Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-08-24 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • • ORANlil COAST YOUR HDMITDWll llllY PIPIR MONDAY. AUGUST 24. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Voyager to look at new Saturn 1noon This ts a scale drawing .~howmg the relatr ue ~rze of the planet Saturn and 1t s rmgs in comparisorr to the F.arth at left. Earth's moon and the distance between the Earth and the moon Hinckley indicted Man charged with shooting Reagan , three others WASlllNGTON CAPl John W. Hinckley Jr., the troubled son of a wealthy Denver oilman. was indicted by a federal grand jury today on charges of shoot· Ing President Reagan. White House press secretary James Brady and two law enforcement offi cers in a March 30 assassin a· tion attempt. The 11 men and 10 women on the grand jury filed into a courtroom and formally re turned the indictment before U.S. Magis trate Jean Dwyer Assistant U.S. attorney Roger Adelman made the only mention of Hinckley's name when he asked the m agistrate to con· solidate sever a l case docket numbers involving Hinckley. The entire proceeding took about one minute. Copies of the indictment were not immediate· Iv avail able · Hinckley, 26. whose father heads the Vanderbilt Energy Corp in Denver. wrote in an un- m uiled letter to actress Jody Foster that he wanted to "get Reagan" to prove his love for her The letter was discovered by investigators after Hinckley's arrest Since the shootings. Hinckley has been confined in a single cell in the brig at the Marine base at Quantico . Va .. so uth o f Was hington. except for two wee k s o f court-o rd e red psychiatiric tests at the federal correctional in s titution at Butner. N.C. He was returned to Quantico from Butner on Tues- day The next legal step will be I hnckley's arraignment before a federal Judge, where he will enter a plea of gui lty or innocent. If Hinckley pleads innocent, the court must decide whether he 1s competent to stand trial a question that psychiatrists have been trying to answer. A report by court -ap pointe d medical experts alr eady has been sbumitted to Chief Judge William Bryant of U.S. District court. but was placed under seal by the judge. Hinckley·s lawyers may raise the defense of innocent by rea· son of insanity in an attempt to have the former drifter com· milted to a mental institution. Earlier. it was learned that government prosecutors reject· e d a plea-bargain offer by <See INDICT, Page A%) FUNNY FLOATERS Leslie Davis ;md Eddie F'raser (above > we re neck and neck at the halfway point of the sixth annua l Balboa Bathtub Race Sunday. but Eddie paddled out in front lo win for the fourth year Competing on a s horter course in the 7, category a re Sue Brennis (below. le ft 1 a nd Carole Depa in their Balboa Brothel entry. The race. whi c h began and ended at the Balboa Pavilion dock. was presented by the Talc of thl• Wha le restaurant. Niguel ma n among j e t blast v ictims A 25-year-old Laguna Niguel man was one of the 110 people k i l le d Saturday when a Taiwanese jet exploded in fight about 94 miles southwest of. Taipei , a ccording to a spokesman for a Compton toy co mpany where h e was employed. A spokesman for Enlex In· duslries said Dennis Rippin, an independent manufacturer'• representative with the com- pany, was killed when the Boe- ing 737 blew apart at an altitude of 22,000 feet. The s pokes man said no further lnformaUon was availa- ble. However, a spokesman tor the Orange County Sheritf's Department said Rlflln's wlle. Brenda, was told of her huaband's death at 6 a.m. Satur· day at their La1una Nlauel home. AccordJna to newa source1, Rllftn waa a Canadian cltlaen. He reportedly bad been workln1 for Erita In Taiwan . Probe's camera s busy PASADENA (AP> -Voyager 2, sailing within 700,000 miles of Saturn on the eve or its ren· dezvous with the golden, ringed world. adds another moon lo its trophy case to01ght when its cameras focus on the little satellite. Hyperion The robot ship's cameras and 10 instruments are casting about in all directions, revealing de- tails of the churning and weav· ing clouds , probing mysteries of th e shimmering rings and watching moons grow larger as the ship prepares ror mankind's best look al Saturn on Tuesday. .. We a r e bewi Ide r e d ex- pl orers," photography team leader Bradford Smith said dur ing the weekend. Nearly 10 months after sister s hip Voyager I cruised the planet, he said ... We have made very little progress' in un · tangling the many riddles it re· vealed. Voyager II spacecraft returned this urew of the planet Saturn Auq I I u l1eri the craft was H 6 ~n1/11on n11les from the planet The night plan for Tuesday's en counte r was extensively rewritten to look more deeply at some of those puzzles Now. Smith said, scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory .. are just . . hoping the answers to some of these questions are going to be found in some of these Voyager 2 data.·· Voyage r 1, on its tour or Saturn in No ve mber, s aw Hyperion as little more than a fuzzy ball as it came no closer than 550,000 miles. Scientis ts s hould see a lot more as this second Voyager comes 250.000 miles closer today The radio signals need 86 minutes to cover almost a billion miles to Earth. Just 180 miles across . Hyper ion is the third most· distant of the 17 know n moons l>Cattcred about the Saturnian neighborhood The ship fl ew past the strange . two-toned moon lapetus on Saturday night. By ra r the biggest puzzle found las t yea r was th e astomshing complexity of the fabled rings, a vas t sheet of snowy particles that ci r cle Saturn's equator Old explanations fell apart when Voyager I found the broad rings filled with hundreds of t hin ringlets and saw a narrow ring that seems composed of braided r inglets. several eccentric or out-of-round ringlets and broad smudges reaching across part of the rings. A popular theory suggests many tiny moons r angina in diameter from perhaps half a mile to 20 miles -may be ~prinkled through the rings , act· 1ng as shephe rds as their gravities mix with Saturn's to herd the particles into the little ringlet-; So Voyager 2 1s aiming its cameras at several likely SPotS in sea r C'h o f the theorize d moon lets Chi ef Voyager scientis t Edward Stone said Sunday, "A lttlle moonlet buried in the rings will form a gap .. by sweep· ing out its orbit. One large gap is about 300 miles wide and if the moonlet theory is accurate, he said, 1t should hold a moon 12 to 18 miles across and Voyager should be able to SJ>Ot it. Smith said scientists have ex- a mined about one-third of the moonlet-hunt pictures taken so far and .. we have yet to detect o n e of the se e mbedde d satellites." Nothing but the tooth, lady Dentist sued for 'repossessing' woman 's dentures BETHEL. Okla lAPl -Den· t1st Curtis Brookover claims it was a s imple c ase of re - possession . But Lee Ann Stoval. count~rs that the Idabel. Okla .. dentist went too far when he came to he r home in this southeast Oklahoma town , pried open her jaws, stuck his hand in her mouth, and rePossessed the den· lures for which she had refused to pay. Mrs. Stoval and her family filed a $530,000 laws uit, claiming damages in last week's incident in which the woman says she was thrown to the ground in front of her house b} an angry. )elhng Brookover District Attorney Don Shaw said no decision had been made on wheth er assault charges would b e fil ed against Brookover. Mrs Stova l s ai d her neighbors. one carryi ng a shotgun. came running to see what was happening when lhe dentist struggled with her in the ,·a rd · Eventual l y , s he s aid , Brookover pulled the S600 set of Swiss por('elain teeth from her J8WS .. He jerked me down and held my face while he grabbed my Stocks take b e ating • on inte r est rates NEW YORK CAP> -Fears of a further long siege of high in· terest rates d rove the stock market into a sharp decline to· day. Bond prices also took a drub· bing in what was s haping up as a "blue Monday" on Wall Street. The Dow Jones average of 30 Industrials, which closed Friday at its lowest level of the year , fell 10.94 Points to 909.63 in the first hour today. and by 11.98 points aft.er two hours. Losers outnumbered gainers by a 9-1 margin In the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex- change-listed issues. In the past few days, many Wa ll St reet a nal ys t s h ave warned that hopes for a decline in inter est rates from their present high levels were unlike· ly to be fulfilled any time soon. One reason for their gloom was an $800 million increase ln the money supply reported by the Federal Reserve late Fri· day, rather than the drop many fi nancial observers had been ex- pecting. The figures reinforced expec- tations that the Fed wouJd stick with a strin gent policy of restraining the growth of money a nd credit, as its chairman, Paul Volek er. indicated last week. Tourists applaud Nixon in Versailles PARIS (AP) -Former Presi- dent Nixon, ln the French capital on the start of a two- week private vllil to Eu.rope, took a brief trip today to VtrHUJee Palace where ht wu applauded by American tourlata. Nixon, who r11l1ned 11ven yean 110 amid the Wat..r1at. •caadal that impijuted bit top alda ta Ul11al actlvitJn. mack no comment to reporters. A spokeaman said Nixon, who ar- rived ln Parls on Sunday ntaht, does not plan to m eet with foreJsn leaders and wlll not If ve intervtewa. A spokesman at the U.S. Em· baaay said lbe former president had nown from New York on a re•ularly scheduled Concorde ( NIXON, Pace AZ) teeth, .. the woman said from the Idabel hospital room where she was under observation for J>OSSi· ble injuries suffered in the inci· dent. "He said, 'Now I've got my teeth' and left," she said. Brookover s ays that's not the way it happened. "I didn't throw her down. I didn't hurt her in any way. I reached for the teeth and she bit me hard. I grabbed her cheek and puJled my fingers out and the dentures went to the ground. We both went for them. but I was fa ster.·· Both agreed the trouble began when the set came back from the lab with upper teeth set slightl y off-center . Broo.kover said the lab refused to mold another set without an extra SSO. Mrs Stoval said the dentist had promised her new dentures al the same price as the off-center set. The dentist said he expects negative reaction on the inci· dent. "l probably really hurt myself." he said ... But at least it was only fair I got my teeth back." DRllll CUil lllTHIR Fair through Tuesday but low clouds late nitht through mid-mornina. • Highs 70 to 85. Lows 62 tonight to 66. 111111 TlllY Young and old, IW<Jlth~ and not, htmdreda ftlloJ/ "clog- Qfng" '"''II &OUlcHd at Alabama Joclc'1. Sn P~ cs llDll Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 Rescues in surf fewer Lifeguards at Oranee Coas t beaches said one foot waves made for a s afe weekend at Orange County beaches. "Where there is no surf, there are no rescues," said Mike Dwinell, a Laguna Beach lifeguard. "It was like swim- ming in a lake," said Dwinell, whose beach logged only three rescues and a crowd of 36,000 over the two days. He said, however, west winds of up to 15 mph drove people home early Sunday. From Page A1 INDICT ••• Hlnckley's lawyers. Under the bargain, Hinckley would have pleaded guilty to some charge in the attack in return for a gov- ernment recommendation that he be sentenced under special provisions of the federal juvenile law covering persons up to age 26. That arrangement could have permitted his release much sooner than normal. Hinckley was 25 at the time of his arrest. If convicted of the charges against him, Hinckley could be sentenced to life imprisonment. When Hinckley was arrested, prosecutors charged him with attempting to assJssinate the president and with assault on a federal officer, Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy. ....,. ..... ~ ... c:a-w.~ ntique and classic cars parade Saturday on Main Street, Santa Ana. to South Coast Plaza Village . A total of 517 ,000 people visited beaches and there were only 86 rescues. Newport Beach lifeguards re-ported 20 rescues with a weekend attendance of 175,000. They also said the Sunday crowd thinned out because of winds up to 25 mph. At that time, no charges were filed in the s hootings of White House press secretary James Brady and Wa s hington policeman Thomas Delahanty. but those charges were included in the indictment today. 1listant relatives seeking cash Meanwhile state lifeguards al Huntington Beach logged 50 rescues and a weekend crowd or 176,000. Reagan and McCarthy have recovered from their wounds in the assassination attempt. Brady r e mains in George Washington University Hospital for treatment of brain damage for which he has undergone four operations. Brady was listed in good condition after the last one, which took place ThUTSltay. Delahanty still s uffers numb· ness in one arm, and remains on s ick leave from the District of Columbia police department. Hundreds on Howard Hughes' family tree vie for billionaire's elusive fortune HOUSTON <AP > Howard Hughes' death touched off a clamor for his fortune by hun· dreds of distant relatives who s eek to overturn a Texas law and discredit a dead cousin. ..... At stake is the half of the ~state valued at between $180 million and $2 billion that a Tex· as probate law s <1ys belonJ.'!s to th e adopte d c hildren and grandchildren of Hughes' late uncle on his father's side. Lawyers for about 500 second, third and fourth cousins from another branch of the family on Hughes' father's side will try to convince a six-member jury that Hughes' late cousin Elspeth Hughes Lapp was the child of an illicit love affair and not entitled to share in the estate. Lawyers prepared to begin quizzing 25 prospective jurors today about their opinions on s terility , adult e r y and legitimacy. The trial is the final hearing to determine who s hares in the estate. Sixteen surviving cousins Sympathy felt for Layton Anger of Jonestown victim's kin changes at trial SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Jynona Norwood's mother and ?6 other relatives died in the i(iteamy Guyanese jungle during .the Peoples Temple mass Jlin urder-s u1 c1de. Though s he 'Chinks "somebody should pay." ··~he's not so sure it should be ~ ·+arry Layton ., 1 "I feel sorry for him At first I . (cit angry. You can see he's scared. and he seems lo be a senlle pe r son But this is , ~ometh.ing he's goin g to have to ·,;ve with for the rest or his life," . ,she said during a break in Layton's trial. --Though the testimony opens pld and painful wounds, Ms . Norwood planned to be 1n court ~hen Layton'!> trial resumed to- ltay. (. "At first, 1 thought I'd just tome for a few days, but now. somehow. I feel compe lled to be • j)ere. and f 'II stay no matter what.·· s he s aid ·'This is ~o ivelcomes .'IJaby jumbo SAN PJ\$(,~UAL <AP> After !4 months in the fetal position. Thor is out and up on his own -· ~'the first elephant born at the San · 'Diego Zoo or its San Diego Wild Animal Park. · • The son of African elephants. ~hor weighted 175 at birth Satur· day and was two feet tall wnen "he was separated from the !)\other and struggled to his feet 'Sunday. Chico, the 12-year-old bull, was kept away "Thor may go on exhibit in a week, say veterinarians at the , Wild Animal Park ... somettung I've had to live with for years I've gone through too much to stop now " Layton. 35. 1s charged with conspiring to murder Rep Leo Ryan, D-Calif.. and with con· spiracy in the attempted murder of Richard C. Dwyer, a State Department official. Ryan visited Guyana in No- vember 1978 to investigate claims that temple members were be· ing abu sed at the c ult 's Jonestown settlement. He and his party were ambushed at a jungle airstrip as they were leaving the area. Ryan and four others were killed : Dwyer was wounded. Within hours after the am- bush. most of Ms . Norwood's family drank fruit juice laced with cyanide. Ms. Norwood says "somebody should pay for that," but she isn't sure Layton should She calls Layton "a victim, too.. of the powerful spell cast by the Rev. Jim Jones. who led more than 900 followers in the mass murder-s uicide that s hocked the world -but not Jynona Norwood. "I told them they were going to be murdered over there." she r ecalled last week during a break in the trial. In a nightmare that used to jar her awake night after night, Ms. Norwood often envisioned her mother dying in the jungle. "I said to her, 'Mama. I had a dream where I saw you getting killed in ajungle', .. the 30-year- old. Ms. Norwood recalled. But no nightmare deterred Fairy Norwood and 26 other relatives from joining Jones a the South American settlement. Ms . Norwood's family joined Jones' temple in 1968, the same ~an held in Irvine investnient schenie Police have arrested a South frica man on a grand theft harge in connection with an in· Frans Theron is being held in Orange County Jail in Ueu of $2.5 million bail. vestment scheme he was al· leJtedlY conduclin~ in Irvine. Irvine police DelecUve Paul J essup alleged that Theron set up a company called Interna- tional Business Advisory & Consultancy Services Inc. 18662 MacArthur Blvd., Suite 200, Irvine. Immigration key identity card? ANN AR60R. Mich. CAP> - Counterfeit.proof national iden- tity cards are needed to curtail illegal Immigration. says ihe Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, presi- dent of the University of Notre Dame. Police said the company may have been an extension of the South African Company, the House of Ocean Magic, which sold health products derived from seaweed. That company went out or business. leaving hundreds of ln· vestors and franchisees ln debt. Hesburgh, who headed the U.S. Select Commission on Im- migration and Refugee Policy for the Reagan administration, said Sunday such a card ls the only way to stop UlegaJ lmmi· gr atioo to the United States. Exact details on Theron's Orange County operations were unavailable th.is morning as a police report on the matter hadn't been prepared. 0 A OICOAST Dally Pilat Tnomu P Hatoy ~--M'w:I C"""' E H•r.vl••• ()fhrftt Robert N Weed ,.._ ThOf"lll A Mur1>h1ne ....... Michael P Ha"'ey --...o... ... L Kily S.:hull1 °"""",,Ojito .. _ 11.enMth N Oodderd Jr ~~ Bernwd Schulman 0.- Chlll'leeH Loot .....,..,_ C.OI A MOCN ..__,_ • CIHllflecl 1dv1nl1l1t9 71411•2·$171 All oth•r dttp1'1m1nt1 f42·Q:t1 MAIN O,FICE JJO Wo\I 8 .. ~f (OSI• Mt\•, (A M••I •l!O•f\\ 811t. ~ (0.1• MOJ• C:A •1t1t 'Oll•"0flf '"' 0.-( .. \I P,.Oh\11•114 (.-y HO n•¥W\ \fO'"'' 10u~r,.f16f'h lfflttOt1•I mAll_.t nr .,, ••ttl\"'"" .. ~h J'tt11tft11\ ,,,,.. bf' ffli0tOdUt fl"O A tf"fh;I "~' '"' OP'""1"~ 01 ( o"w r ;4"1 own.t, \•\Oftd rt~\ Gn\t4tfl" M IO,_, (9't• M•\41 C-'1ft1r,,,4 UP\ IOIOOI Sv&..:f!Ol•Of' ....... ,. u Oil_.,.,.,, Ot ~It \\ M ...,.'"'' ,.ii;tit•t' df'\ftf'ttthon111 '' 00 "'°"'M• '"-~C .. fl O .. lt ,., ... ••lll•fllCfl ~t_;:;;; '~ ,.._ ,.,..,., " _,.,,... e, "'" o. • .,.. c .. ,, l'\1611\11 .... ,......,,, \#H'<tf• oClof-• •• • !Nbf•\Nf Mtft"<lt lll'WJll ,, ... , ,., (9\1• M..v H __ , lktHI\ _,,,..., lkt~" '-•••II Y•llff h•-l..,_l\ot ~~" .towl" (H\I .. , .... ,. rf'9"el\otf _.,,_ '' •'*'",... ~..,.,., -S-.o ,,. ,..,.,.,,., M!hl'I .... 1111-" It! UO Whf 8n 4-lrHI I' 0 lo• l'M Ce\J• .,...,. ~.,,,,,_,.. •• ,.,,., VOL. 74, NO. 238 ' year La yton and his wife became m e mbers . T hough J ones offered her a leadership position in his cult. Ms. Norwood never accepted "I never trusted him. He had a phony air to me ... she said. and she could never understand why her family was caught in Jones' spell. "You never let anyone rule your life like that. Jones offered m e a lot. but I didn't take it. L ayt on was a victim too, because he allowed this lo hap· pen to him," she said. "I cannot excuse him ... Duri ng the firs t week of Layton's trial in federal court here, Ms. Norwood and her un- cle, Fred Lewis -whose wife. seven children and sister died at Jonestown heard ambush sur vivors describe the horror of life al Jonestown. From Page A1 NIXON • • • flight. He said Nixon went im- mediately to the Crillon Hotel across the street from the em· bassy off Place Concorde. Nixon. 68, last visited France after the publication of his book, "The Real War." He was given a warm reception on that trip by the French media and public. The former president, who is traveling with hi s friends Charles "Bebe" Re bozo and Rick Ruwe and Secret Service agents. is scheduled to make a day trip to Reims in the French Champagne region Tuesday. Nixon is scheduled lo leave Paris by train Wednesday for the wine region of Bordeaux, where he will spend two nights at a private chateau. the em- bassy spokesman said. He will leave Bordeaux by train Friday for Lausanne, Switzerland . Nixon also is s cheduled to visit Vienna, Flensborg, West Germany, and possibly Denmark before his re- turn to New York on Sept. 4 or S, the embassy spokesman said. Nixon has been supervising the redecoration of his new house in Saddle River, N.J ., Ruwe s aid before their de· parture. Mrs. Nixon decided to remain in the United States to continue preparations for the move while her husband is abroad, Ruwe added. He said he expected the Nixons lo move to New Jersey in mid-September. The Nixons' New York townhouse has not been sold, Ruwe said. Yeggs steal Laguna safe Burglars armed with an acetylene torch broke lnto •· Laguna Beach service station Sunday and carted off a SOO- PoUnd sale containing $2,000. Operatona of the North Lquna Shell station, 1342 North Coast Hlahway. told police the thieves broke lhro0,ah a louvered win- dow aometf me early Sunday mornin1. _ They used an acetylene torch t.o burn the lock off the otllc:e door. Train hits car ESSEX. Vl. (AP) -A ur stuck In a Une ol tnmc wu llll broadside by Amtrak'• MOft· trtaler, and two pa11e111en were ln Hrloul condltlOG tOdQ after betnf thrown rrom tht ear, aut.horiliel aald . • on Hughes mothers' side, or their heirs, already secured half the fortune after Probate Judge Pat Gregory ruled Hughes le~ no will and no immediate sur- vtvors when he died in 1976. Distant relatives must con· vince jurors to rule that Mrs. Lapp was illegitimate despite a Texas law that holds any child conceived before or during a marriage is presumed to be legitimate . Ir th e panel f inds her legitimate, all 500 claims automatically would be wiped out. If Jurors disagree, the lengthy and complicated pro- ceeding would recess and a second nationwide search for other passible re latives would begin. Although the ques tion of legitimacy does not directly in· volve the two adopted children one has died since the estate battle began their claims also hinge on the jury's decis ion. Most of the distant relatives contend Mrs. Lapp was not the biological daughter of Rupert Hughes. a New York playwright and author. Rupert Hughes was the brother of Howard Hughes' father. Instead. they argue. she was born or an illicit love affair bet ween her mother and one of nine lovers named in a bitter custody fi~ht for the child. The distant relatives say Rupert Hughes could not have been the father because he had the mumps as a teen-ager and was sterile However. their lawyers admit. those claims are backed by family legend rather than medical evidence . Lawyers for Mrs . Lapp's daughters had sought to exclude all non-scientific evidence from the trial. Gregory agreed to rule on the relevancy or any non-scientific evidence before it is presented to the panel. To further complicate the 5- year-old litigation, a few of the distant relatives have a totally different story to explain why Mrs. Lapp cannot be the link to the Hughes bloodline. . They say Mrs. Lapp drowned in a swimming pool as a small child and contend the mother of Rupert Hughes' three grand· daughters was the daughter of his third wife by a former mar- riage. Lifeguards at Huntington Beach said they made 13 rescues among the 130,000 people who visited the beach over the weekend. Air temperatures along the Orange Coast ranged from over- n ighl lows or 59 degrees lo daytime highs of 83 degrees . Water temperature was a warm 68 degrees. GuDlllen flee with drugs in Valley Two men armed with a sawed off shotgun robbed a Fountain Valley pharmacy of $300 in drugs Sunday afternoon. accord· ing t.o police. The two men. described as male whiles, entered Danber Drug Store at 8984 Warner Ave . s hortly after 3 p.m. demanding narcotics. Druggist Oscar Rutsky, 59, told police that th e pair threatened to kill him unJess he handed over the drugs . Taken were narcotics and syringes valued at $300. Both fled on foot. Boy flees into church SAN FERNANDO (APl Churchgoers attending a noon Mass were startled when a 16- year-old boy tried to elude police pursuers by running through the jammed church, police said. The youth, whose name was not released. ran in one side of the Santa Rosa Catholic Church on Sunday, passed in front of the altar and fled out a door on the other side, said police Sgt. Don Rivetti. The chase began as Rivetti and his partner were interview- ing people on a street about the beating death of Is idro Castillo. 27, of San Fernando, who died Sunday. The youth was captured a short distance from the church . presents "WINNING IDEAS" Brady, 40, was shot in the head Delahanty. 45, suffered a neck wound. Reagan, 70, has re- s umed his full presidential duties. and McCarthy , 32, is back on the Secret Service's presidential protection detail Both s uffered chest wounds. Pilot 'fired in defense' NAPLES. Italy CAP> -One of the two U.S. Navy pilots who shot down two Libyan warplanes last week said today he fired in self-defense but knew at the lime it would "cause a ruckus.'' ··rt passed through my mind that it was going to cause a ruckus . I had no c hoice," Cmdr. Henry Kleeman told re- porters aboard the USS Nimitz. the home aircraft carrier for the American planes. The Nimitz docked in the Bay of Naples ear- ly today. The second pilot on the mis· sion. Lt Lawrence Muczynski. said he also saw the Libyan plane fire its missile and turned to chase it as a defensive action. Missing art recovered PARIS CAPl -An oil painting by French artist Charles Joseph Natoire that dis appear ed 214 years ago has been recovered. police officials said today. The officials said the 1746 work called "L'Union de la Peinlure et du Dessin" -"The Union of Painting and Drawing" was recovered in May at the home of a Paris man arrested on charges of receiving stolen goods. Police said it was only last week that the painting was iden- li fied , following a search through records al the Louvre Museum. FASHION CONCEPTS FOR THE INVESTMENT COLLECTOR AND PROFESSIONAL WOMAN Fashion Show Wednesday, August 26 Cocktails 6:00 p .m . Showtlme 7:00 p .m . We'll show you winning combinations to create a top-brass Image for your lifestyle. Including the 1981 'Foll Evon-Picone Collection. and experts for make-up and hair trends. Saks Flfth Avenue. South Coast Plaza Designer Sport5\\l90r, Upper Level R.S.V.P. 54().3233, ext. 217. 218 • r I ----.....,.-.--------..-.-------------;--- Seer fasc~nates France 426-year-old propheci~s topic of best seller we re be prrnted Nostr amus, who claimed his predi ions were or divine in- spirallon, wrote his prophecies in rhym quatrains and sex· lains in Id French, but he w 111 be preceded b~ re vol u lionary troubles in Ensland, then France. and by religious persecution in Poland. West Germany will be In- vaded, then a Soviet-Arab army PARIS !AP> -A new in· terpretallon of the prophecies of the 16th century French physi cian and astrologer Nostradamus has become one or the top-selling books in France this summer It ,ired1cts for the remainder of this century a Sov- iet-Arab invasion of Western Europe, then a major conflict with China. followed by a .. golden age " The book, "Nostradamus, His- torian and Prophet," was writ· ten by Jean C harles de Fontbrune , a 45-year-old pharmaceutical executive, after 17 years of research. He claims the predictions made 426 years ago by Michel de Nostradame. or Nostradamus. were meant for the 20th century. Nos adamus predicted the rise of N apol~n, Hitler, both world wars and the /all of the Shah of Iran. The manuscript was sub· milted to the publisher m April 1980 and sent to bookstores last December rt was not until July, however. when the mass circulation pie lure magazine Paris Match published a long article on de f'ontbrune and his book that sales began to skyrocket and grip the country "I am frig htened by the panic that my bo<>k on Nostradamus has unleashed an France ... de Fontbrune told Mat ch in a thought In Latn. de Fontbrune said. He maintain that the key to hi s i nt erp eta.tion of Nostradamus w s in retranslat ing the old Fr ch into Latin, then back into n French to get at the real meani g. The author aintains that Nostradamus' pr hecies really were aimed at th 20th century two-thirds of em concern the end of the 1 s and his predictions for e· lier periods were mainly to prove their authenticity. For example. Nohradamus 1s described as corr¢tly predict· ing in 1555 the death of King Henry II in a jousta g match in 1559. the Laking of the Bastille ''I am frightened by the panic that my book on Nostradamus has un- leashed in France.'' follow-up article published after thousands of letters began to pour in. His publisher. C hristian Bourgois al Editions du Rocher. was no less astonished at the way the book s uddenly has taken off "I brought out the book quietly in December," Bourgois said .. And then there was an ex- plosion an early July " Bourgois planned on printing 20,000 to 30.000 copies of the 565-page book. But by mid- August, 170,000 copies already had been delivered to book· stores, 50.000 were being readied for shipment and 40.000 more s tarting the French ~volution in 1789. King Louis X\t's flight to Varenncs and his exerution in 1793. the n se of N apole~n in the early 1800s. the coming p power of mihtans tic leaders p Italy. Germany <ind Spam t Mtssolini, Hitler and Franco > in tte 1930s. the two world wars. lhr fall of the Shah of Iran in 1979 rnd this year's leftist election vitlory in France. According to de Font>rune's interpretation, the wo1st lies ahead· War will break out in the Middle East in the nett five years. during which the big powers will intervene The war will land on the Mediterranean coasts or Italy and f'rance. The war will last three years and seven months. Western Europe will be occupied by the Soviets for two years . Paris will be destroyed at the end of the war. The occupying forces final· ly will be driven out by an army made up or French a nd Spanish troops, aided later by the Americans . It will be headed by the future king of France, who wi ll be a Bourbon. The occupiers will suffer two serious defeats, one in Italy and one somewhe re in the Alps. The last great battle will be in the Spanish Pyrenees and the final fight will take place in Armenia. now part of the Soviet Union and Turkey. During the same approx amate period, famine will grir Geneva. Switzerland. and earth quakes will ravage the majo1 C'itie~ along the French and llahan Mediterranean coasts. Followrng this so-called World War Ill will be a period ol reconstruction and prosperity, but at will o nly be temporary, until the war in 1999 against China and "apocalypse" -a word the author says Nostradamus used in the original Greek sense. "revela· t1on ... Nostradamus does not go beyond 1999. · What was Nostradamus' purpose in all this? According to de Fontbrune. "to give man a message or hope ... "He announces that apocalypse as going to bring man an era of fantastic pro· sperity, the age of Aquarius. the golden age . but before that, humanity will suffer the worst tribulations ... Rain dots weather scene I Lightning hits 2 in Denver; mercury reaches 105 in Needles Coastal forecast POINT CONCEPTION TO THE MEXICAN BOROER N0<111~1 wlnct' 10 to lO knol1 will! J lo S loo• .. a, Partly cloudy Ehnrllere ""'11\west to Wfl1 wind 10 lo 1a 'no" In allemoon -•••nl1>9~ with 1 lo• loot ¥<Ind wa11tt and 1 to 1 'outllwes ,,..11 -.uy clear 1111, afternoon U.S. s1tnimary Tllundtrttormt extencleO along tlW Gull Coe•I. acrou nortiwrn Florida and o.,.r nwthern Ne• England S-n also ipread Sunday a< rou Georgia Into So.Ill\ Carolina, w ith tf\undtrttorms t c•tt•reo trom nortl\em Oltlal>Oma Into parh ol Ille Oako!as and Mlnnewta .d.,. ~ \l•lf'•• ... mmm ------ T e niperatures Ski.~ -r• WMy owr mu<h of the rHI ol 111e nation, lncludl1>9 Oen•••. where •-people ••rt struo by lightning Saturday •hen lhun- darslOmu ,,.epi tllroUQll the arH. HI La 1'(11, Temperatures around Ille nation at mld-cNy ranQ9<1 from a low of U In North Bend. CA., lo a lllQll of lOS In Nttdla• Thundtn-r\ -r• loracnt to- day from the -.111ern Atlantic Coa't lhrOUQI> Ille -r MIHIHIP91 Valley 'f hundtritormi wtr• foreca't for •utarn Lower Michigan acrou Ille upper Mlululppl Va llo, ove r norllMrn New England and from wutern Montane ac rou Ille northern Pac Ill< COll,t. HlllM In u.. '°' .,.,.. predict.a In Ille Pacific Nortllwfll. with 70. owr the rH1 of'"* Paclfk CoHI and from New England acrou '"* u-r Great Lakes Low IOs _,.. loracut from tiw central Allantk COHI acrou Ille centra l Mlu lulppl Valley, Ill• northern Plain\ and acrou Ill• "°''"*'" Plateau Ta,,._oflul"H up to tO were uoe<I· .a owr .outhern l"IMIO• end from mu<h ol T .... a<ross New Maxl<o. with the Inland ~tllwut ventno ,....,,11!15 ol over 100. Albany Al~ An<hOr...,. Asnevllle Atl•nta Atlante Ctv Ba1tlmor1 Blrmlnghm 81,marck Bois• Botton Brownsvlle Bulla lo Cha rl1tnSC CharlllnWV Cheyenne Clll<eiio Cincinnati Clawl- Colu- Oal·Ft- Denver Ou Moine\ OelroO Falrbanu Harttord Helena Honolulu Ha..ston Chinese cooking 13 to St 12 IO ,. IM " IO 97 It ,. 79 ,, as 11 n •s ,, IM ts " IS ., ., n .. .. tt to be taughl at CCC SI '° ... SS " 4S °' S7 .. st S6 '3 12 11 ., 10 S4 •1 20 ., S4 S4 SJ u SS ,, S2 ).J S5 47 1S 1• Chinese cooking techniques will be taught by Anna Ding-ah Yee in a fall Coastline Community College course at Westminster High School. The classes will be held from 6: 30 to 9: 30 p. m . Thursdays beginning Sept. 10. Nutrition, use of Chinese cooking equipment and characteristics of the foods native to four re- gions of China will be covered. · The only charge for students who have lived In California one year or longer is a S25 materials fee. Students may register by mail or in class dur \ng the nrst two weeks or the course. Registration Information can be obtained by c11lln1 963..()$2.f. Tahoe plan SOUTH LAKE TAHOE CAP) -A pro· pond Tahoe land ac.- qul&lUon plan, oullinlnr use of tederaJ fund• to buy about 7,800 lots, waa unveiled by the U.S. Forest Service. Bill Morgan, Forest Service Supervisor, said be ex· pecta t7 minion to be made available 1urtln1 In 198 2 r or tbe purcbues. DAILY PILDr CLASSIFllD ADS 142•18'8. Lancuer .. u LOIAngeleS ., .. Marvsv11i. IS SI ···~y Montere, ., SS NeedlK '°' '7 O•kl--M Puo Roble• .. S4 Red Bluff •• '° R.0-Clly ,. St Sa<r-o •t S6 Salinas 10 S4 San Ole90 " 70 San Fran<tKO u S6 Sanl• B ........ ,. SI Stoc"IOn a SS Thermal IOS 72 Barst-104 74 fllge. ... ., .. Bl'llOI> •• 41 Catallna I• .. LltAr-.0 IM '° .. Q A• U l o.,.. vi I -....... Lo1>9 8.ac11 IM .. Monrovia .. '° Newoorte..ch 1S S1 Ontario .. '° Palm!io<'1"9' I°' 71 Pa~ " M 1nc1nap14 u SS Jackv. e .. 73 .).J Juneau .. • San S.rNlrdlno " '3 Santa~ IM 67 Tai-V•lley " JI Kan'! n ., ·°' LHV '°' 11 lltlle R .. ,. LO<llsvlll .. M l'AN-•lllCAN Acaoul<o tO 11 .OJ Bart>edOt .. 11 .11 Ber-1• 8oOOta M 50 Cura<llO .. 1S . .u Fr-1 ., 11 Gu.S.lalar• 12 '3 .21 Gu_._ 7) H•vana " 1S 1' Kl1>9Ston ti n Mont-eay • 1S Matallan • 71 Merida 1) tJ .02 Mexico City IS SI 111 Monte<rey " 13 NUM<I " 1S SanJuan.P A • 1• 1' St Kitts IS Teouclo-lpe to 7J IS Trlnlded tO 13 .02 Vere<•"'* .. 13 l4 CANADA Calgary ,. .. Edmonton ., • Mempfllf IO 10 Ml•ml ., IO 02 Mllwauk~ ,. St Mpls-SI a ., OS NHhvllle~ IM lS Ntw Orie " 73 1S New Yoo IS 6S 01111 CllY " M Omaha 70 •2 J OS Orlando " ,. ·°' Pllll ... ~ ., '° Pi-nl•~ IOI .. Pllllbur ., .. Pll-·s 11 ., Pllano,O to '° RapklClt ., St 02 A-" 0 ... ~ ., •1 Sall Lalle ,, .. s .. nie .., SI SI Louis " '3 St P·T .. 72 St Ste Mar 11 S2 Spok-tJ SS Tulw .. .. Wa\hlnvtn IS St Wlctllla tO " MonlrMI 91 .. Lll'OllNIA Ottawa 7t " Reolna ., u To-91 S4 Bakanili. '1 61 81ytM IOI IO Evrelul 70 SS v ane-7J ff ,,, .. ,,., •• '3 Winni-., " SURf REPORT '-"' .... ... ............. A .. Mii• OW ._ .. ... ..... ,.,.,. tma 2 to a SW nta -.ic 2 10 I SW t.~c I 10 2 SW y tO ' SW Olltl9c* ... 'Idly• Lln1e c~. I Listening ••• What • you llke about the Dally Pilot? What don' u llke? Call the number below and your mess wtll be recorded. transcribed and delivered t be appropriate tdilor. The SI 2•·hour anawertng 1ervlce may be used to cord )etters to the editor on any topic. Mall contributors must include their nam~ and te hone number for verification. No circulation c Is, please. Tell u.s w t'll on your mind. 842-6088 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 I 1. .,. . .,......... METAL ART -This ~olid topper -.rnlptu1't' b.' a r l is I Eb Pr hard F 1eh1 g . on l' x h 1 b 1 t 111 Fr;.inkl urt Wl·~t (;l·rman'. rt>utht·~ ulongs1rl1• ;,,i ~tairca-.(• It \H•1gh~ 11n·1>0unds Defense underscored Week's events let Reagan bolster military strength image LOS ANGELES (AP ) Pres1 dent Reagan's role as com mander in chief hit home symbolically and literally la~t week. First. US. Navy jet righters downed two Libyan planes over the Mediterranean Sea. The:: next day, an exultant Reagan watched a display of the awesome firepower he com mands from the flight deck of the USS Constellation. As the day wore on. he talked tougher and tougher. finally boasting that he was the last high-level U.S officia l to learn of the dogfight "If our planes were shot down. yes. they'd wake me up right away. If the other fellows were shot down. why wake me up?" The dramatic conrluence of events. capping a week in which Reagan had rejected recommen· dations by economic advisers to c ut defense spending. seemed to leave him elated. "I tell you, it was a really Yankee Doodle day so far , .. Reagan said after his first in s pect1on lour of L' S m1htar) might "I saw a display of planes be· ing catapulted off into the air and planes coming back and landing. and bombings and fir· ing practice off the ship and I have to tell you. it was one of the most thrilling experiences ... Reagan is a president whose style is to devote his attention to one issue at a lime and last week was defense week at the California White I louse. head quartered in the Century Plaza llotel here. On Monday, Reagan lifted the s uspension of F -15 and F-16 warplanes to Israel and con- vened his National Security Council for an in-depth dis cussion of which new s trategic weapon systems the United States should adopt After that three-hour session, pr(•s1dential counselor Ed'>'rn Meese HI contended the United States had lost its "margin of l>afct v" over the Soviet Union and 'would s pend v.hatever 1s necessary to regain it On Tucsda)'. Reagan met with miht::irv and economic advisers to decide where to make add1 · t1onal cuts in federal s pending an an effort to balance the budget by 1984 . Budget Director David A Stockman reported!) recom- mended a defense s pending cut When rrportcrs Questioned him about the:: Libya incidept. Reagan first hmted, then sag gested and finally acknowledged that h<' had known in advan<:e the risks the t: S. fighters w~re taking by conductmg trainlna exercises over waters claimed b) L1b}::in !>trongman Moammar Khadafv ' In the past. Reagan said, ttie Na\'y had been ordered to slay on the other side of an "artific\al line" Khadafy had drawn acr~ss "There's a good feeling here that w hat we did was necessary and it ended successfully without any of American life or aircraft." loss or $10 billion to $20 billion in each of the next two years as an alternative to further severe re· ductions in domestic· programio. Refu sing to cut the defense budget. Reagan sent his ad· v1scrs back lo the drawrnJ( hoards On Wedne s day . when Reagan's s<:hedule happened to be free, the U S. Libyan incident occurred But the president and his aides denied a ny suggestion that the administration had de- liberately staged a s how of U.S. bravado as a warning to its ad versanes Nevertheless. and although the ostensible goal of the adven· lure was to establish the area near the Gulf of Sidra as "in· ternalional waters." a far broader mission was ac - complished: The world was duly warned that the United States will not blink. The trip Thursday to the aircraft carrier 65 miles off the California coast was Reagan's first public appearance after the do~fight. ,, the entrance to the Gulf of Sidra "These are internatiO[\al waters ... the president m•n ta med .. And I approved the i~a that. while we don't want to~e provocati\'e. or anything el~. good Lord I approved that that we would do that. .. Knowing the pilots might be endangered. Reagan said he is s ued advance warnings that i:if our men are fired on . our rqt>n are going to shoot back." The mood among the officials around Reagan was one of elf! ti on , "There's a good feeling he,;e and what we did was necessif} and 1t ended s uccessful y without any loss of Ameri<'¥' life or aircraft." said the While House official v. ho asked not ~o be identified . The official said Reagan had projected exactly the imageff wanted to project "That United States as strong. will t fend itself. that we will not oe pushed around. That the U ~ response to incidents of this tyr will be swift and predictable " I the bzczf roll ... I I our classic pznny ~ ~t with 3uet a'tx:ut <l\A'trythif:S tnclud~ caeuol ~ts or dnz.ee cldh~. from C<>I 1E· I I A;\~ in 2 colore, vin~ w\rJz. and black @)~@@)~~ 44 FOlli•on ltlond ·Newport &och • 114/64f·5D70 JOOJ wntwood Blud. • Wnawood VIiiage • 21S/IOl~l ' I " ........ ' s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, August 24, 1981 !Watt hack • m battle (, 4 fter image-building trip, he's. awash in controversy , WASHINGTON <AP> -When iames Watt went to Alaska, he pronounced himself a chanaed ilian, "warm and c uddly now." eut after a week of being Mr. Nice Guy, the interior secretary 1s back in battle. awash again in controversy 1 In Ala.c;ka, Watt made a con· ~ession lo animal lovers, limit· , ing boat traffic in Glacier Bay to wotect a deplet ed population of t)umpback whales , He also movod to increase recreation opportunities for na· t;onal pa rk visitors and made a point of listening to Alaskan con· qerns over his ambitious off- shore oil leasing pla ns. , But upon his r e turn to Washington, Watt in quick order ~t into a s lugfest with the libe ral Democrat who heads the House committee that oversees qis depa rtmt>nl. What's m ore. he ran into qharges from environmentalists t.hat he had conspi red with his old pro-dc.velopmenl law firm in a pending federal court case Aides say Watt's c1ght·day vis· tt lo Alaska was intended as an image-building trip to shore up his ro<"ky standing with con· 'ervation groups In an effort to bolster his out- door image, Wall waded into trout stream s. visited national parks and at one pomt came fate-lo fal'l' with a huge brown hear. Wall took a plane ride with Alaska Gov Jay Hammond for a first-hand look at Bristol Bay. one of the areas Watt is con- s idf.'ring including on his ac· celerated oil leasing schedule. He promised to consider argu· ments made by Hammond that drilling in the bay would wreck Alaska's prime salmon fis hing a rea. And throughout the trip, Watt INTERIOR Sl-:CRF.TARY James Watt stressed that he had decided to Lonl' down the controversial image he had gamed during his ~ix month tl•nurc as interior ~l'('rt•tan ··There·~ a rt•al change in my style. 1 · m warm and cuddly Anti I'm just e asy to get along w1Lh There's a real definite change ... Watt said Aides, h appy with Watt's Jll·rformant·e in Alaska , said more trips Wl're planned. includ· 1n g a tret.•-week foray i nto \\'('stern i.tates in September. They said Watt would be meet · ing more often with reporters to explain his side of things. But in one of those inter views this week. Watt opened up a whole new rontroversy. He told The Washington Post he had brought Rep Morris K t.Jdall. chairman of the Houae Interior Committee, under rontrol by threatening to block tht• lual lei( of a S2 billion water proJl'<'l In the Arizona Democrat 'a dlatrlrt .Udall immcdl11tt1ly rolled 1.1 press conf~rcnc~ to de nounce what he culled a "rrud1.1" thr«'ul by Watt to "punh1h mt"' for al lowing ho11tlle que11llonlng ot Watt during rommlttee meet inJ(s Udall s uggested that Watt's lcg1 slulive program may not fare loo well before his commit· lee und said President Reaga n should not ··condone this crude assault on the p eople of Arizona." On Tbursday. Udall called for Wall's resignation. saying "the country would be a lot better off if he was gone." In a federal court in Billings, Mont . lawyers repr esenting en- vironme ntal groups to ld a federal j udge they would seek to provl' that Watt had e ngaged In "collusion" with his former law firm. Mountain Stat es Legal Foundation, in an effort to open up 1.5 million acres of Montana wilderness to development. Under long-sta ndin g prin- ciples of law, courts refuse lo hear cases brought as a result of collusion by both sides. which secretly seek the same result. In this case, environmentalists sus- pect that Walt wanted his an- tagonists in court to win so he would be free lo open the Bob Marshall Wilderness Area to oil drilling. If environmentalists can prove collusion existed. they can get the lawsuit dis missed and pre- serve the congressional action which put the area off limits to oil drilling. Report urges MX plan change Panel's staff recommends halt to 'shell game' basing WASHI NGTON <AP> -House Inte rior Committee s peciaUsts who studied the MX mobile mis- s ile for two years are recom· mending that the proposed "shell game" basing mode for the weapon be abandoned. In a staff report released last week. the bipartisan group of t•ommillel' aides suggested bas- ing MX missiles in existing or new 1nter C'ontinental ballistic s ilos ins tead. a s parts of a "force diversification" plan. President Reagan is reviewing a Carter administration plan, d ubbed "shell ~ame " by critics, to m ove MX missiles around among 4 .600 underground shelters in Utah and Nevada to batne prospective enemies. White I louse Counselor Edwin Meese Ill has said a decision is expected 10 three to five weeks on whether to proceed with this plan or base the missiles on airplanes or elsewhere. The Interior Committee has held hearings on the question because of its jurisdiction over public lands The staff r eport said the Carter admtnistral1on plan was logically sound when 1t was pro· posed because it would have concealed the missiles amon~ more finng points than the Sov iet Union had warheads . But the report said the Soviet buildup in missiles has now gone too far to be countered effective- ly with the multiple shelter ap· proach. The report recomm ended im- proving U .S . early warning, command control, communica- tions and intelligence capabili - ty . designing a new. small. "tru- ly mobile'' ICBM ; developing a prototype of a s mall, missile- carr ying submarine and step· ping up e fforts to achieve nuclear arms limitations. ............ RESTAURATEUR Ulysses "Blackie'' Au~r pauses in one of the dining rooms of his prine rib es tablishment, Blackie's House of Beef in Washington, D C. Auger said he requires all employees to produce a Social Security card when they are hired. Village copes with chemica/,s Picturesque town deals with asbestos w~ste, arsenic HUDSO N.N H. <AP> -With s teepled churches and Revolu- tionar y War.era houses, Hudson looks to be a typically quaint New England village. But beneath its green hills. dozens or pits hold millions of pounds of asbestos waste, and hundreds of wells pump drinking water laced with arsenic. ·'These chemic al problems are coming one right after a nother," Philip Laurien, the town manager , said. "but the people of Hudson are doing a hell of a job learning to cope with the unexpected.'' This town of 14.000 on the Massachusetts border has had more than its share of the unex· peeled. The arsenic problem cropped up late last year when Judith Constantian and her husband, Mark, were told that their 5· month-old son's hair re gistered high levels of the poisonous metal. "fused to drive around Hudson living my own quie t. m yopic life. l had no reason to be con· cemed about the arsenic until m y kid got sick, .. she said. "When it comes home to roost, you'd be surprised al how quick- ly private citizens become adept at pressuring congressmen, do· ing complex research, making calls and generally raising hell to protect your family and town. And that's exactly what hap· pened in Hudson," s he said. Since the discovery, more than 1,200 wells have been test· ed. More than 30 percent showed a mounb of a rsenic near or above Ue accepted sare level, Laurien iaid. Initial studies by the federal Cenlersfor Disease Control and the Ervironmental Protection Agency have determtned that the ars1nic in Hudson's wate r is produ!ed n aturally i n tl\e bedrock . A variety of waler fillers .s being tested . Bul0there was nothing natural about.he asbestos . The powdery gray blend of asbestos fibers and cmcrete 1s production waste from a nearby plant of Johns ManV1ll e. the world's largest m anuacturer or asbestos prod· ucts. For more than a decade. the comp.my buried its waste in nearb y fi e Id s. with th e pernission of reside nts . The ca r ci nogenic dangers of as beltos had not been proved when most of the waste was dumped. but last month the Justice Department order ed J ohns Manville to c lean up six asbestos dumps in Hudson. A week later, the company said it used at least 38 sites "and maybe a lot more." H udson r eac ted l o the asbestos as it did to news of the arsenic ··it was just another en· vironmental problem," Laurien said. "We had lo deal with the same emotional reaction, the sam e cast of government characters. The one real dif· fe rence is that with the asbestos we know where it came from.·· Townspeople have been c ritical of st ate a nd federal authorities for what they call in action in dealing with the prob· lems Said Laurien : "We've had to develop a very simple basic strategy -when we can't get the help we need from the government. we do it ourselves . People who 'hear' earthquakes tested WASHrN:iTON <API -Gov- ernment s cientists say they are increasitgly inte r ested in serious re!earch on people who claim to be able to forecast earthquakis and volcanic erup· tions. l Technic11ly, the suspicion is that some of these people may be sensitile to extremely low· frequenc) sound or weak elec· tromagn¢ic fields. Researth in this area could yield inportant find ings on whether the unusual auditory and otrur sensations they ex- perienccmay be associated with geophyscal events. according to a reportpresented at a scientific confere1ce here this week. Chrisbpher II. Dodge of the S c i e n 'e P o 1 i c y R es ea r c h Divis iin of the Library of Congrf1)s said a preliminary study tas pointed to a "tantaliz· ing c)inc ide nce" between seismi and volcanic activity alo ng th e West Coast and symp~ms rePorled by a Salem, Ore., ~oman. Dod~e, in a paper given al a con! e n ce of the Bioelec· trom nelics Society. said of· ficials of various federal agen- cies &.!reed at a recent meeting that ile Oregon ca se and others simiht to it "deserve the atten- tion f the scientific com- muni ." Ric ard A. Tell, acting chief of t Nonionizing Radiation Surv lance Branch at the En- viron ental Protection Agency faciU in Las Vegas, Nev., was a co-thor of the paper. abnormal he aring sensations. In a June 12 m emorandum to senior EPA officials, Tell c ited the same Salem. Ore .. resident, Charlotte King, a 35-year-old housewife, along with 10 other p eo ple living in Oregon , Was hington s tate. California, Montana. Illinois a nd Penn· sylvania. ·'These r e p o rt s co uld represent a 'tip of the iceberg· expression of a generalized, but v irtuall y undi scovered phenomenon associated with a ver y s m a ll fraction of the population," Tell wrote. Dodge told the scientific meet- ing that a research program called "Project Migraine" has been set up to systematically gath er data and conduct laboratory tests on Mrs . King and others. The project's name alludes to severe headaches fre· quently associated with the un- usual sensory phenomena. According to Ddoge, Mrs . King has s u ccessfully "pre- monitored" -from 12 hours to three days in advance -occur- rences including a May 9 steam- burst from Washington's Mount St. Helens volcano and earth- quakes which hit Westmoreland Calif .. on April 26 and Eureka' Calir .. on July 17. ' "The coincidence between Mrs. J{jng's hearing sensations possibly related symptoms , and subsequent seis mic and volcanic activity is. to s ay the least tan- talizing," he said. ' Ken Van Sickle. an artist and cameraman, performs patterns of T'ai Chi in a New York city park. T l has u rged that EPA esta ish a special task force to ma detailed plans for in· gating what he termed "s ge phenomena" involving As a first ste p toward in- vestigating the possible reasom b~hind this, Dodge sald, Mrs. King has started undercoing a series of bearing and other tests at the University of Colot ado Medical Center in Boulder . FRoM Fash ion Isl and .. Newport ·Beac h STEREO SOUND OF THE HARBOR r" o a a o a a a a XPS ¢ . ~ITillU~ Panel raps winos' park Arrests nearly triple around San Francisco site SAN FRANCISCO lAP) - Two months ago, on its first an- niversary, "Wino Park" won high praise from city officials. Deputy Police Chier James Ryan called it a wino's "place in the sun." Supervisor Carol Ruth Silver said it was .. an acre of sunshine" for down-and-outers in this city's South of Market area. drawn flak rrom winos. The committee's preliminary report said the winos in the park ··are frequently victimized b ecaus e or their weakened physical condition.'· A final re- port on a variety of issues will be presented to the mayor. ''The park creates more prob- lems than it solves," said Tom Gee, who represents the San Francisco Bay Association on the committee. Deputy Police Chief Stan Cordes, representing Chief Con Murphy on the panel, agreed. "They tried this in New York and it just creates problems," s aid Cordes. The Rev. Cecil Williams of Glide Memorial Church, which owns and sponsors the well-kept park with redwood benches and a simple outhouse, was quick to criticize the committee's stance. ·'There are some ~eople on that commission who c:an't be in- novative." said Williams. PARK A PROBLEM Mayor F'emstem -------- -. -- -- ---- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24. 1981 A• I ' ' i I Trial by telephone tried in California J SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A judge picked up a telephone in Superior Court and started talk· ing with two lawyers in an awkward experiment that could pioneer a nationwide trend to cut the cost or litigation and save time too. Judge Ira Brown joined in a conference call Wednesday with attorneys Michael Melton, who was talking from his office in Los Angeles. and attorney Lee Pantell, who was talking from her office in Palo Alto. Things got off to a rocky start when the talkers had a hard time hearing each other because or noise on the telephone lines. "I'm sorry, but I can't hear you." said Miss Pantell at one point. referring to Mellon's voice. share it. A typical conferencf call between Los Angeles and San Francisco costs $5.25 for the first three minutes during reg ular business hours and $1..30 for each added minute. Melton, who said he liked the arrangement exce pt for the telephone line problem. said i~ saved him and his client time. "I would have had to catch a 7 a .m . night to San Francisco, and that shoots most or the day, .. he said. It's quite a time-saver con· sidenng most of the pretrial pro ceedings in Brown's court last six minutes or less, the lawyers said. ,, But last week. the city's Blue Ribbon Committee on Inebriates and Street Indigents reported that crime ros e 188 percent around the park during the last 14 months. Police Capt. Bob Forni said arrests had nearly tripled around the park for such crimes as aggravated assault. robbery. narcotics and carrying con· cealed weapons. Probe of women's pay sought Brown replied, "You 're not at any disadvantage, Miss Pantell, becaus e r c an 't he ar him either ... In terms of money. attorneys note a typical lawyer's visit to court for a pretrial hearing costs a cli ent much more, with bill ings that often run more than $90 an hour plus expenses. But despite the savings, not all attorneys wholeheartedly ap- prove of the idea. Some prefer the personal approach. And the committee, app<>inted last February by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to find new solutions for old problems. said the city should refrain from opening any more parks for drunks, a recom· mendation that already has LOS ANGELES CAP> The California Commission on the Status of Women has voted to a s k that Gov . Edmund G . Brown Jr o r the s tate Leg,islature create a task force to investigate the issue of equal pay for comparable work. The commission, which met here last week, also voted sup- marriare ~""he r~e~a ... port for Assembly Bill 29 sponsored by Assemblyman Bill Lockyer, 0 -San Leandro, which would order the state Personnel Board to consider factors such as skill. effort , responsibility, working conditions and stress in setting salaries. The measure was approved 50·27 by an Assembly vote in Ju. ly. Lockyer said the "comparable pay" formula, the main criteria used in setting government pay scales, perpetuates pay dis· c rimination against women, while the "comparable worth" formula would help overcome the disparity. But the subject or business ~as ultimately completed an a pretrial proceeding. The experiment was organized by the San Francisco and State Bar Associations Under the rules, the attorney who makes the request assumes the cost or the telephone bill, although attorneys can agree to ··Face to face is better because you can see the de· meanor of the other attorney." said Raoul Renaud, an Oaklancf lawyer, when asked what he thought of the approach ... And J like to see the judge, seeing if h~ screws up his face at something you have said '' I s a weekend experience in decision making with professionals for those not sure what to do about an uncertain marriage or relationship. For information regarding dates. fees and appointment procedures . call: 673 -3183. SPECTACULAR DOLLAR SA VIHG Marriage On The Rocks 2435 E. Coast Hwy., Suite 2 Corona del mar, CA 92625 GRAND OPENING NEWPORT BEACH! -- European Body Wrap Celluhte C onlrol Nutnt1ono 1 gurdonce f/70 FAS .. OH ISLAND NEWPORT llACH 760.1909 UeH ....... as..t Salons Also In Bevef1y Hiila & Encino D&11RD: let me count the weo to~ ~ JJO WEST 7TH STREET. LOS ANGELES. CALIF: 9001• j ~I FASHION ISL.ANO, NEWPORT BEACH 92660 ~~~" ...... ~....-e.....-··~ ...... ~· r THE SAVIMGS GO Otit THROUGHOUT THE MONTH. AH.Al FUUWIBC NOWOPEN t SUNDAYS OF SAVIMGS I 1-4 P.M. [ ( BR1gidalre I l SPACE-SAVING FtUGIDAIRE LAUMDllY CEHTIR • O'lll' ... f,,..,. u..... dry c:..-......... ,.,..,\'" ---dryer tnt ........ Cllbt .... ..,.. 2• -• eon.... In .... only ,,,. ~ LtunOty c...c .. can...,. on fem11y ttr• -• The FrlQ!delte lA#'tdry o...e.. .... -·W..-~ -ln.t--_.,,. ........... o1 ...... ID the •a OI '°"' ...n. -SAVE \__J FtUGIDAIRE lf.O CU FT IUTI UfRIGERATOR· FllEEIB • 100% Frost-Proof! . • Automatic Ice Maker. Available at extra charge • Tough tempered glass. Fully adjustable • 3 Door convenience SAVE RCA Selecta Vision VIDEODISC ,34 YIAIS OP IMTMIITTI D .... DAllLITY INTRODUCTORY OFFBt RE APPLIANCES 17th STREET -COST A MESA & TEl:EVISION 411 E. HOUIS: DAILY t-t SATURDAY f·6 SUNDAY 11-4 r.M. SPECIAL FACTORY IUY TOP OF THE LIHE PAIR w..., • 2 Scl9eO • 3 Olc:tee .,,.,,,,..W..l-. ....__..._ew.. •111D~ Dryer • T--AUIO Ory ·~S... ·2r....,. •1l!D~ SAVE '8000 ON THE PAIR Frigidaire 17.0 cu. ft. ~afol-fl-MS•r • 1~rost Proof • Automatic Ice Maker avail• ble at extra charge • Keep most toPoQualtty meat cuts fresh and ready to cooM. for up to 7 days 1n the Flowing Cold Meat Tender MOW ONLY Frigldmlr• Bectrfc 5-Yer Df., ..... • Trlpte wuh Pot1 and Pan Cycte • Pore.lain-Enamel· On-Steel tub • Cut up to 30% of the electricity UMd In the Normal Soll cycle on the HMted Dry En•t'11Y Option ONLY 95 PHOMI ~1184 ,. ' , ,. J. . . ,. ,. , ........ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/M onday, August 24, 1981 Time for action on merger le~islation P er h aps now . :-.n 111t• 1.1 months a fter tht• Oran~t· l'11u11t~ electorate cll'livt•rt.•d 1l:-. volt'" 1m l h e S U b j l'<: l , l h l' (' ,d If ll l"ll I :t Legis l aturt.· (';tn P·'"=" .1 hill authorizing l'On:-.ohtl;1l1C111 11( 1lw court serv1c·t• f1111t•t to11" of t ht• Oran gt: Count' :-\ht•l'll f :-.111d Mars hal's offtt'L'" In Jww 1980 I>\ a :1 t11 1 margin. tht.• t'Ot1111\. l'lt•t·t111,1t 1• said consohd<1t to11 \\Ith ;rn .11 tendanl l'OSl ..,_., 111 g of SI mtllton to count) go\ t•rnnwnt ... hould occur Bc•tuUM' m.1 r:-.h.1t ... art' state em p Io' t' t.' s t· n ah 11 n g legislation was n •q 111 n•d Firs t thl•n• wa" htl'kt•rtng locally ovt•r how a ml'l'!!l'I' t ould bes t be a<:tompltshl•d Thl'n tht.• i nfi ghtin g mtl\l'd n orth to Sacramento. wht•re t•o mpet ing bills both authort•d by Orange County legis lators bc•gan mov ing in seµaratt· ct11·11tt10ns. Th l' c· o II n t \' fl o a rd o f Supe rvisors ts hac:k111 g a hill b~ A s s l' m h I \' w o m a n :\1 a r 1 a n fh •rgl•son, H Nt.•wport Beuch . '' htch \\llllhl l'rt.'<llc• ,1 <'ommilt ee t.•ompo:-.t.'cl of I wo s upt•rvisors. two .111.dgl'S and 11 fifth mlJluHlly :1gn•t-<I on nwmlwr to dt.•v<•lop a llH'q.~t.·r plan Ttw <·ompl'lin..: bill. b~· Sen Paul Caq>t.•nH•r . I> Cypress. \\011ld l':-.:-.t•n twll\' h•av1• the issue 111 lht• hand s '01 thl' Judges ('a rp<•nlt•r s lull \\~Is viewed as ht.' 1 n g p 1 o rn a r -; h a I . M r s Ht.·r~t.·'oon ·.., as p1 •> '\h(•rtff Las t \\l'l'k. lht.• Carpenll'r btll '' <•" '\hot dcl\\ n after foiling to draw a sc..•cond tn tht.• Senalt.• Com millet.• o n Lol'a l Go\'ernmt.•nt :\1 rs Bergeson· s ht II al rt.•ad~ has bt·en appro\'ed l>\ the same com mitlt.'L' Nov. that th<.• Caqwnter btll is out of the way . we hope our l<'g1slator!'I will pass the Bergeson lt.•gis lation so t h at ltw merg<.•r. so l'learlv des ired bv rnunh· tax· payers and n.•s idents. l"an ·b't.· al" tomplis hed post haste Help for home buyers \\'oulcl bt• Californw homl' bu,·ers ;,tnd 'ot·llt.·r" hml ::,onw en t ourngmg nt'w~ I n1m t ht• s tall' Supreme Court last Wl'ek The..• eourt upheld a .J unt.· Court of t\ppt>al rultng lh at propert~ bu~ t'r" may assumt.• mortg<igt•s held b.' federal Sa\ ings and loan assoc·rntaons and l'annot tw n•qu1red to take out ne". h1ght'r interest mortgages when the~· purchust• a pro~erty In th€! 1Y76 Wl'lll'nk<imp de C'ision. th<' slut<.• Suprl'ml' Court had ruh•d that s tall' s avings and loans could not forel' bu\'l'I'" to pay off an old mortg agt.' and 1wgoti<.1t <.· a nt•\\ ont• unless tlw hu~·er c:oulcl not nwt'l lTedtt n•· qu1rement:- Thl' a hi It t' to assume old. l<l\\ t•r 111ll'rt'Sl mort gagt·~ l'llabled manv Californians to hu\ home~ the~· might not olht1 l"'A"l 0 M' have been ahlt' lo afford And 1t ga"e home st'ller!-1 a bc..•lll'r market B u t \\ i t h i n t e r t.' s t r a t es steadil~ c limbing. tht• sanngs and loans otn 1ous l~ ''ould prefer to get rid of th<• oldt•r mortgages The We ll e nkamp rult• \\a '> challe nged earlier this ~ <.•ur b~ a "a\'lllg:-. and loan firm th.it daiml'd. smce 1t ha" a fl.>dt.•ral eharter. 1t s hould not ht• !-tUhJl'Cl to the state rule The Court of Appeal . hmH'vt'r. ruled that the Federal llo mt• Loan Rank hoard. which go\'crn~ federal savings and loans. cannot p reempt state law.., gon•rnrng mortgagt.• takeo\'e rs -.;ow tht.• s tate Supr'l·me Court has uµheld that de('is ion Since then"s a great deal of money at -;take. there douhtless wtll bt.• further attt.•mph to s iclestt'p the s t att• rult.• But for the time being buyers ''1th adequate credit mus t be pe rmitted lo a ssume e xis ting mortg<iges . Des pite the out tr~ of tht• s a\' mg~ and loans . this is reasonable The mone~ backing up the old m ortgages \.\as long ago com- m 1 tted and the re 1s no valid rc..>ason the people sellmg or buy - 1 n g those home s should be 1wnal ized Music Center boosted Plans for construct ton and e ndowment of :rn Orange Count~ ~t us iC' Center in South Coast Plaza Town Center received a major boost last week when the J a m es l r\'ine F ou ndatio n pledged a $3 million matching grant for the projel't. It is the largest single dona - tion ever prombed by the 50- vear-old fo undation. and the ~econd la rgest received in thl' s ix-month fund-raising effort for the performing arts complex Th<.' larges t ple dge was for S6 million from tht.• Segerstrom famih . whic h a lso donated tht• fh·e -acre site ne.ir Bristol Street and the San Ou!go Freewa~· The $3 m t ttwn Irvine pledgc requires that matching fundfo, br raised over ct l\\11 ~·ear pe nod. with the firs t SI million rnn ti n g ent upon lhe raising of • ,inother $1 million for construe t1on and des ign by Dc..>c 31 Plans n ow call for opening a 3.200-seat m a in theate r 111 1984 a nd a second 1.000-seat theater in a later phase. The t wo-theater complex will cost an est imated S40 million and an additional Sl9 million will be needed for endow ment of the center Campaign pledge s recet\'ed so far total SI6 million. so the re's s till a long road ahead. but uackc rs ha\'e good reason to believe the goal will be ac comptished in due time In fact. preliminary des ign p lan::, are ex· pected to be ready by late next month. an event that doubtless will spur the fund -raising effort and bring closer the longtime dream of a n Or a nge Cou nty fac ility comparable to the now famed Los Angeles Music Center. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of thei r authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626-0560. Phone (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd I Humbug coins ' England's King James ll ordered his mint in Dublin to make coins out of lead. pewter, whatever was at hand. Those coins had JitUe Intrinsic value And the Irish called them "Ulm bo~" m eaning soft metal. That's wh<'rc we got lhe t~rm "hum· bug." Medical researchers say India Is the only country in the world that ex- ports human skeletons. Common among the men wno rode the rods during the first 50 years of this century was a belief that one state in particular was especially hostill' to hoboes Louisiana. Item No. 681C in our Love and War m an's m e is the observation of the re nowned sportsman Casey S\enael: "Being with a woman a ll nipt never ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat hurt no professional baseball player It 's slaying up all night looking for a woman that does him in." Q. Is it true some female lizards produce babies without any m ale lizards ever being involved? A. That's right. At least 25 species do so, according to Smithsonian authorities. With unfertilized eggs. Understand the re ar e whole colonies of lizards that seem to do quite well without a male among them. One shows up here on the patio all the lime. We call it Gloria. Q. Whe re did entertainer Bette M \dler get her s tart? A. ln s inging. At a men's public bath house in New York Clty, Rhinos &ove the taste of vtoleta, I'm told. Almost a catnip kind of cravina. evidently. Thomas P. Haley Publl5her Thomas A. MU,.,..lne Editor Barbare Krtlblch Edltorl•f Page Editor U,S.Hf!Y I NEIMGAS Retiree ins11rance problems WASHINGTON A newspaper ex pose apparently helped to break up a marriage of convenience bt>twt:'en the nation's larges t senior citizen organ1za t1on and a major ins urance company In 1977. I reported that the Amencan Association of Retired Persons was mis using its cut-rate mailing pnv1lege to the advantage of the Colonial Penn G roup, Inc., one of the leading insurers of the elderly POSTAL investigators are now in the process of deciding whether to bnng suit against the old folks' organ1zat1on for letting Colonial Penn advertise its policies in letters sent out by the as soC'iation and its affiliated group, the !'-.ational Retired Teachers Association, at the bar~ain rate accorded to non· profit institutions. As l reported four year s ago, much of Colonial Penn's profits could be traced to the discount it got by mailing its pro· motional literature to AARP-NRTA's 13 million members al a rate that was roughtly one-fourth that charged to other insurance companies paying the r egular commercial postage rate. Colonial P enn and AARP-NRTA began "divorce" proceedings in early 1979. But postal inspectors have con· tinued their investigation. They've ac- cumuJated 500 complaints. testimony from senior c itizens and other docu ments that fill more than 18 file cabinet drawers. And it's beginning to look as 1f they"re going to take legal a~tion. With respect to the lnspc<:t1on Service invesllgation of CPG, AARP. NRTA. there 1s a conc·rete prospect of G -JA-Cl-AN_D_IR-SD-N -~ future l;rn enforcem ent proceedings ." C hii•f l'o~tal Ins p ector Kennet h 1-·ll•tcher said 1n a sworn affidavit fllt'd July 14 HE ADDED that the Postal Service ··1s cont('mplating bringing a law en- for cement pr oceeding against the part1e!-i for the recovery of postage al lc~cd to be owed to the Postal Service as the result of the alleged abus e of the n on pro f it, r educed rate mailing privileges of AARP and NRTA for the benefit of C PG.·· But Fletcher s aid no recommendation has been made yet on a possible suit agatnst the two groups and the m s urance company Meanwhile. Colonial Penn is also the target of an in vestigation by the Securities and Exchange Comm1ss1on into possible violations stemming from the company's alleged failure to dis · close to its stockholders the sweetheart relationship with t he two other senior citizens· groups In an affidavit filed June 16. an SEC t>nfon·l0 ml'nt branrh chief. W11!1am M C"l.ucus. stud. "The Colonial Penn in \ l'St1~ut1on 1\ <'Urrl'nll) in progress and thl•rt' l"'<l!)ts a concrete prospect or fut urt.• la" enforcemt'nt proceedings. Another SEC docum ent reiterates that ruturt.• l•nforn•mt:nt proC"eC'dings are a reu..,on<11Jll' prospt;"ct ·· One md1c<it1on or the <·lose-knit reld t1on~h1p <"ame in a 1979 report b) thl' W1 s t.·on~in ln~u rance C'omm1ss1on. \\ h1t.•h \iJld "TllE RELATIOSSHIP between l'olun1al l'l'nn <tnd AARP-:'oo:RTA h;,i s alwavs b('('n characterized bv an a nnu<il 1nlerrll·1wndencl;' Tht' t WO associat1om hav<· <·om l· to depend hcavil~ on funds from thl' comp;rny. legal adnce and bus1m·s~ sen ·1cl·s from the com pan). not lo ml'ntion tht:1r reli ance on Colonial Penn as a devclopl'r of all programs. bl' they ins urance. travel. employm ent or mc•mbership soli citation " The marnaE?e of convenience worked hoth ways, of course Colonial Penn has sold policies to som (' 2 5 m1lhon mem bers of AA RP-='I RTA A spokesman for AA RP told my as -.oc·1at<• Ton~ Cap acc10 the Postal Sen ·1c·t• document on possible legal ac· t1on 1s "news lo ever~ body A Colonial Penn sp<>kes m an said "We have not bt.•en apprised of 1t · Asked for com m cnl on the SEC probe . he said. As fa r "°' I kno" 1t"s ront1nuinf! and \.l.e ha\ e bet•n eoopt.•r<1l1ng · Some guests can • turn m to pests The next time we have friends al the house over the weekend, I'm going to make sure it isn't old friends . I want our next houseguests lo be friends we don't know well enough to be perfectly at ease with -not that I didn't enjoy hav- ing Barbara and Quintin. mind you It's just that we all know each other so well that no one holds back. ··Boy, you got a lot of work to do around this place." Quintin says WELL, I KNOW I have a lot of work to do and I know l' m not going to do a lot of it and l don't need a good friend telling me about it. "I drove up to Montreal to get my paint," Quinlin said. "They can still make paint with lead in it up there and it lasts a lot longer. That's why all the paint is peeling in your hQuse. Paint isn't any good anymore." He thinks perhaps J haven't noticed the house needs painting? "l nearly broke my neck on those stone steps out by the front porch," he says. "That slab of stone on lop is ro.k· ing. Can't you jam another little stone or something under there so it doesn't rock'1 Someone's going to get killed." Quintin thinks I haven't been meaning to stabilize that stone for four years now since the frost heaved it? "That's a good aerial you"ve got on ANDY ROONEY your televis ion set," he says "Of course. you're on high ground here, so you get a good picture. Why don't you get yourself a decent-sized television set so you can see it?" SATURDA V NIGHT we had some other friends over for drink s a nd din- ne r Ra rbara a nd Quintin wanted to he lp "Sure," I said. "You can put the glasses and the ice and the bottles out on the table on the front lawn." "Which glasses?" Barbara said. Are these sacrifices valid? In s pite of spending cuts, Uncle Sam is still helping out the truly needy s uch as Hilton Hotels, Bristol-Meyers and Prudential Insurance. One thing that always fascinates me is the hypocricy of demagogues on both the le ft and right of our political system. My liberal colleagues spent 110111 MAIR years blathering on about lhe need for everyon e to support buslna of children for racial integration. At the same t ime, they were sendins thelr own kids to private schools to avoid bualn1 and racial integration. The conservatlves for their part m~ and Cll'I')' on about •II thole folka who have lhelr banda In the public lroufb. Th ey want people to take care of themselves a.nd atop HPfCtinl Uncle Sap to sJve them a hand-out. Tbls ls lh• central Jewel i.n the Rea1an adminlatra- llon ldeololicaJ crown. While all that pompous purity lJ be!nl hawked out front. m llUooa of federal bucka are beln( banded oul the backdoor to 1ub1ldlae 1t•nt1 of ' American industry. Some quick examples include : $2.85 million lo the Sheraton Hotel division of International Telephone & Telegraph to build two hotels in Brookline Village and New Bedford. Massachusetts: S9 m ilLion for a l)eW Prudential Insurance Company office building in Newark, New Jersey. S760,000 fo r a Hilton Hotel in Pensacola , Florida: and Sl million for a new plant In Buffalo, New York to house a division of Bristol-Meyers. Even the direct mall superstar of the Far Right, Richard A. Viguerie, was go- ing to build a $7 mUlion headquarters ln Virginia subitldh:ed by the good ole American taxpayel'3. Direct Mail Dick aave up the plan only when those dastardly devlls in the news media aot wind of it and told all. The total of UUs taxpayer subsidy of America's rich corporatlons ls now estimated to run $8.4 billion <wlth a ''b"> a year and includes such truly neediea, ln addition to those I have already mtnUoned aa K·mart and the always popular Mcbona.ld't bambur1tr chain. So. when the lederal bu.diet cuts close down that clinic or child care center tn )'Our town, remember it la a time ror national aacrifice and we au have to do our share. Rl&hl alona with America '1 mlllion.t.N ~aUOM. I told her where the glasses were and shl' st<trl ed laking things out ·'Ther e• are o nly seven of these glassc•s and there a re going to be eight of us," Barbara said. "I know, I know,"' I said '"We used to have 12 of lhem You have to take one Jelly glass I 'll use that." "Don"t fall on that loose stone step as you go out," Quintin said ··what about chairs for out fron\"I " he asked me I told ham there were some old ones up 1n the garage if he wanted to get a couple of those. Quintin is a willing helper. He went out lo the garage and he was gone for <ibout 10 minutes before he returned carrying two aluminum chairs with broken webbin~ •·You mean these"·· he asked in- credulous ly T HOSE WERE THE ones I meant. I know the webbing was broken. If the webbinjt hudn 't been broken they wouldn't have been in the garage in the ft rst place "Boy," he said. as he put the chairs down, "1 thought my garage was a mess. How do you ever get a car in there? You got s tuff hanging all over. You ought lo have a garag0 sale. . and sell the garage," he laughed. Friends can be so cruel ''Why don 't I make the salad dress· ing," Barbara said to my wife. "Is this the only vinegar you have"" she asked. holding up a bottle of El Cheapo.-the supermarket house brand. "'I guess I 'll use lemon instead of vinegar." s he said. "Here come the first guests." Quintin said. "There sure isn't much space for the m to park in that driveway of yours." "I'll greet the guests," Barbara said. "Don't break your neck on that stone step as you 1to out,·· Quintin yelled after he r. lllllYlll The OMV 1ood driver muddle ls jusl the usual CaUfomla confusion which led to the Medfly tltuatJon. NEVADA NELL ·.~._ ........... _ ........ .,~ ..... .... -HNl'lly """""-;:;: .. -Mo I JI , ... -_.. ........ ........... ,..,, ---___ ...,.. ~--- a . . t : a ; coco . . . -.. . . . . aver N o bank or savings and loan can pay you more interest-or save you more taxes-on a new 1-year tax-saving certificate than Wells Fargo. Add to this the security and convenience of saving at a major bank, and the financial counsel of your own Personal Banker~ and the Wells Fargo advantage is clear. Thanks to Federal tax law changes, beginning October 1 Wells Fargo Bank is offering savers the opportunity to earn up to $1,000 in tax-free interest. Up to $2,000 for returns fil ed jointly. No bank or savings and loan can pay you more on thi s fonn of investment-or saves you more on taxes. Plus with Wells Fargo, there's the added dimension to sav_ing that has mad e Wells Fargo the bank for sen ous savers. Important Note. The current high-yield instruments being offered by other institutions in conjunction with tax-savings certificates are not tax exempt. Yields on all tax-saving certificates, which are effective October 1, will be the same at all offerin g financial institutions as required by law. A Personal Banker can help you decide. The new tax-excl usion savings plan raises certain questions that are dependent on your individual financial situation. Should you seek maximum interest or tax rel ief? Is the tax-saver '"'t':·-- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 • ore! • • certificate rig ht for yo u? These are questions that can't be answered in an advertisement. Your nearest Wells Fargo Bank has son1eone who can help you answer th em personally-A Well s Fargo Personal Banker. A fin ancial pro who can keep you informed about things like rates and maturity dates through- out the length of you r certificate. Your savings can buy bank services. What's mor e, at Well s Fargo, your savings can qualify you for the impressive array of services known as the Golden Reward~ Keep· a $2,000 balance in a Well s Fargo Tax-Saver Certificate. and you get 10 valuable ban king services, including interest on the fund s you use for checking-with no service charges or fee. With the Golden Reward, you can actuaJl y "b uy" things with your savings without spending a cent of them. Long-term advantages. Of course, Federal regulations require a substanti al interest penalty in the event of earl y withdrawal from a Tax-Saver Certificate. But where else is your money going to work for you in so ni any ways? Substantial interest on your savings; maximu1n tax relief; the safety and conven ience of a major bank and the financial knowhow of a Personal Banker. Plus the Gold en Reward-just about every service you'IJ ever need from a ban k, with rio serv ice charges. Stop by your nearest Wells Fargo Bank for more information. Wells Fargo Bank Member FD IC A7 I ' 4 -f 0 $ . . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 " - r •. Effective rate until October 1st Paclftc federal~ pre-sign-up program earns the highest lnt~est available, then automatically converts on October ISi 10 a Saver~ lncentlveM tax-free savings 'account. Our Savers' Incentive Account could be the best investment you've ever made. Beginning October 1st. these 12-month, fully insured accounts will return the highest interest allowed by law on a minimum invest-·- - INDIVIDUAL INCOME ------- -- PROBABLE 1AX INTEREST RATE YOU'D HAVE TO RECEIVE TO NET 11.62% * BRACKET AFTER FEDERAL INCOME 1AX -- ·.~ $50.000 or more 60% 29.05% ·---ment of just $500. 1 . Since the first $1,000 ($2.000 for joint accounts) in interest is tax-free, the effective annual yield can be as high as 29% or more, depending on your tax bracket.* (Refer to the chart at right.) And as an added incentive, if you invest now, your funds will earn a full 20%~* up to the October 1st start date. Of course, there is a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal. So, obviously, the sooner you take advantage of this exclusive offering, the more you'll profit. After all, you have to think of your own interests. $35.000 ·-$25.000 $20.000 or less FAMILY INCOME $50,000 or more $35,000 $25.000 $20.000 or less 50% 23.24% ----- 40% 19.37% -- 35% 17.88% - 50% 23.24% 40% 19.37% 30% 16.60% 25% 15.49% ''20% account 1s backed by US Covemment secunties It Is nol 11 savmgs account end 'Approximale &gures In the chart are ba.sed on T·blll euclk>n of AuQust 7th and 1981 tax tables lnterut rates rounded to tM nures1 10th lntuest paid on tax-&tt account to IS not insured by IM FSLIC b« 70% Of ewragc inw.stm~t yield of 52~ek U S Treasury bins 111 monthly auction MCIFIC FEDERAL Our Interest st.arts with you ... Loe~-B~ntwood 820-0406. f.ncino 981-5311, Glendale 241·1158. Hollywood 463-4141, Los Feliz 467-1123, Manhattan Beach 546·3455, Mar Vlsta 391 · 8211, Santa Mon1aa 399·3285. Studio City 985-0611, Toluca La.ke 846-6880. West Hollywood 273-7091, Wtfshire·Mariposa 389-1371. 0....,. Cotmly-Anat)efm 776-4761, Uncoln·Gtlba1 535·5640. Costa Mesa 631·0800, Huntington Harbour 846·3355, Newport Buch 644-7630. Su........_ Cellltf-Callmaa 795· a 2521, Del Rosa 889·0231, 40th Street 889·0231, E Street 889·0231, Montclair 621-5021, Mount Vemon 889-0231, Needles 326-4561. Ontario 986-6nl, Plaza • 889·0231, Redlands 798·2399, Rialto 874-0411, VictorvWe 245-7757, Yucaipa 797-1191. Saa Dleto Comly-Del Mar 755·0231, La Jolla 454·3261, San ~go (Rancho Penasquitos) 485·5910, Rancho Bernardo (To open in 1981), Rancho Santa Fe <To open in 1981 ). •••••lie Coaly-Cathedral Qty 324· l 784, lndlo 347-2761, Palm Desert 346-5511, Palm Springs 325-7471, Rlwrside 781·8080. For further information call toll.free 800·472-8572. Hours are 8-00 a.m . to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Ft1day . . . J • Daily Pilot M O NDAY, AUGUST 2.C, 1981 FEATURES COMICS TELEVI SION 82 86 87 ...,.._ . Orphan Annie goes to work for PBS. See Story on 87. D a Dally f'tt.t P ...... lty Oary ,.....,_ Confidence and coordination gained in United Spirit Association camp is shown by cheerleaders as they wave smartly in unison through a routine learned on Last day. Leaders getting in step There was no shortage of s pirit when more than 460 high school students gathered for a cheerleader-song leader camp at UC Irvine. Loudness was the name of the game during the event s ponsored by the United Spirit Association , the largest cheerleading training organiza- tion in California. "We have camps all over the west," said Bobbi Zeno, a Palm Springs teacher who managed the camp for USA . "The em· phasis is on unity, closeness and crowd control." She explained that during in· s tructional clinics, cheerleaders were evaluated on individual and group per form ance, but they did not compete against o.ther schools as the song groups did. Participants learned n ew s kills from USA instructors, who were mostly collegians with pep squad backgrounds. And they added to their repertoire of routines by watching their peers perform. In technique classes, students viewed game films and were quizzed on what kinds of dances and cheers they would perform in a given circumstance. Regardless of school rivalries, a s pirit o f camara derie pervaded the camp as squads cheered each other for a job well done. Even though they had been yelling and kicking for several days, the students' enthusiasm was just as high at the final awards ceremony. Each trophy or ribbon was welcomed as though it were the league cham- pionship. The apre•"°" of Jo1¥t llo/fOf1 of Copiltrano Valley High School shows that IOOIWf" ar lq&er boundnf to flw ,,,_. beconw1Of1trnuow a.t any ezercile. Two mascots head back to the donmtones after hot day of prancing m fuzzy suits Da lly PllcK """'"• ltr Gary Am....,,w 'Major Gable' unf orgettab"le SAN DIEGO (AP ) S urvivors of the 303rd Bomber Squadron, one of World War ll's busiest bomber groups. re- member him as MaJ Gable. a s traight-shooting gunner and tough-talking gambler To millions of movie fans. the major was better known as Clark Gable. one of Hollywood's legendary actors. The men of the 303rd, meeting here last weekend lo recount their more than 300 missions over Germany, haven't forgot· ten him. "He paid his dues as an airman," said Al Roode. 62. of Cleveland. a group bombardier with the 303rd between 1942 and 1945. "He was sent over to gel 3.000 feet of combat film and boy did he get it," Roode said. Two memories of Gable burn vividly in the mind of Bjl) Brown, 56, of Gig Harbor, Wash. Then an 18-year -old crewman aboard the Flying Fortresses. Brown recalls shootin~ skeets with Gable -"and he could really bust 'em." But Gable. who made five combat missions from the 303rd's base in Molesworth. England. is best remembered for his sense of duty. "We were on a mission, I think to Amsterdam. and one of his cameras malfunctioned ... said Brown. A gunner and photographer, Gable removed his gloves. ignoring 60-below temperatures. '"lo fix that camera with his bare hands. lie got a bad case of frostbite but it shows you that he cared about doing his job.·· said Brown Back at the base. Gable seldom passed up a friendly game of craps. '"Oh how he loved to talk it up, the louder the better." said Roode. '"I don't know an\'hod.v who ctidn't Like him ·· Walter Cronkite riskt>d his life a$ ;.i 111_•\\..,man to fly with the 303rd. tht· f11 ... 1 bomber group to complt·ll· :11H1 m1ss1ons from an Amentan ha..,t· 10 England Reha!>htng thl•tr role. from the destr uc-11on of the rocket re· s(•an·h <"l'ntc·r at Pel'nemunde to thl' Ea..,tcr Sunday raid in Posnan. Pol;.ind . many a veteran l'll'arly rl'<':tllt•d the dates of his brush with d(.•ath · Thl· roughes t was Asl'hers ll'l>l'n . Jan 11 . 1944," said l'<iul Tl o!>bruck . 64, of ChevC'nnt>. w.,,o .. We lost 101 B-Jis out of 2so That was the first ltml' \\l' ran tnlo heavy fighter attacks · Wave after \\ave of them," said F'r<>d Corbin . 62, of Petersburg, \.'a .. Their pilots would ny into our formations do- ing barrel roles I never thought we·d gel back ·· "The rf;_ik was so thick you could have walkeo on it,·· added Brown T\\O month!> later. they en- countercc1 ;mother nerve·wrack· mg i,ight orw of Germany's f1 rst Jl'I ftghll•r.., .. Wt• l'o11l<l11 t hl'hevc how fast the~· \H'n• ..,;11d ('urbin ··we t·mtl<ln·1 hat them and the~ to11l<ln·1 hit us." said Brown. with a laugh. . Frank .11111('" .Jr. 59. of Mission \'ie10. a r<•tirNl military pilot and \"l't<•1an of :is B 17 missions, bcltC'\·t•s \\'orl<I War II will go down ._..., ·11w last \\ ar between gentll•nH•n · There was a mutual re..,pt•ct. he said · If a <;t•r man fighter ran out of ammo. hl''<l fl~ past us. salute and he;id hack to reload. If you we re captun•d. the German pilots would \\ 1ne \OU and dine you ~eforC' Shi PJ>I ng you off to the Stalag «amp ·· I -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 He 0.EAR ANN LANDERS: My birthday was last Saturday. My huaband gave me the same thing this year that be has given me every year for the past 17 -an ariJument. In May one of the kids asked him what he was going to buy me for Mother's Day. The big jerk aaid, "She is not MY mother -she's yours. You buy her something." For Christmas last year he gave me a set of mops. Last year It was a new motor for the washing machine. I know he loves me. When I was sick in the hospital with a ruptured appendix three years ago he almost went out of his mind. So why can't he take the time to buy me a sweet card for a quarte r when m y birthday rolls around? What's wrong with people who don't have an ounce of sentiment in their souls? Please explain -FROM MISSOURI BUT HE WON 'T SHOW ME Dear Mlssourl: Your husband probably received very Utile af· fecUon when be was 1rowtng up. but can't show it llllDllll When tbls happens It I• very dlf. ficult (aometlme1 lmpo11lble> to be affecl.loaate wttb oU.en. l'U bet the big jerk la really nut&y about you. He just doesn't know bow to upreaa It. lna&ead of be· lnl resentful and hard·bolled, sof&eo up ud &each him. DEAR ANN LANDERS: In the last few months you have re· run two wonderful columns I had not seen before. I wish you wouJd do repeats more often. I never miss your articles when I am in town, but when I'm traveling I'm too busy to see a paper. The repeals are aJways of superior quality . Trust those people who ask for another look. We aJl profit from It. -MOR· RISTOWN, N.J ., ADMIRER Dear N.J .: Thanks for the bou· quet. Here's another point of view: DEAR ANN LA N DERS : Another rerun today. What's the matt.er with you? Getting lazy in your old age? If you can't furnish your readers with a fresh column every day I sug- gest you retire I feel gypped when I see a repeat The next time 1t happens I a m going to call the publisher and complain. WANT MY MONEY 'S WORTH Dear Money's Worth: I can't please everybody, so I'm going wlU. I.be person whose let~r •P· pears above yours. DEAR ANN LANDERS : In social conversation recenlly someone used the expression "lace c urtain Iris h." My husband <a Protestant l asked the woman what the expression meant. She said, "IL means a terrible housekeeper who never dusts the cobwebs from the win- dows. and they look like lace curtains.·· I was brought up in South Boston a nd hea rd that ex · press ion often. "Lace curtain Iris h" are people who can afford the bes t while thei r poor neighbors hav e t o s tuff newspapers through the broken window panes Lo keep the cold out Which one of us is right? - DAUGHTER OF ERE Dear Daughter: There are many deftnltJons and everyone thin.ks his Is "right." I like tbls one best: Lace curtain lrlab are people who bne fruit 111 the house when no one ls sick. t.:ONHDENTIAL TO Sort U Out Please In Lexington: He sounds like a very slick operator. I wouldn't be sur· prlsff ii the wool he ls pulling over your eyes is SO percent col· ton. Give him a handshake and send hJm on bis way. Cot those wedding bell blues over cost guest hsl what to ~r and otheT detaals, Ann Lan- ders' completely new "The Bn<U's Gulde .. wtU help. F'or a copy. send a dollar. plus a Long. self-Oddreaud. stamped envelope I 18 cents post~e J to Ann Landers, P 0 Boz 11995, Chicago. Ill. 60611 Aries: Some pieces fall into place Deity "IM"--., C--. Mwr FANCY -~ot ~Ill' r.ir l'\\Uld boast a hood ornament as a rtistic a~ th1:-"~1rk on .1 nntagl' Rolls·Royre Antique . classic and otht'I' "l>t't'iJI t•ar ... \\'t'l'l' on d1spl a~· this weekend at South Cua:-t Pl.11a \'1llage foll<)\\ ing a parade from Santa Ana. Nicotine found to subdue aggression NORTON. Mass IAP l -Peo- ple who find cigarette smoking to be relaxing have received academic support from a new r esear c h s tudy that 'found ni cotine produces less a g. gressive behavior in s mokers . T he fi rst response was Judged as passive and the second two as aggressive. Before e a c h session, re- searcher s gave participants either no cigarettes. low·nicotine cigarettes containing .42 milli· g r a m s, or high -ni cotin e c igarelles containing 2.19 milli · grams. The cigarettes contained the same amount of tar. By SYDNEY OMARR Tuesday, August 25, 1981 ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Various pieces fall into place; patte rn is set, you'll know what Lo do and when to attempt it. Ac· cent on home, security. property values and challenge of added responsibility. TAURUS <Apr. 20 -May 20 l : What had been moribund wHI HOROSCOPE now "shake. rattle and roll." Short trips, calls, messages and in c r eased social activity dominate scenario. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): New approach leads to profit. Exercise indepe ndence of thought, action. Focus on pay- ments. collections. understand· ing of money and how best to in· vest it. CANCER <June 21.July 22 ): lntuition serves as reliable guide. Judgment, timing are on target. Emphasis on teaching, learning and regaining sense of direction. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): You're invited to participate in speciaJ group or club activity. Accent on expansion, artistic endeavors. secret hiding places and com- munication with one confined to h o me or hospital. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You get what you asked for - know it . be discerning. dis- c rim i na ting and ca reful. LIBRA CSept. 23-0ct. 22): Promotion due, but ple nty of competition is featured. ln· dividuals who "posed" as allies may now show true colors. Define terms, see people in re· a lis tic light. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 211 : Family discussion of long-range views is highlighted Potential comes into focus . Accent also on travel, communication, educa- tion and spiritual values. SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 >: What seem ed a "sure thing" r equires r eview. Dig beneath surface indications: you gain vital information 1f persis· tent. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Someone attempts to burden you with unnecessary problems. Refuse to be a human "cr ying towel." E schew sob stories. insist on factual data, and protect self from legal loopholes. AQUARIUS CJ an. 20-Feb. 18): Define responsibilities. Depend· ents may be taking too much for granted. Check medical- dental appointments. Accent also on employment. basic c hores and pets . PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Emotions dominate logic. Em- phasis on change, variety of sensations. travel plans and romantic involvement. \T'S NOT EASY TO LIVE W'ITHOUT KNOWING THE TRUTH, tM 1 Ashi••O"' Bu1t11 n1 411 Right' Re"'"eo D•sf Cl'l•C&QO l uoune N Y N1•I SyinO Inc e>lJT SOMEHOW W£ ALL MA....,AGE TO DO IT. Cancer society is f orrning support group AMERICAN CANCE R society is forming a support group for cl_ncer patients and their families. The free group will meet on Mondays al "I p.m . beginning Sept. 1. For more in- formation. caJI 752·8600. INTERFAITH Dating and Marriage is the subject of a dis· cussion at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday in Santa Ana. For informa tion. call 532-5646. CHILDHOOD ''life scripts " will be discussed in a seminar tilled "To Dream the Impossible Dream'' at 7:30'p.m Friday in Laguna Beach. For information. ca II 832· 1020. INFERTILITY WORKSHOP will be held Friday at JO a.m. in HEALTH HELP Heavier smokers are likely to be even less aggressive than light smokers. according to the study conducted by Prof. D.R. Cherek of the Louisiana State University Medical Center. It was prese nt ed here a t a Wheaton College conference on aggression. Cherek found that s mokjng the experimental cigarettes made the subjects less likely to choose e ither of the mor e "aggressive" options. The higher the nicotine dosage. the less aggressive the response. the study found. This wedding was right, on tar{let BRAILLE TRANSCRIBING classes will begin Tuesday at 9 a.m. in Laguna Hills. For more information, call 586·8516. Santa Ana. Speaker will be ob- stetrician and gynecologist Ari Babaknia. For inform ation. call 973·1733 The study was based on a series of experiments with six subjects. ages 18 to 35. who had smoked cigarettes for at least four years . The subjects were g i ven an imaginary pile of money and were told they had been pair ed with an unseen partner. ·'The s uppressing effects of s moking diffe r ent doses of nicotine on aggressive r espond- ing was dose-dependent. in that s m o king the hi g h d ose of ni cotine produced more sup· pression that smoking the low dose," the report said. TWlN FALLS, Idaho (AP> - In the ro mance between Bill fl ays and Susan McFarland, you might say Cupid s hot darts, not arrows . Hays. a dedicated dart thrower. organized dart-shooting tournaments in this south· central Idaho town. He met Miss Mc Farland while playing his favorite game. So. his friends thought it onJy appropriate he be married in front of a dart board. The brief ceremony was con· The partner could take money away from the subjects, and the subjects couk1 respond by add· ing to the pile of money, sub· tracling money from the unseen partner or punishing the partner with a blast of .. white noise." Earlier exper i m ents had s hown that depriving a smoker of cigarettes causes a person to increase the number of shocks ostensi bly a dministered to another person. Cherek noted. _.;;__.;;_...;;..;.;_...;.;~;..=.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--. I Cltll NEWPORT TILE & CABINET DESIGN CanER • CoMpl•te Th IMfahtloft * * HCMM ·-d111MJ * THE MOST COMPLETE SELECTION OF TILE BOTH DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED Ceramic Tile • Hardwood Cabinets • FIOOf' and Wall Treatments• General Contractor 646·1213 Amoundng a summer Program ForTeeml John Robert Powers has dts1gned a special Summer program 10 meel the sell· improvement needs ol teenagers For over 50 years. John Robert Powers has served the emerging woman In personal, bl.Isl· ness or career development and professional modeling Now Ille teenager can especially leam to reach her lull Polent1al the "Pow· •s" way In the relaxed atmosphere ol Sunwntr cl11MS. Rtcelvt substa11· teal tuition Olscoonta by ttsetVll10 CIHSH now. Ctll tof fr• lnfom11tlon. mMIECGUITY 3 Town & Country, Orange (714) 547-8228 ------ ducted ip the dart room of the Klover Klub here. The couple exchanged vows. and Miss McFarla nd was given a ring fashioned from a bar straw. The wedding cake. topped by two dart-shooting figures. was in the shape of -what else? -a dart board. complete with num· bers and two small yellow darts inserted at the side. Instead of champagne, the couple toasted their union with beer. "SUPPORT FOR PITY" is the topic of a discussion featur- ing a presentation by the Stop· Gap Theater Company al 1:30 p .m . Wednes day at Hoag MemoriaJ Hospital. For more in- formation. call the Pulmonary Department at 645·8600. ROLFl.NG, the integration of human structure, will be dis· cussed at a lecture at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Costa Mesa . For information, call 640-7661. Gr.-d <>,..-. w. BEER FROM GERMANY $1 .99 Per Six-Pack at Trader Joe & rr-to Henninter is one or th~ bes( nown Ge rman been. ''Taster's Gulde to Beer" gives J:ltf\Oln~ a "seven aleio' rafnglie hi&hest It awards! We have 4,000 cases to aell ror only $1.99 per 6·pack. Please visit our newest Trader Joe·s at the in-t.e.nection or 17th StreetJ Newport Boulevard ana Superior A venue (next l<-Denny's end Barclay's Bank). MOW IM COST A MESA SICK AND TIRED? IF SOMEONE YOU LOVE IS HURTING (And you are hurting too> Because of ALCOHOLIS·M or other chemkal dependency Learn how you can help now I Yes, there Is something you can do -even If the victim won't seek help. Attend Our Free Community Educatk>n Alcohotlsm Intervention Program. Every Saturday Morning, 10em tll Noon STRESS SEMINAR led by Murray Oxman will be held al 10:30 a .m. Saturday in Newport Beach. For information. call <2131 936-9176. L .M.Boyd informs in the Daily Pilat 5 p - :'- ,. ........... HITTING HOME A Copperht•e:1d guided m issile hits an M 47 l a nk ta rget during e nginet.•ring testing a l White Sands Mis- s ile Ran ge. N.M in 1978. The 155mm c a nno n -launched pro- j ectile homes in o n laser erwrg~· bounced off the t<.1rge t by a laser designa tor. The missile b dul' to be ready for use la te r t h is year Cop loses pay in pocke t c ape r NORFOLK, Va. (AP> Earl Kupka has found out being too handy around the side pockets can put you behind the eight ball. The member of the Norfolk In ternatronal Air port police got a three-day suspension without pay ror violating the depar t ment's edict : No guard is to be seen with his hands in his pants pockets K upka says his super iors believe "your ha n ds don 't belong in there. It doesn't look professional " "As much as 70 or 80 percent" or the 25 Virginia Port Authority t•mployees who work as airport police have been reprimanded ror putting their hands in their pockets. said Kupka. 51 ·Most of the time. you were M't'n by the higher echelon They would tell you ... Kupka says the bosses even want the officers to sew s hut their pants pockets to keep them honest "I think a man who's over 21 who wants to put a hand in his pocket should be able to put his hand in his pocket," he says. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24. 1981 83 Deductible lunch still on mer"u Kennedy attempt to cut t ax deduction fails like those in past WAS H INGT ON <A PI - Liberal Democrats have been denouncing the tax-deductible business lunch smce the days when the restaurant tabs ran to $10 or $15. They used to call it the martini lunch . Now they says it's three martinis, caviar and fancy wine. Whatever the martini quota, it is still on the menu, the efforts of w o u ld -be t a x r e fo rmers notwithst anding. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy sponsor ed the latest attempt to cut th e lunch deduc- tion and, like those who ha d tr ied before, got nowhe re. His amendment to President Reagan 's tax bill was little more than a token effort to keep the subject alive. He lost. 87·12. "l believe I have heard this argument before," said Kansas Republican Bob Dole, chairman of the Senate Finance Commit· tee, who didn't even bother to s p eak a gains t the Ke nned y amendment. H e'll hear the argument unchecked a $3 billion federal subsid y for three-mart ini lunches and luxury meals for the wealthiest people in the coun try " He said food st amps are being cul by Sl.7 billion, school lunch programs by $1.5 billion. and the tax deduction for business enter- tainment should be cut as well. The three-martini label is a slogan ; what is at issue is the de duc ti b ility of b usi n ess l u n c h e s, wet or d r y , f or customers, clients or contacts. Twenty years ago. President Kennedy sent Congress legisla· tion seekmg stringent limits on deductions for expense account entertainment . "T h e .,e m eas u res w ill strengthen both our tax struc lure and the moral fiber of our society," he said, without men· tion of martinis. The measure sought li mits of $4 to $7 a lunch. Nowadays that wouldn't l'Over the tip Former Se n Geo r ge McGovern made the lunch break a daily target 1n his 1972 pres- 1dent1alcampaign "There is something fun damentall y wrong with a tax :.ystem that permits a corporate executive to deduct has $20 martini lunch. whale a working man cannot deduct the price of hi s bolog n a sa ndwic h ," McGovern said. Carter picked up the theme. adjusted for inflation "A business executive can charge off a $50 luncheon on a tax return. and a truck dnver cannot dedu c t hi s SI 50 sandwich." Carter said But the deduction s tood Then, as now, its supporters include both business men and union leaders. "When one says that you can not deduct the expense of enter taining, this could well be a death sentence to a great number of very ni ce little restaurants all acros!. this land. and people who operate and work in those restaurants very well understand that." Sen Russell B. Long, 0 -La . said 1.11 opposing the Edward Kennedy's amendment So business dmang 1s still de ductible. and will stay that way unless Kennedy and his a lhes can change a lot of minds Perhaps they can do some lob· bying over lunch Food poison dips in U.S . ATLANTA <APl Reported cases of salmonellosas. the most common type of food poisoning m the United States, declined 3 6 percent in 1980. the national Cen- ters for Disease Control has said Reported food poisoning cases caused by salmonella bacteria totaled 30,004 in 1980. a 3 6 per- cent drop from 1979. the CDC ~aid . again, probably in the next cam-.----------.------------------------------ paign. The effort to limit busi- ness deductions for entertain- ment has been a fi xture since John F. Kennedy was president. Jimmy Carter pushed the is- sue from the White House, too. but with no more success. So the three-m arti ni lunch is still a legitimate tax deduction, still a symbol and s logan for Democrats who argue that the system subs idizes privilege. "We are not talking only about the three-martini lunch." Ken- nedy told the Senate when it was considering the tax bill that now is l a w . "I t is a l so th e c h ateaubriand s teak and the bearnaise sauce, the caviar and the fl aming desserts and the fan- cy wine.·· Kennedy said t he business meals deduction costs more than $3 billion a year in tax revenues and proposed that it be cut in half, the same cha nge Carter wanted to make The Massachusetts senator called the entertainment deduc- tion "nothing more than food st amps for the rich." "Cutting the business meals deduction in ha lf will ensure that the sacrifices required by the policy of budget rest raint will be shared fairly." he said. "lf the poor and middle class are being asked to pay more for their food. it is unconscionable to continue if 4 TRt EARL'S 1"1.-·l<IATNOO ...................... "' l..·l ,,,.,,. ,.,,,<• r...-... <e;t..,'h •' ft>u, Orw1 1( .... StOt• ,.. •• ,." YOVt ...... , Cot~a .na641-1289 ·---···-v•.io495-0401 ,_c:._c_ ... ..................... .,, ... ..,, DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS fS42-5e78 ~ Aulo & Homeown1:1rs ~ :~ • Ouores By Phone FAIMEIS INSURANCE GIOU, 54'-5554 w ll5-l4l7 19 14 ....... ·Cotto Mo o Grand O,-ninc) SGle SA VE 25 PERCENT OM WHOLE COLOMllAM COFFEE IEAMS at Trader Joe & Pronto One of the most prized vacuum con latne rs . coffees of Colombia is nushed w1l h nitrogen to called Colombia Excelso. hold their freshness We 1ust got a shjpment of Please v1s1t our newesl Excelso. which we're Trader Joe's at the in· selling for only SJ~ per tersecllon of 17th ,Street. lb. We have only 5,000 Newport Boulevard and lb s . Co m pa r e al SupenorAH•nue inexllo $5.59-$5 99 elsewhere Denn~'!> and Ban·la) 's And they're packed in Bank J MOW IM COSTA MESA Piiot Logbook -D ·1 p·1 ' Candid com~ta~es II y I DI exclU81veLy m the CONSTRUCTION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • R esiden tial • Ulmmercial Buildings: Takeout Comminnen t required along with I~. • Land Loans up to one year 50% appraisaJ. CONTACT: •Jeff Johruon- lrvine Office (714 ) 85 J40c;o THI: l'~U.1N\'El':Tl\JNAL BANK Herit~e Bank ~lemlw, Hll( 'ff=) lOllAl~ Ll!N Dl!A • RECEPTIONIST ANSWERING SERVICE • • • AN INDIVIDUAL NUMBER AT NO TELEPHONE COMPANY CHARGES • A PRESTIGIOUS ADDRESS AND PRIVATE MAIL BOX FOR YOUR BUSINESS • • • • • • • • A TELEPHONE SECRETARY ii~A~Er&~~0~POINTMEN1s, RESERvA110Ns, A MODERN COMPUTER TO MAINTAIN YOUR DAILY CALENDAR , SCHEDULE, AND MESSAGES OFFICE SPACE and CONFERENCE ROOM AVAILABLE FoR YouR APPOINTMENTs MAIL LIST & MAIL SERVICE CAPABILITIES FOR MAILINGS TO YOUR EXISTING OR PoTENTIAL CLIENTS WI DE AREA PAGING FOR INSTANT COMMUNICATION 800 NATIONWIDE ANSWERING SERVICE AVAILABLE FO~ SE~VICE, DISPATCH, OR ORDERTAKING ALSO TELEX, FACSIMILE, DIClATION & WORD PROCESSING ALL SERVICES CUSTOMIZED TO YOUR NEEDS Up Your l•ag•I Mlnl•lze OwerhNdl Maximize Re1ult1I LOW lllTR ... IOIY RATEi . . CAll •AY FOR .. E.IEIAl.S (Jl41 953• 1234 WE'ii AllS-IRW•K ... DI WE'VE IOI -AllSWER FOR YOUI -· .. . '.2 • 4 ~ ... 'I ·j ' ' .. ~ .._ ' .... . .. . . .. .. .... ... . • ' - .... s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. Augu1t 24, 1981 • Don't just sit there small \ on your fortune ••• I e Look around your house and garage and you'll probably discover you have a mountain of oldies but goodies you could sell. Move that mountain. Call a friendly ad-visor at the Daily Pilot. Use the direct Hne. Thousands of ready-to-buy ad readers are "shopping the ads in the Daily Pilot every day. Many are eaqer to buy iust what you have to sell. Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper with ?<~ ~ • Classified Ad Line 6t2-56J8 II , I Garland's 'other' daughter Lorna Luft dances in shadows By DOWRES BARCLAY ~ ............... NEW YORK -Be melman 's Ba r at the Carlyle Hotel was almost empty when Lorna Luft walked in. But Judy Garland's younger daughter filled it with herself the moment she threw back her head in a Bette Davis laugh. Hah' The wallpaper laughed back. She glanced at its sketches of little French school girls and became quieter. In a whisper, almost: "Ah, they bring back memories." Loma Lurt's eyes caressed the wallpape r. She turned fuJI circle in her chair . "My mother had that. We were living in Paris. What was that book, no\;V?" She 's pens ive fo r a moment. "Barbar" is suggested. "No, no . It's 'Madeline'!" Miss Luft pro- claimed triumphantly "Those were the books Mama made us read. Oh, it brings back such m emories." A waiter arrives with a potent "soup" -a bullshot. That's beef broth, lemon and a tad of vodka. He lingers long enough to tell Miss Luft he re members her stayin' at the hotel with her mother when she was a little girl. Her mother ga ve the waiter an autograph, he says. He doesn't ask Miss Luft for hers. That goes with the terrain of being Judy's daughter and Liza's sister. Lorna dances in shadows. But the Lighting is good: for a kid who was raised by a "living legend," later to see her older half-sister, Liza Minnelli, zoom to super· stardom, she's doing OK. "I never thought about being tossed into a shadow," she said. "I knew exactly what was go- ing to happen to me. l know what helped me sur- vive was always having a sense of humor. Don't ever take yourself seriously." Miss Luft recently finished six months on the road starring in the musical "They're Playing Our Song." Critics from Fort Lauderdale. Fla ., to Cin· cinnati and points in between gave her rave re- views. After a 10-day vacation in Hawaii, she's off to Europe lo promote her new record single, "Long Time." Still. Lorna Lufl's energy level pales before the elect ric frenzy that was Judy Garland, and it is not as intense as Liza Minnelli's. But then she says she never wanted to be a supers tar and is not con- sumed by career. "] work real ha rd, but when I'm home. it's like a vacation for me," she said. "1 don't go around and worry a bout my pictures being here or there or being seen at every opening." She sips her "soup." The bullshot makes her cheeks flush to the color of the red pantaloons she wears after a particularly grueling morning audi· tioning for theatrical producer Joseph Papp. "Hard work is a challenge," she says. "Doing a show, learning a song or making a record is a challenge. r always s ay I can do it better. I'm never satisfied. ... GET OFF ON IT! CHUCK NORRIS DOESN'T NEED A WEAPON ... HE IS A WEAPON! Lorna Luft "I'm a lways a nervous mess before I go out on stage," she said. "We did 205 performances and I was a mess every night. Right now I'm running on spit and chewing gum." Miss Luft, whose father, Sid, produced the Garland film. "A Star Is Born," was 11 when she decided show biz was ror her . "When I told Mama that's what I wanted to do, she said, 'You'd better study because you ain't getting it on my name."' She studied hard and she went on stage for the first time the summer before Judy Garland's legendary Palace Theater concert. She was 13. ''I was terrified," Miss Luft said. "It was the first lime Mama ever let go of my hand . She stood in the wings for the first eight bars of the song -'Don't Sleep in the Subway' -and then left . "The teaching J mostly got was from watching her," she said. "It taught me a lot. I watched the m aster." She appeared with her mother at the Palace and later at a Madison Square Garden concert. In 1972, Miss Luft was awarded the Rising Star of the Year Award for her le ading role in Neil Simon's "Promises, Promises." Her eyes wandered back to the "Madeline " drawings on the wall. She s miled sweetly. Paris . It was one of many cities in which she lived with "Mama," Liza and brother JOf'y Luft. They also li ved in Scarsdale, N.Y., for a half a minute, London for a ·second, New York for an hour and Los Angeles for a day. '•Fast-paced, action-filled and Romance-with a capHal R.'' -Rona Barrett • NOW PLAYING • ........ n CMIT llMI .U !'\AU NC1f1C•1 IOllTll COAIT I Cot~ llltSI >l .. 33~2 lltll ~:l'H3J9 L.tguN lleKft •9• 1~1• ...... ··-·'Cl ·~ NCal<C.t [I r .. ~1 Sii() I Orl"Ot 630 ml =.~-:70 ·=:.~Jt:»WUT ., .... m .. Tmm' I I MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE A.A ....... • .......... IRl 12:00 2 :00 4:00 6:008:10 .. 10:115 Finl ........ rii"iiJ · ~IRI 12:00 ~ AU.AGE9 AOMITTl0 I 2:10 4 :15 6:15 8:20 ".,..,..,a...,,.,, .. :>w_ • ..,' I ~:r1,~~-:~~ lul AEITAICl'EO 7:30 9:55. No Economy ~ Ul'ldt< 111equo1 .. -nf"'!I S..tif19 P11on1 °' Adu01 Out1d .. n I Clllla:::•wwwm::m::11:::1:::PG:::i:::I ::i:z11:::30::I 2:l0 4:150 7:30 10:10. ®NOONE UNDER 17 AOMITTIO ~~~.:v-r.~ri;"'No l"oe '"'"' ,... r ••"I "'""'1•..,.,-i Ew_,_ ...... (RI I 12:00 4:00 8 :00. Zato,ThtGllV m.tt FOi I AU. a fD AHO IBI '""ws llEC(IV( 2: 10e:1010:10 ntl 9E.Al. OF TWE WOTIOH l'ICTUflE I COO£ OF SELf llEOULATl()fj ~ DOING •. BUSINESS ·· .. UNDER A _,,. . FICTITIOUS -NAME? II JO" 110,,. t111t lllod JOllt ftOW Flolltto11• l111lnou Non10 end 11 ... not wet ~.d .... ,~ ........ don't fotgot tllot 1110 11n111ot1on I• )0 Cl•r• 11011'1 dtlO of flllne. Tho DAILY PILOT wlll fKlbllall rout 1IOl01Mnt •• , •••••• 0111 clfclllodefl ~· tlM ontlro Oren~ co .. 1 .,.. •lld ..... ,...._, ·~., ............ In oulor to Otl.,... 10111 t t ott"'ont fO t '"~ll c ot1011 01ncl ..,.,..,.... oopy •nd • C"I Cll to THI DAii. Y PILOT. P.O. h• tMO, Collt Mou. CA Ht2t. We'll Ill IN,.._.,'°' lllfofll'I ..... ~ ..... od1rottl'"'9 plooH call Mt-&Ut&.m. llULNWOU UCAl'E 'ROM NIW VO"K (") I HIAVYMO'ALIRI ~~~uu I -.-LOW ("I AUG IHOWtttO flO>CU l"I --'- -------,.. .. _., ....... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 •• If you want LEVI'S Cord Straight Legs. We've Got'em. Our lour basic colors are off·wh1te. It blue, tan and navy In 84%cotton. 16% polyeater tor shrinkage control Al'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NE'M'ORT BEACH (714} 644-7030 *BARGAIN MATINEES• Monday thru Saturday All Perform•nces !Mfore 5:00 PM (Elcepl Special Engagements Incl Holidays) 1.-4 MIRADA MAll Muodo 01 10 .. cron1 LA MIRADA WALIC·IN 994·2400 -ne---CAll-.· .,...._"' __ _ "ARTHUR"-,,..,.,.,.,.. ....... -"VICTORY" -..... __ , __ ··uHOElt THI: MIHeOW'· --. ... , ........... ~.. I ---·----...., --.--~·~ _ _,__ SUPERMAN II -·-·----....._ ... ,.. ----··· --·--· -~Tml .. ~· .... CJit-AAIDEAS OF THE FIRST MONmlY LOST ARK -IN OCTOBER ·-.--,...-.............. ""-. ....... .. LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK·IN --·--· RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK_ ,. __ _ 11::-•.--~~~ .... CHU CHU AND THE "9ttU. Y FLASH tt.a.oa,-(PO) PLUS ZOAAO, THE GAY lk.AOE IPFJ ......... _ LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAlll IN faculty Al Del Arno 213/634·9211 e'l'\.Wl'TWlft--• ··v1CTORY"'"' . ............ ,. ..... LAGUNA so . COAST WALK·IN --·--......... !CAN ftltlWCM.F ... LOMDON""' --.--- focully o l Concllewood 213/531·9510 -~Tml .. n-.•.-..CU'- "FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER" "'' ,., .. ., ...... -... ,.., .. ON ANY SUNDAYll-•1:-. a:.~~ ........... ..... __ _ "SUPERMAN II" -......... , __ _ ltlU-·· "STRIPES" -.~, ................ .. Soulh Coo1t tOwoy ol t•ooelwoy 494-1514 --·--· "MIOIRS CW THI ~-"== •-1.,,,, ·-. .. ,, 0,.11 1: lO \..M '-" 1: 1S .. .....,, ''"' •' ""'' IMPORTANT NOTICl! CMllOfl(lll UlllOlfl 12 fflU! lll•tto •Of .,.,.,. 111 ... !Ill•'" 4:lD • St l s.. Mii$ 6:00 r111 Clllf.R SOIJIOO • l'OUll ""' CN! MOii) 1$ l'OUll $lfMlll !If NO Alll CAA IWllO WITH OlfT10lt ACCUIOllT l'OSITOf -MMGAlf~l·AU ~~ .. GllAll~ ANAHllM --· _°" __ ... ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN ··HONKY TONK Fltft:WAY-"'49 ., .. .,.oy f1 ot l•mo" St ··THE llLUH ~THfAS 1111 179·9150 Cllll II SOUllO --...... -,-,--------------.,"" iOo1Li1 """!6iiilit1illliiiiiiiiw. ··oEADL y BLESSING "" ··sn.iDENT 11ootu·· (Ill) ~.,. "'49 .. THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS ··HE KNOWS 'l'OU'Af ALONE 1111 W£NT OUT IN GfOflOIA" IPOI C1111 11 SOU•O C"'t II loOUllO &UI NA PAl1- BUENA PARK DRIVE IN llncOh"I Av• W••• of Knoff 121·4'070 fOUNlAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORIVE·IN Jon Ot990 ,,,.., o• ltooUl\mt (lo) 962·24't1 __ ........... "AH EYE FOR AN EYE flll -.. THE HOW\.INO 1111 ... ____ _,.,.. "'AN AMfltlCAH nltt:WOLF IN LONDON" flt -··11umN· LOOK,., CIHl !I SOUHO Ill''·• .. ;;rr.;r-) --·-'-" .. THI CAHHOHaALL ltUN --"ARTHIJtlll•• fllllPO) Cllll fl SOUllO llO-·--.. TARZ.AH TtfE All't MAN .. , -"THE llLUI LAGOON" ftllt Clllt fl $0\lllC> I A ~·tu/~ lA HABRA OlllVI IN '"'Pl'"' Cit"'~-~ -' ........ -17MM2 fl\ 'NA •AW• LINCOLN ORIVf ·IN t•ftCOtn A•• ... ., ot Cnott 121•4'070 PA ~ ·' 1 ....... ---· .. DfADL Y M.LUING 1111 -·•Hf KNOWS YOU'ltl ALON« 1111 Clflt A IOUllO __ _ •M.'91 ... ~·.&1.--.• ,, ... T MONDAY IN OCTOtllfl ftllt I "THl~N" ... 1 • Clll( A SOUMO ... --·--... "AH AMERICAN WUllWOU' IN LOMDON'' flll -llUSTIN" LOOSI 11t1 --·--· "ltAIDIRS Of' ntl I.OST ARK tN1 -"TM A NAL COUNTDOWN - ORANGE ORIVf IN SontoA'-•~ ' tto•• c olt•!I• 551·7022 ,,_ ___ "1Uftl9'~11 .... "<* ANY IUNDAY M'· .. ,., llij , 'l.A"" MISSION DRIVE IN .... __ .. ~ ...... -.. . .-$0 -"ANY WHtCM WAY YOU CAii" ... , ....... I /J. WAJlNEJl oo·vt 1N -·:tr."' • --u.=.- 642-4321 to~to...., IMrttl or COUftf, _.., Plat homaouin papier-, ttw . . In the ~eme Covtt. there ore only eight Of them against oU ol hec. FIRSI MONDAY IN OCTOBER lllWUN .... OllT ~ .... POii 9ucft 644 0760 lOWAllOI Clll•t Wll T w .. 1,,.ns1t1 891 393~ A~~~[A -....-O.-'"".:~~.:; . .:....... ~ UIWAJIOI •tUIOI WIUO U. lllU P'U.U MAU c1•u 81u sn ~3J9 M15StOll V1tt0 49~ 6720 P'AClflC CllMOCIMl Ill-WAT >t INllU-11 O<Mlgc 634 ~ Wostmon~lff 891 J69l IO P'Hlfl ACClnlO fOll 11111 Cll8ACllllllt1 • ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, August 24, 1981 THE t ',\MILl' CIRCL'8 by 811 Keane "Is the woter warm enough for us to go in, Daddy?" BIG GEORGE by V1rg 1I Partch (VIP) "I hate Mondays." by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS T HE ME!\ACE 1\ ~ · · "life isn't 'dog eat dog,' it's 'dog eat dogfood'!" A~ THE TWO PLAINCLOTHESMEN FOllOW JASON'!:> CAR, THEY ~fAL11.f HE 15 NOT HEADED FOR THE AIRPORT WITH \.ANA ' -/f.AR 0 t P /!/ p ou!5\ tJ 8 -24 ~ MEV, GARFIEU7. IT 5AV6 HE~E TMEV ARE HOL'71NQ AUDITIONe FOP. A. CAT FOOO COMMERCIAL EVE:RYTHING 0 1<'? I P,ASSED YOUR TR,AILER L,AST Nl~HT .AND HE:ARD You ~ ARGUIN' WIT~ MAMlr;. DOWN 1 Flelurt 2 .......... 30lurdlw• 4 Went UNITEDF911Ur9Syndicl19 S.turday'a Puule SoMd 5 '"Min --'••Id 47 .......... -?" 27 Old.. ""* '°"" e Courie 2t '°"'*TV 4t Ut: Fr. 1 Aecol'd °'. ,.. 12 L .... ~ I .,. } : i ! ~ {; ~ • ..._ N.,_ .. ••MP $1 ~·one tltMllenclty • Hlllll • blll 32 a.-.. NwNtk -~ 3SO.,lltl'lll ..,... 11 aid 34,.... 57 Conwed 12TtDO<'dlt1111 35 Noun... M -- tS w.tno: ,. tu:ll..., .. --.. ,.,,,, 40r,,....,. .,,_.. ....... ,,...,.. 4S~ ..... 22 IOIMf .. ... 44 ,,,.,,,,,.,, 11 Zoel girt M-aff: 4fC.,.lllfll'I MllllCfl ' ~ ~~ l ~~ 0 ·7.t t x:~, "Just watchtn' the day go by, Joey ... Just watchin' i the day go by." ' 2 14 by Harold Le Ooux MY NOT GETIING Hl5 ~WA:; THE 6E5T THI NG THAT EVER HAPPENED TO ME! IT MEANT I HAO TO 00 IN W~NE55 FOR MY~EL.F ! by Jim Davis HAVE. MV AGENT GIVE THE SCRIPT A LOOK-SE.E. PEANL'T8 by Charles M. Schulz .. ., -----Tl:M8LEWEED8 by Tom K. Ryan E:NTER L01SA LUCK( SUP~R SNOE',,__ _______ _., AL.50 L.f:AVltJG' EXR?NENTOF l'HE: ANP WORJ..li"S ONLY Nt71AN WrfH IRIPL..E·WHAM 1"01\JGt.Jf: ZAP. A CHAUFFE:UR ·VRIVE:N HORSE. V I GOT A BLACK EYE A PIECE OF STEAK 15 GOOD FOR THAT I NEVER KNEIA.l 1HAT llME COULD &O 50 SIJ:tOLY ! FOR 8ETTla ea Fea •o al E tW> rr. ~CAN'T GO OJT IN it\OSE I WRINmDPR~. ' ~-.,..... 0 ---IT WAS A FROZEN STE~K THAT DID IT ,_- I'M flJ ~ED I'LL ALMOST BE GI.AO 10 6€.E. ~00l 5111frr A6AIN ! ,'/ltt .. ·~;i, ................ "v'-<:' ! " r I ReNZO RAPAL-L.01 1'HA"'f''S G01" 5-r'YL-e! ANP A ~1Nc:9 OF CL.ASS 1'0 rf', PAL-! by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk by Kevin Fagan by George Lemont .. l 1 I \H 1'.'\I>.\ '\' -~ -. 1:00 I a• HlW8 KUHOFV Caine ''* to prewnt rns IO!rn« muler from vent· Ing hlS rage and ang41r on a railroad I TIC TAC DOUGH M'A•S•H Hawtceye rt1CO<d1 a leller to hl1 father detalllno his I day In the O R wllh a mad run.. a mlNlnQ C«PM and !.1JUn·hllPPY officer. • GOOOT1ME8 In rebelllon agalnll J J • Thelma movee Into her -apattmenl. • ELECTAIC COMPANY (Al • VOYAOEAll From the Jet Propvlalon Labotatory In Puadena, Caltfornla. Or Al Hibbs cover• the hlstorle !tight or I lthe== N9CNEW8 MOVIE •*\Ai "'No Depcnjt. No Rtnirn" 1 1976) Oavld Niven. Darren McGaYln 1 The children or neg11g9t11 pateftll ~ IO lllOA thelf own kidnapping to I ~ aome auenuon 'G' (l)MOVIE **'" ··No Oepoalt. No I Return" ( t976) David Niven. OeNen McGaYln I The Ohlldren ol neglecllva parent• ~ to llege lhelr own kidnapping to I i some attention. 'G" 1:30 JOt<EA'8 WIU> ALL IN THE FAMILY Arcnle fumes with )Mlousy wlMlll an old ..aet about Edith and her t<>1mer beau 11 revealed. • 8ENNY HIU 8el\ny plays French fllm dlreotor Plerra du Terra. • KCET NEWaeEAT (J)Q!NlW8 9 BAANEYMI~ Woto Me6la a man re()Or1· ed mlaalng en route to tall· Ing hll final YOWi as a monk and llnd• him With • lady ol the -Jno. (C)MOVIE ** "'Up RIV«"A young plonee< beoomes lnvOlved I In a lll•and-dNth strUQOle with a oOld·hollQry 1anc:t I baron. OMOVIE • • ··erewster'• MHUons"" (t945) Dennis O'KMfe. Helen W alller A )'OUllQ heir mual spend a mllllo<o dol· 1ars In two months or he loMS an lnherllaoc. WOt1h muc:h more. ~=1== HICHEWI HAPPY DAY8.AOAIN Rld\le, Pottle and Ralph stage a beauty contMt In an atlernpt to mMI tome pretty glrla. 8 AICNEWI I BUUSEYE M •A'S•H A CongresslOnal aide on a lac:l·llndlno tour visit• the 40nth • STREETS Of SAN FRANCISCO SAO TIMES -Cheryl Ladd hugs Nicole Eggert in a poignant moment from "When She Was Bad. . .. tonight at 9 on Channel 7. murders. 9 OVEREASY "Oepresaloo In Older Peo- ple"' GuHI Dt Gene I Cooen. (RIO G MACHEIL I LEHAER REPORT ()) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 MERV ORlfflH Guestl Abbe Lane. Biii Coaby, Ratty Balley. J«ry Setnleld, Mr E.lectrle aJ)MOVIE * • ·~ ""No Oepoalt, No Retutn'" ( 1976) Oevod Niven. D•rren Mc;G1vln. The Clllk:lren of neglectlve parent• decide to stage their own kk:lnapplng to ~some a11an11on 'G" (l..)MOV1£ • • • • "'The Great Zieg· lekl"" (193e) WIHiam Pow· ell, Myrna Loy The QrMt Broadw•y ahOwman atao· es•m•jof lh<>w 7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN Hosts· Steve Edw•rC11. Melody R<>Qerl. A IOOk et athletet and pollllcs, Including Steve Garvey wno talks 1bout his post· baseball plans. a behind· the-1cene1 look •• romance novels. the author• and the readers 0 FIOHT BACK W1Tl4 DAVID HOAOW1TZ Topics: Ellmlnatlno bald· ness. do-lt·•t-nome pteg· narlCy t•I•. am.it catl versus big trucks on the h'9hwly. • SHAH.ANA Guesta: Larry G1tltn and The Gatlin B<other9 Band. 8 CM8ASTEA: LA. FLOODS Johnny Mountlln eaarn- lnea the havoc c:auaed by major floods around the WOf1d. lncludlr>g tha flood In Loa Angeles In t979. I FACE THE MUltC ALL i.. THE FAMILY trs a ,_Archie -lovlng and k Ind, and wtlell a puz • rJed Edith llnd9 out wny. It'• her turn to be breve. • MACHElL I LEHRER REPORT G OAEAT PEAFOMlAHCE.8 '"Ufe On The Mlaaltal&X>I" Kurt Vonnegut Jr host• this liltn adaptation of Merk Twaln't werm and lmaglnaitlve evocation of his eJCperleneel at an apptentloe rlverbo9t pilot In the d9Yt of Iha Q!MI Ml11iulppl 1teamb01t1 Starring Robert L•nslng and David Knell (R) (I) P.M. MAOAZJNE 8 P'AMILY FEUD 9:00 9 (I) WKRP IN CINCINNATI A aurpri" telephone Olll from his u -wtfe has John· ny oonvloced he"s QOiflQ to be ''" ot alimony P•Y· menta tor-. (R) a a LITTLE HOUSE OH THE PRAIRIE Anoered by Mrs Oleson'• 1nterten1noe In her ciaaa- room, Laure quits her fob. teeving the bulybOdy to cr .. te what lhe con~ to be a "model'" Khool (RIO • MOVIE • • •,;. "Bac k Street"" (1961) Susan Hayward, John GaYln. A married man keep• 1 mlstreas who mutt remeln for-in the beo~ound 89 NUT8180LT8 A oomputer engi-u-some or his Invention• to help him rllte his cnlldren G ACfflU>TO REMEM&eR llt P.M. MAOAZINE Vltlt a po91.1tar Calllornl• hat company IOI a IOOk at 1 billion dollar lnduslry; an 111111 wno pelnt• while in a hypnotic trance: Chef Tell preparn German lrull salad; Or Wuoo on com· • mon mltu9M of emeroen· cy care. 8*Y BrlM looks at video c;aue11es 61) MOVIE • • * ··Great E.llpec;ta- tlOna"" ( t975) MlchMI Yorll, s .. a11 Miies 8ued on the story by Ch«les Olckent. A young boy'• life ls deeply lnttuenoed by • ~ encounter with an escaped f)rltoner. • Pl.E.DOE llMAK Regulwty acheduled ptO- oremmlno may be deleyed due to pledge~.-.. (C)MOVIE * *'/\ "Uptown Saturday Night"' ( tt 74) Sidney Pol- ,.., , 8111 Cotby. A r.ctOtY wonuw and • street-wtM c;ebble gel oeught up In • oangland *"' wllen they «*:Ide to trail a Q911Qtter ...no Mid up • bat (}l)MOVI£ • • • "Gloria" ( 1980) Gen• Rowt1nd1. John Adames. A fOf'mer oun moll becOITlM the ptot.C- tor of •n or-phened ll•· yeer-otd Puerto Rican ter· ~ed by the undetWor1d ror the Information he car- ries In 1 battered brief· OIM. "PG" CS) 90HY VINTON Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. August 24, 1981 Owby,P• t:JO• ™ITIMOOHWA'f' IMOW("> • GJ IN T"°4JIU I TUBE TOPPERS Thr .. fun.lolling otn• dla- rupt the ~ life I I tMlr high tCflOOI • TOfltTORY Hotta; Jim T~. Mwy ~llOll. • MOVll I>** ··Ttn Pan Alloty'' ( 1940) Allele Faye, John Pt yne. TlllO CO<npoe«I and • lino-ttrugole to !Nike It big In N9w Y ot1t' I muelc dlltrlct. (I) WE.COME IACI(. KOTTER The SweathOga g91 on the bandwtlgon lor Gabe wnen they 1Mrn lhl t Mr. WOOlJ. man'• oontr9C1 u vice prlnQpl.l la uc> tor ,_., t:009 ()) M 'A•&•H A lett•r lrom Radar brighten• Col Po111t'1 day. unlll KHnger 9Cdden· tally bleak• hi• eye Ql&U- M (~ DQ!MOVIE I KOCE 9 7:30 a nd KCET @ 9:05 .. Life on the Mississippi." A happy adap· tation of Ma rk Twain s memories as an apprentice riverboat pilot. ABC fl 8:00 -"Nuts and Bolts ." A computer engineer calls on his technical know-how lo rais e his children. KCOP G) 8 :00 -"Great Expecta· tions. "Michael York and Sarah Miles star in this classic re make. NBC IJ 9: 00 -"Death Pena lty." Colleen Dewhu rst stars as a psychologist trying to save a young ma n from the e lectric chair. • * * '"Death Pen•lty" C 19801 Colleen Dewllurll. David l.llbloao. A atrono· wllted peyctlologlat lnatst• on helping an Inner city tHn-aoer convlotad ol murder. d4tlplte epethy from h11 lamlly end the y~ man himMll. (R) 8 9 MOVIE 1' ( 19711) Devld Bennett. I AnQel• Winkler A amall bOy with unotull ~· of perception rejeot• pOllttea, human compatllonthlp end -lldullhOO<I and -nd- 11'1 olOM ancount« with S•turn and Its moon i nd MtlilltM . (PW1 t) t2:00 8 MOVIE *'" "Saddle Pata"' ( 1947) Gene Autry. Lynne Rob- erta A land oompany trlet to ralM ranchat•' rents. 80 P'ANTASY ISLAND A timid man want• to ptove tl\91 ~· rNlty do ••lat. and • womWI long• to -the HleQltlmate twin• Ille gi ve up for adoption YNI• Ntller. (RI * * "'When She Wu Bad" ( 1979) Chefyt Lldd. Robert Urle:h. A youno married couple move 10 1 MW town 10 ete9P9 1 MCfet in their PHI whlth threaten• everythlllQ they oh8tl911 CR) D WILD, WIU> WORLD Of'ANIMALS llt MERV OAlfftN Guests Abbe L-. Biii COSby, Razzy Balley. Jerry Selnleld, Mr. Electric. Ter- 'l._Gregory, GYy M.nta (QJ HAMMEA HOUSE Of HO MOR "Rude Aw1kenlng"" An eat•te agent's nlghtm1res always end In the murder of his wtle and he ~ 11 he la really only dream· ~WHATS UP AMERtCA? Visit the Unarlus Soclely - belleverl waiting IOI UFOs 10 land, 1 t>eecn raoe In San Francisco. taid·bedl living on the Colorlldo Riv· et: 1 world-record bicycle r-. 9:06 9 GREAT PE.AFORMANCE.8 '"Ule On The Mlalltsl&X>I" ~ul'I Vonnegut Jr. hOtts thll film adaptation of Mark TWlin'• wwm and 1 lmSQlnatlve evoc:atlon of his 11J1perlenc" •• an appfentlce riverboat pilot In the days or the or .. t MllSl11lppl 1tN mbo111. Starrtno Rober1 l.llntlnQ and D•vk:l Knell. (R) 9:30 8 ()) HOUSE CALLS A man olalmlnQ to be from various oovernment -oen· clM 1n11t11 on M8lllg ona of CNrley't patient•. (RI D WIU>, WIU> WORLD O#'~ALS tO:OO 8 (I) LOU GMHT TM Trib Is 9CCUMd of belnQ an~ by Iha ,_ ptMIOenl of • atnio- gllng electronlo1 firm wtlOM prot>leml -l*rlg muttlplled by the •"- -age (R) !!,INEWI • •• ··Man In The Iron Matk.. ( 1939) Louil H_,,. ward, Joan Bennett. 0...0 on • newel by .Aleundat OumH. The lnf1mou1 Comptt de Rochefor t pl-LoWI XIV'a r.111 broth« on the F~ throna and lrnptlson• the reel king In the Bulllle. CH)MOVIE .... about hl• country dur· Ing the tumultuous r-• or tne Nul regime. reatleally b&llQlng a toy drum. 'R" I .MOVIE **"" ""Fatao·· (19801 Dom DeLulM . Anne Bancroft A I porlly c;ompulslve .. 1er llnd• that nothing can I dampen hla deelre for lood until he l .. la In love. "PG' t~(Z)MOVIE * • •'h ""Wise Blood'" ( 1980) B<ed Oourll. Amy I Wright. An emotionally detecn.d ptNCher 000• tends wltb a Mndful ot peopla, eacn of whom I want• to uplolt lllm for • dtneoren• reason 'PG" 10:301 NEWS IHDEP£HDENT HETWOAA NEWS Ci)MAS~ THEA TAE FE8TIVAL Of' FAVOAITES I ··sunset Song: Tlwl Unlur- rqwed Field" After moving the ramtly. Jonn Guthrie terrorllea his eldest aon WIN an<1 puahM Chris to beOOme • taac:ner: JMn Guthrie cornmlll 1411clde. (Part t)~) 11:008D8(J)OQI NEWS • 8TAATAEJ< An ellen mysteriously boards the EntllfptlM Ind surglc ally remove• Spock'• brain ·~YWEDOAME "'The World Bet-" • BEHHYHIU Benny portr•yt • blltngu.i tour ouk:le . t1:1se DtCKCAVUT Guest Leontyne Prloe. (R) 1 t~ 8 (I) QUINCY, M.E. A botehed 111.1topsy dot>e by 0utncy·1 euperlor oom- pllcat" a homicide lnvestl- Q!:llon U QITOHIOHT Gu.I hoet: 8lll Colby GueslL Sugar Ray Leon- 1td. Rober1 Culp, lrtane Maindrelt. •• AllCNEW8 NIGHTUHE I LET"I MAKE A DL\l IT ANllY 8IEOll CAPT10HED ABC NEWS 11:85. MOVIE * * * '"BlulllQ Sadd ... " ( t974) CINYon Uttle, Gene Wlldef. Directed by Mal Brooka. A rellroed worker In the Old WM1 almott hU more ptobleml th•n he can Nndle when he la appolntlld tMr1ff of Roell RldQe, • town pinpointed for destNC11on by a butl- nese tycoon 'R" 11:40. LIVE F'AOM SATURN Live ooverage of Voy-oer G OUH8MOKE A lonely lp/neter llnd1 romanQe with a wounded etr.noer 11'18 nur-beott tohMllll. • Ml88IOH: IMP088*E Jim ~ falla In IOl4 wllh • woman that the IMF has bMfl ullQnlld to bring out of an Iron Curtain country. ., AOOl<lU A wom•n'• aon 11 kid· napped In a 1Ypermarket parktno lot . but she refu-to help lhe polloe. (C)MOVIE *'h "The HIC>P't Hooker"" ( t975, Lynn Aadgr1va. .ie.n-Plerre Aumont The • Ule or New Yor1t"1 tarnou• c:all 0111. XaVlare Honander. lstOld 'R" (Q)MOVIE • • • ··starting Over'" ( 1979) Burt Reynok:l1. Jiii Clayt>urQh. Aner months of TV dinners and blind dates. • dovorc.d mao•· zJne writer lhlnka he"s found true love when I IOl\Oot teKher enters his Ille 'PG' (%)MOVIE • * 'h "'8'ubaker·· ( t980) Robeorl Redford, Yaphe\ Kotto A reform-minded warden uncover• wlde- llQf'ead eo<rup\lon wlMlll he entert hi1 newly uaiQned prlaon poslno •• en Inmate. "R' t2:1&Cli) RED 8Kn.TOH'8 MOM FUNNY P'ACU Th• lntern•tlonally ac:d9lmed French mime Marc.I MarCNU folna the maater comedlM In a per- IOflnlf'Ce at Ille Clrote In the Squwe Theatre In KltcMner, Ontario. 12::a0 8 8 TOtootOMOW Gueala: EleerlOr Smeet or the N1llonal Orgainlutlon of Women and Jann Loi· ton. lldltor of ConMrV1tlve Digest: Pegoy LM : radio talk lhOw ll091 U1rrY King; llumoriat Simon Bond. (RI {l)MOVIE • • "Friday The 13th"" (1980) Belly Palmer, Adrl· enne Klr>g The r~ of a au~ c:arnt>. cloMd 20 Y"f'I earlier aNer th<M mufders, anrlC1a a vtndlc· live klller who knllH unsuepec;tlno 1Mn·909'•· "R" t2:40. (J) HAMY 0 An ••-cop le found deed I and ......,.one except IOt Hatry thlnlll tt II • oaae of aulclde. (RJ 1:00e MOVIE * * •.; ""South Of The Bo« der"' (19391 Gene Autry. I Smiley Bumett• A cowboy 11 ..,,, 10 atop a revotutlon 1 from getting out of hand In Mexleo D PSYCHIC PHENOMENA ""ConnectlnQ The Dots"' Holla Damien Slmpaon Ind SIK!e Hunt tell hOW to handle everyd•y living I IPEAK OVT INOEP£HDENT NETWORK NEWS t :t0 8 MOVIE *•'A '"Love Hu Many FI Cll • ( 1915) Lena Turner. Cliff Robertton A wealthy woman II pt9QU8d by oonatant ro11awer1 and turna lo the bottle IOI oom· lor1 l1J NEWS 0MOVIE * *'~ "H91>py Birthday, Gemini" ( 1980) Madeline Kihn. Rita Moreno A Har- vatd student's blrthdey party It hll ramlly'a South Phll1dalpl'111 ho ma t>ecomet an eye-<ll)elloog expet'len<;e lor 1111 vl11Uno ciUlmlltM 'R' 1. t& (JI) Ml$81NO PERSONS: DEAD OR ALIVE Patrick O"N .. I 11J1emlnes the backorounel1 or at• r1moua people who van· IShecl without 1 traoe and poaes poaslble reuon1 tor their dl11ppearenc:.s 1:30 . MOVIE • • ""Stanley" ( t9721 Ale~ Rocco. Chris Robinson A rat11esn1ke t>ecomes I Vietnam vete•an·a peraon- al -•pon or revenoe !ialn•I m1nklnel t:509 HEWS 2:00 GQ!NEW8 (C)MOVIE • • 'h "Blue Collar'" ( t9781 Richard Pryor, Hervey Keitel ThrM lrustreted OetrOll 11u10 laGtory work· ers turn 10 et•me. bringl119 them onto more c;onftlCl and potentlal danoer 111an they ev« oounted on "A" EO MCMAHON AND COMPANY Gueall 'The Tea•s Cowo1rl1. Phyllis Diiier. Abbe Lane 2: 16 CD MOVIE • *'"' "'The Nude Bomb" ( t980l Don Adami SylV1a Kr111e1 Secfet 909n1 Max- well Smatl l11Ge1 his moat d1ngerou1 adver11ry In •n arch vtll11n wno plant to leunch mlaslles thll will dl1tobe the entire humllfl popu1a11on ·po· 2:.20 9 EDfTORIAL 2:258 MOVIE • • ""The ldOI"" ( t~) Jen- rnlet .ione.. MiCllMI Parka A na"er-do-well ar1111 seduoea a pretty young girl at the same 11~ hes romenc;mg his bett friend's mother 3:008• NEWS 3:30 (l) COOK.IE GOES TO THE H08PfT AL Cookie lind• the hOapllal. ec:a.ry piece but gall by with Iha help ol 11« friends. 4:00 ct) MOVIE • '*'I\ "Uptown S1turd1y Niglll'' ( t974) Sidney POI- tier. Biii Cosby A llC1ory WOik« Ind • llreet·wlH c:ebble g91 caught up In • ganQland feud when they decide 10 trai4 • Q&ngtl« wno held up a bar (S)MOVIE • ""When Time Ran Oul"' ( t980) P ... 1 Newman. Wll- llam Holden. A love trlan- Qle develops on a newly opened 1111nd retort thrH taned by 1n Ktlve volc:eno ·PG· Tue8day movie• 1:00 (J) ••• "C>MlgnlnQ Woman" (t957) Greoory Peck. L•uten a.ceit A lop dr... dMIQn., and a aport1wr1t•r 1••1 the 11raln1 or 1n911tal bliM •·30 ct) * * * "Hudli.berry Finn"' ( 1976) Ron Howatd. JIOk Elem 8ued on Ille llOfY by Mn Twlln A young bOy and I runew1y tlave bee~ lnvoi..d In a _... of ~lur• white flMlnQ down the Mltalaalp- pl River on a r•h 10:00• ** "8-yToBag. dad" ( t965l 8-y Boys, Joen Shewtee A genie er• llM I hOSt of ptObleml !Of the Boys and tendl the<n on• "trip." ct) **'h "'Adem'a wom- an"" ( 19721 Beau Brldoes. Jonn MUii A wrongly lmPflaoned aalk>< allernPll 10 win hi• rele&M by mar- r}'!ng en lnrtuenllal women (J) •'n ··Running"" (1979) MiCllMI Douglas. Su1at1 Anapecil Having failed II nearly every1h1ng In his Ille. a 34-year-old dlvotced men decl6ea to try out as a mar1th0ne' for tlMI U.S. Olym~ Team 'PG' 11:30 8 * * * 'SOn Of Kong'" ( t933) Helen Mack. Aoberl Armstrong. A pair ol jewel llunten enoounter • mem- moth cre1ture Inhabiting •n Island where • lor1une la burled IJ 12:00 llt * • • .. ~ 01 The Fl1me·· (19•31 Kalhatone Hepburn, Spencer T recy White r ... archino • 11ory on a renownec:I A.me<1can, a report« learns from his Widow that he WU, In llCI. ''"°'' ., * * 'h "One Man"s W1y" ( 196-4) Don Murray Otana Hyland A onme repor1« enters a Mmlnary . when he !Mia unable to help people In any OI her c;apaclly CC) * * 'h "The SMec>- man" (1958) Glenn FOid. Shirley Macl41lne A ~ owner 111emp11 to outwit his enemies while herdlno hia animals thrOUQh Olllle c:ounlry 1:30 (C} • * * ""The ldOlmlk· er" l 1980) Rey Sharkey, Tovah Feldll\Uh A manl· pulatlve mlll'ISQ9r uMI var- ious ploys 10 c:etapult two t~s into pop eino- ~stardom. 'PG' lSJ • • • ··OMIQnlng woman· (t957) Gregory Peck. Lauren Beoall A top dress des1oner and 1 1port1wroter real the 11raJn1 or m•rltal bll11 2."00 0 ***'" "Banan11 (t9711 Woody Allen. LOUIH LUM< A product teller. bated with nil everyday routine. QOM to a amall L•tln American c:ountry and becOl'MS I dictator dur1no a pOllllCal upheeval 'PG" 3:00 Qt * * * "'I Wilk The Line·· ( 1970) Greoory Peok. Tuead1y Weld A Southern .,,...," beoOl"nM the victim of an alkirlno Youno woman wno 1s the oaughler or a local moonthlner 3:30 8 * * ""Klr>g Kong Elcapel'" ( t968) Rhodes Reason. Lindi Miller Or WhO c;onstNC1S a giant rol>Ot •nd pita II ag9inlt King Kong In 1 struggle for world domin9llon ct)*** "Huckleberry Finn'" (t975) Ron Howard. Jeck Elam Based on the atory by Mark Twain A youno bOy a.nd 11 run8W8y slave beCOm8 Involved In a aeries of adventur" while neeono down the MIUlnip. Pl River on 1 ran. After receiving threat• on the alr and belng bleok- m41lted, a dose 10C11ey finds hlmsell eoouaed of two A 111ent agency lhlt hen· dlea C411ebtlty look·•llk•. an 1rtlS1 whO palnt1 whlle In 1 hypnotic tranoe. Bobby Vinton perform• some 01 hll blQoeft hill lrom the Send• Hotel In LaaVegaa • * • ""Feme" (t980) tr-cw .. Barry Miiier. S-al gllled 11udent1 at a N.w y orll high achoOI f()f' the periormlng W1• ex.peorlenoe varlOul Mlbeck• and auc· 09l9M of both person.i and ptoletslon•I natur ... 'PG' JOHN DARLING by Annstrong & Batiuk CHANNEL LISTINGS 1J KNXT CBSl Los Angele'> B KNBC1NBC1 Los AnJt>le'-0 KTLA linel ) LOS Anqt'les fJ MBC fV I ABC> LO'> Angeles .}: "FMB 1CBS1 $;in Diego 0 KHj TV (lnel) Los A n•tPle<. I]' KCST tABC San 01 ... qo m l\TlV tine! I Loe; Anq>'IP., Cl) KCOP TV t lnll 1 LO'> AngPil''> fD KCET TV 1 PBSI Los An l' ll''i OD KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun11nq1on Be.ic h OMOVIE * * Y, '"Happy Birthday, Gemini"" ( 1980) Madeline KM!n. Rita Moreno A Har- vard 1tudent"1 birthday PlrtY at his famlly'a South Phll1delphla home t>ec:omM an eye-opentno expenenoa IOI his vlaitlng cl.-t ... "R' •:OS • PAUL 81MON Com9<>Mr. po.I and enter- tliner P.ut Simon offer• a ,_1y nonstop cotlectlon or hit oreatest hll• and currenl levorttM from the T-Theatre In Uppet aJ)MOVIE • *'~ "How To BNt The HIQh Cott 01 Living" ( 1979) ~Saint Jatne1. .Hmica Lange. No longer eble to kaep up with lnlla- 11 on. three Oregon houwwlves turn to taroany 10 bal•noe thelf budget• "PG' (l)MOVIE * * * * '"The Tln Orum" Hi. l'M GEORG-£ PESKY.ibwa.c:OMING-'(t)U CHANNEL-f;EVENTY-FOUR' S M~SHIP WEf.K! A'S 'l()U KNOW, HERE ON PU9LIC "TELEVISION , WE HAVE NO COMM~CIAL5 TO INIERRUP'T OUR PROGR,._MMING / r; Orphan Annie to • raise money for PBS By MICHAEL DOUGAN Of .. Deify,. ........ In what is incorrecUy being billed as "the largest girt in the history of public television," Columbia Pictures has agreed to turn over all pro- ceeds from the premiere forlhcomiing movie .. An· nie" to individual PBS stations across the country, including KOCE in Huntington Beach. The event is expected to raise between S6 million and $10 million for the beleaguered public television affiliates. The gift, announced at a recent preaa con· ference, is being bailed as a foreruMer of new al- liances between public television and the private sector that may help compensate for reduced aov- ernment support under the Reagan admlnlatra· tlon. Ray Stark, president of Rutar Films, wblcb ts producing .. Annie" for Columbia, said the tilt will cost more than $1 mlllion in man·hourt and Uckell sold. "Public broadcut has a special appeal to ua," said Columbia President Frank Prtce. "The llnb betwHD fllmmaltlni and PBS are eapeclally strona." Price a.a.Id many direct.on aad producen ln Hollywood f'ffei•ed their trainln1 throap pubUc televillon and noted that PBS provides a frequent abo'littue for cluak movt• and ret.rotpedivt1 on ...... diredorl. •·we Jmt Jum.,.4 at it," aaJd kOCE'• Tom Stephenson. "ll'a DOlJu.tt another apecJal event." ParUdpaU.., 1t.atlon1 will be provided witb a prial al • • Aanle," &he movie veraloa ot Ute bit Broedwq mmkat, and wW be retpOMlble for ar· =DI tbe premiere with a local lllHter, ~ upl.U.ed. He uld Udl:et prtea would be~ IUIUaal. wblcb mew lbey •&Y vary the ecMmtry. . AD money netted WW So dlrect11 to the ~al .tat.km: none will be liven to the PBS aetwon • llHlf. bl ldcled. ''In order to maximize profits fr<?m the pre-miere , we're seeking to underwnte alJ our costs," Stephenson sajd. That includes theater ren· tal and salaries for the projectionists and other personnel. KOCE hopes to raise at leaet Sl 00,000 from the event, be noted. KOCE's budget for the coming season is $600,000 below last year's. The station already has laid off seven employees. Station spokeswoman Judith Schaefer said the c utbacks are not an outgrowtb of President Reagan's budtet slaahint policies, which have yet to be felt. "We're finally experiencing the results of Proposition 13," she explained. Price turned aside as "impertinent" a ques- tion on the benefits that will accrue \o Columbia u a result of the gift. However, the 1ta tioo la certain to profit from public1ly 1enerated by PBS at.aUons over the film'• opening, ae weU .. poaaible tax write-offs. For example, mott particlpatiDI affillate1 will be airin1 a ''bebind·tbe-eeenea" document.ary on th e m.UJna ot "Annie,". and al teut one staUon wW be apon.sortna an Annie look·al.llte cont.eat. Prlce noted tbat benefit premieres are a ttadl· tional form of philanthropy in Hollywood, althougt\ they have never before taken place on a national scale. The first premieres will lake place in Loa Angeles, New York and Toronto in mid-May of next year . Those elsewhere, including Orange County, are set for mid-June. However , Stephenson said the station hopes to persuade Columbia to permit them t.o tie their opening witfl that in the county to the north. KOC E President Wllllam Furniss said a taek forc:t! of volunteers to promote the event le being formed, and local bualneas and community leaders wlll be invited to join a natiooal "red-wbite-and- blue boel committee" to support the event and public television in general. ' "This is the flrat In a lon1 line of special events," he predicted. "We tbJnk it's the forerun- ner of many othen. We want t.o do a little blt more pioneering now oa behalf ot our own support." Altbouah partlclpantt In Lbe pre11 conference claimed. =cl t.bd .waa public televtalon'a lariat flt\ ln its biltory, they overlooked the Annenber1 Grant, announced aeveral moatbl q:o, wbicb will Jive PBS $1IO mlWon over the ant JO years. Sinatra sues tabloid 'Star' U>S ANGELU CAP> -l"rank Sinatra bu tiled 1 $1Q million damqt Hlt .,~ut the publllhen ol UM weekly t.abklld The for u . Au1. 18 eover story that wu alle1ed11 ..... repteHaa..d u a •·worldwide uc1mlve, '' Illa publldlt'• olftce aald. The Superio( Court lawsuit. ~ .., • ·~ for publldlt Lie ........ elal•• Slnatra ''" -ntl.-lvt lalrfttw :eo·"' .., and that the dlfeDdut. NM Graup PublWI .. t~ .• knew &1Mtra'1 fam "~ WU tM '-of him for 1lrin1 an uclualve 1atentew to • publication of tb• dtfeadaat'1 lllt ." 1'e 1ult acceHI News Graap PubU.ben of ll· le1all1 •lai llaat.r•'• ume ud Win .. • to publldle ... lld""1M,,.. ..... ~ th1t both tbe ride aacl ·~ piMeocrapbl ..... ~ .............. TM lt8r'1 publllben.,. al8o attaed ol falle· b ... ,~ ..... Mid la ....Ute commerce tlaroup \tliYflklll ad1 ~ tit tdlUon feat..,._ dlie ~ ecmr ...,, I ' "INSTEAD. we INTEl:u:~UPT OUR PROG~AMMINCT WITH PEOPLE UkE ME I (,P(J'VEUN(; ANO 0EGGtNGr ~~ MONEY/ 1 -~ 1 ~ ""-.,,~ ........... . --_......,._._ ------------....... ~--·­.. -. ....................... .....,.-------------.,...... ....... .--.... _._..,_ -·-~--~------------- -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, August 24, 1981 QUEENIE Video display tenninals: A new era yawning? ,., '·•'9 'ff .... '.>t • • ,,,. t '\l"U. ....... 8 2-\ "Whose idea was 11 10 pa~~ oul tt1r1 pt·n~ 111 tht• stockholders' met•ting~ · ~~'\~\ ~'\~' ~~ You still can collect DEAR PAT Dl'N=" We were awarded a Small Claims Court Judgment months ago against a travel service which railed to com· ply with our contract for a trip to Peking and Canton. China. The defendant appealed in Superior Court and lost again Since the date of this judgment. April 21. we have attempted to collect with no ~uccess. It's been suggested that a \\-rlt or EXl'CUt1on be put into effect, but in reviewing th1~ procedure it seems impossi- ble to accomplish Do you have any sugges· lions" F .H .. Corona del Mar A writ or execution Is the answer to your dilemma, but It sounds like you need a bit of advice on how to go about putting this collec- tion procedure to work for you. A VS advises reading "Everybody's Guide lo Small Claims Court ... a Nolo Press book, available al book stores and some stationery suppliers. C h apter 24, "Coll ecting Your Money," goes Into detail on the methods of collection after the court issues a writ of ex· ecution order. You will find that It's not as dlfficuJt as it may seem to collect the judf· ment due you. Detectors recalled OEAR R~AD E RS: The Consumer Product Safety Commission bas announced that nearly 185,000 smoke detect-Ors are being recalled because or a defect that could pre· vent their alarms from s ounding in the. presence of s moke. The voluntary action involves detector$ marketed under the brand names Chloride Protector, Archer sold through Radio Shack stores, Mastt>rguard. Vanguard, Vantage I and Protecter Syste m s. They were manufactured between March I, 1979, and March 15, 1981, by the Chloride P y rotector division of Chloride, Inc. or Hingham, Mass. Division president John Phipps said "probably less than l,000" have defecHve electronic microchips. "We are asking consumers who have smoke detectors with certain model numbers to test the alarm," Phipps said. "If It doesn't work, it should be tested agaln with a new battery. If It s till doesn't work, send It back to us, and we'll repair it for free." The manufacturer and the commission advised consumer s to remove the detector's back plate lo check the model or code number on the interior housing. Potentially defective detectors Include: Chloride Protec· tor models 3077, 3078 and 3079; Archer model 275453: Masterguard model MGB 360 ; Vanguard model 817 and Protecler Systems model P365. The comm isslon did not provide a model number for Vantage I units. Polen· Ually defective models also have a code on the housing showing dates between 030179 and 031581. Consumers should call Roberta Cala of Chloride Pyrotector at (800 ) 343·5'47 for In· s tructioos about where to send a defective product for replace ment or repair. Model numbers can be verified by calling the CPSC's toll-fre.-number: <800> 638-8326. • "(;111 a problem? Then wnte lo Pat 1...1 ()unn Pat will cul red I ape. getltng • lhf' answers and action you need to • soloe mequ111es m government and business Mail your que&ta.on.s to Pal Dunn. Al Your Sermce. ()range CIX131 Dolly Pilot. P 0 Boz 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As many letters as possible will be aMwer ed. but phoned inquiries or letlers not including tM reader's full name. oddreas and bu81ness hours' phone number cannot be cormdered This coluum appears daily ez. cept Sundays " To Place your "Fast Result" Service Directory ad .. Call Now 642-5671 ht.UZ Gr-.dO,...W. SAVE 300/o on RICE CAKES W• have R.lce Cakea on the Oavor. Available ln ••le for only U9 per 4~ Natural Unulled; and 01 packare. Compare Buckwheat Salte d . tbl1 with $.H found Pleue visit oor newett tlHwhere. Orea\ with Trad•r Joe'• at the m· hort•d'oeuvrea, spread.I ~l'Hrtlon of 17th Street1 or peanut butter. We Newport Bou .. vard ana t•P•clally recommend Superior Avenue tout \0 Rlce Cakes with cheele, Denny's and Barclay's since they won't rnaaJl 8allk > • MOW IM COSTA t•SA WASHINGTON (AP> Some of the eye proble m s associated wlth working on video terminals may re· suit more from visual boredom than l'Vl' struin, vision experts say. ·Researchers studying how eyes udapt to video display terminals, or \' OTi.. said that the working situa twns 1n which the t elevision-like M'n•t•ns are used appear to be more of a problem than the machines t hemsol ves. ll r Luwren c e Stark of UC lh'rk1•k y said the fatigue some VDT 01H'rutors complain about is not from t1n•d t•n• muscles Whai wears down the eye and its connecting central nervous system 1s a phenomenon called habituation boredom ste mming from a repetitive task, he told a National Academy of Sciences meeting. "This is not a deterioration of mus cle, but the central nervous system gets tired of looking back and forth at the same thing," Stark said When eyes get bored or fatigued, he said. the focus begins to wander and the sm all eye movements that search out and shape what people see in their visual fields become erratic a nd less effi cient "I don't think VDTs are awful. but I think most work situations are awful,·· said Olov Ostberg, a n engineering physicist with the Cen· tral Organizatio n of Salari ed E mployees of Sweden. Ostberg and others told the meet· ing that many people are required to work too long at the machines. which i.ometimes are not well designed or maintained VI.Yr screens often fli cker or have bad glare problems from poor design and pos itioning in relation to lights, they said. Stark said glare is a particularly fatiguing factor because it forces the eyes to work harder To focus on nearby objects. muscles in t he eyeball change the thickness and curve or the internal lens to bend li ght r ays, a process called accom· modation. "Glare gives the eye both near and far targets and accommodation must i::o back and forth," he said. The meeting was called to gather mformallon for a federal study the academy's National Research Coun- cil ts conducting on the health effects of VDTs, sometimes called cathode r ay tubes or CRTs. The United States has no occupa· tional health regulations on VDT use except for federal radiation stand· ards ' I ~----...-.---------.. -------· r---------- Daily Pilat MONDAY, AUG . 2 .. , 1981 CLASSI Fl ED C6 Catcher Ed Ott 1s rest ramed by three umpires during Sunday's brawl between Angels and Indians. Austin s a ys sh e's bac k afte r win T O RONTO <AP> Tracy Austin. capping her comeback from a back injury, upset top. seeded Chris E vert Lloyd 6· l , 6·4 Sunday ror the singles title of the Player 's ChallC'nge women's ten· nis tournament It was only the second loss of the year for Lloyd. the defending champion. 1n 48 matches F or Austin. y,1nning the $34.000 first prizP over a field that included 19 of the top 20 players in the world signalled thC' final s ll'p back from 412 months on th<' sick II nes forced by a lower bat•k ali ment last winter. The 18-vcar old Californian n ever lost a sl'l 1 n her five matches in th(' tournament. in which she ha d been the No 2 seed. "Now I feel that I 'm totally back," said Austin . who has an 8-6 won-loss lifetime record against Evert Llo)d ··1 get the most sat1sfact1on uut of beating he r becaust• we play s1m1la r styles "IL JUSt becomes a question of who's going to be stronger on the court .. Lloyd . who hadn't pl ayed Austin since the U S Open last year when she won in a semi· final match, admitted s he was the weaker player. "I felt I had nothing left." said the top-seeded American. who won $17,500 as the runner up. "I h ave to be 100 percent keen and play m y best te nnis to beat Tracy, but m y top level game wasn't there todav. .,,.~ AFC Central Conference: It's. always. a dogfight. See C3. .For f oothall, • 1t was great Angels play-a rough game • By EDZINTEL OI ttle o.ily ,.. ... SWft Th ere wa s n o footba ll scheduled for Anahe im Stadium this past weekend. The Rams were in San Diego, while the col- leges and high schools are still about three weeks away from getting started . But who's so s ure that what was played in the stadium Sun- d ay afte rnoon was n't football? If it wasn 't that, it was a pretty good turnout for a rugby match. Appare ntl y. the Southern California heat boiled up enough tempers so tha t wha t was s up- posed to be a baseball game between the An gels and Cleveland Indians turned out to be an outdoor ver sion or Friday night f ights a t the Olympic Auditorium THE FINAL sc·ore. Cleveland 6, Angels 3, seemed secondary to the events which transpired in 11 minutes during the Angels' half of the third inning Cleveland starter John De nny touched off the melee when he hit Dan Ford in the back with a fast ball. As Ford walked to first base. he looked over at Denny and then stoppe d . Before he could charJ?e the mound. which. Ford said later , he was about ready to do. home plate umpire Mike Reilly rushed over and gr abbed Ford from behind in an effort lo restrain him. Unfortunately. Reilly was una ble to restrain eith er benches as both poured onto the field for a brief scuffle. including a small pile up between the pitchers· m ound and the third base line The Angels' Rod Carew. Tom Morgan and manage r Gen e Mauch were the first ones on the field. But it didn't take long for the entire uniformed members of both organizations to get into the act which was heartily en- joyed by m ost of the 21,926 in at· tendance. IN A MOMENT'S ins tant. mass confusion had broken out on the infield grass. Car ew charged Denny, as did Uon Baylor Third base umpire Al Clark worke d to pull players off as did players from both sides Meanwhile, a pile up usually reser ved for Ram players like J ack Youngblood, brought over the Ange ls' Ed Ott, among others. Ott. the club's designat- ed wrestler , was fighting in earnest to get into the middle of what looked like a rugby stand- off. It required three players just to pull Ott off as m omentary peace was restored. As players (in cluding both bullpen corps) returned to their positions. Denny, s tationed near Ford at first base, blurted out something in Ford ·s direction. Bad move O ut ca m e the char ges again and round two started THIS TIME, 1t t ook fi ve players to restr ain Ott who was huffi ng and puffin g by now But someone forgot. or at least was unable to. res t rain Baylor who pounced on Cleveland pit cher Rick Waits It was learn ed later that Baylor landed a punch to Waits' head. In any e vent, the Angels' designated hitter was ejected from the game for hi s part in the rumble. Orde r was once again restored this time for good. liul the incident was still vivid in the minds of bo th club person- nel after the game llerc Wl're some of the reac- tH>ns· Ford "All right, so he <Den- ny> hit me. Whether it was in- tention al or not I don't know, you'd have to ask him . But he's kno wn for that kind or thing. "AS I WAS walking to first base. I looked over at him and he was JUSt standing there. glar- ing away as 1f nothing had hap· pcned I started over and the next thing I know. the umpire is on me and I see Baylor out there .. After 1t was over . he came <~e ANGELS, Page C2> Cards break out, Dodgers leav e town ST. LOUIS IAP J A weekend that almost turned out to be a disas ter for the St. Louis Cardinals posed no m ystery for first baseman Keith Herna ndez. "It's just that Jerry Reuss and Fernando Valenzuela were ex- ceptional," Hernandez s aid Sun· day after powering his team out of an abbreviated slump with an 11 -7 triumph over the Dodgers. "They've got a pretty good pitching s t aff. This was just our day to brea k out." Hernandez' words. at least in the final instance, ranked as an understated observation relating to 20 St. Louis hits . "They got an awful lot of hits, but some of them weren't too good," Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda hastened to comment. "We did," said Cards pilot Whitey Herzog. "We had a lot of good ones, too." f o ur Dodgers highlighte d by towering two.run first. hurl ers - Hernandez' ho mer in the The blast off Bob Welch, 4·5, wiped out a 1-0 Dodger advan· tage Afterward. He rnandez doubled to ignite the Cards' win- ning rally in the third and also s ingled twice. scoring three runs. "I've been fee ling this good s ince the second half started," On TV today Channel 11 at 4:30 said Hern andez, a hitter with a .433 average in St. Louis' most recent 1 t games despite a sore ankle. "It doesn't hurt when I swing. "I think eagerness was the key. It he lped her game to have that time off ... na,, Ford 1s restrained by umpire .Wike Re1ll11 and Coach Preston Gomez as .John ne11riy ux11che<i Most prominent for St. Louis were six extra-base blows off I've been hot ever since I got back," he said. "The only way I was going to get a triple was if I hit a line drive to the wall and it bounced back to the Infield." OCC's quarterback situation has new wrinkle to it By CURT SEED EN Of• Deity ...... SWf It was shortly after his Orange Coast College football team had compiled a rather dis mal 2-8 record last season that Coach Dick Tucker came to the conclusion that a change was needed. Tucke r. who is slightly more ac- customed to victorious campal1n1 (he boasted a 112·51 record before back-to· back 2·8 seasons In '79 and '80), le not one to panic. ' Instead1 the OCC coach and his aasla· tants decided to take advantage of one of the few bright spots in the Pirate attack. They decided they would put the offensive emphasis on passing. After all, freshman quarterback Charlie Boss managed to throw for 1,049 yards In 1980 -with a team that wu basically run· oriented. And with OCC practice ready to be1ln Thursday, Tucker was ltchln1 to formulate an ofrenslve aystem that would would lnclude at least 30 puses a tame. Tucker ref erred lo the otfentlv• chant• Ha "new wriflde" ln the OCC attae-. Well, suddenly Tucker's wrinkle ha s a wrinkle. It seems Boss does n't have enough units to play football al OCC this year. And that leaves Tucker with two inex· perlenced quarterbacks vying for the lop position. One is a familiar face, the other is not. One ls Crom MoptebelJo High School. to be exact, the other is Crom Tucker's house . Clay Tucker, who h as grown up watching his father create a highly suc- cesssful football program at OCC, now has an excellent. shot at being the Pirates No. 1 slgnaJ caller. He'll be up against another talented passer in Montebello's Art Maytorena. To m eke things even more lnteresUn1. a third · quarterback possibility -one Sam Duarte from Tuctoo, wlll be lookln1 for a place on the tftm. Thil ta the second Ume one of Tucker'• IOl\I b• pJayect for him. Older aon Rbell played linebacker In 1971-71 at OCC. Dick Tucker plays down the 1ltuatlon of hvtnl lO decide betwHn hll aon and ~ players vying for the most important posi- tion on the team. "He'll be treated no better than anyone and no worse than anyone on the team," Tucker says of Clay. "I think fathers tradl· tionally put more pressure on their sons, But I don't think that way. If he's my guy, fine. I don't see any problems there." One thing Is for s ure, Tucker says. Th~ decision to .co to OCC was Clay's. "But I s till would have tried to recruit him," Tucker adds. The reason? Clay Tucker ls the only quarterback Corona del Mar High had the durtn1 the last two seasons. In that span, Clay mana1ed to set no lesa than 10 all·Ume rec· · ord1 at the achool. Among tbem: · -most yards paa1ln1 in one aeaaon (1,282); -m0tt paaae. completed In one aeason ( 110): most career pauin1 yarda1• (2,15'); -most passes completed ln one 1ame (15); <SW OCC, P ase C4) Joining Hernandez as a Cards leader was Dane lorg, who tripled him home with the win· ning run and added an !\BI single. Left-hander Bob Shirley, S-3, chipped in 4~ innings of strong relief after balling St. Louis s tarter Lacy Sorensen out of an early jam. The Dod1ers closed to 8-7 with three runs in the s eventhl but Steve Braun respondea with an RBI triple and Slxto Lezcano with a run· scoring double, enablln1 Bruce Sutter lo finish up with his 15th save. H er nandez ' barraae. meanwhile, awakened a Cards attack restricted to el1ht hlta ln the aeries' rlret two 1ames by left·handeri Reuaa and Valenzuela. , AU St. l.A>ula player• who went to bat bad at leaat one hit. Oeor1e Hendrick bad an RBI alnaJ•. and the only mtNlnc e}e. ment waa aborUtop Garry Templeton, 1ldtll.Hd by a tore knee. Heraoa, 1dmlttln1 ht waa pleued that Hernanda bid "blt five balls rtiht Oil ~ DClle". 1 l r -~ .. ..,... .... _ _.... ____ ..... ----------. --~ -..• ---------,--• #WWW¥ 4 + 4 C ¥ W. 0 4 ••••• 0 0 0 "; -!!' .. / Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Mo nday, August 24. 1981 Stones clears 7 • 7 for American mark From AP dhpatcbes NICE France -Dwight Stones m of the Uni.led States set an American record ror the high j ump when he cleared 7.7 Sunday al the Nikaia Internationa l track and field m eet. Stones, who had lost his a mateur standing for l8 mont hs before regaining it in 1979, had twice jumped 7·7"'2 as did J eff Woodard ~f the University of Alabama. but all three 1umps were made m stadiums with downhill ap· proaches and thus were rejected as records. The record then reverted lo Stones' leap of 7.51,.<.z made in Munich, Germany, in 1973. The m eet lost some of its lustre when st and· out Carl Lewis of the United States withdre w from the 200·meter sprint because of leg cra m ps American Greg Foster won the llO·m eter hurdles in 13.41 and Andre Phillips of the United Sl ates captured the 400-meter hurdles in 49.28. Lewi s, w h o h as t h e w o rld 's top performances this year in the lOO·meter dash . and the long jump., said he made a few practice starts before the 200·meter race, ''but I still hurt a little. I don't want to use myself up this season in meets ." Quote of the day "He's the kind of coach that when you see him coming down the hallway. you t want to turn and go the other way." T his is t he reaction Ram q ua rterbac k Jeff Rutledge says football players al Alaba ma have of Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. NeheJUiah • • 11Upress1ve; Moses hurt COLOGNE, West Germ any !AP l World record·holder RenaJdo Nehe miah posted the fou rth·best tim e ever in the 1 lO·meler hurdles at an interna· tiona l track and field meet Sun· day Nehemiah. of Scotch Plains. N .J ., finished in 13.07 seconds, just short of the world mark of 12.93 he set five days ago in Zurich. H is v i ctory helped give American at hletes a sweep of the top three places in the event. he ld before some 35.000 spec· tator s i n Co log n e 's Muengersdorfer Stadium. Tony Campbell came 1n second al 13.54. followed by Rod Milburn at 13.59. Nehe miah's performance was the highlight of the m eet after a m u c h ·h era lde d 400·m e t e r hurdles duel between worl<l rec· ord-holder Edwin Moses of the U n i t e d States a nd Ha rald Schmid of West Ge rm a ny fizzled A half hour before the race, Moses withdre w. complaining of a slight muscle pull in his upper thigh He told reporters he suf- fned the strain last Friday at a meet in West Berlin Tigers top Texas for ninth straight Rick Peters' nlnlh·lnnanl( plneh· ·m s ingle off the glove of first basem an Bill Steln scored Steve Kemp from second base Sunday to give the Detroit Tigers their ninth straight victory, a 5 4 decision over the Texas Rangers . . In other American Lea~ue contests. Larry Miibourne hit u fre11k ins ide the park home run. and Graig Nettles and Osur Gamble belted homers that carried out of the park to give the New York Yankees a n easy 8·0 verdict over Kansas City. Yankees starter Ron Guidry continued his "second' season" scoreless streak with seven innings of no·run bull. Guidry has now won all three of his starts since lhc season resumed. and he has not allowed a run Pettra in 18 innings . Greg Luzinski led Chicago·s 2l·hit attack with a three·run homt•r and pmch·h1ller 'Bob MoUnaro slammed a l\\o run shot as the White Sox ripped Toronto. 13 2 Ted Simmons slammed a three run homt•r and Robin Yount and Paul MoUtar hit ~olo shots to lead Milwaukee lo an 8 5 victory over Minnesota Gary Roenicke and Ke n Singleton hit two.run home rs to lead Hall1more to a 7 4 win over Oakland Ton) Peret's panch·h1t bases·loaded single m thl' t•1ghth inning carried Boston to a come.from bt•hind 7 5 dec1s1on over Seattle. It was the fourth vH:tory in a row fo r the Red Sox Jaworski sharp in Eagles' wi n SY R ACUSE . N .Y . Ron [il J aworski team ed up wi th tla rold Carmichael on touchdown pass plays covering 49 and 30 yards as the P hiladelphia Eagles scored a 36·7 victory over the New Orleans Saints in a National Football League exhibition game Sunday Jaworski played m ost or the fi rst three q uarters, completing 17 of 28 passes for 221 yards and giving the ·defending National Con· ference champions a 19·7 lead in the third period. J aworsk1 's backup, for mer New Yor k Giants quarte rback. Joe Pisarcik. threw two touchdown passes m the fourth quarter. hitting Bill y Campfield on a play covering 17 yards and Greg La Fleur on a 61·yard scoring play. Schmidt. Carlton gang up o n Astros Mlkt' Schmidt hat a third mninl( iii grand slam and Stt>vt' Carlton and Tug McGraw combined on a three· hitter ai. thl' Ph1lad{•lph1a Phillies beat the Houston Astroi. 6 O Sunday for lhe Ph111iei.' third st nught \ 1ct<>r) The grand slam was the 20th homt•r or the season for Schmidt. while Carlton was p1 l'k 111~ up has 10th victory of lht> ram1m1~n a.i.1111~1 three losses In uth1•r g:.tml'S. Bob Ba ilor knockl'd 1n the winning run With a SUl'rlfl('C fly in the 10th 1nnanK. then made a leaping, o ver lhe·shouldcr catch in left field to end the game as lhl' New York Mets edged Cincinnati 3·1. Bailor made lht• ga11w t•ndlng catch of a lint• tlrive off the bat of George F'oslu Leon Schmidt Durham dre~ a buses loaded "alk on Gary Lavelle's 3 2 patch ai.1lh two o uts 1n tht' ninth inning to for<'e Ivan DeJ esus hom e \\ llh the \\Inning run. g1nng the Chicago Cu bs a 6 5 'erd1ct over San .. ·ranc1sco Rod Scur ry hlankl•d San D1t'go un fi ve hits for eight innings, and Phil GarnPr drovl' m three rui:is to lead P1llsburgh to J 5 2 \'ICtory over San Diego Tht• Padres are now 3 11 in thl' second half of the season Rookl\! outfi elder Brett Butler drove m th1· go ahead run on a s1xth·mnang in- field grounder. then threw out Montreal's potential tying run at the plate m the seventh as ,\tl:.10ta l'd).(t•d 1h1· Expo!.. 2 1 The victory went lo Rick )1 ahl1•r 1 I :I 1 \\ho alluY. ed eight hits in 1•1ght inning~. "h1l1• Rick ('am p earned his 13th s a,.,. ol th1· ·' c-a r Three sacnf ice fl ies -in one inning NOHFOLK. Va The Charles· la ton Charl11:•s acc:omplished a baseball rarity Su nday. hilting three sarrif1t·t• flies in one inning en route to an 11·2 victory over the Tide" ater Tides m the first game of an International Leugue doubleheader. The Ch arlie~. who scored seven runs in the 'inning. got lht>1r first I wo runs on a double, a hit batter, u walk, a ~1ngl1.· and another walk. le av· mg the ba~es loaded Angelo LoGrnndc then hit a line dri ve to le ft. which Gil Flores dropped. but the official storer ruled a run "ould have scored anyway. Two more sacrifice fhes followed to send home the next two runs Baseball today On this date in baseball an 1975 San Francisco·~ Ed Hallcki hurled a no hitter and beat tht' New York Mets, 6·0, to complete a Giant sweep of a double·header al Candlestick Park. Today's birthd ay Chicago Whitt• So'< 1nf1elder Tony Bcrnazard 1~ 25 Derby-wi nning jockey injured Three jockeys were injured. one • badly enough to require hospitaliza· lion. m two separate s pills Sunday al Saratoga Race Course m New York. marring the ncxt·lo last day of the track's-lhoroughbred meet. Jorge Velasquez, who rode Ple asant Colony to victories m the Kentucky Derby and Prcaknes~. was IOJUred when has .horse. Native Truth, fell down on the stretch Velasquez was n.·lt•ast:d &.fter treatment at a nearby hospital Tom Weiskopf shot a 69 for a 16·under- µar 272 to win an intcrnallonal golf tournament 1n York. England Running back Larry Ke), the former Florida State star, broke open a close game with a 20 yard TD run early m the fourth quarH·r 10 give British Columbia a 29-14 victor) over thl' Montreal i\louettes m Canda- dian Football League art1on The Chicago Sting. Fort Lauderdale Striker~. Tampa Bay Rowdies and .Jack~onv1lle Tea Men were a ll victorious in the opening round of the NASL playoffs. Television, radio Followlno a re the top SPorts events on TV tonight. Ratings a re : / 1 " I e xcellent; / 1 ' worth wa tching; ./ I fa ir; I forge~ It. n 4:30 p.m ., Chennel 11 ./ ./ ./ DODGERS BASEBALL: Dodgers at Pitts- burgh. Announcen: Vin Scully and Ross Porter. After loslno an 11·7 slugfest to St. Louis Sun- day, the Dodgers wlll have to contend with the ha rd·hlttlng Pirates tonight. Burt Hooton (8-•l will be on •he mound for the Qodoers . In his last outing, Hooton blanked Chicago 5-0 on four hits. Baseball KABC (790), (710). RADIO Dodgers at Pittsburgh, •: 30 p.m ., Boston a t Angels, 7:30 p.m .. KMPC From Page C1 AP'WW..... ANGELS PLAY ROUGH • • • towards first base. staring at me lie said som ething to me c.ind I said something back Then he said something like ·if you can't stand the hea t. s tay out of the kitchen.· "I said to him that we can go one·On·one. l felt that if he want ed to fight . then ll•l's fight. But he doesn 't have lo hit me with a baseball ·· 01T: "NO one throws a ball at one of our players. It was a dumb thing for Denn~ to do He was frustrated, I think. But it's a little bit of stupidity when you have a team down like he did u!> You can teach Ford a lesson but you don't wc.ike an e ntire team up like lhaL "This won't bl' for gotten the next lime we play Cleveland 1 the Angels are in Cleveland for a four gam e set. Seµt. 3·61 and 1t won ·t be forgotten four years from now "Doing something like Denny did is one thing. but thl' paybaC'k is a bicep. "I guess that when yC>u think about it, it makes for exciting ba seball and team inte rest. What a helluva game. eh?" Mauch : "T he only sensible thing to do is go for a one for one ejection <m eaning a player from both teams>. Especially in a situalion where this kid I Denny> intentionally throws at Ford and afterward acts like he wants lo fight three guys. each of which could kick hi s <bleep>. He did all the damage and got away with it." really hurt him and that's nd1<'ulous .. Wait~. "I ht•ard somebody sa~ ~omt•th1ng and ·1 turned around and gut h11 I was JUSl standing arnund I wasn't an the middle of a pill' S.1ml•t1mt•s when you get 111 :i pile. ·' ou n· swinging to pro· ll•t:I \oursc•lf Hut I wa:. on the •1utsk1rb "BA \'LOR HIT me in the tem- pi(• It \\as a cold cock .. Clc\ela nd ca t c h er Ron Jlassey ·1 was looking for the ... malle~t man and rouldn·t find one l>l'nny L'na\'atlable for com ml'nl Acc·ord1ng t o o n e Clevt>land "nter. Dennv has a pohc~ of not talking to' anyone \\ho dol'.., not ha\e a tape re c·ordt•r So th:il "as that Following the altt•n·atwn. Denny mowed down ttw next 10 Angels to pick up h1-. fourth win against four ln~ses I It• got help from Mike St;rnton a~ thl• lwo combined on a f1 vt··hilll'r Angc•l starter Dave Frost ex perit•nc·Nl wildness which ac.• counted for three Indian runs in tht• third Frost walked three. in· dueling Yl1kt• llargrove with the hai.t•:o. loaded It marked his Sl'<'ond c·onsccul1ve st a rt in which he d idn't sur\'I\ .... the third rnning ScbmJd went on to win the event m 49.17. edging Da vid Lee of the United States who finished an 50.2. Hod Carf>w 1 /1•lt , HnhhlJ <;m·h ond ()1111 Hny/11r wre.i;t/e Indian'> p1tchn /111111 t>t•1111 11 / Tiit: ANGELS then picked up a pair of unearned runs in a rather unusual fashion Bay lor led off the seC'ond with a single to left On the e ns uing sacrifice bunt b~ Bobby Grich. Denny threw wildly to firs t . hitting G ri<'h in the back T he ball skipped into right field where J o rge Orta retrieved it a nd threw wildly to third. Moses had been hoping to bet· ter bis world mark F riday Deapit.e blustery. cool weather . he posted a lim e of 47.27 in the Rerlln meet. ln t h e JOO ·met e r das h . American men swept the first three places. Mel Latteny won in 10.12, followed by Stan Floyd in 10.20 and J eff Phillips In 10.37. Ame rican E velyn As hford. spurred along by a strong back wlnd, captured the women's 100-meter dash in 11.02, better- ing her performance Friday in Berlin by nearly three-tenths of a second. Angela Taylor of Canada finished second In 11.17. a nd Linda Ha1lund of Sweden was third in 11.30. ;. Jefferson still holding out SAN DIEGO (AP> ~ Aller a mtetln1 with coach Don Coryell. all·pro wide receiver John Jef • f enon informed the San Dle10 ' Cbar1en that his holdout will continue. Jeffeuon unde rwent a pbyllcel exam Thursday, and hinted he would be reporilnc t.o the National Football Lea1ue • club, poaJbly In time for nt~t week's final preaea1on aame aaalntt Buffalo. Rowev•r, a te1a1 ll!Gk•man uld Jefferson t.old CGryel1 be would not report an.r.U. Jefferson, wbo led tbe Q-..rw Jut year wlt.b 1,MO 'I arill on 12 receptiou and led tb• NrL •llb 11 loucbdown catdlel. bu uted I.be club to ~ bll c:oMract which I tttendl ~ t.b• lte5 MMOft. U.S. swimmers crush Soviets INDIANS MANAGER Dave Garcia. "I'm just happy no one got hurt. I don't know if Denny threw at For d intentionaJly or not and I don't care. Ford has been hot in hitting lately and you don 't want to just give him a pitch he can hit out. Again the ball hit Grich and caromed off him into left fi eld. lie rounded third and scored. Determined Americans sparked by memories of boycott In the sixth inning. the Indians broke it open as Andre Thornton hit a two-run homer off reliever lfruce Kison, his fifth of the year KIEV, U.S.S.R. <AP > -A de· termined Amer ican s wim team. many of its members ke pt out of Russian wate r last year by the U.S. Olympic boycott, whipped a Soviet national squad 203-141 In a three-day m eet that e nded Sunday. The Soviet Union 's swimming performance has improved in recent years, but the fired up Americans turned in an over· whelming show of s kill that took 20 of the 29 eve nta. ·'Some people told us before we went to the Soviet Union that we would be the first U .S. team to lose again.st the Russians," said U.S. co.captain Biil Barrett. 21. of Mission Viejo. "WE DIDN'T come here t.o m ess around. We came to win." U .S. coaches sln&led out v e rsatile Jeff Flo at or Sacrament.o u one of the best perfOhners at the Dynamo pool in the capital city of the Ukraine. "Jeff's performance wu un· expected. He WU the bf& IUf· prlee oo the team," aaid U.S. Head Coach OOft Lamont The 21-year--old Float uJ)Ml Soviet favorltea ln tbe 400-IMtet individual medle7 Ind 1,500· meter freeatyle, recordln1 personal beat Umu ln both race1 t.o help tM American men defeat the Sovleta, tMl. PLOAT, A 8·3 , 112·pound senior at the Universit y of SC>uthcrn California , won the 400-met er medley S unday in 4 : 24.24 minutes, a lmost one second faster than his previous best time. He also won the 400 freestyle Friday with a time or 3 : 51.98, three seconds faster than the clocking which won him the U.S. Nationa l title last week. Float also finished second in the 200 butterfly and swam a leg on the winning U.S. men's 800 freestyle relay. F o ur o ther Am erican s emerged as double winners in the m eet . the first d ua l en - counter between the two coun· tries since 1978. Craig Bea rdsley, 20. of Har· rlngton P ark. N. J .• set the m eet's only world record by win· nlng the 200 butterfiy In 1:58.01. two-tenths of a second faster than his own previous mark. He also won the 100 butterfly in 55.35. Newport Harbor High's John Moffet look a third place Sunday In the 200 breast with a 2: 19..48 clocking. THREE AMElllCAN wom· e n were double wlnnera as the teaM c rus hed the Sovie t wome n , 104 -60. Cy nth i a Woodhead, J'7, of Miu ion Viejo, where 10 of the 38 American team lllembers live, won the 200 individual medley and the 200 freestyle; Mary T. Mtafhtr, te, of Lcqimlle. Ky • took botb the butterfly ennta and Marybeth t.lnameter. 111. fof Ml11ton Vltjo won the 400 anrl 800 freestyle races. A Soviet report of Sunday's ac· lion declar ed that "Vladimir She metov has won the reputa· lion of a new Soviet swimming sta r ." H e too k th e 200 b ackstroke in 2:03.82, edging Steve Barnicoat of Mission Viejo by a half·second . The Americans were to ny lo Moscow early today a nd spend the day in the Soviet capital before departin~ Tuesday. "I agree. not one Angel s hould have been thrown out. Two should have been thrown out. I fe lt Carew s hould have been thrown out. too. lie insti gated the second fight. "I 'm not an advocate of fight· ing, but sometimes fighting will wake up a ballclub ... Carew: "Originally. my lnten· tions were to hurt him <Denny) if I could or at least get him hurt. You can throw a pit ch up and 10 but when y6u throw behlnd a guy's back. you can Cleveland ended a fi ve.game los ing streak while the Angels' win streak stopped at four. The Angels are now 5·7, 21~ games behind division leading Chicago. Tonight. Boston invades town for a t wo-game set. Former Angel Frank Tanana (3·5> takes th t' mound for t he Red Sox against the Angels' Steve Rehko (5·3). , This weeks Special Zillgitt and Wright lt79 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Cabriolet lop. AM/FM cassette tape player . and fuJJ power. (469VPU) insur:mct agents :and brokers Contractora: Insurance costs rlstn1? Contact us ror competitive quotes for Lia bility, Equipment . Pro perty and Worker's Compensation Insurance. We cun olso handle your bonding needs. )9)1 M~ Artl!llT ~ Nnrporf Bud1. C.. 91660 <TW> ~1·90SS ' I f' s a s s a a a • a au a • 0 p • qoec a use e a c a c a • 0 0 • ;:: W' --.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24. 1981 Another tight race? AFC Central winner is tr aditionally tough to pick PITTSBURGH <AP> -In Cleveland, the Browns are raring to go and they'd rather forget "The Play" that ended their otherwise glorious 1980 season. In Pittsburgh, the Steelers say they're young at heart and they've heard enough about "The Season" that spoiled their bid for a fifth Super Bowl ring. In Houston, the Oilers have a new head coach and a new quarterback who aren't looking back on the departures of "The Bum" and "The Snake." And In Cincinnati. the Bengals have "The Helmet," decorated with Tiger stripes that General Manager Paul Brown hopes will add a dis- tinctive touch to a new wiMing era. THAT'S HOW THE 1981 season shapes up in the American Football Conference Central TH E PR OS Division. which has traditionally featured tight races even in years when the Steelers were win-ning Super Bowls. C.ast season. the Browns, 11·5, ousted the Steelers as division champs. But Cleveland's bid ror a Super Bowl berth went awry when quarterback Brian Sipe threw a last-minute in- terception against Oakland in the playoffs. "Please don't ask me another question about 'The Play,' " Sipe told reporters this s ummer. "I spent six months talking about it, and now I want to forget it. It's old stuff." Sipe, who passed for 30 touchdowns last year. was among 18 vets who reported early to the Browns training camp. .. It's a great sign," said Coach Sam Rutigliano. "It also proves the kind of spirit we have. We've always had it but now it's even better because in winning our division we've ac- complished something -&nd we want to ac-complish more.'' Last year, the Steelers missed the playoffs for the first lime since 1971, rtnishing 9-7. Rampant injuries were part or it, the defense had just 18 quarterback sacks, questions were raised about whether the Steelers were too old and it was hinted Terry Bradshaw had lost his zest for the game. Bradshaw spent the otrseason mulling whether to quit football for an acting career. He decided this spring to remain a Steeler. "I'm happy to be here. I really am," he bub· bled at the start of camp. How about old age? "What is old?" said fullback Franco Harris. 31. "Chronologically we are old, but physically we are fine." JOE GREENE LOOKS for improvement from the defense even though linebacker Jack Ham is out with a broken arm. Greene, who'll be 35 next month, also says he has no thoughts of retirement. "I still enjoy playing and winning." he said. "When I do call it quits. it will be sudden -like Ken Stabler did it." When Stabler, "The Snake," took over in Houston last year. he was touted as the quarterback who would take the Oilers to the Super Bowl. Houston finished 11·5, losing the division to Cleveland on a tie·breaker. The Oilers got a wild-card playorr berth, but they lost 27-7 to Oakland and "Bum" PhHUps was fired as coach. "I thought we were getting out·coached," said Oiler owner K.S. "Bud" Adams Jr. Former defensive coach Ed Biles took over for Phillips. He's diversified the offense and hired Jim Shofner from Cleveland as offensive coordinator. FOLLOWI NG STABLER'S retirement. the quarterback will be fourth-year pro Gifford Nielsen. Stabler quit just prior to summer camp and went on a Gulf of Mexico cruise. "My body has taken enough physical abuse ... explained Stabler. "We're not looking back," said Biles. ··No one player is indispensable." In Cincinnati. the Bengals beat the Steelers twice last season. Their 6-10 overall record was an improvement over two previous 4-12 seasons. HOW MUCH MORE could depend on how much the Browns improve a defense that ranked last statistically in the AFC. Among the rookies are No. 1 draft pick Han- ford Dixon, a cornerback from Southern Mississip- pi, and defensive end Mike Robinson of Arizona. "We learned a lot," said Coach Forrest Gregg. "These guys can compete with anyone and they believe that now:· COME BACK HERE Philadelphta Eagles halfback Billy Campbell 1371 lose:-. thl' ball durin~ third-quarter '.\:FL t•x h1h1t1on action <Jgainst '.'jc" Orlean~ Sundc.1~ ThL• Eagle:-. :-.cored c.1 3fi·'i \'t<:tor~ The Pittsburgh Steelers also were looking for help from their No. 1 draft pick, defensive end Keith Gary of Oklahoma. But Gary signed with Montreal of the Cana· dian league. Gregg used his first two draft picks on wide re- ceivers David Verser of Kansas and Chris Coll· ingsworth of Florida. Meanwhile, the Bengals are wearing new helmets with tiger stripes, a motif carried over to the trim on the jerseys and pants. General Manager Paul Brown chose the design. H eb e rt set s m eet r ecord, settles for second "He chose the easy path instead of the tough one." said Steeler Coach Chuck Noll. "It surprise6 me. I had a different view of him, obviously, or we wouJdn'l have taken him on the first round." Noll isn't the type to dwell on Gary's defection, just as he isn't the type to dwell on seasons past. In 1932, when Brown became head coach al Massillon High School in Ohio. he talked the school into buying a S500 tiger outfit for the mascot. The Massillon Tigers went on to become a powerhouse. Chris Baker of the Foxjet Swim Team clocked a 1 :06.25 Sunday night to win the 100· m eter breastroke at the Junior National Swim Championships in Mission Viejo. beating out Jay Hebert, who had earli er set a meet record in the event during preliminaries. prelims, but had to settle for second place as the national championships wrapped up their four days of competition at the Marguerite Recreation Center. More than 1,000 of the nation's top swimmers were on hand for the competition. which was sanctioned by United States Swimming, Inc.· The Blue Dolphins A Team n 1 pped the Miss ion Viejo Nadadores A Team in the 400 medley relay, clocking' a win- ning time of 4:00.40. In women's competition. Tami Bruce of Rancho Bernardo Swim Team . took the 1,500· meter freestyle with a 17 :04.18 clocking. "We look at each season as a new journey, re- gardless or how the previous year went... said Noll. "The tiger motif and the orange and black col- ors were everywhere. and don't think it didn't have an effect on our outlook," Brown wrote in his autobiography. Hebert recorded 1 : 06. 10 in the Daniel credits putting Crucial green play k eys L P GA victory SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio (AP> - Beth Daniel had a ere-round feeling_: that her putter would win her a second straight World Championship of Golf title Sunday, and she was right. "Today was one of those days when I knew I was going to putt well. I can look down at the putter on the prac- tice green and it looks good to me," Daniel said after her 1-over-par· 71 gave her a total or 284 and a one-shot victory over Jan Stephenson for the $50 ,000 pay -day , a Ladies Professional Golf Association record. "I won with my putter. I didn't hit the ball close to the hole today," Daniel said, finishing with a 4-under· par total in this exclusive event at Shaker Heights Country Club. Daniel knocked in a 20-foot putt to save a par on the second hole. One of her strongest was a 50-footer for a birdie at 15 that tied her for the lead with Stephenson. But the most critical putt of all was a one-foot tap-in for a birdie two holes later that provided Daneil with her winning margin. Daniel refused to lose her com- posure after consecutive bogeys at 13 and 14 had dropped her from the lead, with Stephenson moving in front. "I just tried to keep myself together after those bogeys," she said. "I was only one shot out of the lead. When you want to win a tourna- ment you've got to forget about the bad holes. They're gone." Stephenson, who matched Daniel's 71 for a 3-under-par 285, was disap- pointed over her runner-up position. Y041 "ffd Yoo <8>(( DI. YOO A<t~••-•I CNr..,ectlc ... ., ...... _, 770.5211 ~IN IVISI WlllllNOS t112 I lM I .c>•H f Oii iii "Before, when l finished second, I was happy,'' said Stephenson, who won in Dallas last week. 'Tm feeling down because my adrenaline was so pumped up. I thought I could win." Stephenson, after taking the lead with a 30-foot birdie put at 14, missed four straight birdie opportunities down the stretch . Irwin s urvives des pite playoff GRAND BLANC. Mich. <APl - Two-time U.S. Open champion Hale Irwin. whose game deserted him on the last nine holes, rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt on the second sudden- death playoff hole Sunday to win the Warwick Hills Open golf cham· pionship in a playoff with Bobby Clampett, Peter Jacobsen and Gil Morgan. It was the second PGA tour vic- tory this year for Irwin, 36, who earlier won the Hawaiian Open. With Sunday's first-place check, Irwin's earnings this year increased to $248,649, marking the fourth time he bas exceeded $200,000. Irwin, who now plays out of Kapalua on the Hawaiian island of Maui, started the final round at 11 · under-par .205 -one stroke better than British Open ch ampion Bill Rogers -on the 7,001-yard, par-72 l ayout at Warwick Hills . He threatened, for a time, to run away from the field. LEASE A NEW I I I 1982 EXP! RAMS SEASON TICKETS U•Htd Ckalr:• Se.ts 213-463-1101 714-752-09&0 TOllOAROW'S CAR IS HERE AND WE HAVE BIG SELECTIONS FOR lllEDIATE DELIVERY. WE LEASE ALL MMlE CARS AND ftUCIS. 'WE VE GOT WHA f YOU'R[ l fJ1JKING FOR . THEODORE ROBINS LEASlNG CO. zot•~• Coste Mete WEHIREVETE s ~ -TIME. Why would an ex-Marine, Sailor or Airman want to join the Army Reserve? Because you 11 find us many places where your former service doesn't have reserve units. And because we're larger, we usually have more openings. Most important, the Army Reserve can help you cash in on your service experience. Did you know that former E-4s with 3 years' experience can now make over $1,475 a year serving part-time in the Army Reserve? All it takes is a weekend a month and a couple of weeks of annual training. Wouldn't it also be nice to keep your PX privileges? You can. For more information about the Army Reserve, call the number listed below. Or stop by. U.S. Army Recruiting Station 682 So. Brookhurst Anaheim, CA. 772-1480 . U.S. Army Recruiting Station Bulldlng58 l.oa AlamMoa, CA. 527-3031 U.S. Army Reserve Center 2345 8arranca Rd. Santa Ana, CA. 552-3173 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /M onday. August 24. 1981 ~ t I .. .. Major League 1tandlng1 AMtlllltAN LllAOUa 011weo 11-0e111-S.attl• Kel\NtClly ...... TellH Mlnneto1• WntOMslell • I. . ' 1 i I I • • t I , 1 • 10 IEH 1Dlvl6 .... O.trolt tO I•• MllWMlkee ' • tOO 8Mlon I Bellltnor• I Torort10 I •·N..,Yoo • Clevel...cl s X·Flrst-lf dlv1>lon wuww r ._ •.• k ..... c 1e .. 1onc1•.A,,....l Cllkeeo tJ, Totonto 2 o.trolt s. T .... 4 N.., York I, IC ante• Cll• O Mii-• I, MIMoota S 8alllrnort 1. Oa••.....S 4 lo"°" I, Seattle S T-y'lG-emH • s• • ill • u• 1 .. , 10 »> 01 BoHlll (Tanane ).S) et A-h llltl\llO S.JI, n TUH (Jenkin•''" al Toronto CB••.,.....,. 2-01 ICenut City (Jon .. I II •I Oelroll (kM!Ndtf HI. n Mln~9t• c ti•••n• o J> at Nt w Yor• CJolln M l, n Cnlc•oo 1 Oolson I >I a t M 11weu11 .. (VUCll0¥1Ch.31, n Cltwlend (WallS S •I •I Otl\lend fl(-'1 l•>I, II 8a11tmo<e ( O M•rtln.r I " •I s..11i. 11..U <h H l,n NATIONAL.1..EAOUll Wetl Ol•l•lell All .... .. H .... slall w I. • s I ~ 1 1 Soft l'r-IKO Cln<lnNllt Sen 0"9o • • J 11 SI Louot Ne• York MonlrHI C111cago Pll~ EutOlvlt .... 1 • •· Plllltdlttphla S X Ftrfl nett dlvl>lon winner ~.,·,sores St L.oult I I, ~ 1 PlllSl>urgl\ S, Sen Oie90 1 AllMIUI 1. Monlrttl I • 1 • P'c \. "' !.JI !.JI !.JI 500 )1' N-York l, Clnclnne11i110 lnnln~I Cnle-•. ~n Fren<IKo t Phlltdltlpl\o• •, HOVilOO 0 ,...,..,..,O•m .. o• ,.., t..., I .... , II'> , ,..., II'> D.-..n I Hooton••> ti PllUl>urgh IJ-. 1-01, n S•n Oltgo Elc11411Dergor ._,l et Clllceoo 11Cruk_4 .. I Atltnl• 180911\ l 101 et P~lladtlPhlt ICl!rlllefttoll 3-61, n New York !Stoll l •> •I C1nclnne11 IB•r..,yl ~JI. n San Fr•nclKo (Alu•nder • SI ti St Louis IMarlirw1 2 SI, n Only game\ 1cneou1ec1 AMERICAN LEAGUE lndlen1 6, Angels 3 CLEV•L.ANO CALll'OllNIA "'".. •ll r ll .. Onone,tl Orie,~ H.,orv,dl\ H•H•Y.< Ht rr•h,Jb Tnorn1n.111 M•"""ll.cf Kuloer.211 V•ry1«,U S 1 I 0 Ctr-. 10 S 0 I 0 ) 2 I 0 8urlffll.U J I 0 0 J 0 , I L ynn,cf 4 0 I 0 700 2 FCW'~~ •011 l I I I Bevlor,dh I I I 0 • I 1 2 H•rrl•,dn l 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Grlch,ll> J I I 0 • 0 I 0 Downing.II J 0 0 0 J I I 0 0 11 c J 0 0 0 Cmpnr-.ll> 1 o o o H•rlow,pl\ I 0 0 0 Total• ll • • • Tote•• l1 l s I S<9"11yl""I~ Cltvelend 003 001 100--4 Calll'Orni• 010 000 Oto--> E e>ru, Dennv OP Callfornle 1 1.06 Cltvetand S. C•lllMnle 10 78 -Her· grove HR ThOrnlon ISi 5 Grich SF Heney 2 CltW._ Otnny cw. 4-41 St•nton ts.?> Callterlll• I~ ' , M It Ell II SO 3 3 I l , 0 0 t Frost IL. 1·31 1\'i 3 3 ' O ICl"°n l\'i l J t I Mor-V> 0 0 O 0 Jtlltrton 2' > I 0 0 0 I O•ftllY pltcl\ed to 1 btltt" In ltw 1111. HBP by 0eMv (Ford I T 2. Sl A 11.'76. Wfllle ... 11, ..... J•Yt 1 c111caQD oJO 320 on-u 11 o Toronto 000 020 000-2 4 2 TrOUI, HO'l1 ,., •nd Fisk. E•.tl•n. I.H I, J , Mcl..""'111n 131. T-CSl, It.I. Jeck...,. !ti •lld wNtt. w -Trout, 1-' L -LHI, •• Hitt Chicago, L111lnt1tl llJI. Molinaro 111 A -16, .. Y.,..._1,ltayelst ken ... City 000 000 000-0 1 t New YOf'll «O 000 00.4 11 0 O•le, .. ....,,.,. .... IJI. I( Bren 111, Oul- l>trr'( Ill -Wathen; GulClrv, R Onlt Ill. GCK-ltl -CK-W -GUl4ry, W. I. Gela, H HRt -N.., YCW'll, Mlt- 11 I, N91t.lft 1101, G-Ole 191 A -40.291. ,...,. •. It._.. ,..... 000 021 001-4 • 0 O.frolt JOO 100 002-S t J Mettecll. l(ern (ti, Comer l tl en4 Su~. Wll<.oa, ~uellO 111, Totllk (1), 11-1'1-Parrltl\. W -11-. 4·4. I. -ICent, 1-7 MR o.troll, GIO-UI, L J-(21.A -21,• ._. .. , ....... Min........ 110 000 120-S 16 I Mllw..,.._ lit 040 OIW4 12 I Arroyo, v...-wn ISi, O'Cenl\Of Ill -W'(.....,, 8utere l•I. HNI, AU9Utllno 121, kff-.n Ill, festerty (I). Flft9"t (I) end Sim...-. w -AllQ.nllne, 7·1. 1. -Arroy0, .... S -Flrioen 117) HRt -Mllw-... MOlllOf 171. Simmons (Ill. Yount 11) A - 11,724. llM .. a 7,Mt.-nt 9Ml0n 010 O'JO l:I0-1 11 0 S.•11•• 010 Oil 000-5 • t Tortwl, luromalor UI. C•mPllell (ti 9llCI Gedrnen, Allento11 Ill; Clay, Oroeo 111. Ct•r• m. ""*"•n m, 11ew1ey m "'° Har'°"' llulllno w 8_..,.. M. 1. - (lef'I\, M . S -CentpOell U). H II -Setttle, ledlle Ill. Pecto..e• 191. 0r--.J,A'1• lelll,....e 02) a Olo-7 10 2 OMlond 210 010 ._... I t ,,.,....., $WWe'1 Ul efld Dem~; M. Nerrlt , Klno ma" i.1 .,,,. HHlll W - Mtwert, >-t 1.. -M. "'°''''· w , Hit _ Belllrnore. 11-l<ll• (I), S"'91eMrl 1111. Mvrr*" (!JI, OelUllM, """" 1111. A -u,m. NATIONA'-LEAGUE Cerdlnala 11, Dod9•re 7 I.Gt AMiii.iii IT, '-OUll ...... .. ..... , ......... 2110 Herra S220 ltwM911,a I 0 I 0 '()ller\11,a J. I 1 1 '-........ cf 4 t 1 I H•r .... 111 ft A l 9altOY.J' 4 0 0 I 541ttitf"' O t 0 t O.rwy,i. 4 0 I I H~f I 0 t 1 ~,,a J 0 0 0 IWO,lf I i J t ~.ri ' I I 0 Porter,< J 0 t 1 lcleecle.< ' I I I lnimmr,c 0 t t 0 ll•,211 4tt1 1.eu-.rf Je1t W.ICl\11 1 0 1 I ltanttrt... 4 t 2 0 ftenter,11 It 0 0 '"""-•" O O 0 I C41ttlllf.P 0 0 0 0 $11lrlty1o I O 1 O ,,le1,jlll 1 0 I 0 1.ltlell,-O O O 0 ,. _ _. 0 0 0 O 8reur1,jlll I O 1 1 /NftdlJ,pll I 0 0 0 1.Al'fml,H 0 0 0 0 Tflelt )I 1 t • TNlt 41 11 • t ............ .... ~,.. "' ,. --J II. Lailt 211 •1 tl-11 ·-..,._,,.,, I.Oii-'-• ...... •· II, "-"'' •. ti -Overrtrt, lcleMle, ,._,, ..._.. •• \.el(-... -... a,--. Hit -~IOI, ... (1). u --=x·:· weldllL,..SI " ...... Cllltllll ,._ aw. IP '"' • , ... • .. . .. .... 1 • • • • J I J t t J I I 1 I I I t t ...... t~ I • 1 • • : t ....., IW,wt ~ I • • L.-.. ...... .... , .. ,., • t •• W -U....T-J ll A-tt..•. ~ •••• P ..... 000 ---· • t • , ........ ··-1 _" .. ' 100 000 --1 • I Atle..ta 000 002 0011 2 J 0 llOQW• and C-•. Mehler, Camp 1'1 -8~1<1 w Mahler, 4, I.. "*'" .... S ~I Ill. A 10,0lt c-•· oi. .... , Sall Fran<ll<O 000 )00 110 ·S I 0 c111caoo ooo .,,, 001-t 10 o Whitton, Breining Ill, H@tland C.I, 1.awci. Ill -Moiy, Mertr, Ho•ell UI. w Her ...... r 161, ~Ill 111. Ca!Hll• 111 and J Oavt• w -Cllj>llla, t-0. L I.awl,., M ""' San Fra11cl1<0, 0 l•ant 1111. Leo.,.,,, 01 A U,1)1 Meb>,11.-.1 New Yo<k 100 000 010 I J • , Cln<lnNll 000 110 000 0-t I 0 L'fl\CI\, L.N<n UI. Allen Ill ar>d $~ .... S.av.,, H.,.... (IOJ ""d Nolen,O'larry w Alleft ~, L Hume.•l A 20.161 l'tolMlft•,As-t Houston 000 000 ~ O J 1 Pllll~le 014 100 00• .... ' 0 1(-, Smith l•I. SamOllo Ill "'° Pv 1011> C•llorl, M<Gr-111 and NIOAI-'It Carlton, 10-l L -ICM-• .• > "" Pn11-1on1t, Schmtdl 110> A JO I.JO Angel averege1 IAntNO Al • H Hit ••1 ...... C•r•w 1Q 46 " 1 JO au Grit II * ~ w ,, S) * l urleton no • .. • JI ,., l'orO U• 42 ,, 14 .. ttQ H-'°' u M J JO ,,, Oown•t111 111 JO u • ,. ,., Lfllll I .. 10 .. , It to c ..... ,. ti II a ,. HJ He•low •I 10 to 0 I ,. Hetrh .. J 11 ' .,. 011 •• u •f I t• "' Petek al • 0 no c •m'*""' ... ' ' 0 • Jtl BOIOf ll•n•-· l ol.al• "Ht ,_h "•'Wt ~·nu ttlW>n l.,,,. Jttf•--Wiii Fro\1 T' ,_,.,~ Mor•no Total\ t40 JI )0 10 it 1111 ,. • u 0 , "' I 0 1 Ut .. J .. "' '" l'ITCMIN\ IP N I to W-L altA ... , ., t) ,. ).J t~ llJ 14 44 .... ~ ., ,. " )-1 W l .. u 1' S-.J .... • 2 • IMI ,_US JO ~ ... ~ \0 14 It 1-' ,, )I ,, '° .... I• ' IO ' I J •h 14 0.1 I • 1 0 0-I .., .,. JOj JtO • ,. Top 10 1..-... us•tl•UI AMElllCAM LEAGUE ,.., tn , .. )" l it , .. '" HJ '01 •• I) so HI G Al It H P'c\. Almon. CIMc-.-JlO 11 11 m PK-. SHllif> .. JM n .. m z1.io, 5uttlf> s. ''' 11 n JJO 51"91eton,a.111mor~ .. 111 ,, 11 m 011 .. r, r .. H ., m '° ., m c., ... .._., 10 m .. n .m Mumpnrty, N._ York S1 121 27 7) Jn Hencle<-., Oakland 11 2IO SI '° J21 Ev•ns. &o.ton " 2'2 SI " J21 l.•nsford, &o\lon 6' 111 ,, '° J20 "-"-l llOmas, Milwaukee, 11, Armes, Oe11tand. 11, Ev.,,s, Bolton, 14. l'o.-. A,...1,, 14; Murray, Btlllmore, 1). Lu1lnskl, Chl<ago, U. Grey, S.nllle, u. """' ··"" '" Armes. O.kl•nd, ~J. 8 Bell, Teu•, 4'; O o llvle , Mllw•uktt, ••. Thom••. MHw .... kM. 47, Pa<IOt"elll, S.•Ule, •S NATIONAL LEAGUE G Al II H P'c\. Medtock, PltbbYron Sl tM 21 ., SJ1 Oewto11, Monlru 1 •3 2'1 43 IO m G-..-.~ u JM,_, n m ROM, Pllll.edell>IM• '1 11) •l " J2' Ourhem, ClllG-~ ''° J:7 tO Jl6 Fosl.,., Clncln,..,1 61 162 •S 11 lOt Br-s, ,,. ... Yo.-k •1 J:Jt 2t " ,• Howe, -on 61 2a H 1) Jl11 HemdlOn. Sen fr•n<IKO 6J 24S JO 1S .JOt Griffo . Clnctnnelt 6J 24' ,. 16 >OS "-"-SclwTHdl, Pl\1t-lpttle, 20. ICtnom.,, - York, "· o..._... Montr .. I, 11; ,,_, Cln<• .... t•. 1•. ~-rick, SI LOUIS, IJ. "-•an•"' Fo•ter. Clnconna ll, St , Schmidt. Pnil-P"I•. SI> 1C1t111mtn. New Y°"-... ; Concepcion. Clnc•nn•ti. •s. G•r••J. C>Meen .... Deep HI fishing NEWl'OllT (Arl"t l.011•l1tt l -10 •nol..-s: S7 bonllo. ~ ban, Jl rock 11th, "" meckerel. !Dllw-,'• Letk•I -214 •"Ole"' 211 Donlto, IS -IMIH. 12 c•ll'o beu, • yellowtall, 41rock11"1, 1.0lS m•O.,.el. DANA WMAlll' -m •no•"· IJO IMIH. "' bonito. l yellowtall, U roe• fllh. IOO mackerel. OCllAHSJOE -31' anole": J76 bonito, 1'5 c:ell<o ban , l5 "nd o .. s. 16 yellowtall, 31 ro<k llll\, 612 m«Ur•I SAN OIEOO (M&M 1.•otdl"f • ....... enN11t't, ....... i..-1 -UI ....-n: 1 1•llOW!ln ,......,, 4 albKor•. 4.S. Y•llOMall M berrecuda, 1'4bonito,1' ban, S7 roUI fltl\. LONO IEAC:M ca.1 ..... 1 Pier) -4S •noton: 110 oonlto. oo rnec0re1. t40 rec:it fish, 12 calico lleu , J Derracude, t y11-.11 CDllMll'• Wllerfl -"1 anglers. 1 lllutlln lllN, 2 ytttowtell, SJ barracuda, 15' Oonllo, l3>I cotl<.o lleu, 7S Hnd -•· J 11et111ut. m roe• 11111 100 -k I (l\fl• S•wn'°" 0 -1 Al!llt lla<erU, lt ti, 2 Al\dy Ovt\9r ,.._. 0-•I. I 00 00, I $efft M<~ 10.Celllr STI, IOI 11 190 lltUt4 I Wit ltllw ll"Ujel $Tl, I .. U , t J ey Helle11 llllH Oell!INNI, I O..•, J Dell Aktw IC:--li'leet.,1 Miii• U J, 1 OUJ 100 fly I I' .... Moftlet ..._,... Qere SCI, S. •. t Te!N McMvrctlo ce--llapld• $Tl. S. ... &. CNff'I' Dllleft ,...,, L-Mla STI, $1 It "°° _ .. , rola'( -'· llllO OolClfl(fte A r .. m. 4 0040. t MY tlecllMW•• A TNm, 4 00 "· > c-.. o PIMNl\I Hlllt, 4•01.JD. WOMIN '·* fr" t Tami 8t11u 111•11<.,. larnardlO STI. 11 04 te, t Tam"'' H ........ !Ardell Hllltl, II 01.tl, J IC•lf Ooo .. '1' ,,. .. STI. 11 11.41 100 Ot<l I Amy Miiier (i...ke Irle )liver OalpNn•I. I :Ot.U ; 2 Belt'( Mlkllell IMlll.()ftlo Vllle'(I, I OS.M, J. TtMY Heyet 18tt~tleY A4111eUOI, I 0.U 100 l>r'ffp I 8• .. rly Acker ((;jape Co*ll SCI, I tJ tt, 2 Grete HuUler IAllM SC>, t U ... J. ~'fa ISoolll (Wellll\OlOll STI. l •• " 100 fly I H-Wiiiiam• lltaltl(I/> YM> CA>, I Ol It, 1 Dotie OrHn tS.nle Ciera SCI, 1 03 llO, ' ~9411\ 8ttUlt I MoOttto City SCI. t l>'t> t 400 ~•Y rel•y t 8orkelty Aquetlc t CluO, 4 >I /I, 2 ()outer OrianOo, 4 U.1', >. Se1111 Ciera, • tt tt lnternetlonel meet lat( ........ Wet\0«-YI (Olt1-Me e..-.1 .. _,.., 100 I Met LAii..,, IU.S I, t0.12, 2 St.,. FIOfd !U S I 10 20, J Je" Pl\llllPt (U $.I. tO )I 200 I l'IO'fd lUS I 20 4 2 Pt\llllt» 1 U S l JO•> l Erwin Su mrt hl !West G•rMtllyl :IO IO 110 hurdln t Rene too Nellamlell IU SI, tJ 07 1 Tony Campt:>tll CU !U, IJ 14. J ROd Miiburn IVS.I, 13 ff 400 ""'01.. 1 Htrtld Schmid IWffl 0.9',,......YI. •t 11, 2 David 1.H !U.S l, 50.2 100 I J•m"' R0Dln10n tU.S l, I ...... , 1 AndrHt 8uue IBtsl Germen'(). I .. ff Hl t l(erl Ha n• Rtehm 1w .. 1 Germany! 216-l''> 1. Kl•u• Pt09fltu• (We~ Germany>. J4t.n1. J Monlted Huanlr19 tWut ~rmanyl.10·1 WOMEN 100 I Evt lfn A1hfOrd (US I. 11.0'1. 1, Anv•I• f aytor tcen•del. II ti. J. Linde H•olul\CI !S-nl. It lO 100 I Pelre KtelnDrenm t w ul Germa11y!, 1 OJ ti, 1 lrtN POCljeto-•I• I !.o•,.1 Union I. 2 OJ 1S. 3 Ltallt Werrtn CUSl tOlJS HJ I Ulrtk• Mtylarlll CWut Germanvl .._...,, l Pt m Spencer (U S.J, . , .. lJ I JOdy AnOerW>n tU S I, 11 11-., 2 Anna WIOd•r<IY~ !Polt ndl. 21·•. K.,tn H-1 1we>1 o.r ....... y), Jl-01'> ATP tournement , •• Meten, 0111•> l'IMI ""'"' JOl\fl McEn<oe <let ChrlS I.•"'"• .. l, M (Mc Enrw "'"" Ul,0001 Men's tournament (al Alltftlt) Sl"flet l'IMI Mel Purcell clef Giii•• Morellon, M , .. ,. I Purcell wins i is.000, Morellon ,1,5001. Women's tournament l•IT-•l , ....... ,, .... , Treo Au\lln clef Chrl• Evert LIO\'d ... t. •·• (Au•lln win• $.M,000, Lloyd $11,5001 Women's tournement Cal Me ..... , N.J.I "'"'" ..... 1 ...... Pam C-le *'· Marjorie 8 1e<kwooel. "4. .. ,, "-la T.........,ve def. T""'I'• Herfonl, .. 1, M, ~ lle1ll Hotton Clef. Aftll H~ 7•. •• ... ,. ~ry AOer <lal, ICelh'-' Cum-m l110t, ._,, •·4, Sue S.lllN def. Hane Strec'*"°"•· .. 1, k , M : W...O'I' W""9 de<. Juli. Her•lnclton ... 1. 2• • ._,. Hollywood Perk SATUltDAY'S L.ATll llllSUL T'S TINTH llACll. Ont mite pace, Callnu t l.ol\00) ' 40 U O J.40 Tho M..slro CClllll 1'.40 7.tO ke"4ell• eov < TOCldl 4.00 Aho raced Rauchon. Oles.I Eft9lne. Mlnlsler, E•Uwood Prince, Clevetan-t Prince, Clear Ni9111, AndV'I Merino. T lrne 1 002/S tJ IXACTA l:~SI paid UOl.IO. AllendtnU IS,132. Del Mar SUNOAY'S 11uu1..n 12'11191 U..le _r.....,_w .,....1 .. 1 l't llST llACE. 1111• m iles AlmCKI Summer (Torol •,00 2.IO l.IO AlrrOHf\O I Pi .. cel J.20 l.00 Senior Pe)wo IDl•JI s.oo Alto ••ud Truolll Herold, Nall,.. Run, Tlm09npol1, Ma)flhc Court Time I Q:2/S. SllCOMO ltACE. 6 lurtono-. War AlllM (MCC..ronl 12.to I uo "'° ~mlnole Kid !Merel 15.40 IUO Chlel A11111 IMCHa'9"91 UO Alto recect SlaOle Pal, Oafi.ro, Vt.__ Lew, 8•ft9Al•ro. Stylish Carffr, ,_,,. Wll .. 11, Peppoll I.Ou, Oercurt't H-, Ou uvtlle O.- Tlme· 1·1021) $2 OAILY OOUILE IS-.1 peld ~.00. THlltO llACll. • furlOftVj. 8old No OollOl. IMCCarron) S.20 J.20 J.IO Tek• OHd Alm IC..tet'MNI S.00 4.«I El A-10.1111ano) 6M Alto rKed: Treglc e.11. G•r11elCI c;-y. MldnlgM Mine, Ceo1.eln Al. Time: 1:11':)/1 $J llXACTA (H ) peld '1•.SO. l'OUltTH ltACI. 6 lurlongi. Wh•te Bell• (MeHergual 1.20 S.IO 4.00 l.e4y MH (Ort09el 24.00 10.00 F•mous Per'lormer CM<Cerronl J.IO Alto rect<I: 0.lenlr•, OoooOOllymlUll'IOI· 1y, E• .... nt Beauty, Golden c i..noe. MllflO Allltl, Mtnlrel't Mistress, HaPtl'I' llkltr, Ocun to <k .. n. Fly Ing Portner. Time: 1:121/S. "'"" llACll. OM mile Ml Oulmer• IM<Ger•onl J JO MO uo .. ,,., 8""' IC.teneclal 2.IO 2.40 81 .... Aotln l ltllHet) t.IO AllO rec:td: Vllerbo. l(elly My Pel, ICW., P_.._ttton. fl,.,., t1W /J. It IXAC'TA 1 .. 21 pelo Ut.SO. llJITH llACI. One mt ... Olllt (lty I.Ad IMCH•roual 4.40 St~GerNdlari IM<Cw •on> CetMlefle 1°"'9'1 SA UO ........ uo AIM rated. Tu.-11 COUM-,, CM!lbler, "••t09u, Clull Flv~11. P rlcu 11>.re VII, ICenvl. ''"": 1:174/S 111¥11fTM aace. 1111• m ilt•. ,,.,_. 1W1tt1-1 "oe •·• 4.oo l....,Off..,,. CM<Carrenl J.• tA Petter IT-> Ml Al• rec.-1 ~ c;o..no, ore11o ... O- ley, A(lt. A(k L.1111, I r_ .. , Hiii, CMiOoa C)lrt, ..... O'Avfll, It-I• Uitrnlty. TlfN: t: .. l/i. tt llXACTA CM I pe141tta5.JO. U PICC .. JI l"H+HI pe141 $11,11UO .,.,. ,, •llWllnO ll(ql• ltl• l\Ofwtl. "~ .. Sia tentoletleft INlld tM.00 wltll 45' .. Mfftt lltUU (flft fl«-). llMTM ltACll. I~ mu ... JIUln .. ,..,. (Tore1 lt.40 •·• UO •-Olfto (.WCe!'Nfll 10.40 UO ltec.• llftly (li\eniutrl ...... Al• tllCf!ll~ ........ '"""'.,'· ci.-.i11e $1•r, Al/If....,_, Hltfl C--.l, S.-lll!rry, lfwf!S.'-TI-: tt ... '"'"" •M:t. 11/t• ......... ~~•Cc.I-._.,., tJA .... ... ...... 1 • ...,,..1 ... ... "'•'tl'nMtAI t•......, .... ,. .. ,_.!,,..... .. ., ... , .... ._ l--. ..... ._. °"""' .. ... T!IM 110. .. 8IUICTA CNJ ......... . . ...._.._ ... ... t Warwtck Hiiia Open i..~....-....... 1·H• 1 ....... , ~ U_...M2-t17 ....... ~....,..~,t» ...... 11*"'471 • ...., ~. u.. •» ._.,.....,,, 011 Merl9ft. ..,,» 11 ..... "*-UI H"""1 C),_, $12,IU 1CH'•,...._..,. O.n ......,._, ttU1S ...-.,~ ..... , Mal-. $12,7H ...... II 1M1' Tom ICht, '10,lfO I,..._~ Ste,..M91n'(tl,$10,UO 1M7·7•n-t1't 0.n .._..,,110,tfO ,._.,.1 .. 1t-m l'"Aoailt.l,M,OIO U.17-7>-~- Jot>n c:-. tl.OSO lo-.a.t .. n-• Calvin,,..,.., M,OfO .....,.,,.,._. Tom Jenlll,.., .. ,lllO ...... 11-62-1 Biii "°""· .... 10.10-...1s-•1 O•MY f:dw.,., ... JOO 71•14).10-llt Peter°"''""""''· M,421 1t.12 .. 1.n -m Lon HllllCle, M,419 71 10-70.71 112 Oe"" Hiii, M,4H '1·n ·lt>-1>-m Biil 11.r.uert, M.A21 '6-70-1~112 Tim_.,,,, M,42t 14.e-lt..._,2" GlllOV Gllllel1, M.A• ,._14-1~ O.nlt-ton, M.•ll 1"1"11..._., Scott sin.-. M.41' 11..-1,._,...._.., Allen Mlllw, U .. U 72-11·1 ID Oen Paf>I, u .. u 7 ..... 11·7.....,ID Jerry -4. U,.U lt,.._12·1o-••tJ Jeff MOcllaO, U,6U l:i.-11·11-ID Mer• Mc~, U,•U .. 12·71·1'-ial """" -· u .. u 10-10-71-1>-211 BoClbv W-lllt, U .. IS 6._11 11·12-113 Chi Ool lt-loW. UAl' ,, ... 14>-1 .. 0.¥1d GteNITI. UAl' 1 .. 1J.1~11' 8_,CM,U,026 IJ.1171*-2'4 J°"" F...,,_, U,02' II l).11*-J14 Jim SI..-.. lUU II IS.71*-JIS Ge ry McCord. i t.61J 14-14>-12*-JIS victor It-•-. ,,,.u n 11·14>-11 m TM Goin, 11.411 124'·12·1)-JIS Miiier a.oe<. ,l .. IJ 1,_...11 .. 2 • O•w Ek llalbt'V"' ..... u n II 10 72-JIS Ben CAnlhew, lt,1S7 12·71 ,...._._ Crelo 5-. tl,ISI 15'*1>-10-• Tom SNw, $1,IS1 69-14>-IH>-• O.A Weltlrlng. II, ISi 11·10 IJ.7>-• Merk I.ye, •1.157 ,._7).Jt·I>-• Mlk• s..tllvt11, SI, ISi 74>-l 1·11-14--S<0tt Wal•lnt, ,1,157 12 ,,_.._,,_,.. Jol\ll Malla, $164 14-1).11 Jl1 Al Gel-oer, $644 •t-74-72·72 111 How..ci Twitty, $644 , .. 7).lt>-1$-111 LPGA tournament lat SMllM Meiellb, Olllel B-111 °"''"· uo.ooo " ,, .... ,, ... Jan s1.-..to11. l.2',000 72·1Wt.7t-JIS Oon11t i:-1. 111,000 lo..t-14-1~,. ICellly wtllt-111, Sll,SOO 1).12·11·1C>-M JoAMe (Mner. Sll.500 II n .7....__, SAiiy 1.lttle, ll,SOO 71-72-INlr 1tO Pal 8recllef, "·''° IJ..7).1).7J-1't Amy Alcon, M,ljO 12 IS-7~t 1'1 Nano L.op1·Mlt". U,000 INll 1u.._ 1'S J a11t 81etoclo,, SJ,000 1).IS-1lr1 19' JeMy ..... Smllh, ti.too 7 .. ~·IH• 207 ...Jill Slmpwn lnklltr 11·1"4t.1t--JOJ • Amal..., NFL exhibition NATIONAL C:DNl'•ll•NCE Wft..,,,OM•• W I. T l'I' ,A~ ~n frentlKO N•wOr .. _ 2 I 0 1' '2 .. , 1 I 0 to .. .., "·-I 2 0 t3 • l33 Atlent• I l 0 .. II 150 WHl!lnglon St. l.oult Phll-IPf\I• H.Y Glanh OellH Ee ...... Dl•h- J 0 0 '° , 0 0 ,,. , t 0 ., J I 0 '1 I 1 0 •2 C.ral01¥1t._ JO I 000 J4 I 000 '° .. , " .. , 111 .m Grffft Bey 2 I 0 62 • 6'1 Dtlroll I 1 0 .. 7S .m Tampe Bay I 2 0 .0 SI m Min-• 1 J o 1' .. m Chl<tQC> I 2 0 JI i1 m AMElllCAN CDNl'UlllNC:E Miami New Envtend N . Y • .i.ts . ..., ... l•tllrnoro C:IM-1 ci .... ~ Pltt"""Oll "°""°" la-.OOlvh- l 0 0 IS ) 0 0 ,, 1 I 0 '° ' , 0 u 0 J 0 0 ~ .. Dlv- 41 I oao JI I 000 ,, .., ~ m SI 000 2 0 1S " .., , 0 1 0 I 1 0 ... '°° •• " m n ... m S.nO-.. 0•"-o.n- w-..01 • ..._ 210 1' .... 1 1 1 o 51 n m IC•-Clly s..n .. I 1 0 • .. m 120 2612"3 0 J 0 SJ 11 000 ~r"•k­ Ntw E1114•nd U , Oekltlld JI Tampa Bay 21, HOU$1on 11 Mleml JI, Oe1rolt 27 Clllc.aQD 2•, Clndn11ell 21 Buffalo )I, Clewlenc:l 20 N. Y Jail JI, N Y Glenb 24 We\lllngton u, Benlmon 7 St L.oult ••. tC•nMs City J San FrentlKO 24, SHiii• 1 O•llu 14, PllUllUrvl\ 14 Ml~a 70, Allanle .. Oonwr 11, Green 8af 1 , ..... , •• k .... P11118clelphl• l6, New Or .. an. I Eagles 36, S1lnt1 7 "'" .., 0.."9" New Orie.,,. 0 1 o C>-1 Phll-pl\le 12 O 1 11_,. Pl\1-FG Fr~lln 42 Phi -CMmlchMI 4' -· from J __.._I (klCklell«ll Phi -FG Frenlolln S.. NO-ltoge" I run IRl<•nlo kl<lll Phi -Cerml<f\eel JO pen from J-1 IAttnUSlkl l Piii -(emciflolO 11 peu fr-Plwr<lk IAtmus llkkl Pl\1-FG Allnut 64 Phi -L.eFI..,, '1 peu from Pl...,Clk IA-klOI A -211001 l_....,Stittla.tin RUSHING -H-Or .. ent. G lloge" 1..a, T ....... 4-27, J. "°"'" J..10, Wll...,., M , • Me11"lno ,_., Galllt'eall\ 1·1, Holm.> 1-1. Pftlt ......... Oii-WO, Mon\90lnff'I'. M t, M11rray '-It. Harrll\9t011 s-11, '-'Pfleld .. II. l'ltl1oa 1.1. o .............. 2·1 PASSING -.... Orl••11t. Man111no lt·~IOO, Scott l·IH .. 7 l'l\lleOtlpflla, Jaworski 11·21-J-221, l'laerclk J.4·0.tt, Hartel J..4.4-20. ltlECEIVINO -...._ Orlt•ns, Merklnt 4-4t,~4-11, 8.,ktWl, T'(ler).J,J ltoten w , 8.-r 1·2•. o. Rogan HI, Wiiton Mt, P1111.-1p111e, Montgomery).'°· C:ermlclwtl M7, CM/lllflelCI 1-:13, IAl'leur 2-6>, IC"tlflt J.17, l'IUlt. .. 2..i•, Herr!,._ 2..f, Gia~ Mt, H-• 1-17, Perlt.~ 1·14, Murr.., M, SATURDAY'S LATE RESULTS Broncoa 17, f>acker• 7 1c-~~ G,_..., , O o 0-7 Oen-0 o 10 1-11 oa -Ol'•Y '5 ,.. 1nteruiitl011 """"' IS'-"'l •k•l O...-Lytlt4""" ISMlllfwtlllckl Oen -1'0 S.fftfoft ,, Oeft-Lytla 11Httf,..,.. ""'n'°" CSllal,... fert •le.It.I A -n,UO ,..,.... ._._. ltUSMINO -0'"'1 .. Y..1 Atkin• $-», Wiii..._. '°"• I_., Mi, 9"16 .. It, IWd- 41eWI .. 1. ~. l'Mr• •h, II ..... U. PreMell S-•, .,._ J.lt, Wwlt $-16. Lytle ..16,C..... .. 1t. ,.USIHO -0.-ley, Otc-.y .. ,....,,. Whltehurilt .. 1'·1•49. 0•11w.,, Merton .. ,,_1.1t, ~ ....... , ltf:C:EIVINO -0.-kY Iv_,.., 4-li, Ml ....... *-It, AltllM ''"· •1111 1·1', CMt> fMfl •1a. i........ MJ, A. T-.-t.14 Oe~. ltM 2·JI, o.M 1·"· W.,_ Ma. Lytle 1-17, """911 l•I .. l'etf>M M S, 9-H1, ,_..1 .. , • ...., 1 ... Jets 37, Olanta 24 lc _ _,......,. 0 ,, J 047 , 1 7 7-44 ------....... -... -· ... ·· ... -· Vlldno• 20, Falcons 1t k-. -.-.-" Atlante J • o IJl-tt Min-a I 0 11 t--40 Mlllll l,_6rlll\ 10-lar U O ) All "" M6.u..n1 41 0,!1~ftOll;eln ' llAU lt'Om llM1k-I lklO MINI ~-U ..... from IC•-lllCk lel~) ,,:.:;.tck~'11n 42 pe .. lntercoeptl°" '°""'" All FG LUC.khurtt 11 All Fence I run (Mau..n1 klOI A .... l .......... ISIAtltlkl RUSHING Allenta, Fltigereld t->O. Cal" ).U, Jont> HS. Fence 2·12, HIOllM2·7, Andrew. 4-7, Strong 3-S, Mafbttry M . Ml~ netot•. lrown 'I-SO, YOUllO 1·14, ...... -. s.11, PeKllal t-2. Rnnao 1.0 Kramw 1-0 011> ,... • • PASSING -Allante , 8t"0WUI IJ..11·2-202, Jana• t-t2·M7, Morosal •t.O.O Min-.., Krtmet 1•»-1-161, OlltJ..).0.14. R £CE rv I NG -Atl•nt•. F ren<I• ).71, Ayo..-,_.i, Jenttlfl• 4_.2 Je<kson 2-42 Miiier 2 J3, M. Smith 2·JO, F1t1oere1ct 1-1e: Strong t ... Ctln I_., R. Smtih,_. M'--• RHheel Ml. l..tCOU<lt 2-'1, YOU119 .. ,., Wllltt 2·21. Brown 1·U, M<Oole , .. , s--)4 P•tcNI ,.... j 49ers 24, Seehew1!1 17 S<-lly o.. ..... S.•tue Sen l'rentlKo ~-FG Atver.,50 11 0 0 0-17 1 0 1 tt-J• SF Solo"'°" u e>au "trorn Motote11t 1Wert<'11ng kl<k) ~-1.-It run I Herrera kk M) Saa Smith I"'" CAtveret kk k) !.F -Turner '1 lnterc•pUon r•turn IWtrklli"O kl<kl SF FG WHKlllf111 JO Sf Wrlo bt " lnltr<eptlon return IWtrKhlng "Ck I A -Jl.S6J 1 ... lv ..... I SIAtlltlU RUSHING -Seani., Ad~lns J..43, JOC1M ~-ll, 1.-~n. Smith ... u. Oootnlnk 4..f Son Fr•ntlKO, Sleuch ).a(), Jones 10-2', EM..y ~ 14, Berllt mln 1-7, Pellon 1.J, Oollvlt M PASSING Se•lllt, Zorn 12·21·3·'4, Adkin• ~94, Krlto ).Jr.o.41 s.11 Fran < IHO, Mo11ta n• lJ.20·0·116, 8tn)emln ll·l ·HSS RECEIVING Sulllt, Smith J.••. L•roent :1-:U, Mc Cullum 2--0, Oootnlnk 2-40, McGrefh 2·18, Lent 2·22, Joctat M •, s,,-,, 1·1 Son FrenclKo, Sotornon 6-111, Clerk S-11, J°"" ).3', Young ).Jl, Ogilvie MO. Patton1·1t, Sl•uch 1 1•. 8ou1t l·ll, Cole 1 ... E .. , • ., , .. Cardinali 16, Chlel1 3 k•tlly 0..l'W" SI l.OUil K•nwsC11y KC FG 11 L-ry !.II. fG JtO'Ocnoohw 0 10 > 0 0-16 0 J Sii. Nt"o" 1 lumDI• re turn I 0' C>onognue 1'10 I SIL -""-,_,•!kick lttltcl) A •2.SjO 1 .... vW...1Statl11kt RUSHING St l..oui•. Antler-. 12 .... Mllchell l-H. L.ove •n, Morrl• ~It. a- 2 14, ~II 1-', H•rttll )·1, LIKh H ttenwii C•ly, Wiiiiam• J..2:7, M<;1Cn'9111 •21, Moller I 11, H-lrl1, O.ta11ty ..... K- ney 1-~o. Oag41•no I 10 PASSING -St l.OUi .. Harl lS-+71-1, l.ia<h i 4 2'·0 Kantu Clly, Kenney 2• ... 10..2, Mlllf>r 1·1·1-0, Gagliano J·l·l:MI A ECEIVING SI l.oul•. MarJl\2·1S. Fl.,.. t r ' Zl, H•rrell 2·11, R-t·ll, ,_,,..,,_, l·I, Tiiiey I IS ICanw• City, OlxOll ).SI, H•rvey 2·20, Oel•nev J.JO, ""°""'" 1·14, Rom• I·•. M<KnlQhl , .. Cowboys 24, Steelers 14 PllbburOll 0•11•• Sc .. t lly o...,,.,., 0 l I 0-14 ) 1 0 ....... ,4 Oat FG Saptlen l'I Pit -Cott fumoi. roteovery IB<ll\r klekl Oat J°"" •run ISePliffl klcll t Pit -ThOr..Con 21 e>aU lrom Sloucll Clleflr kick> Oel Sc>rlno> 61 pan from w111te 15ap11.., klckl Oa1 Jonn.-. II .,.., trom Wnllt (~ llen -l<kl A -63.50< 1 ........ ,~" RUSHING Pltltl>Uron. Hertll 1·U , f-~14 0.llH, $CWll\OS .. 5'. ~ 1·l4. PASS4NO PllUllUrgl\, Stowt t.ll·l·IQ. Bred111ew • 16 1·70. Oa ttu , Whllo JI.,.., .• ,,.,.,,.. l.J- ltlECEtVING Plttollurgl\, H•WI"°'"' s-.1. S-..y l-41 o.11e1. J04\11ton .. n. Sor-lnot).IOt NASL pleyoffs 'lllST •OUND 1 '"1-«· Tlwoel S..-.y'•Sc- ChleaQD l. Seettle 2 <Chlceoo '"'" -la• 1.01 Tempe Bey 4, Vlll\COUVer ' (Tempe .. , leecl\ _,., 1.01 JeclUOnvllle 3, Atlanta 7. ot, IJec:•...,.vllle l•ed• _ ... 1-01 Fo11 l.eudtrd••• l , CetQery I (Fort L.tudenialt •• ., ... ,, .. '-01 TMlr'•O•-LotAnotlts•tMontr .. 1, n T-.,-sG...,t Ja<tc_..vllla et Atlante. n ........ ., .• o.m .. C•toerr .. Fort L.euderOOI•, n TuheetMl,,,,.SOl•.n p--et Son 0"90, n c 111eeeo e1 s..n ... n r.._ Bey •1 Vencouwr. n T--.r•O- Mont....,lel l.oi Anoeles, n ,......,,A ... D,lfMC-y T empa Bey e1 v-ouwr. n S-Wy,,..... "·" -_., Jec.....,.v11i. et Alltnl•, n --..,, ......... " """_,. s.en .. etCNc-TulM e1 Ml,,..._. M-rwat et l.M Anoe! ... n P0111-at Sen Ola9o, n ........, ..... "· ., __ , For1 '--,,,.le a1 C.l99ry, n NOTE The Cotl'l\os r.cel-e ttye 111 Ille llrsl ,_ f0< nevino Illa btst rocorel 0owt1111 ,,.. ... _.._ P•btt 500 (at lllkM,, Le•e, Wl&.1 The -IO llnlWf'• In S4incle'('I p-,.. C•rnet GT ~ cor teca, with type of <et, ·-~Id -,.,,,,,..,., .... r ....... In tnCll\l 1. ltelf sc.m-1111 ar>d Herel4 Orafll. l'otldle Tine tu, US, IOS,41S. t . 8•1.,. lt•4me11 end Sam ,. .. ,, Chewd•-l.OI• f-400, 11~ J. OWis CMcl -Jim 11>.Geft\1, '"'"'""" L.el•T•, 1tt. '· 11b ~--Tot'll Oloy, l'WtCM Tlwllo '"· ,,,_ s () ........ Mon!tl .,,.. ...., 11 ... 1. l'ot.a. Tint as. ue. 6. Jeftf\ "IUpetrlO or>d Jim 1....-,, ~ Tur11o 9)$, It-. 1 TM "•Id •1111 8 111 Wllltll,..i..,, "°'1<11e T\#1M m , 111. •· LM Milellotr Hod Well Wiren, Mam 111(·7. Ill t. o.M11 Mtt -C!Ntl 1(.....,1, 1MW M-1(, llO. 10. l..telll 11ec.•11un1 -o... ,,,..,...., Oelt\11\ 21(, IOI. British sailor at home By ALMON LOCKABEY o.11,...,.......,..,..., "Locul knowledge" is con· s1dered a great advantage in competitive s ailing. But Ben Altman of Cowes. England, didn't let the lack of local knowledge slow him down Sunday in winning the first race o f the Et c h e ll s·22 North American Championship in the ocean off Newport Beach Either that or he and h.is crew, Phil Lyons and Jerry Moulton, found the 15·20 knot southwester· BOATING ly and choppy seas similar to the cond1t1ons in the Solent where they recently won Cowes Week in the E·22 Class Barry Nesbitt of Australia a lso showed a liking for the strong wmds and lumpy seas by placing second. leaving third. fourth and fifth places to local sailors Scott Ramser , Andy M acdoniAld and Tim Hogan in that order Newport Harbor Y iH'hl Club is host to the six race series which continues through Thursdav Sunday's race was sailed over a ><>·mil e Olympic course Despill' the strong wind cond1· t10ns. there was only one minor gear failure. Others in thl· top 10 were 6 John Savage. Aus tr alia. 7 David J esberg. San Francisco. 8 Don Bever, San Diego , 9 J ohn Ravizza. San Frantisco 10 Tim Wilson. Australia From Paae Cl occ • • • best passing p(!rcentage m one season < 54 percent 1 best career passing percen lage < 49 per cent >. longes t pass play <82 yard!-.> total offense for one season ( 1.608) Tucker is quick to pmnl out that all three ()f his quarterback hopefuls will get an equal shot at the starting JOb ·'I'll look al al I of tht•m Since I don't have a sophomore return· ing, I'll lake a look at them equally through the second game They'll all get as much work a s possible." Tucker says .. Both Art a nd Clay are good quarterbacks." he continues "l certainly won't make a dec1S1on until I see the m in a game .. Tucker doesn't denr that he knows JUSt a htlle ·bit more about his son 's ab1lit1es He 's a regular s pectator a t CdM games There. Clay had only to worry about pleasing his o" n high school coach The situation at OCC presents a radical change one that Dick Tucker thinks his son can accept. "( think Cla v realizies that there will be a certain am ount of pressure on him I don't think he's apprehensive about playing he re, a nd l know he doesn't think he's going lo be treated any differently ... Tucker says. "Clay's a real squared-away guy. I don't think he'll feel any pressure from me. At Orange Coast. I have assistants who are given a lot of r esponsibilities I j ust coordinate ever ything," Tucker continues. Still. it should be noted that the one element or the team Tucker has h andled over the years is the quarterbacks .. All the guys have a chance here. Art and Clay are pretty equal. <Both are left-handers and both are 5·10. 165 pounds1. Art is a real nice person and a real pleasant guy to work with," Tucker says of Maytorena 'Tm looking forward to having him on the team.·· Tong takes Class A win Dave Tong's Momentum car- ri e d him t o Eagle Rock , Catalina Island, in fast time Saturday to win Class A in the fifth race of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's Aneelman Series for Performance Handicap Rae· ing neet yachts. Wlnner in the Class 8 division was Mariposa. skippered by Dick Hayden, BCYC. and the Class C wtnner was Fun Won, Bruce Fettel, Cabrlllo Beacb Yacht Cluh Ttophy winners In each class: CLASS A -1. Mornentum • Peter Ton1, SSYC; 2. Rot Foot, Ron Dau1herty, SOVC: 3. E Tlcke.t. Gary Chandler, SSYC. CLASS 8 -1. Mtrlposa, Dick Hayden, 8CYC: 2. Porpy, Roy Sinclair, BYC; 3. Fl.yin& Colors, OavtStone, BCYC. C~ C -1. P'un Woa , Bruce r.ettel, CBYC: 2. Aloba n. Glenn RHd, YC; a AvutS ll, Fred" Mulmo, VYC. , ............................... __._... ___ .....,.,.....,.._...,.._.._.._._....,_ __ _.... ...... .....,._,.,..,~~--=-~·-----------f I • •. • .. OU 6 =• .• -·- I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24. 1981 cs --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------. I FOR THE RECORD Bones found after 7 ! Births WHEN TO SHOOT A private citizen prae tices when to s hoot at threatening figures on screen in training session in St>t.1ltle Sep- temtx>r & Associates Inc. trains police a nd private t:tltzens who own handgun~ when to ,., . .,....... ·hoot "If Wl' allow pt•opl<• to bt·ar arms, thl'll why not n •quin.• them to lakl• soml' ktnd of performann• tour"<.''1 •• "><.aid a spokl'">fll;rn for the firm Good ol' down home spot Out-o f-way Florida m eetin ' place packs in crowds tOVTH COAi!' MIOICAL CllNTla , .. ,. Mr •"Cl Mrs. Cr•lo r..or-ra, Sen Jvon c.phlr-. llOy , .. , t7 Mr end Mrt Ooroory A Gra .. a, Leg.,... S..C:ll, llOy Mr end Mn Merion S H..,,l•r. 1rv1ne. glrl J .. ,. Ntr -~ Tim Pt\1111-. S... c .......... 91r1 , .. , 11 Mr end Mr• 8ruet G Zlm· mermen, L~ 8N<ll, girt ,. ....... 4 Mr e nd Mrl L•wten<• J Cu111otri.on. Sen Juen C•Pl•tr•no. 9lrl A-IS Mr -Mn Jon It llroomen. l egUNO 11ee<11, girl Mr end Mrs KotwWlll P Cocll,.n, Soutll l.eQoiN, boy A.,._.. 7 Mr end Mn . J-0 Ceuwy. 111, Le9uM Bo.ell, glr1 WtlSTEaN MtlOICAL CENTlllt , .. , JI Mr ard Mtt Stt""9n !>mllll, Costa Mt .. 9lr1 '"'Y• Mr. and Mrt OOu9 Miiier, LAOguna Btacll, llOY Mr end Mn RICllerd Folio.or, l•~IM, girt J .. y ,, Mr -Mrs Mlc,..•I Har1m•n. Hvntlnglon Beech 9lr1 "--'' Mr •nd Mr• Marl< Schult. Irvine, OOy ,.....,.., Mr and Mr1 Jlm F arooQuH, lrvlM, glrl ""-"'' 1 Mr end Mrs Roller1 Ktnt, lrvl,.t, boJ Mr -Mn Gollln, I,.,,,.._ 01n ,._.. Mr and Mrs Wiiiiam llunlert, Huntlngion Bo.ell, girl ... _,,. Mr •nd Mr•. Gr19 C,ooper, Fo..,.,. teln Vall•Y. girl. AI09...C II Mr end Mn. we.,,,. II FrandMf\, Huntlnoton lie.ell, boy ,..,..,,. M r .,._, Mr\ M•r 8 All. tfvlne, boY Mr end Mrt Merr Ill Grimm, Sen Cl•"*''•· Doy. CARD SOUND. 1-'la IAP 1 Maybe it's the <'rab cakes. or the conch frittt•rs Maybe it's the country music and dancmg Or maybe it 's the down-home fri endly "rednecks" who make the out of the-way restaurant a popular mt•et1ng place t} pa· al nautical lri mm1ngs Ouls1de. under a lhatched roof. 1s a thick. bouncy "ooden floor for dancing and seating for about 250 Th£• facilities arc adc quale during the week. when Alabama Jack's closes at 7 pm hC'il\ y on r1sh dishes, !>hrimp, conc·h. <:rah. hilmburgers and ... and\\ 1thes No hard liquor 1::. available or perm1llt•d on thl• premises. but th~rt'·.., plt'nly of ('old beer. soda and \\int• Highway projects \suffering "You'll find lonely s rngles and e n t 1 r t' f a m 1 I i e s . w e a 1 t h y yachtsmen and ragged bikers. farmers and executives 1f you <'an find Al(.tbama Jack's Going south on U S I toward the Florida Kevs. you have to hang a left on Card· Sound Road just out of Florida City. and you can't miss it It's about the only thmg you'll find along the next 29 miles of two-lane road. "I come here JUSt a bout every Sunday," said Thelma Sykes. who owns a cosmetics manufac- turing company in Miami. "I work very hard. and this is the only place you can go to un- wind ... This roadside ··meeting place:· a Florida tradition for years, has gained renewed popularity the last 20 months or so. Much of the credit goes to proprietor Rose Presti, who moved here from Pittsburgh, but looks as if she just stepped off a Hollywood m ovie set. The place isn't fancy and the only dress code is to "be com- fortable ." Ins ide there's a luncheon counter, half a dozen tables. ce1ltng fans and some Rul what happens e\'er\ wt•l•kend staggers the 1magina tion The place s wells with ('rowds numbering up lo 600. Ill· duding plenty of ch ildren brought by parents The sounds 'It's what Florida used to be ' of pc-ople having a good time and tht• noise of dancers "cloggmg" to Ii ve country music carries for miles "I've been coming here for four years.·· said George Miller. a 49-year-old truck salesman from Miami. "It's got good food . good entertainment and every- one gets to have a good time without any hassle ... "I come here because it re· minds me of what Florida used to be." said Art Manon. a Ken dall area "l'eal estate broker "It's one of the few places we call 'down home.' ·· While most "regulars"' cite the friendly atmosphere at Alabama Jack's. they also brag <l bnut the food The menu 1s PUBLIC NOTICE PUil.JC NOTICE '.\h Pn·..,l1 "s s1dek1('k 1s a bur- l~· man from Detroit known onl) as ·captain Ri<'k .. lle's fnend· I}. Im t•s lo fish , but 1s the key factor 111 th<' <'Onv(·rsion of Alahama Jal'k'., from a rowdy hangout 11110 a ramll~ place Warnrng Don"t gt•t out or line \\hen he'~ around Al:.ihama Jack's opened back in th~· lute '40s and has always had a good dl'al of fame good and bad O\'er the \ears. It passed through three" or four owner!> until Ms Presti took 1t O\'er nearly two years ago Thal happened wht•n she came to South Florida "looking for something different" and want· ing to get away from Pittsburgh. where she O\\ned and operated a construction company "I bought 1t the same day I saw it." she recalled, "but it's hard work " She docs all the cooking he rself. which s he said she lt>arned from her Italian mother R1tk. however, said he's ready lo reveal he r "!H'c·rel ingre rl1ent " "ll'" lhl' garlic," he• laughed. "I S\\Car. 1f we sold breakfast ct•n•al :-.ht• d put garlic on 1t " PUBLIC NOTICE ·clean-up funded ,ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMll STATllMllNT "CTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FICTI nous aUSINESS NAME STATIMENT TM fojlowi"9 penon I• dol"9 butl MU•\" ELECTRO WEST, 137 2Jnl SlrMI, coot• Mew. CA mn ARTHUR CLARENCE PEACOCK JR • 131 ~d SlrMI, Costa -W. CA .,.,,, TlllS bu\ineu I• con<luct..i bY an In dlvlduAI Ar1hur Clerentt Pw.coCk Jr. Tllll ~element wet fllecl •1111 the County Clerk of Oranve County Ofl A "9 tJ. 19'1 f'UIUC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUS aUSINIESS NAMIE STATIEMllNT The fol-111Q PtnGll Is 001"9 bull· neHeS BERKELEY <AP > The Assoc1at1on of Bay Area Governments has been given a $90.000 federal grant to help it prevent toxic chemical spills and to coordinate clean-up efforts . The Department of Transportation progr am is meant to help the as sociation lo identify re- sources available in case of a toxic spill SPLICING SPECI A LISTS -----------C.A T \/., 1300 Mems ............ •5K, Coote Mew, CA '2'16 r McCOlMICX MOlTUAllES "I L<1quna Beach DANA ROBERT CARDINAL. UOO Aclarm •-. Cot••"'-••· c,r. nn• Tllh buMMH Is conc:tucted by en In.. dlvlduAI. O....R C.,dlM I Tiiis Itel-I w•s lllecl wllll IN County Cit<• o4 O••noe County on A\19 11, 1t81 Tiit fot1owln9 oer~n• art doln9 buslneu .. "THE ACCOUNTARY •It! Berk-. lrvlM, CA '211• MARY EMILY WOODWARD, 4'1 Berk-. lrvlM. CA '2114 Tllit t>uslneu It conduct..i by en In dlvl-1. MaryE-..ard Tiiis tlaltmenl wa• llled •1111 t"' County Clerll al Or-Co..nty on July ....... PUBUC NOTICE "C'TITIOUS aUSINUS NAME STATEMENT The followlflO _...., h dol"O bull MU as. HERITAGE INVESTME•HS, 1 .. 1 Beker Street, Cmle M .. e. CA t2U6 DAVID WALTER MYHRE. um Weawl"9 Cir<it, Colla Mts•. CA ,,.,. Tiiis bu<ln.ss Is cone1u<1..i by e n In cllvlduel. 0.vld W Myhr• Tiiis stat-I .... folecl •1111 ,.,. 4q4.94 I 5 Covnlv Clerk ol Oranve County on A119 21, lt81 ...... u .. , ..... Lagun;i Holl" 768 0933 San JJ<1n Capo..,lrann 4q5 177h HAllOtt LAW~MT. OLIVE MorluJry • Cc-metery Crcma1ory 1625 G1s1er Ave Cos1a Me~a C,40 '>'>54 "IHCt HOTHHS llil HOADW.U MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 042·91!10 IALTllHGHOM SMfTH & TUTHILL WISTCLIH CHA"tl 427 E 17tn S1 Cos1a Mesa ti46-Q37' NICIUOTHIH SMm4S' MOITUAAY 627 Main St f'\Jntangton Beach 536 6539 PACIAG YllW MIMOllAL PAH Cemetery Mortuery Ch•P91·<:r•mtf<>fY 3l500 Ptc1hc View Om•• ~port Buch ~4700 PulMl\/wcl Or-. (OHi D•lly PtlOI, PvlMll/wcl Or-C<NUI Delly Piiot, A\19 11, 14, )I, Sepl I, 1 .. 1 ,.,._., A119. l4., JI, S.pC I, U , Itel 3740'41 PUlllC NOTICE PUlllC NOTICE LllOAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN l ... t the 1o1_1,,. larM of 1ounc1 °' ,..,.., Pf'-ly ...... -... Id b¥ I ... Pollco D<lpanment a1 tr. Ctly 01 Cost• Mew 10< • .... lod In tJctH al ninety (t0) N'fl! Girl's Bl .. Sctlwtm lll<'f<I•. Gtrl'l a1 ... J 5pe1 SC_,... llkycl•. BoY'• G,_ IO Spd Sc_I,., Blcyclt, Bo'I'• Yellow Mo>nleomery W•rd 10 SPCI a 1c11c11, 8oy's ltt41 Nttah 1 StMf lllcyclt, Boy'1 llr-n/lled to ~. SCllwlnn Cet1tln.nt•t Blc11clt, 8ov'• 91•0 llovct Un*' Motocro11 ll<y<tt, Two T. V. Sets, ,.,,,_Y NOTICE IS l'UllTHER Gii/EN !Ml If no -9-•" end sirove1 111, -ftltf'llllpal h tw-'Y within -m .. .,. fol-lllQ , ... pul>llc.t ll• .. tltll Notice, h 1111• .... e1o -II ¥HI In tM fl~. If Iller• bl -. or In IM C1t11 9f COii• Me1e, In ..,tell <•Mt ,.._ Pl'OlltrtY -II lie IClld ••public euctton ., • """ aM.det• llt • -ed OATEO·....,..,.. 17, ''" It. tl. N!TH CHIEitO" P'OLICE ..,.ltl'M Orlfltll CMtt Oehy Piiot, A ....... at. 1-' J1SMI T~ lotl-•"9 _,..,,. •• doinv buw· "«''' .s CASCADE POOL SERI/ICE, 7ftl Glencot, "l. Huntlnqton Ba.ell. CA '2~1. P 0 8o• 134 C0<ona 0.1 Mar, CA '7"2S STEPHEN 0 BURKHART, l"I Gl•ncot, "l, Hunllnqlon Beacll. CA .,.,, Thll bu•m•ss h conducted by an In 01v1oue1 St"*-n D 8ur•l'Mlr1 Thi\ \lel.......,t wa\ flied wilh the County Cieri. of Dr•nve County on A\19 21, Itel l'lt"'7 Publl"*I Oren~ Coe\! Dally Pltot, AU9 14, 31, Sepl 7, I'. "" l72HI PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINISS ffAME STATtlMINT Tiie followlt19 Potr.c>nt er• dOl"9 bu>lnotH H ADDIE BELLE"S CUPBOARD, 05 Snu9 Harbor Road, Nowport BH<ll, CA n"1 EUotlNE A ENGLAND, m Sftuv Harbor Roed, NtwP<>n Beacll, CA .,.., Tlllt ~notU I\ C-.Cled by an In.. dlvl-1 Elelnot A f"91•n<l Tnl• •lattmenl wH rnecs wllll Ille County Clerk of Orenve County °" A\19 ll, Itel 1'1- Publo.-Or-Coell 0.lly Piiot, AU9 11 24,ll.Sotol I, Itel ,..._., PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMI STATllMINT Tiie 1011ow1nv person• ••• 1101ng butl1'H•• D M S. ENTERPRISES, 17" Newport 111va .. Cott• Mesa, CA n•v PAULS V. DAVIS, .... Pf'MPKI, Nt•llO<I BMGll, CA n..a, BILL Ml!lllllDETH, 240 Hlet Lene, ~ S..cll, CA '1663. Tiii• bu1lntt• It <Onducttd llY • ..... rill ~p PMllS.V. D..,11 Tiii• ti~ ,,.., tlled O#ltlt t11t County Ct~• ol Or•ntt County ~ A "9 21, 1'11 ~, .... Pu4111.....i Or-C.Ott 0.lly Plftil, ,11119.14,JI, S.111 7, U, 1'11 27'1 .. I l'ICTITIOUS aUSINllS NAMI STATIMINT Tiit tollowlflt Ptl .. nt ere .,.Int 1>1111-•s Y•<lltlnt Co11111ta11u Cll•rtff $••YIOt, >•16 Vie Oporto, •1 , N•wporl llNcll, et11tornl• '166.l. ltoberl 0 Hf9h~, Ut Vlrtlnle PIK•, c.tA ........ C.llfornle ~ R4*trt ~ Ii«, fO 1!"'"'4"" Ster "-· N""'9ft h«ll, CAllhwnle .,~ Tiii• llU•lneu I• condllcl" •1 • ..... , .. ~,. Rell«t 0. Hefln Tllla ll•l-t w• "'" wltll t11e Ct1o1111,. Clatlo. ot 0.•"99 Gollnty tft A 119\Qt II, 1.., ,, .... ,..,....,_.Or-CwA O.Uy ~-- ""' \1, 14, JI,,,._ 7, ttll a..aMI SELL Idle ltctn1 wltll 1 Dally Pilot Cla11Ul~d .Att -.~.Y71l SACRAMENTO 1AP1 More than SlOO million in new highway µrojects will have to be postponed thi s year because of a lack of money. the Brown ad- m 1 nistration has said. The Department of Transportation has (·ailed for a S.525 million highway con struction program for 1981-82. about $128 milhon less than had on~inall) been scheduled. Ron Herbold. deputy Ca ltra ns director for planning and program· ming. said this week the reduced budget was a "practical transition in· to the unknown future ... T h e 'c a I i f o r n i a Transport ation Com· mission will decide later this month which proj- ects will actually be authorized. Weekend classes atOCC Registration 1s under wav for more than 100 weekend classes being offered by Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. Classes in foreign languages. sc ience. physical education and other subjects will be of- fe red beginning Sept. 11. Classes wi ll be held Friday eveni ngs and Saturday mornings . School officials said weekend c lasses are popular with students not interested in earning a degree, or those who take c la sses tor pleasure For information. call 556-5772. I years; murder charged HONOLULU IAP> l'xpected a body No one ever Thul's why no murder charges were filed But when the waves heaved a bat tered aluminum trunk to the edge of Palmyra Lagoon 1n January. the last link in a chain or clues led to two murder indictm ents. A couple walking on the beach after anchoring their boat at the re- mote Pacific atoll spotted the trunk. its lid agape Inside were bones. the burned and broken s keleton of Muff Graham_ Muff and her husband. Malcolm. a wealthy San Diego yachting couple, had been listed a~ missing almost seven years Graham had been bid farewell 1n a .. c·cremony of aloha .. near Diamond llead on Nov 10, 1974 The sea Other sailors told of bad f ee lings sim- mering between the couples. swallowed the vanda orchids dropped from the decks of a half dozen yachts m memory of Mac and Muff. along "1th any dues t o their d1 s ap · pcarance. All that remamed was their yacht, the 38 foot ketch Sea Wrnd. Shorn of its figurehead and nameplate. paint- ed lavender over its original gleam- ing blue . it was anchored at llonolulu's Coa st Guard s tation The boat had been piloted 1.000 miles from P:.tlmyra to Honolulu b) Stt'phanic Slt•arns and Buck Walker. who were tried the following year and convicted on feder al charges of stealing the yacht. M 1ss Stearns served a year in pn::.on and a year on probation. then moved to California Walker, who had a criminal record to the 1950s. served 42 months 1n a federal penitentiary before escaping in Jul) 1979 In Februar:,. a month after the bones were found, a federal grand Jury in Honolulu indicted Mis~ Stearns and Walker for killing Eleanor Lavern .. Muff" Graham in ··an attempt to perpetrate a burglar) or robbery:· Miss Stearns. no" 34 . surrendered 1n March and pleaded innocent April 4 J guess they're going to declare . a truce . They 're bringing a cake.' 2 Her trial 1s lo begin here Oct. 20. Walker was arrest ed recently in Yuma. Ariz .. and taken into federal custody. Barring any problems in transferring him to Hawaii. official~. said they hoped to combine his trial with that of M 1ss Stearns The Grahams were deepwaler sailors, living a dream of an endless cruise. They already had circled the globe once. a voyage of six years. when they set out in June 1974 on a two-year JOUmey across the Pacific. Mac was 43. Muff 42. Sailors who moored n ear the Grahams in Palmyra Lagoon. a stop· ping-off spot on the long trip between llawaii and Fiji or Tahiti, told of in- vitations to dinner where they sipped champagne from crystal goblets. But the Grahams, who sought solitude, were not to be left alone. Three days before the Grahams ar- rived. Walker a nd Miss Stearns - who were calling themselves Roy and Stephanie Allen -ran on the Palmyra reef. Neither the motor nor the radio in their leaky sailboat. the Iola. was working. The crews of two boats moored in the lagoon helped the .. Allens" off the reef. They were a "hippie" cou- ple, those sailors later testified. The description stemmed from the Iola 's cond1lton a:. much as Walker's wild appearance 37 years old. he was m 1ssmg several front teeth and had long red hair. a bushy beard and tat toos on hts chest and arms With three dogs to feed and very little food. he started fe lling coconut t n·cs with a chain saw and shooting fish with a gun The seeds the couple brought in hopes of ·'living off the lund" were eaten by crabs and birds So they mooched. begged and ' traded for food In July and August. the "Allens" und the Grahams were the only peo j pie continuously moored at Palmyra Other sailors who dropped anchor Edwm Pollock of Honolulu, Thomas Wolfe of San Diego and others - later told of bud feelings simmering bctwt:cn the couples. So did Curtis Shoemaker, a ham radio operator in Hawaii who spoke with the Grahams every Monday and Wednesday ntght Shoemaker talked 1 to Graham for the last time Aug. 28, 1~74 "I remember Mac saying. 'I guess Lht•y'rc going to declare a truce. Tht') 're bringing over a cake tonight · That's the last I ever heard from him.·· Shoemaker said. Six week~ later, he reported lhe., l'ouplc missrng to the Coast Guard In mid·October 1974 . the "Allens' ~ailed the Sea Wmd to Oahu, put the I boat into drydoek. repamted the hull I and moved on to the Ala Wai Boat ll <Jrbor in Waikiki Thl' d1s tinct1ve double masted j ketch was r ecognized immediately The Coast Guard acted C'ct. 28. ar-1 1 l·Stmg Miss Stearns. Walker was I picked up 11 days later , his hair ('ropped and be<Jrd shorn. In their trial:.. the two tes tified that Mac and Muff Graham. with whom I he} had become "close fnends ... in· v 1ted them lo dmner Aug 28 Miss Stt'ams said the Grahams had told them in advance to .. make ourselves <il home" and gone out fishing. The next day. according to Miss Stearns. the Grah ams' overturned dtngh) was found in the lagoon The jury rejected their story Each was convicted of stealing the yacht and $400 in the cabin and knowingly transporting stolen property. But the Grahams' disappearance was a mys tery Seven years later. a strolling cou- ple found a box filled with bones. The skull, identified by dental records as Mrs Graham's, had a small hole in the left temple The bones and the trunk were charred. Mac Graham's remains are still missing CCC offers Hebrelt' class rivt· courses m beginning and 1ntcrmed1ate conver::.ational llebrew will be offered this fall b~ Coa<;tl1ne Communit) College Beginning I he week of Sept. 10. the class<.'s will be conducted al the Mesa Verde Learning Center. 2990 Mesa Verde Dri\'e East . Costa Mesa. the Bay vie" Learning Center. 2531 Orchard Dri\'e. Santa Ana lle1ghts and Westmin!>tt•r lligh School. 14325 Goldenwes t St . Westminster. The class 1s tuition-free for those who have lived in California at least one year Reg1stratwn and scheduhng m- format1on cun be• obtained by calling Cousthne, 963-0824 Air towf>r clo~e<I SAU NAS <APl The control lower at Salinas Munic ipal Airport will be closed for 90 days while its air traffic controllers work at busier airports. the Federal Aviation Administration said Thursday kn\ Um::\ ci.epu:\ol ty fbr otJ~ea.., 100~ lambe-wool v'J'\<Zcl< and- 100~ -v..o?l eh:ttland. ~ ~ra fu\\y feeh1orxzdin e ~ eictla.ction or color.a. @)~o~@)~~ 44 Fo.hlon 1-'ond • Neuporf 8eoch • 114/644·50'10 1001 Wntwood Blud.• ~tlwood VIII•· 113/IOl~J 1 Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 -~· Alien conflict Reagan rerun .. \• BJ 11IOMAS D. ELIAS IWnal TO PU.UC OP•..UllT "°" ••L&AN °" '" ... 0.-. ...... 11.1•1 Clly tll ~ Vellff, 1999 SI .. • A•-· ~ Yell..,. Ce ft10I C1HI UGIJ TO ALL INTl•UTIOAOINCIH , O•OYl"'IANO ... lttOMI: °".,, ..... .._ ..... , JA. 1•1 .... City tll l'-.IA YelMy wlH r..-. ... U.I. ~ tll "-lllt -Urtefl O.we1e,.mefll le re l•••• 1f President Reagan and h.lR attorney general, WUUam French Sm ith, are surprised by the un· likely seeming coalition forming to fight their pro- posed plan to ste m illegal immigration, they have s hort memories ' ,_ .. ,..,,. __, Tiiie I ef I,_ ._ .. ,. .... °"""""""' °"~-4<1 (1111'14 ll'L ••> ............. ........ tct· H•lm Trct a.-LI,,. l'rofecl ; , ...... uct ..... JW .. _, Melf\ - For precisely the same thing happened on a s maller scale in Caltfornia when Reagan signed a s imilar law almost 10 years ago. J t M-lelwel c-''-" w the melt\. fJ (lly et F-••'" valley, c:.a111ot11I• r ,. • Like h is curre nt propos al, the m e asure Reagan s igned in early 1972 called for fining e mploye rs who knowingly hire illegal immigrants. His int ent, Reagan said at the time, was to "cr ack down on t hose employers who engage in hiring illegal aliens (and> help improve job op· portunities for thousands of legitimate California CALIFORNIA FOCUS residents who earnestly seek employment. . " The measure signed by then Gov . R eagan never took force because of a lawsuit filed by a group of fruit and vegetable growers which object- ed on two grounds . They claim ed that no state can pass laws regulating immigration because that's a federal funct ion a nd they claimed that the law would impose an "un reasonable burden" on them to check a ll pote ntial workers and make s ure they were entitled to work. Every major Latino group in California also objected, claim ing a ll Hispanics wo uld suffer dis- c rimina tion because employers would refuse to conside r any of the m rather than risk fines for hir- ing illegals . The law was thrown out by a state Court of Ap- peal, which ruled only on the growers' first objec- tion. The issue or whethe r employers can be forced to check the status of all job applicants was ig- nor ed; so was the potential for s purring d is· crimination. Both issues will be central in the new battle over the Reagan-Smith "g uest worker" plan, which would pe rmit entry of 50,000 workers from Mexico annually on a two-year trial bas is -to work for s ubminimum wages -while legalizing the presence of undocumented aljens who have been in the US. 10 years or more · FLEECE'AWARD Sen Pro I rm rt> Proxmire 'a w ard' to Tre asury WASHINGTON t API Sen. William Prox· mire h as announced that h is ··golde n fleece a ward" this m onth goes to the Treasury De part- ment, whose investment policies he said lost $2 billio n for the Social Security syste m last year. Th e W isco n s in Democra t said the de· Objections to the current plan echo most of the «" 1972 complaints .partme nt earned 8.3 pe r· cent on Social Security funds it invested last yea r whi le private money ·m a rk e t managers who invested in gove rnm e nt securities earne d a n average 13 percent. The diffe re n ce would h ave been worth S2 billion on the $47 billion m Social Security taxes tha t Treasury invested on behalf of the system, h e said. "We do not beli eve employers should have the burden of indirectly e nforcing federal programs." s aid Mike Stuart of the Western Growers Assn. Meanwhile, Dolores Huerta, vice president of the United Farm Workers of America, called the plan "an insult to Mexicans a nd to all Americans ~ who care about d ecent working conditions and •• j us tice." Proxmire presents the "a ward" each month to call attention to what he considers an example of was te or loss of t ax· p ayers' money. But neither discussed what may turn out to be t he m ain weakness of either the Reagan-Smith plan or any other attempt to limit s ub-rosa immi· gration: f'inding legal residents willing to perform th~ . tas ks done by the illeg als, even at legal minimum wages, let alone the sub-par pay given the undocumented workers . One 1977 s tudy, for instance, found that illegals then held 60,000 jobs in San Diego County alone, The Treasur y Depart· m ent declined comm ent on Proxmire's criticism . J• drawing $260 m illion in wages. That averages out to $4,333 ann ually. Few legal residents would work for wages so low, especially a t the menial jobs given the illegals. Since Socia l Security was begun, Proxmire sa id, every trea s ury s ec retary has invested t he system 's m oney in low.earning government securities to minimize the interest on the na· tional debt, rather than putting the funds into higher-earning govern· me nt securities. Though San Diego County borders directly on m a ny of the e ntry points used by illegals. it h arbors fa r fe we r illegals than s ome other California counties, not to mention states like Tex- a s and Mi chigan, where m igrant labor harvests many crops . The Reagan·Sm1th plan, proposing to allow legal e ntry to f e w er Mexicans t han wer e e mployed in San Diego County alone four years ago. d oesn 't speak to the labor s hortage and con- s umer price increases tha t a sudden change would almost certa inly produce. .. But that's probably a moot point anyway. For the combined o pposition of labor union s, a griculture and civil groups -sure to fall into line behind the Hispanic activists already opposing the plan probably will keep the plan from ever becom ing federal law "If the trust depart· m ent of your local bank told you they had invest- ed your s mall family in· h eritance in order to further the interests of the b ank r ather than yo ur interest s, you would flre the m and s ue the m for misfe as ance, ma lfeas anc e and p e rhaps even fraud ," Proxmire said. "But tha t's precisely what the Treasury munagcn of the Social S('t'urity lruist funds have clont• " And even if it s hou ld make it through Congress. the pla n wo uld still have to pass the con- s titutional t ests which we nt unans we re d in California the las t time around. f Eluu J3 a column111 based in Santa Monica. I • Mineral economists' I job security excellent ' t fly JOYCE L . KENNEDY They'r e well paid -the annual new-graduate starting salary at the m aste r's degree level is S28,000 : Ph.D., $32,000. They're snatched up by employers as soon as they shuck rap and gown. T heir s pecialized degree programs exist at only four universllies. Who? These fortunate 11peciall11l3 are c a lled m in e r a l economi1l1. Besides everything else they've 1ot going. job security Is exce llent because n atural re1ource1 are depleting, not expandln1 ; demand for mineral economis t.I rises yearly. Thanks to R.E.O. Woolsey, he ad of the mineral economics department at the Colorado School of Mines for this view : Mineral economics Is the 1tudy and app lication of both economic• and m anagement prlnclplt1 to t be m inerals and energy lnduatri•. ll takes in economic analyaia. plannin• a nd m anagement. Speclllc areas include mmet and com modity analyala, project and bualneN evaluation and operall9na r esearch. Another area 11 mineral re-: aourc. economics, with empbuiJ oa ' depletable resou:rcu. Some consider mineral economic• = a• a field of It.a own. lnvolvinl m in- : 101. pe&roleum. aeolon. economic• i aJMI manaaemenl 1cleo ce. ' G raduata work not only in the ~ mlnenlJ and eMrl)'_ tndUltrl .. per I~, H, but are ln banklnl INtJtutloal and law firm• that ter n tbem. TM1're found ~rutlanal de· ,...,.eat en • pwn.meet .,.....udacad mJa. • I - u...,, miJIG'al .......... bokl CAREERS line jo~. 1x>t1lllorwd for • move to top mana.icmcint 'rhtiy have worldwide truvcl opportunlllcA ftt>Wc!r thun 100 iraduate11 yearlf. 11 re turned out by four schools that o · for llpcciallzcd pro.crams. They are the Colorado School ot Mines, Pen · n11ylvanla Stato Unlveralty, Unlversl· l)• of Arizona a nd West Vlr1inia Universit y . The taraut u nder· 1raduate min enl oconomlcl pro- 1 ram ta at Ptnn State, while Colorado enroll• the most 1raduat e 1tudent.1. Al the 1 r aduate level, mineral economics attrac ts technically oriented studen t.a with en1lneerint back1roundt In petroleum, mining and geoloay. Other student.a come from auch vaned backiroundl a1 n nance, manaiement or economic•. To better understand th1I contem· porary career, send St tor a nve·pa1e copy ol the article, "Ten Yean of Mineral Econom ic• at Mlnea." It l1 a reprint from the November 1980 luue of Mines ma1tuine. Order It directly from the maautne at Gu11el1hetm H all. Golden. Colo. 90401. READER SER VI CE: Lookin l abelld? "Opportunity. Where to ftDd tl In the '80I" t1 a four·pqe 1QPPle· meal to the U.S. Newa Wublqton Letter. It report.I on Ammca u forecuws envillon ll ln t.be ye.u 1911. To recelve a copy, eoeloH a •la?T., aelf·addretMd, ... while UV with )'OW" request to Joye. La.in ea.nedy at Box ueo, Costa ........ . "'°'· Tiit ••tlt 'I II lt<eled In lllt ....,.._, -•Ion .. "-' .. " va n.., boulldMI te IN nortll end IOUlll .-, Te lllerl Awe-M d Elll• Av• ..... ~.,,.Ctlwely, -.. , ...... --Oy ~le Mrffl end "'°"" ll'"t ...... --ml--_..,... ..... tor ~·-e# f\lllllt Wiii IMiC (°" .-1111tt .. action ...,.n1< .. 11y llffte1'"9 .... -Illy ..... llUftlMI ...... - --~fllly h ....... -'"City et f'_.tt1nVel1tY_ dec_,... .. P••IMI•• .,, En•lr.,m•11t t1 l m1Nt<t Ste-Wflder IN 14111...,.I Envl..- ......ul """Icy Acl (Ill 1 ... CPL t t-t•> Tho ·-.., """ detlalon ...... Pt•Ptrt 11.tCll Slelt mt fll e re ea ltllowt ,,.. -i.c• .... It louted .... low lo rnedl""' .. nally retl<llnllel ., •• -· ..,_ .. .,,. flelwel -llllY~ e11vl~ wlll l:le mlrWmel. An Efwt,_,,cel R..W. Rec- rt"'9(1"'8 ,,. wlllllfl llW'Ol«I llU - m•dt l>Y lho el>eve•nemM City 9' F.....,...n vau.., wtll'9\ doe__,_, tho lftvhwwNfllel ~·-of IN llto'9<1 -,,...,.. tUlly ... tforWl IM, .. _ •llY well St...,._I la ftOt •-lrM Tllla E....,1........-.1 •evlew •ecw• la on Ille .. .,,. ----la •••II.el• .., .,_.,,k eumlMlkwl -<ot>Ylfle _. r--1 •I .,. Plorwilne 0.IMI...,,._ -tho ,,....,.. ol 1:00 • m. -t:OOp.m. Ho ,..,_ lftvlr_....,.el revl-al such proJe<l la~ to be conclYCt· .0 Pf'IOI' 10 Ule r-1 lor rt -el F.oerel luftdt.. All 1..Corest.O eoeMlet, 11'-•nd "''"'"' cllU9'ff4ne wllh lhh dKllllol'I ••• Invited to sul)mll wrHten com· menh tor consideration by u. City (Jll Founl•ln Vell•Y to the Plennln9 0.1M11'1.....,.. Sue!\ written '°"'menu 1110uld be recelwed et 10200 Slelt r ..... ,_on or i.tor• s.pe.,,.ber 6, '"'· All such <°""'*"' to recel"9d wlll be consldtAcl -I,. City wlll not , .. Cl<'ffl .. relMM of Ftdff el twndl 01 t•ke .,y tdmlnlatretl .. ectlor> on .,,. proj«I prlot 10 ll'a del• ~111..S In lho_....,,._,._ •. Tho City al F-teln Velley wlll -c1en.u .,,. project oetcnlled _.,. wllll 81o0. Gr .... -frwn IN U.S. O.pertmenl (Jll H0<n"'9 -Ur'*' 0. ... 1_....,. IHUOI -Tiiie I ol tho Houllne -Community 0. .. 1..,.. ....,., ACt al 191' n. City of "-tMft Valley lscertlfvlftlll• HUD o.t t11t Ci- ty -R_.. G. Voll~. In Illa • flclel ~lly ts Clry ~r. c°"- Mfll '° ecc:9'11 tho Juntcllc11on of the F-rel c:-1• If_, ectlofl Is br'outillt 19 tnforu r-libllllles In rtlttlon to envl-~ •••le"""· dtc:lsl..,.. .......... •nd ec:tlofl; -lllel ·-, • ._ .......... ,...,. -satisfied Tho I~ effect al lhe certlfk9'10ft Is lh•I 11pcin lls •PP<Ovel Ille City of Founte4n Valley may vw tho 8100 Gra nt tundt •11d HUD wlll ll•v• •tllafled Ill r_..iblllllft -.,,. Heli4nel IEllvl~I Polky Acl of ..... HUD Wiii ec.c:ept ... oCljecllon to Ill _...val al 11W ,_ .. al fUl'Hb -eccepCMlce al llW cer1Hlcetlon Oftly II It Is on -of the ro11-1ne i.-: I•> TIWlt ,,. certlfk9llofl wn not In feel euc:.iltd by the certHylne officer "' ottltr olfker al ..,_.,kenl eppf'-4 by HUD; ar lb) tllet -4ken1'a -·~ rntnl .. 1 review record for tt-. prof«I Indicate omlu lon of • required -. c:lalon flncllnll iw •lltP •llPllc.01• It IN prol«! In tho ..,.,1__,tel review PfOCeM. Otll«!I-must Cle p,_,.., encl .....,... ... In ea-• wltft .. r_I,..,, _ _.. CtA CF• l'ert •> •fld may ......... _ to HUD .. O.pertrntnt (Jll H-lne end Urllefl O•••loPment, Area Office. UOO Wlllfllre llo<.tle verd, Los A,...les, Celltonlle ta051. OOlecti-.... ,. 1 .... ,,,,_.,._ .. __ _ at--wlll MC be C~M .,., HUO. No ....... tMelwff eftitr Sep. --ZJ, Itel, Wiii be cefl.,_.., "1 HUO. ........ v.._, atr ......-,.. ........ ,_ .. Velley, Ce. tf19 ,....,._Or ..... COUt Delly Pllol, ... _.tA ... 1 11....i. NOTICE OF DEATH OF PEARL MARIE HAMMER LILLYWHITE AND OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE HO. A·109t96. To all he ir s, beneficiaries, cred itors and contlnc;ient creditors of Pearl M a r ie Ha m me r Lillywhite and persons w ho may be otherwise Interested in t he w lll and /or estate: A petition has been filed by Ann Marie Liiiywhite Soper In the Superior Court of Orange County requesting that Ann Marie Liiiywhite Soper be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of Pearl Marie Hammer Llllywhlte, Costa Mesa, CA (under the lndepen· dent Administratio n o t Estates Act). The petition Is set for hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 on September 2, 1981 et 9:30 a.m. IF YOU OBJECT to the grantlnc;i of the pet ition , you snould either a ppear at the hearing a nd state you r objectio ns or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be In person or by your attorney. I F YOU ARE A CREDITO R or a contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file your clalm with the court or p resent It to t he personal rep resentative appointed by t he court within four months from tht date of first Issuance of lett.rs as provided In Section 700 Of the Probate Code of Callfor nla. The time for filing c laims wlll not expire prior to four months from the date Of the heerlnv noticed a bov.. YOU MAY EXAMINE the me kept by tM court. If you are lnwrestect In the est ate1 you mey flle • request with _,,. court to receive SOKlal notlc• of t he Inve ntory of estate assets end of IN petitions, acco u nts e nd reports deWlbed In s.ctlon 1100 of the C.llfwnla Probate Codi. J ay C. Mwa. AtlltMy at Lew, 11M lereR••• :,t;:~ ~.,~,,b~ ~hhed OfMlllCoelt D.tltL=~· ~ 11, 11, M, ,., - f 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 INDEX Tt Place Y•r U, Ca• 642·5678 HOUSES FOi SALC "-•I k lbNhl•llf kl~ ,.N .. •lt C1fOlraM lluf~ c ....... -.111ar C.ia llou ~, .. Ill I El Two ,_61n V1lll) HoMlflC\Oftlo th ,,.,...,... .... .no .... , ._.._Holl• ......... :-.., .. 1· lllMIOft \'iojO so-~ ... t h S.. l•moMt 5M titMC••utratw S..1A•t ... , .... _ StM•w•••o 'itt1lflnllt&&ff ... llHome1S.I• 1wmm w104t ft,S.lt ~mollUl•S.lo ti::.':~;:... l •-lff> L•h Cruoh ~=~~~·::m:'' °""''" \ ·~· i. ... -••btllt• ... 1.......,. Pr•r\> ~~~:::tr ....... ll~k 11.,. Tri! "" MOw«Mft Dt•trt loort ~'~~:';';op CM°' !.toot ~rop ~•fWIMt >&1m• Gru~ft ku J •At-1• [atfr~•AI• Hu i Lala\f'-. aft\"9 IENULS tkNtn fwtnohed Ho..IH1 l nfl.irnnhH -.C• l•r•ut Lnl l"OftdofnlNl.lm' •• \llft tondom1nuun. l nt To•ftf\w"" rurA no.11110Vm nr Ot.tpt.11t• '"'" 0..plul\ Lnr AOCt ,..,n Apb Lnf1i1rt1 APt• l'lor• Of l nt Roomt M..,...6 lloord Hat•lt \&0tth Gvtt l HotM• 9.Mm'""' kcth l• \tc1\t0ft lhncah lf'M•I' ltM 11r-t• G1111n for ~•M °'"" l\fOlt l 11,auw.._. ktnu• 1-r>ol MtMal ::c~: ... ,.,.o N LH lttfU•h ,. . ' . . . . . .· ;. ·- .... h t• ....... for Wt ...... for We • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ 1002 G...,., tOOJ 100! ... 100! 101• 111112 I~ Illa ·= IO>o ICMO IOM EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNI TY :: Ptllbllahtr'• Moffet: :: All real estate ad· 1• v e r t i s e d 1 n t h i s !E r~:1fe1Cai" r5.i~JHC~~~ l: ln& Act ot 1968 wtucb 1• makes 1t illegal to ad· 1100 vertin ··any preferent'e, lim ital1 on , or du :: crtm1nat1on based on mo race, color. rehgton. :: sex. or national origin. Jtw or an 1ntenuon to make :* any sut'h prererence l: l1m1111t1on or d 1~ 11w criminatlon :JCti UN 1~ 2!00 -.,,, mu l1UJ ml 1100 This newsp<1per "'111 not knowingly :1C'l0ept :1n) 11dvert1s1ng for re.ti estate wluch 1s In \"l<lla l!On or the law : llRORS: Advtrtf1tn = thMld check their od• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPllT BEACH , ................. IH019W Properfftl. 3 Triplexes m a row on ocean 11dt or PCH in Corona del Mar . 2 Duplexes + 1 Triplex In a row on Balboa Penl~ula -1 lot from NEWPOITICH CONDO 2 Bdrm. 2 hill balha. at· tached 1arage. Lota of up11radt1. S~le atory St24 .9001 Call now , 5'6·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS sand and aurf Near l~h -------- St 1 Duplex on lhe water with dock for :Kl' boat All largr assumable loans at 12',C\ Owner'a are mOtl\•ated C/21 Mtwpori Clltr 640.057 DUPW $94,900 ln\ltstors dehght' T\l.u 2 Bdrm units Current in come S750 mu I )ear home prote-ct1on plan 1n duded C1ll to see' 646·717 1 THEREAL ESTATERS , .... ,. Sharp 3 Bdrm home wdots ot brick ' stonework , blt·l n k1tchrn. rrplc, dbl garage, on quiet at Seller will finance at 121\ U1terest Asking on· ly W0,000. JACOBS IEALTY 67~70 HUGE EASTSIDEHME 5 Bdrqu, 3 baths. separate master suite Priced to sell al St68,500 Assum able fi nancing Call ~6·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS mi dolly ~ l"lporl tr--= ron 1...-clattly. The = DAILYPILOTOIMIMet : llbllty for the flnt :: htcorrect htHrtlH ::: Oftly. :: -------· Ul> <JlO .. oo "lll •»"> •!00 ..., ..io Hot11H for S• ••••••••••••••••••••••• GtMrol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Al NORMAL 2 PIMIMSULA POINT lilGAIMS owe BALANCE 10'# Call now• 4 BR Mexu:an Villa, l house from pounding surf Secluded master retreat with hrtplace ~e"' kitchen. dine on tll~d patio Hurr) BUSINESS. INVEST· J H , SIOJ,000 Wherr can you hnd a property 4 doors from the So 811yfront w11h a 0 '><85" lot on Balboa lsland where the ~"'ner will con11der anything or value·stocks. cash. land. units. )OU namr 11 and the o"' ner "'111 trade lncludrs plans for 1 ne11. duplex Asking SM0.000 I otboo I.a.ct Rtty · 67W 709 STEPS TO SAMD FIXER 3 BR & DES needa your attention Br 1ng shovels and paint brush ~take SS's Ov.ner will carry at 1011. 1n terest MEltl, flMAMCE Pnmr CM home. hu&t ..., "" ~· -bll"k > ard. covered ...: ... :v.OAt.., :io1t patio !"tee starter :::::::::l:'::~> = home needs some hx· GIGANTIC :~ ~.';:'~. : 1ng Only 10•, do11.n Call llor\a••n Tn • -now SIDRM Just hated and priced to sell ' Private courtyard rntry Inds to huge Nrwport Beach estate Enormous family room With blaztng r1repla ce' Sunny gourmet k11chen Large lush grounds On ly $299.~' Call toda). 673·~ ANtlOUMCEMENTS. M ONALS & LOST & FOUND An.Mww'tmtM• r.1 ,..., Wtal ,CRlff'• 1Ao4 • IOllnd Pt1eon•I•• Sott•I t lwt.• Troff" SERVICES !wr~•t• Lhrt>(1on EMrtOYMENT & mmATION Xhooll fll•lrWifl l(lfl J~ wt •ntf'1t • Htlp Y. •ftlfO \t • t M£RtHANDISE ""'"" A#il••J'lllCY' Aw<'-ltf\tln .... -.. \e-4trt•h c.wru' fAlwpmu .. c.u °"" ~~ .. , ... t\uwtwc C•nat M.lt ....... ~t100d• J~f'lr\ U,nt_. .. M<lh>M<) '41.w-•1l•""9W~ M1M'•U•""'°"-'. •fU..0 '4uW<"•I &M-trunwnt" Oii ... Fvr• 6 l.qv1p , .. . ~--=~~t~:, .,,,,.,coo0. Sllft •N.wrtnl 8t1r ~,.edM>-.H1ft Mt-rto BOATS & MUINE EQUIPMENT c.-.1 bi. Me1nt g,,f\lct llooh Mon .. E'l\llP 1o1u.,....., loau.hnt c1ior1 .. loaUS.ol 1oau,'i11po llorh loou .5"t<1 • );lo I -..storoao TIANSl'OITUIOM SEA CO VE PROPERTIES 71 4-631 ·6990 BUILD l MORE UNITS R·2. 13.000 sq ft lot 4 1in. Bdrm . 2 bath existing ;,,;; home H o r ses 1100 permitted Owner "'ill c arry paper C.ill s.6·2313 IQ6 tDIO 1111> ~ am 1111> !Cl) "°'° IOU ao -uo THE REAL ESTATERS THIHKIHG :,-.: tow.-.oME? oooa Call the spet'1ahsts al =: I the t'Ondom1n1um in ""' r orm a uon center :: Touchs~e Re<1ll) ::.. --~~ ::! SI 1.000 :: DOWM THE REAL ESTATERS COWlfry Clw'IMr Located tn backbay Ne"' port area zoned for horses. 3 Bdrms. 2 Ba. loaded with rharm from the Oak peg & groo\ e floo rs lo the custom master Bdrm suite As· sume 1011. interest loan and owner "'111 carr) large 2nd Full price $163,900 TR,\DI TIO\,\I. RI .\IT\ 631 -7370 @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 14·631 ·6990 4 BR BACKIAY SI 37,500 Roomy. 4 Bdrm. 2 st) "' rozy firepla ce \'er) clean. llght and airy ~ew dishwasher. 11.·ater heater. paint. paper. sk yll ght' Beau11full) landscaped pat io A must see' s.g.1111 THE REAL ESTATERS • -Super sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath townhome Coz) l --------kitchen and dining area l•-------- .010 o v e r I o o k s I u s h S ..... Jlthry RH LTORS SUPBSlllO SPYGLASS LOT comphments this lo,·ely New Bedford home ll features four bedrooms. four baths. fa mily roc>fTI. and formal dining room Extensive upgrades and a king-med lot make this home a trul)' unique find Orr ered at S589. 000 "''1th ex cellent rinanrlng &\·a1lable. .oai landst'Bped patio 4 Br. onealory, ram rm. : SU,000 down to a 14r4 corner lot Owner very : loan. Price only S109.900. mot ivated & will help ll710 Act now, call ~·2313 finance. Juat 16511,500. --mo 1110 tlJO •1• llltll THE REAL ESTATERS ::: HEWPORTHGTS -DUPLEX One 4 Bdrm 2 bath = charmer with firepltce. ;:: the olhrr 2 Bdrm 2 b th. -fireplace. AIJ for only : SlSS,000. Owner will -carry AITD. Owner anx· -ious. Call ~2313 ''" ,,. f'NI '1W tlll t!U me THE REAL ESTATERS ~ AFFORDABLE f7iD 2 Bdrm. 1 ba -1 yr old :;: Adult complex. Takt ~: over existing loan. .,. .,. fl411 t!l2 "" t!ll rm • RED C'ARPET 754-1202 fl• ~------~ '1111 '"' fl• t!S1 a .,. 1111 m. fl7J - Ml -' =~ .. , ----.. ::: .. = "" = = --= NODOWM VA TERMS 3 Bedroom. 2 bath. pool. lll0,900. Call &4&-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS ~ •ICHITICTS Sii THIS OMI Top ioe•Uoa 1 couple of door• lrom tht prtvete beach In lilt nclu1lve 1uardtd community o f 81y1hort1. E••Y lo rtmodt l I Bdrm, 2~ blth home. P'7S,OOO. RCTc1ylorCo 111 11•1(>(\ Atht.Dt•ftoptrl Prime Cotta Mesa area 20 unll condo project compl approved. read)" to build. rall 752-64911 D.M.tiWIWI 760.0llS P~.1n IV Realty The fastest draw 111 tht West .a Daily Pilot Cluufled Ad. Call To-i day 842·56'11. TAR GAZEK~~ ~.=.;~---tr Cl.AT l l'OLU H. y-°""' ._, ~ )( v ...... ,,., " ... ..... v To 4eva 1op ,,..11011' tor T undoy reod _. cor,..,.....,.10 rV'lbm °' )'II"' Zodloc blrtll """ '=~=' ~~~~-4t-~s· -lly QAY I ~ •........ lt!Wi "' "" low1t111 .......... i.. ... .. ._..,_,~ ..... _. r H,.i i G' E 1 I I· i Ari r '1 I j I ... .... ._ .. v_L_o .. 1 ...... 1...-41 l ni11 OllY 1 11now "'"" "'" I I• r 1 , lletn • bOtft c1•m1ne.1. '* "" ....._.~_....__...._. • Mby plct111M CllM Wltfl I £SR y E J )ltonu114--. ~:1--·_· .... 1-... -1·~1:.::1 :1 • ~ :-.:::.-:::= -............... s ........ ...... , For S• Hon... For We He.Ma For Wt HcMtltt For We Ho.att For Wt HoeM"a For Wt Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• 6 .. W •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... For Wt ....... For Wt HcMIMt for Wt ......... for Wt .. ~~! ............ ~~~~ .. ~~ .......... !~~2 G...,11 t002 ~-1002 G1•r• 1002 Co1t1M... 1024 ...... : ................................................................................... .. ----------------·· ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• •:••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coate MtM I 024 l"M I 044 Htwpott led I 069 Mtwpeti .._. lNt •·······••············· ..•.•..........••...... ·········•·••·········• ..................... ... W 1·.Sl .l Y \; TAYLOR CO Hl-:t\1.T<JHS ·,11111· l~Ht I OH llG CAHYOH GOU COURSE IUGAMT "VH SAllLlS" -OCLUSIVE Spectacular Deant! Homes '"Versailles" located on largest lot of all Deane Hom es. Bea utiful golf course vie~' l'rofess1onally landscaped yard w mature trees in a private park·likt-~etling including a lovely lar~c pool and huge spa + an attrat lt ve ga£ebo Gated front courtyard entry with fountain. Marble floo r in foyer with glittering chandeli er. 4 Bdrms, den. formal dining room & 41 ~ bath~. $895.000. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 2111 San Jooquln tilt Rood NEWPORT CENTER. N.L 644-49 IO I ~-~ · Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US . . . TO THE ILUFFS. POPULAR "X" l"ONOU t;NO UN IT THREE lU-:UROOMS TWO BATHS NEW CARPET OWNt;R n:RY M<Tfl\"ATED OFFERING PROBABLY Tm: Bfo~I Bl'Y IN TifE BLlln'S NUW $18!1.500 1617 WESTCLIFF DR, H.L 63 1-7300 " • I : ... A .- REALTORS 675-5511 SUPER "E" PLAN IH THE llUFFS: This most desired model has a lovely greenbelt and mountain view. Owner will help with financing. Only $239,500. COLE OF MEWrorr REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy .. CoroM dtl Mer 675-5511 LIDO IAYFIOMT · Custom coontry French 6 bdrm. 6 bath Pier and slip Bnck terrace view Elegant charm 4500 sq rt. Call now ror appt. Redhill¢~Realty I;-;-:; ~: ~1111 4 BR. S 14,000 DOWN Giant Back Bay garden home! Charming living room. views flowers and used brick patio Formal d1n1ng Sweeping stairwa) to secluded master suite Easy terms ' Only $137.500' Hurry, call67J..8S50 THE REAL ESTATERS THEIWFFS OWC'TMEFIRST Just hsted with unbeata· ble terms' Owner will carry al low interest rate Large 3 Bdrm garden home on green belt Cot} r1replace Beautiful lush patio plants included' Only S!99.000 Hurry t•all 67J..8SSO THE REAL ESTATERS LIQUIDATION SALE BAYFRONT ..... ESWTIS••· ll'IPllT u:rs EJaJSWE Pma1J Nfl. llAlll041111M.4UTII HYFIOMT WITH IOAT m "° -.. , 12·5, ·~ IRl SIJ ?114 CIMIL 1tA1 YOUR TEIMS DI CASH DISCOUNT Cal.• •75-1311 • 141-7115 £l:Q; . EASTBLUFF VIEW OOME Liie ... , WORd1mt f.., ........ ..w dtcor .. ro119llCH1t. Wood floors, c:roww Maul•9 i. .. h l::a ac ..... 4 ...... ..,.,"°°"' ....... .... "*"-..Ult.GOO. 611·1400. CUFFHAVEN--REllEED! OwHrt Htd to nll tltlt h•• '-ci.ttfyf lt~td OYlf $25,0001 ~ nt ..... "-c .. I......, wfl e.-rt ..... lrd T .0. w • tid r 11. .... roof, fwwt, • ., .. IS, C8'ptf I .... 1....., J M4. 2 .... ;o..11114 lit: I Ii •••• Ctt. ........ + c.-try ..._ SHt,000, A..,., ..... .... .,......,.,,ad ....... WATERFRONT HOMES1 INC lfCAl C..S TA n ~ II~~ "'''Pf'l'V Mon..,._ t.o& W Co~~ JIS M.tmf A,. ~ 8'..:11 &llN hlMld ,,,_,_ '7Ufll LINDA ISLE Exl·1tmg Ol'Portunity! Wide chann el view from spectacular 1m:hitectural dcs11{ned 4 bdrm. 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 larl{e boats. $1 ,495.000. Summer Otcupant'Y. LIDO ISLE HOMES Fl•tttured on Homes Tours this lovely lruditaunal spacious. l'ustom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. newlv redecorated. Priced lo sell quickly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lgc recreation 1·oom & 2 patios Bt!am ceilings Great for entertaining. S42U.OOO. Best prit'P for the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT Panoram1l' bay & ocean view at \\Cdgc. from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home . 3700 sq fl. featur mg marine room . Sl.385.000 NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm. den. spatiou Plan 8. im · mal'ulate. Lo\\ priced at $215.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 8oy\1d1· D"•t· N 8 67S 6161 QUALITY MEDITERRANEAN DUPLO New. custom. corner lot, skylights. textured w<Jlls. cedar ceilings, th e lx>st constru l'tion you can buy One unil 1s a three bedroom. the other a two bedroom. Old Cdm $449.000. U~IVUf tif)Mf' REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 Eut Coael Highway, Corona clel Mar WI HAYE 45 OF THE H ST 4GtNTS ... TOWH HAllOlllOGI An exqul1ite orterln11 . Ele11nl & spacious 3 bdrm + family room, I lev l\ome w1panor1m1c VIS t a or harbor , coutllne, ocean & night li1bts. Prestige, com· ***** l H + Pool + Spe Harbor and Halttr 11rc11 Xlnl nciahborhood taMS with ~K down Owner m111t sell Sl«,900. 59 2 BDRM UNITS TIRED OF TRIPPING IEACHRXSl AT LOT VALUE ,ltCI llOUCIO To 1215.000 & with 0nly 140,000 down, OWf Open House. Sunda\ 12 Spm al 2147 V1:1111 Laredo Tr1rnut't1on Maste~~4842 fort , luxury & 5eCUrJly jMl{W6 IMA 11 1 Reduced. now 1739,000 wv • ""'..u '!~!!!!!!Ow~~!!er!!!!!f111!!a!!n!!ctn!!i!!l!!l!A!!!!!!gt!,I C.Mf"@J§'b MfAt Double 8SU"•&e for each unit Forced 11lr heat On 3.32 acres Prime Costa Men area. Pnnc only Alt ror Betty, 843 9l61 : OPEN HOUSE on tr1cyclC$, I.hen let us show you th.ls terr1flt• I bdrm, 1 ba Plan I 111 Orange Tree f'allo llomes End unit. cen tral air. neutrul i-olors $76,500 Adult only rnm munity Ptn1nsul1 Pt fixer. lowt'll pnced home on the Pt $250,()()() Priced at lot value Submit your terms on this 3 Br. w formal d1nin11 rm J uat Sh!Jlll to sand Call . . . '.•.; RVM~ • DW'lEX $70,000 DOWN Beautiful Corona del Mar duplex only 6 years old 3 & 2 bdrms , hreplacea, beam cetl· ings, private patios, prime comer location Full price only S320.000 ASSUMAIU 10/S°lo FIMAMCIHG MlSAVEaDE First TD approximately S90,000 3 Bdrm 2 bath, new roor. large yard. Asking Sl29,900 For more Information, rail S40·1151 ·'!~-·HERITAGE . . REALTORS REJ.t TY / H_..gto. 118ch I 040 ·········~············· S8000Down Nice 3 Bdrm, I' i l)atu condo Close to shop 'f523 CAMP\15Da·IRVINE ping Owner will help f1nanre. Sllli.500 LocJ-o ltoch I 041 SUM SET IEAL TY ••••• • •• ••••••••• • •• • •• 542.5108 A Lot --For A Uttte 'llCB> 1 acre + bldg site, gent HLOW MARKET ly sloping pam~I short H~ \f 1111!'- H.WVitw Move In cond111on. 3 bdrm. 2 ba home in Harbor View High as sumable loans llighly upgraded throughout Shows 1.Jke model Must sell fast Ask.mg S2J9.500 incl land Come for Ill· spect1on Sal. Sun I 6 1860 Port Wheeler or C' a II 76().9596 Owner Agt CUSTOM HOME "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I M lnutes to miles or distance from tennis & -= pounding surf This low beach Ownr hab 1n A D1v1Mon or --------1 mamt Townhouse w/I duded plans for custom lldrbor lnH•stment Co • coz·y CONDO br + den or 2nd br . I & villa Sl7S,000 Sl)t'C OCEAMFIONT MEWIYOWNER J HR & den. 5895.000 3711 Seashore Owner w Car_J'}' 673 6578 llGCAHYOH Be11ut1rully decor11ted home ror the buyers that expect perfel't1on 1n their next home S Ir.: bed rooms v.1th a n<'hl) panelled ram1ly room with beamed ceilings and a wal.k·m wet bar for rasual entertaining Elegantly dppomted h\ mg room with a marble fireplace llnd a bay wm dow overloolung the golf course and night llghlll Libra ry 11.1th b1rc·h panelling, bit 111 "!!!!!!!!!!1111!!!!!!!~!!!!!~-I ~. ba lmmar. highly tacular views~ -:: 2 Bdrm, 2ba end unit upgraded. Has 3 pools, MISSION REALTY 1--------1 bookshelves, and a bay ~ 751-1111 UMIEUEV AILE FIHAHCIMG On ~his 4 Bdrm. 2 story beach house with guest , 1nlaw quarters Near part< $205,000 with S18l,OOO. 5 year loan at 17r1, 769-1616 New carpels Clean and j a c u z t 1 , t en n 1 s . 4~ 0731 bright Assumable 13"r clubhouse. wet bar, Redltctd Sl00,000 window everlooking the pool Expansive patio overlooking the golr course w11h spll. bit 1n wet bar and BBQ fo1 evening entertaining Offered at '2.300.000 loan rprlc Has ('X\Sll ng 7 9'' WIMBLEDON VILLAGE loan Open SaLSun l 5 9766 Verde Mar Bkr 536·1600_Qr~8341 OPEN ALL WEEK 9431 Le1laru Drive Elegant single ram1ly Sl•S soo. 963-4793 home. Professionally de--.i: corated and landscpd 4 CONDO $6300 dn ur Bdrm Jba & hbrary trade for Porsrhc SClOO Air, alarm, amenities mo total 2 Br. I' 2 ba galore 661 3S39 .. RED CARPET Ill 75.t.1 202 ASSUM.AILE 12.75% WIMBLEOONVLG. l"IH 1044 ...•.•..........•.••... MEAT Divorce Forces Sall' Lower 3 Arch Bay Great ocean view. pvt area 4bdrm beach house 499-3144 ~ In Dover Shores S600 sq rt of top quality l'On struct1on ThlS s Bdrm Medi! style res1dente 1s the best of locations and has the best or fmanrmg available owe '950.000 D.M.Mon .... RJtr 760.0135 at 91 ~r; int Full price in c·lucl1ng the land - Sl,450.000 Call Dan Bibbl•--1• .... -.•0• ... --• forappt -• ROGER'S REALTY OCEAHFIOKT BEACH RETREAT 67>23 11 Great view at harbor en If you're looking for a ----~--1111111 trance Prime large lot Wt!ekend hideaway. or a WANT hol.lSe in Newport ~;~ cs.!t! ~~etal~ special plaretoh\e yeu Heights for client Cleo. ror private showin• round . this 3 bedroom L' n 1 t e d 8 r o k e r s " mobile home 1s just ror 673·777! 548 Z7ll Sl.385.000. you I EnJUY ocean and «>o s' ' VILLA BAI.BOA A Model 2 Br 2ba. close This new IJS!Jng orrers l t o pool and tennis ne~rly 2000 sq ft or lux 1 S17S 000. Call 759-8903 u r1ous custom1ted -:..:..:.&.----- as a pin. clean & c·oz). 3 Br 2 Ba W•<'Ourtyard en try Near new rarpets and m icrowa ve 1n eluded Close to schools and s.hopp111~ Call for details . mountain v1ev.s. llnd the ..,.,.ooo t~10 Condo As pn,acy o( lmng •n " sume. 13 r loan Spa. gate guarded communi pool, clubhse ty S79,500 497-3331 552.1744 Redh11l~lk:tlt;. 1;~:; ~:;1111 THE BWFFS BUYE RS & SELLERS features including two separate master suites. and a large entertaining area and huge Arizona flagstone patio . all in fated community A 148,000 assumable loan at 12'"', awaits the shrewd buyer Priced at $275.000. ASSUMABLE 10% 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. spa Lg yard Easts1de Only $127.900 Call:M>9161 e RANCH REAL TY S51 2000 THIMIJMG TOW ... OME? e btQOO "FEE & SH" W A N T R ES ULT S ~ Ma gn1hrent ~1e11.s or CALL EDEE STERN Upper lfay and moun REALTOR ASSOCIA tams f ront row sharp 3 TE 67~5966 bdrm on FEE land - Good creall\e rinancmg S• J.- a,·a1lable Copistr.o I 071 OPfl' Sat/S. 1-5 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• 416 Plato TRADE OI SAU LET'SMAkE A DEAL ! Choirming 2 Bdrm rot tage with oak noors. m Long Beach t'r~s hly p111nted in and out Owner may lease option bath home wrth income &. Investment . OPEN HOUSE Call the sper1ahsts at the condom1n1um 1n formation center Touchstone Realty 96J..~ cus~~~~ 2 *Cote Realty unit 2 Bdrm and I 640-5777 POOL I SPA bath Super Newport ~~~~~!'I * * • REALTY / HILLTOP ,AIW>ISE Sparkling 3 Bdrm home o n beaut.Cull) landst·a Pt'<! l'orner lut Soothing spa. 11.ood decking and covt'red patio Ocean vie~. iii ow 1ng parquet noors. plush ca rpels gourmet kitchen Lowest pnred in the area SZ49.500 C/21 Newport Clltr 2 67 Acres. 3500 SQ ft 64G-5'357 home. barn. rorrals. NEWPORT CREST 3 B<lrm Condo Close to pool and tenn1~ Xlnt flnanring Priced to sell v1e111• of entire valley many extras, rmancing. Private Owner hc"d '7141493 1372 Beach location $750.000 = '!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!~!!!!!!~I Sep a rate re n c e d ree land. LEASE OPTIOH play yard !ugh.lights this 631-2242 642 5200 llG CA.MYOH superb 4 Bdrm pool • Exquisitely upgraded Luxuriowi custom con h ome 1n fabul o us Sl89.SOO Offt.r led Eshltt C/21 ~ C..+r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Sunho'' Btalh . JUSTUKEHEW! This lovely 3 bdrm home has been completely re done New roof. new carpets, etc. Owner will carry large loan Only. S132 ,SOO Call today 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS SUPERI! SUPRI! Executive 4 Bdrm pool home in exreUent area Creative financing available Only S!78.000 Call today979-S370 j PETE ' BARRETI ... REALTY •UHJVasm 'AU• Sensational 3 br home that Is in absolutely tip lop shape reaturlng a ramily room. formal dining. 2 car garage and much more Only S162,000. Fee '! Call 759· 1501or752 7373 ALLSTATE REAL TORS Class1f1ed Ads. your one· _ stOJ.!..Sh.Ql>J.!!!lj_ renter. RESIDENTIAL REiil ESTATE SERVICES MEWL Y USTEO~DM UNDMAlk Quiet elegance just a few doors fro m Ocean Blvd . Beautifully appoi nted unique residence on a 30xll8 lot with leasehold rights to the adjoining parcel. 2 BR + Den. $650.000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 l!E 111111 ILl llS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE HEW,OIT SHOR.ES Cozy Three Bedroo m Home In A Young People's Location. A Fun Pl ace To Live. Rented For $750 A Month At The Present. Priced At $130,000. Appoi ntment Necessary, But Easy To Show. Monaco on golfrourse. 3 do. 2500 sq. fl. 2 rrplcs. 4 Northwood Try S40M Bdrm. formal dinin g, bdrm. 2'"1 baths Sll50 dwn family room. assumable mo Sl~<XXI. 642-462:!_ 1248.<XXI don osen 640-5'357 Mobile HOMtt PEHTHOUSECOHDO ForS• 1100 v. 1th dork r or ~ o · (jC"i~·;tf.itoN·T~N·;; realt••r., loans. Submit all orrera Mn. Vtrdt 11i119-ce lg) Asking $575,<XXI. ~rming 4 Bdrm hid· ~i W\..OObrldgc den 2·aty and 3 Ba 3 car a~ I garage Superbly de· nd lg corated with the most 55 I ·3000 expensive draperies. tt1tlbrranra Pk'IH .ln iM 499N COASTHWY LAGUNA BEACH 497 4848 sailboat 180 cleg OC'l'an. Modular Type Homes bay and l"lt)' hghl '1cv.s. leased land 3 pvt bchs Lariie assumable loan 24 hr s~ly flSh .; Secunt} • pool ( M• • 111r: DRAMATIC wood and C/21 ... ~C........ pier rom ....... 900 JQ", I 3 B 1 b " rrrr. down 499-31116 714 7<>0 <>HJ COOL POOL wallcove rings a nd - carpeting Pnced lo sell quickly and 1t has 2 as· sumable loans Full price 1228,900. 751 3191 Large family home in beautiful College Park 4 Bdrm pool home, spa + huge bonus room, great home for entertaining Assumable f1nanring available. Call for de tails K us r ust.om r, 2 1 a __ 64(). __ 357 -- with ocean ,·iews HEWPOITIEACH Spac1ousdecksandrozy • s..-a.v • SEACLJ FF PARK ronv pit are perfect for Just reduced to fl87 .000' 1980 2 Br completel) enter1ain111g 2400 sq n. 1'2 blk to furn 1250 sq ft . 1 m1 ~o V~,.E. beach 4 &inns + ram1 from Lido shops. 166.000 • Sl5KDOWH • DESPB.ATl! 4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home Assume hi-balance loan '6500 down No qualify OWC straight note ing. Brand New! 3BR, SUCCFSSREALTY 21".I BA 2 ca r gar 549-7991 0 ve r I ook in g park lalboa lsac..d --I 006 631.5737 - ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE SIX UNITS, NOCASH im provable ll.3X gross. TO OK for down. Cute 3 0 w n e r ( i n a n c 1 n g . BR 2 Ba CO(tage, trade S240.000 Devin & Co OK. Desperate. $385,000 642·6368 Ownr/agt. l~.!:_Q693 ILUFFS COHDO CorottodefMcr 1022 2 Br + tort. spiral ••••••••••••••••••••••• stair way. panoramic 434 IEGOHIA ocean view Luxurious Elegant new 4 Br Vic new condo with security tor ian partial vu. gate & many pluses. ownr/contraclor just Best buy with terms I t SS7 000 Sl69,000 comp e ''!&:. _s._ OPEHTOOAY 12·5 ro,,Y STREET 2 I 57 Padflc A•• Pretty and private. 3 S4M26t bdrm. 21~ ba. Great rinancin 548-1904 • Investors Duplex on best street. pool, hi income Owner $325.000 640-4999 2 BR ocean view rouage South orSeaview Owner will carry first T D. Agent, 631·7~ CottoMtM 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EHTllT A.IHEIS DBJGHT WTSIDI Assumable VIR rinanc· Ing av all able on this FIXER Upper 3 br. 2 ba + fa m rm. Sll0.000 Seller will carr• S80,000 1st at 123. Own/ Agt. 642-1523, 645-7365 MESAVllDI 411&POOL Sll0,000 675-177 I charming, Ughl and airy _P_R_E_S_T_l_G_E_S_H_o _w_. home. Featuring 4 PLACE. Executive 4 Bd rms . plus ramily bedroom rancher. About r o o m . e n c Io s e d 2800 aq. feet. Formal courtyard, lovely back dinlna room. family yard with Kol pond. Alk· room. TWO fireplaces . Ing $l88,.00 For an ap. POOL• Loca ted in Polntment to see, call pr ivate Mesa Verde 540-1151 Country Club. Owner !.· HERITAGE Rf AL TORS SHAIPlll Lovely refurbished home on 101JCOW"Se. Al· aum e 10~ Int. Only St ll,1195. Prln. only Patrltll Tenore. •It &Sl·l• R&'M* I• ~ \ I • wlll h elp finance . 1350,000, TARBELL, REALTO~. t79-2380 AffOl.D.aU WOODSY COMO<> Nr So. Coaat Plan w /many amenltlu • aecurlty. Aaaumable lo1n1. OW carry. Be CttalJ Yt . 178.000. FAMILYHOMI NrSo.C..t"-Lar1e J 1T old bome w1th J Bdrm• 3ba. den and famlly rm 2 frplc1. t..ae LOCJIMO Hill I 050 ly & fplc Wetbar, indoor Open Sunday I 5 890 ••••••••••••••••••••••• B SQ Corner lot As 15th St 640-SJS7 C 21 N~J>Or1 Center Elegant 4 Br custom Inf sume loan or . SJS3,000 'N el Ii e Ga le Ran rh. Call ov. ner64~6406 aft 6 beaut view. 1mportrd S 1--------marble. pool me yard. 4 PYGUSS.RIDGE ltst t.yiit ToWll car garage. equestr1an1 Famll} home'" Al con 24x60 1971 Goldenwest 1 0 l s 6 2 5 . 0 0 0 d1t1on location 3 Bdrms Owner/Brolcer 759 0706 +den + ram1I) rm 2Br. 2Ba w family rm &: 644.5742 951.8269 · Security thru·out wet bar. in Laguna Hills ----= OPENSAT tSUN 1 5 n1restSslar park 21 yrs BY OWNER. Woodbridge M.wport leodl I 06t 1647 REEF CIRCLE + toqualif) '39.000 Carmel 3br. 2•., ba SIOk ....................... C/21 Newport Clltr CLASSIC und~~l.559-~--$8,000 DOWN 64_0-5357 MOIUHOME LET'S MAJCEA DEAL owe lrdTD 4 J!:.I· IACK IAY 2706H;~te206·A L e a 5 e / 0 P l i 0 n · MO INTEREST ClwrryLA*tArH 540.5tl7 Turtlerock Highla nds Versailles 2Br. 2Ba pen 3 bdrm family home Bren home. I /yr old. thse. ocn view $156,000 with separate m law's 1"-~~1111!1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!9 3bdr m. master bdrm Assum e $128,000 of S&L qrtrs Pool size corner I _______ _ w/frplc, 21Aiba. formal loans at 11r1c Sl828 mo lot. Very pnvate Fan· MEARWATER din rm . ram rm . util /hobby rm. lrg pror owe $20,000 3td TD Ofr I a 5 t I (' r In an l' In" Steps to the water on landscaped yrd. mt 730·2270, Hm 642·2tJ!82 $219,000 Lido Perunsula 2 Br 2ba view, upgraded crpt, IEST IWFFS C/21 Newport C..+r mobile homes. only 3 yrs 640.{357 old Pool, ret> rm. smaU wall paper & draperies IUDGET IUY --~ pel OK 1122. priced at Assumable loan & xlnt S62.SOO le •J7 al S69.000 hn. 752·9061 3 Bdrm. 2 bath single OCEAMFIONT * *DDttl'Qfll story ··Townhome·· Slt5,000cmhdowa -WAIT.RfRONT r~ . Original area, end unit. Seller will carry $600,000 HOM~ One of the most highly xln t cond S169.SOO balance.interest only 5 REALESTATE sought models in the (owner fUlancmitl Ag\. years Choice corner 631·1400 prestigious Village or 640·5560 duplex 3 bdnn. 3 bath _ __ Woodbridge. s Br. 3 car BLUFFS CONDO-Single up, 2 bdrm, 2 bath down. Acre-L..-S• 1200 ga r . spa, etc, etc t LI d Pl N Ca t t 1 _"11_.,_ S34 000 s ory. n a an. ew n conver o arge ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4• plush cpls. paint, up home l Acre Parcels 1FS 1 gr ades Top cond lotbooloy,rop. Ocean views, 40 Kona ~brtdgc Greenbelt Assumable ·~ Airport. prices start Da I loans . Owner a1it •675-7060• from SI0.500. Please call ""'' ly S2J0,009.~20J3_ <8081329-7711 Real 55 1·3000 Estate Gallery, Kona. tmllunnn Pll•).lrvlM l"IH 1044 WESTCUFf lncorv.•nte7>5719NAl11 -------..••................... RaUCIDI Spacious 3 BR 2'h BA fam rm & forma l dinfog rm. This is a lot or town home for lhe price! One or the lowesl priced in IRVINE Groves. Submit on financing! $1 35.900 Darlene · Herman 752· 1414 CX56) l BR CON00~.000 Dr Ka1lua, Kona, H1 Can assume exlsllng 92640 loan or approx 560.000 al -- 141t 'k int 673-6640 wport ltodt I 06' ---······················· HllD A IUL IUY TO 6f1' IMfO l.ASTILUFF7 3 BR fam rm Lusk Built home whi ch will give you the best the area has to offer School. sho.pping & recrtatlon., $210.000 Leasehold <.:oby Ward 642-8235 C XS8 ) COSTA MESA IMCOMI T ri ple x Ad j a c en t To New Rede velopment. Great Owner's Unit. Two Rental Units Help With Paymtnts & Taxes. $1070 Gross Inco me Per Month. Excell ent Financing Available. $155,(XX). hick yard. Clolt lO a bop. -------•I pl.n1 and pub, Good U• CIUVftll UllW sumablt to.. and Sl500 J • CONDO IN •LIM U>vely 3 BR "Birch" in Woodbridge Glen. Beaut i fu l d ec orator wallcoverings, brick & patio i.n oversized yard. Immac ulate condUion & within a few steps fr om park & pool. Hig h assumable loan. $127;500 Jamle Wilklmon SSl-8700 CXS7) COIOMA DB. MA• 2·slory 4 BR 21ril B.A spacious duplex, freshly rerurblshed. Close to shopping & schools. Available now. Sl.100 per month Lease Donn a Godshall 644-6200 CX59> ® ·--......... Jl.911 #2C.,.•"-... pwtC-., Ml• Jl'91 per mo. Sa.let price ()( a Bd.r• 1\\ batll• ~ sm,OOO.SUllmltolrer. lar•t famll1 room 17XJT1 with flaoton• llnplatt, •• SlffJOO -4 ..... ltrMICe• ... •· 141-7129 'llt.&l...,_!IBl.UfiPM#IW ""'mnawta.1.1Ul!L!llMl'll•• I I I l I I ~ ... ...... • 0 0 :::S !EA c a ¥$ t • a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 2-'. 1981 -., Alien conflict ~·-Reagan rerun By 1110MAS D. ELIAS l90TlC8 TO ~al.IC O.a•.UHTl'CMI ••~OP "l•M o ... ...-11,1•1 City ti 1"-Mll Yao..,,''* llat., A•-· ,_a111 vauo . c~ '1119 17141 ~. TO AU. INTllllHHO AOINCIH. o•ov~ ANO f'ClltONI: °" -..... ~· 14, "''· ... Clly ti ,..,....11 Valley will ,.._.,. If President Reagan and hill ¥ltorney general, WUUam French Smith, are surprised by the un· Ukely seeming coahtion forming to fight their pro posed plan to stem illegal Immigration. they have short memories. IN U ... ~-" !If "-Ille •M urtt•11 D•••••,n1•11t t• ••l••u • F-ral fYllllt ...... Tll• 1 .. ,,_ I• , ... f· ,. It For precisely the same thing happened on a s maller scale in California when Reagan signed a similar law almost 10 years ago. Like his cur r e nt propos al. the m ea sure Reagan signed in early 1972 called for fining employers who knowingly hire illegal immigr ants. His intent. Reagan said at the time, was to "crack down on those employers who engage in hiring illegal aliens (a nd > help improve job op &)()rtunities for thousands of legitimate California CALIFORNIA FOCUS residents who earnestly seek employment. . . " The measure signed by then-Gov. Reagan never took force because of a lawsuit filed by a group of fruit and vegetable growers which object· ed on two grounds : They claimed that no s tate can pass laws regulating immigration because that's a federal function and t hey claim ed that the law would impose an "unreasonable burden" on them to check a ll potential workers and make sure they were entitled lo work Every major Latino group in California also objected, claiming all Hispanics would suffer dis· crimination because employers would refuse to consider any of them rather than risk fines for h1r· ing illegals . F'LEF:CE'AWARD Seri Prorm1 re Prox m i re 'a w ard' lo Tre asury WASHINGTON <AP> The law was thrown out by a state Court or Ap· .,,. peal, which ruled only on the growers' first objec- tion. The issue or whether e mployers can be forced to check the status or all job applicants was ig- nored; so was the potential for s purring dis· crimination. Sen. William Prox· mare has announced t hat hi s "go l d e n f leece award " this month goes to the Treasury Depart- ment, whose investment policies he said lost $2 billion for the Social Securit y system last year. The Wi sco n s in Democrat said the de· partment earned 8.3 per cent on Social Security funds it invested last year while private m o ne y -ma r ke t managers who invested in gover nm ent securities e a rned a n average 13 percent . 8-0th issues will be central in the new battle 011cr the Reagan-Smith "guest worker" plan. which would permit entry of 50,000 worke rs from I~• Mexico annually on a two-year trial basis -to work for subminimum wages while legalizing the presence or undocumented aliens who have been in the U S. 10 years or more. Objections to t he current plan echo most of the '«' 1972 complaints "We do not believe employers should have the burden or indirectly enforcing federal program s ... said Mike Stuart of the Western Gr owers Assn Meanwhile. Dolores Huerta, vice president of the United 1-~arm Workers or America, called the .,11 plan "an insult to Mexicans and to all Americans ,. who care about decent working conditions and j ustice." T he difference would have been wor t h $2 billion on the $47 billion in Social Security taxes that Treasury invested on behalf of the system. he said Proxmire presents the "award" each month to call attention to what he considers an example of waste o r loss of tax. payer s' money. I• But neither discussed what may turn out to be the main weakness of either the Reagan-Sm ith plan or any other attempt to limit sub-rosa imm i· gration: fo'inding legal residents willing to per for m th~ . tasks done by the illegals. even a t legal minimum wages. Jet alone the sub·par pay given the undocumented workers. One 1977 study, for instance, found that illegals then held 60,000 jobs in San Diego County a lone. drawing $260 million in wages. Thal averages out lo $4 ,333 annually. Few legal residents would work for wages so low. especially at the menial jobs given the illegals. Though San Diego County borders directly on m any of the e ntry points used by illegals, it harbors far fewer illegals tha n some other California counties, not lo mention states like Tex- as and Michigan. where migrant labor har vests m any crops. The Reagan-Smith plan, proposing to allow legal ent ry t o fewer Mexicans than we r e em ployed in San Diego County alone four years ago, doesn't speak to the labor shortage a nd con· sumer price increases that a s udden change would almost certainly produce. The Treasury Depart· ment declined comm ent on Proxmire's criticism Since Social Security was begun, Proxmire said. ever y tr easury sec retary has invested t he system 's money in low-earning government securities to m inim ize t he interest on the na- tional debt, rathe r than p utting the funds into higher-e arning govern· ment securities. But that ·s probably a moot point anyway. For • th e com bined opposit ion of labor unions . agriculture and civil groups -s ure to fall into line behind the Hispanic activists already opposing the plan -probably will keep the plan from ever becoming federal law. "If the trust depa rt· m ent or your local bank told you they had invest· ed your s mall family in- h eritance in orde r to further the interests or t he ban k r ather than your i n ter est s, you would fire them and sue them for m isfeasance, m a lfeasance a n d perha ps even fra ud," Proxmir e said . "But that's precisely what the T r easury m anagers of the Social Security trust funds have done." And even if it s hould make it t hrough Congress, the plan would still have to pass the con- stitut ion a l tes ts w hich went u nans wered in California the last time around . l E!Uu is a columni!I based zn Santa Monica I • Mineral economists' I job security excellent f By JOYCE L. KENNEDY They're well paid -the a nnual new-graduate starting salary at the m aste r's degr ee level is $28,000; Ph.D., $32,000. They're snatched up by employers as soon as they shuck cap a nd gown. T heir s pecialized degree programs exist at only four universities. Who? These fortunate specialists are called m ine ral econom ists . Besides e verything else they've got g oing, j ob security is exce llent b ecau se natura l r esources a r e de pleting, not expanding; demand for miner al economiaU rises yearly. Thanks to R.E.0 . Woolsey, bead of the mineral economics department at the Colorado School of Mines for thls v1ew: Mineral economics Is the study and application of both economics and management pr inciples lo the minerals and ene rgy indWJtriet. It takes in economic analysis. plannint and mana1ement. Specific a reas Include market and commodit y enaly1l1, groJtcl end bu1lnesa evaluation en ow1tlona , research. Another area 11 mineral re· ' source economka, with empbuh oo ' depletable resources. Some coosider mlnerel economic• , ~ .. a field of Its own, lnvolvln1 min· j, in1, peU'Oleum, 1eolo1y. economlca and man.,ement aclence. • Gradualel work not only ln lb• ~ m l'*'1111 and enerry lndUltri• per ,., but are ln ban1Kln1 UMRJtutlon1 1 ad l•w rlrm1 that Hl"Yt tbtm.. TMJ'N fomd ln latenltianaJ de-- •11"411119 ~. IOVtmmftt .,.ew ad aclieml•. • u..., .......... HGGOmiatl bAkt CAREERS line jobs, positioned for a move to top management. They have worldwide travel opportunHies. Fewer than 100 gr aduates yearly a re turned o ut by four schools that of· ter specialized progra m s. They are the Colorado School of Mines, Pen· nsylvania State University, Uruversl- ty of Arizona and West Virginia Universit y. T he largest under · graduate mineral oconomlcs pro· g ram Is at Pen n State, whi le Colorado enrolls the most graduate s t udents. At the graduate level, m ineral economics attrac ts t e chn ically oriented students with engineertnc backcrounds in petroleum, min.inc and geoloay. Other s tudtnU come trom such varied backirounda H finance, management or economica. To better understand thiJ cont.em· porary c1J'ee1, send S1 for• nve·pace copy of the article, "Teo Vean ol Mineral Economtu at Klnel." It ls a reprlnt from the N'ovember dlO ia1ue ot Mines magazine. Order lt dired1y from the masulne at Gu11enhetm Ha ll, Golden, Colo. 90401. RE ADER SERVI CE: Lookln1 ahead? "Opportunity: Wbere to flDd It ln the 'IOI" la a four·P9t• •"PPI• meat to lbe U.S. Nen WublDl'tOD Letter. It report.a on Amerfc• u foreeuten envillon It ln tbe year lttl. To receive a copy, enclOM a 1t.a:T., telf·adcll't9Nd, loD1 white uv witb your requ.t to Joyce Laln •nned.Y at Bos 15IO, Co.ti 111 .. -. ' ~ ... ~"' Olu•l~­ACI flf 1'7• (I'\. •ml ~ ,,_ ..,,._ 1119"'91•1 Ht lm Traci '--LIM f'rojacl, (Ofttlructlefl .. -.. -....... ..... elt_ 1,.ttel ~I.MM .... m•11. City of F-1.tlll Valin, Cailf9rlll<t mm. Tiit project la la t ot•• Ill Ille _.._, -llOll of ,_, .... v •• ,.., --•• ""' ....,II ..... -.., TalMrl Aw...,. °"' lllla ... .,.,. ... ........... , ............. 1 .... -.., ~ .. $1....C ............. ,.., 11 .... --"""" ..... _ .. ,... ~I lof ,..,_.,. '"""• wllt lllM ~ ltllllte., KllOil tltftlfk OllUy affatll119 11'9 -llty af IN ~ ...... ._.. ... __ _._,..,IN--~ City of ,_..,,. v.11.., i.t -.Ci.d,,.. ta Pt•,.r• .,. E11vlrenmenlel lm pa<I Sta...,_. -· .,. N•l-1 E11vlrM-,.....i.i Pollo Atl of , ... CPL t M tO) fl• , .. _,. lof -" dattaloft llOI lo prepert t11c1t $1 •lem e111 ar e •• folio-llW -1«1 ,,._ It IKet.d 111 a low I• mtClllH'll C1a111lly real•nll•I .... --... ~ "" ... Mt.., .. -p11yt1cel Oftvl.....,..,..,. wlll lie ml11lmel An Ellvlr-mot Ravi-llat.,. rewoecllnQ 1,. w1tt1111 -l«• lie.a -meoe bY llw •llOva-11anMCI City flf F_.,. V911.-, wflkll 9KliM9Mt tN ... Yl~el rtVlaW of -... ~I AllCI mon 1"41y wit I-llW rM - why well St-• I• "°' requlr" Tllll Elwl-tol ,_..,lew lla<ord It "" lllt .. llW .00.... ....... -,, avail••..., PloCllk e u mlMllOft eM <09Ylnl -'--' at WW Pl-I"' Depart,,_ la-Ille"°"" ol 1:00 e.m. -i.oop.m. No ,..,,,.... ...,,lr~al r•vl-of '"'" projec1 11 propoaed llD lie,_,_ ed "''°' to ttw ,_,, tor ,...._ flf F-retl\ollld'I. All ,,,._.., 1t9911<le1, 9r-erwl per-.. cll.._...119 with tlllt OK)tlcwl er• Invited to 1Mbmlt wrlllen com- ,.,... .. ter Qlll&lder.ikln b y U. Clly ol Founl•ln Valley to tit• Ple nnlnt ~"""""· s..clt wrltteft comma<IU 1hould lie reul.,.d •I 10200 Slet~ Aw,,.,."" or llefcw• $epC-btr •. ltsl. All 1..c11 c.ommenlt ao •«•I-will lie CDlllldeAd -,,. City wlll not ,,.. q..ett ... ,.. ..... of F-OI f~ cw , ...... y ..... 1n111re11 .. actloft .. .,.. prol«t prior to IN dale "'9<111 .. In ,,. proc.edlne tent1111<• Tlw Cltv of F-teln Volley wlll ..,.. Otrt•lul ,,. project detcrl-above wllll 8IOdl Grent tW>Cla trom IN U.S OoPM1INllt of Ho..11ft9 -UrNrl 0. .. 1..-CHUOI -Tiiie 1 of , ... ~,.. -Comml;nlly o. ....... ,,..111ACt of 1'7'. Ttw City of F-lelft Vallty 11 certJfyl119 to HUD_, lM Cl· ty -11-rt G. \loll,,...., tn Illa .. lk lal ~lty H City MaMeff, caA. .... I llD k C4191 OW j"'IM11c1loll of IM F-r•I cmwt1 II ., action I• llrOUGM lo enforc• r~blllll" In relatlOll lo envl-tel r•vlewt, de<ltlDll· ma1.i119 allCI ocllorl. -lllal ,_ r.s,>ontlblllllet ,..,,. -Mlltllad TM I-' effatl of IN certlfkaotl°" It lltel -Ill -ova l lite Clly of F°""~n vau..,. may .,.. IN 81•0 Grenl h•ndt and HUD wlll lt•v• willalled Ila r""°""blllll .. -1'W National lllv1,.,,,.,.......1 Polley A<I of ,... HUO wlll KcapC ., ot>j«lloft lo Its -"val of ... ,..._.,,,_ - at<~• tll .,. cet11ftce1i.. Oflly If II II D11 -of Ille foll-1119 ~: (e) Thal Ille unllkatlon ... not '" I.Cl ••<wlld by IN c:ertlfylne officer or Other oflker ol ...... kent -twd W HUD; or (Ill ttwt _.k .. t'1 -I~ 1ne1111a1 r.,,taw record hlr .,. project 1nc11c.-omlu loft of • r-.ilred .... clslOft 11"""'9 or n ep •PPlkalll• to,,. 11<01«1 In tlW envlronm..,l•I revl- Pt'OCftl. Oblectlona m"'t lie ~.., aftd _...._ In .ccordaftce wltfl .. ._1rec1 procec!Wa CU CFll Pen •> eftd may lie -auecl lo HUO aot Oopart-m of HOV1l119 alld u.-. Oe ve lopme11t, Area Oltlce, UOO Wllahlr• l o.ilevar•, Loa ... ,,..,.,, Callfwllia ~-<»1acti-to ... ,... ...... l\lftde Oft ..... ---lt.i.d -Wiii not ... ,....,_ .. .., HUO. Ho •t«llOft r-IW4 .-r Se~ lemllar U, 1•1. wlll ba COlltidwM by HUO. ~ •. v .. -. atTMMeew .-~ ..... .._....VOli.,,C:..HM Publl-Orenot Goell Delly PllOI, AU9UPU, ltl1 J7....i. NOTIC E OF DEATH OF PEARL MARIE HAMMER LILLYWHITE AND OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A·109l96. To all h eirs, beneficiarie s, creditors a nd contlnoent creditors of Pearl Marie Hamme r Liiiywhite and persons who may be otherwise Inter ested In the w ill and/or estate: A petition has been filed by Ann Marie Liiiywhite Soper In the Superior Court of Orange County requesti ng that Ann Marie Li i iywhite Soper be a ppointed as rersonal re p r es enta Ive t o a dminister the estate of Pearl Marie Hammer llllywhlte, Costa Mesa, CA (under the Indepen-dent Administration of Estates Act). The petition is set for hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Cente r Drive West. Santa Ana. CA 92701 on September 2, 1981at9:30 a.m. IF YOU OBJECT to the grantlno of t he petition. you should eithe r appear at the hearing and state your objections or flle written objections with the court before the hea ring. Your appearance may be In person or by yo ur attorney. IF Y O U ARE A CREDITOR or a contlnoent creditor of the deceased, you must file your claim with the court or present It to the personal represent ative appointed by the cour t within four months from the date of first Issuance of letters as provl<Md In Section 700 Of the Probate COdt of California. The tlmt for filing claims wil t not expire prlOf" to four months from the date of the hllrlng notlc.td 1bove. YOU MAY EXAM INE the flit kept by the court. If you are lntt,..lted In the Ht•!!1 YOU may flle I req"9A with the court to receive specl11 notJce of the Inventory of u tatt 11.MtS Ind Of tN petltl«IS, 1ccounts i nd rtporta de.Krlbed In Section 1lCO Of tht CaJtfomll Problte COdt. ... , c.. ,.., ........... , •t L•w, UM lerHl41t :,;;; ~~>=n CA PulllJIMd Or ..... Cont 0.11,:~· AUi. .,, • "· 2A, 1'11 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 ·8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7· 8 INDEX Te Pbce hwr U. C1U 642·5678 HOUSES fOI SALE t. .... 1 k lMthl ... a.1•••-•l• c.,..,. ........ c-. .. IM•f Cet1• ll•u Dona Poilll I ltl1w• ,._ .. •\•llt) -. ........ . lt•tM ........... ........... H1l11 i...-:-..... 1 lllNIOll V14)0 ~ ... "'" ..... W t'i.111tMt llAJ1iM.Jt C'1pn\faM s..t1 Au 11 .. 1 1to<~ -•Lat•M YtttlMU\tlt t llOIMlt llolnM ~alt IUJ.(SJAJ[ 4n•lf• .... Salt A .. nmuu '°' S.lt t!~:.!':~~n, (•tm1ltt)' Lotti lr> Ph ~='1~~1:,'~:\~ 1i.,1 .. n l 01t1 ~.i. ........ IO!w llo>M ::.~'?t,;!ni "'°'' fot S•lt 'IOl>tk H,.,. Ttll Pih 'lw,._n Ot-M-rt M • ..,._.,' Ol~tlo Pr.,. 8::: "~-:~~:~., R11111rf\c' • .,,.,, •1rnu• ltu l l.Atttt lartllnlt ku l U l•lt \I ••lt<J RENTALS •4ow ... f\ilrftu~ lfo.I"" lfth'1•1UI .. Hort...., hunet l "f t ondoln1Nwmt t wr" !Oftdo111•,..vllltlM To.IV\(N.w-t furn To•MowJtt l ,.1 ~·t:t~"'"" 0.Pl<ltt l•' ~ .... t'\or• ~po l.nfi.rt\ Apt' "-'" Ot t nf ~=·· 1o11d Hot.th "°'tl\ c ..... 11omc. ~tnf'htr kt-0••1• \ M' thOfl fltftt•h ~·"'·'·,,""·rt· Ciu t10 rtH Rutt Olli(< "'"''' lNt1Mu Ktnt1- llld••lntl ~'""' ::.•,,: ~tMtO Mitt Rtt1t•h BUSINESS, INVEST· MlNT, FINANCE • .... ht• Ho.Mt For w. Ho.Mt For We ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -C.tMf'tll 1002 G....,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• . .. IOIJI 1011 IOll llQI lOll IOI! 11114 1000 lO.. EQUAL HOUSING OP PORTUNITY :: Pllbliaher'a Hotlu : 1~ Al I real utate 1d :: v e r t i s e d i n t h 1 s 1011 newspaper 11 subJect to :: the Federal F'atr Hout· :: In& Act of 1968 which ,,. makes It Illegal to ad 1100 vertiae "any prefer~nl·e. 11 41 l1mitat1on, or dis crim1nat1on based on race. color. rehgrnn. sex, or national origin, or an 1ntent1on to make an)' such preference l1m1tat1on. or dis crtminat1on '" This newspaper 14111 not knowmgl) 11eeep1 &n} ad\ ert1S1ng for rt'.i l estate wlul·h 1s 111 ~ 101 a uon of the law :! UIOIS: Ad¥Htittn !!': thoukS chtdc their ods NEWPfll BEACH , ............... btcw Propertln . 3 Triplexes m 11 row on ocun 11de or PCH 1n Corona del Mar 2 Duplexes + 1 Triplex In a row on Balboa Penln•ula -l lot from sand and surf. Near 19th St l Duplex on the water with dock for 30' borit All la ree auum11ble loan& at 12'-''1 Owner's are motivated C/21 .Wwport Cntr -640.057 DUPLEX $94,900 Investors delight' Two 2 Bdrm units Current 1n come S7SO mo I )e.ir home protection plan 1n duded Call tu )t't' • 646·'1171 THE REAL ESTATE RS ~~ dolly lftd ...port er--~~ '°" ltNMcl.t.ty. The !: DAILY PILOT.....,..., : M•l•ty f« the flnt !: h1corr•ct lnurtloR ::"° oflly. ,:w; 1m '"' •lllt 4«"11 mo OCJI •Wi ..,, t4IO HoutHforS• ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMrel 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AIMORMAL Where can you ftnd a property 4 doors from the So Bayfronl 14 Ith a 4S'x8S' lol on B1lboa Island v. here the QV. ner will con11der anythlnR of value·Slocks. rash. liind , units. you name 1t and the owner will trade lntludea plans for a nel4 duplex Asking ~.000 lolboCI l.a.d llty MEWrOITICH CONDO 2 Bdrm. 2 full batha. at· teched earaae Lota of upi radts Sinale atory S12UJOO, Call now, ~2313 THE REAL ESTATERS , .... ,. Sharp 3 Bdrm home w Iota of bric k Ii st o new ork . bit-In kitchen , frplc, d bl 1ara1e. on quiet ~t Seller will l1na ncr at 12% 1ntuat Askin& on I)' $3.50,000. JACOBS REALTY "'""70 HUGE EAS TSIDE HME 5 Bdrms , 3 baths. separate mllSter suite Pm ed to sell at St68.500 Assumable financing Call S-46·2313 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS 2 'IMIMSULA POIMT IAIGAIMS OWC BALANCE 10'; Call no14 ' 4 BR Mutl'an Vllla 1 house rrom pounding surf Secludtd master retreat wit h f1replat·e ~el4 kitchen. dine on tiled patio Hurr> :::::~ ~~ 3 II, SI Ol,000 Prime CM home. hUlll' back ) ard. eovered patio Nice starter home needs some fix In& Only 10'. down Call . 6 7.l-1799 . CilCiAMTIC STEPS TO SAMD FIXER 3 BR & DEN need• your attention Br 1n11 sho,·els and paint brush Make SS's 0.. ner will carry at low 1n terut ::-.:::::::: ~":.'.) ~ SIDRM ~Oftt) \4' Lo•" ., M0ttt)Y.1nlM' ~ Just llutd and pnced to sell' Private courtyard entry leads lo huge Newport Beach estate Enormous fam11) room with blazing ftreplaC'e' Sunny gourmet kitchen Large huh grounds On· I> S299.~' Call toda}. 673·8550 Monua .. TO, W> now AMNOUNC£MENTS, MONllS l LOST & FOUND .. ~.""'"'' l tl ""°' Lftal ,aou-.. I.Ml • ....... Ptf-.lt.• lor••l llvtit• Tr"•'' SERVICES lM"-DYM£NT l "ErAIUION YhtliOt' IAtilr\ft'WH'\ JcHl'W41fU ... !• lltl~ll••ltO 14 6 t MEICHANOISC ""'""'" AttPh.ncn ...... _ t!t:.':; MaUft•t' C•Mtru 6 f.O\Mp~nl C..h Dot• I).., 19 , .. •'\imlw• c.,.,, S..l• Horut How.wbold (,OOllJ, J ..... ,\ U\f'\lot'-llor"-<> Ml.M'9tl•IWOIU .. , .... ,11.~,. •fttf'd MUUfal lM-tf\lfM"h Ol!ott r ur• • t.qu1p , ... ,..,. •<~ .. ,., Sit-111t3hcl'HIW' s.on...,c...i. Si.on "ftl~ll"' • ., ~~'f..st0.H1r1 ~.,.., IOATS & MUINE (QUIPMOIT c-·• bl.a tb1M S.t\ K'• loll• 11 ..... t:q,;1p ..... , .... , IMtt "tnl Char'" looUS.11 to.I> Sllpo l>och -.s,...i o'llo1 -.. ...... llAMSPOITATION 41,,,.,. l'1mptn Seit Rt•I D«\iitl'•n -er--... · ,._HOltS.lt lllHll Tnl&ettTn u t !~~~!;~'J,n. AUTOMOlll£ U-rol ' A19U4~ C.:t•"ttK• l«r•tl191 V'"I\ i•t ~1~fi:.~oo~ Tr..clla v-....... i.. .. , •• 4-Wa•lt<I AUTOS, IMPHTED UtM fll AVt llo.,.o """' A1i11h1 Hult ) ¥11W CAl>t'I ~ 0.LIUll '•rr•n f l•l HoM• J ....... , J-K1t1•nal.tu• I.MW ..... Matd• litttt .. o.-. a.n. llO 110 1 °"' , ...... ...... "" Ptm ... "-•11 Ro111 llortt "°'" E. h-r.:,. Vftk1wa1u Vo4•0 C-tl SEA COV E PROPERTIES 714-631 ·6990 BUILD 3 MORE UNITS R 2. 13.000 sq 0 lot I :111)) Bdrm. 2 balh t>K1s11n1t Vll h o m e H o r s c s :iw permitted 014ner v.111 earn p;iper (';ill :;,: ~·2313 "11) '""'' 1(1;1) llOlD .. ,. .... Olj<) -11(11),) II[~ ~ """ *''l .. .... IOQll WAI IQ) "°"' -llliOl ,... --- THEREAL ESTATERS THINKIHG TOWtil40Ml7 Call the spec1ahst~ .11 the condomin ium 1n formation renter Touchstbne Realt) 96J.(Ml6J SI 1,000 DOWN THE REAL ESTATERS COW!try C........,. Localed 1n bar kbay ~el4 port area zoned for horses 3 Bdrms. 2 Ba. loaded with C'h.irm from the Oak peg & l(roove fl oor s to the eustom master Bdrm suite As· sume 1014 U\lerest loan and owner 14111 rarry large 2nd t-'ull pme St63,900 TR,\DITIO\,\I. ~1..\1 TY 631 -7370 @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 71 4-631-6990 4 IR IACKIAY SI 37,500 Roomy , 4 Bdrm. 2 st) w CDZ) fireplace Ver) clean. hght and air) ~ew dishwasher. 14 a1e1 heater. paint paper sk) light ' Beaut1full) landscaped p11 l10 A must see' 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS • Super sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath townhome Coz) 11. ;.;.;.;.;.;.;.-;_;.;.-;_;.;.;.;.-;. kitchen and dlnUlg area 1• RHLTO RS SU,SSIUD .oio o v er Io o ks I u' h S--J~ 5 ~~t~ cd~dto P: \~~ ~o~.e~n~.w~:rm v~~Y S'YGLASS LOT comphmenLS th11 lo\el) Ne14 Bedford home II features four bedroom& four baths. family room and formal dining room Extensive upgrades and a ktng·mtd lot make this home a truly unique find Offered 11t SM9.000 with exceUent f1nancm1 &\'a1l1ble -loan. Price onl)' Sl09.900. moll v attd & will help :: Act now. call $46-2313 finance Just 5'59.~. -- fl\O fllO HIU tt• 11• THE REAL ESTATERS ::: HEWrOITHGTS -DUrLEX One 4 Bdrm 2 bath :: charmer with fireplfce. -the other 2 Bdrm 2 bath. :: fi replace. All for only : SlSS,000. Owner will -carry AlTD. Owner anx· -loua. Call 546-2313 -Ml - THE REAL ESTATERS AFFORDABLE 2 Bdrm. 1 ba · 1 yr old. Adult complex. T•ke over exislln1 loan • RED CARPET 75~1202 HODOWM VATIRMS 3 Bedroom. 2 bath. pool ll0,900. Call 548-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS RCTc-lylorCo • •• \11 '•· 11 KI A"". O.•etop.n Prime Costa Mesa area 20 unit condo project compl approved. ready to build. call 752·6499 Plan.JV Realty D.M.Mcnhel -_!!0.0135 --- The fastest draw 111 the Weal. a Dally Pilot Claaaihed Ad. Call To· I do 642·5678. TAR GAZEK" .. ~=..:..:.:.::...,...--1y CUT l POUANl---.----t M YM ~ .&-,. °"""' M ...,. ..... ,,., ,. ,.,. ...... ...,. To devtloet 1M1.oee f0t Tundoy, ,_,_._._... ... to,,.,... °',.. Zodiclt bl"" .... •••• ••• •11 r'\ '=~~, ~~~lA-4~~s· :: --.., -... ----= ... = .., = ft •• AICHITICTS SB TH1S OMI Top location. a couple or door• fro m lhe private beach In tht n cluah t ,uardtd c ommun t y of 81y1hort1. Eaay to remodel I Bdrm, 2~ beth bomt . $175,000. •YOU have a ..mo. to otf• or IOOda to ..U., pYN ID .. fa th D_11l1 Pilot Cllutn.d 5edill . • lbootfflD ~.,Q.&T I l'Ol&All •:-::'":-:...~. ~ t.. 10 I-lovt ""-It _. I ll H lAGE I' I' I I I I SA I OY I: • 1 r 1 1 . • r_V..!:,_D _1 .!..-1.:' ~ • Thi• 0111 I w w m11tt lltYI I I' I' I bMfl • 11on1 crimllll' ,..., 1111 • · • · bMy plct11l'M CtlM wlttl • _\ _t_S_lt_Y_E_J--) tro11i 11111 --. I' I I' I I 1 •~91-=:-..~-:: -. .................. -..... ......,.,... ...... i... ... ~2~ • rm&.ra-a.o"° r r r r r r r r 1 I '::.:lflil ™I I I I • I I I I scu....m.-...,.1ac' ......, ,, ... ....... -. ~ ""-' -~ -.--~~-::.;._..,_..__.. . .. . •• ., ... J y II • . . . ' ' ....... ~., ... )' .. a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 ..._., U•fwlitlied .,._ .... ,_..a.ct .,. ....... u.t.n. ApaelMHh """"-1...e.i1 to Shirt 000 Office._... 4400 • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 01Mra.1Ust.tt °"'trleolbtcrte oaHUwMlill.a-4 HotttHU••.a.ct Mtwportltedi 3269 Ntw,.,ta... 376' Co1t0Mne 3124 wportlHch 316' Su~r vitw. st<' aitt'. UECUTIVISUITES •••• • •• •••••••••••••••• • • .... • • • •• • • • • • • • .. •• • •••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• •••• ••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••• • •••• ••• •• ••• •••••••••••••• •••• ml· teruus, spa N 8 Newport ~ach art>a Acr.119tforS• 1200 ~~~ lal.ooP...._ 3207 '""" 3244 WH tchH, l story 4 br. Tlmf Share Oakwood 3 bdrm. 2 bllth. l'11rpet. Zbr. Iba upptr. l!undt.'~lr.. 7~!;:0 + 11 hskpl( 714 631 ~l •' ••• ••• .......... ••••• p 2 I 00 •••• ••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••" study. 3 ba, <'ount ry Studio You aet Thur. dra~s. pahu. rarpon. ~11 r S600 > rl> Opl'n Share 2 uk su1ll' tn prr • SUMMYMEAD • •••tt•••••••••••tt••••• 3 Br ot·unlroot condo In 2 Br Oungetrtt Condo. kltrh Gardener Av111I Fri, Sit. Sun S2:)() p!'r l'hildren ult, no pets ~15 Sal Sun I 6 212' 1 JOth M F lo sht 2 br rondo. 311g1ous 11rpor1 arlo;t 3'1~ Tr art 3.'l loloirt.id) 10 n· neat beurhy Balbou b> st ream trnn" & 11115 no pdl SllOO mo $48-180c Ora nae A~ IU4~ ~\'es St Halboll Pl'n 673 2830 fl B · pcol, rec rm. lndry sQ ft For dl't111l~ r11ll 1·ord S1SOO per lot Xlnt t•1tri111Co.do louuon w ¥tt p11rk1ni: i.w1mm1n1 °Adull6, no 642-9$67 OCIAHFIOMT 642 7420 3BR IBA $675 HI) f•r si75 848-ll624l'vs 85111226 r1na1mn1: b) ov.nr 714 Tl'rt1Ctr ~ •q rt tn 11nd Spl't'tuculur Vil''* ~ AVtill Sept l~t 2 Br buoaalow 10 ex Bt11ut1fully rum 3 Br 2 I Br c11rpet1. drape~ Sll'P" to tx-h Gur wn Fem to sht 3 br.,2 ba HEWPOITCENTEI 760 04'23, 328 t:r73 l!u~tr11I <'OOdo Wtlh 1200 s1100 irly 644 7211 Agt e7s 11229 t'IUSl\le guarded llllll' Ba lrpl(' d washer pool Adults. quiet at porch 1129Wt'llt Ualbua home. nr So <.:011111 p . Ctt1t..._Lots/ sqClolofftct'av111l11blc 4Hr 3n11 1-·11m11yllumcWOODBRIOGE 48r. community St 275mo atloons.ind Sll2SMo mos phrn· RIL-<tnes5 & 213865~ 641·8702 0rea1111r•u1~~oi" ltith Crypt~t' ISOO in fullenofl Sl20,000of unqu1~thuw,tnterta1n 2 •1 8a, 2 11t y, nll·e Dys 642 9201 evts ~inter rental 6739499 professiun;il ll•n;1~t~ w1-:STC1.IFF 2 fir l'i em1tleRoomm11tl'want G00J1s~~~;h~ taM'" •••tt•••••••••••••••••• 11~sumable hn11nc1nc tnR {>alto otr L1v11111 & neighborhood, J.IOUI 1n &M 169'7 or 98242l4 $48 476i, 73t 61!29Agcnl Bil To~·nhol!M! Adulh ed to share 3 Hr hou!lt' ' llrbr Lawn Mount Oll\t' und St'lll'r will help F'11m1ly Rm SJ200 Mo walk1n11 d1st1ince, no Harbor View II om es 29r Plllto slepii to bch Roomy 3 Hr Townhuu~t· only, no pcti. ss75 Mu M1n1on VttJU, full 11r1v I 7TH STREET 2 lot• (.'yprt'!I~ l.Jwn ltn11nt•e thlll 3 yr old A~enl6449060 peli $750 mo 5516931 Lovely 4 bdrm riamtl)' rl)'bl'.~7Smo Av111i 11,IJl 1n 11u1l'1 Adult 1'128 Bedfo rd l..in1• S3001nl'ldu11lb M61200 COSTA.MESA Makeorr &&G Ollll bu1ld,tng i>nrtd lo sell 1.R.den.Z BR.Z ba.deck, aftSPM hume.~&qft.Cumpl ~PU Comµl i:x Newl~ r c M87533 txl:H honw7707928 zorJ room ofrtC't'Wltt·i. C ;it 1290.000 Exclu1uve ample pkmg, 1 blk 10 Golr course IO<:llllon 111 sec al&rf!l system. 2 546-5S84 dt.'euratt'd, (1replu<·e. 2nR i·ondo Stepstnh• h M 1-· to !>hr 4bd1·m homl' Ar. pll·nt) of prk.: L'til ~HHrclal 1600 w1thW1lham Cott Ocean Adil <·pie ~ Rancho San Joaquin 2 stry Sep tn·laws Qrtrs l!nrlsd patio & gurage $700Mu H U Nr ol'can $200 1111·1 i\v,111 "°"Call •••,••••••tt••••••••••• Ole ea ty 8B.Q poo1' 'd fl ' t 735 Port Sheffield Ba. Blt·mll, slep6 lo tl4S 3381 n1ll btwn !1 5 30 11rt 6pm . roperty t C ,, R I N11pets675·8S36 Br 2 ba den W IU A vatl now Sl500/l~e. Wmler or Yearly 2 Br Surry. no pets SS25 Mo 642 8877 + ut1I ~47 0157 ~;o 0058 Realon11m11·~ 675 6700 HAtU.: <',tll ..;,."P•HI &.lnn•i.lmt>nl CoronadttMcr 3222 with ,3pat'u!~o~ ,~:Drive by lhen t'11ll sand. 5206 Ne~tune li br l'1 batwnh!.1.,fq1h•. SQ!ttaAfla 3880 shr 4br home " prof OctonYiewOfficn ll4;,ll'h I ro1wrt~ 50 640-5777 ~·•••••••••tt•••··~•••• 8.SI 0320or8466613 ~-7813!1Kt S4!:9Z75,213446·9220 l(ar ~1vt pt1t111, adults ··~···~··•••••••••••••• l..ot·ated J<·roi;~ from thi· lrunt&lll' 111 µrmto• 1111'.1 SPACIOUS 5Br. JO a, Oceanfront sin le ramtl Oceanfront Dplx JHr s4!1S 276 Avuc·adu NF.W ( ONOO rwar SC ~ierson No pets Btwn be111·h tit ll untrn,,:tun t1.onO"lll'rw1llf111a111·t• formaldinrm,Camrrn locjunalHCh 3241 4 Br dn 3 ~ p Y 2ba,f/p,bltins.Yrly or!I 548 7510642572'.! Plai;1 Small adult rum a)&ot•ewiti7J l4!ti6 llt•a dt l'11llttl'~ ptl 1-.xl'lusl\'c l'rini·tpJb " wet bar, grdnr lnt·I ............. •••••••••• · e · It. enin mos lse Also avail un ' µlex Sel'luded 1·11rnt•r N U pron Gentleman $325 m o r<·nt u r 1 onl~ A3k lor lrc•nt• L.otsforS• 2200 Avatl91 Sl200mo Ai:t OCEANF'RONT Mobile lo<' F'urn or unfurn rum 6457573,6754283 2 br S400 mo Stoic. unit I BR + 1•xtras S<IHO will shim· tx-11ul home 21 SurrRealt1·S367~~ · Loudon \1:1 t~lt4:!41ur ••••••••••••••••••••••• 760·8311 Homes~ mo & uµ Sl500 Mo Yeu rly rcfrtl( Adult.\, nu vct3 + S:J5uttl 7752580cvc~ with M F u\t:r )') s:nri ~ 631 7300 BY OWNER 1 In T Obi wide 499-:1116 675·8562. A~ttlh 423 W Uu} 548 95\li A • · fOlll pl 7~1.@(fl 68 200 Sq Ft l .. GU ..... 1r "CH Imm::. :u~u°!:. 3Hr V1H·11nt 8 25, LR 16x28, S• C~ 3276 Unfwwithtd p~=-~•Md3900 Shr lrit 1 .. 1guna honw 750 ?qfri~,~~~·~q~ uf • "' ""' ~ fireplace OR 9xll 2 Br "••••••••••••••••••••• ""' ' f n n Olk r OFRCEILDG l.Jrit•• lll'l'an \ll'~ lot 2ba. lge kttrhcn, frpk, · · •••tt••••••••••••••tt•• lfeStiBJIU ••••••••••••••••••••••• or 0 ' fll't'!> ,11.ill..ihl•• 111 W ..• 1,,,e1, roun"· \.'r 1,. Kit with bklst area 2 IDIMCOMDO lolbo t·•-~ 380~ S E W IHI\ Jl'\ cfr c·k >U n F' h 1 1 to b1• <fr,l'lntK-d in tht· Oou l'u't' Area '"'1lh Jll S • It \Q ' ~t, Range & box Patio. gar Presidential Heigh~ . a -0 TOWtof40MES A I N D 1· I J s s i 1· a I mu' 1 r "' ' 1011 :. J 11 d l l' n tr JI 1·11rr 111!-r of the plan3 JnJ Jppro' .ii 1 ~ O o. m 09-· 1.~ 1 1 1 .: yard 905 Temple Ter Panoram1f <><-ean View •••••••••••••tttt•••••• ('ONOOS f'OR Ht:NT VILLAGE 494 411fl •197 ;QI!! I '.'It'" port l'l'llll·r i t:;;., Phoenix I nu:.u.tl 111 rt•ad\ to bi• built Prn1• ~Jr ~"' r !17 412:1 1 \~ r.ire S800 Mo Uttb by Adlts No pets $500 Large I Bdrm. Re(ri11 l!Rr + Dl'nl!•,ua S660 nollt'nl \1Mbth11 l Jll lur \l'~lmt•nt o111xirlu111h Sl.'i9.tlOO 1>14 ~c60l''l'!I u~ntr494 0LS4 ~va119..J~-7210 Stove, d1shwshr, nu Brand ne~ full ~11t• 'lie~ 1&2 bdrm luxu11 t'dM BcJul .lllH 2B\ ch·t;11I:. b du."'t' "Ith r~~h n·11u1n-tlSt 2tKH•H1 4!17 ~100,831 3389 Casto Mno 3224 28R, 28A CX·ean \tcw Spanish style 2br home ' f:{.~.~ '575 No pet~ lo" nhomes duublt' adult JIJU.'" II 11l;1n' I ~!'~';~t ~~~ ~~J~.~ Wtlhum<'ok ~o · tntcn-:.t IHb :t!ill or 3 "Jc IJ, \tel~ loh 111 • ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• I rg patio Lrg rooms Brick fr pie. '375' :;4924 i:arJges, pr" .ill' > urdlt. Bdrm from $t!i5 :: bdrm 1,75 1361l t Cote Re alt'-12131553~ \jll do~nt11"n,1•1 uonlll llB SEC!.l Df!:D I Br \Cr) s8oomo 4973142 CorOtladetMcr 3122 ftrt'plat·~ No pds from $~35. To,.nhou~c .J 2•, blnik!. 111 bch "•mt pn1 Jll'. quiet & "uods) •••••••••••••••••••,,•• Loeated 2 blot ks from from SG111 1 IJC)l11,, tr·n 1-· ·1 ~ nhlt 1'11111 )JI cS.. lnH•!>lmt>nt W C t H C 'I f J!>I ltale. IPrrn:. l'rtn Adult~. no P<'b Nl'" 2 & J Br spar1ous rond o Brealhlalung ~1ew. 2br 2 bdrm . 1 bu. d t r k downtown ~hupp1ni: 5 rm "Jll·rfalb 11ond:.' ~.1unJ lb Prn ~1 • 640.5777 · ' wy omm np.ilsonl' l'.illS.t2 l!'ilJ5 t·arpets drape:.. rnni:e units Ocean view ~II homeonl> S400 J4981 carport. pool. lease min to ....... rh Ga:. for wolonii & h~at '• uttl !163-l!l\2 l\t 111 e ~l ur1n1·r ' milt-J new appl dr ""S pt • """ d •' S Out l'ltls paid Isl + ~crnn • 11r · ,. I: adults, no pets S56U Openda11}' 10 6 tni: 1'<11 'rom dn :-.ion 'moktni: r,·ntJl1· luratiun ne\t 10 1'11111 of County I~ SS25 Mo 642 ll8JS or Mo lo mo See to ap S240 rozy ronage 118358 759·1863 673 0473 666 W 18th St C M Oit>itu F'r~) elm e North rlMJffilOJll' tu 'IHirl' II B lusiness Rtftfd 4450 U.OtnJ':. R1h llouH• Pro,.rty 2550 646 6-123 prer1<1te S800 mo Rent1mes 631·4555 Fee 2bd. l'iba. frpk, det·k 64511334 6421005 on Bt'al'h tu McFadden ;i Bdrm ('undo <.rt· .. t ...................... . ln('IUd~) lh1• IJllll( .. lot:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :! rir :l hath. briirtd nt" ~97 3525or960-6591 Santa Ano 3280 pool. bit lllS Adulti;, no lhcn We,l Oil M· ~\utcli•n luc·dtllln : 11·111 Jrtd For ~ton• & 0H11·e sp111·1 of pu rk 1ni: S1111.1 bll· for l I 2 5 ll 4 I t 11 rr 1 1 l' rnndu Poul S79S Ocee111side Of Hwy •••••••• •••••••••• ... • • l!ClS l.se ~ 673 0473 H11ntln9tClft ltoeh 3840 to °' l' a w 1 nd \' 1 II Ji: l' ut 1h1 It':. 004 711;7 .if tcr JI re J:.onablerates 1a11t•<I hu\1111''"'' "arehou:.ell1gh~ro1Hh 7S.H 2<t! B NewlBr.setunty.l)UOb. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 71418!13~1!11 lipm 500to4000SqFt. ti31 1IOO ,crcd \ffordahh· hou!> J Spar1ous 3 BR 3 a. A IC nu crplldrapcs LarRe I Rr DHk THEWHIFR.ETRU R00tns 4000 Gar ts ~IESA n:RDEf)R Mew bclutin ini: c:uod lubor forn• ~. side lid"). 3hdrm. ~:~e ;:c·~:;d r~~:git· ~ enrl~sed patio, near so' gar~ge. ne':" c·pt. paint 1.uxur) Adult unit:. .it al. ••••••••••••••••••••••• f ~tftf PLAZA l'rirne ro~nwr~~.11 w1rt1 !;~,1·1~~~1'~;~~1 1'~~1~" •. 1/1.1.~•r. ~r6Pl'o" c~>lo i:aNr,olr~ • .;1·;~ great floor 1Jlan lo ~hare Coast Plaza, endosed ~J 4'zs5M aniiold S5!15 fordable hnn~ 1.2 & J Room for rcnl in n or 4350 1525 Mesa \\·rd1: E. L' ~1 µcrl> on 11U.\,1 ·•l'"l>ll 24·13114 ' -' 548~9~; ,.., " and retain pnval') 200 parkini: $450 ind ult! . Jlr Wl'll cle1•oratcd dus1ve area of Co1om1 ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 545-4123 Rlld T110 lnri:t· lnl:. yards to No Laguna IW l 8.21 ·6660, t H t Nearlynew21:!RP.ba Ulymp1csiz.e pool.IJJ£ht delMt1rfor[>ntfl'!t~tont1I StoroqeGcrocJt 111th 1•x1st1ni: 11n11ro\l' Rl\'Ell HA.'llt'll 3 Br 21, Ba Condo. frpll'. beac·h 51400mo ARI 557.3750 w 2 t'ar l(ar. clc•t•k, Vll'W l'd lt'nrm c·ourt. Ja<·uu1. singlt• man s500 ~1u on Halhoa f'eni~UIJ nt~t ment~ l<l•1lll for mot1•I, 5 u nei.. a 11 r t•nn·d cnc·I p11t10, 2 car i:ar 494 7551 2bdrm. 2ba condo nr Sr S690 mu Res 700 ~ park likr landM'ilPtnf! 760-4448 to run i'A1nt• 1101: fl ' 1·on1lo, \h11pp1n1: n•nt1•r \:n·at Well t'ustorn d,• S7~0mo 7511364 MF Plaza. ramtly set·tiun ofr,9750363 Mrn.t l>t·aut1ful bldg tn -2l>'ifti or ' Submit olft•1 \ :.t"n~d h m owt· t L-o.Ji-....1 3252 s II " Balboa fslJnd room :>l'IJ 673 ..... ,3 673 39""1 " • 0 c .t I'~ s1de4 Br 2 BJ. II: bonu:. -'r".a "..,.... Dwnsla1rs. 24•hr s~t 'tudto apt Kll·h. Ha. & 0 entranC'l!" IJuth&.,mall ~...,' "' Office Sub-L'e :-.!pt llt>ach SmJll t'~l'l'Ull\l' olf1n• xlnl dJflr~!> Sii!lli ~lo T~rri t 7141752 11!14 SllS0.0t111 t·i:I h'U I h111 tnh•rt•:.t for lo )rs rm, frplr, ~ar, S7HO mu ••••••••··~··•••••••••• bldg A c. all util pd "X fplc. ref. stuvt• S400 mu from $:19!> ~ 0619 Wdlllt'd to n·nt ~tor.i"l' - \ t \I k "I" '"''I L· " 3 B 2 B G d H • re! $250 ti7~ HllH ... \\\llHIHll" .,i:. 't• w '""' c.it·~ 642963-1 r a ar en ome, rept elet· $525 mo S ofPCll 7W.1HIJ.illt'r M ... Rl ... IUISW .. L"' i:arai:l·~ r~1.1Me~.i 'l:l'"1Jor1 \ludl'rn"it11rr I 111,11., 1,,. I -H 1!171 -S d NtRuel Shores. 11r1vate 894 2592 SPM "' "g\ "' " 2 Rms for r~nt $;!(HI m•i 1).15 ~ f f < ' t. 1 e 4 br. fam rm 2 ba. c.-ommty. pool . heJch · I 2 & J Hr To .. nhow.e ind uttl Fitnllh .. 1 or 11 ' nr P0"'1 '1' .. i;,o RlA. t ,1~1 r Real Estcrtt hOUS(' lrg yard ~.isher S9SO 4926700 6613.\26 Wtshllilltttr 3298 CostoMtto 3824 Apt~ from $<175 ra11us. mosphere960~ ~: S1dt• ("\1 2 dl'Jn l'nt'I 'l lH ~ r 213 ~1; jllOI 67W900 I Exch-2800 & dr\ er rt•fr 1)(. ' ••••••••••tttt••••••••• ••tt•••••••••••••••tt•• s111111~ & tJoubll• 1Jf \lnJ:lt·\11npr11 Jtle1 SS5 Jl'rr> -·r d · ..,., Nt.'~ 4 Br 3 bll fam rm "' \\ ilnh'd Rt.'ftnt-d mJtun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar cner .,.,5 6467010 ·• · · HOMEFORRENT 21r. I laAnt garJges neJr llunt mot"J ti7:~:~1 'lie"l>Orl lk·Jth IS' ')(1 Du~exts/ \ 11·" • untlu. 'lit•" "Or I rentral l.ltr. model home r II bo t'I I I mdlt• Non \mkr ShJrt' I S.S5'1 11105 W"skltll Ur OnihSde 1800 ll1'.1cho1rt.•.i ~5ii.1xw1;.;101 MUR-MEWDPLX St200 mo info Suzanne 3 Bdrm S62S F'rnred1 Ne..,ly derur Gas lid Jr ur ll•lrl'n lh loq·h hom1· l'mat1· 2CcrGaroge ' ••••• ••••• ••• •••• •• •• • • '·' fur 'l!I f Jm11\ homt· Lo11 er 3 br. 2 bJ II I S40 8300 > atsrd & !garage c:~tds & end gar . pool dsh~ r 1 840 6807 ha I h Houm ho .i rel in ('o\t a ~h·sJ mm I' iSI 5525 \n) 11m1· \' RI lrpk. lgedm areo1 bit pe werome ....,5 2000 Adults 642.Stf7J 2 Br 1•, Ua sml \artl IJu11tln $375 mo ht & i:ntl )llOmo CorOftCldetMcr ly Owntf' /2 Homts " ' i·~. agt li.11 !\iSl ins fenrt'<l rear >a rel 2 MisslCHt Vifio 326 7 AgenL no fee 3 Ir Towtthouw l'los<• to bt'Jrh f'h1ltlrl·n lit'l 119-1 lit16 • 751 52iiG ~200 sq ft <:round nnor ~~s:f.,t.' ~~~~',.~:~ ~;~~ Rentals i·ar i:.ir Near 19th & 0 "HoM0E°roitftEITT ... Ca.doinil.'wm Newly decor gas ixJ ~~silt' 1146 1~~ ''"'' Lr!l IJdrm. ut1I pJ1fl furn Office Rtftfal 4400 CoJ~t llii:h11 J' un1h Sti:! 51111 l""' •••••••••••••••••••••••' :-.e"port S700 mo I )r 4 Bdrm $675 r'enred Ullfunlished 3425 enrl gar. pool, ds"hr l\11t·h µr11 F S11u mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Redlun11m11s lii5tii•~· lerm' 1;14 ,))5 &16S HouHs Fw-nishf.d lease No pe1.5 Wkdys yard & garage Kids & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults oo 5073 ~1~1 ,Ji1~1:;1\l<'>I.~ '" Ill'' 545 !18S7 ltili Wcstd1rr :--; II Want Commercial ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1213125.i 919'.I. "knds & pets welrume 545 2000 NEW Be Isl tenent II ll JI H Hottls, Mottfs 4100 r1no1n1·1JI '"'' 7tlfK>-. I Rtttfals 4475 lncomtProptrly 2000jl lb 1 ,_.... 3106 l'\'CSt7141675-3.156 /\gent nofee Unusual adult complex NEWPORT Allf:1\ t~t floor Avt•nt5.ll 50'.ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a oa ,_,., 8rnnd ne11 2 br c·ondu. 2 , w gate & pool Near APARTMENTS. ExtrJ l"l' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 Warth~fo.-Ltast 1 ;:,·1•1••,•:s··,.~~·,~·v··e:•r•l,··:r· ha. 2 l'Jr gar " clel' Newport lkach 3269 S C Plaia Secluded I I Bdrm from S271l 2 bdrm T~nhsc SEA.LARK MOTEL MEW PORT BUCH Xlttt Shop Loe •1 d c· ., t I f '",, '-'· " 11 • " II ( I d h h ••••••••••••••••••••••• t I BR d m + t ls Norh ldr '510 Pool Jat· adulh I Wkl r rentals"''~ "'.iii full ~t'r\ll l' t'\l'I or On Balboa l'cnisul" Jll ,.one -~uttJ > l' ur W tnter Rentals Ac1:1r our. rp "' ts "as er. S . i· • 4 B 3 B· r· I , rorner uru . In o u I I l'n . foot and JUlo tr.iffto Ito rnntr.,t·tur. ,1utomull'l' l'ron.o•rtt~biSAOOO m1rro "ashl•r & dr~cr. ea iedw r a, am1&) mg, patio, rent. air nopets.nowalerbeth 161l85L)nnSt,1!46 :C>41 St:!ti & uµ t'olor T\' r11·1•, lrorn S:l!l7 lln th~ B···l'--J "'"rr' ....... , or "Jn•houM• !lll!X "I It . "' · , pool JdC halcon) :-.lo rm, inmg ~m. ocean S460+SJS util. 775·2580 2450Newport Bl\'d :? Hr 2 Ru upper 1 rph l'hont.-~ tn n,.im 22H Call· t'x t•c· 0H11·1·~ from ' 0 "" r, ,..uJJ• is Jrntlahll'. 1411 ~cl ft nl I h Jr m 1 n g \. ll' I" rt Jn pets $750 mo S.IO 22.53 ntl(hl ltl(hl \lews Pool & eve.!. week.ends. No ~ls C()Sla Mesa drJpcs " i:ar nr Hunt N ~" p u rt BI , d c · \1 SIOS ln1•ld.' wc·rdJrtdl 10 front' lin•al plan• 1111 wh u·h ts olfu·t• 'Pdl't' hornl· lmmac •I hr 3 ~.. d 3 R 1 h· Xt 1 tennis Slln> pr mo • 2 br 1 ba security IHul!ft If arbour ~ 11~ 646 i445 phone ans 11ord pro book ~lon., ..r1 i.hnp 111 S2282 2" IJa9moSl80tlmo118 '51 f' r it .ra g hld .k. sc' -l'Cl>Stng.Tell'Xll"''P r111•,1·t 1li73~\14:1 pr mo •>r ·" µr ~ti To~· /. S'3.Z7·,7 en' I yrd w drC'k. i:rnhse Waterfront lca~e. ~ Ur 4 c 1 o . no pets OCCUPANCY•. 2 RR 2 El.1. dtntnl( rm 111 Summtr Rtftfals 4200 Tll E 11 EAl"'L'A nn:tts 673 3930 n ( >ltlc•r b111hl1n1: hwal r •1.. •• I & rru1l trs !'lewlv tiled Plaza Area. $450. ~,,,, "' 1•11 tn L'1>~.1.·1 ~.It".,., (",111 k1tc•h .. blt1ns· Sml Ua , fom11) rm lop Mn 833 1""3/u<.L"<JH aft6 2 Br I Ba Apt Ut'am in.-: rm. gar. ~ mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• l"OMP/\Nll·:S <'1>a~t II"~ lr11nt Jg1· \•• ·' ft dtt1on do1:k for ~o· bual "" ......,...,.... c·e1l1nus laundry rn1 SJOO Sl'l' 7781 l"~µr~i.~ Nl'"J>Orl. avail >I lll tu '14 uc11"'u1 " lor tll'l.itls hclusivt Rtntak pt•t child ok $650 mo S2200 EAST BLUF'F'S pool "Ad. ults only. 00' 963 8842 Jft 5 Jll 9 12 steir.o tu IWJt'h. 3 IJr. ' °" ""' prox 5<MI 'ti ft !!round R I d DUC D I . " ... EW.ORT nour S•l 1.aj!una $54M• ep) a llo.,.,, 111 y New. lux 2 br. 2 ba. pets 2Br. !Ba. 719-1 Nl'"man nt-" paint in nul Ii!• " r mo Turn1·r ·'"I!' TRADITIONAL REALTY 631 -7370 IN-nishf.dl \ l'Jrl~ Lrdltl'S Ptlol Box 1560, t:osta 4 Br 4 Ba. clean & shurp, view, high wood bt'amed TSL MGMT 642 1603 St S45o mo Lsl last + J4th St 8.5? ll!b/, r.73 51111 PEHIMSULA 191 I 17i Mesa, CA 92626 nt'XI to tmntS & bt'at•h ('e1hngs. spa. Adults on BEAUTIFvL 2 Br :! tl,t dep 646 4559, 642 4431 '.lie" port 3 Rr I huuM• ~panuui. l'\l'l'UllH' of 3 Br Ba I rrt $22.5() mu I U1 "1t'h H SHl.'ill \1 esa Verde 3 Br iJ• R;i SISOO mo Bob ur l)o, •~ ISy Xlnl loc N 0 or rpets Mesa Verde. 1100 S'l ft 2 BDH \l TUWNJIOM E fn>m 1>n•11n. park tnl! f11'1's am1Ss from Ctt, lndttdrial Rtftfal 4500 Si25 C21 Askforlrl'nc i591221 1200 mo ic e 1•ool.pa-'·.near"'"arh Wkl~ a\atl nu" llJll \ll~en1tt'ltJ\.Jil.i ••••••••••••••••••••••• •W• 000 6« 4684 640.8862 fplr, lndry, patio, ch~ "' "" 675 67~5 bl I . 500 S" IT L1uh1 in !J,,2.1 i !!!J8-231!l 38' DOCK 'res. hwshr. An"I •••r. 'dlts. 963-5191 ' l' np1111na ~ rom 225 .., ... n tnll·r cnt.i' 3 Hdrm 2'2 ba. 2 '>IOr) l'Wport ar a ultson nopet.s S.SSO Sm·•ll lbdrm ilpl SmJll IOO'FROMS ..... D ~q up a rea3on;i f.' " R I N Be h d ' ' "y "' I ' ft t bl dustrtal Pnme l0t·at1011 1 nr s.iuo mu d F 1 0 w 3 Br 2•, Ba Nicely de Iv 2 BR exquisite 0 "'" rentals No let1st• rt' nexl to John wit,n• :!Hr ••••i m .. 1·un O rp<'. .t·um curated Condo Avail v· 11 · B 3107 Ma ce ~0 4400 1rd&1tarla1· Sm.ill pet Newpe>pnRearh q red ll6?J."'""' \1rport Sl 250 m11 -~ .. u parlor. sml }ard ill2 6756775 ersat es eaut ok 5 blks from luh IHdrm . S300\q. ut ra .,.,.,, 9751262 HEU'! l Hr S650 mo Westside r M $675 mo gardens. pool, Jacum, $350 mo Isl. la~t req 2Bdrm S3i5 Wk MEW PORT CEHTEI 't't•d :.h,trp ~ ple\ln If H 3 Hr Sl\5<> mo Call 673 22112 Mun thru Luxur) I story house on sauna. gym. 24 hr ser IA Y TIMIBS ~ 1 "~--h p r 11 6500sq It 3rrunt ofht'<'S 2 11,1\e iOK ralih Pnn nn 3 Hr SiSO mo f'n Santiago Or 4 Br with Auard S7501~·~ SPACIOUS I BR A\ail Sept IM !llk! llOSZ • e~ > '""vr !. arr resti~tou.'> u ltCn u·~ 1.J rRI' dr" 1· 10 r1'.H I' 6i5 'li'li 1 llr Siu«1 mo separate master bdrm lrvile 3844 f714 '997 ~32•675 Hl:!i EX Et orricc~ lni•ld~ doors :i pha:.e po"cr Ji• " Eaststdt-J Br den. i:;jr 3 full B ., 1 3br.2ba,a1r.pat10.pool, L lk IBr 1 blk 10 b, & •· h rr pt sec \erox und<'r rt 1--9 '"h L SUtle, a r amt Y SilUna , OO pelS $525 arge p3llll, Wi.1 In tOOfOOOtOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOI J. ut ' . ~Q II n tlll(>r .;>I MAKE AN OFFER! "dhkups,l(dnrmcl No Rm ,f'urmalD1mn1tRm month lo ~month I closet. dt~h""a ~her Wantt'tl Roommat~ to S400mo vrh 2Br ~rh groundpkg.lele~&Jn <:~I 3409352 :I ln111m1 Pr11p1•rt11, 1111'11" In• elegant neighborhood ' & laundry far S4.2S area Prof nun smokt•r 6i3 6210 644 7189 exer 0H1re 2 rear ll\N I -l\\lllcllctt\I t~ ~~S~agr.Wildc & L111nR Rm m very 557.5161545_7975 fireplare, RaraJ{e Pool shr nl'" rondo l'<'l 1 SiSO mo Jone~ Hit\ llqu~ dei·or •onr rm 2900sqh" recepllunand L.-.twt.• (O\l.I "'''J ~ REALFSlATE I Bdrm. 3 bath t'Ontl o Wall papers & carpels 2 br, SSSO/mo Nr So 399W Ba)St $450+ 1JUlll fii$58-lior OCEA Nf'RON'!'JBdrm2 Prtml'Offll'l''PJl'l'tnne" heat1doo~ &>aut c·\1 II" n •· r "111 1 .or r 1 r ~ &7U900 " amen1ttt'S S800 Call thru·out Perfert rond Coast Plaza 2 car gar 646--9813 675 4882 ba house Weeki> A1 Jil I bldl?. Oana Pt 0 ll'JO & an·a \mple parkrnl?. l'rt"'"'""'ll 6i33335d.1,6452439E' S1 7SO Mo Broker Children0K54S.:9706 822 919545284" mtn\lews \\Jll !!Ill 9790533 •--------C B N rt V ·11 td LOC)Ulla leoch 3848 to • Pr" <'ompl•·tion l<>u•1no • 5 br 3 ba, ~upt•r dean 11operat1on 759 8974 Y ewpo ersai es 5 10 Spacious 2 Br 1 u 11 ' ' ' ~ .. ' o rondo pool Jac ' " ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rtttfafs to S~ 4300 honus 661 3351 Rtt1tab W..ttd 4600 Balboa Ptninwla 3107 N~" rrp\ & pain I Walk wner ' . · S · sauna Laundry far pool S395 2 br a pl. I blk lo bl'ac•h & • •••. •• •••••••••••• ••••' , X1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• to all st·hools, park & W1ntA r Rental Sept gar. rehg 435 mo L•D.,;,.,,, sh p o •1 ., .. IRPORT ... r.. •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• N El \:\:T:,R ' 851·~ lati;_~ve. .,....._,., o s. rean \'u•11 . on "ovmg Arn1d depos1b I "' "' ~ 30 ~r old female I~ look mi: 0JL ON Tll E llf:ACll Xlnt shoppmg $1100 m11 • Isl. June Steps to beath. 3 THE VIC'TO RI AN <: o as t 11 11 ) Rd i.. & t•ut living rxJWnse~ • Fu r n 1 s h t' d •ir u n ror 11 ut•st hoU~l' Lo" , llllJ~lll\) /II ' llw Winter Rt•ntal Avail last+ S250 ~7650 Ur. new pamt m & out VIiia Balboa, 2 br. 2 ba. Newly decor 2 Br t'iSO mo Avatl ·l!n 2944 l'rofess1onally ~1n1·t• furnished Lg "1nc!o" cost or exc•hJOl:l' term~ U 1 (. Sl'IJI 12 1 llr 2 Ha Jhrfamtly home.apt!i& 127 34t h St 8570867. sep suites,frplc,mi cro. w/gar. adults. rrpts. Ntwportlkach 3869 1971 Exct·u11ve Suites 10 dtSt'US&ed ;1i o.111171i1 1\ppl's S!l5Cl mo 126 E drps. ranyon ~•cw , 673·5410 ~torean&bayview. drps. blt·ms F'ncd yrd ....................... HOUSEMATES lntnt' Walk1njltl1~tarWl' 645-31111 '!12~1 t olh•i:i• ''" Ckl':inlronl. JUI) IKth reneed yards. garden, 2 br. 1 ba. fresh paint. No · 642·6149-w/pat10, wtr pd Call t 5. PARK NEWPORT 832·4134 to airport ( '"1.' \11.,,, 1 \ /\u)( 21st or call l:ll:ll greenhouse. fruit trl'l'S. )(aragr S600/mo 204 Irvine 2bdrm, 112ba. 636·4120 PL.Ali lusineu/ln•tst/ 398 3332, 1213183!12261 5625 673-5719, 645·5422 44th St Front Drive by den. ate. laundry rm. 667 V1rtori11 1450 COUMTRY CLUB EXECUTIVE SU"ES fiftance Wmll'rR~ntal St•pt li!th Elegant to"nhouse. ftrsL752-6499 ktds pets ok S625 mo 2 Br I'~ Ba 323 E 18th LIVING '•llc>i»nt-.~ls•f~·· 2082M1rheli.on 11212 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 For Prlct Of I thru June 12th Clean. 2 3bdrm. 2ba. 2 rar l(ar'" " -~1·7088. Patio. garage 1 child Bat·helors, l&2 bedroom "'..~ ••t; ., 2021 Uus1nessCtr •213 hshteu 3 lol8 plus 3 l'hJrmtn.: br palm. garage & laun cl dishwasher. refrtg. 0 C E i\ NF Ro NT 2 Condo I Br. S C Plaza Ok , no pets ~5 Sit>rra apts & townhouses tf11'}'irt~Cf1-~ t 714-752-0322 0~ 5005 older home' Walk tn dr) $500 ~lo ~11C'pos1t wa sher dryer 847 5500, Bdrms wtlh lots or wood A C. Ja c. I en n 1 s . M&,mt Co 641 1324 Prom SSIO 644.1900 ·~ _ _ _ _ _ Costa ~tesa. mi lt4 ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• be1H·h & 1.akl• l'.irk On Adulti. 67S 3571 557 5606 or 754·1033 ask and shutters. fireplace. S400 tmo No pets, Jim Medical Gi!llt'ral oft•ce. PRINT SHOP I~ S235.0IXJ Submit on Wtnkr rcntal 9 12 lhru for Jane or John malure adults $875 mo 540 8759 PRIVACY & QUIET Oldest & largest al(rnc' .:round noor pn patt0 terms 1 11 2 Or 2ba 11 hlk 111 Ch<trmmo Jlxlrm famth. 1 Ltke new l Br Apts VA.CA.HT m So Calif. smcel9'71 SS , 3 •7 33 0 Thm 101( business. L' M P ~.1 ('OO""r& \~s•u• .. >r > ~-1-L. .. ~ with 0 11ra0 e Up or 3 b d 2 b h Credits 1\BC .• "'BC.C'°'S 6 mo 1 1 5 lo" O\Crhead l'Jll lur ,,,. -v• ba) $550 mu 673 5638 horn(', onb $400' •8403 A.porhlllt'lh ,.,.,,._ .. .. rm. J l . ., o.; 49-1 4797 S36 l~or $36 8013 HARBOR VlEW • lxlrm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• down. balrooy or palto ltreplac-e. bit ms. nr~ I) Cosmo. Phtl Donahut• . del.itls S6S 000 Cra1j! RE ... T COVraS •YMT I Bdrm. :14th St 9 13 lu ('olle"e close 3hd rm 2•1 ba. 2 st""" with famt lolboo laland 3706 pool. spa. bbq. laundr). refurb1$hfd Yrl> at $750 • '20H• Co~ta \l e~a 250 i.4 rt " g\ r 6 13 Ntl't' Pauo S:JSO Jl('r " -, lush shaded landsrap mo lo all new rlJents ~ho ltu1tr Sli5 mo Ciiis tn 8 untts 1n Costa \lesa mo mrl ut1I II woodburnmg frplr I> rm. formal d1n1ng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg S460 & up Mature need a pla~r l'lcl ii9 W 19th St 2072 Newport Biid 673 5742orfl:m 5789 • dble gar $525' 118379 view. big yard. privacy IA YAtOMT adults. NO PETS Mesa iii 3350 S.110.000.10'.do~n 2 Bdrm 34th SI 9 1:1 to Sl800 moyrly 3 Br. 2ba. Avail 9 l3 Pines. 2650 Harl:i . Ne"PortBearh.6411899 N"pt Brh, small oHtrr. OWC at 14', $36 9441 S5 Renl1mes 631 4555 Fce $1200/mo_ Winter. 549 2«7 6 13 :Kl per mo tnd ultl TRI LEVEL APT with Owner 644-l~. 673-3245 _. · Sen mg all theS Cnasl 8x8 182i W~khrf Or 14 UNITS 673 5742or639 5789 'lesa Verde C'<et• 4 Ur 2 . Deluxe 28R. 28A Plush 'l H Sl50 mo 1131 0900 COST ... urs.t. L"ntque 48R. oar uttl tnd Ba. 2000 sq ft. J{ardcner ocean view 3 Bdrms. J 3Br. 2Ba, S72S mo , rom carpet Choice area Garden Grme. 119:> 34112 Great E std<'~· ";\II Z s1200 Sept t9th to Junr rnl'I S1200 mo ba, 3 car gar In a prime PI et e I Y r urn's he d Adults onl y No pels VERSAILLES spar. 2 br. WESTMIHSTER BR pool,fooks nc" In 19th 675 :nl! ~1;~,i:no:;rl~ocat1on 951-3243 $550 3099 Mace Ave 2ba.sec gate Clbhse. OpenSattoo'I05 1200SQ.FT. rome 568.4611 l'r11·~· 31 44 Jllr.biglot.renc.SS80 Waterfront Homes,lnr WINTER. 2 Br.Iba _CM. ocean view. adults. no 14308BeachBl\'d Ht~n lrvlt1t Call 751 3191 Select ga a a,.. A a I 9/4 S7SO 557 199'1 2 fr "ys Cl\ll' Center $840,lMlO Seller 1·arn Ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• r 631·1400 S ra,.e ,... v 1 Eastside, sharp 2 BR 2 j>etS · ------Shopprnl( Center Pnme years Ill 5' • rmanl'lng l'A RM F.L Cottage Home ro_.{>ert1~ 350/mo. Waterfront Ba . S475 mo. Bltns. 11:ir. EASTBLUF'I-'. s p:ir1ous l Prof rem ale. non-smoker local ion 979 8889 or ..DJJve b> 149 ~:Ila> St ~hr, ram rm. 2,1 ba Eastside 28R. '" 10 Homea631·1400 __ nopets 2477Elden.aft5, bdrm Pool. qutel area To share prestigous 6451260 ChMical Stt'V lus s w i""91incJ P ooa So Oran!le Coast \rea No exp ner Will trarn ~.000 Rt-q 515.000 cash do" n W 111 net S40,000 Plus Call Mon Fn 9 6 PM 408 867·0111 then call ow1wr llrnki·r rorner. $9.'l()SSg 9345 house dev Pool. gar, 15 AC. PVT PARK lal.oo ,.._. 3707 call 979·~ Sgle adlt No pets ssoo Turtlerock home f'rplr . l\t,§42·0282 Newport 1,._h ~,1dult!>. N~ •• f!:C!'o· S52.,5e 2 Mstr Bdrm 2....,.. Ba ........... ••••••••••••• 2 br + lge ram rm, mo64H767 pool, 3BR, 2BA. total up· EXECUTIVE SiZ1ra,~~:,us~~~r~~::r ~~1~1 ,._ 3169 ,. anager.,,..,., n ran,, Like nu. W ID. refrig, Oceanfront, I bdrm. l ba. fenced patio. new crpls 0 f I B graded, many Xtras. No SUITES •1"1 Home & Income ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ave S6SO pr mo. Kids OK, r 1 1 M cean ront arge 3 r. 2 pets SJ40 mo & share Do<·k L'11111n 76 1no Rl22. 2 yrs new. IOI iii Ii un1h. LllJO ISLF. rharmm,,: 4 H·-'~'"'-•--h 32 .. 0 pets maybe Tit · Y!_!~ ysSso ~lure &N paint. ~~.!tur64.2e ,!i.~ults fBraplcU.pypeearr.ly2 rleaarsge~rSalg200e. util _752·2836. IN 7 J· 30 Mon t'n owner m11y rarry f111anr bdrm. 2 buth. newly re •• ':'!'.':'~::::=. .... ;:. J ohn Marshall 11 s, no &73-'4894 ° SP ~ci~u;-;~eR:";~ult, HERITAGE Tradt Exc"-91 Co. m~ al It'~ $.525.l~lO l.567 dt•rorated Sll!OO mo Brand new 3 br, 3 ba 631-1286 !1° 642·3443 ''Gay Roommate PL.Ali c -d " c 1 d Bach ruu kiteh conv loc b d I g LA:8 IOI? •• at 0 p artni: E en. Cl\1 Mu) rnn Yearly Also other rcn houte ror discriminating · · open ume Cl'I tn · Large 2 Br 2 B 11 ContactServires" New luxury orr1re space Serv in 98 Ca Stores Jl~rt radei agt!rl!1509!1 tuls avail Bill Grundy. famll". 2 blks to beach. S3SO yrly incl util, quiet lots of wood. ser ving Bayrront Condo, with abLargest Gay Male rn l n,•ine's busi est 15M.2ooM =2.1 roturn' 675 6161 ' non-amkr673-SS80 bar. S400 No pet& 2256 view, se<'urtt.Y bldg , Roommate Service tn 1 ,,._ p ' 0 .._.0 nual1'fri1·nn . --Totally upgrade d. M I S 8 Calir 11·7PM cen er .,..5y rwy ar tn Isl year 642-3723 f"I T _7 l.1do Isle 4 Rr. 31, baths. G a rd e n er I nc I C"ft MeM 3724 8 P e t 54 · 7356· =· parking. Yearly (2l3JUl-3040 ress A'•all now • Cull ~ - 10 yr old llun 1ni:lon winter rent;il s9oo , Sl200tmo.8J3.0l'5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67J.8803 . Broker 67549l2. for details SUCC ESSFUL Business ·~~ch tr1ple)..lm1rrom 67~71167 NR. BEACH 3bdrm. On the Pftlinlula! $600' SUSCASITAS E'side 2 bdrm , no Brand new 3 br. 2 ba Housemates. F' pref . 551·1231 64G-4UO ~a~~Qelr~o~t nc~p~~~ Qcean Nrwly painted Nur Brach I bdrm. util r d d S I f II h F l br "' ..... •~ children/pets klO/mo Steps to beach Nr pier College Par·k area, C '"t lll&idr nn<l out Ownrr to 2•.,ba, ram rm. nc yr , pac ous am Y ome urn. . a.,. . ......., "' 644-7722 N S850 673 6640 ,, •DELUXE OfftCES • wholuale market1n1t Urn 211d TO \\Ith srnall tnl'ludcd 11ar. yd S500 gar. wld hkups. gdnr In· 11..tdram1tk entry, brick up. Encl. gar Adult.a, no 0 _pets • S200, mo + shr uhl• 1.2 ~ 3 room No leutre· and suppl) business do~ n pa) mrnl f>rtn c mn cl. S895. 536-0021. f1replac:1, large master pets. 2110 Newport Bl WES TC LI FF, I br rondo. Call $45·0Zll aft 5 quired Adj Atrporter P time 64.S 1345 onl) 9fi4 m4Agl ~2901_ _ Rll.o.l9 .. L-.-l11: ... CH suite + drum kitchen ~968btwn8,SPM. ..._..,_8 ,.., adults. no pets, pool. . --Hotel 833-3223 912 Ska le rtntah ~:tlu Ne~ly d"""'ated 3 BR 1 ~•A ,__ SA w/new a~! Children ""'·rn "om! 2BR apt 1·n ~•u newly decor . ne"" ap Want to sh r Park P T O·-. ~"' This 2 bdrm "-auty ~.. " 6., .. ---I ...... '''"" N rt Bd & b th 1 omre space avail for games. etc nmt• IMl' F """""W Ba, 6507 Sh~ashore . ""' & pets 0 'Hurry' U'5t 3/flex. Couple, n·smkr, "' "''" _.., ~ ca N\N. 6'1J..,.,.,, ewpo rm 0 fi•rHlme ust Across beach locallon · S6000 Excellent Oran11e IOl'll drive by S850 mo new cpta, adult occup. Renllmese3l·4SSS Ftt.... .•""'2323 Beautiful landaraptd OCEAN VIL':W yrly 2 or2dayswk Ba<'helor ,,.,L u 0 d II Sa na ·~ ,,_. rd p •-"' · · Ch k C t 21 ff rom lloa0 Hosp1lll l NB v• .. ·.!l ....... 673-1401 Cion One 3 bdrm. 2 bath. winter 752-6499 c 0 0 ava now. u · Bl (( I I 4 bdr I• en aptl at!V9 or BR t Ba. t6oo mo Avl uc · en W'Y ovt • (rplr Three 2 bdrm. 2 tennis. d/w, refr1g, and u I r:Joo Bk' Mtw,.nleedl 376' decks. Pool & Spa. t'OV 9/1644-6780' 646-3189 p N refs. Prerer stable 631 3.'110 "'"" ..... b h 11 h sec: S650 /mo with nurpoo . mo. r.••••••••••••••••••••••• eredparklng.Adults,no -----' -mature le ssor S275 Up Hunt Br h O~y 5015 at A WlbllJI 1a,vcpvt H01tst1Uwfw..itMd garag" No....t•please. 644'0l34 l bdrm lwtw1oua. Pool. •· N:f:l•I waterl1'1>ntupper 11•1640-6361 . 1r no d rr-· P II I I 0. u I I n s ... ....... s I R h pe... l 3 B B r I .. (; 0 r pet. rapes. a 1 r. • ..................... . dihwhra." encl 1taraaes' G0""'o1""0 •••••••3•2•02• A t548·1168_. __ P{I ':' 4 B · ;~ ac 6Jiym.~j!,enailles. l BR. S425 P xd kr 2 11 a. rp.~. answer call rollecl part1t1on 17Jll ~ath TENNIS Court ronst t'O A~~ume l'lttSllOJ l~I T 0 tNr a Bdr. 3ba. rrpl. lllr1um, v ew, car 11ra&e. o .• -r 181£.18th. 64f.6816 IUD ec . II p IV a I 213/846 2460, Burbank 842 2834 I nsta II ation$ John t 9 25r; uhm11 un ....... •••••••••••••••• s undeek, dbl garage. per mo. AJenl, Joyu WAT ER FR 0 NT Mature cpl. No pets Will pay top S rent Ill Proreulonal OHl<'e• Wayne Tennis Club. ~own payment Stlltr '2.40 ru,rn coCtai;e 18358 gardener. 2 ml to beach. Edlund, 842-8235. Mac:· BACHELOR Near 42 St. $850/mo. lit. last 4t sec class raon. Rf mod tied lo )'OU~ r Balboa Ba)' Tennis Club. !VIII carry l11rge 2nd S340C M lbr homr 16425 no ts S696 984·2283 nablrvlneReaJty. $400 Mo. Ulll pald. KIOSOIC + refs.67~7672 00+ lo share 2 Br 2 Ba apedflcallOM. Birch St LaCoste Tennis Club & favorable ttrms Cross :!1~~:~ ;~~~!br ::~ 2 Br , .; 00, ~rrp17," patio. Newly decorated. 3-4 67$. 2 br, 2 ba. laundry hook lr•d Mew CCMMlo Newport Beach Condo. nr Air ~rt Call 644-'7722 Polm Sprin11s Racquet ln<'ome $21,420. Asklna S.~H0 3brhomt 18483 $600/mo. Avail AulJ 1, Bdrm .. 2i.\ Ba. 2 blocks Yearly, winter, summer upe lnaldeapta. Pv\alnk t bdrm. t ba. pool. patio, frp)(', phone S290. Exe<'utlvl' offire with ~lub ~-4<nl ~.000 l--&1--....J.Jl.4555 661·3539 tobeaeh,clole\opoolla rentall.Brltrryllealt,y. loeachbdnn.G-a•for garage. no pct8. Nr 646·7332. _ I f I N PutS:tatoworkinmotl<1n D " Y I D D ....,_."' t II I 1 U 2 U U .rL"lll .... ' ff H .,,.,.. v ew or ease, wpl plclYl""S. L""m Sl".4u A • t9J6 Hart>orOlvd ee 2 stor y giant! SS25! e n · · · ., • .,.. · 1tudeol1I Pvt patio. oa1 o.p. _..,mo+ Npt Crest Condo. 38R, Bc h , s hr ~ervlct'S • ..... • - 1 CA.ILSOM - --3bdrm w /sweepln1 J!!.~rtShoret te50/mo yrty, 2 br, 2 ba, SUO. Drtve by 769 sec: ll rt t y de P0 • 1 t 2~BA . 122SMO. M/F. wtotller prorcssionels NPSTl419S7 ~ '-E 1. l T 0 R ltlboe 1.._.. 3206 staircase. Kidsfpdl OK. Ver)' olc:e 2 br, 2 ba. trplc, ,., Neptune Av. Hamlllon tl·A, OMft call 52.4-5158 Nice l.oc. $4Mlll. 1145.~212 ~191., T'91t K A • •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• tU83 Beach/bay •ltlll awa7. .wa.sc m.1112. Do not disturb OCIAN VIEW Rent loft In Nft Bc:h Otidi 5035 llJ.9293 21DIMW/"1.C MOO 20221't.'7$-5414 Blocktobeach.2br.2ba, ttnant.t. 10 &teps to sand. L.ge 2 home , faml 'I at· 'RIMILOCATIOH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ UM'n l6$0 mo .liru:!673-7360 North HB3br home wlU1 2 bdrm. 2 ba bouM. llv fu.lb fumiabed. Pfpic, 2 bdrm + patio + ? car mOlpMrt.. lllO induda Approx 4IJOO :\ n, ~ Want lnvtstor for Hpt Any 111c 80 3o 40.1e Utllt> lalancl, 3 br. dt'n tncl. 1ard (or kids • rm, •tone fJM'. Enc aar. car 1ar.,t. lSSq mo. MIWDU2• 1ar parnna '69Slmo all ulil. plua 1111 of '?rt air condlt on«! of ba1rron\ bomt <ilH "·II for Jd,u"* a..o.• Sl400 tno yrly lute Pttl OolylfTS IC4 Prlv yd w/1cce11 lo Call J!Hpm.f1$:1'42. 2"-Ba, bit-In.a, encl Furn il u rt a va 1 I bomeowaera pool. ~ t e dw /tp:1 1nk I cri • well ·~ 1Jl 11t tnd " ,.._" =... At~ m«lOO lltnUmft 131 H POOi. Nr NptR~~,".~ Willter ..... Mlbdnnt yard. NUo. tar , de<k, 7 tYfSIQ.2305 lJH'1IO ::~r.b1:·i~~:,i:~r~~· T D A&UM111 I Waltrfrontltalt28r 1 •mo 1'7S.<il>iMv -aalllboe,.. Nly lardtHr.JCJdi /,.UOK. 2br,tbalowtt.trplc,Jar,M•rloclkillfarlrdto Primtfhllll Btatlt 'n· Oe un Homt. U 'A W 8a MOo Mo A.lloS Br 2 HLL Idle 1Mm1 dJI a vt NB t11ra.illa .. mm '400 ... Call IMri, wUn pore•. -"'1· Open Pan .. ......._ ._.. dul\rlal park C 11 yield , ll _, ..... _ .. _ D1U1 Pilot Cluallled Ha"~,-to Mil ao. e-. lie.Can lM, 147 ·1171 , tu/whch let/Su 14 212JIOISt , ID t..a1w .... lef. •n&7Menday AAfot IMO 1t10. Jl'd Tt> XlM Qm~~ltftll fil.M. T r.C.m :.1!1!1': th·--- .. l , I ~dr" Trwt 5035 ~:!.~.~~ ...... ~?~~ ~~~~~:... 5350 Help WMhcl 1100 Hflp W•t•d 11001.._. W•ted 1100 Oranwe Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24. 1981 •••5.;;.;;••••••••••••• Calco Cot F.ftOTll' pte·::«:;·;;~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·t~:~~~~~·~;lj;~~··s:~· ••••;·~··••uuu:•• -------•• Htfp WlllHd 7100 Htfp Wlllhcl 7100,Hlfp Wllh4 71M l ~Co. lust around Nl'wport dont> in bronze i\1111> ADMIMIS11ATIVE denta Cashier Counter A MA.IDS Ctencal "••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••n••••••••n•n•••-AI l)'pto~ of rul esto1tt' Ttrr4t'l' Coodo!i Gon1• 11 titled Erotlt11 T>A11 SPEC Mon thru f'ri 10 2 Full and p1l1me Collt«e tn~ulmrnlu111t'tl!M!I day~ N4ml! Zoo1e women toitethrr b) Few dull l~~Tl'nt5 llours lit\! flu1ble 0~$41.~IC M SptclalPtc) Iii Rew.mt l.am~awc around 1820 Pll'nty or rhanr.-~ to Super envlronmenl ! IUUTICIAM 2..dTDs b45G2411 SSOO l•llBob8329916 1h1ne Arm) Bf1tll}uu Call anytime wurk Fullorpume Rent sl.i '42·2171 545-061 1 f ound M11k Grt>) 11.:er Tro•tl 5450 ran~ ('all Loll free SS§-1~~~ 11on orromm Flu hrs [hnountt'll Trust Ot-t'Ch stnj)t'd Rh1t k ne11 t•ul • • • • • •••••••• •••• ••••• • l 800-2ia 5864 646 .&9~ .iv11lable for lnvestur~ Jar VH· 1'1mr11' A\e WANTJ::l> Airl11w tu·kt't Aulomotave Buuty Xlnt yield F'ur drtiuls 846 6707 to lloustun ur 0111111~ ADV9T1SI G MECHANIC W AMT A CHANGE? 960 19~7 Brolter Found Small uiixtd fo'ort Worth dcp.ir11n.: S LES ~·y Pttrmanent, full time We need l'Ollllletoluicilllll Terri female 1121 Vu· l.os Angt•lr bel\\tl'n A u~rungrort:cperienct'd, &c man1rurllli1 ror Mockt"4 Rah~ Brh & lle1l 84(} 7039 Septcm llt>r 7 and 14 S1•1l re11der ud udv1•rt1~ skilled Merhamr ~:x Shorcchrr H1ur Salon SINCF. earl) 1981 Would like round tr11.1 lnl( tu lot•lll merC"haul~ in cl!ll 1·0 benefits wh1rh SpN·1almn1nn t'ouncl M blk I.ab, :1p r I ea Sl' I: II II cl a \ ' I h l' r 0' I ll :\1 l ~ II • I n l' I u d I' d I Sl' 0 u n I 4 9 2 2 2 8 ll b' l ti 3 tst & 2nd 'I D ) pro~ ~ mOI.. on Canyon 761158:[1 I!\\ v<irt Hc.u·h. In"'" pm ileges, medical/den tVtckieJ - Jr lhl'rt' 1s .i !les11,. Al·rt!t, Laguna l.i\:h areas. Will tra111 tht' tal, hf!' ins , profit shar BoatO~rator M t' M "ill cit•\ ist• ,1 497 46!12 &npfoymf'ltt & n11h1 person <:ood com mg & Pi!Mlon plan /\pp Shore Boat Operator. way Found wallet in phont• Pr•porotlon pany bt•nef1t11 For ap1>'t ly 111 per!IOO Coast Guard License To l't•lt•r Dohh). nrokcr booth outsidt' Ralph 's ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Ull :\Ir MJc' Thl' l't•11 J .C. PENNEY operate Shore Boal 111 760·6827 6406016 Golclt>nwl''l WarnH' JobsWonttd, 7075 ny~111l·r,642(M11 2H 'ash1onlsland.NB Avalon Bay, <.:ataHnu.I Stl.000 buys $12.000 TD 1147 7R411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AtrH. E 0 E M F 213 510.~ John Jen 32 4'. annual \leld round 4" water , all t.'. HOUSEt<E:ErER For dJ~ c·urt· 111 m> r ~I nanv_att fil'M ALL JOBS FREE Cleriral General off1ct' dut1e11 m ou r Ofl1ce Serv1res Dept Pulse PBX exper helpful Late typing 20 hra per week Call Melissa ~7001 P'ACIRC FID9AL Sa.,"'91 Ir l.oaft E.O.E. MIF NEWPORT IDCH MARRIOTT flJm * TtMlt Cowt A.*-'-' P /T • T ... t CW. S.,.-.IMr F/f .......... ~ ..................... * ltttow..t Hotf /HOthutt • fltcJ'a HrMcJ s.cr.e.y * Security Offkw Exciting, estublished hotel has immed. full & part time opportunities avail. for qualified applicants. S17,000bu,sS20IXJO 20'. owner 1dcnl1f'. Pa .. 1f1 .. Seeks pos1t1on .,. 1111·1• home Will l'1111\ld!'r BABYSITTER BoatOperator , , ' ' IC ti II h 11 Shore Boal Op"rutor. TD. 27 6'. rt'lu111 <.:oasl ll\\y, N ll !179-0285 fam1I) as hvt• Ill "ilnlPll· !'.7 1 ,!1:r0 "' 'ma i· 11 Mature, t'XPt'rwomlln to ('oast Gun .. d Lace'ns"e To S80,000 bu)s Soo.oou 20', FOUND Puppy, Nwpt nion Exper & ~Int rt'rs "" ""' h11bys11 in our home for ... Isl TD, 3 )'('ars lli:ts area. TUblm & {'Jav Pleasant. ll061tl•l' nc;11 1\mbt1mus wk1ni: , pit•' 111ran1 M 0 n . p 1 1 uverate Shore Boat in Sll.000 buys $...'kl,(01. 21' St srn. ll bN-n" hlk lip ~ob er. relaablt• l>v si:ls \\Ith rn.mal(l'IT1l·nt II JO 4 JOPM, ref CDM ·1 Queenswa) Bay M1mna. 2nd TD. 3)ear~ l'ars l<ttl MS ]}92 drive Prd 5 da)~ un, 2 cxpt>r P Tll:ll Jll:JI! ~6667 I. o n g B e 11 r h . Chris Sha\\ I 71·1 730 W.'IU orr Pe.&iu: 631 2121 AR r G ALU, R \ ~ .... i..' B b ll r ·" 2q 437 5611, 9-4 Found lcl\el\ ~oung a )51 er or our 11,., l:loat rigger mct·hani< S29.000 bU)S S.12.000 :.w . blat'k t'.it. "'' ~'lo\\ er H•lp Wanted 7100 hrii:ht )t1uni: \\tm1,111 J' dler Mon Fn Pleast' •' lstTD 3)ea" !',t ,r \I t>l.S84S9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11.trl 11n1t• m.inJi:t•r I (all artt'r7P:'t1 or beforl' o::.xp neress.ir} liar S44.000 bu>' ~.ooo ;m ACCOUNTS 1).14 .fS.15 12 Noon &14 ICJ'?1 rason Boal t'rnter S A Stc:Ntory Top l'O in Irvine area sreks t'areer minded 1.11div for position which re quir es hvy . Interfacing wrth other de~s. Rui.ly shorthand OK Outstandi ng benefits Salary to SI.JOO Call Clerical CLWCmlST Laguna Bea<'h elec Ironic mfgr has 1mmed opening for sharp Pt'rsun for general l'leriral duties 1.11cludmg typing ror our Purrhasang Dept and working 1n stock room. pulling Job kits. 1sswng materials. keeping record~ G• typing skills d mu~t M1.11 SOwpm Stock room exper helpruJ. not nee We ofrer gd pa)' & benefits plus a We are seeking people·oriented persons who ha ve a sincere interest in a future with MARRiarf CORP. We off er excel. co. benefits including a FR EE meal per shit. Apply in person 9 AM Noon, Mon Fri. PERSONNEL. 2nd TD. l)l'iir\ fOL'\'() LI( i:ra\ f1i:er 542 7211 t'hn:. Sha"', 714 iJllliO!i2 'tnplJ(•d k11t('n " "ht I" A y AILE CLERK ARTIUSlYM.AN BABYSITTER 8 ookkeeper (Jua llf1ed bl' 11 \ r JI t p J \\ ~ The Joli} Roger lnr h,1, ~ ut th .. l'Jl>ll''I U\ MY HOM~: Trend Imports Salt':. Rffa JoMIOft 972-9955 1616 E 4th St . S A 900 Newport Center Dr . Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr M/F AMoWlc~/ lrll ~ .in A P l'lem·<1I "'"'1t1v11 ~ ~ ' 8Jm 5 JOpm until St'pt lri<· P --~/ .,.... per1en1 l' uf \UUr lifl' 14 h d ers-. FOi \D Shepherd mix for dtl 1nduslnou5 111 Pusl>lllh thl• · l!rt'<All':.t I 3 6pm orang 63l·W41 Lod&Found "U"P' tan furn ale dl\1dual Gent'r.il offi1·1• \ B. 5chool Harbor& Bahr .. ,. , rm) t' Jll ~ou l'an be 966 •--------1 •••••••••••••••••••••• Shl·lt1e Sablt' & \\hi & or dl't:Ounling ,., {' d 11 l 011 r r l' I' I 21197{'\l'S Acch.. 'ayabft Lilt exper OK Need 10 key adder & some typing Beaut ore Excell benefits Starting salary to S7SO Call AfWIOWlctmfftts 5 I 0 rt•mJll' Teml'r m1" bit.. 11t•rient't' preft•rrt•d Ex I 800 2112 $1 lftjnq •••• • • •••••••••• •• • •• •• & "ht ft'm.tle. Goldt•n n·llenl lx>nt•f1b & "'ork TR.I.IA SCRAUL£TS Lib malt' lillle "fl'l'n uig cond1lluns •\111111· 1111,. _______ _. nt "' peri.unat 1· Part lime pos111on b11d :>.l'"port lll'uth THEJOLLYIH><a;H ASSEMBLERS d\illlablt' \1ust be able ANSWERS ,\nirna1Sheltcr6-14 ~ INC Lot· MisMon \.'1l'JO rn lo work Salurd<tys typ- Awe1gh Dais~ 17042l;111ette 1\•1!. lrl nt-l'cb \~,1·mblcr~ "' :t 1ng 3.S WPM No rx Li\'id Jt•rsl.'i Personals 5350 (7141.>160331 'n "'Jl l'a11ll1dutc' µeril'nt·1· net'l'!>Sar) For SI Dt: \'I EW ••••• •••••••••••••••••• must ht1H• Jld m.inual lllllln 1t-ws b) appoint This guy 1 kno" mu~t SHE ACCOUNTING dt:Xll'lll~ ~cl ,•~t·~1i:ht. menl tilll Jo:vev lfavl'~ h fast i:nming ad ugt•nn neat 111,111J.ll'Jr~1111·t•& cl1• 1213) 37:1·0433 · · IOOICKEIPEI F/C P time for t•l<>tl11ng store in F'ash1un Island F.A pt>r'd person in A P. payroll & double entry Journ<tl lhru 1r1al balance <.:all ror 1n t1Jn1ew app't artl!r IOarn dally THE LOOI< 644·~ "' ll be~ n a l>o 1 n ~: s r O R T S & need~ reUablt• at rnunt~ pend a bit· Wnrk •~ tn hft1 Mecn::Scrvinc)s nimmal f,\cll his bah\' :\IODEl.INli p;iyablt> l'lerk "1th ~u1.1por1 rnc•1l11·JI 1•lt•1· Pll'lurcs tamt· \\Ith ,1 83 ( B 0 UK K E F p •· R Rffa Johnson 972·9955 1616 E 4lh St . S A 4 DAY WORK WEEt< Co 1s 2 nu from Coast Hw y & 8 m1 from 405 & 5 Frw}S Please rail for appt Personnel Dept. TELONIC BERKELEY 714-494·9401 E.O E Cook DAY FOOD PREP ERRAND GIRL/ RECEPTIONIST P tame for N B dt! veloper Mon F'ri, I 5pm MU!>I han• dl'IJt'n dable t'ar & good phone voice 67~472.5 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY GEMEl.Al. OfffCE Sm all manufacturing r1rm needs someone with minimum 6 months experience to handle bookkeeping. light (yp- rng & telephones. Must be personable& have ex- cellent skills 545-5047. ask for Trar1. ------ front and"IU•.'\'l•.·w S.9199 m1111mum 12 vt•;1rh 1·~ tro1111·, <id 111•11" "' EOEMl/FfH/V , "' lo ro EDS \\Ollld ICJ\ c lo ,. gress' e "PA L' ~ r r perienrc Pll•asc' appl.1 Onl1 r"'""11'1blt•I T RAI NEE for pro st & FOtlnd 5300 "OJ rt'. "Ith'· ou Call Sot• m person. 1r quahlll'd, 11t•r\01h 't•t•kmi: pt•rm.1 iv '-rirm 111 .. 1681'' ut'" hill, lr\·ln" n"nl t·m11J11111 n""d 'JI llJnkini: fashion Island Call • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • u r K .1 ' h ' a n \ t 1 01 o ' " :-\I \-' '-' ._, FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: I !l!i:J !l:Jiil • ' 9i!l-7000 dor dm.·t·1111ns pl) Call '"' PJn·lh I C'heryl 640.1335 I onl~ 1 581 31130 1 LOAN SALES IOOTH ATIEHDAHT EXECUTIVE SPECIALIST ~ e w po r 1 A r r h es I ACCOUHT REP. ~tarrna C.tll bt\\n 9AM I * SUIJE * Join the ll'a1ll'r rn lht• h~t·mbh I Career o~portunil> fur & 5P~f &t2 464-1 Mun :!I flour ""'-''">RTS lt'mpor,1r1\ ht•l11 111 indl\ "'11 ~"N~IA Loan f'ri ask for Jud) orl Acch, RectlYabtt No typing needed but must be gd on phone~ as dtahng with Jots or outside agents Must know how lo use 10 key adder Salary starts at S700 Call & KITCHEN MGR Apply 9 noon M·F'. Jvsh Slocum's Rest<tu rant , 2601 W Coast ll w\ 642-59~ . COOKS , S"ini: Graveyard Full & Part lime Denn}'!> Restaurant. 184TI Bt>:n·h Rhd .ll unl Heh 1142 2112 For Newp0rt Bch Tour & travel compnay. typing 60WPM . Sil, riling Salar) t•ommensurate "'' exper In~ & travel benefits 752 <Y188 Nona fast Food Pina Parlor on the Beath Now h1r ing Must be 18 or Ol'er 673 1811 tll1 i1\1! message I GEMEIAI. OFffCE Working knowledge 'AtP, AIR, & payroll a must Computer input exp helpful. Heavy phones. lite secretarial respon Front office ap- pear L-Oc 111 N 8 Xlnt opp'ty for advancement Conta ct Jennifer (71419M-L680. ~' d \\ k HO EXPYIENCE? ~.h1pp1ng b<td~ground Hane• •hi! or 'arf.tiftw • 953-1122 MC/Visa uslr~ l' .m: "'*' mi: '11 GET KRL y b alualt'S loan inven ' selr mul1\.ilcd. bri~hl I 1 lorit>s. sele..·ts & plt'diies l Busbo> m•t:ded . J.unl'h 'iOOTll 1 :'l.'G ~IA&'i.\(a; ~rson<1bh· s.111•\ Hric·ot EXPERIENCE! loans for ~ale to , a nous hr l IM1! JPM ( omc 111 ~or cl1!>lnmrnJt1111: ffil'n 1 t'd 111111\ 111 l'nh.11111· our d"t'nfi~~ F.N~.I.\ loan for appt -1251 :'ti art Lost Red fem Ctx·kl'r CJll l't1er l!M 18il :.all'!> fon.. .~t·11" , ,. War• ..... ·-· p ... ..14. " ' I NB 7 """ " ,.,_,.,. ""'P"" Sd le~ ex per desired I rnga r 1 14 ;uJ 2755 642-5678 Rita JohesOfl 972-9955 1616 E ~th St . S A CUSTODIAN Npt Rrh area Foll time, 3 to llPM Call ('hurkJ 631 2880 • c Of'ffr ODot'y. $30 ,1100 vr aus1ne1>S mngmt exper helpful. but not nel Call for app't States UIS! ~· F 631 7559, ell.') >Aknds S4j) 5254, ~7 5611 Gill F«JDA Y f time. 8·»5. Respon person w secretaria skills Salary open N B omce.~7 Spaniel t G1n11er l-nrtolJl!>lressrt-du11111n sumt'!>lu As~ T)prni: -10\\pm farell l'ASlll ER Ortt.>ga II\\) 11 11•1& rela'<Jllon ma,Sd1!1' Ho\=9'll Packen brnef11i. C.ill Katie HOL'SEWARESALES !\~ward 193 8421 Sll'H' 1t1 8 . .>18 2817 ll.i1ll 1'11111 p Julson ror appt full or p lime Appl) Lost f em.ill! Gt>rmJn I-or stn~' & "L'11lht 1' 11 Bo\ ISW RrferTd Bonuses S.19 7051 Cro" n llard\\art', Jl<n Shepht>n1 hlk \\ llh !Jiii Jos:> ma»al(e t'11'tJ :\'lt'Su l'J E c II feet 1'1 "' ulct rll';i ~1lll111; 101\)l IOP:\I ll262605ti0 Poi~,r,~t~iOfts PACIFICFS>YAL Coron~~!1'Ma:gh\\a\ collar \I\' l>oH•r llr & YOl '\(i L \IJIES 1.ill i·--------•l 1\ppl1 .1l lh1• 1\c·ll1 111111•1• So.,.._ & Lo-M a ri n !'r I< ~ \\ u r ii 1 1 " J -·.,... -· 646 5194 ~It' Ill .Part) an~llmC' Ol'ilfl'Sl VOii (.all t.inJ or Lisa \rrountmg 2102 llu\lnt•" l't•nl1·r EU E MF' Lost Cot'kl'r S1.1.111ll'I F bu fr rolor Thi.' C•1lt111). i619036 PAYROLL & Or . 11z1111 lr11nP. ---!!!!'II!~~ CASHIERS UTUTEM BILLING CLERK 113.114·111:>;r M,.11·\1thur ------Ill & 405 fr"'\ 1 11 r~ K 5 Banking COi Corp. , , __ .. '" or 279~7 ('abnt lid , SAVINGS ACCT Jr, me 551 0750 GRAND OPENING u1s1 .:01c1 brat·C'lt'1. 111K Prettv Ba~ i:old rh .. 111. 131 11ear1s ESC'O-RT al·ross lop . (21 , IS ,.....'"9 l...ii:una N11:ul'I. 1131 0512 , for on indlY. to work 1('rt1\\ n V;clle\ l'k141 MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Sh1fh diamond~ Lo~t 111 ~!Jr Mun Sat IOam 4am rioll Hnll'I , fa,h1u11 739-0964 in It's Ac counting l''<ll l lfr~ •1 3 111 1tW1l COUNSELOR Dept. SOtM pre.,ious Ul·a<"h Ill =:!:•1~: llunl ED,., poyrofl & billing mgton Rl'Ul'h llrs II s StartingS4 uptoS4 so We promote to manage ment & SUPt'J"\'1s1on rrom within Island .ire.i \'t•r) cit• llra1e • <2 131784 Hl25 R?'"" h11a1d salar~ REWAR D' ~•irt lime 11111111<1 -n1on~h1p ancl l1,i:h1 REW ARD! housek<>ep11111 ldeJI for Lost Blue tole Hui: on < ollq:e ur l .Jrl.'1•r Cedar Wa) bet"een "omJn Laguna Bt•at'h Rosa Bonheur Jnd .irllst author 1-.dmund Aster. Laguna Beath 49-1 042'3 Aug 17th Contarned no Dear Thief C'luthes but1suserla, .. \\e \a\\ \Ou runnin~ lunch bag t.111 194 4J9i rium our .ipartml'nl on after4 P:'t1 S<'J,hon• Dr "Ith our Los l 2 Ger rn d n monc) We II\ l' .inrl Shorthair \!alt' do~s \lurk m 'liewport lll'urh Upper Back Buy NB & Costi1 \lesa Wl' \\Ill 8 I 3 R t-: W \ R II ' hnd you for pohre actmn 645-3275 no rn atter "hat 11 costs e 1 P. er . r e q · d . ILL[" The Fc:.iuliarity with llM ~ .~ -~.,r 5200 Series pref'd. q "'. E • Must be otik to ust o EOE I 0-lcey by to..clt.. Post-,_ _____ _ tiOft Offtr;J.gd. CJ"OWth opporiwliff'. Cal for oppt. CDI CORP. 3303 Harbor llYd. Ste D-2. Costa Mtso 556-8022 EquaJOppt~ Employer M F Aui5t 1uy.r S/R l nt crest1ni: Jtlb Women ;, fashions Ex per in lh1s lwld hl'lpfol Will trJ1n hri.1:h1 .1:al "' t:d mcrnur) 1-'a-.t pace Top l'J) \1111 smoJ..n \1>1>1> 111 ll('rson BACKSTREET 1\55 ' B .. St Tust111 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : 8-DA Y WEEK SPECIAL : e 8 Days • 3 Lines • 8 Dollars e e Its easy to place your 8-0ay Week Classified by mail. and 1t e e costs 1ust $8 -that's only a dollar a day' To Qualify tor this e e special offer you must be a non-commercial user offering • f'l'lJ.TIME 1'0~1t1on avail m our So Cuast Plaza office. F.x per nee Please con Id Cl I\ a thy Amburge)' 540-4066 CALIFORNIA WANT A CAREER? Costa Mesa 5l?W W1lsonS1 63t 9609 LaRuna~arh 494 9233 FEDERAL lfunllngton Beac•h So.,iftcJI & Loe.. 962 9116 69S Town Center Dr I P"rsonnnl ""Pl l'osta Mesa. Ca 92626 I " • v.:-J::qual Opportunity S37 4840 Employer --------•CATE.R ING Serv1rl' Banking HEW ACCTS REP 6 months pre\IOUS bank· 1ni: c~ per preferred lorclay's 1-* of California Conta1·t l'al hy . fiJI 1511 EOE Ml"V H Bank1n1? needs rood prep workers S4 hr Purl lime 5AM·9 llAM, f ull time SAM I 30P M Lori's K1trhen, 3077 S Harbor RI . S A. 979·07H ror 3j>pl. Catering Sen 11:e nl'eds rood prep workers pan lime Mon Thur . I PM 5 30PM & Sun 6A M 2PM Lori·~ Klll'hen. 3077 S Harbor Bl . S A 979-0747Jor a_ppt e merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the price must • • be 1n your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad •' needs eight days selling time or Just one TEllER F'lJLL TIM E Position avail in our II untington Bearh uf llC'e Teller exper pre f1•rred. t.ish handhnl! t'Aper rl'q'd Contacl Chef & Frv Coe* 100 unit Moter & 250 seal Restaurant in town 3S males NW or Santa ~·r. 17,000 populallon. 7.000 ft ele\'ataon. heart or pine roresL Good r1sh1.11g & hunting Salar) negot1u ble. housing aY111lable ~nd resume to P 0 Box 250. Los Alamos. N M 87544 t 50.S) fi62. J600 • • e Use one word 1n each box. About 4 words make one e e ctass1f1ed tme of type Minimum ad rs 3 lines Please pri nt e e plainly • • r_------------------------------, • • • • • • • • s 8.00 • • • • 10.60 • • 13.20 • • • • 15.80 • • Add S2.60 for each addttlonat llne for 8 times • • • • • e Publish my ad for 8 days starting e : 1 Classification • •:Name : e 1 Address e • 1 City Zip Phone 1 e ., '• • 1 Check or M.O. enclosed D '• e : Charge my ad to: : e : f 0 # Ex p. :: :: 0 # Exp. 1: ·L------------------------------'• • ..... -Qn,51'114 ..... ...... • : Daily Pilat :w:: ~ .. mu : • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' JohnJunt> il4 8480111 CALIFORNIA FEDERAL Savings & locllt 7222 Edinger A\'e Huntrngton Beach Equal Opportunity Em11loyer BA NKING * TELLERS Full/Peri Tiffte CHILDCARE Mature English speak 1ng person, after school care my home, light housework. S4 per hr Min. 4 hrs per day Ref. Da 851 -1075 , Eves 559-464~-- Clerical Position with medical lab in Newport Beach near Hoag Hosp. Ac c urate ty ping & general oHice duties Will train, no experience necessary. Full time 9AM to 6PM Mon·Fri Fldehty Federal Sav-548-~-1--- mgs has full alld part Clerical l1mt opportun it ies FILECUIKS available in its Irvine. R L Kautz ' Com Irvine Santa Ana. Costa Mesa are in need ol 2 sharp, and Newport Beach of. bright & resp file fa ces ror Tellers. Ex-clerks. Requires some puaence is preferred, ofrice exper and light ideally In 11 rommercial t)'llilt&. f\1.11 lime. 371, bank or savings and brs. S.4:~. Call Valarie Io an. 1 nd Saturday ~•~t~~....,_4'"'7'""00_,e;;:x.:.:U:.i:l:..9 __ houn will be reqwred for the part li me posi---------lions Weoffer: Clerical • ExcelJenl salaries prttftMu.n •eald carcerapparel UWunntL •Beautiful work RfCf""OllSJ environment r" •frctpartina CDt Corp. ft--~ for • ..,.,,4. .... Please apply at our ,..ct,.._. fw _. Newport Dead\ office on hi~ h~attrl•t Monday, Auauat 24 or Tuud1y, August 2s. fee lty, •fHtht rrom9:10amt.o3:30pm, ~ '-'• 1 • & •ltlllfr •• ,,,. ::t:C':i)a;" . CDI C • JJIJ ......... Sh 1-1, Celll MIM llMIU .~-°"" _,...., .. ,, Secretory PIU!h orflrei. & friend Jy co.workers in this top Ir vin!' ro 2 y r s :.ecre1ar1al exper suHic1ent No shrthd nee Very gd benefits Salary to Sl.200 C:a II DATAEHTRY Full time Wa rt>house OPERATOR truckdriver Good P&y ' Irvine based restaurant A~k for Oob EOP chain has an opportunit) 957 0536 available for an IBM FULL Time. I' T1ml' 3741 Data Entry Ans sen T>pmgrcq'd Operator I yr on lht> No exp ne<· Call btwn 8 GllLFIJOAY •Pleasant. mature person req'd lo handle d1vers1f1ed duties •Must be Excellent. ac· rurate typist ISperd 6.S wpm I on electrir typewriter RffoJoheson 972-9955 1616 E 4th St S 1\ Jr. Clailftl bom'r. Exp needed in hfe & medical rla1ms Very Jovel)' Npt. B<'h ore Gd advancement potent Salary to St.100 Call Rita Joheso.. 972-9955 1616E 4lhSt .SA Acch). Cltrii High sc h ool o r bookkeeping classes + some work exper Data entry knowledge a plus Salary tu Sl.200 Call Rita Johnso.. 972.9955 1616 E 4th St . S A Cltrii No prev exp nee Try for this pos ir you hke working wilh numbers This is a large, very loH!ly ofc m Fash Is Salary starts at $700 & there 1s plenty of room for growth Call Rita JoMIOft 972-9955 1616 E 4th St , S A Cltrii Traintt Variety pos \\1lh super Npt Bch <'O No prev exp nee Late typing fine Salary $700 up Call Rffa JohMoft 972-9955 1616 F. 4th St . S A Citric al Need auto insurance bkgrnd . lo as'aist product mer. in lovely fashion Island ofc. Career oppl)' Very gd. benefits. Salary St.000. Call llt.J ..... '72·ft55 1616 E. '4lh St., S A ltctpt/Typfst Well utab'cf co . In Santa Ana aeek11 ad. typlst who would like to rtlioe on Reception desk. Nice p.r101111Jty needed S1l1ry 1900. Call· .... , ...... '7J.ftl5 1818 £. «J9 St.. S. A. IBM 3741 is required & 4 30PM. Mon Fri Small (31 girl data entry 631·0140 EOE team Pos111on 1s for full F'ULL TIMI::. Ans. Serv time day shift with at Ma ture, responsible tractive working l'Ond1 adult No cxper ner lions & an excellent Call bl" n s & 4 JOPM, benefits par kage Mon-F'ri,892-1212 Salary will be com mensurate w1Lh ex GEMEIAl.OfffCE pe r1ence Appl) 111 Fullt1me bookkeeping. person Mon· Fri. Sam 10 kt}. f1hng Company 5pm at. benefits N R 8 5 THE JOLLY ROGER 645·1711 lNC 17042G1Uette A, e In GtMnll Office '714)546-0331 Wall tram on word pro ress1ng equ1pmrnt DEUVYY Should be good typcst. P T Flonst 7.Sl-470S min SO WPM Coogenial Dttltal Offict Front desk. dental exper required 4 days a week In a nice Newport Bearh oHice 645-751ll DEHT AL FIOMT DESK All phases. dental exper req. 41 ~ dys wk C M 1 63U!?O I Den Lal. Exp Ortho asst RDA Full-time Xlnt s alary & benefits 644·J405. DENT AL Rt<pt/ Asst t'O.worker. Jo~ely off1l't'S nr OC Airport Pos111on avail 1mmed1atel} for 1nlen 1e\\ appt rail Marilyn Ce1ley 9M:2000 Genera I Office HOMEMAKERS!! C Olftf Out of Tht Woocfwortt!! Im med opemni:s for S tCl"ttarits T • ts Word ~•S50f"'S Rec="ts •Dependable & efficient self starter lo do Xerox- ing & maintenance o manuals & f'ihng •TWX & Lelephone ex-per an asset •Non smoker E xcellent sala ry &c benefits MISSION VIEJO AREA PHONE Mrs Jans 581-38:K> Guards NOW HIRING Security Officer posi- tions are now available 1n M issron Viejo & So. Laauna for mature· minded 1nd1viduals No pra or ex f)era enre u necessary Must have own phone & car Veterans bnng 00214 l'inkerton's. 2701-B S. Mam. S ~ (to rear or Rad 10 Shack store I 557·9020. Equal Oppty Employer. HAIR DRESSEi Hent Station w well known salon Must have rhentele 548-1311 P 1t1me Rerept1on1st w l'ha 1rside rxpcr P erfect for mot her w sch0<1l aged rh1ldren Friendly ofc rn Irvine Lots or beper1ts 551·2024 Dental Assastant x. Ray exp 4 day wk Paid vac & Holidays 546-3000 c Mon·Thurl __ HAIDWUESAW Jom the leader in lhe Full or p1time Apply in temporary help 1n pe r so n C rown dustry l'aJI or l'Oml' b) llardware. Jlln E. Coa.sl today Hwy J..CdM DENT AL ASSISTANT E:cper req RDA prer NB are~~~- DISPATCH part lime Must have re liable lransportat1on and good drwing record Be ramilar with Harbor Area and willing to learn Newspaper business from ground up Call MI} Z~ 67~'i0- 2102 Business Cenlcr HOME HELP AlDO Dr '208, I rvine HOMEMAKERS F & 1133 1441 tNr Mat'Arthur p t T & C Bl & 4~ f'Nyl Hrs S.S H I mt or 27957 Cabot Rd • omema_!ers .H6-I420 _ Laguna Niguel. 831 0542 HOSTESS <C rown Valley Pkwy Experienced only. App- ex111 Hrs 9-3 or 161~2 ly 1n person The Beat'h Beach Bl . llUJE. liunt House 619 Sleepy mgton Beach. llrs 8 5 Hollo\\ Lane. Laguna Beach Hotel SWfTCHIOAID OPa. E 0 E. M F' I' DOMESTIC help. A neat 1lllilll!lilllmml!~~-·'-•' Christian cpl <Cook ,- needed for luxury hotel. ~Ul!!.,~&Ch. 497-5313 Nanny or rook maid or cook gardener) or person needed for ram'1 ly with 3 children. French cooking desired. Must be English speak· ing & able to drive. Car & setr-rontained apt proYlded in So Laguna Por details, call Judy. 7t4-$86·4400. Mon·Fri . ,!AM toSPM _ . DP Harbor Yachu saJes ofh ce needs a good lyp1sl trecp lo work wknd's. Opportunity for addfUonal brs. W11l lra1n on computer. 493-2011 or 496-7045. Drain men wanted Exp pref Will lral11. Mual have own truck. All ref will bt verified. Xlnt • 7s.4-68112. DRIVERS.Bui Drivers for Christian School. Muat have b u s ctrtlflcite·Catlr. Class l o II c. Appl1 18836 Brook hurat. F v. 982, z. IUC1'llCAl 1$TIMATOl E.xpr. n«. Salary open w/dnt wofttnt cond. tor ttt.htr Pllm Sprif1•• or Rlvtr&ld.t uu AJI la guirla 1tt ~al h1diastrl1I !lectrlcal loc '°' Palm s,,... c all Jtm Oomu 714 /J27·124l or ror &lHr1l4t call Jerry 7W GEN OFC/UCEPT Newport Center oHire has immed. opening for general omce clerk with 10.kcy by tourh Varied duties inrluding sales re ports & romputer data entry. Call for app't. 64H.e60. More ramlUes are getting the ramping "bug" lhls year H you have a camper lhal's not &t'l· tin& used. sell It now with a Classified Ad, HOUSECLEANERS To SS/hr. car. 645-5123 Housa-. HOMIMAMAGa Full charge houffkttper trained in all phases ot home manqrmenl for buslneu family in Hunt· 1ngton Harbour. Cootiot eseenttal. Salary open. Call Rita . 846-1476 after 6 Call before IPM. _946.0583 _, ____ _ Paily Pilat .................... \ . . f 1eld Sales Supervisor \ i . . i ' I i t ! ---------.---------------~ ---·------·· . ..------. .. ----... ---- .... ,,. c...t/C11a th k• b l H.... H......... Mo•... r.,.,-. ooftitt ....................... ••..................... .........••.••••.•..... .....•..•.............. .......•............... .••.................... ..••........•....•.•... ........•..•......•.... . ..•••••..........•... Babyaltllq. my bomt. l 611WICl &SOM CONCRt:rECONSTR. JArANf3EGardtoer •A·I MOVING • •·we t ala 1hould hong 8ALBOA ROOFJNG CO Y,r 6 up, or Vlctor1a. BulldtnSlntt l94l Foundatlona. 1lab1, Malnuoanc.,Cltao·Up ,.R?:S~~~~LY Top Quallty Sperial tocether" S101roll The only roof&ntl co for C.M • "2,,_, Ml-5751 Addltlon.s, romodtllni. drh ewaye, walkways, Fr~• ntim te •2$9! care In handlinic 25 yrs !J2.hol walls 839 0730 thecoast 673-_6743 _ Prev. p..._adlOOl teachu plan1. Fre.i e.t. Reu. block wal11, relalnin& G•ID••w.a "Security Plus'" will 111 exp. CompetaUvt ntu PAPEIHAMGIHG WILBER ROOrtNG, lnr now babyajttln1 In mr. J.l.£.!!0942. M9-2l70 wall• Local r efs. ,.. ~ HAULINGlrOUMP your houee. planta ft Noovertlme 730-1~3 2.Syrsexp Preeesl All typea. new ronatr & C.M. home. Mon.·f'r . ~..:..~ WAMT9 JOBS, ukforRandy, u .83 .7~ STARVING COLLf'GF. Labor 111irott&up re·roofing, Ina, bonded. &:JO.f, pref Infant to 5 JIMCOCOMST. cwwc... Muwin1.edaln1.rutn1. 641·"77 STUDENTSMoviNG. 30oA Off · he 322179 Fret est _m__$41-~J5!1... __ Ad:l~:.n ~Una ••••••••••••••••••••••• !.~1~:t~! n 1.6.0:-.~ '0~ Rbr~::'l t':Jn~o~:~e ph~~u:1:':; s::•l .~~r CO Lie .-fl2H 36 wallpaper l'rwe hanjl It 327·0861 INh.. M•t •ct/ Lie. 1299374 oma:_fm& $36.90/WK ~5737 tn• clean_un 6U am Have rt fa Prer NB. Insured 641 8tZ7 BOOKS brought to your RooringSperialtst ~kt --------Hot 1 b C.M Chris-'&I ~" Balboa, CdM Ii/or CM WATCHUSGROW! home For appl, call Freeinsperuon&esl ....................... ..,..... . l punc hool645-$423 Sam Fukumoto YARO WEHAULIT.AU.' artu Pleau call ABC MOVING Exper RobertsD«or Ul-~ Reuonable 966 5257 Boat ' Yacht Cleanmc. •••••••••••••••••••••• -'!!LJH C MAINT ' Clean· UPI Demolition. t'onrrelt U O 2l40 wkdya 8 5. pror I.ow rat~ Quick, The Paper Hanger, Prof Tile Cltallinc waslun& ' re-Rmiodel, lut cabinets, COlltrochn, G1Mrtl Tree trlmmin&. amall breakout, stump rC' 640·2246 evea S.9 & Sal s areful service. 552 0410 install Derorator qual ...................... . pairing. Fr ests'. p1llo1. bookahelves, ........... •••••••••••• J..andsca .64$-3540 moval, yard clean up 10.5 TILE INSTALLED Bonded pror care Lie alid ang windows, HERITAGEPAJNTING TIHSTOPPIEO& ~@~ •TOUCHDOWN• Freeest Stevc 0 •541 7·~J All Kinds .Guaranteed 11-.o5: ~953S Water frames. door hanging. & REFURBISHING CO. REMOVED EXPERT H....__'Ch••• L..dtc..... T 0 Moversarecarcrul. PA l'l':RllAN N(, Refs John S9l lS6? Boys Inc. 848·7228 __ Retid. or romm 2S yra YARD C.i .f;AN UPS -.,, .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r o ur teous & 1n rx CO(Tlm1545-9S75 Resdl ROUGH OR FINISH txp. Lic.353444 997 2020 751·34""' Jtf!1~7 7568 Tree Trlmmln&. r t pensive Please call. WALLPAPERING Tt"ff S~ict Ooo , ... __ •v Unwanted clutter ln "OUr moval. matnl 30 )'rt ., ... 1.,...... p r t 1 l ••••••••••••••••••••••• ra. encU1g,etc ~or..., H-..a. 111 • CLEAN UP .,...... ....... ro eu 1ona . qua 1 y S '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l••N••E•E•D••itfij:~···c~·LL•• Chns~4043 ....................... ....,.. llAeULING ._..., "720 Ir fll P far~r , havt MOVI..--. $35 _1... workman s h• P b > TREf. D~IGN · •--~"'"-" --D r r ••••••••••••••••••••••• . _... equli> Xlnt r .... ~8318 ,..... """· M 1 r h a e I F' r e e Prune ni:. Stulpturing .. Ace I ..... "The Accountary", bt •reel rom ma.nu I t'· HOM,.; IMPROVEMt:NT -!HINRIS•: l..ANOSCAl'E SmalJ Jobs 53114800 e$limates 492 8798 Top, Th111. Remo\'als L •h •••••••••••••••••••• kp&' acctg, PU ' del CarpetS.-.kt lurer decor pillow•. Plumbin& rlean upa HCMtMC...... ~ Maml~nimrC' Clean.up 6312513 Art)'oureadyfortheTax Lowestrates.llS74646 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s preade, el <' Bev odd Jobs '211 vrs exp'••••••••••••••••••••••• flrt1t ""l t..an.,,7 roWiitg riClllO b ltOltS Seuon? Let me help you lridal S.,..,.; -We Care Crpt Cleaners ..'.!:!!.1!1er 851 0567 979.2265 ' ROBI N'S CLEANING ..... '""""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••. ••••••••• ••••. •• JAYE TIEE CARE !wine your rtt.Orda up lo " Steam clean' uphols. n.......o1 H-Service ii thoroughly Lot StrlpMIJ THE C.f. c.IOUP ON F. f' R El:: L ~:SSON ! Com plelt' St'r\' Ire and d l A I b ••••••••••••••••••••••• Truck mou t l .... ,-anduman t•arpentry Cl"an h........ U I\ ..... 7 RES./COMM L'X'I' N h' L" l a d na 10 yr· a e ccount ng y DESIGNER nat1on11ll" n uni ••••••••••••••••••••••• , fi ho , .. "'""" >ITV'"°" ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' • ew Approac c.nJOY s ump .. r1n 1 • .., ,, Samatha 9li6-M24 . · · ,. Work 1uar 645-3716 Druwa~S ialist masonry. roo tng, ine Want a REALLY CLEAN Parkin& 1.ot Stn™n1 PROMPT LIC'O I e a r n 1 n g • R n b e_!l> L1r Ins 640.9:.Jll • known. will custom11e ----' repairs It improve 0 l · .. 11 htpol lrfrt 75•1539 d AatwerilM)Sertk t your wedding gowns. Shampoo & steam clean Qual & New & re· H USE~ Call Ginicham """' I( 'Ma~ ix ures .... Bear sley 548-4859 WIRdow a.c.Mg ••T•o•••••u••••••••••••• access .. etc ~v Thayer Cololr blOnghtenersbl. whhl mod 11389944 532·5S49 ;;.e;: 0~~7TRADl!S Girl Free est. &4s.5123 r:~:~~~ C-0 'r:.~~~ain Exl house painting only Ploit.r /Repair ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 5: Sl5 a month. un· &SHl567 crp s mm eac ALL TEXTURES & p . Give a G11\' Scrub a Dub WedoUw Job right • ••••••••••••••••••••••• C ALL JULIO'S li mited calls Mall •Ilk Hall. hv.din rms $15, Drywall.Clean&depen· lumbm1.elec.heatin11 pror houseclean1n11 Mtttowy LEE Paint111g 846 4889 Neatpatches &texlures f or all your house & Hand lln&; use our I Mn avg rm S7.SO. couch SlO: dable. Reas. 631·234:i Odd.JQ.~ 53IH068 service. Reas. rehable, .... •,•••••••••••••. ••••• Summer S"""'tal. t'Xl int fT'H eat. 893-1 439 window dng 64S.Sli89 Lasuna Hllls Address ••••••••••••••••••••••• chr SS. Guar. ehm pel --HOME IMPROVEMENT rers Je~n 6:1__!~5016 HRI CKWOHK S 11 ,.... 951·1334 HOME ~MPROVEM~NT odor, Crpt repair 15 yrs DIYW AU lgtAll & R EPAJR Plumbing. -==---JObll , Newport, c~:lli ~~~~l!~f St~~~~/~~I Re11tu rcOll Textures Orig ma I Window Washer • · Add1t1ons/Remodehng exp Do work myself. TheC.F'.Groo_1n_754-lS39 carpentry, elec, tile ReliableCoupledoes ren M•ia lrvln"' R~h Int t?xtpatrhwork Avg3brhome.S35 • ........ Guaranteed. 642· 1323 _Rer!:._531·0101 _ Tape, Texture~Acoustic Free eat No job too lal ' yard clean· ups, 57;.3n'5 '· " PAi-~.iTING CUSTOM 1''ree est 645 8258 631 7698 i: •••••••••••••••••••••• I 0 ... _,,,.. ...... S c ·1 Fr R small 64S-2811 1Qallas > hauling, elc. 642-.:W_ work . ~ yrs exp Many PLASTER PATCHI NG "Let theSW\Shine In" ;Driveways, parking lot 0 M-11"" ROBERTS CA RPET ei ings eeest eas ----GeneralHouseclean1n11 EXPERTBRICKlt l<X'al refs Lie •403941 I :ll S repairs, sealcoat1ng & IEMOOBJMG REPAIR Re3Lretch. re· ~''•!! 67S.!Q8/673-1503 H•dwood Roon Reliable Rererences Masonry Small Jobs & Bonded. ins"d 1-'ree est Ne11~~~~~ l';;J ~;P "2971 Call Sunshine Window . S'5 Asphalt 531·4199 Kitchens. baths . ex lay All r;.r;~ Drywal FWt hhtq ....................... Own trans __ ~-OSlO rep11rs Frplc rim ngs HutchlSOfl 963 0911 Cleanmg, Ud 54!...88S3 ~ c'd. pa.nsions. French doors. Call PMul 54&7504 HARDWOOD FLOORS A thorough hsecleanmo Rer1 5SH~J. 700.. 7074 AGAP E FORC:E ,._bMCJ ......... aa...~t .. .........._ .. ""'PHALTREPAIRJNG wtndows. skylights. oak NoSteam/NoShampoo '---Cleaned,Waxed " Jim J ennin as Custom ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. .....---"° Inter , oak sta1' rways. S i S J F' a...-trtc.-1 A t" 832 •""1 S A done call Jennie lhe " Pamllng Co 3 genera McCORMA''K PLM BG on the,..._ Coat SeaJco1Un11&Striplng tan peria ist asl uono 1111 '!}'•mt'... . ...,.,_.:.. Perfectionist541·3709 Masonry Ser v in g t1ons or pa intinu ex '"' "'-•· Comm/ .... "•d.F .......... l Plans. Lie :.!1007 Free dr .Freeesl.839·1!182 •••••••••••••••••••••••H-..1.1 1 I l969 " REPAIR&REMOOEL DAl'v Pl'l'W' ''"" ·~ "" R "" All . ELECT RICIAN pmed -ltCJ Quahlied. Experienced, coau a area iunce · cellence 839-~1 Stoppa"es Reas rates '"' IA.'I • Uc. !397361 64s.8181 est. eu . .,,, yrs e1. . ht f -· l •••C· .. ·•••••••••••••••••• Hon-1-1-1. Call M•' All types Brick. block. -.. CLASSIFIED ?" E Jonnson 840.~ or Cell.CJ, ACC*lfic Ag . ree ~1ma e on ... ~ ,,... .. stone 6'S.8Sl2 _ Fine pa1nt111(( by R1rhard Lie •2943711 67S.9194 Babysitting anytime, 8'0-•724 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• large or small ~obs. • Ul Yow Act S<&S-3246 •BRICKWORK• Sinor Lie, ms 13 yr~ or Drains from SIO Mam : t'l~~W -AroustirCe1hnp + Jdc .:1!16621 67_3-0359 ?:~~~~~~k g~."~~~;~3 H~ Block walls. driveways. happy NB customers rrom S20 R<•p.i1rs haul ADS $ --=-=-'='"'-"'= l..od Adlltiom custom hand texturing RESID ICOMM'L --••••••••••••••••••••••• _l!at.!QS_~ tile. !IJl·62&6 Thl!Qk you 631 4410 1 n g . I .i"' n s M & :\1 '°"Con Stl 11 find 11 ! W1•off•t Ltc. 389944 "2·5549 Highly qual1f1ed No Job Haul, cleanup, concrete YNG , prof. married cpl NEW PORT PAINTING &t2·9033 :'••••••••••••••••••••••• ~NTH _ __..1,..~_,,_ -toosmall.631·2345 removal Dumptruck La guna, Dana Pt . Custom brick, stone, Com m Indus Resid Trodt llWrtho Wom Ad f VO• "SW _.,.-IUJ _..... ~ -----Quick serv 642-763' C block, concrete, stucro Pree est Low rates Property MClllOCJl!Mtlf re ] • -"'...-.;ll"'O INI ••••••••••••••••••••••• GordetdBCJ ----; -ap1atrano. No children Refs Fr~esl 549-9492 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642•5878 SPICIAUST CUSTOM CONCRETE ....................... HAULING Student has or pets Excell. ref's 642·7;r75 PROF' PROP MGMT Herb's Garage 1995 CoNlnvcnoNCo. Remove old,iMlallnew CLEAN UPS/I.AWN lge lruck Lowest rate. Will pa y r e nt The fastesldraw mthc l.ARR Y'S PAlNTINt; By OC IPIOrangcCoun Harbor Bl<Allta Mesa George D Ca.ndflla lOO's oflocal ref s. Maintenance Landscp Prompt Call 759·1976 j 2 1 3 · 3 5 S · 4 7 2 9 o r West. .a Daily Pilot Int/ext 5 yrs exp ty Investment Prol)t!r ~ Beach rllles 83).8833 ___ 64.S-8512 _ F'ree_e.fil:._ 6'2·9907 Th ank you, John. 1 213-449-6400, ext. 251 C~ss1hed Ad. 642 5678 R!_as rree est 645-9383 ties ) Ed, 11141534.5940 :twpW..tH 7 100HttpW..-.cl 7IOOHttpW..t.d 7100HttpWcmhd 7100HelpW-.d 7100HttpW..W 7100HttpW-.d 71 00Ht4pWGlllftd 71 00HttpWcmhd 71 00 .... W~ 7100 ························1·······················j······················· ..........................•...................................................................................................................................... HOUS11911 INTERIOR DESIGN . Nursing , RECEPTlOMIST REST AUUMT RETAIL ASSIST. Hlllpg 'cluld care. Sun. SALES LA'lfMH&I Mechanic l .N.· LV.N. R E A L E S T AT f, btceitivt SWt• El Roberto nolk hm ng Mature night'wkend ~ • Mon. only. Laauna Decorating nalr nee. M N9' IEFllGllATIOM 3to 4days3to ll.:.lpm AGENTS , Attractive real estate r .T day & evening sist neededtosupervise Beach area. 641·8700 Flu hrs, will train. · ELECTRO 01mrt fMI' MECHAMIC/ Sml priv ronv hosp. Im p r A'J'.TENT1 :~N rr development omce nea r counter ~r~onnel _In· sales starr Retail exp days <Eva I; 497-3983 ~1'61 • '1 I I~ ""· EMGINEBIHG maculale. Gd staffing ro es~iona 0 ce 0 er Orange Co Airport Ex terv1ews IOAM or 2PM . prer Apply m person eves " wknda. JANITORIAL, mornlnp A growing la ser manufacturing co Prestt&ious hotel has 1m 20362 Santa Ana Ave 10~ high rommi~sbon c e II e n l l y p 1 n g & Mond ay thru Fndlty Pier 1. 2710Harbor Bl \'d Houseteeper,childcare. ooSund~ys.»3.Hn.,U. located in San Juan Capis trano ha~ med fulltim~oppty for Santa Ana He11thls !:e~~l~°fow~~e 1 e r telephone answe ring As k ro r ~1 aria . 43 C M hve·in 9/yr old son wk. Retired penoo pre. · ed" t · · th ( U · fully quahr1ed & ex S49-~L --_ 1k Ill s Health 1n f ashion Island, N li Perr. 'ror student or f'd. Cal1847-«r.!2, ask for 1mm 1a e openings m e 0 owmg per 'd refriger ation Nurs* @ aurance. 752-5181 Rest<1urant C:aler1n g 1--------- &nndma..N.B. 759-9219. LarryorJtady areas · lt!ech Successful .can· D1reHor or Nursing, lECEPTlOHIST firm has Oj)t'nlng for RETAIL dtdale will have mm. 3 R N with supervi!ory Full and part lime pos1 respon adult lo operate Part lime clerks HY&l~T JI. c• r:Mr ./ DESIGHll yrs. ~pphcable ex~r exper. Must be able to lions available nr oc Hobart auto sltrer & Expanded duties. $225 LUUW ./ PLAHT MAMA(iEI This Ill an outslan~1ng organize. plan It de SEA COVE Airport look1ni: for learn portion control STOf'M'CiO per day, 2days Newport RegiJter today for local oppty. ror growth. situa lejJ a le Contact Ad PROPERTIES sharp 1nd1viduab "Ith Exp pref but will tram MA.RICETS Center temporaryaaaignment.s. ./ B.ECTIOHIC ASSEMILBS l•onwilhprogressiveco. minia trator. Newport proress1onal altttude 9 JOAM to 6PM Mon 4555 CoastHwy .. 640-0300 55JMJ' We offer ex~ell co Conv al Ce n ter 714.631·6990 and appearenre Must thruThur 6AM lo lP~1 Mewportt.ocJ. lmmed. operunp, p/llme ......, I MECHANICAL ASSEMILHS benefits mcl~g a free 6'6·776' be a bl e lo an:.we r Sun 979 0747 for appl work Lag Bc h . ,-n.. Lfr'\~ ./ELECTROHICTECHHICIAHS mealpershltt Apply in Nursing med i um t u hr a\\ Lori"s l\1tchen 1------111111111111111111~ i:~~~~~i:s ~ft!~ u ,. II \1: I MECHANICAL TECHH~IAHS rr~~~1000' Mon IM-4.VHC.... U.IHVESTMINT phon es N.~ l~pihni: Retail Sales SAILBOAT 2pm. llMl'OllMV"ll$0NNll5'1MCU MAlllonHOTa 3-11 & 11·7 relief. C'onv Earn while you learn ~~lttt2~~.., ~r r MAY CO. MAINTENANCE l7Z31ird1Strttt ./QCIHSPECTOI 900Newport CenterDr. hoepl. wilhexcell re· HERITAGE --TVH•r• Boal cleaning. M 1f . Me ~leech I STOCKROOMCLEll NewportBeach,92660 pulation. Beach area. INVESTMENT will lECEl'T/SfC'Y , rn F/T·PIT 111clwknds.No IMFAMl"IYMAH w O E I ccou~ ... ~cLERI EqualOppEmplyrM/F Freemjr.medlcal,den· leach you creative Brighl selfm .... J\'alcdin MAJOR ex pernec 2633 W Coast We'll push YOU to your · · · v A. """"-' tal " lire. Top salary financing, 1031 Ex· dividual who likes work APPUAMCES Hwy .. N 8 645-7IOO_ Umlt t.o bring out your !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!' Medical Flex. hrs.642-80« chan&ea, investor de· mg with people & has Looking ror a career ' Sales best. Army. Be all you Key Punch Excellent benefits package-Ch1r o pract 1c Asst / OlDaDIStC velopment"counsehng front office & light We are seeking perma •lllDALSHOf'• can be. CalJ toll free DATA EHTWY Receptionist. Beaul Desire a penon with er Exper C'Ounselora re· J secretarial expenenre nent r time salespeople 1-800-282-5164 OPaATOI Competitive wages-bu.s y office. Good ap· rective communication ceive 1ocncomm The 1s for R E De\elopment 10 the Orange Co area Irvine based restaurant pearance. healthy, en skills & lollow through an unusual opply for Co nr 0 C Airport Ex Pre,.1ous expc•nence m Part & lull l.Jme. will train Prer exp 111 retail clothin g sales C.M IHSUUMCE Laree insurance co. has the following full lime poeilions available ·~a..ta w Ill be rtllni & aortlng insurance recorcb. Some phy1lcal work involved. MUil Uke detail work. Wiii train. ,., ........ , Will Quauty Control in· 1urance l)Ollcles ' IS· aemble (oc mallin& lo a1mu " insured. Must enjoy detail won. T ....... Typms or 10wpm needed In this full lime poeillon. Wi ll tran1crlbe In · eurllMe lnlcnnatlon orr tUfftle. S..tyeln Will be ty!>in1 bond•. haodllna heavJ phones • have gen. olc. duties. Typlnc of nwpm re· quired in thla poelllon Excellent co. benefit•. Ule, Medical, Dental & ProOt Sharin1. Apply In perlM. Mon. lhru Fri . 10AMto2PM. 5AllCO .. SUIAMCICO. 17570 Brodi hunt Fountain Valley 112-77ll E,O.E. M/F chain has an opportunity For more information. contact: thusiasl1c, knowledge or ability seeking perma· right pe.rson. Confiden· c e 11 e o t s a I a r y & brown & white goods or available for an IBM Maiigontfrcmib ins. billing, peg board· nenl employme nt tial interview. Call benefits Please sendrl' hlf1 sales prer . but we 3Hl Data Entr y 714•493•6624 computer very helpful. ~-6300. ___ Vince54&-S880. sume to Cont rolll'r. w1lltram.Xlnt oppt'y 1n Operator 1/yr on the Great career potential. p rt t· aJ .,._ P.O. Box C l!l54!5. In a growth oriented en· s.a• r11: SS6·9333 546-)821 IBM 3741 is required , 1 a · 1me s es <:.Aper 92713 \"ironmenl ~ Sm111 (31g1rldataenlry j;aJ 63l·S664_. --Ladies specially shop IEALESTATE Carpel and drapeq · team.PosiLionisrorrull· LAAKMAHH MEDICALASST Fa.sh.ion Island. I day. SALES IECEPTlOMIST Call <'e>llect ror in· sales person with 111 lime day shirt with al· RECTl().()l'TICS, IHC. Proot lback office. Full some eves Flex hl'1 Tblsisourlllthyearsell Full-time gd phon e [ ten•e"' uhis numbt>r tenor design ba rk tractive work111g cond1· or part time Ex · CaJIM 1m1 759-9961. Ing rine Southe rn personality Must type, onl}J ground lions &t an excellent 33052CalleAviador. pe r ienr tt desired Parl·ltme Sales Lad)' California homes good with figures. use 1213132~174 6422210 be nef its ra ckag e SanJuanCapistrano,CA .92675 647-6004. wante<1rorretailstore 1n Perhaps you would en· 10.key. b11llng, likes de L' t () . Sales la.·1. u 1•1 Monarch St . An r, q u 3 p Pt y Salary wil be1 hcom· E.0 . E. M/F/H Medi r al front orrice La guned.a Beach. Ex J1oYJ1·oining a ri~dactj.ve1 Garden" Grove. 92641 Employr CARES Of'PTY mensurate w l ex· Part-time Typing & in· .R_er~~·5659 n uxury res• ent1a For a talenlt'd RE perlence. Appl y in surancc.847-1150=-=-·--PBX OPERATOR . areas such as Big Ca· (7141891·4425 sales proress1onal w a person Mon·Frt. Sam· Telephone Ans. Serv nyon, Spygl ass Hill, R E C E P T IT Y PIS T Retail strong interest in """Pie 5 l M •~•urE E NT Medical Office. 1 I I T L d r--pm a : "'"'~""""' Day & graveyard shin rv ne errace. in a <45wpm min I Dir OHK.Clerit developement. a take THEJOLLYROGER telYPUHCH aECTIJCIAH employee Hadley WUltram.CaU:S42-6747 lsle,etc. taphone, !or bus) NB Stodl charge ab1hty. who ran INC. Insurance aaency need5 Min S yrs exper as Syalem TlJ'ring. some --PBX -It you a.re presently IC· Insurance orrt('e C.ill Mcstwr/ChKker work well both 111depen· 1700 Giiiette Ave .. Irv " Journeyman Eleclrl· assisting. rile lo Ad RECEPTIONIST tJve in real estate sales Pal. 675~ dently & collaborative (714154&0331 Data Entry Processor ct an Mu al ha v t' nOl, DaJly Pilot. p O do you have immediate -: M•'t s.ih I H hi l I l"d ----'-'-"= -Starling salary com generalist background, Box 1560, Co51a Mesa. NEEDED " unlimited access lo Rec~pt1on1Sl u.-n. Y ig Y a en ~ Have something you mensurale with ex per r u n C 0 n d u 1 l . ca. 92S26-~ the president of your lrvi'!e Mrg rirm has 1m Wot1t·;;r,A~ctts. rhallenging pos1t1on uf ::1ntd~ 1~1!Je1f1aaslbl!~ ~~iLrP:Urn~~~~~l• troubles hoot, repair MEDICALASST IVICKI HESTONJ compaoy,orishehidden ~ed1ate need for ru11. DrftHt ~~u~~(.:r !r~~~i:: Ow ~ pl1nl equ":J'menl. in· Part/lime. Costa Mesa away in an ivory tower lime recp I yr exp req CL.l.l...L....-'1 dem·e Get m on the N .e.u-.... ,.,. __ _ _ _ pl I "ASSOCIATES r•movedfrom •"-s~·ene. Typing 45-SS. wpm Call -' Laborert ftffded. rom 11lall1llun ante e<' P~latryoffice.548-7779 Spedalist.ain Our ~esident {."",;aila· 549·4464for 111t~v1ew SportilM)Cioods ground floor or this I '""" S4 h tr lr1 I t qulpmtnl " TemporaryClerical • 1--dynam1r gMwth Co ,, ...... , .. .......... , mercia JV"ff• pr r machinery Blurpr1nl MIOICAL COUllEI Penonnel ble. you need add•· RECEl'T /TYPIST .....-located al the bearh in Apply romer or Bear & readlnll 1 muat M u 1 t h a v e o w n tional training to help Active real estate olfice Stodl 1.-r s 0 o r a n g e c 0 JrhcArthur, Co.la Me111 Narmru ofttrl 1 com· tran1portat1on &t be 540-0400 rou !ncrease your eam· has operung for a well We have rull and part Sperializtng in beach A•k for Kc-vln petltlvt itartlnl( salary ram Ill a r with Ca Ii f 18004 Skypar1' Blvd. 1n11 . . groomed personable m· time openenl(s in the ori ented tn\'eslmenl pro ' c 0 mp re h c n , 1 v e rreeway 1y1tem. Mon· Suite 235 Irvine Experienred or 1nex-dividual. Must be ex ab ove dept s r o r per 11 e5 1nd 1 v id ua I l.A8 TF,Cll TRAIN•:v.. benetll• park1&c Eri~_l!m. 768-8500. rtST COMTIOL perlenced you may well perienced with ty ping quahfied people Exrell should ha\•e a high le\'el p I T Ru po n r o r P'ur I mmedl11tc ron· Meuenger FIT Calif TICHHICAH proril fro'!' our color skills 4S·60wpm Real ro. be nefits. wh1rh tn· or energy, imagination. cleanup, " animal C'Mr., 1ldtr1tlon pltM•e call: DL. Good rec. CM area. Leadin& local pest con· video lape Uating & sa.lea estate experienre de c 1. u. d e d i s <' o u n I initiative & enthusiasm In ph11rmMl'c-uUral R'O Jackie Rl4•kel, 548-1144, Call Karen 9·lpm. trol Co. needs Route tr1inin& PfO'rlm which 11rable Call Suia n pnv1leges,med1cal den l o rer r u1 l . train, '1!"1ll!lt rl Sll!'",1'1Mron>l1Pnrrl. rxt 22<1 714·55414MIO Technician for atetd" we feel ts the finest 631·0213 ta.I. hfe ins . profit shar motivate & manage • .. It. C11 HAIMCO , av11lable. 1ng It penslOl'I plan ap~ Must ha\"e 2 yrs.ex per 642 7611 , ••• :tl. M .... ............... .__ MHGMMf POSmOM ,ob. Entry-level pos i· We are not a franchise, ly in person or broker's hr & eager "'It .,..,,,. M--.. F b I h In C M •· hon. We train. no ex· b h ._di " ..,,.,.. s blldl r a r c c a · · · .. ranc or suwt ary-J .C. f'IHMEY to work ror a large p1ere 1.1'.0A 1. fOWRY.T A RV AC 1u ~!.2 Anaheim . Xlnt oppt'y perlence oecesaar)'. CaJI ~·ust headquarters. 24 Fashion Island. NB 0 f p 1 e ( 6 s. 7 5 " 1 T R .. I N • ... u u t afleM'.....,.., Gerl.,.,,,.,..,, Tim : 979·6021 Tuea., ... have ,,......;no• ror a E O E u F h ,, "' ... n ... eoow . Vidorla St. ~"'-=..:.·---9-12 r·"w· hlgh ....... Jy.·m-o._livaled . . . "''~I w 0 w n c r s I p CJ!.:l'TIONJHT, Irvin" C0tt1 M•a Ca 921827 Modela needed. Alltypea. . " R l I t 8 30 l -po 6S I b ll 1t 1 es A 11 llf:dhlll ' Mat•Arthur. F.OE... /F M e n , w 0 m e n ar Phone people, No sales. persona who have a de· ecep ~n 5 · : 0 responses conlidcntiol "1W PM , IA)Cld 1r1mmar -Child N Distribute doorhangera sire to be more auc-2PM · Typing & good SELL di te th UOO mo lo at.rt MAIHT.TIAIMHr/T 7~~n. 0 exp nee. In aftnooo &for work ceuful. For alf in· busineas manner req. · 1 e 1 ms wi a Sendresumeto Owner, '7 .. ,.10 Lt mtlntenance, re· =:...:....::::""''-------phonea In pm. 14/hr +'4 terview appointment Call, 752·0322. In Irvine ~: .. ly Pilot Classirie d ~-~te~!~~~ •fi03, LMAL llCllJAlY pairs' 1eneral cleanup MODB.S/ISCOITS per app't + boa1.11. Call with Utt sole owner ' IECn/TYPIST SA law firm , ~lued •l· In pharmaceutical Co To Dollars953·0t'71_ Mllte Aft : 545-4941. founder, call Wesley N S.A Lesa! firm variety moephtrt Zt.oJyn p.( 1·5pm. Mon .. Wed . It Need exper lunch cook. Plctureframeshop1eeka Taylor. or activities Jackie ~------,._ _______ ... dtfenae upr Jackie •'ri. $3.75/hr. Call Si n Litt lunc h. Hou rt capable penon to uslat WtsltRrH. TftlorCo. 953-9063 _ dy·642·75U.ext. l0.M·F 7:30-3:30. Nice environ· ln all .J.aaes ol produt' 'EALTdRs R 1 Offi p r f!lP2 t:J 1: m e n t. Good P ll y . lion viorli:. Ex.per. pre: 2111 San Joaquin Hiiia enta ce erson or RESTAUIAMT MAMAGl:MINT KIDS- SUMMER JOIS. Earn f».180 per ...c. TriPI I Prizes. M .... a '"'''''"' l•-------•I 4949850 ferrtd.5.5&-lS22 NewportBeach 100 unit apt11, Costa LMlllecrtfsy MAMA .. /CLBIC 1 • · 6 ...... 910 Mesa. Show & rent apt.a, ii lat CorpOr Hallmark Gift• & MlcJM~IMr Plllme,7daya,2hra dal· .._ li«hl bkkp&. s :•i:u.~ ope,Y~;~' Co1m1tlc1. Exp. pre-For youtfl ·•helter, ly1. Am 1~00Uvery, L.Ak. HCB'YlOMST dLayafwffeek ~50 CMo11. Min. 1 yr. 11111 uper. f.ttfed.M>---...737~3 -__ _....,._Oii=.______ Times. " per wee . P/llme, •lpm • l·Spm tve o premiaes a No fH loapJllJcaot. • Mana1er, omce wol'lt. MUIS•YSALIS Lacu.oa8eacb.4N-84t8. /11r.MU:m. 6'2·4907 wkdn.10.4 - MtryHW!lt counter help for food Looklnl for personable, P/TIMIM•teS CadUlacstoGo-Cuta RESTAURANT ... ..._ urvlct. Seuonable neat, tn«lellc peraon C •1 WhatevertheFad Part time sandwich le s~tla tn (f/Mo). HB area. Call ablt to 1row WIU\ a well Y .... c.rtin Roll 'emolfthe market counter help wanted, Le1alPfl'IClfUltl H4·UZ!oreeo.tet3 •labllahedco.M.ln.lyr. Adult.t wltb<MUtandln& Wltb aCLuatfledAd Call btwn 9 & ttAM. Lt7G MacAl\hUr Blvd., MAl"mNG retail nur1tll' ..UinJ ex· attractive penonalltlea Call Nowl ff2.5t78 752·5401 lrvlDt M0-2920 Mii per. req'd. F/t lme. who eftjoy wortinl with ilJ p lat MANAGE StarU11..Wy 11,000 to 10.15 year old yooth1. ,,. 1• • .... · ...... · · · · ·· ·"·:. Live In Houaeheper, • llj•ot per mo Pd. Evenlnp f<t p.m. Call ahare upeues, 2.5·2' Mon boJd1y1 • vac1tlon1. U2·02l. ut. JU ,ean old. 5 day wtet. Hoar.l\allutloo· lu. bet•ten 2 p.m. and s s.o.tt11 t1 ~ let ant . Ptnme poelllonl p.m.AttforA!dtt• rtu.CallbtwnH. JUINE£ :1:°P~~·~· .. tt.1?~ ------- Mslat1 ratW. $l 2 00/MO. ~7~yl1..~~1r1r1Y. .... ..... w.. Oentul mecbenlcal """"" u1u .. ..,_ ,_T., taowltdp1 nptrlence PNf,, Oflcit i. tlettrkal • plu_mbUll ..... A9ll Nnport Betds Udo Of. ....,,..,, AlllQ co Larry; • .,,_, __ .,. fkt ...... creetlvt-. ac· Surf 6 hlid Hottl, TOSTAIT ._ _. _ _, 1rta1lve •1t•ll wbo Llnp•l!K'-m:tm ~u. 11-7 C..v. •r.· wut '° •uimlll lll· ...._ ... ...,_tor ·•OPDIUfOS lelf" .,... "'".._,!. dhldul pott1tlal. Apart• .. l compln, •HIGR PIOllO medklA, drllLaJ • U t . BJQH omm•ONSI .... ,.,..,_,.... PoramAL ~ .utt•. CallWll.•.._ "''"" la pef1\la1, • NllDTIAHIP. ---~ c.,... •YOU'HOPIOPLI ILL Idle~~ a b7 ' Ii , • "' PIU. DallJ PUot Cleulfled m4MM ----- PAIT TIME MllliS Wa are preaently 11ekln1 adult• with Jlltannl ptraonalltlea who would be ~Uid ln worlllnc In Sat. fr Pnlmollon wt~ Dail1 Pilot Carrlen 10 to U yem old 0111.mittd tamlnp available to ri,i. ,.non Hra· S:IOPM to 1:30PM. Monday tbru l'ritlay, Somt Satutda1 avallablllty. FOf c~l. call: '42·"21. uk '°' Btn ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT . . • m W.IAYlfa,·~A-~.11121 \ .. ......._ f\llllfY t a ,: ··•·••····•····•··········•···•···••····· I We are looking for selected inlflvldual• to rm our current need~ throughout Southern California. Wt orrer 1 tompttnullon pro11ram commensurate with your experience + benefits hard to malt'h MAMA&BS SI 6,000.$20,000/WW Plua quarterly ptrformanci bonuses based on sales and full company paid benefits ASSIST AMT MAM'••s I l ,000 SI 5,000,tyNr ' Fl.Ill company paid benent.e and opportUt1lty for advancement lo Restaurant Mana«er ,., 1111111•• Can I•• c:t. APPLY IM PHSOM n..~~21••...i,. , 2t;,c ....... ti__.. Se. ef 40l ....,.I SAUIO-S llST AUUMrl. IMC. ;. • J') Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monda , Au ust 24, 1981 Sell it all and put cash in your pocket! DAY WEEK · 8Days 3 Lines 8 Dollars • Special flat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan- dise priced in tbe 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. For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678 n. ..w Dally Piiot 8·Day Week its a Classified PLUS tfflp W.ted 7100 Http W antt'd 7100 tip Wanted 7100 l lcycles 1020 Fwwihn 1050 Jewelry 1070 Pets 8017 loah, Power 9040 TrallPrs, Travet 9170 Allfos W anf•d 'YS90 ....•...........•••.••••............••.......• ·····•················· •......•.•••••..•...•.•.•............•.•..•••..............•.......•.....••..•.••........••......•....•....•.•....•.....•.•.•••••.............................•.. --------1St;CRF.TAHY Part ttme TYPIST MONGOClSI:: Red alloy 8eau 4postoakwaterbed 620pt D1amoods&l 25pt Co<·katell Bab) 8 wks Hptwtu.dYrRt.d TttltTrailtt r.enerul ofhce work. no parts,S1:;o orbest oHer w air frames. Ju!>l D1amondRml(S480 t.ime. S25, adh Pied Classic Sound hull Nu SSOO 1>41~101!1 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR USED CARS ALAN MAGNOH' PONTIAC/SUBllh) Sales CUWGAHOF SAHCUMEHTE 1:. look1n~ (or a salt'Spt>rson 141\h o penent·e m d1re!'t selling or ha\C held pos1t 1on~ that rellum• ml't'lm~ & rel.iting tu the pubh\· Weorrer 111 Guaranh.>t'<lmt·onw during trammi; 112 Bonus. t·omm1~swn #3 Val'allon 14 Ith J>ay •4 llosp1lallrnllon msurum·e •5 C:ompletctrammi.: ..,,.1th factor) followup •ti Protel'tt'd loc:ul 1err1t11rv •i Quu1tC1t!C.l lt.'ads H you ..,,.uulct Ilk\• to hl'l(I l'Jll H30 3031 or 492 :121:1 n o w & j1J1n th\• "Cull11tan" team' 1 EEO SALES COMMERCIAL R.E. Tired or selhni: houses 7 t.ld\~ d "'eek' Wt: Ot'<'d one hrensee lo leam lht• skills to manaj!t'. hrok1·r rommert'IJI reJI 1•,lall' lncomt• from m.:mt while )OU lt•am Sup..•r 1 bener.ts. hfe m~uranre health 1nsuranrt' & den tal plan Contdl'I Ken. 675-6700 SALES HELP Fabrir storl', retail. Cl\ J1e r 11re f 646-4040 SALES UDY f'or exclusive l'hildrt·n:> bout ique. South l'm1s1 Plaza Le Magas111 549-~ Npt Brh Jrea 9A \I to I P~I Dail) T\ pm.: & hll' shurthJnd Call Pat. ~ 7796 bef I P~I SECRETARY nl.'edt'd for In 1 nl' t:snu"' ulfH't' ~lust haH eslr0\4 t'>.pr Jnd ~ood I) pmg :.k1lb llrs 8 5 \Ion thru fn Pd health & 1o:t-1i"I bt·nd1ts <'all for appt Tu111 or Nadine 552-4USO SECRETARY Nt•wpon Beach law of· fkl' Word pron·~SlllJl. will tru1n l'.irv n . 644 6516 . Se<•retar1 . Jt1nior Soles Srcretory 5.'lllo Month l'X pt'r required Hil(h 960·0386 moved. must sell 155() 3 25pt 01Jmoods & 141l male. talk & tame $..50, lo hr et·on eng S9800 T 'I« utility 9180 school grai..I <.: M art'a BL'A''ll l'RUlSER 8"2·9381 Fling S~I Jdll rem ale. tame SIO 644 6660 da 7 .»5 rat s, "'" w P & 675"'ino -•••••••••••••••·••••••• W 111 be mo11ng lo In me • Urand new Mus hell SACRIFICE l4rt dtermJn en ..,, 5 x 10 lS Wll n :1.'i :.non t:uod bt>nef1h SIOO 6'5 7965 Wood & s.uede backgam Pencil Set Sl!IO Call Parrot. C:anar) "'mged loah, R...t/ ssuo ~~Jr m ,. rs Insur Jn,.,. •··lid.... .... ............. ~ 1025 mon lbl & 7 chairs. on!) bl w n Io AM I 2 p M t.lwarr, lame. sv.ei!t d1sp Charier 9050 55:! bWI MX L!~'I <,rouµ 54!>-4100 -'"9 ~ $285. value SIKIO. whill' 673·64$3 "' <·ag_e SM 631 2499 ••.•••••••••••••••••••.•• • · · L' r ••• ••• • • ••••••••••••••• 42 modem fishing boiit Attto Service Perts ... u · WOOD 216,S love seat. S2SO-value. lltmalayan kittens S75, for loeal r15hml( trips & "c ..... ...::., 940c HO S615. Xl nt cond Evt•s, MiscttlCIMC*S 8080 blk k $15 '"" c ......... , .. TYPIST Word Processor. 4• to 20' Iona Xlnt d~ck •llens Ql4J846-7445aft 6pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ' S4.8·9!188 ••• • • •• ••••• ••• • •• • • •• • 957 6257 --..Arlee 20001d1ctaphollt' " L' esh load arr1v1ng It's not too earl" to make ftbl'rglll~b hJrrltnp fur '"" rr .. OVING TO HAWAII Lovel_.-~· I t I J 2000 Fast. acrurate for we"kly Sav" at • .,,n "' _.. I pair beautiru ba 1y OVI' plans for your orflct' Jeep, sunroof hr.ind ' ' .>.r SALE Everything lleltum Bouquets de ~· busy. growing center. J m 646 9885 anytime birds (peach fact:J .,.5 Christmas Party lrom 10 nel4 752 1784 aft I:! I 1 ' · must go· Waterbed. <•ol ~n e red Pedcrt for Fu I or part lime The f>49 7565 lo 130 people Full l'ater 4 lloneyrnmb v.ht'l I\ 0Hice549-2188 FRENCH DOOIS or TV. Furniture. ell' t'Vl'r1o~asion 673-4419 Afl(han !)Ups 4 mo No ing av all Y d<'hl•ni: gold. 15>.i f11 l'h1•\ lO pane. not sanded or ~all 960·6846. 1---------papers S7S Co nsultants Charter Olds. Pout Xhll wod T~PIST /RECEf'T. sta1nt'd SIOO. 494·S060 _ Maple framed mirror. Rams Season T1rk<:ll> 84&6249 Services~fili5·2960 S200 or off l'I' 1 714 J Pl lime Nt'wport Bearh Catt 8035 lrg, portable 19'' B W forsale,:.!forS700 •IMMAC 1!'-34' BOATS 64511294 art:'a. Call8·5i673-9389. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV, '50e11. 556>4994 _ 752-0960 (21.31463-1101 Pianos & OrcJ-1 1090 6112 mo. plans prepaid Yettrincwy Rtcpf Persian Kittens, adults Hide a·bed. queen siit', _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• from Sl89/mo. mcludmg A.utos for Sale lmmed open1n" for Sho~'Regl'aml'O,elr off white.S60.Art.5orKIRBV home main ·73 Roads Pia no & sli•nles"-·7141964 5994 ••••••••••••••••••••••• " Ch rum er Orchestrater -'.LL ""'"' -• • bright pleasant persun SL25+ 546-9965 wknd, 979-_9546 tamance systcm. all at ,. Ii r lh holi IMPORTANT + PA equipment Best ... ome sa1 ng or e to handle phones. re 3 Top quahl) C:IFA kit Twin beds t'Omer tabll' lachments indu(dl1n..; ()Her 631~ day Vachtw1th capta111 NIYfl('J:-;To rurds. appts An1mul t ens Burmese , "'hanging lamp. s100 separale power oor -Burns Charters REAl>Elt'i1\:\0 llosp cxper helpful 40 llimalJya n, Si amebe. Ampex stereo. solld polisher Xlnl <·ond Ask Pieut0,Hc-.dccrnd 675~2867 AU\'t:HTISERS R•cqit'onist hr wk Salal") drpendt'nl SIOO-S250 ~&S87 r herry Fr Prov. S250 mgSl50 96().5844 Shiller Sl ,000 Bus loafs, Sal 9060 Tht' prire vi lfl·m~ L' ssoo1 M1onth ~1 ~ter. at t 1 tudc DOCJS 8040 orrers 836-fi6?3.,_494-2149 TWA KARA 01~ b1kedS1~ 1133 95501 67~6493 arts •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ~~~krt~~~~ thh~· ~ ~.~~~::~ r.ntq eH· po!>ition:. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• <;old couch + matching aH tool 5 5 no ingh 1980SllAFFER BROS 8' FLJPPER & lrlr Ne"' da~sifit'd Jd' ert1<.1ni: J\ JI la bit• "'1th fa~t WAITt:HS WAITRFSSt~ KEESllOND Pups AKC chair, greal cond, SIOO SllJO 646-4042 SPINET PIANO sails & accessories eolumn~ due-. not 1n pated .:ro,.th oril'nted Experrl,lun1·h&dmner Champ sire MF Pet& Nt'v. dbl bed $JOO Roller coaster 1·ars. uni AskmgSllOO S49·0411 Xlnl t•ond Ver) rast dude Jn.' JpplltJblt· firm Exl•t'llt'nl bt'ndit:. Ai>PI) in per!>on 2900 !> h 0 14 P ,. t pt) Wicker hdbrd ~ 4ueen que conversation p1t'res. U~"-~ SJOO or besl ofr 673 ~82 tu.es lucnltl' lrau)f~r mdudi• mecht·al & dt'n ~e"' port Bl,..d N B 213 697 13'5 art 6j>m t•ha1r . ._,. New dresser $200 ea ._.... & 9•7 1424 lal 2 '4 t>l'k.., pJ1d 'Jl' and W \ I T R ES S W a I I t' r LI IASA APSO pn nc:-. + n I g hl st and . SI 00 I 848 1765, 848 6202 111ano S5 5 759-9567 ,, -f I ff~~~ rorr',".,;~~~l~t~~:~.~~ , ironml.'nl We Jn• a "' car or 141<' er as et 3 rel{ F. 9 wks. adora 673-9449 Antique rree standing organ, "oOO cond. $2:50 equtp'd Trailer Co, er trol de\ll'I.' n•r11firatcu11' Jn e'<l'l•llt'nt "'orkmi.: en f k b k I .,,-. .., T-.o keyboa rd. 13 pedal Lido 14, good tond ul) "~ ... d\ naml(. ,.1~·n mJrket lum·h sl.'n 9 l> I l>P\1. ble. S200ea 566 7Z71 3 Pl' bdrm set. desk. I bathtub"' cl11"' feet S50 .. 536-8083 da\s SJl'i 2603 or dealer dornm1·nlJP ~ I? .. C' E St ... s1-5 k ,. I I h d Sell 1mmed 548-0697 Eves . . . . I • • ·" r .im ,,.,. ' 14 F 1 k 6 drawer dresser & -.ye one arge "' Ut\ prep.irauon <'hJrl?t'' un mi.: lo i:n•Jt lll~iple to I~ \I ust bl' n l' J l ' eed ema' coc apoo bookshelves. $250 or will gate s10 69 C:al Eldo s~g Goods 8094 ,77 Ne"' port 27. hm"t'd less otheN1M' ''"'1 1111·11 14.nrl. "11 h II '"u Jr<'", person<1ble & t•n1:ri:t•l1t or poodle to breed"' II ou127s d · Good mlr needs mech ,.......~ ,. b th d rt l Jrt:'er or1t'nlt:d 1n '97!1-0H? llrt IOAM for m.ile co\'kapoo stud se se ,.,.,.,. a s'-work. Makeofr 8J9.390I 1.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.··.·.·.·.··.•llj• mast. Tiller mas t. '> t'll 'e bt'r d1\lt.lu:il 1<1th l!ood l~IJ appt 675·9227 Lazy Boy reclining --1• loaded w1xtras/S18.9110 Alltiqun/ in.: bk1lb Jnd pus~t·s., a i\Kl' Silk• Terriers. 2 \1 swivel rocker SI~. Ktng REDWOOD2l6'S RamsSeason Tlckets 846-2208 Cl • 9520 W h I s I e R e l J I I J • I ....,_., for sale. 2 for $600 OHtCS gen"'ral kno"' ledge or of o l' a 9 wks. shots. 5200 s11e inner·eot wateruo:u 4' lo 20' long Xlnt dt'<'k 7,<2.0960 12131 • .,.,1101 13' Flying Junior, full~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l11·e proredures Ca 11 Sea rood Com pan) in 989 50021548 4~ "' Cane headboard & 6 1ng. Fresh load arm mg ·• "'°"" equipped. 3 sails. trlr JO f'ord l'ou 11,. "'11 h ~lar) 752 1121 l'M Nt't:'ds operatwnb ~·rel' to lovin" home. drawer pedestal base weekly Save at SS< rt hght weight, run to ~Jil Rumble beat lh•.,tun•tl m.inagcr. dr1,·ers. .. S375. Anl1Que48" round J1m .. 64."9885anyt1me 673·6296 SEC 'Y /RECEPT Rus) N.B arrh1lel'tural (1rm nreds sharp lad) w l?Oud 'skills 1m1n 6Swpm ,1nuratt'ly, nu S It 1 " lr1cndly persunahl) for phone~ & front desk Call W1•nd} 17141640 (1772 1 h 1 14~ !'." adorable puppies. 10 wks k 1 foot bl $950 -"" -to nl'l4 rnmf Ot 1i.: 111 1' ou" er ~ P • ' old 894-11(~4 oa . c aw 1 e · Ceiling Fan, Casabella. NEW tlf IJES '76 RANG ER 23. Fixed J!!.ates $15,IXkl 1!1.1 4!ll()O llroadwayC ~ Smith .Corolla man ual forward. reverse, wood ~ keel, VHF. 6 hp 0 8. 1~7 VW Hui? Runb 1o1oo<l M handi Fntto Yau 1045 typewnter w~case S45. blades. w'hght. was $28.95 Bristol Nwpt slip New ures Good hrak1·~ ere St ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ke nmor e lo\a~her & S239 take SIOO J udy Sll.OOO.ca1_1645-2'.it>i ••••:••••••••••••••••••Free k ittens. 6 wks . drye r.SJOOpr M~ctoots 730.o9so (Reg.S60.00value1 -~ -Needs paint ~15uo AllttqUts 8005 trained Call Sandy & sporting eqwpmenl. --CALL: 64211:16 SA BOT 3 mos old C:ar 840·4068 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646.0941 752 1422 752.5992 Comer Group Good con • '1hl racks me! a steal al 1940 Ford Sedun l>t'lu>.i: u....a _ _. -• · -dition Sl50 C/B set + S4SO, 759-9320 t h ,._,.... Free to lovm11 family MUST SB.L base S200 645-3614 conco urse rop ~ "'m 'IKUll.11 •• 111 • .J ll"-1 \ \H.-..\ 549-4300 549·l457 W•'lltry Or Sell YOt1r Clton Import On Con1iC)Olmttlt! ! 1 Call Out' U1C'd Car MonOCJer TODAY!!! 831 ·2040 495.4949 Soddlebac~ ltotW Mission VlrjC\ WE BUY CLEAN CARS AND TRUC"'°" COMMB.L CHEVIOLET 220\Harbor flhd CCfilA MESA 546-1200 HIGH BUYER 1'011 1\ 11l.11' 1111 !'>port:. I .11' 1\11 • I ..illll.'l'f.i. 'll 1 ' \11111 \,~Im l < \lt:f{ JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 111711 Beach Rhd lll'''l J..;1/fON H~:M'lf 842·2000 --------• SERVIC:f. Station i\llen Sales dant E>.p'd l>J)S & l·m-~af·*'1i "F t .. d s US Diver dlvmg tank. HOBIE14 ner. ,round up ll''tora •wt-*... ros Y a spaye yr Mahogan" Obi. Bed Antiqub .'t)1le pool tabl". Good ....,.,, S ('"" 1905 Louis C trfan) o Id b I ark :. 1 I, l' r tt ' N ht 1 d .. , • wet suit. mask. BC S80 Cuuwllon l ""' lion, 12,500 851 lil21i glass fmgerbo"'I. s11rned Miniature Schnauzer 14 ma ress ig 5 an s late top. lt'alher 646·6708 962·8'70 Tn.cks 9560 WJ63. 1rndesl·ent blut' Beautiful. exrepuonal &dressertomatch Ltke pockets , 4X8 S350 s IOTSlOO TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR , GOOD&CLEAN USED CARS~ H 'I Sales M e\e:. Full & p time Ap at gr pl) Shell Stdl1on. 17th & Senior person "'1th pro ln·111c, NB new Must see to ap 644 4289 TV, Rodio. A trarel, appx 4 12 in d1spos1 t1 on. raised preciate Only $1000 or HIFi, St.no 1091 962·8068 14·1de. $375. Wilham w children Xlnl blood bes t offer Maria J white dernrator rod:. .•••..•.••••....••..... 1965 CHEVROLET miracae mazda \'en expenenre railing SllOI•: SALtS .\llracllH' on the computer 1n shoe dept in Fash1un duslry al OE~1 level Island 1s lookmit for part Must be kno"'led1teablt• ume help Exp pref'd or the penphcral or disk 640 7810 ~-..Ii t ct ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Boats• ~ov.er '1 ft Hogarth t'lchml( dated Imes Moving 7~ 1100 631·7797 all6PM. S2S. real v.uuu. UlC u es Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr Sailboat. tl95 8 rt un 1763. caricature of John 6 yr old n-" u ,.91. quiet -----3 sets or nowered t•ur 1 F d I "'"' '"' 2 mat ~h1ng de"orator -.rn Y ree e ivery smkable ding) S225 Wilkes at lhe famous ac gentle. des ptrate ' ' tams 536-J&U S1'8 64~1786 ..,4 .• "J9 Wilkes trial. famous 754 0574 eves club chalf'S f75 ea Lrg Ladies' fuU sz Samsonite '"' "" Piece s hown '" en _ or footstool S2S Die . MAGNAVOX combina· hats SI-/ l/4 TOH PtCKUP llas a nt>l4 driH' 1r.11n onl) 4.000 mill'' 1111 r1· bu1ll eniimt• Hun' "t·ll but nerds wm1• h111h "'Ork IL~LL.---8050 l pho e a saphone pd SUlll'ase. S20 Mens lion Stereo rec·nrd oo.'.L.,.... 9070 l') cloped1a. Wilkes ,........_.. a n · " . Amer Touris t S40 uu shown twirling lhe cap ••••••• •••••••••••••••• S650, sell S3S0_645-2094_ Ladies' sz 16 coat. $20 player. French ClJss1c. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $ 1600 2150 Horbof-lltc! Costa Mesa 645-5700 . -m edia markl·I Respons1bll' for l'ntire sales & marketmit rum t1on Small ~rol4 1ni.: co1ripany in Orani:e Countr 963 ~ SltW Computer Com~incnts Co Inc SALESPERSON needed for nel4 duldren's store Exper P time Pt'llll' Marche' 6424714 369 E 17th St Wrstport S~are,C 1\1 Saleswomen Men THE FED ERA TEO GROUP ls hiring pro(e5s1onal rt> tail salespeopJe <.:all personnel for a .1treat op portunity with our grol4 ing com pan) 121 31728-5100 _1Call r.i_on U,i, 9 SJ SCllOOL 1PRE1 AID Irvine exper prd 5S2 74~ Seamstres s. ex perienred Top sal.ir) & benefits Palllson Sail j2l'S!Jln 673-2180 Sec Reep m l 1{1rl orftrr Typing 45-~ wpm L11{hl bookkecpinl{. Must have good phone vo1re Sharp energetic person a must 751·8775 SECRETARY For general C'ontractor Light typing. some book keepinl(. fiUng. answer· ing telephones & pr1r1ng Ver y plea5ant one ~rson office. 6!11 2004 Secr•lary Newport ronsultmg firm nttds stable competent secretary 6SWPM 8 5 M ·F. SI.JOO mo Call ehnd~ 640-5430 • •SECUTARIU• • GOIConsttSASl9.200 FC Trial8111Sl8,000 T&O/Spell funS15.020 AcctP ay /StableS14,000 Exp Consultant Our1 Lit Relndtts Agy, lnr ..o20 81rcbE&t'&4EOE Ntwport/83Wll0/fne SEClff AIY DIC. Per1onnel/Advettlsln11 Dept hu openlnc per expanalon Npl. Bch nnanclal aervktt nrm. Gd. l_yptng. alutM • exr. req'd. Non·smkr. Cal . M0-0123btwn 962. SUPPLY SPECIALISTS Look bc)ond i:raduJtinn learn a skill Arm) Ill' Jll rnu can bl' Call toll free 1 im 282 5864 ul_L1bert} at the end or a * * I BUY * * '4 wooden wall units. incl 675.2333 cost Sl!l95 sell ro_r Sl.OOO Newport shpava1labll' I 1ur bl-st ort\•I , s11rk. unframed, S~I Good used Furniture & dry bar. china case, f795 SACRIFICE show prizes. ~2 ~~ords 1 erm s I Ev~3329 t'all Dt•nm!> Tul·~tl.I\' I' P 17141 ~e e~ Apphan<•es OR I will OB_QS5H2'7I 11 2 new 20 pc w:iterless -'-thruSJturdJ\'\9 \ '1 10 1 &wkepds. sellorSEU,forYou !::than Allan Solid Pine ! ckware $450 value. S29S Sony Giant Sctiecn TV. Slip al'ail ror lrg pref fiP !\1 di Drop teal oJk thl , 2 MASTERSAUCTIOM Dark Anno1r. used_ a~ ea S463114,S56:J715 xlnt rond · 11<1 R 0 i. a 1 I b oa I N 1 <' l' 581-0790 wicker 11!1!0 S!lllU 64 • J ~ 401nw1de 18mdeep '• 60 gal uquanum. fill'r 2 13 592 3 98 I 642·7288 _ •Chev.'80 chairs. rorker 1·,int' 6 8686 13~9625 bdrm piece. 75 m high. 1 8 4 8 2 J 7 7 d > s 0 r ne1 ghborhoorl "\HI $56·8842 llUYFURHITURE dble drs: Xlnt cond S)~l t'':"· florl·~rent 14kn.ds ev·es· . . 'h·TonPickup Tf.ACllERSApphralions .,.,7·8133 Sl.100 new Askin" lights 645-~ I MGA 23 TV k now be ing tllken for ANTIQUE Bedroom Sel Lt's "" .. K M 1 k ·OJ l'On Tr•spor+afioft ;\uto Ir.in' pu111·1 ('hmt1ansl'hool i\ppl.v. 2 Dressers. Queen bed 20SOFAS.new.S98ea S700 .Wkdys. af1er ing size allrei,s .1 e sole, remote. 2 )rs old •••••••••••••••••••••••1 sll'l'nn11. 6 nl \'11~11u• 16113.'> Rrooilhurst. Fount acn ice <>JJU. 9·""" 15 Loveseats. $75 ea ' arn~n. _. e r l' r ~ ' ' ·111 W EHEEO - YOUR EXOTie-· & BRITISH CARS NEWPORT IM PORTS I y, I ... ,, ' S ( ~cc" 97 .na7 645-0159 new $200 144 Lexington S600 640.8862 C S-'·/ I t \ I I \'ly . 962 3.112 ,\NTIQU E dinette set. s 957 57<llor SS4 4180 2 month old eanhtone Lane CM 545 1291 25" Console HCA rolor RMt 9120' 11 Ul061JH 1 T~:ACllER. Pre~«hoc1I t•hairs S275.Anlique Ruf KtNG INNERSPRING sofa &loveseat $.S50 Forsalcwe1ghL~&l1rt1ng TV.i.:oodoperating<'on ••••••••••••••••••••••• OMLYS499S TOPSOOllARl Exp'd Part »r full llm1• ll'l all in .:ood <·ond EXTRA FIRM mattress 498-1741 Sequip 600 lbs + mort• d1t1on $75 644.4565 10' l Campl.'r Four Star HOW ARD Chtvrol•t I i ,, i1 , d S f. ....,. '"'9 4987 250 960-8.116 I ats & U-L..... w rerr1aerator & <to\ fl 1>01 ~ "uatl St' I ', ,\ "II " !1611 8833 • acn ire~ "' · set. never used. worth Garnne S• 8055 · o ,...... " • ' • "< -.,, Los Ca ball~ros rum1ly E .,..... Po rt a ·polly i\ll 'l;•'WPC>RTH•' .. \···11 \\1·1°11 • 11 1•111111 'Joll•I' Isl eler Hotpo111t ~love S530. sacr $248 del ••••••••••••••••••••••• • -.: 111111 "' < • ' T"'"CHER tenni s c lub ml'm .,-Butane.Queen s1zc·bl'd 83~0555 ronl11 1l11"' I m;..,. mad". procelam le"S, Ne,·cr used queen s1. M LI S T S E L L ••••••••••••••••••••••• S "" Independent sc hool perr' cond. everyth~ng 14'orth S399. rash only Everything in house . bersh•.P,ml 586•2916 Gttttral 9010 c~eneS~ti~n 1"ss~~c·e~.;rg ·75 t;I Camino \lr.i i i'I' ~-.• ~~- seeks part lime Sµ.rn1sh 14orksS350 ~7·5069 S218 del Usually home we're moving out tlf Pool leble I in slate top ••••••••••••••••••••••• between IOam 5pm dean i.len'<> Jlr m,11!' teal' h l' r ~I ust ha' e 7•• 1~•" Stale. 97"4987 ,• ~cessor1·-Xlnt cont.I 16' F be I C & h r-. ... 11 Hurret Lots or mlay Xlnt "" Jo.I\} "' '" = 1 rg ass anoe 631·7657 s t>ll .;;..,..w1 • • minima Y 1 )t•ar:. l'~ rond $425 3026 Furniture & rum1shmgs Mo\·ing out or Stal ~ S500 8423123 Goodrond1llon.S225 Mot -•-/ 494~1)3 ~~,:~i·e lh t;:r fra:~ha; Kill} brook CM 545.2335 sale. Lido Isle Call for Everythmg must go By Baby crib for sale "'Ith 642·8171 77~5724 s::r~ 9150 ln.t 'I .61 111 hi l'Utw °''~ !'>.1111 lt·tm nil Chot·olatl' Pll·ase Cu rios C~binet. S-400 a.I>il (714J951·03Jl 8-26-81,646-004.5_ mattr ess S4 5 BOATLOAD~;R ••••••••••••••••••••••• GdCond S21!1JO 831 ·0580 492-ISOO respon .. to J Van Record player cabinet LG Wooden desk. 8 GARAGE SALE · Anti 213·592 59l> New. 11ut.o Eide retail '74Ho d Motorc rle 191\ 11467010 W T DI " S I H d O T 00 ~·so sell for_,,_ 968-0064 n a Y Allt.J E Winkle. po Rox 23. $250 546-9147 _ _ dra ... ers 150 Lg antq que fie cabin et ammon rgan 4 • .,. _,., miles Peder! cond f'lll • CdM .. 9262.5 Oriental ,a.ses $4.5, bowl man·s dresser S200 Best Merchandise both new & Sl400 Console stereo loclh, M... SIOOO 549-3758 Y•• 9570 L.11t-mrnlt I I 11 .. 1t,1 .. dll•I TE1\CH ER Credential S35, ginger Jar S200. orr Dbl bed. matt & old from gift store re· 5't'. S220 IS" Color TV Equl,....-903 ·80 H o_n_d_o_._X L 185S ••••••••••••••••••••••• \"I'• ,•,, 11 · .i ' 1eacher needed for aftr pitcher wash basin f75, box · gd cond s5o renUy closed Wholesale S22S 5J6.95SI •••••••••••••••••••••• Perfe<·t rond 4K miles CLASSIC! •1•0"!!11,.'•'---'T"I-• hi h Id nt runo cblS375. wall clock 642 6980 pr1res Wed 9·4, Thur Weber s rrboard. S60 9' Columbi a Dinghy, '•'ever orr road. must CHM V""-' ~~ F~1:.lJ~~~eSl~~e;0 $90 631 S979 HERCULON Couch & 9-l2.233Cana1St., l'!J!. Porsche Bra. hke new. fiberglass. lapstrake. ~~11_$90()_760-9440_ Ne"' p 01 n 1 '""~'11 i·"' Sl2.000 dt'pendmg on ex Appliances 8010 Easy Ch11r. hke new MOVING Household .!11,912 S40 556-0993 xlnt cond 760-9440 .80 Yamaha SOOXT En· Good) ear Stt<el hl'llt•d per Call ~·5618 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sarnr1ce Si.175 97!H987 supp.lies. cleaning, ro5· Mlsctl....s 71, hp Sears outboard duro. SllXl aft.er6PM Radials tAll Wr::Hhcri TF.ACHER Director for 1 IUY APPUAHCES Beautiful lge frml din mellcs. cani:ied rood W..t.d 8081 motor. not pretty, but 520-opi Snow <'ha 1 n~ Grt•Jt c0 ....... . preschool in c M ECE Les ~7.8133 tbe + 6 h1back ch r s 1temds. dl~haltng •1temts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• runs, $100 646-5914 .77 Yamaha XT500 En· lravelinit. fun ror lrq>) ""'•o •101 .. ~·o H 1 · 'd 751 ..... Med1t. hvy solid oak. 42" goo . c "' es. P an 5• W A NT E o p LA y • _ _. p 904 Beaut1 rest bed Lot~ or Cert re!l -·""""---New '80 Frostless l8' furniture. 1387 Balter HOUSE f G . _...,, Owtr duro. xlnl cond. many room Nrw 1•a rpet ( wide, extends to 96" A 1 C C M D .1 or my ran •••••••••••••••••••••• extras. must sell •T~* Refngerator,sam1ce Xl nt cund S9SO. 9 P5 ··c h. a1 1 Y daughtt>rs <.:all after ,79 Sea R ay 24 · AM FM Strr1•0 Sotfctton S.\50 979-4987 samr1ce 751·l>.S4 ~.~7 as on Y 6pm. Weekender. VHF, CB. 645-1390_ --Cassette 6 iloor:. Win Top Dollar \ Paid Are you tired or working White Kenmore refr1g, I s P1e~e -Mapi:"Bedroom -------642-4~ ster"", b"'•l ta.nk, trlr & 'II KA.WA.SAKI dow. Sll'Jl \JO OV.tll'•I Ii\ I ' ' H 1060 -"v ... KZ ~·"Ltd · h I 2<0 Christian Sliii Clllll I• "1 \ "111 1 Ir full time for part time yr old. just move<. must Set. great rond S~ °"" Mnlcal more. New cond. Sl8,500. .,,.,., wit on Y " 759.0271 JOHNSON & SON Motwy7 !.~!J,S250.842·9381 _ $45·6916. ....................... I tn I 8083 7~9·8936 miles. U>i'ded. Street I Why not try working Like new. Gaffers Saller Beautiful big bay re· •• •••on bikU 900.67S·9111 ·73 Dodge 1•an. ~t1rk ,hilt. part time for full time gas counter top stove D rm set w/hutch, $600. gistered Oregon mare. s~~;i;;;.-e•;;;;5;•b;~~~ '77 21' s.lptock '7U .Z400. S2000 '77 Ood l-:l' t' ,1r money Work 20lo 24hrs ov en S2 50 . P o rt Ping Po~ $50. Bdrm Trail horse, show, xlnt cond. S90 or offer. lmmac,keptoutwaler, NewsprodtN+chaln.· ryvan . S4000 1 $!1~ per wk in plush new of· Whirlpool dsbwshr S79 set 673-0 eves. parade. Reasonable to Kristi 545-1543 160 hrs, loaded, Cull cov-f S7~ New port llh tl (' " fire 10 lhe Santa M ise.~J Elegant round pedestal good home . 17 14 ) • -ers VHF.123,500 • 645· 6-~m 6422~0 Ana/Costa Mesa area. corree table. off.white. 244·2218 (714) l:m-1011 Must sell Ventura buss, n 14) 49l-8230 '77 Hond1 . l6M m1, ·75 Chev) Van. xlnl i•nntl for well established Co. REFRIG E~TOR unique llOft gold /silver S YR . ...; Arab mare. 14 SlOO. & amplifier. SIOO 24' SICIPJACIC very clean. Sl600 080 must see to al)prc•r E11rningpotent1alofS220 Kelvinator,likenew trim 493-1457. ha nds, gentle SSOO Goodcond.548-7S86 Cuddycabin, 80hrs . _SS2-956Sda $3800 orr li5TO IOli per wk base + comm + StsO. 631-4752 Oa~ High Boy dresser 964-7171 Secrffke VHF. full cover. many .73 Honda 250 XL 1300 ac 675-6406 · bonus Call llJS.8883 for Ellto Sewillg M«k. w/beveled mirror, xlnt Surry English Saddle. Br.and new clauical xlna, better lhan new, cident-rree street m1. '76 Dodge V:rn 100 litl a11~t --$260 495-2537 cond S4ZS perf cood S300 fiwlar Sakurl.l Best or prof. ma Int. Sl5,SOO. Uke new 16.'SO. cond High m1 $1000 TELS'HOMl G.E SIS reCria. $400. GE SSM.119alle 646-81183 er. Lo~~n~~bey 752·6692, arter 6pm 67$.3136 080 497 ~ SOUCITOIS •Wu h•r Ir gas dryer MOVIMGSALE H-8aW&oodll06S VI OLIN· trat co ,,.,&ff:o.:..=...·4=1"=..:..·----'78 Yamaha 125 Enduro, Aatto1Wlllltd tstO Need 15 tmmedlately to $300. 640-8862 Fin• quality rumlturc: ••••••••••••••••••••••• lh d he~ c!:i '77 20' BA YUNER, mall.)' Model shocks. lo m1, ••••••••••••••••••••••• work easy evening Hotpoiot refrigerator H endred o n 9 d wr NlCEQueenboxsprlng& \ 11r 1 Sl ~~i· arcesa Slip avl S6,500. u kln .549-0411 WEPAYTOPDOLLAlt hours. Great for slu· Good condili.on.S7S. dresser 20 xl2"'400.blk matt. w/trame. S75 ~~~ srm P.P.760-6726 ror top used rars deni.. ~9. Mon-Fri. No MS-9701 leath chr SSOO, 6 pc "!'lee. dryer, Kenmore 14 ft. 0 18. W/40 HP foreign. domesun or aelUtl1. Call 966·01Sl H RBORAREA brown etctlonal Sl900, . 780-9545 Office Pw1Mst & Merr .. trtr Xlnt cond clarnrs If your car 1s rt m. pp AIANCESERVlCE dul1ner cualom 8' Kenmore 15.3 upright l\BpRIHf IOlt Many Xtraa. '2300. extra elun. so us Tftl~,.._ ~e t,y~ances couch $300, o;ak burret, fro1lle11 rreeier '200 ........................ Eves, wli:nd's.S»-!!14 Mom's Yamaha DT12S FIRST' Weare r;;"fu t irow· weseU .,(Uar 21x74" SSOO. 2 cstm Sunbeam &Ice. mower Uaed Executone K·lSOO ia' 8$ HP Johnlon. Uvt Xlntrond.t300miles ~ inll orfi~ supply outfit a lances. S4i-lm :~::.~~ ~.e:~ e~it!1a:C ~ ':: ~:ree~.Kt'oil:!e~~ bait lank, akl or fish. MOO firm. 97M4~ selling wholesale to th• StA?ve, G.E.L!."lte, 2 yrs. cocktail Ible U 75. Playbouse~e butch pace. 20 loatrumenla. 000 '80Su1~lGSUOOET. Vhr Jc publi c. We offer ttl• Lihnew,¥Q.fl46..2:189 640-8882 izs 2011 Oranic C M Own yourown ayltem ln lwfltillllllbollt 1pe1 . lo ba r s highest comm pal~ in Wuber, CIHn. work1 2coucbea:Sl00 teellonal, 642; . rour oewoffict.Charles 14 ', wooden d eck , / 80.17~69'l4 . Oran~e~ lll"O\lnd oor &ood $85, dryr, clean l&O (bldeabed),TV~. 75 nta N ton carpet. fetrr .-.Ul!l tran.10m, t.5 Evlnrude, '80Su1ultlJRSO.S2$0Xlnt oppo=~:J.. -wor1C1 ood '15. 5'M513. .7 _ r:_ tam~l ~ ••• Uaed 4 Port. tltc. typewriter all ucet. Must aell thia cond. Mini Mini Indian, .xr.=:::w:i:....-----1NEVERUSED:Sofa8ed .. .•'375. w /a~and, xlnt cond, wH tl00,llJ().T7Z Sl7S.f73-952 Offkit llcycltt 1020 $170, iota ' loveseat IO cr1flce $. • PAITMmWAMTB> Moto'&tcltTralltr JoM 1714' ln ....................... $300, Qn bdrm cC)IDpl Jtwtlry 70 Solid oak fillq cabinet .... S"'=a•"' CC ..... 2or? ue1• · S250. S '540 b nk beda t:lGO ....................... crede1111 aid S91& • ., • ' .... c. .. TB.9HOMI U(ES. 20" Stlniray S7~~ tt u Ibo& .-i ' RING 1n111t ell ' 141-' pms. ~ 1222 '74 Honda Ca.> runs. SUIYIYS 28'' Junker $40. Pldd~ ma ,..... .,.. .n1: 1.• oear perfect ,,bile -1 · per mo incl KH 11ip. nets work ID ' From llomt or office. ~rdl201 121 --St'l25,flll1~'1S. dlamood w/14)( yellow ti.h lot7 Luu or buy DA • • lalarJ + boftul. St.art wlNI M.lnf Srambler1 1-: lOP IZIO. sold mou.nU11. At· ....... ••-••• ....... ..:..:L.::i::z:<a.&~g,..:·Wf::::;; __ Im at · 1121 $35. Schwtftn 21 In 10 apo -· curate ~pprallal from 2 Alrltaa IJ"t1 pamta, M '{lt........., --Vatiky, • Srhwlnn 21 KttaJ De*, ITS 2 bu 1111 of '10,JA. Private •k -080 M111t • TUYILA..... 11 io epd NDtiaental, *°'t,$1.5eacb pa,ty. Hut to Hll .. •owe Mali• lkcm '75. llotGr Pwaae 24 ia atl-.0. 'f~I g:C'"oed. Sabre 10 11111• btd allt••· ~ llCMAMll tr u••• Im·_...... ..u ..-._ bo1-bl1•h1rd, ~-...... m"tate opmtu. E•· a..-,.. -llluu rw llgt~.ttHf14 ,.,. .., ~-,... ..,..., u ll hHfl\I Call ftfW 1oodJt1 with a aUHr 6. 4 ' ta Wt ana tr_--1121 Cl .. tnellMl.IGn Wut .m.nll Linco~Mtf'eury 11,.1 I l 11 lNH Ill\ 1f C~t .c M 1.,,,, ~Ill ~lli:ltl Wc P~ , OVER -- ,. . . . . ~ ii Cll Orange Coast DAILY PILOT {Mond1y, August 24. 1981 Wo• IMport.ct Allto• i.,.n.c1 ....._ 1.,11itd AtltM • ..,,rt.d AtltM. UMd Alfto•. UHd . . .... : .•.•........•.•...•..• : ...•..••.•.•.....••••........•.....•....••••••••.•...••........ ·················•····• •····•····••·•·····•·•· ~ ....... t M AtltM, ..,,rt.Ml .... • ••• t .......... 1.W , e.p1rW • • ~!~~ .... !?.~~ !~••••••••••!?~~ !~!~~•••••••!??.~ !:!::•••••••••••••!?!.~ :~••••••••••!!.'.~ ~•••••••••••••!!.~~ • ... ••··~··••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• • ·7~ Granada 65 (k)(J m• ~ ~ t7011ww t71J t720 ........ t 7lt ·~~:re' r~,r~:·~~!~ 'I)~~'rd;1~~umli~1 ~!nd6 ·~s0~:~,~~erad~~bl s~~~~~~~:~ co~=rrG AC As ii, l>Ht ofrer Wiii ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C•H :l6 500 ml dk nod M t II r l 7c.1 77 IA A k •• ...;.. ...... """' 9S8 "'""'/213-4"" .,.,.... w bt' l('(•epted ~ 8784 ~ Audi '80 ~ lmmaC' · · · • us ae a.s ., v a 1ng.....,., ....., .._., ...,..., "".,,..., e speclaill~ in leues ~ U,500 ma, all options. s T1te Mott b e"'-·at Datsun Mu1ma, fully '61 Spider. beauttful & un pvt ply SZ6.000 Call Vollaw-9770 . '76St'IRR<X'O lor the business ex Mttcwy 9950 ~ "' c.oM Sl2 <AA , ... Of y ... _,, loaded. white w/bl~ Int lque. Wiii UC!'ept tr11de .. 673 93:ul or a08Wt'f ad -r·· , ......... ( ......... _, ofrar ..... u-........1 t'Cullv-.. .....1--ional ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1JE , "' warr, ,,,,,.,, -•""" 642 ...... w, ••••••••••••••••••••••• """" ,. '""' ~ ' M'U ~ "'"'"-~ *--1412 IMW~...;';Or Ul,000 ma Vet'/ ei.an. r uh . 848 176S . or ~,.,..,, """" '60 'M VW left & rlKht &44!1tll7uftS :l!PM ....................... LwcJts.ledloll O ltANG~COUN'fY 'S ~ 'U lOOLS 4 dr pd air ,........A..j.. $lOJOO t.7W*. MS 6202 MGI 9744 door. '7:J lcfl door ~ ·79 8uJC Cunv S1lv G....-.e 9901 00..W ltll FIMIST ,~: tr ' '45 '1K. Lt ... _ '76 710W ••••••••••••••••••••••• t':ll'h W1!5tem ~tyle whl AM t'M can l..u Ma ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.._t LINCOLN MF:RCL'H\ ~. ~ ~PCslereo. ~ ' McL ..... IMW!I Eaullent coor an50 Mere...... '740 ·79 MGU 9.000 mt. wm• rims ror Sul)t'r U~tl' Xlnll'OOd.., 873 t!.84 H •Stodt' DEAU;RSlllP ... .~ir'ry cean, l•yOrU.. ArterSIG-ll'TI ••••••••••••••••••••••• whls, O\t'rdr. snoo S20n ~9'744 Jlf,S , CA.IS , NAowBER·~ 1'-~ 'J~-J.-1. g "J$ IJO.."-P'-! ~ ~ tl130727c-H-s,PP '6JC11mP"r Uw. 12 Volt . '751..a.wt "CXUPS ~ T"'1NW'PI• ~ br:e:~ax~ ~~·,~~~ (7141 522·53J3 ... 9727 SELL!~~ ~~~RM 8 'onct.. '750 1600 f,wythini: n1:w S249S fl4ff 31!10 From S3S A\'i.ul.ibll• o1t ( 'Al)I( ( ,~ LINCOLN Mt::RCUHY ~ a Jl350 6'4 0117 •••••••••••0 •••••••••• ft"6 t ... 1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oral( p.iint SIHOO l .ill '66 VW Uut. nu brilk\'~. lural Go\l 'l Aul'lwn~ • J J ·~ • 16 18 AutuCenter Or ~ OIANGI COUHTY'S VISIT YOUI TOP.,_,_,. •• '69 Punwh1• !II I T n1·v. Mter 6, 1137 !f.!fiS nu starter & tirt•i1 $189S F'or D 1 rHt111 > r 11 II /t<'S.111.111. • l\l\d SD fwy Ut fortst l'xit ~ IMW 9 7 1 OlDIST 01.1.11.u!! .. ECO&ST l'all JackRaron m:&Jt!> & lire~. Uri!! , bi~5291 Surplus Dal.i Centtr 1 ...... 1\\,, 'o01\1••1l•1 IRVlN~ ~ ...................... $ A""'ws A JIMSUMONS j11unt r11111so.0388 • 64 1968&.q 1 ~(4~t;s>~J3().~~7800:. ___ .J.111~~~'!'~~-830.7000 ~'q F --HOii.JD~ 1ua..--~la red frndcrl>, mJ.: 'liliSqb1·k.4spd.oew,·n11.1, ;of., or •""Betit 1""111 " _.."" • ~ '14 Blue Xlot t>ond l6000 wht'eb. l'lCl't'llent rnnd l'lean lntr runs l(rt'al, EL DOIADO Mat 9952 ~ Buy or Leue Deal HE ·D~ ... •ms 1910 ll11t~tr B~Avd l' 11 II M Ike M 0 rn. s····oo. ~46 ""13 I nds pa ant SISOO, 9ti4 10~ h lcta 99 I 0 ., ....: I O Co -" """ COSTA " ES ~ " "' '79 Silver, red strapp11111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '!/ n rll\ge • unly., T Q A Y! ! ! 631 12761133 9300 675 ISS6 ~:vt'll, 673 6397 '70 auto slll'k, St700 OHO '70 VW llu11. xlnt 1·011d. ••••••••••••••••••••••• am /fm stt'rl'o Auto. ful '66 Elll't'llt'nt mod Or11: ~ C~me SffUs1oday '70 1114 6, xlot c·ood, al 'ti() Hui( Sti.'10 114111765 S2700 19791UICIC ly equip, xlnt rond ownt>r \'ti . .iuto Ill'" ~ & S11h.•& Scf\ln~l.(llliani: UNIVERSITY luy~. reblt S l'nl( & 1"116202 · 'llH 2 1~ RIVIRA $11,800 brakt'3, rbh t'nl: S:Jlt"J ... Roi c .... tr.lwc. SALf.~UsSERVtn: '1~,~:~~e:n~~~!~~ . trans, r~ 870 ~18 '68SQllAltEllACK '67 vw l'.lmpl.'f Wiii ~··II t'u "f. equqlpt'd lllt (714) 499 4754. 499 4764, OHO 548 1432 Kull~ 1~6J~ml•m•:MW O~=ILI S2UOO ~ :i~(. ~\Ml~ .. ~~~~~· ~ew t'nlo( t mun• S2ooll fa3t Slit(.~!,, ·•·ao< A Mt ·~1t<"i~ .. i&r sph~ 628 611M '66 VS. JUto .• m I'S SADOUIACK Newnnrt &•lollh ~1)1>4H 640 62l5, 966 177!1 E · 1 JU 1 !:> J m !1!>3 l.lliO 0 r "" ...,,.., wa s. 1 'W more '71 Blk CadJllar, loaded, pun) 1nl Xlnt rnnd 2l402 M.=ie Pkwy '68 1600 Coul)t' I~) rr 21!.SOHarbor Uhd ·;~u~!~ ~a'r s~':::[.· I~~:~ ·n 924 IA11< m1 MJI!. ·~ VW liJJJ Bult 1((1(.td roor Paollrt'r t.il)l' dcrk S78H G'°rte 7S9 \:Kil '66 Mw.t.ing wn' IJt•,1 of i-GMC TIUCIS ve~ 964 9062 I ~5 8471 '71 t'urrnul~ V 1'Jn, ~un 11181351 runs Ii looks good S695 J3t95 I SJJ.4242 M " V . donl' Ni:,. µaint look' COSTAMl:SA 'bamboo 35.000 mi 3tereu 5685(1 1ond rl'blt l'lll\ 'Wlth.im fm.rbltt•ntt .30 9917 fer Mu3t 3rt> prl\ µI) AVE~RJOOY PKiWeJOY great Nt>v. rnrp\'lllll( 540.9640 l!IJ.592 21 IU S2000 bt>s.l ulr 1140 4109 mpg $\85() ('Jll IOAM lo Cm11•o II.SS 8:nl Rblt unr '77 R"ru• fan,• I m m a c· S I 7 5 0 U ••••••••••••••••••••u• ~ .. • II d r d I · b 6 · 1 Z P u r ~ l' h ~ or 1146 9566 12PM dJ1I.' b"13 IW1J or · ( I EXITS FWY ) Askrn( l,800 675 .. SJ 76 on 11 I\ 1c·. rll 1<1 851 6226 •1, C 128 66 :T l'oup.• P' .i1r 1)1 2040 49S.4949 ttrt's.$2350 Ask forUub 280SL Latd969.s1l1l'r& lran~m1ss 1un 5 ~pd 79VWC11n1 Wht11111<hl. lilSStli!IJ R ....-0 .iuto. flOll\ mt tw~t or • '732002 UMW .nt'\\ pJ111t 6408447 5~064S, l'V~ ·d b th t XI I Nevt'r u~~ >an<t' rblt lon11 .~lntrn11d SI0,000 197!1 l'OO\ Whllt•Wh1tl', ebu1ltt'ng.newbrakt>s, fer 4!1421!.,jl 1!127:1133 ~ __ CIOffdSundaj's & tares Sunroor l\t>St of wknds , orre1.,'1nulo••ondop1s•.1so in11 842 3123 Call Jo• or Ti:rn (7 111 l\.irmJnn 'ha1111wune llrt's, rust anterior, T .,,. i..i'r l' ' I ~ Sl 000 000 r ,. II '16 ""I"'"'" .. u • s., , ,.. lops Sanyo b1 Amt .,,, oup •, Ill', .JU <I, l~ ' er'-a 10 •"" """" '78 llonda l'1v1l·CVl'l' 5 uffer.day~!>497971.eit>h lt•"ault 9755 tl10!l(/72K :10 ~JOwktla ed1t1on. Mint 1·ontl '6SSkylartc Goud l'oncl sten'<JS5000~l737 a1r.53M a<'t.bt>bt1.1H,•r • '78 3201, ~nrl fo:d l'tmd sp, dean. runs greal SS2 2971 •'t••••••••••••••••••••• '73 VW IUS Sk,400 S500or bei;t uffl>r ' 494 2831, I !fl7 ll:l3 lnve:f;y Uest offer $3200, 631 2991 J"Sl arra,·ed, "tutt"art 1971 Renuult K16. S81MI f\75 2948alt 4 Che•rolet 9920 . . I OF .._.EW ... -·s 972 "'24 .. ., .. H 1 d d 1 ori1t own ... r. rt·blt ··nlo( vw . 1 646-074.S ....................... 69 Gd 1·ond SJ.1so <.:all t> " '"'" do 9731 1981 300$ D Turbo. SO es on· ~~'!..~_:on Xlnl 1.:ond 5.'5JO i8 tamp,·r Jt nt ·n ~:let·tra rumrortablt• SEE US FIRST! 2A•nhsrwst'r Ad •526. 642 4300 " S1lu and Leasing at Datt. 97 20 Mn mah!s. met blue. )un """ ~ 7~1 11.'>.'\6 \Und 19K 1111. r:11nl.lt'll 111 ~ ;::, tempet1l1ve prices Ex ....... •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• roor,.P' t 2JJ'1) 6'l2 3805 Rola Roye• 9756 .58 l'i\ ~!'.:I. lll'S (iuod ool} IO t1m1·b i 71150 town tar Auto. air. P"' r WI' have a Kood sele<'l100 ..u ... ___ ._11_ ~:s. 66"-nt servic,andparts '79 RX7.auto.Rall}v.hb llSIKlili!> "'or~ 1\41 ~~1 l6SU83927ill or NEW & L'S~[}"'"'-9955 ......... I d '79 "'"""0 Sta \\'un ~lutt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eno1nM ar··· l'rJn• l)UI l• dtpt 38.000 m1 'nt l'On .JUU• "' • ' [ [ N A " ' '" ·~, [).,,,. Cadilac 9915 Chevrolets' ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Leaving t'OWllr) m~t red v. tan inl . 3nrr. "l D Al RI U.S. . $800645~bt'Wnti111101 ~ .. Hlic· t t k •• • .. •••••••••••••••••••• '80 C:utlJs' Suprrml' ··s 9341 646 .,.. .u • , .... .. Ju"' i1 '•l'"' B h ~· Ootd selectlOl'I of pre sell S6800 PP. 8.'17 2:113 cass ,,, • <-<Ho ROY 1!f:>7 \ \\ Uul( Hun,, .:ood t'O.lt br.ik~~ & front <'1111 69 Eldo. <iood intr but rouK m Jar luJdl'<l 5 vicMl.slv .owned BMW & .548·8684St·e't' . '79 300D. 'Int rnnd JRR CARVER Nev. 11r"" l!UIJ(J hrJkl'' Sl!OCJ !16J6'6.\ needs lul.\ of TLC" Good Z3,000m1lc'3 liJ2 2217 '!I: '. M· d RX I )ello,. w bamboo ant Nl'l'd' IJdllll SISUO I ." . f p1.....&-99"7 OCber rane cars an e.11· 73 at a 2. x nt i:ood ttrt·:. SIR suo r RO llS·ROYCl 11-lO t!Aill llO t on1t 1,n.11t i·ond buy or methamr Make wnv ~ rtllenlcondit1on cond. A~ FM l'JbS. 640.9637 · ts.tOJ•mllort• ._1 lll'I' f 1 llt>bl offt'r or t.1kl' cl\1•r ofr 839·:llOI ~,·:·1,•1•11•10••R••u•n•a•bo••u•t••:.:~: heal AC, ~tored 111 , ,.. • ...,., &utn • · .. run~ 1>1·r 1·1· Ii.I' 972 i1124 , • ,, " also have a lease garage for 3 yrb, 50,000 81 JOtlSDdrk i.:ra)"' tao ~.... S220llorbl.-:.tofh·r . , 8° Cadlllllr •:ldorado '68Chrvellc Mahbu 2ll6 llrt's Ot•stofr compa ny thal leases m1 hke nt'w S2!X10 f'1rm int 961! 60lltJ ~13 4:fl bl2.'1 74 \V. tt.2 xlnt a•ond Diesel w'28 gal aux I N d 5'la 71!li 7c":"""'M·f'U.~ 644~ ClOUOSUNOAYS liUllJ. 5~ fl:~<>IM uft tank full opt1ons 22000 cy eel> )Ume enl( __ ....... other makes of autos. .u..r.NV o., '78VW llus Champ ~:d1t tlPM wkmb 96.15'~ mi si4 soo llARW!i&! work Huns S500 ._,n 9960 ~~~ks 11nd vans For ad IUUTIRJL!! Mawrcrti 9739 '78280£ Saab 97 60 35 ll()(JO rn1 SWlrf. n1·°" Vol•o 9772 1130 6100•8am·Spm M F 751 5333 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ditiOnal in/onnallon on .12 2 4 OZ 8 •••••••• ... •••••••••• •• Im mac·ulate San1flc'1' ••• ••• •• .......... ••••• tan·~ S6751l, 193 51;.!'.! El 1 1 k COl'\'ett~ 99 32 '77 Vol art' P!> pb ., , leaa1ng pletiecall . d 81 k • t Nur~1u;5 tl4029-ll 213 592 ~011 1'68 Saab 96 hod1 tx·d ,8011 1 ............. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 1!2 .. • do dsM, 1 e nl'w, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .im fm 1.~, >.Int iund '714/972 lZJO 714/66\.!~ll Y ac an ew r ORANGE DESPER,\Tt' Runnao!( l'ni.: "nt'l'd~ J m:lllllff #I VOLVO DEA.LEI ...,.., m1. SO eni: i:uar. ·73 Vl'llt' T Top 35U $3395 5~t1Zio Xlot condataon St-t•lu ap coua..JTV•s , rk 56"5 '!!IS" ll kt'r ;hov.ru11m 1·oorl .1m rm I.'' ()RA".' '(',L',{'()l',"'~\.'• rabaro roof leather int prec1ato 67S 9510. "'' Mt:STSELL. ":0 1• ~ 1 d \'J )>C'lll' Jlf d...lu'l' I'" ·' ·' r ,.,,, \\lrt' ,.hb. western sad AulomJl11· i\ c. lull ·71 Arru"' 1;i 5 ~pt't'fl For a good deal aod good 7•9 OZ71 EXCLUSIVE Suptrb on cond i3 l !\I "I 1 L' pwr. ,tereo c·ass. orai: air .im fm Xlnt • uod '76 8 210. 42.300 m a. MA SERA Tl ~~Sfa ~~}! ~~O .:' ............... !?!.~ . '"'""'"' """"" ~MD LU! G p;unt, Sl4,500 &l~ 11711 ~~;~,bi~\~~ rnnd ~I~;~ P I' KJI ~9 saJesserviresee: " S" .. ON ttt',r~o.':..~~71-?'.,!!'.!c"Jrrt'n l S .. LES,S.,..VICE ul' roor r1rl•m1\I CREVIER am rm . new tart.'!>, S2700 DEALERSHIP 11Subaru 1;L ldr hpd. I 68 Uul! ,unm1I , look• O\'E~SF:ASl)Jo~lft·r:R' ill St"dan l>t>\'alle nl'\\ Afl 5pm,SSI 8541 We'll deh1er Jny-.her1· •'81 300SDT· ........ -• 35 mpg, C:ll'an. runs i.:rll'l.i~.,.:~(blll(l.lt)'~ll· 1'"!;1.'!;"t EXl'EHTS p.iant tan~. reblt tr.in~. Ford 9940 Ofltiac 9965 SM.!S-SER~IHG ·7 3 240Z. .iuto A C:. 111 the 'World' ......., .,real S23SO 631 2991 1 ~l' •~vvv .,.. "''" \Int rond. :n•l m11111 rblt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• roe w 111. SAHTA ANA Am 1f'm cas . bt.-sl ofr BE &CH IMPORTS I Midnight blue. sunroor 1 ° i!I t'uui oni.: 0.,.n<·r i·nl( ~1u~t s~ll $1250 hsl '7K f'a1rmunt f'utura 211r. '78 t"1reb1rd \'Ii JUlu 714 /835-3171 Ca11John631019S --loaded Savi• S40<!,0 1.Toyota 9765 Sho,., Tl.l' 1•11 1111 EARL.fll<E 11rr6312244,!Jjil;Hl55 6, auto. p:., ph. air I 18 22 mpi.:.Ttop p!> ph ____ ClO§EOSUNOAY 848DoveStrect Wiil PU In Eurono.oSl'pl ....................... ,I d d , •.. l rr VOLVO u ... •ner. lo m1 Superb a I' .• am fm l'J~~. 5/i\1 -752 0900 ...-· SR oa l' ..:~ 0 l'r Oll'I 96611 tx HI d SL'Ll di t th II · '71 Datsun, runs good, • 24 Buy beforl' rt! 75. S.nc,.pa1nt.t1r\·~.1 ·t· lb<iok 1,,-3117~ I ar 1r \ .r •• 1l'1 ,·m~ "'I a l'tmd in out Must ~e ma Sor)t'r tll-l)l·ndabl<" flAld something to sell' greatmaleage,needJs up-t969 llarborUlvd 1(1stered PP. 64213:11. lom1 S2800 rt ai ' l'USTA r-H:S,\ Daill P1lut t'la~~1rll·d now ,' S32Sll orft"r S41100 or b1•st oHl'f ~u1(11•<fAii<:tln1lwPll 1 hnldPrv l'1flll~l·U20 I 11484957 121318674313 1f1edAch 6425678 6-9 0 540.9467 Ad · 4649 675 _206_9 _____ _ ATLAS CHRYSL.Sl~LYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tet 5-46·1934 3 blocks eouth o l San Diego Freeway oll Harbor Blvd Complete body shop Sales Service Parts Servace Dept open Monday thru Friday 7 30 AM 10 5 30 PM and 8 A M to SP M on Saturday IEACH IMPORTS Oove Street. Newport Beach Tel 752·0900 Call us, w.·~e the spec1alls1s for Alfa Romeo, Peugeot & Saab THEODORE ROllHS FOttD JOHMSOM & SOM UHCOLH MRCUltY 2t~ Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel 540-5630. 57 Yeara " friendly femlly service -Orange County's oldest Lin· ~I ·Mercury dealership SOUTH COAST DOOGI Harbor Blvd . Coti. Mesa. Tel 540-0330 RV Nrvloe l1li1ta, custom van converllona. Tel MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street, Newport Beach Tel 833-1300 Al the triangle ol Jamboree, MacArthur & BflSIOI behind Victoria Station Sales. Service. Leascng & Parts Fleet discounts to the public • MAIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Tel 540.9100 Orange County s Largest Cadillac. dealer Sales Service, Leas· 1ng • DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICIC.f'OMTIAC·MA.ZDA Sales • Service • Leasing 24888 Ahc1a Parkway Laguna Hills 8 37-2400 CORMlll-DeLILLO CHIVltOLIT 18211 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach, Tel. 847·6087 o r 549-3331 Sales. Service. Part• Full Le111ng Dept FrHway cloH to 111 Orange Co • ALAN MAGHOM POHTIAC·SULUU 2480 Harbor Blvd .. Cotti Mell T.S 54~ Sain , Service, Leaalng "Mr. Goodwreneh. 0 Ua&.I llCI TOYOI' A-VOL VO 19ee Harbor Blvd • Cotta MMe (714) &41·9303 o r 540-1Me7, 11 vorvo dealer In Orenga County and When )'OU ul( for 1 Toyota at Earlellle'a. you oat It! . IOI LONGPRE ,OHTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd . Wes tminster Tel 892·6651 Orange County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales. Service Parts UNIVERSITY HONDA COST A MESA DATSUN 2645 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel ~6410 Serving Orange County tor 16 years t Mile So 405 SUNSET FORD, INC. 2850 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa Tel 540.9640 South 405 Freeway. Sales, servace. parts & leasing Mile (Home of W11f1e the Whale) 5440 Garden Grovfl Blvd .. • SAMTA AHA DATSUN 2001 E I 7th Street. Santa Ana Tel 558·78t 1 Your Or1g1nal Dedicated Datsun Dealer • MlltACU MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa Tel 645-5700. #I dealer In So Callf See the all new 1981 GLC. ALUH·OLDSMOleLa.c:ADILUC SUIAltU.GMC TltUCKS San Diego Fwy. at Avery b it on C.mlno C.plstrano In Laguna Niguel Tel. 83H)800'496-0800 • SAM 01 SA.MTIS CHIVIOLIT 401 S. El Camino RMI, Sen ci.mente S elea. Service. LeMlng And Part• Orange County'• NEWES1' ChtWolet dealer: "OfoWlng Your WI'(.' Exit El Cimino off"'*""P 131-0580 492-4500 Westminster Tel 636·'0 10 • FRAHIC PROTO LIHC()LM.MBlCURY Service and Parts Depar1ment always open 7 days a week 7 30 A M to 6 30 p M 848-7739 • COMMELL CHIVIOUT 2828 Herbor Blvd., Coate Mesa. Over 20 years serving 0t1nga County! Salas. leasing, SetVloe. Cell 54tH200; apec!•I parts line, 546-9400. body ahop ltne, 7S4-04()p. 0 CHICK IVERSOM POltSCHE-AUDl·VW 415 E Coast Hwy . Newport Beech 673-0900 The only de1lerthlp In Orange County With these thrH great male.es under one roof I • IOY CAIVH IOI.LS IOYCNMW 1540 Jambor" Rotd, NewPort Beach. ~4. SllM, Sefvlce, P1rt1 ~nd Leaalng. OR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE .PLACED '642-5678 . N THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOl REP. ·- ., ' J_ 6 ii 2 .! • • * * • ORANGE COAST YOUR HOMITDWN UllY PIPIR MONDAY. AUGUST 24. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Voyager to look at new Saturn m.oon Tt11s 1s a scale draW1ng slwwmq tlw rt'latn•t' size of the planet Saturn and lls nngs m comparison to thl! Earth at left Earth's moon and tlw rl1.o;tanc<' betwee11 tlw 1-;arth and th<'_,_n_n_o_ri ___ _ Hinckley indicted Man charged with shooting Reagan, three others WASHINGTON (APl -John W. Hinckley Jr . the troubled son of a weallhy Denver oilman. was indicted by a feder al grand jury today on charges of s hoot ing President Reagan , White House press secre tar y James Br'"ady and two law enforcement officer s in a Marc h 30 assassina lion attempt. The 11 m en and 10 wome n on the ~rand jury file d into a courtroom a nd formally re turned the incU ctment before U S Magistrate J ean Dwyer Assistant U.S. attorney Roger Adelman made the o nly mention of Hinckley's name when he asked the magistrate to con· solidate several case docket numbers involving Hinckley. The entire proceeding took about one minute. Copies of the indictme nt were not immediate· ly available llinckley, 26. whose father heads the Vanderbilt Energy Corp m Denver. wrote in an un- ma1led letter to actress Jody f'oster that he wanted to "get Reagan " lo prove his love for hl'r The letter was discovered hy investigators after Hinckley's arrest Since the s hootings, Hinckley h::is been confined in a single cell 1n the brig at the Marine base at Quantico. Va .. so uth o f Washington . except for two w eek s o f court -o rd e r e d psychiatiric tests al the federa l correct iona l ins titution at Butner. N.C. He was returned to Quantico from Butner on Tues- day The next legal step wiU be Hmcklcy's arraignment before a federal Judge, where he will enter a plea or guilty or tnnocent. If 1-tinck ley pleads innocent. the court must decide whether he is competent to stand trial - a question that psychiatrists have been tryinJ{ to answer A report by court ·a ppointed medical experts already has been sbumitted to Chief Judge William Bryant of U.S. District court. but was placed under seal by the j udge Hinckley's lawyers may raise the defense of innocent by rea- son of insanity in an attempt to have the former drifter com - mitted to a menta l institution. Ea rlier, it was learned that government prosecutors reject- e d a plea-barga in offer by (See INDICT. Page A%) FUNNY FLOATERS L<.•s he Dans and Eddie Fraser 1 a bove ) were neck a nd neck al the halfway point of the s ixth annual Balboa Bathtub Race Sund ay. but Eddu.• padciled out in front to win for the fourth yct..1r CompNing on a s horter course in the Z c·atc·gory arc Sue Brennas cbe low. left l and Carolt• Depa in their Balboa Brothel entn The race. which be(!an and ended at the Ha.lboa Pavilion dock. was presented b~· lht• Tall• of lhl' Whale restaunmt Niguel man among j et blast victims A Laguna Niguel businessman was one of the 110 people killed Saturday when a T aiwanese jet exploded in flight about 94 miles southwest of Taipei, according to a spokesman for the Compton toy compa ny where he was employed. A spokesman for Entu In- dustries said Dennis Rippin, 50, manufacturer's representative with the company, waa killed when the Boeing 737 blew apart at an atllltude or 22.000 feet. There were no survivors. The spokesman said Ripptn, a cltlzen of Canada, had recently Jolhed the company and wu on hl1 ftnt offlclal trip for the firm. Since jotnine Entex he bad been llvlnl in the Laguna Nl1uel private community of Nifuel Sbore1, according to the •pok•man. A 1pokesman for the Orange County Sherlff '1 Department Hif Rlfftn'• wife, Bnnda, WU nolilled of her busband'a death at I a.m . Saturday at thelr home. P r o he's c a llleras busy PASADENA (AP) -Voyager 2, sailing within 700,000 miles of Saturn on the eve or its r en- dezvous with the golden. ringed world. adds another moon to its t rophy case tonight when its cam e r as focus on the little satellite, Hyperion. The robot ship's cam eras and 10 ins truments are casting about in all directions. revealing de tails of the c hurning and weav ing clouds, probing mys teries or the s himmering ri ngs a nd watching moons grow larger as the ship prepares for m ankind's best look at Saturn on Tuesday "We a r e bewildered ex plorers. · · photography team leader Bradford Smith said dur- ing the weekend. Nearly 10 months after sister s hip Voyager l cruised the planet, he said. "We have made very little progr ess' i n un· tangling the many riddles 1t re· vealed Vo_qager 11 spac·(•cruft rl'turned this meu.' 11/ thl! plarwt Sorum A11y 11 when th<• era/I rvc1s H fi f!ll/11011 rr11/es /mm the planet The night plan for Tuesday's e n counter was extensively rewritten to look more deeply at some of those puzzles Now. Smith said, scientists at the Jet Propuls ion Laboratory "are just _ .. hoping the answers lo some q[ these questions are going to b e found in so m e of these Voyager 2 data." Voyager 1. on its tour of Saturn in November, saw Hyeerion as little more than a fuzzy ball as it cam e no closer than 550,000 miles. Scientists should see a lot more as this second Voyager comes 250,000 miles closer today. The radio signals need 86 minutes to cover almost a billion miles to Earth. Just 180 m iles across, Hyperion is the third most- distant or the 17 known moons scattered about the Saturnian neighborhood The s hip fl ew past the s trange , t wo.toned moon lapetus on Saturday night By far t he biggest puzzle found last yea r was the astonishing complexity or the fabled rings, a vast s heet of s no wy partic les that c ircle Saturn's equator. Old explanations fell apart when Voyager I found the broad rings filled with hundreds or thin ringlets and saw a narrow ring that seems composed or braided ringlets. sever a I eccentric or out-of-round ringlets a nd broad s mudges reaching across part of the rings. A popular theory s ugges ts many tiny moons ranging in diameter from perhaps half a m ile to 20 miles -may be sprinkled through the rings, act- 1 n g as s hepherds as their gravities mix with Saturn's lo herd the particle!> into the little ringlel.8 So Voyager 2 1s aiming its cameras at several likely spots 1n search or the theorized moonlets. Ch ief Voyager scientis t Edw<1rd Slone said Sunday. "A little moonlet buried in the rings _ will form a gap" by sweep- ing out its orbit One large gap is about 300 miles wide and if the moonlet theorv 1s accurate, he said. it s hould-hold a moon 12 to 18 miles across and Voyager s hould be able to spot it Smith said sc1ent1sts have ex- a m ined <1bout one third of the moonlet-hunt pictures taken so far and "we have yet to detect o n e of th ese e mb e dde d satellites." Nothing but the tooth, lady Dentist sued for 'repossessing ' woman 's dentures BETHEL. Okla. <API -Den- tist Curtis Brookover claims it was a s impl e case of re· possession. But Lee Ann Stoval counters th al the Idabel, Okla .. dentist went too far when he came to h e r home in this southeast Oklahoma town. pried open her jaws. s tuck his hand in he r mouth, and repossessed the den- tures for which she had refused to pay. Mrs. Stoval and her family filed a $530,000 lawsuit. claiming damages in last week's incident in which the woman says she was thrown to the ground in front or her house by an angry. yelling Brookover District Attorney Don Shaw said no decision had been made on whether assault ch a rges would be fil e d against Brookover. Mr s . S t oval s aid h e r n eighbor s. o n e carrying a shotgun, cam e running to see what was happening when the dentist struggled with her m the yard. Eventuall y. s he sai d , Brookover pulled the $600 set of Swi ss porcelain teeth from her jaws. "He jerked me down and held m y face while he grabbed my S toc k s take h e a ting • on inte r est r a t es NEW YORK (AP> -•Fears of a further long siege of high in- le r est rates drove the stock market into a sharp decline lo· day. Bond prices also took a drub- bing in what was shaping up as a "blue Monday" on Wall Street. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials. which closed Friday at Its lowest level of the year, fell 10.94 points to 909.63 in the rlrst hour today, and by 17.22 points after four hours. Losers outnumbered gainers by a 9-1 margin in the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex- change-listed issues. In the past few days, many Wall Street analys ts have warned that hopes for a de cline in interest r ates from their present high levels were unlike- ly to be fulfilled any time soon. One reason for their gloom was an $800 million increase in the money supply re ported by the Federal Reserve late Fri- day, rather than the drop many financial observers had been ex- pecUng. The figures reinforced expec· tations that the Fed would stick with a stringent policy or restraJning the growth of money and credit. as its chairman. Paul Volcker. indicated last week. Tourists applaud Nixon in Versailles PARIS <AP) -Former Presi- dent Nixon, in the French capital on the start of a two- week private vt1it to Europe, took a brief trip today to Vertalllea Palace where he wu applauded by American t.ourtatl. Nixon, who teai1ned leven years a10 amid tbe Water11te scandal that lmplteated h1I top aid• In lllecal actMtJes, 1n1de no comment to r eporters. A sPokesman said Nixon. who ar- rived in Paria on Sunday nt1ht, does nol plan to meet wlth forelan leaders and will not ctv• Interviews A 1pokesman at lbt U.S. Em· baaay saJd the fonner praldent had nown rrom New York on • r .. ularty scheduled Concorde <Set NOON. Pace AJ) teeth." the woman said from the Idabel hospital room where she was under observation for possi- ble injuries suffered in the inci dent. "lie said. 'Now I've got my Leeth· and left .·· s he said Brookover says that's not the way it happened "I didn't thro\\ her down. I didn't hurt her in any way. I reached for the teeth and she bit me hard. I grabbed he r cheek a nd pulled my fingers out and the dentures went to t he ground We both went for them but J was faster." Both agreed the trouble began when the set came back from the lab with upper teeth set s lightly off.center Brookover said the lab re fused to m old another set without an extra $50. Mrs. Stoval said the dentist had promised her new dentures al the sam e price as the off-center set. The dentist s aid he expects negative reaction on the inci· dent. "I probabl y reall y hurt myself." he said. "But at least it was only fair I ~ol m y teeth back ... ORANGI COAST WIATHll .. Fair through Tuesday but low clouds late night through mid-morning. 4 Highs 70 to 85. Lows 62 tonight to 66. INSIDI TODAY Young and old, weolth11 and not. hundre<U niJo11 "clog· ging" ever11 weekend at Alabama Jock'•. See Page cs 11011 r .. 0 • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. August 24. 1981 Ex~Mesa mayor Jordan dies Flags are being flown at half· must today at City or Costa Mesa raciliUes for architect and former mayor Willard T. Jordan who di ed i n Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital early Sunday morning. Mr. Jordan died at aboot 2:30 a .m. of complications that followed surgery last spring. He was 68 years old. Hls civic service began in 1952 as a member of the committee formed to incorporate Costa &fesa a~ a city . . !QI--~ ..., """""""' 0--...,., He was appointed to the Plan· ning Commission in 1958 and served until 1963 when he was appointed to rill the unexpired City Council term vacated by the resigning Joseph Tomehak. Antique and classic cars parade Saturday on Main Street , Santa Ana. to South Coast Plaz_a_V_il_la__;g;;_e_. _______ _ • ~ ··'.Distant relatives seeking cash Mr. J ordan served on the council until he was dereated at the polls in 1973 by Coun· cilwoman Norma Hertzog. He was mayor from 1966-68. Hundreds on Howard Hughes' family tree vie for billionaire's elusive fortune As a councilman and mayor, Mr. Jordan was known by city employees and other council m embers as a level·headed de· cision maker able to keep peace a mong warring factions. .,.., ............ - SUCCUMBS AT 68 Ex·Mesa Mayor Jordan HOUSTON <API Howard Hughes' death touched off a clamor for his fortune by hun· dreds of distant relatives who .P.eek to overturn a Texas law and discredit a dead cousin. r, At stake is the half of the est ate valued at between $180 million and $2 bilhon that a Tex· as probate law says belon~s to the adopted c h ildre n a nd grandchildren of Hughes' late uncle on hjs father 's side. Lawyers for about 500 second, third and fourth cousins from another branch of the fami ly on Hughes' father's side will try lo convince a six ·member jury that Hughes' late cous in Elspeth Jlughes Lapp was the child of an illicit love affair and not entitled to s hare in the estate. Lawyers prepared to begin quizzing 25 prospective jurors L :>day about their opinions on s terility . adult e r y and legitimacy. The trial is the final hearing lo determine who shares in the estate Sixteen surviving cousins on Hughes mothers· side, or their heirs. already secured half the fortune after Probate Judge Pat Gregory ruled Hughes left no will end no immediate sur· vivors when he died in 1976. He and his wife Ruth moved to Costa Mesa in l!M6 from Daven· port, Iowa, after he had served about five years in the U.S. Coast Artillery during World War JI From Page Al INDICT • • • Sympathy felt for Layton Distant relatives must con- vi nce jurors to rule that Mrs Lapp was illegitimate despite a Texas law that holds any child conceived before or during a marriage is presumed lo be legitimate. If th e panel finds her legiti ma te. a ll 500 claims automatically would be wiped out. If jurors disagree. the lengthy and complicated pro- ceeding would recess and a second nationwide search for other possible relatives would begin. Mr Jordan designed many coast<.il area commercial struc- tures, including the Daily Pilot building on Bay Street, Costa Mesa. several municipal build ing:.. mcluding fire stations, and many Orange Coast homes. Hinckley·s lawyers Under the bargain. Hinckley would have pleaded guilty lo some charge in the attack in return for a gov· ernment recommendation that he be sente nced under special provisions of the federal juvenile law covering persons up to age 26 Anger of Jonestown victim 's kin changes at trial He was a past president of Orange County's chapter or the American Institute or Architects and a former member of the state H1ghway Commission That arrangement could have permitted his release much soonor than normC11. Hinckley was 25 at the time of his arrest SAN f'flAN CISCO <AP l J ynona Norwood 's mother and 26 other relatives died in the .~teamy Guyanese jungle during the Peoples Tt.>mple mass , :murder s uicide Though s he • ;thinks "somebody should pay, .. i;he's not so s ure 1t should be Larry Layton "I feel :.orr} for ham At first I felt a ngry You <'<in see he's i;cared, and he seems to be a ~enllc pers on. n ut th is is f"rom Page A 1 NIXON • • • ~light. lie said Nixon went im- mediately to the Crillon Hotel llCross the street from the em· bassy off Place Cont'orde Nixon. 68, last visited France <sfter the publication of his book. ·or.The Real War." He was given .::i warm rcct.!plion on that trip by t he Frcnl'h media and public. The former president. who is traveling \\ ith ha s friends Charles .. Bebe" Rebozo and Rick Ru we and Secret Service agenL<>. is scheduled Lo make a day trip lo Reims in lhe French Champagne region Tuesday. Nixon 1s scheduled lo leave Paris by train Wednesday for the wine r egion of Bordeaux. where he will ~end two nights Qt a private chateau. the em- bassy spokesman said He will leave Bordeaux by tf'ain Friday for Lausanne. Switzerland. Nixon also is ~c hedul ed to visit Vienna. .. fi'Jensborg, West Germany. and .. possibly Denmark before his re- turn to New York on Sept. 4 or 5, the embassy spokesman said. 1 , Nixon has been supervising ·.the redecoration of his new ·6ouse in Saddle Rive r , N.J ., .Ruwe said before th eir de· .• parture. I. Mrs. Nixon decided to remain ··-Vl the United Stales to continue preparations for the move whjle her husband is abroad. Ruwe added. He said he expected the Nixons to move to New Jersey in id-September. The Nixons' ew York townhouse has not been sold, Ruwe said. Yeggs steal Laguna safe Burg lars arm e d with an acetylene torch broke into s. Laguna Beach service station Sunday and carted off a '600· pound safe containing $2,000. Operators of the North Laguna Shell station. 1342 North Coast Highway, told police the thieves broke through a louvered win- dow sometime early Sunday morning. They used an acetylene Lorch to bum the lock off the office door. ORANGE COAST something he's going to have to' li ve ~;th for the rest of has life." shl' said during a break in Lavton's trial Though the testimony opens old and painful wounds, Ms. Norwood planned to be in court when Layton's trial resumed to· day "Al first. I thought I'd JUSt l'ome for a few days, but now, :.omehow, I feel compelled to be here. and I 'II stay no matter what. .. s h e said . "T hi s is l>omething l 'vc had to lave with for years . f ·ve gone through too much to stop now ... Layton. 35. as charged with conspiring lo murder Rep. Leo Rvan. D·Calif . and with con- :.p1racy m lhc attempted murder Car injuries fatal to HB youngster, 9 Ni ne-year-old Scott J a mison of ljuntington Beach died early to- aay"'from injuries suffered when he was struck down while cross· 1ng a street near his home Satur- day. police reported. Police are studying possible manslaughte r charges against the driver of the car. Brian W. Simpson, 21. who Uves just a few houses from the victim at 16602 Rhone St. lmmed:ately following the 7 p .m . accide nt Sat u rday , Simpson was issued a speeding ticket and released, police said. Authorities declined to sa)' how fast he was driving in the 25 -mph residential area because lhey said the case still is under investigation. Young Jamison , of 16521 Rhone St., had been in critical condition with head and internal injuries at Fountain Valley Com- m unity Hospital since the acci- dent. police said. Gunmen flee with drugs in Valley Two men armed with a uwed off shotgun robbed a Fountain Valley pharmacy of S300 in drugs Sunday afternoon, accord- ing to police. The two men, described as male whites. ente red Danber Drug Store al 8984 Warner Ave. shortly alter 3 p.m. de manding narcotics. Druggist Oscar Rutsky, 59, told police that the pai r threatened to kill him unless he handed over the drugs. Taken were narcotics and syringes values! at $300. Both ned on foot. Daily Pilat Cl111llled edvertil l6'g 7141 .. 2·$&71 All olh•' depertmel'ltt '42·4321 Ttlomas P Haley ,..,.,....,_, et'd CMt l •fit..if+we ('HI Jc et Rooeri N Weea ~ ThOr')U A Murph1ne (•IOI M•c:h .. I P Han.ey -......onc11r L. i<-v S.·hullz Ow&*"°'*'"-1'.enMlh N Goctdard Jr c:w-0ir- 8ernard &c:hul""" °" ....... °""''• H LOO.I .............. Caro4 A:. Moor a ............ MAIN OFFICE JlO w .. 1 llo \I CO.I• M•~· CA Meil 1ddro" 110• t1t0. Co.le Mf\e CA '1U• (OP•••Q"I .... °' ...... , .. ,, PMbll\hono ComNny No ....... , \tOIH''\ '""'tt.thon, "'ff•ff\f ·~. ...,.,,,., .,, •O ¥•tf1\"""fO"f\ ,.,.,,.,,,. m A¥ o.-t t·O•l\dUi"'fJ ••f~f'k.11 \O#f ,4111 .,_,mt,,.c)ft ~I c •P•• •Qftl n•""""' \t"(Of\fl u.,, OO\t4"1"' .,.. ..... , (O\tA M .. ~ (4Utf(1tf'h4t U"S tu IODt \utt~r•ot~ ttr ,,,.,,,,., 1iJ 00 """""" 0• M4)1I \\to ~~h· m1lit11U• dill'\hftAhM\ \•4'>ft M"Oflltf\ly of H1 chard C. Dwyer , a Stale Department official Ryan visited Guyana in No- \'ember 1978 to inves tigate claims that temple members were be· ing abused a t the c ult 's Jonestown settlement. He and his party were ambushed at a jungle airs trip as they were leaving the area Ryan and four others were l..illed. Dwyer was wounded Within hours a fter the am- bush, most of Ms. Norwood's family drank fruit juice laced with cyanide. Ms Norwood says "somebody should pay for that, .. but she isn 't sure Layton should. She calls Layton "a victim, loo" of the powerful spell cast by the Rev. Jim Jones. who Jed more than 900 followers in the mass murde r ·s uicide Although the question of legitimacy does not directly in· volve the two adopted children one has died since the estate battle began -their claims also hinge on the jury's dec1s1on. Most of the distant relatives contend Mrs. Lapp was not the biological daughter of Rupert Hughes, a New York playwright and author Rupert Hughes was the brother of Howard Hughes' father. Instead . they argue. she was born of an illicit love affair bet ween her mother and one of nine lovers named in a bitter custody fight for the child ll1s long list of accolades in· eludes selection as Orange Coast College's Cit izen of the Year and the Costa Mesa Cha mber of Comme rce's Man of the Year. both in 1979. Ile was serving as the cham- ber's vice president this year a nd would have assumed the or- ganization's presidency next year Funeral ser vices for the popular c1v1c leader will be private. with burial at sea following cremation If convicted of the charges against him. Hinckley could be sentenced to life imprisonment When Hinckley was arrested, prosecutors charged him with attempting 'to assassina te tht! president and with assault on a federal officer. Sec rel Service agent Timothy McCarthy. Bandit hits shoe store in Costa Mesa Man held in Irvine investlllent sche1ne Survivors include his wife of 40 years. Ruth, and son James of Costa Mesa and a daughter, Mrs. Arthur Ebert of Muscatine. Iowa. t he family suggests donations to the Boys Club of the Harbor Area in Mr. J ordan's name HB suspect held in rape A mus tac h ioed bandit threatened to s hoot the manager of a Kinney Shoes store in Costa M esa l ate Saturd ay if he couldn't come up with more than the $690 taken from the cas.h reg. ister, police said . The gunman walked mto the store at 2861 Harbor Blvd. and pulled a handgun from a bag he carried, the manager said. Police have arrested a South Africa man on a g rand then charge in connection wilh an in · vestment scheme he was al· le~edly conducting in Irvine. Frans Theron is being held in Orange County Jail in lieu of $2.5 million bail. Irvine police Detective Paul Jessup alleged that Theron set up a company called Intema· tional Bus iness Advisory & Modest waves keep beach rescues down Lifeguards at Orange Coast beaches said one foot waves made for a safe weekend at Orange County beaches. "Where there Is no s urf, there are no rescues," said Mike Dwine ll , a Laguna Beach lifeguard. "It was like swim- ming in a lake," said Dwinell. whose beach logged only three rescues ,and a crowd of 36,000 over the two days. He said, however. west winds or up to 15 mph drove people home early Sunday. A total of 517,000 people visited beaches and there were only 86 rescues. Newport Beach lifeguards re· ported 20 r escu es with a weekend attendance of 175,000. They also said the Sunday crowd thinned out because of winds up to 25 mph. Meanwhile stale lifeguards at Huntington Beach logged 50 rescues and a weekend crowd of 176,000. Lif egua rds at Huntington Beach said they made 13 rescues among the 130,000 people who visited the beac h over the weekend. Air temperatures along the Orange Coast raneed from over· night lows of S9 deereea to daytime hi&ha of 83 degrees. Water temperature was a warm 68 degrees . I 00 beheaded SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP> -Nearly 100 people W.N draued from their home. dur-ina the nlptly curlew lut week and beMaded, official IOUrCel reported. lndeoendent obeenen aald appareoUy tbey were the vlctlma of rl1ht·wln1 death squads. Consultancy Services Inc. 18662 MacArthur Blvd., Suite 200, Irvine. Police said the company may have been an extension of the South African Company, the House of Ocean Magic, which sold health products derived from seaweed. That company went out of business. leaving hundreds of in· veslors and franchisees in debt. Exact details on Theron's Orange County operations were unavailable this morning as a police report on lhe matter hadn't been prepared. Seal Be ac h police in · vestigators have arrested a 24 · year-old Huntington Beach man in connection with the rape Sun· day of a 24-year-old Long Beach woman. Investigators s aid Norvall Newhan was arrested about one hour after the woman reported she had been raped after attend· ing a party in Seal Beach. Police s aid Ne whan was booked at Orange County jail and bail was set at $25,000. presents "WINNING IDEAS" The gunman. described as a Latin in his late 20s , ordered the s tore safe opened but found nothing msade. That, the manager sa1a, as when he demanded more money and threatened, ''I'm gonna blow your legs off.·· The . bandit ordered the m anager and a woman clerk in- to a back room and ran out the door with a Kinney bag contain· ing the $690, police said. The two employees heard a car start but did not see it leave. FASHION CONCEPTS FOR THE INVESTMENT COLLECTOR AND PROFESSIONAL WOMAN Fashion Show Wednetday. August 26 Cocktails 6:00 p.m. Showtlme 7:00 p .m . We'll show you winning combinations to create a top-bfoss image for your lifestyte. Including the 1981 Fall Evan--Picone Collection. and experts for make.up and hair trends. Saks Fifth Avenue. South Coast Plaza Designer Sportswear. Upper Level R.S.V.P. 54(}3233. ext. 217. 218 4 242 232 George Buu.•man carries his parachute through a wheat field 111 Waynesmlle. Ohiu. after cumpletmg his second 1u mp smce gil'mg up skydwl11g 30 years ago The Sprmy Lake Ky res1de11/ l'nws to ht• 1umpllll/ Ill 4ears from 11vu•. rd1e11 l1t• 11•1/l lw IW Butz re la i 11s Purdue honors f''ormcr Secretary of Agri('ulture Earl Butz ap· parently will retain his dear\ emeritus status at Purdue University despite his con v1ction for federal 10come- t ax evasion "We don't go back and alter a student's record 1r he doesn't turn out all right, .. a spoke~woman for the office of Purdue President Arthur Hansen was quoted as s aying 1n a copyright article 10 The Muncie Star Rutz, 72. served 25 days m pri~on on the tax·evas1on charge The title allows Butz, a former Purdue dean of agriculture, to use a uni· vers ity office a nd entitles him to secretarial and other benerits a fforded regular faculty members, The Mun <:ie St;;1r said Harry Belafonte's benefit performance to boost An· drew Young's mayoral can- didacy 1n Atlanta raised more than $100,000 for the former U.N. Ambassador's campaign coffers A bout 1.300 people paid $100 each to eat ftlet mignon and hear Belafonte sing African and Caribbean folk songs in the performance for Young Among those who attended were Corella Scott King, jazz trumpete r Miles Davis, ac· tress Cicely Tyson, and out· goi n g Mayor Ma y nard J ackson, who has served two t erms and is not permitted lo run again J ane P auley, CO·host of NBC's ··Today" s how, and her husband, "Doonesbury·· cartoonist Garry Trudeau, are expecting their first c hild. NB C s po ke s man Bill McAndre w said Miss Pauley, 30. is expecting a baby the last week of February Mc An drew s aid Mi ss Pauley plans to work as long as she can before hav10g the baby and "absolutely " will return after giving birth. New York Gov. Hu g h Carey and hi s Gr eek·born bride, Evangeline, arrived in Athens for a two.week holi· day stay. . Carey and his wife were met at the airport by her parents, Greek officials and journalis ts. Mrs. Carey told reporters t hat the trip was their "unof· /ic1al honeymoon." The cost of the trip was being paid by the Greek National Tourist Rain hits across Or1an111Uon, accordln1 to a Carey 1pokt1man ln Ntw York. Budaet d irector David Stockman wlll be the featured speaker at an an- n u a 1 bul l roast in Queenstown, Md. that was 'Once a big campaign fund- r a is er for former Co ngre ssma n Robert Bauman. Bauman. who was defeated for re-election last fall after a scandal over alcoholism an d homosexuality, said Stockman agreed to appear us a favor. A s p o k esma n for Stockman. one of President Reagan's top economic ad· visers, said the budget direc· tor 's ap p ea rance is "absolutely not" an endorse· ment of any future political candidacy by Bauman. Mark Hamill, the kid hero of .. Star Wars." is about to turn 30 and has an identity CrtSIS Hamill had said by the lime he turned 30 on Sept. 25 he wanted to star in a movie, be in one nominated for an Oscar, make a million dollars a nd appear in a Broadway play fi e did. "Star Wars" was nominal· ~d for an Oscar: its sequel "The Empire Strikes Back'' made him a million, and he appeared on Broadway in "The Elephant Man.·· "Rut having done a ll that, 11 's not what you imagined," he says in an interview in People magazine "( must ~till prove myself as an ac· tor ·· PROVING SELF? :work llam11/ East Fog brings near-zero visibility in some areas NUWU ,, 75 Coastal f ort>cn.i.;t Sen J u.en. P !I .. 7• .u Fair throu9h Tue.day Out low cloud• lat• n19n1 t11rou911 mid morninig Coastal low U tonl911t, 74 M911 T ... Ide, Weter II Inland low .. 1oni91't. IS 111011 ,.,., day Over outer walert northw•it wlNj\ tO to 10 •nott with :J. to J.loot w•• EIM-rt. W>Ulh ... il to Wt\! wind• tO to ti knot• with 1 lo 4 loot wind waves One to 1 foot scuU"wett '*''u Nl9nt .,..., mornl"O low Ctoud\ <l••r· •n11 r .. 100 al1emoon U.S. sumniary A ~ ol .,._,.,." Ul-from wute<n Mln,..!IOI• and t,... u treme •astern O.llala• W>Uth Into ""'1Mrt1 Mluour1 toesay •• rein t.00ne<1 peru of •••t South C¥ollne. Geor9la •"Cl nort......,. N"' Vora F09 dewloC*l in p.trt• of -.thHl1 NeOrHU -IOUlhWftl ,_e VI• IOI Illy WH ,. .. , "'°In tome"'°" La ter today Jhowert end thun· dtt,.torm• were .. Pkte<I to cover,,... MlniHIPC>I Valley, nelo1100rlno -· tlon• of .,.. ....,.,rn Greet Laaes. parts of New England, the central Gulf region Into FIOrlde. O.Or9le and So<lth 1.ArollN. The,.. WH a Chen<e of ''-" from t,... north P.clfl< Coast to wet tern Montane Ttmperetur" around tht nation ranged from '7 In Pt>oenl• to $0 In Phillpacuro, Pa Temperatures HI ... "<• Albany 13 S6 Ot Al~ '° ., AmarlllO lj tl A,,..,,llle IJ 62 Allat1te IO '° Atlante; Cly 71 .. 8a1u ...... ... . , 8 1rmlnotwn " 6S lllwnero IO 60 llolM t 7 u Boston 11 "5 lrownsvtle 97 71 n luffalo 1t 6J n Cl\ar ..... SC 7S .. " Cllarlltll WV IS S1 Clle.,_,. n u CllK ... ,, IO CkKIMllll IS ,. c.....-11 '' ~ 7S .., .Ot O.t.'1'#111 " .. Oen-" .., O.•~ es M .11 0.trelt u 61 Olllwlll • M .JJ " ........ b ,. HaleN .. » HeMl\1111 .. n ......,. " " ,,..,..... u • .lllClllfMla • 70 .v 1(-Clty .. .. .. ~v.,... ,. ., = .. 11 ... • .. ...... .. n ........ ., • Ml ....... ,. .. ............. N .. _., ............ .... .... ori... ti n .16 fMwYn IJ .. ...... 11 " o. .. c:n. .. .. OMell9 n "t..• ~ .. 1J ............ . .. ~ , .. .......... a• ...,..... 11 .. ,.,....,~ .. .. ) !ltno Seit Lal<• s.anlt St Louil St P·T-St Sit Marie Sc>o•- CALIFOaNtA tl 46 tl 66 10 M St 81 n ,, 14 71 S2 ,, ., B"e~le~ tt M Blytht IOI U Eurtll• '4 Ml Fresno 94 Ml L•ncai1er t6 M Lo•-'notlfl U 67 Mary•vllle 9S S6 Monterey •7 60 Ntedles 10t - Oallla nd -Ml PasoRo«llH Mo n Red BIUfl It 62 ReclWOOd City 74 St Seer-11 S7 Selina• 70 St Sen Ol990 1• 10 San FrMCIKo 66 S6 Santa llertera 1• 5' Stooton u Tller....i IOS 11 Ullall 1S U ll•rttow 104 1• llQ 8Mf ti " ll•lloel .... Catalina 14 .. L-Ar-IM 60 t.OftQe.-11 1M .. Monro¥1a .... NtWllM 8MOI 7S S1 O..tarle M II Palm~ IOt 1' PaMCllN " • San ~ -~ Santa Ni. IM '1 Tat>oeV•ll<rY 17 • ,.AMAM8•tCAN At~• '° n .oa •arMdM " 11 •• ....,.,.,. 1• 8oeota M t0 c.wec• M n ,.. ~=1-· : ~ .21 011.......,_ 11 St Kitt> 7S T1t9u<l~lp.t 'O 73 .U Trlnld.td 'O 73 .en ver..c.1...a .. 73 .34 CANADA CalQ¥Y 7t .. Eamonton ., .. MontrN I It .. Otta we " •t Regina t1 S1 Toronto 11 SA Vane-7l n Winnipeg ., .. un~ moon, tides TOOAY ... o•a v\O•• ·--· .. Se<onct Hl9fl • p m S t TUESDAY Flrll 1-1 22 a.m. -0 2 H•v•n.e " IS 1' Flt\11119" 1.sea.m. • t Klno•ton " 1J Second._ 11:4l p.m. 2.4 Mont"90 Bay .. IS Se<ond hlQll •· S6 p.m. 6.2 Mautten .. II Sun Mt• 1 JO p.m , today. rl,.. 6.22 Merl<M 13 t3 en • m r .. ,.,.,. M .. lcoClly 1S SI t 1' Moort rlws 1.16 •.m. T-v. Wll 4 •9p m. Mont•rTeY ., '3 ii:l ._,__~URf REPORT I • TMt ...,,....,. A "'/Mu. M M flat Ital fl•t 11•1 flat Ital 11•1 1 1J ll•t ·-~ fair -----r --r --fair - A-... T-.. " "5 .. .. .. .. .. .. " .. .. .. We'Te Listening ••• What do you like about the ·Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your messa1e ~II be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the 1ppropr11te editor. The same 24·hour answerinl aervlce may be used to record letters lo the editor on any topic. Mailbox conlrlbuton must include their name and telephoM number for verification No clrculatlon c1ll1. please . Tell ua what'• on your mind Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24. 1981 H/F . .. . . I • . AP'W .......... METAL ART -This solid·t·oppl'r stulptur<· b~ a rtis t Ebe rh ;,1rd F il•h1 g . o n exhibit i n Frankfurt. \.\\•st c;l•rman\. r<.'aehe:-aloncsi<k a !-ila1n·asl' It Wt'il.!h:-. I to .pound:- Defense underscored Week 's events let Reagan bolster military strength image LOS A'llGELES <AP> Pres1 dent Rt agan·s ro le a s com mander in chief hit home symbolically and literall y last week. First. U.S. Navy Jl'l fighters downed two Libyan planes over the Medterranean Sea. The next day, an exu ltant R eagan watchtd a dis pl ay or the awesome firepower he com· mands from the night deck of the US.S Constellation. As 't•e day wore on. he talked toughtr a nd tougher, finally boasting that he was the last high-level U.S. official to learn of the dogfight "If our planes were shot down. y es, they'd wake me up right away H the other follows were shot down, why wake me up?" The dra m atic confluence of events capping a week in wruch Reagan had rejected recommen· dations by economic advisers to cut defense spending. seemed to leave him elated. "( tell you, 1l was a really Yankee Doodle day so far," Reagan said after his first in spection lour or .s military might "I saw a display of planes be· ing calapulted off into the air and planes coming back a nd landing, and bombings and fir· ing practice off the ship . . and I have to tell you, it was one or the most thrilling exper iences ." Reagan is a president whose style is to devote his attention to one issue at a ti me and last week was defense week at the California White House. head· quartered in the Century Plaza Hotel here . On l\londay, Reagan lifted the s uspens ion of F-15 and F -16 warplanes to Is rael and con vened his Nationa l Security Council for an 1n·depth dis · cussion of which new strategic weapon systems t h e Un ited States should adopt. Arter that three-hour session. pr es1dent1al counselor Edwin M ccse 111 contended the t:nited States had lost its .. margin of safet v" over the Soviet Union and ·would spend whatever 1s necessary to regain it On Tuesday. Reagan met with military and economil' advisers to decide where to make addi· tional cuL<; in federal spending in an effort to balance the budget by 1984. Budget Director David A Stockman reportedly recom · mended a defe nse spending cul When reporters ques tioned him about the Libya incident. Rl'<.1gan first hinted. then sug. gest('{J and finall y acknowledged tha t he had kno\\n 10 advance the risks the l ' .S. fighters were taking by (·onducting training exc·rdsei, over waters claimed by Libyan strongman Moammar Kh<1dafv. In the past. Reagan s aid. the Na V) had been ordered to stay o n the other side of an .. artificial line" Khadafy had drawn across "There's a good feeling here that what we did was necessary and it ended successfully without any loss of American life or aircraft.'' of $10 billion to S20 billion in each of the next two years as an alternative to further severe re· ductions in domestic programs Refusing to cul the defense budget , Reagan sent hi s ad vis ers back to the drawing boards On Wedne s da y. wh e n Reagan's schedule happened to be free, the U.S.-Libyan incident occurred. But the president and his aides denied any suggestion that the administration had de· liberately staged a show of U S bravado as a warning to its ad versaries Nevertheless. and although the ostensible goal of th,e adven lure was to establish the area near the Gulf of Sidra as "in ternation al waters.·· a far broader mission was ac complished : The world was duly warned that the United States will not blink. The trip Thurs da y lo the aircraft carrier 65 miles off the California coast was Reagan's first public a ppearance after the do~fighl. the entrance to the Gulf of Sidra. ·'These are int e rnational waters." the president main- tained "And r approved the idea that, while we don't want to 6e provocallve. or anything else. good Lord I approved that that we would do that.·· Knowing the pilots might be endangered. Reagan said he is· s ued advance warnings that "if our men are fired on, ou r men are going to shoot back." T he mood amo ng the officials around Reagan \\as one or ela· lion .. Thl•rc's a good fe~ltng here and what we did was necessan a nd it l'nded s uccess rull ~ without an'.\ loss of American life or a1n•rafl. ·· said the White House off1c1al who as ked not to be 1dent1f1ed The official said Reagan had projected exactly the image he wanted to proJect "That the l 'nited States 1s strong. will de· rend itself, that we will not be pushed around That the C.S response to IOCldents of this type will be swift and predictable.·· thcz birzfroll ... our classic pznf1Ygorz.e ~t with jU8t abJut <l'4ryiliiJB includaj c.asuol ~ts or d~cldhaj. f'iom ('(>LE· I I 1\/\ :\ in2 colore, vmt..og:z. wim and black @)~o~@)§~ 44 F-'tlon /-'and •Newport &och • 7J4/6U·"" 1001 WntwoOd Blvd .• Wntwood ""'• • 113/IOl-3273 H/F ~ops; ... aowns~~. Wilfredo Navarro, head ot the <int i-Castro group Cubam \Jnlt· ed . claimed Sunday that 1J men a re missing and preau~ dead fo llowing a mysterioua Weiekeod e xplosion in the Turli$ and Caicos Islands that bf•;... ~ group·~ shrimp boat ''btJf tiny, foot-long pieces " • Coaet DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 Be a che d fish boat rescue I ry fails WOODS HOLE, Mass. <AP> - A derrick barge and a tug railed in their firs t effort lo pull a Virgini a fishing vessel off rocks where it has been leaking diesP.I fuel since running aground a w eek a g o n ear Ma rtha's Vineyard. The barge and t ug planned a second attempt today after ef· forts failed Sunday when two lines broke twice, Coast Guard Capt. George I re land said He s aid none of the oil has hit beaches. Ha i{! sa.vs Lib.va 'testi11(.(' p la 11 es WASHINGTON (AP > -Ta pes and exchanges of messages in- dicate Libyan pilots "were on a targeted m ission " when they at· t ached U.S jets in the Mediler· ranean last week, Secretary of State Alexander Haig claims. .. I think it was a testing inci dent" deli berately ordered by t he regime of Liby a n leader Moammar Khadafy, Ha ag said Sunday The U.S r eact ion in shooting down two Libyan jets. h e a dded. should deter an y s i milar episodes an the near fut ure. Sheik Ja ber Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah, ruler of this oil -rich Arab state. Government sources said the Libyan leader discussed last Wednesd av's shootout over the Gulf of Sidr a an which U.S. jets s hot down two Libyan planes. Car (er e n rout e to R ed C h i 11 a T O KY O I A P l -Jimm y Carter, heading fo r his first visit lo China. arrived her e today a board a cha rtered jet fo r a brief stopover , airport officials s aid. Before leaving the United States, the former pres ident said he pl anned lo spend his time "learning about the nation and seeing what we can do " to s tre ng the n diplo m a t ic ties estabhs hed during his pres- idency: Landing put term over LA change LOS ANGELES (AP) -Night landing approaches over the Pacific Ocean at Los Angeles In· ternational Airport have been s us pended and old over-land ap- proaches have been reinstituted because of the dismissal of so many air traffic controllers, the Federal Aviation Administration said. .. ,~ JUST DUCKY Robert Duck of Bosque Farms. :"J M . hold~ hi s fowl friend BFD Expres~ and the Sl.500 in bills that Duck's d·uck won d uring the second a nnual Great American Duck Rac.·e in Deming. :"J !\f Duck ·s duck~ won a total of $2 .000 in tht.> world 's richest ctuek r a ce World talks nixed in c ontroller strike WAS HI NGTON 1A f > - Transportation Secretary Dre w Lewis, saying the three-week ·old air traffic controllers strike is s trictly U.S. 1-iusiness, is reject- ing a new call by an interna- tional group to reope n negolia· lions. Th e le ad e r o f s triking American controlle rs. h'>wever. s ays "a line of communk:ation" exists between the government and the union. although there are no di rect talks and no settle- m ent is in sight. The International Federation of Air Traffic Controllers . clos- ing a two-day emergency meet- ing in Amste rdam on Sunday, expressed concern abOl.t s afely in the wake of the walkout by a bout 12,000 U.S. controllers and urged the Reagan administra- t ion to s eek a negotiated settle- ment But the federation rtfused lo s ay whether controllers from various nations had decided lo ta ke further action, such as re- fus ing to handle U.S. flights. Lewis. questioned on NBC's .. Meet the Press," said the ad· ministration is standing firm on its decision to fire the strikers. The only negotiations. he insist- ed, will be with controllers who have stayed on the job. "This is r eally a m a tter be tween our government and the U.S . traffic controllers ... Lewis said. "We're not going to de- velop our policy based on wha t they decide on the inte rnational fi eld." He conceded , however. that foreign controllers ha ve the capability to create chaos on in- ternational routes a nd said he would be willing to meet with their representatives to reassure the m that s afety is being main- t ained. Lewis said tha t the re 1s no way "someone in Spain could know whether a tower is sale in New York" and any sugges tion lo the contrary by lhe interna· tional group "is a sympathy sort of thing ·· C&W tuning up Oak Ridge Boys, Gibbs lead field NASHVILLE (AP> -The Oak Ridge Boys, a fl ashy quartet whose hit "Elvira'' peppered the music charts this summer, and bland newcomer Terri Gibbs are like ly fin a lists for multiple C oun try Mus ic Associ ation awa rds. < The Oak Ridge Boys,4 former gospel singers, are reg3fded as certain finalists for enttrtainer of the year. group of tbe year and top single when th' 5,800- me mber association announces this year 's finalists at mi~·week. Mi ss Gibbs, who s e "Somebody's Knock.in'' became a No. 1 hit this year even though it was only her first record, bas a strong chance lo be a •finalist for No. 1 female vocalist. single of the year, album of the year and for the horizon award honor- ing a promising newcomer The association will artiounce five finalis ts in each of 11 categories. Winners will be an- nounced on the nation ally televised live awards show Oct. 12. Liltely lo join the Oak Ridge Boys as finalists for entertainer of the year , the lop award. are perennial finalist Kenny Rogers. m ellow Canadian Anne Murray, the ha rmonizing Larry Gatlin a nd the Gatlin Brothers Band and rock-country star Eddie Rabbitt. Top picks for single of the year appear to be "Elvira." "On the Ro ad Again'· by Willie Nelson, "Some body's Knockln" by Miss Gibbs, "I Love a Rainy Night" by Rabbitt and "Lookin' for Love" by Texan Johnny Lee. Others possibly will be "1 Believe in Yo u " b y Do n Williams, "Could I Have This Dance?" by Miss Murray, "Smoky Mountain Rain" by Ronnie Milsap, "What Are We Doln' in Love?" by Dottie West and "9 lo S" by Dolly Parton. Strong candidates for finalists for top album are "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" by Nelson, "Somebody's Knockin' " by Mi ss Gibbs, "Tenth An - niversary" by the Statler Brothers. "Out Where the Bright Lights ar e Glowing" by Milsap and "I Am What I Am" by George Jones. Fitz guarded? Protected. after Hof fa testimony NEW YORK (AP) -Frank F i tz si mm o n s, the late Teams ters president, told I RS agents that forme r President Richard Nixon had ordered hlm protected Crom government In· ves tlgators, Time magazine says. Fitzs immons worked for the Internal Revenue Service as a (lovcrnment informer against Jimmy Hoffa, his predecessor. Time said in its current Issue. The magazine s aid Fttzsim· mons, the late William fresser, then boss of the Ohio Teamsters and his son, Jackie, met regular: ly with IRS agents between 1972 a nd 1974 to inform on Hoffa, St. Louis Teamster leader Harold Gibbons and Las Vegas casino builder J ay Sarno. The magazine. quoting I RS docume nts , said the three sought lo save themselves from c rim~nal in vestigations by in· forming against their enemies Fitzsimmons, allegedly feared Sovie t s ate llite g o es down? PERT.H, Aust ralia <APJ Dozens of people. including a pilot and a 6-year-old boy, saw a brilliant "g reenis h -while ob- ject," possibly a Soviet satellite. plunge to Earth Sunday night an remote northwestern Australia. Astronomer Michael Candy of the Pe rth Observatory said the obJecl could have been a meteor or the remains of Cosmos 434 , launched by the Soviets in 1971. "Because it was seen for a long time, we belie ve the second is most likely," Candy sa id "However, it's impossible lo say that's the one until we can find a piece of the wreckage. "Judging by the inclination, it could certainly be the one . The report was that a large chunk had fallen eight miles north of Mar- ble Bar airport and started a fire. So I presume something is there to be found. "It's a bit like Skylab, I sup- pose." Candy had been tracking the Soviet satellite and had said it was expected to re-enter the at· mosphere last Thursday Skylab, the American orbiting s pace laboratory. burned up re- entering the atmosphe re in July 1979 and scattered pieces of wr ec kage ov er w este rn Australia. Asked if Cosmos 434 could have been carrying radioactive materials, Candy replied : "Cer- tainly. lf it was m e I would go close lo it with a Geiger counter in my hand.'' There was no immediate con· firmation that the satellite was nuclear-powered. In January, 1978, a nuclear· fueled Soviet satellite, Cosmos 954, broke up as it re-entered the a tmos phere over C anada's Northwest territories and scat- tered debris over a wide area . Moscow eventually paid Canada $3 million to cover c le anup costs. that Hoffa, who disappeared In 1975 and is presumed dead, would seek lo regain power in the union. Sarno was tried on charges of attempting lo bribe an IRS age nt, but was acquitted. The in· formers were not successful in their attempts to get the govern· menl lo charge Hoffa and Gib- bons. The magazine said Fitzsim· mons told I RS agents he asked for a meeting with Nixon in late 1972. "At that session the presi· dent allegedly summoned At· torney General Richard Klein· dienst and personally ordered him to make sure that govern· m e nt investigations of the Teamsters then in progress did not harm Fitzsimmons or his al- lies," the magazine s aid. Fitzsimmons died in May and the elder Presser d ied in July. The younger Presser , an in- ternational vice president of the Teamsters, was a senior labor adviser in President Reagan's tra nsition team. .. So. I · m a fi n k ? " J a ck i e Presser told the magazine. "I can't be responsible for what's in government re ports.·· Time quoted him as admitting he . his father and Fitzsimmons met with I RS agents once in 1972, but denied meeting with them more than once. Kleindienst denied Nixon told him lo go easy on Fitzsimmons The Cleveland Plain Dealer a lw reported that Fitzsimmons and the Pressers served as in- formants. The newspaper s aid in a copyrigh t s t ory that the younger Presser rece ived kickbacks of Sl6,500 a month for 11 ~ years from a Las Vegas publi c r elations company hired to improve t he Teamsters im age E scape d s p y linke d to robbe r ies SEATTLE IAPJ -FBI agents have found evidence that cap- tured spy Christoper Boyce had dis~uises, fueling suspicion that he might have committed bank ro bberies while a fugitive. sources say Boyce, captured in a Port Angeles. Wash .. restaurant after e luding a uthorities for 19 m onths, was to appear today before a U.S. magistrate before being returned to California. FBI s pokesm an Roger Young in Washington. D C. said agents wi th a wa rrant s earched Boyce's efficiency apartment in P o rt An geles Sunday . They searched his automobile the day before. he said. Young declined lo s ay what was found, but the federal law enforcem ent sources -who asked not to be identified -said there was evidence of the use of disguises. The sources said the evidence a dd ed we ight to s us picion Boyce. 28, may have supported himself afte r fleeing Lompoc Correctional Ins titution in California Jan. 21, 1980 by com- mitting crimes. - • USA 2 • . -· . ., ~ ........ . ... LIBYA 0 ..., ... . . ABOUT TllE .. ·-"' f ]It ... --•""~la~C .... r __ AME.RICA --~-. ... . ,,,....._......., ... ~ ..... --- .......... WE'RE AHEAD -This s ign outside a motorcycle sales shop • in Murfreesboro, Tenn., offers al least one view of the air incident betwee n the United States and Libya. U.S. pilots downed two Libyan jets during military exercises last week. STER 0 SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR ,. • ' . t g 3 ~UillUa Fly qllarantine spreads 14-month-old war against pest escalates again SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A second agricultural county faces quarantine and the sale of one of its major crops is in jeopardy to day as experts try to check the spread of Mediterranean fruit flies. Federal and state experts planned to enlarge a zone of aerial pesticide spraying by at least 150 square miles. Those developments on Sun· day -less than 48 hours before a federal judge was scheduled to rule in Dallas on the adequacy of California's medfly eradication program -escalated the ex· asperating war against the crop. destroying pest that was first spotted in Northern California 14 months ago. Nevertheless, Dick Jackson. the top U.S. Department of Agriculture official at the proj- ect, said. "We're going to beat this dude." An aerially sprayed zone of 700 square miles will probably grow by at least 150 lo 200 square miles this week as a chunk of farm-rich San Benito County is added. A larger por- tion or that county. the sixth county known to harbor fertile medflies, will be placed under quarantine. USDA already has quaran· tinf>d Alameda, Santa Cl8.1'a and San Mateo counties and portions of Santa Cruz and Stanlslaus counties. The designation pro- hibits removal of any or more than 200 medfiy-host fruits and vegetables without fumigation or other treatment. Stanislaus County is the west central edge of the Central Valley, California's agricultural heart. The fumigation stipulation poses a particular problem for San Benito farmers who are ready to harvest bell peppeTS, a $5.5 million crop with a world· wide market. Bell peppers spoil too quickly for marketing when fumigated, farm spokesmen say. ma rrla1e on ~P,e roe~a ... ]t1eanwhile, in Dallas, U.S. District Judge Patrick Higgin· botham said on Saturday that he'd rule Tuesday on a request by Texas that all California pro· duce be fumigated before enter- ing that state. Higginbotham asked Texas Agriculture Commissioner Reagan Brown to attempt to negotiate a settlement with California and USDA official.a. An estimated S4. 7 billion in California crops can host the medfly -more than a third of the state's $14 billion-a-year agriculture industry. A fertile female medfly was discovered in a walnut orchard trap four miles northeast of Hollister in San Benito County over the weekend. Much of the county's bell pep- per crop grows within three or four miles or the medfly find. s aid Jack Edmondson. San Benito County agriculture com· missioner. ---·-------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 H/F A" .... .......i CROPS SPRAYED -Rancher Paul Bertuccio examines some of his SI 4-m1l11on bell pepper crop in Hollister. Calif .. as cropduster J ohn Shelton leavt!s trail of malathion. Saugus area fire c ontaine d By The Associated Prell A fire break dug in antlcipa· lion of the fire season helped firefighters contain a blaze early today that burned 1,200 acres of steep, uninhabited chaparral seven miles north of the town of Saugus. authorities said. Firefighters also knocked down a fire in the Glendale area Sund ay. and controlled the largest of a handful of three weekend fires in Riverside County. Spokesman Dick Moode of the U.S. Forest Service estimated that the blaze near Saugus in San Francisquito Canyon would be controlled this morning. Los Angeles city firefighter Ray Walker said a fire which started up in the southeast por- t1on or Glendale and burned eight acres on its way over lhl\ hill to Eagle Rock was put ou( within 40 minutes or the 4 1!\ p m. alarm Sunday In Riverside County, a fire, that burned about 1,800 acres was controlled by 5 p.m Sun- day. It started Saturday aner- noon. I s a weekend experience in decision making with professionals for those not sure what to do about an uncertain marriage or relationship. For information regarding dates. fees and appointment procedures. call: 673-3183. SPECTACULAR DOLLAR SA VIHG Marriage On The Rocks 2435 E . Coast Hwy .. Suite 2 Corona del4'Tlar. CA 92625 GRAND OPENING NEWPORT BEACH! -- European Body Wrap CelluhlP Control Nutritional gu1<:lonce DESIREE lol me coun1 lh•J we t<\ #70 FAS .. OH l~D HEWPC>ln' llACH 760.lt" l .. H .. kal aS... Salone Also In Beveny Hills & Encino ~ SJO WEST 7TH STREET, LOS ANGELES. CALIF. I J ~J fASHIO. ISi.A D. NEWPORT BEACH 92660 , ~~~('~~,..,.c.MJll"··~_..,.eA!r'. • .c:-- { BRtgidalre l I SAVE \ _J - RIGIOAIRE 19.0 CU FT IUTE HFlllCHIATOR· RIUllt • 100% Frost-Proof! • Automatic Ice Maker. Available at extra charge • Tough tempered glass. Fully adjustable. • 3 Coor convenience SAVE 00 RCA Selecta Vision VIDEODISC J4 YIAIS OP IMTHllTY & D ... DAIR.ITY TELE~ISION & APPiLIANCES 411 E. 17th STREET: -COSTA MESA HOUIS: DAILY f.t SATUIDAY t-6 IUMDAY I 1-4 P.M. SPECIAL FACTORY IUY TOP OF THEUHE PAIR w-.r ·2~ ·3~ • lnllniteWat• L-• ,,..,_...,. Pr-CAie • 18111 '-'ti' Dry.t- • T llNd •no Auto ll<y .,._ ...... :r,r~ SAVE '8000 ON THE PAIR FricJidaire 17.0 cu. ft. Refriotrator·FrH1..- • 1 oo% Frost Proof I 1) 11 if 11 I r I f I II I! l • Automatic Ice Maker ava11a-v ble al extra charge u • Keep most tOP·Quality meal 11 cuts fresh and ready to cOOk ~ for up to 7 days in the Flowing Cold Meat Tender HOW ONLY ) Frigldall eBectric S..erDllllw.....,. • Triple wash Pots and Pan Cycle • Porcelain-Enamel· On-Steel tub • Cut UP to 30% of the electricity uted in the NOf'mat Soll cycle on the Heated Ory Energy Option ONLY $ 95 PHOMI 646-1114 J I " v ., , Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 Time for action on merger legislation P e rhaps no ..... some 14 m onths after the Orange County elector ate delivered its votes on the s ubject , th e Cal ifornia Legis lature can pass a bill authorizing consolidation of the court service fu·netions of the Orange Count)' Sheriff's and Marshal's offices In June 1980. II\ a J lo 1 margin. th<.• count). t•lt·c.·toratt' !)aid consolidation with an at tcndant cost saving of $1 millwn to county government s hould OC('Ur. Because m;;irshab art• s lutc employees . <.•nabling legislation was required First there w<i s hu:kenng locallv over how a mergl•r could best be areomplishl•cl Thl•n the.· 1nf1 ght1ng mo\'ed north to Sacramento. where eompeling bills both aulhorl'd b~ Orange County legislators began mO\ 1ng in sl'parate dire<:t1ons The count) Board o f Supl'f'\ isor., i., ba<:ktng a bill by A s s l' m h I \ w o m a n :\1 a r 1 u n Bergeson. R -Newport Beach, which would c r eate a committee composed of two supervisors. two 1udges and a fifth mutually agreed on member to develop a merger plan. Thl• compe ting bill. by Sen. P a ul Carpent e r . D-Cypress. would <.•ss <•nt1 allv leave the issue 1n the hands 'or the judges ('arpenter·s bill wa!) viewed as ht•1ng pro marshal . Mr s Bt.•rgi.·son's as pro-sheriff. Lust week. the Carpe nter bill wa:-. !'>hot down after failing to dra\\ a Sl'cond 1n the Senate Com mittee on Local Government. ~rs. Beqi1;•son·s bill already has been appro' ed b" the same com- mittee. Now that the Carpenter bill i.:; out of th<' way. we hope our legislator!> Will pass the Bergeson ll•gislat1on so the.it the mer ger, so el earl" des1 red b\' eount \' tax payers and r<.•si detlb . tan ·b<.• ac eomplishl'<I po:-.l ha!>tl' Help for home b ·uyers Would·be California homl' bu\en. and sellers had -..11me en c·ouraging n<.•v. s t mm thl· .,tat1· Supre m l' Court last week The court upht·ld a .I un<.• Court of Appl·al ruling that propert) buyers may assuml' morbwges held b.' fl'dcral sa,· ings and loan ussol·wlions and t•annul be required lo takl• out l1t'\\. higher-interest mortg uge:-. "h<.'n the~ purchast' a pruµt•rt) In the 1976 Welknkamp ck ('IStc>n. the state.• Suprl'mt• Court had rulPd that st<1tt• sm ings and loans could not forn· hun•rs to pa~ off an ol d mo rt gagl' and ncgotjatl' a n<.•\\ 11m• 11nlt.•ss tht· bu) l'r ('ould not m<'l't ('rt•d1t rt· 4uin•ments The t.tbilit' to iJ s.,umt• old. lc)\.\(.'I' intl'J'CSt mortgagt's <.•nabll•d man~ Californians to hu~ hom<'s th<.·y might not othl·l'Y.1-;<.· h<.t\'l' bl•en able lo afford And ll gavc home sellers a better market Hut with int erest rat l'S stcad1I~· climbing. the su,·in gs und loans obviously would pr<.'fer lo g<.'l nd of the older mort~agt•s T h l' \\' l' 11 t· n k a m µ r u I(' w i.I s C'hallengt•ci t•arltl·r this )car b) u ..., a ,. i n gs a n d I c >a n f 1 r m th i.I t e I a1 mt•cl. ..,, nt·t.• it ha!> a federal charter. it should not bt• subject to the s tate rut<.• T h t' C o u r t o f' A p p e a I . howl'\'er rult•d th<&l the Fede r al 1 loml· Loan lfonk board. which go\'t•rns fcd<.•ra l l'.a\'lngs and loans. <.'annot pn•empt state Jaws g O\ t•rning mortgage takeovers :"\ow th<: state Supreme Court has upheld that det·1 s ion. Since thPre·s a great d<'al of money at s take. then· dou btless will be further atll'mpls to sidestep the st<1tt• ntle Hut for till' timl' bt·ing bu~•ers with adequat<: tred1t must b<: IH'rmitted to assume exis ting mortgages Despite the outcry of the sa' ing-; and loans. this 1s reasonable The money backing up the old mortgages was lon g ago com milted and there is n o vC1 l1d reason the people selling or buy- ing thos e homes s ho uld be 1wnalizcd Music Center boosted Pl ans for const ru<.'l1on and \'ndowment of an Orange Count~ \t us1c· Cl•n tcr 111 South Coas t Plaza Town Cent<.·r rt>ceived a nutJOr boost last Wl'l'k when lht· .l a m e s l r\'i n e F oundation pledged Cl S3 m illion matthing !;!rant for the project It is the largest singlt• don a - tion ever promised b~· tht• 50- ' l' a r -old f ou nda t ion. and th<.· ~econd larges t recei,cd in th~ stx·month fund·ra1sing effort for the performing arts complex The largest pled gt• was for Sli million from the Sl'gt•r.,trom famih . which also tlonatt.•d thl· fi ve-acre site near Bris tol Street and the San Diego Frl'cwa~· The S3 m illion I n •tne pledge requires thut m atching funds bt> raised ovcr a two yeur penod. w ith the first SI mtllton eon ti n,gent upon t h e ra1 s 1ng of • ,mother SI mtlhon for cons true t 1on and des ign b~ Dec 31 Plans nov. call for opening a 3 .200-st·at main theater ip 1984 and a second 1.000-seat theater in a later ph ase. The t wo·lheater complex will cost an estimated $40 m illion and an addition al $19 million will be n eeded for endow ment of the tenl<.·r Campaign pledges received so far total Sl6 million. sp there's still a lon g road aht'ad. but hackers ha\'e good reason to l>clic\'e the goal will be <tc eomplishe d in due time. ln fact. preliminary design plans are ex p ectcd to he ready by late next month. an event that doubtless will spur the fund-rais ing e ffort and bring closer the long time dream of an O r ange County rac1ltty comp<irable to the now faml'd Los Ani;!eles Mus ic Center Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views e)(- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626--0560. Phone (71") 6 .. 2 ... 321. L.M. Boyd I Humbug coins England's King James II ordered his mint in Dublin to make coins out of lead. pewter , whatever was at hand Those coins had little intrinsic value. And the Irish called them "Uim bog" meaning soft metal That's where we got the term "hum· bug." Medi cal researche rs say India is the only country in the world that ex· ports human skeletons Common among the men who rode the rods during the first SO years of this century was a belief that one state in particular was especially hostile to hoboes -Louisiana - Jt.em No. 681C In our Love and Wu man's me is the obser vation of the renowned sportsman Casey Sten1el: ''Being w'llh a woman all nl1ht never ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat . .. . hurt no professional baseball player It's staying up all night looking for a woman that does him in " Q Is it true some female litards produce babies without any m ale lizards ever being involved? A. That's right. Al leaat 25 species do so. according lo Smithsonian authorities . With unfertilized eggs. Understand there are whole colonies of lizards that seem to do quite well without a male among them. One shows up here on the patio all the time. We call it Gloria. Q. Where did entertainer Bette MidJer get her start? A. Jn stn1tn1. At a men'• public bath house in New York City. Rhino. love the taste or vtoleu, I'm told. Almost a catnip kind of cravlns, evidently. Thomas P. Haley Pub llsher Tltornn A. Mu,,,..lne Editor 8arbllr1 Kr .. blch Edltorl•I Pege Editor I NERVE GAS Retiree ins11rance problems WASH INGTON A newspaper ex- po:-.e apparently helped lo break up a m arraage of convenience bet ween the nation's largest senior citizen organiza- tHrn and a major insurance company In 1977 , I reported that the American Associat10n of Retired Persons was mis· using 1ls cut·rate mailing privilege to the advantage of the Colonial Penn Group, Int ., one of the leading insurers of the elderly POSTAL investigators are now in the process of deciding whether to bring suit against the old fol ks ' organization for letting Colonial Penn advertise its policies in letters sent out by the as- soc1at1on and its affal iated group, the l\o ataonal Retired Teachers Association. at the bargain rate a ccorded to non· profit institutions. /\s I reported four years ago, much of Colonial Penn's profits could be traced to the discount it got by mailing its pro- motional literature to AARP-NRTA's 13 million members at a rate that was roughtly one-fourth that charged to other insurance companies paying the regular commercial postage rate. Colonial Penn and AARP NRTA began "divorce" proceedings in ear ly 1979. But postal inspectors have con- tinued their investigation. They've ac· cumulated 500 complaints. testimony from senior citizens and other docu- ments that fill more than 18 file-cabinet drawers. And it's beginning to look as if they're J!oing to take legal action Wi th rc:.peN to the Inspection Servtl't' 1nvc!-tt1gataon of CPG. AARP, 'i HTA. thl•rt 1<; a tcmcretc prospect of ~ -JA-Cl-A-ND-IR-SD-N -~ futun· l;rn enforcement proceedingl>. · · C had Po-.tal Ins pecto r Ke nneth Fletcher .,aid an a sworn affadav1t falt'd Jul) 14 tit: ADDED that the Postal Service · i~ contemplating bringing a law en forN'ml'nt proceeding against th e pa rtic!-1 f<>r the recovery of postage al leged lo be owed to the Postal Service a s the result of the alleged abuse of the non profit, r e duced rate mailing privileges of AARP and NRTA for the benefit of C PG ·' But Fletcher said no recommendation ha:. been made yet on a possible suit against the tv.o groups and the in ~urancc company. Meanwhile. Coloni al Penn 1s also the target of an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Comm1ss1on into possible v1olat1ons stemming from the company's all eged failure to dis close to its stockholders the sweetheart relationship with the two other senior citizens' i.:roups Jn an affidavit filed June 16. an SEC l'nforceml·nl hrant h chief. Wilham !\IC'Lucas. said. Tht· Colonial Penn tn· 'est1gation as t'urrl'nll' in progress and there exist s a c·onnete prospect of future Jay, enfortcmenl proceedings," Anothl'r SEC dot uml•nt n·1terates that "futun.· (•nfon•t•ment pron•edinits are a rt·tlsonable prospN'l · · One md1cat1un ol tht• du"e-knit rela- 11on!-.h1p came in a 1979 rt'p<1rt by the Wi scons in I n ... uranc<.' Comm1 ss1on . .... ha ch '>aid "TJIF. RF.LATIO:-O:S HIP bctv.een C'ulonial Penn :rnd AARP NRTA hdl> JIY.dVS been c:han1ctenzed bv an annual intercfrpendenc·e The t WO assoc1at1om. hav1, comC' to dl•pc•nd heavily on funds from the l'Ompany. l<.'gal advice and hu~iness !'ierv1Cl's from the com pan). not to ment1un thc·1r rl'hance on Colonial Penn as a developer of all programs. be lhey insurance. travel. t'mJ>loyment or members hip sohcatation " The marriage or convenience worked both ways, of course Colonial Penn has sold policies to !-.Oml• 2 5 million mem bers of AA RP NRTA A spokesman for /\ARP told my as s ot·aate To n) Ca pu c'<'IO the Postal ~en ace document on 1><>~l>1ble legal ac· twn is "news to l'Veryhody A Colonial Penn spokl•sman said. "We have not been apprist.>cl of at · Asked for com· ment on tht• Sf:C prnhe, he said. As far as I knuy,. it's c:ontinu1ng and we have been cooperating · Some guests can turn into pests The next time we have friends at the house over the weekend, I'm going to make sure it isn't old friends . I want our next houseguests to be friends we don't know well enough to be perfectly at ease with not that I didn't enjoy hav· ing Barbara and Quintin. mind )OU. It's JUSl that we all know each other so well that no one holds back .. Ooy. you got a lot of work to do a round this place.'' Quinlan says. WELL, I KNOW I have a lot of work to do and I know I'm not going lo do a lot of it and I don't need a good friend telling me about it. "I drove up to Montreal to get my paint," Quintin said . "They can still make paint with lead in it up there and it lasts a lot longer. That's why all the paint is peeling in your house Paint isn't any good anymore " He thinks perhaps I haven't noticed the house needs painting? "I nearly broke m y neck on those stone steps out by the front porch," he says. "That slab of stone on top is rock· ing. Can't you jam another little stone or something under there so at doesn't rock'' Someone's going to get killed." quintin thinks I haven't been meaning to stabilize that stone for four years now since the frost heaved it? "That's a good aerial you've got on I~'· --~ ANDY RDDNIY ~ your television set ." he says "Of course. you 're on high ground here. so you ~et a good picture. Why don't you gc•t yourself u decent-sized television set so you can see it? .. SATURDAY NIGHT we had some other friends over for drinks and din ner Rarhara and Quintin wanted to help "Sure.' I said "You can put the glasses and the ice and the bottles out on the table on the front lawn." "Which glasses? .. Barbara said Are these sacrifices valid? In spite of spending cuts. Uncle Sam is still helping out the truly needy such as Hilton Hotels. Bristol-Meyers and Prudential Insurance. One thing that always fascinates me is the hypocricy of demagogues on both the left and right of our political system. My llberal colleagues spent 118181 MAIR yeani blathenn1 on about the need for everyone to s upport buain1 of children for racial integration. At t.he tame Ume, they were sendln1 thtlr own kids to private schools to avold buslna and racial lntegratlon. The conaervaUves for their part moan and carry on about all thoee tolk• who have their bands In tbe public trou&b. They want people to take care of themHl ves and atop upecttna Undt Sap to live them a band·out. 'lb.ls ls the central jewel In the Reatan admlnlJtra- tlon ldeoloeical crown. While all that pompou1 purity 11 beln1 bawked out front. mlllJoa1 of federal bu ck• are b eln1 handed out t he backdoor to 1ub1ldht slants of American Industry. Some quick examples include. S2.8S million to the Sheraton Hotel division ot lnlemational Telephone & Telegraph to build two hotels in Brookline Village and New Bedford, Massachusetts: S9 million for a l)eW Prudential Insurance Company offi ce building in Newark, New Jersey. $760,000 for a Hilton Hotel In Pensacola, Florida; and Sl million for a new plant in Buffalo, New York to house a division of Bristol-Meyers. Even the direct maH s uperstar of the Far Right. Richard A. Viguerie, was go- ing to build a S7 million htadQuarters in Virginia subsidized by the good ole American taxpayers. Direct Mall Dick gave up the plan only when those dastardly devils in the news media got wind of It and told all. The total or this taxpayer s ubsidy of America's rich corporations ts now estimated to run $8.4 billion <with a ''b") a yeer and includes such truly need1es, In addition to those I hav already mentioned. aa K-mart and the always popular McDonald's hambur1er chain So. when the federal budget cula close down that clinic or child care cenlu ln your town, rC!mtmber lt la a Ume for national aacrlflct and we alt have to do our sbart R1jht alon1 with Am rice'• mtlllona1N corporaUon1. I told her Y..hl'rl' the glasse!. were and s he startt•d taking thangs out "There are onlv seven of these glasses a nd there arc going to be eight of us ... Barbara !.a ad "I know. I know." I )aid "We used to hav<> 12 of them You have to take one Jl'lly glass I'll use that .. ·Don't fall on that loose:> s tone step as )OU go out." Quintin "aid "Whal about chairs for out front .," he asked me J told him there were some old ones up in lhe garage 1f he wanted to get a couple of those. Quintin 1s a willing hclµer He went out to the garalo(e and he was gone fo r about 10 minutes before he returned carrying two aluminum chairs with broken webbing "You mean these•., .. he asked in- credulous!~ THOSE WERE TllE ones I meant. I know the Y..cbb1ng was broken If the webbing h;idn 'l been broken they wouldn't have been an the garage in the first place. "Boy," he l>aid, as he put the chairs down, "I thought my garage was a mess. How do you ever get a car in lhere? You got stuff hanging all over. You ought to have a garae" sale. .and sell the garage." he laughed. Friends can be so cruel. "Why don't I make the salad dress· ing," Barhara said to my wife. "Is this the only vinegar you have?" she asked. holding up a bottle of El Cheapo,, the s upermarket house brand "I guess I'll use lemon instead of vinegar," she said. "Here come the first guests." Quintin said. "There s ure Isn 't much space for them to park in t ha t d riveway of yours." "I'll greet the guests." Barbara uid. "Don't break your neck on that stone step as you go out,·· Quintin veiled an er her. 5llllY Ill The OMV 1ood driver muddle la Juat the usual Callfomla confusion wt\lch led to the Medfly situation. NEVADA NELL .. - -- -~-1 ......... HITTING HOME A Copperhead guidl•d missile hits an M47 tank target during engineering testing at White Sands Mis- si le Range. N M . in 1978. The 155mm cannon-launched pro- jectile homes in on laser energ.v bounced off the target by a laser designator Tht• mi~silt• 1s du<.' to he ready for use later this ~ear Cop loses p ay in poc k e t c ape r NORFOLK. Va. <AP> Earl K4pka has found out being too handy around the side pockets can put you behind the eight ball The member of the Norfolk In ternalional Airport police got a three-day suspension without pay for violating the depart- ment's edict · No guard is to be seen with his hands in his pants pockets Kupka says his superiors be lieve "yo ur hands don't belong in there. It doesn't look professional.·· .. As much as·70 or 80 percent .. of the• 25 Virginia Port Authority emµloyees who work as airport police have been reprimanded for putting their hands in their potkets. said Kupka. 51 ";\lost of the time. vou were "t'en by the higher eche.lon They "ould tell you." Kupka says the bosses even want the officers lo sew shut their pants pockets lo keep them honest. · I think a man who's over 21 who wants to put a hand in his pocket should be able to put his hand in his pocket," he says Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday; August 24. 1981 H /F 83 Deductible lunch still on menu Kennedy attempt to cut t ax de duction fails like those in past WASHINGTON (AP > - Liberal Dem ocrats have been denouncing the tax-deductible business lunch since the days when the restaurant tabs ran to $10 or $15. They used to call it the martini lun ch. Now they says it's three martinis, caviar and fancy wine. Whatever the martini quota, it is still on the menu, the efforts of wou l d -be tax refor mers notwithstanding. Sen. Edward M . Kennedy sponsored the latest attempt lo cut the lunch deduc- tion and, like those who had tried before, got nowhere. His amendment to President Reagan's tax bill was little more than a token effort to keep the subject alive. He lost. 87-12. "I believe I have heard this argument before," said Kansas Republican Bob Dole, chairman of the Senate Finance Commit- tee, who didn't even bother to s peak against the Kennedy amendment. He'll hear the argument unchecked a $3 billion federal s ubsid y for three-martini lunches and luxury meals for the wealthiest people in the coun· try." lie said food stamps are bemg cut by $1. 7 billion. school lunch programs by Sl.5 billion, and the tax deduction for business enter· talnment should be cut as well. The three-martini label is a slogan; what is at issue is the deductibility of business lunches. wet or dry. for customers. clients or contacts Twenty years ago, President Kennedy sent Congress legisla- tion seeking stringent limits on deductions for expense account enlertammenl. "These m eas ures will strengthen both our tax slruc· lure and the moral fiber of our society," he said, without men lion of martinis. The measure sought limits of S4 to $7 a lunch. Nowadays that wouldn't cover the tip Former Se n George McGovern made the lunch break a dally target in his 1972 pres- 1dent1al campaign. "There is something fun damcntally wrong with a tax l>YSlem that permitl> a C'Orporate executive to deduct his $20 martini lunch, while a working man cannot deduct the price of hi s bologna sa ndw ic h ,'' McGovern said. Carter picked up the theme, adjusted for inflation. ··A business executive C'lln charge off a S5() luncheon on a tax return, and a truck dnver cannot deduct h1 i. $1 50 sandwich," Carter l>a1d But the deduction stood Then. as now, its supporters include both businessmen and union leaders. "When one says that you ('an not deduct the expense of enter· taining. this C'ould well be a death sentence to a great number of very nice little restaurants all acrol>S this land. and people who operate and work in those restaurants verr well understand that , .. Sen Russell 8 Long. D-La . said 1n opposing lhe Edward Kennedy's amendment So business dmmg 1s still de durlible, and will stay that way unless Kennedy and his allies C'an change a lot of minds Perhaps they ('Sn do some lob bying over lunch Food poison dips in U.S. ATLANTA <APJ Reported casei. of salmonellos1s. the most common type of food poisoning in the United Slates. declined 3 6 percent in 1980, the national Cen ters for Disease Control hai. said. Reported food poisoning cases taused by salmonella bactena totaled 30,004 in 1980, a 3 6 per cent drop from 1979. the CDC said again, probably in the next cam· .----------.-----------.------------------- paign. The effort to limit busi· ness deductions for entertain· ment has been a fixture since John F. Kennedy was president. Jimmy Carter pushed the is· sue from the White House, too, but. with no more success. So the three-martini lunch is st ill a legitimate tax deduction, still a symbol and slogan for Democrats who argue that the system subsidizes privilege. "We are not talking only about the three-martini lunch," Ken· nedy told the Senate when it was considering the tax bill that now is law . "l l i s also the chateaubriand s teak and the bearnaise sauce, the caviar and lhe n aming desserts and the fi.fn. cy wine." Kennedy said the business meals deduction costs more than $3 billion a year in tax revenues and proposed that it be cut in half. the same change Carter wanted to make T he Massachusetts senator called the entertainment deduc- tion "nothing more than food s tamps for the rich." "Cutting the business meals deduction in half will ensure that the sacrifices required by the policy of budget restraint will be shared fairly," he said. "If the poor and middle class are being asked to pay more for their food, it is unconscionable to continue if *TRI ~~:~ ....... , .. .,. .. ~ 'lt~•t 1Tlf>~~ ~.,.,..(. ,.,.,. '\t"'1t ,, '°"'' 00!;16 1r •"Ste·,,., N•11e't •w, "'••• cot"' .. ,.641-1289 ,.,. __ IOllllC* v.-~9s.G401 J'W2'1 Ce.,.. c .......... II •" .... ,.., et A•i9f"f _.,_, I DAI LY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842-5&78 • "Our 24th y<'ar" ~Auto & Homeowni:.rs ~ .; , Quotes By Pt.one FAIMEJS INSUUNtE CIOUP 5 4 .. 5554 Of' ll5-l4l7 l t l 4 ~-Cotto Mono GrGftd O~ninq Sale SAVE 25 PERCENT OH WHOLE COLOMBIAN COFFEE IEAHS at Trader Joe & Pronto One of the most prized ,. al' u um l' on la 1 n er s . correes of Colombia 1s nushed with nitrogen to l'aJled Colombia Excelso. hold their freshnes s We just got a shipment of Please v1s1t our newest Exl'elso. which we're Trader Joe's at the 10-sellmg-for only SJ 54 per tersecuon of 17th, Street. lb We have only 5.000 1'\ewport Boulevard and I b s Compare al Superior AH•nue tn\•Xt tu $5.59 $5 99 els ewhere Denny's .md Harda) ·!> And they 're packed in Bank 1 HOW IM COST A MESA Piiot Logbook -D ·1 p·1 " Candid com~ta~s II y I DI e.rclU$tvely m the CONSTRUCilON MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. •Residential • Commc.-cial Buildin.,.: Tukeout Commirmcnt .-cquired alon i? with lcasct.. • Land Loans up to one year 50'11 apprah.al. CONTACT: •Jeff Johnson- lrvine Office (714 )851-4050 • RECEPTIONIST ANSWERING SERVICE • • • AN INDIVIDUAL NUMBER AT NO TELEPHONE COMPANY CHARGES • • • • • • • • • A PRESTIGIOUS ADDRESS AND PRIVATE MAIL BOX FOR YOUR BUSINESS A TELEPHONE SECRETARY TO HANDLE YOUR APPOINTMENTS, RESERVATIONS, AND CANCELLATIONS A MODERN COMPUTER TO MAINTAIN YOUR DAILY CALENDAR, SCHEDULE, AND MESSAGES OFFICE SPACE and CONFERENCE ROOM AVAILABLE FoR YouR APP01NTM ENTs MAIL LIST & MAIL SERVICE CAPABILITIES FOR MAILINGS TO YOUR EXISTING OR POTENTI AL CLIENTS WI DE AREA PAGING FOR INSTANT COMMUNICATION 800 NATIONWIDE ANSWERING SERVICE AVAILABLE FOR SERVICE, DISPATCH, OR ORDERTAKING ALSO TELEX, FACSIMILE, DICTATION & WORD PROCESSING · ALL SERVICES CUSTOMIZED TO YOUR NEEDS Up Your hnagel Ml•l•lu OYerheadl Mul•lu Re1ult1I LOW lmltODIKTORY RATEi' WI TODAY F• M•E DETAaS (714) 953• I 234 WE'ii AllS-IRW•K ... ' MD WE'VE•• uswa • Y•I • I l I i I .... .. • .) ~ .., • . . . ~ .. . '\ . .. .......... -.. -------.........---------------.--.. --. .. ----. -----------~-------~~--~---------._..--_..._.._._.. ____________ _.. ______ ..,...... i IN Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION QUOTU!Oto~tNCl.UOITIAOllO•TMl .. IW•Olll MIOWUT ,.M:t•tC l'IW IOITOIO OlflOtf AllO (lll(llOIOAft"OC• I •CIOAltOll ••O •lf'OllflO l 'I' Tltl ll•UO AltO 1 .. Ull•IT W I... N•I wt.. Nfl S.01"' Ntl Wt.\ Ntl Pt""' (iow (ft9 ,. 11 "0' c .. " C"9 ,. r.""' Ctov C"O "'' l\O\ (to,,. C"O ~pl ~ 1~ »*-1\\ ~Mt • t »7 1~1\\ ._.ftl Pf J JO J, ll~,,.. Cl!NO 1 7t l 11 1--"' pl 1 jJ • ~ ''" ... It " ............ OS I 1' 6 ~ 11-14 J>j[;' I j it '" · • · 'pl ii 1'~-16-~ u• ~ ar ~:: :'.IW,. ij • J:::.:·i4 ,.:=, . .lit m = ~ ~'"' N~l ~I.{ I, 7 ~ n-\\ flM I .. 6 n: > -: Mci1'11 tS --IV. P~rir..,.;f 6 "'fldl/"" ~ P E ""' (.10\t ( "t ::A 2.J · • yl lt""' ! ~ ~.:. I!!'& l!i 11\la= \la = "lJ • • t ==I~ ;fJ' t'.JO tii IOlf l111o II.. itf 2. y I~• 'Ii 144infly IAO 1 1' Ill -• Mc 1 ,,\ 611 ~ '-"K It 1q d >~ 'A llim111 2 60 w ..., u • 14 Kt 10 • on 'A .....-i 11 7\lt-1' Mc o 'i ., 4'1 al"'-Ill ~"" ·'• I JO ".. " lvllrl11 'Q I .. m 1o. . . ~ 2.'>1 • ,...._ ... ... .... "' I . ' I I~+ " Mc • I II " .,~ 14 ~ ~ ' 1~ :-• ~ •un.. 10 111 "'-OuCI ~ t.7J • !f"' . ~ I 1 M u:-,i; M< I 11 "' ~'"' ~ll'G '11• UI Joa .... Cll llld IA vn _._, ~.ri: 11.~°l 11 Y'f 1t1to~f: m=: ·i :i 1' .~ 5" =. l!J .JJ ·. ll ~-; ~ p;/~ ·J. :: m :=1~ \411'\ Ntl ~~~ I Ill I :} :;:: 1 OV11Am ~'.!.aJt-f'll-~ HjVtlt ;14 ,; ~ f 1 =~ ·; II J:: = ~Tai .tO 12 IS to'" ~ • PC~' t•ov CNI 1.C S ll U14-.to 11 .. ·~ ._ Mi l.4ol t jf 4i . -Me';f' 1.:: S 1'1 ~ '4 e< .tob 6 4lldiillt-1111 NEW YO,_K IAPI 2 p.m ltA P'11 11 D U\\, •. 1! Sys 1 U J .. v.-Yt Hll 1.60 IO 1 ...,_I =. = .JOU 60 JI.._ 14 II~~ ~ !8 11 1~ n'2f::' 1~ Ntlloll•I P•IUt lqr N•w CHA pl I 10 ' 10 " -Eeo .. ,. ... • ,, 11~ ~ ml ., ,,. • t 11-.-.. .» It u ~ " Pot f l ,·.60 1 ~ " Yor• Stock Elt(Nno• 1 .. un CNAI ' i.. . , '"'· ... l!aKO 1.32 • JO UV. • "' 1111¥1 ,. • ., J11A-Ulo .. , ... "1.AM • JI-~ 14 1"C111t1 pf • JO UGO 1 ..... Pl ...._. U.11 Ole. CPC t I '1 7 m m~-bttAlr . Ml l"'-" IMO ,WI. It · · *1 ,._ 'A !Mlvlllt UO t ft 41"' + '* P,..mr 1 ;,. ii 11 It~• n -~ -CP Net 1 1 1• 11~ IAL wlO • 1'1 4 -14 ~ 1, .. 14 ~ P -Jiii M!rmp: 1't II -\It Pl'9lle 4'1e f • II A~p ... • 1• ' ~ csx t.M 1 210 4714-lllo •Air 1112... 11 j"'-· · · · · .11r t .'j& :r'-~ Mtrde uo • &S ., -11; Prt. ~'!.X · It 1111 m~· ;,.. ~ .. n~:~.,: ;~ ~~!:.. ~:~ 1~ ~. E~tof~·~i7 l~d1~~~ ~J ~;;: t '11 ~I~ =~•i.J ,: 1:f =-=I~ =~ltaoti .:: ~J~·,~. AM 11111 tO IJYt .. C.otnc 11 t EatlUll IAO • 1211 10~ 14 Hot!-.m 10 111 12111-.. ..,..,.. .. !AO 1 al .,_._ .. Pnlllli• 'n 14 •S I~ Al'l. IJ s-. ~MMn • d1 ,_ lsl(Od )a .. ..., 61*-1~ H...C• .auo Ill " _, .. Meffl..y '·" "* ~"'Pro! 1·.010 $0 ~"".:...'"' A"A 2 6 » ~ Vt aHIWI 70r 1• 172 II -··-l.n 11 IM ~ '-HOtll ... 1 .to 7 ts II\\,··· MtN,.t .It 10 .. It -.. P$w~ , ... 7 ., 14 Ill ASA Sa "' Ill '" .,..,.., ' 11 14 Jt JO\lo-1 Ed•llll S2 ti 20 12v.. • l't Ho.@ IAG 10 U ,.,.___ lit Mau" 1... . • .. 16-1\\ ~ ptt 'io , 1P't-"°" Allx F, .. lo. 1111-.-1: C"Lll'' :. "' ,._, EO•d •. IO 11 111$ Ullt .. ~,,_ ,. • 17 1 -.. ..,.. ... ,: ... 14 u ,, -"' l'Sllld 2 tO 1 m 2C*-\Ii ~~ ... • 1 1 14 7£ ?•,~ 14 oms. 2.IO 1 60 1714-Edit Br t.f.4 1 •1 21 -!:'.:! '40¥111'11 1,.s • Ml """-l:! Mt.U • s ""· ... PSlll Pi >. u 104 6ft' 111 -"""" .40 1 ,. • (""''r t,Jt 10 .. ~v. •.•. EdWrd 1.60a 7 7t ~V. -lfflllt "I to .. J 14 -.. MOM,l.D 17 IOSl IMli • \It l'Svl H • l 14o1 IS V. =09.:. ~ ,~ :c•Pec9 1«1. ,., 41111-E•"'•"° I.fi ll m 24.._ ... ~'"' , • .., 1"-·····IMetml 411 Dol'7 -1-PSH':.~~I . s ""'·. ·-ll 1 • . 4~ • Ce11PE ,, u .... ~ EPG pl a H . H J4 HouNO 1. • • &$loll-" IMUl ""' 12 ... .. . . ~H pf.4 2S .. • ~ " AM"o"'1 10e 1•. 1! '~"' ~ CeMlll • .. 11 s 1211.. . • E•to• JO u 11 11~ · Houe>tliy 1.11• .. u ~ I\ 1 M1e: ftlJ ._., • a::uo Q~ "' PSHH llf>'u 2 ~ .... I -C ,_. 1 JO 10 4 »loll-El~As It It •--Yt ..._, .411 U 61 IJ -1 Mii! ,ti L IJ • Im 0 +Ill> ffi M i .. 7 Ill ?2.. ~. =! t~ 1to' 0!: ~~ ~ C~llS ,:: 1: 1:: ~ ~~~ .0 ~~ l~dl!V.. ~ :::-..:.. 1 ': :: :~:: i:!~~ Ut ·::r 1~:.: . ~G .: ... tlt11 ,._ Alleell It 16 J\'t' ~=I Id 10 ... S-EMM p' 1 14 •~ 14. HIHIMO 110 11 ,,._.__ \\ M<lll,_ 110 I t 114-14k ~ g pft.40 ; :il'o i.. !l~:~ .: 1~ ~ ?;:r ~ '·~~:, :: 1 ,~ =:-l:?~r. ' .o ,~ ~ ,! ~ ~=rT. ::: u ~ !: =·= ::g .. ·~ 1 1; :~ ~ PSe:o ~ ~ t,SJO ~. ~ Aktor.a ,IQ J) • II~. ... ~: ... Frt u s 4 '~ EmrtEI U• 11 IAJ 4J -.. Hv ......... 17 .,. » -~ M~.42 • ta IJ -" "'~8 '"l: ,,J ""' I" !::'rpf 11 A>'2 1~ ~~ 1 ,, CarP'w 1.14 1 213 '"'-~:::~".:l 7t: IO 1~ a, :: HHvttMAEr.·: j .:~ m~.::1: Mi."-1,40 1 " 21-~ ~EG ::..61 r7f00 ..... , .. Alai" dpt ·11 > S'• Ce r"' pf 1.67 IO II~ Y JO\ • 11 t · Mll .. tW .ft! I • lPlo--Put>lfd1 111 >-.-~. Al•P of • t4ol0 It CarTet ?.10 • n • .,....._ EmMrt t .40 • .. 0.: i: Hyert" IM 1 ti JO _,""' M llM I.JO • • " -"" Pueblo u • J ·~ .... AlaP pl 11 rlO 11 Ca rrGll 1 "• ,. """ .. EmpOs l.f.4 • ' 1 • "' -~ -"'"'" "10 IS ""'· .•• PR Gem 4 • 1 d 41.'> I. AIAP pt t 4o1 dO to , '• CeraPtr 1.llO l 1lto ,....,._ Emp pf '2 t300 ·~ IC llld t 30 • 107 iS -'6 Ml....c;. 1 ta S » JD -\\ PQSPL I Tt s l&l it~ \o AlaP pf ,·" •120 511'> • CarOfW 1 ?2 • JJ ,,_ ~mpclll. ;: ~ J: ~ • :: IC '"pf J. }J jJ ~'t: MMM J • ,., SI -\lo ....,,.. 1.60 10 IA7 t7Yt '~ AleP pl I 2t "° SJ CartH pf 2 I 1'~1 119 P 11 It ,,_ ICN Ml11Pl t.12 1 ll 11~ 14 PvrllnF I l!tl ti\'• l''o AleoKo 1 tO • J Ill• "· CertWf 411 I Jt 11-Ennl•ll n • l ~ INACp '411 • .,. .,._,_,\\ MlroQi ... • Jt u -14 Pllfllllr 1 .. IJ lJ ... ,, 1 Allillll 60 • 251 27'o ••• C•KNG 1.04 1 n ..._ EEnMfCll 1 i. • '~~ l~,;-1~ INA pf ···'° J2 ,,,'\lo -114 Mlllllfts I 1 ,. '1'-114 Qv.ellO 1 60 1 '~ JJ\'t ~ Albany I 20 • ts " ... CHllCll • • 17 "---lllf(t n . ' !NAiii 1. . .... MP.cc i.to 1 " a -2'-0..-llSO IO IS lt.J !Sito .. Alllffla 40 • ' 1''' CelrpT J «> ' 1• to\lo-1 E11l•ra 7• 12 SJ >?;"-I' IU 1111 I IO 4 117 ··~ .... -1'$v 111 , Jt t llo-14 Qloenll t 'eo II .... 40"'-.... Alblllft • t IS ,_.,. C.c:oCp .to 4 11 11 -14 Enle1 I 6 '1 13" II> 1u1111 pf 1.25 .. 1 21"-14 MoPS jlft,f.4 I ISi'> ••.• Ouetlor t ,,, AIUll t 10) 221 l•'·• '• Ctltllte >• 7 IU. ., Ellvflet 70dl0\t-:;> IUllllof 1.16.. I 21-... Mll•I" , 4» ....,__... _a -II _ AIC0$1 t 1 7 lf'9 ll V. • 1 • CellCO I 1J:2 t~I EQlllh 2 olO S 16 tJ.\'. ' Ida~ 2 ... "6 4J 20Yt. · • MOtMI t J S 411'0 '°' -1 RB Ind 2112 11 11"t Ate•dr 16 If~ "' CenltA tl 10 n ,.Ill-Eqvlmk 9' It 7• l't ldNll 1,10 1 Ill U\lo-\\ MollilH . . 107 W.-\4 RCA 1 10 1 n• 21 •, AllQCr l.OI • 21 35' ~. <•11SoW I.SI • 1011 I~ v. Eqmll pl?.31 • 16\11.. • . ldealT . . n s -Mo -.... .:!Cl 41 216 ~ .... RCA pl 4 ' 47"4 AIOln 1 40·10 11 tJ ~ CenHlid ?.» s 1W 11 l!q!Gt 1 1 l2 ~ ~~ ~:~ 1~ 'I'"'-t.• 1 "' I~-\\ -Cpl n 14 llS d --" RCA pf 111 1 "''"° •, Alain pl J " J ,... <•nllLI I n • " 1-. EqlLI 1.-I Pow pf4.IJ .. ·---• " MoM9( ,, to II-.. RCA pf l .•S .. 2~ '·• AffoPw , .. s .,. 1s•, ''•Cn1Llpl 4,j0 rlOO -· E1m•k1I M IJ llS ~~ : llP-111 4 .. 1 ~ •••.• Mo!ll!Dt 11 101 .. ....._\\ llLC "4 10 SJ 12~. '• All•llGP I • ,. 11.. CnlLI pf 1.11 .. 1100 n t\ ..... EIQulre ·'° • 14 ~ 1m111eo .tol " tS ltl4-... Mollll . tO 4 n " -... RTE .. 11 1'I 14. AOdCp 2.40 • 351 S• ... ''" CtnllPS ..... 7 7• 11 -Ee•:-,xc '<: ~ 1tl ~-,~ NCO 1' 12 1rn ''o'.I. .... Mollfdl •• s. 41 U*-IYo R•l1P11r .12 1111' ""' .... AldCo llf•.,. H d52"'-"' cnuE 1.20 t 111 .. 1.--11> '' 11• · , lll 1nccac> • 12 ' "" "' "'°"°" ,., • 20 soi.-1 Remed ne 1 n1 '"" '"' Alld~nt 1 1 J7 11• 1 "'C•M""'. 1.n • 41 11-.-l't ee111y1P :·~ ,t :~ ~!" \\ ln<CC U le 27 fYo Mo11..,. J.111 n 1S1 ~1~ Rem!>( 1 IOt 11 in 11"", " AlldPd 10 Id ,.. '11 C11So~1 M f 110 11\lt-VIII ·--lllCljM Pf 12 dO ~ t V. MlllOO 2 t Ut IW--'-A.tneo '.iM (S 11 "'"'· AlldStr l.IO • ?IA 2H.-'It CMTel 1:10 • 120 ,._ eev•c11,P1 1 40 'i lJ }~"". ~ Ind M pf2 IS ~ 14 + .... MonPw 1.• 11411 ~JV. Reybl 'to 12 ., 17'" Alll1Cll 1 I ., """ ''•'C.ntrDI .051 .. 2'4d 1-llN a e s -lllCllM pl?.U • I~"" MonSI I.ala .. 21 U~ 14 Re mdl . 110 .. 24"• ''• AllrAv .Mb 14 40 21 CnlryTI 10 6 Sol 714-\\ l!e•<l1r 11.~ · S no! l~:Z.:1"" l"dlGH 2 IO S ~ 22•1~ ~ MONY .tie I Sol 6f9 .... R•~lll f 1.20 12 1411 42.V. ''> AlpllPr I 11 '"''Cenvlll 1.«I S 16 13-~ uon ncllPL J.fll 1 ,., -n More<: 11 1111 I 00 JI~+ ~ st.adB to 10 m • S Akl>A t 1.IO 6 M 21"'-• '" Cn·-.tO 111 42 14-~ -,._, -, lndNt ll I 7• S 27 U--V. M!rf'M I : .. • JI Gt -1~ Rd BAI p12'. U . 1J Sol'} 14 AmtSvo 44 3 tO 41 • v, cen .. lr .IO I 202 is -VI FMC 1..0 1 n : !: tneaco n 2A 1't "~ 1'14 MotM 11 1114 10t 2'"'-2.,,. Rllll•f 1.0. 1 4 111o Ame1 J.00 11 112l S711• J' • Cllmr111 1.• I '2t U1111-l't FMC Pl ?.~;.;. .~ WI ll'o l119trR 3.40 1 104 to\lt-\lo Mo,_ J. IO 1 19' U~-1 ... R.cnEq 11 J79 d ' - Amrc.e 1.22 • 2• """ 'Ill Cllm Pl 4.tO .. IJ OOY>-YI Fallra• -.. ... • •no" pl 2.JS • »Vt Morltftd 1.10 f 17 J2-~ Rlldmn .JO 12 111 11v. ,.., AmHus 1 10 I •1' JO..,_ 11• (llamSo 10 t 241 ,..,_ Vt FlllltCI 11 .. ' U I~ ~ l119fT.C U 10 1 171._ ,._ MorMS • I t3 21 ... , ... RM<e .tO U I'• AmAo• • 10 X> 2Jt •• • 1' c11aneo 1 f93 10 --Feut u , tnldSll t I 1.0 2 .. Mo•-l.Jol • •1 lS4-lit RHvsB 2 u s u ~ '"" AmAfr $7 1210 IS'> '• Cf\art .i 1'1 S -l't FelrtllCI IO S 260 d20 ,._ ~ l11sllco 111 ' ~1 l"I• -MoltOM !AO 10 1117 ..,_,_2"' Ret<llCll fl t 3t IS , • 1 AAlr wl 182 S'> .. , Cl\Art pl l..S . u ·-\\ F•l•c ~· J . .O 41 d»..._ •n•llllV • 2 ,.,., Ml'v.1 Z....10 1• IMlt-h R•IGp J 1 ., 11.\f. '• AAI• pf 2 .. ,. 13\, .,.. (llAll"'d 1.259 JI 1211>-.... ~.,,,w o,; ·44 1 ·~ :,_ :; ll<PSe I ... "Iii) !!!'.: .~ Mvllfrd . 10. II 12 Wt-14 RelG pl 2 to s 1111) A Bakr JSb 17 200 t•'·> I'• Cf\aN J 10 t .. 1 U -1 r • l'o llllet(O 2.• 1 SI ,.., •• Mllfcl pl AO I RI>-\It Rell11 pf 2 ti 20 201... '• ABmd I) H • 121 40 "' CMM pl(1 tO 10 dU _, ~:d:". 12 ,r. '~·~ .. Inter pf 7.1S • '1 '!!, '·-Mlilllftl . 10 I~ ....• "-PAI• · ,o ·~ • ... ABrcl pl 1.H I ~ " Cllel-60 • 2 7.,._ r II> lnlflk 2.20 IJ h "" • "' MvrpllC t.• 6 It I~ ~ R91>Cp .O 6 1'I 14... ... ABrd pf UI l .0 ~ CllmNV J ... • Jll U -114 ~re''! 1 JO I ~ : , .. lntAlv .tO t 2.!! )?Ill M11rp() .75 I )II ,._,~ RetiFll$ 1.20 1 JO 24~, Alkktl l.tO • 1• 1' ~ CllNY pfl 11 100 Ul't. •r ?I 1~ IBM ).U t ,_ ,, 1 MvrrvO I.JO 1 tt 1ffl.-WI Ret!Mlll a It 2 ... AllldM .. 1 1 IP. "' ClletV• .. • ,. l21'i. \lo F= 1 l'2 • ., II t11!FI•• * 12 12A ··~ .... MvtOm , .. ,.. 1 1011> ..... Ret>N'I' I JO • 24 J7 AB111Pd fl • 1 12''> '•ChftPn Ill 9 )16 Jl\4-~~=~B ,i~·i S~:: ,• lnlHerv JO "'..!!~ ~ Myttil. .!'OU a 1,__V. RepSU 2 4 ..SO ltlll AmC.n 1 '° I 7Jl J:l... ~ ClllMlw .. lt 74~ ... "-' , ' lntMr pf S.7 . 21 u~ " -_.,. -RepTes 1 fO 7 IJO 41'1. A(ell pt ? IO J 20'> '" ClltMI pl J tO"'--FOSQnl • IO 10 i. I • lnlMln 2 to I ljO Q I'>-~ NCH 71 7 40 1114-'-R Ta pti 11 J JI , ACnlry 20t IJ ISi ,.,,_ '• ClllP,,.T 1 t U 21'4-V. Fl!dOSt l.'O 6 ~ ~ :: l11tMull I • S It 1''1>-lll NCNB :111 t »6 If\\+ \\ R~Cot Jl 1 1t1 1"- ACyan US 07 xllt u.:_) ~ CllllFull 411 10 60 --.... ~r;~~n ';: 9 I(» ,;:! '• 1111t~aClf 2.~ ~ •:; ~~-~ NC" UO ' 1 .. d~ I\ Re1ttoO I 11 1 »•'t AOT 1 S2 1 ti ...,.... Cllrl.ot tit I •1 JJV.-"' , 2•~ ... n .. eel NIO 2 S 2t ~ ••••. Rtv•re 20t 6 Jn 20•,,_ AEIPw 11• I S.t ""' .. CllrlJll> .40t 20 J II-Yt FldUnl 2 IO ' 4 7 ,, llllTT 160 S '13 1~ , NL llld 1 .tD IJ 17IO G~J Revlon 1.14-I m dJ7 ... AmE•P 1 I 1010 4"' 1 C,.,._ llO I IJO 22~. •. FlclCll 2 • 11 2l," • TT pf IC 4 U 04.J l'O NL T 1 J2 1 Uf zs--Reallem 60 1 It l6Y> AFemll "° ) llS 7'• ~ Cllryllr •7• s-"' Floole "° s ll ,. .. ;• ITT OIO s IO .. ~ " NVF . is. 10 1JO )\It-\\ Rnnrd I OI • •GnCp 1 1 •1 ".. • CllfYl#t 22 , ..... 'F llmwy liS 1 .~ lnlT'r pf 2 2S J ~ • .__ N•llKll I.IS 1 1• 16~" Rey11l11 2 40 1 AGn lllf J 2> ' ~ Cllru pf •7 S.,._ ~ Flmwl pf 1 ,._ , ' llllNnh ?. n I ~ Jl\lt-J NllloCB llf>.jO 110 Jiii> + Yt Rtylll pf'J IS AGl8d :-=: ~~ ~J'." :~ CllvrCll .14 10 ''° JIYt. ··· ~~G.:" /:' S :~ 0 •::; , ; :n:rpc• : ::: ~ xn n""-::: Nal<0 l ii 11' --. R•Ylll ri 10 . !~~\. n I ... ~ ') Clllllefl 2.n 1 • ,....... Finl Fed Jll Ill d16'..-•• l~t::'lw I... • 11 1J .... Nepeo .J:J II ta 10 -Ill ReyMI 2.40 • AH!f l , l2 l lfl II''> ,._ ClnGE 2,10 1 • U~ Ill F ltHlll Oe IJ 1101 10~ 'l'I loweEI 1· .. t U l2 \\ NePIFd 111 1 J1 1--" RltllC·O 1 JO 14 .~. ;·tO 10 '3I 1'1~ ,, ClllMll n 14 SI ,....,__ 1111 F!Allnn1 n s .a H ,,. lowllG 1·20 > If 16-1,. Nerco .... n 1""1-1111 Rt llVO I.fl ' AHO> 1Ol17 ano ,. •• , .. , ClllU'P Is. 1 JOtS 1•-1 FKll•t IOlO ''° .• ... Iowa PS 2 40 • ,. 11'1. v. H• ..... I.SO s 7t ".._. \\ R .. QtlT I.to s AMI p .0 I• ,.. •I 1 ClllSvc 1.60 IS 47" '1~11> FstClllc 1 20 10 111 1' >\ l-•Rt I 1t t St 20~ ... NelC.. 1 S ti 22.. • . RloGra 11 I 1 AmMolr ... l~> '• Cllylrw I.to 7 IOllo 14-'Iii F18TX t 1 06 • •5 l4'• i., lpeoC 20 11 S. s v, HCM pl 1.50 . l 411 · ··· RIOGr pf IO · ANelA Ju 1 SA 41°' I'• Cllyl #1 111 ~n FIClly 10 21 S 1'> Irv Be J 04 s 24 49 11> NC11VS1 .tO t f 1~ Yt RlleA s .. 11 ASLP'le 10 U U '-Cllyl11 pf 2 · I •Yt-tllo FllBn 1 I 10 • 211 21 '• 1e:Cp lOe 11 llS d'16 1 NalOl9' 1.10 I UI Ull>-" ROllsllw 1.40 t •Sii • :eo • ,. n~ .. Cl••l<E' 120 • 2• nv.-" FllnB<P, °" , 113 -~ .,. -J-J -NelE~ 1.lll 1 " "'-• Ill ROl>IM\ t i '° 4 Amfto 2 10 ' 127 30 ... '• Cl•rkO l 20 "' »Yt-v. FIMIH 24 IS 421 20'1• '• WT. I .. 10 ~ 2H .. "' H•IFG 2.«I s JO ...._. 14 ROiiins ... ' ASlerll M t 170 ,.. •• ClvCll 1.111 I 2t ~ ~ FstNBo 2.SO S 1• 41 1 rnesP' 1:.0 17 17 ~ 1111 NFG pf 2.30 .. 1 20\\ .•... RocllG 1.S211 ) Am~ll .IO • II u •,, . Ctevl!I 2 OI t 1ff 141'. . . FNSIBn 2 IOI> 4 1' 2J''t-1.. Rvr t 40 I It 11 _ II) NatOn> IA I US a. -,_ RocllTI 1 ... 7 ASI• pl S.SI J J7'111 v. ClvEI pf 1 «> tSO " .•.. F1tP• 431 41, emaw 12 • .. '""· NIHonl . . 74 J" .... Roellwl 1 . .S. ' ATT S 40 I JI.. s.q. ''> CtvEI pf 1.S. · · r20 _...._. 1111 FstPe wt IS \lo . -.>Ill" I.Ole 47 1011>-V. NMdCr t .... t 122 12--llWo ROflmH 2.IO t ATT pl 4 n H 'I> .,., Cl•v• to • 2• 1~ v. FIPeMt 243 '~ ..._ ettPlll 1.52 s " 141/t-'I• NMOE111 .• \j 70t 1Mlo--l'A ROhrln 41 ATTpl r. .... 12d1't-ll• i,,CIOtOI .. 1 '" ll~l'tF1unR1 110 .. 1s1,-. -••C pl 11 r20 t.3\o t NMlneS .141$) ... IMO-I'!. Rollrpf J.U .. AT~ pl J.14 u lO'-. '• c1 ... 11P 7• , 11 ll .. -FtV•B~ .SS s ,. , ... _ .. ••Cpl 2.11 1 in .. \It NPtell 1.as. • ISi J:J\lt-'lit Rolllnt •. S.10 Awelr I °' • .. 11"'-'" Cl11ell pl I ' J 10\lt-"" FIWlsc 2 4 17 21 •• ew•I( 2 2• 1 , .. 33 ..... "' Nlfflll '13'.S d21-1 RotmCp lJ AWel pl 1 43 1SOO 1''• • ''• Coatllm · tt 1llt-1111 F\Klll> 2 • J22 JI 0,. wltr 11 t •~-V. NISvln I.JI 1 SI a.lit ..... ROll10ll ,... 10 • AW• SPI I u ISOO • •1. Coa1i.1 -.. IJ7J n -4 F tll"dl ,to ' 21S ""'-... hnMe11 1., 10 "'d17•1t .,.. NSt.. l,:IA 11 l7 IS*-\\ R-t "' Arneron 1 .O S 4 21 t 1,. Cttl pl 1.&2 J Ullifo • 'Iii P'l""5c M 1' f7 U~ ~ llMn pf s f11 1 3'~ 14t H•UH J 11 t.:1 UW.-... Rorer '2 10 AmetD .O I U 21"l , ... C«eBll 1' t 242 10\lo, ••. · Fl .. 1E11 .U 21' 161 I~ V. J IV\Jn 1 .• 1.i 1Jt1 ;aov... 'It NelTN 6 11 • ._ .•... It-en .0. IO •-1-1 u JS ,.. • \I CouCI , J:2 •.. 1 32~ ..,, F....._ l.2A 1 14 ~-"' JollrlEF l) "' ,,.,.._,,,.. N•tom I.JO 111111 .,_.,"" R-... Pit ... Am1K I .. • S2 1121"0 .. ClclWllt. I 17 " ~ ""' Fteallf' ., 21 " --14 JClflnC11 I JO • 21 1'I " ~Pin 1.201~ •ts jO -'·CO .. Nl n 2' tu -lloFleal pfl.61 . 1 ,__,.J-Cpf .2 2017 ..... ... Amrep s 1 I~ '"' Colec;o • 101 ..,.,_ .... Fle•I pf 1.7S 11 ~--JoftLftA tO 22 2t ..... .,,. AmSlll nl ... s 31 20'"' . Col9Pel I 12 1 7'fl ·--~ FlglltSI .. Jt 4oll .. -Yt Of' ... • 1 1 I SI~-""' Amsl•• ' .0 J 147 2l~I Coll All< .71 • S1 10\4-\.') Fl•EC •. 10 n 14 n -114l .,.C'. M • ,., ••II> ..... Amil pf .. 1 S''t • '" ColllnF JJ 1 60 l~llN FtePL l.oot I c21t ~ 14 ovMI t I AO 10 If' ,...._. '-Amtted 2 .. • t? ...... '. Col..... 1 411 u "' 17-1 Fl•Pw ,,.. • 1'5 I-.... -IC.-« - AMIOQ 1 10 • 17 'It COii ind J to 11 514 MV.--l"leStl I .10 6 f.4 tt\lt-... ICOT .211 2$ It ...... AllCllor 1.Jt ' 11 It'._ ''> ColGet J 70 6 11t JJ~l\lt FIYOr 111 IJ IM -1111 ICLM I as »'-1~ AllCl•y I 20 • » u .. CoklPct AO 1 " ~ .. Fl-wt • • 2 _," I( man ... 10 .... ,,_..._ 14 Anoellc fl II 211 II~ •> CSO pl lllS.1S . L4'° '11.'> ••• • • FooteC 1 1 16 CIMio-I\ KAlttAI 1.40 f 2M 20V>--\\ AllMu• I OI • Jn 14'• , •• Con1bln l.tO • " ~\It FonlM 1.10 .• 79t II\\>-.. ICaltG• IA 1 ,, ~ .... Alll•I•. .. IJ 10? ...... I CmllEll 1 '°IO llS ,._, .. F«MIC 2.24 • 4 1714-" KaltrSI I IS C211.-VI AlllMy '°' 6 S1 "-'• C-s .a 11 .... 11\\-114 FMIC pf LIO .. 4 ~ + ~ t<MWMI •• 1 D I~ 1111 Apecll s 10.3 ~ 24.. 2 (°"""I 14 501 ~Ulo FIONt I.JI . . 2S Ni····· ~ 1 11 GI ?~ ... AP<llP un 1 ll 25' > I CmwE UO 7 ~ ~ 14 Ft-I ,.11 2M II • • · · • ICCl'l'PL 2 11 S IS l2 -.... AOOIMQ t JO II~ ~ CwE pl hG I 11*-14 ,ostwll .fll IO U2 11 -I~ KCll'L plJ 111 &IOO 2S . Art•I• I ,. • 4'IO JS•.. l\'t CwE pf 1 '° 1 IW. . • . . "-JO tu I --a:&L pf4:n : . tJO. .., • 1\lt Arce! pf 2 4 .. ,, I" CwE pf 1 J 1)14-14 F-Ptl 2' 145 •11o-1-. Ill I AO t 11 j9 •• Areal Pl 2 It .,. »1• 1'-ewe pt a.a 1100 S314... Fo.StP ... s 2 'I -.,. 1 2'.04 s 111 1~ 1"' ArcllD s 1411 t S11 dlt' ,_. '• CwE pf 1.J7 4 17 ....• Foatwo 1.40 1J 62 SI'-'Ii K411Nb I .. 10 17 ~ -Yt ArllPS , 1t • ,.. 17~ ·~ C•E pf 1.40 rllO " _,..,, FrptMc ,60 u 1052 as -1\i l(.,.,.Ll 2.io s ,. •• -VI Art<81I 60 S 20 10 >4 Con1ES IM 6 JJ u -\\ Friot"' .A0 10 12t 16-'Ii ICaPL p12.l? •• I 16\\ ...•. Ar11LG 1tO11 SI ll"• ... C.-nES Oft.ti.. tJO Ill • 1f9 FrwM 2.40 11 q ~ \It Katyl11 l 114 11.,._ Vt Arlnllty • fl I'~ Com..C l.» t tJ ~I-,~ AO 4 lid ...._ Yt Kety pf I.. . J Jl'-11.'> AnnAde olO '"-CoP•l't .411 It .. 71'-VI FllOll pf 1.25 . . 52 ,.._,. .. l(ellflr .U I J04 Armco 1 IO I 131 J2' • '• COfnPlf 011112 JOI It -.. -<r-o -K.ellt • )I) t 43 Armc pf 2.10 .• 10 ~ .. Con1P5< ' , .. ""' .. GAF ,.,,.. IU '~ \4 Kenooo 1.411 • 211) Armr pl • 1S t2to Jt Cptv111 • lJ Sil 1714-1"' GAF pf 1.20 . . J 17\/t-Yt l<ellwcf .fl 12 1t Arm Ru 1 40 4 2J JS'• COllA!lf 7S I Jt 1.-.-l'o GAT)t 2.40 7 Ill »-'-IC.tMI 10 10 116 ArmWl11 1 10 1 SI 11 '• c-MI t .10 S • nv. . GAT pl J.JO .. 2 4S -114 Kt""'I 10 1J 231 ArowE • •• IS JS UI~ I"" ConnGn 1.16 I " .. -" GCA. " ISS ·\lo-1\lo t(yUlll 2.12 • n Anra 20 ,.7 ?!. 1,?:. '~ CMNG 1.• s , 1411> ..... GOV 10 117 ll'llt.. • . errGI• ... 1 ti Arvin I 12 n , ' " Conoco ?.AO 10 1"9 n~t~ GEICO n A I " M~. • . errM 2 11 a Arvin pl 2 l 14 'It COllrec .• IS aSI ~-lit GEO 11 . 16 11 110 411 -1\\ •YFda .20ll t 11 AMICO 1.40. 12 32• 3'V.-1~ Cot1Ed J ... • ,,. '9\i't-1111 GF Eqp .10. I 17 S'-\\ tYln t .fl II 20 A11>1011 2.00" .. s ,...._ '''•cone pt s. 2 uv. ..... GatHou . .o 11 n »l'i-111> klO. t s S1 ~::::g ~; ~ 1& ~ ~ COllF• '·'° t 1211 ~Yt-.... GeftMll 1.52 U 4J6 ~-Ill l<lmbCI J.to 7 12 AtlllOG 1ao 1 •S ,..... '" COllF pf 4.to.. • u -2 Gepttr ... 7 ... 17111-"' ICnglllRd .IO II • AtlllO pf i 1s •S '111t .,, CntFn I.SJ ll Y.I Jt\4-'It G•111M 1.AO U .,. u -Yt Kooer n .JO«> 14 AM•d . ' 22 •' ,,.. Cn•NG J.S2 1 74 ... _ .... GHSVC 1.2' I ., '°"· .... Kolm• I .:n 20 u Al!llO~ 1 SO 6 I ?l'I> Vt OlltPw J.» S 111 II . • Gee"'9 .a 1' 212 » --314 ICOPOrt 1,40 14 l(lt AtC 11 2 u s .. 11v. + '"' 11Pw pl4.16 r20 ?~ Gel<O 1.12 S 01 11\\-21' ICGPt>r Pi iO .. 10 Allillth 2 20 I IU7 .. 11/t nPw llf•.SO uoo ,. GemCe .. " as-" Kroelllr . ~ All RRc'c!:pl J,·IOIS uoo, d,JO,.'L J~ "~ ~~·~ ' l~ ~"'; 1i1'1 &!:::Ou~ iii I~ !;llt=I~ ~~":;rm' '.~ J 11• All t · ~ ;" Pw pf3,91 7 tµt, • Vt Gnlletfl • S 4 ,,...._ \Ii ICYotOC , .. A1te1 P S 14 1J l'I ::. Pw pt? 2l 12 u -"• GClnm .111 11 11 ~ \4 Kyaor Ava•I • 20 • "~ .. Pw 1112 ., • UV.-,,_ GOA\I" u " 10\'a' AvWl t 44 JO 1t.J 2t ,.._ 'Ill 1Alr lff • V. Gnl>Yll n t ,_ --V. FE A•coCp I 20 S 121 1~ "1 teop 711 . 4 H ·~ 'A "-t1Et ~.JO I UM St~ '6 Avery IO 10 ,.. 2l'• "' 11~A 2 .a s .,. ,.~ .... Avnet lb., "' •1'"' II ..... '" lS1 . ~ Gii~ J.10 1 200 1114~ ~ Avon J • JOt J7' t "• 11Grp 1 to S GG"' .Ao. 11• Jt 0 1'. , Afdl11 14 41 7'''t '•C:.~1~1 pf 1 J 6 ~ ~ ii, G11-.«I .. t 11W.-"' -_. -COlllTel 1 u I 1'1 1'-'It g~:.~ 1·~ ': ~ ~I :!i~~gll 40 S !~ ,i~ ., CllOele I 1 1141 ..... '-G-2At. 7S 1tm •V.-1\'t Bllrlnll to 14 411 f2V. ,_; ~~ldPI noo I 11, fiy,' ::; G-pf J.1S . l JO ••••• 841-,. 12 • 20 .. """'"" ' • I GMM pf s . . J 4014--8aldwU 1 to I II 441,. ,, Cook Un Olr IS 101 SI'>-~. GHC 1 CM It I It _ l't BldU pl 1 I» 1 .. <;oo~ I 24 IO 9't ..... ~ Gii,..,, I IJ .. """"-,_ 8411CP 1 ·eo 1 ... JI"' 0.<o Coop! pf 1.«I · · 2t SI -~ GPU 16 411 --\It 8allyMI .10 llUJ 11"' 11 ,C-~~ : ! 1f. 1::;::..., GeftR• 17• t 122 B•HGE ?.ti t S1 ll''t' 1' 0119Wd I 60 I o10 .OV.-?V. GGll~, I . g el B 4 to • 110 JlV, re 'S2 t SO -"' 11__.A ' 11 el 1.20 I lO 2711, tlll I • 1I lJ I~ ,,.. GnS ....... IJ ~ IO IO J02 ?:Pl>-nG 2 J:11J m S1\li ~ GTE l.M • BAllOP s .IO 4 l1 2011> rBlk I 1' II ff ll-.. GTE ,t 2.11 .. BllNY J S JO 31" • IH 1 " 12 30>4 y, GTE pf 1,• .. BkolVe 1 It t 12 U \'t xBrd Sl 1I IJO GTFI pf 1.U .. &nkAm u2 • en n •-. ••lo llllARI n2.20 10 11 21' • rene 1 tob I BnkTr t I.IS 4 461 JI "Y."I ' .S BllTr pl ?.JO .. 6 I~ dlF '° • Ba11ner 16 10 '1 IJ 1'9dF pfi 7S 8ardCR .• u '" 2• non · 6 BemGp 1 I lS 20'• rocllN 1 40 7 Bernet t tt I •s ll'1• r<kN p12 11 Be~Wr 40 1l ltt 11~ rml( 1 .. 1 ::sc•~ U• :! !~ Jv. 1 rwnCk • • BaxTrv .1' 1• >77 S4 1\i k yFln 11 Jt ·~ 'It Bey SIG 1 .n 1 I 20'4 ''> h 'l'llk 1 • I 11 '"' :::1~"1 1 ~ ~ ~ ~r: · ~ I: 1:: 11 ,j m. • "" ,,0 I II tS • , • 111 OP I .60 1 lt.J llM J6tl I tt How ... • ' 1"4 t4 ' JO Cf O 1.IO .. SI el• 1.tO • ,., II J ... •pf•04 . ,. c, t t m .....,pf4 l0 I a-fjlf4 SO •. dO leNf pl 2 so 1100 • "' -~ m ..MIJ JJ ~·"' ~~~ .._,~ Cut your tax bill now fThas L' rile f1rst o/ o four-port stnts on how 11<>u can &ave U1'Wk1' tM ntw la.z law) Millions. in occupations ranging from sales lo physicians to lawyers, can shirt portions of their in· come rrom 1981 to 1982. Start arranging to do so now and you will be able t-0 cul your federal Income taxes s ubstantially. Uncountable numbers in middle und high-incom e brackets will be in positions to receive unearned as well as earned income In coming months. Delay tak· ing as much un-~ earned income as you can until 1982 and you '# ,. will be taxed on _ that type of in· ~f""l:..:n ....... ~~--~~~~~~-~f ~: ~~r! ;:;~ SYLVIA PORTIR 20 percent < ths!'l includes much more than long·term capital gains. of course). Uncountable numbers of taxpayers also de liberately underpay their income taxes for a wide variety or reasons and then pay the 12 percent penal· ty imposed for underpayment. Think seriously about continuing to do this. Your penalty could rise to a rate in the range of 20 percent or more. Most of the well-publicized changes in the 1981 tax law applying to you, as an individual taxpayer, become effective in years after J981. For example, the widely hailed ·•indexing'' of tax brackets to reflect the rate of inflation won't go into effect until 1985. But there are significant changes that are retroactive to 1981 or become effective this year 11 The first rate reduction stage of the '81 tax law goes into effect for 1981. When you file your 1981 tax return next spr ing, you will be given a credit of l 25 percent of the tax calculated under the 1980 rates. If you must use the tax tables to determine your 1981 tax, the likelihood is that the lRS will have pre· pared new tax tables that will reflect the 1 25 percent credit {$1.25 for each SlOO of tax) If you must use the tax rate schedules to figure your tax. you probably will have to make the com- putation yourself Under the tax law. you get only a 11/• percent re· duction in 1981 but a further 8~ percent reduction sn 1982. another 9 percent reduction in 1983 , and still another 4 percent after 1983 Now. the switch or income comes into focus as top-notch tax strategy, for by the shift into 1982, you also will get that 83/4 percent cut The '81 tax reduction IS minimal. For instance. if your tax for 1980 was $1,000, and you have the same taxable income for 1981. you will pay only $12.50 less than for 1980. 2J Next year, all income whether earned or un· earned will not be taxed at more than a 50 percent rate. That means long term capital gains. no matter how large in amount, will be taxed at no more than 2Q percent (50 percent of the 40 percent of long-term capital gains subject to tax) ln addition. long-ter!"l capital gains from sales made after June 9. 1981, will go under the 20 percent celling rate. 3) No matter what your age, if you sell your house for profit, you can defer tax on the profit if you buy another principal residence within an 18-month period before or after the sale, at a price at leas t equal to your selling price. This period has been ex· tended from 18 months lo two years for residences sold after July 20. 1981. 4> If you a re 55 years old or older, you. as an in· dividual. have been able to exclude $100.000 of any gain on your residence, whether you bought a new home or not. The exclusion limit has now been raised to $125.000 for sales m ade after July 20, 1981. 5) As a qualified oil royally owner, you were al- lowed a credit of up to $1,000 against the windfall profit tax during 1980. This has been boOsted lo S2,500 for 1981. 6) Between Oct. 1. 1981 and Sept. 30, 1982, you will be able to buy a one-year lax·exempt savings certificate from a bank or other qualified institution at a rate of 70 percent of the one-year U.S. Treasury bill rate. But y6u can exclude a lifetime total of only Sl.000 of exempt interest earned -or S2.000 for a joint return Thus, If U.S. Treasury bill rates were to remain at about 14.5 per cent, this would allow you to invest a maximum of S20.000, if married. at a 10 percent tax- exempt yield for one year C70 percent of the current T bill rate of about 15 percent) rTuesday IRAs and KeogtuJ Gold metals quotations By The ~sod•t.ed Press Selected world gold prices today: London: morning fixing $4.28.50, off $1.00. London: afternoon fixing '422.00, off $7.50. Parla: afternoon llxlng $473.97 , up SO 16. Frankfurt: $430.02, off $1.52. Zarteh: late fixlng $424.00 up $4..00, $427.00 asked. Hudy & Harman: (only dally quote) "22.00, ofr $7 .SO. Entelllard: <only dally quot.el $422.00. off $7.50 . En1elb1.rd: Conly dally quote> fabricated $443.10, off $7.88. Coldcoim NEW YORK CAP> -Prices late Friday of sold coin•, compared with Thursday's price. ICJ'qerrud, l troy o&.. $4.5.5.00. up $3.» . Ma.Pie leaf, l troy 01., SC54.00, up $3.2$. Me.Seu so peso, 1.2 troy 01 .. $550.00. up $5.00. AutrlH 100 crown, .8802 lt'Oy 01., '430.00, up $3.00. Source: Deak-Perera Met.ah NEW YORK CAP> -Spot nonferrou• metal price.a to· day: Copper 86~·90 cent.I a pound, U.S. desUnatlona. Lead 4f centa a pound. Diie 41\4 centa 1 pound, dellnr-ed. na '1.8017 Met.alt Weea composite lb. A.hlmln• TS-.IO ce.nU I pound, N.Y. lleftVJ $440.00 per fiuk . ......... $411.00 lroJ OL, N Y. 1~111,s~a ... 111 ... a .. ~a ..... s ... !9'~• ......... ~ ..... ,,...~,,... ... 1119 ... ,~,,.. .... ...,~..., .... Cl'!""""""'~-------· ...... ---.v:-· ............ ------··--............. ----~--:_...~--~~~~--.--~~~~- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. August 24 , 1981 H /F C$ FOR THE RECORD Bones found after 7 Births IOUTH CIOAIT MIDICAL CIMTI• JWy» years; murder charged WHEN TO SHOOT A private citizen prac- tices when to shoot at threatening figures on screen in t raining session in Seattle. Sep- temb€r & Associates Inc. trains police and private citizens who own h andguns when to ............. s hoot "'If we allow people to bear arms. then why not require them to take :-.omc kind of performance tourse" s:.11d :J ~pokc-;man fo r th<.• firm Good ol' down lwme spot . Mr -Mn Cr•lt loftclers. S... Ju.., (apjttt-. llOY ,..,11 Mr and M" O.rto'Y A Grt,,.s. L~ .... IM<ll. IM>Y Mr -Mn -ion S Huni.r, 1r1tl.,.,91rt , . .,. Mt •I'll MO Tl"' .... 1111-, S... Clemenw. 9111 , .. , ,, Mr •t1d Mr> Brue• G Zlm ""''"*'· i.._... -h, 9lrl A ...... 4 Mr end Mrt l ••ren<• J Culbertson, $an Juan C•Plltreno, 9lrl A"""'' Mr -Mn Jon R Brockmefl, La9una lleech, 9lrt Mr •nil Mn l(.,,...th P Cocllran, Sovlh~,bOy A--1 Mr •nllM" J ..... s o cauMy, 111. L"9Uf'la lloM<ll, t lrl •UTIRN MIDICAL CENTI" J .. y JI Mr and -· Steplwn $"'1th, C061A Mew 9lr1 , .. , . Mr and Mn Doo'll Mille r, L•llUNI s .. ch,bOy Mr .,,., Mt> Rlclt.,d F•IUr, Irvine, girt Joly J1 Mt -Mn. MICN•I Htnm .... HunllnQlon &eacn, 9irl A ..... 1 Mr and Mt>-Mara Sc:ltult , Irvine. boy " ....... , Mt encl Mt\ J im FarooquH, Irvine, o.lrt .......,, Mr •nd Mn Rollert Kent. lrvl"" bO'( Mr end Mr~ Gollin, Irvine, girl A ....... Mr •nil Mn. Wllllem BuHlete. Huntington Beech, 9lrt A1191111 " M r ano Mr> Gr~'-'• Foun· lain Valley, 9lrt. ' A ....... U Mr end Mr> Weyne 8 Fr•nclMn, HunllnQlon &each, boy A ...... _. .. _ -- Mr -Mn Mir 8 All, lrvl"", l>Oy Mr and Mn Merrill Grimm, San Cle,,_i.. Doy Out-of-way Florida meetin ' place packs in crowds ·--------- CARO SOUND. !''la (AP> Maybe it's the crab cakes. or the conch fritters Maybe it's the counlr) music and dancing. Or m aybe it's the down home friendlv "rednecks " who make I he out of-the-way restaurant a popultir meetin~ place typical nautical trimmings Outside, under a thatched roof, 1s a thick. bouncy wooden floor for danci ng and seating for about 250 . The faciltlit'S are ade quate during the wee k. when Alabam a Jack's c loses at 7 p.m heavy on fl~h d1:.hes. s hnmp. eonc h. crah. hamburgers and sandwichc~ No hare'I hquor 1~ available or perm1tll'd on thl' premises. hut thert··~ plt·nty of cold beer, soda and wine ··You'll find lonely singles and e ntire families . wealthy y achts men and ragged bikers. farm<'rs and executives 1f you can find Alabama Jac k 's . Going south on V .S . l toward the Florida Keys. you have to h;rng a ll'ft on Card Sound Road Just out of f''lorida City, and you ('an't miss it It's about the only thing you·11 rind along the next 29 miles of two-lane road. Rut what happens ever } weekend staggers the 1magina lion The place S\l.e ll s with crowds numbering up to 600. in· c I ud1ng plenty o f c hildre n brought by pare nts The sounds Ms Prt-i.l1 s -.1dek1c k 1s a bur- ly ma n from Dl•lro1l known only a s '"Captain Rick ·· He's friend I~ . love~ to f1 ... h but IS the key f actor sn tht• conversion of Alabama Jat·k ... from a rowdy hangout inlo a famil~ place Warning Don't gel out of line \\hen he's around 'It's what Florida used to be ' Alabama Jack " opened back in the lalt• '-10s and has always had a good dl•al of famt-good a nd bad over the years. ll passed through three or four own ers until Ms Presti took it over nC'arly t"'o years ago ··1 come here just about rvery S unday ... said Thelma Sykes. who own~ a cosm etics manufac turing company in Miami "I work \.ery hard. and this is the only plaCl' you can go to un wind .. of prople having a good time and the noise of dancers "c logging .. to li ve country music carries for miles. Thal happened when she c~e to South Flo rida "looking for something different" and want· ing to J(et away from Pittsburgh, "here she ownl'd and operated a construction company. Thi ~ roadside ··m eeting plaCl' ... a Florida tradition for year s. has gain ed renewed populurity the last 20 months or so Much of the credit goes to proprietor Rose Presti. who moved here from Pittsburgh. but looks as if she j us t stepped off a Hollywood movie set. "I've been coming here for four years." said George Miller. a 49-year-old truck s alesman Crom Miami "It's got good food. good entertainment and every one gets to have a good t ime without any hassle." ··1 bought 1l the sam e day I saw 1t." sht• recalled. "but it's hard work." The place 1sn·t fancy and the o nly dress code 1s to "be com fortah le ·· Ins ide there's a lunrh<.'<m counte r. half a dozen tables. ceiling fans and som e ··1 com e here because it re- minds me of what Florida used to be." said Art Manon. a Ken dall-area real est ate broker "It's one of the few places we call 'down home · " She d oe~ all the cooking herself. whi c h s h e said she learned from her Italian mother Rick. howt•\ er, said he 's ready to re\"l'al ht•r ··secret in g re- dient ·· While most ··regulars " cite the friendly atmosphere at Alabama Jack's, they also brag about the tood The menu 1s '"It's tht• ~arllc . · he laughed ··1 S\l.Car. 1f Wl' sold breakfast cereal. ~hl''cl pul garlic on it.·· DEATH NOTICES "1<'('ARTHV l'cmcl<'q . M1nneso1a :\1 \HY \1AY MrCA RTllY. Sen1('<'!1 undl•r lhl' d1n.'t'liun rM1drnt of l'•hla :\lesa. C;? of Harbor La" n :\lount Ohve Pac;S('(f ·•".!\ on .\ugu.,l 22 :\l nrtu.in or co.,ta :\l<-!>a 19111 "h" ha., been d rt-~tdl'nl 5-10 555-1 of C'o.,ta ~l"•a. \a •;inrc· 1959 lli\:"l{'OCK ancl a mt•mber o f St 1.17'/DA L llANCOCK . age . Joarh1m ., C.1lh•ihr ('burrh :19. a rr:.1dent of llunllnglon She '" ~un l\'td h v hc•r Bearh. Ca l'a!!~cd away on ct;.iughll'I'" f'l'J.! Sparr.ow of Friduy. Aui.:usl 21. 1981 _al (.'osta .l'Sil, t'a and Dorothy lluntini;lon lntercommunit~· Brown of lkmC'l. Ca . 13 llosp1lal following a lengthy ,grandrhilclrC'n and 8 great illness Mrs llancork was a grandrhtldrcn Memorial bowl_ini.: enthusiast and had :\las!\ will be on Mondav, rercwl.'d man~ awar~s for August 2'1. 1981 at !I OOA:\1 at her -.kills Beloved wife of S1 J11arh1m ·s Catholic Thom.1'i E H anc~ck . Church "1th final intermeot belnH'<l mother of Tra\'IS E .,erv1ce., btoing held in the Il a nroc~ or llunt1n1n.on famih plot in Detroil Lakes Reach. <.a . ali.o , sun•1v10g · an• her mother f ranees J Weigel. brother Phillip B r Ml:CottMIO< MORTUARIES" Weigel and her mother-in LaQuna Beac h 494 9415 Laguna Hill<., 7(i8 0933 San J.Jan Cap151• arw 495 1770 H4Rlotl LAW~MT. OLIVE Mortuary • Cemetery Crema1ory lb25 Gisler A11e Co!>la M f•<.,i 540 555.i rlHCl HOTHEU llU HOADWAY MOaTUAIY 110 Broadway Cosla Mesa 642·9 150 IALTl IHGllOM SMfTH J TUTHILL WISTCLI~ CH.A'IL 427 E 17th St Cos1a Mesa R46·937 I la" l nt•z E ll anrock Friends mav eull al Pierce Brothers Smith:.' Mortuary from 12·00 noon to 9.00PM on Tuesday. August 25. 1981 Graveside ~{'rv1ces will be conducted on Wednesday. August 26. 1981 al 2:00PM at Good Shepherd Cemetery with Rev Albert Jansen. pastor of the First United Methodist Church of Hunt- ington Beach. ofhclating. P1ercl' Brothers Smiths' Mortuary directors 536-6539 BAEHR MARY E. BAEHR. rs· !dent of Costa Mesa. CA. Passed nway on August 22. 1981. She ii; survived by her husband Robert F Baehr of Costa Me s a . Ca 3 daughters. Anne E. Evans of Yorba Lmda. Ca.. Peggey M Baehr of Costa Mesa. Ca . Kathleen M Scanlan of Irvine. Ca . 2 slst era Elizabeth Oohr and Geraldine Chanlleger both or Ohio, and 3 grandchildren. Memorial Mass of Cl\rlstlan PUIUC NOTICE l'UlllC NOTICE "ICTITIOUI •UllNUS l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME ITATllMENT NAME STATEMENT Th• fOllOWll\9 person• ... doln9 n •• foUowlnv """°" I• dolr19 b• .. I b, .. ,,,..... n ..... "THE ACCOUNTAllY, , .. , SPLICI NG SPECIA LISTS 8 ~-I lne CA '771' C A TV , UOO Adam> A...,,,.,., •SIC, •r • rv · C°'I• MHa CA '1•2' MA"Y EMILY WOOOWARO, *1 OANA ROBEllT CAROINAL IJOO B•rl<wocid. Irvine, CA '2114 ' Thi• buMneu •• condv<tt<I l>Y •n ,,,. Ad•m• Awnue, Colt•-... CA '7•2'. d lvlduel Thi• b<N,,..., I• Condv<ted l>Y an ,,._ -y E Wooctward dlvldual Thi> •IAl-I w•• llllCI wllh the 0.... R Cerdlnel Count Cler!lofOr-CountyonJuly Th" •w•-• w•• llllCI will• ttw t• 1,/i county Cler~ o• 0<•"90 County on ' ,., ... , Au9 12 1 .. 1 Pul>U"*' 0r•"9t Cout Dally Pllo1, Fl ... 1> AU1j 17 ,. JI Sept 1 "" l6•M• Pub0•"9d Oranve co ... O•llY Pllo1, ' ' ' ' AU11 17, 14, )1. Sept. 7. 1 .. 1 3',._.I l'UlllC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •UllNESS NAME STATEMENT T ... IOl-1"9 !MrtOn Is doi"9 butl ,... .... . HERITAGE INVESTMENTS, 1"1 l allff 54.-..t, CO.ta -w. CA '26~ OAVIO WALTER MYHRE, UIS Waawlnv Circle. Colla Mu•, CA .,.,. Thi• bo.-IMU ll conducted l>'I' en tn d1¥1-1 0.1tld W Myhre Thll rtal-t wn fll.O with ltw County Clerk ol Or a noe County on AU9. 21, t•t PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •UllNEH NAMI STATEMENT The IOllOWl"9 i>erton I\ dol"9 bus!· nen•5 ELECTRO WEST, 237 Uni Sl,...t. c~t• MHa, CA m11 A"THUR CLARENCE PEACOCK J R . 111 1lr'd Street, Costa Mella, CA .,.,, Thi• buM~• Is conduct.cl by en ln- d lvl-1 Arthur Cl•.-.nc• "'8ecock Jr Thi\ llal-1 wn llled with IN Coul\IY Cieri< of Or•noe County on AU11 1J, '"' ,., ..... Publllfted Or-coest Dally Pilot, ,t...,. AU11. 24, JI, 5ep!. 7, I•. l"I ,7_1 Pul>li"*' 0..ange Coesl O•llY Pilot, Nil.IC NOTICE LIOAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1.,_t ,.,. tol_."9 I •IM of f ouncl. or • .,,.,, jlf'-ty ............ Id .,, llle Pol!Q 0.,_r1....,. <II Ille City of Co&tcl Maw for • period In .. ceu of ninety C'91 MYS Glrl't Slue SchwlM llcycle, Girl'• llue l 5c1d, SchwlM Bkycle, llo'(l G'"" 10 ~-Schwinn lllcycie, llo'(• Yell-Montgomery Ward tO Spd. e1cycl•, .. .,.. ""' Nllall• ' ""'· •lcycle, lo'I''• lrownll•..i 10 $t>cl. kl"''"" Continent•• llcytte, lloy's 81acll Royce Union Motocr•s II cycle, T-T.V. Seta, Ntto/My. NOTICf IS FUltTHEA GIVEN !Nt 11 no -_., -prows lllt __..,,.,of h IW-1Y within -en o.n to1i.wt11C .,,. pu1141eat1on of thll Ncltlce, lllt lllle -eta N II wit '" ,,.. flflllff, II o.r. lie -· or In ttw City 9f Colla Mtta, In _,, ca .. "" ,,....,,,, ............. •t "*4k _ ..... at a llMIMd-etolle-... OATllO; Allflll' 11, 1•1 II. I: HITH CHIEl'OI' POLICE ""*'..,. Or.,. Coast Dally ,.,..._ A....,.S., "'1 171Ht AU9 17, 14, ll, $etlt. 7. 1 .. 1 »•7 ... 1 l'UlllC NOTICE NOTICI TOCRllDITORI 0" eULK TRANlftlt:R C .. o . •1t14M1 U.C.C.I NoCke It llffel>y 01...., to cr«lltors of IN •lll'tln ,..,.,... ,,.,.,.,.ors tllat • ""'" trwttler II -• • lie made en per\on•I property llereln•fler desc:rl- T.,. name -bu>lneU adclr"t of ,,. 1-1ra11.,.rors an: MIT, Inc • !DO PoftcteroM, cone Meu,CAm». Tiie _, and w.lllHl addrftl Of IN Intended tr_ .. ,..., •re: Al•• N Malllovlch and l arlNlre M•tkovlcll, toot Me""phll Drive, COl'flUl OvlsU, Tit t .. IJ. Tll .. ,,. -1Y pet11M"' Mr.to,, detcrl-In teNrel as· hlrnll"'•· fl•· t11re1, -.u.,,.,_., IN....,_. 1-.. •nd leasehold '"'"'""•"'•nit, tooclWlll, tr-. Mdc~,.. .. <-'9 -•• IO<akel at l.SlO ~ der .... C.la ....... ,,. ......... -_. . ., ........ lrentleron .. Mtd i.uo ... " MING AUTO HAUTV <;INTIE•. Tltet Mid llulll lr•1"r It lflt~ .. k cen111mmet•• at tit• olflu .. STllHI!• HCM>W llRVICE, SW Corlllll Ai;enu• •• IOI, T•tHftl , C:.lllornla, "*• .,. or •ltw ~. It, ""· Tiit -lftll ....... 9f ,,_ ,.,_ DEATHS ELSEWHERE RIO OE JANE I RO IAP • film u1l'l'l'lnr Glauber Rorha. ·12. an exponent of Brazil':. 'C111cm:i ~nvo. du:d Salurda) SEATT LE 1 -\P 1 Fo rml'r l" S \ttorne' Stanle\ (,. Pitkin. 11. "ho broke. opl'll the Sl·all ll' poltrl' µJ)Off -,randal m lht' 1970~. dtl•d Thur..,da) \\' 0 I) I> I. ,\ ~ I> II I L L S 1.\ I' 1 I.eland Gillett!'. 68. onl' ul I h<' h11{gc•s1 r<'C'Ord prndlll'l'r' on thl· Wesl Coa!>I from 1945 65. died Thur~da) BE\'fo:Ht.Y lllLLS tAP 1 F.leanon• Whiting. 86, the "1do" of romposer Ri chard \\.'h111nj! and mother of )>Inger M.irgarel Wh1t1ng and .irtrc~~ B;irbara Wh1l ml! dwd Aug 18 WOODLAND lllLLS <AP > Nt>vada P e nn. 86. a \'l'lc•ran film and tell'v1s1on <·oslumcr who designed gown~ for Clam Bow. Ma<' Wel!l. Carole Lombard. Ann Sh~ridan and m<1ny others. diet.I Aug Ii Weekend classes at OCC Registration is under way for more than 100 weekend classes being offered by Orange Coast College 1n Costa Mesa. Classes in foreign language s. sci e n ce. physical education and other subjects will be of· fered beginning Sept. 11. Classes will be held Friday evenings a nd Saturday mornings. School officials said w eeke nd c lasses are popular with s tudents not interested in earning a degree. or those who take c la sses for pleasure For information, call 556-5772 '9HCE UOTHHS SMITHS' wo•T\IAlY 627 M•in St Hun11ng1on Beach 536-6539 Burial will be celebrated on Wednesday. August 26, 1881 at 8.00AM nt St. Joachim's -=::::.," CathOUd <..."hurch with lnttr• Tllo...._......-•• ~ IMl- mont at Holy Sepulcher -·• Cemetery. ln lieu of rtowers -.::;: :,~'=:4:!~"':.,:· donatJons may be made to HOWA•o H•NHAltO MA'l'll wllll ~ <llllftt IMY M fll• It l'fl!INIR HCIO'N .. .-v1c1, n• CM""' A ... , •101, Tan.,., CA ..... .,... Ille lat *"f for llllftt Clal-"9 .... ,ACINC YtlW MIMOllAL 'AH c.n.t.ry Mortufl'Y Cflapel-Oematory 3500 Pac1hc View Orivt I NewPorl Bueti 8<M·2700 • t Joachim'• Cathollc J.-.... w. •"~ •u . ..,.... Church. Pierce Brothen ~.=,1,~.., .. 111- Bell Broadway Mortuary ....... directors. TNt ==n..., ""''"" •t---------~-nc-e' c,.... • °' ..... C-'Y"' SELL Idle ltema wUll .. "-'·"" ,,._. Da\hr' Pllot Claaaifie4 ,_._0r.,.c-MOc11y ..,..., -~'ULa"'..1Mcm.;'J··;a.5l'Tll.r.n.------4 A"" ....... ..,._,, M. ltll m7.-i ... ., c .................... t•. ,..,, Wfllcll •• t .. ~ .. , .....,.. .. ,__.._ ....... '"'"~ ..... . .. ,.,.,,..._, ..... ........ ,,..,...,_MW ......... Tr...,tr•• ..... ,........ ... *Ml.._ ..._ .......... ~ .. .,.. ,..,.. ........ (If .. _ ....... , 0....My .. ... ............. di ..._..~ .. ...,...,,.....,.. ~or-. c-et hlty ... .._. "-·IA,""' ,,..... HONOLULU t AP) -No one ever e xpected a body That's why n o murder charges were filed But when the waves heaved a bat tered aluminum trunk lo the edge or Palmyra Lagoon in January, the last link in a chain or clues led to two murder tndictments. A couple walking on the beach arter anchoring their boat at the re- mote Pacific atoll s potted the trunk, its hd agape. Inside were bones, the burned and broken skeleton of Murr Graham Muff and her husband. Malcolm. a wealthy San Diego yachting couple. had be~n listed as missing almost seven years. Graham had been bid farewell in a "ceremony of aloha" near Diamond H e ad o n Nov. 10, 1974. The sea Other sailors told of bad feelings sim- mering between the couples. swallowed the vanda orchids dropped from the decks of a hatr dozen yachts in memory of Mac and Muff, along with any c lues to their disap· pearance ---- All that remained was their yacht, the 38-foot ketch Sea Wind. Shorn of its figurehead and nameplate, paint ed lavende r over its original gleam· ing blue. it was anc h o r ed at Honolulu's Coast Guard station The boat had been piloted t.000 miles from Palmyra to Honolulu by Stephanie Stearns and Buck Walker . who were tried the following year and convicted on federal charges ol stealing the yacht. · Miss Stearns served a year in prison and a year on probation, then moved to California. Walker, who had a criminal record to the 1950s. se rved 42 months in a fe deral penitentiary before escaping in Jul} 1979 . In February. a month arter the bones were found. a federal grand j ury 1n Honol ulu indicted Miss St earns and Walker for killing Eleanor Lavern "'Muff" Graham in "an attempt to perp.etrate a burglar}' or robbery ·· Miss Stearns, now 34 , surrendered in March and pleaded innocent April 'I guess _ they're going to declare . a truce. They 're bringing a cake.' 2. Her trial is to begin here Oct. 20. Walker was arrested recently in Yuma. Ariz .. and taken into federal cus tody Barring any problems in t r ansferring him to Hawaii. official~ s aid they hoped to combine hjs trial with that of Miss Stearns. The Grahams were deepwater s ailors, living a dream of an endless cruise. They already had circled the g lobe once, a voyage of six years, when they set out in June 1974 on a two-year journey across the Pacific Mac was 43. Muff 42. Sailors who m oored n ear the Grahams in Palmyra Lagoon. a stop ping-off s pot on the long trip between Hawaii and Fiji or Tahiti, told of in- vitations to dinner where they sipped c ha mpagne from crystal goblets . But the Grahams. who sought solitude. were not to be left alone. T hree days before the Gr ahams ar- rived, Walker and Miss Stearns - who were calling themselves Roy and Stephanie Allen -ran on the Palmyra reef. Neither the motor nor the radio in their leaky sailboat, the Iola, was working. The crews or two boats moored m the lagoon helped the "Allens" off the reef. They were a "hippie" cou· pie, those sailors later testified. The description stemmed from the lola's condJtion as much as Wallcer's wild appearance 37 years old, he was rn issing several front teeth and had long red hair, a bushy beard and tat· toos on his c hest and arms. With three dogs to feed and very little food, he started felling coconut trees with a chain saw and shooting fish with a gun. The seeds the couple brought in hopes of "living off the land" were eaten by crabs and birds. So they mooched. begge d and traded for food. In July and Augus t. the "Allens" and the Grahams were the only peo· pie continuously moored al Palmyra Other sailors who dropped anchor - Edwin Pollock or Honolulu, Thomas Wolfe of San Diego and others - later told of bad feelings simmering bet ween the couples. So did Curtis Shoemaker, a ham radio' operator in Hawaii who spoke with the Grahams every Monday and Wednesday night Shoemaker talked to Graham for the last time Aug. 28, 1974 ·1 remember Mac saying. 'I guess they're going to declare a truce They're bring ing over a cake tonight · That's the last l ever heard from him." Shoem ake r said Six weeks later. he reported the couple missing to the Coast Guard. Tn mttf-OClOt>~r 1974. the ~-H~"' soiled the Sea Wind to Oahu. put the boat into drydock. repainted the hull and moved on to the Ala Wai Boat Harbor in Wa1kik1. The distsnct1ve double-mas ted ketch was recognized immediately. The Coast Guard acted Oct. 28, ar- r esting Miss Stearns Walker was pic ked up 11 days later , his hair cropped and beard shorn. In their tri<1ls . the two testified that Mac and Muff Graham, with whom they had becom e "close fnends." in· vited them to dinner Aug. 28. Miss Steams said the Grahams had told them in advance to "make ours elves at home" and gone o ut fis hing The next day. according to Miss Stearns. the Grahams' overturned dinghy was found in the lagoon. The JUry rejected their story Each was convicted of stealing the yacht and S400 in the cabin a nd knowingly transporting stolen property But the Grahams' disappearance was a m ystery Seven yea rs later, a strolling cou· pie found a box filled with bones. The s kull. identified by dental records as Mrs Graham·s. had a small hole in the left temple The bones and the trunk wer~charred Mac Graham's r emains are still missing. CCC offers Hebre1v class Five rours t>s in beginning and intermediate con ver sational Hebrew will be offe red this fall by Coast lin e Co mmunity College. Beginning the week of Sept. to. the clasSf'S will be conducted al the Mesa Verde Learning Center . 2990 M('sa Verde Drive East. Costa Mesa. the Bayview Leaming Center. 2531 Orchard Drive. Santa Ana Heights and Westmins ter lligh School. 14325 Goldenwcst St . Westminster The class 1s tu1t1on free for th ose who h ave li ved in California a t least o ne year. Registration and scheduling in· formation can be obtained by calling Coastline. 963-0824. Air tow~r c lo"ed SALINAS CAP> The control lower at Sal inas Munic ipal Airport will be closed for 90 days while its air traffic controllers work at busier airports. the Federal Aviation Administration said Thursday kni ttm:i cua,pz.c\o Hy £br atrq,a~, 100~ lrunbswool v·rvzck and- 100" ~l ~ crcwna.ck ~tJ:z.ra fu\~ iaeh1onzd.in e ~ sala.ction or cxior;e . @)~o@~~OO 44 Fothlott ltland • NNPOr1 8coch • 7141644·5010 IOOJ ~ Blt>d. • Wntux>od Wfogr • 213/t<Je.#13 ' ------..... ~~ ..... --.......................... _.....__..,__.............._ _________ . --.. -. -- .. aa Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Monday, Augu1t 24, 1981 :: Alien conflict 5. Reagan rerun u By 11IOMAS D. ELIAS MJ'nCe TO ...,a&.IC .. .., .. , ... alL.SAU Of' "V•ot Oftt1 ........ ''· 1'91 City el ~Ml V .. t.v, 1-Sieler A•-......... Veli..,, C. tf10I 11141 ~. TO ALL INTl•H"TIO AOINCI H . O•OUPS ANO "lltiOHS: Oft ............ ~ "· 1"-1, fl• Clly el ~ ......... wlll , ....... U President Reagan and his attorney general. William Frenc h Smith, are surprised by the un- likely seeming coalition forming to fight their pro· posed plan to stem Illegal immigration, they have short memories. Ille U.S. o...rt.-ot H-lnt .... U•••" O•••lo,l'llelll lo ••l•H• \ .............. ~ Tiiie I ef tM _..,.. .. c.m-.., o.n•r AU .. tf7' IP\.. •aJI lo< Ille llftl. lllt-llKI· For precisely the same thing happened on a s maller scale in California when Reagan signed a similar luw almost 10 years ago Like his current proposal, the m easure Reagan signed in early 1972 called for fining 1 .. e mployers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants. Jt His intent, Reagan said at the time, was to •' "crack down on those employers who engage in hiring illega l aliens (and) help improve job OP· " portunilies for thousands of legitimate California residents who earnestly seek employment. . . " ~·: CALIFORNIA ~ FOCUS The measure signed by then-Gov Reagan never took force because of a lawsuit filed by a -,. group of fruit and vegetable growers which object· " ed on two grounds: They claimed that no state can pass laws regulating immigration because that's a federal function and they claimed that the law ., would impose an "unreasonable burden" on them to check all potential workers and make sure they i were entitled to work. r. Every major Latino group in California also , objected, claiming a ll Hispanics would suffer dis- crimination because e mployers would refuse to consider any of them rather than risk fines for hir· 1ng illegals. The law was thrown out by a stale Court of Ap· • peal, which ruled only on the growers' first objec· lion. The issue of whether employers can be forced lo-Check the stat.us oLall job ap_plicants was_!&· nored, so was the potential for spurring dis- c rimination. Both issues will be central in the new battle ov~r the Reagan-Smith "guest worker" plan, which would permit entry of 50.000 workers from Mexico annually on a two-year trial basis -to f work for subminimum wages while legalizing 1 the presence of undocumented aliens who have 'I been in the U.S. 10 years or more. Objections to the current plan echo most of the • 1972 complaints. "We do not believe employers should have t he burden or indirectly enforcing federal programs ... said Mike Stuart of the Western Growers Assn Meanwhile, Dolores Huerta. vice president of the United Farm Workers of America. called the plan "an insult to Mexicans and to all Americans S who care about decent working conditions and justice ... But neither discussed what may turn out to be the main weakness of either the Reagan-Smith plan or any other attempt to limit sub-rosa immi· gration: Finding legal residents willing to perform th~ . tas ks done by the illegals. even at legal m1rumum wages. let alone the sub-par pay given the undocumented workers. One 1977 study. for instance. found that illegals then held 60.000 jobs in San Diego County alone. t drawing $260 million in wages. That averages out to S4.333 annually . Few legal residents would work for wages so low. especially at the menial jobs given the illegals. Though San Diego County borders directly on many of the entry points. used by illegals. it h arbors far fewer illegals than some other California counties, not to mention states like Tex· as and Michigan. where migrant labor harvests many crops. The Reagan-Smith plan. proposing to allow legal entr y to fe wer Mexicans than were employed in San Diego County alone four years 1• ago. doesn't speak to the labor shortage and con· sumer price increases that a sudden change would a lmost certainly produce. But that's probably a moot point anyway. For • the combined opposition or labor unions , a griculture a nd civil groups -s ure to fall into line ., be hind the Hispanic activists already opposing the plan probably will keep the plan from ever • becoming feder al law. And even if it s hould make it through Congress, the plan would still have to pass the con- stitutiona l tests which went unans wered in California the last lime around (Elias is a columnist balJed m Santa Momca.J 'FLEECE'AWARD Sen Proxmire Proxmire 'award/ lo Treasury WASHINGTON (AP l Sen. William Prox- mire has announced that hi s ··go lden fl eece award" this month goes to the Treasury Depart· ment. whose investment policies he said lost $2 billion for t he Social Security syst em las t year. The Wi sco n si n Democrat said the de- partment earned 8.3 per· cent on Social Security funds it inves ted last year while p riva t e money -mark et managers who invested in gover nm e nt securities earned an average 13 percent. The difference would h ave been worth $2 billion on the $47 billion in Social Security taxes that Treasury invested on behalf or the system. he said. Proxmire presents the "award" each month to call attention to what he considers an example of waste or loss of t ax- payers' money. The Treasury Depart· ment declined comment on Proxmire's criticism . Since Social Security was begun. Proxmire sa id, every treasury secretary has invested the system's money in low-earning government securities to minimize the interest on the na- tional debt, rather than pulling the funds Into higher-earning govern- ment securities. · · rr the trust depa rt- ment of your local bank told you they had invest· ed your small fa mily in· heritance in order to further the interests of the bank rathe r than you r interests. you wo uld fire them and sue the m for m isfeasance, malfeasanc e and perhaps even fraud." P roxmire said . •·But that ·s precisely what the Treasury managers of the Social Security trus t funds have done." Mineral economist8i' J •• '!:job security excellent .. B y JOYCE L. KENNEDY They're well paid -the annual new-graduate starting salary at the master's degree level is $28,000; Ph.D., $32,000. They're snatched up· by employers as soon as they shuck cap and gown . Their ·s pecialized degree programs exist at only four universities. Who? These fortunate specialists are called mineral economists . Besides everything else they've got going, job security is excellent ~· because natural resources are ,. depleting, not expanding; demand for mineral economists rises yearly. Thanks to R.E.D. Woolsey, head of the mineral economics department at the Colorado School of Mines for this view: Mineral economics is the study 1nd application of both economJcs ind . man11ement principles ~o the minerals and energy industries. It takes in economic analyai.s, plannln.1 and manageme nt. Speclllc areas include market and commodity analy1i1, project and butlnesa evaluation and operaUona research. Another area i1 mlner1J re- source economJca. wltb empha1l1 on depletable resources. Some comlder mineral ecl000mic1 • 11 a fleld ol Its own, lnvolvint min· : lna1 petrOleum, 1eoto1y. economlca : 1na maoaaem•nt 1clence. Graduata worll not only ln the mlntta&a ud ..,.., lndultrt• per ,., but an la bankln1 Jlltitutlana and I•• firm• that serve l~em . ,._.re touDd In lnte.raauc.IJ • v...... e.nterDrlHI. penunnt a,_dM ad ac.a.mla. u...u,. miW'al _..,milu tiald 11 , CAREERS line jobs. positioned for a move to top management. They have worldwide travel opportunities. Fewer than 100 graduates yearly a re turned out by four schools that of· fer specialized programs. They are t he Colorado School of Mines, Pen· nsylvania State University, Universi· ty of Arizona and West Virginia Un iversity. The la rgest under· graduate mineral oconomics pro· gram is at Penn State, while Colorado enrolls the most rraduate students. At the graduate level, mineral eco nomics auracts tec hnically oriented students with en,meerlna backgrounds in petroleum, m1ning and geology. Other student.a come from such varied backlfOWlcll as finance, manacement or economics. To better undtntand this cont•m· porary career, send n for a ftv•pa1e copy of the article, "Ten Yeara of Mineral ~mica at Mines." It 11 a reprint from lhe November l9M) l11ue of M1n8 m11anne. Order It directly from tho macaalne at Gucsenbetm Hell, Go&dtn, Colo. a.MOL R EADER SERVICE: Looklnc ahtadT "Opportunity: Wbe.re to ftDd It In the '809" la a four-ptap 1uppte. ment to the U.S. New1 Wuhlniton Letter. ll reportl on Amalee 11 forecuten envtaloa 1t ln the yur 1981. To receive • copy, eodOM a •taml*I. Mll·addrelltd, loQf white envel~ with your reqwt to l07ee Lala Kennedy at BOs t.MO, ca.ta ..... -. Hell'll TrlC1 ,__, Liiie .. ro)e<t, C_trwc1..,"' lW of_,""'"" -............. ~ ....... .,. fl'oll\ Clh Of "-taln Velley, Colll~lll• .,,. Tiie ,,.,.,, I t lo<•l•f II\ Ill• MVt'-f t«t ... el l"-111111 Vall.v --to .. Nrtll --II .., T•IMrt Aw-..,d Ellh Ave"lle ... _.-.. -.. ,,.. .... --l>Y ~a. Sl1"t end Se<-M,,..I I I NI Mefl _.,,,..,_,. INI -",... _ .. tor rel-Of f\lftdt Wiii Mt (*I tlltute ell K"tleft .,.,...k Mlly effOCllne .. .wffty .. .,,. -.,.,,,,_. _,,. •CM'Cllfllly IN ...... .....,,... Cir, of l'-.!11 Voll.v lwt d9Cleled Mt to ,, ... ,. .., El\Ylr*lmentel lmpe<I si.-..,,.., ... ,.., ..... , • .,,,,,_ mol'lt .. Plelky A<t Of ltH C"L t i.Ito), ,....,. tor 1..cll doelllof\ Ml to pre ell St•tt menl ••• •• 1o11-., T"9 ,,.j«I tit• It IOU\N II\ o low tt f'nMlum c1e1111ty rtt ... l'ltlel •••• -'-• 9fl«t.t en Ille ,..,.,. ... ,.,, pllytkel tflwlran,...... wlll .. m1111~. All EIWlr_.,.al lle•I-11~9"1 ,.._....,.Ille wl!Mft proi.<t .,., - mode ~Y Ille tllOVe•namH City of Fo.Mlalll VoO.v -IP. d0<_.1 t he ..... ,__ ............... of tM pr!llecl and more fully "°" fonll 111e ,..._ wtoy ~II St~t It not r ... lrecll. Tiii• Eiwl~el Aevl-Record It Oii file .. .,,. ........... -ll •vtllabl• ... llUDlk .......... , .... -<•••no llPOI\ ,..,_,. at e. ,.,.,,.., .. 0.port~ mtween Ille"°"" of l ;CIO •·""· -S:m p.m. Ho,..,,,,.._,,_,..... .. reYI-ti we" project It~ to .. c~t> .,, prior to Ille '"""' lor ,. .. _ o1 ,, ..... ._. All Int-_ .... or~.,.., ,..,_. dllOO'fflno wllll 11111 OO<ltlon ••• ln•llad to •..ibmlt wr"t•n com· ""'"'' for contkMUlllOll ~y ,,_ City OI l"ountaln Valley lo '"• "'•""'"' O.pe,,,._ Sucl\ wrhtefl com~ •'-vi• • rec.I-M IOllCIO Sl•t•r ..tlWtNtOflorbeforeS.ptemt»r•. ,, .. _ ..tlll lwdl "°""'*"'to rec.elvecl wlll be ,.,.,,_ -tlle City •Ill noc re- qUHI llw rea-of F-al I-or tau MIY ..,,,.,llllstrallw actloft °" IN pro1«1 prior lo IN clett -Hied In ,,.. P'O<*llllll _,,.eK •. Tiie Or, Of F-toln Valley wlll -dertok• Ille pro)ecl described .-,,. wit" 81odt Grant fMftOI from tl\e U.S Depart ...... Of HCM1.1ifte aftd Ur- 0.Y'tlopl'Nf'll (HUOI -Tiiie I of ,,,. Houelno -Conlf'llllftlt'I' Oew•• .....,, Act 9' lf14. T'l\t City of FOUl'lttln Valley It <trtllylng to HUD_, Ille Cl· ty -Ro0et1 G. VollMOf, II\ lllt Of. flclal ~lty u City Moftegor, tan· wnt to eccet>t Ille hwlt<1kllt1t1 of ,,,. F .. ,at count If ., «1 loft I• brOUIM to enforce '"'*"'llllltln '" relation to envlroNnental reviews, O.C:l•l- m•klllCI al'ICI action; encl lllat IM• re-llllOltln l\ow -MlllllM Tiie 1oOa1 eff«t ol ,,_ cartlfk atlon It lllat UPOft lh -ool IM City of Fount.I" Volley .... , .... , ... BIOtk Gro nl tu11d1 and HUO wlll llave Mllilled lb r~tllllllft -e. Hatlonol En•lrcww'Ml\lal Polley Act OI ""-HUD •Ill a<(Jtfll ... OOlecOon to ... -""•I"'.,,. ......... ,_ -acuciunce al e. ctf1Hlullt1t1 only II II It°" -Of tN followl119 -(al Tllal ,,.. certlfkatloft was not 111 tact Hecuted by Ille oertlfylno Officer or oll\ef afflc.er of -'k ant --by HUD. or (II) tNt -'k lnt's .,.,,1,_. montlal ,.... ... l'f<Otd liw Vie proJ«t lndlc-omlHlol'I of • ,...,1...a de· cl1lon fllldll\o or ••P •PC>lk.c.te to 1"9 P'Olect In Ille .,yl""""41fttal revl- process.. Objecll-.,. .. l .,. p~ encl ...iwnltllld In ace~• will\ e. raoulrecl procedure 124 Cl"R Pert 51) and .... ., .. addrttN<t ,. HUD .. O.por1mont Of Houslr'I -u.-Dev•lopfl'ent, Arte Office, 2500 Wlltlllre Boul•vard, L°' ,..,..,.,, Cellfonllo tDOS1. <>efe<I'-lO ltw ,... , ...... ,_..., O.Slto--•- flat.cl -•Ill noc lie canslOwtO by HUD. No Ol>jecllt1t1 re<elvect aftM 5'tt> 1emtoer n . "''· wlll lie c.,11...,.._ by HUD. ~··"--· Cltf-...r .-MMw ...... .._... v....,.. c.. t"9 P..ollMlld Or-CN.t Dolly Piiot, A11111St 14, "" n....-i. NOTICE OF DEATH OF P EAR L MARIE HAMMER LILLYWHITE ANO OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A-1°"'6. To all heirs , beneficiaries, creditors and contlnoent creditors of Pearl Marie Hammer Liiiywhite and persons who may be otherwise interes ted In the wilt a nd/or estate: A petition has been filed by Ann Marie Liiiywhite Soper in the Superior Court of Orange County requesting that Ann Marie U llywhite Soper be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of Pearl Marie Hammer Liiiywhite, Costa Mesa, CA (under the Indepen- dent Administration of Estates Act). The petition ls set for hearlno In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive Wes t, Santa Ana, CA 92701 on September 2, 1981 at 9:30 a.m. IF YOU OBJECT to the grantlno of the petition, you should either appear at the hearlno and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the htarlno. Your appearance may be In person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A C REDITOR or a contingent creditor of the deceased, you must file your claim with the court or p resent It to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from tht dltt of first Issuance of letters as provlcMd In Stctlon 700 of thl Probate Code of California. The time for filing clalms wlll ·not expire prior to four months from tM d.lte of tht hMrlng notlc.d above. YOU MAY EXAMINE tht flit kept by tht court. If you are Int.rested In the esta~~ you may flle a rtQua1 with the court to rtcelv. s;peclal notice of the Inventory of Htat e 1uet:s •nd of tM Pttlttans, accounts and r•porh delcrfbed In S«tlon 1200 of tht C.IJfornla Probett Codt. Jayc • .....,A-., at Law, 1116 .len••" :,;.T'tl.~a> =··CA PW!flllhed or-. Cont 0.111.:T~ Auo, n , 11, 2•, "" 1 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 -...--- INDEX Ital ht• Holtte1 For W. Holtte1 For Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ta Place h•r U, CaU -.._.. I 002 G.tr.t tOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-5678 NOUS£S f 01 SALE c:-.1 11o1-.i.i. ... ltllllN Ptfllft•wlt C1111•trtno IH<h c ....... ,11 .. c...i. .... . a-..... 1 11 TON rowu10 \111•> ................ . ....... i.e.-. lol(-'-'•WM M1U• Wcllll• 1'1&vtl 111 .. JOllVtt,lt ~~..::.-:-S.o Jwo~c,,.,.,,.,. S.1110 ""' S1tl a11th *""''""' ..... IN.Mlff 114•'-~•~if IDL£STAT£ ~ruuforkJ• A,.n-ol> fOf S.I• t:::.r:r.~,,) (fl!W\tr) l.4t> Crrpo ~=~!.!~:.'~' o..p1 .... l••" s.i. 1eo... .. to "9 It ond loromt Pr090r11 ~~.:'..' .. "' 1100.k HK• lrtr "r~ Wt!iijMft t#wn kovr' ct,-,~~p,~op IM II Mtl• ~rVll k1NfW> t'elM• firOH ' Mui l:.tt••• t!u"•fllt Mu i tate\' V. •flllf'd IEllTALS .""'M1 rufl'll•~f'd t*"" Lnf1,H'ft1tl\c4 Hot.Mt rwrA Of l rir (0Nlioft\IN1'mt rvt" t'oridoft'UftHiUJ\• l •' r..--. .. '"'" lo•""°""'IM l>wQt.oh f\1rl'I f>w!PAunl•t 411U ...... ...,....L<llw• Aplt floro or I of ll4o•" Roo"' • llootO ~tblll•fl• Cvotl Hom.• .._."'PM' Jhnuh \'•talaon fhtOtb a.-,1, '° 111h•tt• c;., .... '°' "'"' ()llttt ...... 1 INllMUfttftlll IM~ritl M•ru.i ::-·~: ... ,.. .. V14t RtMl h BUSINESS. INYEST· MENT, flNANCE :::::: ~:.:,· l:~:-.::::::~.:i' llatw)lftl.o•• "-' "•••od' Mort11an TO. ANNOUNCEMENTS. PfJSONAl.S & lOST & FOUND AftNNn«,,..At• (••P..i t..uJ'-.•tt• i-........ Pt1.oft.el1• 'l<>-•.tllwi..• Ttl\fi• StaYIC(S \ff\10 °''"''°'' UIPlOYM£NT & ,.EmATION ""ftioob lfhtr"4.tl(ln J~"'•"1••1· tltl• ....... 11 6 • MEICHANDISE Afthqw .. A. ... 1.f'l(f\ ""''*' ::~: Mtlrr1•I• C'•l'Nt'•• • t:qu1pmt"I y., Ooc• f'rfflO '°" r-.,,w.1we Ci1t•ft HI~ Hor ... -1.l!Od• '"'"" LHttilOfl )hcf\1Mf) MIM"t ll.r,rw• M1M'tll•IWOl.t• V. •"' .... "'"-"'•' ·~"''"'""'"'' ou,,~ r-.r" ~ t q1.11p Pt<• Pt.no.• Ur-.n' Sn uw M ., f'ill"t""• ....,, ... i.c..o. Sien 1'nttwt•flil tf,..1 ~~·rllridio H1t'1 ~"'"' IOATS & MAllNE EDU"M£NT loct IOlll 100'! IOlf IC I .... ID •• 11114 IOtO IOM EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY :: Plbll1htfJ1 Moffet: NEWPllT BEACH , .............. ltteOMt "°"rfftt 3 Triplexes In a row on ocun side of PCH 1n Corona del )tar 2 Duplexes + 1 Triplex an a rov. on Ba lboa Peninsula -1 lot from und and surf. Near 19th St 1 Duplex on the water with dock for JI' boat 1G1Y All real eatate ad· :: vertised I n th11 1ri. new1paper 11 aubJect to :: the Federal Fair Houa· :: ing Act d 1968 which 1• makes It tllegal to ad- 1100 vert11e .. any preference. llmltation. or dis All lar1e usumable :: cramlnation based on loans at l2'r3. Owner's ·~ race. color, rellgaon. aremotivated :: sex. or national origin, C/21 Htwpcwt Cntr JfOO or an intention lo make _ 640.'357 _ :: any such preference, o••w 1ioo 11mital1on. or dis ,.,.,.. ~ cnmmallon " $94, 900 ~ Investors delight ' T-..o 2 1000 Th15 newspaper will nol Bdrm units Current in ~ knowingly accept any come tlSO mo I )ear Mt» ad vert1s1ng for reJI home protection pl.in in l: estate wluch IS in \'!Ola eluded Call to He • m1 l,!onof~helaw 646·1111 THEREAL ESTATERS IHOltS: Advtf'tlatn shcMiW chtdl ttwir odt dolly -rtpori ~ -ron l ..... .t.ly. The DAILY PILOT cnMIMI l abtlty for .... flnt l11corr•ct hutrtloit AIHORMAL Oftly. Where can you find a property 4 door11 from the So Bayfront wath a 45 'x 85 · lot on Balboa Island where the owner --------•I will consider anything or """ HMIHforSah ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l IR, SIOl,000 Prime CM home. huge back } ard. roHred pati o Nice starter home needs some fix- ing Only 10'. do-.. n Call now SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7'4·63 J-6990 BUILD 3 MOREUHITS R-2. 13.000 sq ft 101 4 :rm Bdrm. 2 bath ex1st1ng .~:, h o m e H o r 5 e s '1 permitted o-.. ner "'ill carq paper Call S46·2313 •li.i\ 1111• ... , -OOl) mi ..:II -*I llllO llllM .... THE REAL ESTATS:RS THUCIMG = TOW~OME? -.a Call the spe<:1ahsts di = J the rondom1n1um 1n 0 1 formationcenter :: Touchstone Reali> ::; 963;~ :: Sll.000 :: DOWH value·stocks. cash. land units. you name 11 and the o-..•ner will trade lnC'ludes plans for a new duplex Asking SMQ,000 lolbool.t.dllty . _l7~~g GIGANTIC SIDRM Just lasted and priced to sell' Private courtyard entr y leads lo huee :-le-.. pon Beach estate Enormous fam tl) room with blazing r1replaC'e. Sunny gourmet kitchen Large lush grounds On ly S299.SOO' Call lod3)'. 673~ THE REAL ESTATE RS C OURtry ChonMr LoC'.tled 1n backba} Newport arra zoned ror horses. 3 Bdrms. 2 Ba loaded .. 1lh charm from the Oak peg & groO\ e floors to the custom m~sler Bdrm su1tr As sume lo-.. interest loan and owner 14111 rarry large 2nd Full prit'e Sl63.900 .. Super sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath townhome Cozy 1-------- k1tchen and dl.nmg aru w10 O\'erlooks lush : landscaped pa11 0, -Sll,000 down to a 14', ::: loan. Price only S109.900. "'° Act now. call 546-2313 -- mt tlJt t\JO •1• 11111 THE REAL ESTATERS ::: MEWPOITHGTS -DUPLEX One 4 Bdrm 2 bath ~ charmer with rlreplace. ~ Uie other 2 Bdrm 2 bath. :: fireplace. All for only -11 55.000. Owner will : can'y AlTD. Owner anx· • lout. Call 546-2313 Stllr Jttttry 4 Br. one story. ram rm. t'omer lot Owner very motivated & wall help finance. Just kS&.500. RCTc1ylorCo I .1P ,. ,, >( ~ ....... Dt•tioptn Prime C01ta Mesa area 20 unit condo pro1ect comp! approved, ready to bujld. call 752-6499 MEWPOITICH COHDO 2 Bdrm , 2 full bathJ. II· 11ched 1ar11e LoU or up1r1des Sln1le story SlH,800. Call now . ~ma THE REAL ESTATE RS , ..... ,. Sharp 3 Bdrm home w !I ota of bri ck & stonework , blt ·tn kitchen . frplc. dbl 1ara1e. on quiet st Seller will finance at 123. interest Askin& on ly $350,000. JACOBS IWTY 67W670 HUGE EASTSIDE HME s Bdrms. 3 baths, separate master suite Pnced to sell al Sl68.500 Assum able r1nancing Call~6-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS 2PDIMSULA POIMT IAIGAIHS owe BALANCE 10'1 Call no-..' 4 BR Mexican Valla. l house rrom pounding surl Secluded master retreat with hreplare Ne-.. k1tchl'n. dint on tiled patio Hurry STIPSTOSAHD FIXER 3 BR & DEN nttds your attention Br ing shovels and pain1 brush Mue SS's Owner will carry at lo-.. in terest @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 4 IR IACkBAY SI 37 500 Roomy. 4 Bdrm. 2 st) w cozy fireplace Very clean. light and iur) New d1shv.asMr. -..ater heater. paint , paper. skylight' Beauufull) landscaped pallo A must see~ 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS • REHTORS sur• stuo SPYGWSLOT com ph ments lh11 lo' el) Ne"' Bedford home II features four bedrooms, rour baths. family room, and formal dining room Extensive uperades and a king.med lot make this home a truly unique find Offered al IM9.000 with excellent financing a'•aalable D.M.MGnWI 760.0135 The fastest draw in tht West. a Dilly Pilot Classified Ad. Call To· I dax s.Hm. fltl -fTl/I THE REAL ESTATERS TAR GAZEK•._. -fllJ flU mt ?~ AFFORDABLE ms 2 Bdrm. 1 ba · 1 yr old = Adult complex. T1ke r,~ over ui1tin& loan ma .,. ""' .,., " .. " .. rJ(I fl• f!lll ma •YM m1 !! = '"' rm - • RED CARPET 754·1202 HODOWH VA TllMS 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, pool. l90.800. Clll 646-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS Wl r'\ ... •tt i = AICHITICTS :: SB THIS Ot41 .. Top loutlon, a couple : of doora from the • private beach In the ;: ucl111lvt ,uudtd : com mun t7 or •T 81y1boru. Euy to : remodel a Bdrm, 2v. a btUl bome. P7S1000· .,. •YOU baq a ..met toolftr or IDOda to•U, place an ad re th D_allr Piiot CluaifW 8edloo • • • Pll!!MNR i,;.;:.=..:...:.:.:.T"---~CUY lPOLLA1'~--r~~-t )( , ... o.111 _, GM. )( V An•'''•f '• "'• S"9n Y To ck•tlop -·~for T ... •doy, ...i _. cor,_..1r9 ,._..,, "',.,.. Zadloc bCf1tl""" '=:::: s~~~1v\-4~~s· = -----t411t4 lty C~f I ~ •.......... i......oA!he ,_ ._._, _. ... i... '° .......... ~~ -· WHIAGC I r I' I I I I SAlOY l'i I I I' I I . t l ... _v ... L.,..D "'111,..1_-tl _!. Thi• OllY I know mutt ll•vt I I' I' I . been a born crlntln•I l'llll hit • • • • tlaOy plcturee t1111t wt111 a ,.., _£_S_R_Y _E_J_ .... , front 1110 --. ...... I_' ... l_l ... ' .... 1.-1 ..... !~~~= • DUICI l:UIT YDUR HDllTDWll DlllY PIPll MONDAY, AUGUST 24. 1981 ORANGE COUN TY , C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Voyager .to look at new Saturn 01oon This is a scale drawing shoW1ng the relative size of the planet Saturn and its rmgs in comparison to the Earth at left. Earth"s moon and the distance between the Earth and the moon Hinckley indicted Man charged with shooting Reagan , three others WASHI NGTON <AP> -John w. Hinckley Jr , the troubled son of a wealthy Denver oilman. was indicted by a fedeni grand jury today on charges of shoot- ing President Reagan, White House press secretary J ames Brady and two law enfo rcement officers in a March 30 assassina· lion attempt. The 11 men and 10 women on the grand jury filed into a co urtroom and fo rma ll y re· turned the indictment before U.S. Magistrate J ean Dwyer. Assistant U.S. attorney Roger Adelman made the only mention of llinckley's na m e when he asked the magis tra te to con- solidate aeveral case docket numbers involving Hinckley. The entire proceeding took about one minute. Copies of the indictment were not im mediate- ly available. Hi nckley, 26, whose father heads the Vanderbilt Ener gy Corp. in Denver. wrote in an un- m ailed letter to actress Jody Foster that he wanted to "get Reagan" to prove his love fo r her. The letter was discove red by investigators after Hinckley's arrest. Since the shootings, Hinckley has been confined in a single cell in the brig at the Marine base at Q u a n t i c o • V a . , s ·o u t h o f Washington, except for two week s o f co urt -orde r e d psych.i atiric tests at the federal correctio nal ins titution at Butner , N.C. He was returned to Quantico from Butner on Tues- d ay. The next legal step will be llinckley's arraignment before a federa l Judge, where he will enter a plea of guilty or innocent. If Hinckley pleads innocent. the court must decide whether he is competent to stand trial - a q uestion that psychiatrists have been trying to answer. A repo r t by court -a ppointed medical expe rts alre ady has been sbumitted to Chief Judge William Bryant of U.S. Dis trict court, but was placed under seal by the judge. Hinckley's lawyers may raise the defense of innocent by rea- son of insanity in an attempt to have the forme r drifter com- mitted to a mental institution. Earlier , it was learned that government prosecutors reject- ed a plea-bargain o ffer by (See INDICf, Pa1e A%> FUNNY FLOATERS Leslie Davis and Eddie F raser (above l were neck and neck a t the h alfway point of t he s ixth annual Balboa Ba thtub Race S unday. but Eddie paddled out in front to win for the fourth year. Competing on a s horter cou rse in the Z category a·r e Sue Brennis (below, le fll and Carole De pa in their Ba lboa Brothe l ent ry. T he race. which began a nd ended a t the Ba.lboa Pavilion dock. was presented by the Ta le of the Wh a le resta urant. Nigu e l man among j et blast vict ims A Laguna Niguel businessman was one of the 110 people kUled Saturday when a Taiwanese jet exploded In flight about 94 miles southwest of Taipei, according to a spokesman for the Compton toy company where be was employed. A spokesman for Entex In· dustries said Dennis Rippin, 50, manufacturer's representative with the company. was kllled when the Boeing 737 blew apart at an atltltude of 22,000 feet. There were no survivors. The spokesman aald Rippin, a cltiaen or Canada, had recently Joined the company and was on bia first official trtp for the firm. Since jolnln1 Ent.ex he bad been Uvln1 in the La•una Ni1uel private communlt)' of Nl1uel Sborea, accordlftl to the spokesman. A 1poke1mao for tbe OrUI• County Sheriff'• Department aaif Rllftn'• wtfe, BNDda, WU DOllfted ot her bubud '• death at • 1.m. Saturday at tbeJr bome . • P r ohe's c a meras busy PASADENA (AP > -Voyager 2, sailing within 700,000 miles of Saturn on the eve of its ren- dezvous with the golden, ringed world, adds another moon to its trophy case tonight when its c amer as focu s on the little satellite, Hyperion .. The robot ship's cameras and 10 instruments are casting about in all directions, revealing de· tails of the churning and weav- ing clouds, probing mysteries of the s himme r ing r ings a nd watching moons grow larger as the ship prepares for m ankind's best look at Saturn on Tuesday. "We a re be wilde r e d ex - plorers,·• photogr a phy team leader Bradford Smith said dur· ing the weekend. Nearly 10 months after sister s hip Voyager 1 c ruised the planet, he said. "We have made very little progr ess' in un · tangling the many riddles it re· vealed. Voyager II spacecra/t returned this u1ew of the planet Saturn Aug 11 when the craft was 8 6 1mllton nules /rom the planet The flight plan for Tuesday's e ncounte r was extensively rewritten to look more deeply at som e of those puzzles. Now, Smith s aid, scientists at the Jet Propuls ion Laborator y "are just . . . hoping the answers to some of these questions are going to be found in some of these Voyager 2 data." Voyager 1, on its tour of Saturn in Nove mbe r . s aw Hyperion as little more than a fuzzy ball as it came no closer than 550,000 miles. Scientists should see a lot more as this second Voyager comes ~.000 miles closer today . The radio signals need 86 minutes to cover almost a billion miles to Earth. Jus t 180 mil es a c r oss, Hy perion is the third most- distant of the 17 known moons scattered about the Sat urn1an neighborhood. T he s hi p fl ew past t he str ange , two-toned moon lapetus on Saturday night By fa r the biggest puzzle f oun d last yea r w as the astonishing complexity of the fabled rings, a vast sheet of s nowy particles th a t circle Saturn's equator. Old expla nations fell apart when Voyager 1 found the broad rings fllled with hundreds of thin ringlets and saw a narrow ring that seems composed of braided ringlets, sever a l eccentric or out-of-round ringlets and broad s mudges reaching across part of the rings. A popular theory s uggests many tiny moons -r anging in diameter from perhaps half a mile to 20 m iles -may be sprinkled through the rings, act- ing as s h ephe r ds a s their gravities mix with Saturn's to herd the particles into the little n ngl.ets. So Voyager 2 is aiming its cameras al sever al li kely spots in sear ch of the t heorized moonJets . C h ief Voyager sc ienttri Edward Stone said Sunday, "A little moonl et buried in the rings . will form a gap" by sweep- ing out its orbit. One large gap is about 300 miles wide and if the moonJet theory is accurate, he said , it should hold a moon 12 to 18 miles across and Voyager should be a ble to spot it. Smith s;tid scientists have ex· amined about one-third of ~ moonlet-hunt pictures t aken SQ far and ··we have yet to detect one of these e mb e dded satellites." L ennon assailant sen ten ced Chapman gets 20 years to life for murder NEW YORK CAP> -Mark David Chapman was sentenced today to 20 years to life in prison for the murder of former Bealle John Lennon. The maximum sentence would have been 2.S years to life . Acting Jus ti c e De nni s Edwards said before pronounc- ing sentence in state Supreme Court that he would recommend that Chapman, a 26-year-old former mental patient, undergo psychiatric treatment. Before being sentenced, Chap- man read a passage from the novel "The Catcher in the Rye" the book he was leafing through when police arrested him Dec. 8 moments after the s hooting outside th e luxury apartment building where Len- non lived in Manhattan. The slaying of the singer and songwriter shocked the world, prompting throngs of fans to gather in mourning outside Len- non's building . Hundreds of t housands around the world marked his death with s ilent vigils. Second-degr ee murde r , in New York's legal system, is an intentional killing of anyone other tha n a police offi cer, which is fi rst-degree murder. The re is no death penalty in New York. Supreme Courts are the county.level trial courts. Authorities said Chapman had Stoc k s take h eat ing • on inte r est .. rates NEW YORK CAP> -Fears of a further long siege of high in- terest rates drove the stock market into a sharp decline to- day. Bond prices also took a drub- bing .in what was shaping up as a "blue Monday" on Wall Street. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which closed Friday at its lowest level of the year, • fell 10.94 points to 909.63 in the first hour today, and by 20.45 point.a to 900.11 at the close. Losers outnumbered gainers. by a 10-1 margin ln the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex· chanae-Usted issues. In the put few daf a,, manr Wa ll Stree t analysts have warned that hopes for a decline In inte rest rates from their present high levels were unlike- ly to be fulfilled any time soon. One reason for their gloom was an $800 million increase ln the money supply reported by the Federal Reserve late Fri- day, rather than the drop many financial observers had been ex- pectiJtR. The figures reinforced expec- tations that the Fed would stick with a stringent policy of restraining the growth of money and credit, as its chairman, Paul Volcker, indicated last week. ' Tourists applaud Nixon in Versailles PARIS CAP) -Jl'ormer Prell· dent Nixon, In the Frtacb eapttaJ on the 1tart ol a two-wfflll private .wt to Europe, took a brief trip today to v ........ , .......... bewu ~1W bJ Amerteu tomtlta. lua, wtlo retllMd HYH ,~._.. .............. IC aMltmpUeltMb611iDp ............ adlTttt•, ..... no comment to reportera. A al)Oketmao said Nixon, who ar- rived Jn Peria on SUnd., nlpt, doe• not plan to meet with fonlp luden aod will not ctve ......... A ..... man at th• U.S. Em· b&lll·..W lbe former i>nlldtet bed ao.. from New Yort Oil a replarly acbeduled Coac.de (lie NIXON. Pa1e A.I) traveled fr o m his Honollu home for the sole purpose of kill- ing Lennon. Chapman pumped four .38- caliber bullets into Lennon's body as the popular musician. was 'coming home from a re- cording session with his wife, Yoko Ono. Chapman was arrest· ed at the scene minutes later. Several hours earlier, Lennon signed a copy of his new record album for Chapman, who had been hanging around outside the Dakota apartments where the rock singer-composer lived. Edwards had said before today's court proceeding that if he decided to impose more than 20 -year s-lo-life senten ce, ~e would a llow Ch a pman t o withdraw his guilty plea and stand trial. Chapman 's lawyer, Jonathan M a rk s, ca ll e d se v e ral psychiatrists to testify at the hearing about Chapman's me~· tal condition when he pleaded guilty June 22. Assistant District Attorney Allen Sullivan called no witnesses of his own. Marks renewed a motion ij\at the judge dismiss "the plea on g r ounds that Chapman was mentally incompetent at tl!e li me he confessed. DRAllil CUil llATHfl Fair through Tuesday • but low clouds late night through mld -mornlng.t Highs 70 to 85. Lows a ; • tonight to 66. .....,.. llllDIT•Y YOtMQ and old, weolthw Glfd not, ltUftdMll mjof "clog- ging" H•r11 lbuhttd ot Alabama Jo.ck'•· Ste ~. cs. 11111 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Mo nday, Augu1t 24, 1981 Deity .......... "'Clleftn ~ ique and class1c cars parad e Satur day on Main Street , Santa Ana , to South Coast Plaza Village . istant relatives seeking cash I Hundreds on Howard Hughes' family tree v1e for billi onair e's elusive f ortune 1 HOUSTON <AP1 Howard t he adopted c hildre n a nd ilhc1t lov.eaffair andnot entitled on .Hug.hes mothe rs' side, or Hughes' death touched off a gr andchildren of Hughes' late to share in the estate. . their heirs, a lready secured half clamor for his fortune by hun· uncle on his father's side. ~a~yers prepared. to .begin the fortune after Probate J udge dr~s of distant relatives who Lawyers for about 500 second, quizzing 25 pros.pect1~e. Jurors Pa t <?regory rul.ed Hughes left s&1'Jt' lo overturn a Texas luw third and fourth cousins from t:>day about the ir opinions on n~ wi ll and no ~m~ediate sur· ~~d discredit a dead cousin a nother branch of the fa mily on s l e r i Ii t y. a d u It e r Y and vivo.rs when he d.1ed in 1976. At stake is the half of the Hughes' father's side w~ll try to legilima~y . . . . D1st~nt relatives must con· estate valued at between $180 convince a six-member Jury that The trial 1s the fin al hea~ng to vmce JUro:s t<? . rule that Mrs. mltnon and $2 b1 ll1on that a Tex Hughes' 'lat e cousin Els peth dclermi~e who s h.a~es m ~he Lapp was 11le.g1t1m ate despite a a'> probate law savs belon~s to llughes Lapp was the child of an estate Sixteen surv1vmg cousms Texas. law that holds any child conceived before or during a Sympathy felt for Layton m a rriage is presumed to be legitimate. I f l he pane I f 1 n d11 her l egit im ate, all 500 c laims a utomatically would be wiped o ut If Jurors disagree. the lengthy and complicated pro· ceeding would r ecess a nd a second nationwide search for other possible relatives would begin. .An ger of J onestown victim's kin changes at trial .~AN FRANC'ISCO I API J ynona Norwood ·i. mother and if) Vthcr n:lall\ll'S died in the t>IJtamy Gu}anese Jungle during thtt Peoples T e mple m ass m,urdt'r s u1 c·ide Thou~h she tllil)kS ""sorrn:bod y should pay." 1>.lw ".s not so sure 1t should be 4u"r.r Layton. '"I feel sorry for him Al first I fl'I\ angry You can see he"s i.c;~ired. and he seems lo be a gt.:c1Pe person . But t his is From Page A1 NIXON ... Mght I le said Nixon went im· C>;l'.~ately to the Crillon llotel across the slrl•et from the em· lnss~ off Place Concorde Nixon, flB. last visited France ;if'fer the publication of his book, ·1Th~ Real War " lie wag given a w.arm reception on that trip by thrf'rench mC'd1a and public · 'rhe former pres ident, who is t1•n ve l1n g \\1th his fri e nds Cl'l arles "Rebt"' Rebozo and Rick Ruwe and Secret Service agents. is schedull•d lo make a da}1 trip to Re1ms 1n the French Champagne region Tuesday. Nixon is scheduled to leave Pan s by train Wednesday for the wine region of Bordeaux. wtt41tt' he will spend two nights ati p private chateau. the em· hassy spokesman said Ile wi ll lea vc Bordeaux by trai-o Fr iday for La usanne. Switzer land Nixon a lso is sot\eduled l o v1s1l Vi enn a. f.'llmsborg. West Germany, and poe&ibly Denmark before his re· turn to New York on Sept 4 or 5. the ~mbassy spokes man said. l'ltjxon ha~ been supervising Llae • redecoration of his new hoQse in Saddle River. N.J . Ru.we said before their de· parture. , ·•\rs. Nixon decided to remain in lhe United States to continue preparations for the move while her husband is abroad, Ruwe adru:<J. He said he expected the ~ns to move to New J ersey in tn id ·Septem ber . The Nixons' New York townhouse has not been sold, Ruwe said. Yeggs steal. ;Laguna safe something he·s going to have to hve with for the rest of his life." s he s aid during a break in Layton's trial. Though the testimony opens old and painful wounds. Ms Norwood planned to be in court when Layton's trial resumed to day .. At fi rst. l thought I'd just come for a few days, but now, somehow, I feel compelled to be he re. and I'll stay no matter wh at ... s he s a id . ''This is somet.hlng I've had to live with fo r years . I've gone through too much to stop now." Layton. 35, is charged with conspiring to murder Rep. Leo Rvan. 0 -Calif., and with con· s pirncy in the attempted murder Car injuries fatal to HB youngster, 9 Ni ne-year-ol d Scott Jamison of Huntington Beach died early to· day from injuries suffered when he was struck down while cross- ing a street near his home Satur· day, police reported. Police are studying possible m anslaughter charges against the driver of the car, Brian W. Simpson, 21, who lives just a few houses from the victim at 16602 Rhone St. lmmedlately following the 7 p m accid e n t Saturday , Simpson wruj issued a speeding ticket and released. police said. Authorities declined to Sa} how fast be was driving in the 25-mph residential area because they said the case still is under in vestigalion. Young J a m ison. of 16521 Rhone St.. had been in critical condition with head and internal injuries at Fountain Valley Com· munity Hospital since the acci· dent . police said. Gunmen flee with drugs in Valley of Richard C Dwyer, a State Department official Ryan visited Guyana in No- vember 1978 to inves.tigate claims that temple mem bers were be· 1ng abu s e d at th e c ult "s J onestown settle ment. He and his party were ambushed at a jungle airstr ip as they were leaving the area. Ryan and four others were ~it led ; Dwyer was wounded Within hours after the am· bush. most of Ms . Norwood's fa mily drank fruit juice laced with cyanide. Ms . Norwood says "somebody should pay for that," but she isn't sure Layton should. She calls Layton "a victim. too" of the powerful s pell cast by the Rev. Jim Jones, who led more than 900 followe rs in the mass m urde r ·s uic ide . Al t hough the question of legitimacy does not directly in volve the two adopted children -one has died since the estate battle began -their claims also hinge on the jury's decision. Most of the distant relatives contend Mrs. Lapp was not the biological daughte r of Rupert Hughes, a New Yo rk playwright and author. Rupert Hughes was the brother of Howard Hu ghes· father. Instead. they argue. she was born or a n illicit love affair between her mother and one of nine lovers named in a bitter custody fi ght for the child. Man held in Irvine investment schenie Police have arrested a South Africa man on a grand theft charge in connection with an in· vestme nt sche m e he was al· le~ed.Jy conductin~ in Ir vine. Frans Theron is being held in Orange County Jail in lieu of $2.5 million bail. Irvine police Detective Paul J essup alleged that Theron set up a company called lnterna· lion al Business Advisory & Modest waves keep beach rescues down Lifeguards al Orange Coast beaches said one foot waves m a de for a safe weekend at Orange County beaches. "Where there is no surf, ther e are no rescu es," said Mike Dwinell , a Lagun a Beach lifeguard. "It was like swim- ming In a lake," said Dwinell, whose beach logged onff three rescues and a crowd o 36,000 over the two days. He said, however , west winds or up to 15 mph drove people home early Sunday. Consultancy Services Inc. 18662 MacArthur Blvd ., Sui te 200, Irvine. Police said the company may have been an extension or the South African Company, the House of Ocean Magic, which sold health products derived Crom seaweed . T hal company went out of business, leaving hundreds of In· vestors and franchisees in debt. Exact de tails on Theron's Orange County operations were unavailable this morning as a police report on t he matter hadn't been ptepared. Ex-Mesa mayor Jordan dies Flags are bei.ng flown at half- m ast today a t City of Costa Mesa facilities for architect and former mayor Willard T. Jordan w h o d ie d in Cost a Mesa Memorial Hospital early Sunday morning. Mr Jordan died at a bout 2:30 a .m . of complications tha t followed surgery last spring. He was 68 years old. His civic service began ln 1952 as a member of the committee formed to incorpor ate Costa Mesa as a city. He was appointed to the Plan- ning Commission in 1958 and ser ved until 1963 when he was appointed lo fi ll the unexpired City Coun cil term vacated by the resigning Joseph Tomehak. Mr. J ord an s erved on the council until he was defeated at t he polls in 1973 b y Coun· cilwoman Norma Hertzog. He was mayor from 1966-68. As a councilman and mayor, Mr Jordan was known by city employees and othe r council members as a level-headed de· cision maker able to keep peace a mong warring factions. He and his wife Ruth moved to Costa Mesa in 1946 from Daven· port. Iowa. after he had served about h ve years in the U.S. Coast Artillery during World War II Mr Jordan designed many coastaJ area commercial slr uc· lures, including the Daily P ilot bu ilding on Bay Street, Costa Mesa. several municipal build ings. including fi re stations. and many Orange Coast homes. I le was a past president of Orange County·s chapter of the American Institute of Architects and a former member of the state Highway Commission His long list of accolades in elude:. selection as Orange Coast College's Citizen of the Year and t he Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce's Man of the Year. both in 1979. He was serving as the cham- ber's vice president this year a nd would have assumed the or ganization·s presidency next year F uneral services for t he popular civic leader will be private, with burial a t sea fo llowing crematio n. Survivors include his wife of 40 years. Ruth. and son J ames of Costa Mesa and a daughte r. Mrs Arthur Ebert of Muscatine, Iowa The family s uggests donations to the Boys Club of the Harbor Area in Mr. Jordan's name. HB suspect held in rape Seal Be a c h p o li ce in · vestigators have a rrested a 24- year-old Huntington Beach man in connection with the rape Sun- day of a 24·year-old Long Beach woman. Investigators s a id Norvall Newhan was a rrested about one hour after the wom an reported she had been r aped after attend· ing a party in Seal Beach. Police said Newha n was booked at Orange County jail and bail was set at $25,000. presents .. WINNING IDEAS" D•llY Pllee SU H - SUCCt'MBS AT 6H r:x-Mesa ,'\1ayur .J11rda11 From Page A1 INDICT • • • llinckley's lawyer:. Cnder the bargain. llinckley would have pleaded guilty to some charge in the attack in return fur a gov ernment recommendation that he be sentenced under special prov1s1on5 of the federal Juvenile I a" covering per5ons up to age 26 That arrangement could have pc•rm1ttl'd hi s relea5e much sooner than normal H inckle~ "a~ 25 al the time of h1'> arrest If convicted or the charges against h 1 m ... If m e k Icy could be ~ scnlent·ed to life impn!.onment When l11n cklev was arrested. prosecutors c·ha.rged him with attempting to assassinate the president and wi t h assault on a fC'deral officer. Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy. Bandit hits shoe store in Cos ta M esa A mus tachio e d bandit threatened to shoot the manager of a Kmne) Shoes store in Costa MC'sa late Saturday 1r he couldn 't come up "1th more than the S690 taken from the cash reg· 1ster. pohce s aid The gunman walked into the store at 2861 Harbor Blvd and pulled a handgun from a bag he carried. the manager said. The gunman. described as a Latin in his late 20:., ordered the store safe opened but found nothing inside That, the manager sa1a. ts when he demanded mor e money a nd threatened , · ·1 ·m gonna blow your legs off " The ba nd it o r dered the manager and a woman clerk in· to a back room a nd ran out the door with a Kinney bag contai n· ing the $690. police said. The two employees heard a car start but did not see it leave Burgla r s a rmed with an acetylene torch broke into a. ·Laguna Beach service station Sunday and carted off a SOO· PQund safe containing S2,000. Operators of the North La1una Shell station, 1342 North Coast Highway. told police the thieves . broke throueh a louvered win· dow sometime early Sunday morning. Two men armed with a sawed orr shotgun robbed a Fountain Valley pharmacy of $300 in drugs Sunday afternoon, accord· ing to police. The two men, described as ma le whiles, enter ed Danber Drug Store el 8984 Warner Ave. shortly after 3 p.m. demanding na rcotics. A total of 517,000 people visited beaches and there were only 86 rescues. Newport Beach llfeRuards re· p o rted 20 rescues with a weekend attendance of 175,000. They alto aaid the Sunday crowd thlMed out because of winds up to 2.5 mph . - FASHION CONCEPTS FOR THE INVESTMENT COLLECTOR AND PROFESSIONAL WOMAN They used an acetylehe torch to burn lhe lock off the office door. ORANGE OOAIT Dilly P.llat Druggist Oscar Ruu ky. 59, tol d police that the p air threatened to kllJ him unlesl be banded over the drugs. Taken were narcotics and syringes valuesf at saoo. Both fied on foot. MAIN OFFICE JJO WU I l •v M (~1• 'llfH, (A Miii toG1t1• BoM 1le0 (•1• M•\t CA th h Meanwbile state llfe1uardJ at Huntington Beach lou ed 50 rescues and a weekend crowd of 176,000. LUeeu ll r ds at Hu ntineton Beach aaid they made 13 rescuet a mone the 180,000 J*>Ple who v isited the be ach over the weekend. Air temperatures alone the Ora.nee Coast ranted from ovfr · nl1ht Iowa of 59 de1rees to da,Ume bllhl of 83 depep. Water temperature wH a warm ••srea. •• Fashion Show Wednesday. August 26 Cocktails 6:00 p.m. Showtime 7:00 p .m. We'll show you winning combinations to create a top-bros5 Image for your lifestyle. k\cludtng the 1981 Foll Evan-Picone Collection. and experts for make-up and hair trends. Saks Fifth Aver.lue, South Coast Plaza ~ Sportsweor. Uppei Level R.S.V.P. 54()..3233, e>Ct. 217, 218 • 4t. ... ~ - N NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION , ouot ATION$ INCLUOI T•AOll ON TMl NIW VO••. MIOWIU. lfACllfl( ..... •OUON, Olf•O•f AND CINCINNATI \TOC• lllCMAlllOU AlllO ••N•TIO I V TMI NASO ANO INSTINlf .. Dow Jones Final Off 20.45 Closing 900.11 now I fThtll 1s the first o/ a /our-par1 smea on how Y°" can saue under the new ta% lawJ Millions. in occupations ranging from sales to physicians to lawyers. can shift portions of their In come from ·1981 to 1982. Start arranging to do so now and you will be a ble to cut your federal income taxes substantially. Uncountable numbers in middle and high-income brackets will be in positions to receive unearned as well as earned income in coming months. Delay tak- ing as much un-~ earned income as you can until 1982 -and you ~,... will be taxed on _ that type of in-.A-.--•-------come at ,a rate of no more than 20 percent <this SYlVll PDITll includes much more than long·term capital gains. or course> Uncountable numbers of taxpayers a lso de- hberately underpay their income taxes for a wide variety or reasons and then pay the 12 percent penal- ty Imposed for underpayment. Think seriously about continuing to do this. Your penalty could rise to a rate in the range of 20 percent or more. Most of the well-publicized changes in the 1981 tax law applying to you. as an individual taxpayer. become effective ip years after 1981. For example. the widely hailed "indexing" of tax brackets to reflect the rate of inflation won't go into effect until 1985 But there are significant changes that are retroactive to 1981 or become effective this year l ) The first rate reduct.Jon stage of the '81 tax law goes into effect for 1981. When you file your 1981 tax return next spring. you will be given a credit of 1.25 percent of the tax calculated under the 1980 rates. If you must use the tax tables to determine your 1981 tax. the llkelihood is that the IRS will have pre- pared new tax tables th at will reflect the J.25 percent credit <Sl 25 for each SlOO or tax). If you must use the tax rate schedules to figure your letX, you probably will have to make the com· pulation yourself Under the tax law. you get only a 1 •t.. percent re· duction in 1981 -but a further 8:V, percent reduction in 1982. another 9 percent riduction in 1983, and still another 4 percent after 1983. Now, the switch of income comes into focus as top-notch tax strategy. for by the s hift into 1982. you also will get that 8~ percent cut. The '81 tax reduclion is minimal. For instance, if your tax for 1980 was Sl,000, and you have the same taxable income for 1981, you will pay only Sl2.50 less than for 1980. 2) Next year, all income -whether earned or un· earned will not be taxed at more than a 50 percent rate. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS Exxon s Sony Co.p ClllHS•Ct Moe>ll s Amer T~ I Comw Eols TtJC«O Inc UllOllCel n1,100 S...,100 414,000 419,900 n•.«JO lSJ,IOO 134,500 lJ0,.00 l09.l00 2'S,'IOO 271.700 ID,600 716,'°° lOl,300 Jo.,700 ... .. ,, I ~ ... I I .. I ~::i18fi'!.1 s IBM p_, Am SuPtf'Oll s MarelOll WlkrHRts 11 UPS AND DOWNS ........ I Ouql.I 1.2Clll 2 JllMCfl tpf 2 1.TVCp AA 4 W•Sl'I OHi.i s OuclLI 2.SOIJI t M•vP I 60pf r ~l ... n In< • ll«m•" t GTF'I t.1$Cll tO fl·C.ro s II Oucal.t Jpl 12 Ev•nPd !,«)pf U KCPL 4,Jjp( If lfSEG •.'2Jlf 1; UnP•r-Min I LIL Co pfE I -EO ofl PC1 ·~ I Up t S Up S.J Up S.J Up S.2 Up 0 Up '6 Up U Up 4,2 Up 4.1 Up 4 l Up 4.0 Up St Up 3.9 Up U Up H VP U VO '" Pel. Off U.7 E 12.0 10.• 10 •• IU Off 10.4 E°" i:_i ... u OH 1·1 °"fi :1 ·i ~ METALS c.,.., "-·tO onh • pound, N.V OHIN1*11. l-Mf46teflb•_. V.•l'c-•~.Oell~w Tiii $7A011 Mei.ls w .. -. <Omposlla 111 Al.,.._..1._ <tntu llO\lfld, N. V ......._.,..W000Ptf'lleM lf..._,,1C1IAOlroyo1., N.'I'. SILVER Due to late transmission today's llstlng will not appear In the Dally Pilot. GOLD QUOTATIONS ....-..1"'°"""'11•1119 '°"'°·Oft St.00. ~: ---flk1"9 S02.00 .... .,.,., .,_, .,..,_,..1,,.acn,t1, 11t1 ... Mo. ,,_,..., ... O'J,off$U2 hftdl: !Nfl1lft0...,.,00, WI ..... , t41.00 •KM. ....... ...,....., ,.,,,~ '-"' ..... lltt.00,off P.IO • • .........,, CMIJ OllUy .-1 M22.00. 9'f t7 • .JO. • .....,.., ( .... y delly .... , f~ """'10. oH ., • SYMBOLS i Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 24, 1981 H /F --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.. -Deductible lunch still on menu. -• .. ... := Kennedy attempt to cut tax deduction fails like those in past -.. :i:__, __ ·~-1 ........ :HITTING HOME A Copperhead guided missile hits an M47 tank target during engineering testing at White Sands ~b ~ sile Range, N.M. in 1978. The 155mm c:a nnon-launt'hed pro jectile homes in on laser energy bounced off tht' tar~et by a laser designator. The missile is due to be ready for USl' later this year. Cop loses pay in pocket caper NORFOLK, Va. <AP> Earl Kupka has found out being too bandy around the side pockets can put you behind the eight ball. The member of the Norfolk In ternational Airport police got a three-day suspension without pay for violating the depart· ment's edict: No guard is to be seen with his hands in his pants pockets. Kupka says his superiors believe "your hands don 't belong in there. It doesn't look professional." .. As much as 70 or 80 percent .. of the 25 Virginia Port Authority employees who work as airport police have been reprimanded for putting their hands in their pockets, said Kupka. 51 '"Most of the time. vou were seen b) the higher echelon They would tt>ll vou · · Kupka says the bosst•s even want the officers to sew shut their pants pot>kets to keep them honest "I think a man who's over 21 who wants to put a hand in his pocket should be able to put his hand in his pocket. .. he says WASHINGTON <AP> - Liberal Democrats have been denouncing the tax-deductible business lunch since the days when the restaurant tabs ran to $10 or $15 They used to call it the martini lunch. Now they says it's three martinis, caviar and fancy wine Whatever the martini quota. It 1s still on the menu, the efforts of would -be tax reformers notwithstanding Sen. Edward M. Kennedy sponsored the latest attempt to cul the lunch deduc._ lion and. like those who had tried before, got nowhere. His amendment to President Reagan's tax bill was little more than a token effort to keep the subject alive. He lost. 87-12 "I believe I have heard this argument before, .. said Kansas Republican Bob Dole. t>hairman of the Senate Finance Commit· tee, who didn't even bother to s peak agains t the Kennedy amendment. l-le 'll hear the argument again, probably in the next cam- paign The effort to limit busi· ness deductions for entertain ment has been a rixture since John F. Kennedy was president. Jimmy Carter pushed the is· sue from the White House. too. but with no more success So thl' three·martini lu.nch is still a legitimate tax deduction. still a symbol and slogan for Democrats who argue that the system subsidizes privilege. "We are not talking only about the three-martini lunch." Ken· nedy told the Senate when 1t was considering the tax bill that now 1s law . ··1t 1s al s o the chateaubriand steak and the beamaise saut>e, the t>aviar and the naming desserts and lhe fan cy wine .. Kennedy s aid the business meals deduction costs more than SJ billion a year in tax revenues and proposed that 1t be t>ut in half. the same t>hC1nge Carter wanted to make. The Massachusetts senator called the entertainment dedut>· tion "nothing more than food stamps for the rich ... "Cutting the business meals dedut>t1on in half will ensure that the ~at>rifices required by the policy or budget restraint will be shared fairly." he said "JC the poor and middle class are being asked to pay more for their food , it is unconscionable to continue unchecked a $3 billion federal s ubsidy for three-martini lunches and luxury meals for the wealthiest people in the coun· try " He said food stamps are being cut by Sl 7 billion, school lunch programs by $1.5 billion, and the tax deduction for business enter· tainment should be cut as well. The three-martini label is a slogan; what is at issue is the deductibility of business lunt>hes, wet or dry , for customers, clients or contacts. Twenty years ago, President Kennedy sent Congress legisla· lion seeking stringent limits on deductions for expense account entertainment. "These measures will "lrengthen both our tax struc· lure and the moral fiber of our society," he said. without men· t1on of martinis. The measure sought limits of S4 to S7 a lunch. Nowadays that wouldn't cover the tip. Form e r Sen . George McGovern made the lunch break a daily target in his 1972 pres· 1dentiaJcampaign ·'There is something run· damentally wrong with a tax system that permits a corporate executive to deduct bis $20 martini lunch, while a worklng man cannot deduct the price of his bologna sandwich," McGovern said. \ Carter picked up the theme, ; adjusted for inflation. '·A business executive can charge orr a S50 luncheon on a tax return, and a truck driver ca nnot deduct hi s Sf.50 sandwich." Carter said. But the deduction stood. Then, as now, its supporters include both businessmen and union leaders. "When one says that you can- not deduct the expense of enter· taining, this could well be a d ea th s entence lo a great number or very nice little restaurants all at>ross this land, and people who o perate and work in those restaurant.a very welt unders tand that," Sen. Russell B. Long, 0 -La .. said In opposing the Edward Kennedy's amendment. So business dining is still de· ductible, and will stay that way unless Kennedy and his allies t>a n t>hange a lot of minds. Perhaps they can do some lob- bying over lunch. Food poison dips in U.S. ATLANTA IAP) -Reported cases of salmonellosis, the most common type of food poisoning in the Uniled States, declined 3.6 percent in 1980, the national Cen- ters for Disease Control has said. Reported food poisoning cases caused by salmonella bacteria totaled 30,004 in 1980, a 3.6 per- t>ent drop from 1979. the CDC said. If k TRI ~:~"° ............ " ....... ,. ~It 7t ,,,. ~ •• ,,,. , ...... \,.,,~·· "'"""'°",., (. \.1 .... ,.... .. "', '°"" ., .. , c otra 11111 .. 641·1239 ,,,. __ .. ... ""' ... ..cA95-G401 i.a c ...... c ......... II•" °""'91t#l'Wf at •• _...,~·--t , • ·our 24th yc•;ir" -;;..~Auto & Homeown&rs ~ .; • Ouotes By Phone CONSTRUCI10N MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 FAIMCIS IMSUIAMCE HOUP 549.5554 or IJS.)07 19t 4~·CottoMuo GrandO~S. SAVE 25 PERCENT ON WHOLE COLOMllAH COffH IEAHS at Trader Joe & Pronto One of the most prized va c uum con tainers, coffees of Colombia 1s flushed w1lh nitrogen lo called Colombia Excelso hold their rres hn esi. We just got a shipment or Please v1s1t our newest Excelso. which we 're Trader Joe's at the in Reiling for only S.1 M per tersection of 17th,Street1 lb. We have only S,000 Newpart Boulevard ana I b s Co mpare al Superior AH~nue tnt•xl lo $5 59 $S 99 elsewhere Denn) ·s a nd Barria~·~ And they're packed in BankJ HOW IH COSTA MESA Pilot Logbook -D ·1 p·1 ' Candid com~ar:ies II y I DI exclUS1vely m the • Reside ntial • Commercial BuilJings: Takeout Commitment required along with leases. • land Loaru. up to o ne year SCYA; appraisal. CONTACI: •Jeff Johnson- lrvine Office (714) 851-4050 TIH:. L'N<. 'ONVENTIONAL BANK. Herit~e Bank ~kmh..., Fllll • A (QIW -L.ENDI!" • RECEPTIONIST ANSWERING SERVICE • • • AN INDIVIDUAL tlJMBER AT NO TELEPHONE COMPANY CHARGES • A PRESTIGIOUS ADDRESS AND PRIVATE MAIL BOX FOR YOUR BUSINESS • • • • • • • • A TELEPHONE SECRETARY l~~A~IfA~~o:POINTMENTS, RESERVATIONS. A MODERN COMPUTER TO MAINTAIN YOUR DAILY CALENDAR, SCHEDULE, AND MESSAGES OFFICE SPACE and CONFERENCE ROOM AVAILABLE FoR YouR APPOINTMENTs MA IL LI ST & MAIL SERVICE CAPABILITIES FOR MAILINGS TO YOUR EXISTING OR POTENTIAL CLIENTS WI DE AREA PAGING FOR INSTANT COMMUNICATION 800 NATIONWIDE ANSWERING SERVICE AVAii.ABLE ~ SE~VICE, DISPATCH, OR ORDERTAKING ~LSO TELEX, FACSIMILE, DICTATION & WORD PROCESSING 1ALL SERVICES CUSTOMIZED TO YOUR NEEDS Ip y.., hn•l Mlnl•lu he~I Malllllu le1•lt1I LOW mRIDUCTORY UIEI c•11 .,.AY ,_ .... DETAILS (J·l41 953.1234 WE'ii AllS-mlWllK ••• r y --. .... . . .... _, -~ . . -..