Wl()l Jf t1()~fS
Realtors, 875-'8000
owner wlll l'lelp wHh Id·
dltlonal financing. Full price $132,000. Don't
wait. call 9711-5370 now
A ora e tltrter ome n l"WI 1 1'~ loll In Huntington C111•1 l1l #11 3UJ fee doe. Securll" gale. lovely neighborhood! EJC· Prof. decorated, warm 3 Beach CA on 2111 bet· •••••••••••••••••••••• ' ~r~l.e~.~~·~~~~ll~~al:~: ~l~c.:::Ri;p?c;,~l~iRa, ::f :-:~ P1clll~ c:f ~ ~~ C ;1~:~ ! B~ ~rm.;·. r • M:~~:1:7~,M:~7 !,8; :~ .. ~~ p'=::~
cludlng 8 fruit trMI. Cati $1700/mo chela kitchen w/blt-ln1 Realty, ~t-2850. 978-5370. vlle lrg manicured yard 714-ffe>-2411 780-~708, 875-2144 I d ONLV & a private put11ng green • ota-• l"L .... andac;aped yar Im•• ll44
& 3 car garage. A real -" _,. Nice 2Br 1'hb• In dplx. Liv 825 •••••••••••••••••rr. •• value at S376,000 and Unique R-3 corner lot, rm w/lrplc, 1undeck, gar. METRO R~~ 838-7005 LUlllU
you own the land. Try •ultable for 8 twnh1ea. 10 of hwy. $850/mo -3 Bdrm dltlehed 11omee
.lf >IJ./ 1lE1/
Mf Al • • .\ •••-..t ,1._.f: '°' T 10% dwn. Patrick Teno-owe nnanclng & aubor-3 2 3 'A-L • r k 1 p urn . Beautiful 4Br pool oouee In excellent arM. Avail•· HllLlll re. 831-12811 dln1te. Poulble J.I/. 536·1453 wkdya. several bath• rock lrplc bl• lmmedlately . WOODBRIDGE CONDO • Owner (714) 559-9285 ---------gourmet kltch garage $800/mo on 1 year·leaae. llYFIOIT VIEW 2Br, 2Ba, end unit, pre· M 1 I n... 1 hHI YI If Part 850 five other• to chooH PRICE REDUCED! Fine mlum loc. Frplc. AC, at· ,., .. I ., -111 1 2BR 2ba duplex. Avail METRO RL TY 638-7005 from. We're thl onee to
(plus) bedroom home tach1d gar. yd. $128, llNll '14H 9/18. 1900/mo. J. Doran lee call I<>< leull.
with l)(lvate pl8' and lllp ---------500. Good a11umab1e 1'iiiiiiiilliliiiiiiii ••••••••••• •••••••••• Bkr. 759--06111 E•ceptlonal Bay 111ewl Desperate owner. must· loan1. Owner/agt.I• Kone, HI. Time Shareliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Jll Ill Cll [Uj]
Perlect home lor the 1811 0' trade. 4 bdrm pool 499-5778 lllf Pl IAJlllll Condos for .. ie. 1 Br & 2 Complete with 2 matr ~I "'1odbr1dtt water aports-orlented home In Beck Bay area ---------You own the land. 2•000 Br. Call tor detalla. lnlLAU llU baa Hult•
lemll" Pric ed at Priced below rece11t •P-10., DOWI a ft 3B lam rm 2'h 540-448.4 Executive 4BR, 3B• equipped chet1 kltch """"'
5875.00o/leasehold. or pralsal. Low lntereit 111. ,. q • '· • 1---------horTM on 1paclous cul· 551 JYVV
$1,996,600/lee. Try S50.000 down. Open to 5 bd, 2·~ bl. 1Clvl. SFee, Ba, ,wldFe Gree,nbelt, ":~ l••till, 111•1, de-sac location. Putting rock lrp~~~~d v1rd w/ '9?0K1rrut1 .... ~).It.la!' CASH lor further price 111 oller1. Call 648-8474 Univ Pk, Cath ell, ky· poo . er be ow mar e llln6 1100 green & 3-car garage. ,
,eduction C.11 ••arll"n or 891-8058 PI P Ill••· Gorgeoua, Saller $245,000. Wiii 11 ... op-•••••••••••••••••••••• Include• g1rdener at fruit,, ... kids & pet .., , tin Oual. $2611,000. AllO Uon. Bkr. 644-0134 gar1g1 lo move In HUR-
Twitchell Yltw tf ltHI, Ital Avatl. IMM optlonlleue. AUllll llOIUI SUOO/mo. RY am au
GEORGE ELKINS CO
759-9100
Ill OAIYOI
Bulld1r'1 own peraonal
residence on goll course.
The archltectural design
and meticulous attention
to det1ll renect the OW·
ner·s desire to create an
unusually high quellty
home built to pleaae the
most dlacrlmlnatlng fa-
mily. 5 bdrms. e'h b• *
all amenities one would
anticipate. S 1,1150,000.
Owner lln11nclng.
144-4110
-------~ j •I '
L~AY LOH C9.·;
------~ --
1Utw L11llts Open hOuse Sat/Sun 1·4 Park Lido Adult Condo 3 32'~ ecre1 In Merced METRO RLTV 836-7005
MESA ;BLUFFS CONDO 22 Cypress Tree Lane. Br. pool, near hoapltal, adjacent to sold out lee ~Macnab -Irvine
2 to 4 bdrma. 1tartlng 11
S800 to 11400.
reduced 10 1811 by owner. lrvlne, 857-5880 belch. S145,000. Owner 1ubdlvl1lon. Younger
$152,500 Contect Linda WtlMllME wlll help. Agent a.6-104~ trtllS wllh growing PfO-
Ba Ir d 9 5 5. O 2 8 0 • 3 bdrm, 2 ba condo. lnrPlll OIHT ductlon. "'k:'u~e 8\1\%
650-9903 Across from community Two 3 Bdrm Condo•, loan. Full pr e .,.....80,000.1~~~~~~~~~
* FORECLOSURE Park. $118,500. By OW• large 12'4 auumable 17 I 4t 613·4•00
ner 851-1586 d1ya loan. AAA locatlons, IZlll U .. JIU * iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii pool, ape, tennl•. S1114. HARBOR 10 DOWI m Tiil U.111 .... 000. 844-=7424 Broker.
Owner will conald8' 2nd &lllllllU UfflHll 111
at 0% for 3 'fl'•· 3 Br 2 be flUIOlll Thie lovely Veraalllea
Eastllda. $159,000 A.gt. Beeutlful 1 Bdrm and condo penthOUH at only
OILY 1% HWI unit on the water. Deco-I 129,500 with a 30 yr A l>i\l~mn 01
Plctureaque 2Br g11den
unit kldl pet g11age 500
METRO RLTY 838-7005
tee
ra1ed In Mrthtonet with 1 1 · 5 % I 0 • n · Gr e • t II arbor ln1 e~tmenl Co 5BR. 2'Aba, l906 all, ahuttere thruou1. Man" mount1ln view, pool, OllTA IHIA
$189,500 Assume In, ' t d O 't l~~~~~~~~~l owe balance. Prine extru. AasurTM current gym, MC. ga • · on 1-lt4tl lrt• It••
Dollar stretching value
2Br 111 kitchen bl1-lna
kid• pet 450 no IHI r9<1
METRO RLTY 838-7005
lee
Jr executive 3Br 2ba
POOL home queen• kit· ---------Chen Woodbrldg.on the lake.
kid pet ok E2 terrNI 650 Ex8CU1lve 3 bd, 2 'h be.
METRO RLTY 638-7005 Many EJCtrul $1400/mo fee lea1e . 552-11549 ,
661·21113 or 887 ·8857 financing and owner wlll mlH 111lng thl1 one. I--• •·t a.. on I)'. 5 4 4 · 8 311 O a con•lder carrying 2nd. Ag1. Rod. 876-4000. ~ .. ••• ••oo Decor11or perfec1, •P•· 836·9851 TO. Alklni s 118,1100. ~ lxtW•I -cloua 2 bdrm, 2'hba, ,_ B••l1•1I•• Turtlerock exec. 2
Ocu. VIEW C.,1 ,,.,. 11 1 ~ . , •••••••••""••••••••••• Ctpe Cod. Pool. jlc. re-i..tl 3UO maatera, den. 2\1\ be, ., ~ , Trlde lkl coodo In Parlt cr11tlon aree, pvt patio. •••••••••••••••••••••• I 1350, Rita 844-11080,
2 Bdrm, 2 bath condo. City. Utah tor rllldence balcony, wine cellar & ig. Lge 3 br, 3 be. lanced 873-8588 Full amenities and NC. In Orange Co. 648-1487 gar1ge. Decorator will back y1rd, up1talr1 rec ----,A-b ___ h __
gate. No qualllylng with paper. draperl•• and rm, repet0ntedK. Ch1118dr:ri0& 2 .i:~!t 15~~~ ome
$8000 down 10.75% ll•llh more. $1050/mo. Call Pe I I . " · $725 493-2117 loan program avallable. , ~~~~~~~~~~1 BEST DEAL IN HARBOR ••••••••••••• ••••••••• 548-22311. 10:30 to 5:30 641-81130, 540-5597 --·-------
c 11 RI h 0 I .. I RIDGEi 8"ut. 3 Br home pm WHAT A DEAL 2bf 2b1 w/
a c wn ... g · ltltmTIYI with lncfed. view In •1un fll8IUH --·-------SUPER HOUSE Enormou1 Lg git pool MORE 1675
CRESTLINE 984·8171 .... preattoloui git• guarded •••••••••••••••••••••• Nice 3 BR 2 Ba. den. Mesa 4 Br dealgner kltch 8751 OC-RENTALs 750--3314 Need a huge 2 Br. 2 Ba. com um n . $ 4 8 6 M . i.J)H llU.I 3111 de4 Mii, grdnr, no peta. METRO ALTY 838-7005 ---------Love nest In the lky. N-New Orlaana Condo. The dramatic dealgn °1 842-7745 •••••••••••••••••••••• $895. SleHa Mgm1 Co. lee 3 bd. Avalleble Now. lge
I pie pool I b lk thl1 home wlll be perfect iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii C•ll ua for VEARLY or 641-1324 private yd. No Peta. 2 br wlllreplace. S70, ' • .cu hee,wa lor th• entire famlly. 4 WINTER rental•. A1glr 1---------3 Br. 2 Ba. 2 atory, lrplc, S930/mo 83l-l815:
000. $8000 down now, ~ou~~~~~1v:2'l. ~:,11 bdr,m!:..} b•,· B.,~~ .... tn .. di a Tiil YAl.ll Propenlel 876-4000 LAF NO. LfORos, /REAtLTORSI screened patio, d l•h· 493-7766
$4000 next year. Owner enc o ...... pat o . ..,....,. n II Ull W•tlrlront 2 Br. 2 Ba. all .. !!. cr"a11 .. !~1•::__!,tyrov • washer, auto aprlnktera, ---------carry 10% auumabla. 873-3313 '°' appt. location near 1chool1. ...... .,.. ,._, lawn 11rvlce. 5311-3319 Rare 1 lvl, 5 bd, 2~ bl,
(714) 588-0369. WIE 2 II TWlllE tennl• and pool $235,' Thi• 3 bdrm home offers appll1nce1. $850/mo. 539-e11M tor appt. very Pflv, beaut, 11460,
000 and you own 1118 one of thl beat 1treet to 073-4108, 873-3724 i----------i Aleo avall .._ option/ BRAND NEW "Heart of with 2'h blll'l8, 2 e.r encl llreet loc1tlon1 on the HOME FOR RENT Sharp 2 BR condo 1 •ty
Orange County" Town· gar. & yard. 15000 down land. ltlend. FMtur11 a lovely C~te 3 8:· 2 B:a frp:·.r. 3 Bdrm. S7110. Fenced all bltna, pool, S55o mo'. ::i~· 1~P~ ~=-~~
homes · Lu•ury 3 bdrm ind payment a111111d patio perlect le>< enter-omea rom 1Y· v y1rd & garage. KJda & Call 540·1158. 11k for L lrvlne. 857-6e80 homH beautltully d•· program. Call R ick talnlng Oen, mra wide now. I095. 1eo-1gn. pet1 welcoml. 5'15-2000. Dave ane. ·
signed. quallty bull1 ·and Owner/A.gt 9&4-8171 tot. 3 cer garage. A mutt AT11AOT1Yl Agent, no fee. 1---------1•1Br "Springe" Pool.
tlnanclng now lhat you to 188, 1495,000. 2 bdrm houae avaltable 2 Mr•, 2 .. Otfft HI • llO 1p1. Clrport, 1495 mo.
just won·t bellevel Call DI•• 1•1•1 IOZI now. $700 winter°' I025 Frml dining 2 tile bl No peta. 752-5822
now Brandywyne Pro-•••••••••••••••••••••• -prlv patio. Exclu1lve children/ .... ok garage pertlH II, 531-9870 $4000 Downl 3 br 2 ba y11rly. Conv loc. Near EHtalde. Beautllully METRO RLTv 838-7005
home on 2 1o11. _ea_y_._87_5-_966_7 ____ 1 landacaped. Pool and tee ~'!!~.!~1A ••• 1.~~f
*IAYOIE$T FIXER $1800/mo. Act lastl Call llllfi clubhou11. $750 mo. t--------
Brlng your paint bruah & Bkr 497-3034 idO eQ ty 11•J.1.J1 31111-49_"-" __ 1_9_1 _____ 3h:;,,: :•~,:let ~~e:~
HARBOR OCEAN FRONT
Nu 3200' luJC hm on bluff.
180 d911. vu ot harbor.
aurl, mtna, 3br. 3bl, M-
curl t y, 1auna, 1pe.
111100/mo. 496-7009.
broom to 11ve SIS on 't513 CAMfvsl>a:fRV'llfl •••••••••••••••••••••• NICE 3 rm w/utll--pd,lo 18 Ihle 3br.1xect.1tlve ranch II r111 l03J 673-7300 4 Br bayfront w/dock. yd, novll lcltch '325 ~oOoa, ~~~
style home In prestige •••••••••••••••••••••• ---------~;;;;;~~;~ I 4 O O 0 Imo . yr I y, OC~RENTALS 750-3314 area. Lownt price on lee WEFlllT $3000/mo. wln18'. Avall. i-R-oom--lor-k-ld_1_3_br_2_b_1_ M11n1nce free 2Br full OCEAN VIEW 3Br 2
landll Only S280,00CI. 11,000 llWI 11/10. w/"•llO, 1Vln1 kltctl $800 2b1th1 klda/pet get 500 fr"'ca. 11075 mo. 1422 Ca II 7 5 9 -150 1 or 2 lou bd + B 1AUN 1M1 J.R. PROPERTY ~ENT'":LS 750-3314 METRO RL TY 83&-7005 T!::.~-w-. 7,.,., ... 70 752-7373 for detalls IC)ac • rm• 2 •• For Ad Act""' MANAGEMENl ~ " lee _......... _, ---. 2 pool. apa, Huna & Ml If IWllO 875-e173 CALL NOW NICE 2br w/ f,, •Ill JIJI
tennla. All for only $811, Sharp. ocean view 3 "-·•-2 B wt t , ... bl.. huge gar, fncd yd $320 3 BR 2 Ba Seabury ••• !~~~•••••!••••••••• --
1100. Mull sell lmmed. Call a bdrm. 2'h be, IOl1 earth-wvowt r. n er. ,... " OC-RENTALS 150-3314 School•. park1. •hops, HOME FOR RENT
PleaM cell 831-4587 tone decor. spa & all 1 0 be• ch • 1 n d r Y • 1---------bMeh. Btn cond. $850. 4 Bdrma. exec. h0m1.
Little MlS8 Muf1e1 ut on • ···~ Tullet. along c1m1 a 1pld1r ind re•d In the Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
othef extru. $500,000 & $500/mo. 2?th St. Avail I Ir. 2 la. 844-1094 $900. Fenced y1rd & ga-
gr ea I I• rm 1 . 11/18. 875·3148 -· Frplc, range, yard. garl· 1---------1 rage. Kld1 & pets W91co-
714 55·0177. BEAe';HFRONT 0 C5o~o pe111. ::;_vale. ';::1~3=1~! ;~~ :5 me. 54S-2000. Agent. no
tUHlllM
2 & 3 Bdrm LuJCury Con·
dos. Encl. gerages. Full
amen«IH. $5000 down
Call Rich Own/A.gt
864-8171
i.Jlfi ,,,,., '"' ..•....•....•..•••.•..
lllPPllEIS
3 Bdr 2Y. Ba, very apeclel
cuatom home. Bargain
price. Chuck Splllar
831-1266. ---
C.tn1 11/ "'1 IOIJ ..........••••••••••..
hMlt YHr lfter
Home+GU99t+lncome owe 111 -Flex. Twm1
509 Acacia CdM nr befl
SpotleM l/acant Duplex
Huge 5br/3b.+3br/3ba
440K own/bier 64S-7048
llYIU TIUAll
S195.000
111 TIME OFFERED
Thi• nalt 3 bdrm 2ba with CN8f 1800 aq 11 with
lovely p1t10• end oar·
dent. Owner wtll flnanu
8Ubltantl•I 111 TD at
12% Int. 7 yr 11rm. A
IMMhOld .. 1111. Priced
to self In f11,
IC4-l211
10% ••••
Oelux1 duptea • 1erm1 to
nt your budget. own alt
<>< part. D1tretl own/agl.
AEIMAX 759-12.21
COM OUPl.IX ~ble flnlnolng Of•
1erecs on 1h1e contems>0-
r•r1 lnoome property
with new c1rp111 ind
paint 1398,000.
..... 1020
L.911 WL m1T1
Oedltltlceto~
Wiil ...... IM Fed "°' ·em elf IN !Mftlat Wlttt a Cltllllled Ad
Call Nowt "'2·M71
Diiiy Piiot Cla111f11d
Mellon about Ml11 Mul-
111'1 Tuffet and bought It
lor S9.95. Vou can sell
your tultat and Iola ot
other thlng1 through
Dally Piiot Cla111fl1d
Ads. Call 842·5878
642-5678
More value for your
DIMES
I
r
In the famous Delly Piiot
DIMES-A-LINE ADS I I
Adverlln Item• up to HO In value In
Ulm .. ·A·Lln• eda every Seturdey In Ute Dilly
Piiot. Bring your ad with cHh to any Of our
tttree conven-.nt office• or rn•ll ,our copy
wlttt a chedl t>r money order fol ttte cotfect
emount. 20c per Hne. 11.00 minimum. tony,
no llveatock, produca or plenta •nd no
cornmerdet ed• •r• allowed. l«tt Item mutt
fM pr'lc.d With no Item over NO. Dtme .. A~lft•
ada 1Hy be peaced at ttte Coat. Meaa offk:•
unlit 3 p.rn. _.rtday.
4 Br 2 . Frplc. WI • ~8· w·'· 18 h Mes METRO ALTY 638-7005 _f_ee_. _______ _ fn CJl8l•lf J01f dahtwtlr, 2 car gar, no only. v4 . I . I I #JU VJ•'-,,,,
•••••••••••••••••••••• pell S1250. Avail. now. 1_4_99_-_1_e_11_._____ .....: •• ,, •• .' •• ~ •• !1: ••••••••• l'I llllllll 84<4-9582 TownhouH, 2 bd, 1Y. bl . ,.__." HOME FOR RENT TWt ...-SI On the Point. 3Br 2ba. 3 yr new. gar. patio, Spec. 1 & 2 br. lovely 3 Bdrm. 1700. Fenced
Approx 2400 •q 11 ••· patio, winter 118, av111 1535/mo. 875-0500 No pln11 & atrHm1, HC. y1rd & g1rag1. Kida •
Wiit Mii 1 L.aat 101 1111 I m m a d • S 7 5 O I m o . pet. gatu, entry by phone, peta welcome. 5'15-2000.
right on beachfrontl A 8 7 5 • 3 8 9 4 o r -1t>r-. -qu-,.-1-.-tree--lhaded---y-d. lge rec area Incl. gym, Agent. no lee.
RARE BUYI Call I Vll. 21317112-4810. See be· Couple or alngle o.k. no pool & ape. IM0-8581 • t.ffj '"'
•92-4864 San Ci.manta OIMlng Sundfl'/. peta. 145(). 54M251. A geml Splntllng 1Br ••~••••••••••••••
•-1111 L.a.aal •---" •Jfl kid• olc gtra""" Juit 390 FCK 1eaae or ..... 09tlon, -•II A.al ~ ••••• ~ ..... '! •••• 3Br, 2Ba C•p• Condo, METRO RLrY '38-7005 S1600/mo. 5 Br .. large •••••••••••••••••••••• I maculate ood1y char quiet, xlnt loo. Clean fee yard, achoola, ah ............ •PERFECT STARTER m w • $760 mo. 487-21•8 ..._.., . .., CONDO !Mr. Recently remodeled 1---------1 nMrby. Agenl 846-1°'44.
great so. Coa11 Plue ind re~ecor•tr~·, 2 3 t>r. 1 ba, din, petl09, big 5s:~in~d~~-~o~~~ne:,~
foe, been unit w/rei.; rm, bdrm, 1 ~ b• Inc u no y1rd, '8115 + MC. dep. $900 mo. can 847·3803. tennla, pool, IC>•, 18.000 dining room. L11ge tun· a.6-3803
dwn, prk:ed to Mii. A.gt. ny deck oveflooklng Cl· ---1,-ba--d--lr-plc-211 • aG
552·2000· 752-0117 nyon. 3 bike to beach 2d~k. ~ble ::. ~Side'. Bring the kid• & petal INl/~TORS :u::.ea.mo~nler rwitll _I0_2_5._862 __ ·2_48e____ Ultrl modern beach
3 Br, 2 bl, Oen. nr High
Sehl, $800.
846-3532 .. ,~ ..
Fam rm. 11250 lei
84<4-8053 $5000 down & 1200 mo. 497-4503 4 Br. 3 Ba. Condo, man)' home negative caal1 now for a amenlt1e1. $800/mo. METRO RLTY 038-7005 E11tblun 38f, 2bl. ~v•ll
38f 1b• agl famlly dell• Almoat OOMnfront, winter 01ya 937-8090. Evee & •-----'"-----now I 1 O O 0 I mo . ched horTM •I•. 2 Br duplex ... ,... •3" 840 -tO 19 Arnie or A t 984-e1i 1 $77 r houM Wllndl ,...,..2 .. •· Hr. bdl aharp 2br w/lg 131-o&Se alk for Elaine g 1850/mo. Parking, P•· 1·L-r_g_3_b_r_2_Y._b_a_c_o_n-do-p1tl0. blt·lns. Call 1460 .._ .... , JIH II I ' ' ' ' ""'RENTALS 750.3314 LIDO BAYFRONT nft 4 •••u• tloa, b1au1 u vu. avall. 1011, M1ny exiru, -~---------1 Br. 5 ... l """"/mo. • •••••••• ••• •••••••••• 84'-1849 everl. lnclud micro frnl tlke •-ge.. ,.<JV _ · • "· WIN paint Interior and ex-131-3e71, e7S-1MO I .. ~ Emer1ld Bay 3 Br, vu, n • w 4 9 9 • 2 3 O O • tene>< of fixer upper for•---------2 Bdrm•, 2~ b•, low quiet at, 11200/mwo. 1_83_1._1_100_. _____ move In coet1 on 3 bdrm NICE 4rm/ wllg geii:, all
down. 10.75% financing Call Emll'atd Bay Alty 3 er. 1¥• ea. ~atage, lrg houae Hunt. Boh tree utll-pd, kid pet ok '450 av1ll. Cllll Rich Own/A.gt 494-1840 d .......... .._ ~"'. 984•7512 OC-RENlALS 750-3314 984-9171 •---------yar , 1tove, ..... --. "'"' 11--------••---' ltMt llll n 81 r S . c . PI a za. Ottn IHI ltl•lf •• -.•r.•••••••••••••••• 1_s_14_&_1_mo_._8_s3_._a_1ea_. __
•••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE -3 bdrm. fem 1 BR TRAILER. Private, llMllf • ..., rm, 4 Ba. 11700 mo. yard, no pelt. VIII• paid. "1 ,.,. 1111 ---U 50/mo + ucurlly.
•••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANF'RONT 2 bdrm, 4tt-1817 MIDWI ~ B ,!,y 1~00 8';~1: ~ 11 •-4-B_r_2_e-.-. -b-,o-ne-.-d-tw-.-MW-
24 X ~ with 7'X211' 911· rv ' ttr, ' cpta, drape1, trplc, dbl
cloaed are•, light Int .. Baautlf\11 hOfM for quilt.. cet gar, pool, I050/mo.
rlora. ltl•nd kitchen. tied peraona, Qftcloua II-23 f S1nt1 Ana Ava.
l.Mge fem, rm, 2 BR. 2 vlt1g . 12500/mo In. Call 2131375-8107
BA 540-5937.. 1-87_s._,_500 ______ MESA VERDES bf, 2 bl,
4+1 +•--
Blt·ln• kld1 1>911 g1r1Q41
METRO RL TY e3e-7005 ,..
StretcllOl.ll In tNt trg 4
+2 + frplc + gar equell
1150
METRO ALTY 136-7006 ~-------~ ... NEAR BEACH a br, 1~•--------
ba, flfTI rm, 10/1. 1825 Specious 3Br, 2~ very
mo. agent 973·8931. clean twnhae, pool, Joo•
-'
• • ·-olng. lie. SIOO mo. 8oO 1at I _., kann A.Qt. 644-1..0
Xtra lltge 4Br 2S. Hart>or Vl9W Homea Ctr· ~~~LW' ~7== mel Mdl 3 Br, ,_;.iv·""· ... L .... $1160 ....... 71 PM.II ...... Winter, ~block 10 ~. avail 1011. 1811 8anct»-
Landac.ped GOf"4N' lot. 2 Br. 1~ la. ample wood. t740 ll'ICld. g•r· I. -.. ti
Furnlahed. 1 bdrm parking, fa7mlly p9rel. denll'. S4S.t4H . Heir ac"'oola, children
a er, Offlee. c:ten. country
tlltc:tl, !Ypto, 214 II. t car
ger, W/O llootcup, e•r-
dener, nr acllool'-• no Stllnleaa twin ltly alnka, 1675/mo. 1• S&o«>SI · ,.
dlehwllMr. etov.. eotn-Outa1at1dlng 1 & den, 2 "':n~::. :.~8•::: r.'~ ~8 ~~1~-;
pao1or, •Ir cond. pink e., eundec*, fOr 1 or 2 otc l'lat IUT ~1to 6)t.81IO fee
b1throom. CUTI ANO ~ t760fln0 lee 1 ,_ 1---------1
O 0 Z V . I 12 .OO0. '3' Lole M iiier, •ot 2 Ir With Qtt• kid Pit Ill . 411 Bluff• I bdrm, f ba,
S45-M14 M2M Ok. fllat 1400'• H8T .. tl\ln IOO mowe you grM~bel·~s., 114'
Liv-I In~ e.ecll fOr 6SH190... In 28• nloe ¥llw blQ mo. r., •
118.000. 2 lklrm 1 ba In .__ ~ trooleel patio rnuet aeel llU"8 I bt, t~ ba, f9"I
private comm. Very ~·••••••••••••• -u;;..,. I Ir... ~ ALTY .-1008 rm. ore1nbe~oo1.
c 11. n . Mu. I • e e . e~ .......... IMI ~. 8"uatlon '°" r.tnlly ... .1400 mo. A4t 114.
975.274a 111111.1 2 bathe, ....... :-II _, ... .. Hl"9 II mtt DIDM 4 llr, a ~ ..,.~__,.Winter 2 IUT ~ ..... , ... L1atect~t0cs•r· Kia Ok. ba ~ ....... -. " '1u•fw !."' S,4 ........_ ' • ADIT TO OWN: New 28" o. ... IO,._ HIT fee lle(l1.'"""7.;.,~.._ ....... -..... ~ .. 7....... .... .,. .. lllLn t~b• ooncso. can Aloi\ I ...-u .,. --·---•'L l·I ..., <>wnertAQt "4-tm t<lne .... a• na '""' Noe & ....,_•rm ' Ir
PfllM o.M ioo 4000 IQ •••••••Dn bft~':::'eoo : ~ := ~ :i' ~ :-ir: :::'•1':6o~mo,:C::: ---·---M~ "LTY IK-1009 M!T;;~·e.'l'OOI Mm.c> ALlY ... 1'11
'M0-1 .... 7IO-Olll 111-1111 ... ... ...
c::::· 1...:S1·14Mor
• I
~!~t~A!t~~~i
IOI I
30 day ad
In the
IAIU
PlltT fUYlll
llllmaY
00 IT NOWI ... .., .... ,.
Your Dally Piiot
Serva Directory
Rep<-t•llv•
142·Hll, 11t. HI
Or•nge Coa1t DAILY PILOTIMond•y. 8ept9mber 13, 1812
le5sim1al Service Direct
~!~~ •...•.••.•••• ~w. ........... .
Olvon»·Support Chen04 OU8TOM wood Piiio oo-
All F•mlly Mattera ..,.,., deck• a ltnOM bY
Atl'y Koflroth 148-4375 -MNDV 841-0822
&'Rt. f.'!!t. •• • • • • • • • • !!.~!!~.,,. ~.'!~~.... !~'!~P.'!~ •••••••••••• llfl~d ahtll' lie. Cfllld Cu11om Reflnl1hlng·Furn Oen contraot'g, m1lnt.
0111, IOI '. V home, & lnlerlora·All R1p1lr1 plumb repelr. p11n1'g,
plenty ot elpg fm1. Cell tor Ml 844-5294 moblle l'lome wvlca.
Mlnlte. 941·2271 Jim 536-99671038·3884
C•rf!.' lttriH c .. ,,.,,.,, t.a111l ,.,jnltll•• ••• •• •• ••••••• ••••••• •••••••••• ·'•••••••••• " ll •••if••••••l'•u•••••••• 8"-mPoO & 11 .. m CINI\. • 1 • .....__ • .. 99111 •II •• 1nt1n1 10 3 yra, my c M. Color brlght1ner1, wllt ••• ..._ • 1 n •••• •• -. •• •• • • •• • • ••••
~!'!.'.".!~ ••••••••••••
home 8 hr dey Lto. crptl • 10 min. bi.Kii. Lia 30MN. Remodel, TQPl)td/r~""· Ctean DUMP JOBS
B8C18053 764·8238 Hall, Nvldln. rm• S15; ·~ Add'n1. C1b1Mt1. up, lawn ranov 751·3478 & Sm.ii Moving Jobi
oom 17 '"0 ""'""II 11 , 84845881845-4844 Celt MIKE 846-1391 HP'l IAlnmtll ~hr sa. Ou~r7tm. pei ,_A_OO_'_N_Sl_A_EM_O_OE_L_IN_O_ Tiil 1101 Ullt HAULINO·ORADINQ
C.M. ar11. 848-57511 odor Crpt ~llf, t5 )'ti p111111, Lk:'d. "~rr. Lawn•trff•lhrub lnetall demolition, cle•n·up. D k If '3.v Tree trlmlrtmovel c Babysitting In my home up. 0 wor mY•• · Pllmer & Sona 848-1~4 L•wn Malnt1Ro1ot11llng oncrtte & tr• removal
nr Victoria. C.M. ' Alf• 531-0101 .. .,& FrM Mtlmete 548.8085 Quick eerv. 842"7838
8'42·8482 No Steam/No ShamPoO ...................... PROF. SERVICE Slain Speclalltt. Fltl •KATRINA'S: LIVE·IN QUALITY WEEDING & Htulll\Q. yrd c:IMn up Loving_ home. ~ 3 I up,
FIT $40/Wk, + ti.l./aft.
IChl, CM. 556-382;1
dry. Fr•"'· 13t-1H2 hekp1e, deity maid MrV. Main!. R«nlmber the 3 Quick l olHn. FrM Ht
!~!!!!~!~f ....... . 8lM MouNOIMnlng
Rea1on1bl• Call Bent•
Dalbo. laland 875·3010
!~r .............. .
ITAlllVIMO COL.LEO!!
~'~~,!~ ............. ~,,_,,~~ ............. .
l!xpert wattcoverlng UIP pt-•1Mt STUDENTS MOVING
CO, LIO. T 124·430
ln•ured 8'1·8427
WATCH US GROWi
1n111t11t1on. Aaae prklla _. Conau111nt A1tlgnment DOrH rerool. repair at 58 Ml690 lrectton or Ille co•1 Cell 81Cll•IOr'I HMCltanlng
& Ltundry 8t<v Karen,
6•0·2818/150-0892
PRlMIUM QUALITY
DAV WORK
Paperhanging, llrlpplng, ••nlll• llnlttl pelnllng xlnt work. lg 01
•••• .. "•••••••••••••• 1m1ll Jobi. reaaontbl• NurHI Atl'I for home fat•• • R1l1 Free Ht
care avail. lmmed • full) Branden 988· 7427 by lady w/exp. & ret1
645· .. 251118~2·3299 Ina 538·5883 Vtckta. --------
1·t21· 10llO t!~~A!~~!~!. ..... .
8oa1 Cabin• cleaned. O•· I. I I ter tor I ripe. A· 1 ref' a. .!.~!.'!I. .••...•.. ••••
842-30,.7 or 8.48-48.40. Piii PlllTlll
},.J111I•l by Alcl'tard Sinor Lie.
•••••••••••• • • ••• • •• •• 280CW4 t~ Y'I Of fttppy Completl Janitorial ~-local cut1omer1.
Cff, trained ltaff. bOn· Thank you, 831·44 10 ded & Int . Unlcleen
••BRYANT'S,** Wallcovetlng R•movel
All Typee 042·1343 ,, '" ••••..••.••.•.•.......
C4trllfled HO\IM Slt1er1
Bonded S 11/day (ev~
3rd wk fret), 831· 1234
Lff 857·28"0
ROOFING REPAIRS
Small lobe o k tr• etll·
mat" Call Tom a C~
642-8392
le1H .. ••••.••..•..•.••......
MOBILE SERVICE
Reacreena/New aor-.ne
NB/CM 942.g55~
'"' ......•••.........••..
TILE INSTALLED
All Kinds GuerantM<I
R•I• • John 840-9217
~~~~~~~~~ WHkdeyl afltr 3 11117
Anulle•l CtllL~I Weekends, daya, n1Qht1. •••••••••••••••. •••• ol/9fnlght. Lie BHC f388. Applied, re-applled, guar.. Call Irene 556-<'211.
EXCEL C•RP.,. c•AE otllca cle1n1ny. crpl R'•: Reuoneble, Rall•· 013~548 " "'' " c;tunlrv1 83'"-21 8 ble, Rick. 497-3070 --------Jeck Buffington ··•· .,. ..,.----..,.-----HAULING & CLEAN·UP
Ownet/operator Dr/ri•• lfl'Y/1t Simmon• Oerd1nlng • Vdalgaragee. Prop. mgt
Carpet, upllot. llM rug ••••••"••••••••••••••• Cln·upe. lewn care. lull 831-<>9531831-0085 cteanlng. work guar. IT Jiii 11aY1tt comm a rHld malnt
Syetam1 of Npt Bch. Collom work. Int a e11t,
850· 1200 llc'd 20 yra In 11rea. relt.
z,.J,e,./a1, Herb 521·8012 •11 5:30. !~!!!!~ .. !!!.~f ..... .
Conaultatlon & Hand
Mada Fr•~• 40 years
Experience 646·5 t 4 1
f1•• ltrr/et . .......•.•••••• , .....
HPllU .. •••••••~•• •••••••••• RALPH'S PAINTINO Yard Malnl. & CIHnup. tnt/eicl Reea. ratff THE lllYIOI ln1ured, llc:'d. 414891 73°"1900 free Mtlmlt ... 8aby11ttlng, S80 wHk, Mon·Frt .. m(. home. Ka-~!!".f!!r/!!..... trlne. 848·9 45
Fr .. Ell. 845-1'171 p1,.onal, quallfltd drl· 848-6684 Clean-ups, g1regH, "*'IOI your day lo day -G.,-A_A_O_E_N_IN_G __ S_E_R_V-IC_E_ yarda, •nythlng. Cell
Ct• /IC..U.t. 1rr1nd1. Shopping, dr Cl11n-up1, Ir• MrV. a Randy. 642·7a-.7 ...• !~.'~••••••••••••• apptl, church, etc. All haullng. 841·10IHI Pett HAULING • ttudent ha•
Sod. eprlnklare. roto. Rat. Free aat. 636-9898 lree rmvl, dralnege, hill· 1lda weeding Brian Painting: our famlly tredl·
586·2253 llon for over 100 yrel
!!~!!!' •• !~~!~ ...... .
ED'S PLASTERING
Neel patches, 1111/exl.
"Tree Work with • Con·
science" Trimming &
removal by Howard Doi·
toll. P.O Boie 3,., Colla
Meu . Ca. 92827, Ph
6A2· 1932 Reatuccoa 645-8258
Cemen1-M1sonry·BIOCk nHde met. By hour or lge truck. Lowell rate. W1ll1·Cu1t. work. Lie. day. 494·5857. Landaoaplng M•ln1en1n· Prompt. Cell 759-11178. ~ ,,...._____ lntlaxt. Lie. 348252. Free ':!I.'.'. N!.. ..• .. .. .. . . _ .. _t._88_1_-3_9_98 ___ _
~ OFF FIRST MONTH Babyalttlng In my home,
' Depandlble, affordable, Mon-Fri, tll 5PM. Cell
e11entlal. Anawerlng Sherj, 682-7922
aervlce, aecretarlel &
#381051 Rob 547·2083 _...:.... _______ ce. L1wn a gerden care, Thank you, John n.-111 clean up. Ken Jon,e. Drlvea-P1tloa-Walk1
NO JOB TOO SMALL l1llu11 lfmffl Free .. ,. 536-2807
-::1.~···••••••••••••••• 536 ... 1810 ref'•. DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC ~~!~!!!~~!!!I •...•...
YlllO WILLS Biii'• Painting. Int/ext
For • frM feet ah .. I. call Retldlcomml. 6 yr1 exp.
Herry W111e. All01ney at S Cit area High qual &
PLASTER PATCHING
Ru1ucco1 lnt/ea1 30
yra. Neat Peul 545.2977 r.-.~·!!~~ ............ . bu1lne11 NrvlcH . mall
box rental, word procea-
1 Ing •. Telex·Fac11m1111.
order entry, pegera-leue
buy, desk 1peee rental.
ANSWER NETWORK
780-7320 (Hk for A.V.)
~1~'1!!!! •••••.•••••• R~L ESTATE
ResldantlallComm'I
673-1919
••••••itftiOALi°••• .. Deaperatel ~1110 work.
GP BualJ'lets "Doctor" Free dHlgn. Lo prlce1.
Booka/ Datt/Word Xlnt rel•. '497-7354
Procettlng
90 Min on-site Vlalt
S50 extra 11~ 125hr
(71•) fS.45-5979
c., •• ,, ru. . ........•.••...•.....
Kitch b11111 anlrlee
custom a oomm.
Fr .... t. 840-2062
Cilll C1tt '•'"'" ---------·· ········· ............ . ~~!!~ ............. .
Driveways. Parking Loi
Repairs, SNlcoltlng.
S&S Alphll 831·4199Llc
REMODEL/REPAIR
Finish work & door
hanging. No Job too blQ
or amall. Mike 831·837f
······•··•··•········· HARBOR TRINITY PRE·
Ref>•lra. am1 Job apec. 11 UlllllH WUTU
yra. Hp. BUd 552·9582 Mowing, edging, rakkfg.
Wall t1xtures-Acou1tlc IWMplng. l"ree Hiima·
ROBIN'S CLEANING
Siivie. • a thoroughly clean houte. 540-0857 Heng-Tape-Steel. ituda '"· fS.45-5737.
Lk:. 389944 1·532·5548 FINESTKINO Joan'1 Cleaning Service
.,_tr/•-' GARDENING Cleen-ups. Houaea-Apta·Aentals ~:: •• :!'!••••••••••••• am lendecaptng, monthly Offices. 540-1287
ELECTRICIAN-Priced malnt. Nell 842·87115 TIRED OF HASSLES?
right, tree estimate on l-K-&_D_Lend __ ICl __ pe_M_aln_I_.-Quellty cleaning help 11
large OI amall Jobi. R"ld/Comm. Clean-up. llerel Refe. 960-7462
Lie. 398821. 873-0359 Lit h 11 5•8 2•8" · • au ng. .. • .. " OIAL·A·MAIO. Quallty &
LIC'O ELECTRICIAN
Qual. work·Reu. r•IM
FrM .... Tom 831·5072
ELECTRICIAN
Serv. Nr As Your Phone. !1.~~1!!~~... .••. .•••. _s_3_s_is_4_5._8_3_9_-o_8_80 __
Law, 553.0290 material• Lo price. Free M•H•tr e11. Reis. 496-5717
·······•·············. QUALITY WORK • neat, BRICKWORK: Small Joba. reaa .. honest. Rafa Lie. N-port, Costa Mesa, 287107 o 110• 0•5 Irvine. Rafa. 875-3175 · ave ... , ..
vltltl•llH•·lteH Lowell reteel Prompt,
ALL TYPES MASONRY nt1t prot4aslonala 15
Lie. 3494711 838·36t2 _Y_r_•_e_xp_._9_4_s._5_6_84 __ _
CUSTOM PAINTING Cuttom Brick-Stone Int/ext. Reaid/comm.
Bloc:k·Concret•Stucco Free eat. Lie. 644-4798 Ref1. Free est 549-9-492
.. ,..:. 15 yra eicp. NB/CdM. I'm ,.., • .-• 1mall, my price• are
••••••••• ••••• ••• ••• • • amam Ron 673-8..t 77
!~~!'! .• ~!. •••.•••...••
ATLAS PLUMBING &
Moat 1ubJect1. K·14 Day/eve $5 a $10/hr.
Mr. Mor9an 045·5176
Heating, specializing 1n Avall to studente K· t2 aftr
repairs 845-1888 echl or eves. Have Calll Credential. S5 hr. Janelle El Ell 141· 1121 960·583 ..
Weter Heater Spectal! --. --------
2A hr plumber etc I !!!~~!~£{~'?!!!1 ••••.
le•Ntlla• l l1uj1 "Let the Sunshine In" ••••••••··''····~·-••••• Call Sunshine Window Remod & additions, free Cleaning. Ltd. 548-8853
design & ett Qual & low 20°1• Monthly DllCOUnl
reles Steve, 752-9558
IHn .. ······'···············
lnt/eict. Retld/c:omm'I
F'rea Ht. 20% monthly
dlacount 64-4·4788
SCHOOL. DAY CARE
CENTER. Colla Mesa.
Opening Sept 13. Full
Dan Hallberg Gredlng Cd/atl #di•• and ~day care. 7AM to I Paving Co. Res/coml. ••••••••••••••,.•••••• 8PM Reglettr NOW. L.lc 397804 842-1720 Cabinets & Carpentry Cor"" 8akar & Fairview.
Smt Jobl/Repalra. Lie:.
233108-C· 10. 648-5203
••NORTH STAR** Elelltrlcal Contractor
Lie. New eervloe. 220
clrcutta. 24 hr 645-4174
Carpentry · Masonry
Roofing • Plumbing
Drywall • Stucco • Tiie
Remodel J.B. 846-9980
H!REO HANO, WILL
TAAVELI Many diverse
chore•. Wiiiie 1142-3491
Cullom home cleaning &
complete maid Hrvlce.
Prof .. bonded & Ina.
Unlctean Systems of Npt
Bch. 850-1200
•A·1 RYlll* Top quality Specl1I care
In handllng. 25 yra exp. Competitive Aetes
No overtime. 730-1353
!~~'!~ ............ .
Farthing Interior Design
Huber Roollng-111 types.
New-recover-declcs
Lie. #411802. 548-9734
--ROOF REPAIR
~.'!!!~!1! •••.•••••.•••
~allzed. low coat le-gal MMcel: Ind .. family.
busl. Initial conaultetlon
tr ... 553-0290
Small Joba a Aepalre 556--4335 ot 56e-7787
Free Eatlmllea 845·2003 Chlld C•r• wlcdyl by YO
KITCHEN FACELIFT crtd. teacher (MHtert
Restyllng eiclatlng kll· Oegrea). Organized aett-
cnen ceb. w/real wood. v1u ... C.M. home nr Npt
Sa~ $$S nowl 842-o881 Hts Elem. &4~7
uc·o ELECTRICIAN
NEEDS WOAKI
Uc:. 4181188 842-8023
Carpentry • Cablneta Plumb • Oretn Cleanlng
Electrlcal • Tile
Rel1. Don 118&-o 149
Ouallty HouMCleanlng
w/a pettonal touch. CM,
Irv, NB. Beth 850-0933
HOUSE CLEANER
Good ref1. NB & lrvlne
praf. Gladys S. 1-0702
Preatlge Moving. Low
rate1, tanteellc Mtvlce.
State wide. VIII & MIC
Insured 543-8462. Cal
T • 137. 124
HANGING/STRIPPING
VIU·MC Scott 645-11325
ASA PAPERHANGING
7 yrs local exp Guar
work. Prices atart 11
$8/roll Alec 979.0853
SPECIALIST S25·S t85
Free e111ma1e 770-2725
vHENRY ROOFING.,..
Shake-Shingle-Comp
Lie. 415232. 548-6213
STOP!
Heal* Glare•Fedlng
by SUN MASTERS
High Quality Guaranteed
Hom•Auto·Comml-Boat
CALL 83t-4720
~r..'!!!!~!!.f"!!.•J.'!'/; ~r..~'!!!!!!.f'.'~J!!'/; A~1a111 .. ,... "'.:':''•i'' ... _.J A"u.""l 1a111 .__.J A,,.,:1~1a111 .__... ,.'!!!! ••••••••••• !'!'/ ¥!!~'.'.'.!~.!'.~~'.!}.~ ¥!!!~~.~!~!~! .... !.~f!91 !'f!!~~-~!~!~! .•.. !.~o.f ·
"' I IN a. ••~, ,. I .. •7,J'~ 1111111 ••-tll101a ••-• •t• ••-11•1•1• , • .,. L:Bune B11ch Motor Inn Roommate to shr 3Br hM *IELIU tFFICEI* t817 Weatcllff NB 256 ..... , f• ~-"'' I ,..,,. ~ y •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••-.r.:•• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~··•••••:.,•••••••••••• 9 5 N Paclfl Cit H ' • .. •• ~.-.I'•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• lllMf 11 I "" C..I• #m RJI C. Iii 3114 .,.,.. I ... et 3111 . c wy. Laguna Bch, non·•mkr. From 1 room to 3 rooms to 4000 sq. ft 111 floor
OC-RENTALS E1111tda Srudlo, $345 ••••••••!.~~•••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .~!~ ... ~••••••••••• ... •I'•!••••••••••••••• Laguna Bc h. Dally/ reta. $310 mo. 4117-~017 From St t8 • aq fl No Agent 541·5032
1·5br'• $200 tp 52000 ullla pd Nr snop1 & bus. 2 BR 1 .a.. no pet•. yrty. LllllJ ClllOI Spacioul 2 Br. 1 ea. 1425 NO FEEi Apt. & Condo Wkly/ Kitchen avail. Low eves lease required ~di Air-IHilfll ltalil 4ISD
750-3314 opan·7-deyt Pvt. 648-4831 lndry facll, daek, saoo. 3 er t 'n Ba. 1475. rentt11. Ville Rental•. winter ratM. 494-5294 AVAILABLE porter Inn 2112 Dupont. ••••••••••••••••••••••
POOL HOUSE MAM·D•ailt/al 311f 075--03411. ... ..... Osf PIUI Leundry lac .. pool. 875-41112Broker. Roomwlthkltchenprtv.Nr IMMEDIATELY CallAM 833·3223 Retella1oreat2650Avon.
MOUTH 4 •••••••••••••••••••••• Frplc, elegant French 5,.8-9558 12·7PM. ehopplng center & buall· to share with prof re-•1 t .,_ S 1 1885 aq. ft plus 8 car
plus 2 ptue big den with Super 1 Br. 1 ea. VIII•, JtiL--window•, AC, In homa PINE BLUFF APTS ne. H.B. 1152·7520. aponalble female 26-30. "t~~,:~e~2S~~ sq. ':t: _g::..a_r_ag,=.e_6_4_1_-8_7_7_7 __ _
radiant lrpk: JUST 850 courtyard. very private. -'1'Bc:1uarlt1yt.ud2'~ 28e. 1Br 2 Br, 2 Ba. Child ok, on 2 bdrm t'h be COM apt St ft M OFFICrtl .. ETRO ALTY •""7005 No pets $450/mo. ltaJuoJ1 ~1 ..,.. B ff N.8.pvthome,kllch prlv, . . per1q enyxtru " "' ...,.,.. 1B & t dlo 1-... w•h I the lu ' patio vtew ~amok-S""'5 3 blks to bch. Pool & Call 557-7010 I M 0 W • I I M I I• 673-3313 •••••••••••••••••• ••• r I u '"" .,,, ' ' ' COUNTRY CLUB LIVING ·~·· -· "'• n
----------'·---------2 bdrm, 2 bl,_ d"'•. dryr, &110 lnclud" pvt lrplc, encl gar .. gusto-IN NEWPORT BEACH 850-11191or631-7215 gardener lncl'd. tat. IHt • .,... dllhwatMr I MC, ·~ utH. Consuelo. Wk Executive office suite. WUEltttl Harbor View Home. 2 Br, Boali•fl•• yrly. Mature non·amkra, club w/tennla court•, ve, . apa. n· A total environment CM. tuic above gar for 6 4 1. 6 9 1 1 . ho m • corner ot 405 Fwy, Near In Stonemlll. Beautlful
den, 2 Be. S1250/mo. INei 3141 no petl. $750 X 3 gym, poola, J1cuu.l1, · g~MC. S&00/~1•6107 apartment community on neat non·•mkr person. 7ll0·0859 Harbor Blvd Take over reception area. omcea, &40-a1811 or 831-3985. •••••••••••••••••••••• 213n911-4195, 257-97112 Hunu. beautllully deco-the Upper Bay. Private no kltch, 548-7197 alt lease 1llOO eq.tt. at 904 h c M 1778 WESTCLIFF TOP CONDI· HTATE UYlll or <714) 873-3988 rated olbllee & much BAY TIMBERS clubllouee end health 6PM Mate 35-45 shr 5br, 2ba ft. Call 751·619t ~ar:t o~:: 6 75.388~
TION Beeutlful p1rk·llk• eur· $425. 1 br. ullla pd, 417 E more. From S450 mo. Spacious 1 Br. lrplO, pool spa, 8 tennl1 courts, 7 ---------hH nr S.C.Pla.za/Frwy. 84A 9539
SBr. 1g yd wl grdnr. pets rounding•. Terraced Bay Balboa No pet•. Inola motl utll too. & more. 848-9883 pools, ck>H to b\lllneee. Spa. S225+share ullls Fountain Valley Office --·--·-----Weteoine. ~ -. Avail pool. Sunken ga1 bbq, 647-1155 54t-3421. 3641 BMr St airport. Fashion 1111nd ••tell #it.II 4100 &41·4913 spa.ce. 2500 IQ.ft 11 soc Bal Isl Comm't &/or otc ........ _,_ kll f t I (btwn Sunflower & c ••••••'••••••••••••••• a 11 Good exposure. + slor..,.. From StOO to l mmad. s 1000 mo. 1par ng oun • 111 "••• riial . •1•~ onvenlent 1hop1 on WWII •nl -·-s l .,~ .. _ .... hur) "' ~ -1 Female roommate ant.... good parkln9. Talt>en & $350/mo. C-11 ••r Pem· ..... 1290 pee oua room a. .....,a. "''""' • · ••• •• • •• • • • • • •. • •• ••.. 1 It Unfurnllhed becM· w -.. .., ~ rate dining area. Walk-In C.rtu ltl #M 31ZZ TownhooM 2 Br IV. Be VACANT 2Br. 2B• cer· lore, 1 a 2 bdrm apt• and Wkly rental• now evell. to share spaclou1 3 ?; ~o; h u' 11 C 9 11 berton 2131289·9307
Harbor Ridge leue 4 Br 3
Ba. beaut. decor, 380011.
pool, tennis .. guard Qlle
11500/mo. Bob or Dovie
Koop. Aot. RE/MAX
cloaett. home Ilk• kit· ••••••··.·:~_:••••••• trplc, pool, epa.' ett~hed port, S575 mo ' townhOUMI. SPh1005n•'• lunp.roCoomto. 1
22T7V; bdrm. 2'n ba. lull factftty --1--1-'-----......1 C • I
chen & cabinets. Walk to •• 1-B•-garage No pate Avell 542-3597, 730-7165 S540. $1000 .. Coate Mesa Condo $275 400-900 PLUS t400 sq. 11. •••erell Huntln"ton Center Modern r apt, carport .~ · •• .,_ 1 b ch-I __ ... 1 Newport Blvd. CM. mo. 545-4358 PenthouM Beyfront Sul· lt•l1l1 · ,M~111
1 Bdrm-turn, •615 or garage for retired now • ..,25/mo. 831·49 .... 1 Br. garege, near oce111. -var• • .... ore..... 648-74A5 te. parking. patios. •••••••••••••••,••-:'."..~ • ..,.., _, very clean. S3901mo. Bdrm unlll feature fine •----------F to 1hr H.B. home. pvt rm 800 ft I ' No pell. Utllltl .. lr•t l ...... 7. No peta, no 11 .. rt. S550/mo. 2 Br. 1'n 81. dHlgner furniture and $ 873-1003 IQ comm or o c
LA QUINTA HERMOSA Up to $500 (21 3) TownhOuee, bllcony, In-2131402-2857. Sea II eccMIOrlel Move In lo-8 £AC H ARE I _'_b_•_•h_._2_5_o_u_1_11_p_d_ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. apace Baker a 8111101, Prlme oceenfront value! 18211 Parkllde Ln. 1 blk 275·2540 Mon-Fri av" dry rm, car port, 111 bll· 24882 Cordoba Or. Apt diy or ,_ IOI sum· n ,. 893-8526, 848-4AO t CM '400 mo. 54()..()8&6
2 apactoua Bra lrg plct W of Beech, 3 blkl S. or ell day Sil/Sun. lne, Avall Sept. A. mer months. Smartly $84/. k FEl&LE IOI *UrTE HAU* Pll•E Olll'l
7511-1221
Window kid/pet gar•"• of Edlnger ... 847·5 .. 1. So. ol H_, deluxe 4 Br 3 TSL Mgmt 8.42-1803 3 Br 2 Ba. ocean vu, avall. turnl1hed modal• open W Student wanted ·~· 0 C. Airport area.. Prof • _, environment. full servlee, 1100 sq 11 C-1, nr 17th & 500 u.,01 INeA J1fl 81, 2 lrplca. 4 car Qlt. S53o-S540/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. 9/1!>· '850/mo. dally. Refrigerator-Meld-Pool 20·24. to 1ha11 turn 2 r or no frllla l/ldlvldual ot· Superior. $700/mo, avall
METRO RLTY 836-7005 ':':7••••••••••••••••••• S1•50/mo. Darrell, own/ 1 1tory, lheg etpt. drpa, 4118-4179 On Jamboree Ad 11 Nwpt Blvd & Wllaon apt In CdM. Beaut. quiet fices or desk ac>ace 150 Oct I 642-2434
let Luxury lludlo, frM HBO, IG1· RE/MAX 758-1221 patio, frplc, beamed Otl· OCEANVIEW·LO 2 + 2, Stn Joaqu.ln Hiiie Rd Costa M... 54e.9755 loc. NOn·tmkr, nr bch & 11 3500 It 1 MO
--------"'o • maid se 1pa ''""" __ ..... ··-sqF'REE·. 75 ... 8!'178 · · lol11t1/1l EASTBLUFF Exec. home Pn n • rv. • .. ., .,........, g--..-· lrplc apl. No peta. '850 144-1100 Yaetly on the buch. hotel 1torea ~ mo plul ~ ., ,,
G br. 2 bl. den. formal $130 wk. 499-3015 C..t• #m JIU TSL Mgmt. 642-1903 mo. 488-0271 2 Br 2 •-from $525 No ,_oom,. 2kl01tcn.nt/mo ttpalu&s ~ 2ut1131a83. 1ev3e201129120 cell ~~~~~~~~~~ ••• ~~~!~! ........ !.~~
dining, 2 frpla garden OcHnfronl, magnificent •••••••••••••••••••••• $325, utlUtlM Incl. Sm. 1 a till ,.. • · -.. -· IESI SIAOE OIM N B 3975 Birch. 1000 eq
patio , Sl2 5 0 mo 4Br,$1~5097._..,..2 1w%t?i~s4~:/~':: CbdM.83111e21_73~ewport2 Blvd, •:_._flu ..-~O ::i•·~'~,~mc:.: 1r9~tN!~po~·=~·-F-e_m_t_o_t_h_r_2_B_r_2_b_•_2 Attreetlvarustleupstalrl ft. M IA zone Agent
_M_2_-0_3_50_. _____ ·l-:::----.. -=-"'--:-'"--=-==1 11-15. " ••• ~t ......... ~~. hr111-4. 545-4855 873-4164. 11 or Y 'Pt In H e setting We supply desk. _5_4_1_·50_3_2 ____ _ 11..,..tl J.ui 3111 645-8825 Nr 18th/Pomona. 1 Br 1 Oeluite poolside xtra large I lllS(mo. Non-amkr.. apace. copier. You sup-$750 up 2160 11. lndu· .... Clt•eMlf 3111 •• -.-.l'i................ Ba, downstelre, OI W. 2br, 2 ba. bltna, dlwhr. Pine Knot Motel, 2 Br. utlt Pine Knot Motet on Coall Cont• o t Ann d y 1 ply phone. & $95 pr mo 111111 • Office 18101 A•
•••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRONT Dix 2-4 Br. Brand new Condo 2 Br. 2 ClfPO'I, water pd, 1 child 1'/\ mlle9 beech. No pets. pd. llta mngmnt dutlea. Hwy, N 8 Step I I o 557·1108. av 848·0410 pr Oes1t Call fS.44·7211 don do Circle 11 M & T ~BR condo, 2 Ba, tplc:, By week or month. Ba. 2 car garage w / OK no pet• 1450 Agt $500/mo. 53e-8382 Avall IOI reduced rent. ocean. Wkly rates M/F 10 lhr CdM houae· 2 den, wetbar, gar. Beaut 873-7873 opener. wood burning no f... S45-2000 · " IM6-o440 845-0«0 1,,., br'I. 1 be, I-"', ... n. 20DO IQ ft w/500 aq ft Hu2n2t!~gton . BHch turf view. Step• 10 bch. trptc. view of stream .l 2 Br. 1 81. up1t1lr1. 1 1----------1----------• . .,... -storage. 0 C Airport _84 __ ._-_4 _____ _
• *750 mo. 492-1819 he•frelt/Ylewt w •tart a 111. '715. Huge 3 bdrm. 3 ba., pt1v chlld ok, no pet1. waler Quiet 2 br, gar. patio, IEEI l PUCE! deck. lndry tac. 3 bike •85'1~e•,,·28' 2 o o o I mo l1w,1rt·Alr,er1 •-a11 •-• •110 2 ead 3 bdrm. Ldry, gar.. 662·1309. patio. No pets. S&OO mo. paid, $400. Agent. no pool, no pet, 1801 H 15th Reasonable rates. Kii· from baaeh. S360/mo. • ~ •••• !!'! •••••••• :' •••• fireplace. S850 and up N11t & clean Ellld• 1 br 851-2175 lee. S.5-2000. ;~·25~::'f-~~o~elght1. cllenettH. Ph<>MI, maid ,_u_t_111_1nc_1._8_7_5_·_11_2_1 __ '·s-o-.-LA-G_U_N_A--.3-A-ro_t1_B_•_~-· ~~~~~: .. ~J3od~q·::1:111
~SR 2 Ba twnhme nr So. winter. 840-478• crpts., drpa 11ove rtfrl: STUNNING leree 1 er. On bch·2Br Apt-pool/ Hrvlca. Z channel mo· 2 BR 2 Ba Nwpt ept, w/ 2 Sult" avail. Gd. Hwy AIC Hvy Pwr and Light·
Cat Plan. AC, fplc, O/W, Oerllng 1 BR, 1 blk fr ge, 130 E rottl. St. 12. Garden Af>t. pool & rac eauna/MC. $900 mo. + '..+ Block to beach, 2Br, vlee. SANDPIPER MO· view. lam, 26-35 yre. Vltlblllly. 497.2351 Ing Xlnt IOI R&O and low
relrlg, a10Ye, pool, spa, & beach, wlgar • wlnl•r $375. 851·9522. .,... 710 w. 18th. SI. sec:. dep. 538-80113 111 bright I •~ $700 mo. TEL. 19e7 Newport Blvd. ~r;;:!~ ~·188-42-4,300, •--1-IPl....;..R_lllt--Ul--1-1-1 re 1•1 7 2 O. O 8 2 1 ,
more. No peta. 111 & las1 rante• S&OO mo Ind utU Eutalda 11 2 Br Ba * 28r 1Ba. Neat So C 4PM. .._Y'_tv_._1188-__ e_2 _____ 1 __ c_M_84_S-_t_t3_7_. ____ ---------21s-1127_.404
req'd. LH. Avt now at 780-19e2 • . qu 1 • 1 . • • • . Lr Bl tte cond 2 8 2 M/F, lo.,...,. CM tlOUM. &ae. SutlM Ind. recapt .. •----------$700 mo Oya 979.7100· w/pftvete yard & garage PIG.I, S.A. Luxury Con-2 Br 2 Ba twnhM, tennis a g u o. r VM•llM ltallll 41SO dbl gar. yd, frpl, $285 Hc·y eerva, cont rm,, 1000 aq ft ofc & werehM,
eva. 775-03eO, Mika Oo~ Winier. 101 2 BR, gar. In 4 plex. No pell '520. do. w/pool. $575. No ape, nr l>MCll. 2202 H ... Ba, 2 car gar wl~. •••••••••••••••••••••• kit .. mall hendlg. Ra· xlnt toe. 1310 Lo9an.
herty bttna, atep
1
a to und. avl 752-2650 pell. 833-897-4. Cir. 960-3745 ~:/5.v~~~·:,r~~lt . 1 Br. tleepa 4, ecrou the _84_6-_1_888_·_____ sponelve to your busl· C.M Raaaonabl• rant ,. I L I Sept 12. 525 mo. 5206 2 Br 2 be deluxe apt E.llde luxury In a pine lo-2 Br & den, 2 Bl twnhae. 11reet from the beach. Prof, MIF 21 to 30 yrs to neea naada. AdJ. 405 846-7512: 548-6900.
..... •• • ••• Neptune. 645-11875 244S Elden Ave. se25 , .. ,. Rettig. OIW. Incl. 2 tennl• a ac>•. nr beach 2 Br. 1Yc Ba. TownhO\IM S295/wk. 875-5088. 1hr dllC 3 bdrm. 2'h bl FWy In F.V. lndlv. ofc1. I 1a ''l I I ... ~!/~!~!!~!!. .. !.~~!Junior 1 Br. VerNlllM, on mo. 851-822e. Br 2 Bl. $625. Avell. 2202 HeM Cir. IMI0-3745 1ty1t. No pet. $450/mo. Lake Tahoe on water w/ lwnhM In excluelve Npt M o/mo. from 1325 H .,,,, llWll1
co u r 1 S 5 8 5 / mo 11115. Mor Rick 831-8741 64&·2082 boat doc:tl. 481 3be exec Bch Area. Pool. Jee:. td~. 963-8445 fia••tt 2n~':ic!. b~~·~:: 21310 ·1.3292 d1y1: ~~~.· :,,:~ 1,:-~t!: or MI F ~131592-26'5 B••mutlfualnpaLrkMll·llk• aur· lu Cl•nl• J111 h m . com P 1 I urn. •9~~5mo085• deP 137•22 • NEWPORT EXEC SUITES -.:..:::;.·=···•••••••••• ..... , 11 B I d 8 5 0 2131387-5900 ........ • " s •••••••••••••••••••••• S700l wk. 552·2115 or ..... i .. ve m••••· FUil eervlc:e. reeeonah•-... ~,, ·-• • • g . . · mtt on Pll. balcony. Call pecioue 2Br apt, PY1 Pl· rounding• Terraced 1 Br V1 deck Old world ...,.. 975--0311 _Ot-...·-------.,,.. ,..,,..,,. 1#$ 752-5328 hHllfreet a,t tor eppt. tlo, blt1n1. Encl 11ar. poot. Sunken gas bbq, ohifm. apec11eular Fernale25to35to1hare2 _ra_1ee_._x_1n_1_1oc_._1_s_2_-M_o_8...1 ••• r.;;:-:-:;< ••••••••
Brand new condo. 3 BR, 1 bdrm. winter rentel. TSL Mgmt 842·1803 Cong r ••a AP'•· 1p1rkllng fountain•. ocean vu. walk 10 beach PALI NUil Ollll bdrm apt, courtyard. nr Executive Suite • H.B. MARKETING BUSINESS
2'h ba. Vltd celllnga. $425 lncludlng utllltlN. lllTAIT •I 645-8914• Spacloue rooms. S•P•· $495. Contact Mgr at apt (Monterey Country Club) So. Cit Plaza. $281 plus Share rent with CPA an ••P•ndlng. Several Pff
Frpc.2cargar.'350Mo. No pate. 873·7844, Eaetelde$8251mo.2 Br. E. Side 2 br , 1 be, r1teroome.Sepet1tedl-C.332Enclnolll 3br,2be,fum.,wlfrplc. ulll,Otp. Attorney. Sac. Xeroic, S~~ed. Wetrlln
752·5328 548-1930 1y, Ba. TownllouM, 111 downetre, lndry:no pet•. nlng at••· Walk-In clo-A,, hraldH GOif. tennle & mmmlng. 957..()832 ev/Wknda Recap Avall 891-6991 OI appt
3 Br. Condo""' So. C. WINTER RENTAL btch. bulll-lne, lndry rm, c:a.t· S430 mo, 271-A E. 18th aa:~!':~lt~& ":~,. .._ Dally, wkly a monthly _A_m_m-,-.-w-tn_t_e_d_l_o_r_N_B_ 1 •• FRH Only $5000 flnanclno IOt •
Plaza, crptng & bit-In•. apt. 1 btk to ocean.·~ blk port. yetdlbalcony. emalt Pt. 64~52· ~ton ~tar. 0 unt· ••• '!.!'.':'.~ ••••• '!.':'!'! r •' • 1 · C 111 M • r k ' ocHnfront. ~on-emkr N-port Center EXEC new food prodUC'll Very
overlook• greenbelt. Io 8 • y . S 4 2 5 mo . pet OK. •1 Br. Triple• • $375. 2 Brm unl\lfn, '575 IUWlll 5~1 wkdyl. rekble maJe. 873"-5383 SultH fully 1t1ffed to ht oroflll 54ws72 fW
poota, spas & ciubhoute 875-4802. 'TSL Mgmt. 8'42·1eo3 New carpet a paint, no 2 Bdrm Townllouu Kone, HI. Condo for rent 1 handle •II your bualneu #tatt W1•IH SUf
evall. Security gate. BEACHFAONT RENTAL SplrkllnQ clffn 2 Br l'.4 pet1. unfurn .. '850. VILUIE Br. ""P• 4, Avall 10·15 Prof. & ton to thr 38drm needt. lndlvldual olflct111 •••••••••••••••••••••
MSO. Cail 979·823f ..,., 2 Bdrm. Winter J850. ea. ... f5. Utll• pd. Relrt· 2 2 8 2 PI 1 c ant I•, No pet1. Utltlttea freel New t&2 bdrm. luxury to 10·29. $250/weak. hOme In N.B. Wiii GOntl· Mo/Mo . from $350. Wiii P•Y fee for c:o-llQner
. & wtcnda. 3108 w. OcHnfront. ge. 2 llNll chlldren olit, 845-9484 LA QUINTA HERMOSA eptl In 14 plans. 1 Bdrm 540-4484 ~-.;.,' 3cJ'_ll~3~r0;:i1:.e1~ 6"·7189. for S328·000 111 TO at
f,_jfOHI 873-1573. 634-3777 AM. ftO pet•. 2 BR. 1 BA, lrplc, pool, 182t1 Parktlde Ln, 1blk from SS.O, 2 bdrm from Avell now wkly or dallv meg 1. 511-11135 L1guna Baech 600 1.I. 12 9%. M0-9605
a.,._1_a.~ •szs &48-5802 PM. tlleO Waltaca "II". gar, 1395-A w Biker. W. of Beec:h. 3 bike S. '815, TownhouM from 38r. 2Ba. 10 eundaok, -...;:...'--------view d Iii tff rr t
R
•• !.'!6'h ..... 1"!'s•~••J•••f••1•• 1 BA COTT AGE. Mature 3 apla avail; 2 bd, $550; 1 ~"'o25~moe ta.;_.~ ~~11d5 o k . '_ 01 Ed,.'W ... 847·5441 !~~:rf!11:.o:nd~~n8~i ,_N_._B_. _846-__ 1_39_11 ____ , P~3'=~·~~:::y::-: =7ng, le:~/ osa~~} ':::c'' II HJI
enc: o an oaqu n, adult• pref. No p•tl. bd. $425; Baell, 1375. ._ · .,..._ · w•UI ..... "41 l•tlll ,. liltt fJOO tleble M·F 10 thtre home option/ equity pertlclpe· ••••••••••••••••••••••
Model TownhouM In Ir· Very teotuded. Utll pd. Ca II SIU 5 .. 0· 3 8 8 8. 2 BR. 1 BA, old hwtt. no ••'•••••0 •••••••••• •• for cooking & heating •n••••••••• ••••• ••••• on 11nd. N.b. 2Br avalt. I IO n · Ag t ' Pa u 1 R ' 1,1, Umfl
vine. 2 bd plua '*'·one 1415/mo. 945.3477 4117-2338 pell, ohlld OK. All utll pd. OCNnfront, magnlncent ~:~Y ~'r~:. s~;rf::'~~ Flnanofally rHponalble Wiii con1ld1r 1 clllld. 648-5051 •rtaec• O.. lte. :~·P~~~~.'n.~h;5~·~4:; wkdys. NEWBREEOAPTS. U~~~5mllton, 15311. 4Br··1~~~2 Beactl to McFedden to =3~0t:.~:. Judy87S-6&37 Costa M ... 1or2 room Speclallllngln 1at &2nd
728-2141 Winter Ranta.I, 3Br 2ba, 1 Bdrm wfloft. Frptc, r« Se• w In d v 111 • g • Motor•Sallor doclted In 2 F to thtr• 3 Br. Apt In 0 aullH. From S75/mo TO'• since 1949 wetlrlronl. $750. God~ room, pool, )lcuDJ, tit ..... ,, JHej 3111 (714)8ti·51N ...__,Me ~tral .. r. M. ~Imo. lhlft utile. Utile lndd 7711 W. 19th Robt Settler NH/CM _._,.,_,.,, FualdH rect. 1803 W. Bay. & water p11d. No peta, .,....._BnB •• -.-.'I'••··-·-·-·•-••••••••• L.eguna 9ch ltUdlo, 2 bike hMU• bathe, tho"'· Avell. Oct 111. Karen St. 851·8921 RE. Broker 8d RMllC>f'I -:r;-::::••••••••••••••• 730-3777, 837-2113 383 H1mll1on, C.M. _.,..;;wu ~ OCEANFRONT 1 BR. to beach. furn. 105, kllctlen. •II ellclrlc. 831-8032. . Otflce ~.In •chg for 8'42·2171 54~11
,._,,, ITn 2 bdrm. 1 ba IHO Mo M5_..11 IPUt•m winter. S550. Dye, unlurn $375, ulll Incl. PIHH Hnd reaume. Quiet F nonimkr to look llghl talaphone enaw•-WIDOW HASSSSIOfTO'• BAe"it°i~r"r•:irsuN"j~ Winter Renlel. 209 30th Bac"-lor. CIOM-ln, quiet 730·0104; 1v1/wknd1 Mature peraon *·1881 curt~I photo, p.,_onal for 2 br, uf_· to $275 ea. rlng. 980-1598 RE Lo101, 101< Up. No St 842 S.31 area. fOf 1 rr;eon only BeauUlully landeoaped 833-3743 Iv mag baokQl'OUnd lo P.O. Boll c-thla •• 2732 ..__,... bae llltte 2 min Credit C • No Ptntl• bMutltul Palm Sprlnga. • • 111 d 2 8 0 I • garden epi.. Pool a Spe. 35-8, Balboa ltland, Ca,. _ _,._ .. ________ ............. • 1 De son & AllOO Wt!)' pay high hotel rate Winier rentllle u • P mo. Petloalci.cti.I. No pate WTILln LAguna turf view. 11epe to Ill. 82962 NEWPORT BEACH from Airport hH lndlv y. . lor 1 emall room when now r1allab'e. Call 833-3125 81cM10f 1410-1415 18715. 2 bdrm, w. be. lownlOCMn 1 Br. 2 ea offlcH In • lu11urlou1 _•_7_3_.·...,__11_.,... ___ _
you can "-ve 1 1 or 2 br. ~ UAL.n 13115 • 1BA. relrl,. no 1 Bdrm. $46$4470 Sunny uPf)ef. View. No condo wtpoot. 1760 furn. :':'.:~~:r.:·1 ~125• 111 a.nUque fllled bu1ln•H Mone an tor rHI
pooleldtcondobynlght. pttp••ia_.,w pett,2aduttapref. 31·C 2250Vanguetd pate. 811 Amlaoa Way. 1-772•3063 IOIMMITE environment equipped .. 11tt Tr\l1lOeedio.nl.
Mt, or mo. for IMI. Cell ----· w. 11th. 113-r111. 540-lle20 or 842"'4805 Sae Mer. 844-1'119 OCEANFRONT 3 BR 2 B•. R .. ,. gay M tllr hOUM With Tb!. W.P., ant l«V.. 7 141545~4930. ~~=~eoera Realty NEWPOIRTTMC .. !!IT CO"' 15P2050.12' fiar •. 1110\.t•bn•otwnpehMte'. LMOt 2 8,'28.th.S515 Lrg 81ctietor ept, Newport lo• unit, 1pectaou111 fll DEll :~.?, e::.'~:is + :t=~~"'or'~::: Wiii bvY eman. enort, high .,,... "" 308 w Wlleon Hot• .,. •• quiet & PV1. OOHn view. W•lklng OIMI & 1et9Mt IO'f'CY. from t 37!1, d .. k ac>•c:• yleld 1'0e. PI P W... DO • B11ut 31!1r, view. t7a-54 5, 141-057,. 831•5513 O, 8'42-4805 No pet• 1400 lnol. utu. dl1t1noe to 1t1Qp91ng & All c:fl9nte '°'"'*' wtth M/l' lfW lbr/it>f, "•to S250. Move In .i.owance 87i-0922
. IMJM.U ''" $1200 mo. Agt. 845-0285 CIOM 10 bMch, 2 Bdml, 831·22" N.-wpor-1'1 flnlet reetau• pl\OIOI & '*"ICIL bOl't, N.I 1275. Cati 833-11978 •----~ ,/
... •••••••••••••••••••• Win ter Rental. 2 a 3 1480 mo. t 8dtm S3t8 3 ltdnn. aB.;;. '8211 LOVILV 2BR. 28A rant•. Avl 8•P 18• to Credtte: Ootmopollt9ll :.a.:~~' Ad 8 7 • • llAl1'lflL ___..,., a BR 2 Be, dpbl, 817 E. Bd Newpon Penln mo Pool var No peta• 1&1 e. 2111. Mt-2AOI •n t>lk to bch. No pet1. Jvn• 15• s 1100 mo. Good Morning Am.tea. •w-n• ...,. !!!!•,•~ hlboa Blvd. Winter 0t ~·· • M2_..70• • • Yrty 1700 mo. 175-l70e 873-44'3 The Tomorrow Stlow. f' l\el ar ept to"" wt ,,... _,
·yrly. S700·l750 mo. PltY• ,_... Eetele .... ,... ..... rt M1·1MI flm38"!).UIOmo.+'A With uH ol reoept1011 ..................... ..
f73-57-45 173· 1900 ., .. llWI WE&l:fleld LOE, cle•n 1 IA. bay •..... !.................... ulll Ml-Otoe con' IOOM, lcllctl. pf!Olw, ~---,, ..
I 01 • Bdrm: 2 beth, Large 1 Ir, refrlo•. be~, no ~1. l4H. leNM tnll..... Dltonmlnetlfto a llntnclel· Fem to lfl.,. NI apt, 1 aecretarlal 1 WOfCI ~ ....... ~ ............ ':I'
aomple\e_ wlllnena, .,,.,,.,. m' laundry, carport, p-.y ant ~ 87 2; 17 57°' Mtture ledy. MIY lleve ty r .. ponelble l'emale •tlloc*tobMCfl.U7tmo. ~":Y:all ~~ ~l'DIUL£TS ..... utile. 873-4588 fahualdfl . No Pl'• 1428fmo 8t1Utlt:clarden •Pt• WUTCLIFF a"· t~ ... kltehln PflvMefl. OtM Pd. 3-39 ~ 10 "*' ~ 14&411e or t7J.~ _... ~ _ 1 .... •••n•••••••••••••• .. • S 1 W 1tt11. 8 t A---..1 L .,_ ..... 2· TownhouH. No P•t•. f»tl~WS mo 1 ..,._ .. r-m"'nt-dellred. Call. • ANSIBS ••--~ dte-•·•....._ Lt~ Ml-0482 ,.._ ._ ...-• .,... 721 ~ XllfY -m ,. .., ..., ..,... Non _.. --... t_.. 7141780-01 · • --· ~ ""'°°"'9. ...,.,/mo. 1 ..... ord 14 29M, 831·750t ry '1. TOWfto"'°""· ovet· ...... r ....... _ W9'1 -C:'' refrtt•· etove ..................... Large 2 • 1 ea dtw !ft-I ldrm 11,(, 8ettie t6'40 Lane. 841-75$3, MINI HACH lro mllllter look• pool 8encl r•tu• for 3 1111 CdM dplx. 3 illllTM ma llWf. AMM
2 .!~: ::.. ~ ~ 2 ~I.:,,~ ~-:z ~f90Y1 rm". .. !! 1..t! d1!,,• 2 idf'r'I', 2 IMN eaee Lie tunny, 1 bd LICIO bldrm, wlprvt bettl, '* mt, current pt!Oto, I*· r: :.:o:e ~~~ 'f5
Peter'1 UndlnQ ennoun-~ • C-allll 10 oO...i'O, ~No ped, private iund.ok, ::: ..... ~,· ,..v_ ""'' ""' 9M W. Wilton 1ylront. H50 yrly QI ""· pool, ,..,._... pref. aonal background to t?:J-4nt..,.: _,.911 yt, c .. 1 taw ct1olc1 tllleo HANDLU =. 1100 mo.I" mo. '-'''" Incl. Yl1'y ...... --N1·Nll or 1e2 ... eoe 87Mtl0 Of 173·2'3!17 .... eou. •• P.O. 1011 ,. ••• lall>Oa 1u1t1 OlllOH for rent. r•Hlll you ..... lltnf ..
H8cltmo Avail no ...... ............... -·-·-· .._ .... --~.~---· ,__,.,., ... -7t.._.7,...142 c 11 M · 1 ,1 •· --. --rllfl a"" a ... TOWl'lflm, ,.,.., 1 II\ NICI/mo. ~In 4 Wrm. 1 tie ltM ....... 1 TO ...... -m~.m.:=nmu Molfilo . ._...., •· •~••• on "'' 1troo• .... ., ,,.; nn els-11a:'c • •dlOIC Lge --•!tr*. pdO I no~ 1411 & MIO. , pettOft. No.,..., ICltOMn, WllMtldrrer. .=. --CONOO I ..... CM ..... ,.,. ... (114) ...... or _!"4~tAl!NDI~~·~·-.:_-~. m...-. •••••••••• T;.-:: ~-~ .. "!..,~1 • ,....,,,.,._... ..._aen Nnno••· ...Mii4_., ..,...,. ~.·~ .• --.. ....... (ltl)-..at• ,_, .• -... OoMlt w-. belutlfully Hew aoinea::11 you..,,. -..... -. _.._ I ~. , .. .,...., 1~ NI w p 0 "T c "IE. T ....... ,71• Ml..aM.., __ , ••• In.MOO ~lnnl'·•ii==
fwn townllouN, frptc, toMll?~lldedo ~ 1 .. Wlf/ltOwr ml loll. '811o. lier.,.._ COHD()....,.,31,,,.,.. .. QOM In tlappy. IOYe4y l'efn.rmmtewwi•tollW 1 Cer IOOll yp garag•, your "'°llPlftl .. L.eltl •IWllt•,I DOCM & petto •.... Imo. It ••II I 0111 NOW, tge ~. U78 mo ' novat•d. IHI mo1 cp\ & P91ftt, •1000 mo. home In Co111 MeH, CM ept. t1111mo a""'· QdM. llOI,.._ • bY ullfll "'f ~ Miit. ...,..... ... 2.11n. t73-01ii en.-1 Alt-... II-Otts 12211ino . ..._,,.,.. ...._.,. '1'CMlttr "'°'a.••• Mt. ·-L•·•-
\ ..
•
Orenge Coul DAILY PILOT/Monday, September 13, t982 c:e
fof your out"'tto"n bike -DOLLAR DAV DOUGH SAVERS
tor Merch•ndl•• under •1,000.
8•11 your no-longer needed Items for cuh. If II doan't
MU, we'll run It another 3 day• FREE. One Item
per ad, muet be priced. Sorry. no r .. 1 Mtate or
commercial ad1. Call today for full detall1.
(Noft ~ .... ···~· ..... 81..00)
3 . 3DAY8
INES •
CLA881FIED8642•5678
U• rt .. ltl ""••I• tr .. ftl 11• •~'· t11._.1t4 1111 B•I• ,,,~..., 111111"" tf r11 1141 #l1Hlll.,H1 "" .. ,,' llMIN ..,,,, llJ,. !!~'!!. .......... !~~ ""iliiilillililiiilillililiiilillililillli• •••'"•••••••••••••••••• ••• r ••• .-r. ••••• ••••••• •• 7'..-:m •• ••••• • •••• •••'"••••• ':t~ ••••••• ~ ••••••• ••••• • ••• • •• ••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• .._, 0..11 H10 1111 T t Pl!
.. AoooUntlnO OIECK HANDS Llve•ln Hou1akeeper 6 1111nuY To good hom•. sn.cin.rd --2111 --.. ~t~!......... ................ ...... Ith .,. h. II •"1300 TU ... 11/P·tflll Fvll time, lop pay, .. ~ Cook !Of' etderty genii• ru11 time. Good lyplng Mix. 2 yr1 old. 8 to 20' long, Ste per n ... al 1111 Slip• ev111 CdM area w camper 1 • FOlll> ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
'41-llll
20 or SO hr1 weelc. Fifing, rat Potltlon• open. )(tnl man In Corona del Mar. ind admlnlttrttiv. 1111111. Cell 94o·47e7 770-1491 any'llme. ••••~•••••••••••••••• Io /1 t. c: 11 11 c • rr 1 t Firm 673·6619
llght typing, •chedure ~tunlly. For fM Info Mlle or Female, ••&>e· Sml.11 growing Hotel Co KITTENS • FrM to good DOME HOME KITS ......... 714·966·2473 Wkdy1 '79 TOYOTA W/lhell, IW
pr•paratlon, HIH and call John 631-&e20 rtenc• required Call 8attry comm•naur11e home, adorable. llttar Locally manulaoturect. t,11 44 ft L.lneer. a YMtt old. 1-6 ml AC, Mint cood. AM/
uee lax ~u~a No eapr. 11-..-••• •s 770-2712 111 e:SOPM. with lblllty and expe-bo• trained 648.e<>l2 prlc:• Introductory ,,,._ t1'e ooo. Will trade. Newport Buch~ FM, 14000/0BO Chrl•
nee. IHlc accounting _,,_ -rl~. ~:;.~5r~P King bo• eprlnga and c111. ConVW11 to 2000 l<I Submh Pfop«ly board allp up to 80' 64.4·9030 knowt.dg• pref. For 111• PIT. FIT, •Int comm, Lill lfflOll mattrau. Good cond. fl. 639·3596 87$.4424 boat, ~lltr, power, lho· 1·.,-------,-,,-1-0 0-0 C. Computer Mfg, worll In OC. Mu11 have PffUO llUTllll S 7 0 0 f rUI ~
locetec:t In 1rvlne/Tuit1n 1111r for color, wlll tr1tn Fountain Vall•)' mortoa· llOlnAIY $70 546·2626 Full fix• Pool Table, good ..,,, #ltl•• 97; ~25 m o ••. •••• ••••••• ••••••••
a r • 1 . Ca II o ebb y . 840·5249 ge comptny need• ,.6 lmmed °'*'Ing lor ... Lib/Shepherd Mh1 Ft· condition 3 Bar •tool&. ~--I "'' · 73 Oooge Van Conver1
7141730-30'8 DELIVERY /STOCK proteeslonalwomeri .... c:retarylnL11g1.1naBucr1 malt 7 wa•kl old. Alk lor Rick art 4 •• ~:"'J5o.•••••••••••• Sldetleto18ft s1oomo xlnt cond , $3100 firm
Loll: Toy black poodle, ""ll'IWITlllllllOTtl 11am-8pm, Tuea·Sal. king rewarding poalllon ir ... )(lnltyplngandor· Mo1t1y black m1rklnga. 631·1387. Onan tOKWOtf*tlor.4 Marcu1Channel A ir , auto, atereo
female, vie. Santa Ana luhtait benellt1, -HerOld 496 ln·the Mono• Banking ~~~:.z~!l1°~~~.~~~l~r~ 966-0904 12 Place Mttlng or chin•. ~1~t~1~:; 673·6146 . 63l·2t77, 6'46-3643
Ave & Robin Hood Ln, "'-...... 1en~· .. Pref. P/T E. 17th St. CM. lndu1try. RHI HIBi• Sat. 7141494-0748 ,,,.,,,,, 1080 '350, 12 PllC41 MttlnQ ol • • ......!.' ' r I BOAT SLIPS AVAILABLE: 1111 ,. .. CM ... 8_,..... ..,.,._. ~-background de1lr1bla cry1tal $21\A_ Mon Fri water ....,.,._., M1 up or B ... 25· · ·.,.. ..,,~.,... HUNTINGTON BEACH D I II · ••••••••••••••••• .. ••• · ""' · · marine appllcttlon. N~port , each ~" • · Theme• Van Great foe Loet: Red Jackel & wallet CONVALESCENT llfl IO,t. Subatantlal Income for llllPPIH OLlll * *' BUY** eYll, 759•1206 S2500 675-2837 30 , 40 , & 45 Call work or turf $695 080 a1 Featlvel of Ar11 Rum· HOSPITAL Full time. E•pred In dedlcat•d. motivated, Fut growing luhlon • 642·4644 from 9 ·5, 840-6144
mage Sai., L.aguna Bch. 947-3515 Pegboard, Ina, billing adun8d11c. on1l1t•n• lndlvl· buslneu, coametlc line, Good uMd rurnllure & #/111ll••Hll VHF AADIOTEl.EPHONE Mon-Fri ,73 FORD VAN
9 4 12131 697 8404 and 111 phHta of front charge of Inventory con· Appliances-OR 1 will Mii W••IH IOll 12 ch~nnell 2 waather, • · 7 ) 87; 44; Apt Manager•. coupi. wt office req. Fin Valley olc. RESIDENTIAL lfOI. Mature. lull·tlme, or SELL '°'You •••••••••••••••••••••• Ilk• JW#, at IOlld ltate. 50 Ft Mooring Newport Custom paint, Int, whl1,
home I 14 • l exr:,rten.c• tor 100 unit M· Th. 963-5634 MORTGAGE SERVICE benefit a, Call ror Inter· IUSTIRI •tOTIOI Wlah 10 purchaM two or s 180. 648·8A24 Beach. S 125 Mo. ate S 1700. 898·6645 work Joe c •• J hn Cua•Ak " 549-4293, 957-0957 · ~ den apt.. 0111 M•H. o ""' view 979-8073 more 1tc1<e11 to 1 or more er·-.. ~ 1 ..... Evl~·"'""' Oental-chalralde, PIT AM. 964 9090 t•t 1111 1•• 1121 .. .., ..... ...... '"...,. 1--------1 Ill.a Loel Min Oachs, Bl & Tan. 750 + bonus + apt. exp. ADA. 4 dye pr w1I • SHIPPING CLERK ~ • ee• of the lollowtng event1: 4 HP outboard, never ... ,, llffl I A•lll WHtH 15~
Mat., Lo11 9-8 nr Culver 642-4907 wildys. Busy ....... ..,,, office, Npt MAINTENANCE I llY FlllllTIRE Aem1 Vs Detroit Llona, uaed. 1525. Call Dou~ 1.:< IOIO •••••••••••••••••••••• & 4 0 5 Fr w Y ( 7 1 4 ) •urOMOTl"E .,..... LHer Mlgr ha• lmmed Sun 9/ 19 Angell 111 •I WE PAY 552 7172 " " Ctr. 640-0300 Full time, minimum opening for an 1xper Lii 957.9133 · Turin (work) 873-143 •••••••••••••••••••••• -*Afll Nlmllll $12.26 per hr. Xtnt op-l ull·llm• •hipping/ K1n11s City Royals Sept (home) 642--4910 WHALER 11' Spon, etec
Lost· M. Oalmallan, vie. onver 10, service Dept. ~:!rtenceo A.O.A. nee-~:ir'J~~~6;1~~6f:; Into reoelvlng clerk Xlnt be· " HHITU E·IEW ~~n~~r.~~;v01~~~:~'! ,..,, 1.,,,, I040 ~·:~'ir~~~.P·108~'d':;;'C.:,~
Beach/Edinger, HB. Coor1•ty wagon end to ded lor Orthodontic nellts. Call or eppty at PRICES START AT; Sit Oct 2. •••••'•••••••••••••••• Q9llOM . deluae New &
.. Buckanor. 842-3646 u1l1t Service Mantlller practice In Minion Viejo Laakm1n El.ctro Optlce, M11trea1 & Found. Mt Please contac1 TEO Clau lc 18' L1p11rake perfect •642•8395, ask
Lost: Chow, reddl1h In In other tHk1. Ideal for area. 830-3703. Menegement 3J3051CCalleAvla9d3or6.6S2a." NTeww1n'•scnto·rylut"1 s'9led7 at 760-1313 Century bay boat, 4 cyt, '°'Phil • ~ ... -. s L arM mature. aeml·r•tlreo Utott• larLits uan apo 4 -., Gr ..... $3500. 875-6161 ---------t """"• 0· aguna ' peraon DENTAL ASSISTANT " E 0 E /M·F·H Queen $147-Klng S167 ll•lltal _, IOIO 499-1617• Reward. P · ---1 1 1 Xlnl 09J)Ortunlty tor ex· l•11f. TraifttH · · · · Sola Bede $197 l 1,.,,3 Boat & trlr 18' GIHper, ~'!,.~!~~~!. ••..•••
TOP DOLUR
FOR USED Cllll
AW•AllH
NITUO/llUll
2460 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA F~·nd·. Black male Pood· Lot erson to 8111 n perlenc•d ROA. Bu1y, • Shoe SalH, 26·35 hre, $ 9 •1t11•1•ll -116hp Evlnruda 018. ~ BOdy and Service Dept. lt1l1 Yt1r Oarttr exp only Hrly & comm., Soro & love 1981 1 7 •••••••••••••••••••••• $>4500. 1140-3118 le. vie Magnotta & Elll1 Varied activities, lull or pleasent Laguna Beach Start your n-career on xlnt oppty, Chlldren1 DISCOUNT FURNITURE YAMAHA B11e Amp. ------~~-"""""'."~ Fii. No 10. 963-4602. "•r1·t'-· office. Full or p1r1 time. 1 ~· B 6 2•6 M 1959 Hert>ot Blvd. 197 .. 20 ft .,,_ Ray with DRY STORAGE 141·"00
Monthly boat etorage, 1 ____ 1_41_·_1_4_1_l __ _ 7 •2•• ..-""" •9• 9766 our 3rd lhllt, earn ng .-ootery 44· .. 4 r. d 1 h I"" v .,.... 84 ·v"" MWUI Olltfftltt " .,. Up to $4.50 u you be-Miiter COSTA MESA 831•6609 H .. wt a double " trailer. $7500. G hal o I Chi PV tpeeker cabinet. All 844-6983 Found: erman lhor1G r OoYa/Ouall s1s. omeat1c ldcarej r•· come more Hp'd. You STOCK CLERK BullettAoom OMder In excellent condition. ---------
male. Vic Mag. & ,.a,:5• NEWPORT BEACH spo~n~ bl• baby1,. tter will be promoted to Full time, wlll train. top S17
1
x
2
4
5
2. xw7o
111
. d3ad
1
.w:
5
a
7
._3.
09
d
2
r7s, Sl,000. * IUIAY field. Hit & run. 960·2..., nee ...., to care for v mo. mgmt. & 1upervlsory I&-1 F v u uanm11 old .. Wednea Morn• In vele. Call: 714·537-4840. pey, x nt opportunity. or IH-0171 1·1Pll 24 ft Cuddy Crul-. '77 Found Black kltlen w/ M 1 1 1 Corona del ••er Call 1 1 h Id lee ln l o call John Dining rm teble, 4 c1u1, •--------W/twln 1.0 .. 170 hra. hit 11 11 ( 1 ure ov ng woman, .., . nterv ewa e every ,.., 1_6620 w e aa co er near my .. ~ 3 day,_.~~.. 675-4552 w ..... 7•6 pm 11 111 Del v.. breakfront, cu1tom pads, C 1 PA 1 v ,_ S 1 3 , 7 00 f Ir m . d a 22nd & Orange) C M ,.,,..,... ..-· .._.. ""' 1---------o I h Waln t Int am ·•YI em, o ..... 213-276-8610, evee and
any 1lre. 24 hr aecurtty, WE IUY Ir" l1unchlng
IEWPORT 11111 CLEAi CARS
1111 lao• l•r Ir. Ill TRUCIS ...
144-0110 631•4418 · for Intelligent 16 mo old. DONUT SHOP counter Mer, Co1ta Mesa and Teach 01her1 5-6 hrl. per ~on"!.5$350 642~0•9~ of the Thea1er 1peca, 4
Own tranap. Corona del help, P/tlme, 'AM •hilt. every Thur1 9am-noon II wk. Earn $600-$900 mo w " cablnell w/15" Altec1, wtlndl 714·673·2058 fll•'J.!ll•llo•
Found: Siamese cat, Wll· Mar Area No exp neceu. Apply In 1390 N Cit. HWy .. Lag. no aelllng nee. 650-1991. Like new couch & love· horn a & pwr 1mp w/ 26' Chrlacra1t cbn cruar, ••••• ••••••••••••••••
C~HIEl.L
CHEV.OUT
.:x;,.1l.rh111 Iii\ •1
1 1 is1 A \H~'i \
546-120 Iowa. Irvine. Call bat. 720·1437 parson Olpplty Oonuti, Bch. E. 0. E. TEUPllllE seat, rust/ blue/whlle. cover, like nu $1000. recently refurb, rebll #1t11t1c/11/
S&lOpm, 552-0794 BABYSITTER. my San 1654 Newporl Blvd. CM. llLIG1t••t SSOO. 648-6636 bfr 2PM. 498-4614 ang1 & trant, bait tank, SIHllll 1150
... radios NB aOp Ind $11 ••••• ••••• •• ••• • ••••• • 1---------Found: ~ lge lor10IM, Clem. home, Wed. 7·5, 3 EIORIW IFFIOIR Mature. raaponslble per-King sz solid Oak cenopy llfHT OWlllT 500 675-9565 • . Lt dlr1 bike. lndtan 74, it Ill• llftl Santa Ana Hgt1. Identify. mo. Infant. 661·7149 son to work PIT In • bed wfmlrrors & curtain-Almoll n-. $800. · 11c·o. $295 firm. Top dollara for Sporll
556-1285 PllOEllll busy 11ndwlch shop. We need good people to s, 1preeo $1600. Full c 17 85 01•0 21 ft IMP •--o 752 9467 Cera, Bugs, Campera, ---------1BAA PERSON, college Deya only. can ror eppt. set up appointments •I 14· 1· " -•& · Found· M. Yor1<1hlre Ter-OK, full or part-time. Fountain Valley mortge· 64 l-6209 from our Newpor1 Beech 1118 bran head & foot 0,111 • II a 1961 Volvo V8 fresh we-·7~ Yamaha YZ400, good 9l4's, Audi's
rler vie. Woodbridge. Irv. C.M. 640-5544 ge compeny •eek Ing office In the evening for board. $500 Mon-Fri eva '"'' 111• •11 •IOI ter cooled. A Beauty. cond $775/0BO. Ask for U/C MGR 3 escrow olltcer to proceaa •i••Aai llOln••y 759·1206 L I I I s s7 500 •t• 1&••1n 657·1151 Beauty loan escrow1. Salery & -"" HOiiday Inn's n-travel ---------~·!r.'!•• ec . . Bryan 546-1396 • -
Lost: i/10, Ylc College PK, Orange County's FlnHt comml11lon. R•wardlng Fronl Office. exper'd. ty· club. Salary + commit· Furniture lor sale Shown •••DESKS.FOR SALE••• 673-5157 • YAMAHA 650 Special, YIUSWAIU
CM, Oob .. mix, lge neut. Salon need• elegant. t•· career opportunity. ping, H.B. olc. Good Sa· •Ion + bonu1. Call tendef lovlngcare Death DHka and matching 16 ft JOl\t\eon 110 Kint cond. MUSt SELL 18711 Beach Blvd .•
M, ahor1 tall, ftutfy eara, lented, hair llytlst. Top RESIDENTIAL lary. 947·377l 633·3740 after 1 PM. In lamlly cau ... 1118· Fr. ch1lra at 1acr1flc:e price SISOO firm. tut S l200 or beat. HUNTINGTON BEAC~
blk/brn, no cOllar (Jake). Salary, MORTGAGE SERVICE MEO. WALK-IN CTR Telephone Sates & lite Prov. dining rm eel (oval at $650. Replacement 873-2190 545-0930 1•2-2000 •
760· 1233; X 418 dye; RIVE GAUCHE John Cuucll Nwpt MD'I new walk-In delivery work. Cuh peld ~~~i!i).6 v~~~~!'ia~;:: cost 12300. CALL DAWN 23 ft Cuddy Oebln, rigged •-7-3-S-U_Z_U_K_l-12-5-. -rb-1-1-m-tr-. Eva, 97g.3136 HAIR SALON 964·9090 cllnlc seei<a mature P«· dally Apply 779 W. 19th, 9·5pm M·F. 833·8600 I k N e w p 0 r I B • I c h H I f I s H c I M Chllfl, odds & ends. All for f11hlng, b• I tan • new tires $250 Found: Siberian Hu1ky, 540-8167 Female baby1l1ter for 2 aona. eavy exp, n ron 18 • OI 1 el8 In xlnt cones Dealers 1ftke ftrl. l81t depth finder, VHF Aedlo. 645-4203 or 645·4199
mate, blk/wht, approx 1 _________ , glrls 8 & 11 yrs. 6 d1ya, ~e~d'•~kF~~~l ~r~m~ T•llJltHt Stlltlttn welcome. Call 54().6627 Word proceHor, deal<, Trailer. 6 cyt VOivo out·
yrs. H.B. area. 947-Mll IMllllPll 2•6 pm, 760-1410 thlftl vary. Send resume Needed Immediately. Kitchen tabt. with lormlca chr1. bkcaau, detalla drive. '4950. 973-65'40 #lll~J'••ll, S1/1J
160 FOUND: Norwegian Elk High volurM reataurant FOOD PREP. plu1 d•ll 10: Ad # 1026, Dally Piiot. Ideal ror 1tudenll or ho-lop $35. 1144-9604 '26 Carver '77. SF, FB, l••!t. llltlfl f I
WAITED!
Late model Toyo111.
Volvoa, Pickups & Vans.
Call u1 loOayl
Earle Ike Hound, Brentwood Park, h .. lmmed. opening for counter, 7am-3pm . Bolt 1560, C.M. 92626. memaker1. Hours, 3·9. 557-6393 -1B-M-·D_TY_P_E_W_R-IT_E_R_o""lf-1•1 28Kn, n-cuatom llrn ••••• 1•111•••1•• ... ·••1•••••• CM., 548-6998 par1 tlm•llull time bkkpr. Mon-Fri, benefits, aee No selling. Airport araa. ---------rm, loaded, lo hra. fin •e-·-·'· ,,,,.~ Some •xperlence pref. Harold 495 E. 17th 11. llllSEI AIDE' Cell between 9· 12. Entire contents ocean lrnt ce •lz•. S250IOBO avail. $39,000. 964-4820 2111 S6,000. Good cond. TOYOTA·YOlYO
r' ~ ., " 10 k.ey by tooeh. PIMM CM. Exper. only for conv. 640-4647. After 1 pm, home. BlkH, beds, ta-645-8648 eve9. 556-0461 IU6 ...._II•& coeos:·w~i;·,;,~·i~ apply In perM>n from 310 s s Cwft p I hospital NB. Good work-986-0151 blH, dl1hwuher and ,,,, IOI -... -· ...... -·'ll • I 1110 , .......... 5 pm. LH Brlsae, 361 FIT ALE Pos, ......, re Ing condition•. Excel. ---------1 more, 675-7873 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1wn tr .... .. !!:i!.!!!t.!.':~!!....... ",0 .001., S•O·U•I pa"k wi.t~ you. C": Sue Cliff Or, Laguna Beactl. Apply In per1on Laura benefits, Come end bee TOPLESS MODELS Beeut. couch. L·ahapeO, IOI FISH 200 HP Evlnrude. Al 18' Xlnt cond and very I~=========-~ ~3/~4-3l338 n Y 1 m 8
• Iii lt1t•I bllt Ashley So. Cst Plza par t o I o u r team . '~: ~x~ \:ic ~~~6-~~~Y navy & beloe. xlnt cond. 642· 1794 option•. Like ,,.-.. • 1°. clean. Lots or 1torage
OV9f 18 yre. fuil'llme Fii -'H 642-6044, S650fob0 552-1389 ---------1 000. 71~1·5870 Eve-S1500 644·9526 Unemployed M wlll v1111 752·7l00 Are you aoventuroul, WAllTD ---------Sle.mese kitten. female, 8 _n_lnga~-·-------i----------1
lonely F. Leave mag ••u-1 need mon•v. & love to Bil• WnlH 11 21..1 lit ... Pt.,lt Antique pine 1,re1Mtlekt1ble8: Wiii old, $50. 20' aaaa•rm Alll S.m11, 11111 556-4395 J. Tuciler •-, •••,.•••••••••••••••••• • end droplea . • es 496-4874 -• .a • H-travel? C1llfornl1 mri• PUT TIMI Wiit Wt1l4 llh ti table. 8 chalr1, $1100. ±= N-427, ... ,, 4-6. Xlnt .. !!.I!!!!!!~!!!~ .... ~
'°'voter registration drl· ting company hu 10 Eves and/or wHllend1. 11000 Call 499-1246 eves. 11 .. 11 I th'flll lllllfl con d . S 1 2 • 6 O O . PAINT & lite body work,
Ulll • ""'" PHOTO MOOELS
ESCORTS/DANCERS
OUTCALL 24 HAS
MMHl
Ye. PIYI $50--$100 dally. opening• lor •harp, mo-•• ,. tltr• I •••••••••••• ••••••••• 714/6-41-5870 Evee. I SOY. II bod Paid twice weekly. tlvated hlgh-IChool gra-Aesponilble adultl, over ft 12-IMftrt Penn. HouH cherry 4 N•w '81 Baby Gr end up O • o your Y 760-1821 750-5584 du1te1 to travel 7 21, with outllandlng, ti· ,._. potter bed & canopy Baldwin, xlnt cond. IHtl lall "" lh09 .. , Biii 536·9832
Western States & de-tractive peraonalttles to Oltrtt .. as frame $600 Sella for $9000. 876-9510 •••••'•••••••••••••••• Dual 42 OCNF Weber ltltt Prl ... rt monetrat• an exciting work with youth (agH For conllOentlal lnl'er· over $900 Like new. 16' Hobie Cat, yellow w/ c:arbl. manllOlda, linkage
Fromex Ona Hour Photo d 1 T 1 1 10· 14). C all 2·5PM , view. call for eppt .. 675·9686, 840·9129 PIANO · KIMBALL conso-teq. aunrlH 18111. Like & K&N air llltera for vw Sy1tem1 In Huntington new pro uc 1·d rAa n ng 842-432t, Ext. 346. EOE 730·1500 btwn IOAM & le, 4 mo1. new. Sacrifice n~ •2500 •1w161 $ 00 progrem P• · bove •PM, Mon-Thurs. Sml gold velvet chair, like S2000. 64.4-6211 v". • · v · type I duel port . · 2 * * * BMch 11 now hiring color average earning•. Irani new s42.50 I' IAllT 1821 OBO, Call AM'1. a.sk lor ~~~SeC•ll Mr. Rogera. turn. return guaranteed. PAIT THIE WAREHOUSE 642·8171 ORGAN • CONN Good Xlnt cones. 562-1143 Dan. 546-3147
WI Ill
USED CARS & TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
HIE &PPUllAL
Cormler·Oellllo
OllYHLn
18211 BEACH BLVD.•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Hl-10111 Mt-1111
Top Dollar ..
Paid Atl11ti1 Parter ---..,,..mnnn..---1 F 0 r In 18 r v I e w c 111 ... nnns Full time, Hveral POii· tone, excel. cond $990 . .,...,..-..,---,:.,.-.,.-~-:-:--:-~ FOf Your Cert
Open 24 hre 8 day WllE 646-3337. 11-4 PM thru tlons o~n Xlnt oppor-Dining Ml. B1uett 5 pc 556-0535. ~ &oop 20· Vamllh •tfl /11 Silt Ill I HI
a ........ ~ Fri or 646-<4167 Parenti EnlOY working wtth kid• tunlty. For fM Info call w/cerved credenu. Xlnt. •~••• .,, .. ,.,,,-• M•"""'-Y· 3 Miii •••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ·' Jacu:.i~T.~n~ocell Needed -;~=ry Legu-weicome attntWvlew. ~~~ ~ey~~~ John 631·6620 $350, 644-1033 ~~~.~ •• i: •••••• ~~ S1°200.. 546-0577 IM:C,O~~~~A~oz~cJ l11ttl1·•tr412
II well 11 Tourl1t1. n• BMch Hotel. Sunday GOVERNMENT JOBS. counselor. Call 2·5PM, WOOD PROCESSOR, Ar· 10 ft sof1 gold cir, sofa, SINGER -Ing mach. wt fM~I MS ADVERTISERS ~:2~::bor5:t~· ~~!'k .. ~~~.";!.'..!_1m.•Ar11-1 and Monday only. Cont· Many Jobs available In 842-4321, :1<346 tee 2.000 a dlctapho(le velvet wflooH e1ushlon1. cabinet, came, $176. •••••••••••••••••••••• The price 01 Item• •O· i---------
-· ""'"·-"'""' eel Jan Flood at U.S. and overseu. For dual display 3,000, eicper Gd con d 2 0 0 • 962·1256 New Windsurfer Magnum vwtlteO by vehicle dea-Premk.lm prlc4ll
welcome 714/646-3433 494-8460 Directory 312-688-4347 PBX T~ Ans-Ing only Full°' f ltlme. THE 644· 1033 fY. ~I 310, rainbow 1811. N-tera In the vel'llc .. classl· paid '°'any uMd car
2ll2 Harbor Bl. CM CPA Flml hu position for Ext E-9t Service, e11p•r pref'd. OFFICE. 649·2188 OCCASIONAL CHAIRS, B.'J'P: I ' ,_,, $1166. Sacrifice '800. 11«1 a0ver11slng COiumns (foreign or domettlcl
Relax Ing ma11age by ten-ateff accoontant. Public GROOMER WAN TEO for Flea hrs. w/lraln qualified #1tdi••'1ll aqua, good con o. • •••• ".~ •• !!!!! ••••• ".~ 873-3800 doH not Include any In iood condition •
nl1 pro1 from Laguna Accounting experience Fri & Sat, (possibly Sun) per1on1. 644·7050 •••••••••••••••••••••• $25/eaeh. 556-0635. BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA Co-••• 11 •u,. applicable texea. llcenae. ee Us Flnitl ·'
Beach w St NB M t be .a I 100" TV 2 $146 -'•u. transfer lees, finance . eyne or eve helpful. Knowledge of lor pet th09. us Prop Agcy needs cler pera ~!'.J.~~~ ............ ! 6 11 black n1ugahyde lor · yr wrnty. · O#kf H10 charge_s, lees for air poi-~91! .. 1'1111!1!!11!~ b Y I PP t . 1 0 . 9 P M Data ProceHlng. Send e • P • r. & r e 11 ab I a . who can type 80 wpm Antique quill very nice. coveh, mint cond. Free delivery. O~ Sun •••••••••••••••••••••• lullolf control device
540-2617 reeume & Ulery requlr• 640-0001. with friendly tel voice $l50 • S200. 646-9666 TV John'• 64 1766 SLIPS avail. Huntington certifications or dealer
Oanc:er1 for 8ach•lor1 menti. Dilly Piiot, Ad GUARDS Some Cu/Prop Expr 67S:.9666 or 640.9129 Hanredon Pecan dining PACIFIC MICROWAVE Harbour B 1 'I · documentary prepare·
Bachelorette ParllH *1007• P.O. Box 1580• pff'O, XLNT beneflll, & rm table and 6 chairs. 2 ANTENNA sates & MM-1 1 4 • 6 4 0 -5 5 4 5 • tlon charges unlau
738-8538 °' 558-8538 i2e:i:.-Os: • s a • c a . Accepting appttcat1on1 Opty '°' growth. So Cat Antique Cradle, unusual & table leaves end custom c.. Call Clency 631·0908 846-7766. otherwise specified by
I !'!'.r!!P.!~! .•••..•••• .... "'
I I lo I El T Plue Loe. Call Marlee or line. $475. pad. 673•2512 Selling anything with 8 th• advertiser --.. -,-1-11--Plllll----i or poet na n oro, Jim at (714) 754·7612 676-9686 640-9129 Stereo with turntebla,
Houri 8 AM·5 PM ~~ ~:ro A~~·n::: UM. llTATI l&UI AEFAIG/FREEZER fro1t Ranan Dinette Set. Brand 1paaker's, etc. Good Delly Piiot CIUlln.d Ad AllllfHI/ '14118 11.11 hol llhd
luttHtN• 1111 N>9frv In penon WOOd, Orana-. Suite 213 NMd 2 exper. people In free $200. wlllte New. 4 chalra ~· S75· 642•4336 alt. ~ ~ :=.=1~• · · · C/111lt1 ISZO ~ \ll'•' :Hll lt:llO
MOn·Frl, 2-4 PM. Ulll • .,.11 •~. 1 644-6211 S200. 559-<>796 pm. 1 · ••••••••••••;;;;•1••••• Highest calh lmmeotatety ••....••..••..........
MAPLE AVE CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL IN C.M . Re·
gl1terlng K-2nd grade.
am lndlv clUMI. Open
enrollment child care
avail.~
AIM> taking application• --· commerc al an1 lndu· •IEL l I for your vehicle. Do-
lor: needed for Heir WHI, strlalrealeatate orauo-A/J.111•111 1010 9p'-Playpenaolaaet. Shay replicas: pickups& mettle or for•l gn.
Bartenders N.B. LOUIN, 673-4166 ' ~~lul and, growing firm, • ······B·o·R···A··EA······ Earth tonu. $400 obo. Boat picture ads provide coupes. 4 to choose 551-8265
..... 1 WOf'kng condition• HAR A ··1-0"77 .... •7•.999• lroml (006768) (Stk ---------H~/HOllllSS In Newport Beech. APPLIANCE SERVICE -.. ... u " ~ . .. 11111 Homemaker Sandwich eva & wtlnds A30i3). Prloel 1t8r1lng at A I I. . ti·~ 111e1 per1on wenteo 7t4/846-5051 We Mii '9COOO., guer. · k_ llLf II 1111 • 11'1 ••t ..
•WNIT IUOI Short working hrs, good IEOIPTillllT applianc.s 5'19-307? MAGNIFICENTI Enkeball oO\\' 1 A•;jj ••• ,-.-•••• ··-;7;;
March to your phoM to Alw1 y 1 • ute rn ~i~'~!.,,~~~~6~· for boat yd In N.B. Mu11 I llY APPUAHll wine cabinet 5'117' blk ~1' .................... ,.
place a fut-acting cl ... cl1Hlfled-r"d the ad• have car. An•-r pho~. Les 957·8133 oharry, 11atned gla11 s~~ g II hM IOOO Tirk
tined ed. 642·5678 ~ dlly. 642-5678 HOSTESS Ille pa~r·work, casual UPRIGHT FREEZER whl-door-. $3000 960·1232 ~\' • \-'.~ 26.000 mlla, fully loed«I
FIT po1lllon avail. r•· dress. $-4/hr 673•6825 le, $501080, ....... " '"'' IOIS ~e-''. ~~':~~ 1~~4c0o;do~·~4!
lpOOllble, meture 1)80914t Aeetaurant Lantz 751 ·7079. •••••••••••••••••••••• $9 8 4 5 . 8 2 1 1 Ev• 1 . only, apply In peraon NOW ACCEPTING PAINTING 39 .. 11 72", oll
Mon·Frl 2:30·6:00, Vic-APPLICATIONS FOR: Waaher·Oryer·Aefrlg. by Marla, Sp1nllh. $100 '/ 657-9684 days.
tori• Station 990 Dove IHYlll Ollhwalher·Freezer 962·1266 '53 Studebaker Champlo,, lllW 1111
St, NB Xtnt cones. 646-58~ 5 ~·•• cpe. Nice car. •••••••••••••••• ••••• • Experl•nca nece11ary ., U IOIO k.f $3 50 2131•92 1792 HOUSEKEEPER . Student APPLY: between 2 and Coldlpot Fro11 Free Re-•• .'!.' •• ~~.'!.~!........ 'fl . " • CHOICE INVENTORY
or parMlrM emplo)'M, 4, 37 Faahlon laland, frig. 13 cu ft, like n-.. ILOllll 1tt4 lt•tl IH'-4 VOLUME SALES
s s s s s s s
BINGO s s s s s s s
rm & boal'd + allowaooa ~Beech s2oo. Sun. all day. Mon $>45 497-6918 1946. Ford Woody We· ·~
Watch this column for places to in .. change tor hou ... -------a rues1116pm644-6051 --------1 s13ooo '#
Ill wOfk & child car•. Mu1t IALll Electric dryer, gOld, used ITALIAN MARBLE Co· I gon, ' · play Bingo. This column w have cer. Rell. N.B. AggrMllve local compu-6 mo. Xlnl cond. S100. lumn. Var; btaulllul. UM 1929 Ford MoOelA Town
appear each Monday In the Dally 1_760-_25_90 _____ ~:a::"::Z. ~\!.: 942.433e an. •pm. ~J'~~~\:~~~~;3•to. s.csan. s10,ooo
Piiot. T 0 place your Bingo Parlor lnsuranoe nal1. Prov•n HI•• re· DISHWASHER portable, -··T ,_. 1963 Studebaker Av•nll. Saln.s.rw.l.eallng
IOI loLIKE• ...
C lfl d Ad UtlP llAL11 cord more Important run• nne. S40. ••-._ 15500 67,,6161 850 N. ee.ch Blvd. ad call 642-5678, lass e s. ..... UA9111• than computer back· 656-0535 OlllllTllAI • ..,,... . .,.. . L• Habra
IOYS QUIOf
GARDIN GIOVI
EWty Mondey Nlallt
Doofa Open 5 PM
,,,,,
Special Bingo J>re>gf9m Sept. 13th
S 100/'200 Pote
9169 Lonon A.,., 537·1465 ................. ... , .. ,.....
Sept. lltll-ltth 3:30·9:30 P.M.
CASH PllZll
SIOO [. Santa Ala Caft1on Road ..........
Minimum 2 yMrl exper. ground. Wiii train. Call ll I IO EUU 1967 Che'/ Capri 4 dr. VI· IH·UH
Should be famlllar with Chuck Kelty 646-1410 •• !r..!?•••••••••••••• Beautiful cerarntc horM. nyl top Air cond. Ex· Open Sunday
RVS, COB, and Medical UUI OUH ~-°-y!r.OwlR/T2 ~l<_Eof 30" high on hind leg•. i;~~~.· :..~~~;9!995' l 11aitiwaii.i.iiii1:'i .. Mi1iian1rw1;;t'll group contract•. Xlnt Office aupply company ._. .. ,.._ _.., color TV, wamtc call.
t1enaflt1. Salary com· llH full/time po1lt1on WhMla, $60. 552·7143 plcl\1,.., Slhta ClauMI, '67 Eldorado Claule. Sl, a.IT
menaurat• with •xp•r. avallable. Wiit train. Men's 10 1pd, 19W', Mo-Mr. & Mre. Sante & mucf'I 500. Good cond. &
Sedd .. back Vall.y Ar... Newport. Stallon«a, Inc. tobeeane Super Mirao-, more. Handmade leotNr Call Wall 642·7222
Call 837·9830 557·9212 (Mr. Emmon1) $100. 552·7143 Item• & much more. 4 RH/ lhlNI lfll
i.-..-1a... (W ....... ) 84()..8709 -· "8' Ericson F•·"" .... ..1.....-4 CNIM, •••••••••••••••••••••• •-1MJ11 ALL PAO m«ll 3 ap. loll ' ""' ._..,v._-E DEALER SllM-~Leuina Sit. St.In, 7 AM to 3:30 of axtr• Ilka ,,.-. $60 6 18111, UHF, ci>mp .... ~ LARGEST J EP tY"'tV CARVER PM. 4000 Hllarla Way. sN•oow crelllve Item 642·8171'. • • IF YOU HAVE P•rfect condition •1e.500 tn the w .. 1 N.JI N. w p 0 rt B •• 0 h.. 1 , .... pl\11 reord.,. INITIALS 123~4&e7 dtlper•tel'Y Meda ~
842·5881 Can you pr0199Ct? Can Raleigh 3 1P9ed, tnllque, CUI\ your Jl:EP. 1()1$ Rm ... c·l1MW you cloH? If 10, call •Int cond. •140. nu Hlo*t Oolltr Pa.Id ")'&I_..._,..,.._.,,.,.,,, u.tf 031·5540 Mon thru Fri 559-8529 Call Gary~ ,._.,. • .,..,.,,.,,"'°'""'
.._.. Thi• I• your lucky day S ... f f _., ............. -·-i T , •t• .78 3 ....... ..........__ Hetp wanted full time. I II" way, e..u111u1 hand too-et your "ourse or a., --.... '"' .. "'""'"'"
Fluff and fold/counter Saleaper1on for plant I •I ltd ch.ck book cover with a Dally Piiot boat pleture .. /,,..,/llUILT concl. f"'8fY optlOn avail.
pefaon. Pren•'• for 1tora. Fun 1nd part·tlrM. #11ft11/1 H wt1h hor,.. het<I & Int-i;524 Harbor 9tvd., CM Garaged w/COW/f 6 N~ Mncl lronlna. Driver for E • p • r pre terr• d •••••••••••••••••••••• t1t11 CHO. A41gu1ar P<ic. ed. Each Saturday, the Dally f.9•8023 645•7170 on P<«nlum. 4t4-7420 . ~.we wtll train. 645-3392 • IOW llo/n. tH. sacrlflc• for only Piiot wlll otter you ad 1pac. ·111 BMW 3201 r d o •
Hopalng'1 Lllundty Sttv. Redwood ht Cl.eking, S 15. to lucily pereon wttf'I 1111 "°' Wa.111 ' S 08 • • L.aQuna ltecf'l 4t4-4044 a.... 4•20• tong; MC> rectwood tti.M lnltlaf•. Huny can thlt not only deecrtbee your ..,11 option•. wht wt~ :!t.~~ :17eo.:e11~0. LJIM. ~UY Su~t fencMO. Call Jim or K.,, -..o-a109 DtY9 boat, but pleturet It .. W.-1. Int, alnt eond. 14100. ·
Newport C•nt•r AHi Work Y~.~a pm anytime, 770-14'1• Portabl• 11eavy duty 3 The price II guarenteed to <7141641•6870 '~c!!!~.~~~!i,:,~~ .r,
E•t•t• Litigation firm with tht Lo• Ang_etea OOMI! HOMI! KITS H.P water pump, Brigg• buoy your i plrltl _ $46 If we fnds 1111 Int. dtlal*I. run• goocJ. """'••per LtQtl Sec'l· Tlrnee C1tou1111on T.atn 1.oc111y rn1nuftcturect. ''°' a St r • t ton s 1 25 take the'plcture, and only 111140 •••••••••••••••••••••• E•eo tr•n•f•r • mutt idnt typing, Clk:tapt!OM & In t-"on. ...... f!M-n prla. lntrodu01ory I~ 945-M14 • Toyota '78. AM/FM 81.. Hit. 17H0fobo. PAP,
IMl'thand •mutt. &aiery en hourlr wage+ comm. claJ. Con"'1• to 2000 •q AO'l.EA &KATH If UN• provide the picture for a reo cuHll• Small bulll t7t-0710 oC*I 640.-eo Training provided. For ft 63f..35" .. ,__ oampar ahell U 176. -------,-.,.----
. ·-• d•talle, Call 11141 · M«i'• u 11, ""· Oornl· 2 column 3" ad. 113-4t11 ·11 eMw uo1 11.100 •
.,,,. &4C).()301 C.fl Mt nlOn. S18/0bo, 751-6547 ""'MM't. "'Ell' Good COl .. ~lt~a.. •••••••••••••••••~• VY VI ~ ~
AtapoMlble ~ ..... 8ALH Slameae kitten,•~· Bt1t M~. Ml• new For further d .. 8111 abOut hOW i.quarttr ton ou1tom 1--------011 to coOll tor elderty WOfte In OWYI btckyard, rnii., 150 8ee to apprect1te. 1176. ,,._..., Piiot -·t --'--_...._ ptctr-up truck. 1IOO ml ,79 IMW Qll, • ""'· i.t\f,
w oman In Newport proteated *'"OtY· Stt· 498-4114 Na 541414? ~ _,, .,.... ..,_ ..... -'91199 new II•••. many ... wMI. a.,.., •tt.
IMctl. \ltot elllltlnQ 900ovntl t ...,.. 10" fttdlel 1ew + 2 ()911 'WOf1( for you 9fMt to ..... ~ fclf """'9-to0 Ot tlMlfM ... (11•) 7"'°1"7 Lffda pr~. Dir.ct •corp0re e ctr~. onwNa U8ed d lale aale 14'00 ~.Ill I UI I
Ive you""'*'° a MCM7 ..... exp. a rrMllt Ad· headquarters onoa. MH t1S-Mo0 ~2 . .'!-78'f041118nd ~.: ~ ...... LA9. •?t·1MI 't? oae.iC'. "*'Pf 4 ..,., l~~~~lllr&illlll ~ • -.. point ¥ertl•1"1 ..... "•tut. J• a rden carts -vv -"" '' ·sa '°'d P1C111 up. ve .... model to00 • ._...,.... WM... you In fflt rlgttt dlrtet!On f40,0()(J J!lu1 "'"'"O• --1 A's•••• A 1 w • Y' • •a I • 1" ''*"' A" Of'IO. 14.IOO. M uat ttlll le1t otter. to find the f'lome 1011 ~.Cell lot>...._ •t~ alUtlfled•rtlld thf I da .. ._.., Jtt.1171 or •u.oeoo ---...... , ... 1. .. ....... , ..... 10IO ...,.., . ..,....,.
. . ..
'78 Datsun 510 Wagon, 4
spd. air. AM/FM stereo,
lug reek. wood grain package. Very clean. 47, 000 ml. S acrifice
$3200/bat olr. 559·8<120
~ ....
",.:. ......... C)
~\, ,~ ...
MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE
~ z
12 POITllO T1000
NE
SW
Aulomallc, air cond .. tllt WhMI, llerlO (205888)
1112 •t1•'1 +tu Cap. coll $8038.76, Re·
sldual $3617.••. 10111 of
paymen11 for •8 month• $8750 •O + tu. a. magnon
pontiac I subaru
"' "'
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IM THE BOXES
0
ATLAS CHRYSLSl..PLYMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel S46·193' 3 blocks
south ol San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd. Complete
, body shop Sales Service Parts Sen11ce Dept open
Monday 1hru Fr1day 7 30 A.M to 5.30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to
5 P M on Saturday
IEACH IMPOITS
848 Dove S1ree1 Newport Beach Tel 752·0900 Call us.
W" n lhf ' I'\ I • Alla Rc-<ni>o Peugeo1 Saal> &
M .!>.-ra11
THEODORE ROllMS FORD
Modern sates. service. parts, body, paint & tire depts
Compellhve rates on lease & dally rentals. 2060 Harbor
Blvd .. Costa Mesa 6'2·0010 or 5'o-821 1
• JOHNSON & SON UHCOlH MHCURY
2626 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 5'0-5630 57 Years
of lflendly tam11y service -Orange County s oldest Lin·
co4n·Mercury dealership
• SOUTH COAST DODGE
2888 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa Tel 5'0-0330. RV service
apec1ahs1s. custom van conversions
HEWPORT IMPOlrTS
3100 W Coaat Highway, Newport Beach Tel.
642·9•0515•0·t 76• The Ferra11 HeadQuartera
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove S1reet . Newport Beach. Tel 833-1300. At the
trtanglo ol Jamboree, MacAnhur & Bristol behind Victoria
Station Sales, Service. Leasing & Parts We make great
deals!
0 MAIERS CAOILUC
2600 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel S•0-9100 Orange
County s Largest Cadillac dealer Sales Service Leas·
1ng
fD
DAVID J. rHILLIPS IUICK-POMTIAC·MAZDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hiiis 837-2400
G) CHICK IVERSOH PORSCHE-AUDl·VW
'15 E Coest Hwy • Newport Beach 673-0900 The only
dealer1h1p in Orange County with these three great
makes under one roof'
• ALAN MAG HOM rONTIAC·SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa. Tel 549-•300. Salts.
Service, Leasing Mr Goodwrench
• CLASSIC AUTOMOllLH
785 Nftton Wey, Co1t1 M .... T.i. 831-1393
"JAGUARS OUR SPECIALTY"
XK 120'1 I 14-0'e I 150'1 I E·Typee I XJ'1 s.._ -s.rvic. -A"t0tatlon1
Off Plac«ttla b9tween 17th & 18ttl In Coet1 Meta
I 01 LONGPRE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd Westminster Tel 892·6651 Orange
County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes.
Service. Pans
G) DICIC MILLll FIAT/LANCIA
"Probably Iha towesl priced F1a1s 1n Southern Cahlom1a"
(localed 1 mtle n0<1h ot Soulh Coast Plaza
near Main St and Warner Ave in San11 Ana )
120 W Warner, Sanra Ana 557·2132
• SANTA AHA DATSUN
2001 E 17th Street, Santa Ana Tel 558·7811 Your
Or1glne1 Oedic1ted Datsun Dealer
0 MIRACLE MADA
We ve mo<tedt Our new locatlOl'I is 1425 Beker Street.
Cost1 Mesi Tel 5•5·3334 Stop by & v1s1t our brand new
ahOwroom end see why we re Iha ll t M1zde dealer '"
Southern C1flforn11 Sales, Ser.t1ce, Perts and Le111ng
• ANAHEIM MAZDA
''Ollfy o.c. ...... 0..-.....
,, .. Senlu "-c.n ..
601 S. Anaheim Blvd . Anaheim 956-1820 Just nortl'I of
Santa Ana Frwy on An1he1m Blvd C.11 us f11stl ·we ARE HARO TO FIND-BUT WORTH ITt
• SADDLllACI IMW/SUIAaU
28402 M1rguerl1e Pkwy • AvetY Plcwy e1111
We Offer whet no t>1nk or tease COfn9any can 1 E11penty
staffed. most modern service & parts dept • 2 One of the
SOuthl1nd • most e11~r1enced sal• & 1 .. s1ng staff, 3
Ellmlnatlon of the mlddleman by teasmg (jeaf« dtrec1
831·2040 Mission Vie o 495·•949
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE .PLACED
ON THIS AD, CONTACT ·vou~ DAILY PILOT REP .
..
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa Tel S•0-6• 10 Serving'
Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mile So. •OS
SUHSET FORD, IMC.
{Home of Willie lhe Whale~ 5'•0 Garden Gro\19 Blvd •
Westminster Tel 636-.010
ORANGI COUNTY VOLVO
10120 Garden Gro\19 Blvd. Garden Grove
Tel. 530-9190. Excluslvely Volvo 10 cover all your Volvo
requirements.
New•Used•Sales•Leaslng•Parts•Servlce•Body Shop
Freeway close In the heart ol Orange County at Garden
Grove Blvd & Brookhurst
0 COMMELL C..V.OUT
2828 H1rbor Blvd • Costa Mese ~ 20 years MNlng
Orange County• S1lea. le8Slng, service. C.11 54e·1200;
spec11I perts hne 5'6·9•00. body shop llne. 75'-04..""
0
ROY CARVER ROUS ROYCl-IMW
1540 Jamboree Road. Newport Beach 640-644-4. S1IH,
Service. Parts And Leasing
A CORMllR DeLILLO CMIVRO&.IT
W (Formerty Grottl ~)
18211 8Mctl 81vd .. HwltlngtOrt heotl
New • UMd • s .... • L .... ng • PllU • Ser"6oe Come by end ... our Huge tnll9ntotyl
M1·eo81
· I
}
j
..
111181 l:lllT lllllllTll lllCI I flllllll llWY
MONDAY Sl-PTEMBER IJ. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY, C ALIFORNIA 2~ CENTS
Spain plane crash death toll tising
MALAGA, Spain (AP) -A
Spanish charter jet en route to
New York with 393 people
aboard crashed on takeoff from
the Malaga Airport today, and
officials· saJd at least 42 people
w ere killed, most of them
burning to death Inside the
flaming OC-10.
In New York, a Spantax flight
coordinator said 95 percent of the
passengers were Americans
booked through the Carefree
David Company in Miami.
Airport authorities in Malaga
said 40 bodies had been pulled
from the smoldering wreckage
and taken to a military hangar
set up as an emergency morgue.
Carlos Haya Hospital officials
in Malaga said two injured
people died in the hospital and at
least 17 of 90 other people taken
there were in serious condition
with injuries or burns.
Clock ticks
on rush to
stop flood
This Is the second of three parts In a Dally
Piiot series on the Santa Ana Rlver'S'impact on
Orange County. Today, the flood threat and
steps being taken to defuse It, plus a scenario
for a major flood under current conditions.
By STEVE TRIPOLI
0( the Delly Nol It.fl
It's a dry bed of rock, dirt and scattered brush
almost all year long, with perhaps a trickle of
water running here and there. Invisible even to its
nearest neighbors in much of Orange County, it
hides behind rising embankments of low
shrubbery that back the concrete-lined channel
walls.
Police said 100 people were
Injured.
The plane, FUght No. 996 of
the Spanish charter company
Spantax, carried 380 passengers,
th,e maximum, and a crew of 13,
the company said trom its
headquarters at Palma de
Majora. It did not Immediately
report their nationalities or
names. It said the pilot and co-
pilot escaped unharmed, but
three stewardesses were
unaccounted for.
Airport sources auld the
passengers Inc lude d. many
Americana and Canadians
returning home after vacationing
at Malaga, a picturesque beach
resort city on Spain's famous
Costa del Sol. They said
arrangements were being made
to have an Iberia Airlines Boeing
747 fly the survivors not needing
medical treatment to New York.
There were conUicling reports
about what happened.
A New Yorker, who etcaped
the wreckage with his wife, told
The .\ssoclated Press in a
telephone lnterview from a hotel
after the crash that the pilot
appeared to have decided to
abOrt takeoff, a front tire blew
out, and the plane plowed across
a highway, coming to rest in a
field.
"There was somewhat of a
The Santa Ana River is out of sight and out of
mind for many people. Because of that, it is often
difficult for them to perceive the magnitude of the
threat it represents.
But those with long memories of this area,
those whose job It is to know the river and many
others can tell you that nature has placed its own
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in our midst.
Pra do Da m's huge spillway, on which groups of helicopters often
land, could not sto p Santa Ana River in a major flood.
And thoee who redµce such things to statistics
say that the major flooding the river is ca1>:3ble of
would, at present, be a disaster second in
TUESDAY: POLLUTION PROBED
Salt levels need attention
California only to a ~t earthquake in a densely
populated area.
The river that usually doesn't flow at all is
the greatest flood threat west of the mighty
Mississlfe' ~iver, according t.O the U.S. Army
Corps o Engineers.
There were very few people here in 1862
when, in the words of longtime river watcher H.
George Osborne, the river turned much of the
county into "one vast lake from the foothills at
Fullerton to the ocean."
There has been flooding regularl~ ever since.
Osborne, director of the Santa Ana River Flood
Protection Agency, says the floods of 1884, 1916,
1927. 1938 and 1969 were the most significant.
The 1938 flood, as one of the moat recent, is
well remembered. There were hardly any 8erious
flood control facilities then, and the waters
"overwhelmed practically all the barriers that had
been put up," said Osborne. There was
widespread damage and 58 lives lost.
That flood, a small one compared to the best
estimates of the 1862 flow, alarmed residents and
officials enough to result in the construction of
Prado Dam, which straddles the river just over the
county line in Riverside County.
The main purpose of a dam is simply to put a
barrier between a heavy flow of water and an
area downstream that would otherwise flood.
When it was completed in 1940, officials felt
sure that Prado Dam could handle any future
flooding on the Santa Ana. They have since
discovered that is far from the case.
At the time, the severity of the 1862 flood was
not known, and the weather conditions that
caused It were not considered reasonably possible
for this area. .
The facts now known have led to a new
conclusion that no one seriously disputes: Though
Prado Dam is big enough to hold back waters from
a flood so large that it can be expected to occur just
once every 70 years (a 90-allled 70-year flood), an
1862-atyle flood is much larger but still can be
expected to happen eventually, and it would
overwhelm Prado's capacity.
By comparison, the 1938 flood was only a
40-year flood -were It to occur now it would be
fully contained at Prado.
What thls means, according to Dennis Majors
of the Army Corps of Engineers, la that an
1862-atyle flood would send water rushing over
Prado's spillway and toward Orange County at a
rate of nearly 1.8 million gallons per second -
some eight times the capacity of the river channel
here.
Such a flood can be reaaonably expected to
occur about once every 200 years -there's a
(See MAJOR, Pase Bl)
FUUERTON
Large 200-year flood would soak all
blue area, but even &pJa ller l 00-year
flood would drench coast (dark blue) .
..---INDEX-Airport parking to go up?
At Your Service
Erma Bombeck
Cavalcade
Cla.'llified
Com.lea
Crossword
Death Notices
• F.ditortal
Fntertainrnent
Art Hoppe
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Movies
National News
Public Notices
Sports
Dr. Stelncrohn
Stock Marketa
Televiaion
Thea ten
Weather
A4
A7
A7
C6-10
B5
B5
C6
A6
B4
A7
A7
A7
B4
A3
C6
Cl-~
A7
B3
B6
B4
A2
S uper visors study proposal for $2 daily boost
By F REDERICK SCHOEMEBL
OfltleDelrNetlleft
Parking fees charged at John
Wayne Airport would increase
substantially under a proposal
that will be considered ~y
by the Orange County ~ of
Supervisors.
Under the proposal, the daJly
rate charged at the main parking
lot adjacent to the airport
termina1 would climb to $7 from
$5. The 60-cent per hour rate for
ahort~tenn U8e would not change,
however.
The daily rate charged in the
long term parking lot north of
the airport -the lot favored by
moet t.ravelera -would lncreue
to '4 per day from $2.60.
The monthly rate would increaae
to $30 from $10.
The lncreues, if approved by
supervisors, would boost parking
revenue from $2.24 million to
$3.1 million annually -an
lncrease of more than $860,000,
accordlng to a report by Airport
Manager Murry Cable.
Ahhouah county-owned,
parkina Iota conce11lori1 are
operated by Parking Company of
America. ,,
au lots for rev,nue up to $3
million. \ PCA would receive an
additional 2 percent of gro11
receipts above $3 milllon under
the plan.
Depending on the number of
can parked during the first year
of the new rates, PCA'a lnoome
would be between $287 ,000 to
$297,000 -an Increase of
between 1 percent and 14.3
percent over 1981 compensation,
Cable aa.ld.
• Cable aa.ld the new rata would
compare with tha. charged at
other Southern California
airport.I.
panic," said the man, who did not
want to identify himself. "The
stewa,rdesses opened the doors
and people began to leave . . . I
went down the chute that was in
the front of the /lane. There
were flames aroun the engine in
the back of the plane . . . by the
end, the flames were engulfing
the entire plane."
Spantax said the DC-10
crashed after havirur "technical
(See PLANE, Page A%)
Victim
• given
award
An Orange County ::>uperaor
Court jury has awarded a former
Huntington Beach resident $950,-
000 for injuries received in 1976
when a 500-pound filing cabinet
fell on her legs.
The jury m Judge John Flynn
Jr.'s courtroom deHberated about
four hours before finding the
filing cabinet manufacturer,
Supreme Equipment and
Systems Corp. of New York,
liable for the injuries.
Attorney Wayne Austero who
represented the injured woman,
Kathea Suzuki Latham, 34, said
the filing cabinet was not
equipped with an interlocking
device to prevent the opening of
more than one drawer at one
time.
Defense attorneys cont.ended
the four-foot wide cabinet was
equipped with an interlock but
that it h ad been rendered
inoperative.
Austero said Latham suffered
serious knee injuries in the
incident six years ago. He said
the woman faces as many as
eight surgeries on each knee as a
result of the injuries.
Latham, who now lives in the
San Francisco area, was
employed at the Santa Ana
offices of Sequoia-Pacific Realco,
when the filing cabinet fell over.
Austero said similar filing
cabinets now are equippc;d with
interlocks and carry a
'recommendation that they be
bolted to the wall.
Man slain
outside bar
One man is dead and a second
clinging to life .f.oBowing a
shooting outside a Buena Park
tavern during the pre-dawn
hours Sunday, police
investigators said.
Officers said the dead man,
identified as Roberto L . Cort.et,
29, was shot twice in the head as
he walked from a 9th Street bar.
The second man. Juan C .
Espinosa, was reportedly shot
four times in the head and
remains in critical condition at
Anaheim Memorial H06pital.
No arrests have been made.
Hinckley praises
in san ity d efen se
NEW YORK (AP) -John w.
Hinckley Jr. says abolishing the
insanity defense would be "a
travesty of justice" by a
vindictive America to avenge the
shootinl( of Presjdent ReaJl&O.
The bluest lncreue would
f.ce flnne whoee employee i-rk
at employ"-only parktn1 lota.
Under a revised aareement
negotiated by the county General
Services Agency, PCA 'a
compensation would lncreaae
from 6 .8~ percent of 1rou
receipts f rom the main and
employee 1otl and 2~ percent of
l"Om recelpCa from the lonf ·tenn·
lot to a O.t rate of 9.3 percent fot'
He Mid a rate lncreue wu
warranted, ln part, due to lh•
~ue hiah demand-llmlted
tJee lltuat.ion at the airport.
File photo 1how1 when daJly parklq n te
was 1 3 . 75. h '1 now IS a nd may increase to 17 · ·-.
• )
'
H/F Oran Ooa1t DAIL V PILOT /Monda , tember 13, 1812
Barkeep's tragic death stuns patrons
By STEVE MITCHELL orttie Dlllfr ,..., ,,..,
Two yl'u111 ugo, on his OOth blrthdMy, J. "Popo"
Oaltlnl'11 frlunds at The Saloon ln Laguna Beach
greeted the bartender with an 18-foot Iona cake on the
rnAhogany bur top.
who wandcrccJ into tht.• 11tandup bar Sunday morning.
•·1 114w him Frldul. night," 111.lld John Lara, a
long-tJmc Suloon-gUt'r. • lie 110ld hllJ stomach waa upeut
and he was drlnk[ng broth &all night." Cosw Meea police said the cx·togcna&rltn'• car
alommt>d Into a tree at about 2:65 a.m. Saturday ufter
leavln" the road on East 17th Strt>et in thut city.
Unlit.'<! SU.tel &rtcndc:rt' GuUd, and had won two
lntt>rnotlontal "wl&rd11 for hli drlnk1.
Hilt apt!Ciully, u powerful ooncocllon ''lllled "Popo'•
Coffee," wu a favorltA• at The Saloon.
It's a rcgist.crt.'CJ drink &Ort or a i>atent -which
means only burt.cndcni ut The Sa,Joon cun IN!ll the stufC.
•
i '
Last year, on his 8~l birthday, rearular patrons or
the popular waterlnar hole hired the W&una Beach
High School band to play for the birthday boy.
Saturday night, Popo's friend.a held a wake of
sorts, for the 82-year-old veteran mJ~oloalat, who was
killed in an automoblle crash in Costa Mesa earlier in
the day.
M"oorc sold h., 'und fopo had clOS(.'Ci the Saloon at
about 2 a.m.
"I told him I'd l!eC him that nl1hi. and he walkt!d
out the door," Moore said.
Popo mixed the brew in hiJJ 'Coeta Meta home and
brought it to work. It's o comblNIJon of five ltqueurs
poured Into coffee with o thick whipped cream ' topping. . I
"He was the best, the very beat," aaid Saloon
barkeep Tracy Moore, who. said Popo taught him
everything he knows about the bar trade.
"I was probably the last one to talk to him."
PoUoe said they have not received a pathologist's
report on the accident, but speculate the bartender
mjght have suffered a heart attack.
Before working at The Saloon, Popo was bar
manager at Ambrosia and worked at Amelia's in
Newport Beach four years. Before that he was bar
consultant for the Outrigger restaurants, and several
restaurants in Los Angeles.
A color photograph of the smillng Philippine-born
bartender hangs over the cappuccino P*hines at the
South Coast Highway bar, with a legend underneath
that reads, simply, "Popo: 1900 to 1982."
"We just won't know for aurc until the report i.a
back," a poUce sergeant !laid today.
" Popo had been a bar consultant and bartender (or
nearly five decadt!s, servlng up drinks in Ireland,
Spain, France, Portugal and Italy.
Married four limes, the bartender lived alone In
Coeta Mesa. He leaves a 22-year-old daughter who
lives In Arizona.
News of Popo's death shocked regular patrons, He was named an honorary life member of the
Memorial services for the veteran bartender are
pending.
J. 'Popo' Galsini
Syrian, Palestinian posts hit
.Bolsa Chica set
, for big cleanup
The Amigos de Bolsa Chica
~· organization is scheduling a
' ., cleanup of the Bolsa Chica
, 1. lowlands Sept. 25.
The environme ntalist ~ .:· g r o u p i s s e e k i n g 2 0 0
't '<. volunteers to work under the
' ~ direction of Kit Novick, the
~ :-managing biologist from the . J ••
'< •Orange County
~ employment prospects in the
.i-. 1980s will be the topic of a
, 11 free program for women
slated Tuesday at Golden
! West College in Huntington
, J Beach. 'The event begins at 7
.. p.m. in Business Room 113.
' :.r
Department of Fish and
Game.
Voluntee~ can join cleanup
crews at either the Warner
Avenue and Pacific Coast
Highway parking lot or the
parking lot about 1 ~ miles
south of Warner on Pacific
Coast 8*ghway.
Speakers will be Grace
King of the North Orange
County Regional
Occupation al Program and
Diane Miller of the. Orange
Coun t y Empl oyment
Development Department.
1.fLANE CRASH.
j • •
: From Page A 1
-difficulties." It said the pilot,
J~an Perez, reported a vibration
e plane after starting down
runway and th~t he tried to
t'he 'U.keoff.
, The Spanish ne ws agency
qupting ~WY .so~ at
Malaga airport, said the right
~e failed on the takeoff run. . , '
o : One of the plane's engines was
found in a field near the runway.
'1 'Angel Fernandez. one of the 1~ngers who escaped, said the 6 I
.plane did not appear to have the
power to take off, "either that or
the plane was carrying excess
weight." He said the plane
crashed so quickly, "there wasn't
time for anything."
The plane crastied into a tree
nursery.
EFE-said the jet was burning
near the airport and alongside
the Cadiz-Barcelona highway,
which police blocked off in case
of an explosion.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
Waves of Israeli jets attacked
Syrian and Palestinian ·positions
today in sustained air assaults on
eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley,
killing 30 troops and guerrillas
and setting several militarl
encampments ablaze, Lebanon s
state and privately owned radio
stations reported.
The leftist Voice of Arab
Lebanon radio described the
assault as the "beginning of a
new round of full-scale warfare
in Lebanon."
It was the fourth time since
Wednesday that Israeli planes
attacked' Syrian anti-aircraft
missUes at Dahar al-Balda, about
20 miles east of Beirut. The
Israelis said the at.tacks were in
retaliation for Syrian cease-fire
violations in Lebanon .
The Israeli military command
in Tel Aviv said its bombers hit
Palestinian and Syrian positions
in the areas of el-Matar, Chtaura
and Dahar el-Said.a.
The command said a Syrian
S A M-9 missile launcher was
destroyed and other Palestlnian
and Syrian positions were struck.
Israel has said it destroyed six
Soviet-made SAM-9 missile
batteries in the same area in five
days.
Hud ting ton house
story correcte d
An article in Thursday's
editions of the Daily Pilot about a
man trying to get back his former
house from the City of
Huntington Beach was in error.
The story should have read
that the attorney for Thomas
Talbert said Talbert's property
h a d n ever b een officially
condemned by the city.
The word "never "
inadvertently was omitted.
~· ,,.~. Cloudy day
' ~ ).
ranolng from 15 to 26 mph ~y
aooom~ny temper1ture1 In llle
llOl In northern ~ while the
I
----------tow~ forecoat predict• high' . F' I In the 00.. ~ t.A 0 a S fa Boate<I trom POlnt ConoeptlOn , • ' to the Mexican bo<der can expec1
• Low clouds, b&C-Omlng puUy tight variable wlnd1 during Ille
iunny Tuesd1y ettemoon. COutel night and morn1n9 hours,
tow 62, Inland 67. Coa.11al high 72, becoming sout"-terty 11 8 to
Inland 80. W1t« 69. 18 knots In the lftllfnoon wltll a
EIHwhere, tight and varl1bl• Ho-3-foot south-I ....a.
Wind• tonight 1nd Tuaaday ----------morning. t>ecomlng southWMt to ._.,., e 10 18 knots anemoon anc1 Te nip e ratures IY&nlng hOIJtt. Wlnd waves 1 to 31
f .. t. Six to 8-foot combined -WfK northern outer wat&B today, HI lo ftcp
.O 1 Nal'0'\111 'NH"'-' Se""'Ce
dec:reUlng tonight. OtllenriN 1 to Albony 88 51
3 foot west to aoulhwetl swell. Albuque 68 48
Considerable low ctoudlne11 Amarillo 89 57
tonight and Tuesday morning with ~=•lie ~: ::
partial clearing In etternoon. Atlante Cty 79 65
Austin 99 81
U.S. s umniary :t:~':e :: :;
Blrmlngllm 82 72 .23 Thunderstorms boomed and
lashed towns lrom'-te<n Ulla Superior IQ the Texas Panhendte
today. _,.., torn1does toudled
down In Mlnnasot1, Wl.con1ln
and Mllllaslppl. "Th9 root II gone, windows.,.
out. two 91r1ges and one b81n
ara gone.· aald M1rle Cr•-· detcrlblng the damege Sun4ay
from .tornado-Ilk• wln<M 11111 struc:lt lw llome In Dunn County, _, 01 EM.I Claire. Wl•.
AuthorlllH Hid about two
dcnen hon1M or apartments on
Eau Er•'• aoutllarn fringe•
-• lged by Ille stormt and four from nearby Attoona
_. t,..ted for ln)urlft C.tlUMd
by brolt«I glell. Downed poW9t Hnu and ~
outlQM -• reported In north· centr1f Ok1thom1, which w11
pound4icl by hlll. high Wind• and
bftef, hRVY dowlipourt. Wlnde of over 60 mph •truck Oklahoma
City, otflcl1l1 utd. Sc1u1red
~ outao-elto occu!'f'ed In
TutlL • ln~11. l(an .. eouth ... t Of
WICl'llt two l)e09le --= ln)ur Ille windl a bar~~8adgwlek ounty
1Nriff1•1ma11t Mid. • -'
81tmarck ee 40
Boise 67 40 eoeton 78 58 Btownsvtte 87 81
8vlfll0 f7 65
8urllngton 87 68 Ce899' 74 43
<:Mrllln SC 82 70
Cllwlltn WV 89 83
Charttte NC 83 88
C11ey1nne eo 44 . t 1
Chicago 81 70
Ctnelnnatl 84 72 CllMll~ 89 15
Clmbla SC 65 73
Coklmbu1 98 13 Dal·Ft Wth 95 78
Dayton 82 le
Defwet 57 41 .22 DetMOU-16 M .tt
Detroit f7 83 Duluttt TO I 1 .83
El PllO 91 81 .01
FlfilO N 11 .29
Aagltalf t2 41 or .. 1 Fallt 50 sa
twttord r7 M Helena ,, 41 .42
~ 8114 ,_, 92 .,
~ ....
.Mcillll M$ 17 15 .38
N0"'A U S Oepl OI eomm..ce
Fr-onts: COid..,. Warm .,.,
Jtdltnv11e
Ken1 City
Knox..illl• LHVegu
Uttte Aocil
loullvllle
lubbo<:k
M«nPhl•
Miami
Mllwlluk ..
Mpl..st.P
Nullvllle New°'*"• New YOttt
Norfolk
No. P1111e
Okla City
Omlll•
Ortando Ptlllldl)hla PhcM!nlx
Plttlburgll
Piiand, Me
Piiand, Ore
Pr~ ~
lllU6c• sen Arttonto ....... == 81 loult St P·Tlln!P4I
SI St.Marla
91 74 .01
86 67 .17
84 72
86 70
89 75 .12
85 72 .05 89 82
79 75 .56
88 83
91 89
77 57 '.07 e1 12 .ee 91 73 2.27
85 65 73 $-4
82 48 .24
H 89
81 6e .52
92 74 .01 89 62
87 71
88 88 80 57
12 50 .oe
83 83
90 83
74 52 83 48 .04 97 78
M 49 .03
H 78 ee &2 .o3 86 7t .03 91 74
94 83
ac.~act ~I fell In the cemr• HIOll Plalna. 111e Roolltaa 111d tile Great 8utn In Nevada
and Uttll, and ramnant1 of
tr09IC8' ,_Ofm CN11 eta~
the .....-n TannellM Vt/11(/ff.
lllf RIPIRT
Ca lif ornia
Th• jlleatll•' picture for ~~T-s ~~e .
Hltl!9 "' t.oe MQllla.., .,.., ao w1111 eo11tet lltoM renolna
from 11 to U . llle1td•nt1 ol mountain oofnffMlnlt'" 9'M>Uld
expect t•P•r1t11r .. r..clll~
from H l o 7 .. OultY wind•
•
1:4a p m,: lwell
t
Spokone 70 42
Syracuse 83 56
Topeka 86 66 .11
Tucson 81 61
TulH 99 72 .05
Weshlngtn 87 87
Wichita 93 88
CAUf'OlllNIA
Bakerafleld 93 88
Blythe 93
Eureka 81 53
Fr11110 90 81
laneutw 82 59
Loa Angetes 74 e:..
Marytvllle 91
Monterey 74
Nead lee 92
Olkl1nd llO 59
Paeo Roblel 87 53
Red &luff 90 80
Redwood City 90 80
Sacramento 87 83
Sllln11 78 57
San Diego 78 89
San Franc:IKO 78 55
Santa Barb1ra 72 81
S1nt1 Marta 74
Stockton 90 85
Tiier mat 93
Ukiah 81
a.11ow 90 83
Big &Mt ee a1
O.tlllna 77 ee
Long Beecll 81 08
Monrovia 81 ...
Mt. WlllOn 11 65
Newpo(I 8eacll 74 87
OntatlO 18 80
Palm 8p(tng1 t3 83
Plllden1 82 81
Siii Bemllfdlno 79 59
Stn Gabriel 81 08
San Joee ee 55
8anta Ana 78 97
T al'lol Velley 72
Tides
TODAY 84IGOl1d lllQll 1:83 p.m. e. 1 TUllOAY
Flr1• tow f:69 1.m. .0.1 Arlt lllall 8:31 a.m. 4.7 8eoon4tow l r43 p,m. U
&eoonCI lllgll 7:41 p.m. 8.4
l un H\I 7:0t p.m., rlt••
Tueact1y 8:38 a m.
· Moon lttt 4:10 p.m., rlHI Tu.dll'; 3: 10 an\,
T he attack came a day after
Israeli Prime Mlnister Menachem
Begin's government warned
Syria against allowing
Palestinlan guerrillas in Syrian-
held territory to launch attacks
on Israeli troops in Lebanon.
The Lebanon reports said
Israeli warplanes also staged
mock divebombing attacks on the
Palestinian refugee camp of
Baddawi near Lebanon's
northern port of Tripoli, drawing
anti-aircraft barrages from
(fl.lerrilla positions.
'Baddawi houses more than
8,000 refugees registered with
the United Nations.
Israel said the raids were in
reprisal for Syrian cease-fire
violations and accused the
Syrians of aiding guerrilla forces
in eastern and central Lebanon.
It said 12 Israeli soldiers have
been killed and 20 wounded in 98
cease-fire violations in eastern
Lebanon since July 23, when
Israeli warplanes and artillery
pounded the Syrians there to
h alt a s tring of 20 days of
flareups.
"The Syrians are enabling the
terrorists to croes lines and are
supplying them with information
regarding our deployment
Israel cannot agree to this," an
Israeli military communique said.
Syria claime,d it would keep
rolling anti-aircraft missiles into
the Bekaa irrespective of Israel's
response. The military command
in Te l Aviv said "Israel is
detennined in mind and decision
not to allow the Syrians to bring
ground-to-air missiles into
Lebanon."
Israel says it has destroyed
roughly 30 Syrian missile
batteries since its invasion of
Lebanon began 13 weeks ago.
Mesa homes hit by explosion
A late night explosion beneath
a car in Costa Mesa sent pieces of
a pipe bomb flying through the
air, damaging four houses and
leaving neighbors stunned and
frightened.
Police said that the device,
possibly a pipe bomb, was placed
by unknown suspects late
Saturday ni"ht beneath a 1980
Mustang parked in the rear alley
of 256 E. 16th Place.
No one was hurt in the 11 p.m .
explosion that blew out the car's
gas tank, damaged the gas line to
an adjacent apartment and sent
pieces of shrapnel flying into two
"arages and a ijving room.
Antonio Tamaltzi, owner of the
damaged 'car, said he had no idea
who wanted to destroy his car.
Maggie O'Donnell, who was
asleep at the 1iime. said she heard
the explosion and ran out as soon
as her~trnent began filling up
with gas fwnes.
"I thought there was a war
on," said O'Donnell. "I was so
scared l did n't even turn the
lights on. 1 just ran downstairs."
The torn gas line was repaired
early Sunday morning.
Pieces of the pipe bomb went
through a garage belonging to Ed
and Vivian Hollingsworth,
damaging boxes of s t o red
Christmas decorations, before
entering an adjacent apartment.
Joanie GQldsrnith said she was
watching television~hen sh e
h eard the explosiofl and ran
outside to join nearby residents.
Goldsmith said she didn't
reaHze until. Sunday morning
that a three inch piece of the
metal bomb had tom through her
living room wall and then rut the
ceiling. She found the chunk of
metal lying near her front door.
"I heard the explosion and I
thought the building had blown
up," saict'Goldsmith. "I was juSt
lucky that I wasn't downstairs."
About nine small holes were
left in Lu Daley's garage door
after the late night explosion.
One hit the wheel frame of a
bike, but was ejected without
damaging the tire. Another was
found embedded in a chair.
"All I could think of is what if
I had been out here emptying my
trash," Daley said. ''This is a very
safe and quiet neighborhood.
We've never had anything like
this happen."
Our luxurious c amel b lazer
and Own Make flanne ls
•
Superb materials and workm~nsbip combine
for these handsome casuals. The blazer of pure
camel hair comes on our 3-button model and
features Golden Fleece embossed leather but-
tons, $300. Tu complement, wool flenncl Odd
Trousers from our own workrooms in brown, or
light, medium or oxford grey, $90
UTAal.ISHID 1111 • ~~~~/
~W~1~
furnlshtnge for llrn. Womtn ~ loy~
530 WEST 7TH STIU!F.T. l .OS ANGHLRS, CALIF.
FASHION ISL.ANO, NEWPORT BBACH. CALIP.
,
..
'
NATION
Insanity issue pushed
WAS HINGTON (AP)
Pre1ldent Reagan 11 Hktng
C.Onsress to make it tougher
tor juries to find defendants
lnnooent by reuon ot insanity,
the verdict that ~nabled
presidential assailant John W
Hinckley Jr . to escape
l'C.lnVl\!UC)O.
The controverllal leglalative
packagl'. a p roject of
pret1ldentlal counselor F.dwln
Meese m, a former proeecutor,
was sent today to the House
and Senate. Chances of
t"Ongressional passage thls year
are considered tllm.
Nuclear arms flayed
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)'
Voters in a city bond election
hav e registered thf!ir
disapproval of the nuclear
anns Tace, approving by more
than a 4 -1 margin an
unofficial referendum that
calls for President Reagan to
propose a jo·i n t weapons
freeze.
The proposal was kept o f
WORLD
the bond referendum ballot
because it. did not deal with a
municipal matter, but
organizers of the Nuclear
Weapons Freeze Campaign set
up a volunteer-run "sidewalk
election" outside polling places
Saturday. Voter registration
cards or affidavits of voting
eligibility were required to
pait{cipate in the straw poll.
Princess' leg broken
, H/F
..
Trunked
Neena, the
elephant, uses a
trunk line to get to
know Bobby
Cooper of Astoria,
Ore., during a
break in the Big
J ohn Strong Circus
in Astoria. MONTE CARLO, Monaco
(AP) -Princess Grace
suffered a broken leg today
when the car her 17-year-old
daughter, Stephanie, was
driving left the road on a
hairpin turn near here and
rolled over several times,
authorities said.
The princess, 52, is expected
to remain hospitalized for 10
days. Stephanie s.uffered
slight contusions and returned
to the palace after being
treated at the hospital. Prince
R ain ier Ill went lo the
hospital to be with his wife. Water wells drought safeguard
Crash kills 39 in Switzerland
PFAEFFIKON , Switz-
erland (AP) -A signal-
woman's failure to lower the
gates at a railroad crossing
apparently c aused
Switzerland's worst r ail
disaster in nearly a century,
authorities say.
At least 39 people were
STATE
killed and 10 injured in the
fiery collision Sunday
between a commuter train and
a busload of West German
tourists. The gates were not
down as they were supposed
to be before the bus passed
through the crossing in the
early afternoon, said a police
spokesman.
Lawyers admonished
J)ACRAMENTO (AP) -
The new president of the
State Bar is highly indignant
about what he calls the
"hysterical, 'soft-on -crime'
rantings of the assailants" of
the state Supreme Court.
Anthony Murray, 45, a Los
Angeles lawyer. urge d
members of the State Bar
Sunday to defend state courts
and "denounce these political
mercenaries who are trying to
pull down our system."
Aviation pioneer dies
SAN DIEGO (AP) -T. new aircraft up to the day
Claude Ryan. a pioneer before his death. He died
airplane builder who founded while sleeping Saturday night.
Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical In a half~ntury's work, he was credited with developing as well as the finn that built the nation's first regularly
Charles Lindbergh's historic scheduled airline, the Navy's
"SplritofSt.Louis,"is deadat first jet fighter and the
84. world's first vertical takeoff.
Ryan worked on designs for and-landing (VTOL) airplane.
NBC gathers trophies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Struggling NBC took home
the most trophies at the Emmy
awards banquet, where minor
category and technical
achievements are honored in a
preliminary event to
television's big awards show
next week.
A total of 31 awards were
handed Sunday night, with
videotape highlights of the
ceremonies to be included in
the telecast of the Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences
34th annual Emmys
presentation at the Pasadena
Civic Auditorium next
Sunday. ABC will telecast
that event live, with awards
set for presentation i n 27
categories.
3, 700 acres scorched
CAL1STOOA -A wildfire
raging over Mount St. Helena
shifted direction early today,
jumped a fire line and has
scorched some 3,700 acres on
the hillside above the
northernmost vineyards of
Napa Valley.
Although three-quarters of
the blaz.e has been contained,
the rest of the fire is "very
inaccessible," said Tom
Randolph of the state
Department of Forestry.
"We're having real problems
with that 25 percent."
By GLENN SCOTT of"the Delly Piiot Steff
The Irvine Ranch Water
District, guarding against the ill
effects of drought and higher
costs of imported water. is
seeking protection by going
straight down.
District leaders are embarking
for the first time on a plan to drill
wells to tap Orange County's
plentiful supply of underground
water.
Curiously, the wells won't be.
in Irvine but nearby along Dyer
Road in southwest Santa Ana,
where recent tests have indicated
water is soaking among the strips
of sand and gravel beneath the
ground.
Three test wells have been
d r illed and three more are
scheduled for construction early
next year. Water could begin
flowing in early 1984, officials
say.
Officials hope to sink as many
as 16 wells to capture as much as
20,000 acre feet of water per
year. One acre-foot is considered
enough to meet the needs of an
average family for one year.
A precautionary measure, the
wells aren't ex)lf'Cted to create
great immediate savings for the
district's water users. A pipeline
to hook the wellfield to existing
district lines. for example, is
estimated to cost $11.7 million to
install. The six-well project is
projected to cost $14 million.
When complete, it will send
the naturally purified water
along Dyer, which becomes
Barranca Parkway in Irvine,
through miles of lines until H
Clnally is released In a domestic-
use reservoir at Sand Canyon
Avenue and Trabuco Road.
Arthur Bruington. district
general manager, said the
groundwater will come in handy
in future years when energy
costs to pump water from
Northern California are expected
to force the price of imported
water much higher.
As much as 75 percent of the
water under ground actually is
imported water that has been
recharged into the basin, said
Bruington. But that water is
purchased at surplus rates and
doesn't cost as much as other
water brought into the area by
pipeline.
Moreover, because the water is
purified by percolating through
the sand and gravel, it doesn't
need the costly treatment that
water purchased directly from a
pipeline requires.
We'l'e Listening •••
~·,rlOay II y0u clO t>OI ~
Yo<" -by ~ JO o "' call -· 7 o"' MIC! '°'" cooy ... 11 bt O.h_..,
$elutdey tncl Su-y II 'l'OU 00 t>01 :=,~ c:':J ~. ~"' .. 11C: __ ..,
Whal do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number below and your messaae . will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answering service may be used to record let·
ters to the editor on any topic:. Mailbox contributors must include
their nam' and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST ClaaalftM advef'tl8'ng 114'M2-M71
All otfMf depertme"'9 f42 .. S21 Daily Pilat
Thoma1 '· Haley Pub41llwlr onct CM.I Executive Off~
Jane Amati
hecutl•• fd11or
l . Kay Schult1
Vice ,,.,Idell!
ond Dhctor of Adlt.,11t111g
Mkhtlet , . Harvey
Director ol Mor• tl"'O
tCwCIAol.oN
Themot A. MurphlM
fdttot
laymoncl MacLean
C0111rol9r
KenMth N. Gecl .. •d k .
Dlr~IOr ol °'*°''°"'
MAIN OfftCE WW--$4 , C•I• ""'"8, CA. Me"._... ha 1911, C•'8 Mtte, C:A ..a.
C:'"'19M ""Or ... , ............ ~. --........ , ..... ., ............... -... ...
ffftlMIMMI llwtlfl ~ .. ·~-W""8llt
..-<let .-nNt*" .. (~--·
. . -VOL.n,NO.•
..
river are the areas where the
underground basins developed.
Santa Ana
Irvine, by contraat, ia· juat
south of that area. Ill eoil w.
washed down from nearby
sedimentary foolhilla. Bruinctan
said Irvine's soils are not u
permeable and water. that
eventually soaks throug}l la
saltier and less u.eful.
• • • SEOEASTROM
! • • 5 > ... a: ! • ...
•
•
...
~ ~
The underground baain la
estimated to hold about one
million acre feet of usable water
and u much aa four million in
all, said Elaer. ·
Delly""°' Map
Sites shown are tentative locations for
wells Irvine Ranch Water District will drill
to tap county's ple ntiful supply of
It is not a fountain of
sustenance, however, and the
co unty waler d latrict 's
management plan is intended to
ensure new water replenishes
the basin for what ii removed.
One way to finance the plan la
through a repleniahment
aaaeament, eet th1a year at $21
for every acre foot of non-
agricultural water pumped. underground waler. ·
Officiall ln Irvine also are
dlacuuln1 other mltt1atlon
measures they may be required
to help finance.
"There will be a slow Increase
in the amount of groundwater
we use," Bruington explained.
''It will keep costs from going up
faster than otherwise."
The district's board of
directors signed an agreement in
April 1981 to sink the wells.
The contract also was ratified
by Santa Ana (which has rights
to buy up to 10 percent of the
capacity) and the Orange County
Water District.. which holds the
sole responsibility of managing
the underground water supply.
Santa Ana. Fountain Valley
and the Mesa Consolidated Water
District (serving Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa) already own
wells that pump water from the
basin. Because or concerns that
Irvine's introduction would
affect their operations, OCWD
officials placed limitations on the
new plan.
Irvine can take no more than
4,000 acre feet per year through
June 1990, 6,000 acre feet
through June 1995 and 8,000 by
1996.
Other users, explained Gordon
Elser, public infonnatlon officer
for the county water district,
were "a bit apprehensive about
I
,
Irvine taking out a lot of water."
Bruington noted that the
additional wells are likely to
cause the underground water
level to recede somewhat. He
said Irvine would probably take
water from no deeper than 120
feet. He noted, however, that the
groundwater basin has usable
water down to 1,000 feet.
The water below that level
offers a small lesson in natural
history. "Bruington said that
surface once held many redwood
trees and water trapped today at
that level contains a reddish color
and odor that is not economical lO
purify. •
Different geological forces
helped create the underwater
basin, according to Bruington, a
Cal Tech-educated engineer.
The Santa Ana River is mainly
responsible. The river not only
carried the water to soak below
the surface, but it also brought
the porous, granitic soil washed
o(f the ·San Bernardino
Mo\llltalns that enabled the
water to seep straight down, he
said.
Thus, he added, portions of the
county that through centuries
have lain near the course of the
't
A current plan of the caubty
water district is to buy .venl
empty aand and gravel pits new
Santiago Creek in ViU. Park.
where water CX>Uld be diverwd to
fonn recharge buim. .
Peer Swan. chairman of the
IRWD board, said ru.:u.iom on
thoee measures have continued
for several months. Swan al.o
noted that the wellfield ww·:
become more imporiant for the •
district after 1985, when
Southern Callfomia loees part of
its ahare of water from the
Colorado River.
The wells, he added, are one of
three key projecta undertaken by
he district. Othen are to tie to the
new Diemer water treatment
1plant in Brea and effort.a to
reduce dependence on the
M ichelson Avenue 1ewa1e
treatment plant.
Irvine d!strict offidala made a
choice in 1977 when the Diemer'
plant was being completed
whether to· seek lar1er
entitlemen ll of imported water
or drill wells. Bruington noted.
They cEoee the latter.
our ,Jl,otri Palm.£ 1am~l
v·nack~.
our maet fOPUlar
S'Ml.Ot.<z.r, mock cl' tbz.
f\m.&t 2 ply lam~l
ervo\ lab\tz. ,ond meet
ocmibrt.oblci crxi.
pract1c:al R>r yz.or round
'M:Z.or:
t'MZ.M. ~t oolora
to~from.
Orange COHI DAILY PILOT/Monday, H/F Bl
NY ~f~ f :()MPO 'ITE TRANSACTION
DUOUflOIO IMC~UOI TllAOU 0111 , ....... .,o•• 1111.10.rau. l'A(ll'IC ~·-· IOUON, lllflOlf •NO (IN(llllf!llUI UO(M l'llCllAlllQU AMO llll'Olf 0 •f flll 1'100 •MP INUINIT
\•I•• N•t ~If• Ntt \.ol•\ H•I ,.,.. N•t \•l•l Ntl
.. I llO• l IQ\P (l'U I I Nh \.10\tt (11\j P [Ml 110 .. C:llQ P•l IMJ\ (IOM C"9 PI"°' CIOM '"'
llut'nt !>ft 'IO II ,,.. Ht\ll>lln f If '9/ Hh t ~ Mtdhn .M 12 W ... , '· V. 11~-.m~ t t m u)4~ ~ ~ \•Ill••• 1 IO It •U ~ t '-
0\ii.tP ',. I tli• 21" I \t litwll'll ,. • 7611 U\t. " Mttlon I t4 6 tJ "'" .... Po;;Pd' .0 • 1 I nt;. ~ lvt<o. 11 ,.. .... ~ Du~• 111 1 10 17~ .. , , •~· 111$11 .. , iO • liO i+.. , Mttvlll• • °" 1 I 11 u-.. v. Ppor1,1r01c1 l ... 0 04 ,..-. + 1 _, ,_ 1 Ouk• pl I )0 ,, 61.. I HIVoll ,. '! " 11. M4prt\1 , 1 ff\... 1;. 1\1111 ~ «> iO :tO ~ "
!>•It\ Nt• gukt"' I eo I " HltOllCh Ill I 1111 JI! .......... MtrlH I It l ~. \oo P0tihl !i., t• a" L }l~K~ '1'.,. 'I ~ Wt .. ~ I' t 110• t iv-. t 1111 ll~t Pl Jn t u~• ~. klHO/I I IO I )04 al~• I\ MtrO t •• 14 11 ~ 1 \<It t,,. Polle< J'J I t ~ l(o •
t ... I,, I I "'• .. g~~r,!" ~,.II 4~ ti> .. ' :: ~~.~: 'Di Ii.~ m: h =~~:~~ ~·r. : t1!: tt~ ~ c~~o ,::~. \ }" .. I 2 JI' 1 :t'"; 14 ~~t' ?°"~· I .!~ ~~t. \lo t>uqll 'tO • 1'1 Uh HllChA I IOI 10 to I MtMll'I ,JO • 1021 "~ v. i:.o, pf 'j : IO~ fRW"' ''°' IOIV. , .. Ill! l)uq pl ' 1:10 14 110lty~ I ,,, IA... 114 MU•R 2.11• . 111 ""'. ~. i'Ot ill ' . .... v. ·r ... , , ,, •114 " Cl' Nat t • """ ••• Ouq PllU 10 • u•. limeo pll 10 11 Vo •. Mtul t> ." 6 4J •v.. "" Poi• Ch I 10 1t o.. v. ,. 1610 I • '1 ,. .... ~SS~ Pl , .. , \ '" .. ,, g11Q P• 2 i1 UIOO ""' I HOm\lk «> \J UJ\ >41 ..... Mo. lo 4 ""' itO ftllll I 1 ,,, i•Y. "" '• t:Y ,, 41\, ' " "" ht> YUP\ .U I i U•• • I, Honda Slt I 10 )I'• \t, Melrn1 ) t • 20 I Polll PU~ t Hy,-"1 rat )' jlf l '' .. 114 • '-~ltt Ntl C•bol 91 I II« 21!1 ti\• OynAm I)" tO ••• Honwlt HO 11110 ,... IV. MhC~ft05 . 1 ··~ • ..:. ltol I jlf '·&; 1100 ~ v. ~=~.. :: ~a ~ .... ~
fl l "°' (.10\• '"" ',· .. 11:: ~ J: ·;~ :;: EGG. ..•,. ,,. ~ ._ HOOVV ""' u "" \'f MUI 1.:W 1 • I) ~ Pol '"" .. '''° 11111\el 2111 , , .... \'f • NEW '!'ORK IAPI 2 p.n1 ( llM ,.., <'I) ., IA\>. ~ E •• , ' ·,·o 77 '.. h ... HO,,lln U> ~ ' u ... 114 MhWI ""., . . , "" ltrenvl .•2 t4 u ~-" f <h<lr .• 12 u ·~. " n.11-1 prl( .. tor .... ,· I -• •• 111-·~ l:•'o'••" ~ • ~ " ~··•ion S41 1•s .u H· \it Md(lll 116 I Ill tlVo. "' PrH .. Y ·J "i " t:li,. + ~ •er.•-· I .......... I" Yo'k ~·oc• E•···-,, .. _, •n11 n -• ~· • •• r .. • • P +o \o'o o KO •• 1• it u. Ml"•n n •,.. t ti ••µ, ~ Prrarlo. nt t "" "' • ""' "' "Pe 111;-w1 CllT. CRt ~ o 78 -.> •~1. "' fio<o 1.:n • ) m. • 1<11 Hofe11n i • 1 2 i; M1osv1 :·; 6 ~ .. itll.: ;\ Pr nwc 1 204 1•"' • ijj 1• <OM " 1'--14
-·--C•m!to >10 • 115 n~o '1• Eo1Al1 IJO ).. .... HOU•Fb .«> 10 '3 I ... I'll Mio Ao. 1.40 ' 117 "~. I'll Pr mM I . ,. u tel ""'. " ltldr,.. • "" 104"'. I AAA U 21 10 ) C•mpl I "dl7 3Slot' .. EAL. wlO 11 1.. ,,_ HOUllnl I U 10 Jll tl~ ~ Ml!trW t.to. I U 21%. • .... Prot..11; 4,:IO 10 •>O tH• • I'll ltlH IO ... IOU ... · ACF l.7• s ,. u~.' ~ CllP•<.11 '° ,... JJ>\'. lie h.t.lr p!U9 ) !).... HOlfll j)I uo , " ... fill tllro 17(! 10 ., 21\'f+ I'll PtdRlh .H 11 ti •'-\4 hnnco uo t II~ " • v. IAftllr 1.3' S 261 U , Va C.anPI: Q IO 1' U\oo "° l'\Alr PIJ :IO U ,... V. Holnl pl 6 JS 11 U\\ "' Mitt,_ s .)J I 4 1114 + V. prol•• I «I ta t 21 I'll ftrK'rl t3 1• 4l'lot I'll
AAA J 10 1t JJ ~:"(\~, ~ ~ ~! .. ~ ... ' \ EutGf uo ; ,.,~ l~~~ lie 110utnd 2 .... U20 ,., .. t I'll MMM '·'° 11 •. n ~. v. ,.~, .. '·'· I " 1• .. . . letoro .<II) J Ut ,,~, .... Je~ .~il 1!~ 1~v. ~. C•~Ht<I •n I 'ii, •... ~ e~·~c::i 1 i1t2~1 UV.1 "• ~~~~~,·~ \ 6;! ~~::·~ ::~:i~.2·: t ~ ~%.· ·~ Cs.~114 ,·:: ~ ll~ ""· ~ m:;i"t .. ': m::.::: Ablllb ... ,. '°' U Vt' +. Carino II ,. . t 1V.. Vt E•IOfl I 72 ' 'I) 2'\tl h HOwtll .0 ) ) '"'. 14 MPatC l IO • "' .. \It .... Pll" pf 1.04 • d»O ...... ~ ruaco 4 Uff 791'. \'f
Cm•E n.nb 9 12 •llo I'll Carn.ti 2 I ,,, l 7 • "· EOt!<I .'7 10 11 '«)~.. . Hubb•d t I 40 •• MOPS ... ,..... 7 17~. v. " In pf .... t40 .., ... ~ •• IT\ 1.10 • 4» "~ l'e ~'~ !.~ • H 20 • v. Carll•l• " I 2 2• • I'll 1!<111 o .~" n) t)~ ~. Ho•PI .«> t t " u~ • \oo MoPSv 1 IJ s st t>l1. 1 v. I> n pf t • 1no Ml J••~c nt "' • •12 »I<.• I'll
oml:lv 04 7 1J s+ Vo CaroFt St t 21 lho i-t. l!dl\8t l,4ot M U 24~ • 1• r .O II U 101-> MOPS,.. 2 I ~ PSvNk 2.12 ) '" 1$'9. fn 11 f 10 6 4t 4tll) + Y» ~oe•• u '.tt 45 u~ ~. C•rPw 240 11 ... ) 21~ . Ellwr<H 17• I 4) 19.. \,o ~~;~ll M , 01 17~, v. MfiP5 ~4ta t i: .. , ~ PrtH ~2.7J. 1200 !ho ..... f:EGf' J:fi • j ,t m~ .. i;;
':,.";,""' ·* ll .: J~ l'e ~=~~rir N8 1
9g ~ n~. ~ ~rt~.~~ ' •;1 :'~!. ~: ~~~:'i.12.~ ·~ ·:; ro:.: ~o':,•, 2 • J:: m: .. ·y. :s~~ ~rn : It m: .... v. t•=•nd ,IQI> 10 .0 m. '"
"
tt"LI I .Sf • 14JS ilt.o. "' CarlHW I,, 1 ltl 1J•.. ..: EPG pl ).I) ] 7••·. .... HunlCh 40 14 , ""' Mot••• ,. ' • "' PSNH pfU) ) !)Vt .... 1 Ulllil 1 II 0) .. "". v. CarlWI M t SJ ''"• ~ l!lcor 30 •J 11 V. ec "" • '"" •••~ d . ' PSvNM UO ) 14) U\Q I'll hKlnl ~ 1111/t 1014 + ¥o tit. pfl,4Qt 40 S2\io Vo Cut NC. I. 12 I 1. t h . Elt<A' 1' llO h , Hull ~ ·"" '• ,.., ••n ~ M er .lO It 6l UV. I P$1tl!G 2.$6 I ~ 21~ I V. 1 •NMa 2. It 1 It It ~n=s .iO .. 2~~ ·:::~ "" C•sllCk ·-n .. ''° I Y. ..... EDS ... 19 •• ,,.. HY<l•al '.!..' ,._, ._ II • v. =~:: ': l~ ;~. ~ PSEG pjs.:11 . 120 » 1 hOG•• .tt" ,,. JI.I;, •• (,9 ~,rPrCI .IO 'i •1 19 -" ~=~~~ 2·ci. 1~ ~~ m•' "1 ~'"1•M<I n ,:~ ~ IC ll'\CI ue • 10 29~ MollkOt ll 520 U\oo " ~U8 ~J:ll ~ li.,.. ~ mw:~ t.04 6 '~t ;Jv.; ~ ·~,~~ ,t() II : m:-v. Celanse 4 1 " « ","it. E~r~EI I.~ I~ «9 Jll/t , 1 fc~ pl l .SO l7 ,:i: 4~~ Yo =~~':' : : 1U ::~-" PSI: pf'iU5 1160 .. " t \r. JHlron I IO I iOl 21 I<. I'll
';f;t•P pl.t.).92 ... 11 21\1. ' ~··••on .60 4 129 II "' ER•O • 171 ~ U I\ PSEG 1117,IO . ISO sa IY. "'"" . « 2" "'
.Al•P Clpf •• 7 . . l2 4\oo •• c:~::~ 2 ~I; :~~ ~\· EEmrv.t. 2 ~I~ •,SJll IJ!SV.E' .,. I~~~~ :.':'i ~ I a :~~: ~ ==· ·~ ~ .~ ~ ...... " PP~.!>b"•'o" 12 , .!73 .2~.· ... r,,h,romlllEI 1.-los .;! !,'~.~ ~ .t.11P pl • llSO •2 " . mn .. t ·-, . ldtl\OP 2. I 13 u" ..... MnlOU 2,. 6 ISi 22"' -• -w "' ' • • •• .,. h~llP pl 11 ': 1Ut0 t!Yt 1 3 ' CC1tn~.: ;·:: ; 1r, ~~:: .~ Empbt U2 1 21 12.... IGtalB . 1 16 100 13h MOnPw ,; .. 6 40 24 .. ' PUQoelP 1,7' 6 ISi 14\'e." .. Jhm!MI 2.12 13 40 41',,. " l1P pf a,i. .. tlO n~ 1 '> en,... · " Emp Pl '1 1100 3~ tllPowr 2.48 I 811 2Ho MonSI 1.tOa .. J3 1•t,. \fa PurllnF 4 3" t~+ " Jhomtn ."4b 10 S It • ~ l•P pf 1,ll . UIO S.•1> 1 Cenllt.I 1.'M 6 2l "" Empln< AO 1 J2 14 '• II Vow pf4, 12 1100 31,_ t ~ MONY ~ I 2:0 6loo • I'll Purol1 • 1.0I 7 15 llh+ y., rhmMd .JOe 6 J6 1•v. i..., o11199rrco 1.60 , 2 u-..-"> Cnlllf' 1•17 •· itOO 2lv. .... EnglCp .s. 10 271 24 up0,. p1319 tt?OO ,.~. • ~. MO<>reC. 2 , .. 31"_ " Pyro ,• 71 4'A .. , . rtirlfly .eo e 42 131"t "' *llNln~ 1.«1 1 u 27'h-~ c n 1 ., ~ 01 0 P 11 9 ~ . • ' Enn1,e llO 1 ?• HY. "-1 rw t.OI • ~ JO\.o ~ MoreM t.04 J 104 IS"', •• ,, Ouai.o l 110 41 II) flCaro 1.20 • 12 14 ...• AlbtrlO so I 17 13 v. CenllPS 1 48 1 91 "~' ~; Enurcf\ 1.60 • 11 llh • ~ lmplCp ts 9 \'lo Moran .!lb 7 alO 10 I'll Ou•llSO .IO I 244 1l • "' tjdwlr tO S UJ 19'1t-lo Albllll 1 11 21 37\t CeMPw t IO 1 41 1' Enff<e • ,.. $ • •• INCO 20 .. 412 9'W t,,. Morgan t.40 • Ul Sit.-~ 01ttnta .tO 7 577 I~ t Vt f gtfln · i04 tV.+ ~ Alt I n 90,. 609 n •10 tnSoy• M 13 6' 12 1 ENSl R 60 , II) IS1 It. 1no1M pt? ts s IS MOrKnd 1.:12 S n 20V. ... ,. OutllOt 30 2t tt3h I'll lmfl I IS 7.. :16t1+ lo
,,.ICOStd 1.0I 11'57 22~. (VtPS n 2.12 S 10 !In ~~:::• 14 4 ~I >~;:.. lo Ind M pfl.2S II 1• t V• MOrMS .201l 11 12'A .... Ou .. ! pf 7 1 4'~. • rim plBU7 21 S.V>.. •• !:::~ nt.9'4 I 2:.: >~~: • . '• CenlrOt .I• S 217 Ho EQllllX i: 11• J u38 ' v. :~:!~.r~:~ ~ rnz' ~ =r~r. :.~ ,; Im m:: ~ -It-It -f 1:::!~CA ~ 12 1r, ~~Ill -:: ~:~~ pfJ:: .~ 12 u;;"'. I~~ ~~~~· • s H ~i~ ~~rb':t I so s ~; 2:-. .... :~:~~:,-2·~ • ,tt m: i,O :~~~J ~~ ~ -~ m:; :z =~~no :~ ~ '~ 2~ .. :-~ f:i'~ ~:n t 1~ *:: ~
.AtQlnl 1.40 J •39S 171-o ,. ' C~uAlr "° 10 121 18\ EQILI .SOJ 19 19 13"-"• lnlmlt n 11 180 U+.. ~ Mnlll pf «I •. •10 141. •••• ' ltCA pf J.O .. I.SCIO lJV;. ,,, ro1e:Il1 2'.» • '" ""' .. \.;
•tgl (II 25 27 Ill+. ,,. hmr.:: 20 • II .. • E\qulr .... 7 I '"'' tnnR ... 2.lS . 30 ,..r.. . . Murpf\C 1.28 11 ,.. 171111 \It llCA pf 2 11 12• ~ rot Ed pfol ... '. .. 2tV. '' '. ..t.191~ 2.1• .. a16 11 '•• C 1 .034 2 •. E•marll 1'4 I SO 41 tn11e1A J.l6 S « 414!. M~n)llQ I II~• ~RCA pf 4 . 2 51 • \It ...,
~:::..G 2·~ ,; ·~r ~~~ ~~~a ~.~ I• ~= ~~: rn:r~ '°:! .~ ~~ ::\~· t: :~~J~,f ~ ~'. ~ ,;.,,: t :~~~ •. ~ ~ 1>: m: ~ =t~ ~ 3.:! • ~1 ':~:: :~ f::.~ pf2:~ ;, : :~"'= ~ AlldCo 1.40 S 698 JS&o '•• ChartCO 1 s .S31 11\.o, Elhr• I.SO 6 ,7 m. ln•ll<O 10 I 20 ,.., V• MulOm 1.47t . '1 17 RTE 40 a ~ I -llo f~~~ i~ f ~ n:z: ~ ""''dCp 01• 1' 11 541/o, ~ (tllfl wl 7« • , t'ly pre 4 > 42 ln•llnv 1 I H• I l• Myerst. .UJ • t V• A•lsPu• .79 I W 10•-v. roroCo 36 6,1<-.,.. ,,.ldMnl . I io .. :M\o I Ch•rl pt u.s •II ""• Ev•nP .2:6 210 II• IVo tnltl',:R• • 160 llh. I'll -H-H -• .,n.o l•S s -.... lot.Co •• 'i 441 UV.+ .. ~!~r~~n··~: :1r~;~. ~ ~~:E~frr •1~J ~::·" i:f~~~.:~.· 2n ~!E. ·~ !~~:~:llit'; J! li:: ~ E~r" 2·.:~; 1~ Hi:·~ ==~~"1:ti ':i m:. ~ ~~~k:~~ -.:~ m ~~i·~
,All•Ch plS ... ~ '2 21 . (MM pf2 33" •IA7 llS21~ ~~ Enon 3 6 Jill )ti.,. tnl., r I IS 79 9.11/•, .. NCNB .18 f M:J 13 .... Raym~ , IS 7\o 14 rrane 1.:16 1 46 26V.-14 ,)l.lpl\Pr . , t SI.. • v. CllelM• 60t> ' u ' . -" " -lnlrh 1.20 • 011 194" . . N( A 2.«I • )j 1110 .. ~.. h R•ymGI I s 14 11...... ~ TW Cp . • ,,. 21 .. Vt .,_l~oe l.llO 14 3301 18\o.... Chmed nl.U 17 10 26\e 1,. fMC 1.60 8 S63 lO 'i.. lnl.t.tuc .6010 S 1'\.1 ... NL. Incl 1 J SSS 17~ ~ Reytl\n 1,40 111~ 43\\• \<o TW wt 113 1 + II. ~mlSuQ s s 136 t1\lt Vt Cl\NY. 2.18. 140 JO• •• '•FMC pl 2U J 311/•• -IBM l44 2044 12 • "Nll "'° 101J7'1 4) 0" Aeld8$ .IO 4 -...... 11. )!.m._. .20 .. llYS 22'"' Vo ChNY pf2 67~ 124 S2•• '• F•brQO' .... 21 l90 20~ I.. tnlFt•v 114 112 u .. , Yo NVF .C.. · 147 IV> .. • RllBal pfl.13 .. 6 22YH y. TW wtA · '70 ·~• ... ··
llm•• pf J . 6 351., "• Cf\NY pf . 162 soi., .. l'•t>rCI .3110 32 10111 \, 1n1Harv 211> 41t. .,.. Nlbi<8 ·2.0S 8 44 lS:W. • v. Rl!Rtf t.01• 1 13 av.-v. ~=CC~ ;:: : . r, ;~:.*:.~ tllmrce 1,32 I I 14 11•1 ..... Che>ll• t 08 ' s 2) Fae.I .. s 6'1• Int Hr pf .0 9 • II> Nl)U8 pfJ.SO . 130 36'1.. ~ RtcnEq 280 •"'4-.... ... imHls 1.101s ••1 231'>• "• Cf\esPn t 1110 27• JS~ •• '• F•l•chO ·'° I 101 i.n " lnlMln 2.eo s ttl 26"'. . N•tcos 1.121• lnt 24~ '"• Reamn .30ii 112 1s1n-v. l~=~~ t~ .• »~ ~" ..,, m.t.gr OSl 60 1+.. "• CNW•I )0 U.J II\• F•lrc pf 3.60 ' ,. 31 I .,. lnlMn pl ' l JOv,' "' NaplFll 80b•• • 20 \lo R•o•I n 6 169 '* "' m.t.rr . 1401 II'• • ,,. ChlMlw "° 17 • '' • .,.. f •mOlr 40 1:t St 211n ~ lnlMull 1.60 7 :n 17~' "• N•rco .6116 u 24lo Atfcf\C 48 II 62 111/J l ARlty !.J t2 7Vo ..... Air WI . 366 6 . ClllPnT .0 'IO 1• 121. FrW)IF 33 8'-\oo lnlP•pr 2..0 S IJ" 42''• V. NISl\U4 .IO , 1S2 10'1>-W. RepAlr .. 122 Slf> "• TrenKo I IO S 10 21\oo-" iA, pf 2.11 . 10 l41n ,,. ChkFull . .o,, 11 151'.. F"•" • 52 7 • " Int Rael . IJ 7'1<. "" Nate-1 1 J "~ V• RtpCp .60 • SI ,. loo ~~:.~ 'ofi .. J ':~ ~ g~~ ~·~ 7 14~ m· • .... CllrhC.11 S?l 11 110 •I , ~::'c! 1 44 io ~ 7~; :'.: lnlT T U8 6 S36 mo \;, ~~ffi'~t ~I~ ,t ~~' \It RtpFnS 1.20 IA .0 43 . lrGP pf J.S().. 10 m.-lo
Bro pl 2:61 .. J .. • . ~~~~~~':. l?I ri lt :~. ~: F•hp "IOIS SI •• .., :H ~~ ~ 1~ !!~ NOhl pr1.'a5 I !HH ... /. ~:r:~ci:~. s 1~ ~~~ ... :· Tran•y '·'° • 11 ,, ..... i80ut 1.60 8 1171 47•n' .. Cnryslt 1399 I••• •' FdM09 I J'l ~ 2.S 12h i,. tn1Nr1h 2 12 S 349 2Ho. i,. N•IEOU 1.J'l1 S Jl IH't . ANY pf"2.60e 31 51\lt-"1 Travtr > 1.6' 6 1l2t 11\r>+ lo g~11::0 .~ ~ ~~ m: • ::: ~~~~.~ ~~ t~" ~:~~~ I~. S 26~ m~ • '" :~:~~; :·: 1~ J! ~~ • Y,: ~=:~~P n: I~ .~ m:: ~ ~R=s~Coli~ 1.41>.~ ·S;. 461'11 ~~'~::. ~ ~~!~n J.17~ 1: 1~ ::~~ ~ mC111 2.'1011 112 31 \o ChurCf\ 1 9 JSJ 32 ' 1,, FdSQnl s .IO 10 44 U•• 1n18akr 35 S9 iov, v, nlHom 151 Jin + "' h ., 12.,..._ V. iCanpl 2.IO .. S Jiii> •1. C•ll8tll 212 6 4 2th, '• FeODSt 2.10 9 320 ._ • \rt tnl\tl'W 1.6' ' 23 1n11 Vo NMdCre ... 9 S16 IV.+ V. Revco .• 14 9' 33\'>-\It T~nlr .3'11 I 10 1 -In
Cnlry .10. 12 I 6"° Vo ClnGE 110 I 114 17h v. Ftrro 1.2010 70 U~o • " lnPw pf 7 2t t40 IS.\< I NMdEn .40 12 .. 19~t v, RtVIOfl 1 .. a •7' U\f>-1\'e T o ·~ I 41 t~ .... C~•n l.7S 9 1'f' >On ., ClnG pt 4 r90 2t\.o v, FldVnt 7,IO 6 1 23 ~. 1owaEI 1:n ·, 13' 1411'1. NMl""S .J2 8 13 '" ... RUllMl"I ,60 7 19 Uh• \'II fr.'c",tlP 1:92 : 1~ i;._:: ~ ,.,~,,... ~·~'; _ ~11~ t, ClnGc>I 928 uo 64 1 ~:ck~! J1~ 1~ ~~ : lowllG 2.36 s JI> m1 .. ~~~1$ '"20 1 13~~ ~~· tt Runrd 1.oa20 33 10\lt-" TTwvc'o"l~ 1.7010 •. 7! 11~~-=-~ "' ~ ClnG pl 9 S7 z140 64 1, 011 low Ill pfl ll U20 17 " · • Run pf 2.Jt .. 1 33 . . . . • • , ·~-•• im Eap 2,2:0 I 2J71 44"-" C1nM11 ·n 10 114 2310 Fn(pA ~ .. 6 J70 ti">• .. towaPS 2.41 1 II• 21~• NISvln tM 1 IC. JO•t. • 14 Ronin 2.IO • 1312 "" • " Tyler 60 9 9 17 ..... F•mll .60 ' 341 Ill>.. Cltltrp 1.n H721 2Jl'O FF'n"s'P.P', .60 .• 1,! 4.\o\ "' ICl"'aRs 2.M 1 11 2411'1 ..... NStlncl .IOI. 1 7\ci 1.., Reyln ~.u •. 6 122'1>+ "" TymRlr 21 10 19'11-.... GnCp l.20 • ,,, "°". ~o ClllS' t eo 16 ill «I I 0~ llKOCp .2012 '° I .... N•ll!'>tt 1 . JS9 l6V,. . Rtyln 4.10 .. ,. 41 -v. Gllld 2.16 . ,. 17&. v • • FlnlFed ~ 14"' ~. lrVQBk J.36 • 123 )8 • • • NelVI n , • s 11'1> t "' RtyMI 1,IO 11 . 7S 23~-"' AGnCv I.IOI . I 251,. y, CHSvc WCI ISl'I .. ~, lo Fir.sin .0 ~ tHe I/, llOCp JOI> 10S 11~ ~ Halom 1 40 4 1099 16\'• .... ReyM pf4.SO . 2 ~· ~ ttMrll ... 9 I 19 "· c,:1v•nv I~ .J. •!1 20~· :.o' FtAUn ' I ~ 2 16 • ~. -J-J -• • N•tm pf • . 27 JO..... RchV<k 1.41 ' 76 Uh .... Hoisl .$61 6 221 UV> •brr ""•-"" 6 ' Ft(hr1 IO 20J 14'" Vo JWT 1.« 4S 4 1n0, ~ NtvPw 2 4" S 91 24\o • \lo T IO ~ Home 2.10 12,.,. ~ Cl<1rkE 2 20 143 71 .... '. F\l(f\IC I 20 ISi 16\'t •• ,, JmuF 1.60 11 • 11•1 ••... NevP pf 1.60 1100 11 RRlloeetr'-'1·.~ '1 • .!~ !..~. ~ •H •• S2 ~ Clv(;ll 1 80 10 2' 111/o • ._ FIBl I 20 t'IO ?0 Ille N p... a< oG•-· -•vo ,.... •• 1~1!' ·» i: ~? ~~: : t::er:.i? ~ • ~ m;. ~ ~:;:~i: 2.14 ·~ s~ ,:~~ "~:z.;: s:~' I;~ H~. '" d~~~ ·; ·, j ;r t! =t~!,:EH ":Ji *~~ ~
lN•tR n J .. ,., 2'1.\-o "' ~::;: ·~ ~ .~ ,: FIMI" 2• 10 91 Ho. Vo J•pnF I 3Se 1'3 '"" NJAK nl.I• I s 10•, RoblSn 1.60 s "" 21•1.-" ,.,SlFll 40 '" •• Cl UP .. I 41 11~ .. FNBo• ,, "' • 233 ,, ... v. JtlfPlll I ... 23S ,,,,, ..... NYSEG 2.20 s 20> 19\lo • .,. Robln1 .St • 40 •4~-I'll ASf\lp IOI I 1 ¥ • . . . ..., I 0 ' F\IP• 10 24'o "> JerC pt 4 1100 U V1 V, NYS plOl.75 .. '6 U~ y. RocllG 1.7tb S 131 IS" v. AmSIG 2.20 lJ 60 20 .. ~. Cl ... l pt 1 11', FslP• w1 I "" l·M JtrC pf 11 1.010 711/) ..... Newell I 7 18 16~. v. ROCllTI 2.04 1 S9 U\o "•
.lSterll .3110 162 U -~ ~oac:-.r;-40 2~1 ~S I~~ FIUnRI 1.20· 8 12 ""-+ V. J••C rc 2 11 14 14\'e + II• Nwh•t .n ll JS 26\'e \to Rockwl 1,S6 10 1134 •\lo+ \Ill ~m~·~ s.sl •·1~ m:. t: c~'r>t 1.., • n~. ~. ~:~~!k2~~.: ~ 2:."'· ~1::rccpf2·" 4 ~~ r.~· ~~:.":.~~ .1!2P!ti ':f. ~~~:~:.'I~ 2·'°.'.,J, n~-~ JiTT S 40 6 4013 SS•11 • "° CocaCI 1 <Ill IO l3• 39 1 'o Fl>tf\b 1 ) !.J -+ \0 Jtwlcr 6 I 4'-, V. NleMP 1.IO 6 221 141't \lo Rohr pf 3.13 . 6 27VH w ATT pl f 6 5' t !Va Col•N' M IS IS JI, FIU1Fd .70 1 x'IO 10Vo• V. JohnJn I t6 1239 44'1t , 'h NlaMpf 3.40 . 1100 2Sh--Yi RoHnEn . 23 7V•-V. ATl pf ).M • ,.~.. Col•<0 • 2'6 lho 1• FllFinG 2 4 7 14"1 . •t. JOhnEF 2:0 .. 14 ' ~ Nl•Mpf J,60 . 1300 1• • I Rollln$ ... • 12 ll\'11 • I'll ~TT pf l 74 ' lS"--i.,. ~o:t~I / I8 1~ 2:: ~:,,_ V. F IHIEn .Sl 21 Ut U~t • l\ John(n 1.«I 8 •39 27\'ll + 'I> NleMpf 7 72 , . IlO 54 • 1 •4 RolmCp 20 167 3JV.-\o f W•ir I 20 S S7 11 -v. 0 O ~ Fltmno 1.24 I 15 llto-I'll JonL.gn 6Q 21» 16 ,... Nl•QSf\ l Ile •. so 14 14 Roper .tO • s 13 W•I pf I 4J rlOO 22v>.. ~ ~::r:irl ~ I 11!~ ~!~1 1, FteatV .IO IS "°8 21"-• 1'• Joroen I S I 21~ "' NICOii n 24 101 19 101/o lo Rorer .te 14 ISO 24V•. AWll pf l.1S ' d•20 9~ ~ Col F. . ' "' 1.:.• ... flt•I pl 1.61 I • 111/a. "• Josfen .in 12 ,,. 2'>1t.-lo NICOR 3 1 94 ,."'_ v. Row•n .OI 3 704 IV> ..... ...... ,..., 1.60 .. , ,,.,. • Vo n -~. -FllglSf. ,. lo 138 2J~o-~ JOVMl9 1 40 4 ,.,., 23 "" NOblAI 12 s "° 10\'e 14 RCl"'tn of2" :12 ,..... v. #IMHO .40 9 SI 2)\:, •• ColP•n l.40 6! 14v. "' Flo.1!Pn 19 ).36 2•11<· 114 -t<-11 -NorSo n t.IO .... » • 14 RC c ... 1.04 ,. 19 11 .... -"
.!>metk I ?0 12 91 JO . Coll!" s 1.IO lSO 2t" · Ft1EC .10 IS ISO II ~IE KOi 11 10 174 4V. Nontr n 2.20 S » 24\lo • .... AoylO 2 t7e 4 S70 U._ \'I Amfac 1.44" 131 21\rt .. ColC.s 2.16 s » JOto+ lo Fl•PL. 3.Jt .... ;l4j4-2 KL.M II I )?14 \I, Norttll .• 3 JO ... II. Rubrm '1.u 11 12 ........ ~ "" AMPln l.«I u .199 S6h. "' cso pf 3·45 .. so 1s.-.. "' Ft•Pr9 1.IO I 16 ..... "' I( m•ri 1 ,. Ill ,,,.. ... NAC:O.I .IO • 17 ""'· ' R11•T011 I s ,. 14 .... tmrtP 20 I 1-\lo CSO pf OIS.2S · ~ ulOJ •I FIA511 .S2 J.t 13.., ~ t<al\rAI .60 100 UI/, l'e NOAPlll 1.10 7 16 421') -Ry•ntf I 411 111 lt\lo .. mSth 1.60 S « 1a~o .. Combln 1.IO 6 ltJ 21~ '" FlwGen 20 ,._ II~ \, t(1l1C1t I«> t 47 17'!1o lot HEurO 2.2tt 9 I It%.-I'll RyClttrS I Olb 10 41 37 mstar l.tO s 21 22"·. " CmbEn I .. s 33' U to· "" Flowr' .s& 10 ., " K•IC pf ,.,, I 15 V1 NoestUI 1.28 1 '4S 10\lt. "' ,.,mSI pl ... .. 10 Sh -V. Comdu 2• IO ¥5 20 if. Fluor .IO I 1040 11"' ~ Kal\rSt 174 21\lt .. NlnclPS 1.!0 10 3SI 12.. I'll tmSleCI 1.60 11 J6 2111> ~ ComMll .. • J'l 161· FOOltC 2.20 1 JI ""' .,, K•neMI ,. 12 uU ..... HoStPw 2.74 1 24ot JO\/)• .. -_. -ncmc> n .n 11 745 10.-v. Comdt • 13 1601 34"'-' h ForoM .. 1974 2t'h .,.. 11.1neD 111 11 Ullo • ._ HSPw plJ.60 . 1100 11 -v. C~ .20 t 146 11-v. n1-s JO J1 -"' CmwE '·'° 1 • .,. 2l ForMll. 2.40 9 J16 ~ ... I ~. KCIYPl. -• ~ ••••• '· usPw ... 4 ---·-,.. C.M S2 • 207 UV.-" ~ Cw£ pl I CJ0 JtiO 10•' 4' FMK pf I.to • I 57') . Pl .... llSO-7l;: .. " "' ·-. 1-u .. ,., • •• FH I 1• t to Ult> I'll i~g':r l:t : ~ m~ • ~ CwE pl ll.70 Y4000 M\o • \It F10 .. r 1.J:P .. n 1~ + loo ~~Pt ~.: 2 II . ~::;-; :''·1~ .. ffl !J~='i: PSTec :n S S in1,! I\ nclrG n lO 8 19 121"' . CwE pl I 38 ySIOO St'-21/f FIHowd 1 Oii ll t)8 40.,_ + t1o KCSou .• t IOI lJ¥. v. Nl~f 9 .. 31 4 _ I'll blnt .40 1• 142 S:Ult • ~
1199lk; 60 11 '° 22\'o "' CwE pf 1.40 v40 s... Fo\t\rolrl 44 • l33 11\oo .... Ka-~e 1 17 6 , .. 16~ H t I --· •• 1•~ ~a, I .111S Jl113 tlllt ""' An~ 1°4110 Sl3 SO'o • .,: e we pl 7 1• ylOO S2 • ,,, Fo•SIP ... • 16 "". ""' ;e 24;;:. 0 , .... . ..~ I ., IQCISc 12 4V. I'll
Anlatr .2012 1111 tl\:.+.,. comes 1·• • 11 m. "• Fo•b" 1.04 1 ,., m. "'~:~~t11;": t 92 m ;; ~=f~~1.:·4 ~~ ft"'!¥; 'r.!vwia.tO ;~ J: JJ~: t~l~n~ .J..1~ : 'l~: .. v· ~:::;.,'f:l1s·~:"'n., ~~r~~ ·:·~ ,~~ l~t -.. ~:~\n°'2". ,:! ·~~· ~~!~ft.:1;.':·s ~~~ ... ~ ,~ol':e ,·~; , 2'\lt. ~
"t_.tlle .24 ' 111 •~. . . CoPsyc' lit )I r. ~ ,,. Frueh! 40 79 II'• .,.. 11.tlv pf I... I H'IO • v. Nwl!n pf·7.13 •. •II 1711) If> SP1ut 1·-10 1'11. • ""
pc.llP un le . 1S 20 . c::::~ 12 41 ,_""' • YI Fuqu. }!> ~0M_ 1! • I/. K•ul8t 2• I SO ~ Nwttnd 4.40 1 Jt2641 :M'-1\lt SIAegP i'j'; · j irt ~~:ii.:.'.· v;
pp:: pf2pf4:f. :: : r. : ~ Cptvsn 11 3'0 u• ..... ,,, GAF 20 • Sii ••o ~ it.lier :JO s ""• "'HWIP pf 2.SO .. al1 19~ ••.•. Soll-'40 4 '°' 1 • I'll ~~~~~.191.:'~ .~ :!"• ~: ~:-.:& 2.~ ~ 1t! ~· v. &!~f ;:: j ~ m-: .. a:~~ 1
·: ! ~~ ~!~. ~=:r~ ':;.~ il h~~ ~ ~~~~ .~~1t ~n 1:~ .. : ..
J.rl1PS 2 S7 11131 231/o ConnE nl.IO 6 tO 12"' l'I GCA 101 It 154 17 t 9(1 ~ Sh-~ NorSlm 1.0I t 4113 22'-• -~~~s 1'.·nftc:tl2I ~ 6-\o'o Ar IP pl l 'st 3' 2~ . .,; CnnNG l.)O 6 II ""' ~ GEICO 14 1 ,, ,. ~. ~!~, 2:20 1} 3 2611' N r1S pf 160 1 SI ~ -·-· ·~ U\'J ..... t~est .~ 11 1 • ·~ Con•ac .ao 14 41 2t "' GEO 24 J 54 94,, ,,. • •5 " • "' No ,;,_ ,-. .,.. -~ • SAn!IRI t.61 10 t uv. , . '" -1· •• CCMIEd s 1,61 S 177S 1'V, GF £ . 7 41~ • v. 11.trrGI 4ot 6 61 II • OYO ,,_ ' .... +II\ SFtlncl I I 76' 1•1')-~'
'""' 92 )It IS~>+ .... CCMIE pf 4.6,S 1100 • GTE qp 1.92 j tilt K••G pf l.IO . u 11•1• "' HNIKt"'s ·5212 .SI 42'-· ... 591Wet '20 I 1 21 • II. rlnRI I JJ lt-3' . . ConE pf s s 3'~ i,, GlE ? 30V• ... t(errM, 110 t "8 11""-•, II' n ~~-~-J1~-1114 ~ulAE ,jo... l2 ·~ I'll
Armtdl 3 •~0-l'e CCMIFds 1. 12 I 211 37~ '"' G•IH:. 2:: s 2l :::: :;-: K•J.•lnl ... " 4) 70.... v. O•••na .24 84.o 161'11-.... SnEIP 1.11 s JIJ """ .... t~::::~o > 1: 1~ ·~~ ~~ "' Cn\~2 1.: ) ns ;::'-.,., G•n""tl t.n 12 194 "°" ~~mO:C~ I I~ 41 ;: i;~ l'e O<cl..,.. J.SO ) 711 19'\o-"" ~vE A 1,:W . . 1 11-.,.
t •mWln1.10111m 16\\t "E~sPW'h.1 t Jf tt"'.~.~ g:~:!~ 1:~ ~ 1~4 "t:· It. l(nQhlR .9217 ,. m> .... OcclPl>f2.SO . 24 11 -.. ~~~?>t.1 ... ii s~ :J::.:·it rocp .ao 1 J u~ • vo cnPw pf4.16 rtoo 2t -"• Ge1r11t .:.. 9 :.~ dU • ~ Kooer 110 ,, 3 11~. • ~1) pf111 1 u 1. • .. S<hlmll ,,. , 1179 36\to • '-t~r':E .~ !; r, l~t:-t! ~~~= =~ ~ ,;: ri-=," O.lco 1,17 t '6 19 ~m;>; 1·: g 2,.! :;~-~ beef ;":J:{. ,: ~~; ~ t~~·~ .~ ~ l~~ ~;~ ~
rvln 1.12 12 4S 14\1.. II> CnPw pf7.76 .. dOO 53\.'>. 1\f) g:::::f:2 . .eo. '.' ~ ~~~= ~ KOPP• pl 10 7 17 . =ODECO 1 s '°' 20'~. ~ S<OIYO .. "· 41/t ... A.terco AO -27. U . , CnPw pf7... 1~ Sll'0-1" GAi 1 lO l6'• KfOQer I 71 t ISJ 40~o-"' n 1.llO 4 SIO n .. S<otFel I IO I 2l JI-I'll ~SlllOll 2.40 • ISO l7h+ I'll C"Pw pf 4 J:I 21v.-1'1 GAr::o114:J: i4 11>2 ,., \-. t<uhlm IGa • Ml ·~~... . loEd 1.76 6 391 u~. StottP . I • ·-1•-"' .?~'o0Gpf3."210 ,1121 !37~-:".:'. cnPw pll.98 , n 27 GCtnm "11 60 s1:: KvotoC .nr 22 ' 11'"'' "• oo"11eEod pfpf 1,·!:?. tJ00110 lul" -111) Scotyu .tO 12 22 191\ ..... .. _ • .. + •• CnPw prJ .. ts 21 2611• .. G Oat ?M 9 ._ KY'°' .44 23 S 6'rl • I'll ·-.. JO•• S<ov111 1.52 11 111 17\lt v.
lf'~.!..2G:.' .,se 1'1f>-11. CnPwl>'1.2J 2 IS\l>-V. &i~y~43';21120; ~~ ~: L.NHOnl.S6e 1 3 m •.. ,,OhEOPl •.S6 . 1'°° ~,,,;:;: t:c·~::: ... •' 1~v.-..:
UAL ' .. -.~-~,;-22· ·; \\
VG! 2.04 S 9 ~. II. UGI pf 2.IS moo 22 .. 2 UMC .60 1 2S tV.-v. UMET .32e 10 SI J-V. UNCRH . IO S -V. lJSFG 3,60 I a•l J7'10o • ~ VnlNV U6e S H 51'\lo ..... ~~~:rt l.~ ~ .: ~: ~
Union<: .?ti . . .0 4 • "' VnEIK l.M • f'1 1211<-V. U"EI pf 3.50 .. 1400 u21~ • I Un El pf 4 , . 1100 3011) + 11>
VnEI pf 4.S6 .. 1100 JI ~ 'n Un El pf 6.40 .. 1100 '4\1'1. •..•
Un Et pfM ' . . 41 l1 h UllEI pf 2.IJ ,, U U\l't+ \It VnEI pf 1.n • ' • ,, ........ VnEI pf 7.44 .. dOO SI~+ Ii.
VOllCel I • '91 11\lt + I'll VnPac 1.IO II U72 ,,~. ,..
V"lroyt 4 " 1h+ I'll Vnryl pf I .. 1400 4~ + 14 VnllO n l SS .-.114 Un8 rncl .JD 1!0 Jt t • , ... UCbTV n .14 16 67 22"1-V.
tJnEnr9 2.J2 > '" 2'14 • ¥o Vittum 2.92 S U 22~• II. Vthu pl J.t7 • 21 ,_..,.._ \l't Ulllu pf UO . L600 U\'11 • V.
Ulllupf 4 .• 1 -· ••• V11tttl'CI 11> 12 40 SO t ~ (JJ,rllll, t.24 S 61 u , ...
VldMM •• 12 6 ••... UPILMl'I ff II 2~ •.• VSl'oS S,Ole . • 21 20'N-'-US.t.lr .12 6 S50 1111>-\lo
VSGYP6 ).40 11 116 3ll')0 I'll USHom .lSt . . Jtl i6-lo0 • I'll USIM .7• . . JS '*-Ii. VSlt.ts .to 12 SJ 27V. .... . VS Aty i.10t 2 69 I~ .... . USS-1.» I 10.7 ~-'-VSSl"I 2 2 ,..._. 19 -V.
VSTotlt 2.IO 10 JS 49~ .. , .. VnTach 2,40 6 11» .. -W. VTch pf J.17 •. t St'n-1V. UTth pf 2.SS 40 2'14. , ., VnlTet 1.74 I U7 1.--I'll VnlT 2pfl.50 ,_ I 22"'4 , Vnllroe .ts IS J7 ,,,..._ 'N
Uni var .6' 7 42 17 •... UnlvFCI 1,04 I t.. l211) • w UnlHt 1.64 1 16 2'1f>., I'll VpJ-. 2.a I 5't '4"1-V.
USLIFE .M .S 242 ltY.-\'f USt.F pf>.Jl . l 2J\lt + 1"1 VSlF pfUS . t ~ 'It Usti.Fd 1.0.. .. 1 t~ .... Ul•PL. 2.1t I lU 1~. , Vt PL. pf 2.IO .. 6 22\'e .... . VI PL pf 2 tO S tt'I> ... . UIPL. pf 2.'6 .. 60 It\\-114 illllone 1.60 6 60 t6t'o + Y. CnP"",.,., so U 17 -•n " • · ' -l~ -OhEd pf 4.4ot . 1100 so 1 Ill
Nluv 1 +I It CnPw pf2.4l · 2S 16\o-If. GenEI j .o io 1732 JS + Vt L.FE 3 It S~ V. g~~~::: !~ ·. ~ S.1C1pf1 10 5a U -\4 ,.::=~<~ ~'.~ 6 !~ m:~ ~= ~:~ ~ :~ , ~o GnF01 2 20 9 237 .,.. ,,; t~~Cp )0 2 3U ~h Vo OllP pfG2:21 , 2 l~·.. Sl•Conl :o ·5 U2 UV.-~ VF Cl> 1~40 Vl VJJ S6V.t 11.
•t1Rc pl 2.IO . 2 "lf>-3'h CnllCp 2.60 6 HO 1' , .. g~;:~ ~ ! •: 1~1._ I"> lQutnt, 21 Sl ll'lt lf1 g~~ =~1 :• I~ 10tllo + °'" t~~m ::~ ~ 1X! ~t..:..'.. i,i; Valero .J2 S 121 17-
AllAJCp 1 1111 ":'"" V> CntlGrp 2.60 S 183 ""'• "° Gnln\I .1012 7ff SI~• 1. L•tGoH 2.40 S > 20~• • l'e 0-I C.E ·76 11 )ol~· • ~ SllQUI 11 2 • ..... Vv•an'""~ l,4012 •• IO! 1!v. t ~~:6' '.~l: ~ I:{;::;: cn1Gpp1 1 2 1..... GnM1111 1.M 1o u1 olo ~. L.•nlet a. 12 m '""' "'Okt:Gpf'.Ji 7 ,!~ •r .... s .. r•ir .601l 40 26\'e•"' var!" .12 4 21 4.,., .. ~V((>Cp 1.70 . 200 22 .. ~~?1~1pl4·~·S2.J ~ .. • ""GMOI 2.«leSIJOll ....... '· t!:','~' :~~~ ;~ :~ ~ Olltl 1.20. 43 ~. -Sl•IPw 1.44 ' 4 ,._"' v.,1 .... n'° m u-.. t:~~Tpf l ~ 10 ~ ~~ • ~ Conll•I I )6 I m M o •i. &::: ~ l.1~ · ) !~\, ~ ~ lm~ 1.so 1 ao 7' Ii. g;:::~ n ~ 1: ! j, ..... " · t:~~ 1~ ~i J~~ !~:-. ~ ~:!~o :: :~ J! ,U::: • v... 112 •11 "'":,,, ~·o·~ 1·~ ,,~ ~~. v. GNC Ol20 67 ,. -"' lHRT s . .010 7J ISt,:• .... o ... ~ 'n 6 n !:Rt v. SICPIC 2.40. 13 JO ....... v nclo ,. s~ ~von , 1 t1'S , • .,. .. v. c::'un .01r ,. ~ g:11uRt 1·• :: '!: .!!;-~ t!:lnt' ',~ 1~ ~ ::1 · .. gNeoA11. 2:40 s u 21~· v. tl"9~1 ·~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ v:s1s. '·* : . u 10 ..... ,.l()e 1.1S ' 2 l7:-. .. · Coopr 1.51 4 230 lHt ilt G A~ 1 •3 3 Le9Plfl .. 1 1l 19'\lt • \Co ••n k UO 1 la """ , ' 2t VIie.om .30 16 Jl UV.~ .. yllln S 19 611 ~ .. '-Coopt pf 2.to.. U 1'V• In n ~• • ' ~ l.ehVel 11 t. Orange .051 · 14 J V. ..... ~~r.. ·~ 1~ ;; II>."·· Vtcm pf 2.10 .. 2 31 + Ill
a-1 -CoopL.b .8011 112 38•11 GG"TSFlgnt 1·6030 9 319 31"•• ltnmn211• U !Ho . Orlon<: .60 • IC. UV.-114 Sh I 1~. 10 lO~• .... VaEPw UO 1 Sii ti~ ..... l•lr~o . .iO t 1' 16~-V. CooprT .M ,S II 71:\', "' fpl I. . I SO l(H.o• 4t. lennar 20 is 24 14~" l'e Otlon n1 IV>-V. ew n ,4 ....... • V1EP pf7,n .. 1400 ldt\IJ+J\lo
e•rtnto 9'l S 701 21V. • loo Coc,,i•<ll 116 6 17 ltt.o. + v. Gllrt 1 SOb 1 91 24'1! Vt enott 1 IO 9 1, uO • I'll Orlon pf 7 tl'1.... 5S!!!11I01T t.1i .. 67 ": '6\'11-'-VtEP pft.M • , ta.II •t _ B•ldV. • • •14 27V•-.. ,. CO<dura .60 9 ... ·-GenS<o 62 , .. 0 tU<IO . • s 121'>. "' OulbM .tO . i "' 241'o-Yo ... 1'\<I + I'll V•EI pl '"° .. ISO 6J\.'t +I BldV pf l.06 4ot ll'h-l\> Corel~ .44 1 1& GnAao .102<1 7 24"-+ "' evtSI l.U 10 -JI\>+ ~ Outlt1 .6012 IJ 34 + "• SllelGlo •'° t 70 17-14 V•EP pft.7s .. 140 .. 1 81llCp 2.0I • n --1 CornG 2 zz ll 114 SIV. 11/f Gen•l 9 60 .. 11 IOV. ''" •vlUF 1 23 83 ll\lo-V. OvrllOf I 2t 41 t%.. .. . Sllrwln 1 a 1S3 2116+ It> \l•Etz:•'°.. 4 21V. • , 8allyMf ,20 I 671 2)"• V. CorBI~ 18010 t ,,,,.. .. GenuPI 1.30 U 19S '6-"-\• OF 1 JD s1 3J ?4'\o+ ~ gvrTrn .IO 10 33 21\'ll-~ Sitt Pac !.46 • 104 ltY.., , • \/'9~ J 1,72 . lllO SJ + .... 8111GE 2.M 7 476 ,. • " Cowie. I 2J II Jl'4 ..... G•Pac 1.20 1 11• ltlro .. OF pf 1S J .. .,. V$hlp .so s .. 13\'t ..... SIQll•I .... 463 ""'-~ V•E pf7.20 .. uo SI ... ~ 81nc.t 1.20 U at 23"-'•o coxc.m 2t 1• 234 3414 • 'I'> Ge Pc pf,_,, 6 2lit1 lbtyCp '12 n 121 13 Owenc 1.20 0 2•S It-11' SlmPrt ,«I t SS lt\t • I'll VO<ncl . . 213 U • v. B•nTa n 20 6 ts 6 Cr•lll ' U H 6-11. G•Pw pfJ 76 , 64 2•" • 1. llemk ... u IH 29,_ "-Owtntll 1M 6 JU U\o • I'll SlmpPI .1tj 14 ISO JV.-Vt VulcnM 2.44 7 42 o v. + 'n 8•ndlQ .to II 11 29\oo + w Cflnt I to. 7 2'4 21~ • 11, GePw pl2.S6 6 11* . Illy 7 .0. 1o 1542 ~ + to OJClrClln i 6 It Jl!'O-~ Singer , 10. 13 '2J 13 -V. _ W-W _
e,119P IO 7' II • \o Cray Rs 1t 04 U V>+ IV. G•Pw pfU2 4 II ~ lmllO n' :II 16 -1 -,,, • V. -P-0 -$lnQf pf 1SO · · 1 lOo WICOR 2.14 1 ll 11 ... + •~ BkH'I' J.20 4 40 .,._ 'I• :rllO'l • 73 G•Pw pf7,ll) . asoo 5711. I lll<NI . ) 1 ~ .... ~.:.. "" PHH 7412 160 24--Skyline .4141 •102 1•11t· .... • .. .. 8-ofVa 114 I 3' llV.+ v. Cre><ltlol t.40 9 tO ;!!:·.·~ GeP..,pf7.72 .11<io SS~•'°" l•1'PI J1' j 11;;:, "'PNBMl l .7* t 76 10~+ V. SmlthA .131 . 1t tV.-\o'o ::~~~~J.,1{ 2~ ~ ... ~ ~
BllltAm 1 Sl • ,, •• 17\oo. • C•<kN pf2.19 .. u 1' -II. GetbPdsl.-... 23~ ... "" lllon I toD ., 40I 4µ. ~ PPG 2.» ' "3 3911)-"• Smltntn ... 3 ,.. 20w. "' Wtlnot .111 .. U2 Slit. .. BkARty 2"IO 10 13 2S . . Crmpl(n 1.04 • " 14114 .... Gefb!ic . 12 II ,, .... IHOfl pl 2 1 1n •• "' PSA ''° 3 379 JO -~ Smk8 2.ZZ 14 ,.. 72\lt. "" WfMr1) .1• 24 613 33h-.... Benltlr 2.0S 4 91 ll\lt-,._ Crwf>(ll 7 '1 14\ro • ... Gelly 2..60 S 304 SOV> ockl\(j 66S u i,., ~<AS 1.40e · · 1 11~. • · · · Smu<kr 1,40 I 21 U\o • -Wetorn s 1 11 Sf UV>
BkTr pl 2~SO ·~ 7 2CM\-\\ c .... ze11121111134 21~+ I'll Gl•lllP . 2 s ~W\ 1 JO • S6 "'""·;;"' ,.~tGE SJ 610.... ,. + ... Snebon ... 12 ,. n"'-v. WllHR191.22 .. 41' u.,.:..'.'~ B•n-.11 9 13 .... ~. c.rZtl pf 4 6l 2 ll\'11 • Vo GlbrF" 771 Slo "' omF~ ,· .. 10 ,. ltVt-.... PICl.19 2.16 1 SI ,.v,. "' Sona( I.JO • 7S i.\1.-:-.•.• W•tCSv ... II ., u.._ "• B•rOCR .St 16 382 39\io. 1Vt Cr Ztl pf8J.OS 41 20v.-\-. GlflHlll .tl 11 ' 1J•n. . on1MI ,.... • o · 24~-"" P.ttL.um .IO IJ 11 ... , •.. ' '. Sony(.p . llt 10 31(11 ·u .. ' . W•llJm I IH lt1 21\IO. I'll BunGo .60 . IJIJ ,..,,_ v. Crum~ 116 • 19 UV.-~ Giiiett• 7.JO 10 411 40 .... •I nStar 1tO1S 127 2,_ \/f PacPw 2.16 6 ISll It .••.. Source 7,60 .. It 24'Mt-I'll WellJ pf 1 , . 1170 7~-~ BarMI 1.0I I IU24\'ll .. Culbro 1 I al 271f> GtObtM .24 J 4S6 • • l'o llCO 102 •2111 16\\ PacPpf 3.75 · J 21"'-\oo SCrEG 1.¥1 t U4 ,. ..... _ 14 W•IU pl! 40 4 22h• '-B•rnl of 2.• . . 1 ft '> Cull Inn 31 121 Jl'h.... GldNUO I 1:16 2•"1 tl pf8 · s . tlOO 33v. 11,.; P•cP pf 4.07 . . 23 29V. . ... SoJtfln 2.lO 6 t 1• • ~ wamac 1.1c>' ii t7 n'lot-" BtryWr .40 U '7 11\o Y. Cum En 1 6 100 35 + \olt GklWF .02j . SI lh IL. pfU 4 u .n 30 + "°' PacStl .36 I a43 11~ .... · SouCIWll .SO 1 n ~ " WrnCm I 9 2136 ~-1¥o
8HRH .141 • lff s CurrlM 1.10 .. 1 ''--No Gclrl'" 1.S6 • 72 21~. "· IL. pfl 3 JI 2S ?J\o . "' Pa<TI" .«1 n 10 !IV• " •. SoetB• I 71097 17¥'> ..... W•~ntl '·'° 111l17 U\lt-" 81u.Cll I.Stu 423 lSV•.... CurtW 1 • 27 QV. "' Gd,.(h pt), 12 .. ,. 25'"' ,.. ll pf P 1 '3 1 ""' .... PtineW .so,. 20t 21'--" SoetPS 1.311 • 5 11'Mt-"' Wet~ 2 16 • JD ~ \It BexTrs .46 11 I... 41 + ~ Cycloe>s !IOI IS 11 17V,.. I'll GOOdyr I 40 9 1219 2.S.\\ Ot19C>r 1041i S9 ll -V. Palmllt 1.20 I JS 17'14. · · · · SC.1£4 U• 1 156 )4 ~ V. Wti'IHll 1 ·0I t o 11V.,, ...
BavFln " 1'1 IO'h. -o-o -oorcMJ .St 7 9 ltll. .._ orel ·., 16 44 ll\oi " P..,AB~ Sol t J 1•\/f+ w Soutl)No 1.10 7 7S6 1..-..... wsnwt 2.«1 • at 1~+ "" BayS.G 2.31 • 1 21'1· I .,.. OMG II 2\'11-I'll Gollkl 1.72 10 1019 1•"'-. .. •Genl '45 9 .... ·~-; "" P111Am .. .. J I'll SolnGE 2.0I I 4 n .... W•>I• ·» f7 "° Jlllt-I'll 8tarl"9 I 10 I 79V·. It. o • ..-20 20 Ha. "" Gr•t• 2.IO 4 "' ,. IUl'CI ,·ao 11 1().1 lo.I ~. p.,.11Ec; 2 30 • ,,,. ts ...... "" SNETtl 4.S6 1 ,. U411/• ..... W•tltlfl ... IJ s l1~ ..... e .. IFd 1,'° • 11•7 >IV.. ,,. b111Rlv .St II 17• l»:t ... Gr••nor I 1• " 41 Oh "" •Pac iob J'll 10)1 191/o t "· P•IKrt.J 1.21 ' Sl 28 . . . . . SOuPac 2,60 1 t6$ 12'-+ H4i W•yc;o, 20 s • , __ ~
e .. 1 pl >.• . . "' 3'1lo + If> Oef\.cc> UO II all 27"" V. Orantfv ll 9V. 1111 Lou\fGs 2.30 1 111 20\lt • y., P•rdyn 21 '65 14h t " So Ry pl 2.60 . • I 71 .... WHllU .OSI . . I 1 ... + t,,. BKlllO 1\011 1' -II. 01111•1 , .. 1 ~ llY.-"" GtAIP< .. IJI al\ .,. owtntlt.~ j ,. ttlt• .... Par91\ 1.140 • 1S 1•1')-"' SoVnCo 1.S. ' :M 17\Q .•.•• W•bbD .. 1t 1 -v. l!ltlt-' .. 20 4~-'-Oanltf ).4010 ... S6 -'-GIUln .IO 8 10 ~ V. owtu ..-20 60 20w ..... Ptr!t~I .J• 3 "'° 10\/f ..... SOllUllCI t.t• t 173 ,..,._. \'a Wellsf' 1 fl ' I~ till)
Btl<OPI ,70 s " 20V.-"' O•l•Gn • SJO 21 ' GHtrn 4.Sle s 11 ll"-. "" U~fl I.QI 10 ICM ""'·-"' ~·~!:!.. ·"n •• S16 11•~..... SoRoy .• u 412 11V.-"' Wtll'M t:eo 10 s ""':.:: i\ BetdnH .» • • , I'll Oll'Ttr .. 143 1 -"" GtNoNll 2 7 100 ,..,.,_ 'h ub~S ft 60 17 • ,, __ " ........ .-Tl • 1 • 2,,.-I'll So\IMfk J m Slit ..... WtllGyJ .• 12 to , • ...._ 14
8t1How ·" 7 •S ,,,.. l'e 0•111'11 li)ol9'l2 16V. ~ GIWF!fl .4020 270 .. ,,,_ .... uchS 1'1• 91191 Ullt ........ 1·~·. 1 J IOllO 14,14-~ Somkpf I .. llU t • 14 w Es T' s .. "" Btlllncl ,U 10 11 16\1)-I'll Oly<O .1t U • 7'Mt.... OWHIC> n U I IV... • ---=· r•' -\/f-n Sw.t.lr) .JJ 17 $61 ff\/)-lit \'II • "1 to \/f '41 a.IC091 ..... JI IOH ""'Oe y(p44.iS..1IOO., ..• OMPn 1.14 s JS lath k ACOM .1620 • .,.,. ' .. eylN 4110 19 19\lt+ .. SwBllllfll.20 J 1• 20.,..-v.wP."Ppl4.SO .. llOOJ7 .......
a.mt• !AO • 11 ,.I/). I O•YHd tl.10 13 l2l •S ... II> Grtyh 1.lO • •U IS\\. If. "" 1.SOb 17 uo ., . '... aye.ti .:tO 17 12 ,.... . . . . Swf'IBk .. • " 14"• .. W.\IPtP '·• 1 • • ':.::
B-1• l .1211 1.0 MIQ-"' D•YIPl 1.90 • 1U tt~ "" Grer. WI " .. '<)-,... El .s& u 54 ""3!/f. '"" ~·~bely ~ '! It:, •. J\'11 -~ Swtf'O< .ISi .. • tY,-tlo WslctT 01.oe .. 1 ,, ". 8-•... 3 • . t 11tYt o l/J DPl pf 7.4' r2SO M • IVt Oro., n 1 If! 2lt llt GMGr . .i 11 141 6'•o l/f .-pt 1IO • 6 1 ~4,~ -.. SWIGes 1,), t 12 tllt-llt WllAlrl • 110 4-.i-~
B-•l>f•().I )t 4ot 'lit OPlpf 7.70 .. 00 M'l1 111) GfowG .» t 21 7~ ..... GMU1.10e20 12l t llt-1/t entn• • .,-.. SwE"rn .S110 '4 ti-. .. "WCHA .24 4 .. J~ I'll BenfC. t , Jt1 20h • lt DH"I' n 76 11 "11 ~ " Grumm !.«I 23 IS J6h • '-II ll g ,2Qr I 17 --. Pel!C 911 U7 · 1J .. · • · · • SwlPS 1,SO I 124 1'\41 + 11t WPtc;I S 6S V. .. ,,,
Benel Jlf 4,30 .. 1 :IO t .,, Oetre 2 1' sn 76t.-~ Grum pl?,IO .• 11 21 • v. atmll .10b ii 19' ''"' + .. PeP•"n<:p ·'~ 137 I~ ,1,1~·-!'.' Sperl" Al> t llO It + llt Union t.40 ' Mt )ft,,.+ 1111 8ttllll8 13 MS 6V.-\'f OtlmP I.SI 7 IJt 14~ + I'll Guard I "'-Ill 1111 201."> ..., IC~ s t 11 »• 42* 1 . t\ntY • ••• ~ • -SIM< P 11 17 l•l'e • " UTI r 1.56 .. J t•l'r • I'll Berk•Y 1 1 >~ I'll 0.111•. Is& 19'0 aov...... GllW•I .IS s •Jll '~". .... • d I Ut . 22 171/J v. PaPl 2.:12 • 4n ''"• "' Sotrry ,,., Sl2'1 24\Q-v. WHt9 1.IO • U.1 atllt-"" BHl"'d .3211 tto 17'11.-... OellOf\I .. Jt t \lt-v. guwr. uo 'au 3Sh IO Cf 4117 4Jt ux-,,, ~•Plpl .. 50 . '*SI -1 Sl>fl~ 1.u' ... )I ... ~ WHIVC 120. ,., ~ ... ..
Btthill I .. 7'1 1t..,._ I'll Oh•Cltk 1.1' 11 21 2'v .. "" ullOff I 7,11) • ~ ·.~~ •lonH I S2" " 31 ......... 11•PPL.l 1111~~s • • '•"'-,"" !!!",•.!.. ~·!! 16 ,::', ~!t: .. Wt<;em 1:30.,. llt 2'V. .. .... 8l9Tllf .72 • 4U "~ ~ OtnMr9 I... • ,, ~. "" Gijlf ' • I .,. OIA\I 10 S2 10 b , • pf··-. dO .. -..,.u.... .... • • or'-" 1,to.. • 8'1A + "'
11111MR 1.2012 11 MtA• v.o.nt1v•• ... 12 _. tt11.-11tG"" 111•.s ·· 1 1.111.. anhlt1J01> s 114 ia\O+ .. P•Ptpr •· iJO 60 .. "' S\f••v .ao • .01,. -'-weyrpruo .. , 4sl4i-1'11 111•" 21 s -"" Oentply • IJ IO 14\'ll "' GllS Vt 1. 6 m n y, IMIL.1 .:n 1 IS ...... P•P ,,,..,0 .. 110 St -tit> ~llPM ·'° 12 22 Jlw-.... w""'"' ... 1 , .. is v. 8 ac: 0 .16 ii t7t uv. ..... O.SOlo 1:1221 HI II =Yo GllSV pl4. •· 1fO U lt>. ••• •nCre :3l 11 2 17";.'..'~ Pt"w11 UO 1 lat U V.-14 SloMo!,.' .'6 t ~ UV. ..... WlllllF r4,12 . 4 ~7h+ "" 81U!Pw 2,«I S 11 ~-lOi OelECI 1 .. I 61' U \ll GllSV P'4.«I , S6 JO -~ ltMIOl\ t '1 4 2t4 UV.+ \4 itenw pt UO . 12 16-.-Yo St 11-.t 2.«I 6 7h1 JO -'-WMl"'I IO It _ lo> ltalrJll t • ,. ~ t "" O.tE pl .:,, • 1·10 *"' ... ii; Guuura 1.'2 I 2t 22~ "" MlrH plUI• ., 11"1-I Ptnnt04 uo • II• ltir4. .. 'IOtnd 2.IO 7 "~ 43\lt-~ W!olrlpl !AO ji • ,. .... \11 llldl"lt Ut 10 20 311"t-llt O.IE ot 1.61 .. •111 SJ ••••• Gullon • .0 lit d 1011 .. , V. MlrM pf , 29 SOito • v. P"POr • t 219 2111•-ti! StCIOOti 2.fO S 1716 ~h-'-WllllG 1 Jiii! 11 b \Ii
eruea 1.-• :ze i.v. + ~ 0.1 e 111 1 a. '"° '°" + ~ HMW -~ ... 1 av. ~f~•nv1 .. , ue •\\. v. ~eop~ 1 ~ 1 PU: ;1u "" '!:~" .to,. 1• '~ "' w111tru · u " ''IN v, ::.!!' 1:~ ,i ~; =~ ~ 8t ::: rn · · : n\! • t: Hltl • «> 11 u • .,.. • I'll ~~c~4.r; .. 1~r ~:v.= ~ .. :~£1 , ~ ... ,. ;No: ~ ~"'i. ·~r: 1 11 If"'~ t: :r.'""" 1·40 . s ''l ':::-lit ew;;i. vn 6 122 25 ........ OE prl 4 16 ~'". " HICllW ,,.... 31 17 •••. ~·~d n I) tOt ,.. w Prmta.1 i.-. 1 HO ,.,.._... l.tMI 1,-.' " • .,.,_ .... WI= 1.20 io 411 IS~ .... i.; llOl'tw $1.«I 7 .. ,,.,,._ "" OE pfl( 4 " I• 2911) " H•llFB 1.70 I~ 119 27\<. + "" lrMld I 15 1 .. , • ..., Petri.. 1.40 tO • u -"' ell ,, ..... 1U """· •.•• Wl•m• " «I 4 ,..., t~+ "" ~!!1"4 10 ltt ·~-""DE PfJIS .. ' JutOt +t Htlbln 1.40 112411 "'-• v. Marlon · .. a.s ., )411o lit Pe1(11\ ,10 6 II t2W-\lo '"O! .. 1t1>1• t *"· .... Wll"'rO ,..,. " t2 ..... -8osl• UO 7 U u-,. ..... OE r1 12':11) I ... 7\1) +Iii> Hamrf 1.14 S It f•V.-W MerllG I') to •l 7._.., ,_ il'lllllS t.U.,. II u .. -'-i.rt.., ,}6 0 S 10 • , , Wll\OI t • .010 to 40 -y, eo.e pr '' 11 too , ........ o.1 pl • 72 . '"° •111> • i "•"'jr 1,g: ·• sl l!-~ "'•'"ill no ' '~"' v. l"fllll• 1111.1s .. I "" "" trt~• .n • u ......... w1n1111e n '" ,_.,_ l.tt troV1~io J ~~~~.'.': g:~f.r f°:i~ ~I m:·.-" ~~·~1· J . .,,/·~ a~~ v. ~~~,::it~~~~:: :1~':':o lt ~~1fi~ tr-~:"' !t~~J:=q:i 12~ ifg ~ :IZ'tJ,1.'li • ,r, fii:;'+ ·~ :::~ 12;: '! t~~ ~:: 0101: : .. t *2 10 •.. ~=llCI 1·40 :; ~s 20 ::·: MartM ai.ti t •i• u v.-2"" Phjl';l, 1·~ •: 1440 f''>"I+ £ i.avc t'. 1 fi ~+ , .... w11I,( '·a 6 &al \It •• -..
8roc1tn '.IOtt .. u" ..... g,~1n1"'U~ii ,~u-:~tj·~l!J •'11'',•1·2"6Y ..... ~,l.~ ·~':'t1J:~:tt ~llEpf 4'.I0 .,1W,f t1~ •VClll .,1100 t\li• .. =1:~f:,,, tl ,~·ioi ••cll'fWY 1.ia • «> 1~ • ,. g• ms 1 It 1 m ".,.. Her.,.. • 4 • • • . ·.. ~ " l"Nt~ 1·'°. 11000 111tt + ,,. ~w 1.aa. ~ t111 + -. w i<o I.JO • i" ,_,,,__ "" ftltf,UG UO 6 1• 2"111 I'll 1:0,o 'tou 1 .. 1''\11 ..... ~·~ 1'd. ·; 22t t • ._ :•~, 1' 11 2~ n .... "'1111 I .ii .. •t6 lllll)+t~ t~ t.010 1'14t-'-" WotvrW ·a' m 14'-t w. ==""~ .. ~ ;L.: ~ g1111111 . 11'»1 Ti'°~ ~ :rr1•" '··I~ 21; m· ~ M::M ~., ... , u u ...... ~ .. ~I "111 .. ~m H1t'"" , .. i .,..14 .. 1'-w-. I ... ~., ••::Jr, 1:1• ·; tU~I • ~ "ll~d;t; n 2. lfi~ ~ tj.,~ rn t ,J; w··"it ""::&" U• ,~ I~~· .... :1:11U 1:io 'f 'i m~~.~ m:C .n I 1~._;.:·~ ::r.: 1:.u~ ~ l~· l: ::;.n,.,... :1;•11• f:"• '°' DMley 1·:'t * »'-• llO H:~1H '.t01i 14 JOh,'. ... ""' 1:n :. tt 11*:.:'.. :"11!:; 2·~1 '': ~·~ !,It!!-'"'"" Wr!dAr •. 4 n; ~ 8rull'IW 1 • n ft --~ OEI 2. J JV'-'"' H•llSe 1,toe t II-' 1•t.... ,. Metwl .Hr t 2' 'lh• \It "~'C?f'" ' I 4 U'I• Yo ;,-o 1: • n n-= ~ Wrleiy IMf t .. ,,_ • IYo Bue~ r '.• 10 ., m u "' B~ll.!!!: ... lo '" t3tt'+ ti """. lllil a ... ~ " ,.. I\,, ... ~!'•"' JO 4 Ut.,! 11.,,_ llo "'"'' ··a 't' ··1 " -\II ..... 6j .. ., • -14 W11rlur .. ,, f:'!t "· e H 2 '4 11 1~ + !A oo~i 10 u. "' H•Y•fA .. • • .,., 'It .... •I WI " -'" · • " · _,,., 14\11 • ~ au • 1 J7 '"'• " w,i,.1.11 • MJ .. ' ~-~ I"' llld ,·.J'l ·• ,,. Ullt-,,., 8516 :.. •• , U\'11:·::: ~~~"" .u '° ,&; g:1 -~ ::~ir ui .• iit 1:~-r: ........ vt : .... at\11. ,,,_ ~ ,1 .~ n ,1.':·. ~ ~::.. .0, : .. -: ~ iiWtfl 1.UI • 114 d V.--1.,1 ,JO 10 '* la -1' "'I' 71 ·:· ,_ _. ~· ta ti ,..5 11 ._ l"l!!'G 1.• 1 H 11i.-\lo 4 .. ,... tlN1! t.I>.. I II'-..... nly 1."2 Ii m ., \It IM 11T'; IAO lot --. Mc rm 1M a •• 11 -'" ~Utl t J •11 ...._ I'll i' • "T 9~ "' "' ,· .. '•::' ,,1! '1'~ ~~WY l,!O «I .. '"!~ HtltnC • ' ,, .. , "MC "'I·*'. u -.... :'*Y ,,,. .. , •t'lot+ ~ ~ 1:.0 ·71 •' .... =. ~ "f1!! .-,•1 .. -1-fl""• t W f ' ,, j ..... ~ .... ·'° ' 60 uv.-...... ,,.1111 'I, 4J It.,._ -Mcfif • j t•Mi "' """" I • ., '•"'-.... ··~ .. ... .. uur" .st .. " "' OI 1.eo '° ._. HY...... Htt"19i • .,., 11 • " N!C 1,'w ii lft ti'" ';iv. IO!l•J •.t7• It • t~-"' t., 1• ~ !l • M 1 .. I -
""" • 16 ,..,_ " JoOn 1~ 1' 'I .,.. "'4 Herc111• 1 1• "~ "" Mc 1 S6 J 1 ~1-"'[Si 1·~ t • ,, .. • \lo '' • ''-aft<: 1·! • I• '°" • " ~'~M, ... C.-Cf 't-lltt i.. :: :.211~ ~111t=" f:''tC" • 14 HI t .... Mc • ·.a, ll~;.:. ... ~~~·t•!'Ji c,,~';~ ~: ~' -; ~ .tyN .4'91J i!; ~~:.:·\.; tM Tl M\ltt '-HI 2 . 4 J 14 th(.,fl.!J., I) ._.Mc H 1••' JIM~ \It et ,, 1111-~ l 'i "1,,,,, ef\19',_ ISj •• UI t~• ~ IGNA ~ .. t ~ J:·,"" ~:~1 ~ ~ J: J ,!. ~ e~,,~ifi .. '3T, ~~\ .... ;I .....,;,:;~ 1IO .I. J i~ •. ~ ·?t l I l~~ -~ ,.,... 1 't 1 l :t . .'~ o' •I fJ ~ ;~ ~
16• Ul k t.lt.-"-clvPntDtJ.JO , ' , •Ulll eoei t ;;:;;, • .J.J j ti .. + 14o t~tt 1 .. "'"' .. lflwftllft•. 1 • _. '11'1'1 !. 6
HlOHLANO PARK, Mich. (AP) -Time-wu
running short today for b&rga.lnert at Chrytler Corp.
and the United Auto Workert union, with eoonorrucs
and health c&rc iasuca the main stumbling blocks to a
contract.
"I can't recall being ln thl.s altuatton having ao
little time with which to do so much," UAW President
Douglas A. Fraser said at a news conference late
Sunday.
The current contrnct, covering 43,200 U.S.
autoworkers plus another 40,000 on lndefinlte layoff,
explree at midnight Tuesday.
Benefits package OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill boosting worker
compensation benefits for on-the-job disabilities was
signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Brown called the measure, AB68i by
Assemblyman Bruce Young, 0 -Cerritos, "a Jong
overdue benefit and reform package for the working
people of California."
A deadlock between employers and .unions has
frozen the top benefits at $70 a week for many years .
GM may not meet fuel goal
DETROIT (AP) -General Motors Corp. says it
may fall short of the government-required
26-mile-per-gallon fuel aver.age for the ~ew model
year.
The nation's No. 1 automaker said that if the
company does not meet the requirements, it will avoid
paying a fine by using credits earned previously when
its average mileage exceeded federal mandates.
GM said that consumer tastes for bigger, less
fuel-eWcient cars was the major reason the average
may fall below the standard.
Gas prices still I ailing
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oil industry analyst Dan
Lundberg says motorists are continuing to buy less
gas, which has caused prices to fall to an average $1.27
per gallon in late August and brought on sharper
competition for business among self-service stations.
The decrease in price was just under a penny a
gallon. Self-service gasoline dropped an average of
$1.15 cents per gallon to $1.23. Full-serve prices
decreased .56 cents a gallon to $1.36, Lundberg said
Sunday.
He publishes the weekly Lundberg Letter.
Takeover fight intensifies
NEW YORK (AP) -Two high-technology
companies locked in a takeover battle say their
respective offers have lured more than hal( of each
other's stock, adding more complications to an already
tangled fight.
· Martin Marietta Corp .. which is seeking to acquire
Bendix Corp. for $1.5 billion in cash and securities,
announced it received 63.5 percent of Bendix's shares
by midnight Thursday. That was the deadline for
Bendix shareholders to submit th eir stock and be
assured of receiving cash for at least some of their
holdings. Bendix is trying to buy Marietta for $1.7 billion in
cash and stock. · l
Gold producers can mint seal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -California gold
producers will be able to mint a gold medallion using
the state's Great Seal if they pay all costs and a
royalty to the state, under a new law.
Gov. F.d.mund Brown Jr. said he signed AB676 by
Assemblyman David Kelley, R-Hemet . The bill which takes effect immediately, allows
the state's Great Seal to be used in a series of
commemorative medals to be sold by gold producers.
The producers have to pay royalty fees to the. state
that range from $1 to $4 per medallion and must pay
for all design and production costs .
Gold, metals quotations·.
Gold By The Associated Press
Selected world gold prices today:
London morning fLxing $440.00, off $13.00.
London afternoon fixing $439.00, off $14.00.
Paris afternoon fixing $422.90, off $2.93.
Frankfurt fixing $440.00, off $6.92.
Zurich late afternoon fixing $439.00, off $19.00
bid; $440.50 asked.
Handy & Harman (only daily quote) $439.00, off .
$14.00.
Engelhard (only daily quote) $439.00, off $14.00.
Eagelba.rd (only daily quote) fabricated $460.95,
off $14.70.
Si.Iver
Handy & Harman, $8.880 per troy ounce.
Metah
NEW YORK (AP) Spot nonferrous metal
prlces today:
Copper 70 ~·73 cents a pound, U.S. destinaUons.
Lead 26-29 cents a pound.
ZlDc 40-42 centa a pound, delivered.
Tiii $6.M46 Metals Week composite lb.
AhamlDam 76-77 cents a pound, N.Y.
Mercury $36~.oo per flaak.
PlatlDam $366.00-$372.00 troy ounce, N.Y .
·Gol.d coim
-NEW YORK (AP) -PriC'et late Frld~ of gold
colnl, compared with Thuraday'1 price.
Kn1erraad, l troy oz., $4~9.7~. off i1.~. Maple leaf, l troy oz., f4~9.~&. up •7 .~.
Mexlcu H peso, 1.2 U'Qy oz., $&40.500 oti '8.'76.
Aaatrlaa 100 cron, .9802 troy oz., f438.26. otf
$7.00.
~: I>Mk-Perera .....
..
..
:·
lllllil CIAIT uml1Hll/mTlmll
MONDAY ~f PHMBfll 11 1911} OH ANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA :i'S Cf NT S
Spain pl3ne crash death toll • • r1s1ng
MALAGA, Spain (AP) -A
Spanish chart.er jet en route t.o
New York with 393 people
aboard crashed on takeoff from
the Malaga Airport today , and
officials said at least 42 people
w e r e kill ed, mos t o f them
burning to death insid e the
flaming DC-10.
In New York, a Spantax CUght
coordinator said 95 percent of the
passengers were Ame r icans
booked through the Carefree
David Company in Miaml.
Airport authorities in Malaga
said 40 bodies had been pulled
from the smoldering wreckage
and taken to a military hangar
set up as an emergency morgue.
Carlos Haya Hospital officials
in Ma laga said two injured
people died in the hospital and at
least 17 of 90 olher people taken
there were in serious condition
with injunes or bums.
Clock ticks
on rush to
stop flood
This Is the second of three parts In a Dally
Piiot series on the Santa Ana River's Impact on
Orange County. Today, the flood threat and
steps being taken to defuse It, plus a scenario
for a major flood under current conditions.
By STEVE TRIPOLI Of'"!M Delly Piiot Steff
It's a dry bed of rock, dirt and scattered brush
almost all year long, with perhaps a trickle of
water running here and there. Invisible even to its
nearest neighbors in much of Orange County, it
hides behind rising e mbankments o f low
shrubbery that back the concret.e-lined channel
walls.
P olice said 100 people were
Injured.
The plane. Flight No.
the Spanish charter co.
Spam.ax, carried 380 passe. .,,
the maximum, and a crew o. 13,
the compan y said f rom Its
headquarters at Palma d e
Majora. It did not Immediately
re po rt their nationalities o r
names. It said the pilot and co-
pilot escap ed unharmed, but
,
three atewardeases w e r e
unaccounted for.
Airport sources s aid the
passengers included many
Ame ricans and Canadians
retumlng home alter vocationlng
at Malaga, a picturesque beach
resort city on Spain's famous
Costa d e l Sol. T h e y said
arrangements were being made
to have an Iberia Airlines Boelng
747 fly the survivors not needing
medical treatment to New York.
The Santa Ana River is out of sight and out of
mind for many people. Because of that, it is often
diHicult for them to perceive the magnitude of the
threat it represents.
But those with long memories of this area,
those whose job it is to know the river and many
others can tell you that nature has placed it.! own
Dr. J ekyll and Mr. Hyde in our midst.
Prado Dam's huge spillway, on which groups of helicopters often
land, could not stop Santa Ana River in a major flood.
And those who reduce such things to statistics
say that the major flooding the river is capable of
w ould, at present, be a disaster second in
TUESDAY: POLLUTION PROBED
Salt levels need attention
California only to a great earthquake in a densely
populated area.
The river that usually doesn't flow at all is
the greatest flood threat west of the mighty
Mississippi River, according to the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers.
There has been flooding regularly ever since.
Otbonae, director Qf the San~ Ana River Flood
Protect.ion Agency, says the flOOda of 1884, 19 16,
1927, 1938 and 1969 were the most significant.
The 1938 flood, as one of the most recent, is
well remembered. There were hardly any serious
flood control facilities then, and the waters
"overwhelmed practically all the barriers that had
b een p ut up," said Osborne . There was
widespread damage and 58 lives lost.
That flood, a small one compared to the best
estimates of the 1862 flow, alarmed residen~ and
officials enough to result in the construction of
Prado Dam, which straddles the river just over the·
county line in Riverside County.
The main purpose of a dam is simply to put a
barrier between a heavy flow of water and an
area downstream that would otherwise flood.
When it was completed ln 1940, officials felt
sure 0_!1-t Prado Dam could handle any future
flooding on the Santa Ana. They have since
discovered that is far from the case.
. At the time, the severity of the 1862 flood was
not known, and the weather conditions that
caWled it were not considered reasonably possible
for this area.
The facts now known have led to a new
conclusion that no one seriously disputes: Though
Prado Dam is big enough to hold back waters from
a flood so large that It can be expected to occur just
once every 70 yea.rs (a 60-QIJed 70-year f1ood), an
1862-atyle flood is much larger but still can be
expected to hapr_en eventually, and it would
overwhelm Prado s capacity.
By comparison, the 1938 flood was only a
40-year flood -w ere it to occur now it would be
fully contained at Prado.
There were conflicting reports
about what happened.
A New Yorker, who escaped
the wreckage with hia wile, told
The Auoclated Press in a
telephone interview from a hotel
after the crash that the pilot
appeared to have decided to
abort takeoff, a front tire blew
out, and the plane plowed across
a highway, coming to rest in a
field.
"There was somewhat of a
There were very fe w people here in 1862
when, in the words of longtime river watcher H.
George Osborne, the river turned much of the
county into "one vast lake from the foothills at
Fullerton to the ocean."
What this means, according to Dennis Majors
of the Army Corps of Engineers, is that an
1862-ityle flood would send water rushing over
Prado's spillway and toward Orange County at a
rate of nearly 1.8 million gallons per aecond -
some eight times the capacity of the river channel
here.
Such a flood can be reasoDAbly expected to
occur about once every 200 years -there's a
(See MAJOR, Page B 1)
Large 200-year flood would soak all
blue area, but even smaller l 00-year
flood would drench coast (dark blue) .
-INDEX-
At Your Service
Enna Bombeck
Cavalcade
Classified
Comics
CroMWord
Death Notices
Editorial
Entertainmenl
Art Hoppe
Horoecope
Ann Landera
Movies
National News
Public Notices
Sporta
Dr. Ste~hn
Stock Marketa
Television
Thea ten
Weather
A4
A7
A7
C6-10
B5
B5
C6
A6
B4
A7
A7
A7
B4
A3
C6
Cl-5
A7
B3
B6
B4
A2
Airport parking to go up?
Supervisors study proposal for $2 daily boost
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of Ille Dellr "9t 8Wf
Parking fees charged at J ohn
Wayne Airport would increase
substantially under a proJ>0¥1
that will be considered Tuesday
by the Orange County Board of
Supervi8ora.
Under the proposal, the daily
rate charged at the main parking
lot adjacent to the airport
terminal would climb to $7 from
$5. The 60-c:ent per hour rate for
short-term uae would not change,
however.
The dally rate charaed in the
long term park.Ina lot north of
the airport -the lot favored by
moet travelers -would lnc:reue
to M per day from $2.60.
The monthly rate would increase
to $30 from $10.
The increaaes, If approved by
supervisors, would booet parking
revenue from $2.24 million to
$3. 1 million annually_-:-:~ an
lncreaae of more than '86(),000,
according to a report by Airport
Manager Murry Cable.
Although county-owned,
parking lota concesalona are
operated by Park.Ing Company of
America.
all lots for revenue up to $3
million.
PCA wou)d re eeive a n
additional 2 percent of gro11
recelpta above $3 milllon under
the plan.
DependJng on the number of
can parked durlna the flnt yew
of the new rates, PCA'• income
would be between 1287 ,000 to
$297,000 -an tncreaae o f
between l percent and 14 .~
eercent over 1081 compenaaUon,
Cable laid.
Cable said the new rates would
~pare with thoee charged at
other Southern Caltfornia
airpc>Ma. ..
panic.'," said the man, who did not
wont to idenllfy him.sell. "The
stewardesses opened the doors
and people began t.o leave . . . I
went down the chute that was In
the front of the /lane. There
were flames aroun the engine In
the back of the plane . . . by the
end, the flames were engulfing
the entire plane."
Spantax said the DC-10
crashed after havine "technical
(See PLANE, Page AZ)
Design
rules
altered
The Laguna Bedeachh C:ity .V Council has amend t e._ ctty s
municipal code to pres'e'rve
residents' existing views, despite
opposition from several architects
who contend the c hange is
unnecessary.
The new language, added to a
c hapter d ealing with the
r esponsibilities of the Design
Review Board, calls for "the
preservation of existing views
and sce nic v i s tas fr om
unreasonable er'lcroachments by
structures or appurtenances."
In other woros, the council
wants its Design Review Board to
take existing residents' views
Into consideration when dealing
with new structures that might
block an ocean or hillside view.
The unanimous council vote
follows a recommendation for
such language approved 4-1 by
the Planning Commission last
month.
The co un ci l sees th e
amendment as a means of dealing
fairly with developers on the
issue of view ereservation while
the c lty look s into a more
permanent ordinance:
Traditionally, the city has
relied on traditional zoning
standards, such as building
height and setbacks, to deal with
view preservation.
"Practical and effective
solution s concerning vie w
preservation are few in number,"
a staff report stated.
"This is principally due to the
inhere nt difficulties of
implementing regulations that
are essentially aesthetic and
philosophical in nature," the
report continued.
ln approving the cod e
amendment, the council said the
measur e is a n appropriate
interim solution until new
standards a re developed and
adopted .
Members of the Associated
Architects of Laguna Beach, who
were asked to comment on the
proposed ch ange, argued that
current wording in the ordinance
is adequate.
The group said it feels strongly
that the amendment is not
necessary at this time.
"We recognize that some fonn
of v iew ordinance is being
considered at this time and it
w ould probably be time well
spent for all of us -city staff
and architects -to concentrate
on coming up with a workable,
equitable plan for consideration
of exis ting views," said Jack
Weston, vice president of the
architects' group.
The council wlll consider a
seco nd reading of th e
1 amendment Sept. 21. If
approved, th e amendment
becomes law in 30 days.
The btageat lncreue would
face tum. whoae employees park
at employee-only parll1n1 lota.
Under a revised a'areement
negotiated by the county General
Ser vice• Agency , PCA'•
compensation would increase
from 6 .85 percen t of gron
receipt• from the main and
employee Iota and 25 pawnt of
..,_ nicelpta from the lonc·tenn rot to a flat ..... or o.~ percent '°"
He said a rate lncreue wu
warranted, In part, due to the
unique hl1h demand.limited
facWU. lltuat&on at the airpon.
File ·photo 1how1 when dally parkln1 rate
wa1 13. 75. 11'1 now 15 and may increue to 17.
1 \
I •
Barkeep's tragic death stuns patrons·
Uy STEVE MITCHELL
O(IM D-41r llllot lteff
Tw<.> Y4:1u11 qo, on hia 80th birthday, J. "Popo"
Oalalni'a friend• at The Saloon In Lqurui Be1ch
l(teeted tht• bortender wl th an 18-foot Joni c.ke on the
rnahoguny bar top.
Last year, on hllil 8hn blrthqay, resulu patroru of
tht: popular watering hole hired the Lquna Beach
High School band to ~lay Cor the birthday boy.
Saturday night, Popo's friends held a wake of
sorts, for thf' 82-year-old veteran mixologist, who was
kiHed m an automobile crash in Costa Mesa earlier in
Lhe day.
"He wns the best, the very beet," said Salocm
barkeep Tracy· Moore, who said Popo taught htm
everything he knows about the bar trade. ·
A t.'Olor photograph of the smlling Philippine-born
bartender hangs over the cappuccino machines at the
South Coast Highway bar, with a legend underneath
that reads, sunply, "Popo: 1900 to 1982."
News of Popo's death shocked regular patrons,
who wand n.id into llw 1wndup bur Sunday momlna.
"l auw him fo'ndoy nlgM," IWid John Lua, D
long-Urm-&loon goer "lie aiuld hi• lltol1'Weh wu up1N
nnd h<' ww; drinklnAl bruth ult nlaitn."
Costa Mt>sa police aatd the octogenarian's car
itlammed ant.o a lrf'(' at about 2:~~ a.m. Saturday aft.er
leavlnJ( thl' rood on F.ast 17th St~t in that city.
Moore td h und Popo had clooed the Saloon at
about 2 a.m.
"I told him l'd see him thut night, Md he walked
out the door,'' Moore said. ,
"l was probably thl' Inst one to talk t.o him."
Police aald they have not received a pathologist's
report on the ac.'Cident, but apecula~ the bartender
might have suffered a heart attack. ·
"We just won't know for surf' until the report is
back." a police sergeant said today.
Popo had been a bar consultant and bartender for
nearly five decades, servlnf up drl~s in Ireland,
Spain, France, Portugal and taly.
..
Unl'-tod 'm.tc.s Bartcndera' Oulld, and had won two
lnt.trnuuonal award.I for hil drlnka
Hil 1pC!clalty, a powerful concoction called "Popo'a
Coffof'," wua a favoriw ut The &loon
lt'• o re(lllter<.'<i drink -BOrt of• potent -which
meanJ unly bart.cndurv at 1'hc Saloon can aell the ttuft.
Popo mixed the brew In ht. Costa Mesa home and
brought it to work. It's a combination of five liqueurs
poured Into coffee with o thick whipped cream
t.opplng.
Before working at The Saloon, Popo was bar
manager at Ambrosia and worked at Amelia's In
Newport Beach four years. Before that he w~
consultant for the Outrigger restaurants, and seve'l\
restaurants In Los Angeles.
Married four Umcs, the bartender lived alone in
Costa Mesa. He leaves a 22-year-old daughter who
lives in Arizona.
Memorial 11ervlces for the veteran bartender are
pending. He was named an honorary Ufe meJhber of the
J. 'Po po' Galsini
I esa explosiori
•
j jdamages 4 .houses
f
. l A late night explosion beneath as. her apartment began fillmg up
car in Costa Mesa sent pieces of with gas fumes.
.
pipe bomb flying through the "I thought there was a war l. ·r , damaging four houses and on," said <?'Donnell. "I was so
leaving neighbors stunned and scared I didn't even turn the
htened. lights on. I just ~an downsta1!'8."
, olice said that the device, The tom gas line.was repaired
ibly a pipe bomb. was placed earlr Sunday moz:rung. w nt
.. y unknown suspects late Pieces of the pipe bor,nb e
·Saturday ni~ht beneath a 1980 through. a .garage be~ongmg to Ed
Mustang parked in the rear alley and Vi.v1an Hollingsworth,
. bf 256 E. 16th Pl . da~aging boxes. of stored ace Christmas decorations, before No one was hurt in the 11 p.m. entering an adjacent apartment.
e)<plosion that blew out the car's Joanie Goldsmith said she was ,. eas tank, damaged the gas line to watching television when she
' ~ adjacent apartment and sent heard the explosion and ran "pieces of shrapnel flying into two outside to join nearby residents. ~arages and a living room. Goldsmith said she didn't
: Antonio Tamaltzi, owner of the reali1e until Sunday morning
' damaged car, said he had no idea that a three inch piece of the
who wanted to destroy his car. metal bomb had tom through her ~ ., Maggie O'Donnell, who was living room wall and then hit the
, asleep at the tim~. said she heard celling. She found the chunk of
: the explosion and ran out as soon metal lylne near her front door.
Joanie Goldsmith holds
pellet found in ceiling.
~Probe clears labor secre~ary
NEW YORK (AP) -A special
. prosecutor said today that "there ~ l!emains insuUicient credible
. evidence" to conclude that Labor
'Secretary Raymond J . Donovan
once had ties to mobsters.
... In a report to the U.S. Court of
' AP.peals. special prosecutor Leon
: $1lverm~n also said h e was
' concluding his 9-month probe of
.,~e Reagan administration
, ~binet officer.'
• . In his lOO!page report,
, Silverman said there was not
e.nough evidence "Lo conclude
that Secretary Donovan was
untruthful when he testified
before the Senate Labor
; Committee and a grand jury as to
, his relationship. or lack of
relationship, with Salvatore
Briguglio, William Masselli and
other reputed organized crime
figures."
In an accompanying letter to
the appellate court, Silverman
also declared: "To date there has
been developed no evidence of
any relationship" between
Donovan and the gangland-style
slaying of l'iathan Masselli, the
son of William Masselli, a
reputed mobster serving a prison
term on a truck hijacking
conviction.
On Aug . 25. the younger
Masselli, who had allowed
federal authorities to record
several telephone conversations
with a lawyer for Donovan's
New J ersey construction
company. was shot to death in
the Bronx.
"O n the basis of th e
investigation to date, there
appears to be no evidence of a
relationship between the Masselli
murder and Secretary Donovan,"
Si)vennan's report said.
The special prosecutor said he
has directed the FB~ to report the
results of his findings to
Attorney General William
French Smith, and said that, "If
any evidence is subsequently
developed indicating such a
relationship," he would be
willing to accept a new
appointment to reopen the
Donovan Investigation.
'.~~ ,_~lrom-16 t-o25m-ph m-.. C_l_o_u-dy_d_a_y_· __..,
accompany temperetur.. In the
80I In northern deNrta Wiiii. the
----------· low d-1 l0<acast predicts hight
: · Cons ln I In the 90t.
Boatar. from Point Conception
to the Mexican border can elC$1«1 Low clouda, becoming partly light varlable wind• during the
tunny Tuetd•y eftarnoon. Coutal night and morning hours, low 62. Inland 67 Coastal high 72, ti.coming touth-terty at 8 to
inland 80. Water 89 18 knoll In the anwnoon with •
1 EIHwh1ra. light end var1able l·lo-3-foot soutttw.t swell. 1 wind• tonight end Tuaaday ----------, morning, beCOmlng tout~t to
..... ta 10 t8 11no11 a1ternoon and Temperatures evening 11<>or1 Wind wa,... 1 to 3,
teet Six to S.loot combined -HI Lo l"ett
over northern outer water• todey. ••'"·-y 88 51 .Cleereulng tonight Ottiarwt.a I to ,...,..,
3 loot w11t to a<>Ythw .. t •-II Albuqua 88 48
Conslder1bl• low cloudlnau AmarillO 89 ~
1onight and Tuatdry morning w11h AIMvllle 74 ""'
.01 ~...,,... w .. .,.., ~""°""' US 0.01 °' Comm.-c•
parllal cleating 111 afternoon Atlante 78 68 Atlante Cty 79 85
Auttln 99 81
U .. s11nu11ary =::· : :;
Blrmlnghm 82 72 .23
Jaoktnvlla
Kana Ctty
Knoicvllla Luvaou uttta Rock
Loulsllllla
Lul>boek
Memp/111
Miami
Mh~•
Mplt-St.P
Nulwllla
New OrlMnt
New V0111
Norl<>ll!
9t 74 01
88 67 17
84 72 Thundaratorm• boomed and lathed tOWN lrom -tern Lake
Supattot to the Taxu Panhandle
today, attar torn9doea touefled
do-In Mlnnnota. Wlec:ontln
and Mluluippl
"The roof It gone. wlndowll are
OYt, two 91reo•• and one btlln era go~. · 111d Meri. CrHMr,
desctlblng the d•meo• Sundry lrom tornado·llke wind• that
1truck lier home In Dunn C4Unty,
-• of Eau Clelre. Wit.
Aulhorlt111 11ld •bout two
doz_.,, homes or epartmenll on
Eeu Claire'• aoutharn Iring••
-· damaged by the llO<m• and lour people trom nMrby Altoona
-• trNtad IO< ln)Yrl• CllUMd by bfollao glue.
Downed power linaa end power
outagaa -• reported In nonh-1:antral Okl•homa, which w11
pound«I by hall. high wind• and
brief, r-vy downpour• Wlndt of
ovar eo mph 11ruck OlclahOf'lla
City, olllcl•I• uld Scattered pow« outagaa mo OOCU'fad In
Tulia.
In Viola, Kan , aouth-.at of
Wlchlta, IWO people -· ~ lnjut9d ~ the winds tooolid •
barn, the Sedgwick County
"*1ff'• OIPMtmant Mid.
Sclllered ~· felt In IM oentr.. Hlgtl ~ the Aoclllet and the <JrMt Batln In IM\<eda
and Ullh, and remnant• of
'.roplcel "°''" Ctlrlt darnpeMCI ttie ...... nT_,_Vlllley
Lalifornia
Tiie wealhu picture for
Soutllefn Callfomle on T~ lndudle OIWdll-Md ......
-'ont IM 09Mt with 11....ir:s wlndln• .. In 111ountaln1 en ~.~to ......... ~ ...... HlgNlnlol~~•o Wllll COHiii hlth• rang.Int
1,0111 71 to u . A111den11 ol
mountain oOMmunltlM lt\Ol.lfel
up.ct tam"r1turM r•eclll"O
lrom ti to 15 Gully wind•
BltnlMCtc ae 40 8olM 87 40
Bolton 78 5S
8rownsvlle 97 81
8ullalo 87 85
Burlington 87 58 Casper 74 43
cnar111n SC 82 70
Ctlarllln WV 89 83
Cllatltte NC 83 88 Cheyenne eo ,.... . 11
Ctltcago 81 70
Cincinnati 84 72
CleYeland 89 65
Clmbla SC 85 73 Columbul 86 83
Oal-<Ft Wth 95 78
01yton 82 88 o.n-87 47 .22 o.~ 85 .... ,
o.trolt 17 t3
Oulutll 70 81 .u
El Paao It 11 .01 FWQO II •. II
Flagalalf • 42
Or9at F... 80 33
H.nt«d 17 II ,
Helana 11 41 A2
Honolulu 87 74 ~ 12 to lndnepla ....
J9dl111 M8 87 71 .38
No. Plitt• Okla City
Omaha
Orlando
Plllladphla
Pl!Oenlic
Plttlburgh
Piiand, Ma
Piiand, Of• Pr~
Raleigh
Reno I.it I.ale• IM Ant0<1lo het1 .. ~~ St Lou11 StP·T~
St Ste Marie
ee 10 89 75 12
65 72 05
69 82
19 75 se
S8 83 6t 69
77 57 07
81 72 .88
91 73 2.27
86 65
73 84
62 48 24
98 119
81 se .s2 92 74 Ot 88 82
87 71 ee ae 10 57
72 50 .08
83 83
90 83
74 52 83 48 04 87 78
84 49 .03
98 78 N 52 .03 811 7t 03
9t 74 M 83
• ... > ..... su ..... R_f R ___ IP ___ IR~T
,."#., 1.a
1
1
1 :
' I ,
I
A"'919 , ....
87
88
68 ..
88
87
87 87 .. ..
Tomorrow High Tide· l :il e.m : Low Tio.: 1:43 pm.; a-u (lrectlon. ,fW,
,.,
Spok-70 42
SyracuM 83 S6 Topeka 88 68 .ti
TllCIOf'I 81 81
Tulaa 99 72 .05
Wuhlngtn 87 67
Wlchlll 93 68
CAllfOANIA
Baka<alleld 93 88
Blythe 93
Eureka 81 S3
Freeno 90 8,
Lancaster 82 511
Lo•Ar-74 84
Mary1vlla 91
Monterey 74
Neadlu 92
Oakland 80 59
PHO Robles 87 53
Red Bluff 90 80
Redwood Cl1y 90 eo Sact1."*'I to 87 83 SaHnH 78 57 ~Diego 78 9g
San Fraoct900 78 85
Santa Batb¥1 72 61
Senta Marie 74
Stoelllon 90 65
Thermal 93
t.Jlllal'I 87
8ar1I-90 83
Big 9Mr 68 31
Catalina 77 86 Long 8Mch 8t M
Monrovia fl 84 Mt WdtOn 71 55
Newport 8Mch 74 87 Ontario 78 eo
Palm Springe 93 83
PUldena 82 81 Sen lernerdlno 79 59
San Oa~ 81 841
San JoM ee 88
Santi Ana 78 87
T alloa V all9y 72
Tides
'f00.4Y
Second hlOfl •:~ p '"· •• , TUUOAY Flrtt low I.ff a.m. .0. t Fltet Non .,, • m. 4,7
~low 1,43 p.m. 1.t hoond hlOfl '1 44 p.m. e_4
Sun Hit 7:03 p.m , rlH1
Tuetday 1.3& 1.m.
Moon ••t• 4.80 p m .. rl1n t\llMI'( S: 10 a.m
,
Church showdown due
By STEVE MARBLE
O(tM o.ltr ..........
As it stands, St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church ia a modest
low-slung facility nestled In a
quiet Newfort Beac h
neighborhood. Its been there for
years.
The place bustles on Sundays
and has tum-away crowds at all
three services. Th e pastor is one
of the most popular In town.
But the church with its
•swelling congregation and its
need to expand is at the center of
a storm that has raged without
interruption for months.
It's a claaaic neighborhood
squabble with residents and
church officials at loggerheads
over how tall a sanctuary should
be built.
The dispute lands in the lap of
the Newport City Council tonight
and council members say they're
inclined .to ask t.he two sides to go
home and work out the problem
themselves.
Robert Curtis, an Irvine
resident and leader of the
church's building committee, says
the church is in a tough spot
becauae it needs to expand and
with a limited amount of land,
there's only one way to go -up.
The church, located on a street
corner across the street from
Newport Harbor High School,
wants to build a wave-shaped
85-foot-rugh sanctuary. It would
increase seating from 700 to
1,335.
But residents in Cliffhaven, an
older community that surrounds
the church, are critical of the
plan and claim the sanctuary will
be too tall, too ~ve and, some
sulU{est, even ugly.
Residents have taken turns
describing the planned sanctuary
as something that will have the
appeal of "a Chicago grain
elevator" and be "an office
building disguised as a steeple."
Two weeks ago, council agreed
it didn't want to pick sides and
the wrong direction."
Curtis claims residents, who
mitJally asked the church to drop
its sights to 36 feet, are pushing
for a ~8-foot height hmit.
I Barbara Jean Whitford, a
Cliffhaven resident, says she
believes the talks have gone well
"We seem to be going in the wrong
direction."
asked representatives from the
church and the neighborhood to
calm down, sit down and work
out a compromise.
There has been no compromise
and reports from the negouation
meetings vary on whether
progress is beinll made.
"I don't see anything fruitful
coming of it so far," says Curtis.
"In fact. we seem to be going in
and that a settlement may not be
far off. She wants the council to
give the bargaining group more
time.
Not all the council members,
though, are willin~ to wait.
Councilman Paul Hummel,
running for re-election, claims
colleagues want to put off taking
a stand until the Nov. 2 election
has passed.
PLANE CRASH. • •
From Page A 1
difficulties." It said the pilot,
Juan Perez, reported a vibration
in the plane after starting down
the runway and that he tried to
abort the takeoff.
The Spanish n ews agency
EFE. quoting military sources at
the Malaga airport, said the right
engine failed on the takeoff run.
One of the planeTs engines was
found in a field near the runway.
Angel Fernandez, one of the
passengers who escaped, said the
plane did not appear to have the
power to take off, "either that or
the plane was carrying excess
weight." He said the plane
crashed so quickly. ''there wasn't
time for anything."
The plane crashed into a tree nursery.
EFE said the jet was burning
near the alrport and alongside
the Cadiz-Barcelona highway,
which police blocked off in case
of an explosion.
Our luxurious camel blazer
and Own Make flannels
'
Superb materials and workmanship combine
for these handsome casuals. The blazer of pure
camel hair comes on our 3-button model and
(eaturcs Golden Fleece embossed leather but-
tons, $300. To complement, wool flannel Odd
Trousers from our own workrooms in brown, or
light, medium or oxford grey. $90 ..
ISTAIUstllD 1111
~6~1:1/
CT[P~~
l\arntshinge for llrn. Womtn ~ lo~s
530 WH 'T Trt I STR RET, LOS ANC1NLf.S, C.A I.IP.
1:Ast llON ISi .AND, NEWPORT hliACH. CAl.lf.
•
111111 l:UIT lnllllDll
M u N1111r '•l l'l 1M111•1 11 1•1111 O HANG[C:OUN TY C AI lfOHNIA /', 1 ,1 N :<..,
Spain plane crash death toll rising
MALAGA, Spain (AP) -A
Spanish charter jet en route to
New York with 393 people
aboard crashed on takeoff from
\he MalaRa Airport today. and
officials said at least 46 people
were killed. most o r them
burning to death inside the
flaming OC-10.
In New York, a Spantax flight
coordinatQr said 95 percent of the
passengers were Americans
booked through the Carefree
David Company in Miami.
Airport authorities in Malaga
said 44 bodies had been pulled
from the smoldering wreckage
and taken to a military hangar
set up as an emergency morgue.
Carlos Haya Hospital officials
in Malaga said two injure d
people died Jn the hospital and at
least 17 of 90 other people taken
there were in serious condition
with injuries or burns.
Clock ticks
on rush to
stop flood
This Is the second of three parts In a Dally
Piiot series on the Santa Ana River's Impact on
Orange County. Today, the flood threat and
steps being taken to defuse It , plus a scenario
for a major flood under current conditions.
By STEVE TRIPOLI of "'9 D8'tJ Piiot Staff
It's a dry bed of rock, dirt and scattered brush
almost all year long, with perhaps a trickle of
water running here and there. Invisible even to its
nearest neighbors in much of Orange County, it
h id es behind risin g embankme nts o f low
shrubbery that back the concrete-lined channel
walls.
Police said 100 people were
injured. Airport offlclala put the
figure at 113.
T he plane, Flight No. 995 of
the Spanish charter company
Spam.ax, carried 380 passengers,
the maximum. and a crew of 13,
t he compan y said from its
h eadquarte rs a t Palma de
Majora. Ct did not Immediately
report their nationallties or
names. It said the pilot aqd co-
pilot escaped unharmed , but
th ree stewardesses w ere
unaccounted for.
Alq~ort SOl,.\rcea said the
pauerige r s include d many
Americans and Canadians
retumlng home aft.er vacationing
at Malaga, a picturesque beach
resort city on Spain's famous
Costa d e l Sol. They said
arrangements were being made
to have an Iberia Airlines Boeing
747 fly the survivors not needing
medical treatment to New York.
The Santa Ana River is out of sight and out of
mind for many people. Because of that, it is oft.en
difficult for them to perceive the magnitude of the
threat it represents.
But those w ith long memories of this area,
those whose job it is to know the river and many
others can tell you that nature has placed its own
Dr. J ekyll and Mr. Hyde in our midst.
Prado Dam's huge spillway, on which grou ps of helicopters often
land, could not stop Santa Ana River in a majo r flood .
And those who reduce such things to statistics
say that the major flooding the river is capable of
would, at present, be a disaster second in
TUESDAY: POLLUTION PROBED
Salt levels need attention
California only to a great earthquake in a densely
populated area.
The river that usually doesn't flow at all is
the greatest flood threat west of the m ighty
Mississippi River, according to the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers.
TMre bu been floodl!>8' regularly eve-since.
Osborne, direct9r of the Santa Ana ltiver Flood
Protection Agency, says the floods of 1884, 1916,
1927. 1938 and 1969 were the most significant.
The 1938 Oood, as one of the most recent, is
well remembered. There were hardly any serious
flood control facilities then, and the waters
"overwhelmed practically all the barriers that had
b een put up," said Os borne . There was
widespread damage and 58 lives lost.
That flood, a small one compared to the best
estimates of the 1862 flow, alarmed residents and
officials enough to result in the construction of
Prado Dam, which straddles the river just over the
county line in Riverside County.
The main purpose of a dam is simply to put a
barrier between a heavy flow of water and an
area downstream that would otherwise flood.
When it was completed in 1940, officials felt
sure that Prado Dam could handle any future
flooding on the Santa Ana. They have since
discovered that is far from the case.
At the time, the severity of the 1862 flood was
not known, and the weather conditions that
caused It were not considered reasonably possible
for this area. .
The facts now known have led to a new
conclusion that no on e seriously disputes: Though
Prado Dam is big enough to hold back waters from
a flood so large that It can be expected tQ occur just
once every 70 years (a ao-ealled 70-year flood), an
1862-style flood is much larger but still can be
expected to happen eventually, and it would
overwhelm Prado's capacity.
By comparbon , the 1938 flood was only a
40-year flood -were it to occur now it would be
fully contained at Prado.
There were conflicting reports
about what happened.
A New Yorker, who escaped
the wreck.age with hla wife, told
The Auocla ted Press In a
telephone interview from a hotel
after t he crash that the pilot
appeared to have d ecided to
abort takeoff, a front tire blew
out, and the plane plowed across
a highway, coming to rest In a
field.
"There was somewhat of a
There were very few people here in 1862
when , in the words of longtime river watcher H.
George Osborne, the river turned much of the
county into "one vast lake from the foothills at
Fullerton to the ocean."
What this means, according to Dennis Majors
of the Army Corps of Engineers, Is that an 1862~style flood would send water rushing over
Prado's spillway and toward Orange County at a
rate of nearly 1 ~ million gallons per second -
some eight times the capacity of the river channel
here.
Such a Clood can ~ reasonably expected to
occur about once every 200 years -there's a
(See MAJOR, Page 81)
Large 200-year flood would soak all
b lue area, but even smaller 100-year
flood would drench coast (dark blue) .
....__INDEX-
At Your Service
Erma Bombeck
Cavalcade
Claasifled
Comics
Cl'Olaword
Death Notices
F.ditorial
Entertainment
Art Hoppe
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Movies
National News
Public Notices
' Sporta Dr. Steincrohn
Stock Marketa
Televiaion
Theaters
Weather
A4
A7
A7
C6-10
B5
B5
C6
A6
B4
A7
A7
A7
B4
A3
C6
C l-5
A7
B3
86
B4
A2
Airport parking to go up?
Supervisors study proposal l or $2 dail y boost
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
OftMO..,NetlUft
Parking fees charged al John
Wayne Airport would increase
substantially under a proposal
that will be considered Tue.day
by the Orange County Board of
Superviaor11.
Under the proposal, the daily
rate charged at the main parking
lot adjacen t to the air~
terminal would climb to $7
$5. The 50-cent per hour rate for
1hort-term uae would not change,
however.
The daily rate charl'!d ln the
long term parkinc Jot north of
the airport -the lot favored by
moet iravelen -would lncre-
to $4 per day from •2.50.
The monthly rate w ould increase
to J30 from $10.
The lncreaaes, if approved by
supervisors, would boost parking
revenue from $2.24 million to
$3.1 mllllon annually_ -an
increue of more than $860,000,
according to a report by Airport
Manager Murry Cable.
Altho ugh county-own ed,
parking lota conce11lons are
operated by Parking Company of
America.
all lots for reve nue up to $3
million.
PCA would receive an
additional 2 percent of 1ro11
receipts above $3 million under
the plan.
Depending on the number of
cara parked durtns the flrllt year
of the new rates, PCA'a income
would be between $287,000 to
$297,000 -an Increase of
between 1 percent and 14.6
percent over 1981 compenutJon,
Cable Mid. ·
Cable aaJd ... th~ new rat.ea would
compare with thoee char1ed at
other Southern California
alrporta.
panic," said the man, who did not
want to ldent.ify himself. "The
stewardesses opened the doors
and people began to leave . . . I
went down the chute that was ln
the front of the !lane. There
were flames aroun the engine in
the back of the plane . . by the
end, tl1e (lames were engulfing
the entire plane."
Spa n tax said the DC-10
t-rashed aftt>r having "technical
dHf1cult1es.''
Irvine
to hike
bed ·tax?
By GLENN SCOTT
otlM D811y Pltol etatr
The Irvine City Council, once
resigned to seek ing voter
approval to raise the local hot.el
bed tax from 6 to 8 percent, ls
expec ted to imple m e nt the
incre~ Tuesday without a ballot
measure. .
Council me mbers, meeting
July 27, had opted to ask voters
for two-thirds support to increase
the bed tax to earn the city a
projected $3 million over five
years.
They believed then that voter
approval was their only legal
means of raising the tax.
But council members changed
their minds after learning in
August that a recent s tate
Supreme Court ruling had
returned to city councils some
taxing powers most bad assumed
lost in the passage of Proposition
13.
City Attorney Roger Grable
said the outcome of the case, the
City and County of San Fr-anciaco
vs. Farrell, meant the council
could either seek merely majority
support for their ballot measure
or aimpJy vote ln the increaae by
it.elf.
Members c hose the latter
method.
They wilJ hold a h ear ing
Tuesday to allow interested
persons to discuss their concerns.
Local ho tel manage rs h ave
objected to the proposal, cl.aiming
the tax increaae will hurt their
businesses and drive visitors to
other cities where the more
common 6 percent rate is in
effect.
Laguna Beach Is the only
coastal city with an 8 percent
rate. Newport Beach voters
rejected a 6-to-8 percent increase
in the June ballot.
Tuesday's meeting will begin
at 6:30 p.m ., an hour earlier than
former m eetings. However ,
matters involving public hearings
will not be scheduled until at
least 7:30 p.m.
In other key issues, the council
will discuss recommendations
from an adviaory committee on
Ins talling traffic signals at
Culverdale, con s ider f ee
increases for the Irvine Animal
Shelter and consider implications
of annexing land in the Laguna
Hills.
Despite neighbors' complaints,
the cit y Transportatio n
Commission advised Aug. 30
against adding signals at Culyer
Drive and Ferria Avenue or at
Main Street and Thiel Avenue in
Culverdale . Council members,
during an earlier meeting, had
seemed supportive of the signals.
Proposed (ees for the animal
, shelter are intended to raise
revenue to offaet 10 to 15 peroent
(See JRVINE, Page A!)
'the btgaeet lncreue would
lace fitml whow employem park
at employee-only ~rkln1 lota.
Under a revised agreement
negotiated by the county General
Se rv Ice a A1ency, PCA 's
compensation would Increase
from 6.85 percent of gro11
receipt• from the main and
employee Iota and 25 eercerit of
ll'Cm recetpta from the Jonl .. tenn
lOt to a O.t nite of IU percent few
He aald a rate lnc:reue waa
warranted, ln part, du. to \he
u.::lfue hllh d emand -limited
f U.. aitulltb'I at~ airport.
File photo 1howe wllen daily parking ... 1e
wa1 t 3. 75. It'• now 15 and may increaee to 17 · ..
r I ...
r
" • '
I :
• I .
• ' i • I . : : .
I
-1
Oran e Co11l DAILV PILOT/Monda lember 13 1H2
Barkeep's tFagic death stuns patrons
Uy S'l'EVF. MITCHELL
O(tM Delly ,ttot It•"
Two yt·a"" aso, on his 80th btrthday, J. "Pupo"
Galslnl'11 friends at The Saloon ll\ La1:cuna Beach
f(r<'f'ted thl• bartt·ndcr with on 18-foot long cake on tht>
mOhlll(UllY bar top.
Last year, on his 81st b1rthdoy, regular patrons of
tlw popular watering hole hired the Laguna 8e1.1eh
High School band t.o play for the birthday boy
Saturday night. J>opo'il friends held ll wak<' of
sorts, for the 82-year-old veteran mixologtst, who was
killed in an automobile cr&11h In Costa Mesa earlier in
the day. . ~ "He was the beat, the very beat," said Saloo11
barkeep Tracy Moore, who said Popo t.a"ght him
everything he kn.ows about the bar trade.
A color photograph of the smiling Philippine-born
bartender hangs over the cappuccino machines at the
South Coast Highway bar, with a legend underneath
that reads, simply, "Popo: 1900 to 1982.''
News or Popo's death shocked regular patrons.
who wandert.-d 1nw thl' atandup hur Sunday mornlnai.
"I saw him Friday nil(hl," 1111ld John L.ure, o
long-tim &lwn tl<k'r . "llt: .iud hili stomach wa» UJ*'l
and ho WAM drinking broth oil mght"
Co1tl.!1 MP110 pullet• ~ulJ llw oct.ugenorlan'11 cur
slamml-d lntu o trt.'<' at. uboul 2.55 u.m. Saturday after
lt•avlnit ttw rood on Elt11t 17th Strl•t.•t i.n that city.
Moort.• ~Id h<' and Popo hud l'ltlO!ed the Saloon at
about 2 um.
"I tuld him I'd see him thot night, And he walkt.-d
out tht' door," Moore said.
"l was probably the Inst 111w Lo talk to him."
Police said they have not reccivt.-d a pathologist's
report on the acc:idcnt, but. spct:ulate the burtender
might have suffert.>d a heart attack.
"We just won't know !or sure until the report is
back," a polll-e sergeant said today.
Popo had bt.'Cn a bar consultant and bartender for
nearly five decades, !.ervlng up drinks in Ireland,
Spain, Fran<.-e, Portugal and ltaly
He was named an honorary life member of the
UnJtttd SwtM Bartt>nd<'l'I' Oulkl, ·and had won \WC>
lnwrnu\lorwl nwurda for hla drinks
Hla apeciulty, o powerful COn<.'OCllon c:allt'd "Popo'1
Coffee," Will II r~vQrlt-0 al The &loon.
It's a rt1gi11k•rt-d drink 110rt of 11 palt>nt which
mean.sonly 64rknders ot Thl' Saloon can scll lhl' stuff.
Popo mlx<'d the brew In his Costa Mesa hc>mt 1tnd
broujht 1t t.o work. It's u t'Omblnatlon of five llqu urs
pour<'d Into cofCec with 11 thick whipped creom
topping.
Before working al 'l'h1• Snloon, Popo was bar
manngl'r al Ambrosia and worked a l ~melia's in
Newport Beach four y(•an1. Before that ne was bar
consulwnt for the Outrigger rt.'!lwurunts, nnd sevoral
restaurants In Los Angeles.
Married lour times, the bartender hvt.>d alone m
Costa Mesa. He leaves a 22-year-old daughter who
lives in Arizona.
Memorial services Cor the veteran bartender arc
pending.
L ~ . 1-..-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------""'."""----..... -! lMesa explosion ! ~
)damages 4 hOuses r .. • I ·: A lat.e night explosion beneath
~a car in Costa Mesa sent pieces of
~a pipe bomb flying through the
lJair, damaging four houses and
leaving neighbors stunned and
frightened.
,
\ Police said that the device,
JOSSibly a pipe bomb. was placed
b y unknown suspects ·1ate
Saturday ni~ht beneath a 1980
Mustang parked an the rear alley
·of :l'>6 E. 16th Place.
No one was hurt in the 11 p.m.
. explosion that blew out the car's
~•gas tank, damaged the gas line to
an adjacent apartment and sent
1 'f>ieces of shrapnel Clying into two
, 'J{arages and a living room.
· • :. Antonio Tamalui, owner of the
" damaged car, said he had no idea
who wanted to destroy his car.
•' • ·. Maggie O'Donnell, who was
"J ·asleep at the time, said she heard
1 .tJ .. ,. explosion and ran out as soon ,.
as her apartment began filling up
with gas fumes.
"I thought there was a war
on," said O'DonneU. "I was so
scared I didn't even turn the
lights on . I just ran downstairs."
The tom gaa line was repaired
early Sunday morning.
Pieces of the pipe bomb went
through a garage belonging to Ed
a nd Vivian Hollingsworth,
damaging b oxes of stor ed
Christmas decorations, before
entering an adjacent apartment.
Joanie Goldsmith said she was
watc hing television when she
heard the explosion a nd ran
outside to join nearby residents.
Goldsmith said she didn't
reallie until Sunday morning
that a three inch piece of the
metal bomb had tom through her
living room wall and then hit the
ceiling. She found the chunk· of
metal lying near her front door.
Joa nie Goldsmith ho lds
pelle t found in ceiling.
: Probe clears labor secretary
•>
" NEW YORK (AP) -A special
prosecutor said today that "there
·· femains insufficient credible
, ~vidence" to conclude that Labor
• ~retary Raymond J. Donovan
once had ties to mobsters.
, In a report to the U.S. Court of
· ~ppeals, special prosecutor Leon ~ilverman a lso said he was
'· concluding his 9-month probe of
~he Reagan administration
Plbinet officer.
In his 100-page report, ~lverman said there was not
~nough evidepce "to conclude
· that Secret'lf'y""Donovan was
l#'truthful when he testified
• R.efore the Senate Labor
:: A>mmiltee and a grand jury as to
l hJ,s... re!tticnsifl p , or lack or
relationsh ip, with Salvatore
Briguglio, William Masselli and
other reputed organized crime
figures."
In an accompanying letter to
the appellate court, Silverman
also declared: "To date there has
been developed no evidence of
any relationship" between
Donovan and the gangland-style
slaying of Nathan Masselli, the
son of William Masselli, a
reputed mobster serving a µrOOn
term on a trucrt hijacking
conviction.-
0 n Aug. 25, the younger
Masselli, who had allowed
federal authorities to record
several telephone conversations
with a_ lawyer for Donovan's
New Jersey cons t ruction
company, was shot lo death in
the Bronx.
"On the basis of the
investigation to date, there
appears to be no evidence of a
relationship between the Masselli
murder and Secretary Donovan.''
Silverman's report said.
The special prosecutor said he
has directed the FBI to report the
r esults of his findings to
Attorney General William
French Smith, and said that, "IC
any evidence is subsequently
developed indicating such a
relationship." he would be
willing to accept a new
appointment to reopen the
Donovan investigation .
. r.---::7.~ :~~ ... ~ Cloudy day
i• I
ranging from 15 to 25 mph m1y
llCCOmpany 19mper•turH In the
809 In nOf"lhern ~· While lh• ·.
--------------· low dtMr1 for-I P<edictt hight
,'Coastal In the 90t
Boetetl lrom Point Conception to lhe Mexlc:M1 border can upect
, Low clouds, b.comlng partly llghl varlal>le wlnd1 during lhe
sunny Tuesd•y altemoon. Cou1•J night •nd morning hour a. 'K>w 82. Inland 87. Cout•l lffllh 72. t>ecomfng toulh-1etly II 8 to
Inland 80. W•Ulf 89. 18 knotl In IM •lternoon with • Elaewhere. llghl •nd nrlable Ho-3-fool touth-1 swell.
, ')'Vind• tonight and Tue1day -----------------• •morning. bee<>mlng 1ou1h-t 10
• -• 8 10 18 kno1a atternoon anc1 Ten1.peratures 41Y.nlng hOura. Wind w111• 1 to 3 ,
feet Six to 8-foot oomblned -·bv• northern outer w•t9'11 lodty, HI Lo f'cp
..
adecteulng tonight. Othenwl11 1 to Albany 86 51
3 foot WHI 10 •ou1hwHt •-II. Alt>uque 88 •& 01 ~'Cini' Wealhe< ~· Conald•r•l>le low cloudlneu Amatllto 89 57
tonight and TUNOIY mornlno with Aahevltte 74 84 NOAA us 0.01 o1 c-c~
pani.1 clearlng In afternoon ~:::~:~ Cty ~= ::
Austin t9 81 U S e.iumore 86 81 . . s1unniary. e1111no• 88 47
Thunderstorm• t>oomed end
IHhed IOWl\S fr"om -••n l.ak•
Superior to the T elUll Panhandle
lod•Y. •lier tornaaoea touched down In Mlnnt•Cll. Wltcon•ln
•nd Mlasls.tppl. .. The roof I• gone. wlndOWI .,.
oul. 1wc 911age1 ind one barn
•re gone, ' Hid Mule Cr .. -. detcrlblng lhe dtm•oe Sundty
from tcrn•do·llkt wind• lhll
11ruc11 lier home In Dunn County. wm of Eau Claire, Wis.
AuthcrltlH uld about two
doZ9n ~ °' •ci-rtmenta on E•u Clalre'• 1oulh•rn frlllQH -e dam.ged by the ttonM MCI
lour people from nMtby Altoona
-• 1realed /or lnJu"-c:euMd by broken glue.
Downed power llnM Ind power out~ -e reported In north·
c•nlr•I Okl1hom•. which wH pounded by hall. high wlndt and t>rlef, heavy downpOUra. Wlrldl Of
ever 80 mph struck Okl•h<>m•
City, ottlcl1l1 11td Sc1tttred ru= ~ MM> OOCUfred In
In Vlol•. l<•n • IOUth-t of Wichita. two people -e llllghtly
lnjur.c:I when the wind• toppled a
bar!lJ the Sedgwick County
Blrmlnghm 82 72 .23
Bltrnarctc 66 40
8cMll 67 40
Boaton 78 58
Brownsvtlt 97 81
Bulfllo 87 65
Burtlngton 87 58
Caaper 74 •3
Chatl91n SC 82 70 Ch•rtttn WV 89 83
Cllatltt• NC 83 88 Cheyenoe eo 44 '17 c~ 81 10
ClndnNtl 84 72
Cleveland 80 86
Clml>i• SC 85 73
Columbut IMI 83 ~Ft Wlh tS 78
Oeyton 82 ee
DellYer 87 47 .22
OM MolnM I& 88 .t 1
Oelroll 87 83
OulUth 70 51 .83
El Puo 81 81 .01
Fatgo 68 at .2t
Rag1t11f 92 42
0rMt F• 50 33 HtnfOfd 17 118 HtltM 11 41 .42
Honolulu 87 74
Hol.Mon 92 eo ·Ind~ 84 ..
Jaot111n MS 17 75 .;ta
Sctitlered •hower1 lell In the •
JICktnvlle
l<•n1 City
Knoxvllla
LUV9QU
Lltlle Roell
Lou!"""9 t.ul>t>Oek
Memc>hl• Mlernl
Mlfweuk ..
Mpi..8t.P
NUhvllle
NewOrlNn•
N-Yorll
Norfolk No. Platl•
Okie City Omen• on.ndo Pl\~~
Phoenix
Phl•burgh
Ptltnd, Me
Ptlend, Ore
Providence
~
Salt lak• San Antonio a.tile
~~
SI Louie
SI P·Tenlpl
SI Ste MMe
91 7• 01
86 87 17
84 72
88 70
89 75 12
85 72 05 19 62
79 75 56
84 83
81 89
17 57 .07
81 72 .88
01 73 2.27
85 65
73 84
82 •8 24 ta 69
81 58 52
112 74 01
89 82 87 71
86 88
80 57
72 50 .06 83 83 90 83
74 52
83 48 04
t7 78 84 40 03
08 78
IMI 52 03
15 71 .03 111 74
84 83
lllilrlfl'• depenmen1 Mid, Ii
-:"-d''":'_h•H_~_r ... PlfilM-
8
_ •• _·,n
1
he-
1
n _~_:_, ':· ·,•iiiilllliili!~~!-~!!_ '~!-1no Utah. •nd remn•nte of
troPICel .Corm Chrle d•""**' llMlwtemT-V~. •s Z; 0
California
The we1ther picture for
Southern Callfomla on Tueeday I~ ~1'*9 MCI drlale
l'°"9 ""' cottt with ...... ~ wl11cJ1n .. 1 111 111ountal111 .,,
~ IOCOrdlnO to ttit NltioNI
---~· ... Ill Loe A'*6el 11\ey '*' 10 wltft co .. tel hlth• r1no1110
from 17 to 83. "••ldent• ol mo11nt11n cof!'munlllt• •novtd tJl~t l~fltUI .. re lClllllO from tl5 to n . ou .. y wind•
'
:::::..
1•2
I -.' t ,
1 t ,
1
1
' Tomorr-. Hlfh Tld9. 8:31 a rn., i.Ow Tkte: 1:4S p.m.: Swell c<lreotlon: etw.
,_,
Spokane 70 42
SyrlCOte 83 56
Topeka 815 66 11
Tucton 81 81
Tul .. t9 72 05
Washlngtn 17 67
WiChlt• 113 158
CALIFORNIA
Bllkerslield 113 68
Blythe 113
Eureka 81 53
Fretno 90 81
L•ncasl8' 82 59
LOI Ant" 74 84 Marytvllt 111
Montwey 74
Needlel 92
O.itlMld 80 59
Paso Rot>lel 87 53
Red Blulf 90 80
RedWood City 90 eo
Seer llTlllflto 87 83
Salln11 78 57
S•n Otego 78 89
Sian Franclll<IO 78 65 S1n1a 8arb•re 72 81
Sant• Marl• 74
Stocaton 90 85
Therm•I 93
Vkl•h 17
B•rttow 90 83 8lg~ 88 31 Calllinti n M
Long ee.ell at 81
Monrovle ,, 84
Mt. woaon 71 55
Newport Beech 74 07 Onl.,lo 78 80 P•lm 8pnng1 93 83 P...Oena 82 81
S.n Bern.wdl.no 79 59 Sat! O•bf'ltl 11 ee Sen JON If 55
Satlt• An• 11 07 r 91\0e Veftey 72
Tides
TODAY
S.COnd high 8:43 p "'· •• , TUHDAY Flrtl low 1.lt • Ill. -0.1 '1111 lllOh I 3 t a.m. 4.7 ~low U3p111. 1t ~ lllOh 7 45 p "'· 8.4 Sun Ht• 1 ·03 p M., rtH•
TuHdly 0 35 I tn MOOll tell 4;50 P m,. rlHI
Tueectey 3:10 a.in
Irvine ·school Dells toll
Most of Irvine's school-aged
children ended another summer
vacation and returned to class
t.oday .
Students at levels from
kindergarten through the 12th
grade reported today to 22
schools in the Irvine Unified
School District.
They were the last to report.
Others began clas~ al Irvine
High School last week. And
school never stops at year-round
campuses at Vista Verde and El
Camino Real elementary schools.
District officials say 15,872
students will be enrolled in
cluses by the end of \he month, a
3 percent increase over last year's
l~.461.
IRVINE BED TAX. • •
From Page A1
of the operating costs of a new
shelter approved for the city,"
said poUce Capt. Charles BoZ7.a.
They include doubling fees to
claim pets impounded. First
impou.nda would C08t •10 l.natead
of •5. climbing to '30 for three or
more repeat cues. Boarding 0081a
would change from •2 to 15 per
day. Adoption fees would remain
•5 for cata and •10 tor dop.
Clty planners, In a recently
completed report, said new taxes
generated by annexing 686 acres
in Laguna Hilla and up to 2,964
acres l.n a sphere of lnfluence
would not be auffident to pay
cl~ C08tl to service the area.
The Koll Co. had propoeed the
a nnexat ion. The firm is
proposing to build the Rossmoor
Business Park on 189 acres al the
southern end of the annexation
area. acoordJ.nB to the city report .
Following is a partial agenda
for the Irvine City Council:
COltUNT CA&iNOAll
I) Minuta of put rMeUnp.
2) ProcWNltlonll !I> Appllutlona for alcoholic bevrragr
llcll'.-
4) lrvine Kiwanla Oub reql'ftt f« Alcon
P11tk way rou ie f « °""' 4 pa.rack
,.
~) &d noq-fof SmlO< C:~ni . .-r )Uu:tw.n
addtuon 61 Aj>proval ol plan• and authoruy to adv~rtlte '"wftdng project for Jamborre
Ibid. 1) ~t cillllrK'I fQI llarvard Avl'nu<>
and rftOJuU-MtUnt public hearln1 and
ratlfYl.nc c.i~· lnvll.auoo of bldl
I) Gutter dralnaae Improvement• for
Oibnli.ar U'.111 c.n-t avl'nl'ft
9) i.u.~ of add111onal ••fUM hauUna
pHTl'lila..
10) Approval ot _,.,..,., rwoh1uoo
11) Update on fsir houalnl l1w1u1t
N!ll>lutlod.
Irvine man hurt
in home attack
A 22-year-old Irvine man,
sleeping in the living room of his
Northwood apartment, was
stabbed in the chest, arm and
forehead early today by an
'\Jnknown assailant, police
reported.
Philip L. Vind was treated and
later released from Western
Medical Center following the
2:30 a.m. knife attack. Police
have made no arrests and said
the motive for the attack remains
unclear.
However, economic: slowdowns
that enabled the Irvine Company
to scJJ only 586 homes the past
year in tbe formerly fast-
growmg community have made
pred1ct1ons difficult, warned
Dave King, planning and
facilities director.
Officials said they wouldn't
know until late today how many
former students did not return
this fall.
Present contacts with school
this summer indicated that most
campuses should experience
shght enrollment increases, King
said The new statistical "bulge"
is m ages 6 and 7 (first and
second graders), he added.
Meanwhile. 538 full-time
classroom teachers called roll
today. including eight who are
on the JOb for the fir-st time. The
number of teachers is about the
same as last year's 540. A few
last-minute openings are being
held down by substitutes until
new employees are hired.
Teachers are in classrooms
although the district and the
Irvine Teachers Association have
not agreed to a contract for the
school year. O!Jicials say
negotiations are conunumg.
One bright economic note was
Gov. Edmund G . Brown J r.'s
signing Thursday or a b ill
designed to allow Irvine to retain
about $1 million for its building
fund.
The money -unused local
bond funds, state appropriations
and inte rest -would have
reverted to state use without the
bill, sponsore d by
Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson.
Our luxurious camel blazer
and Own Make flannels
Superb malerials and wor kmanship combine
for lhese handsome casuals. The blazer of pure
camel hair comes on our 3-button m odel snd
fcarurcs Golden Fleece embossed lcarhcr but-• tons, $300. To complement, wool flannel Odd
Trousers from our ow n workrooms in brown, or
light, medium or oxford grey, $90
UTUllSHIO llU
~~~~r.J/
~~iifii~
l'urntshlnge for lltn. Womtn lf loys
SJO W~ST ITH STfU~RT, l.OS AN<iHLRS, CAl.IR
FASUION ISi.ANO, NtiWPORT BBACH. CAUH
DIAIGI ClllT Cllll 1111 1111101
MONDAY SEPHMBER 1:.1 198~ ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Spain plane crash death toll rising
MALAGA, Spain (AP) A
Spanish charter jet en route to
Ne w York with 393 people
aboard crashed on takeoU Crom
the Malaaa Airoort today, and
officials sa.Jd at least 46 people
w e r e killed, most or them
burning to death ins ide the
flaming DC-10.
In New York, a Spantax flight
coordinator sa.Jd 95 percent of the
passengers were Americans
booked through the Carefree
David Company i.n Miami.
Airport authorities In Malaga
said 44 bodies had been pulled
from the smoldering wreckage
and taken to a military hangar
set up as an emergency morgue.
Carlos Haya Hospital ofCicials
In Malaga said two Injured
people died in the hospital and at
least 17 of 90 other people taken
there were in serious condition
with injuries or bums.
Clock ticks
on rush to
stop flood
This Is the second of three parts In a Daily
Piiot series on the Santa Ana River's Impact on
Orange County. Today, the flood threat and
steps being taken to defuse It, plus a scenario
for a major flood under current conditions.
By STEVE TRIPOLI Of the D911y Piiot ltaft
It's a dry bed of rock, dirt and scattered brush
almost au year long, with perhaps a trickle· of
water running here and there. lnvisible even to its
nearest neighbors in much of Orange County, it
hides behind rising embankments of low
shrubbery that back the concrete-lined channel
walls.
Police said 100 people were
Injured. Airport officials put the
figure at 113.
The plane, FUght No. 995 of•
the Spanish charter company
SpanJ,aX, carried 380 passengers,
the maximum, and a crew of 13,
the compan y said from Its
headquarters at Palma de
Majora. It did not Immediately
report their nationalities or
names. It said the pilot and co-
pilot escaped unharmed, but
th rce stewardesses we' rt!
unaccounted for.
Airport sources sajd the
paaaengera Inc lude d many
Americana a nd Canad ia ns
returning home after vacationing
at Malaga, a picturesque beach
resort city on Spain's famous
Costa del Sol. They said
arrangements were being made
to have an Iberia Airlines Boeing
747 fly the survivors not needing
medical treatment to New York.
There were conflicting reports
about. what happened.
A New Yorker, who eecaped
the wreck.age with his wife, told
The Auoclated Preas In a
telephone Interview from a hotel
after the crash that the pilot
appeared to have decided to
abort takeoff, a front lire blew
out, and the plane plowed acros.9
a highway, coming to rest in a
field.
"The re was somewhat of a
The Santa Ana River is out of sight and out of
mind for many people. Because of that, it is oft.en
difficult for them to perceive the magnJtude of the
threat it represents.
But those with long memories of this area,
those whose job it is to know the river and many
others can tell you that nature has placed its own
Dr. JekyJ.J and Mr. Hyde in our midst.
P rado Da m's huge spillway, on which groups of helicopters often
la nd, could not sto p Santa Ana R iver in a m ajor flood .
And those who reduce s uch things to statistics
say that the major flooding the river is capable of
would, at present, be a disaste r second in
TUESDAY: PO LLUTION PROBED
Salt levels need attention
California only to a great earthquake in a densely
populated area. .
The river that usually doesn't flow at all is
the greatest flood threat west of the mighty
Mississippi River, according to the U.S . Army
Corps of Engineers..
There were very few people here in 1862
when, in the words of longtime river watcher H.
George Osborne, the river turned much of the
county Into "one vast lake from the foothills at
Fullerton to the ocean."
There has been flooding regularly ever sJnce.
Olbome, c:Urecto.r of \he Sant.a Ana Rivw J'lood
Protection Agency, says the floods of 1884, 1916,
1927, 1938 and 1969 were the most significant.
The 1938 flood, as one of the moet recent. is
well remembered. There were hardly any eerlous
flood control facilities then, and the waters
"overwhelmed practically all the barriers that had
been put up," said Osborne. There was
widespread damage and 58 lives lost.
That flood, a small one compared to the best
estimates of the 1862 flow, alarmed residents aRd
officials enough to result in the consU'UCtion of
Prado Dam. which straddles the river just over the
county Une in Riverside County.
The main purpose of a dam is simply to pvt a
barrier between a he;ivy flow of water and an
area downstream that would otherwise flood.
When it was completed in 1940, officials felt
sure that Prado Dam could handle any future
flooding on the Santa Ana. They have since
discovered that is far from the case.
At the time, the severity of the 1862 flood was
not known, and the weather conditions that
caused it were not considered reasonably possible
for this area.
The facts now known have led to a new
conclusion that no one seriously disputes: Though
Prado Dam is big enough to hold back waters from
a flood so large that it can be expected to occur just
once every 70 years (a so-aalled 70-year flood), an
1862-st.yle flood is much larger but still can be
expected to happen eventually, and it would
overwhelm Prado's capacity.
By comparison, the 1938 flood was only a
40-year flood -were it to occur now it would be
fully contained at Prado.
What this means, according to Dennis Majors
of the Army Corps of Engineers, is that an
1862-atyle flood would send water rushing over
Prado's spillway and toward Orange County at a
rate of nearly 1.8 million gallons per second -
some eight limes the caphcity of the river channel
here.
Such a flood can be reasonably expected to
occur about once every 200 years -there's a
(See MAJOR, Page Bl)
FULLl!fl'TON
Large 200-year flood would soak a ll
blue a r ea , but even smaller l 00-year
flood would drench coast (dark blue) .
-INDEX-Airport parking to go up?
At Your Service
Erma Bombeck
Cavalcade
Cl888lfied
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Editorial
Entertainment
Art Hoppe
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Movies
National News
Public Notices
Sports
Dr. Stei.nc:rohn
Stock Markets
Television
Theatera
Weather
A4
A7
A7
C6-10
B5
B5
. C6
A6
B4
A7
A7
A7
B4
A3
C6
Cl-:>
A7
B3
B6
B4
A2
S upervisors study proposal for $2 daily boost
By FR EDERICK SCHOEME HL
Ofttle DMtyflllotli.tl
Parking fees charged at John
Wayne Airport would Increase
substantially under a proposal
that will be considered Tuesday
by the orange County Board of
S upervbora.
Under the propoal, the daily
rate charged at the main parking
lot adjacent to the alrpor\
terminal would climb t.o $7 from
$5. The 50-cent per ho\#r nt.e for
short-term U1e would not change,
however. .
The daily rate charged in the
long tenn parking lot north of
the airport -the lot favored by
moet travelers -would lncreue
to $4 per day from $2.50.
The monthly rate would increase
to $30 from $10.
The Increases, if approved by
supervisors, would boost parking
revenue from S2.24 million to
$3.1 million ahnually_ :--: an
increase of more than '86(),000,
according to a report by Airport
Manager Murry Cable.
Although county-owned,
parking lots concesaiona are
operated by Parking Company of
America.
all lots for revenue up to $3
million.
PCA would receive an
additional 2 percent of gross
receipta above $3 million under
the plan.
Depending on the number of
can parked during the first year
of the new rat.es, PCA's income
would be between $287 ,000 to
$297,000 -an Increase of
between 1 percent and 14 .tS
percent over 1981 c:ompenutlon,
Cable aal~.
Cable aaid the new rat.es wo"1d
compare with thoee charged at
other Southern California
airports.
panic,'' said the man, who did not
want to identify himself. "The
s tewardesses opened the doors
and people began to leave . . . I
went down the chut.c that was In
the front of thejlanc. There
were flames aroun the engine in
the back oC the plane . . by the
f'nd, tlae name.>$ were engulfing
tht:' entire plane."
Spantax said the DC-10
c·rashed aftRr having ·'technical
diff1cult1e!J."
Church
• issue
looms
By STEVE MARBLE of111¥'Da111 t>ttot atan
As it stands, St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church is a modest
low-slung facility nestled in a
quiet Newport Beach
neighborhood. It's been there for
years.
The place bustles on Sundays
and has tum-away crowds at all
three services. The pastor is one
of the most popular in town.
But the c hurch with its
swelling congregation and its
need to expand is at the center of
a storm that has raged without
interruption for months.
It's a classic neighborhood
squabble with r eside nts and
church officials at loggerheads
over how tall a sanctuary sh~uld
be built.
The dispute lands in the lap of
the Newport City Council tonight
and council members say they're
inclined to ask the two sides to go
home and work out the problem
themselves.
Robert Curlis, an Irvine
r esident and leader of the
church's building committee, says
the church is in a tough spot
because it needs to expand and
with a limited amount of land,
there's only one way to go -up.
The church, located on a street
corner across the street from
Newport Harbor High School,
wants to build a wave-shaped
85-foot-high Ranctuary. It' would
increase seating from 700 to
1,335.
But residents in Cliffhaven, an
older community that surrounds
the church, are critical of the
plan and claim the sanctuary will
be too tall, too massive and, some
suggest. even ugly.
Residents have taken turns
describing the planned sanctuary
as something that wiU have the
appeal of "a Chicago grain
e levator" and be "an office
building disguised as a steeple."
Two weeks ago, council agreed
it didn't want to pick sides and
asked representatives from the
church and the neighborhood to
calm down, sit down and work
out a compromise.
There has been no compromise
and reports from the negotiation
meetings vary on whether
progress is being made.
"I don't see anything fruitful
coming of it so far," says Curtis.
"ln fact, we seem to be going in
the wrong direction."
Curtis claims residents, who
initially asked the church to drop
its sights to 36 feet. are pushing
for a 28-foot height limit.
Barbara Jean Whitford, a
Cllffhaven resident, says she
believes the talks have gone well
and that a settlement may not be
far off. She wants the council to
1 give the bargaining group more
time.
(See CHURCH, Page AZ)
The biggest lncreue would
face finnll whoee employ ... park
at employee-only ~rktnc lota.
Under a revised agreemen t
negotiated by the county General
Services Agency, PCA 's
compensation would increase
from 6.85 percent of aro11
receipts from the main and
employee lotl and 26 pen:ent of aro.e receipca from \he Iona-term
lot t.o • O.t rate of 9.6 percent for
He aald a ra&e lncreue was
warranted, In part, due t.o the u:,:3ue hl1h demand-limited f ta. •tuaUon at the airport.
File photo how• wh en daily parkl"I rate
wae 13. 75. It's now SS and may iner•ee to 17.
• ' A I
I CIN Oran a Coaet DAILY PILOT/Monday, 8epttmbar 13, 1082
Barkeep's tragic death stuns patrons
By TEVE MITCHELL Ofttte Deity "Nol II•"
'l'wo yeal'H ugo, on hl11 80th birthday, J. "l'opo"
Galalnl'11 friends al Thl' S aloon In LQ.auna Beach
grt-cted the barll'ndt•r with an 18-foot Iona cake on the
mnhoJ(any bur top
Last yt•ur, on his IHst birthday, ~guJar patron.a of
the popular wuwr ing hofc h.lred th~ Laguna Beach
High School band lo play ror the birthday boy.
Saturday night, P opo's frie nds held a wake of
sorts, for thl' 82-year-old veteran mlxologiat, who was
killed Ir\ an automobile cra'lh in Costa Mesa earlier In
the day.
"He was the best, the very best," said Saloon
barkeep Tracy Moore, who said Popo taught h im
everything he knows about the bar trade.
A color photograph of the smiling Philippine-born
bartender hangs over the ca1>pucdno machines a t the
South Coast Highway bar, with a legend undernea th
th at reads, simply, "Popo: 1900 to 1982."
News of Popo's death shocked regular patrons,
whn wandt•rt-d into thl• at.nnduµ bar Sunday momlna.
"I 11uw him 1-'rlduy n ight," suld John Lora, •
lung·tlmt• Suloon-g0t1r. "Ill' 11a1<.l h111 atomach WWJ Upit't
and he WUl'I d rinklnu broth all mght."
Coslti Mt•3u pul ln· tU;1id tlw ol·togcnurlan'• ca r
slammed lntu u tr1..'t· ut t•bout 2:55 u m &turday after
leavln~ lhl' rood on Eoltt 17th St1·wt In that city.
Mocm· t'uld he and Popo had closed thl• Suloon at
about 2 sun.
"I told him I'd • him that nigh t, and he walked
out the door," Moore su1d
"l wu.s probably thl' last one to Wik to him."
Pulk~· suid they have not r<X'<'ived a pathologist's
report on t he accident. but speculate the bartender
might have suffered a heart all.af'k..
"We just won 't know for sure until the report 13
back," a police sergeant saidJoday.
PoPQ had been a bar consultant and barll!nder for
nearly five decadea, serving up d rinks in Ireland,
Spain, France, Portugal and Italy.
He was named an honorary life member of the
United SUIU.'t &r1.endl!r9' O ullJ, and had won iwo
lntl•rnallonol w urdal ror hu• drlnkll.
Hla i pt'<"IJlty, b powerful t'Oncoction called "Popo'1
Corft'(!," was a fovurll • at T he Saloon.
h 's a regl11tt·rl'<.I drink aort of a patent -whk h
means only bartt·ndcra at Thl' Saloon can !K?U the stult.
Popo mixed the brew in hla C.ocn.a Mesa home and
brought ll to work. h'~ u ('Omblnallon of live liqueun
poured Into coffet• with o thick whipped crea m
topping
Before working at T hl' Saloon, Popo was bar
manager at Ambrosia and work ed at Ame lia's in
New port Beach tour years. Before that he WWI bar
consultant for the Outrigger restaurants, a nd several
restaurants in Los Angeles.
Married four umcs. the bartender lived alone in
Costa Mesa. He leaves a 22-year-old daughll!r who
lives In Arizona.
Memorial servlcc:.-s for the veteran bartender a1'c
pending. 0
'Popo' Galsini
.
1 esa explosion Teachers start with contract
• ~amages 4 houses
: 1 A late night explosion beneath
: car in Costa Mesa sent pieces of
; r. pipe bomb flying through the
l-.IM. damaging four houses and
leaving neighbors stunned and
htened.
olice said that the device,
ibly a pipe bomb, was placed
u nknQ.wn s u s pec ts late
Saturday ni~ht beneath a 1980
Mustang parked in -tl'ie rear alley
. .of 256 E. 16th Place.
• No one was hurt in the 11 p.m.
• ~~plosion that blew out the car's g~ tank, damaged the gas line to
• ~ ad jacent apartment and sent
· :~Jeces of shrapnel flying into two
, *"ages and a living room. ., .
. , Antonio Tamaltzi, owner of the
·'damaged car, said he had no idea
who wanted lo destroy his CM.
''.Maggie O'Donnell, who was
,"a'lleep al the time. said she heard
1 U-0 explosion and ran out as soon .
as her apartment began f11lmg up
with gas fumes.
"I thought the re was a war
on ," said O'Donnell. "I was so
scared I didn't even turn the
lights on. I just ran downstairs."
The tom gas line was repaired
early Sunday morning.
Pieces of the pipe bomb w ent
through a garage belonging to &i
a nd Viv ian Ho llings w o rth,
damaging b ox es of s tored
Christmas decorations. before
enll!ring an adjacent apartment.
Joanie Goldsmith said she was
wa tching television when she
heard the e xplosion and r an
outside to join nearby residents.
Go ldsmith s aid s h e didn't
reali%e until S unday morning
tha t a three Inch piece of the
metal bomb had tom through her
living room wall and then hit the
celling. She found the chunk of
metal lying near her front door.
Joanie Gol.dsrnith holds
pellet found in ceiling.
!Probe clears labor secretary
NEW YORK (AP) -A special
,prosecutor said today that "there
·remains insufficient cre dible
',evidence" lo conclude that Labor
'Secretary Raymond J . Donovan
'once had ties to mobsters.
·~In a report to the U.S. C.ourt of
:Appeals, s pecial prosecutor Leon ~ S i}verman also H id he w as
'concluding his 9-month probe of
th e Reagan ad m inistration
C,lbQ'tet officer.
'• In hi s 1'00 -p a g e r e port,
S ilve rman said there was not
enough evid ence "to conclude
't hat S ecr e tary Donovan w as
untr uthful w h en he testified
;b.e f o r e t h e Senat e Labo r
; Committee and a grand jury as lo :!Us re~ations hiE · or lack of
-re lationship, with Salvatore
Briguglio. William Masselli and
other reputed organized crime
figures."
In an accompanying letter to
the appellate court, S ilverman
also declared: "To dall! there has
been developed no evidence, of
any re lation s h ip " b e tween
Donovan and the gangland-style
slaying of Nathan Masselll, the
so n o f Willia m Masselli, a
reputed mobster serving a prison
t e rm o n a truc k hijacking
conviction.
On Aug. 25, the younger
Masselli, who h a d allo w e d
fed eral au thorities to record
several telephone con versations
with a_ lawyer for Donovan's
N e w Je r sey con stru c t io n
c.'Ompany . was shot to death in
the Bronx.
"O n the ba s i s of th e
in ves tigatio n to date, the re
appears to be no evidence of a
relationship between the Masselli
murder and Secretary Donovan,"
Silverman's report said.
The special prosecutor said he
has directed the FBI to re port th e
r esults o f his findlnrs, to
A ttorney G e ne r al W i lia m
French SmHh, and said that, "U
an y eviden ce is su bsequently
d e v eloped ind icating s uch a
r e la t ion s hip," h e w o uld be
willing t o acce pt a n ew
appointmen t to r e ope n the
Donovan investigation.
Cloudy day
renglng lrom 15 lo 25 mph mey eooompeny temper•tures In tht
80t In northefn deMft• while mt
----------· low d-1 IO<eCUt ptedletS high• In the 90s Boett<a from Polnl Concepuon
to the Mealclln border can ex1>«t ' , Coastal
· Low c;louos. t>ec:omlng partly llghl varlable wind• during tht
...,nny Tuesd~ afternoon. Coastal nig ht end morning hour a.
low 62, Inland 67 Coe1t8J high 72, bec:omlng south-terly 81 8 to Inland 80 Wetllf 69. 18 knola in the tfttf'noon With •
• Elsewhere. light end varleble M o-3-loot aouthwt1t swell.
winds t onight end Tuesday ----------(noming, becoming toU1"'-t to
-.st 8 to t8 knoll afternoon •od Temperatures .-itng hOurt. Wlod wevts t to 31
.i,et. Six to 8-loot combined '9eu ' over n0t1hern outer wetere today, Hf Lo Pep .4ecraaelng tonight. Othtnwlw t to Albany 88 51
3 foot wHt to soulh-•t swell AlbuQut 68 48 0 t
Contlderable low c;toudlneu Amerlllo 89 57
tonight and Tu&Sdey lnOfnlng with Ashevllle 74 84 partlal c;tearing In elternoon Atlanta 78 68 Atlante; Cty 79 85
Austin 99 81
U. . suttuuary =~~~e : :;
Blrmlnghm 82 72 23 Thundaratorms boomed and
laSlled town• tram _t.,n Lake
Superlo< to the Te•u P•nhaodlt
todey. t iter tornadoea touc:hod down In Minnesota. WIKonsln
end MISllltiP9'.
"The roof II gone. Wlndowl are out. two 9erege1 end ant bem
are gone. · .. Id Merle Cr•-.
dncrlblng the damege Sunday
from tornedo-llke wind• thel 1truclc her homt In Ovnn County.
_, of Eau Claire. Wla
Aut'1orllles H id about two
do--. homes 0< epertments on
E1u C111re·a soulhtrn frlng11 _. d1maged by the atonna &lld
four people from nearby Alloon•
were lrH ted tor lnJurlel eautlld
by brolcan glua.
Oowntd power nnee end power
oulagte -• reported In north-c;1ntral Oklahoma, which wes
pounded by hell, high wind• end
brltl, htevy downpour•. Winds of over 80 mph struc;k Okl•homa
Clly, olflclala aald. Se•lltrtd
pawl!' outages also oc:cutrtd In
lulM.
In Vlole, Ken • eouth•Mt of
Wlc;Nta, two people were tlgfltly
ln)Urtd wtletl the wlncla IOPPltd I
btrn, lht Sedgwick County thtrlN'• dtpet1ment .. ,d. Scattered ahowtre ltll In the
«*llrll HIOh P1alne. lhe Aoc1c:i.
and tht <Jr"t Buln In N4"tlldl
and Uleh. and remn1n11 or
lropteal 1torm Chfla d1mpenecl
Ille Wffttirn T~ VllW;.
California
The wttthtr picture tor Southern Cellf«nl• on TUMday lncludtl Clol.ld..._ Md ctnme
9lonQ the aottl w4tll IMff!U!':J wlndlntH In 111011nt1ln• an .,...,,.. ICICordlnt to the NellONI w .... ..,.,,...
Hlgtll In l oe Anotltt mlY ,,_
eo with oo .. tll high• renglno rrom 11 to es. AHldtnt• ol
Mountain c:ommunlllt J. ahould
t.llP*Ct tem~ratur"..'.f•ac:111no from 16 to 75 Query w ind•
'
Bltm•rck 66 40
9otM 87 40
Botton 76 58 Brownavlle 97 8 t
IM falo 87 85
Burlington 87 58
Caaptt 7• '3 Cherlstn SC 82 70
Chet1ttn WV 89 63 Cherhte NC 83 68
Chtytnne 80 44 I 7
Chlc;ago 81 70 Clodnnatl 84 72
Clevtlen<I 89 8$
Clmbla SC 85 73
Columbua 88 63
O.l·fl Wth 95 78
Oayton 82 68
OtnW!' 57 ., .22
Otl MolnM 85 88 .9\
Detroit 87 e3
Duluth 70 s 1 .13
El PllO 8t 81 .Ot Fergo 58 3t .29
Al!lllllff 82 42
OrMt Flh 60 33
Hanford 87 se Hellnl 51 41 .42
HonolUIU 87 74
Hou91on 92 eo lndneplft 84 •
Jldlln MS e7 76 .3e
'
Na-Wu~~• NOAA U S 0.01 ot CO'nm.-c•
Fronts·Cold ..-. Warm w..
Jacilsnvlle
Kans City
Knoxvlltt
LIS Vegu
Little Rack Loutavme
Lubbock
Memphla Miami
Milwaul!M Mpls-.St.P
Nuhvllle
N41W Otttene New York
Norlolk
No. Plettt
Olde City
<>mah• Orlando Phlladpflla
PhOenl•
Pllttburgh
ptllnd. Mt
ptlend, Of• PY~
Rlltlgh
fWlo 8111 u ke
8an Antonio
Stettle
ShrevtPOfl
SlouI ~ ...
St loult
St P-T emp1
SI Sit Mlll'lt
91 74 01
88 87 t7
84 72
86 70 89 75 t2 85 72 .05
89 62
79 75 .56
88 83
8t 89 77 57 07
81 72 .66
91 73 2.27
85 65
73 M 82 48 24
118 89
el 58 52
92 74 Ot
89 82 87 71
86 88
80 57
72 50 .06
83 83 90 83 14 52
83 48 .Olt
97 78 M 49 ,03
118 78
841 52 .03
85 7 t 03 91 74
84 83
1:43 p.m.: l •ell
'
Spolcane 70 42
Syrecuse 83 56
Toc*I• 86 66 11
Tuc:son 81 6t
Tul .. 99 72 .05
W11hlngtn 87 67
Wichita 93 68
CALIFORNIA
81ktrslleld 93 68
Blythe 93
Eurelle 81 53
Fresno 90 81
Lencaster 82 59
LOI Angeles 74 84
Maryevltlt 91
Mont.,ey 74
Needles 92
Oakland 80 59
PHO Roble• 87 S3
Red 81utt 90 80
Redwood City 90 80
Sec:remento 87 83 Sellnu 78 57
San Diego 76 69
Sen Frencltco 78 55
Sant• 81tb1re 72 et
Santa M1tl1 74
Stookton 90 85
Tlltrmel 93
Ukleh 87
es,.. tow 90 83
Big BM< 88 31
Cat111n1 77 841
long 8Meh 8t 88
Monrovia 8t 84
Mt. Wll.an 7t 55 Ntwpa<I U..Ch 74 87
Ontario 78 80
P1!m Spt1ng1 93 8S
Pa..Oen1 ea et
Sen BernardlnO 79 59
Sen O•bllel 8t 841
S•n JON " SS
Senti Ane 78 87
T W-0. V 1lley 72
Tides #.
TOOAY a.cono NOi\ e ~ p.m e 1
TUHOAY
"'" IOw
1·68 1111 -0 1
~IOw I 31t 11'-4' 1•43 111111 u leoond lliOl'I 7:48 p.m 8.4 lun Hll 7:03 p m • tl tu
Tuetd•y 8:35 • "'· Moon aeta 4'110 p m , tlaa• t u.day :J. 10 Im
'
Teachers in the Newport-M~sa
Unified School District began the
echool year today w ith a cont'racl
granting them a 3 percent pay
h.ike, following a voll! Friday by
teachers to accept the district's
offer.
The Newport-Mesa Federation
or Teachers voted 240 to 68 to
'accept the contract. There were
two abstentions. It was the first
time in 10 years that teachers in
the district began the school year
with a contract.
However, the validity of the
contract appeared cloudy today
after another teach ers' union
filed a decertification petition ,
asking to re present the district's
800 ll!achers.
Pat Stephan, president of the
New port-M esa Ed u c a ti o n
A ssoc iation, a C alifornia
Teache rs Association affiliate,
said the petition was signed by
m ore than 30 percent o f the
district's teachers. She added
that the union had rriore than 250
members.
Stephan said that the teachers
who signed the petition were
dissatllfied w ith the con tract
agreement calling for 3 percent
pay hike.
Maya Decker, president of the
335-member Ne wport-Mesa
Fede ration of Teache r s, the
union representing the district's
ll!achers, said s he was surprised
by the timing of the petition.
"I feel very good about the
contract,'' said Maya. "It received
a 77 percent endorsement and
I'm making an assumption that
those who didn't show up were
happy with the contract.
"We 're not happy with 3
percent. But I feel that's all the
district •n oCfer right now until
the $tall! comes across.with more
money.''
District officials were unsure
today how the petition will affect
the tcach.ers' new contract, T he
sta t e Publlc Employ me nt
Relations Board will have to
review the signatures and decide
if an election for a new union
will be held.
"We're not sure if we have a
contract or not," said d istrict
spokeswoman Jean Harmon. "I
just think that people have put a
lot of work into this contract."
The Newport-Mesa &iucation
Associa tion re presented the
d istrict's teach e rs until 1979
when teachers voted lo switch to
the A.FL-CIO affiliall!, Newport
Mesa Federation of Teachers, to
represent the m in contract
negotiations.
Mesan critical
after knifing Disabled vie in nieet
A Costa Mesa man is in crilicaJ
condition and two other men are
in eollce c ustody following a
s tabbing Sunday night, police
said.
Luis Andrcxia, 25, is in criticaJ
condition a t F o untain Valley
Community Hospital following
t he 11 p.m . st a bbing in the
parking lot at the Reef Bar, 820
W. 19th St .. Costa Mesa.
Michael Lee Stanley, 24, Costa
Mesa was arrested on suspicion
o f atte mpte d murde r a n d
Michael Wayn e Lawson , 29,
Costa Mesa, was a rrested on
suspicion of armed robbery and
assault with a deadly weapon.
HARMARVILLE, Pa. (.(\.P) -
Pac-Man was guided by breaths
of air, turns of the head and voice
commands at the Sip and Puff
pinball tournament, kicking off
National Rehabilitation Week.
"It's the same kind of escapism
for me that it is for e verybody
else." said S and Blatt, 35, a
quadriplegic taking part in the
pinball tourney along with 74
other disabled people, including
p araple g ics, a mpute es a nd
cerebral palsy victims.
The rehabilitation week began
Sunday. Hospitals and clinics
s u c h as the Harmarville
Rehabilitation Cenll!r are holding
activities to impro ve public
a wa reness of the needs of the
disabled.
CHURCH. • •
From Page A1
Not all the council members,
though, are willing to wait.
Councilman Paul 1 Hummel,
r unning for re-election. claims
colleagues want to put off ta~
a stand until the Nov. 2 election
has passed.
Our luxurious camel blazer
and Own Make flannels
Superb ma terials and workmanship combin e
for lhese handsome casuals. The blazer of pure
camel hair comes on our 3-butto n model and
fcalures G olden Fleece embossed lealhcr but-
tons, $300. To complement, wool flannel.Odd
~t'rouscrs fr om o ur own workrooms in brown, or
light, medium or oxford grey, $90
ISTAtUSHID 1111•
d!6£.iJM;;}Au.P
\
Gi9~~®:8
furntthlnge forlltn. Womtn ~loyt
530 WH T 7Tll STRR6T, l..OS ANOBLES, CAl.W.
PASI llON ISi .;\NO, NHWPORT BRACH, CALIP.
l •
111111 CIAIT lllPlll RH I flUl lllCU
M O NO AV. SlPTEMOf n 13. 198:1 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Spain plane crash deat,h toll • • r1s1ng
MALAGA, Spain (AP) -A
Spanish charter jet en route t.o
New York with 393 peop le
aboard crashed on takeoff from
the Malajla Airport today, and
officials said a t least 46 people
were killed , m ost o f t hem
burning to de ath in s ide th e
flaming DC-10.
In New York, a S pantax flight
coordinator said 95 percent of the
passenge rs w e re American s
booked through the Carefree
David Company .I n MiamJ. •
Airport authorities In Malaga
said 44 bodies had been pulled
from the smolde ring wreckage
and taken to a military hangar
set up as an emergency morgue.
Carlos Haya H06pita1 officials
in Malaga said two injure d
people d ied in the hospital and at
least 17 of 90 other people taken
there were in serious condition
with injuries or burns.
Clock ticks
on rush to
stop flood
This Is the second of three parts In a Dally
Piiot series on the Santa Ana River's Impact on
Orange County. Today, the flood threat and
steps being taken to defuse It, plus a scenario
for a major flood under current conditions.
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Ofttte D11llr Piiot Sl111f
It's a dry bed of rock, dirt and scattered brush
almost all year long, with perhaps a trick.le of
water running here and there. Invisible even to its
nearest neighbors in much of Orange County, it
hides behind rising e mba nkme nts of lo w
shrubbery that back the concrete-lined channel
•walls.
Police said 100 people were injured. Airport officials put the
figure at 113.
The plane, Flight No. 995 of
the Spanish charter company
Spaniax. carried 380 passengers,
the maximum, and a crew of 13,
the company s aid from its
h eadqua rte r s a t Palma de
Majora. It did not immediately
r e port their nationa lities or
names. It said the pilot and co-
pilot escaped unharmed , but
thr ee s t e ward esses w e r e
unaccounted for.
Airport so urces s aid the
pau~ngers included ma n y
Amer ic ans and C anadians
returning home after vacationing
at MalatJa. a picturesque beach
resort city on Spain's famous
Cost a d e l S o l. They s aid
arrangements were being made
to have an Iberia Airlines Boeing
747 fly the survivors not needing
medical treatment to New York.
The Santa Ana River is out of sight and out of
mind for many people. Because of that, it is often
difficult for them t.o perceive the magnitude of the
threat it represents.
But those with long memories of this area,
those whose job it is to know the river and many
others can tell you that nature has placed its own
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in our midst.
Prado Dam's huge spillway, on which groups of helicopters often
land, could not stop Santa Ana River in a major flood.
And those who reduce such things to statistics
say that the major flooding the rive r is capable of
would, at present, be a disast er second in
TUESDAY: POLLUTION PROBED
Salt levels need attention
California only t.o a great earthquake in a densely
populated area .
The river that usually doesn't flow at all b
the greatest flood threat west of the mighty
Mississippi River, according to the U.S . Army
Corps of Engineers.
There has been flooding regularly ever since.
Osborne, director of the Santa Ana River Flood
Protection Ag.ency, says the floods of 1884, 1916,
1927. 1938 and 1969 were the most significant.
The 1938 flood, as one of the most recent, b
well remembered. There were hardly any aerious ~
flood control faclllties then, and the waters '9
"overwhelmed practically all the barriers that had
been put up," said Osborn e . There was
widespread damage and 58 lives lost.
That flood, a small one compared to the best
estimates of the 1862 flow, alarmed residents and
officials enough to result in the construction of
Prado Dam. which straddles the river just over the
county line in Riverside County.
The main purpose of a dam is simply to put a
barrier between a heavy flow of water and an
area downstream that would otherwise flood.
When it was completed in 1940, officials felt
sure that Prado Dam could handle any future
flooding on the Santa Ana. They have since
discovered that is far from the case.
At the time, the severity of the 1862 flood was
not known, a nd the weathe r conditions that
caused it were not considered reasonably posmble
for this area .
The facts now known have led to a new
conclusion that no one seriously disputes: Though
Prado Dam is big enough to hold back waters from
a flood so large that it can be expected to occur just
once every 70 years (a so--called 70-year flood), an
1862-style flood is much larger but still can be
expected to hapf:.Cn eventually, and it would
overwhelm Prado s capacity.
By comparison, the 1938 flood was only a
40-year flood -were it to occur now it would be
fully contained at Prado.
There were conflicting report.'!
about what happened.
A New Yor ker, who escaped
the wreckage with his wife, told
The Assoc iat ed Pre s s in a
telephone interview from a hotel
after the crash that the pilot
appeared to have decided to
abort takeoff, a front tire blew
out, and the plane plowed across
a highway, coming t.o rest in a
field.
"There was some wha t of a
There were very few people here In 1862
when. in the words of longtime river watcher H.
George Osborne, the river turned much of the
county into ''one vast lake from the foothills at
Fullerton to the ocean."
What this means, according to Dennis Majors
of the Army Corps of Engineers, ls that an
1862-style flood would send water rushing over
Prado's spillway and toward Orange County at a
rate of nearly 1.8 million gallons per second -
some eight times the capacity of the river channel
here.
Such a flood can be reasonably expected t.o
occur about once every 200 yean -there's a
(See MAJOR, Page Bl)
Large 200-year flood would soak all
blue area, but even smaller I 00-year
flood would drench coast (dark blue) .
-INDEX-
At Your Service
Erma Bambeck
Cavalcade
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
F.ditortal
Entertairunent
Art Hoppe
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Movies
National News
Public Notices
Sporta
Dr. Steincrohn
Stock Marke ts
Television
Theaters
Weather
A4
A7
A7
C6-10
B5
B5
C6
A6
84
A7
A7
A7
84
A3
C6
Cl-5
A7
B3
B6
84
A2
Airport parking to go up?
Supervisors study proposal for $2 daily boost
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tM D.., Not ltllllf
Parking fees charged at John
Wayne Airport would increase
substan tlaJly under a proposal
that will be considered Tuesday
by the Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
Under the propoeal, the daily
rate charged at the main parking
lot adjacent to the airport
terminal would cllmb to $7 from
$5. The 50-cent per hour rate for
short-term use w ould not change,
however.
The daily rate charged ln the
long term parking lot north of
the airport -the lot favored by
moet t.ravelen -would lncreue
to $4 per day from t2.6().
The monthly rate would increase
to $30 from $10.
The increases, lf approved by
supervUC>rs, would boost parking
revenue from $2.24 million to
$3.1 million annually_::-an
increase of more th.an $860,000,
according to a report by Airport
Manager Murry Cable.
Ahho ugh county -owned,
parking Iota conce11ion1 are
operated by Parking Company of
America.
all lots for revenue up to $3
million.·
PCA would rece ive an
additional 2 percent of gross
receipts above $3 million under
the plan.
Depending on the number of
can parked during the flnt year
of the new ratee, PCA's lncorne
would be between t287 ,000 to
$297,000 ~ an i n cr ease of
between 1 percent and 14.5
pettent over 1981 compeneaUon,
Cable aald.
Cable aald the new ratet would
compare with thoee c:har1ed at
other Southern California
airport.I.
pank ," said the man, who did not
want to identify himself. "The
stewardesses opened the doon
and people began to leave . . . I
we nt down the chute that was in
the front of the !lane. The re
we re flames aroun the engine in
the back of the plane . . by the
end , the flames were engulfing
the entire plane."
Span t a x said the DC -10
crashed afU'r having ··iecruucal
di ffi<:ultie s."
Church
• issue
looms
By STEVE MARBLE
of Ille D11llr Piiot ltaff
· .
As it sta nds, St. Andrew 's
Presbyterian Church is a modest
low-slung facility n estled in a
qui e t N e wp o rt B e a c h
neighborhood. It's been there for
years.
The place bustles on Sundays
and has turn-away crowds at all
three services. The past.or is one
of the most popular in town.
But the c hurc h with its
swelling congregation and its
need to expand is at the center of
a stonn that has raged without
interruption for months.
It's a classic neighborhood
squa bble with reside nts and
church officials at loggerheads
over how tall a sanctuary should
be built.
The d ispute lands in the lap of
the Newport City Council tonight
and council members say they're
inclined t.o ask the two sides to go
home and work out the problem
themselves.
Robe rt Curtis, an Irvine
resid e nt and leader o f the
church's building committee, says
the church is in a tough spot
because it needs to expand and
with a limited amount of land,
there's only one way to go -up.
The church, located on a street
corner across the s treet from
Newport Harbor High School,
wants 'to build a wave-shaped
85-foot-high sanctuary. It would
increase seating from 700 to
1,335.
But residents in Cliffhaven, an
older community that surrounds
the ch urch. are critical of the
plan and claim the sanctuary will
be too tall, too massive and, some
suggest, even ugly.
Residents have taken turns
describing the planned sanctuary
as something that will have the
appe al o f "a Chicago grain
e levato r" a nd be "an office
building disguised as a steeple."
Two weeks ago, couneil agreed
it didn't want to pick sides and
asked representatives from the
church and the neighborhood to
calm down, sit down and work
out a compromise.
There has been no compromise
and reports from the negotiation
meetings v ary on whe ther
progress is being made.
"l don't see anything fruitful
coming of it so far," says Curtis.
"In fact, we seem to be going in
the wrong direction ."
Curtis claims residents, who
initially asked the church to drop
its sights to 36 feet, are pushing
for a 28-foot height limit.
Barbara J e an Whitford, a
C liffhaven resid ent, says she
believes the talks have gone well
and that a settlement: may not be
far off. She wants the council to
, give the bargaining group more
time.
(See CHURCH, Page At)
.................
The blggeet lncreue would
face flrm1 whole employees park
at employee-only parklnl lots.
Under a revised agreement
negotiated by the county General
Services A1ency, PCA'a
compeneatlon would Increase
from 6 .8~ percent of grou
recelpta. from the main and
ernployft Iota and 25 percent of
p-.. rec.ipta from the lonc·tenn
1ol to a n.t me of 9.& percent for
He Mid a rate lncreue wu
warranted, ln pan, due to the u_::au· hl1h demand-limited f u. lituadon ., the airport.
File photo 1how1 when daily parkin1 rate ·
waa 13. 75. lt'1 now 15 and may lncreaee to 17.
( •
Oran~ Coatt DAILY PILOT/Monday, hplember 13, 1812 N
NY 'f.: (:(>MPO 'J ~l'E rrR CTl()N
OUOlllllOfi\tll(lllClt ll•Ul•Olll •M• .... •OIU MIVlllU ••t"lt ··~ 10\tCll un•o•• •llD (llllCINllUI noc• l•CMllNOl\Alf. lttN~llhCI lt'f HO •A,0A"ll11'1\tlllltllt
... ,.... ,.,, .i.. ..... ...~ ,.. •.
t• t "'1• t """" ( tlQ tt I f"kh t ht t I ttt P t M\ l •011tt' ( ~
ltl;"/l 1
;&11 ''l ~ : 1i! ~~1~:w11 Mj • •• ~~ lk 1 :: =~~T; "~ 11 1~ ::~ '"
011f1;\ 11 ~ "" • )o, Hal\4lll fill It Ill II ~•8!1~~ 1 ~1 1111 4!! II'• I , () OlllJll IOll t I .. II'• 1t Henn• 1 lQ IJ IJI JI , I ,.. fo. .. n , •• .Ml•1 ....... .. •• DlllCl'l 1 tit! t .. n~ • ... H•• U• J 1 I m .... . • MglA\I 10 .. •o ~. r• l "Cl• c kl•• t "9 Rlwwr ':it IOU n • • 1 He!lll(I .l'.~ u 111 ,., , 1. M•nhln Jllb '• u1 IJ\o, i.
1hirNJJ ff , " "" . r;~:.1n' , • to, .. 1
' ~=:~:~r /rd , 1~ 1~ • •• ~:~t~! ~ ,( l~ ,t:: .. llllttllll t 10 ltllt Jl\.1 I .. Ur~-.. 16 ,oJf 11~~ I •• ....... • " lAI "' Mfrll1111 t •1 • Ill ,, .....
:1tflrln 10 IJ U " 0o"'t I 10 ... •h • \, H•t1ot0 1 ~ • Ill tt •, Mlfll j)l111• 1011111 '"' "''°' It •• I~ Oonekf ~ I t II'• H•ll\M I U I U• U • , h Ml111 P 111 '9 C: ..c; OOllW IO .. , 11'1 lo Hattl1 10 11 It JI , '• •IAA41flvl .. I 710 r· • ~ti 111 I .0. t U JI" \.1 ()oMly I 4 II ht ff 1, MeU\ot I ie. t •t Ht• MAPCO I .0 t 0) 1 '-11
... ,., Nol r. 2111 I .. ..._ • '"'° OOIMY I 10 ' •t lt tloNll•I t .. I .Ml JI 1 • t M•"O 11 11 tl4 '• 1-11 "' "'" t.•u•• ~"9 I 4 ·~ ... oo... ,H) IJ n •. h M•yn/4 " •• I '• Mer Mio I h • Jlt IS • ~. ~"1l!WYO\Kt/4Pl Mol\4ey lft~·"1r:' ~~ rs'll•I .. s::~:c1:~·i:: W:: .. H•l•lln '°'' l m •• '• M••IOt• ... ,) IU .M•· h
y I ~. Pf ;: IOt ..... c~'l .. > .... ~· D••YO .. ao '~ 12 "' ~~~·M ,. '0 !l! :~~· • :::ttpl I~ .a r, .~:: ~
o..-';l ,:.~~I ~· ~=:tnl ~ I it ·;~ ~ Og~::'o , l 71'! m: t: H:ll~ T1 • ti I~ • 1
11 M•lllol 111 IJ lltl 43.. l\o
AAR -;.;, "o I CPClrHIO Im )H• ~. tn(U\ '°"I·~ ....... ::::;u Ito. J~~ t~::· '• ~~~~.t~1:,~~ 11--'" ACF J 1' t •• "" + ·.,; CP Net 110 • JS u)t • » CluPont 2 40 I I~ »~ • 1, ~lelrl11I 1 JO )t 4Al ""', '• Meryl\ Jt 11 )t• n•• • ... AMF I,. t ... IS~ ..... ,,)( i .. 'Int .. .... duPnt pU Ml ' JO Mtltr11' :n '100 "' 11 '" Moc..., • I .. ,.. • '•
APL IS 2 )\.> C X pl I I tl C111P11IP1t j(J 20 ;19 • '• H411(1•16 1 11 • elt 2{1 • •, ~~·lwl 14 11 111t171 .. 1'14"' I~ ARA J 10 ti JJ C 5 1 II 11 '' OultP 1 le 1 >1IOt U\t• '-Httllt n 14 !II I'• to ,...,,.11 • -
ASA :i.. '" 4S'• .. I~ Cetool 91 J I"• 21\'" •• Ou'• Pl t.70 1100 M \1 '"' Htrll( Oft W) I 1• '• M•\f'A "" ' 61 ltl• loo
AY)( ~ l3 tit u -I'll ~~ > 1J "~. " Du'• pl • 20 ''10 ··~· n. Htt~Y , 10 • 'II)) u41 • I M•••vl 10) lh I I• Abll tb M 17 IOlt Jt •II<-a'l'it"! Jli SJI' rn .t~ •• ·..: D0u~e ~!· .. Ill I ~.~ I MO\IOll 101 I t't 1 '• M .. (p l Ml H .... • ~. /4C....C I 40 • 43 20 + Y. "" • "" -II•• ,.. " U,. • Ht\ln pl t()I. I I'• M .. lllt I 31 iJ 10"° E<rntE n.0S21> • IS t~ v. Cammi 40 4 0 11~ .. 0..h pl J b il't 1''-1• Ut11bllll J 11 .. I 14 I> • Mel~l J\t • 1' ti • '• Aamot cw 1 u S4. "' CRLk 0 M IQl.I U\. • ,,, Duke pl I M 1200 t11 > Htwll't. 1• 11 .O.t t : 1.: M<ill<'I JO 1 ,_ 11\• I• AdtEa 2 ue H 14"1+ Carn~ 210 t UO lS I• Dun8t I 7t 11 l\t Ill'•• '• H .. 01 till 11 1 11 Meltll wt 111 '"-
/4-Ml -II Jt '"' "' c amp I IJ •l«> U h. ~. DuqLI I tO • j1e It'• HtShHr IO • ., ••• ""M•.tll ~ ', ~ I '1'1~ !!',,' 1, AMO 44 IUt Hiii. 1 .. COPa< 0 .IO ~1 24 • "" 011q Pl 2 · •?0 14 11111011 h 13 SI I '• ,U'~ -, ,. "-
AtlnLI 2.SJ • 1111 H~ I'. CenPE 0 Ill . 1S4 ll\.1 "-Ouq prt(J tO 6 U• • Hllnbd' IO 10 '" JO .. ' '' Mer tu ,, ll \ti Jl'' • "1 Atll.. pll OJI ., ~ ... Can•IA "lt SI 1>62 • I 011q pt 2 )I IJtOO lt l • ' ' Hiiton I iO 10 .... JI! • •• Mc 01111 I Ill , .. , I/ 1. /41\rn"' till . OS It •..,, (ec>Clll 2011 '"IS .. Ouqj>r PS 1100 11'1 Hllt<n n Ill It ti 141 I MCDrP1 ?j0 .. IO'-All•n 10 J'-• lo CepHIO 1 :a I 1'1 JSh "" Ovcol'I 2• 1 It '"• • '• 110110.y IO II •Jl1' l\ , 1119 Mebr Pl 1 tO 11 1 h '• /41rPrO IO 11.00 1th 1. C•t1nu u ,. 113 J"9 DynArn IS II 101 I • '• HlldyA I IOI IS"""'. u. M<DnlO 1 JO 11 lllQ 1a ... 1v.
/41rbFrl till ll " 12.... '• Ct rlltle ., I ,.. ,,, .. 1 -·-· MollyS I IU ·~ • '• Mc Ono I u • "" 3'1.1 "'
/41Moe n SS 10"1 .... CCer11aFll ,! t1 ~ ~.J~' ~ ~<;~, ~ ·~rn ~ ~'• ~ Hm~(', Pll 10 U • 't ~~9,E~ I J. 1,1 -J !JI\,• ~. AllP Pl/4J., U JI '" tlO ,.. -• n ' ~~~~• .. lh J~ ~.14111, J1114• • l~ """" n ..,. <f6t • ' Al•P Op1 11 ~ ... 1. C1rPw 2 40 I 2511 U • '~ Ee91tP ... 4 1 l\lo 1 • "~-.., , ~ Melnl o > ,.._ •, AlePpf • ll.lO .,.,, CerP pt >•1 I ,... Ett<O IJJ t • ,,,,, "' uonwll l till 1)111 ., •I McNeil liO t , I) ...
AleP pf 11 ~to tl~H J Carlee 2 10 • .. lS'• " Eell/41t ll? >'" '• tlOO•V I t.,I I~ uJO'•, '• Me•O 7 9 ?ti I/<. •••P pf •. ,. . llO SI ..... (tt\Plt I JO 10 tt 11~ •• v. EAL wtO ,. 21. Hor 18n 1 )J s J O••. '. M .. .,. lll... > 1)1.. I• AleP pl I.», t610 St'h-I CulHw t.U 10 1211 1l 0,. EJAlr plJ,t'I S Uloi Hor11on ~I 19J 91 "• h Medtrn ..i I) 191 )II°"', \Ii Al~KO uo s • UIA-~. C•• WI 44 9 ,, 141> E•Alr 1113 20 ,, It•• HO\PCP .. IS 1&50 >'I.. •• Mollon t . • 10 l4 ...
All>OtnY '40 • .. Jiit>-.. (•o<llG I 12 • 1• '"' '. EeslGF 1.20 s 1811 II\· Hotttln l ' > ,. '• Mttvlllt 1CW II "' M'• /41btrto so I ,, ll h C••llCk tOJ 0 lit •• • I~ E••IVll I 10 • ,.. u•. HwuM I .a 9 10 J)•, MertSI 2 I 11 ,,.~ •••
Alblsn I 11 Ml JI", t,, air pl J IO II 149' 421. 1 .. hlCOO i. U l9SO U • , .. ~~.•flnbt I ,f!> 1100 1 .. llt1 211~ • '• Mtt fta I 11 S I 21 , \o Al<ell 'IO II .. S 11'>' \• t<oCp " S 10 It•' Eaton In t 102 ,,.. "-, :I~ '• Marek t Ill 1' 1111 II ' "• AlcoSIO Ult I"" 11~\. •1 •l•11se • ' Jl3 ..... "' E<hlln ~ 1• ,., ISl1 Uotnl pl 2 IO II J)•, I '• MtlOlll\ 1 IO • 21 0)4" I
...... Al nl.'4 • S.2 n • "· Ctttton .60 4 201 ""' v. EOtrO .92 10 ,,. JI • It Holnl Pl t n 13 S• ~!:~Ly I?! '2 ll60,, •• J1•'~. ','·. Alt•dr . II .... ~ Ctnltl , 20 •••• JO.. I• EOl\8r l.U • 11 ,, ..... '• lloulnd 2 ... 1870 10 • '• --"' "' • -~ AlluCP I°' • '1 .. I'. C•f\IH 25 13 ,. 11• •• '· Eowro ~n· • '" ,... liOllHG I 10 s .,, )O·'. • -... R I Ito m 2)1' I '" AIUCP..,,.. • un • \\ ..,Sow , ... I MJ lt\1. lo EIPHO I ... 1 ,,, 11\t 't HwO~ 2 lo. 41 .... • .. Me\<lb Ut • n i •• h Algll\I t 40 3 a'14 11~ I\> tftHuO 2 o11 S " JO.\. EPG Opl1 3S JI It\,• 1 • 11ow~11 tO > to I •• , 1, Mf\I• 10 • o.0 Al91~ J" aO IJ 1. Ce11llLI I '4 1 31 14!1 • \, EPG pl 3.~ SIS 2• '• H o w P l t 0 Metrn1 I ll JOI 1 "' AIOI CllU . a1' I~"' Cn1Ltpt2.ll 1100 1l•t Etcor .., I 111. HuOMQ IOJ W 12'• 'o MIEpl~8.11 ttO !01, 1,.
Alfo '·'° • "3llO Jlh • .,_ CnlU pl, 62 llOO ..... £lee A\ IS llO , .... lo Hu Hy 60 II IWI 10'. '·• Mii: plG/.. rlOO ., Allt.IO l 11 s:1 IS..+ '.1, CtnllPS I ti I llS 14'1> • EDS M " II »"-• 1t Hughll IM t 'Gt 18 • ~. Mtf PIJ t JJ r!O ~I , ii, AllOCP J 40 5 t0t 1' It CtMPw I 10 I •9 ll<\o lo EIMtMQ 21 41• I• Hum•n • 60 IS 9ll )0 1 • Mlf P'HI lJ t JtO ••• 11, AIOCp pit 14 ,. St + '• tnSoy• .. 13 IS6 ,, • •• Elvin I.to I ,. "" Uurn• pf1 IO 1• 10'. • MnC.n pfJ OS 2 ••• AldMni I 10 Ill ~\.> II• CYIPSll, ,, s 13 ...... Ernr\EI , 11 .. , ~ , ,. • Hunten tO.. II 11... MchEA 1 ,,. 6 ,, • '
AllCIStr l lO I, .. ,..\~ tnlrOt 2>2 "· ~ EA•O• Ill '° 141. HullEf '°" '1'11 u 1 .. '• MnW1plJtl • JI~ •• ~ AldTtt n I • 31 1.Vr+ 1' nlryTI I• S 11S JV. EmryA .IO IS 711 111-11 '' lly016I I 1' 6 6 II • '• MhWI 1>12 11 I 19'" •,, Alll•Cll m ."" Ctn•lll • 5 tS )IV• \'t Emh.trt 1.40 I IS3 3l' I I ... ' I MOC Tel I It I HI ...... • 1, AllsCh plS M 41 21 , , CtHMO St 13"1 1. Emp~ I U I 2J l2.. I( Incl 11' t 14' I~', I " MIOtn n 2 08 • .,10 I> , h !:~· '.,is~ ~~: ~~ ~~~"'f:~ : ~ .~ ::~: ~ !::i~t~ t~ 'j'! ,!"' :: :~~n"' l Ml •• 1!~ •r • ~::~~ : ~ = :!~ ::~:' ..
ArnlSuQ S S I~ '1V. h Chm pf .20 aS '"'-· EnU1 ,p IO 1 .. 1; ~ INAln I 9l 2 IJ I\'• '• Mllt1W 1 !0a I ISS ii••, 'o 'Am.. JO 119> J211, Cnml pl •.till all 3tft "" n11 \8 I ~ IU lnl I I~ • 191 Ii'• MlllBUJ I 20 10 •1 l)~, ,,, Arn•• pf • 3 I »"11 . Ch•mSp 80 ,. J21 • • .... Ennrth l.60 • 451 1•~·. '"' IO•hOP , 118 I llt 1•'·. '• MlllR' St 8 I 1)1.. ''
AmtUt 1 32 ti 19 ,..... ChertCo I s .. ,. "'"'. "" ~~·;~~ till 5 ·m .!~: .. :?.~c!!. 1 ~ ·~ ~ ~i t • MMM ) JO II '°" ..... Ii'
AmHH I 10 IS 1"9 2Jh ..... ~~~;:I u .~ ,::·. :: Enlete IM • Ill ,... 1. II Pow pf) CM rlOOO I\ ~:~.:::LP , : • 1~ !:"" ... ~mrn~111, OSI 1-'? ,,'.~ Che•• J -• 1n1 ... .! ', ~ Enlt• 'OI t " •>'• • '• p 1 1 o 11 1 ~ t '' -~· ... ,,..;; "'' iS l ;o-.o •• EQull• 1.0 II ll )I.. 11 ow pt I •II .. • Ml\ntn ' Ill ' llo 20.. '· /4A/ WI SU ·~· \II Cne•• ... <.2• •" JJv1 + ,,, Equtrnll 1) t lo ' It 1,1Ppow plfl• 1'J11 'l~ JJ~!" 1" MPP•~C. 3 80 "s 281 •H• '1 AA1rpl ?.II 2' 14~ ..... CIWIM pjJ.:ij. •UOdSJV• EqtGoK I "1 $ t• Jt \\ It I ow P , • ..,., " Mo ~v II? 78 IJ.tH '• A8e~r I 11 t V. ChelS.a 60b 4 JO 1._ t: EqlLI "1/ l9 lJ l)~t ITW I 08 9 ~I )! '• MoPS pl144 11 II' 1 ~ A8reno l .IO JtlO U lt,. ~ Chrnl!CI nl JS IJ 10 ,.... •• EJm•r• I IM I Ill ., lmplCp I I • • MOPS,,,,.. 1 114-
ABtO pl , JS • 1•1· . ChHY' 1 •• 11' JO'•. 1, E•qult ' .. 1 '° .... '• NCO 10 •IS .... • MoPS pl• ll ,.. ,. ... ''
::::: ~ ~ .,,,~ :: ;, CnNY pfl II I 10•. ... E•M•C tob I II ::\o '• ~:~ :=rn 1: :: • '. :;,1~.·. • .~~ ~~: ~ A8IOM t ' 1S JS\o + ~ ChNY plJ .,. 132 S7"-I E\lrtne t4 10 10 nOiM 11131>3 SS 75;.' '• Mob1IH tO l • lo A Bus PO ~ 7 11 llh ~ CnNY pl · 162 SO•/'o ~ Elhrl 1.IO 6 I l6 2''' nOtG•s l CM M JS• • '• MOM<ot 10.. •S 11' • I AmCMI 1:'IO II J41 J04'o' y, Clle\Y• IOI I IO 11~ ~. Ely plB ' l •:., nOIPL 2 .a 111 Jt~ 1, MoO(pe lJ JU ''• 1 11,
AC•n pl 2111 . e 11\; It, ~~~r" 1 n ~ m m': • ~· ~=:~':.t j2~ J~ I '•, 1'' n .. co It 9 JOS 10\• •• MOh.l>e t 121 9•, !~n~ ,1~ I~ .. ~ ~ ~ CluMlw 40 IS ~· .. •t hCtlo I 60 1 W 21•. :; infrnl< n l 10 220 "' ' •t =~~~ 'lO '! ~; :ti,, I,, :~l""' ~·t '; J:t: m; v. ~~~~"uT1 :~ ~ a,,• (: ~=~~ '"; t S9~ ~::' ~ .,:rn~o~1~1 2 ~1 ,: "1~1~1 ;,i: ·. i , ~~~7 :J : 1~ ~· • '•
/4mE•p 1°20 l ml 41 ; i ' Cllrl\Cf I SJt It lt9 0 'I -,_, -It~ ,., '• MOnsan • I '"" I•'•, !·t AFemll t0 9 406 11!\lo ' Chrhtn SI IS S\o \lo FMC 1.60 I Ut JO ln•ll<o lb I JO It•• '• Mn IOU l 1t • 160 12 ...
,AGnCp 2 20 6 203 -: ~ ~~~~ n~ :n ,~ .~:~ •• ~ ~:ic; Pl J !:21 .J ~:: ... ln•llnv s II,. I .. Mo11Pw , ... ICM ,, ~gG11111~,1_1U~ .'21 u,·~~· ""~~~·!:t lffl ~~:· :: ~:~;ri n:: ~: 1!,.' '· i~J:!n'?:J!'t '!Vi!':::: =:c·~ n 1:~:· '•
AHtrli M • 1 ,9--:z Cl\rys pr llS ,., ~. F1lrch0 .80 I 113 16b)I 1 1n1erco 2 88 2" •·l"' '• Mor•M I.Gt 13' ~~;: i! AHOl•I UJ I lO "' "' (hurCh I 10 SM JIV. "' Faire pf l tO , IO:I 32' • • '• Infer pf I IS 9S O• • • .,. Mo .. n IJb all 10 '-~Honw l 20 l1 »1' ..o:' • "" CtnBell 1 n t S 2th• '• FtrnDlr ,40 13 .. 21't '• lnlrtSI I JO 0 tt) 20 , '• MOtllMI J 40 d i SJ'.
AHOst> s M 1112J1 )7'.:: I\• ~:::g~ 21: I ;: :4• \, ~~~:F :; ~:'; • ~ :~:~~u ? ~I~ ~ m:: :: MOrl<.no I l? S 11 JO-. » ~~~ »14 ffl '!\'>-~ ClnGpl 4 /S r O ,, I• F-rs m J\, '•ISM l 441Jnl3 I) .1 .. =~:~ .~'!1~ ~ .. "' ASLFle Ml t!\lo .... ClnG pl 9.JO dO U '" F.OICo l,44 10 llt 20l t lo ln1Fl•v I 14 IM Jt 1 't Molrola I 60 1' lllCM 19>1 , 21.1 /4Shl IOI 'j 4 '"" "" ClnG pf 9.18 1'° .. I FdE•P ,. IS1' SI\\ •• lnlHarv 3'0 ••• '. M1FIH'1 1 .. 1 '° lilt ,. /4rnsl'o , 20 12 ••• U Y>+ .... ClnG pf 9.SJ 1270 Ml 1 FOl\l\00 •I l1 • SS 2J "• llllHI pl ., • • • • Munl•O so. • •tl .,, '
ASttrll 31 10 JSJ "~' • "" ClnMft n IO JU lS ' 1' • F.011~ 1• lA'9 11'•' '• lntMtn 2 60 ll>t 111• • '1 MnlO pt tO •20 ,.._ ArnStt I I U. S1"° I Cllk rp 1 n S 3"l 1' •' '• F.OP8 1.20 S tO Jllo tntMn pl • J JO , , Muno,ng t II'•+ ... AStr pt S SI .. 42'-: ~ CiltSv< I till It Ul 44"' ... FOSQnl l 11110 101 IS>. tnlM..11 I 60 1 SI 17"' • '" Mure>h( I 19 II 110 11\o , .,_ /4T T s 40 • W3' SH I CtlSvc"" lllS .... .. F.OOSt 2.10 9 OS 43 ... ', lnlPept 2 40 s 161' .,. • \o Mu•pO I s 106 21 ...... /4TTpt t n se~::1 Cllylnv 110 • 141 JO ... :•Ferro l,JOIO ll U..1 '• lnlAt CI 1' 1 .. 'o Mutry0110 I t ""' +.
ATTPI )'4 e )09 Ctytnpf J I~ "FIOUn< 2.IO. ll 231,. '• l11lll 1MI • "° Jl'o, '• MulOml tl• 118 11'• " &ff pf >'It 9 » .... Cl•blr 60200 te ' 1• FlckJI 21S 13 10~ lfTPllC. • IS tJ 1 , '• M~<'"L 711 " l'• )iiwalr 1 20 · s .. 11v. ClerllE 1 JO t'3 21'' • 1• Fl119i. .. s ,., "'' "' 1 lT p10 s t ., • H H /llWll pf I 43 1100 11~; . ClwCll I Ill to " ~ • '• FnCpA' .. ' tlS ..... • '• lt>tl t Pl • 10 J tS'o NBD I 01 t IJt 11'>, .._
AWAI pl I ts t'20 ·~· .. C!evEI , .. • UIO 11•·. ~. FlnCppl .., IJ ·~ '• tnlHrln , ,, s •H ,. '• H81 n u 1'1 n • '• &m•ron I.till • 2 12\.\ ..... Cl•EI Pl 7·40 "° SJ\?. II> FnSB•r " •I.lo. ~ .. lnlfpu 1 IO IJ s• ..... NCH 12,, ., ... I '• ~ .... ,o .40 9 tS 2~.... ClvEI pf I 56 ltOO SJ I FlnlFl!CI ••• ~ .... tnlpGp I .a • • l6• .. '• NCH8 •• ,.. ll
Arntt' t.20 12 9'I ~ "' Cltv.,._ tO 1 It I FlttJlll till 111S U I• 1n1Ba .. r » ,., 10 t NCR 140 t a2CW2 .... • ''· Ami• 1 u ,. ,., 11"• Clo•o• " I .:JI ,. . ft/411n' I s , " ••• 1no1Pw I.. • JO 13.. NL Ind I ) ... ".. .. ~Pin I tO IS 602 Sii<. + 11> Cl ... llP .. .. ti ..... FtCIVl IO IJIO It ' I 1• lnPw pf J 11 1140 IS.. I NL l I IO 10 1113 '1 • ..
'"' 19 1• J.... .. ,, ... ,"' I u "" 1 • FstCnlC I JO I 231 ISi· ·-•El I n 6 '" ... • llVf Olr llJ "'" •• AmSth '60 s IU 19 • v. Coe<hm 1l l"1 I)~. h Ftllh• I 20 s .,. ""' ... towllG 2 ,. s SJ /()•. N•b'KB 1 OS • 1080 ,,,, "" Amstar I'° s .. 2J ••• Coast•! 40 JI t6<I ,,.. • .. FtClty I .... IOwlll pll 31 rl20 II '. Hb•<B pf] so •JO ,... • ·~
.... m .. pf .. 10 Sii>-~ ,, .. Pl 113 • 23 ..... FlnlJle 2 ... 5 !St ,..... '· I PS 2 .. I 141 ,, N•l<O• l .," !JU JS\> .. /llmst«I 1'.o ii .. 21~ .... CoctCJ J .. 10 1112 ,. ..... FIMIU 14 10 ,,. ,,.. .:::Rs l M J n )t\o. '• HAplFO IOl>H ti 20 I. /411CIT'P n 12" ,.. 14>"'-It. Col•N . ... IS 11 l>]l\,. .... FNBol "" •• 11j u-.. I oCP 20,, Ill 1• .... ll•r<O .. ,. 11 1 ...
"'"'"'. JO J1 --... ColKo • 311 u•. .. FNSIB l «> • ? ,. • " 1f!11ek J,. • 123 • NH""• Ill ,,. 10', ~ /4nchor I» • " u ..... ~ Col•rnn I 20 10 ,. 2• •• F•IP• ., l'< '• II kC JOO ,,, 11 ...... N•ICen ' t 13 II ... /4nCtay 1.11 6 212 2'V.-\lo Colo Pet 1.20 1 S•S 19 • lo FllP• wt 1 V. IM " P • J J HCn•SI 601> 12 111 1 .... , ''•
AnclrG n .20 t •J 11-1<1 • It• Co10P plJ . .lO tllO >21> it FtUnAI t JO • 19 16'·> JW1 I 44 0 t II'•• " NelD1st 2 20 I 156 171,,, '• ,,._,le .0 ti S6 ,,~. VJ co IAlk 11 • " IS FIY•8• .... • " ....... J11'14•F 160 II .. ,.... .. NOif! "''I> J IS•· .. .. AnMllS I .. 10 1040 SJV.• \lo ColnF s ' 9'I .... • ·~ FtWl>e ) 10 4 "1 1• 1• JRl~r tO • o ""' NelEOU I J1t S tS 11'• •..,
Anlatr JO u JIS u , ._ ColP.n 1.40 99 "'-Ft!oftFd 10 t •ICM 10' • • 1, JRvt Pl s 40 2 t • , 1 N•tFG > 16 S 14 JO , '* Ante 11 ~ t 11 12"'-\lo Colllft' IAO Jt2 ,... FllF"'G J • 10 lH• • ") Jtrn•w 12 1u .,11.,, • , 1 NJ G pl 1 JO '2 uJO' •, .. Anthfly <Mb 10 • ........ , ColGM l .. S 10I JO'o • ... FIMIEn .SJ 2' UJ 117'' h I J F I JS. 20 t lo H•IGyp I oll IS 81 12 , \o /4pactw , •• Jn '°"' cso pf l 0 so 2S... •• Fl•m"'O 1.2• I .. lt J:r,nPlll I.. 21 HIHom ,,. J\•. .... ApehP"" ,. . u 20v.«.:·~ cso pf olS 2S l'IO ul(l:J +I FIUIV .111 15 031 211•. '• Jere pl •• ,~ t: .• ~; HMOCt• .. ,o l)Jt .... ,, At>l>w pl2 •S '° 20 ..... Comb!,,, 1 Ill • 2'1 21•, ..... Flo! Pl I., II 10~. (pl • ,. ,, s; I •• HMOEn 40 ,, IJJS 20 v.
ApPw pf• .. 20 " -"' CrnbEn I .. s •JI 1n . '. FllgtSI ' .... '"° 23'. ... j:~c p ,u:: •• ·:. HM1 .. s l1 • " ,. • h :~~ i~ 'L:H ii~ .... ~ ~=t !: :;,:: ~ It ~!~f n 3~:. :. :~ Im::~~=;~::: • :~ ~~o ~.. E~E~' 120
: I~~ uli~: In
Ar IP pf ).Jt. 1:11 ,, ... _ ~ CmwE , Ill I •4636 U llo. ~ Fl•Pro 1.IO • "' """. 1. ~=~rc : !: • .~~ ~'.,;: :·: NSt•nd ·:. II /It. .... Atk8t l • .0 .. 21 I • V. CwE pl l.AJ •2 12 ""' Fl1~11 51 . 41 13<t '• J•wtC Pl JI 17,, , 0 ll•llSll I J92 •••• Arkl• i ., I U3 IS~• ~ CwE pf I to a21 I~• .. Flwei4f> 20 1't 11'1 '" t'o H•IUI n I I ' 11',, \. ArlnAI I ~ 1~11 CwE pl 2 aS ""° ""' Flowr \ SI II 4' II'•• I• Jewlcr 11! ,.g t5 , '• H•lam t «> 4 21'S It t .. Arm-J •'• '• CwE pl ti JO y4000141o• ~ FIUO< Ill I 11'4 "" '• JOl!ftJn~ 7''o , '• H•lm pl t ~ JO• '• /4rmco 12010 10 It\•• v. CwE pl81 40 ytO 4J:\o , .. FooteC 1.20 1 JI ll'> " JohnE I 40 ~ .a 111 .... NnPw 1., S lit 24'-, '•
Attn< pl 2 10 2 14>,, 1;. CwE pl t • ySJOO 56~ 114 FO<OM 3157 211• • '• J01'1nCn 60 t0t I&', , • HevP pf I to r~ 12 /4rrnr pl 4 JS . 'f)O 39 +J CwE pl 2.11 at 21\• °" ForMlt 2.AO ' 42 31 • t,, JOllLQn 1 S ' JI'·• .,, Hovi> pf 1 •S s 14'•
ArmA l Ill S J) 20"'1 CwE pl I 40 yolO Sf.. FMlt pt I Ill I S71 J ~~~ .,_ " llt•edSll I I /4rmWln 1.10 JI U&J It"-• ..., CwE pl I Jt ylOO 51 • '• Ft Dear 1.32 " 10'• • '• JoyMIQ "1 11 2}S ~;.,. , ,
AroGp Ill • s "'°. v. comi:.s I . • tO ·~ ~ FIHowO I °' 13 10 '°". .. I '° • '109 llEnoE• > '°' l"I 1. /4rowE 165' It 12h-'-ComESIJft• • 1100 10'> •2 F~IWh 44 4 1'2 II'> ltOI n ~O~l9 ''• '• HJA\C: nll• • .....
Ant• 20 ~ 12 11-'" Goms.1 2 JO IS m -• 7'\o FoaStP .. I It II ... • 1 • Jl" HYSEG 2 20 m " Antlll 1.U 12 t'I ltYt+ ... CoPsyc l.1'?1 •21 21 FOAi>< I I.CM 1 65' 21 ... • 11• ~'i:,1 I :~10J 11 , t HVS pfOO JS S• 2•'< • '• AtYlll pl 2 . I 12VI-.... Comw 41 U Y> "' Ft PIM< .till 10 ;MO II~ ... Ka1srAI .a •CM·l "'. '. H•w•ll I • .. ••
/4U"o «> tOS 251'> • .... Coml>S< 11 IOt "'• Ftlglrn .. • IJJ "' • • 4-(, 40 SJ II'• , 1 Hwll•I 11 13 )9 26 .. A~IOll 2 40 • M J14o + Vo Cptv"" It tlO 15'-• ~ Fr~M 40 102 II'• ~::~;. : J? • 11 u , 1 Htwll'•I 111 lJOJ "" '• "'"''°pit so 1 JS Con~ ... Ill 10>... "' FllQ... till ... , ...... Kei\rSI ... , ,,. , I HWIJ'f.. I• s .,. .......
A!oftlO pfJ.. 11 lJ>.. C-MI 120 1 .. 31._ I• -G-G -lt•neMI 21 1 "ulS , 1. •m1MP I 80 • "33 IS' t AMIDG 110 21' 31 + V. ConnE n2.IO • 12 11•+ GAF 20 e I~ 9h .. IC.•neb lb s tU ISlt, \o lltlAMpt 1 40 1100 1SI 1 'd AMID pl t,75 • • ~.\'o 1. CnnNG 2.20 • 21 tH. .. GAF pt l,20 I llh '• KCtyPl ',. s 11 ,.,. '' Nt•Mpl 3 ~ 1!00 lt • ' ... ,,.,_ I 60 • IS II\.\ • ..., Cont~ IO ,. 61 ,., • GA l x 2.40 I .. ,... • • KC PL p!J Ill 1'30 2J.. Ht•Mpl I n tJO s. • ".
AICyEt 1 21 I 11 ""--.... ConEO l I .. S Jffl 1"-i • '·• GCA IOJ It 131 11'• • 1 • ltCPL pll 20 J 17 HleoSn J !Joo SJ Ith AllMln> OM t 14 I o l·lt ConE pf t tS r100 ,.,,. • t,, GEICO 56 I St 11 '• ltCPL oO l3 3 1111 , 1, Nlcol1 n 2• 101 11 IO'• ...
AllRkh J «I •103l '2-.. C0<1EPI S S ,.... 1• GEO 1• J IH ·~ '• KCSou a 9 • JS •I NICOR l 1 109 tt , '•
AllAt pl JTS r9'0 JI~• v. ConFd5211 7 4'1 • '• OF Eqp 1 ''• • '• l(allGE 212 • t19 lt\t HobtAt 11 S 1013 10'• '• AllR< pl 2 Ill . J 100 -J Cn1Frt ltill S NS ..... ;.,: GTE 2 '1 I 31JS 30.,, • 1 • lt•nllb 1 11b I ta 24h , <i Hor~ n 2 IO • IJOS S>••, I All•5CP 1 Ill 14V.. " CnsNG 11 •• 10. l• ..... ~ OTE pf 2... , .. .\\ •• t<•llPLI , 40 I 120 11.. NOt\lt n 1 JO I SS ,.,, • ·~
·-· 3:1 II 1'&1 ,.IA+ ~ '°'"""'JM • 111• II~. '"' G••-" s ,. "'. .. KaPl ptJ,, IS ,,. • .. Nort~ °' l SJ •• t .. AutoOt so .. 29:1 ,.~ "-CnPw pU.. 1'°° ,..... lo G•nnett In 11 lSI t i • .. ltalyln 6 121 9~ '• H/4C,..I 80 t U ,. .... 1. A..co<;p I 20 t tS6 ,, .... , Ir> C11Pw pO.aS r10 ~ '-GapSlt SO I 1)1 u1'' • • ... Kai pt 1 .. 2 21', HoAPn4 I 10 1 n ,,... \o Avcop1J20 4 ,.\l'r +l\I> CnPwp11n 1UO u.,,,. '> G••Sv< ,,. S •tt 11'• 1te.lte1 2• 11 h· '• Nl:u10J 211t • t 1•~· \1
Avery 'O 10 1..i uJll'I• +I CnPw pf7.1t i llOO S2 Geerlll 1' 10 ,.. "'I '• t<•ller JO I l4 ""' + ... Ho.UUll 18 I J70 10 .. A•MI I 11 ~IO .,~.IV. CnPw pfl.'8 . 11S.!O j,)\lo Gelto 111 • " '''• •• IC•''-I j(J 9 •2t U 'l .. NlndPS I !O 10 S11 .,_, ....
Avon 2 11408 ,..,.. • "' CnPw pl • •9 21\'o ,... G.mC• 13 J 37 .. • "' lttllwCf 40 J 600 It\., '• lltoStl'>lr 1 It I JM -A•I• I IS ' I) 11.. CnPw pfJ.. 23 1~ .. Gamin,..,. • IS... lttnel 10 2 •l s.. 1. llSPw pf) tO ·~ 11• I I Ay01n • 19 .. 19'-+ •1; CllPw prl ti JO 2'1o GA Inv 4 1'e ts ,..... itenmt .. 11 .. 16' 1 '• NSPw ptt 01 140 u1111 I J',
--· -CnPw pr1 Ml " 11 I'> GAmOol -" ·~ ,,.. .. KYVlll J 20 1 "' , .... '• NSPw .,,. 10 l20 11 "• ::~·.~r ~ ; "~ m:: ~ ~~~: ~ ~ ~ m: " &c~~: :: ,i 1! m:: :: ~:.·,,G,~~. 11 :4100 •, ... ~ ,l,l·.·. "" ~!ir~ :" "l .. ffl ~... .... B•ldor '111 JS 1914+ ~ ContAlr 9S o, '" OnD•la 111 91• • ... " M ~ '41 1111hQat O JI 4 v. BelOV, • • 10'4 2Jh-to ContCoo JS t i. t "' GnDyn n 1• 1'11 Jl>. '• l(eyiCJ> J 11\o llorl"' 1 IO 941 51.._ 1 .. llOU pl 2 Ot 0 11...,_l"-CllllQ) 2 t0 • .. S 141• • " GDyn pl •,»-1 II • > Key\tnt s 4 It ti 20 't H•\IAlr 10 1142 Xllolt, 11> 8ellQ> Jot • ti 1'4 •r. CllllGtp 2 t0 S alt JJ ..... OeftEt 3tO10 2•1' 1•'• • , .. 1(1-• 110 t 111 20 , ''I Nwt8(p I t4 6 ISO 21'" 11.
BatlyMI JO I UIS 26 -+ \\ GnlGp pl 2 4 It"> '• GnFCIS 2.10 • 0 • ll" • KIO pt8 • 2 41'-• '• llll<p pll I.. 210 Ml .. , '-8"11Gf 2 .. 1 113 211!'t• v. ClltGr.. pla,j(J l J:I • It GHost. .!O 11on u... .. ~lmt>CI • I 610 ., ....... NW\IEn I 40 ' 10 .,.. '•
B•nCM 1.20 is Jt u1Ao-1"' ~onl~~ 1 ,! Pill :!~' • ~ &"r°':' ·~ 1~ 1~ ),h '• 1tnoh1A 9112 .. , ""', '"' 11twEn p11 1) •" 11.. 1.
Banh n JO • llS S.\o-v. "" " " "' • ~-0 ~ I ~ 11•s 10a 11•'"'•~ lltwllllO • «> 2 •3321 U I'• e anci.u 'IO 11 21 2'1• CIOtl s 55 J 2:MJ JO'-t ... GnMlllt 1 M 10 SIO .,,, .. or-. _ • HwtP p1 t SO all ,.._
llanQP IO ,, II ... Conwoo 1 «> • 21 JO 0 -, • ,, '1U ... ". '"' It_,. I «> u 2•» ,,.. '• llwMLI I 20 • ., ·~. '• 81111'1' l 10 I 101 Jt~-\. CoollUll .07r II J\,. I• GMOI Pl l.JS I lJ • "' ltopr pl t 110 H •• NwStW Ill U 191, '•
lliofY• 11• a m 11 .. g: Pl~~ • ~~ ~~ • \i g~1 pf ~ 20 !f ~!'• '• Koppr p1 to 2 11 Horton J J ts H •· =~"~t 1.S2 ""; ~1'" + .. c~ .Ill 12 19) ~. "• GPU II SJI s~. ~ ~roenlr 1.n 9 II; ~, h ~:~~r;:. : : HS1~ ~~·I : ~ B•~llT~ ~ ~ I~ 1*7 :J ... ·+. ~ '-T " s .. ,.... ... Gen Ru 1.01 ti l'IO .,... • .. 1t~'1r..; .. t ., '~ .... HO•O ,.. 11 tlO .,~. H.
811Tr pl 1 SO I --1'\ COCIWO S I 1• t 41 ""' • '' GnAalt U l '• It yolOC tlr tt I 211• , ""'°' 52 12 M O'> 9811,_ II t >3 t .. + "> Cotclure till • 4' IOloo GnSlll'\I I tO t 111 31 r • '• K•-44 1l • •'-llultS n J11J t» n •, B<lrclCR i6 I• S1S ""' •;po Cofel11 44 I a floo 'e OT Fr pl 1 ll 1100 ulO'" '• _ L-t. _ _ 0-0 _
Ber"°" t0 ISi ,,.,._ 1'\ CotnO l ,D U 351 ~ , ... GTFI pl 1,30 t»oo IO'o • ~ LH Mo nJ 569 1 ti 2• + '• 0."nd t• I SIS ,.,,. \• Barnet 1'09 'i tSJ ,,,,_ C0t8lk tM 10 10 21'-• loo GTlte l.!ICJb I 1" 241• • '• LFE > JO 4 O•hlt•P 1 51 t I II'-" llerntPli• J,. .:.:·-Cowles 1 22 11 3111. v. G•"'KO • IJt J't , LLCCI> JI 1 Cl<""-'2!0 SIJll ........ B•ryWr 40 ii )JI 17""-"' CoaCm 21 It 27• Jt .. • " GnA.O tO 10 It 2•1~ • '• L TY to J ICM 10' • • ~• OC<IP pl1 JO •I II ~
lesRn , ... "' s ,,.,, IS ,. "' Gentt u .60 S6 IO... '. LDulnf • 11 11 '"' ~. O<c•P plJ 12 I IS"' 8-11 I S6 ~ '51 lS -t,, ~r-I 60e 1 )jO 211'> c..n11A I Jll IJ J~ lt"7 'o La<GM J «I S S 10 .. , "'° 0CCl~2 lO It It
8Hlti .. 11 l tSS 41 ... +I ••YIU " .. 11 • "' Ge Pe< IJO "'°' 1• '• Lente< ,,. u ., JO ' • DHI ,._.,. 77 104 .... Bey Fin 43 Jn llRio + WI rlton ' " •~. • · GIP< pl J.l • 11 11~• lot L.ewllnt n 1$ 101 1011.-~ OOC. 0 I S tit It '•, ~. BeyStG 2 n t 1 tlV. • ~ Croc:kN 2.40 t 1'1 2~ • ~ G•-pl>I' 70 2 ... + ~' .. ,Pl 11 ;:io IJ'-\,. ~en I Ill 4 4~ ~ llo Be•rll'OQ • 1 10 I ,...,. + .... Cr<llN..,, II • • 21 " "' G•Pw pl1,M ,, !Ito $0 l Ml I , 29 loECI I " •• ,, IJL. IHIFd I.SO I 1'51 111'> ... Crmpl(11 I cw • n w~ •... G•Pw pl1 u s tH. ... L::k .... 40 IO ;; IS~:: ~! Ed pf l 'O •400 26 \')
IMlpl J ll 2>t ·~·•" C""nOt J 0 2•"-+ w GaPwpf115 2 JI». Ltwy1r 1"111 Ult -· 1, O!>f0pl 4C) tlO JI'• 8ettnD I IO ii 16 ""•. "' ,,,,,z .. 1.nt 11 IW Jlw o ..... pl] Ill llOO SI·~. I LMEnt I ,. 10 10 21 . Ol\Edo pf .... 1>00 JO
Belitr n •I'll Crlel pl 4.., 11 ·~ ..... G•P>lr plJ n ""° ss~ •• '• L.aQPl•I .. 1 II 19 .... ~ ~-OllE pf.~ "°° ,,. I. h lltl<oPI 70 's tOJ ~ V, Cr lei Pl83 OS • • 100 1"-'-GtrbPo ".1' • 41 24 • •• j.ef\llal '' 1~ t• 1•16 01\EO pl 1 a. 1XIO 10 1, BelclnM ')6 I • S'-\lo Crurnft I.I• t 11' U~ \.\ GerbSc IJ ti » l h Lthmn 2 It• 147 II'• OnEo pl 1 Ill S tt , '• 8t1How " J 101 n-. + '° Cul bro I I d i fl.... ~ 0.61•tt•P 160 J Siil> s1: >• I L.enn.11r 20 1S 21 ""-, io OhP pf I Of t lOO M o1 lletlll'lll 2A 10 25 Ith \lo Cullin" lO 100 :le • " ant • • '• 1..tnoa 1 111 • tot 11.,.._, , 1 Dllft pf8/ till 111'0 uMI , I\, llalCcl. 1 '• lt ltl'o. ,,, C11rnEn 1 • IOI .u 1 .. " Glbfl'll 577 s>.. LtllUO • I ,, ' ••• OllP PIG111 I. ,. ...... ..,,,,, 1.60 '1 tt JtV. + 'lo C.,,.rlrc: I 10 ) lft \lo GlllHlll ., It 4 llb L.avlSI I •.S lO ISO .Jt , h Dlltl' PIA !t 11)CJ 1011 • a-•· J.n II ton ff .... + .... C11rtW 1 • ., o~ ..... Glllt1t• 2 :11111 .., ,, ... '"' t.evlltf' ',, "' Jtl. .. OhP PIOU6 ,,oo )4•.+ i.; 11...0.M pl 3 .. ' llt"'1+ \II Cy<I-1 10. It It IH• ~ GloblM .lt J US t + I\ LOF I 20 56 '6 20, • II. Okl•GE I 16 7 211 tJ , 11 •enct• pl4 CW SI 41 • 11'> -0-0 -0 OHug I 252 2t' > LO" p1 '7S 1 •S , ... O~ltG pl 111 rl70 1 8t<1ICO 2 •12 ~'> • " DMG It 1-. • "" GIOWF" O:J. It l h LIDtyQI n )9 ,,. IJ't \o Ollll I 10 ' Ill 70•, • ;, 1-9f4.JO. l H•+" De,,_ Jiii .. 1''11• \.\ GOtkh I 1 1'22 12 •I• Lit-.,. 2\0 t''t ... Orner.. I• I ..... tenet i;j 1112 ._ • Ioli §:""'" .56 II •2 IJl'I • I'> GOtel> Pll 12 JO U '• Liiiy t .,.. IO t,ll "4 , t•~ Ornncr 11 10 It 10 it ...--., 1 11 J\lii ef\aQI 160 11 is. a • h GoNTr 1 40 t 1"3 U '•. 1, _. ~ 8E•o• n • 2• 1;1 .., kit,... S1 11 • 17¥.,:.:. ·~ ntel , \a J J 11-. \.\ GotOllJ .~ t 11 ,. • .,. ~. l..lmtbt n ~ 1• J1' "" • ~ N60tc 1.0 s .. "~ 1 lltlllS41 • , .. , I~+ "" O.nt<t J.tO 10112' J6\lo "' OetllO I 1110 1JJS u ... LlncNt • I nt ,. 1 .. 1411\Rh 'IO • » It.. ~
tlQTl1' n 1 sn ••to-,_ tt.on t ..,, 21\l't • ~ Greet ; Ill • '°' ,..,. • Ltn<Pt ' '' • m~ 1 1. 0,11,. osi 14 s• llnnel 1 JO 12 MO J)._,_ "' tllf' :165 •~ .. G•••"'O·' I It 11 tJ 4h •. 1..lllOll I -• 1011 •', • • O•IO'IC to • t:lt 12 • ,, 811,S JG s -i;. IP'lt 114 lllS 14~ Ill. Gr.,.11• 43 •·~ ... t.IUOll llf J • t IS~ 1 \ .. Orlll" )OI r., 11.
llac:•D 16 ll "" ...... Dayco "H ., J~. GIAI"" • 71' '"' .... L.OOhd '°"' ~. • Ollon pl 1 t\lo 811tHPw 1.AO s 21 ,,~· ... ~ f;'r< .... u . alOO 0 ... ' Oii.Min ,., • 10 ~ ·~ L.octltt Ml 14 II 22• .. It Oull>M 't\) I 141 ,.,, •• t lelrJ11 1 9 M 11a¥i+ ¥1 •YHCI •1.lO IS ... , 0 '"' + ~ Glllrn 4 Sh S ti U~ + "9 LOtW\ 1.20 • .. Ill~>• I~ guH•t t012 1~ M 1 ~.
tkkHA I., 10 2J J!Vt + \.\ •:cPL I to ' J.. 17 • l>\ GtHoNk 2 I 110 36\'0 ~ t:::::..i; 2.'.:: I~ ~ r.~ ~i •ft!IOt I 71 « t •o , ,,_
Bl.-I i'.a I )9 ,.._. Ioli ~ Jf 1A 1lSO S<J +ti-> GIWFln 40ll0 :a.. , ... , Ln$t•t I.-I' 1 .. ,J1 • g~~ln::t'•" !! 10 fl n~1. ' toelne I .. J »oJ U..+ ~ D .. L ... 110 00 )4 .... lh GWHll>n ,, 1) 11. "' • ... ~ ... ·~ -j '° "' .-<: I to 10 1217 21 • .. O.enl'" It II .,. ,..... "' GMP n I )t s n 1' ....... LIL.Co 1 OJ • ~j ltYr '• .... 1 ,. q ,.,, 20 "'
-J.22 t 1J)I ~+ .... Deen t It 1J4 J1 • Greyh I 20 • J'7 IS~•• .. t!I.. Olll J · 1Jii0 i»1• II• Owtnttt I .. • SOI Ull't , . ti.AO 1 .. ~ ~ 0.lmP '·i! 1 1... I•'-·. • Gr·e r "' • IOI .. • I It 11.. PIV 4 2t . .tt JO • h O•lrdlll I t 40 ~ + v. ,.,.,.. 10 IS. . ~ .... 0.li.A. I ,. 2UJ ... • "' GtOltr II > I.. ,.,.,, I.IL plT J ,, ,. tJl>lt + ~ •-o -
I• UO 1 101 2i!AI ..... 0.11-• d '"° .... OrowG ato i JO '" '' I.II. OIP t 43 10 11'11> ~ PM~ I• IS »2 2~ w IW 1.1J .. J, ifE "" l•Cllll I !1 '~' " •». \It Or\ltnn'I I Cl u 1•1 J1.I.. n . LIL j)4'() , 4J I .,.. I'll ..... Ml I * • 101 10• •• 1. ~111,,JF I .. , i. 11-Wo I .. If' 10h t " Gr11"' ri to 111 '°"' l.91'j10t I CW II 114 ' \, ..._ P,.0 2 lt • UH Jt.\o rip u .. Ml 11 ... Ti\ M 1 ... ttit Gll4tf0 Jt t UO Jiii " Loral Ill I• l.JO • ._ ,. 11$/4 tO J NO ~ •• ··~ MO ,, I 't • ·~ "'"'¥ .. '* -ti~. . OllW•I .ll ~ • .,, "". \, l.•0 .,.1 •> ' tt' • .. . "" tl'ecAS ' 40e • " "" • ' rll"' Utt i .. t + ... ,_.. 1.1171 ltl II ~ GllW Pl t t0 •. ~ti U h , t•I...,. 18011 I Jt:\o '• lllttOE I • lt)t t•t• • I'> rock n ,jo 1' 11 i,.._ "' I Ed I ... I t$2 11 ......... G11llOll UO • Ml ftt,1 ., ••a< M <IOS Id to .... + .. Pa<l..tt t ?t I 11 It~•• ...
rc.ll*'l' 1"2 • M 1~ • ,_ tE pf ·~" 110 ..... ~I• .... 0111111• ,.. tJ . ;_ l.W'WOt f jfj 1 1)1 ~1-t • Pa<\.llM to IJ IJ ttMI • \, rUG 1.N t H .,_ " o..a. ,... rJO »· 01111• ptl,. 1 11\IH ~ L-t I tO s IO 1•\•. 1. PK~ t .. ',..,i "'"• ... UG ,n Q • " "" 0.Ul "' , .. OJO ,._.. "' 011$1\li ·~ • ns ,, • ., Loo.re•' • 10 " ~. "' it.c• ~ • ,, ti .. tft •., ,. l ~ DI .... > IJ 2M ~ • '-G11$V Pl•.80 • tlO U "' ~lltlrll I Oii 10 1•1 1,~. f '• l"e<ttr •.•/ • 4 1' l 1.16 ' nt 11'41 + _., Dl 1111 2.IS t2 tat • Olf'V P<• <10 • • .. JQ'~ ._ l..uDyt JI tO ll ~ 2 .. ~ Ptt ,,. ... 1 l\'t • I'll
r 11 "* JW>+ " 01 "'" '.. ~ !lllt• " 01111utd 1.~ 1 "' l'"' + "-l.KllYS ,,,. • 1"s !Slit "" '" 40 r, ~ WH '-~I~ ti lT ~·~ 81 :f1u4.r ' f.,il"' +t,._ Gullon ~:_"''-IO • 1~ MAC.OM ,.~~1 It • ., :::::: 1: II ' .. 11 "• r:
Ill.,., ii If .. lt\it• ... D rl ti..-I 1111.\•H l\/'o H~W .. I r11 . iA I.JOI> It 211 ... ,,. 11 ,..,. .. a. >4 l Uf,• • I• m' 11 1~~ ._ ti.:u1 a;: m-::· .... H~RTlW.i::14" tt'"•,''11 #< ~ :a Jl"'?l:''t! :::::t",tJO 't = U1'-' ~ ~ f • l1t ~!V.-~ °'~-,,,. .... lt"'t " I'"'' I'°.. It"•~ ~ .. ~ .. l 11..,,. llff(lt• M. .. .. .. 1 •1111 -Iii+ .. l>IOior ... t n 10 .. 11411 ... t 2Mo+114 Mu..•N !ti •~• .. •• lltt~ JI .. S JS-._•1~ .i$ .. 1 ~ ... D!Glo11nn t ,. .. I'll ·~" 114 s ..-. . 1.11 HP .. • 11 ,.. • .,1111i. • M It'• "'" f It I 11..... Di<tlM I 411 ti 1t ~ t '°' HtnJ' 1.Alll ... ltt. • \.\ Alla<lflif -ti '11 It • "-...... Dtl ,M J tlll "-"
' •
Dow Jones Final! l
UP 11.78
CLOSING 111.IO
HIGHLAND PARK. Mich. (AP) -Time was
running short today for bargainers at Chrysler Corp.
and the United Auto Workers union, with economics
and health care Issues the main stumbling blocks to a
contract.
"I can't recaU being m this situation having BO
little time wl\h which to do so much," UAW President
Douglas A. Fraser said at a news conference late
Sunday.
The current contract, cover:ing 43,200 U.S .
autoworkent plus another 40,000 on indefinite layoff,
expires at midnight Tuesday.
Benefits package OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill boosting worker
compensation benefits for on-the-job disabilities was
signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Brown called the m easure, AB684 by
Assemblyman Bruce Young, 0 -Cerrltos, "a long
overdue benefit and reform package for the working
people of California."
Gold producers can mint seal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -California gold
producers will be able to mint a gold medallion using
the state's Great Seal if they pay all costs and a
royalty to the state, under a new law.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said he signed AB676 by
Assemblyman David Kelley, R-Hemet.
The bill, which takes effect immediately, allows
the state's Great Seal to be used in a series of
commemorative medals to be sold by gold producers.
The producers have to pay royalty fees to the state
that range from $1 to $4 per medallion and must pay
for all design and production costs.
Gas prices still failing
LOS AN<;iELES (AP) -Oil industry analyst Dan
Lundberg says motorists are continuing to buy less
gas, which has caused prices to Call to an average $1.27
per gallon in late August and brought on .sharper
competition for business among self-service stations.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW 'l'OAlt IAPI TM fol-1"11 llM
-. U. -York SIOO Ea<f\an9o slo< .. • ond wetreno llWlt h.I•• -uP
Ille ,,_, tnd -ttw mo\t bot-on perc""I of <hen91r rt•OtlOltU Of ¥OlurN
IOI Mon<M~ ..:: ~~ ;.~~'1.:~~:z~~ Cltl1~9"te llRI_, ,,_ Prevlou• CIO\lftU
P<lce ond todeY'l i~rn price
1 ,.,,:·~..,. Les~,, ,cn90 Up Pc~ 1 s
2 VGIQ> pl 71 • 2 Up 100
l -.!CmSY' t "1 • '-VP t • t Flae.ctl II • 1'-VP t J S llSPw t Ollll n y, • 21/'o Up I) 6 TUU Ind ).. • "4 Up 1.0 I GTFI pl8 !Oh "" VP 1.4
I PSEG 4 Oll>t >1 2 VP ' I ,: ~~s::r ~": ·: 8: : ! 11 Y•EP J.npl J6ti ,... up ~I
12 FlllcPTu JO • '"" Vp • 0 ""°'"•·SClfl.! n , 1i,. VP to " VSl.lf'E 1llPI 211'> • 11/'o VP .I IS F•rall MIU I '-VP ),J 16 Te<,....tolor ,._ • VI VP S..S
11 ........ Payne II "°" Up H II H .. ~ 2 .... • ~ VP S l t9 ""El e.JOpl l! • 111> Up S I 20 SuP<Ye l.,. 2l02 • ..... Up },I
21 Baro CR " .... + lh VP SO 22 Al-lllC , ... + ~ VP 4 I 2J AllMCll U I> • 1>1t 1Jtt t t
1A StCIQVC pf '"" • .. Vp •.S 2S WYMilM Ifft • "' Vp t J ... ,,..
I Welt.llm pf
t E•-PO J Al'-lnll • MarllnM,
S Gel\HO\I • • Mar"''' J -rtl> I Ar,..,Ei.t
tY-(4
10 Dwql..t 7 Jtpo 11 Trlcenir1
12 /4rn Motor I 13 IMnPw pt It CenlrnO..e I) lt,...lllO
16OMG 111< 11 KtlVSl .. 1 11 Ae<GVllEq
" vlt\llllvl 5.«Jl)I JO w .. "'c.m 21WnAlr 1,.111 n~..t~ ,. G<Olt .. " 1S T lle<lltf ay
DOW•S LHI C."9 Pct.
l\o "'°'' •• I I'> "" Dlt I I 11'-IVI Ott 11
)4J e U \ Oii 1.1 U~• 10,. Olt I t
1'1i .. Off J.S 11\0 I Off 1.S
12"" I Oii 1~ S.,_ -'-Oii LI IS~ 1~ D1t 6 r I .... Off e.J
, ... -'· Dlt ••• IS'--I ()11 tO • ~. Oft s.• JJ.¥, -II;) Ol1 H ,... ... Dlt St ,, ... -.... Oii st
t~ -~ D1t S,4 ,. h Oii u
-~ '"-Oft 'J 4'-I. Off S,I II~ ft Oft S.O ,.. \lo Off so
2*11 v. Oil u ,.. ~ 0t1 ~o
GOLD COINS
NEW YORK CAP) -P~ Ill• Frld•y
ol gold tolne, com&>•'*' with Tilutadly'I
prlee.
ICNttff-4, 1 t•or o~ .. $459.76. oft
SH$ M.ie ..... 1 tiOy oz .. $451U5, Oii
S7.2$ llllNto.fl IO,.... 1 2 lrO'( OI., $640.50,
off M.15 .... ,..... "° ......... 9102 troy oz .• ~.25. °" 17.00.
Source O...·P-1
AMERICAN LEADERS
MnALS
NEW YORI< (AP) -Spot nonlwrout
metel Pfloee lodey.
Copper 7~73 centa • pound. U.S destlnllloM
L...S 26-29 cenll • POUnd.
Zlflc 40-42 cen11 •pound. del!Yered.
Tift S6 S448 Metals Weelt coml>Otite
lb. """'*"-76-77 oent1 a pound. N.V • ....,_, $365.00 pet flalll. -~ $365.004372.00 troy 0Ufl09,
N.V. "
SILVER
Htndy & Harman. $8.880 per hoy ounce.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
8r n.. A-'•M ..._. :!
8-elecl WOrld gold &>rte. lodey· :_;:
LOfldofl mOfntng ""'no S-440.00, off 113.00.
Londoft ettemoon flJllllg '438.00, ott f 14.00
Pert• ellernoon fhdno f422 tO of1 $2.83. '
Pfenlltwt flKlng '440,00. off M.82. ZWtofl lat• lliM\OOn fll(lng '439.00,
off 118 00 blc:I: '440.50 •tci •
HMdr • HMMMI (only d .. IY qvote): '439.00. ott lf4.00. on -SC" (only dl!lly ciuot•I am oo.
..:o~ J~~ qucM) letltlca1M.·.
,•
;i
,•
., .. ,. .. .. . :.
:; ..
·' .
.
'• ..