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1981-08-03 - Orange Coast Pilot
MONDAY AUGUST J 1981 . . -.. . -· .. • * * • • • -11111111 ., PUii OH ANGE COUN TY L AL If OHNIA 75 CE.NTS County flying Air traf fie flows despite strike • By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ... .,.., ...... ,." Jeta thundered out of Orange County's John Wayne Airport un- der relatively normal scheduJes today, despite the air controllers' strike that cut the number of on- duty air traffic personnel by 40 percent. Airline representatives said some flights were delayed from five to 10 minutes, but that no scheduled departures were can- celed. Arriving flights also were unaffected. they said. Ralph· Odenwald, chief of the Orange County lower, said three persons -instead of the usuaJ five -were handling air traffic in and out cf the airport, the fourth busiest in the country. saves fuel because jetliners don't sit near the runway awaiting takeoff clearance. At a separate Federal Aviatioft Administration air traffic contro1 facility located at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, chief Don Fowler said the strike had impacted operations. but declined to release a specific figure on the number of personnel involved. ·'We have adequate starting for about 50 percent of our opera· Hons," Fowler said. The radar fac\lity serves as somelhinl of a centraJ clearinghouse for aJJ air traffic along the Orange Coast. AirCal's outbound flights were carrying about 25 percent fewer passengers than normaJ, Mark Peterson. director of communica- tions said. By contrast, he said, AirCal ex- perienced a higher than normal passenger demand Sunday, as travelers attempted to beat the strike deadline clock. Peterson A single-engine Cessna airplane takes off over the control tower. marmed by three people , at John Wayne Airport todau. Odenwald said a "gate hold" procedure was implemented, whereby commercial jetliners were held at the terminal gate un- til a firm departure time could be given to pilots by controllers. Such a system, he said, allows for a smoother flow of trarfic and (See FLIGHTS, Page AZ) Tax cuts ready Congress wrapping up action WASHINGTON <AP> -Only Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and his opposition to tax breaks for the oil indnstry stood in the path of the largest tax cut in American history today. The Senate was scheduled to complete action today, and the House Tuesday, on President Reagan's lax legislation, a cor- nerstone of his economic plan which would reduce individual and corporate taxes by $749 billion through 1986. That would put the bill on Reagan's desk for his signature. The final version of the bill was agreed upon · Saturday morning by conferees who spent 14 hours hammering out dif· ferences between the House and Senate approaches, largely over how 'much of a break oil pro- duc,rs shouJd get. (See related stories Page A3.) The compromise calls for re- ductions for pe troltrn pro· ducers totalling $32 bition over the next 10 years, most of it go- ing to royally holders. Thal is about halfway between the $19.9 billion the Senate wanted and the $46 billion written into the House bill by Reagan supporters in a successfuJ move to win the votes of oil-state Democrats. A big night at big top READING , Pa . <AP> Circus buff Ed Phillips wanted only one ring from fiancee Pen· >ny Jordan. She decided to give him three. The Wilmington, Del.. couple planned to marry tonight under the big top when the Clyde Beat- ty-Cole Bros. Circus rolls into town. Senate Republican leaders wanted to bring the bill up for a final vote Saturday but were thwarted wh en the Massachusetts Democrat called from his home state and asked that it be held up until today. Kennedy, whose request was honored under a Senate custom allowing absent members to be present for major actions, .said he wouJd demand a vote on a motion to recommit the bill to conference with instructions to rewrite the oil provisions. How much support he might gel was uncertain. Last week, Kennedy and other liberal Democrats threatened a filibuster if lhe oil industry re- ductions proposed by the con· ferees were much larger than the original Senate bill. After the compromise was reached, however, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, one of those threatening to filibuster. said he would not hold up the legislation. It takes 60 votes to stifle a filibuster. Eighty-nine senators voted for the bill before the con- ference. Kennedy voted against it. Kenn~vowed "to do all I can to oppos e the gigantic multibillion dolla.r giveaway to the oil industry. . . "I know that my colleagues wish to begin the . . . recess and to leave the long hot summer of a Wa s hington Aug1i1.._s.~. but I believe that we shoulft stay in session until this issue is r:e- sol ved," he said. Kennedy's absence Saturday angered some colleagues, who will leave town this week for a recess lasting until Sept. 8. "I hope it's convenient for him to be here Monday," said the bill's manager, Sen. Bob Dole R-Kan. · ' Waves, tides keep lifeguards hopping Orange Coast lifeguard de- partments say they were kept busy over the weekend making rescues u 4 to 5·foot waves and rip currents plagued bathers. Laguna Beach lifeguard spokesman Bruce Baird said a Covina woman nearly drowned at Mountain Road beach Satur- day. Baird said when lifepard Mike Longfield reached Eleste Martines she was noatint about 4 feet underwater and· bad stopped breathina. However, by the time abe was brou1ht to the beach her breathing bad returned after be· in1 Jlveo mouth-to-mouth re· 1u1citatlon, Baird said. Ms. Martinea was taken to South Cout Medical Center where she was treated and released. Baird said about 70,000 people showed up at city beaches over the weekend. Suif WU reported at from 3 to 4 feet and 1'1 rucues were performed. Newport Beach lifeparda re· ported 185,000 beach vis\tQn on • both Saturday and Sunday, an • unusualJy large crowd. Eighty- one rescues were made. Evening beach-goers in Newport Saturday were sur· prised by· the landing of a Coast Guard rescue helicopter. Lt. Frank Mulllns of the guard's Rescue Coordination Center in Long Beath aaid the pUot dla- covered a hydraulic leak while· flyln1 over the ocean 30 miles from shore. No one was injured in the emergency landing. Mullins said the craft was repaired on the beach and returned to Lona Beach Saturday n11ht. Huntington Beach city llfepards 1ald a weekend crowd of 90,000 was counted. No major Incident.a were reported and 88 rescues were performed. Huntin1ton Stat• Beach cuardl said the crowd at their 1trand wa1 eatlmated at about 139,000. There wen no aeri.oua incldenta reported and 40 rescues. * * * Traffic at Orange County's normally bultling John Wayne Airport was .doum by 15 to 20 percent today. Passengers find the going easier in the terminal. No pa,nic at· county .airport Wayne Airport quiet; many left before strike ByGLENNSCO'.M' OflMDellJf'IM4StaN Although most of the passenge r s at John Wayne Airport seemed resolved this morning to flight delays cawied by an air traffic controllers' 7 a.m. strike. Jonathan Haines of Laguna Beach was taking no chances on his flight. Call it bad luck, but Haines had a job interview in San Francisco al 10:30a.m. Heaiready was wall- ing at the airport at 7 a.m. for a scheduled8:30a.m. AirCalflight. "I figure I'm going to wait," he said as he sat in a chair in the terminal lobby. But Haines was surprised when he arrived, he said, because the terminal was not busy, not rocked by panicky passengers. In fact, it was aJmostquiet. "I expected a big crowd, but I don't know where they are," he said. Bob Pike, AirCal's station manager, thought he had the answer this morning. "I think everybody got smart and left Saturday and Sunday,'! he said. An hour after the strike began, some flights had departed and all other commercial tu1hta were scheduled to leave, althouib of· ncials said the planes wou.ld be at leAst 15 to 20 minutes behind schedule. Passengens with less at stake than Haines seemed aaUsfied with the arrangement as they sat sleepy-eyed In wajtlnJ rooms while thelr commer~la1 Jets wait- ed, doons open, juat steps outalde the terminal. Al Principe of La Ha.bra and Steve Schreiner of Arcadia said ihey were encoura1ed tbia wee.kepi after rea41n1 and bear- ing news report.a that smaller termlna11, aucb u John Wayne, wouldn't have, the problema ex· peeled at major alrport.a. The two work c0Uea1ues were headed to a tralninl aaaion ln . . Sacramento. Their biggest worry. they added, was how lo re- turn to Orange Courity on Tues- day. "We're taking it one step at a time," cautioned Principe. "We may have to take Greyhound or I heard they may put another Am- trak train on the route from San Francisco lo Los Angeles." Vonna Hammerschmitt of Newport Beach accompanied her husband Robert to the airport,· where he was heading for San Jose. "We tried to get out yesterday and everything was full," she said. To her amazement, the terminal seemed less crowded than on normal Monday morn- ings. If there was any part of the terminal that seemed more crowded this morning, it was the pay telephones. They were jammed at 7 a.m .. mostly by men in business suits holding com- plimentary cups of coffee in one hand, receivers in the other. "Just tell them r11 be there some time," said one of the callers. 'Californians pay more for gasoline LOS ANGELES <AP) - Californians have been paying about seven cents more for a gallon of reguJar leaded gasoline than the national average, but that price gap couJd vanish soon, according to industry statistics. The difference In price was at- tributed to an extraordinary drop ln gasoline supplies last spring on the West Coast, the Los Anaetes Ti mes reported Sunday . Meanwhile, a worldwide surplua of oil led to a drop ln natiooaJ gasoline prices. As production tears up this summer, gasoline supplies should be return1ng to normal levels and wholesale prices ba~e already started to drop. Prices at the pump should follow, industry of. ficials told the Times. In Man:b, the avera1e price for a 1alldn of leaded reaular 1u was $1.31 both in California lnd na- tionwide. ~Uea west of the Rockies however, tbe prtcee ln C om(a roee. By July 1, agallonolre1utar 1uollneeo1t $1.34 in CallfornJa, ac~ to the ·Lundberg Letter , an authoritative marketing survey. Nationwide, the price had droppedtoSl.27 a gallon. The Times reported that the gasoline sup11Hes in the West dropped so drastically last spring that Jess fuel was on hand then than had been available during the big 1979 gasoline shortage. In 1979, a s percent supply loss during the Iranian revolution prompted panJc buying and Jong lines at service stations. That triggered a rise in lhe cost of oiJ of more than 100 percent a year. When the first llnesJormed, the panic spread and drivers kept their 1asolinetanka fiJled, usually carrying about three-quarten of a tank of gu. This put an addi· tionaJ strain oo supplies, since the average driver normaUy keeps Ju1t a quarter or a tank or gas in •hhcar. But lut spring, panic ~lnl wu averted. AdditJonaJ supplies were shipped in from the East, although usually oil ii shipped from the West Coast to the tut. * * * voiced WASHINGTON <AP > -Presi- dent Reagan gave striking air traffic controllers 48 hours today to return to work or be fired. · · 1 must tell those who failed to report for duty this morning they are in violation of the law. and if they don't report for work within 48 hours, they have forfeited their jobs and wiU be terminated.·· Reagan told a Rose Garilen briefing this morn- ing. Reagan's announcement came at the same lime the Federal A v iation Admini s tration grounded much of the natioJl's commercial air traffic as the controllers . in defiance of a federal .1ud~e. ·launched their first nationwide strike. The walkout began with the day shift at 7 a.m .. locaJ time, and the FAA said early indica· lions were that more controllers were staying off their jobs at some centers than had been an- ticipated while in other areas some controllers were defying the strike. No fitures were available. Reagan told reporters that federal law prohibits federal employees from striking and that air controllers promised not to strike when they were hired. "I hope you 'll emphasize again the possibility of termina· lion, because I believe that there are a great many of those people who have been swept up in this and probably have not realJy considered the fact that they have taken an oath, the fact that this is now in violation of the law. "I hope they will remove themselves from the lawbreaker situation by returning to their posts." Trans portation Secretary Drew Lewis , who also briefed <See WARNING, Page AZ) .ORINGI GUST WllTHIR Late night through mid- morning low cloudiness. Otherwise fair through Tuesday. Not much tem- perature change. Highs in low 70s at the beache.s, ranging to low lo middle 80s in the inland sections. Lows tonight 60 to 65. ·llSIDI TODAY They're called the "girl Beatlu" and they're giuing cuteMu o good name. Mttt this new rock group on Page A7. llDll I Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 ........... , FAREWELL WAVE Prince Charles and Princess Diana bid farewell to crowd which gathered to see them off on the Royal Yacht Britannia. The couple set sail for a honeymoon cruise of the Mediterranean. ,, Bradley in county, hits Reagan policy ANAHEIM -Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley greeted the general assembly of the Chris- tian Church !Disciples of Christ> in Anaheim by attacking the policies of the Protestant church's most powerful member -President Reagan. BradJey, considered a proba· ble contender for the 1982 California governor's race, en- couraged the 200-member breakfast crowd Sunday to fight administration cuts in social welfare programs and to adopt a proposal calling for renewed ef- forts against racism. Developing general church policy is the main focus of the six-day biennial assembly, at- tended by 7,000 of 1.2 million dis- ciples. Conferees voted Sunday to make "peace with justice" the church's top priority and were to debate a proposal con- demning racism before the as- sembly ends Wednesday. Bradley rapped administra- tion moves to balance the federal budget by cutting aid to the poor ,and elderly, saying he "cannot see taking battleships out of mothballs and putting •senior citizens in mothballs.'' ' Reagan maintains mem- bership in the Hollywood- Beverly Hills Christian Church in Los Angeles although he at- tends Presbyterian churches. Spokeswoman Lillian Moir said adopting resolutions such as·that for '"peace with justice" were more than moral ex- ercises, since the church stresses individual interpreta- tion of Scripture. Disciples also voted to .in- crease donations to foreign ministries-a reaction to contin- uing world inflation-and to encol.trage individual congrega- tions to study the causes of domestic violence. The church dispensed $15 million to overseas missions last year, up S1h percent from 1979, Ms. Moir said. That anti-racism resolution was on Monday's agenda, along with a proposal to boycott Nestle for its distribution of infant formula to Third World nations. Critics of tbe. company have charged the formula contributes to malnutrition by discouraging breast-feeding The 7,000 conferees also called Sunday for another five years' discussion on a proposed union with the 1.8-million member United Church of Christ. :Hospital expenses California • soar 1n • SACRAMENTO (AP> -The costs of operating California's 550 acute care hospitals jumped near- ly 18 percent for the year-long period ending in April 1981, state officials said, almost double the risejn the consumer price index fortnesameperiod. However, the report by the California Health Facilities Com- mission said the 17.7 percent in- crease drops to 17.2 percent when spending by Kaiser Hospitals state h~pitals for the mentally ill and disabled and Shriners' hospitals are included in the figures. The rise in the consumer price index for the same period -April 1980 to April 1981 -was 9.9 per- cent. TV newswoman's mate a suicide WASHINGTON (AP> -Dr. Donald .Payne, husband of NBC television journalist Jessica Savitch, apparently committed suicide by banging, police say. His wife found Payne dead in the basement of their Washington home Sunday morn· ing, police sald. An ambulance crew was unable to revive him. ORA GECOAST Meanwhile, patient costs were up ·an average of 16.2 percent statewide, e xceeding the hospitals' goal to hold the in- crease rate to no greater than 14.9 percent. The hospitals' occupan- cy rate increased by slightly Jess than 2 percent. According to the report, the average patient cost upon dis- rharge from a hospital was $2,861, with an average cost per day of $411. In addition, the average cost of an outpatient visit was $82 dur- ing the first quarter of 1981. Although the report gives no figures on specific hospitals, total hospital operating expenses are expected to exceed $11 billion in 1981. The cost increases were at- tributed to three factors -rising prices, increases in hospital use and changes in the kind and amount of services provided. The commission serves as a statewide' clearinghouse of hospital information, and its fis- cal reports are ustd by state agen- cies in determirlng reimburse- ments for state-subsidized medical services. The commission's report stems from a quarterly financial and statistical reporting system c reated when legislation authored by stale Sen. Robert Presley, D-Riverside, passed last year. Daily Pilat · Claaalhd Mlventalng 1141142·5171 All othef depertmenfa 642-4321 Thoma9 P. Haley ~ -Ohlel hecut1Yt omc .. Robert N. Weed ~ Michael P. Harvey ~~ I.. Kay Schultz Olr9ctoi d Opet-. Kenneth N. Goddard Jr. · ~Ol-Thomn·A. Murphlne ,_ Bernatd Sehulm•n CeMrellor Ch.,IM H. l.oot --.~ lcl!IOt CatGf A. MOore ........ MAINOfftCE UO Wtll 8•'t $1., Costa llilt<w, CA. Mall •lldreH; lo• IMO, Cwt• MH•, CA . .,.,. , Travelers flnd alternative mf}ans •1 'fte Allocla&ed Pren Travelen faced delayecl and caocele.d fll1ht1 today and scrambled to ~i alternate mean1 of trans rtatlon aa a controller&' atrt e 1rnarled air' tramc acl'Olla the nation. The alrl>orta were kert open by supervisory peraonne and by coaitrollen who defied their un· lon 's lttlke call. But some flightl were canceled even before the walkout began at 7 a .m . and others left behind· acbedule, with longer delays ex- ,pect.ed as the dfl.Y wore on. Amtrak Hid business was brisker than usual -particular- ly between '!Yashington and New York. Rental car age)lcies were swamped by people who planned to drive instead of Oy. And bus lines braced for a boom. Ninety musicians from the Oklahoma Youth Orchestra wnited with cro&.1ed fingers at tbe Oklahoma City Airport. They worked ror month• to raise more than $200,000 for 1 concert tour ol Chlna. "We're at their morcy." said Director Le1h Burns. "U ... our flight from here to the West Coast ls can- celed, our trlp . . . Is canceled and there is nothing we can do about it." "l have to get back to London tonight," said Lucy Regan, 29, of England. u s he s\ood at Boston 's L·ogan International Airport. Mrs. Regan said her visitor's visa expires today and added, "My husband's waitlng for me." Phil Orlandella. a spokesman for the Massachusetts Port Authority, said that delays as of 9 a.m . were running up to 20 minutes. "Planes are taking off pretty s moothly," he said. "We're operating over so per· cent. as far as takeoffs and ar- rivals. AJI major airlines are aetUnt planea off the ground.'' He 1ald nine auperviaon were handlln1 cbOret ln tbe control tower, whJcb normally Is ataffed by 20 controllers. Many chanced their plans and traveled Sunday to avoid the strike. Others relied on the airlines' promises to operate at least some flights. "People wtU get to their dQtUnaUons," vowed Brent 8askfield, a Northwest Airlines spokesman in Min- neapolis. Frank Borman, president of Eastern Airlines, visited the car- rier's ticket counter at Miami Aiq>ort this morning. He said Eastern would "do everything possible to keep the planes fiy; ing." The contingency s trike plan of the Federal Aviation Ad- ministration hit hardest at short- haul flights -those of less than 500 miles. USAir, a regional car- rier w~ch serves 25 states, an- ~ig ~erger ;~~~NG ISSUED ... fight Ill rt:porters, said the government Reagan and Lewis spoke after will not offer the ,controllers any a midmorning White House fl•ll } d . more money. meeting also attended by At-8 ays "We do not plan to increase torney General William French our offer to the union," he said. Smith. NEW YORK (AP> -The three-way struggle to · acquir~ Conoco Inc . in the lar,gesl transaction in U.S. corporate history entered what could be its decisive week today. Du Pont Co. was in the lead. However, Seagram Co. Ltd., the big Canadian distiller. already has begun buying shares of the ninth-largest U.S. oil_ c~mpany, and Mobil Corp. said it planned "further action" to st~ngthen its bid. Du Pont. offering a total of $7.3 billion, appeared to hold the edge. It said it h~ received tenders for more than SO percent of Conoco's shares and said it ex- pects to have final antitrust clear ance from the Justice Department by Wednesday, when it will begin buying those shares. Conoco wants to merge with Du Pont, the nation's largest chemical concern. Du Pont has reserved the right not to buy shares unless 51 per- cent were offered. But its board was expected today to consider cutting that figure to 41 percent. Until Du Pont actually purchases the s h ares, the owners could change their minds. Seagram said Sunday that it ~has received valid tenders for about 18 percent of Conoco's common stock outstanding. Mobil's promise of "further action" came after it was jolted by the Justice Department, which said it had questions about the "competitive implica- . lions" of the $8.2 bilHon offer by Mobil, the nation's second- largest oil company. The department said it sent questions to Mobil, and Mobil purchases of Conoco stock would not be legal until 10 days after the questions were answered. By then, Conoco may have been acquired by someone else. The announcement of possible "further action" was seen as a hint that Mobil might raise its bid to hold .investors ' interest and dissuade them from tender- ing their shares elsewhere until Mobil's antitrust position is clear . Mobil spokesman John Flint said Sunday that the company had not changed its offer. Reagan said the threat to fire Lewis said beforehand that the t~e controll~~s was the only ac-government would not try to put lion open to him. . controllers in jall, but would "What lesser action can there seek civil penalties and ask to be?" he asked. "The law is very have the union removed as the explicit. They are violating the controlJers' bargaining agent. law." Meanwhile, a federal judge in * * * New York City ordered air traf-From Page A 1 fi e controllers to halt their strike temporarily and appear in court FLIGHTS Tuesday to explain why they • • • should not permanently return said nearly all standb y passengers were a ccommodated. Calls poured into AirCal's res· ervation lines as concerned travelers sought. information on whether their flights would de- part, Peterson noted. Peterson saidAirCal. which operates 25 of the 41 jet de- partures permitted daily from the airport, intends to operate its normal schedule until otherwise advised by the FAA. The FAA has prepared a con- tingency plan to handle traffic, but its implementation has been held in abeyance while officials determine how much of an impact thestrikeishaving. Peterson said it is much too early to assess what financial im- pact the strike may have, but pointed out th at the threat alone of an air traffic controllers strike on June 22 is estimated to have cost the airline industry about$4-0 mil- Lioninlostrevenue. TV watchdogs flay Donalwe CHICAGO (AP) -;-A con- servative TV watchdog group says it will begin monitoring the Phil Donahue show, claiming that most topics on the award-winning program viewed by millions of American housewives deal with ·•abnormal sex." In announcing .plans for monitoring the program, the Na- tional Federation for Decency s aid it would publish lists of com- panies that sponsor the hour-long "Donahue" shows dealing with sex and would encourage con- sumers to boycott products ad- vertised on such programs. "Never before in television's history have we had a sex activist broadc as t er s uch as Phil Donahue," the group said in a news release. to work. U.S. marshals immediately were ordered to fan out with copies of the order, seeking striking controllers and serving them with Platt's order. Failure to obey the judicial command could subject mem- bers of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization to contempt-of-court penalties. Representatives of the union were ordered to appear before Platt at 10 a.m. EDT Tuesday to answer his order. The judge's order enjoined the controllers "from in any manner calling, causing or authorizing, continuing, encouraging and participating in and engaging in, obstructing or taking any part in any strike, work stoppage or slowdown or other concerted failures by FAA employees to report to work." The 7 a.m. walkout was in de- fiance of another judge's order. U.S. District Judge Joyce Green in Washington ordered the union and its leaders to teU the court by 2 p.m. PDT today why they should not be held in contempt for disobeying her or- der making the strike illegal. Mrs. Green, at the predawn hearing, also granted the gov- ernment's request to bar the un- ion from paying any benefits from its strike fund to the con- trollers. Mrs. Green's order had pro- hi bited a work stoppage or s lowdown for 10 days. Mrs . Green, who noted government e mployees are forbidden to strike, said a hearing will be held Aug. 12 to consider a tem- porary restraining order, which would lengthen the legal prohibi- tion against the strike. The un- ion was not represented at today's court session. The controllers. who direct air traffic at 23 regional centers and more than 500 airports, earn an av~rage of $34,000 a year, with a low of $20,SOO and a high of $49,200, depending on years of service and traffic vofume. nounced just before the atart of the strike it had called oll all morning nights. The flight arrival board for · Pan American World Airwaya in Miami showed five ~ancellationa -two from New Yorll's Ken- nedy Airport, one from the Newark, N.J., airport and two from Washington. "We are ad· justing to accommodate as best we can," said spokesman Mike Clark. U.S. Sen. Jennings Randolph, 0 -W. Va., was among those forced to travel on the ground in- stead of in the air. Randolph spent the weekend in West Virginia and planned to take an Aeromech commuter fli&hl to Washington, D.C. today. The flight was canceled and Ran- dolph pressed a cousin into service to drive him to the capital so he could get there for an 11 a .m. PDT vote on the tax cut. Amtrak reported an increase in calls about reservations and officials said they wo,uld do their best to accommodate extra passengers. Jung Lee, an Am- trak spokesman in New York. said trains leaving Penn Station in New York and Union Station in Washington carried heavier loads than usual, as people who normally would take the shuttle tried the train instead. Lee had no specific figures. Auto rental companies said there was ,a surge of customers who wanted one-way rentals. ·'Our customers have told us they plan to take the cars home with them -as far away as Detroit," said Nancy McDonald, a s pokes woman for Budget Rent-a-Car in Atlanta. Jack Weiler of the Greyhound Bus Lines said business at the Port Authority station in New York was "brisk compared to a normal Mtmday morning." He said the company expected an increase in traffic in late morn- ing and early afternoon as the full mpact of the controllers' strike hits home. * * •. Airports cut plane flights WASHINGTON <AP> -The Federal 't\viation Administration said today it was telling the na- tion's airlines to ground half their fughts at 23 major airports later today because of the strike by air traffic controllers. The 23 airports are: Atlanta, Boston, Chicago. Cleveland, Dallas-Fort Worth, Denver. Detroit, Fort Lauderdal~. Hous ton, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis , New York, ( LaGuardia and Kennedy>, Newark , Pittsburgh , Philadelphia, St. Louis, San Francisco, Seattle, Washington D.C. <National). Fuentes gets panel post Thomas Fuentes, senior vice president of a Newport Beach engineering firm, bas been elect- ed president of the 12-member Santa Ana College Foundation, which administers scholarship programs for the college. Fuentes, a Santa Ana College graduate. is a member of the Republican State Central Com- mittee and first vice chairman of Orange County's Republican Party. He is also communications director of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Or ange and a member of the U.S. Catholic Bishops Na- tional Advisory Council. Seagram, which is m aking its bid through its U .S.-based Joseph E. Seagram & Sons Inc. unit, said it received irrevocable tenders for slightly more than 15.5 million Conoco shares. or about 18 percent of Conoco's s tock, as of 9 p.m. PDT Satur- day. It said it was buying the • tendered stock for $92 a share in cash on a first-come, tirst- served basis -up to 44.4 million shares -and that its $4.1 billion offer e nds at 9 p . m . PDT Wedn~sday unless extended. Denim: '\den-am\n Schlitz quits brew business MILWAUKEE (AP)-Thebot- Ues and cans of "the beer that made Milwaukee famous" no longer will whir through the a utomated lines that slink through the Schlitz Brewing Co .. main plant. For 132 years. Schlitz has made its beer here. With such com- petitors as Pabst, Miller and lllat.z, SchliU earned Milwaukee the reputation as the beer capital of the world. But that title will slip• bit when the agtna plant is officially shut down Sept. 30. Scblitl announ.ced the closing Friday, ahakl.ng the cl- ty as well u 720 breweQ' workers wbo have beeb on strike slnce Junel. s,. H~len& stirs SEATl'LE <AP) -Mount St. He.11111 sbot 1 plume of •team 3.100 feet above 1-.. crater rtsn Sunday a teoloebLI recordfd a balf-bOur barmonle tremor from lbe volcuo. A1's Garage; 'bur Denim Store A. Levi "5()1: SMnl<-b-ftt basic denim. B. Lee mctef, Stroight leg denim. C. levMor-Men. s11eteh dertlm. 0. CoMn t<lell\ 14 Ot denim. 1. A well known basic cotton ex blended tabrlc. The lobtlc is very durob4e ond is popUor fol di types of garments from work clolhes to spomweor end ~wea . 2. A coo-se ~ue dungo199 used fol wen clothes. Ollglnollv used fol soiloB work clothes At.:SGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (7t4) 644-7030 It's hack to reality After fairy tale wedding, Britain's problems remain LONOON \AP> Alter the tulry-tulc wedding or Prince Charles uncJ Princess Diana, Britain hull rt'lurncd to the hush reality or llS decaying cities, unt1quated economy and the hutrod-lorn province or Northern Ireland. As the honeymooners Clew to Gibraltar to embark on o cruise, the pomp and circumstance of Wednesday's ceremony watched by millions worldwide receded · rurther into memory. The Financial Times com mented Saturday, "ll will be to a Britain stripped bare or bunt- ing that the Prince and Princess of Wales return from t heir honeymoon in genUer climes." The Times or London said Bra· tuin no.-nust fuct "oil thtMSc harsher~ealltles or nationol life." Among thoiit rclllllhis are· Riots in 1.lverpool, London and other cities where joblei.s- ness, decrepit hou1ung, alleged police harassment and racial discrimination led to un· precedented scenes of looting and burning earlier this month. The first fatality of the riots came in Liverpool's Toxteth dis· trict the day before the wedding Hundreds have been injured, and substantial damage has taken place. -The crisis in Northern Ireland. where the outlawed Irish Republican Army is fight- ing to end British rule and 12 'Passion Play' purged for Israel JERUSALEM I AP> -An American-di reeled version of "The Passion Play,.. carefully cleansed or the s lightest hint of anti·Semitism, opened Sunday in Jerusalem within sight of the places whe r e Je s u s was betrayed, condemned, crucified and buried. It is a setting the play's pro· ducer-director, Francisco de Araujo of Was hington. calls "the best backdrop in s how busi- ness." Despite the advantages of the historic locale, de Araujo said bringing "The Passion Play" to J erusaJem for its first run was not an easy matter. In an interview as his mosUy Arab Christian cast of 300 worked in final rehearsals, de Araujo said a major considera- tion was to avoid the taint of an· ti-Semitism that lingers over the famed Oberammergau drama· ttzation staged every lQ years in Wes t Germany Jewish groups complain that the Oberammergau script puts too much of the blame for J esus· crucifixion on the Jews, thus re- calling the theme of innumera· ble anti-Jewish campaigns over the centuries De ArauJO said he discovered deep apprehension among Israelis when he cam e to Israel to make early preparations. Christian authorities were even more sensitive to hints of anti-Semitism than the Jews, he said, and the script was redone four times before everyone was satisfied. De Araujo said that in the Jerusalem production the Roman rulers of ancient Palestine are the louts, and in· s tead of having a mob of Jews call for Jesus to be executed, the script uses dancers to symbolize ·•the evil of the world." The Christian philosophy is that everyone who has sinned crucified Jesus. the producer- director said. De Araujo is not looking for a local aud i ence, since Jerusalem's J ews and Moslems are not likely to attend and the city has only 12.000 Christian residents. Instead he is ajming for the several hundred thousand foreign Christian pilgrims who come lo the Holy Land each year. '"The Passio n Play .. i s scheduled for a three-month run outdoors on the side of Mount Zion on the grounds of a Fran· ciscan church. y1,.•1m1 of sectu1 iun str1ft.• have clalm1..•d ut lt.'ast 2,12'1 llvf>s. Tht.' I RA 1s ton1si111t its campaign on the Ma:tt' prli1ont'r:.' hunger i.trike to the death 1n which Ja1ltd J(ucrrillui. are seeking re· forms amounting to political prii.oncr s tatus Unemployment at its hl~ht!sl levels stnce the Great Depression. Mor~ thun one in nine people 2.85 million -are o ut of work, u rate of 11.8 per- cent. Last Monday. the govern- ment set aside almost Sl billion for job training, early retire· ment schemes and e mployers' subsidies. a package that opposi· tion Labor Party leader Michael Fool dis missed as "derisory.·· A sinking pound sterling, which Friday hit a three-year low of Sl.84. The pound was worth S2 43 six months ago but has been hurt by high U.S in terest rates and falling world oil prices. blunting the effect of Bri- tarn's virtual sdf-surriciency in North Sea oil An annual inflation rate of 11.3 percent, down 10 percent from a year ago but still above Conservative Prime Minister M argarel Thatcher 's single figure target A piece of good news for Mrs Thatcher was Thursday's v1c tory for the pon~rnment in the 21-week pay dis pute with civil servants that produ<.'ed a series or sporadic s trikes by 530,000 while·collar emplo~·ees in nine unions. They had sought a 15 percent raise but settled for 71 :e percent•. after an original gov ernme nt offer of 6 percent. The settlement came 24 hours after the "'eddtng, when this class-d1v1ded c·ou ntry ~eemed to hci ve its confidence and purpose restored. Nearly a million people from s kinheads. t he young while rightists inv9lvcd in some of the recent riots. to stockbrokers gleefully c·elebrat<.'d weddtng da) in the streeb of London The "'eeklv Ne\\ Scientist magazine ol;sen ed that Lhe wedding .. threatened no one, fascinated unprecedc•nled num· bers ;md must have demonstral ed to the world full of potcn~ tial tourists that Rntain is not going down the tubes in a blaze of nots. muggings and extor t1onale prices for goods · · South Florida drenched Rain welcomed after months long drought Coastal f orecasl Point Conception lo lllt M .. o<an Border oul 60 Mlla1 Ou1tr «••st•I waler• Polnl Conttpllon to San Nltol•• ISi-nor111wa11 wind• 10 lo 20 kl'IOU wllll ' 10 S fMI tombona<I uu dKrH•l"9 lonlQlll IE ltoewhara 119111 variable winds nl91\1 .ono mornfn11 l>ouo oe<omin9 wHIHly 10 to i. knoll wofll 2 lo )-fool wind waws lllls altt._. 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H•ttON•~ .,., .... \1t ¥•t1 FIOf'ICS.# wf'lich h•S wtteAd from• mmtII ---=== NC•• w\ o • .,. -''-••··· StP hmp.o Wa'1llfllll" Wlth1la 116 ., 81 IS IS oro11glll all year. and lluvy rain ~==----.;;;;..;;..;;_ ______ ...__....;....;.~.;....;.;;....;..;,,_,, CALll'OllNIA Baktr\hf'td B•rsto• Blythe C•l•llna Long8Nt ll Marys•lllt Monrovl• Sant• Marie S•nta Monlt1 SIOO!p'I Tllerm41I TorrlN"C.• Yum• .. 61 106 11 114 19 ,. •s 16 61 19 SI '9 SI 10 so 10 60 19 SS 101 16 10 S9 l U 17 ovtrll-_,,. rlvtr• Jn parU of Iowa otherwise. •u .. >lllM .,.. .. alltd over Ille mt of Iha Unllt<I StalH on Sunoay. TM National WHIM• S.rvlte said sll9'1tly over 3'1) lntMl of rain ltll on downtown Miami, and mC)(t lll•n ll•t lncllH of rain ltll on Sllf'N suburbS. No Jtr•t llOOCllno w•• reported. HH"l' rain el!IO cau...i some rl•tr• In nortMHltrn 1-a lo overflow. but '""'' was no report of mefor damaee or Injury. S•ln ....,... ......,., from ti>• Noni> Allanllc coast 111r0U9f\ mucll ol tr. Ot\io VaU1y, •1 well •'over muc" of Ille Wt11Mn 111lrd Ol llla nation Ttmper•lure~ around Ille nation Sunday alter.._, ranO-O from • low 01 SI In 8allln911am. Brtmtrlon. Ever11t1 anet FOft Lewis, Wash .• to• high of lOS In Palm Soring• Sh-rs -tl'lundersto""' wart fOft<ast for lod.ly lrom Illa upper Ml»ourl Valley acrou ll'lt nor1"8rn Great Ptalns, Ille Mluln lPOI Vallar . "" Ohio Valley and llle •-•r Gre•I Lalttt. Tiie Mmt was tkPt<le<I from IN Gull Coest to ,,,. TanntUH Valley. and HSI to Illa soulllern Allanllc Coast •tales. Today'' ttmPtraturn wert us-ti· ad to reacll 90 over nOf'lhtrn New 1En91ano, IN Great l •kn and the up. per Missouri Valley Tampereturts 0-'ty ,.. Dtl•«y lt~-'"4 -..,.·Frlelay II ,ou dO ""' n..,a your P•-bv S 30 p rn call Deb t 7 0"' •nd your COPY ... 11 .,. d@ll-ed S.1urd1y 1no Suncl•t II Y°" clO not =~·~':'~ c~,.°J yo~• ~~r"!..11": deliver ea In IM Jow 90t -r• tor~asl ac:rou FlorlCS. -IN Gutt Cout. Rtacll1>9s near 100 IMQrHS wan Us»tltd over toulh-t Taitu. •nd i.twHn 100 and 110 over Ille lnl•nd SoutllwHl Smog report El MONTIE (A Pl -TN Air Quall IY MaNoemtnl OlstrKI ha> fOfteUI unMalltllul air quallly lor weryuna In 1111 valleys and Rlver11da-San 811narcMno eru lod.ly Tlla AQMO prtcllcted • Pollutant Standard Inda• ••11"9 of 12S In Illa San GalH'lt l·Pomon• vallty, whllt the San Ftrnando·S•nt• Clerlt• valltyJ a nd Rl vtnldt ·S a n BarMnllno area sllOUld l\avt • PS I of no. Stnslllvt PtOPlt sr.ould find un· httllhlul a ir quallly In Illa mttr-411.an arH, PSI 16l', •net tllt Htmtt IEI""°" area, PSI 113 GOOd a ir ~lly tl!CKlld be found In O.n..,. u " O.trott tJ " Oululll eo loO HtltM " SS Honolulu .. IS Houston .. eo JatkSllVllt ,, ,, KansClly •• 10 .IM LHVtOH 106 n LltlltRO<lo; '12 11 lotAnotlH .. 6S Southe rn Ca lifo n1ia surf report valid to 6 p.m tod•Y Swf S..rf "'" s-H s ... N ,_., ... , .. .... MH .... Av1 Ma• Dir Zuma 1 17 7 SW Santa Monica 1 11 2 SW Ht.._i J 11 ~ sw San Dleoo Counlv • 13 1 SW Bennlne -Inland Oranot C-"•· ----------------------PSI 100. IN low -rt PSI 61. and t11a t oes1a1. e 19 e .. , •net 111g11 0twr1 arHs. PSI 0 AQMO rall1>9s are brOlltfl c:town at folio~ 900CI, 0 lo 100, un,,.altMul for wnslllva people, 101 lo 200; un· hHlllllUI for everyone. 201 to 100 and ,, ... ...iou.. )01 IO'°° Tempe ratures Albuqut Amarillo 8elllmora Botton lrownsvtta Buffalo CNrbtnWV Cheyenne Clllu90 Clevalanf Oel-l'IWV\ HI La N' " u 9S 7J .14 17 61 " .. " 11 13 .. 11 M lj " .. MI.JO 94 u 100 71 •• We1Te Listening ••• Whal do you like about the Daily Pilot" What don't you hkt>'' Call the number belo" and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor The same 24·hour answenng scr\"lce may be used to record letters lo the editor on any topic Mailbox contributo~ must rnclude their name and telephone number ror verification. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your mind 642•6086 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday. August 3. 1981 s Reagan burden ' heavy WASHINCTON <API -No"' lhat Congress I deltverln~ President Reagan the economi< recovery program he wants, it't up to him to deliver the health> economy the American pubUc wants or stand alone In failure. Reagan is getting so much ol the budget and lax cuts hE' sought. he will have no one elsE' to blame if his policies don't sue cecd "I know the monkey's on our back now, but we think the pro· gram will work ,·· Treasury Secretary Donald T Regan said The president's economic ad· v1sers say it will take about a year for the program lo tum the ANALYSIS economy around That is not much time for all the ambitious changes predicted by the ad· mtnistration. .. ~.1,,...... NOT TOO CLOSE -:\I llanM•Jl. of Citro'. i-. lhl· wlf prodC:Jimcd "(;arllc King.·· a., ht.• ~troll~ through <innu<JI C1lro~ Gari!{' Fc>-.,ll\al Dn.·~..,t·<l likt• thl' pungent 'il>ll't.' l·om plt•lt' with a l.!a rltt \\T{'alh. ll:m !'>t'n 1okt''-ht•:-nothing 111 -.nfff <il but admit:-I h<' arom<1 t«1n b<.·c·oml' :-trnng after ,, whi ll· The administration expects its program will lower inflation and interest rates, balance the federal budget , increase economic growth, stimulate pro· duclivity, brmg down unemploy· ment and encourage Americans to work and save more. That is a tall order for an economy beset with high infla- tion, near-record tnlerest rates. a S55 billion budget deficit, slug gish growth. falling productivi ly. persistently high unemploy ment and a dwindltng savings rate Supply side theory based on old law Reagan proposes to ac comphsh his obJC«l1ves by re versing the trend toward In· creased government involve ment in the economy over the last half century. This has left a lot of skeptical economists won- dering if he can s ucceed By the Associated Press A new economic theory based on an old e<.'onom1c law is behind a lot of lhe political arguments O\ er s pending a nd tax cuts \\-h1c h Pres ident Reagan JUSl won The theory is .. s upply-s ide economics .·· The law is the one of supply and demand. US. Rep. Jack Kemp. R-N. Y . and L!.S. Sen. William Roth. R- Del., were among the earhesl advocates or the new economics They called for reduced govern- ment spendin~ and for a 30 percent. three year Lax cut which became lht> cornerstone of the tax and budget measures passed in the House and Senate this week. The final bills were different from the original plan the lax cut is 25 percent rather than 30 percent. for ex- ample, and there are a number of added provisions . But the basic idea s urvived. • It's easier to understand ir you think of the economy as being divided into two piles. Stack the s upply on one side Goods and services On the other side, put demand, expressed in terms-of money. As long as the two sides of the economy stay the s ame, or grow al the same pace. the cost of liv· ing remains steady. Supply and demand are balanced. If de· mand grows fas ter than supply. however, inflation goes up. H supply grows fas ter than de- mand. unemployment rises. For most of this century, er. forts to keep supply and demand in balance emphasized demand. The theory went like this: In- crease government spending and cul taxes to boost dem and when unemployme nt is high and the economy needs speeding up. Reverse the procedure -cut I spending and leave taxes high lo curb inflation In the 1970s. however. the L'nited States raced both high in- flation and high unemployment. Increased s pending to cut un· employment meant a risk of in· flation. A new theory became popular. Concentrate on supply instead of demand. Improve pro- ductivity. "Supply s1de rs" like Kemp and Roth urged cuts in taxes and spendmg at the same time. They agreed that a cut in spending was needed to fight inOation. But they said that a tax cut was just as important as long as it was the right kind of tax cut. Kemp and Roth said that any tax cut which was limited to in- creasing disposable income and giving people more money to spend was wrong What was needed, they said . was a reduction in marginal lax· es. rates and corporate levies. The world .. marginal" is impor· tant. You may not realize it, but you pay a different rate of tax on d1rfe rent parts of your income The top rate is the marginal one . The .. supply s iders•· said high marginal lax rates discouraged production Why work overtime to earn more if you lose much of the extra money to taxes? Why produce more if you don't kee p more? The arguments or the .. supply siders .. were summed up by Bruce Bartlett. a former Kemp aide. in hi s recent book . .. Reaganomics Supply Side Economi cs in Action .·· He wrote· .. Tax cuts should be structured so as to give the max imum stimulus to investment. savings and work incentive:· The president says his economic plan does that. But Reagan and his economic thinkers contend the govern- ment has been responsible for the nation's economic problems Thus. they say. the solution Lies in trimming the government's power to tax and spend so free· enterprise capitalism cao fl oun sh again Toward that end. t he president has persuaded Congress to ap· prove spending reduct10ns total- ing S140 billion over the next three years and more than dou ble that amount in tax cuts S285 billion from 1982 through 1984 Reagan 1s counting mainly on his personal and bus iness tax cuts to turn the e conom) around . According to his economists· ··s upp I y-side · theory. the tax cut will leav• more money in the hands < bus inesses and 1ndivid•Jal.Y-. parllcuJarly affluent people. to s ave and inves t m econom) expanding enterprises . The cul in personal tax rates . which will total ~5 percent for all income groups over three years. also is s upposed lo encourage Ame ricans t o work harder because they know Uncle Sam will take a smaller s hare of their earnings . The benefits flowing from this new climate are many, according to Reaganomics Productivity will improve as bus inesses invest in more effi· cient technology. the economy will return to a healthy growth rate, jobs will be c reated at a faster pace. chronic budget def icits will be eliminated as the increased prosperity brings in more revenue and interest rates will decline. · 1t:s stnitch Q..Spo p1~·which meJ<as this shorL so outetorrlmg whm yo.J-mcuz. 1t ~ivcz.s, JUSt e;nough lo ma'ka. it. onq, of thiz. most ~fbrt.ablcz. ehort.'5yo.ii1 <lN<l.r ~r fMZ colora-wh1tcz., swiss blue, sagz.. tan orrl ravy Slm..5 28-38 @)~~@)~@ 44 A:ulhfon Island· NewPott Seodt•714/644·'070 lp()J \\\?$C:WOOd Blvd..•"-"twood VUlage·213/479·7727 .. 8 Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3. 1881 Israel's· offensive ·straini_ng · U ~s. ties 81 aA.UY ICBWIUD WASHINGTON (AP) America'• Qedl.l ~for Iara.a, n&ell srew out tbe ..._ '1l WCll'ld War U, ll UDdlr upr..-ted 1trabl foUowtq Prlliae lllnl1ter lleaaebem Best.a•• dMtlloG to pummel Arab elvlllu ud mllltary tar1eu wltb warp..._ purebued from tbe Un1ted8tate9. In CODIHH, crltlcl•m of 111Hl'1 pollelu laH 1prHd .be1G9d tM oceu1oe1• lk.,Ue.· ~ • ....uw ........ railed .,.. amoq Amertcu Jewtab le., ra ...S acUvllt.I. Oalr.:,re1ldeat Rea1a•'• dlnet 11111hlt ba.IW a cam· palp '1l OO"lllamaU09 by ad· m,bUatndae ClftleJala. Wblle tbe Beirut bombing may I NEWS ANALYSIS ' not be a waterabed event Sea. Cbarl•ff. Perey, R·W., toidTbe A11odat4ld Pr .. 1 "there LI a 1rowln1 (9Cem about tbe trend tn Jaraell foreign and mllltary policy. There la a feeling that the laraeU 1ovemment ll takiDI K · Uon1 which are counterproduc· live to llrael'1 own long-term ln· tereatl and wbleb are barmfW to the u .s. int.enst ln movtoc the re1lon toward peace." Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum na- tional interrell1lou1 at#aira dlreetor of tbe American Jewilh Committee, said the kUUns ol clvlllana in Lebanon "leaves many Jews with a deep 1enae ol horrw. ~ "It 11.mply bu to said tbat the llvea ol Pales · children are u precloua to Jew1 u t.be lives of Jewtab children," the rabbha.ld in an interview. "It's a deep commitment Jews have - tbat every llfe IJ Hcred." Tanenbaum said Be1tn will "feel pressure" from the Jewilb Regan victory Treasury chief key to tax cuts 'FINE SALESMAN' TreCUVTJI'• Donald Regan· Refugee rape victims bring VD ~o camps ATLANTA (AP) -Pirate at- tacks on Vietnamese "boat peo- ple" spread eooorrbea t.broutb a refugee camp in Thailand, where nearly 20 percent of female refugees said they were raped by the attackers, the NatiooaJ Center for Disease Control 1a.ld today. More than 50,000 Vietnamese refugees have arrived in Thailand by boat since 1977, with almost ball of them anivtq Jail year. Retueee camp pbyaidam arely saw ionorrbea before t, but f,y early 1981 the aexual- trammitted disease wu re- frequeoUy, the CDC said. ween December 1*, and a ch 1.981, nearly 20 percent ol \ 'Put 2,000 fema.le refugees over J,ep.n old who entered a camp in SonPbla, Thailand, said they bad been raped sometime durina the boat journey from Vietnam, the CDC said. The center said the a1ency Medicina San.a Frontieres, which provided medical care for ref- ugees . ln Sonekhla, teated 138 rape victims and found a penicUIJn-realslant strain of eonorrbea in 18 of them. Testa were also performed on 63 women who 1a.ld they bad not been raped, and only one had IODOM'bea. The cent.er sa.ld the fltvHnp have led to routine treatment of rape victims with kanamycio, an antibiotic effective against penicillin·reaiat.ant 1onorrbea. A follow.up inve1UgatJoo in May and June involved gooor- rbea testl on 114 female ref. uieea, includlnl 51 rape vic- tims, the CDC said. Only one rape victim and one woman who said abe wun't raped bad gODDr- rhea, indicating the treatment· program was 1ucce11ful, the CDC1aid. WASHINGTON (AP> -For a poUUeaJ novice with a name people confuae with the pretl· dent'•, Donald Reean proved to be an adept and savvy manaier of the admini1tratioa'-1 vic- torious tax-cllt battle. U President Reaian played the starrtq role in pu.abl.QI bil tu cut tbrouah Coo11esa tut week, Treaallry Secretary Regan played a key aupportlq role u salesman, negoUator, coordinator and defender. • 'l bet some outat.andinc help from a nwnber of people, but particularly from a very fine salesman named Don .Regan," the president said Wednesday, after the Democratic-controlled House approved the adminlltra- lion bUJ over a Democratic alternative. "The president genuinely Wees him and tbinks be did a tremen- dous Job putting this tocetber," White House spokesman David Gergen said of the wealthy, 82- year-old Reean, who gave up a lone and distinguished career on Wall Street to run the Treasury Department. Regan had Jots of experience seUing stocks and bonds as chairman of Merrill Lynch le Co., the nation's largest · brokerage house. 'The president genuinely likes him and thinks he did a tremendous job putting this together.' WHO 'LL CRACK FIRST? -Cinzia Veronesi, an exchange student from Italy, strains in bare- handed combat with a lobster claw that just won't crack during a clambake in Cum- ~ ....... ~erland, R. I. After a few minutes of struggl- mg, she found a set of nutcrackers and did in the recalcitrant crustacean. Thai youths fan riots Students renewing violent tradition against each other Bllt selling a t.u bill to politi-BANGKOK, Thailand CAP> - cia.ns was an entirely dllferent Vocational students have laid matter. "It really is unHke down tbe1r anti-government ban- anything oo Wall Street," Reean ners and have turned on each said. "Notb.ing prepared ml! for other in a renewal or a long lhia." tradition ol interscbool violence. The only other presidential 1n recent months, vocational aide to play as important a rote, students have hijacked buses, administration officials say, was knifed rivals on the streets and White House chief of staff James burled plastic exploeives into a Baker W, who called the main school compound alter one or political shots. their colleagues bad bis pen After a while, Regan said, taken by students from a rival. Baker was making tax policy school. 1&.aigestions while the treasury Analysts say the student out- s e c retar y c...~ as suggeslint bursts are part of a rising tide of political strmegy. violence in Thai society. but Regan's role was comparabte they added that they are in· to the teading rote budget direc· clined lo dismiss them as a tor David Stockman played in youthful "phase" with no real the administration's successful criminal implications. budget-cutting fight in Congress, This reservoir of violence, White House aides observed. bow ever, baa been open in the Reean arrived here ostensibty past to exploitation from dif- a s the president'IL chief ferenlpoliUcalquarters. spokesman oo economic policy, lo 1973, vocational students but qwckly wu overshadowed became heroes when they by the young and energetic helped overthrow an unpopular Stockman, a former con-military dictatorship. iresaman and congressional • A right-wing general turned a.lde. politician, Maj. Gen Sudaai Treasury and White House of. Hasdin, med bia influence on the ficials say Regan was never students to mount a demooatra- j ealou1 about the attention Uon at the Soviet Embusy, pro- beaped upon bia younger col-testing an alleged Soviet role in league, but felt frustrated about supportin1 a Vietnamese his own lack ol experti.ae. mllitary incursion across the Tbe uncomfortable and Cambodian border into awkward presence be dbplayed Thailand. lnitialiy IOOD gave way to an alr But political motives appear have formed into lareer gangs and brandish more sopblsticated weapons -sharpened ruJen, knives , pistols, plastic ex- plosives and hand grenades. Police statistics sbow that 1,862 students al all levels were arrested between January and June in inlerscbool clashes. The vocational students are young males aged 18-22 learning electrical, mechanical and con- struction trades. They typically enter vocational school after high school, while others with higher grades go on 'tie uni- versities. Thailand bas one of lbe highest homicide rates in Asia, with deadly weapons in me to settle even minor quarrels. But experts say that the vocational students are harmless as in- dividuals, and are unlikely to go on a solo spree of robbery or murder. Psychiatrist Arun Cbavanasai explains their actions as "mus or group psychology.•• "These vocational students have to contend wUh a stigma ol inferiority to the elite university students, and when they are together their egos are boost- , COLLECTORS CORNEA R•r• Coln• • Stampe GOLD • SILVER ed," he said. ''Fighting in the streets is ooe way to compensate for their feeUng.s ol inferiority. It's the image they want to show -bold and always ready to fight for a friend," said Aron, who is chief or the psychiatry division of Pbramongkul Hospital. Education Ministry officials claim that the troublesome vocational students are thoee at- tending private schools. They add that students in government vocational schools have rarely been in trouble because the Education Ministry controls them. Thailand bas about 1,000 private vocational and lecboicai schools which operate for profit. The government runs about 100 such schools. University student activities have also changed since the violent confrontations of the 1970s. Since the ouster of the civilian government of 1976, universities have stopped regarding themselves as the "watcbdoc for democracy,•' and instead have more directly taken up public welfare issues. ot coofideoce'and control. lacking this year. The students! -----------------,.-:----:::----------------1 70% Bank F1Mnclng I RA & 'KEOUGH ' ·11 AGURES ... How long has it been since you liked yourself in a swim suit? community ll Beirut ta bombed •aaain. . "At the Hme time," be Hid, "it '1 important to underscore tbe importance of malntaininl economic a.nd mtlltary aid to Iarael. The 1reate1t trasedy would be for the United States to back away from 11rael at tbls time became it would be an en- coura1emeot to tboee in the Arab world like President ffuaHin of Iraq, who bu called on Arab inaUona to Join in building a 1bomb to destroy larael." • In response to the recent Israeli attack on Beirut, Rep. Paul Findley, R·W. -long 1ym- pathetic to Palestinian concema -la calllnc for a auapenaloll of all military JShlpments to larael, while Sen. lt!chard· Lugar, R- ind .. la proposln1 a moratorium on U.S. arms to Israel and friend- ly Arab countries alike. "We really need to call time out and make sure we see the dangers ln the same way. and that we react to1ether -in the same way," Lugar said. Frustration with Begin runs deep. "Our commitments are not to ~Mr. Begin but to the nation be represents," Deputy Secretary of Slate William Clark said before Reagan ordered an end to the personal attacks, in which ' Defense Secretary Caspar Wein· berger had joined. The cease-fire in southern Lebanon, arranged by presiden- tial envoy Philip Habib, baa blunted some of the criticlam. Taking their cue from Reagan, administration officials are focusing attention on a need to promote a durable selUemenl rather than on wbal Begin has already done. "We feel this is not time, and we are in no position, to point the finger of blame," Edwin Meese Ill. the presidential coumeJor, said. "We are constructively working at a peaceful solution." Al the same time, Meese said U.S. support for Israel is not slip- ping. "We still view Israel as a ._very strategic ally,'· be said in an interview. "What we are looting toward is a cease-fire." Findley, one of Israel's most consistent critics, suggested the United States amend its arms sales agreement with laraeJ to clarify the circumstances under which U.S. weapon.a could be used beyond Israel's borders. Lugar said that while Findley's restriction might "be fatal" to the Jewish st.ate, some llm.its may be necessary. "We really · are moving along with business as usual," Lugar said. "I don't think that will do." Congress traditionally is Israel's surest stronghold. It bu lost only one major baWe on Capitol HiJJ. Thal was three years ago, when pro-Israeli forces unsuccessfully tried to block former President Carter's sale of 60 F-lSs to Saudi Arabia. In 1975, former President Ford, annoyed with Israel's· neiwtlating tactics on a Sinai withdrawal, declared a "re- assessment" of the U.S. rela- tionship. Israel's supporters gained a fut reversal by enlist- ing 76 senators to oppose the I president. A U.S. official, who keeps close labs on Congress and who asked not to be identified, reported "a noticeable lack of the usual automatic defense of the Israeli viewpolnl on the Hill." Yet, the official said, "a lot of people support Israel and what it's doing. They teU us we're on- jlY being mean to Israel, that both sides are responsible for escalating violence and that we are movine against only one side." -"~~~::~~~~ (7'14) !51 1150 South eo.st Plan Vlll•o• .......... -... . (Ac_ ........ c-..... , Come In now ... for a fabulous One-Month 1U111mer st.ape •· Elizabeth Stewart 50°/o Off .. Lose I 0 lnchn & 8 Lbs.! * VIDEO MOVIE RENT~ * F.C.A. * ~MENT RENTALS • SONY * VI RECORDERS * M.G.A. * VIDEO CAMERAS * MAGNAVOX * VIDEO ACCESSORIES • PANASONIC • INTELEVISION •• HITACHI *COMPUTERS * SANYO * 8l.ANK TAPES • ZENITH * PRE-RECOR TAPES ! I • ' ~ ~Ufl\Ua Gold in them arches Teens claim they were cheated, win prize money suit BERKELEY (AP) -Two former hi&h school .ba1ketball atar1 who claiD.led they bad been cheated out of a $25,000 prize wlll receive the money after all under an out-of-court aetUement with McDonald's restaurants. The exact amount or the aet- tlement t.o Qoona Collins, 19, and Ao1et Hardy, 18, was not re- vealed by their attorney, Charles Bonner, under term.a ot the aetUemeot. But Bonner said the money at Diesel fuel cleanup campaign told LOS ANGELES (AP) -The state Air Resources Board baa announced it bas taken action to reduce diesel fuel emiuion.s by up to 85 percent· in Southern California. ARB Vic.e Chairman Dr. Laurence Caretto said that although the new cleanup rules will eventually boost Lbe cost ot diesel fuel by 6 cents a gallon, consumers still will come out ahead. •'This rule could result in an estimated $500 million in benefits in its first year, includ· ing lower medical bills·, less property damage and lower death rates ," Caretto said. "By 1990, these benefits could be worth about $1 ~ billion each year. By contrast, it will cost re· liners about $44 million a year to comply with the rule." The rule would limit the au!fur level of diesel fuel used by passenger cara, heavy trucks and buses to .05 percent, com- pared to its current unre1ulated level of .28 percent. ll would ap- ply to all diesel fuel sold in Orange aod Ventura counties and the urban portions of Lo6 Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. The cleanup action would re- duce sulfur dioxide emissions in- to the atmosphere by 30 tons per day, the ARB said . Sulfur dioxide is a major com- ponent of "acid rain," the highly concentrated fallout of pollution in rainfall. leaat equa.11 the amount of the prize the pair would have waft. They had aou&bt '32.5 million ln their suit. The t.een-aaen claimed they had won the money in the restaurant's "Dlamond Hunt" promotional campaJJD in tm. The contest required matehl.Da figures on a aame board. But they claimed Lbat after the assistant manaaer at a BerkeJey McDonaJd'a told them they bad won, the reataurant manaaer told them they bad not collected enoup letten t.o win. "Rlaht away, we knew we were beina ripped off," said Miss Hardy. Students at the hiah school or- ganized a boycott of McDonald's, a.ad 500 turned out one day to picket Lbe branch of Lbe fast-food chain. The girls turned t.o Booner, who negotiated with McDonald's until March 1980, then filed a suit. Miss Collins, who attended California State University at Hayward the past year, plam to attend the University of Arizona, majoring in aero.pace engineer· ing this coming school year. Miss Hardy bas accepted a four-year basketball schola.""Ship at UCLA. Both played on Berkeley Hi1b 's 1980 state championship team. ~==-------=--=------ Fiber checked DEAR READERS : The Consumer Product Safety Commission <CPSC> staff la ur1lng consumers who are parchaalnc chlldren's sleepwear to look for the Ober con· tent labels In each garment and to avoid purchasing garments made from acetate, trlacetate, or the blends of acetate or trlacetate, since such garments were manufactured before 1977 when such fabrics almost always were treated with TRIS to re· duce nammabWty. Slace April lt77, the com· mission has considered TRIS·treated children's sleepwear to be a banned hazardous product. TRIS la a chemical name-retardant believed to cause cancer. CPSC alao is recom mendlnc that coa- aumen don't purchase children'• sleepwear which has had Its labels removed, especially if the carment ls being sold for what appears to be a bargain price Oen than S3 each). Consumers who suspect that they may be parcbaatnc pre-1977 TRIS-treated sleepwear are advised to write down the GPU number (garment production unit> and to contact the manufacturer to confirm whether the car· ment contains TRIS. In some cases, retailers may be able to assist la tbla ldeatlficaUon process. Most manllfacturen have detailed lists of which u.nlts of production were made wttb TRIS-treated fabric, .. lone .. the car- ment still bears a GPU number ta1. Consumers should call the CPSC toll·free hotline at (811) U8·83ZC if they can coaflrm (or establlsh strong evidence) that children's s~epwear treated with TRIS ls beiDI .. ~ from specific outlets. A teletypewriter for &Je deaf la available from 8:31 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST, by phoning (800) 638-8%71. Eye treatment sought DEAR PAT DUNN : I'd like to get in touch with a practitioner of the Bate5 System of Eye Exercises. Do you know of any qualified persons in this area? K.W., eon.a del Mar No practitioner of the Bates System was .located wlWa reasonable traveUag distance of Oranie County. Edaca&on at the Soatben Calllornla College of Optometry do not en- courage anyone experiencing eye problems to foUow precepts advocated la &lie Bates Syatem -fl.rat proposed more tbaa 4t yean a10. Sc:lenttflc evidence bu not 1lllowa ~ 1y1tem to be beneficial. It wu advlaed tllat yoa 1eek the 1ervlce1 of a Ucenled op- tometrist or an ophthalmologist. Rent taxable? DEAR PAT DUNN: Every year my wife and I· lake a vacation and rather than leave our house empty, we rent it. Do we have to report the 'rent we receive on our tax return? 1 K.L., HunUneton Beach The Internal Revenae Service aaya that lf you rent your personal reslde•ce for leu thaa 15 days dlll"hll lite year, &Jae rent yoe re· eelve Is not to be lacladed a. yov lfGH la· eoDle. U rented loa1er tlaH 15 4la71, yoa •ut report the rental income ud expeues <aab- ject to certala llmltatlou). tW fllrtller a.. formation, refer to hbllcadea 117, .. aeataJ Property," available at aay IU .nice. •. "Our 24th year" ~ Auto & Homeown&rs ~;!---. Quotes By Phone FMMOS UCSIUIG , .. , 541-5554 .. IJS-)07 19 I 4 ....... • CMt• MH• DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842-5878 ~••"'(• ~ Sttnt •• Y°"" ~ (Call 5'Gte NHtMt "°""" At••, COITA -$41-1289 , ... ...__ MISIQl~1 ...,c:.-~ ... , ........ _,. ... .., ......,., THE WORLD'S MOST COMPACT BICi COPIER {;N~~'1I~1-1200 e ~ d f /(~I •fll• ~ ftl flllfl1lh' ... ,,.,, ) lt•ltl'f ''•'1' • f ,,p1t•C. il\ flJ Tl• l 1••\lq••' '•It'• C"'.'H"•''-•o \11•h1ttlh, rtn1 Ortf\,f>r { lt"4f\£lt-' ( «• ,t'•v "'\ f"•llt1,•v*"' C'~H\Oft 01<..1t1t ,. u Also 1n San Bernardino Riverside. (714) 88:1-5009 MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT 11774 lrMltlt•rst, FH•t•I• V•ller '"' Hl11I .. nl .., .............. .,, CAll MOWI 1 .:.:....(714) M3-t366 BOOBY HATFIELD AUG. 2MD IRD 119T (f.,_ 9"1-llttlllr) PAT PAULSON =.~sr:> AUG. ITH, ITH DENNIS COLT C.D. BUCHANAN ~rr.-rw.· -: BREEZE BROTHERS 11 Or•nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augutt 3, 1881 s Al u hit l with pay bias suit-: l LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe • union that won ilt batUe lo , equalhe pay between men and • women who work for the city of • · San Jose now baa flled COl'.D• , plaints with the federal 1ovem· • ment chargln1 Los An1elet with pay discrimination. Attorneys for the American Federation of State, County and Mu.niclpaJ Employees and two A FSCME locals -clerical workers and librarians -flled the charges with the Equal ' Employment Opportunity Com· mission tut week. Similar charges led to a nine· day strike by municipal employees in San Jose earlier tbls month. The strike ended when the city agreed lo spend $1.S million lo equalise pay between men and women. Vern Wat.kins, state director of A~ME, said any dlscussioo of a strike here wotlld be "pre- mature." The city has 180 days ' to resolve the dispute, after J which the union bas Lbe option of I filing suit in U.S. District Court. DOWN AT DUSK -A Los Angeles shopkeeper takes down a pair of jeans draped over a "body balloon" outside his shop, along with the American flag, at dusk. The "Americana" symbols were part of an advertising display. . The sex discrimination charges involve pay.,promotiooa and assignments for women. They were filed on bebaJf of A FSCME local 3090, which represents about 4,000 municipal clerical workers, and AFSCllE local 2626, which represents about 500 city librarians. Don't let your . summer gO -1o waist! 50% Off our 2·Week Introductory Program Don't let this summer go to waist, or hips or thighs. There's still time to get in shape and look great at a Holiday Spa Health Club. And there's no better time to give us a try, because if you join now, you can get our short term introductory program at Yi the regular price. Eajoy the full use of all facilities, plus a free, per- sonalized sampler program. Call or stop by for a free tour. Different Me111be1-sl1ips Available All membership programs are at a discount and include the finest progressive physical conditioning equipment. With program directors to show you how. Also, join in our fun group dance exer- cise claBses for ladies. Come in! You'll be surprised how easy it is to get in shape and stay in shape for all the summers to come at any one of our 15 Holiday Spa Health Clubs. There's a club near you. Drop by for a free guest tour. But hurry, this special offer ends soon. Not available at Thrrance and West Los Angeles. Holiday Spa Health Clubs 'tor Men ..... Women • HM kb 6 'Jftonu c..,. o( ii_,..• 11le1 C... ...... 2300 Harbor 81..t~ (Behind Thrll\y DNC), , (714) 649-3388 Oruce et2 !ea ltatella Aw.. Wea 1'ilUn Ave~ (714) 639-2441 M&aatoft Vie.lo 24401 Alicia Pkwy. al San Diep Freeway. (714177<>-06.22 8VoW.: .8JeW... More value for your DIMES w..tm.luter 6767 West.llllnet4r A\l'I. al Golden Welt, (714) 894-3387 In the famous Dally Piiot DIMES-A-LINE ADS AdvertlH Item• up to HO In nlue In Dlme•A-l.Jne ede •"'Y leturdeJ tft the Dally ~llot. Mno row ad wtth caah to anr of ow thr•• COft~ ofl'loel Of ...... row oopJ wtth • cttMk cw money otAr f9f the OOtt9Cll •mount. IOc per tine, a1 .oo """"""""· lorry, no llveetoetc, produce or .,..,,,, •ltd "o coml'Mfdal ede •re •lowed. 1.-lttfft muat be pnc:.ct wttt\ no Item o.., MO. DIRMe A-!JM ads mey be plaCM •t the Coata ..... oMoe ""'" s p.rn.. ,Iida,. / __ . . t t , ) , ., l j I .l Oranot OoMt OAJL Y PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 lmmigratiOn action an imperative need The Reaaan adminiatratJoo'a proposed immjgr.ation . reforms, unveiled last week , bave been roundly criticized from all direc· lions -by emplo y ers , agricultural interests, unions and Latino groups -a rather surpris· ing conglomeration. each with its own concerns. So far the critics have been singularly lacking in suggesting any constructive alternatives. While the program undoubted· ly has flaWs and will be substan· tially modified as it progresses through Congress, the fact re- mains that someone has to take a first step to clean up the immigra- tion chaos. President Reagan says the aim is to accept foreigners "in a conlroiled and orderly fashion. 11 Ther~·s certainly nothing wrong with that. Indeed, the United States is the only country th'at has let its immigration policies disin- tegrate to the point where illegal aliens by the millions cross the border. hold jobs and remain lugel)• undetected. The plan, put together by a s pecial task force, provides for : -A speciaJ guest worker pro- gram under which some 50,000 Mexicans would be admitted an· nuaUy to work here for 12-month periods. -Establishing legal status for illegal aliens who have lived here since Jan. 1, 1980, by giving them renewable temporary resident vis- as tor up to 10 years, after which they couJd request permanent status. -PenaJlies with fines of $500 to $1,000 for employers of more than four persons who knowingly hire illegaJ aJiens. -Increasing the number of visas available to both Canada and Mexico, with visas not used by Canadians transferable to the Mexican allocation. -Specific steps to head off any mass influx of refugees, such as the Cuban and Haitian inlluxea. Strooaest attacks were direct· ed at the employer penalty pro. vision, wlt.h critics lnsisUng tt should not be left up to employera to verify immigration status and that this proviso could result in re- luctance to hire anyone who ap· pears foreign. Tbe administration backed away from the task force recom- mend all on that a non - counterf eitable Social Security card be issued to all workers, cit- ing the cost, alon~ with the uauaJ paranoia about a 'national identi- ty" card. Instead, employers ,could satisfy the law by requiring two pieces of identification, such as a birth certificate, Social Security card, draft card, or driver's license -all of which un- fortunately are readily available in counterfeit form. AJso criticized was the re- qwrement that aliens applying for temporary resident status be re- f used the right to bring a spouse or children into the country during the 10-year wait for permanent status. This does seem harsh. · Latino spokesmen further ob- ject to the fact that such persons would be ineligible for welfare, housing assistance or food stamps during the wait, but it's really reaching to call that provision "repressive." Agricutural employers sug- gest a 50,000 limit on guest workers would not come near to filling available jobs, especially at harvest time when hundreds of thousands of workers are needed. Unions, on the other hand, rear the program wouJd take jobs away from their members. No doubt the debate wiJl be long and loud. But equally certain is the fact that the nation, sooner or later, must get its immigration sys tern under control, and this is as good a beginning as any. Brow n policy blamed Painting a rather grim pic- ture of the state's transportation problems, -Newport Beach As · semblywoman Marian Bergeson predicted last week that the highway program could be bankrupt by the time Gov. Jerry f)l"own 's current term ends in 1982. .,· The Brown administration's policy of trying to move Califor- nians out of their cars and into alternate transportation modes, she said, has eroded funds once designed to complete authorized freeways. And the state now is last in the natiOh in spending for highway construction and main- tenance. As far as Orange County is concerned, Mrs. Bergeson sees highway action virtually at a standsWJ. The county was successful in obtaining its own transportation district last year, she noted, but there's now no money to go into that district. Nor is there-any money for such previously authorized proj- ects as extension of the Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar freeways. State foot-dragging, • she pointed out, bas increased the original $4.6 million cost of the latter project to a present $10 million. So far, Mrs. Bergeson told a county group, the Legislature has been unable to come up with any solutions for the highway dilem- ma. But she urged residents to keep prodding their legislators and state officials to seek funding alternatives -such as turning some of the gasoline sales tax revenue, which now goes into the state's general fund, over to the financially strapped highway fund. Unless the situation im- proves, she warned, business and industry will look to other ar-eas with less critical transportation probJems -a development that could spell disaster for Oranege County. The county lawmaker's words should not be taken lightly. And no convoluted excuses and explanations by the governor or Caltrans Director Adriana Gianturco can change the fact that their stubbornly impracticaJ policies precipitated the dilemma. Qp1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner view~ ex-. pressed on tn1s page ar e those ot their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s inv•I-. ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714J 641·4321. L.M. Boyd / In calwots You've beard that rural expression "in cahoots," Pete and J ate are ln cahoots, or some such. A sort of backwoods partnership oo one deal or another. The French word "cahute" means cabin. You were in cahoots with somebody originally, lf you were camped out toeetber in one shelter. Q. In rodeo lingo, what are the Bil Three? A. The Cheyenne Frontier Days, the Calgary Stampede and the Pend.lf:tm Roundup. Chapter Seven of "Boyd'•. Boot ot Odd Fact.a" bestm •Unct.~ the llbr•rY at England's Cambrld1e ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat P!l941SllM _, .. , .i ...... , et )JI -.. , \I., C•tl& NIRM ......... ,.,~ tD ... U ... (9'111 ~ L' .,.,. • . University has one shelf of boot.a ex· elusively devoted to the works of de· ranged writers. That's right, ooJy one shelf." Remarkable, what? Al.so to be found therein is the fact that the typewriter was invented befot'e the 'fountain pen. • Remember, one ostrich weighs about as much as 48,000 hum- mingbirds .. Q. What ls the most widely-known word in the world? A. Amen. ll that baby were to gtow u a whale growl, il would be 15 feet tall by age2. . . . ... . . . · .... . . '* •• ..... Pro-Israel tide receding WASHINGTON -In the office of the senior senator from New York, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the mail on Middle East issues has always been the same: between 10-to·l and 20·tO·l pro-Israel. Always, that is, untU the .Jast two months. When Israel's American-made jets bombed Iraq's nuclear reactor, the pro-Israel ratio dropped to something like 7-to-3. Then, last week, alter Israeli jet s hit Be irut, the first wave of Moynihan's mail included 171 pro-Israel l~tlers and 138 th~l were anti-Israel. A CHECK OF the maJI of six other senators' offices indicated a similar and, usually, dramatic shift in long- standing mail patterns. In two other states with a decided Jewish political presence, California and New Jersey, traditional, almost reflexive, support for lsrael coUapsed into evenly divided heaps. Letters to Sen. Alan Cranston of California, in the weeks after the Iraqi raid but before the attacks on Palesti- nian areas of Beirut, were running only 773-to 631 in favor or Israel. The maU of the office or Sen. Bill Bradley of New Jersey was .arenly divided, for and again.st laraelP actions -again before the Beirut raids. "The bottom is falling out for Israel," said an important congres:iional staffer. ··People who have supported Israel b ecau se t hey trus te d its mos t knowledgeable supporters in Congress are now going up to Moynihan, or to Cranston, or to congressmen from Jewish areas and saying, 'OK, tell me how I'm supposed to explain this to my constituents!· They're really mad." These are three other comments I have heard in the past weeks: ··Any candidate who sua anything nice about Israel in general or Menachem Begin in particular is a little crazy ... " -a Democratic campaign ,RICHARD RllVIS manager with a candidate running this year. "You could have a great wave of anti · Semitism in this country. It's always just under the surface anyway ... and Begin's asking for it . . . ·• -one of the best-known Republicans in the country. ''They're hoping something happens lo Begin. Whal they're worried about now is not only Israel, but anti- Semitism here ... " -a Democrat re· turning from a private meeting of prominent Jews active in the party. IT IS A VERY, very anxious time for Americans who are pro-Israel. They used to be a majority of the nation. I doubt they are anymore -and I could conceive of an anti-Israel majority here ii there are a few more raids in Israel's self-proclaimed self-defense. Fewer and fewer Americana are going to be willing to accept Prime Minister Begin's defi· nitions of defensive measures - par ticularly when be is u.sine American weapons to make those definitiom stick. American public opinioa seern5 to be on the edge right now. Newsweek sponsored a Gallup poll that indicated Americans by margins up lo 2·to-1 think we should be withholding some weapons from Isr ael and should be pressuring Begin to moderate his policies. But, im· portanUy. there has been no significant growth in the relatively small number of Americans supporting the Palesti- nians or Arab solutfons to the problems of the Middle East . ,,_ THAT PUBLIC opinion, l suspect might bave heel pushed over the edle -the anti-Israel edge -ii President Reagan had not moved quickly to cut off official criticism of Begin and the bombing. What seems to bave happened is that the White House decided to go alter Begin -with Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and Deputy Secretary of Stale William Clark doing the t.a.Uting -and then, after seeing its own private polis, realized that even in- direct criticism from. Reagan might start an anti-Israel bandwagon down a long slippery slope. So. the White House had to pull the rug out from under Weinberger and Clark. That bit of diplomatic doubletalk may have rnade a quick Israeli- Palestinian cease-fire possible. The White House may have saved Prime Minister Begin, Israel and its American supporters from themselves. If they don't understand that it may be a long time before they find a better friend than the current president of the United Stales, then Israel is in even more trou- ble than I think it is right now. Can taxpayers afford the UC system? R e ge nts of the University of California have voted a 75 percent in- crease in student education fees, raising them from $300 to $525 a year. They al.so raised the quarterly registration fees. The higher student fees were made necessary by other board action boost· ing the already obscene administration salaries to new heights. Under the salary schedule approved UC President David Saxon will receive $91,520 malt-· ing him by far the highest paid employee or tbe state. UC general counsel Donald Reidhaar and treasurer Herbert Gordon were given 14.3 percent raises. Each will be paid $80,000 as will vice president Baldwin G. Lambert. Other veepees and chancellors were in· eluded in the pay adjustments which boosted most of them to $69,000. NOT OVERLOOKED were the pro· fessors. Pay for full prpfessors was boosted f.o $51,500 and $33,100 for as· · sociate professors. For the assistant professors and instructors who do most of the classroom work. the pay was set at $25,900 and $16,800 respectively. Officials may deny that the salary in· creases caused the boost ln student fees but the fact is the two actions went band in hand at the meeting, one following the other. Before the fee increases were voted the university bad estimated its rev- enues from student fees for the next school year al $190 million. In addition it had budgeted $1.1 billion in alloca· ~ . I -.R-1 W-AT-IR-S -(i lions from the slate's general fund. This puts the total cost per student at something over $11,000. But that isn't all . From federal grants, endowments and other sources the university bad budgeted an addi- tional $970 million mak~g the grand total for operations next Jear in excess of $2.l billion. Considerioe th~ fact that the state's second college system, the California State Colleges and Universities, has an enrollment double the size of UC and operates 19 campuses for $936 mUlion, less than half UC's costs, the question arises as to why should the taxpayers continue to operate the more costly UC system? Why not close UC down and send the students to CSUC where 1t is only cost- ing the taxpayers about $4,000 per stu· dent. nearly two thirds cheaper than UC? Maybe even better. since the capital outlay costs of property, building and equipment are oot i ncluded in the foregoing figures, pay the tuition costs for them to attend the state colleges in other slates and close down the state colleges too. WITHOUT EVEN calculating the sav· ings to be made in capital outlay and the money which could be realized in the sale of the properties, the taxpayers would s~~ be ahead of the game. For UC only charges out of state stu· dents $2,800 a year and most other stales charge even less. And surprising as it may seem there are still many ex· cellenl private colleges around the country with tuition at much less than $11,000 , and quite a few less than $4,000 . As for depriving the students of the opportunity to live at home and go to college, the sad truth is the kids don't want that. It was on the "live at home" theory that the state developed the 19· campus state college system. As it turned out the majority of students enrolled at any or the state's colleges are from a place to which another state college would have been closer. Meaning is ~ in your point of view , Antic• with Semantic•: -A highly act.Ive woman I happen to like ls qulvedng with "an.lmaJ vitall· ty 11 ; but a highly active \VOman I diaUJce ls Jumping with "nervout eneray." -I have put on a few pounds; you IYlllY 111111 are fU1J.nC out; he ia getttq u bll u a bouae. -When I fail to do sometb.l.nt, I sift ao "explanation"; yo.a make ao "ISCUM"; he comet up with an ........ .. -My competitor wH awardld the contract becaUH "be pqt bl tbe flx"; we won the contraC!l became we ••spoke to ~ rilbt people.•' . r -1 am ~ a _._,,.banood nntun cut n acerue 1o lllJ MMft( because J am "community-minded": you are supportinl a nnture that may harm my interests becaUH you are a "busybody." -"Mere rhetoric" la what we would call "powerful oratory" if we •freed with what the speaker ii aaylng. -My personal remark wu lntnded as a "1ood·natured Jest," but YOW' peraooal remark was ''in extremely bad tute." -It's. a "bldeoua insect " to the restaurant patroo wbo findl it ln his soup, but "Ju.t a llWe hue" to the reatauraot man.,er. -A "perc.lved difference" I.I tbe U- lualoo an ad a1eney trlet to create about a product tbat bu no real d1f. ference. -Every panat'a IOO ln a IMC waa "led wr<IQI" bJ lbe otber boys. -111 do1 ''barb•' u a protector: your doc "Japa" aa a a~ee. -ToUle ~.au naturatn.e I.I "wlaartt:Y': Wtlile to t.llle vullar. all ... formality is "snobbishness." 1 -Most of the people who are quick to "stand up and be counted" think they deserve to be counted twice. -Only strangers are "criminals": friends are "in trouble." lllllY• Tbe belt part ol betq a ftlqnbead, wlletber on a decaylea alfp fl it.ate or an old uUln& veuel, -1, lbat lite ftfurebud rarely 1eta blamed for tbe 1blp'1 demiM. J".IC. J i:::, .......... _.........., ............ ... _._.., ......... .._ ........ ',, ,, ... .,.. ... ........ ..._, .... OtlfY,....... • . . . $ Orange Coa1t DAIL y PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1881 . .. .. . . . . . . . . Go-Gos , -cute, talented and on their way up ONE Of THE HST THINGS THAT EVHl HAPPENED tS AIOUT TO HAmN ACAIN. , 87 YA&D&NA AMA , II , , ........ HOLLYWOOD (AP) -They're= called lbe "lirt BeaU•." they've made t.be "cute" rapectable ln rock mualc writiq, and wbee t.be Qo.Gm hlt the road tbil mcJGtb t.be wbole country wUl 99t a chance to '" what all the aboutiD1 It about. The Qo.Goe, by way ol introductloo, are five diminutive women 1n tbell' add·JOI who look ~e tMD·acen. talk in little itrt ~c. ud juat happen to write, •lna a.nd play some ol the m09t appealln1 and danceable pop lunet to come down the pike tbil aummel. They've already conquered New York, Lot Anselea and En1tkand with their bouncy • performances, and tracks from their recenUy re· leued debut album have already surfaced on Top 40 All radio, aometbin& rare for banda spawned in the Loa An&eles club scene. Tbe Go-Gos certalnly aren't the tint all- female rock band, or even the tint to 1et national attention lo recent yeara -remember the Run.-waya? But lead ain&er Belinda Carlisle, bualat Kathy Valentine, lead guitariat Charlotte Caffey, rbytbm guitarist Jane Wiedlln and drummer Gina Schock are playing for bigger stakes: recogniUoa for talent rather than gender. No ooe ca.n accuse them of trying to capitalise on sex appeal in the cover of the album. An un· usually witty package, it's a l10Up portrait in which all band members wear bath towels and facial mud pacts -a tongue-in-cheek Wuatration for the LP's tiUe, "Beauty and the Beat." "The Beat" is the name of. one al the sonas on the album. · "We wanted to a void beine put into a category," says Miss Wledli.n, a petite, dark· haired woman. "We just wanted to be in a clus by ourselves so our solution was to avoid wearing clothes in the pictures." Miu Wledli.n, Miss Caffey, Mias Carlisle and two other women wbo were hanging out at the same rock nightapots got the Go-Gos eoing in 1978. They didn't deliberately set out to exclude men -"it was pretty much a matter of all the boys being taken," Miss Wledlin says. "All the boys were already in bands, and we figured, why not." "We weren't very good al first," sbe admits. No wonder. She and Miss Carlisle bad never played in bands before, and Miss Caffey's musical ~~.~~ !ye of th• NHdl• (R) 12:00 4 :00 1 :00 z.,.. TiieO..,Bllde (PG) Alto Showi~_ Vcuvft•.__.,f'GI 11tE a.tRE STRIKES BACK IPGI Plusl Co-Hit Al IE N (RI I Disney's Tim .. OX • Tim HOUM> (0 ) Th• •~ck Hole (l'<J) <>*"...._ t:flJa~IRI Foite1 IRI Bill Murray srR.U IR) Plus Wholly MONS IPGI OPEN 7:30 NIGHTLY 1 n MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE Tiie ""9C-ol N t•IJnpo • 10 nloml -•"1<M,,.. •..t•°""Y ol m:>ll'M conf9il"lf 0 ~•W"O Or,,..,, c,....,,.,, ~ All AGES AD+.llTTED ~ 0.-ol AUCI- rn,,-i All f<GES f<DMITTED ~ Parental Ouittenc::e SuQ99tle<I RESTRICTED Und!M I 1 'lqY , .. Kcomc>eftY"'V p.,.,.., OI Adutt Qu.,-chen AU Kl!~ AHO {HJ 'IL"'5 RECEIVE n<E SEAL Of' THE MOlt()H PICTURE C00E Of SELr AEOUlATIOfol l~ .. I ·· - DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? II you hew• lual flie d your n ew Flctlt loua B ualnesa Hem e end 11••• not r•t aubmltt•d It for publlcellor\. pl•H• don I lorgel th•t th• llmltallon la 30 deya from d•I• of llllng. The D A IL Y P ILOT w ill publlah yo11r at8'ement l or f 40 oo Our clrcul•llot'I Include• the e ntire Ore ng• Coeat area •"d 199111 notleea appeer In •II edltlont . In order to aubmil yo ur at e l eme n l l or p 11 b llcat lon a e n d •pproprl•t• copy and a che c k to THE DAILY PILOT, P 0 . BO• 15'0, Coate MeN. CA 92121. Wo"ll do the real. For Information eboul logel •dvorllslng l>l••H c•ll 8'2·021 E111. 332. .. HUGELY ENTERTAINING!" -Gene 5naltt The TOday Show NBC-TV FROM }v{Al)O wr· ISAAC STERN I~ CHINA 1·1 ,. • HO& E CoHI H~ldet Mt< • 973- brooke shields martin hewitt e~love PolyOrwn ~ A Un venal Release ••••••••'•••••••••••••••• .,_..._..._...,C'il:)_li .. -..W back=r:: comllted maJAly ol clualcal piano tram . Bu tbe IJ'OUP penllted and Improved. KW Scboc-. a Baltimon native wbo bad come Wt1t with llDOtMr band. wu swndW 1D lt'7t; the band Ml&D playln1 1bowa wlt.b Brltllb buda ud in lMO enCled up tourtn1 th• Unlted JUqdom lo the company ol aucb 1roups u lladnen and The Spec hall. lllaa Valenti.De, a Tuan who bad been pJayin1 1wtar in variou.a en.aembl• and wboH IODCJ bave been •unc b-, Phil Seymour, l.IDOlll otben, took up ba11 and slped on with t.be Go-009 lut New Year's Eve. ID lta tlrat years the band bad to fllbl to be taken seriously;, mainl.Y becauae women rqck 'n" rollers by and •:-::; tend to be ainaen backed by male instrumen ta. Miu Valetitine maintalm Lbat th1.a aWtude ii chanelnl. But in any cue, the Go-Goa have lon1 since teamed to handle sire dim. 'lb love a stranger is easy. To kill a lover is not. ~ei NOW PLAYING Uml8d A1tJsb COITA MIU OUllGI WllTMIHTlll C1nert1a Cen1tr 979~141 Conedolne 634 25~3 C111e,,,. West 891 393~ I• IUIU .a:IP!m,. Tiii -i "'911,_• O.llr al Moel Theellft I AMCOU..Ull Om91 537·0340 l.llWUMIClllTIICOUT Coli. W-S49-33S7 UA CfTT C..U 0.11191 634-3911 A PAAAMOUNT~E l~I ""'""..,,.. ""'·~··· .. ,._...._... ":'-;:~~ . .=-.:::.. . ~ : NOW Pl.AY1NG IDWAll .. **fl•TOll TWiii ....,,inoton Buen eo 0311 BW&MI IUIUUCll ·~· ...C."'"' ...... • CMUn·l9 c1 Tore se1 saeo 1 Wtsi .. nster 191 3693 ---~-"9·~' BO DEREK ·~RD HRRRl5 NOW PLAYING &IWlllM U TOM IHI• OMltGl Ananelm Onw·ln S.tedltl>aek Woodbridge Contdome 879-9850 ~1·~ 551-0655 63-4 25S3 COITA MUA fOOllTA .. YAllH lHUU IUCll WllTMIUTlll Soulh Coasl Fount~n V•lloy Soutn Coist Ho W•y 39 Orr-..·ln 546-2711 839· 1500 494 1514 891 ·3693 1·--,.--11 ... u-o.11y .1111oe1 '"'"""I THIS SUMMER'S EPIC! ACTION SPECTACULAR .a..vTo IT "Hurrah and hallelujah!" -Sell Beman. LOO MGLES Tt.ES NOW Pl.AVINO •llW ... IGUTll COMT MU. lllO rlAU PAClflC'8 84MITII COUT t eo.i. .,..., ~g 33~2 ll<u ~19 )JJ9 ...,., a.Kn 49'1 1~1• llW&Ml IMkll&Cll ., • .._... lNiiC'Ol. ........ fl loro ~I S8eO I Otl"Of 6)4 l)~l 8<1fA1 p,,. 811 4010 ·~~=~ c:'i~Jr-T •PURI acarTU ,_nil .......... •rn .... ....,,. t'°"""'a.,it.woCDMfMr •BARGAIN MATINEES• Monday thru Saturday All PerformancH before 5:00 PM (Except Spacial Engagements and Holidays) LA MlllAOA M All M11oao at Ro1e cron1 LA MIRADA WALk·IN 99•·2•00 -~""'.L..c ... ..,., "ARTHUR",,.. 11;a ,t11.••.••,1:. ... tft'll ., ....... ""°"""° ....,._ "TARZAN THE APE MAN" I'll •:-tt.aa. ...... ,. , •• __ ........... _. "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" (PG\ tl::ll. UI. "*• l ,M; .,.. LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK ·IN --·---· "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK::J!G> --..T 11;.··· l:M. Ira .. ~ '*" __ ..,_ "WOLFEN" "' , ...... _ tna.1 .. LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAl K·IH Foc\JllV At Del Arno 213/6,.·9211 ....__noo.,-.-• "VICTORY" IPGI ,,,. .-. ..... _...,__, l>GUNA •n...,..."'~"' "VICTORY" IPGI ...... ~ ... ,tlfl • ..C "UNDER THE RAINBOW" IPGI ,, ... bll. ·~• .._. .._ "'-----... "SUPERMAN II" -'~·ta ....... ,,. foculty ol Concllewood 213/531·9510 _.......,....._ "SUPE9~" (PG) tl':ll ...... ~k-t•• --·~~ ··THE FOUR SEASONS" -ta:a.--. ............ . ---· "ZORRO, THE BAY BLADE·· tPG) , ... ., ............... - Ml.__.., .. "STRIPES" (RI •-..a:n,•a.--.1~ so. COAST WALK·IN South Cooat Htwoy ot •oadwoy 494-1514 llO-·--"TARZAN THE APE MAN" {R) ~.t; ... ,,,, ..... ..._. '°"° ....... AU9. "RAIO£RS OF THE LOST ARK" IPG) -. .............. .... ,.. .... "' °"'"' 7• JO "" ···"" 7: 1S .. .._, ''~ 11 h o IMPOR TAN r NOTICE 1 CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE! H11b0< ••f Wu•t• lllt• fb10 f11 6:JO • S.t Sv• Holi 6°00 'Ill CJNf-R SOUie> • '1lUll AM CAA IW)I() IS TOUll Sl'lAMll olf NO .\1111 CAA llAOIO WIT1' IGHfTOI .urSSOlff l'OSl11CN ...-.c; NI> l'llllTlllUc I• AU CllfMI OIWMIS IJO Oii M !Wiii llO-·--ANAHflM "TAAZAN ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN THE APE~AN" (R) Jtee.,oy t t ot Lemo" s1 "CAVEMAN"' (l'O) 179·9150 CIN( fl $0Utl0 ---,~..._--,-.-,_..,......-.-,.-_.,..,..,.,,--.CICYY=""'-= .. ·. cMiiiiii • ..., • • .-~ ··cANNO=ll RUN" "UNDER THE RAINBOW" "AR1l4UR'" (PG) (PG) ··BRONCO":Lu·· (PG) CIHI It SOUND CJNl R M>UllO 8UINA PAii• BUENA PARK DRIVE IN l•nc:Olft ,.. ......... ~- 121·•070 IOUNIAIN _ ............ ,, _ _._ '"THE EMPIRE STRIKES MCK"" (PO) ""' ··ALIEN"(RI \. ,..~ooen.... FOUNTAIN VALLEY DlllVE·IN ··sui-ER= II"" (PO) son Diego f'W'f 01 .. oo-~u111(So 1"AHY WHICH WAV YOU CA\f" (PQ) 96%·2•11 Cltlf H SOUllO _,!'.• ~~fft;f •'1\.--ff-• "VICTO"V" (POI O\.W "THE L.AIT CHASE.00 (PO) -·--"WOLnN"'(R) ""' ··THE HOWLING" t"I COIOt ·H SOUllO...;._ __ --··-""'-" llO-·--"l* CANNONMlL RUH"' (flO) "'TAltZAN THI ~ MAN" (") --"AltTHU"" (PO) e .. CAVI MAN" (PO) CtNl ·JI SO\llio CM FUOUllO \A. .<4 .. 81.1..a LA HABRA DRIVE IN ___ . ...,. ............... 171-1162 •*• UMOlft IW# Weol OI kr>Ott 12U070 --- ........ ·' llO-·--'"TAIUAH TMt: APE MAN" l"l -"CAVIMAN" (PO) --·--M&m .. "MIMRI Of' THI LOIT AM" (f'O) ""' "HA~11"(N) ORANGE 0111\ll IN lof\to Ano,,..., a Slote CoMe0- 558•7022 --... ~· '"itc:TC~!!I' (llO) ..,,_ LAIT atAM'' C"OI .. '·. ~ ..... --·--·--... M I SSION l'lllVf IN "UHOIP TH9~'(N) "' p "9RONCO ..U.'I'' '"' . .. ~· Oranr Oout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 ' ,/ ........ STCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY 'S SHOE SERVICE BANK OF AMERICA CHARLES BARR JEWELERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR DR. LOU ELDER optometrist HAIRHANDLERS SALON HALLIDAY'S MEN 'S CLOTHING HICKORY FARMS specialty food items HUMPTY DUMPTY children's clothing JEAN DAHL designer and better sportswear LA GALLERIA elegance in f oshion MARK ET BASKET t~ES AMIES TEENS NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNLIMITED gifts and stationers SAV-ON DRUGS STOREKEEPER traditional sportswear VETA 'S INTIMATE APPAREL WESTCUFF CLEANERS WESTCLIFF CORNERS ' gourmet wore and collectibles WESTCLIFF SHOES XAVIER 'S FLORIST '• . :r .. •t . " ' .. 'I Cl ,, n. I DallyPUat MONDAY, AUG. 3, 1981 TELEVISION STOCKS SPORTS AP ......... Adrian Rich takes a break from daily journey with pushcart full of belongings into doumtoum Little Rock, through MacArthur Park and back home to North Little Rock. ' Indians battle bingo bust Sheriff wants to shut down Seminoles' nightly games HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP) - The lndians say they went into the bingo business simply to make some money from idle land, but the local sheriff is try. ing to head them off at a legal pass. Broward County Sheriff Robert Butterworth wants to shut down the l ,!OO·seat bin&o hall on the Seminole reservation in the Florida Everglades near here, citing a state gambling law that limits bingo jackpots to $100 and permits a single group lo bold games only twice a week. He is pursuing the matter in court. He seems to have an easy case. Nightly prizes at the Seminole Bingo HaJl -which is open seven days a week, some days from noon to 1 a .m. -total $12,000 to $60,000. But the Seminoles point to their unique, federally regulated status as a sovereign nation and argue that they are exempt from statutes such as the Florida gambling law. "If Florida prohibited bingo altogether, then we couldn't play it either," said Stephen Whilden, the tribal attorney. "We're permitted a certain amount of leeway but not total leeway. The s tate does n 't allow casino gambling, so we can't open a casino. ''Once the state allows a cer· tain activity, we can conduct the activity. But we don't have to do it the same way," he added. To all that, Butterworth coun· lers that it is not the Indians who are running the bingo business but a white·owned firm called Seminole Management As· sociates Ltd. which gets almoet 40 perce.nt of the bin«ic profits. Butterworth likens the ar· rangement to the Dutch trading beads for New York's Manhat· tan island. •'The real issue is a whole Jot of people are making a lot of money on bingo and it'• not the Indians," the sberiff said. "The Seminoles do not run this bingo, a manaaement comp1any does. "You have non·lndi&Jll operat· lng a bin&o parlor on Indian land ln violation of state law and &iv· Ing Indians a portion of the profits. What you have basically ls unregulated gambling." • An uneasy truce baa been called while the sth U.S. Circuit Court of Appea.lJ conaiden the arguments. Broward County ii appealln1 a fede.ral Judge'• rul· lnl made when Butterworth flnt moved aaaiDst Seminole Blneo before ft opened in December 1979. Jn that decision, U.S. Dlllrlct Judae Norman Roettc• in Fort Lauderdale naled in favor ol tbe tribe, l11uin1 an lnJunctlon f orblddlnt Butterworth to In· lerfere with the bt.n10 ball. aoeu,er 1a1d bi.I c1ec116oo wu ''a ClOM oee" bec'UH ol the 1overelp rt1b\I q\aeaUon. He noted a case ln Waabin1ton stale, ........ IJMllana were ecm· vtcted ol violat1Q1 a •tale law bJ Hllin1 0.reworkl, even Uloqb they were on tribal land. The federal courts classified the law prohibiting fireworks as criminal, not civil, and said it was intended to "promote the safety and h ea lth of all citizens." Because Florida permits some bingo playing, Roettger said, it "has acknowledged the benefits of bingo and has chosen to regulate, not prohibit." Meanwhile, Seminole bingo is booming. The games draw busloads of Floridians, it's a tour stop for groups from the North and Gold Coast con· dominiums often reserve tables for residents. Each night hundreds of people pay $15 to $25 to play as many as two dozen cards al a time, hop- ing to be the first to cover five numbers in a row. Understandably. the people who come to play bingo oppose Butterworth's efforts. "I think it s tinks," said Dorothy Sena. ·'I think the ln· dians are entitled. They've been done out of so much, they de- serve a break." "Why do they bother the poor Indians?" demanded a woman from Ve.nice, Fla., who wouldn't give her name. "At least they're not on welfare -they're out try. ing to make a living." The Seminoles eet SS percent of the profits. For the fiscal year just started, they expect that to be $1,263,500. The money goes into a $5. 7 million operating fund that next year will pay for·two new gym. nasiums and fund dozens of pro- grams on four Florida reserva· lions -employment, social services, hot meals for senior citizens, a tribal newspaper and police force and financial help for needy Seminoles. lo the ear· ly 1970s, says tribal Chairman James Billie, the fund was only $600,000. Billie defends the involvement of the management company by explaining that the Indians couldn't have started the opera· lion without expert help. He said that when the tribe had little money and no credit rating, Seminole Management was will· ing to take the risk, helping build the $900,000 haJI on the ln· dians' undeveloped land. ·'It's a lot more than beads for Manhattan -we've got bucks in our pockets," Billie said. ·'People can allege any way they want to. Sheriff But· lerworth never once came to our door to give me any million· dollar proposals." ,.._ 1'1orido't ~· hope to make ll.2" mUb Mn ~r Oft tltrir bal(10 9G"W• '*' Oldlaonttn q QOJM• "'' U'-fal ad or•,,.. bit a wMte-ouined fmn. ff~ arw fOflW of ttw plo)ln• /Ulbto numbered boordl. 83 85 86 Johnny Mize and Bob Gibson have been placed in baseball's highest echelon ... Page B6 . D ~ 0 Streets their 2nd home ~ Adrian, 'Annie' make daily trek in Little Rock area: NORTH lJTI'LE ROCK, Arlt. (AP> -They are tbe fiotaam and Jetsam ln the bit city sea - sb•bby flcurea swirlin& in the eddies o( proeperity's tide. Every day, be riles from hla bed ln a used car lot restroom to maneuver bis junk.filled shop- ping cart through the traffic. She bids her 14 cats aoocl day and sets her courae down Pike Avenue while keeping a sharp lookout for castoff bottles and cans. They are Adrian Rieb and Coke BotUe Annie, two of the in· digent but stubbornly proud Americans wbo sleep on park benches, in railroad yards, in seamy boarding houses and apartments and who daily rum· mage through other people's garbage. For .Annie, also known as Bertha Birchfield, home is a two·room apartment she shares with her cats and an occasional boarder. "It's jwst kind of illte a cat hospital or a nursing home for cats," said the 72·year-old Mrs . Birc hfield . whose neighbors call her the Cat Lady. Mrs. Birchfield's baggy men's pants, brogans and floppy bats are as familiar to North LltUe Rock merchants as the rusted shopping cart that she pushes down the city streets. "1 always get along with every- body," she said. "I've been out in the world, and I've teared to give and take." Like Mrs. Birchfield, Rich doesn't complain about his llle. His trademark is a shiny pushcart complete with a front· end bicycle basket attachment, two orange flags and license plates from Arkansas, Ken· lucky. Illinois and Texas. In the'cart are two umbreUas, a can pf insect repellant and a portable radio that Rich turns on to listen to Sunday morning church services and Arkansas Razorback football eames. Oc· casionally, he totes a sma.ll Bi· ble that be reads oo the roadside as be rests and pulls bis pipe. Police wave at the small, white·baired Rich as he makes his dally journey -across the Arkansas River bridge into downtown Little Rock, through MacArthur Park and then back home. When Rieb, 64 , h.its the road, he paclts bis clothes and other belongings in bis cart. "I can't leave my clothes there," be said. "I ten them over a couple or three months ago, and people stole them." Rich said bis 15· to ~mile walks are good for his sore root, which was hurt when he was struck by a car about 4"11 years ago. "The walking just kees)s my foot from going stiff on me," be said. Rieb, who stuffs his daily earnings -a maximum of $5 - in one of bis blue and white ten· nis shoes. said he started collect· ing bottles after his second wile died in 1946. "I saw somebody else doing it, and I thought I'd see if I could make any money at it," he said. He'd get out of the business and gel into something better - lawn mowing, for instance -but he said, "Every time I go to a job they telJ me I'm too old." Mrs. Birchfield, who claimed she also cleans houses and does la undry, said she earns about $35 to $40 a month. She said she was married to a retired sheriff for five or 10 years until be died about eight yea r s ago . "I wa s a housekeeper,'' she said, "and I decided to marry him and to set- tle down and to stop my running around." After 20 years of collecting bot· . .l tles and cans. Bertha Birchfield says she's just an honest ' woman out to make a living /or herself and her hoU3eful of cat$." East Africa eyes oil riches Import costs spur drilling for black gold on east coaJt . . NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - East Africans have embarked on a big bunt for oil, hoping to match discoveries in west Africa that are transforming some or the world's poorest countries. Spurred by skyrocketing bills for oil imports, the governments of Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique have given permission to foreign oil com· panies to begin exploration. South Africa, threatened by a possible international oil boycott because of its apartheid policies, also ls searching. The African continent has long been a major producer of oil, but so far the rich fields have been confined to the north -Libya and Algeria -and the west - Nigeria and Gabon. But experts in the four eastern countries, stretching more than 2,SOO miles along the cout, say that region has potential oil· generating geological forma· lions, both on land and offshore. Comparatively few wells have been drilled in the area and nearly all have been dry. The outlook for major discoveries is uncertain, at best. In the past 20 monUul, since Somalia lost a war with Ethiopia and broke with the Soviet Union, five big Western oil companies have signed agreements with the Somali government for ex· ploration and drilling rights over half the country, as well as off. rshore. More companies are ex· peeled to join in soon. Mineral Resources Minister Hussein Kuslm says 9' percent of Somalia is composed of oiJ. generating marine sediment. But Andy Anderson, a manaaer for Cities Service Co. ol Tulsa, Okla., rates the chance of find. ing oil in Somalia as only a "slim possibility." ln Kenya, an American con· sortJum -Cities Service, Union OU Co. and Marathon OU Co. - is about to begin drUllng 15 mUea offshore ln Ngwana Bay, north 9' the resort of Mallndi. West.em experta say Kenya'• 1eoloeical formaUons have the potentlal for oU, but the tame area wur:viousJy explored by Shell an a French company wit.bout •ucceu. Duiint the lut 28 years, 1' wella have been drilled in Kenya and not a drop of oU bas been found. Ta.mania 111ned an -.reement wllb tbe A.llerlan oU company Sonatracb, last month to drill weU. and CaJT7 out a Mlamlc eurvey on Malla lalud. rt.e wells bave been drilled near Son10 Son10 hlancl, off Tanunla's IOUtbern cout, bJ a multlutional l"OUP UlilWd bJ the world But, the Or1uiA· Uon of Petroleum Saportla1 Count.rt• and tbe· SW'OpUll fa. Yestmenl Bank. Tanzanian officials say lest wells have revealed some oil de· posits but the quantity and quali- ty have not been determined. Tanzania also has discovered natural gas and has formed the Kilwa Ammonia Co. with the U.S. ·based firm Agrico to pro· duce ammonia and urea for fertilizer, starting in 1985. Mozambique's secretary of state for coal and hydrocarbons. Abdul Magid, said in June the country plans to in vile bids for , 5 western firms have signed oil pacts in Somalia offshore prospecting rights next year. The Mozambican news agency, AIM , reported that con- tracts were signed June 27 with the Geophysical Co. of Norway and the Western Geophysical Co. of Houston for seismic ex- plorations .on the continental shelf. Magid said three natural gas fields were discovered in the past two decades but that the ex- tent of Mozambique's reserves was still unknown. Oil discoveries In any of the east African countries could bring unprecedented prosperity. In Tanzania and SomaUa, they could make the dirference between economic survival and collapse. TaJUania, where a decline In revenue from agricultural ex· ports bas brought the economy near a standstill, spends 80 per· cent of its foreign exchange on oU, despite stringent gasoline ra· tioning. ·Somalia, a nomadic na· lion with few exports, is burdened by hundreds of thousands of refueees from drought and the war with Elhlopia. Somali officials say export earninp la.st year, nearly $130 million. merely covered the oil import bill. National Planning Minister Mohamed Omar Giama says, ··All major development projects have been subject to suspension due to lack of fuel." While east Africa struggles to join the club of oil nations, west. Africa is moving to increase ex- ports and locate new fields. Nigeria, Libya, Algeria and Gabon already are big exporters and are members of OPEC, and recen"t discoveries in the huge Gulf of Guinea oil fields extend· ing along Africa's west coast from the Ivory Coast to Angola could pave the way to an oiJ-ricn future for a dozen more coun-' tries. Angola and Cameroon are ex· porting oil and the Reagan ad· ministration has recently ap- proved an SSS million loan to Angola th rough the U.S. Export· Import Bank lo double produc· • lion. The Ivory Coast's recenUy discovered Espoir·Hope field, being worked by Phillipa Petroleum Co., is expected to become the biggest producer in west Africa after Ni~eria. Experts believe there is all somewhere offshore along most of the gull, mainly in de-u> water. Explorations are current· ly under way off Sierra Leoot. Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Llber11 and Equatorial Guinea . Production for domestic n~ is under way off Ghana, and Norway is expected to become involved in oil production on Benin at the end of the year. Conoco Corp. found oil in the Lake Chad basin before Chad's recent civil war. Continued 8 · rest has delayed production plans. And South Africa, with aa abundance of coal but no proven oil reserves, is explorfn1 a promising oceanbed site 55 miles south of Mossel Bay, aJoq the southern coast. The 10.-. ernment·run Southern OU Ex· ploration Corp. says the site w more apparent ,Potential f«: natural gas than for oil. Clone methOds offered , STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - The bulc technique uaed for aene apllcint and clonina will be offered to the entire cenetlc entlneerlnc Industry in what Stanford University c1ll1 a uniqu. arruaement. A brcMld patent covertnc I.be method wae 1ranted lut December to Dr. Stanley OlMll of Stanford and Dr. Herbert Boyer of tb-Univeralty of Callforal1 at San Francllco. ·Under m01t Ueenalq •sree· menta, only one or a few flrma ' are given permission to use a patented technique. ' But under Stanford's prtt gram, licenslna WiU be available to the entire industry, cUITIDtlJ about 200 flrma, said Bo~ Beyers, a university spoblmu. About 50 companlu have •· preued intereet. Niell Reimen, head of tbe D veraity'e omce of TeehDoloO Lleenatnc, said, "becaUM Ult lleenH la noa•Jlclu•lve, we're not livln.I anyone a compedtlTe 'ldvantage.1' .. . . . . • ti' • • • • .. ... . . .. I Orange Collt 0 Y PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 ------------------------------------------------------------------------~; Stuffing your bra won ~t help GA&GUNG THE GAGGLE: It 1ure wu com· fortJ.nc to learn in the public printa that water of· ftclala ln Laf\l.D& Beach and South Laauna almost have their Utue water buJ problem under control. You have to feel better. This intelllgence came ln tl)e news dllpatch that reported that some tiny water bu11 have been dJ.a. covered living ln about 3> reaervoln. Not to worry, the water savants saJd, these auys don't drink much. Actually, that Ian 't what the water officers aald. · ~ WHAT TREY DID say is these micro- • ._ or1aniama are dylng r-\ _ for lack of sun· DEAR ANN LANDERS: J am U years oJd and wW be in the llxtb lfMM when ICbool It.art.I in September. l bave beeD t.eued a lot became f111 che9t la to flat. 11 th .. ~I I can do about developln1 up there? Plea11 &n1wer IOOD. I am Ured ol 1tal· II.DI my IOCU Ua a b'a1.n.tq bra. -SKINNY Dear 8.: lo•e atria ...._ la&u llaaa .U..n~ .. ,.._., deal'. 'l"IMln .... •i[ ,. cu mil tMM *:."'.A:· 1• are ltiu.J &a.. .. MCU wW ,_ "-J. I MU-' 1• ltiop ........ ,..,...., ... . .. ,_ aa&are to de Mr ....t. DEAR ANN LA.NDBRS: Some recent advice you 1ave lrked 111 lllllll . me. I am compelled to let you know. Tbe couple wbo 1l1ned on "Not •Sure What to Do'' wen 1eekina >'OW' advice about tMll' propoeed marrlac• cereJDGDy. Tbe1 had 9luaed to bave a bJack frieDd in tbe weddlq PAI'· ty. Tbelr problem wu tbe an· llolpated reacUoa from the bride'• family. Wbat troubl• me ii not tbeir dilemma, but a part ol your auwer. You aald, "U you would pua over )'OW' black friend for fear of uPMUUI& toine lporant red· necb, you have macaroa.l where JOUJ' SpUM beJoap. '' Webar'1 deftnltioo of "Nd· neckl" la "white memben ol the Southern rural laborlD1· cla11." Tbe uae ol tbll word lo lbat cont.ext stvea one the feel· ln1 that you an •Wl marchlnl to lb• "Umoa" dnammen. You 1houJd accentuate tbe positive and .Umlnate the nesative. - AMERICAN SOUTHERNER FROll BATON ROUGE Dear "'-ten s..u.e,..,: I IHH I AM •arc~ ... &a.e Vaiee ..._er beeaue I wu ben ............. lowa .... l&'a ta.. Mr ...._.er I llHe enr lleard. I ...... &b& &a.._.... "Nd· •eek'' was •• ••fer&•••*• cMlce. I ...W UH 1.W • •• Mru&llq.U.0 CONFIDENTIAL to An We Get&m, Croklaetyf: Deftal$el1 ... 0.. of &lie ,.,. of ..... .. .. -...... ••tare -... .......... ,... ......... &o •· clen&aDd. It II the Joy of NOT .. .. , .., die party. ' I Do 11011 Jul oaolcword, Hlf · cOMCioul -lorwlfl? WelcOJM to Ck club. There'• lwlp /O'I' "°" fn Atn• Londer•' boolcllt, "The Kq so: Po~.·· Snd ~ cnt. toUla pr r•~.t and a long, ttomp.c, Nf/· oddreued mwio,. to Ann Landn:J, P.O. Bo:r um, Cldcooo. IU. QJJ. TDM .URPHl.I ~l'f light. The water bug -~ ~' population has thus _______ ....,,. .... ..__ decreased between so and 75 percent. You're left to wonder if that means that instead of drinking live waterbugs, now you're gulping down deceased ones. She's committed to the art Anyway, the actual report suggests that nobody has seen one of the little fellows floating on through u far as the family water faucet. The water bugs ap- parently just float away while still visiting uae...Hs· ervoirs and aren't at all interested in the homes of Lagunans or South Lagunans. That's another comfort for the South Orange Coast water customer. You have to be careful in reporting on beasties that might be living in the domestic water supply. If people start getting the idea they can't drink By ELLEN B&A.NDT Joan Scblrle of Blue Lake: The Well-Balanced Art.lat Jt'a juat a sleepy UtUe town, one of thole quiet, con1ervative rural villa&ea that dot Northern Callfornia. But tonight, tbere '• excitement ln the air. The townspeople have aeen the posters; they're dressed in their beat clothes. In the Town Rall, spent her 20I drltt1nt from one job to another, aa performer, colle1e lnatructor, bartender, secretary, and. teacher ot the Alexander poatural therapy technique. In reaction to aa unhappy love affair, •be moved to aouthem Humboldt County lo 197• and spent almost two years alone ln a small cabin, dolnl craft work and conlemplat1n1 her future . For tbe CALIFORNIA WOMAN bu.ndreds are waitinl -easer youJlgst.ers, farmers and farm wives, senior citizen1 -for lbia ls a once-a-year event. At last the curtain rises -it's showtime! The travelio1 theater company, bringin& ·entertainment and enlightenment to small towns IIld farm communities. baa been a part ol American lile for a long time. And lbe tradition Ii ves on in tbe efforts of dedicated theatrical troupes, committed to the idea of ma.kine theater acceaaible to the widest possible audience. Laguna water quality officer~~ an 'Jlf! on hU dript. One of the best and moat unus ual of these traveling theater companies la the Dell· Arte Players of Humboldt County's Blue Lake, who've transformed the topical humor and physical sldlla of Italian Com med la dell' Arte into a disciplined, iotellicent, alld humorous performance style 1eared towards California audiences. Tbe managing director of Dell' Arte, wbo also serves as leading lady in most ol the traveling troupe's productions, is a vibrant, talented woman named Joan Scbirle. the water, no telling what they'll start guzzling in· stead. • l.Alguna and South Laguna already have too many loud parties that go on into the night. rr WAS RELIABLY REPO&TED by this sterling joumaJ that the tiny waterbug in question is known by the name of Daphne. You might have always believed that Daphne was a sweet little nymph of a girl who got turned into a laurel tree while being chased by the God Apollo. Schirle , 37, tall , auburo ·haired , and exceptionally pretty, aeema the epl tome of the dedicated performer. The walls of ber modest ooe-room bungalow are lined with books on acting theory. An antique piano stacked with sheet music testifies lo the devotion with which she perfecta her mualcal performance and composition skills. When abe'a not rehearsing with tbe touring troupe or t.akinl care of the company's finances, publicity, or bookinlf, Mlsa Scblrle is teaching at Dell' Art.e's renowned Theater School, where each year, approximately 30 students from all over the world come to study the pbyalcal techniques ol theater. This must be a different Daphne. Some res~arch might suggest to you that there is a eutomostracan, a tinf organism called Daphnia, known commonly as ''the water flea." Hey listen, we can't possibly be dealing with the Daphnia here. If we had fleas in the water, .SJlrely the high brass of the water district would fess up to it. Fleas in the water? No chance. The very thought of it makes your stomach itch. ANYWAY, WREN YOU get started talking about water bugs that lead you on into Daphne getting chased around the laurel tree by Apollo, .that carries you on into Daphnia and fleas, you wonder why you brought up the whole thing in the first place. Besides that, the water officials say not to f rel. The water bugs just aren't making it as far as the pipes in Laguna Beach or South Laguna. With the energy and joy abe exhibits in her work, Joan Scblrle appears to be aomeooe who's really found ber proper place in Ule. But Schlrle la a self-confessed "late bloomer," wbo claims to have lacked direction and dedlcation unW her early 30s. BESID~ THAT FURTHER, the water experts aren't worried and aren't taking any action against the little bugs who are passing on so fast. But, they assure us, they're watching the water bug situation very, very carefully. So am I. A Unlveralty of Santa Clara graduate, San Jose-born Schlrle Scorpio:-Time to celebrate . - TaeMa.J,A.,...t BJ SYDNEY OllA.8& A&U:8 (March 21-April 19): Unuaual fi&UTJ of cal.la, meuacea could domJnate teeGarto. M•tal alertaeu now la prerequisite to aueee11. Empbuil on trips, visits, relatives and the wrtttea word. Gemini, V1r10, Salittariua native1 p1., lmpol'tant roa.. TAU&l.18 (April JO.MaJ 20): Low-key ap· .orouh brinp del1red ren.tu. MMDI remon cbip lrom ahouJder. Family member l1 ready lo cooperate o.nce you provide ''.face·H•ln•'' aJteruUft. ADotber Taarua ll nrt mucb ID pte· tan. GDINI (llQ 21.Jw.. •>: Good mooa upect _ collla.lm wtU. emotional napcmea, llpl.fteut, eba•.-iidHllWN ol 1peealatiml and aftalr ol • beart. Romaaee, W•toe aDd wtahfuJ thl•kl•I .... ct=n,:=w:s:r, ~ ,...n, .... ....... Dia .. far eeca.rt:;,.:--........ Mid par cl.U11dr. &m on prupwtJ • ._.. I' .... ., ................. ud dee"'• ~ ow. ............... "llHM lanw." L80 (Jllb" •Aq. II): ae•w. M*•••......._.•vst11m .... _.. 11& w tlnla,..... oa•t IJll .. Dtl,.. ~ =an&.m-1 HlllM7 .... Ml.a.leU" .. tilt .... llilattll. It.., ...... u.. to •• .,.. ....... r.--. Ym80 CMS. • '"' II): l'NM ecmuptf neceaaary to take advanta1e of flnancin1 op· port unity. Hi1bll1bt ori1inallty. independence, wilHnlJ""H to pioneer a project. Focua oo material at band, special products, income and locallq item tbat blld been bat, mialnl or atolen. U•IA (~ZS-Oct. 22): Pol.low tbrou&b OD bUllcb; cycle and your dedaion will be on tar1et. l!mpbu on penooallty, penonal •P· pearances and ways ol penuadinl familJ mem· be_r1 to eupport principl•. IC»aftO (Oct. 21-Nov. Zl): What bad been realCJll for fears, doubts will now boom•aq llato came for celebraUon. Divenlf)', qpand bort.., 'and plu entertain meat for tboM wbo pro¥ed loyalty and =a-•ed faltb ID 1CM1t ea~11611U•. MGITI' V8 (No•. ZZ.Dec. tl): rn.da ma_J be l"m'*I bJ 10W' clealre to nMH, reYiew and rebulld. Obtaln blDt from Scorpio llMIMI•· Pencm who ~ care will •tick by JOU -UM otben would not remain no mau.r wtaat JOUI' poll et.. . CAPaJa>&N (Dec. II-Ju. lt): Member of oppoette aa aidl in promoeina caner. ambMIODI 1tu4'n1 ID community. Oflt 1deu on paper Md 1ubmtl tMm to,.,...-cl\,_., ChH;pe wW OC· car, but a ~.u .. CWl"M ...... ,_.. belt in· ...... ' A~A81VI (Jan. JO·f'eb. 11): Pamlly member talb of 10lla ...=! ... de9IN for ••edaealtlcm." ,.._.. be ... , •:llin, bat .......... ~,..,. ...... , ........... . llom•HMlatiaa.... . •--<hll.. u.llara•>: flnu•:"I11l- .,.... DGt ... ~-···· a.,.. to ... ............. .. .. to .......... ..., ::Cle ... " 0.. wlilo • ,..... _. -•Iii' l'lllut Mio be ftnpeclallJ......,...... \ Jeault-educat.ed Schlrle, it wu a Ume ol pbyalcal and emotlooal "retreat ." "Llvina alone," she says, "I learned self-reliance a1ut self-control. Reviewinc my pal{, I became atron1 enoup to face the future. And realbin1 tbe importance of being close to nature, J committed myself to a rural Ulestyle." Scbirle joined DeU'Arte in 1978 as a teacher in the Theater School. When her administrative talent.a became apparent, she was named managing director of the company in 1977. Tbe Theater School of Mime and Comedy is the heart ol the Dell· Arte Company. The only institution of its kind in the U.S., the school offers a one-year curriculum stressing aucb physical performance skill.a as mime, juggling, and acrobatics and aucb stylized actin1 techniques as the use of masks, melodrama, and vaudevUle. Students learn the principles ol the classical Commedia dell' Arte style and bow to adapt those principles to the demands of American theater. The Commedla tradiUoo is based on the development of stock character types, identified by the use of masks, standard costumes, IIld bigbiy stylized physical movement. A Commedia actor would perfect one character type and play that character all bi.a life. JOAN SCHI RLE ... Turns anger into creativity Pa11iphlet on asthma Since outdoor performances were typical, Commedia came to depend oo sucb CPowd-pleasing spectacles aa juggling, tumbling, and broad clownine. Comm-edla plays, collectively composed by companies, also directed their humor towards popular lute; it had to be current, topical, and easy to comprehend. T be Dell' Arte Play era Company, in its school and on Its performance tours, baa adapted Com media principles and characters to the demands of regional California theater. Joan Schlrle'e optimism about the growth of regional companies and her penonal devotioo to her craft refiect her high esteem for the position ol theater in America. We welcome 11our que1fMml, commnti, mid ~.tionl about tlafl coh•mn. Pl•ou 10rite to CcW/°"*1 Woman, ~ PUot, P.O. 80115"0, Coda Me.a, nas. F&EE PAMPHLET titled "Whal Everyone Should Know About Asthma" la now available from the American Lu.n1 As· aociation of Orange County. The pamphlet, which coven normal lung functions, causes of asthma, diagnosis, what to do during an attack and treatment, is available by calling 835· LUNG. CA&DIOPULMONA&Y Resuscitation training is available at Huntington In· tercommunity Hospital at 8:30 p.m . Tuesday and Aue. 18. For Information on the free course, caJl 842-1473, ext. 245. CBILDBmTB la the subject ol an ellbt·week course bet.lnn1nc at 8 :30 p.m. Tuesday in Lquna N11ueJ. eo.t for the aeries 11 $40. For lnlormatioa, call tl5 em. THE COMPULSIVE Personality la tbe subject of a discmaion at 7:30 p.m . Tues- day in Santa Ana. For ioformla·. lion, call 532·*6. ' &OLFING seminar will be QI· fered at 7 p.m. Wednesday ln HEALTH HELP Costa Mesa. For inlormatiob, call 6'0-7661. ANN MA&TIN of the Ad· vlilced Health Center will 1~ a dJscussion oo "Findinc and Tap- ping Your Talents and Pe~ Strengths" at 8 p.m. SalUJ'dalWi Newport Beach. For lnforma· tioo, call 975-0700. ... , NATURAL FAMILY PLAN· ning is the subject of a t~ part lecture series be1lnnin1 at 7 :30 p.m. Monday in Oranae. For information, call 83S-9Jlpl, ext. 7881. '· SICK AND TIRED? '•' To Place your "Fut RetuJt•• Sll"ViH Directory ad .... Call Now •••••1• W.IU ........................ .,...._.,. ......... ............. .....,. ,., ..... ,.,.. ....... ..... ... ............. _ .. ................ _..._.. , ...... ,,......... ...... I ........... ......, .... .. . ,.. .. _.. ................... . .., .................. .. ..__ ....... ........ ..... ..... .,,_......_ ............. ... ClllYY ~ I 3 fown & Conry, 0r ... · (714)547~ • ' IF SOMEONE YOU LOVE IS HURTING <And you are hurting too) Because of ALCOHOLISM orotherchernlc81dependency Learn how you can help now! Yes, there I~ ·something you c•n do -even If the vlct1nf l won't seek help. Attend Our Free Community Education Alcohotlsm Intervention Program. Every Saturday Morning, 1oam tll Noon Alcoholism Recovery Servlcess 301 Victoria Street •1 f,~~\· .m13f~:~rJ I:) Approved for MecUure 1 A .............. . . . -.. "' . . . .. . . . . . . . . ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 •• uo1u:- ~ .. ~.1N1Pto• ~ mine by • d)4llo P'O.- ~Of I TIO TAO DOUGH ... ,. ..... ' ' Clwtll w~ JoN thl '-"· Hot Lipe retum1 trom hlr honeymoon Md Kllnolr IMrM that hit '-'" ~le I phony. (Pit'! t) .. I •r • caooo.,.. Thllrna ~ lnYOIYed with I l'llndlome AlrtoM •tudent (Pit'! 1) eG IUCTNC QOWIAlf'( ,,., ())CMNlW8 0MCNlW8 8N9CNlW8 (l)MCMI "Bronco Billy" ( 1980) Clint EMNood, Sondra Locke. A le><m« llflOe uleM\an from New ~ r..iiz.. 1119 ~ ot performing In I • Wiid Weet lhow. 'PO· a:ao I JOKM'I WllD AU. IN ntl 'AMI. Y Atehle lumc>a •t • 136,000 olfw to NH Illa llooMe to 1 blldl buyer. • 9l!HHY MIU. Binny lhl mugger get• • •••• Of 1119 own ~ wt*1 hi trite to rob• Cl9r· r.ur NEWMIAT • tl\008& "Stunt Kid" HollywOOd 1tunt kid Reid Rondell per. tonne a world rece><d· b<Mklng lump otf a hlgll- rtM. cJi) ~ .:=tA!D The detectlwl ln-tlg1ta 1n unulUll .noe thief wtllla Wojo betrland1 1n aldwty lndlln. DMCMI **~ "The Young War- lord" (11175) 011wr Tobiu, Mlehael Gothard. A young laed9' unlt11 -al trtbel Into a flgllllng unit to com- bat thl Suon.1. ea e EDfTOAIA.I. 7:G08 C:.NlW8 I .CNlWS ~DAVI AO.AIN JoetWe .... up llmOlclng cigarettM In e><der to Joln • ooot girt•' club. 8 MCNEWI ·~ A dlapoe-Md Korwi famlty and a gin w1111 a 01 baby cellM prob*na lor the 4077111. • STNETa cw 8AH ~ Slone t-the problem Of finding • l)OCentlal Informer '*°'9 the man le mur- dered. • OVPl!AIY OuHt: COmedlln Dick Smothlra. (R)Q • MACNlll. I l.EHMA AfillORT ()) TIC T~ DOUGH Ill MOW Offff1N "Hit Mu11c Makar1" Gu.ta: Kai Rudmen, Burt Bacllarecll. Carola Bayer Sager, H.._, Raddy, 81119 ~;:,;: "Swim Team" Stapnen Fum. A pamperad group ol country clllbbara ICqUlre • gorgeoua ,_ member who cll.,ge1 . SURVIVING Ed Asner (right) meets Ed Harris, a member or a doomsday group on "Lou Grant " tonight at 10 on Channel 2. them up '°' the Ctl.mplon. lhlp. 'PO' (D)MOW "&cape From AJcatru " ( 111711) Cllnt E•twOOd, P1trlck McOoohan. A llerdaned convict, raturnect Illar Illa llrtt ..cape from "thl Rock," plena to b<Mk out again. 'PO' CZ>MCMI "A Pair! In The A-" (11175) Uno Vantura, Jacqufll Brei. 7:80 8 2 OH THI TOWN Ho9!1 Steve Edwardl and ~ Aogerw pron1e 1 hu1b1nd-and-wll1 ta•m that conducl• Mmlnars on protection 11g11n11 ~tme; a loolc I I Ille popular old radio -lee. "Your Hh Parade"; I nd people'• re.ctlone to 24•h0Ur 11110- rnetad banlc telleta. D AOHT 8ACK WrTH DAVID HOftOWl'TZ • IHANANA Ou..tm: Thi Angela. I MATCHQAM£ ,ACE THI MU8aC 81 AlllHTH£,AMILY Atchla 11 t41me>lld to don the lamoua llOOdad rot>e or J)Unlshmenl In • lecfel ~enre aoclety. (Part 1) • MACHEIL I LEH~ AIEPORT G GREAT PERFOAMAHc:E8 "Moliere" In Ille fit'lt part ot ~ Mnouchklne's ftve..hour 8'>1c. .i.an Bap- tl11te Poq'*ln (Mollere) 11 -growing up In 1 bour- geol.. 17th-century houMllold and, rlbeltlng IQlinat tradition, decldM to ltudy law (Part t)(R> Cl) P.M. MA4AZJNE A glanl tlnlchole In Wlntw Par'k, Florida; HOllywood'1 llllh doctor to the 1tar1. 8FAMll.Yf'BJD <B) KAMIKAZE: Ml8SIOH OF DEATH The tec1or1 of J~ Ille which led numerous pllols to commit • lorm of IUldde 11\eV conlldwad l\on«abla during World Ww II are examined. e:OO 8 ()) WKAP IH aNC'ANNATI The 1ta1f trtM to help Hartl flnd out wflllhar hi• drink- ing llaa gotten out of hand, (R) D 8 LITTl.E HOU8E OH THEPRAIM Widower Jonathan Garvey and his eon M1 our to find 1 ,_Ille In a neighboring town.(R)Q • MOVIE ***'A "Ar1b11que·· ( 11188> Gregory Peck. Soc>nla Loren. When an Amerlc1n proleHor In England II kidnapped, eld cort\M In the form of 1 my11eriou. woman who la the mlatr-ol an Oii mag- nate. 8 9 IUL.8A The carelr11 exlltenc:. of a U.S. embaNy 11111 In a mythieal land 11 lntatrUj)I· ad by a vtllt from en of11- clal from home "MOVI£ * • ·~ "The AllUIJnatlon Of Trotllk~"' ( 11172> Richard Burton, Alain Delon. The men1111urmo11 and Int.,.. delerrnlnlllor't OI an Ulll• lln i.ad to the lur days or thl Ru81Mn revolutionary leader. ID P.M. MAGAZINE A giant lllnkllOla In Wini« Park; Florida: H011ywood'1 ll91l OoclO< 10 the llll'S; Chef Tell prepetM Hungat- len Chicken; Dr Wasco on aneml1; Biiiy Brttl Inter- views Jeffwaon S1arlhlp ti) MOVIE * * "UFO'a II HH a.gun·· ( tll78) Documen- tary. Gol.wnmenr agen11 and scienlls11 dlteula 11>1 lncldente of UFO sighting• ol past and P'IMnl fE) GREAT P£AFOAMANCE8 "Dane• In America: Clytemneetra" The Marth• Grlham DlllCe Com(>any perform1 11111 ballet baaed j on tl>I Oreel< trlgldy In C wtllGh C/ytemnMtre mur. ders her hu1band 10 ~•In with her lover. (R> Uf) AEM£MllE.A WHE:N: rru. N£V£A FL v The detarmlnallon of American ln"8nlOrl. Wfloee concept• and ldeu .....,... lually changed the I-Of the entJre nation, II exa- mined by Olcll C1v.t1. Cl) 8Pt!CT~ULAA LONDOH OMOVE "Touched By love" Deb0tllll Ralfln. Diane Lane. An emotJonally dfa- turbed teenage glrl c:tevel- <>PI a frlendlhlp with Elvl1 Prlllay which changes her llte complately 'PG' l:30 8 TH£ TIM CCftWAY IHOW{A) II®' I LOVE HEA ANYWAY A llClll9f'b,.lned young woman m11 In lllf lier alster •I a doci0<'1 appointment wttll dlustrous r...,lta • TOP8TOAY Ho.11: Jim Thomaa. Mary lrigerlOll. QI!) MOV1£ 11 I CHANNEL LISTINGS **'~"The Shocking Mlsa Piigrim" ( 111'7) Betty Grable, Dick Haymea A woman •hock• Ille world by becoming the first or her Ml< to maatar !hi type- wrllw keybolrd I I ti '· 1, I II KNXT 1CBSJ Los Angeles G KNBC (NBC> Los Angeles D KTLA 1lnd 1 Los Angeles D KABC· TV !ABCI Los Angeles ([) t<FMB (CBSJ San Diego 8 KHJ·TV(lnd ) Los Angeles !Ill KCST (ABCI San Diego ID KTTV (Ind > Los Angeles ID KCOP· TV (Ind > Los Angeles f.lll KCET· TV tPBS) Los Angeles al> KOCE·TV IPBSJ Hun11ng1on Beach CJ) WELCOME BACK, KOTT£R Gabe Ind Julie lake lhe newborn twin• home only 10 find lhemMlvee with unexpectad gueeta. (Part tl>MOVIE * ** * .. Orear E•pecta- tlons" (11147) John Miiia, Valerie Hobaon. Baled on the story by Chart.. Oictt- 8111. A~ '°fl .... 11 ~ ll\iluenoed ~ • ~lllOOWI-...... .,, ~Drilclnet . ... Cl) M•A•t•H ,....._,. of IN 40n111 ................... Intl tlHMler '*" Md • v*1ety °' l*10n4ll P'oOlema. (A) 8 8 Ill IUll9GO WO Claude Weldon olf•t• 'laldlno a Olvofoe !tom • COftecance In IXcl\ange few • l)Olltklel lavOf, and i.-·1 peat tlnally c.tctlel -~(Ill) • • • "The Do\oe" ( t87') ~ lottom1, OIOof911 "9flln A young man flndll romance while lllllt\g around 1111 world • MCIWG.....,.. "Hit M1,11lc M•k•re" 0-t.: Kel Rud!Nn, Bun llectweah, Carole ~ aaoar ..... ~. ""' ()y9t1t 0\111, Larry Or9'1am. JOlln Klemm11. Charlie Moeleln. dJ MOYIE • • "No Pl-. To Aun" ( 111121 HerKhel Bernardi. Larry Hagman An e><phan end Illa grllldl•lhlr flee • tlM country wMfl autllorl- tlel l'9tuM lhlm perml ... lion IO llw logetllar. (C)MOVll "Frld1y The 13th" ( 11180) Belay Palmer, Adf!Mne King. Thi reooenlng of 1 aurnrnet camp. CloMd 20 ~· Mrfier •lter tt1r11 mutderl. •llrlCtl . vlndlc· llve klllar who knllH unau1pectlng 1Mn·ag9f'a. 'R' CID MOVIE "Bronco Biily" ( 11180) Cllnl Eutwood, Sondra Loch. A lonner el\04I MIMman from N-.letMy rMlf:z.89 his dream ot perfllfmlng In a Wiid WHI show 'PG' ©)MOW "Bobbla Jo And The Out· law" ( 11178) MarJoe Gortner. Lynda Carter A Cll' hop who Wlnll 10 be a country 1lnqer and a qulckdraw •windier who dreams hi'• Biiiy The Kid mike a path ac:tOA tlM SoutllwMt 'R' (S)MOW "Dreamer" (111711) Tim Mllhaon, Suaan Bll)cely A young bOWler llaa 10 O\llrcome many ob1tacles while trying 10 rNCll ior his Mfelong dr.-m 'PO' t:ao IJ CJ) HOU8E CAU.S A deranged men pllnt1 e ~b IOmlWhlre in Kens- ~ron G-•I (RI f:ll) TYMPANI The laura Dean 01ncers and Muelclan1 perform the com~ I Choreogra- pher's major new work t:460MOVIE .. 8'onco Biiiy" ( 11180) Cllnl EUIWood. Sondr1 Locke. A '°'""" anoe 111a1man lrom N-Jerwy reallzel hl1 dream of performing In a Wild West allow •PG' 10:00 8 ()) LOU ORAHT A Trtb story •bout the sur- vlvall1t movement hit• home fllf Lou and Rosal when the two Ire caughl In I klller llorm. (R> gge NEWS • EXCHAHOE "The Third Coat" The style of ltte In T exaa and Ille eftectl OI rapid growth on Houston. the 1111e'a largest city, are lltplored. i, TYMPANI The Laura Dean Denoera and Mualclans perfl)(m Ille com~ I dloreogra- pher'a rnejor new woo 10-:ao I NEW8 INDEP£HDEHT NETWOMNEW8 ID MA8TPPt£C£ ™EA TM FEITIVAL OF FAVONTU "U1>11alr1, Down It al rt The Bollw" Jam.. •nd Huet 111 Invited lo a fo1t hunt and ROM and Edward a,. • Mnt along to Ille• care of them. (Part 3) (R> cm Cll MOVlt! "The Godfather. P1rt II" (11174> Al Pllcino. Robert Duvall. Mlehael COl'leone NIUmM Illa 1111 father's throne and power 11 he becomM the new head of the Mafia, ftndlng prob- lem• with nVlll tectlon• and the llw lllroughoul hla reign. 'R' (%)MOVIE "Rough Cut" (11180) Burt Raynolda, l11l1y-Anne Down. A Brllllh IOciallte lur• an lntll'nallonal jewel I TUBE TOPPERS KOCE 8 7:30 -''Mollere." The first of a five·hour epic shows Moliere growlna up ln a 17th century houaehold. KTLA e 8 :00 -"Arabesque." Sophia Loren and Gregory Peck 1tar ln a film about espionage and mystery. KCET 0 8 : 00 -"Dance ln America." The Martha Graham Dance Company per!orms a ballet based on a Greek tragedy. ABC D 9:00 -"The Dove." Joseph Bottoms and Deborah Raffln star in a movie based on a true story about a 16- year-old wbo sails all over the world . thief out ol retlr-t 10 I*'> II« •tMI '30.000.000 In diamonds 'PO' 11:GOBDe())98 NlW8 • ITAATM>< C4ipt, KWk la llrandecl on a pl-with I Federation Commlulonar whan a 11ranoe fe><u Oll)lur• Illa lhuttlecran l~YWEDGAME ''All Alound The Money Tr .. ·• Mannix nnc:r1111rnMH caught ~ 1 band ol lllllvet, a beautiful glrl and • Scotland detective. 111 of wtlom .,. -ctllng '°' the money rrom 1 multl- mNlion dOllat robbery ., 8E.NNY HIU Benny tr• hl1 hind u a newaannouncer Sl DICf< CAVITT "Drugi: Addiction And ' Recovery" 011 .. 11: Dt Mark s Gold, Jonn Phll- llpl, Madlenve Phllllpe (Part 1 ot 3>(R) CC)MOV1£ "The Ten1n1" ( 11177) Roman P011n1kl. laabelle Adjlnl. A man r4'tlt1 an apartment wi-e a previ- ous tenant committed llJI. cide and bec:oma p11a- noid lbOUI Illa neighbors 'R' CID HBO 8N£AI( PREVIEW Hu•blnd·and-wile comlca Jerry Slllllr and Anne Meara lntroduoe the mov- ies, spec:l1l1 and lj)Ortl eventa coming to Home Box Offloe In Auguar 11 :30 IJ C88 REPORTS "The DelenM 01 Tt>e Unit· ed States" In • 1"'--Plrl -*· Din Rathar, Waller CAonklte and othar corr• 1pondente .. I/nine the Unitad StetM' Chanoa of defenM and survlval In IM IVlnt of a nuclear war. (Part 1)(R) Ga! THE 8EST CW CARSON Guests· Kita Jeck10n. Mar~ Horne (R) e a A.BCNEWa NIGH'TUN£ G L.Er8 MAKE A DEAL I 8T ANl.EY 8l£Gll. KCET NEWMEAT ID CAPTIOHEO A.9C Nl'WS Jeff Ooklbfum. Thi 1talf member• of an "under-ground" 8ollon -.pa- par nave varioul romenue 1nd journall1tlc ll'ICOl#lt.,. with MOii other Ind the IUbjeGtt Of lhett llorlla. 'R' 11:GOe MOVW * • "Thi Singing Hiii" (tMt) 08l'll Autry, Smiley Bumette A young gift want1 to Ml an Inheritance Ind • band Of rllnCNrs try to k119 the land • 111 'AKf AllY lll:AHO A ooernetlel tycoon go11 altar • mllltonalfa, Ind an actor 111att1 Illa haunllng grounoa of hla "-1<>< Drecull.. (R) G OONIMOKI! Matt and Doc are troubled by a meddtllOml woman u they MCort an ..caped convict on • train tt1p to Dodge. • .....aM: WCllllL.1 Barney la Cf'nleally Wound- ed Ind muat be left behind In e><der few lhl IMF lo complete their mlulon. • MIWTTA Biretta la unhappy about being lolnad out-to llM vice 1qu1d, Hpeelally when lie dlacoYwl Illa partner la on the rake. t2:30 D 8 TOMORAOW Gu1111: boxer Tllomu Hewn•: eongwntar Pllll Colllnl; F-Parker Cl) HAMYO Althougtl a young rlj)I ~ tlm can kMntlty llar aua11- 1n1. the police ctoM her cue wtthOut arr1111no the IUllQICI. (R) CID MC>Ylf "The Awalllnlng" ( t9IO) Ctlarffon Hiiton, s-. nah York, An ardlllOfo.. gilt'• daughter becom. Poa-lad by the malevo- lenl lj)lrlt of an enclenr [lf~-·R· "Somewhere In Time" ( tNO) Chrlltophar Aeeve, J-8eym0Uf'. Obelllad wllh the portrelt ol • 111111- century ectr-. a modern- day New York playwright UNI hY!)l'IOllll to travel b-* In time and ~ her. 'PG' ()) 8T AA TREK 12:40. HAM'( 0 Capt. Kirk Ind 1111 EntwpriM ~nter a 1trange force and come under the domlnltlon of llM god Apollo. ® 8TAHOINO AOOM ONLY: HAI I II HIAH HOU.Y'#OOO From llM MOM Grand Hotel In Laa Vegu, a- Kelly hollt1 1 gllttwlng Lal Vegaa rlVUI which aalut89 lh• golden era ol movllmal!lng In long and dence. t1:-taDMOV1£ "Belween The Linea .. ~ 11177) llndaay CtouM. Ahhough a young rlj)I ~ tlm can Identity her llMI· Int. 1"41 pollce cloae her -without arraatlng Ille ""PICt. (R) 1:00e MOYIE * o,; .. WM1em Jambor11" ( 11138) Gene Autry A cow- boy Qlll -and oi--outi-..... punlah- menl they had eomlng to lhlm. G PSYCHIC PHINOlllENA "P1ychlc Development Througfl Ufecyclel" Host Damien Slmp9on GUiii. Caro! Ann Dryer. JOHN DARLING 00Y.' THOSE R:)OTBALL PLA'YERS ARE REAL KIDDERS! 1 IHOUGHi IHEY WERE GOING IQ MANGLE ¥0U OUT IHE~! ~ ............ -, l ..WCOUT . .. .,.., t.tO;':: .... •• "l)ll OOuoie Men" (1NI) Viii ~. ""' lklenef. ~ CIA -oent ._ oowre "'-t111111 aoentt plOttlng to ,.._ lllm with • IMnlal and pflylll.i de» ... 1ial= • • "Holl'OM" f t843) l'*8 "81net, Artwo de Cotdo'ia. ~ World w., ll, .....,., ~ ot ""' c.cti ........,_ .,.. tllken ho.I.age by .,... '" rltelllltlon tor the dMth of one ot "*" OOl'npetrlota. 1ll0. MCMI *** "h'I A WMder'ful Liie" ( 11M7) Jamet 8t-- ""· DoMe Aeld CC)MCMI "The F1r8I Nwdie ~ .. ( tll75) Cindy Wllllam1. ~ Klmmel. A down-- '"6-oul Broectway pro- ducer plll\l lo"*" lntar- Mt In Ille let ... pro)lat by •taglog IC completaly In Iha nude. 'R' 1:IOI NIWt t:00 8NEWI MCMI "JokM My f'olkt N__. tOld Me" Pleyboy Bunnlel Ind P9ntlloull Pit• ICt out ~ Jok• and •Ila. 'A' t:1S i CtHBlAIOOM l:IO IDn'OAIAL 2:21 MCM1 * * * "Ruthleea" ( 1848) Zechary Sc;ott, Diana l ynn. An .mbltloul ~.,, forull• 1118 flmHy and ~lorlUCOlll. l:IO (Z) MOVIE "A Pain In The A-··· ( 11175) lino Vanlura. Jacqu" Brei. , ••• NEWS a: 1S (C) MOVIE "Target1" (1"4) 8orl1 Kllrlotf, Tim O'Kelly An IOk'll llorror-mcMe st11 trill to,_, with• mur- dlroue enipar at a driv.ln movie thlatar. lllO Cll 8Pl:CT ACULAA LONOON ••CZ>MC>Ylf .. Rough Cut.. (1 lleO) Burl Reynold•, LHl•y·Anne Down. A Brlllall llOCllllta lurM an lnlarnatlonal )lwl! Ihle! out of retlr-t 10 help her ..... $30,000.000 In dlamondl. ·PQ· 4:30 (C) MOVIE "Friday The 13th" (11180) Belay Pelmet, Adrienne King. The rlOpenlng ol a .ummer camp, cloMd 20 Yll'• awller •lter tllrM tn\Kders, •ttrect1 a lltndlc· live lllller who knllH uneutplctlng ,..,,_llglrl. 'R' (J)MC>Ylf "Bronco Bllty" ( 1911<>) CNnt Eaatwoocs. Sondra Locke A le><mer thoe allMtnan ftom New ~ •Miila 1111 dreem of performing In I Wiid Wiil at10w 'PO' Tuesday movie8 -MORtK- li:OO CZ) "Somewhlte In Time" ( 1HO) Ctlrtatopnar Reeve, J-Seymour. OblllMd with the portrllt ol • 1111h· cen1ury ~. , modern- day New York ~t -llypnoela to tra\111 back In time and ~ har 'PG' 9:IO CC) * * ~ "Adam '1 Wom- an" ( 11172) 8-i Bridgll, John MW.. A wrongly lme>riaooad Miiot 11tempta to w4n Na,...... by mar- ~ en lnfluer!tlal woman l:OO (I)**~ "Alie Any Gin" (111511) Shirley MecLalne. De'IN .,,.__ Job Md ,__ ~ oocupy "" • ..... d ... ~ .,.,,_. 1t1 *-YGt11Qty. .. (I:) ''Up ,._ .. A,_.,. pioneer .,.,,.,._ lmloMtd "'. ~ ••"'llO'e wlll'I. ~~ ~ Mrotl, ... (I) •• ..,. .. OorllaM '""'*-" ( 1N0) Geoff~ Horne, Jean l erv1le laMd Oft I flOytj by AlaJI• lltlCler Dlit'rMie A pelf Of tw4n1 I*>! r-. egalnat .,..,,~•kllllll ,,. ••• .,. "lmutolw'• c-•· (11Ma) Leo Oorc.y, ~ ...... The lowwy to,. Ml off on thl tr .. Of ,,.~om!neno. l!ater" ( 111511) 0 1or91 Coulowtl. Vwa o.y A ""*' Eft9lllll eclentllt dll-oovw. • ~w1oua S...111 Amerlo1n plent lhat requjr• ""*' """ '°' -ienanoe, -AFTERNOOH- 1 11:4D ••• ·~ "Ride Beyond v...,_ .. (1He) ClluCli Connora. Mid\MI Rennie A buff'*> lluntll' Miki ,....,. on -ll OUtlaWll ' who atteellad and robbad him after Ille wife rejectad him. •••• "8ergelnt Autlldge" (tlleO) Jeffrey Hunter, Con1tanc1 T OWIB. Attal rllllng above 1119 llav. beglnnlng1. • cavalry olflc9r chlrged with rape Ind murder 18 defended by hie tuperlor offlc:>ar 12:30 CC) * * ... "Adlll'I .. Wom- en" (11172) S-. BrldgM. John Miiii. A wrongly ' lmprllOnad llllor attempt• 10 win Ille releMe by mar- ~ an lnftulrltlll -1:30 C1J * • .,. "Aak Any Oln" (111Sll>~ Mecl.alne, Dlvld Nlvlrl. Job and llul- band-fluntlng occupy the time Of a gin newly anlvad , In New Yor1t City 2:00. "Wholly M_I .. ( 11180> Dudley Moo,., Laraine Newman. In tllbll- caf Egypt, a falM prOptlet nlmad Herschel -drop1 on a divine conver- M llon with M-and decidM IM mu.t be the ON IO lead hll people OUI ol 111.....-y. ·PQ· 2:30 CC) • *. "Heidi" ( 111e5> Eva-Merla Slnghlmmer, °"1rlnd Mh1armayr A HI· tie Swtaa gift 11 taken from har mountain home in the AIC>t by her •uni to the Clly. a!(IO e ..... Move av.. o.nlng" ( 1983) Dona Day, J.,,.... Garner Relurntng from 1 plane crUh ...,... ~ befe><e a wife dlaoov- w1 11111 her hulband la •bout to remarry lllO D * • ~ "Hellflgh1 ... • ( 11HSll) John W1yne, Kllha- rtne Ao.. A band Of ~ r llglOul fltoefightara battlae • •~taculu oil-well blu.. Cl) "Mule F11tllen" Rory Calhoun. voice of pon Kno!te. P111on 8-lr• gird Shelby owna an lncradlble mula named NellOrl with ~ 1M ta able to communlclle through men111 telepathy 'PG' 4• (t) "Up Rivw"A young ~~lnVOlved In • llfe..and-Oea111 •truggle With • gold-llungry land baron 4:30 • * * * "Huelllaberry Finn" (11175) Ron Howard, Jacll Elem. Bllad on the ltory by Marti Twait! A young boy and • ,,,,_.y ..... become lnvot¥ld In • --Of ~·\KM wtllle flMlng down the Mlulaalp. pl~onaran .:Mulholland named new presid ent of NB C ), LOS ANGELES CA P > -R o bert E . IW~hoUand, the new president and chief operating offi cer of NBC, is a business-oriented executive whose promotion may aUow bis boss lo focwi on pr.ogramming, where the network languishes in r.rdptace. Grant TinJcer, NBC chairman and chief ex- 1r:cutive officer, announced MuJholland's appoint- ' iment just a month after Tinter's own ucenaion lo I :network chief in place of Fred Silverman. : Silverman alao held the title of president -the ,position assigned to Mulholland president or the :.NBC Television Network since um. ~ "I wai;it lo be free -available -lo help on rograms m any way I can," Tinker said after the ~nouncement to network affiliates· in a closed-~trcuit broadcast. "Bob bu done other thJn1s bu klUs and t.a.Jenta that I believe will compte:Oent my expertise." Tinter simultaneously announced the appolnt-m ent of Raymond E . 'nmotby u MulboUand'a 1uc- 1sor as network president. Timothy bad been ex- eutive vice president lD the same divi.llon al.nee ptember 1979. The primary objective ol botb Tinker and llulboUaod will be to raile both prollt.t and raUn.11 · ·~ NBC, the No. 3 network in prime time since ltf8. Tinter said Mu.lbolland'a backfrOUDd should aae "the tormldable tut abeld." • 'lt seemed to m• that tbe man J needed abouJd be particularly 1tton1 lD oc.ber areu -heavier oa ro1deut•n1 and buliD ... :• be laid. "That would permit a team -c.balrmu and &>ntideat ~ wbo ould complement. not dapUcate each OUMr." Tinker le.ft bia poelUoa u chief at MTM En· rpri.la -producer ol 1udl Hrt• u ''Tbe M1.17 yler Moon Show'' "Lou Gnat'• IDd "RUJ sa.r.-. ~JJues" -to tUe the NBC job. SUvermu was belt kDown rw aiin..tac BC'a IUCCellfu.I climb to tbe top po1JtJClllta Jld18• e, NBC'a lt.andiq did not lmpro,e dVlq Silverman's tenure, which began in oUd-1978. . Some in the industry said Silverman's dual position as president and chief executive involved too much responsibility to allow him to concen- trate on his area of expertise -programming. Tinker said he wouJd concentrate for the next several weeks on learning the operation of the network. He said he bad not spent much time on programs NBC bas scheduled for the fail season He indicated NBC's 1981-82 lineup, unveil~ in Robm M~. w NBC,,,..,.,.,, the spring, probably would remain intact, aJtbougb there may be some "fme tuning" in scheduling. MuJhoUand has been with NBC for 20 years, beginning in 1961 as a newswrlter for WMAQ, the network station ih Chicago. He later wu a station executive in Los Angeles, and in 1974 was named executive vice president for NBC News . He moved to lbe network dJvi.sion in urn aa executive vice president responsible for N BC's coverage of the 1980 Olympics in Moscow. Tba\ coverage was canceled wben President Carter or- dered a boycott of the sames. 'Benson' no average butler 81 FRED BOTBENBE&G AT ............ NEW YORK -Robert Guillaume's comJc character "Benaon•· continues b1a climb up the social ladder th.ls fall, movinl from the governor's mansloo to his cabinet. But he'll still be a know-lt- all, eaier and able to bunt anybody's balloon. Bensoo, once the buUer on "Soap," will re- main nobody's fooJ. On ABC's "Semon" you'U see him u the bead of the 1ovemor•1 bouaebokl staff but this fall he•u become the 1tate budget direetor • "Ke woa't cbante. He'll atlU eacbew pomP01i· ly and hosw.,b," Guillaume said. "Everybody conaeet.ct with Bemoo bad an evohaUooary seme of the character," the actor •aid l.n an interview. "Thi.I job will require more respomlbUity. He's obvloualy an lDteW.1eat man seeldn1 tar1er OeJda to conquer. Benicia'• uparad· inl bu alw~• ~ a. facet ot the cbaracter ... Guillaume wu a diaUdlullbld Broadw., ac-tor in "Gu.ya and DolJI•• add "Goldin Boy" before be achieved J>OP •tardom on TV. Tbla taU. be'U mo be aeeo lD a teleTiiloG remake or tM bit •• Purlie" for Sbowt.lme ~ton cable. · OuUlaume wu trlUelHd by to•• black arou .. wtlm he aceepted tbe butler role. • "Some people becoae ptdrJ &Dd o..rcrlticil wben lbe)' He black act.on. ""1 ~ aaw tbe apl'On; tbeJ wen b__, up Oil a J-* tWe ... be IUd. ''They dldn'l ... the inbenet dlplb ot tbe character. They m!&Md tbe ribM I wu lrJtat to get across. You are a person, you have dip.tty, no matter what the job, u looe as you try lo puraue excellence." Guillaume said his grandmother worked at several Jobs to raise him and h.lJI t.b.ree siblln11.~ One Job wu bouaecteanlnJ. ''She worked for a lady wbo bad no space ancl could have cleaned ber one room herself but. abe. was too l11y. It was inherent in lbi~ lady's personality tbat abe considered benell better th84 people workln1 for her. My trandmotber w~ working lD • r•pectable job to put us tbrou1ti school. Now •bo •u·really better?" He said be wouldn't have accepted the orillaat buUer role ii It meant belnc aubservteqt or • stereotypical lheUo black. ~ "The creat.on bad an enll&btened view tb1t came tbrouib in their alt.mpg to 11Urt1e" h• laid. ''The Ol'lliDal Ha1pt bad DO lnbenat ~ lema that coufdn•t be talked out. Some 1crlpU' create kUoU., and no amount ot t.11o4 ... cu wM them out.;•• ......_. Guillaume HY• be it concerned about ·~ o1 wblt. and blaeb oa televiaioa but addl at bit race bun't a.. a ~cUiat1 J>l"Obliem lD bia caner. ,, "l(y PfOblerm a.re l.l'Uldc. like any oUter ac-t.or, .. be aald. "Robert Redfclrtl .._ 11aLLlar probJ lema. 1'1Mre .,. ,.,... wllie •'t be Mm bee.UM he'• tood-IOMJa•. n .. Mt ratr to 11ota•~ black aciton:' 1 -I ; TRI f-'1111Ll' Cl8Cl11 "That's my bal, Jeffy. Don't Ust up al the bounces.'' Mt\RMADIJ9'E by Brad Anderson "With a peephole, no lessl" • • 11.JDGE PARKER HAVIN(; DECIDED TO DRIVE LANA DOWN TO THE Olf;TRICT ATTORNEY'~ OFFICE. JAOON (;IVE5 HER L.AbT- MINlJTE INeTRUC· TION~! "I hN Mondeyt." u DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum by Harold Le Doux l..OOK, l'M OOIH6 TO PlAY JT CY EAR! l'M NOT 601HC1 "TO OffER TOO MUOI INFORMATION! Nt\NCl' wow---TODAY IS AWFULLY HOT GORDO ·------ AUNT FRITZl-MAY I HAVE THIS COLD BOTTLE OF POP TO COOL OFF? SURE lMAT'S PRETTV 600() .. IAJ4AT IF '«XI waE OH A socca 1EAM? ... . . ~ . . by Charles M. Schul PHOOEY--- THIS 15 TERRIBLE I LIKE IT BETTER THIS WAY by Gus Arriola --...... ....... .--;::::::::::. ·----.--· ·--_. 'CAUSI!! IF 11"' Wl!!"I!! ON Ht!!" &ACK, !JHI!! COUL.PN'-r W°"K 1-r roa •£11 Ea oa Fe• We•ll AT LEAST~ KEPT'" "ffie. HOUSE. IN G(X){) SH~, ELL)'! ;t 91!!1!! ••• WHA-r'S A 3 -a..l!!rre~ WO"P FOA Pl 9el!!L.1 l!!F? ; I I 'I : I I :I ti t I - I: ii I: . I I I : 1 ' I , I : I I \ I . I • ' 1' , . . . I ' I • I I I I I i I ~ I l l ' l l. j • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mondmy, Augu1t 3, 1981 s rbefore! .~. ,,, ,. Every Friday, you'll fi~ a big, bright, brand. new televi_sion supplement_ in the Daily Pilot like you've never seen before! You'll find the most co·mplete TV li~tings available . -~ in any newsp~per around _:.__ with unique, easy-to-scan grids, plus complete evening program _ details. You'll find the channels you watC'b-(we list 22 including cable), pages of movie highlights, up-to-dater~' soap plots and more -all in a bigger, easier-to-rea~ format " Get the complete picture . .'1n the all-new Pilot TV Log. It's a new Pilot you won't want to miss! •• II l . • •' .) . New Grid Format -A unique, sign-on to sign-0ff grid · format every day. The grid is a quick visual reference to 18 hours of programming on 11 broadcast channels, and prime·time programs for 11 cable channels. You also get details of each show during prime-time evening hours in a "rolling log'' format, with notes for re-runs and closed captioning. ~p-to-Date Sports -Bec~use Pilot TV Log is ·published on a Friday, sports listings ( atmost a whole page) are fresh and accurate. ,. Speelal Progralmi -From blockbusters to dance to children's shows, you'll find all the week's specials in one {>lace on Page 3. Movies, Movies, and Movies _ -Pa1es and pages of movies virtually around the clock every day of the week, with the stars and the year the movie was made. Our four·star rating system helps you choose, plus G, PG, and R ratings for cable movies. Daytime Drama -Grid listings for each and every daytime show, every !lay of the week. And if you missed an episode of your favorite soap opera, you'll find a summary of the week's plots. -More C~hle Listings -Subscribe to HBO, Showtime, the Z channel, ON, ESPN, CNN, WTBS, WO R, Cinemax, or Spotlight? Pil~t TV Log carries listings for them all! •• ·----------~--------~------. . . .. . . . . . . . ' . . . . . .. Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 Sta1•ting like new? Split baseball season appears certain ~ From AP dilpa&ebea U the American Leaaue 1ehedule for the openlna of baaeball'1 aecond 1981 1e11on look• 1trlldn1ly famlllar, lt 1hould. It allo waa the openln1 achedule for bueb1ll'1flnt1181 aeaaon lut April, when a strike seemed unthinkable. On Monday, Aua. 10, one day after major lea1ue action re- aumee with the AU-atar Game at Cleveland, It wlll be Chlca10 at Boston, Kan111 City at Baltimore, MJfwaukee at Cleveland, Texaa at New York, Toronto at Detroit, Oakland at Minnesota, and the Angela at Seattle in the American League. Seventeen weeks aao, it was Chicago at Boston, Kanau Clly at Baltimore, Milwaukee at Cleveland, Texas at New York, Toronto at Detroit, Oakland at Minnesota, and the Angels at Seattle. THE ONLY difference between then and now is that, in that second week in April, every- body started even, with nothing but zeroes in the won-lost col· umns ~ and that may wind up being the same, too. Al the moment, New York leads Baltimore by two games in the East Division , with Milwaukee three games back, Detroit 3Vi off the pace, Boston four games out and sixth-place Cleveland only five games behind. In the AL Weal, it's pretty much a four.team race, with Oakland in first, Texas ia,.; games back, Chicago 2.,, off the pace and the Angels six games out. BUT THE MAJOR league owners. particularly the AL owners, appear inclined to wipe the slates clean and start every- body off even again, creating an entirely new season for the remaining eight weeks of what was sueposed to be a 26-week season. In a CBS telephone s urvey conducted Sunday, spokesmen for 16 of the 26 teams favor posed to the split season, Philadelphia and St. Louis were undecided and the other eight teams were in favor. In the AL, Chicago and Baltimore were op- posed, Texas, Milwaukee, Detroit and Cleveland undecided and the rest in favor. THE OWNERS are to meet Tuesday in Chicago to decide whether to approve the agree- ment announced last Friday. The 28 player representatives (one from each team ana one representing each league) met in Chicago Saturday and voted unanimously to recommend that the 650 major leaguers give their approval. That also will be de- cided this week. Baseball is facing what could be a monumental task, namely winning back its fans. "I think we all owe them an apology," was the sentiment expressed by Seattle third baseman Lenny Randle. His feeling was shared by other players a nd owners. One way of winning them back would be to create pennant races that weren't there before. In the National League, the "opening day" schedule for next Monday isn't a carbon copy of the one in April -but it's closP THE NEW YORK METS will ~e visiting the Chicago Cubs, Just as they did when their seasons opened April 9. For the moment, though, they're the two worst club!! In the league, the Mets at 17·34 and 15 games out of first place In the East and the'-. Cubs at 15-37 and 17Vi out. : What better present to give : the new owners of the Cubs, the I Chicago Tribune (assuming the . : sale by the Wrigley family is ap-: : proved> this week, than a team : lied for firs t place in the l division? That's what Chicago : will be if the major league : owners go for the split-season : idea, with Its mini-playoffs to • 1 determine the division winners. : ALSO IN THE NL next Mon- day night, the Pitts burgh Pirates will be in Montreal, just as they were April 9. And the P hilade lphia Phillies, who opened the 1981 season with a one -game visit to Cincinnati April 8 before hearung home to face St. Louis, will be home against the Cardinals in this opener. The NL's three other openers, all diffe rent from the first ones, are Cincinnati at the Dodgers, Atlanta at San Diego and Houston at San Francisco. There are. or course, other ways to try and win back the fans -and Ray Kroc. owner of the San Diego Padres (last in · j the NL Wesll, is doing his part. "YOU DESERVE a break to· day," is his hamburger chain's slogan, and the fans will be get· ling a big break -free ad· mission to the Padres· "second" opener against the Braves. "our way or tell ing the Cans we 'r e sorry," Kroc explained. Seating is on a firs t come-first served basis and could cost the Padres j as much as $250,000, what they-.. would ma ke on a sellout or all 51,562 seats in J ack Mu rphy; St-eruum. '1 C inc innati , a long with a • number of other teams, will be playing a few exhibition games· , in the days leading up to the All· 1 : s tar Ga me at Cleveland The Reds are scheduled to v1s1t the Califorma An~els Friday a nd · Saturday. · adopting a split season, with four clubs opposed and six un- decided. A simple majority is needed in the American League to go to the split season, while a three· quarters vote is needed in the National League. If one league favors it and the other is op- posed, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn may cast the deciding vote. Long, short of it: I, Cooperstown beckons Mize, Gibson GETTING WITH IT Gene Mauch spent most of hb time wat C'hing his pitchers Sun · day. inclucli ng Steve Renko above. Rod Carew took some time to accommodate autograph seekers <below) during the Angels· workout at Anaheim Stadium. In the National League, Cin· cinnati and Montreal were op· COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. <AP> -For Bob Gibson, the trip to Cooperstown was as short a s possible. For Johnny Mize, it was long and agonizing. Gibson and Mize, along with Negro League pioneer Rube Foster, were inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame Sunday. Gibson, 45, returned to the spotlight oniy five years after his retirement. He is only the 11th man eleeted to basebaJJ's shrine in his firs t year of eligi bill ty. MIZE, MEANWHILE, has been retired for 28 years and eligible for the Hall for 23. But be was bypassed 20 times by the Baseball Writers' Association of America and twice by the Veterans Committee before making it this year. "I certainly am proud to be here," said Gibson , who amassed 251 wins, 56 shutouts and 3,117 strikeouts in his out· stanrung 17-year career. He is the only pitcher to win the . seventh game of a World Series twice and bad seven consecutive Series victories in a 7-2 postseason record. "I've devoted my life to baseball." Schmidt offers another • view of losers Never one to do things at half· speed, Gibson was the most in· timldaUng pitcher in the game for much of the 1960s. He was so dominant in 1968 -22·9, 13 shutouts, 268 strikeouts and a phenomenal 1.12 earned run average -that he won the first of his two Cy Young awards and the National League's Most Valuable Player honor. PlULADELPHlA (AP) The major league players suffered a defeat in the baseball strike, but Mike Schmidt says the fans were the bi~gest losers in the SO·day impasse. The Philadelphia Phillies' s lugging third baseman was thinking of the fans confined to hospitals and homes and others who de· pend on baseball broadcasts throughout the summer to keep them going. "Those are the people who really lost," said Schmidt, who had a .284 average with 14 home runs and 41 RBI before the strike started on June 12. It was the owners who benefitted "over the long haul," Schmidt said Sunday. Because of the settlement, "They're able now to curb players' salaries. This was their ultimate goal. "They don't mind paying the premier player big money. They can't stand the high price of mediocrity. The pool com· pensaUon concept is going to hold down ... the average players' salaries a great deal. And that's what I think they were after,'' Schmidt said. The agreement between players and owners "makes us the losers," declared the 1980 major league home run king, in reference to the degree of compensation for clubs losing free agents. ''The owners made some gains by get· ting some things back from the players. Now they have a little bit better policing e((ect on themselvest baaed on the com· pensation pool," he aaded. - Schmidt, who became a weekend television sports commentator durln1 the strike, is going through workouts under the watchful eye of Manager Dallas Green and his staff. FOLLOWING THAT season, which Gibson capped with a rec· ord 17-strlkeout performance in Game 1 of the World Series against Detroit , baseball lowered the pitching mound to give batters a better chance to hit agalnst the likes of Gibson. "A writer asked me how I'd like to be remembered," said There was nothing pint-sized al>out Johnny Mize By HAL BOCK AP SporU Wrtler The scene is etched in your mind'a eye, burned there indelibly. It is a memory, a link to the past that you can not -must not -ever surrender. For alter all, without our pasts. what have we left? It's true that everything is maplfied when you're young. You're a pint·si&ed person in a full-sized world. That has an ' effect. Home runs look longer when you're eight than they w~hen you're 28 or48. ror one particular elaht-year-old, no home runs will ever be quite as lon1 as th• onet Johnny Mise used to hit. -,-----· .. The year was 1947 and Mize was play- ing first base for a team called the New York Giants in an oddly shaped stadium called the Polo Grounds. It was a place weU-sulted for polo perhaps, but rather poor for baaeball. !n that marvelous aummer when this particular ei1bt·year-old discovered the wonders of baseball, lh• Giusti' t.am resembled thelt nickname. They were a club ol bqe 1lu11en, 1Jow mdrinl on the fteld but a treat to watch at bat. That summer they would bit 221 home runs, seUina • Nallonal Leape l'ffOrd for lq·be.U ftreworkJ. They a1lo would flnilh fourth ln an eight-team leaaue, a matter of little imp<>rtance to t.be el1bt· •' year-old. For him there wu nothlnl quite so wonderful as a alant·ailed Giant home run, And no one delivered them as frequently 11 Johnny Mlse. In the summer of 1947, Mlze bit 51 COMMENTARY home runs. No National Llal\M left· handed hitter before or alnee baa reached that total. 1'be ae.Dario wu repeated time after marveloua Ume. lll&e would at.ride up lo the plate, bl• broad aboulden atretch.lna bi• uniform Jeney to l~ llmlll, the buae No. 15 on bl• back. He'd carefully pOtiUon himself ln the batter'• box and eye the pitcher, sid.ng up the enemy. Mize was no 1ueas-hitter. He studied the pitcben. Wheo he went to the plate, be wu prepared. He bad a mental book on the burlen and be referred to it all the time. In the field, Miae was hardly a gaaelle. He wu a bll man and played first bae U.. way you'd expect a bll man to do Jt. He would not be ml1taken for a Gold Gtove winner, but, like the . Glanta' annual 1tandin1, it hardly mat· tered to the a.year-old. Juat keep awln&· (See IOBNNY, Pa .. 81) Gibson, now a coach with the · New York Mets. "I think as a person who was a competitor ', and gave 100 percent every time, 1 • I went out on the field. I might not have been so good. but I ' gave it my all." Gibson nearly gave his all to another sport after starring in basketball and bas eball atfj Creighton University. · "I was looking for a.. $35,000 • borius to sign," be recallid. 1 U "Bill Bergesch, who's with th~ ' New York Yankees now but was 1 scouting for St. Louis, was the only one to tell me the truth. He said a lot of scouts were sa ying the closest I'd gel to $35,000 was $3,000. "I SAID I LIKED bas ketball " better anyway and wouldn't play'' baseball. : I "But that's the reason I signed' with St. Louis ... honesty." Mize would have had an ;, honest beef with the selectors w a bout being overlooked despite · some excellent career statistics. ' ' He hit 359 homers, including a ' ' National League record for left·' handed hitters 6f 51 in 1947 with · the New York Giants. He won or • : tied for the NL home run title' n four times, captured the RBI' crown three times and the bat-' 1 ting title once. •;t And he's the only major ol• leaguer to have hit three homers'~" or more io a game twice in a1 ·~ season in two different years. '.fl BVT MIZE, 68, betrayed ncf 'l bitterness at the ceremonies. · I "Somebody said to me the ' other day that getting in by the I Veterans Committee was going in the back door," said Mize, ' 1'nown as "Big Cat" when he ,, was beltl11C the ball for th -.; Cardinals, Giants and. Yankees from 1936-~. ''I said, •No. Look at who ls on the committee: managers, general managers, players. Who do you want to pick you? They're your peers.' In Hollywood, when your peers elect you, you receive an Oscar." Mlle said he learned how to 1 · hit while ln high school. "My first game as a 1.o2ro, in Greensboro, N.C., I got a fill th~ 1 firat time up and fell over n.rsv base because J was watchinc tbe- ball," he aald. "I watched lq ever slnce. i j ' Ricardo sparkles for Salnta Co1t1 Mesa lllth and Oran1e [i] Coa1l CoUec• product ... ,. aJea ... o •II• be1an hi& abth National Foolbull Leaaue campaiiin with a bana thla weekend, bootlni field 'lO&ls of •• and 22 yard1 ln the New Orlean1 Saint.a' "18·8 win" over Miami ln a scrimmage at Vero Beach. ltu.saell Erxlebeo, the Sain ta· punter who has aaplred to place·klck for the Saini.I. too, waa given a ahot R e f e r e es n eed love, like the r est of us a nd mined a 42·yarder. Ricardo was the Saints' lead· ln1 scorer in 1980, th~ NFC's lhlrd·leadlng scorer In 1978 <92 points with Detroit>. kicked 10 of 17 '1tld goals In 1980, set un NFL r~cord of 29 straiahl Cield goals inside 40 yards and has a 68 percent lifetime success ratio In the From AP dispatches CHICAGO -former Chicago m Bulls forward Bob Love says he w unts lo return Lo the National Bas ketball Association, but not as a player or a coach. . NFL. He has missed only two R1c01'do inside 40 yards out of 40 al· Instead, Love wants to become the object of most fans' disaffection -a referee. "More fhan anything else. I want to become a referee in the NBA," Love said recently. "I want to be a very good referee. That's what I want now." The former Chicago star. who retired from the NBA in 1978, says he knows the path won 't be easy but adds that he's ready lo meet the challenge. tempts ... Deliberations resumed today in the Oakland Raiders antitrust suit agains t the NFL . . . Former Ram quarterback Vince Fer· ragamo threw one touchdown pass In a 43·23 Montreal loss at the hands of Saskatchewan before being replaced by Gerry Dattilio late in the third period m Canadian football. Montreal is no>Y 1·4. Quote of the day Becoming an NBA referee is about as dif· ficult as a college player making it into the world of professional basketball, according to Gene Berce, a former Big Ten official and NBA player who now works for the NBA as a re· gional scout. "We want them to look ugly because when you look ugly, you work harder ." - Pitts burgh Steelers Coach Chuck NoU after a heavy rain forced his players Lo wear high-top sneakers for an indoor prac· lice. "Two or three ofCi cials are added •o the NBA every year out of several thousand appli- cants." he said .. Bob's going to have to work hard." Raiders get Super Bowl rings Million dollar golfer disqualified DA NVERS, Mass. -Kathy !I Whitworth, the only golfer to win Sl OAKLAND T he Oak la nd [i] Raiders received their Super Bowl 4. • XV championship rings, glittering with diamonds, in ceremonies Sunday. million on the ladies' professional tour, was disqualified Sunday during the final round of the Boston Five Classic at Ferncroft Country Club. Whitworth was disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard on her ninth hole. "These are symbols of a great, great year for us, and now lhat it's been done once, there's no reason why it can 't be done again." said quarterback Jim Plunkett, sounding the general theme of the two·hour awards luncheon at Oakland's Kaiser Center. LPGA officials said" she inadvertently signed a card with a par 4 on the ninth hole. She should have had a bogey 5. Coach Tom Flores told his players. "We.-.r the rings with pride and dignity. You worked for them, and no one can ever take that awav from you." · Dooley almost quit Georgia, coach take honor s KI NGS ISLAND. Ohio (API - Twice in his coaching career. Vince Dooley came close to quit- ting. the University of Georgia football mentor revealed Sunday after his team was honored as the nation's 1980 coll ege football champion. D oo le y accepted t h e MacArthur Bowl trophy for the honor as 18 college greats were enshrined into the College Foot· ball Hall of Fa me. ''I've had some difficult times m coaching. About 10 years ago I got discouraged. I said if I didn't get the program moving forward. I'd leave <c oaching) in a year ... he said. T HE F IRST TIME Dooley considered a change in jobs was in 1963 when he was an assistant coach at Auburn University. He said he gave himself one more year for something positive to happen. ··1 was 30 years old in 1963, and the prospects didn't look too good," he said. "You have these times when you'r e not too pleased with yo urself . Everybody goes through it. but Roge r s' fathe r in big accide nt LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. 1AP> -A Lawrenceville man and his teen-age daughter were killed and the father of Heisman Trophy winner George Rogers was in· ju red in an auto accident south of here Friday. Gwinnett County Coroner Billy K. Wages said Sun· day. Wages said 16-year-old Wanda Black died in the head-on collision two miles south of LawrencevUle on Georgia 124. Her father, 34~ year-old Clifton Black, died Saturday night in an Atlanta hospitaJ. Clifton's wife. Maggie Clifton. was listed in fair condition Sun· day night at Joan Glancy HospitaJ in Duluth. George Rogers Sr . of Duluth was listed in good condilion Sun- day night at Twinnett Community Hospital in Snellville, Ga. Wages said Rogers. who was the driver or one of the cars, s uffered several broken ribs and a collapsed luna. you've got to be responsible and say. 'I have to turn it around myself'." A break came when former Auburn basketball Coach Joel Eaves became athletic director at Georgia and brought Dooley with him. Dooley said all of lhe former players and coaches enshrined into the Hall of Fame have had their share of problems and dis· appointments. "EVERY I NDIVIDUAL up there has gone through some very critical times," he said pointing toward the s tage. "Some go through more vaJleys than others. It 's not permanent. You don't have to stay there as long as you keep going and don't despair." Dooley said last season, when Georgia racked up a 12·0 record, was a high point. but he knows it can't stay that way. "Trying to defend a cham · pionship in college sports is a lit· lie different than in professional football." he said, pointing out that pro s ports teams keep many of the same players ti-om year to year. ··Last year the chances were slim, but this year they're a lot slimmer. We try to be the best we can be." Dooley said. ENSHRINED INTO the Hall of Fame Sunday were Ara Parseghian. Miami University <Ohio) graduate and former coach of Miami, Northwestern and Notre Dame; Bob Gain, Ke ntucky: Raymond Brown, USC: Sam Huff, West Virginia; Merlin Olsen. Utah Slate; Eddie LeBaron, Pacific; Jim Swink, Texas Christian; J.C. Caroline. 111inois; Glenn Dobbs. Tulsa; Clayton Tonnemaker, Min· n esota. and B ob Ward , Maryland. Also elected into lhe haJl were John Harding, Pittsburgh; An· dr e w Moore, Tennessee; Ch arley Berry. Lafayette ; Calvin Jones, Iowa ; Steve Lach. Duke: Barry Wood, Harvard; and Ed Franco, Fordham. The enshrinement followed an induction ce r e mon y las t December In New York. The former players and coaches gathe red at Kings Island, w,here they saw bio· graphical s ketc h es a nd memorabilia of themselves Peter On!ilL'rhu1s Caponi n e ars $1 million with easy win DANVERS, Mass . <AP>-Don· na Caponi. inching closer to her goal or becoming a milJion-dollar winner on t he Ladies Professional Golf Association, settled down after a s puttering start and breezed to an easy win Sunday in the Boston Five Golf Classic. Caponi, who joined the circuit 16 years ago at the age of 20. fired a final round 1-under-par 71 for a 72-hole total of 276 and her fifth LPOA victory this season. With her 6-stroke victory over Jan Stephenson, Caponi boosted her earnings for the year to $158,595 and her official prize money to $982,521 in her de· termined bid to join Kathy Whitworth as the only LPGA million-dollar winners. Caponi. who sh1tttered par with 69. 68 a nd 68 in the first three rounds at Ferncrofl Country Club's 6,008-yard, par·72 course, took a 3·stroke lead over Stephenson into the final day. However, she bogeyed two of the first three holes and Stephenson pulled into a tie for the lead with a birdie Jon her 56th hole. However, Caponi, a two-time U.S. Open c ha mpion, got her game in gear again with a birdie 4 on the fifth green and went in front to stay as Stephenson, playing head o n , took a bo.cey 6. ---. .--:... -. ' ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 3. 1981 ' Baseball today On lb.la date In b11eball In 199: BalUmore pitcher Dave McNally uw hll two.year, 17·1ame wlnnlna 1treak end as Rich Reese's pinch hit arand 1lam home run li fted J(m Kaat and the Min· neaota Twins to ll 5·2 victory over the Oriol . On this date In 1940: CinclMalJ Reda reserve catcher Wlllard Hershberger. reportedly distreaaed by his sub par play, committed suicide during the club's stay In Boston. On this date In 1933 · After golna a record 308 games without being blanked. the New York Yankees were stopped by Philadelphia's Lefty Grove 7·0. Today's birthday: . Seattle Mariners inCielder-outfielder Dan Meyer. a Mater Del Rlgh product, Is 29. Hall of Fame gets minor game There was only slJght m ention of [i] the major league basebaJJ strike at 4 • the Baseball Hall of Fame Induction ceremonies Sunday, The strike, which lasted 50 days, dld have its effects on proceedings here, however. The Hall of Fame Game, scheduled for today between the Cincinnati Reds and the Oakland A's , was scratched and a New York· Penn League contest between Oneonta and Elmira was subs tituted ... New York Mets outfielder Joel Youngblood, the major league batting leader at .359 when the baseball strike began on June 12, was returned to the roster of 1 he National League team. Spilled female jockey OK SCHENECTADY. N.Y. Karen ~ Rogers. the leading money·winner among American female jockeys the past two years. was in good condition late Sun· day afternoon after a spill that left her with a dislocated shoulder and a slight concussion. Rogers was injured Saturday while·rolling clear of her mount. Wiggle Waggle, In the second race at Saratoga Race Course. Wiggle Waggle was approa ching the half-mile pole of the seven-fur long race when Hudson Ruler, rid· den by Steve Rydowski. cut in front, causing the horse to clip Hudson Ruler's heels a nd go down. Both horses walked away from the mishap. Yankees off Angels' achedule NEW YORK The An1el11 won 't WI get to see Ntw York this ycuar un· les11 they and the New York Yankees win their reapec\lv& divlslons In the Ame can Leaiue. The major league baseball 11trlke, which Is cancelling 712 games. is elimlnallna some en tire vlsita by lea ms to other cities. The Angels, for example, were supposed to be In New York June 16·18 and July 2•·26. But all six games were wiped out by the strike, which began June 12 and ends Aug . ...9 with the pluyinlJ of the All·star Game at Cleveflind. In the AL. Oakland andJoront.o wlll play 49 games each . the Angels and Texas 50, Baltimore 51. Boston. Detroit. Seattle and the Yankees 52 apiece. the Chicago White Sox, Milwaukee and Minnesota 53, and Cleveland a nd Kansas City 55. Buss says Jabbar trade slim INGLEWOOD Kareem Abdul· m Jabbar of the Lakers may ask to be traded when he meets with team · owner Jerry Buss today, but Buss says he won't consider trading away the veteran center. Buss, responding to reports Saturday that lt\e former UCLA star would seek a move over a matter of "respect," said he would be very surprised if the six·lime National Basketball Association most valuable player asked lo be dealt away. Abdul·J abbar·s displeasure is apparently related to Buss' signing of Earvin .. Magic'' Johnson lo a 25-year, S25 million contract with the Lakers earlier this summer ' 28,393 turn out at Del Mar • Summer Time Guy took com· 'mand on the stretch turn and went on lo capture the 582,300 San Diego Han d1cap by 112 lengths Sunday before a crowd o( 2R.393. largest ever lo attend a thoroughbred racing program at Del Mar. Ridden by Sandy Hawley and carrying 115 pounds. the wanner covered 11,16 miles in 1 41 and paid $9.60 to win . Doctors may perform paralysis lesls today or Tuesday on Landon Turner, the Indiana Cnivers1ly basketball player who suffered a broken spine in a car accident. Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: No events scheduled. Victory was long time coming Oosterhuis gains first pro title at Canadian Open • OAKVILLE. Ontario <AP> -Although he had encountered.little but frustration since joining the American PGA Tour, Peter Oosterhuis never real· ly considered returning to his native England where he once dominated pro golf. "I now have homes in Palm Springs and Santa Barbara My children are in school in the States. "It would be a bigger move. a much bigger move, to return to England now than it was to come to lhe Stales," said Oosterhuis, who joined the American tour seven years ago and finally· broke through to a victory Sunday in the Canadian Open. lhis country's national championship but also a part of lhe U.S. PGA circuit. "When I was playing in Britain. 1 didn't have a home. J JUSt traveled all the time, .. he said In those trvavels, the pleasan•. 6·5 Oosterhuis established himself as the outstanding player in Europe. He topped the British Order of Merit four consecutive seasons and collected 19 international lilies. Then he joined the American tour and it all turned sour. He lost a playoff for the 1974 Pensacola Open title and didn't finish higher until the weekend, when a last-gasp challenge by Jack Nicklaus felJ short. Oosterhuis won $76,500 in Canadian funds and the spectatular Peter Jackson trophy with a final· round 70 and a 280 total. four shots under par on the difficult, 7.060-yard Glen Abbey Golf Club course in suburban Toronto. Nicklaus. who desiined the course as a perma· - nent home for the Canadian Open. left critical putts s hort of the cup on three of the last four holes and finis hed second again a single s hot back at 281 "Yes. I'm disappointed." said Nicklaus. who has yet to win this title and now has finished second five times He'll defend his American PGA title in Atlanta this week. Nicklaus had a closing round or par 71 and was tied with Bruce Lietzke and Andy North. each of whom had a closing 70. Mark Hayes. who was tied for the lead until he double bogeyed the 17th hole. finished with a 74-282 Third round leader Leonard Thompson was another shot back at 283 after a 76. Tom Watson shot 72·288 and ~e Trevino. a three-time winner of this event. had 74·289. For much of the last seven years, it has been a series of deep frustrations for Oosterhuis. From the leading player on the Europe tour he became another face in the American crowd, a career struggler, an also· ran He brushed aside any suggestfon he may have thought of giving up the game. "Any time I started thinking of a different way lo make money, it took me only about 10 seconds to decide I'd better go practice my golf game," be said. "I have no other interests. no other desires." The break·through victory occurred 1n peculiar fashion. with Oosterhuis sitting in the scorer's tent watching the other challengers finish. "Pele is magical in a totally winning movie!" If it'sgot wheels, you'll move it faster in a Dail y Pilot c lassified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- v iser will help you turn your wheels into cash. NOW IS THE TIME FOR HEROES. . f .f Y~ flffd Yoo\.~ ~ DI.TOO ~--·•o.i,. .. ll X•tft II Ne(•Wr Zillgitt an d Wright This Week s Special 77M251 OPCN MS I W&ICINOS nn 1 lNlf l'Olff' OM '411 RAMS I SWON TICKETS U.IW CWceSHh 213-463-11 Dl in~ur-Jnn· .i!(rnts Jnd brokrri: Retellen: Jnaurance ooeta rtatn1! Cont1ct us ror 1 compeUtive quote for a Buslnesa Owner1 Packa1e Poticy which lnchadel rnoet covera&H ne«ted to prote(!t your bwllnaa. We also wrile Group Medical and Ufe for amalJ ,,.oups as well u lar1e. N JI ~.I<' .\r1 hur lioull"V.1rd "WWJM'r1 Hr.wh c" '"'""' (71.4) /\)~I'>'> People a ll along .. .._. the Orange Coast rely on the•-•J .._142-4321 • 1980 COUPE DEVILLE o •ELEGANCE Dual comfort seats, Cabriolet top & Cadillac wire wheel cover~. < 3S0137 1. l.ORIMAR PRESENTS A F'RmDIE Fiil.OS ~ODUCnON A JOHN HUSTON FtLM SYLVESTtR STAU.ONE MICHAEL CAINS MAX VON SYOOW PEL.a "VICTORY" ... Mu.le by BIU. CONTI Olrtctor of Pho1otr1phy CF.RRY FIStffJt O.S C Scret'nplav b~ EVAN !ONES and YABO YABLONS.:v Slorv by YAO() YA9lONSICY 11nd OIORDfE MILICfNJC .• IF.FF MACUIR6 Produced FRED016 F16LOS Din: tod llv fOHN HUSTON ~ .• 111.111\11\liu,.. ftj] -tJ:JltMM. wwl•r· A l'ARAMOUNT Pl(;f\JR!;; ... --..,.... •~_.,.t .. ..,.....,..,.,.... .,....,........,. I NOW PLAYING ~ · _ ... , ... ..,, _ -·-:··· .... , .......... Orlnfe 9)4.J111 ~ TOtO 5'1• .... , .... '91 3693 ..... _,..Tllnnl -• • .._....._I ~ hl::tl l•I 0318 :.=-anr fX-M I Del M•r "ll•OA Y'S •81UL n l1t•efU.y111Wru1P• .. _._, C•nedlan Ooen ceeo.,,..,o.ie,...> Peter 0..1 .. ...,., vuoe • .....,,,.,~ l •IKt U.U.0, Ul,1N 11.1 .. 10.,._., Mcty """"' Ul,7'1 n_.. ... ,...., Ja<ll NlftJ...., Ul,111 10-1'-70->1-ai 0.Vld ~ ........•••• 1.10 7 .. 7 .. ,.,.... Mtrll Ht.,.., t i .. !JO n.., .... ,._. ... e.tweod. &IJ.UI ... ,..,...,_. Tom Kiit, tlJ,li1 '"11*1•-m U-rct T,,.,.,._, tU,U7 '1-4.1·1>7._., J ffry ...... tlO,JOO ,.., .. ,,..._.,. lceu HOOi. a 10.:ioo 1u..11-11-a. Jim Thofpe, tlO)OO ... '1·71-71-214 fom ""119", SIG.JOO 11., ..... ,.._. .. I.AWi HI .......... .,, ...... ,,.~ .Jc Sneed,.,,..,., ,, ,,., .. ,, __ ,, •IT llAC •. • 1ur1ono• 6Utt It-(McH•r .... I U.JO U.40 e.to l'f'H9'\ ... rd (Mete) U .to 11.110 T-.Hnllln\, .... • .. ,,.,,..._. Tommy"'""'· M.Mt 11.1 .. 1,..._. Mr. C-• (Scllv-""ldt> J.20 AllO ,_ Ttuco, r.ro, Sto<my Prince, GeorQe Arcllff, "·* 10.1s..1t.11-m Dtnlt WatlOll, M.• 7MH1·14-a7 lt•pld EmlNr. Styllsl't Corter , Hllhlde lt11ler, 5-dy Tuctor, T11rnln9 Wll60ll, T11h1mer. 8ruce Devlin, U. llt 11·1S.1).,._. TDn'I --• .,,111 7J ,.,,.,, __ , Mlllt SuillvOft, U, 121 M·7>10.7...._. Scoll si.._, •Ua 7J.7H...._.. Tl-: 1.10 us. SICONO •Acl. 1 "" mlloa.. llObSllHrw,P ,111 7).Jl.IS.70-.. Cwttt Sll'Mtt, U,tt:J 101 .. ;a.71_ .. Ho Sein! ,..._ .. yl IUO S.00 UO 011 To Monte I Plncoy) l .40 UO urry Helson, U ,IG 11 .... IS..1'-., LH Trevino, U.1~ 14·10.11·1-- CrlmtonArrow CC:.IJI-) •.IO '"" re<ed! Cl1111090, A11nnln9 Trw, He~ )...lod. Alllflo Power, S....lc_I_,_ Ovrtoo O..too, 0.6Uvlll• Down. Pllll Han(ocll, U,MO .. •77·1S.71>-Zt1) Kellll Fwouc. U,8'0 71.71.7a.1o-,no Time: 1.43 J/S. JJ DAILY DOU•LIE (H) P<tlct '122.IO THlltD IUIC8. 1 1/16 mllH on l11rf. Jlmwl Csr-m.ker) I .0 s.oo •.OO AUSler SUI'-IOllvorHI t.oo •.40 l(lck (Wlnlonct) 7.111 Alao reced: French Riteellt. Rolls Ro\'Ce, Blue Oencer, l(unctallnl, P.rry Cebln, En-voy To aee.o. Time: 1.441/S u 8XACTA (S-01 oelo '111 so. l'OUltTH ltACI. • lur1on9s. First CIMS (Btlteier) I.Ill S.00 J.to Don't Judger CC.l-1 S.60 J 00 F•-Pert. (Del~ ... ,_, uo Also ren: Derby Comclous, V-•11, ,.,... Splrll, Proven Sw .. t, Udy .. ljlrnky, l'Ofty l(erats, Ast,., Hypocla Time· I 113/S. l'll'TH aACI. • lurlongs. Horthem Fabio C~molo.erl 3.00 J.IO 2.60 Metclli"9 IBaltHar) •0.00 10.IO Conky Johnston I 0.1.,,.,ussoyoJ S.IO Also rWt. Tommy's F01ty, Icy """· On· dertllo SNll, Fly A Jenny, So.red, Miu Bacon. llilllrt<ulous Kolo, Grant Htr A Win. Time 1.10 l/S U IE.l!ACTA 91·J> POlct $.SOI.SO. SIXTH ltACIE. I m ile. TllrM Dou C«:MI•-> II 20 '·'° '·'° Okie City ud IM<Hargwl UO 3.00 Shady CerMr ( Hewloyl S.IO Also raced Aln. Boron. Glllloans Purcl\aw, MtoQle's BHt, PrlcH Are Uo. Ealllbll, CNroe a.""'""· Geraoe. Time: 1.1'. SIEVINTH ltACI. t 1/16 miles on turf. Ta11111 ... King CSMemtUr) •.40 3.00 l.00 BMCll G<ove CM<Herg .. > 9.60 a.:io AdYoCOlum CLIPNlml '·'° Al.., ractd: Prince Circle, Miners I.Ame>, Son Of o Docto, Bon Cour-. Em-s l(o, Frenc:11 Cul, BOid E••I, I'll Sl•nd P•I, Cl•lm The Tl .... · I OJ. $S IEXACTA (S.o) ~Id $1$).00 U .. ICI( SI)( C._s .. l·IO·SI Ptld t.21,J.1'.60 with M• wlnnlno llcuts Isl• llOrses). t.2 Pkll Sia ConsolOllOft INIO $1!0 00 Wolf\,, .. wlnnlno llcUts (flvo horse•> EIGHTH AACE. I 1/1' miles Sen Ol- Handlc ... Sum,,,... Timo Guy (Howley)• 60 S.20 4 00 Sllomoo I PlnUy) S.60 '·'° E•Olod9cl (Cesta-> J.«I Also reeeo· Soito. Fln~I. Doon.,.llury, llerduret n,,,. t" NINTH ltACE. I mllo Smollln' N•Uve C~m•hrl 1.20 s.ao 4.20 Foll-n .. Jwelgo (H•wlol S.60 4.00 Touc110t At>lllly IPlnc.y) 3 00 Also roced Sports Sotcta culer, Pretonoeo, L•uQlllng River, Kh•lmtr(. Desert H•Wk. Pl,.lt Fleet, N•llvo Wit. Time: I :'6. U IEUCTA (HI peld JIU 00 A llfndence -11, !93 Augu•t Regatt• LIDO Ill.I YACRT CLU8 ,.......,,..._.., LIDC).1~ -1. AUr1y LOCl!ney, LIYC. L100.14B -1. Blalne Tl'toma, BCYC. LASER -t. Suzonnt Soem11 .. r. HHYC. 2 Htd J-1, HHYC. SABOT A -I O.vkl Fr6neo, LIYC, J. J ell ,..._., SDYC, J. Jim OtlJ. l.AYC. •· Jolln Parnlck, BCYC; S Cessandr e S....ellJM, HHYC. SABOT B -I. Andrle Mou, SOYC; 2. Mike O'Bry6n, SDYC, 3. Eric Proul, BYC; •. Trlw Aoys, LIYC, s A•y Stein, BCYC. SABOT C·I -I. Eric f+«qulsl, BYC; J. Julie Walllle, LIYC, ). Eric Slutzky, UYC. •. Hiiiery 8-11, LIYC; s. Loslle F-r. LIYC. SABOT C.J -I Foblan Rousot, LIYC;) Peter Gt'odocll, LIYC, '· Vlll<enl Palltcllno, LIYC, o Mo9Nn 0.1•, NHYC. One-de1lgn Regatta NIW..OltT HAltlOlt YACHT CLU• 1. CloM E"'°""ttr (Tim Hogon and Jim Warmington,,..._,, Harbor Ye<hl Clull); J . Varlttlle (Andy McOGntkl -~ T#lll IHHYCI , J Shy (Doll Baver, Sovtl>WHlern Yedlt Club). Commodore'• Crul•e llOYAOIElt YACNT CLU8 I. TN\tml co. .... Gray, Voy-rs YocM CIUO); J. Cab Ptl•,.,,., CCerl u1t, VYC); 1. A11110 ... y 11 (John Wlebel, llYC). Pro bowling NA 'T0411tNAMINT , ............... , T'lllrdlt-.!t.o.,.n I. Tom LtlKN 4,0H 2. Mike Durbin J,M J. 0~ T._ J,tSI •. Jt»llerorcl , ..... S. AU'11'toll HOllNll'I J,D JMMy Mlllor. U,flO n .1s..1 .. 11-no 8111 C•re.. U,ltO 10 1HJ.11-1'0 Jt» Keeer. U,ttO 10·1'·1N._...:lt0 Tim -..11. t.2. ISJ 1S.1>·1J.11-.ttl Tim SCMP90n, '2. UJ 1t•l .. 7>-12-:rt1 •obb'f W-ln1, t.2, UJ 7 .. 71·1J.1t -1'1 Bo41 Glider, t.2,1S2 7HMS.1)-:rt1 Guroe Bums, U,tSJ ll·To.1 .. 7'-Jtl Arllo McNICklo, U,ISl '* 11-IJ.IS.-:rtl Vonce HM19-, U,tSl 71).11°1).71-1'1 Tommy Volanllne, U. I St 1"-M·10-l)-29J Mike Morley, Sl,tsl 12.1 ... -.1s-m Biil Kr.uen, ll.uJ n 11.n .n -m "6<1 Nuclloll1, Sl,JSo 7S.12·1S.ll_..m Jim Nellon!, Sl,2.U ,, .. ._70.12-2':9 Leo Elder, St,2So 11-1"1 .. 11-1'3 JOllll c-. ••.:i.u 7'"11·7S.7,_,,., Lyn Loe~ s•.Uo ,._12.12.thm Gery PSoyer, Sl.2.U 1'·1).10-1)-n:J Oen PoN, Sl,lSO 14·10-12·11-1" Ed Oougl'IM1y, $1,001 72-IS.7 .. 11-2'4 Dolo Douoleu, s1.001 12·7 .. 7S.71-Jt4 Lou Gr-m, tl,001 7S..7 .. 7f.7)-Jt4 Cllt rlH COOdy, ll,001 1S-11·7f.7-Deno Quigley, ••.001 IHH).7- Merk McCumtter, $1,001 12·7S.7H- Woody BloCkbum, USJ lo·1•·1S.IJ-:rts Bott Prot.en. S9S2 12·7H .. 1>-1tS Morris He1At1aay. n u 11-1J.12.,.._m Jim 0tn1, '"' n.n., .. ,._...,,,. EOdle ~trce. l93t 1S.11·1o.t'-1'6 Mlh Reid, HO$ '9·rt·1•1J-297 w • .,.,.. Levi, no~ IHJ.1t-13-m Mlcll Soll, St05 11·1S.1f.11-J91 G•ry liol11tere. nos 1•12·1<>-1'-191 Jay "-·,., lo-10.1a.12-291 1111 Sender, &-.i ... 1 .. 1a.1s-2t1 Lon Nie!...,, ~ 1'·1'·1 .. 1$--m Don l'lloMy, '8.SI , ... ,._, .. ,._,.. John Mau.e. '8 14·72·1Ht-J9t Cur1l1 Sltlord, ._., IJ·1S·7M.__ LPGA tournament (elDa1tven.AUu.) OortN '-4, t.22,000 ......... 11-27• J•n SleptientOft, SU.TOO 12-1().1.._,212 Jo Anne Cerner. 110,500 1<>-1s ..... n-m · 8erllere Moaness, Sl.500 12·11·70.11 -214 C•rolrn Hiii, M,Ho n -10..,.1)-211 Betsy Klno. M.'90 1.54"10-13-211 Pellr Sllee1-, M.1'111 11-73*41-2t7 Holl ls Stacy, M,HO TS·IHl>-11-217 Ce!hy Sherk, M,HO IS4t·11·11 -217 S.ndre P•lmor. "·'°° 12·71·11·10-111 K1I• O'Brien, '3.300 ,,..._,._"__. Send•• Poll '3,300 1'·11·11·10-- J •"e Blalock, "·)00 12·12·7J.1J-al Allct R1um..n, u .ssa ,._...1,.1,_.. Cero1 Menn. U ,S51 H ·1).lfo.l)-21t Pol 8redley, S2.J3.S ,.,.,...,6-1'0 Debbie Austin, t.2,2.U IHS..IS..70-290 lllUI T-. Sl,llt IH ... IJ.I0-291 Cerole Jo CAiiison, Sl.att 17 11·10.7'-:rtl S.ndr• Heynle, Sl.119 1"10.12-IS-291 Pet ~'l"fn, "·*" 7Ht.7S.7J-2'1 Morie,. Flo'(<!, 11,no 12·1<>-i•n-m Svlle ~llster. U,olO 1>·12·1'"11-m Dale Lunctqulst, i 1,010 1•7J-7f.lo-2'3 M,J, 5'"1111, Sl,olO l).IJ.IJ.ISo-m Penny Pulr. t l,230 1Ht-7S.l.._JM Bonnie t....uer, tl,230 74-IS.70.IS.-2'4 Cindy Hiii, Sl,230 11·12·71-70-"4 DIMe Delley, Sl,230 ao..7·1S..7'-JM A-t1•~r. $1,230 1•13-lf.11 -1'4 Exhibition •ehedule ....... .,..0-. S..n Frenclsco •t SHtlle, n TI!oorMe'('1 0- Pllll-pNo at H°"'ton, n ,r ... .,.1~ KMtt.ts cn.,. et W•Jlllneton, n H..,. York Jets el o.n ... r. n ~. Detroit at 8ulleto, " Clnclnnttl at Tt11'19' B•Y. n H..,. York Giants •t Clllc-. " PitlJbut-olt et CleV91-, n 8o1Urno.e al H-~to..-1. 11 SI Louis 01 Sen Otego, n Gr_, Boy et Oellu . n AllWtta •I Ookltnd, ri ~ •• ""-· II How Enolancl ot •-. • o.m . Canadian Football League EASTl:t'N DIVlllOfol W L T l"Ct ,.,. PA H•mlllon OtlAl•t ""°"'"'' Tcwonto J J 0 "°° 1• '" I J 0 .1SO 11 IS. I 4 0 .JOO ICU llt 0 S 0 .000 100 ISi WHTEltN OllllSION 8rlll~ COlwnOlo o o O 1.000 1'1 ll Edrnenton o I 0 .IOO 179 ti Wlnnt1199 1 I 0 .7JO 10. .. S.1k•lcr.wen 2 J 0 .SOO " • Ctloery 1 J O .500 to 1114 , .. ., •• Sc_ S.t.llolcllewoll "· Ml>nt•••I u ~ . . . "' AMa•ICMl~-Ue ._DMIMI • L '°'L .. 0.IOfte 11 u .•17 Ttll .. aa n .... ·~ Cltlce1t JI n -M ...... II " .Sl7 • l<MNIClly •• •• It 5-eltl• 11 -... ·~ Ml-..U 11 .. ... .. .............. N-Yoni J4 tt .*07 .... "'.,.. JI n .J7• I Mllweuae. )1 u ."4 J 0.11'911 JI -.s.4 M ....... • • .s. • a ..... lfld .. 14 .no , Tor-• 1' 41 .116 " ..... , ....... ......... '""'9.11 Cllk.oet• ....... 11 l(~ty et .. Hlrnora, n Ml et Cfltw!Md, 11 Tt-• .... Yeni.11 T.,.,... .. Olerefl,. n 0.lalld ·---·" MTI-.-&. LAMU8 ........... ........ -II .... Clft(fMatl as II .us ~ "-'""' • .. ... , • AtlllMe u .. .. "" t.11 PrMdla 1'1 ** •• " ... 0 .... n • ··" 11" ............. ""' ....... .. •• Mt lt.1.N• • • ... 1~ ~ • at .... • =-~ IS u .111 M " .. .. ~ Olfc.1119 IS II .. .......,,,....,. ~ ......... " ................ ............. ,_. .. " .. _.,.,. .. ~ ltl......, .. ....._,11 ~, . C:111e1,,...11 •I ....... ; '"II-'-"'• el a.1u_..; -.. ... et ... ,.,., Cltwt ... el ,lhllllwtlltl TWOftt. el Htw Yerk M9tt. ....... , Cl11d(IMll ot ...... 1 H•• Yw• MIU •l for..,,..,.,.,....,. It-It l.a..,.04 ..._ Ytr• Yan•on; 8otlon ol Mt11trul , Oo•I ..... S-l''lllCltO. LITTLI! LUOUI a.nto,. (1).~Hr-olda) NC'TtdteAL "INAU CetH-.!IM..,,._aJ l'Nllllill llelley Hortl't 2, Ttnaflce .... 11ona1 O I'-..., V•ltf HWtll U, 8e11 Yettie U11-u I ............ ._ ,_..,n Veller Hor111 "" .,,,.,.,..,..,_. ~. S;JO al Ha'11or (lt'f Liii ........... Senlo,. (14-15 YHr-old1) ICCTIC*At. ,llfAU ( .. C04 ""° ,_,_, So.1111 Ill Monlo S. F-l•l11 \/alley Hortfl I T ...... ._ ,....,..,,, Vtllty Ne><lh n 5-11 I'~ s IS hlladega 500 (elTeH ..... ,A ... ) 1. lton ~d. 8ulck, 1• lap,, tM.m "'""· l 0«re11 W•llrlo, 8ukll, 1• 3. THry L..Mlonlo, lluk ll, 1•. t. H.,ry GWtl, B11lc1l, t• J llellOy AIU-., Buick, 1• , '-I.Ake s-G, Bukll, 111 '· l(yl<I """Y. lkl!Cll, Ill. a. Jody Aklley, Ford, 117. t . 5ton llMrell, Ponllee, I,., 10. o..,.. Morels, Buick, as. ti. 8111 Elll~I. Ford, IU. tt. Elllocl F-,·Aot>l11t011, ll11kk, IM. ti IMnllf P•"°"'• Ford, IM, " Torry Hermon, 8ulck, IU. 1s. Olck Moy, Buick, 111. "· Jimmy Mo.,.., Polllltc. tao, 11 C..Cll Gor-. Buick, llO 11. T°'""'rco.ie, Ferct, 111. 1t . &-... Wewelr, Bulca, Its 20. Ak i! Wiison, Otd\mOOlle, 1oa. z 1. Austy Welleco, Ponlloc, HI. 27. Joe ltutt ....... Ollbrnof>l1e, U3. 10. '--'• Pond, Buick. 133. U. Gery Btlougll, Bukk, llJ U . Al<NrdCllHdrtts, Pontiac, 111 21. Mlb Potter, 8ulcll, 100, JI. Cole YorborOUgl\, lukll. U. tt. Dtlo h.-dt, PonllK, U 30. &n.ce Hiii. 8ukll, IS JI. S...O., S.lullo, Buick. M.. 11. Buddy Beller, Buick, M. u. Connie Soylor, OldsmooH•. M . 14. Tim ltlchmond, 8ukk. sa. JS. MIU Aleunder, Buick, SS U . Mor9efl SftefiMrct, Ponti«, SS JI. Hell Bonnett, Fcwd, •I. 39 Jee~ Ingram, Buick, 29. J•. J-Hytlon, Bulek, 29. oo. Richard ""ttr. Bukk, 12 OJ. 8-y ArrlngtOft, Oodoe. 10 •t . .,.. 8ool'tff, """V« .•. German Grand Prix Re1u1t1 (el Hee..........,., WHt 0..--f) 1. Helson PIQuel, Brull, •r*'8m, I hour, UmlnutH, !UOM<on<B, IJ2.Umpl\. J. Al.Cn Prost, France, A•"6ull 3. Jee-Ulllle, France, T61bOl·Lltlw. 4, Hector Ao..._, Moalco, 8r*'8m, S. Eddie Cllffvor, Unllecl SlatH, Tyrrell. •. J-W•lsofl. Brtloln, M<Ltr9'1 7 Ello 0. Angtll,, ltoly, Lotus. I. Jeon-Pierre J arler, France, 0..110. 9. ilillorio 4'ndr•IU, Unlttd Stett1, All• Romeo 10. Giiies 11111-u.,.., c-. """"' World lrlvar• 1tandlng1 I. Carlos Rtulomann, Argentina, O polnls. J. Helson Pl-t. BrolH, :IS. ' Jee_. 1.Alllle, Franco, JS. o Aten"->. Aontrallo, Jo. S. Giiies VIII_.,,.., C-. 21 •, Jottn woi-., Brll•ln, ,0. 1. Al•n Prost. Fr6nee, It. a. Ak<M'Cto P•lrHo, ltely, 10. Ct .. I Eddie°'"""'· Uni-StalH, 10. 10. ElloOe Anoalls, ltalr, I . Cll•I Ht<lcw R~. ~•lco, a. U. Dicier Plronl, Frenca, 1. IJ, Hl•I Mensell, 8r1taln. S. (lie) R-Ar-.., Freno, S. IS.~ SWw, Swllltrl-, o. 16. Merlo AnclrelU, Unll9CI SlatH, J. ti, Plllrlck T-y. F•6n<o, 1. ltlel AndrM Oe C.sorls, Italy, l (llo) Sllm ~. S--n, I . NASCAR 1tandlng1 ..OINT LIADlltS 1 Bollby Allison 1 OerreU W•ltrle> J Herry GWtt 4. Ricky Rudd S Oa I e EMnl>ercll •· RICl'ttrd P.lty 1. J octy Rlctte., a T•rry 1.A-e t. 8eMyPtr-.. 10. Budcly Arrington MOMIEY LEAOIEltS I. B~ "lllson J Oerra11we1trlo J Alcllorct P.lty o. Otte Eor"""'cn S. Ricky Audd • Benny PtrllOnJ 1 Terry l.Abonte I J oct., AICl!ey • Harry GWll 1 O. C •lo Y ertlorouQll NASL WISTIEltN DllllSIC* U'4 2,760 2,6U U1'0 2,S27 Ult 2,CU l,CJ 2.m 1,1n Ull,000 :rt1,GOO , ... .., 201,110 ,.,ft.S. $113.'10 Hl,115 , ...... ..... 12AMO W L 011 OA ~ .... Stn DI-11 10 U '2 M t• Ltl Allgoles IS 12 41 4t J7 125 S4N1 II 17 SJ "1 M 110 Son Jcu t II 36 " ,. • HOltTNWIEST 011/ISIC* Venc_, ti 10 st J7 SI IS1 Ctl...-V IS 13 SI .. U 1'3 Stetu• U 11 U ff .. IV l"orll-U U 40 M M IOI E•"'°'1tOll tO 11 SI U U IDS 8ASl'IEltN DIVISION CO'lmos Mont,... I Woslllnvton Toroneo 11 • n oo 14 u " .. IJ " .... s u n 10 S1 m · • uo u 114 n.., S04JTNEltN 011/ISIC* Atl•nlJI 11 to St M JO t• Ttltlpe Boy I' 1• So " ., Ill Fort '--rctelf 1S 12 .. 40 )6 Ill Jtckaonvme u IJ Jt 41 S3 Ill Chlc'OO Min-a Tulw OOllH C8NTUL DIVISION It I 116 Jt JI I .. 16 II SI 4o '1 1J7 u 14 SI 4' 4S 1• s 11 11 se n s1 --.,..sc- AllOftle 4, Fort LtUder .. le 3 (SO) W•INngton J, Toronto O Caloery 4, Ollct901 J t C!kJOllvlll• 2, Caamos I T ... .,...9-... ..,,..~l«I T_.r't9- Los ........ et Je<lllOllYll .. , 11 llwt .......,...,. at MonV..1, 11 Col..,.., et IMttl•, 11 ........ .. ~ . :::i-, . .. . . . . . .. . From Page 88 • JOHNNY MIZE • • • Alters two-man lllonohull Ing, Johnny. Keep ewlnil1'&. When t.h~ e111bt·)'t&r·Old Cot I miniature Ctant.s unlrorm for hi• birthday, he requested and re ccivtld No. 15. When he picked up a bot In a aanc:Uot aame or a broomhandJe in a 1Uckb11J game, he swung for the Ions ball. Let somebody else worry abol.ll singles. He 'd take the homers, just Uke,Blg Jawn. In 1948, the Giant.II atuMed the baseball world by hiring aa their man.,er Leo Duroeber, import· ing him from or au place. - Brooklyn, where he had been piloting the hated Dodgers. It w1s a body blow for many fans, especially Mh:e's man. who by now was a mature nine years old. Mize hit a league-leading 40 homers that summer but the Giants finished rifth, and for some people that was an impor. tant consideration. Durocher was not thrilled with a big, slow. moving team. He wanted speed and defense. Mize did not fit into those plans. In 1949, Leo the Lip started his remodeling project. One of the first victims was the big first baseman. Mize was sold across the river -down the river, some felt -to the New York Yankees. There was al least one Giant fan that day who wished hi~ team had sold the manager instead of the slugger. There were 4 ~ more seasons, much of the time as a pinch· hitter deluxe for Casey Stengel 's Bouchard pe rennial American Le•aue champions. Then, ln 1954, MJze retired. Interestingly. that wu the aame y ocher'1 re· desl&ned GI the world champlona When he finished , Mize had spent ~ years in ~ajors, wallopiDJ 359 home na and compiling a .312 car r batlln1 aver11e. Those are impressive numbers, especially when you consider t.hat he missed three years at the prime of his baseball career bee1use ot Navy servlce during World War II. On Sunday, basebaU saluted Mize's achievements by induct· ing him into the Hall of Fame along with Bob Gibson and Rube Foster. It was an honor Jong overdue a nd it brought back memories of the man who used to hit au those home runs. Gee, I wonder what ever hap. pened to that kid's baseball uni· form with the No. 15 on the back? Foyt goes on HOUSTON <AP > Four-Ume Indianapolis 500 winner A.J . Foyt Friday said that he does not plan to retire, despite an elbow injury which doctors say will make it impossible for tum to straighten his arm. . Foyt s uffered a compound fracture of his right elbow, a concussion and a deep cut in his left call when his car cr ashed in· to a waJI in the Michigan 500 car race July 25 .- • A futher·son comblnaUon of world class catamaran sallora displayed their skill 'in monohull ulling yachts by selling an elapsed time record In South Shore Yacht Club's two·man race around Catalina Island. . Hobie Alter and his son Hqbie Jr. from Dana Point Yacht Club sailed their 34·foot Magic Light over the lOS·mlle course in 23 hours and SO m inutes, beating the record by more than five hours. The race. with 15 entries, started off Newport at 6: 15 p.m. Friday and Magic Light crossed the finish line at 5:05 a.m. Satur· day. Magic Light was designed and built by Alter Sr. who is famed for his creation of the H•bie catamar an line. Second boat to finish, an hour and a half later, was Light, co skippered by Dawn Smyth and Randy Riswold, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Magic Light also saved her handicap time to win Class A and Li~ht was second. Class B winner wa s M icheegas, s ai led by Joe Greenblatt, Seal Beach Yacht Club . Runn er -up wa s Shockwave, s kippered by Joe Winkelmann, South Shore Yacht Club. WIDS LEASE A NEW TALLADEGA, Ala. <AP) -Ron Bouchard sa id it was positive thinkmg that helped him win Sunday's Talladega 500 NASCAR stock car race in his rookie season in Grand National competition. Bouchard, a furniture truck driver from Fitchburg, Mass .. took his first victory on a major track by winning a three.car dash Lo the finish line. He moved from third place lo edge Darrell Waltrip by two feet. 1982 EXP! TOMORROW'$ CAA IS HERE AND' WE HAVE BIG SELECTIONS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. "AL break.fast today," he said, "my girlfriend told me, 'You know something, you're going to win the race.• I looked at her and said. 'Well . you might be right.· I had kind of a funny feeling we might win." The victory was worth $38,805 to Bouchard, compared to $.19,205 in total winnings in previous races this year. His best previous pay day was about $11,000 in a 300-mite race last year. "We had planned to go home tonight, but now I think we'll stay and party," Bouchard said. "Everybody is in the mood to party." It has been difficult as·a newcomer. he said, to adjust to tbe big tracks. WE LEASE ALL MAKE CARS AND TRUCKS. "WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU 'RE LOOKING FOR." THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. 2096 Harbor It Costa M.so FALS 642-0010 ___ ,. __ 540-8211 e -1111 SY•Ol"Sll O" TllE ANNUALSTATaMllN1' 0" NIOHL.ANOS llfSUltANCI CIOMPAllY ... JAPl'IEltSO .. IT•IEIET, HOUSTON, TlllAS nm Totel o--•ssets . 4M,.,0.•06 Tota l ll0041111a • , .. • . . . . .. • .. . .. .. . .. • . , , ........ ~ns.us YMrl .... ~n.t• Col>il•I P6lckc>/Gu6rWtly CtpllAtl/Stolutory o.p,.Jt 2.000,000 Gross palct.in-ConlrlDuttd surplus. 4',JOl.42 U11ou1....,, '"""' Csur111uil 11,10>,ua Surplus., r99o1ros polk yholO.rs ...... 1n. ..... .-1 Income tor U.. r•tr . . UO,:ltO,,.I OIS11ur_,_ts lor Ille yoar . • . • .. . . . 112,143.60/ We ,.,....., cltrflly lllel -obO,.. llemt ..-. 111 ee~ordenco wltll Ille ""'-' Sl•lemen1 for tlle Y•., -D•omoor JI, •• • .._ 10 Ille Insurance Com mh.sl-r Of tlle Si.le Of C.lllornlo, ....,_ • 1- ,L.A Terry. P'"lclenl ~IO. H•rrl$on. Trt6Sllrer Publl"*' O<'"Ot C06'1 0.lly Piiot Aue. J, o, S, •, 1, t•1 ... Ulla .. "'# $ IJlile. II TfWCY ... M ...... "'=-.~'J.l.w (~ .... ._. ........ ,,.,.._ .. .. . ... ,.,,. "-----=------------------,..._ ___ """"=-----~ ~ i ·.---- .... _ ...... ____ - I I '" INDEX ,•I IWESTUE 1£NTllS ·-•• "'' ,.,. 1• ... -.. -, .. IOM , .. :: ........... ~ :: All re1l eatlte 1d· '"' ve rtlaed in this :: newspaper is subject to '* the Federal Fair ffoul. :: -tn1 Act d • which 1100 maka it Wepl to 1d- v er ti se "1ny pre· •• ference, limitat.loo, or :: discrimination bued on ,.. nee, color, relision, ~= ltll, or national orilin, ,.... or 10 intent.Ion to mike :: any such preference. -llmit1tlon, or dis· ~ criml.n1t.lon." t:lllO :. ~ JW -mo -- Thia news.-per will oot koowl11f 1Y accept 1ny advertasin& for real estate which 1' in viola· t.loo of the law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IALIOA ISLAMD DUfUX ..... 450,000 4 Bedrooms upstairs & 3 bedrooms downstairs with patio and deck. Cov· ered gitrage + laundry room . Ex· cellent Tor summer-winter rental. Just steps to the bay & beach from the door of this excellent tax shelter + poten· tially appreciating property. WISLIY M. TAYLOI CO., UALTOIS 2111S.J ............ MIWPOIT CIHTll, M.I. U4-4t IO NEWPORT BEACH PRIME RESIDBml Hl:OME 3 Triplexes in a row on oceanside of PCH in Corona del Mar. 2 Duplexes + 1 Triplex in a row on Balboa Peninsula -1 lot from sand and surf. Near 19th St. 1 Duplex on the water with dock for 30' boat. All Large Assumable Loans at l2'h%. Owner's motivated! c....., 21/Mewportc..ter_ 640.51&1 ... MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1981 / CUSTOMtIIO DYNASTY MODB. Enlarged· to make a flexible, multi purpose sun room. Two bedroom, two bath, sophisticated and beautifully de- corated. $415,000. U~IVUf tif)M~§ REALTORS. 675-6000 2«3 £.et Cout Hl9h,111y, Corona del Mer WE HAVE 4 ' Of THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN -Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate • .REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949. COMI WITH US ••• TO COSTA MESA CEASTSIDEJ . ATTRACTIVE THREE BEDROOM CONDO .. TWO BATIIS .. FULLY lNSULATED CEILINGS AND WALLS .. SOLID OAK KITCHEN CABINETS. FREE STAN· DING UNIT .. PRIVATE YARD .. Wini TWEN· TY PERCENT DOWN OWNER WILL CARRY, WRAP AROUND FINANCING Wini THJRTY YEAR AMORTIZATION .. $135,<XX>. 1617 WESTCLIFf DR. H.I. Ul·7l00 IH2 .~~~~~~~~~~~ ...•..•....•.••.••..... ~ ~ AMlllCElllEMTS, PmOOlS & LOST & FOUND ~ ~~tmtf'lb Lfj•I Sot1<" ., 'IAll•f-• hfMMb ,., .. n.,.,. Tu'"f'I SEIYIC£S EMPlOfMENT I PIEPUATIOll ~ '''''"'''-, .... -......... ""' lttilW.C.-..r Full time real estate sales associate who re· quires substantial In· come is desperately needed b y long established local broker. Outstanding earnings avail. on a generous commission split. A marvelous op. Portunlty for tbe eager professional. Call Mr. H11ting 1 at (714)&40.BI. *** ....... 1650 Marguerite Corona del Mar You are the winner of TWO FREE P~E5 ($17 value) RINGLING BROS. BARNUM ' BAILEY c•cus Anaheim Convention Center Aug. &-17 Long Beach Arena Au.c. 1.&-23 To claim puses, call 642-5678, ext. 272. Passes must be ex- THNOHG TOWMHOME7 Call the specialists at the condominium in· formation center. Touchstaoe Realty 9U"67 IACKIAY $14,000 DWN llYM changed for reserved I 71H! seats at box Giant 4 Bdrm garden home in Newpo r t Riviera! Spacious living room , beautiful fireplace. Fonn1I din· iog. Sweeping stairway to private master suite. Easy terms! Onl y $137 ,500. Burry, call 81U550 Private tree-lined o ll ice pri o r t o = 1tittt, 3 Bdrm 2 bath, performance. 1110 spa . 14 ~ fi11aoc in& ---*--'*-*---THE ~EAL ESTATERS «m IOIO 1111) 1v11lable. Owner anx· ious. Call now, 548-2313 = -l&m --mu -~ -lli$ -1117$ 11171 -... --...., -.. 9llH lll'KI THE REAL ESTATERS UlCUT'IVE $227,000 HAllOIU>GI Awa r d winnin& "Jodelle" atat.e home. I.st resale offering on thla exqulsite.ly appoint· ed townhome with m111slve view of bay, ocean, coastline ' nltht li&hta. Now reduced to 1739,000. 1!1,1 ,111:1:" ,\I..!,' •!;I , i( Ii I! ' '°" - Almost new 2 story bea uty. Sun ril led kitchen, formal dining room, wark and cosy family room too! 2nd story hosts secluded muter suite with c ra c kling bri ck fireplace. 3 more queen H,•) i '"lr1 ,.;,i<J An,11111•· ! ,,n,Jurt >·•· 1 hl'l 1 siled bdnns too! Don't ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I miss out Clll. r: -------- llllt I03D 9IDO -lllOO llOllll --- ~110 "21> llJO ~ llllO 1110 tlal - CD SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114-431-6990 ASSUME! $15,000 111u Mesa Verde's fmest 4 -Bdrm 2 bath home with ~ larse llvin& room IJld -family room, br ick =: fireplace, professionally :; decorated. Assume 115,000 1st TD, price OD· m• ly $137,500. Owner will '111& help finance . Call ;: S.-2313 fllZ rm •111 tlJll rr" 172:1 rm '7Jt rm mis fl• fl• flU ., .. '14' '14'7 fl• fllol ~ "" m1 "'° ""' m;s m rllll rm - M l -••• ••• THE REAL ESTATERS lmuc&' Char m ing wood 1hin1led t.ownhome. Sun fWed kitcbeo overloolu co1y patio. 3 lar1e bdrms plus aewinl room too. Only SI00,000, Clll .. , SEA COVE . PIOPfltTIES NEW EXCLUSIVE FIRST TIME OfftRED PENTHOUSE GARDEN UVING e.. far ..... Oii ........ co.dot ..... COllltnlctloa. ,.... oJ _.... .. ,.,,,, __ ttlCloMd ,. ... MCSffy syshw. tk. .... ..... roof ..... for 1Alcrt1l1ilg w/bay Ir oce. .J.w. PENINSULA POINT AXER 0. .......... wfffl .. ,,...., of ...... ,.t WG6 to hy or It-' l bccl. 2 ....._ fw .. .....,. or~ ........ lttt priced for .-Id ... S2t5,000. 631-1401). BAY AYl CONTEJlllARY """ ,... old C9lto. ....... "'· Wood, tleff Ir ...,...... _, ...... ... ., ...... l IMcl. + • ...,. Oww ... c.,., Ant T.D. $375,000. _ WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL.ESTATE t s.lri iwn .. P,()pfft\I M.r.-,.11111~ 2436 W Cout Hwy JIS M£nnt Aw Nfwpo!1 ~ICh 8alboil liland 6Jl·l4M '7UMO ·= I 7f4_:.6_~:~9_90 ' -..,.. ----... ..., Ml .., ---.191 ··--... •• IASl'SM .wn Mii tq.ft. ol faml.11 UY. lafl Cottrtd eotry lead• to lrul• ll•lAI reom wltla walk·I• ......... w.. · f amilJ room, brlet flttplace1 wetbar. lltebta witll all tbt = . ......,. .•. tellldlblPL• .... ~ ..... -ftlIP ... Cd lo ..... THE REAL ESTATE RS ---............... OCEAMFIOMTS 6 i o be exact from SSO,<XX> down & as low as 123 interest on the balance. Call for det.ails and the super locations. JACOBS REALTY '7M'70 IUYHS W AMTID We can help you find your dream house. Call our Costa Mesa · Newpo r t ~ea c h Residential Spec1ahst. Delores Gelberg TSL PROPERT1E5 642--1603 TIADmOMAU.Y UDO! Large 3BR Lldo family home on lovely street. Convertible den and family room. $445,000. Tom Allin son /Terry Hanes 642-8235 (U60) YOUU LOVEC~ HOME .·· to this panoramic view, custom home in Turtle Rock. tJt>per le~el invites formal dining, with farruly : rm, kitchen, 3BRS 2 bath Lower level widen, large game room w/fireplace PLUS 4th BR and bath. $385,000. Helen Wood. 644-6200 (U61) !OW. ama& !OW. IA!llrJIO'll& llW'DOllr --8(1 ~ DrM ll&IUltVW. ~ ~ a.II. CA~ llewPl'I' llllcb, Ct. llllleC> ('114) Ma-ea:le (7\4 ) OM-SlO WAnlFIOMT LUMY Sensational 3 bdrm townhome featuring used brick, plank floors , French doors, ceramic tile & a multitude of interior up· grades. Priced at $319,950 with assumable loan. NEWPORT .IEACH OFACE 26 7 0 Salt MICJMI Drift 1714175t-1501 ; 171 41 752-7373 Walker&Lee Real Estate ':t':.' S<C\\411A-4t.~s·:: ------., QAY I. POUAll ----- •....... ion... ol .... ·-......i.w _. i.. loo: lo '°"" '°"' -· -.la . RJ"EEM I I I' r I I . . .. • J Whether you're looking for a grass shack or a palace at the beach, see classification 4200 . UNDAISLE Exciting opportunity! Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm, S bath, pool home. Slip Cor 2 large boats. Sl.495,000. Summer Occupancy. LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tours th1s lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm , 3 bath home. newly redecorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420.000. Best pnce for the money PENINSULA POIMT IEACHFRONT Panoramic ba y & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot , 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom hom e 3700 sq ft. featur· ing marme room. $1 ,385,000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO . 2 bdrm, den, spacious Plan 8. im -, maculate. Low priced at S215.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bo;\"h 01 '~' N B 67) 6161 . REALTORS 67~5511 OLD CDM: Chor•l•CJ clupl•x. wall to beodwt. shops. Cotlsl1h of .. 3 ... . .. 2 .......... °" ..... finploe• .. .. 11111) $27',SOO. • COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coost Hwy., CCINIO .. Mer 675-5511 RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES 20% DOWH For this highly desirable tri-l~vel in Eastbluff. Large & spacious rooms & even room for a big pool in attractive level yard. Excellent "fixer'' price & terms. $259.000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 C!E IBDBIB BLlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE HAHOR VIEW tlLLS Owners Are Leaving The State And Must Sell. Secluded Home In Mo ve-In Condition. Three Bedrooms Plus Family Room. Ex· cellent Financing. Give Us An Of· fer. NEWPORT SHOIES Cozy Three Bedroom Home In A Young People's Location. A fun Place To Live . Rented For $750 A Month At The Present. Priced At $135,500. Appointment Necessary. But ~asy To Show . '@ 1' --· .. , ........ . IRKl,,Nlf FIGHTER PLANES C E R H I I I N 0 J S V M 0 0 K S M L S D P I E E R T A C 0 E M E V A $ C U E K M A 0 E T l 0 I R E D N U K T 0 A R8NMGHDREYARELOIA SG Y I 0 J 0 C P R R Y A 8 N 0 l I I M TlTRKIVOYEKlTAMEF IT A T M A 0 I 0 N R I M I C A D E I l 0 EtTMCSOOIVNKHAVl8AA TfMOKMOMl8VPS£U8HCY E M I Y E N 0 D S I S U l E N A T K N lAROUTOTDUlR RA 01 LO QA JH NVAORCQITHT M8 YLTA IRVCJIC S I EOHOTVOD I VUVCPltCOU NPLSTAlTSMOlKAL•tN SP AHLI "'94TYI $20,000 down, owner wlU carry 1 2nd and will provide 1ddition1l financlll& help on tbas lovely 4 bdrm home wtth a sperkhng pool Only $1:11,900 Call now 979-5370. ·ALLSTATE REALTORS FIX UP IEACH HOUSE-VIM! Incredible bargain-~ blk to ocean. Quamt white picket fence & dutch door entry Spiral slairway to ocean view, mstr Bdrm, 2 Bdrms + loft, atrium & french JUSTUSTal Decorator'• own bome 1.11 Harbor View Hilla. 3 bdruu., ellcit.kl& family rm . with hardwood floors, French doors, beam ceilinp, and a maanificent bar. C ustom spa and waterfall. Everythin& tastefully dooe in finest quality. $465,000. A Dlvis100 of 11.irbor lnveslmenl Co doors 1 Take ad vantage-'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! you paint, fix & save -------- $$$1 Only $189,900 CaU JUST USTID! B o b B u r d i c k • Decorator's own home Ownr/ Act. 7~1.221 111 Harbor View Hills. 3 bdrms., exciting family r m. with hardwood floors, French doors, beam ceilings, and a magnificent bar. JASMINE CUB C u s t o m s p a a n d Most popular 5 Plan waterfall. Everything with spectacular green· Laslefully done in finest belt & vie w location. 3 quality. $465,<XX>. Bdrm + family room . ,. S36S,ooo, --0~.~ RH LTORS llG CANYON Custom French provUl· c1al home located on the 8lh fairway wrth night light views, 5 Br . library, family room, formal dirung room, !Jv. ing room. separate maid's quarters. and gourmet lutchen The perfe<:t balance of these rooms IS complemented and enhanced by the In· numerable details and fine craftsmanship found throughout the home Call for a pnvate showing ol thlS incred1 ble home S2.Dl.OOO D.M. Mcrllllil Hr 76o.ot35 IEACH IARGAIN OHL Y $209, 900 Walk to sand! Huge Newport Beach 4 Bdrm Wood burrung fireplace Extra large lot. Owner ls motivated and willing to help finance! Call oow.67~ THEREAL ESTATERS GREAT 4 IR, 2112 IA Spacious 2-sty. Open liv· mg room w/bay win· dow, step-down famly room with fireplace. Downstairs guest Bdrm & Ba. Nearly new $215,000. Ownr/Agt R Keeler 546 ·6706 or 631·0213 4 II-FAMILY HOME 13~.~! Com fortable large 4 Bdrm family home. Brick frplc. Spacious enclosed patio Prime So Coast Plan area. GREAT fnma fuunciog at 13"•<\-lNTERE5T ~ Full price just 1117,000! Call Bob Burdick now ! 759·1.221 !WM~ R t.~l T11R.., CIYMOMOIE We have the perfect 4 Br ' Fam Rm on cul· de·uc with pool su.e lot Dry your tean and caU us now. Unbebevable at 1215,000 . RCTaylorCo J , \ I 'I 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO CASH TO OK for down Cute 3 PURCHASE Of'TlOH BR 2 Ba cottage, trade N F .... . 3 B 3 OK. Desperate. WS,000. ew an......,.ic r Ownr/agt. 1-661·0693 Ba Condo, S'2:5ClO moves - you in. Sl<XX> per month. SAU IY OWMll (Why pay rent) Next to 327 Coral all shopping, theaters & 673-0Ul8 park. just minutes to Coro.o clcl Mor 1022 beaches Ward Management Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7141631-~ 434 llGOMA OCEAHVIEW NO DOWN Rare Harbor View Hills opportunity! Owners are ve ry anxious aod will help finance. Exclt- i n g new program! Buyers must qualify Elega11t new 4 Br Vic· tor ian partial vu, ownr/contractor just completin&. SS75,000. IYOWHa Custom 4 yr old home. 3 Bdrm, 2..., b1 . Xlnt fm1ncing. Soo.ooo. is~ dn. Courtesy to Brlls. Spectacular ocean 8t6·0086 S..IJMM view! Secluded pool -"""'-.....--~· ~=.,;;,, ____ _ Only $359,900. Hurry, Co• W... 1024 call 673-8550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSUM.._I FtMAMCM THE REAL ESTATERS 4S'IOATSW' For ule $595 ,000! Includes sandy beach . deck • patio +larse quality 3 bdnn + den, 2 bath home. Fireplace, brick BBQ + extra p1rkln1. Owner/ A&t 873-91J'1or17~7080. WTSM Beautiful 4 Bdrm plus I hmily, featuring enclosed l'OW1,yard, en· tertainen backyard with Koi poad and lov'" ly patio. Very open IDd lots of glass. Askin& Sm ,500. Fer an appoint· meot to see, call 540-1151 '. HERITAGE Rf Al rORS S..1111•1~ Ht1h'1 upcrad7 4br home Oil \le lot. Qae to everyWna, mwt tee to 1ppreclate. N11De your terms I Altd/k>w down blah a11unaabae, call for appt to see. 957·2811 <>ntr/ I I , I r I ... .,, .. --. . . . .. . . -• Ir •••• . .... Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 QUEENIE *"'" °" ........ . , ..... ,.." .... . .. CTIC*l .. aa.-. CAU,_NIA IWtiMI• AltO ........... c-. PE~Nfl Ne-II llOlltH ,• COUNT•Y l1L&4•1NC,, -HM1ler IMI., C•la Mt .. , c:.lllWNe Tr_,.,_, HUAH PHAM .... H.-.1 "IAN, I-~-•A C..la ~ C.tlletNa. !Cine •I llctntt lnltnflefl ta • lrM.i.rTMl OH ·S.-.LI lllR AN O WINI 1'01' IOH.-. 1'101 .. UILIC IATINO~CI T°"" ,....., .......... 111814 ... ,,. ~·I-•nd llctnM ,, SIOl.--00 .,...,,~ c ............. .... 0."*"11 ..... .., "'-.. ,_., "'" , . ........... o.-..... ,., h •Meolllt., ln"'lf'!Of''r nof IOtJIC- tlllt_,t/li NOCt ..... ~lty .-...-11n1•,,... ' ··-·· U,000.00 J,000.111 0111\eS.Ow. IS..000 00 TOTAL tOl,000.00 .... -....... -~ Tl\e ~ ....,, llllt con•~•lltft IM the trl!Nfer OI ltle Wt!MU and 11\e llcenu It to lie i>eld 11: W••tern Mvlv.I e.c,...., t_, Slwtll YOf'lle St. S..llt 101, TM!Mlft, ~lltwnlt ,_..,on., ., .. , "-' tt, t9'1 Tiii ~ ... -1 the COflM*r .. lion ,,,, .. , ___ ... Of , ... Clull- "I type, ru., take dlctaUon and I faUtd ·a~for'. You know, coffee, rolla, undwlchel, etcetera, etcetera ... " •nd u. "-,,,, nu,.,.• I• to •paid •lier the °""'tmenl ol Alcol\ollc a ... ., ... Control .... -'°"" 11\e PfoPOe9dtr-lw. N•--.cldr ... OI the Hero. holder: w.stem Mll .... 1 EKr-, tGI Fraud award $3 5 0 ,000 So. Yorbe St ., S11ltt 101, Tu1t1n. C•illornl• t1 .. 0, .-.11n : M•rllyn WotmonlMQ. llE No. tS-9tS-¥ c-trv a11 .. , '"' By O.vlct T•u. P••lldent Tr.,steror N-..._, Ntl TrN, T••""-Pllbll-Or--oe COiis! Dally Pllol, ,,, ..... >. 1"1 lttMll SACRAMENTO (AP) -A federal judge has awarded $350,000 to two brothers who he said were the victims of fraud in connection with the cor· porate merger of a convenience store chain. NOTICE 01' TllUSTEE'S SALE N•. l'SC·Sa27 On Auousl 11. ltlt ... IO:JO .-..M .. Heriford -'!w:row Inc., • Celllornl• corpor•llon .. dlily •-nted Tr11S1N U.S. District Judee E . Dean Price told at- torneys he had found the Circle K Corp. liable for fraud and punitive damages in its 1973 merger with 36 Handy Pantry convenience stores. IHlcler -1111"1<*11 to Deed of T '"" recorcled N_, l. 1'90 •• lnltr No 471. Clo'* 1Jlll, peee •74, o1 01 11<1•1 Records. ••e<ul9d DJ. ThomM l 09Mott ...., Jec-lyn L. 0.¥ott. H111ll•nd •nd Wiie •• Joint T•n •nt1, In Ill• olllc• ol th• Co11n 1v Recorder ol Or•no• County. Sitt• of C•llloml•, WILL SELL .-.r PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIOOEA FOA CASH C!My•ble •t time 01 H ie In 18wlul "'-Y OI ,,.. UnllllCI Stein) •I the Soutll front llfttrence to 1he Or•noe C011nty old Court-. Clly ol Sant• .-.1141, Stew 01 C.lllomlt, •II rlglll, 1111• •nd Intern! conveyed to •no now held by II under wio O..d ol Tr11st In the pr-rty .it ... 111<1 In wiO County •ncl Stet• ciescn-•• The suit against Circle K was brought in 1975 by Thomas and Frank Miller, who merged their Handy Pantry stores with the Arizona-based cor- poration in a transaction involving the exchange of stock shares. Circle K ·stock dropped Crom $32 per share at the time of the transaction in January 1973 to $14 by April 1973. The Millers, who bad traded 2,500 shares of Handy Pantry for 27,000 shares of Circle K stock, claimed Circle K executives knew the stock value would drop. lot• -tl\t So.illltrly tO IH I of Loi I In Block"· Trac11n, •• .,., m•p ••· corded In a.. n. P~ s •ncl ' oi Mlscell.....,.,. Me~. In 11\e offlu ol 11\e County Rtcor-o1 .. id ~•nae C011n ty, CalllOf'ni•. Price, a visiting jurist from Fresno, voided the st-0ck trade and said he will order Circle K to pay the brothers In cash to complete the merger. The strNI ll<ldreu •nd ottMrr com mon dnlQNtlon, II •nv. ol ,,.. rHI pr-rty dnc:rl-•bOve Is pUtPoft•d lo be m 62nd Street. Newport aHcll, C•lllorni1 'Save Medfly' time has co me Tiie unoen1Qn11C1 T"'slff dlsclelms •ny ll•llillty '°" eny inconec:tneu ol tM street ll<ldreu -other common dulgn•llon, II •ny, shown herein Said .. ,. will b9 mem, but wllt>oul coven•nt °' w•rr•nty1 ••Pf"•S-' or im Pll•O, re911n:11no Ill••. poueulon, or •nc11m1>uncn, to pey Ille ••m•lnlno prln<l!MI """ of Ille note(s) secured by Wld Deed ol Trus1. wlln intern! thereon, as Pt'OYlcled In .. Id nowl1>. •Ov•nce, II eny, undM the l•rm• of WIO Offd OI Tr11st. '"'· ClltrQt• Ind .. penws ol 11\e TruSIH and 01 11\e SAN JOSE (AP) -The state that led the calls to "Preser ve the Whales" and "Free Angela" now has a group asking citizefls to "Save the Medfly." '''"'' crNtld DJ .. id Deed ol Trust 'or Ille MnOUnl ,.. .. on•blY ntlmtled 10 lie: $I 1•,•H-'1 In the midst of a serious campaign to rid the Santa Clara Valley of the voracious Mediterranean fruit Oy. Rob Skinner and his "Committee to Save the Medfly" have sprung up, claiming 70 members' and a tongue-in-cheek purpose. TIM lleftefi<i.ty 11ncler s .. d Oeed o1 Trust l\eretolore e .. culed •nd de· lvered to the IHICltfsiQIMO • wrllten Oecl•r•llon of Oel8Ull ...a o........i tor S.le, ""' • wrltltn Noll<• of Oel•111t -Electlon to S.11. Tiii wn· ~•rtloned c•11Hd Hid Notice 01 Oel•11ll wid Electlon to S.11 to be ,.. corded In 11\e c-ty .... ,. uw re•I P<-rty Is localed "Everyone's got to have a cause," Skinner said .. "Nowhere in the North American continent do we have a refuge for the Medfly. Now we have one, and you want to kill them all? That's ridiculous. It costs nothing to save the medfly, and it costs millions to kill them." O•te: Jul., 20. ltll H-.tford EK row ' "' .• -. .. ldTrlKt .. Pacific Stnllnel C""-•tlon, By Biii Corwin The group held an ice-cream social recently and announced plans to send the proceeds to Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. who, Skinner said, "has done just about everything he can to save the Medfly." 6060 W.11 Mencllnler Aven .... l..os AnQeln. C•lllwnl• 90045 Tel. UIJl /l .. 170t Publl.shed OrM>Qt COo1st Dally Piiot. J11ly 11. AUG 3. 10. "" ~1 Re·cruiters lack data WASHINGTON <AP) -Some drug abusers are slipping through the military's screening process because recruiters do not have access to police files on juvenile offenders, the' Pentagon's manpower chief says, Only a few states permit recruiters to check the criminal rec ords of minors. Assis tant Defense Secretary Lawrence J . Korb re· cently told the House de· feose appropriations subcommittee. rlMCI IROTHHS SMITHI' MOITUAJlY 627 Main SI. Huntington Beach 536-6539 ,ACW4C VllW MIMOllAL,AAI C.melery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac111c View Drive Newport Beach 644·2700 McCOIMIQ( MOITUAltlS Laguna Beech 494-9415 Laguna Hills San JJ=streno 495·1776 KAliOI LAWM-MT. OUVI Mortuary• Cemetery Crem1111ory 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mesa 540-5554 ,_Cl .. OfHIH -.L•OADWAY MOITUAIY 110 8toadway CO.ta Mesa 642-9150 RSSO\.UTION NO. tw1 RESOLUTION 01' TME llOARD 01' TRUST•U 01' TME l'OUNTAIN V Al.LEY KMOOL DISTRICT WHERE.-.s. the Fovnt•ln V•ll•Y S<-• Olstrkt of o ...... Co11nty. C.lllornl .. Is ,_ the _, Of J-H. COii Sc:Mol, ioc..ted •I 1'615 L• J•rcllnn ~I. F-.ln V•ll•y, •nd Wlll ...... T. -i.nd Sc-, loc.e.cl •I 1117 Oolpllln Orlw, HllnllnQton 8"<1\, C .. llot!M; -WHEREAS, -CIUS-•t N<I\ Ki.al, to lie din.-, •Ill root lie ......., •I 1'-..... OI dellvery Of 1111• Of' ~ '°' k-CIH&room 1111rpotH; WHEREAS, 11\e Hunllngton BHCI\ tJnlon Hltl\ Sc-Dblrkl. "'dllH S<,_., 11 cleslr-to I--two clessr-!Qr ,,..,....,, l!-.C.UO../""-S<i-1 Cl•u.s, NOW, THEREFORE, aE IT RESO\.VEDnfoltow9: I. It b the Intent Ol 11\h lloerd to IMM -<...,_.,., • Co• S<-•nd -CIHW_.,, et New!-S<,_., lo 11\e Hunll ...... llMcl\ Ul\klft H19" Sc-Ola· Incl. Adllll S<-. under u. 1011-•no tenns-<ondlti-: (8) T ... period OI tl\e LHM Sllall lie IOO' the 1'11-C, 1'G-G, ltOM K1-I y .. ri, C°"""9nel"9 no_, u..n uecllllon OI the Le•M b'f the Boerd....., endll!Q on J..,. 30. HM. Tl\e right la reMrwcl to uoncel Mkl l-, or• portion ,.,.,9114, by elll\er perty, within thirty UO> uolendw O.ya 8'1M receipt OI ••ii· ten notlf!Utlon OI c9"Celletlon. Tl\e per11ft, by lftllt ... , ..,_......_ ,.,..., •-'- Ille term OI Mid L .. w fOr -lllonel -"-w1>Jec1 llO ,..._i.uon of .,,. LHMprlC8. (Cl) Tiie LMM t>otY"M"I 11\ell be H lollowt: "".a tc'-1 .,.., $453.llO "" __ ,.,_ I "2-G scMol re•r · •.oo per<i.suoo<n/y .. r 1~ K'-4 yHr l,M0.00 per cl•uroom/~r The L-peylNftliNll be i>eY•ble ln.OVenc• I.,..,.. (C) No -l•lon Is MMle .....,., Ill~ LHw lot ... °"''°" IO ~ Ill& pr-r1y. (fl) Tiw ,_,n V•ll•Y S<-1 Olslrkt INll Nml»I -,.., '°'•II wlllltleS, lnchlcllng ele<b'klty, w•t..-, on. c11sto0i•I MrYkft. -,.,.., __ of t1ulld- lntS•nd.-.ch Tiie H1M1tlngton 8ffchU-Hltll\S<i-Ol:s-"-· tl\ell pey lorlnsl41118tlonof •nd tl\e rnoMl'llylO......,._.,,k•. TIM Huntlng!on llMcl\ UnlCMI High S<l\oOI Olstrkt. Adult Sc , et ltl own t• penu, ll\911 me1ni.1n In fore• dwlno tl\e term of ttw U..., -•nY •Id-loft ti.reor, lull compni,,.,,11,.. public lletllllty ''*'-· IMUrlnQ ... In .. 111 Cl•IMI for lnlllflft to perSGns Of' p._rty OCCUf1"1nQ "'· ..... Of' ....,, tile IHW<I P<M'I.,_ S.ld POlky tl\ell MW lll'lllts Of Nt leM tMfl OM Mllllon Doti.rs ($1,000,0llOl fOr ln)wlu to pe,_, Of' ... .._ ..,. not leu 111911 Fl"• Hvndr9d f1*Mnd OollMS ('500,000) for pr-'lf ~. ~ sMll, ...... *"'4tndol'--,lllC!PtYLAporw1tl\•Gettlflu•ol l...,,~ol-l\P91ky, -II ~lo pnw"'9.., ebrvmont lo well,.,.,,.., ... ,.. 11.ollltr JO!kr Of' policies .,_lno LAuot Hen ecNll!eftM 1-w with rnpect lo c,.lm• •rl•· 'flf out Of "-'' OCC\OpetlCy ~ 1199 of .. t...o PAftl!Mt.. Le-..tll pro- Vklt end pay tor llno IMW.nc• ~v•rlne i..-'a __ , pr~y -<Oft. IOftb. (I) l-wlll c-Its 0-''" lnt.w8flC• POlklH .... Conti--to COYW the MIO C'--M lot 11\elr '"" "•lue. (9) T1w WWl<Cley 11W ,,..II ... MclnMy 1-.ofl FrlOlly, .. CIVll"9 l'lolklo9'f$ •nd ......... -"°"'of ---....... ; (1) C. ScMol, R_,, U t-12 .._,......., ttwouQfl FrlO.y 12:»-aPl'fl. TWICl9)', ~)', ~ 1·10 pm, Ill & Jf1I T~y of HCh l-4tl 7-10 pm, 2nd & «h Thwlclrt of NCI\ MGllCll (2) NewlMCI Scllool, R..-n 6 t-12-.-...., ttwougfl FriM'I' •:JO..t:•pm. 21!111. -~,Of Mel\"*"" Clll TM--1 ...... ID IM <'-"-Wlll llt-a-cl'llklnn J . Mota IJf .._.._. 81 11111 R .... lltl9rl,.., _.._ -tll •II,,_ - ll9n •lecled "' ............ ttw ~_.. .. II-., ,wtk MltlU MI ... theft-.•-lorlfww <*) WMl!aprtw ..... KVlltflet9't~.., .. ... 1"111 In .. Delly Pllet, • i-111 •M• tit..,...... clrcll!MIM In IN Oletnct. AOOf'TEO, ll~•D ANO Aflf'ROVEO ""9 1"'.., elf JlllV, 1"1. l'OUH· TAIN VALLEY SC~ DISTRICT, IOAROOl'T.VSTIES CllllM ..... c..e .... ..... ...,.,.. ...,, . ,...., ...... f'WllJNt Or ... (;Off& Deity f"1'1et, JllAy Ii. !7. A .... I, ltll PIU .. ""'" tYltO~SOPTM•MINUALITAT ... WT Ml ... t..AMOIUMee ... lftM~e ~y •Jlf'f'altlOtl na11T, NOUtTOM, T9XAI ,,_ .,_ ....... ....., ... ... • .,. ... 1..w ....................................................... 11 .. .. T .... l~M .......... , •••. , •••• , •••••• ,, ••••••••••••••...••••••••••• 1 .......... c.e ... ......,....,.et~,....,.,-.... ......... .... Oftee~-CllllCFI .... ~ ...................... ....... u,._........_,......., ........................... , .... -.-.- ._......,... .... ",. ....... ••••••·•·•••••••• •t•• , •••••••••• ,.. ... ..... "' .. ,.., •••••••••. , .••••••••••••••••.•••••.•• , ••••.••• ,, ••• 614.1'1 Ho.t•t for W. Hoatt ~Wt "'-" ,_.. W. JHo.Mt for U. He.Mt fofl Wt ~!~.~~~ ....... ;;;:;;.;~··· .. ··io24 c;;;·.;.~·······i(;j; e;.;;············io4~~·i;;;· .. ··;o-4i ;;;;;;;;i:,;h···io'it w,_f tea '°'' 6 ••••e••···········•••e• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:r::i0~!~T:~r N21!A~r WTSIDI PREMIUM ~1'0W,,.e~.01eua1:e~ T!td~ Aa~~~~~·~~!bta <:!:~m 'f:'la~•f 4; 2 • 120.000 d~ s1 is.500' ,-..0 units on a lot LOCATION Oceanfront Pk. 3 ~Yl Nl::WPORT HEJGllTS Luxury pl\I.\ ,\ ttUly dt .\(l LaDol'lll 84.S 9161 S 152.500 Superb view with lol.I of bch.a, 24 security, 11 rharmtr Bund •0,0 hahtrul family homf ._alM"T 75-1171 pr1vary ' bdrm., 21, hl.n11 pier from S34,900 l11t1n11 al 1234.9$0 <All wllh 1euu1 quartrrll ~ ._, ba Fordham Model in 499 38l& -Rae Rodt:cl') G3112ti6 t;vt-rythin11 dr 111ned MISA vaol Vlllue 11, Univ Park HO CASH DOWN lij~~J&I With 1'00\l'nu•nct 10 Brand ~t·w on th el Ettlcn1lvely up1r1ded SS00,000 AT 110/o • , mllld ,., formal duuna market Sff .lh1N 3 Br 2 throuahoul Walk lo OACTorS60,000 ·-·-· room v.ith 11 view, Iv.< 81 home )OU 11 ~proud r hurch 1bopP11111. eoll CASH DISCOUNT ! • ; tam ii,) ruumb and J lo own Owner will btlp ltonia 11od 5w1mm11111 • • l.iric•· billu&rd room f1nan ce Pncrd al S178,SOO. Call today for Xlnl tn,,t$lment " tu OCEANFRO'IT Ouplt'll :... t'..., I y c .Hp t 11' d $139,000 751-3.111 Mewport Hqh Are• 1nrormat1on on out abelter. ~r. 5ba ei.tate 11 Tri r1ex Xlnl Joe l'l'rlccl for th,, t'X Brand nrw 1 Fine~t slaodin1 ~rm11>eln11of· 10~1t1 m111•0iver mastd~r PP.673 7671..._67371173 i·cut1q" nwnt•r "'.111 II ~"'" 3 BR 21 rued SU e, r& \I, 11m. '" t I r L' I 5 qua ty c"""" . , . rooms + saun1, lde11 NEWPORT w1p mallet' .-,Xl' us1v1 ba Fanta.sllr hnuncltll( rm for maid. office FOR $I l 450.' at SI 7 m1lho11 Call now ror dtlallS arwma. ~ Panoram11· . I I 0 't {' ,. R It USTSIDE 759-M99 while water Ci t ) Laich i view l Br I DI ote ea y C::. ',U ( (I ~l 'HOP{ 14111 •, S7,500 OM! islands views rr~m mo~1 condo ~134;51~11 R.ir & ltl\ t•0itment 6 ~~:mr~~I 2+ b~I ~~s Ov.~~~m ~.II.~~; lii~ir;:?l~~::;J hi 640·S777 den on Yt'ry lg lot. beau e Toro 768 0421 , . cul de sac Great loan ....................... A uniq~l' & beauliful /S t ! 7 $175,000A&entChtbli.na 1--------•1 vlev. home Ste~ from ,,_____ bduc~ Sl00,000 _S!l 5117-or 557 2783 LAGUMA MOITH '+523 CiutPU,J>t·IRVINE Woods Co\ r Burh In 11c1\rr 'ihon·~ 56()(1 l•----•••-•I tX'A.HOB> Creat1H f1nanring PARTY IN ,q rt or tu111iu.thty ron 3 HOUSES SI Jl,000 OUTSTANDIMG Prmc1pab only plea;r ~truruon J'hL' S Bdrm 8 Former 4 Br, now 3Br VALUE S850,000 Harl Real HARBOR VIEW \fr(Jll o;lvh· rt.•"dem·e .. ., ON 1 LOT + den + 13x22' added ~slate ... 49D l&45 bma~hmu fJrn1h room lh1• ht';I of l1x·:illoru. and Love I)' 3 Bdrm Cam " I th "-1 ( (1nanc1n° ram110 rm frml dinmg. .. •...... ~ 11 h ,,,.., Ila r l' 11 111> '"'''' 11 ., " bnd11e model in des1ra "'...,.. 1 bl <>WC ~,,. ..... """ D A I L y c L 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 pool sz yard Nearl) ble Greentree local.Ion For A Utfft behe\,1hh tw.1ut1f11I 1·n ·11 '"ii " ~ . .,.~ E.hidt lMIO sq ft 111 ho~ for lt'rt .. 1n1'.r , flltC111 5 JI,,,. me full price Onll Large master swte with 1 acre + bldg site, gent· •II l' I u d 10 g 1 ht' 1 and only S133.~ study, secluded yard. ly sloping parcel shon Htlrm So1tu111•1vt u!l li•1· ~I ~50.or111 Cdll Dan S 9 644-7211 beautirully landsl·aped, distance from lt'nOll> & Id nd A b"ulult•l\ irn lhbti ror .i"pt 17 00 featuring shade arbor. beach Ownr ha~ 111 m.ir11l111t• "'"1'' in ""11 r 111:..ayy ' ~ $139,500 eluded plans for ru.~lom 1htmn Cn·at1w f111.ir11 ROGER'S R~ s villa S175.000 ~Pl'I' 1111: J\ail.1hll' 675-2311 Call 645-9161 I I ' a ~ tacu ar \ 1ew~ It."'" RED CARPET MISSl~l~j;Al.T\ di .75-)-1202 don osen l OPEN HOUSE REALTY ;,t' HuntinCjtoft leocll I 040 •...................... ON EXCLUSIVE llUN· Tl:-.IGTON S~:ACLIFF'S GOLfo' COURSE' rc.dtort. ITnl AT PR(l;PF.C'T TUSTIN,,131 ·3111 **LOCATION .._Jbdrm. pool. ttra lrg ASSUME VA LOAN r o l 1\1 11 n ~ "tr a" Super locauon (or ch1i. at a•, ... , $64.000 bal SJ95.000 Broker large 3 bdrm detached Suru.htne home. fenced 633~6633, 637 6ai6 hume 1n the heart or front and rear Onl} Ne~ dlx 3 Br cownhoust', Woodbridge Steps 111 SllQ,000 BK.!\ ~·4380 v.alk to beach. rull)' de beach, lake, sa1lmg ert EASTSIDE GOODIE' curated S'.!:11.IX.IO -t mm On qu1el cul·de !oac A• Lge FR. LR. w fpk, dbl dov.n 5~-0332 ~umable fmanring Call gar w opener gre.tt BY OW:"JER. •.;o llntg for de1a1b A~k 1nl( rond Quiet nbrhd Bkr lkh. 3 BR 1 •• ba. R\ S220.ooo 646·4380 I ane~s Com"'r lol l:p [Uj] Town ho m I:'. own,. r l(ratled Ownt'r flexible, Wl)OObrldgc w rinJnce w IS'· dn 3' !ouhmit wrm' 77~ 7tfi5. Really BR . fpll, dbl gur I 8!:114627 m4> 551 JOOO Sll0.000 Ruth Launt' PRIC,.1S' .. SHED bk ,,.~ 4._, ~ ...,,. IY.?Olhn•nu p~,., ll'ln• r '"" -' Ov. ner read\ lo ill' JI • 4 IR P'OOL HOME Exrellent College Park area llas $80.000 bl. assume Jl 14'i 'Sl46,90CI 3 IR + pool + spo Harbor & Baker are~. $146,900 Owner will ca rq al 13'. w11h $40,000 down 4 IR Wl.!STSIDE Sl 10.000 Exrellt'nt neighborhood ~eeds new loan Owner mu:.t sell Call OJ• id cars•bikes• •skateboards• trucks'baby carriages•tea carts•trikes rol lerskates • walker~ .oys •wagons•••• scooters•hot rods* coupes• tr a Hers *r'iard tops•convert- ibles•. @ If It's got wheels, r.ou'll move 1t faster in a Dally Piiot classified ad.call 642·S678and a f riendl~ ad· vlserw It m1 lo beat:h' lmmJt upgradl'd I hr . '11•n bdrm I & '• ha Pools. Jat•un1. te1111ls. l'lutihou;l' V.1.'I bJr rrplr Perl for q1l 'l;pe<b flOJllCllll( lll t'l< ll>I mg 7 9'. ltldn Oprn Sal & Sun I 5 9766 Verdi' Mar. SJ> 1600 or !168 834.!,jUtr Co op S3S.OOO Down 2 st.or}. 4 Br . lam rm l.onw. rm. 3 Ba Near bearh Broker 1142 14UI B} ownt>r, 2 stOr). IBR. nr Brh. Sl48 500 gd terms. no Al(!' plt·ase 964·7362 *•LOCATION Super lorallon ror th1~ large 3 Bdrm delJt'hrd homt' tn the heJrt of Woodbridge Steps co beJch. lake. sa1l1111: t'H· 1111 quiet t·ul·de >at' \~ s umable fmanC'ing Call for detaili. As k1n 1: s220.ooo w,mdbrldgc RealllJ 551.:1000 19:!11 ttHnnra Pk"'. In 1n•• *•REDUCED! Dir "AMTllB.LUM SPLIMDC>a .. Price REDUCTION -SELLER ASSISTED FINANCING. This lovely Lincoln is localed in the heart of Woodbridf{e w/its lake, ~Is. ~· tennis courts, bike lls all Qf the Cabulous Woodbridge amenjties. SeUer will consider a 2nd. Great Fmancing. $169.900 Toni Morris 551-8700 lU58) WXURY WfTH SECUatTY Beautiful Jasmine Creek home localed on lovely wide greenbelt 3 BR. 2~ baths. Total privacy in security Lated commuily $369 ,900. adeliM Crawford 752·1414 CU59) WW.--!DUJ.Mt•W&& Son Juan ~ 1:-iv~:STllfl"i lo~ '·" 111 n , lo~ m.11ntl•11.ir11 r Z yi' 111 " Jll a11ohanrt•, 0 W \ ~ k \\ I I t. ~l\\\e. "''• hi ,' Capistrano I 078 ·····••···•·•········•· VICTORIA ll£ACll CHA HM l'<YrrAGE W "lk to rumi1u_, V1clor1a Beach from lh1s 2 bedroom. 2 bath C'illlagr located on th!' OC'l"anMde of Coa!ot lf1ghv.a) The ll1ll lor •H•\ John \IJf'.1 .... 11 t,,11 1-10 R&'MtlC REALTORS TRADE ORS.ALE " ti, ·\, rt.'' 3.5()(1 sq ft hn1111 , h.1r11 torral!> u1·~ ,f l'!lllre 'alle} 111,111• •·\II i' hn.mcmg l'rl\. 1\i llv.ntr ht··d Santa Ano 1080 •··•············•·••••• YA add111onal dt'fl pronde~ ---------i excellt'nl IJ1 IOI\ .,part' I $90,900 3 Hd1111 > 11.ith kitchen f,1m11\ .on,, >r1arklin11 po<il <1111\ $.!s8.900 \'A lt'rm I .ill for more dt' ldlb :..Iii 2313 ~hilt> the frun1 ort'an Vlt'W deck and had, pa l 1" > 1• n t• '" l h 1· 1 perfert M'lllOI\ for 'um mer11me entertainml( POS!olble ,l'llt'r rm.me· mg al a.1 .. bk s:ns.oou I 4!'n·3331 A ungo l • ~ Mulhu" LI 1050 ...••.••............... THE BLUFF PLAN "l" 3 hell rn, tlu1 nu rm l.1n1 rm I I' Ila \lr.1 1 .. r1•1• i"'' • ..i 1111 lnh" "r;1n111 Iii,. ..... 11~ & fluor ~ r,.1 .. r .. •I p.ti "' arl'J' 1'1 1• • ~:!111 IKll'l ;, ·, •I n ~ n i • • 11 111 1• THE REAL ESTATERS S4t1.1~•1 ht Int I il'""I ,,1 Viii. W...M. Condo i \Int l,on•I """'' -$11.'i.1 i~I 1,. 1 ",.1 1• ill 1 :i H1lrm tn h·1el t·ondo th.in)'•' un11I \1 , ~···• Ill' <t""n ITl<J\t<' you 11\ It llil IJI h !11U tru,1 WhelaSlll'j ~J ~~~ n· ifrNI cl111· l'IW '<• I .di own~r Im ·•l•Jll •l.11h 20K DOWN 760 1112s .,111·1 .. JJlll 111 'I Real Estate No qualif)ill~ Lon~l·--------lt(HLSTll" Hi\~CHER term (tndnl'IJ\I! on chi~ 2 Lo1t h ~ lit'droom m bdrm. 2 bJ pJtl(J humt• BEST VALUE IN prim .. 1.,,,.l"'" CIQSt' ''' in Laguna ll1lb l'um ''™"'l' Jlid \ho~ :\ire mun1t} 11001. 'Ila t•U· 3 EASTBLUff I\ rti•uirJlt-d ~1th hear years ne~ o .. ner ' I\ c •ilor and texturl"s mot1vawd Stt.6,000 CJll :1 llrlrm :t lialh ;n1 \11• .. nd all oHrrs C•Jn now .,,,11111,11t•' Ovmn .tr1\ '1d1· r l' ti SI 06 3011 IOU' $;!!IS 10 1 'I \ R ll t. L I. Roy McCcirdle. Rttr IH \I TOR.'> '!i9 2:II<• I -RANCH HEAL TY ~5 1 2000 , ___ 5_4a.._77_2_9 __ Other Re-al Estate IOOo/o COMMtSSIOH We are offent1 lt all! Plus prut11e Coast Hwy address to full time e>tperienred agents Call for details "ap-pt. Ul..U4Z ....................... Hortaor V'te-w Mobi~ H~ Mii\ e 1n ro11d1t ion :ii For Sat. , I I 00 bdrm . .! ha h""" 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• lfdrhor \1«v. ll1~h" i i. Sf>\111<~~.T 2 tir 'umahll 10.1~ l11i:h.• •• 111 I"·' h 1n uni· •11 up11 r .tdre1 I hrn1111ho111 I 11r1·.111•t<l1 , hdtt·r .idll Sho"' hk1 m••l1 I \lu·tl p J r k !I 1 ·12 5n11 'l'll r,"t \,111111. '>:?:r1 ~ •• ,, i t i ~:i:111:12• tn1•I 1.11ul I •m11· lor 111 lh 11~nn (1r..,nd nl.'W 2 ~IJ''l'l1•;11 "·'' ~Im 1' Br i 11.t ~I \ 52 up 1111;11 I • 11 \\ h• • I• r '' ~ r ,,,J,. uii ,: .. 1r tour.e 1.111 iii• 'l~iW 0~n· \~I I "' ii ~ 1 u II 11r.1 in11ton VILLA 8All0.A II .... I h ( :.t I I 1 Br 11111tl•• \1t"" 11 iii 1tlllo':'i, ('JtJlin.i "''"' r ~1111 H .. ~truo: «'.1li,1nJ Si~.CXXI ht•Iµ (111a111 l' ~uhmll •11 l'J 'h ~r ~M~ Broli~r. 96).8182 I Btnineu Property 1400 HEW PORT CREST ••••••••• ... •••••••••••• 3 11th m i,1ml11 I I< ., •• OHO\\ DtJ. ~1.\R pool Hiil Cl'Olll ~,.,I t 'tor,' l!I 1inml' area r111.1nnni:. 1'r11 ,.;j '"I Ldll!t "'"Umdblf' loan wll. $J8!1.:-.01 ancl O)ll' 711 "57 28l3 C/21 Htwpori Cntr. I Condominiuma/Tow~ 640·5357 76~67671 holHH for so~ 1700 Redh ill~Realty •i7:~. 'i:loo OWNER ANXIOUS Will help fmance all un drr SlJS.000. 3 lo rhtxK( frnm Wm't lo1~t Call rot .ippt John Ma~hall 631-1286 Pridt of Owntnhi 20 units. E side @M 1 yr~ vld Overall rmanr· 1n1t 10 •·, Ow n er mot1n1trd Hurry' Call Kt•\ in i Units gro~s income SU.280, s~.ooo ush 6•2 133' dl)'I, 85J.9889 eves o-= ... .., .. ,...., .............................................. ..,.._,..,., ,.....,c.....,._ .. ..._..,._111-.c.-....wit11u.M11i111 81 help you turnvour IEACHDUPLD Two gor~ umu l 1't blo<'k.s lo beach and on· ly 2 yt•an old Oc-cn vi~w, 2 & 3 bdrm unit.s TIM 3 bdrm Is CJ'ftl ror owner occiu>1nl Ooly $300,000 Call now 979531'0 ALLiSTATE ............. ,_ ...... 0..11•1 "· _.._.. .. -•-.u c:.i.. .... ...._, ......... ., CM""1!1e, ___. .. ._. J.A.Twty ...... ..... ""'' 0. ...,., .... ,,_. ........... 0r-. c-4 0.llJ ...... Alll. a. ...... ,. "'' wheels Into cash. RE.ALTOn ~ J Oiler lMt... ....._, U•fnllMd Ho.Mt U•faat•d C'"*°t ' Afa taeita ~ ~ tw1t1 ....... Orangt Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday1 Augu11 3, 1981 , •• • ••• • • ••• • .... • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ... • u.flrahlllfl 1411 • •• • ••••••••••• , • • • ••• • •••• • ••• •••• ••••••• ,, ,, ..... ,.. .... , IOOG c..tew... 3JJ4&.eti-H• UIO ....................... c..t.Me. HJ4 ............... ;u40,ltfalw•aw... .s .... ,, ..... 4JOO .............. 000 OMctl.... 4400 Tnd••••Hu••• •••0 •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •u••n••••••u••••••u CONDOS FOil RENT, •••u•••••u•tt••u•••• ••••••••••u•••nn•••• •u••u•••••uu•••••tt .................... , ......................... ••••••••••un•••••••" r!n' Li&Xvry Newport DLXCONOOIBr +lr1 HOMtFORRENT CoeliM•.Bnodntw. lBr OardtnApt.Stov 1HIW ..... TUI .............. JHt NEWPORT OCEAN· Prof wortlna r. non IAYNONrOMCI to. \'t irre tor In ion Br ll't Ba trple, :s Bdrm '82' l'enred S t • W ' • t b • Y l t I Advil • L Adllll llnlU t .... 1 .......... •••••••• FRONT Lu• 2·4 Br amoker. ~·40, lo ahr 55 aq It Ptrkln •· t0meUn1&aor•r.qu1ty ur , 1/r, new $745 yerd 1nd11ra&t' t(lds Townhomald urtloa rtrl•· ll I, no an"!:!b1tUrin 261 a BR,2ba,yrly f130mo. Wkly 173. URf, apar. lrvlne home ~nltorlaJ....eit7tO>~. UI0,000. Art now I 11$-or91»3TJ • pelt IOIC'o me . lli4 ' ta Nt-l 8 .. 11 d •· 1·t d rrplc:, blt.na, peUo, aar. ~a.1m. w/~rol M, pool, lmnJJ, Office, a rooms w/ wet· Broiler Co.Op AaHlt ~2000 ....... t f r. "'' erora • , ,.. .... ... S !..!. -.... 1. 1 .-.. ·-r<u 1~11 , Br 2 Ba CoUeae Park, ....... t. no "---Otten View New ConJlo aMd ........ ., Olympie Ille pool, Uitit ..... 'new 18 .-,, I Newpart av1U 1/22 to U\J wC 'no.--. -bar, 232 sq n ..... arl'I :&.;.....::.;:.;.:...· -bit Ins , DIW. frplc Miss• v.,._ JH7 2 bdrm, 2Yt be Double ~•...uti ed tcruall cowt, JacuuJ. Don l dlaturb occu· 9112, •t.ePI to bearh, 3 Mike S51·11• UOO Mo U1 ii pd 'I 0 PI~ TY Avallab~ frOO Alkfor ....................... 11ra1• Rtf req saso TOWMHOMIS park Ukt landteapln&. pants Daya Gus, br,aewpalotln/out.lZ7 ~ .!'1·11114 MA.MM•litn Ptl•~· HOM!PORRENT mQ.Mf.sel»tu-31112. CONDOSFORRENT MOil btautllul bkll. In 2lf:331·990e 34th St 857 ·0187 , ..,....... 4UO ••ll'HOfO•• 'We tnH1 .. lG09 Unlb £11ttlde 2 Br 1ar1111~. 3 Bdrm '62:S. Fenced llV9NI c--o 2 Br. + Den. ZYt Ba.ING H.8. 2 Br. lYt 81. Townhouse 67H410 •••••••••••••••••••••" * S1\1Df0S * 111C01ta .... ·Newpon yard Av11l now WO yard Ir pra11e K1d5 & --Z8r.2Yt&. U Prom .Mf..Oll9 aty'8. Adultt, no pet.a. Balboa Ill, 2 1araat1, Avail to $hr 2 111, Bearb for pn>fas1i0nal • S300 serurlty Kid• pcta welcome MS-2000 :!f~~:1• •lnl )o(, (Xtra lr.13'0aq. rl I .. STANT IN $385. Sfil.3182 100' NOM SAMO mo/mo, IUO pt mo t!I studloe wilh IJ"hts, t-lc "manaaelnt'lt oC your In OK C7s.&81!7 Al!Pl...M fee 844.8325 s.,~ l Br, 1tr1 Jra 1$1$ 3 Br. 2 e. Apt with 2 Oceanfront, yearl.Y, 1 Br Newpopn Beach 8albo1/M1rlne Stuts SI 0 . S 7 51 m; x 1n 1 come pro,.rty pletst' CON DO~ FOR RENT Newport IMdl 32't -~ --19 BRAND NEW. full cu att1chtd 11u1110. modern wood ' glau lBdnn, S300/Wk. Sept. 1. Marilyn 7$2-0202 _rulllllea & loc. 556-2904 call ua. We can 1ive you 8 rand n ... w sec ••••••••••••••••••••••• l00yr 1ne1w. 2 BR·2BA Con· alte townboma. dovble w ID hook·up, pillo, ipt. Utll pd, no pets. 28drm $375/Wk. wkdya 1:30-l :.>. __ ptnonahtrvlM. Weatbay Townhomell 2 Br mobile home on n Bluff Decorated gancu. private yardJ. frplc. Small pet/child '600/mo. rfS.JIZ3 Newly de«lr/sharp Office...... 4400 Offke Space on Paclfir .!'SLMG __!!2-1603 id,sectlon:1124. wat t'r quiet no In Xlnl 1tyle. Spa. 2 fireplarea. No pelt. ok. Nr Hunt. Harbour. (714)997'°'32 Co.stHwy,nearBalbou ,.....___/L.....1.-.& --k c.1$/ • t6So &el&4 adults onl~No pets. Located 2 b&ocka from OnJ S59S Ver1111le1, l br, view of · -....................... Bay Club. 3'2 sq rt • ~ -· 38drm, 28a, lovely Mon 1 ii.[)ets · Rer• ne" mo •12 do to ho In c Y • o c e a n , be a u t , I Br I blll to bay ' bcb, 1817 Weatcurr. N.B. Want .... 0 , ... , mo. AJso 212 sq C... ~ t1rello CONDO. aa1 . New Condo Nwpt H11ht.s 3 m ; 1~1 8 e 0""1 m;."to b:ac'h. PP 1• .. TSL MGMT IMZ-ll!{l3 clubho111e, ~. 6'Ul49 S400 mo. yrly 2Br, yrly rlnanclal inst. 7000..r. (:'. f220 per mo. call l9.800aq.tt \4unlts ..200l.S6J;S~~ Br 2...,.811 lSOOsq.fl. fice,6444684 Res , Opendallyl2-6 NIA.I llACH , Sandy S7SO mo Jones Rily 1st . floor Agent John5'9·2ll7. readytorsale.lea!leor 1775/mo 3 Bdrm 2 Ba Drive by 292 Pulmer 64081162 Weekend$1~6 2IDl.M 2 sty, 4 br, zv. ba, 673-6210 541-5032. --~~~--- lea n -option 10'~ 1002 Presidio Or Md~ #IA SllOO Mo. No pets, -666W l8tl1St.,C.M. Crptl drp1, bltlnJ at l850/mo. yrly. Steps to Yac.tiH ..... 4250 HIWrC>nWCH a.llNHl...tal 4450 rtoandn1 1vall11ble. del Mar. Refs req'd No no children Call IUUTIM HOUSE$. 6'S-1'73orl42·4905 tchdjar.ms.s3a.c»21 .. beich.675-6725 ....................... Full service exec. or ............. ; ........ . Colton, l<ll l·lO & I lS pets. Avail 8115 Agt 752-64ll'J COHOOS N~wly decor2Br w/gar, DELAWARE PINES WATEU'RONT. Upper Oceanfront Newport ficea from 1397. "On For store & o.nce spare freeways, surrounded 559-6221 ~6445 Waterfront lease, .i Br 4 Apt , NeWl>Ort Beach unit 2 bdrm, 1 ba Beach, 2 & 3Bdrms. Call" exec orfices from al rea50nable ra~s. by new comm'I &. office s -=.:.i...: B r I to Colla Mesa Call us ... APTS. avail week I Call SOO to 4000 ~ff development. '885,1\1'" E~LUDED I Br \ery a, ami Y rm, P t•on nit1 600 uni • " Spacio1&S l & 2 Bdrm Newport lala.nd. Yearly · Y St~. lnclds. ~retanal, • Own /Bkr vvv privite,qwet&woodsy d111on.dockfor40'boat nage ,.,::,nur Frplr atove dis· rental. $650 mo . 5"·0614/838-3232 phone am . word pro-MESAVERDE R 494-?184 or 04-4831 Adults, no pets New s2zoo Bob & Oo\11e ~~~[ O:~o~ Gelber& up hw11her, garbaie dis· 875-1908 ll .... to se... 000 cessuig, Telex, qw1p Pl.A2A d ---t'lrpets, drapes, range 63t-1266 ~--' posal pool laundry fie ... _,...,. Flnlllltd ....................... T H E 1525 Mesa Ver e E. Lots for S. 2200 Ullls paid lst + secur1 Newport Island Home ~L MGMT 642:.1603 Smali. quiet complex ....-.a. 111._ ... "t"'"' Movlnc? Avoid deposits HEADQUARTERS C M ....................... ty ~ Mo 64.2·~ or 4br. 2ba, pnva('y, ste~ Adulta only Pets con or U•JWIW...., ~ '""' & cut living expenses! COMPANl~ 545-41!3 Mo,,o Bay . fabulous 646-~ __ lo ocn bay, St200 mo A,.,.tMttlh r.nlai.d sidered. l Br kSO/mo. 2 ....................... Professionally since 7141&51·0681 ocean view lots, lo, lo NEW2Br JBa Qwet& 673-3335 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br. S550/mo 19221 SE AW IM D 1971. PLUSH OFFICES. pr~es. EZ temu. walk cool. built ms, refnge Newport Shores 4 Ur J Cof"OM ._ M.. 3722 Delaware St. <So or VILLAGE HOUSIMATES 500 6000 sq ra 1801 to beach 141.7452 t Adults. no petS Ullls Ba Canal Fronl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garfield> 84.2·8807. Or New l"2 bdrm luxury 832-4134 Newport 81\'d, C M Ph RA·lal balot , 29H'xB12s17· 813 paid Isl + security __ 962-~ _ _ _ CO z v, sma 11, ru rn r;,ce hrs:p!ues Thurs adult apts in 14 plans 1 1>41.9495 ma, 5,000 S650 Mo 642·0835 or EXECUTIVE llOME studio, pool Util pd a ter 5::.l .. 1 , Fn·Mon. Bdrm Crom $465, 2 bdrm CM. 3 beaut offices & Owner/Agt (2 13) 6'6-M23 DOVERWESTCUFF Single, empld female, 9·5PM . from SSJS, Townhouse ~\l~e~ bath.840sqft. Xlnt loc 92).9716; (714) 962-5153 East.side Condo 2 Br l'-i 4 Br J Ba Gated rront non -s moker. S290 2 ll E D R 0 0 M rrom 1610 +pools, ten· i~7.J'inder1i .. l Air. cpts,drps, eve1. Ba. Frplc, gar S650 Mo cou~ yard & rear patio. 640-4999 -----TOW NHOM E Pool. nts, waterfalls, pond!! KL.A_ ~U'" 64.\-7661 ...._.elil,o..rt, Call59-~1 _ dbl frplc. Lease option CoitoMtlO 372'4 park, neur beac h Gasforcoolung&heat· ·-·--·---HEWPOltT llnot't 2400 Townhouse. 1 year old, 3 11oss1ble. $1200 in<'ld ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-5191 in& paid. From San Old •-tar d N l est.. 0est agency , .......... s·· ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br 2 Ba skylights. gar ener o pe s New decor lbr dplx, sep Lge 2Bdnn, 2Ba Diego Frwy drive North in So. Calitsince 1971 ~ -rrplc. master Br suite. 752·~·----by gar Quiet empld prestigious & quiet, on Beach to Mcfadden Spacious executive of· ,... er commty pool S69o Call Deluxe 3 Br Jba duplex adult o"er JS. no pet! lovely panoramic vu then West on McFadden CCr~imtso:,AC!1!~l.NDoBCna'hCueBS. fices across rrom City "' S3SO N H H ho s · d v ·11 "" Hall. All se rvi ces OFNHD 642-2134 ___ in exclusive Bturrs. . SU-1021 ___ r uni ar ur to eaw1n 1 age. • of(• available, 'optional ' Cathedral Canyon Coun-DELUXE 4 BDRM Beaut. greenbelt view IHYHMy O.C'd 960.4370 840-4970 (714)893'51Sfl. lo all who need a place. From 225 sq.ft. up al re· try Club 2Bdrm. 2Ba Nr. schls, & 5hops. S800 w/pools AvaiJ for 1 yr 2 bdrm executive condo. I & 2 a.-looms 400G asonable rentals. No completely fW11, CON· mo+ sec. No pet~. beginning Sept. 1 ocean view f95o Pool, Adlts, no pets,••••••••••••••••••••••• NewportBeach,6411899 lease required. call DO-. $9,SOO buys '• in 67~·2345 $1250 mo. 6#5t:n ber IO __!ll:§.7~ ...... ~ 6945 _ S400 and up. ?.20 12th Sl. Res po n a I b I e young Serving all the S Coast 67J.~2 terest. Contact Owner E Side JBdrm. I Ba, l!_m ____ -SUS C"''SIT•S &2191St.hSt female wanted Attrac· (714)114.-Z _ w a 5 h e r , d r y e r , E. Bluff CONDO beaut "' "' Lge 1 br front unit tn live. bright, large room Garden Grove, 895-3482 HIWron Centi ie. of C__... stove/refrig, adults on· 3 b r . 2 :i. b a . po o I Furn 1 br. apt S32s & p 1 es , 0 r 8 each & with frplc, pvt entrance PresUg1ous. (uJI $erv1ce ,,.~' 2550 .!Y~ S6ootmo ~-2733 S83Slmo. 848-3119 Suzi, up. Encl gar. Adults. Talbert. 1375 incl gas & and wet bar Avail 1m ·open Sat too! 1~5 EXEC orrices lnclds •••••••••••n•••••••••• 1795 Mesa del Mar beau· 640-8449 _ __ no pets. 2110 Newport water. 891.7490 evs or med s:.>o. Isl & last rcpt, sec. xerox, under Horse property, 3 acres. ty 813 Presidio Dr. 3 Nev. port Heights old 2 Bl. 548·4968 btwn 8 & wknd. Call 646-3375 eves. ground plt'g, telex & an· 3bdrm house. 1 ba . bdrm. 2 ba, lg cov patio, Br I Ba house. large SPM Nr beach, 3Bdrm, 2Ba, Room near OOC Pool, Male/Fem lo sbr 2br Ilse ~~~ecor conf rm ownerwillcarryatl5'l: landscaped. fplc , mcls yard, 212 car ~arage 1 BR. rum. all uul pd 751·990511vmessage. I built-ins, encl gar, non·smkr, male St80 CdM. Avail. Aug I.st SlS,000. San Bemadino gurdner. ref req'd, no Adults, no pets Isl &I \'ery private, l adlt on· 1 Bdrm, So Cst Plata.I small child OK. no pets mo 545-2510 Aft 6 PM. Yearly. 673-49811 CdM Deluxe Swtes. AC, a a.~ ~~SSH~ a\'a1l.J l lasl + $200 deposit $695 1.l'.,; ~~8967 pool, air, ref rig, pool. SSSO/mo 963-8625 Lovely pvt room. patio, am pl pkg, ulll pd 2855 a..1 lst• MODERN WESTSIDE ~S0:16!ft s;nta Ana Newport ltoct. 3769 S4SO mo gated romm. 2 Bdrm. 2 baths. up-refrig, no kit "'3 blk t<l LIBERALG.R.C. E Cst H 675-6900 HTAL SPA.CE 770 sq ft on Harbor Blvd 1n C M SSOO Great exposure ~ulonomics 675-67~ OffluWM.M N~ Beach Small executive orJice, xlnt address. $696/Mo Terri (714)752·1194 RETAL srA.CE 5000 sq fl on Nwpt Blvd. Hi traHic Great exposure. S3500 mo lmmed occupy Realonom1~5-6700 Newport Modem Store or or c n r post ofc S4SO 548 str 21314711001 Jerr Corot111 *' M• 4200 sq ft Ground noor Coast Hi ghway Realonom1cs Corp 675-6700 __ w .......... 1200sqft 14308 Bearh 81\ld_ Bt11on 2 Frwys. C1v1c Center Shopping Cent.er. pnme 1oc 979-8889 or 6'.S· 12SO bcti.Jt 2100! 3 Br 2 11 Ba BIG CANYONTWNHSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca ll Jo AMe 545·0148 stairs. Grove Circle. ocean S2:SO/mo Sept. Roommate Contact Prime orflce space m ••••••••••••••••••••••• Townhouse. patio. det•k. I G 'ir · 1 • B Winter. 1, blk ocean. 3 559-1111 gar, 1 cluld. no pets ~June lS 675-5710 Service U-7PM. new bldg. Dana Pt I E EXNUMl'QIS! frplc Perfect for kids o course view. 2 r. br, 2 ba Sept l2 June S. Studio apt, separate umt. S425 Siemi Mgmt Co Rm for rent, nr bch, S300 213/&»lMO Ocean & mtn \'1ews Store for rent. JI() Sq Ft. "'1,.,. S775 Mo 64S-7226 2Ba. pvt gar. pool. ten S700 mo 67S.S710 S225 + utll. Conv Loe. 641-1324 mo ut1l Incl Tony Av a i I. 9 81 pre Laselle Plau, CM Call 1UvlS~ East.s-ide -3~Bd-rm ., ba ms, 1mmaccond Sl,2.50 64.,8821 Art 5 ~3_1.5314 aft 5py _ M/F.2 bdrmaptinPark completion leasing arter 6 PM 957·2740 '""a,.:,:'s' hse lg yd b-<A 57'• i:i11 mo. ~0.812S or 4!!7 5471 3 Br, ocean vu. new. 2 s •. LI. ,_ 2 B 1' swa 2 -working adults Huge Npt. SU> mo. incl util. bonus 661·~ . A!_k for uan 1 ""-, ~ ,, . car pkg Avail 9/1 to par .. ung CllCan r • 2bdrm, lBa in • plex C 11 p 1111u.''""''' 646 8225 Pat JD 6 15 S9SO Bkr 673-9060. B ••7n ••75 f ed ~ pool home, across Santa a au ~.....,, •11r-••I!:• Cowrciat OPPOl'TUNITY! -· ~--ff.ARBOR VIEW a. " "'" · enc · encl gar, tlOOI( ups, no "' ""' _..,. PrlmeOffictspacewith lbdrmhse,privyd,rplc, 4 bdrm .2~2 ba,2 slory utils paid. Refrig pets.kSOlmoSlJ2 "D" Ana C.C Nr 0 C. M/Fprof.3br,pool,S.C Furnished or un Rttltoh 4475 well known Exchangor new cpls, sgle adlt. no with ramily rm, formal A~rt!Mftts 2 small child OK. No Ellis. !l6J.65Sl Airport. '275 & S295 mo Plaza. S200 mo. + S200 rumlshed. Lg wmdow ••,t~~;L~·0p;•0•FC .. St rvices: Sect'I. ani. pets SJSO· Util inrl du)lng, vlf:Jo big yard, UnfuntisllHI pets. 1960Wallace. 545·6891 all6PM sec. Alter6PM. 549·»26 Executive Su11 es 1n & er ., .. <'op I er 64.2·27!ll -privacy .mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• _S40-96a6or6'2-4905. L~~l~a;~~~fie~tc~;t Mission Viejo area HOUSEMATEWANTED Irvine. Walking d15 EtS~~.M S200-SJOO/mo Jmmed Cozy E Side 2Bd rm. CORN.Im 2 BDRM GHerol 3802 1 br bachelor apt w. Ave s 355 & la 5 l S250/mo. StOO security Rent loft and have full tance to airport. occupancy Near OC w 'cnrl patio & i:ar. with 2 baths. Panoramir ....................... kitchenette, $350/mo. 960-5179 _ negotiable. 831·6905 ... use of home and pool. rLA1A Coast Hwy frontage Ap- A1rport. Gene Tribolet fresh pnt, adults pref view condo Adu Its A.rTMTS FOR RENT utils incl. 556-9096 aft. 7. Pvt. room. Pvt. entrance Family atmosphere EXECUTIVE SUITES prox . 500 sq. ft ground -_552·7j55 no pets S475mo avail ~':'landspe SISOOmo HB .N.B .~taMesa 1 Br unfurn. $375. 2 Bdrm.lBa.S450.IJt& Empt Male , furn. SJOO /mo. include s ~2Michelson11212 nmooor. TSou.rnLeagunr Aasss.500oc 8 5673-0231 Something for Everyone Bachelor furn or un· last dep. 7794 Newman kitchen u t II , S65. utilities. In Newport 2021 Busmess Ctr 11213 Reol htah Dix new 3 Br 2 Ba OCEANFRONT Bach to 4 Br Unfurn. furn. $325. ISi Mo, + H.B.6'6·4SS9 5'5·3710 Beach. 759-0780 __ 7_14-?_52.0234 !94·1177·--- W-.d 2900 duplex. formal dining. in9ds~~£te';;~ fr~pfa~ Apts Certain locations security S200 required. l"IN 3144 Furnished room m C.M Nr bch. Shr spac tri-level Office ror rent. Balboa lndmtriol 1...tal 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl gar w opener. matureadulL'l.S8751mo o rr e r Pool . spa, 548-0130. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo . Near O.C. home. Micro. S2:SO mo Peninsula.,oceanfront. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lln ....... leocfl adults. no pets S6SO (ireplace. laun room. •2 bdrm, 1 bath condo. Col lege S200 Mo. inc all. HB. 536·8090. UOOfill.67S.8740 Rent M.G 600 sq fl $240 Older Residential Bch 642·7456 Waterfront Homes,lnr. beamed ce il i n gs, CHOICEEASTSIDE Adults.:..~ lake. tennis. 979·9621. 960-9630 mo 2944 Randolph, or Waterfront pronorty ----631-1 .. 00 garages. all bu1lt·ins. Sharp lBr in sm dlx POOis ~ ~5626 -""'------"'"'""-----Costa Mesa, 704 sq rt C M 675-5116 To purchase&orJ~ntlv Lease10pt1on, desirable ..,, Garden & Townhouse complex w/pool. Cpts, · · Room for rent to non· Roommate: Female. Medical/General office. ------ J MesaVerdearea,4Br3 d f I bit 2 Br. Picturesque smoker.in1\nlin.S200 nonsmoker wanted 9/1 froundfloor prvpauo C-Osta Mesaorrire &work develop. 1 will pro\ide Ba pool ·1mmac t"'ndi VtL• • •••ia.o• design NOFEE rps,/ rp cd, h hns Orangetree Condo. by pl• .. utW"-731Z7"'c for H B 2 bnn condo S63 '11 1 3350 area totalJng 4,225' al IOO"l-r.~an-'-g Charle~ · · .u · """'--, "' TSL MGMT 642-1603 range oven, s ws r, . •--uc.t. • ""' . mo . m <.:u• lion S_tlOO'mo 1-522-0332 2 Bd n.... & B adlts no ........ 1410 mo stream, tenrus • swim w/ swimming pool. free 494 4m »per sq I\ A\·a1I Ort Perry. 512111 --rm """3n a) 381 H'ami·.!':..~. · · ming. AvaiL Sept Isl S u ur a... 4200 laundry Split r•nt & . ls 642 211211 Sa \'ACANT ' &Side. quiet 3 view Comp. upgNded Swio111, "-:•clllah ....... t c -°""' "' Costa Mesa 'Kl\ sq r1 t ..:_ _..J!!:~m S800 mo. 1 oo~ • .,,,.. wk r---~. 675--. ••••••••••••••••••.••••• util. Call...,. 7167 · <-IV ......., hr, 2 ba. frpl. D W. Id> ._,........, Lovely 2 Bdrm. Quiet $.340. 1 BR. pool, 1 adult. LIDO ISLE channmg 3 ..,... suite s11s1mo UtJls ln· Low cost office space ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar $695 mo 35:1 end.673~eves cul de sac Nicely 325 J . 17th Place. l.0CJl90.._.. 3141 bdrm 2 bath playroom Resp. Roommate,3bdrm cld 779 W 19th SI w11h shop area Ho.NI~ Woodla~67J._Jliil0 Blurf's 3 BR or 2 +den landscaped, garage. No 546.51;n aft UAM ....................... Just 'remodeled. Mon· C.M.: pool, etc. S175 + 1_71 ~ 0\•erhead rear door. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 MS'99 Bi"'S 21, BA. rplc, palm. pool pets S385 mo 1747 lbdrm, new, lrg deck, thly r .. ntal. Bill Grundy, I.') ut.11. 646-00766-10 PM . orr1•'A Store Business ample par1tmg, quiet m-lalloa .,._. 3106 '" Ill S87S 7608:114 6755930 ~~.~a868c Lane, Anaheim ~:~1151 :d:p~.G~~~ North tnd Close to 675-6 6 anyttmewknds 14t.,'.X.o. 3019-A Harbor dustnal area or Costa ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• PLUS DEN. 2"1 BA -' ,,..... -31'"' Eastside,.oc. Mature beacb.SS25.49'-7079. 11 Roo~mat.e ~ed. nice Blvd, Costa Mesa . Mesa.~. TENNlS COURT, SPA. LIDO ISLE lolboo Island '"' Adults only. S34S. 147 E. Ocean view, walk lo Newport 3 Br l house apt. in CdM. Avail im· across from Fedco 1100 sq ft. 2 offices & Wlllhrll..tal REFRIG , 2 CAR C harming & coiy ••••••••••••••••••••••• l8thSt.••,C.M. beachNoeod,2 bdrm,2 from ocean. parking med.~at4668 Avail now' •·7s agt whse,toploc ,frtrear 9/14 -6/14 3 Bdrm. 117 GARAGE W OPENER 38drm. 28a. else to .....,_ Avail. Aulllat.675-6775. I.OS · .,. · b -.....,39,. S EASENOPETS Lillie Island, lge I br, 2 B l'"'BaTo ho ba. Fireplace, gar, 549-1366 ent.S32S.67~1 a.•1"'1mo.u1....-w 700L . clubhouse. bay. beach. utils pd, $500. Dix l br, r . .,.. · wn ~e. lower rront unit ---- ..... , ..... l107 JohnManihall & tennis. Agt. Virgmia S6SO NQJ.ll?ts.673-9473 enclsd gar, prv patio. (duplex), SSSO mo •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1·12566 O'Bn~'!_~J.1323 ---Adults, no pets. S4SO. Barb a r 8 R 1g 11 5 • • • ON nu: BEACH: Xlnt Unusual properly ~~.~.~~~.~ .. ?!.~~ 548-4660. 494-9819,675-$)00 ~P~~ter1Rl~~1/~3~~ ~~:~~~~~~~mrt 2 ~~ 1g~~~~e~~ci~1':c~n~~;~ E£.t~d.Ye6~7r~;,o3·1.~·~~a~~ ~~r.!~~ ... ?!~! •• 8•D A Y WEEK SPECIAL •• Appl's. S900 mo. Inquire closets. prime location B h & I B ~..., ..r-v• O r t r w· t ea c a so a y cean ron or in er 8 D 3 Lines 8 Dollars 121 E. Oceanfront. July 3226 G ti con ti • w a I er · Yearly $4.SO mo. Eves, 2 B~ 11'2 ba, (pie, pvt Rentals. Furnished & • ays • • • 18th. Aug. 2l!t. or call Dono roilt g_ard~_incl 630-5576 21~332.8101 patio. pool. 2 car gar.. u n r urn Br 0 k er . ns-5990 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,. dt ~ • I . oo C . f w· Se Charming s ml home. 38' DOCK Corot1o .. Mor 3822 !rt ts6. 447 J~~~~~ 675-4912. t s easy to place your o-ay Week lass1 1ed by mail. and 1t e th~~:ne:~. ti~~~ spa, deck. ocean vu J Br 2'~ Ba. Nicely de ....................... Open Slll\.12-4 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo • COStS just $8 -that's only a dollar a day! T O Qualify for th IS • br, patio, garage & ~ corated Condo S1200 2Br I') ba, 2 stry, frplc. 1 rentals. VII.la Rentals. I ff t be · I ff di 493-0467 -~to. AvaiJ...!.1! 675-67]5 pool. deck, adult, no 2 Bdrm, l 'J Ba, adults, 675-4912 Broker • Spec1a 0 er. YOU mus a non-commerc1a user 0 enng • la~1. zd:, ::.~~~e· Fo_..IR v•y 3234 Harbor view Homes 4 l!t'' ssso ~,.EJ:047.L ~~.~ a~~~P~~~~mo PAI" WWPOIJ • merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the price must • ...._ rt...____.... "l6t ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR 2 Ba. new cpts S111s rEHlHOUSl co"u~"y CLUI be in your ad. The cost stays the same whether your ad .-wpo -~ HOMES FOR RENT mo Agt 673 7761, Ute lrile. Airy "'" • eed · h d 11' · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• J & 4 Bdrms S600 & 760-1397 ~n~~~mr'i~e~l·a'::m i:::: 1 Br. ~·pt. with bafco~y LIVING n S e19 t ay·S Se IOQ tune Or JUSt one. ltwflM FmlY $725 Fenced yards & 3 Br 2 Ba. House with Adlts. no pets. S62S Mo or paho, cathedral ceU· Bachelors. 1&2 bedroom • • h 0 me . r u 11 y (urn garages Kids & pets sw1mmmg pool + 2 ad 640-1208 428 Seaward. ing, poo~ & spa, lush apts "townhol.8es. • Use one word '" each box. About 4 words make one • w/g~nr. 5 bdrm, .4 ba, we I come 545 2000 dillonal utility Br . fam -------landscapmg. Adults. no f'rom SSlO 644-1900 family room. d1n1ng ~t, nofe:L_ --rm . lrplc, nicely 2v~~'wl~e~· 6s!?s°i1!~: pets. S460&up. 549-2447. LIDO VIEW 2 br. 2 ba. 2 • classified line of type. Minimum ad is 3 lines. Please print • l:~~r1f:z.=1;,e~11,::rd H•t .... leocll 3240 64taO-nd1~~.,S1881lSO r~r1o 975.0363 work. 760-2566 2 Br. 2 B1 garage. laun-terr . frplc, prime. • plainly. • 8'2-0346aft6PM •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ,,..,, ~ . o ice res dry. No pets. S42S. ad Its. St ,000 mo 3 Br 2 Ba Great loc 759-659_7. __ ---- . 831-llOOS. 67• ~'K" • • EnJOY summer livrng all .,..,..,.,., r::------------------------------, $685 Mo meld gardener. 1 Br 4 Ba. clean & sharp, d L..._ ......._ ~ N C 11 ., .. , .,.,1 year Walk to C M mr, -.., • * * • I • o pets a .,....,.1.,. or next to t.eru11s & beach beach 1 & 2 Br. f~lc, 1 Br. apt. with ba_cony H~Wnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 846·4296 Mrs. Ga.!!! s1 soo. Koop 631 1266. ti ....... _I u • -..0. ha.d l206 lrg deck, encl prkg 75 or pa o, cau..,.m• ce · 525 ictoria • hcmlffM Agt & $800 Mo Avail ing , pool & spa. lush CostaMesa • ....................... Yearly. 3 Bdnns. 2 ba, den, fpc, lar(t patio. No dlildren SB50 mo. Ref lsl, last. security T-.90611 67S.3>24 JBdrm. 2Ba family )lome. Jae, micro, gar, I USO/mo. 6'fS.13152 Three bdrm. 2 ba. I WcrterfrmttHCMM! 675·8589 landscaping. Adult!, no Youarethewinneror • stor y condo In the 2 story custom home. 4 Fantastic ocean & city pets. S460& up. 549--2"7. TWO FREE PASSES • • Gab I es Lots o f bdrm. formal dining light view rrom every 3 bdrm, yd pool. Quiet (117 value) • $ 8.00 amenities Gale d and breaknook. J car room. 1 Br S600 Mo. pref. NO PE'J'S. Water RINGIJNG BRai. • comm. S7SO 846·1371 garage. lg closets, pan· Ca II Anthon y days pd. $445 mo. 549--~ BARNUM & BAILEY • 10 60 BKR try, 3 fireplaces. lg 6'2·5757, eves & wknds Lg 3 bdrm, 2~ ba. 2 C•CUS • • Brand new deluxe 2 Br 2 deck. Boat dock avail at 644-8889. story , Valencia St. Anaheim Convention • ,. • Ba. Condo. lS.24 sq. ft. extra charge. For lease Nice & brite 2 Br. 1 Ba. Carport. 2 children. Center Aug. S.17 • 13.20 • Micro, 2 car garage, only. Call Peggy Pat· Sundeck, patio. carport. SSSO. Sierra Mgmt. Co. Lone Beach Arena pool & spa. super loc. terson No ts. $580. 760-1713 641-1324 Aug. ~23 • 15 80 c.r..... .. Mer 3222 S800. 544-7552. (714!955-2473 wkdys 8·5 Co-"-M----".24 Sruocious clean 2br, frpl.c, To claim passes. call • • tt•••••••••H•••••••••• CONDO E Bluff S ar11 s.. -t ti bea ed I 642 -5678, ex I. 272. • • CA.MEO HlchJ111d! 4 br, ' .bdrm. immac new . '1 urpelr •••••••••••••••••••••••. 1e pa 0• m cei. Passes must be ex· Add $2.60 for each 1ddttlon1l llne for 8 time• SllMY patio, pvt. beach t1tch, nr schls & Wmstr 4br, ram rm. poo , pr . an.1.s $450/mo 67M166 • 1s1 , 3 c 0. m 0 Jn c I. Mall. $675 894·8842 $1,250/mo. 675-<Mi04_ NEWLY DICOI.. ' · cbaoged for reserved • ~ l B gas pd encl gar Large 2 Br •. 1 Ba. over seats at box &ardeoer . .\It, 673-5354 HOME FOR RENT S. C.,_. 3276 r. • i:rage, pet:io, laundry. r I ' • • 8d ..._ F _.._ d/washer, -'. Adulta • .,, Mo. S17S depos'tl. o C c e p ri o r t o ,.._..._ u~ 311.. 3 rm. ~. encn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,... ~ ..1 ::::.: ....... :.~~ yard "garage. Kids"' 3 Br 2 Ba . Condo. "2·5C173. 2009 Maple St. S48-511L penormance. • Publish my ad fo r 8 days starting ---• pell welcome. 545-2000. Firepl1ce. Near Marina J It. I .. ~ 0.. roW 3126 * * * • • LIASIOl'T'IOM Agent,nofee. & Frwy. S700 Mo. No Newly .decor. Gas pd. ....................... BEACH YRLY REN· W~y paJ l'tllt??!~?"' ._ ..... _ 3244 pets. 760-l&05,6'U368. encl 1ar., pool. cl<lbwr. Spacious. attractive 2 TALS tBr • bachelor. • • New. rantalltic, well ..,._ 3B ... 2' ... n-t .. __ 1600 .. d Its ,. .... CNN JonesRlty87" ..... 0 lo( ttdJBr 381 ....................... r ...,. "'!' wn.._, "u . ..............,. bdrm , l Va ba, 11r '""".. • Co~o • .00' per· ~:. OIAMGETIH ~1·S:= orean vu. 3 Ir To ... a•• w 19 her • d r Yer • 1t1t to 1U shopping. 2 Bd , l Ba. 2 <'Ir · Newly decor. 111 pd., '93-CM87 VACANT • • 631-~. g1ra1e. adult comm S-. AM 3210 end ear., pool, dswhr. Spectacullr ocean view 3 bdrm, 2 b 1th , • -Tennis. pool, 11ym, •••••••••• .. ••••••••.••• Adults."2-5073. dplx . 2 br. 2 ba . firepllce, bk-Ina, newly Phone • * * * uuna. Avall Aua. 1. Historic 2 Br. Vici.Onan downstaln S5Z5 Sun· refurblebed Yrly at • • ....... hww $580/mo. Isl. last • House In Central Santa MIWPOIT decks, new'c1ecor: 33111 S'750 mo. ' l1001Ah clun ln1 deposit. Ana , beautifully APAl1MltfT'S. Colep.637..a. • • NewportBMch WimerCa.rr.59-NOO rtator~. SS50 per mo. 2·2Bdrm. 1·18drm. Hwllafl•.._.3140 • Yov art t1M1 winDcr of Vickie 833-7192, 1135-6988. From mo. mo. + uUls. ....................... • 1'WO PROP~~ C11••ldmu :~t:~=· 00 pell, no Avail. now. 2 Br. l Ba. • O E • RIN~BN~i:~~. u.fwnhe.d 3425 24SON~ Blvd. Upatalra, dsh~n h. • xp. • BARNUM A BAILEY ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• Coell Meu refHae, w/d, balcony. l Ad~-•-, YI.LA IALIOA. i;= ch lid OK, no pets n11, DO ...,, IBr, l1H1 • • A ..... ~!I~.~ WOodbrid,e, 3 br, 111. ba 2 Bdrm Octan • Bay 2Br , 281 twnhome, pleaee. 1495. 545.3000. nur Hoaa. hOO mo. 1 ;ZJ.,., -••u""""._ • .,.. cotdo, 1125/mo, avaJl view. Comp. uptt1cltd, beauttlully lod1cpd, Mt. no fee. Ul·M?f._. •· Cftlc.r Allf. •11 lmmtd. ... -mo. i -....... -" trpk, fir, lndry room, D I I Id t Y•"-••y Lona a.th Ann. -= -____, ... tk. '480 mo. Adlt.80 • uu poo 1 e 1 " .,... • fl • Au&. tt.Z3 L.f1M IMdl l241 end, 61~ peta 141-a Iara• %6r, Jba, bl&u, ~ ILi ro OCEAN 'or-tlalm ,.._, raD ....... ,., .. ,, ......... New. Be let tentnL ,· dlwhr. l~mllea bteda. Jbr,lba,tlDO/mo. • •1 fO·HU. nt tu. ••ch matalit trom k50 U11111u.al acllllt complex ... .wt., 80 •· k50 mo. 1 ~\i _i., •/mo. • I •1 p•1at • •P11H1 muat be ts· mo. Mllonb' •I aatr • pool Near OCC&l'MCT! Nl-Ull. uns.f!H!Jt · I y I JJO W • .., Sf. 1 c•11a1ect lot ruened ••11. S C. Piasa. Seduded 2 Br. 1 91. Aft. a..m 2 Br. 2 a.. CCllldo •ta. l.otwlJ J Ir. lit Ba. la • C-. ....... CA tZW •. •ti•• •Ir Ha, peUo1 lrplc, tonier unit. l Bil. dlo· ee1U1p, llllDdrJ rm, sud, JOOl...... , Nftllrto.&. •Mo. • . ~ tfl lt e prior to T.O.W., If.ti s.r. 1. in1. paUo, cent. 1lr. pool Malta oalJ, boltaft, .a_... 111.6111t+•Malft. • • ~ * -~ W . ~ ~ .. o.: lill. mall m·.. Ko. IU/UJ.•4' o flH:t•a • wkd1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 11 lllilllii .. lliillii_..ACCOUN'nNOCLDX · r... 1., PAaT.n111 Oru1• ,... .. Coatt ••*It ba .. lmmtd ... b'Plf • fl£E IC~waUq CJert. Entry t.Ytl poidUoe lochade• Cit varied d\tlel. Will lrala Mlil6-rl&bt peuon. Call !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.!!!!!!~ kaw..D TM-llOl. 1100 ~ _ Adami Ave, C.11 . ...vat petite aulpolnt £.o.c. FAST FOOD S la a au Ce t wit b , ..... ....,.. ... C_C_OUMT'S ___ _ Y• .... ........ ~ • ......,. crooked tell. Vte. A oe-· ....... + -·-Batboe ,...ult. noo PAY AU am ~~!\!: L:t. 8 -~ b:.~ Rn~. m.tut. for Rucla Katbt. Need ceu...t Jotat.loD btavy LOST . Parrot, 1rn =~~b~.,: .=..=::Wo!'-----1 fOQt lnttlc •0oo w/ye)low be9d. Lal\llLI eei1 v lDvolces. ..... ~Dr Tia . R want. 4M4MO Mlllt bave numerical '1 700 Found: Parakfft, July aptitude• know l~key mb, So\tb Hllllt. Bcb. by touch. Qpp'ty for ad· w..y tea... 5021 Oiuer mu1t ldtot. vucement. Call for •••••••••-•••••••••••• ...:;1112=..::·363=1.:...· ____ --1 an't: ...-io. WIDOW ~ n:iont1 ~ Lott: Pit Bull, fem., 1yr1•----•-•I BIKE RIM' 2nd T.D. I '10,000 6 up. oJd, Bolaa/Sprio&dale. AceouaUaa AL BUSJ. g.z CREDIT! No pall)'. 8'7·'700 -.. LD• am ln LalllDA Beach. For Call Alt PJ)eenf7S.7S11 Irvine ad .,_cy needs moA lalo, call 49H31M. IUSleS & Pen... UIO ad. bUUna clett. 11 ..i * * * 1i1111111AN1DU&• L .. ..aa ••••••••••••••••••••••• hive bk.Pl,.~ • ... ..._ A:'JY for :J =· FIRST LADY be venaWe, accwate, UIASo'"-.. tH s -... Es rt U-...l..ls flulble fr detail· ..,._ wy 1,000 to _..ooo. Call: CO • ~ '-ded .. _ b Lacuna Beach Mr. Balley, 71WlC! p~-....._ m111 . 10.s.c)' Dy touch You are the winner of -'-· 6 1d. t)'Pina ltil.la re. TWO JREE P~ES Mort~911. TNlt * 9 Z,.1345 * q'd. WW train on NCR ($17 value) DtHi 5035 MC• VJSA Accepted 395. Excell. beneflt1. B~~.?:~EY w::;·i:~:;;·;:;·;;;: COVER GIRL f~~l~l Mra. Breclte, 4:•CUS bayfront home. Give * ourcM.L * AnabelmConvention well sec~ Lit or 2od ~ MCNISA ADMIM. ASSIST teat.er Aiac. '-17 T.D. A&t.17Wlal.. -------.i Professional needed for Loa1 Beach Arena WI PAY 1HI MOST * FOIY LADY * a locll term temporary Aua. i.n For your T.D.'s •Notes OUTCALLONLY 11111 n ment. T)'pe To claim puses, call at Denison Anoe. VISA MC 70wpm , shorthand or 842·5179, ext. 272 . -=87.:..::3-'-'7:.:31:..:1 _____ 1 * 9_ 11 •• * 1peedwritln1 OK, ln· Pauea must be ex· ,., -terface with t op ch1naed for reserved S.ttltr l!lg. Co. mana emmt. seats at box All types ol real estate SHE o ff Ice prio r t 0 investmeruslnce l.N9. performance. Spte....... E S C 0 R T S • * * * W TDt MODELING VICKI HESTON • ASSOCIATES specialists in New arowina womens 642·2171 545-06 I I HI-tiff exercise 6 health spa. Disrounted Tnat ~ COEDS-WOuld love to Great potential $250,000. 1vallable for loveaton. party with you. Call Sue Terms m4l33 Bkr. Xlnt yield. For detaUs or Kat by 1 n y t Im e Temporary Clerical .PenomeJ 5~ Stained c1au shop. By 96CH957 Broker. ~9:53-C»7~~1"------- owuer. Newport Bch. 9K buys 12K TD 32% E x P e r I e n c e d Lona established. yield, 7~ LTV. Acupre11ure Ma1111e I I004 sar,,.n .. S.215 ....... 87S.S790 Cal 1~5PM. 14.5K buys l&K M. TD Tberapem..lc ReluaUoo c...-..s.n.. 71% LTV. Techniques Sunny ADY811Slt5 SALIS swa....a.... • _ _. 27.9K buys 29.9K 203 6ll..Q77 Newport. ~ ,.._ TD 9K 63 lst. Preventative • Streu For rapidl)' arowina preat11e ma1ulne. Generous commission. Exp pref -but will tram I Call 497.+e64 10.3 ll·F So. Oriaae COast An:•· 18K buys 20K 21% TD Reduclna Muaaae by No exp nee. Will tralD. Gle ndora view. Chris Doris. "Intro" Special! Sl.5,000 c11h down. Plus Shaw 730«li0 548-2817. IOAM..SPM approit S'loOO for equip -=.::.:..::..-'=.=::...._ __ _ needed. CaU Mon-Fri. 28 months left on 2nd. -------•IAns. Serv. Pleas. ofc. M PM. 4C!H17--0lll T.D. Sl5,000 at 1.5%. Dis· a,..e Ca .. •r N.B. ~p. opr. for pit -------• counted to yield 20%. Escorts wort, rienda • l eve. 9150-lt57 Broker. 24 Hrs. 641~180 per wt. 63i.5511. PlfYATI 2nd. Trust Deed avaia· APT Ill AN AGER 14YISMAJ10MS ble, 3 yean . su.ooo at CeslVClltc::tn ' lS~. Dilcomted to yield AM DP/MC/YU :ai::rt. CC::. ~:.~: Est1blilhed ftrm with 14 203 on choice F.V. pro-Adults, no pets. Apt + yea rs tract record perty. 9150-lt57 Broker. * * * small salary + bonus. need• manaaemeat ._....._ Wkdn IG-4807 trainee for office in thil A.omu .... / l.931 Pomona Apt. c area. Salary $500/week, PtnH•/ Costa Mesa ASSB• •s mr e d1 lhc da 1 1 6 a u t 0 1 Lo.t & famd You are the winner or Loe. Mission Viejo ro. urn s e p us equa •••••••••• .. • .. •••••••• TWO FREE PASSES needs Assemblers w/2 a bare of d.°fiu . Cash Aao• c IS Htl 5100 (Sl7 value) yra. exp. Candidates Prequt.irell . $18,SOdO ••••••••••••••••••••••• RINGLINGBROS. must haver manual ar aa y s ecure . ... te ·t 1•r..t Duti~a are. PR. dis· sc11u I rrt' BARNUM• BAILEY ud n y, C . eyes...,. patching USJgnments & ""1.11 tl c•cus neat ln ·~ • control. Individual UINfJS AnaheimCoovention dependable. Wort la in Nttlft ,._ •-A &-l7 life support medical selected will be ~ Ermine -Washy -"""0 K> UC· e I e ctr on i cs . Gd . for license. For addi· "--wn _ u---n _ Lona Beach Arena be ..... ~·-I n.uu ...,...... Aua i.ZJ Dern•. vw., respona . tlonal Information. MOVIES T · U ble persons seeking Phone (714) 9.52·2135. We live in ........ of • ..,.,,_ o claim pauea. ca I 33 -.........., 642·5678 ext. 272. Passes permanent emp ymt. ext. • or wnte P:I., high rise apartment must be exchanged for oeed apply. Call: Mrs. Box 5203, Anaheim buildings. This building reserved seata at box Parelli, Sil-a» 928CM. ls so high, the elevators 0 ff i c e p r I o r t o I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!~L~sbo~wJM~O~VI~ES~.===-1 performance. AS5EMBLE.RS. We will Woven Wood Basket Lost & famd 5300 * * * t rain. Ap~ly 7AM . Bus .. m1t.erlal included . MacG--a .......... 1 11500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------·~•-,uy,....,. 548-2704 64S-5762 FOUND: Irish Setter, THE Placentia. Costa Mesa I 1 Assistance needed Facts IEAun SAi.OH Wht poodle m x. 8 k Gi·rH, k...N Of Irvine HaircutUna. '"e ele1ant C.M. --•--Shauy doc. Australian .,..KQ 71'·~ Leonard -......... Shepherd, Lab mix. •ESCOITS• -119,500. or tnde for? Brittany Spaniel. & SERVICE Station Atten- 644-1616 more. Alto cats & kit· H._/OMce/Hoht dant. Exp'd. Days 6 Would you like to keep tens. Irvine Animal * 972-9772 * eves. Full• p/lime. AP. your present job? Or Care Cen&.er. 754-3734 Male/Female Escort ply : Shell Station, 17th ~uld you like ID retire Found : Small male. MC VISA 1...;•=Irvin..;..;;:::.;:.ie,i...:.N.:..:;.B::.:·'---- m 1-5 yrs. 98M401. could be Lhasa Apeo vie Attract! ve female to Loll & Fo.d 5300 Atlanta & Mag HB YOUNG LADIES Avail•· work part or full lime 980-8037 ble for Casua I fun on cruise promotion. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .=::..=:..:.......-----1 Dawn Call John 714/67S.5020. ,~ .... -......... _ .. ___ ... " 1a.go:n WAMtol2PM. * $200 REW ARD * No questions asked. Lost GIANT JOSE CURVO, 35' BOTTLE Collect $200 cash finders from Tortilla Flats Restaurant. 1740 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, CA. See Mr. Amando Sanchez or Mr. Javier Sosa, 494-6511 or Mr. Earl Watson, 524-6965 home (21 l) 7 26-2100 office WCKt~~ ~~ ~~ Ji1s7 otW'X' . l1* .... " ~.~ Use ,,,,.,,, M service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad ... we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you calf In at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $7 .SO weetc. For more lntOrma- tlon aod to place your ad Clll '42·5678. EXECUllYE * SllTE * 24 How ESCORTS HJ.1122 MC/VIM Seekinl refined man u~ to 55. Miu Sweetly C/0 .General Del. Laguna Bch. "?:~' F._ ....................... Jobi w lllllit4. 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitting my home oo- ly. Moo/Fri Spm-7am. Sat/Sun all day. CM 64$.1802 ACCOUMYS PAYAIUC&.m Organbed Individual with buy A/P dept. Ute typina, Id benefit.a, Newport Beach area. 640-lll50. Automotive Secretary UCWl IOMIST CASHm Good workln1 at- 11101phett aood benefltl. Salary based on ex- perience. Call Lola. COSTAMISA AMC .. 54M02l AUTOMcmvE . WAUAMTY a.mlUI& M\llt wrle clearty, be detailed comdous. aood with numbers, some typin1 necessary, ex- cellent wortln1 rondl· lions. frinie · benefit.a • 40 bow'I per week. Con- tact Stan 1t ~to~ l~ H.lrt>oi 8M1 (00.1~ ~ S4().l)t()() -------- ••••••• Daily Pilat • • : Art IMrectlr : • We're a fut.paced dally aew1111per .-. • Ina an experienced art dlredor with e beav1 backaround lo .dulan of e • prhlt/collateral m1terl1l1. If you're • famlllar wttb prlnl produdbl, cltrect • • mail, mail advmlalAf lod ~ color • . .. u well u th• coacesami and elf. • "'~·tt toOmudcatliw • ltt'1 talk. But 10'I 1mllt alto • • llMlHlt foar otJlen Grluilt • _, cootdlnatt multJplt p~ to mtet • deedl!nM, ud commllllkatulfedlftb. • • 8omt knowledn of AV would be a pl111. • OoaaPtaNUoo lor thla cb•l...., Poli· e doll II COlllilteat witb .. ,...._.. Md ae-e • ~tt. Hd lneludtl • t1ee0ml e btnefll• paeka11. Repl7 lmlDed.leW,, e wlt.b ~ m um• tlloiftll...., Mt· e • *'· wWa Xeruof ................. to: • lllarkedD.I Servlete ..... • • ~C..t . ... . • 330 w. Street ~ • Colta lleu CA • • or call (TH ) ab.an • Equal OpportamitJ J;mploJer .• ·'-.. ALL JOBS " ALL JQM neE We M .. '!!l!CJt~ ~ ~avail. tamed • ~·,. l!I V )'OU daD 't Mt wUi J'OU'N ....... Call: C9'Y•• t72-tfll CLERICM. Rl!tla.111 Tr._ poliUool. CO: p....,.. fl'Oa) UUa depit. No wort exp. Mt. Beaut. OM• IQ Not. Bcb. Great beotfill. St.a.rt.lal 1alary •·Call: ... J ...... .f7Mtll lilt E. 4t.b St., tlJO, S.A. Clltt No ~v. up. nee. Try for thia pol. tf you like ~ wttll oumben. ThM la Iii a 11rte. veey lovely Ole. In Fuh. l1land. Salary lta.rtl at J100 • there ~ p&tntr of room f« IJ'O'llft.b. Call: -....... fn.ttll lilt !. 4tb St .. IUO, S.A. w•ca.. Beaut. 11. co. In Publoa lllaad Neb nice, cheerfw sienooallty. Lotl of....,! I No prev. exp. nee:. Excdl. beMI. Salary PQO. Call: U.Ja•••f7Mtll ms !. 4th St .. t130, s."' .............. Sec...Ury to aubt V.P. in cLrae ot traJo.Ln1 procram. lntereatln1. people-orl,nted pot. Shorthand • typin1 needed. Excell. beoefia. Pllllh offices. S.Jary Sl.200. Call: ... J ...... t7z.ttll 16181. 4th St.. 1130. S.A. CllttT..._ Variety ~· with IUl!lf Np, ti. co. No prev. exp. nee. Llte typlnl fine . Salary*°. CaU. -Jaa.1• f7Mtll 1611 E. 4th St .• ll30, S.A AcchP_... Two poeitloo.a open in beailP.Mldoo laland otc. Some typinl • 10.key exe., needed. Qi. olfers excell. benefits A aal.aiy to '750. CalJ: ... J ...... t7Z..t915 1616 E. 4th St .. #130, S.A. C~Alllatl ToUll 6, mos. ofc. ex.per. Type 25+ CRT Input b:ackcround helpruJ. Can· Cern 972-ftSS 1616 E. 4°'1 St., #130, S.A. . . ........... Two openinp witli"la.-Npt. ifCiL co. Need acct1. cluses 6 aome exp. In an accounUnc dept. Qi. bu outstandlna benefits. Salary to $1,000. Call : ... , ...... t7z.ttl5 1611 E. 4th St., tl30, S.A. Clerial Need auto imura.nce bkund. to auist product IJlll'. In lovel)' Fuhion Ialand ale. Career oppty. Very ad. benefits. Salary si.ooo. Call: U.Jaa. ... f7Mt55 1616 E. 4th St., 1130, S.A. Well estab'd. !~~Neb ·.d. typist who would like to relieve on Recepbon desk. Nice penooality needed. Salary~· Call: ... J ...... t7:Mtl5 1611 E. 4th St., 1130, S.A. IAMKIMCi LAtm'-dna..r To 1140I Exp. ID fuadlDI ' c lollDf FHA /VA • Conventional loans. Gd . aowled1e of re1ulatlonl, bvy. outlide CO!Uct. Call: C.-ry t7z.ttll 1616 E. 4th St., #130, S.A. Mlcnfllt °fr~• To SI I U&ht exper. 6 type 2:5+. Call: Cern97Mt55 1616 E. db St., tU>, S.A. hrclm~~ To SI, 61 Exper. in pu"ba1lna mjr. equlpmt .• furniture. ttrYlce contracts, etc. Call: C:.rry t7z.ttll 1616 E. 4Ch St., #130, S.A. 5T:r..~=, 3 tellers..t_new acCOWlts ba~ Willinl to travel. 1ype 40+. Call: C9'l'Y t7Mtll 1616 E. 4lh St., #130, S.A .• Lo.. Cllrtl Tr•111 ToSllO - • Nice aj)peariA1. Soble ofc. bqmd. a plus. Type 40. ean: c.,., t7Z..t911 1616 E. 4th St., #130, S.A. . ~='r.1,,, I monthl expe . OK. Type !O. Call: Cern t7z.ttll 1616 E. 4fb St., #13>, S.A. ....... t ••ru1•n · !x~'d. in Jou ~ or "-ijq. Type •+.Call: C-.yt7Mtll 1616 E. 4th St., #100, S.A. ..... :'• IC1 ......... SeYent Dtede4. laper. ~·11.-can: . C.nw t7Mtll 1818 E. «b St., ta>, S.A. hvl •• 0 a1 Te Sl.121 PnYkRll ~-=:&;7~: · 1818 ! St .• ~ S.A. ,. W-.4 7100 W..W 7IOO~W.-. 711C ......................................................................................... w..w 7t00 1Uyall1« ,_ lJ m01. IOW• Cl.me4L ••t•M OMCI '1rf. II• V .. en• PartLlme. IDr srowLo1 T111ll1 are• laterna· l1ptrltl'• lael1ful, bl1lau1. lhwf.°r Uoeal prolttlioul of· rcr.~:r-:.~ IAlfttnll Beac.ll. Call M.m , t'.d fltt recallim Oeneral IO.~•l by toucll. Op- Oofdeovlew or 11111 °' J!lf. OMce penoca rib Sood portllllJ for a4vw. View Scbool ll'9a, R 8. BUS PERSONS. !&· typ1J11 akllJ1. Prefer ment. Eactlltot com· :.11.. .. cblfdren (lO·l ·f ), cacectoal.y. Lunch Ir Telex exp.1 but •Ill -nv bemft,a. lllformal N-'12111 r abl.ft.l avall. App. llaln. Sult.Die for N· ..-1 ..... ,. ty daily 10 am w 2 pm. cent h10 IClaool .,_d. otnce. C.11. CaU •llll'll 1-..... The Ba Kalt.a " Con1e11J11 almotpbere 10.r tam at••· NHded Ii my Irvine Saloon~HIU J:rblll • beoelll Iodide ft'ee bome. u clia)I a mo. 4 • Ave, Tultin. racquet ball bealLb club •ooo PIOftl 5 Y! old bol'I· !'IH@ CASH 1 ER Fl l l me, mem benhlp. Houu: W Alft'9 BABYSrrrER needed ln p/Ume. brilb&. depeA· 1M with aome over-n.. Bru1 .8aDooa a full my Bunt.. Bdl. bome. a dab l e . 1ood wl tb time. Call Karey at MrvkerwtairaalOPIO• day1 per week. JPM fl.llll'U. WW train. Car '1J.GIU. ln1 1oon la La1uoa I.AM. 3claild.ren, Wub, lSOU Beach Cllrtcill Nl1uel ll lootlnl for d 1ood people. All posl-Blv , H.B. Mature, typln1. 1ood Uou are av.U.ble In· Babytltter tor Balboa CASH• CUii phone manner, math cludUi&: food 1erven. ltlaadJ tmmed. Mon· Experienced, bondable 1111111, fllln& frln1t buaera, boateue1, Fri. 1nr111t. Ref'1. J:l'IOft witb references btoeflu. Lln•tlco Lab cooks, ialad makers, 11s-1111M. _...... Will m.rroo. Call betwwetn b t d .. t 11 or Rueb lla.r•el &All-t :30AM for aPIJt. ar to era, coca a BABYSITTER part· procua dally ulea. -waltre11ea, dis· time, may make wort baakl ., • aniwerille Cocldomlftlum Ma.naaer bwuhers. Please apply 1Dto full·Ume, Woodland 0 • . Oran&• Co. Property ill ~non at -.... 8l'UI phooe1. »-35/hr. wor •uo; Sehl area, C.11. M$-I020 week. Mlllt be avalJable Maaa1emmt Qi. needs Ba loon 30100 Towne -------•I ror weebftd wort. Call coodomlnhBll muaier Center Or. L11una BaU.inl for app't SS.l570. to handle So. Cali.lorn.la Ni1uel. See Steve or MIW ACcn I• CASHIER. Part lime af. projects. Applicant Paw. d&-SlOZ Prevlou1 blnklnl ex. ternoons 6 wlmdl. App. should have property GROOMER • Kennel ly The Earl'• Plumbina. mana1e~ .exper .. & penoo, exp'd. $3.50 hr. per. I~.. 2 8 9 2 z C a m I n o 1ood adm101strat1ve •up 79-1911 Npt. Bcb. Caplatrano, Mlulon aklll1. Above avera1e . ' of CMtact: Viejo. 714/tJ5..(M()l. ;ua~i Contact Betty Gua rds Anne Peavey,&sl-1511 CASHB COOK /Housekeeper. NOW ml E.O.E. M/P/V/H Stock brokeraae firm Llve IJI~ mana1e Sr. Security Officer posl· haa lmmed. openin1. adult home for 6. S650 tioo.s are now available Accurate typina req'd., per mo. with 1 wt. pd in Mbalon Viejo • So. "-'"•-1 tele....a.-.. • broker11e vacatioo ·-21-CHIDllw ...--prel'd Hn a 30 · -"" La1uaa ror mature· IXICU'nYI ~:~~·Contact: neien COOi P/TIMI minded individuall. No SICllTAIY II cGlnley for a ppt l0AM·2PM. Pvt. School. prior experience is Local Newport Beach 8'4·22!12 Gardea Grove. 642-0411 necessary. Must have aaviop • lou la aeek· Counter .,.,..,.,.. In ~-t own phone • car. in1 a self-motivated --------• ...-~ ""... ve•·rans "-'-• D021• shop. Heavy public coo· "" "'._ ... Secretary w Ith ClNlflS tact. Variety or duties. Pinkerton's, 210l·B S. STRONG secretarial IWIH W Main, S.A. (to rear or skills, tbol'O\llhnesa & 111 train. Insurance Radio Shick store ). con&enial manner to UT .. TIM plan. call wkdya 557·9020. Equal Oppty work for President. II 898•21628• Employer. Salary commenaurate CIDIT !!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! with exper. Full ln-l)lrance benefits ' P1id MARKETS Aaalat Credlt Mer. 'iUAIDS career appud. Pleue For 2nd &c 3rd Shills Credit eolledions, ty~ Full & part Ume. All caU : Startin1S4uptoS4.50. in1 • 1eneral work. areas. Uniforms Cwn'd. Ma. Denny Parilla We promde ID mana1e-Publishing co. w/good Aaea 21 or over. retired 71~ ment & supervision rompany beaeflls. Ell· welcome. No exper. MIWPOIT IAU()A from wilhin. per pref, bW will train. nee. Apply: UllivenaJ SAVIM65 & LOAM WANT A CAREER? Salary to $950. Pb. Prot.ecUon Serviee. 1226 llOOlrvineAve .. NB m~=St 549~· :i.e~le~·~~~~ E.O.E. 631·96al DBJVaY 1-4, Mon·Fri.r Bankln1 Driver needed im · Laguna Beach mediately. Fulltime. HAii Snu5T ~9'l33 Good driving record. To SS% wllh clientele. 2431 W. Coast Hwy, Beautlrul. friendly MIW ACCOUNTS l .. ISltfTATIYI tmmed. openin1 for New Accts. Rep. witb 6 mOI exper., Savtnp 6 Loan pret'd. Trpina ~wpm, ad. ora com· municatioo skills & speWng req'd. Located in Newport Beach. Hunt.initoo Beach Newport Beach. 11lon. Fashion Island, C. Newport Beach . 9U6 DIEMT AL ucarr. (714)7IO-lleO. Perscmnel Dept. Office exp. req. Dental H a I r Sty I i s t , e x · S37-4840 exp. pref. Wed-Sat. Top perienced oeeded for CIYI. EHG .. B Lie. Civil Engineer, TB 1 _ Designer, Draft1m1n •-exp'd in land dev. & Current oppty. positi.oo bli -~ r , pu C .. UI ... or I mos. lo l yr. exp d. (714)M'7·56Sl Teller. Will consider .-. -.-. -_ sharp penon wXh l·l YI a..= .. ~c..-.n..a...:~ yrs. casblerlnJ back-CLASSIRED ground. Typ1 n1 25· lOvn'llflMl' ~pm & Id. Cicure ap-IDUNllWI titude req'd. t'll lt' Interested parties ~ please contact: The Classified Dept. of John Lal.II the Daily Pilot has an 71~ opening on one of our LA. ... AL telephone sales desks. SAW.S The person we 1eek LO.L M/F should eQJoy telephone Beautician .... ...,cw. 1s ....... H~ Preferably rib foUow- ia 1. E1cell workln1 ·coods. Pll. call: Tues- Sat. 642-oot2 ask for Joyce Beauty Desiree, European body wnp salon. Hu opm. ings for flt manaaer & MJ-p/tlme lichnlcians. will train! Loca~ Hair Hunters Salon on Fashion Island. Ca ll 78G-1909. sales, be able ID type 45 wpm and have a pleasant person1llty. Classified or telephone sales experience would be helpful. We offe.r ex· cel leat compan y benefits includine medica I. dental, life in. s urance. etc. Salary commeDIW'ate with ex· perience PLUS areal rommiuion program. U you are ambitious and want ID be paid for your efforts, please call for interview. - PenonneJ Dept. 642-4321, Eltt. zn 0 I A H G E C04ST DAl.YPILOT 330W. Bay St. Costa Mesa EOE/MF IOA1S ~I-coat repair. Ellp'd. MacGreaor Yachts. 1631 ..::..P.:.::la=ce=n=tia='""'C:.:;.M:,:..:, . ___ ~...-..~ 1ooracm• CL.alCAL FULL CHARGE Senior Dep 't clerk Maintain all journals 6 W I 1 I b a v e a d . 1eoeral ledcer. Prepare · 1 t idJuitlna entries & man s rative clerical financial statements. responsibilities includ· Supervise payables .ti ing l>kkPI • purchu· receivables. Firm In ina. For Karine lab. Re- C 01t1 Mesa-Non quirel minimum 2 Yfl smoker. Call Carole. relited exp " accurate 754-lotO tr,Pina skYls. Some ..:.::c::...===------1 science baciiround de- BOOKKEEPER. Const. alreable. Please call • computer exp. pttfd. Y a r a L e w i n Smith Bros. Co., CM. (110675·2159 E.O. E. $41-5541 M IF /H AppUtanta m111t bue eiperteoee In breakfut a.nd •II cookery, IJill and broiler cookln1 and 1eneral food preparat.lan. . , .. ,., . c::z::.,... llllllrua • •ur. ., .... ...... .,.,... ..... ,... ............. ul1ry for qualified Costa M'esa salon. eeraoo. 542-31158. Luae stat.ion or com· DINT AL HY~T milsion. Eiteellent p1 y, im· 631-9754 ;::.~te opening HAIDWAU • Dental Aa.slstant. RDA. Full·time retail sales X·ray license. Xlnt pe rson , gourm e t benefits. Call Moo·Frl housewares dept. 633-13112 ..:c67.o;:5-17:..:.:.;04:::.=,_ ____ _ DIHTAL/ASSIST HIGH EAlll•WiS R D A CH A 1 RS ID E. Distributors wanted (or Short hrs, xJnt beaefits product cmsumed dli· for experieoced, eager ly. D)'Ulmic marketing person. 5'S-9f15 plan. New in 1ru. No door to door. No inven· DRIVER, deliver pro· tory. Many already duce, your van or ours. earninc s20.ooo +mo. Must be over 25 . We shall prove. Sl&O "Retired oll". 8-Uam. &eta you in. BSl-9195. Mr. Camp: 645-0032. HOSTESS. Mia. 3 Yl'I ex· DllY• HBfD perience. Lunch " din· Huntington Beach area. ner shifts avail Apply (714)S31-25Q5 daily 10 am tiJ 2 pm. The Bam Restaurant & IAIM SIOOOWK P/T Saloon, 14982 RedhiU CaU 983-1206, ask for A .... ~ · J P I ve, ·-tin. oanna or au , 8·4 wkd11. HOUSICIWBS beatf'f9 *' .•• ;, ~=· i;'n:_ ~!~~ J ohn Wayne Te'!n1s perience. •3786 Club, needed Im· __ mtdlat.ely. Must have Housekeeper, live·in for ex~rlence, refs, xlnt mature rouple. Ref's typm1 1peed, Encliab, please. CUI aft.er Uam: spellin1 • crammar. 1..;83}=-=2382=·-----Call Moo-Fri. aft 9AM. HOUSEKEEPER dln.l.ng 64G-l830 f~ ~· rm. attendant ;, cook. Female live·m compa· Needed i.mmed. for am. n1oa for n yr old lady retirement re1idence oo 1 walker. Must have Laa. Bch. F/time, rotat'. own car. $550/mo. Eves in& wknds. 494--tGI 833-0379 -HOUSEKEEPER want· ..... otc. & ..... ed for wortinl cpt Must Throuah trial bala.nce. love plants • animals. Mature person. Typing, 11tu1t drive • speak l~key. Weetdayds. 8-5. English. Ubenl fringe Ms.1050, ~. benefit•, Ideal job for qualified penon. Call: Find what you want in 548-7187 btwn. 116 SPM. DailY Pilot Claasifieds. or '97-%783 -=-=.:..==------ • • • • ·~••a1y111i1 • • • : _field Sales SllPl'YISfl' : • Limited openings available In the Orange • • Cout area, for self.motivated Clfffl' • oriented individual who can ~ with • · Field Sales People .. Tram, molivate and • • get results. Station waaon or van • • necessary. Ex.ceptioftal earnings, plus job • related benef1u available for the right re people. II YOU can produce• results not • • 1 1Just ~alk about it, call : 9&0-0694 for • I Interview. Aak for Mr. Chance. ._. -• • ~c.... • . .... . e 330 W. ay Street .. e . , Equal Opportwi_ity Employer e ~ Costa Mesa, CA 9 •••••••••••••••• .••••••• ..., .... I. • • • • • • • • • • le1Dedlate opmlas for Yer11Uat '8· • diY~. lllllt ht capable ot bud}. e a. f11t.-,.., ftried IDCI ID*-t· • .... dutJ4il .. ....,.,.. ~ 6 penoutl adm.,.tor. Call: • MMm, lxl. m forap,t. • ~= -aow 1Stnet • Com ..... CA • I ·-'4¥11 OpportuDllJ ~ • , ................ ' ... Orlnpt Collt DAlLY PILOTIMondly. AugUll 3, 1911 I .. Ji C.1111• ClllltC.. . .. '-... H • I , ••• ,. I ........ ,......,, .... ....................... ....................... ....................... .........•............. ....................... ...................... . ....•................• ~····················· ·········•••·····••••·· •cocOMSt. flNJIBCAIPINTIY IJl.tOIWI CLIA.N.UPl/LAWN HAVl.JNG--itl• ... baa lrai&Mn~ .... MO\l'I•• ,.,....... WILBER ROOFlNG. Md..._ • .._. ... , "°'*J,MMlll Hot ..... ~Ji. ChN-llaia&w.~ ... tnxk. 1.owt rate. .OSuuA.UA.v,CJll Top q11a Special II yn up .. f'rti •l INC. • C•tom JCioam. Ut. M lar Uy P!!ld!pol •M tPrtt !!t. ~ Prvmpt. Call 19-1171 PI ant•. lot / e 1 t can in •· a yn wbor •troll 6 up, All ty,r::, new ccnalr II !Nt. fIMOM f!-..A .__.__ C• uta Sim Pullumoeo YARD Dykmilola. LA,,•1:.=ea•plig ll'ffn. L1""1.:. eap, Compd.lve ratM. ,.,,__,. "1 roo 1.~caF, booded, -..... --llA.lNT " .......__ Upe ,.,,, " -·-· au II I.I ..... l c. 322·1... l'ff •l. ••ALOMCC»IS11. ............ -....... ....................... ~·lamlaa .... -.• ·• . c ... .,,,...... tq! .... ove . ·-~ WI papetu ... _ 127-81 Bl&UdJll16RemodtU.• Shaapeo•.._. cllu. CONITl\1CTI~ =: ... ..:.:.,man oara...,lle!Yubl. TrH Trlmmlna re-,.......,,,..... ll. ...,, .... M muc-w. !f1·!PI CoJor ~J •Ill Add/remocW. ew:rw -l '9! &net ... SH@! 0 I IMt .,· ....................... BOOKS ~lo )'OW' S.w_,,11- HOM! IMPROYIJllENT crpt1 10 llllD. b1tacll. ,,.,. ..._ "1Wtft. I llowtq tJ0.4u.lll Tiii/SHRUB TR.DI m va , ma.... . 1n I.lit/lilt P&lntlni cab ,. bome. for appt. call ..................... .. A.ddtUoal/ltmlodtlln• HaU, Uv.-6l. nna tlS; C111tom Brick Block Hadq/llovtu.. oanae • yard dean-u~. ~=r, have f1D/1taln. Proi RaAbl Robt Catm Dreu Makins OUfru&eld. IGU23 av• rm suo: co11cb Tile. PaUo1,' Walks: TM;..,...llart 11 •• Preeell.H!.ml ea D. 'StNN rr.test 'a.veMI l ,.,.. ~~:::,~~~T!~R1~P~~:, tlO: cbr ti. Our. tlm. Drtv•, 0wett Didi, ,.._, WI RA.UL rr ALLI ..... "°' pain~y JUdiard ••••••••• .. ••••••••••• bom• ...,....,. IOOM Alln10MS pet odor. Crpt ,...ir. Carport. • Ft•c•• ........ ~ u•'-_.... ·-...................... Sin Ll ~ The Paper UaA-r Prol .. ·-·v I lw.IMI Jfl up. Do work Uc'd. I ' j . To.,._/~,clwa Demo...,, y._ ClllJID· MORTOA.OIMONEY ha:::t· N~ft. :..:: lnttall. ~qui~ Kltcbeu baths ta• m II. Rell. -0101 .__ · upa , lawn renov. up. lhlmp tnack, bob-AVA.D..ABLE -.. .... ..... rreeeat.Steve54'"4»1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rNDCh L-..utill... .'J ·IC'JI tal. By br or job. l:JOOIO llSOOOO ,... ,_.__ SPRlN~llSOO paa1k>Ga, ' --· We Cart Crpt C1eluMn ...................... • .. ._ d-... l@tlS5 I &o I OB'a PAINTING "We .... Jbould Ilana ...... _ R moval DIO n wlDdowt,~.oak Steamclean6" .............. ,. .. ti I ••r -.. w ................ In / ., __ Ub'• to~tbtr"SlO/roll '""' e · Int .• oall lt1lrway1. Tnck mount-;-1111 ~ rom mHQ IC· ......... "........... w........ UPpltoMJJE/yn lo repay t eat ·-t re I ~ • • La dt 645-7'170 Plau. Lie. 1111007. P'ree Work uar. 16171& t11rer-ddff0r. pllloBw1, Let mt llelp 1'0'I Mil your ••• .. •••••-••••••••••• R J'INA.NCIAL ref1. D~ve ~ eva . • ~/w .... alll. aMnJ> .,.n cape, . • t. n---.• ....,. ...... 0 a9rea •· etc. ev wrttins. Call LIJa II. Waat a REALLY s•-""'!S RENTALS OW' s_,.laU ,.._.. "--J • •• '"""' No Steam/No Sbampoo na r 151 ~""" r--• • • • • • • • •••••••• •••••••• £ Jobuoo •ssa or Terraaa at llS-mr (al· CLEAN HOUSIT Call 527•3477 ly. int /eat. Seulde ••••••••• .... • .. •••••• CERAM.IC/MaiAIC ~tvea. dr~~~a:.ut Dryw.. fordab .. ra&. OIDabamOlrl. rree•t Palntln1. Prompt. Neatpatcbeslltel'tUrel ALSOBRJCKWORK ••wa I SOM ...................... H..tx • MS-Sm Met .. ,., 5Jl.4108 "" .... Hl-l 43' Free eat. Crall Ml·S854 eullden Since JM Ad-RR~~~1~~~~~ Qua°P:~,:.,u.~ ....... ifw;;.w:r·.. ~~a.~ 8.liciwoaK·="s;:i, oi:C~, p~~~ ~~.:.G r,...-. dlllou, remodelin1. lay. All ""1n. mod.• .. PROMPr nsB r.sT. eleu Ip!!. S-.SS'J Joba. Newport, Colla Int/ext. O\&ll'. 983-3383 Nut work Paul ~2177 ...................... . ...... It ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUAR. USED REFR'a SA.LES• SERVICE Good CGDd. ~ T154 ~· "'-ell. Reu. ~ ALLTEX'n11l18• A.LllciilVDY El rUle&Uletetpln Meu, Jrvlne. Ref1. RAL H PAJNTING JAYITUICAll ~ 310N2. S.Zl'l0 ,.. ........ •:i•tk Drywall. Clean•cle-· REPAJINUD. ED PIDe---'-ble, _ .... I fr5-llT5 E t/lnp 'S .,. F' t •t Topplnc pNnlna. re· •••••••••••••••••••••• --,. dable r----..... Liac t, reu, prom.,., ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• moval it sprayina. 1C Drivewaya, park.Ins. lot ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ........ ,............. da · llw. Ul-21&5 CH m Sueplles fllm. Ml-49'10 BRICK: Walb, Walb, Free tit. WWW M c C O R M A C K I f I l Aco111ticcelJl.nia + DI t t 1 Planters. Patlo1, . PLUMB'G yra exp. Loea re ' repa ra, aea coat1.n1. All Typea Remodellna' c111tom budtexturiD& DIYWAU.•Am acoan • o ten or Qualltyllomecleaninl V t AGAPE FORCE REPAIR .._R,....ODEL Free est. Lk omsee ~ Asphalt. 631·41" Repain, t-M••lltv, 17 LJc. _.. 5»5549 Tbe C.r. G 1$6-WI dtil.eu. All typm ol,... with PtrlOILll Touch. e n e e r 1 ' e c PAINTING COMPANY • .,..,. 640-90 Lied. yn in area _,..ik~ -9tctriMI pain. Free eat. Call . Free eat. Beth 551-0IM Block wort, Concrete. 3 Oeneratioos ol Stoppases. Reas. rates. TREE DESIGNS ASPHALT REPAIRING Mr Paiomi.i 91Z-Ul4 Ct...t/C11:.. Auwer ad IUl, WANTED! Hwclean· Lie. Ref's l!l'7 PaiDllnJEacellence. Lie. •21MJ1B. 87~9194 · ScuJ · Se I . tin •Stri . . • ..................... , , ............ ,........ '41·4300, or 111·111'7. ln1.e1p'd , reliable, • Pla.nlen. -~ poo1 •-.......t...-•~ PrWUD1.. ptunnt 1 coa I Pini C 111 tom· bu I J t la 12 Pool Deca and PaUoe EL!CTRICIAN-pri~ Aft.er 5 For a done riabt ~. -r-• Top, Thin. Removala. ~omm/reaid. Freeest. wooden abelvea for Muoory Sport 6 Tea: rtsb1, free .umate on boeest .... 7125afttPM La 50-tlla . Quality Ptc. Lowest ....................... Clean-up.831-251.3 Lie. 13113112 "5-8111 atora1e, display • Dia Courta. Uc. 3787. larseoumall)oba. JACK OFALLTRADES •Houaecleanlna• m7 evea. raw In OC. Neat pro-Complete service re-, ._.••alh't aaraae. our price is Bob, l5l·la, 141•10'18 Lie. !3111111 S?MIW PlumblDS, e&ec, beatinl ProlntbW·Thorouah CUSTOM llMONRY mpt Serv. 848·5684, pairs, .tr solar install. Wlltdow 11:;0..-.•••.ag •••:;;:.:;•SWu•••a::•••• lowest.~ DRIVEWAY CLEANING RESJD./COIUl'L Odd bl.· XIDt L«aJ Ref'a Brick, Block, Stone. 631-1149 So Cal. Pool Service. ••••••••• .. ••••H•••••· ·-Mmn Cabineta II ~ter lope_. Improve vour bome! Hlshl1 qualfted. Ho job Het4wM4..... Clw1ie 131-«154 100'1 of local ref's . Stamns Hw Painter1 142-81&3 Original wu:w w::er SPICIAUST Room additioal • rmlah· Remove uCJy oil 11 rwt too •mall. Gl·ZM.S ....................... ReUable. Great work! ~l51Z . Ouallty Won · Real. lt•dtl & ..,... Avg 3 ~-~· . Herb's Gara1e .1995 work. Free•l 754-4420 stain. Forat..,97~: Electriclu-qllll. wort, HA~~==RS Steady Job. Re&. Call MEXPERTs!!n~ " Free eat. M&0230Doua ............ ~.......... "Let theSuoahine In" Harbor Bl Costa Mesa (bet 7'9 am, 5'r.1.0 pm) 'nlOllPSm'S reu. rata. Ho job too Anytim after 4 PM. •na re ~·rr,1c fadnl.I QUALITY PAINTING ~neral Services, no job Call Sunshme Windo• 5484236 CUSTOMc .. anENTRY CONCRETECONSTR. 1mall!S...9'Rdan.e,-..1S.A. G' Gift!"'-·'-"'-·'-nJ:' . . . State lie 3Mll50 11 Yl"I too small. Fret est. Cl . Ltd ... -... ........--.._.__ 1ve • ~v~•·uvu ...... 551-4555, 75-7074 · · Reas. Call Answer Ad eaoU1g, · _._ Patio covera, decks, Uc.383113 &UMIZ ....... •--, prof. bouaecleanln1 Mo-'-Orall,CeCo.•J.a 11453 8'2 -4300 or Window Cleaning&: Al room additions.1148-5231 •••••••••••0 .. •••••••• ... -...... 0 ---"'able • ..., _..,,. • aaA.1• 63 ,.;. -" ' s ReU bl f I ................ ___.__ •••••••••••••••••••••.. Ha··• clt·-·p _ ___._ ............. -· ~ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• '" ""' --1-._..,, .... 5. creen1. a e, a r -••••••••• .. •••••••••• Custom wort. Patio cov--_...,._ w -...... ".'"'"" refa Jean.131 5011 +DIAL..A-IAte• ers, eabineta, wall units .................... , ... YARD CLEANUPS tree removal oWnptnack. · . Movlna? The St1rvin1 RES./COllll. ~T. looftitg Call Chris or Jobn DESIGN~ natiooally· work, lrrlpUoo A re-Quick aerv. ~'Jal He........ CoUese Studmta Mov· PROMPT. UC D ....................... 546-~. 567-111118 ('714) 7»1342 ~~ld. • repair. known, will c111lombe pair Maintenance. DU»PJ~ ....................... ~u;:· bu arown 754-153' BALBOA ROOFlNG CO. SEAVIEW ~~.~~::?!! ........... Remodel, kit. cabinets, !~~e:~t-;~0;1!'~ '}.~e_0e.~belt Landacape, Small llovln&Jobl rfil>:Sii'~~~Y Uc. #TUMa Ml·842'7 5'F PAINI'ING The Oflly roofang co. for Window wuh642-W~ll All ......_ ... _ .,... · b .. h 1 ...... _ --'"" Call MIKE-.1311 Watch 111 ....... , Resid'./comm. No job the coast. 673-6743 . .......... ~·uf, write-patios. oo .. s e vea, .... yeras1 ....... , JAP .. .;ESEG _ _.__ . .. . ~ · too small. Free eat Selling an)'l.h.inl with 1 up. P'lnancla state· slid i ng windows , "', UuaKJ HauliDl60umpJobl. 'Security Pl111 wUl sit ABC MOVING, Eaper S.5Clll SELL idle items with a Dally PilotCJassifiedAd meota II tu.es. -..s49. frames, door haofinl. Maintenmce, Clean·Up Aak 9or Randy. your bo111e, plaota II prof, low rates. quick Daily Pilot Classified is 1 aimp&e matter .. •noon. 646-7221 Free atimat.e. 9GZl88 Ml..a7 pet.I. U1·7Sl'1 urdul aemce. 5.52-0UO SeU idle items 60-5818 Ad. Just call 642-5678. HelpW...W 7100 HetpW..W 7100 IWpW...W 7100 .... W..W 7100 HefpW...W 7100 HetpW..W 7100 .... Wllllld 7100 .... W..W 7100HltpWllllld 7100 HetpW.-1 7100 ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Housekeepers wanted Ll(l»UOI CUii( Medical front office. -------• REAL ~ATE ~OC. llCWl~T Rettaurant SeadifUfotel, F/time. Mat~. e1p'd. Part time. TypUia" in· HRSOMiea opening. Xlnt train.IDS, Narmce lfaWiala lac.. Good opportunity for SAU5 -------•·-------Start earning now for Christmas. Sell toya II. SIClll'AIY ___ 41N-;;:;._,_97;:..;..;:;.17'----• or will train. Apply: sw-anee. IM7-ll50. Emplorment A1ency c~atlve ftn. avail. Call leadlDI m11111facturer, Bartender 11 Ho1teas. COMMllCW. l.I. Housekeeper/Child Care 10AM·2PM, 895 w. l9lh •-M=e=u=en=ae""'r=, '"",=monun"---.-,.-Conaultant for Sarra DiYenified Real Eltate bu u lmmedlate open-~·::r ~'A,'; J::!: Tired of aelllnl bousea 7 Support ac count· inalpe~ func:tlOf\5. Good variety & growth opportunity. Min S5 wpm, 10 key by ioueh . Newport Ceater loca· lion. Good salary &: benefits. Call Arlene, 640-5111. gifts. Wltly pay, no col· lecung or del. Free $300 It It. 84CMl912 ~.good pay. Need im-~~·~ c:. :..:.~ non· ~ru :!: s~ ~o~A:: =~c~rri~~.~ ::~~ins for app't. ~e fo:u:c='°:!'; 'MU7U. !:!'u!.=t~ ::m ~ Ml-9323 .. d I h hid ed in the heart O/C'a ctidate wUl have had ex-llST"'' .... ....,. .--...---...---...---• sm..r a u t se . 8:30AM. Must have fncl. center at 18952 IJC.r./TYPIST perieoce on a Pulse _..., 1killalomanaee,bro1ter Stock Ir Del~ E&cellent company benefits. Room for rapid advancement. Ap- ply in person: 495 E. 17th St., C.M. HOUSDCEEPER Cleanin&/Lndry 67~9872 Calif. license II excell 111 c Arthur, Irvine, Cotta Mesa omce. Lilbt Board, typjaf akilla ol Immediate openinp for commercial real estate. L i ve·in . Enalisb· LVNJ.U:30PM driving record. Vehicle 92715. Call -.2147 or typiDr, belie bookkeep-5Swpm lltiUoY meeUni aernas peJ'IOOl 11 cook. Income from mgmt speaking for couple with Sml priv conv hosp. Im· provided. Apply Pen-Send reaume. In 1 , aome erranda. the public. Excellent t.neflta. App-while you lea.m. Super 1 c hild in Newport maculate, ad staffing nysaver 18llO Placentia !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Dale, •ICMO (l-4pm, Narmco olfen a com-ly In penon: Jolly benefit.a ; life insurance; Beac h. 5 day work 20362 Santa Ana Ave. 1~A..;..;ve""'""c_M:..:.·-----Moa Than ) Roser, 2300 Harbor health lmurance & den-wttlt. Ill.St bave re'-. Santa Ana Heiabts. M~._.....,..._---.. Pharmacy Clerk, exp . ..=.c=.:.."-===·"'-----1 petttive IW1.inf salary Blvd,C.11. tal plan. CooUct Ken. s~-.a.•y Swldsba..,,~. Q "9"'"'~'""" pref N.,. Bcb area RECEPTIONIST-II comprebenal ve ~·-7~7. 549-30&1 •-C "-' r . I I ....___,.._ ....... Rettauranl 8754700. MBMC"'' ~-~-----• Fabric cha111, .M. • lllon·Frl 9·5. Peter w 1enera secretary ...... m .. pe..._e. Kit b d d - Niles. F/t ime Will train. 642-3013 . HOUSEKEEPER Maintenance: For Apt Anaheim. XJnt oppt'y. M0-'511 lkilla, for am N.B. law For lmmedlate con-c en menchnee e ·1 ILUtG OfflCI T~ .a.CHll:8 Prof. adults w/4 small Complex in Costa Mesa. Gerl MMIMO. ~'-=PH-=---OTO--,-... --..:;ft.rm=:.:..· =Lil=' al!:..m.l!::!·='"'~--I 11deratloo pleue call: NewPort Bea Ancii!nl Sales Over 30 preferred. non ~ ~ do11 nee4 housekeep-SS hr. 548-11558. Eaper. 0 _ •/ISCOllTS ..-Gloria Calm, 548-1144, MariDer, 6*Q21Dl JOl:N A SUOC~FUL. smoker Type 60 WPM Cert . .tr uper Prd ex- ins. lndry, shopping, nee. M -Printins 6 mite. lab ltcr... ' I ext. J'2 Reataurant NATIONWIDE aeeurately Perm. full per. in toddler care. 2i,., etc . 12/hra. week. MANACHI Top DoUan95H313 dutlu. Wiii train. ~O Food Prep II llDdwicb SALES TEAM time. Call Answer ad t yr olds. 5 days 9-1. N.B Salary commensurate Hallmark Gifts " Modeh needed. All Fltime permanent. Leadioa micro com· M•a,,.._llC. maker. If you are Be ooe ol over 600 in· S23,642..al0,2'hn. Suaan,640-8820, w/rers. Mmt have own Cosmetics. Exp pre· Types. Men. Womeo • Mature person pre· c~~~~ h:~ ASubaidiaryol friendly, cicmcleotious, dependent 118 11eo\I Teacher, pre-ichool. im· car. Mrs. Allen : ferred MG-7373 Ch.ildreD.Nouperieftce ferred. St.art SUS/hr. -CelamaeCGrp II dependable we.want aellina produtta of The SICIETAIY med ia te full time 144-92'4. · necessary ~17G. Non·11Doker. Apply an exper receptioo.llt. --w " ........... _~. you. Nowmt-· foe full Thoe. 0 . Murphy Co., a Small,actiYesales dept. employment. Benerr· -=..::..:_'-="""------1 MANAGEMENT. Am·· ~Jpm at Ob1ite P~ Froat olftce appearance -· .,..,_,.'1'· Ume ~'i.5. Moa· pioneer lo 1pecialty Id· Informal office. Ex· Mio. 12 ECE uni't';, Fulr.~:1!~~ales b1itiousHc~ubple. P1art Mohl...-Clett srapble, 3303 Harbor a mual. Confident eo.taM .. ,Cat:112'7 Fri. !aper. pref. Apply verU1in1 aloce 1881. perlenee necessary. Costa Mesa area f t me. 11 pay ng Exper.pref. 142-3030 Blvd., Unit £..5o1Com-penonality for beavy !OE.. ... M/F ln peraoo. Stonemill 'l'bro&alhour1aletforce. Mature. Type 60· 548-~&:~1919 penoo or aourmet second locome. Call m-P-.... ,C... ra:nea. ~bt tvp•-1. Reep for HB Op· Ide -rined 70 Sh h d dept. la hardware store. • .... _ ...... .... .-1 111 Terrace, 2115 Redhill. we prov unp t wpm ort an 675-41704 --MMMn' CHIP PracUcal Nune IAt Co-d bueftta, t.ometrlll Part-time, •f· ea.ta Ilea •calendars, 1peci1lty 90-lOOwpm. Excellent TEACHa ....=...:..:~.::..:....-----• MARKETING .,._ ri __. -10 ,._ 1 Id•.... ..a.. Ii bollday1, vacation ternooaa. ....:=;=1==-15==,~==-----items and executive com~oy beoelsts. Call Third grade, ereden HSKPR. (n....--tlc) "'-~ .,.,.pe en ... ~ ......,., .....,... 1or e .... v cou_, ve --•-_,,. _ .,.,....... .,.... t' t t Restaurant •-c ... dri u ht .... ry. --~lfl1 to thousaodt of Mil le after 9am at tiala. full time employ· ... Ref ......,.d ... ust spea soen 1 · w . oo .. , ve, I B _ __. ....... Part PO BOX •Eni"-"h-..... be• able lo MAlulBBIT Partner's Bistro, baewk,rel.f!}llM Recpl for busy travel uapel"IOClf -1 · uaineuea who 1d· -"~.=.:5800=.:...· -----ment, 106l9 ... .. • La .... _ ..... -···t w~ ··-.... D-•-bu1'c time or VO unteer ue .. :--by ""·-'-g .... ,. toC •::.:;•M::.:... C~A:.!...::DZ=7 __ _ 9AM •·.:ionu Contact Rick or Carl. bu1ine11. Call Lynn·. utll aecretarial 1klll1. UJCU ~· •wa OC A........ Pan Pllo-SCHOOI. ., .-• Garden Gro¥e CA D43 Salary ~· Call a e r v Ice at pub 11 c your bla opportunity for 1•....,. • uu. · drive. Pia. call 645-7358, TRAiii., ~ IUD• uo:aaL _,.... P/tlme belp for &ro'lrinl ..... hJ· ..__...... opera led luncheon : ... ~~c·~•~. ~~Is SECmAIY/TYPfST - lnaurance v 200 0 MUISln l.aMal. lNpm. __ (,_'J""H"").;:;;55_,• ..... mo=--i Sue, "4-tmO 11rdena kl <Arona de! aood commiuioos and lime, r=a ordafur-F H~~ n-h ......... nww,._T s-...... T n/TIMI-"'~ Mar. Tbun. "Fridaya coolin"--' income from noon. r wor pro-or uo _ _.. uoe1e "~' ·~ r-,__.._ llCri ·y Reep wltb varied c ti '""" ri d .s h 1 E SUI.AMC G b alatant A f .-.. 12Noon to 2PM. a repeat orders. If you eeuor expe ence e-c oo . &per pre· Asen~ needs pe~al 0 START. ~'ect.0t ~c ·.,~~mt! ~!l!!!~~N.~. 3s!'ao~ ~~~~~· l!lr~!ru~1 '~! :=r.::r»:ai;=al~~ -..::;:O,._D ...... ~o..;:r.;:;.i..::;:·za::;;;'=-:30_A_11_ .. _P_ .. _, :a:!1tfode1 ~. :a~ s~~t !:-s~~;a~: rerredT, o:zver=l.I. 96o..a788 lines u.nderwrier. 2 yn r-· _._ '--y a·""-,....ir -•-r type witb profeuloa -c· K -......., * 511 c :• * minimum exp required Corona del Mar. Must -==:...==------i-;-c.ir Dlverill!';d attltude. Medical Real RETAJLSALES tact : J ohn E. Mor· -=1c.;.;e."""""'a"'y'-'1"=-:'""":.=..;'"''.:...· ---~==~ In all phases ol personal SO m 11 .... :C have eaper. working 1 ............. •~ --poa. ,__, ___ _._1 Eatate Firm Call Vicky Gourmet houaewarea r i s s e y . Ph o ne ·--------A .:--..1 o1-A.•- Unea account aervicin•. aa-M ,.,.. with plan&a inch.Sins a --pbo·-_. 1 ~::S.;'lr Ml·nDl aalea pen.on, fulJ·Ume 102-125·753S, ZSSl So. fuJrellyotmu~ ..... ...,.Um ... , g Salary commensurate ;:; :i.... ·Pi;: .. , .. ,.11111.... ~en~iu!:~•e,. 0;ro•;1i~!: hrJ;_ ordTra, eolfe;tlo& ""'R"'"'E""'NT=A ..... L-A-G-ENT--·-B-ua-y ~ g::~n,:~~. %e~~ p~:~~v~g M:.y'i e wit.II Hp. 752-9055 polltloL Me.t .,. lion c 11 AJex 111 11 ..!.':! 1 produclnr mooeya, aecurinl parta property m1mt ofC) -------• 1511' Dept. has opening per Why not try working --------i -I ca' ,. Fri · 1 !..~ .. .-ni( :· 1 --& car delivery. M111t be muat haYe re.al eatate expansion. Npt. Bch. part time for full Ume LAMDSCAPIMCi ,. .... w ' =~...-0 y. •sent. JOU abould look auresalve, aecwate II lie. La&una Bcb 4M-aM llTM. flnand al services firm. money. Wort 20 to 24 FIELD SUPERVISOR q•lrtd. 147-0011, -=87:.:.:3"o..:ml='------into our NEW com· able to follow pro· Rental Office Penoa for Put time clerb. SALESPERSON Gd typing. shrthd.. hr1 per wk in plush nev. We are seeldns 1 relia· td. l. MUISISAIDIS ~=C°=~tJ ceduru. Mon.Fri, 100 unit aptl, Costa STOPM".O HICIOIYFAIMS exp. req'd. Non-amltr. office in the Santa ble landscape main· Mature Lady with aide EXPERIENCED nee 11 one ol the oldest l-5:JO. Xlot 11lary II Mesa. Show" rent apt.a, ~ Opportunity to sell Call: 640-0123 btwn. 9 & Ana/Costa Mesa area. lenance supervisor with exp who would like J.11, 11·7. C.OOv. hoept. establllbed ta Newport workln• coad. Apply 11 1 b t bk k p 1 , 5 4551 c:..t Hwy.. sourmet foodt • sllta 2. ' for well established Co at leut 3 years ex-permanem scbedule of Beach uu. Free mjr. Beach rill 1 very pre-1·12 :30 at Aamco dayi/week. S800 Mo. Me___.IMdi Flexible hours. Will Earning potential of perlcnce In Irrigation weekends Sat 9PM· medical, dental II life. •tlslom locaUon. Call Trua., 711ZSlater, H.B. Live off premises. ..r--. train. West.cli.ff. 64Z-W12 SICUllTY $220 per wk. base + f:::i:~:.~ c;=~ ~t~'r:: ~:ri::~:E ..;::~=...:.'°'4:.=:=--~iU-.,ve-wuG_•tt1t_uc1e_. !!:!!!n!!'!!t!!!.,!!o~!!7JDO!!a!!n.!!a!!p!!po!!ln~t· u1~:WiiOPIST =:...::.. a. M. SALIS aPS ~r~':f't:C,rc=.n~r E~ ~~tor:;~· can II crew supervision. "beekhalr for alert, nv ....... , IJP'D OfC w.t. Tbe Saia Oemm&e Inn ii 2 lo 1 daY1 '7..S:IO PM or LUoc1~t 1cod•l!letic Co. perienced. P /time. TaJllMOHI ~R~~=· elderly lady but not an R.N. or LVN. director of IW llTATI For 1rowin1 &Heral lookJn& for I dynamic s to 4 daYI 3 to 11:30 ~ Im te !nc oppty Flea. hn. Cowit.ry club, souerroas TRAINEE lnvalid.66953 :Jf5~;~fCo!i~ SALB practice ln Newport experienced individual PM . Sm{ priv conv s.•-~,11o.. La1una Niguel. Pb. Immed. openln11 to To team commercial Medici I Front Office va~nt Q;14&,TJe. Thia It our Jlth year Beacb. ~.!..environ· for lbelr realdent/nite hosp. Immaculate. Gd MR, •5117 for loterview. · work pleaaam evtniD1 maintenance, nursery Urolonl~_l~.L~eneral N .. -i... aellln1 fine Southern ment. 4~wya.m.rras. mana1er padjon. Call Stallins. IOllZ Santa ¥IDlO SIC'Y/llC.-r. hn, 3·9, Moo·Frt. No work pest control, ir· ofcskilla,peglll)llrd,exp -.:::-J-..~ Calllornla bomu. llCWIWWW Pete 111tc6ell T\Jes.Suis Ana Ave. Santa Ana Ea.citlnJ products wilb Want a cha1lente with sellln1. Hourly wase. ri11tlon repair. Some ..:reg.=:s.:·....:13:1:..:-530=1,_____ -·" Perbape '°" woald eo-For cir'• oftlce. Mwt be tor al!l!l: aN10I Hei bta ~ lllllllt oppty in NB. room to grow? We'tt an Call after tpn: 811-0l.Sl. Spanl1b helpful. Con-Medlcal S.11 • 11·'7 relel. v. joy Jotnial a ftnn active enth1111attlc, motivated RESPONSIBLE Person Sales MO-Sim O.C. advertililll aeency Teleph. Part Time tact: Commercial Huntinstoo Beach Al· hoe~ptUo. wlhn. 0 _aacceblla.rerea·. In l111ury re1ldeotlal II type well. E1p. to clea11n llbamal~n ADVIRT'ISM Saleswomen/men looklD1foraaelf·ltarter MOW Landscape Services, lergiat needt 1*:k otnce """ areu aucb u Bil Ca· helpful, but not nee. bome. Ult ve .,... s. witb Sood skills. Ex-TOOAY 957.alll beloft lllm. Technician. P/time, mjr. medical. dest-nyon, SpY1l111 Hill. ~-8:10am·12:30pm Mon· Adv. coullltut flrm THI,...,.. ceUent ~wth opp'ty. IMMaATaY .... __ •Fri. c.1.-com· tat • life. Top salary. 1"ine Terrace, Linda 8.,..PTIONJSTff Fri. St.art'5/hr 4U"'80 needt aalel rep for So. Call Sheila or Paul at N---' ·15 Pb. n.....•·n ~--__., Flex ... _ IG-IOM ~.... YJMlt, . Oran1e Co. Comm. MQlt ~ vr.••W UN&UAIOS mensurate with exp. · ..... · bit, etc. with dlctapbone II Rettauram-Need out1<>-Potential unlimited. 9'73-47Sl. Call: Jeff-G-1133 ARC Cena onlY. 988-0311 ....:C::•ll=-=5JO..=-=' ---~ ~~...:.~ :.-~ ~ ..t: awitdaboerd np. prtf'd. lnl pe=' ::Jaood CreaUve Solutiom, N.B. II b1rinH:;es1M>oal SIC'Y ~. Tiii lJQUOR CLERK. aper, MEDICAL ASSIST ~ ~ Jl'W°:t ; do JOU Mft immediate Front ofc. Tuea·Sat. prep,• J, as:J.1111 retail aa . Call Challenlinl opportunity MAM 40 hr wk. MUil be over needed for bu~ y s!f • .... ~· ,,V::. • unlimlled aceeu to PYt. co1U1try cl1&b. meat alldnl, catb re-SA.LES /ADVERTISING Penoenel a rreat willl b•~ Laiuna Hilla ~Ume. op. preferred . .,. __ ... c•-,_ 0 1-"'-MM · 1t1ter. 1·4 lloa.·Frl. 0 _._ OC ......... opportuDltv with our Law of ..... Top pay, Ill train the rl&bt 21. Also ;:xv,;& rcra, N e w po r t p • 411 th'"l!I anday tile pr•ktenl of )'OW' U /br Also need esp· n>w111J • • TuuaCI· 1 be"""ft'·. ~-pel'IOD. Am Newport part-lime or full ti.me. th1lmolo11tt'1 office. 12·4. Contact llr. compel)',• II be bid-TtlliDI the IDllll peot)le Ant 111r 'J .J at t.lon looldDt for eap'd irowln&compe.ny. .... .. -n...eenter,~ 541.2112. 2944 W. Cat Exp. preftrftd. Ml-2411 Welner. Jewel• by dee aw11 a an lvorr poaalble 11 lmpoltaat to '450/llr ..-' proa-top commlulon SIC'Y/TTPIST ..:.H::.;w~y""',N=.=B.;;.,_ ____ 1-'w=k=d•==-)'!r.:;...;:;;only=t.-'. ____ 1 Joee@,._ t.oftrNID0¥9dfl'omU. tbe 111ccea1 of Uf · · pak11...--.-21).7Jl.5100 We are lootiDI for 1 TYTlallCIAM r~------"-------~ PA.RltINQ ATTEN· ~.Ow' pr..w.rt ii 1araie Ille. llake aare e.talliut Salel \ (CallMon-Fri,t.S) sharpladywbocantype Experienced. Good .,_y, DANT·hll·ti me, available. Do 10U need youu h lilted In Food waltreaHI A •IDA&.SHOI' SIC_"'_ 1 mln. ol 50wpm. Job bendit~WApplyStin KIDS - SUMMER JOI§; Earn $30-seQ_ per week. Trips I PrizA Cll Mr. Clir1elft ..... M Laiuna Beacb ('fl4) additional traiaial to Clanlfled, phone cocttall ...,_, aak * * -·-• ma.IDiy NCI'•· tJJUa let· peno.: .,,,. . 19th .. --bllp JOG i:1crw rour MWm· forQec!Ua.IOM . \put' hall time will Part time lOam·IPm tenloclleaboeawordi-C..,.=M::..·----- Part Time PACllCSIWWW II looklal 9or ....Uc people to worll part time Hitt at Mr El Toro loeaUoo. SaJarr .WU at •11 .. llr. UfOll""Dpleticeoltwo wk. tralalea period, ... ,, wlll be k 75 per 'lar., ......... .. tentrn will bt Wd at: ,.... .... Mat~ld.. ll'nn Tlm.,~lWI nniD•T llilf Piil I Mon·Frl. Muat b .. e Pl'OC••IDI 1111dl. w1u1·------· l1perlaeecl or inn· tralD. Pref. ap. 111 ,.. 1ood typl•I • S/H •-•-1W pertltlH!tdJWIDQwell ·····~ . t.allclotbiafaalel.C.11. 1klll1. Call Jlllulon W•lll· 80 ~'*· J'\111 XOl'llATOI ~::: !:-,. ::u:,1o~ .• . • ... s ES•ian =c;~· ::a1;,. ~~.om-. Be~ lriD. ~~~=-~~ AL Hf.mo . S!llVICI STA.nON At-l'd. oPllQltwb • COOl· =•tnn.,:.r:':! 1• . ... 1+1r&!.. l..W · •. Mow •CCllldDI apples-teallaol. Nt.lme. ~ .. , . i...ema. Call; ftDelt av.U.blt. n •'!'.!.11911 N ~& ,_.....,. daea for hll ~. pl~ b : Cb1vroo, lJSl ·M.1111!!!!!!!' -!!!!i-ii!!!l!!!!I!!!! We .,.. Id 8 fnldlM. U '°" Mft et..-oee tt•~-• a1ta 1\14 ~ •SICllJAIY• C.t. Hwx. LM 1e1L F= wad•...,...,._ e =:r!~?!.~~3 = e •c•mkto••'-~• _.!!!. Euelleat oppty. ror Senlet suu. Atteo·!--r:::~--r.~-.--~.... -... , .... ,, ... '° wort in d••t. ··~r••need , TIY•n . ::---'" =·-·' a.... a • =pecl11, tome teclaaleal ........ • ...... , 'vrrdlk' : .-I ... l t ltlm I rN -. IVI IDd ..... '8Dd Ult "'6cl ol r.-..,.!'...:.:: ~ .. •ba fut·paced Newport n tu I, u e part· few la1•bl1· luted e ta'1 I.I "'-'-aid art ,........_ for e ..---" · Btacll comm'l. real tlmt. A...,: llht'eTt1· lealtW ..._, fillf locaJ ....... • Illa" ..... ....,.,;-;;;,..uctm wa.-a We're'. •rnatl .... 1 ... talat• ofc. llletllnt aeo. ~a.di Blfd. tn1•orar1 ... ilD· 1lre to a. more Ht• :::;; li1"t aod 'ptdlcUoi, ft i:ltiH aubdl. Call \JPl•f • diet•"'"• B.I . --· meatt. ee11fel. for n 11· e ~,.._, ...., b -wllo, •• ~; mt>tttM 1k11 1 ,., • l red . 55JM teniew =lat•11t e 111111Dld"jll..._Of,.1ta1\otfrom e • Claa~f.l*i-lor SHl1t•.r. ,..,..._ __ tra .. ~. 1"-.ma-=::.. ~#~~~-,::. :::::~Y~E~ rtpll.d.,~ ftAlm U 1 ,..,.... I--' rw, m '-"a......,,=. talta penoa, "'" ;!!;ii!!;!!!iii!ie hctU. co. '91thta. ~._.. .... , ·~=c:.. =~=,.."'!'~U.IAITJ ......... 11.UdtVW.,. :·=.-:.:-:.:.-: 1111.-hl C 6J awa.._lllDa e Hlllllmtl~ ·.., ......... rt e nwm.• .' l': •• ~.iiCc•=M' ;1;1:-•• :' Ol.Dallnlrk,~ Ml•ea,,.•~ , .. c..tlia .tlld • ~:-' . • lllal Mt/&S/Ma~• .. ..._ =.:_-,:-;~ I uow.&:"!tnlt • ,.q,,.l~ .... ~ ............. ................ • eo.ta• .. CA I :-aMa ............... lc.!o.,ll.la .... ,... ... ,..... E~" ... : ... ,A~-~,,..:....,.. ........... .,. 111!0 ••O.. ............ ·Cd ..,........ ll!"I vn-·~ . .. .......i!P. ......... 3 0 '1£ ~----------··•tl·Oli.J1t. Id, .~....... ... , """'iJ::.l,._: •llrt= . :lf!L ......... , Cl111tn ..... L .............. _ l;,.,.ld.'*" I··- ... --~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--\....;;...~~--~~----~~~~~ ....... ---~--------...... -=--------~ ). I ., Cll Of!'!' C4Mt DAILY PtLOT/Mond1y, Augu1t3. 1911 , ··-. . . . . . . •:-. ----·--...,._ ... ----·---------• • r • ----- se11 it 'all cind put in your pocket! DAY WEEK 8Days ~pecial flat rate for non -commercial users offering merchan- dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for '8 days or one. Mini~um three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days. 3 Lines For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678 8 Dollars TM ntlW Dally Piiot 8·Day W.ek Its a Classified PLUS Hetpw..-. 7100 Afpl11cee 1010"" lo Y• I045 fwallu• IOS Mkcel•a• IOIO Office Fw•a• a to.b.Poww 9040 Motorcvdtt/ f,..W 9560 Alllo1W..-9590 ~··•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• • • • • • •••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••• •• I ~1 I; I IOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Scooter. t 150 ••• •••• •••••••••••••••• •• • •••••••••••••••••••• WAJTERIWAITR~ES Brand new 30'' sell clean German Shepherd, 1 yr Almost new $x2'-' aeat * * * ....................... Cabin Cru.iler, &ood llvt! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 CHEVIOLIT WE IUY Ex pe rluced on I y elect rante w/matcbin& old Fem., t.o eoocS home. wood & Unled glass, cof-l.J. HentcJi Beaut. mahopnl u~. 1 boa rd. Localed In '75 Honda CB3Xl, clean, ¥•TOH rtCKUPI CLEAN CAIS Lwich fl dinner shiftl fan hood l200. S4&-QS3 Oya 975-0727 . eves fee table, Si.SO. Brass 23S3C Carb.oo Pl. ~ak:1 d:1t coo · ~· France. 26' diesel. runs good, $350 or best Auto. trans .. pwr. steer ........ 0 llUCIS avall.ApplydailylOam Refrlg,froet!ree,clean, 759-9516 Lamp fluted s hade, COltaMfU s :Y • xlnt f° · fl.5,000.m.21190 offer.67U6&5 ing, etc. Fine work Al"'I ~I 2 pm. Tbe Ba rn works good S200 Cut.e ateY ai white kll· SlOO. Gius end table. Youaretllewtnnerof ~ir.C~bat.bk 416 P ....... ...ttd 19 YAMAHA Vamahop. truck! (0017111. 1 :;~~ur:!~h~t~'lO::· S48-8Sl3or~ le n ':.G r eat 1100.MHAl TWO FREEPASSES ~c . cbalr. tn . cst!!i ttnr-Y•cl.Mt .pu. Xlnl cond. S300; OMLYS4995 Tustin · Washer, clean, works personaUh es. 8 weeks Hard rock maple duung (S17 value) desk, older type, SlOO. Spcrtflaber 1154 mo Runs good. Must see. HOW AID CllHroltt · good $85. 548·8513 or 848-5336 set w I custom pads, RINGLING BR~. Secy'I cbalr near new 24• Suray SD Sl30 mo CaU Kurt ~78 Dove/Quail St.s. W A I I H 0 U S E 548-4485 $300. Drn.wr, bean bag, BARNUM le BAILEY tes. Kit.cben'type dinini zs• Skip Jack 11ll mo '74 Honda Motorcycle NEWPORT BEACH rlaSOM Steal! Galfen & SattJer FwMI&• 1050 cherrywood rotfee ta· CaCUS rm t.bl, 4 chi's, almost Slip rents Included 1.9K miles Perfect cond 133-0555 Xlnt benefits. Prefer elec wall oven. WI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble, end tables & other, Anaheim Convention new, 1125. 559-S480 or Plus equity dn paym't SlOOO. 549-3758. '81 Dat.'lun Longbed with b1clt1round in fine rotls.$95. Xlnt cond Oaniabmodemtealt:wood all Items under $800, CenterAua.fJ..17 833-8"0. 01131MQOevSS1·932'1 i1360Yamaha,8000m1, camper & sleeper lul wines " 1piri.u . F~ll 846-3874 dining tabJe with 6 new 754~ after 6~. Loo'A Bea:~• f ile cab!Mt, 4/drawer, • 7 s 2 4 · s EA RA y xlnt cond. crash bars, Sor(. amtfm /cass. (;8 tame le pay while Lra1n· Ref r i aer a lo r S225 ma l chin g ca ned Area Rug, 9Xl2 ' 1100, T I , ug, II lock, heavy gauae steel, Week ender 300H P lua. rack, $800. Call incl. S6400 974-422'7. 1n1. See Harokt 495 E. W h & D SW chairs -$275.00. Bent club chr, $3>, Oak end o cum passes, ca tan S80 Desk Danish Mere radio Stereo JOO Cherie, ~0391aft.3. T du ls 17lh.St.C.M. eaacsh,eDris. hw•~heyerr SlOO glass oak china cabinet tbl, S45, lamps, sis."'°, 642 ·5678, ext. 272. T ·.. . • b h TI 'n--t 'rt '76 Yamaha""'""' En· 2 1978G MC 1 on a .... (antique repr oduc· &44 l<M Passes must be ex· ea .. wood, 11• rown, rs. r r. oc.. 0 er unuu wlheavy duty racks 454 646-5848. tion).$29500 King siz.ed · changed for reserved modern executive , CaU Tom842-83S3 duro. clean. new tires, wtfull speed manual Mere.._.. SearsDlxwuher&elec. maple hUdboard .witb FANT AST 1 C seata atbox black leather chair. 15 ' Starllte , 40 HP S600.84S-1658 1Paul) $5.SOOea. ....................... dryer, 5 yra old, SZ75 drawers turned spools, FU.RNITUf!.~ BUYS. o ff Ice pr Io r lo Si.SO. m-ml after&pm. Evlnrude with trailer, YAM VIRAGO l~ mlles ___ (714) 894-0555 .......... IOOS both. B&W portable TV, Beautyrest mattresa & Solid teak: ~g ~ble, performance. P'.tt IOl7 Sood cond $750 Call Sacrifice-My loss yoor '79 F150 6 cyl, 25K m1. S.SO 960-34115 sprin"S·S2SO.OO. Call 6 Bruer chain, anttque * • * .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 49'1·2'1SS "ltn, Save Hundreds good cond. •••••••••••••••••••••• · m 1 ... -.. •--c mahogany sideboard. • Ornate nlckel~nd·brass 21 c u ft. dbl door . .-.a • ..,.~ p.m. custom.made modern Lon l•w • IJ{ASAAPSO flAC..CA 41 Call646~ ~t -- Lion Corsair helmet, a ref rig I f re e ie r , * * I BUY * * sleeper sofa, two oc· Helium Bouquets de· S months. Shota up to Like New only ~ hrs MUST SEU.or TRADE Yeas 9570 muterplece of artistry w/icemalt:er frost-free casiooal chairs,corree livered. Perfect ror :!!:~~~~KC use. SACRJFICE David '78 KZ400. fairing~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• worn b Y I ua rd s of xlnt cond. $400 75&-9557 Good used Fumlture & table, bm. vinyl couch every occasion. 67~19 . Fraur (714)67}5252 Had surgery. 548-8192 CLASSIC! prince of Belgium , m Dryer, fas, clean, works ~~r~:~~~~ Y~u will and recliner. s~I desk Int doors w/bdwe, 12> P''-ot I 0....-1090 CLASSIC 23' s EDAN JUST MARRJED-must CHM YAM 1840, spectacular, with good 75. 548·8513 or king size mattress set, •••••••nH•••••••0••• c Ru JS ER Ideal tor sacrifice. '77 '!SO Honda, f::~~; ~~~~~~yll~~~ae~ S48-...a.s , ~t~i=.~~~ girl's bike, plus much :Z:~ 1~i =rt; ~0•J1/ ~rfanh ~~w . summer & winter ~~d~nmi.~~~~ ~~ye~: ~I ~l~ed !4th Century calli· Stove, older, O Keefe & more. Phoot548-0863 93130 ; (2) 93138;' (2) .,~080 c · r Y m, harbor entertaining in tras-wheeb, exhaust. Radials IAll·Weather) sraphy on sheepskin, Mer ritt, clean. S75. I IUY MHITUIE Ma hog nite stand, 93142, SlO ea. Gd cond. 8S7Gaft s ful!Y enclosed c~z y S Snow chains Great COMMfll CHEVROLET '\.'l'i 11..: '• 11 !t : ' ,._I \It · \ Hl>-1200 HIGHIUY• Top dollars for Sports Cars, Bugs, Campen . 914's, Audi's Ask fOC' U/C MGR Jl~MAlltO YOUCSWA• .. 18711 Beach Blvd . HUNTINGTON BEACH 14Z.2000 TOP DOI.LAI PAIDPOI GOOD&CLEAM USEDCAISI bea utlfully framed, 548-8513, 54IH485 Les 957-8133 dresser wlmirror, twn 644-6579 I . . · ·. cabm w/lnslde steenng chrome. Ul5. 673·4068· traveling, fun for trips. $59$; tar-handcarved •1·yci...t IOZO 20SOFAS,new,198ea burl hdboard ' root· RAMS SEASON Ticket 5 l WurU~~ ~l p11no, '360 degree view win· '79 HONDA CB&SO. 4 cyl, Beaull·rest bed Lots of 2150 u~-.... j d •" ~ 111r ....., board S400 842-5498 .·v 1lnt ...._. ••N· dows. Bnghl vam1Sh, 1'700 mi, xlnl-like new, room New c arpel ,._._ ~ a e bone, $2200. P/p. ....................... lS Loveseats .• ,., ea. • · seats avail. for se)ectl e UOCfl'l--chrome • ..:m .... 1 cov·-,.__._ 5700 miracle mazda K' I SlOO ~...... u• IW ... ~ always gar'd, fairing, A M I FM s l 4 re 0 --...... 645-CaU (714) BM-2183. Fuji Finest (campania 957·57111or554-4180 mg matt sprgs, · games. 841-0366 days, 1 G d Ft & 1. . ' t 1 helmet. Sl696. S48-8S69 "' FOR SALE-1930's professional) 21 lbs. Beaut traditional love Oak desk: chair, s75. 759·1.S92 eves ~~wcfc 3) r;ny;1 6 old: Ne~~ ~ftirM~n:a~ ~!!~e~~P6 v~rso,!~d kitchenware. Rare Hall '700 replaCt?menl value seats w/tbls & lamps Stereo cab.,IS0.844-2119 S piece Dinette Set Beautifully polished Asktng only SS,950. Call *lol'HOMtS.,Sdt/ b" Chris tian S1777 WEMB YOUlEXOllC & llrnsH CAllS and Fiesta. Over 300 '300. 615-21167 from attorney's ore'. Bunk beds, solid f!llPle. Brown Xlnt Cood. Siio, Ebony. Professi?naµy Mary Jane 67~9D> l..t/S... f 160 OBO 7~1 pleces. Buy one or all. L41d5tt Culu Ion Cost $2200, Sacrifice excellent condition. ' 646-211161 alt 7PM owned, high quahly ID· '81 33 Ft Penn Yan twin ....................... 1972 VW Van S3200 or 640-40S8. tOspd. $75631·9195 Sl500/obo. 97~ · $200, 4 .e6J2 Terrific Spanl.sh Galleon strumeot. Sacrifice, diesel spcrll'isber Cost. WE CAM SEU. best oHer. m11Sl sell Bicycle for S\lie. Boys Sectional sofa~. glass MO ING SALE s· Ship Model. Only $7000. 080. ISl-8061 Sl03,000. Sale price. YOUR.I. V. 6?3-42'75 __ l~d • * * 24 .. 10 speed, Call top dinette S290, Qn S~reo cab ~. love seal SIOO! 640a88 Everett Baby Grand. S79,900. 21.J.S92-2859 S.W-13>4 "-cy h Arcot 842-3678 bdrm $540, sofa & lov· SlOO, resin top tble 1150, beautiful fin ish. S2500 •77 Ranger 19' tri·hull. frai'9n • ...._ 9110 SELL idle items with a 8392'Tamaru A eseal $350, bunks S200. king water bed 185, 6 WHEELCHAIR, Everest firm. 848-DI& eves. Volvo p-•· OID. Ford ' --·r Daily Pilot Classified HunUq1ooBeach ~MatetW.IOZS Ma ttresses/box spr· drawer chest SHO. Jennings Traverer, Uke Babl Grand. blfl dk .,,... i;;jj9;~~;;;·~;~~j;; ~A~d~·---JlOo·w CoastH•>'· You are Ult winner of ....................... logs: twin S7s. full $85, Aquariums SlOO, sew new, ISOO. 8'13475 w a nut.ma hoc an Y 302, xlnt. $5500. 491M1141 w/locklne door & lights. t\iltoa W .-cS 9590 • Newport Beach TWO FREE PASSES llDWOOD 2 X 6'S ~u~nE~l.25and Tl~OOOl mach S7S ~l BIRO CAGE Wroughdt flnleh, xlnt cond. PP. ~~:i::a~~:c»tor, Some rust. Sl.50. 548·2161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---'642-'-=te=-='---- (S17value) 2' to 20' long. Fresh . Curio -cabinet, S37S. Iron J' x !Ya' & Stan ' SS200.64().8lt7 •rt·,--.c .. ....._S---'--,P.ts WEPAYTOPDOLl.AR TOP so-· ..... , RINGLING BR~. truck load arriving 1' Cowitry French sofa Regulator clock, S250 S7S/OBO ~-._._w -..,....._ VY.A BARNUM ar BAILEY weekly. Save at ssrtrt ( p u r c ba sed al Trunk s.5. Oriental ~9'14 Sew ... Mee" 1 1092 .._...... I .. / & Acc.tuorin 9400 for top used ca rs For C1ean U&ed Pp II JI 6•6 988• B 11 " ) I S300 i. .: Med d k ••••••••••••••••••••••• --.C............. 9050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• foreign, domes\ics or Cars & Trucu cacus Cl m .. . ., u oc.s . on y . vase, M), • es . John Wayne Tennis Club SINGER Futun in solid _........ SERVICE o~ classics. ll your car IS We pay cub on the Anaheim Convention anytime 759•0854 185. 63l·S979. Membership Sl.250. Call Walnut 3 drawer desk ....................... 0 0 A...-W 'k• extra clean. see us spot! Contact buyer at CenterAug.6-11 C_..,.& Co m p lete h o u s e SMOKE GLASS 48" SSl-8300 $400~l~ •UOIAC211'·34'BOATS pen6 ays tt FIRST! Long Beach Arena E .. p "' 1030 furnishings. & bsehld Rowid Tbl Chrome Base 2 Small Oriental rugs, 6112 mo. plam prepaid Moo ·fn.7.»5.Xl AU(. 19-23 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• items. living rm. din· w 14 ch rs-as is S80. 130 ea, Lge wooden 5potfilMJ Gooda 1094 from $189/mo. 1ncluding Saturdays 8:~5:00 To claim passes, call Canon 400mm r 4,5 ing rm, stereo. TV 's. 962·8596 desk. s.so. Brown vinyl ....................... slip, lessons7141964-5994 Atlas carn..rtY. 642 ·S678. ext. 272 . wlfilter set, W/'lx, S4SO. misc mustseU. 7S9-0988 KingsiubedSl7S. loveseat, SlOO. Blue Ram season tickets 2929HMtxirBlvd Passes must be ex· Eves, 545-1~ (2) Matching Club Cbrs 661.0Z49 schwinn. Pixie, ~. 920 acvaill.I Pr vale P•tY ~.~~••••••••!~~ Co5U Mesa changed for reserved "'--1040 Orig $950/ea now Nottingham Rd, Nwpt a an el e . 13' BANSHEE I I 546-1934 seats al box ....,.. $75/ea. xlo1 cond. small M.ust Sac .. 2 weeks old, Bcb. 642·5488 213· 788·6802 , Daya, w lr r ' Mag. Wheels, D70 x 14. o ffi ce pr i or to ••••••••••••••••••••••• chest s•ua ~ liv rm, din rm. game Barry. 213·990-7468, Xlnl cood. $535. KE.FSHOND Pu AKC w ...,.,_. Airline Tickets, value S23S3 off of VW Bug, '*> lhe performance ps. .,.,_ ...__ •· set, lamps. Best offer. S 08 oo S Ill f eves. ael Eves & wknds * ; * Champ sire. M/f Pel & ~1-s1ze """ spnng "' 8SJ.182S. s . . e ng or Colt AR·l.5 "shorty"; ,223 14' SUMRSH DcSANFIS CHEVROLET San Clemente 131.0510 492-IMO WANTED! s h 0 w . p v l pt y . mattress, xlnt rond, T . b d 1 $375.0098M013 libe Colt 5•95 ,,_,.r 0415 ~MS-~0022~"-· -----S w e d I s h C u p · 2131697·1345 al\6 pm. S100. 646~19 win e • comp · w. c E J L l NG fan , ca r. scope, am· ~ -;r 2 Center Line Rims S~. --.::..:.-'-=-=-='--- board/Armoir solid om· d · frame, SSO. Chest or Ca•a'"-lla • ..., _ _., ~ mo.feOOobo.548-216'7 . HOBIE 14, xlnl cond, 2Brand-w""-S'""' Lale model Toyotas and Volvos . Call u a DAY!!! . • Two female Doxie pups. · mgroom set an misc dwra, szs. 2 wood end g uo: ,.,. .... u ... .... •m=~ ......, oak. Ctrca 18SO. Askmg 7 weeks. Papers, AKC. furniture tables, SlO both. Tan verse, vartable speed, fY leclo. used less than 10 times. 2 Shocks $2U36·1687. $750 61~125S Red, Si.SO, 96:M428 CaU 642-3468 l0Xl2 good co d Ilg.bl inc I'd. Wu SZS. HIA, Steno 1091 SHOO. 4M-45S4 Tom or BMW Alloy Whee la (4) Oak Claw.fool table. 5 Papered, aggressi:e Orientallmodem chesl,5 ~·960-~ n' Tak e 11 00. Jud y, ....................... Dave Ukenew.OrlginaUy SS60 rress back chairs. br1ndle Pit Bull, H·2 yrs, dwrs, Sl00/080. Rerord KING INNERSPRING 7»0llll6 Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr 16 FlSallboal nowSJOO/OB04S9-5l65 1600. OB067U253 does not fighl wlother player, S10. $5164 EXTRA FIRM mattress Memberabip for Ir&. wml7. Free delivery. TraUer.1800. (5) Terr11n Tires 11 ) MfffY Go 1.-d dogs, needs ma I e Dinette Set $.50, Chest of set, never used, worth xlnt, fully equipped $148. 846-l?M S40-43n. aft.er 5 new, all on wheels 15-10 Hone owner , SlOO I OBO drawers S25-S35 , S.530, ucr. 1248 del. Gym . 8 mo. 18S.OO Beautifu.I Color TV, 2 yr 12' Kile w/trlr. Good Ch evrolet Blazer Divorce force; sale of 644 · 3656 or ah 6 . Recliner $40, Uphol Chr Never used Queen sz, 646-9'14 ews. wmty. f'rft delivery. cond. S60010BO Sl.SOlaU $51·~17 r a r e a n t i q u e . SS7-314S. S25, 8JS.S9T7 worth S399. cash only JUKE BOX Sl48. 646-1791 963-4&52 FLOOR JACK bandcarved Stander. M in1 at ure Schnauzer Elegant sofa & loveseal, S218 del. Usually home. 1956 Seeburg, xlnl cond. Sony l9" CoJor Remote 12' Monohule w/sall & Like new. C.ost '348, sell Moving, must sell lhis AKC Reg. Sl.50 S800 new. sac $350. 754-7350 S9SO. MG-1217 Control. ssso. John mast complete. S200 for S200. 645-9325 weelt 842-71!1 6/pc bdrm set, $650 121 Cushion Daveno Masculine canopy k&·IZ 10AM·12PM.67S-S020. OB063l.sl22 (805) 9U3731 Golden Retriever litter, l new, sac. '300. Euro· (slprl. makes queen bed bed, baclt:pmmon cof· Beautiful solid wood HOBrE CAT 1.8' Alltoa for S. AMT1q411ES male left, 8 wkB AKC. ~n glass dmetle set, SlS0/080. 42" square fee table, traffic light, Barzaly stereo cabinet Xlnt cond, 10 mos. old, oo••••••••••••••••••••• Anll·que se•tanl. dry Shots. S~. NB. 642-2003 . 19" color portable, plain glass all mirror S2SO ea. 760· 36S 3. SJOO (no room) Ml-0503 SS500 Invested, sacr. IMPORTANT .. S l S 5 X l n l con d coffee tbl Sl.50. 968-~7 75H894 - -$3500. ~2510 N<YnCE TO card compass. divers AKC Golden Retriever Delivery S&92S2. h K E N W O OD 96 O O READERS AND shoes, 1904 brass "Na-Puppys. Sl7S. Ca ll Boys F~ F.n"' ..... Bunk (3) Barzilay Cree stand· Loa Caballeros Heatt Receiver 1tO WPC w/2 20'T__. ADVERTISERS lional" cash register, 838-5292 anytime. ..,.... S 1ng waU units for stereo, Club Membership, $2SO CQl'.ICept CDI ''*" tfM)() by Salc:raft antique ....... _r chat'r, 4 S , S . ls AKC 8 Beds. Needs work. 100. desk. etc . $345/all. or offer. Call AnswtrAd OBOl42-8'194 of ,.--La The price of items """.., pnnger parue Call aft 5. 642-1236. 548--057 11542, 542-43001 24 hn. -advertised by vehicle ftantlquebarberspcle. wks, CH. lines. SlOO & Drexler Bdrm Set Anti· SANSUl Receiver, Tilt trailer, beautiful dealers in the vehicle 714 99M411 up. 541·04.13 que White 5 drawer ~~ ;u,bi~~ :!~~er~~r: Jolllll w.,.. T.-Technls spkrs. Tecbnl.s condition, race ready. classified advertising .,..., AKC Silky Terriers. cbesl,dressinallb&chr or.$3SO.Coffee &endla· Club Membership. A Direct Drive turnlbl. very competitive. columns does not In· ' I 1010 a dorablel2_hedless, nitestands k i ng GI in1a ..... bargain price. Alt 6pm Value over $1.5()0. Sale Private party (714) elude any applicable If P 1•"" shots, M IU'.>, F b>O. bdboard, •. spread . ._,,, ble. ass y. """· (213) 991-3486 wknds or trade for Cok>r TV or 998-14118 taxes, llceme. transfer ....... •••••••••••••••• ... -.,,., 613-4743 ... ,, ....... be r •n3313 f -"""~""'"-------· t h I IUY A.l'PUAHCES $51-2348 644·0345 · ....,.""~ al o r. ..... a l lffh, Slpa/ ees, finance c arges, Les 957-8133 Free lo·Ya. 8045 1 rt beige & brown sofa. s 0~ ~.~inl'~~~~~ MKt,Y}As~ t,: ~r f:: 5PM DocU 9070 ~~~n:rde~,i~ ~:ti~~a~ -----------~~-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rt t bin I l Boo"' ...__. land • Sylvania. Stereo, TV COD· ••••••••••••••••••••••• n Cu ft dble dr refrig ma c g ovesea · ea. ..case ~ s AU ucell. ~. sol 4 ft ti in. $100/080. t Io ns or de a I e r free1er w/lce maker , Free lo loving home $1.50, 644-9183. $25-$30. 54&.(1195 67U253 NEWPORT Slip Avail. documentary prepara· $375642-3118 a~orable 6 wit: old pu~. China Cabinet. pale Queen sofabed Herculon B~r~~~Eve~yE.g:~~ Tom~J.;es lion charges unless pies. Call S94~ yellow antique finish, reversible cushions · •-IMh I MmrW otherwise specified by 19 cu fl · UP r i I ht 2 sweet kittens, need lov· large storage & lighted earth tones tm. OBO G. E. Washer u 11 ....,. • .... I Ill SO' DOCK for rent or lse. the advertiser. Slenature Frost Free ina home to s tay glass shelf, fl7S. Swivel 73Hlll43 SSl·l!l6l7 ••••-•••• .. ••••••••••• Main channel Hunt Freezer. Uke new S200. t.ogether. M/F. 4 mo old. bar chairs, 135 each. rx3' Pine shelvio&, S25 a..rw1 tolO Harbour (714)84M707; ~/ 54t-UIM t Like new Brn/Beige ..,..,. -" -Clilstia · Mov ing. Must see o Chandeliers, S25 each ea. or .,.,. ..... er. n••••••••• .. •••••nn• _,(.::.21.3=t.:)st2=·=-=-----HABBOR AREA love. 642.-S, 96U400 Room size red oval rug, striped loveseat le cha ir 675-3191 Tu Ded~ Donation 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLIANCE SERVICE Clusified Ads, )'OW' one· S25. 760-1065. Eves, $12S. 673-lllil 3 hanging lamps, 2 red Boat.· Can· Planes filllf I ..... BUY.SELL-REPAIR b . le Wknd's. c.-s. 1055 velvet w/ cryetala,l ruf9St.ZN1 ........... •••••••••••• t.M ..,..,., atop s oppn& cen r. ---r -~n• --....................... black, wro~abt iron lolh. MMI •ct/. C1•f in, S./ FIND YOUR NAME WIN TICKETS WORTH $17 Cl US ....... ., ....... ~ ... ANABEDI CONVEN'110N CENTE& AUG. 1-17 LONG IEAt11 AUNA AUG. 11-D MovingSaJe w/blue g1au iDldl., S4S ~la f020 Reilt 9120 Sunday 2-S, Wednesday Xlnt cond. 84f.8501 Eve ••••••••••••........... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Z..S. 2ZS Canal N.B. Kin1-0 ·Lawn. 3.0 HP Marine ElectricLan lOl,Aj Camper Four Star • Ho•e~oW ._. 10'5 F.daer tTs. Lindell Vac · De1lcn/1nsta1llrepair w/refrigentor Ir stove. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3.S HP Sl.50. Both, tmo. Qual. work. S49·2S20 Port -a ·potly. All 75 aq 7da carpeting. 631·2025 eva. Butane, Queen al• bed camel shade. Used only Couch Sll.5. Cbr $t0. Kit Slee119 I . ·In ucellent 4 mo. IS sq yd 968-93'7S tbl Ir chn $50. Kenmore IMht ~ condition. S12SO. Call wabr Ir elec dryr. S'7S lrlllt d 90)0 between lOam·Spm. !'ii"== • ....., 1070 ea 59-IMO .... 1 .................. Ul·'l&S7 ·a Mod 1 AT .._.. • ................. •••0 • • 3 a I I b o a t m a s t 1 , 40 e OWD -n. Pvt pty wlabes to buy for Windsurfer wanted. Uted 4 .. 111,Aj "xlS' . SlSO . .,..,,.._..... ti 4 dr, restored. Ideal for cash ~ CT-3CTaolitare car lop carrier, locb, 3"14"11 ''114' . $7S •••••••••••••••••••• .. • !tudtnt. $10,500. ALSO diamond weddinl riot $ID. Evet.fT&.Jal ..__ · "78Pucb:Xllltcood. 4f Ford Woodle, No dealers please! '•KAW $15(). Mtrc1$ll01 Sl50. reatored. IU.500. 557.:§M CB radio ~. ~wave 10PEDAL80ATS CaUevea§l='K94 ""11"""5'""'-l=lt=l----- Mllcel1 11• IOIO =:m.':°· 8 tract "°· :@z~= 7c:;o!~1T ::l "Ju~:-:=·~~/ ~r ....................... 1'2" Blmbai top, Uke oew, fSZ5080 fD.1154 aft fl iJOOcc Dttlun Roadater ••WOOD 2 I 6'S ~=•• IMI $ZIG. Recovered Moped Ser. enp, S.111.as:J 2' to 20' ion,. Xlnt deck• .... ,_.... '°" ••ntl•y 111'1.A.o.. $NIP tn Fresh ~ )oad ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ "'' 1P11 "ll .. ".. r-e . ._ ~ .. iv S WAMTID Complete UO Volvo S»tm Co n tinental S·I , arri•111f ~· ave Baby Baaainett• ' .. _.. . Mlni·Blkn: Honda SO, beautlfl&l ClOlld. 2 tone at SS'ft. pp call Jim ., •rm Suall.ki JR50 ltaljet so. paint, sa,ooo poulble 141-85 amUme :ltU:r .. ;:;.tbl Call Jolmoe 1 H.P. oatbwd ute new. h;uonable tr!d•lM <P> tl$'4GID a Bik• m• tllD. Qlalole 0 L D S 1 y L I mtr . -Diil C!Olld. offer, 7108S. 4 WllMI Dlftw HM TV w/at.reo SlOO. Mlle. TO&MTABLE-wlta. 51HlO&tftl P.ll. ~-.J ...................... . dotlantt'\anlll.SlOO. flpaeedletopiayoW1' ...... ,.._ tt40 1 ... 11n · ttlt 74J-WA.at4 !4l=f1ll-rwcordt. ,,,,_, ... •" ...... -.... -.......... -........... Low.aaa.,. . Po o I Ta b I e , 7 ' ...... r lab II I boat 27 • Sell Ot tndt '79 1t1w1 ~~ BnullWlek, very pod h ft ft l•J ToUJcrtA dh = Q • Xlat c.4. -.... , -coeditioe,'150.•• • • .a ... , d pt · BtblttJlc."7.fm .... to t •x• 1 t ·-....................... llfl, fl'll O, t --..... -JO I • •• ID 11"81 tool a for p&tk O.adoa MIMllk Gdar ftader IMlt tnl. • "f•9'111d•DUt·~ eoad, lSlt ml, never •.P track 175, wa.etl ~ / i.ard•bell u 11• trul. Wiil tndt NIOt 111/C. XII& Coed. -.,0. b t ta off · road . dWr~OlkdlU• Perfect eoncl. $1'5. e411lt1 fer car or T M9 IHH/Ofr. HS·HIO, MH11 ttH'Tl1.lm· T.O.P. oa bale.au. '71 llAWl bl ltW, Ml ~=:s:..---=-- NnPDlt ._. MMidc ""· ...., 0rwaJ: .,. • ...,, rem~ • an 1"M't. Clah-.:~·· ....Ct.1tCJ11 .. h, r ,..Wu~ ....... ~ ~.~ 'al. -· Ill ....... ..W: '1t ~ ~AIA&J ,,,.,,CAii ..... ·-= --.,. u. ~· . 1 ·~·-.Jr.lm,M ..... .m . - •• , ......... ~ c .... ..... "-64 .. tJOJ w '4 .. t4'1 for Your Car! JOHHSOH & SOM LIKaht ... cay 26216 Hubor Blvd'. Costa Mesa St0-'630 for good 9712 Allow us the opportunity ••••••••••••••••••••••• to consider the purchase $1 !YOOO or trade-in of )'Our clean Porsche. Check with Us 'lo Today! OF MEW IMW'S ·_ IJj)~'::l Salea and Leaalnc· al iU competitl~ prices. Ex· --·•o ,._ cellenl service ••d 13831 H<lrbof 81VO parts dept, GMO... a.-·~ ..._nll Wtr.!l OVtK . ....... For You.rGood VW, Ponche or Audi -· .• ,•4J ' ~· . VW·PORSCH&AUDI 445 E. Cout Hlway -Good selecUoo °' pn. 'rioualy owned BMW 6 otber rine can In ex· ceUeot coaditioo. We alao have a teue company that leases other •aka °' allllol, trucks and vaoa. For additional information on teuln1 p&eaae call ... 714/'7l·1Z7W7141•1•11 at Bayside Drlvt Newpcrt Beldl l'IS-OIOO For a lood deal aad cood after ..... aervice Premium prices paid for 1111 Uled car (tore Ian or domntic l 111 cood eoodilloD. . See Us Pint! CREVIER .. . . . . . . . . A.ll!toa, IMported ot, lmpon.ct Mtoa, l•,.,W Alltot, t.,erit4 ...... 1.,orted Aaltot, l.,..+td Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Monday, August 3. 1981 • Cf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••u•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~~ ............. !!.~~ ~.~.·~ ............ !!.~~ ~~:!~~ ......•.• !?.~ ~~~!'!·.~ .... !?.~! !~.~~ ........... !?.~~ !!~!::r.!' ....... !?!~ ~':'!~·.~~ ........... ~~·.~!~! .......... ~~~·.~~! ......•.... ~~~·.~~~~ .. ····;;5; -, ORANGE , 1 0 1 '71 Corona w11 Lux t:d ·so ·a VW lefl .. r11ht CHM,.. ttO I CeAc tt 11 DodcJt 9935 ••••. •••• •••••• •••••••• 76 IMW lOOZ ~ CO\lfl'Y'S 1 aoo 400 mt AIC VS PB AM /FM door. •n left door ISO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ....................... . t'ur unbt .. tablt 11uul11:v Sunroot Whiter F1wn cuieue. 41K. ml Like tub W•ttm tt)'le wl\I • • * 0 TMLATIMG FOi SAL.I 74 St1 "'en. 4 ~pcl " j· ••nil ll Ut' valU<•, tlu~ }.ou LUSI EXCLUSIVI Int W,..000, lltS.8423 new ... ~ Mt Sfl9:! rlcn1 for Sul)fr Retitle J .._ D ....__._ C MC ... ft.Ill "'C? ·n Dod&e Dart 49,000 ~~;, l~=~~o ~·~~ muat H'•'' 111\1 Ht YOUIMIWJIOlJ MASERATI M~ t742 -l20ea.~'744 °-,,,,_..._, "'-mUH ori1ln11I owner -~ r11dl11 . ~tylt' ~t1•1•h1d DtalCT! Dir..a.a -SHIP ••••••••••••••••••••••• folt1w...-9770 , -1 1 25001 Via Portol11 We 1peclalll.e in idJt11 Runs Perfetl 20 Mp c '73 PINTO rwu 11ood 4 111hl'l'la ._nd &un roof , m;"'llioa' MG M ld&el ·14 Xlnl u••••••••••••••••••••• 79 VWpclR•,!bKlt Ot! ~e l..a•un1Nl1uel fur lht' bu11neu u OBO Call, Dennis spd Rt'd wh111• \tn)'I t~ I Wt' II dthver anywhere Cond 123001000 79 lAlllT 4dr, u • .,. mi, x nl You art'lhr wlnnerol rruUvt & pro(l'tSlonal 11754233 S73S'Ji6 top GHON 111 tht wotld' • rond befit otrer 770.4629 TWO rnEE PAS.~t-~ L•"P Set.ct'-or l800 1164 1244 9960 •;~AC HACH IMPORTS 0_. m.tm !:'::1i:':: ~~·:~ ·511v~ Rrbw1t 1600en~ 1~17v1~""' • OfMtw 1911 Ford 9940 --·•h 148 Dove Strtct ,..... '746 io .,.8.,...,H) Bod y & lllecttical need RING UNG DH<~ c.......1111..-••••••••••••••••••••••• mvvr S49-4l00 75•-00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t5 o.0t .. LA" MW work S800 675-1222 UARNUM&RAILF.Y ~~LI '70 CalaKy. Good l'ond ••••••• .. ••••••• .. •••• '79 DATSUM A"V"f '73 G1'. Orig owner • D BA.CK I --c•cus Mow ... ~t;ll~ p s. 11r 1'150 or best of 77 l''UR\' w.111110 full ThMostbcttWH) !J~ l!l69 llarbor81Yd Rwu 1reat ~.200 ml lll·1040 49Mt49 89VWBAJA Ao1he1mConH!nl10n 1'1...T AB[~R~ ftr 9635350 pwr&a1r 611K1111 d1·an hrtOfYow •FT.I --631·71 t O S2,4SO Dayi. 8:9&3330, ---New l~tn&ine, new CenterA""617 !~/' :, '72 RANCHERO waold S1SOOF1rmboll>7!111.1 IMW .-WC.._ Or • 116tr<edff.... 9740 evts ~ 1971 "fW upholslry. new brake~. -( • \()I( I \ D 99 5 4 r•d w1Ul l;irur ti rt -Th l $ rue I lnJe ~t .. d not finished O\lt, drive~ Long Beach An•n11 ,/ ~ JI , r l m !> . b ht' 11 . 3 s I POttliac 6 L ... ~ .. ., •• • • • • • • • •• •••• ••• • •• • • \,, .-: A l"23 I d h d • be . P~clw 9750 Da•her 15 Ion& on hne Sl600 or offer w o U& ,,. /o•~>rt11 , 11'"' Cleve an . qu1nc e ••••••••••••••••••••••• McLareRIMW!! S~DDLEIA.CKIMW SELLING YOUR MR' ••••••••••••••••••••••• eeonomy and short on en,i!ne 4976236 I To da1m vas~el>, rall , , '"·" •,1,,.,1011 head!>, lo mt, xlnt '78GRA.NDPRIX l•y Or lHM ll 1·2040 495-4949 Wt !JAY JAN ACO PORSCH E price uicludui1 a SUD· '69 VW Swuoor new en.: 642 5678 ext 272 ~hape• SZJSO 61H406 Luxur) Punt1J1 .,. tlh ly Ow,..,._ Pkllt! TO!J DOU.Al SS AUDI Freeway rlose to tool for lhl»e summtr seal.$ rup lm brks Pusu must be ex .. W.rcwy 9950 ~em1 formJI landJu lop, (7141 SlZ..Slll_ '77 21101. F11eball r~d C'llll Jark Bacon all area& 6«i rreewa)' al d•Y• llMUJX ahorka .~ fm •8 lrk: changed for reserved '79 Eldorado J:aded' ••••••••••••••••••••••• A"1 n 1 rad1U Jlr 1111.. Blau 3001 & \1'ontc JIM SUMONS Fires t one Bl vd A MAGNON more St900 4976236 stal$atbox 734 l900 ys, OKANCECOUNTY'S wh\'el. whtlt• '4Jlh. OIAHGECOUMTY'S spkn ,M1rhelu1XWX t Norwalk. A fine i.elec • --·-of Cl rt> 1>r1or t o 371 4359 eves t~knds FIHIEST • IAl'l''J73 &>stOlh·i OLDEST ma•s. c:~tm mt S.i4i6ti IM!JORTS uon of new and used on POMTIAC SCIROCCO performance Sit,~ A MA.GMOM 7~ O'Jlill llYJO Harbor Blvd sale now Call us ror __ S4t-4JOO 711 Brunt metallic A l' • * * L INCOLN MER<:Ull\' ;OMTIAC '7!1 i:!l!OZX ,1111 1111 ,lt'M>. COSTA MESA selection and quote:. ,72 vw red bug, xlnt Blaup stereu <'ass nu 77 Eldorado immar . DEALERSlllP 631-lZ768lU300 Lookln" ID sell one~ w •. Aond S2600 Day mich lire.. lo m1. xlnt ~C 9905 Jblro roof. I o,.ner, 549.4300 Jll' Julu hni1<1\ t'\lkir, "' " ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSJOO 964 ll06 tG I ) <0-~ "J~ J-L > G d \ II S7l!OO t~l'J 11~. 49!1471\4, bu Y and cons 11 n 831-4611 1 bl 944.1 2.8 cond~7S9 1158 1971 p ac:er . retired __ \.: a,y _e_ ,.._.., Tc41"4W'll l~73 I onllal' ,n;n 1 r. Sa le!> ~rvit-t• Lt•aMnl( 6~ 6t!H CASH TODAY ,.ll_4-631i-6PT1SL ~~d 32 1 33 '79 VW Bug "Conv.erti '64 VW ramjll!r bus, far bChool learner's, 24,000 CGMGro 9917 LlNCOLN·MERCURY • f~ r~~·~:~~t'~;in~•:.:?,~~ RoiC-r,lnc. Fiat 9725 Wew11lcometoyou 66 912 orsc .. c re xnt ble"S1lver 1mtfm rus. sunroof. lent. new en& mt Perfcond many ex •••••tt•••••••••••••••• 16.l8AuloCenterD.r S 11 -.... Mr..C__. cond S620010BO Debi xloti. s1~ ............. Xlnt ori1 cond 12250 tral> S2,975 Fimi '72 CAM ARO pa mt 500 \tu."1 "' Rolls oyee HM~' ••••••••••••••••••••••• liR ~ ~Jitlli7'794N s bes rr SO FW)·Lk Forest exLl Mo' tng' ~ .. 2fi68 1540 Jamboree H !'tat l:!Jl CJ.ll· llnl in & W AHT1D 1 2 1 3 > i!i O · 1 6 6 7 • '73 VW SuPfr Bug all 0 80 631-0257 • 5111·9817, 496 14~ ~~~~ ~~[ IRVIN£ ' Newport Beach 64~64.t.t out nt'" VJlllt, ttres C:Jll for 11nmec!J4 1.e ~71~960 --orig, rassl stereo. 69K •SUPER '70 I Ii 9910 --IJQ-7000 HEW 1981 -lut h ""•t1•1' S'"""' in Roh loy-9756 . s r ...,~ '"'"' IHC '78 (.'AMARO 7.28 Rblt PHO ...... IX· ~ ~11:1 """ ' '"''"' ~p:k ~:nt ......... ;:•••••••••••• ml.t...: 2300 inn """'"""" Great cond 67!'>·9613 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eng, new brakel> tires. ll41ntClftCJ 9952 We h.n e :"r .. ~t ."ltl' For The llebt Buy or l~a:.e Deal lq Orange Count> Comt' See l's Toda) • '7!1 ft.ti l.28. IJ~c brJod Mark Sachs-Buyer 111 DEALER IN U.S.A. * * * VW eni: • 16.'iO. ncw tal>t'. 1979 luick l'~lm llll T Top. Sanyo ••••••••••••••••••••••• St'lcl'lton all JI l!Jri;.110 111,.,. 111,tdt ~out ki mi 83I 1740 495-1700 •79 CONVaTilll rods. cyl. cam c·arh RIVISlA Bi Amp bterl'<> S5000 73 Mu!>l Grande, auto. Pnt't':. Miss.-.. VIEJO ~ ROY rrank. 300 m1. S450 57 This beauty t'Omes ... 1th 556 173'! air vmyl top. P 'I • P b • ... • M ... GHOM S28SO KIU 1449 vn CARVER Al whh. Lo .. Mitt. \'W van panel. ncw Wtn all Option& and full c1.-vro.. a m r m rai.\ lilt .... ~ ... c 1-tondo 9727 IMP~_ ROLLS ROYCl Lou, 16 0 • 7 0 I 4 dowi., S,?00 w. 9325 "° ... er (6684 > ""' 9920 wheel $2350 or pa rt n.'"""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·so JOO TD. wgn. Sunrr. iwoJ.~bo... Mewport leoch 1970 vw Bl'S SA.DDLEIA.CK IMW ···s··E·E···u·5···Ft··R··5·T·~.··· trade 964-7~ 549-4300 VISfTYOUR Ivory lan t nlr Ne•JIOrtlm~ * * * N~w eng1nt'. tire,, 831!~040 495-4,?49 '66MUSTA.HG '7b ftrt·lurd Furrnulu 0 R A N G E Sho<Aroom new S23,SOO _._ brakes. shocks dock '68 Bu1rk Elertra 2 door We haf\'e .. ,aE'"~~ UseSIEl'lD' Ne<A paint. !>11\l'!. i:a' 6 Creml' ... tan 101 1111· S4DDlHACK 714 6427~71.!_~ ctOSfOSUNOATS '75 RABBJT and r11rpet1ni: Don 't hardlOI' 1700 tion o •''" "' t')'IJ~pd Sl.900 mJt All P'"'· .ru1~r IMW COAST iJ JOOSU snrf.' llhr. all '74'2 Silver Shadow, dk Engine & body good miss thtb one $2600 080751 15111 Chevrolets' _5SS-0378 J ' Jrn fm ... lx."li'r 28402 Margllt!ntl'l'kw\ HONDA cxtral>, 1mmac S25.900 blue, w/beige cordovan cond, 12200 646:7228 OBO Also 1970 Bus -ne,. rnth&ls •ml( ""ft Mission Vtt•Jo HE"D~"nTE·RS 640·62~!!!16-!179 landau, beige int Xlnt 64 VW M1crobus part::. engine 1600, :.uigle port. 1 Cadlllac 9915 Oldsmobile 9955 12t315n llill Avi:ry Pkwy t•)(ll 15 "' ""' S2toS200 S250 !'>86Dlor951·8X38 "00••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'w} l TO AY!!! ·79 ~E.snrf.auxlank. $45,000 97J.lS29 545-1774 112 CADILLAl frozen 69 96 Luxun St"dan HEY 6FOOTBS! 831-2040 495-4949 26.~ mi. Becker )lereo Saab 9760 ---Vol•o 9772 eng mu::.t M'll no" Re~t Good condrt.aon $4()() Thi' ., \our l.i't tip UNIVERSITY r .. ~i.. dk red 111 bamboo ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 Van walh 26.~ mile~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• i irr r 968 <X1'79 673-9482 ponun11~ t1.111bt .. 1n J full Closed Sund .. ~ ~\I ~~ & ~•II\ ll ~ Ult S27,000._61}9JJ6 1978 Saab CLE 40.000 m1 on rebuilt engine, nl'w #I VOLVO DEALER 1 t> ·79 l'ullass Supremt> 2dr. 'ILi i·ar Tilere '4tll lie• 80BMW ID~:.1•l ~11rr., OLDSMOBILE 19H 12 MB 4SOS E x.Jnt $6200 £<!._lllt S~ 7~~ INORANG ~:COUNT\'' 11 .. \r !>nml'lhint: you ~~~~~•••••••••!!.~~ 23K mi. V8, al e', cad no more New l!IKI Hon all a\1111 optJon,, hk1· HONDA mt.'talht· 11reen. tan "' (714> 4~g~ '81 VW PU 5(Q) mi. Co~t <AJnl tu wll' Cla,s1hcd '77 Corvt•tlt• Whitt roof, S~ 'lrol737 Ol'\lllt>l> Great ""'"' ~~· S:1\k w camcl int GMC TRUCKS lt'rtor Xlnt rood Besl foyota 9765 58787 S7:.~ SA.LES, SERVICE ad::. tlo at v.t'll h·t2 ~ill Auto Loadcd <:lean 'Into 9957 tum Bargam Prtt ,.<f :.!X;.,illlarlA.lrlllld orrer 67584li .. •••••••••••••••••••••, ----A.MDl.liSIMG Xln1 rond ssooo A..MAGHOH Dab.n 97201 l'llSTr\ \1 ES\ Ml '76 450 SL 74 Corolla, reblt tram., 63 VW Dua1 Cab PU 0\'ERSEAS 0£UVl::R\ r,:.-lht• D.itlv Pilot SJ6 3196 :•••••••••••••••••••••• POMTIA.C u•••••••••••••••••••••i 540-9640 ~2 b 2 t.o good cond Jttras S189S Rebll eng, runs great I EXPERTS 74 Pinto Hakhback. 549-4100 J m. ro ... n. ps, ne,. • 8578000 ·ra,t Hc,ult '"'rv11·~ CoUCJClr 9931 auto. am rm stereo. -• - '76 Datsun 23.)Z 2 t ~ I Jaguar 97 lO M 1ch\'l1n urei.. I owner Bsl .Qfr. 846·~..;.._ ·--k E .... , .. IKE dtrt'cton \our •••••••• ••••• •• •••••••• new Ure~ m:.g "'hi~ Mint uind ·n GrJncl Pr1>. t213l 5Ba-l:l46 ·1 \SSI( 'j'\ '(J6t' S:J\e ssooo '81 SL Mtch·rad. rog Its .. am r.~~a~2~~73mt , 2200 VOi.VO Wr\Cl\ '"1ur Xlnt c~ Lo -A • ~71136 • ntt•IJlhl hn1 cru1, .. lull Auto. a r. W OHO ..... •••••••••••••••••• $23,750 «714> 968·0103 1 .78 Corona. 5 spd. :m '72 VW liug loo \runi. ~ '7l Co-XR7 ConT. Sl950 or be~t ofre r 2.l 1100 mi can IJnthlu Jb~entet' n"ni•r mu~t I m 1 11 r 1 I! " '4 n ~la rm mob tit' phone S4,6001bst 962-0048. (213) Sell things rast with Datl) <:USTA M~A Call &12 56714 1.'xl 322 options. $6,000 010 Dai Iv Piiot Classiried ,,Ji .llil'll bt t.f J h!I, I 01 77 Dat:.un 280Z ! , ! Hrn ... n lllk. \ m\ 11np. lu I \t'llOIO ool~ 900mt, m fm rass l!K m1. Xlnt I -I 1966 Harbor Bhd 'IX'< tall\ SF.LI. idle ttt'~ wllh J P."'' ,11.r ... 1. ~ 1i11 '.>BO ~1111 S59000H0644l:IOJ:! S!IOOOOl\Ulii~57hl 1 $39,000 5$-0332 1~·4020P.M._ PilolWanlA~·-I 646·930154~9467 04-5201 Ad642·S678 l21i!!d,1 • ATLAS CHRYSLER.PLYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 546·1934 3 blocks south or San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd Complete body shop Sales Service Parts Service Dept open Monday thru Friday 7 30 A M 10 .., 30 PM and 8 AM to 5 P M on Saturday BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Stree1 Newport Beach Tel 752·0900 Call us, we re the spec111lor,ts lor Alfa Roml'o Peuqeot & Saab THEODORE ROBINS FORD Modern sales. service. parts. body paint & tire depts Competitive rates on lease & dally rentals 2060 Hart>or Blvd Costa Mesa 642·0010 or 54(}-8211 • JOHNSON & SON UHCOLH MERCURY 2626 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-5630 57 Years or friendly family service -Orange County s oldesl Lin· coln·Mercury dealership 0 SOUTH COAST DODGE 2888 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel ~0330 AV service spactallsts. custom van con11crs1ons NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W Cout Highway Newport Beach Tel 842·9405/540· 1764. Tlte Ferrari Headquarters MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IM THE BOXES NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel 833-\.300 At the triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind Victoria Station Sales. Sefvioe. Leasing & Parts. Fleel discounts to the publlc 0 H.AIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel, 540-9100. Orange County's Largest Cadlllac. dealef. Sales. Service. Leas• ong 6) DA YID J. l'HILLIPS IUIQC-POHTIAC-MAZDA Sales • Servtoe • Leasing 24888 Alicia Parkway Laguna Hills 837-2400 CORMIER.Oft.ILLO CHEftOLIT 18211 Beach Blvd . Huntington Beach. Tel 847-6087 or "549·3331 Sales Service. Parts. Full Leasing Dept. Freeway close to all Orange Co • ALAN MAG HOM PONTI.AC-SULUU 2480 Harbor B!Yd .. Co11a Mau. Tel. 54!M3QO ... 1 ... Service. Laaalng. "Mr GoodWT'anch " 0 UILI IKI TOYOTA-VOLVO 1966 Herbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. (714) 846·9303 or 540-9487. #1 Volvo dealer In Oran09 County and When you uk tor a Toyota at Earle Ille'•. you g,t ltl I 08 LONGPRE PONTI.AC 13600 Beach Blvd . Westminster Tel 892-6651 Orange County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes. Service. Parts · UNIVERSITY HONDA 2850 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9640 1 Mile South 405 Freeway Salas. service. parts & leasing • SANT A ANA DATSUN 2001 E 17th Street, Santa Ana Tel. 558·781 t Your· Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer 0 MIR.A.CLE MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tat. 64&5700. #t dealer 1n So. Callf. See the all new 1981 GLC. ALLEH-OL.DSMOllLl-CADILLAC SUIARU-GMC TRUCKS San Diego Fwy. •I A.,.ry Exit on Camino Caplatrano In L~una Niguel Tel. 831-0800/495-<ll!00. • SAM DE S.AMTIS C~OUT 401 S. El Camino Real, Sir\~ SalM. Servi~. La.Ing And Pwta Orange County'• NEWEST CheYrO!et detiler: ''Orowtng Your Way." Exit El Camino Off~. 831-<>580 492"'600 COSTA MESA DATSUN 2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 540-6410 Serving Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mole So 405 SUNSET FORD, IMC. (Home of W111te the Whale). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd • Wasttll'unster Tel 636-4010 FRANK PROTO UHCOf.K..MERCURY Service and Parts Department always open 7 days o week 7 30 A M to 6.30 P M. 84&n39 0 COHMELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd .. Coata Mesa. Over 20 years aervlftg Orange County! Sales. leasing. S«Vlce Call 54(H200. special parts line: 546-9-400; body shop llne. 754-0400 • CHICK IVERSOH PORSCHE-.AUDl-YW 415 E. Coast !'fwy .. Newport Beach 673-0900. The only dMlershlp In Orange County With these three great m•kes under one root• ROY CAIVH IOU.S IOYCMMW 1S.0 .llimbOrM Rold. Newport Beach 640-6444. Sal • Servloe, P4rta And I.easing. I . . ' ... . . \ . . •• ' I \ • ·' ·' '•. .: . . . " .. Orange Cout DAILV PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 .. . . . .. ... ,, .. . . . .. ' I ' , • . , o o o I • ·~. I • ' " t •• : •••• t : . ·: •..• ~<: .. ~·. . . . . . .. . ••• • •••• •• • • •• j ' . ,, .. . ,· ·-' ' .. t .. o ' 0 o I :(\ ; • r;O 0 t I I o i •• • •• ~· .. :'. • ••• .. .. s. s . . , oa .. . ~ ,',• .. success a .. ara e sa e. ··"' . ... ... ' _,, ... • I ' •• t • . . . . ' \ . . • ;, I Garage sales, yard sales, rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what you call them, the id_ea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded attic or garage, or when you need a little extra cash, have a garage sale! So get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money doing it! It's fun, it's profitable, and following these 10 steps will make it simple. -• Decide on dates. Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your II sale. Weekends are usually good, but many successful sales have been held in the evening, just after work. Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for any other large event that may attract potential buyers away, such as fairs or community events. Have your sale run at least two days -some people may not be able to come on any single day. What to sell. ,Everything! That is, everything you haven't used in the II last year. If an item has antique value, or is brand-new, or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house. Look everywhere, and list everything. Fwwiture. This is your main attraction and your best source of income. Be sure to place furnitur~ where it can be seen from the street. Price · furniture low enough to beat auctions and secondhand sales (check the classifieds for compartsons), but high enough so you can come down a little when someone shows interest. RockinQ chairs, chest of drawers, tables and chairs are all very successful at garage sales, so feature them in your ad. . Allff.-s. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and kept close at hand where you can watch and talk about them. Nostalgia items are very popular - display them well. ClothlllCJ. Make sure clothing is clean, and mark the price way down. Put as many things as possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age. Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low prices are a ....ton clothes except for unusual items, which should be tagged with an explanation (like, "hand-embroidered flowers, dress worn by Mae West)." Appliances. These wi II sell .for a fair price only if they work. No one wi II take your word for it. Have an extension cord so they can be tested, or better yet, have radios playing, old TV sels-turnecrori etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold "as is". rt.h. These usually go fast, but keep them out of direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper, Maggie), and write a line or two on the name card about how to care for them. Write your ad. ·Here is a suggested ad: "Garage Sale-desks, II Bentwood rocking chair, toys, infants' clothing, 1922 Victrola in originar cabinet, many.gadgets, lots of unusual items, rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 1234 Soutti Anystreet, Yourtown. Just west of Main and 2nd." · · Use this sample ad as a guide. Be sure to list unusual items. Be as specific as possible. Give directions if . needed. Don't use Jbbreviations -many people won't bother to decipher them. CAUTION: Don't advertise anything you don't really have. Every item in the ad must be on hand at the start of the sale: . . 642-·5678 lailJPil · 330 W. Bay St., Costa Meia, CA. Open 8-5:30 Monday thru Friday, Saturday 8-noon .. ' .. . . .. \' . . . ~ .. ' . ' ' .. ·· . :~.-~·.: ... · .. :_·:··. . . . ,. . . .. ·'· . . . . . . . •, I ' ··~ • .. . . .. . '·I. I I ,• ·. ,,... • . t . . 1 Where to ad:tertise. · .. .-.. · ...... · ·1 ·Place your al;i where ·it·~ll·be seen· by people wh·o liv~. · :--..... _') in the area -mos~ pe.opl~.·~hop ctose ·to t:lof!ie. The ·, ... ._·: .... · . I m Dally Pilot is read ·by8$,09Q'adults in·Co~~ Mesa,· .. · · · · · · 1 Newport B~ach, Laguna Beach .• IN.ine; Hun.tin'gt6n .: .· : : Beach and. Foun.tain VaUey .'-:guaran1e.eing. yo~ ~ide· . ·.": · exposµre. And with t~e .. P.il6t, you're ':nc>t P.aying tor waste circulation in Los Aligel~s·or Anaheini. Plan t'Q run your ad 3 times or more, and start' if a few. days · before the sale so bargain hunter~ can have plenty of notice. Make a sign. · :· . .·, . . . . . . .. ·. . ". r ., I :· . ~ To help make your s·~1e successful, make a fe~ sj.g~s · . _ · m from c·ardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good . · ·sign size is 14" x 22" .. Placing your sign. The morning of the sale, bUt not before, place your • signs. Be sure and add your address and any • directional arrows. Th is should be done about a half hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it can be seen from both sides of the street by passing cars and pedestrians. CAUTION: Some towns have laws that restrict the p•~cement and duration of garage sale signs. Please check with your town's planning department or clerk. Marking prices. Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office llii supply stor~s have varoius sizes and colors of stickers • that work weH, or you can use masking tape. However ·you ni.ark.them, make prices low. Garage sales are for bar~a1n hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell you U have to drag Qack in the house and store again for another year. _..../ ·: · Serving ref reshm.t·nts~ · This doesn't have to cost m,uch,.,and creates a friendly •atmosphere. It also enCQu~~.eeople to stay longer -and perhaps bu}( more~'¥o.u could even charge for expensive items like donuts, or the kids could go in 'I busine·ss for the day, with a le~rade stand. .. ' . Display.. ,. ~-=-·~~>/' :~ ,, ·. :. : Make sure ever}'ttring can be seen. Have card tables or m boards used as shelves between two chairs. Don't cause people to bend over unless you can't help it. Use one table as a desk where you can see everything and take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes work fine) and make sure someone is appoint~ ''cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend who can help answer questions, relief for· lunch, etc. Check y~ur neighbors ond . .. fr• d t\." . 1en s. J~ ~~... • ••• • • llSee if any want to joiff.your sale. This will giv-.Y<>o .. . someone to share e><j)enses with and increase interest in your sale. If others join you, be aure to include this in your ad (example: "thre&-family sale," .. neighborhood sale"). Group sales are a lot more fun, too. ··' \ . GOOD l:.UCK WITH YOUR GARAGE SALE! MAY IT BE SUCCESSFUL AND FUNI i IUlll ClllT MONDAY. AUGUST 3 , 1961 * * • * • Ylll HlllTIWI DAllY PAPIR OR ANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS County flying Air traf fie flows despite strike • By FREDERICKSCHOEMERL of .. DeM,Pl ... StlM Jets thunde red out of Orange County's John Wayne Airport un· der relatively normal schedules today, despite the air controllers' strike that cut the number of on· duty air traffic personnel by 40 perce nt. Airline representatives said some flights were delayed from five to 10 minutes, but that no s cheduled departures were can· celed. Arriving flights also were unaffect.ed, they said. Ralph Odenwald, chief of the Orange County tower, s aid three persons -instead of the usual five -were handling air traffic in and out cf the airport, the fourth busiest in the country. saves fuel because Jetliners don't s it near the runway awaiting takeoff clcurance At a separate federal Aviation Administration a ir trafhc control facillty located at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, chief Don r'owler said the s trike had impac t ed o perations. but declined to release a specific fi gure on the number of personnel involved "We have adequate staffing for about 50 percent of our opera· t10ns," f'owler said . The radar facility serves as something of a central clearinghouse for all air traffic along the Or a nge Coast A1rCal'~ outbound flights were carrying a bout 25 percent fe wer passengers than normal, Mark Peterson. director of communica tionssaid By contr ast. he l>a 1d. AirCal PX· pcrienced a higher than normal passenger demand Sunday. as travelers attempted to beat the strike deadline clock Peterson A single-engine Cessna airplane takes off over the control tower, manned by three people, at John Wa.11ne Airport todau. Odenwald said a "gate hola" procedure was implemented, whereby commercial jetliners were held at the terminal gale un· ti1 a firm departure time could be given to pilots by controllers. Such a system . he s aid, allows for a smoother flow of traffic and (See FLIGHTS, PagP AZ> * * * * * * Reagan gives air controllers 48 hours Tax cuts ready Congress wrapping up action WASHINGTON <AP> -Only Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and his opposition to tax breaks for the oil industry stood in the path of th e larges t lax cut in American history today. The Senate was scheduled to complete action today, and the House Tuesday, on President Reagan's lax legislation, a cor· nerstone of his economic plan which would reduce individual and corporate laxes by $749 billion through 1986. That would put the bill on Reagan's desk for his signature. Newport dad awaits search for son, 26 By STEVE MARBLE OI tM o.lly 11'1 ... SlaM A Newport Beach police sergeant who has been awaiting confirmation of his son's death for four months says it appears authorities are dragging their feet on completing a search for the light plane which carried his son as a passenger. Detedive Ken Thompson re- ceived word last month that authorities in Fresno County bad spotted wreckage of a white plane near a remote lake in the rough terrain of the Sierra Nevada. The description of the plane, Thompson says, matches that of the rented Cessna 210 that was carrying his 26-year-old son Michael and pilot Robert Reed, 25. CSee SEARCH, Page A2) The final version of the bill was agreed upon Satucday morning by conferees who spent 14 hours hammering out dif· ferences between the House and Senate approaches, largely over how much of a break oil pro· ducers should get. <See related stories Page A3 .) The compromise calls for re- ductions for petro le um pro· ducers totalling S32 billion over the next 10 years, most of it go· ing to royalty holders. That is about halfway between the $19.9 billion the Senate wanted and the $40 billion written into the House bill by Reagan supporters in a successful move to win the votes of oil-state Democrats. Senate Re publican leaders wanted to bring the bill up for a 1 final vote Saturday but were thwarted when the Massachusetts Democrat called from his home state and asked that it be held up until today . Kennedy, whose request was honored under a Senate custom allowing absent members to be present for major actions, said he would demand a vote on a motion to recommit the bill to conference with instructions lo rewrite the oil provisions. How much support he might get was uncertain. Last week, Kenne d y a nd othe r liberal D e mo c rats threat e ned a filibuster if the oil industry re- ductions proposed by the con· ferees· were much larger than the original Senate bill. After the compromise was I reached, however, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohio, one of those threatening to filibuster, said he would not bold up the legis lation. Californians P?Y more for gasoline LOS ANGELES (AP ) ~ Californians have been paying about seven cents more for a gallon or regular leaded gasoline than the national average, but th at price gap could vanish soon, according to Industry statistics. The difference in price was al· tributed lo an extraordinary drop in gasoline s upplies last spring on the West Coast, the Los Angeles Ti mes reported Sunday , Meanwhile, a worldwide surplus of oU led to a drop In national gasoline prices. As production gears up thlJ summer, gasollnesuppliessbould be returning to normal levels and wholesale prices have already started to drop. Prices at the pump should follow, industry of· ficial1 told the Times. In March, the avera1e price for a gallon of leaded regular 1u waa $1.32 both ln California and na- tionwide. Aa 1uppliea west of the Roc:k1e1 dropped, however, the prices ln Calllomla rose. By July 1, a gallon Of reaular aaaollne eo1t $UM in CaUfornia, accordinf to the Lund'berc Letter, an authoritative marketJn11'41"Vey. Nationwide, the price had droppedtoSl.27 a gallon. The Times reported that the gasoline supplies in the West dropped so drastically last spring that less fuel was on band then than had been available during the big 1979 gasoline shortage. In 1979, a 5 percent supply loss during the Iranian revolution prompted panic buying and long Unes at service stations. That triggered a rise in the cost of oil of more than 100 percent a )'ear. When the first lines formed, tbe panic spread and driven kept their gasoline tanks filled, usually carrying about three-quarters of a tank of gas. This put an add1· tional strain on s upplies, since the average driver normally keeps, just a quarter of a tank ol gu in ·his car. But last spring, panic buying was averted. Additional supplies were shipped In from the E~t.I althou&b usually ·oil 11 sbippeq from the West eo.,t to tbe .Eut, and demand ln California wu lower than ln 1979, ln part becaUM more tuel-etncient can are in use. DeMJ ............ "' o.ry ~ Traffic at Or?nge Cou~ty's ~lly bu3tling John Wayne Airport was .<.UJum by 15 to 20 percent today Passengers /md the gomg easier m the terminal. No panic at county airport Wayne Airport quiet ; many left before strike By GLENN SCOTT OfU.eD•ty~l ... Sa." Although mos t of the passengers al John Wayne Airport seemed resolved this rnorrung to fli ght delays caused by an air traffic controUers' 7 a.m. strike, J onathan Haines of Laguna Be ::h was taking no chances on his flight. Call it bad luck, but Haines had a job interview in San Francisco at10:30a.m. Healreadywaswail· ing at the airport at 7 a .m. for a scheduled8:30a.m. AirCalflight. "I figure I'm going to wait," he said as he sat in a chair in the terminal lobby. But Haines was surprised when he arrived, he said, because the terminal was not busy, not rocked by panicky passengers. In fact, it wasalmostquiet. "I expected a big crowd, but I don't know where they are," he said. Bob Pike, AirCal's station manager, thought he had the answer this momine. "l think everybody got s m art and left Saturday and S1,t11day, •'he said. An hour after the strike began, some flights bad departed and all other commercial fll1hta were scheduled lo leave, allhou1h of· flclals said the planes would be at least 15 to 20 minutes behind schedule. Passengers with Jess at 1take than Haines seemed sattafied •with the arrangement as they sat s leepy-eyed in waitlnt rooms while their commercial jet.a wall· ed, doors open, just steps outside the terminal. AJ Principe of La Habra and Steve Schreiner of Arcadia said they were encouraf'd tbl1 weekend after readlnt·and bear- inl news reports that amaUer lermlnala, auch u lobD WaJM, wowdn't have the problems ell· pected at major airport.a. The two work colleap• were headed to a tra.lnlq ... ion In r Sacr amento. Their biggest worry. they added. was how to re· turn to Orange County on Tues- day. "'We're taking it one step at a lime," cautioned Principe. "We may have to take Greyhound or I heard they may put another Am· trak train on the route from San FranciscotoLosAngeles.'' Vonna Hammerschmitl of Newport Beach accompanied her husband Robert to the airport, where he was heading for San Jose. "We tried to get out yesterday * * * and everything was full ," she s aid. To her amazement. the terminal seemed less crowded than on normal Monday mom · ings. l! there was any part of the terminal that seemed more crowded this morning, it was the pay telephones . Th ey we re Jammed at 7 a .m .. mostly by men in business suits holding com· plimentary cups of coffee in one hand, receivers in the oCber. "Just tell them 1·11 be there some time." said one of the callers. * * * Is it safe to fly? Opinions differ WASHINGTON (AP> -With thousands of air traffic con· troUers on strike, is it safe to fly? No, says the controllers' un- ion. Yes, say the government, the pilots and the airline in- dustry. To move air traffic, the Federal Aviation AdminlatraUon baa reduced the number of flights and is usin1 2,500 supervisory and nonunion con- trollers and several hundred military air controllers. "I do not feel these people are qualified lo work in the towen and centers or this country," aald Robert E. Poli, pr94ldent of the Proleaaional Air Trame Coo· trollera Oraanilatlon, which represents nearly 15,000 coo· trollen. "l believe it would pro- vide a sreat safety buard." But Traneportalion Secretary Drew Lewis aald that aafety la the lint coocem of the FAA'• conlinlency plan. "We're not going to jeopardize the public lives," he said. "We feel the plan is safe," said Daniel Henkin. spokesman for the Air Transport Associa· tion, which represents the airline _industry. ·'The airlines and their employees in this s ituation as always will continue to give the highest priority lo safety," Uenk:in sald. "No CUgbt will be dJspatched and no pilot will take off unless there Is assurance that all aafety requirements are met fully." Byron Whiteh ea d , a spokesman tor the Air Line Pilots AsaoclaUon, reported that the group ha s safety coordinators stationed at each of the naUon's 23 regional control centen and that ln the eal'ly houn ol the 1trlke \hey reported no safety problems. "AB far as safety ls concerned, we feel everythlni is normal," Whitehead aaid. Firing threat voiced WAS HI NGTON cA P I Pres1 dent Reagan gave stnkmg air traffic controlleri. 48 hours todav to return to work or be fired · "I must tell those who failed to report for dul~ this morning they are m violat ion of the law. and if they don't report for work within 48 hours. t hey have QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON STRIKE -A4 STATE'S CONTROLLERS ENDORSE STRIKE. AS fo rfeited their Jobs and ~all bE' terminated .·· Reagan told a Rose Garden briefing this morn· ing. Reagan's announcement came at the same time the Federal Aviation Adm1n1 s trat1on grounded much of the nation's commercial air traffic as the control ler s. in de fiance of a federal 1ud~e. launched their first nationwide strike. The walkout began with the day shift at 7 a m . local time. and the FAA said earl) 1nd1ca· lions were that more controllers were slaying off their jobs at some centers than had been an licipated while in other areas some controllers "ere defying the stnk<'. No figures we re available Reagan told reporters that feder a l la w prohibits federal employees from strik ing and that air controllers promised not to strike whe n they were hired ·1 hope you'll emphasize again t he possibility of lermma · lion. because J believe that there are a great many of those people who have been swept up in this and probably have not rea lly cons idered the fact that they have taken an oath. the fact that <See WARNING. Page A2) .ORANG I COAST WIATHf R Late night through mid- morning low cloudiness Otherwise fair through Tuesday. Not much tem- perature change . Highs in low 70s at the be aches. ranging to low to middle 80s in the inland sections. Lows tonight 60 to 65. INSIDE TODAY They're called the "girl Beatles" a'nd they're giving cuteneu a good name Meet this new rock group on Page A7. .INDll ···-~· AJ i•:-.. •• ~ A.I «:..-.. Ct,. c--. .. Clrt • .. .._..._..a ........ M .... 11 I 1 Iii ,....._ ai = a .. , . . -. . . Orange Coa1t OAILV PILOT/Monday. Aug1.11t 3, 1981 Options eyed Air strike sparks rush for alternates Travelen. raced wltb an air tramc controller8' atrlke have befUI\ hopplni tralna and bulea out of town. Al 2 a.m. thl8 mornln1 92 t&llen from Southern Callfom!a were waltin1 to 1et through on Amtrak rea~rve.tioQ lines\ ac-cording lo Michael Harr 1, a re1ervatiorus aupervlaor. Harris said. that the number of c:allers was extremely unusual, * * * From Page A1 FUGHTS • • • sai d nearly all standby passengers were accommodated. Calls poured into AirCal's res- ervat ion lines as concerned travelers sought information on whether their flights would de- part, Peterson noted. Peterson saidAirCal, which operates 25 of the 41 jet de- partures permitted daily from the airport, intends to operate its normal schedule until oUterwise advised by the FAA. The FAA has prepared a con- tingency plan to handle traffic, tiut its implementation has been held in abeyance while officials determine how much of an impact thestrikeishaving. Peterson said it is much too early to assess what financial im- pact the strike may have, but pointed out that the threat alone of an air traffic controllers strike on June 22 is estimated lo have cost the airline industry a bout $40 mil· lion in lost revenue. * * * From Page A1 but tbat call1 have 1anC!e dropped t.o near normal. Alf reserved trains < thoee re· quirtna advance tlckeh) between Oran1e County and San Francisco have been sold out UO· tll ~ middle of the week, ac· cordlna t~ a n Amtrak spoke.man ln San Franclaco. Seat.s are still available on UO· reserved lralna between Oran•e County and Los Antelea . However , a company spokesman warnttd that it may be standing room onJy. Local Amtrak ofllclals said they don't exJ)fft t.o see an In· crease in travelers until late to- day or early Tuesday morning. "I haven't noticed a big d.11- ference yet this morning," said Mark Ziegler at the Santa Ana station. "I imagine later on we will, though." Officials al the Fullerton sta- tion reported no significant in- crease in train riders this morn- ing. Requests for tickets on Greyhound buses were reported slightly higher this morning, as travelers began looking for alternative ways to reach their destinations. Kirk Hoover w ith the Greyhound Laguna Beach office said most of the callers wanted to travel lo the east coast. However, a group of 16 people originally scheduled to rly to San Francisco Tuesday morning, will be taking the bus instead, he said. * * * WARNING ISSUED • • • lhis is now in violation of the law. "I hope they will remove themselves from the lawbreaker situation by returning lo their posts." Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis, who also briefed reporters, said the government will not offer the controllers any more money. "We do not plan to increase our offer to the union." he said. Reagan said the threat to fire the controllers was the only ac· Lion open to him. "What lesser action can there be?" he asked. "The law is very explicit. They are violating the law." Reagan and Lewis spoke after a midmorning While House meeting also attended by At- torney General William French Smith. Lewis said beforehand that the government would not try to put controllers in jail, but would seek civil penalties and ask lo have the union removed as the controllers' bargaining agent. Meanwhile, a federal judge in New York City ordered air traf- fic controllers to halt their strike temporarily and appear in court Tuesday to · explain why they should not permanently return to work. U.S. marshals immediately were ordered to fan out with copies of the order. seeking striking controllers and serving them with Platt's order. Failure to obey the judicial command could subject mem- bers of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization to cont~mpt-of-court penalties. Representatives of the union were ordered to appear before Platt at 10 a.m . EDT Tuesday to answer his order. The judge's order enjoined the controllers "from in any manner calling, causing or authorizing, continuing, encouraging and participating in and engaging in, obstructing or taking any part in any strike, work stoppage or slowdown or other concerted failures by FAA employees lo report to work." The 7 a.m. walkout was in de- Mesa firm's s afe rifled of $2,296 When a U-Haul Rentals employee opened his Costa Mesa firm's s afe early Sunday to reach· the more than $2,200 sup- fiance of another judge's order. U.S. District Judge Joyce Green in Washington ordered the union and its leaders lo tell the court by 2 p.m. PDT today why they should not be held in contempt for disobeying her or- der malting the strike illegal. Mrs. Green, at the predawn bearing, also granted the gov- ernment's request to bar the un- ion from paying any benefits Crom its strike fund to the con- trollers. Mrs. Green's order had pro· hibited a wo'rls 1stoppage or slowdown for 10 days. Mrs. Green, who noted government employees are forbidden to strike, said a hearing will be held Aug. 12 to consider a tem- porary restraining order, which would lengthen the legal probibi· tion against the strike. The un- ion was not represented at today's court session. The controllers, who direct air traffic at 23 regional centers and more than 500 airports, earn an average of $34,000 a year, with a low of $20,500 and a high of $49,200, depending on years of service and traffic volume. $10,000 taken at eatery in SA An armed ma n and his ac- complice escaped wit h an estimated $10,000 in weekend re- ceipts from the Santa Ana Heights McDonald's restaurant early today after herding employees into a basement storage room. No one was harmed in the 1: 25 a.m. robbery, in which one of the holdup men brandished a .45 caliber automatic pistol. Orange County Sheriff's Departmen t spokesman Sgt. Dan Spratt said the money was taken from a safe just as the restaurant was closing. The restaurant is located al 2290 Southeast Bristol St. Further details surrounding the robbery were not im · mediately available, Spratt said. Commenting on the size of the loss, Spratt said, "They got more than they usually get in bank robberies." Dollar soars posedly inside, he came up with LONDON (AP) -The doUar only a couple of rolls of coins, soared against major foreign police said. currencieS in early trading to- Officers said someone with the · day bitting a 5-year high safe's com~inati~n appai:en_tly · ag~t 'the West German mark, entered a wmdow ID the building and a record level against the at 2680 Newport Blvd. sometime Italian Ura. Gold slumped below late Saturday or early Sunday $400 an ounce for the se~ond and stole $2,296. time in less than a month. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat I CIHttned lldY9'ttatnt 7141142-H 71 All other depertmenta 142"'321 Thomas P. Haley ~-CN91(-ut.,..()4f- R<>Oerl N w~ ,.._. Mleh .. 1 P. Harvey ~Ottectot L Kay Schultz Olf9ctoi"' °""'-Kenn.th N Goddard Jr c.-Oireclof Thomas A. Murphlne Editor Bernard Schulman 0- Charltl H. L009 "-"~'Cetol A. Moore ....... E'alll MAIN OFFICE )lO WHI 8•y M .1:•1a llMM, CA Mall -"M ... IMO, C•la MaM, CA mll C•yrl9'11 1•1 Or ..... CoHI ..,,...w ... c._... No ,, ... , ,..,, ... , lll11•lr•ll011t, .onor••• ""'"•• or •• , ••rl1ltMttllt -•In ..... bt r•prod11<ad •11 ..... I oc1eclal perrnluklll of <01>yr19!11 ... ,.r CONCERT ON THE GREEN Joseph Pearlman, director· or the Orange Coast Community Symphony Orhcestra, con- ducts the American Home Symphony Pops in the first of a four-concert series Sunday on the campus green at Orange ...,~ .... ..-- Coast College, Costa Mesa. Ame'rican Home is presenting the free public concerts through co-sponsorship of the col- lege and the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Other programs will be played al 7·30 p.m Aug. 9, 16 and 23. Mobil ups 'Grand mal Waves, tides keep s~izur'i ' lifeguards hopping . bidding hits Brady Orange Coast lifeguard de-4 feet underwater and had for Conoco WAS HINGTON (AP) James S. Brady, Pres ident Reagan's press secretary who was wounded when Reagan was shot March 30 , had a major seizure in his hos pital room today, deputy press secretar y Larry Speakes announced. The seizure, known as a "grand mal seizure," was treated with intravenous m edication and anesthesia , Speakes said. A While House announcement said that Bl'ady's vital signs were normal and that he was sleeping under anesthesia in a recovery room at the George Washington University Hospital. Brady bas been treated at the hospital s ince sufCering a gunshot. wound in the head during the assassination attempt on the president. From Page A1 SEARCH. • • The two Costa Mesa men were last seen March 19 when they took off from the Mammoth Lakes airport bound for nearby Bishop. It· was snowing at the time. . Sgt. Ken Abell, a member of the Fresno County Sheriff's search and rescue team, con- firmed the sighting but said that bis department does not have adequate funds to bankroll a search. Authorities in Fresno say the plane is located near Red Slate Mountain which is a two-day hike from the nearest ranger's station. A volunteer team of moun- taineers that was . lo begin a search for the wreckage last week had still not been dis- patched today, s heriff officials s aid. It was unclear when the search team would be sent into the mountains. An investigator for the Na· tional Transportation Safety Board. which inves tigates airplane crashes. said his agen- cy is aware of the wreckage sighting. But. he said, it is too early for them to take any ac· lion. "We're on standby right now," said Terry Armentrout, an in· vestigator for the board. "We can't launch an investigation un· til lhe wreckage has been clear- ly identified." He said it is up to Fresno County to go into the mountains and attempt to locate an iden· ti fication number on th e wreckage. "Wet ve gone up on these things before and they've turned out to be wild goose chases, .. said Armentrout. Thompson claims the whole thing seems like a Catch 22 situation. ''This is the most unreal thing that's ever happened to me," Thompson said. "Unless you've lost a child it's hard to express the reelings I'm going through." Mr. Hamilton • services set FWJ1eral servtces for longtime Newport Beacb resident Jae~ B. Hamilton, 72, who died of leukemia last Thursday, wUJ be' held Tuesd ay at 2 p.m . at Pacific View Chapel, 3500 Pacific View Drive, Newport Beach. Mr. Hamilton co-founded tbe- First Step House, a Costa Mesa recovery home tor alcoholics, 25 years a10. He a lso was a member of the Newport Club, a aervt~ organization. Mr . Hamilton, who bad lived in Newport Beach tor 40 years, 11 1urvlved by his ton, Robert of M'cCall, ldiho, dauihter, Donna Lee Tbomet.s of Boise, Jdabo, and 13 crandchildren. t partments say they were kept stopped breathing. busy over the weekend making However, by the time she was rescues as 4 to 5-foot waves and brought to the beach her rip currents plagued bathers. breathing had resumed after be· Laguna Beach lifeguard ing given mouth·to·mouth re- spokesman Bruce Baird said a s uscitation, Baird said. Ms . Covina woman nearly drowned Martines was taken to South at Mountain Road beach Satur-Coast Medical Center where she day. Baird said when lifeguard was treated and released. Mike Lon~field reached Eleste Baird said about 70,000 people Martines she was floating about showed up al city bf>aches over the weekend. Surf was reported Drug s ales charged to beach guard Laguna Beac h undercover ofricers arrested a s easonal lifeguard who police said was selling narcotics from his lifeguard tower at Moss Street Beach. Thomas Lindheim. 20, of Mission Viejo was arrested . Friday afternoon while on duty at the beach tower. police said today. The lifeguard, who had only worked for the city for seven weeks, purportedly sold a small amount of ha s his h to an undercover officer. Police said th! arrest was the result of a complaint from a beachgoer who purportedly overheard a con versa lion between the lifeguard and another party near the tower. Lindheim was immediately replaced at the tower by another guard Friday afternoon and booked on drug charges at the city police department. City officials said he was later released on his promise to appear in court on the drug charges. Police h u n t rap ist of Mesa g irl, 16 Costa Mesa police sought a man with shoulder-length blond hair wno reportedly raped a 16-year -old girl in the parking lot of an apartment complex al 12:30 a.m. Investigators said the girl was walking a long Wilson Street when the man threatened her with a gun he claimed was con- cealed in his pocket. a t from 3 to 4 feet and 141 rescues were performed. Newport Beach lifeguards re· ported 185.000 beach vi sitors on both Saturday and Sunday, an unusually large crowd. Eighty- one rescues were made. Evening beach -goers in Newport Saturday were sur- prised by the landing of a Coast Guard rescue helicopter. Lt Frank Mullins of the guard's Rescue Coordination Center in Long Beach said the pilot dis- covered a hydraulic leak while fl ying over the ocean 30 miles from shore. No one was injured in the emergency landing. Mullins said the craft was repaired on the beach and returned to Long Beach Saturday night. Huntington Bea c h city lifeguards said a weekend crowd of 90,000 was counted. No major incidents were reported and 89 rescues were performed. Huntington State Beach guards said the crowd al tr.eir strand was estimated al about 139,000. There were no serious inc idents reported and 40 rescues. Three killed in two fires OAKLAND <AP > Two c h ildren and a man in a wheelchair died in San Fran- cisco Bay area fires. authorities said today. Lavelle Allen. 4, and Ebony McDonald, 6, died in a blaze that started in the closet of a north Oakland home shortly after 9 a.m. Sunday. Luther Townsend, 64 , died Saturday night in Oakland when fire overtook him as he tried to leave his burning apartment in a wheelchair. Al's Garage; 'rour Denim Store A l$'.'I "501:' SMnl<-lo·ftt bOslc denim 8 Lee Rider. Sl\'Qjght leg denim. C. Le\A·fOt·Mef'l. stretch denim o. CoMn Klein. 14 oz. denim ' • I NEW YORK (AP> -Mobil Corp. today boosted its offer for Conoco Inc. to $8.6 billion in an effort to keep the bidding war for Conoco going until it can gel government clearance to begin buying shares. Mobil, locked in a war with Du Pont Co. and Seagram Co. Ltd. for control of the nation's ninth- largest oil company . said it would pay Sl 15 a share in cash for 51 percent of the Conoco s hares, up from Sl05 in its earlier offer. Mobil did not change the other part or its offer. providing for securities worth $85 a share for each remaining Conoco share. The old offer was worth $8.2 billion. Mobil is lhe only one of the three bidders that still faces ma· j or antitrust questions, and it said the increase was "in rec- ognition of the fact that a Conoco shareholder will have to wail longer for payment" from Mobil than from other bidders. Seagram, the big Canadian distiller. already has begun buy- ing shares of Conoco. and said Sunday it has bought, or will soon buy, about 18 percent of the company's stock at $92 a share. Du Pont. offering a total of $7 .3 billion, said it bas received tenders for more than SO percent of Conoco's shares and said it expects to have final antitrust clearance from the Justice Departme nt by Wednesday. Fuentes gets panel post Thomas Fuentes. senior vice president of a Newport Beach engineering firm. has been elect- ed president of the 12-member Santa Ana College Foundation. which administers scholarship programs for the college. Fuentes, a Santa Ana College graduate, is a member of the Republican State Central Com- mittee and first vice chairman of Orange County's Republican Party. He is also communications director of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange and a member of the U.S. Catholic Bishops Na- tional Advisory Council. 1 A well kl"IC1Wn boSIC COiion or blended fot>ric fhe fabric IS V0fY dUtob4e and IS pOpUlor '°' au lypes ol gaments horn WOii< clothes lo SPof1$WeOI and e\/9l'llngweo1 2 A COO!se blue dungaree used for WO<k Clothes, orlglnolly used fol sollOls work clothes At:SGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 I lips prooccupl d with the word "mol." And Ma McCorklo ls look· Ina lnto th cflcct1 of Ml11 PlHY and the chDncter'a sldeklcka, human and mup. pet, from "The Muppet Mov - ie" releued. few years aao. •"The moaning of these find· ln1s for chlldrnn viewers ts un· clear," Ml Mccorkle said. "The extent to whi ch viewlna any form of media affects role models. the extent to which particular messages are at· tended b)' children and the ef· fects or simultaneous viewing by valued adults Is yet to bede- lermlned.'' However, she said one tt\lne is \Cery clear -thousands ot children are watching Miss • Piggy , a rigidly sex- stereotyped character with so~e negative personality traits. And lt seems Miss Piggy is a loved muppet that children. particularly girls, could imitate. Bo distraction from innocence A ruling is expected this week, pe rhaps today. on whether Elvl8 Presley's manager will continue to re- ceive a "lion's share" or the late singer's income. Revealing scenes of Jane in a new movie vers ion or "Tarzan, The Apeman," may draw some viewers, but the woman who made the jungle man's mate famous says she doesn't want to see the film. Actre ss Maureen O'SuJUvan, who played Jane opposite Johnny Weissmuller in six Tarzan movies between 1932 and 1942, said in Rutland, Vt .. she won't see the film because s he fears it will detract from the innocence of the story. Nudity and sex in the re· make, starring Bo Derek, prompted a lawsuit by the estate of Edgar Rice Bur- roughs, the man who created the jungle hero. Ms. O'Sullivan. who plans to settle in a Vermont home she bought five years ago, said her Tarzan movies contained "poetic sex." But she said re· views she has read of the new movie lead her to believe that sex and nudity are exploited in the remake. She also said the · · R' a ting for the new movie will lude children -the audle e for whom the original st written. ·'She is the cha motivated by roman and power,'' a res says. She 's been s magazine covers, in on television a nd e calendars. ''She is the vie of violence who saves th and herself -only w man fails as a savio nd is threatened. She man lates and connives to re· her goal s," s a ys Su McCorkle, an assista fessor of communica Boise State Univer Boise, Idaho. So who is it? Miss Piggy, of J ppet fame. who else? Miss Piggy, one or t best· known Muppets. look anno· cent enough with h long curled lashes. broad sn•t and Shelby County Probate Judge Joseph Evans is to rule in Memphjs, Tenn. on charges brought b y attorney Blanchard Tuai of Memphis, who was appointed by the court in May 1980 as guardian of Pres ley 's 12 -year-old daughter. Lisa ~arle. Tuai h ad charged that Presley's manager, Col. Tom Parker, and RCA Records defrauded $2.7 mill ion from Presley's estate. Last fall, Tuai asked Evans to void an agreement between Presley and Parker that gave the man ager half or the singer 's income for life. Tuai called Parker's salary exorbi- tant and accused P arker of mishandling Presley's busi - ness affairs. Parker. who lives in Los Angeles, has ~ecn unavailable for comment An RCA spokesman denied the charge during the weekend PresleydiedAug 16.1977.at theageof42 Tornadoes hit Montana Thunderstorms range from north I Arkansas to Michigan U.S. sum·mary T-Jtonns lleerl"9 1..-~ !Wtll, lllOfl wlndl -IO...-S NI parts OI Mo"lana, w·"fl• showers or 11\un· deratorms 1•11 o¥er Ille western Dakota. ColCH"-, Ille sou1herl\ HIQll Plelns. -'""" -1Nrn Arunw1 to I~ Mlclllgan. A ICH"nedo •IM WH 1l111t•d In IO<lth-centrel N-Mealco. "" twister touched down brlelly ne•r Shelby In northwestern Monqna Sllnclt y • ...,.,no. -tnOCNr tomeoo wts --d netr Herdln In Ille soutt>-<entrel pert of t,,. tq te. U.. Nttlonet wutllff Strvlr.e said. L•ter today, sutt ... td $1oowtrs tnd tl\understCH"mt were forec•st to •••di'""" the Dfllo V•ll•y -GrHt L•kts to the north -mld·All.,,tlc Cout •nd over tl\e Mlu lsslppl V•lley, .. ,, Gull Coast. northarn Plt lr.s tftd _, Rockltt. C._y sal..s _. predicted lor ,,,. P t c II le Hortllwttt. re,,_tturet ··-the nation •• midnight POT ,.,9ec1 ,,....., SO In CUI· B•nk, Monl, to '6 In "'-nla, Arl1, California Felr tkl" •ncl lllOfls In the ml~ •nd 'IOs -• forecast lor most of Soutllt1'n Ctlllornlt tllrc•'llfl T-.,. Ille Natlontl WNI,.... Servi<• said to- day Fore<.esttrs also w ld there _.., be conctn.ilng ct-ness o-coutel areu <Nrlng nlglll and mornln1 llours, 9"CI toutty 9U1ty winds In tile northern aserts In Ille tiler~ •ncl nenlng Alter t low tonight In the mld·60s, LOS A19I .. lhould IWlve t l\lgh nttr U, ,..htle coastal vtlr.y lllgt>s rtnge lrom IS to n. Ille NWS u id. Tiie ln- t•rmedltle ¥alleys wltl be sunny encl werm with hlgl!S lrom 90 to 9S. Tiie mountelns t.llould IOP Int,,. tos, Upoer clttert temoer•ture1 wlll r ange lrom 9S to IOI wlllle lower OeMrts slu te betw-. 10l •ncl 11'. Temperatures Al.,.._ Am•ritto ""lltnte 8•111..-. Boston llrownsvll• ChtrlstnWV Clllcego Hl·L..C.C. 91 67 9S 13 '1 .. 17 .. " .. .. 76 12 " .Ol II U 2.JS D.ity ""°' o.ti•*"Y I l•G--..4 Motlo1y·l'ro01y If you Oo not hevt \'OU' -11y !> 30 " m u n 11e1c>re t D m Ind your cooy ..,11 De Oeh-9CI SMurOay ano SvndlY 11 yo.. 00 not =~I~;,. c:,::r ..:r :..,~Ym"'ltc: cltl•_.., Clrc:....._T....._ Moel Or1nge Counly Arlu t4J.-4UI Nor111 ..... Hunt•ngton e .. ch • Incl WM•m•ntttr '*IUf t Legun1 Nogoel 4.....,.. ..... (ol4 ~ - Cincinnati " 10 Ott Ft Wiii 100 n Oenwr 94 .. Detroit ., 10 Felr!IW>ks u u .03 Houtton 94 '° lnOnepli. IS n Jt cksnvlle .,, 70 .1. l(tnsClty 14 70 .05 L81V-s 10. 75 Lillie Rock tl 71 Los Anve1 .. .. .. LOUfS¥111e 91 " Memphis .,, 73 Mltml 14 76 I 1' New Orte..,. tl 74 .«! NtwYOl'k " 71 Okla City 91 14 OrlandO 9S 13 P-.la lOS 11 Pit tsbuf'Qh u .. s.uu11e '1 •7 S•n Di"90 19 " Stn Frat1 u S4 St Louis 11 73 .20 StP·T-94 71 19 Tulu 94 76 .50 WeaNnvtn .. 14 CANAOIAN C•lgery 73 so 10.0 Edmonton IS so 10.0 Montru t ... .. ., 011••• .. .. ·°' R99lne 17 u Toronto .. .. Vtn<.-" SS Wlnnl1199 It SS 20 Marysville~ Paso RObl Reo BIUH Red-C S.crt ment S.tlnts " " 9l SI 94 " " S6 n se " SS Senta Berber• Thermal Ukiah B•r,lOW Big Beer Bl11\Qp , ........ Long llN<ll Monrovl• Ml Wiiton N•WPOf'I Beech Ontario Palm 5'>f'lr\QS P•se<ltn• Sen B.,nerdlno S•n JOM" Sanl•AN II S7 101 " .. S6 10. n 11 :la 96 SI 14 .. .. " 91 SI 12 •• II ~ 9S 60 112 11 90 SI 91 S9 n S1 n u Sun, moon, tides TUESOAY Flr1t low 6 SI a.m. 0 S Flt1l N9" 12 ti a.m. S.t St<_ low 7 .16 p.m. 2 I Stc-lllQll t .:!1 p.m. 4.6 Sun Mis •t I S1 p m today. rls .. at 6;0. t.m T .. "'8Y Moon rlMt t i 10 " • m Tue>day, sets at 10 SS p.m SURf RIPDRT I T-r'• A¥9/IMI . •·l M 2 . 2·3 1-2 ,., 2-4 2-4 2·• ..... s.._. ~ Ir-eel ''"'° Ir-eel lalr Ir-eel lalr lair felr felr ltlr ···-T-. .. 6S .. .. .. .. .. .. " .. .. 67 .. 1.) ••tr .. 3-4 good ., ,.... '°°" •I CALI l"OllNIA ,.... good 61 OMl:>IDW'S TIDES: S•Hll direction So.IU>wtst BaktNlleld Blythe EurH.e Lanoster " l.S 114 ,. 64 S6 tS l.S NG AGENCIES HB S..te, Eric Emery, H""t City, Wally .• Bud Btlsllt; L.B .• Mlk• Owlnnel, Seit er ...... Orm-..! y, IClrt• Reymont; ~. Due 0.-.welow; S.C .. Rlcllerd lle1, Tom Snydt r ut the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number bel and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delive d to the appropriate editor The same 24·hour swering service may be used to record let· ters to the editor on a topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and teleph e number fo r verification No circulation calls, please Tell us wh~t 's on y r mind 642·6086 Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 3, 1981 H /F ........... NOT TOO CLOSE -Al Ha nsen, of Gilroy, is the self- p~oclaimed. "Garl~c King." as .he strolls through annual Gilroy Garltc Festival Dressed lake the pungent spice. com - pl~te with a garl_ic wr eath, Hansen jokes he's nothing to sniff at. but admits the aroma can become strong after a while Supply side theory based on old law By the Associated PreBs A new economic theory based on an old economic law is behjnd a lot or lhe political arguments over spending and tax cuts which President Reagan JUSt won The theory is "supply-side economics." The law is the one or supply and demand. U.S. Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., a nd U.S. Sen. WiUiam Roth , R- Del., were among the earliest advocates of the new economics. They called for reduced govern- me nt spending and for a 30- percent, three-year lax cut which became the cornerstone of the Lax and budget measures passed in the House and Senate this week. The final bills were dirferent from the original plan the tax cut is 25 percent rather than 30 percent. for ex· ample, and there are a number of added provisions . But the basic idea survived. lt's easier to understand if you think or the economy as being divided into two piles. Stack the s upply on one side. Goods and services. On the other side. put demand. expressed in terms of money. As long as the two sides of the economy stay the same. or grow at the same pace. the cost of liv- ing remains steady. Supply and demand are balanced. If de· mand grows faster than supply, however, inflation goes up. H s upply grows faster than de- mand. unemployment rises. For most of this century, ef- forts to keep supply and demand in balance emphasized demand. The theory went like this: ln- c re ase government s pending and cul taxes to boost demand when unemployment is high and the economy needs speedjng up. Reverse the procedure -cut spending and leave taxes high - lo curb inflation ln the 1970s, howe ver , the United States faced both high in· flation and high unemployment. Increased spending to cut un · employment meant a ris k of in- flation. A new theory became popular. Concentrate on supply instead of demand. Improve pro- ductivity. ··supply siders" like Kemp and Roth urged cuts in taxes and spending at the same time. They agreed that a cul in spending was needed to fi ght inflation. But they said that a tax cul was just as important -as Jong as it was the right kind or tax cut. Kemp and Roth said that any tax cut which was limited to in- creasing disposable income and gi_ving people more money to spend was wrong. What was needed, they said, was a reduction in marginal tax· es. rates and corporate lev1es. The world .. marginal" is impor- tant. You may not realize it. but you pay a different rate of lax on different parts of your income. The top rate is the marginal one. The "supply siders" said hjgh marginal tax rates discouraged production. Why work overtime to earn more if you lose much of the exlra ·money lo laxes? Why produce more if you don't keep more? The arguments of the ··supply siders" were s ummed up by Bruce Bartlett, a former Kemp aide. in his recent book . .. Reaganomics · Supply Side Economics in Action.'' He wrote· "Tax c uts s hould be ·structured so as to give the max- imum stimulus to investment. savings and work incentive." The president says his economic plan does that. Reagan burden heavy WASHINGTON <AP> -Ncnr. that Congress Is dellverin1 President Reagan the economic recovery program he wants. it'~ up lo him to deliver the healtb> economy the American publie wants or s tand alone ifl failure. Reagan is getting so much o1 the budget and lax cuts h~ sought, he will have no one eljf to blame if his policies don't sui ceed. "I know the monkey's on our back now, but we think the pro- gram will work ." Treasur,y Secretary Donald T Regan sa.ld The president's economic ad· visers say it will take about a year for the program to tum the NEWS ANALYSIS economy around That is not much time for all the ambitious changes predicted by the ad- ministration. The administration expects its program will lower inflation and interest r a t es. balance the fede ral budge t , increase economic growth. stimulate pN> ductivity, bring down unemploy ment and encourage Americans to work and save more. That is a tall order for ari economy beset with high infla- tion, near-record interest rates, a S55 billion budget deficit, slug- gish growth. falling productiyi- ty, persistently high unempl9y- ment and a dwindling savings rate. Reagan prop uses to ac · complish his objectives by re- versing the trend toward in- c reased government involve- ment in the economy over the last half century· This has left a lot of skeptical economists won- dering if he can succeed But Reagan and his economic thinkers contend the govern- ment has been responsible for the nation's economic problems. Thus. they say, the solution lies in trimming the government's power to tax and spend Toward th.at end. the president has persuaded Congress to ap- prove spending reductions total ing $140 billion over the next three years and more than dou- ble that amount an tax cuts - $285 billion from 1982 through 1984. Reagan ts counting mainly on his personal and business tax c uts to tu rn the economy around . According to his e conom is ts· ··s upp! y-s ide ' · theory, the lax cut will leave more money an the hands of bus inesses a nd ind1v1duals. particularly affluent people. to save and invest in economy- expanding enterprises. The cut in personal tax rates. which will tota l 25 percent for all income groups over three years. also is supposed to encourage Americans to work harder. The benefits fl owing from this new climate are many, a ccording to Reaganomics · Productivity will improve as businesses invest in more ern- caent technology. the economy will return to a healthy growth rate, jobs will be created at a faster pace, chronic budget def- icits will be eliminated as the increased prosperity brings in more revenu e and interest rates will decline . it's stNtch ·<Z.Spe plu&.which makz.a this ehort so out8torx::img whm yo.i.. mcMl. 1t q1'R.S, JU.St e.nooSh,lo meKa. iL ontZ. of thcz. moet comfbrU!b1a. ~yo.ii l <t:VrZI \MZ.8r fl'Vl2. colors-wh1ta.., SWlOO b\UQ,, sagz., ten ond nrNY Sl2<Z.S 28-38. I I I , . I A.4 H/F Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 :woornarn Rome kidnap Yictim .found murdered ROYE (AP) -The bullet· riddled body of Red Britadet kldoap vlctim Rob.erto Peel, bearln.c a siltn '·Death lo Traitors," was found today ln a fleld on the out.skirts of Rome, policeaa1d. The 25-year-old Peel wu kid· napped by the letllst urban ter· rorlata S4 days ago as revenge against bis brother. Patrizio, a former Red Brigades com· mander who turned Informer. Police discovered the body ln a field near the Campanelle race track south of Rome alter an Italian news agency received an anonymous telephone call say· Ing where to find it. lri&h riot again after atrike death BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -Rioters and IRA guer· riJJas attacked security forces in R oman Catholic areas of Northern Ireland and a British soldier lost both legs in a rooket attack following the eighth death in the IRA's hunger strike. Hu"Ber 1triken march in War•aw WARSAW, Poland <AP> - With horns blartni and headlights fiaahing, hundreds of buaee, trucks and taxi.I cl°"ed Warsaw streets today lo an anU· hunger convoy. The protett un- derlined t.be ur1ency of taUu on Poland's food crisis between the eovenunent and the Solidarity labor union. Heavy police patrols monitored lbe routes snarled by about 80 bu.5es, 80 to 90 heavy trucks and al least 300 taxis. Bombing victinu mourned in Italy BOLOGNA, Italy <AP> - Trains from lbe Alps lo Sicily baited for one minute Sunday to observe t.be first anniversary of the terrorist bombing that killed 85 people here. A tablet bearing the names of the victims who died in t he railroad station bombing, the de· adliest terrorist strike in Europe since World War II, was un- veiled. But the violence in response to the death of hunger striker Kieran Doherty on Sunday night, like that early Saturday after the starvation death of Kevin Lynch, was markedly less intense than the riots lrigeered by the first deaths in the five· month fast. Panama control rww up for grabs BURNED OUT Ray mundo Alva. 41, sur veys the ruins of his Detroit home where his three teen-age children and a neighbor girl died in a fire s tarted. police say. when someone APW...,.... threw several firebo s into the upstairs rooms. Police say the qigedy may have been triggered by a neighbo'ood dispute Rajai.takes reins tu Iran presidenl. Flights now up • • mair BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -Mohammad Ali Rajai took office today as Iran's new presient, replacing the ousted Abolhassan Bani·Sadr, who said from bis ex· ile in Paris that he is counting on the military forces he once led lo topple the Islamic regime. PANAMA CITY, Panama CAP> - . The funeral of Omar Torrijos Tuesday is expected to launch a period or intense political maneuvering to decide the control of Panama. There was no clear indication yet of the outcome. Torrijos, 52, and six compan, ions were killed Friday when1 their small, twin-engine plane slammed into a cloud·sbrouded mountain 60 miles west of Panama City. Questions, answers on controllers' strike outines Meanwhile, opponents of Iran's clerical regime forced their way into the Iranian Em· bassy in Bonn, West German y to day, brflaking windows, damaging offices and injuring the ambassador in a brief scuf· fie, authorities said . West German police ejected the in· vaders. Reagan 0 Ks meet CANCUN, Mexico (AP> - President Reagan has agreed to take part in the North·Soulh s ummit conference this fall on help for developing nations as part of a "new beginning'' in U.S. policy toward the Third World. WASHJNGTON (AP> -Here are some questions and answers related to the s trike by air traf· fie controllers. Q: How many planes would fly if there is a nationwide strike? A: There 'are a bout 33,000 rlights each day using the air traffic control system, about 14 ,200 of them r egularl y scheduled commercial flights. An FAA pla n would allow about 7,500 or the regularly scheduled flights lo. operate with a chance that as many as 10,000 could fl y if enough controllers do not strike. The plan gives priority lo es- sential military flights and com· mercial flights or more than 500 miles. Flights of less than 500 miles will be hardest hit. Some commuter services mi~ht be * * * able to continue if the planes can fly under visual flight rules and not use airports under the air traffic control system. General aviation flights would be given low priority unless they fly under visual flight rules. Q: How would travelers be af- fected? A. It could be difficult lo get a seat. There could be delays. Many short·haul flights undoubt· edly will be canceled, forcing travelers into trains, buses ancs cars. Airlines also may not provide some of the normal amenities. Travelers stranded will not be provided hotel rooms or meals by airlines Q : How many controllers are there, and what do they do? A· There are about 17,000 who * * * Forest fires out in Utah and Idaho Guests for royal By The A.111ocla&ed Preas U.S. seen selling A 9,000·acre range fire about wedding stranded 70 miles west of Salt Lake City AWACS to Jaudi.s LONDON <API -Hundreds of and two other smaller fl.res in American tourists who came for Utah were controlled Sunday WASHI NGTO (AP > -theroyalweddingcampedoutat night, officials said. A 750·acre Senate Majority Leader Howard Heathrow Airport today. stalled forest fire near Challis, Idaho, Baker said Sunday he expects on their return home because of also was reported contained. President R eagan to give a strike by U.S. air traffic con· Martha Burbidge of the In· Congress informal notice next trollers. teragency Fire Center said the month of U.S. plans to sell People lounged on back packs 9,000-acre blaze outside Salt A WACS radar planes to Saudi and sleeping bags in clogged Lake City started about 5 p.m . Arabia. waiting areas and aisles, and Saturday. Investigators suspect "It will be a very difficult airlines were forced to pay It was man-caused because fight if lbe president submits thousands of dollars in com- there was no lightning in the this, and it is not fully de· pensation for ove rbooking area at the time it started, she termined that he will." Baker flights. said. said. All fl ' ht f II Firefighters used aerial drops " our 1g s are u Y of water fire retardant to W/;~,,· ..... cn"t•~al booked and there are bound to " ~ u.a -... be delays because of the air traf-turn the names away from a fie controllers ' s trike," a dynamite storage facility, a MOAB, Utah CAP> -Nine spokesman for Pan American microwave station and an people injured in a propane gu World Airways said. "We would aragonite' mining plant. Ms . explosion al a quiet campground urge people to wail until the end Burbidge s aid cooler tern· here remained in crillcal condi-of the week to travel. if they. peratures and higher humidity lion Sunday, and officials were can." of people began camping out at the airport during the weekend to obtain standby tickets home following Wednesda y's mar· riage of Prince Charles and bis bride Diana. A spokes man said the number had grown to the hundreds by this morning. "And it's going to get a lot worse because of the American air controllers strike," said the spokesman, who declined to be identified. The sudden rush of returning tourists was coupled with the start of annual vacations for many British families. COLLECTORS CORNEA R.,e Cofna & St•mpa GOLD & SILVER aided firefighters in their ef· trying to determine the exad Heathrow officials said dozens f_or_ts_. ___________ c_a_use_o_f_th_e_b_J_asrt_. --===--------::------:-----:---:-----::-1 lO% Bank Financing """ IRA & KEOUGH directair traffic from 23 re · giona centers in the United State9lnd Puerto Rico and at more tan 500 airports. They are emplc;ees of the Federal Avia· tion Aministration. Q : iow many controllers are 015trike? A: he Professional Air Traf· fi e C«rollers Organization has about.S,000 members. Union of· ficiah said an ove rwhelming percetage of the rank-and·file woul<lstrike. A union rule re· quir~ 13.500 controllers -80 perceL or the work force -lo apprde a strike before it is called Q~ %0 would direct air traf· fie? A· 'be FAA planned to use 2 ,50Qsupervisors and 400 milit~ controllers as well as any pn trollers who do not strik~ Q : Vhat was holding up -: •• agreeent? A: 'be union sought a wage a nd ~nefits package it s aid woul<lcost $500 million a year. The evernment put the cost at $681 lillion and said that was far bfond what the administra· lion 'fS prepared lo provide. Ke~elem~nts of the union's wage~ackage included a reduc· lion atbe work week from 40 to 32 h<i-s, increased retirement bene6l and a salary that would havea top of $59,000, about $10.00more than now. Q: Vbat do controllers now earn? A : fbe average pay for journtmen controllers is about $34{1 Depending on seniority a nd affic handled, annual sal range from $20,500 to $49, ithout overtime. I FIGURES ... J liked yo If in a swim s~it? 'Heart' hope • remains HOUSTON (AP> -Despite the (jeath of the world's third artificial heart tranaplant pa· tient. doctors say the plullc de· vice still ofers hope to a small number of patients who cannot be saved any other way. Willebrordus A. Meutnes, 36, died Sunday. a week after a sur· glcal team headed by Dr. Den· ton A. Cooley implanted a human heart to replace the plastic pump that kept him alive the S4 hours needed to find lbe donor. Officials of the Texas Heart Ins titute said he developed "overwhelming complications" and added there were indica· tions that drugs used to avert re· jection or the donor heart made it difficult for MeuJfels to fight infection. A kidney machine had been in use since Thursday. Cooley said he thought the need to "open his chest a!ld massage his heart in semisterile circumstances" may have "al· lowed bacterial contamination." Conscience triggers man's death NEW YORK CAP> -A 30· year·old Boston man fell to bis death out a third-story window trying to flee a burglar he thought was his lover's husband or boyfriend, police said . The man was identiried as Roy Howes. The incident began early Sun· day morning in a Brooklyn apartment. police said. They said a burglar, believing no one was home, broke through the front door A woman sleep- ing on a living room couch a woke and screamed. according to Detective Pat Nannery. Nannery said the burglar went lo the door of a bedroom in which a man and woman were in bed. The couple and the interloper caught sight of each other. At that point, the man jumped out of bed , climbed out of the bedroom window and reu three stories. Poli ce found hi s body lying face up in the back yard of the apartment building. The burglar escaped without taking anything. WRITER DIES -Paddy Chayefsk y. award-winning sc r eenwrite r C .. Marty ... "Network"> and major fi gure in TV's golden age. is dead of cancer at 58. /.~~~::~~::.~ Elizabeth Stewart (714)5~50 South Coe•t Pleu Ylll•p• ............... , ____ C:-"-•1 How lon!s it been since you Come in w ... for a fabulous One-,. ··~-sl;ap• .. 50°/o Off ., llfllSlll 'n. AITI& lllNl'l lllCI Ml-UU , ...... ,. NEWPORT BEACH O~e CoW1ty•s Complete VlcleO Store LO ATI * VIDEO MOVIE RENT .ALS * F.C.A. * EOulPMENT RENTALS • SONY * VIDEO RECORDERS • M.G.A. * VIDEO CAMERAS * MAGNAVOX * VIDEO ACCESSORIES • PANASONIC * INTELEVISION • HITACHI . *COMPUTERS •SANYO * BLANK TAPES * ZENITH * PRE-RECOROID TAPES Lose 0 inches & 8 Lbs.! is the only Health Club or the Mature Woman! I Air attack resumes in Medfly terrain LOS GATOS (AP> -Eight helicopters were airborne early today u the tblrd of six planned aerial pesUclde attacks on the Mediterranean fruit fly 1ot un-d~r way. About 76 square miles In the 267-square-mile sprayin1 zone were to be covered today wttb the malathion-laced mo.laaaea bait, aald Eric Strahl, project spokesman. The area inchades parta of PaJo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos, Los Altos Hill.a. Cupertino and Sunnyvale. • ' .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 H /fl AP ....... Oil lease l I • exemption askedinLA( LONO BEACH (AP) -'l'be U.S. Interior Department ba• 1 been asked to eliminate parts ol Santa Monica and San Pedro bays from a pendlna oU leue sale on 1.1 mlllion acres off Southern California's cout. ,, The request was made by 1' Coast Guard and Los Angeles of. 0 rtcials as they spoke during the ·T last of two days of bearings t. before the federal Bureau of ''l . Land Management and U.S. Geographical Service. 11 2 satellites go in orbit VANDENBERG AJR FORCE BASE (AP) -Two Explorer satellites were launched into or- bit by a Delta Rocket early to- day after washouts on three pre- vious days, the National Aeronautics and Space Ad· ministration said. Aa the spraying continues. of· ficials are debating whether more than six aerial applica· tioo.s will be needed to eradieate the medfly. wblcb threatens California's $5 billion-a-year produce Industry. ' Tralftc at LAX was backed up a half-mile around IM airport Sunday evening as travelers had hopes of catching a flight before the air tralfic controllers struck. ''We already have a 1001-, , developing problem of corn.ions and near-collisions" at the en-1; trances to San Pedro Bay, said r: Coast Guard Capt. Ronald Taub. Drilling rigs would pose addi· tional ser ious navigational ,. hazards to ships enterin1 the , J ports of Los Angeles and Long , Beach, he s aid. Aerial sprayUig st.arted July 1, and no new {lledfly ma11ot1 have been discovered in fruit since July 24. Although bil~ons of sterile flies have been re- leased, few have been found re- cently ln the thousands of med· fly traps scattered about tbe area, and no wild flies have been found since June. Air strike endorsed statewide 1'y The Auoclated Pres• Ground tracking stations and three aircraft assigned to track the rocket reported it successful- ly placed the satellites into orbit after the launch at 2:56 a.m., said NASA s pokesma n Walt Dundon. The infel'ltation forced the U.S. Alr controllers in California joined their counterparts throughout the country by voting to strike as shifts were due to re- port at airports and traffic con- trol centers this morning. 'The launch, originally planned for Friday, was scrubbed once because of a problem with the computer system on one of the satellites, a second time because of heavy winds in the upper at- mosphere and again on Sunday when one or the tracking aircraft developed engine prob-lems. Department of Agriculture to quarantine Alameda, Santa Clara and San Mateo counties in hopes of keeping the fast- breeding medfly from ruining produce in the rich San Joaquin Valley. "We 're on strike," said Al Stephens, a s pokesman for the Professional Air Traffic Con- trollers Association in the Bay area after 90.9 percent or the members who \toted there ap· proved the walkout. A meeting is scheduled Tues- day to consider adding more flights to ens ure that all medflies are killed as they emerge from their pupae. Union officials in Ontario, Los Angeles and Palmdale repctrted similar endorsements from con- trollers in their areas following conclusion of the early morning Fiber checked DEAR READERS: Tbe Conaamer Product Safety Comml11lon <CPSC> staff ls urging consumers wbo are parcbaalng cblldl'ell's sleepwear to look for the fiber COD· tent labels ln each garment and to avoid purchublg garments made from acetate, trlacetate, or the blends of acetate or trlacetate, since sacb garment'• were manafarta.red before lt77 wlaen Acll fabrtca almost always were treated with TRIS to re- dace fl•mmabWty. Slnce April lt77, tbe com- mission baa co•sldered TRIS-treated chlldrea•s sleepwear to be a banned haaardoas prod•ct. TBIS I• a chemical name-retardant beUeved to cause cancer. CPSC aJ90 ls reeommendlag that COD· Hmen c1oa•t parclaase cblldl'ell'• sleepwear wblcb II.a.I llad Its labels removed, espedally ll tbe garment Is being sold fOI' what appear.I' to be a bargaln price (leas t.bu $3 eacb). Couumera wbo suspect U.at they may be purcbaalng pre-1977 TRIS-treated sleepwear are advised to write down the GPU number (garment prodactioa ualt) and to contact tile manufacturer to confirm wbef.ber tbe gar- ment ecmtalns TRIS. la some cases, rdaUen may be able to assist ln Lill.I ldeatUlcatioD process. Most manufacturers bave detaUed lists of which units of prodacdoa were made wltb TllJS.treated fabric, u long as tbe gar· meat still bean a GPU namber tag. Consamen shotlld caU tbe CPSC toll-free boUlne at (811) 138-8321 If &ky can coaflrm <or eatabllsll lltroDS evidence) tllat cblldrea'• sleepwear treated with TRIS Is belnS sold from specific outlets. A teletypewriter for the deaf ls available from 8:31 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST, by pboelng (811) 138·8%7f. Eye treatment sought · DEAR PAT DUNN: I'd like to get in touch with a practitioner of the Bates System of Eye Exerci~s. Do you know of any qualified persons 10 this area? . K.W., Corolla del Mar No practitioner of U.e Bates System was located wiWa reasonable traveling distance of Orange Coaaty. Edacators at the Soatllen California CoUege of Optometry do !lot ea- coarage anyone esperleactas eye problems to follow precepts advocated la the Bates System -ftnt propoted more U.u 41 yean aso. Scientific evidence hu not slaown ~ system to be beneficial. It wu advlled tbt yo• seek the services of a Uceased op. tometrlst or an ophtbalmolosJst. Rent taxable? DEAR PAT DUNN: Every year my wife and I take a vacation and rather than leave our house empty, we rent it. Do we have to report the rent we receive on our tax return? K.L., Huntington Beach The Internal Revenue Service Hys dla& lf yoa '"' yoar per909al residence for lea Ulan 15 days darlal U.e year, the rea& yoa re- ceive Is not to be IDcJaded ID yoar srou la· come. U rented loa1er tban 11 da71, YCMI aut report the rental lacome and upe•set <••b· Jed to certaln UmJC1Uou). F• futMr ID· formation, refer to hbUcaUoa U'7, "&eatal Property," available at any 1118 office. "Our 24th year" ~ Auto & Homeown~rs ·f ;;-. Ouotes By Phone FAIMEIS IMSllWCE ,., 541-5554 or U5-l4l7 If 14 H9rtlof' • Cotte MeMI DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS &42·5878 S~lltG• r..... 51.,,. at YOUt ~ tC1•l Stof.,,..., ... 'fOVI ., •• , COflalllQA641•1289 , ___ _ ·-~ --c:.i.-·-ca---..,,_ .. ...,......, .• THE WORLD'S MOST COMPACT BKi COPIER ~N~!t'1I~1-J 200 • F;tt..I ' ·I .~ ... ,,.., ,,.., h ·P•'' t l•'tt1•r /•' • c ·o••·"" .,, 'o ~ 1. · • J ~,., • ., •• • r 'l .. · ,,, ,, ,, .. "~P··· lti'r)Qf' Co 1n1 ... '•••th14..1~ Qtnt)n [)c..•,11 ~ ,, Also in San 8ernard1no Riverside. (714) 88~·8009 MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT 11n4 lrHklt11nt, fH11t11l11 V1111e, '"' '""' ..... -............ 911$, CALL •OWi a.:':....1714) 963·2366 BOBBY HATFIELD AUG. 2ND 3RD IO S18T (fw• 1111.U. lntlls) PAT PAULSON DENNIS COLT 4UG. ITH C.O. BUCHANAN AUG. 2ITH. rrnt 11 THE CHANTAYS IETTY FOSTER E:-.......................... . ................................... ,,, ........ ,, ......................... . ................................... ................................... ................................... -voting at about the same time negotiators broke off talu with the government in W ashiniton. The bli test of the effecUve- ness of a strike came at· 7 a.m., when morning sblfts reported to work at Callfornia airports an·d traffic control centers. Busy days were reported Sun· day al most airports -where lines were longer and bookings were heavier :_ but all were nearing up under the strain of travellers wanting to get home before a strike could disrupt much or the nation's air service. The biggest problem was on the road to Los Angeles Interna· lional Airport. "It's just falling apart out here," Los Angeles Police Of· ficer Bob Poteete said of the - bumper-to-bumper traffic into the airport complex. Afternoon delays or up to two hours were reported Sunday. Once ins ide the airport travelers fared much better.. Airline officials estimated that travel was up 10 to 15 percent over a normal summer Sunday in Los Angeles . Somewhat s maller increases were reported at the Hollywood-Burbank and Ontario airports, John Wayne Airport in Orange County and Lindbergh Field in San Diego. Roger Holt, an assistant clty attorney, said at the bearing \ \ that some areas near Santa Monica Bay should be excluded J) from any possible oil lease sale because of the risks of an oil spill. "It is senseless to endanger 11 the economy of the region for ,. the amount of oil and gas which may be found a&facent to Santa ·" Monica Bay," he said. Interior Secretary James Watt has to d ecide by April 1982 , whether to open for oil explora-..i lion all or parts or the coast , from the Santa Barbara Channel • to the Mexican border. ;. It ., Don't let your summer go to waist! \ ) 11 " ,. 50% on our 2·Week Introductory ~ram Don't let this summer go to waist, or hipe or thlghs. There's still time to get in shape and look great at a Holiday Spa Health Club. And there's no better time to give us a try, because if you join now, you can get our short term introductory program at 'h the regular price. Eajoy the full use of all facilities, plus a free, per- sonalized sampler program. Call or stop by for a free tour. Holiday Spa1lealth Clubs for Men MCI Women tfVoW.: .tfVeW:.. More value for your DIMES In the famous Dally Piiot DIMES-A-LINE ADS 'I "• ., ,. l I J r • l I I 0 IJ h n r j "I "' l~ I I I Advertl.. Item• up to HO In velve In Dlme•A-Une .. effry letu•y 6n the ~ '"°t. llftnt row ec1 wtth c .. h to 11ny ot our IMH conveNHI offtoel or "*' row oopy wfttl • dWClll or MOney Of'der tot the OOfT.ct ............. ,.,line, 11.00 .... OUM.'°"'' no ftyeetooel, produce or plMtS •ftd no com!Mf'dal .. ,,. •Mowed. lecie. ... ,.. ..,.. ~· I be prt.ct ..... no Item oMr MO. Din•• MIN "' mer• pteoM .--. e.... ......... undt 3 P•"'-fl'ltdey. ' j'I I Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1081 Immigration action an imperative need Tbe Reagan admlnlst.ratJoo •a proposed lmmigraUon reforms, unveiled last week, have been roundly criticized rrom all direc- t ion s -b y e mployers, agricultural interests, unions and Latino groups -a rather surpris· ing conglomeration, each with its own concerns. So far the critics have been singularly lacking in suggesting any constructive alternatives. While the program undoubted· ly bas fiaws and will be s ubstan- tially modified as it progresses through Congress, the fact re- mains that someone bas to take a first step to clean up the immigra- tion chaos. President Reagan says the aim is to accept foreigners "in a controlled and orderly fashion." There's certainly nothing wrong with that. Indeed, the United Stales is the onJy country that has let its immigration policies disin- tegtate to the point where illegal aliens by the millions cross the border, hold jobs and remain largely undetected. The plan, put together by a special task force, provides for : -A special guest worker pro- gram under which some 50,000 Mexicans would be admitted an- nually to work here for 12-month periods. · -E.5tablishing legal status for illegal aliens who have lived here since Jan. 1, 1980, by giving them renewable temporary resident vis- as for up to 10 years, after which they could request permanent sta tus. -Penalties with fines of $500 to $1,000 for employers of more than four persons who knowingly hire illegal aliens. -Increasing the number of visas available to both Canada and Mexico, with visas not used by Canadians transfer able to the Mexican allocation. -Specific steps to head off any mass influx of refugees, such as the Cuban anti Haitian lnflwces. Strongest attacks were direct- ed at the employer penalty pro· vision, with critics lnsiaUnt it 1Jbou1d not be left up to employers to verity lmmiaration status and that t.h1a proviso could result in re· luctance to hire any.one who ap- pears foreign. The administration backed away from the task force recom· m e ndation that a n o n - counterfeitable Social Security card be issued to all workers, cit- ing the cost, alon4' with the usual paranoia about a national idenli· ty" card. l~stead, employers could satisfy the law by requiring two pieces of identification, such as a birth certificate, Social Security card, draft card, or driver 's lice nse -all or which un- fortunately are readily available in counterfeit form. Also criticized was the re- quirement that aliens applying for temporary resident status be re- f used the right to bring a spouse or children into the country during the 10-year wait for permanent status. This does seem harsh. Latino spokesmen further ob- ject to the fact that such persons would be ineligible for welfare, hou~ing assistance or food stamps during the wait, but it's really reaching to call that provision ·'repressive.'' Agricutural employers sug- gest a 50,000 limit on guest workers would not come near to filling available jobs. especially at harvest time when hundreds of thousands of workers are needed. Unions, on the other band, fear the program would take jobs away from their members. No doubt the debate will be long and loud. But equally certain is the fact that the nation, sooner or later , must get its immigration system under control, and this is as good a beginning as any. Brown policy blamed Painting a rather grim pic- ture of the state's transportation problems, Newport Beach As· semblywoman Marian Bergeson predicted last week that the highway program could be bankrupt by the time Gov. Jerry Brown's current term ends in 1982. The Brown administration's policy of trying to move Califor- . nians out of their cars and into alternate transportation modes, she said, has eroded funds once designed to complete authorized freeways. And the state now is last in the nation in spending for highway construction and main· tenance. As far as Orange County is concerned, Mrs. Bergeson sees highway action virtually at a standstill. The county was successful in obtaining its own transportation district last year, sbe noted, but there's now no money to go into that district. Nor ls ther~ any money for such previously authorized proj- ects as extension of the Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar freeways . State foot-dragging, • she pointed out, has increased the original $4.6 ,million cost of the latter project to a present $10 million. So far, Mrs. Bergeson told a county group, the Legislature has been unable to come up with any solutions for the highway dilem- ma. But she urged residents to keep prodding their legislators and state officials to seek funding alternatives -such as turning some of the gasoline sales tax revenue, which now goes into the state's general fund, over to the financially s trapped highway fund. Unless the situ a tion im- p roves, she warned, business and industry will look to other a reas with less critical transportation problems -a development that could spell disaster for Oranege County. The county lawmaker's words should not be taken lightly. And no convoluted excuses and explanations by the governor or Caltrans Director Adriana Gianturco can change the fact that their stubbornly impractical policies precipitated the dilemma. Op1n1ons expressed m the space above are those of the Da11y P110.t Otner views ex·. pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t ed . Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 1714) 64:1-4321. L.M. Boyd I In cahoots You've heard that rural expression "lo caboota," Pete and Jake are in cahoots, or some such. A sort of backwoods partnership on one deal or another. The French word "cabute" means cabin. You were in cahoots with somebody orilinallY. if you were camped out. together in ooe shelter. . Q. In rodeo lin10. wbal are t.he Bl& Three? A. The Cheyenne Frontier Daya, the Calcar1 St ampede and tbe Pendleton Roundup. Chapter Seven of "Boyd'• Book ot Odd Fldl" belinl "Understand tbe library at E~1land'1 C1mbrld1e ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat University has one shelf of boob ex- clusively devoted to the works of de-· ranged writers. That's right, only one shelf." Remarkable, what? Also to be found therein is the fact that the typewriter was invented before th& fountain pen. ~emember, one ostrich weiebs about as much as 48,000 hum- mingbirds . Q. What is the moat widely-known word in the world? A. Amen. If that baby were to crow .. a whale grows, It would be es feet tall by 11e2. r --.·- Pro-Israel tide receding W ASH1NGTON -In the office of the senior senator from New York, Daniel Patrick Moynihan. the maU on Middle East issues has always been the same: between 10-to-l and 20-to·l pro-Israel. Always, that is, until the last two months. When Israel's American-made jets bombed Iraq's nuclear reactor, the pro-Israel ratio dropped to something like 7-to-3. Then. last week, after Israeli Jets hit Beirut, the first wave of Moynihan's mail included in pro-Israel l~tters and 138 that were anti-Israel. ' A CHECK OF the mail of six other senators' offi ces indicated a similar and, usually, dramatic shift in long- standing mail patterns. In two other states with a decided Jewish political presence, California and New Jersey, traditional, almost r eflexive. support for Israel collapsed into evenly divided heaps. Letters to Sen. Alan Cranston of California, in the weeks after the Ir aqi raid but before the attacks oo Palesti- nian areas of Beirut, were running only 773-to 631 in favor of Israel. The mail of the office of Sen. BiU Bradley of New J ersey was evenly divided, for and against Israeli actions -again before the Beirut raids. "The bottom is falling out for Israel," said an important congressional staffer . '"People who have supported Israel b eca use they trusted i ts most knowledgeable supporters in Congress are now going up to Moynihan, or to Cr anston, or lo congressmen from Jewish areas and saying, 'OK, tell me how I'm supposed to explain this to my constituents!· They're really mad." These are three other comments I have beard in the past weeks: "Any candidate who says anything nice about hrael in general or Menachem Begin in particular is a Httle crazy ... " -a Democratic campaign ~ --~~~~~~~~~~~ "'-"!1~ ,·,: ... ,RICHARD RllVIS manager with a candidate running this year. "You could have a great wave of anti· Semitism in this country. It's always just under the surface anyway ... and Begin's asking for it . . . " -one of the best-known Republicans in the country. "They're hoping something happens to Begin. What they're worried about now is not only Israel, but anti· Semitism here . . . " -a Democrat re- turning from a private meeting of prominent Jews active in the party IT 18 A VE&Y, very anxious time tor Americans who are pro-Israel. They used to be a majority of tbe nation. I doubt they are anymore -and I could conceive of an anti-Israel majority here if there are a few more raid.a in Israel's self-proclaimed self-defense. Fewer and fewer Americana are going to be wUling to accept Prime Minister Begin's defi· nit.ions of defensive measures - particularly when be is using American weapons to make those definitions stic.k. American public opinion seems to be on the edge right now. Newsweek sponsored a Gallup poll that indicated Americans by margins up to 2-to-l think we should be withholding some weapons from Israel and should be pressuring Begin to moderate his policies. But, im· portanUy, there has been no significant growth in the relatively small riumber of Americans supporting the Palesti- nians or Arab solutions to the problems of the Middle East. ,THAT P UBLIC opinion, I suspect mighL have been pushed over the edge -the anti-lsrael,edge -ii President Reagan bad not moved quiclr.Jy to cut off official criticism of Begin aod the bombing. Wbat seems to have happened is that the White House decided to go after Begin -with Defense Secretary Caspar We i nberger and Deputy Secretary of State William Clark doing the talking -and then, alter seeing its own private polls, realized that even in· direct criticism from Reagan might start an anti-1.srael bandwagoo down a long slippery slope. So, the White House had to pull the rug out from under Weinberger and Clar k. That bit of diplomatic doubletalk may have m ade a quick Israeli- Palestinian cease-fire possible. The White House may have saved Prime Minister Begin. Israel and its American supporters from themselves. If they don't understand that it may be a long time before they find a better friend than the current president of the United States, then Israel is in even more trou- ble than l think it is right now. Can taxpayers afford the UC system? R egents of the University of California have voted a 75 pel'Cent in· crease in student education fees, raising them from $300 to $525 a year. They also raised the quarterly registration fees. The higher student fees were made necessary by other board action boost· ing the already obscene administration salaries to new heights. Under the salary schedule approved UC President David Saxon will receive $91,520 mak-· ing him by far the highest paid e mployee of the state. UC general counsel Donald Reidhaar and treasurer Herbert Gordon were given 14.3 percent rai~es. Each will be paid $80,000 as will vice president Baldwin G. Lambert. Other veepees and chancellors were in· eluded in the pay adjustments which boosted most of them lo $69,000. NOT OVERLOOKED were the pro· fesaors. Pay for full professors was boosted to $51,500 and $33,100 for as- sociate professors. For the assistant professors and instructors who do most of the classroom work, the pay was set at $25,900 and $16,800 respectively. Officials may deny that the salary in· creases caused the boost in student fees but the fact. is the two actions went band in band at the meeting, one following the other. Before the fee increases were voted the university bad estimated its rev- enues from student fees for the next school year at $100 million. In addition it had budgeted $1.1 billion in alloca- fUl IATIRS lions from the state's general fund. This puts the total cost per student at something over $11,000. But that isn't all. From federal grants, endowments and other sources the university bad budgeted an addi· tional $970 million making the grand total for operations next year in excess of $2.1 billion. Considering tbe fact that the state's second college system, the California State Colleges and Universities, has an enrollment double the size of UC and operates 19 campuses for $936 million, less than half UC's costs, the question arises as to why should the taxpayers continue to operate the more costly UC system? Why not close UC down and send the students to CSUC where it is only cost· ing the taxpayers about $4.000 per stu· dent, nearly two thirds cheaper than UC? Maybe even better , since the capital outlay costs of property. building and equipment are not included in the foregoing figures, pay the tuition costs for them lo attend the state colleges in other st.ates and close down the state colleges too. WITHOUT EVEN calculating the sav- ings lo be made in capital outlay and the money which could be realized in the sale of the properties, the taxpayers would still be ahead of the game. For UC only charges oul of state Stu· dents $2,800 a year and most other states charge even less. And surprising as it may seem there are still many ex- cellent private colleges around the country with tuition at much less than $11,000, and quite a few less than $4,000 . As for depriving the students of the opportunity to Jive at bom4= and go to college, the sad truth is the kids don't want that. It was on the "live at home" theory that the st.ate developed the 19· • campus state college system. As it turned out the majority of students enrolled at any of the state's colleges are from a place to which another state college would have been closer. Meaning is all in your point of view Antics~ Semantics: -A bilhly active woman I happen to Uke is quivering with "animal vitall· ty"; but a highly active woman I dislike is jumping with "nervous eqereY." -I have put on a few pounds; you IYlllY 111111 are filllng out; be la aettlnt u bla 11 a house. -Wbea 1 fail to do aomeW.aa, I live an "explanatloo .. ; you make an "excuse"; be coma up wtt.b an "allbl." -My competitor wu awarded tbe contract becauae "be ~ ID tbe fts"; we WOD the CODtl'lct bee~ ............ to the rtPt people.·• -J am IUDDCJrtlu I Mipbanood nnture that Will accrue to my beneftf because I am "community-minded"; you are aupport.lng a venture that may harm my interests because y0u are a "busybody." -"Mere rhetoric" is wbal we would call "powerful oratory'J ii we agreed wlth what t.be speaker 11 saying. -My penonal remark wu intended as a "good-natured jest," but your personal remark was "in extremely bad taste." -It's a "hideous Insect" to the reataurant ~Itron who finds it ln hla soup, but • Jut( a Uttle bu1" to the restaurant m&n41er. -A "perceved dl.nerence" la the ll· lu1ion an ad .. ency tries to create a bout a product lb.at bu no real dlf. ference. -Ev«y na.Nnt'a MD lD a IUC WU "led ~'rbftbeotber boJI. -lly dot "WU" u a ~t«; your dos "nPI" 11 a aW.anee. -To tbe over•ref:lned, a1J naturllo ... .. "v\lll&rtt1"; While to the V\&laar, au formality is "snobbishness." -Most of the people who are qu.iclt lo "stand up and be counted" th.int they deserve to be counted twice. -Only strangers are "criminals''; friend.a are "in trouble." llDllY Ill The belt part ol betft1 a fllu,nbead, whether on a ck«JiAc 111.lp fl It.ate or an old aaillD( •eaael, 11 lbat tlae ftprebead rarely 1eta blamecl for die tldp'1cletnlM. r .tt. , l Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 3, 1981 H I ~ Af Go-Gos -cute, talehted and on their way up ONf Of THI Im llflNCS THAT Mlt HAPPENED IS AIOlJT TO HAPPEN AGAIN. By y AJU>BNA AaAa ............. Wftew HOLLYWOOD <AP> Tbey're belnl called lbe "Sirl Beatles," they've made tbe word "cute" re1peetab10 ln rock mualc wrtUD1, and wbta lb• Go·G09 hit tht road lbJ1 mooth lht whole country will 1et a cha.nee to aee what all the 1bout1n1 la about. Tbe Go-Goe, by way of lntroduct!oo, are five dlmlnut!ve wom n lo their mld·20I wbo look Ute teen·a1era, talk tn Uttle irlrl volcu and juat happen to write, sln1 and play some of lbe most appealln1 and danceable pop tunes to come down the pike this summer. They've already conquered New York, Los Angel es aod England with their bouncy performances, and tracks from their recently re· leased debut album have already surfaced on Top 40 AM radio, sometbin1 rare for bands spawned in the Loe An1eJes club scene. The Go.Gos certainly aren't the flrat all· female rock band, or even tbe (int to get national attention in recent years -remember the Runaways? But lead slnger Belinda Carlisle, bassist Kathy Valentine, lead guitdrist Charlotte Caffey, rhythm guitarist Jane Wiedlin and drummer Gina Schock are playing for bigger states: recognition for talent rather than gender. No one can accuse them of trying to capitalise on sex appeal in the cover of the album. 'An un- usually witty package, it's a group portrait in which all band members wear bath towels and facial mud packs -a tongue-in-cheek iUu.stration for the LP's title, "Beauty and the Beat." "The Beat" is the name or one or the songs on the album. "We wanted to avoid being put into a category," says Miss Wiedlin, a petite, dark- haired woman. ''We just wanted to be in a class by ourselves so our solution was to avoid wearing clothes in the pictures." Miss Wiedlin. Miss Cafrey, Miss Carlisle and two other women who were hanging out at the same rock nightspots got the Go-Gos going in 1978. They didn't deliberately set out to exclude men -"it was pretty much a matter or all the boys being taken:•· Miss Wiedlin says. "All the boys were already in bands, and we figured, why not." "We weren't very good at first," she admits. No wonder. She and Miss Carlisle had never play~ in bands before, and Miss catrey's musical z.n.. ~Oliy .... (POI i :10 5:10 10:10 tye ol the N .. dlt (RI 12:00 4:00 l tOO 80 Derek TAllZAMTHE ANlllAN (RI 1:00 3 :20 S:40 1:00 10:20 Brook• Sh1tlch FMDI EM LOVE IRI 12:30 2:50 5:10 7:30 9:50 z.no, TM Gey B ... (PGI Also Show1n_g_ Y~Frw ...... 1f'G) THE a.IRE STRIKES BACK IPG) Plusl Co·H•t AL I E N (RI MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ,,,. __ "'""'''""9'•10 '"4bmt -•l>Ouf ...... ,.°'"')' ol m:>,.,. COtWw'lt b ...,.~ Oy IWr r:l'tlldtwt rf=il All AGES AOMITTI 0 ~ ~aJ AUOil'nc.t ~ AU AOES AOMITTEO ~ P011ntal G1.11dan04 Sugo-stt<I All D ~ AHO ® 'ILMS RECElllE 0.£ SEAL CY T><E "'OTIOH l'CfURE C00£ OF SElF REGIJLATl()H ooiNG J BUSINESS ' UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? I Dl1ney•1 TtC ll'"OX a THE HOUM> (G) The Black Hole (PC) Olld\ PIW:a ti you have jual filed your new Flctlt loua Busl neaa Name and l'leve not yet aubmltted It lor publlcatlon, pleue don t forget that the !Imitation la 30 days lrom date ol tiling. The DA IL Y P ILOT w ill publlah your stalement fo r It o 00 Our clrculatlon include• lhe entire Orange Coaal area and legal notice• appe., In all editlona. In order to 1ubmlt your 1tatement lo r publlctllon aend I WOl.FOt (R ) ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK (RI ft!n.ia••ld• ;;crLOVE IRI Foxes IRI 8111 Murr•y STRIPES !RI Plus Wholly Mosu (PGI appropriate copy and a check to THE DAILY PILOT. P 0 Box tSto. Coata MHa CA 92626. We II do the re•t. For inlormatlon about legal advertising pleue call 8'2·'321 Ed. 332. brooke shields martin hewitt endless love PotyQtain Pfct"'" A Universal Rcleatc •' • • • • • • •' • • • • • '• • • • • •' •' 0 t•t V•Off\M C"M~ ltliMI'°' IM b1clitpound conalJted mainly ol cluslcat piano tralnln1 . But tht lf'OUP pertlJted and lmproved. lrli.11 Schock, a BaJllmon naUve who bad come Weal with another band, wu recndted in 1t'7t; the band be1an pJaylna show• with Brillab banda and ln 1980 ended up tourina the United K.lncdom in the company of l uch 1roup1 11 M1dnet1 and The Specials. Mlas Valentine, a Texan who bad bffn playtns cultar ln various enaemblet and whoee son11 have been sun_g by PhiJ Seymour, 1mon1 Olben, look up bass and 1l1ned on with the Go-Goa last New Year's Eve. In it.a first years lbe band bad to fiaht to be taken seriously, mainJ.)' because women rock 'n' rollers by and larae tend to be slneera backed by male instrumentalists. Mias ValenUne maintains that this attitude is changing. But ln any case, the Go-Gos have Iona since learned to handle ske cilm. NOW PLAYING U111t1d ArtJsb1 COSU MlH OHllGl WllTMIHTI" Cineffiil Cenle• 979 4141 C1neoomt bl~ 2'J'>J r1nema We<.I 891 J93~ ~s ~II IOI'"" C-•i) ~1tlneH Dally 1lMoat n;;;t;;;'J AMC OIWlll MAll Otanga 631 0340 A PAAAMOUNT PICTURE ,_, • c ... , ..... -. y,"' ••• h .• • ___ .,.., .,~ ... "' . . .... ._._ ... ~ ~ .. NOW PLAYING IW&llDI llUllllllCITOll TWI• ....,,,"'GI.,,, llwch • 41 0311 ·~·· ~ OWUDI UllTll ~IT Co$1' Mn. St9-33~1 lllWAllOI UOllU.IACll Et T0to 54t 588Cl Ill-WAT JI lllllft.11 Wt1!"'4ftSltr 891 3693 ua c1nc1--.. Orinve 634-3911 BO DEREH · RICHAPD HARRIS ....... Anlhelm Dnve·ln 879·98!>0 COITA lllU Souln Cont ~6-2711 MGM G united Amata NOW PLAYING ...... WOOObllOge 551 0655 IOUllTA .. HlllT l-'GUtl.l IUCM WHTMlllSTI" Foon1a1n Vatley South Coasl Ht Way 39 Onve·tn 8J9.1500 49-4 1S14 891 3693 I •--,.--I I Mau-Dally at Moet TheettM I ................. .,. ... ~. THIS SUMMER'S EPIC! ACTION SPECTACULAR FLY TO IT "Hurrah and hallelujah!" -9letla Benson. LOS tlaLES Tt.ES •UIWUll IOUTll c:MIT llAllll NU l'UU PAClflC'I IOUTI ~It t tosu M.., '>19 JJ~7 Biu ~19 ~l» l.1941"' &t.i<ft •9• t ~ t • lOWMll UlklMCa • CfKDOMt u.co:. o•u•1 .... [I l0to 591 SU0 I Ot•"Of ti.I< l~~J &itn.a p,,, 171 tOIO ·~i::=~.c:.~93~m .. PAllU ACCVTU,. Tilll YUllMHl •CllP!liiiJ,. ''°"""s.."-IDNPNI" •BARGAIN MATINEES • Monday thru Saturday All Perform•nces belore 5:00 PM (hcepl Speclaf Enp91mtl't1 1nd Hol1d1ys) LA MlllAOA MAU . LA MIRADA WAUH N o Muooo ot Roa•c•on1 99•·2•00 ----CM-"AffTHUR"tNt tt•.t:-••····· ...... 80 ..... llllCIMA• ........ "TARZAN THE APE MAN" 1111 t~a.. ..... , .. , •• --·--·--· "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" (PGI ·-· UI, UI, l"M, Id LAKEWOOD CENTER WALl<·IN --·--· "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" IPG) _ _.,....., ti:•, t:M. ~ ... , ... ...... "°_ "WOLFEN" 111 ·---.., ... _ LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WALll IN ~Al o.I M'tO 213/614•9211 tnYUl'Wln....-. "VICTORY" f PGI 1bl, -=·~~ ... tW LAGUNA IY\~ITAU.Ol9• ''VICTORY" f PGI tL ... 1-.a.a.u1(teiil "UNDER THE RAINBOW" f PGI ............ ---· ... _...._ "SUPERMAN II" -tL•,1.:a.._.. .... ,tt• focutly or Conolewooo 213/531·9580 n• AOft#1'\N corn.. "SUPE9~" (PG) ........ lk4it.,lr1'tt• ----~ "lltE FOUR SEASONS" -"~---........ , .... uoam....-.,,... "ZORRO, THE BAY BLAOE" IPG) ... ,...-.-.......... - ~.._..,. ''STRIPES" (R) ...... t ......... , .. so. COAST WALK-IN Sou111 Cooat •Owoy ot lrOOdwoy 494-1514 -----"TARZAN THE ~PJ.. '1.t~· (R) -------· "RA.IDEAS OF THE LOST ARK" IPG) ___ ...,.. .... '""• "' .. , o ..... 1 JO h' ...... 1· 1s ,..._, u ..... o.o IMPORTANT NOTICE' CMILOREN UNDER 12 FREE! ""'" 101 W>•AOf ••• Ill•• fH 6:JO •Sal Su• Hel1 •:OO r• Clffi-11 SOUND• YDUH AM CAii IWllO IS YOUl1 5'tM£1' 1 If NO 4M CNl IWllO WIT~ Ol'l10H ACUSSOl!Y l'O$l1lOll -lllU!IO AM POl!TMU 1•41..1. CM.fl OllM-llCS &lO Oii A111 MOii --·--ANAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE-IN "TARZAN THE APE~AN" (A) J1ee•ov 91 ol lemoft SI "CAVEMAN" (PQI 179·9150 CINI Jo $0Uto0 --~,,..,,,.=-==-.--... .,,.,.,..,.,..,..., ""'•""wa=n--::orn==-=-·. ciiM-,.._-; ,.-_,.. "CANNO=LL RUN" "UNOER THE RAINBOW" "ARTHUR" (PC) f PG) "BRONCO ":LLY" (PO) Clllf JlSOUflO CINt Pl~ 8UINA PAl1l BUENA PARK DRIVE -IN h1~ofn Ave Wett ~Knott 121 .. 4070 J0uNIA<N ...,.. M-..L. -.&.•-~ "THE EMPIRE STRIKES aACtt .. (PO) -''AUEH'' (RI ----"SUPERMAN II" (PO) FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE·IN -Son Olego 1,,,., 011100•1111111 (So >''ANY WHICH WAY YOU C-'w' fll'G) 962•2411 Clll( II SOUHO -j;· ~;;1~;,;fo., J ·~-n-• "VICTORY" (f'O) -"THE LAST CffASE" (PO) CUit II SOUllD I -·"°-"WOU'EN" (R) ...... "O.E HOWltNG" fRI __ .,_,._.. ----- "THE CANNONBALL RUN" !PO) "TARZAN THE AN MAN" (R) --.. AR1"Uft" (l"Q) "CAVE MAN" fllQ) Ct11t fl SOUtoO Clllt I< SOUllO ,A HA&~.l LA HABRA DRIVE IN -lllMow•ltO<•-'"°'"°'-S7Mf62 f'• I ... A 1".A"l LINCOLN DlllVf·IN h~o•" A•• _. • ., Of cno" 121·4010 MA."4 •I .. _. __ "TARZAN T'H~PI MAN" (RI "CAVEMAN" ff'OI ------· "RAJOV.a Of' THE LOaT AM" (f'O) -"HANGAR 11" (f'O) ORANGE DRIVE IN "'-..-..-. "VICTORY" (NI -"THll LAaT CHAii" (N) ---,··--· "IU>W~r· (RI "ORllllD TO KILL" (RI j.. , ... I ~ I"' --·---·1•-MISSION OQIVI IN . . ,, "UN0911 TMI ::J'*'W'' ('°-I "IMONCO lttJ. Y" INI' • • ' ' I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 • STCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE BANK OF AMERICA CHARLES BARR JEWELERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERNON SPORTSWEAR DR. LOU ELDER optometrist HAIRHANDLERS SALON HALLIDA Y'S MEN 'S CLOTHING HICKORY FARMS specialty food items HUMPTY DUMPTY children's clothing JEAN DAHL designer and better sportswear LA GALLERIA elegance in fashion MARKET BASKET t~ES AMIES TEENS NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNLIMITED gifts and stationers SA V-ON DRUGS STOREKEEPER traditional sportswear VETA 'S INTIMATE APPAREL WESTCLIFF CLEANERS WESTCLIFF CORNERS gourmet ware and collectibles WESTCLIFF SHOES XAVIER 'S FLORIST I 1 I i • j 1 .. . I .J .. DillJNat Johnny Mize and MONDAY, AUG. 3, 1981 ·Bob Gibson have been 0 placed in baseball's TELEVISION 83 highest echelon ... 0 Dllllil CDllT STOCKS BS Page B6. SPORTS 86 New paramedics may come for price By PIUL SNEIDER MAN 01 ... °"'' fll• li.tt A homeowner has a heart at- tack. A motorist crashes into a power pole. A child is found floating face-down in a backyard pool. Within minutes. fire depart- ment paramedics are on the scene, providing emergency medical attention. In most cities, a fee is charged when an injured or ill person is transported to a hospital. But the basic on-scene paramedic treatment traditionally.is free. Like police and fire protection. paramedic services are support- ed by city tax dollars. , But some cities, especially lbose without a hefty tax bue, may soon be forced to consider additional fees to pay for the ex- pensive paramedic services. Fountain Valley otriclals are pondering such fees. The city was forced to reduce some se rvi ces , lay off employees and use all of the federal revenue sharing money it had squirreled away from pre· v1ous years to balance its 1981-82 budget. Proposition 13 s lashed the city's income from property tax· es. And unlike neighbor cities like Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and Westminster, Foun- tain Valley bas no large shop· ping district to generate a large amount of sales tax income. Anticipating continuing finan· cial problems in the coming years, the Fountain Valley City Council has instructed the city's fire chief to prepare a study on paramedic fees -and the best method of collecting them. The issue is not as simple as it might seem. Orange County cities that have tried to collect paramedic fees have not always been suc· cessful. About fo ur years ago, Anaheim began billing $25 to $45 per paramedic call. ·'The fees were not designed to subsidize the program but to dis· EVERYTHING'S DUCKY -Sixteen-month-old Travis Lagerlof puts his best foot forward while tentatively meeting the feathered Dmly ,. ... ,...... ~ Cll9rtft ....... friends his mother Judy attracted to the water's edge at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa. Ivy overgrown?-Rats! By JODI CADENHEAD °' .. D96tJ,........, When Carol Caroll's 13-year- old son told her he saw rats climbing up the neighborhood telephone poles, she told him to stop being silly. There were no rats in Huntington Beach, she assured him. But that was before she came face to face with one of the beady-eyed rodents earlier this week as it scurried across the living room floor. It remains mysteriously hidden in an up- s tairs closet, having already chewed through a "nice-sized" chunk of shag carpet. A county Vector Control of- ficial says there is not an epidemic or rats descendin~ on Orange County despite a recent rash of calls from ciUzens in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley. Fred Beams , education coordinator for Vector Control, says most of the calls come from neighborhoods that are about 10 or 15 years old, where shrubbery bas grown thick. If a neighborhood gets to about 10 or 15 you can alm0&t predict that you'll start seeing roof rats," said Beams. "We're not to the point where you'll start seeing disease." Trimming trees, cutting back ivy and making sure pet food is not left exposed, wiU solve most of the problem, he said. "It doesn't mean lhat ·the homes are getting run down, .. c;aid Beam s . "The most manicured and well kept proper- ty can support rats It not trimmed properly." The rats seen in Orange Coun- ty are not the white Norwegian rats often associated with slum areas. The roof rats seen in the county are typically small and gray and do not carry rabies. They get from one place to another by climbing telephone poles and roofs. Vector Control receives about 30 to 50 phone calls a day from residents complaining about rats. courage unnecessary calls,'' ex- plains Anaheim Fire Captain Jim Nellesen. "The reason It didn't work was that it was too costly for us to collect." he adds. "The people who did pay were the elderly. who we did not necessarily want to collect from. And the people who abused the service were the ones who didn't pay." After five montHs, the fees were abandoned. Nellesen says. Today, Anaheim charges nothing for a basic paramedic call. Like most cities, it does not normally provide transportation to a hospital. A patient must pay a private ambulance service for this. Santa Ana, however. does operate its own ambulance service. Previously. the city charged its residents $25 for· a basic paramedic call and an ad· ditional $25 ror transportation to a hospital. The fees were doubled for non-residents. The city was able to collect these fees in about 40 to 45 per· cent of the cases, according to Santa Ana Fire Di vision Chief Jim Dalton. As or July 20, the city has begun charging a flat fee of $100 to residents and non-residents for transportation to a hospital. Ir no transportation is needed or if it is declined by the patient, no paramedic fee is charged. Dalton s ays Santa Ana 's paramedic program costs Sl million annually . The transportation fees will only defray a small part of that ex- pense, he says. Huntington Beach , Costa Mesa and Newport Beach employ their own paramedics and do not charge for calls. These cities do not transport patients except In extreme emergencies. A patient must pay for private ambulance service in these cities, often costing more than $100. Laguna Beach contracts with Orange County for paramedic services and patients must pay only for private ambulance transportation. When private ambulances are unavailable. city firemen will transport for a S45 ree. San Clemente, which operates its own paramedic and am- bulance service. recently raised its charges. Residents now mus t pay ~ for ambulance transportation, $110 with a paramedic escort. The charges are higher for non· residents. A San Clemente paramedic call without hospital transporta· Lion is free. Irvine contracts with the coun· ty for both paramedic and am· bulance service. If a person re- quires e mergency attention within the city limits, there is no charge for paramedic attention or the ride to the hospital. At present, Fountain Valley charges no paramedic ree, but patients must pay for private ambulance service. Complicating any attempt to charge a fee in Fountain Valley is the city's participation in the Net Six cooperative firefighting pact with Westminster, Hunt- ington Beach and Seal Beach. Under this agreement, Hunt· ington Beach paramedics often answer calls In Fountain Valley and vice versa. "It would be best if all of the (Net Six) cities were uniform mainly because of the in · terworkings of the system," says Huntirigton Beach Fire Chief Ray Picard. Picard noted that per-patient collection records for such fees have been· poor. But he said he would not object if Fountain Valley taxed its own residents to help defray costs of the city's paramedic services. Acting Fountain Valley Fire Chief Paul Summers said the city's paramedic program costs $256,000 annually. He added that He admits that some residents may object to paramedic fees as double taxation. They may con- l end that the government Fees should disc.ourage unnecessary calls, not pay plan. this includes the salaries or six paramedics who spend about half their time on general firefighting duties. Summers said he currently is researching legal issues as· sociated with paramedic fees and how this service might qualify for medical insurance reimbursement. Most medical policies pay am· bulance costs but not initial al· lention by paramedics. . The fire chief also is examin- ing means of collection, such as an $18 annual paramedic service fee on the water bills of Foun· lain Valley residents and busi- nesses. already collects enough to pay for basic health and safety services. Whether Fountain Valley will impose a paramedic fee is un· certain. Summers is expected to present his report to the City Council m six weeks. ~ But one area fire official, who asked that his name not be used, noted that paramedic training is expensive and so is the main· tenance of such services. "Wh al Fountain Valley is thinking of doing," he observed, "is probably a trend that's going to be seen in more and more cities in the coming years." OellJ ,.... Sl9fl ,,_ Laura Malmquist sends son John Carl off to ·patrol" neighorhood in vehicle that provides therapeut ic ererc1se Carl likes cops Tiny police car's just the ticket By STEVE TRIPOLI Of tlle Delly,. ........ A little boy who loves television police shows is getting help from his grandfather and some real Costa Mesa police in overcoming a phys ical dis· ability. Four-year-old John Carl Malmquist of Santa Ana Avenue has bis own miniature Costa Mesa Police car. loaded with sirens and other gadget.$ that ex- e rcise his fingers, arms and other body parts as he works to overcome his cerebral palsy. John's grandfather, also named John Malmquist. took a regular yellow pedal car and transformed it because John wanted a police car of his own. John's mother Laura said her son's favorite TV show is ''CHiPs," a series about · California highway patrolmen. With that in mind John's granddad attached a CHiPs siren to the little police car " along with the other gadgets. Costa Mesa Police, hearing of John's fondness for men in blue, have taken a liking to John. Of- ficer K.C. Gleason visited the youth recently. bringing along his patrol cruiser to show him. The police said afterward that John thought his car had just as much equipment as Gleason's. Mrs. Malmquist said that playing with the miniature car's many switches and buttons is "stimulation to get John going," a substitute during the summer months for the exercise he gets in special classes at the Carl Harvey School in Santa Ana dur- ing faJI and winter. Little John has one other use for the car, his mother said. His grandfather pushes him along the street occasionally so that John can play policeman. The youth loves giving play- tickets to his friends, and the' friends play right along, she said. It could be the beginning of a career. I i HeatheT Hunt~, 6, Kate Steele, 7, and H~idi Huntle11, 7 (left photo, from left) have fun climbing from semicircular ladder in lrtJine'• SWrrCI Amigo Park . .. •. I - Y PlLOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 Stuffing your bra won't help l J I GUGUNG THE GAGGLE: It sure wu com· fort1ng to learn ln the pubilc prints that water of· flcials in Laguna Beach and South Laauna almost have their little water bug problem under control. You have to feel better. This intelligence came in the news dispatch tbat reported that some tiny water bugs have been di.a· covered living in about 20 reservoirs. Not to worry, the water savants said, these guys don't drink much. Actually, that isn't what the water officers said. WHAT THEY DID say is these micro- organisms are dying ' for lack of s un · T_O_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_'_ · ·If light. The waterbug DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am l2 ytan old and will be lD t.be alzl.b arede when achool at.arta in September. 1 have been teued a lot became my cheat 11 ao Rat. II l.bere an)'tb1n1 J can do about dnelopln1 up there? Pleue anawer soon. I am Ured of atuf · fins Ill)' aocu in a t.ral.Dt.n1 bra. -S.Kl.NNY Otar 8.: S.•t &lrla bMo• la&er ~ cKIM!n. Be pa&IM&, de.r. n.ere .. mo wa1 ,.. caa raala Uiete UW.11. U 1• are 1kl.Day, die 1tatfecl IOCU wW look plloay. I 1auu& )'09 Mop 1&atnac 10UMll ud waU for aature to do a.er work. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Some recent advice you eave lrked AlllAllEn me. I am compelled to let you know. Tb• couple who 1l1ned off ''Not Sure What to Do'' were aeeklnl your advice about their proposed marria&e ceremony. They bad planned to have a black friend in l.be weddlnl par- ty. Their problem waa the an· tlcipated reaction from the bride's family. What troubles me la not l.belr dilemma, but a part of your answer. You said, "U you would pus over your black friend for fear ol ulJIMIU;ilq aome tinorut red· oecka, you have macaroaJ where your aplne belonaa." Webster'• definllloa of "red· necu" is .. wh.lte members ol the Southern rural laborlo1 cJ111." Tbe use of thil word ln that context aivea one l.be feel· t.n1 that you are 1UU mardlinc to the "Union" drummen. You should accentuate l.be J>C*tive and eliminate l.be ne1ative. - AMERICAN SOUTHERNER FROM BATON ROUGE Dear Amerlcaa SM&Mnet: I IHH I AM marcMlll le die Oaloa dnlmmer becaue I wu bora ud reared la Iowa, a.ad 1&'1 Ute oaly dnlmmer I llave e.er Ilea rd. • •P,9! ta.at Ute ..... ,..~ •eek • wa1 a• ••fert••at41f chlce. I t.IMel4 lane 1Ud .. .,. D0'8D&lltlota." CONFIDENTIAL to Aft We Ge&U., CrotebetyT: Deftal&elJ DO. One ol &be Joya of pUiaC older -aad more m atue -II aometblD1 7oatlt la uable &o ... dentud. It la tile Joy of NOT 1o; lnl to tbe party. : --I Do you feel owlcword, ulti con1cioul -lonely? W tlcome to ~ club. There'• ~lp /or 11<>1' tn ..,.,. Londera' booklet, "Tht K•11 tq Popularit11." Send~ cent• tDUh .,oed rtqueat and o long, .tamped, Id/• oddreued enuelope to Ann LanlWrlJ P.O. 80% 11995, Chicago, 1u. au. 1 I l ,~ population has thus decreased between 50 and 75 percent. You're left to wonder if that means that instead of drinking live waterbugs, now you're gulping down She's committed to the art deceased ones. · Anyway, the actual report suggests that nobody has seen one of the little fellows floating on through as far as the family water faucet. The waterbugs ap· ·parently just float away while still visiting Uwwes· ervoirs and aren't at all interested in the homes of Lagunans or South Lagunans. That's another comfort for the Sodth Orange Coast water customer. You have to be careful in reporting· on beasties that might be living in the domestic water supply. If people start getting the idea they can't drink By El.LEN BaANDT Joan Scbirle of Blue Lake: Tbe Well-Balanced Artist It's just a sleepy little town, one of those quiet, conservative rural villages lbat dot Northern California. 1 But tonight , there's excitement in the air. Tbe townspeople have seen the posters; they're dressed in their best clot.bes. lo lbe Town Hall, spent her 20a drifting from one job to another, as performer, college instructor, bartender. secretary, and teacher of the Alexander postural therapy technique. In reaction to an unhappy love affair, she moved lo soulbem Humboldt County lo 1974 and spent aJmost two years alone in a smaJI cabln, doinl craft work and contemplatiol h e r f u t u r·e . F o r t b e CALIFORNIA WOMAN hundreds are waiting -eager youngsters, farmers and farm wives, senior citizens -for this is a once·a-year event. At last the c urtain rises -it's showtime! The traveling theater company , bringing entertain~ent and enlightenment to small towns and farm communities, bas been a part of A¢1erican tile for a long lime. Aild tbe tradition lives on in the efforts of dedicated theatrical troupes, committed to tbe idea of making theater accessible to l.be widest possible audience. Laguna water quality officer keeping an eye on hu drif'4. One or the best and most unusual of these traveling theater companies is the Dell'Arte Players of Humboldt County's Blue Lake, who've transformed tbe topical humor and physical skills of Italian Commedia dell'Arte into a disciplined, intelligent, and humorous performance style geared towards California audiences. The managing director of Dell'Arte, wbo also serves as leading lady in most of the traveling troupe 's productions, is a vibrant, talented woman named Joan Schirle. the water, no telling what they'll start guzzling in· stead. Laguna and South Laguna already have loo many loud parties that go on into the night. IT WAS RELIABLY REPORTED by this sterling journal that the tinY waterbug in question is known by the name of Daphne. You might have always believed that Daphne was a sweet little nymph of a girl who got turned into a laurel tree while being chased by the God Apollo. Schirle, 37 , tall , auburn -haired , and exceptionally pretty, seems lbe epitome or the dedicated performer. The walls of her modest ooe-room bungalow are lined witb books on acting theory. An antique piano s tacked with sheet music testifies to the devotion with which she perfects ber musicaJ performance and composition skills. When she's not rehearsing with the touring troupe or taking care-of the company's finances, publicity, or bookings, Miss Schirle is teaching at Dell' Arte's renowned Theater School, where each year, approximately 30 students from all over the world come to study the physical techniques of theater. This must be a different Daphne. Some research might suggest to you that there is a eutomostracan. a tiny organism called Daphnia, knewn commonly as ''the water flea." Hey listen, we can't possibly be dealing with the Daphnia here. If we had fleas in the water, _s_y_rely the high brass of the water district would fess up to it. Fleas in the water? No chance. The very thought of it makes your stomach itch. ANYWAY, WHEN YOU get started talking about waterbugs that lead you on into Daphne getting chased around the laurel tree by Apollo, that carries you on into Daphnia and fleas, you wonder why you brought up the whole thing in the first place. Besides that, the water officials say not to fret. The water bugs just aren't making it as far as the pipes in Laguna Beach or South Laguna. Wilb the energy and joy she exhibits lo her work, Joan Scbirle appears to be someone who's really found her proper place in life. But Scbirle is a self-confessed "late bloomer," who claims to have lacked direction and dedication unW her early 30s. BESIDES THAT FURTHER, the water experts aren't worried and aren't taking any action against the little bugs who are passing on so f ctst. But, they assure us, they're watching the waterbug situation very, very carefully. So am I. A University of Santa Clara graduate, San Jose-born Scbirle ~orpio: Time to celebrate Taellday, A•IU* 4 By SYDNEY OMAR& A&IES (March 21-April 19): Unusual flurry of caUs, messages could dominate scenario. Mental alertness now is prerequisite to success. Emphasis on trips, visits, relaUves and the written word. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius natives play important roles. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Low-key ap- proach brinp desired retulta. Ileana remove cbip from aboulder. Famlly member ls ready to HOROSCOPE .. cooperate once you provide "face·aavln1•l alterudve. Another TaW"UI it very mHb in pie· ture. l GldONI (Ma7 21.June 20): Good moon upeet OotacUS. wil.b emotional reapo111H9, tipifteut cban1ee, adveature of 1peculadoD and attalr of tieart. Romance, Wualon ucl wilblUl l.btntr1D1 could dombaat. interesUns acmano. CANCE& (June 21-July 22): Get property ap- prmal. Dia ID for Hcwity. 8'11lMta ID,....me& poald IMl1 cllvideadl. Empbula oo proplltJ, .... ranee beMftt. iD&erett rates and deallap wtOa pldtr indlvklual wbo la "la-U.aow." l . L80 (JulJ II-AUi. 22): Reeop•• ddf.w. Mtw .. .,....Uoa eDd ccmtu.loa. Dalal too mucb at oee ttm. prone couterpradaiift. flatlla .- project &bat earn.........., bardw . .lelati•• lDteDdl to ten JODI' llaltl. It IDa1 MW be tim• to "draw tbe li.M." VISGO (AN. JI.Sept. ZI): tr.ta ' necessary to take advantaae of financinl op· portunity. Highlight originality, independence, willinpiess to pioneer a project. Focus on material at band, special producta, income ud locaUn1 item that bad been lost, miaalnl or at.oleo. LIB&A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Follow through on bunch; cycle blab and your deci.aloo will be on target. Empbuu on personality, personal ap· pearances and ways of penuadlna family mem· bera to •uPPOl1 prlnciplea. S<»llPiO (Oct. 23-Nov. Zl): What bad been reuoo for ~an, doubtl will now boomeranc intol cause for celebration. Divenify, expand borilODI •and plan eRtertal.Dment for t.boH wbo ved loyalty and= •aed fail.b In your capabWJ:. &\G1'IT JUS (~ov. 22-Dec. 21): Friends may be pualed bJ' JOW" desire to NYtle, review and nbuUd. Obtain bl.nt from Seol'pk> m.,.ce. Penom wbo really care wW ttick bJ JOU -tbe otben would not remain DO matter what JOU!' poUci•. . CAP&ICO&N (Dec. 22-Jan. 11): Member of ono-l\e tea a1da in prom~ career, asnbttionl 1landlq ID comdullllty. Get ldeu OD paper aDd submit tbeal to proper cbannell. C.....,_ wW oe· cur. but a eomeryatlv• COWM aervea your belt lD· t.erftta. AQVA&IVS (Jan. JO·l'eb. 11): J'asnlly member talb of loq Jounae:r. ud 4-ln for 1'educatklll." PweeJYt ~ , be cooperatl", bat dao'l P" up JOU' OWD prtadpa., ldeall. Home....,..tioDdM. · PaD (Feb. 11-M~JD): Pint tar111'°" MoUI Dal be tDUreiJ traMed. Kef MW to wait Uic1 ... , to ~ oe.... and to be ''crutiYelJ ateptlnl." One wtio lt proud IDd _...., reJiut could allo be fluDdallJ embur111ed. Jesuit-educated Scbirle, it waa a lime ol physical and emotionaJ "retreat." "Living aJone," sbe sa)'B, "I learned s elf-r eliance and sell-control. Reviewing my put. I became strong enough to face the future. And realizing l.be importance of being close to nature, l committed myself to a rural lifestyle." Scbirle joined Dell' Arte in 1976 as a teacher in tbe Theater School. When her administrative talents became apparent, sbe was named managing director of tbe company in tm. The Theater School of Mime and Comedy ls the heart of lbe Dell-Arte Company. The only institution of its k.lnd in the U.S., the school offers a one-year c urriculum stressing sucb physical performance skills aa mime, juggling, and acrobatics and s uch stylized acting techniques as the use of masb, melodrama, and vaudevllle. Students learn the principles ol tbe classical Commedia dell' Arte style and bow to adapt those principles to l.be demands of American theater. The Commedia tradition ii based on the developmHt of stock character types, identified by l.be use of mask.a, standard costumes, and bithJy stylized physical movement. A Commedia actor would perfect one character type and play lbat character all his tile. Since outdoor performances were typicaJ, Commedia came to depend on such crowd-pleasing spectacles as juggling, tumbling, and broad clowning. Commedia plays, collectively composed by companies, also directed their humor towards popular taste; it had to be current, topicaJ, and easy to comprehend. The Oell'Arte Players Company, in its school and on its performance tours, bas adapted Com media principles and characters to the cSemands of regionaJ California l.beater. Joan Scbirle's optimism about lbe growth of regional companies and her personal devotion to her craft reflect her high esteem for the position ol theater in America. We wlcome 11our que.Uona, com1Mnt1, ond 111gOelffonl about this column. Plea1t write t o CalifomJa Womon, Dail11 Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, Co$t4 Meld, 920S. To Place your ''Fast Result" Service Dlrectory ad .•.. Call Now JOAN SCHIRLE ... Turns anger into creativity Pa~phlet on asthma F&EE PAMPHLET titled "What Everyone Should Know About Asthma" ls now available from the American Lung At.· sociation of Orange County. The pamphlet, which covers normaJ lung functions, causes of asthma, diagnosis, what to do during an attack and treatment, is a vailable by calling 835· LUNG. CAllDIOPULMONAAY Resuscitation training is available at Huntington ln- lercommunity Hospital at 6:30 p.m . Tuesday and Aug. 18. For Information on lbe free course, call 842-1473, ext. 24.5. CRILDBl&TB is l.be subject of an eight-week course beginning at 6:30 p.m . Tuesday in Laguna Niguel. Cost for tbe series is $40. For information, caJl 495-6423. THE COMPULSIVE Personality is the subject or a discussion at 7:30 p.m . Tues· day in Santa Ana. For informa· ti on, call 532-5646. ROLFING seminar will be ofi fered at 7 p.m . Wednesday in . HEALTH HELP Costa Mesa. For information, call 640-7661. ANN MARTIN of the Ad· vanced HeaJth Center will lead a discussion oo "Finding and Ta~ ping Your Talents and Personal Strengths" at 6 p.m. Saturday ia Newport Beach. For informa: lion, call 975-0700. • ' NATURAL FAMILY PIAN· ning is the s ubject of a two- part lecture series beginning at 7:30 p.m . Monday in Orange. For information, call 633-9111, ext. 7881. SICK AND TIRED? IF SOMEONE YOU LOVE IS HURTING (And you are hurting too) Because of ALCOHOLISM orotherchemlcaldepenct.ncy Learn how you can help now! Yes, there is something you can do -even If the victim won't seek help. Attend Our Free Community Education Alcohotlsm Intervention Program. Every Saturday Morning, 1oam tit Noon '42·1671 mmc.n w.au 3 Town & Country. Orange (714) 5'7-8228 > I \It'")\' -"'NBlfif~ uo1 •• NIW9 KUNG lllU c.int i. giwn 1 mep 10 1 gold mine by I dying pre»- pector. I TIO TAC OOUGH M0 A0l 0 H CMt... WlnGIMetlf tplrw Ille lllllTI, Hot LIC>I retum1 fl'Oft'I hef' ~moon 111\d ~ IMtne th11 nls •- Y9' II I pllOny (Plfl t) • GOOOTIMU , SUAVIV1NG. Ed Asner C right> meets Ed Harris, a member of a doomsday group on "Lou Grant" tonight at 10 on Channel 2 . Thl4IM ~ ln"°"'9d with 1 hlndeome AfriGan lludenl (P911 11 •• ELICTNC COMttANY~ (I) CMNIWS 9 A8CNEWS al...CN!WS Cl)MOYll ··Bronco Billy" ( 19801 Clint EMl"WOOd. Sonora Loctc• A form« lhoe Miiiman !Tom N..,., Jereey rM11z11 hla dr-ol petformlng In 1 Wiid W11t lh0w. 'PO' U0 Cl J()f(IA'8 WILD • ALL IN THI! FAMILY Archie jump• II 1 135,000 Olllf to ..,, hi• hOUM to I black bu~. ., llHHYHIU Benny the mugget gell 1 tHll Of hll own medicine when hi trlee to rob 1 cilf- l man. KCET NEW88EAT STUOK>IEE "Stunt Kid " Hollywood 11unt kid Reid Rondell per- lorm1 1 wOf'ld record- brNklng jump off a hlgh- nM (R) Cl>IBNEWS 9 MANEY Miu.El' The dltlci"'" ln\'llllgltl an unutual shoe thief while Wojo beln1nd1 en el<llfly lndlln 0MOVIE * * ~ '"Thi Young Wer- IO<d" ( 11175) Otjver Toblu, Michael Gothard A young IMOlf unll11 _., trlbll Into a lighting unit to com- bat 1119 Suone 1:16 9 EDITOALAL 7:00 . 088 NE.W9 I N8CNEW8 HAPf"Y DA Y8 AGAIN Joanie talc• up 1moklng clgar111 .. In orcM< to Join a cool girl•' Club. G AICNEWI G BUU.aEYE m M0A0 8°H A dllPOIMUld Korean fatnlly and I gill with 1 GI baby CIUll prot>llMI for Ille 4077th. • ITN£T8 0# 8AH "'-+.HCllCO Stone•-the problem of finding • potentlll Informer before thl man II mur- dlr9d. • OVEl'EAIY Gufft: comldl1n Olc:k Smoti-1. (R) O G!) MACMll. I LIHfllER REPORT Cl> TIC TAC DOUGH IUJ MERV OAlf'FlN "Hit MullC Miker•·· G.,..11. Kii Rudman, Bun Bec:hlrlCh. Caro.. 8IY9f Sig«. Hllln Reddy. Blue ~·=' "Swim T11m·· Stephen Fur11 A pampl(ICI group ol country chlbb1r1 acquire • gorgeou1 new member who ch1rg11 them up tor the~ Wllp. 'PG" (Q)MOVIE .. &cepe From Alcatraz" ( 111711) Clint &llwood, Patrick Mc Goohan. A hardened con..,lct, returnlCI lfter hll fltlt 91eap1 !Torn "the Roc:k :· plan• to brllll out egaln ·PO' (%)MOVIE "A Plln In Thi A-" (11175) Lino Ventura, J1cqu11 Br ... 7:80 8 2 OH THE TOWN Hoall Ste"" Eelw1td1 and Melody ROQlrl proftll 1 hu1b1nd-1nd-wll1 team that conduc11 _,-.1nar1 on protection lgalnst crime; 1 look 11 tne popular Old r9dl0 Ill'.... "'Your Hit Par1de .. ; end paopl1'1 teec:tlona to 24-hour -.110- matlO bank '"""· 8 F10KT BACK wrTH DAVID HOROWn'Z • IHANANA <Nlill Thi Angels. I MATCHGAME Fiia. THE MUSIC ALL IH THE FAMll. Y Archie Is temptlCI to oon the famou1 l'IOod.cl robe of punlanment In a aecret 1fi9llant1 aoclety. (Pat1 t i • MACNEll / L£HllllEA REPORT '1!) GNAT P£AFOMlANcE8 "Mollere" In 1111 first pan of Arline Mnouehklne"a five-hour eple, JNn Blp- lllle Poquelln (Mollere) la -growing up In I bour· g10IH 17th-cent ury nou..notd and. rebelling eg1ln1t tradition, decides to lludy 1-. (Plf1 1 I (R) (I) P.M. MAG.AlJNE A gient alnkhOll In Winter Petti, FlorlcU: Holtywood 'a lllh doctor to the ,,.,._ 18 FMlllA.. Y f£IJO CH) K~AZE: MISSK)H <#DEATH Thi 18c10ta of J~ life wNdl led numeroua Dlot9 to commit • torm of IUldde tt>ey conaldet9d hOnOrebtl dutlng Wor1d War" are examined. t.'.00 • Cl> WK.NJ .. QNCINNATl Thi tlllf tr ... 10 help Herb find out whither hll Orlnl<· Ing hll gotten out Of '*'<I. (R) G 8 LITTLE HOUSE OH THE PAAIAllE Wkl~ Jonethan G""9)' and hi• son Ml out to find • new Ille In a nelgflbor1ng town.(R)O 9 MOVIE * * * 'h "Arabe1que" ( 11166) Gregory Peck. CHANNEL LISTINGS 1J KNXT 1CBS1 Lo'> An9ele'> 0 KNBC 1NBC) Lo!> Angeles 0 t<TLA 11ne1 I LO!. Angeles D KABC TV 1ABC) Los Angeles Cl' ~FMB 1CBS! San Diego G KHJ· TV (Ind 1 Los An ~eies 0 KCST (ABC! San Diego CD KTTV 11ne1 I Los Angeles Cl> KCOP TV tlnO I Los Angelt>s fD KCE 1 TV 1 PBSI Los Angeles m KOCE TV 1PBS) Hunt1ng1on Beach Sophia Loren. When sn Arnerlcan prol1uor In Engi.nd II kldnlQC)ed, lld com. In Ille form of a myat~ women wno le the mllltt-of '" oil m-v- nall. 89 llUlaA Thi C.lffel PllllnOI Of a U.S emOlllY 1talf In a mythlcll lMd II lnleff\IPI· ad by a 111111 ltom en olfl· clll from home. -~ **'Al "Tiie Aaallllnlllon Of Trotlky·· (11172) Richard eunon, Alain Delon. Thi mental turmoil and lntenM determination ol an aaau- lln leacl to thl lut day1 ol the Ruaallfl ,...otutlonary leeder. • P.M. MAGAZINE A giant llnkhole In Winter P11k. Florldl, Hollywood'1 nan doctor to 111e ater1, Chit T .. prepetll Hunger· Ian chlcken; Dr. Wuco on .,_.,la: Biiiy Brlll Inter· ""9wl Jelfetlon Stlflhlc> .MOW * * '"UF0"1· It Hll Begun" ( 19711) Oocurnen· tary. Go..,.nment agent• and ICllntlall Cl'-the lnctdenll Of UFO llQhtlnga ol put and pr-I • OAEAT PEAFOMIANCE8 ··Dance In America Ctytemneatt1" Thi Martha Grlharn D1nce Company petform1 thla blllet balld on 1111 Greett tr~y In which Cly1em,,..lta mur- ders her hu1b1nd to remlln with lier lover. (R) CID MMEMIEA WHEI: rru~FLY The d,ellrmlnlllon of Am«1Can lrwentor1, WhOll cono19t1 and ldeu --tually changlCI. tll9 ,_ of lhe entire nation. Is ••• mined by Didi Clvett. (I) 8"CTACUUA LONDON OMOYtE "Touched By Lo..,1 " Deborll'I Aaffln, Olene L-. An efnOtiOnllly dl9- turbed '-1age gW1 oe....1- oC>I • lriel ldetllp wtlh EMe Prealey which cNnglll hlf Ille QOfnj)tltlly ·PO' a:30 8 THE TIM CONWAY SHOW(R) •@ ILOVEHER AH'fWAY A -llerbralnlCI young woman 11111 In IOI her ll1ter II 1 doc1or'a appointment, wi1h dtsutrOUI r11Ultl. tD TOPSTOR\' HOlll" Jlrn Thomu, Mary ~ * * ~ "TM Shocking Mlaa Pllgrlm" ( 111<47) Betty Grable, Dtck Haymae. A women ahodl• 1111 work! by blcornlng tM llrll of her MK to muter the type- writer keyboltd Cl> WELCOME 1ACK. KOTTP 01bl end Julll lllce lhe newborn twin• hOrnl only to nn0 thlmMIYel with unexpected gu1111 (Pan ~MOVIE * * * * "GrMI Eltpecta-tlooa" (UM7) John Miiia. llalerie Hobson. 8ued on 1119 1tory by CNrlea Didi- IN. A ~ llo'(• llte 11 ...... ~~· CNf'°9 tnMllnlllr !lllltt Ill .. ;T'~ ........,. qf ttle 40Tl'UI ..... #IUIN•~IO ..,.,,. .... Md • vettety ol ...... ~11'> .... .__,WO Claude WeldOfl offer• 'leldlnO • dWofoe ltom • eon.tence 1n e•cnenoe 1or I Pofltlc:t l ft.., Or, Ind LMM'1 pelt ltnelly "1Cflle ·-=(A) ••• "The Dove" (197•) JOMPh '°"°""· Oetlofeh IWflrt. A )'OUtlQ met\ llftdl romance wtllle 1alllng Wound tM wor'ld. •....v~ "'Hit Mu1la Maker•" Gueate: Kii fludman, Sun lecllerflCll. Ca1ole Ba}'9' a_.. Helen Reddy. 8kie <>v-t• rut, Lltry Grllharn. John KlemrMr, Charlll McClain. 9~ * * "No Pleo. To Run" ( 1972) Hwedlll &etnetdl. Lwry.Hlgmln. An orphan lftd hia gtllldlather Ilea Ille OOUtllty ......... author1- llll ,.... ltlem permll- 8iofl to IMt togMMr. ~MOYWI "Friday The 13th"' ( 19801 Beley Pllmer, Adrienne King Thi reoc>enfng ol a eummer c.M9. doled 20 )'Mfa _,.., after thr11 muroen, 1ttrac1a a lllndlC- 11 ... 1 klller who knllH uneuepectlng tMIH09fl. 'R' • CID MOW "Bronco Bitty" ( 11180) Cllnt EMl"WOOd, Sonor1 Loeke. A form« lhoe aalMman from New JerMY realtz11 hi• dreem of petformlng In a Wiid W•t lhOw. 'PG' (G)MOYIE "&obble Jo And Tll9 Out· law" ( 11176) Marjo1 Gortner. Lynda Carter. A cat nop wno went• to bl • country 111\ger 1nel • QUlckdr.w IWlndllf WhO dr.-na hi'• Biiiy Thi l<ld meke I pith ICfOA the Souui-i.'R' Cl)MOVIE "Dreamer·· 11111111 Tim Mat'-!, Susan Blakely A young t>owW hll lo overcome rneny Oblleclel whl .. trylno to ructl for hll llflk>ng 0r-.i. 'PG' •.ao 9 (I) HOUSE CAlL8 A Olranged man planll a ..,I>~· in Ken.- ington a-II. (R) ID TYMPANI The Laura DMn Dancer• and Mulicl-petform the compolMI< I choreogra- ph«"• major new worle. t:46 Ii) MOVIE "Bronco Biiiy·· ( 11180) Clint Eutwood, Sondra Locke. A tormer anoe 11111rn&n from New Jereey real~N hi• dream of performing In • Wiid WNt anow. 'PO' IO:OO 9 (I) LOU GRANT A Trtb 1tory about the aur- v1 .. all1t mo..,ement hit• hOml tor Lou end RoMI ""*1 lhl two 111 caught In 1 kllllf ttorm. (R) ••• HEWS • EXCHANGE '"The Third Coael"' The ttyte ol Ille In T e1<N end the eflec1a of replel orowt11 on HoultOfl, thl ttat1·1 latgeet ctty. 1re explored j. TYWAN The Laut• Deen Dencers and Mualclln• petfonn !hi oompo99f I dl«eogre- P'*°'I major ,_ W0<tc 1o:ao . Nl!W9 • IHOEPENOENT NETWON< HEWS • MASTEN"IECE THL\TAE FE8TIVAL CW FAYONTES ··upstllr1, Down•tlllra· Th41 Bolter•· James and Hazel are lnvtted to a lox hunt end ROM and Edward are Mnl •long to take cere of them. (P911 3)(R) (nJCl)MOVIE "Thi Godlether, P1r1 II'" (1974) Al PeclnO. Robert Duvall. Mich... Corllone HIUl'Tlll hll 1811 lalher'I tlvone and power u hi blcomll the ,_ hMd ol thl Mana, finding prob- lema with l'lval llcilon• end thl •-throughOut Ilia reign. 'R' (%)MOVE "'Rough 0u1·· ( 1980) 8Uf1 Reynold•. Le1t1y-Ann1 Down. A Brltleh IOCiallte tur.. '"International J9w11 Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 TUBE TOPPERS , KOCE 8 7:30 -"Mollere." The riral of a five·hour epic shows Mollere 1rowlna up in a 17th century bouaehold. KTLA e 8 :00 -"Arabesque." Sophia U>ren and Creaory Peck star ln a film about espionage and mystery. KCET D 8 · 00 ''Dance in America." The Ma rtha Graham Dance Company perf ormA a ballet based on a Creek tragedy. ABC D 9:00 -"The Dove." Joseph Bottoms and Deborah Raffin star in a movie based on a true s tory about a 16· year·old who sails all over the world. thlll out ol retirement to help het llMI l30.000.000 In OtamOndl. 'PO' 11:00888(1)98 .... e ITAATMK Clc>t Klnl .. •tr anded Otl • planet with a FldltatlOn Commlu loner when a 11range force captur11 hie lhulllecrlft I :=.xvwm GAMt "All Around Thi Mor..,, Tr .. " Mannlll llnd• hlm..it caught bit-• bind of IN9vll .• bNutllul gll'I Ind 1 Scotland dlllcihre, all of wh<>nl are -Ching tor 1111 money from a multi· mlMlon dollar robbery • MHNYHILL Benny Ir ... hi• hand ... -lflnOUl\C)I( • DICK CAVETT "Drugs· Aeldlcllon And Reco .. ery" GuHt1. Dr. Merl< S. GOIO, John Phil· llpa, MICilen.z.11 PhiHlpe (Part t of 3)(R) (C)MOVIE "The Tlna n1·· (111771 Romen Polanakl. l11beile Adjenl A rnen renta an 1panrnent ""'*' 1 pr9"'1· ou• ten1nt commtttlel aul- Cldl and blcomll p111- noid about hi• neighbor• 'R' CID HBO 8NEAK PMV1EW HUlbln<l...,,O_.,, comic• Jerry Stllllr and Anne MNra Introduce thl mo"'· .... apecleta ano ~· ._,,, corning 10 Home Box OlflCI In August 11:*>. C8I MPORT9 "'Thi Delen11 Of Tiie Unit· Id Slltll.. In a live-pan _...,Dan All'*. Walter Cronkite end o1her corr• epondentl lllAmlM lhl Unltld Stai .. • ChlnCll ol OllenM end aurvt .. al In lhl elleflt ol • nuellar war (Part 1)(R) G 8 THE 8E8T OF CAMON Gu11t1: K•ll J1ckaon. Marilyn Horne. (R) 8 «I A8C HEWS MOHTUME G LEr8 MAKE A DEAL I ST AHlEY 8l8JE. KCET NEW84ll!A T C'il CAPTIOHED A8C NEW9 (I) STAR TMK C apt Kirk and th• E,nterpr1M encountlf 1 attenge force encl come under the domination Of the god Apollo. CID STNCIH> ..ooM ONLY: HAU.EL.WAH HOLLYWOOO From thl MOM Grand Hotel In LU llegu, Gene Kelly hOIU a glltterlng Lal VIDA' rewe whk:h 111u111 thl golden era o l "'°""'""'Ing In 10ng end danQe. 1t:4a0MOVIE ''Between Th• Lln11" ( 1977Y Und11y CrouM, J.n QoldblUm. Thi 11111 rnemblr9 of .,. "under· Ofound" BOl1on MW9C>8- per ha ..... 111oue '-''le and Journ1ll1tlc ..-it-with Md! Olhlf end thl eubj9Ct1 of t"9it atoriel. 'R' 12:00• MOYW * * "'Thi Singing Hiii" ( 1M 1) Gene Autry, Smlley Bumetll A young girt went• to 1111 en lnh«ltance and • band of renc::hln try 10 keec> thl land. • 9 ,NffAllY 18&.ANO A coemltlCI tycoon goea aft• 1 mtltlonaW•. Ind en ec:lor \'fllll Ille haunting grounds of 1119 eno11tor Dracula. (R) D OUNIMOQ Mitt anCI Doc at• troubled by 1 rnectdlllome women .. they llOOr1 an eacaplCI con..tcJ on a trlln trip to r~ .. ~ Barney le crltlCllly wound· Id and mu1t bl left blttlnd In order for thl IMF to ~·their million • BAMTTA Barltta 11 unhappy about being loenlCI out to the "'Ice 1quad, 11peclally when hi dflco\oerl hie plt1net 11 on the take 12:30 G at TOMOMOW Qu11ta· boxer Thoma• HNrna. lc>n0Wflt8r Phll Collln1, F.a Patker (I) HAMYO AllhOugh 1 young repe vie· tlm can Identify her 111111· '"' · Ille police CIOM her cue without arrNtlng thl IUIPllC'· IR) CID MOWE "Thi Awllcenlng"' ( t9801 Char1ton Hiiton. Sularl· nan Yori<. An wef\ll04o- gist'1 daughter blcomN po.....o by thl m1lrolo- 1ent aplrlt of an ancient ~~-·R' "Somewhere In Time·· ( 111801 Clviltophlr Relw, J-Seymour. Ol>lllM<I wflh the portrait of 1 19th· century ec:lr-. 1 modem· day New York playwright ue11 hypnoele to traWI bedc In time end rnwl '*"· ·PO' 11:AO • HAM'f' 0 Althougn I young rlC)I ~ tlm can Identify hit _..... ant, the police CIOll her -without lfTWllng thl ~.(RI 1:00. MOYIE *"" ''Weatem Jembor11·· (111311) Gene Autry. A cow- boy getl -Ind °"""' eome outllwl the punish- ment they hid coming to 1i-n D PSYCHIC pttENOMBCA "Paychlc Development Through Ulecyclll" Hoel: Damlln Slmpaon. <Nllt: Carol Ann Dryer. JOHN DARLI NG FOR MORE ON "THAI STORY ASOU1' PRINCE CHA~L.ES ... 1 .-.WCOUf INGSSIDeNT N9TWOM ... t:10• MICMI .. ·~ ~ .. .,, .. (1 ... ) VIII ~. 1rttt ~ A ~ lglnt dle- 00-a ""'911M eoent• ~to,.-him wltfl a IMntll lfld ~ oau.. ... 1:111= •• "HoltllOll"' ( llM3) LW,. Aalnlt, Muro de Coidov• Our'lnO wono Wlr II, -II -befl Of Ille CJltdl ,....tanee ere llMn .... by Hull In r.CallellOI'\ l0t the dleth of one of their OOl'flc>4llrlol•. 1:ao• MOYll * * * "11'1 A Wonderful I.lie" (11M7) J-St-· art, Donna Reed. (C)MOW "The ""' Nudle Mulloal" (11175) Cindy Wlllla ma, ~ Kimmel A down· and-out Broedliway pro- ducer plllw 10 IC*" Inlet· 111 In hll tateet proj9Ct by ltllOlnCI It aotnp1911fy In the nude. 'R' 1:801 .... 2:00 alNEWS MOllW "Joll11 My F01111 ~ TOid t.41•• Pleyboy 8unn111 Ind PenlhouM Pela ac1 out bnod)I Jok• end 111111 "R' 2:18 (%) aNIMAIOOM 2:20. IDffONAL l:2S 9 MOYIE * * * "Ruthllla" ( 11M8) Zec:hery Soott, DI-Lynn. An arnbltlou1 bu'"-"'an lorwakll hie family Ind ~for-. 2:IO (%) MOYIR .. ,. Plln In Thi A-" (t11751 Lino ll1ntura, JacquH Br ... 3.-G08• NEWS a:111(C)MOV1E "T11get1" ( 111118) Borla Katlofl, Tim O'Klll)' An aging horror-movie atar tr ... to ....on with • mur· dlroue enlper at a dfl..,..in movie theater. a:ao Cl) 8PECT ACULAR LONDON 4:00 (%) MOYIR "'Rough Cut" ( t980) Bun R1ynof01, LH ley-Ann• Down. A B<lllah IOCilllt1 lur11 an International j9wll thief out of retir"ernenl to help hit 1tlll l30.000.000 ln d~.·PG· •:30 CC) MOVIE '"frldey Thi 13th" (1980) Beley P.,,,.,.,. Adrienne King. Thi reopentog of 1 -camp, clolld 20 )'Nf"I .rtier after tfvll rnurderl, attrec:11 a lllndlc· ""'• klller who knll11 uneu1pectlng f""""Olfl ·R· Cl)MOYIE "Bronco Biiiy"' ( 11180) Clint Eutwood, Sonora l.oeke. A former lhOI Hiiiman from New Jereey rMllue hie dream ol petformlng In 1WildW11t lhow 'PO' Tuesday . movies -MORl•tG- l:OO CI>··~· In Time" ( tll80) Ctwi.tophlr Aerie, J-Seymour~ wlttl IN portrait of 1 t llth-- oantury act,_, • modern- Oay New Yori< playwright -~totr....i bedc In llml Ind ,,... ,,., 'PG' e::IO~ **~ "Adam'1Wom- en" (11172) a-. Brldgee, Jofln MUii. A -ongly lmpneooed Mllor 1ttemp11 to wit\ hll ,..._. by mer· ~ng .,, lnllulntlll woman. t:o0 (I) * * ..... ••All! Any Glfl" (111511) Shirley Mec:Lllnl. Dll¥ld Jot> 111\d llW- ~ oooupy the ..,.. of ... neiwly llffMd '" .... v.-City . l:aO (1:) "Up 1'11¥W'' A ~ ._....,..,,....., ln aW.~~ wtttl • ~ lllnd '*°" tOlOO Cl> • * '"fhl COr-tlcen •otMrt" ( 1N0) ()eolfrey Horne, Jean ••'"'''• BMect ()fl I nO¥ll by Mu· ender Duma. A pelr ol twine plot r-.i egttllwl thllr fel'llll(• klller • 11:00• ....... "SmuggW'• CcM" ( t941' LAIO Ooroey, Huna Hiii The s-y 9oyw ... off on thl lrlll ol ·~gang 11•• *~"TheWoman liat1t" ( 111119) George Coulouria. \/ere Day. A mad E1'glleh acientll1 dla- --a myaterloul South Am ertoan p"nt that nlQUlf11 111m11e lllltl ror euet-. -AFTERHOOH- 1a.oo •• *"' "Ride 8eyond VengMnCe" ( 19811) Chuel< Connorw. MICl\lel Rennie. A bullalo hunter ...... r--ve on_.. outlawl who allechd and robbed lllrll alter hie wife rejected him •••• "Sergeant Rutledge" I 194IO) Jeolfrey Hunter, Con11anc1 Tower1. Alter rising above hll ...... t>eglnnlngl, • ca"'alry officer Charged with r9P1 end murder la deflnded by hll IUperiOr officer. 12:30 CC)* *'A "Adarn'1 Worn- en" (111721 e..u Brldgll. JOfln Miiii A wrongly lmprlaonlCI 111tor 11temp11 to win hit r..-by mar- rying an lnlluentlll woman. 1:30(1) **~ '"Alk Any Giff' ( 19511) Shirley Mec:Lllnl, David Nlllefl. Job and hu• band-hunting occupy the time ol 1 gill newly erThllCI In New York City. 2:00 0 "'WhOlly MOllll" ( tHO) Dudley Moore, Laraine Newman In bibli- cal Egypt. • ,.,.. prophet named Her9chll ......... Oroe>1 on 1 dMnl corwer- 11tlon '""" ... _ encl decldll lie mult l>I lhl one to lead 1111 people out of 11.11-...ry ·PG· z:ao CC)*** "HllOI'" 111165) E"'1-Marl1 Slngl\IMtnlf. Olrtrlnd Mlttenneyr. A ~I· t .. Swt• gorl 11 tall"' lf"om her rnountlln home In the Ati>I by her M#ll to the city a:oo a • * • ··Move 0ver. Dariing .. (t983) Dorj1 Dey, J-Garner Relurrung from a pl-crUI> ..... en year1 l>«ore a wile dlaco"'· .,. !hit ,.., hu•b•nd It •bout to remarry. 3:30" * * 1A "Hetlflghlera·· ( t 91111) JOM W1yne. 1Calh1· rlnl Rou. A band of COU· regeoul flreflghtefl l>lttles a ap1c 1acular oll-well bl&l.I. (I) "Mull fNlhlt1" Rory Calhoun. 'olOICe of Don Knott1. Pwton BMur• gard Shelby own• an lncrldlbll mull named NelaOn wl1h whom hi It able to communicate through mental te61palhy 'PG" •:OO CC) "Up Rlwf""A young ~ l>ICorT>ll ln"'°""9d In I U...and-4Mlll Slruggle ""'" • golCl-nungty land baron 4,:.30 • • • • 'Huckllber"ry Finn" (111751 Ron H-ard. Jae* Elam e...o on thl ttory by MAl1< Twein A young l>Oy and • ..-way ...... becoml tn't'Ohled ,,, • 111'111 of ldllefllurN while llMing down thl MlulMip- pj ~on1r11t by Armstrong & Batluk Ne w NBC president business oriented LOS ANGELES (A P ) -Robert E . M~lholland, t.he new president and chief operating officer of NBC, is a business-oriented executive t.'hose promotion may allow bis boss to focus on C.r.ogrammlng, where the network languishes in \turd place. : Grant Tinker, NBC chairman and cbie! ex- fCUliv~ officer , announced MuJholland's appoint- 40ent Just a month after Tinker's own ascension to \letw~rk chief in place of Fred Silverman. :• Silverman also held the title of president -the Position assipied to Mulholland, president of the llBC Televlsaon Network since 1J77. l "I want to be free -available -to help on trograms in any way I can," Tinter said after the *!1no':111cement to network affiliates ln a clOHd· cucwt broadcast. ·•Bob bu done other things bu •kills and talents that I believe will complement ry expertise." . Ti.nicer simultaneously announced tbe appoint· pient of Raymond E. Timotby u Mulholland'a suc- .fessor as network president. Timothy bad been e.x· tcutive vice president in the same division since September 1979. J The primary objective ol both Tinker and ulhoUand will be to raise both profits and rat.lap :.r~BC, the No. 3 network ln prime Ume 1,loce Tinker said MuJholland's back~und abould aae "the formidable task abead " "It seemed to me tbat the mu I needed 1bould particularly •lr'Onl la otber ~ -be,vler oa roadcuUn1 and bulloeu," be aUd. "That would rmlt a team -cba!rman ud preeldeat .:... wbo , ould complement, not duplicate eacb other." ~ Tinker left bll po1lt1oa • cblef at MTll &o· riHI -producer of 1udt Mrt• u • 'Tbe II ~r Moore Sbow •• "Loa Gr-*" and "HW ~ ues" -to take tb• NBC job. Silverman ,,u be9l ltDowD f« •li"lldQI ABC'• ·~ceuful climb lo tbe top ooaUGG iD pdm• t!me. NBC'• 1ta.od.ln1 did oot lmpron cla.rla.1 Silve rman's tenure, which began ln mid·l978. Some in the industry said Silverman's dual position as president and chief executive involved too much responsibility to allow him to concen-trate~ his area of expertise -programming. Tinker said be would concentrate for the next several weeks on learning the operation of the network. He said be bad not spent much time on progra~ NBC baa scheduled for the fall season He indicated NBC'a 1981-82 lineup, unveiled. in the s pring, probably would remain intact, although there may be some "fine tuning" in scheduling. Mulholland bas been with NBC for 20 years, beginning in 1961 as a newswriter for WMAQ, the network station lh Chicago. He later was a station · executive in Los Angeles, and in 197' was named executive vice president ror NBC News. He moved to the network division in 1977 as executive vice president responsible for NBC's coverage of the 1980 Olympics in Moscow. That coverage was canceled when President Carter or- dered a boycott of the games. 'B enso n' no alJerage butler By FRED ROTHENBERG A~T ............ NEW YORK -Robert Gulllawne's comi~ character "Beo.soo" conUnues bis climb up the social ladder this fall, movtnc from the 1overnor's mansioo to bis cablnet. But he'll still be a tnow-it- all, eager and able to bunt anybody's baUoon. BeDIOll, once tbe buUer OD "Soap," will re. main nobody's fool. On ABC'• "Benion" you'll see him as the bead of the 1overnor'1 boulebold ttalf but Ulla fall he'll become t.be state budtet director ' "He won't chan1e. He'll atilt eschew pompoai- ty and bopaah, ·• Guillaume said. ••Everybody connected with Benion bad an evoluUonary senae of the cbar1ct.r," t.be actor said in an lnterview. "Tbll Job wW require more responalbllity. He~ obvlou.fy an lotellltent man eeeltine larger fieldl to conquer. Bemoa'• uurad· lilt bu always been a facet ol the cbaractel'."°,..- GuUlaume was a dl1Un1ullW Broadway ac· tor ln "G'O't' and Dolls'' and "Golden Boy" before be achieved pop ltatdom OD TV. Tbil fall, he'll al.lo be aeen lo a televlalon remake of tbe bit "Purlie" for SbowtJme Entertalnment oD cable. Guillaume WH crltlclaed by tome black IJ'OUPI ..._be aecepted tbe IMUer role. , "Some people~ pldrJ and overultlcal when tbe7 '" black acton. ,,,_, only aaw tbe aproaj lllleyweNbuaf upcmaiobUtl•,'' Ml&id. "They ctidn't 1ee the iDbertat d.lpily ol tbe character. They rntued Lbe vtt. J _wu t.r'Jlnl to • get across. You are a person, you hav• dignity no ~; matter what the job, as long as you tty to pu~ue excellenc,.'' ~ Guillaume said bia crandmother worir.t.. at several jobs to raise him and his Udee slb"11ng1. •· One job wu boulecleanin1. ' . • 'Sbe worked for a lady wbo bad do apace ,.and • could bave cleaned her one room benelf, but she· was too lasy. It was inherent lo this' lady's personality that lbe considered herself better than people workinf for her. My tr and mother was workina lo a respectable job .to put us throu&h _. school. Now who wu really better?" He said be wouldn't have accepted the orilinal • buUer role ii It meant.belnl subservient or a stereotypical lbetto black. "'rhe creators bad an enlllbtened view tbal came throu•h In their attempta tQ aatirlae " be said. "Tb• ortllnal 1cr1pt bad no lnhereat prob-- lems that coufdn't be t.alted out. Some sens* create ldlotl, and no amount of t.alldq can wort them out.;" Guillaume aay1 he 11 concerned about 1tereotypea o1 wbltM and blacb on televtaloll, but actdl tiaat bl.I race bua't bMa a partieu.lar· problem iD bla ....... • "l(y proble1119 are artistic, like &D1 0CMr IC, t«," be taid. "loblrt Redford baa 1lm.Uar prob- Imm. Tltere an people wbo don't like blm ~ ... bl'• CoQd.-look.IDC. lt'• DOt fair to laolate black actors." I ·I °"'9. CoMt DAILY PILOT/Mondey, Auguet 3, 1111 Tiii f-'MILt' £1aCIJI "That's my boll, Jeffy.· Don't use up ol the bounces." •IGGEOIWE by V1rgll,P1rtoh (VIP) .. , hate Mondays." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum "With a peephole, no less!" JUDGE PARKER HAv1Nc; VECtDED TO ORIVE LANA DOWN 10 THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY"5 OFFICE. JAOON c;1ve& HER LA&T- MINVTE IN!:>TRUC· TION5! fl,4R.0 tP llj p ov-;<( t" 8 ·,, by Harold Le Ooux LOOt<. l'M OOIN6 TO Pl.AYTT l'>Y EAR ! J'M NOT (,()IN(; 10 OFFER TOO MU01 INFORMATION! PMNl1T8 .. , TVMBLEttEED8 WHY li'S HAM AHf1 NAN& -me MULeSKINN~RS! WHeNtP YOO OOV'S GeT 1"'101t>WNPI ·-------- AUNT FRITZl--MAY I HAVE THIS COLD BOTTLE OF POP iO COOL OFF? GORDO SURE "°"' ~!! l'MI& ~ FOt. ~~ W!AT FtYIA.M. 1)¥! ~I ~------~ FUNK\' "INKERBEAN PHOOEY--- THIS 15 TERRIBLE • by Charles M. Schulz by Ernie Bushmiller l LIKE IT BETTER THIS WAY by Gus Arriola by Tom Batiuk -----= .. ,__ ,__.. -__ .. _...;::::::::::::.. ~---- WHY C'OeS 'T"HIS PA"rtEN"T'" HAVI!! A °'°ss-~RP PU'ZZl...f! 1'A-r"r00f!P ON HE!R 1'UMMY ?- ($) 'CAUSE! IF l"T'" We!RE! ON HE!R eAO<, SHE! 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J.ltlta j t .. ·~ f11M~~!f---i: ..... 1 ""' t•M 1 ~--.ttie 41!:= '-JJ mt:W lf l iii :;• ~ ;:uj : ::·: ~; s1 ~·: 'J:?J ~:: :~q ~·! ~~ J '1 ~···· "'., ,; l ::::: !·!a J _'}!_._.,.. -:f!, . = "'H!.·;~ ir:: Get more value for yovr dime :r, 'i: .. '!! ···'4i -•-« -.~ ; Jt F~ ;la • +lti. • tlf .. "'····· with the famous Dune-Mine ~ .,,·; i ~ = 11 "J " ; & 15 ., ';°: • ..a ·t " . :: et··" ads where items worth up to t.ti .t ,,, ~, •i ' '1 ,. · ri -= ._." ! I 'i , .. ··• S50 . .n fast, fml' Sot· ....Mt.. in . .:h J :;·: :: '=. •.it J,., . : .~J·.,, ==~ :•i w! lhe lolJidLL -~, ~i ~ t ~·! \: ~ ifi ii .. • ..... f~ tt ~ .!f.~ ~ ~i~ • ······--- t.i J " 5!. ~ ·1B'i • ::r' •.1::-m 1 :.~ :: ~.~~ Hlf •• Tldl u tlw /int o/ a tMJO.parf am... ~ • moMJI auppJI . Araumeot.a about lhe hqe U.S. money 1~ly and resulUnJ hllb interest rates dominated t.be ,... cent OU.awa conference of t.be world'• major in· duttria.lliod naUooa at which Praldeot Rea1an wu introduced to hl1 rd.low leaden. UPI and dowu iD tbe U.S. money supply. muaJty runnl.n& lnto bUUom a week, now make bl& beadlinea oo t.be flnanclal pa,.. and even reach lhe froot pages u well aa TV eveJllq news reports. Interest rates respond at once to t.be mone)' AP· ply totals the Federal Reserve Bank at New York re· teases from its stronghold at 33 Liberty St. In New York City at a ~ s p eci f ied minute each Thursday after· ~ ,c noon. ln finan· ..; c Ii.ti c e n l e r s .. &-..-. .. •--------! ro 0 r ~ ~ ~ : ~ : IYllll PllJll figures are awaited witb anxiety. The "money supply" and In· terest rate levels are actually becomina accepted topics at$0Clal parties . The money supply? What is the money 1upplyT Interest rates soaring because the money aupPb balloon.a? What sense does that mate? Since when is it logic-1 for tbe cost or a commodJ· ty <money) to rise "sharply because tbe supply of that commodity Increases? Is it not simple common nue to expect lhat the bigger the supply of a product, lbe less it will cost -and the smaller the supply of that product, the more expensive will be its price? Money, says my dictionary, is "any medium of exchange, especially as issued by a government or authorized public authority." Obviously, what the governments or lhe world's industrialized nations and the securities markets are referring to goes well beyond tbis definition. Money, In lhe minds of millioM of Americana, t. the cash in our pockets or wallets (coins or billl). Again obviously, what ls being debated so furiously goes far beyond that eaay explanation. Money, in the minds of other millions more sophisticated in financial jargon, includes not only cash in our possession but also deposits in banks tbat can be withdrawn and transrormed into currency on demand, via the writing of a check. Once more. too simple. So? So, below are tbe defUlitions of the "mooe)' supply" as of early August 1981 -and I'll wa,er countless numbers of you have hoped someoee, somewhere would give you precisely tbia guide. Ml: This is the total most frequently reported in the news flas hes Thursday afternoon from New York and is the most basic measure or money in our n•· lion. (M stands ror Money, of course.) It includes all currency in circulation (the coins in your pocltet, bills in your wallet, currency in a strongbox al home or safety deposit box at a bank) and it also incta• all demand deposits at U.S. banb < meanin1 money deposited al banlts which can indeed be withdrawa oo demand by writing a check). This is merely tbe beginning, however. Thus, 10 OD to: . Ml P LUS: This is the total of Ml, detailed above, plus: savings deposits at commercial bant.; NOW accounts at banks and thrift institutions; demand de· posits al mutual savings banks, and credit union share drafts. The total of Ml plus is much larger, much more inclusive, and a much more accurate meaaW'f! of lb~ supply oC money in the United St.ates. Now, go on to: Ml·B: This includes the two measures above, plus : dem and deposits of domestic branches or foreign banks, and ATS accounts (automated transaction S)'stem accounts). But it EXCLUDES savings deposits at banks. By that exclusion, tJUs meas ure shrinlts in comparison to Ml plus. But it ii a refinement which, added to the other measures. lives our monetary authorities a clearer understaodin.I of the money supply . WedMadarr The "logic" o/ the big~ the Wf'Pl11. the hiQher the con. Gold ~etals lquotation8' ~ By The Associated Press Selected world gold prices today· Lendon: morning fixing $392.50, off $13.50. London: afternoon fixing $392.50, off $13 .50. Paris: afternoon fixing $467.71 , off $7.04. Frankfurt: $393.99, off $12.98. Zurich : late fi xing $391.00, off $8.00. $394.00 asked. Handy & Harman: <only daily quote 1 $392.50. off $13.50. Engelhard: (only daily quote ) $392.50. off $13.50. Engelhard : <only daily quote> fabricated $408.~. off $14.04. RepubUc National Bank: $404.50 unchanged . Gol.dcoins NEW YORK <AP) -Prices late Friday of gold coins, compared with Thursday's price . Krugerrand, 1 troy oz., $426.50, off SO.SO . Maple leaf, 1 troy oz., $424.25, off $0.75. Mexican 50 peso, 1.2 troy 02., $513. 75, off $0.25. Austrhan tOO crown .. 9802 troy oz., $402.00, un· changed. Source· Deak-Perera 'Metal. NEW YORK CAP> -SPot nonferrous metal prices today . Copper 83~·85 cents a pound, U.S. destinations. Lead 42 cents a pound. Z1Dc 4614 cents a pound, delivered. 'l1a S7 .3810 Metals Week composite lb. A.lamlaam 76-.80 centa a pound. N. Y. llereuy M3S.OO per nask . Platinum SU0.00 troy oi .• N. V. su.a- Handy & Harman •.300 per troy ouace. I • I I t ... Orange Cout DAILV PILOT/Monday, Augutt 3, 1981 Sta1•ting like new? Split baseball season appears certain From AP dJJpatchee If the Ameri c an League sct}edule for the opening of baseball's s~cond 1981 season looks s trikingly famlliar, lt should. It also was the operung schedule for baseball's first 1981 season last April, when a strike seemed wtthinkable. On Monday, Aug. 10, one day after major league action re- sumes with the All-star Game at Cleveland, it will be Chicago at B os t o n , Kans a s Ci t y at B a ltimore, Mi t'waukee at Cleveland, Texas at New York, Toronto at Detroit, Oakl.and at M lnnesota, and the Angels at Seattle in the American League. Seventeen weeks ago, it waa Chicago al Boston, Kansas City at Baltimor e, Milwaukee at Cleveland, Texas at "New York, Toronto at Detroit, Oakland at Minnesota, and the Angels at Seattle. THE ONLY differe n ce between then and now is that, in that second week in April, every- body started even, with nothing but zeroes in the won-lost col- umns -and that may wind up being the same, too. At the moment, New York leads Baltimore by two games in t h e E as t Divis io n , with Milwaukee three games back, Detroit 31 ~ off the pace, Bost.on four games out and sixth-place C levela nd o nly five games behind. In the AL West, it's pretty m u<'h a four-t eam race, with Oakland in first , Texas l'l:i games back. Chicago 21~ off the pace and the Angels six games out BUT THE MAJOR league owners, particularly t he AL owners. appear inclined to wipe the slates clean and start every- body off even again, creating an entirely new season for the rem aining eight weeks or what was supposed to be a 26-week season. posed to the s plit season, Philadelphia and St. Louis were undecided and the other eight tea ms were in favor . In Ow AL, Chicago and Baltimore were op- pos ed. T exas, Milwaukee, Detroit and Cle veland undecided and the rest in favor. THE OWNERS ar'e to meet Tuesday in Chicago to decide whether to approve the agree- m e nt announced last Friday. The 28 player representatives (one from each team ana one representing each league) met in Chicago Saturday and voted unanimously to recommend that the 650 major leaguers give their approval. That also will be de- cided this week. Baseball is facing what could be a monumental task, namely winning back its fans. "I think we all owe them an apology,'' was the sentiment expressed by Seallle third baseman Lenny Randle. His feeling was shared by other players and owners. One way of winning them back would be to cr eate pennant races that weren't there before. In the National League, the "opening day" schedule for next Monday isn't a carbon copy of the one in April -but it's closP THE NEW YORK METS wiU be visiting the Chicago Cubs, jus t as they did when their seasons opened April 9. For the m oment, though, they're the two worst clubs in the league, the • Mets at 17-34 and 15 games out or first place in the E ast and the I Cubs at 15-37 and 171,.-'J out. Whal better present t.o give the new owners of the Cubs, the Chicago Tribune (assuming the sale by the Wrigley fa mily is ap- proved) this week, than a te am tied for first place in the division? That's what Chicago will be if the m ajor league owners go for the s plit-season 1 idea, with its mini-playoffs to 1 determine the division wiM ers . I ALSO IN THE NL next Mon-1 d a y night, the Pitts burgh ' Pirates will be in Montreal, just as they were April 9. And the. Philade lphia Phi llies, who : opened the 1981 season with a . one-game vis it t o Cincinnati April 8 before heading home to face St. Louis, will be home ' agains t the Cardinals in this opener. The NL's three other 1 openers, a ll different from the first ones, are Cincinnati at the · Dodgers, Atlanta at San Diego ' and Houston at San Fr ancisco. ' There are. or course, other : ways to try and win back the fans and Ray Kroc, owner of . the San Diego Padres (last in the NL West>. is doing his part. : "YOU DESERVE a break to-, day," is his hamburger chain's . slogan, and the fans will be get· ting a big break free ad· ' mission to the Padres' "second" · opener agains t the Braves, "our • way of telling the fans we're sorry," Kroc explained. Seating is on a first come-first served basis and could cost the Padres as much as S250.000. what they would make on a ;;ellout of all 51,562 seats in J ack Murphy Stadium. Cincinna ti . a lo ng with a number of other teams, will be playing a few exhibition games in the days leading up to the All- star Game at Cleveland. The Reds are scheduled to visit the California Angels Friday and Saturday. In a CBS telephone survey conducted Sunday. spokesmen for 16 of the 26 teams favor adopting a split season, with four clubs opposed and six un· decided. A simple m ajority is needed in the American League to go t.o the s pli t season, while a three· quarters vote is needed in the National League. If one league favors it and the other is op- posed , Commi'ss ioner Bowie Kuhn may cast the deciding vote. Long, short of it Cooperstown beckons Mize, Gibson GETTING WITH IT Gene M auch spent Carew took som e tim e to accomm odate autogr aph seeker s (bel ow 1 during the A ngels' workout at Anaheim Stadium COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) For Bob Gibson, the trip to Cooperstown was as short as possible. most of hjs time watchi ng his pitchers Sun day. i ncluding Steve Renko above. Rod In the National League, Cin- cinnati and Montreal were op-For Johnny Mize. it was long and agonizing. Gibson and Mize, along with Ne gro League pioneer Rube Fos ter, were inducted into "the Baseball.Hall of Fame Sunday. Gibs on, 45, r eturned to the spotlight only five years after his retirement. He is only the 11th man elected to baseball's s hrine in his f irs t year of eligibility. MIZE, MEANWHILE, bas been retired for 28 years and eligible for the Hall for 23. But he was bypassed 20 times by the Baseball Writers' Association of Ame ric a and twice by the Veterans Committee before making it this year. ·'I certainly am proud to be h e r e," s aid Gibson , who amassed 251 wins, 56 shutouts and 3,117 strikeouts in his out- s tanding 17-year career. He is the only pitcher to win the . s eventh game of a World Series twice and had seven consecutive Series victories in a 7-2 postseason record. "I've devoted m y life to baseball." Schmidt offers another view of lose rs Never: one to do things at half. speed, Gibson was the most in- timidating pitcher in the game for much of the 1960s. He was so dominant in 1968 -22·9, 13 shutouts, 268 strikeouts and a phenomenal 1.12 earned run average -that he won the first of bis two Cy Young awards and the National League's Most Valuable Player honor. . PHILADELPHIA ( API -The major teague players suffered a defeat in the baseball strike, but Mike Schmidt says the fans were the biggest losers in the 50-day impasse. The Philadelphia Phillies' slugging third baseman was thinking of lhe fans confined to h0spitals and.·homes and others who de- pend on baseball broaacasts throughout the summer to keep them going. · '.'Those are the people whO. really lost,'• said Sch~dt, who had a .284 average with 14 home runs and 41 RBI before the strike started on June 12. It was the owners who benefitted "over the long haul," Schmidt said Sunday. Because of the settlement, "They'r e able now to curb players' salaries. This was their ultimate goal. "They don't mind paying the premier play~r big money. They can't stand the high price or mediocrity. The pool com- pensation concept is going to bold down ... the average players' salaries a great deal. And that's what I think they were after,'' Schmidt said. The agreement between players and owners "makes us the losers," declared the 1980 major league home run king, in reference to the degree or compensation for clubs losing free agents. "The owners made some gains· by get- ting some things back from the players. Now they have a little bit better policing effect on themse1ves1 based on the com· pensation pool,'' he aadecl. S chmidt, who became a weekend television sports commentator during the s trike, Is going through workouUI under the watchful eye or Manager Dallas Green and his staff. FOLWWING THAT season, which Gibson capped with a rec- ord 17-strikeout performance in Game l of the World Series agains t Detroit, baseball lowered the pitching mound to give batters a better chance to hit against the likes or Gibson. "A writer asked me how I'd like t.o be remembered," said There was nothing pint-sized about Johnny Mize . By BAL BOCK AP Spona Wrl~r The scene ls et<:hed in your mind's eye, burned ther~ indelibly. Jt is a metnory. .. a ·link to the past that you can not -must not -ever surrender. For after all, without our pastS, v.:bat have wet~? It'• true that evel'ythlng is mapJlied when you're young. You're a pint·slled penon in a fuU-slzed world. TbaL baa an elf ecl~ Home runs look Jopaer when you'n! ~ig'tit than they. will when you're 28or•. . . . ·, . · ·J'ot one particular eight-year-old, no bome·rum. wlU ever. be quite u long •• tM cmel Job.My Mbe used to hit. The year was 1947 and Mize was play- ing first base for a team called the New York Giants in an oddly shaped stadium called the Polo Grounds. It was a place well-suited for polo perhaps, but rather poor for baseball. In that marvelous summer when this particuJar eight-year-old discovered the wondera of baseball, the Olanta' team resembled their nickname. 1bey were a club of huge slu11ers, slow moving on the field but a treat to watch at bat. That summer they wouJd hit 221 home runs, setUnf a National Leaaue record for lona·bal fireworks. They also would finish fourth in an eight-team leaaue a matt.er of Uttle lmPortance to I.be eithl· I ' year-Old. For him there was nothing quite so wonderful as a glant·tlzed Giant home run. And no one delivered them as frequenUy as Johnny Mlie. In the summer of UM7, Mize hit 51 COMMENTAR Y home runs. No NatlonaJ Leaiue left· banded biller before or since haa reached that total. ·The scenario was repeated time after marvelous time. Mlae would stride up to the plate, his broad abouldera strelcbin1 hi.a uniform jeney to lll limlUI, the huge No. 15 on his back. He'd carefully position himself ln t.be batter's box and eye the pitcher, sllin.1 up tbe enemy. Mize was no cuess·hitter. He studied the plt.chen. When be went tot.be pla.te, be wu prepared. He bad a mental book on the hurlers and be ref erred to it au the time. In the field, Miae was hardly . a gazelle. He was a bll man and played firat base the way you'd expect a bll man to do tt. He would not be mistaken for a Gold Glove winner, but, like Ule . Giants' annual 1tandin1, lt baldly mat· tered to the a.year-old. JusL keep •win•· <See JOHNNY, Pate 88) M ize Gibson Gi bson, now a coach with the Ne w York Mets. ''I think as a person who was a competitor and gave 100 perce11t every time I went out on the fi eld. I might ncit have been so good. but I gave it my all." Gibson nearly gave his all to another sport after sta rring in bas ketball and baseball al Creighton University. ·'I was looking for a $35,000 bonus to sign." he recalled. "Bill Bergesch. who's with the New York Yankees now but was scouting for St. Louis. was the only one to tell me the truth. He said a lot or scouts were saying the closest I'd get to $35,000 was $3,000. ··1 ·sAID I LIKED basketball better anyway and wouldn't play baseball "But that's the reason I signed with St. Louis ... honesty." Mize would have had an honest beef with the selectors about being overlooked despite some excelJent career statistics. He hit 359 homers, including a National League record for left. handed hitters or 51 in 1947 with the New York Giants. He won or tied for the NL home run title four Umes, captured the RBI crown three times and the bat· ting title once. And he's the only major leaguer to have hit three homers or more in a game l wice in a season in two different years. Btrr MIZE, 68, bet.rayed no bitterness at the ceremonies. ''Somebody said to me the other day that getting in by the Veterans Committee was going in the back door,'' said Mize, known as "Big Cat" when be was belting the ball for the Cardinals, Giants and. Yank~ from J.936.S3. "I saidl 'No. Look at who is on the committee: managers, general managers,! ~:;~e~?W~~e:·~e Y;~ur w;:r:~: In Hollywood, when your peera: elect you, you receive an' Oscar." Mlle said he learned bow to bit while ln bigb school. "My ftnt game as a pro, in Greensboro, N.C., I got a hit the flr1t time up and rell over fitlt baae because I was watcbinc the ball," he said. "I watched lt everstnce. IUlESJlT[ 1£MTAlS -fwrAiillfd I..,.,_ l:•l•rn1tll<O llcMftf'llrnOfl'nl tondonun1wm1 f u r1 c-,. .. •nui:or To""hou'<ft f'llrn T"" ""°"'" l nl DwtrHcn r\lrn 0..,lunl:nl """ "''" Aphl..ftrtittft APl• f'llro Of lnl R_,, 'R_,6_,d H<Mb llolrb c_._, StdHMr ll"'•'-. \'ant.-lltnttb llroolol• .. Sllor< c ...... , .. 11, .. Ollitt 11..,lol luwtwu lf"ftl.tl llllMlnalllt1111J ·=·-... )I .... """•" BESS, INVEST· lOT, FllllMCE == ::==~~) M-1\eLo .. 111-1•• .. .., 'lorllHtt 'tO ' AllffOUNCEMENTS, l'HSOMALS & LOST & FOUND SEIYICES : Srn1('t Utrt<1Df'\ ' EMPLOYMENT & l'IEPAHTION SrMoi~ IMlrwhOfl JOll W•atf'I lf•l•"'•ole<lll •, MEICKANDISE ""'"""' Apfl1anrt\ "'-rt""' llin<it. a..WiniMatf'rl•h Camrra.t' l4,,,,.p~n\ fah lloci n ..... , ... '"""'"'' Cara.at Salt Honn -Good• J"'"'' 1.r•ntoH lh<lllftH) WtW'tll•MOv' M1'"Uuwou~ lAa,,lf'di f11Dte•l 1Mlfti1tntnh Olfrtt furn ' 1;qu1p Ptlt =~~=:.: Sc>ort1111 Coocb 9-ort Rnt1wt1nl 6u ~ 'l!o.u,HI ., Sltrf'O BOATS & MUINE EQUIPMENT c .... u l &o.b ,lhuu ~n1r• llolb flhnM fq.lp llolb ........ lloab KHll C'hart<r ~Serl b b.511... Doth llNtt..5"<4•51<1 8010 Slnr11t THMSl'OIUTION "''"'" f'1mprn..saJ~ krnt El«tl'IC'Can Molor C1<'1HScOOI" Mot• It"'• Self llul TntWn Trtlltl !~,~~bti.,t, Got<•.I lUTDMOBll~ AJIAJ4Wb l'.l&.>J1n llett .. 1-V•htrln SpacU k•rf' Mod~ tWMt-ll>n\h TNCb y..., AWW1Aat1n~ Aut.ot W1ftltd AUTOS, IMPORTED litttitrt1 AU• Monwu Allllo Atiathft Hult• llllW :!:r o.i. ... t~«tan f l1I -· J., .. , J-KatM1nnUJu11 llud• Mtt<'fllhi'-'11 llli 110~ l)prl P.-&.tr1 ..... IV! ......... ""'"'' ltoll>llOJ<t 11 ..... So•• So<bono .,., .. T..-pll ' Valb••i .. \'oh~ c;c.n.1 ID ... 100! 1011 111:1 •• :: ... ... , ... ... :: ...... ..w • .WC.: :: All real t1t1tt ad· '"' vertlaed in tbia :: newspaper Is subject to ,.. the Federal P'llr Jlous. :: IDI Act cl 1m wbicb '"' makee It Wep.I to ad· IW.IOA ISLAMD IMIUl-44IO,OOO 4 Bedrooms upstairs at 3 bedrooms downstairs with patio and deck. Cov- ered garage + laundry room. Ex- cellent for summer-winter rental. Just steps to the bay & beach from the door of this excellent tax shelter + poten· tially appreciating property, WISUY M. TAYLOI CO.. llALTOIS 2111S.J ........... MIWPOIT CIHTll, M.1. 644-4t IO vertlae "any pre- •• rereoce1 limltaUon, or :: diacrim1oaUoo hued on •• race, color, rell1lon, J: se•, or oatioo.11 oriJjo, '* or an iotmtioo to make ---------------:: any such preference. -limitation, or dis· = crimlnatim." QJI --i$IO -r1W -ZIOO This newspaper will DO( knowln1ly accept any advertl1lo1 ror real catate which is in vk>la· lion of the law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH PRIME IESIDOOll llCOME 3 Trivlexes in a row on oceanside of PCH in Corona del Mar. 2 Duplexes + 1 Triplex in a row on Balboa Peninsula -1 lot from sand and surf. Near 19th St. 1 Duplex on the water with dock for 30' boat. All Large Assumable Loans at 12i,.,%. Owner's motivated! MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1911 CUSTOMlllD DYNASTY MOO& Enlarged· to make a flexible , mulU purpose sun room. Two bedroom, two bath, sophisticated and beautifully de· corated. $415.000. U,._IVUf" t1C)Mf~ REALTORS, 675·6000 2H3 Easr Co .. r H!thway. Corona clel Mar WE HAVE 4 ~ OF THE BEST L!STINGS IN TOWN ~ 1---....-Dalebout · Bay &Beach Real Estate • .REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949. COMI WITH US .•• TO COSTA MISA IEASTSIDU. ATTRACTIVE THREE BEDROOM CONDO .. TWO BA1llS .. FULLY INSULATED CEILINGS AND WALLS .. SOLID OAK KITCHEN CABINETS . .FREE STAN· DING UNIT .. PRIVATE YARD .. WlntTWEN-TV PERCENT DOWN OWNER WlU. CARRY. WRAP AROUND FINANCING Wint THJRTY YEAR AMORTIZATION .. lllS.IXXl. 1617 WESTCUfF DI, N.I. Ul-7300 ........ c..... llX» Full time real estate :~ sales auodale wlX> re-l: quires substantial in· lOJ come is desperately ~ needed by long ••• u .. a... THNOMc; TOWHHOMI? OCEAMFIOHTS IUYBS WAMTID Call the apeclalists al 6 io be euct from We can belp you find the co ndominium in-S5o,OOO down• as k>w as your dream house. Call 1650~ Corona deJ Mar You are the winner of TWO FREE PASSE.5 ($17 vahie) formallooceoter. 12~ interest on the our Costa Mesa · Toucbstooe Realty balance. Call for details N e w p o r l B e a c h established local broker. Outstanding earnings avail. on a 9U0887 and the super locations. Residential Specialist, 1Aca 1AY JACOBS REALTY 0e~~sp~":an1tS RlNGLING BRa>. generous commission split. A marvelous o~ portunlty ror the eager professional. Call Mr. Haatings at (71'~~- BARNUM "BAll..EY c•cus Anaheim Convention Center Aug. 6-17 Long Beach Arena $14,000 DWM '7S.U70 sa.1600 Giant• Bdrm garden --jlliiliiiiiiiliiiiiiililij[--l lOO rn• 131111 WI j,l)O -)4)() Aue. 19-23 To claim passes, calJ 642-5678, ut. 272 . Passes must be ex· lllVltilE changed for reserved I 7TH! seats at box Private tree-lined office prior to \~ street, 3 Bdrm 2 bath. perlormuce. 1100 spa. u~ rinaocing ---*-*-*---available. Owner anx. lous. C&ll DOW, 54&-2313 home In Newpor t Riviera ! Spacious living room , beautiful rireplace. Formal din· ing. Sweeping stairway to private master 1uite. Easy term•! Only 1137 ,500. Hurry, call 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATE RS !WI 11110 ~ •n I = --:: 7 ... 1111 H~IMI Award wl nn ln1 "Jodelle" eat.ate IX>me. lit resale ottering on this exquilitely appoint· ed townhome wilb massive vlew or bay, ocean, coast.line • niibt li&hts. Now reduced to $739,000. IOU :: UICVl1YE t.tHCt4 -$227,000 ASSUMA&I LOAH : Almost new 2 story Lovely, private 2 BR + 5 ~i~:~~~. ro~:1 r~~: ~a~~ed~a~ n C:J:ng: la~~ :: room, wark and cozy lots of decking. Security IOI) family room too! 2nd g a t e d A r b o r : story hosts secluded Lake /Woodbridge. -master suite with $175 ,000. owe 2nd :: c r a c It 11 n g b r i c It TD/Submit! 1~1 i' I 'I;': \ I.' I ~ 1' • I f 1 I ~I ~ I , , • , Hr\,• .1r '·'1' ,i.•1111··· t 1 ,fti!uff Pi i' (:Id i -fireplace. 3 more queen 759•1616 l!l1Jf slzed bdrms too! Doo't ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! mlaa out call. r= ------- mo lllD tlJO 9150 ,,., IHO tl!M - @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 ASSUME! SIS.GOO ••v Men Verde's flneSt 4 ....,. Bdrm 2 bath home with :=; large living room and : family room, brick 11uv fireplace , profeuionaUy ::; decorated. Assume 185,000 lit TD, price oo· lfM ly 1137,500. Owner will 1111.6 help rlnance. Call ;;~ S46·23U t712 fll) fllT fllll m:t 111.0 rrn flJU 111' rt.I$ ,,. ,,. lf1Cl flt! Vl-,Uj VI• '1lol ~ ~ '1$1 fiW t1'l '* ,,., '"' t71l - THE REAL ESTATE RS I.UCB C barmins wood ahla&)ed tonbome. SUD fllJed kitcbell overloob cosy patio. 3 lar1e bdrma plus 1ewln1 room too. Only $100,000, call SEA COVE PIOPEITIES . ' 714-631-6990 I ---· - IASTSIDI &wn MIO aq.ft. ~ fuaU1 liv· tn1 t CoHrtd eotr1 Inda to hut• ll•l11 room wltb wallr·ln NEW EXCLUmE ARST TIME OFFtltD POOlllUSE 6UDEN LMNG tel for ................ c.-.. _.,. c.wtwwclloa. FiHtt ~ _ ... ., ... ,,,, __ wJoMd ....... ttarlty .,.... sfc. .... ...... ,.., .... fWHtsutal lillg w/tw, & oce.Yltw. PENINSULA POINT AXER °" .... 9""" ....... pri..ey of ..... ywt wcA to hy or ..... 3 bad. 2 Wt. far ... Wdst' or~ ....... lttt llriud for ...... $2'5,000. '31-1400. BAY AVl. CONTEflllARY 11ww J"I' old cato. ._ wltla VU. Wood. "911 I *ylcJluh. _, ...._ ... ., ..... l Md. + • ....,. 0.... ... gny Ant T.D. Sl75 .• ooo. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC . REAL ESTATI S.W.. !Wnt& Pr.,-ty ~ 2436 W Cou1 Hwv 31S MMW1t Avc ~ &.c.h &lbol Island 611·1• '7UHt TIADmoMALLT UDO! Large 3BR Lido f amilY home on lovely street. Convertibfe den and family room. $44.5,000. Tom Alliosoo/Terry Hanes 642-8235 (U60) · YOUU LOVE COMIMC HOMI • · • \o this panoramic view, custom home in Turtle Rock. U~per level invites formal dining, with family : rm, kitchen, 3BRS 2 bath Lower level w /den, large game room w/fireplace PLUS 4th BR and bath. $385 ,000. Helen Wood. 644-6200 (U61) 'IOW. ama 'IOW. l&llllllOllS nonoarmua 9CI Ocmt OrTra KulJCt'"""' OlllW ~8-b,C.t.llaee3 ~a.m.C.t.88elll0 ('l'l4)~ ('M)e.4-SIOO WAnaROMT LUXUIY I Sensational 3 bdrm townbom~ featuring used brick, plank floors , French doors, ceramic tile & a multitude of interior up· grades. Priced at $319,950 with assumable loan. MEWPORT ·1ucH OfftCE 2670 Seit MIC)Mfl Dri" 1714) 759-1501 1714) 752-7373 Walker&lee Real Estate '=::.'i' S<C~4l~-ai~s· = ----....... a.AT' l'OllM----......... """' "' ... ..... ~ ...... ...................... t 11'" ,~ i " I I ......,,..s .. A .... W .... H_Y--tl ~ .__1 ....... 1 ....... ' l_I __ i ....... o_•-" .. l-" ...... J l we u .. 111 OM ot tl'IOM ~ I I' I I " "" apanw1 ~ ™• ....... ..._..__.__-4 ' bulldlng II IO "''"· 111t ---...... ---. ..... 10fS .now-. r.rdm .... Larp amll1 room, brick fl rt pl act, wet bar. lltcllen wltla 111 tM .............. tultt, ------·· ftnpiaCll .. .,.. •• Ult U.S Dally Pilat ..... dM• ,_., EVHAME I I' I 1• I I•~·:-.... ·~ "Fiil lllUJt" Hr"fkt .... fh F *• CaJI to clNtorJ. Your .... .... ........ .....,, Clll ..... \ THE REA: EST/\TERS ---- '-------yeit .... -i.;, .. ':"!~ , . . t Whether you're looking for a grass shack or a palace at the beach , see classification 4200. LINDA ISLE Exciting opportunity! Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000. Summer Occupancy. UDO ISLE HOMES fo~eatured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. newly red ecorated. Priced to sell q~ckly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm . 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price fqr the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROHT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur· ing marine room. $1,385,000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm, den, spacious Plan 8. im· maculate. Low priced at $215,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3-l 1 ~' , .. d· D"•· ~, P. b75 olbl of newparl REALTORS 675-5511 OLD CDM: Cltoral99 _,.x. w• to bMcMs. .,._ Cotisbh of -l .._, w 2 .._ •lh. OM wftti ftis1l1ce. Alli· i., S27t,soo. COU OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. eo..t Hwy .. C.... .. Mtr 675-5511 AESIOENTIAl REAl ESTATE SERVICB 200/o DOWH For this highly desirable tri-l~vel in Eastbluff. Large & spacious rooms & even room for a big pool in attractive level yard. Excellent "fixer" price & terms. $259,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 mE llDlll ILlllS ca. OVER 55 Y~RS OF SERVICE HAHOI VIEW tlU.S Owners Are Leaving The State And Must Sell. Secluded Home In Move-In Condition . Three Bedrooms Plus Family Room Ex· cellent Financing. Give Us An Of. fer. HEWPOIT SHOIES Cmy Three Bedroom Home ln A Young People's Location. A fun Place To Live. Rented For $750 A Month At The Present. Priced At $135,500. Appointment Necessary, But Easy To Show. ...,,,,,.. CERH t llMOJSVMOOKSML SOPIEERTACOEMEV ASCU E K M A 0 E T L 0 I R E 0 N U H T 0 A RONlfQHOREYARELOIAS6 Y I 0 t 0 C P R R Y A & M 0 L I l M TRTRKIVOYEKRTAIUFIT A 1 M A 0 t 0 M R I M t C A D E t L D ~ETMCS ODIVMKHAVL AA T Y M 0 K M D M t t 11 P S E U I H C Y E 11 t Y E 11 0 D S I S U R E If A K If RAROUTOTDURRlAOE LO IAIHMVAORCll T Ml Y L T A I R V C J I C S I lOHOTVODIWUWCPllCOU HPLSTARTSMORlALiJM ..... ..=:-......,. -~rt, °"" ....... T-" =' e. ..:..:i r.-1 ........ l1r: ,_ Llrlelllt I SPillCU PUMTYI tm,000 down, owner will carry a 2nd and will provide addit ional financing help oo thas lovely 4 bdrm home with a spartlln& pool. Only Sl.39,900. Call now m -5370 'ALLSTATE REALTORS FIX UPIEACH HOUSi-VIEW! Incredible bargasn·~ blk to ocean. Quaint white picket ren ce • dutch door entry Spiral stairway to attan view, mstr Bdrm, 2 Bdrms + lort, atrium & french JUSTUST91 Decorator'a own home In Harbor View Hilla. 3 bdrms., esdt.lng family rm. with hardwood rloora, French doors, beam cellln111. and a masniricent bar. Cuatom spa and waterfall. Everythinl t.aatef u Uy done in finest quality. Nss,<01. A Dlv1s1on or Harbor Investment Co doors! Take advantaae· '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! you paint, fix & save -------• SU! Only $188,900. Ca ll JUST USTB>I B o b B u r d i c It • Decorator's own home Ownr/ Act 7S&-1221 in Harbor View Hills. 3 bdrms .. exciting family rm. with hardwood floors, French doors, beam ceilings, and a magnificent bar. JASMIHI CUB C u s t o m s p a a n d Most popular 5 Plan waledall. Everything with spectacular green· tasterully done in finest belt • view location. 3 quality. S46S,IXX!. Bdrm + family room. ~ 1365,000 • RHLTOR S llG CAHYOH Custom ~nch provin- cial home located on the 8th fairway with night light views , 5 Br, library. family room. formal dining room. liv· ing room, separate ma id's quarters, and gourmet kitchen The perfect balance of these rooms Is com~mented and enhanced by the in· numerable details and rine craftsmanship round throughout the home. Call for a pnvat.e showing ol this mered•· ble home.12.300,000. D.M.Msnt.eltlr 760-0835 IEACH IAIGAIM OHL Y $209, 900 Wallt lo sand! Huge Newport Beach 4 Bdrm. Wood burning firepla ce. Extra large lot. Owner is motivated and willing to help finance ! Call now, 873.a550 THE REAL ESTATERS A Dw1s1on or II arbor lnvestm~nt Co . .., GREAT 4 IR. 2112 IA Spacious 2-sty. Open liv-lng room wlbay win· dow, ste~down ramly room with fireplace. Downstairs guest Bdrm & Ba . Nearly new. $215,000. Ownrl Agt R. Kee ler 546 ·6706 or 631·0213 4 II-FAMILY HOME 13143! Co mfortable large 4 Bdrm family home. Briclt frplc. Spacious enclosed patio. Prime So. · Coast Plaza area. GREAT fnma financing at 13\1•% INTEREST! Full pnce just SU7,000! Call Bob Burdick now! 79-1221 CIYHOMOU We have the perfect 4 Br & Fam Rm on cul· de-sac with pool size lot. Dry your tears and call us now. Unbelievable al 121.5,000. RCTaylorCo •~l I ' \ '\ 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO CASH TD OK for down. Cute 3 PURCHASE OPTIOM BR 2 Ba cottage, trade New Fantastic 3 Br. 3 OK. Desperate. S38S.OOO. Ba. Condo, S2:iCIO movea Ownr/aat. l..sl-0683 you In, $11XX> per month. SALE IY OWta <Why pay rent). Next lQ rn Coral all shopping. theaters ~ m-01!8 parlt, just mmutes to Coroeo cW Mm-1022 ';.~~~anaiement Co •••• ••••••••••••••••••• 7141631-~ 434 llGOMA Elegant oew 4 Br Vic· OCEAH VIEW tori an partial vu, MO DOWN ownr/cootractor just Rare Harbor View Hills completin,g. SSls,000. opport unity ! Owners IY OWl8 are very anxious and Custom 4 yr old booi~ will help f1nance. Excit· Bdrm, 2~ ba. XI ing new program ! fl · •··oooo 15 B l·r ananc101. _. , . uyers muat qua t y. dn. Courtay to Brits. S pectacular ocean ~ S.-1904 view! Secluded pool. ~~ ......... • ~~'--- Only $358,900. Hurry, CosM Me. I024 call 673-SMO ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••••• THE REAL ESTATERS ASWMAlll FIMAMCIMG WTSM Beautiful 4 Bdrm plus 1--------· family , reaturing enclosed courtyard, en-45' IOATSLI' For ule 1595,000! Includes sandy beach . deck • C:::: + lar1t quality 3 + den, 2 bath home. Fl~place, brick BBQ + utra parkln1. Owner/Alt 673-9117 ore1GIO. terta inera backyard with Kol pond and love. ly patio. Very open and Iota of 1lass. Aaking Sm.JOO. Fw ao appoint- ment to set, call S.0-11.Sl ~-HERITAGE RE AL TORS S..Plam1W Hi1bly Gpffadef 4br llomt oe a,e lat. Clle to " I 0--evtr1Ulila, m..t '" to '"IWK lpptte\8'1&, NaJDe 10Uf WIU. ~I terma! AlWlow don JO~ Mir Raocho hip .. -.... call for Catltornta. Owner appt to '"· ts1·28Lt nots eoodo bl Nwpt, l-0...~:.:W~I~.__-~ lmne, Cotta Meta. Can .._ _____ _ ... divided Into 4 to $ ... aat Plrtela for 1m1U ~or '140.0IO takes Orano-Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 ·DEATH NOTICES. BIUJNf'iER 4, 1881 •t 2:00PM It P•~ltlc1 l)' ao. 1981 ut the •tit" of 84. p OEOROIA DAMftON View Chapel. Vililat.lon on She la survived by her BRUNNER. roaldent of Monday, Au1uau, 1Nllrom dauihter Maraaret Well• or uauna Btaeh, Ca. Paaaed 4·00PM t~ 9:00PM. Inter Anahola, Kauai, Hawaii, 3 away on SW\day, Auawt 2. m ent al PacHlc View arandchlldrtn Terry and I 1981af\era1h.ort Ulneu Sbe ~1emotlal Par It. Pacific John Wella of Hawall, Chrh1 la aurvlvtd by her hutband View Monuary dirtctort Well• of Colorado and 2 J oaeph, son Thomaa and llA.&AJNGTON areat arandchlldren, and doqhter Laurel. 3 slater• 0 RAC E CLARA HAR· her ai.ter Laura Ward of Annette Gillette or Nevada RINOTON. resident of Coe· Portland, Oreion lb lleu or L <.:lty, Ca. Faye Woodman or ta Mcu. Ca. Paucd away rlowen th family suaaeata North Hollywood, C• .. and on July lU, 1981. She Is aur· memoriel contrlbutJon1 be Be111 Ca~r of Va.n Nuy1, vlv~ by ber sons Fred of made to the Senlor Cltliena Ca. She was past president Coata Meaa, Ca., Lonnie ot Cto ntor, Inc., Kou St., o andUlememberortheSan Lakewood, C11. and Harrry Kapaa, H awaii 96748. ta Ana Tustin Ebell Society, or Belview, Mich.l&an, also Memorial service& were past president of P.E.0 ., aurvived by 7 1randchildren held at Koolau Huila Protea· California Chapter QT, und 23 gre11t·frandcblldr~n. tant Church In Anahola T located In Laguna Beach, St'rvlces wit be btld on Kauai, Hawoii. Service• un· Ca , was very active m club Monday, August 3, 1981 at der the direction or Medeirt>ll services and she was an IO·OOAM at the Harbor l..llwn Mortuary or Koloa . arllst in both oil and water Memorial Chapel with Rev SCHEERUNCK colors and had one person Paul Alexander. pastor of c y R E L A shows She was born In San the First UnJted Methodist SC.HEERLINCK , passed Diego, Ca. in 1920 and was Church or ~ta Mesa, or .. away on July 30, 1981 She Is raised m El Centro, Ca. Her tlcia.llng Ftnal tntermeot survived by her daughters ruther George W. Damron services will be held at the Gay Wilson or Santa Ann, c <deceased> was a pioneer or family plot at Morean CA. and Irene llatwn and the Imperial Valley. She Cemetery, Battle Creek, her son Albert also 14 was a graduate of El Centro Michigan. Harbor Lawn· gra nd ch I I d r'e n and Junior College and San Mount Olive Mor.luary of n u m er o us gr e at L Oieao State College, she Costa Fesu Cowardme dlrec· grirndchildren and great· taught elementary school in lors S40·5554. g r ea l ·grand ch l Id re n Sant.a Ana, Ca for 9 years MORAN Services held on Monday, Funeral services will be held DR. EDWl.N TERR.ANCE August 3. 1981 at l OOPM at A on Wednesday. August s, MORAN, reured dentist, re· Har bor Lawn Memorial t981 at l ·OOPM at' Pacific s1dent or Newport Beach . Park with Rev Aaron View Mortuary Chapel In· Ca Passed away on July 31 , BeuhJer or the Harbor Trini terment at Pacific View 1981 He was a resident of tr Church or Cost.a Mesa of s Memorial Park. Newport Newport Beach, Ca. for ~he r1ciating Ser vices under th Beach, Ca Paciric View past 14 years arter having direction of Harbor Lawn. Mortuary directors. m oved he re fro m Los Mount Olive Mortuary o CARR Angeles. He graduated from Costa Mesa. $40·SSS4. WALTER CAR R. resident the USC School of Dentistry. s or Newport Beach, Ca . He is survived by bis wif PWtJC 1111£ formerly or San Clemente, Ann or Newport Beach. Ca .. 1----------- Ca. Passed away on August sons Terrance Moran, M.D. NOnCAIOfll•n•oao 2. 1981. He is survived by 2 or Newport Beach. Ca. Den· TllANll'•• u•oe• I . R M r C • lllCTIC.S .,_,a a.r• sons Jack A. Carr and Don ms . oran o osta .. 1esa . CAU,,_•••1M1tt•USA•o W Carr both or Newport Ca. and John P. Moran o ~U9MMllCOOll Beach. Ca., 6 grandchildren Porterville, Ca He is also N•-•• 11ce ...... : COU NTRY He was a member or the s u r v i v e d' b y l 2 •11.u. INC.., -HMtiiw aMI .• c.1.1 First Presbyterian Church grandchildren and 1 great-~.;:,.~UAH PHAM -HAI F of San Clemente. Ca. and lhe grandson Recitation or the TRAN, ,. Mia .... A O.la ~ Masonic Order, he was a re· Rosary was held on Sunday, c.e1t1on11e. tired electrical supervisor Aus. 2, 1981 at 7:00PM at tr~:11c~:."~~L"~·;~·:" 1~N~ I for the City of Burbank. Harbor Lawn Me morial WtH• FOR aONA l"tDE Pua1.1c Ser vices will be held on Chapel. Mass or Christian l!ATINO Pl.ACE b I I h Id M TCIUI C...,._1ttl0fl lo be ti.Id for I.lie August 5, 1981 at lO :OOAM at ur a was e on onda~. bu••--ucenM is $10l,ooo.oo Paclrlc View Chapel. Inter· Aug. 3, 1981 at lO:OOAM At 41.o9J1'1 .. C:.'11<1( I ..,..,. ; IJJ{ JI Jt jJ' 11 I I IASTSIDI $7,IOODNI Swimming Pool + pool houst. 3 bcinn,. 2 ~ + Plan IV Rea1 ~y ckn on vtry Ii lot. btau 8 TON IOll 833-8600Jill,..... cul <IA!·sac. G~at loan ••••••••••••••••••••••• sm.ooo A&ent Christina , ________ •1 851·5111 or S.S1-2783 LAfiUMA MOITH lf523 CAM"'5Dl:IRVINE 3 HOUSES ON 1 LOT ~ only $179,900 Call~9Ull . OPEN HOUSE REAL TY / ASSUME VA. LOAN al 81,<)%-$64,000 bal Sunshllle home, renced front and rear. Only 1110,000 BKR. 646·43!0 EASTSIDE GOODIE' Lge FR. LR, wlfplc , dbl gar w opener -great cond. Quiel nbrhd Bkr 646-4380 Townhome, own er wlftnanee W /)!)"/. dn 3 BR , rplr, dbl gar I SI 10.000. Ruth Laurie. I bit r. 646-4l!O IXPAHDIO SIU,000 Former 4 Br, now 38r + den + 13x.22' added ramlly rm. Fnnl dining, pool u yard. Nearly 1800 sq rt in house ro r only 1133,000 '44-7211 tJn NILLL 131\IL[Y & ASSOCIATES H.tlltgto9 IHdl I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON EX..CLUSIVE HUN· TlNGTON SEACUFF'S GOLF C OURSE ~ ..._Jbdrm, pool, xtra Ira 10 1 Many xtra) S395,000 Broker .!33-6633, 637-6266 New dlx 3 Br townhouse. walk to beach, fully de corated '2:11.000 + min down ~36-0332 BY OWNER. No Hntg 8<.'h, 3 BR I•• ba, RV OUTSTAMDM VAUit Lovely 3 Bdrm Cam· brldae model in deslr11 ble Greentree location. Large muterlulte with study, secluded yard. btautHully landscaped, reatunn& shade arbor Sl39,SOO don osen rt.·,,Jt,,p,. 17TH AT PRa>PECT ~.731·3111 * •LIM:ATION Super location for this large 3 bdrm detached home tn the heart of Woodbridge Steps to beach. lake, sailing eel. On quiet cut.de sac As sumable financing Call for det11ls Ask 1ng s220.ooo access Comer lot Up· (Uj gradt'd Owner nex1ble, ~i Woodbridge submit terms. 775·7165 , Realty 891·4627 (714} --551·3000 f'IUCE/SUSHED 1ntoarrun pi.,..,1,.1n .. A unique & beaut1ru1 view home. $1.eps from Woods Cove Beach Creative rlnanclng Principals only please $850,000. Hart Reul Estate, 499-~ A. Lot For A LHttt l acre +-bld& 111.e, gent ly sloping parcel short distance trom tenruJ & beach. Ownr has ln· eluded plans for custom villa. Sl75,000. Spec tacular views• MISSION REALTY 494-0731 VICTORIA BEACH CHARM C<Yl'TAG E Walk to fall'lOl.LS Victoria Beach from thu 2 bedroom. 2 bath cottage localed on the O<'eans1de of Coast Highway The R&'M~ II F.!\l.Tt1k' bctvuctU00,000 PARTY IN HARBOR VllW -In Dover Shores. 5600 sq rt of top quality COD· strurt1on. ThtS 5 Bdrm Med11 style res1den<.'e is the best or locations and has the best of rmancin& available owe $950,000 at 91 i'( mt Full price including the land St,450 ,UOO Call Dan Btbb for appt Smashing family room with wet bar Un· beltevably beauuful en tertaaner's patio S Bdrm Sommerset on fee land Absolutely 1m maculate move·m con d1tton Creative fmanc mg available • REC CARPET 75§-1202 INVESTORS-low varan cy, low mamt.enance. 2 yrs new, all appliances, O W'NER WILL FINANCE-won 't last ' Call for appt. John &1arshall 631·1.S R&'M~ H E.\l.TORS ROGEl'S RlA.LTY 675-2311 SClft JUCNI Capl1tn.o I 071 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRADE OR SALE 2 67 Acres, 3SOO sq ft home. barn. corrals, view or entire valley. man) extras. fmanctng, Prt\ ale Owner lic'd 1714149J.1371 ___ _ s..ta .Ano 1080 .........•............. VA additional den provides 1--------111 excellent livmg space, THE ILUFf $90,900 3 Bdrm 2 bath. kitchen family area. sparkhng pool Only $88,900 VA terms Call for more de· tails. S.6·2313 while the front ocean r• ..... "X" view deck and back I.Al' patio serve as the 3 bdrm, din. rm . h\. perfect setlmg ror sum rm , ram rm , f lP,.211 mert1me entertaining ba, xlra large por('elatn menl a t P aci fi c View Set . Joachim's Cat hJ?liC ~m!.":..."":':! 5 s,ooo.oo E Memorial Park. lo lieu of hurch. Interment services -.11111ceofce.i110 flowers the family suggests we re held at Holy Cross • .....,..,. u ,000.00 l•--------i memorial contributions be Cemetery, Los Angeles CA o._,,...,,,. "-Owner ready to deal 1'.! m1 to beach' lmmac upgrade d 1 b r . den bdrm . I & ~ ba Pools. Jacuz11, tennis. clubhouse. wet bar. frplc Perr for cpl Needs rmancmg to ex IStmg 7 9'1 loan Open Sat & Sun. 1·5, 9766 Verde Mar. 536 1600 or 968·8341, Bkr Co-Op _ Possible seller ftnant' tub w ceramic ule walls ing available $275.000 & noor 4 rovered patio * * L""ATIQN 497·3331 areas Price $230,000, THE REAL ESTATERS made to the Building Fund Services under the dire~tto~ =.:.,:wncory D of the First Presbyterian of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive 111.,.um o1: >.000.00 Church of San Clemente or Mortuary or Costa Mesa Hote ltlldS.C,."y the chanty of your choice 540·5554 A..-In, • ...,, • of u. Sell•: u,-.oo Pacific View Mor tuary PIERCE TOTAi. 1111.ooo.oo directors. COLVIN P IERCE. rest Tiit plll(ll-. u. ~,.,.., DRISCOLL dent o't the Costa Mesa. area ror 111t tr..iw of 111e 11us1-..,.. IN J A M E S A R T H " R for the past 2 years. Passed llcenM 11 10 be ,.10 la: Wulerr1 '-Mu1 .. 1 IUc.-, lal s.utll Yorblt St. DRISCOLL, resident of the away on August l , 1981. He SUit• 101, Tutolln, c.e1110nt111 t1'1DOfl or 6 Costa Mesa area for the past was a veteran or both World •fl••"'-*''· 1•1. 14 years. Passed away on War l and World War II. T11e,..,,.....,...1Mttllec0flsldef'• llCMI for IN t.-lltr ol Ille but.lneu July:.>. 1981. He is survived U.S. Army, he was also a •ftdt11e tro-w t1c•-•sto 11epe1c1 by his parents Mr. and Mrs. m ember of the Elks Lodge. •fl•r 111e 0.,1111.-01 A1u11011c Carmen Driscoll of Costa He is survived bv his wife aner• Cotll~ ,_ ...,_ 1119 4 C Pl..-ftrltlWler. Mesa. Ca .. brother Bernard onstance of Costa Mesa. N-..... _.._ ., .,,. H e,_ and sister Uelen Shirley both Ca . daughter Constance llol..,.:.....,, Muut Esc:,_, 1a 1 or Can ad a a nd h 1 s Congleton of Torrance. Ca .. ~:·11T.~n~ ~~ .. :~1::11~0:1·J11",W:'n grandmother Mrs. Amy son John J ames Boyd of Wnlmorel...,,RE:Ho.ff.911WA 2 Newcombe of Canad a M a r YI a nd and 6 · c--,a111-,1nc.. Services will be held at the grandchildren. Services will ly: Devld T-. PrllMdeM Gates or Haven Cemetery. be held on Tuesday, August .._..._,MelT,:_,. H a lifax, Nova Scotia ,4.198l at U ·OOAMatHarbor Tr_,_ Canada. Harbor La wn · Lawn Memorial Chapel. ,.,.._°"9'lltc-stDe11yP1-. Mount Olive Mortuary or private interment services • .,..,, '"' · ,...,, • Costa Mesa forwarding immediate ly following at directors. $40·SS54. Riverside National Military DROLET Cemetery . Services under LOUISE DROLET. resi· the direction. or Harbor dent of Costa Mesa C Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary · a or Costa Mesa. $40-5554 Passed away on August l , REDDICK 1981 She was a member of To Place your "Fast Result " Service Directory ad .... Call Now 642-5678 ht. 312 Our Lady of the Wayside EVA M. REDDICK, rest· Catholic Church. She is'sur-dent ~f Anahola . Kauai, vived by her sons Rev Hawal.t. Passed away on Ju . ._ _________ _ Father Howard v. Drolet or ~ l9llCE PWUC 911C( Michigan and Richard P. ----------------------.... ' Drolet of Illinois. her RHCM.UTIONNO.tt41 daughter Dorothy L. Drolet RHOl.UTIONOf'TMa or Colorado. Mass of Chris· M>A•DOrTaUITilat · B · J 11 .. A T o~ TM• NMIWTA•• llan una wi ~ on ues· VAL1.av SCMOOL011Ta1CT day, August 4, 1981 at WHIUtEAS, t11e Fou11teln v1111ey ScllOol 011tr1<1 of ore,... eo..nty, tO·OOAM at St. Joachim's c.e111orn1<11, •• -u. -·., J.,.,,., H. c-ScMol, 1ou1"' 111 11'1s Loe Catholic Church. Final inter· JerdlMS 1!1111. FOYIQln Valley, Mel Wllllllm T. ""'-Sclleol, lcKM9d 111 11'7 Ool,._ Drtw, ~!lllM Bffch, ~I -ment services will be held at WHE REAS, w ci.s,_.. 111 ~ ...... '° .. ......,._.., •Ill ,,.. .. the family plot at St. ,_.._ • u. 11tM of dlltllvery o11111e .,,......._1w ICMol c111__, M i c h a e I · s C e m t e r y . ,..,.,_.; Schaumber~. Illinois, on Fri· WHE1'EAS..,. HUftllftQllCHI a..11 Union Hllft Sc._. Dtllrkt. "°""Sc-. Is deal,_ 10 '-.,... two cles.,_ IOr PwWlt Edwc.etlon/..,.._Sc_ day, Augus 7, 1981. Baltz c••-. Ber~eron-Smith & Tuthill NOW, THEREFORE, 8E IT RESOLVIED M ........ : w 1·rr Ch IM l.ltls U.1-oltllb llOllrd lOl--~-C-Sc'-leNl-es C 1 ape ortua ry cteur_.,, •• Newl<llncl Sc-. to Ille Huntl,..... .._,., Unloft H1911 Sc-oi.-r 0 r Ward i n g d i re Ct 0 r S Irle I, ACllull SctlOOI, Uftdw Ille loltowlne eem. Md 'Oftdlti.w: 646-9371. (el Tiit period of IN I.MM lllall ...... lllll ltlt..a_ 1,..., 1-.. sctwol HAMlLTON YHra. Cot'l'WNnCint no-· tlleft uec:ut.., of IN ~tty 1t111 aoerd, 11nc1 . eftdl"11 °" J..,. :IO, 1t'4. The rlOM Is , • ..,.,..., 10 <afttlll Mid I.Miii, ore P00'1!0fl JACK HAMIL TON. rest· llMreof, by e11Mr s-ty. w1t111n 111trty <»> c.111eftder t1tys .,.,. '9Clllpt of wrt1· dent of Newport Beach, Ca . ..., notlfk<llt!Ofl ot cenc1111a11°". Tlw ,,.,,._,by muhtltt .,,..,_, ,.,,., •ict.nct Passed away on July 28, .,. •••m o1 Mid L...MM 1w _,,_. ..-n. ..,.ltct '° ,.._i.tlOfl ot tM 1981. Survived by his son 1.~~~-r,:~,,.,,,,....s,..11b .. s1011~· Robert Hamilton or McCall. 1•1-12 sc:hclol YMt H D.• fl9H .... ,_../ Idaho and daughter Donna ,..,...,SCllllfl ,..., · -. • .-<~~ L Th ( B . 1ta-MICJ>eol.,...-'·*-"-<-~rr-ee ometz o 0 1se, T1w i.-,......_,.,,.11.,,.,..,..1n..,_.1 ~. Idaho. 13 irandchildren. a <cl No prwlt.loft 1s ,_..,,.. 1111s ..._ ,_ 1tt1 •ton 111 ~ -grandniece. Renee Lee of. -r1y. San Dteao ca Services wiU ldl TNI ,,_,..,." v.u.., sctwo1 01s1r1<1s111111111m1111.,.. ,.., tw e11 vt11111M, ' • lnclUdl,,. ltlectrklty, weter, gu, cu1eoca.l ..,..lcft,.,.. .,......._,_of bulto-be held on Tuesday. August ,,,. .. nc1.,_-TllllHIMIU"ltof\BMch"'*"HllllSc'-1 oi.u1<1.Ao11u"sc-. sllllllpeyforlMlalllllloftof-lllemoritllly ........ _.,ke. _,,.---------,.... Tiie HUfttlnattlf'I IMKll Union Hltill Sc-Dllef'l<I. Adult Sc-. e1 llSOMl ea rBCI llOTHHS ,.._, _, melnteln In fOrc9 -•flt IN W... Ill ttle i...., ... ..,, •lll-.IOfl SMITHS' MOITU.AIY tllereot, 11111 c_......,slw SIUbllc llMllllty 1-MCe, 1-1"11 .,.,Mt ell 627 Main St cl11lm• for 11\lllflft 10 ""'"'' or ~ occuwlfte 1n. upon, or e11out IN Hu ie.MCI Pl'Wf!ll-.. S<llkl polky 1111111 llew llmlU of Nit ... llllltl OM MllllOfl nttngton Beach Dollen m,oao.0001 for lnjwle• to ,.,_or....-. --... IMft , .... 536-6539 """*" "*-DaU•n 15500.0001 ,. fW'Gill9t1Y ......... ......_ -·· -~ flf ~. llll!PIY LaaM wltll e Cenlflc.ltllt el 1-enclt of IUCI\ '91ky, '•C..C••w .....OllAL, .... C.matery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1flc View Drive , Newport Beach 644·2700 McCOllMfCll MOITUAl•S Laguna Beach <49°HM1 5 Laguna Hills 76&-0933 S... J\uln Capistrano <495-1n6 NADOll LAW~MT. OUYI Mortuary • Cerretery CretNtory 1625 Gisler Ave . Cotta Mesa 540-5554 , -11 ..,_ tolW°O'llde.., ..... __ , lolUCll ,.,,.,.,,..,... ... 11•111ty '91k y w pell<'" lllewlfte ~ u"" eelllllleMI I-wllll ,..eel lo c1111,,.. en. .... out "'~· occ~y -... of .. .__"""'..., Lit-w111 -vW. -~ fllr "" IMWllllCe co,.., .... ~t ll9f-' ~ _. c-""'ll. (fl '--w111 -lb -'"•.~ '9fftln '° • c-i-toc-.. ..,•c~r.1i.1r,,..1 ve1w. (9) Tf\e -"*Y ... N II .. Meftcloey .......... Fn.ey, H Clutlfte .... !Mys ..,........., .... i.ursof ..... f .. _: (I) C..Sc-, ·-u ... ,, -· ~ tllreutlll ,.,...., l2:1Wtw11. ~ • ._..,.. ... ,, T-...., M O""' ua .. int TIMCl8y flf NCI!_.,, 7-10 ""-JN I. 4lfl Tlltindlty of NCI\ ,.,,..,... 121 ........... aa..i. "-· • "II Mefl..-...., ~ rrld<lly •1 ... 1»~,Jndl.tO\Thyrideyof HUI-I Ill) n....,_1.....,.. .. u.<1111 ___ _..._Clll'*- :t ....... "' ....... ""' •..-Mte.1..., __..,_ ..... ., •" .. -.,.. •*• ............................ .,_..,~Mike .. ._ .,_ '""'. --,. ""-tal ..... ,,_ .. •mtllUM"' .. '-.., ... -..,..1" .. 0elly f>lr.c.•-.JtJIFlf ...... tlre ...... lfl ... DtlltlcL Aoo,..,ao. llOH•D MD APlllROY•o .... ""'..,If Jvty, ""· "°" ... TAIN VAL..L.aV SCMOCM, OtlT1'1CT, IOMtOCWTMISTllU a.nt--c..11 ...... ......... == ,._.., .... OrMet CMlt Otllly ...... Jvtyaf. ,, ........ "" flU ll1ll ....,, 5 6 7 8 4 llrOOLHOME Excellent College Park area Has S80 000 1st. assume at 14"r.~146.900 3 II + poot + spa Harbor & Baker area. Sl46,900 Owner will ca rry at 13"1r with S40,000 down. 4 IR WESTSIDE St 10,000. Excellent neighborhood Needs new loan. Owner must sell Call David Sl\,000 Down, 2 story. 4 Br . fam rm. bonus rm, 3 Ba Near beach. Broker 842-1418_ "" e 5": down. assume Super locallOll for this k 0.000 1st trust dei!d at VII. W• COMlo la,,ge J Bdrm detached L.IOgO 7"1c, Xlnt land lease 3 Bdrm tn·level condo, home tn the heart of S853 00 per year Can't Woodbridge Steps to At.tk•.n change unUI year 2003 IO'i dwn IDO\'es yoo Ul beach, lake, sailing etc 14": 1nt only 2nd trust WhelaSlO'.l.900 54().J666 n· on quiet cul-de·sac. As· deed due 1986-87 Call sumable financmg Call LaC)WIO H• I 050 owner for appt d;11ly ror details Asking ••••••••••••••••••••••• a f ter !i pm t7141 Real Estate S22o.ooo 20K DOWN 760-842.5 ---- No qualtfying Long I•~~~~~~!'!'!! RUST IC RANCHER term financ1ng un 1h1) 2 Lovely 4 bedroom 1n bdrm, 2 ba pat10 home BEST ALUE IN prime localton Close to in Laguna Hills Com Y schoob and shops. ~tt'e By owner, 2 story, 4BR. 480l11""fOlltf nr Bch. Sl48 SOO gd r 111 MW terms, no Agts pleue -1;2Z!t ~7362 ••IEBED! munity pool. spa etc 3 EASTBLUff 1) decorated with hear years ne" Owner s t) tolor and teKtures mouvated. su~.000 Call 3 Bdrm 2 bath Im An) .ind all orfers COD· maculate' Owner anx ~1 dered Sl06 ,300 ious $205,000 T A R B E L L Roy Mee.elf, Rltr. REAL TO~ 979-ZllO _ now '""'!!!~~!!!!!!!~~H.t~ •-= H.-.. 1041 Super corner location gives grut privacy to th11 lovely backyard. highlighted by a n almost new hot tub! The --·548--7•7•2'--i OtMr Real &tote 1---------1 ·· .................... . A.FFOIDAIU MESA DEL MAR Assumable 1st, owner wilJ carry 2nd. 3 Bdrms and custom fam ily room with vaulted ceil ings Excellent condi lion. very pnvate yard Sll\,000. AFFOIDAILE M ESA NORTH Northgate comfortable 4 Bdrm family home. convenient ·to schools and shopping, near F a i rvie w an d Paularino. See and ap- preciate. 1127.000. 642·5200 j PETE ' BARRETT .. REALTY Twnhse 1760 sq ft. 2Br. 2~Ba , guard gate comm .. owner will finance Own r/agt $242,500. (714 ~ 997 .5490 lnlltt 104~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• THMJHG 1ow.-.OME? Call the specialists at tbe condominium in· formation cent.er. Touchstone Realty !163-(8;7 ASSUMAILE VA Take over high balance VA loan on this almost new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba on large lot Nice up grades. central alr. lrg covered paliO Call for details JMrahnCO. Woo6rkilpa...6'g Last availabe plan 5 $2&,000 4 Bdrms + bonus. 3 ba owners are anx10us and ----- rlexi ble terms are &.ogi.o ..... 1052 available. <I Bdrms. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba and only l t63,400 \\bod b rtdge Rea Icy 5S t·3000 ltlll Barranra pt,.,." lrvtnf' OCUHllHIE Clean air, mountain view, trees. 3bdrm. 2 12ba. s pa cious townhome Sl.24,000 by owner 53J.T700 ""kdays. 495-6585 eves wkend.'i M.wport INcll I 069 Lagmo ..... ' 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Trade Luxury Newpon sECWDID LAGUNA. ESTA.Tl Spectacular 4 Bdrm custom contemporary home, on over •., acre or complete seclusion. Breathtaklng ocean and canyon VleW, spacious and spartilng thruout Dr a matic Laguna dream home $745,000. don osen r• .,1H·r~ • 499 N. COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH 61-4848 home on '' acn• for In ('Orne Units or ~ Equity $280,000 Act now ' Broker Co Op Agent 631-~516 BLUFFS t.'ONDO Smgle stor>, JBr. 2Ba. Lmda Plan New applias. hie. etc Assumable loan. owner agt $230.000 8SS-21Jl3 OCEAHFIOHT HEW IYOWHER 3 BR & den, ~.000 3711 Seashore Owner w/carry. 673-~78 OCEANROHT $450,000 3 car gar for info caU Catalina Sunset. Lower 3 S.Sl-8058 Arch Bay Pvt area Grt ocean vu 4br. beach This orrering 1s an estate sale One or Newport Beach's finest views 3 bdrm home wtth guest apt or 2 un· LEASE/OPTION 11se 499.3144 its. . ..................... . Hartior View Mobile HCMMS &1ove 1n condt11on , 3 For Sale 1100 bdrm. 2 ba home 1n ••••• •• •••••••••••••••• Harbor View High as· '78 SO MERSET 2 br. sum able loall$ Highly + sunpor<.'h m one of upgraded throughout 0<-eans1de's betlt-r adll Shows like model Must pa r k , ~ 3 2 5 O O sell fast. AskmR S2:1! !iOOI 714 433 8329 met land Come for in lh 011o ner brand ne"" 2 ~pecl1on Sal. Sun 1 6 Hr 2 Bc1 24 x 52. up- 1860 Port Wheeler or Rrade!'. on golf course, rall 760-9!i.!!flQ.v.Tier Agt v..i lk to Hunlinglun VILLA IA.LIO.A R l' a r h C a I I I Br rondo View of· 714 644 6276 Catalina Ov.ner v.111 l:layrronl Cab<lna $75.000 , help finance. Submit or cash rer 67s.8423 Broker, 96):818_2 ltnilleu Property 1400 MEW PORT CREST • •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm condo Clo!.e to CORONA DEL MAR pool .ind t.enru.s Ella·e I financing Prired to sell. S!89.500 4 stor~s an pnme area Large assumable loan and OMC 714-457-2813 C/21 Mewpcri Critr. CondoMillillfftt/Towit-640-5357 _ Z,60..6767 houses for._.. 1700 1--------·1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SP A.MISH VILU OM UDO is very versaule on "r extra wide lot Ong t bedrooms. now 5. bul could be changed bark lo 6 Features a larg< lovely Sunn) patio Nev. k1trhen, ~must lo see' Rrdh1ll~Realty 1;7:~ 7:~1111 PA.LMDESaT Deep Canyon Tennis Club Lovely 3br. 2ba A" Plan. Great Green· belt Loe S5000 down OWC St~.000 at l2'"t BK R 9S3--=123>=·--- IKOtM rropetty 2000 .....•.•............•.• 5 b d r m • 3 b a • Retmog to Laguna! 1 Turllerock. Sso.ooo Perfect for you • a down. Owner/ agt, spacious; brieht Z Br. 2 644-6125 at\ 6pm. Ba. Condo w/excellent OWN ER·Turlle Rock, ocean views. Cliff Dr. at upgraded \.liacre? Del, Heisler Pk. S296,000. RealonoDllcs 67~00 Ll9UIDA T10H SALE ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I S~Ctr Located"in.No San Otego Cty, super growth area 15.500 sq I\ leasa- ble Owner fmance Full price $850.000 Ask for Mike 4br (3 + den) 2ba, for L~ VllecJt R.E. dr, cent entry & atriwn, 497·17'1 3 prriv ds, xtras. Nr pk " . . ~K or best nlltt I 044 CAI . 641·8al'O a4 hn ••••••••••••••••••••••• WA18FIOHT COMDO Boat slip ror 45' boat Beautiful condo on th< IA.TRONT Owner/builder must sell now Exclus ivt Peninsula Point home, brand new 4 BR 4 Ba w/boat dock. Your bay 2 ~rm It den terms or cash discount. Owner will carry 01 Dan Bibb, lfl e75·2311 •• trade. ~K. 640-7665 IOO'Yo COMMISSION We are olrerin& il all! Plus prestiae Coast Hwy addreaa to Cull lim e ex.pe r ienced agenta Call for detal.ls ••ptlt. Hl·ll4J Rl'Jh 111 ~ Re.1ltv I ;7:{ ~::1111 OWNER ANXIOUS Will help linance·all un der Sta5.000, 3 to choose from. Won't lasl Call ror appt. John Marshall Qt.la& TR\DITIO\,\I. l~L.\l T' 631-7370 Priclt fli Owwlt~ 20 units, E.side M 7 rrs old Overall ftnanc ng 10'1 Owner motivated Hurry! Call Kevin. I £&& 111111 CUii MONDAY. AUGUST 3. 1981 • • • Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS County flying Air traffic flows despite strike ~ . By FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL O( .. D114, .......... Jets thundered out of Orange County's John Wayne Airport un- der relatively normal schedules today, despite "1e air controllers' strike that cut the number of on- duty air traffic personnel by 40 percent. Airline representatives said some flights were delayed from five to 10 minutes, but that no scheduled departures were can- celed. Arriving flights also were unaffected. they said. Ralph Odenwald, chief of the Orange County tower, said three persons -instead of the usual five -were handling air traffic in and out er the airport, the fourth busiest in the country. sl,es fuel because jeWners don't s it near the runway awaiting takeoff clearance. At a separate Federal Aviation Administration air traffic control facility located at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, chief Don Fowler said the strike bad impacted operations, but declined to release a specific figure on the number or personnel involved. "We have adequate sta!frng for about SO percent of our opera- tions," Fowler said. The radar facility serves as something of a central clearinghouse for all air traffic along the Orange Coast. AirCaJ's outbound flights were carrying about 25 percent fewer passengers than normal, Mark Peterson, director of communica- tions said. A single-engine Cessna airplane takes off over the control tower. manned by three people , at John Waune Airport todau. Odenwald said a "gate hold" procedure was i1tlplemented, whereby commercial jetliners were held at the terminal gate un· lil a firm departure time could be given to pilots by controlJers. Such a system, he said, aHows for a smoother flow or traffic and By contrast, he said, AirCaJ ex- perienced a higher than normal passenger demand Sunday, as travelers attempted to beat the strike deadline clock. Peterson <See FLIGHTS, Page A2) * * * * * * Reagan · gives air controllers 48 ho11rs Tax cuts ready Kennedy opposition rejected WASHINGTON (AP> -The Senate today prepared to give final approval to the largest tax cut in history after rejecUng an effort by Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy aimed at reducing the biU's tax breaks for the oil Industry. A motion by Kennedy to send the measure back to a Senate- House conference committee with instructions to trim the oiJ benefits failed, 55·20. A final vote oq the bill followed im· mediately. The House will consider the compromise bill on Tuesday, Ne wport dad awaits sea rch for s on, 26 By STEVE MARBLE Of t• 01111, f'IW ltaff A Newport Beach police sergeant who has been awaiting confirmation or his son's death for four months says it appears authorities are dragging their feet on completing a search for the light plane which carried ttis son as a passenger. Detective Ken Thompson re- ceived word last month that authorities in Fresno County had spotted wreckage or a white plane near a remote lake in the rough terrain or the Sierra Nevada. The description or the plane, Thompson says, matches that of the rented Cessna 210 that was carrying his 26-year·old son Mi chael and pilot Robert Reed, 25. <See SEARCH, Page A2) sending it to Reagan for his signature. The measure, a cor· nerstone or Reagan's economic plan, would reduce individual and corporate taxes by $749 billion through 1986. But the only issue for the Senate today was an estimated $32 billion to $33 billion in special tax relier for oil pro· ducers and owners over the next 10 years. "When we are as~• school chHdren to pay more for lunches, should we be giving away billions or dollars to the oil companies?" Kennedy asked. "Whe~ we are asking the elderly to gWe up their minimum Social Security benefit or $122 a month, should we be giving away $33 billion to the oil industry1" Sen. Bob Dole , R-Kan., manager or the bill , accused Kennedy or staging a "media event" by blocking final Senate action on the bill Saturday night. "The facts are that whatever we do for anybody in the oil busi- ness . . . he would be wrong as far as he (Kennedy) is con- cerned," Dole said. He called Kennedy and a few supporters or his cause "lhe same old, tired liberal voices ... knocking the free-enterprise system." The final version of the bill was agreed upon Saturday morning by conferees who spent 14 hours hammering out dif- ferences between the House and Senate approaches, largely over how much or a break oil pro- ducers should get. <See related stories Page A3.) The compromise calls for re· ductions for petroleum pro- ducers totalling $32 billion over the next 10 years. Californians pay . more for gasoline LOS ANGELES <AP > .__ Californians have been paying about seven cents more for a gallon or regular leaded gasoline than the national average, but that price gap could vanish soon, according to industry statistics. The difference in price was al· tributed to an extraordinary drop in gasoline s upplies last sprin1 on the West Coast, the Los Angeles Ti mes reported Sunday. Meanwhile, a worldwide surplus or oil led to a drop in national gasoline prices._ As production gears up this summer, gasoline supplies should be returning to normal levels and wholesale prices have already started to drop. Prices at the pump should follow, industry of· ficialstoldtbeTlmeu. In March, the avera1e price for a gallon of leaded re1ular 1u wu $1.32 both in Calllornla and na· tionwide. Al 1upplie1 welt of the Rockies dropped, however, tbe prices ln Callfornla roee. By July 1, a1aUooofresuJar1uoUnecoet $1.34 in Callfomla, accordlq to tbe Lundbera l,etter, an autboriLIUvemarketin1survey. Nationwide, the price had dropped to Sl.27 a gallon. The Times reported that the gasoline supplies in the West dropped so drastically last spring that less fuel was on band then than had been available during the big1979 gasoline shortage. In 1979, a 5 percent supply loss during the Iranian revolution prompted panic buying and 1001 lines at service stations. That triggered a rise in the cost of oil of qiore than 100 percent a year. When the first lines formed, the panic spread and driven kept their gaaollnetanksfilled, usually carryin& ab(>ut three.quarters of a tank of gas. This put an addJ· tional strain on supplies, since the average driver nor mally keepe just a quarter of a tank of 1u ta 0biscar. But last spring, panic buyinc was averted. Additional supplies were shipped in from the Eut, altbougb usually oil la shipped from the West Coast to the .East, and de,nand J.n Callfornla wu lower than ln 1979, in part beeaUH more fuel-efficient can are in use. Delt, ........... ..., ....... Traffic at Orange County's normally bustling John Wayne Airport was .down by 15 to 20 percent today Passengers I ind the going easier in the terminal. · No panic at county airport Wayne Airport quiet; many left befor e str ike By GLENN SCOTT 0tu.eo.11,,.. ... su n Although most of the passengers at John Wayne Airport seemed resolved this morning to flight delays caused by an air traffic controllers' 7 a .m. strike, Jonathan Haines of Laguna Be ..:h was taking no chances on ttis flight. Call it bad luck, but Haines had a job interview in San Francisco at 10:30 a.m. He already was wait- ing at the airport at 7 a .m. for a scheduled 8:30a.m. AirCalflight. "l figure l ' m going to wait," he s aid as he sat in a chair in the terminal lobby. But Haines was surprised when he arrived, he said, because the terminal was not busy, not rocked by panicky passengers. In fact, it was almost quiet. "l expected a big crowd, but I don't know where they are," he said. Bob Pike, AlrCal's station manager, thought he bad the answer this morning. "J think everybody got smart ahd left Saturday and Suaday, · · he said. An hour after the strike began, some flights bad departed and all other commercial flights were scheduled to leave, although of· ncials said the planes would be at least 15 to 20 minutes behind schedule. Passengers with leas at stake than Haines seemed satisfied with the arrangement as they sat sleepy-eyed in waiting rooms wbUe their commercial Jets wait· ed, doors open, Just steps outside theterrnlnal. Al Principe of La Hlbra and Steve Schreiner or Arcadia said t hey were encouraged this weekend after readinl and bear· lnl news reports that smaller terminals, such u John Wayne, ~ouldo'l have the problems ex- pected at major airports. The two work c0Ueaiue1 were headed to @ lralnlnt a .. ioa in Sacramento. Their biggest worry, they added, was how to re· turn to Orange County on Tues· day. "We're taking it one step at a time," caulioned Principe. "We may have to take Greyhound or I heard they may put another Am· trak train on the route from San Francisco to Los Angeles." Vonna Hammerschmitt or Newport Beach accompanied her husband Robert to the ajrport, where he was heading for San Jose. "We tried to get out yesterday * * * and everything was full," she said. To her amazement, the term.inaJ seemed less crowded than on normal Monday morn- ings. H there was any part of the terminal that seemed more crowded this morning, it was the pay telephones. They were Jammed at 7 a .m ., mostly by men in business suits holding com- plimentary cups of corree in one hand, receivers in the other. "Just tell them I'll be there some time," said one or the callers. * * * Is it safe to fly? Opinions differ WASHJNGTON (AP) -With thousands of air traffic con- trollers on strike, is it safe to fly? No, says the controllers' un- ion. Yes, say the eovernment, the pilots and the alrHne in· dustry. To move 'air traffic, the Federal Aviation Administration has reduced the number of flights ·and is usin 1 2,500 supervlsory and nonunion ec>n· trollers and several hundred mllltary air controllen. "I do not feel tbeae people are qualified to work In the towen and centers of this country," said Robert E. Poll, president ot the Prof esalonal Air Trattlc Con· trollers Or1anilatloo, wblch represent• nearly 15,000 con· lroUen. "I believe it would pro. vide a areal aaf ety baaard." But TranaportaUon ~retary Drew 1Awl1 11ld t hat 1afety is lbe flrst concern of lbe FAA'• contmaency plan. -- "We're not going to jeopardize . the public lives," he said. "We feel the plan ls safe," said Daniel Henkin, spokesman for the Air Transport Aasocia· lion, which represents the airline industry. "The airlines and their employees in this sltuatiOh as always will continue to give the highest priority to safety:" Henkin said. ·'No flleht will oe dispatched and no pilot will take off unless there is assurance that all safety requirements are met fully." Byron Whitehead;"' a spokesm an for the Air Line Pilots Association, reported that the g r ou p h as safety coordinators stationed at each ol the natS0011 23 re1ioftaJ control cent.en and that tn u.e early boun of the strike they reported no safety proble~. "Al far u safety la concerned, we feet everytblae la normal," WhJt.ebelld said. Firing threat voiced WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi- dent Reagan gave striking air tramc controllers 48 hours today to return to work or be fired. "I must tell those who failed to report for duty this morning they are in violation of the law, and if they don't report for work within 48 hours , they have QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON STRIKE -A4 STATE'S CONTROLLERS ENDORSE STRIKE, AS ' forfeited their jobs and will be terminated,·· Reagan told a Rose Garden briefing this morn- ing. Reagan's announcement came at the same time the Federal Aviation Administration grounded much of the nation's commercial air traffic as the controllers, in defiance of a federal JUd~e. launched their first nationw.ide strike. The walkout began with the day shift at 7 a.m., local time, and the FAA said early indica· lions were that more controllers were staying off their jobs at some centers than bad been an- ticipated while in other areas some controllers were defying the strike. No figures were available. Reagan told reporters that federal law prohibits federal employees from striking and that air controllers promised not to strike when they were hired. "I hope you' 11 emphasize again the possibility of termina· lion. because I believe that there are a great many or those people who have been swept up in this and probably have not really considered the fact that they have taken an oath. the fact that <See WARNING, Page AZ) .DRlllil CDIST WllTHll Late night through mid· morning low cloudiness. Otherwise fair through Tuesday. Not much tem· perature change. Highs in low 70s at the beaches, ranging to low tp middJe 80s in the inland sections. Lows tonight 60 to 65. ·111111 TIUY The11're call•d lhe "girl Bea.tZ.1" and l~'re giving culmeu a good name. Mnt thi• new rock group on Paoe ..47. .11111 u • Al • .. a • .. • • Al Al .,.~ ... .. .. -... Orange Cout DAil. y PILOT/Monday, A\IOUlt 3, 1981 Options eyed Air strike sparks rush for alternates Travelers faced with an air traffic cont.roU~r•' atrlke have betun bopptn1 trains and buMI out oltown. Al 2 a. m. thla mornln1 92 callers from Southern California w re wllltin1 to get throuth on Amtrak reaerv•tlon llnet, ac· eordln& to Michael Harr11, a reservations supervisor. Harris said° that the number or callers was extremely unu.sual, * * * From Page A 1 4 FUGHTS • • • said nearly all s tandby passengers were accommodated. Calls poured into AlrCal's res· ervation lines as concerned travelers sought information on whether their (lights would de· 'Part, Peterson noted. Peterson saidAirCal, which operates 25 of t.he 41 jet de· partures permitted daily from the airport, intends to operate its normal schedule until otherwise advised by the FAA. The FAA has prepared a con· Ungency plan to handle traffic, but its implementation has been held in abeyance while officials determine how much of an impact tbestrikeishaving. Peterson said it is much too early to assess what financial Im· pact the strike may have, but pointed out that the threat alone of an air traffic controllers strike on June 22 is estimated to have cost the airline industry about $40 mil· lioninlostrevenue. * * * From Page A1 but that call• rtave 11nce dropped to near normal. Alf reterved tratm (tbOle re- qutrln1 •dvanct llcktU) between Or1n1e County and San Francisco have been aold out un· UI the mJddle of the week, ac· cor dlo1 to an Amtrak spokesman ln San Francisco. Seats are still available on un· reserved trains between Orange County a nd Los An1elea. However . a co mpany spokesman warned that it may be standing room only. Local Amtrak officials said they don't expect to see an ln· crease Ln travelers until late to- day or early Tuesday morning. "I haven't notic!ed a big di!· ference yet this morning," said Mark Ziegler at tbe Santa Ana s tation. "I imagine later on we will. though." Orticials at the Fullerton sta· lion reported no significant in· crease in train riders this mom· ing. Request s for tickets o n Greyhound buses were reported slightly higher this morning, as travelers bega n looking for alternative ways to reach their destinations. Kirk Hoover with the Greyhound Laguna Beach office said most of the callers wanted to travel to the east coast. However, a group of 16 people originally scheduled to fly to San Francisco Tuesday morning, will be taking the bus instead. he said. * * * WARNING ISSUED • • • this is now in violation of the law. .. I hope they will remove themselves from the lawbreaker situation by returning to their posts." Trans portation Secretary Drew Lewis, who also briefed reporters. said the government will not offer Che controllers any more money. "We do not plan to increase our offer to the union," he said. Reagan said the threat to fire the controllers was the only ac- tion open to hi m. "What lesser action can there be?" he asked . "The law is very explicit. They are violating the law." Reagan and Lewis spoke after a midmorning White House meeting also attended by At· torney General William French Smith. Lewis said beforehand that the government would not try to put controllers in jail, but would seek civil penalties and ask to bave the union removed as the controllers' bargaining agent. Meanwhile, a federal judge in New York City ordered air traf· fie controllers to halt their strike temporarily and appear in court Tuesday to explain why they should not permanently rel.um to work. U.S. marshals immediately were ordered to fan out with copies of the order. seeking striking controllers and serving them with Platt's order. Failure to obey the judicial command could subject mem· bers of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization ~o contempt-0f·court penalties. Representatives of the union were ordered lo appear before Platt at 10 a.m. EDT Tuesday to answer his order. The judge's order enjoined the controllers "from in any manner calling, causing or authorizing, continuing, encour aging and participating in and engaging in. obstructing or taking any part in any strike, work stoppage or s lowdown or other concerted failures by FAA employees to report to work." The 7 a.m. walkout ~as in de· Mesa firm's safe ~ed of 8 2 ,296 Whe n a U ·Haul Rentals · employee opened his Costa Mesa firm's safe early Sunday to reach the more than $2,200 sup- posedly inside, he came up with only a couple of rolls or coins, police said. Officers said someone with the safe's combination apparently entered a window in the building at 2680 Newport Blvd. sometime late Saturday or early Sunday and stole $2,296. ORANGE OOAIT fiance of another judge's order. U.S. District Judge Joyce Green in Washington ordered the union and its leaders to teU the court by 2 p.m. PDT today why they should not be held in contempt for disobeying her or· der making the strike illeg4J. Mrs. Green, at the predawn bearing, also granted the gov· ernment's request to bar the un· ion from paying any benefits from its strike fund to the con· trollers. Mrs. Green's order bad pro· hibited a work·•stoppage or slowdown for 10 days. Mrs. Green, who noted go~ernment employees are forbidden to strike, said a · bearing will be held Aug. 12 to consider a tem· porary restraining order, which would lengthen the legal probibi· tion against the strike. The un· ion was not represented at tod!!y'a court sessiof\. TIM! controllers, who direct air traffic at 23 regional cent~rs and more than 500 airports, earn an average of $34,000 a year, with a low of $20,500 and a high of $49,200, depending on years of service and traffic volume. $10,000 taken at eatery in SA An armed man and his ac· compli ce escaped with a n estimated $10,000 in weekend re· ceipts from the Santa Ana Heights McDonald's restaurant ea rly today after he rding employees i nto a basement storage room. No one was harmed in the 1: 25 a .m. robbery, in which one or the holdup men brandished a .45 caliber automatic pistol. ' Orange County Sheriff's De partment spokesman Sgt. Dan Spratt said the money was taken from a safe just as the restaurant was closing. The restaurant is located at 2290 Southeast Bristol St. Further details surrounding the robbery we r e not im· mediately available. Spratt said. Commenting on the size of the loss, Spratt said, "They got more than they usually get in bank robberies." Dollar soars LONDON (AP) -The dollar soared against major foreign currencies in early trading to- day, hitting a 5-year high against the West German mart, and a record level against the Italian lira. Gold slumped below $400 an ounce for the second time in less than a month. Daily Piiat Cl1111fted ectverttllng 7141'42·5171 All ottMtr depertment1 142~1 I ThoOlU P. Haley JIVtJ/litlwtr W <:"'91 bKul!ft OllW Robert N. Weed '"'-'' Mlchael P. Hervey ~~!Of L. Kay Sehulti OW., OI 0.-• Kenneth N Gocld1rcl Jr ~~ Thomaa A. Murphlne .... Btrnatll Schulman ~ CtwlelH.Looe _.. ......... " .... Carol A. Moo;• ._....,..., f MAIN OfftCE SJ0 WtH ley Sl., Caal• MHe, CA. Mell HO,.u· lo• IMO, C .. ta M01e, CA ,,.,. Cooyr191W "" Or-Co.nt PulllfM>ine C..-y. No "'"'' "°',.'• ll111>tretoon•. edllorlef ,,,.,ll•r or ecl-•••l1Hn•e1111 lier.,,, mo b<I rtProauud without "ll'ttlal permluloh ot COl>Y•itlll ow••tr ..................... CONCERT ON THE GREEN -Joseph Pearlman, director of the Orange Coast Community Symphony Orhcestra, con ducts the American Home Symphony Pops in the first of a four·concert series Sunday on the campus green at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa. American Home is presenting the free public concerts through co·sponsorsh'p of the col· lege and the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Other programs will be played at 1·30 p.m. Aug. 9, 16 and 23. 'Grand mal Wav es, tides keep Mobil ups seiz urli ' lifeguards hopping . bidding hits Brady Orange Coast lifeguard de· 4 feet unde rwater and had for Conoco partments say they were kept stopped breathing. WA S H I NGTON (AP> - James S. Brady , President Reagan's pres:; secretary who was wounded when Reagan was shot March 30. had a major seizure in his hospital room today, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes announced. The seizure, known as a · grand mal seizure," was t r eated with intravenous medication and anesthesia, Speakes said. A White House announcement said that Bl'ady's vital sigas were normal and that he was sleeping under anesthesia in a recovery room at the George Washington University Hospital. Brady has been treated at the hospital since suffering a gunshot wound in the head during the assassination attempt on the president. · From Page· Al SEARCH. • • The two Costa Mesa men were I ast seen March 19 when they took off from the Mammoth Lakes airport bound for nearby Bishop. It was snowing at the time. Sgt. Ken Abell, a member or tbe Fresno County Sheriff's search and rescue team, con· firmed the sighting but said that bis department does not have adequate funds to bankroll a search. Authorities in Fresno say the plane is located near Red Slate Mountain which is a two·day hike from the nearest ranger's station. A volunteer team of moun· taineers that was to begin a search for the wreckage last week had still not been dis· patched today, sheriff officials said. lt was unclear when the search team would be sent into the mountainS". • An investigator for the Na· tional Transpo rtation Safety Board , which in vestigates airplane crashes. said his agen· cy is aware of the wreckage sighting. But. he said, it is too early for them to take any ac· lion. "We 're on standby right now," said Terry Armentrout, an in· vestigator for the board. "We can't launch an investigation un- til the wreckage has been clear· ly identified." He said it is up to Fresno County to go into the mountains and attempt to locate an iden· lification number o n the wreckage. "We've gone up on these things before and they've turned out to be wild goose chases," said Armentrout. Thompson claims the whole thing seems ·like a Catch 22 situation. "This is the most unreal thing that's ever happened to. me," Thompson said. "Unless you've lost a chlld it's ...,... to express the feelings I'm going through." Mr. Hamilton • services set Funeral services ·ror longtime Newport Beach re•ident Jack B. Hamilton, 72, who died of leukemia last Thursday, will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m . at Pacific View Chapel , 3500 Paclfic View Drive, Newport Beach. Mr. Hamilton co-founded the First Step House, a Costa Mesa recovery home for alcoholics, 25 years ago. He also was a member of the Newport Club, a service organiution . Mr. HamUton, who bad lived In Newport Beach for 40 years, 11 survived by b1s son, Robert bf McCalJ, Idaho, daucbter, Donna Lee ThotMts of Bolte, ldabo, and 13 grandchildren. busy over the weekend making However, by the time she was rescues as 4 to 5·foot waves and brou ght to lhe beach her rip currents plagued bathers. breathing had resumed after be· Laguna Beach I ifeguard ing given mouth·to-mouth re· s pokesman Bruce Baird said a s uscitation, Baird said. Ms. Covina woman nearly drowned Martines was taken to South at Mountai n Road beach Satur· Coast Medical Center where she day. Baird said when lifeguard was treated and released. Mike LonJ?field reached Eleste Baird said about 70,000 people Martines she was floalln~ about showed up at city bPaches over the weekend. Surf was reported Drug s ales charge d to beach guard Laguna Beach undercover officers arrested a seasonal lifeguard who ~lice said was selling n.arcotics rrom his lifeguard tower at Moss Street Beach. Thomas Landhei m . 20, of Mission Viejo was arrested . Friday afternoon while on duty_ at the beach tower. police said today. The lifeguard, who had only worked for the city for seven weeks, purportedly sold a small amount of hashis h t o an undercover officer. Police said thP arrest was the result of a complaint from ~ beachgoer who purportedly overheard a conversation between the lifeguard and another party near the tower. Lindheim was immediately replaced at the tower by another guard Friday afternoon and booked on drug charges at the city police department. City ofricials said he was later released on his promise to appear in court on the drug charges. P o lice hunt rapist of Mesa g irl, 16 Costa Mesa police sought a man with shoulder·length blond hair wno reportedly raped a 16-year·old girl in the parking lot of an apartment complex at 12:30 a.m. Investigators said the girl was walking along Wilson Street when the man threatened her with a gun he claimed was con· cealed in his pocket at from 3 to 4 feet and 141 rescues were performed. Newport Beach lifeguards re ported 185,000 beach visitors on both Saturday and Sunday, an unusually large crowd. Eighty· one rescues were made. Evening beach-goers in· Newport Saturday were sur· P,rised by the Landing of a Coast Guard rescue helicopter. Lt. Frank Mullins of the guard's Rescue Coordination Center in Long Beach said the pilot dis· covered a hydraulic leak while flying over the ocean 30 mi les from shore. No one was injured in the emergency landing. Mullins said the craft was repaired on the beach and returned to Long Beach Saturday night. Huntington Beach city lireguards said a weekend crowd of 90,000 was counted. No major in cidents were reported and 88 rescues were performed. Huntington State Beach guards said the crowd at V:eir strand was estimated at about 139.000. There were no serious Incidents reported and 40 rescues. Three kille d in two fires OAKLAND (AP > -Two childr e n and a man in a wheelchair died in San Fran· cisco Bay area fires, authorities said today. Lavelle Allen. 4, and Ebony McDonald. 6. died in a blaze that started in the closet or a north Oakland home shortly after 9 a .m . Sunday. Luther Townsend, 64, died Saturday night in Oakland when fire overtook him as he tried to leave his burning apartment in a wheelchair. NEW YORK (AP> -Mobil Corp. today boosted its offer for Conoco lnc. to $8.6 billion in an effort to keep the bidding war for Conoco going until it can gel government clearance to begin buying shares. Mobil, locked in a war with Du Pont Co. and Seagram Co. Ltd. for control of the nation's ninth· largest oil company, said it would pay SI 15 a share in cash for 51 percent of the Conoco s hares. up from $105 in its earlier offer. · Mobil did not change the other part of its offer, providing for secur1ties worth S85 a share for each remaining Conoco share. The old oHer was worth $8.2 billion. Mobil is the only one of the three bidders that still faces ma- jor antitrust questions. an~ it said the increase was "in rec· ognition of the fact that a Conoco shareholder will have to wait longer for payment" from Mobil than from other bidders. Seagram. the big/ Canadian d1sWler. already has begun buy. ing shares of Conoco. and said Sunday it has bought, or wiU soon buy. about 18 percent of the company's stock at S92 a share. Du Pont. offering a totaJ of S7 .3 billion. said it has received tenders ror more than 50 percent of Conoco·s shares and said it expects to have final antitrust clearance from the Justice Department by Wednesday. Fue ntes ge ts pane l pos t Thomas Fuentes. senior vice president of a Newport Beach engineering firm , has been elect· ed president of the 12·member Santa Ana College Foundation, which ad ministers scholarship programs for the college. Fuentes, a Santa Ana College gr aduate. is a member or the Republican State Central Com· mittee and first vice chairman of Orange County's Republican Party. He is also communications director of the Roman Catholic Diocese or Orange and a member of the U.S. Catholic Bishops Na· tional Advisory Council. Denim \den·em\n Al's Garage; 'tbur Denim S1ore A Levi "501;" SMnk·krnt boslc denim 8. Lee Ride<. Straight leg denim. C. le'w1·10f·Men. S1ret<:h def'tlm. 0. CoMn Kleln. 1A 01, denim 1 A well kno<N!1 bosk: COiion Of blended tobnc The fabric 1s ll9IY d\Jroble ond Is popular b all types o~gorments rrom work olOlhes IO sportSWEKlf ond evening wear 2 A coarse blue dlXlgaree used b \NOii< clOlles. ongtnolly used IOt soilols work cioltles AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 • ) " IUlll CUii MONDAY . AUG US T J. 19HI * * Ylll llllllll llllY PIPll ORANGE COUN I Y C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS County flying Air traf fie flows despite strike ~ . By FREDEIUCK SCHOEMEBL 011 ... D*y~l .. tl Jets thundered out of Orange County's John Wayne Airport un· der relatively normal schedules today, despite the air controllers' strike tttat cut the number of OD· duty air traffic personnel by 40 percent. Airline representatives said some flights were delayed from five to 10 minutes, but that no scheduled departures were can- celed. Arriving flights also were unaffected. they said. Ralph Odenwald, chief of the Orange County tower, said three persons -instead or the usual five -were handling air traffic in and out er the airport, the fourth busiest in the country. saves fuel because jetliners don't sit near the runway awaiting takeoff clearance. At a separate Federal AviatiOf\ Administration air traffic control facility located at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, chief Don Fowler said the strike had impact ed oper ations, but declined to release a specific rigure on the number of personnel involved. . "We have adequate staffing for about 50 percent of our opera- tions," Fowler said. The radar facility serves as SQmething of a central clearinghouse for all air traffic along the Orange Coast. AirCal's outbound flights were carrying about 25 percent fewer passengers than normal. Mark Peterson. director of communica- tions said. By contrast. he said, AirCal P.X· perienced a higher than normal passenger demand Sunday. as travelers attempted to beat the strike deadline clock. Peterson A single-engine Cessna airplane takes off over the control tower. manned by three people. at John Waune'Airport todau. Odenwald said a "gate hotel"' procedure was implemented, whereby commercial • jetliners were held at the terminal gate un· tit a firm departure lime could be given to pilots by controllers. Such a system, he said, a llows for a smoother Clow or trarric and <See FLIGHTS, Page AZ> * * * * * * Reagan gives • air controllers 48 ho11rs Senate OKs cut Kennedy opposition rejected WAS HINGTON (AP> -The Senate today gave final ap- proval to the la rgest tax cut in history after rejecting an effort by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy aimed at reducing the bill's tax breaks for the oil industry. The measure was passed on a 6V·8 vote and sent to the House where it is expected to be ap; proved Tuesday and sent to President Reagan for his signature. The legislation, cor· nerstone of Reagan's economic plan. would reduce individual Newport d .ad awaits searc h for son, 26 By STEVE MARBLE Of Ille o.lty ... ._. Sa.ti A Newport Beach poli ce sergeant who has been awaiting confirmation of his son's death for four months says it appears authorities are dragging their feet on completing a search for the light plane which carried his son as a passenger. Detective Ken Thompson re· ceived word last month that authorities in Fresno County had s potted wreckage of a while plane near a remote lake in the rough terrain of the Sier ra Nevada. The description of the plane. Thompson says, matches that of the rented Cessna 210 that was car rying his 26-year-old son Mi chael and pilot Robert Reed. 25. <See SEARCH, Page A2) and corporate taxes by $749 billion through 1986. But the only issue fo r the Senate today was an estimated $32 billion to $33 billion in s pecial tax relief for oil pro- ducers and owners over the next 10 years. A motion by Kennedy to s~nd the measure back to a Senate- House conference committee with instructions to trim the oil benefits failed, 55·20. "When we are asking school childr e n to pa y more for lunches. should we be giving away billions of dollars to the oil companies?" Kennedy asked. "When we are asking the elderly to give up their minimum Social Security benefit of $122 a month, should we be giving away $.13 billion lo the oil industry?" Sen . Bob Dole, R-Kan .. manager of the bill. accused Kennedy of staging a "media event" by blocking final Senate action on the bill Saturday night. "The facts are that whatever we do for anybody in the oil busi- ness . . . he would be wrong as rar as he (Kennedy ) is COD· cerned.'' Dole said. He called Kennedy and a few supporters of his cause "the sa me old, tired liberal voices ... knocking the free-enterprise system." The final version of the bill was agreed upon Saturday morning by conferees who spent 14 hours hammering out dif· ferences between the House and Senate approaches, largely over how much of a break oil pro- ducers should get. (See related stories Page A3.) Calif ornia~s pay more for gasoline LOS ANGE~ES (AP> ~ Californians have been paying about seven cents more for a gallon of regular leaded gasoline than the national average, blit that price gap could vanish soon, according to industry statistics. The difference in price was at- tributed to an extraordinary drop Jn gasoline supplies last spring on the West Coast, the Los Angeles Ti m es reported Sunday. Meanwhile, a worldwide surplus of oil led to a drop in national gasoline prices. As production gears up this s ummer, gasoline supplies should be returning to normal levels and wholesale prices have already started to drop. Prices at the pump should follow, industry of. ficlalstold theTtmes. In March, the avera1e price for a 1aJJon of leaded re1u1ar gas was $1.32 both in California and na- tionwi~. Al supplies west of the Rockies dropped, however, tbe prices~ California ro1e. 8)' J uly 1, aaalJonofresularguollnecoat $1.34 ln California, ace0rdiq to the Lundber1 Letter, ao aut.horttaUve ma!*etin11w-vey, Nationwide, the price had dropped to$1.27 a gallon. The Times reported that the gasoline supplies in the West dropped so drastically last spring that less fuel was on hand then than had been available during the big 1979 aasoUne shortage. In W79, a 5 percent supply loss during the Iranian revolution prompted panic buying aod long lines .at servlc:e atationa. That trigger~ a ri.ae in the cost of oil of more than 100 pereent a year. When the first lines formed, the panic spread and drivers kept their gasoline tanks filled, usually carrying about three-quarters of a tank of gas. This put an add!· tional strain on supplies, slnce the average driver normally keeps just a quarter of a tank of au in ·bis car. But last sprtn1, panic ~Ylnl was averted. Addlllonal ·~• were shipped In from the Eut, alt.boueh uaually oil l1 lb.lpped from the West Coast t.o the ~ut, and demand ln California wu lower than tn·1'79, ln part*._. more tueJ-efftdent un are ln use. Delly,... ...... '70.., a.... Traffic at Orange County's normally bustling John Wayne Airport was . down by 15 to 20 percent /Oday Passengers find the going easier in the terminal. No panic at county airport Wayne Airport quiet ; m any left before strike By GLENN SCOTT OfllleDelty~S•" Alth ough m os t of the passengers al John Wayne Ai rporl seemed resolved this morning to flight delays caused by an air traffic controllers' 7 a.m. strike, Jonathan Haines of Laguna Be .:h was taking no chances on his CUght Call it bad luck, but Haines had a job interview in San Francisco at 10:30a.m. He already was wait· ing at the airport at 7 a .m. for a scheduled8:30a.m . AirCalflight. "l figure l'm going to wait," he said as he sat in a chair in the terminal lobby. But Haines was surprised when he arrived, he said, because the terminal was not busy. not rocked by panicky passengers. In fact, It was almost quiet. "l expected a big crowd. but I don't know where they are," he said. Bob Pike. AirCal's station manager. thought he had the answer this morning. "I think everybody got smart and left Saturday and Sunday," be said. An hour alter the strike began, some flights had departed and all other commercial flights were scheduled to leave, although of· rlcia.ls said the planes would be at least lS to 20 minutes ~bind schedule. Paasengers with less at stake than Haines seemed satisfied with the arrang-ement as they aat sleepy-eyed In waitini rooms while their commercial Jets wall- ed, doon open, just 1tep1 outsfde the terminal. AJ Principe of La Habra ~d Steve Scbrelner of Arcadia 1ald tbey were encoura1ed &bla weekend after readilla ~ hear- ln1 news ~port. U..t amaller terml.nab, 1ucb u J ohn w.,..., wouldn't have the problema tx· peeled at major alrporta. The two worlt collea1uea nn headed to a tralntn1 aeuAon ln Sacram e nto. The ir biggest worry, they added, was bow to re- turn to Orange County on Tues· day. "We're taking it one step at a time." cautioned Principe. "We may have to lake Greyhound or l heard they may put another Am· trak train on the route from San Francisco to Los Angeles.•· Vonna Hammerschmitt of Newport Beach accompanied her husband Robert to the airport, where he was heading for San Jose. "We tried to get out yesterday * * * and everything was full," she said. To her amazement, the terminal seemed less crowded than on normal Monday morn· in gs. If there was any part of the termina l th at seemed more crowded this morning, it was the pay telephones. They were Jammed at 7 a.m .. mostly by men in business suits holding com- plimentary cups of coffee in one hand, receivers in the other. "Just tell them I'll be there some time." said one of the callers. * * * Is it safe to fly? Opinions differ WASHINGTON (AP> -With thousands of air traffic con- trollers on strike, is it safe to fly? No, says the controllers' un- ion. Yes, say the government, the pilots and the airline in- dustry. To move air traffic, the Federal Aviation Adminlstratlon bas reduced the number of fll1ht1 'and is usini 2,500 supervisory and nonunion con· trollers and several buodred military air controllers. "I do not feel these people are qualllled t.o work ln the towen and centers of this country," said Robert E. Poli, preiident of the Professional Air Traffic Con· lrollen Or1ulaation , which repraenta nearly 15,000 COD· troUen. "I believe lt would pro. vide a sreat 1afny board.'' But Tra'.naportat.lon Secnlary Drew Lewla Hld tbat 1alet1 11 the flnt eGncenl of the FAA '1 COfttlnlebcy plan. -- "We're not going to jeopardize the public lives," be said. "We feel the plan is safe,'' said Daniel Henkin, spokesman for the Air Transport Associa· lion, which represents the airline .Industry. "The airlines and their employees in this situation as always wlU continue to ilve the highest priority to safety," Henkin said. "No flight "'111 be dispatched and no plJot will take off unless there ls assurance that all safely requlremente are met f'ully." Byron Wbitebead , a spokesman for the Air Line PUota Association, reported that the 1roup bas safety coordinators stationed at e•cb ol tbe oat.loo's 23 re1lonal control c•nt.en and tbat in the early houn ol the atrtke they reported no aafetJ problema. ••Al far u ulety 11 concemed, we fell •verythlnl 11 n«maJ," Wb.ltebead said. Firing threat voiced WASHI NGTON (APl -Presi- dent Reagan gave striking air traffic controllers 48 hours today to return to work or be fired. "I must tell those who failed lo report for duty this morning they are in violation of the law, and if they don't report for work within 48 hours. t hey have QUESTIONS, ANSWERS ON STRIKE -A4 STATE'S CONTROLLERS ENDORSE STRIKE, AS forfeited their jobs and will be terminated ." Reagan told a Rose Garden briefing this morn- ing. Reagan's announcement came at the same time the Federal Aviation Administration grounded much of the nation's commercial air traffic as the controllers , in defiance of a federal jud~e. launched their first nationw.ide strike. The walkout began with the day shift al 7 a.m .. local time, and the FAA said early indica- tions were that more controllers were staying off their jobs at some centers than had been an- ticipated while in other areas some controllers were defying the strike. No figures were available. Reagan told reporters that federal law prohibits federal employees from striking and that air controllers promised not to strike when they were hired. ''I hope you'll e mphasize again the possibility of termina- tion, because I believe that there are a great many of those people who have been swept up in this and probably have not reaJJy considered the fact that they have taken an oath. the fact that <See WARNING, Page A2) .DRllGI COAST lllTIHR Late night through mid· morning low cloudiness. Otherwise fair throu1b Tuesday. Not much tem- perature change. Highs ln low 70s at the beaches, rangin1 to low to middle 80s in the Inland sections. Lows tonight 60 to 65. ·llllDI TDIAY Thq're calltd the "girl Beati.1" and tMJI'~ Qivincl cutneu o good nam•. Meet thu MW rock group on Page M . \ •. ! -.. -... Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 3, 1981 Options eyed Air s~rike sparks rush for alternates Travelera raced with an a1r tn&rnc controllers• strike tlave t>eauo -hopplna t.ralnl aDd bulel outoltown. At 2 a.m. this mornina t2 callers from Southern Callfornla , ·were waJtln& to get throulb Oft Amtrak fes~rvaUon lines, IC• cording to Michael Harns, a reservations supervisor. Harris said. that the number or callers was extremely unusual, * * * 'From Page A1 FI.IGHTS ••• s s:;_-near I y al 1 stand by passengers were accommodated. Calls poured into AirCal's res- ervation lines as concerned travelers sought information on whether their flights would de- part, Peterson noted. Peterson saidAirCal, which operates 25 of the 41 jet de· partures permitted daily from the airport, intends to operate its normal schedule until otherwise advised by the FAA. The FAA has prepared a con- tingency plan to handle traffic. but its implementation has been held in abeyance while officials determine how much of an impact thestrikeishaving. Peterson said it is much too early to assess what financial im·· pact the strike may have. but pointed out that the threat alone of an air traffic controllers strike on June 22 is estimated to have cost the airline industry about S40 mil- lion inlostrevenue. * * From Page A1 * / but tb1t Ulla b~ve tlnce . dropped to ntar normal. Alf reeervtd tralnl <lboM re· quirln1 advance .Uc:ket•) betwMD Oranie County and San Fra.nc:ilc:o have been told out Wl• tU the middle or the week, ac:• cordlna to an Atntrak spokesman In San Franclaco. Seats are sUJI 1vallable on Wl· reserved trains between Orange County and Los · An&eles. However, a company spokesman warned that It may be atandinc room only. · Local Amtrak orficiala said they don't expect to see an In· crease in travelers until late to. day or early Tuesday momine. "l haven't noticed a big dJf. ference yet this morning," said Mark Ziegler at the Santa Ana station. "I imagine later on we will, though." Officials at the Fullerton sta· lion reported no significant in· crease in train riders this morn- ing. Requests for tickets on Greyhound buses were reported slightly higher this morning, as travelers began looking for alternative ways to reach their destinations. Kirk Hoover with the Greyhound Laguna Beach office said most of the callers wanted to travel to the east coast. \ However, a group of 16 people originally scheduled to fly to San Francisco Tuesday morning, will be taking the bus instead, he said. * * * WARNING ISSUED • • • this is now in violation of the law "I hope they will remove themselves from the lawbreaker situation by returning to their posts." Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis, who also briefed reporters, said the government will not offer the controllers any more money. "We do not plan to increase our offer to the union," he said. Reagan said the threat to fire the controllers was the only ac· tion open to him. "What lesser action can there be?" he asked. "The law is very explicit. They are violating the law." Reagan and Lewis spoke after a midmorning White House meeting a lso attended by At· torney General William French Smith. Lewis said beforehand that the government would not try to put controllers 'in jail, but would seek civil penalties and ask to have the union removed as the controllers' bargaining agent. Meanwhile, a federaf judge in New York City ordered air traf. fic controllers to halt their strike temporarily and appear in court Tuesday to explain why they should not permanently return to work. U.S. m ar'shals immediately were ordered to fan out with copies of the order, seeking striking controll ers and serving them with Platt's order. Failure to obey the judicial command could subject mem- bers of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization to contempt-of-court penalties. Representatives of the union were ordered to appear before Platt at lO a.m. EDT Tuesday to answer his order. The judge's order enjoined the controllers "from in any manner calling, causing or authorizing, continuing, en couraging and participating in and engaging in, obstructing or taking any part in any strike, work stoppage or slowdown or other concerted failures by FAA employees to report to work." The 7 a .m. walkout was in de· Mesa firm's safe rifled of $2,296 Whe n a U-Haul Rentals employee opened his Costa Mesa firm's safe early Sunday to reach the more than $2,200 sup. posedly inside, he came up with only a couple of rolls of coins, police said. Officers said someone with the sare•s combination apparently entered a window in the building at 2tB> Newport Blvd. sometime late Saturday or early Sunday and stole $2,296. fiance of another judge's order. U.S. District Judge Joyce Green in Washington ordered the union and its leaders to tell the court by 2 p.m. PDT today why they should not be held in contempt for disobeying her or· der making the strike illegal. Mrs. Green, at the predawn hearing, also granted the gov- e rnment's request to bar the un- ion rrom paying any benefits from Its strike fund to the con- trollers. Mrs. Green's order had pro- hibited a work 'stoppage or s lowdown for 10 days. Mrs . Green, who noted go~ernment employees are forbidden to strike, said a · hearing will be held Aug. 12 to consider a tem· porary restraining order, which would lengthen the legal probibi· lion against the strike. The un- ion was not represented at today's court session. The controUers, who direct air traffic at 23 regional centers and more than 500 airports, earn an average of $34,000 a year, with a low of $20,500 and a high of $49,200, depending on years of service and traffic volume. $10,000 taken at eatery in SA An armed man and his ac- complice escaped with ·a n estimated $10,000 in weekend re- ceipts from the Santa Ana Heights McDonald's restaurant early today after herding employees into a basement storage room. No one was harmed in the 1: 25 a.m. robbery, in which one of the holdup men brandished a .45 caliber automatic pistol. Orange Coun ty Sheriff's Department spokesman Sgt. Dan Sprat.t said the money was taken from a safe just as the restaurant was closing. The restaurant is located at· 2290 Southeast Bristol St. · Further details surrounding the robbery were not im- mediately available, Spratt said. Commenting on the size of the loss, Spratt said, "They got more than they usually get in bank robberies." Dollar soars LONDON (AP> -The dollar soared against major foreign currencies in early trading to· day, bitting a 5-year high against the West German mark, and a record level against the Italian Uia. Gold slumped below $400 an ounce for tbe second - time in less than a month. ORA GECOAST Daily Pilat \ CtaHlfled 9CIY.,,ltlng 1141142·5171 All oth•r depllrtrMn-. M2·4321 Thomas P Haley ,.....,__cr....~oo-. Robeft N. Wee<j ......,, MAIN OfFtCE UO Wut e.y SI , C•I• Meu, CA ~II --... ueo. C•I• Mew, CA .,._ ....., .............. CONCERT ON THE OREEN Joseph Pearlma n. director or the Orange Coast Community Symphony Orhcestra. con- ducts the American Home Symphony Pops in the fir~t of a four-concert series Sunday on the campus green at Orange Coast College, Costu Mesa. American Home is presenting the free public concerts through co-sponsorship of the col· lege and the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Other progra ms will be played at 7 · 30 p. m. Aug. 9, 16 and 23. 'Grand mal Waves, tides keep Mobil ups s~~zur~' lifeguards hopping . bidding hits Brady Orange Coast lifeguard de-4 feet underwater and had I or c 0 noco partments say they were kept stopped breathing. WASHINGTON (AP ) - James S. Brady, President Reagan's pres:; secretary who was wounded when Reagan was s hot March 30, had a major seizure in his hospital room today, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes announced. The seizure, known as a "grand ma t seizure, .. was treated with intravenous medication and anesthesia, Speakes said. A White House announcement said that Bi'ady's vital signs were normal and that he was sleeping under anesthesia in a recovery room at the George Washington University Hospital. Brady has been treated at the hospital since suffer ing a gunshot wound in the head during the assassination attempt on the president. From Page A1 SEARCH. • • The two Costa Mesa men were last seen March 19 when they took off from the Mammoth Lakes airport bound for nearby Bishop. '1t was snowing at the time. . Sgt. Ken Abell. a member of t he 'Fresno County Sheriff's search and rescue team. con· firmed the sighting but said that his department does not have adequate funds to bankroll a search. Authorities in Fresno say the plane is located near Red Slate Mountain which is a two-day hike from the neares t ranger's station. A volunteer team of moun· taineers that was to begin a search for the wreckage last week had still not been dis· patched today, sheriff officials said. It )Nas unclear when the search team would be sent into the mountains. An investigator for the Na- tional Transportation Safety Board, which investigat es airplane crashes, said his agen· cy is ·aware or the wreckage sighting. But, he said, it is too early for them to take any ac- tion. "We're on standby right now," said Terry Armentrout, an in· vesligator for the board. "We can't launch an investigation un - til the wreckage has been clear- ly identified." He said it is up to Fresno County to go into the mountains and attempt to locate an iden- t if i cation number on• the wreckage. ·•We've gone· up on these things before and they've turned out to be wild goose chases," said Armentrout. Thompson claims the whole thing seems like a Catch 22 situation. ''This is the most unreal thing that's ever happened to me," Thompson said. "Unless you've lost a child it's hard to express the feelings I'm going through." Mr. Hamilton • serv1ees set Funeral services for lonctJme Newport Beach resident Jack B. Ham.llton, 72 , who died of leukemia last Thursday, will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Pacific View Chapel, 3500 Pacl.flc View OrJve, Newport busy over the weekend ma~ing However. by the time she was rescues as 4 to 5-foot waves and brought to the beach her rip currents plagued bathers. breathing had resumed after be· Laguna Beach lifeguard ing given mouth-to-mouth re· spokesman Bruce Baird said a s uscitation. Baird said Ms Covina woman nearly drowned M artincs was taken to South at Mountain Road beach Satur-Coast Medical Center where she day. Baird said when lifeguard was treated and released. Mike LonJ?field reached Eleste Baird said about 70,000 people Martines she was noating about showed up at city bPaches over the weekend. Surf wa s reported Drug sales charged to beach guard Laguna Beach undercover officers arrested a seasonal lifeguard who police said was selling narcotics rrom his lifeguard tower at Moss Street Beach. Thomas Lindheim . 20. or Mission Viejo was arrested . Friday afternoon while on duty at the beach tower, police said today. The lifeguard, who had onJy worked for the city for seven weeks, pUl'portedly sold a small amount of hashis h to an undercover oJficer. Police said th! arrest wu the result of a complaint from a beachgoer who purportedly overheard a conversation between the lifeguard and another party near the tower. Lindheim was immediately replaced at the tower by another guard Friday afternoon and booked on drug charges at the city police department. City officials s aid he was later released on his promise to appear in court on the drug charges. Police hunt rapist of Mesa girl, 16 Costa Mesa police sought a man with shoulder ·length blond hair wno reportedly raped a 16-year-old girl in the parking lot of an apartment complex at 12:30 a .m. Inve"ltigators said the girl was walking a long Wilson Street when the man threatened her with a gun he claimed was con· cealed in his pockeL at from 3 to 4 feet and 141 rescues were performed. Newport Beach lifeguards re ported 185.000 beach visitors on both Saturday and Sunday, an unusually large crowd. Eighty· one rescues were made. Evening beach.goer s in Newport Saturday were sur· prised by the landing of a Coast Guard rescue helicopter Lt. Frank Mullins of the guard's Rescue Coordination Center in Long Beach said the pilot dis- covered a hydraulic leak while flying over the ocean 30 miles from shore. No one was injured in the emergency landing. Mullins said the craft was repaired on the beach and returned to Long Beach Saturday night. Hunt ington Beach city lifeguards said a weekend crowd of 90,000 was counted. No major incidents were reported and 89 rescues were performed. Huntington State Beach guards said the crowd at l~eir strand was estimated at about 139,000. There were no serious i ncidents reported and 40 rescues. Three killed in two fires OAKLAND <AP J -Two chilctren and a man in a wheelchair died in San Fran· cisco Bay area fires, authorities said today. Lavelle AJlen, 4, and Ebony McDonald, 6, died in a blaze that started in the closet of a north Oakland home shortly after 9 a.m. Sunday. Luther Townsend, 64, died Saturday night in Oakland when fire overtook him Ws he tried to leave his burning apartment in a wheelchair. NEW YORK CAP) -Mobil Corp. today boosted its offer for Conoco Inc. lo $8.6 billion in an effort lo keep the bidding war for Conoco going until it can get government clearance to begin buying shares. Mobil , locked in a war with Du Pont Co. and Seagram Co. Ltd. for control of the nation's ninth· largest oil company, said it would pay $115 a share in cash for 51 percent or the Conoco s hares. up from $105 in its earlier orrer. Mobil did not change the other part of its offer, providing for securities worth $85 a share ror each remaining Conoco share. The old offer was worth $8.2 billion. Mobil is the only one of the three bidders that still faces ma· jor antitrust questions. and il said the increase was "in rec· ognit1on of the fact that a Conoco shareholder will have to wait longer for payment" from Mobil than from other bidders. Seagram, the big Canadian distiller. already has begun buy- ing shares or Conoco, and said Sunday it has bought. or wiU soon buy, about 18 percent of the company's stock at S92 a share. Du Pont. offering a total of $7 .3 billion, said it has received tenders for more than SO percent of Conoco's s hares and said it expects to have final antitrust c learance from the Justice Department by Wednesday. Fuentes gets panel post Thomas Fuentes, senior vice president of a Newport Beach engineering firm, has been elect· ed president of the 12-member Santa Ana College Foundation, which administers scholarship programs for the college. Fuentes, a Santa Ana CoJlege graduate, is a member of the Republican State Central Com· mittee and first vice chairman of Orange County's Republican Party. He is also communications director of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange and a member of the U.S. Catholic Bishops Na- tional Advisory Council. 1 A welt l<nown basic collon 01 blended fabtic The fobtlC is very duioble and Is POPUiar tor alt types ol garmen1$ l!Orn W0<1< clothes IO sPOrtSW90! and everongweo 2 A coarse blue dul'lgaree used IOI .....orl< Clothes. ooglrolly used for 50•IOB work clothes Michael P. Harvey .......... °'** Cooyrl"" "" o.-c .. tt P\>1111.i.1119 c-Ho "'"' llO<i.~. illuMr•tlot1l, tO•IOrlel m•lltr ot ect. •t•11Hme"h ,..,,,n tno bt rtprociuod wllt>oul •M<l•I jltrl'ftlulof\ot CCIPl'fl9111 o .... , • Beach. L Kay Schultz °""°"" -~ t<enMth N. Goddard Jr. ~~ Thomas A Murphlne ~ a.m.d Schulmen ~ a. .. t4. Looe ~ ..... t ... c.rot A. MOOte ....... ' Mr. HamUton co-founded the· First Step House, a Costa Mesa recovery home ror alcoboUcs, 25 years a10. He also waa a member of the NewPort Club, a se:tvlce or1anlution. Mr. Hamilton, wbo h.cl lived ln New)>Ol't Beach for :J::St ia survived by bb son, or Mce.ll, Idaho, d.aqbter, Donna Lee Thomet.a of BolH. Idaho, and 13 IJ'&ndcbild.ren. Al's Garage; Your Denim Store A. Levi "501: Sl'\flnk ·to-ftt boSIC denim B Lee Rider. Straight leO derwm. C. le ... Hor·Men $"8tch denim o. CoMn Klein. W Ol. denim. ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (71~) 644·7030 ·-·· - a 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 .... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Mondav. Auauat 3, 1981 N •• Dow Jones Final . Down 6.08 Clo Ing figure 946.25 ~~' ~ .. ~ ... ,~ What is tlie money supply? Thia I.I tluJ firrt of a two-port 1nit1 trploinin11 tht mone11 aupplJI. Arguments about the huge U.S. money supply and resuJUng high interest rates dominated the re- cent Ottawa conlerence of the world's major tn· dustria.llled oaUoos al which President Reagan was introduced to bis feUow leaders. Ups and downs UJ the U.S. money supply. usually running into bilbor111 a week, oow make big headlines on the financial pages and even reach the front pages as well as TV evening news reports. Interest rates respond at once to the money sup· ply totals the Federal Reserve Bank of New York re· leases from Its stronghold at 33 Liberty St in New York City at a ~ specified minute each Thursday after · ~ ~ noon. ln finan-__ cial centers .~-..-..·~Ar----~----~~ ! ro 0 r ~ ~ ~ : ~ : SYlVIA PORTIR figures a re awaited with anxiety. The "money supply" and in· terest rate levels are actuaUy becoming accepted topics at social parties. The money supply? What is the money S\lpply? Interest rates soaring because the money supply balloons? What sense does that make? Since.when is it logical for the cost of a commod1 · Ly <money) to rise sharply because the supply or th al commodity increases? ls it not simple common sense to expect that the bigger the supply of a product, the less it wiU cost -aod the smaller the supply of that product, the more expensive will be its price? M~y, says my dictionary, is ''any medium of exchang especially as issued by a government or authori . public authority." Obviously. what the govemme ts of the world's industrialized nations and the securities markets are referring to goes well beyond this definition. Money, in the minds of mJlbons of Amencans, 1s the cash in our pockets or wallets (coins or b1lls ). Again obviously, what is being debated so furiously goes far beyond that easy explanation. Money, in the minds or other millions more sophisticated in financial jargon, includes not only cash in our possession but al.so deposits in banks that can be withdrawn and transformed into currency on demand, via the writing of a check. Once more. too simple. So? So. below are the definitions of the ·money supply" as of early August 1981 -and I'll wager countless numbers of you have hoped someone. somewhere would give you prectsely this guide. MI: This is the total most frequently reported an the news rtashes Thursday afternoon from New York and is the most basic m easure or mone~ 10 our na· tion. CM stands for Money, of course.> ll includes all cur rency in circulation (the coins in your pocket, bills in your waJJet, currency in a strongbox at home or safety deposit box at a ban.k) and it also includes ail demand deposits at U.S. banks (mearung money deposited at banJts which can Indeed be withdrawn on demand by writing a check). Wedneaday: TM "logic" of the tngg~r the supply th~ hiQher the co8t. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT GOLD COINS NI W Y4)ttlt (All') -l'fkM llllil .. ....., fl .... tllllll. _,...,.-•Mtl lllwMl't't ~- ll~ ................... ..... ........ I.,.., •.• '414.JS, eft •.n. ........ ...,u,,..,-.,uws.e« ... n. .......... c-. ..... ,.., .......... ..,_..., ~:~ METALS HEW YORK <APl Spol nottfUfO...\ met.el prk al !OOH c.,,., U~·H cent\ • pound, U S On lin.IOM. L•• 4l cents• _..o. ZJM .. v. <MIU• pound, Gell••rlG Tll• l7.JlllO Met.els w .. ~ com!IO\llt II> Al_._ 1..-i cenu • PoUl"d. N v ~ $4."S.OO per 11•\k ,....._,. 5.00 00 ln>y oi N V SILVER H...ay ~ 1-4.,..,..,, 1' JOO per troy ounce GOLD QUOTATIONS ......... : mottllft9 lb Ing "'1 SO. Off $IMO L•-: elltrnoon fl•lno i>•> !JO, oft 51),JO. ,..n.: ett.moon 11••no .-u1. Oft ., O' .,,..,.,.,~·"·Off 112 .. &wl'tdt: l•te ll•tft9 '3tl.OO, Off M.00, .,...oo Hlr.9" M ... y & He"".., (only O.lly QUOlel s,:m.50, olf 51'.50 ........ , (only CMlly C!UOlt) 5!fJ JO. Oft t!UO •~: \only o.lly 11wt•I 1.~ic.1eo ~.JO,oll$14.0' ••11•1tllc Mell•••• •••ti: '•o•.so 1H1<'*'09d • SYMBOLS .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augutt 3, 1981 Sta1•ting like new? Split baseball season appears certain , From AP dbpatcbea If the American Lea1ue schedule for the opentn1 of baseball's second 1981 season looks strikingly famlllar, It -4iould. lt aJso waa the openin1 /Schedule for baseball's first 1981 season last April, when a strike seemed unt.hlnkable. On Monday, Aug. 10, one day after major lea1ue action re- sumes with the All-star Game at Cleveland, lt wlU be Chlca10 at Boston, Kansas City at Baltim ore, Mlfwaukee at Cleveland, Texas at New York, Toronto al Detroit, Oakland at MiMesota, and the Angela at Seattle in the American League. Seventeen weeks ago, it was Chicago at Boston,• Kansas City at Baltimore, Milwaukee at Cleveland, Texas at New York, Toronto at Detroit. Oakland at Minnesota, and the Angels at Seattle. THE ONLY differen ce between then and now is that, in that second week in April, every- body started even, with nothing but zeroes i,. the won-lost col· umns -and that may wind up being the same, too. At the moment, New York leads Baltimore by two games in the East Divi sion . with Milwaukee three games back, Detroit 31/:z off the pace, Boston four games out and sixth-place Cleveland only five games behind. In the AL West, it's pretty much a four-team race, with Oakland in first, Texas l'h games back, Chicago 2'h off the pace and the Angels six games out. BUT THE MAJOR league owners, partic ularly the AL owners, appear inclined to wipe the slates clean and start every- body off even again, creating an entirely new season for the remaining eight weeks of what was supposed to be a 26-week season. posed to the split season, Philadelphia and St. Louis were undecided and the other eight •teams were in favor. In the AL, Chicago and Baltimore were op- posed, Texas , Milwaukee, Detroit and Cleveland undecided and the rest in favor. THE OWNERS are to meet Tuesday in Chicago to decide whether lo approve the agree- ment announced last Friday. The 28 player representatives Cone from each team ana one representing each league> met in Chicago Saturday. and voted unanimously to recommend that the 65().major leaguers give their approval. That aJso will be de· cided this week. Baseball is facing what could be a monumental task, namely winning back its fans. ''I think we aU owe them an apology," was the sentiment expressed by Seattle third baseman Lenny Randle. His feeling was shared by other players and owners. One way of winning them back would be to create pennant races that weren't there before. In the National League, the "opening day" schedule for next Monday isn't a car bon copy or the one in April -but it's close THE NEW YORK METS will ~e visiting the Chicago Cubs. Just as they did when their seasons opened April 9. For the moment, though, they're the two worst clubs in the league, the l Mets at 17·34 and 15 games out of first place In the East and the Cubs at 15-37 and 171h out. • What better present to give : the new owners of the Cubs, the ' Chicago Tribune (assuming the I sale by the Wrigley family Is ap· proved) this week, than a team tied for first pl ace in the I division? That's what Chicago will be if the major league owners go for the split-season • idea, with its mini-playoffs to 1 determine the division wiMers. ALSO IN THE NL next Mon- day night, the Pittsburgh Pirates will be in Montreal, just '1 as they were April 9. And the Philadelphia Phillies, who ' opened the 1981 season with a f one-game visit to Cincinnati ! April 8 before heading home to , face St. Louis, will be home I against the Cardinals in this 1 1 opener. The NL's three other openers , all different from the first ones, are Cincinnati at the Dodgers, Atlanta at San Diego I a nd Houston at San Francisco. I There are, or course. other ways to try and win back the fans -and Ray Kroc, owner of 1· the San Diego Padres (last in the NL West), is doing his part. 1 . "YOU DESERVE a break to· day," is his hamburger chain's slogan, and the fans will be get- ting a big break -free ad- mission to the Padres' "second" opener against the Braves. "our way of telling the fans we're sorry," Kroc explained. Seating j is on a first come-first served basis and could cost the Padres as much as $250,000, what they would make on a sellout of all ~ 51,562 seats in Jack Murphy Stadium. Cincinnati .' a lo ng with a ! number or other teams, will be playing a few exhibition games in the days leading up to the AJI· sta r Game al Cleveland. The Reds are scheduled to visit the California Angels Friday and Saturday. In a CBS telephone survey conducted Sunday, spokesmen ror 16 or the 26 teams favor adopting a split season, with four clubs opposed and six un- decided. A simple majority is needed in the American League to go to the split season, while a three- quarters vote is needed in the National League. If one league favors it and the other is op- posed. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn may cast the deciding vole. Long, short of it Cooperstown beckons Mize, Gibson GETTING WITH IT Gene Mauch spent most of ht~ time watching his pitchers Sun- day. including Steve Renko above. Rod Carew look som e time lo accommodate autograph seekers (below > during the Angels' workout at Anaheim Stadium. In the National League, Cin· cinnati and Montreal were op· COOPERSTOWN, N. V. <AP> -For Bob Gibson, the trip to Cooperstown was as short as possible. For Johnny Mize, It was long and agonizing. Gibson and Mize, a long with Negro League pioneer Rube Foster, were inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame Sunday. Gibson, 45 , returned to the spotlight onJy five years after his retirement. He is onJy the 11th man elected to baseball's s hrine in his first year of eligi~ility . MIZE, MEANWHILE, bas been retired for 28 years and eligible for the Hall for 23. But he was bypassed 20 times by the Baseball Writers' Association of America and twice by t he Veterans Committee before making it this year . "I certainly a m proud to be h e re," said Gibson , who amassed 251 wins, 56 shutouts and 3,117 strikeouts In his out· standing 17-year career . He is the only pitcher to win the . seventh game of a World Series twice and had seven consecutive Series vict ories in a 7 -2 postseason record. . "I've devoted m y life to baseball.'· Schmidt offers another • view of losers Never one to do things at haJf- speed, Gibson was the most In· timidaling pitcher in the game for much of the 1960s. He was so dominant in 1968 -22·9, 13 shutouts, 268 strikeouts and a phenomenal 1.12 earned run average -that he won the first of bis two Cy Young awards and the National Leaeue's Most Valuable Player honor. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The major league players suffered a defeat in the basebaU strike, but Mike Schmidt says the fans were the biggest losers in the 50-day impasse. 1 The Philadelphia PhiUies' slugging third baseman was thinking of the fans confined to hospitals and homes and others who de· pend on baseball broadcasts throughout the summer to keep them going. ''Those are the people who really lost," said Schmidt, who had a .284 average with 14 home runs and 41 RBI before the strike started on June 12. It was the owners who benefitted "over the long hauJ," Schmidt said Sunday. Because of the settlement, "They're able now to curb players' salaries. This was their ultimate goal. "They don't mind paying the premier player big money. They can't stand the high price of mediocrity. The pool com- pensation concept ls going to hold down . .. the average players' salaries a great deal. And that's what I think they were after," Schmidt said . The agreement between players and owners "makes us the losers," declared the 1980 major league home run kine, lo reference to the degree of compensation for clubs losing free agents. "The owners made some gains by set· ling some things back from the players. Now th~y have a little bit better policlni efCect on themseJves1 based on the com· pensation pool," he aaded. Schmidt, who became a weekend television sports commentator durtn1 the strike, is going through workouts under the watchful eye of Manager Dallas Green and his staff. FOLLOWING THAT season, which Gibson capped with a rec- ord 17-strlkeout performance In Game 1 of the World Series against De troit, baseball lowered the pitchini mound to give batters a better chance to bit against the likes of Gibson. "A writer asked me how I'd like to be remembered," said There was nothing pint-sized about Johnny Mize I By HAL BOCK ~p Sports Writer The scene ls etched in your mind's eye, burned there indelibly. It ls a memory, a link to the past that you can not -must not -ever surrender. For after all, without our pasts, what have 1Ve left? It's true that everythlna ls malllified when you're young. You're a plnt·•ized person in a fuJl-aized world. That hu an effect. Home runs look looter when you'ie eight than. they wUJ when you're • Olf 48. For one particular el1ht·year-old, no 1'ome runs wUJ ever be quit. u IOQC u the ones Johnny Miu uaed to hit. ,, I The year was UM7 and Miu was play· Ing first base for a team called the New York Giants ln an oddly shaped stadium called the Polo Grounds. It was a place well-suited !or polo perhaps, but rather poor for baseball. · In that marvelous summer when lhia particular elght-year-0ld diacovered the wonders of buebaJl, lhe Giant.I' team resembled their nickname. They were a club of huae sluuen, alow movtns on tbe fleld but a treat to wateb at bat. Tbat summer they woukl bit 221 home runa, HtUns a NaUoaal Le&IUe record for lclal·ball fireworks. They allo would flnilb tOurtb ID an •ilbt·team l•aaue. a mattM ol UW. impe>rtance to the •ilht· year-Old. For him there WU nothing quite so wonderful as a oant·slled Giant home run. And no one delivered them as frequently u Johnny Miie. In the summer of 19'7, Mile bit 51 COMMENTA.RY home runs. No NaUonal Leasue left· handed hitter before or since has reached that total. The 1c:enarlo waa repeated Ume after marvek>ua time. lllae would ltrWI up to the plate, bis broad 1bouldera stretc:bln1 hd uniform Jetsey lo lta llmita, the bu1e No. 15 on bis back. He'd carefWly position himself in the batter's box and eye lhe p!tcber, sllin• up the enemy. ll1ze WM no 1uess-bitter. He studied the pitcben. When be went to the plate, be WU prepared. ae bad a mental book on t.be bvlen ud be referred to it all the time. In the field, Mile wa1 hardly a sasel.le. He wu a bl& man and played fttst bue tbe Wlf you'd expect a bl1 man to do it, He would not be mlltaken for a Gold Glo¥e wtaner 1. but. like tbe . Giant.a' annual Rudlnc. a bardly mat· tered to tbe 1-"v-old. Jmt lteep •wins· (lee JOHNNY, P ... M> Mize Gibwn Gibson, now a coach with the New York Mets ... I think as a person who was a competitor and gave 100 percent every time ' I went out on the field . 1 might not have been so good, but I gave it my all." ' Gibson nearly gave his all to ' another sport after starring in • basketball and baseball at l Creighton University. ·'I was looking for a $35,000 bonus to sign.'' he recalled. "Bill Bergesch, who's with the New York Yankees now but was scouting for St. Louis, was the · only one to tell me the truth. He said a lot of scouts were saying the closest I'd get to $35,000 was $3,000. "I SAID I LIKED basketball better anyway and wouldn't play baseball. "But that's the reason I signed with St. Louis ... honesty." Mize would have bad an honest beef with the selectors about being overloo.ked despite some exceUent career statistics. He hit 359 homers, including a : National League record for left· handed hitters of 51 in 1947 with the New York Giants. He won or tied for the NL home run title · four times, captured the RBI , 1 crown three times and the bat·,. ting title once. " And he's the only major leaguer to have hit three homers or more in a game twice in a l season in two different years. BUI' MIZE, 68, betrayed no bitterness at the ceremonies. •'Somebody said to me the other day that 1etting in by the Veterans Committee wu goine- in the back door," said Mise, known as "Big Cat" when he was belting the ball for the Cardinals. Gianta and. Yanke:ies from 1936-53. "l said, 'No. Look at who is on tbe committee: mana1ers, general managen, playen. Who do you want to plck you? They're your peen.· In Hollywood, when your peen elect you, you receive an Oscar." Mize said be learned bow to . bit wblle in bllh school. ) "My flnl 1ame u a ei:o. in Greemboro, N.C., I 1ot a bit t.be l flrlt Ume up and fell over ftnt base beeauae I wu wateblnl tbe t ball," he 1aid. ''l watcbed lt tver 1lnce.