HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-08-10 - Orange Coast PilotMllNll/\Y /\llt,11'.I I ll 1'1111
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Workmen assemble equipment in fuel·handLmg room next door to
new reactor at San Ono/re Nuclear Generating Stati011_
Catholic group
hits TV sponsors
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -
The Knights of Columbus, a
l.35·million-member organiza·
lion, is considering its most
political statement ever -a
possible boycott of sponsors of
"immoral, obscene or criminal"
TV shows.
Members of the all·male
Roman Catholic group are to
vote this month on a .resolution
based on r ecommendations from
some of the group 's 7 ,000
councils. officials say The
binding resolution would require
members to boycott the goods or
services of any sponsor of an
offending show.
Elmer Vonfeldt, spokesman
for the New Haven-based group.
said that while the proposed
policy is new, the feeling about a
threat from television is old.
''They (the Knights) have
expressed their concern long
before anyone ever heard of the
Moral Majority,'' he said.
He said the Knights are "very
strong on family values" and
feel many TV programs show
"excessive viole n ce a nd
abnormal preoccupation with
sex . . . particularly out or
wedlock. that would incite young
people to similar behavior."
The Knights holds its national
convention Aug . 18·20 in
Louisville, Ky. The proposed
resolution is one of several
hundred that will be brought
before the 431 delegates
expected to attend.
The resolution does not target
any specific shows for the
unfavored status and does not
name any sponsors. But
VonFeldt said delegates on the
floor could bring up specific
(See TV, Page AZ>
Mesan critical
after being shot
A 23-year-old ceram ics tile
helper, shot in the chest as he
argued on a west Costa Mesa
s idewalk with two men early
this morning, is reported in
critical condition this morning
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
.URllCI COAST WllTHIR.
Night and early morning
low clouds. Otherwise fair
but hazy sunshine through
Tuesday. Highs in tower
70s at the beaches and low
to middle 80s inland. Lows
62 to 66.
111181 TDllY
The Roma, wtth Pat Haden
tatabliaMd at quarl•rback.
Icicle of/ a nC10 campaign
tonight wfth an uhUriUon
garM CJQBinit New England.
A capadt11 crowd fl upecttd
.• .' ot Anaheim Stadium. StMJI
I PogcCl.
1111r . ,...,~ ......... t:;.:: .:
lil ·--. .
Investigators said Trinidad
Pena of 1780 Monrovia Ave. may
have been shot at 2:18 a.m . as
t h e r esult of an altercation
earlier in a west-side bar.
The shooting is the second in
Costa Mesa in two days.
Police say they still are baf·
fled over the early Saturday
morning slaying of Jeffrey Ran·
dall Knox, 33, who was shot
down as he walked toward hla
home from a nearby cooven·
ience market.
Knox, a cook for 10 yean at
the Victoria Station resuurant
in Newport Beach, wu shot
several times at about 1:30 a.m.
Saturday on Santa Ana Avenue.
Investigators say the bail of
bullets may have come from a
small caliber pistol fired from a
moving car.
Officers described Knox as a
quiet, unauuming man who
lived quieUy alone.
&unday's sbota on Mcmrovta
Avenue also were believed fl.red
by a small caliber platol, but in·
vestigatora said there II no ap-
parent link ln the two •hoodnp.
Funeral servicet for JC.-.,.
scheduled for 10 a.m. at Harbor
Lawn Memorial Chapel.
He wu a traduat. of Carona
del Mar Hilb Scbool ud a U.S.
Navy veteran. ·
He la 1urvived by bia ,.,_.,,
Mr. and Kn. Clem ltMX of San·
ta Ana Hel1ht1, bl1 brotber
Craic of Coata llHa •nd a
IJ'andmotber, Gladys Montoya
of Garden Grove.
• * • * * *
YOUR HDMITDll DAllY PIPll
1111 /\N<,f t <HINI V < l\l If O UNIA .''· < t NI '•
Potenti&l Onofre dangers defined
Planf?,ers write scenarios for what could .happen. at nuclear plant
Editor'• note: The U.S. AtomJc
Safetfl, and Uc.n#ng Boord wW con·
duct htaringa in Oronoe Count11
•Sorting Aug. 25 on emerg.,,c11
~Ion pl/ml for comrm.nUW1
. ntar th• Son Ono/re Nucltar
Gen.rating Station. TM• ia th•
aecond port of a three-part .,,U•
e.ramming t~. • By DAVID ICUTZMANN Ot•DMIY,......,.
Early in July, the Oran•e
County Board of Supervisors ap-
proved an agreement with
Southern California Edison Co.
lo provide for a public alert
system within the lO·mile area
surrounding the San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Station.
According to county off icials,
the system would include in·
stallation of up to 39 sirens in the
so-called emergency plaMing
zone around the plant.
The sirens, Edison officials
said, would be activated within
15 minutes of a n e mer1ency
situation at the huge nuclear in·
staUation. They would tell area
residents to tune into emergency
radio and TV broadcasts for in·
formation on where to go and
what to do.
David Pilmer , Edison 's
coordinator of emergency plan-
ning, said the sirens would cost
more than $1 miJUon to install,
an expense borne by the utility
in its SIS million quest to insure
that emergency plannin1 for San
Onofre ls successful. (Plant
critics would quibble Mtb the re-
s ults.)
What could go wrong with San
Onofre?
According to emergency plan·
nera, there are myriad
possibilities . And to deal with
them, officials came up with
four broad classifications of incl·
dents.
Jn increasing order of im·
portance they are an unusual
event, an alert, a site emergen·
cy and a general emergency.
This is what they mean:
An unusual event could signify
as many as 30 different mishaps,
including a minor release or
radioactive fluid. Or it could
mean that the temperature of
the reactor coolant system was
getting too high, requiring a
plant shutdown.
It could mean there was an
airplane crash on the sprawling
plant grounds n ea r San
Clemente or that an explosion
bad occurred with min or
damage to facilities.
According to emergency plan·
ners in Orange County. an un·
usual event would not constitute
a real emergency condition, but
could escalate to a more severe
status if appropriate action was
not taken.
If plant safety continued to
erode, an alert would have to be
called.
This could mean that an ac~i ·
dent had occurred resulting in
unexpected plant radiation
levels greater than l.000 times
the norm. It also could mean
that the reactor coolant system
had sprung a leak greater than
50 gallons per minute or that an
explosion had occurred affedin&
operation of the plant.
County planning offi cials sald
the purpose of the a lert level
was to assure that emergency
personnel would be available
and ready to respond when
needed.
If conditions continued t9
worsen, a "site emergency"
would be declared, raising the
possibility that radioactive
materials could soon seep or
spew out of the reactor 's con·
tainment domes, the reinforced
concrete cupolas that rise so
prominently along the Southern
California shoreline in northern
San Diego County.
At this level, a fire could be af.
feeling safety systems needed to
keep the reactor core cool or for
shutting down the plant.
It could mean an explosion
had caused severe damage to
shutdown equjpment or that an
earthquake had jolted the plant.
It could also mean that Edison
engineers had to fl ee the control
room.
Orange County's emergency
plan states : "Most events in this
category constitut e a clear
potential for significant environ·
<See GETTING. Page A3)
Controller strike spreads
Canadian action causes delay and cancellations
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
air traffic controllers strike is
spilling over U.S. borders, while
the Reagan administration says
"positively not" to negotiating
the retu rn of 12,000 fired
workers even il they end their
week-0ld walkout. .
She said a 7 a .m . Delta flight
to Toronto was still on the
ground in Boston two hours later
and that another Delta flight.
from Miami to Montreal, had
been diverted to Boston.
At Montreal, three planes
The president of a controllers
union local in Rochester, N.Y ..
Jerry Presley, said Canadian
controllers had not been
h andling U .S. flights into
Canada from Roch ester or
Buffalo, N.Y. Nor, he said, have
three flJ ghts from Toronto had
arrived since t he Canadian
action began.
No fligh ts had been scheduled
to leave Buffalo for Toronto. he
said.
Some French controllers
refused to handle U.S.-bound
flights Sunday, rerouUn1 tbem
to Canada, and the Canadian Air
Traffic Control Association told
members to stop procesalng
n'on-emergency Oigbts to and
from the United States at 4 a.m.
PDT today.
"We understand the Canadians
have replaced controllers involved
with supervisors."
At t he Federal Aviation
Administration. spokesman
Fred Farrar also called
Presley's charge "totally false"
a nd added that Rochester
controllers do not h a ndle
U .S.·Canadian air traffic.
Farrar said at mid-morning
that he knew of only one incideot
of an American plane being
refused service by a Canadian
controller The Canadian action caused
numerous flights from Logan
International Airport in Boston
to be delayed or canceled,
airport spokeswom an Jo Ryan
said.
bound for the United States
returned to the passenger
terminal at Dorval Airport after
being refused take-off clearance
by controllers who disregarded
orders they clear U.S.·bound
flights as usual.
.................... .._
QUIS1' Tl.a AHi.AD -After a Sunday 1pent patrollin1 the
hectJc recntational boating tratnc ln Newport Beach cban·
nela, Deputy Don Jdralemon of the Or•1e County Sheriff's
Department Harbor Patrol probably wbbes be could speed
up the swset. For a look at his daytime duties, see Paie 81.
flig hts from Can ada been·
landing at those two airports.
But the deputy tower chief at
the Gr eate r Buffalo
International Aiport. Vito
Borrello, said operations with
Canada were normal and that
He said a controller refused to
handle an Anchorage-Seattle
flight that was to have passed
(See CONTROL, Page AZ>
Tustin residents
return after spill
About 2 ,000 Tus tin ·area
residents were allowed to return
to their homes early today.
a bo ut 13 hours after the
discovet-y of a che mical spill
from a 3,800-gallon tank at a
fertilizer firm pr ompted their
evacuation.
,Tustin police said the
residents were. permitted back
in their homes at about 1 a.m.
after chemical spill experts
cleaned up the remaining
phosphoric acid that had leaked
from the tank at Larry Fricker
Agricultural Fertilizer Sales,
12791 Newport Ave.
Police and fir' officials said
five persons required treatment
for exposure to the acid's fumes, but none was hospitalized.
Two of those treated were
youngsters who bad discovered
the chemical leak Sunday just
IRVINE
..
N
EVACUATION
Spill area circled
before noon.
T he teen-age boys, f rom
Anaheim and Tustin, were
(See SPILL, Page ,\!)
Pig-like call real
Rubber snake prompts fair shriek
SPRINGFIELD, llJ. <AP) -
Jeanine Bloyd didn't call her
husband a male chauvinist pig,
she Just called blm like a pl1
and that was enough to win her
the husband·calling cOblell at
the Winoia State fair.
The ho1-callln1 and husband·
calling conlesta are beJd J.l the
same time at t he fair, so it
wwn't surprltina when Mra.
Bloyd let Jooae with a few pla
calla Sunday to summon her
husband to' save her from a rub-
ber snake.
As abe be1an her routine, Mn.
Bloyd told the crowd It wu just
an~ typical day at bome .
She unfolded a chair in the mid·
die -of the arena and betan
cleaaiq with a feather duster.
In came 4-year-old Nathan with
1ometbJn1 for mom my -a
llfellke rubber snake.
Shrieking, she bopped on top
of the chair and began yellin1,
"Kenny, Ke nnnleee ! Come
quick, it's an emergency!"
In case tbtal didn't do the
trick, she tried some of the
yodeling pig calls ahe teamed
bacl on the farm , and then,
hooking two fingers inside her
mouth, blew a piercing whistle
that would stop traffic· in mid·
Manhattan.
Mate no mistake, Kenny1
came a-runnlna, re1cuin1 bis
distressed wife .
In addition to doinl tbe
household chorea, Mn. lo)'d.
'25, is a psychology mafor at Western u11no1a u n1vers1t)' an
Macomb.
Clifford Hayes of Vllllf.a toolt
the title ln the bo1·cam-..
dlvisloo.
• • I
' U • • • • • • OrangeCoa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
RoCk concerts
• erupt mto
~tampede, melee
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -
A crowd of rock fans nearly six
times· larger than expected
s urged toward a stage at an
outdoor arena near here,
injuring 38 people, while a rock
concert 150 miles away ended in
fights that left two people shot
and two stabbed, police said.
The flnt lncldent erupted Sun-
day afternoon at the East Bat.on
Route Parish Grounds after a
crowd of 85,000 turned out for a
concert featuring rock
performers Rick James, Teena
Marie abd a group called
Cameo.
Police and witnesses said an
announcement of a delay
touched off a surge toward the
stage that, together with people
throwing fireworks, stampeded
the crowd. Sponsors had expect-
ed only 15,000, but police s aid
25,000 to 30,000 crowded the fair·
grounds, and the rest of the
crowd was outside. They said
traffic was backed up for six
1 miles.
At Lake Charles, west of
Baton Rouge, a policeman shot
two fans at a muscular
dystrophy benefit after one of
them grabbed a gun from an of-
ficer who was trying to stop
fighting that eventually involved
an estimated 1,000 people, said
Police Chief Jimmy Gwatney.
In East Baton Rouge, state
police first thought "a stam·
pede" was triggered by audio
equipment falling from a stage
on some spectators. But later,
E as~ Baton Rouge Parish
sheri ff's s pokesman Randy
Thompson said a combination of
things caused the panic.
''The crowd at one point
pushed forward, trying to get
closer and closer to the stage,
and a restraining fence col-
lapsed," said Thompson. "Then,
there was a nothe r report of
fireworks in the crowd and the
crowd panicked."
William Garrison, promoter of
the Baton Rouge concert, ssaid,
"I think the heat caused all the
problems. It panicked the peo-
ple." . .
From Page A1
CONTROL • •
through Canadian airspace.
The flight was re-routed over
water, Farrar said.
"We und e r sta nd the
Canadians have replaced the
1 q>,ntrol l e r invo lve d with
supervisors," he added.
Farrar said t he Canadian
action could have its greatest
effect late this afternoon, when
trans-Atlantic flights bound for
New York are due to pass
through Canadian airspace.
Earlier, anoth er FAA
spokesman, Dennis Feldman,
said the Canadian controllers'
action "could be disruptive, but
I'm sure it will be resolved."
"The Canadian government
can handle that," Feldman said.
"They did the same t.blng earlier
when they disciplined three
controllers" for refusing to
handle U.S.-bound flights.
The FAA said U.S . air traffic
on Sunday, the seventh day of
the strike by 12,000 controllers,
slipped to 76 percebt of normai
after hitting a peak of 83 percent
Saturday. Transportation
Secretary Drew Lewis
attributed the drop to cutting
controllers on the job from 60
hours' work last, week to 48
hours.
Lewis said it would take six
months before the FAA can
again handle much more than 75
percent of regular flights and 21
months to get back into full
operation.
Woman dies in fall
YOSEMITE (AP ) -A
Wllllamsvllle, N.Y., woman wu
killed in a fall whlle climbing
with p frlend in Yosemite
National Park, officials say. The
victim was identlfled as Judith.
Ellen McDade, 22. National
Park Service spokeswoman
Llnda Abbott said Ms. McDade
reportedly slipped while
climbing Tenaya Peak with a
companion around noon on
Friday.
OAANOE COAST
At Lake Charles, Owatney
said a ftgbt broke out aa crowds
were leaving the benefit concert
held by local bands ln the park
next to the downtown Civic
Center. He said the first fi&bt
was quietly broken up by police,
but about five minutea later new
fight1n1 erupted in the rear of
the civic center. lnvesU•aton
found a man Lytnc face down, hit
in the face with a beer bottle.
Other fight.a then broke out,
s aid Gwatney, and bis men
called for help. The violence uJ.
timately involved as many u
1,000 people. He said it had to be
quelled by 70 officers.
During the fighting, a man
identified by Gwatney as Steve
Guillory, 2.8, grabbed a platol
from the holster of a policeman
who was trying to subdue him
for resisting arrest. The· other
officer saw Guillory wave the
pistol in ·the air and the other
rired twlce, the chief said.
One shot bit Guillory in the
side, Gwatney said. He said a
bystander, Joseph Lee Henry,
20, apparenUy was bit jn the left
thigh by one of the two bullet.a
fired by the officer.
B,otb were taken to St.
Patrick's Hospital, but Guillory
later was transferred in serious
condition to Moss Regional
Hospital. Henry was in satisfac·
tory condition at St. Patrick's.
No charges were filed im·
mediately.
Also treated at St. Patrick's
were two men stabbed during
the violence and the man who
was hit in the face with the beer
bottle.
Honest sailor
g iven $1 ,000
he discovered
CINCINNATI <AP) -Navy
radioman Gerald W. Bentz Jr.
has today off, thanks to bis
co mmanding officers in
Charleston, S.C .. who th.ink that
stumbling across Sl,000 is a
once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Bentz, whose frigate sets sail
from Charleston in just days for
a six-month stint in the North
Atlantic, got the special one-day
leave after Cincinnati city
officials said be could pick up
the $1 ,000 he found last month.
The money has gone unclaimed
for a month.
Bentz, 32, found the money
July ll during the last day of his
military leave. He had been
staying here with his parents,
Gerald and Ellen Bentz.
"I was just walking down Blue
Ash Road on my way to my
buddy's house," he recalled. "I
looked down and -bingo -it
was silting in the middle of the
sidewalk, just laying there.
•'People keep telling me they
wish they were walking about
five steps ahead of me."
Bentz turned the money over
to Deer Park police and was told
that it would be bis if no one
claimed it within 30 days.
"I didn't know if it mlgbt be
stolen money. so I didn't want to
be spending it," be said. "And if
it was somebody's money
legitimately. I thought he should
get it back."
Since be had to collect the
money in person according to
law, Bentz bad to persuade bis
commanding offlcers to glve
him today off so he could make
it to Cincinnati. His ship, the
U .S.S. Trippe, leaves for the
North Atlantic tour in a week.
"It was no problem. They
were very nice about it. When I
told them what it was about,
they just said to go out and get
it," be said.
Bentz plans to spend some of
the money for a camera and
winter clothing for bis North
AUantic cruise, but also intends
to "slick most of it in the bank"
so he can pay for a trip home
when be returns to the United
States next sprlne.
"I'm awful surprised and
awful haJ>PY about it," he •aid. "I 'll bave a lot clearer COD·
science enjoyina that money
than ll I'd kept it."
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Newport saflor surveys problem of his 30-foot sailboat running aground Sunday south of Corona del"Mar.
From Page A1
SPILL . • •
exposed to the fumes as they
bicycled near the fertilizer firm
and apparenUy pedaled through
the liquid acid. They were taken
to Western Medical Center in
Santa Arta for precautionary
treatment.
Also requiring treatment were
two firefighters from the Orange
County Fire Department.
The acid s pill, which bad
begun about 9 a.m .. required
a utho rities lo evacuate all
r esidents li"ving in the area
generally bounded by Irvine
Boulevard, La Colina, Elizabeth
and Holt avenues.
The area most affected by the
fumes was the intersection of
Newport Avenue and Irvine
Boulevard, according to police
spokesmen. Retail areas also
were evacuated.
The first evacuations were
ordered at about 12:20 p.m. and
an emergency center was set up
at Columbus Tustin Inter-
mediateSchool.
A medical aid station also was
established at a department store
nearby. Radio and television
broadcas.t s and door-to-door
notification by authorities alerted
nearly 2,000 residents to leave the
area.
Assisting in the evacuation
and cordoning off the area were
police officers from Tustin.
Santa Ana, Irvine and the
Orange County Sheriff's
Department. Other units from
the Orange County Fire
Department and the California
Highway Patrol also were called
in. No problems were reported
in the removal of residents.
The phosphoric acid, which is
used in the manufacture of
fertilizers, can cause burning in
the chest and watering of the
eyes if its fumes are inhaled. It
is considered to be polaonous.
Ca use of the leak in the
above-ground tank is under
investigation. Spokesmen for the
Tustin police and Orange County
Fire Department, which serves
Tustin, said they did not know
what caused the buge tank to
begin leaking its contents.
Cleanup of the toxic spill by
diking and vacuuming was
handled by the IT Corp. of
Wllmington.
Streets which had been closed
ln the area of the spill also were
reopened early this morning.
The intersection of Newport
A venue and Irvine Boulevard
opened a short time later.
.From Page A 1
1V ...
offenders to be included in the
resolution.
The resolution's concluslon reads:
"Further resolved, that to
prevent the implanting of
immoral, obscene and criminal
tboupt.a in the minds of men,
that all memben of the Knicht.a
of Columbus do everythlna ln
their power to influence their
family, friends, relatives,
nelpbon and others to keep
away from and refuse to
patronJae all companies and
or1anlaatlon1 who use aucb
metboda ol lbelr advertlainf for their promotional pUl"pOMI,"
Volunteer army
incentive eyed
W ASHINQTON (A P> -A new
"01 BW" that may pay for a
colleae edueatloa for me Wbo Hrve ID eombet Jobi la beJni
cou&dend M an lncintive ti
IUltU the voluntary U1D1 t tM Peuta1on '• top ma npowar
otfta.J IQ'I. J Delwe aftldal Lawr~ J .
Korb Hid Sanday tbat the
Reapn actmlnlltntlon Dlw to
1ubmlt to Coa1re11 6y next
January it• pr op•eall for
exl*ldlna educatioa blDeftta I«
former memben of UM armed
forces.
Coast waters lake-like
Waves. average only 6 inches, thousands at beaches
Lifeguards along the Orange
Coast said the thousands that
poured onto b e a c hes thi s
weekend were treated to lake·
like conditions with waves
averaging only six inches in
some spots.
Newport Beach city guards
said bodysurfers at the Wedge
concentrated on their tans when
waves at that usually-li vely spot
failed to raise above one foot.
Despite the flat ocean condi·
lions, one 25-year-old beach vis·
it.or in \Vest Newport got into
trouble when caught up in a rip
tide Sunday afternoon.
Authorities said a lifeguard
rescue boat had to come to
Arturo Sanchez's aid off 7oth
Street. when he was pulled under
the water. Sanchez was treated
by lifeguards and taken to Hoag
Hospital where he remains in
serious condition.
A Newport man also bad his
problems Sunday when bis 30-
foot sailboat ran aground on the
beach south of Corona del Mar
adjacent to the Ir vine
Equestrian Center.
Skipper B . Tu c k er totd
authorities he had bis craff on
automatic pilot and that when
the boat started heading for
shore, be couldn't release the
automatic pilot.
The boat, partially destroyed
on one side, was to be pulled off
the sand today.
Stale lifeguards in Huntington
Beach, where waves stayed
between one to two feet, report·
ed 175,000 persons showed up at
the beach over the weekend.
Thev made 50 rescues.
H·untington Beach city
lifeguards said 100.000 turned
out during the two days to enjoy
the peaceful ocean conditions.
The water temperature in Hunt·
in gt.on topped out at. ea degrees.
In Newport Beach, 170,000
beach visit.ors squeezed onto the
sand. There were 30 rescues,
mosUy attributed to a slight rip
tide, over the weekend.
A women's volleyball tourna-
ment at Main Beach in Laguna
bolstered attendance there.
Guards in Laguna estimated
41,000 persons showed up during
the weekend.
San Clemente, Doheny and
San Onofre s tate beaches at-
tracted 20,000 visitors each day
wilh little rescue activity.
"It was a calm weekend,"
commented one lifeguard, "cer-
~ainly nothing to write home or
get excited about."
Airlfue chairman dead
Chief of embattled Continental apparent suicide victim
I
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
c hairman of Continental
Airlines, an embattled organiza·
lion des perately fighting
takeover by Texas International
Airlines, apparently committed
suicide, a Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport spokesman said.
The body of A. L. Feldman, 53,
Continental 's cbairm an and
chief executive officer, was
found Sunday night in the ex-
ecutive sulte of hls airport of·
flee, said John Smith, the direc·
tor ol airport operations.
Smith said a gun waa found ln
Feldman's suite and that the
Continental executive apparent-
ly had shot himself. His body
was found shortly before 8 p.m .
Los Angeles Police Depart-
ment detective Gary Guthrie
said, "We have a telephoned
confirmation that an A.L .
FeldQlan bas been shot." Jn-
vestiiat.ors were unavailable for
further comment early today
Feldman stepped lnto the poet
of chainnan of the corporation
at Continental last month.
George A. Warde. was na"!ed
president and chief operating
officer and Robert F . Six
retained the title of chairman of
the board.
Although Feldman reportedly
met Sunday with other Conlinen·
tal officials to map strategy ln
what was shaping up as a losing
fight against the Texas Interna-
tional takeover, his death ap· pe~red unrelated to those
events.
''I understand -this is not of·
ficial -that he left three suicide
notes," Smith said. "They
basically stated that he lost his
wife recently and had the in·
timation that life wasn't worth
living."
Smith said a gun was found in
Feldman's s uite . He did not
know who found Feldman's
body. '
BeCore joining Continental on
Feb. 1. 1980, Feldman bad been
president and chief executive of.
Cicer of Frontier Airlines nine
years.
Before that, he served 17
If you want .. Cord Straight Legs,
We'Ve Got'em.
Our four be8ic c:olot'l ate Off-while, It. blue, tan
· ard NNy. In 84" ooeton, 16X potyester for shrinkage control.
years with Aerojet General
Corp. most recently with Aerojet
Nuclear Systems Co.
A graduate of Cornell
University. Feldman held a B.S.
degree in mechanical engineer-
ing. He was a graduate of the
executive program of Stanford
University and was an Associat-
ed Fellow of the American
Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics.
He is s urvived by three
children, David, 25 ; John, 23;
and Susan, 20, and two brothers,
Herbert and Lester Feldman, a
Continental spokeswoman said.
Attack p rotested
NEW DELHI CAP) -About
150 demonstrators shouted
slogans outside the U.S. Em·
bassy here today in a brief pt?-
test against the June 7 Israeli al·
tack on an Iraqi nuclear reactor.
The Israelis used U.S.-built F-16
jet fighters in the raid.
AL:SGAAAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
FromPageA1
GETTING ~WAY • • •
meDtal releuet ol radloacUve
material."
TM lut condition. "1eneral
emer1ency," would Involve a
major tallure of plant safety
1y1lem11, leadln1 to potential
m 1Jor release of airborne
radioactive materlala. Evacua·
lion would b e a dlatlnct
poeslblllty. Pilmer said that In the three
hi1beet categories -that la, ex·
clud.lna an unusual event -the
w atcb en11neer at San Onofre
woukl be charted with the
responsibUlty of calling out sla·
tion management to activate an
on -site technical s upport center.
From this so·called ''nerve
center" near the plant's control
room, utility officials would seek
to quickly evaluate an incident,
control it and also notify off.site
agencies.
In the caae of an "unusual
event," plant orricials would be
required to contact Orange
Co unty commu ni cations
facilities, on a telephone de·
signed and installed for that
purpose, within one hour of the
occurrence, county plans say.
·'When higher alert levels are
Involved, either due to a de-
gradation of a former <reported)
problem, or as an initial report,
the contact will be made within
15 minutes," the plans state.
After such an a lert, plant
operators would keep Orange
County authorities completely
informed as more information
becomes available.
School in Hunthaston BHch.
Notification of the public '
would be accompll1hed -
theoretically -by bavt.Gc re•i·
dents tune In on radl0t and
televi.•lon to receive information
on what la to be done. That'•
where tbe 1lren1 aa well as
mobile public addreu unita
would ~me in.
Decisions on whether to
evacu.ate or simply have res!·
dents stay in.doors, offJclala said,
would be "an early criUcal d•
cision."
Selective evacuation or
general evacuation uJtimately
could be ordered.
Specific hospitals which could
handle eatients with radioactive
contamination and compllca-
tions would be utillzed, incluclio1
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital. Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach, UC
Irvine Medical Center in Ora.nee
and South Coast Medical Center.
The chairman of the county
Board of Supervisors would
have ultimate responsiblUty for
command · and control of the
Orange County emergency OI'·
ganization.
In San Clemente and San Juan
Capistrano, key city otrlcials
won.Id pr.ovide direction and coordination of emergency ac·
tivities in their communities.
Re-entry of residents to affeqt.
ed areas would take place when
radiation levels diminished suf-
ficiently to meet occupancy
standards spelled out in the
county's response plan.
(On Tuesday , plant critic a
describe their objections to
emergency preporedMu for com-
m unitie& near the San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Station.)
··---------~
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1981 s
ORANGE COUNTY/8AN ~GO COUNTY
AMM MOtmf Of' IAH ONOFM NUCUAA GaNeM11NO STATION
EV.ACUAllON AOUTU TO AECEP110H CEH1EAS
DISTNCT R~C!ll'TlOH C!NT!R ROU'TW NORTH
-;_:~:.4;;~ Un•-•llY ot Cal1lom1a. I 5, 1406
UntYetS•IY SI IMne
~:::;:;:;:; Same as Aoov. Pac1llc Cont Hwy
O!anoe Coall Cot~
2701 Fa1r11ew Ro
15.1~
Coate Mesa
~ SameH Above Pac1llc Coast Hwy
_'..!,:," :.~:= ~ Santa Ana H•gh Sctoool '5 520 W Walnut St ,Santa Ana
:l\?-!'.i'f~i.l Tustin Hogh SchOol t 5
1171 Laguna Ad
Tustin
W//& Edison High School l'acll1c Coasl Hwy
21400 Magnolia Ave
Hun11ng101i Beach
This data would include mete·
orological conditions such as
wind s peed and direction,
estimated release rates and con·
centrations of radioactive
materials, the types of isotopes
which might be involved, on-site
monitoring results, extent or
damage at the site and an
estimate of repair time. * * * Evacuation routes f rom San Onofre lead to Irvine, Costa Mesa , Huntington Beach. Santa Ana and Tustin campuses.
Officials in San Clemente and
San Ju an Capist rano .
meanwhile, who also would have
been notified, would continue to
dire.-t their r esources and
personnel. There would be close
coordination between these
cities and Orange County, plan-
ners said.
Nail-biting nuclear emergency recalled
County s upe r visors and
emergency officials would have
to evaluate the seriousness of
the incident "in terms of possi-
ble hazard to the public," ac·
cotding to planners.
If evacuation became
necessary, pre-determined re·
ception and care centers would
be opened, principally on school
sites, in areas outside the
emergency and extended plan·
'ning :zones.
Six facilities were picked to
serve as initial reception cen·
ters. Citizens would report to a
center depending on which area
they lived in.
The six centers would be at
Santa Ana High School, UC
Irvine, Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa, Edison High School
in Huntington Beach, Tustin
High School and Marina High
Ask John Corney how well he
remembers the events of March
28, 1979, and he'll likely give you
a minute-by-minute synopsis of
that spring day.
And of the next, and the next,
and the next . . .
As an official or Penn-
sylvan ia " s Emergency
Management Office in Har-
risburg, Corney became a first·
hand observer of the nation's
first and only commercial
nuclear power plant accident at
Three Mile Island, a name that
bas become a fixture in nuclear
terminology.
Within four tension·packed
days -beginning on March 28
-Pennsylvania's emer1ency
planners prepared for the wont:
evacuation of about 150,000 peo-
ple living within 10 miles of the
crippled nuclear power plant.
As it ultimately turned out, on-
ly pregnant women and children
under five years of age were
asked to leave the area while
engineers with Metropolitan
Edison struggled to gain control
of the plant's damaged Unit 2 re-,
actor.
Although there was no
meltdown of the reactor's fuel
core, Nuclear Reautatory Com·
mission officials said, there wu
corisiderable damage to it.
And alt.boutb DO fuJl.fied&ed
evacuation of local resident.a
became necessary. event.a at
Three Mile Island came to play
a major role in resbapin1
federal policy regardin1 pre-
paration of emergency plans for
communities near n uclear
power plant.a.
According to NRC spokesman
James Hanchett, t he federal
agency, before the Three Mlle
Island incident, did not require
off-site emergency plans as a
Heat and tempers soar
Thirsty prisoners protest, bridge stuck open
Coastal forecast ,
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We're . Listening •••
~t dt you like about the Daily PUot?
What don'l you like? Call the number below and 1ou~ mesa••• wtU be reeont.d, u..-crtbed •!'d
dell vtftd to the appropriate edit.or.
Th• same at-hour answertnc aerv.•ce may
be aaed to record letten to tbe editor on any
topic. Mailbox contributors must lDc:lude their
name and let.pbont number foe vertncaUon. No
clrculaUon cans. pleaH.
Tell UI what'• OD JOQt mlad.
842.-S 1
formal condition of licensing ap-
proval.
''We did require a utility to
have the capability to notify off.
site agencies," said Hanchett.
After Three Mile Island,
however, requirements changed
dramatically . A so-called
emergency plannln& zone was
established for communities
within 10 miles of a nuclear
power plant, requiring prepara-
tion of acceptable evacuation
plans.
These plans were required to
meet cert.a1o federal criteria as
well as paaa disaster drills
monitored by the Federal
Emer1ency Management Agen-
cy <FEMA).
When Comey and bia state and
local colleagues in Harrisbur&
found themselves confronted
with a nuclear crisis in March
1979, the plans at their disposal
covered much leas territory than
10 miles and were "rudimen·
tary" in comparison with docu·
ments now required by the NRC.
"It was a learning experience
for all," said Comey in a recent
interview, recalllng how of·
ficials coped with the ongoing
emergency at Three Mile Island.
The fint that local officials
knew of the situation on March
28 was at 7 a.m., three hours
after plant workers first noticed
problems with the Unit 2 reac·
tor.
Comey said utility officials felt
there was no need to notify off.
site &.1encies during those rmt
few hours.
But once the call came
through to state officials, all
emergency management offices
'
in a three-county area were
alerted. So were the governor's
and lieutenant governor's of·
fices.
"We we r e prepared, if
necessary, to begin tbe early
stages of relocation (of resi-
dents)," the state official said.
explaining that buses were
moved in for quick boarding and
departure.
Meanwhile, workers with the
state's Bureau of Radiation
Protection were put in contact
with utility engineers on site to
assess the danger at the plant.
By 8 a.m., an hour after off.
site agencies had been notified
of the plant's problems, the
bureau said further protective
action in the community was not
required.
This uneasy situation pre·
vailed for the next two days,
Comey said. By Friday, March
30, the ·'scenario began to un·
fold."
Radioactive materials were
released into the attnosphere
from the crippled power plant.
The releases were variously
described as both accidental and
controlled.
At this point, ''The NRC said
we should think of evacuating
out to 10 miles," said Corney.
The governor also r ecom-
mended that pre-schoolers and
pregnant women within five
miles of the plant also leave the
area.
A care center was established
at a large auditorium on the out·
skirts of the 10.mile emergency
zone.
Health officials told residents
near the plant to remain indoors
that Friday, but the advisory
was lifted later in the day.
Teletypes were used between
counties for communications
purposes and hot lines a1so were
installed. The federal govem-
m ent provided radio com·
munications equipment.
Though everyone remained
poised for the order that would
send 150,000 Pennsylvanians
scurrying for safe ground, the
situation never reached that
stage.
After hectic days filled with
contradictory announcements
and fears or contamination,
state officials said it would be
all right for residents who had
left their homes to return. "A
good number came on Monday, ....
said Corney .
The experience of dealing with
a nail·biting nuclear emergency
had several effects. '"The most
important thing out of all this,"
said Comey, "is that an aware-
ness grew of the potential . . . It
was always there."
Whereas emergency planning
for rlash flooding ·once took
priority over nuclear accident
planning, he s aid, the order was
joltingly reversed.
" (Nuclear planning) is very,
very high on the list of our plan-
ning people," he said.
Because of Three Mile Island,
requirements ror emergency
planning tightened considerably.
At the state and five-county area
around TMI. emergenc y
response plans have been re-
written numerous times. Now.
said Corney, "there is no such
thing as a finished plan."
-Damd Kutzmann
••
8 Orange Cout DAIL y PILOTi Monday, Auguat 10, 1ee1'
He's out to lose job
Education secretary seeks downgrading of his department
WASHINGTON <AP> -l:d\tCaUoa Secretary T. ff. Bell,
c&rl'Yial out a promile to Pr.a· deot a..,an, want.a hll CabUMt·
level d9partment downf.llCled to
a founclatlon, admln 1tratlon
1ource1 1ay.
If ::ri loel alq with aueb a , e, Bell, the aeCODd
aecretU')' educaUon, would
have to relinquish bla aeat in
Re.,an'1 Cabinet.
Tbe IOW'cet, who asked not to
be idenUfied, aald the Wblte
House 11 upected to decide
what to do with lb• SH llWloa
department by th• end ol Dnt moatb.
"We're not ,looktnc ror a NS·
ulatory aaency :'' one source
aald. "W.e 're lookiDI for
aometblna ot more 1cbolanb1p,
of more research-orientation.·
Tbat•1tbe1eneral focua.'' Durtnc lut year'• prealdentlal
campaign, Rea1an repeatedly
attacked the department aa a
manifestatioo of 1rowln1 federal
regulatory intrusion into tbe af.
fairs ol scbools and c0Ue1•, and
TMI official fired
in test cheating
KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. (AP)
-A sblft supervisor at the
Three Mlle Island nuclear power
plant baa been fired and
another's status ii under review
after the two admitted cheating
on operatin& licenain1 tests, tbe
Nuclear. Regulatory CommiuJon
reported.
The NRC said the two shift
auperviaora, identified only u
"lone-term" employees, bad
marked simila.rlties on their
IUUWer sheets during the April
tests. All 38 operators who took
the reactor operator and aenlor
reactor operator licenae tests
were reuaiened after General
Public Utilities, Inc., which
owm TM.I, confirmed reports ol
the cheatJ.q July 28.
The two supervisors who ad·
milted cheating were on duty
durin1 the several days in
March Ur'19 when TM I's Unit 2
was involved in the nation's
wont commercial accident, ac-
cordin& to NRC official Dudley
Thompson in Washington. Their
role at the time of the accident
Paper facing
lawsuit over
phony story
waa wiclear.
The operators were elven the
tests to ensure they would be
qualified to run the undamaeed
Unit 1. reactor under NllC res·
ulations instituted after the ac·
cldent. The NRC ls conalderin1
whether to schedule another ex-
amination for the operatort. The
NRC office is in King of Pruaaia.
The utility bas been aeeldn1
permission to restart Unit 1,
which was abut down for refuel·
ing wb'en its twin was involved
. in the 1978 accident.
The utility, with headquarters
in Parsippany, N.J ., is "natural-
ly dismayed" by the cheating
and is conducting its own in·
vestigation, spokesman Wllllam
Gifford said.
The second operator's employ-
ment ls still being considered,
the NRC said Thursday.
The NRC concluded that "the
degree of similarity of the
answers could only be a product
of cheating by these in-
dividuals," accordine to a state-
ment from Victor Stello Jr.,
director of the NRC's Office of
Inspection and Enforcement.
The NRC said the operators
ha ve given sworn statements
acknowledging they cheated.
Thompson described the two
operators as ''first-line
supervisors" in charge of the
staff operating the reactor dur-
ing an eight-hour shlft.
The agency said some parts of.
the examinations were "euen-
ti ally unproctored," but the
sessions during which the cbeat-
i n g took place bad been
monitored by NRC proctors.
• b• vowed to dilrnanlle tt.
Bell, a former U .8. com· m--. ol MucaUoD, t.UW 1 ln f avcr ol c~atlq th• cttput.
. mmt in 1"'. ·
It ODMed It.a doon lD 11.,
1880, four years after fOl'llMr
Preeideot Carter prom.lled tbe
N alkloal Education Auoctatlion
that be would 1eM to liberate
educatioG from the old Depart.
ment cl Health, Educatloa and
Welfare.
.
ae.,an bad d.lfficulty ftndlni someone to run the depart.mart.
and Bell became the laat cl bla
C•bi:ne( plw in JanuU')'. He tot
the post after promlaint ae.,an
that be would draw up
alternatives to its Cabinet
statua.
Congress would have to ap.
prove any cban1e in the 1,000.
employee department'• at.atu.
Bob Harmon, the NEA '• com-
municatlooa director, 1a1d tbe
oraeaniutlon would fipt any
move to tum the a1ency Into a
foundation. "We think tbe de-
partment ouebt to be given a full
chance to operate, and it hasn't
bad that yet," be said.
Tube births
said failure
CIUCAGO (AP) -Despite the
•birth of the first "test tube"
baby three years aco, artificial
fertilization is still largely a
failure, says an official at the
National Institute of Child
Health and Human Develop-
ment.
In an article in the Aug. 1 ls·
sue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association,
Gary Hodge n reports that
although s ignificant achieve·
ment.s have been made, "the
rate of success is disappoint·
ing."
Siqce the 1978 birth of Louise
Brown in England, fewer than 10
s ucceaaful "test tube" births
· have been reported in the world.
The failures are estimated to
number in the hundreds, wrote
Hodgen, chief of the pregnancy
research branch of the institute
in Bethesda, Md.
Pickup costs up
Commercial establishments in
unincorporated Oranee County
which were payln1 $30 to $50 a
week for trash pickup will be
paying 12 percent more as a re·
. .
LET THERE BE LIGHT -The Lady Chapel of
New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral is shown
at left, prior to the switch being thrown for a
new lighting system. At right is the chapel
as it appeared later that night. The lights
were originally intended to illuminate the
,, .........
courtyard of the Helmsley Palace Hotel
across Madison A venue. When the lights ac-
cident a 11 y fell on the c hapel. church
representatives saw the effect and agreed to
make it permanent .
Campers only need a scar
Kids have one thing in common -heart surgery
GREAT BARRINGTON,
Mus. (AP) -Snuggled in the
Berk.shires ls an idyllic summer
camp, a place where children
bike and swim, fish and laugh.
They take nature walk.s in the
morning, skipping across still
dewy grass, and gobble pe.anut
butter and jelly sandwiches at
noon . When their weary
counselors put them to bed at
night, they are still bubbling
with energy.
No one pays money to come
here -there ls a steeper prlc~.
The Madden Open Hearts Farm
is limited to children wbo have
had open heart surgery.
"The only thing you need ls a
scar to get in," said Keith Taub,
14, a Levitttown, N.Y., boy.
"Some of the children come
here shy. They don't want to
show their scars to anybody .at
first," said Sue Coulon, the
camp direc t or . "But here,
ever ybody has a scar and
nobody tries to hide it. They're
just like anybody else.···
The-camp was founded in 1960
by the late Edward Madden,
operator of a New York blood
bank and a heart surgery pa-
tient himself. Its joy, say those
who come here, is that it pro-
vides an escape from a life
where classmates, friends and
even family treat them dif-
ferently because of their sur·
gery.
"When it gets bot, J like to
take off my shirt and not have
people say, 'Ob, you have a
weird scar,' " s aid Danny
Seplow of Newton, N.J ., a 13·
year·old who has had three
operations for a weak heart
valve. "I'd rather have an ugly
scar than be dead."
"Nobody tries to s top you
from doing anything here," said
Christine Zawzck.i, a 14·year-old
from Port Jefferson, N.Y., who
enjoys biking in the mountains
that encircle the 400·acre farm.
Elizabeth Fields, 14, went to
regular summer camp once. She
didn't go back.
''The other kids looked at me
like there was something wrong
with me," she recalled. "They
wouldn't let me in any games,
and I was always the last ooe
chosen for the softball team. In
school. your teachers think
you're a slower learner.
"Before I came here," she
added, ''I thought I was the only
kid who bad bad open heart sur·
gery."
WASHINGTON <AP> -A
member of the District of
Columbia Board of Education
baa ftled a lawsuit against The
W ubineton Poat seekilll $8.8
mlllloo in alleged damages from
the newspaper's fictitious story
about an S.year-old heroin ad·
diet.
The NRC investigation found
"no evidence the utility either
knew of the cheating prior to the
NRC becoming aware of it, or
attempted in any way to
facilitate cheating by any of its
employees," Stello said.
suit of action taken by the coun· .---------------------------------------
Reporter Janet Cooke was
awarded the Pulitzer Prise in
April for her feature story "Jim·
my'a World." Two days later the
• Post announced that Mias Cooke
trad aurrendered the prize and
resigned from the newspaper
because the story was a fabrica-
tion.
School board member Calvin
Lockrldle filed the suit Thurs·
day in D.C. Superior Court, HY·
lng be "bas an oblitation to the
citizenry to seek rea.toratlon
from the Post for the personal
and monetary opemea involved
with trying to find a child who
did not exist."
Illas Cooke wrote that she saw
a friend of the child's motber in·
jeet the boy with heroin. When It
appeared lut September, dis·
trkt ofticiala expressed doubt
about ita accuracy but tried to
locate tbe cblld.
Lockrldee'a suit seeks $1.8
·million in compensatory
dama1ea and $1 million in
punitive damaees. Other defen·
dantl in the suit are Ms. Cooke,
Poet publlaber Donald Graham;
executive editor Benjamin
Bradlee, metropolitan editor
Robert Woodward, district
editor Milton Coleman, Howard·
Simom and Me& Greenfield.
Tbe Poet declined to comment
on tbeault.
ty Board of Supervisors.
Trash collectors were granted
the bite to keep up with in·
creased costs.
Records roasted
Church youths burn 'works of the devil'
DARDANELLE, Ark. (AP) -
Assembly of God church mem·
hers have roasted about $2,000
'worth of rock 'n' roll albums and
other "works of the devil," ac·
cording to the Rev. Bob Huie.
"We just did this for the eJory
of God and the kids,'' Buie said.
"We have no qualms or
apologies to make for our
stand."
He said about 60 people,
mosUy from Assembly of God
churches in the Dardanelle area
about 100 miles northwest ol Lit·
tle Rock, also burned country·
western albums, T-ablrta, calen-
dars, playin1 cards, tapes,
magazines and books.
Huie said the burninl beean
spontaneously after the IJ'OUP
listened to a taped sermon about
the hazards of rock 'n' roll
music.
"It was not church-planned or
prepared. It was not something I
suegested," he said.
If church members request it,
Huie said, another batch ol the
offensive items will be burned.
"There were some who couldn't.
come Monday night,'' be said.
"I ~ed to listen to that stuff
before I got saved," said 19-
year-old Gary Grimes, after
burning part of bis record collec·
ti on.
Grimes, who said the muaic
can have a hypnotic effect on
listeners, suggested that other
young people join him in burning
their albums.
Huie said country-western
music ls almost u bad u rock
'n' roll.
"It's different but it certainly
deals with immorality, d.rink:lq,
fornication and divorce," Huie
said. "It certainly doesn't
glorify the Lord. There's no re-
deeming vaiue to it.
"It's vffl')' vexln1 to the Chris·
Uan, I feel," the minister added. ------
aiP• I I
pleuurable way to stand tbi beat. ~~)'
spend the afternoon houn under the aprlnkl•,
1DI watera of a modem f O\IDtaln ln a
Frankfurt park.
'lake off this summer!
'lake off this summer with this summer's special. 50% oft'
the price of Holiday Spa Health Club's two-week introductory
program.
You'll eltjoy a personalized sampler exercise program to
fit your needs. With program directors to show you how. You'll
also have complete use of all facilities. St.earn, sauna, whirlpool,
jogging and swimming at most locations.
Save On ou..r 11e1nbershlps Too
We offer different membership programs, all at a discount.
Call or stop by for a free pest tour at any one of our
15 Holiday Spa Health Clubs. 'Dake advantage of your
best opporiimity to pve Holiday Spa a tr)t. There's a~lub
I near you. . , · .,
These specials are not.available at our 'lbrrance or West
L<>e Angeles locations. : 1
I
• J • ~sp&He81th
forllermdWomen
'
..
•
Or~ Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981 s Al
Money for ne~ gym ·
may be in card'
DESERT HOT SPRINGS
CAP> -The Boys and Glrla Club
here want.a a new nmnulum
that cost.a $56,000 and It looks
like the money co'uld be "ln the
cards,·' aa they HY.
Club director Terry Krebs and
local artist Scotty Foeel are lay·
ln1 their cards on the table.
They plan to aucUon off what
they say are the laraest and
mos t unique celebrity-auto·
graphed playing cards in the
world. Proceeds wtll go toward
the gymnuium.
by the atar that'• pictured and
will be played '1 a Lu Veau
caaino before it la auct.looed olfz
making the deel( tbe lar1•t ana
most unique to hver be played,
Krebs says.
Hopelully, be aay1, tbat will
make the project .Ulible for a
slot ln the Guinneaa Book of
World Records.
But Krebs and Ma. Foael
aren't playina with a full deck.
Only seven cards have been
finished.
Bo Derek bun't honored the
request to be immortalised u
the 10 of hearts. Lucille Ball bu
refused to be honored u tbe
joker of hearts. Enelilb Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher re-
fused to provide a pbotoarapb ol
her home at 10 Downtne Street
for the 10 of spades.
The deck of S.by-4-foot cards,
with a joker in every suit, will
feature Bob Hope as the joker ol
clubs, Bjorn Borg u the deuce
of clubs, pool-shooUng champion
Lou "Machine Gun" Butera, aa
the eight of clubs, two World
War U fiying aces as the aces of
hearts and clubs, and so on.
Each card will be autoarapbed
Krebs said he is a little piqued
at the celebrities' unwilllnanesa
to "help a good cause." ·
But, undaunted, he is continu·
HOIE GROWN -Matilda, a koala bear at the
San Diego Zoo; cuddles her newborn son,
Pooya, during a news conference held at the
Af'---zoo to show off the new baby. Pooya, who was
named after an Australian city, is the first
koala born at the zoo in three years.
IA/ire'!Wn
toStdt Lake
ing to write to beads of state,
movie stars and sports figures to
get their cooperation. And Ms.
Fogel continues to paint the
huge cards. Diablo Canyon license eyed
Krebs said be came up with
SALT LAKE CITY CAP) the idea last January when be
P 0 Ped . was thumbing through the Guin· eter . erson, assistant fire ness Book of World Records
NRC discussing low-power permit for nuclear p~ant
chief for Los Aneeles County, looking for fund-raising stunt bas been named chief of the Salt ideas. Lake City Fire Departmeiit. Mayor Ted Wilson bas aD· He said the record.I for play-
nounced that Pederson will ing cards showed the rarest deck valued at $4,000 and the begin work Sept. l , and will be most valuable single card at
paid $48,000 a year -a cut from $1,000. But be noticed there was his current $60,000 salary. Wilson said Pederson ad· no record for the largest,
ministers a portion of the Los smallest or most unique deck of cards. Angeles County department that He plans to auction the deck
is larger than Salt Lake City's beginning at a minimum bid of
fire department. $ ooo --~~~~~~~~~~~--1, .
SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP) -
The Nuclear Regulatory Com·
mission will start discussing
whether to Issue a low-power
license for the Diablo Canyon
Nuclear Power Plant today.
A federal appeals board bas
yet to approve a security plan
required for operation of the
plant, but the NRC will go ahead
and talk about what it will do
when the security decision Is Is·
Arti.!t Scot1y Fogel of Desert Hot Springs !fonds between piant playing card& depicting B~ob Hope and pool
trickater "Machine Gun" Lou Butera. l
-..-~Wt SAVE 25 PERCENT OM
WHOLE COLOMllAM COFFH llAMS
atT ...... Joe&PIOlllo
One of the most prized vacuum containers, coffe~1 of Colombia Is flushed with nitro1en to called Colombia J!;xcelao. hold their freshness. We just 1ot a shipment or Pleue vi.lit our newest Excel10. which we're Trader Joe's at the ln-aelllnl ror only $3.54 per' tenec:Uon of 17th,Street1 lb. We have only 5,000 Newport Boulevard ana
I b s . C o m e a r e a t SUperior A venue (next to $5.59·$5.911 e~sewhere . Denny's and Barclay'••
And they're packed in Bank).
MOW IN COSrA MISA
HHl'S M>OD MIWSI
MO MORE FLEAS!
OM TOUI NT oa .. YOUI NOMI.
PI0¥81·9NCtlt'I MAIMIT:
Fl,EAS
ROACHES
RATS
MICE
FLIES
SP1DERS
MOSQUITOES
CARPENTER ANTS
BEES, WASPS :rs
WATERBUGS
PiS iel i& .. NOW 569•
• Ecooomlail Matntenence p,. ()per.non
• Pr'O\l'en More En.dive ThM "*°"' . • u-Onty 4 wen. of Power • ,_. Elln'llnated In 2 to 8 W....
• ~ NoSpedlll lnetlllllHon R~
...... 1 .. ,..., ... . ....,. .
• ~SAL91.141MeqMTHW'l .. MMANIMr ~ ......................... 2 0 ..... ",. ......... ,...... ......
lllAlll9 ....................................................................... . ,..._ ................................................................... .
CITT ................ : ....................................... w .......... ..
""'61 I Jllla. •••••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..,. •·••·•••
--ftN, ................................................................. .
... ""5"-.. ..,. ... 1 Ol-120 Volta N:, .. Watta
UIA •A llT. t•••MLAJ
IT FIGURES. • •
How long has it been since you
liked yourself in a swim suit?
Come in now ... for a fabulous
~Month~ummer._,, ..
Lose I 0 Inches & 8 Lbs.!
Jean Marie is the only Health Club
designed for the Mature Woman!
sued, the San Luis Obispo Tele·
gram-Tribune reported.
At the closed-door Waabi.nitoo
meeting, at 2 p .m. EDT, the
NRC will diacuss contested is·
sues in licensing Pacific Gas and
Electric Company's $2 billion
twin-reactor plant. The plant is
on the coast 12 miles southwest
of here.
The commission mu1t make a
final decision on whether to is·
Utility goes
to court in
tax hassle
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
Pacific Gas & Electric Co .. COO·
tending that a tax imposed by
the city of Livermore is unfair to
the utility and its customers, bas
asked tile state Supreme Court
to change.the levy.
PG&rE asked the hilh court to
reverse a June 26 state Court of
Appeal decision that held valid
the Livermore tax, levied at a
higher rate against the utility
than against merchants and
manu:facturen.
At issue is an interpretaUoo of
a section of the state Coostitu·
lion that says no tax can be lm·
posed on gas or electricity firms
if the levy differs from that im·
posed on other businesses.
Livermore taxes the utility 80
cent.a per $1,000 in gross receipts
-40 cents more per $1,000 than
the city collects from grocery
s tores and automobile deal· erships. ·
.. ·---~~~-"
sue a low-power test permit for
the plant.
An NRC licensing board,
meanwhile, moved a step closer
Tuesday to granting a full-power
license for the plant. •
The board said in a written or·
der that only emergency plan·
ning -one of nine issues raised
by plant opponents -would
definitely be considered at bear·
ings on PG&E's application for a
full-power license.
The board delayed setting a
date for the full-power bearings
unW the NRC stair issues a re·
port on a second issue, the ablli·
ty of the plant's electrical
systems to stand up to beat,
steam and radiation in cue of
an accident.
That issue might also be con·
sidered at the bearings depend·
ing on what the staff report
says, according to the board or·
der. The staff report should be
ouf in a month or two, said Art
Buckley, NRC project mana1er
for the Diablo plant.
The board rejected seven
other issues raised by plant op-
ponents, saying that opponents
bad failed to prove that silbifi·
cant new information about
them existed. These issues con·
cerned bow Diablo Canyon
would operate in case of a
Three-Mile Island-type accident.
Monday's commission meet·
ing will be a preliminary dis·
cussion of low-power licensing
issues, said commission lawyer
Martin Malsch. He said only the
commissioners themselves and
their legal advisers would be
present to discuss the hearing
record on the Diablo plant.
Repeal
of tax
opposed
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The
ballot m easure to repeal
California's $500 million in·
beritance tax will be foulht by a
coalition of labor uniona,
educators and the elderly.
The groups are some of the
same ones that successfully op-
posed Proposition 9, Howard
J arvis' lnltiative lut year to cut
state income tax rates in half,
and there are other similarities
between the campaigns, a
leader baa said.
"Right now I'm sure we are in
a very similar situation to the
early days of the Proposition 9
campalgn where probably two--
thirds of the population are very
sympathetic to the initiative,"
Steve Smith, executive director
of the California Tax Reform As·
sociation, said In an interview
last week.
''It will require the same sort
of very Intensive education ef·
fort."
The s tat e inheritance tax
would be repealed by either of
two nearly identical initiatives
t h at have qualified for the
ballot. They will be voted on
next June unless a special elec·
lion is called earlier.
The California tax was the na·
lion's highest inheritance tax
before it was reduced s'ubstan·
tially by a law sponsored by
Democratic leaders, partly to
under c ut the repeal drive.
Among other things, the law ex·
empts surviving spouse5 from
the tax.
The recently formed coalition
to oppose the Initiatives, called
Californians For Tomorrow, in·
eludes the California Teachers
Association, the California
Federation of Teachers and the
Service Employees Interna·
tional Union as well as Smith's
group, Smith said.
He said the Parent Teachers
Association , the League of
Women Voters , the Grey Pan-
thers and the California Com·
mission on Aging have also
passed resolutions opposing the
initiatives and may be joining
the coalition.
Smith said the campaign will
stress two points: the initiative
mainly benefits the "super-
wealthy" and will force new cut·
backs in social ser vices by
draining s\ate revenues.
He said 1,000 estates worth at
least $1 million apiece would get
tax breaks averaging $150,000.
Supporters of the initiative say
the inheritance tax is a cruel tax
that forces heirs to sell homes
and farms to pay the taxes.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., who
actively opposed Jarvis '
Proposition 9, bas not taken a
position on the Inheritance tax
initiative, though bis Finance
Department bas opposed any cut
in the beritance tax.
"It's unlikely that we will lake
a position until the state's fiscal
picture comes Into sharper
focus," Gray Da vis, Brown's
chief ol staff, sa.id.
(
I ,
...
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1981
~~\ ~""' ~~ Chew away
smoke habit
DEAR READERS: Tbe Dow CMmJcaJ
Co. baa woe federal approval to &et& a 11ew
chewing pm that contalu nlcoUH ud S. de·
signed to help amokera quit. ne &llleol')' 11
tbat although tbe 1tron1ly lllpalaed llablt b
one reason people find It IO dllftcaJt to qllit
s moking, many people alto llave
pby1lologlcal addldloa to alcoUH ud utter
withdrawal symptoms wbea tryla1 to qalt.
Tbe gum ls designed to beJp Htiafy ~ CHY•
lng for nicotine while lbe former smoker aa·
learns the smoklnl bablt.
Nicotine-base d cbewlag I•• •••
orlglnaJly developed ID Sweden. Early ladlca·
&tons ln Canada are that four oat of It uen
are flaaUy able to quit both the amokmg and
the gum-chewing habits.
Because nicotine la any form ls a
dangerous drug, Dow bad to obtain federaJ
approval even for a test, and the alcotbae-
based chewing gum wlU be avaUable Ollly by
prescription.
lroolcally, tbe government bas beld tbat
cigarettes -which contala nlcotlae u well
as other dangerous drugs -are to&aJJy Im ·
mune from regulation and may be sold
without any prescription botb over·tlae·
counter and from unattended vending
machines.
No tax on car rebatea·
DEAR PAT DUNN: The manufacturer of
a car lha~ I am planning to buy is offering a
cash rebate. Is· this considered income and
must it be reported on my tax return? '
K.E., Costa Mesa
No. The Internal Revenue Service says
casb rebale11 offered by manufacturers are
considered discounts. Bat ii yoa plan to ue
the car for business, lbea yoa mut reduce
your basls In the automobUe by lbe rebated
amount.
Grmtd OpeMlig We
AUSTRALIAN BEER
SI .99 Six Pack
at f rader Joe & "'•lo
The famous Australian
wine town or Adelaide is also known fo r its beers. ~t Enq Is one or the . Youd expect to pay over $4.00-bul it's only $1 .99 at o ur s to r es
Please visit our newest
Trader Joe's at the in-tersection of 17th Street1 Newport Boulevard ana
Superior A venue (next to Denny·s and Barclay's Bank .)
MOW IM COSTA MESA
1Wlao.'• wo• the tlaimblet
DEAR PAT DUNN: I placed two orden
with the Franklin Nlnt tor Country Store
Thimbles. Wbea the first ~ &ntved, I at-
tached one check to both 1tube and mailed lt
back. Apparently, lbia confuHd them
becaUH I've only been r.celvln• oae order
•lnce then. I've written to Franklin Mint
•bout Ulll, but there'• 1Wl a mlaup and I've
gl ven up t.rytna to 1et lt atralCbteDed out on my own. •
P.C., Newport Beach
AYS caatac&ecl l'r....._ llllN u111 , ....
mlaba1 order will be Mat .. l ... 'fte •all·
order ft.rm'• 1potnwomu eald U.at tM mOI&
recent Wmble la th ....... Ill llu beea
malled to.yoa aad U.e otMn wtll M ._, u
aooa u UMy eaa be loe1&M ............ It
may &alee tome Ume for cleUvel')', IMlt at leall
tbe Nmf•loe 1bMt you wder llu bee•
cleared •P·
Ho•pice care claeclced
DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I aet
some information about hospice care for a
terminally ill patient -particularly about
hospices ln this state?
K. W .• La(UDa Beach
Tbe federaJ Heat~ Care Flauee Ad·
mlnJstratloa I• carre•tly evalaa&la1 H
hospice pro1ram1 tbroa,..._ ~e ca.try.
Five of the pro1nm1 are a. CaUforala, aad
the atady iaclades aa evalHUoa of tlae
medleaJ and ffoaomlc feulblllty el lleeplce
care, u well aa a.Ile rGle of Medicare aad
Medl-CaJ ln Heb care. More laformaUoe b
available from: Health Care Flaaace Ad·
mlalstratloa, HO Vu Ness Ave., Saa Fru.
ciseoMIOZ.
You aJao may want to read "The Hoeplce
Story la California," by the California
Medical Association, Satter PabUcationa
Inc., 731 Market St., Saa Francisco Mlt3. ---·
• ..Got a problem' Then write to Pat
'-.,. Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting
"' .J.. the an&wers and act&011 you need to
solve 1nequitie1 in governmenl and f'1 bwaneu Mail your que1tioru to Pat
Dunn. At Your Service. Orange Coast
Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Me$0, CA 92626. A1
many letters a& pou1ble wall be answtred, but phoned
1nquines or letters not includmg the readn'& full
name. addres& and bwine.u hours' phone number
cannot be con&1dered This column appears daily ez-
cept Sundays ··
NEWPORT TILE & CABINET
DESIGN CENTER .
• Co ....... Tltlwl•ltloll * * Hw lszmj1l19 *
THE MOST COMPLETE SELECTION
OF TILE BOTH DOMESTIC ANO IMPORTED
Ceramic Tile • Hardwood Cabinets • Fl00< and Wall
Treatments• General Contractor
312M.Me ..... lm.d. 646-321 J
PUBLIC NOTICE
/.
Own Your Own
Bueln••• Show
Art rou •oo•iog loi a ous ness of
'~"' OW11' P'an 10 auend rht
ma1ke1piace o' I BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
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• OH lers h1p1 • tnv111m1n11
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INNATTHEPARKHOTEL I '~'~ _., Oo AN••,.., [A
I < l lb 1'li
.o .. 111 •otV ~1 &c\. ! I ._V
't• a n e iJ..,. .,~•l~
if;;;~~
Sel.,W .... H••ttftt
.. ~, ~"' 11'6~ .... ,.!(,. ,.,.. ~,..,,, ., """' ~ r .. II \ff.Wf" ""'-1'•\t '°"' 4'1lfl'I •
COIT& wu641-1289 ·----••Hl()tj V11.J0495-04()1
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••OM Fa h1on Island
Ncwporl Beach
Proposal
What do you think about conetructlng an Interchange
on the Santa Ana Freeway (1-5) at Alton Parkway and
modtfylng Irvine Center Drive Interchange on the San
Diego Freeway (1-405)?
........
The City of Irvine, in conjunction with CalTrans, Is planning ·
to construct the Alton Parkway Interchange with the s.nta
Ana Freeway and modify the I rvlne Center Drive interchange with the San Dleoo Freeway. The proposed
project would provide easier entry for vehicles to existing and future commercial and Industrial sites. It would also
make more accessible a proposed bus and rail terminal and permit better distribution of traffic on the freeways. A
crosstown arterial hfohway proposed by the City of Irvine would connect residential and r~lonal employment areas
within the City limits.
The public hearlno will give you an opportunity to talk about certain features of the project with CalTrans and City staffs
before the final design Is picked. The tentative schedule for
construction wlll be disclosed.
From now untll September 24', 1981, you may see maps, a
report on the anticipated environmental effects of
construction, and other Information on the proposed project. You may question CalTrans and City representAatlves about
the project. They will be avallabte Monday through Friday
from 8: oo a .m. to 4': 30 p.m. at two sites. Tl'Mt first Is the PUblk
Works Department, I rvlne City Hall, 17200 Jamboree Boulevard, Irvine, California, where the environmental
document Is also available. TM wcond site Is at CalTr.,s, Project Development Branch B, 120 South Spring Street Los Anoetes, California. Come In and tAake a IOOk, make cop'-$ If
you like, ask questions, exprHS your cone.ems.
If you can't attend the hHrlng, you can send your wrttten
comments until September 24, 1911 to C•ITrans, P~t
Development Branch 8, 110 South Spring Street~ Lot Angetn.
California 9001~.
When & The hearing wlll be Thursday, September 10, 1911It7:30p.m. w...... at the Irvine Civic Center, 11200 J•mborH BouleY•nl, lrYtne, California.
com.ct For further Information about this project, contact C.tTr1ns
at (213) 620-3210.
IF YOU CARE •.. COME!
Deted: August4{ 1911 Published: The A ... Ster
or-. C09lt O.lly Piiot LOI Angetes Times
Auvust 10, 1911
Septrlmber 1, 1911
' .. -. . .
Because of the air traffic controllers
strike, ou r phone lines will be quite busy.
Please come to the airport in person,
and we will help you the best we can .
Republic will continue to operate at
the fullest capacity possib le, maintaining
in most cases, 95°/o or more of ou r
scheduled service. There are plenty of
seats ava ilabl e on most Republic flights .
Rememb er, if you are planning air
travel, Republ ic serves more cities in
Amer ica than any other airline. We
apologi ze for any inconvenience you
may endure because of the strike. We
are working closely with al l the other
airlines to accommodate yo u, our
passenger. And, we'll do the best we
can to minimize your travel delays .
The phone lines may be busy and the
air traffic controllers may be on strike,
but Republic Airlines is still very much in
operation. Joining more of America
than any other airline.
t \,
I
·1
.. . . . .
' Orange CoHt DAIL V PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1981
Sim Diego Federal introduces
The new.lax-Free Savings Account has just been
~--••• and San Diego Federal will pay you 17.55%
to resene yours today!
T he President and Congress have just approved the long-
awaited Tax-Free Savings Account, available October 1,
1981. You can reserve your account today at San Diego Federal
... and earn 17.55% from now until October lst.
Here's what our new Tax-Free Account will provide.:
• You can exclude up to $2000 in earned interest from taxes if
filing jointly, and up to $1000 if filing individually.
• You'll earn a tax-free "Money Market" interest rate that's
tied to the one-year Treasury Bill rate in effect when you
open your account. Based on recent rates, your Tax-Free
Account rate would be approximately 11% ... and that is
equal to much higher interest rates on a taxable basis. See
the chart for examples.
• Your Tax-Free Account rate will be guaranteed for the full
12-month term, and your savings will be insured to $100,000
by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
• The minimum deposit for a Tax-Free Account is just $500.
But you can deposit even more and enjoy increased tax-free
earnings. And when you open your account for $2,500 or
more, you'll receive a free Interest Checking PLVS1 M ac-
count that opens the door to extra conveniences like 24-
HOUR TELLER service and TELE-PAY telephone bill
paying!
Based on a Tax-Free Account rate of ll%:
If your taxable Your tax bracket Tax-Free ·rate of
family income is: will likely be: 11% is equal to this
rate on a taxat;Je
basis:
$29,900-SJS,200 37% 17.46%
SJS.200-545.800 43% 19.30%
$45.800-$60.000 49% 21.57%
$60,000-$85.600 54% n .91 %
Above flaures arc approiuma1e. Tax-Free rate of II~ 1s for comparative purl>O'es only and 11 based on
70%ofrecen1 averagt investment yield on one-year U.S Treasury 81lb Actual Tu-Free rate that will
be effective on October I. 1981, will be determined in Septcmbcr.
We'll pay you 17.SS% to resenre your account today!
Visit any office of San Diego Federal and we'll start paying
you 17 .55%* on your money immediately, and then
autqmatically transfer the funds into your new Tax-Free Ac-
count on October 1, 1981. You 'll earn high interest imme-
diately, and maximize the tax-free interest you earn.
Reserve your account now! At San Diego Federal, we're
leading the way to higher interest for all savers!
•t7.5S% rate available on accounts Opened thru August 17, 1981. This Interim
Money Fund account backed by U.S. Government Securities. It Is not a
savlnp account and Is not Insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insur-
ance Corporation.
FSL1c
.....,.._ ai-111...c., .............
. ,
C1-lllw INdl J42tl D1M1tJ PM k 4tM2tl lllMIM Vlett/L.apte ttMll 21U2 C1Mt IN. 71NMI IM CIMMMt 401 ~ rte. 41MJJO ....._. Oft llnl"" 1t Ll~t SSMIOI
L111M ..... Mall C......, hrhly 4tMlll ..,... INdl I c.r,w1tt Ptua M4·*5 IM Jui~ UJOI C..-c.,llttW Ml.olt7 •
I Calllon.la'• ow.It Mini ... ~ ... ud loan. ..,. ~ 1115 ••• '."lb • omct1 ... 60 U.HOUI TELLERS ......... JOU ttat.wlde. °'• Sl. 75 billion In ~ - --.
Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
.County merits voice
on transit panel
Orange County. the second
largest county in California and
beset with e normous traffic
problems, has lost its only
representative o n the s tate
Transportation Commission.
That unfortunate
circumstance became known last
week with the announcement that
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. had
replaced Orange County's sole
representative on the co m ·
mission with a Van Nuys woman.
Gray Davis, Gov. Brown's
chief of staff, said that an Orange
Countian will s oon be appointed
to a vacancy that will open on the
panel when one of the com-
missioners resigns in four to six
weeks. He refused lo elaborate.
That aside, Orange County
deserves representation on the
commission. So we hope Davis
means what he says.
Stat e transportation money
hasn't exactly rained on Orange
County. even when it was
represented on the state
Transportation Commission by
former Irvine resident Frances
Mo.ssman, now of Laguna Rills.
She was the commissioner who
was replaced last week.
Ms . Mossman said she hud
been expecting to be replaced
since 1979, when her -0ne-year ap-
pointment to the commission ex-
pired. She said she didn't know
why Gov. Brown chose to replace
her at this time.
If a replacement was in or-
der, Gov. Brown surely could
have chosen an Orange Countian
for the position.
For a county as large and
with as many traffic problems as
Orange County to not have
representation on this important
commission, even for a short
amount of time. is inexcusable.
EPA sanction.s costly
Failure of the state
Legislature to pass a mandatory
annual motor vehicle smog in-
spection law may become moot if
the Reagan administration's pro-
posals to modify the federal
Clean Air Act are approved by
Congress.
But so far the deficiency has
held up some $62 million in
highway and sewage projects
and nearly $1.3 billion in new in-
dustrial projects.
The Environmental Protec-
tion Agency imposed financial
sanctions on the state last
December because California
still was the only one of 27 states
in areas suffering heavy air
pollution to fail to comply with
the smog inspection rule.
The s anctions held up federal
funds for road and sewage work
and for any potentially polluting
industrial installations. Projects
thus far blocked include some
highway improvements, sewage
treatment plants, oil refinery ex-
pansions and coal exporting
facilities. Other projects simply
were not submitted because of
the sanctions.
Several vehicle smog inspec-
tion bills have been introducedt
but so far none has survived op-
pos ition from within the
Legislature or from the operators
of gas stations who want to han-
dle the inspection operation. The
latest bill, which would satisfy
the EPA requirement by impos-
ing annual inspections in the
state's six smoggiest areas, still
could be passed in the final
weeks of this year's session.
The administration's pro-
posed changes in the Clean Air
Act do not directly address the is-
s ue of financial sanctions for
failure to impose auto emission
inspections, but Orange County
Supervisor Bruce Nestande says
it is his wtderstanding that there
will be changes in the policy of
cutting off funds to states that do
not comply with the act because
it is felt "there are other ways of
bringing compliance.•'
That being the case, and
despite the financial loss already
incurred. tht!'lawmakers probably
wi 11 be even less inclined to
bite the bullet on the auto inspec-
tion issue when they reconvene.
Gas tax boost valid?
If the California Legislature
approves a pending measure de-
signed to bail out the sinking
highway fund by adding 2 cents
per gallon to the gasoline tax it
will be following the example of
19 other states and the District of
Columbia. all of which have
boosted their motor fuel tax rates
this year.
California's highway fuel tax
of 7 cents a gallon has not been
increased since 1963. The 7 cents
now are worth less than 2 cents.
A bill by Sen. John Foran
would raise the fuel tax to 9 cents
a gallon and increase fees on
truck weights, drivers' licenses
and auto registration. It could
raise an estimated $3.3 billion in
the next five years.
Compared with fuel tax rates
in some other states, the pro-
posed tax seems mild indeed.
For example, in Delaware,
Idaho, Utah and Vermont the fuel
tax went up this year from 9
cents to 11 cents per gallon; in
•
North Carolina from 9 cents to 12
cents; in Minnesota and the Dis-
trict of C-Olumbia from 11 cents to
13 cents; in Washington from 12
cents to 13.5 ·cents, and in New
Hampshire from 9 cents to 14
cents.
Californians now drive more
and spend less per capita on their
highway system than the resi-
dents of any other state.
Thus it would not seem un-
reasonable to ask the state's
drivers to ante up a few more
pennies to get their cars back on
some decent roads.
However, given Caltrans· un-
deniable mismanagement of the
highway fund in recent-times,
they'd probably feel more com-
fortable about it if they had some
assurance the additional tax
burden would be translated into
real highway improvement
benefits, rather than being spent
on vague dream plans of future
transit systems and other notions
that have little to do with the
problems at hand.
Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Otner views ex-
pressed on this page are those of therr authors and artists. Reader comment is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 17 U J
64'.l-4321
L.M. Boyd/Word. o/ wudom
A Yiddish proverb goes: "LttUe
children won't let you sleep. Btg
children won't let you live." Another:
"Better an honest slap than a falle
kiss." And still another: "Tbesun will
set without your help." Acron all the
languages, there is a sameness of
meaninis m the saylqs, lan't there?
The old verities aren't ethnic.
Claim la there are settinc to be too
many surgeons. They're multiplytn1
faster than other pl'Ofeuloaill. AQCI
surgery ltaell 11, too. The 1urfery rate
durlna the lut 10 years crew four
times f aater th•n the population
growth rate.
Q. Which U.S. chief execuUve bad
I I
ORANGE COAST
Dally Pilat
the yacht called Mayflower?
A. T. Roosevelt, Taft, Wllaon,
Coolidge and Huding, each dld. lt was
the presidential perk of five ad·
mlnlatrations.
What you and I called biccougha ii
ref erred to in the medical trade u
alnsultus.
The American Dairy Goal Alloola·
Uon competet wtlb tb1a promoUOQ
Une: ••u Ood bad wanted ... to milk
cows, he would have elven us four
handl.''
There la no drua that doean't have a
aide effect, I'm told. None.
.. ,..,..Knl..,.
Edltorlal Peoe Editor ---
'
~--.. --... --
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Emergency force unprepared
WASHINGTON -Tbe Middle Eut is
once again at the explosion point, and
President Reatan is using every possi-
ble diplomatic means to keep this vital
oil region from blowing up. Backing up
the diplomacy is the Rapid Deployment
Force, which is ready to introduce U.S.
military power into the equation.
But unfortunately, a top-secret Pen-
tagon analysis suggests that the RDF
wouldn't last long against a Soviet
power play.
According to the military's own
estimates, 46,000 of the emergency
force's 100,000 trQOpS would be killed or
wounded in the first 60 days of combat
against a Soviet lb.rust into the Middle
East oilfields. Historically, few military
units have retained their fighting effec-
tiveness when the number of casualties
exceeded 20 percent.
A CASUALTY BATE of 46 percent is
hair-raising enough. What makes the
estimate even worse is that many of the
wounded would die, according to the
secret analysis, because the armed
forces don't have enough medical
personnel to treat the thousands of
casualties anticipated.
Expanding the RDF to a deployment
strength of six-and·a -hall divisions
( 130,000 men) would only compound the
slaughter, tbe Pentagon analysts _in·
dicate: they postulate 86,000 casualties
in the first 50 days with the bigger force
-a horri!ylng 66 percent cuualty rate.
Even assuming the armed services
could suddenly enlist the necessary doc-
tors, nurses and technicians, there is
serious doubt that they couJd be put in
G
--J1---c1-1-1a-11_so_1 -~·
position to do the ROF troops much
good. With the macabre advance plan·
ning necessary for the Dltlitary art,
Pentagon experts estimate that the
present RDF would require 10,000
hospital beds. and the expaqded force
more than 15,000.
But it takes 100 C141 and 30 C-5 cargo
aircraft round-trip sorties to deploy a
single general hospital. Thia pieans that
virtually the entire present U'.S. aircraft
capability would have to be committed
just ·to transport the RDF's medical
facilities.
EVEN WITH adequate treatment, the
Pentagon planners ar~n't sure the Unit-
ed States could ever build a strike force
capable of countering the Soviets In an
area that is thousaqds of miles away by
sea and air, yet only a few hundred
miles from the Soviet border.
Most military planners, In fact, look
upon the RDF as a "trip wire" or
sacrificial lamb, lite lbe hopelessly
vulnerable garrison in West Berlin. If
the Red Army overwhelmed the RDF,
as it easily could, the Uniled States
would have no military option except to
respond with nuclear weapons. Indeed,
cdntingency plans are ready for just
such an option.
In addition to the strategic and
logistical problems of the Rapid
Deployment Force, it is causing the
United States political headaches a.a
well. SeveraJ otherwise friendly Arab
nations view the ROF u a potential
threat to their oilfields. These fears
were reinforced by tbe RDF's com-
mander, Marine Corps Gen. P.X. KeUy,
when he undiplomatically revealed that
contingency plans included seizure of
the Iranian oilfields.
INDEED, sourceii told my assoc~
Ron McRae that there are some gWig-1 ho t)'.PeS in the Pentagon who don't care 1
whet.her the Arabs distrust the RDF f
concept. They argue Ulat the so-called j
moderate Arab states 're weak, feudal
and generally unreliable, and recom-· 1
mend that the United States stop trying
to win their cooperation.
Instead, these fire-breathers say we 1
should rely on the threat of military
force -with perhaps some help from
Israel -to keep the Arab oil flowing.
Mutual trust crucial in our society
Last rugbt I was driving from Har-
risburg to Lewisburg, Pa., a distance of
about 80 miles. It was late, I was late
and if anyone asked me how fast I was
driving, I'd have to plead the Fifth
Amendment to avoid self-incrimlnatioo.
Several times I got stuck behind a slow-
moving truck on a narrow road with a
solld white line on my left and I was
clenching my fists with impatience.
At one point along an open highway, I
came to a crossroads with a traffic
light. I wu alone on the road by now,
but as I approached the light, it turned
red and I braked to a halt. I looked left,
right and behind me. Nothing. Not a
car, no suggestion of headlights but
there I sat, waiting for the light to
change, the only human being for at
least a mile in any direction.
I STAllTED WONDERING why I re·
fused to nm the light. I wu not afraid
of being arrested because there was ob-
viously no cop anywhere around and
there certainly would have. been no
danaer lnsoing through it.
Much later that night', after I'd met
with a group in Lewisburg and bad
climbed Into bed near midnight, the
question of why I'd stopped for that
Utht came back to me. I think I stopped
because it's part of a contract we all
have ~th each other. It's not only the
law but lt's an atreement we h.ave and
we trust each other to honor it: we don't
go throutb red lights. Like most of ua,
I'm more apt to be restrained from do-
ing something bad by the social conven-
tion that disapproves of it than by any
law against it.
It's amazing that we ever trust each
other. to do the right thi.og, isn't it? And
we do, too. Trust is our first inclination.
ANDY IODNIY
We have to make a deliberate decision
to mistrust someone or to be suspicious
or skeptical. Those attitudes don't come
naturally to us.
IT'S A DAMN GOOD thing too,
because the whole structure of our
society depends on mutual trust, not
distrust. This whole thing we have go-
ing for us would fall apart if we didn't
trust each otber most of tbe time. In Ita-
ly they have an awful lime gettln1 any
money for the 1overnment because
many people just plain don't pay their
income tax. Here, the Internal Revenue
Service makes some gestures toward
enforcing the law but mostly they muat
have to trust Uiat we'll pay what we
owe. There baa often been talk ol a tax
revolt in this country, most r~ently
among unemployed auto wor11tets in
Michigan, and our government pretty
much admits that if there were a
widespread tax r eyolt here, they
wouldn't be able to do anything af>out It.
Where will wealth trickle?
Today's focus is on the Theory of
Trickle which is the basis of Mr.
Reasan's great tax victory that be
bou1bt by 1ivin1 away the family
lfllCf 1111
Jewell to couervative DemocuUe con-
rreaamen.
You know, of course. about the
TrlcJtle Theory that liv• I.be rich tu brew and aubl1diet lD the hope some
of lbe 1oodie1 will ooae down to us com·
moololt.
ll'w eumple, cutt.lnc oU iDdustrJ ta-•• lQcludinc lrimmlnt tbe wlndlall tu;
blaer eum~ oo dlvldenda, i•· ~i: :t.:: :::i ·::.1¥A'.;.
' llill dM ..tale taa aemPtiae.
Yet, the Trickle Theory Is a creature
of the conservative mind U..t curloualy
does not differ much rrom tM UMoria
of my liberal c0Uea1uea 1n lta 1Lat.d ob-
JeeUve. Namely1. to help aoctety'• ult,
lame, poor and G11advanta1ed.
'Where comervatJve and Uberal part
com_pany la on bow lbJa ~ deed 11 to
be done.
Liberals u1 aoveroment mone1
should ao to fellow Ublrala nailll
academic stud.lea, eommwalty pro-
1rams •nd demonstraUon projeeta.
They. in turn, wW belp ~·· •· fortunates. Somehow, tbat aever
worked out.
The CODHrVaUvet bave tbe aame ob·
Jective, but they t.hlnk t.be aovel'IUnent'•
money 1bouJd to to thelr rldl coo·
aervaUve colle.cuH. 1'bete 1&erlln•
fellOWI would t.bea belp tbe downtrod·
den. Tbat'a never 1'0rked out eltlalr.
J auapect that, under the aulM ol 1ue· corin1 the poor, "llMrir le in ~ 11
I 1e,tually tuckerlq the poar, ,
We do what we say we 'll do; we
show up when we say we'll show up; we
deliver when we say we'll deliver, and
we pay when we say we'll pay. We trust
each other in these matters, and when
we don't do what we've promised, it's a
deviation from the normal. It bappena
often that we don't act in good faith and
in a trustworthy manner but we still
consider it unusual and we're angry or
disappointed with the person or or-
ganization that violates the trust we
have in them. (I'm looking for :.
something good to say about mankind to-
day.) '
I hate to see a story about a bank
swindler who bas jiggered the boob to
bis own advantage because I trust
banks. I don't like them but I trust •
them. I don't go in and demand that
they show me my money all t.be lime
just to make sure they still have it.
IT'S THE SAME buyinl a CJUJ of cof-
fee or a quart of milk. You doo't take
the coffee home and weigh it to make
sure it's a pound. There l.an't time in life
to distrust every penon you meet or
every company you do bUllnesa with. I
hated the company that started aelllns
beer in 11-ounce botUea yean aio. One
of the million things we tde oo trust is
that a beer botUe contaln.s 12 ounces.
It's interesthlt to look around and at
people and compare tbelr f ait.b or lick
of faith In other people with their sue·
cess or lack of success in life. The
patsies, the suckers, lbe people who
always assume everyone else is as
honest as they are, make out better tn
the Iona run than t.be ~le wbo di•·
trust everyone -and lbey're a lot hap-
pier, even if they aet taken once in a
while.
I was so proud of myaelt for atopptna
for t.bat red ll1ht and inumucb u no
one would ever have kndwn what a Sood
pe,rson I wu on the road from Har-
ri1bur1 to Lewisburg, I bad to tell
aomeooe.
F\rtq ltriken may not bllp the un-e~ploJmem fl"Obl•m but a\ leut lt wW ctve....,,. ,_,.. jObl to be ftnd from
. ' r .x..
~::.':~-:--" ..................... ... ,................. . ..... _
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1902 flight .claimed
Did farmer UDStage Wright?
LOS ANGELES <AP> -
Orville Wrtsht hu always been
1tven bi1tory•1 credit for the
flrat manned, powtr~1 _!OD·
trolled, hearier·tba.alr rupt.
But a replica ol a CUlVU·and·
bamboo contraption tbat
orleinally had i.bac:co c8DI for
platona and cut lroD drainpipes
for cylinders bu arrl ved from
New Zealand to cb1Uen1e that
long-held uaumpUoo.
The Wright broth en' 12·
second ni&ht at Kitty Hawk took
place Dec. 17. 1903.
But Gordon Barnaby of the
M uaeum of Transport and
Technology of New Zealand,
says that two years earlier, on
March 31, 1902, a farmer con·
sidered a madman by bia
neighbors took off la hil
homemade motorized plane
from an escarpment on tbe
South Island of New Zealand.
Richard Pearse flew at an
altitude of 30 reel for five-
eigbths of a mile and landed in a
riverbed.
Barnaby brought a replica of
Pearse's plane to Los An1elea
where it went on display Jut
week at the World Trade Center.
It will remain for two weeks.
But aside from a neighbor and
his sister, the only witnesses to
Pearse's achievement were a
gaegle of achoolchlldren.
And Peane lived the We of a
loner, worfdnl on airplanes and
dyin1 id frustration and
anonymity in 1958.
Five years later, a former
pilot wu rummaging through an
old barn. He found precise draw·
ings, written descriptions and
remnants or what appeared to
be a crude airplane in a nearby
rubbiab dump.
Those few witnesses have
since been coming forward, tell·
ing what they saw 79 years ago.
"The noise just about drowned
.you," said Pearse's sister, who
llv• in a nit bom• ID Auckland.
An elderly wltn111, Robert
Glblon, told a mm crew: "Tbh
paddock WU ODI to two mllea
from PeUM'• wwbbop. ADd be
bad apparently \raul)Ol'ted tbe
machine wlth tht ald ol two
bol'MI and a dray.
''Oft the fl.rat 1tt1mpt, the
plane, Tt"hicb wu btad..t in a
westerly cllrectlon, ran Into a
gorae-coveNld hollow where the
propeller was apparently
damaged.
"Tbeo be made a lecond al·
tempt. The eq1ne started with a
fri1bten1n1 noltt. Some bo11
commenced pU1bin1, and u the
plane 1athered apeed tbey were
left behind. They watched u tbt
machine turned over the clUf to
the right and new 'lP the Oplhl
River until it dlaappeared
behind a pine plantation."
New Zealand acbolan have
decided that tbe fllcht path
would have first curved left and
then made a gradual •wina to the right.
But there is stW a question on
whether the fll1bt waa con·
trolled, and that's important, ac-
cording to Claudia Oakes ,
curator or aeronautics of the Na-
tional Air and Space Museum in
the Smithsonian Institution.
CofC Dolphin8 aid
Mesa Crisi8 Center
The Dolphins diviaioa of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
or Commerce has donated $175
to the Family Crisis Center of
Costa Mesa.
The center is a non-profit or·
ganization providing counseling
on a sliding-fee basis and main-
tains a youth shelter for adoles·
cents requiring time away from
their families.
NO Clubs to Join
NO Membenhlp Fees
FUTURE DIM
Fransie Geringer
Ancient London
eatery to close
LONDON (AP) -Stone's
Chop House, where the rich have
dined for 210 years, is closine
because the neighborhood is get·
ling shabby, crowded and full of
derelicts, the owners have said.
"We felt that the local aura
had changed for t he ~rse,"
said an official of t~avoy
Group, wbicb owns the
restaurant in London's West
End near Leicester Square and
Piccadilly Circus. Stone's is not-
ed for lamb chops, roast beef,
steak and kidney pie, tripe and
onions and other old English
dishes. It opened in 1771.
* ALL llMT AL.S LAST FOil J DAYS *
SATUIDA Y UMTIL WID..sl»AY!
(left to right) Sue Stiver•. Mgr. San Marcos;
Elizabeth A. Wargo, Mgr. Del Mar;
Luann Stone, Mgr. Irvine· Airport:
Every title In BOTH V .H.S. and
Beta every 6th movie you rent 11
••• FREE!
We have movies from:
• 20th Century Fox
•MGM
• Universal
• Col1111bia
• Orion
• Warner Brothers
• United Artists
• New World Pictures
• Paramount
• Allied Artists
• lB.C.
Vicki Harris, Mgr. Heritage Plaza:
Margaret Newman, Mgr. Orange;
Sharon Truschlnger, Mgr. lrvlne·U.C.I.
We had a
Picnic to
celebrate.
..... 1111 ....
Orange Coa1t DAILY PIL:OT/Monday, August 10, 1981
Boy. aging before his time
South African lad's spirit trapped in old man's body
~ ORKNEY, South Africa CAP>
:_ Llke moet I-year-old boys,
Franale Gerlnaer la full of
lau1hter, ml1cblef and in·
nocence.
But b1t youn1 1plrit I.a trapped
in the body of an old man by pro-
1erla, or premature a11D1. a dla· •
eaae that h1a doctor aaya will lllll
·hlm before be reaches
adulthood.
Bald and emaciated, with only
40 pounds on bla 3·foot-8-incb
frame, Franale acampera
around bla famlly'1 small,
fenced yard, cllmblna the naked
treea with old·looklnf, 1lr001
bands and dining lo the winter
1arden of oran1e and yellow
dalales.
The only conce11lon to biJ OC·
logeoarian characterlstlc1 at
playtime are rubber·aoled slip-
pers that provide soft padding
for his bent toes.
Dr. Martinus van Zyl,
Franale's pediatrician, said in a
television interview that the
cause ol progeria, which can age
its victims as mucb as 10 times
faster than normal, is not
known. It usually la less severe,
and it can appear in adults who
aged normally as children.
The identifying charac·
teristics are small stature, loss
ol hair, wrinlded skin and other
outward signs or old aee.
Fransie is energetic and suf-
fers oo handicaps in his daily ac·
tivities. But be does experience
severe headaches that cause the
blood to throb visibly through
his scalp.
His parents say be never com·
plains -ju.st sits in a comer by
himself when he's tired or
doesn't feel well. Otherwise, his
joy shines through big brown
eyes, bulging over a spindly
nose offset by smalJ elephant
ears.
Fransie is happiest when his
10-year-old brother, Paul, is
home from school and Wt.a blm
onto the back of bis black and
yellow bicycle for a ride a.round
the famlly'a corner plot lo
Orkney, a duaty 1old·mlnin1
town 105 mllea 1outbwe1t of
Jobanneabur1.
The boys adore each otber.
Franale bas avera1e ln-
tellleence but atucliea at home
with bis mother, Maida, rather
than riak teasing by claasmates.
Once be asked, "Why do I look
10 ugly!" Mn. Gerin1er. 31, re·
called, her eyes mlatlng behind
dark-rimmed 1lusea.
"What can I aay? I say, 'No,
you're not uaJy. You're a very pretty boy'."
"It's not nice lo be the only
one," Fransie told her quietly.
When Fransie was a year old,
hls hair began to fall out and he
failed to develop fatty tissue.
The visits to apeclalists began.
Dr. van Zyl says his condition
is "static." Muscle degeneration
la not marked at this stage, and
be doesn't have high blood
pressure. But the doctor says his
case is hopeless.
"Fransie can live to 16 or 17,"
he said. "Victims of this disease
die ol coronary heart disease. If
he 1eta a coronary. be'il dle, Juat
llke that," he said. ")
Herman Gerlnter, 37, a de·
monstrative father, expreaaea
sadness because be can't take
the child to Dianeyland to aee
Pinocchio, biJ idol. He works at
one of the mines u a bancman,
loading the men to go under·
ground, and says, "I'm not a
rich man.''
"My aim is to make blm hap-
py and let him enjoy his life for
as long as he's here for us," aaid
Gerincer. "That's all I care
about."
Fransie is still being treated
like a normal child. When be
misbehaves, he's punished. His
rather pulls off his belt and puts
the shy liWe boy over one knee.
But because "there's nowhere to
hit,·· Geringer quickly sub·
slitutes a rolled-up piece of
newspaper for the strap.
Geringer said his son, who's
now getting his permanent
teeth, "knows his problem and is
not scared of himself."
Every night he kneels, clasps
his aged fingers and bends over
a Bible on his bed to pr ay :
.. Dear Jesus, please make me
big and strong." ·
Accident death rate up
CH1CAGO (AP) -Accidental
deaths for the first four months
of 1981 increased by 600 over
those during the same period or
the previous year. the National
Safety Council says.
The accidents increased 2 per·
cent from 30,200 to 30,800 this
year, Vincent Tofany, head of
the group, said in a statement.
Ourin the period, motor vehi·
cle deaths increased 1 percent to
15, 160, home accidental deaths
increased 3 percent to 7,700 and
accidental deaths in the
workplace dropped 2 percent to
4, 100, the statement said.
The overall accidental death
rate was 46. 7 per 100,000 popula-
tion oo an annual basis, com·
pared with 46.2 th previous
year.
@
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&••
•
O,.nge Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1981
Scientist disputes findings
of cancer risk to nonsmokers
Stu.dy Downplays
Nonsmoker Risk
He l'OnCluded that l"K'ltbtr ~ .... ' ... .
Non-smoker cancer 'risk' questioned
SEATJ'LE (AP) -Coatrary to r«eot
fladillp by Urie J1~. lllClll...rnokillC
womeo mam.ct to dpl'eUe smoken
rw little il uy iDcreued rill ol han&
cancer, 111 ~ CUcer Society
sdlfttist Mid Wedlletclay. -
Llwiuce Garfl.nkeJ ol New York, Uw
1«lety's vice pralci.t f'W epldemiolc>-
IY and st.aU.tJcs, alto commented on
otber recent Cl.ncet' stadia, MJIDI
tbtte Ls DOt yet flll~ ~ ... ~ .....
~·--·-,,.
New study contradicts non-smokers' risk
WASHlNCTON CAP) -Non-smokin& women whose hUSbanda amoke have Ill·
tie ll any more chance of contractlni lung c:ucer than If their busband1 don't
amote, 1 ne,., American Cancu Society
Jtudy conc:t~ Friday.
The ltudy, prepared by epidemiologist
Lawnnce GartiMel, found Ultre l• lnsuf·
lldenl evldeOOe SQ far to conelu~ that
pa.lslve u.nokioa -non·smo.teu lnbalin&
nur amokers-ls a hazard to non-.mok·
ers.
The rtsulta contradict tbt conclusJofts
of a a well-pubUclud Japanew study r-.
ltued In J&lMWf.
A Japaane raureber said be had
proYed tllat llOHmokiftl WI"' Ooee
husbands IGleMd dimJoped luq c-.
at a moo ~atet rate thAll tbolt wkb
l'IOHID~ ~. Some q.uou
Several months ago, headlines
around the world trumpeted alarming
news. A Japanese study was claiming
that non-smoking wives of smokers had
a higher risk of lung cancer because
of their husbands' tobacco smoke. That
scared a lot of people and understand-
ably so, if this claim was the last word.
But now new headlines have
appeared. First, because several eminent
biostatisticians found an apparent statisti-
cal error in the Japanese calculations-
raising serious questions about the study.
Second, because Lawrence
Garfinkel, the statistical director
of the American Cancer Society who
is opposed to smoking, published a
report covering 17 years and nearly
200,000 people in which he indi-
cated that '.'second-hand" smoke has
insignificant effect on lung cancer
rates in nonsmokers.
. If you'd like to know more about
these developments, write Scientific Div-
ision, The Tobacco Institute, 1875 I St.,
N.W, Washington, D.C. 20006.
BBl'Oll YOD ·•LIMO BIJ.l'fBB ftOB~
. &BT tll \lllOLI STORY.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined ..
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ·
~I
,
I ;
I
I
J
' . .
L I
DlilJ Piiat
MONDAY, AUG. 10, 1911
COM ICS 83
ENTERTAINMENT 84
BUSINESS 86
The merger wave :
----What does it
really mean , B6
a
a
South, north capital ideas going awry • • ... . ,
By PETER EISNER
BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) -
Brasilia, the ml>dernistic inland
capital hailed as an experiment
in futuristic development when
it was inaugurated in 1960, may
today be more a city of the out-
moded past than a visionary city
or lhe future.
Architects and urban planners
agree that the Bra zilian capital,
a city of modem steel govern-
m ent towers and superplanned
housing complexes surtounded
by rings of poverty. succeeded
in drawing the population or
South America's largest nation
inland from the Atlantic coast.
But in the process, It created a
megalopolis i n which living
costs are high and wherl! only
diplomats, government officials
and the middle class can enjoy
the benefits of clean air and
open spaces.
More than half of Brasilia's 1.2
m illion residents live far from
the central city in lower class
"satelllte" cities. A maic;t or
blue·collar worker may travel 80
miles or more by bua every day
paying $1 fa r e to earn the
minimum wage or about $4 a
day.
The middle class has been
hurt by drastic gasoline price
bikes as Brazil attempts to con·
serve fuel and save on a foreign
oil bill that reached $9.4 billion
• 1ast year.
The city is divided into isolat-
ed residential and commercial
sectors, and wit h gasoline cost-
ing $.1.25 a gallon, a trip to the
bank and supermarket can cost
several dollars.
The country is dependent on
highway transport for more than
two-thirds of its commerce, so
stocking Br asilia's warehouses
is expensive and leads to what
statistics say is the highest cost
of living in Brazil. The capital,
by design, bas no m ajor in·
dustries and is dependent on out-
side shipments for most goods.
·'Br asilia is not a n ul -
tramodern city, but a very old
cit y, 11 says Alexander Fils, a
Ger man architectu re student
preparing a book on the city 's
development. "The plan of this
city reflects the ideas of the
1920s and 1930s."
The city, brainchild of former
President Juscelino Kubitschek,
was designed by Lucio Costa
with several unusual concepts.
The center city. shaped in the
form of an airplane, has few
traffic lights. A series of traffic
circles and circuitous intersec
lions keep vehicles moving.
Costa designated the fuselage
or the plane design for govern·
menl buildings and the wings for
a series of apartment complexes
c alled "superquadras." The
apartment complexes were to be
self-sufficient, with schools,
recreation and commerce in
each.
"The idea wa s t hat the
physical structure of the city
would change the social struc·
lure," Galblnsky says. "But tilt
exact opposite occurred."
Expensive apartment prices
and high demand have kept poor
people out of housing in the cen;
tral city since Brasilia was in·
a ugurated . Renting a two· bedr oom apartme nt c osta
between $400 and $1,000 a month,
more expensive than all but lux-
ury apartments or the same sile
in Rio de Janeiro.
Wealthy Brasilia residents
and high government offtcia.14 .
can live on ranches out.side the
city or in hous es along the
artificial La.ke Paranoa, which
wraps around the central city.
Poor people a r e d oubly
penalized by having been forced
to move away from the center to
the so-called satellite cities,
Galbinsky says.
·'The poor people are the onea
with the greatest transport.atiOD
burden. They also are artificial·
ly separated from informal work
sources <house c ho r es and
cleaning) that are an important
factor in developing countries. 11
Poor residents who have not
moved to the satellite cities live
in makeshift houses intended as
temporary structures for the
construction workers who built
the capital. Squatters live bud·
died in drainage pipes, under
bridge viaducts and in aban-
doned buildings throughout ~
city
Galbinsky says Brasilia can
be saved through a series ol
changes that would decentralize
the city He calls for new urban
cen ters on the outski rts of
Brasilia which would draw conj:
merce and government servicelf
to the less affl uent areas .
Modern sculpture decorates lobby of Foreign Ministry building while arches frame Congress building in Brasilia, a city that is surrounded by poverty.
Plans to create Alaskan Brasilia getting dusty
By JEAN KIZER
J UNEAU, Alaska (AP> -
Alaskans voted In 1974 to move
their capital from Juneau -a
picturesque town tucked away in
the state's remote southeastern
panhandle -to a site hundreds
of miles northward and closer to
Alaska's heartland.
Construction was to have
begun in 1980 on a new, modern
capital city designed by a team
of planners who dreamed of
carving a $3.5 billion "Brasilia
of the North 11 from a hunk of
barren wilderness.
But today, the seat of govern-
m e nt remains in J uneau, a
charming but isolated town or
a bout 20,000 people nestled
between rugged mountain peaks
and a narrow channel of water.
Despite the voters' mandate,
not a shovel of dirt bas. been
moved at Willpw, the chosen site
for Alaska 's new capital. And
t he designs for a "model"
capital city, to be financed by·
the state's huge sur plus of oil
money, have been relegated to a
dusty shelf.
But, Alas kans are gearing up
for another battle in the bitter.
war that has raged for two
decades.'
The state Legislature, after
long, often angry debate
between supporters and oppo-
nents of the move, a1reed to put
tbe relocation issue before
voten again in 1982. Alukans
will be asked -for the lecood
time -to approve the COit of
movtns their capital.
Tbe battle pita the patrlota of
Juneau and their allies in rural
Alaska qainlt the boolten ol
Experts plan to build a $3.5 million 'Brasilia of the North' in Willow, proposed site of Alaska's new capital.
Anchorage, the state's lar1est
city, with a population of nearly
200,000. Willow, the proposed
capital site, ls about 30 air miles
north of Anchorage and about 70
miles by road.
Altbou1b voters In 197'
agreed. by a margin of 48,858 to
35,683, that the capital should be
moved, four years later they
soundly rejected a tlee million
bond tuue dellaned to 1et the
move Wlder way. Tbe conllictlq
votes esaentlally have resulted
in a ltalemat.e.
In response, lawmaken have·
decided to call on a citizen com-
mi11lon to figure a· new cost
estimate for the move, and to
put the price tag before votets in
November 1982.
Many people efpect the cost to ·
top $1.5 billion, and possibly
even $2 bUUon.
Private cit.laena on both aides
of the Issue are prepartna for a
hard·fou1bt, bitter camj>aip,
and campe have begun planniQa
full·aeale advertisl.n1 blltaee ex·
peeled to eo1t nearly $1 million.
"It'll be an awful campaip.1
You've 1ot to be willlnl to tear
lblJ stat. apart to win," ••YI
Bill Mcconke y , who ha s
managed several campaigns ln
the state.
Juneau's state Sen. Bill Ray,
a staunch foe of the caplt.al
move, says , "Anchora1e wants
everythinf. I don't blame them
for wanting t o Improve
Ancbora1e and s et up an
economic base. But at the same
tlme, they have to realise the
move would ruin a whole area."
If pro-moven bave their way,
a barren bunk of Aluka wilder· •ea•. 1now-covered durinl the
winter, mo1cuaito-lnfHtecf and
..
I
swampy in the summer, would
b ecome the setting for a
beautiful, modem capital city
(lesigned by some of the nation's
top pl~ers and architects:
The bizarre chain of events
that led to plans to urbanize a
wilderness site began shortly
after Alaska won statehood in
1959.
An c horage l nt e re1ts
spearheaded a ballot initiative
in 1960 to ·move the capital
northward. The campalp wu
fueled by ar1ument1 tbat
Juneau was too isolated and too
far from the bulk of the state's
population.
J uneau was -and still is -
remote and isolated. It is two.
time zones and 600 miles away
from Anchorage and the heart
of Alaska's population. It's also
relatively inaccessible.
The only way into the capit.al
is by boat or plane ($285 round
trip) from Anchorage; there are
no roads beyond the mountaim.
T he dense fog, pe lting rain and
snowstorms that are Juneau'4
winter trademarks often fol'CJ!I
flight cancellations.
But; despite the efforts qf
some powerful Anchorage in·
terests, including Ancbora1e-
Times publiaher Robert AtwoOcl.
that capital move initiative WM
d e fe a ted , in part becaua,
Alaska's oil riches had oot beea
discovered and the state barelJ
had en ough m oney to stay
afloat.
Oiehard capital moven triaJ
again in 1982 with a second lJi.
itlative, but It too was defeat.eel:
In 1984, a massive eartbq~
hit Anchorage and other sout.b·
central Alaska towns, leaviJM
widespread damage and cuttbi
s hort a third initiative cam·
paign. l
Reconstruction of the repm
served u a new SOW'Ce of unlb'
amon1 Alaslcana, and ma19'
hoped the sectional rinlrifi
produced by the capital move iit-
sue would be for1otten.
But in the early 11'101, reJoc•·
tlon propooeata reMwed tbelt
efforts. Flna1ly. ln 117•. an i.
it.iative to move the capital _..
voter approval by a maJ'lin ot •
percen~ to 44 percent.
-Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
Should have kft, but didn't
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I
. want to at.and up and clvt three
cheen to that woman wbo left
her hUlbaDd (a clerl)'man> -
knowtn• full weU ab• would be
roundly crtttclaed In a amall
town -and went to work to help
aupport her three children. How
I Wiab l had her courqe.
For 23 yeara I have been
locked into a belllab mantaee.
On two occulom when I leJ'toua.
ly cooaldered leavtna, I made
the mlatalte of li1tt1Jnln1 to my
mother and aunt wbo told me I
owed It to my cbUdren to keep
our marrtaee toaether. .
The children are erown now
------~~ 111 lllllll ...
and I am alone witb a mlaerable
nut wbo ii 41 yean old and look.I
60. He la in poor pby1lcal coadl·
Uon becauae of bia drinkln1. We
have DO couple friends. He bu
alienated bla relativea and mine
with bis foul mouth. My only
lifeline to humanity ls women
acquaintances who come fOf' cof.
fee and cookies ln the afternoon.
I am stuck becauae of a bear&
condJUt>o whJcb makes it Im·
poalble for me to work. How I
regret I didn't make t.be move
when I had my health and tood
looks. Don't anawer th1a letter,
Ann. Just print it. -20·20
HINDSIGHT
Dear ••: Here It II a1•1
wlUtmyUtaab.
DEAR ANN LANDERS :
Here's a litUe aometblne my
wife slipped in my prayer book.
I found it when I opened the
book in church and broke up.
Please print it. Thanlu, Doll. -
R .O. IN EVANSTON
De1r a.o.: '"'' pleu•re. Here I& II:
To keep a mamaie brlmmln
With love in the lovlnt cup,
Whenever you're wrone, ad·
mlt lt.
Whenever you're right. shut up. --'~
Don't ~t burned bf1 . o "IW" I that'• too hot to ~. PlaJI u cool
with Ann ~·· f11'UU to "Neck· I ing . and Petting -What Are tM
LhnUa?" ~ ~T reqwlt to Ann
long, •tamped, ul/..oddrelM!d
velope.
lAnMT•. P.O. Boz 11915, c1 Ill. Qll, enclolmg 50 cftlt1 and
'To make friend be a friend' ·
.. ~
NEW JOB -Air Force Staff Sgt. Ronald Gatlin, from Shep-
pard Air Force Base in Texas. assists in clearance delivery
and ground processes in control tower at Chicago's O'H~re
Airport. More than 500 military co!'trolle~s are helping
direct traffic during controllers stnke, with 1,400 more
scheduled to be phased in.
Transplants raise
web of legal issues
NEW ORLEANS CAP> -Fear
or being sued has already made
dying a nightmarish marathon
ror some people and a doctor has
told lawyers that new legal com-
plications are coming.
Dr. Charles L. Brown Jr. said
researchers will soon solve the
problem of rejection, which now
complicates the surgical
transplant or part or one body
onto another body.
The human body almost
always tries to reject foreign tis·
sue. It is a major difficulty in.
for instance, heart transplants.
"When the rejection problem
is finally solved we are going to
have a lot more problems about
death," said Dr. Brown, whose
patients include the New
Orleans Saints football squad.
For example, a newly dead
body, depending on age and con-
dition. may be a source of a
variety of spQ-e parts that could
keep some other body alive or
give it good health.
In that situation, fear of being
sued would not be the only
pressure on a doctor with an ap-
parently dead patient whose
heart still beats due to machine
support. There would also be the
s earch for good transplant
material -at times backed by
political power or cash in·
fluence.
"I'd hate to see them go back
to body snatching," said Dr.
Richard Lescoe of Los Angeles,
jokingly.
The two physicians took part
in a panel discussion at a pro-
gram on "Death and Dytne" at
the American Bar Association
annual meeting.
By EU.EN BRANDT ................
Like moat beginners, the
swimmlne students are afraid ol
the water.
RecognWng their fear, their
teacher does everythlne poalble
to relax. them. She keepa them
laughing with jokes and riddles,
bas them stand· in a circle in
shallow water, and asks them to
hold bands. After telling them a
particularly funny joke, abe
CALIFORNIA
WOMAN '
shouts, "OK, all toeether DOW,
let's duck our beads under water ,
and bold them there for five
seconds." Still laughing from
her joke and confident of their
teacher's ability. every student
ducks. By the end of this flnt
class, they can blow bubbles un-
der water and float on their
backs. They've completely lost
their fear of the water.
What's remarkable about this
particular swimming class,
however, is that the average stu·
dent is over 70. Many have never
attempted to swim before, and
some have been unable to use
the s wimming pools their
families own. Their teacher, too,
is remarkable ·-an enereetic,
dynamic 73-year-old lady named
Emily Rodd.
''Swimming is a wonderful
sport for people of all aies,"
says Rodd. "I'm proud to be
able to introduce it to so many
people."
Rodd's classes for begbmen,
held at the Town Hall Pool in the
Riverside County retlrement
Scorpio: Opportuntty on holUon
Tuesclay, Aagast 11
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Professional assignment could
require extra correspondence,
meetings, attendance at social
affairs , possible journey.
Gemini, Sagittarius natives
figure prominently. Focus on
career, promotion, prestige and
spotlighting of unique talents.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20):
Good lunar aspect coincides
with spiritual awareness, Jong-
r an g e projects and com·
prehension of personal potential.
Temporary confinement proves
a boon -you're able to piece
together bits of information and
come up with complete story.
GEMINI <May 2l·June 20):
Dig beneath surface, reject the
superficial and "communicate"
with young person who ex -
presses des ire for change.
Virgo, Sagittarius and another
Gemini play important roles.
Focus also will be on credit rat-
ings, taxes , special r ights,
permissions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Moderation and diplomacy
become valuable twin allies. Ac·
cent on public relations, pa·
Uence, cooperative efforts and
contracts. Major domestic ad· • I
HOROSCOPE
justment dominates scenario.
Marital status commands more-
than·usual attention.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Goal ls
elusive ; refuse to be dis-
couraged by "moving target."
Emphasis on basic chores, calls
or letters from relatives and
your general health. Cancer,
Scorpio, Pisces persons figure
prominently. Define terms! •
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22):
Lunar emphasis on physical at-
traction, charisma, em~tional
commitment and professional
obligations. Relationship in·
tensities and you could become
''inextricably involved."
Taurus, Capricorn and another
Virgo figure prominently.
UBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Best
results are obtained by working
with familiar material. Success
comes close to home base. Looi·
standing transaction can be
completed. You gain wider rec·
ognitioo and can strilt~ chord of
universal appeal.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
New opportunity ls on horizon;
emphasis currently on relat1ves1 short journeys, special notes ana
"dramatic confrontaUon" with
one you loved. Emphasis also on
independence, originality, new
starts and courage to break with past.
SAGITrABIUS <Nov. 22-Dec.
21 ): You'll be dealing with
money -be a comparison shop-
per, recognize your own worth,
refuse to be intimidated by one
who talks a "big game.'' In·
tuitive intellect is on target -
you'll know what to do and when
to do it.
CAPalCORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19 ): Moon in your sign
highlights individuality, vitality
and success through presenta·
lion of original concepts. Social
life accelerates, popularity in-
creases and you get invitation to
travel. Keep eye on Sagittarius!
AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18):
Material that bad been obscured
will beeome "brightly visible."
Methodology will be clarified. Be
ready for review and rebuilding
program. Scorpio, Taurus, Leo
persons play significant roles.
Get the facts!
PISCES (Feb. 19·Marcb 20):
Gain indicated through· written
material. Special information
received approximately 90 days
ago can now be utilized for
profit. Focus on hopes, dreams,
desires and succeasf\ll business
enterprise. Watcll Virgo!
Facing your fears discussion set
FAaNG FEARS is the topic
of a discussion to be led by
tberaplst Michael Alvarez at
7: 30 p.m. Tuesday in Santa Ana.
For information, call 532-5646.
BBTTEa B&EATRE&S'
Club for chronic obstructive
pulmonary dlseue patients
meeta the second Wedneeday ol
each month~ 3 to 5 p.m . at
Padftca Community Hospital ln
H~ Beach. For Informa-
tion, call 842--0611, ext. 3!IO.
8T&ESS AND ADOL -
escence seminar 1pon1ored
by the CareUnlt of South Cout
Medical Center and the city ol
lnine will be held Weclnelday at
7:• p.m. in tmne. For lnforma-
tJoo. call 49f.1Jll.
. ~DOLSICBNT P&OBUMB
• Will be u.. "'bt«t of a 1ecbare t~ ,...... at 7:JO p.m. Tbun·
-Ill UMt llartpoH Womea'• c...e.r Ila OrM19. For lafclnD•· U..,callllr .....
HW.TH HELP
AME&ICAN &l:D cao11
bloodmobile will be at tbe Ad·
vanced Health Center, lJOO N.
Bristol St., Newport BHcb
Thunday from 1:'5 p.m. to 7:30
p. m. Monday. the bloodmobile
will vtllt Our Lady of Fatima
Church, 105 La l!lperanu, San
Clemente from 2:45 lo 7:30 p.m.
For more Information, call 885-at. ut. 318.
PAaEN'l'ING wUl be the t.Gptc ot • t~bour HmlDar • 7:IO
p.m. Prlday In Tultla. J'or In~
formation. ca11-.1010.
rass •Aaa1Aos
worubop •Ul be offered bJ
tbe II.al llealtb AllodedciD of
Or ... Oomty • •=• •.•. l"r1· ct., ID lliilita Aaa. Par tafGnae. tJoa. c.Jl llf. 1111. •
WIN PE&MANENT CON·
fldence la the title of a di•·
cuulon by 1tre11 speclallat
Murray OKman at 10:30 a.m.
Saturday in Newport Beach. For
lnformatlon, call tZU> -.nTe.
•llSION COMMUNITY
Ho1pltal will 1pon1or a
Health Awareneu Day Saturday from noon to 5 p.m . to dilcuN
medical teebnolory, community
health prosram• and safety tipa.
For information on the ptelellta·
tlon, beld at MlallOD Viejo Mall,
, call -...00, ext. 5'11.
AMB&JCAN •llD caofia ot Orance County II 1pouortnc tu
third annual 8eacb Project wltb
repreNDtaUY" from tbe Red
Cto11, American Cueer Sod-.
ty I PWmed Pu.tlloo4 .. tM
Blrtb Control JuUt-.. Villta
will be made from 11 a.m. to I
p.m.llffmtt._,.a.-.._.
daJ, Saa Clemate TueldaJ,
Aq. 11, Seal .. ult Wednlld91,
Aq. 1t ad Caroaa del lbr,
Tlnnday, Aq. •· ror man ID-
formatka, call f:ll..llll, m. •
EMILY RODD ... Having time of her life
community of Sun City, are part
of an extensive program for
older swimmers at all levels of
ability.
Twenty-five students, ranging
in a•e from SO to 90, attend each
of Rodd's popular eieht-week
classes. Upon completion, stu·
dents are adept al both crawl
and bacltstroke. Many move on
to more advanced swimming
classes, and some choose to
participate in a gala swim show,
the Aquarian Pageant, held each
autumn. Most important, all
have acquired a useful, healthful
sltill they cart practice the rest of
their lives. "One of my recent
students," recounts Rodd, "an
85-year-old lady, progressed throuch the entire sequence of
classes and now swims several
miles each day.''
The determination of Emily
Rodd's swimming students
typifies the active enjoyment of
life exhibited by Sun City's 8,000
residents.
Sun City most resembles a
· univera.lty campus, and an ex·
traordlnarily cosmopolitan ooe
at that. Everyone ii friendly,
smiling, and enthusiastic.
Service clubs, church eroups,
and cultural societies are thri v-
ine. A elance at a typical day's
roater ol eventa 1bow1 several
lectures, political meetln11,
such sports activiUea u bowl·
int, billlarda, and aerobic
dance, and clasaea in Italian
conversation, Japanese brush
painting, jewelry making, and
yoga
And Emily Rodd probably de-
serves the title "Mn. Sun City."
It seems she can't walk one
short block without being greet-
ed by SO people, bugged by 30 of
them, and invited to at least 10
community events.
Rodd is vice president of her
synagogue sisterhood, photo
chairman of Sun City's square
dance club, and an active
member of the women's club,
book discussion group, and geo-
graphic society.
But except for her swimming
classes, she's most rewarded by
her involvement with pbotog.
rapby. During World War II,
she worked as a volunteer
service photographer, taking
photm of servicemen on their
way overseas. (The photos
would be sent to the soldien'
families, along with chatty let·
ters written by canteen ladies.>
Rodd didn't study the technical
aspects of photography,
however, until she came to Sun
City and joined the Sun City
Camera Club.
Working mostly in color, sbe
now develops all her own slides
and prints. In the past decade,
she's won more than lSO ~
grapby awards, lncludlng a
number in the Kodak Interna·
tional Camera Competition, and
is listed in the Photographic
Society of America's Who'• Who o/ Photographer1.
Rodd also has created several
slide shows, which she presents
to civic, church, and cultural
groups. In fact, she's ln so much !
demand in Riverside County
hardly a week goes by without at
least one presentation. Her most
popular show, called "Our
Heritage of Beauty," features
pictures demonstrating what
Rodd calls "the manifestation of
God in Nature.''
Although Rodd is paid for bet
slide shows, she creates them
primarily for the "satisfaction
of accomplishment" and the ex-
citement she derives from enter·
taining and informing people.
"Through my shows," she en-
thuses, "I've made many won·
derful friends." ,
Indeed, friendship is the j
motivating principle in Emily :
Rodd's life. She clalms to have ;
been a shy wallflower growing •
up in Bismarck, N.D .. obsc:i I
in the shadow of a beautif I
older sister. "I remember bow :
felt at dances." says Rodd. I'
"when nobody asked me to
dance. Now, I make a point of I
drawing shy peopl.e into groups. I
I believe in that old motto: to
make a friend, be a friend."
With the enjoyment she finds
in her many friendships and ac-
tivities, Emily Rodd thinks thiS
is the best time of her life. "I
certainly don't feel the least bit
old ," she says. "I've bad much
more fun the last several years
than I ever had when younger.''
She believes younger women
tend to feel insecure about their
lives. For one thing, in these
days of high divorce rates, many
are in.secure about their rela-
tionships with men. "As you
grow older," says Rodd, "you
can become more secure and
comfortable in your marriage,
I've been married 42 years now1 -
and my marriage is the emo-
tional anchor in my life."
Younger women may also feel
insecure about their looks. But
Rodd, whose note paper is I
he aded "Greetings from a ,
Jewish Grandmother" and who :
cheerfully describes herself as /
"five feet square," is totally at I
ease with her appearance. "I :
even narrated a fashion show re-l
cently, although my family
claims I usually look like I just
emerged from a Mixmaster."
It all boils down to seJf.
c onfldence, liking yourse
enough lo s hare your talent
with others. "Everybody ha
some special talent," Rodd say
"and we all have the talent fo
loving."
Emily Rodd believes keepin
active and involved naturall
leads to a happier life. lnvolv
ment in any activity inevitabl
leads to new interests
friendships and rewards. "
ing begets doing," she laughs.
Rodd's swimming studen
would surely agree. On be
almost daily afternoon swim ,
she's mobbed by former pupils.
"Watch this dive, Emily," on
shouts. while another asks ad
vice on his butterfly stroke.
Wt ~lcomt 11our commntl
queationa, ond 1Vgge1tioM abou
thi1 column. Write to C<W/
Woman, TM Dail11 Pilot, P.O.
1560, Costa Mtta, Co., 92626.
Annollldng a 5ummer
' Program ForTeeml
John RObert Powers has
designed a special Summer
pro0ram to meet the self·
lflll)fovement needs or
teenagefs For over 50
years. John Robert Powers
has served the emerging
woman 1n pefsonal. bus•·
ness Of career development
and p(otess1ona1 modeltno
Now theteenaoer can
especially team to reach
her lull patential the "Pow·
ers" way In the relaxed
'atmosphere ol Summer
classes. ReotiYe substan·
tial tuition discount s by
reserving clesses now. Call
for lree lntormatlvn.
SICK
AND TIRED?
Pf.MC:lfW. OEVllOPMlNT & MOOEUNO SCHOQU
GIAllEcoum
3 Town & Country. Orange
(714) 547·8228
IF SOMEONE YOU
LOVE IS HURTING
(And you are hurting too)
Because of
ALCOHOLISM
or other ohemk:81 dependency
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 Alcohotism
Intervention Program. Every
Saturday Morning, 10.m tll Noon
THI
f.4MIL't'
ClaClJI
BIGGEOaGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
.... -......... --, .. .. . ,. .. •
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981 ••
PMNIJT
-----TIJMBLEW EED8
'1t>O'~ ON SACREW POOHAWK L.ANPi .,_,...-----........ ~-
y ~ "'-""'-=--:
by Ch1rl11 M. Schulz
'ftXI Me MOT IN TME ®~'-~p I DC»fT l<NOW WtttAt SECTION
TEN, ROW 6, IS ...
by Tom K. Ryan
ooPSY-PAISY?
.
1fip SHOE by Jeff MacNelly
• \\Your plant in the bottle looked thinty,
Mommy, so I gave it a good drink." "I hate Mond1y1."
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
I' ~ 8-tO l
g ___ .,._,_
I ••
..
~ II II ~
S-10 ~~,.)
, "He's fine, so untll he tires of playlng dead,
' }
I
IRMA WANTS
TO BORROW
SOME PERF=UME
I GORDO
1 enjoy the peace and quiet!" 'Tm not speaking to you, "Thank You. Lord." l .., Dennis Mitchell!"
AfJ LANA I~ A~UT
TO I.EAVE THE
ptf)TRICT ATTORNEY'!>
OFFICE.AL.EX REMO
"5K~ A ~EEMIN6L Y
CAf)UAL OUEfJTION !
-If.A 1'./)I. 'P fl/ p _oui<.,-/,,1 8 -10 \
41Alllbed
508'"Vlflqll
51Fh~ 52Medhpett
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WHA1"'9 Wl1"H 9MOCt<
ANP -n-t• cau 1-r•.-f'
""MtUUXXXX)f.
by Gus Arriola
1tJ "TMerle
~ece., ~,~
~,..,,~
~
~fJl!AJ-!
~
by Tom Bat1uk
by Kevin Fagan
~i·~ 1l'(!Mt:, -n.1~
A LO'f ~f'f£R 'f~AN
l 1'~0\.1(, ~'f ~~ \l)OOL. ~.
by George Lemont
I'M NOf SUPC ... 8Uf l
'1l'i1NK lT MEANS
~nYGOOD .
I
I
I I
• .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguet 10, 1981
Off the stage
and into rock
lh JAY SllARBV'M' ..............
NEW YORK -Linda aoD1taclt eam•
from rock stardom to a Broadway hit, "The
Ptratee ot Penzance." Now, her auccusor, Karla
DeVito. hope• to dolt the other way -from that
hit to rock atardom. "I'd like to be able to go back and forth, from
theater to rock," says the lady who aucceeded
Miu Ronstadt ln producer Joe Papp'• pop·
flavored edition of the Gilbert & Sullivan classic.
"I like the idea of being able to jump back and
forth," adds Miss De Vito, who plays Mabel, the
show's chief maiden. ''My big motto thJs year is:
·'There's no future In specialization."
At 27, she's already done a fair amount of
jumping back and forth since her days as a theater
major at Chicago's Loyola University, which she
left after her freshperson year.
She says she decamped directly into the na·
tional company of "God.spell," thence to a little re·
vue that even played the Plaza here, "El Grande
de Coca Cola.''
Onward to Boston and Orchestra Luna -"it
was the per.feet combination between theatrical
and rock." That led lo a stint in the rock band of a
hearty named Meatloaf and a world tour.
Then, off to an off.Broadway revival of the
e lderly musical, "Jubilee," then the role of Helena
in a musical version of "A Midsummer Night's
Dream" at La Mama, the experiment house here.
Mlss DeVito hails from Moken, Ill., ''halfway
between Joliet and Kankakee.'' Equipped with a
3'h-octave vocal range, she's been in "Pirates"
e ver since it bowed on Broadway last January.
Until June 2, she was Miss Ronstadt's un·
derstudy. She considers understudying akin to
awaiting a hanging. Just as it happens, your mind
gets wonderfully concentrated. But you do fret
some before then :
"It's a form of torture. You never know when
they'll call on you and you're thrown on at the last
moment.''
The lhrowing·on has occurred a few times.
She's heard her s hare of disappointed "awwws"
from the patrons, a soul·cbilling sound to any un·
derstudy ever trundled In to substitute for a star.
But she's philosophical about it. "If I were go.
ing to see the show and Ronstadt was in it," she
says·, "of course I'd want to see her do it, too."
Although now one of the main events in
Orange Dffve In 551-1022
UA City Ctnemti, Of•ne-
134-3111
Or•nge Mllll, 837.0340
HIW•Y 39 Drive In,
We1tmln1ter 891-3613
UA Ctneine, Coate MeH
S40.o5M
HEAVY METAL (RI SHOWS AT 11: 30
1:15 3:00 4 :45 6:30
8:30 a. 10:15
f,_1J-.-..1R'1 ShoW1 al 12·00 4.00
1:00. Zorro, TIM Gay
Blade CPGI :Z. 10 6 10 1
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
AU. Ill ll!iJ AHO ® Fil.MS AECUVE
l)IE S~ Of Tl<E MOTION PICTURE
C00E Of SELF AEGUlA T ION
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
llSULT ..
SHYICE
DIUCTOIY
For Result
Service Call Ii
642-5671
Id.JU ..
Karla DeVito, three and a half octaves and plenty of drive.
"Pirates," the maid from Moken won't be in It
much longer. Next month is rock time.
Her first album, in a musical bag she calls
"power pop,'" is being loosed Aug. 23 by Epic
Records under the title, "Is This a Cool World or
What?"
And, she says, come Sept. 7 she'll exit the trills
and chills of "Pirates" and sally forth to promote
the album at various radio stations, clubs and con·
certs.
Her label originally wanted her to start the
tour in F.ebruary, she says. But it agreed to a de·
lay alter learning she was going to replace Miss
Ronstadt on Broadway in June.
"I think that's really helped, with Linda and
Rex Smith, (another visitor from the planet Rock)
doing the show,'' she says. It makes pop.music
and Broadway moguls aware each can help the other.
A'f LAST THI WORLD'S
FlllS'f ..... 9Y HelUIOll ROYll.
NOW PLAYING
UW&llOI Cl_.. CllTtll DIWAMS IA•El'C-
Cosla Mm 979 •1.i El Toro SSH.180
--~_,.. TWW M CITI c.111 Hvnl1f1910n 8uc.lll 941·03al Orange ~-3911
"""'°' TfCllnl(OIOf® •• Oit.i i'f ~fU1'fS " ......
TfVv WAl'INUI ••Os 0 A WatMt C~Mvftl<thOftl c~, C F ... C ..... Auo..,ltt IHI .. ....,..,,..,...
Roller Skates
•WOPEI
HEAVY llETAL IRI
ALSO PLAYING AMERICAN POP (Al
WOUB !RI
ESCAPE FROM
NEW YORK !RI
I TIIE _... ST'RIKB
UCS frGl ,.1nl Co-tilt ltttle Bevoncl The .... ''°' I WIMUW1R1·
~::"!RI
..... 111111 ...... !POil A Ito lfloWint Ovt llt Fint
llt• 171
new location
'Skate-Away Dist., Inc.
Direct Factory Outlet
Hi-top & Jogger_ Style
Rollerskates
now only
.$.95
(rea . .,.00 value>
with a FREE 4·way skate wrench
Open everyday 11 am-7 pm 642-8516
Slcate·Away Dist., Inc. 1111•':.ir ~"""·
7ll W. 17th Unit D-4 Costa Mesa
in The Mesa Industrial Park ...
ProfeuiOnal Skat•• & Acce1torie1 Availal>U ~
. --' '
You'renewr
too young to
leamtbe
•BARGAIN MATINEES*
Monday thru Saturday
All Perform•ncH before S:OO PM
(ExCIClf Spedal En9191ment1 Incl Holidays)
,._ ___ CM_
''ARTHUR'' ""' , ___ .... __ _ --~· "VICTORY" IPG' t----~Wii/ .,_. __ --· "TARZAN
THE APE MAN'',.. ..... ___ _ --·--· "RAIDPS OF THE
LOST ARK" IPOl
·----Nii: Wiiif
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALIC ·IN -"RAIDERI OF THE
LOIT ARl\';,LG> --·---.-.--·--"WOLRN""' ·------LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
-----· I "Y1CT°"V" ''°'
·------I
"UNDER THE
RAINIOW'' IPG' ·---. ............ ,.. __
"SUP£RllAN II""' u.. __ .......
foeulty 01 Condlewood
213/531·9580
""_,__
"SU~ttJl"(PG) ,_, ___ ....
"ONAHY
SUNDAY 11" IPG' ·----·-----· "ZORRO, THE BAY
BLADE"lPG) ,_ ... -. ..... -
ILi.-·· "ITRIPEI" (R) ·-------South CooJf Hlwoy ) ollfoodWoy
494-1514 --·----·-au.• ''TARZAN "RAIDERS OF THE
THE AP£ MAN" (R) -.-.... -LOST MK" lllO) -----
•.-1111. ,._, o .... 7:30 s.• "" 7:tS \.._• s. .... • .. ,,
IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNDER 1Z FRlE! ""'* ,,.. • ., ....... n11 fu •:• • ••• • S•• . ""' •:ao ,. CINf.A 1DU11D • l'OUll AM CM IWlll IS~ 5'fMSI
tfl IC) Ml CM MOIO WIT!l IQHllDj ACCD8Y l'OSITlllll
-IMll,.. l'UlltJilll.l•NJ. ~ .._ .. Oii M -
AN AHf 1"4
ANAHEIM DRIVE ·IN
J,_woy ti 01 LemOfl SI
"YOU'M ~TOO YOUNG TO LUltN TNI ICOM'•
"TltE NK1H1' TNI UGMT9
WINT OUT tN~" (N)
"M>AD GMml'' (PO) an.tHO C1llf ·A SOUllD
--,•='='='""·""-=•~.,,,-=---.r~a"'f.,..,Ultf<ZlrllMm ...... rJllW~imllr'
"TARZAN THI AN MAN" (It) --
fl\.ua "fTUOUfT ...... "'' "CAWllMN" (N) ''CAMNt CORPIU'' f'-
Clllf • " SOUllD Clllt • " $OIJlll)
P'\,1t• .. • ......
BUENA PARK "11/I Vf IN
I .... , A '·
FOU NTAIN VALLEY
OlllVE IN
..... 11111&L·-.a.·--'°THE ~ ITIUKU~(PG)
"STAR ntl!Jr• (Q)
,_ __
""'""= ti" (PO)
Son 0!990 fftty. ot llook"""' CSo > "Nf't WHICH ~AY YOU CAW' (PG)
M2·Hll CIM ·A toullO mlll '"?,~!f J
''TMC NtCIHT TMI UGMT9 WbTOUTIN~"(N) "OM ANY '="y "" (N)
"LOOK DOWN AND_.. (Rt "fM>AD GMma'' (PG)
Ctllf·PI toullO;;;.._ __ .-.-·--" ...... __
''THI ~LL RUN" (Na "TARZAN ~AN_,. .. (It)
"Aln'HUR" (.N)
Cll( • l'l IOUIO
A t, .. ~ ..
LA HABRA D111~1 'N ....... -................ .... ln·IM2
.. . . ' ~ ~ '
LI NCOLN DIHVf IN
1oncoin Awe ••ti ot •,,..
12M070 ---
' ,..,. .
ORANGE lJIJIVI N
. ''OM ANY "ry r ,...,
''vtCfOln"' (Na
. .
MISSION (ll<IVI IN
. -.. ·
"CAW IWf" t'9J
CtllHI 10U11D •
"OH ANY •:f"Y I " {PO)·
"l.OOll DOWN AMD0~.(N)
__ .... .,.. ........... C•••llMC••T•• .... ,.,.,..., •'-''" .. "" ..... 0r-. U.·'911
7
NOW PLAYING
•
._.. ll~ ..,. ....
Mallliln Driw-ln ~ Woocttw100I CinedOme 179-9150 Sl1·Sl80 SSHl6SS 634 2!>~
C:.TA 9IU f-1 .. fAlLIT LMUIA IUCtl WUT .... TO
Soutll Caul Foun!Mn Vilify Soulll Coast H1-W.-, 39 Drl'lt·lll ~6-2 711 139· 1 soo 494 1s14 891 3693 1-----.. --11111 ....... 0e11y 11111oe1ni.. .... 1
(
I • I
l
k
--;;;..;;...===-~
MO ....... KlMlru c--OOl'lfrontt • klllilr
from CtlN.. • ~ pfloto-
... end .,.. Indian
youth tlw ..... ..S by tht
dellttl of hie .pm. I TICTM;~ w•A•t•H
i1u=:::~ -"' .... 'Al OI a -.,. OOflo
....... IOfellaln
...... .,11 .... M•A•l•H
...... talk.I IN llllft
IMI •-11"•11 a ~ OI
...... '""' • tour1'I Qnlda &lllallom•-·<AI ,.._.o~
WeldOfl offer•
...... • .... frolll
C•ulc:ioe In ...... tot
• polltlMI favor, and
'--'• .... tlnaly ........
;.-haf.(A) • "°'" °'* A.....,Md.....,MNO-... *OUlflNW ..........
....... achoo&. CIDMOV!a .. A ~ etoty'' (1171)
flWfy '°'II• Meg F_... A
... Md. -"'"' .,,. an llHnlc:ted to one
..... bllt "'* ~ llNP le arp•uted by tM
feet ..... ttley ere bottl
~.'A' A"-tMle ~ of ,_.
CXlf'ltlnuoua duty, Hawll·
••• befllwtot beeofnN
wec*llf INll ueual.
• GOOOTIMl8
Floflde'• reluetllnoe to go
out on • d•te pr-to be Jwtllled wtien her ..,....
ROUGH GAME -Michael Landon com-
forts Matthew Laborteaux alter a foot-
ball injury in "Little House on the
Prairie" tonight at 8 on Channel 4.
(JI) ........ "°'*°' NOMOR
'W•io Time" The lvw
of. ~ m.wrted couote
••• lhoc:lllng twn wtien
a 17th-century witch Cir'9 ~haunt tharn.
~ -htedecl for ......
•• ILICTNC• I~== ICNIWI
MCME
"Our Time" ( '873) Pamela·
Sue M.,,ln, P111!., Ste-
~. The ll¥M of two
)'OUtlO couplee etll'olied ••
privet• 1chool1 ere
changed wtien one of the
glrtl dllCOVW8 9he II preg·
nent. "PO' .,..MOW!
"Smotcey And The Bal>dlt
ti" C1880) Butt~
Jecl!le a.-i. SMrlff
Buford T. Juetlce c:aMI In
hie two i-nan brothers to
ltop • rMnd bootlegg«.
the Bendit. from trenaport.
i1 •baby elephant. 'PO'
l:IO Ill MIDAU.
AeglOnel coverage of Cln·
d nnatl Reda et Loe ~
lee Dodgen; St. Louie cat-
dlnele •t Phlt-.delphl• Phlt-....
I JOKP'IM.D
AU .. THE FAML Y
Edith oet• her big c:hence tor ,_ end fortune when
lhe'• Nlced to do• t~
lion c:cmmercllll.
• BINNYHIU.
a.nny'1 Wnt Country
cherecter hu the belt
lldvlce • t.ther can gtw to
hlleon.
• ICCET NEWlllEAT ID STUDIOI&
"GymnutQ" Young gym.
null train tor Mure Otrm·
pie comc>etltlon; two kid•
f\'om NerMk• make 1 eel·
-fiction fllm. (RI
(1)8NIW8 (H) ntR& TALES DAN<
AND DNtGEAOtJ8
Thf" 1torlee Involving
Intrigue and bizarre tent•
ly -pr-led: "Silvet ea.a... •tlln'lng Chrieto-
pher Plumtn..-u Sherloc:ll
Hoim.; "The Ugly eoy:·
"'11th Berry MorM; end
"Rocking HorM Winner,"
... 1\Klng Kenneth More.
Cil WOM.O M>UJ!R
DllCO~
Tel Beblonle end Rendy
Gerclner join hoel Skip
Stephenlon M ten coupliM
from Wound the WOfld
comc>et• tor the tttte of
world rohr dleco ~
on.
HI I BlfTOflAL 1:'00 C89 NIW8
I ICNIWI
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Lori Beth chooeM . the
Cunnlngtwn. ... the mod·
el tor her paper on the typ-
k:al ~American I
femlly.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
·~ Al Chrlltmuttme, Hew!<·
lye wrltM a lett... to hl9
father d .. crlblog wn.1 a
doc:tor'1 llfe Is llke at Ille
40771h. •tt ..... ME_,.,.,1,..8 Of 8AH
~,
WMn two firemen at•
burned to cleeth In • nre
dellb..-ately set by tome-
one. Stone Mt• out to c:ap-
IUf'e the~t.
• OYEAEASY
~t: lllf\Q4lf Vic Demon..
CRIQ
• MACHB. I LEHAEA
AIPORT ~~ACDOUOH
"GIOria" C 1980) Gena Row-
lend1. JOhn Ad-. A
former gun moll ~
th• protector of en
orphaned 8-year-old Puef.
IO Rican targeted by the
undenwortd for the lnfor·
matiOn he c:arrln In •
battered briefc:u41. 'PG'
CZ') CHAAl.18 CHAMPUH
TAU<I WITH OEOAOE
CUKOA
1:t0 9 2 ON THE TOWN
Hoell: Steve Edward•.
Me6ody Rogers. A look et e
Jumbo Jet er-u they
prepare tor e lllght around
the world. D FIGHT BACK WITH
DAVID HOROWITZ
Toplc:a: light beer c:ommer-
cllll1; polaonoua plant1;
pewnthopa. 8 IHANANA
Gueet: Joe Namath. G FACI! THe MUSIC
• TOPITORY
Hoeta: Jim Thoma. Mary
~L /LEHAER
AEPORT ID GREAT
~
"Mollere" M041ere rnMll
'"-ec:trH1 Madelelne
8ejert and abandonl "'• 1-car-; with the Bejart
lamlly and others, the tllu•·
trl~ Theatre Company la
formed. CPatt 2) (I\)
(I) '·"'-MAGAZINE A former 11o-. child wno
II now a mMlonlllre i..
tycoon; • trio of ... end
bam9t--. !:=.YFEUO
"S~ M.OVI•" (1919)
Documentary. Mua6c: by
Mllce Oldfield. Arc:Nvlll film
foouoe c:hronlc:IM the trl-
umphl ol the U.S. apace
Pf'OQrtrn, loc:uelng on the
dramatic: ApOllo 11 moon
landing. 'G'
7:48 CZ') MOYIE * • • • "Grend Hotel"'
119321 Grete O.bo. JOllr
8 KNXT (CBS} Los Angeles D KNBC (NBCJ Los Angeles D KTLA !Ind 1 Los Angeles D KABC· TV (ABCI Los Angeles
(I) KFMB tCBSt San Diego 8 KHJ·TV (Ind I Los Anqelf's
®) KCST (Al!CI San Diego m KTIV I Ind I Los Angetes
• KCOP TV (Ind I Los AngelPS
&) KCE T· TV f PB St Los Angeles '1!> KOCE·TV 1PBSI Hunt1nq1on Beach
brooke shields
martin hewitt
endle~Iove
PofyGl-.n Ptcturea A Universal Release
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e 1•1 u .. "Cn..a c..., s.~ llfllf
and Lionel Barrymore. A
day In the IN9 of llW
IMablttntl of OennanY•
Grend Hotel bflnge thelf
pethl together.
l.'00.(1) WKAPIN
CINQNNAT1
A ~prlM telephone call
from hll ex-wtte II.a JOlln-
ny CXlf'lvinoecl he'• going to
be ll'M of alimony pay-
ment• I~. CR) 8 8 um.E HOU8E ON
THEltMIM
P.,c:1Vel'1 pro.id and 11ub-
bom father flghll with the
equally ltubborn Mra. Ole-
M>fl over the rellglon of
Netlle"• unborn c:hlld. CR)
• MOW * * "T errttOty Of Other1"
11970) Oocurnenlery. The
o-1 wlldllfe of Amertc:a'1
vHt South-I region
remeln1 laolated from
man·a lntrutlon.
8 MOVIE
• • "Cerry On Doctor"
11972) Frankie Howard,
Kenneth Wiiiiams, A~
tal'a orderty routine 11
thrown lnl o ~ when a
g<oup of madCep rnedlcoe
take aver.
• NF\. FOOTBALL
LOI Angeles Rama 119. New
England p •lrl<>t•
• MOYIE * * * "The Oar1I At The
Top Of The Slalf's" (11*>)
Rob..-1 PrMton, Dorothy
McGuire. Baaed on IM
play by Wldlarn Inge. Mem·
berl of an Oklehoma taml-
ly In ttle 192<>1 alruggle
with the problem& of
~Of• .
• THE 8HAKE8PEAAE
P\.AY8
"MM14Ke For u-;re"
Kate NelligM, CMltoe>her
Streull. nm Pigott-Smith
and John Mcenery llar In
one of Sheke1peere'1
moel c:ontrOVWIAlll c:ome-
dlel. C RI
(Jl)MOYE
"Ott Godl 8ooll II" (t980)
George Bumi. Suunne
Pleahette. God retume to
EMth and ~ .,..
~I young gift to
IOfMd 1M mMMOI thll
He 1111 ...,., l"°'Gh Iha
la the ortty peraon wtM> can
ec:1ualy -Him. 'PG'
(l)WHAT"8UP ..... ~.,
Viti\ the Unertus Society -
betleverl waiting tor UFOe to lend; • beec:tl ,_ In
San Fr endec:o; lald-bec:lc
ltvlng on the Colorado Riv·
er: a worldofec:ord blc:ycle
race
0MOVIE
"Welcome To L A." (1977)
Keith Carredlne. Salty
Keltennan. Vanoue Sout~
em Cellfomla realdentl er•
bre>ugnt together briefly In
1 aerlee of romantic: llal-
IOOS which moltly end up
being one-nlQht atanda. 'R'
1:.30 8 THE TN. COtlWAY
IHOW(R)
Gl MOVIE * • • "Sweet Ro al•
D'Gredy" (1943) Betty
Grab,., Rot>«t Young.
8'ooktyn·bom Rolle goea
to Europe where aha
bec:omM a hit on the Lon-
don 1taoe and 1a ~
toa dull•,
* • * "Forbidden Ptanet" (1 .. ) Wllltef Pidgeon,
~ Fr8ftde. B..i on
... ..,_.. •• ''The T.n-
.... M An OUler~~
.... 11 lel#ICtled to locat9 •
.......,, wttO hM tie.I "*" tor • number of ,_,. on a dletant '*'* of
Illa lvbKe.
.... (I) HOl.a CAU.I
A pW;ful patient pull Ann.
Ora. ~. Weatherby
Md . Solomon. end the
___.ting Mra. Phlppe
In .-antlhe together. (R)
• MOYIE • ** "fha Com•n· c:tl.-.01·· (1961) John
Wey!w, Stuart Whitman. A
T-Ranger-· out to ltoC> the dlltrlbullon of
~ end'ftt_.t..-to the
hOetlle eom.ncn... 0 MOYIE
• • "That Man Bolt"
(1973) Fred WIUlamaon,
T-Gr•-· A courter
lkllacl In the martial att1 11
...ion.o to delfver an
attedle c:aM containing
1,000,000 dollat1 from
Hong Kong 10 Mexk:o Clty
...... MCME
"Bloodbroth..-1" ( 1979)
Nc:ilwd Gere, Tony Lo a.noo. A young man
Cl.-to !><eek fernlly Ired·
lt(ln by worlllng In • hoepl-
, .. .....-cl tor chlldren rather
then In the ,_vy c:onatruc:-
llon ~. ·R·
(J)MOVIE
"Fame" ( 1980) Eddi•
earth, Irene Cara.Four
~ ltudenll ICllnd
an a.c:ttlng four ~ at .. t4WI Sc:hool of ....
~Attl.'R' 10!00. ()) C89 NIW8
~
"Tlle Cowboy, The er.ft•
men .And The a.llarina''
~Safer~ ..
CCMboy Bob Oouglaa. ....
~ boe1 bullCler Bud
Mctntoell. and prime bel-llrtnli Natalia ......,_.
.,... on ttlelf •• and tail-.,.. to younger ~
tloN. II& ...
~ .. CN'90E
••tlRIUA
A Pfofl6e of CleM ~
lug. one of the '-mo6-
em ICUlpCora wtte> tlM
~ a-.fuf In creetlng
targe outdoor lc:Ulpt\n, Is
preeented. (RJ
®MOYIE
"AllM The Tltenlc:" (1980)
Jaaon Robwcta. Richard
Jordan. A daring er.. of
~:;~-:~
• INaelor1 wtllc:tl
a danger both
end below the --..... PO.
(Jl)MOYIE
"Nljlfttky" ( 1979) Alan
...... George de la P9na.
Trllt"'Ph and tragedy
puftO!uat• t~ ltormy , .....
~"'-the great
~ balleC .. ., and hla
....... ~.'R'
10:IO .... BlllNT
NifwoMNIW8 ecua
OU.19lMQ'S aiiuec.
ml)p •A
"HUGELY ENTERTAINING!"
-Gene Shalll, The Today Show. NBC-lV
FROM ~~O ~· .
ISAAC STERN I~ CHINA
w.dn1 ... ,, Aue. 1lltl Oft1J ..,K..._,
'" "42nd STREET"
... ... ····· . . ...... ..,,. ... . .. , ,. .... -. . .... ._.. . . . . .
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981 ••
TUBE TOPPERS
KOOP• 8:00 ''The Dark at the Top
of the StaTra." Robert Preston and
Dorothy McGuire atar in a movie
versioo of the Wllllam lose play .
KCET D 8:00 -"Measure for
Measure." Kate Nelligan, Christopher
Straull and John McEnery star in one of
Shakespeare's most controversial com-
edies.
ABC 8 9:30 -"The Comancheros ."
John Wayne and Stuart Whitman track a
gang bringing firearms to the Indians.
CM 9 10:00 -·'The Cowboy, the
Craftsman and the Ballerina." Morley
Safer reports on a cowboy, a boat
builder and a ballet star.
A prolllta of CIMe c::>lden-
tiwo. one of "" ,_ mo6-
em eoulptora wtlo hM
~ IUCCIMful In c:rMtlng
terga outdoor ICIUlpture, la
.,,_Md.(R) e MAITIJlll IECI
THU TN f'DnVAl. ~ ,.YONTl8
"Upetalrl, Downetalte: The
OIOflou1 Dead" After
teernlng of her llllnce'•
dMlll, RoM goee to • lpit-
ttua161t. !_!).,, 4)(R)
11•••••C1>111e NIW8
• ITMTMK
The ~ of the Entwpr!M la ~tured by a dying ,_
of allenl wtM> hope to r:late lhelr planet.
NEW\. YWID GAME
....VHIU.
Benny lo0k1 •• the "'• of en Imaginary famous mual-
clan from boyhOOd to
manhood.
• E**CAWTT
Gue1t1: fltm director
Federico Fellini, ector Mer·
oello MaatroieMI. (Part 1
of 2)(R)
(C)MOYIE
"A Force Of One" C1979)
Chuck Norri•. Jennifer
O'Neill. A master of the
martial ert1 embark• on •
~·lv•ted~
tor the klflen of his adopt·
ed M>fl. 'PG'
{I)MOYIE * * * * "The Godfether"
C 1972) Marlon &endo. Al
Padno. Oltec:tad by Fran-
c:ll Ford Coppola. 8aNd
on the novel by Marlo
Piao. An aging Malloeo
-the~~
hie lcfytllc: !Miiiy life end
the hatrWI ,........ of ""
~ brMlt down ..
1111 eon• become lnc:r-
lngly lnl/Olved In the vlolenl
working• of Ofganlad
crime.
11:219MCME * * ·~ "Avan1ll" (1172)
Jecl! Lemmon. Julee ......
A coo-V.UV. ~
man f1llll tn low with the
llghtty -trtc: deughter
of hie dead fathll". mi.-
tr-. 11:aoeC1> ~.w.a.
An eutopey on a college
football star IMde Quincy
to ...,. thllt the men'•
YGUf'get brotMr mey euf· .. "°"' "" -brain .,,,.,..," .. '"(A) eaTHl!.-r~
CAMON
~ Elluibettl MHtly.
Amold Schw..-~.
~ Batbuttl. (~
e OMCNIW9
NIQHTUNI I ~ ltWCEADML.
"Pi•yground" An ego-
manlecal movie lier
,..._ to belleYe Man-
nht • 1 contention that
101!*>M la OUI to klll him.
• STANLEY 8IEGS..
··~MC ...
1l:OO. M<MI. * * "Singing VIQllbe>nd"
(113&) 0-AWy, AM
Ruthert«d. ~ Autry
r..cu. a w-oon train
under att9C* with a young
runewey girl lnelde.
• 0 'llHf""' mNC> A man dr-ot becom-
ing. ~.and.
_, WW'lte to '-" tM
truth ebout her twin
brot!W'I deelh. (R)
• .... IOKI
• ..00.C..
®OONIBmNG
ADUt.1'8
Verloul typee of , ... ,lon-
lhlpa INt dfitty the lradt.
llonal llandardl ... by
model'n aoc:iety .,. .. ..
mined.
(%)MOYIE
"Fello" (1990) Dom
Oel.ulee. A/Vie Benc:roft A '
portty ~ ......
find• that nothing Clln
dltmC*' hla Oeelre for food
until he fall In lc>Ye. 'PG'
11:11(D)MCME
''Bobble Jo And The Out·
lew" ( 1979) MerJoe
Gortn..-. Lynda c.rter. A
car hOp who wan11 to be 1
country 1lnger and •
qulc:kdraw IWlndler who
drMmi he'1 Biiiy The Kid
make a peth llUOM the
Sout'-1.'R"
1t:aO 8 8 TOMOMOW
GuMf•;Afnetb.
• HOGAN'S HEAOO
(C)MCME
... "Out Time'. (19 73) Pamela
8ua M.,,ln, Parker Ste-
-· The llvM of two young couplee erwolled •1
prl¥ale I ChOOll ere
changed wherl one of the
gll1I dlec:c>YeB ahe .. preg.
nant. 'PO'
12:40. (I) HAMY 0
12:41 <ID MC>W
"Without Warning" (1890)
J-* Pai.nee, Martin Lan-
dal. A gaa.«atlon attend-
ant and a VlecNm Wlleren
1M1 m.ma.t-~ a
terrifying end powerful
humanoid wtllc:tl att.c:ltl It•
pr-.y with deedfy flying
~'R' 1•• MCME • • "The Old Correl"
( t937) 0.. Autry, Hope
Manning. 0epuu.. on
llor'lebecl! PM"I with •
bllnct ot gen a•,,.. 1n tt1e1r
fancy.,_,..,_ to try and
bring~ In the Weat.
• N'tCMC "•roreett...
''The ..... ~·· Hoet8: ~ 8lmpeorl. Si.-
Hunt, Gveat: Rlcherd
....... D.
I INAKOUT ..,. lltDINT
NETWOMNIWI 1:10e MOW * * "Two For The Money"
(197t) Watt.... Brennan,
JOHN DARLING
TODAY ON OARLl/llG MY GUESI IS
A P5YCHOL06'15T WHO SPENT 5C>tv\E llME WORKING-ON IHE. WAIERF~a...a-T AMONG ~C.K ~fi:S ...
ONE Of THE IEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED
IS AIOUT TO HAPPEN AGAIN.
~~·1·,,1
. . .
OMNftne 8WN. A pelf of
CIUIC&h49, lorfMr pollo9--. "** dowfl .,. ..,. INek ...
1•1= •• * ''The ....,. .._
oenta" ( 1M 1) Anthony
Quinn, VC*o Tani.. Or.-dy
.,..... "" v.o.r. dlarupt -... °' .,.. tallllfto ~ ..
1111 <Il-r IMGAJINI °' 1"1Mt 1:Al(J)~CHAW\.IN
TA.Uea wmt G110RM
CU(°" 1•1=
''Wtleotne To L.A.'' C1977)
Keith Carradine, Sally
Kelarrnan. Vertoue 80Ulh-
ern c.llfomle realdent1 -brought together btMfly In
a .... of rornMtlc: Ila!-
-Mllc:tl ~ end up
t:iOO iE="' ttMdll. 'R'
''Swim TIMI" Stepnen
f\lnt. A pampered gtoup
ol c ountty clubb•r•
ftOCIUlt• • gore--,_
member who charge•
them up for the chemplon-
tlhlp. 'PO'
(l)MCMI
"Up The Academy" (1880)
Ron Lelbmwi, Barbara
841c:ft. The --obeeMad
c:ommllndMt of Weltlberg
Mllltary Academy la no
matd\ for the troublaeorne
bratl _.Oiied ther1l. 'R'
a:ao I DTONA1. 1:11 MOYIE
**~ "The Public: Eye"
C1112) Mia Farrow, Chaim
Topol. A hueband'I plan to
.,...,. hi• wtte followed by •
private detective bee* tlrel
when the deeec:tlve takM •
lancy to her hlmaalt.
2:IO (%) MOYIE **** "Grand Hotel"
C1932) Greta Garbo. JOhn
and Uonel Barrym«e. A
day In the ..... of ""
lnM&liltant• Of OennanY•
Grand Hotel bringe their
petfta together.
•••• NIW8
l:IO(l)MCME
"Don't Mill The Boat"
4:00 CC) MOYIE
"A Different Story'' (1978)
Perry King, M-e Folter. A
man end a woman meet
lll\CI ere attr.c:ted to one
another. bu1 tfleir reletlon-
tlhlp le oompllc:ated by the
fllCt lhll .,,.,. -both
rion-xu9'. 'R'
4:IO (%) MOYIE
"Feme" (1980) Eddie
Banh, Ir-C9ra.Four
talented ltudentl 'Ptnd
an exdtlng tour yMrl at
the High School of Per·
forming Arte. 'R'
Tuesday
HO CJ) ''No Oepoelt, Ho
Return" 11978) David
,..._,, Darren Mc:Gavln.
The ctilldlen of neotec:ttve
parent• decide to llage
~ own kldNlpptng t.o
~ -attention. ·a· ailO (C) ''Up Rhw''A young
~~lnvoMd
"' • ~ cleelt• ltruggle
with • ~ i.rMI
baron.
1:ao CC) •• ~ "The 0.-owning
Poot" (1975) Pu ,._.
man,~ Woodwwd. A
prtva~tor la hlr9d
by a ~hy Southern ol
~ to dlec:over the
Identity of the euthof of an
lnc:r1mtnetlng letter.
MO(I)•** ''11wca-.eot•
loft\ ...... (1 ... ) Dorta
Day. Rod T.,tof. A~ * beoom9 ln.oMld .. • ..,. ""° .,_ -• -· nlllld '*1·--t::ao (I:) ••i. ''The .......... ta.ti ...,, .. (1913) ,.,.
,.....,_, Oomll ..... ~
de.leaadon•,....lll.r
0-.... .....,,. A. lrtllfl ........,_...,.. ......
........ ootlOr1 -..,,..... to 0099 wtdl dollbla ..-...
end ~a 1111 on If'*
mlMIOrt to GllPMW • OQM.
'""""" llP'Y. 10:GO. * ~ "Up In Stnoll•"
C1157) 9-y lloyt, Huncl H•. The lloyt get Into ..
_,. of tT°'*9 ........
~bugbflea. Cl> "Oh Godl .......
( 1tto) Oeor~ 8vtl\9, luz-. ,...,.... WNft
thlngl go wrong. God -°" • lt1te girt to be ....
ewthfy ........... PO'
11:80 ••• ~ •• .loflnny MOit''
(~5} Oeolva Atlft. a..
1,_, A rnercNrrt mwN
c:apUiln ""' ...... the ~ tary of hill lather'• murO.
at .... CC> "Deer lfMlpec1or"
(1111) Annie Glrlrdot, PN-
tlppe Nolret. A ..,_..
ctetec:tlve lrlM to ,_,., on
• ~ rOfl'IMCe
end • b9fftlng mwder
~Ion at the-h~PQ·
1l:OO •••• "l.Jnle ......,...
C 193-1) ~ HepOvn\.
JoM ..... A 8cottWt pee.-
tor fll1dl ,__ for the
llr8t time.
•••• "8o81g"(1953)
Jane Wyman, Stetll"O
Hayden. A wtdow le d!Mp-
polnted by her ortty -wttO .....,.. her to find ....
own _, dMplte her and-
._ dwotjon to ....
1:t0 (C) "Terget1" C1911) 8ortl
Karloff, T1m O'K.-y. An
aglrlQ horror~ Wlr
tttaa to ,_, ~ • mut·
derOUI enlper ... ~
nlOlltelheater.
(I) •• * "The GIMa Bot·
tom &o.t" C 1118e) Ootta
Dey, Rod T~. A ~
dlt beconlM ln\IONed wlltl
• girl who poeee • a mar·
meld pltt·tlme.
l:OO • "Ho Oepoalt, Ho
Return" (1879) David
..._, ~ McOeW\ .
The c:Nldfw> of neglK1M
perentl decide 10 llage
their own llldNpping to
9!' -anenuon. ·o· a. (B * .... "'A 0.. With
JuOf'' (19'ta) Jww POMI,
EJlab9ltl T eytcw. A pair of
1-.agan with -ec:tlw
lrnaglnatlona keep their
farnlllM In turmoll.
(C) "Up Alver"A young
~~lrwolved
In • '"---'<1-deeth llrvggle
with • ~ land
Ml'on.
l:IO ••• ~ "8011..oocty
L-Me" ( 1952) Betty
Hutton, Relph ...... A
pair of .,,~ br.-i
up and "'*•UC> In the -· ~ 20ttl '*""'Y.
(I) "Ho Depoalt, Ho
Return" 11971) Devtd
Niven. o.r.-Mc:Gfttn.
The c:Mdren of neglec:lHI ·
perent1 decide 10 llage
thelt own kldnaipplng to
Q!' -attention. ·o·
4:11 U • • • "Mc:Untodd"
C t"3) John Weyne, ....,_
,_ O'Hara. A ainle won tttaa to "9ndle a
gtoup of dlligruntled lido
-and 009I with • fiery, deMrmlned .... at the _,,,_
&:ao (H) "81ac* 8-Jty'' ( 197 t I
Merk Leiter. Welter
Sier.ale e....s °" the ltOty
by Anna S..... A prCMI
and··~~ horW com. utlder the
OWMrltllp of IMl!y ..,_ I
peopi.. ·a · CIJ "Don't Mlel The eo.t"
by Armstrong & Batiuk
AND HE'S HE~E W ITH US 10 DISCU SS IHE SU9'JECT O F
P IER REL-AllO N S 14tP.5.'
If )'Oii _,. -Cord StreiQM lAIOI. Wt'VeOot'elll 0.-IOI> __ _.._ ~ -., __ ... __ .... _tor __
f ·IO
.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
v rnrn~~m~~~.
Mergers on the rise
But that doesn't necessarily mean more jobs or profits
By .K>HN CUNNIFF . ,. ....... ....,.
NEW YORK -Who said bullneta WH bad?
DuPont la buyin1 Conoco and Phlbro anapped up
Salomon Brothers and Burrou1b1 l\ buyln1
Memorex and Allied Corp. bu Ql'ffC1 to buy
Fisher Scientific.
Caterpillar Tractor has ac·
quired the Solar Turbines ln•
temational division of Intern•·
lional Harvester, and Amfac
Inc. said it intends to sell out lts
Amfac Mort1age Corp. lo
General Electric CredJt Corp.
Heileman is aner Schllll
and so is Pabst, and thl'ff other
banks are tryln1 to buy out \be
Connecticut National Bank ot cu ... • .. .;;m:=--....
Bridgeport. Hep & Hardhart
has 81Teed to b\1'y BoJanales of America, wblle the
Fifth Third Bancorp. said It has plans to buy the
Bank of Russellville. Ohio.
Meanwhile. Westinahousc's purchase offer to
Teleprompter was clu~ by the Federal Com·
municatlons Commission. the ctvll Aeronautics
Board gave approval for Texas International to
AirCal reveals
traf / ic / igures
AirCal officials have reported the number of
passengers carried by the airline last Tbunday
was 15 percent below the number of passengers
1 carried the previous Thursday.
This is compared to approximately 25 percent
fewer passengers the airline was carrying the first
three days of the strike by Professional Air Traffic
Controllers Organization members, compared to
the previous week's pre·strike levels.
"Out passenger boardings have increased as
the public has become aware that our flight
schedule is unaffected by the strike," said Joe
O'Gorman, senior vice president-operations. "We
are operating all of our 180 flights linking
California, Nevada, Oregon and Washington
cities," he said.
O'Gorman said the airline's ''no-show" factor,
the percentage or people with reservations who fail
to show for flights, improved from 30 percent on
Monday and Tuesday to 20 percent on Wednesday
and 17 percent on Thursday. The normal "no·
show" factor is 15 percent.
"Our agents are calling people who hold res·
ervations lo reconfirm that our flights are operat-
ing on schedule. These efforts seem to be having a
positive effect on our passenger traffic,"
O'Gorman said.
take over Continental Alr, and Wa1hlnston Savin11
& Loan, nearly broke, said It bad seven 1ultor1 .
Amid.st all this activity ln the put week, the
Acton Corp.'• product. divllton 11ld lt baa ac-
quired the null product. dlvtalon of General
Foods, and Northwest lnduatrles iot a new tl '
billion line ol credit tor, among other purposes, the
acquisition of other companies.
All this buylna and sell1n1 totals tlO billion or so, which sue1e1ta that America'1 butlne11ea
haven't been sittine on their handa ln the paat
week. Ten billion ls a week's work, even for the
federal eovemment.
It ls enou1h. it can be said, to dispute the com·
plaints comin1 from other secton of the economy
-from the auto people and the retailers and
buUden and semiconductor-makers and the aav·
ings·and·loan folks.
Yes, business has been 1reat in the mereer
and acquisition industry, and the country can take
heart that the big fish and little fish are so actively
feeding. Except for one thing: the people aren't be·
ing fed .
Mergers and acquisitions don't always create
more jobs for workers or more products or more
efficiency or more shareholder earnin1s. They
don't always improve the country's productive
capability, either.
In fact, the opposite sometimes can be said. It
has been said that they cost jobs, that they can cut
into future earnings of shareholders because of
high borrowing costs, and that they can lead to no
gains in production or productivity al all. Not
always. Sometimes.
There always are exceptions -major ones.
International Telephone & Telegraph did rather
well with acquisitions, becoming one of the world's
largest corporation!;. And Caterpillar Tractor has
projected sharp earnings gains because of acquir·
ing Solar Turbines International.
But there is another side to mergers and ac·
quisitions. These corporate marriages sometimes
lead to divorces. Parts of the company acquired,
and sometimes the entire acquisition, are sold orr
in a few years. ITT alone had seven of these so·
called divestitures last year.
Why all this buying and selling? Companies
generally say they buy because it is far less costly
and far less risky than founding and developing a
brand new operation. Companies sell for several
reasons -because the owners want to cash in,
because the company is losing money, be.cause it
needs more capital to be competitive.
There are lots of other reasons too, but one
thing becomes clear when you follow the list of
mergers and acquisitions:
All the hullabaloo, all the give and take and
the fighting and maneuvering, bas rather little to
do with a company's primary concern, which la to
make products or provide services, jobs and
profits. ·
.~
u .......
ROBOT KLIX PIX Mad~ ln Jupan, naturally.
this smutng robot takc1 pkturee on radio
command with a camero built Into Ila middle.
The robot d111pen11e1 ln11tonl pictures and cost
developer Jiro Rlzawa about $20,000 to con·
struct. The metal "photoJ(ropher" was
demonstrated recently at a Tokyo depart·
ment store.
c
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g_ Auto & Homeown&rs r ,;, • Ovotes By Phone
FMIOS IMSUIAMC( .,
ua.ssu., UJ.>•n
'' 14 H.4Mr • CO.te ~"'
Grmtd o,..mg W.
Mo Suqcr or P1"111"atlve1
HI PROTEIN POWDER
$2.99~.
at Trader Joe & Proafo
Our soy protein powder is Trader Joe's Hi Proteln
96% protein. This special· Powder is only S2.99 for a
ly forulated product con· pound! Pleue visit our
tains no artificial color· newest Trader Joe's at
Ing or navoring, and no the intersection of 17th
suear or sweetener has S t r e e t , N e w p o r t
been added. Soy protein Boulevard and Supepor
powders found in health Avenue (next to Denny's
food stores normally sell and Barclay's Barut).
for SS .95-16.75. But
NOW IN COST A MESA
I
. . . . .. . ....
Takeover rules
change sought
NEW YORK (AP) -The chairman Of Conoco
Inc. 1.Sd be lean "a merger wave" tbat will
"ellmlnai. mlddle-Uer energy companlea" and
•aid be beUevea the 1overnment 1bould conalder
chaqlq the rules 1ovemln1 corporate takeoven.
Rafph-Bailey, in hla flnt public appearance
after l>u Pont Co. won a three-way btddinl batUe
for ccotrol of Conoco, prailed the fortbcomin1 Du
Pont·Goooco mer1er but aaid other mer1en would
''not be in the beat lnterestl of the country.••
The Conoeo chairman also vowed that Conaollda·
Uon Coal Co .• a major Conoco aublidlary that is
the nation'• second-lar1est producer of coal, would
not be sold off by Du Pont.
Bailey aaid be worried that lar1e oil companies
mlght be allowed to acquire smaller one..
"It would be a critical development to see the
real oil and 1aa finders put out of business, and
that's what it would amount to," Bailey sald at a
:aews conference late last week.
He said he thought the government should con·
aider barrtn1 tende.r offers for a bare majority of a
company, such as the offer by Seagram Co. Ltd.
for 51 percent of Conoco, and should wtead re·
quire that any tender offer for more than perhaps
30 percent of a company should have to be for all
shares .
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.. * Or .. Oout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
QUEENIE
JIJB
8 ·10
tl••·o.e-•~i...-..... -~I
"Idler!"
.FD~ THE,RECORD
•
"°'*1'At• YAU.aY
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.,._.<>,..mg w.
UNFILTERED APPLE JUICE
$2.89 Gallon atTNderJoe&~
A •real d rod u c t -Trader Joe'a at the in· urmtered uice from tttaection of 17th Street1 r pened allfornia . Newport Boulevard ana Gravenstein apples-at a Superior Avenue (next
areal price: $2.89 per lo Denny's and Barclay's
aallon. Banlt).
!lteue viJit our newest
MOW IN COSTA MESA
More value for your
DIMES
In the femou• Delly Piiot
DIMES-A-LINE ADS
AdYertl•• lt•m• 11p to HO In HIM• In
Olme•MJM eda Hery S1turd1y In the D1My
flMot. Mftt your eel wttf'I ca ... to eny of our
, t9'rH oonwentent otftctH or '"... your copy
""" • died! °' 1MMY order tor ttte oonMll eM011nt. * P9f MM, 11 .00 ..... "'*"'• lorry,
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U.S. would block Haitian influx
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbt Rtatan ad·
mtnlM.raUon wanta to belln lnterceptina and tum·
lnJ away boata carrylna would·be refuteet hom
Haiti to Jiorida by Saturday, admlnlatraUon of.
ftclalJ aay.
Tbit "Interdiction" Pr'OIJ'•m, aa it ii beint
called, would help eaae a major political aod ad·
mlnlltrative headache for the Reqan admlnlalra·
lion ln aouthem Florida.
But lnt.erdlctlon rtab tarDlahint America '1
reputatioo u a protector ol retuiees and "boat
people," and could lead to utlY lncldenta at aea,
accordina to an internal admlnlatraUon memo.
The adminiatration otftciala, wbo uked not to
be ldentitled, said they have been trylna to work
out detaila of the plan alnce lt wu announced by
•
Attorney General Wllliam French Smith on July
30.
Meanwhile, Supreme Court Jualice William J .
BreMan bu cleared the way for the planned
transfer from Florida to Puerto Rico thia week of
800 HalUan and Cuban refqHI.
Brennan turned down an emeraency request
from Juana Dias, the Puerto Rican community
where the retuaee camp, Fort Allen, ii located.
'nle admlniatratton's interdiction program
now calla for the Immlaration and Naturalization
Service to aupply apeclal uylum offlcera and
Creole tramlatora to Cout Guard vesaela patrol·
inl the Caribbean, accordln1 to the officials.
Aft.er 1toppln1 a boat suspected of carrying
Haitians to the United States, the Coast Guard
would bring the paaaencen aboard for an on-the-
11pot hearing to determine whether they meet e
American requirements for refugee status.
Almost none of the Haitians will meet those re-
quirements, since the State Department has de-
cided that they are almost all fieelnt from pov~r-
ty, rather than from political oppression. • • Alter the hearings, the Coast Guard la s•p·
posed to determine whether the Haitians' boat ls
seaworthy. Depending on its condition, the Coast
Guard vessel may escort it back to Haiti, tow it
back, or take the Haitians aboard and transs>i>rt
them back. I •
One official working on the plan saJd there 're
fears that fights will erupt during the process ior
that Haitians may jump overboard and droWTI
rather than be taken back. · :
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarerte Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health
•
·1
"' ..... .-.. .. . .. .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. Augu1t 10, 1981 s
~-----------------------------------------------------------------------~------_;_ ______ :._ __ ____..
TV listings like .never befo.-e!
Every Friday, you'll find a big, bright,
brand new telev~sion supplement in the Daily
Pilot like you've never seen before! You'll
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.
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find the channels you watch· (we list 22 including cable),. pages of
movie highlights, up-to-date sport:s, soap plots and more -all in a
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Get the complete picture in the all-new Pilot TV Log.
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• II
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New Grid Format . .
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programming on 11 broadcast
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TV Log carries listings for them
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I
I
..
Dilly Piiat
MONDAY I AUGUST 1C), 1911
CLASSI Fl ED C6
~. .
The big winner
at Riverside
was charity. C2.
"~ ........... Baseball came back after a 50-day layoff and, although everyone was happy by its return, a record crowd of 72 ,086 m Cleveland was. Baseball's "second hat/" starts toaay .
. . . and the NL makes sure nothing's changed
CLEVELAND <AP ) -Baseball's back, and
for the National League. anyway, it was like the
All-stars had never been away.
ception it would receive from the fans and it
turned out to be mixed.
A record crowd of 72,086 jammed Cleveland
Stadium but some came equipped with whistles to
signal at the start of each inning a shrill protest to
the strike. But by game's end they were caught up
in the excitement of the record-tying NL power
show and there were no protest whistles blown on
the way out.
Singleton did, and the AL had the lead. Carter
balanced that run with a firth-inning homer
against the Angels' Ken Forsch. Then, in the sixth,
Pittsburgh's Dave Parker unloaded on Mike
Norris of Oakland and the Nationals had a 2-1 lead.
Tony Armas of Oakland and it left him short a
player at a critical juncture later.
"I wanted to save Armas, but after Lynn pinch
hit he went into the clubhouse," said Frey. "I told
him I wanted him to play cenlerfield and he said
he didn't fell well."
With surgical efficiency, the Nationals cut up
the Americans again in the S2nd All-star Game
Sunday night, rallying for a S-4 victory that
brought baseball back with a smash following the
strike that stilled the industry for seven weeks.
But it lasted only until the Americans batted in
the bottom of the sixth when Singleton touched off
a three-run rally constructed around five singles,
four of them in a row.
The two-run lead lasted only a little while.
Carter, leading off the seventh like he did the fifth,
ripped his second home run, thjs one on the first
pitch from New York Yankees reliever Ron Davis.
to climb into the All -star record book .
Gary Carter tied an AJl·star record with two
homers and Mike Schmidt supplied the clincher
with a two-run homer in the eighth inning that
nailed <town the NL's 10th consecutive AU-star vic-
tory and 18th in the last 19 games. Overall, the Na-
tionals hold a 33-18 edge, with one tie and the way
they take the Americans apart year after year, it's
bard to imagine they on'ce trailed in this series
12-4.
Like the fans, the NL warmed to the AU-star
task rather slowly, playing a somewhat tentatively
early on, perhaps because of the strike's break in
their annual summer routine.
"We had played two exhibitions and I still
didn't feel just right," said Carter, "but when you
get that heart pounding . . . "
Baltimore's Ken Singleton staked the
Americans to an early 1-0 lead, tagging Tom
Seaver of Cincinnati for a second-inning home run.
"It was a fast ball, right down the middle,"
Singleton said. "I aimed the pitch," admitted
Seaver. "I had nothing on it and it was the type of
pitch you should hit out."
Singleton and Boston's Dwight Evans opened
with hits against Burt Hooton of the Los Angeles
Dodgers. Then Chicago White Sox catcher Carlton
Fisk also singled, loading the bases. Pinch hitter
Fred Lynn beat out another hit, tying the score
and leaving the bases still loaded. A sacrifice fly
by Buddy BelJ and a pinch single by Ted Simmons
supplied two more runs for a 4·2 AL lead.
There was a delay in the top of .the seventh
when the AL took the field with only eight men.
Manager Jim Frey wanted Lynn to stay in the
game but the California outfielder, who banged up
his left knee sliding into second base during the
rally, begged off. That forced Frey to substitute
Four other players Ted Williams of Boston
in 1946, Pittsburgh's Arky Vaughan in 1951, Al
Rosen of Cleveland in 1954 and San Francisco's
Willie McCovey in 1969 -had hit two homers in a
single All-star contest.
··1 never imagined hilting two home runs," the
Montreal catcher said. This summer's gathering of stars had added
significance because of the strike which shut the
game down for 58 days from June 12 until the All·
stars took the field Sunday night.
Davis escaped the rest of the seventh without
further damage but the Nationals were in position
to strike and an inning later they did. RolUe
Fingers of Milwaukee was on the mound when San
<See NL MAKES, Page C3) Of utmost concern to baseball has been the re-
It wasn't as easy
as Nelson made it
Carew calls
All-star loss
embarrassing
New season for Angels
Seattle marks. a fresh start for Mauch. and Co.
PGA winner was. a bundle of nerves
":LEVELAND (AP> -The
By EDZINTEL
Ott•DllM'I ........... as it will be, the Angels are likewise split in their
approval of the system.
DULUTH, Ga. CAP> -That
major championship feeling hit
Larry Nelson for the first time
when he lofted a two-iron shot 20
feet from the 17th hole Sunday in
the 63rd PGA.
"When I saw it. make that
beautiful. little ball mark, I
knew I had it won, especially
Mter Fuzzy Zoeller missed the
green," he said.
Nelson two-putted and owned
what be thought be needed -a
four-shot bulge going into the
final hole of the year's last ma-
jor tournament.
"I'M A CHOKER," admitted
the candid 33-year-old Georgian,
'Who has played this demanding
~ame just 12 years.
t "I didn't want to go to the 18th
with a one-shot lead, even a two-
shot lead. I wanted it to be at
least three shots," he said.
"I think everybody is a
choker. Anybody who telJs you
coming down the stretch that
he's not nervous, I'd say he's on
something." said Nelson, a win-
ner !or the fifth time in his elght-
year career.
Nelson never let any of bis
pur suers closer than three
~trokes on the Atlantic Athletic
(Club. He closed with a one-over-
~ar 71 (or a 273 total and the
:winning check of $60,000.
' ZOELLER, HIS playing rtner on the bot, humid day,
tled for second. The former
asters champion collected
,000 after also shooting 71 for
277 ..
Tour driving champion Dan ~ohl closed with a 69 for 278 and
place of $25,000.
efendinc champion Jack
ldaua fell abort in a bid for
la 11th major professional title
•and alxth PGA crown, ftnlablnc
:With •119 for a Ue for fourth.
Alto at that figure were Bruce
Liet1ll:e, Bob Glider, Keltb
Ferp, Tom Kl~, Australian
Grea Norman and laao Aoki ot
a pan.
Gilder matched the com-
petitive course record with 66.
Lietzke and Fergus had 68s,
Aoki 70, Norman 71 and Kite 72,
marking the 11th time in 12
starts he's been in the top seven.
Zoeller didn't think the race
was over quite as quickly as bis
more serious, quieter playing
partner.
"I thought Larry had it when
he drove the ball straight down
the middle on the last hole. You
can't give up until the 72nd hole.
Golf is such an unbelievable
game." said Zoeller.
"He played consistent. He's
deserving. He drove it right
down the middle of the fairway
except 14. When you see a player
hitting a ball like that all day,
it's pretty to watch," the run-
nerup said.
Driving, in fact, probably
saved Nelson. an admitted bun-
dle of nerves.
... agels' Rod Carew, selected to
the American League All-Star
team each of the past 15 years.
has enjoyed only one victory. It
is, he says, "embarrassing."
"They just seem to always get
the big hit at the opportune
ti me,'' said Carew after
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt got
the big bit, a two-run, eigbth-
i n niog homer, to sink the
American League for the loth
straight time and the 18th in 19
games.
The losing streak puzzles
Carew, who collected one hit in
three trips to the plate Sunday
night.
"Everybody's going out there,
doing their best, trying to help
the ballclub win," he said.
"Nobody ever dogs it. We
thought we were going to win
tonight, but again they got the
(See ALL-STAR, Pa1e CZ>
SEATTLE -It was here, exactly four months
and one day ago today, that the Angels innocently
began this mixed-up baseball season. And it's here
that they start it over in the first of a three-game
set against the Mariners .
With the same kind of visions and ho~ they
had on April 9. well before the effects of a 50-day
strike were realized, the Angels again start over
with a clean slate, eyeing a divisional title, pen-
nant, world championship -who knows?
ONLY THIS TIME, the end is very much
within sight. As Fred Lynn was saying the other
night, "everything you do now, every mistake. is
all the more critical. This Is serious business."
Indeed it is. The Angels were serious enough
over the weekend to play as if the season had
already re-started, splitting a pair of exhibition
games with the Cincinnati Reds.
Tonight, however , it's the real thing. Geoff
Zahn (7-6) gets the call against Seattle's Glenn Ab·
bott (1-4).
So begins the second half of the season, one in
which the Angels play a total of 50 games -29 of
those on the road.
As for the decision made to split the season
Shortstop Rick Burleson was among those who
disapproved of the concept. "I let it be known what
my feelings were on the subject," he said.
"There's nothing we can do about it now. We 'll
just have to go out and win a 50-game pennant
race.''
Burleson says that the Angels will have to im·
prove on their first-half home record of 14-19 in or-
der to challenge for a division flag in October.
"We'll have to be at least .500 at home for us to
have a chance," he said. Either way, he says, he
expects a dogfight.
"Texas, Chicago and Oakland are all going to
come back strong. Kansas City could be in there.
too."
BURLESON, LIKE OTHERS, feels that it will
take some time, at least a week, for the hitte11 to
get adjusted to live pitching. "It still feels a little
funny ut> at the plate. I expect you'll see a lot of
low-scoring games. The defense will take care of
itself."
Thus, the Angels may find themselves playing
a different brand of ball early, as opposed to the
all-out long ball offense they were used to employ-
ing.
Malavasi will be looking for some answers tonight
By JORN SEV ANO °' .. ....., ............ So, baseball ls back, huh? Well, try
telling that t'O the 69,005 fans that
will cram into Anaheim Stadium
tonight (8) to see the Rams open thelr
preseaaon schedule against the New
England Patriots.
The contest, an announced sellout,
will be a rematch of lut year'a wild
preseason encounter which the Patriots
won, 35-31, despite four second half
touchdown pauea by the departed
Vince Ferragamo.
Tonipt, Coach Ray Malavul -and
Patriots Coach Ron Erhardt for that
matter -y.till get a chance to aee a lot
of rookies, plus answer a few questions
of his own concernill'1 some returning
veterans.
Malavui, in particular, will have a
lot to watch. For lnat.ance:
-After al moat 1 ~ yeare on &De
lldellnes, bow wUI Pat lladm l)erfonn1
And can tbe Rama' offtDM come clole,
to matcbln1 lot year'• nploelvenea
with Haden at the controllf
-How well will Wendell Tyler bounce
back after enduring hip surgery and a
hyper-extended elbow in 1980?
-Can Carl Ek em fill the void at middle
linebacker left by Jack Reynolds' exile to
San Francisco?
-Can Fred Dryer keep hi.a starting ·
spot at right defensive end with Cody
Jones breathing down his neck?
-Can Jeff Rutledge adequately fill
the spot as the team's No. 2
quarterback?
These are ju.st some of the queaUona
Malavasl hopes to solve tool&bt a1alnat
the Patriot.a.
"I think we're rtabt on schedule,"
sald Malavasl of hla team'• protreN.
"We'll 1lve Pat (Haden> and Jeff
(Rutledle> a half each. If lt'a a loftt
game, there mltht be. a chance (Jeff>
Kemp will see aome action."
The Rama' otber quarterback tn
camp -\'eteran Bob Lee -wt11 not aee
action due to a painful rtsbt tlbOW in-
jury auftend ln lalt SaturcS.,'1 1ertm-
ma1e .,alaat the San D!'to Cbar1W1.
l ,
Lee hasn't been able to throw a pass in
practice all week.
Other injuries, although not con-
sidered serious, have left the Rams thln
at wide receiver.
Tight end Henry Childs, acquired dur·
tog the off.eason from Washington (by
way of New Orleans), will not play
On TV tonight
·channel 11 at 8
because of a 1roin problem. The Rama'
other U1ht end, Victor Hicks, la suffer-
ing from the same malady as ia Drew
Hill. Neither will see acUon, either,
which means the Rama' otfense la down
to only a bandlul of healthy reeeiven -
Walt Arnold (who will at.art at U1ht
end), rookie Mike BatUe Preston Den-nant, BWy Waddy, WilBe Miller, Jeff
Moore and rookiet Rick Parma and
Marcua Andenoa.
"We'll play a lot of people and keep
veteran• to a minlmum," 1ald
Malavut
"I'm not too worried about lookinc
s harp because when we play that many
people it's bard to look sharp. Sharp-
ness is not what we're looking for."
Erhardt mi1ht feel the same way.
"We've got some talent," admitted
the Patriots coach, "but we aren't so
talent-laden we can just go through the
mQtiooa."
Among the newcomers Erhardt hopes
to watch ls Ugbt end Terry Nelson, who
is expected to replace the retired Ruu
Francis in the starting Uneup. Nelaon, a
starter with the Rama for three seuona
before a groin injury slowed him in
1980, su{fered a pulled muscle, however,
in pracUce lut week and hla status t1
uncertain.
Erhardt will also study the work of
quarterbacks Steve Grotan and Katt
Cavanautb, both of whom are com.in&
off knee 1ur1ery. Grocan la e~pected to
start acatnat the Rama.
The Rams flniabed lut year at 11-S,
while the Patriota were l°"!.! lncludint a
17·14 ton to the Rama ln roxboro dur·
lnl the retwar aeuon.
1
•
VP Bush: Baseball
will bounce back
From AP c11.tpaklle1
CLEVELAND -Vlce President •
Geor,e Buab had no real reaerva·
tiona about throwlnl out the flrtt
pltcll ln Sunday nilht'a All·atar Game.
'n>ere were some upecta of the 1ame-openlnJ ceremonies, however, that disturbed
the former Yale Unlvenity tint baseman.
"ll'a obviously less than an ideal arrange-
ment," Bush said, referrin1 to the resumption
of the baseball season followtn1 a SO.day strike.
"It hasn't been 1ood for the game, but it'll
bounce back," he said.
Buab said he would be r00Un1 for the Na·
tlonal League, no surprise alnce he is a fan of
his hometown Houston Astros.
Quote of the day
"We didn't buy tickets to ball parks,
didn't pay for parking there, didn't buy bot
dogs and beer. We didn't drive into the
cities to go to games, didn't stay at hotels
and motels, didn't eat in restaurants. We
didn't watch or listen to radio/TV ads dur-
ing games and run out and buy what was
advertised. So what did we lose? We lost a
few hours of entertainment. Otherwise, we
saved a hell of a lot of money. Stop calling
us losers." A baseball fan from New
York, Fred Brooks.
Angels reactivate Grich, Kison
The Angels have reactivated ii second baseman Bobby Grich and
right-handed pitcher Bruce Kison for
the reopening of the 1981 baseball season, the
American League club announced Sunday.
At the same time, the Angels optioned right·
handed pitcher Fred Martinez to Salt Lake City
of the Pacific Coast League and purchased the
contract of. left-handed pitcher Angel Moreno
from the GuJJs.
Grich suffered a broken bone in his hand six
days before the strike began. Kison had been
sidelined for nearly 13 months following surgery
for nerve problems in his pitching arm.
Unhappy
R e d s play
Dodge r s
.w
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
Cincinnati Reds, who are .not too
happy about the way the Dodgers
won half a championship, will get
a chance to take out their frustra·
lions on the Dodgers tonight. • Th~ question is, are the Reda
ready to beat the Dodgers,
whom they meet at Dodger
Stadium at 5:30 p.m.
THE REDS thought they were in as good shape as anyoce after'
the *1.ke layoff. Before the June
12 st.rll9e, Cincinnati was playing
excellent baseball, having gained
four games on the Dodgers in
seven days.
But when the strike began, Los
Angeles was a half-game ahead of
Cincinnati and with the split
season in effect, the Dodgers have
been declared as first-half cham·
pions of the National League
Wea\
"It slinks," was Cincinnati
Manager John McNamara's re-
action to the split-season concept.
"W.hydon'tthey justtbrowoutthe
ffjMhalf? What did we play for?''
-w. Cincinnati can only look
ahead to the second half of the
campai~n.
Duran wants rematch wUh Leonard
CLEVELAND -Roberto Gii D\.lran, mlxlnt hit attack to lbt bead
and the body and callln1 on his vut
experience, pounded out a unan
lmoua tO.*>und decl1lon over Nino Oonsalh
Sunday tn Duran '1 fir1t 01ht slnce be quit ln the
tllhth round a1aln1t Suiar Ray Leonard last
Nov. 25.
at bout, Duran had nld ht would
I not n1ht a11ln. But now the
Panamanian It back and he
wanll Leonard a1aln,
althou,h Suaar Ray bu 1ald
,be won't tlaht Duran a third
time.
Duran'• comeback vie·
tory ln Cleveland'• Public
Auditorium waa ln the junior
mlddlewet1ht cla11, and he ii
scheduled to rlabt a1atn Sept.
Duran 26 , posalbly a1aln1t Baba
McCarthy. Should ho wln that bout, promoter
Don Klnl plans to match Duran •Caln.at Wilfred
Benita for the World Boxln1 Council title.
Leonard holds the Wofld Bollinl Aaaociation
l54·pound class title, and should Duran set the
WBO crown, a tbird fight between the two la
conceivable. Duran won the WBC welterwei1bt
title from Leonard on a decision in Montreal
and lost it back to blm when he quit in New
Orleans.
Baseball stats will stay the sam".
NEW YORK -Baseball's of-•.
ficial playing rul~s committee has
decided that individual player
statistics achieved by major league players
before the 50-day strike will be continued when
play resumes today.
Minimum standards for determining in-
dividual champions were adopted. For the bat-
ting championship, the standard will be 3.1
plate appearances multiplied by the number of
games played by each player's team. The 3.1 is
the regular formula. but because of the strike,
teams will finish with. different game totals this
season.
The exception would be if a player with
fewer than the required number of appearances
still would have the highest average if the'
number of plate appearances he was short were
charged as at-bats. .
For pitchers, the standard of one inning
pitched for every game played by a given team
will be used to determine eligibility for earned
run average titles. .
Catchers must play in at least half their
team 's games and infielders and outfielders in
two-thirds or the games to qualify for individual
fi elding titles. A pitcher appearing in a number
of innings equaJ to or greater than the number
of games played by his team will be eligible for
defensive leadership.
Baseball today
On th11 date ln baaeball In 1929:
Veteran Grover Cleveland Alexander
posted hia N aUonal Le Hue-record 373rd
career vl ctot)'. one more than New York'
Olanta' ace Chrltty Mathewaon a1 the St.
Loula C ardinali outslu11ed the·
Philadelphia PhlUlea 19·19 ln the second
same ot a doubleheader.
On W. date In 1901 :
Frank J1beU of the Chlcaao White Sox
aet an American Lea1ue record by 1trand-
tn1 11 teammate• oo the buea In a 1tn1le tame.
Umpires almost boycotted game
Atter.meeuna for 1~ houra with • leape presidents Lee MacPlaaU and
Cbub Feeaey the umptres u1l1ned
to Sunday n11ht•1 All·•tar 1ame aereed to work,
pendln1 resolution of their Hlary dlspute with
the American'and National Leaeues. The um·
plrea are seekJng to be paid 100 percent of their
salaries for the period of the seven-week
baseball strike. The two leagues are wlllin1 to pay for 45 days of the 50·day strike.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: I 1 I I excellent; 1 I I
worth watching; I 1 fair; 1 forget It.
9 6:30 p.m .. Channel 7 ./ ./
BASEBALL: St. Louis at Phlladelphla.
Announcers: Al M ichaels and Bob Uecker.
The Cardinals' Bob Forsch (6--2) Is scheduled
to face the Phillies' Larry Christenson (2·S> as baseball's "second" season starts today.
Philadelphia was declared the flrst·h•lf winner In
the National League East. The Phllfles led St. Louis by 11;, games at the time of the strike. n 8 p.m .. Channel 11 ./ ./ ./
RAMS FOOTBALL: New England vs. Rams.
Announcers: Stu Nahan and Jim Hiii.
The Rams open the exhibition season agalns1
the New England Patriots In Anaheim Stadium.
With Pat Haden at the controls and all players
sloned to contracts for the coming season, the
Rams are off to a "contented" start. Steve Grogan
is scheduled to start for the Patriots tonlgbt. Last
year's preseason affair turned out to be a wild one
as the Patriots won, JS-31, despite four touchdown
passes from Vince Ferragamo.
RADIO
Football -New England at Rams. 8 p.m ., KNX (1070).
Baseball -Angels at Seattle, 7: 30 p.m ..
KMPC (710); Cincinnati at Dodgers, 7:30 p.m., KABC (790).
...... . . . .
. From Page C1
ALL-ST AR LOSS • • •
blS hit at the rt1ht time. You c..-•i do much about
that." ·
lndeed, AL Mana1er Jlm Frey of Kamu City
could not do much about that. By the Ume Schmidt
crushed the aame·winner off Milwaukee'• Rolli e
Fin1en1, Frey bad used up all bla potential pinch
hitter1.
Carew'• teammate, Fred l,.ynn, said be ••· 1ravated a knee Injury on a force play at aeeond
baae and left the game alter the sixth 1nn1n1, and
Frey choee to replace him with blJ last available
hitter , Ton1 Armas or Oakland.
Winfield, who baa been on wtnnln1 All·Star
teams while with the NaUonal League San Die10
Padres, aald, "They go out and plan to win and
never give up. They didn't etve up toni1ht,,elther."
Despite the loas, several American Leaguen
had rea&0n to celebrate. Topping the list wu Len
Barker . the Cleveland Indiana pitcher who threw
two perfect innings before a hometown audience.
"It was really a great feellne beln& here ln
Cleveland," said Barker. "These fans here a.re
outstanding and it's just great to be an All-Star."
But ln the record books. the game was another
in what has become a humlllating string of
American League failures.
"It seems that it's going to tum around one of
these days," said Fingers, a participant in one Na·
tional League victory and rive American League
losses. ''But every year it seems like a home run
or an error and we lose by one run. It's a crazy game"
* • *
Manager Dallas Green of Philadelphia knew the key to his team's victory.
"We just played National League baseball "
said Green. '
. "We go after .it. We play with intensity. We
Just pla~ that way 10 the National League."
National League baseball this time was power
baseball a series-record·equaling four home
r uns by one team.
The fourth home run was a two-run shot by
Philadelphia third baseman Mike Schmidt off
Rollie Fingers in the eighth inning that won the
game.
Schmidt's home-run trot was a joyful jaunt.
"Hey, that's a game·winning hit in an All-Star
game," he said. "lf that's not something I'll re·
member som.e day, I don't know what is."
While Schmidt hit the game-winner, Montreal
catcher Gar y Carter won the Most Valuable
Player Award, catching six iMings and hitting two
home runs . The other NL homer was hit by Dave
Parker of Pittsburgh.
'"It's run playing baseball again," said Carter
on receiving tbe MVP trophy from Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn. "I'm looking forward to the second
half of the season."
Newport
t ries, b ut
falls sho rt
The Newport Water Polo
Foundation team finished with a
flouri sh but it was n't quite
enough as Industry Hills A post·
ed a win and a tie to be crowned
the 1981 AAU National Outdoor
champion Sunday.
In Newport's first match at
Newport Harbor High. J eff
Stites, the water polo coach at
Corona del Mar High,.scored his
second or two goals with just
1: 25 remaining in t he final
period as Newport edged Stan-
ford South, 5-4.
Newport's afternoon contest
was even more exciting as it tied
Concord A. 7-7.
With only seven seconds left to
play, Concord's Dave Meyers
scored to give his team a 7-6
lead. Six seconds later , though,
Jim Kruse tallied for Newport lo
give the team a thrilling tie.
With Industry Hills A beating
Concord A. 5-4, in their morning
affair. Industry Hills needed on·
ly a tie to walk away with the
crown and that's exactly what it
got in a 7-7 battle with Stanford
South.
oeAy .............. lcMf'f 1( ......
"I CAN'T SEE anybody's staff
ahead of ours," said Reds'
catcher Joe Nolan. "No one 1<J
really at top speed, but they all
have pretty good control. Tom
Seaver threw very well Wednes·
day with eood velocity and con-
trol. Doug Bair looks very good;
he's probably throwing harder
than anybody. Bruce Berenyl la
throwing his normal way -a
iood, moving, heavy fastball."
Mike Gillman survived this near disaster to win the Class I r ace at Riverside Sunday before 34 ,393 in attendance.
Industry Hills A finished the
three-day tournamer.t with 11
points. Ne wport, which was
second in '80 and first in '79, :.et·
tied for a second place finish in
'81 with nine points.
Stanford South was third and
Concord A fourth.
But when the Reds' pitcben
finally faced some batten in a
Friday night exhibition, the
Angels pounded out 11 hlta in a s.-0
trouncing of the Reds, 1etlln111x
of the hits and three l"UDI off
Frank Putore in two innlnp.
In Saturday's outin1 wtth the
Angela, Reda' pitchers fared bet·
ter, stopping the Ana els with four
hits and one run. But the paltry
two runs Cincinnati scored in the
two aames may be a caUM for
concern.
Id far as hltUn1 goes, the Reda and Dodgers •are even. Los
Aqel• matched the Reda' flnt.
1a1M effort aaa.lnat the AnplJ
with JUlt two hit. ln a 1.0 1<>91 to
their Albuquerque farm club lut
Tblll"IQy nlsbt In the Dode_..'
only practice same u they.,,...
pared for the re·openin1 of ba..U. Nonetb....,, the Dodcen 1ot
1ood pltcbhtl pertormancea
from Jerry Reuu, who worked
the ftrst four lnninc• aad savt uJ) only one bit, and Burt
Hooe., 7.3, wbo pitched three'
lnnlnp llMI IH• up one nm on,
lb.rel bltl.
CiDct.DDati'a Frank Putore,
J.l, II adleduled to Ii.rt OD tbe mOlllld for tbe Reda ln tbe .. ,._
opelS." lteUla, 5-2. wtll pied trw tbe Doqen.
I
Big winner ~as not a driver
Oh, Gillman won Class 1 race, but the prize money went to charity
By BOWARD L. HANDY
Ot•Olllly .........
RIVERSIDE -When the dust bad set·
tied at Riverside International Raceway
late SWlday evening, the big winner ln the
Bridgestone-SCORE World Championships
wasn't among the more than 800 drivers
who competed.
The big winner was the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation which picked up a check for
$16,500, thanks to Mike Gillman or Oran1e
who won the featured Pepsi Challen1e
Clasa 1 race arid donated his entire purse
to the fund.
GILLMAN IS A virtual newcomer to the
sport of off·road rac1n1, bavin1 taken lt up
after br~akinl hia back In a motorcycle
racing accident 4\1'1 years a10. He ia one or
four btotben competlnt in off -road racin1
under the family banner, Sunset Con1truc· lion Company.
"Our family made a commitment to the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundtion two years aao
and we donat. all ol our wlnnl.nt• to them.
They can use the money more than we
can," he aald.
Only last week the raclna 1roup with the
1lo1an, 'Drivlna Hard to Coaquer Cystic
Ftbrosl1,' presented the aroup wltb a
check for •1000.
Whtie GUlman won the tuturt, Hunt·
inlton Beach'• Mite Lund waa alto a wln·
ner Sunday in Clua 2 for veblcl• with two
seats and no bolda barred In -pNparaUOI\.
He was s urprised by the victory.
Lund, a refrigeration plant supervisor,
owns his own car . But bis victory didn't
come easy.
"WE GOT A FAIR start but we weren't
up front," Lund sald. "It was tough get-
ting through traffic. All we could do was
wait for some of the others to crash or go
out of the race.
·'The start was the toupeat part of the
All we could do was wait{or
some of the other cars to
crash or go out of the race.
Huntlnttoft h-'• •k• Lund
race -that and 1ettin1 throuth traffic,"
he aa1d.
Lund apun out in front of the 1randatand
on the asphalt just below turn six of tbe re1·
ular road courte before an estimated
34,393 fana. "When we 1pun out, we knew we were
runnin1 second," Lund and co-driver Mlr
Smithaald. Tben h• added:
uq DIDN'T know wh .. Wt wer. after
the apln. We Juat wut baek to rad.DI and
ran 11 rut aa we could. WIMD lt wu over,
we ..,. lD tM pit &Na tlytns to fllUN out
II we bad ftalabtd tblrd or tow1h wbea
they came aloal and uked u. to IO to vie·
tory clrd.e. Wt wer• pJ ...... tly 1urprtaed
to ftnd out we had won."
f
Gillman, a regular on the off.road
circuit at Saddleback Park and leader of
Class 1 in the Baja series there, says this
was by far his biggest win ever. He was
engaged in a t ight battle with Glenn
Harris of Camarillo until the 12th lap and
was runnine second most or the time to
that point in the race.
· "I didn't think I was goine to catch
him," GlUman said. "But he went a little
sideways in a sharp rlebt turn and I got
by.
"I got a few lucky breaks and I thought
It was all over when I hit a hay bale rilhl
down there . But I was able to come out or It.,.
Gillman s aya it cost about $25,000 to
butld bis Funco alngle·seat racing
machine.
Rocer Mears, a fixture in oft-road rac·
Ing, eapeclally at Riverside, captured his
15th race here when he woo the Claas 3
event SUnday. It was his~ triumph of
the weekend and lives him almoet tw1ce
as many wlna at Dan Gurney (8) of
Corona del Mar on Ute f\al.l circuit.
"fr WA.8 A TOUGB race out there today
and Sherman <Balch) aave ua a heck or a
10. He really made ua work for It unW be
went out. He 1ot ua on the dr .. race at the
start. becauae bta car ta aborter a.n4 Uthter.
But we bad the advanta,. over tbe rouch
areas with our tonier wheel bale," Mean
Hid. •
The only player to make the
all -t ournament team for
Newport was goalie John
Gansel.
In the women's division, In·
dustry Hills A again walked
away with the title.
IHA finished with 10 points to
Commerce's six.
Stacy wins .
in playoff
WHEELING, W. Va. (AP) -
Hollis Stacy, 1urvlvln1 a five-
way playotf, aank a 12·foot
birdie putt on the fll"lt sudden
death hole to win tbe Weat
Virginia LPGA Clualc Oft ~
day.
Stacy, coJleclin& a win.Der'•
paycheck or SJ.8.750. held a one-
stroke lead 1oln• lnto the 1'1tlt
hole, but mlaaed a five-foot par
putt attempt that dropped her
into a tie for the lead with Susie
McAlllater.
Stacy and McAllister each
then parred the par~5 1ltb bole
to gain a playoft wttb Penny
Pulz, Allee Ritamann and Kiib ·
PosUewalt.
Puls, Rit&man an4 Poltltwatt
each had to make late daarl•
to catch up with Stacy, .-car-
ried a two-shot lead lnto tbt ftDal
round before ab, abot a two-•
over-par 74 durlna Sunday'•
round.
I l
'
~ f I . . ~ "
Au...aTAR OAM!
NeUonel 5, A1Mrtcen 4
NATIOeeAt. AllM•tCMt ...... . .... It-, Ill I 0 I 0 C-, Ill I 0 t 0 ~P 0 O O o Mltrrey,lb l o O o ltllttw9ft,p 0 0 0 0 It,,..._ lb I 0 I 0 , 0-l'r,... I 0 0 0 Sift-,... I 0 I I 81ut... 0 t 0 0 Wttlte,1111 I 0 0 0 ~· 1000 Br.tt.a JOOO °"'°'.. J 0 • 0 NWf'ly 0 0 •• o.~ opoo Ollwr""' 1000
PWllM,rt J I I I O.vlU 0 0 0 0
Sc!WMt,a •12J 1000 ......... I I 0 0 E .. 0 0
ltr8'1.P 0 0 O O WI"' cf f O O O 0.-,» 0 0 0 0 5lft91titl\H J 2 2 I
Pot•'," J 0 0 0 ·~ I 0 0 0 ...... ,H t 0 I 0 ltO.J<ku\rl 1 0 0 0
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L-.Jll 0 0 0 0 L\tftll,jlll I 0 I I
TrlllO.llll 2 0 0 0 AN'l'l ... H I O 0 0
Swtlilr.P 0 0 0 0 Morrl"" O O O O •wctuv.llft I • 0. Pac~ I 0 I 0 Va-~ 0 0 0 0 BoRM,p 0 0 0 0 Y~ 0 0 0 0 T"°""'pt, I 0 0 0
S..-AI 0 0 0 0 Fondl,p ,0 0 0 0 ICl\OlllP9F Al 0 0 0 0 8.llall,at I 0 0 I T.ICOl'ldyAlft I 0 0 0
C)Mwy,lb 2 0 I t
TOUh ts St S T-• 17 4 II 4
lc-.11¥1 ......
H OUGNI 000 011 IJl-S Amaf'l<M 010 4'03 ~
E -Scfwnldl. P·l,.n.. LOB -~ 1,
AIMfic... t. 28 -o...t, SclW'llldl, Owwy
Hit -S1119leton, carter tu, Porker, Sc......._ 5e -0.-, 0. $mlttl. SP -a. ..... ........
Va~ s:.. ....
1( ........
Hooton
ltvl"-1
Blut (W)
ltyM
ktw A--.
IP
I
I
1
'"" YI
I
I
I
M " •• 88 IO 2 • 0 0 0
) I I 0 I
I 0 0 1 3
S I I 0 I
0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 " 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 •
llil«rll 2 0 0 I 2
Ber!IM 0 0 0 0 I
F.....O. 11100 Horris ) I 1 0 I
Devit I I I O I
Pl11t9n ILi I') 2 2 2 2 O
Sow-Sunw, WP-81 ... T -1:ft.A -n,-..
All-eter MVP1
1'71-Cert Y...,_.I, Amorkwt
1111-F--* ~ • ._rlcAn
ltn-Joe~,HatloMI
1'7)-....., ....... HetloMI
1974-S....Gerwy, Hatlenal
lt7S -11111 AMdiOCll eftd JOI\ Metlack, NL. 1116 -0-,.. PoAer, HatlaNI
lffl -o.i Mtlll, HatlaNI 1m-s.. ... Garwr.Het1oM1 lt7t-O.... ....,...., Hetional
t•-IC.OllOr'"9y,HetlaNI
1'11-Gery Car1er, HalloMI
NOTE: No All~'°r 0-MVP. -· •lectad ....... 1'71.
RAST HALF STANDINGS
A!Mrtcen L•eau• W91TDIYllH)le
Oalll-
Te._
Clllceeo ....... IC-City
SNtu. MIN-.cM
N-Y-Beltl,.,....
Mltw-
Detratl ...... c .. .........,
TOFllMI
W L Pie'-08
17 ll .617 » n ... 1Y1 JI tt .JIS M
11· It .Sl7 6
:II •.• 12
21 •: ·* u .... 17 ,, .....
•AST DtYlllOM
M 22 .WI
,, 2J .S74 2
itU.SM~ 31 16 .s.4 M
JO a. .sa • ,. 14 .Ult s
" 42 .276 It .....,..lcer'O
Hetlonel 1.M11Ue S, Amorken l.Htut 4 , ... .,. . ._
A ..... I~ 7•> et Sellttle (AMoft I-fl, n Chk.a9D 1o.e-. 741 at ltoa11tft (Rcuni.r
S..f), n
IC-Cit\' 1"-rd .. 71 al .. ftltNn
ID. Martl!Wz 7-JI, n Ml._.. ('luct&ovlcll •21 ., Oeftlanill ltty.._. , ... ,, n
THM (Derwtft , ... , ., .... y-(Jefln
S..f),ft
T-ICleney >SI al Detroit IWllC011 6-Jl,ft
OelllMd (Lanof«d S·71 et Ml-aota
ll!rlcll-2•1. n
°""""' Ctnc:lmetl
H-*Oft Atlll(!la
NetJonelL••au• wan DIYlllOM
WLP«.•e
• 21 .'311 IS JI .m .,._
19 It .491 I
$en Francisco
San OletD
U It ."'3 M
27 J2 ... 10
11 D All 12\1>
•AST CHYllK*
Pllll .... pflla ,. 21 ·'" $1. LAMs JO 20 ... ,.,..
Mofltf'Ml • U .SU 4 Pit........ U ll .521 S\11>
H-Y-11 M .m IS
ClllG090 IS 11 .al IM ......,.,._...
H.uon.t ~s. ""-kMI ~· TMIY'19-
Clnclnnetl (PHto,.• >-21 •I ~
llt-S.2),n
H .. Y-lkOlt Ml al Cllk ... (IC,,._
Ml
Plll1bur9ll I Bibby 4·11 al Moftlroel
( ltogen 7-fl. n
St. Louil It. ForKll 6-tl •t Piii ......
10wi-.-2-S), n AUM!la CP. Hlell,. >Ml et $aft 0...,.
ll!lclwlK: ... W),11
......... (J .......... ,, •t $en F1'8f1Clec:e
(A .. ..-dff J..41. n
NOTE: ~ reconll ere ...... •
JuM ll. Hew Y-end 0.lllaftd lft ..
Am•rlun L•eeve •ftd "" A,...._ -""'~ "'tlW ........ , L....-...... .... "*' fw iw-llmlMrt ,..._.,.. .... --.OlllMlelf dMMoln w'-n. It -...... wlM--. 1181-It wm "-t IN div"*'•
...... wttl\ 1'w Miit be1lt -•II -po~.
.....
Jt/W ...... P JI U ... ,.:~--·
.............. v.._~t ,.....,., ...... ,, ......... " ..... cc • tt. ..,...., AellllCI. ..._,, .... A1,Ct awl
, ... .-.....: '· .......,., ..... A, • ..-:LOI aw,o;a.,........._,: ....... ~ ..
l _
WHt Vlr~~~leHIC ,.. I
•·Hollll $Ucy, SIU• .. 10-1....an
Allee lll!JmM. .. 0'2 n.J~J
~NJ. .. ..., 71-7>*-212
Sus .. McAlll51M, 11-* 70-7~12
ICattly ,.......,,,ti.OU K-71-1~2
BerbWe a.row, .. ,J7S 71·1~U
Cet11r "'"11, 14,000 7MM~U Vicki T-, P,.J7S n -7>-H-216
Cllrll ~. SJ.17S n.n7~21'
Cetllr MorN, P,l1S J0.7•72-216
Man.n. Fiord, '2.1• 7~•7~16 e...-eMNMM,U,UO 71-1>7~7
$ue F~, $2,on 1•,.~I
Jo.Mt Alb, a.on 11.1w>-21t
Marty~. $2,072 70-7W~11
Alie• Miiier, u..on 1s.1•1~1t
Pal If'....,, iz,on 70-7>7~11
Maf'90~1eld.Sl .. 11 n ·7 .. 7~21t
.. ...,., oav1...c:oopor, Sl,611 J0.7>7~1t
Dot GenNlft, S1.l'f JO.,.n-2JO
J•rll'fll llrltl, s1.~ 1 .. n.1~no
Ketllr v-., Sl.ut 76-70-7._,.
Vicki~ SI..,. 70-7S.7~
JOM t Colea, 11,GJS n.7 .. 7>-Ztt
JeM Blal«ll, $1,01' .,._7S.71-221
A .. -. ~. Sl,07S 7>-7S.71-221 Pat~ $1,G7S "'*~ Ill......_ S.-., S1.07S n .11.1>-111
0.... ~. $1,G7S 70-7 .. 7~1
Gali Hlrala, tl,075 74-,.n-a:tt
Mar"d911 WlllllN, 9111 10-1 .. ~
MarleM ....... 9117 71.7~
Kat11rH1te,S111 ~ Oe!*r ......... $67S 7$-7 .. 71-m
Je11 ,.,.,....._ $67S ,.71-1>-m
Katllr Mer11ft, 1675 71-77-74-m
Laura Hurttlut. $67S n .1 .. 1s-m 0.le~, "" 7S.~ ....., 1(111(1. uu ,..,..71-114
M.J . Smlttl, UU ,....,~
Clftcly ...... tola 1'Hl.J>....m
C«ot•Jo c.a11111111, wa n~
IElalM Haftd, 141 74-17.76-425
SIWt...,-..1111, '431 11-1+1~ ltos .. ..,,i.tt, ..-a 72-,..7~
Jore• ICMmierllll, ..-72.n.1~
Siivia 8er1dacclfll, '431 1S.1+1~
Haney 111ut1111, '431 1+1+n-m ~· Poll.,.. 1+1+n-m
Loa Alemlto•
SATV•DAY'U.AT8 ••SULT
T•llTif ltAC«. 1'0 ranb.. S1udl0 Ort .. (CArdoUI
Loom Oecll (.._I
DH-Mr. Comic (Myles)
S.20 UO 2.20
J.40 ~
OH·lndlMWar Oaftcer (CM .. ll 2'.JJO
Alto racao: ,......, Te, ~-· Jet, M -Iion How, Midway OOUMe. OH Du--.t
tor Ullrd.
U •XACTA 1 .. 21 ...id Sl1.AO. ~tlllndMce -14,Dlll.
O..Mer
IUllDAY'I ••IULTI 1w. ...... ,.... I' ........... , ,.,..., lllAC8.6fwleftOI.
TOile Dead Alm
ICaaUMdel 10.IO S.40 UO ...... h Loll
l....,_I S.JO 4.JOStar--.
(McH•rtv•I 7.IO AllO I
Unlfennlty, A·Tl ........ AWfttltt, lt-y.
Pa,. TN .. II, FIMI °'Ive, HGMI .. Kllltillt.
St.ble PM, Wor Alli.d. A-<.OW114ad.
Time: 1:111/S.
s•c:oto •AC•. 6 furlOftel. I(_, (Mful 10.40 SM SAO ""°'*"" IV etOl\J'UOlal II.. 1.111 Litt .. HOoWt (McH.,.,_l 6.40
Al• racN: lllftr T-. Tlmllevall, l"lam-lnt lntntue, Wiid And s..et, lt"'9 OI l!rlft,
o.11c1a, OMclnv ..-el', S..C• w1n.
Time: 1:112/S.
U DAILY OOUBL• (~71 peld$11.to.
TMl•D lllACe. 11/16 mllft. ~Led 11'1nc:•r> 10.a s.. S.41
l'IYllll Br-ly IM<CMrOft) UO a.9 Le .... ltlwr (Scflv_ .. ,., uo
Alto r.-: Hlttler A.ltd TllltW, I(""""',
""'°"'°Sari«, Deft Dee tlllffer, ..........
Sllr Ml.ion, OM st., "-,.... A PrlMe, Su""41t*-r· Time: 1:412/S.
U 8XACTA 112-11 peld $71.IO.
POUllTM llACe. 6 fw'°"91.
Yvodla tOIJl ...... .,.I UM ltAO 7M
$111-(~J uo ... °'._-' HOl!Uy tMcCM,...l MO
Al• raced: Merci ~. MMttr.'•
Ha1111, lt•d lllalaln, Ce111ar•1 Marti,
CaryMtt. Loft Me Hot. Ill_,., Allllle
A-Tlme:l:11.
1'1"1t itAC•. 0... mile 911 tlHf.
I Fell ltl ~ (McC.WnM) ••• t.• U1 M-a (c.t\lllM) 1t ..... *"""...., (u,twlll ... Al• ,_., Dell<lll Dell, ........... 'lnllllt, J--, .-~ . ...,.. L.e•t. lt.-W•. C~Ot:•www•o. TllM~ Haatt.
tlllXACTA llNl (leldSl.-...
llHHllACa.•1-lefttL ._.. .,..._ <ll'lfltev> ... ._.. ue
._,.&1•1 (..._Ciel S.• UI
Tiiiar tCollliMMI ..... A•,_.., ...... ~-ltMlll, llft M ,...._ LMOL';::'ollll, K ........ LM.
11111-. .. T,... • • Ti-111112/$.
MV9NTM a.ca .• ...._..,
...., .. ~) t1MH.• Mt ...... ( ........ ) , ......
CUCNlti t"'8tUl UI A*,._., 1'¥ A "'"-~ All ._,
l't1C't Act. l. ... rfl~tll"'• T• .. 11 YiW
.................. T1-\, .........
1'111&: I ;INll.
• .-c"A (IM) .... 9',llR.a. • ..... °' ................... . ..................... ...., ... ....... ~ ................ . ....__ ........ .
•• ~:r• .... _. ~ . -· -.
Off·Ao8d Wcwtd c:helnDMtn.,._ t• •• _... ........ .., .__,, ........ ,.,...........,..,
I, .... .--,~ o-: .. 0...
Intl", UM •talftOfej_ >'. -lt .... r ........
BloM\li ..... ;; A-• -ef-etl ..-. Mr.ait.m .... ~....-..
1. Jim WrltlM. ow-, ••-: I. -8Mol, ......... v ..... CMMwtll; s. • ...,,_..
ArotOft, POMdlN\e, HloJ...,,..r; no ..... ,.
Cel'diM. .......... " .... ...
I. "°"' .... ,. .•••• ,. ...... J•ot Hoft<N; l. 1111111 Hell, It-. Nev •. , ~; S.
llll<ll °"""""""·--...Arla.,-. ....... ; ·~ ....... 0\IOfOll wlMtr: Sl,91 ... ............... ~ ...
1. OOR ....... H~. C-.,-. CJ1; t IC...in O'c:-11, TUCIOft, AllJ., J-. CJ7;
J. Mlcll••I Blwrlllne, ltlve .. lde, J•••
HOfteho; "° _. reconlM, .............
I. Jack~. L.111 v._.,., Hl-J-; I. J .C. ~ ..,,._, C~; S. Mof-.
Crowford, CArlllloed, Chlt-tll; • .., ... _...,, ........ ....,. ......
T'wi ... ,,.u........,
1. Miil• Lend Hunllnoton lleull
Ole-; J. "°" lf'anl. SM ....... lletaeo T aftdtm; S. Jdwl S.W..-, LM .,.._, H(.
J """-; Aver ... _.ct of WI-......
mpfl.
...,...~
I. Miu Glllmen, o.-.,...; 2. Gletll\ "-''· c-lllO· S. Frill ICroyw, N_,.,.; 4.
Denni• ile•t•, Le11ce11er; S. Pa11<llo w ..... ,.11-..eeac11. .....,, ..... ~
1. lve11 Stew1rt, LellHlde; 2. G .. IWI
Harris, Camerlllo; J. Tom Morrl•,
lrefl-.
U.S. Cley Court
l•tl ........ •l
........ PIMI .
J-Lul• CIDK def. lvM LONll, ._., M .
H . CClorC wlM Ul,000. L-wlN S16,GOOI
Men'• tournement
let o-citr. Olllel ............ 11 .....
lrlan Teacller *f. Hkll Savi-. 6-.i, 6-2;
JoM At.a1ln clef. Hank Pfister, M , 7·S.
UST A chemplonahlp1
letM ....... ,N.Y.1
MlllMel"I... ' Afttlv -def. Cristo Stevn, .. 2 ... I.
~ .. ....
Scott c..r-.Man ..... , ...... --
SHn 8r-1ev ... 1.1• .......
NASL
.. IT •• 11 DIYllK*
W L•l'NBP ...
Sell 0...,. It 10 '9 G .. 1M
Lot..... 11 12 46 S1 41 141
lwf 1111566'0HJ
Sell ,,_ 10 " Jt 71 ,, 11 llOllTM-.sT DIYlllOM vane-II II ., • SI 1.9' Ca,._., 16 1' SS SO e 10
Seattle IS If S7 SJ .. IM
Port._ IS IS .. 47 G 1216 ~cl-11 11 M .. 46 112
•ASTl•ll DIYltte* ,, • n .. • m
If 1S te SI SI ID
If IS ll S2 4' IM
S14U1JIZ'2
IOUTNe•11 DIYlllOM
Allanla 17 12 61 • R I• Fort~· 11 12 49 40 2' 1Jll Te'""..., u 17 54 61 0 121 Joell-II.. IS 14 42 4f llS t17
C•llT•AL DIYllKHf
Cllk etO 20 t 6t 0 S4 170
.. ..._ ,. 11 Sll '7 $1 w
TulM IS 14 D 44 e 1216
Dallot S 1f ts 61 M S1
Sia PGlnts are _.,_ 1or e f'l9U'OI .... °"
overtime v\ctorf. F-polnu tor a .,_....
vlC1ory. One llonUI POlftt ......... ,., ....
acorecl wlttl • meal"""" <II th'" per....,..
No ....._ pot11t 11 •••~cl9cl tw ownlme °"
ll\Ootolll ... ls: .....,..ac-
W•alllnglOn 2, Atlante 0
Ecllftlnaft lo c.tnos 0
FOtt ~ .. I, T-lat'O
Ml......UJ,T-100 , ... .,. . ._
Ho~~
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1881 ca
From P.age C1
NL MAKES SURE • • •
Dte10'1 OuJ1 Smith opened wtth
a walk. He promptly 1wlped
second but on an overthrow-by
Cleveland catcher Bo Dlaa,
Smith 1ot cau1bt ln a rundown
and WU retired.
A moment later, thou1b, the
NaUoaall had the tylnl run back
on bue u Flncera uncharac·
terlttkally l11ued another walk
to Plttabur1h'11 Mike Eaaler.
Thi• Ume. Sctlmldt made him
pay for the lndl1cretlon, wallop.
Ing a two-run homer over the
fence in center to turn the game
around.
"I wu trying to overthrow the
ball and I bad no rhythm at all,"
Fineers said. "I threw about 10
minutes in the bullpen and felt
good. But I obviously left ever·
ything down there. The ball to
Schmidt just said 'Hit me' all
over it.''
Schmidt obliged and the
beneficiary of the shot wu San
Francisco's Vida Blue, sixth of a
record eight National Leaeue
hurlers. He gained credit for the
victory, becoming the first
pitcher to wiJ\ an All-star cootest
in each league. Blue received
credit for the 1971 AL victory -
the only time the Americans
•
have won 1lnce 1982.
Another record w11 Nt by
PbUadelpbJ_a'1 Pete ROH, the
NL lt&rter at flr1t bait. Tbat'I
• the tltlb poelUoo at which RoM
ba1 •tarted in A1l·1tar play. He
1howed the •trike bad not dulled
bl1 talent.I when he opened the
came with a 1intle. Toni&ht,
when the reaular season re·
aumes, Roee aoes after the NL
career hit record. He was Ued
with stan Musial al 3,830 when
the strike began.
After Schmidt., homer eave
the Nationals the lead, Manager
Dallu Green of Philadelphia
went to Houston's Nolan Ryan
for the el1ht innin1 and St.
Louis· Bruce Sutter for the ninth
and they retired the AL in order.
For Sutter, it was hls second
consecutive All-star save follow·
in& victories in the 1978 and 1979 games.
His task was made simpler
when, with one out in the ninth,
Frey was forced lo let Toronto
pitcher Dave Stieb bat for
himself. The AL pilot was out of
pinch hitters because of the
Armas-Lynn moves two innings
earlier.
Lighl air mars race
Frustrating weekend for sailors
Llght airs from San Diego to
Santa Barbara plagued sailors
in three different offshore ocean
sailboat races over the weekend.
Most frustrating was the San·
ta Barbara to K,ing Harbor race
with 162 starters Friday at noon.
The race started in about two
knots of wind and by S p.m. the
leaders were less than 10 miles
from the start.
First yacht to finish was
Roller Coaster, sailed by the
Golison Family Syndicate of
Long Beach Yacht Club, com·
pleting the course in 17 hours.
Roller Coaster failed to save her
handicap time and finished third
in the overall standings of the
International Offshore Rule fleet
behind Harry Hibbs' Tonka,
Ventura Yacht Club and Paul
Berger's Decision, Del Rey
Yacht Club.
It was a slow race going and
coming for the yachts In
Pinckney wins
Mike Pinckney of Bahia Corin·
thian Yacht Club beat out 18 rivals t.o take top honors in the
Laser Class Western Regional
championship sailed out of
Newport Harbor Yacht Club Fri·
day, Saturday and Sunday.
The seven race series was
sailed in the ocean off Newport
Beach in light lo moderate airs.
Runner-up was Alan Ledbetter
of San Diego; third was Jon
Pinckney, BCYC; fourth was
Charles Buckingham, Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, and fifth
was Rod Turner, BCYC.
You ttHd Yoo . ~
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's
Ahmanson and Dickson Series
and Balboa Yacht Club's 66
Serles in a race to Catalina
Saturday and a race home on
Sunday.
Yachts were still finishing
Sunday night in Bahia Corin·
thian Yacht Club's race to
Coronado Yacht Club, San
Diego. Fina! results were not ex·
pected until today.
llMYC-BYC Oc-.•ec ... tenes
IOlt OYlllV<LL -1. Scarploto, ~ J-
SOYC; t. t1111flla11, l arl Oea11r, BYC; S.
Calltornle Gold, L• Coll, OPYC.
CLASS A -1. GM&1. JOlln lllrt ....... "HYC; t. lllalellt, Jim LI....,_, IYC.
1011·9 -I. 9'9wle. llon Malvll .. , BYC; 2.
Splrll, AllM Br-ft, VYC, J. Flwn-yent,
90fflOV Flam, LBYC.
IOlt.C -I . ScorplOft, SIMnar JUllQ, SOYC; 2.
111ut11an. hrt OeirW. ave; s. ea11twNa Gold.
I.ft Colt, DPYC.
PHltF OVl!ltAL.L -I. ~ cam.t, Oden
Br..._, HHYC; l. ,..,.,,., 111.., Slllclalr, IYC;
J. Wlldll,., Jim Gronakl, VYC.
PH•f<.A -I. Jor It .. , ~l'Y autts, BYC; 2.
Captelll Ml*°ltllt, WHv•r·lt111ll, IYC; J.
~ • ....., rwoe. ssyc.
PHii .... -1. ,..,.,,., ltey $Mclalr, IYC; 2.
~ o.i Mel(~ HHYC; S. ~.
Joflft wi.et, VYC.
PHltF<-1. ~ C-, Odtft If' ...... ,
HHYC; J. WlltHlra, JIM Or<Hlllll, VYC; I. llluellerry Mufllft, IC-Metoft, llCYC.
UYC-ICMYC .......................
10111 -1. T...U H.,.,.r H .... Ve YC; l. OKill9I. P8lll ......,, OPYC; S. Roller c:..r,
Get'-Femllr S'l"ftllkate, LBYC.
ULOB -1. Trlcll Ponr, Aldefl 01~.
PVYC; 2. 111.-&ent, LIO\t'lt OllHn, CHIYC; J •
Cllelfllre !'ca, GHllM Kerr, SMYC.
SPLIT 11110-1. SN Larl. Mal Tore, SIYC.
PHltf<.A -I. T.,,,_, Wotf, L.arrt Harwr,
CBYC; l. ~ CMrtn Pewlff, ICHYC; S.
ltllll, .. Miiier, MOeYC.
PN•"""• -1. He« ltum, ca1111,_w11 ......
KHYC; 2. J-, Freel 8r0Wft, CYC; I. Blue Be-,w, Joe J.-1, ICHYC.
PHllF< -I. Wint&. Fr-L\tflCll. PBYC; 2. Wiii• ~ 0 . .,...,_,, PCYC; S. ~
tlafl, .J«Ty .._.., ICHYC.
PH•F-O -1. 0-"'4\Me, 8111 CalltW, UYC;
2. Gr .......... , ltGllift ...,In, KHYC; S. ~
martlme, 041Y T-. SBYC.
PHlll"-E -I. Mtar, $.0 . C-1, UYltC; l.
11111~, ltkNrcl Mm«, CHIYC; a. .....,_,
WllWI """f• UYC .
DI.YOO A«••-•& (lli._octk
)(.,..,_llN••-t'
770.5251
OPIN rvna WffUHDS
2712 I LA« f IOIU I Oii! Ill .
WITf 1 I •
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
u.utecl
Cllolce Seats
To Place your
"Fast Result"
Service Directory
ad .... Call Now
642-5671
ht. 322
213-463-1101'
71~752-0960
Zillgitt and Wright
insurJncr ~.~rnls :ind brokrri;
lnaurance premium• up tN• re•r?
CaU us for a competitive quote for Auto, Homeownen, Fire, Fine Arts, Ule, Medical, R. V., Boal or Yacht lnaurance.
J9Jl MK Arthur f\oulN'.ml
"4r19p<1rt Ruch C ' WC><..c 1
< /\41 ISl '>OSS
This Weeks Special
. ltM COUPE DEVILLE O'ELEGANCE
I' Dual comfort seats, Cabriolet top & ·
Cadillac wire wheel covers. (3:i0137>.
.. ~12,995
642-5678
Top divers
to compete
in MV event
Mission Viejo N ad adores stand·
out Gre(. Louc._anis will bead an
all-star cast of 100 springboard
and tower divers who will com·l
pete in the U.S. Outdoor Na·
tional Diving Championships lnl
Mission Viego beginning Tues-day. I
Louganis has won 16 national •
titles, twice won NCAA cham·
pionships and swept the U.S.
Olympic Trials in 1980. A silver
medalist In the lO·meter plat·
form at the 1976 Olympics. he
also took home two gold medals
al the 1979 Pan Ameri'Can
Games.
Other top divers who will com.,
pet~ in the event include
Louganis' teammate on the
Nadadores Megan Neyer, the
first woman in 24 years to win
both events at an Olympic Trials
( 1980). She also captured the
t)lree-meter event at the 1981
U.S. Indoor Championships.
Mi ssion Viejo 's other
representatives will be Wendy
Wyland, 16, a national tiUist at
this year's Indoor Cham·,
pionships and Dave Burgering, a;
national team member since
1977.
Other top contenders include-
A my McGrath and Bruce Kim·
ball, both Olympic team divers.
Tickets for the five-day com·
petition, priced at $2 per day or
$6 for the entire meet, will be
available at the gate.
Prelimin a r y rounds are
scheduled mornings with finals
set for mid·afternoons.
Steelers' Ham
out 10 weeks
PITI'SBURGH <AP> -Jack
Ham, the Pittsburgh Steelers'
All-Pro linebacker. will be
sidelined from eight to 10 weeks
with a broken left arm. the Na·
\ional Football League team
said Sunday.
Ham suffered the injury in the
Steelers' 35-31 exhibition VlCt.ory
over Cleveland Saturday night
during a third -quarter pileup
near the goal Une.
The game als o cost the
Steelers the services of tight end
Randy Grossman for four
weeks. Grossman sustained two
fractured ribs on his left side.
Put o /~ words tb work /or MOu lnlhe_ ....
• • '
l
'
,.
ct Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Mond1y, Augutt 10, 1911
NeTICI ..... t!IAC'Mt ~NllllM
lclilHI Oltlrl1h C:OAft COM
MUNITY *""' 0tn•1cT I" DIMl!MI .ti• t'4-ll 'f'll1 ef ...................
................ 1 .......
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CHtl C-'h (ti .... 01 .. rkt.
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l"rejt(t l•lttlc1t11111 N-: 114
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C•lll., Otlwt , N••11trl leecll,
Collltrllla ....
NOTtCI ti HIRHY OtlllN 11111
Ult ... -...... klleel Dttlrkt ti Or1111 .. (Nlly, C:elllerllla, Klint ••
111d lllrwtll ltt O."tr11l11J ... ,., 11trer11el1er r•rt rre t• •• "OlaTIUCT", wlll rKolW _,. ,., llMlt
11t1 ltltr tlllll IN --'91M Umt
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ldtlllllled -· -11\tll. _.... eftd ,...kly l'Md ......... tM .......
lllltd tllfte ........ .
Tlltrt will tit t UUO .._II rt
tlllrtll rtf' Nell Ml of bid --It .. 1111'•"'" ,,. ,..,.,11 111..., ctlldlll.il
wltlllll 10 .... '"" ,,. bid '""'"' .. , ..
lacll bid mull coftlorm Ind oe
rt110111lw to IN c111trect dK11-.
lt<ll ~ ~I llO KC-led Illy
Ille -wily rtftrftd to 111 lllt Clll4tttl
doewmtnb..., tty lllt 1111 ol ,,.,._
1u1K111trectoo.
Tiit OISTlllCT r_.,.. ttw rlt lll to reject .,,., ., ell lillds or lo ••lwt 111r
lrr-.Wl•'ll'" or 11\fonNllll .. 111 111y
bktl., 111 lllt lllcNlllt.
Tiit OISTlllCT t1a1 OOltllled rrom
llW Director of tlw Dt(Nrtmtllt of In·
dw1trl•I llt11tlllls tlW 91Mf'•I prnt ll•
lftl rt lo ol pet di..., w .... In Ille
locellty 111 wlllcll 11111 -k It to llO
perrorrnecl '°' H Cll <rell °' type ol workmen lletd9d to uecut• ti. <Oii·
ttecl. T""41 retff •rt on r11e 11 tllo
OISTlllCT oflkt Ioctl.cl •I Olfl<I el
,,_ Ol..cter, J-P'ottor, Pllf'k t l
't<lllllft . COplH mey lie Obtained
CoHt Community Coll ... Dl1trltl,
1170 Actems ,. ..... CMlt Mew, C•. ttU•
111 req-. A <OPY of ttw .. rtlH !NII
be pOtlH et 1111 JOO 1111.
Tiie r0fegol119 t<l'ltclwtl 01 per dl9"'
..... II MJed -I -klllt Oty or 119111 Ill ,_rt, Tht rot. lcw f\Olldlly
end overtime -k .,..II lie et leett
11me •IWl-lltll
It tNll llO l'MI ...... y -.... CON·
TllACTOR to ""'°"' Ille conlrtet "
••••did, -upon any subcontractor w11d1r lllm, lo pey not IHI llltn llW
Mid SllO<lllecl rot11 to ell wortlmtn
empto'(td llY tlWm In '"' tt.ecuuon or
Ille COlllrtcl.
No bleldtf' mty wlll*ew 1111 bid ror
• period of rorty·llw• COi d•r• elwr
Ille dole Mt ror llW -•119 or bldt.
.,..av= ett•IM.tl TV
AT Ntrm tiM.8 ...... ., .. #i ... ...:r. ....~ .. "" WMAlte& C~IMNI JAMH C, llTIM ... MA•Y
C•Ate, fllel ... ff&. .-IMMIT'T T, C:ONN ....... --.•PlnT. CONMU, ~~ .iOMN IMITH
aht a111w11 n MAVLIN Jll'li
MUTH, CA'n41•1NI I , CtllCHNI•,
OA'llO ICt•C:HNI•, C141'•Lll
ICl•C:HNI•. ANO ALL lll•IOMS
WHO HAYI o• CLAIM ANV
INTl•llT IN o• LllN ON THI
l'llOlll•TY .. , ..... OllCIUllO,
Oel9MaMI. CAM.._.....,
OAlllO A. ltllltCHNI•, CHA•LH
Kt•C:HNI• t M CATHl•tNI I ,
KlllCHNI"-~t41111fft. "' IMMITT T. CONNlll, MAHLOff JOt4N IMITH1 eh MAYLIN Jll'' IMtTM, JAMI•
C, MAllTl~L MAlllV ClllAIO, ANO
ALL lll•1K1N& UNKNOWN WHO
HAI/I O• CLAIM TO HAYI ANV
INTlllllT IN 0111 LllN UllON THI
lllAL lllllO'l•TV Hl.llN
OHClttHO, De~•·
NOTICI II Hl•llY OtYIN ""' •'*I.ct .. c...,lrmett.1 .., ,,. ...,..
llllltrltr Ctwrl, I'" lllldtrlltllttl .... , ... ""' .....,. ..... ,,. ........
nem•d c--1 I• Mii IM IWl'elM"9r
.. tcrl~ ""'"""· wtlt Mii el IWI•• .. 1tle, ell w _ ,,_ 1"11 MY flf A....-1.
'"'· .... ellk• .. t .. .....,....,
"•'"'"· ... the rltlll, llll•, 1 ........ ............. .,,. etiove·MlllM ,.r11 ..
, .. "' llltlllll"• •llCI WfWnM!ltll Ill aM
I• lfltl urtt111 rM I ...-nv •ec•_. 111
IN City _, H\llltl""911 Mecll, ~
•• or ...... St•te .. Ctlllotlll•, -
more 11erllc wltrly dntrlll•d n to11ow1, 1owt1:
Tll• rNI pr-rty dettrltlt4 H
Loo 21 encl D In llaek 1 el ,,. ....
-.ir11 Troct. 111 ,,. City et HWllll~
IHCll, c_,, ., or...... Stele ..
Ctlllornle, •• ..., tnajl reconlH Ill
looll 4, ..... I of MlllCtllt-• Mtjlt, In 11 ... offke of IN C-ty llec.,... er
wldc-'Y I. Seid pr-1Y II t• lie Hid He Wll·
II "H 11" lot cull, lewfwl m-y ol tr.,.
Unlttd ttttft of America, end not ..-
on crtdll. -llW Ml• I• ••Ject '° conrlrmetlon llY tlW elltw c_.. t . 114h Of oflen -II lie Ill wrnl111
e11d eccompanlH by • certllled or
cfflll•r'1 cN<ktor1t11 percent (10'11.I
of ,,,. • .......,. bid, medt payebie to llW
Rtt.rH encl W ll Ille ltft t i IN olfkt
of Ille Rel-ti any time afler llnt 11111 pwbllctllOll ol 1111• llOlkt. Tiie of.
Ito of tlW Ref-11 localtd at SJ17
VI• l ido, ~ l•e<ll, Ctlllcwnl•
t'MtO.
DATEDJwly 17, '"' Carol Mwl ... Y. Rert,...
J377 V It l ldO
N-1 Bttell, CA 916'0
Tel (1141 •7J.7JDO
""'bllsNd Or-c .. 11 Delly Piiot,
Jwly a. It, A.,.. 4, 10, 17, '"' •
A poy"*lt bOlld -• perrormanc:• -Wiii be reqwlrtcl prior lo necu· uon or llW contrect. Tiie pomtnt bOlld
tllell be In llW r .. m "t lortll In u ... 1---------...:>:.::*-t~t COlllrttl doeunllllh. o.wr-..-..
lyN-a.Welll•
SecrwW'y, ltMN ol T,,,.t ... Pwblllhecl Or ..... Cotll Delly Piiot,
t.119u1I 3, 10, "" J40t.tt.
•
Cf!,mpaign
donors
listed
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Here are the 20 or·
ganizations that gave
the most money to
California legislative
campaigns from 1975
through 1980, according
to a report released by
Common Cause:
NIUC NOTICE
NOTICI 0 .. TllUITll'I SALi
Ho. 'SC·U27
On A-fl 21. 1'11, t i 10:30 AM ,
Hartford E1<row Inc , a C•lllornlo
corporetlon •• Cluly ._.nttcl TrullH
unoer •lld --• to o..d or Trutl recorded Nowtmller >, 1'90 ts lnllr.
No 01. -1a11, PtOt '74. or Of· llclel Records, .. ecuted by T11omo1
l DeMott -Jecq ... 1y11 l O.Mott, H111b•11d Olld Wiit ts Jol "t
T •n o n11 , 111 the ofl lc e
o r 1111 County Recorder o r
Or•nt• County, Stele 01 Cttlfornlt ,
WILL SEll. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST a100ER FOR CASH
(Pt,.ble et tlmo o1 1ele 111 lewrwl
money ol llW United St•l"I et. 1111
Soult> front ..,trt11ee to Ille or.,...
County Old Court-. City or Sent•
,.,.., Stele or Callloml•. a ll rlg111, 1111•
end lnter.,I COllwtYed to •net ,_ lleld
by II unOlr Mid Deed or Trust In Ille
pr09erty sll.,.led In seld COll<llY •lld
$1•1• d11crlbtd 11.
Lot 6 -IN Sowllwrly 10 IHt of Loi T 111 1 100 It, Tr..:t 7n, e1 per "'9'1 te·
corded 111 Boole u . Pegea s M>ct • or
MISUll-O•lt Mep&, Ill Ille onlc• or
lllo County Recorder of w ld Dr•ll99 Cownly, Ct lllor1111.
Tiie 1trwt ~' ones otllor tom·
Collfornl• Meclk •I Polltlul AUIOll mon d .. 1-llOll, II tnY. ol ,,. •••I
C•mmlftH (PACI, ll.U mlllloll; pr09erty dn<rlbtd lbOwt I\ pur,ported
Ctlllornfe ~t.M EmploYtff A.Uoclt· to IM· 312 62ncl St-I, NtwPOrt 1 .. c11,
tlon, 11.11 mlllion; C:.lltorllle ""I Cttlrornl•
lttete PAC, '"4,000; Unlttd ror Tiie 11-toloneo Trulleo O•S<lelmi
ce11rer11le, tm,llOO; "-latlOll lot eny ll•lllllty lot eny lncorreclllfll of
''"'' Cltlantlllp, an lllt led wllll lllo '''"' -. .. -othor common Ct llfornlt Tutllers Anocletlon, 11ulgnet1on, II e11y, ,,..,...n IWr•in.
Vtt.000. Seid Ml• will bt mode, Dul wlltlo\ll
GWll OW..." of C:.lllotlll•. 1747 /l(IO; owe11an1 or werrenty, e•pr•n or Im·
Cllllornl• O.nt•I PAC, '607,000; lltd, r999n11111 title, PHMISIOll, or
Call!orlll• TH mlliff'I l'lllllk Alftl" ncwmbrencet, to pe, Ille r..,,•lnlllt
Council Fwnd, Mtl,000; ••nkers rlnclpol sum or llW nolehl secured
RHPOllllblt Go ... l'lllntfl( Cemmln... ' H id Deed of Trll\I, ... ,,, lnlertll
MH,000; Ctllfornla L.tbot ,,_,._ lleroon, H prowl-In w ld nolthl,
tloll, 1446,000, Ct lllornl• Trl1I ctvence. II 111y, -tlle term• tf Lewy~ PAC, M)t,000. Id DHCI of Trust. 1 .. 1. cllaroe• •llCI
UnltM Awto Worun lleglon 6 """'" Of t"9 Trull" end or tM PAC, 1174,000; Cellfornle Ferm rw1ll cr .. ttd by Mid Dotd or Truit
auruu Focltrellon PAC, WS,000; or Ill• _, rHaontbly ottlmettd Fwnd ror l111ur•11<• ldwcet1011, to IM Jt1•,47S 47.
UU,000; Wfflltll Grow•rs .. ,.c, ~Tllo btfleflclMy .....,., H id OetCI of
Ut7,000; -.ollera Good GowtN\l'lltflt ""' '""torort taecwttd end do· Cowncll, Utc,000. lwertd to lllt undlnlgnea • wrin.., Celllornte AHO<latloll ol Hetltll ecltratlon of O.IMOll end O.mtllO
'«llltlff PAC. llfflllated wltfl nwr• or h it. f"d a wrlll•n Hollo ol ln1 lltmes, 12'0,otO; C11lfor11I• reull .;..., El.ctlon to Sell Tiie .,..,.
A11lem.-11e Oetl•rs Auoclt llOll et1l1 ned ttustd H id Nolle• •r
PAC, Ulo0,000; St•t• end Locel tfewll -EIO<tlon to SOii to be rt · Cltlanllllp R..,.....lblllty o,_, er. orded 111 tlle county _,. trw ,...,
llll•l•d with '9wtller11 Celllornle roptrty 111outtd
Edlto11, m...-. Colllornle H-1111 01te: JtJAy 20. tti1
Cowncll PAC, 1210,000. Hlll'tford EKt'OW Inc •
Graduates
Jeffrey S. Siegel of
Corona del Mar has
gradu ate d fr om
Washington University
in St. Louis with a
bafhelor of arts degree.
rtHCIUOTMIH
SMITHS' MOITUAaY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
S36-6~
rACIAC YllW
Mll«)llAL rAal
CerT9tery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach 1).4.4-2700
MeCOIMIQC MOITUAlllS
L•ouna Beach
494·9415
Laguna H1llt
768-0933
San Juen C.p111reno
495·1776
HAalOI LAWN-MT. OLIYI
Mortu•ry • Cemetery
Cr11TW t()ry
1825 Glsler Ave .
Cos11 Mesa
54b-5S54
,_ClllOTMMI
-.&.MOA9WAY
NOITUA.f
110 Broadw•y
Cotl•Meta
&42·9150
IALn ... °"
SMITH I TVTMIU WISTCLW CMApa
42'7 E 17U\ SI
Cosla M ... ' 849371
••..CdTru1lH
Ptclllc SOnt1ne1 COfpor1llon,
1y a111c-1n
tOIO West Mellchttltr A\OOllwt,
Loe An9tlos, C.lllornl• taOtS
Tt! UUI 776-1201
P11Dll1hecl Orenot Cottt Delly Piiot,
u1, 21, Awo a. 10, '"' J1«Mt
Panelist
to resign
SACRAMENTO <AP)
-Ronald Ruiz plans to
resign from the state
farm labor board as of
Sept. 1, he.bas told Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr.
Ruiz, 45, or Fresno,
has beep actinl c hairman of the
Ag ricultural Labor
Relation1 Board slnce
the state Senate refused to confirm Brown'• re-
appointment of former
chairman Gerald
Brown.
Rua aald he decided
t.o leave in September
Instead of walling \I.nut I
Otc. 31 wben hla term
expires beceuae "I have
ce rtain commltmentll and opportun1Ut1 that I
have to act on by Sept.
1." I
Hiring eyed
SACRAM&NTO (AP)
-Out~ to Hbool dl1trlet1 on blriDI of
tducaUon coaaultaata
Wirt dllttlbutM b1 UM
atate Department of
Education. The atan·
dard1 are tht "'ult of
lan1ua,. lnatrtM into
the lt't• bud1tt on
behalf ot A.Memblyman
Rlcbard Lebman, D-1 rr11no. le coetrol &.be
UH ol CICIGlultaD&I
IWLY Pl&OI' C&.AlllPllD ADI • Ml·Mn • -·
6
4
2
•
5:
6
7
8
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
IENTALS
HOU•r' t'.-tn1cihtf .... .,, l ftf•ffti•~"' ii.. ... .,., • .,, I.,
l~'"'"'"'' t-.rn l tM1t1u•111ftl• l ol r ............. ,. t ............. . u.,. ....... ,. ~Hr1ttl'•f A~• l'\or•
""'\.Aflrjtft
..,., "''"., ' ftf ·-· M-l -•d IMtthM°'•I' G"''' ltornt• '-"''""' M'"'''' \ .,_.,.,. M•tttal'
"m•t'"'"'•"' C:atu•i.. for RPM
Ol'hu Mitftl•I
f4w•1f'tf"\' M.-tital lrwf~ttltl Mrt1t1I ~., ...
Mtf't1\., "•'"N
'11\t Mrflt•h
IUSINESS. INWEST·
MENT, FINANCE
....... °""'' ~' ,._,..,,Yt•nttd
'"' "''rntftt 0,111Uft \ ln~t\hntrM "•nlwf
"""'"' lu L.u1n \Jenn "•"'" \111W,h 1r-TO'
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
msoNm &
lO~T & FOUND
"""'"'"-"ff'*',..' lor Pilt>I
Lt1,1t 'Y'u '' ..... , ..... rid
Ptf~eh
"'«'••"hi ... lh\'4
SERVICES
EM"-OYMENT &
mPHATION
Mhovl' ,,.,lrut l1fln
Jvb • •"'"'' 11•1~11 ·••..t \1 6 '
MUCHANDISE
Allt .. UC'" Awtwut ..
A\illl'liufl M1t'H~ ""'-ht •• \I dff ., .. t •rntl u ~ .... pm..M
l •h 1 .....
• ,fftlM \1Mi1
•'-r"11ur• t,., ... ,. '41•
ucw,~ ··~··•tjff' Jf'••ln l.H~\bl ~
\l•rh1Mn "'"'II•""""'' \htuU~• "•"hi.t "•··· ·' '"'"•"'' ,., .. U-f1t f' t \Uf'I 6 • tfWl.-p,.,
C:~ ~~;~~,.~~ ~'nt•t,nuch
•"'" tt .... lewr•"' k•'
j7'f-4o0 lhh " .. ,..,,
BOATS & MARINE
EOUlrMENT v.-.;
.f'o•h \I 411M "'i+f "' • "°•" "•flfl ... 'flitll1
l1o•t' Po••' 8IU1h Mf'fU I fliMl"r .. , .. ~,1 lu•h ~ • .,.. , .... ~ "°"'' "'"4 ~ ,, f'Mh .-.11, ....
TUNS'1JRTATIOH
~Htren
l .,,,,,.,, '4'" Mtn•
t'\fot•rn '•" \lfll14f' \4 It• ",.,.,. ~Olot' llm" '•'" t4 .. ftl l'r••lff" lft~tl ,,..1 .. ,, l tllll\
4\lfuVhUI t•.,\•
AUTOMOBILE
\H'Ml•I
""ll'tU\'fl \lilOI\• ~'IU\J~ft \ ¥11\U I'''
.,,, H11 r H111t
bn1U11t."" fr"'•" \•A• A1i1,wLn1t1f'la.: A~'A'eftlf11
AUTOS. IM'1JRTED
"'"'' Ale Rutnirv ~"'11
Aw•hn tlul\'\ ¥llW t:r." Uelltiin
t'fft•ft
'"' HIHI~• J•ww11 ,,,,.,,.
ic ........ tJ~·· .....
)h t1.f''"'tkftl )Ill llOM Ullfl '&Mn• """' .... ....... ~.
llffla•ll IWll• 11.~,. f'n'''
tJE: i~~.r.-.• Vth'V
C:WW"t1I
Uflll!l•I ~ !i!•'Jff ~~ti
AUTOS, MEW
AUTOS, USED
~~l;
~·l t.).f•.U. . .,
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 ....... ......,.,.. .........,.. ......,.,.. .......,., ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
............. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ,...,... IOOJ .... ,.. IOOJ ........ IMJ .... ,.. IOOJ ;.;~;~c; •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••NI IHJ
""" -41111 .. ,, ,,...,
11$1
'"'
IQUAL HOUllNO
OPPORTUNITY
BlOIS: UrerltMn ........... ....., ..
~ ·= .,_ '°" ""-. The DAILY MOT__..
.... ., fer .... tint
l11errect l•tertle11
~·
TUITIMllAUTY
I Bl I IA family nn. • dlQ. rm. Dbl. detacbed ''"I•· Homt complN-11 r.aeconted on ltrlt
cul·dt·HC lot In Co.
atrlp. lllckt1 lblftr
M0-190,
IAITSIDI
PATIOHOMll
A 11p1rat,t llomt on 1
1mall lot I Udrm I belh, brick flrtpl1c1, 1uper
erlvate and clun.
Owner wW btlp f\oenu. 1111,aoo. Ca ll now,
UUIU
THE REAL
ESTATERS
GIGANTIC
lllDIOOM
nuda decoratln1 !
U~• :~~ Hot9fffwW.
Private courtyard entry
lead• lo huie Newport
Beach Estate .
Enormoua family room
with blatinl fireplace! Sunny. 1ourmet kitchen.
Larae. lush 1round1.
J111t llattd tnd priced to
1111 Only 1291.500 CaU
today, 873-ISSO
.....
ll.llJ
''" .,,,
•••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.. 100
······················~ TRY IJO/o I
THE REAL
ESTATERS
SZ6,000 DWHI -H-A-ll_Ol_ll_M_I _
RepubUc bom•! 4 hu11 A w a r d w I n n I n I bdrma, 2 baths, ramlly II •
VACANT-VllW-AMXIOUI
Panoramic view of bay, ocean &
1parklln1 li1hta. 4 Bdrma. Lt• famlly
rm. Formal din. rm. 2\41 Bathe
$39S,OOO. Submit offer on price and
terms owner anxloua .
WllLIY M. TAYLOR CO., UALTOIS
2111 S.J ....... ~
MIWPOIT CMll, tU. U4-4t I 0
REAL ESTATE EXCELL.ENCE SINCE 1949
COMI WITH US •.• TO MIWPOIT
llACH. TWO NEW DUPLEXES .. ONl ON
WEST BALBOA BOULEVARD wrra THREE
AND TWO BEDROOMS -nlE Ol'HIR IN NORnt NEWPORT JUST OHi BLOCK FROM
OCEAN .. EXCELLENT FINANCINO .14.25,000
EACH .. A.SK FOR SUSAN FROST.
1617 WHTCLIPF DI, M.I. Hl0 7JOO
DOWHPOI
THICOUMT
Time runn1n1 out ror motivated seller who
ha1 bou1ht another
house. Guarded 1att
community, 4 Br 21,\ Ba,
exerclae pool• 1p1. M>w
rtduced to 13S5,000.
•••e••e••••e•••••••e•••
REAL ESTATt
SALES MAHAii
Major re1lon1l brokera1• ftrm with 13
years experience tn the coutal area la
1earchln1 for an experienced peraon
to mana1e lta expandlnl Newport of· nee.
H1&hly vialble Faahlon Ialand location
with 15 full tJme a1entl haa the pot~n·
till for 27 •tents.
Thie firm has over 125 fulltJme 11enta
and offers realdential investment.
eecrow, securities and mort111e
brokera1e services to Its clienll from
8 offices located Newport to San
Clemente.
The per1on chosen will receive liberal
1tartln1 salary and an override on the
office produ ction along with other
benefits.
All responses will be held in strict con·
fidence . Send resume to: Drawer 18,
P.O. Box 2000, Corona del Mar, 92625
/
Tlll"IC IUY
room , brick fireplace. "Jode e ' estate home. country llltchen Owner lat reaale orrerln1 on --=~===:..::;--1
eoxloua, may carry lhil uqulaltely appoint· RCllylorCo
Pogular Carmel model in Harbor
View Homes Th ree bedroom, two
bath , fireplace, private yard, and
very well priced at $229,500.
U~IVUf ti()Mf § ed townhome with AITD •l 13%. Price only mualve view or bay.
1129,500. Act now ! ocean, coastline" nl1ht
548-2313 ll1ht1 Now red1,1ced to
1<11111
~·(\
111,llU .,,:, : ~ ~
THE REAL ESTATERS
IXICUTlYI
$227,000
Almost new 2 story
beaut y. Sun filled
kitchen , formal cllntnl
room. wark and coiy
ramlly room too! 2nd
story bosta secluded
master 1ulte with
c r1 c ltll n1 brick fireplace. 3 mon queen
ailed bdrms too ! Don 't
miuout call
::~ Cl) ..... \lv. :
::;: SEA COVE
:::1
1 PROPERTIES
""' 714-631 -6990 :f: _____ _ ...... ::! THMI._
:,~' TOWMHOMI? ..... Call the speclellsts at
the condominium In·
form a lion center.
•I• .. ~. ..... ,, ......
Touc~one Realty
~
~~; I EDUCED ~.~. C h a r m I n g w o o d
:::. shin1led townhome. Sun
filled kitchen overlooks
,11,, cosy patio. 3 lar1e
·•~· bdrms plus sewing room ;~:.· loo. Only Sl00,000. call
-1tti1
'lflfU
'f111111 .....
SEA COVE P~OPERTIES
714-631-6990
~z
LOT+I Nut 2 Bdrm home on
tht front ol the lot. Room
to build behind . A
bar11ln, S11J~500. Call for mort oetell1.
54e·UU
THE :REAL
ESTATE RS
n•ooo
·~1 1 .. 111111·· :, ~ 11
·~;I ;[ I fl I "
JJ1111•1l•• ')1,t,llJ\f1yl1tt1f
f 1 11111111 Pr I hH 1
IALIOAISLI
OHLY $175 000
Lowest priced unit
available! Unbeatable
terms Owner will carry
lJt at l2"e ror 10 years.
Ideal weekend or sum· mer hide-away Step1 lo bay View boats (rom
rront 1lllln1 porch' Hurry. call 673-8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Dlft.EX
5'4.900
Investors dell&hl! Two 2
Bdrm Units Current in·
come '740 Mo I year
home protection plan in-
cluded Call lo see !
646.7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
LEASEomOH
MEW,OITICH
Rare Back Ba y op·
portunlty! Enjoy your
own private pool. spa,
and paddle tepnla court!
Spanish tile entry Spacious livln1 room
with 1oarln1 c11Un11.
Gourmet cookln1
kitchen. 4 1en1rou1
bdrma Only 1219.000 .
Won't lut. hurry, caU
67l-SSSO
THE :REAL ESTATERS
IUYllS W AKTIO
We can belp you find
your drtam houat. Call
our Co1t1 Me11 ·
Newport Btach Rulden·
l11I Bptelallal, Delores
Otlbtr&
TSL PROPERTIF3
Ml=llOI
OCIAHPIONTS HOISIPIOP•n e to bt euct from
Lott of wood, ata!Jllld 111,000 down • u low u
' ]• 'll'll
HAUOIYllW
Super location and 1uper
REALTORS, 675·6000
2443 Eoet CoHt Hl9hwev. Coron• del Mu
WE HAVE 45 OF THE BEST .AGENTS IN TOWN
RE~LTORS
IAYSHOUS
financing. Quiet area, 1 .. •••••••lil••••••-wlth community pool. 4 1•
FAMILYHOMI
Thia Ira 4 Bdrm 4 B1
home ii just 1te1>11 away rrom the pri~ate
bucbea of this 1ate
1uarded community.
The Uvina room with
heavy wood buma,
paned windows. and
Bdrm a 2.,.. baths. formal dining room. fam ll)i
room. 1429,000.
64Z..S200
J PETE
BARRETT
REALTY
shutteh open to the 1un· I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ny brick paUo-1real for
entertalnlni. Owner will OCEANFIOMT 1ui1t with llnancin1 or 5 Bdrm 2 Ba Terrific
will cooaider tr1de1. value ' locallon on the 1549,500 aand. Only 14111.500. C.U
D.M. M9sW lltr now 979-5370
760i-Oll5 A
SI l.OOODOWM I LLSTATE
Taite over flt\ loan on REAL To..S super Sll2,000 home
963-SS7l I ~'_/!O/O
l','f'1 1:{4J:tllfti§ Sll,OOCJDWH Vacanl and owner wants
~
I I
• .J REALTORS
67S..SSI I
SO. Of HIGHWAY -T1 •ONll ......
2 Wocka '""' buc~ nw... ,... eld ,....
11111.2 .... 21 .. ,.,.... .......... ....
... 1 ................. <:66.
Ofhn4 .. UH,500.
COLI Of MEWPOIT UALTOIS
2515 I. C..t Hwy., C... .. Ma-
675-5111
REALESTATE out! Huie 2 Bdrm 21,\
AFFORDABLE bath condo with lar1e -----------· ramlly llvinl atta. At·
2 BR l BA I yr old take tached ~an11. 111.S.IOO LIQUIDATION SALE over existing loan in total pnce. Call now ,
•
adult ::e~PET 549.2313 BAYFRONT
754-1202 .......... Sill .....
THE :REAL ESTATERS
RESIOENTIAl REAL ESTATE SERI/ICES
OCIAH/IAY YllW
Perfect Harbor View Hilla family
home with 4 BR. & a lar1e comer
lot. So convenient to sc hools.
shopping and a bike ride to the
beach ! Good financing. $42S,OOO.
Fee.
IN N•WPORTC•NTER
644-9060
UNIT ors Em.ISIWE PBmaJ Piil.
.. 04-4MTII
UYFIMT wm1 IOAT -
IPO mil IM.T lH r .M. MTl SU
m4CMmlltM
YOUI TOMS DI CASH ISCOUNT
C11••1JS.l31l • ••
~Q,
SUPEIB YU---OWB All
hptclefty 1.,.,. trl.fe•el ..._ wttlil
lteHtlhl 4eur lty 4teereter ........... ....,.. ... , . ..., ..... ) .... + ....... .....,.w-4 ..,. ....
-""' + -ltllllft ,... ..... ... ............. , ..... ._ ..... + 1la11 aod cnntrl 1H1 lnterut on tbt
cbarm dllmbe tbt a • balance. Call for dttaila •••••••••••••• moeP.l!•rt o1 Ulla aant1 anJAd U1C•DiilEAL1oc1uJYon1. An1 H~ I 8dnn I 81
prf•• .,._ Ut49UISTIC*Aal YllW
OP OCIAH & IA YFlOMr deli apt
OWMr _..Mt,._.,. St7"000. llomt. 1'be OWMr wtU
111., carry 1arla lllld ID410ll __ .,IZ .. Ht ......... 70.___1 :::r.:r.~~hU 0
OWOI IALI Ida la
Utt D1ll1 Pilot briaf um relultl. To .ia• 1our drawlll eird, ....... ,., .. ,,
llTHI
DAILY '9LOT .. ,.,
IBULT" .....
~:r
lemctCatl
MAllOI YllW
ta&I
W1toh tM cUUlnl of tbl colon Ii tlll•
Hlllblll t HllOll
fardta, plan11td tor ttar rouad bloom1.
1•91 detalJ ot "'' a ldrm ktmt lhOWI pr1't of owaeuhlp.
NtW ltttrll Olrpt\11
l•••••llltlJ ••lllal• .. ,., ... l,. Ow• wUl aulll al ,..... ....
rm:
llDlll ILllll aa.
OVER 55 YEARS OI SERVICE
MIWPOlT IHOMI
Cosy Three Bedroom Home In A
Youn1 People '• Location. A Fun Place To Live. Renttd For '750 A
Month A' The Preaent. Priced At tu0,000. Appointment Ntet111ry. But
tuyToSbow.
COSTA MllA IMCOi9
Triplex Adjacent To New
Rtdevtlopmtnt. Great Owntl'11 Unlt.
Two Rental Unlta Help Wltb Payment• • Taua. 11010 Orou Income Ptr llontb. l1ctllea\
Flnanclnl AvaUable. SlU.llO.
NewElctamlJslll&!
LAIGE PEIN. IAYFDT .......................... """ ~~ Yed1t CIM. S,. .... tH ._ll141W'W.....,_ ......... ,.... ...... .........
...................... ,_ ... &
VU H IA,, Au••eMt I••• •f lttt,000. te ~Hllflt4 r.1ytr. ...............
WATUFIONT HOMES.~
IJM.UTATl
~ lli.t.4. '"·~••I\ ............ .
~Wl1..itt.. ........ h ll ......
\
• • n._ .. _ "--• (\~u v ;ttc;r;a;a;;,1G(utf !b.:. i:.;;ii;:;.;.. ______ ,...11111!!9-.. ;=:.~~ ....... ~.~~ ...... ,, ~.~~ ........ ~.~.'!4!'! ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~~....... °'I? eo.t DAILY PILOTIMond!y. Augu1t 10, 198t Cl
··=~ .......... IOU !:~~.. • ... C..MIM 104 .,.... 1044 ....... 1044 ... .,.,..... • .. , ...... ,.,Wt ...... .., .. ~C*erlttl ..... U.k I b' ..... . ................................................................•....... , ............................................................................................................................... .
-................. ..C»1"1 WOODll1DGI ........... ... ....... IN S..C ..... 107 ..._,.,,,,., 2000 ........ U N UMDA ISLI 8r11C1 ••• , rln••• ••••OW' tow~. Ir ·~ Ba, llo•• l• co9dlttoa. a .... , ...................................................................................... .
Exclttni opportunity' Wlde channel ql&&llty ecedol a H , J~ ... utJl\tl t ldra IM •• 1"'tl lit T.D. bdrm, I ba ho•• IA 1MI...,... SACll'ICI IM1'S Ye1rl1 J lldrml .• ! b1. I f · bl. Put.MOe lbwdq. IMalli Mme. OI •v.let cul tlJl)OO. Oww • .....__ Hubor vtew. Hi&tl ... PIJlll """ eoado J ._ \1NDU MA.U£T A17 else, tG-IO·•O· ll dn, rpc. larlt pet.u. No ~ ew1 :~m 1pect1cuJar 1rehltectur1l Call oow for det1lll. de uc. la E~ •WD•blt loalll. ~ Bdnu-frollt row ; .. Yr-oldd...,. A.Mwn CaUforfft..1q11.S.O.• cbUdreo *° mo. Ref.
\I] &ned 4 bdrm , S bath, PQ.Ol home. .,.,.. owae,.adpllliei ._.._. u:.!:dtd =•bout. laad Low do~o -low i.ow...;owc · Whela lit. lall, aecurlty Slip for 2 lar&e boata. Sl ,495,000. In lovely Go deowe1t _,.... IHI U 1 lb .,:.!mt -··••.--.......... ..;. __ • .,,. . n H0·9011 f7S. Su 0c Ill l LI r ally ....................... .. ut Alkill-.IOt ~.-u _ ·--· --JJ mmer cupanc:y. •"· .... ~ ... a __ .., Mew Mod11lar Type IDel Jud. Come for in. C/JI Ml•'-!*tC.. T'l$:0lJ:lTH·l!1' n=-t ~ .. _._ Cerw .. W. l2
UDO ISLI HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home. pewly redecorated. Priced to sell qul_ckly at '475,000. Must see.
l'OOCl'I Wan -.--r 1111U H I d I d ,4 .. IJl7 J&a "76Z 1~ ~141'1111:' •••••••••H••••o•u••• Townbonu1 owner CO&)' Rreplace Sparkl· omH, .... 11 • •pectloo Sat. Sun l·t .-IOfO 1 Bdrm a ba apa dbl•
w/floantt w 1$,. cl.ft. a ln• 1011rm1t 'kitchen, ~::~r~k, ,:.~ IJIOPort'"-lerorcaU OCWRONT ........ ._ ........... , , • ._ 11raae Nr ra~blon
BR, fplc, dbl 1ar ph11bea1'1*1 .... .l&O. pie~ from ij, 100
7f!.•Oww/Act 11 otrw.111t Balboa IN FOllCl.OSUll I unite, owe. trade. II land. redecorated. Suo,ooo. RUlb La11rie, •me • · VIU.AIAl.IOA toe. t.ceprbnchactJoo, Vrlce reduced with Owner desperate. 111 "745 per nlO, 2 yr le11e. ~~ l Br coodo. View of ••zwdpa.-..,., sa.,aoo dn payiueot. t4t-15'4 t2l3) 1181-0887 or (213)
Cl\1rmln1, modem 3 BR • l11Ma... Catalina. Owner will ta.Uover~otlJC,000 RE Sales peop&e to learn -'712=--'.Jm=------
2 Ba bouH. B11lllln ~n.st. btlp Oouet. S4abaalt ol· IAST._.... at l.K aad move lo lh1a Investment• • u · c.. .. M... J224
kitchen, trub eompac-7TK TPJ.OS Wal&td ad 111.ed ocean fer. 81OWMrdr,28a, Hee vaunt pool home now, chao&u. Xlnt oppty tor ••••••••••n••••••••••• tor. Grut <Mdoor Uv· 1 A PECT front utatt •Ith ....,,. ftHlll bo11H, at appralul la Tuat.ln area. Lr•• Br rt1bt pel"IOn. 100% com· owe CONDO 2 Br. + lrg
Ina. Patio. bl& BB TUSTIN Tll fabuloua view. PYt atepe Trade L N _ SM0,000, 1"' clD. owe rucb home w/RV •c· mlaaloo available Coo· 1on Br. 2~ ea frplc.
w/ralaed deckina. Ian to tbe 1ud. CaU for bome 00 ~ t.'i;.: bll 1JW• 1/0. lM bold. ctH. Approx. market fldentlal interview car., a /c, new SHS
w I j a cu u I . Au t MEW• HOME brocbun. come Uda or T •Autty Owoer ~lilfret eoop value over 1210,000. St&·SlllO, Vince. 873-554Sor96U377.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus la~ recreation room & 2 pat ios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420,000. Best price for the money . aprlnklen, preet11lou1 fvearokUBdnn CAROLTAT'UK,RLTR .• 210 000 A t -1 w/IRS 1011 tu H · Great buy. Prill. ool~. H•.. 3 Br 2 Ba "-t•-ae Park • area. Only 1149,00 ' ~ • • · c 00• ebaon.'Jltp;W DoW'a pay may be flexi· ..,., ~ K' • PEHINt•u • •OIHT 1ir.•cHF10uT AITD. A&t. Espie, ZBa.S144,•. Broker Co-Op. A1tnl WANT boule ID N ~ tale Call la Ownr/Aft Needsbarpf.plex In HB. bit.ins, . O/W, rrplc ~ ..-~ " 21~1• 675-tnl AL.tit 131"'511, Hel bta ,_ 'ltnt~ ,_ w'.NOOor&.o7ee. Have70KCaah. Prln on· Available. f700. Aalr for Panoramic bay & ocean view at FwALHe BLUFFS CONOOS1··1e u 't d ...... Be ·.: ._ 1 676-979'1 Pete. n1.=319=1'----
d ( H•1101--1116 Dl • ro.era . we ge, rom prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 "" ..-"'"111: l acre+ bldcatte. aeat· story, lBr, Zia, Linda 17a.1171 NI-ml oe..ra....... IY ow.. CON DOS FOR RENT ~ath cus.tom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur· COMDOS 11 ilopin1 parcel abort Piao. New aldaa, We, NIWPO.RT SHORES· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'la units ,_., Beacb Brandoew SeeWestbay
$ 2 apacioua metr. suites d.lat&J2ce rrom tennla fl etc. Auumable loan, · u....a..a.. ... _ · .....,. · Townhornes ad, section ing manneroom. 1,385.000. or 2~ story with lotted beaeb. Ownr h11 in· owner/11t 1230,000. Beautifully deeorated • _.._ Cub flow. lO% Fin. 3824.
MEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. im-
maculate. Low priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
11 '" , · .. r1. u.... ..,, tl ol) biol
JASMIMICIB ..... ..._. 1004
Moat popular S Plan.with •u•••••••••••••••• .. ••
apectacular &reenbelt" NOCASH
view k>catice. 3 Bdrm + TD OK for down. Cute 3
ramUy room. 1.115,000 BR 2 Ba cottage, trade
714 760·9333
OK. Desperate. l.lBS,000.
Ownr/a@. Hl6Hl693
Coroeo .. M9' I 022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
434llGONIA
Ele1ant new 4 Br Vic-
l or i an partial vu,
ownr/contractor just
completing. S57S,OOO.
OWMB AHXIOUS
3 bdrms 2~ ba, lg as-
sumable lJlt at 11 y,3
European flavor. Very
private. S410,000.
548-1904
CDMIWFFS
IYOWta
--------1 above beach, full ocean
& jetty vu from every
rm. 3 lrg Br, lrg liv rm +
kit., 2~ Ba, 2·sty. 2 brick
frplcs, 2 decks, beach
arcess, semi-pvt road.
Sl,2SO,OOO. P.P. Appl on· --.... ---IWl•I ly. 714/67US2S
UMIYllSITY Pill Cos .. M"° I 014
DIANI HOME •••••••••• .. •••••••••••
mstr bdnn Both mdls cl ........ r•-~ ,,_ e• .. tom W-ZOU bedroom 1bowpl1ce. PwS. 1100 1119500.&M-451 S-"E=C<'-L:....U_D_ED __ l _B __ _ . . . ...,... ...... ,.,. -D di I r •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• . . r. very have attached 2 car vlU1. 175,000. Spec-MIWPo.TC•T flen, 1 • D~ otolmd lBr.TralJtt,lmUefrom Wai.k.ikl2BRh&nicoodo privale,qwet&woodsy ~:iryee 1~!~e. r~~n~ns tac~=EALTY 3 Bdrm oondo. CloH to • .!~J~ ;!cs!. beaeb. s.oo. t•t~.nrvblewSale. pool, h Adults. no pets. New pool and temda Excel aod llOI 5e-41JO nr ...,ac . orexc g carpets, drapes, range.
10.6PM. 3M Avocado St., Hui~ 06-0731 t'illancins Pricedtoaell. ::1'1ot .:.•J:~":f' · t118 0000wner644-1'51. UU!s paid. ut. + securi-
631-3405 H.,.._ I04Z INVESTOR Needed. Sllt,500 · ' fen beafd! TARBELL . .._.,,..,., ll50 .... trW/ ty. WS Mo 642-<*JS or
CM conAGE ....................... l l2,500 total invitml. C/11 ............ <=*. REMT0RS.f79..23llO • H•;· .. ··;.:::;.::•u Proptrly 11 ..::6'6-~6423==------
Cule 3 Bdrm 1 Bastarter Twn.bae 1780 sq ft. 2Br, $2()0 nef. bu.ye ~ home. 640.IJl7 76N767 .,.,. ....,.... ~r-...................... NEW 2 Br 1 Ba. Quiet &
with garaie and l1r1e 2 ~Ba . auard ga.te 499-58 - - -Ocean view. 3 doOra to 7,500 sq ft. Xlnt loc. + cool, buih·ina, refnge
yard wilh RV access. c.omm., owner will CITYUGHTS OCWROMr LJDOISU beach. Carlsbad. 8000 •q ft. Fenced yd Adults, no pets Utils
Washer , dr er finance. Ownr/aal. HIWIYOWMEI 811yorleue 4 bdrm,I $235 ,000 . Paul apace haamodACof· paid. lJlt. +security.
refrigerator incl~ded'. '242,500.<n4>tt7-5'90 by nl11ht .bfadntuilc !BR•den •ooo bath, I cu.'° ft. lot. Wopsc~all, realtor, licea.canbesplit.2919S $6SO Mo. 642·083S or
Assume fl,1,3 loan. Full :e~~!1); ~ 1~· a!· 3711~ . Sunoy IO. patio. New (71')4M-1735. Hal1day, SA 646-7Sl2, 646-6423 _
price$105.<m. '"M I044 bo~e 00 pvt. iOt in U · Ownerw/WT7.f73.'578 ~bet!, be~ ~:!y~r ...,...,,,.,.,,, 1400 S48-GOO Mesa del Mar beauty 813
....................... cellent nbhd. Featuring a ry · · ....................... Lots for S. 22 Presidio IK. 3 bdrm, 2
Tl1.\[)f T 10\, \I
RL\I'"
631·7370
THl«I• s It Y 11 & ht e d b r i c·k OC~RONr ed. Only S.75,000. ...................... ba, lg cov patio, fplc. in·
TOW.-.OME? gourmet kitcb. + det. -IO.~ FOi SALi Lot for sale by owner m els gardner & water
Call the speclalisu at guest house w/fp 6 wet Th1I offerillf 11 an estate M.-~ Silver Lakes. For mfo 117S. 557-4~. ~6445
the condominium in· bar. Owner wlll help ule. !>ne ol Newport Offlcel I' g call645-7158. ""'a"'"va=i"-'19-'-l""". ____ _
tonnationcentu. ·N/rinancing.1315,000 Beach• finest viewa. 3 Tualln·3e001Qft. o.tof C..-iu 3 BR l Ba, Federal Ave ..
Toucb.stcMRealty L.,_.V....1.l. ~':r 2~ with 1ueat Fullert.oo-227Ssqft. properiJ' 2550 new cpts, drps pamt .
9fi3.(967 4'7·17{1 Re loooml · S75-1700 Oranse-MOOsq ft. ...................... fncd yd. grdnr. i6SO mo.
OWNER-Turtle Rock , 1 Cl Xlnt fina.ncin1, tu ad· Horse property 3 acres Family only. Children
EASTSIDE, 2 ador~ble ~acre! Det, UJ>&rad 4br DivorceForcaSale UDOIAYfllOMT vantages. Chris Pauls 3bdrm hous~. 1 ba: OK, refs. Avail 811S hous~ on 1 lot. Pnme c3 +den> 2ba, fonn din, Lower 3 Arch Bay. ltdllced Sl00,000 Custom coont.ry French (714) ~ owner will carry at U% Reply to Ad No. 931, Dai
location. 395 Flower St. tile entry & atrium, 3 Creal ocean view, pvt In Dover Sbora. 5400 6 bdrm, 6 bath. Pier and Monday ttuu friday Sll9,000. San Bemadino ly Pilot, PO Box 1S60.
Assumable loan. Spa, priv ycls, xtras. Nr pk & area. 4bdrm beac b aq.rt. of toe> quality con-1lip. Brick ternce view. Prime retail loc. Harbor area. 46S-OZ56. Costa Meta, CA92626
red:'f"00d deck, etc pool. Asking $23SK. bouse.'53l44. 1tructlon. 'nUa S Bdrm ~~C'aiu'~.:: sq. and Newport Blvd. CM. Carlsbad·waterrront. Mesa Verde 3 Br. den. 2
Devin Co. 642-6368 641-8070 24 hn. Medit. 1tyle residence is .000 sq ft or less. 548-3402 Come home to a retreat! Ba, 2 frpics, No pets
Npl Hgls duplex, 3 Br 2 M ... 11 ~1 COUIT OIDlllO the beat oC locations aod Eves, 548-3270. Spacious 2 Bdrm, 2 full S8SO lease 966-2453
Ba + new 2 Br 2 .Ba "" ~ Pl-•n s • • 1r. has lhe bat oC fl.nandn1 B Terms, AJTD or 4bn· Owner leaving area, --available. OWC l850,000 a , eorgeous view. East Side Condo-J Br,
tract. S27S,OOO. 00.7400 must sell. 3 bdnn ' 2~ Magnificent ocn tr bch at9~% Int. Fullpn'cein· 16b0 1110,000. Lowdwn. 2Ba, frplc, Jg patio, S6SO
Ownr. bath to~. Man~ views, pvt comm, 2Br, R & H lnv't. 752·2197 mo. 646-0329 2Ba. Court sale date, cludin& the land RARE C H N upgrades incl air con . Sl.450,000. Call Dan Bibb · l -ewPort o.t of Shh Spacious 3 Br + Den IY OWNER Owner will help finance Aug 12, 9AM, 700 Civic forappt. Beach ~roperty. SO' Propertf 2600 L n dry h oo It up
4bdnn, 2ba, pool, jac Less than 12% 11\l. AGT CeR nler Dr., S.A., 1>4;pt 31. •-•'S-••n front.age ID prime loca· ••• .. ••••••••••••••••" gardener meld. No pets
Mesa del Mar area 551-3417 e cent a PP r a Is a -,7 ... 2:--1 I OM WATa-lion. Owner will finance. B n_, S87S. Savage Wilde & Co
Sl&0,000. SS&-7271 S340,000toS375,000. Finl • ~ LOTYALUl7 Exclusive. Principals J Uwnr;J 67s.9006
DISCOURAGED? ::r~~~~~D~~ AlmOll lot value " the only· Ask for Irene Three bdrm country 3 br, 2 ba condo. au gar ,
SID,• AITD
'20/o-30 Y"9"
Charming 4 bedroom,
fresh new pafot. de-
c-orato r touch
Think you'll never fmd cal (7lt) 642.9038 or St,OOODOWM home comes with it! Old Loudon, Alt. 63l-4247 or home on Washington's pool. $575. lJlt. last & ~c
that 3 bdrm home you (&05)646-1521 Venailles2Br, 2Ba pea-Ne•Porl charm in a 631·7300. beautiful Olympic Near OCC 5S7·8071.
rHlly want at a price lhle, ocn view. SU7,000. qu.let location wit.II 4 br. Coado .. -./Tow• Peninsula with heres or 646-8273
you can afford? Don't Aaaume$121,000ofS"1. home+ oier•alip. In· ....... ..,. .. 1700 land and 300 ft on BeautifulnewXmdl.de
dispair, we have just ....... H. 1050 loana al 17%. S1828 mo. credible VIEW of Main ••••••n•••••••••••• famous Sol _Due River corated & landscaped
what you have been H•••••••••••••0•••••• Of c 7 30· 2270 , H m Ba yfront. OWNER UMDB $70 000 Terms negotiable Somerset Ci ti hom e
$J3',000
Charmin& and apcacious
3 BR + family room
home. Comer location
across rrom part, pool
and tennis. Retirina
owner will CllT')' fmanc·
inl at reasonable rate.
YA throughout. Beautiful
POOL HOME front lawn, pool s ize
looking for at SlSS,OOo. MB.UI ~All 642·21112 WILL HELP f1NANCE. Nr South eoast Plaza! (206) 374-0748__ (Baker Bear St 1. 3 Br 3
lt's inaconvenientloca· Newcuat.om,greatview, M.l.IAl6AIM "50,000 decorator sharp ! lffllhtat. 9a. 2 car gar ssso
lion. Highly upgraded. laree 4100', 4 Br, 4 car ruooo ..._ . B . Earthtooe. 1 Bdnn COO• be.._ 2100 Resp. parties o nly
Ownerorfertnggeneroua garaee, S62S,OOO . • ....... u , ruce 3 r, -WATERFROl'IT do,air,pool,spaclbhse ...... -:::!: ............ 642-86631vm5K:.__
terms to help you Ownr/Bkr, 75-0706 or ~h~~~~o:::. ~HOM~TE Byowner Exchange or trade tor 2 Br. with swve, enclsd
purchase. 644-S74.2. S2o5,000. 1_1400 m-077S oceanfront or tncome farage. Adults. no pets Let--..... I052 SUMSITl.I. Leisure World 1 BR. property, 3 . condos ns. 773 W Wilson
Lovely 3 Bdrm home back yard. By owner.
reaturing master bdrm Last weekend before we
with open beamed ceil-list. SlJS,000. 840 San-
ings and Ben Franklin tiaao. Mesa Del Mar
fire p I a ce . den and ~85~1~·9~1_00~, ~-....-.""'1"'"48._ __
library/study off muter IAl'iAIH AT 'l.,.s •••••••••••••••••••••0 542 llOI amilutoty, eod wiit. at· Steamboat Spnngs, Col 6JHll89 3Br. 2~Ba. 3 car 1ara1e tached earage. Air, fplc, Ski-in, s ki-0t1t, on slopes ~~·---759-1616
bdrm. Elegant formal SllS 000 n
dining room overlooking • 'l~ .. I ..t
+ RV /boat storaee. 11 sum ab I e I 0 an . 714/S40-4752 DUl'\.D
dinette in kitchen, new HA.llOI YllW 83'7·3204; m,7126 lffll hhlh Westside/Bluffs area 2 JUST llDUCED
Nearly ·new 4 Bd 2~ Ba,
family rm, Grat terms!
S208,SOO. call for details.
Ownr/ AIL Rkk Keeler 631·0213 dys, 546·6706
eves.
pool and patio. Assuma· FUU NICI '-l'J'
b I e Ii nan c in g a Is 0 2 Bdrm home on larae 1122 8600 carpetln1, fuUy lndapd, IMOU.S w-.a......11 29,.,, Br 1 Ba. Fenced rear
fncd, pvt pool 6 jacuui 0. ... Wfliflr _..._ "" yard. large front yard. lot in East Costa Mesa. w.;,· available. Asking 9~% assumable loan.
Sl&s,000. For an appoint· Owner will c.ury small
meot to see, call S40-11Sl 2nd. Hurry. tt523 C.utl'V5 DI: IRVM
area overlookln• L· A rare opportunity to •. A Low interest rate as •••••••••••••••••••••" duhwasher, was her • pvchue a bcme oC clia· I 1..&........&.1.....1 Niauel Golf Course. llnctin dellp in thia in· well 11 a low price for ff•-hoda hook -up. enclsd garage
'331.000. -..,. Um ate and unique com· lhis 2 bdrm. 2 ba. In the Older Residential Bch or S 4 s 0 , 1st & 1 a s t
11.7%
ASSUMABLE
Triplex one year new.
Try S4oK down. Owner
will help finance. Call
645-9161
OPEN HOUSE
RtAllY
/
St,toODOWH
Take over lar&e 10,53
loan on beautiful South
Coa1t Villa Towohome.
Askine w.soo. 9S).S67t
'. !. • HERITAGE
REALTORS
MOVllM
COMDmOM
Sharp 3 Bdrm, S years
new, larae open kitchen,
lovely atrium, earthtone
carpets. Asking SlJC,900.
Call S40-U.Sl
! HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
MISAYllH
llSTYALUI
Sharp 2 Story, 4 Br, 3 Ba,
new carpet, redwood
spa, easy care yard. As·
sume 9~3 loan. 103
down to qualified buyer.
Sl6S,OOO. D. Bourke
_ ........ R"'"E._AL~ESf=--._AT_E""-_1 Realtor ~9950.
I llMCOI I I I I I I' .
I PUllllS I: r I' I I . i
r,_T_A_R .. D_,F.--41 ;=· Our gUMt of honOr wae to J I I I glw a •PMOll on on1111, but 011
-• · • tilt WIY O"ter, llt WU -. .. --------. I £11 10 ,E I ... _, ..... , """'r_.....1 .... ,--, .... • ~ .:--.... ~ ~ --------yow ....... ,,_ ... No. j below.
• Ris!';i;t'ms IN I' I' I* 1· I' r I
I ~M~f unus I I I I I I I
SCUMUTS•wen •c ......... 5100
TAR GA~EK• ..
~~~r---ltaA.TLfiCX.LUI"--~..,...~~~
M ,_. Oii, ,_,,., o.Ms X v ,._...,,.,.. ..... y
To......,_..., for T"'9doy, ............... '°,_,.... .,.,..,z..A1t11111t1119r\
\
C/21 Newport C.tr
640-5357 76CM7'7 GOICHOUS
1201 DOW.... Clean ' cozy, 3 Br 2 Ba 1~ • ':" w /courtyard entry. No qualityuig. Highly-Near new carpet.a and upgr~ded • bdrm. coun· microwave included.
try kit., on lge lot. Call Close to schools and
957-2819, owner/agt. shopping. Call for de-
COZY
CONDO
2 BR 2 BA end unit. New
c1rpets. de.an & bright.
Assumable 13'1 loan
tails.
* * TAllELO!
FOXIOIOHaTS.
lllAUTY
Exceptioaal 2 sty, 1 yr.
old, slain &lass,
hardwood lln. Lovely
landacapina. mountain
view. Elaborate sec. system in this • br, ram
rm, frml din rm. Lge.
assum. oa.n ol $156,700.
plus owner will carry
2nd TD of $133,000.
Reduced to SB,900.
munity. Tradftionally RE._ l T 0 RS heart of Newport Beach. Waterfront property To Gardeneruicld. 642-9136
Ca"' Cod Oii tbe ex-Boat slip avail. Submit purchase&~rjointly ~e-MESA VERDE 38R,
ter1or, tbia cbarmlnc UDOISLI all offers. A.gt.. ~01. velop. 1 w_ill provide 2BA. elec k1tch. dis
townbome II aplit level W /FIMAMCM Wknd's, 213-~ & lOO% ftnancmg. Charlei. hwasher Own quiet cul
and beamiful.ty detailed Tbla encbanlin1 home 7lf.557-3144. ~~128l --de-sac S72S Mo Days,
within. Tbll ii the only hu all the amenities for Location view. 10% as-Need to seU? I nttd to 64S-2284 Eves, 966-2896
one of itl kind oo lbe family life plus luury sum able. Lr1 a /c buy pool house CM. or Unfurn. 2 Br. Yard-&
market and is yours to entert1ninln1. With S 3bdrm , 2~ba lu!'. nearby wtOWC, assume garage. S550 + secunty
experience ror 1235,000. Bdrms, eacb witb lt1 townhouse. 2 fr pie s, or? Call 213-76S-6261 _ deposit l(jds & small 644-nl I own bath. there Is plenty laadacaped back "side pets OK Avail Sept 1 oC room. A S.00,000 U · yards. Loe. at top of hill ....... 64H369
/.Jn l1%EL
1JAILEY &
A':i5U(IAT(5
aumable lit TD at 11% is o v e r 1 o o k I n g E . ••••••••••••••• .. ••• .. • -"-""'-=='------
available wltb owner Fullerton. Thl.a is the HoeMt Fw I a.cl H..tiitgto. hocll 3240
wlWn1 to carry IOClle nicest COlldo in town It ••••••• •• ••••••• .. •••••
balance. Thi.a cla11ic meed to aeU quickly at ;::.:·~:::.:.:.:•••"3''1'0°6° Brand new 3 .br: 3 _ba
home will not 1ut loo& 79 soo 738-0ll.S4 -._ house for d.J.scnmmallng
WATERFROl'IT D.M.Mw '•Dr lilcw,,..,.rtf JOOO WINTlllBn'AL Totally upgraded
•
'Reo CARPET·.
-754·1202 -A;\_ · ' · · ....................... family. 2 blks to beach
'
R~HOM~_.,1-400~re. 760-tll5 ••••••n•HH•••••••••• 9114-6/14 3 br. lllt ba. G a rd en er 1 n c I
No, not a Crull but lhe ~"' 1--------11Tr•de Luxury Newport S72S/mo.673-2346 Sl200/mo.833--01~ street th.is charming OCIAtRONr !tome oo 'r\ acre for In· MHGY.,.~• Irvine condo i_, on. va. ••A-S come Units or, Equity 1-'*'P.-.. 3107 NR. BEACH. 3bdrm.
Charming 4 ~ig-canttrready~go.Make ._._ __ .......... 1055 MIC .... Stl,000 lt5!000C..-. ... S280,000. Act now !••••••••• .. ••• .. ••••••• 2.,.,ba.famrm,fncdyrd.
an ofrer ' Askmg --.......--Lowest priced olferla1 Sell will carry m>,000 Broker Co-Op. Agent ON m .E BEACH ~t gar, wtd hkups. gdnr in·
gen 2·story and 3 Ba and ·n 01 900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo eleaaat secure com-balaoce-lalereat only s 631...s16. loc .. Wmter Rental Avail cl. S89s. S36-0921. _
3 car garage. Superbly ' I OFAIOHD mun.it)'. Call Bill or Lin· yean. Choice corner Sept 12. 7 Br 2 Ba. S600 Mint cond 2 Br 2
.. , ...... wUh ... moot r~1r-·br1d-4 bdrm home OD the d1. '31.-&. dupltll 3 bdrm, 3 bath p I 0 , I • T y Appl's. S800 mo. Inquire Ba Near ocean: No pels expensive draperies. """" .. -waterfalls In Lake 11p,2bclrm,2bet.bdown. 128 E. Oceanfront, July 833-IMlM> 833-m7
wa llc.overi.ngs and Reilll Foreat. By owner. --·-----· Can convert to lar1e ~ 18lb. Aug. 21st. or call I '-· ' ~--·--carpelmg. Pnced to sell •m """ -........ ,..._ -"'" home. We manap 1000 Units in 675-S990 "-3244 quickly and l't bas 2 as· 551·3000 • ,J<N,_,_,.., Llm"_.,.. __ ,,_.,r 2113 ti. ,,,,_lr .. .::::-C ... ~ced .... ..,,,.,. ea.ta Mesa • Newport Winter Rental: Sept 12th ........... •••••••••••• sum able loans. Full U208manu Pkwy,tnhw Newport.... 1169 to,._:::= ...1"::::....... 11••· Beach. For pralessiooal lbru Juouo 12th. Cl•an. 2 ORAMGmEE price 1228,900. 7Sl·3191 ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ..... ..,_""" ...... _ meat d · ... ~ "' IWW I SP ILUPPS COteO until Sept. 1. 7S" ftD~ •67'-716t• maoa1e your ID· br, patio, garage' laun-2 Bd, 1 Ba. 2 car garage.
C::: Sfl HT
~PHClPE HTI{ <.,
* *rUUI. A Immaculate 3 Bdrm lnl at in.. PrlDdpala ~::i:..P~~gi~~e;: dry. S:SOO Mo. +deposit. adllt comm. Tennis.
s e p a r • t e re D c e d condo clOle to pool. End l"'!!OD!!!ly ·!!!·!!!!!!!!-!!!!!!'--!!!!!!!!.!!I! s.. c...... I 07 penooal service. Adults. ~l. ~g: f.Y~~=a .. t r:s~
playyard highlights this unit.s'1•.ooo. r: ........ ._........... TSLtl.Gtl.T 642-1603 C..., t J & cleaning deposit
superb .4 Bdrm pool C/ZI Ml.,.,.c.tr. IAS'l'all'F ~ llACHIKl'LD Newly decorated, 3 WamerC .. ':'!~~~.!~.~! hNo mthe ood1 n rTa bu ~~OuMs '40.U57 76N7'7 ' bdrm, fam rm. tpka, Two 1or-· un ... l"" bdrm, 2 ba, steps to iiii•iiiillJjiiili
ON EXCLUSIVE HUN· or w · ry .. Xlnt flnaocia1. Im· •-'"' ,... beach, no children. no
TINGTONSEACUFF'S dwn. ...-.ooo panv Ill mediate occupancy'!!!!!!!! blocutobeacbancl~y pets. Sept 1 to Jwie l
GOLF CO UR s E ! .,,.., Mii poulble. $215,000. : 2 yean old. Ocean Vlew, 875-147S HA .. VllW M2·Slll,ltN10'1 2 A 3 bdrm unit.a. The 3 -"=..;:..;.;..;;;.__ ___ 1
3bdnn, pool,"" kl 1°'· l~i)l\lio4Md-fll'll -BUILD 'IHI: ROllE OF bdnn "put""•-• .._ _ 314' ======= Many xtras. S39S,OOO. 1r' Smuhlnl family room 1--------•I YOUR DREAMS occ11panl Onl,y $300,000. •••• .. •••••••••• .. •••••Woodbridge, 3 br, 1v. ba
Broker : 633-6633, Reihl with wet bar. Un· MIWPOITcmT Walk to famou1 and Callnowm.uro. Le furn 1 bdrm hse, nr condo. S62s/mo. avail
637-6266. SSJ.3000 believably beautiful en-Fint time bu1IT and re-beautiful T.stnet Beach A .·· Main Beadt S660 per mo lmmed. S.7690
l"M I 044 mtBarnnra Phy, t"IH tertainer's patio. S Bdrm tine, atep rtlbt up and from tbll to.175' lot L LST' A TE 'tllS/lS 494-711116 Turtle Rock, 4 bdrm1.
••••••••••............. Sommers« on fee land. make Ill •Oiler. A two located in a Pftltilioul I,. .,..___. .._. l 169 family rm, din rm. Uv i--------i Ablol~ly Immaculate bedroom emdo rill Iota area ol Su Clemente. ,........ • &: kitcb 2i,., b
•••••••••••• move·in condition. of character. Vaulted AD a~ buy for ___ A_EAL __ TOR __ S_-1••••~::;.;·;;;;•••• ::Ommo.AvailSeptl a,
Cavraielaatbllev.e financin I ceilln11 aad weUNll' are Jmt 1111,IOO. -.SO 4 P\1115 ho m e ' r u II Y (urn S52-4136 afttt 4 PM
HAllOI llDG E·llAUTIPULL Y
appointed view condominium. 2
BR + conversation area, kitchen
with nook + formal dining • One
level. A.ssUtnable Lqans. Owner
will assist in financing. $U9,000
U>rraine ReMie 752·1414 (V:I)
llA&mN. lllCH 3 BR condo in
Woodbridge Glen. Plush
carpeting; mirrored closet doors,
fireplace, air condltJoning, •
levelors on windows. Close to
park " pools. $128,000 Jamie
~illdnaon 551·8700 (VS9) . ... ..,..mm.u•www
j u s t 1 o m e o f t b e OR RED CARPET" amenWaa. Tao IOOd to Covio,u.a 4-plex nr. So. w/(rdnr, s bdrm, 4 b1, ANGETREE-2 Bdrm
lull SllS ooo Lingo Co11t Plue. $Z87,500. ramily room, dining 1 Ba, 2 car gar. Adult 754-1202 • • Callfor~. room, IJ pool. II yard. community. Tennis.
*Cote Realty •.a&wo Lleforstooopermo. pool, nm . sauna.
1"1 .....
PLANT
& Investment 4 · 1 BDRllS. Nr. Civic 6'2-GMlaflHM SSSO/mo ht & last L-sm ---=-----i Ctr. In Santa Ana. Co•)'beacbcottaie.2Br. +sec. deposit. ~94<IO. _. I06t •i.o,ooo. Owner will 1 Be. rum. Winter ren· _w_a_me ....... r....,.. ____ _
ftnaoce. lal. t-lUl. thru ~1.S-82. D......,c.do i. bdrm, din. rm .• Uv. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!r.~
rm .. fam. rm., FIP, 2~
ba, xtra Wp porcelain
tub w/ceramk We walla
• floor .• covwed patio
aNu. Price tzl>,Ol6, $'° c1owo ......... llt
tnaet deed at 7~~. Xlnt
lead i. ... tlU.00 per
19ar. Cu't cMqe mtll
year ... 14" Int. CIDl1
IDd tru1t dH d due ...r. Call OWIMI' for
appt. daUJ eftel' I pm. m•>,...
llSTIUI
USlllff
I _,,. I INt•, I•· ....... ,o... .... ........
..; tteCs* llr· l4Nnt
·nMICNAB till~-
"TIADeTIOMALL T UDOI Larae 3BR
Lido fa mily home on lovely
street. Convertible den and
f amlly room. $4'5,000. Tom
Allluon./Terry Ha.nes "2·8215
· l"'>)
De~~cketts S4sotl.o.m.imo. 3 Bdrm, 3 ba, aar, d11·
8151~· UDO ISLE charmio1 • hwasher. Close to pool ---=-"""~---a bdrm. 2 bath newly re-and rec center. Avail
12 unite, &aide Colt• decorated. Sl800 mo. r\1111.S. s.sa
M•a. '5'1S,OIO. saoo.ooo Yearly. Abo other rtm· •Na•wHw
tmlDd. down. "olll conaide/ • r ~~:;1ail. Bill Gnmdy • ' bdrm. a ba. fireplace,
ra e-up. wor Aat. · 111. diatawuber. Avail
•1122 s.c..... Jl7' Septl.sal-58
~ l11t., i•w;;'~";;;;"&; Woodbridae • br, 2 ba,
,....._, San Clemente. Avail ram. nil. aardener. Nr
la 11per reatal area. Ay 11 -.... acboell, putEs. StOOOmo
Poaltl•• c11ll flow • l21J)U..741Z.O!«f• ~I=~-:·== ...... Uak I ta~ "-J-.... J141 1 P II ••••••••• .. "'••••••••• •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• carr1. 11 prlu .._....._... •• 16 1ucb maq rtom l4iO
$111 000. Call lob --mo Adltla.b ~ ICl. f7t.ll70 or .......... -.......... ' pt:' ,u la)'fro1tt. Ytub. JB'R, S .., .. _"!· I.A frpk lr& patio H arnc..-bJll1ldc
.lmt _... Wt '""' 1tiU 11jit a Sia mo'. lloat, J Ill, J IA,
n ..... u1aa11ttd ----=·!::..::i ::,~:.-=~ ir.:::r.:r:· = :.:: .. --=J I llWJlal .. .._... LOIA VAl'CSILft St,t. lat for a,,, . IHI trr·••n,
I I
J.
---------~!'-!.~:.~.: ... ?~~ ~~~ .. ;.,µ;, -Colit D~LY ~ • 1 M
tM..'~~ _. rru.~~•alla· owe1 '' ~~~ ..... ?!!' ••• .~~ ..... ?~!! ••• .~~ ..... ?~ ••.
Hlh1l11tlt ,.,...., We.Top ..... ..., CL= ..... WI .... -----~----.!!!" •U'm&I.~ '9dldllal ...U... ,.,., --BCWllOJUT
-------11, ........ lf JOU A MU« ••aka Pltlme tor N.B. de· ._..... art llduatr&oaa Hd ~iico'f\n)'°"1 uloper. lloa·rrl, lllNl'J Ill
... AID._ ... SU .... ..,a. ~:o·t:r-:.:a.~ ;a " ......... ~ ~'=·,~a:== •m 1111111 .. _......, Htrborll!d.&M. orwltW~. •-uO~iH::.i.•.::ff==---nulU. ....... CASH.Ill HCUTAJUrB ·-rttn " -• o.w J• • .,.... ...... Mau• &.a. fl'om i•1 o1 S..-md IQJ01 Prtferabir 'wb follow· HQUSIWAllSALIS TYPIST9 ....... l.MJ
ln1. laetll. worklna rwl or P/Uroe. Apply: Call,.._,-Put Ume. lJ/h:r .,... •MltWAllllClilt •Ult~ ........ c;....,
..... s....ac.c;....,
•PMH11.11lllqs
.._Dr .. H.B.• Aq. all tM belftta ol a larp •. He ... a ., 1,m. corpanU. 111 • amill cooda. Pia. ull: Tua-C\'own Hatctftre, 1024 WortTomonow w/word procw. tllbr
Sal. NHOta Ilk for Jrylpt (!esttltt) HB mu hel MMl1l =:r~'f. c.:: ;:.::~ :ria:i~ a Wa u. put _. more 11lperviH lht sneral ~ oa the famll). aeeowatlDC ltaff. You
Call aa,U.. llMOTI, •ill be rwponall* I« am. rtCOl'dtn1 o1 1a1aa and
AU.JOISPIH 1...;'!!0Y!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~=~~-1 111 lftH FIEE lxp Ortbo aut RDA full-1~ ..... IUIN time. Xhll Hiit)' • CASllEIS a.tMIT..... benenta ..... 14115
L08T...:=::::::Gold:.i.::::;a.o=~.-.-tc-b.-I ICCOllllll r•e•I vab~•1
•le. nue u,.wate .. r pnparat.lcll ot nnaocw
H B reporta ror COfllOl'*Uoo
· · ~-'· 91• IP a11d Internal maoa1e· RIWA~. to• meat In additJCll to belnl
Lost: l yr old. White r.ponal)lle for tbe eom-
Samoyed male. Vic paoy 1toeral led1er. Colle Pm. Gl·3Mll. Other related dutl• In·
Found: Oennan pomter, cllade coord1n.atl.na moo-
llale FCMICI: Shepberd thl1 accowrta clollnf
Lab/tri colored male. and travel audit.
Newport Bell Animal de1ree 1n aClCDUllUnl or S..~r.e.4--.. flnuc. II preferred for
Loat : Z/yr old red tbl1 cbaU1111ln1 poai-
Dobtrmu, femaM. Vic. lion. A minimum 2S
La ima Beach.4M-T700. bol.ln colltle Mvel ac-countlna and S years a....•••• general accouotine ex-Lost: !lamese, dark perleoce is required.
altered male vie Broad· Some Sllpervilory ex-
moor Romea COM Ifs perience Is preferred.
M4·7US
Lo 1 t : a I Iver 1 ray Emenoo olfen an ex·
P 1•• ..... St • B cellent salary and com· en...., WUI • ay' plete benefits package iD ~S-~ 'tt:Jl R D ! addition to an overall at·
FoUDd : irey • black mospbere of career 1rowth with an industry lonabair cat, Fernleaf, leader. For immediate
Coron• del Mar. 144-91!4 con1ideratlon, please
Found : M. Pit Bull, ap-calJ for an interview·~
prox. 1 yr old, bro. polntmeol
Fairview • Baker.
m.2125
Found: 5 ke11 on ring
with lllC lnalJ, on July
22 o n Saodburgh,
551-S1Z1.
hnH• 535 ••••••••••••••••••••••
. EMERSON • llECTll: CO.
Industrial
Controls Dlvisioo
3300 S. Standard St. (adjacent to the
Newport Frwy)
IAMllM• &
CLmCAL
We h•ve ·over 100
Clerical &: Savin&• ft Lou poalt1on1 avail.
lmmed. &: the1're all
FREI! lf rou don't 1ee
what you re 1tekln1,
Call :
C..,.,erU.
'72-tHI
T ......
T•$1,IOO
Need 12 exp'd. bank
lellef1. Beaut. beach
location. Call:
C..,., t72-ttSI
Ttler Mew Accta.
T•$tSO
Need 6 exp0d. people
with S&L backeround.
Call:
Cfl/T'f t7Z·ttlS
PWfOl•S.C.
T•$1,JSO
Beaut. bank seeks exp.
secretary with loan
do c umentation
backcround. Call:
Cfl/T'f t7Z-ttSS
BEAUTICIAN wuted.
BUI)' Coll& Meu ahop
ottda a Halnl)'ll1l , :~:k!~'" + com-u TDTI u
ID•f154 • ..
llAUTYSALOM MARKEI'S Looklll1 ror halut1u.u PorZndlSrdSbiAa
• manlcurl1t. High Startla114upto$UO.
benefit•. Cont ac t We promotetoman11•
U7-Zll0 ment a 11q1ervialoo rrom
' wilbln. • llAun SWft. Y WANT A CAREER?
Mature, experience eo.i.M .. helpf\lU, btDetlta, paid 517 W. Wilson St.
bolldaya. lllO wk. Reaal Ul·lla
Beaut)' Supply, 283 E.
17th St. C.M.
Boat Operator
Shore Boat Operator,
Coul Guard Uceme. To
operau Shore Boat ln
Avaloo Bay, Catalina. 213/51~. Joho Jen-
Din&uft 6PM.
Hu.ntjqton Beach
S91J6
Pu'IGllDeJ Dept.
537-41MO
Boat Operator Shore Boat Operator, CATERING Service
CoastGuardUceme. To needs food prep.
operate Shore Boal in '!orkera. ~· hr. Part Queens way Bay Marina, time. $All-9.J>~. Fllll
L 0 D g Be. c b ' tlm~ S!-11 ·1.30PM.
213/Ul·SW..M. Lori I Kitcben, 3'717 S.
Boat ... •-~ tock Harbor Bl., S.A. '794747 pa~ .. coun<-• s for apPt.
and inventory. Valld1;.~.~~.-.~~.-~~~.-.-.-~-I
Calif. Lie. nee. Harrison Clerical Boat Ctr. S.A. 5'2·7211
Boat rtuer/mecb. Mttc. O(PIDTU(NJ exp. nee.~ Boat Mini
Ctr. S.A. 5U-721l c• mlf~
IOOTH ATTIHDANT LUUhJ
Ne w port Arche s Excellent opportunity to
Marina. Call btwn. 9AM join an industry leader 41 SPM, "2-4&44, Mon · and share in the many •FOXYLADY * OUTCAUON'L Y
VlSA llC
( 714) 641-s240 Fri, asll: for Judy or benefits we olfu. You l S«nt.p <ilty Harvey will be respcnaible for I
To $1,200 -IUS IOY typin1. filini, answering * t7Z. It ll • ~ualoppty
employerm/f/b 3 tellers, new accounts Full time experienced phones and other related
backgowid. W!llinc to bus boy fordaysbift. Ap-clerical d\Ees. Requires
AEROBIC Instructor-travel. Type40+. Call: ply in person BEACH typln& UW})m and 6 Sii
ESCORTS
lllODWNG
135-tlH
experooly, Newport Bch Carry t72-tt55 HOUSE INN. 819 Sleepy months cenenl office
6 area. 75t-1'58 Hollow Ln. Laguna experience.
Beach AIDE to uau t elderly Emenoo offers a rom-
lady, approx. 2 brs AM, S.C.t .. let CARETAKERS plete benefits pacll:age
COEDS-would love to Nwpt Bch. S.73116 aft. 6 To SI ,Z It Reliable mature couple which includes lile and
party with you. Call Sue _. "'*r"*--.......... for caretaker of smaU 1 medical imurance, paid or Kathy anytlm• Amr an ,...........-We have secretarial story comm 'l bldg 111' " Ver " fi'ne stor• t'n I b va cations, 12 paid ..., .. 9_.. , ... openings w t out NB Apt + -•-F ---------------------• Fuhlon Island bas ex-'d · · · · s ... ry. or holidays · including YOUNG LADIES Availa· shorthand. WI e vanety more info 6 interview Christmu weell: sbut-ceUeot position. Must be of dillies. Call: u ult. .,.,,,. ble to party anytime. experienced working on ca ............... down, paid sick leave,
Call Gina or Lisa. fine clothing. Top Cfl/T'f t7Z·tt55 Car wash help, f/time. company paid pension
___ 7,..ll-·9036""""''"----• salary. s day wk. No Apply in penoo, Metro plan, a credit union, an
EXrNlllU( nights. MATTHEWS, Car Wuh. 2950 Harbor oo-alte cafeteria, free
U.UllJ Mrs.Hubert759-1201 Ptnu11IA11Jtt.I Blvd.,C.M. parting and more! Our
* SllTE * ToSl,13' Malle your shopping excellent salaries are Ambitious employee G r d 1 b In t'"·Dall compllmentedbyanen-24HourEiCORTS couples/singles lo en, o c. exper., g . eas tr yua g '"" Y vlronment that en· manage small bus PIT math , typing 45 +. -'P"-"l=lo"-lC:.:lass=""lfi=led.;;..;...;Ads=-. -~ courages growth and ad-tsJ.llZZ MC/!iM 831-3838 Heavy pboaes. Call: van cement within our
SOOTH1NGMAS.5AGE 1-------•I Cfl/T'f97Z·tt55 lfe.• ,,.,,, company. For Im·
Por discriminatin1 men ASSB mas .,•lf••wt f mediate coaalderallon
_..;:C;.;;:;all"""""P""u""r,.._1..;;;tlM;..;...;Wl=l -1 Loe. Mission Viejo co. please call:
Are yoll a 1enUemen needs Auemblers w/2 Citric .. Aunt I
alone in your 80'1, tall, yrs. exp. Candjdates To $11 I
interested in pbysclal must have gd. manual 6 mos. ofc. e:1per. Type
frtoeu, concerti, plays, dexterity, &d.-eyesight, 2 S + . C R T i n p u t
bridle. travel? If so neat ID appearance& de-back around helpful.
pleaH contact a lady pendable. We>d is in life Call:
co111rterpnt. -Ca II support medical elec-Carry t72-tt55
Answer Ad 524.. 642-4300, trooics. Gd. benefits. _.24~bn.,,..._. ______ , Onl y responsible
petsoos seeking perm a· u,.. ,_...Clot«
Rama Sealoo Tickets oenl emsllyml need ·~ To $140I foraale,2forteoo ply. Call: Mn. Parelli, f d ' & 752-0llO (2U)41S-UOl S81·3830 Exp. In un 1ng -!!~!!!!~!!!!i!!!!!!!!!j•!!!~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I cl os Inc FHA I VA & '= Conventional loans. Gd. For total atreu reduction Aaalslaot Manager to II: 0 0 w 1 e d 1 e 0 f
& relauiloa II) usage. w o r k d i r e c t I Y rec u I at ions , . h v y .
Steve 10-l.•2817 w/maoager entry level outside contact. Call: • __ _. .____._~ 511 ... " poalaltoo _w /possible c--97z.tt55
.--.,.._ ~ •-growth. Solid retail ex--• 1
•••••••••• .. ••••••••••• per at least 2 yrs. FAO
COUMSIUHG Schwan 754-l.561, Mgr.
Fam ily, Business,
Marital, Weicht Lots.
Licensed fl guaranteed.
673-9311111~
IAIYsmB
Nwpt Hgta element.ary
acboolarea.IMS-1812
Cootemp vocal instr. for Babysitte.r for Balboa
those wbo wish to be Island, 1mmed. Mon·
prof. entertainers . Fri. Infant. Ref's.
848-9916 -=67~5-:..;5994==-o.:.· -----
Helpfw ttal estate broker
would 1pomor beginners IAIYsmB
and p/timers. Wltnauer needed for 2 weeks start·
151-6378. inl Sept. 1St thru Sept. y .... ,.."""'-..... el'""'-----5-4-50-• 14th, 8am.Spm, Moo-Fri.
<2> lfrla, aces 10 " 6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mu1t have own
Leavin1 for Pittsburgh tranJportailoa " refs. 8118· Need toabr ps 6 Woodbridge area,
P• cll 11"'9 Atf.
To$1 ,6'5
Exper. in purchaslna
mjr . equipmt .,
furniture , service
c:oatrects, etc. Call:
C..,, t7Z-tt55
....:drl:.:..:vc.=:ID:.&.:..· ~==3131=----1 Irvine. Call Ginnie:
Tahiti now lit clasa 3 552-0461, aftus:~. """" D~ "*'r t 13 Island May trip. Leav· upcrw·ToS
iDJt/25.Grouprates. Ph i--------i 6 months exper. OK.
Gary 642·5'24 or Jeff BANKING Type50.Call:
S81·5471 • Cfl/T'f t72-tt55 "?::= ••••••••••••••••••••••• * TB.LOS
HtlpWtlllld 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * Acuzar.a9a.. Fidelity Federal Sav-
Excell. co. benefit•. logs, a growlne leader,
penakln • profit shari.n& ha1 full and part time
plan, medical " dental opeoiop in the Newport
coveraae. Prefer l~key Beach/Colla Mesa area.
by touch • knowledae of Experience ls preferred, bow to post • balance Ideally in a commercial
accta. 1 yr. exper. In bank or5'L.
pa7roll. Contact: Ao, ....:1:~14'::.c~===-=:E""'.o'"".""E.._. __ 1 We offer excellent
ACCOUMl'S ularlu and areal
p A y AIU C&.81 benefit.I includln1: ~aataed ladltldual •Paid medical/dental •Profttabu1nl l>Yl1 A1P dept Ute •Free careerapP&ttl
t7pln1. 1d benefll1, •Freeputilll .
Newport Beaeb area. •ExceDmtpowth
...... pcMatia)
ACCCMCTM
Orowtb orillMd Colta
111 .. CPA ftnn Ml re-
q1irem .. t tor Book·
u.,tu/Jr . .AccollDtallt. .............. p.111
...... W..,/ftDuci.al
•tattmtat :::1.·• lH prep.,.lllf arwllb .... r•"••• Input. It• ru••• to : a-HW.W-Dally
Pill&, P.O. IOI 1SIO, ----
Pleau apply on
TUESDAY, Aucust 11,
from t:ao am to J:ao pm
at:
Go•tt-•f
Lem flroc"IOI' To$1,046
Exper 'd In loan
eroceuin& or fundlna.
Type 3H. Call :
C..,,t72-tt55
--.~
ToSl,SZI
Previous S6L exper. In
al.lditlne. CaU:
C.nyt72-HH
1'9ICll~
ToSJ.000 Several ne«ttd. Branch
mimt-aper In 8'L. In
depth knowleqe Ope.
supenlaory • buabteH
deve'ml Also bonuaa.
Cell: C9TJ f7J.tf II
lat I. •I!.:. I .A. ALLl<*rall
Fora..llWM
ACTIO~ cau
A OAU PU.OT
AD-mol
'42-W1t
EMERSON
llECTll co.
lndUltrial
Controls Dlvisloo
3300 S. Standard St.
(Adjacent to tbe
Newport Fwy.)
( 714) 6U·S240
equaloppty
employer m/f/b
SELL idle It.ems with a
Daily Pilot Classified
Ad .
Applicants must have experience in
breakfut and en cookery, 1rlll and
broiler cooking and geaeral food
preparation.
• Toppay
• Compuay paid bwlruce
Medical" We
• Paid vacatiou
• Pront llbrial ,, ..
• Merit waae rettew1
Applicants muat be 18 and above and
have experience.
Apply In person
Z PM to6 PM
195 E. 17th St,
Colla Mesa
ADiDenny's Inc. W An equal opporlllnity employer 11/F
DistribuUon I
MAllAliEMEllT TRAINEES
Distribution Center now
accepting applicants ·
for 50 management
trainee positiona. _
S 1200 PER MONTH l
Neat, hardworking
young people With cars.
High promotion
potential.
141-2421 ea #4
• •
• -.... -.. ... -• • ----... • • --............ lflllJi ~ ~ ......:: • ~ ... ~ ... • ~
lllCJ'OCraphle dept. or JOUNDRY ~ lo¥tb' Np&. &It. ofc. bH Exciting, established hotel hu
immed. full Ir part time opportunities
avail. ror qualified applicant.a. vJrtttY poe. open tor , , '8.25 hr. "-auirea l >'"· cbeerfuJ, froot otc. type lq1&1I Opp !mfb 11/F Foundry lla1ntenance penon ..._ceU ... _ tit.a Mechanic aper. Dlnct Salano· c.• · .,.,..e · conat. of new Cupola for
ll')'e>pen. Call: •------•I cut llUl wort co. In· We are seeking people-oriented
persons who have a sincere interest in
a future with MARRl<Yrr CORP.
U.J1• • C .... TTPtST cludlna canal •repair '71-ffll with arowtb co. Gd. or buUdlAI, inlt&UaUon
1618E.4lhSt,S.A. phone penonallty, ' oout. of pipe
to.pm lYDl.n1. Varied macblna. Repair weld· lnW.1tper dutlea. Non·1moker. 1111 machlMI. ~ate
S f I di d f C o n t a c l : A D I l I , I I d I m. r en y ept. o 71 ,._975•0884• 9 to S eleclr ca we n1
We offer excell. co. benefits including
a FREE meal per shift. Apply in
person 9AM · Noon, Mon·Frl.
PERSONNEL.
lar1er CPA co. needs • fabrication macblnea.
bltpr. to handJe aeverat "'!!!•!!kd!!y!!1!!. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! IJn . $All-1:3QPM. Take
let.I ol boob. Poa. 11 not r: ad to nearest Stale
de111andln1. Excell. C:ou.tenOMCLBI EmploymmServlceof·
benefit•. Salary to Ortat.erlrviDecr.clitun· flee in 0n.raie County.
Sl,D . Call : k1o bu Immediate full DOT 519.131.010. Ad paid
900 Newport Center Dr.,
Newport Beach
Equal Opp Emplyr M/F
lh Ja.,u• UmeoDeDID&s. Prior exp for by emplo)'el'.
t7Z-ttH belpful bl.t Dot nee. Con· l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1'16 E. 4tb St., s .A. tact Steve. -.ruo. Full-time Girl Friday,
bookkeeper. fHMllAL Off1CI Housekee~n wanted
CPA ca.,•y Ci f :ca=. 845-JMO E1perienced. Flt1me. SeaclllfMateJ,
Plush Fashion bland ~ FULL Time, P/Time. Beoefita. A·OK Service fM.1717
olc. aeeka peraoo who is ~Yf:t b~t~e:~i~'i: Ana. serv. Typing req'd. Center, C.11. •93SL Housekeeper-II !•·,In,
detail -minded to varlouJ office duties. Noexp.nec.C.Ubtwn8 GIRLFRlDAYforFlllht S/da_ya, appreciative
proceu tu returns Non •maker. CPA Firm • ':30Pll, Mon-Fri. $(hool. bookkeeplnl fam1l1. Oceanfront.
from the computer. Coala lleaa. SI00-$900 131-0140. F.OE backgJ'04.IDd, mUlt have Rd'1. ~Wl.
Need lo be mature MoCallCarole754-1040 4Ht411ALOfflCI out1o l o1 phone HOUSEMAMA ..
mi D de d . Ex c e 11 . help needed for busy nooalit . ~2203 Mature woman waii~
bentfitJ. Sala,y Sl,ooo. l-C•O•N•T•R•OLLE-•R-IZ7-,000-I N e w p o r t to mana&e, ~eep,
can: .. ..._ J-+aao11 yr. Require BA Dee. Opbtbalmolo1ists' Of· ,. 0 TYPISTS babysit 2 yr old. 3 to 4
tu111 -with Math mjr. • 3 yrs, fice. Typin&, filing. Exp. a. • days weekM PM f12·ttH exper. Dir«t. financial a mlllt. Start MOO/mo. Regilter today for local 1714) 551.-J
1618 E. 4th St., S.A. atraln ot co. manufac· Dy1: 846-Ull. tempora,y assignments. HOUSEWARES
turi.ng 0-Riap. Pre~ General 557.-S Full·tlme retail 11lea Z Jr. Sec'y T..-.a
No previous exp. needed
II you can type. Lota to
learn &r plenty of oppty.
to grow. Plush offices.
Ex~ll. benefitJ. Salary
$840. Call:
U.J1h1011
t72-tt55
1818 E. 4th St., S.A.
financial anaylaia of Two girls to wort family person for gowmetdept.
operatlona. eatabli4h owned commerci•l laun· • rn. Lin-in hardware store.
mjr. ecooomlc objec-dry. Gd training, exp. U \• ':.1...::.67:.:::s-6'1-=04::..:------
Uvet • policies. Direct helpful. 1077 W. Baker, nwowv"tsONNtlSllMCts Jmmed. opmints, p/Ume
preparaUooolbudletfl C.M.CaU54&-76IO. J72allrdisen.t work . Lag . Beh.
fmanclal forecaatJ, re-... _ .__....... Telephone sales, de-
port Income, espema • -... _,.1 ,_w..,. _. livery driven. Up to earninga. Contact GIM~~ t .O.E. h /br. '97·'181 after
nearest State Employ· Worklo& knowled&e 2pm.
ment Service office in A/P, AIR ' payrol~ 1 -=IN:.cT:..:...E_R_l _O_R_D_E_S-10-N
Oran1e County .. DOT must. Computer Input GIMOCHAIUFS SALES. Flair for de-
Cltrtl 186.l17-01'. Ad patd for ~;e~u~~it New rutaura nt-coratiag neceuary.
No prev. up. nee. Try byemployer responsibilities. Front Mexican/American Flexible hours. Will
for this pos. If you like COOK N ......... _. . ed office appearance. food. Af~ appllca· traln.491H411
work.Ing with numbers. ...,_... imm . Located in N.B. Xlnl op-tlon1 or w11tre11es, ~._..~-
Thia is a large, very fldor re~~,..:nt re-p't y for advancment. cocktail waltrebe11es, has-=.::,~-for~~
lo .. 1u f · ... I ence ,._...._ C J If ho1tesaea. Must 18 vr----v-u,s o c. m Fa .... la. · o o tact eon er: •-·b.oi"l'•• with ref SaJ .. v at.arts at ..,00 & I COOKS Helper, airline (714)955-181 years old. Exp. pre-~ , --' •• · f•rred----oe"-•ary. mo. MZ· .. there Is plenty or room catering. C.M. area. .. ....,. , ... _
forgrowth.Call: Over 11 w/valid Calif. GIMllAl.OfftCE Apply in pen100: 10.m·i-------• IHaJalmll• driver's lie. Call : Lite t=, riling, noon; 4pm·6pm IMYOICIC&.m Mal'vin Davis lOAll to answer . 6 hr. day, Formerly Charlie Doo'a • _.55,..,. t7Z-tt55 8p11, Mi-l004 ' S day wk. Apply btwn restaurant. 28022 Cape •""
lS16E.4thSt.,S.A. COUNTERHELP 9AM "Noon. Charlie's Dr.,LaeuoaNl&uel. • .. tSO-S~.:.~oo._poE . ,....,Ii 3001 n ...... ,ll Bid ature, ...,., to ..... e pre.
FIT Prr G ' Deli "w • ncwu ' g· l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ' :. ......... _. MelClttt
Beaut. Le. co. In Fash.
la. Heka nice, cheerful
personality. Lota of
walll:inl! ! No prev. exp.
nee. Excell. benea.
Sala,y $700. Call:
lthJD .. IOll
t72-tt55
16111E.4tb St., S.A.
CltttT .....
Vari~ pot. with auper
Npt. bcb. co. No prev.
exp. ott. Lile typing
fine. Salary $650. Call ·
U.Ja•••
t71-tt55
1616 E. 4th St , S.A.
bec.S.C......,
Mjr. Irvine co. seeks
c areer-o r ie nte d ,
oreanized person to lake
pos. In corporate
plann i ng dept
Outstanding benefits &
beaut. offices. Salary Sl.~.Call :
IJhiJDllfllOll
t72-tt55
1616 E. 4th St., S.A.
Secretary
Cereer·mlnded, bright.
gd. appearance, min. 2
yrs. secretarial bkgrnd.
In return, outJtandlng
benefits, lovely offices &
friendly people. Salary
start.I al Sl.D . Call:
U.Jallu•
f7J.ttH
1118 E. 4th St.. S.A.
Clericeil
Need auto Insurance
bk&rnd. to a11i1t
product iqr. In lovely
Fashion Island ofc . career oppty. Very 1d.
benefits. Salary Sl.000. can:
lhJDlm•
t7Z·ttH
1616 E. 4th St., S.A.
' · ary s ' 12, Ste 12218, CM uue. wae •T .-.• r-·· CdM, 675-2113 btwn 9 " In& A/P •help balance
llAM forappt. Guards monthly led1er. Gd.
CO U R I ER -0 r a o g e General NOW Htlltl with fi1wa. To type all
Coait Savino has P IT Tiit 1 .... 1.yctilb Security Officer f:i'i· invoices, help relieve openiD1. Gd. driving re-•mow...., phones. etA:. Nevu a fee. cord. Aftel'DOODI. Car lions are now aval able Call : Gary, S40-60SS, In Mlnioo Viejo • So. Co I n-----1 A furn'd. Cell: Kathleen, NI o,.,... L r t asta """"~ CY. aauna or ma ure· 2790 H rbo Bl CM 7S4·1801, 1700 Adams, We will tram. Requires a minded individuals. No 1 r ·• ·
CM. EOE pleuant voice & varied prior experience ii ~E=O=E====== DIMTALllC.,.. hours. oecesu,y. Must havelii
Office exp. req. Dental Pis. call for appt. own pbone It c ar. JAtilTC.fl/T
exp. pref. Wed-Sat. Top " -SPY .. F "''" 7358 Veterans brina DD21'. lmmed. --'-• for a S.l.ry for qualified .. :_. ·•· .-..-Plnltertoo's, 2701·B S. .....--Jani l or to •orll: penon. so.ms. Main. S.A. (to rear of S d S d -Radio Sbacll: store) atur ays 6 UD •1• DINTALASST Genenl 5SHOZO. F.qual Oppty only. 2PM-11Pll 1bift
Experienced. Parttime lfYCMr'tt600D Employer. For Interview, call·
poalUoa In 11.isaioo Viejo '111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 S ( o t t W he e I e r . office. l3Ml.U. Y CMr'tt laL Y 1-= 714·975-0700 or come i.D: Hair Dressers wanted. Ad d H J th Do.,...ALRECEPT vance ea ~· Well known salon. ,._ 1300 Bristol St
Fron,.t ull• ~~ olNBc aper •Cl.HIS Be1inners or exp Rent No°~~· Suiu 100, Npt.
req. . ·Ulll'C, area. •TYf'ISTS or percentage. Guaran· Bch. EOEM/F
548-5504 •SICllTAllES teed. Call owner :!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!le
hllWOffke •llC.noMSTS S48-l3U . I D 0 G L 0 V E
Frontdesk,dentalexper WOID Hane Glider Mfg.~ WANTED> Ke:DMI help
required. 4 daya a week. * •tOCES.r~ someone with the ability needed w i 11 tr a in In a nice Newport Beach '" ~ to perform multiple jobs StS-21128
office. 845-7* from met.al ahop to sblJ>--=-==---. --. --
pi o & " receiving. LADY TO Live tn, 2-3 Dental Alsistant. RDA. KeUyServicescanotrer Phone·54'1.Q86 days wll:. Must be
X-ray license. Xlnt you immed .. exciting, · · veraatile.Carpttrd.135
benefiu. Call Moo-Fri. temporary positions HAIDW All du. 673-31ll3
633-1382 when &r where YO U Full-lime retail ules Leaving for Wilmioctoo
DENTAL ASSIST. PIT. 3 want. per• on. Io u rm et N Carolina. Fri Aug
dys, no Sal RDA pref. IEL[~· housewares dept. 14th. Need 2 driven. 2' Carman: 881-2.290. Git" 67s-6'7<M ft motorbome. 953-278',
Dent ust/Ortbo. Npt HEALTH ~a.-..ft"""er.._S.._. ____ _
Bch.4day.M-'IH,orAM SE Rvice s IVRYIOOYUKES L5ALSIC"Y
ooly lf pm. RDA req. 2102 Buslneas Center A WMB Small Newport Ceour
MZ·21Ze D 12,.8 I I Be part ol the futest law firm setts trainee "--&.. • ... __ t Fin r .. v· ' rv oe, . ~ .. n com ....... : e 833-14'1 (Nr. MacArthur 1rowto1 company in the with xlnl typing skills.
art and aceas, design Bl. • 405 P'rwy) Hn. 8-S health " nWit.lon field. (714)6*@X).
and sales comm only or 27957 Cabot Rd., Unlimited income op~ LEGAL SEC'Y MZ-#74. Laguna N"IJUel, 831-0542 ty. Mr. Cwy.134-1755.
DRIVERSCroacountry. (Crown Valley Pkwy. HIAUHCLUI 3-Syraexp.•disao.exp.
No .peel .. lie ....,•d 't) H "3 l"'l52 req. 4 day wt. fles. bn. · ·-.. · ext n . r or " Allendent, Mon.-Frl. lrville. BSl-1733 llacGre1or Yachts, 1631 Beach Bl., t23lE, Hunt· 10am-4pm. 6"·466'
Placentia <Mt.a Mesa i.ngtoo Beach. Hn. 8-S. (1~2). UReUAIDS
IAIM SIOOOWI P/T I HO•e·~inK ~RC Cert.sonly. 99-0311
C 11 ...... ,...,,. .. f E.0 .E. II F/H --.. U In Houlek •
a ......-~. u.. or Im!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Earn M per hr. bapt1. in Cvoeo.. . Mu at eeb ~e I · Joanna or Paul, 8·4 -; Cd .. "' wtd 11 ' Npt.' Irvine. perienced " have re-
l . ._.,. Ptrlme approi. 15. hn. ferences. Own room fl
Electrooica Leading Newport Beach ~er wk. Girl Friday bath on beach. Call CllW LEADllS stock brobrqe/lnvesl-omeServicea, W-S022 _-._1_m_. ____ _
To work with, 1upervise t f' .... In H-...-., & schedule 10 men men um ..... open ge v•-~ MAIMTIMAMCI
crews. lnltallln1 alarm ~ ~e foUowiDI po1I-elm flOOL WOllB T,... 1y1tem1. Steady work :rr M11al hav. experience. Oran1e Cout Collqe
Gd. on pbonu, lite w/naUonal company of· ADPT..,,. A11'!!1.Y8toa .. ~!.:.~cbetNNeewUU~nr S:30-2pm, l _UZITmo'.
typing Ii some lite ore. fering xblt waselboallS Jr. Acca•I •• _... ...... Cl Din maiDteun
up. for this beaut. packa1e. Call Don luc.Swca•r t!•m ·4pm, H ot~l re:!lr ~ dlllrift ~
Fuhioo bland co. They Schaper (Zl.3) •1313 (with Word Procwlng) Juna, *-1151, 42S · faciUtles. Request ap-
even have their own i----....... ~-----------• We are a arowine co. of. Cout H "Y • La gun• plication: Cout Com-
a pa! Salary to 112S. Vou don't need a lllD to ferln1 excell. beoefita " Beach. munlty ColJe1es, lr70 Call "draw fut" when you .__... -·-1+ Pla : .. v ..... o.,_-y. ·Housekeeper-live-lo or Adama Ave., C.11 . U. JD .. •• place an ad in the Dally c al I : Pt rs o one I • out, 3 •dlool children, 55f·S947 • submit by '7l·HIS Pilot Want Ads! Call 152-0070, EOE TuaUn area. Belin Sept. spm, Au.a.11th.
1111E.4tbSt.,S.A. now -8G51171. llt.5'+090. E.0 .E. 'll/F/H
Wel~-::t:('!r.':!. In .1. lily Pilat .... , ............. ····.:· I: Ii"' Pilat ........... , .......... ~.
Santa Ana 1eeb &d. I J
tnQt wbo would like to • • • · · • =.·Ni: =~~ flld Sales s.niWr : C111ral Assitaani ·
~td. Salary $900. Limited opeoiap available ill t.be Orance Secretary ti
.. Ji•H• Cout area, for self.motivated, carttr r·~ Offa
oril.nted lftdlvidul who can work wttJ\ uuun t1Z.Hll rteld Salf9 People. Train, moUvate and
tsin:.«.bst..S.A. set rt1ult1. Station ••son or VIII
DectlUI)'. Exceptional eanainp, plua Jobi related beaeflta 1va1lable fqr the rlpt ~~l!~.~r you can p~~raulta, oot ~.~~i'J.~~~~ for.
......
-~~ I .::i?'su. 1: Colt.a ll•a; C.\ "-ta II ~ ..
I:: e ........ Opport••lfv •-..s-I \,N9 eta, "" ~~ ~v ·~.~ , • 1,..EQ\WOppottubl\J~. •
. . • •
• • •• • • ..................... ·:······················ . ··············· ...................... ;.•'
.. ,
.
"' . .
I Ht\JW..W 7100HtfpW..W 7100HtfpW.W 7IOOHefpW..W 7100HHpW.W 7100HelpW..W 7100HelpW-.ct 7100HtlpW ...... 7100HelpWtlllhd 7100H.tpW..W 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MuWe •c• FIOMTOfftCI NURSING PBX Ans Serv. FIT & hpenllor NEWPORT BEACH LVH ).I 1:30PM PIT. Exp. helpful. CM.
c b a 11 en gin g and 0 B G Y N . h ea v y Sml .Priv coov hosp. Im· S40-1TI710All-4PM
responsible position in telephone, experienced maculate, gd starting Phone people. No sales.
private community. only. Call AMwer Ad 20362 Santa An~ Ave. Di!tribute doorbangers
General maintenance J525,642-4.100,24hrs Santa Ana Heights in .tternoon. And/or
and repairs. Supervise ~EHEIAL OfftCE 549-3061 work telephone in PM.
small crew. U you are Typing, filing, busy Nursing k .00 hr+ k .00 per appt
ootafraldolhardworll: phones, salary com· ST.AffDIV. +bonus.CallMikeafter
and are ~ for a mensurate with ex-DlllCTOI SPM .~.
permallt_nt position, we perience. Contact: Lee LVN witb ability to PLASTICSCo. lliing ap-
would hke to talk lo Staffe, 754-5783 teach It supe.rvl&e. Exp. plications for 2nd • 3rd r~u~ ~acllh!9:;?~d 9i~ Medical d ~s.ired . Call Ad· shifts. Working with
te le Ni..,,..l Sbo Fashion Island Office m101strator, Newport saws & vacuum form-
Corv ~ ~=-· ti.res needs Back Office Girl Conval. Center,646-1764. Ing. Exper. helpful but
mm Y"""""11 on. to do EKG' s, In · NURSING-certified or will train. Only responsi-
llanagement restaurant lravenous Punctures & exper. aides, 7.3 shift. ble & dependable people
position open to qual. ap-Injections. 1.2 days per Call 646-776'. need apply. Must speak
plicants. Resumes req. week. ~11644--0381. fluent English. 8AM to
prior lo personal in· Meer 1 Nursing 3 : 3 0 PM. Sc bu I l i
terview M C.B., 177 Cb!ca . A IM-lVMCi.r. Plastics,642·1026
"F" Riverside Ave., iro~ra~tlc sst J..11 & 11-7 relief. <Miv PracticaJNurse
NB Ca 921163 Receptionist. Beaut hospl. with excell. re· for elderly couple, live · ' . busy office Good ap-putat1·on. 0 ·aAh ar•a ... Ith uc ~ "' in. CookL drive, light Management liquor store pearance. ,..,a y, en· Free mjr medical, den-rer
daytime pos. O""n to thusiastic, knowledge Of hsewll:, · 67~ ,,~ m· s. billing, ... o board· tal & life. Top salary P/time, 7 days, 2 hrs. d11-qual. individual or COU· ....... Fl•" brs ., ... """' .. p1e. Submit resumes computer very helpful ..... · ....,.....,.. ly. Am delivery, L.A
prior t o interview, Great career potential. Office exp needed. Work Times. SlOO per week.
M . c. B., 177 · · F · · Call 631-5664. with public. Filing, 10 Laguna Beach. 494-8496. key, phones. Work oo Riverside Ave., N.B., Medical Saturdays. Apply Tues-n /TIMETIACHEI
Ca.92663. H.B. Allergist needs day tbro11oh Thursday Afternoons 3·6, S bac k offi ce assistant, .... d I k N B s M..,.. Tues & Fri Exp pref 12 ·4. Contac t Mr ays w ... usan,
Mature, seTr starting But will train. Call We iner . Jewels by ~&4().~8820~------i
husband-wife team for S»S690. Joseph. S40-llOll6 PT /TIMI DEMO
IECB'TIOHIST
Progressive real estate
company investment
company is looking for a
person with a pleasant
l.M.
2 to 3 daya 7-3:30 PM or 3
lo 4 days 3 to 11 :30 PM.
Sml prlv conv hosp. Im-
maculate Gd Staffing.
20362 Santa Ana Ave
Santa Ana Heights
549-3061
phone voice and basic
typing skills to fill a
challenging position.
Responsibilities are
varied, !Deluding heavy Sales
contact with clients. High Eami.ng.s. Distrib
There is room for career utors wanll!d for product
growth in a stimulating c o m s u med d a i I y
working environment. Dynamic marketing
So. Coast Plaza area. plan. New to area. Call
Salary & benefits com· Kim: ~1339, Mon &
mensurate w /ex -Fri 9·4, Tues, Wed,
perience. Call 549-3185 Thurs, 8·llam.
for interview. Ask for S 1 Kathryn. ~mN A SUCC~FUL.
llCEPT/TYPIST NATIONWIDE
Newport Beach ad· SALESTEAM
vertising/P.R. firm Be one "over 600 in·
seeks a cheerful person, dependent sales agents
must type 60wpm. Will selling product.s of The
train Hrs: 9·Spm Thos. D. Murphy Co., a
644·6037. pioneer in specialty ad·
•~EPT/SEC-vertising since 1888. ~ . • Through our sales 'force. Immediate oper_ilng. we provide imprinted
Pleasant phone voice & calendars, s pecialty
appearance. Good typ-items and executive
Ing skills & knowledge or I gifts lo thousands or generalofficework.CaU businesses who ad-9am·l~ noon , Mrs vertiseby glvinggifts to
Wea ver · (714)540-8180. their customers This is
SALES/ ADVERTISING
Growing O.C. Public•·
.lion looking for exp'd
pros-top commission
paid, 835-91192 ~
SALIS
An excitinJ new concept
related to the mterior
design Uldustry is ex·
panding to the Orange
County Area. Applica-
tions now being accept·
ed for consultanlS who
are professionally
oriented and highly
motivated. A complete
training program is pro-
vided. High commission
plan, with no income
Ii mil. 546-3781
Sales
CUWGAHOF
SAMCUM&nl
is looking f or a
salesperson with ex·
perience in dtrect selling
or have held positions
that "'Cluire meeting &
relating to the public.
We offer :
111 G uarant.eed income
during lrLllling
#2. Bonus. comm1S11on
113. Vacation with pay
#4. Hosp1taliution
Sales S•sP.tTI.e
E.x-OR Evenings in our El Toro ..-., Store. k .75 per hour. SHOP TRAINEES Contact:
We're looking ror CbesterHipple
salespeopletojom Mark PACIFICSTEREO
C . B I o o m e , S o 1714) 951-13S5
C .a I i f o r n 1 a · s ' I Sales Tire Auto Servic e PAINT Center. Exp. preferred. Must be
We offer our employees able lo wort Sat.• Sun
an u:cell starting Other hrs. lo be ar-
salary & an outsl11J1ding ranged. Wages based on
benefits package that in· ex per. Apply in person:
c I u d e 5 : L i r e , Kerm Rima Hardware,
Medic a II Dent a I in · --~=-' .... H""'a""r'""bor=-"B=I..._, C~M....__
surance. profit sharing, Sales
credit union. discounts & SHOWROOM SALES
much more Parttime or fulllime.
If you're lookmg for an
exciting career m sales
cit enjoy worll:.Ulg wrth the
public .. we've got the
opportunity .. & we're
wailing to bear from
you!
PLEASE CALL:
MELSUMMas
714-557 .. 000
MARKC.
BLOOME
Equal Oppty Employer
Must be able to work
with interiordesignen &
answer phones. Hours
flexible. Variety or
work. The Accessory
House, Irvine, 96&1622
SALESr,,Starl earning
now for Christmas. Sell
toys & gifl.S. Wkly pay,
no collecting or del. FTee
S300 II: it. MO-fi912.
SAWTIAIHH
Yng. men , stereo
speakers. tra11Sporat1on
provided Call: 540-7653
Sec~tary
PVT. SICllT AIY
Organized, loyal, part
time momirw. s0-052s
Secretarial
STEMOClm
Sl.066 to Sl,326 MO .
Environmental Agency
Is seeking applicants
with the ability to type
SOnwpm, take shorthand
at 80wpm • 1 yr .
secretarial exper. 'to
work in our £niineering
Div. Excell. benefits in·
elude a 3 day wknd
every other wk. Apply:
Personnel Office, 111144
Ellis Ave., Fountain
Valley, Ca. 12708
714·Sf0.2'10 EOE M/F
SECllTAIT
busy self storage racili· OFFICE Person. Variety Fri/Sat. k /hr. Car nee. ty. 1 bdrm apt+ uti1 on Mgr needed~ run snack or duties including 541-0718; (213)m ·l13S
premises, ligbl main· bar at ~eruus Club. Call bll:pg., lite typmg, ans. ~"-'-'~'-==--''"'"'--=-----
tenance, bookkeeping. Mon-Fn, U-2. M2·5683 busy phones. Able toi--------~
lecepti-.t
Ellecutive suite 1n
Irvine, heavy telephone.
light typing, froot office.
professional ap
pearance, exper nee.
851·0744
your big opporturuty for
good commisa1ons and
continued income from
repeat orden. H you
want mdependence and
a selling career. con·
tact. John E. Morrissey,
Phone 602-625-153.S, 2851
So. Camino El Greco,
Green Valley, Arizona
tnSurance Sales
•5 Completetramtng Grnd n. Opp(. to earn
Sales
Wanted : overweight
people interested in los·
Lng weight & gaining
money. Fool proof. Call
Dotty: 551.2234 or Kay:
W ett Coast district sales
office of ~r Mid· West corp. bu a secret&rW
position available now.
Good pbooe • typing
skills. Aiaomctive ~
ing bacll:sround belpfw.
but not necessary. Start·
log salary up to SlCISO +
benefita. For app't COD·
tact:
Should have good sales MMGMMT POSmOH work under pressure & IHI W. S-..
with factory followup S8K/wk w rcrd break·
116 Protected local ing, multi·mrktg sys
LBl>LIASI 2172~Dr.
and public relations Fabric chain. c .M. & maintain a pleasing ForTop territory corp. Only !I/mo nu ~7 Qualtfied leads. Over S3M in resv Call
Ste.15.nt.
t7 I 4Jl3J.tll I skills. Salary and Anaheim. Xlnt oppt'y. personality. Full lime. Prof.Offlu
benefit package+ Geri 64&-40t0. Callforappt.aft.lOAM -NewportBeacbLidoOf· . blwn 9-12, 646-4327 If you would like to help,
SSl-1910. ..
SECllTAIY
Parttlme, rib good typ-
ing skills. One person«·
fice. So. Coast Pl1Ja
area. Linda Ragle.
546-72611.
bonuses S day work 979.0747 fice needs creative, ag·
week. Perm position. MODELS/ESCORTS '"'P---..A-'-'-'l~N-T--E-R--/i gressive agents wbo lECEPT /TYPIST
Law offices, 0 C
Airport atta. S800/mo
call: Sales Saleswomen/men
S~rry no childr~n . Top Dolian953-<971 MAINTENANCE MAN want to maximize in· 85614 s:.>-3031 or 492-3213 GHAT HOUIS THE FIDllA TED GIOUP L1nkletter Properties Models needed . All Experience necessary, div idual potential S •LES
957-8191 Types. Men. Women & full time. M2·l&03. HIGH COMMISSIONS! A
Ch Id N · c UW It 67 .. 7300 Restaurant-Need outgo-N . Ii MAMAG9 I ren. o expenence Part-time sales. Exp. a a • .,. . ing personality for food ow accepting app ca-
H a 11 mark Gifts cit necessary.548-77&2. Ladies spec shop. Fubl'!!~~!!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!I prep, sandwich making. lions for full & p/lime
Cosmetics. Exp pre· Models nttded. All types. ls. Eves, some Sat/Sun. RECEPTIONIST/Typist. meat slicing, cash re· sales staff. Experienced
rerred.64G-7J73 Men . Women cit Flex hrs. Call MiMi. wltb dicta phone & gister. 8-4 Mon.-Fri. in micro computer pro-
MAMAGaS Children. No exp nee. 759-9951 switchboard exp. pref'd. k /hr. Also need exp. As· ~~r¢i!f.~~ v:~
Aggresaivepeoplewant· 548-TI&2 Part-time sales girl ~or:~~~j~~vt. st Mgr, 7·3. at k .SO/hr pllcant.s will have back-
ed to fill management MUlSBY needed at Fotomat, -==;;...e_c...::..:;=-=..:.=-=---1_646-....-..._._88&3 ......... _____ ground In sales &
positions for Orange Co. SPECIALIST Mon-Thun, day shift. RECEPTIONIST. Restaurant positive attitude. Call
Sbakey's Pilla. Must be Greenhouse assistant Apply in persoo: :018 Real Estate lnvestment Food Prep & sandwich Lev: (7H)S40-15J>.
21. Ellp. preferred. l$t needed to fill full time PCH' South Laguna. Co. Good f~t office. ap-maker. II you arerriend--=----..__.==-=-==..o..:..--
year potential S20,000. pos. at public garden in '99-3650. pearance, light typing. ly. conscientious, & de---------
N&-3224 M·F. Corona del Mar. MU5t PART Time. Ans. serv. 4"' day work week. pendable we want you. Sales
ba ve n per. working No exp. nee. Call bhvn 8 N e w port Be a c h , Now hiring for full time EARN TOP tttt
with plants Including a Ii 4 :30PM, Moo-Fri. 549-2988. position, S.S. Mon-Fri. ~
Ca 11833-9124. now & join th e
"Culll1an" team!! EEO
SALIS
COM.-CIAL I.E.
Tired of selling houses 7
days a week? We need
one licen1ee to learn the
skills to manage, broker
commercial real estate.
Income from mgmt
while you learn. Super
benefits; life insurance;
health Insurance & den·
lat plan. Contact Ken,
875-6700. Manicurist wanted for
bu.sy Mens shop. Contact
J enlf er, M.'>2972
Mc Fadden• Bayside.
Now accepting applica-
Uooa for line-cool!. Exp
ooly. Apply in penon.
2-4 PM Monday-Friday.
333 Bayside. NB
knowledge of soils, 546-3333EOE Reep/Sec part-time. 2 Exper. pref. Apply in PAIT/TIME
fertilizers & propaga-days per week. 8-S. Npt person. Stooemill Ter· Sales
lion. Call: Alex, Mon-Part time oewspar.r Yacht Brokerage. race,291SRedhill.Costa S unlight Energy Earn Sl~S300 per day
Fri, 8:30AM-4PM only. work early Satur ay General skills required. Mesa. · Systems 11 now expand-taking orders door to
67S-22168 and Sunday mornings. Call Sharon., 6'73-8Sll Restaurant. Caler in g ing O.C. operations & door for utility company
HUISIS AIDES Must have large station Receptionist positions firm bu opening tor bas Immediate openings fmance attic insulation
EXPERIENCED wagoo, van or pickup available. Part • full-respon. adult to operate for: program. Offices in
3-Coo ....., truck. Good drivfni re-time. With established Hobart auto. slicer & •Phone ApptSeUers• Orange & L.A. Counties. 11, ll-7. v. ,..,..pt. d ._ ut' ""' in NB learn portion ""'nlrol. (ex..,.riencedonly) For the office nearest Beach area. Free mjr. cor necessary. or.. exec 1ve ,.,rm . . w ,... If you've never placed a medi·"al • .._·tat •. life. consists of delivering Contact R.lta Paulson, Exp. pref. but will train. •PhoaeSurveyTakers• you call Mon-Fri from Clasaifled ad, you're in " """'' "' b dl ,A D&'ly Piiot 8511021 9:30AM to 6PM Mon. •FieldSuryeyTall:ers• l 0 a m · 4 p m .... ino "t 1 Try· Only positive attitude. un es .., .., · ----·------------1 lPM Kris"A• m-0722 C2l3)59M556. u ... m n y . 1tonce 642_8044 newspapercurler. llC--ST lhru Thur. 6AM to ... ..., and see how qulcll:Jy you . Good .&..... ith .... ,,_... Sun. 979-0747 for appt. l'!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I E.0.E.
I .......... PIY w For dr's Jfi"""'. Must be IP.!!!i~!!!!!!~i!!~~;!!!~i get resu ts. Phone Have something to sell? I bed led · ..... ~ Lori's Kitchell -, 842·5'78. Classified ads do It well. regu ar •c u in· enthusiastic, motivated _ .,. creases. A type well. Exp. RETAILSALE.5 ~ ~
Call Don WUUams at helpful, but not nee. Gourmet housewares :e~~.:-'~ UAM or 642-4532. ~~orrsoo· full-time ~~~/Ul. Secretn Serrice ~
llC.n<>MST R-=-e=ta...::.U;..;..:...~---~ ~-~:"' ~ /
;· .
f
'
KIDS
-~
~( .
PART Time. w . serv. Co. w /preg recept IUU.OCIS
Aftemocm 6 eveoinp. needs replacement tor SOU1HCOAST RESUMES No exp. nee. Call btwn 8 U mo. ilay work into
& t :30PM, Mon-Frl. perm poa. ellewbere in
892-121.ZEOE Oo. Well froomed , Hu Immediate opening yypt•
pe ra ona b e, 1ood both full ltp/ti.me In our .. r/TIMllYa•eas telephone manoer' coemeUca delJt. for the CONSULTATIOM Blll'BIDIJION C J ... varlou1 duties. F /T, Cllnlque line. Previoul "11W"NIA
, ... C........ $UO •tart. Non-smoker. coameUc experience ii COMPLETE muw
Adultl will out1tMcHn1 APPLY 10 to 1 Ontlte dellrable. 1'llele ~a-&Ill~
at.trac:UYe peftCUUU.., Pboto1raphlca. uoa neat potitJool er fU1l who eQJoy W'Oftial rib Ha*r Blvd CM Unit company beneflu In·
10.16 1ear old 1outu .... u~------i cludln1 empk>ytt dis·
evtnlo•• f.tPll. Call 1 .. =• count, medical • dental
I ~) U Z·UU, ot. IU, =:rl r:::c:l: ;:a=
\...... ClP"" f , ~~:a i.!'11 to $PM, If 7ou lib pilOple, cu accepted at the penoll·
CHOICI OP STATIOtmY
POI eonaumas
COPYM
SPllM.I .... -~ ' •-=-=-=-==----tit.Ink oe ,._ f..t, and net otnee, am Briltol. R~CE~STS baadle hltvy pbonn, Coata ..... me. tllru SUMMER JOIS. ~ .. ' :~~c:s=. _rrt_._.ioam_s.....,ti: .... .z. ____ ,
~ ApfflYTodlYI tr./"odllUoa offlce.i------I
IMMIDIATI ~OUMO
SATVIDA Y I If&•• HOUIS
Earn •31\._ •eo per week. IVICll IUTOll te1s~!i:..~1~~ •M · 7 52·0234 • v-• • -· Missel Sbore1 C9m· ran .... d6rb. ..-.......... -·--212 Trips I Prlzea. c. .... ' •MIOCIATD •.ttrAltodlUoa STGPM'90 ZMZ MIC,__.. ..... _.._ •• Q•ctltf6N6t4. . 1,11 ..... MAmrl ~ t1'1MLCAtl711 (. T•"""!a.teal People wtloneed Peoi* 4UI---~ ~JMioMtlur loutMtd • .... Ol9 ,,,_,,,, ~ I ...._., nat~1wt11atu. __. • _.."°"'°"""'Caul"JAlri*' ·"·
..=IM. 1 '1u~~RY ~·~ .. ~~ -II 1~ ·~ J ...... -lnflllrl lllllabeilllt f'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!B!•• ~ -
'
.
tAM.2'M
or
4flM.tPM Is hiring professional re·
tail s alespeople Call
Personnel for a great~
portunity with our grow.
mr. company.
21l-721-5100
(Call Moo· Fri, 9-S)
SECllTAIY/
GllLFllDAY
SECllTAIY
needed immediately
Responsible poaition
workinl with the presi·
dent 6 coatrolle.r. Must
have good typing skills.
shorthand It some •C·
counting ll:nowled1e.
Call 9-12noon, Mrs.
Weaver, (114)540-8180.
Join the Los Angeles
Times cirt'ulation team
& adapt your work
sc hedule to you r
lifestyle. Work S/hrs a
day in a Times Circula·
lion sales otrlce near
your home & have more
time for your family .
studies or leis urely
periods. We pay hourly
wages cit comm.iaslons
wanted for company SlCllTAIT
starting up. Experience Part lime llon-Fri. Muat
in business office re· have good lyPint skills
quired. Well organized • S/H optional. Call Mis·
and comcientious. Sub-sion Beecbcraft, 11741 N.
mit resume and salary Airport W1.1. Santa Ana
requirements to : St0-2720
LOSANGELESTlMES
1375 Sunflower Ave .
C.M
540-0301 Murphy & Broad --------
Publishing Co., 425 30th S~f''e° f,~.1
Equal Opportunity
Emp&oyu
St., Suite 8. Newport ~ 1-......
Beach, 928S3. Lnteres&a. cballeofsin&
poaitlon in private com-
munity. U rou can \ae
lnitatlve, exercise :in·
dependent jud1ement
and handle a wide varie-
ty of 1enera1 aecretanal
uslanmem., we'd bke
to talk to you. Call
4t3·0122, t :JO to s to
stbtdale Interview
Nl1uel Sborea Com-
munk.y Auociltioo I
•aily Pilat ········· .. ········ ... ,
: ~~ :
Trainee
For IMstrict Mlll&I'
Thia highly 1uccessful local newspa.per
bas an openlnl tor a trainee in the
drculaUoo department. Bask skilll will
entail aupervialon of 10 to 14 year old boy
and girl home delivery carriers. Areas "
aupervlaloo will be delivery, colledions
and 1ales.
Selected applicant will receive Uber1I
startJ01 salary, reaularly scheduled
raitft, bonus opportuniUes and maQY fr·
IDie benefits such 11 company paid deft. taJ and health plan, group life Insurance,
vacation and sick leave. =~~~icle Is furoisbed durin.&
Secretary, uperiellced
• ID eacrow for financial
firm near a irport.
Btntfitt. Salary ne•.
Ask for Barbara 8usett
Applicants must be over 18, have 1 &ood cb1viftc record and be neat IPPtarlnl·
Houn are ltntrallY 11 AM to IPM, Mon·
day thnl Friday. Some ovtrtime is avllla·
.Ille. Jr you are ttuallfled and lnterelted tn leamlna tbe circulation buslMU. ~tact
the Dllb Pllot al a30 W. Bay, C.. ....
bllon lO:IO All or afltt 2 PM ctaU:r.
Alk for Oon WU.ma ar Ken Goddud.
Dl~. j
Costa Mesa, CA • :
: •• 11 r.qoa1 0pportUDtt1 ~ ,.: . ~ ...•••••••••••••..•.........•......•...•. :..
1n•1. .
cs
I
+ I •
..
·t a a 0
Orange Oo•t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1991
....
111• c"
sen . it all and put cash in . I your pocket!._
t.llhl,.. _____ _
....
u
rJ DAY WEEK
8 l)ays
Special fiat 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. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days. ...
3 Lines For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678
8 Dollars n. rww Dally Piiot 8·Day W.ek It's a Classified Pl.US ...
. ~!!:=! ..... ?!!! ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~ ............. ~!.~ ~~~ ......... ~!!~ ~~~~~~.~.!~~ ~ ts IOll ~!.=. ..... !~ ~=-/ ti 50 !~~ ............ !!.~~ ~~.~ .... ~~
• Wfllltw-/W..._ 2 Himalayan Kittens. K.1o1 size watttbed, Incl Le• Lumlnoul seucape, ••••• ; ....... •••••••••• SHo.uH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 CHfflOt.IT
#'ti SICllJAIY QIC. A pp ly bt wn UM & Sealpt~h lines, papers, aU. $400. Bnmlwic.lt pool 3'14 ' approx., aallfn1 Sa er HI ce mu at sel I. .17 Flberilus 41 h ,, ~onda Motorcycle l9K ~ .. TOH PICKUP!
Penon1tl/Advertl1la1 Noon. Charlie'• Chill, shots, S.832-1879 table, Windsor model, 1'1SO,tenna .... ev1 Walnut Baby Grand Grandbanb. Skipper males. Perfect cond. Auto trans . pwr stttr·
Dept. bM oPeQi.Dc pe.r 3001 Redhill, Blda. 12, Dogs 104 $400.SU-4311.S. 10112' Carpet. Blue, Plano Xlnl cond. maintained. Call eves $1000.$0-3751. Ina, etc. Fine work
ot.t1pan1lon. Npt. Bch. Ste.12218,CM ...................... Patio fum l30(, desk & creenshe&redplle,new. *-11" ooJy '77Husky388.Mlntcond1 truck!(U<.81711).
fillanelal Mr'Vica firm. WA IT RE SS J Wa i ter KEESHO~D Pups. AKC. chair SlOO, dbie'bed $1&0, S.W. 7Sl·2317 ' piece Peart drum set. 673-3178 ask for Lee lion. l800 or best offer. OML y $4995
, Od.,typlQC,alutbd.,ex1. w/carforwick.erbasket Champsire.M/F Pet& Slereo USO. Mite Jewelry 1070 Good cond. MOO 080. "78 Sea Ray Weekender, 6'&-8600. HOWAIDCi.e.rolef
·.lfoeq d. Ncio-tmlr. Cell: luachserv. 9:!0-1:30PM, s how ' pvt pt y . 7S9·0988 •••••••••••••••••• .. tu SU.2lU VHF, CB, stereo, ball 1918 Su:iWd TS 125 Xlnt Do /QuallS
e.OWbtWll.tli2. M·F. Earn $1.S().$175 wk· 2131697·l345aJt6 m. Unusual custom made 14K YG ladiet' o"1 rinc 120 lauAccor6. tank, trlr & more. New cond, lo ml. On road, off NEWV:oRTBE~CH
ly. Mus t be neat, AKC Silky Terriers, antq. wht coffee table S/W 1orul1ciia1amond S8s 642.3379 cond.$18,S00.759-8938 roadlegal.S5500B0 IJJ..0555 .. Secy;.pr penonable&energetic. adorable, abedless, Sl7S.493-14S7 melee,k507$1795AM 12. Klamth aluminum 641H136 •7S Toyota SRStrk.short
b·,Small mortcace banlt· 919·0747 aft lOAM for shots, M $22S, F $300. Carpet. 49 sq yrd. Never l ct, Marquise, VVS2 l 6UITAIS boat 9.9 Mere, 1980, 1980 KZ S50 Kaw. 10,000 bed reg gas amtrm
'inc firm l n Irvine. appt. SSl-2348 used, TOP QUALITY. clarity, F-Color, raceted S'fS.8243 $13SO /best ofr Tim mi, mll$t sacrif Very cas~. pop top, ~ags. GT
D\lllfl Include: phones, WAMT A CHANGE? Basset pupa, AKC, 6 wks, Grey· blue $496. Less girdle, GIA RATED. 6'2-6180 xlnt cond. 842-1821 radials, cab high shell,
ftyPhll anil li&ht boot· We need cosmetologists gorgeous colors. S200. thanwbolesale.64.5-7430 Marie (7l•)7st-9212 OHktFw•aw& '76 RM 370. Xlnt cond Ha jackers. S3450 f ll:eepl.nc. Comrortable 4t m anicuris ts ror Pvtparty.S92~?evs Waterbed, king, must White cold wedclinc/dln· IQ'•' 111 IOIS . HO~OAT Many Xtras. $700 UH727 at\ 5 Mission
Wt'll Buy
Or Sr ll
Your Cleo"
Import On
Co Miqnmrnt''
Coll Our
U\ed Car
Monoqt-r
TODAY'"
831·2040 49 S·4149
Soddll'boc~ IM ·"
Minion V1r10
ht~~0:=:fe!tae R;r~ Shoreclarr hair salon. Shellie puppy, .AKC, all sell, coil matt., mirror, ner ring, appraised at ;~ .. ~icicii:d~:;:;;;_;j ~Mgcij!n !~':!· :!'trrp su.scns. m..a11. Mike _V~i~e~o ______ _
ferable. Contact Mrs. '9~-2288 bet 9 & 3 shots, ~ood disPo11tion cabinets, $500 /080. Sl,OSO.SeU~.-7720 desk w/cbrome trim, inwater.'havet~lr lo~ 78 Honda XL 350, xlnt '75 Dat su n P U. __ W_E_P_A_Y__,,,,_
Adamaon at 833-9911 (9 (Vickie) Sl.2S.53l ~ 631-4249 B r a l i I i a n 30"180'' wood top $105. of character $3900 condition 3700 total w/camper shell. Beaut
AM to•> Lhasa Apso, AKC, 7 wks, Simmons bide-a·bed 1100. AQ~AMARIN&5 cut & 8S7·03'3 957-8180 miles. $750. 960-7235 mura I on both sades TOP DOLLAR Mere.._.. M/F.~4 S350. Simmonssglbed,com· polia~ed. Only $50 per Larae metal desk CHARACTER BOAT for '75HondaC8200,clean. New eng work jus t FORUs-c•mHr. SIC'Y TO V,. ....................... 94-4l93 pl, S7S. 64.5-7807, 6'$--6S2l stone. 6'().8688 wftypewriter shelf SUO, parade Aug. t8th. Past runs eood S2SOor best of· done, plush int. S2575. cu """~
La[Je ~stab~sbed So. ~ 1005 Sofa bed 8'. vinyl sofa 8', A Coltc._1 ..._ one drawer metal file winner! Price ts right! rer. §73-8E85 979-6144 , 963·9323 aft ALAM MAGHOH ;:a~r~b~e~=~ L••e•t•t•e•;·~·r·1.•tt•e••n••b•y•••A•.· LHASAAPSO xlnt cond. $too ea . A very apeclal Cuat de· cabinet SI0.2797 Bunting Slip avail. 673·7677 , Just Married·must sac U>f or 957-io47 dys, r02!'!!1HAa~bo/s:=:f:U
di Id 1 tf S Monlhsold,sbotsupto 645-1609,548-6380 slfn. Gold & Fresh CMMHseo 673-7873. '77 7SO ffooda, S800 ma, ~L _, v ua lope orm Conan Doyle, framed date. Male . AKCTosbi·ba,.,.,,u.,.,$700.6 1\ Water Pearl bracelet. U d Q h ~ ... M '80Chev •<i T S.cyl,AC, COSTAMESA •
U
arlety or aecrelarial ~......... •.e uantor 406 •-~. s.. t060 s owroowmh1~vuu. h any · · . with picture. S27S. letter a rs. SUIO. 646-0944 s toraoe cab'ftet, 1100. Call for, ...... to W"""l. u fl h --. t t P IS. P ' B. xlnt cond 549-000 549· 57 duties. Peal~ req_w.rea written by Rudyard • ... I')" ~~ ... aero c e reader ••••••••••••••••••••••• ex ras-s. ex aus . S5SOO 7714063 1cc1:1rate typmc, flliJJg & Kipling, framed with Toy Poodle, female, bile, Manual typewriter, 135. 6'4·0323, eves. pr Inter, S200 OBO. 16° Hobie Cat with trailer chrome. Sl.Jl5. 673-4068 ---__ PORSCHES
bllity to do ceneral ad· picture, blO, miniature AKC registered $150/of· All very good cond LADIES' DIAMOND Norelco mini cassette 11.500 MotorH--., S•/ '68 lnt'I ~ ton HO. nat WANTED , 1 ~ln. taab. Shorthud oil portrait ol woman. rer. 640.7849 673-2282 BRJDALSETSIJOO dictaphone, 1'1S OBO. 675-8312 l..t/Storaip f 160 bed. 304 V8. auto. Allow us the opportt!ntty
'prererred. In excbaage with rrame on table MINI SCHNAUZER Round gourmet chopping Jdll$tseU 846-S304 I 0 I Y mp i • add In I LASER f150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PS rPBB. gd tares. mech to con41der the purch.ue
"!for ability to f~ •land, S22S: lovely 14th AKC REGlSI'~RED block·~· same as .n~w. MocW.1ry 10711 Fnac~ ~":· J~0~ c ~~r~ Xlnt oond, eltlras WE CAM SELL ~~~d .~1 Cassette, ortrade an ol your &an
..... eu in buay omee~ Century color ca Iii· S200 842.7159 6 gm Hitchcock dining ••••••••••••••••••••••• g S90 $750. 964-5032 YOUR R.V ---Porsche Check with. Us
paoy offers rriendl~ .at-grapby on sheepskin. AKC & purebred Lhasa chairs $100ea. 631·9272 S l 1 d In I t •bl e r or typewriter, OBO. 16' Hobie Cat, no trl;, • 70 Datsun pick up. Second Today! mospbere, competallve framed, 1595. Pip. Call A · 7 ... 9 .,..,. L "T" G Id R L 11 U · 752·7855. Daon Corp. SSS.l:.>4 owner Runs great. Best
I • ......... be fi pso, 4 puppies, w..,, r , awson o oc .. we rusaw, near· Conta"t Lex good cond Sac $1200 for rr ,,,aa ary •Ill""" ne its. (714)955·2183. old SlSO/OB0.751·1317 withmatcbingcbair. lynew,$396.S»5723 • · rastsale.~9190 For Sa le : Z Tra1,ler o er.645·75~ ___ _ ~~ryre~~L."c!:.:'!1"yy, F~R SALE-1930 's 4reg.LhasaApeopups,8 s.150 . 6'5-6S83 Mltctl••-IOIO p IOl7 SELL INTER~T. Will Couches. ~pprox ~ • &c Y..s 9570 kitchenware Rare ~tall ks M •-F ado able Li f t •. eh Approx 30 . Funushed ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,,.resley of Southern , ' w • "' • r · v. rm unu ure "' ac· ••••••••••••••••••••••• sell ~interest in Cal 20 631-3105&64&-0147.
Calif., P.O. Box 2200, a!'d Fiesta. Over 300 S200 ea. SSf..7271 cess .. 1 yr old, cost $2500, Lo .. l•a w 0
1·=·.·:.::0 .. ;:;:,;;0
5 a i l b 0 a t I 0 ad e d CLASSIC!
Newport Beach, 92663. pieces. Buy one or all Puppies Elkhound max mll$t sell. 1llOO or orrer. Helium Bouquets de· -• --·-w/everythi.ng for S2SOO GEHaATottS CHM VAM
E.O.E. 840-40&8. $25. Seven weeks old, 752·1483 livered. Perfect for Withgreeneye1 or S250/ mo. Boat WAREHOUSE New paint New "
Ser vice Station Night Larg~ C.:rysta l beade,d phone Mite Duncan Beautiful glass tnlaid cof· every occasion. 67~ 9fl3.-0t88 storafe 170 mo. Prime Portaoby_!=1RSTOCaltemKators Goodyear Steel belted TOP $Dou.Alt
Mer. 40-48 bn pr wk. ChaOdelier from l~ s 64S-5203C.M. fee & end tbl. 1450. Los Caballeros Health Nanday Conures Parrot N .8 . Marina location. ""' Radials. (AH-Weather> For Clean Used'•
')eneflts. Neat ap· Hollywood Ma_ns 1on Std Poodle puppies, 673-•7•3 Club Membership, l2SO w/lr1cace.Sl40. 67S·9UL elect. puts. Must sell, Snow chains. Great Cars&TNcJts ...
"1 pearance, must be over S37S. lOO yr old Solid Oak white, 7 wk.s old. AKC. Virtue tble, 36 x 46-70" or offer. Call Answer Ad S..tll23 16' HoWt C.t pvt. pty. Call: eves or traveling, fun for trips. We pay cash on U1upot!
,'« 21 yrs or qe. Apply Z5 Grandfather Rocker a rs S275 7»0966 Siio, 6 fiber glass chairs 11542, 6'2--UJO, 24 hrs. Blue·c rowned Con.u re Used Himes. Xlnt cond wlrnds. 64IMM63 Beauti-rest bed. Lots of Contact btlyer at •;J~ewportBl,CM. $400. $20 ea 900-1320 at\ 1 or . Parrot w/wroucht iron T Ir $30000BO Trol.n, Tnnet tl70 room. New carpet. 1 ' Sta 642-9'7s.5 FnetoYa. 104 week~nds Big Sale on Patio caae$150Call67J.7616 r · ....... _. .. Ev •••••••••••••••••••••••AM /FM Stere o ,,~ERVICE lion Atten· G'b f h ...................... • Furnitun, Fiberclasa ' · · .....,._ es UO 15• lllOO/l d Cassette. 6 doors. Win-:•r:~ant. Exp'd. Days & 1. son reezer, w lte up-Good home desperately Orange floral couch, 8~ Table & ' chairs. Rec. "-" & er,.. 1090 '71 Catalina 27' Sloop, 64 A • ' ra e dow. step van. Owned by
1,,eves. Full & p/Ume. Ap-~h~ood cond. Sl7S. needed 2 wonderful cats ft, $150. Rebolmd pool la· $395 for S2915. +Big Sale ••••••••••••• ... ••• .. ••• 1980 Honda 7.S Outbrd, 6 for 6xlO~~ Christian. 11777 OBO
hr91Y : Shell Station, 17th & --homeless. due to death ble, Sl25. Wooden file on All merchandise, ta· 2 yrs new, Whitney by sails spinnaker gear 758.0271 '(.Jrvlne, N.B. Onental Vases k s Sehl of owner. Before 5 PM cabinet, twenty 8 inch ble. chain, solu, etc. Kimball upricbt, xlnt, possible slip 112,000: A.to Sn-rice,,_.. VW • .,.,,,,. ~rvice Station At ten· cloc.k $90, pitch~rlwash (213) 947-1719 __ drawers,~-552.311119 2nd. Chance Antiques & S600. 631·1512, 751·9740 498-394.5 & Accasoritt t400 1972 Van ._,.,or best
r.1'Clant. FIT eves, esper. basin S7S. Curao/Cbnt. FREE KlITENStogood White s pindle lullabye Us ed Furniture . T Steinway 5'1 walnut Classic Star 13111 and ••••••••••••••••••••••• oHer.mustsell e~lso Mechanic, F /T 631317~9Plexa-glass S25 home 1 Wlute, l White crib & mattress. $9S. 631·3105. grand, bit m 1948, beUer trailer. Glass over wood '70 Landcruiser motor & 67:H2'7_5_
days. Apply in person: ·.R• w orange spots. I White Wood spindle cradle, TENNIS MEMBER-than new cond. Ham· Rblt, refinished, &c re-trans, $150. '70VW Bus. ·79 GMC wmdow van, 2
.-Mac'• Texaco, 18502 African Mahog Roll Top w black 546-5967 SSO. Other items. Call SHIP: Lindborg Tennis mood Ortan as Piano, riued. A oomplete fast wrecked, 1200 all, or bench seats. ~.000 ma.
Beac h B Iv d , H.B . Desk, beaut. cond. SJooo. Hi! I'm Caesar I'm potty 675-7440 after 3 PM Club. ssoo or best offer. CdM. 644-an beauty. tJaoo or possible parts. 6'2·2'34 Eves SS700 or offer. 644-4077
, ~ Call 54S-02!M, 6'2-t77o trained I would like to Movinc ! Roll-top desk, fM6..M87 Sporti114J .._. 1094 trade for G·Cal SM & 6'5-9502· '65 Ford Van~ i;. Stw M9ctt ap.r-. TIFfANY GLASS live with a ruce family so 112S. 3 tables. SlSO. Book PIP bu~ US sµver & ............ ~.......... cash. 53&-4ID Used 900x20 Truck tire Newerengme.
OeSANFl.S
CHEVROLET
San Clemente
831-0510 49z.tl00
WANTED!
Late model Toyot.u and
Volvos C all u s
TODAY!'!
Ea rle Ike
TOYOTA-VO&. VO J:.r£J1perienced, quality IOW.L I can tell them ii any case, SSO. Bene~, kS. go.Id coins. H11besl Ra~aeuonticketaavail. WESTSAJLJ2.nusbdeck, :~~t:_~ofonlS~~.~mw':~; •7• Ford ~line IOO.
6 1:ework. Costa Mesa. Georgeou.s! lmdescent s~r&ngers are around. 546-9147. Must see. pnces paid. 675-T~ ask Private party. Call a steal. Only $39,000. , .,.,VI.., "" H.,._ 11•& ~I\ 642-9652 blue with purple 1 .ve h~d.allmy shots:& NEVER USED glass top rorTom. Janette. 213-188·6802, Hans6 (71•)63H212 VW rims. pair S4o cyl, 70,000 mi. good Ce•t•M•u
·?. highlights. 41,<i inch Im laving at Sher1es dinette, $290. Qn Bdrm Orie Revere Ware, l6 Day a . Barry. Cal 20, 6hp O/B, hinged, 642-3379 cond.S~/ofr.846·2269 ,,..o.tJOJarS.o.uo
,luSHOP FOREMAN S400 diameter.Will sacrifice Poodles.546-2848 SS40. Sofabed Sl70 . pcs.,ni~.aellbyFri.as 213-990-7468,eves. mast, lood cond. pp 6FT Six-PAC Cam~er '78Ford Van.E·150 4 spd
r iw k Su per vise 15 al $475. Call eves. at Beauty! English Spr· Bunks $200. Matt/box set $110. 546-0658 Colt.AR·lS "shorty"; .223 S3600. 7S«lllll, 536-ml17 s~ell paneled. sliding stk w /overdrive PS.
·. ma~hinists in the ra (714) 835-639'2. P /p. inger Sparuel Reg. l \'J s pmgs, two $75, full S8S. DOG HOUSE· caliber. Colt scope. am· wand . Rear door SIOO. PB. A C ~ 100. 673-2180.
111\ioo of aW>mati~; Antique Auction, Mon y r s . Great dispo qn $125. MORE '! S50. · mo.ISSC>obo 548-9981. HOllE14S750 631-3929 495-1938
ping machines, Buffalo Aug . 1 O th . 6 pm . 962-3220 770.osoi m.a TY, leclo, or bestolrer67S-6'792 VW Engine, reblt 1600 ex-'73 Dodge ~an. stick shift.
machines bottom feet American. English & Can't keep beau. chann· 2 chairs, swivel rockers. HIA Steno 1091 15' Finn, nice. but needs lot shape, strong $350, $2000 '77 Dodge Car·
machines' lathes mm. Prtncb rum. & smalls. ing in-out cat. nurty blk· earthtones, SSO ea. RamsSeaonTictets ••••••;•••••••••••••••• work, xlnt trailer, custom high back seats ryvan, $4 000. 1595 lncmac~top~uce No minimum. lnspec· re •631-3647 ZenitbC00501e colorTV, rorsa.le,2rorl'100 BeautifulColorTV,2 yr S650/best.67S.6806 ll00.67~1S Newport Blvd, C M
aeroapace parts. Re· lion all day Mon . Aug hnitwe IOS works $50.549-2332 752__, (2l3)'63-llOl wmty. Frtt delivery. REDLASER -'6'2'-=-·""2050~-----
qulre 5 yrs. esper. as 10th: Larry Morgan, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Six piece Thomasville $1'8. 846-1786 S500 Aaltot for S. '72 Dodge Van wt Bubble
Machinist Com.act: Mr. Auctioneer. 1~ Toronto Danish modem teakwood ~room ru:m.iture. ~ff Typewriter SCM Elec-BeauUrul Coloc TV. 2 yr. 673-7677 673-1873 •••••iMPORTOO••••• 3 0 0 Trade ma ~ '
-0.j<argea, 71'-~. Way, C7~)640-051l dining ta~le with 6 new white. new $1200 asking tric Portable w/cue & wmty. Free delivery. loah, SI,./ NOTICE TO automallc, cooler, radio .
. ( -, m atchin g c an ed S600.673-ffi38N.B. coverS75.s.s&-9084 $1'8.64&-1786 Docks 9070 READERSAND all self contain 2558 ~ 1kalned class studio seek·
• 'ing esp craftsm~ Call
for appt. M&-7'7'
Chm.ese Antiques. ap· chairs·S275.00. Bent Couches: green Herculon M t 1 d /b d ao.tl & M.rtii. ....................... ADVERTISERS Fairway Dr. C.M.
praised w/documents, glass oak china cabinet corner croup, incl. end J.: ete~~ ~e~ 1..,,1111111 NEWPORT Slip Avail. The price or items Aalfo1 WCl!lhd 9590
flower vaae, 175. teapot, (a n t1q ue re prod uc · tables Sl~. 752-1324 $2s~~oro9 s:s.16~9· •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Tom 6'5-0222eves advertised by vehicle •••••••••••••••••••••••
1225: Ice 24" high vase, tioo).S295.00. King.sized 8 ft beige couch with 3 5'8-6311() ' Gi•,..f · tOIO 61, 3-~ dealers in the vehicle WEPAYTOPDOLLAR
11 Stodl I°"""" S500. ~ maple headboard with pillow bact S50 Cetll f -Casabella ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEED 28 Slip for beaut. classified advertising for t op used ca rs .
1111E x c e 11 ent com pan Y Antique Dresser SJoo. drawers turned spools. 67J.2076 °1 an : re-Tu Deduclioo Donallon Sea ray in DANA POINT columns does not in· foreign, domestics or
l .. ~ ..... nefita. Roomforrapid Drop Lear table w/2 Beautyrest mattress & . verse wood blades, light N Call GI 1 d I bl 1 · rr · -spr ings-Szso.oo Call KING INNERSPRING included.Wul239tate Boats ·Ca.n·Planes or ewport · yn, c ue any app1ra e cass1cs your car is •a.advancement Apply in C\!alrs$400.64S-738§. 971_7352af\erSp.m. EXTRA FIRM mattress '100.Judy?»Oll86 213/654-23'1 497-43'2evesor9'7~ t.axes. license, transfer extra clean, see us
.7itpersoo: 4115 E. 17th St., ~•ell 10 I -set. never used, worth INT ER EST ED IN 0 .B. motor. 3.5 hp, S17S. Balboa laland fees, rinance charges, FIRST•
., .;,M. hi "•••••••••••••••••••• * * I BUY * * $SSO, sacr. 12'8 del. H E A LT ff A N D Sm. Is lge Aquasea bait 20'SldeTle {:r ~~~::~°:tf:~~ ~
J re manager. cas er-I IUY APPLIANCES Good used Furniture & Never used queen Sl, NUTRmON? Have loo tanka, S3S. New 12" 67J.1440 l • 'clerk. FulJ.Ume. Les 95Hll33 worth 1399. cash only Genera•·-'or sale, ..,.,.t 8'W TV, f1S. S40-01S3 Slips avaU. up to 59', CdM ot dea er documentary ' 548-71163 Appliances-OR I will •"18 del Usually home ..,.., ,, """ . preparation charges UD· k HARBOR AREA sell orSElLlor You 7 · · + 10~-overatock. 9-12 lo.ts M•I act/ area. 19.00 rt. Peggy .
SUPltYISOI APPLlANCESERVICE MASTEISAUCTIOM S4'7350 Mon.Fri (714) S.3-1184, Smlct I f020 Pattison , 9S5·2•73 ~s~~:~~~ilied
fP;,Pl/tlme. E:xp. In demo BUY..SELL-REPAJR 646-1616,Ul-'625 Bunk beds + trundle S.9Mon-Thura842-6224 ....................... wkd s 8·SPM &-"-a./ #t .. cn-.co.ty ~:1ifield. Wages + comm. 549-3077 custom made xlnt cond. Proresslonal Sonar Drum Marine Electrician -!.~! 2925 Harbor Blvd. -.~ar nee. SU-0718 : 21 c u ft. dbl door llUYWTUlE 3 mattresses. $1SO. Set w/caaes S65o. Pet Desicn/lnstall/repair y,.,,, l .. loa Clittdcs 952 COSTA MESA
", 213 877·1.lJS re f r i g / fr e e z e r . Les 967.Sl33 67S·S8S9 at\ SPM. Snake, rue f10. s&28'7S Qual. worti. 5't-2520evs. ...................... ...................... 979-2500
Tap Ollar hid .
For Your Car!
JOHMSOM&SOH
U.cMlt .. r"'l.
2626 Harbor BlY ~
Costa Mesa 5'0-5630
w.r!l.
OVEK .......
For Your Good
VW • P orscbe or A \111i .,.
VW ·PORSCHE-AUDI
445 E. Coast Htway
at Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 67J.(9()0
Premium prices
paid for any used ~r
I foreign or domestjc l
an good condition.
SeeUs~t!.
&n•swlc....,.~. w/icemaker frost.free 20SOFAS.new.1118ea. 6'Ta~akWallUnit,cood Compact rolltop desk loeh.M.-C•p1r1,S./ !5UTT115
7
T-llRDT
-Nltea. F/time. Will xlntroncUt00758·9557 l5Loveseal!.S7Sea quahty,S200. llSO. CotorTVw/remote I Ii mr• 90l0 ltilt tU TOP DOLLAR traln.~13 . WhiteWbirlpoolWu her, 9S7-S1CllorS54-4180 541-9'90 tlOo.Lamb/nlD!kjacket .... !.!...................................... IMTOWM! PA.IDFOI !888llJ1hoaHl\O,, TEACHEI S17S. Kenmore cop· W AT E RB ED w I 8 Nu 3·pc ~onal sora, 1175. Stereo conao&e SUO. 'llO sinH.P. SEA GULL 10~ Camper Four Star IEST Offllll GOOD & CLEAN _ ~ 0,1., "'''J ~o ~ :C"'c pertone dryer. elec, drawers, bookshelf natural/hemnct>oo. pd SU-3722 Motor, forward & re· w/refrlaerator 6 stovr. (~) • WEIUY
ll' ert.•exper.Ptef.es· l 17SM7·'1n hdbrd. S3SO 6'H072, 1350aeU$'750.5S7-8073 Airline ticket l way verse low hours $525. Porl·a ·pott~. A 1 USEDCARS! USEDc •o"•·TR"''CKS
)er. In toddler care. 2~ · 848·2820 M ts ·mmec1 B d hit' d 1 h' • 642 7<M Butane, Queen m e bed. """'• v •u1)'r olds S days ,_1 NB Whirlpool washer. Works us . ac. I . ran LAX to p a e P ia, . Sleeps 6 In excellent COME IN OR oi · · · · great.$100. In xlnt cond, matching nu hv rm, .came set, mualuaebeforeA1.1g. l5, '79 1inHP Suzuki Out· dlt' · ll2SO c II CALLFOR •
111fiSuaan, 641M8211. 5'8·2454, af\er SPM sofa $3SO, um chair dinette, cuno, lamps, will sell at discount, board, like new k2S. b~~ we':~· lOam :5P~. NH AMAISAl
'Jrt T....,.1.Aa. Microwave, Norelco, S~ss. coffee table ll05, etc. Bstofr.8Sl-1.8Z5. fl:IO.ll41M1233 673-2303 63!-7657 Cormler-DeUUo l•::P~eschool. exp'd. Full $l.25. Trash comp, Oaf· side table seo. lamp S6o, Recliner musace chalX Used belce carpet ror liv-lStl. Swordfilb plank. Lt _C .... am ............ r .... •_hell __ n_ts_T_o-yota_, CHIYIOU1''
1liit'tme.&U:9!U rera & Sattler, Sl2S. or $78.S ALL. Beth w.fback rollers & inc rm" bdrm, &ood wt metal w/apear sta· Ii rourler'ton beds . 182118EA.alBLVfi.
fi: Te'·~~•cttors 63H7'3 5'0-1872, aft.6,lnJ.8406 vibrator, $98. Royal cood,U>.551·»0 lion Teall walkway 3 II d Cd 1' My darlln1 Triumph 2150 m.cl HUNTINGTONB"" .. CH , '"' ....,.,. . I t ---u "fl/cue · · pane e , aew ua H Id ... ........ 1 _ _. LI\ "· WE' E EXPANDING UP r i I ht freezer. Decorator pieces from e ec. Y...-ft• .. er , 18 " Atlas. Skill. Saw. Mt.I, baJllOOO aear. SS apkn, roldinc Ml bed, . era • 1111 •111"' w ·~ C-. W... 645-5700 147-60l7 ..,..,S T A R T I M . Frigidaire, 17 cu fl, Cha~dlers. Gold rose S98. Both like new. beavydutymodel.$175. Radio, all or pert. wk· in cab-over, atoraee. mt. Convt. Xlnt cond. --------• S4t.Jl3~"-
n1• MEDIATELY . rrostfree, MS. S$-l6l3 mo.t1f wrought iron ~7·3044 . 541-tdO d a 1 • s •. 1' l'. boot."50.112-'l'035 S5000.875-1X7. Wttia) :7:"'~--.--.---....--
•• Salary + lucrative eves lamp, no. Largesconet, 7 Coucb,bi·backColon.lal For Sale John Wayne wknd/Di&btSZMm Mot rhH .... ti C..._C.. YOUlllOT1C Hlchest cash for cood ~ .. ~.: .:~ WARDSGASRANGE rrs~~~x:lr~~ s:. ~~h'i:.:i d!:i:J~!!~~ Tennis Club ramlly ...... ,... 9040 .... :................. ~. oril owner. S49K &lllTISHCAIS cars&v::a.
,, Dbl oven, clean, works (26XU) Gold wood linen fabric, cood cond. membel"llllp tr.iO lncldJ •••••••••••••••· .. ·~··•CIAO, MOPfld. Low ml miles,SZSOOOBO -
1,. * T ........ * ood s.a.3458 carved frame , 1•5. $250/bttofr.SD-lQl truarer feea. (71') Cabin CruiHr, eood live-Helmet, l'.Ad, Bult.eta. •5'53 ~ ,., hlchn G E refrt& alde by side/ (28X3•l Conversation -.1100. aboard. Located in $200. '84 Cadllac Dt Vllle Con· , '~re youtJredolworldn1 tcewaterdoor.kSOOBO piece picture, S.O. Gold ~::,:~~a":· c':t!·crll~ Kenmore Washer ~ i'JO:Oc~:.:, diesel. 842-IAO vert. Whl. te,whlte top,
;;;Jull tlmelorputtlme . ~-111114 rose carved boudoir new • .._.1 • Doer. Lamps. Chain. --·-· "7IBataVU1Moped,Runs dartredlat.Plnal yrfor __ _ ..._,? 111_._ 112 cbalrwfli1Jitbl11eaeatlt . Solid llaple Student ,............... all. loolll 1d. $300. the tail finned Cadillac. OOW Coastff' Wb aot tri wortla& ... ?:::: .............. matcbtnc kln1 size SACWlf Deak w/cbatr. Mlac. tt7tr..Y ..... 548-7'81 Euentldly orig, 31N · Be wy.
l.,,,.,.i Ltae tor f\aJl time Racine 12 spd, Titanium •~read, 950. Other small Wood' luedl beka•m· .a.6-58. Sportlbbtr ftwmo Grycor moped, COit SIOO metlrulou1ly main· ew~ ach J~'1· Wort•t.oMhn frame/forts, full cam· ptecet. 911~ after 8 moa tbl • clWrl, ool1 M' en IMder '100. 7' 34'S..n;ySD momo new only a ml. S500 t.alned Cal ctr In nearly ----------
d,if!r wll ia lll*ll.,, ol· p1snola, 1 mo old. $1700 PM SZIS · valuellDK •~ tnchaell-. Toolbo1 2S'aip.lec:k hllmo OBO.•• naw•• cmd. Xbrt In· WllUY
,)J_lc• ta th Sat a Eve84$-5m MustSell love Hat, $350, value .4D-KIO. Slipr111&11Dduded -Pu bf.t .. MIW kl i vestment In a qlltllty · CLir•uc••s ~le.ta .... atta 0 bed MU. Rattan It 1la11 Adllll tri .. Lr1 Pl attye 't n• c ....-. m . Automobile. Belt Offer ..,..,.. AA
., ~·U -..bllbtd eo: 10 1pd bike, Ulle .new. Mahoaaay BL. w/ bnfat nook. •• value but C~lt.l..·lodt G:d 1)a ·u:-~ xlatcoad,-orbeatof: between SUOO·l4000. AMDTIUCIS .!>? ,...aialoltal UalvttaSlOO. mattreu. Nl&ht •tand teoo.XJDtcaDd. tt. -· _..., · f1r.M1·•1ett MMm. IAUIYtsbett.
1ol wt + m.G6S and d,....., t.o matcla. cand. • .41Jf PACl'ICA41 'rrH<lfDAJ.lkc Ray, nm Nichola Unit
Cua ·CID ~ror Schwinn Beach Cruiser, IAe new. 11<':\ ~ Model"ll 1fal bnMtroet. MMa'1 11• Uk• New C1111., bn R'8DllDOd.•. _J .......... H .... B ..... mn __ . ____ 1 ,....-. ' Id cood •lloclllc cbaln. :f.Pr~~rmze !, · matd*al bureau, w-... IMI .,.., SACIJJICI David MI·f111>KI·•ev1 4WllHIDrfftt HIO
!!!!! TIAY&AWf llO ... .,,. '~met. nae c:b Sz ' . OllOMI-'_.. ()*i. .. o'·sr·v·L•i _rrw (nt)!'JN1U 1'011.(~T moped need1 ...................... .
... , (t••'I ••ht Scltwtnn. •In crulter. ant oak ctn -17 ~u Sor1bed 1150, rattan TURNTAIL&-wtthnlp .,, M' 1'tlknft A!nlot mJaorreJllnlllO ·ao Jffp CJ·S, 12.5115
........ ,.. •/1prl1 er. 2 spd lnrefriaM•....., couch• chair, t150 . ....,.to oadftr. t/O DO KP~ dbit uJe Jti*4 "'"..:!Rioh •bit, •.c..-r. .548-108'7 dinnergM !ta·ll! pecH dbl. tblt' elln trantr:mtf cabin, iDJ·llik•fHoada!OltaJ.. CUltomg';6bumper,•
. ,,.,,.;, ltdnn Ht, * rcmd. ·2 UIO, rtfrl1. UH. IAll 11n10 s u !Y.191.~ Jtl ... Llh .... ol. •. UMS41, 10 ilte itaadl drtaHr tlee Nfria. 90 U:'to ClaHlc lollllaeout· IS lu1011bl1 offer .... '9i!P ........ ...._.. ____ _
Y.. chtll of ciuwere: Urill nl 111&.IDla, lof· coat...~! llWlll er..,Jdllc:md.hllJ "74 .. WMOM
«111...il'l'il. .-fill· l'lslaJS.U,Jlmcood. IDOdm,dmlw. t1Mtieo8'etllllt.a_. tltt•"'t!i".... ,. .. ,,.. 0... i.llp Ba'Jfibllid6Seow
......,., llllutl Al•Mt MW. Jama, lft':fOPll..... tablu, rm dlvlder. ...u. 7-1M Mrt ~ tlM n..., ........... Alt '~.• .m1. ~r-.__ .. -............ " ... CeM. ,.. .... . .. ..11. 1ma CHH nl, SSllM. SILL idle llmaa wk11 a Qlem DlmkA4slt·A· tor ~tr• 1T'1nilllr,_.-.. 'TTllONDADPIDS Tiit Wh1L Low nu lfl (lfpl w/ltu eaN. liat DaU:J Pilot Clwllied •••~ 1111. tts-Tfn, .,.,a • M BP,trtr• -•• llU:=f•· tMM. Call ... . ' .... G'll.... DlmBli.... ~ -•-· .... •-· ----·
COHHEU
CHEVIOUT
"" I '• I
._,_ I \ \ ~ \
~4 ~ 1200
Amhtt, .. , 11 h4 .
·················•••9'e• ~.~~ ......• !?!!
MOCAStL 1 Just auume mnJlaliil lea.se paynwnta 6 dr1te
away.. . Or buy f9r
S81SO. '79 Sprint Velote
GT, black, 1/r, leather,
nice. Desperate! Da~
at&51·-·
't7f7 .....•........... , .... .
'80 Audi 5000s. Aau ... e
leate Im. CaU ct' tailt. EVF. IS'f.tl l,
1t7 J
)
..
..... , .. ......... . .......... . .. ,,, .. ,. ................. . , ...... ... 15L••Deal 11 c.o.&y eo..a. 1NQll
SALE&-SEAVICE-UASI~ ·208 W. Ill SAHTA AHA
71 41835-3171
CLOSED SUHDAY .............
P.tOfYOlr
IMW r. ~· tOr
.u...~•
Mc&..-IMW!! ..,0ru... .
. •10.. ..... .....i ' l7 l41522-Slll
. People who need people
a!lould always check the
. lllJvftt Directory in the •. ~ !>AIL Y PILOT
• ATLAS CHRYSL.Elt,ft, YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 5"46·1934. 3 blocks
eouth of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd. Complete•
Dody shop. Sales. Service. Parts. Service Dept. open
Monday thru Friday 7.30 AM. to 5:30 PM. and 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday. • HACH IMPORTS
&48 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 752·0900. Call us.
We're the specialists for Alla Romeo. Peugeot & Saab.
THEODOlllOllMSFOU>
...,_rn sales, service, parts. body, peint & tire depts.
COmpetillve rates on lease & daily rental•. 2060 Harbor
blvd .. Costa Mesa. &42·0010 0< 540-8211 .
•• JOHN SOM & SOM UMCOLH MllCUIY
2826 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tet 540-5630. 57 Years ol ftlendty famlly service -Orange County·• oldest Lin·
c:Olll-Mercury dealership.
SOUTH COAST DODGI
Im Harbor Blvd .• Coats Meu.. Tel. '540-0330. RV service
..Clall1t1. custom van conversions.
HIWPOIT IMPOITS •11 .. io W . Coast Hlghwey, Newport Buch. Tel.
1540· 1764. The Ferr.-1 Heldquarte,.,
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMIERS IN THE BOXES • MEWPOIT DATSUM
888 Dove Street. Newport Beech. Tel. 833-1300. At ttM
triangle of ,Jamboree, MacArthur & Brl1tol behind
Victoria Station Sales. Service, Le&Slng & Parts. Fleet
discounts to the public.
0 MAIEIS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mees. Tel. S4<>-9100. Orange
County's Lergest Cadillac. deal«. Sales. Service. Leu·
Ing.
• DAVID J . PHILUPS IUICIC-flONTIAc.MilDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia PnW11y
Laguna Hills 837·2400
COIMIH.O.ULLO CHlftOUT
18211 Beach Blvd .• Huntington Beach. Tel. 847-6087 °'
549-333t. Sales. Service. P91ts. Full Leulng Dept.
Freeway close to all Orange Co.
• ALAH MAGHOM rotn'IAC.SUIAIU
2480 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mlet.. Tel. 6'M300, a.tea,.
Service, LeHlng. "Mr. GoodW\'aneh."
0
IAILI IKI TOYOf A-VOLVO
1986 Harbor Blvd .• Coata Mata. (714) Ml-9303 ot
540-M7. t1 Volvo dealer In Orenge County end when
you IM for a Toyota at Earle IM'a. ~get ltl
0 •
IOI LOHGNI PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership. Sales,
Service. Parts
• UMIVHSITY HOHDA
2850 Herbor Blvd., Costa Meea. Tel. 540-9640. 1 Mile
South 405 Freeway. Sales, service. p!lrts & leasing
• SAMfA AHA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana. Tel. 558-781 t . Your·
Ortglnal o.dlcated Datsun Oealef
• MlliCLI MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd., Co1ta Mesa. Tel. 645-5700. 11 dealer
In So. Calif. See the all new 1981 GLC.
• ALLIM-OLDSMOllf..l.CADIUAC
SUIARU-.MC TIUCXS
San 0 1990 Fwy. at Avery Exit on Camino Cepl1trano In
Leguna Niguel. Tel. 831~.
• SAM DI SAMTIS CHPIOLIT
401 S. El Camino Aael, Sin Ciemeni.
SalM, S.Nlce, Lllllng And Pam
Orenoe Cou"ty's NEWEST Cheolrol9t ,:tealer; "Orowlng
Your Wflf. •· 61dt Et Camino °""'lll'nP· "11-G&IO 492.fSOO
COSTA MESA DATSUM
2845 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa. Tel 540-&410. Serving
Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mile So. 405.
• SUMSET FORD, IMC.
(Home of Wiiiie the Whale). s.440 Garden Grove Blvd.,
Westminster Tel 636-4010
FAAMK PROTO UMCOLM-MstCUIY
Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a
week 7.30 AM to 6 30 p M 848-7739
0 COMMELL CHIVIOLET
2828 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa. Ovw 20 years 89fVing
Orange County! Sales. teasing, service. Call 546· 1200;
apeclal parts llne1 546-9400; body shop line; 754-0400.
• CHICK IVERSOM POl5Ct6AUD ... VW
415 E. Co11t Hwy .. Newport Beech. 673-0900. The only
dealership In Orange County wllh these three great
makes under one roof'
• IOY CAIVll ROLLS IOYC-..WW
15'40 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach'. &40-6444. Sare.,
Sefvloe, Parts And Leasing.
OR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED
-···N THIS ·Ao, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT REP.
I
MONDA Y . AUGU ST 10. 1981
oetly "'9l "'*''..., ........
Workmen assemble equipment in fuel-handling room next door to
new reactor at San Onofre Nuclear Generating Staticm..._
l. Catholic group
I hits TV sponsors
NEW HAVEN. Conn. CAP) -
The Knights of Columbus, a
1.35-million-member organiza-
tion. is considering its most
political statement ever -a
possible boycott of spon:;ors of
"immoral, obscene or criminal"
TV shows.
Members o f the all -m ale
Roman Catholic group are to
vote this month on a resolution
based on recommendations from
some of the group's 7,000
councils, officials say. The
binding resolution would require
m embers to boycott the goods or
services of any sponsor of an
offending show.
Elmer VonFeldt, spokesman
for the New Haven-based group,
said that while the proposed
policy is new, the feeling about a
threat from television is old.
"They (the Knights) have
expressed their concern long
before anyone ever heard of the
Moral Majority," he said.
He said the Knights are "very
strong on family values" and
feel many TV programs show
··excessive violence and
abnormal preoccupation with
sex . . . particularly out or
wed.lock, that woufd incite young
people to similar behavior."
The Knights holds its national
con ven tion Aug. 18-20 in
Louisville, Ky. Tt1e proposed
resolution is one of several
hundred that will be brought
before the 431 d e legates
expected'to attend.
The resolution does not target
any s pecific s hows for the
unfavored status and does not
n a m e any spon sor s . But
VonFeldt said delegates on the
floor could bring up specific
<See TV, Page A2)
Mesan critical
after being shot
A 23-year -old ceramics tile
helper, shot in the chest as he
argued on a west Costa Mesa
sidewalk with two men early
today . i s report e d in
critical condition this morning
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
.URINGI COAST WllTHIR .
Night and early morning
low clouds. Otherwise fair
but hazy sunshine through
Tuesday. Highs in lower
70s at the beaches and low
to middle 80s inland. Lows
62 to 66.
111101 TODAY
TM Rarru, with Pat HtllUn
establilMd at quarlnback,
klclc of I a new campaigtt
tonight with an ezhibition
• game OQOinat NeJD England.
·A capacttv crowd it ezpected • at AnaMim Stadium. StM)/
Page Cl.
11111
~ -
..
Investigators said Trinidad
Pena or 1780 Monrovia Ave. may
have been shot at 2: 18 a .m. as
th e result of a n altercation
earlier in a west·side bar.
The shooting is the second in
Costa Mesa in two days.
Police say they still are baf-
fled over the early Saturday
morning slaying or Jeffrey Ran-
dall Knox, 33, who was shot
down as he walked toward his
home from a nearby conven-
ience market.
Knox, a cook for 10 years at
the Victoria Station restaurant
in Newport Beach, was shot
several times at about 1:30 a.m.
Saturday on Santa Ana Avenue.
Investigators say the bail of
bullets may have come from a
small caliber pistol fired from a
moving car.
Officers described Knox as a
quiet, unassuming man who
lived quieUy alone.
Sunday's shots on Monrovia
A venue also were beUeved find
by a small caliber plttol, but In·
vestigators said there ls no ap-
parent Unt lo the two abootinp.
F\meTal services for Knos are
scheduled for 10 a.m. at Harbor
Lawn Memorial Chapel.
He WU a 1taduate of Corolla
del Mar High School and a U.S.
Navy veteran.
Re ls aurvived by b1a parents,
Mr. and Mn. Clem Knox of Sm·
ta Ana H•ichta, hi• brother
Craic of Co1ta Iii eu and a
crandmother, Glad11 Montoya
of Gardtft Grove.
t
• • • • •
Yllll HlllTDWI llllY PAPER
ORANGE COUNTY, CAClf'.;_QRNIA. 25 CENTS
Potential Onofre dangers defined
Plan~ers write scenarios for what could happen. at nuclear plant
Edttor'1 note: The U.S. Atom'c
Safet~and Ucenting Boord will con-
duct hearing• in Orange Count~
•tarUng Aug. 25 on emergtnc~
~ plan$ for comm¥rrille•
.near the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station. Thia i1 the
second port of a three-port U1W1
f%0mining t~j>lanl. ~
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Ol ...... "'9& .....
Early in July, lbe Orange
County Board of Supervisors ap-
proved a n agreement with
Southern California Edison Co.
to provide for a public alert
system within the 10-mile area
s urrounding the San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Station.
According to county officials,
the system would include in-
stallation of up to 39 sirens in tbe
so-called emergency planning
zone around the plant.
The sirens, Edison officials
said, would be activated within
15 minutes of an emergency
situation at the huge nuclear in-
stallation. They would tell area
residents to tune in to emergency
radio and TV broadcasts for in·
formation on where to go and
what to do.
David Pilmer , Edison's
coordinator of e mergency plan-
ning, said the sirens would cost
more than $1 million to install,
an expense borne by the utility
in its $15 million quest to insure
that emer gency planning for San
Onofre is successful. (Plant
critics would quibble with the re-
sults.)
What could go wrong with San
Onofre?
According to emergency plan-
n ers, there are myriad
possibilities . And to deal with
possibilities. And to deal with
four broad classifications of Inci-
dents.
In increasing order of im-
portance they are an unusual
event, an alert, a site emergen·
cy and a general emergency.
This is what they mean:
An unusual event could signify
as many as 30 different mishaps,
including a minor release of
radioactive fluid. Or it could
mean that the temperature of
the reactor coolant system was
getting too high, requiring a
plant shutdown.
It could mean there was an
airplane era.sh on the sprawling
plant grounds near Sa n
Clemente pr that an explosion
had occurred with minor
damage to facilities.
According to emergency plan·
ners in Orange County, an un-
usual event would not constitute
a real emergency condition, but
could escalate to a more severe
status if appropriate action was
not taken.
H plant safety continued to
International
erode, an alert would have to be
called.
This could mean that an ac~i
dent had occurred resulting in
unexpected plant radiation
levels greater than 1.000 times
the norm. It also could mean
that the reactor coolant system
had sprung a leak greater than
5Q gallons per.minute or that an
explosion had occurred affectin1
operation of the plant
County planning officials said
the purpose of the alert level
was to assure that emergency
personnel would be available
and ready to res pond when
needed.
H conditions continued to
worsen, a "site emergency"
would be declared. raising the
possibility that r adioactive
materials could soon seep or
spew out of the reactor's con-
tainment domes, the reinforced
concrete cupolas that rise so
prominently along the Southern
California shoreline in northern
San Diego County.
At this level. a fire could be af-
fecting safety systems needed to
keep the reactor core cool or for
shutting down the plant.
It could mean an explosion
had caused severe damage to
shutdown equipment or that an
earthquake had jolted the plant.
It could also mean that Edison
engineers had to nee the control
room
Orange County's emergency
plan states: "Most events in this
c ategory constitute a clear
potential for significant environ·
<See GETTING, Page A3>
Canadi an cont r oller s refuse to hand le New York planes.
By Tbe Associated Press
Nearly all international air
traffic to and from New York
was stopped because controllers
in Canada were refusing to han-
dle the planes. a Federal Avia-
tion Administration official said
today.
striking American counterparts
by refusing to process flights to
and from the United States.
Owens said that controllers in
Toronto and Winnipeg were not
handling U.S. traffic and that
when controllers in Montreal
"were told to handle the traffic
flights over Canada.
•·All foreign governments
have been contacted by the State
Department concerning the is-
sue," Owens said.
Numerous flights to Canada
from Boston's Logan lnterna·
tional Airport were postponed or
In add1t1on, a Delta flight from
Miami to Montreal was diverted
to Boston. Ms. Ryan said.
Armando Ballotta, Florida's
manager for Air Canada, said
none or the five daily flights
from there had been canceled.
but "we are getting a lot of calls
from passengers." Norbert Owens, chief of air
traffic control for the Federal
Aviation Administration's
Eastern region, told reporters al
Kennedy International Airport
that "virtually all international
arrivals and departures have
been halted" because most
flights to Europe go through
Canadian air space.
Montreal controllers "were told
to handle the traffic or leave, they
left."
An 8 a m. Air Canada flight
from Montreal to Chicago was
canceled due to the protest. said
o ffi cials in Chicago. Other
airlines were reporting no can
cellations or delays
In Atlanta. Jim Ewing,
spakesman for Della Air Lines.
said a 7 p.m. flight from Mont·
real was refused clearance for
takeoff. M·eanwhile, at least one plane
was diverted from Canada and
.others from the United States
were delayed or canceled today
as Canadian air taffic con-
trollers showed support for their
or leave, they left."
He said Kennedy handles 120
international flights a day, and
"99 percent" were affected. He
s aid ai rpo rts in Bos ton.
Philadelphia, Washington and
Chicago also send international
.....................
QUtl'T TI•I AHDD -After a Sunday spent patrotllna the
beetle recreational boatinl traffic in Newport Beach chan-
nels, Deputy Don Joralemon of the Orange County Sheriff's
Department Harbor Patrol probablf. wishes he could speed
up the sunset. For a look at his dayt me duties, see Page 81.
•
scrubbed, said Jo Ryan. airport
spokeswoman. She said only Air
Canada flights from Logan were
not immediately affected by the
Canadian controllers' refusal to
process flights to and from the
United States.
* * *
Republic Airlines was forced
lo cancel two flights . one
between Detroit and Toronto <See CONTROL Page AZ>
* * * Airport operations
.near normal in OC
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of u. Deity ,..... .....
Operations at Orange County's
J ohn Wayne Airport continued
a t near-normal levels today
despite the week-old strike by
air traffic controllers
Ralph Odenwald, chief of the
Orange County tower, said
notices of intended dismissal
have been sent to 17 local con-
trollers who participated in the
strike. None of those receiving
notices has decided to return to
work. he said.
The tower is r elying on
s upervisors and four non·
striking controllers to handle
traffic at the nation's fourth
busiest airport, Odenwald said.
Asked how operations were
going, Odenwald responded,
.. Just fine "
Meanwhile. Mark Peterson, a
spokesm an for AirCal, which
operates 25 of the 41 jet de-
partures perrr.itted from Orange
County. said passenger volume
which was down substantially
last week, is improving.
For example. a 119-seat Boe-
ing 737 departing at 7:05 a.m. to-
day for San Francisco carried
113 persons, compared to 84
passengers last Wednesday.
Three other early morning
flights to San Jose. Oakland and
Sacramento also left with near-
n or ma l passenger loads,
Peterson said.
Tustin residents
return after spill
About 2 ,000 Tustin -area
residents were allowed to return
lo their homes early today,
about 13 hours after the
discovery of a chemical spill
from a 3,800-gallon tanlt at a
ferUlizer firm prompted their
ev acuatioo .
Tustin police said the
residents were permitted back
in their homes at about 1 a.m.
after chemical spill experts
cleaned up the remainine
phosphoric acid that had leaked
from the tank at Larry Fricker
Aertcultural Fertilizer Sales,
12191 Newport Ave.
Police and fire offtclala said
·five penona required treatment
for expo1ure to the acid'• fumes,
but none wu boclpitaU1ed.
Two or thdae treated were
youncaten who bad dilcovered
the chemical leak Sunday juat
IRV NE
..
N
EVACUATION
Spill area circled
before noon.
The t een -ace boya, rrom
Anaheim and Tu1tln, were
(See SPILJ.... Pa .. A.a>
... ------------__ __..., __ _ u . • .. • •. Orange Coa1t OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Augutt 10, 1811
Crowds treated
to mild water
on OC coast
Ufeguarda alone the Oranae
Coast said the thousands that
poured onto beaches tbla
weekend were treated to lake·
like conditions with waves
averaging only six inches ln
some spots.
Newport Beach city guards
said bodysurfers al the Wedae
concentrated on their tans when
waves al that usually-lively spot
failed lo raise above one foot .
Despite the flat ocean condi·
lions, one 2S-year-old beach vis·
itor in West Newport got into
trouble when caught up in a rip
tide Sunday afternoon.
Authorities said a lifeguard
rescue boat had to come to
Arturo Sanchez's aid off 10th
Street when he was pulled under
the waler. Sanchez was treated
by lifeguards and taken to Hoag
Hospitai where he remains in
serious condition.
• out durina t.he two daya to ..UOY
the ~acelul ocean condltlona.
The water temperature ln Hunt·
lnttoo topped out at 81 desrees. .
In Newport. Beach, 170,000
beach visitors squeezed onto the
sand. There were 30 rescues,
mostly attributed to a sliahl rip
tide, ovef the weekend.
A women's volleyball touma·
ment at Main Bea~h lo Laguna
bolstered attendance there.
Guards in Lacuna estimated
41,000 persona showed up durina
the weekend.
San Clemente, Doheny and
San Onofre state beaches al·
tracted 20,000 visitors each day
with little rescue activity.
"It was a calm weekend,"
commented one lifeguard, ''cer-
tainly nothing to write home or
get excited about."
A Newport man also bad bis
problems Sunday when bis 30·
foot sailboat ran aground on the
beach south of Corona del Mar
adjace n t to the Irvine
Equestrian Center.
Skipper B. Tucker told
authorities he had his craft on
automatic pilot and that when
the boat started heading for
shore, he couldn't release the
automatic pilot.
Mexican national
wounded by deputy
The boat, partially destroyed '
on one side, was to be pulled off
the sand today. .
State lifeguards in HuntingtC?n
Beach, where waves stayed
between .one to two feet, report-
ed 175,000 persons showed up at
the beach over the weekend.
Thev made 50 rescues.
H·untington Beach city
lifeguards said 100.000 turned
From Page A1
CONTROL. • •
and another between Detroit and
Montreal.
·'The Canadian government
said it was unable to handle the
traffic because of problems with
their controllers," said airline
spokesman Neal St. Anthony.
A man believed to be a Mex ·
ican national suffered
superficial wounds early today
in Dana Point when an Orange
County Sheriff's deputy's gun
accidentaJJy discharged during
an arrest, according lo a
sheriff's spokesman.
Lt. Wyatt Hart said Demetrio
O'Campo Vallez, 21, was treated
and released at San Clemente
General Hospital alter a 1 a.m.
s hooting incident in the parking
lot behind the Silver Lantern
Cafe at 33472 Silver Lantern St.
Hart said Deputy Tim Stewart
was returning lo his patrol car
after a confrontation with Velle2
and four companions when his
gun fired. Fragments of the
bullet struck Vellez's right arm
and side as he lay on the pave-
ment.
Hart said Stewart was called
to the cafe after Vellez and his
compa nion s allegedly
threatened the manager with
lead pipes and knives during a
verbal dispute.
The five Hispanics reportedly
accosted Stewart who pulled his
service revolver and forced the
men to lie on the ground.
While be was returning to bis
car to radio for assistance, his
gun went off. Hart said the acci-
dent is under investigation.
Hart said Vellez and the four
others who accompanied him to
the cafe are in custody. They are
identified as Pablo Vega O'Cam-
po, 29, Leopoldo Hernandez
Lagunas , 18, David Lopez
Alaniz, 18 and a 17-year-old.
None has a permanent address.
Hart said the juvenile is being
held al Juvenile Hall in Santa
Ana, while the other four are at
Orange County Jail. Each was
booked on suspicion of assault
with a deadly weapon and is be-
ing held in lieu of $10,000 bail.
The FAA said U.S. air traffic
Sunday, the seventh day of the
strike by 12 ,000 controllers ,
showed 81 percent of scheduled
flights took off, after hitting a
peak of 83 percent Saturday.
Transportation Secretary Drew
Lewis attributed the drop to cut·
ting controllers on the job from
60 hours' work last week to 48
hours.
Barricaded Lagunan
s urrenders to cops
In another development, a
bomb threat forced partial
evacuation of the air traffic con-
trol center at Toronto's interna·
lional airport, an air lower
supervisor said. There were a
few planes in the air at the time
and a skeleton crew remained
on duty while police searched
the building, he said.
From Page A1
'IV ...
offenders to be included in the
resolution.
The resolution's conclusion
reads:
A Laguna Beach man who
barricaded himself inside his
apartment Sunday night surren-
dered to police after a 45-minute
standoff in wbich nearby resi·
dents were evacuated.
Charles "Tennessee" Smith,
22. of 2961.h Cypress ·onve, left
his .38 caliber handgun inside
his apartment and gave himself
up to police at about 9:30 p.m.
Sunday.
He was being held today in
Orange County Jail on suspicion
of assault with a deadly weapon.
Bail was set at $25,000.
Police said Smith's neighbor
allegedly spotted the man steal-
From Pag~ Al
ing a Boogie board from bis
yard and pursued Smith. The
victim said Smith turned and
pointed a handgun at him and
the two men began to scuffle.
Smith apparently dropped the
weapop and the two separated.
A few minutes later, the victim
again confronted Smith and the
suspect again pointed the
handgun at him.
It was during the second scuf-
fle that witnesses called police
and Smith purportedly ran to bis
apartment.
Police evacuated four res·
idences s urrounding the Cy·
press Drive apartment before
Smith gave himself up.
"Further resolved, that tr,
prevent the impla nting of
immoral. obscene and criminal
thoughts in the minds of men,
that aJJ members of the Knights
of Columbus do everything in
their power to influence their
family , friends, relatives.
neighbors and others to keep
away from and refuse to
patronize all companies and
or ganizations who use such
methods of their advertising for
their promotional purposes."
SPILL IN TUSTIN • • •
HD man held
in break-in try
exposed to the fumes as they
bicycled near the fertilizer firm
and a·pparenUy pedaled through
the liquid acid. They were taken
to Western Medical Center in
Santa Ana for precautionary
treatment.
Also r~uiring treatment were two firefighters from the Orange
County Fire Department.
A 25 -year-old Huntington
Beach man was arrested Sunday
night while allegedly trying to
break into the Lucky Discount
Center al Bolsa Chica Street and
Heil A venue via a rooftop grat·
ing, police said today.
The acid spill, which bad
begun 'about 9 a.m .. required
authorities to evacuate all
residents li\'lng in the area
generally bounded by Irvine
Boulevard, La Colina, Eliubeth
and Holt avenues.
The area most affected by the
fumes was the intersection of
Newport A venue and Irvine
Boulevard, according to police
spokesmen. Retail areu also
were evacuated.
The first evacuations were
ordered al about 12:30 p.m. and
an emergency center waa set up
at Columbus Tustin Inter·
mediate School.
Paul Perkins was arrested on
suspicion of burglary in connec-
tion with the 11 :55 p.m. incident, police said.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomas P. Haley
~ -~ Eaecu11•• omc ..
Robert N. Weed .._
Thomas A. Murpt11ne
h!IOt
Mich•I P. Harvey .........,. °"9Ctor
L Kay Schultz ow.a.. ol Opw-
Ken,,.th N Godderd Jr. ~°'*'°' Bernard Schulman
~
CtwlelH.LOOI ............. £-
Carol A. Moor• ........
CleH lfted ~18'nt 1141M2·N71
All othef depeftments 142-4321
MAIN Off1CE
lJO West .. " SI .. COila .... CA. Mall ecldrHa loa U .. , C .. la MeM, CA .,.,.
CottYrltflC ""Or-COHt .............. C-He "-' ''°''-'· lll11llrall0tl~. echlorlal ,.. .. ,., or a• verl1t•me01t1 lle<e101 may M r aprO<lu<ed wot"°'11
t.t>e<lall1trmlnl4Nlo•<-ot>'l'fltlllo•N• 1 '
S.cOOld ciao -•• palo at COiia M•M, Cafffornla IUPS I.._) SUb1crlptlOft by carrlfr M 00 mont11lf. Dy mall "'° _ .. ,.,. mllllan IHShNI_, ... 00 ...... "''"
A medlcal aid station aiso was
established at a department store
nearby. Radio and television
broadcasts and door-to-door
notification by authorities alerted
nearly 2,000 residents to leave the
area.
Assisting in the evacuation
and cordoning off the area were
police officers from Tustin,
Santa Ana, Irvine and the
Orange County Sheriff's
Department. Other units from
the Orange County Fire
Department and the California
Highway Patrol also were called
in. No problems were reported
in the removal of retldents.
The pboepboric acid, wblch ls
used fn the manufacture of
fertilizers, can cause burning lo
the chest and watering Qf the
eyes if its fUmea are Inhaled. It
i1 considered to be poisonous.
Cause of the leak in the
above-ground tank ts under lnveetilaOon. Spokesmen for the
Tult1n police and Orange County
Fire Department, wblcb serves
Tultin, said they dld not know
wha~ caused the huae tank to belln lellldq lta contents! Cleanup ol the toxic spill by
dlktn1 and vacuumlna was
h andled by t he IT Corp. of
Wibnlncton.
Streets which bad been clOHd
la the area ol lhe spill allo were
reopened early thl• mornln1.
The Intersection of Newport
A venue and lrviDe Boulevard
opeoed a abort time later.
Worker8 r etom
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (AP) -
Workers at two nuclear weapons-
and research centers be1an
retumtn1 to work after ratltytn1
a new contract and endln1 a
"-day strike.
OFF-ROAD WINNERS -Mike Lund of Huntington Beach.
with co-driver Mir Smith. won the Class 2 off-road race
championship at Riverside International Raceway Sunday.
For stor y, see sports. Page C2.
Airline
chairman
suicide?
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
c hairman o f Continental
Airlines, an embattled organiza-
tion desperately fighting
takeover by Texas International
Airlines, apparently committed
suicide, a Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport spokesman said.
The body of A.L. Feldman, 53,
Continental's chairman and
chief executive officer, was
found Sunday night in the ex·
ecutive suite of his airport of·
fice, said John Smith, the direc-
tor of airport operations.
Smith said a gun was found in
Feldman's suite and that the
Continental executive apparent-
ly had shot himself. His body
was found shortly before 8 p.m.
Los Angeles Police Depart·
ment detective Gary Guthrie
said, "We have a telephoned
confirmation that an A.L.
Feldman has been shot." In-
vestigators were unavailable for
further comment early today
Feldman stepped into the post
of chairman of the corporation
at Continental last month.
George A. Warde was named
president and chief operating
officer and Robert F. Six
retained the title of chairman of
the board.
AJthough Feldman reportedly
met Sunday with other Continen-
tal officials to map strategy in
what was shaping up as a losing
fight against the Texas Interna-
tional takeover, his death ap-
peared unrelated lo those
events.
"I understand -this is not of·
fi ciaJ -that he left three suicide
not es." Smith s aid. "They
basicaJly stated that he lost his
wife recently and bad the in·
timation that life wasn't worth
living."
Smith said a gun was found in
Feldman's suite. He did not
know who found Feldman's
body.
Before joining Continental on
Feb. 1, 1980. Feldman had been
president and chief executive of-
fi cer of Frontier Airlines nine
years.
Before that, be served 17
years with Aerojet General
Corp. most recently with Aerojet
Nuclear Systems Co.
-----------------
If you want Ill Cord Straight Legs,
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Our four basic colors are off·white, II blue, tan
and navy In 84% cotton, 16% palyester for shrinkage cootrOI
At:SGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPoAT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
From Page A1
GETfING AWAY • • •
m eotal relt.... of radloactlve
mat.rtaJ." -n.. lut condition, "1eneral
emenency," would involve a
major failure of plant aalet.y
systems, lc~adJng to Potentlal
m aJor releue of airborne
radioactive materials. Evacua· tlon wou ld ,be a distinct
possibility.
Pilmer said that in the three
highest categories -that Is, ex·
eluding an unuaual event -the
watch engineer at San Onofre
woutd be charged with the
responsibility of calling out sta·
tion management to activate an
on·slte technical support center.
From this so-called "nerve
center" near the plant's control
room, utility officials would seek
to quickly evaluate an incident,
control it and also notify off.site
agencies.
In the case of an "unusual
event," plant officials would be
required to contact Orange
Co unty communications
facilities, on a telephone de·
signed and installed for that
purpose, within one hour of the
occurrence, county plans say.
"When higher alert levels are
involved, either due to a de·
gradation of a former (reported)
problem. or as an initial report,
the contact will be made within
15 minutes," the plans state.
After such a n alert, plant
operators would keep Orange
County authorities completely
informed as more information
becomes available.
Sa,hooJ in HWlllniton Beach.
Notlflcatlon of the public
would be accom pll1hed -
theoreUcaJly -by bavlnc ttti·
dents tune In on radlot and
telovialon to receive information
on WhMt is to be done. 'lbat's
where the alrens as well 11
mobl~e public addreu unlta
would come in.
Decisions on whether to
evac1,1ate or simply have tesl·
dents stay indoors, officials said,
would be "an early critical de· cision.''
Selective evacuation or
general evacuation ultimately
could be ordered.
Specific hospitals which could
handle patients with radioactive
contamination and complica-
tions would be utilized, including
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital , Hoag M emorlal
Hospital in Newport Beach, UC
Irvine Medical Center in Orange
and South Coast Medical Center .
The chairman of the county
Board of Supervisors would
have ultimate responsibility for
command and control of the
Orange County emergency or-
ganization.
In San Clemente and San Juan
Capistrano, key city officials
wo•t,ld provide direction and
coordination of emergency ac-
tivities in their communities.
Re·entry of residents to affect·
ed areas would take place when
radiation levels diminished suf-
ficiently to meet occupancy
standards spelled out in the
county's response plan.
(On Tues<{oy, plant critic a
describe their objection• to
emergency preporedneu /01' com-
m unities neor the San Onofre
Nuckor Generating Station.)
•
Orange Coast OAlLV PILOT/Monday, August 10, 1981
ORAHGR COUNTY/SAN DIEGO COUNTY AMAi NORTH OF IAN ONOFM NUCUAR QIMMTINO ITATK>H
EVACUATION ROUTES TO AECEPT10N CENTERS
RICl.PTION CINTEA
Un•-s•tr ol Caltlorn•a
Un1vera1ty SI , '''"!'Cl
Same as Aoove
Or•noe Coast College
2701 F•ltv1ew Ra
Costa Mes<1
Same as A!><We
Sanla Ana Htgh SchOOI
520 W W;ilnul SI ,Santa An•
Tusltn High School
1111 Laguna RO
Tu1t1n
Ellison High School
21'600 Magnoha Ave
Huntington Beacn
ROUT£ NORTH
15140!)
Pac•hc C-0"51 Hwy
I~ 1.o!I
I~
This data would include mete-
orological conditions such as
wind speed and direction,
estimated release rates and con·
centrations of radioactive
materials. the types of isotopes
which might be involved, on-site
monitoring results, extent of
damage at the site and an
estimate of repair time. * * * Evacuation routes f rom San Onofre lead to Irvine, Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach. Santa Ana and Tustin campuses.
Officials in San Clemente and
Sa n Juan Capistra no ,
meanwhile, who also would have
been notified, would continue to
dire"t their resources and
personnel. There would be close
coordination between these
cities and Orange County, plan-
ners said.
Nail-biting nuclear emerg.ency recalled
County supervisor s and
emergency officials would have
to evaluate the seriousness of
the incident "in terms of possi·
ble hazard to the public," ac-
cording to planners.
If evacuation became
necessary, pre-determined re·
ception and care centers would
be opened, principally on school
sites, in areas outside the
emergency and extended plan·
ning zones.
Six facilities were picked to
serve as initial reception cen-
ters. Citizens would report lo a
center depending on which area
they lived in.
The six centers would be at
Santa Ana Hig h School, UC
Irvine, Omnge Coast College in
Costa Mesa, Edison High School
in Huntington Beach, Tustin
High School and Marina High
Ask John Corney how well be
remembers the events of March
28, 1979, and he'll likely give you
a minute-by-minute synopsis of
that spring day.
And of the next, and the next.
and the next . . .
As an official o f Penn-
sy l vania's Emergency
Management Office in Har-
risburg, Corney became a fll"St-
hand observer or the nation's
firs t ~nd o nly commercial
nuclear power plant accident at
Three Mile Island, a name that
has become a fixture in nuclear
terminology.
Within four tension-packed
days -beginning on March 28
-Pennsylvania's emergency
planners prepared for the worst:
evacuation of about 150,000 peo-
ple living within 10 miles of the
crippled nuclear power plant.
As it ultimately turned out, on-
ly preenant women and children
under five years of age were
asked to leave the area while
e ngineers with Metropolitan
Edison struggled to galn control
of the plant's damaged Unit 2 re·
actor.
Although there w•s no
meltdown of the reactor's fuel
core, Nuclear Regulatory Com·
mission officials said, there was
considerable damaee to tt.
And although no full-tledted
evacuation of loc al residents
became necessary, eveata at
Three Mlle Island came to play
a majpr role in reabapine
federal pollc!y reaardiaj pre-
paration of e1ner1ency plans for
communities near nvclear
power plants.
Accordin1 to NRC 1,otesman
James Hanchett, the federal agency, before tbe Three Jlile
Island incident, did not require
off-site emergency plans as a
Heat and tempers soar
Thirsty prisoners protest, bridge stuck open ., 11 a ,.
" SJ .. •7 Comtal fore cast
N 19111 e11d •••Ir mor11lr19 low
clo11d1 otlwrwlH telr 11111 lleay
tlW'ollVfl TtafdeY.
C-·-•2. lnl-M . CMnel llloll ._ 'Ila, llllend mlcldle ...
Wetw10. El-re, llefll verleble wlllcls
nltflt -mornl119 llwt'1 lleC011'1"'9 wn"'1y 10 to II Mob wltll 2 to •toall
wlftd -lr1 •"•~'-OM to ). tool IOOll!lwft1erly swell tllro119'1 tGnltM. SUrtrlY .,.,__
U.S. summary
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What dq you like about 'the Dally PIJolT
Wh•t don't you like? Call the nu,.ber below and
your maaa1e Will be f'ft«'ded..:utertMd apd
delivered to the appropriate .
The same 24·hour anawwtal 1ervke may
be used to record letten to the edttor en any
topic. Mailbox contributon mutt lneludt tbtlr
name and telephone number for vertncatlon. No
circulation calls. please. ·
Tell ua what's on your m.lnd.
formal condition or licensing ap-
proval.
"We did require a utility to
have the capability to notify off.
site agencies," said Hanchett.
After Three Mile Island,
however, requirements changed
dramatically . A so-called
emergency planning zone was
established for communities
within 10 miles of a nuclear
power plant, requiring prepara-
tion of acceptable evacuation
plans.
Tbese plans were required to
meet certain federal criteda as
well as pass disaster drills
m onitored by the Federal
Emergency Management Agen·
cy CFEMA).
When Comey and his state and
local colleaeues in Harrisburg
found themselves confronted
with a nuclear crisis in March
1979, the plans at their disposal
covered much less territory than
10 miles and were "rudimen·
tary" in comparison with docu·
ments now required by the NRC.
"It was a learning experience
for all," said Corney in a recent
interview, recalling bow of-
ficials coped with the ongoing
emergency at Three Mile Island.
The first that local officials
knew of the situation on March
28 was at 7 a .m ., three hours
alter plant workers first noticed
problem! with the Unit 2 reac·
tor.
Corney said utility officials felt
there was no need to notify off.
site agencies during those first
few hours.
But once the call cam e
through to state officials, all
emergency management offices
-
in a three-county area were
alerted. So were the governor's
and lieutenant governor's of-
fices.
"We were prepared, if
necessary. to begin the early
stages of relocation (of resi·
dents)," the state official said,
ex plaining that buses were
moved in for quick boarding and
departure.
Meanwhile, workers with the
state's Bureau of Radiation
Protection w~re put in contact
wiUt utilit,y engineers on site to
assess the danger at the plant.
By 8 a .m ., an hour alter off·
site agencies had been nqt.ified
of the plant's problems, the
bureau said further protective
action in the community was not
required.
This uneasy situation pre-
vailed for the next two days,
Comey said. By Friday, March
30, the "scenario began to un-
fold."
Radioactive materials were
released into the atmosphere
from the crippled power plant.
The releases were variously
described as both accidental and
controlled.
Al this point , "The NRC said
we should think of evacuating
out to 10 miles," said Corney .
The governor also recom-
mended that pre-schoolers and
pregnant women witbtn five
miles of the plant also leave the
a rea.
A care center was established
at a large auditorium on the out-
skirts of the 10-mile emergency
zone.
Health officials told residents
near the plant to remain indoors
that Friday, but the advisory
was lifted later in the day
Teletypes were used between
counties fo r communications
purposes and hot Lines also were
installed. The federal govern
m e nt provide d ra dio com·
munications equipment.
Though everyone remained
poised for the order that would
send 150,000 Pennsylvanians
scurrying ror safe ground, the
situation never re ached that
stage.
After hectic days filled with
contradictory announcements
a nd fears or contamination.
state officials said it would be
all right for residents who had
left their homes to return. ··A
good number came on Monday,"
said Corney.
The experience of dealing with
a nail-biting nuclear emergency
had several effects. "The most
important thing out of all this,"
said Corney, "is that an aware·
ness grew of the potential ... It
was always there."
Whereas emergency planning
for flash flooding ·once took
priority over nuclear accident
planning, he said, the order was
joltingly reversed.
"(Nuclear planning) 1s very,
'very high on the List of our plan·
ning people,'' he said
Because of Three Mile Island,
requirements for emergency
planning tightened considerably.
At the state and five-county area
a r ound TMI , emergency
response plans have been re·
written numerous times. Now,
s aid Corney. "there is no such
thing as a finished plan."
-David Kutzmann
it's stnz.tdl"cz.spe pl~·which
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s i2<l.S 28-38.
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.....
H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
WUJ[TI[OO
OPEC chiefs seek·
o _il price unity
KUWAIT (AP) -OPEC oll ~lni1ter1 wlll hold a special Jrleetint Aug. 19 ln Geneva to try
to un1fy oil prices and end the
current supply glut on world
marltets. a Kuwaiti official says.
Dr. Abdul Rahman al·Awaddi,
actina mte minister for Cabinet ·
affairs, said Sunday that Alaeria
and Ubya have c::r,lained that
a alut caused m y by Saudi
Arabia baa resulted in economic
bardabip to some member coun-
tries. especially Niaeria.
Hunger striJres
mnka increase
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(AP) -IRA guerrilla Patrick
Sheehan, 23, refused breakfast
at Maze Prison today, joining
the hunger strike that has
claimed nine lives since it began
March 1. The family of another
hunger striker was summoned
to the bedside of their starving
son.
Hunger striker Michael
Devine's family was called to
his prison bedside today after
bis condition deteriorated sharp·
ly on the 49lh day of bis death
fast. Sinn Fein, the political arm
of the outlawed Irish Republican
Army, said the 27-year-old guer-
rilla's health was failing but
gave no details.
Dol,/ar makes new
globed gains
LONDON (AP> -The U.S.
dollar, already at a 10-year high
against .key world currencies,
posted more gains in European
trading today, reaching record
highs against the French franc
and Italian lira. Gold prices fell .
Spurred by high U.S. interest
rates and nervousness about
Soviet intentions in Poland, the
aolJar also gained 2~ pfeMigs
against the Deutscfiemark,
pushing it to a five-year peak
against the West German cur-
rency. And the dollar reached its
highest level since October 1977.
against the British pound.
Evangeline Carey, wife of
New York Gov. Hugh Carey.
tosses 1:1a.$ketball during .
game at National Governors
Conference in Atlantic City.
The notion's governors took
time out to play the Sunday
ga~ publiciztng the Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation.
Nixon offered
tavern mmenhi,p
Former president a&elllant
NI.um was offered the deed
to ooe of the oldest -and
smallest -taverna in Fort
Colllna, Colo. if he showed up
for a party celebrat.lna the
seventh anniversary of bla
reallUtkln. "Ile waa nice enoueh to re-
sip for us, to when I die, I'd
like to live blm the bar,"
aald Guy IUmee:r, owner of
the Town Pump: a landmark
. tbat meuura out 11 by 30
feet. . KhnN)' Mid that eacb year
IUtee 11'1'1 be b.al lqvttecl Nb-
oa to 1111 ~br•tloo marldq
the ct., tM former pretldlllt. 1tell*I down, Au •. I, lfH,
followta1 tbe Weter1ate
IC!aadill.
About too DemoC!rah
1at.bered '' Uie 1Cenned7
Tropi,ool, st.onn
gathering /orce
MIAMI CAP> -Tropical
Storm Dennis, carrying top
winds of 65 mph and churnlnt
westward through the Atlantic
at about 23 mph, could reach
hurricane strength within a day,
forecasters at the National Hur·
ricane Center in Miami said thla
morning.
Tropical storms become bur·
ricanes if their maximum sus-·
tained winds reach 74 mph.
Ciuter proUes
Sat/a4's efforts
PLAINS, Ga. CAP) -Former
President Jimmy Carter,
welcoming Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat to Georgia, said it
was time for Palestinians to re-
ceive full autonomy on the West
Bank and in the Gaza Strip.
Sadat praised the former pres:
ident for his role in seeking
peace in the Middle East, while
Carter called Sadat a man of
strength and courage.
Prime mi.nist.er
of Portugal, qWb
LISBON <AP) -Francisco
Pinto Balsemao resigned today
as Portugal's ninth post-
revolution prime minister, declaring a bitter rift in his own
Social Democratic Party made
it "impossible to stay in office."
Pinto Balsemao's resignation
came despite a 37-15 vote of con-
fidence in his government Satur-
day by the party's governing
National Council.
Embassy bombed
VIENNA, Austria (AP>
Powerful bomb blasts today rat·
tied the Israeli Embassy in
Vienna and Israel's diplomatic
mission in Athens. One woman
was reported slightly hurt by
flying glass in Vienna, police
said.
family compound at Hyan·
nisport, Mass. to listen to a
Dixieland band, eat clams in
the rain and donate $200
apiece for Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy's re-election cam-
paign.
Rose Kennedy, 91 , the
senator's mother, presided
over the gathering. Most
other Kennedy family mem-
bers were on hand, but Joan
Kennedy, the senator's
estranged wife, did not at-
tend.
"About a year ago, we
thought we would be holding
this occasion in another
garden, The Rose Garden,"
Kennedy told reporters in a
reference to his failed 1980
race for the Democratic pres··
idential nomination. "But.
welcome to Rose's garden,"
he added.
Gov. Eugene Gatling was
an impostor among 47 gen-
uine state chief executives
at. the National Governors'
Association meeting in Atlan-
tic City. N.J .
Actor James Noble, 59,
who plays Gatling on the
"Benson" television series,
was invited by New Jersey
Gov. Brendan T. Byrne to at-
tend the three-day meeting
at a Boardwalk casino hotel.
Noble, who lives lo Studio
City; Calif., attended social
functions with the real gov-
ernors at the Hambletonian
Pace horse race at the
Meadowlands and a dinner at
the World Trade Center in
New York City. He also sat
in on a gQvernon' meeting
on refugees.
U.S. Sen. S.l. Hayakawa?
chairman of the Senate panei
on East Asia and the Pfcific,
exchanged views with 1bai
Prime Minister Prem
Tl•••l .. o•da today in
Bangkok on the Cambodian
conflict and future U.S. aid
increases for refu1ee1.
Pl'em declined to elaborate
OD the 45-minute meeUn&,
but said details would be
liven to the pre11 Tueaday
by Hayakawa ln a newa con· ference.
The l.S American cllmben ~et to leave on a trek up the
eaat race of Mount Everest
are divided over the trip'•
chances for succe11 .
Altbouth the north 1lde of the
Hlmalayen mountain bu
been conquered, DO one bu
ever reached tbe 1ummtt up
the Nit atde.
Climber ,... a.AeDeJ of
Soc+ee laid tbe tum bal a
"" .........
Soviets, Czechs
hold war games
WARSAW, Poland <Af> -Wars aw Pact mill ary
maneuvers in the Silesia in-
dustrial belt ol Poland w•re re-
ported today by an army
newspaper aa the aovetnment
'ent a team of negotiators to
Gdansk to discuss ti\e food
crisis.
The hardline arm)' daily
Zolnierz Wolnosci repol'tf!d "war
games" in southern Poland in·
volved forces from the Soviet
Union and Czechoslovakia.
There was no elaboration on the
report, whlch was not carried by
the general Polish media.
The Soviet Union's Warsaw
Pact commander in chief,
Viktor Kulikov, held talks over
the weekend with Polis h
Premier Wojciecb Jaruzelski,
who is also Poland's defense
minister, and other 1ovemment
officials. Naval rnatieuvers by
Soviet forct!S are under way on
the Baltic coast of Lithuania.
Kulikov held talks last week in
Czechoslovakia and East
Germany, apparently signaling
a new round of Warsaw Pact
maneuvers, Western diplomats'
in Warsaw said.
against the 1ovemment'a cut lo
the August meat ration, lts plans
to raise food prices and the
shortages of most staples also
were certain to dominate a
meeting Tuesday of the Com-
munist Party's Central Commit·
tee. ·
Solidarity chief Lech Walesa
cited the union meetine as bia
reason for rejecting a govern·
ment offer of television time to-
day to discuss the food crisis.
Walesa also proposed a
television debate Saturday with
Deputy Premier Mieciyslaw
Rakowski, the government's
chief labor troubleshooter.
Soviets call
neutron nwve
'barbaric'
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Reagan admlnistratioo, accused
by the Soviet Union of taking "a
step toward nuclear death,''
says producing the neutron
warhead and storing it at home
will reduce the need of ever
deploying it.
MOTHERLY LOVE -A giraffe at the Stoneham, Mass., zoo
A government delegation went
to the Baltic port of Gdansk to-
day to talk with Solidarity union
leaders on the food crisis, which
has plunged Poland into re·
newed widespread unrest.
Officials of the independent
labor federation opened the two-
day meeting to debate a pro·
posed government-union aaree-
ment on how to deal with the
crisis. Details of the agreement
were not available, but it was
reportedly negotiated Friday
before government-union talks
on the crisis brole"Off.
Major European allies
generally refrained from com-
ment on the weekend announce-
ment of President Reagan's de·
cision to go ahead with produc-
li on, calling it America's
business. But s mall NATO coun-
tries and at least one neutral
condemned the move.
li cks her newborn calf hours after giving birth to the first
giraffe born in captivity in New England.
58 French citizens
depart from Iran The government delegation
was led by Stanislaw Ciosek, a
government official •dealing with
trade unions, and a team of "ex-
perts," officials said.
In Moscow. the Soviet news
agency Tass said, "All signs in-
dicate that this is in line with
(Reagan's) new strategy de-
signed to justify the admissibili·
ty of a limited nuclear war and
condition people to this horrible
thought." BEIRUT, Lebanon· CAP> -A
group of 58 French nationals,
prevented from leaving Iran last
week, took off from Tehran
airport on an Iran Air flight to
Paris today. the Iranian Foreign
Ministry announced.
An External Affairs Ministry
spokesman in Paris sajd 57
'French citizens left and the de·
parture of three others had
again been delayed, "two
because of minor financial
problems and the third, an Ira-
nian married to a Frenchman,
sO·SO chjlnce of success after
it starts the trip Tuesday.
The climbers hope to reach
the top of the world's highest
peak Oct. 4.
When President Reagan
wants to get away from it all
for a summer vacation, he
really gets away.
Except for horseback rid-
ing and clearing brush, how
Reagan is spending his time
is almost a state secret. Ex-
cept for a handful of aides,
Reagan and his wife, Nancy,
are isolated at their 688-acre
ranch atop the· Santa Ynez
mountains.
Even if r epo rters or
curiosity seekers make the
60-minute drive from Santa
Barbara, much of it up a nar-
row, sometimes treacherous
road, the closest they get to
the president is the main
gate -about fi ve miles from
the ranch house.
Country rock music singer
Edd.le RabbiU and his wife
have become parents for the
first time. ·
Rabbitt's wife, Janine,
gave birth to a seven-pound,
six-ounce daughter who has
been named Demelza Anne.
Mrs. Rabbitt and the baby
were in good condition at
Williamson County Hospital
in Franklin, Tenn.,
Jrifl'I LeBeou of the
C~ River Indian
ReNrVOtion Mar Sheridan,
WNO .• hal bun se~cted tlw
21th Miu lndbt America.
SM UMOTI tM crown oft.,.
thrn-dafl ~t in
Shmdan.
because she did not ha ve an exit
visa."
There was no immediate ex-
planation for the discrepancy in
figures on the number who left.
Iranian spokesman Reza Alavi
Tabatabaie said a second group
of French nationals, including
Ambassador Guy Georgy, is
scheduled to leave Wednesday.
Of the 144 french citizens liv-
ing in Iran, a skeleton staff of
diplomats is staying to staff the
embassy and a handful of Chris·
tian religious workers have re-
fused to leave.
Solidarity called off one pro·
test Sunday, a women's hunger
march planned for the Baltic
seaport of Gdansk. A spokesman
said the march was canceled
because or the ''tense situation.''
Another protest, in the small
southern city of Krosno, took
place on schedule with residents
rallying in the streets to demand
full meat rations and immediate
economic reforms, the official
PAP news agency said.
Widespread public protests
Calling neutron warheads
"barbaric" and "a step toward
nuclear death," Tass said the
decision to build them recalled
•·the same cannibalistic in-
stincts" that led to the U.S.
atomic bombing of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki in Japan in World
War II.
The Soviet Union "will have to
give such a response to the
chaJlenge that will be demanded
by the security interests of the
Soviet people and their allies,"
Tass said
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Fruit fly still spreading
Medf ly Jou~ outside three-county quarantin,e zone
LOS GATOS <AP) -Official.a
batUlng a tenacious fruit fly find
that the infestation baa spread
farther afield, ralaing tbe
specter than a fourth county
may be infested.
An· egg.carrying Mediterra·
nean fruit fly was found over the
weekend ln Santa Cruz County.
30 miles southwest of the three·
county quarantine zone in which
officials thought they had the
bug corralled.
County supervisors plan to
meet today, the first day of the
county's apple harvest, to dis·
cuss the dlsco'.rery. Apples are
among the more than 200 pulpy,
fruits and veaetablea that can
play host to the Medny.
No ma&aota have been found.
Without that, aarlcQlture of·
flclals don't know whether tie
fly was one that happened to
find its way out of the quaran·
tine area or whether it indicates
the Medlly bas establl.abed a
foothold in the county.
If mag1ots are discovered,
ground spraying would belin
immediately, said Jack Sim·
men. county agriculture com·
missioner. No aerial spraying is
planned, but trapping was
stepped up immediately.
Jerry Scribner, head of the
64 skydivers join
in midair record
PERRIS VALLEY (AP) -
They were three seconds short
of a world record, but one of 64
skydivers who held bands in
midair says completing "the
largest human formation ever
flown" was its own reward.
Tossing themselves from
three DC·ls flying at 15,000 feet
Sunday, 64 parachutists linked
in eight diamonds plummeting
at 95 mph. U.S. Parachute As·
sociation records say that's four
more people than the previous
record.
The jumpers from across
Southern California, including 12
Navy paratroopers from San
Diego and nine women, executed
the ~tunt after four attempts
above Perris Va~y Airport in
southwestern Rive'rside County.
Search pressed
for 4-year-old
CORONADO CAP> -An all-
points bulletin was out today in
Baja California and the western
United States for a 4-year-0ld
Provo, Utah, girl believed kid·
napped on a visit with her
parents.
Maria Martin, brown·haired
and wearing a white and black
polka dot dress and sandals. dis·
appeared outside a Coronado
motel Saturday night. ·Al the
time, her parents were carrying
in groceries from a shopping
trip. Donald Martin, a SS-year·
old chemist, said "she was un-
supervised for about five
minutes -and somebody ap·
parently snatched her in that
five minutes."
Hearst acquires
30 neuJJpapen
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
Hearst Corp. bas acquired 30
Los Angeles County newspapers
as part of a program to create a
community network in conjunc-
tion with the Herald Examiner,
officials announced.
Expanding Hearst's county
distribution to more than 700,000
copies a day, the firm b aa
purchased two dailies and 28
weeklies, Los Angeles Herald
Examiner officials said. Com-
bined circulation of the new
palM"fS, to be owned by Hearst
Community Newspapers Inc ..
will be 425,000.
Sunballwr kilkd
in jeep mishap
LA JOLLA <AP> -Coroner's
officers were trying to identify a
middle-aged man who was run
over and killed by a city
lifeguard's petrol wagon while
sunbathing at Black's Beach.
The lifeguard, identified as Al
Br uton, dropped off another
lifeguard and said he struck the
man about 10 feet away while
driving at slow speed on Sunday.
Lifeguards and paramedics
were unable to revive him.
Police probe
2 abductions
SAN JOSE (AP) -City police
are trying to determine if
there's a link between the cue
of a l2-year-0ld girl who wu
missing for six weeks and the
five·month abduction of another
young girl.
Calling it "an awful coin·
cidence," San Jose police
planned today to interview a girl
from nearby Palo Alto who told
police that she escaped last
week from a mountain hideout
where she had been raped re-
peatedJy by her captor. She was
not identified. Abo last Tuesday,
Jeana Rodriguez, 12, of San
Jose, returned home after being
abducted in February.
eradication effort, aald Sunday
be would meet with the
supervisors and Simmen today.
"All it means la we have a bla·
ger war, but lt doesn't mean
what we are doing t. failln1," be
said.
"We don't know yet whether it
was an adult fiy carried out on
somebody's clothes or larvae
carried out in fruit and thia fly
'emerJed_," he said of the Santa
Crus~.
· Meanwhile, a single helicopter
is set to spray malathion over a
smal l Tampa, F l a .,
neighborhood today where three
dead Med.rues were found lut
week, the first trace of the pest
in that state in 18 years. The find
was close. to the state's $4
billlon·a-year citrus belt .
The fourth round of aerial
spraying starts today in a 2B'7·
square·mile zone within the
quarantine area here. An addi·
tlonal 179 square miles in Santa
Clara County will be sprayed
from the air for the first time
starting in a few days. Fruit
flies were found in the area late
last week.
In addition to Santa Clara
County, Alameda and San Mateo
counties are under federal
quarantine, meaning no produce
can be shipped out without being
fumigated. The quarantine area
covers 2,082 square miles.
Officials have said they plan
to increase the number of spray-
ings from six to at least eight in
the 267 -square-mile zone
because they discovered the
fly's life cycle can be as long as
70 days, rather than 30 days, aa
previously thought.
California farmers grow half
the nation's produce. and crops
that can harbor the Medfly com·
prise a $4. 7 billion·a·year in·
dustry. Aerial spraying started
July 14 in an effort to prevent
the Oy's spreading to the state's
agricultural heartland to the
east and south.
Bakersfiel,d
temperatrue
ties record
By The Alaoelated Presa ·
It was as hot as it's ever been
at Bakersfield in August.
The temperature soared to ll2
degrees Sunday, tying a record
fo r the month set Aug. 1, 1979,
the National Weather Service re·
ported.
Naturally, it was a new record
for Aug. 9, beating that mark by
two degrees.
Fresno did almost as well, or
badly, setting a new record for
the date of 111, up two degrees
from the previous mark set in
1898. However, Fresno was two
degrees short of its all·time
August record of 113.
IT FIGUR&. ..
Cir-.d~
SA Vt 25 PERC&IT ON
WHOLI COLOMllAM COi Fii IEAMS
atT,....Joe&PtOlllo
One or the most priied vacuum cootainer1,
correea or Colombia is flushed with nitrogen lo called Colombia Excelso. hold t heir freshness. We just 1ot a shipment of Please vialt our newest · Excelso. which we're Trader Joe'• at the ln-aelling ror only 13.54 per tenection of 17th.Street.
lb. We have only S,000 Newport Boulevard and Iba . Compare al Superior Avenue (next~ S5.59·S5.H elsewhere. Denny's and Barclay II• And they're packed in Bank).
MOW IM COsTA Ml5A
Hlll'S e.oc. MIWSI
MO MORE FLEAS!
OM YOUI PIT Ol IM YOUI HOMI
PIOYIM •ACnft MAIMST:
FLEAS
ROACHES
RATS
MICE
FLIES
SPtOERS
MOSQUITOES
CMPEHTER ANTS
BEU , WASPS
CRICKETS MOTHS WATERBUOS
How long has it been since you
liked yourself in a swim suit?
Come in now ... for a fabulous
One-Month summer sl-~1 •
Lose I 0 lnchn & 8 Lbs.!
Jean Marie is the only Health Club
designed for the Mature Woman!
Improve special problems such
as Circulation, Dowager Hump,
Dropped Buttocks, Lethargy.
Tension & Stress. l'IC'
~.
\ 3\\. ·~""" ..,.., ..,..,,. ...
I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguet 10, 1981 H/F
............
OLD SHIP POPULAR -A crowd that Navy of-USS New Jersey. The s hip is al the Long ·
ficiaJs estimated at 25,000 but police sa y Beach Naval Shipyard for a $320-million re·
could have totaled 100,000 stood in long lines furbistling. Thousands we re turned away •
for hours to tour the historic battleship the from Sunday's open house. .
9 fires scorch 34,000 acres
Wind whips worst blaze in Lake, Mendocino counties
By Tiie Auoclatecl Preaa
A wind·whipped blaze in Lake
and Mendocino counties was the
fiercest of nine brush and forest
fires that together had scorched
more than 34 ,000 acres
throughout Northern California
by early today.
Ms. Thompson said nobody
has been hurt in any of the four
fires.
There is no estimated time of
containment or control.
Five homes were lost in a fire
that burned 1,500 acres in the
Inyo National Forest on the east
side of the Sierra Nevada. ac·
cording to Forest Service dis·
patcher Larry Armas.
"It's pretty rt>ugh country. It's
getting into the 10,000-and
11 .000-foot e le vations.·· s aid
I
Armas. "We have erratic winds
a nd we've got thunderheads
above.''
Two firefighters were hurt in
the bl aze. One was bitten by ai
scorpion. The other was hit in
the eye by debris, Armas said.
Officials have determined the
fire was started by children
playing with matches and said
they would talk to the parents of
the children about the hundreds
or thousands of dollars it cost to
battle the blaze.
Firefighters reported progress
in battles a1ainst some fires.
But others raged out of control
with the help of unpredictable
winds and near-record tem·
peratures. Weary forestry of-
ficials said they bad no idea
when some of the fires might be
contained.
Temperatures in some areas,
including Lake County, were ex·
pect.ed to reach 110 today.
The Lake-Mendocino fire
destroyed the Scott's Valley
Community Center, at least two
homes, a $150,000 microwave
television rel ay station, a
mobilehome and two barns, ac-
cording to Debbie Thompson.
spokeswom an for the California
Divisioo of Forestry.
Eight hurt in two
plane accidents
"Ther e are pr obably more homes destroyed, but they
haven't been able to get in and
take a look," Ms . Thompson
said.
The Lake County Sheriff's
Department evacuated the out·
skirts of Lakeport, a city of 3,800
residents about 110 mu~ north
of San Francisco. The fire was
moving slowly towards Lakeport
t his morning.
Another fire, just northeast of
the first blaze, bad burned 3,000
acres and a third fire in the area
blackened 800 acres, Ms .
Thompson said. A fire burning
in a watershed 18 miles north of
Lake Berryessa burned 7,000
acres by early today, she re-
ported.
LONG BEACH CAP) -Eight
people were injured in separate
accidents involving two private
planes over the weekend .
Authorities said one of the crafts
made an emergency landing;
the other flipped after its nose
hit a runway.
Four people aboard a Cessna
421 en route to Long Beach from
Las Vegas were injured about 6
p.m . Sunday when the plane
made an emergency landing
near a Long Beach shopping
center, said Long Beach Police
Sgt. David Drake.
The pilot. Robert Myers, 38,
had radioed that his twin-engine
plane lost power. Drake said.
The plane was damaged during
landing in a vacant oil field near
the Marina Pacifica shopping
center along the Pacific Coast
Highway.
Myers' wife, Jerry, was in
serious condition at Long Beach
C9mmunit y Hospital with a con.
cussion and fractured ribs, a
hospital official said.
Myers and his two sons, John,
22, and Anthony. 18, were treat·
ed at the hospital and released, The family a re residents o
Dominguez Hills
In the other accident, Josephj
Visger. 50, was attempting loj
la nd his Cessn a 182 Turboe
Skyline al the Catalina Islandl
airport al 9:30 a .m . Sunday
when lhe engine stalled. The
plane hit the runway on its nose,
flipped over and landed on its
back. said Los Angeles Count
sheriff's Sgt. Arthur Robinson.
Visger and his wife. Shirley
60, of Los Angeles. were trea
for minor injuries at the island'
Avalon Hospital and released.
Passengers Eugene and Billie
Lou Cowhert. of Santa Monica.
were treated for minor injurie
at the crash site, Robinson said.
~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~
aliU ... oomt .........
New, too, .. t0ft.r j8Cket
.... pilcl alit: pleet·
lhoulder illCUt In AmlriClll
8eMlty' rot1 wool tlblrdine
--• .,,.. ..... lodln
bru .. lpld ... btou.
..... ~lto129'zel
-.oo. Finl &lit Slllon
The 00H11Jdoft com. to
8ou1h Colet Plan on
T......_ llld W .. .-.Y.
Aulult 11 end , 2.
NEWS . ..................................................... : ...................... .
~ .................................................................... .
an ......................... ,, .............................•............ ..... ·-........................ : ................................ .
.... 1\R. .•••..••.•..•..••.........•...•.•.•••••• , •.•.•.•••.••........ M"dl'-'~" • 10&-120 Vot'9 At; 4 Watta
USA •A llT. t 441•MA2
... -..........
from all over Ca llfornia ts rounded up eactt day
In the ....
\
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~--~-~~~~--------------------.-..................................... a•z•t•tt~C ... ....
~· Orange Co11t DAIL.Y fllLOT/Monday, AUQUlt 10, 1981
,~·\ •lf'laq'• •o• ,,.. llaU..bi.r
D&Aa PAT DUNN I I~-two ordtrt wltb tbe rruk.Ua auat Couatr, Mon Thtmbl11. Whea tb• ftnt antvtd I at· ~,,~ ~ Chew away
tachtd one oheck to both atubl -.nd milled lt
baok. Apparently, Ulla confuttd them
becaUH rve Qftly been recelvtns one order
1tnco then. I've written tQ Franklin Mint
about t.hia, but there'• 1tW a mlxup and I'vt
stven up trylnt to 1et lt 1traiptened out on my own. smoke habit
DEAit READERS: Tbe Dow Chmlc:al
Co. bu woa federal approval to teat a •••
cbew1q pm tba& coa&alu aJeoUIN ... la 4le·
1lped to beJp 1molten q1dt. TIM tlaeof7 la
that al&bough t1ae atroaaty btpalaed laablt la
oae reason people ti.ad It eo dllllcalt to qal&
•moiling , ma a y people a llo Ila ve
phy1loloalcaJ addlcUoa to aJHtlae aad 1111fer
withdrawal symptoma when trylaa &o qut.
The pm II dealcaed to llelp 11u.ty U.. ern·
Inc for nicotine while &lie former •molter U ·
learns &be smoltlDC habit.
Nlcotlae·baaed chewl•I 1um wu
originally developed In Sweden. Early lad.lea·
lions tn Canada are tbat fou.r oat of It uen
are Rn.Uy able to qalt bot1a the 1moldn1 Hd
the pm·cbewinc habit.a.
Because nicotine la aay form 11 a
dangerous drug, Dow bad &o obtain federal
approval even for a tea&, aad the nlcodae·
based chewing gum will be avaUable oaly by
prescription.
lroakally, the government bas held that
cigarettes -wbJch contain nicotine 111 well
as other dangerous drugs -are totaJly Im·
mune from regulation and may be sold
wi&hout any prescrlpUon both over.the·
counter and from unattended vending
machines.
No tax on car rebate&
DEAR PAT DUNN: The manufacturer of
a car tha~ I am planning to buy is offering a
cash rebate. Is this considered income and
must it be reported on my tax return?
K .E .. Costa Mesa
No. The Internal Revenue Service 1ay1
cash rebates offered by manufacturers are
considered discounts. Bat If you plan lo aae
the car for business, tben you must reduce
your basis In the automobUe by &be rebated
amount.
Grmtd o,..mg W.
AUSTRALIAN BEER
Sl.99 Six Padc
at trader Joe & Pr.to
P.C., Newport Beach
AY eo11t1ded FrallllJla M.lat 1941 you
mluia1 order •W be leM '° l ... TIM ••U· order ftrm'a apot"wo•aa 11Jd ._.,, &Jae moet
receat W•We 1a U.1 mJMaq aet 1ta1 bee•
•a.llel to Y• U4 tbe edlen wW be Mat u
100. u daey cu M loea&ecl ud a~pped. It
may &De 10mt time for deU\ltf)', btlt at lea1t
Uae eoetua. abo•& yom order llH bee• cleared up.
Ho•pice care checked
DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I 1et
some information about boepice care for a terminally Ul patient -particularly about
hospices in this state?
K.W., Laguna Beach
The federal Bealtla Care Fbluce Ad·
mlnlatra&lon 11 carreatly eval•atl•I H
bo1plce programs &hrou"9oat tbe toUtry.
Five of tbe programs are la CallforaJa, aad
the atady lacladea aa evalaatloa of tbe
medical Hd economic feaslbWty of hospice
care, as weU as the role of Medicare Hd
Medi-Cal ln such care. More lnformattoa II
available from: Health Care Finance Ad·
mlnJstratlon, lM Van Ness Ave., San Fran·
clsco MltZ.
You aJao may want &o read "The Hospice
Story In California," by the California
Medical Association, Sauer Pabllcatlons
Inc., 731 Market St., San Fruclaco tU03.
• "Got a problem? Then write to Pat \..l Dunn. Pat will cut red tape. getting
• the answers and action you need to
•
solve inequities in government and n bu.nness. Mad your QtU!tlOn& to Pat
Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coo.st
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa , CA 92626 As
many letters as pou1ble will be aMWered, but phoned
inquines or letters not including the reader's full
name. address and busineu hours' phone number
cannot be considered This column appeari daily u -
cept Sundays ..
NEWPORT TILE & CABINE'J
DESIGN C&ITER
• Co .................
• Hwlwda•lllJ •
The famous Australian
wine town of Adelaide is also known ro r its beers. ~t En4 is one of the . You d expect to pay
over $4.00-but it's only
$1 .99 at our s tores
Please visit our newest
Trader Joe's at the in· tersection of 17th Slreet1 Newport Boulevard ana
Superior Avenue (next lO Denny's and Barclay's Bank.)
THE MOST COMPLETE SELECTION
OF TILE BOTH DOMESTIC ANO IMPORTED
Ceramic Tile • Hardwood Cabinets • Floor and Wall
Treatments • General ContractOf
NOW IN COST A MESA 31 2 M. Hewpori llYd. 64'-3213
/.
Own Your Own
Bualn••• Show
Are you loo~•llQ ror e bosllless ot
your OMI 1 Plan 10 aueod 1ne
mar-etplace of
I BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
• FranchlH S • Ol11rob<.ll0<s•11p1
• O.ale1sn1ps • rnva11mel'\ll
• Foll encl pan tome opPOnun111e1
• lnveatmenll trom sec> 10S100.000
INN AT THE PARK HOTEL
\
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•l)<JR\ I <Fiii ... H .. '·~ ~IU '" UI )10 e &OV I} f&CM
JF k TRI
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\f'IWt("f' r.,... .. ,.,,, 161 'f'Out 0oo1
l(•H Sl()t~ ~-9"1 VOvf "'f'••
CO.TA ...... fM1·1289 ,"'..__
11111110H vtt.io.495-0401 -c.-'-... fte" .,.... • .., ot A~ .. ...., I
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,_ F ash1on Island
Newport Beach
Proposal
PUBLIC NOTICE
What do you think about constructing an lnterchenge
on the Santa Ana FrHway (l-5) at Alton Perkway and
modifying lrvlne Center Drive lnterchenge on th• San
Diego Freeway (1-405)?
The City of Irvine, in conjunction with CalTrans, Is planning
to construct the Alton Parkway interchange with the santa
Ana Freeway and modify the lrvtne Center Drive
Interchange with the San Diego Freeway. The proposed
project would provide easier entry for vehicles to existing
and future commercial and Industrial sites. It would also
make more accessible a proposed bus and rail terminal and
permit better distribution of traffic on the freeways. A crosstown arterial highway proposed by the City of lrvlne
would connect residential and regional employment areas
within the City limits.
The public hearing wlll give you an opportunity to talk about
certain features of the project with CalTrans and City staffs
before the final design Is picked. The tentative schedule for
construction will be disclosed.
From now until September 24', 1981 , you may see maps, a
report on the anticipated environmental effects of construction, and other Information on the proposed project.
You may question CalTrans and City representatives about
the project. They will be available MoncMy through Friday
from8:00a.m. to4':30 p.m . at two sites. The first Is the Publk
Works Department, I rvlne City Hall, 17200 Jamboree
Boulevard( I rvlne, Callforn~a, where the environmental
document s also avallat>M. The second site Is at CalTrans,
Project Development Branch B, 120 South Spring Street1 Los
Angeles, <:alltornla. Come In and take a look, make copies If
you Ilk•, ask questions, ex~s your concerns.
,If you can't attend the hearing, you can send your written
comments until September_ 1-41 1981 to CalTrans, Project bevetopment Branch B, 120 ~h Sprlno SV..t, Los A,.tes,
California 90012. •
WMft a The hearlno will be Thursday, September 10, 1•1•t7:30 p.m. w...,.. at the Irvine Civic Center, 17200 J•mborM Boulevard, lrvlnt,
Callfomla.
COfttlct For further Information about this pr0Ject, contact CalTrans at (213) 610-3210.
IF YOU CARE ... COME!
Dated: August 4 1981
Published: Orange Cont 0.lly Pltot
August 10, 1•1
5eptilmber 1, 1981
' (
Becau se of the air traffic controllers
strike, our ph one lines will be quite busy.
Please come to the airport in person,
and we will help you the best we can .
Republic will continue to operate at
the fullest capacity possible, maintaining
in most cases, 95°/o or more of ou r
scheduled service. There are plenty of
seats avail able on most Republic flights .
Remember, if you are planning air
travel , Republi c serves more ci ti es in
America than any other airl ine. We
apologize for any inconvenience you
may endure because of the strike . We
are working closely with all the other
airlines to accomm odate yo u, our
passenger. And, we'll do the best we
can to minimize your travel delays.
The phone lines may be bu sy and the
air traffic controllers may be on strike,
but Republic Airlines is still very much in
operation . Joining more o~ America
than any other airline.
.,
...
..., .....
MONDAY, AUG. 10, 1911
IRAlll COAST COMICS 83
BUSINESS 86
T.he merger wave:
What does it
really mean? B6. J
•
a
0
Line of duty "leads to dangers
Daily safety patrol may be interrupted by explosion or drug smuggling
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Of ... Dlllty ...........
Like shore·bound policemen,
deputies of the Orange County
Sheriff's Department Harbor
Patrol spend much of their time
in the mundane work of enforc·
ing speed limits and safety laws.
But they also share the duty <:A
responding at any moment to
situations that are dangerous
and require split·second de·
cision-m a king. The deputies
have full police powers.
Their equipment·laden 28-foot
fire boats weigh some 13,000
pounds, and each of the two pro-
pellers is powered by its own 454
cubic-inch Chevrolet V-8 engine.
The engines have a combined
600 horsepower.
All deputies learn to operate
these vessels and a small fleet of
one-man boats during a IO-week
training course.
Fighting fires in the marinas
and waters along the 43 miles of
county coast is a major harbor
patrol responsibility. Plus as·
sistance is provided upon re·
quest for fighting land fires.
Emergency m edical as·
s istance also is part or the
patrol's role. This means &ivine
first aid or rushing the injured to
shore and sometimes brinliog
paramedics to accidents or ill·
nesses on board a craft.
Based in the harbors at Sunset
Beach, Newport Beach and
Dana Point, the patrol coven
the e ntire coastline when
necessary and goes outside the
three·mile limit of county
jurisdiction when needed.
A Sunday afternoon cruising
the Newport Harbor area with
two separate two-man fire boat
crews showed a range of duties.
Much of the time was spent
slowing down speeders who
violated the S·mile·an·hour limit
in the harbor, towing disableQI
boats, and doing what the dep.
uties call one of their most im·
portant jobs -educating
boaters about safety rules.
The deputies said a large
percentage of people who use
boats know little of how to
operate them safely. largely
because anyone who can buy
and register a boat can drive or
sail it.
When deputies stop boats for
speeding and other relatively
Steve Houstan writhes in pain as Deputy Ken Ferrell finishes
wrapping his hand that was slashed by a ski tow line.
Keeping watch at the wheel, !Hput11 Don JOf'aWm.on crtdU•
lhoreUM reaiM1at1 for help in criminal inveatigotfonl.
minor violations, they always
review buic rules with the of.
fenders.
One of the most important u
the law requirin1 one U.S. Cout
Guard-approved We Jacket on
board for every passen1er.
Boaters are often liven advice
on how to maneuver tbroup the
crowded harbor also.
Though the deputies usually
let violators go with a warning,
persons IUilty of flagrant or sub-
stantial violations receive a cita·
lion that means a court ap·
pearance and possible heavy
fine.
All warnings issued are placed
on computer file so that the dep-
uties can deal accordingly with
repeat violators.
On this day the crew only went
into emergency .action once.
The fire boat received a call
from the patrol dispatcher say.
ing that a person at Laguna
Beach had been injured by a fish·
ing hook, which was reportedly
stuck in the victim's eye. The
crew was told to return to the
patrol's base, located on
Bayside Drive in Newport
Beach, pick up paramedics and
rush them to the scene.
Siren blaring, the fire boat
rushed from the outer limit of
the harbor to the base,
dangerously maneuvering in the
Sunday traffic and producing a
large enough wake to disturb
many smaller boats.
The boa\ got to base and
awaited the paramedics, ready
for a 15-minute rush down coast,
Deputies must
know they can
set off, a fire
just be stepping
on to, a boat to
investigate. a
gas spill.
when word came that the injury
was not so serious and they
would not be needed.
Deputy Ken Ferrell, who
steered the speedy trip, bad a
grin on his face as be eased the
boat back into the harbor.
utles are best suited, Dyball
said.
One frequent danger is when
gasoline escapes into the bilge
area of a boat, leaking in during
pumping or in a number of other
ways.
The gasoline can explode
when automatic sump pumps
tum on to drain it because the
revving pumps give off a spark.
Deputies must be aware that
they can cause that spark when
investigating a gas spill simply
by stepping onto the boat and
sloshing the gas around, he said.
While most of the patrol's con·
tact with the public is during the
busy summer months. some of
the most unpleasant work comes
during the rainy days of late fall
and early winter, Dyball added.
These jobs range from simply
cruising for eight hours in a
driving rain to catching sections
of dock that have broken away
in a storm, carrying several
moored boats with them.
Since the patrol works 24
hours a day, fog and other ad-
verse weather conditions are
more of a factor than most peo-
ple realize, Dyball said Deputy Phil Dyball adds muscle and direction to lme towing dis·
abled craft back through harbor to dock for repcurs
·Jiut being visible keeps surrounding boaters hanest and within the speed l1m1t .' say Deputie s P/111
Dyball and Don Joralemon. setting the pace for a dozen craft trailing them down channel rm wt'ekend
"The tough part is facing the r
boaters after s'ometbing like
that. We splubed water on half
of them on the way in," he said.
Ferrell and his partner for the
day Jim Clendenin bad already
seen one real medical emergen·
cy earlier at the dock.
A power boat sped up to the
patrol station -"You know
they're either stupid or in trou·
ble when they do that," Clen·
denin commented later -carry·
ing a young man who had tom
open his right hand when the
wrong end of a ski tow·line was
pulled through it.
The partners assisted deputies
on shore in bandaging the badly-
c u t hand while awaiting
paramedics.
Deputy Phil Dyball, OD the
second fire boat we rode, said
he's seen everything from ex·
plosions and arson to homicide
and drug smuggling in bis three
years on harbor patrol. None ol
those things happen often, be
said.
His partner Deputy Don
Joralemon described people who
live along the shore or in boats
as almost indispensable to
criminal investigations as the
"eyes" of the deputies.
"A lot of times our hands are
tied without informants. People
know what's normal and what
isn't around their homes," be
said.
The patrol generally turns
over criminal investi1atlom to
local police, customs offtcen or
federal law enforcement of·
ficials. But the deputies are
police too and they don't hesitate
to get involved, especially if
they are first on the scene,
Joralemoo said.
There are some problems and
dangers peculiar to harbor
patrol work for wbtcb the dep-
Daily Pilot
Photos by
Charles Starr
Speeding brought the1e men to the attention of Deputy Phil Dyball who subseque?'!tly issued a citation
for lack of regmration. and Ufe jackets on board. The la.st off eme is frequent. deputtes say
L. -----! • •
..
Or1nge Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguet 10, 1981
Shou/,d have kft, but didn't
bEAR ANN LANDERS : I
. want to •tand up and 1lve three
oheen to that woman wbo left
her huaband (a clernman) -
knowinl fU1l w•ll 1be would be
rou.ndly crttlclsed in a amall
town -and went to work to help
1upport her three chlldrm. How
I wlsb I had her courace.
For 23 y•ar1 I bave been
locked into 1 beW.b mamaie.
On two occutona when I aertoua-
ly cootidered leavinf, I made
the miatalte of liltenln1 to my
mother and aunt who told me I
owed it to my children to keep
our marriage to1etber.
The children are grown now
111 lllllll
and I am alone with a milerable
nut who la 48 yean old and looks
60. He la in poor phYaical coodi-
Uon because ol h1a drinkin1. We
have no couple friends. He bu
alienated bis relatives and mine
with his row mouth. My only
lllellne to humanity la women
acquaintances who come for cof-
fee aod cookies in the afternoon.
I am stuck 'because of a heart
condJUon wbJcb maket It lm·
posalble for me to wo.rk. How I
re1ret I didn't make the move
when t bad my health and lood
looka. Doo't amwer thla letter,
Ann. Just print it. -20-20 HINDSIGHT
Deu •·•: Here It la .._,
wltll my t.lt..U.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
Here's a little sometb.ln1 my
wife slipped in my prayer book.
I found it when I opened the
book in church and broke up.
Please print it. Thanks, Doll -
R.0 . IN EVANSTON
Dear 8.0.: WUb pleaHH.
Here It ll:
To keep a mantas• brimmln1
With love ln the loving cup,
Whenever you're wron1. ad·
mit It.
Whenever you're rl1ht, abut,
up. I
Don't get burned b11 a "UM"
that's too hot to handle. Plafl U cool
with Ann Landen' guide to "Neck-
ing and Petting -What Are the
LimU&?" Send your reqiu:lt to Ann
Landers, P.O. Bo:z 11995, Chkago,
Ill. tXl611, enclo&ing 50 cents.and a
long, &tamped, 1el/-Gddreised en-w•.
'To make friend be a friend'
1#---NEW JOB -Air Force Staff Sgt. Ronald Gatlin, from Shep-
pard Air Force Base in Texas, assists in clearance delivery
and ground processes in control tower at Chicago's O'Hare
Airport. More than 500 military controllers are helping
direct traffic during controllers strike. with 1,400 more
scheduled to be phased in.
Transplants raise
web of legal issues
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Fear
of being sued has already made
dying a nightmarish marathon
for some people and a doctor has
told lawyers that new JegaJ com-
plications are coming.
Dr. Charles L. Brown Jr. said
researchers wiU soon solve the
problem of rejection, which now
complicates the surgical
transplant of part of one body
onto another body.
The human body almost
always tries to reject foreign tis-
sue. It is a major difficulty in,
for in.stance, heart transplants.
"When the rejection problem
is finaJly solved we are going to
have a lot more problems about
death," said Or. Brown, whose
patients include the New
Orleans Saints football squad.
For example, a newly dead
body, depending on age and con-
dition, may be a source of a
variety of spare parts that could
keep some other body alive or
give it good health.
In that situation, fear of being
sued would not be the only
pressure on a doctor with an ap-
pa rently dead patient whose
heart still beats due to machine
support. There would also be the
search for good transplant
material -at times backed by
political power or cash in·
nuence.
"I'd hate to see them go back
to body snatching," said Dr.
Richard Lescoe of Los Angeles,
jokingly.
The two physicians took part
in a panel discussion at a pro-
gram on "Death and Dying" at
the American Bar Association
annuaJ meeting.
By ELLEN BRANDT ...................
Like moat be1innera, the
swfo1ming students are afraid of
the water.
Recognizing their fear, t.beir
teacher does everytbin1 poaible
to relax them. She kffps them
laughing with jokes and riddles,
bas them stand in a circle in
shallow water, and asks them to
bold hands. After telling them a
particularly funny joke, she
CALIFORNIA
WOMAN
shouts, "OK, all together now ,
let's duck our beads under water
and bold them there for five
seconds." Still laughing from
her joke and confident of their
teacher's ability, every student
ducks. By the end of this first
class, they can blow bubbles un-
der water and float on their.
backs. They've completely lost
their fear of the water.
What's remarkable about this
particular swimming class,
however, is that the average stu-
dent is over 70. Many have never
attempted to swim before, and
some have been unable to use
the swimming pools their
families own. Their teacher, too,
is remarkable -an energetic,
dynamic 73-year-Old lady named
Emily Rodd.
·'Swimming is a wonderful
sport for people of all ages,"
says Rodd. "I'm proud to be
able to introduce it to so many
people."
Rodd's classes for belinoen,
held at the Town Hall Pool in the
Riverside County retirement
Scorpio: Opportunity on lwrizon
Tuesday, August 11
By SYDNEY OMARR
AJUF.S (March 21-April 19):
Professional assignment could
require extra correspondence,
meetings, attendance at social
affairs, possible journey.
Gemini, Sagittarius natives
figure prominently. Focus on
career, promotion, prestige and
spotlighting of unique talents.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Good lunar aspect coincides
with spiritual awareness, long-
r an g e projects and com -
prehension of personal potential.
Temporary confinement proves
a boon -you're· able to piece
together bits of information and
come up with complete story.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20):
Dig beneath surface, reject the
superficial and "communicate"
with young person who ex-
presses desire for change.
Virgo, Sagittarius and another
Gemini play important roles.
Focus also will be on credit rat-
ings, taxes, special rights,
permissions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Moderation and diplomacy
become valuable twin allies. Ac·
cent on public relations, pa-
tience, cooperative efforts and
. contracts. Major domestic ad-
HOROSCOPE
juslment dominates scenario.
Marital status commands more·
than-usual attention.
LEO <July "23-Aug. 22): GoaJ is
elusive ; refuse to be dis-
couraged by "moving target."
Emphasis on basic chores, calls
or letters from relatives and
your general health. Cancer,
Scorpio, Pisces persons figure
prominenUy. Define terms!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Lunar emphasis on physical at-
traction, charisma, emotiodal
commitment and professional
obligations. Relationship in-
tensifies and you could become
''inextricably invol ved.··
Taurus, Capricorn and another
Virgo figure promlnenUy.
UBllA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Best
resalts are obtained by working
with familiar material. Success
comes close to home baae. Lona-
standing transaction can be
completed. You gain wider rec-
ognition and can strike chord of
universal appeal.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
New opportunity is on horizon;
emphasis currenUy on relatives,
s hort journeys, special notes and
"dramatic confrontation"' with
one you loved. Emphasis also on
independence, orieinallty, new
starts and couraee to break with
past.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-0ec.
21): You'll be dealing wit h
money -be a comparison shop-
per. recognize your own worth.
refuse to be intimidated by one
who talks a "big game." In·
tuitive intellect is on target -
you'll know what to do and when
to do it.
CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19 ): Moon in your sign
highlights individuality, vitality
and success through presenta-
tion of original concepts. Social
life accelerates, popularity in·
creases and you get invitation to
travel Keep eye on Sagittarius!
AQUAIUtJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Material that bad been obscured
will become "brighUy visible."
Methodology will be clarified. Be
ready for review and rebuilding
program. Scorpio, Taurus, Leo
persons play slenilicant roles.
Get the facts!
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Gain indicated through written
material. Special information
received approximately 90 days
ago can now be utilised for
profit. Focus on hopes, dreams,
desires and successful business
enterprise. Watch Virgo!
Facing your fears discussio.n· set
FAaNG FEARS is the topic
of a discussion to be led by
therapist Michael Alvarez at
'7: 30 p .m. Tuetday in Santa Ana.
For information. call 532·5646.
B ETT E R B&EATBE &S'
Club for chronic obstructive
pulmonar y disease patient•
m eet.I the aecond Wednesday of
each month from 3 to 5 p.m. at
Pad.flea Community Hoepital in H~ Beach. For inform•·
tion, caIJ 842-0611, ext. 350.
8 T&ESS A N D ADO L·
eacen ce aemlnar sponsored
by the CareUnit of South Cout
Medical Center and the elty of
lrvlne wtll be held Wedn.elday at
7:90 p.m. lo lnine. For inform•·
tiOG. c.u-.uu.
ADOl..SllC&N'I' P&OaLSJU • trill M .. IUbJeet of a leeture ror pa Pb et 1:• p.m . Tllal"I·
day It Ult llartpoea WOllM8'•
CellUr • OruC•-For illfarma-
doa, caD 547...._
HEALTH HELP
AM E RICAN &E D c aos s
bloodmobUe will be at the Ad·
vanced Health Center, 1300 N.
Bristol St., Newport Beach
Thursday from 2:45 p.m. to '7:30
p.m. Monday, the bloodmobile
will viait Our Lady of Fatima
Church, 105 La ~perama, San
Clemente from 2:'5 to 7:IO p.m.
For more lpformation, call
835-5381, ext. 318.
PAllE NTING will be the toplc
of a two-hour Hmlnar at '1:90
p.m. Friday in Tuatln. J'cJr' In·
formaUon, call 112·1030.
r a E & MA&alA.GS .
workabop wlll be ottered bJ
the Mental Healtb Auodalllia ti
0r.,. Coai, at t:• a.m1 l'lt·
d11 iD Sllllta Aaa. Por lnfcirma·
tloa, clll 54'7 ·1SSI.
WIN PERM ANENT CON·
fidence is the title of a dis· cusslon by 1treu speciali1t
Murray Oxman at 10:30 a.m.
Saturday in Newport Beach. For
information, call (213) 9a&-tl7S.
MISS ION co•• UNITY
Hosp ital w ill 1po n1or a
Health Aware~ Dd Saturday from noon to 5 p.m.'\o dlacull
medical technolotY. community
health J)r'OIJ'llDI and 1alety UPI.
For informatioa on tbe pret.U·
tion, held at lllillion Viejo llall,
call• HOO, at. 571.
A.llEUCA.N a ED caOM of
Oraqe Count7 ii 1~ HI
tblrd annual Bea ch Proleet wttb
repnHDtaUv• from U.. 'R4ld
Cro11, American Cancer Socie-
ty, Planned Pareau.ood ad the
8 lrtb Ccaatrel lutltate. Vlatta
wttl be madi from 11 a.m. to I p.m. et ~ Buda JlaD.:
day, Su Cl•m•t• TaiMaJ. ~UJ. 11. Seel .......... .,.
•••. 11 Md Oilrma del .... .
ThundQ, Aq. a. tw llMft la·
formation, tall m.ull, n:t. m.
EMILY RODD ... Having time of her life
community of Sun City, ate part
or an extensive program for
older swimmers at all levels of
ability.
Twenty-five students, ranging
in age from 50 to 90, attend each
of Rodd's popular eight-week
classes. Upon completion, stu-
dents are adept at both crawl
and backstroke. Many move on
to more advanced swimming
classes, and some choose lo
participate in a gala swim show,
the Aquarian Pageant, held each
autumn. Most important , all
have acquired a useful, healthful
skill they can practice the rest of
their lives. "One of my recent
students," recounts Rodd, "an
85-year-old lady, progressed
through the entire sequence of
classes and now swims several
miles each day."
The determination of Emily
Rodd's swimming students
typifies the active enjoyment of
life exhibited by Sun City's 8,000
residents.
Sun City most resembles a
· university campus, and an ex-
traordinarily cosmopolitan one
at that. Everyone is friendly,
smillng, and enthusiastic.
Service clubs, church groups,
and cultural societies are thriv-
ing. A glance at a typical day's
roster of events shows several
lectures, political meetings,
such sports activities u bowl-
ing, billiards, and aerobic
dance, and classes in Italian
conversation, Japanese brush'
painting, jewelry making, and
yoga.
And Emily Rodd probably de-
serves the title "Mrs. Sun City."
It seems she can't walk one
short block without being greet-
ed by 50 people, hugged by 30 or
them, and invited lo at least 10
community events.
Rodd is vice president of her
synagogue sisterhood, photo
chairman of Sun City's square
dance club; and an active
member of the women's club,
book discussion group, and geo-
graphic society.
But except for her swimming
classes, she's most rewarded by
her involvement with photog-
raphy. During World War II,
she worked as a volunteer
service photographer, taking
photos of servicemen on their
way overseas. <The photos
would be sent to the soldiers'
families, along with chatty let-
ters written by canteen ladies.)
Rodd didn't study the technicaJ
aspects of p hotography ,
however, unW she came to Sun
City and joined the Sun City
Camera Club.
Working mostly in color, she
now develops all her own slides
and prints. In the past decade,
she's won more than 150 photo·
graphy awards, including a
number in the Kodak Intema-
tionaJ Camera Competition, and
is listed in the Photographic
Society of America's Who'• Who
of Photographer&.
Rodd also bas created several
slide shows, which she presents
to civic, chureh, and cultural I
groups. In fact, she's in so much I
demand In Riverside County I
hardly a week goes by without al
least one presentation. Her most I
popular show, called "Our I
Heritage of Beauty." features I
pictures demonstrating what ,
Rodd calls "the manifestation of i
God in Nature.'' • 1
Although Rodd is paid for her I
slide shows, she creates them •
primarily for the "satisfaction '
of accomplishment" and the ex· J
citement she derives from enter-
taining and informing people.
"Through my shows," she en·
thuses, "I've made many won· 1
derfu.I. friends.··
Indeed , friendship is the
motivating principle in Emily
Rodd's life. She claims to have
been a shy wallflower growing_
up in Bismarck, N.D., obscured
in the shadow of a beautiful I
older sister. "I remember how I I
felt at dances," says Rodd, l
·'when nobody asked me to !
dance. Now, J make a point of :
drawing shy peopl.e into groups. ;
I believe in that old motto: to
make a friend, be a friend."
With the enjoyment she finds
in her many friendships and ac· J
tivilies, Emily Rodd thinks this
is the best time of her life. "I
certainly don't feel the least bit
old," she says. "I've had much
more fun the last several years ,
than I ever had when younger."
She believes younger women
lend to feel insecure about their
Ii ves. For one thing, in these
days of high divorce rates, many
are insecure about their rela·
tionships with men. "As you
grow older," says Rodd, "you
can become more secure and
comfortable in your marriage.
I've been married (2 years now,
and my marriage is the emo-I
tional anchor in my life."
Younger women may also feel. l
insecure about their looks. But ,
Rodd, whose note paper is
headed "Greetings from a
Jewish Grandmother" and who ,
cheerfully describes herself as
"five feet square," is totally at
ease with her appearance. "l
even narrated a fashion show re-
cently. although my family
claims I usually look like I just
emerged from a Mix master." I
It all boils down to self-: :
confidence, liking yourself, ;
enough to share your talents; j
with others. "Everybody has,
some special talent,·· Rodd says~ :
"and we all have the talent for
loving."
Emily Rodd believes keeping!
active and involved naturally •
leads to a happier life. Involve-
ment in any activity Inevitably
leads to new interests,
friendships and rewards. "Do-
ing begets doing," she laughs.
.Rodd's s wimming students
would surely agree. On her I
almost daily afternoon swims,
she's mobbed by former pupils. I
"Watch this dive, Emily," one'
shouts, while another asks ad-1
vice on his butterfly stroke. I
We welcome your commmts,
queltion&, and sugge•tion& about: I
this column. Write to Cali/om~
Woman, The Daily Pilot, P.O. B@
1560, Colfa Mesa, Ca ., 92626. I • ...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. I
Announcing a SUmmer
Program ForTeeml
Jolln Rober1 Powers has
<1es1gne<1 a special Summer
program 10 meet the self-
llllprovement needs of
teenagers For over 50
years. John Robert Powers
ttas served the emerging
woman 1n per$onal, bus•·
ness or career developmeol
and pr'oless1onal modehng
Now the teenager can
especially learn 10 reach
her tuJI potenllal the "Pow-
ers way In Ille relaxed
atmosphefe ol Scinmer
classes Aece1vt substan-
11al 1u1Uon dtscouots by
reserving clfasses now Call
lor free intOfmatlvn
•ARE COUlm
3 Town & Country, Orange
(714) 547-8228
I I rr::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=:::=:=::=::=::=:::=::===i'I* I
SICK
AND TIRED?
IF SOMEONE YOU
LOVE IS HURTING
(And you are hurting too)
Because of
ALCOHOLISM
or other chemtc.l dependency
Learn how you cao help now! Yes, there is
something you can do -even If the victim
won't seek help.
Attend Our Free Communi ty Education AlcohoUsm
Intervention Progra m. Every
Saturday Mor ning, 1Gam tll Noon
Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
(710 641-273-4 Ex. 129
Approwd tor Medicare
I I
I l
I
I ·1
I
'I
H /F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
Off the stage
and inio rock
By JAY SHA.llBUTT .........
NEW YORK -Llada RoD1tadt came
from rock stardom to a Broadway hlt, ''The
Pirates ol Pen1ance." Now, her successor, Karla
DeVlto, hopes to do It the other way -from that
hit to rock stardom.
"I'd like to be able to go back and forth, from
theater lo rock," says the lady who succeeded
Mi ss Ronstadt In producer Joe Papp's pop-
flavored edition of the Gllbert & Sullivan classic.
"I like the idea or being able to jump back and
forth " adda Miss DeVito, who plays Mabel, the show~s chief maiden. "My big motto this year Is :
"There's no future In specla.llzation."
At 27, she's already done a fair amount of
jumping back and forth since her days as a theater
major at Chicago's Loyola University, which she
left after her rreshperson year.
She says she decamped directly Into the na-
tional company of "GodspeU," thence to a little re-
vue that even played the Plaza here, "El Grande
de Coca Cola.·'
Onward lo Boston and Orchestra Luna -"it
was the perfect combination between theatrical
and rock." That led to a stint in the rock band of a
hearty named Meatloaf and a world tour.
Then, off to an off-Broadway revival of the
elderly musical, "Jubilee, .. then the role of Helena
In a musical version of .. A Mid.summer Night's
Dream" at La Mama, the experiment house here.
Miss DeVito hails from Moken, Ill., "halfway
between Joliet and Kankakee." Equipped with a
J 'h-octave vocal range, she's been in .. Pirates"
ever since it bowed on Broadway last January.
Until June 2, she was Miss Ronstadt's un·
derstudy. She considers understudying akin to
awaiting a hanging. Just as it happens, your mind
gets wonderfully concentrated. But you do fret
some before then:
"It's a form of torture. You never know when
they'll call on you and you're thrown on at the last
moment."
The throwing-on has occurred a few times.
She's beard her share of disappointed "awwws"
from the pa.tons, a soul-chilling sound to any un-
derstudy ever trundled in to substitute for a star.
But she's philosophical about it. "If I were go-
ing to see the sbow and Ronstadt was in 1t ," she
says, "of course I'd want to see her do it, too."
Although now one of tfle main events in
Orange Orh1a In 55$-7022
UA City Cinema, Or•nge
634-3911
Orange Mall,e37-0S40
Hlway 39 Drive In,
Weetmlneter 191-3813
UA Clneine, Coat• MeH
,540-0584
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
ni.~ol,,..,•llng.l•to
-•l>O<ll ...... ,.O<tty"'
m> W9 00/fltll'fl IOr .....,.Q bti ftlw Cltlld,.,.
RESTRICTfO
Undt1 11 •equt• .. KC0"'P""Y"'9 Par9'\1 Of' Ad...tl G-...tc:he-"
AU am N«J !Bl FILMS RECEIVE
THE SEAi. OF fl-4E MOTION PICTUAE
COOE OIF SELF REGULATION
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
HFAST
IESULT"
SllYICE
' DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call . 642-5671
Id.HJ
I
Ka,rla DeVito, three and a half octaves and plenty
of drive.
"Pirates," the maid from Moken won't be in it
much longer. Next month is rock time.
Her first album . in a musical bag she calls
"power pop,.. is being loosed Aug. 23 by Epic
Records under the title, "Is This a Cool World or
What?"
And, she says, come Sept. 7 she'll exit the trills
and chills of "Pirates" and sally forth to promote
the album at various radio stations, clubs and con-
certs.
Her label originally wanted her to start the
tour in February, she says. But it agreed to a de·
lay after learning she was going to replace Miss
Ronstadt on Broadway in June.
"I think that's really helped, with Linda and
Rex Smith, (another visitor from the planet Rock )
doing the show," she says. It makes pop-music
and Broadway moguls aware each can help the
other.
AT LAST TH• WORLD'S
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•WOPEI
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ESCAPE FROM
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I TitE .... 8TIHKEI ~ l~l Plu1I Co+iit
e.ttle .. yondTIMI lbn(PCJ
z....n.-. .... <POil A Ito ltw>wlne 0"11 et Ftrtt Bite !POI
new location
Skate-Away Dist., Inc.
Direct Factory Outlet
Hi-top & Jogger_ Style
Rollerskates
now only sn •s
(reg. seo.oo value )
with a FREE 4-way skate wrench
Open everyday 11 am-7 pm 642-8516
Skate-Away Dist ., Inc. Ewi':.lr ,;"".)
711 W. 17th Unit D-4 Costa Mesa
in The Mesa Industrial Park N
Profetlional Skotea & Acce110N1 Available ~
You're newr
too young to
leamthe
*BARGAIN MATINEES*
Moftd1y tttru S1turd1y
All Perlorm•ncH before 5:00 PM
(ExCetlt S,.ctll Enp91ments ancl Kolldays)
,... ____ _
••ARTNlJR'' . ............. Jt"'-·----"TARZAN
THE APE MAN",_ ,,..,...,_..,,_ -----· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" (PO' .. ~.~---?t91;'.'tW
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALl<·IN
--·-~· ''RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARJ<::J.eG> --. ., ........... ---·--"WOLFEN" ,_ ........ -1111,-
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALIC IN
l'-oc'!'fY Al Del flvno 213/614-9211
11'1\._,_eY_•
"VICTORY" IPGl .... 11n .. -. Mt,.,,,
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"UNDER THE
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focull'y al Conolewood
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... ---"SUPERMAN 11" (PO) --·----···
"ONAHY
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IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNDER 12 FRU! """' alloll Wt<.., Mtft 111<11 Fu 6:JO • S.1 S.• lltla 6:00 , ..
CINE.fl SllUlll • YIUI All CM MDIO IS YIUI Sl'UllC9
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ANAH!IM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
"'YOU'fH! N~ TOO YOUNG
TO LaA"N THE ICC>i.E"
"THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS
WENT OUT IN OEOftOIA" (JIG) -f!•••oy ti ot lemo11 SI '""OAO.~" (l'O)
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"LOOK DOWN AND DIE" C"I
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"Your plant in the bottle looked thirsty,
Mommy, so I gave it a good drink."
... • ,.
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"I hate Mondays."
··--------------~---------------.
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
l
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..
I II ~
&10 l~~J
"He's fine, so until he tires of playing dead,
enjoy the peace and quiet!"
~
As LANA 15 A~our
TO LEAVE THE
DISTRICT ATTORNEY'!:>
OFFICE. ALEX REMO
AS~ A 5EEMIN(JLY
CA5UAL QUE!'JTION !
lfARO/.'P /I/ 7?.0•11<,..
"' 8-10 \
GARt'IELD
"I'm not speaking to you,
Dennis Mitchell!"
~ 8·0
"Thank You, Lord."
bvJim Davis
I ~NOE.R WWE.P.E 1 SMOULQ MAV8E F'RANCE. OR MEXICO
00 ON VACATION
DOWN
1 """""' food .... ......
4"'-'lmt • °"""' tlndlnld
7Nt ....
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tNdr• ..
10CNdllr9 11,....,. .. .....
110..-
OR SPAIN ...
' . .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguet 10, 1981 Iii
PMNIJTI .
·-----.-TIJMBLEWEEDI
l ·IO
by Charles M. Schulz
'QI Mf. NOT IN TME COllSE~~p 1 POH'T !<MOW 11MtJ.t SECTION
TEH, ROW 6, IS ...
'1tXJ'~ ON SACRl:V AX>HAWH LANl?i .-.....--------
¥ ~ ""--::!_...
NANCl'
IRMA WANTS
TO BORROW
S O ME PERl=UME
FlJNKl' WINKER8£AN
1Jfl5 HA5 S£EN 1ME ff{)Sf
Ml~ERABLE ~ER~~
LI Ft ! NO MA'TTER wHAr r oo,
I CNtl 5f£M 10 G€T r£.U.<,J
OFF ff(..) MIND !
DllA88LE
~N,l ~~~lN&
01'£U.. '400, 8Uf I QON'T
WANT 'iOU lo l:JEf u~r. ..
i
1tJ 1Mell.E ~eitG1 evuc:,oo-a
'OOIJ I ~ ~
~DeAJ-1!
~
by Tom Bat1uk
~B£ 1U. STAND A~D
AND MOPE FOR AWHILE. !
by Kevin Fagan
"£'~ "nKlNb 1\U-5
A urf ~f'f'~R. 1'"AN
I 'f"ol)b~f ~E WOJ~O.
l'M NOT"&JP.E ... SUT I
IHlr-\K IT MEANS
~ertYGOOD .
. . .. . .
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981
YSE (JOMPOSITE TRANSACTION
~ ~"~
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Who owns
the most shares?
At '295 a copy, lt'• not likely to become • best
teller, but a new manual on stock ownenhip ia run to
read ii you have a pusloa for knowina who are the
biggest stockholders ln America.
Did you realize, for example, that J .P. Moraan.
the bi.g New York bank at Broad and Wall street.a,
next door to the New York Stock Exchan1e, ranka as
the lar1est alngle shareholder in Eastman Kodak •
Gillette, IBM and 10 other industrial giantl? And that
it• holdings make It the tecond. third, fourth or fitth
largest owner in 91 other big companies?
Did you know that foreign companies bold more
than 5 percent or~ st-0ek in 35 ma.>or U.S. manufac-
turers, including Dan River, Kaiser Steel, Levi
Strauss, Mattel and Scott Paper?
Did you realize that there are still some sizable
family holdings in American business? Families with
more than half·a·billion·dollar stakes in companies
i nclude th e
A bercrom bi es
(Cameron Iron
Works). Dor· r a n c e s
(Campbell
Soup ), Dows
(Dow C h em·
ical ), Get -11n11 1111•1n
tys (Getty Oil), Hewlett& and Packards (Hewlett·
Packard), Haases (Levi Strauss) and Kecks
(Superior Oil).
The top stockholders in the largest U.S. manufac-
turing companies are identified in this new manual,
"CDE Stock Ownership: Fortune 500." It was pro-
duced by Corporate Data Exchange, a non.profit re-
search organization based in New York (at 198
Broadway) not far from J.P. Morgan.
For each of the 456 companies in the directory,
there's a listing of the major stock.holders, showine
bow many shares they own. For example. on Dow
Jones & Co., publisher of the Wall Street Journal, the
list runs to 2.5 names. beginning with the Bancroft
family and descendants, who own S9 percent of the
shares, and ending with a former editor, William F.
Kerby, who own& two-tenths of 1 percent. The
Lockheed roster runs to 30 names. beginning with a
7.5 percent block owned by Trust Company of the
West and ending with Oppenheimer Holdings. owner
Of tWO·tenths O( 1 percent.
Stock ownership is highly concentrated. Tbe top
five stockholders own 24.6 percent or General Motors,
24.8 percent of Standard Oil o! California. 62.4 per·
cent of Ford. 23.1 percent of U.S. Steel, 42 percent or
Du Pont. 44 percent of Sun. 26.6 percent or lnterna·
tional Harvester.
An index at the back of the directory gives a
quick picture or the varied holdings of the Big
stockholde rs . It shows, for example. that the
Rothschild family interests <of France and England)
have now captured 66 percent of Copperweld. 5 per·
cent of Pitney-Bowes. 9 percent of Levi Strauss, 2.4
percent of General Mills, 1.7 percent of Caterpillar
Tractor. It shows that Miami's Victor Posner holds
huge chunks or Evans Products, Johnson Controls,
Nashua. National Can, Chromalloy American, GAF.
General Host, Royal Crown. It shows that Omaha's
Warren Buffett is an important player in General
Food, Handy & Harman, the Washington Post Co.
When the COE Directory was released in late Ju.
ly, it received attention because of its disclosur e of
overlapping in the ownership of companies engaged
in takeover battles. For example :' a big New York Ci-
ty bank, Manufacturers Hanover Trust, votes 2
million shares of Du Pont, 1.5 million shares of
Conoco and 1.4 million shares or Mobil. Citibank,
another New York bank. owns 1.3 million shares or
Du Pont. 2.3 million shares of Conoco and 1.4 million
shares of Mobil.
Mobil and Du Poot were battling furiously for
control or Conoco. But the same institutions are ma·
jor owners of stock in all three companies. That's
what you call financial incest.
When the Corporate Data Exchange embarked
on this study, it took as its baseline the 500 industrial
companies listed In the 1980 Fortune 500 roster. Such
is the pace of merger activity, however, that it bad to
drop 22 companies because they were acqufred by -
or merged with -other companies.
Gold metals quotations
Gold
By Tbe Aaeocl11.ed PreH
Selected world gold prices today;
London: morning fixing $.193.20, off $4.05.
Loadoa: afternoon fixing $393.75, off $3.50.
Puts: afternoon fixing $460.2.8, ocr $6.16.
Fraakfurt: $394.98, off $5.05.
Zmich: late fixing $392.00, off $4.00; S395.00 sked.
Handy Ir Harman: only daily quote $393.75, off $3.50.
En1elbard: only daily quote fabricated S409.50, off
$3.64.
RepabUc Natlon1l Bank: $397.00, off $1.50.
Gold coins
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices late Friday or gold coins,
compared wttb Thursday's price.
Kntgerrand, 1 troy 01 .. $420.00, unch.
Maple leaf, 1 troy oz., $4.17.00, unch.
Mextcaa 50 peso, 1.2 troy 01., $506.00, uocb.
Autrtaa 100 crown, .9802 troy 01 •• $896.00, unch.
Source: Deak-Perera.
Metah
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrous metal prices to-
day:
Qiipper 86~·89 cents a pound, U.S. deaUnaUoos.
Leila 42 cents a pound.
DIC 46Y• cent.a a pound, delivered. n. $7.3391 Metals Wffk compc19Jte lb.
Al9mlnm 78-80 cenu a P,OUDd, N.Y.
llel'Ctll'J f'4().00 per nuk.
PlaU.8m '390.00 troy o.z., N.Y.
Kandy Ir Harman, '8.495 pef' troy ounce.
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Gravenstein apples-at a treat price:· S2.89 per
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P!eue vuit our newest
Trader Joe's at lhe in· tersect.ion of 17th Street1 Newport Boulevard ana Superi.or Avenue (next
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utttte I p.m. ,...._,, '""' "°°" 'ftdey et tM ut-ne ..._or,.. .......... h8dt offloaa.
U.S. woUld block Haitian influx
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe RtaflD ad·
mlniltratiCJll wanta to betia IDttreepUD1 and tum·
lq away boeta carrylnJ would·be rtfYI"' from
HaiU to Florida by Sa\'urday, admlnlltraUon of.
ftclala1ay.
The "lnterdictJon'' prosram, aa lt ll beinl called, would btlp .... a ~ poUUcaJ ud ad·
mlnlltrative beadatbe for tbt Re.,an admlo1alra·
Uon ID aoutbern nortda.
But lntardlcUon riakl tandtblnt Amert ca '1
reputatJon u a protector ot ret\&s.. and "boat
people," and could lead to Ul)y lacidenta at aea,
accordln• to an IDtemaJ actmlnt1tration memo.
1be adminlttratioo olftdall, who uked not to
be ldentifted, aaid they bave been trylnl to work
out detallJ of the plan 1lnce it wu announced by
Attorney General William French Smith on July ao.
Meanwhile, Supreme Court JuaUce William J.
Brennan bu clea.red the way for the planned
tranafer from Florida lD Puerto Rico tbll week of
800 Haitian and Cuban refucea.
Brennan turned down an emer1eocy requeal
from Juana Dtaa, the Puerto Rican community
where the refu.1ee eamp, Fort Allen, la located.
The 1dmlnl1tratlon'1 Interdiction proaram
now call• for tbe lmmlaration and Naturalization
Service to 1upply 1peclal uylum officer• and
Creole tranalatora to Cout Guard veaaels patrol·
lnl tbe Caribbean, accordln1 to tbe officials.
After 1toppln1 a boat 1uapected of carrying
Haltiana to tbe United States, the Coast Guard
would brlnl the paasen1en aboard for an on-the·
spot hearin& to determine whether they meet the
American requirements for refu1ee statua.
Almost none of the Haitian.a will meet those re·
qulrement.s , since the State Department has de·
cided that they are almost all fleeing from pover·
ty. rather than Crom political oppression.
After the hearings, the Coast Guard is sup·
posed to determine whether the Haitians' boat is
seaworthy. Depending on its condition, the Coast
Guard vessel may escort it back to Haiti, tow 1t
back. or take the Haitians aboard and transport
them back.
One official working on the plan said there are
fears that fights will erupt during the process or
that Haitians may jump overboard and drown
rather than be taken back.
Dally Piiat
MONDAY, AUGUST 10, J9'1 H /F
CLASSIFIED C6
The 'big winner
at Riverside
was charity. C2.
,. ............
Baseball came back after a 50-day Layoff and, although everyone wasn't happy by its return, a record crowd of 72 ,086 m Cleveland was. Baseball's "second hal/" starts ioaay .
• • • and the NL makes sure nothing's cha'!/Ied
CLEVELAND CAP) -Baseball's back, and
for the National League, anyway, it was like the
All-stars had never been away.
With surgical efficiency, the Nationals cut up
the Americans again in the 52nd All-star Game
Sunday night, rallying for a 5-4 victory that
brought baseball back with a smash following the
strike that stilled the industry for seven weeks.
Gary Carter tied an All-star record with two
homers and Mike Schmidt supplied the clincher
with a two-run homer in the eighth inning that
nailed down the NL's 10th consecutive AU-star vie·
tory and 18th in the last 19 games. Overall, the Na-
lionaJs hold a 33-18 edge, with one tie and the way
they take the Americans apart year after year, it's
hard to imagine they once trailed in this series
12·4.
This summer·s gathering of stars had added
significance because of the strike which shut the
game down for 58 days rrom June 12 until the All·
stars took the field Sunday night.
Of utmost concern to baseball has been the re-
ception it would receive from the fans and it
turned out to be mixed.
A record crowd of 72,086 jammed Cleveland
Stadium but some came equipped with whistles to
signal at the start of each Inning a shrill protest to
the strike. But by game's end they were caught up
in the excitement of the record-tying NL power
s how and there were no protest whistles blown on
the way out.
Like the fans, the NL warmed to the All-star
task rather slowly, playing a somewhat tentatively
early on, perhaps because of the strike's break in
their annual summer routine.
"We bad played two exhibitions and I still
didn't feel just right," said Carter, "but when you
get that heart pounding . . . "
Baltimore's Ken Singleton staked the
Americans to an early 1-0 lead, tagging Tom
Seaver of Cincinnati for a second-inning home run.
"It was a fast ball, right down the middle,"
Singleton said. "I aimed the pitch," admitted
Seaver. "I bad nothing on it and it was the type of
pitch you should hit out."
Singleton did, and the AL had the lead. Carter
balanced that run with a fifth-inning homer
against the Angels' Ken Forsch. Then, in the sixth,
Pittsburgh's Dave Parker unloaded on Mike
Norris of Oakland and the Nationals had a 2·1 lead.
But it lasted only until the Americans balled in
the bottom of the sixth when Singleton touched off
a three-run raJly constructed around five singles.
four of them in a row. Singleton and Boston's DwiJht Evans opened
with hits against Burt Hooton of the Los Angeles
Dodgers. Then Chicago White Sox catcher Carlton
Fisk also singled, loading the bases. Pinch hitter
Fred Lynn beat out another hit, tying the score
and leaving the bases still loaded. A sacrifice fly
by Buddy Bell and a pinch single by Ted Simmons
supplied two more runs for a 4-2 AL lead.
There was a delay in the top of the seventh
when the AL took the field with only eight men.
Manager Jim Frey wanted Lynn to stay in the
game but the California outfielder, who banged up
his left kn~ sliding into second base during the
rally, begged off. That forced Frey to substitute
Tony Armas of Oakland and it left him short a
player at a critical juncture later.
"l wanted to save Armas, but arter Lynn pinch
hit he went into the clubhouse," said Frey. "I told
him 1 wanted him to play centerfield and he said
he didn't fell well."
The two-run lead lasted only a little while.
Carter, leading off the seventh like he did the fifth,
ripped his second home run. this one on the first
pitch from New York Yankees reliever Ron Davis.
to climb into the All -star record book.
Four other players Ted Williams of Boston
in 1946, Pittsburgh's Arky Vaughan in 1951, Al
Rosen of Cleveland in 1954 and S~n Francisco's
Willie McCovey in 1969 -had bit two homers in a
single All-star contest.
"I never imagined hitting two home runs," the
Montreal catcher said.
Davis escaped the rest or the seventh without
further damage but the Nationals were in position
to strike and an inning later they did. Rollie
Fin~ers of Milwaukee was on the mound when San <See NL MAKES, Page C3)
It wasn't as easy
as Nelson made it
Carew calls·
All-star loss
embarrassing
New season for Angels
Seattle marks. a fresh start for Mauch and Co .
PGA winner was. a bundle of nerves r:LEVELAND (AP) -The
.1gels' Rod Carew, selected to
the American League All-Star
team each of the past 15 years,
has enjoyed only one victory. It
is, he says, "embarrassing."
By EDZINTEL
Oft•DeMy ........... as it will be, the Angels are likewise split in their
approval of the system.
DULUTH, Ga. <AP) -That
major championship feeling hit
Larry Nelson for the first time
when he lofted a two-iron shot 20
feet from the 17th bole Sunday in
the 63rd PGA.
"When I saw it make that
beautiful, little ball mark, I
knew I had it won, especially
after Fuzzy Zoeller missed the
green," he said.
Nelson two-pulled and owned
what he thought he needed -a
four-shot bulge going into the
final hole of the year's last ma-
jor tournament.
"l'M A CHOKER," admitted
the candid 33-year-old Georgian,
who has played this demanding
game just 12 years.
"I didn't want to go to the 18th with a one-shot lead, even a two-
shot lead. I wanted it to be at
least three shots," he said.
"I think everybody is a
choker. Anybody who tells you
coming down the stretch that
he's not nervous, I'd say he's on
something," said Nelson, a win-
ner for the fifth time in his eight-
year career.
Nelson never let any of h15
pursuers closer than three
strokes on the Atlantic Athletic
Club. He closed with a one-over-
par 71 for a 273 total and the
winning check of $60,000.
ZOELLER, HIS playing
partner on the hot, humid day,
settled for second. The former
Masters champion collected
$40,000 after also shooting 71 for
277.
Tour driving champion Dan
Pohl closed wtth a 69 for 278 and
third place of $25,000.
Defendlnt champion Jack
Nicklaus fell abort in a bid for
Ma 18th m~or professional UUe
and sixth PGA crown, ftnllbiri1
with •279 for a Ue for fourth.
AJao at that f11ure were Bruce
Lletike, Bob GUder, Keltb
Fersua, Tom Kite, AUltrallan
Grea Norman and l1ao Aoki of
Japan. •
Gilder matched the com·
petitive course record with 66.
Lietzke and Fergus had 68s,
Aoki 70, Norman 71 and Kile 72,
marking the llth time in 12
starts he's been in the top seven.
SEATTLE -It was here, exactly four months
and one day ago today. that the Angels innocently
began this mixed-up baseball season. And it's here
that they start it over in the first of a three-game
set against the Mariners.
Zoeller didn't think the race
was over quite as quickly as his
more serious, quieter playing
partner.
"I thought Larry bad it when
he drove the ball straight down
the middle on the last bole. You
can't give up until the 72nd hole.
Golf is such an unbelievable
game," said Zoeller.
"They just seem to always get
the big hit at the opportune
lime," said Carew after
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt got
the big hit, a two-run, eighth·
inning homer, to sink the
American League for the loth
straight time and the 18th in 19
games.
With the same kind of visions and hopes they
bad on April 9, well before the effects of a 50-day
strike were realized, the Angels again start over
with a clean slate, eyeing a divisional title, pen-
nant, world championship -who knows?
ONLY THIS TIME, the end is very much
within sight. As Fred Lynn was saying the other
night, "everything you do now, every mistake, is
all the more critical. This is serious business."
Shortstop Rick Burleson was among those who
disapproved of the concept. "I let it be known what
my feelings were on the subject,'' he said.
"There's nothing we can do about it now. We'll
just have to go out and win a SO-game pennant
race."
Burleson says that the Angels will have to im·
prove on their first-half home record of 14-19 in or-
der to challenge for a division flag in October.
"We'll have to be at least .500 at home for us to
have a chance," he said. Either way. he says, he
expe<:ts a dogfight.
"Texas. Chicago and Oakland are all going to
come back strong. Kansas City could be in there,
too."
"He played consistent. He's
deserving. He drove it right
down the middle of the fairway
except 14 . When you see a player
hitting a ball like that all day,
it's pretty to watch," the run.·
nerup said.
The losing streak puzzles
Carew, who collected one hit in
three trips to the plate Sunday
night.
"Everybody's going out there,
doing their best, trying to help
the ballclub win," he said.
"Nobody ever dogs it. We
thought we were going to win
tonight, but again they got the
Indeed It Is. The Angels were serious enough
over the weekend to play as if the season had
already re-started, splitting a pair of exhibition
games with the Cincinnati Reds.
Tonight, however, It's the real thing. Geoff
Zahn (7-6) gets the call against Seattle's Glenn Ab·
bolt (1-4). .
So begins the second half of the season, one in
which the Angels play a total of 50 games -29 of
those on the road.
BURLESON, LIKE OTHERS, feels that it will
take some time, at least a week, for the hitters to
get adjusted to live pitching. "It still feels a little
funny up at the plate. I expect you'll see a lot of
low-scoring games. The defense will take care of
itself."
Driving, in fact, probably
saved Nelson, an admitted bun·
die of nerves. <See ALL-STAR, Page C2> As for the decision made to split the season
Thus, the Anuls may find themselves playing
a different bran'iror ball early, as opposed to the
all-out long ball offense they were used to employ-
ing.
Malavasi will be looking for some answers tonight
By JOHN SEVANO
Of .. ...., ........
So, baseball is back, huh? Well, try
telling that to the 69,005 fans that
will cram into Anaheim Stadium
tonight (8) to see the Rams open their
preseason schedule against the New
England Patriots.
The contest, an announced sellout,
will be a rematch of last year's wild
preseason encounter which the Patriota
won, 35-31, despite four second half
touchdown passes by the departed
Vince Ferragamo.
Tonight, Coach Ray Malavui -and
Patriots Coach Ron Erhardt for that
matter -will get a cbanc. to aee a lot
of rookies, plus answer a few quest.Jona
of his own concerning IODJe returntn1
veterans.
Malavasi, in particular, will have a
lot to watch. For instance:
-After almost 1\A) years on tbe
sidelioel, bow will Pat Hadm perfonnf
Md can the Rama• on ... come c.loM ,
to matcblhs lut year'• upl.Olllveneu
wjtb Hiiden at the eontrobf
-How well will Wendell Tyler bounce
back after enduring hip surgery and a
hyper~xtended elbow in 1980? -Can Carl Et em fill the void at middle
linebacker left by Jack Reynolds' exile to
San Francisco?
-Can Fred Dryer keep bis starting·
spot at right defensive end with Cody
Jones breathing down his neck?
-Can Jeff Rutledge adequately fill
the spot as the team's No. 2
quarterback?
These are Just some of the questions
Malavui hopes to solve t.ont1ht againat
the Patriota.
"I think we're ry1ht on schedule,''
said Malav_asi of bis team'• protfeu.
"We'll 1ive Pat <Haden) and Jeff
( Rutled1•> a ball each. If it'• a lont
1ame, there mi8ht RM a cbance (Jeff)
Kemp will 1ee aome ac:Uoa."
The Rama' other quarterback ln
camp-Teter• Bob. i,.. -will not'"
action d-. &o a pUdu1 not elbow ln-
Jury 1\lffwed la lut SatlrdQ'• lerlm-
ma•e .,a1n1t the Saa~ Cbar1en.
Lee hasn't been able to throw a pass in
practice all week. Other injuries, although not con·
sldered serious, have left the Rams thin
at wtde receiver.
Tight end Henry Childs, acquired dur·
lng the offseason from Washington (by
way of New Orleans), will not play
On TV tonight
·channel 11 at 8
because o.f a groin problem. The Rams'
other titht end, Victor HJcks, is 1uffer-
ln1 rrom the same malady u ls Drew
HUI. Neither wtU see action, either,
which meana the Rama' offense is down
to only. handtUI "'bealthy reeelven -
Walt Amold (who will start at ti1ht
end), rookie Mlke Battle, Preston Den·
nard, 8Wy Waddy, Willie Miller, Jeff
Moore and roold.-Rick Parma and
Mareu1 Ande,....
"We'U plaJ a lot of people and keep
veter••• to 1 mlalmum,' • aatd
llalavat.
"I'm not too worried about looklna
sharp because when we play that many
people it's bard to look sharp. Sharp-
ness is not what we're looking for."
Erhardt might feel the same way.
"We've got some talent," admitted
the Patriots coach , "but we aren't so
talent-laden we can just go through the
motions.'' Among the newcomers Erhardt hopes
lo watch ls Ugbt end Terry Nelson, who
is expected to replace the retired Russ
Francis in the starting Ufleup. Nelson, a
starter with the Rams for three seasons
before a groin Injury slowed him in
1980, suffered a pulled muscle, however,
in practice last week and his status is
uncertain.
Erhardt will also study the work of
quarterbacks Steve Gro1an and Matt
Cavana\llh, both of whom are comlnc
off knee 1ur1ery. Gro1an la expected to
atatt acaln•t thf"Rama.
Tbe Rama flllisbed last year at 11~.
while the Patrlota were lM, lnclu-•
17·14 lou to tbe Rams in Foxboro dV·
lnl tbe fel\llar seuoo.
-------~-·-----~-----·~
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• • •
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I
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VP Bush: Baseball
will bounce back
From AP dbpatclaea
CLEVELAND -Vice President Iii Geor1e Bush had no real reserva·
Uons about throwing out the first
pitch in Sunday night's All-star Game.
There were some upeds of the game-
opening ceremonies, however, that disturbed
the forme.r Yale University first baseman.
"It's obviously less than an ideal arrange-
ment,'' Bush said, referring to the resumption
of the baseball season following a 50-day strike.
"It hasn't been good for the game, but it'll
bounce back," he said. '
Bush said he would be rooting for the Na·
tional League, no surprise since he is a fan of
his hometown Houston Astros.
. Quote of the day
"We didn't buy tickets to ball ~arks,
didn't pay for parking there, didn't tfuy hot
dogs and beer. We didn't drive into the
cities to go to games, didn't stay at hotels
and motels, didn't eat in restaurants. We
didn't watch or listen to radio/TV ads dur·
ing games and run out and buy what was
advertised. So what did we lose? We lost a
few hours of entertainment. Otherwise, we
saved a bell of a lot of money. Stop calling
us losers." A baseball fan from New
York, Fred Broolts.
Angels reactivate Grich, Kison
The Angels ·have reactivated II
second baseman Bobby Grich and
right-handed pitcher Bruce Kison for
the reopening of the 1981 b~ball season, the
American League club announced Sunday.
At the same time, the Angels optioned right-
banded pitcher Fred Martinez to Salt Lake City
of the Pacific Coast League and purchased the
contract of left-handed pitcher Angel Moreno
Crom the GuJls.
Grieb suffered a broken bone in his hand six
days before the strike began. Kison bad been
sidelined for nearly 13 months following surgery
for nerve problems in his pitching arm.
Unhappy
R e d s play
Dodge r s
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Cincinnati Reds, who are.not too
happy about the way the Dodgers
won half a championship, will get
a chance to take out their frustra-
tions on the Dodgers tonight. Th~ question is, are the Reds
ready to beat the Dodgers,
whom they meet at Dodger
Stadium at 5:30 p.m .
THE REDS thought they were in as g00<1 shape as anyot~e after'
the strike layoff. Before the June
12 strike, Cincinnati was playing
excellent baseball, having gained
four games on the Dodgers in
seven days.
But when the strike began, Los
Angeles was a half-game ahead of
Cincinnati and with the split
season in effect, the Dodgers have
been declared as first-half cham·
pions of the National League
West.
"It stinks," was Cincinnati
Manager John McNamara's re-
action to the split-season concept. '
''Wbydon'llhey just throw out the
first half? Whal did we play for?''
Now, Cincinnati can only look
ahead to the 'second half of the
campai~.
Duran wants rematch wtth Leonard
CLEVELAND -Roberto m Duran, mlxinS hl1 attack to the bead
and the body and callln1 on bla vut
experience, pounded out a unan-
lmoua 10-round decision over Nino Gonsalez
Sunday ln Duran'• rtr1l ft&ht 1lnce be qult in the
eighth round aaain•t Sugar Ray Leonard last
Nov. 25.
that bout, Duran bad said he would
I not fight a1atn. But now the·
Panamanian ls batk and he
wants Leonard &lain,
althouch Sugar Ray has aaid
be won't nebt Duran a tb1rd
time.
Duran's comeback vie·
tory ln Cleveland's Public
Auditorium was in the junior
middleweiibt class, aad be is
scheduled to fight again Sept.
Duron 26 , possibly again1t Babs
McCarthy. Should he win that bout, promoter
Don King plans to match Duran against Wilfred
Benitez for the World Boxing Council title.
Leonard bolds the World Boxing Association
1S4·pound class title, and should Duran get the
WBC crown, a thlrd ficht between the two is
conceivable. Duran won the WBC welterweight
title from Leonard on a decision in Montreal
and lost it back to him when be quit in New
Orleans.
Baseball stats will stay the same
NEW YORK -Baseball's of-.•. .
ficial playing rules committee bas
decided that individual player
s tatistics achieved by major league players
before the 50-day strike will be continued when
play resumes today.
Minimum standards for determining in-
di viduaJ champions were adopted. For the bat·
ting championship, the standard will be 3.1
plate appearances multiplied by the number of
games played by each player's team. The 3.1 ia
the regular formula, but because of the strike,
teams will fmish with different game totals this
season.
The exception would be if a player with
fewer than the required number of appearances
still would have the highest average if the'
number of plate appearances be was short were
charged as at-bats.
For pitchers, the standard of one inning
pitched for every game played by a given team
will be used to determine eligibility for earned
run average titles.
Catchers must play in at least half their
team's games and infielders and outfielders in
two-thirds of the games to qualify for individual
fielding titles. A pitcher appearing in a number
of innings equal to or greater than the number
of games played by his team will be eligible for
defensive leadershi_P.
Baseball today
On this date ln bameball ln 19'l9:
Veteran Grover Cleveland Alexander
posted h1s National Leaaue·record 373rd
career vktory, one more than Nuw York•
Giants' ace Chrlaty Mathow1on as the St.
Louis Cardinals outslua11ed the
Philadelphia Phlllles 19-16 in the second
game of a doubleheader.
On th!s date ln 1901: I
Frank Isbell of the Chicaao While Sox /
set an American League record by 1trand·
ing 11 teammate• on the bases in a 1lngle 1, game.
Umpires almost boycotted game
After meeting for 1 Y.a hours with • league president.a Lee MacPbaU and
Cbub Feeaey, the umpires aaslgned
to Sunday night's All-star game agreed to work,
pending resolution of their salary dispute with
the American and National Leagues. The um·
pires are seeking to be paid 100 percent of their
s alariea for the period of the seven-week
baseball strike. The two leagues are willing to
pay for 45 days or the. 50-day strike.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: / I .t 1 excellent; ' ' ' worth watching; I./ fair; I forget It.
9 6:30 p.m., Channel 7 ./ ./
BASEBALL: St. Louis at Philadelphia.
Announcers: Al Michaels and Bob Uecker.
The Cardinals' Bob Forsch (6-2) Is scheduled to face the Phillies' Larry Christenson (2·Sl as
baseball's "second" season starts today. Philadelphia was declared the first-half winner in the National League East. The Phillies led St. Louis by 11/2 games at the time of the strike.
II 8 p.m., Channel 11 ./ ./ ./
RAMS FOOTBALL: New England vs. Rams. Announcers: Stu Nahan and Jim Hill.
The Rams open the exhibition season against the New England Patriots In Anaheim Stadium.
With Pat Haden at the controls and all players signed to contracts for the coming season, the
Rams are off to a "contented" start. Steve Grogan
is scheduled to start for the Patriots tonight. Last year's preseason affair turned out to be a wild one
as the Patriots won, JS-31 , despite four touchdown
passes from Vince Ferragamo.
RADIO
Football -New England at Rams. 8 p.m.,
KNX (1070). Baseball -Angels at Seattle, 7:30 p.m.,
KMPC (710); Cincinnati at Dodgers, 7:30 p.m.,
KABC (790).
From Page C1
ALL-ST AR LOSS • • •
big hit at the riaht time. You can't do much about
that."
Indeed, AL Mana1er Jlm Frey of Kan1d City
could not do much about that. 8y the time Schmidt
crushed the 1ame-winner off Milwaukee'• Rollie
Fingers, Frey had used up all bls potenUal pinch
hitters.
Carew'a teammate, Fred Lynn, said be a1·
gravated a knee injury on a force play at 1econd
base and le!t the game alter lhe siitth innina. and
Frey chose lo replace him witb bls lut avallable
hitter, Tony Armas of Oakland.
Winfield, who has been on winning All·Star
teams while with the National Le-iue San Diego
Padres, said, "They go out and plan to win and
never give up. They didn't give up toni,abt, either."
Despite the loss, several American Leaguers
had reason to celebrate. Topping the list was Len
Barker, the Cleveland Indians pitcher who threw
two perfect innings before a hometown audience.
"It was really a great feeling beinl here in
Cleveland," said Barker. "These fans here are
outstanding and it's just gTeat to be an All-Star."
But in the record books, the game was another
in what has become a humiliating string of
American League failures.
"It seems that it's going to turn around one of
these days," said Fingers, a participant in one Na·
tional League victory and five American League
losses. "But every year it seems like a home run
or an error and we lose by one run. It's a crazy game."
* • *
Manager Dallas Green of Philadelphia knew
the key to his team's victory.
"We just played National League baseball " said Green. '
. "We go after .it. We play with intensity. We
Just pla~ that way in the National League."
National League basebaJJ this time was power
baseball a series-record~ualing four home
runs by one team.
The fourth home run was a two-run shot by
Philadelphia third baseman Mike Schmidt off
Rollie Fingers in the eighth inning that won the
game.
Schmidt's home -run trot was a joyful jaunt.
"Hey, that's a game-winning hlt in an All-Star
game." he said. "If that's not something I'll re·
member som.e day, I don't know what is."
Wlule Schmidt hit the game-winner, Montreal
catcher Gary Carter won the Most Valuable
Player Award, catching six innings and hitting two
home runs. The other NL homer was hit by Dave
Parker of Pittsburgh.
"It's fun playing baseball again," said Carter
on receiving the MVP trophy from Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn. 'Tm looking forward to the second
half of the season ...
Newpor t
tries, but
falls short
The Newport Water Polo
Foundation team finished with a
flouris h but it wasn 't quite
enough as Industry Hills A post-
ed a win and a tie to be crowned
the 1981 AAU National Outdoor
champion Sunday.
Jn Newport's first match at
Newport Harbor High, J eff
Stites, the water polo coach at
Corona del Mar High. scored his
second of two goals with just
1: 25 remaining in the final
period as Newport edged Stan·
ford South, 5-4.
Newport's afternoon contest
was even more exciting as it tied
Concord A. 7-7.
With only seven seconds left to
play. Concord's Dave Meyers
scored to give his team a 7-6
lead. Six seconds later,. though,
Jim Kruse tallied for Newport to
give the team a thrilling tie.
With Industry Hills A beating
Concord A, 5·4, in their morning
affair, Industry Hills needed on·
ly a tie to walk away with the
crown and that's exactly what It
got in a 7 · 7 battle with Stanford
South.
Deity ............. .,·~ .......
"I CAN'T SEE anybody's staff
ahead of ours," said Reds'
catcher Joe Nolan. "No one 15
really at top speed, but they all
have pretty good control. Tom
Seaver threw very well Wednes-
day with good velocity and coo·
trot. Doug Bair looks very good;
he's probably throwing harder
than anybody. Bruce Berenyi is
throwing his normal way -a
good, moving, heavy fastball."
Mike Gillman survived this near disaster to win the Cl.ass I race at Riv erside Sunday before 34 ,393 in attendance.
Industry Hills A finished the
three-day tournamect with 11
points. Newport, which was
second in '80 and first in '79, :;et·
tied for a second placP. finish in
'81 with nine points.
Stanford South was third and
Concord A fourth.
But when the Reds' pitchers
finally faced some batters ln' a
Friday night exhibition, the
Angels pounded out 11 hits in a 5-0
trouncing of the Reds, getting six
of the bits and three runs off Frank Pastore in two innings.
lo Saturday's outing with the
Angels, Reds' pitchers fared bet·
ter' stopping the Angels with rour
bits and one run. But the paltry
two nms Cincinnati scored in the
two 1ames may be a cause for
concern. M far as bitting goes, the Reds and Dodgers are even. Los
AnSeles matched the Reda' first·
game ef!ort a1ainst the Angels
with Just two hit. ln a 1-0 Ion to
their Albuquerque farm club lut
Tbunday night in the Dodgen'
only sractice 1ame as tbey pre-
pared for the re-openln1 of
baseball. Nonetheless, the Dodgen sot
good pitcbina performanc11
from Jerry Reuu, wbo worked
the lint four i.nnin11 and cave
up only one hlt, and Burt
HootA>n, 7.J, who pitched three
lM1nO and aave up one nm oa,
tb.reeblta. CiJtdnnaU'1 Prank Putore, s-a, II MIMdaled to 1tart ma tbe naomd ,. tlM RMa ln .... ,.
~-'' ~. w, wlD pttdl
for tM f>odlers.
Big winner was not a driver
Oh, Gillman won Class 1 race, but the prize money went to charity
By HOWARD L. HANDY °' .. ...,,.... ....
RIVERSIDE -When the dust had set·
Ued at Riverside International Raceway
late Sunday evening, the big winner in the
Bridgestone-SCORE World Championships
wasn't among the more than 300 drivers
who competed.
The big winner was the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation which picked up a check for
$16,500, thanks to Mike Gillman of Orange
who won the featured Pepsi Challenge
Class 1 race arid donated his entire purse
to the fund.
GILLMAN IS A virtual newcomer to the
sport of off.road racing, having taken it u.p
after breaking bis back ln a motorcycle
racing accident 4 ~ year• qo. He le one of
four brothen competine in off.road racing
under the family banner, Sunset Cooltruc·
lion Company.
"Our family made a commitment to the
Cyatic Fibrosla FoundatlOft two years a10
and we donate all of our wtnntnp to theui.
They can uae the money mort than we
can," be ta.ld.
Only l .. t week the ractns group with the
1lo1u. 'Drivtnc Hard to Conquer CysUc
Flbrolla,' presented the 1roup wttb a
check for '8.000.
WbUe GillrHD won the feature, Hunt·
li>ctoa Beacb'a Mike Lund waa llao a win·
ner &mday in Clut 2 for vehicles with two
aeatl and no bolda barred in preparation.
He was surprised by the victory.
Lund, a refrigeration plant supervisor.
owns bis own car. But his victory didn't
come easy.
"WE GOT A FAIR start but we weren't
up front," Lund said. "It was tough 1et·
ting through traffic. All we could do was
wait for some of the others to crash or go
out of the race.
·'The start was the toughest part of the
All we could do was wa1Cf or
some of the other cars to
crash or go out of·the race .
Hunttftgton IHcft'a MIU LYnd
race -that and eetting through traffic,"
he said.
Lund spun out in front of the arandltand
on the asphalt ju.st below tum six uftbe res·
ular road course befor~ an estimated
34,393 fana.
"When we spun out, we knew we were
running aecond," Lund and co-driver Mir
Smlt.b aald. Tben be added:
.. WE DIDN'T know where we wt ... ~r
th~ spln. We Just went back to racin1 and
ran a1 fut u we could. WMD it wu over,
we were lD tbe plt area U7IDI to ft.lure out
1f we h.cl lbUIMd UUrcl or tow1h wbeD
they came alona Ud Qted UI to to to vic-
tory C!lrcJe. We were pluNDUJ nrprlffd
to find out we bad won."
Gillman, a regular on the off-road
circuit at Saddleback Park and leader or
Class 1 in the Baja series there, says this
was by far bls biggest win ever. He was
engaged in a tight battle with Glenn
Hanis of Camarlllo until the 12th lap and
was running second most of the time to
that point in the race.
"I didn't think I was going to catch
him.'' Gillman said. "But he went a little
sideways in a sharp right turn and I got
by.
"l got a few lucky breaks and I thought
it was all over when I hit a bay bale right
down there. But 1 was able to come out of it .••
Gillman says it c04t about $25,000 to
build bis Fuoco sin1le·seat racing
machine.
R<>1er. Mear1, a fixture in off.road rac-
ln,g, especially at Riverside, captured his
15th race here when be WQn the Cius 3
event SundQ. It was bis second triumph of
the weekend and aJves him almost twice
aa many wlnt as Du Gurney (8) ol
Corona del Mar on tbe full circuit.
"IT WAS A TOUGH race out there today
and Sherman <Balch) cave us a beck qi a
10. He ree.lly made ua wort for lt until be
went out. ff• cot 111 on tM dra1 rac• at the
•tart because hia car la •boner and U1htei-.
But we had UM advantase over tbe rou1b
areas with our L~er wheel J>a1e," al•an·
saJd. .
The only player to make the
all -tournament team for
Newport was goalie John
Gansel.
In the women's divlslon, In·
dustry Hills A again walked
away with the tiUe.
IHA finished with 10 points to
Commerce's six .
Stacy wins
in playoff
WHEEUNG, W. Va. (AP) -
Hollis Stacy, surviving a five·
way playoff, sank a 12-foot
birdie putt on the first sudden
death bole to win the West
Virginia LPGA Classic cm Sun-
day.
Stacy, collecting a winner's
paycheck of $18.150. held a one~
stroke lead 1oin1 into the l?U.
hole, but miesed a five-foot par
putt attempt that dropped her
into a tie for the lead with Suale
McAllister.
Stacy and McAlll•ter each
then parred the par·S 18tb bole
to 1aln 1 playoff with Penny
Pul~1 Alice Rlumann and KathY
Posuewait .
Puls, Rltsman and POlltlewalt
each bad to make late daupe
to catcb up wttb Steer. who rBl'·
lied a two-abot lead into tbe ftuJ
round before 1he 1bot a two-
over·p&r T• durln1 Sunday'•
round. ,
• I
C4 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augutt 10, 1981
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Putlllatlld OrMQt Coest O•lly Piiot.
.. 1191111 '· 10, "" ~1
DEATH NOTICES
KNOX
JEFFREY RANDAL
KNOX. resident of Costa
Mesa. Ca for the past 30
years He was a veteran in
lhe U.S. Navy, he worked as
a cook at the Victoria Sta·
lion Restaurant for the past
10 years and was previously
a graduate of Corona del
Mar High School. He 1s sur
vived by his parents Clem
and Belly Knox of Santa
Ana Heights. Ca.. brother
Craig A of Costa Mesa. Ca
a nd grandmother Gladys
Montoya of Garden Grove.
Ca. Services will be held on
Tuesday, August 11 . 1981 al
IO:OOAM al Harbor Lawn
Memorial ~hall':I with inter
ment Services 1mmed1alely
following . Services under
the direction of ll11rbor
Lawn-Mount Oli ve Mortuary
of Costa Mesa 540.5554 ·
BERNARD
OR D ONALD P
BERNARD. resident of
Newport Beach. Ca for 7
year s Passed away on
August 6, 1981. Or. Bernard
was born on December 14.
1921 In Minneapolis. Min
nesota. He was graduated in
1948 from Marquet t e
University Medical School
and w as a board certified
member or American
College of OB GYN. He was
in private practice in
Westminster, Ca. and was
Sell with EASE!
It's a BREEZE
Classified Ads 642-5678
""'ed b) his wife Helen S.
Bernard of Newport Beach.
Ca .. 2 !Ions Richard Bernard
of Gulfport. Mississippi and
Don<1ld Bernard, Jr .. o f
Newport B each , Ca . I
daughter Constance Bernard
o f Washingt on . 0 C , l
brother Clair Bernard of Sun
City. Anzona and 2 sis ters
Verena Edwards of Phoenix.
Arizona and Evelyn Colbert
of Sun City, Arizona. Recila·
lion of the Rosary will be on
Monda). August 10. 1981 al
7 30PM at Pierce Brothers
Bell Broadway Chapel Mass
of Christian Burial will be
ce lebrated on Tuesday,
Augw.l 11, 1981 at 10 OOA M
·at St Joachim's Catholic
Church Interment at Holy
Se pulcher Ce mete r y.
Oran~e . Ca In lie u of
flowers donutions may be
made to St Joach1m ·s
Catholic Church. Costa
Mesa Pierce Brothers Bell
Broadway Mortuary d1rec
lo rs.
Graduates
Jeffrey S. Siegel of
Corona d el Mar has
g raduated Crom
Washington University
in St. Louis wilb a
bachelor of arts degree.
on staff at Westminster -----------
Community and f'ountain1 PIH ~
Vall ey CommunilY-----------
hospitals Or. Bernard
served in the U.S. Navv
from 1950 to June 1974 where
his las t duty s tation was
In Guam as commanding of·
ricer or the Navy R!!.l[ional
MedkaJ Center. He ts sur
PtHCIMOTHHS
SMfn4S' MOITUAll'f
627 Main SI
Huntington Beach
536-6539
PACIAC Y•W
MIMOllM. PM•
Ce"11tery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1t1c View Drive
Newport Beach
6'4·2700
McCC>aMICll MOITUAllH
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hills
76&<)1333
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HAltlOll L.AW.._MT. 0\1¥1
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
54().5S$4
... Cl•OY ... I
m&.•OA•WA'f
MOllTUAIT
110 8roldw1y
Cotta~
EM2-9150
a.un .... °"
SMl1M6nm&L ~ MnCL.W CHA,._
427 E. 17th St
Colt1Mesa 64937t ,
D41LY PILOT CLASSIFllD ADS .... ..,. _ __,
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.
RENTALS
·~·-·,,.,hff Kou...., l "{i;rnt,f\.tod t'°'1"e>' t•vrn l.Jf l ftf
< ONSomuuum" t 1io1rn 4. UftdomlNUr'I\, l ._f To..ftMw\& twrft .,..,._,.,
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(iuht llomt" ~"""" MPM•I• \ .r•llol!I l\tftt•I"' Kffllah\o~.ar. c.;., ..... '"' ""'' Olfu• H.tMal tkM,'""" Ft•fl\•I lftdu:.,ln•I Mtftl•t
Nl••at' Mm.ls." aattd \41,f Hf'nl•I•
BUSINESS, INVEST·
M£Nl. FINANCE
t::::..;~~~.!t
ln\hH!W'9« Oppc,wt \ ffll,~lNM ••Mrd "°""'' \u Lwa \IMW',V. .. MH
MM hit'' Tll ,
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
PllSONALS' LO~T & rouNO
4'w!iiJUNf!mtM111 l •r Pid Lfhl,ot.tf~ Lo<•' .... od .... ,~ .. , ..
lroif)c 1tl ,·tuho.
T'•\•I
SERVICES
CM'LOYMENT '
mrAUTION
'c'~fl'hlr"ct11>n Juo W11ntr11 lltlP' ... ncf<I \I.•
MEICHANOISE
~nC-· Aw'l•ftf~ Aloitt""" Moh~ ..
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W t..,1<.tfMXt .. SlM" H~l•wr.-ru u.1
;-:;·~M> th••.._..,"'
BOATS' MARINE
EQUIPMENT
t....nn•I
ftio•h\l: .. M "°''"" ~-.\l.t4'tNt~t1 Ko.c• Pm.n eo.1-. ttfnl t "•'''' tto .... ~ •• ,
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TIAMSPORUllON
A1trr11ft
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t.Jtirtrw l ar-.
"OIOt l'r)f' '°I 1.Mr,.
\lOfet Un" ~•I• N•flt
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AlllOMOBllC
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lfflWr•I
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ti.."r U•t•Yft .. ,,,.n
f 1•l H_.1. ''"lj" tc:-,:an<J"11
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l'ltntlle "-•II ll<llltlloHo "'"l'1 k•• ..... ,. f:,.. Vwh w•_.n Voh• ""' .
AITOS, IO u ...... ,
AUTOS, ISO
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678
~... . ....... ...,. Wt ...... '-"We ....... ...,. Wt ....... ...,. Wt ......... w. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
......... 1002......... 1002 .... ,.. 1002........ 1002 ....... 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY ..... ...,,.MIHM:
All rul ulate ad
verthed ln th l1
MWlpaper la subject to
the Ftdcn.1 Falr Houa·
ln1 Act ~ 1118 which
mallea It WeaaJ t.o ad·
vertiff "any preference.
llmltulon. or di•·
crlmlnatlon baaed on
race. color, rell1ton,
NX, or oaUonaJ ort11n.
TUSTINIMUTT
I BR 2 BA family rm. fl
din. rm. Dbl. dtuched
sara11. Home coaipl.et• lY Nldecor1t.ld Oii lar1•
cul·de-11c lot In Co.
atrlp. XJckey Shafer
lllHlfO.
IASTSIOI . PATIO HOMll
A teparate bom• on a am all lot! I Bdrm 2 bath,
brlcll fireplace, 1uper
private and clean.
Owner will help finance.
SUt,500. Call now,
546-2313
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
\\ I '.-,I I 'i '\
TAYLOR CO.
IU .\I 11 11;·, "" • I . I 11 '
YACAHT-YllW-.lNXIOUS
Panoramic view o( bay, ocean &
sparkllng lights. 4 Bdrms. Lge family
rm. Formal din . rm. 21'l Baths
$395,000. Submit off er on price and
terms owner anxious.
WISLIY N. TAYLOI CO.. llALTOIS
JlllS•J ...... ._.
MIWPOIT CIHTll, M.I. '4~t IO
REAL ESTAT£
SALES MAE
Major regional brokeraie firm with 13
years experience in the coastal area i1
searching for an experienced person
to manage Its expanding Newport of·
fice.
Highly visible Fashion Island location
with 15 full time agents has the poten·
tial for 27 agents.
or in lntenlioo to make ----------· -lllllll-111111 .... _.llllll .... _.llllll ... _.i.lllll ... _.i.lllll ... .,
any auch preference, 6 HOMIS
This firm bas over 125 fulltime agents
and offers residential investment,
escrow, secltrities and mortgage
brokerage services to its clients from
8 offices located Newport to San
Clemente.
rn.11
UN
l)lj
:Ml>l .Ml)
llul
lm m,
JtilA)
JlQu .. aw .....,
ICl'l!I ilfAJ
tl~J ail
lt!O OJl
t'll<I
llmltttloo, or dla· On i,i, acre. Prime loca·
crimlnaUon." lion, new roofa and
f alnl. Seller will
Thi.a newapeper will not lnance. U00,000 al
knowlnfly accept any 1314'~. 963-5671.
advert 1101 for real
atate which la In viola· l '/M I :rn l:• ('IJ
onof law. ~~~~~--I REAL ESTATE
RIOlS: Adferthen
....... dlttdl tt.lr ..
4elly ... =.,.. ...... .... . n.
DAILY rt.OT..-.
hlltllty fw ... tint
h1correct h1Hrtl0it -,.
GIGANnC
SIEDROOM
. need• decoralin11
Private courtyard entry
lead• to h111e Newpor1
Bea ch Estate .
Enormoua family room
with blalini fireplace!
Sunny, 1ourmet kitchen.
Lar1e. lush 1rounds.
Just listed and priced to
aeU. Only s211uoo. CaU !: H .... fOf'Wt today,87~
U()• ••••••••••tttttettttt t = .... ,... 100 ... ,, ······················; TRY ll'Yo I
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
$26,000 DWN! _H_A_ll_Ol_ll_DG_E -
RepubUc homes! 4 huge A w a rd w 1 n n in g
bdrms, 2 baths. family "Jodelle" estate home.
room , brick fireplace. lsl resale offering on
country kitchen. Owner this exql&itely appoint·
anltious, may carry ed townhom·e with
AJTD al 133. Price only · · r b Sl29 ,SOO. Act now ! massive view o ay. S46-Z31ll ocean, coulline & night
SUI) ~llll 1.1.\1
).Ul
lJlO ~ ... ,
"~'
..,.,
THEREAL
ESTATE~S
UICUTIVI
SJ27,000
Alm osl new 2 alory
beauty. Sun filled
kitchen, formal dining
room. wark and cozy
family room too! 2nd
story hosts secluded
master suite with
crackling brick
fireplace. 3 more queen
sized bdnns too! Don 'l
miss out call.
Cl)
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714·631 ·6990
:': THNOM&
:::! TOWMHOM!1
~... Call the apeciaJi.sl! al
the condominium in·
formation center.
......
~""
Touchstone Really
ll63-C867
;:: RIEOUCED
.. n.. C harming wood = shineled townhome Sun
filled ldtchen overlooks
,11,, cozy patio. 3 laree
•1~· bdrm& plus sewinl room ~:! 100. Only Stoo.ooo. call
il8J
'ft7U
'11•1
"""
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631 -6990
R·2
LOT+!
Neat 2 Bdrm home on
the front of the lot. Room
to build behind. A
bar1aln. SW,500. Call tor more detalla.
548-HU
THE ~EAL
ESTATERS
HOISIPIOP•n
Loll of wood, 1talned 11••• aod covo try cbarm clttcnbt tbe at.
moepbtrt ol Ul.11 Santa
Au Hsta I Bdrm I Ba
bomt. TM owner wW
_,. CllTJ 1arfl 1Dd and JOU
CU UllllDt tbl lit. J'Wl llrlct .....
G.uAOl IALI Ide ID Oaa D•llf Pilot brlA1 ... ..,, ....... T1I ....
roar draw111 card,
.. ltlfl'lt.m\tYI
U1hu. Now reduced to
t739,000.
1~1.1"III11 I" .\ ~ 11 .
1!; r. tl It 11 ••
Hin 1 ho.I() 'l"'lt)f l An7 linlt-'
f t· 1!11111! P1 ! hid I
IALIOAISLI ONLY $175 000
Lowest priced unit
available! Unbeatable
terms. Owner will carry
lat at 1.2% for 10 years.
Ideal weekend or sum-
mer hide-away. Steps lo
bay. View boau from
front sltlin1 porch !
Hurry. call 673-3550
THE REAL ESTATERS
DWI.EX
$94,900
lnve5tors deUgbt' Two 2
Bdrm. \Jruts. Current in·
come · 1740 Mo 1 year
home protection plan in·
eluded Call to see!
646-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
LEASEOrTIOH
NEWPORTICH
Rare Back Bay op·
portWJity! Enjoy your
own. private pool. spa.
and paddle teMU court!
Spanlah tile entry .
Spacious llvinl room
with soarine ceilings.
Gourmet cookln1
kitchen. 4 1enerous
bdrms. Only 1289,000.
Won't lut, hurry, call
'13-WO
THE REAL
ESTATERS
IUYas w AMTID
We can belJ> you l'lnd
your dream boUM. Call
our Cotta Meu .
Newport Beach Raiden·
U1l Speclallat, Delora
Gelber& TSL PROPERTIES
Ma.1803
F.\ .....
M•llOI •t1W tlLLI
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COMI WITH US ••• TO MIWPOIT
llACH. TWO NEW DlJPLEXD .. ONE ON
WEST BALBOA BOULEVARD wrm THREE
AND TWO BEDROOMS -no: cmu:R JN
NORTH NEWPORT JUST ONE BLOCK FROM
OCEAN .EXCELLENT FINANCING .. SUS.000
EACH .. ASK FOR SUSAN FRa;T.
1617 WISTCLIFF DI, M.1. 631·7300
S 16,000 DOWN
Take over 12...,% loan · l890 per moolh. A retl
charmer wllh cozy
firepl ace and double
enclosed 1arage .
S89 .500 963-5671
DOWNFOI THI COUNT
Time runnin1 out for
motivated seller who
has bou1ht another
house Guarded gale
community, 4 Br 2"" Ba.
exerclae pool &spa. Nbw
reduced tol385,000.
RCTaylorCo
I -~I ( ~\ I
HJr.UOltYllW
Super location and super
The person chosen will receive liberal
starting salary and an override on the
office production along with other
benefits.
All responses wilJ be held in strict con-
fidence. Send resume to: Drawer 18,
P.O. Box 2000, Corona del Mar, 9262S
/
TEHJAC IUY
Popular Carmel model in Harbor
View Homes . Three bedroom. two
bath, fireplace. private yard, and
very well priced at $229,500.
U,_.IVUf ti()MfS
REALTORS. 675·6000
2«3 Eau CoHI Highway, Coron• del Mar
WE HAVE •5 OF THE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN • RHLTORS flnancine. Quiet area,'-.•••••••••••••••• with community pool. 4 11 IAYSHOUS
FAMILY HOME
This lrg 4 Bdrm 4 Ba
home is just steps away
from the private
beaches of this gate
guarded community.
The living room witb
heavy wood beams,
pa oed windows. aod
Bdrms 2..., baths. formal
dlnio& room, family room. $429,000.
642-5200
A PETE BARRETT
.. REALTY
shutters open to the sun· '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ny brlclt patio-great for
enlerta111m1. Owner will
assist wit.h financing or
will consider trades.
1549,500
D.M. MrnW lltr
760.0135
S 11,000 DOWM
Take over 9~ loan on
super s112.ooo home.
963-5871
OCEAHFIOMT
5 Bdrm 2 Ba. Terrific
value & location on the
sand. Only k98.500. can
now 979-S370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
12112%
$18,000DWN
~
I ,,
REALTORS
67>SS l I
SO. Of HleiHWAY -T1oclHoMI ......
2 Wockl "°"' btoch. ,,.,... ,... old .....
.... 2 .... 2 ... FrCMlt ... older .....
wltll l .... .... .... of old C4M.
Ofhnd .t UH.500.
COLE OF NEWPORT UALTOIS
2515 L CoottHwy .• C... .. M9'
67S.551 I
AFFORDABLE
Vacant and owner wants
out! Huse 2 Bdrm 2"'
bath condo with larae ••••••••••••••• .. family living area. Al·
2 BR 1 BA 1 yr. old take
over existing loan 1n
adult complex
•
REC CARPET
754.1202
tached 1arage. 1115,900
total price. Call now,
546-2313
THE REAL ESTATE RS
RfSIDENTIAL AEAl ESTATE SERVICES
OCIAH/IAY YllW
Perfect Harbor View Hills family
home with 4 BR. & a large comer
lot. So convenient to schools,
shopping and a bike ride to the
beach! Good financing. $425,000.
Fee.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
-llDlll ILllll CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
HIWPOIT SHOlll Cosy Three Bedroom Home In A
Youns People's Location. A Fun
Place To L1 ve. Rented For $750 A
Month At The l»reaent. Priced At
SJ.30.000. Appointment Nece11ary, But
EuyToShow.
COSTA MISA IMCCN
LIQUIDATION SALE
BAYFRONT
........ SB.lllS••·
IOPlll DI'S fJalSfft PUmaA ...
.. 04-4MTII umwr wmt WT m
IPO -IM.T 11-5 r J~ Int. SI.I
m4CMmtltM
YOUI TOMS ti CASH DISCllT
Cll IM -.11s.n11er141-1115
tOQ,
SUPERB YU-8Wtll RN.
llpecl .. y 1..,. trl-tt•tl lllOm ....
h11tlhl decor lty cltcontor
• ..... ,., ..... t!lty & ..., .... l
~ + ......... , .. td.,. .... -. .... + ............. ..-.........
... .,.... ............ ". --,.. + pm• ... UM9UISTIOMAU V1IW
0. OCIAM & IA YFIOMT det1 .. I <>--wll lltlp -..C.. St71.000.
New ElcllsiYe -LARGE POIN. BAYfllT
Mml ...,... ................. ..,....
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................. .--... 1
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Stot.tOt. t• 41ullflt4 hytr. , ..............
llLL Idle *--• ::.'~ Clullfttd
UllTMI
DAILY PILOT ..,.,,
Watcb U. cblll&lAI ol th colora llt'lall
UlHblll • llUOD 11rd1a, pl11tatd for
fHr rnad blooms.
IYWJ d9tlil of tilt I ldrm llom• allow•
pride of owatralllf.
New atutral earpetl,
tmm1ovl1tel1 a 1lata11td ~r1•1t. OwMr will aullt la
t.r l p I t x A d J a c e n t To N e w
Redevtlopment. Great Owner'• Ullit.
Two Rental Unlta Help With
P17ment1 6 T1x11 . 11010 Groaa
Income Per Month. lxetlltnt
Flnandnl A vallable. tlaiOOO. To Place 1our
.. , ....... 11
lln'lct Dll'ICtclrJ
Id .... Call NQW
641-1671 --
lllULT"
lllYICI
DlllCTOIY Por Result
SlmceCall
ftl ........ .
r
~ • • . · '.
ALL-STAR QAME
N•tlon•I I, Amerte41n • MATIOM~ ~•ICMI .. ,..... ., .....
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lt77 -Don SutlOl'I, Nallonal
1m -Stew o.r ... y. N•llonal 1m-Dew P•tMr, Nellonal
ltlO -IC.,, Griffey, NalloMI ""-Gary carter. Ne11oMI NOTE: No All·•ler Game NIVPI -•• MIKled Mfo ... "10.
FIRST HALF STANDINGS
Amerlc•n league
.. sr D1v1s10-..
0...1-
TeJ<U
ClllUOD .......
Ka-City
Seattle
Ml-.
New Y-8alllmore
MllW-
0.troll
Boston , ...... _
To..-
WLl'ltL09 ,, u .'17
l3 22 ... '"' JI 22 .515 21'1
JI ,. .m •
to JO .«IO 12
JI a. .JM lf\'J
11 ,. .JIM le
IEAST DIVISION
:M ll fll1
JI U S74 J
11 u ·™ ,.,., ,, 2' .~ , ....
10 2' .sa ' 2' ,. .uo s .. ., .21• It
.......,.ekw9
Hatlonal ._...,. s, Amerke11 Le-•
r.-r'•O-
A .... • (z.hn H ) et Se.tile (A-ti 1-4), 11
Cll~ I~ 7->J et'°'""' IEc-y ~>.11
K-Clly llAonard ~71 el 8eltlmon (D. Mat11Ml 7·Jl, n NII-.. (Vucko•kh t-J> •• , ...... _
(81yl....., 7-41. II
Teus !Derwin 1-4) el H.-, York (Jofltl
S.41, II
Toronto CClenq ~SI •I Delroll CWllcoa
6-Sl,n
O•kl•nd (Lenglord J.71 el NllnMtola
!Erkkton 1•l. 11
~ Clnd-1
HOllStorl
AU Mia
National league waST DIVIS16N
W L l'ltt. 0 9
1' JI ,'32
U11 .•J$ l"t 2t ,. .4'1 • JS ,. ,..., ......
San FrMICls<O
S.11 Dl"90
27 J2 .451 IO u u .•11 12"" aAST DIV!llOM
Phll-pllle :M 11 .. le
SI. Louli lO 20 ... ll"t
MonlnNI lO U .SAS • Pll"°"'Vfl U 1J .S21 SY>
New Yor~ 11 S4 .m U
ClllC._., U 11 •• 171"1
~Y'•k-.
N•tlonal ~ s, Amerlull u..-• T.-r'a._
Cl11clMell !Pastore J.J) el D .... "
( Reuu S.21. 11
N-Y-(Scott Ml el Chi<._., llCNl!ow
U)
Pllhburoll I Bibby •·II •I MonlrHI
( R098" 7-4). II
St. l.alllt (II. Forw:ll .. 21 al Ptllladtlfltll• (Cllrlsten-.1·)), n
Allallle IP. Nlekro •·•l et Sell Di-.o I EkNH!ef'Qff WI. n
H-10n (J . Nlekro .. 11 •I S.11 FrencltcO (Ale.-S-41, 11
NOTE: Won-IOSI reconb ere I-_,. to
Ju,.. t2. New York el\d Oakl•nd In tM
Amerlce11 L•eoue end Los A11911M and
Phlladltlpflle Ill .,. Na1i-1 L ............
q11ellfled tor PAllmlnary pl•Y'Off• eetlNI
M<-.f dlvllloll wl-ra. II -.....,,
wl11• boltl llalws, II •Ill meel lN dMalaft _.
_.... wltll Ille 1101 llttl -•II -per<-....
West Vlr~~le11lc lat j
•·HOllli Stacy, $11,7911 .. J0.7+-J11 Allee Riun.., ~J n -7Ml--211
p.,,llY ~ Sl,061 71-7>*-211
~$19 M<AlllJCar, $1,°'2 J0.7W.-l1J
ICetlly ~t. $1,061 '9-71·~l1J
llarbW• ~ .... J7S 11·7W.-Jll
Cetlly SllH1l, M,000 11·71-7>-215
Vkkl T-. $3,J1S n.JJ.11-1'4
Cllrls ""'-· $3,J75 7l-7>71--.21•
Cetlly Mone, ~l1S i.7~7)-216
Nie ...... FIGW. U.1• 10-1~1)-.2'4
11 ... -. --· U,7Si0 71-72-74-217 S.... F...,._, 12,crn 71>-n.,.._211
JeMI Ale•. 12.on IHS.7~211
Marty Ole.,_,, 12,on i.7S.7>-2tt
Allee Miiie<', u ,crn 1s.11>-1)-11t Pet er_,...,, s2.0n 70-72-7._21t
M•r99 StUll«llefleld, $1 .. 12 71·1 .. 71-Jlt 8ever1y Devi~. $1,412 71>-7J.7._Jlt
Doi ~In, $1,3.Slt 70-,.72-UO
Jerll.,., Britt, $1,l.St 1 .. n.11-220
Ketlly Young. $1,359 7Hl>-7.....m
Vk kl Sinai-. $1,U, lf>.7S.7S-UO
J•Mt Col ... $1,07S 7).7 .. 17-DI
JeM Ii.tock, $1,075 7l-7S.7l-Z21
AIH-• Ael,,,....dl, $1,07' 7).7$.7J-Z21
Pel~ $1,071 1'-*1>-221
Robena Sc>Mr. $1,075 11·11·7>-DI
Debelle ~Y. 11,075 71>-7 .. 7hZ21
Gell Hlru, 11.011 1•1o.n-n1
Merdell wt"'"'· $131 10-1 .. 1._m M•r'-....,., SIJ7 11-1H~-m
Ketlly Hiie, 1837 ~m
Debby R-. $67S IS.l .. n-.m
Ja11 F8o'er1s, 1675 ~71-1>-m
K•tllr MM'tift, S67S n-11-1~
L.e11r• H\#'lbul, w s n-1 .. 1s--m
Dele ~st. S67S 7S.rf>.1a--m a.tsy Kina.. $562 7~7 .. 12-zJA
M.J. Smltll, $2 1040-16-ZM
Cllldy Feno, M31 7Ml-7J-m
Cerole .>o c.aui-. M3I n-.7)....225
EltlM ........ $CJI 14-n·1+-m
SNl'-Y Hemllfl, M3I 71-74-1+-225
Rosie 8.ar1 letl, $431 7).n.75-m
Joyo ~1. M3I n -11-1._225
SIM• llw1olacdlll, M3I IS.7~7~
Na11ey Rllllln. M3I 1•1•n-m s...ar. Post, s.&:a 1 ... 1~n-m
LOI Alamlto•
SATURDAY'S lATa •HULT
TIElllTM AACIE. lSO yMdl.
Shodlo Orlw ICMCIOl4l S.to J,IO J.20
Loom Deck (8a<dl 3.40 UD
DH·MI'. Comic (Myles) 2.to
OH·lndlert War Oen<ff 1c11a ... ,, UD
AlllO raced: Tencty Te, Corl'O(ete Jet, Ac,.
lion -· Midwey '*-· OH OHdl'IMt lor 11111'11.
U EX.ACTA ( .. 21 pefdSll.40.
~n..-.ce -l4.0J9.
D.i Mer
WNDAY'S •IHUL.TS
11t••04ey..,1 lllt .......... ) "I ltST ltAC ••• furlongs. Tuel>e9dAlm
ICH""9Cla) IO.IO SA UO,..,.... LAlu
IPedrcaal S.to ._JO Siar AM•
(Nlc Har911e) 1.IO Aho 1
U11l-ty, A-Timeless A ......... R-.
P.an nw 8.all. Fllllll Orllte, Hos1U• Kllltht,
Sl.atlle PM, WM All>ed. A-<OUP!ed.
Time: 1: 111/S-
sllc:oteD •ACL' ""'lo"9S· Ke-CMn.al 10.40 5.10 UO
A1W11*7"' CVai4ntuela) 11.00 1.60
Llllle Hoo1-v IM<Hergue) • 40
AllO read: Rlftr r ..... Tlmbll•ell, Flam-
1119 lntr19W, Wiid AnO s-. RlllQ Of Erin,
Oellcle. Oellclng Hool!M, ~·Win.
Time: 1:112/S.
U DAIL V OOUILE IHI peld $11.tO.
THIRD •ACE. 11/1' ml ....
HerbllQltr L..ad ( PIM•YI 10.IO uo 3.40 Flylne .,_,.,, INIC.CMrClll) uo Ull
La~no Rl,,.r lkllv_,,.ldll 3.40
Also rec.cl: Hl!Mr And Tlll1hef', krypt1n,
Promo Sencw, Den 0.. lllllftef', 8M9111ef'o,
Stly Ml•lon, Olio Sflo, R-For A l'P'°"•· Surreplltl-y.
Time: 1:G2/S. ti aJ11ACT.a 112·31 .,..d moo.
f'OU•TH RACE. 6 fllflOftOi.
Yvoelle Co.tellcHas.aye) 4UO It ... 7.00
Slllebll (Cal....,) s.• UI
Ore_.a Holiday (McCMl'on) MO
Al• rec~: Merci CT~, MM-Prt's
HelQll, Rell Raltln, Cev1ar't Merli. C.ar)'Nftt, .._ Me No1, .. _., .-...... ·-TllN. l :lt.
11'1"" •ac&. One mile"' l\Hf, I Fall Ill~ (MCCerrClll) ••• • .......
NWH (~) It.• Ut -.,w......, u .. ......,,., ....
At• ..-ct: Oell<H Dolt, IEnvoy•a """' Jtot-. ,..__, .._. I.al\, K«IW•,
CupCl»o+a•o.
Tll'll9: l :ap/S.
ti eltM:'TA I IN> peltl ",.,._.,
•• ..,.. •ACa ........
~ ........ (fllnc.ay) ........ ut
...,.._.,. (l'tefc.a) J.• ....
, ... ., (C19111MN) ....
Al• rec•: ,.,..... ~. It..,.,
$.ate At ll'lnt, Ludrr .......... Kl~ lat, ~.Tl'l!lleO-. T'-11:tll/S,
HW•NTM uce.4 ........... 8-y .. IMtC.r•I l7 M 11,. tA
..-H1Mef4_...) llM Ut CwtH!leC~I 4M Al• raiM: I'• A l"9t. _ _. Al..._.,
f'erl't Act, l. ... fllJlll,,., T"-1111 Yff ......... , .... lllilt T'-, liltOM•w.
TllM:t :..n. •UACTACl~..Wl\ ... A
.• ~ ltJl IM•1·•t.m ........ . ... ""' ......... ----,...,. --· . ~•C111 1 PM ............. ....................
Ott-Road Wortd chamolontttlpa
(at •• __. ..................... . 9-18 .... Ul ......... VW.)
I, .... ~' ~ 0,...,.1 t. Deo,. l1111n, L..eU Eltl,_.; J Rwwr, IM.aff,
8lool'nlftll0n, A ... , ... ,,..., of-·"·""
ner. " .,. """'· " .................. I. Jim WritllC. C.-, Aeittu; I. Joe
.. M , MlleleflVltjo, C-. I. lt.-,-
Ar-. P ........ , Hl.J-r, M ...... ,.
<or-. ......... .., .......
1 ROflr Meara, ••lt•nll•t•, Jaa,
Hone .. ; J. Rod Hall, R-. H ..... Oeflllt. s.
Rici ~lft, -·Mir.,"-..._,.;
•v•r• ...... ..., ........ r: "·" ...... ................ .,, ...
1 Doll ......... N.VW.. Cele .. J ... CJ7;
J 1Ceotl11 O'c:-11, TWUOfl, ArlL, ,_ CJ7;
I Mlcll .. I 91urlll110, Alvertlda, JHp Honcho, no~ recor,... .,.... .........
I Jkk~,L.e~V-.at,Hl-J-;2.
J.C. M'l'9n. ....... C,,._, S. ~ Crawford, GarlRoaO, Clle-111, .,,., ...
~ °' •""-.... OJA mpfl. ,._ _..,.. UMIMltM
1. Miile Lend Hwrttlrtolort ll••rh
CM_,., 2 Aon Brent, San Paclf'9, •.:.:o
Talldem; a. JCINI 5j)r90W, la. AllOI•. Hl-
J11m-; A,,.,aoe -" of wl-"4-084
mpll.
...,.ic11.a1 ..... I Mike GllltnM, Ortw\98; 2. GleM Harr1t,
Cemerlllo; l. FrltJ l(roYef', Nortllrldgt; •,. Dtllnh Keele, Le11ce1ler; s. Pancllo
Wee,,.,, R.--hacll.
.... Y'f.MftalCMI .....
I. I ven Slew••I. Le kHlde; 2 Glt f\11 H•rrli , C•M•rUto; J . Tom Morrh#
8re11!*>0d.
U.S. Clay Court
l•tl ....... h )
S11111et ..... .
J-.L11I' Clerc def. Iv.,. L.endl, 4-4, M ,
.. l IC!en wins UJ,000 L-wlM •i..-01.
Men'1 tournament
(el o-CJty, Olllel
SeftltflufSllllMt
ar1.,. Teac,_ def. Nl<k Sevl-. 6-l, .. 2.
Jotwl Aultln def. Hank Pfister, 7-5, 1·S.
USTA chemplon1hlp1
lalH.......,.,N.Y.)
$1 ........... Arwtr ~def. Cristo Stey11, .. 2, .. ,.
o.Melf'IMI
S<oll C¥nar.en-Merti Lewis del. AndrWWl-
Seert er-ltY ... 7. 7_.,._.
NASL
WIHTeAN DIVISION
W LO" OA 8" ... Sell Diego 1• 10 ff G e 154
Los ,.,.... 11 IJ 4' SI •1 Ml
Mi 11 It S6 '1 0 II) Sell .,.. 10 It ,. 71 11 '7
MCHtTMWUT OIVISIOM v._-It " .. • S3 I,.
ce...-, " 14 SS so • IG
Seettle IS 14 SI $2 e lM
Por11elld IS IS • ., G 1•
Ed,_ II II S4 .. • 112
EASTERN DIVISION JI I 1J ._. '9 112
14 IS • SI n 113
14 IS 51 52 • 124 sunn iau
SOU'THIAN DIVISION
Atl.,.le 11 12 " SO SJ UO
For1 ~dele 11 It 4' 40 Jt 113
Tempe 8ey IJ II Sol '2 Q 121
J e<UOIWllie IS 14 4J ._. l5 117
caNT•AL DIVISION
Chlc990 tO t " ~ S4 170 Ml11-. 'It II 5' •7 SI IS;)
TlllWI IS 14 U ._. • t•
Dell., S 24 " U M SJ
Sia pofnb ere •••r-for • r_...tlon or
O••r111N victory Four POlnts for • tnoatout
victory. One bonus po1111 for every goel
s<ored wllll a me•lm11m of th,... per -·
No -POlnt >• •••rd.ad for overllme or sllootOUI OMIS:
5'111My'•k-
W•llllllCllOft J, Allenle 0
E clmolllol't 2, c.mos 0
For1 l..auderOelel, Tempe lley o
MllWWIOU l, TorCllllO 0
T•J'eO-Ho..,_ KNdliled
I
_,_
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1981 ca
From Page C1
NL MAKES SUR E e • e
Dle10'1 Onie Smith open*1 with
a walk. He promptly •wiped
second but on an overthrow by
Cleveland catcher Bo Dlas,
Smith 1ot cautbt In a rundown
and wu retired.
A moment liter, thouch. the
NaUonall had the tying run back
on bue IS fin1er1 uncharac·
teriatically l11ued another walk
to Pitt1bur1h'1 Mlke Easler.
Thls time, Schmidt made him
pay for the indiscretion, wallop-
ing a two-run homer over the
fence in center lo turn the game
around.
"I was trying to overthrow the
ball and I had no rhythm at all,"
Fingers said. "I threw about 10
minutes in the bullpen and felt
good. But I obviously left ever-
ything down there. The ball to
Schmidt just said 'Hit me' all
over it."
Schmidt obliged and the
beneficiary of the shot was San
Francisco's Vida Blue, sixth of a
record eight National League
hurlers. He gained credit for the
victory, becoming the first
pitcher to win an All-star contest
in each league. Blue received
credit for the 1971 AL victory -
the only time the Americans
•
have won since 1862.
An.other record w aa set by
PhUadelpl\la '• Pete Rose. the
NL starter "at flrtt bast. That'•
the lll'lh poe1tion at whJch Rote
has started 1n All·atar play. He
•bowed the strike had not dulled
his talents when be opened the
came with a single. Toni&ht,
when the regular season re-
sumes, ROISe goes after the NL
career hit record. He waa tied
with Stan Musial at 3,630 when
the strike began .
Alter Schmidt's homer gave
the Nationals the lead, Manager
Dallas Green ol Philadelphia
went to Houston's Nolan Ryan
for the eight inning and St.
Loub' Bruce Sutter for the ninth
and they retired the AL in order.
For Sutter, it was his second
consecutive All-star save follow-
ing victories in the 1978 and 1979
games.
His task was made simpler
when, with one out in the ninth,
Frey was forced to let Toronto
pitcher Dave Stieb bat for
himself. The AL pilot was out of
pinch hitters because of the
Armas-Lynn moves two innings
earlier.
Lighl air mars race
Frustrating weekend for sailors
Light airs from San Diego to
Santa Barbara plagued sailors
in three different offshore ocean
sailboat races over the weekend.
Most frustrating was the San-
ta Barbara to King Harbor race
with 162 starters Friday at noon.
The race started in about t wo
knots of wind and by 5 p.m. the
leaders were less than 10 miles
from the start.
First yacht to finish was
Roller Coaster, sailed by the
Golison Family Syndicate ol
Long Beach Yacht Club, com-
pleting the course in 17 hours.
Roller Coaster failed lo save her
handicap time and finished third
in the overall standings of the
International Offshore RuJe fleet
behind Harry Hibbs' Tonka,
Ventura Yacht Club and PauJ
Be rger's Decision, Del Rey
Yacht Club.
It was a slow race going and
coming for the yachts in
Pinckney wi n s
Mike Pinckney of Bahia Corin·
thian Yacht Club beat out 18
rivals to take top honors in the
Laser Class Western Regional
c hampionship sailed out o·r
Newport Harbor Yacht Club Fri-
day, Saturday and Sunday.
The seven race series was
sailed in the ocean off Newport
Beach in Ught to moderate airs.
Runner-up was Alan Ledbetter
of San Diego; third was Jon
Pinckney, BCYC; fourth was
Charles Buckingham, Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, and fifth
was Rod Turner, BCYC.
You need Yoo <8><(
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's
Ahmanson and Dickson Series
and Balboa Yacht Club 's 66
Series in a race to Catalina
Saturday and a race home on
Sunday.
Yachts were still finishing
Sunday night in Bahia Corin-
l h i an Yacht Club's race to
Coronado Yacht Cl ub. San
Diego. Final results were not ex-
pected until today.
NMYC -8YC
Oc.-hdlltW-.
IOR OVERALL -I. Scorploft, s.-J ..,...
SDYC; J. R11Hlan. Earl Outer. eve , J.
Cellfomla GoW. Lee Coll, OPYC.
CL.ASS A -t. G,_t, Jotln lleyncMdl, NHYC; J
Reldef', Jim Llndenn.an, ave .
IOA·• -I. lll9W19. ROl'I -VIiie, eve ; 1.
Splrll, Allen er-11. VYC, J. Flamllu0ya111,
9.arMY Flem, L&YC.
IOR< -I. Scorpion, Sletot1er J-SOYC; 2 Ruttlen, E.erl Dexter, llYC; J, C•lltoml.a ~.
L .. Coll, OPYC.
PHRF OVERALL -I. l.-111 c.m.4, Oden
llrutlwll, NHYC; 2. Por'py, Roy Slnelelr, eve ; >. Wlldfl,.., Jim G,_I, VYC.
PHAF-A -1. Joy Rlellt, Jerry &lltl:., eve; 2.
Ceplal11 Mldnlglll, Weever-Ru1h, 8YC; 3. ~ ...... Tur19.SSYC.
PHRF·• -I. Pwpy, Roy Slnc:lefr, eve; 2. ~. Don MclClllOln, NHYC. S. R-•Y. J-'#le094, VYC.
PHAF< -1. ~ C.mel, Odlft a r-.
NHYC; 2. Wiidfire, Jim GroMlll, VYC; l .
e1-.-, Mufll"' "-"""°"· acvc. H YC-KNYC
SmM ....... K ... M..-r•-
IOR -1. T-.e Herry H .... , Yell YC; 1.
Oeclalon, p_,1 llerQltf', OPYC; I. ltolter ~.
Qoll-Femliy S~, LllYC.
UL09 -1. Trick POtly, '"6911 Olkk,,....,
PVYC; t. Redle<rt. Lio.,.. Gllll11, CHIYC; I.
C .......... "-· Giit ..... iC...,, SMYC. SPLIT RIG -t. S.. lM1I. _. T..,., SllYC.
PHR,-A -I. Tlmbef' Wolf, L.err, Herwy,
c evc ; t. s.r.toee. CMrllH "-· KHYC; J.. R1111, 8olltMlllef', MOeYC.
PHltF·• -1. Hot R..,.., cesu11-.w11 ....
ICHYC; 2. J-. Fred 8rowt1, CYC; >. 81ue
... Y911. JoeJkGftl, KHYC.
PHRF< -I. Winos. F.-Lynd\ PIYC; 2.
WM .. UoMnlnL D. VeftMefl, PCYC; S. ,__
lion, Jeny HWllM, ICHYC.
PHRF-D -I, o-u ....... 8111 COllltef', save ;
J, Or..,_., RoOlll Martin, ICHYC; J.. S.-.
mer1Jme, Guy T.,,.,..,., SllYC. PHAl'-E -1, Sl ... y. S.O. c-1, S8YRC; 2.
Mir ..... Rld\enl WI....,., CHIYC; S. ~.
WllWI Wllo!'· 5e YC.
DI. YOO
AccMpr••U<el Chlrop .. wo(
)(., ... , ilNac•-y
770-5251
l>'fN (VIS & WfflCfNOS
11821 LAI I l'OtfST Oii \If
WITflll•
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
To Place your
"Fast Result"
Service Directory
ad .... Call Now
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ht. JJJ
Ulllihcl
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(Alie for S..d.yJ
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insurJncr .ixrnl!I Jnd hroltrr.1
lnaurence premium• up thl• rear?
Call us rot a compellllve quote
tor Auto, Homeowners, Fire, Fine Arts,
Lite, Medical, R. V., Boat or Yacht Insurance.
N JI M~ Arthur Roulrv~rd
NC''l'llJ><'rl Rtach Ca Woli41
I /l4) ,.,, •)05c,
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198f OOVP E DEVILLE D'ELEGANCE
'r oual comfort seats, Cabriolet top &
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Top d iv e r s
to c o m p e t e
in MV event
Mission Viejo N ad adores stand-
out Greg_ Loug_anl,5 will bead an
all-star cast of 100 springboard
and tower divers who will com_,
pete in the U.S. Outdoor Na ..
tional Diving Championships in·
Mission Viego beginning Tues-day .
Louganis has won 16 national
titles, twice won NCAA cham-
pionships and s wept the U.S.
Olympic Trials in 1980. A silver
medalist in the 10-meter plat-
form at the 1976 Olympics, he
also took home two gold medals
at t he 1979 Pan Amer ican
Games. 1 Other top divers who will com·
pete in t he event inc lude
Louganls' teammate on the
Nadadores Megan Neyer , the
first woman in 24 years to win··
both events at an Olympic Trials
( 1980 ). She also captured the
three-meter event at the 1981
U.S. Indoor Championships.
Mi ss ion Viejo's other
representatives will be Wendy
Wyland, 16, a national titlist ati
this ye ar's Indoor Cham-
pionships and Dave Burgering, a
national team member s ince
1977.
Other top contenders include
Amy McGrath and Bruce Kim-
ball , both Olympic team divers.
Tickets for the five-day com-
petition. priced at S2 per day o~
$6 for the entire meet, will ~
av ajlable al the gate.
Preliminary rounds are
scheduled mornings with finals
set for mid-afternoons.
Steel e r s' Ham
out 10 weeks
PITTSBURGH <AP\ -Jack
Ham, the Pittsburgh Steelers·
All-Pro linebacker, will be
sidelined from eight to 10 weeks
with a broken left arm, the Na-
tional Football League team
s aid Sunday.
Ham suffered the injury in the
Steelers' 35·31 exhibition victory
over Cleveland Saturday night
during a third-quarter pileup
near the goal line.
The game a lso cost the
Steelers the services of Light end
R a ndy Grossman for four
weeks. Grossman sustained two
fractured ribs on his lef~ s ide.
Ptd G few wordl tb work for y0u
In the ..., ....
-
"""'if'"':',.
,,
111111 ml Ylll 11111111 llllY MR
MONOAY. AUGUST 10, 198\ . _ ·-~-@
Workmen assemble equipment in fuel-handling room next door to
new reactor at San Onofre Nuclear Generating StatiQ11.
Catholic group
hits TV sponsors
NEW HA VEN, Conn. <AP> -
The Knights of Columbus, a
1.35-million-member organiza-
tion, is considering its most
political statement ever -a
possible boycott of sponsors of
"immoral, obscene or crimit)al"
TV shows. Members of the all -male
Roman Catholic group are to
vote this month on a resolution
based on recommendations from
some or the group's 7,000
councils, officials say. The
binding resolution would require
members to boycott the goods or
services or any sponsor of. an
offending show.
Elmer VonFeldt, spokesman
for the New Haven-based group,
said that while the proposed
policy is new, the reeling about a
threat from television is old.
''They (the Knights) have
expressed their concern long
before anyone ever beard of the
Moral Majority," he said.
He said the Knights are "very
strong on family values" and
reel many TV programs show
''excessive violence and
abnormal preoccupation with
sex . . . particularly out of
wedlock, that would incite young
people to similar behavior."
The Knights bolds its national
convention Aug. 18·20 in
Louisville, Ky. The proposed
resolution is one of several
hundred that will be brought
before the 431 delegates
expected to attend.
The resolution does not target
any specific shows for the '
unfavored status and does not
name any sponsor s . But
VonFeldt said delegates on the
floor could bring up s pecific
(See TV, Page AZ)
Mesan critical
after being shot
A 23-year-old ceramics tile
helper, shot in the chest as he
argued on a west Costa Mesa
sidewalk with two men early
t ·o d a y , i s r e p o r t e d i n
crtUcaJ condition this morning
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
.IRlllil CDAIT 1111111
· Night and early morntna
low clouds. Otherwise fair
but hazy sunshine through
Tuesday. Highs ln lower
705 at the beaches and low
to mJddle ~ inland. Lows
62 tb.68.
llllil TIUY
The Rama, 1Dith Pot H°"""
e1tob&Md ot quartnbock,
kick olf a n•10 campo•gn
tonight tofth an uhibUfoft game~ Hew Englaftd.
A capoctlll c1'0IDd 1' upect.t
at Anqltdm Stoctilnn. siorv
~Cl.
11111
Investigators said Trinidad
Pena of 1780 Monrovia Ave. may
have ~n shot at 2: 18 a.m. as
lhe result of an altercation
earlier in a west-side bar.
The shooting is the second in
Costa Mesa in two days.
Police say they still are baf-
fled over the early Saturday
morning slaying of Jeffrey Ran-
dall Knox, 33, who was shot
down as he walked toward his
home from a nearby conven-
ience market.
Knox, a cook for 10 years at
the Victoria Station restaurant
in Newport Beach, wu shot
several times at about 1:30 a.m.
Saturday on Santa Ana Avenue.
Investigators say the .bail ol
bullets may have come from a
small caliber platol fired from a
movlnccar.
omcers described Knox .. a
quiet, unassuming man who
Uv~ quietly alone.
swcs.y•s sbota on Monrovia
A venue also were believed fired
by a small caliber piltol, but ln-
veal.laaton said tbere la no ap-
parent link in the two sbootinp.
Funeral servltet for KnOll ue
scheduled for 10 a.m. at Harbor
Lawn Memorial Chapel.
He wu a 11aduate of Corona
del Kar Hilb School and I U.S.
Navy veteran.
Hell 1urrived by bll pennta,
Mr. and Kn. Clem Kaox ~San·
ta Aae Jf•ltbla, bl• brotber
Cr:.!£ of Costa lleaa aad a
1r ~. Glad11 ll~a
of Garden Oro".
.Potential ODofre dangers defined
Planr,,ers write scenarios for. what could .happen. at nuclear plant
Etitor'• note: Tta. U.S. AtomU: $Gf~ond Ucnamg Board will con·
duct hNring• Jn Orange CovnlJI
•tarting Aug. 25 on emergnc11
~'°" plana for communitie•
.n(or the Son Ono/re Nucltar
Genef'ating Station. Thb ii the
Hcond port o/ o three-port lerie•
e.ramining thole_planl. . ----
By DAVID KllnMANN °' .. ...., ..........
Early in July, the Orange
County Board of Supervison ap-
proved an agreement with
Southern California Edison Co.
lo provide for a public alert
system within the 10-mile area
s urrounding the San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Station.
According to county officials,
the system would include in-
stallatioo of up to 39 sirens in the
so-called emergency planning
zone around the plant.
The sirens , Edison officials
said, would be activated within
15 minutes of an emergency
situation at the huge nuclear in·
stallation. They would tell area
residents lo tune in to emergency
radio and TV broadcasts for in-
formation on where lo go and
what to do.
David Pilmer, Edison's
coordinator of emergency plan-
ning, said the sirens would cost
more than $1 million to install,
an expense borne by the utility
in its $15 million quest to insure
that emergency plannln1 for San
Onofre is succe11ful. (Plant
critics would quibble with the re-
sults.)
What could go wrong with San
Onofre?
According to emercency plan·
ners, there are myriad
possibilities . And to deal with
possibUities. And to deal with
four broad classifications of inci-
dents.
In Increasing order of im-
portance they are an unusual
event, an alert, a site emergen-
cy and a general emergency.
This is what they mean:
An unusual event could signify
as many as 3() different mishaps,
including a minor release of
radioactive fluid. Or It could
mean that the temperature of
the reactor coolant system was
getting too high, requiring a
plant shut.down.
It could mean there was an
airplane crash on the sprawlina
plant grounds near San
Clemente or that an explosion
had occurred with minor
damage to facilities.
According lo emergency plan-
ners in Orange County, an un-
usual event would not constitute
a real emergency condition, but
could escalate to a more severe
status i! appropriate action was
not taken.
H plant safety continued to
erode, an alert would have to be
called.
This could mean that an acc;i-
denl had occurred resulting in
unexpected plant radiation
levels greater than 1,000 tim,s
the norm. It also could mean
that the reactor coolant system
had sprung a leak greater than
SO gallons per minute or that an
explosion had occurred affeclin•
operation of the plant.
County planning officials said
the purpose of the alert level
was to assure that emergency
personnel would be availab~e
and ready to respond whe~
needed.
If conditions continued to
worsen, a ·•site e mergency"
would be declared, raising the
possibility that radioactive
materials could soon seep or
spew out of the reactor's con-
tainment domes, the reinforced
concrete cupolas that rise so
prominently along the Southern
California shoreline in northern
San Diego County.
At this level, a fire could be al·
reeling safety systems needed to
keep the reactor core cool or for
shutting down the plant.
It could mean an explosion
had caused severe damage to
shut.down equipment or that an
earthquake had jolted the plant.
It could also mean that Edison
engineers had to flee the control
room.
Orange County's emergency
plan states: "Most events in this
category constitute a clear
potential for significant enviroo-
<See GETTING, Page A3)
International flight halt?
Confusion rei gns; F A A denies ordering suspension
BULLETIN
W.ASmNGTON <AP> -The
Federal Avlatlom Admbalatratioa
this aft.erDOOD a.aaoanced a su·
pensba of m•t Rlgllu between
tJae Ualted S&ates .. ct Evope,
bat after several lloan u d
mada CGllfu loa la t.lle alrllDe la·
ct.ary re.ened lbell ud said
DO atpu llad Mee etopped.
that "virtually all international
arrivals and departures have
been halted" because most
flights to Europe go through
Canadian air space.
Meanwhile, at least one plane
was diverted from Canada and
others from the United States
Toronto and Winnipeg were not
handling U.S. traffic and that
when controllers in Montreal
· "were told to handle the traffic
or leave, they left.··
He said Kennedy handles 120
international flights a day, and
.. 99 percent" were affected. He
sue," Owens said.
By Tiiie A.laodated Preas
Neulf all internatlf>ul air
traffic lo and from New York
was stopped bec:auae controllers
in Canada were refusing to han·
die the planes, a Federal Avia-
tion Ad.ministration official said
today.
Montreal controllers ''were told
to handle the traf fie or leave, they
l eft."
Numerous flights to Canada
from Boston's Logan Interna-
tional Airport were postponed or
scrubbed, said Jo Ryan, airport
spokeswoman. She said only Air
Canada flights from Logan were
not immediately affected by the
Canadian controllers' refusal to
process flights to and from the
.United States.
In addition, u Della flight from
Miami to Montreal was diverted
to Boston, Ms. Ryan said.
Armando Ballotta, Florida's
manager for Air Canada, said
none or the five daily flights
from there had been canceled.
Norbert Owens, chief of air
traffic control for the Federal
Aviation· Administration's
Eastern region, told reporters Jt
Kennedy lnternati~nal Airport
were delayed or canceled today
as Canadian air taffic con-
trollers showed support for their
striking American counterparts
by refusing to process flights to
and from the United States.
Owens said that controllers in
.. ........ __ ....,
QUllf,.... AHIAD -After a Sunday •pent NtrOllln& the
hectic recreational boatlnl traftlc lD Newport a.Hb Chan-
nell, Deputy Doa Joralemoo Ol tile 0ranp ~ Sbllrtlf's
Department Harbor Patrol Pl'Oba.bl>' WW.-~ fOUld tPHd up the swiset. For a look at hi.I daytime duties, 1ee Pqe 81.
,
said airports in Boston,
Philadelphia, Washington and
Chicago also send international
flights over Canada.
'•All foreign governments
have been contacted by the State
Department concerning the is-
* * *
Republic Airlines was forced
to cancel two flights, ont>
between Detroit and Toronto
<See CONTROL Page AZ>
* * * Airport operations
near normal in OC
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL °' ... ....., ""'IUff Operations at Orange County's
John Wayne Airport continued
at near-normal levels today
despite the week-old strike by
air traffic controllers
Ralph Odenwald, chief of the
Orange County tower, said
notices of intended dismissal
have been sent lo 17 local con-
trollers who participated in the
strike. None of those receiving
notices has decided to return to
work, he said.
The tower is relying on
supervisors and four non·
striking controllers to handle
traffic at the nation's fourth
busiest airport, Odenwald said.
Asked how operations were
going, Odenwald responded,
"Just fine."
Meanwhile, Mark Peterson, a
spokesman for AirCal, which
operates 25 of the 41 jet de·
partures permitted from Orang'
County, said passenger volume
which was down substantially
last week , is improving.
For example, a 119-seat Boe·
ing 737 departing al 7:05 a.m. to-
day for San Francisco carried
113 persons, compared to 84
passengers last Wednesday.
Three other early morning
flights to San Jose, Oakland and
Sacramento also left with near-
n or ma l passenger loads,
Peterson said.
Tustin residents
return after spill
About 2,000 Tustin-area
residents were allowed to return
lo their homes early today,
a bout 13 hours after the
discovery ol a chemical spill
from a 3,800-gallon lank at a
f ertlllzer firm prompted their
evacuation.
Tustin police said t h e
realdenta were permitted back
in their bomee al about 1 a.m.
after chemical spUl experts
cleaned up the remalnlnt
phosphoric acid that bad leaked
from the tank at Larry Fricker
Acnculta.ral Fertlllstr Salee,
12111 Newport Ave.
Police and ftre offtdall aa1d
nve penoae required tnat'Mllt
for expollll"e = acid'• fUmel, bUtaanewM tabMd.
Two of tboa• treated were
YOUDllttti wbo bad dlKoo••ed
t.b• ~cal leak 8wMla1 Jmt
EVACUATION
Spill area circled
before noon.
.........
Tbe teen-ace bo11,
Anabelm and Taalln,
.,See SPIU., Pase All
u • ! .••• Orange CQ11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1981
p-9":ds treated
Jo mild water
.on I oc coast
' uteau..-da alon1 the OrU11e ~out saJd the thousands that
poured onto beaches this
1weekend were treated to lake-
l~ ke conditions with waves
averaging only six inches in
'some spots.
Newport Beach city guards
said bodysurfers at the Wedge
concentrated on their tans when
,waves at ~at usually-lively spot
failed to ra.tse above one {pot.
· i Despite the flat ocean condi·
,t,ons, one 25-year-old beach vis·
it.or in West Newport got into
'trouble when caught up in a rip
tlde Sunday afternoon.
• out durln& the two days to enjoy
the peacetul ocean conditions.
The water temperature in Hunt-
lneton topped out at 88 dep-eea. .
In Newport Beach , 170,000
beach visitors squeezed onto the
sand. There were 30 rescues,
mosUy attributed to a slllht rip
tide, over the wedtend.
A women's volleyball tourna·
ment at Main Beach ln Laguna
bolstered attendance there.
Guards in Laguna estimated
41,000 persons showed up during
the weekend.
San Clemente, Doheny and
San Onofre state beaches at-
tracted 20,000 visitors each day
with liWe rescue activity.
Dellf Hme "--.., .. ,., ......
Authorities said a lifeguard
rescue boat had to come to
Arturo Sanchez's aid off 10th
!Street when he was pulled under
the water. Sanchez was treated ~Y lifeguards and taken to Hoag
:Hospital where he remains in
serious condition.
"It was a calm weekend,"
commented one lifeguard, "cer·
tainly nothing to write home or
get excited about.'' Onlookers survey problem of Newport sailor who ran his 30-foot sailboat aground Sunday south of Corona del Mar
A Newport man also had his
problems Sunday when his 30-
foot sailboat ran aground on the ,~each south of Corona del Mar
'adjacent to t h e Irvine
, Equestrian Center.
Skipper B . Tucker told
authorities he had his craft on
automatic pilot and that when
the boat started heading for
shore, he couldn't release the
automatic pilot.
Mexican national
wounded by deputy
1 The boat, partially destroyed '
·On one side, was to be pulled off
't:he sand today. .
' State lifeguards in Huntington
Beach, where waves stayed
between one to two feet, report·
ed 175,000 persons showed up at
the beach over the weekend.
Thev made SO rescues.
H-untin gt on Be a c h c ity
lifeguards said 100.000 turned
From Page A1
CONTROL. • •
and another between Detroit and
Montreal.
·'The Canadian government
said it was unable to handle the
t raffic because of problems with
' their controllers." said airline
. spokesman Neal St. Anthony.
A man believed to be a Mex-
ica n national s uffered
superficial wounds e arly today
in Dana Point when an Orange
County Sheriff's deputy's gun
accidenl.4illy discharged during
a n arrest, according to a
sheriff's spokes man.
Lt. Wyatt Hart said Demetrio
O'Campo Vallez, 21, was treated
and released at San Clemente
General Ho5pital after a 1 a.m.
shooting inci~nt in the parking
lot behind tbe Silver Lantern
Cafe at 33472 Silver Lantern St.
Hart said Deputy Tim Stewart
was returning to his patrol car
after a confrontation with Vellez
and four companions when bis
gun fired. Fragments of the
bullet struck Vellez's right arm
and side as he lay on the pave-
ment.
Hart said Stewart was called
to the cafe after Vellez and bis
companions al l eged ly
threatened the manager with
lead pipes and knives during a
verbal dispute.
The five Hispanics reportedly
accosted Stewart who pulled his
service revolver and forced the
men to lie on the ground. ·
While he was returning to his
car to radio for assistance, his
gun went off. Hart said the acci-
dent is under investigation.
Hart said Vellei and the four
others who accompanied him to
the cafe are in custody. They are
identified as Pablo Vega O'Cam-
po, 29, Leopoldo Hernandez
Lagunas, 18, David Lopez
Alaniz. 18 and a 17-year -old .
None has a permanent address.
Hart said the juvenile is being
held at Juvenile Hall in Santa
Ana, while the other four are at
Orange County Jail. Each was
booked on suspicion of assault
with a deadly weapon and is be-
ing held in lieu of $10,000 bail.
' The FAA said U.S. air traffic
Sunday, the seventh day of the
'strike by 12,000 controllers,
showed 81 percent of scheduled
flights took off, after hitting a
peak of 83 percent Saturday.
Transportation Secretary Drew
Le\¥i5 attributed the drop to cut-
ting controllers on the job from
60 hours' work last week to 48
hours.
Barricaded Lagunan
surrenders to cops
In another development, a
bomb threat forced par tial
evacuation of the air traffic con-
trol center at Toronto's interna-
tional airport, an air tower
supervisor said. There were a
few planes in the air at the time
and a skeleton crew remained
on duty while police searched
the building. he said.
From Page A1
TV .••
offenders to be included in the
resolution.
The resolution 's conclusion
reads:
A Laguna Beach man who
barricaded himself inside his
apartment Sunday night surren-
dered to police after a 45-minute
standoff in which nearby resi-
dents were evacuated.
Charles "Tennessee" Sotith,
22, of 2961f.l Cypress "Drive, left
his .38 caliber handgun inside
his apartment and gave himself
up to police at about 9:30 p.m.
Sunday.
He was being held today in
Orange County Jail on suspicion
of assault with a deadly weapon.
Bail was set at $25,000.
Police said Smith's neighbor
allegedly spotted the man steal-
From Page A1
ing a Boogie board from his
yard and pursued Smith. The
victim said SmHh turned and
pointed a handgun at him and
the two men began to scuffle.
Smith apparently dropped the
weapon and the two separated.
A few minutes later, the victim
again confronted Smith and the
s u s pect again pointed the
handgun at him.
It was during the second scuf-
fle that witnesses called police
and Smith purportedly ran to his
apartment.
Police evacuated four res-
idences surrounding the Cy-
press Drive apartment before
Smith gave himself up.
"Further resolved, that · tr,
prevent the implanting of
immoral, obscene and criminal
thoughts in the minds of men,
that all members of the Knights
of Columbus do everything in
their power to influence their
Jamily, friends , relatives.
neighbors and others to keep
away from and refuse to
patr onize all companies and
organizations who use such
methods of their advertising for
their promotional purposes.''
SPILL IN TUSTIN • • •
llB man held
in break-in try
A 25-year -old Huntington
Beach man was arrested Sunday
night while allegedly trying to
break into the Lucky Discount
Center at Bolsa Chica Street and
Heil Avenue via a rooftop grat·
ing, police said today.
Paul Perkins was arrested on
suspicion of burglary in connec-
t.ion with the 11:55 p.m. incident,
police said.
ORANGE COAST
exposed lo the fumes as they
bicyc~ed near the fertilizer firm
and apparently pedaled through
the liquid acid. They were taken
to Western Medical Center in
Santa Ana for precautionary treatment.
Also requiring treatment were
two firefighters from the Orange
County Fire Department.
The acid spill, which had
begun about 9 a .m., required
authorities to evacuate all
residents Jiving in the area
generaJly bounded by Irvine
Boulevard, La Colina, Elizabeth
and Holt avenues.
The area most affected by the
fumes was the intenection of
Newport A venue and Irvine
Boult!vard, according to police
spokesmen. RetaU areu also
were evacuated.
The first evacuations were
ordered at about 12:20 p.m. and
an emergency center was set up
at Columbus Tu·aun Inter·
mediate School.
D1ily Pilat CIHaffted edvefttei"tl 1141M2·MTI
All other depertm.nta M2-4321
TholNS P. Haley
~-C-'-vt1ftOll-
~ N. WHd
' Thomas A. Murphine r..
MK:h;.i P. Harvey ............ ~
L. Kly Schultz ~ .. OpenlloN
Kenneth N Goddard Jr. ~0..-
e.rneni Schulman c.......-cnartee H. LOOI ~..,...... . ..,
c.rot A. Moore ..........
'
MAIN°"9CE JJO Wttl a.y SC , Gell• MIN. CA.
Mall..,.,._ ao1 IMO. COiia Mew. CA nt»
S.c-(I.St l!Ofl• pelo •• Cott• ""ltN. Ctll .......
IUl'S 1"4001, S*<rltllton by <•rrltr '4 00 "*""''· by m•ll tBO """"""'· mllt .. rv dttllNI._ MOO _ .....
VOL.74,N0.222 ~ . ~-
A medical aid station also was
established at a department store
nearby. Radio and television
broadcasts and door-to-door
notification by authorities alerted -
nearly 2,000 residents to leave the
area. •
Assisting in the evacuation
and cordoning off the area were
police officers from Tustin,
Santa Ana, Irvine and the
Orange County Sheriff's
Department. Other units from
the Orange County Fire
Department and .the California
Highway Patrol also were called
in. No problems were reported
in the removal of residents.
:I'be phosphoric acid, which is
used in the ·manufacture of
fertilizers, can cause bumlng in
the chest and watering of the
eyes if its fumes are inhaled. It
ia considered to be poisonoua.
Cause of the leak in the
above-around taat is under
lnvestiption. Spokesmen for the
Tustin police and Oran1e County Fife Department, wbicb serves
TUatln1 said they did not know
w._.t cau.ect the hu1e taat to
be=n1 lta contents.
of the to•1c 1pill by
dlktn1 and vacuumln1 was
baadled by the IT Corp. of Wtlmincton.
Streetl wbJcb bad been cloeed
tn tbe area of the apW alJo were
reopened early thla morn1n1.
The intenectlon of Ne1tp0rt
A venue and Irvine Boule9ard
opened a abort tllne later.
Workers return
OAX '1DGE, Tenn. CAP> -. W~ at two nuclear we~
aad re1earch centers be1an
retumtn1 to wort after ratifytn1
• a new contract and endln1 a
'8-day strike.
'
OFF-ROAD WINNERS -Mike Lund of Huntington Beach.
with co-driver Mir Smith. won the Class 2 off-road race
championship at Riverside International Raceway Sunday.
For story, see sports. Page C2.
Airline
chairman
suiciile?
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
chairm a n of Continental
Airlines , an embattled organiza-
tion des perately fighting
takeover by Texas lntemational
Airlines. apparently committed
suicide, a Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport spokesman said.
The body of A.L. Feldman, 53,
Continentai 's chairman and
chief executive officer, was
found Sunday night in the ex·
ecutive suite of bis airport of-
fice, said John Smith, the direc-
tor of airport operations.
Smith said a gun was found in
Feldman's suite and that the
Continental executive apparent·
ly had shot himself. His body
was found shortly before 8 p.m.
Los Angeles Police Depart-
ment detective Gary G\athrie
said, "We have a telephoned
confirmation that an A.L.
Feldman has been shot." In-
vestigators were unavailable for
further comment early today
Feldman stepJ)ed into the post
of chairman of the corporation
at Contine ntal last month .
George A. Warde was named
president and chief operating
officer and Robert F. Six
retained the title of chairman of
the board.
Although Feldman reportedly
met Sunday with other Continen-
tal officials to map strategy in
what was shaping up as a losing
fi ght against the Texas Interna-
tional takeover. his death ap-
peared unrelated 't o those
events.
"I understand -this is oot of-
ficial that he left three suicide
notes," Smith s aid. ''They
basically stated that he lost his
wife recently and had the in·
timation that life wasn't worth
living."
Smith said a gun was found in
Feldman's s uite. He did not
know who foun d F eldman's
body.
Before joining Continental on
Feb. 1, 1980, Feldman had been
president and chief executive of-
ficer of Frontier Airlines nine
years
Before that. he ser ved 17
years with Aerojet Ge~eral
Corp. most recently with Aerojet
Nuclear Systems Co.
-------------------- -----------
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'
ALSGARAOE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPOA'T BEACH
(714) 644-7030
' ' • •
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 10, 1N1 N
Dow Jones Final
UP 1 .33
CLOSING FIGURE 943.87
Who owns
the most shares?
At $295 a copy, it's not likely t.o become a best
seller, but a new manual on stock ownership is fun t.o
read if you have a passion for knowing who are the
biggest stockholders in America.
Did you realize, for example, that J .P. Morgan,
the big New York bank at Broad and Wall street.a,
next door t.o the New York Stock Exchange, ranks as
the largest single shareholder in Eastman Kodak,
Gillett.e, IBM and 10 other industrial giants? And that
its holdings make it the second, third, fourth or fifth
largest owner in 91 other big companies?
Did you know that foreign companies bold more
than S percent ot the stock in 35 major U.S. manufac·
turers, including Dan River, Kaiser Steel, Levi
Strauss, Matt.el and Scott Paper?
Did you realize that there are still some sizable
family holdings in American business? Families with
more than half-a-billion-dollar stakes in companies
include the ~ A bercrombies
(Cameron Iron K; 0 Works), Dor-\' ~'
ranees ,,JJJ;..•/.:N (Campbell ·-~.._..._...._ ____ _
~g~~ · c~~;~ lllTDI llllRRZ
ical ), Get -
tys (Getty Oil ), Hewletts and Packarda <Hewlett-
Packard ), Haaseti (Levi Strauss) and Keclu
(Superior Oil ).
The t.op stockholders in the largest U.S. manufac-
turing companies are identified in this new manual,
''COE Stock Ownership: Fortune 500." It was pro-
duced by Corporate Data Exchange, a non-profit re-
search organization based in New York (at 198
Broadway) not far from J.P. Morgan.
For each of the 456 companies in the directory,
there's a listing or the major stockholders, showing
how many shares they own. For example, on Dow
Jones & Co., publisher of the Wall Street Journal, the
list runs t.o 25 names, beginning with the Bancroft
family and descendants, who own 59 percent of the
shares, and ending with a former edit.or, William F.
Kerby, who owns two-tenths of 1 percent. Tbe
Lockheed rost.er runs to 30 names, beginning with a
7 .5 percent block owned by Trust Company of the
West and ending with Oppenheimer Holdings, owner
of two-tenths of 1 percent.
Stock ownerst\ip is highly concentrated. The top
five stockholders 6wn 24.6 percent of General M9t.ors,
24.8 percent of Standard Oil of California, 62.4 per-
cent of Ford, 23.1 percent of U.S. Steel, 42 percent of
Du Pont, 44 percent of Sun, 26.6 percent of Interna-
tional Harvest.er.
An index at the back of tbe directory gives a
quick picture of the varied holdings of the Big
stockholders. It shows, for example, that the
Rothschild family interests (of Fr~ce and England)
have now captured 66 percent of Copperweld, 5 per-
cent of Pitney-Bowes, 9 percent of Levi Strauss, 2.4
percent of General Mills, 1.7 percent of Caterpillar
Tractor. It shows that Miami's Victor Posner bolds
huge chunks of Evans Products, Johnson Controls,
Nashua, National Can, Chromalloy American, GAF,
General Host, Royal Crown. It shows that Omaha's
Warren Buffett is an important player in General
Food. Handy & Harman, the Washington Post Co.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERIC AN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
' I
SILVER I
.. * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu1t 10, 1181
QUEENIE
Jlli1
"Idler!"
FD~ THE RECORD
'
flOUMTAIM YALL•Y
~ITYMOl .. ITAL ,,..,.
Mr. -Mn. E"*t ....... CM .. -... -JlllY.
Mr. -MrL 9' .. er H-, F_. t•n Veller, llOy Mr . .,. Mn. Ali.tto Seftdovel, H..,.. .............. ...,
JlllY 1 Mr. Md Mn. GretWY MertlMOn,
HunlMlton 8Mdl, ...., .,,.,,
Mr . .,. Mn. ,...,I Metlod, Hunt·
1...-8Mdl,lloy .,,.,,
Mr. end Mn.. Len ....,....,., ~teln
Yeller. girt ,,...,.
Mr. end Mn. At1vro l!tc.e)ede, CM ..
Mew,glrl
Mr. end Mn. Ml<Met Krem.,.,,,.,.....
.. In Veller, lloy ,,.,n
Mr. 8N1 Mn. 0.0,.. 8'-. H..,I·
lftlton 8Mcll, 11oy .-,u
M.r. end Mn. G«eld :t..cMt'o, H ... 1.
lnelM llMcll, lloy
JlllyM
Mr. -Mn. Alcl\erd Fltller, Hwnt·
lftt1Gn llMcll, tlrt ,,.., ..
Mr. -Mn. Wiiii• 8ond. Huntlnvton lff<ll,lloy
Mr. end Mr._ Ooveta 8..clll>oh,
... ..,.., lllNCll. t1rt ,,..,,.
Mr. -Mn. JoMpfl Kl-ti, HllM· ,,.._ llMcll, flrt
ST.,,_.,... HCIS"ITAL '-• Mr -MrL Mic-I ~. Col .. Meu, lloY
'-" Mr. -Mn. TilcwnM ~. 1,,,1 ... flrl .... ,.
Mr. -Mrs. Sem Creccltlolo. ,,.,..... t.ln Veller, 9'rt .-,n
Mr. end Mr1. Kevin McMullen, .... port llNch, ...., ,,..,,.
Mr. -Mrs. St.,,_. Hey, Colt.
Meu, lloY ,,..,"
Mr end Mn.. A-.._I, N--t
8HCll, lloy •
ltOAO M•MOlllAL
HOSl'ITAL ...... YT.AIAM
""'' 11 Mr. -,,...._ LM 8emdel, Colla
-..... rt Mr. end Mn.. Mic-I He,_s.. C:O. ..
Mew,llo'I
Mr. end Mrs. Alcllllnl Wlr.cl!Mtet, c .... Mne • ...., , ..... ) .,,.," Mr. -Mrs. GMy Neu, lf'ltne, boy
Mr. end Mn. Aollert Mowe, C:O.t.
Mew,glrt .... ," Mr. end MrL Jose cone, Coste
Mew,11111
Mr. -Mn. H¥t8"'1 Kocll, eor-
del MM,lloY ,,..,.
Mr. -MrL G...tletd L.entmulr· l.oeeft. 1rw.. lloy
Mr. end Mn. Doneld McMkllllel,
Intl ... lloY ,,...,,,
Mr. and Mr._ A-rt Gennewey,
Huntlnllon 8Mcl" girt
Mr. -Mn. Jofwl G,_, lrvl,.,
lilOy
Mr. and Mrs. Ooftald Cttectwlck,
Intl,., 9'rt 8"'1 llOy, ltwlftl)
JlllyD
Mr. -Mn. S.-c..ie • ....._,
a..dl,llrt
Mr. -Mn. Mk llMI deL.eon, Hwnt· lntlGll ...,., girt
Mr. -Mn. """-lei-·· lf'llM , girt
Mr. -Mn. Amd ElllllJ, ...._I 8oacll,glf1
Mr. end Mrs. a.rt Nk "-. Cata
Meu,91n
Mr. -Mn. ltlcl\erlll Al•. Cella
--. ... girt
Mr. -Mn. Wllllem s.t1ers.. H..,t. 1,.._ .._, glf1
Mr. -Mis. 8'.n WllUfl, lrvlne,
gtrl
Mr. end Mn. Deen Wlck1trom, c.--del MM, girl
Mr. -Mn. I.Hiio "'-· c:or-del MM,lloy
Jiiiy D
Mr, end Mrs. o.nlel "-II, H..,I·
1,.._ IHCll, lloy
Mr. and Mn. JoMpfl ~ H ... 1.
Ing .... llaadl, 9'rt
Mr. -Mn. ,,..,_ *"411. Hum·
lngton llNCll, lilOy .... , ..
Mr. end Mfl. Gelen H1111slckor,
lntlN,lirt •
Mr. -Mn. 8oC11rt Weddell, I rvlne,
bOy
Mr. -Mn. Lane Wiiton, C:O.la
MeU,lloy
Mr. -Mrs. 0.vld H-, Coate MoW,lloy Mr. 8NI Mrs. Gerald c:-.ly, lrvlne,
glrl .... ,.
Mr and Mrs. CO.ry Hllffman, I rYIN,
9'rl
Mr. end Mrl. Mor< Kovam-ff,
lrvlne,boy
Mr. end MrL David Sol•ll•r .. r,
Coste Mn-. boy
Mr. and Mr•. llrlen llerkllaUHfl,
DaN Flalnt, lloy
Mr. and Mn. Gery JW111L HllMlngtoll
lloecll, girt
Mr. and Mn. Mic-I Wllllt, Fo-.
t.ln vaner. llOJ ""'. Mr. and Mn..,... o.lrtlo, lf'llne, boy
Mr. -Mn. ~ Gneclt, lntlne, boy
Mr. and Mr._ lt..WWltl Smltlt, C:O.la
Meu,gtr1
Mr. -Mn.. Mettllew 81gter. C:O.la
Mou,glf1
Mr. -M1'L. Mk llMI Mou, C:O.la MoW, lloy (twlN) .,.., 11
Mr .... ,... Kevin SI....._, lrvlne,
boy
Mr. -M1'L. Gf'o9orY, HllMlnglOft llHCll,boy , .. ,.
Mr. end Mtl. Lyle Soerl, Colle Mow, boy
Mr -Mn. DoYkl Jeck, ln1l11e, boy
Mr •nd """· Mlcllaol HartmM, Coste Mn-. boy
MllllON COMMUMITY NOl .. ITAL
J-D
Mr -Mn. Tommy llollkn, San Juan c:.pislt'-. gin
Mr. end Mr._ Jol\n Wtlu, Soft Juen
Caplsl,_, bo'f. ,_It
llillr. -Mn. A_. Wle<elt, San
Juan Caplltr-, glrl. ,.,1
Mr -Mr._ Danit! L-., Dol\e
Polnl,llCJ'Y.
Jllfyl
Mr end Mrl. Dennis Lynn. San
c1-•.•
Mr. -Mn. David Cloru, Dana Point, lloy.
Jlllyl
Mr. ond Mrt.. ltanda Hlbbonl, Dane
Polnl. glr1. ,.,.
Mr. and Mn. Joffr.., Mlir.UI. San
Cl-1t,t1oy.
Mr. -Mn. Enrique Pantoje, Dane
Point, girt. ,...,,
Mr. end Mn. Cltrl•t09hor 8oblll.
Legune NIOU-1, glrl. ,...,.
Mr. end Mrs. Jl.....,.1eean-, 1rv1ne.
boy.
Mr. end Mn. J-K..wwdy, San
Juen c:.pislr-. boy.
GrmKIO~W.
UNFILTERED APPLE JUICE
$2.89 Gallon
at Tr.der Joe Ir Pr•lo
A .1reat droduct -unfilte red uice from
ripened alifornia
Gravenstein apples-at a
great price : $2.89 per
gallon.
Please visit our newest
Trader Joe's at the In-tersection of 17th Street1 Newport Boulevard ana
Superior Avenue (next
to Denny's and Barclay's
Bank).
MOW IN COSTA MESA
More valu·e for your
DIMES
In the famous Dally Piiot
DIMES-A-LINE ADS
AdYertlH Item• up to $50 In value In
Dlnt .. ·A·Utte llde Hery Saturday In the DaMy
Piiot. llftnt your ed wtttl caeh to any of our
thrH conHolent omc.. or meN your copy
wtth a d'9dl Of MOney order for the conect
amount. 20c per llM. 11.00 "'""'"""'· lorry,
flO lt•"Uclll. prOduce or plant• and no c...,......_. .... ,. attowed. Eectt i..... Mutt
be pttoed .... ftO 119"' Oftr llO. °""""A.U...
ed• _, be ..-..... •t IM Coeta ..... office
uftll a, ..... ,,.,.,, Ufttlt noon '~ ..... ~.._,_or HuMMl'Oft .. ectt •
U.S. would block Haitian influx
.WASHINGTON (AP) -The Rea1an ad-
mlnlltratlon wanta to bestn lntercept1n1 and turn·
lnl away boata earryln1 would·be refu1eea from
HalU to Florida by Saturday, admlniltration of·
flclall aay.
1be "lnterdlctlon" pro1ram, aa It le being called, would help eaae a major poUUcal and ad-
mlnlatrative headache for the Rea1an admlnlatra·
tlon ln IOUthem Florida.
But lntel'dlction riaka tamilhin1 America's
reputation u a protector ot retu1eea and "boat
people," and could lead to upy lncldenta at sea.
accordln1 to an internal admlnlatratlon memo.
'Ibe admlnlatratlon ottlclals, who uked not to
be ldenUlied, aald they have been tryin1 to work
out details of the plan alnce lt wu announced by
It's
.-........
AttOmey General Wiiliam' French Smith on July
30.
Meanwhile, Supreme Court Justice WUliam J.
BreMan hu cleared the way ror the planned
tranaler rrom Florida to Puerto Rico thla week of
800 Haitian and Cuban refu1ees.
Brennan turned down an emer1ency request
from Juana Dlu, the Puerto Rican community
where the refu1ee camp, Fort Allen, la located.
The admlnl1tration'1 interdiction program
now calla for the lmmieration and Naturalization
Service to 1upply special uylum olficers and
Creole tranaJatora to Cout Guard veasels patrol~
ing the Caribbean, accord.in& to the otficials.
After stopping a boat suspected of carrying
Haitians to the United Slates, the Cout Guard
would bring the passengers aboard for an on-the-
spot hearing to determine whether they meet the
American requlrementa for re!u1ee status .
Almost none or the Haitians wUl meet those re-quirements, since lbe State Department bas de-
cided that they are almost all neetn1 from pover-
ty. rather than from POlitlcal oppression.
After the hearings, the Coast Guard la sup-
posed to determine whether the Haitians' boat lJ
seaworthy. Depending on lta condition, the Coast
Guard veseel may escort It back to Haiti, tow It back, or take the Haitians aboard and transport
them back.
One orri cial working on the plan said there are
fears that fights will erupt during the proceas or
that Haitians may jump overboard and drown
rather than be taken back .