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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-09-21 - Orange Coast PilotORANGI COAST .......... This i! the type of C-130 ca;go plane which crashed and exploded near Indian Springs Airfield. Nev. Plane, carrying 65, crashes, hUrns BULLETIN INDIAN SPRINGS AIR FIELD, Nev. <AP > -An Air Foree C-Ut transport plaae carrytag a people on an Army tralalag 'mlaalon crash-landed aad bust ID&o names &oday near a remo&e desert landing strip. Air Force St. Joe Wiies sad seven people were kllled and ze boapltalbed. INDIAN SPRI NGS AIR FIELD, Nev. (AP> -A C-130 transport plane carrying at least 68 people on an Army training mission crash-landed and burst ·into names todar. at an Air Force base, authonties said. The Air Force said most or those aboard suffered minor injuries. There were conflicting reports as-to whether anyone was killed in the accident about 12:30 a.m. PDT one mile north of Indian Springs Air Field, a desert airstrip acljacent to Nellis Air Force Base, which is 45 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Shelly Camp, ~ Las Vegas police officer at the scene, said the Air Force told him four deaths had been confirmed. But Sgt. Joe Wiles, a public in· formation officer at Nellis, said "We still have no fataliUes con- firmed. There may or may not still be some on the aircraft." Wiles said officials "know of 65 people on the airplane ." He said of those, 44 have been treat- ed for minor injuries and re- leased. while the remainder bad been hospitalized either at the Nellis AFB hospitaJ or in Las Vegas. H e s aid none o r those hospitalized was thought to be critically hurt, and said most or the injuries were "orthopedic" such as broken arms or legs. Lt. Col. Mike Wallace, public information officer at Nellis, said rescue workers spent hours trying to remove all passengers from the wreckage. The plane was still burning four hours after the crash and firefighters were on the scene, Camp said. The flames could be seen leaping 20 to 25 feet. •Reno NEVADA + Lake Indian Springs • Mead Air Field -"-• Las Vegas CALIFORNIA AIR CRASH SITE Base near Las Vegas Nell is has a continuing military t r aining exer cise known as Red F1ag which lasts several weeks at a time. It is not known whether the c rashed C-130, a Lockheed-built craft whose model name is Hercules, was involved in Red Flag. The air field is home base to a large entourage or helicopters and other craft. Ln Washington, Capt. Virginia Prbyla , an Air Force spokeswoman, said the plane, attached to the 463rd Airlift Wingat Dyess Air Force Base in Texas. was believed to be carry- (See PLANE, Page A!) Power plant pickets return Arrests mount to 1,192 in week-long blockade SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP> - With a decision to start up Diablo Canyon atomic power plant looming, an anti-nuclear blockade of the plant resumed today with more than 180 ar· r ests, bringing the seven-day total to 1,290. The Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission was expected to give Pacific Gas & Electric Co. in· terim approval today for low- power testing at the plant, a move that could spark a new push by protesters. PG&E spokesman Dick Davin said that if the license is ap- proved , "We will start the prQcess immediately" to load the reactor, start the nuclear chain reaction and begin tests at up to S percent of the reac- tor's capacity. Today's arrests began shortly before 7 a.m . as authorities cleared a path through a triple row of blockaders at the main gate to allow three empty buses t~ leave the $2.3 billion plant, and a balf-bou.r later as a mile long convoy of buses loaded with PG&E workers rumbled into the plant. Several hundred new pro- testers, all of whom have un- der gone the non-violence train· ing required by the sponsoring Abalone Alliance, have joined the protest fo r tod ay 's showdown since last week. "This is the day." said pro- tester Russell Cutler, 23, of San· ta Barbara. "We're going to be here till the end -the end or this p lant. We're a new wave or people who haven't been busted. There's lots o{ us ." Led by a National Guard truck with San Luis Obispo County deputies on the running boards, the incoming conv oy was s topped sever al times by the blockaders, with som e pro- testers apparently trying to sit in front of the moving vehicles. The line fell back at the last moment and deputies swarmed over the demonstrators, using choke holds on several. Elsewhere, a Hawaiian anti- nuclear group called the OPIHJ Alliance was on its way to join the blockade at San Luis Obispo, following a brief stopover today in Los Angeles. Neith e r the Cal ifornia Highway Patrol nor the Abalone Alliance, a coalition of anti- nuclear groups, would estimate the total number of protesters remaining today. About 5,000 people from nearby com- munities marched on the pJant in a one-day demonstration Sun- day but were not involved with the Abalone blockade. Tbere were no arrests during that march. San Luis Obispo County sheriff's Lt. Jerry Dooley estimated there were 1,000 pro- testers in the group'ls camp- ground Sunday night. About ~ remained in custody today, said CHP spokesman Dan Parker. The Alliance said it might spread demonstrators all around the 735-acre site if testing is ap. proved. ••• * * * YOUR HDMlllWI DlllY PIPll 111•/\N' .I { l .'U N I'( I 1\1 ,. ()l•"I •/\ .. t N ' .... Bellringer's songs gonged She's removed after playing pop tunes on c.arillon ST. HELENS, England (AP) -Tbe bells of St. Mary's started a d lng·donl fieht bere between bellringer Eva Gamer and her parish priest, the Rev. Vincent Hughe.a. Mrs. Garner, a pop-loving pensioner, made Sundays swing with foottapping versions of "The Teddy Bears' Picnic," "Danny Boy," and other upbeat tunes in addition to the usual Beethoven and Mendelssohn. Her light touch on the com- plicated keyboard of the 47-be.ll carillon at the Roman Catholic Church in this glassmaking town won praise from the Jesuits who ran the church. But they moved out last April and a new team or "renewal" priests moved ln, Jed by Hughes. T he new priest, feelin1 the music was less than heavenly, issued a stop.the-pop ultimatum. Mrs~ Gamer refused and quit 51 "You can't play hymns and sacred music all the time." the e~oyment of local people." Hughes, 50, aald Mn. Garner bad been playiq "these rather trashy S<lllP" since be arrived and be la looldn1 for a new keyboard player. But a replacement won't eui- ly ~ round. The carillon, one of only three lo Britain, ls operated by leven, feet and stout blows of the fist to make the bells rlnf. and Mrs. Garner sald It toot her three years, three hours every . night and all afternoon on Saturdays, to learn to play it. years or playing the bells. . Storekeeper Mary Foy or- " You can't play hymns and ganized ~ petition to get Mrs. sacred music all the time you Garner 's Job back. would go round the bend :. the '' Al~ost ever ybody round unrepentant 60-year-old ~dow here has been married to Eva's said. "After1all, the bells are for bells," Mrs. Foy said. Poor· nations due aid Reagan strategy excludes th<?se who suwort terrorjsm UNITED NATIONS <AP) - Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. unveiled the Reagan administration's new strategy for economic d evelopment of poor nations today. but s aid those supporting international Odor leads to raid in Huntington Unus ual odors coming from a Huntington Beach home led to a raid on what police described as a sophisticated lab for the illegal manufacture of m etham- phetamine, a powerful stimulant commonly called "speed." Police arrested three men and confiscated two truckloads of lab equipment in the raid, which took place at 15711 Plymouth Lane. A fourth man in the case is still being sought by police. · Huntington Beach police narcotics Sgt. Carl Vidano said some neighbors told him they had not been suspicious because they thought the unusual odors were coming from the highly publicized chemical dump ex- cavation at Bolsa Chica Street and Warner A venue earlier this summer. The dump and the house that was raided are both located in the northwest part or the city. Aft er investigating an anonymous tip regarding the odors, however. police obtained a search warrant to raid the residence, Vidano said. In the garage, bathroom and service porch, oHicers round containers of volatile hydrogen and ether, as well as oxygen, nitrogen and other chemicals and equipment, Vidano said. When officers arrived Thurs- day evening, they arrested one resident, Daniel M. McDaniels, 32, described as a paraplegic. Two other residents who arrived home while the raid was in progress also were arrested. They were identified as Stuart Robert Pryor. 20, and Michael Richard Dahn, 24. All three were jailed on suspi- cion of possession and manufac- ture of illegal drugs. The three were released Friday after post- ing $5,000 bail each. · A fourth resident fied when be saw a police vehicle near the home, Vidano said. Officers pursued the man in a 60 mph vehicle chue through the bous· ing tract, but the man eluded capture, he said. This fourth resident of the Plymouth Lane home, identified as David Lee Corbett, 24, is slfil being sought by police. Vldano said "speed" is sold on the street for $75 to $100 per gram. HB oil tank spill probed A 20,000.&allon oil storage tank ruptured thla morning, causing '°" to spill in the back yard ol a . downtown .'Huntln1ton Beach !Mme, ftre oftlcla11 aald. ~ The rupture ln the 1torqe tank occurred 1hortl:y after I · a. m. at 2Z7 tth st., accordiq to Capt. Bocer Boemer. HOimer &aid ft.re depart.meat I pel'IOGDel went to the acene lm· media&ely. nae cauae of the rup- 1 tun la belnc lDveatJfaled. It allo . waa not known bow much oil bad ' apUJed from the tank. Hoemer Hid then WU DO fire. ., terrorism will not get lap. In a speech to e U.N. General Assembly, aig said t h e world body and global economic developmen t are threatened by "the willful viola- tion or the national integrity of both Afghanistan and Cambodia by the Soviet Union and Viet- nam,,.;, "The ~Id's hopes for peace, for security and for development will be jeopardized if 'might makes right' becomes the law of nations," Haig said in prepared remarks. Haig said security from ag- gression is an essential ingre- dient for economic growth in poor nations and that the Reagan administration will in- crease its help for "programs essential to deter international aggression and to provide the domestic security necessary to ca rry out sound ecotc>mic policies. "We have no intention of pro- vidin~ foreign assistance, moral comfort or the prestige of in- ternational political platfQrms to countries that foster interna- tional violence," Haig said. Haig's criticism of Soviet in· tervention in Afghanistan and its support for Vietnam's occupa- tion of Cambodia reflects the firm stance be is expected to take in his meeting Wednesday with soviet Foreign Minister An· drei Gromyko. The chief purpose of the meet- ing with Gromyko will be to agree on details for the start or U .S.·Soviet negotiations late~ in the year aimed at restralning deployment of medium-range nuclear missiles. He said Sunday that while the administration is ready to talk seriously with the Soviet Union, he will tell Gromyko the Soviets must not intervene in neighbor· ing Poland. Communist officials WARNS TERRORISTS State Secretary Haig bave repeatedl y warned Poland's ind ependent labor feder•lion SoMdarity against challenging governm ent authority. Haig met here today with U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who is seeking U.S. support in his re-election bid. The "strateey for growth" Haig outlined in his speech is aimed at bolstering economic development in poor nations. It emphasizes private investment rather than government-backed aid wherever possible. "Our common objective should be to sqmulate domestic and international private invest· ment," be said. "We must en- <Stt HAIG, Page AZ> Compensa~ioJJ, seen for Iran lwstages WASHINGTON (AP) -A Presidential Pan el recom- mended today.that the U.S. gov- ernment pay each or l.be former American hostages in Iran $12.50 per day as compe111at:loa for their ordeal. If the proposal is approved by President Reagan, each of the 52 ex-hostages held in captivity for A« days would be eoUUed to $5,550 in compensation. The nine-member com- mission, which included former Secretary or State Cyrus Vance, released its recommendationa after three months of delibera- tions. The compensation recommen- dation was one of six specific proposals contained in the com· mission's report. · The panel said U)e tax-exempt detention benefits lt wu recom- mending are similar to ~ given to Vietnam priaonen ol war, and interned civilians ln Vietnam and to the crew ol the USS Pueblo, which was dftalned by North Korean autbqrlties for 11 monthll iD1888. In addltJon, the cqmmtuloa recommended that: -The maximum payment al· low able on claim• for daaaace to or lose ol personal property be Increased from ·ue,OQO to $50,000. -The medical aoct health beneflta relating to the bottac•' detention be a.ut.bor1nd wttbout Umlt. -lCJdstinc lecialaUoa "18UDI to bOltap benefttl be amtnded to cover future bOltace lltua· tlon.a. • The $1J,50 per da1 co...,a. tJon recommended bf tb1 _., mission •fell far short of the figure suggested by Brice Clag- gett, the · attorney for the hostages and their families. Considering the execution threats, torture and other mis- treatment ol the hosta1es. "you would be on the conservative slde if you were to decide that a court would be likely to pay a minimum of $1,000 for each day of captivity for each host.,e," Claggett bad • told the com· mission. Dllllil CUil lllJHll Nigbi tbrou1b mid· morning h>w clouds and fog alone the coast, otherwise lair throu1h Tuesday. Lows tonight near 80 alOft.I cout, 86 in- land.,, IDJhl Tuesday low 70s at beaches, 808 lnland. 111111 TlllY a...-... • --.. E ........ : a a4 :: I • I 5 d • • • • • • •.Ofat9'CoU1 ONLY PILOT/Monday, September 21, 198'1 Bo~ trial OMDS ·today· 12 mtn"der cbdrges faced in Freeway.Killer ca8e · , ' . µ>SANO&D(~, ~· 14 moot.be=~.,.. IMlf-~ ecutor1&1 ijld ••••· Int •=• •ti•~ eo· defeod : . .._ed sual• -lll•r 81110. m OaaU1~ WUf&c~ ......... .,.. Killer c . : The "" DbwllC-* driver II dl ... t,.-,_· murden al~ '°""' ._ .S boys betfe aAl&llllt Wit ._... 1 June t•. !IW)o~ -nude, wen.._.. clum.,.cl .._,, 1 killetl; · 3 hurt ., in free~y crash A 27-ye......ad Loni Bncb woman ~u .ili)l.. aod ~ other peeple"'Wer~ inJured ur:ty today in a t(ngle-vehicle enlob on the S.. Diego Freeway near Harbor Boulevard In Coata Mesa. • Californi• ~ -Patrol Of. ficer Joe MoF wet-Wendy Searles ..u tilled when a van driven by Dould Km.. 21. ol Huntincto9 -Beach, slandlecl ln· to a tree. ., __ ....1_, _, __ KnisswU~'.CllJ~ of felony ~ 'llli'i.._, Pd manslaUlb•.ai the4ail w.-d • the UC lrYtae·"MedlcaJ C.ter. Morrison · sald be s uUued bruises aDicub. \,· · A' sister al the ct-' 'Wcmd, Robin Searles, 22, of Looi Beach, WU mealed for i.Qjuries at Fountain Valley Community Hospital Md releued, Morriaoo said. Another paaaenger, Bruce Reyes, 24, of Long Beach, ~ maloed at the boepital todey ·with a bJ10ke11 spine, broken right leg and a collapaed hmc, Morriacm said. ' Morrison said witnessea told· blip that the van was nOl'UI· bound on the freeway and a h1'h rate of> ipeed abou\ 12:45 Lm. when ft went out of control. struek the center divider, then traveled across the traffic lanes to the shoulder where it 1t.n&ck the tree. de&ay proceedinp and 8oD1n to ••Y be l.bipt represent himself. The Juda• aareed wlth DeDUb' Dl1tr(ct -Attoraey Sterlin.I Norrtl, who dubbed Boo.ln'a 1ur-prt.e request "nothJn1 more tlaan a dilatory tactic" wblch cou.ld bave ltalled proceedlQp anodaer four months. Proaec:utors are Heklnt the death penalty for tbe twice· convtded su offender wbo baa pleaded limocent in th.ii cue. He •• arrested ln Hollywood on , June 2, UlfJO. Co-defendants have termed Bo.Dln the mastermind behind the murders. James MlJDJ'O ol Port Huron, Mich., and Gregory Matthew Miley of Houston, both It, pleaded guilty earlier thi.s year to one killing each, lm· plluted Bonin in several and a1reed to testify against him to escape the death penalty. Another admitted accomplice, Vernon Butts, 33, was found banged In his jail cell last January, an apparent suicide. William Ray Pugh, 18, of ~orwalk, has pleaded Innocent 10 anotber slaying but pro· eeutors have not said whether they ire seeking a similar plea- ba rg aining arrangement with him. Pugh's attorney bas said bis client was in Bonin:s vu ud e.f raid for his life the night in March 1980 that a 15-year-old Lancaster youth wu strangled. SO TtERE Alexander McColl. a contribut- ing editor for Soldier of Fortune magazine, puts his viewpoint on display during the mercenaries' convention in Scottsdale. Ariz. --~---.---- ,.,_._ As another contributing editor, R.ot1ert Burton, put it: "You've got a group of guys h er e who might be described as a little to the right of Attil;i the Hun." Meadows crowd dazzkd Cross s hows vocal ability, command of guitar By J OEL C. DON OMale o.lly HMS.... Riding the crest of his hit t1lle track from the movie "Arthur," C hristopher Cross roused a REVIEW quick success and wu brought back on stage by a standing ova· lion to perform an encore medley of tunes from U.e Beach Boys. SusRect, ~ught in giTis" ·~hooting 'Horse rac'1' payoff game goes haywire FAJRF1ELD, Maine (AP> - Everyone loves a winner, and just about everyone turned out to be one when a promotion game sponsored by a northern N ew E n gland supermarket ,<;halo apparenUy went haywire. · near-capacity Irvine Meadows Amphitheater audience to his special brand of love songs Sun- day evening. expressive and barely uttered a fe w words on stage. All hi s energies were poured into hi s music and dazzling the en- thusiastic audience with his pre- cise attack and ab1hty to set a romantic mood for much of the evening. As he crooned the1 lyrics of "Surfin' U.S.A.," fans swarmed down to the stage to sing and dance along with the more up- beat. fast-paced music. Orange ~· -~ Slle~1· ill)uri ... but said lhe older Clrl uties wett ·+cc~ was \UlCOOScious when she ar- the ~tio ab lw • riv~ at tlle hospital Wurday. Elsinore~. ~· Horton said Ulere .. 'were wit· were e · netaes to the· llilooting, and et· National ' ~ • .. tentptl are belal made to locate The ~ ag~,..._~ the ow.er-Of thf pickup tnlck, names ~ rel ;~ walkillC Ile the• e )a, ~:~:r=~':!:.=~! Two perish man drl~ an orange Dat.aun • • h pick-up tr'D~1Jbq} ~. •P· ID Jeep eras parenUy ._._t piflwe>fttkm°"' 1 accordint i. sh~fr1 ~lt. RANCHO PALOS' VE1t'Da Gerald Haf11!1a· , • i (AP) -Two mell died won Ho!1Gft WM cmwy=,eaP-old · th~it jeep J>lun&ed off a "tSO-foot w~s ~ ~e:,cc;,.~ cliff oear a dirt path in thiJ billy Mission J.Y; area of Loe A.ngetes CcM4atY. Mission eJOt WiC· sberift"a deputies uld was in serioWJ '+-oeawGD ~ · Deputy John Ra~leff u.td The wounde& tu'bsi W'l!r8 • Sunday that Richard Mu Davia tifi4:d llJ. ora.ng4 ~u ·y 22, of Lomita mad his paueneer: Sheriff's =••t ~t. W,att Frederick J . Sailor, 21, of Hart u . 1. ca.u.-· ~ Carson died after the jeep .ran Vanessa 1'WrTi., 12,.)otb off a winding dirt ·path on Elsinore. • • )1f' f' ! . priYate propd't.y s.turdaJ. The Miss a.i~r.wi be uil,. is in accident was reported to criticaJ ' "~.DOt •· a uthorities 'by a passing ~cted to ~«t;" MiN c~ inotorist. lD serioua CC!Mttiop -wiUils The cause of the accident WllS wounds -~ · ~We · •. bein1 inv~ted.. ti u..-.. --~ on.~ . · • ·~-~ Y The liJ't*, wbo ad -~ \ ~:lk:"~tth.tra =:11W:i::! Blast hurt8 2 nationaJ ' at abfu,t % p.m. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An Saturday en tile"' ••nm~ explosion apparently iptted by oulled uP ..._.e them-.!! find a abort cil'euit bluted three several l'Otlldlb, Sberifrs ;;ct. manhole coven as high as a Gerald li>rtdn said. power pole, injortng a man md A sl)Ottlman at M18slon Com· a woman in the city's rmanclaJ munity ....,tal d~ .to re-dlltricthere Sunday. lease ~ f# pis' ,., Hit~rtt~ !friver . sougli¢ _inf atali~y Witnesses wbo sMJ .-a..year- old Newport Beach ~a.a nm dpwn and killed a. be ttas walk· ing across a Balboa Boa.ltvard crosawalk early Sanday have provided JSolice with a descrip- t\on of the hit·and·run vehicle and its license plate number. Newport Beach police have not rileased the name '11 the registered owner of the dark· colored foreip car that alleced· ly struck Donald B. Warner. No 11Test8 hav. been m.Se., Warner, who lived less thaa a block from the aeeae d tlaeJatal aecident al the intenectioe ol Balboa and#'SJ..at Streei'J WM taken to U,e trauma cent'-" at Fountain Valley Community Hospital where be died. Witnesses told police offtcen that Warner and an WlidenWled male companion ~re croalq Bal~, beading ln the directlon· of the !Htach, when the car knocked him down. Poliee uMl tMy ~ tM drh•r 4ld aot h•• 11M Hm.ide'• lll)ltl OD.-. W~"J ........ ~J • . .. .. •· Officials for Sampson's supermarkets were trying to figure out today what went wrong with its "horse race" coo· test during the weekend. There are supposed to be only two $1,000 winners a week in the chain's 31 stores in Maine and Mew Hampshire. But ~n employee says that five to 10 minutes after a taped race .ended on television Saturday, people in many of the stores, were lining up with winning tickeU. No payoffs were being made l*ldinl the investigation. One employee said that at the Fairfield store, 11 people bad tickets for the winning bone. Other stores in central Maine had unofficial counts of up to 25 holders of winning tickets. A Sampson's employee said that 10me of the winners who were denied their purses were understanding, while others were livid. "l happened to go outside to aet some ice for a customer,'' one employee said , "and one • man was saying, "They'll either pay or I 'U see the at· tomey general·.·' Roger Hoyt, president of Han· na!ord Brothers Co., which runs the Sampson's stores, could not be reached immediately today. But he said during the weekend he had not contacted the man who ran the promo- tional aame. · Hoyt also said he was not sure whether insurance would cover lone. if the stores decide to booor the winning tickets. Winds whip brushfires QUINCY (AP) -Northwest winds were l'\1.Shina a number of forest, gras ; and brush fires across port ons of Northern California eu.ly today. The laqes·. was la Plumas National Jbrf,<St about 15 miles northeast of Quincy, about 180 alr mUea northeast of San Fran· cisco. The fire bad -consumed over 3,100 acres of largely heavy timber by late Sunday, advanc· · ing two miles or more before 20- to 30-mile-an-bour winds during the Clay. Forest spokesman Warren Grandall said tt started Thurs· day wttb about 100 li1btnlns etril• that touched off about 10 1mob tUumnl ID rugQCI tel'· rain, ha burned out onto rel· atlvely nat 1round Sunday. If any ftree ln the 20-to 40-acre · catecory were a1ao belq fOQCbt. Low-key opening planned at hotel KANSAS CITY (AP) -A low· .: by nopentna ii plann~ for the <( ETY 1totel Gil <>et, 1, ··~~ weu1 after· two · • coU..-.S tn the hotel ~~Ua'90Ple. • ,.. ~ ldel-bM -anderlGG• •· n• a IW"!f.• lncludinl a • clluc• In tllent1n of tbe 1k)walka that erubed JulJ 11 .. om.to a lobby ftlled wttb people •~dins• tea dance. The 30-year-old Texan treated the crowd to a 00-minute set, which included current hits such as "Never Be the Same," "Sail· ing," "Ride Like the Wind" and ''Say You'll Be Mine." !1?1aily know Cross for his high- pilched vocals. On stage. he cemonstrated his command of ·the guitar, offering a number of lead guitar solos. C r oss appea r ed non - The majority of hit singles cam e by way of Cross' first albu m , 1which has sold more than three million copies. In 1980, he took Grammy Awards for best album . best s ong (·'Sailing ''> and b es t new artist Cross seemed an awe of his Though he played for an hour and a half, a few concerttoen were overheard to c.omment on the brevity or the show. Perhaps they were really expressing their enjoyment, havina been swept away by Cr.osa' ex- cellence. Coming to Irvine Meadows on Oct. 2 will be Jefferson Starship. Palace denies Diana bored Newspaper says.Princess unable to .adapt to royall y· LONDON <A.Pl -Buck- ingham Palace has denied a newspaper report that Princess Diana was "bored with her role" as Prince Charles' wife after only seven weeks of mar- riage. "Total Iv untrue ," s aid Michael Shea . palace press secretary of the r eport in the Sun, a London tabloid owned by Australian newspaper magnate Rupert Murdoch. The newspaper said 1t was standing by its report. The Sun article said 20-year- old Diana was bored, losing Cold remedy squabble fatal BERKELEY <AP> -A Berkeley man was shot lo death by a drug store security guard over a $4.50 cold remedy, police reported. Se c urit y guards told authorities that Robert Labuzan, 37, took the remedy from the drug store and was shot while fleeing, police said. He was rushed to Herrick Hospital and pronounced dead. An Oakland resident employed by a private security firm was held for investigation or involun· tary ~anslaughter. weight and finding it "almost impossible to adapt herself to the day.to-day r outine of a royal." Quoting unidentified sources. it also said Diana was finding it d1ff1cult to treat "servants as ser vants" at the royal family's Balmoral residence in Scotland, where she has been living with her husband and his parents. Queen Elizabeth Tl and Prince Philip. Although he denied the report, Shea said he would not bother to ask for a retraction. "If I rang the Sun every time they ran a story like this, I would not have anything else to do," he said. The Sun said Diana was "deeply un settled " and persuaded Charles to "take her away from it all'' to a s maller home on Balmoral estate when the queen leaves for a trip to Australia next week. An un identified Palace spokeswoman told Press As · sociation, Brilain·s domestic news agency, that various mem· hers or the royal family are often housed in one of the estate's smaller buildings. "They never keep BalmoraJ CasUe open unless the queen is in residence there," she said, declining further comment. The princess. formerly Lady Diana Soencer married the ......... ILLUITAAJED MAN -Wtlfred Hardy of En1land i1 in· vestigated by French entertainer Jacques Martin and Murielle Hess on a Paris TV show. Hardy says he's the "~orld cflampion or the tattooed," covering everything but h1s face and toenails. ' 32-year-oid heir to· lite throne amid great c~rentODJ at St. Paul's Cathedral OD J\11)' 29. The Sun, the firt£'9e1r1paper to report the romance of Charles and Diana, said Diana bad reached "a personal crisis in her new Ufestyle." From Page A1 PLANE • • • \ng nine crew members and Si passengers. She said the plane was takint part in a night trainina exercise of the Army's tt.h lnt.ntry Division from Fort Le.U. Wash., to simulate Air Force-Army airlift operations in combat COD· ditions. As dawn lit the area, the charred remains of the plane were visible to reporrten a balf. mile away. All that remained ol the craft was a t~~ and part or the left wia1, one ....-e and about rive f~l of,f\a.Mla,.. Wallace said thtf pi.e6 wu carrying flares •n• lmolle grenades to be u.se in the train· ing exercise, and thole lpit.ed in the crash. The plane came to. rest nortb of the end of the ftlaway lllld pointing perpendicular to it. WaUace said the plane eame in fiat and skidded akfll tbe~ floor. A tangle of •meraency vehicles and crWa wM sWl spraying the wreekale down u rush -hour tralfl~. mottlJ workersen,....~dll, buzzed by on ~ • 1'11t a hall-mile away. • • : The C.130 ii poweM4~1- turbo-prop en11n• _, ·It• a wingspan of LU ftet. It cu car ry 92 troo-1, er 84 paratroopers. The plane is tbe Hine trpe ID· volved in a cta•h 4luHac tAe abortive reseue of the Americana held boltu• lD Ir• in 1980. \ \ . ' ' Orange Coast OAILV PILOT,Monday, September 21 , .4981 8 A few ·r~membere il:1 Centennial of Garfield's death obs~rved ... ~ ~, . llJUn'OR. Ohio <AP> -Oa t.be leotb uaiVU'HJ'J Se~ ol ~lames A. Oarfteld'• death a band.f\ll ol blttory buff1 d.a1t;\ elf the memory of the •r11ldent whoee 11"Htt1t coe· tribuUon to blltory boob WU hla PlaasinaUoa. A few people recalled Oarfleld'a death tn allnple ceremoniea at bla llometA>wn hen and ln nearby Cleveland, where be ls buried. An official obaenance wu pinned for Lona Bra.ncb, N.J ., where he died. J>reparat_,. la· : eluded cleantn1 up a memon.i • monument that baa betonte lit· tered wlth bf'oken 1la11. A ' nearby broaae statue atandJ nearby, erected 10 yeaH ago. At Lawnfield, the name of ' ' Garfield's bome here, the I.Me 1 County Historical Society i plannecJ to Jay a W!'Hth private- ly at a historic.I marker. Eric Cardinal , biatortcal direct or, said the society celebrates the anniversary ol bis election u prftldeot rather than his death. "It was more upbeat," be said. In Cleveland, a hastily or- 1anl1ed ceremony marked lhe date in a public ceremony at the Garfield Monument in Lake View Cemetery. Jl was just Thursday that Smokestack to topple ? GREAT FAU.S, Mont. <AP) -The city's most prominent landmark, th~ SOS -foet smokestack of Anacooda Copper Co., ls ttacked. Officials said. Uie "1J.year-0ld chimney may have to• be tonl down because it would cost more than Sl million to fix . The ro111· pany closed its refinery here last fall. Built In 1908, the smokestack was vaJued at about fl million in 1972. 20TH PRESIDENT James A. Garfield Cleveland history bufr 8a.n>va Riedel l&W'lched her campatin to honor Garfield after hearing that no public ceremony ·wa\ planned. She was aided by Allan P eskin, a Cleveland State University history professor and a biolJ'apher of Garfield. who served only seven moollls in of. fice before dying of art as· sassin's bullet. "She put it together out of thin air, and it's wonderful," said Peskin, master of ceremonies at the afternoon event. Gar field , he said, was a brl1liaot Union geaeral dutlng the Civil War, a congresaman for 17 years, a senator, a teacher and president of Ohio's Hiram College -where he had worked as a janitor while studying. ·•Now, maybe Clevelanders will realize they bad a great man u president, even though bis term was cut short by an u - sassin 's bullet.." Peskin said. Invited to be the featured . . . l'l• .... J-. a.~ 1reat·•reat itanCJ.O'b ~ ... tWf ': Pl'etl~t. All branch• ·O! tit mWtary Hilt boeor l\IUda. • 61r'f'Jeld occu .... Olll) • Un.. Ill mtmor)' f"r :ti• acboe>l ...., .. ~. · ~ tbelttll~(.~ !' 8Nllliaated aad the Ullnf ~ • seven preaidenta prob~·~:· Ob1o1 • , Hl a 1reat~t te1acy •••, ~~~toi:;'mlnet~' the creation ol the led•rat:ct~\ Service Comtni11ion. i11 i8" which took politic• out C>f 1'Wd·. Ing most IOVet"fttJMdt poslttitit. He was almt &o 1eatla b~ Ctl Gultea-.,. a d strft\.l~d . seel5er1 who wel•aate4 /0t crime"' 1181.. • • r. n .• , GJl'fteld oppOM!lf dvlt 1etY(d · , • . refbrm wbDe he was la~ftee.,.; :-"· '!xtMCIE TtMIE -John Evans takes his lie was sh~ Ju.tr ~li. ~ 'tbr.be clog» for a run near his Ndrthampton, the plaf.f'cfrta of ttftl'-Batmho~ cc .. 1 d \.. Th · s ·b · and llotom•c R•llrt>adti4u · c-n .. ~ , "ome. e_ c~mes are i .erian WI' answer their initincts . ~r the 200-pou Evans, taking the dogs•for a walk means just goes along for the ride. Wnhlncton. one hllet" ir.aled )buakies and need this kind or exercISe to b1A right arm, bllt ~ .-cind' tirY • , t~ h1a ba~ . and. c.u~ ee. fo\nMI. f "" The president who had1ta~ office March 4d lbtlt year.'llft!cl more than two moot.hs after~ shooting but died Sept. 19 at aie 49 from blood S>Olsolllns allier-· weeks of being probe4 bt:.,..: sterile instnimenta and \h~·un­ gl ov ed hands of aur.ceotts .f\mericans singled out Terrorist group targeting U.S. presence in bom bings searching ror the bullet. · The wounded Garfield .ft•c beeft tra ns ported' to Loa g Branch on the New JerMy share to escape Washlng~n·s sulllllW'~ heat. .. BONN. Wet Germany CAP> · -The li!rrorisl Red Army Fac- tio11 e vi<U!ntly has decided to i<&ke · IMlvantage of the wave of -.dtlrAmerica nis m in West (}enuny and target U.S. of. fkta11 •or instaUat.ions for urban guerrilla attacks. Since Aug. 31. the ultra-leftist xroup bas La.ken responsibility Hang glider pilol~ed 1 • • .. , ~ ;Uie 'bombing at lhe head· qu'..,.ters of the U .S. Air Force in £uro'pe al Rlmstein that YUBA CITY (AP) -A bane W8UD~ed 20 people, including an ,.,;;:. Amencan general, and for the glider plldl was killed wts. ~ grenade attack in Heidelberg lost control and crashed bead-d d G first Into rocks at. tM ban ttthe . -i~at sllghtly wouo e en. Sutt B tt tb ·u ,. ..._. ~hick J. ICroesen, the U .S. .r u es, au ori 4t8 e...,... . Mrn,.,s commander in Europe. The 'Sutter. CoWtL)'. c~, .,t.fter Tuesday's unsuccessful office identified the vac;lim ol.tbe a~pt on Kroesen'a life Franz T~ursday c ras h tu · t19fle J oS.l Strauss, a former defense Wilkerson , 45, of SluUer. · • ahnSter and now st ate premier dreas Baader the next month in a n apartment near the U.S. m1l1tary s hopping area in Frankfurt. Other arrests foll owed. Baader's successors launched new attacks four years later. But mindful of America's im· proved image. they chose promi- nent West Ger mans, including the solicitor general, a banker and an industrialist, as t..arget.s. Things are different now. "As it did at the time.of the Vietnam protests, this group is trying to exploit anti-American trends, which today are triggered by the arms policy of the Reaian ad· mini stration," wrote the Co l ogne Stadt·Anzeige newspaper. ' Interior Minls t et •Gerlt Baum said ln a \ne\fl.,..,_. • terview that be had heed "1~ ing for moo\hA that the • Army Factioo wa.s gearinc-; Cor a new campaign and Ula f U.S. interests were the lit,. targeU. '1 Althoup rnoet We•• Oersa cond emn Red lAyflly "F• violence, the U.S. ·tmage , has suffered in recent )' The anti-Americanism ste from a mix of fears that Pres&. t dent Reagan is leading the Welll1 to a new world war andl emerginl o.nnan nationali · • • "' o'1Ba\laria, quoted German in· Teddy Roosevelt gets fiacial · l:~~~:~ei~%~~ !~7~e~ ~ The Red Ar my Faction -also Congress to debat ' .~ ~~ ,~;1 • air waves access Andrew Jay Schwartzman, J~ ecutive director of the Media Mt;• cess Project counters; "T~i right of the listener, not t214t"t broadcaster, is paramount.;' ~~ ., t RAPID CITY. S.D. CAP> - Quick. Which president most re- cently had a facial? His friends Georee, Thomas and Abe just lqed on Mne- faced Friday while the fal"e of Theodore Roosevelt waa rubMd down with a concectien of linseed oil, granite dust and white lead. The recipe for the mixture was devised by the late Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of Mount l\ushmore. ll was applied to Teddy's granite face by !lob Crisman of Rill City. Crisman spe.ads about five days a year doing •hat be called "sculpture maintenance" at Mount Rushmore. inspecting all the cracks and applying the special repair mlx\ure where it's needed. . . jcnown as· the Baader-Melnbof Cnaman s'*1d be ~· b~ \lfl"" , ·ri1lf -said in letters to news de r standa .. Borglum s . Vi•\ , ,.rgatrtzaUons that the attacks sculpt ure. , I have a e'bance lO '.w~re part of ils "war against crawl over the same specM.anll • ltnpe rialist war" directed ctevtces .that BorgJarn did and I \•against the centers, ba~ and feel ~ if I act..u1Jly kno~ eie strategy of Uae U.S. military man, Cri&mao satd of' Dte machine." sculptOl'. ' ' ·. , Observers note the Rams- ExperU estnnate thct fac~s te\'n and Reidel~rf attacks will erode by only I 1.-cb \?very (ollo"f a strategy pursued by the 50,000years. • K~l1 Army Faction in the early .. WA SHIN GTON <AP ) - Thanks to the Federal Com· munications Commission, Congress will soon debate the ruture of two laws that affect what Americans see and hear on television and radio. Last Thursday. the · F~; picked sides. It declared, in ~~ most forthright and cleat ~ .. ner ever, that Congress ·sbOUld repeal the equaJ time and ~· oess laws. 1'i' It'll be sunny, ag_aif:i 1910s aurtnc another period of al'll5·Americanism fueled by the \Ttet.nam war. • ·~y targt!ting leaders or the , 280,000 American troops in West Germany, the terrorists can nokt indiscriminate killing of 'Germans that would further tarnish their image among the The laws are known as equal time and the fairness doctrine. Broadcasters s ay if they're re- pealed. political campaigns will be covered as never before. More debates will be staged because there won 't be any con- cern about equal lime. The public will be exposed to better, more hard-hitting news pro- grams as well as to a rreater diversity of opinions. Stations won 't be afraid to speak out in editorials as newspapers do. ·'Government shouUtn•r· · termine what the Pflll>l '' and see.'' says 14a.r.k ~ the •ew Re~ublkut c!lal the FCC. 'B~adeute abuse their right of free • in the· marketplace W'ill f~1 what every boor, every zealf~ and every loudmouth faces ... people wiU stop paying atteti.; tion." ;~ Co tutal Tem peratures U.S. summary Ext.ended out.look COAITAL AND MOUNTAIN ,. .. ,., -'"" ..... ,..... ... .....,c.-.. ... .--. ..., ... ................. " " 7S .. -........ ~ ............ ................... ., . .,, ................. ,_...,. .. ., ...... ......, ..... .., ..... ......., h ........ . "' &..-~ a SI It St " . .. ,.. 71 ,.. .. u 77 ,. .. Q 71 u ., ,.. .. fl .. SJ ., u ., .. 7S g 12 • IJ 54 " ,, .. 70 IO S4 . ,.. U 7t UI " A 7S • 7' D ., n IS B 17 f1 ,.. "' .. . n ,. 12 n ., .. 12 ,.. ... . .... ., " .. . .. S4 17 ,.. Cul,,... City IEunll• ,.,...,. UllleA.-~ L.one .. .,. ..,.,.,... .. ~­.... ,_,, Mt.Wl'-1 ........ OellleM Olllerte ,. ..... Stlf'ln9l p~ ,._ .. *" .... ,_ ....... aty ... ...-........ ... ~"' 9-0 ....... ... ,. .. ,. .. M lllMI AM ': ~ ==-~: =::...., 1e 74 Tllenllill 62 • Terr- IUlf RIPlll: I "-· ii l . We're Listening ••• FORfCAST 1 ide•· · ·popolation. U.S. installations are often in lJla jor urban areas whe re gunmen can blend into the "1>0put.ace. Wi th tbousands of ClvUlan employees and depen- •deots traveling in and out of gar- . ·NOftS daily, sealing off such fllcWtio is difficult. Tb.e Red Army Faction began • :ill.I pl"'dious campaign against ~merican interests in May 1972 whftl it stt off bombs at the . Headquarters or the u .s. v ~rp/i •ta Frankfurt and the .1-c!q\Jlltets of the U.S. Army · lbr );urope.ln -Heidelberg, killing Your 0.S. !Jervicemen. : ACtec a nationwide search, 1>j1Hce cornered eang leader An· ·'!' ' ~ \ ., . .. . . \ ' . I "'• t Consumer, church and labor groups see it di£ferently. They predict the major TV networks will use their power to limit the diversity of ideas presented to the public. Independent political candidates won't have a prayer of m aking it on the air, lhey say, nor will individuals or com· panies attacked in those hard- hitting pl'IOgrams. Fairness will be s ubmerged by seosa· tionalism. Vince Wasilewski. president of t he National Association of Broadcasters. says the la""5 have turned the job of delivering pews and information "into an inhibiting. self-concious. often confusing minuet.·· The fairness doctrine, mulgated in HM9, states broadcasters must provide ti for contrasting views after ing programs on controvers issues. The equal time law, adopt in 1927. states that il a bro caster airs a message by political candi4ate, he muat fer an equal opportunity to op •' nents. r f Abto recommended for repe. • by the FCC was the reasona accesa law. It states that it is ~.' legal during a campaign for · broadcaster to refuse to time to a federal candidate. ,•' . . ·' ~ :J f . .. ~ =v ..................................................................................... ...,: ,. ~~~ . . ·~.~ ' • our brl.st se.lling shirts and pant.e... · ~~~ straight 1'z.QQW cufnzd cord&) wae. and '118rrow walq.; both comcz. in e.i~ht g~ co Ton;. showtl witb our griutlook~ cotton flannil ehirts,intradi- tiorel tart.mi artl . clos~i c patw.:rns. { ' ? 0 = a • s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, September 21 , 1981 ' ~ffiu~rnrn Oil price dip o cost U.S.? WAS HINGTON (AP) -Ellnlna oil prices, a break for ven and homeowners, are ely to cost the 1overnment '6 bllllon in tax money and create ' new bulge in the federal deftclt. The lou in revenue from the "windfall proftta" tax on the olJ. lndu1try will have to be made up by r8.l.stq other taxes or by cut· tint spending if the admin.istra· Uon hu any chance at all of Key fossil found in Arizona WASHINGTON (AP) -Scien· Uats have discovered an ancient foaail jaw of one of Earth's earliest mammals, a tiny mouse-sized creature that quiet· ly evolved alongside hulking dinosaurs l~ million years ago. holding t.be 1882 deficit to t.be $42.5 billion projected by Preai- dent Reagan. The $6 billion shortfall is , larger than any sm,le budget cut not bein1 proposed by Reaean for the 1982 fiscal year, which.beings Oct. 1. The latest estimate from the administration it that the windfall tax will produce $28.6 blllion in 1982. When Congress completed preliminary work on the budget earlier this year, the oil tax was expected to bring in $34 .7 billion. Similarly, the tax is producing about $1.5 billion less revenue in the current year than the $25 billion that had been forecast. The reason is clear: The tax takes a share of each increase in the price of U.S. -produced crude oil. I The Arab ·ddminated Organization of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries sets the world price of oil ; since government controls on U.S. oil have ended, oil pumped from wells in this country is priced at or near the world-market level. Thus, fall· ing prices bring in less tax. ALPINE CONCERT -One hundred five alphorns were blown during a music and folklore gathering on Switzerland's Mount Pilatus above Lucerne. Visitors were treated to ............ echoes of the horns from nearby mountains during the event. The lower jawbone with three teeth, found this summer in Arizona, is from a previously unknown type of ancient mam· inal, Dr. Frish A. Jenkins Jr., a biology professor at Harvard University, said Thursday. The find, which may represent one of the earliest stages of mammalian development, in· dicates that mammals came in· to being all over the world at about the same time, J enkins said. Barry warns New Right groups on dictating morals "What we have found is equivalent (in age) to the oldest mammal remains found anywhere in the world," he said. Scientists believe the fossil is from the only known creature r epresenting the next step from mammal-like reptiles in the evolutionary chain, Jenkins told a briefing at the National Geo- graphic Society , which sponsored the work. The expedition he led found the tiny fossil, half as long as a m an's fingernail, on the next·l<>- last day of a six-week dig at an Indian reservation 75 miles northeast of Flagstaff. WASHINGTON CAP> -As a rule, conservatives argue that the government should stay out of the way of the American peo- ple and let them make their own decisions. But so;ne of them take exception to the rule on what t hey see as issues of morality. New Right conservatives want laws to promote family values and to ban abortion. That has led them into al· Hance with politically oriented religious organizations -and to a sc his m with Sen. Barry Goldwater 's brand o f old- fas hioned Republican con· servatism. "I'm frankly sick and tired of the political preachers across this country telling me as a citizen that if I want to be a moral person, I must believe in Goldwater 'sick and tired of political preachers' A, B, C, and D," Goldwater said. "Just who do they think they are? And from where do they presume to claim the right to dictate their moral beliefs to me? "I am warning them lod•y: I will fight them every step of the way if they try to dictate their moral convic tions to all Americans in the name of 'con· servaUsm.'" Goldwater said he was talking about the Moral Majority, the anti-abortion March for Life "and other religious groups" · that are regarded as part of the New Right and the New Conservatism. "Well, I have spent quite a number of years carrying the flag of the 'Old Conservatism,' " said Goldwater, the 1964 Republican presidential nominee. "And I can say with conviction that the religious is· sues of these groups have little or nothing to do with con· ser vative or liberal politics." It is a campaign Goldwater be gan after the Rev. Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority tried to derail the Supreme Court nomination of Arizona Judge Sandra O'Connor on grounds she bad cast state legislative votes favoring abor· tion. About two weeks ago, he set his speechwriters to work on the subject again and came up with an address in which he accused "religious factions" of divisive, uncompromising and potentially dangerous behavior. ·'The uncompromising posi· lion of these groups is a divisive element that could tear apart the very spirit of our repres· entative system, if they gain suf- ficient strength," he said. "As it is, they are diverting us away from the vital issues that our government needs to address ... "Far too much of the time of members of Congress and of· ficials in the executive branch is used up dealing with special in· terest groups on issues like abor· lion, school busing, ERA, prayer in the schools and pornog· raphy." Goldwater said he was disput· ing tactics, not values. He said he opposes abortion, "but there are many fine conservatives" who do not. "Unrelenting obsession with a par ticular goal destroys the pers pective of many decent peo. pie with whom I trunk I agree on most issues,'' he said. At the same time, he accused the religious right of jumping onto a pendulum that already was s winging "to the con- servative, moral end of the spec- trum ... and then claiming that they caused it to swing in the first place." So far, Goldwater has directed his criticism against groups and individuals outside Congress and the political parties. But if he really intends to continue the fight, it will inevitably put him at odds with Republican con· gressional colleagues who claim to be the new custodians of con· ser vatism . We're ALL celebrating our Montclair sion explosion Grand Ope11ing! \ LA COUNTY Cerri&oe/Lakewood 11881 Del Amo Blvd. in C«rritoa at Pioneer, 3 bloeb Eut of 606 Freew~. 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' t ~UffiU~ Refugee aid funding hit ZPG objects to tax money for Catho~ic charities SACRAMENTO <AP> -Zero· PopulaUon Growth objected to tax money aolng to Catholic charities to aid refuaees, and said the CQW\try la admitU.nc too many refuaeea. • Helen Graham, state coordinator of ZPG, said at a Capitol news conference that 10 Catholic aaenciea ln Califomla got about $4 mllUon ln federal money last year to provide social services to refugees. "Being the Catholic hierarchy denounces all artificial birth· control and family plannlpt, are the refugee clients given ade· quate information in the field of birth coolrol and family plan- ning?" she asked. "If we do not have enough aeencies, other than religious af. Inmates to cheer depressed females?· MARTINEZ (AP) -Male in- mates could be used to cheer up female inmates depressed by television viewing and d~me sleeping, a jail advisory group has suggested. Ri chmond are bec oming depressed from extensive television watching and daytime sleeping. It suggests they might be culled from their lisUessness if men were around. ' flllated aaencles, available to help the retu1ee upon arrival, la this country tatin& more refU· gees than we can reuoaably aulmilate into this society without contlict to our U.S. con- stitution?" Asked how many refueeea she thought the U.S. should admit, she said she dldn 't have an answer. Sbe distributed literature that said the bulc &oal of Z PG Ls to "stablli%e the population of the State ot California, of the nation . or the world, and in that order." The literature said ZPG aeeb a set celling on legal immigra· lion, to be reduced by the number of refugees admitted. Shawn Ortiz, spokesman for the state Department of Social Services, said California will get $8.8 million in federal funds for social services for refugees this fiscal y~ar. Some of it goes to Catholic and other church agen· cies, but he said none of it is for family planning. _..,..,,.. . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ,Monday, September 21 , 1981 • "' And dining is a good place to start, said the Correcllonal- Detention Services Advisory Committee in its report lo Con- tra Costa County supervisors. Rejuvenation could continue, it s aid, with male and female in· mates joining in sports, classes and g~p counseling. Th' document finds that women inmates in the county Work Furlough Center in "Many sources, including the women themselves, paint a pic- ture of women . . . going back to bed in the morning after their chores are completed," the ad- visory committee reported. •'They rise again for lunch and watch television all afternoon and evening. He said the Legislature in the budget act specifies that it be spent Cor language training, employment advice, vocational training and health related services. It excludes child care, mental health services and social adjustment services, such as family planning. ............ "Many of the women appear to be depressed. MOVING OUT -Workmen move lawmaker::;· lion for legislat~r~·/eturn to the newly re- desks and chairs out of temporary st ate constructed Capi~n J anuary. Senate chambers in Sacramento in prepara_·-------------------- Kaiser stock option told OAKLAND (AP) -Palo Alto businessman. Stanley Hiller Jr. said through intermediaries that he bas acquired an option to buy more than 1.1 million shares of Kaiser Steel, a $55 million purchase giving Hiller 17 percent of Kaiser's com· mon stock. Hiller is a San Francisco Bay area venture capitalist who represents a group interested in ac- quiring Kaiser Steel Corp. Hiller's opUon is to ac- quire 1,198,832 shares of the stock from the Henry J . Kaiser Family Foundation at $50 a share. The foundation has confirmed that Hiller ac- quired the option. Speculation about an acquisition began Thurs- day when trading of Kaber Steel stock was baited. Ka iser officials said at that time a statement would be released later by "another party ... Kaiser Steel trading resumed Friday with stock opening at $41 a share, $4.50 above its low this year of $36.50. Hiller , a partner in Hiller Investment Co. in Palo Alto, is chairman of the board of Bekins Co., the moving and storage firm, and chairman of the executive committee of Baker lntemational Corp., an Orange, Calif., energy tools and equipment manufacturer. It was not known immediately which invest- ment group be was representing in connection with Kaiser. When trading halted, a steel analyst, Michael A. Conner of Schaenen, Fellennan & Peck in New York, said a takeover "is certainly the first thought that comes to mind. It bas been known for . some time that they were looking for such an ar- rangement." Conner suggested that the suiter may be a foreign or privately held company. Normally, il the suiter were a publicly traded American firm, trading in that company's stock also would be halt- ed. There were no other significant trading halts. Elliott Schneider, a Gruntal & Co. steel analyst in New York, said that Kaiser "ls defmite- ly a potential candidate for acquisition." Bottle 01easure initiative due.? SACRAMENTO (AP) -Backers of the bottle bill, unsuccessful in the Legislature since 1975, say they will appeal to the voters. The bottle bill would require a five-cen~ de- posit on all beer and soft drink containers. in order to reduce littering. The Oregon-type legislation is opposed by grocers and the beverage and packaging industry. The latest bill, by Sen. Omer Rains, D- Ventura, is to come up again next January. But its chief backers, Californians A&ainst Waste, issued a statement Tuesday saying they can't wait. The CAW said it submitted a proposal to the attorney general Tuesday to place the proposal on the ballot. The executive director ol the state's Solid Waste Management Board, Matt Kuzins, said in the statement that the attomey general la expect- ed to return a title and summary by late October. He sald the CAW will have 150 days to gather 346,119 signatures to place the proposal on the Nov· ember UIB2 ballot. Kuzim said more than 400 IJ'OUPI with more than 10 000 lndividuals are organidn.& a grassroots campafen statewide to gather the slpaturea. Doctors nix nuke ernergericy work CONCORD (AP) -Contra Costa County'1 medical staff bu revealed it retu.ed to cooperate with the Pentagon'• emeraency plau for nuclear war cootend.iq that to do 10 would amount to ap- proval ot plannlq war. Sul*'Vilor &mne McPeu preeented the letter to the board aakiq the bowel to 1upport the doe· ton' poejtloa. . The letter was written by the ltaff and sent to, the l>eputment ot DefeoH on Sept. 1. Tbe dodora 1aJd a war the mmtary eaflliom~ would be dilutroul for tbe bu.man race. Michael Vojta1ko, deputy director of ~e bospltaJ conUnaency plu=aaid that to bis knowlqe the Contra eo.ta wu ''the onl)' "nqatlve ......... •• baH ne;i . " . DESKS. INC. 2nd Anniversary . ~ ~W,~E;:;;,R:;:E:-:C::E:-:-L-EB-R-r~-T,-1N_G __ 2 GREAT YEARS COMPUTER DESK Available In left or right returns, this practk:al desk Is designed to accomodate CTR screens or typewriters. Choose oak or SMITH-CORON.it TYPETRONIC" AT !HIS LOCATION With Great Savings And Great Selection! walnut formlca finishes. s1999s THE TYPEWRITER AN INCREDIBLE CLOSEOUT OF SPECIALLY SELECTED OFFICE CHAIRS! 20~ OFF TAG PRICE! THAT TYPES BY SOUND • The most prestigious office typewriter In years. • The new electr.onlc typewriter with a brain $§25 Secretllrlal Chairs, Side Chairs, Executive Swtvel Chairs, Conference Chairs, One of a ~d, odds 'n ends. Hurry! Llmlted to supply on handl • 50% fewer parts than electro-mechanical • typewriters. Imm late DellHfl' SWIVEL CHAIR Super savings on a super chair. Fully upholstered. JUDGE'S CHAIR This plush judge's chair Is regularly $175.00. Hurry In today and save! '119 Arm tilt, too. Hurry! '6978 EXECUTIVE CHAIR ._....._.....__ 1 ·A comfortable upholstered swtvel chair now at a price to good to pus up. WARDROBE OR STORAGE CABINETS Welded steel corutrucaon cabinets. 78"x24"x36". Choote storage or ward- robe cablneta. Whtie tMv last! Al-It. S.-S.,•cW r.;111• CLOSEOUntt 1611 Reg. S223.00 '17911 · OAK BUTCHER BLOCK DESK Oak butcher block top deak wtth walnut rails and walnut veneer end panels. 72"x36". Compare at $1200. Our reg. dllc:ount price $549.00 Now at alzzllng summer aavingsl •49995 TRADmONAL EXECUTIVE DESK 2 Sets of file drawers with full extension ball bearing suspension, locking c.enter dn•wet and 2 full writing slides. 36"x72". •59995 EXECUTIVE DESK A 30"x60" executive duk at a price too good to pass up. Comea In a rich walnut finish. •9s10_ EXECUTIVE DESK A gr~t desk now at unbelievable savings. Choose oak or walnut finishes. 30"x60". '14 711 UTILITY TABLES Metal construction with laminated wood surface. 18x30x27". Now only 3995 ' . , I \ ,I ... -. • ~ .1 ·• • • .. ·.u· r~~ ----------------------~--~-----------1 • ' ' • ' ~'f • ';; • • 'f.:. I I ~~,,. ~· a~ \ . .:ri'bost can :'.,.'·~' sa~°"ate · hi'ghwa~,,· :l ~ ~~mfllto com(Den-from chuekb(je to chUcllbole.' tator -~ -oui the other day. Transportatlan •Yfterm can· st«te Se«. · Jetm toran had to not be maintaloed nbr expthded neae>ti.tb • Polltkal minefield tn without monet. Sxls'thts rev~ takUll 'Oft~le ~nh to stture ab enues are \aperia( ~~ lnor•ase-ttl':t~, st1rt,'s motor of declining ga~Uie' ~ fuels tax t rr,.n !eveh to nlhe maintenance and eonitrUcUOb cents. · " · costs are soa.rtna. ProjecUens In ~times of lltht flScal show ed that tbe "c't~t e's policlm, tlomifteled i>y tax cots, ttansportalion =~b• any mtJYl¥ t~ 4o the opposite any..,here from · t.o might na\'e ·~--ared doortled ~-4 billion ill the red IS ." _. from>the ~tset. · / The new law. all'fttb Slgnea B\at • th-e San Fr anoisco by the gove"1ot, a.ha) \lltlu~stfn-Deltt~rat>: rctftd himself ·to be crea•e! tn dri~el"'• )l~f!ri.e,.'"bi." bGtlt ~and s1cutfal . .And cle reglstf"ltion and trilti.~elld\t · that ts'; ·~~Ol'llia1E ' are ~ fees, and e!OUltt r~'W--to'•·' sured tha~-tl1-~e·a-dderiorat-billion over the next rlv•~ar&.~' • ing abcflo~' •ettNtw~ highway It stipula~ tt\llt't'!f!ea.'IOIMe .. ,, . . . ·. I • . " .. .. ... . . .. .. ... . systOrp ~im~ed . " tax inctease, sett~ . "• The·. ciS were cleirly with effect Jan. I , ·1~l ~· it • • F o ran. Legislatm-s, be they endoned by COUJnY·· s · · ··~!!!~!!!!ij!!~!j Republlc"rts of Demofl'llts, could represe•ting t\t~tb ..._, 1be · not a'VOlcl Ste-plain ahd simple state's population. 'the'cth8·~ ...,..,..""'"'....,_....,. ___ _._~1!1-i----------------------------- I I I I I I I I . '· I I I I I truth Uha wifhd\Jt an· increase tn tncreaaes will begin~ ... > ·.i the tax On tasoline and diesel Orange Cowrty ~u~lid..-s. tuel the !-fate's freeways . h aving ur~ed -•see url)ie "bill highways 81td major streets to meet mcr~'2$llallf ~ertw'!S would' ccMtfrnle to crumble to the hi&hway needs, 4oubtle'S'B'Will'be · poirtt •ti•~ as Foran was fond prompt to j6k1 in ·the ~aslr'.y of saying, ·.rtyou wollld be driving endOl'Sement. > • • ' • ... 4 AJJZ,fCS needs supj)hit BetWffD-OOW aJ"i <kt.~. the Am~ ~ace~ be leam- mg a ' ldt -about out Airborne Warnlllg ·atW Col\trol Sys\em <AWACS). Bal ttie question is, will enough b~ known about a pro- po-sed "Sl.S ..btllion sale of five A WACS plan-.a ana related equip- ment to,.SaUftl Arabia? Also in- volved ate J:J\issiles and gear to enhan~e ""'62 U.S.. built F-15 jet fighter:s Sa\tdi Arabia has or- dered. The Reagan Administration plan is in trouble . but not• necessarily dead. In order to block it. bOtb ·n.us~s of Congress must v~to 'die »t•4>efote its SO. day canetd~tfon-el1ds. ProP.one1"s say the pact would sttenttlierlu.S.-Seudl ties; give the u.§. a fbotbOld; albeit a small Me, iR 'lle ?tttdeast. pro- vide ettrli~.wa~agatnst mis- siles and l>l~~· tf elp defend the''OU fields. . ·· Oppnnents.. who include Stm. Alan Cransk>~ !>-Calif .. contend Saud\ KWACS ·.uae would com- promise-fST~e.ft atr spa~e. reward • I • a nation not always ~l(ppal'U"t·ol U.S. Mideast gaalr. allC! .t1t-'le, third party courtl#iijsi =tc)~in our secret radar equipmW, • It would appear on the-whole, however. that the arrlls pltel_tag'e can· be of benet\t to the<U6~ States. On that basi,, We·~aula support it. even thoqR:.w~ SUS· pect th.is is part of a tmtch I~ overall settlement, betw~n the· two countries, details,' or• wbioh probably will not ~ ~''"1lt.ll' immediately . · Due to the sophisticated and classified nature .or1 the sur. veillance plane, not eraou&)t has been made public ·~t ~en •Plh@r the needed sup~ 1or ,~~ !-A This put week, .'mo~ ~ were made pubUl' as \b~ ad· mtnistrallon earn«! under' ·pres- sure . · • . ' • ·· There shoutd· be ne ootktioa . to positive modification drlbe prop~aJ . If more U .. S. cobtft>I ts reqwred, if limitatibM on U\e use or the plane are imposed, Jf-<Jther fine tuning is required'~ DOtfr' ~ and the Saudis probal>lf;e~q~ with this. · t Openiµg the courts . -': :;·.,1· p~~-~f>';_ ~in !hat would facing a mot• senou. ·tri~ ~in bar the tlosir\f df, most pre-open court. · · liminary heaTiags in criminal Under the blll just passoo·by cases cpuld ~r_-ugnificanl vie-the Legislature. a d'.efendanCmay tory raf.'.(be,puDU.J'· be granted a closed ,frelimiftny UnCfet currertt.i state law. a hearing only if the judge ~ be pr elimtruicy beating -duriog persuaded that an open bearing which testib$0rty4 is taken to de· could present .. a clear and termine U a • dl!fendant should present dan~' tt> the~ to' a stand tridl t~ ..a ~e -may be fair trtal, Mi~ultt.orse b~~eJ'~i closed to th.e p.tbfic and press Thi · f · ~ It 1..-si mJ1ly QA the request of the de-sis air enou.... t1tV1 e ii fendant. · genuine danger in pre•trial And ip most ~ases, a defend-publicity, the deieridfDtt ahon!d ant'! .llttomey 3"r1ulng that an and will be l)rot~cted. JJ\lt mor'e open heartnt ·~0ultl · prejudice a than that, the public? ~&e pro- possible future trial. r~uests the tected from an Increasing -vrac-"" tice of clos ed-door just!ce under closure ~ whim then ·must be which too many criminal caa4tS gran~:f-statist~ sb<)w that-abowt simply avoid public scrut.irty: 90 percmt 0( dfulmai· cases ~ Since Gov. Bro~fla\ely~~- dispdsed.of i.11 o.-·way or another been expresstdg g'rettt i•ete5t:)n durilll )'re~tftary hea rings the crtmlnal · jusUce --sysi~rn: "'lie . before &Oing'WUl"tal ~ should have oo ·trouble ·-slJnin~ Sori'\4times evlclence is n.ded this biU . But, sin~ theri ,are insufftct.tt t.o Wan-a~ a trial. those who would prefer. tt,'!IH ll but m11cb lltc>t.e-often · plea veto. it mi&ht hef.9 if;cd~ barg•h,llni af \bis _level permits citizens took Ume 'to Jftlte \i.e . the d~ to blead guilty to a govarnbt to affix bia sisr,a~ to ·• lesser 'ohtrgle"lni.ordu to avoid AB m . :·. ~ · . I . ,; I t , ' •• .. ' • J • • r • . • ' ·~,, '1'1•. Oplnlon\·W'ilfn.tcl if\ lhe' $pace •l)Ov& are tho~' of the btity ~: ~~ws a.- prelSed dh ttiitPHQ. ttte t~ ol lheir •uthors and artists.°"'~..,. c~S:in•lt­ ed. Ad<Sttl51'tuf l)a.ly Pl .. t, P.O. Bo• tS60, Costa Me~,·CA ll62'.-~e ,ct1~> 642•~1 • .;. t '• I ' • , • • tt t ' 1 • t a O ' o I s .. et W ' 'I' a ft I f,,, UM ,,..~. .... . .. . , .: i ·, ... '• . LM~i.Qfjf d/Hypnotist'; · trleli:.;"'~:-··t~. · · ,l ; • ' • -~·: • ' f • II~ y.U'•f.'4-d the daft ll1P-There's a IOrt of tetaM utw'6 notitt aeerabtelr.saometu= ln· Bazooka that ltM>od ~·i.< lta to a deep-.., 11 *1th ti. o1 en~mlel. · ; : \ .,· .,.'l·""I.· , autst~a~1 ha II u•d '~111 Q. Wan 't Elvta · ~•t•i Wal boa1amtanY ....... two daln Mtb :a:' Clitily· uad-\h neell and name Jeale'! :·· · , ~ _.._bl But A. That WU the' atidt Of bfl ~ . . ..em..... e. b-'-'"'"-•. ._ .. ._.. ... ....,.... ,,, it ita't ~~It ... trim Jchlnl IUUIW.I WHU \U.U ..... .,.. .... • ' cm~,~~ t.~~ remam What tele't'Wioa r9*~tau " tt,scl t.DS"W M 't. wue ..ul•, et ll "acrtPt~ ii Nf~_.;Wft'.._ I -. .. • t t•l-"..L..a ... _ ......... "'°* ... ',' \ . ·-· I ~ ; ' • .. 'l:!YWIUH IOlll II 4 • I f "" ~ fersuading 'stupid' smokers fl ASH1NGTON ~ Cigarette slbokers Wftt. be irtterestJd t4 leant t.laat a leading ~~ Yor1c advei'UJling ageacy comtden Ulem t6 he lllogiul, tnatiobal and sutptt\. Ttfat's the description U5M in • coo-f~tial 111S report by the Ted Bates ad attlllc1'6 Dre&~ Wlll1alDIOll Tobacco ~-\ Ult 111 r1' Vt~t'roy eltar611es. the eonlideJrtial, r6pot\ -seen by my usaei.ate Toay Capaeclo -notes tbat J"'UY smokers peneive their llablt as "db't.y" 111d dugerou, and think only "\te~mmltt peop11~1et hoiotm by it. ,. "'• :.:;r tbe' A.ate report .tJeerves, ''ttnr atnotera bne to face the fact that their are illogical, fi'r'•Uon8' IDd stupid. ~e find ft hard· to go thrtUgbout life \kl~ S'ICh ptgatiye presentatMn u• eMlntioo ef MU. Tbe savtort are ra· tionalizatlon 8!ld Ure repr&aron that end up end result ln a defense lnecbanlam." Needless to say, the cigareU.e com- panies' ad men are more than willlng to help ci«arette smekers bolster their de· feok tneclaanbmll ai.tnst -... of aetf-loathiq. 1'Mir entlauai-m t!d.s eodtavdt 4*t ua tobacco ~ a ret4N $1 "tm.l tor advertlslq m am, aceot6ikrlt' to official 1o~erru11eat fllut'es'. . • ·,~ A. 8EtftOH defeftiiftly ttUed, .. ow' to Red11ct! Objeedoas to a c; aretle, •• ~tre Bates report · adobwl~ that there ate "not may r.eel: a"8Glute, poslttn qualities and at- Uimttes in a dearett.." So to reduce ob-. . jections, the advertising must givt' 1molten a rationale for their illogical, irrational and stupid behavior. A Brown & Williamson internal docu- ment, dated March 3, 1976, entitled "Viceroy Strategy." notes repeatedly Q -JAC-. l-Al-11-111-1-~ that its advertising campaign must pco- vlde consumers with a rationalization for smoking and a ·'means of repressing their health concerns about smoking a fwl flavor Viceroy." The company's strategy report con- cedes that smokers of "fulJ flavor" cigarettes -those which have plenty of fl avorful tars -are particularly prone to guilt trips, and thus badly in need of encouraging advertising. ~ .................. . · -•<R~VOll smokers perceive· • ~ 1Uij.g as dangerous to their· he~· the strategy report observes. "GlYelJ ~ir awareness of the smoking: and bdlth situation, they are facedl with tlwrfact that they are behaving il- logically. They respond to this in- con•l~cy by providing themselves· with either a rationali%ation for smok·· Ing or by repressing their perceptions of the possible dangers involved." The B&W battle plan pursues its Freudian theme In describin1 how Viceroy's competitors have dealt with smoker angst: "To date, major full flavor brands have either cooadoualy or unconsciously 'coped' with the smoking and health issues ln advertising by ap· pealing to repression." Jn Brown & William1on's view, the whole smoking scene is r ampant with dingbats -irrational puffen repress- ing their reasoning processes and un- conscious puff artists desperately try- ing to cope with the task or selling a product ~th no positive qualities. ABOUT THE only positive ap· pro aches proposed by the B& W strategists are "to communicate effec- tively that Viceroy is a satisfying, flavorful cigarette which young adult smokers enjoy," and what they call the ·reels good ' campaign." The latter is a frontal assault on the smoker of breathtaking, Napoleonic simplicity: It "appeals to the smoker by repressing the concerns be may reel about smoking by justification: If it feels good, do it; if It feels good, smoke it ... Footnote : The Bates report a nd Brown & Williamson documents I have quoted were placed under a protective order by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker in 1979. These papers -and hundreds more which the cigarette in· dustry requested be withheld from the public -remain under lock and key to this day. '..ldeal·TV season just a pipe dream • lo • •' . · Het~ teleriston exffutives who ~hooff' ·'wh.i lbo1l'S we'll watch, and tllevtsioa cr1tlcs wbo comment on tfl~rd. both bave touah Jobe. Tbe betlfot"t executlve hd a hard time ~Int · up "Wllb ·sbdws that are any I~ ind tJ\e · criUc leep1 bavtng to tml ~ waya of saying Mw bed the thOWs are. · Jt•e ba1ic -differenee between the dtrtwort ex~e ud Ute crttiea is Uaet Uie uectfti\tet aa~ tll~"re P.tni the Americ• public what It want.I ud the ~ritln say tftat i&n't good enough. 'Tbe at.be-41tffereace betWft!n criUca 'd4 •xecut\ves ts about 900,000 s year bl lalary.) r ~ 'wAN"I' to get caught agree- ftig witb aet•ork executives about much ., enYtbinl but they do have some points 00 OMir shh. Tbet don't cd oyt ~ for b .. lhows any more Uunf' ~ers try to WR& a.. aovela to~-The detw«t d~iai<m-maken m,,,. btY• W-t.l&te or taey may be ••cn·rjftd"" ot wbat tilt po'Mlc will ac· tept, but the wood• at• ddl fuD of Veat wri&en. ff bi• mont1 pl'()d.eeS ~·t att. -Olln «oM pla11. ...... a114 ~ pa1atln• wout4a't ff H aelllfee •' ?!f an. Yo.. ea't make .... anyw alp a . ttot~.n CMllBtrliltt that ~ ~-s~~liGa c:GllMd1. • W.t-.orll-lts«•t l"Ye1 •• eMtt-t .. . ' ·~ . between conflicting pressures, too. On the one hand most Americans agree that some television is too sexy and violent, but on the other hand they seem to Llke watching the sexy, violent stuff. What's a network executive to do? TELEVISION CRITICS are tough. I've read some of the columns about the upcoming television season and the '~~' -All-Y-R00-11-Y -§t reviews IOok about the same as they look e d last year , terrible. I've daydreamed about the kind of reviews I'd like to read about television some· day. The preview of the new fall season would go something lite this: "The long creative drought in televialoo seems about over. In pre- v1ewiag the upcoming fall shows, thU critic was Impressed with the overall .quality ~ th·e pre.sentalions. Viewers are going to be bard-pressed this year to ch008e from the' wide selection of ex- cellent programs scheduled by the n'tworka. In addition to first-rate dramatic works, good comedy and en- tertaining variety shows, the networks have agreed on the following in· novative procedures : -There will be no reruns. -Advertising will be cut to four commercial minutes an hour. U the networks wish to promote a show of their own. they have agreed to take it out or the commercial time. -There will be no Saturday morn· ing cartoon schedule for children. -BECAUSE OF the success or the NBC experiment laat year, there will be no announcers on any sports con- tests. You will see a football game u you would if you were there and if you don't know the score, that's your prob- lem. -The netwoTks have agreed not to compete with each other with com- parable programmin& at tbe same hour. U one network schedules a good documentary, the other networks will have cultural or entertainment shows, not good documentaries. -The local option time from 7:30 to 8:00 p.m .. now occupied mostly by bad game shows, will be eliminated and net work news will be expanded to one hour. Andy Rooney. will do an euay five nights a week for one of tbe networks, to be announced." That'll be the day. ~P.laeebO ·:effect works with liqu()r· t~o •• I • • doaei mate students at the University or Wlst'Oftlin, only five were able to teU correctly ii their glasses of tonic also contained vodka. Moreover, the students who believed t'-eir glasses contained vodka lost their sexual lnblbltions just u rapidly a& tboH with alcohol ln their drinks. What the drinker ·~ct• seems to de-ternlln.e bla mood more than tbe actual chemical composltion of what be arinkl. a Uquid placebo and 1 am convinced they would act exactly the same way. IT IS MY guess that the moet impor- tant frontier in human diacovery awaits us: learning more about tM mlnd·bocly relaUonaftlp, the subtle and diverse ways in whlch each affects tbe other. I I TlllS llA8 BEEN my obeervaUon and Hperieaee, u a relative noe-drlnker au my ICMt U.fe. I can cet blab on a &1111 of tlnler ale if tb• compuy and th• pl9tt Uld UM oeculon come lOfetber riOlt. i • J .a.a know people who haV. the rep- utation forbeln• f•roctoua dr1Dken, Jet I ba._ ..... Lbem lake DO llllON tbaa twe *"*' at a PU't1 ud ad tmubed. ~~V,:1-m:.:=...~ tie ..._. .a. Gl'8 ..._ '1Jo ttiall OI t \ I I I I I :I NOMINEE -Dr. C. Everett Koop, 64 , vehement critic of abortion, has been nominated by Presi- dent Reagan to be surgeon general. The Philadelphian, who has been deputy as- s i s tant health secretary, has to be confirmed by the Senate. Toll continues I 11 SAN FRANCISCO ,1 (AP ) -Golden Gate ~ Bridge directors have ~ voted to continue unlll If ' , Oct. 31 their experiment ' of charging a $2 toll on 1 Fridays and Saturdays ~ and $1 the rest of the 11 week. ! ~ I 1: w ....... '' .... ......_ ....... Of .... ...., • I' ~to_.,• la.._..._ ... of -MIXT c ..... e I I I I I· .... '°'"1•1i.. w1111 Tenor' for PAY/CAIU T.V. • • :t....-11 $c~ ~ : ••••••••••• (71419~7-0282 ••••••••••• : Transcendental Meditation® Program Ushering In The Age Of Enlightenment In This Generation 'br.' cfln ~ gal!.r. "!J CUSTOM FRAMING ART Prln .. Etcltl,.,,. s.ng,.pha Ufltof,..,. 11.,,,oduetlona ~ Arl Umlted Edlllonl ·----------r---------, : 30% OFF 1 · 20% OFF I l CUSTOLFRAMING : FRA!!, ART l L-------IXPIRU t1w1 ________ _. .. VISIT OUI GIFT IOUT14jKll eenll • sum 1011 i : -MOUIS . MOM.· Fil. ICM .._.woein-c..llr SAT. ll·S (714) 544-0475 Next to Jewelry by Remy Daily Pilat ~~ Dilly Piiat ,_ Classifieds RE portable KENMO $50 omett.e dishwasher $3s Lge. tbl & 6 c~ 0 ~ g e d 0 g bile roof $30. w/removea 646.0000. "Sold everything I advertised in 1he .Pilot. II I . ~~~1@642-5678 charge It~-by pt1one From South Laguna & North CountY call 540-1220 toll-free. ... :is deductible. KOF AnENo·ouR FINE JEWELRY REMOUNT SHOW AT BW A7 NEWPORT BEACH This wednesday and Thursday, have your jewelry re-designed or create your own new styles by selecting from our collection ot precious gemstones and more than six-hundred settings priced from $125 to $3000. A designer and jeweler will be available to assist you and complete your orders that same day. Appointments are necessary. 'f elephone 759· 1211. extension 241. Fine Jewelry. B~ llOC~S WI lS~ I Rb Ill SPl (IAllY S!O tl NEWPORT BEACH . 83 FASHION ISLAND (71 4) 759-1211 I If it floats, chances are you'll.read about it i n the Daily Pilot 642-4321 "• :r . ... " . . .• 1 J • \ ' ' I r.;. . t ;J ~ ... t,. •• ,. . -\, . OU ERi CES • ·~ ----- TAX FREE* lllTEBST PLUS WEIT PWS COMBINED BALANCE SERVICE™ If you're looking for checking with no monthly charges. look no further. With Bank of America's Combined Balance Service. the money in your Tax Free Time Deposit can help you meet the balance required to get checking, even Interest Checking, free of monthly charges. --. - PWS CONVENIENCE When you open a Tax free Time Deposit account at Bank of Am~a. you also open the door to California's largest bank. With more branches statewide than any other bank or savings and loan. That's convenience. And that's a big plus. Come in and talk to us today. \ .. -------------. -.. as ~· Orango Coast DAILY ~LOT l.~bnday. Septemb r 21 , 1981 ·How to invest nest egg? .Choices vary ly Tbe AllMClaled Presa ll you think saving money Is hard these days, lry figwin& out how to Invest it once you've got it. nu: poaslblllUes seem endless and the choices are complicated. Amona the things to consider are: Is there a minlmum deposit? Oan you take your money out at any time or Is there a penalty? Is tbe deposit in· sured? Is lnlerest compounded? Is it interest taxa- ble? Up to $200 in interest and dividends -$400 for married couples -ts exempt from federal Income tax this year. The general interest exemption is a one-time break only, however. H you want an in- terest exemption in 1982, you'll need a new All Savers Certificate. , Here are some of the current sav.ings options: Passbook account: Interest 1s 5.5 percent annually at commercial banks and 5.75 percent at savings and loan institutions. You generally can take out your money at any time. Minimum balances of $100 or more may be required. -U.S. Savings Bonds: Series EE bonds are available in denominations as low as $25. They pay 9 percent annual interest if held for at least eight years. Interest is exempt from state and local in- come taxes; payment or federal tax can be de- ferred witil bonds are cash~. -All Savers Certificat es · There is no minimum investment required by law, but the certificates must be orrered in denominations as low as $500. The annual yield is 70 percent of the CONSUMER interest on one-year U.S. Treasury Bi Us -12.61 percent as of now. tJp lo $1 ,000 of interest for in· dividuaJs and $2,000 for married couples 1s exempt from federal lax. In some places. where there is no state or local income tax on items not subject to federal lax, the interest from All Savers also may be exempt from local levies. The certificates go on sale Oct. 1, will be available until Dec 31 , 1982 and have a maturity of one year. If you withdraw money early you pay a penalty equal to three months' interest and you lose the tax exemption. -Six-month certificates of deposit: They cost $10,000 and pay a maximum interest rate one- fourlh of a percentage point higher than the in- terest on 26-week U. S Treasury Bills. The current certificate rate is 14 .907 percent There is a penal- ty for early withdrawal you forfeit three months' interest -but regulators have made an exception: You can cash in a six-month certificate of deposit and invest in an All Savers Certificate without penalty. -Small Savers Certif icates : These . certificates have a term uf from 21'7 to 3 years Federal law does not require a minimum deposit. Thrift institutions pay a maximum interest rate equal to the yield on Treasury Bills of comparable terms currently 16.55 percent; commercial banks pay one-fourth of a percentage point less The penalty for early withdrawal is a loss of six months' interest. -Money-market funds: Minimum deposits vary, but generally start at Sl,000. You usually can withdraw money at any time in fixed increments without penalty. Funds may be invested in govern- ment securities, bank certificates, etc. Interest rates fluctuate ; they have been averaging around 17 percent a year, but are not guaranteed for any set period of time. Deposits are not insured. but you . can pick a fund that invests only in low-risk items like Treasury bills All the investments except money-market funds are available at banks and thrift institutions. You have to contact a broker or fund represen· tative directly for a money-market fund Check your newspaper for fund advertisements, or ask a brokerage house for information Floods wipe out crop PEKJNG <AP 1 -Flooding from nearly two months of heavy rain has wiped out more than 2 m ii lion acres of wheat and soybeans in China's far northeast corner. the offi cial Xinhua news agency reported. ·········••c~PON ············ : THE BEST THING SINCE : • SUCED BRMO! • .. Divorce move stirs fund probe NEW WOES The government has filed lawsuits against sevcnAbscamdefend ants in an effort to get back $186,000 in bribes the FBI paid out during "sting" operations'. Among th ose named are former Rep. Frank Thompson Jr., D· N.J .. left. MORRISTOWN, N.J . (AP> - Publicity about a woman's ef· forts to be named guardian of her comatoee son so ehe can sue his wile for divorce baa prompt· ed an inquiry lnto why the man was permitted to stay In a coun ty-run nursing home. The man, 25 -year-old Lawrence Jennings, lapsed into a coma when he was anesthetized for exploratory lung surgery at Dover General Hospital \n April 1978. Since then, he has been a patient at the county-run Morris View Nursing Home here. Jennings' mother, Fanny, BUY MOVIES RENT MOVIES SONY. Trt: O\E Af\O O\l.Y • 816 51" DIAS. PICJURE DISCMD PRICED SAVES RENT OR BUY ~\ \t~ s A v E petitioned Superior Court to be appointed her son'• guardian ao 11he ma)' sue on his behalf for divorce on grounds of adultery and desertion. Publlclty about tbe case prompted the county'11 Social Service Department to examine court rues. Those records show that Jen- nings was last year awarded $600,000 In a medical malprac- tice suit, part of a total settle· ment of $1 million. Celeste Kalina, director or the social service department, said the only way a person with sub- stantial assets could remain In NEWPORT BEACH a 149 Rlverakll or 1 548·2213 BY THE P.O. Morris View is either throu1h a mlatake or because the county la not notified of a "chanae In circumstances.'' She said, "If there is a IUat· dian, It la his or her reapomlbtJJ. ty lo notify the county.'' Jennings' guardian is bia wile, Tammy, aho ~. who wbeo her husband dJes wUJ receive a tnaat fund set up by the malpractice settlement. She has already re- ceived about $1SO,OOO for loss of her husband's services. Mrs . Jenn Inga thinks her daughter -i n-law "bas not performed her duties as a wife," said Mrs. Jennings' attorney. Starting Oct. I. 1lnitedS · • Current Off·Peak Peak Destination Coach Price Flights Flights Portland ~ $99 $U9 Reno $J/12 $J9 $59 Seattle $U(l $109 $129 San Francisco $j)9 $J9 $59 Fares s ubject to change With no advance-purchase or length-of-stay requirements. Now thcrc·s a whole new way to fl y the friendly skies. United 's Friendship Express. We've cut some of the extras to gjve you great everyday low prices. Unlike promotional fares. there are no advance- purchasc or length-of-stay requiremenlc;. And every seat on every flight is available at a great low fare. So call United at 973-2121 or your Travel Agent for terrific savings throughout the West on United"s Friendship Express. And remember-you're not just flying for less. you're flying United for less. United is Partners in 'lravel'with Westin Hotels. Fly Uniteds Friendship Express arid.get an exclusive discoUnt on Alamo Rent-A-Car. ln San Francisco, rent a 2-door Chevy Citation or comparable model from Alamo Rent-A-Car for only $15.95 per day. Along with a great low price, you get unlimited free mileage, air conditioning, automatic transmission and primary liability insurance. Offer available October J through December 18. Gasoline, taJces, and optional collision-damage waiver are not included. "Th.at s a small price to pay ~ r Friendship." Flythe frie~skies of United Call United or ){)Ur 1rave1 Agent. Fare Code V/K ' • Daily Pilat MONDAY, SEPT. 21, 1981 CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION 82-3 84 87 Deity ...... ""--.., akMN It....._ n -___ .................. "'"' ... ,:. --·---~ Sharon Gless will replace Lynn Redgrave on "House Calls." See. Page 87. Whale, fish . '• . catch attention of students .. Officials at .the Orange County Marine Institute in Dana Point say they have a full schedule of events for the 30,000 students ex- pected to use the facility this year. In s titute spok'"eswoman Kathleen Costello said two boats are being chartered to lake stu- dents on cruises off the coast where they will study the marine environment. The program is called the '·Floating Lab." Miss Costello s aid a grabbing device is dropped over the side of the vessels and underwater life is brought to the surface for the students to observe. Programs are designed for s tudents from kindergarten through junior college. Sessions are held onboard the "Sum Fun." a convert-00 sportfisbing boat, and the "Kelpie," an root schooner buUt in 1920. The institute also i J>ODIGl'S sailing class aboard U>e Kelple. where students act aa ~ecrew. Included in the ·educafl outings, which are ·available· c hurch groups, scj>utln1 ganizations or communh groups of 24 indivlduab o.r man is a sessioo in the·institute'a l where samples collected oo boat trip are studied. · The institute bulldin&, loca in the west bas~ of Dana . Harbor and open from 10 a.m. 3:30 p.m. daily, houses sev salt water aquariums fe• ..... ruJt•• local marine life. · Suspended from the ceillnl la the main room· of the bulldlq the skeleton of a ·27·foo adolescent whale washed \JP Huntington Beach two ye ago. Miss Costello said t.b41 Surrounded by whale bones, Kim Beckman, 8, of Irvin~, now understands how Jonah must have felt in Bible story. had been severed, apparently· a large ship's propeller .. The skeleton wu prepared~ Crossmg fish and undulating plants m the aquarium fascinale Kevin Rnu..c;ch. 2. of Capistrarw Beach dunng tour of institute. Wendy Perry of Irvine givea daughter Jackie, 2'1'l, a chance to touch no3e 9f whale and imagine what whole ~reature would be like. :::-~~~J display by the American cean Society, and donated to· institute by the Bowers MUNWa of Santa Ana, where. it. w housed formerly. Beginning in October, Or County families will be able spend a weekend oobo..-d Pilgrim, a replica of 't.be a ship that author Ricbard HmQ Dana sailed alone the Calif_. coast more than a century 8'0· The Dana Point Oeeaa Institute Foundation, tbe l\mi- raising arm or the count7~ owned study center, is cu~ involved in raising private.f\mdl to purchase the great •Jilinl ship. Up lo four families can be housed on the vessel; theY. will take part in activities simulatlnl. life on a square -muted ablp. ... Jim Perry of Irvine holds daughter Jennifer. 5. up for a closer view of the whale skeleton. Carcass was prepared for display by the Amencan Cetacean Society and donated by ower s Museum. Persons wishing inform on the outings should call the. stitute at 831-3850. ~\ . ~\\\ HB's reputation boiled in oil TAR & FEATHER DEPT. It has now been divulged that some time back. two rollers from elsewhere, disguised as consultants. skulked about our coastal region and have now held one of our fairest cities up to the contempt and ridicule of the nation. This arrogant pair of knoves had the nerve to besmirch and malign the good name of the city of Huntington Beach. I. for one. refuse to sit still for such vapid insolence. done in the name of the gov- ernment of the United States. What hap -~ pened was the dis- P a ·r a g i n g d u o 4 F- served as consul-,...., ~:~!rtt~e~~eo?t~~ TOM MORPHINE '~/-,, Interior to study . our California coastline and pick the ugliest places where they figured they could get away with drilling for more off shore oil. SO THE PRETENTIOUS pseudo-pundits picked Huntington Beach. This was accomplished by the two of them driving up and down the coastline, as- signing scores of 100 downward. and searching for places upon which they could look down their noses. which are no doubt long and thin and sniffle a lot. In this 100-based scoring by insolence, Newport Beach got a 98. Laguna was awarded 89 and the area between Corona del Mar and Laguna, a· 96. Hun- tington Beach trailed in with 48 points. Now I happen to be an honorary citizen of Hun· tington Beach. I have a framed certificate from the mayor to prove it. And I protest this barbaric atroci- ty of scoring. WHAT MAKES THESE TWO yahoos think they can downgrade Huntington Beach to a 48? For starters, take the beachfront itself. The rogues from . Interior probably were impressed with the rocks and headlands of Laguna and Corona del Mar and dis· dained the flat, open sweep of Huntington's· beachfront. The facts are, however, that Huntington's sweeping shoreline is very beautiful to those who like to gaze upon open beach and open sea. Further, Huntington's sandy beaches and equal· ly sandy surfbreak are delights to swimmers and surfers. The city and·state beaches boast one of the longest open strands in Sowthern Califi>rnia. The municipal pier is certainly one of the finest you'll visit anywhere. NO CITY HAS GONE to more effort to beautify and landscape the immediate highway ocean front· area and authorities are working valiantly in the ef· fort to upgrade the older downtown sector. Additionally, you have to look hard to find a nicer boating-oriented community than Huntington Harbour. But what did the disparaging duo do with llUp. tington Harbour? Why, they rated it separately! Huntington Harbour got a 71. Amazingly, in their consulting contortions, the pair gave a low 51 rating to what was identified as . the area "between" Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. This is amazing because you always believed the two cities shared city boundary lin~s right at the Santa Ana River. Very little in between. It's hard to rate a line. ALL OF Tms CONSULTING work cost tbe.U.S. Department of the Interior $250,000 and took seven · months, which , in these days of tight money, seems almost obscene. The two that Interior sent here to knock Hun· tington Beach should have stayed there. In the in· · terior, that is. And kept their oil drilling rigs with them. '• I-· • .. OrangeCout DAILY PILOT/Monday, September 21 , 1981 • ANN LANDERS • ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE ............ llOUTH TO BEAK -The old saying about eat-as Theo Powell, a Bronx Zoo keeper, holds ln1 out of one's hand doesn't quite apply here grass in his mouth as he feeds it to a goose. · Slllres Interiors • I 0 II•' • 0..IMRl•I ..._. -.SO AYOll Sit., ._ Newport Beacb --r· .U-ms ~ "ll MIA,__ -----. St "" 11191 s.o.-'-s._., ·-o-tcM Seore ...... t 'fOWt Are1t' c-11-141·1219 ~~ -~c..-­.... ...._, ... ...,-,, fOR t<IO S' WATCH OUT.] 1r I .. tmrTllSllm j "Our 24th year" 1 I t ·~ Auto & Homeowntirs-/ k • Ovotes By Phone • ,, , f-.S lll$llAllC( _, ua.HM w US-107 ........... c ........... If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad .Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels into cash. lo""'1 Jo O.tl11 Sltlilo 1:1.,,.,,,,, *""'"< '-'" Ill Ill 11#11 /J/1"'11, II . "' ,,,,,,, '"' ,,,,, ,,,,. """" ,, Al .. .,, E. ,.,, ,,,,. tftl E. ,,.,,.,,,,. IJl11• ,,, ,,., IJl11• iii ,,., 111-lfll Leon's Interiors WHY SHOULD YOU BUY AT LEON'S? 1. Leon'• i• the only real dUrount lntt>rior Dt>1i/(n Firm that tl'ill /rir>e you the p1>rt1onnl 111"n •irP that you and _vour ho m e <k•e"'"· 2. THE SA JllNC -DRAPERY Jlf!VD UPHOLSTERY FABRICS AT 30"/o OFF -WALLCOJIERllVG . .-,AT 2.5<"/c TO 30<"/t OFF -LEJIOLOR BLl!\/D . .., 1.'VD WOVE'Y WOODS AT 30% OFF -FURNITURE AT 3<Yl< OFF -SH UTTERS AT 15'7c ABOJrE COST -CARPET. H ARDWOOD FLOORING & Jl/NYL FLOOR/NC AT UNHEARD OF LOW PRICES -DECORATOR ITEMS AND CUSTOM BEDSPREADS AT 25o/c OFF -NATIONALLY AD JIERTISED BOX ."iPRINC."i AND MATTRESSES AT 2.5% OFF 3. Lcut but not l f'a•t. tA> haVt> qualified lntnior Df'1i/(ner1 to help you with your •t>lH tioru. Bring thi• ad uith you, and rf'reive a /ref' 11ampl,. of our ma!l'ic-<"arpel apot remol!f'r STORE HOURS Monday throU/(h Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday Or eN>ninllll by appointmen t WE ,.CRE LOCATED BY THE ORAN CE COUNTY AIRPORT BETWEEN MAC ARTHUR AND BRISTOL 3723 BIRCH STREET NEWPORT BEA CH. C.4. 92660 (714) 557-7883 Placing a Classified is twice as easy! Just SBcY 'bba:rge it" JOU can use your VISA or KASTER CARD to place a DAILY PILOT Classified over the t elephone, inc luding 8-Day week ads. Call ( 714) 642~5678 11111 Piil T~e Orange Coast's largest m&rketplace Getting a fair shake DEAR ANN LANDERS: I deeply re· sented your statement in regard io handshaking. ''A person who would lcnore an extended hand is a hopeless clod. . . " Well, I do NOT shake hands with anyone, and I am a well -educated. sensitive woman. The problem: I have ichthyosia - a skin disorder that has made my hands extremely rough. Sometimes they get as scaly as a fish. I tried to be gracious Wltil a man (in a receiving line in church, no less) shouted, ''Your hands are like sandpaper, woman. Why don't you use a good lotion?" Since that day I do NOT shake hands with anyone. -CANTON OfUO Dear O: I'm puttlag you on bold. Read on. DEAR ANN : The Orientals have a more sensible and charming method of greeting -touching their own fingertips together and bowing slightly. -BAY AREA Dear Bay: Ah-so ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have hyperhydrosis -excessive sweating of the palms. For no reason whatsoever. my hands become wet. The perspiration drips. No one wants to shake a hand like mine, so I ignore the custom and people can think .whatever they pleklse. -LARAMIE . WYO. • Dear Laramie: Join hands ... er ... ahh . . . I mean stand beside the woman whose letter appears above yours and read on. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Get out the wet noodle. I am arthritic. A firm handshake can be agoruzmg. It's like a thousand needles piercing my wrist and shooting up my arm. During mass we are asked to shake t he hand of a nei~hbor as a gesture of peace. The pain I have suf · fered during those "p~ace" gestures could start a war. Who are you to say that a light clasp doesn't mean as much as a grip like a vice? -SHAKE AND ACHE IN LONG ISLAND Dear Ache: Join the others for a moment, please ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: Years ago l developed tendonitis in my right hand. It aches whenever I lift something heavy. If som eone with a firm handshake gets ahold of me , I almost faint from the pain. So. I refuse to shake hands . If I offend someone, that's too bad. -MOREHEAD. KY. Dear More: Hang on. l'IJ get back to you soon. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Most people's hands are crawling with germs. H you took a survey, I'll bet you'd find that not one person in 100 washes his hands with soap and water even ONCE during the day. So. I wear gloves at all times and never shake hands. -THEY CALL ME SfUCK· U P -SO WHAT? Love takes it s t oll A lot of mother s I know are downright meddling when it comes to their children's selection of a boyfriend or a girlfriend. They want to know how old, how tall, what their father does, where they live, the scope of their education, what their plans are for the future, and how they feel about children. I don't care about any of those things. All I want to know is. "Is he or she a local call or a toll?" I DON'T REMEMBER names or faces "of old flames. All I remember is their area code. One of my sons once dated on area code 513 for six months. It was marriage b.y Ma Bell. I figured we were spending S35 a month to share such insights as: "What are you doing? .. "Nothing, what are you doing?" "I 'DON'T WANT to Interrupt you If you're doing something." "I told you I wasn't doing anything." "You sure?" "I'm sure." "So, what's new.'' Another one of my kids showed an in· terest in a lovely girl who lived just a few miles from us. It was great. I didn't have to worry' about a d eep involvement because they were never off the phone. He set his alarm to call her in the morning. AT NIGIR I used to go in and remove the phone from his ear as he slept. It was like hanging up an umbilical cord. As soon as they left one another at school in the af - ERMA IOMIECI AT WIT'S ENO ternoon they would shout, "I'll call you when I get home." I offered to feed him in- travenously. The suggestion by my husband to put a timer by the phone with sand running through was ridiculous. However. I did slip a calendar under his door and circle the month. Panic didn't set in until one day when I was standing near and saw him dial "l." "Who are you calling?" I asked. "You know." he said. "The same person I've been talking with for the last month." "Btrr I THOUGHT she was a local call." "Don't worry," he said. "It only costs about eight cents a minute. Besides. this isn't just some siJly kid infatuation. This is a person I genuinely care for and want to spend the rest of my life with . She's impor· tant to me. She's special and there isn't anything I wouldn't do for her." "I'm glad to hear you say that," I said. "Because according to the phone bill you owed us $36.86 in long distance charges." I learned something that day. When toll charges enter the room . . . love goes right out the window. Cancer: Polic y pays Tuesday, September Z% ARIES (March 21-April 19): Home, family. territory, long-range 'investments and security dominate scenario. Older in· dividual wants to curry your favor. Be polite, receptive, but not gullible. TAURUS <April 20-May 3>') : Contusion can be transformed into versatility. Means you play role of juggler. You are on y~ur toes -and hands are busy. Accent on trips, relatives and discovery of a decep- tion. HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA portunlties multiply; people in positions of authority are willing to make room. Em- phasis on diversification. travel plans, commwlication and increased social ac- tivity. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You 'll be asked to review, revise, rebuild and to check source material. Look beyond the immediate -perceive potential, see pie· GEMINI (May 21-June. 20): Focus on ture as a Whole. financial status, authority, reward based SAGITTARIUS <Nov . 22.Dec. IZl ): on added responsibility. Cancer, Taurus, Capricorn persons play significant roles. Nothing occurs halfway -you are in· Lost article wi. ·u b~ located. volved and should be aware of it. Em-pb'aai.s on change, travel, variety and in- CANCEB . (June 21.July 22): Loni· tensified relatiQOShip. Gemini, Virgo and range policy pays dividends. Your faith in another Sagittarian figures prominently. programs and persona la vindicated. CAP&ICORN (Dec . 22.Jan. 19 ): You're 00 brink of greater independence Diplomacy should dominate -you can win and a m.,or discovery. rather than force your way. Emphasis also LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Areu pre· on home, family relationships, budget dis- vlously clouded by fears, doubt.I and de· cusslons and decisions· related to legal ception will now receive benefit of ireater documents. light. Aries, SacJttarius and another Leo AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Main· figure prominently· taln low profile, persons who ·'handle Vl&GO (Aug . 23.sept. 2Z>: money" eould change policies. Have Circumstances tend to dlctm actions. New . alternative • band. Terms will be defined. development domlnatet scenario. You work schedule ls altered. could develop idea or product with 1peclal PISCES (Feb. lt-Marcb 20): Good appeal to women. Studlee ol evidence lunar upect coincides with cban1e of enable you to make career advance. heart, apeculatlve venture, exdtemenl of dJacovery. Member of e>ppo1lte sex Deur• LIB&A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) ! Op· promtnently, J t ' •.. ,, By PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna Beach "Quick. Did J get a vacation t.his year?" PflSOIAllTJ Q.&A. BY t,1ARIL YN ANO HY GARONER Strauss given design credit Q : Who designed (or should we say .. invented"> those tlght·flttlng pants almost everybody -boys, girls, min and women -wear these days under various names. And bow did the originals get the name "Levi's"? -R.S., MIAMI A: Credit (and plenty of cash) went to an imaginative young man of 20 named Levi Strauss back in 1850 in San Francisco. He had sailed from Manhattan via Cape Horn to join the Gold Rushers toting a roll of rugged canvas in his baggage. He hoped to sell the material to a te~tmaker for a grubstake. when a miner he d never met before complained that pants wore out too quickly for a miner to afford. As the story goes, Levi had a tailor cut a pair of trousers from his burden of can· vas and soon the miner wearing them boasted all over town how strong Levi's pants were. By the time the firm celebrat- ed its loot.h birthd~y. Levi's factory had turned out its 95th m1lhon pair! Q: I picked up a paperback titled "A Dangerous Woman" to read while waiting at the airport for the air traffic controllers strike to be resolved. I never beard of the author's name before. Who is Sharon Steele? She's a fascinating writer. -JILL JOHNSTON, STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. A: "Sharon Steele " is two fellows - Bill Mulvey and Dick Fehr! Fehr is Sharon while Mulvey is Steele! The latter's in- s piration to co-author the feminist novel is the background he amassed working for several years as executive v.p. of the Mac- Cann. Erikson Ad Agency, one of the most formidable Madison A venue firms. He has a sincere opinion of the opposite sex. "In working with big corporations ." Mulvey revealed, "I met and watched a lot of women who are s marter than their macho bosses, instead or living up to the old image of. being second-rate citizens." POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT SOME OF MY TROUBLES ARE SO FAMILIAR, I KNOW THEM BY THEIR FIR.ST NAMES. l•·.~: CH All IS McCAii Whence un'icorn? I am listening to a cassette of The Irish Rovers. Over and over I listen to two songs. One is 11The Unicom," perhaps their most ramous recording and a lovely, lovely song. The other is "Black Velvet Band " which reminds me of my mother, who nearly always wore a black velvet band to gather up her beautiful black hair. I am in a proper black Irish trance, and loving every minute of it. The unicorn has always fascinated me. Surely' if such an animal had not existed, we should have invented it, and so we did. The myth of the unicorn satisfies some deep part of our nature, and especially the nature or women. How did, this lovely creature come about, and what does he mean? THE UNICORN, etymologically, means an animal with one horn. The Greek and Roman mythologists described it in some detail, though they usually said it was indigenous to India, where so many of our myths originated, and none of these writers, so far as I know, ever said he set eyes on one of these fabulous creatures. In appearance it is much like the representations of the lion and the unicorn on the ~ritish shield. It (nobody was really sure of its sex) looked like a horse with a single straight horn with a spiral twist. T~e horn was _red at the tip, black in the middle and white at the base. The uni · corn had a white body. a red head, and blue eyes. Its tail was like a lion's and it had the legs of an antelope. IT WAS A SYMBOL OF PURITY in the Middle Ages. This was because of its great strength as the "wild ox" of the Old Testa· ment, which ended up in the Vulgate as "unicornis" or ''rhinoceros." The strength was usually used to protect the Holy Fami- ly, and especially the Virgin Mary. The earliest description or the unicorn is that of Ctesias, who states that there were in India white wild asses celebrated for their fleetness of foot, having on the fore head a horn a cubit and a half in length, colored white. red and black. From the horns, Ctesias says, were made drink· ing cups that prevented poisoning. Aristotle mendons two one-horned animals: the oryx, a kind of antelope, and ''the so-called Indian ass." In Roman times Pliny mentions the oryx, the Indian ass and an Indian one-horned ox. SOME SCHOLARS TRACE THE IDEA of a one-horned ox to the Persepolis sculptures and other places, which Ctesias had undoubtedly seen, in which the ox, represented only in silhouette, seemed to have one horn. As India became better known, it was realized that the unicorn was not found there. Its subsequent abode became Africa. The unicorn was thought to be able to best the lion in combat. There is the passage in Aelian, quoted by the Encyclopaedia Britannica, "which says that as a rule savage and quar- relsome, even with females the unicorn at mating time becomes very gentle to his mate, which is supposed to have given rise to the medieval idea that the unicorn is subdued to gentleness in the presence of a virgin and will come and lay his head in her lap, which is the only way he can be caught because of his s wiftness and ferocity." Tms STORY IS ILLUSTRATED IN Pisanello's medal to Cecilia Gonzaga, on th.e reve~e of wh~ch there is a young girl with a urucorn lymg by her side. the uni-· corn being represented here as a beautiful long-haired goat, with the long horn in the middle of his brow. In the Middle Ages, besides its use as a religious allegorical symbol, the unicorn also signified the softening influence of love upon the fiercest of men, and was a symbol of purity. Relief spelled DEAR DOCl'OR: I've bad rheumatoid arthritis for years. It's especially bad ID my knee joints. At times the pain Is unbearable. My doctor has me on 10 asplrln tablets a day wblcb help quite a bit. But there are days when nothing seems to relieve the pain. My doctor bas asked me to use beating pads on my knees, bat tbe beat at times makes me feel worse rather U.aa better. Aboat a week a10 I trted aa experi· meat of my own. I 've been wrln&lal clotht oat of Ice water ud pattbll them arollDd my knees for at leut a ball boar a day. 'Otey brhll me more comfort tbaa I tboagbt pouible. My doctor told me &o COD· tinae with the cold clodla lnl&ead of tbe heat. Will the cold cloths be harmful &o my condition? -MRS. J . DEAR MRS. J : Although heat applica· lions are the usual treatment, we've atao· prescribed cold applications for some patients. Like yourself, they too have often found more relief from col ct than from heat. An article in the Journal of the Amerycan Medical Association (7 /24) will interest you as it has us. The treatment technique offered by .Peter D. Utsinger, M.D., and associates of , :0 e r m a n tow n M ed I c a I C e n t e r . ·\ T JOUI HfAlTH DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN Philade!phia, is called "baggietherapy." It results m considerable alleviation or knee - pain in rheumatoid arthritis. The treatment consists of placing an ice pack (six ice cubes in a plastic bag> above and below the knee for 20 minutes three times a day. Although it's uncom- fortable at fitst, most patients soon learn to tolerate the cold. After treatment patients note increase in joint function, decrease in pain and im· proved sleep. A survey of many medical centers indicates that cryotherapy is now prescribed when heat treatment fails. Discuss this with your doctor, Mn. J. He may agree to try baggietherapy to bring you relief. Dr . ...,.,,.. t0tkom.1 qm.eklu from ,..: ·n•. H• ~.w .aU tsuAft r'lf 11111 au t. cw. ,,.,.. of ~ ...,,,.., .. ,... colwM. Ind pr ~ {o Mm IR care o/ U.. ~.AW,. P.O. 80% ,,.,, eo.to AltlO, q.ut. ~· . Orange Coast DAILY PILOTJMonday, September 21 , 1981 .. 'OVAL OFFICE' VISIT -Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy tours Oval Office AP...._. replica in the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids,.Mich . FIEE lelar l1111l11ar Thursday, September 24th 7:30-9:00 P.M. At Murdy Park, Huntington Beach (Golden West & Norma Drive) Hear Gerry Reed speak on "SOLAR APPLIACTION " Learn about Tax Credits and Utility 6% Financing Gerry's a member of the L .A. County Energy Commission and Mayor Bradley's Solar City Committee. F'or More lnformatt0n. Call REEds SolAR· DAy CoRp. (714) 891-2616 15431 Chemical Lane, Huntington Beach C:O..trecl LlcenM ,s »3in78 ,, . have long s leeves a nJ button-do wn collar. which allowf> you the option of wearing a ttc. In small. 1/H-inch checks of red, gold, navy or blue, all o n whi1c. Or Tattersall chec ks of . plue-black, gold-blac k, red-black or brown- black, al l o n white. 14 1.? to 161/2. Each, $33.50 ISTAIUSHED 1118 _r;D ~J. Q;(}~ciJJmfA,ff.1/ ~ ([9~0J:D ~ Furnishtngg for litm. Women ~-Boi:Js ~ ~ 530 WEST Tm STREET, L()S ANGELES. C:AUP. 90014 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BBAa-t 92660 ·~~!'~~~~,~·~ . ,• / -I I· I. e • 2 s i I 1 1 t t r \ ,, •l I I I' I .... r s -• ---........... • __ • ._ • ..........,_.._ • $ p ....... v ¥4 $ Orange Cont DAILY PILOT /Monday. September 21, 1981 DUllCI CIAIT 11EAE ARE I 2 $ 5 3 scssssz • • .. YllR llllUDlll DlllY PIPIR To keep up with all that's happening in your community you need the -Daily Pilot ···every day REASONS 'Vl1Y ••• {/ Read all toda)·'s UJ news .. every day Local, county, state, national and international events come to your /i1lfollow ~r our team "V The sports action at 15 Orange Coa st high school s, three community coll eg es, UC Irvine a nd Ca l State campµse s i s r egularly r eported by the ~Enjoy your Sunday ~Family Weekly, color comics, finance, the latest news and f eatures about your community, your mone y a nd you high I ight the inter est i ng r eading ~~ packaged in your ~~ doorstep in the bright, light and lively Daily Pilot. Daily Pi.lot sports staff. Keep up w ith nation- a I ly r a nked college a nd pro t eams, too! ~~ Sunday Daily Pilot. Enough to r ead - and enjoy. ®Keep a11 eyt.• on ~oeal government No other newspaper brings you more news of your city counci l, planning commission, school and college districts and county government. B Save money and (J shopping time (ij/'Tune in to the {/;latest TV logs ~Laugh, ery or get 21 smart Real values on items from apple- sauce to zippers are advertised ev e ry day in the Daily P i lot . The lates t , most accurate televi s ion guide is published each w eekday in the Daily Pilot. \ Because, the ads are from On Fridays, Pilot TV Log fi rms in thi s area, you save t i m e, ef - fo rt and money . charts the tube in convenient, easy-to-find grids. , Get into the Daily Pilot D ·1 p·1 4'.. for only •4.00 per month. II J 111 -----------~~-~-~!!~~~-~~~:~~-~~-~~-----------· : I 'd like to e njoy the comforts of a ho me .... 111111 1 1 delivered Daily Pilot ever y day. ~~ms':~~( I II MAlllO I I Enclosed is $4.00 for one month. •N '"' .. ------~ ~------UNIHOSl'llS : . B~~~~.~~~~.~~~:.. ~~~~t : . I Name . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "OS•A(.I ... ,111 ··~~· •CJl)At.,.,., I I • I Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orange Coast Dally Pilot I I Box 1560 I I City · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · Phone · · . · · · · · · · · · ·. . Costa Mesa, CA. 92626 I I I : Signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CI RCULATION DEPT. : I I 1 ,,.,0111<.uM1Distric t ................... Rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I I . . I ------~-----~---------------------------------------------· 642•4321 Complete the coupoti • • . glue or tape the prepaid label on an envelope for malling, or call 6'2-4321. Ask for Circulation. r I 1 I I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT"'1onday, September 21, 1981 ~--------------------------------iiiiiiiiiii;;;iiiiilil ................. -==-=-•• English actor Irons talks about himself BJ BOB TllOllAS Two yeara elapeed, and lroca COO· • r , w .......... Unued hJa campalsn. He found to· HOLLYWOOD -Jeremy Iroo1 couraaement with Harold Pinter, waa ln town recently wlth the view ol wbo waa wrhlna ''Tbe French lAformlq th• rum community •bo Lieutenant'• Woman;" they bad GET YOUR TEAM TOGETHER! ANCENT MARINER RUSTY PBJCAN RELAYS A TEAM RELAY RACE he lJ, what be doea, and even, ll worked together in the theater and uked, bow to prooounce bit name. TV. The anawera to the above: "I made an extensive tat for the 1. Helt a !2-year-old Eneliah actor 'but u-• ,..a wlth theater experience ran1ln1 tum," said the actor, ' •ut.:iu Cycllet 14.7 ... ft ' g IOIC Swl•••t 660 yd1. Loh of Cat.pries lllCWlltt .... w. ......... w .... from "The Wlnter 's Tale" to Artista kept sa)'in1. 'We still don't • G 11 f know who he ia; why not Michael 9 A.M. SATURDAY. OCT. 24 Stcwta a.d ,..,.._ .t .. "9wport 0-.s. Newport leech • odsep , •· phu a sprinkllnf. o YQrk?' pre1tistoua TV sbowa auch u • The Palliaers" and "Love for Lydla." ''Fortunately for me, Karel likes to 2. Moet recently he co-starred with Jive new people 1tarrin1 rolea. He MEDALS & PRIZES TO CATEGORY WINNERS T-SHIRTS TO All COMPETITORS Meryl St.reep In "The French Lieu· did that with Albert Finney ln tenant's Woman," which United "Saturday Niaht ud Sunday Mom· Artiata ls releuln1 thJa month. ing," with V~etaa Red11rave in 3. "My name ia certainly not pro-'Isadora,' wltb Davld Warner lo nounced 'Eye-rona,' but juat like the 'Morgan."' metal. lo England we say, 'Eye-ons' Irons' fortune turned with the cut· -we're lazy about our R's. Here I ing of Meryl Streep as the em1maUc iuess you would say 'Ire-ona. "' The Sarah Woodruff. A bie·star name for name is fairly common in En1land, the marquee emboldened United All PROCEEDS TO THE CALIFOIMA SPECIAL OLYMPICS be added: "It's probably short for Artists to accept an unknown costar. lronsmith." He almoet blew tbe big break. Pick UD ~ ..d .......... et: IUSTY PIUCAM mTA.OIA.Mn • .ANCl9fT MA.llMll HST 4UIANTS • MOST ATHUnC & llCYCLI STOllS Jeremy Irons' wtde brow, brooding Irons bad already been cast in an 01 CALL C7141 54f·f J22 e y e s a n (I s t r a i g b t n o s e eight-hour TV adaptation ol Evelyn makehim~aJ~aroman~utor, Waug~s ''Bridu~~ R~iaited,"~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~:~~~ a category in short supply during re· and the production schedule confUct-cent mm history. With an actor's ed with the film. confidence, be ~ampaJgned for the .. For 24 hours 1 contemplated end- role of Charles Smithson, the Vic· ing my career," he recalled. The torian aristocrat wl)ose passion for reason: it he failed to keep the TV the disgraced "French Lieutenant's commitment, be could be suspended Woman" almost destroys him. After by the actors' union for five years. a history almost aa stormy as the h 't ht John Fowles novel, the film pro;ect This curious custom asn caug on ~ in America, where TV stars break landed with Karel Reisz, the Czech-their series contracts at will. born director who has made a series oflaudablefilmsinEngland. Happily, the scheduling was "I knew I was absolutely right for worked out, and Irons was able to ~~~ r. the role, but I had no illusions about play the role of Charles and also the ril: ... t01f • t 1 getting it; I figured they would cast a role of Michael, who is the film actor hows at : · :4 star," said Irons. "I went to see who is playing Charles -Pinter de· I · · Karel anyway, and he was encourag. vised modem scenes of actors wbo I!' n ;1;1 ing. At that time be wanted to cast are making the movie. Thus Miss . 'VL~,.J.~rr the leads with two unknowns and fill Streep and Irons have two romances. : =~-=- the rest of the cast with dames and in the 18608 and in today's world. One I knights." ends happily, the other doesn't. QllftlA.~ ..=.:.:.~=---------------=..;:._:...;__ ________ I ~1~115 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND fi.~~ 1 YOUNG PEOPLE &:~:~ BlPlf J:i1 & B':t'o~ CONTINENTAL ·~ ~~.=~~o Ille --al,,.. r•Dng• •lo -.., ,,.,_ ·-...... ,.INWy ol ..., .. ....,_~-Oyfle"C- DIVIDE A UNIVERSAL l'ICTURE PINCH ME. (I must be dreaming.) You II think you re dreaming too, when you see rhe ci1ttercnce Powers training can make 1n lhe way you look and feel Just try 11 Soon ~~ Mayt1it..ot\(1uld tN •J p.tlll r t~\(f.)'0 ~10"lf-,,)fUf'r 't1' matoUl'I l~dlPl!lf"l)trX)•"""lrTom<r.;l •~e•eo;le<J• ~ ~ "'"lfllftvt•"""'' r .,..,,, ...... c;.,.,,,.,.,."l f)r,.)'r• ,, -----AOaoen _________________________ _ '"Y------------------------ S~~ ---------------~Z~--- Age ""°""-------------Send lf'I this coupon or call 547-1221 , lt-.·qukkal Colvtn Klein Jeans ... The great 5-pocket wlde·wole eold.lroy jeOn Colon: dusty green. nutmeg. burgund,t. bloclc ond row. Add a westem span shirt flom Polo k> corrQ!ete the outtlt Al'S GMAQE • 56 FASHION ISLAND NEVWORT BE.ACH • (714) 644-7030 "LL am AHO 11!1 F"-MS AECEIYf Tl1£ SEAL DI' THE MOTION PICI~[ COO£ DI' SH r AfGUl.A I 10H --·1 Pl••• a:::=:::==:::::==~• •f ••"• t 1 IU:l~~~ .... •;;' ~ ~~~razf'GI ~1 i&RAO~'cllv or Ad ACTION CaU A DAil Y PILOT AD-Ylsot '42·1611 ~Gl..-(R) "Humh and hallelujah!" -Shella h190n, LOS A.HORES TIMES A PARN.Q.NT PCnff ~ '111 ~U• tVU IOU.IJO , .. Jtf""-.. w. NOW PLAYING ... , .. ,..r ·~<• fOWTAffl Hll(l Dlllfl-1• Faunu .. v111ey 962-2•61 IT&Dlllll llllfMll Ollngt 171fl 63H170 ''°""" ..... _ ........ r' .. THE TEMPERATURE IS HIGH AND THE ACTING SIZZLING IN 'BODY HEAT:" -Tunc M .. UJnc "A MELODRAMA SOAKED IN ATMOSPHERE, RICH IN CHARACTER AND TAUT WITH TENSION~'-Sawn1a.rRC¥icw ' *BARGAIN MATINEES* Monday thru Saturday All Perform1ncH before 5:00 PM (Exce,t Speclll Engagen11nt1 and Holld1ys) LA ~lg ADA ~Al' LA MIRADA WALK·IN Mlroelo 01 lo1•c1on1 994·2400 ... -----·· "ARTHUR"" ·---.. -.--"VICTO"Y'" f'lt -·· ........... ___ ..,,,,.. ··EYE OF THE NUDU 1111 _,_ ... ,... -............ -"STRIP£a•· _,.,_ __ _ ••Nf•TOAVF·,,_ _,_._ ... , ...... 1111 --·-----·aa.--""UNDER THE WN90W'" ,,_ -···----------· ""AAlot!AS CW THE LOST AAIC"" ,,_ .... ,,... ... ,,._ ""T .. CAHHON9AU AUN" ,,_ _,_, ... --_na. __ _ ...... __ _ ... __ ··eooYHEAT'1111 ·-----LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK ·IN foculty or Concll••OOO 213/531·9580 --·--· "AAIDt!AS Of' THI LOSTAAk"" ... .. __ _ •:n. o:a. .,., .,.., - "'PIAIT fllONOA.Y IN OCTotlEA .. 1111 -·---.. -........... __ '"FOUR SEA90NS"" -....... ,_ .. ,_ ..... __ ".'THIE CANNONllAU. AUN" ,,_ ·····-""HEAVY METAL'" 4111 1•tl~ ... , .. "NINE TO RV!"" -·=-- LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllC ·IN Foc\Jlty Al Del Amo 213/614·9211 .. VICT~Y-1ta • ...._ .. ""EYE OF THI •ROU• 1111 --L>.GUNA "TARZAN, THIE APE MAH"" 1111 -.- .. CHIEECH A CHONQ'S MCEDMAMafll ·-··.-.-.. CHIEECH & CHONQ'S NEXT fllOVIE •. t111 ........ - "'STAIPE81111 1a:..1t1a..-=• s .o .•.1111 .,,..,,. SO . COAST WALl<·IN Soult! Coo11 Hlwoy otltooelwoy 494-1514 ..... __ _ ··900y HE.Ar· 1111 , ... _ -.. FISTS OF AMY" fl! ----CMWY ""AATHU .... _ ""-- ... .,.,. ~ ........ 7: JO ~ ''"" 1: ts \Aft•, • .,.. ...... IMPORTAMT MOTICE! CNllDREM UNDER 12 FRU! Ktt ......... .., MM 1111• f11 6 ;lD •Sil S.o lltk 6:00 ,. C111W1 SOUND • l'Ollll All CM IWllO IS l'OUll SIUllDI 1• NO AM CM IWllO Wlllt Ofl10ll ~ llO$ITDI _...Ml POl1MU i•AU. c..fl ~ Ill Oii Ml Wiii A"' •11H ll1A ANAHEIM DRIVE ·IN -·---'°-___ ,.._ ··PRIVATE LESSONS"" (Al -.... Yfl09NYW fre-oy ti ol L•""'" SI ""HEU NIGHT 1111 179·9150 CINl·ll SOllMO ,,____ l,,_°',,.;...;;;.;...--;;:;_--- .. THIE CHINESE CONNECTION" I ••OAOINAAY PEOPLE"" !IQ .. FISTS 07" FURY"" 1111 "THIE ELEP:::NT MAN" Cfll Ctfl( JI SOUNO Clllt ~' ~ 9L f "'A PAPW BUENA PARK DRIVE IN ___ .... __ _ .. CONTINENTAL DIVIDE'" --uncotn A•• West°''"°" ••COAL MINEA"I DAUGHTER .. IN! 121•4070 J () JN 'A1"'4 FOUNTAIN VALLEY DR IVE· IN son D••vo f,.,,., 01 "ook"""' (So) -----· ""RAIDERS Of THE LOST MK --GAU.IE- 962·24'1 CUI( !I SOUllO •ll'•'---Gor':_o.;_"1::_;_;;_3_°'_, _) ,,_ ____ 1111 "THE c ..... CONNECTION" -"'FISTS Of NAY'" flt Clllt ·fl SOUllO --·-MwmTT "'T .. CANNOHeALL MIN'" ..i -"'NINaTOAW .. ,,_ CM • fl SOUllO , A M•SW',l LA HABRA OlllVI IN _,_,.._ ___ ,.._ °'MVATI U:llONS"" 1111 -'"ENDLESS LOW"" 1111 Clllf ·fl SOUllO __ _ .... ___ __ "AH AMIE .. ICA.H MJICWOLf IN lONOOW" 1111 -••HEU NI0"1'"' 1111. Clllf "$0\lllb -------··CONTININTAL DtVIDI!" --_._ .. ,. • -"'° a Htrteo -"COAL Ml•A'S DAUQHT'I"" IN! 171-1162 811 ~ ''4 4. ~ Ai>• LINCOLN 0111Vf IN htlCOlll A•• Wetf Ol lno" 121-4070 -~-.. ,. ... ... ,.._.__ ---"llOOY HEAT' "' O~AN GE 0111Vl IN .. ,,. __ _ ----"800Y HI.AT"" ..... "A•MCAN QIQOU)" 11111 . . ~ •, ... MI S~ION D"'IVf IN ·. .. •. . WARNER 0111\/I IN We<Mt A ... W•tl Ol .. OCfl ...,_ M7·1ffl \ fl '-·--~--­"'OMMNAR.!.~'" ''TMI IL.a~ ........ I i400 Ni CiliW I Mmtto 8rN 990-402? UACITI C.U 0ranoe 634·3911 &MC--llAl.l Or .vige 637 0340 11Mt8dM-.a... w .. kday1 7:00 & 1:00 8unday1 2:00.. 4:00.. 7:00.9:00 11 ,, I I I •' I ,, I j I !I I ' ~ . r . r I • _____________ -• • • • - --~-..,., ------.,.----~~-...... -· .. , __ , ---.... ,.... ....... _ .... , .............. ,11911 ... s•s11110111112 .... u •s•a .. a .. •• .. c•c111c••&••• ,o,..,. Coelt DAILY PILOT ,Monday, September 21, 1981 Tiit: BIGGt:ORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) FA~llLt' c1ac1:1 "The .only thing wrong with soccer is you don't get to wear hats." Ml-'RMIADl'KE by Brad Anderson "I h1t1 Mond1ya." tf'lf) Hank Ketchum c , 1 " t ~' ~-21 l "Where's the breath freshener? He had garllc last night!" "Boy! Whoever wrapped these sure did a good Job! .. .. ll'DGE PARK ER WELL, 1r's rwo LONG BLOCKS TOTH~ H1<5H S'CHOOL TR,ACK. rT WILL eE NICE TO G£T &AO<. IN1'00CH Wl'TM MOT'MtR f'UllT09'E. ; Puff puff : oH, r 'SAY-- WoNPE~FlJL !:XERCISE . .ANDA IAXI BAC.K? BUT W.ALKIN<1 JS GOOD ~XERCIS'f:" .' PfANtTS ----- Tl: M BLE" EEDS 90&-Plt:~S ON HORses HeP111N'ilof IS·A-WA'/i SHOE GORDO '1CJll T1'D!:IE WHo M~O J.A~r .54'7LWL.>4~ ~­rous J:Pf 8CJ{)e, ~ITU, MJ IN6TNIT Rl!!Pi-Avf . 9-.%1 t~l'NK \' 1' INKERBEAN (cxmiJDI lLIMI OR.SMOCk ~ ONPSRS"f.ANP YOU PR.ACT"ICeP IN HONG KONG FOR "f'WO Y8ARS, IJH, SMOCK? 'I>. by Charles M. Schulz --------. ''TMIS LUNCH BOX 15 GUUPEO BY A NE~~STAHCE PRO~AM 11 by Tom K. Ryan OrJLV "THE: SA'7'71-E:S IS Sf:PJ:MillV' '~M ! by Jeff MacNelly -Ef/!Nfe tl~S,,Mlt.t.eR_ C) ""-'-·'-""" by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk Ole DON'T MUCH (Jiili. 60, "R:AM,60! ~·s OtJlt Ml6H1tJ CHEER/ WHE1'E ~&O, ~ 6ET OUT <i= H9E ! Naf{MAN , ~ ... ~'1' tl'tO~IE.S \.n<t 'f~IS ~1" of N'f '4oV IN II UIMAN'fll MOoO? I by Kevin Fagan MICHAEL, YOORE NOT Ibo )OoNG Tb DO SOME kXJRK PfOJND HER.E.~ INFPCT-'/00 ~rr1bus! ~E ffil F~ 'f().Jt. Cl.D'lHES, ya)R FOOD, YOUR EDUCf\TlON ... DID\ R5K loGE.1 80RN ? . . . j i l l ' - ' , ...... -... "' '"' \' ,_ __ MIMG_~ ...... KUNllfl\J CMl9 trtee to ,..um • ~ OI"'• loel IMOcellOt ...., • ..,... '*"' lrom =~POOTMµ. DellM ~ et New Engillnd Petnot1 I TMA8UM HUNT w•A•a•H ~~In tt. 40ntt1 -to oon-nrm ttie Kor~ belief In 1111 ~ wend M deMOna end .,_.,., eplt'hl. I HAWAII AYl-0 • l!UICTNC r!:= * *'-' "The Cet From Out· 1t1 s.i-" (1979) Ken Ber- ry, Sandy Duncan. An ex1te1erre1trlel tomc:et c:rMfl llll'ldl on Eerttl. 'G' .MOYIE ..... "No Depoelt, No Return" ( 1871) OaYld N!Yen, Darr.., ~aYln. The dllldren of neglec:tlYe Pllfel'lla decide to 11909 tNlr own kidnaippng 10 i aome ettenllon. 'G' uo IUl/..Mft WB.COME Ma<. KOTTP Betbarlno II c:orwlnc:ed that he 11111 loel ,. "mag- lc:'' wltl't -. • KCET NIWHEAT Hoat: Cleta RobltltL • 8nJC*>IH "Cowboy" ~ trick rop- ing with e young T- c:owt>Oy; S..ttle'I Gr..., l.Me Crew I>'"*'• for • ,_,(RI (l)alNEWS t:l6. mTONAl. 1:GO . c.a NEW$ II .CHEWS HAPPY OAV8 A<WH Rlc:hle hu trouble with a co-worker when he geta • job on the loedlng dodt or ·~· I YOU AIKB> ~ rT THlMUPPETS Gueet: Bob Hope. I JOKIA'8 WILD OVER EASY Guest: Eat1 "Feltla" H"-. (R)c;l • MACHEL I LEHMR AS'ORT (I) TIC TAO DOUGH QITHE~ Gu.I: John Oen,,,.,. (C)MOVIE ***'h "The Haunting" ( 11163) Julie Harris. C1alte Bloom. Four di.pirate peop6e in....tlgate • houM with an Infamous repute· tlon lor aupernatutal ~'= * * "The Gema For llul· turH " ( 1878) Rlcllard Hema. Rietlard Roundtree. A rutNeel INF~ wtlO ~ Amer1c:an hell- coplera Into Alrlc:a during I terrorlll W"1 II pitted against • fierce freedom ¥ter.'R' 7:15(%)'T ' IHORT IU8J!CTI 7:80 8 IOOIWOAl.D IN L08 ANQll.D Correspondent OenlH Bradley ~· from I/an Nvys on 10.yew-old Joni Hofwtadter, wtlO 19 I c:Mm- plon ~ rolenkat.r; • 1tory lrom Cheryl ~on the El 0or .. • 0 STIFF UPPER UP -Peter Cook is a British buUer coping with a teen-age slumber party in "The Two of Us" tonight at 8:30 on Channel 2. do ~ c.nter In Lond 8-lh; Lon Ktugltl ~ "°"' Chino on • young rocMo rider. I a ,NIJA.. v fllUD LAvaw.ANO --.rt AHO~AHV ''Ot>l1ade COurN'' MA~QAMI M•A•l•H ---""""'"" lt'1 found 1 robul1 nune 19 lonely and ud, the other ~ d9dere they Will hold badl their flYOrt untY lhe oet• it boyfriend. I TIO TN; DOUGH MAC:Nal. / LEHMI' NPORr .GMAT ~ ··11-·· Jollenna ......, 11 f11t11red In semu.i e&rber'1 PulltHr Prtn- wlnnlng GP«• about 111'1 aging bMu1y wtlO peniCI as her youth f9dee; Chrllo-topner Keene conductl lhe Spoleto FeolNal t>cneetra and Choru1. (R) (I) p .... MAQAZIHE A 100k et Jaclyn Smlth'1 portrayal of Jeckle Onueil; • ~ of flee m1rket expert Su••n W-.teln; I.Inda Harrl9 ........ Mt. McKinley; Chef Tell on llldng and dicing ar:· ••• "1900" (1977) Rob- ert Oe Niro, Ooneld Suther\end. The dey-to- day th of two WK'( dm.r- ent 2G-th century Italian famlllM II portrayed. 'R' l:OO 8 Cl) WKAP IN CINQNMAT1 Atthur and C"1men c.1- -pl4ln • lltnpM llttle wedding ceiemony to take place on the 25th WWll¥w· N1Y M th* elopement. (R) 8 QI tEvu.v STRAY DOGAHDICJO A felnal9 b-con ltruoglee to w.tt. • book about pri.. on wtllle matllng • ,_ for fOUt ltf......... klda ptaced under her aupeM- llon. Q • MOVtlE * * * "Night Watc:h" ( 1971) EJtzabeth Taylor, Leurenc:e HatYey. An attrectlYe women c:annot c:onYlnce her akeptlc:al husband that ..... 11111 - • murder taking place In the IMl«1ed ~ ac:rou rhe courtyerd. "MOVtlE • • "Murder In P9yton Place" ( 1977) Ed Nel9on. Dorothy Melone The muf· der9 of two Peyton Place r191denta trigger a -of Intrigue and 1ueplc:lon wtllch ~the town. • P.M. MAO.AZJHE • MOYIE * '* * ''The Young Ptlile- delphlan•" (1859) Paul ~an. Barbara Aulh. The Integrity of • young llWY'I' la lnatrurMntel In hie gaining • pr99tlglout poeltlon and 1 ~llM ,.GAi.AT ~ "\/-" Johenna Meler 11 IMtured In Samuel Bwtler'a Pulltnr Pru. winning oper• about an aging bNuty wtlO panics .. her youth f9dee: Chril- topher Keene conduc:tl the Spo191o FeellYal Otc:tie.tr • and crion... (R) CB>ewovw •• "The Piiot" (1980) Frank ConvarM, Clltt Rober1aon. A pilot turna to drtnldng lo eec:ac>e the unhappl..-. of 1119 mer- rlage and the lruetrellon ol hla~.'PG' CJ) NT'IR AUiN ANO ne 9'0CKETTU The Roc:kett• jolt'I ..,., Peter Allen on ltlQI et Radio City Muelo Hall In lhla mueiCel ap«:lel. e:10 8 (I) ntl TWO~ U8 Br..,twood reoel,,,.. an educ:etlon when he i. left In dletge ol a tMn·•g• llurnber petty. (RI • AU. .. T.-,Nlift.Y Arc:Ne and Edith lntroduee a rlc:tl widow to BetM)' ...,,,... after hlf wife runa aweyegeln. t:Aee9 TOM AHNOUNCID C1IJ THEY Ml> rT OOUUWT • DOHIE (TM! Af'Pft())QM.A TE) ~•CI> w·A·a·H The 4077th wagee • two- lront Ctwlstmea. hoellng • pltl1y fOt 1(-~ and terldinO to • aertoully wounded eokller. (R) D'1tMOYIE **'lo ••And Baby Malcec. Six" ( 1979) Colleen Oewtluttt, WllrTen oat-. s.cur. In ,,,.., Independ- ence, • middle-aged ~ pie with grown c;Mdfen ~ that • ti.I>'; ts on ltaw.y.(R) • THAr8 INCMDl8LE (S-Premiere) F-ee- lured: • 90-yeer-old trtc:k bOwllng expert; • 77-yMr· <ltd dllredeYtl; • ~-old glf'I ""9igfltllf\e; • ... ~; ll'llcro-llmb -gery. W MSWGM'AN Gu.t•: Jecquellne a.et, RoOer1 Wuhl, Tltlry Grego. ~RoyCdvl. DONOORYIU MCME •• •Yo "My &ooyguard" ( 1879) CM9 MakepMQe, Adern Beldwtn. The ,_ kid el a Chlc:egO high adlool ma11 .. friend• with the Khoo! outc:eet and together they etano up to the cruel gang wNctl heel peraecuted them both. 'PG' CHANNEL LISTINGS (a:l ~HOU8EOF HOMOR "The Cerpathlan &gle" A m)'ltel1oU9 woman np. the '-1a from her vtc:1Jma, rec:elllng the legend of • Pollah count-who ~ lltlld her lcwwa In the -way. 9 KNXT ICBS> 8 KNBC (NBCI 9 KTLA (Ind.) • KABC (ABC) e KFMB ICBS> D KHJ-TV llnd.I e KCST (ABC) • KTTV llnd.) e KCOP·TV (Ind.) e KCET (PBS) e KOCE IPBS) (Q) On-TV (lJ Z·TV Qi) HBO (C) ()) @ ([) (Cinema~) (WORl NY., N.Y. (WTBSl (ESPN) (I) I Showtlme > • Spotlloht • (Cable New s N etwork) l'M 8 (I) HOUM CAil8 Ar1lc:leo begin to OIMc>PMf .. the hCJIOltel, and It ~ 0-ltlal. k~ lomanlec le at WOttl. (R) • KB#IEDY CIHTEA TOMC»fT The John F. Kennedy Cen- ter for the Performing Arte 4 111 'i .._ "9 IOUI .W. ""'M'Y ~ • pertcwm. enoe or i.-d a.n- "'6n'• .. ..._ A "-tnt ..._, ......... ~ Alltd o.no.r." "°"' Wlllh-~on. O.O. O~ANlllNT ToemtfT (l)MOVll * * * * "Chlnelown" ( tt7-0 Jac:tl NIGholllon, '• Owlewey. DwlnO the 10304, • pnya11 0..te1IYI ln-'.igeltil. ~ ltlat ~ I tr• M OOl'NP· Uofl, "-1 end murder •a.ovw ** "F'f'Ol'l'I ..... To 'lllc1o-r(' (1t7t) Chotge Hatnll- tOn, Otiotgo ~d. ,_ friend• from different oountrt.I muet lalye Plltll In t 8G9 10 fight lor thel• lndMduel c:ovntrlH In Wottd War II. 'PG' 10;00. (J) LOU GAANT When Mfe. Pynchon le 11rloken by • 1tr<*1, oon- ttol cl the P9'* la U\rown Into Olepute. (RI ·=-HNI •• • "The Men WhO LIWld Cet ~ .. ( 1873) Burt Reynold•. S1reh Mlleo. An outtew lella In IC>Ye wllh the 9ole IUl'Vlvor of 1 train his geng robbed end muat outwit hla c:oh0t11 to 9"1Ure her eec:ape. • CAAL.08 MONTOYA AT CHAUTAUQUA Thie c:aptlYltlng conoet1 by 11.menc:o gullarl1t MOtl· toya ealutH KCET's Hlapanlc: month 9 THE AOa<10AO FILES Roc:ldord'1 lcwmet llanoee ... him '°' help when Ille ~ the targel ol • palduaualn. ®MOVIE • • • "5-ns Uk• Old Time•" ( 1980) Goldl• H.wn, Chevy OlllM. A eoft-t!Mrted lewyet la lorn be'-! her~ ••• hua bend -turned· b •nk rObber and her uptight pr_,t hU9band who la running lot Celllotnl• attorney Qef*'al 'PG' al)MOVIE * * "~It On Preclnc:t 13" (1878) Auetln Stoker, o-in Joeton. Potloemen and conYlcta ere lorc:ed to join together to prewint • ·~ gang lrom c:om- plelely OCCU9YlnO • pollee 1tatlon. 'R' 10-.JO . NEW$ • INDEPINDEHf NETWON< NEWS 11:GO •aw a a News • 8.ATUAOAY NIGHT Holl: SteYe Merlin Gueell. the Bluee Broth-.,... 8 NEW\.YWED BAME • MOVIE ** "Tarun And The Amuooa" (1~5) Jo/\nny Welalmullltl, Johnny Shel- ll1ld. Tarzan bec:om .. lnYOIYed with en alt-woman tribe. • llEHHVHIU Thei. mull be money In c:ommerolala, but not with Benny In c:hatge. • OO<CAVETT Guee1· 11.S. Halpeul (Pert 2 of 2)(R) (C)MOVIE * "The Happy HOOker Goll HollywOOd" (1978) Merline Belwlcke, Adwn Wiii. The q_, of the c:all gWta ~ to the lllm c:apl- 111 to mek• a movie beeed on her eutoblogfaphy. 'R' 11:30 • (I) QUINCY A pregnant ,_.._., 11111 to her deetl'I lrom a c11n end her boyfriend 11 eccuMd of rnurd« D 8 THE 8E8T OF CANION GUiits; Buddy HKl<ett. st-l.8w>-ence. Dizzy GA- lelple. (RI • NEW$ II LEr8 MAKE A OEAl I 8TAHLn IEGEl.. KCET NEWMEAT Hoet: ci... Robert• • CAPTlONE> A8C NEWS 9 ABCNEWS NIQKT\.INE (11JMOW! * ** ''The Fog" (1980) Adrienne Berbeeu, Hel HolbrOOk. Terror com. to • amen c:oeete1 town In the form of an omlnou• mist 9UfTOUndlng Iha yengef\11 Qh09tl of lepet-e kllled In • lhlpwrec:a 1 century ..,..... er.'R' .MOW • "The Chlldren" (1980) Merlin Shekat, Gii Rogers . A etrenge radtoectlY• c:loud tum1 1 gtoup of ldloolchlldren Into ,,_,,_ o a o ¥00$$($ 0 5 0 5 5 Orange Co,at DAIL. Y PILITT/MOnday, September 2 1. 1981 TUBE TOPPERS , CBS 8 7 .30 ... Kids World ln Los Angeles.'' Reports by kids, for kids and about ki~. KOCE 9 7:30 and KCET 9 8:00 -"Va nossa." Samuel Barber's priz~-winnlog opera about an aging beauty. NBC D 8:00 -''Every Stray Dog and Kid." A female ex-convict plays foster parent and writes a ~k about prison. CBS 8 8:30 -''The Two of Us.·· A teen· age slumber party widens Brentwood's education <Photo al left. J deroua zoml>IM with bleck llngerNllle. 'R' 11:41 CID CON81MP AIEPOA'T8 PAUEHTS: THE~ IM-IOW T oplc:a Include: IOIPI, break tut cereal, tee cream and motcwcyc:lee 12:00e MOW • • "Man From Mullc Mountain" C 11131) 0- Autry, Smiley Burnette. 0-Autry and hll 91dek· 1c:11 aet out 10 1rap • geng ol 11oc!k ewfndlerl oper1- tlng In • amall mining town. 8 A8CNEW8 NtGHT\.JHE Cl MOVIE * * • "Rine Of PUiion" (t978) Bernie Cu.y, St._ phen M.chl Two hell!)'· weight prlnflghter1. Joe Loul1 end Max Sdlmellng, aquete otf lor champion- ship matd'lee In 1938 and 11138. • AOOt<JE8 Two young c:rooks who rob I llc:kel agent "11 wit· n....o by a mailman @ THE AOCKFOAD FILES Roc:kford end• up In • deedly game of bleckmell when he trill to dMt • drunk drlYltl who WH lr•med for• homicide. (S)MOVIE • • "Sunrival Run" Peter Clfe,,,.., Ray MMland A group of ta.n-agera etum- ble uc>on something they lhoUldn't haYI _,, end must pay lor II with their ll\191..'R' 12:15 CID MOl/IE * • "Coast To Coast" ( 1980) Dyan Cannon, Rob- ert Bl•k• A runew•y hOU-"• and • ec:tapc>y trucker h•ullng c•ttl• C:OUI to cout bec:orne IM target• ol 1 wlld crosa- c:ountry c:h .... 'PG' t2:30 a a TOMOAROW G~•: lllmmalcer Robert EYana, Bob K...nan (Cec>- tlln Kangaroo) 8 MOVIE *'** "Trial Run" (1969) J-FrancilC'UI, leelle Nlel-.. A l1wyer llrrvet for euooeM. bu1 lc:h....._ It 10011.te. • HOGAN'S HEAOU HOQln -propagend• broedc:uler A.Jell Annie to get Info to Ml underground ~·· ~MOVIE * • * "Motel Hell" ( t9801 ROf)I Calhouf'I, Peul Linlle. Farmer Smith u-"'• backro.01 mote4 to pro- w ra and 11tten tM cn.ap but high quality me.I M need• lcw hla aauaage bualneu.'R' 12:40 8 Cl) HARRY 0 Herry becornM the protec- tor of • mu9'clan WftO hu beMI mer1ul0 few oeeth. (R) 12:46 CZ) MOVIE • • ,,., "Honey1uckle AoM" ( 1980) Wlllle Nelson, Oyen Cannon Wiilie on tout, • Texu country· -tern linger ~ lnYolwd with lhe MductlYI daughter of Illa llldelt let. -t~ he •tlll l()Yll lll11tay.et~ wife 'PG' 1:00• MOVIE "Home On The Prairie" I~) a-Autry INAKOUT ~NT NETWON< NEWS ·= * ·~ "Wekc>me To L A." ( 1877) Keith Carradine, Slllty Kallerm•n Varlou• Souttlern Cellloml• reel· den11 ore brought togethltl brlelly In a 111'111 ol romantic: H•laon1 wtlk:fl moetly and up being - night 11and1. 'R' 1:ao• MOVIE • • ,,., "Johnny Coot" ( 1913) Henry SllY•, Elh•· beth Montgomery. An Ital- ian boy ralaecl by e Slc:lllan guerrlllll is Mnt to New York to -Nie~ on lhe .,..,...... ot an American exp•trl•te ())MOVIE • • "FIYI Me11er1 Of O..lh" FIYI mertlel art• c:hlmplone 111 out to IYlfl the score against powerful Ctimlnall. 'R' 1:50 8 NEWS I 2:00 D ENTERTAINMENT TONIC»O' QINEW& 2:201 IEDIT~L 2:21 MOVIE • • •• ,., "Wiii P•nny" ( t eea I Cherltoo Heetoo. Joan Hackett A cowboy trlel to atay out of trouble wtllle • ,_ lrontlerawom- •n trlee to bulld • ,_ Ille. 2'.30 D 8 NEWS (C)UOVIE * * * •;, "My Bodyoultd" ( t979) Chris Mell~. Adwn Baldwln The ,_ kid at a Chlc:tlQO high ac:noo mak11 friend• with the IChOol oulc;uC Ind together they lland up to the cruel gang wNc:h h.O pereecuteO them both 'PG' 2:41 (%) MOVIE '* * • "C•ddy1hac k" (19801 Biil Murrey, Rodney Oangertleld The dernenl· eel ground .. keepet of • 1wenky c:ountry club wagee -agelntl the ~ Inhabiting hl9 1Ur1 'R' 8:000MOvtE •• * "Deadly Stranger" (t974) Heytlly Mltll, Simon Wiid A young woman I• terrorind by • Ylolent patient wtlO ~ from •mental hoee>ltal 'R 8:30 CJ) MOVIE * • • ''The Runner Stum- blfl" (19791 Olc:k I/en Dyke, Kath..., Quinlan. A Cetholic: prleet la tried tor the murder ol • nun with """°"' he heel bMr'I ..... peeled of tlaYlng an attu 'R' 4:28 (.Z) MOVIE • • * •;, "The Pollman Atwaye Rlng1 Twice" . (194e) Lana Turner, John G•rlleld A young woman ALONG IHE l/llA.Y WE'LL. &EEK 10 ANSWE:R !HOSE C061""1()L.0G I~ M'<6TER1 E!6 "'Tl-4AI HA.VE PL.>.GUEP MAN~IND IM~Olff 'THE MIL.LENN!" ~INCE ~e FIRST FE~S~ FLICKERS OF HUMAN IWAAE~' .... ""''* .. ~ Mr'ld with tfle Nie> of one Of the lllM'I ~ 4:111 CC) MOYll • "The HIC)py Hootler 00.. HOiiywood" (ltfl ) Mltl1k'le leewloke, Adem W•t The~ ol the c.it gllW go.-to the 111111 ~ I.II to lftlk• • MOYie o...o Otl '* 911tobiogrephy 'A' .MOW e .. + "11 "The H1t19lng TrM" (1959) Oery Cooper, Merl• 8chell A dOOtor klt11 a man wtMle reeoulng • girt and la lllmoel lynChed by • dtunken mob. 'PO' Tu.e•daff• Dat1• l•e /tlovl~• -MORtM- ~ Cl) * * "Tuc:k EYlrlut- lng" Fred Keller, Joeeph MecGufre A youtig girl ,._ta an lmmortJll lwnlty known u the TUCk1 ·a· t:20 (%) *'It "S1tutt1 3" ( tNOI Kirk Oouglll. F•rr•h Fewoett. A pair of Kolen- llat• worttlng In a ~ ate!lon .,. menllCed by • mad genlul and hla rtndy robot. 'R' 1:ao CC) * • • * "The Spl(lt Of St LOUii" ( 1951) .,_ St-an, Murray HM\11\0ll. In 1927, Charlee A Lind- bergh becomel ,,,. llr1t man 10 fly nonstop IC"OSI lhl Atlenllc: Oceln to Par- le. D • .,., "Nuty Hablta" ( t97T) Glenda Jac:llaon, Mellna Mercourt S-lll nuna In • Phlledelphla c:on- ..,.,,, bec:ome enmeehed In a Weterg11 .. llke ac:andel U I new Abbeal II •boul to be appointed 'PG' l:OO * * * "Belle Are Ring· 1"9" (1960) Judy Hollld1y, Deen Mlt11n A ""Y end lmpreulon1ble young an•-•ng serv~ <>1>1rator t>ec:omu inlatuated with e c:h"1mlng aalptwrller Ct * • ,,., "Thi Cat From Outer S~" ( t9791 K.., Barry, Sindy Ounc:an An axtraterr11trl1f tomc11 crllh land• on nrth ·o· t:OO CC) * • * ".Manny'• Orph•na" ( 1980) Jim B9ker, Mallci'ly McCoort The t>oys •I an orphln9g1 risk their dlerlty fund In an 1111mp1 to help their IOCOlr c:oec:tl pey back • $40,000 debt to 1111 mob 10:00 e * • "Jinx Money" ( 1948) Bowery Boya, Leo Gorcey TM Boye remove $50,000 trom a dead g•ng· Iler Ind give It to ch"11ty 0 * * * "Return 01 A Man Celled Hor .... t 1976) Rlc:h•rd Horris, Gale SOtl- dergaard. Ari Engll1h lord returns to Arnerlc:a when hi learns that the lndl•n• wno Initiated him Into 1helt tribe 'to • ..,. 1011 their model! pre1erYe to trappers. 'PG' IC>:aO CC} * • • • "Raaurrec- tlOtl" ( 1980) Ellen Burstyn, S9m Shepard Alter • ~r ••Ill auto llCcidenl, 1 wom- •n llnde th•I lhe hU 11"11 •blllty 10 heal Ol,,.,.. but le perMCUled beeaUM of her refulal to c:lalm 1 dMne 1nt1uenc:e. 'PG' CS) • • • "The Runner S1umblee" ( t878) Dick van Dyke, Kathleen Oulnlen A Catl>Ollc prle8t le tried lor the murder or 1 nun wllh Whom he had been sus- P«led of haYlng en aflalr 'R' 11:008 **'lt"LOYeMeTen- der" ( 1956) EMS Prnley, Rlc:h1td Egan Two b•olh· era lrom thl South light oo opposite aidee of the CMI w., Cll •• "The Sier PIGket" t 1934) JOl'ln Wayne, Vern• Hiiiie A tough cowboy deputizes a g1oup of renctlers to round up • g.ng of outi.wt 1t:GO ••• ~ "\/.,......, .. (Plt'I I) (1170) Alalwltd Wldl'Mrk, Ill~ ,....,, The app¢ffllt k~ of • ~Ill tdvlew le blamed on I IOteign pow- er ••• ''fheOMIMd Don't Cr(' ( 1150) Joerl Cf llW!ord, 0.Yld lrlan A woman n... "°"' mMOI' ~not to 11eoome a !!~Olli gun moll w ·•~"~ie Roel" ( 1880) WlllM Nellon, Dyan CIMon While on tour. • Texu OCM#ltry- -'-" ..., beCOll* lnYolYed with the Mduc!M dauglltet ol "" eldelllOll -thoUgh he 11141 loYw Ills ttay·lt-t..orne wife 'PO' 12::111 CC> •••• "Th• Spirit Of St Louie" (19S7) J- St9Wltl1. Murray Hemlhon. In 1927, Chartee A Und· bergh ~ Iha llrll min 10 lly nonllop ICU"OH lhe AU•nllc: Oc4atl to P"1- fl 1:00 Cl) ••• "Bell• Ar• Rlng- lng" ( 1IMIO) Judy HolllOlly, DMrl Martlt'I A any and lmpre11loJ1tble young .,._1ng eervloe Oj)llllor bloonlll lnfetualed ""th a charming ICflptwrlter 2::00 g * *' "11 "The C.t From Outer 8'*1e" ( 1979) Ken Berry. a.'ldy Dunc:an. An utr aterr11trl1f 1omc:e1 c:rMrl lend9 on Mrth. 'G' (%) * *** "Adam'1 Rib" ( 1848) Spencer Trec;y, t<11h1rlne Hepburn. A muroer trlal a u tee hevoc: 1n the marriage of • wom- •n llWY'lf and her roue- band, an ...,etant dla1nct 111orney. 8:00 (t) * * * "Manny'1 Orphln•" ( t980) Jim Balcer, MllllChy McCourt The bo)'S et eri orphanage rllk thelt c:harlty lund In an •llernpt to help their ~ c;oeoh pey back • '40,000 «Mbt 10 the moo 3:30 D • * \4 "Hudson'• B•y" I ( 1840) P9UI MUQI. G9"I Tierney Fur treppera lound the luc:tellYI Hudson Bly Cornpeny In 1711'Hlen· I uty Nor1tl Americ:a. CS) * * "Tuc:k E....,._- lng" Fred Keller, JoHC)h Mac:Gulre. A young girl mee11 an Immortal l111nlly known u ""' Tuc:ka. ·a· 18:'5(%) • * * "C9ddyahac:tt" (1980) Blh Murr•y. RoOney Dangerfield Tt>e dernent· ed ground .. keeper of a swanky count ry c:lub w11ge9 w•r ag1ln11 the gophers Inhabiting hl1 IUrt 'R' 4!00 0 ;, * • ·~turn Of A Man Clllld HorM " ( t978) Rlcl'l.,d H11rrl1, Gele Son· derg .. rd. An Englolll lewd retutna to Am4wlc:e wl\en he ~n• that lhe lndlan1 wtlo lnllllted him Into their tribe h•v• loll thelt mode•J pre1erYe to tr9'>PIB 'PG' I •:30 CI:) * * "A HOtM Celled Jeeter" A young glrl lll•tM an extraordlnery bond with the ofd l'lotM Whom the retcuee from ,..lrement ~ {%) * * 'h "He>ney'IUc:kle Roee'' ( 1980) WIMle Nelson, Oyen cannon White on tour, I Texu c:ountry- -•ern tlnger t>ec:omea lnvOlved with the Mduc:11Ye d1ughter of hie tldeklc:k .....,.. though he 111n lollee Illa et•y·ll·horne wife 'PG' 11:30 CC) ;, • • * "Reeurrec- llOn·' ( 1980) E.l1en But•tyn. Slll'l'I Shep1td. Alter • ,...., fetel auto eccldenl. • wom- en llnda t"•I she hu the eblllty to heel others but Is perMC:Uled bec:auM Of her relu11t to c:llim • dlYlne 1nnuenc. 'PG' * * *,,.,"WIN Blood" (1880) 8'1<1 Oowll, Amy Wright An emollonelly detac:tled preac:• Qon- tend1 with a handful ol people, eac:11 of wnom wanta to explolt him for • dlflerlt'lt reuon 'PG' by Armstrong & Batiuk --~~~~~~~~~-GuesTIONS SUCH ~: 'WHAi IS IHE Me'ANIN<3 OJ: LIFE~.:_ HA"r 16 "TliE PRB:Jse NATURE. OF "l:HE UNl"llERSEF:~ . ~C' '00 BLONDS> REAL.I...¥ H~VE MO~e FUNT Public TV brings special fall programs By TOM JORY In addition to "The Mark Russell Comedy ~....,.,,._.,._ Speciala," scheduled to return Nov. 11, PBS wiU NEW YORK -Public TV .will present more call ooce more on two popular special series, than two-dozen special programs and series this "Live from the Met" and "Non-Fiction fall, and the focus, for the most part, wUJ be people Television." ::1 tenor Luciano Pavarotti, Nazi-hilnter Simon The "Uve from the Met" season will premiere wJesenthal, explorer Jacques Cousteau. Sept. 30 with Verdi's "La Traviata," featuring , Mark Russell will be back for another series of tenor Placido Domingo. No date has been set for "Comedy Specials," but all the faces won't be the return of "Non-Fiction Television," which will familiar ones . The Public BroadcaaUn1 service be1ln its 1981-82 season with a two-part production, wUl introduce a defiant al ave from pre-Civil War "Pesticides and Pills for Export Only." 54utb Carolina called Denmark Vesey, and a Viet· As with all PBS presentations, air dates and dm-veteran named Frank. Um es may vary from station to station. ' Cootinuinl series like "Muterplece Theater," Among the special programs scheduled for eat Performances" and "The Shakespeare broadcast ln the fall, with air date if available: ya" will remain stapl• of the PBS Muon, -"The Loe Aqeles Philharmonic Bicenten- a eduled to start Sunday. But specials wW pro-Dial Concert.a with Carlo Marta Giullni." Four the system, u they have 1D the put, with itl hour-long proerama. ue constantly chan1ln1 penonallt.y. -"A House Divided: Denmark Vesey 's $haron Gless replac~s Redgrave I LOS ANGELES (AP> -Adrea• Sharon Gleaa ha• been named to replace Lynn Redvave In 'tlou.ae Calli" after she w• dropped from the dBs aeri• ln a dil])Ut.e with Universal Televll.loa. I Slpln1 of Mia• Glet1 waa announced by Jlobert A. Harrll, prealdent of Unlveraal 'l!elevisiae. 1 MIU Jledp'ave ftled a Hit 111Hn.c SlO mUUon • .,. from Unlveraal for What she all .. ed wu • ~ dl.Khar1e" from ber role lD tbe 1bow. eGllMDded t.be dllput.e aroM from ber requ•t breaat feed her inlant daqbter, Annabel, at ork. UnlverHl countered that lt snw out of a d• Hcl to double her •alarJ bJ her buabud· manager, John Clark. Mias Glesa will Joln Wayne Rogen ln "Uouae CaUa" u Jane Jeffrtea, the new ach:ninlltratl~e u - 1latant at KenainltoD General Hoapttal. Sbe wW dlacover an old dame on tbi medical ltalf, Dr. Charlie Michaeli, played by Roten. The aeries ll jebeduled to resume production Sept. "8, acc:oMJ.nc to an announcement from Unlvenal TeleYlstoo . Mias Gleu previously starred lD t.be NBC aeries ''Turnabout'' and WU • ncuJar -UM CBS aerlea "Switch." Sbe bu a1ao ltm.d la aueb TV movle1 u "lilovtola," ••Jlardbat IDd i.." ''Tbe La1t Convertible" and ''fte lmma,r-.." Rebellion.'' Yaphet Kolto plays the lead in this 90-minute drama, based on a true story of a free<l slave's efforts to lead a revolt of bis enslaved brothers. Oct. 28. -"Survival Specials." Four one-hour pro- grams: "BalJoon Safari," "Penguin Island," "Secrets of African Baobab" and "We Live with Elephants," lo premiere ~v. 18. -"Frank: A Portrait of a Vietnam Veteran." An hour-long look at the emotions and experiences of a Vietnam veteran whose life wu unalterably changed by wartime service. Nov. 11. -"The Hunter and the Hunted." An hour-long documentary on Simon Wiesenthal'a continuing search for Nazi war criminals. Oct. 21. -"Juat Another Missing Kiel." A 90-mlnute real-Ufe detective story on the search for a Cana- dian youth who disappears in the American heartland. Oct. 14. -"Stepping Out." Forty people labeled men· tally handicapped perform at the Sydney Opera House in Australia. Oct. 7. -"Board and Care." An Academy Award· winning short story on the attempt by two mental- ly handicapped teen-agers to develop a mt•nln1ful relationship. -"The Cousteau Odyaaey." Jacques cousieau returns wlth the crew of the Calypeo. -''Hot Sholl.'' Prollle1 ol YOUD.I athlete.. -"In Record Tlme.'' The recordint ol a-rock album. -.. Full Clrele." J>ractlcal wa11 to aave energy around the bouae, al.med Ill lbe adole1cent audlenceJ , • 1 -"Geclrft Caleb BJnOiam" A .w.91 ol lbe •ort ol "Tbe llluouri artill." -"Autllm: Beacblac tile Qdld Wltbln." A d.oeummtary by the matber f#. a 1Uti8tlo ebild. OPEN WIDE -Julia Child offers James Beard a bite of bread In a televised ap.- perance on "Good Morning America." Tbt ratnous cooks talked about bla new cookbook UUed "The New James Beard." .,. ,. 'I I ·I ., •' I I I I I 'I I ,, "I '• i'I 9 \ ' d 4 • z P a e w _.,,,.... ____ -~ -Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Monday, September 21. 1981 I Boy meets girl with aid of computer matchmaking game GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP> - Wbtn Geoffrey Aydelette aave up analyalns aecw1Ues and took up matcbmak!na. bi• 10&1 was '4 meet Iott ol attractive women and 1et rlch ln the proceaa. Six years later. Aydelette la meetlnt women all over the. country . His c()mpuler matchmaking aame, Selectrocu· Uon, is brln&in1 in about $200,000 a year. "I'm makint money and I'm makinc people happy," said the 31-year-old Greensboro native. "What more could I ask for? Aydelelte calls his game, 'Which ls featured ln nightclubs up and down the Eut Coat IDd SelectrocuUoa la euy to play. pears on a Jar1e screen for lion bualneaa from bls modett ln California, "aa audience-Playera comina into a club everyone to see. For example, a brick bome on the outaldrta of partlclpaUon same for •IAcl•." where the aame la offered are meaaaae ml1ht say. "To SX Greensboro. Two-person crews He came up with tbe tdea wtU.le 1lven a decal to pin on and a Male. I'd like to meet you. Want operate the game at night spots spendln1 evealn11 In alqln scoreboard. Each player to dance? FromTK Female." in V'lrginia, Maryland, Penn- bara. chooses two Initials that are Al the end of the evening, s ylvania, Connecticut and ''It wu pretty silly. The IU1'I printed ln bi1 letters on the de· male and female players rank Maasachusett.s. Computer Ume would be lined up at UM Mr cal and the aame card. After each other on their sex appeal is bought from a Richmond, Va., watcblnc the sirll and t.be lirll that, there are no rules. People by voting for their favorites on company. would be sittina &l'OUlld looldal do whatever they would usu.ally their scorecards. If a person "There was a time in the back. It never aot mucb f\wther do in a sinales bar, but all the gets few or no votes, the com· beginning when I traveled ev· than the looking ata1e," while they check one another puter declares him ot her erywhere, helping run the game. Aydelette sald. out. "selectrocuted." I didn't have the money to hire a "I just t.bouabt ii I ~ eeme If a player wants to send a "The game can be a brutal lol of people to help me, just my up with a game that weu.Jd IM&p me1sace to aJlOtber player, he form of ente rtainment. It father •and my brothers,'' people meet people aad llaft a 1ive1 the measase to one of doesn't spare your feelinas," Aydelette said. good lime, too, it woul• be Aydelette's staff members who Aydeletle said. Aydelette gets about $500 a trocutJon ls reatured But he said the c lubs get their money's worth from their Investment. "It can take a slow Tuesday or Wednesday night and turn ll lnt.o the busmest night of the week," he said. Seleetrocutaon has been writ ten up in s everal n a tional magazines and featured on East Coast TV newsmagazine shows, but Aydeletle said he depends mostly on word of mouth for ad· ver tising. Meanwhile, be has plans to take Selectroculioo into Florida and try at again an his home state great," he added. types it int.O the computer. It ap. Aydelette runs the Selectrocu· night from clubs where Selec· r-~~~~~~~-"-~~~~~~.;......~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ,,, ........... .. POP -A newly born emperor penguin gets acquainted with its rather at San Diego's Sea World Polar Research Facili- ty. Born last week -the fourth born in captivity -the chick is six inches tall. 'Pack palsy' now a civilian aillllent SACRAMENTO <AP> -If you're tramping along with a heavy backpack and your shoulders start hurting, then your arms, and then you start gelling a numb or tingling feeling, you may have "pack palsy." The condition, known to soldiers since World War I, bas started showing up in civi.lians, now that backpacking is so popular, said Dr. James Lieberman, a professor or physical medicine, re· ' habilitation and neurology at lhe UC Medical Center here. Those particularly vulnerable may be inex· perienced campers who load their backpacks im· properly, and parents who carry young children in their backpacks. · "We have a 13-month-old, and my wife bas been complaining of these symptoms," which she connected with her use of a "baby-pack" after he first gave an interview on the subject, Lieberman said. He said he "stumbled" on the condition about a year ago while diagnosing a young man who bad weakness and occasional loss of sensation in the arms that turned out to be permanent damage. "It turned out be bad done heavy backpack· ing," and, despite pain and numbness, "just kept backpacking, week after week, without it getting better," Lieberman said. He saJd that was the only case of permanent damage he bas seen, but that questioning other young patients who complain of arm and shoulder pains, and taking telephone calls prompted by the earlier interview, have turned up other cues. Besides campers, "we have seen il in people who carry heavy weights on their shoulder," like a cement hod carrier, Lieberman said. "It wouldn't surprise me if it turned up in a mail carrier." He explained that on the back of the shoulders, "lhe nerves are very close to the surface, they're the major nerves to the arm, and the protective padding is very minimal indeed. It's an easy point for pressure." The first symptom is paJn that usually shoots down into the arms and per~aps the fingers, Lieberman said. The pain disappears if lhe pack is removed, but if it's left on, the wearer will prob- ably feel numbness and tingling in the arm. "Then you've got a nerve problem," he said. That can be followed by weakness of the arm, 1whicb may last a long lime after the pack is taken off, Lieberman said. He said he tells patients not to backpack for at least a month after lhe symptoms disappear, and to correct the bad habit that caused the condition. 1 Unlets they are experienced and in excellent ~condition, people shouldn't carry a backpack iweiahine more than a third of their body weight, Lieberman said. He said a waist belt should be used for heavy loads. Nuclear arms curb • pamphlet popular CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -A city 1overn- ment pamphlet urging residen ts to demand nuclear amu control is so popular that Cambrid&e is orderinC a second printing. The fint printing of 30,000 pampbJeta will be supplemented by a second 10,000-copy printlJll, the City Council decided. , Tbe pamphlet, "Cambridte and Nuclear Weapcms: II There a Pla~ To IDdeT" contends there ii no defense aea.lnat nuclear attack other 1ban controlllnl nuclear arms. Bomber in mweum , ' 1 CASl'LE AIR FORCE BASE CAP) -Tbe flnt Brltl1b Vulcan !><>mber to be donated to an American alr museum bas arrived at tblt Strateatc Air Cotnmand bue in Central Callfonala. The Vulcan was the world's ftnt delta·winftd 1et bomber and baa been ln uae for more t.llan a quarter, of a centurY · , .. ~ j g ' I . I .. ., TWE NTY ClASSA CICARETT£S More .. ·--····· ---~---·----- Jloh ts 70os Diiiy Piiat MONDAY, SEPT. 21, 1911 CLASSI Fl ED C6 Houston's, Ken Stabler was r udel y t reated by the Miami Dol phins. See. Page C3 . · .Rams gladly accept Pack's donation The problems haven't disappeared, but they'll, take, a 35-23 win over Green Bay By JOHN SEVANO CM-Deity .......... Before anybody gets too excited about the Rams' 35-23 victory over the Green Bay Packers al Anaheim Stadium Sunday, let's examine a few facts : (5) -The best C?) offensive line in the NFL allowed five sacks. Granted, a win is a win -and nobody needed one more than the Rams . But, at the same time, you have to-be honest about how the victory was acconlplisbed. . ly, accounted for 21 or the first half's 24 points. A Wendell Tyler fumble on a Rams drive ul- timately turned into a Green Bay touchdown early in the second quarter . And two Green Bay fumbles m idway thr ough the same quarter accounted for the Rams ' first two scores of the day. down because we're the LA Rams. "Coming in we knew our backs were against the wall. We knew we couldn't afford to lose this gam e and have any kind of season." " (1) -That for three quarters the Rams didn't look mucb better than they did in the second half against Houston, or the first half against New ~ Orleans. Was it because the offense woke up fronl its dormant sleep? Or did the defense finally decide to take matters into its own bands? For three quarters Sunday the contest was a classic case of "I don't want it, you lake it." There were so many gifts being banded out by both sides Santa Claus was searching for leftovers. It wasn't until Jeff Rutledge hlt Drew Hill on a 30-yard post pattern late in the third quarter that the Rams' offense could be credited with con- tributing. Of course, one victory doesn't do much to change the Rams' awkward position. At 1-2, they still trail undefeated Atlanta (3-0) . . and their tough games are ahea d or tbem. Plus. the problems (i.e. Dryer, what to do at quarterback, Coach Ray Malavasi 's job security) haven't disappeared (2) -That the Rams' potent offense rn was at least for the most part -once again impo- tent. (3) -The supposedly productive passing The quarterbac k situation seem s t o be s hakit!st at the moment. • game -which accounted for 30 touchdowns last year -accumulated a net'total of 26 yards against the Packers (1-2). ''I'm gl ad we won," said Fred Dryer, who ac- tua lly saw soOle playing time Sunday, "but we could have played much better. "I Olean bow can you continue to lose with the t alent we have in this room?" he asked. "They (Packers) actually gave us 14 points. I guess they didn't want to win it either ." Rutledge, subbing for the injured Pat Haden, t hen put together another 44 -yard TD march before the defense -thanks to a 64-yard intercep- tion return by Pat Thomas -put the offense into good field position for their final score. What th.is all boils down to is that the Packers were more charitable than the Rams, and the Rams' defense played well enough to compensate for the deficiencies in the offense. Haden, once again , is injured. Just how bad he's hurt 1s hard to say. He sustained his injury <a contusion of the sternum and.left lower rib cage) when he was leveled on a blow from Packer de- f ens 1 vc end Mike Butle r early in the second q uarter 11 • (4) -T he oHense committed five more turnovers to run its season total to 11, putting the Rams among the top three NFC leaders in that category. Both sides gave that impression, especially in the fi rst half when turnovers directly. and indirect- "What this game did was make us realize we have to go out every week and prepare," said J ohnnie Johnson. "We can't expect teams to lay !laden said he never saw Butler coming and as <Set> RAMS, Page C2 ) . Angels • given the Blues TO RONTO (AP) -By his own accounts, Ted Cox is just happy to be anywhere in the big leagues. C ut adrift by the Seattle Mariners under the Maury Wills regime, Cox was s itting by the phone in Midwest City. Okla .. wa iting for a call from the ma- jor leagues when the Toronto Blue Jays dialed in June. Cox was very much on the ball Sunday afternoon aRainst the Angels as he drove in three runs with a solo home run and a two-run single to Jead the Blue Jays to a 6-3 victory. The victory gave Toronto a s weep of the three-game series. The Angels have now lost six s traight and 14 of their last 15 to sit mired in the bottonl of the Am e rican Le a g ue 's West Division. The An gels chased starter Lu is Leal in t he firs t when Brian Downing led off with a d o uble and Ri c k Bur leson walked. Bobby Gr ich singled Downing home and Don Baylor follo wed with a double that scored Burleson. Daryl Sconiers then singled to right to score Bur leson. That was all for the Angels, who went on to strand 12 run- ners and also get under the skin of Manager Gene Mauch. "J have nothing to say." said Ma uch. "You can't talk when you're embarrassed." Cox felt as down a s t he Angels afte r being released by Seattle. "It was just a situation where I wanted to get back into the gam e," s aid the 26·year-old third baseman who was drafted by the Red Sox ahead of Fred Lynn in 1973. "When Toronto called me, I was sitting at home for about six weeks. ·'T he strike was on and they s aid go to Knoxville ~et in shape and when the strike s over you'll either go to Syracuse or Toronto.'' Cox didn't make the jump to Toronto that quickly. "It was in my contract that if another team wanted me at a high level, then the J ays would either have to match the offer or let me go and that's how I got here. "Se attle called m e a bout Sept. 1 but Toronto didn't want m e to go because I was having a good year at Knoxville and they didn't know with the Ainge thing here." SPRINGBOKS FACE CROWD ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)• -An orderly group of 50 pro~rs chanting "Springboks go me, racists go honle" greeted the arriving South African ru by team SUnday night at Albany County Airport. The 36-member Springboks s~uad arrived about 7 p.m., EDT, and was taken away by two city buses, which were brought through a locked 1ate behind the airport. • 'l'he ·racially mixed dem· onstrat.on, mott of whotp are members ot tbe New Yori City· based St.op the Apartheid Rqby Tour (SART) coatition, curled s l1n1 and chanted ·at the airport .. About 12 uniformed Albany County sherilf'• dep· Jrtjea stood nearby~ In juries keep Dodgers down Reds flyi ng high, after 5-1 v i ctory LOS ANGELES l AP) The Cincinnati Reds, by virtue of a thr ee-game sweep of the Los Angeles Dodgers, possess the best overall record in baseball. Which, however. is meaning- 1 e ss inasmuc h as the Reds finished a haJf-gamc behind the Dodgers in the National League West's first half and must win the second ha lf or finish second to the Dodgers in the second half. "IT DOESN'T mean a thing," snapped Reds' Manager J ohn McNamara after Cincinnati's 5-1 victory over the Dodgers on Sunday. "We're in a very good posi- tion to win it ourselves." s aid McNa mara , whose Reds are 21"2 games behind Houston in the National League West. "T hose six games between the Dodgers and Astros will be very impor· lant in the final standings." The Dodgers, though, have a manpower shortage because of numerous injuries Sunday they were without three-quarters or their regular infield, two-thirds of their outfield and even gave a rookie, Ted Power, his first m ajor·league start "I look down my bench and l see all my guys sitting there," said the Dodgers' concerned Manager Tom Lasorda "Yeah. I'm really worried. I want 'em pl aying." THE DODG ERS are idle to- day while Cincinnati continues its final road trip of the regular season tonight in San Diego. As ked about a possible let- down agains t the last-place Pa d res. McNamara said , "I d o n ·t h ave t o te l l them a ny thin g. T hey know what they're pl aying for. There won't b e a ny letdown a nd if the P adres beat u s 1t won't be because we aren't trying." Ma r io Soto, 9-9. sc attered seven Los Angeles hits, striking out nine and wa lking only two. He lost his bid for h is third s hutout of the year when he Sur· re n der ed three s uccessive s mgles in the rifth inning after two were out. T he Reds pounded out 13 hits off three Los Angeles pitchers with Power, 1·2, taking the loss. · Ken Griffey led the attack with four singles and Dan Driessen and Joe Nolan each had three hits ORIE~EN, WHO knocked in three of the Reds' runs. drove in two in the first inning with a bases·loaded single and singled home another in the eighth. Ron Oest er's sacrifice fl y gave Cincinnati a 3-0 lead in the fourth. Singles by Gary Weiss. pinc h-hitter Ken Landre aux and Steve Sax p r o du ced the Dodgers' run in the fifth but Cin cinnati put it a way in the eighth off reHever Steve Howe. T he Dodgers we re without regular second baseman Dave Lopes <bad back >. s hortstop Bill Russell <bad foot>. Ron Cey (b r o ken arm ), Dus t y Baker <headache) and the slumping Landreaux, who snapped an O· for · 15 skid with hi s firth-inning pinch single. Elway signs baseball pact with Yankees Delly ........... ., CMrttt SW.. "We played well. but we also ca ught the Dodgers with in- juries, with players out." NE W YO RK <A P > -John Elway, Stanfo rd's outstanding quarterback . has s igned a baseball contract with the New York Yankees' or ganization t hat wiJI allow him to finish his schooling and play football, the American Leag ue c l ub a n - nounced Sund ay. Drew Hill autduels Packers' Mark Lee 122J and Maurice Harvey for third-quarter TD pass Is Jefferson's future • in Green Bay? Former Charger wide receiver thinks so, and he's itching to sign By EDZINTEL °'-~ .......... The handsoOlely dressed man wearing rose-tinted eyeglasses positioned blmseU against a retaining wall inside the press box, high atop Anaheim Stadium. Then, like the start of a scene In a Hollywood Dlovie studio, camera lights flashed on, microphones were pushed to the man's face, and a swarm of people gathered around. "Looks like I came to the wrong place," John Jefferson smiled as be pre- pared for the onslaught of questions Sun· day. IEFFE&SON WAS Clnce •lain lo a familiar place ~the spotlight. Only now It was far away rrom the field where be had been the focus of attention u one ol the NFL's premiere pua receivers the lut three yean. Jeffenon, an All-pro receiver for the San Diego Cbar1en ever alnce be entered the league in 1t78, calmly aawered quea· Uou u beat be could, altboulb, M ad- mitted, be would much rather l.a1k to re· porters by bit lockerroom -aft.er the 1ame -than next to the preu cbow UDe - durtna the 1ame. In al\>' event, the f amoua f\atitlve from San oteao, for now a c.mporary membtr of the Green Bay Packen or1mbatloa, bad to .W.tand tbe bUTap ol curloeltJ aeeken. • After he was unable to come to terms with the Chargers on a new contract this sum mer, J efferson was finally turned over to the Packers, who were more than glad to take him off San Diego's hands. It's not often that a perfectly built wide receiver who has caught 199 passes over a span of three years, comes your wa y. But Jefferson is not all the Pack's - yet. As outlined in the basic player trade agreement, Jefferson must go unclaimed by the Chargers within the first six gatnea of the ·season before he can become property of another team. Thus far, J .J. and bis agent, Howard Slus her of Rolling Hills, have fought for months to come to an agreement with San Diego, one way or another. NO READWA Y has been made so now, says Jefferson, he's sitting back and letting Slusher do his talking. "He's keep· inf me informed, but J don't want to be in- volved in oeeotiaUons beyond that." What Jelferaoo says be wanta now more than anythln1 la to 1et back into the fame. The Packen. who already bave one bona ftde deep pua catchlna threat ln Jamn Lofton, want another. 1teac1· coach Bart aarr11 belMI awtma when be thbaka about the poeatbiltt .. with the addition of .JefteflClll. A ADd Jeftenmt W&Dta IO badly to •ten • and get on with the thing he does bes t - perhaps better than anyone in pro football. "IF TIDNGS WORK out, and you can underline the word if , -then I would look forward to playing here," says the 25-year- old former Arizona State All-American. ''I see an awful lot of talent here. It kind of reminds me of the Chargers a few years ago. I think my playing in Green Bay would be excellent for the city. fans and the confer ence.·· Jefferson said that like most other contract negotiations, neither side was willing to give in a little, and thus. his talks with San Diego owner Gene Klein re ached a stalem ate. "I understand that Gene has his own views on certain m atters and I've always done my own thing, so it doesn't surprise me what has taken place," says Jefferson. Jefrerson believes that bis future is in Green Bay. In tact, be says, he's hoping to play this Sunday when the Packers play Minnesota. "I love a challenge," be says . "I think I can adjust to i\ all -the weather the new team, the new conference. I :;tli ad- just ti I'm any kind -of ballplayer. And we'll lfOW totether. '• ~. Jefferson ii not bitter witb tbe Cbaraen . He would, ln fact, play (flee IEl'Ft:&80N, Pace CZ> A Yankees' spokesm an said, ..One of his concerns was being able to stay in school and play football. That wasn't a problem I with us. He can play foot ball for Stanford this year and next ." : The spokesman said the sign-' in g took place Saturday night after Stanford was be aten ~ by San J ose State, a team coached by Elway's father. J ack. T he younger Elway was the Yankees' No. 1 selection in this year's major league draft. The 21-year-old outfielder , who bats left and throws right , was taken on the second round after hit· ting .361 with nine home runs and 50 runs balled in for Stan- ford last season . T he Yankees said Elway had signed a one-year contr act with Columbus, their Triple A farm club in the International League and would play for one of their m inor league teams next sum- m er . Financial terms were not disclosed. Elway, a junior at Stanford, j has completed 39 of 68 passes for the Cardinals this year. Last 1 season, he was 248·for-379 for 1 . 2,889 yards and 27 touchdowns, and was named a third-team All·American. I On Saturday, however, Elway was plagued by five intercep. lions, two of which were coo· 1' verted into quick aecond·half touchdowns by San Joee State. Last year. Stanford beat the Spartans, 35--21. \ f Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday. September 21 . 1981 ............... ..._ ________________ ..,.. ~,,.. ............. ______________________________________________________________ ... ~ey don't yell fore; they just yell duck From AP cllapatcltn OMAHA, Neb. -Playen at the n Lakeview Golf Cour se say J .R .• who has been following them a.round the course for about a month now, unnerves them with her critical stare. But, they add, at least she doesn't quack during a backswing. J . R. is a duck who has been making the rounds with human partners she carefully selects each morning. "It was eerie," one golfer said recently. "I was putting on the sixth green and I got thi• reeling of presence. I looked arowid, and there was this duck, watching me." Course pro Dallas Wendt said J .R. waa given to a family as a gag. After she was raised, the family freed her on the golf course. They visit her once a month. Wendt said J.R. waddles to the clubhouae every morning to select some partners. She usually returns to the clubhouse after six or seven holes, rests a bit and then goes out for another round. \ Quote of the day John McKay, Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach, wondering whether the injured Lyllll Ca.la of Atlanta would be ready to play against Tampa Bay: "Let me know if Cain is able." Weiskopf flawless in victory Tom Welakopf shot a flawless, final round four-under-par 68 Sunday to win the inaugural LaJet Classic golf tournament and boost his career earnings to more than $2 million. GU Morin shot a final- round 69 to finish two strokes behind in the tournament held in Abilene, Texas . . . Saa- dra Haynie, a 20-year LPGA veteran, shot a four-under-par 68 to overtake Marleae Floyd and capture the Henredon Classic golf tourna- ment. Haynie's four-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole wrapped up the victory. Schmidt. Rose spark Phillies A ..... by Pe&e .... drove ln 111· -the •o-w.ct rwi and Mike ae.•ldt MNed bll 2'1\b home ru.n u an ln- 111tante IM&l\lte u the PhU.cielpbla Ptilli• a.cored four run• ln the aeventh lnntn1 IWMtay to down Pitt.ab~. M . Lefl·bander 8'•rll7 lcyte, M. picked up the victory . . . In other NaUonal League cootetta, Nola11 &yaa 1urvl...a a ah&ky flnt Lnnlnt and went on to · ipltcb a 1even-biller u Houston beat San f'Tanciaco, 7-3. Ryan was staked to a .C-0 lead ln the flrat lnolnc. but the Giant.a got to hlm for three runs in the bottom of the rirst . . . . Claudell Waabbac&oa singled home the game·wiooing run with no outs in the 11th inning to give Atlanta a 3-1 verdict over Sc'-midl San Diego Bill G~ struck out 13 batters and scattered three hits en route to hla fifth victory as Mont· real dilpoeed of the Chicago Cubs. .C-0. The right-hander hacl a no·hltter unW the fifth when Leo• Da.rtlam slammed a double to center . . . IWookte Wllaoa, whose error allowed St. Louis to 10 ahead in the top of the ninth inning, hit a two-out, two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth to itve the New York Mets a Hi vic- tory over the Cardinals and a three game series sweep ... Toa Paciorek doubled home the win- ning nm·in the seventh inning as Seattle defeat- ed Kamas City, 3-2. Perez's homers sink Yankees TOiiy Perea drove in three run& ii with a pair or homers Sunday as the BoslOll 8ed Sox defeated the New York Yankees. 4-1 behind the pitching ~ aruee Hant and BW Campbell. With their sixth victory in seven starts, the Red Sox boost.eel their second-half record to 23-16, bolsterlq hopes for a playocr spot. . . . In other American League action, Lena Sakata rapped four hlt.s. including two home runs and drove in five runs to lead Baltimore to an 8 -2 victory over Milwaukee. Jim Palmer, 6.S, who lasted one-third of an in- ning against Milwaukee in his last start, hurled a five· hitter . . . Jim Sandberc'• bloop single to right field scored pinch·runner Wayne Pne2 Tolleson with the winning run as Texas nipped Minnesota, 4-3 . . : Jim Morrtsoa belted a two-run homer to help Rlelaant DotMa and the Chicago White Sox stop Oaklan4, 11-3. Morrison's homer, his ninth of the year, came in the sixth inning and scored Dotson . . . Loa Wlll&aker stroked a one-out double to snap a l ·l tie in the top of the ninth in- nln&. and Jack Mom. burled his 1.Cth complete game to spark Detroit to a ~l victory over Cleveland. . Baseball today On thJs date In bueball lo 1'73: After once trJillnc .the dMalon leaders by 12in games, the New York Meta catapulted into the flrat place ln the Na· Uonal l.Au&gue East u Tom Seaver beat Pitt~burah 10·2 at Shea Stadium. On this date ln 19'70: In just his eighth major league 1tart. Oakland rookie Vida Blue no-tilt Min· nesota, 6-0 On this date in 1964: Chico Ruiz's aixlb·lnnlng steal of home was the aame's only run u ClnclnnaU nipped Philadelphia, 1-0 at Connie Mack Stadium. ., Unranked Kiyomura upsets Bunge Unranked Alla Klyomura of the Ill United States defeated 1thlrd-seeded Bettina Bunge, 6-4, 7-5 Sunday to win the Toray Sillook tennis tournament in Tokyo . . Alexander Ha1e11 of Weal Germany and crew member Vlocea& Hoeecb won the first race over 84 starters in the Star Class S9th annual world championship sailing competition at Marblehead, Mass .... Loni-di.stance run· ner Maurizio ScarteulaJ set a world mark in the 2,000-meter steeplechase, a non-Olympic event, with a 5:22.2 clocking in an Italian armed forces meet . . . Herb Undaay set American records in the hall-marathon and 10-kilometer run in the Maple Leaf Half-marathon at Man chester, Vt. Lindsay, of Boulder, Colo .. ·clocked a 1 :01.47 In the half-marathon and 58: 37 .46 for 20 kilometers . . . &Jell Meara won the accident-plagued Michigan 500 race for Indy cars . . . Gerry Mlnor of the Vancouver Canucks suffered a s mall skull fracture during early morning drills. Televison, radio Followl~ are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ I 1 1 excellent; I I I worth watching; I 1 fair; 1 forget It . 9 6 p.m .• Channel 7 ./ I I I NFL FOOTBALL: Dallas at New England. Announcers: Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell and Don Meredith. Although the Cowboys are 2--0 and New England has yet to win Its first game, Dallas Is on- ly a 2'h'i>Oint favorite In tonight's game. Coach Tom Landry wlll send Danny White to the firing line with Tony Dorsett leading the rushing attack. The Patriots have Sam Cunningham back In the told and are expected to start Steve Grogan at Quarterback. RADIO Baseball Chicago at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). Football -Dallas at New England, 6 p.m ., KNX (1070). 1 Hockey -Kings vs. Winnipeg at Victoria, 7:50 p.m., KPRZ (1150). From Page C1 RAMS WIN • • • a rHu]t didn't have a chance co pl"OUct hlmaell. "Just caU me lucky." a downcut Haden tried lo Joke. "It's a 1ood lhlng I alowed t.be fUY down with my cheat. "It's really a day·bY·day thing," be Hid more seriously. "I can't breathe deeply and when it'• In the Rtemum Uh this it bothers you In everylhJn1 you do." Haden-with his fourth major lnJury in rour yeari, -tried to talk P<>Sitively about 10 early re- turn. But his appearance would seem co lndicat.t otherwise a.a be stood In the lockerroom with b.11 left arm in a sling and his upper body arched to re- , lieve the pressure in hi11 chest . "They're going to take more X·r1y11 tomor· row," added Haden. "With a little bit or luck l hope to be able to throw again this week. 1•1 TRY TO STA V positive but things keep hap. penlng to me that make It difficult to be an op- timis tic person." The person who stands to be optimistic now is Rutledge, who figures lo inherit the No. 1 job and start next Monday in Chicago, ironically the same place he got his NFL baptism as a starter'in 1'79. "I'm excited," admitted Rutledge of the pr05· pect. "I guess now that Pat is hurt I'm the quarterback." Yes, but for how long? Dan Pastorini'a shadow is still looming (a decision on him is expected early this wee k > and, If Haden recovers, Rutledge's promotion could be a short one. "I realize that," said Rut, "and I certainly reel bad for Pat. If he's healthy, he's our No. 1 guy. "What they end up doing concerns me but I have no control over it They're going to do what they feel they have to do. "I would Hke to think the job is mine until som ebody takes it away or I prove I can't do it." The Rams, for awhile, almost proved they forgot how to win. Ironically, it was the Packers 0 ·2) last year, too. who helped start the Rams on their winning ways after a 0-2 start "WE NEEDED TIDS win badly." concurred Rutledge, who was 5 of 10 passing for 70 yards and one TD. "Losing can be a habit just like winning." "They are all must wins now ," added Malavasi. Are the Rams turning the corner? "We won't kn ow until next week," said Thomas. "If we come out like Utis next week, and if the defense has the same adrenaline. we'll be all right. "If not, it will be the s ame old soap opera " From Page C1 JEFFERSON • • • for San Diego again if it came down to it. New England's game plan: 11 guys on 33 IT WAS RUMORED that when Jefferson was traded to Green Bay last week, he had asked for a contract that would at least match, if not ex- ceed, the recently s igned contract of Lofton. "I haven't even talked to anyone about that," Jefferson said in response. "I don't think it's fair to compare me to anyone else." Translated, that means to stop Dallas, you must stop Dorsett Nonetheless, the thought of teaming with Lof· ton excites J~ferson. "I think we'd have the : same kind of tandem as Boyd Dowler and Carroll ·Dale." FOXBORO. Mass. CAP> -If the New England Patriots keep "11 guys on 33" and bold him under 100 their chances of being 1-2 should improve, says Coach Ron Erhardt. The Patriots' leader isn't resorting to numerological voodoo to shake his team out of its winless ways. In fact, he's being quite logical in preparing to play the Dallas Cowboys in tonight's National Fotball League game. Tony Dorsett is "33," his uniform number. He is off to his best start in five pro seasons, having gained 132 and 129 yards in his first two games. In the 2'l games he has passed the 100-yard mark on the ground, Dallas is 21-1. So it makes sense that a team bas to stop Dorsett to have a better chance of stopping th~ Cowboys, who are unbeaten after two games. "You can't let him out at alJ. Eleven guys on 33, Erhardt said. "Dorsett is running better. He 's running more." He leads the NFL in rushing and bas gained 7.tA~ards per carry tops in the National Football Colierence. He also bas caught eight passes for an 'average gain of 8.9 yards. •'He got married in the off-sea.son and spenl more time in DaJlas and worked out more," said Cowboy Coach Tom Landn:. "This has made bjm stronger and more confident." NFL standings New Enaland will be hard pressed to stop Dorsett. ln their two previous games. the Patriou allowed BaJUmore's Randy McMUlan lo run for 141 yards and Philadelphia's Walbert Montgomery lo 1m 137. They also have allowed 103 more rushing yards than any other NFL team. But Landry doesn't plan to tilt more toward ruaning plays. -• "We try to really go with what goes good for us, and t1'e running game has been going good. On TV tonight Channel 7 at 6 We don't really worry about the opponent," he said. New England defensive end Tony McGee doesn't think the Patriots are as bad as the 469 rushing yards they've allowed. "We c!id a good job last week in a 13-3 loss to the Eagles unW we had to gamble and then when you gamble they can add SO or 60 yards," be said "We just need to 10 back and play our defense the way we ahould. We have to have 10 or 11 men around the ball." On offense, New England could gel a boost from the· return of wide receiver Stanley Morgan and running back Vagas :Ferguson. NATIONAL CONFERENCE Western Dlvlllon AMERICAN CONft:R&NCE Western Dhls,.. JOHNSON & SON Presents ... W L PF PA Pct. Atlanta 3 O 92 34 1.000 llama l ? 1Z 73 .m San Francisco 1 2 62 75 .333 New Orleans 1 2 30 64 .333 Eastern Dlvlaloa Philadelphia 3 0 57 27 1.000 Dallas 2 o 56 27 1.000 NY Giants 2 1 47 38 .667 St. Louis 1 2 64 80 . 333 Washington 0 3 47 83 .000 Central DlvllloD Detroit 1 2 71 71 .333 Green Bay 1 2 56 75 .333 Chicago 1 2 54 61 .333 Minnesota 1 2 49 81 .333 Tampa Bay 1 2 48 60 .333 Pete's Pick at Johnson & Son 'Johnson & Son Lincoln-Mercury 2626 HAllOl aVD. C9RAMISA 54~5630 W L PF PA Pd. San Diego 3 0 lH • l .000 Kansas City 2 l 87 85 .667 Oakland 2 1 83 !9 .187 Denver 2 1 47 30 .an Seattle l 2 44 57 .333 Eu&eB Dl'1tlea Miami 3 0 66 71 1.000 Buffalo 2 1 ~ 21 .887 Baltimore 1 2 '2 tl .S33 New England 0 2 31 '2 .000 NY Jets O 3 CO 100 .000 Ceah'al otYlnea Cincinnati 2 1 75 71 .867 Houston 2 1 46 39 .867 Pittsburgh 1 2 81 11 ..m Cleveland 1 2 3'1 TO .333 , .............. .. NFl.1s Pick of Th• Week ~Tonight* DalotOY ... Hew lftgecMd W( 17000° " 52700 •• 18 I u.ae. • 111ary Amt. ttyed depend1 on length of contrac:t & amt. dowt). Minimum 25~ dn. 48 ITU .. onf'tr-rt Both missed the first two games with in- juries, but Erhardt said Morgan may start and Ferguson could be ready to spell rookie Tony Lofton, cornered by his locker after Sunday's game against the Rams in which he caught five passes for 73 yards and one touchdown. said that the addition of Jefferson would be a big boost to the team. Collins, tbe AFC's fourth leading rusher. · Dallas, the only team the Patriots never have beaten, led the NFL lo scoring 1-.st year and New England was second, but neither bas been over· ooweri~ on Monday nights. The Cowboys are 8-9. and the Patriots 2-9 in those games. "I'm happy for him and the team that we got him," he said. "He's too good a player not to play. Sills wins Queen Mary title "ONE GOOD Tft]NG about it is that the de· fenses wouldn't be able to stack up against me. J ohn could definitely help us become a winning : ball club." LONG BEACH <AP> -Tony Sills of Los Angeles fired a 68 Sunday to win the Long Beach Queen Mary Open golf tournament at El Dorado golf course by two strokes over Frank Beard of Rancho Mirage and Stewart Reese of Seal Beach. l Said Starr: "J effe rson could upgrade our pro- 'gram tremendously. It would take a great deal of ithe burden off Lofton. It's so difficult for J~mes when he's constantly being double-and tnole· Sills forged ahead early in Sunday's final round and led all of the final nine holes in picking up $7,000. the largest check of hls three-year pro career. •teamed. You're always trying to free him up or hide him." Back by the chow line. someone asked Jef. ferson if be at any time had considered Canada as an alternative. "l hadn't talked to anyone about Canada, if that's what you mean. But if that's the only way. l guess I would be crazy enough to go." Greg Twiggs of San Diego and Brian Lindley of Fountain Valley tied at 288 for low amateur honors. Twiggs won the playoff with a birdie on the first extra hole. Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dlvtalon Kansas City x-Oakland Minnesota Texas Chicago Seattle Angels W L Pct. GB 22 17 .564 19 18 .514 19 21 .475 17 20 .459 16 23 .410 16 23 .410 12 25 .324 East Division Detroit 24 16 .600 2 3..., 4 6 6 9 Boston 23 16 .590 \.\ Milwaukee 24 17 .585 ..., Baltimore 21 17 .553 2 x·New York 21 18 .538 2~ Toronto 19 18 .514 3~ Cleveland 18 22 .450 6 x-First-half division winner .....,..k-T-• ....... 9M-4,-Y~I lettll!W'8 e, Ml-1 O.t...itS.~1 CPtic.eio 11, 0.1..i J s.en .. i, ~ Clt\r , Teut 4. ..,.,._. J T ... J'•O- ClllUtiD( ..... ~181 ........ Ut-Ml,fl Mllw ...... IHeM HI •• lolt4111 Ilk........, '"''·" 0..'91t ('Wiicox INI !It hnll'Mn C~ 11···· fl Oe111e11f (Uflftr••H J•ll el Tero11to ,.........,, ... ,,,, c ..... ...-(w.ltl...., .. -y-'""" ~-. fl ,_,_ (~ ... , .. llC-City 10..• Nl,11 lfftt .. ( .......... Ml • T•llM CDlrWI M), 11 NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Houston 26 14 .650 Cincinnati 23 16 .590 2~ s·Dodgers 22 18 .550 4 San Francisco 21 18 .538 4'f.I Atlanta 20 19 .513 SY.a San Diego 12 29 .293 14Y.a East Division St. Louis 21 17 .553 Montreal 20 19 .513 l~ New York 19 20 .487 2~ Chicago 17 20 .459 3""2 x· Philadelphia 17 21 .447 4 Pitt.sburgh 16 23 .410 S'f.I x-First-hall division winner ....,..sc.. CIMlllMtl S, Dellllilft I ~rwl 4, Cll!UeD O .............. ,.~4 N-Y-7, St. IAYIS I All~\e a, 5-1 0-.. I (II lfwllftell tMulWll 7. s.. "'-~ J ~·--St. Louis IAndlll• M l •t ~ Cl(r- 1-41 Pllll.._. Cltllltl-11-S w C•I-IMI Ill Mefttrwl C~ls NI." Pl"""""" (~ J-4) •t N .. Y-(IWTll >-4J~IMMI c~.-1-11 et s.11o...-11..o11w , .. ,,,, ()Illy ..... ~ 1 ' Orang Coaat DAIL V PILOT !Monday. S ptembor 21 . 1981 Cl Strock gets to Oilers; ~olp~s get to Stabler Miami defense $acks Houston quarterback eigh~ times en route to third straight victory, 16-10 Fro• AP dbpa&.cbe1 HOUSTON -Mlaml quarterback Don Strock completed a 3·yard touchdown pan to rookie An· d.11 Franklln late In the fourth ~ua.rter and the Dolphin def eo.se sacked Koustoo 1 Ken Stabler el1bt tlmea Sunday en route to a 16-10 National Football Leaeue victory. MlamJ bad to overcome the lou of atart.ln1 runntns backa Woody Bennett and Tony Nathan to' enatneer lhelr aecond·half comeback that kept t m u.ndeleated 1n th~e 1ames t.bis season. Bennett suffered a twilled knee in the llrst quarter and Nathan received bruised ribs and did not play the second half. Strock replaced starter David Woodley to start the third quarter and put the Dolphins ahead for eood wit.h 6:40 left in the game with his TD pass to Franklin In the com er of the end zone. It was the first touchdown scored against the Oilers this season. In other games: Chargers 42. Chiefs 31 KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Dan Fouts threw three touchdown passes, Chuck Muncie ran for two TDs a nd defensive linemen Leroy Jones and Gary Johnson teamed for the fiQal score Sunday in the San Diego Chargers' wild 42·31 victory over Kansas City. The Cha.rgers. 3-0, were leading 35·31 with 1: 53 left when linebacker Linden King deflected a NFL ROUNDUP Bill Kenney pass into the arms or Jones at the Kansas City 10. Jones struggled about 5 yards, then lateraled to Johnson, who lumbered into the end zone. Kenney, a former San Clemente High and Saddleback College star. connected on 22 of 41 P.asses for 303 yards, but he was intercepted five limes by the Charger secondary. Bears 28, Buccaneers 17 ClDC~GO -Rookie Jeff Fisher returned a punt 88 yards for a touchdown while Vince Evans scored on an 8-yard run and hurled an 18-yard touchdown pass to lead the Chicago Bears past Tampa Bay, 28-17 for their first victory this year. The Buccaneers j umped ahead early in the game when Mike Washington intercepted an Evans pass and ran 29 yards for a touchdown. But the Bears tied it after Gary Fencik intercept- ed a Dough Williams pass and returned 20 yards to the 21>. Cardinals 40, Redskins 30 ST. LOU IS -Jim Hart threw thr ee touchdown passes and rookie Stump Mitchell scored on a 50-y ard punt return, leading .the St. Louis Cardinals to a 40-30 victory over Was hmglon. Browns 20. Bengals 17 CINCINNATI -fl'ullback Mllte Pruitt na1bed for 69 yards, locludln1 a 12·yard touchdown jawit that offset two fourth-q uarter Clnclnnati touchdowns, and carried the Cleveland Brcpm• to a 20-17 victory over the Beqala. Pruitt's TD bunt 1ave t.be Brown•. 1·2, • 20-10 lead ln the fourth quarter and banded the AFC Central Dlvlllon rival Ben1ala tbelr flnt loss in three 1ames. Pruitt's run capped a TI·yN,ve after the Bengals whitUed the Browns' to u .10. Cln· cinnati responded wit h a 78-1corinC drive aided by a pus lnterference penalty ln the end zone on cornerbaclit Hanford Dixon. The play moved the Benaala 43 yards. Fullback Pete Johnson crashed 1 yard to brtnt Cincinnati to within three points with 1: 57 to play. Steelers 38. Jets 1 O PITISBURGH -Frank Pollard, a newly in· serted starter, rushed for two loucbdowna as the Pittsburgh Steelers, rebou.ndiD& from their worst start since 1970, beat the winless New York Jets 38-10. The Jets, playing amid rumors that Coach Walt Michaels' job was in jeopardy, were limited lo a 48-yard Pat Leahy field eoaJ and 17-yard fourth-quarter touchdown pass from backup quarter Pat Ryan to Freeman McNeil by a Pitts· burgh team that in two prior losses had allowed 67 points, most in the league. Falcons 34 , 49ers 17 ATLANTA -Steve Bartkowski. playing despite a cracked rib, fired three touchdown passes and Tom Pridemore returned an intercep· tion 101 yards for another score as Atlanta smashed San Francisco, 34-17. It marked the first time l.n their 16-y.,ar his- tory for the Falcons to open the aeason with a 3·0 record. Bartkowski. wearing a flak jacket lo protect the rib he injured last week against Green Bay, had three different players on the receiving end of his scoring 60mbs -29 yards to Alfred Jackson, 18 to Lynn Cain, who made a brilliant run in escaping defenders. and 15 yards to Alfred Jenkins. Bartkowski, who completed 13-of-22 passes for 208 yards, had a fourth scoring pass nullified by a penalty and extended bis streak of passing for a touchdown to 13 straight games. Broncos 28, Colts 1 o DENVER -Veteran Craig Morton passed for 291 yards and four touchdowns, including three to wide receiver Steve Watson, to lead Denver to a 28·10 romp over Baltimore. Morton, who entered the game with 24 875 career passing yards, became t he lSth quarterback in NFL history to reach the 25,000- Y ard plateau. Raiders 20, Seahawks 10 OAKLAND Quarterback Jim Plunkett ran for one touchdown. pused for another and H t up a third Sunday, leading Oakland to a 20-10 victory over Seattle. Vikings 26, Lions 24 BLOOMINGTON, Minn. -ruck Daomeier kicked a 21>-yard field aoaJ with four lttoods left in the game, lifting Minnesota lo a 26·24 victory over Detroit. ·Giants 20, Saints 7 t:Asr RUTllERFORD. N.J. -Joe Daoelo kicked M team ret'ord, 55·yard field 10&1 and Phil Simms threw for 324 yards u the New York Giants defeated New Orleans, 20-7. The Giants also scored on a 12-yard, Simms .to-Gary Shirk pass play, a 1-yard dive by BUly Taylor and a OO·ytard Oanelo fleld goal. New Orleans' touchdown, a 2-yard run by running back Wa yne Wilson, came midway through lhe final quarter, icing a nine·play, 62· yard dnve. •1 Touchdown cr0ssworcts ·1 Sta nfor d wi ns title; UCI fourth ACROSS 1,5 Shown, Patrlott' Mack the Sack 10 Cowboy'• CB e.nny 12 Of.-Fortmann of 28 RB Bubbe of tht Falconi 29 Ctiemtcal ending 30 RB Andtraon'a lnltlals Iha Hall ot Fame 31 S Johnnie of the Packen 13 Had a bite 1' -Patrlota (ab) 15 Sound• of 33 LB DuMll ol th1 Redskins -Roberie U lll·llt healt1t1on 36 18 He hlr11 and Urea 37 player1 (ab.) 40 Punter Ray ol the Raiders 17 Greek le11er 18 Ouarterbeck- 20 "Ro09r-Oodger .. Staubact\. 42 Dandy-Meredith 43 WR Haven of the Broncos DB Abruzzese's 1nltjals QB Graham's 21 Appropriate 45 23 OB Minucci of thd' 46 Biii• lnltlala. 49 -FOfce Academy S4 OB Norman - 24 Stadium bever-oe 47 25 Root tor · 48 DOWN 1 RB Motl ol the Patriots 2 Smelter Input 3 HB Nardeecl's lnltlala 4 HaN111lngs 5 K Moeelly of the Redskin a 8 Credit notes (ab.) 7 U.S. aoldllr 8 RB Matll van-of the Raiders 9 WR Balley of the Oolphlna 10 The Crlm1on Tide, for short 11 Mall 12 OE Fred ot the Charg119 19 Apiece (ab,) 20 Oolong or IOU Chong 22 OB Rot1'1 lnltlala 24 Pape-George Halla 2e Fllld- 27 Remember T Howard-? Ftllne foot 50 Sea 52 Across 55 Remember E -Louis Cardinals 52, ~DE of the Cowboys Buddy-? 2 3 4 6 6 7 8 9 21 Stanford University made it a clean sweep with two victories Sun- da y. including a n 8-5 triumph over. UC Irvine, to capture the 15th an· nual UC Irvine water polo tournament cham- p ionship at Newport Harbor Wgh The Cardinal poloists also topped UCLA 10-6 to wrap up the title with a 6 ·0 record for the three-day tournament. UC l, needing a victory by at least four goals to earn second place, let a 3·0 bulge over Long Beach State evaporate into a 4-3 49er victory. The Anteaters settled for fourth place. The Long Beach State triumph marked th e first lime in 15 years that a 49er polo team had knocked off an Ed Newland·coached UC l squad. Long Beach State finished second in the tourney with a 5-1 rec· ord . UCLA was third with a 4-2·1 mark, and UCI was fourth at 4·3. In the Anteaters· first ga m e, Junior John Vargas scored all five ~oals against Stanford to keep things interesting Three of hi s tallies came ) The 37-year-old Hart accounted for 226 yards to becom e the NFL's fourth-ranking career passer. His scoring tosses to Roy Green. Greg LaFleur and Dave Stief offset a passing performance or four touchdowns and 388 yards by J oe Theismann of the Redskins. Despite suffering four interceptions in the fi rst ha.If, Morton fired a pair of scoring passes five minutes apart lo put the Broncos ahead 14·0 at halftime. His second-quarter strikes were for 7 yards to tight end Ron Egloff and for 29 yards to a diving Watson. 28 LB Breunig of the Cowboy• 31 OB Stave of the Patriot• 32 Ru1hed the footbell :M Sliver (1ymb.) 35 WR Harri• of the 36 Exists Ootphlnt 39 Intertwine 36 TE Riiey -of 41 T Ron of the the Bronc~ Vikings 37 Football unit of play 43 L.au 44 Boer town 47 Sch grp 49 Ml11 Gardner 51 Musical note 53 Nelghbof ot MA Sea next waell'a Issue for aolutlon in the final period .+ Against Long Beach Stat e. the Anteaters opened their 3-0 lead on goals by Jeff Campbell, • Julian Mus pratt and , Tony Choquehuanca. M~ _,,, Z illgitt and Wright insur.incc agents .ind brokers Contractors: Insurance costs rising? Contact us for competi\ive quotes for L1abil1ty. Equipment. Property and Worker 's Compensation Insurance. We can also handle your bonding needs 3931 Mac Arthur Boulnr.ird Ntwporf Bc.ich C..1 91060 (714) 752 905~ ~ .. ---- Thi s weeks Special ' 1979 CADILLAC EL DORADO Full power. All Cadillac luxury options in- cluding Astro-roof. (119XKB>. $12,995 Cadillac Value ~oltc:twn Servsce Agrttment Avatlab~.._ All C... llObjod To ,..,.., Soll ,ta Prb:r P• Tu 6 I..._ IR¥,!t:Jl~~;r:= :: :.". NABERS :MOO ........ 9hd.. ce.= "'6• ••• lmO • CJD} fi97; Look Who's Coming to UCI ! JOHN WOODEN Legendary Basketball Coach of UCLA Presents: "Pyramid of Success" a challenge to ... do the best to become the best - Wednesday, September 23, 1981 , 7:30 p.m. Village Th eatre, tx: Irvine Tickets· ASUCI Box Office. 14 general; 13 faculty, staff. A l umn i Aaaoclatlon mtmbert. other students: '2 UCI ltudenta lnfoonation: 833-5588 TAKE Off FROM ORANCiE COUNTY, LAX, OR ONTARIO AND SflVE 40%. For as little as $36. A1rCal can Jet you to San Francisco. San Jose. or Oakland Naturallv. there are some restrictions on our Low-Cal fares~ But even if you can't pick up a Low-Cal fare. you can take off and save with our everyday low fare of $60 RENO $43. SACRAMENTO $37. we also offer Low-Cal fares• to Reno. $43; and Sacramento. $37 Or. when you have to leave in a hurrv. it's an affordable $ 7 2 to Reno and S62 to Sacramento. San Francisco There are no better deals from Southern California to these frve dest1nat1ons. Not from any airport Not on any airline But A1rCal gives YOU more than Just low fares We give you service 1n a very special way. It starts with our people All are trained to make flymg a pleasure by doing more for you than the competition We offer one-stop check 1n and seat selection before you board the plane And we serve only the verv best hQuors Chtvas. Jack Daniels. Beefeater and Smirnoff MORE THAN 350 FLIGHTS PER WEEK AND A GREAT ON·TIME RECORD. A1rCal has a great flight selection Nearly 260 flights a week from Southern Cal to the Bay Area. 70 to Reno. and 38 to Sacramento That means our schedule should fit yours And we·11 keep you on schedule A1rCal has one of the best on-time performance records tn the tndustrv It all adds up to stvle . A1rCal stvle And that's the nicest way to fly •Seats are /1m1ted bY rime IR~ L ind day of deoarture se\lt'n dJY adVance reservations reauired f.jtres and schedules subJ«t ro c~nge without notice \L.... J'll Id....-our style Sacramento servrce noc avail IUU II IUUS able from LAX • i .... .. .. ... I• •• "· .1 ,. ;• . " ll 1( ,.. I; (J '( ., .. ~ . . "' " AMl!AICAN LUOU't Blue Jey1 O, Angela 3 CAl.l"°"NIA .. r II W TO'"*'O Oo#ftlllQ.K 4 I I 0 .. t ll .. lll<'lftft,\I t I O O IOtt,D 4 0 1 0 Gtlch,211 4 I 1 I WOOClt. 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Olis Ill A 4 ,111 WIM14 Sea 11, A't l Oeklel\G 000 OOJ 001 l 4 t Chlce90 000 012 4b -11 1J 0 Norris, KlllQmMI 17), McLauohlln Ill - Heath, OolM><I Hoyt 17) and Fisk. - Ool•on "II L Norris (ll·I L HA- O•'l•nd, M<ICay ll> CNc990. MorrlMin ltl. A 11,119 T'-'9S,l...._.1 OelrOtl 001 000 ~S 11 0 Cleveland 000 001 OC»-1 S 0 Mo,, ls .ond Wockentuu; Br-n, SpOlnsr l?l end 01.u w -Mo<rl• 11>-Sl L-Br...,..n 11 ll A 9,nG. ~·.~J Mll•aUkft 010 000 OC»-2 S 2 8alllmoro 40l 000 10.4 11 0 Ce10 ... 11. Cle veland 111, Clure 141. Muelltt U ). Por1tr (II , Pelmer and Oempwy W Palmer (W ) L C•l~I C1Ml HR B•Hlmore, Sall•l• l IJ), Mlill· ••1 !"> MllweuU.,()gllvle 1121. A-17,4$7. ll•S.•4,YMl! ... I N•w YOO 100 000 OC»-1 I 0 80'10'> 000 201 -~ 10 0 John """ Ce<Ofte. Hurn . C8fTlllClell 161 -All•n>0n W Hurst (NII L Jofln (Mt. HR 80\lon "-ru 1 (II A-JS,O'I •-••, Twll.,J Mlnneso~ 020 100 OCO-J ) 0 Tues 001 000 101 11 1 Hev•n.. C0tllwn I/) aNI But ... a; Hough ano SundDe•a (W Ho..,9h 11·11 L- Coro.11 U SI HR M1nn .. ole, G•tll 11) A I H I NATIONAL LEAGUE Reda 5. Dodger• 1 CINCINNAll LOS AlllOILES COllln•,rl Mejl .. rf Grlffey.<I Cncpcn,n "'°'''' .. Orltun.lb lln19hl JI> Nol•n.< o.n ... 21, Soto p H rhlll arllW 4 1 1 0 S.U,lb J 0 I 1 I 0 0 0 A Sm llh,pl> 1 0 O 0 Sl •O Howe,.p 0000 S I 1 0 ThOmH ,Jb 4 0 1 0 •I 1 0 Mondey,rf J 0 0 0 J I > J Garvey, lb 4 o o O • 0 0 0 JOflnlton,K • 0 1 0 i 0 J 1 Sc:IOM:la,c l O O O 1 o O I Roenlck,cf 4 O 0 O • 0 n 0 We1H,H ' 1 2 0 P-er,P 1000 Lendr•.PI\ I 0 I 0 Nl..:lnfur ,p 0 0 0 0 Mer\tll,Jb 1 0 1 O Tolel• >I> ~ 11 s k-.11\'I• ..... Clr><lnnall JOO 100 ~ LOS ........ 000 010 OC»-1 OP Cln<lnf\4111 1, Los Aft99leS 1 L08 - Clnc•nn'"11 •. LO\ A"991e• I . 211 -COlllns, Nol•n SF OHi~ Calif-• tP So10 1w '" • LHA ....... Power IL I,, .,.l•Ol!nluer H It la 81 IO 1 I 1 2 t J J ' , 0 0 0 1 , 2 1 1 """"'·· , ..... C>uc •90 000 000 000--0 l 0 ""onlru l JOO 010 00.~ • O Grilltn -•II Ill, Smit/\ (•). Gel•I 111, T•d•o• Ill •Rd BtaOwell G11llkhClfl - C•rl•• W G11lll<Uon IS 11 L-Grlllln 17·•1 A 401)1 PMtt ... S,l"lraton4 PllhburQll 100 010 001~ t 1 Phll•li<tll)fll• 000 100 ~-S 12 0 '>olntnon. Tt•ulvt (1) and Pitne; Proly, Lt le 111 •nd Morel-W-Lyle (I-SJ L- Solomon (I SI HA Phil-ll>fll•. S<""'ldt Ull A JI .. Mtbl,~1Mls& SI l OUll 203 000 001-4 I 0 ..... 1'00 000 002 Jtl2-I :u 2 Soren•n. B•lr 161, llHI (71. O.Leon (11, Sykes (7) Lltt•ll Ill, Siiiier ltl and Porter; Uchry, S..r-IJ), Mersllell ISi, OnlKo 0) Aflf" Iii aNI SleerM "' All.n , .. ,). L Sult .. I).•) HA SI Louis, H-r10 1111 A IJ.lll 8ra"" ), P-• I Allanle 100 000 000 Ot-J I I ~n DI-000 010 000 00-1 t I P Nl~.,ro Hr•-Y Cl). Cemp (111 and &en..:11<1 0-... ICuheulua, Luus (I), Moire 110) and Kennedy W-tir-y ( 1-1). L- Mura 1).UI S-Camp CUI A 2 ..... AJlt,...l,OiaflbJ HouSIOft 401 002 --7 16 0 San Fr-IKO 300 000 000-3 1 0 Ryan and Pu)oh, l.Awlle, Alpley (11, Brelnln~ U1 Holl-!'), TufU Ill -Mn W Aytn 1'1-Sl L-Le ... llt (Q.61. HR- Hou•lon. ScMt l•t -1'.t14 Top 10 1-•Vht .... ) UlllltlCAN 1.IAOUI 0 A• • " ""-Lan•lord, Boston t1 Ut S4 no .IM Zl>k, Se•ttle II JI) 40 104 .m P.clorn, Seeni. '1 W U 117 .111 11.HHICl,...,.,o.kww.a .. m II 12S .111 Her11ro .... Cl•.,...encl 12 212 Jt n .DO Aemv, 8ollOn n 114 .ft 101 .m C.C-r, Mllw-M t4 J10 M 116 .'14 Oll•tr, Tuat '2 .. .ft uo .J1J M11ml>ftrv. '"""York n 110 ,, " .no Almon, Chic-tO 311 O " ... _ .. _ ArmH, °"'-· 11, n.orn.. Mii•-. JO, Murrn. S.ltlmort, It, Oridl, .._.., IM; L"1lnoal, Olk-. 11 ...... NFL Rama 35, Pack•,. 23 sa......, ...... • G'"" Bey 0 10 6 1-JJ l.ot Angeles 0 t• 1 1~ G B -Elll1 J""' IS1-Nd kkkl LA -Hems 21 rvn wlltl tumote (Ctfflll klclll LA -T1* ! run (Cclffel t.lck) G8 -FG Sltl!eNd 1t GB -FGS9MNd!J • GB -FG SlltMnld ~ LA -Hiii JO peu from Rutledet Cc.tr.I 1110) LA -.,.,..,,, 2 run (Cclff•I kkll) LA -Tyler 1 ""'(Cerni llk k) GB -LoflOft It PHI trom Ol<k•Y ISl-1.tdllkllJ A -61,• Flrtl~ It 1t RulN .. yanb U.IZJ ~In PMJIRO yenb 71 • Return yerch tO ICM P-s 1S.J4.1 .. 1).1 S.Ch by S.50 M7 Punb MS 14 """'_...._. ..., ,., P-llt.Yf.... 1~ 14-UD Time crt "--Ian 32:>1 J1:Jt 1 ......... , ........ llUSHIND -G.-a.y, Mlddl-11-45, J•nMn .. 17. 'Ml111efwr'll MS, Altllns S.11, Dickey t-u. Ellls .... LOS Arlgeln, Tyler U-1 ... Brvent .... GYmen S.21, J. T~ 4-12, ltlltledga f-2. PASSING -Green 9ey, Olckey 1S.2'-1·11S, WN._,. ~J.0.4. LOS A....,,._ H-n 1·244. lllltledge s.1•1-10. RECEIVING -Gl'Mft eey, 1.otton S.11, Cottmen ).16, G. ~Is 1·1•. Jenten 1-J, Hu<llleby 1-S, Alklnl M , Mlctclleton 1-4. La Aft9'IH, w-., 2·14, 0. Hiii l·SO, Clllio. 1_,, Dennard 1-t, Tyler I_.. Beer1 28, Bucceneer1 17 ~llryQMl'ten T MIP8 Bey 1 0 7 >-11 Ciltc.9o o i. 1 1-• Tl -W11hlnot0f'I Jt lnlerc""'..:I -s (Y'Pf'•m ... 1110) CHI -Stlhey 1 •un INlelMfl llkkl CHI -J. Flllltt •-I""""" (N .. lten •l<k) TB -HouM 11 pen trom w 1ttlem1 (Yepr.m ... kkkl CHI -Ev_ I""' (NlelMfl llkk) TB -FGY_...... .... Jt CHI -Wltllem• 11 pen Ir°"' E•- INlelMftkkk) A -60,lJD l...,.....SU!Btka RUSHING-T.,,.. Bey, E'"k.-cft).114. Wllllem.1 ).11, WI-,_., T. O.•i. l·Z. R. 8•11 1·1 Oii<-. Pe,,.,.. t1.._., S-y I .. Evens ).t, PASSING -T•mpe ley, Wl1llem1 17·40·l2'-2. Chlcego, Ev•ns 1).l).116-1, Payton~!~. RECEIVING -T..,_ Bey, Giits S.ICllf, HouM Ml, J-. ..a, T. hll 1-47, WlldlW l·f . Clll<•oo, W•ll• l·>S, Peyton 1·4, Mugerum l·lS, Sulley '-"• E •rl f•ll, Wllll•m1 2-~. BecilNeel 1-4. Bronco• 28, Colts 1 o ~..,...,..,. .. ltlmCM'e O O IO 0-10 0.nver O 14 I• o-• OEN -Eotoff 7 -s from MGnoft (s..ln-l'ort ltkk) OEN -Watson Jt MU from Morioft .,(Slalnfor1 kklll I BAl.T -FG-21 IAL T -Okuy U rvn (...,_ kklll OEN -Weltoft 11 -• Ir°"' ~ 1Stetnlor1 kkk) OEN -Waltoft • pen trom Mor1Dn 1Slelnfor1 kkll) A -14,.11)4 ......... , ...... *. RUSHING -lleNlmon, Okllrr lt-IU, Ol1on S-21, McMlll•n 1·17, Jonu 1·1. Oen•.,., p...,... l...S, p,..*"' 12-47, C- .. u . Reed H, Ly11e 14, W-14. PASSING -a.NI,_., J-J.l'l-1-45. Den•.,., ""'°"°" »111-4-m, o.e.re 4-5-6-90. II ECEIVING -8elll1Nr9, M<Mlllen ~Jt. Carr 1-lt, Oklley Ml, OllCOft 1-4. Oemlff, Welson J.1'3, PretllOn 6-t6, Reed ).40, Odoms ).Jl, Mo.1 1..JO, CenedA 1·20, Wr1oht 1-1•, Mannl"1J 1-4, Egloff 1·7. Glenta 20, Saints 7 1c.w.-,o..r'9n N .. o..... 0 0 0 7-7 HY Glenb 0 U I 0-IO HY -Wr'll It pen Simms (0-lo kkkl HV-FGJDO-lo NV-FG"O-lo HY -TeyllW 1 run (Oefwlo kklll HO -Wayne Wll.., 2 run IRIYI• kkk) A -.. ,tl• I ......... ,..._. llUSHIHG -New OrlNons, 11 ... rt 0 . JO.IS, HOit1 7~ Wll_, W. 1·!. New v-. Kotor ..-. 8'1oht .. JI, ,......., '1-17, Te'tlef .. 10, SI"'"" >Ml. PASSING -H-OrlffM, Scott ~lS.l-41, WlllOll 0. ll·U-1-15'. H-Yorll, Slmml Jl.41+J2A. B,_. .. ,~. RECEIVING -""' on.-. ~ 4-7J, WU_, W. ~. Cater >-SZ. Grotll l·lt, Hertll I-Ii_ ......, l·IZ. Tyt..-1-10, ......,_ 1 ... H-v-. Slllrll 11·101, Pw111nl •11' lrleM M2. G<"ey 2"*1. KOIM J.14, ,..._. 1-11, Tey• 1-S, Pwry H . Alltden 20. s .. h•wa 1 o ..... ...,___.. S..t1lt • J 1 0-1' OolllaM 1 • 0 7- 0AK -~II "llfl llleflr llklll Sl!A-FG....._.16 OAK -lltodlNw 2t .,_. '""" P"""""' (kkll MecUdl SEA -McQlllum • -from Zwn 1-rere ltkkl OAK -"*-" I""' (9etlr kkkl A -u,ns Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS A REALLY ''CUR.LY,. OOUC>L.E -e,~EAKING PUTT ON A VER.V FAST QP.EEN \S ONE OF GOl...F'S STERNE.ST CHAL.1...ENGE.S, e>UT THE.~E. IS A WAY TO MA.\.'<.E TH IS STROKE: EASIE.R. THAT'S U SED e>V A LOT OF GOOD PL AVER!). m an•m•a•&•onaena a • • 4 F9'con• 34, 41el'9 17 IC-. .......... Sen Fr-IK9 O 10 0 7-'7 AU.ftto 17 1 10 o-4' ATL -JecJ1ton It-· trorn eortlt-al (LUClllMlt'll kkkl ATL-l'G Luck"""t 47 ATL -Celn 11 peu from lertll-1 ILuckllum kkkl SF -v-. II peu from MClfltaM (..,,. llkkl SF-F09-41 A TL -Jerllllft• U .,.u from •---.• (LllCk~ klelll A TL -,.,...,.,.,... 101 ln!w<etl'llon ,..tum (l.llCk"""" llklll A TL -f'G Lwcklwrll ta SF -So!Omon 12 pen from - ll•llr kkkl A -5'.4Sa 1....-.11'°"9tk1 llUSHIHG -Son l<r-ltce, Coeper ...... Petlen 12·•, IEHley 4-11, Elllotl •11. SoMomOll t• Atlenta, Anclrewa 12..,, C86n 12-41, R .......... 1 •• ,._..,..,,'t ).I!, .._ H . PASSINO -S.n Frencl1<0, Mon~ 24-J4.J74-J. Allonte, BortkOWllll 1).U·-.0; J-11·"1~ RECEIVING-Son Fronc:ltco, Clerti ._n, You"1J ).SS, Solomon ,.,., c .... r S.2', wu..,. J->4, P-J.16, Herter l·D. ,_ H . All-• ...,..,._, 4-11, Celn >-a, JtftklM Ml, Jeclltan 2-4, MHler 2·21, Fronc:l11-1I. Dolphlna 16, Oller110 Sc.....,0-rten Mleml 6 J 0 7-1' H0111ton 1 0 J -10 MIA -FO VOii Scilemerln 11 HOU -'""°""' 11 e>eM trom ~ (I' rllsc:h llk1t) MIA-FOV•S<lletneM.J7 MIA-f'GVClflSdlo,,,_J7 HOU -l'G Frfbch 40 MIA -Frenllllll 3 pelS from Strocll 1v .. Sc11om ... kkkl A -47,17t . .......... ~ llUSHIHG -'Ml•m l, l're ftktlft ll·S., Neli141n 4-411, ~ S.12, Vteortto M , Gi. q;llnto M. Woodier 1-1, Stroei. U . H°""°"' Cem•N 1'1-71, ~r l..J, SIOOler ,..._ PASSING -Mlem~ Woodley 11-U«M, SITOCk 7·!0-4M. H-lofl. S~r , ... 17a-1 llECl!IVING -Mleml, Harris 4-37, Vl90rlto ••. GlequlnllO J-11, Helflen J.16, a.-tt 2 .. , II-1·22, Herdy 1.f, L• 1~ l're nklln, 1.J. Houlton, Renfro S-57, Carpent..-S.SI, ew._n ).76, B-J.16. 7C•m,,,...I 1-S. Steele,. 38, Jet• 10 k-ll'YO-r'-n HY Jets 0 ' II 7-10 PlttSb<>"" 7 10 U 1-a Pl T -O.vll t""' ( Tniut kkt.l PIT -FG Tt'M 2.S PIT-... lonl !>"'"!Trow! llkk) NVJ -FG~y· PIT-.,..._., r"" (T.-1 kklll PIT -..... le<'d 1 ""'ITrowt kkkl PIT -Tllllnlllon 1 run IT rout II k ll I HY J -McNell 17 pass frorn RyM (l..Ntw\' kkltl A-J2,m ......... , ......... •USHINO -.... Yon, M<Nell 7-4., H-t .. 1·1'. ~!all M l, Todd M . Dierking,._., ~1 1_., Ho,,_r 1-1. pin.. lluroll, Oevll 1).100, Pallord 1J.7t, H•rrlt U ·U . 8redtllew 7-41, Thorftlon 7-n , Sl•llwor111 "17, Colqultt 1-4, Stoud! J·l. PASSING -N-Yor1l, Todd 11-i..t•Z. RY,Aln l ·t-44-0. PIUtburtil, 8redtllow 14-21-~. s-l-2·174. RECEIVING -New Y-. Mc ... 11 4dll, O.Hney 1..Jt, ...,,,.. 2-2.S, •. J-1-:n. New10ll J•16, Welker 1·12. Oltf'klftg ).12, AUllUlt'l'nlek I... Pllltllurtfl, Stoll-'11 t-IM, Sl'nl91 ..... SW-2-14, Cwn~ f·U, Potl-J,14.. Cerdlnml• 40, Aedaklna 30 ._...,ONttlft Wnlllf\910n 5'. Loult STL -FG O'C>oMlflw 14 WAS -FG Molelty 21 10 1 0 1>-a tl7 01 ...... WAS -Tllomp1on H peu lrolft Tl•lam-1""-leY kkkl STL -0.-!I _, from Hert llllek f•ll•dl ST L -FG O' Ooftoclllue a STL -Mitchell SO punt re t11rn (O'~lllckl WAS -,_.. 1' ~ trom Thel..- l"'-91ey llkll) STL -LaFleur 27 P•ll from H•l1 (O'~kkkl STl -Stief 6 pa11 from H e rt (O'~llkkl STl -Alldtrtml 1 run 10·~ kkkl WAS -.,, ...... 1D -trom n..11-(llkk felted) WAS -Tllompson 10 peu trem n..tam-(NIOMley llkll) I .............. RUSHING -W~, JKk-ZJ>tee, MatcaK >te, ~ 1-11, c-111• St l.Alllls, MorTl1 lJ.40, A_,_ llMI, H....,...1 >1,L-1·2. PASSING -Wulllnoton, Tlltltmon !S-'7 ... 1. Sl Louis, Hert ll·Z1•2»-4. 111! CI! IVI NO -W°""""'°"' ,..,,.,,_, t-106, Mer* 4-1•. ~I ..... Waltltf' Ml, Jen..,. •11. w.,..., J.12. H-1-21. McC,...,., 1-4. St. UIUe., 0-4-llS, Ah dlrton >-Jt. Sti.t 1-15. Herrell 2·SO, ul'teur 1-11. Vikings 2e, Lion• 14 ._....,~ Oetroll 0 .. 1 ,_,. M ...... IOl.I 1 10 • ..... MIN-8,_I r""(DMwMierkklll MIN -SeNer • ,. .. ,,_, l(r-(0... melerkkltl OET -Simi 2""' <Nllwr•y ltkll) Ot:T -Slmt Jr"" (Muney ltkltl MIN -l'G~lt MIN -I,_ '9 -· fl'INft Kr-(k~ MeckeCl Ot:T -~I fUll '"'""'•Y llkltl OET-FGMiwrey !5 Mllll-f'GC>enmelK10 ,....,.... ....... RUSHING -Oetrolt, Sima lMll, ._, 11.-, L. ~ 1•1$, o.M-).j, .,._ ,.. ..... •-11-11, v ...... ).17. PASSINO -Detroit,~ 1•~1. Mlllftot_.•, Kremer 1M2-JU-J, Wll- t-1- a m = m 0 0 s LAJMcf .. alc let....._,T_l a T-W.t....,, ...,_ 1'-41·1Me--111 Oii ~"7,IOO 11 .... 1...-- 't-yV....,....,Sll.JDO ~1'>-7S.70-111 ,1111.f 1 ...... t11.• ,..,.J .. 70-111 Crltt ltadler, '"·-"'*7~10-211 ... ~ •11.»i 1~11-1s.10-m J_. ·-· $11,Dl ,.74*70-m .l,C. IMM. $11,IJl ... 1...._1._m >.-lnmen. s11,JJ1 J0.72'1'>-71-m 1111 lr"'°"·"·100 10-,.7,.7>-• J9M MeNftey, ... 100 7W.71·7'-• 0."'I E~, $7,700 TS.11-41·1-111 H....., Orwt1. V.700 ... 70-7).76-111 Mike hlll•9'1.M.12S 74-71-71-11>-• Grier J-. .._,ts 1'>-7S.72-71-• ·"'"sn.w., ... 11S 11·J0.7).7--......,N01111,M,IU ~·7s.7._.. auft L.,., ~S64 7•71-7.,._M M.,. "911, SUM 7t.ll-7H-M Mlk:o aeld,...,,.... 72-7>-7>-11-., ... Mwpfly,M,1"4 n ,1).74-11-.. 0 .A. WeltlrtftlL ~ 71-7>7•7t-M Ttf'ry ~. M.* 1 .... ,.n-.. Jee lllttMlt\. ....-11.12-1 .. n-191 '--.,... ~. u.• 11.11.1•1t-Jt1 ~d s-. P.OIO n -71-71-76-191 Mike McO.llOutlfl, U,M2 TMl-Jl.7._.lft 14* SM-r, $2.642 ... JS.74-7._.1'2 ...... WMllle, SUQ 7t'4e-Jl.1._.lft Jtff Mlktwtl, $2.442 11·1'>-74-76-1'2 a.-.. Arctwr, U.112 7).1).7).7 ..... ,., Cwtl1'"""'·U.122 7"7).74-7t-!t> o." """'· 12.112 n.a.n.11-m .... ,_ 0'-•. U, lZJ ... 71·7).7J-ftl 1'tm"Jeflk .... $1,J4S 74-12·7 ... n-JM hMly C•, $1,W 7~72-74-7._.JM etvu F ...... r,$1,J4S 7S.J0.74-IS.-JM Jll'll ~. $1.54$ 7t.71-7 .. 7t-IW ~ ...... ~ tl..J4S 7>7).72·77~:rw ee. a.,_, t 1,S4S n-10-1s.n-* 8Nee ~ 11,SO 71·70-75-71--IW O.Mr "-*· s1 • .s ~11.n-16-JH Mike Hol'-, 11, IU 71-74-n.JJ-2" M.ertl H..,_, 11,IU J0.7S.7 .. 7S-2" Mkk Soll, $1.1" 1 .. 10-12·1._N llernr Horwetl, tl,ISS 7~7t-7Ml-2'6 Henredon CtHllc (etlfflll .......... C..) 5eftdra ....,.,.., U4,790 7•71....._., ,.,_., C!ef11, $16,11'0 11-11-11......m Men-Flo'l'd, Sll,SJO 7._...71.7._.m Jttwl Alea, V,425 11·1'>-71-71-.. .... Oanlel, P ,425 TW'l-J0.7>-.. "-"'Y N&. S.S,527 71-72-11·1>-• Kettly M<Mlltlefl, SS,S17 M-71-7•7>-111 Jentvn Brtu, M,71$ 11.1w.1._.• Pe1 lredlof, M.2'0 1).71·74-71-M ~ c.-. .....,.. 12 .... 1 ... J>-• ....... Miiey, SUJA 7s.71-7M7-JllO 0... L......._ u,Jl4 71-7S.7S.70-Jtl ....,..., K ..... ii.DA 71-7).JWJ-2'0 .111;,,., A~ P.»• 7>1'!·71-7>-l'llt ~ Wllltwllr9I, P.712 74-71-7>7>-2'1 Ce,..._~. $2,4511 Jl.7.>-7Ho-2ft ._...,. SpoaldJ, u.• 1•1~10-1 ..... m OOlln• ~ $!.111 7 .. 7'-11·7--- Ulrl GeltlKa, tl,t» 7 .. 7S.7H7-81 S.tly Uttle, $1.f'JD 72-7).1 .. 1>-2'4 C-lo CNlllml, $1.t'lO 1s.n.J0.7>-JM Vitti T-, 11,7.. 7).75-7 .. 71-Jtt I.""' A.,,., $1,611 12-14-1 .. 1._.M Oot Gemlelll, $1,617 • 1Wf..11·1S.-1" .~ ~. $1,611 71-7 .. 7).76-1" ~-&teloek, s1.w 1 .. 12.1 .. 1>-m 0..... Allllln, $1,W 7~7).77-7+-"7 .... McAlll ..... '''"' 71-11·1•1-"7 ....-, ....,., s1.m 12,1,_1 .. n -m .............. 11..m 7S.7).7)..76-Jf7 Ryder Cu:f. c.e ..... ..--. ...... , U.l.~a_....t°" SINOLaS .... ,....-(U.S.), def. Sof'1 Ton.nee, <eur'OP9>. s -s. Tem K"' (U.S..) def. Mor!! Lyle IE.,,_.) )eMI. ••n C.-1\ew (U.S.I def. O.s Sm'fl'\ <e-16end4. •111 ...... IU.S.) -........ rd Gall_,.,. (Eu,_l llel....,, wrrv ..., ... 1u.s.1 ,.._.., Merti J- (E\lropel 2-. MenU04 P...,,, (E..,.-1 oet. Jerry ,._ (U.S.) 4-2. I""' Ll•lrll• CU .S.I end Bernllerd ~r 1e.ir-1 lltlWd. Nk k F.-. (Ew-1 def. ~y Miiier, IU.S.12-1. H-ord <='-" (E...._) def. Tom W- (U.S.J 4 -). Mele lrwln (U.S.I def. Jole·Merle Ceftlrer9S IE...._1, 1-. Jtcll NIOI-(U.S.) -· E•-O.rcy <E11 ...... ),S-S. ltay ..,.,.. IU S.I -'· ~ ~ (fUf'eCIOll-. 0 0 0 c o s; e a Sdd!JCi!i!SlZ : a a 256!2$$!& ......,., .... "*°"'"'' .. .,., n ........... ...., Allf'M.OOl&e Pl•IT llACt. t~ Mr,ltklJllll tt• U1 U1 OtMI .. Oll1 (Aller~) Ut t.» Stllle'• "'"' (~l ... AIM rlCIM• Weetlwr W-11, C:Wlwt .,. .... Al-a lie lted, let T-. TllM, t:OU/S. .. 8IUICTA IMI ..... SJ.J.• 9UA•T••MOllHI Uc:ottO llACe. • vwe. Selle! T-..C ,...,_....,., •M U1 U1 Tlle,.. ... 0...C~l ._. U1 P~Pleill (lercl) U1 Al• r~; 11• 11-Jee 0-... N •-••. Qn .. Illy, T~ 0., TM Jet lltlfte. Time: :17, .. THI •O llACll. -yera &oay...._(Cre19W) 14..» t..11 U1 Ptl--IMllChelll llAD 1A lrln1 l'llfll (.,..._,, 4.Jt AIM raM; ~ 5-11, •1n.r. .... °"· •td MtUln, Klla CllUtet, &11wo-flHt11ro, c:.llmetlfl't, E .. y o..... Time; :1',7' II aXACTA (M l 1N1'41 ... 00. T~lltaOS POUaTM aACa.Uut'--lftSIMI ,.,_ 1-.el UO J.. lA 1a1e et err-c~J s.so , .. Sir l11rv 1i..new ... 1 ..... AllO r.C.-: Georve Get .. , 51-'e. T 'l'ltn CAP, All1ufo. Time: l:IU/S., "'"™ •M:a.1111'1n1~ Journey ANecl 1-.e1 11.tO t.00 100 Gummo-. (C.r1al a.oo 400 ...... _, ''-•> ... Alto teced; Sflowtenll., Aloe-Me, W"lp It. Time: l;CJS. SIXTH ltM:a. 6 turlongL Oeaoc 8Mu IHarrlal •·• 4.10 >.» Chief leld Ruler IJlnl S.• 4..JO CMcll My Tlmt (Cna) UO Aho r.ced: Alel•r•, Worm Eapr..s, Tlnko llotd See, MoQ'I Polky, GI-HML Tl"": I : IJJ/S HVINTN aM:E. 6 furloftOa. Slllpplng Hiil 10r1iege) II.JO S.40 UD MaJesllc w.111 (Spencer) l.40 UO Hell• T-Fun 1-.e1 uo Al10 raced: Western Thuno•r, MolM, G1no'1 Oreem, 0 •1• H Men, Pocket Pleewre. T lme 1 · 112JS. llOMTM •M:I. ""''-Bold 8etl (c:.tmpesl 140 uo ,,. •.• uo 2.40 lleeustrvb, With liberty ( l..e9lit l 0.ld•le Gunfllnt 1Met1411 Alto r-. Emperor Jotin. Rodge 0 ., 5-r Tiger. Time: l:OM/S. SJ IX.ACTA IS.I) peld Ut.:10. NINTH ltACa.6furl-. lmprosl,.. Hot1 (Menel J.60 J.IO UO 5""ol tor tlle Moon ( 8oeg) l.tO 1• Hene .. I Prince 111-1 S.00 Aho rand Arrant Ori .. , Blu.,,lng 8-dll, Ooc'1 Helper, SciMcl't Touclor, Run crt e.. North, Time : I 111/S . TENTH ltACI. 6furl-• Pelol\a Fi..10r'9gel 11.JO 4.IO MO Fletn1"9 lrtlr"-(Me<\e) 4 . .0 S.00 L-1S..-..IAoulfll .....0 Aho r•od 11«1"9 DellOhl, Mart.el'• Fun, PreclOUI Polley, Nin.Iv D•Y ...... Kfffl N's.Hey. Time: 1.lt. U IXACTA IS-21 PAIOIOO.SO. '2 fllCK SIX l~J.S.>-S) peld tl,021AO with n •!Mino lk UU 111 ... hones). $2 Pkll Six contOlallon pelCI S21.IO wll'll • wlMl"ll llclleU (lour hor .. I. ILEVaNTH llACI. 11/16ml'". Foti C••oerv ISlelilngs) 1110 7 AO uo P9f'lout (Herrlll 4 . .0 190 Unl90ken(-) UO Alto r.ced: Bl.Ck H-. M.,,._., H-y. Afft.nce, Oogo. AeK.elcw, Coun9elot ,_,..,, Time I 43'/S TWILl'TH a.ACE. 11/16ml'" . WMl'I Your 8eo. (-) 4.40 J.00 2.40 Kl"ll Weko IL.eouel l.40 2.40 Bto C ICnul UO Alto rececl: Biiiy's Commender, 0 8e't Oumpllno, W11191es Turn, Qlllcll Olp'-t Time· 1.461/S. P CXACTA 1 .. 1 peld Ul.SO. Atte--11,1•. Hollywood Perk SATI.laDAv·s LATI ltlSUl.T TIMTH aACa. One mll• pec:e. ROfften~l IOHomerl UO S.00 UO Slec19tttemmtr , ........ , 1•.• 12.40 MHltrValue (f-1 7.40 • Also rec..i· Cebonoe Ideal, Cellnul, CMtllY l..Obtll, Scooter Kt y, Fr•ty 511....,_, Kendella 9oy. Time J.002/S. »IX.ACTA 11·41 pekl W1 SO A ttendenc;e -14,557. DMD ... flattlng M ll'W "01tT (Arts' lee•l•1l-1S' eno .. ra: 1sJ llOllllD. 11 bHI, "' mecunt. > yellowtall, 3' rodl '"ocl. IDa....,.I L.-rl - 147 .,,. .. ,.., " bonito, 16 yellowtoll, 1' calko best. I --· p reek CM , !OS meek-. DAMA WMAltf' -210 -lert: MM, 116 bonito, 11rocltflt1>, 1,010mack-I. SaAl UACM -111 ..... rt: SSO nocll 11111, 1 lint cod, 110 bonito, 2 Mnc1 IMIM, 10 ro1-t.11. Women'• toumement <etT•rel ........ , .. Ann Kl~•-· httlM 1.,,,.., k 1·S. IKIY..,.llf'e •IM $34,ClllO, ...... $It.oat.I Gr•nd Prt11 tournement , .. ,......_, Sklly) S...-f'I ... M•"uet Or""'" def. PMro •.-on.so. k ..0, ..0 IOr.,tes •IM •IS,000. lle«iolledo '7,totl) Wor1d of Double• (Ot-Y'*• ... 11.Plo.I ,., .... Peter McNemero-Htlnr <Jwlt1141rdt ..i. lob Luti·SI., Smltt\, 7-4, >-4, 7-4, S.7, M tMcHemor..O-llerdl IPIK ........ l.utl• Srnllll IPlll UD,JlllU. Tennl1 Legends tourn•ment ~lt ... ,N.Y.) ............. K.n II-It *"· CIKf 0ry90ele, 7-4, ~ D•vle Cup aU!tOP9AM ZONa A ...... Z......-rYI ....... Belus Toroc.ry IHllntervl *'· .>Mt L.•H -·,.., .. ,, 7.5, ~ .... ..._., ....... , . ....... P.C.r l!ltff (Wltlt GennMy) def. ~ KOCll, 1-S, 1-S, H ; C:.• Ktm141Yr (llt"alll) ..i. Ultl .. ~ .... 2, 11-11, !Mt, U W.terpolo cou.e•• UCl,.,...ftaM•111 ......,.,UCIMmiel ,UClnrlM 1 1 I ,._. IUl'lfot• t 1 I >-4 UC lntlM llCM'lfte: v ...... S. L.lcl ..._ .... 4, UC,,.,... t UC lrYllll I t t ._. l.MthAOI._ e It ........ UC ,,.,._-"'I: ~-1, ~ 1,C'Pt••~•1. o.r-.... ,._ ..... ,,.,., .. ._,...., UK 11,. UC IM D19111 I c.f ... , uc ..... -...w •• L ... e-a ..... ~. ,.,., .... ,._ ..... cs...,.. •i ca..,_.• UC..._..,._. 14UC1e11 D19111 J ~1'UCLA•. Ql....,..,ute. NHYC's Power breezes SAN FRANCISCO -lllth Roler, skippered by BUJ Pow« of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the overall neet winner lD St. Francia Yacht Club's Bit Boat Serles. Power also won the Keefe· Kllborn Trophy tor yacht.a rat· ing 32 to 33.9 feet under the In· ternaUooal Offshore Rule. Second In the 69-boat fieet was Great Fun, skippered by Clay Bernard, St. Francis JJOA.TING Yacht Club, and third was An· nabelle Lee. BiJl Crum , Sl. FYC. The five -race series was sailed in moderate to strong winds on San Francisco Bay. The only casualty was Irving Loube's Bravura, Richmond Yacht Club, whi c h went aground in the final race Satur- day. Loube was slightly injured in the mishap. Winner in the Richard Rheem Trophy Series for yachts rating • 30 to 32.5 was Ron Melville's Bigwig, Balboa Yacht Club~ with Dave Ullman at the helm. The St. Francis Pe rpetual Trophy was sailed for this year by a fleet of eight Santa Cruz-50s. The winner was Silver Streak, s kippered by Bob Brockhoff, Santa Cruz Yacht Club. The City of San Francisco Trophy was won by Great Fun and the Atlantic Trophy winner was Annabelle Lee. Final class results: ST. FRANCIS PERPETUAL -1. Sliver SlrHk, 8Clll Brocklwtff, Sonto Cnu YC; 1. -Oo aoce, Lerry Burgin, Sonle Cna YC; 1 5Nftdll Miii• er-. BCYC. CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO -1. G,..at F.,,,, Cloy 8-11, st. l<YC; 2. SwHblire, Oennta C-r. SDYC, 1 z..,eu.n, Larry Sllowart. Hewall. ATLANTIC TAO""V -1. A.-1111 .. Loe, Biil Crvm, Sl FYC; J ......,regon, Jotlft -LAunll. CYC; ). G-. JOfln Reynalda, NHYC. Kl!EFIE·KIL9011N -1. HIQh Aoler, 8111 .._.,., HHYC. 2. Slo<IH cmtr-, SFVC; 1 Ir re11onel, Leet.a..1r-. St. l<YC. lllCHAllO llHEEM -1. lltwlt, MIMI .. u11men, ave. J 1m~. Myron E~ Riehm-. YC, J SNne..-eh, 1 111 Pel,,.... NHYC. 'NOSA's Argosy crowded Forty-five boats in five classes turned out Saturday and Sunday for Newport Ocean Sail- ing Association 's annual Argosy. The yachts raced from Newport to Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club on Saturday, and from CBYC to Newport on Sun- day. Newport to Cabrillo Beach: PHRF·A -l. Gedi Master, Bruce Hanson, VYC; 2. Cats Pajamas, Carl Last, VYC; 3. Vol -Au -Vent. Kent Enderle, LSF ; 4. Runaway II, John Wiebe!, VYC . PHRF-B -1. Gizmo, Gary Hinscbe, LBYC; 2. Flapjack, Rick Orchard, Capo BYC; 3. Kaneohe, A. R. CutcHlfe, BCYC; 4. Fire Crest. Pat Glazier, VYC. PHRF-C -1. Fun Won, Bruce Settle, CBYC. ORCA -1. Tiger-Tiger, Lyle Willits, SSYC; 2. Black Widow, John Savage, LBYC . SO RD -1. Momentum. Peter Tong, SSYC; 2. Michegass, Joe Greenblatt, Sl BYC; 3. De- fiance, Richard Nowling, SSYC; 4. Sorcerer, Dennis Rosene, VYC : 5. Salacious, Ric bard Schlesinger, SSYC. Cabrillo Beach to Newport: PFHR-A -1. Outlaw, Seth Horrel, BCYC; 2. Cats Pa- jamas. Carl Last, VYC; 3. Debra. Richard Raul!, SSYC ; 4. Pursuit"" Robert Babson, BCYC. PHRr·B-1. Flapjack, Rick Orchard, Ca po BYC ; 2 . Kaneobe, A.R. Culcliffe, BCYC ; 3. Fire Crest, Pat Glazier , VYC ; 4. Gizmo, Gary Hin.scbe, LBYC. PHRF-C -1. Celebration, Jan Fluegge, SSYC. ORCA -1. Defiance, Hugh Towle, VYC ; 2. Tiger-Tiger, Lyle Willits , SSYC. SO RD -1. Micbegass, Joe Greenblatt, Sl BYC; 2. Momen- tum, Peter Tong, SSYC; 3. Van· lage, Dick Seward, LSF; 4. Sorcerer, Dennis Rosene, VYC ; 4. Shanghaler, Kopen·Morrow, VYC. . BCYC's Thorne ·tops Lido-14 Oeet KING HARBOR -Gary Thorne of Bahia Corlotblan Yacht Club, Newport Beaeb, was the winner of the Ude>-1' Dlstrlct Champ1onablp aalled here Saturday and Sunday. Runner-up in the Gold neet was Pete Jefferson, Mi11lon Bay Yacht Club, and third was GQ.J B.atfee, Minion Bay YC. Winner In the SUnr n.- ' (coosolatloa) was Jim ltu11, Alamlto1 B•J . Yacbt Clab~ I 1eeood wu BW l'rbd:, IDu1 Harbor Yaobt Cub~~, tldi.a wu D-10 SIDdla. IUIT\;. --------------- l I . • I ~ , l • I I " 'I I ~ ,, (1 I --------:---....... ,,. ____ ... ,ACES OF NEXT WAR ? Soldiers of the v.s . 8th Mechanized Infantry Division donned m asks for a decontamination ex .......... er cise in West Germany recene\y. The ~x­ ercise followed a simulated. cheniiea.r at- tack during m aneuve rs. Chefs replace gamblers Ensenada seafood fair brings tourists to port ENSENADA, Mexico tAPJ - A roaring gambling casino in its h ey d ay, th e bustling btachfront hotel was the stomp· "iqg arounds of Hollywood's "in" C'f()Jr'd. • Pl~boy Ali Khan was a reg· ula r . Heavyweight boxing ehampion Jack Dempsey was a ,host lo high rollers. Hu mphrey 8ogart arrived by yacht. And, · ~ding to legend, an unknown young singer named Bing Crosby entertained with Xavier Cugat's band at the opulent grand opening Oct. 31, 1930. •Sul the h-alls of the Hotel lti\>iera del Pacifico turned quiet 40 years ago when all gambling was banned in Mexico. The long-deserted landmark comes alive this wet!k as food /lo•ers from north and south of th e border ga th er f o r Ensenada's fourth annual Seafood Fair. Chefs from 35 area restaurants compete for culinary prizes and recognition •durin g the two -da y event . Wedne~ay and Thursday. Drawn by food fit for kings, an estirnated 2.500 persons pay $10 each to sample abal9oe, lobster. cerviche, swordfish, shrimp and scallops. Last year's best-of-show win· ner, The Tiger's Cave of Ensenada, swept the top prize with specialties that included abalone stuffed with a shrimp filling. A non· profit affair , money raised goes toward restoration of the elegant old building local· ed near Ensenada's fi shing docks. "The whole idea of the show is to build the tourist trade," said F'red Krall, a San Diego chef who serves as technical director of the epicurean extravaganza. Competition, which includes artistic creations of lobster, salmon and trout, has attracted chefs of all rank -even a new entry from the USS Stein in San Di e~o. "MMS 3rd Class Wells Ford likes the idea of a challenge and we hear he 's qu ite ac- complished. One of his main dishes is called the Stein fish- r o 11 ," sai d Krall , who coordinates judging for the event. "By the way," expiahled Krall, "MMS staoM for Mess Management Specialist." Restaw-ant' setting up booths for the public must furnish al least 150 two-ouncf pbrtibns each day, he said. · The be.auty of the event, says Krall. is the variation of Rllf06d dishes. "V ft'Y seldom dO )'OU liDd two or three or the same diabes, .. ht said. Mexican chefs, more familiar with fresh seafood, holcl -an edee in preparation over Atnerlcan counterparts, \tho are used to working with frozen ~eafood. he s ajd. But the Amerioans shaw more artistry ud a('e sharing those talenb, added knll, Another dlfH!renfe• sai4f Krall, is the Mexicans 'tlell6 tb ~ more fresh seasoDinas llk~ cilan- tro , s ubtle pe ppers and tom a toes. The blend is milder than you expect, but still with the distinct Me:xiean llndr. ·'The American ~•efl . tend to use more sauccis and exetk dried herbl." But no one loses, says Krall. "The big winner is the public." ! Protecting history difficult : Landmark buildings seldom up to modern safety codes t By PETER COY Los Angeles enacted its cun-eul Fire code after ._....,......w,._ a 1970 hotel blaze claimed several lives wlntn npen I t I t In Colonial Williams burg, Va ., safety -staircases funneled fl ames CO upper floors. The cl· conscious restorers replaced the Raleigh Tavern's ty building department has told BOdbury wood shingles with some made of fire·retardant Manager Terry McKelvey be must get rid ol the cement and asbestos and didn't tell the marble staircases and the mttqu.e French Iron ~ightseers. balustrades to save the building. Jn Philadelphia, tour guides at Independence "If you're going to tear~ that out and eocl09e Hall are given detailed instructions on how to it, you might as well call in the WTeclten and lfave evacuate tourists from a building that falls far done with it." McKelvey replie4. NegotiatiObS' are short of modern fire codes. but that nobody would under way on McKelvey's propoMd altttaate tlream of tearing down measures such as smoke detedors anct roODa-lht· In Los Angeles, the 1893·vmtage Bradbury clock guards. · Building is threatened with condemnation because The "Million Dollar Staircan," an el.a~ra~ly its marble staircases -a favorite of Hollywood carved sandstone s tructure dertgned by R.H. directors are unenclosed and therefore unsafe in Richardson for New York's state Capitol buildinc cased fire. is likewise unenclosed -and protected bf a ftate In each case. the issue is how to preserve his· Jaw that exempts historic bu.ild1Dp from ftte ~s toric buildings without endangering the people who at the discretion of lo<: al fire marshals. frequent them. New York is spending thousands of dolMn 'lo "It's one of those things you live with and make its Capitol fire-safe. iMtallinc sprinklers iQ pray a lot," George Proper Jr., chief fire-the basement and bill room and an autolbatic·gas protection specialist ror New York State, said. extinguisher for precious coUe~tions of tht CaJ)ltol • "There are measures we suggest can be taken. Library. and 1 must admit they are not always cheaply ac· "It wouldn't be impossible to enclose the compllsbed." staircase," Proper said. "B11t it would -tread all "llCI DOTffHS • .~"MC>tlTUAaY ~Ma1n St f.4un11ng1on Bearh 536-6539 .. PAClfllC VlfW NINOIJA.L p AltK CAmetery Mortuaty Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pacific View Dt1ve Newport Beach 6"·2700 Ni:CO«MICll MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·9415 L-ouna Hills 768-0933 San Juen Capistrano 495-1776 ,tt.AlkMUW~MT. OllVI Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory .. .. .. . 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa '40-5554 "8ClllOTHUS ~llOAOWAY MOUVAIY 1 flt'&oadway Cct.ta Mesa ~'9150 ~ wn EtGHOM •• ·~"""9U '" CtfAPB. t 4 E t71h SI Cost• Mesa ~8-937, Ca" 142-. 5171. f afewworda k fot Ou. On board · SACRAMENTO <API -George Marcus of Los Altos Hills was named a trustee of the California State University and Colleges by Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr Marcus. 39, operates an investment real estate brokerage firm. PHUC 1Jta over aesthetics and it wOUld give any taxpayer a hernia. You do come to a point of weilhlng ·~ and safety." ' < 'i ' A fire that struck San 'Dtep's .tucft-tnd.:wooct aerospace museum In Febnaq 1978 ~01.-t..ct airplanes and cost some $16 IDUlioo. ~j combustion was blarned ror a fire that destroyed 3,000 reels of original cellulose ftitra.te •otiad· picture negatives at the ~Be Eastman Hauff photography museum in Rochllster, N.. Y., in Mly 1978. A decade ago, a $2 rnillion ft.rt rtpl*S tkt'Oucb the Henry Ford Museum in DelJ'bom, Mleb., and another $2 million fire devastated BGstca'I hilitoric First Unitarian Church. 4 ' Yet old buildings can sometlnte1 be saleYt.hn NOT!ca«>P new ones, a fact recognised. by the, l:blUtabce aUUt TaAltl,.a hi h -·..1d .._.a} 1 111oa1ce 1a......,., •-_, ~..,.,,, Services Office w c p1v.1 es actu.n aerv ces "· • ..., _., •· ~--· -._.. for insurance companies. 1'he oUl~ ctoft, llot ,... .-..u •• wsi v...-. Hwwt· penalize buildings because al a.ire. • ..... .., ...,., c.llfonll• .... ,,..,,.. 9 '° ,,......, '° K-0.111 ~ "To our way or thinkiAg, a buUcUnc ~ to =.~· :::~::.:::::;:. its original condition is no wont tJMm lt evenru,' • c.ne111 ,,..nv IOUIMd • sm IMfl said James Townley, aaal.tanl mana1•t .bf *Ile 1rbw1. s.naa ""' CellfWlll• '"" Insurance Services Offlct't \lfSt'9t• New York .... •Kl1--11tf191'911Y n : "" "-""""""· tllrtwM.,... ~ branch in S)'l'acuse. . -• .. .,. _..., ._... • ..,_,. • Charles Liddle ol Albaay. N. \' ., wdla • ptee-K"''' K-...-•t 1111 $eultl • Gol••--d 1r1s1e1,1M1•M11, c.tlfwnol•tft&. er vat.ion award for cooverun, a 1901 _u..,. w1w11 nne YMI'• .... -1. • tw White-designed carria1e boas' Into lalara.Dte ~­~,!,,:1::=."1::...:,:• "~::,;r~~~ fices, The hand-powered lift that taiffSS tslll'ria .. J•o-. or .cliff•. ll•w "'" ._ to lhe second floor ia still io piece, coUftd)' of fire :_i.w.=.:':"::!•:-::=,. ":;;;. officials who decided tbe floor opealfte WVUJd na SMt1 ....... s.rm.t ,_, CM...,.• endanger second.-floor OCOl:'t nn., ...,. "'*MIN ow'•-"• ''They don't ma .. e c.k ~u1JM-.... "'""' thll ......., .,. '"' """" •n•. s... a --. .-~~ .,., '411...,.,....,... these day~1" Liddle aald. "No\V .._, lb~t'brfe\ TM -..... ,,...., .. 11 "" '111• veneer witn wooden 11""--U. When U.. z=~­-m.n.1 • ., .,..~,,,,.,, .......... -........ - .. tM ~ ... _,<IMM tw ..... ., bum; the bricks coll a~, ud naMM I t ·~ .. .,......, -. • ..... -"" Oetv between the brick• and the wallbMn[•T ~i:::.e.:;•~e.!!!~ As much as two rMt ol IDMODrY CQVttl tM ~~·a:; :=c.=.~:~ steel rrames of early ~ ~~ <:4* ...... ., .. 1111111C1MN•lt1 York City's Woolwortb .a..cMysttt~t.-~•·Di .. lllU-.-.. 0ct.-w,a."'1. cording to contultant 1'h•o Prucle~1 . wb'o o•n~1:;.:~ s upervised their restotatlona. Kocten. eremtecta ~ "skin It down to the bare mJJw1ua~." a.. MN. ~~~0 " '• • •" • 1 • • ''Protecting Our Heritaae.'' a ~ of •a.-Oli,.,... . the National Fl.re Protectkla >l,IWl :•II•• =:-.=:-:-..: other steps that 10me oveon ._.,ti tQ'Jll'O' ,,.....,. 0r-. c.111 o.11y ....._ tect bulldln11 wltbott dtttro,.. •r ... ..... 11,... •1'M1 pea:r~e. •:i; ·• •. '>1 ------- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT,Monday, September 21 , 1981 .8 Cl Syphilis control studied ATLANTA <AP) -A S8 per- cent increase In reported 1ypk111a cues since im bu hHltb officials recon1lderln1 bow to control sexually transmitted diseases, a doctor al tbe Centers ff>r Disease Control a aid. In 1980, Z7,2i0' eues of syphlllJ were reported ln the United St.ates.z...~P from J0,399 in lt77, the C&X,; •Hid in Ill Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. In 1'75 there were 25,~1 reported u1ea, 23,731 in 1978, 21,656 in 1978 and 24,874 ln 1979, the CDC said. "This ls a very dramatic in- crease," saitl Dr. Stuart Brown of the CDC's venereal disease control divbioo. "Thirty percent is very subltantial and worthy of our attention." He said the most significant aspect of the Ul80 figures, the latest available, is that they are the result of a congressionally mandated shift In emphasis toward curbing gonorrhea. The effort reduced iooorrhea and pelvic Inflammatory dis- ease. but resulted in less money and attention to syphilis control. The number of cases of con- genital syphilis declined because ol veneral disease control and better prenatal care. The nUU".lber of cases of congenital syphilis has stabilized, with lll in 1980, the CDC said. There were 451 cases reported in 1977. States differ on how to best cobtrol syphilis, Brown said. Some work to reduce the number of cases, and others focus on preventing complica· tions. Since 1969, syphilis among men tncreased by 50.8 percent and decreased among women by 19.1 percent, the CDC said. From lm to 1980, the CDC said, rates for both men and women began to increase. The increase from 1979 to 1990 was 10 percent fo'r women and 4.4 percent for men. The highest rates of syphilis were reported in San Francisco, Atlanta, New Orleans, Memphis and the District of Columbia. Cities with the lowest reported rates were Wichita. Kan., Omaha, Neb., Tulsa, Okla., Pittsburgh and Des Moines, Iowa . 'Parson Bill' memorialized on billboard OMAHA, Neb. CAP> -A billboard in tribute to a lnlclt driver known as "Parson Bill" has been er ected near the spot where the highway evangelist skidded off a highway and died last December. Trinit y Church In · terdeoominational purchased the bHlboard in memory of William Payne of Omaha, an or· dained minister of the congrega- tlon who preached while lnlck· iog. Payne was killed on Interstate 80 when his ri&, pulling a double trailer, jackknifed and went end over end down a SO-foot embank· r'nent. He bad been afttempting to avoid a car which lost control in front of his truck on the sleet- covered highway southwest of Omaha. The billboard includes a pie· ture of Payne with the caption: "lo memory of Parson Bill." It is less than JOO yards from the site of the crash. · ''He was an excellent preacher," said the Rev. Elmer Murdoch. Pay™! named bis ministry "Just for Jam men," a ref- erence to a cithens band radio terminology for truckers. It in· eluded radio broadcuts aired on 18 stations in the United Slates, Canada and Australia. The broadcast.a were recorded iA Payne's basement studio and we're financed by him, Murdoch said. . . ... ,: .... ....... . . . .. "" ....... Paul Chow, nght. and father Hmg Gm Chow recall the hell on Angel Island m San Francisco Bay dunng tour they took m 1974. Angellsle anything but for Chinese coves in the middle of San~­cisco Bay now draw cy · • ANGEL ISLAND STATE PARK (AP> -" 'Angel Island. Shhh ! ' I heard t hat so much from my father, it's almost like one word . 'An gel I sl and. Shhh!'" Paul Chow vividly recalls his father's admonition. Between 1910 and 1940, som e 175,000 Chinese came to the United Slates. Most. including the elder Chow, awaited entry to Cam Sa an -the Golden Mountain, as they called California -at the U.S. Immigration Station on Angel Island. Like better·known Ellis Island in New York Harbor, where legions of Europeans first saw their promised land, Angel Island was the first stop for Asian immigrants But many recall their stay with only bitterness. They were locked up like criminals. They slept stacked on steel bunks six high. The reward for rebellion was a bare, win· dowless closet. For decades this s habby chapter in American history lay virtually unexamined. Humilal· ed Chinese-Americans -nearly all of those who entered at Angel Island were Chinese -would not speak of it Besides, many had entered with false papers, "paper sons" whose documents m ade them sons of merchants, teachers and U.S . citizens. Those were the privileged, exempted under the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the first U.S. law to deny entry lo a specific ethnic group. Now the unpleasant story is being told -by Chow, whose Angel Island Immigration Sta· tion Historical Advisory Com- mittee wants a museum created in the decaying barracks. last used in 1940. And told by Felicia Lowe, a Chinese·American filmmaker from San Francisco who is in- terviewing detainees for a television documentary. Chow, a state transportation engineer, stands in what was the men's dormitory on an island whose hilly paths and secluded hikers and boaters. ~ On the peeling walls of the ' dormitory are poems in Chinese, written by immigrants to ex· press outrage and anguish. The immigrants called this place "The Island." "Angel" seems to mock memories like those held vividly by Howard Tom. Tom was a bewildered 14· year-old when he ar rived on Angel Island in 19'l2. His father was a naturalized U.S. citizen who returned to China lo get his wife. Howard and a baby son. His family was "separated within two hours. We didn't have a chance to say goodbye." Tom recalls lying on his bunk in the locked dormitory, daydreaming of pals in China . Through an interpreter. an im- migration official separately grilled him and his parents, seeking to determine if they were , indeed, a family. ··How far from your house to your neighbor's?" they each were asked. ·'The three of us all gave the wrong answer. I stretched my hand out to represent so many feet. I didn't tell the interpreter how many feet each arm (length) represented ," Tom said. The family was detained for two weeks and released only when a Chinese minister in San Francisco vouched for them. "After 40 some odd years," Tom visited the island as part or a special tour. "I was r eally up. set ." There are some Chinese who say the period is too painful to relive. Genny Lim, who wrote a his· tory of the era. says a "promi- nent. older" Chinese-American woman was horrified by the idea of tourists, calling it "exploita· tion." Speed control fix due for Chryslers The story is ugly. Detainees recount suicides not mentioned in official records. Modest Chinese women, sho<:ked by lack of privacy in toilets, covered their heads with bags. This history began to unfold in 1970, thanks to Alan Weiss. then a r anger on the island. Weiss noticed characters carved on the walls and s howed them to superiors. "No one was interested," said Weiss during a recent tour with Chow's group. DETROIT CAP) -The Chrysler Corp. ls recallin1 about 150,000 191 model cars to cor- rect speed control systems which could stick and fail to dis· enaaae durtn1 normal braking, tbe aut.omaktr 1aid. "With heavy brakin1, the car wW .tow down and the system will finally disenra1e.'~aid a 'Chrysler apokeaman who aaked D()t to be ldenUfted. "But we'Te Ju1l a9kinl people to dllconUnue ualnc them anyway until the r.,tacement part can be ln- atall~. •· While the problem la onJ1 in tlte ''nlume" pOlltion of the speed control option, ownen are betn1 told not to uae the entire system, Chrysler said. The No. a o.s. automaker Mid It would send letters to tbe owners ~ UM clll"I urpnt them Dat '° me tbe qttem1 -atan- danl elllQm•t ~ tbe Cbrnler Impe rial but optional on all other models -until the switches can be replaced. The problem has caused at least one accident in which there were injuries, but no fatalities, Chrysler said. The automaker said the sticking switch problem was corrected late in the 11181 production run. ''There will be a recall. We estimate that 4,SOO or the 150,000 that have lhe control system.a may need the repair, but we're 1oln1 to replace It on all the cars," the spokesman said. "Basically, It's to avoid the 1ltuatlon happening at some rut.ure date. It • Chrysler aald it will send notlflcation letters to ownen "Shortly," and wtll befln IUl>" plying ita dealen with new part.a to correct. tbe problem tn late October. So he invited a scholar who de- termined that t hey were tbe poems of Chinese immigrants. Enthusiastic Asian-American college studenb then began to pry loose the island's history. Restoration work coes sJowly I A state grant of $322,000 is ex· hausted, and $1 mUlion more is needed. Chow doesn't want to rush the project. Yet, "Patience IJ"OWf thin when I see people d11nc': before they can vtalt the laludt He wanta survivon ot the ctete.• Uon to be purged emoUonally, u bis lasher wu wtMD be returned in 1958. = ''He ltOod before Ilia baM cried. 'Today I can walk la rorclve America,' " Chow rat· c•llJ him 1aylq. "He wa&k4111' home wftb me IDd Ile .,,. fne. •• -----··-------------,...._-·------~_.. ... ,._. ..... , _________ J_S ____ i!_t•t•t••··- I ···-*•'"' .. 0 -- NOTICE OF DEATH. OF .. , .... , D~NIEL H. STEELMAN, l'ICTITIOUUUll .. HI ~ 0 NAMtllTATtM8MT laa ANIEL HERBERT ri. to1-1,.. '**'' ••• do1"' STEELMAN AND OF .., .. _-.: PE TI TIO N TO A D • KAtll!R ROU.MIT, 1m Deere MINISTER ESTATE NO. A ... '::i~e~~:~:ca & El£C· A-109334. TaOH1cs COAPOAAllON, • No04M T 0 a I I h e i r s • cor~•llOfl. * Ull.oslcle Orlvo. b fl I OOllt-.d,CA._lt MOTIC• OI' APP\.ICA?lC* l'Ott ene c arles, creditors Th1tbullneulHonctwc'"'•Y•<0t· and contingent creditors of pore11on. •AMII "°'-DINO COM"A"Y D~mlel H. Steelman, aka ico .. rAe._u D•nlel Herbert Steelman l1eetronk•CarJI Notice ll "".0Y t(Wfl lly ll'lt ADl)ll COl'I, Or91191 8-p, 10101 Slot" AVOllUO, ,_..... Volley, Collforn4• d K. G. Hein&, an persons who may be • "9cretorv t'l70I, 11\0I 11 wlll °""' to""' Fedorot ROMf\10 lloar• --1 to Mellon J of IN 9.,,. Holdll'IQ (;ompony ACI ffw a IMnll holcllng c-y. Tllo Al>INl<onl lnlondt lo ecqulre -hllftdt.o percent II~) of the IMtot of Tho 9ank of Or•ft90 c.our.cr. IOIOI Sloter Av.nw, F011nloln v .. tey, C.llfornlo '27Cll. qtherwlse interested in the 11111 '~' w .. "'" w1111 -WI 11 and/or estate: Co11nly Clerk of Oronte County on : A. petition has been filed Avo. u, "'1• ,.1 ..... by Carolyn Kay Steelman Pu111111we10.-..... caest o.111 P11at, Jn the Superior Cou rt of "'"'· "· $etll.1. i4, 21• '"' ,,,.,., Orange County requestlno 1hat Carolyn Kay Steelman be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of Panlel H . Steelman, aka Daniel Herbert Steelman (under the Independent Administration of E states Act>. The petition is set for hearing in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, in the City of Santa Ana, California on October 14j 1981 at 9:30 A .M . F YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should either appear aj the hearing and state >µ>ur objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your at· t orney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a cont- ingent creditor of the de· ceased, you must file your c:laim with the court or present It to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first issuance of letters as provided in Section 700 of tbe Probate Code of California. The time for filing claims w ill not ex· pire prior to four months from the date of the hear- ing noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the f i le kept by the court. If you are interested in the estate, you may file a re· quest with the court to re· ceive special notice of the tnventory of estate assets and of the petitions, ac· ~"Ounts and report s described in Section 1200.S of the California Probate Code. Michael Norman Saleman, Attorney at Law, 3701 Wiishire Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90010; tel. (213) 731-1216. .• Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot, Sept . 14, 151 21, 1981 4074·81 ~MOTICE MOTIC• TO ca•DITOtll 01' MIL.II: TaAJtSl'•a Clea. 6M'MMlr U.C.C.I Netlea 11 ........, 11-to c,...ll!WI ef h ......... Mrnocl Ir_,.,_ hi O bulk tr.,.._ Is obooll to be mode 011 "rso1101 property horolnoltor dllKrMled. T"8 --llWlftfts -HS of tllrt 1..--,,...., .. ore: aAV KENOAll WOOD, 700 •~"I Vocnlllo, C.lllornlo ,)611, ~·o $«1Wlty No. , ... ,..... T"8--busW9i--1of 1"19111.....,tr~ ... : • WILLIAM EAal PAGE, IUO Gro1101110, H11nll119to11 Hor11011r, Collfornlo. Socio! Soc11rlly Na. U..SHao7 'Tut .. """911'f ponW...\I Nreto b do.er.._. In...., .. os: All flK!llt11ro, fllltwrot, oqwlp. rMll\. stoell+cr--__,..II of llllrlMnl bul!Mll end Is IOCo"41 .. , 1t1 •okor Strool, Cosio Mou, ~ ......... •. T"8....,..._,,.,,,......,11y tN sold froml_. •Yid lour!.., la: WOOOV'S ALIGNMENT :Jllel Mid llultl treftllw Is In..._,, "' .. ~ .. ,,.. Clfflco of: PmHtlanll EK,_ S..Vlc", 1'21 "· T111t111 Ave11110, Sonto A,.o, C.llfornlo '2101.,. or en... Oc-r 1, "''· • TM no,,.. ond oddrou Of li.e _.,_ with -c .. lm1 m-v lie Hied II Prot.nlonol Etcrow t.rvlc ... 1'21 N. T .. tlfl A-CP.O. 9-a 1u111 Soltl• AM, C.llfornl• ..,01 1"7111, -tti. lftt..., ... Ill-"" c lolnw 11y _., cl'Odltw IM41 be Oft ....... lt11, Wllldl 11 tN """""' .-+r .....,.. .. ~mltl.,. dote _.clflM....... ' be*IS.,....... 11, , .. , • WI" ..... Eorl P ... l,....,T .......... P11llll1M4! Oron .. C•HI Dolly "9t, ~JI, "'' '11CMf To Place your • • "Fast Result" Service Directory ad .... Call Now 642·5671 bf.HJ Tho !Hlbllc 11 lnvlllocl to lYll>mll writ· Ion com...-u on 1111• ~lcollon ta tho Foder .. Resarvo 900rd el tho Ml..... F-rel R-¥0 a-of Son Fro,.. l'ICTITIOUI •u11 .. •ss Cisco, 400 Sontonw SI-•. Posl Office MAMCITATU1W .. T 801 noz, San Ptonclko, C.llfornl• ,.,.. following person• or• dOlf\9 '4120. Tho comment period .,. ""' 11>- 0..11 .... 01: pllcollon wlll not -before OclObtr OKLAHOMA Oil LIMITED, * 1', 1 .. 1. C611 Mr, GorOon Smllll et Newport~ O<'I .... •200, NowpMI 14151 ~,,,. 01 Ille F-·· Res- Bea<ll, CA nwo.. Bonk Of Son Fronc:lsco ta find out If JACK D. WILKI NSON, 260 YOll ....... _.llano! time lar WIH>lll· Nowpor1 Cant« Drive. •200, Newpcw1 ting commanu on thl1191>llco11.,. Of' 11 8HCll, CA ntiO. VOii llffCI ll'IOl'O Information ebo<lt sub-CHRl STOPHER W, GRIMSHAW, mlltlng comments Tiie Fodor el JI .. ~ Volley Rood, N-. CA Reser ... wOI consider cammants, In 9'Sll. cllldlng reqwsts for o public mH41"9 Tiiis t>uslnen 11 cand11c1oe1 llY • or IMmol i,oorfnv on Ille apptkotlon, 11 llmllOd pe.-rSlllp they ore ,l'•Ulved t>y Ille Fedorol Jock S. WllklnMlft Reserve 9ank aurlng Ille comment O>rlstCll)ller W. Grlmshe• period. Tllll stotomonl wos fllOd wllll l1IO "'IMll'I', ICUM•ll, WAGNEa, County Clerk of Dr•nte County on Mlf"•· U"DE••••o & MAMllV 4119. t4, 1 .. 1. OMI C•MTUaV l"UZA l'ltflU 112' c.Mwy ,._ .... Pul>llllwel Orange Coe•• Delly Pilot, .. " ......... CA,..., •vo. "· ~. 7, 14, 21, 1w1 3'1MI P11bllSl'ltd Or0fl9t c.oul Dally Piiot Sept .••• 21. '"I 4013 .. i PllUC MGltE NS-t5033 "o0:~~::.r"'-r::s NOTICE OF DEATH OF Notko 11 Nrffo/ e1-to cr9Clttoo CE LESTE-H. OLDHAM, of tho within lrensforars tllol o .. k ti CELESTE HAN 0 STOCK • .,_,., Cs _,. to lie moo. O on porM>MI property herelnoftor L D H A M A N D 0 F c1Hcr111ec1. P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D -T,,. ___ butineuoddreuof MINISTER ESTATE NO. tllo lntondild lr8Nftr•• ore: A 103 1 DAVID 4 . CRUMRINE o"d ·1 1 • JEANETTE v. cRuMa1NE, • E . T o a I I h e i r s , c-t HIQllwoy, s.-e -... N_,_. beneficiaries, c reditors Beac:ll, c.tltornla 92MO d ti t ed' to f Tllo 1ouii1on in C.Ofoml• of 11,. an con ngen er 1 rs o c111e1 011K"1tve ot11<.e or pr1nc1po1 CELESTE H. OLDHAM, b•ulneu office Of'"• Intended aka CELESTE HANO tron1 .. ron11:SAME OLDHAM and persons All at,., llullfloM n-Ond eel· h J drenu uud by tllo Intended W 0 may be Otherwise n- lrontlOf'Ot'S wllllln three Yffrt IHI terested in the Will and/Or pest so,.,•.._,. 111e 1n-estate: tr•,..,_.,.., N()tjE A petition has been filed Tho --~'..,._of 1,,.11,._tr_,_.,.0: by James E . Nitch in the LOUIS DAAGENZto. no1 wo111 Superior Court of O range Victory Bo111eord, •11r1>enk , County requesting that Colllornto t!JQS Th81 .. """°11yportw...\lhoreto James E . Nitch be ap· 11 •scrlllecl In gainarol os: •N _,... po i n t e d as person a I a1uoc~o1 .. c.111or111o_._011on r e presentative to ad· WESTCllP:F TRAVEL SERVICE. m In I st er the estate of IMC., dllinl IMl11ots 01 WESTCllf"F TRAVEL sERv1c1: enc1 ,, toco"41 Celeste H . Oldham, aka ••= 1m 'Wfftclltt Dr1,,., ,. __ , Celeste Hand O ldham, 8~i..'.:'=,'!,,...-11y,,..sa1c1 Costa Mesa. Ca. (under tronslorors ol H id loutton Is: the Independent Ad· WESTCLIFP:TaAVElSE•VICE. ministration of Estates Thol Mid stock ,,.,,..r 11 tnt-Act). The petition is set for to be <.,._ et tllo office of: • I De N t PA OFESSIONAl ESCROW earing n pt. o. 3 a SE 11v1cEs, tt21 Nor111 T111t1n 700 Civic Center Drive "'",_· s.nc.o Ana, CAllfornl• tuo1. West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 .,.To;_~~!:~: iWlocl. 10 n October 14, 1981 at 9 : 30 C.IHornlo Uniform (;ommerclet Codt • m • Soctl01'6'°'· IF YOU OBJECT to the Ti. -enc1 ....... of, .. .,.,. ranting of the petition, l«I with -clolms ....., lie fllecl should Is PROFESSIONAL ESCROW OU either appear sEav1cu , "°'' Olftu eoa m11. t the hearing and state s.nto ,.,,., c.1tfamlo t1111-1.w1. At· our objections or file anUon: 110t41-Mf",..,..,,. Ifft day 'tt ob. t' · h ror 1111ng < .. ""' b't •v crodlt• IMll rt en Jee tons with t e .,. 0r1,,._ '· '"'· wNc11 11 1,.. ._1-ourt before the hearing. "°" ..., ......,.. .,. ,....,,,........ our appearance may be .so1o "*"lod•11o.... In person or by your at· Doled~ 4, IWt t..ou11D.._1o orney. ll't-Tr_._.. I F Y 0 U A R E A Publlshed Or•-Coast Dally REDITOR or a cont· Pltot, ~ 2'1, 1'11 ~171 .. 1 PVIUC MOia ingent creditor of the de· eased, you must file your laim w ith the court or LaOA&. lfOTIU resent it to the personal Notk• I•,......., •-lllM Tho..,. representative appointed of~.,,.. c..itv. 10101 51•« A-. th I . ,_1 .. 11 vo11..,, catlfwnNl tlNI, .._, Y e court w thin four m.-"-'iut1on "'"" tile ,. .. ,.1 months from the date of Deposi t 1n111r•n<• CorPOr•tton, irst issuance of letters as w..,...,....., o.c. JDGt, '•.,. _..., rovided in Section 700 of ,_ ........ "'"" 90C ,,..,_ eom,..,,.. h e Probate Code of ~l!n ":':11~~~ 1a11ifornia. The time for ,,._.._Act. My...,_. wllfllne 10 I ng claim s will not ex-<..,"*" on ws .,_.iut..,.,..,. n1e ire prior to four months CIM'll-ln-llft9wtt11 .... ..._1 rom the date of the hear · Directer of the Fo .. rol Oopesll jnn noticed above ·--Carpar•lon .... ..._, .. • Office, .. Mar!C..,_-y sc...-. wee YOU MAY EXAMINE -... s.. F-renclsco, catlfornl• "'°'" he file kept by the court. Any,.,_ c111t1,_ °' ..,...., ... ttw If you are interested in the trentlne of 11111 ._lcotiell, "" • • rteM •••11Vt11111o_...,. ... uc.e state, you may file a re- ., well w.c """'tile RotiloMI DIN<· uest with the court to re· tor •Y ~ '· "''· c..i-..1a1 eive special notice of the portions et .. ~kallon ore on Ille I t of t 1n '"° • .._1 Office'• _, .. ,,.. nven ory esta e assets ,...le 11o ,.,....._. ""t11t ~· nd of the petitions, ac· '*'-T .. 111e ts..,.._ tw .-..c 1... o u n ts a n d r e po r t s :::!-. ., .... ti. rl9MI• ....,._ scribed In Section 1200.S DATIDS.. 21, ""· f the California Probate n. ~of0r-.0ouritv Code. ==~:.~ma Uw Office of DAVIS ANO llOC..,.,.....~ KILLIAN t01'tsi..erA-3901 M•cArthur Blvd., "'-M!nvo1tev,CA'2* Suite 202 PIN&.aY, icu11H&.a, •••M•R. Newport Beach CA 92660 =·~~;"~=-.. &MA.le&.aY (114) 752 ..... 1 r ., eo.ry...,. ._. Publlshed Orange Coast ~a.:=-~.:'7c.st Detty,....., Dally Pilot, Sept. 21, 22, 28, 5et1t. 21,a ,Ckt. S, t2. It, ltll 41'MI 1981 <41"3-81 D I L p I L 0 T c L A s s I f ' I E D 6 4 2 ' • 5 .6 7 la RENTALS Holil~ie"\J\irn1•Md Hou'" l.nfv11u,htO ''°"'" r•r•., l "' r~""'' •. "'" r-....... 1o1 Tw.,.......r•1~ Tt•Miou~lnl 1Np1 .. ,. f\irn o.,i .... ~·I ""'' "''" A.pt' l.11fwrn A.ph f\.rn or l "' A-• 11-6 Bo.rd ll<ttl• Moc.U Gw•tllom" Summt'r M .. n••I" \.,.•llOft Kt-nUJ\ Mtnt•l~ t() s.-.,., Ctu.infot R•M OHlo.R..U.I 8.n1""" Rf'Ma>I lndu"ri•t R.f~•I ~:.·.,: 1Ad4fd ~1,r kf'flt•I• ltOO llilO mi l4(aj :IQ) )IW W) Wll *" J10u '*'° JM tUll() 1(11(/ associated BllUl<EllS llfll lTr llS i1• •' ""' r;,,rr J ,, ' ,. e BIG +POOL 5 Bdrm with swimming •--------• pool and jacuu.i · solar heated. RV area As· sume FNMA. Sl69,000. Ulil Ho.et for S9f ll!MI ·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • RED !: Gn1nil I 002 CARPET 1ll0 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 754-1202 :: I GIANT RIB HO CclMRXER OCEAN VIEW Reduced over $40,000! Se llers are truly motivated! S Bdrms. Hufe family room. As- sume 9~3 hrst ' 3 pri vale beadles. Only 1318 000. Call 673-8550 rtlfil1 ll~CAMYON Exquisitely upgraded Monaco on gollc:oune. 3 Bdrm, formal dining, family room. assumable loans. Submlt aU offers. Asking '575 ooo. ::; s Bdnns, 3 Ba. pool, RV .. ., ac:c:eaa, 2 r1teplac:es. and '4)) ereat financing. Call BUSINESS, INVEST· now for more informa-DOWN MUST QUALIFY FOR PAYMENTS. 5% needed for cost. College Park 3 Bdrm, 2 bath. family room, double firrplac:e. cul de sac: street. A bareain at Sl.34.900. Call s.6·2313 M(Nl, nNANCE Uoo. Full pnc:dl64,900. ftv\lfW\\ ~"'' lW\UWH " a."tf'if '"'~'JM"t Opport ' lft\t\ttrwN "•Mrf M__.,, toLo.n \IQl'M'\ "•"'"' Morthf'' TU -. ANNOUNCEMENTS. 714 71.>0 Q 3 B PERSONALS l LOSl l FOUND AllflUYntfl'ft'lff'tt"I , ., v, ... THE REAL ESTATERS If you want your ad· EXECUTIVE vertising message to re- ac b more people at MESA VERDE The fastest draw 111 the lower cost, Classified is Covered entry overlooks West. . .a Daily Pilot the way to go• Call Now! "'·' '°'''.' ............ .., P°f1V)Nlh '°''•' nw,... 1uu·I SERVICES ..... beauWul sparkling pool, ....:C~l•:11;il·i·ed·Ad···M2··S67·8·. ··&'2··5678···· spa and fire ring. Formal living room and formal dining. Huge co untry kit chen , separate family room with fi~plac:e. 4 Bdrm, EMPl.OYMENJ l ,_EPAIATION VfWJOI-. l"\HWIW'Pft :1~.w...•::::.i II ' I M(ICHANOISE ANMfW'"' ~""'61encf .. Awr-uoin H•tHlf'\ k...-l<h"t ~h1ttll•I" \ 11nw1.h' t q1iii.pn ... m '•h 1 ..... ._..,."-'°" t\lrNIWf't (,•f O f '"14' ,.,,...., ..... ..-... ..,. J•••'" '~'""°"' '41.,-fll..!Wh \41\#"ftlaMW"' W1\l'tll.,.°""" °"•l\lr-0 Mu"rel ln'ltrun''"'"' Othtt rum• t.qw•$.1 Ptl• ~:': ~~~=~:,\ ~1 ... (1N~\ Slutf Rr~•wt•""-"•' i~•r.cfto H1t'1 "-'tr.c> BOATS' MARINE EOUIPMUIT WMr•l :~'t huee master bdrm. 3 1111• bath. A bargain at S:no.ooo. See it now, c:au ~ <()<) .. , .. , l()lol ~~ *1'3 ""' 1111a W:• ....., 1(111 llOlll ~) }t&-..2313 THE REAL , ESTATERS .....__.....__ AXIi STEPS TO SAHD 3 BR & DEN needs your attention. Bring shovels and paint brush Make SS's. Owner will carry at low interest. ""' •'OJ @ SEACOVE :: PROPERTIES ::': 114-631-6990 - $69,950 IO°lo DOWN, 131/1% LOAN UNIVERSITY PAD No qualifying and no points on 13 th % loan on 3 bedroo m townhome with super view plus interior atrium ! Won't last with these great terms ! Call 759· 1501 or 752·7373. NEWPORT HACH OfACE 2670 San Mlguef Drive 1714) 759-150 I 17141 752.7373 ~ Walker&lee Real Estate fto•h M••ft4 '-ff\••t Boeh Mer1nt t ct\tlP lo•t\ Po'" 8o•b Rf'nt t fll•n•r lo6b.S.d $7,000DOWH A must see! Security _ _:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-gated 2 Bdrm condo, poola. llUDU, llpll. Vaunt and owners anx· lous. Act now, 546-2313 llool.o si,,.. Dot~· lloou s.....i• ~. ltoebSl•Ut THNSPOmTION """''" l amp•<> !><It R"li Dtrtnt t:ar1 !llollllt"-" "°'°' l'\ tlfl ScOOl h "''"°' Hl'lt S.I• Rini Tn 4ltt• Trotl !::~~~~1!''~•rh AUTOMOBILE C,,tMr&I .4Mi1llil«'• t.:lHtlt• llf'(fHlton \ thK'lf• ~1:t1 ~~'.~,~..a- Tri.Kl .. \ ... A'1Wl.c611Aal ""'-W.n\t1t AUTOS, IMPORTED litncral "''• Runwu Audi A .. t.aa lt••f4') llMi.' f::r' D•t..WA ..... ,." ri •• ._. J.iu.•r Jtn..ra ••fMitfl1tltf\1• lhtd• MfnrOu tkn1 Ill: Mil~ Oi>tl , .•. ,. ........ Poru .. Rto1Ytt IWll• "">" Rmr• .... b Subtlrw Tt)'OI• Tn<1mpll VWilh••&:tr• Vol\O AUTOS, NEW AUTOt,USEO For C'-'fted Ad ACl1~ CaDa DIUJPl.lot AD-Vl901l eon i!~t!Wl3 tlto •1111 NIWPOIT HllGHTS :.!: SLASHID $24.500 ~•• White picket fence sur-= rounds flower filled ft>• yard-loads of uaed : brick. Owner will carry = with 1mall doWD-4:111 *" r7UI 'i7'A WM WM ''" rm 11111 fl bl now. SEA COVE l'IOl'EITIES 71U3f-69'0 '1U 1---------"7.0 'fill ,,.., "" 17:1) W7M •ltu 117~ tf1U .1 .. flfl ,,. fl)lt ms fllti flSl ., .. mi WM rm ,,,. '17J HEWPOITICH $124,900 A vacant home with a desperate owner! 15,000 rebate II )'OW'I. 1 atory, 2 Bdrm, 2 bath condo. Owner will belp flnance.1 \ Call DOW, ~Zl13 ffW§A i TH .... TOW*OMl1 ..,, Call t.be apedalilll at the condomlnJum LD· formaUon cent.tr. Touchltone Realty t!E llDBll ILllRS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE S MILLIOH S YllW S Lovely Courtyard Entrance -Tile Galore -Plus Bay View -Huge Patio -Potted Plants -Flowing Fountains -Indoor /Outdoor Living -This Two Bedroom, Two Ba.th C.Ondo Shows Better Than A Model. Shown By Appointpient. A "Joy or Newport" Listing. "POOLSIDI SETTIMG" Elegant Condo -Neutral Tones - Two Bedrooms, Two Baths - Formal Dining Room -Gorgeous Sunsets -Super Financing -Very Low Fixed Interest Rate -Shown By Appointment. Asking $220,000. A "Joy Of Newport" Listing . --...... , ...... 759-9100 He.,..,._ .... _ .. c:..e..-; AESIOENTIAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES SALUns THE 191 I DESIGN HOMl 17 MUii IEACH Clla.E SrYGLASS HILL Sponsored by N ew porl Jr. Chamber of Co mmerce to benefit OIAMGEWOOD A new home for abused children. Open f o r public viewi ng September 13·27. Tickets may be purchased at the door Presented at $2,400,000 IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 Nei Sweater-Jacket I Two-Skirt Sult II .. '-\ • . _..,, J l1fr .,"lll' ' k:~ .... ·~:'Iii ;) 1 ... 1 -..''-• i I . . P.<f .. .. . , ... : . '""""-. • • .~: • • : .'-. • • . • .... ~ l ! ' . .. 11 •" .- ...... I•' 1 .' I ' .. \. ~· . ' . . ·~' ~~------~------~· ......... --~ ....... --...... __ ......... ______ s .............. a•t ....... 2•1•2 .... 11111 ....... ,_ ........ Wt Orlf!'Collt DAILY PILOT,Monday, Sept,mti.r21, 1981 ........... _ ......... s. ............ s. .......... Wt --.... -.................... ...................... ...................... ....................... . .... ~···---··in4 ....... .... .. ...... ,., ,. 3 .......... ,., ( ........... ,. ~····~·~~! 1111 ~':!:~ •••• ~··~~·~~········~!~ ~~ ... ..! ••• ·~··~~········ ············~~···~· ··············~·~~ ···••••••·····••••••·•• ·········i£··..:···1t.•11 I ... tturJs_ ..... I LewmM..... • ... .,.,. ...... ~ 19' .... ,.... ., ~corTAM JM0..-1 LOT ••••••••• .. •-••••••• ••• .. ••••-•••• .... • •••••••••-• .. ••••••• •••••••·-·-• ... &a ._. llUDt o1 ~ I Bdrm, a be, modern 11 ... DOWMI A Let W-. • OHwf • / acb.at..:'..._ on tlll1 kltc~,dtalpr.A.LSOZ For S1l1 i.1 owner. ,_~Ult Huie 5 bdrm. l\.t bl WANI abt lot. J ldrm ud JUlt 8r, l bl, &pk, dbl car Aarp tU, SBA, liv mi, l ecre + bldt tllt. &tot· ovulOOOeq ft WaattUtt' .. OMf IOW 1101 10 •bo1>1. lit aar. wtUI atftte. Am111al ram nn, ltl lot, tnea lY 11op1.n1 S-rttl abort Mf. 111 Newly dttout1d 2 llietl '111 ooo •tbtduled ll'Clll lllcomt Ntxt to Greenbelt. M dlatHce from tenM ' -Bdrm, 1 blth C4-op. ~ wtf..-.&cne. l fU,ODO per )'tar 1Ume lo1u. Set beach. Ownr bas In· IYOWMm!IXIC. Gor1toijl Catalina nd '7Mt00 611-i.O. mo 000. 7S Ill)' ll IDt I U4 ,500 eluded plans for t'USlOm • Br 2 bl. Ea1tbluff turnJn1 buin view. ,,., TWOftOITWO Caretahronprop.11711 villa. sm,ooo. S~c bomt. 10% do . Owner 1umeloaa,1elltrwillu-Z 8 2 8 11 1 DI ant St. ,..0794 or tacular views ! flnanclni. lntAlttlt only. 1bt in ftoandoa, lolt C..W. .. Mw 1022 tt~ive~ywre~!de~l~ad MISS10NREALTY A•lc11ll appr•IUI 1Upaval1ab&e.S..OOO. OM .. CAMY MU COUISI SNCTA SA'' 'S" Stl0,000 YOU CAM AlfOID TO OWM Desirable end unit, three bedroom, i i,; bath, double garage, pallo, carpet and paint 1llowance. Fantastic fmanclng . Low down required. $97,000 Fee .. U~l()Uf ti()Mfi · .. REALTORS. 675·6000 HO EHt Coe11 Hl-"'w•v. Corou del lltar • .. WI MAYI ~°'THI UST UmMM* TOWN REALTORS '7S.HI I SUPll '"I" PUN IN THE 11.UffS! Tlllt wt ~ _.. ..... ao.e1y ,... .... " IN •a•t1• •ltw. Ow..., Ml Wp wft11 •••c.,, Olfr snt,soo. 6' COLE OF MEWPORT WLTORS 2515 E. Cont Hwy •• c ....... M• . 675·5511 CUFFHAYEN -REJO:m! OwHrs Htd to ull tlll• Ito•• '-ciehly! ltdtlced o•er SlS,0001 4-edtH.g &.c*J & Ow.tr Ml c.-ry a.. lrd T.D. or -'I .xdimp. Mtw roof, fw-Hce, ........ c.,.t & ..... 1-stwy 3 ta.cl. z bo. -pod shed tot. 2 ftreploce1, boMs rOOM + ca.try ldtaea. sno.ooo .• ...,.,. ..... cna of hicJlwt" pric.cl hotftt1. BAYFRONT PENTIIHJSE ~&ler'gt2e..d.+ ........ boot llp ••ailclblt. S.,..-locafio. wffft YU. &ct.i ••.. $625.000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE S..ln R•n•.il• P•l)ptrlv M.trwg1,..n1 2436 W Coa.1 H"'V JIS M.inne Aw Nl!WPOrl Bcoach S.lbo. lsl.trid Hl-1400 '7Ut00 Sell with EASE! It's a BREEZE Classified Ada642-S678 Largest Jot of all the Big Cyn Deane I Hornes! What a spaei~ & beautiful yard for entertaining ! Lovely pool & spa plus a darling gazebo (with even a c~andelier~. Gated front courtyard with fountain. Dramatic foyer w /huge ~~stal chandelier, 2·story ceiling lo living rm, formal dining rm, pa neled den w/parquet floor . 4 ~ baths. 4 bedrooms including glamor ous master suite with marble bath. WISLEY N. T 4 YLOI CO.. 11.U TOIS 2111 s. JOCNplla ...... MEWP0rr CfNTIR. N.I. 644-49 I 0 •••••••• .... ••••••••••• w/btited Jicuul '9t·073t 1240,000 Prine only WAT'EAf'R()f(f Htludtd ln redwood ow c U,..H• 1050 857·~o.150 HOMES d e c k • I u • b I Y • • • ....................... OWMr Dttper•! AEAl ESTATE Jud1uped covered $5!WJ Ele&ant 4 Br. custom In Ni:ed quick escrow. 631-1400 patio. IN CLUDING Nellie Gale Ranch. Beautifully decorated I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lliiiiiiliilii'iiiiiiiiiiil COLOR TONED AP· Super 1 3 rm 2 Laguna Hills, beaut. HVHomee.3bdrm.2b11. C ........ c .. .., "-Iv PLIANC~ ' LAUN· bath, 2 milee fr~m view, Imported m11rble. Hiah uswnuble 30 yeu IAYSHOllS. .,. .,.... DRY. Ool s o ooo pool size yard. 4 cur flnanclnjat l2.53 flxed. 4Br. 2Ba, family rm WllfllAl•c... PLUS 1 ~r, l Ba. occ•,,a.~~ ,,.1'Y 14 ' . 1ara1e, equestrian lot. A!kiog $235,000, land in '215,0000WC. 831.-, J BR Zbe or 2+ &uest DolUsoUH with aar~ge, a _, . .., $625,000. eluded CALL NOW! owoer'• lmit. Pl111 28r patio 6 extra pariin&. Jenaen&OD. 759-0706 Owner/Agent. Prin· PllMl.....SULA rental cott11e. All In Complete privacy for Eves : 644-5742 or cipalsonly.Comeforln rOIMTIMl'LU sharp coad w/eacel loca· both o~ l lot . loca~ ln 95HIZ9 spectson Sat/Sun 1 5. Hall a block to Beach. tlocr. Owner wW cvry the nicest area of E. 76G-9586 These 2BR. 2BA com· lae 2nd TD. Bal buy in Costa Mesa. Sl7UOO HOISEPIOHITY . pletely seperate wilts townfortel)'DI0,000. with alot flnancin&. ~acre. 2SOOsq. fl 4 br, OWNER ~OUS. love· have a blgb uaumable 6~7211 Driveby3115Flowertben 21,; ba, lam nn .. 3 c:sr ly 2 sty m esub nbrhd loan plus the owner will ma. ull673-S372forappt. *COM)()* gar. Noqual. Lowdown SI0,000 tot.al cash down carry larae 2nd trutt te 000 DOWN 3 BR 2 B ''SHIWt VW--" S3000/mo. a>s71 Stetson OWC balance Payable deed. Dynamite: buy at • • • . • a, .·-or Pl. 831-11636 S2,000 per mo at 12"'~. or SJ8s,ooo. Hurry oo tia • ______________ _. t;C E/s1de home on R·2 lot Nr beach. 3 Br, I yr old. trade for 4-plex. A!klna one Ask for Barbara ~~!!!!!!!!~~!l!!!i!liiliiiiMllllliliiil Price $185,000. Take Assume 12"i7o lo ' No Newportleodl 1069 S26S,OOO.Ownr,63M2l.5 CbambeB. UMDA ISLE Exciting opportunity! Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. SJ ,495 ,000. LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious .. custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. newly redecorated. Priced to sell q~ckly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm , 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420.000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm . 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur . ing marine room . Sl.385.000. WEST OCEANF«OHT Triplex units. xlnt fin ancing $600,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3-ll Bu,\1d• o,,.,.,. ~ B bl5 t-161 Fast II ._1 over pymts ol Sl6SO mo. qual. 1247,SOO. PP No ••••••••••••••••••••••·..._ ______ _ -• c_, No quaUfyin&. or get .a1ts 213/833 1369, FOL.A.ND .. RedhilJAo6 ... ~• Duplu. Buyer who new lo111.S46-3SS8 wkdys 213/831·5U4 Qu 1· .._ d be ff 1DB(I ~I HID y1.v;;au.J needs neg income + eves . a 1ty ~t escn s M hlLM sheller Front unit 3 s llDIOOM . tbss Bluff condo. New oppn1m11i11TY 552 -7500-"-"---· bdrm, fpk, jac, 3 ba. MESA YaDE · H•t~ carpet, floors. appl, fix· Uftlun mini ocean view. Rear 3 Ule baths., pool, spa. Horbiw I 042 lures aod bath counter P r i m e 4 5 ' X J 4 O ' S. J .. unit 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Under· '310,000. Sl47,000 as.sum. •••• ••••••••••••••••••• top~ Sun filled morn waterfront lot with ex1St· Capis.,_ I 071 ground pldng for 4 cars. By Owner. m9789 • w A TafltOMT * patio oH FR, lots of mg pier and slip for 45' ..................... .. 10% dn. large assuma· l BR condo below markt, HI.OW MARKET natural ll Appf'OI( 2500 yacht. Pnce or 12,300,0001-------- ble. inc. $1700 per mo. t!O,OOO dwn, 11_718~ 3G Only S65 K down. OWC sq. ft. Call Pete John.son includes cleared lot, ap :!f~~~dba ~~~a~ PricedatS350,000.Drive yrloaousum.546-l883 rest. Townhouse. 4 al63H.266 proved plan s and by714Potnsettia. Uyou OW .... H--"-t bdrm, or 3/den, 3 ba. permits for aluxunous5 Tl~·. ~~~ycpurs~ra~~j like. call the OWTier at " ~'"· Prof dee, boat slip. Bdrm 5 bath French 752·6956 Sls,000 down, take over pool/te nnis , onl y Regency hom e with paper, lan<bcaped, e~c Duplex. won't last for paymen~. Exec. Back $499.990.0penSat&Sun --------manyextras £:it.i~~~tJ~0.teg::e0 buyer w ho need s Bay View Condo. l·S. -------• Tt.--A•aiklblt Sun3-6orbyappt.32031 negative in + shelter. 646-5791. Prins. only. 840·2129. ~3335 THEll.UFF Call Pac.-esetter Homes Via Tonada SJC off P ·ce ....... 000 5"'· dn p• ....... _.. for details and appoint· L~rae =~able."'Mon'. SlmrD 1.1. '"'" 1044 ._.... " ment.646-5002 Alipaz corner del lhly"' rental inc Sl425. 3 Bdrm~m Home ••••••TH•••::;.::;.:••••• ~~~:~. i: .. r;/P, ~~ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!I :_11~.~~Co. Drive by 514 Marigold w/frpk Beawifully up· ....__ ba, xtra large porcelain ""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! COM. If interested call. graded. SU4,000, with TOWHHOME? tub w/ceramk tile walls Owner will help financer: John Bellam 752-6955 terms. Superb. Call the specialists at &c noor. 4 covered patio great assumable loan 4 So.Ht&....-I°'' lha Ao d 1n'um p .......... 000 5"'-Br. near Mariners .••••••••••••••••••••••• CDM .. •-111. " .. n om 1 in areas. nee...,.,, . "' s 98 ooo s b · ff ~ RED'"'"'"~ formationcenter down.assume'40,000Jsl 1 • · u mil 0 er. WHITEWATaYIEWS Above beach, below \J'VOl'r-11:• ToucbstooeR.ealty trust deed at 7"1%. XJnt 646'1044 Agent or from this scarce ocean· ~~a&i~1~· t~f~. P~ I 754-1202 9S3-<.867 land lease $853.00 per 646· 1046 front unit . pro( derorat degree view Ocean &c I Excellent financ ing year. Can't change unttl THE BLUFfS ed. Spacious l Br+ den Jetty rrom every · win· Large 2 BR 2,,.. ba condo. Un 1 Y e rs 1 t y P a r k year 2003 14"1: int. only "FEE & SH" or 2Br 2ba. Perfect in dow.Proplinebightide. 2 car attached gar .. Fordem.2200sqft 4BR. 2nd trust deed due MagntficentVlews ofup-everydet.ail.S37S.OOO . Obie invest 2 yrs. Clear, microwave, fpl c, etc 2"'1BA, fam rm. Formal 1986-87. CaU owner for per bay and mountains. LGCJ19C1 YllalJt l.E land incl. Sl,250,000. Almost new Great din rm Decorator appt daily after 5 pm Front row.sharp 3 bdrm 4'7-17" OWC. PIP Appt only financing. Sl12,500. Home Spa ManyXlras mo760-8425 on F EE land Good (714) 673-6525, 673-2210 770..5S78 5S9·8S13 c re at 1 ve f 1n an c 1 n g other leal &fate CdM DW'l.D HLU OCEAN w ... oodbl ..... lw--'.i.lcil)tt.. a Y 81 la ble. • •••••••••••••••••••••• Y Ow.._.ER POOL HOME C~ Wiiow UDO ISU Open Sat. Sun 1·5 Mobile tt-.s _I " . -3 Br. 2 Ba. Nice. Conve 4BR. JBA 2000 sq ft 20<h down. OWC lge 2nd , 416Plata ForSole 1100 i._ _______ •l·-------•I ~nde ?f ownership. ~Int nient to all. low down home w/ S149.000 assum wino payments. 2 br. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. financ10.g. Best locabon. Owner will help finance. fin. Prine only. $199,000 ba . i m mac. w I ex C/21 Newport Cntr OCEAN FRON T ·New • IA YRONT l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I BOAT SUP · SANDY BEACH • Deck & Patio. Lge, lite & cheery 3 bdrm + deo. 2 bath home. ()pen beam ceil- ing, brick BBQ, 2 ca r garage +extra parking. S595.000! Owner/Agent 673-9187 or67S.7060 ~ 751-1111 4M21A. CM.Ala This could be a cutie fo the 1st home ~yer at low rice, with eood f1nancin1 available. 7&G-Ol40, 644-4026 Call Agenl646-7434. Owner I Agt 857 2100. ~sion ~ntial. Just 40..S'357 Modular Type Hom1:s, M. E S A V E R D E _ ~2·~ ,000. Agt, 963-8182. leased land, 3 pvt bchs, COIOHA D& MAI l 0 2LOT Cha rming beach col· tage, featu.rtng 2 Bdrm +den, large living room with fireplace. double garage. A!king 1269.500. For an appointment to see, caU~llSl · · ! -HERITAGE AS.5UME UPPEl IACK IAY. 24 hr secwity. fishin& Beaut .• BR 2 Ba. loe CHARMING WEST OCEAMFI,_,.. Spotless 3 Bdrm rum1ly pier from 134,900. l<>"t{i " " p• • .._. 2 "'"1 home A "MUST SEE" down. 499<1116 comer lot, Sl97,500. """ Triplex. Xlnt terms & property Open Sunday 1·5 I n W i 11 ow c r ee k prime location. S600,000. Open Sat/Sun 15 Trailer at pvt beacb, 275S Gannet Drive Northwoods, Lovely 3 -"A.:.:g'""e=nt,...,, 67=-S-6.:.:1:.::.;61'"-. ___ 2320 La Linda Place Trea s ure I a I and , 751-0205 ;831-$3f7Bkr. bdrm, 2 ba. Extra~ m-1________ C/2 l Ne~C.+r Laguna Bcb. S8500. eluded: Pri vate spa 499·3816 Very p.,.._., Yotn covered raised patio and OCE.AtROMT __ _,6,,_4()..'"" 3U __ 1-=;.:..::;=----- UPOOn1qLuboe Messa ~erde planters timed mahbu 3 bdrlmt, 2hbath i~th. INVESTORS!!! S30,000 Sl4U8 5COOH/Altffoth I daillllel w me. pacaous 4 Utes . Italian tile entry ma cu a e ome w1 under market Only , w ow o bedroom 2tn bath, over lovely wall covermp guest house &/or 1 bdrm f7500dn. 2400~ft home down. 2 yr. 2 Br, 2ba, SELL idle items with a Dally Pilot ClusHied Ad. 642·5678. s112.ooo or submit you '""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! offer r= . . REALTORS 2,500 sq. It. Elegant din plantation shutters Call apt Incredible ocean Xlnt appreciating area fam rm Min. age 18yrs. iog room. coiy den. today tlus won't last long view. kS0,000. ,1741500. 631.5476 sml pets OK Across family room. TWO atSl77,500. Realonomks 675-6700 from bch. Mary Jank 759-1616 IEDUCID SIOO K fireplaces ! Beautiful Ltaw Opf orHo Ott J!!t!:...:· 60.::.3.:;...l·""lllM,:;.o_ __ _ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ C Sbo Estate 3 location. S350,000. Owner Owner Cle s per a te '77 Skyline. 2BR, 28A = ameo res · will assist with finanr· 2 II 2 IA COHDO Bought an<>ther 4BR. Fam rm. Across from -------~be br, 4b i.; ~~J>tivadte ing. Call now. '79-2390 Adjacent to Newport 2"2BA. fam rm. pool. agt Beach. Pet Adult Park. ac , enc""""' cty .. T ... c "-w· d .... ""'"" w/apacio18 pool, forever 1-~~~a.!~~CM~nL_ rest area--.xca tn ......-"""" ~-S881, 645-43111 harbor &c ocean view. 1--------Section Sl23.900 Good HEW HlW HEW S695.000leasebold. FASTMOVI terms. SPANISH ORANGE COUNTY Winter Retreat. Oasis in the sun. New I yr old 2 bdrm + den, 3 ba, furn with cathedral celling Indian Wells Racquet Club, Palm Springs. Home overlooks 14th Golf Hole at the lndian Wells Goll rourse. Pool in front of home. Ex- cellent loc. Sl95,000, no money dn to qualified buyer. Will consider trade for unit in Corona del Mar. Call John Bellamy 752:6855 RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES ~ tl/ -:0 Owner packing and will loy Mcc.dlt, Rltr. VILLA OH UDO 1 9 8 1 B e a u t y • -4.tZ; Y eta-~ finance this 4 Bdrm ~!!!!!!541-!!!!!!!7!!72!!9!!!!!!!!I ts very versatJle on an microwave, frpk , bay COIOHADB.MAI REAL ESTATE 644·6397 Costa Mesa North home. 't523C.ot,..,,Da·IRVtl(E = extra wide lot. Ong 6 windows, priced to sell l..cJ.oS..h Estates &c Acreage Try 4 BR 3 BA 3400 sq It Pool and ci trus at $745.000 We lrnow all Rancho Properties 9UAIL COUMTIY IWESTATE C714175'-IHI By Owner, lovely •bdrm. 2ba home in very nice neighborhood. Beaut. pool with rock waterfall. Lrg patio, quality con- struction. SJ 04,750 897#7S. ONE OF THE MOST BEAllTIFll HllS IN OUllE CO. Th.ls incredibly beautiful home slands alone in I s uperb qua l i t y , crafl•mans bip a nd COUMTIY HOME OH LARGE LOT Lovely home on woodsy lot. 4 BR. 3 BA . with large living area. Room for pool, expansion & boat or rec. vehi cle parking. Two story with warm country feeling inside. A "must see." $23.5.000. , '=!:' S~\l'11J-"t~~· ::: -~CUTl.~----- ·~.....: ~ low ,., '°"" ·-'""Pie -· t i R ,~ 1r L 1 I r 1Till I • Iii~_ I G R ) 8 " 1-:' I ne~er liked 101111 discos. 111 1--.,..l .....,.l__,I.,..~ ... ,~ _ w1n1ed to break an arm, I'd L-.A.--L-.&--JL--1 rathe< do It 1he old·lashloned ......------..., way --·-. ICGN l lV I S--..,.-1 ....,.,,-,..--..,-.-,-I 0 C-let. 11o9 c~1dle ~ • • • • • by 1111.09 '" Ille '"''"'"9 WOtd .__.....__,_......__,__.___, VO. O..elop ''°"' ""' No 3 ti.low South of Highway.--------This quiet cul de sac ~ OCEAMFROHT bedrooms. now 5. but '41,500. (Pf'3115A·B). Co lonul two s t or y Costa Mtso 102~ home is loolcing for a -----BY owuER could be changed back MULHEARN do 11 b o use . Two ••••••••••••••••••••••• family! Will consider JUST USTED " I to 6 Features a large bedrooms. Lovely one THIEE IS ~-...u! 14% loan for 7 years with Beautiful 3Br Wool! New cust. bit 2 sly, lovely sunny paUo. New REALTORS bedroomrearunit.Two Tbi"s 3 8ed.roo........,_,...mpn·de or just S20,000 down ! bridge Broad mo.or ~rednchNhormandy.JBR kitchenamusttosee' MOllLEHOMEDIV. ....,.,500 F 11 ssy -Move fas t I oflulls "I ha "' en ome. Can be (71•15"75900 car 1arage. N6:>, ownership home is large " W VleW • n. g . S· lJ S895 000 OWC • & • 631·7l00 H.I. enough for any sized buyers. Call 540-llSl sum able loan. Cul-de· Sesp t. · · ·:rm .... II S sac loc. 2 sunny patios, ashore.673-6578 OCUn fDE family. 1st T.D. is 8·753 motivated s e 11 er Trade Luxury Newport Close to bcb. This lg dbl --------1 and owner will carry a Sl65 000 bome on ·~ acre for ln· wide ts on an oversized •"YSH-H 2nd T.D. with reasona· · · .,.., " ...__ come Units or? Eqwty !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I comer lol 5 Star park. A IAYAtONT ble ,down. Just listed. e!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! '[Ui)w...':wlhrld ~ S280,000. Act DOW I must to see. ISD7467). Desl·rable eastern ex· won _t last. Call Robert ~i ""' ge B '-C 0 A t MULHr.•au Island. Private pier and EYERJU. 551.3000 INCOME TAX? 10A1o posure facing Harbor -Ulike 631-12116 DELIGHTFUL Re•lly 63~~~~~. o· p. gen TllED OFPAYIHG ar.••J~Ols"" slip. 3 bedrooms &c con· r • This 3 Bdrm, 2 bath 1 Eastbluffat 13% How about an ocean MOllLEHOMEDIV. verti ble den. Large bome is spic &span. The · moBarruu Phy, Ir'."~ Get last year's interest front duplex with '34,000 17141527·5'9 bayside terrat"e ideal for added lamily room 1041 rate now! Fully assuma-a year 111come. Call Bill CtlMlet wloh/ entert_ ainiog or just Sit· CO"ST"·•HTK creates a beautiful LOC)9MlleocJa ble 30 yr large Isl. 4 Merrell. cn1..1 1500 S95o ~ ~-----••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm ram rm lg yard .,,,.... ting m the sun. ,000 Cool, charming, 4 BR courtyard entry. Near TRADE OR LOW DIP 642-5161 or64G-8107 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• L.H. bome approx. 2~ mi to So. Coast Plar.a. Flexi· o adj. lots. Wstmstr C714J67J-4400 beach.Brickfpk.Coun· bleseUersayasubmiton H09UAUFYING DUPLEXOHWATEI Memorial Pa rk S500 121 JI '"'a.zi•a try kitchen, features oak terms. First time ad· Ocean front mo bi le Doc• for 30, loaf each 842.6a42 before • .. noor plus colorful de-vertlsed. $127 .too. homes 2 Br. pvt beach. 3 &c 2 Bedrooms and 2 ..;::8a=m='-. ------ HARBOR corative ceiling. Large 752-1700 adults. fireplaces . decks and ·-------•l'c~-trrdal covered patio for out· iliiEl-i:!•LI S49·~or499-3816_ patios. Annual income.o-• ~r~r~:t ~~r; l$-$f3j/fl-1 i~:i:/:;:1o~~:. ~ff• =c.tr NEW Oil.AND •. ~.~ ••••••. ~!! SU9,500! CaJJ645-0303 leased land. 3 pvt bchs. 6~" 357 BAYfR"'" 24 hr security, fishing ._. un I PIM COLDWeu BANl(eRO Styt!lllStstet- Nicely detailed 3 Bdrm -~~--home in California -==:::!~~==~ cooperate with rinanc·j dft\ iog. Showa like new 'WI Homes. Seller will fct\_- home. Close to park ' CIR w/tennb & swimmlna. MESA V11D1 pier from 134.500 l~ HEWPOITCWT Under market. Owner COASTHIGHW4Y Three bedrooms and a l-'do=wc::n.:..:.499-=38=16'-----I Absolutely prime! builder read y l o Next to Tony Roma's private yard with brick CUSTOM Former model. 3 BR, negotiate. Great terms Ribs and gives you a BBQ on a cu.I-de-sac 1 A'-!.1•.uEST"TE 3bath. master suite to qualified buyer . super "window" on a~ location forSl«,900. A!· -·--" w/pvt retreat overlook-Brand new 4Br 4ba live Mariner's Mile. sumable loan of S98.500. Tucked away on private ing tennis court, pools, bayfront with boat dock Lease & existing struc· Owner very anxious. road, ill this magnlficent and spa. Good ass um a· is available al S950,000to tu re for sale. 4 Bdrm contemporary Sl,135,000. Open Daily Wat. "' u_ '*. Cote Realty home on over ·~ acre of ble loans. till sold. 2274 Channel ' newt...__ complete seclusion. C/21 Hewpor+Cntr Rd. BalboaPen.Wula. '31·1400 & Investment G~rmet kitchen. Sun 640..~357 CALL67S.231 I I eleeance. Fabulous u,,e of masonry, 'WOOds and 8 PflNI NUMefl!D lfll(f S IN I' I' I' ,. ,. r I Mfte v.,.. stained &lass. to&etber uut SOUAm · · · · · -· CioH eo.. "- Call for details. "'·~,..,. . -~ I. ·.r .1 ~ .:t ·-l I 'y ~ .. 1.11111,) 640-5777 drenched breakfast Ll•e laNt•-•tlcll o.do .... imas/To•• room. 4 decks and ..-:: e....for .. 1700 liDFM> Beautifully maintained 3 Bd{m home, huge farm t~ park slz.e yard and a rarely found large baument. Full price Sl27,IOO. 7Sl-IJ:tl breathtaking coastline For~ S200I ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. S745,000. 0wn,er very ne, xit~le will -NlW - go ease w op ion or Reduced to St28,SOO. purchase w/very smaU HAR• RIDGE 2BR, 2BA Condo. l yr down &c owner financing I · · bl J ust listed 3 Br 2 bl. new. Highly upgraded, w creative negotsa e Ts' le . Wall to wall terms. R EN A ISSA N C E 491lN.COAST HWY lHEIUlffS-MODEL. Outstanding carpets. Wall paper. • view with greal flnanc· Landscaped, enclo.ed LAGUNA BEACH Hi&hly new upgrades. Ing. Priced for immed. patio Pool, Tennis. jac. l---.::G'1:.:...::M~---1 xt11 Ifie master ~rm sale at 1495.000. A&ent, IU,000 +assumable lit. SePUi,_!.IWIWpantf~~-wl. th Daily ~lb:t~f~; nn. u!: Dan Bibb. 13S/8~. Open Fri.Sat 6 with exquisiU decoral· 6 ~~'c~~~~~l imm I J I I I j I S289,SOO, 4 Br, 3 Ba, inl make this a very · · · · · · · view. $223,000 In U · special residence which SCl4M-UTS AMwtn • C ........... 5100 1~=-=====:;;..;..i a um able loans at 11.~. also features breatbtak· 1 Ing views from almost -------"!""""~~---------, Opn Wed. Sat & Sun l·S. every room. 6500 sq ft . 4 FEEUllGS VllW-¥11W Call AnJta SS7·l270 or bdrm•. 6 baths , 4 Corona del Mar at ita ""646-~5096='------ flreplaca. wine celter. C " ST SN E R 0 I S I N MAT E t S best! Lovely view of LIASIOf'TIOH Special ~ financing so" Ho N p Ass I O II$ AT Y YO Catalina, spacious Lu.xurio1.m custom coo· available. T S E " T 0 0 T E M S T E E F S T S S rooms_. nice bdrms, do. 2$00 sq. ft. 2 frplcs, 4 don osen I• ''•I.,. "" ~ 6 7 5 • 2 l I I o r Su.n. Or by appt. 32031 1044 '"~ ... :::.:..:c:..::.::===---10-44-4 in& rm. w/fpk, dining Via Tonacia. San '"'° rm &c 2 car garage. Close '40-7665 Capo. Off Alipu, corner dining room. and bl& bd 2~ baths SllSO E H C U 0 T H II I T II 0 E 0 Y T E P M ramUy room. Assuma· rma, · .,. ... 0 T H S A I I 0 A C T "" S ., T R I .. U ble fan' an...i .... , and ,_.....r mo. '19S,OOO. &G-4S23. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• • •••••••• lldl AWlrwtt. ..... Dt ..... ., 7Jl-4444 4llDIOOMS POOL SPA Loni)' 2 Mor)' bome oo quiet c ul de sac. IHtsldt Calta Mesa. S.Chaded DllllW tulte. Cotered petio. CU.tom dlllped pool llld •pa. Gr.at uaumeble fiDanc· .. , OllfJ .... , Cd ....... ,Inn IF11 ~ " " ......._.. v -uv ••••••••• \ NA S E I T I L I I IT p EC SUS E is ready to move . JUST USTEI U fl 0 W R R ' L A 0 T A S E l P II E S S429.ooo,. IJOO 4 BR 1'4 b1, teller TL EAR I E D T I T 0 Z LA 0 Y NH 42--motivated. Terms, I i E T A E T H T H O E I T I A S T I Term1, Terms. Call C H T T F M " S I L X R H T R A " J T quickly '15Ut9 J PETE BARRETT REALTY HTHTAOHEIAETOPARSMS HHfTVASRDROMVCAOEEL A NlF [ [ L I 8 I !1£ A R V M O I N O " 0 11 Y S U S C E P T 1 H P A R T T S SMO£YNETPSATMISRNSE ,_..,.. Pl.1n fV Real ~ v l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IEuttide Ftur Upper 3 • br, 1 ba, IJll. UM~ rift. .......... 10'6 fl.20,000.A#.142-1523 ....................... Col.tea• Pk. lbtr upper. a br, 2 ba. t1m rm. tsLA• con... fU0,000. owc •ooo lit E&dmlve lilt.lftl ol Utll TD. "2·1SZIAIL adoTable home oo r.u PrtcH ... Mrtf Ille kit. 2 Bdrm ' Jlllt Villa Creek Condo 1t1p1 to 1bop• ... but -.. 11t -.1-..1 wet quilt! SID.-. · _.., alt, ~ w............ bar, decor. p1pu 6 67MfM Uf.14M clraPt•, l!.'l_opuar. sin.tot. UQtr/11t, WALi TO LAH Located only steps from Woodbridge Lake, this 3 BR Estate home Is competitively priced al only 1172,500. Lorraine Reid Ml-8700 (mf) . ' tosboppinacenter&ten· l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!I of Del Obispo. A1t. n is cl ub. Owner1·-------1 transferrin&. anxious Pat Ir I c Com P Ill>'· Contact owner/a1t. P8IMSULA dl·5MO,-.SOZO. D&IUXIS ?J.4-180-00 Slt4.IOO DOYa SHOllS Sliz.HO Pool, Jacuul overlook $475-000 bly. GaluyDr. Formal Ctl'75-l7JI din. rni .. 2 frplcs. Mas,000 fee. 842·2510. ....... .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12 Units Coeta M111. '800111 1125111 dn. I&. Net SSOOO per year. Ul ·21SO. 2043·200 Wallace. __ ,..,utr &• . ..................... . • ,. -. II .. to IU H •• •• .. n, ls s. II 12 ,. ' • '· :--.~ ---,.. . -----:~•"'.""""----~i""7'.".:."'""'...,.._._..~.,.. ....... ,~P .............. ,,..,""', ....... ..,.. .... ,11119z ... 11111511111s .. s•s111 ...... •al!ID .. ~•1111•2 .. u--.z~a•a .. a11121111J~& ... u•s314-.a .. 1m1111'1•2~a .. s .... 111~ .,,./ -.....---~ .... t I ' ,~ o •.& • Jr l q -. . . t. • • ,.. 1 ..... OrwpCoaatOAILYPtLOT/Mond1y,S1ptarnbtr21, 1981 "-"U.fw h••• .tfa t ... ,. lilied Afl•""'•hu.fn. .,_, .. &Wlft ~Af•I ... ......,.. ........... ,.. . o.t.... . - -.............................................................................. ··-··· .. ·· ............... ·-··· tit·~~ O' 0-•me~~•-•tU HHtUHM•HtHUfHt .,. 1 0 • U.flli 'hd .... ,.,.... JHf .... , 1 lh )70J C .... MfM JIJ4 C.. .. W.. JIJ c..t.W-JIJ 't•W~~ ........ . ............................................................................................................................................... -................ ~, ''• .... -~er .. ~, ........ ~.!'!'~.~....... .,._, JUJ ........... 3240 EHhulve Bii Cyn. 2 br, Pillo, oc.an •iew. Spacloua 2 Br I 8'l Over 30. Uwer I 81'. Hr. 1~11 T•inhH, I bt'!-~I · ~ ............ _ ....__... ., .................................................. hmbH. a bt, z be, pvt. Avail DOW '700/11)(1, 1()9 Laundryfac.. ... Quiet. 311 . Wllaan l•rtl•· p1'\ ,.Uo, '"*· ri•~-o~. ,. ... • --~ -t Har ..... ··y• .. .,.um .. Gor1eo1a13br-Uohomt f: -..1 i.nnb.112:.W. Balbo.!81vd.~l\81l. . 1-%177 a"lt• l\o pe\a US dly ,Mita.·1.1t.i.....' .... ~ ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• "'l'U" .. ,.. n.uui b .... · ~· E I"-" Br • 1~ r I" ·-EPS TO BAY ) Br Home. Pool.Jae. very at• •raaln rmt price. --1.12t..f7· 1 2 bdrm. l bl, 1ar. ldry, • ut;a-.. . +enc Avotaooll51S190 +WI' . .BUll!!l.l!!!ll!!!lf--t~ a ~ -~~ ~. nMIC Iba, fem nn frJ>lc aar' pvt. new. Av I Ort lit. ooly IMO! Chlld~n ' Udo IJltnd. clean Sbdrm, dJahwuher, fpr M50 •eet;•nu 119Uo, d/w. la Univ~~~ *-15 o "2 m lpacl09l 1 Br. Apt 1•' 11 ..... ~IT_...D Smv"atl 2 patloe. -wi.oter' SUOO mo. 7AM lo 3PM pe11 wtlcome! •HO lba, 2 car pr, tra patio. winter 113 7083 <21SI .. ~ ~1 Dr S..NanaJtr S Btdl Un.It. bot wtr pd, oa 9.a . Pool. ~ -w'* ~ OPEN aza 81 hire 640-smG. After67~ Plua ceotr11ly located s1.1001mo.W.lS23 258.!!60 _ A,.ArnieCTS t;!t•~ nill now. tu.t·mo. ._. fee., frpl,, • , u,.tlvt Owner wlll · PP · AakforCbudt. 2br . 2b1 ho mt w t -Winter Rental 9 Ill to Buutlful landscaped NEW BREEDAPTS. ~Camino• • ctilp .. ll • tr1dt · ma lie otr Br Zba ocwly dee not 1p1clo~ grouod1 just WISTCUflf COMOO S.l2 3 Br 2 aa. SMo. aarden apts. Piallot or 1 BR with LOJo'T, BACH E Id~ 1 Ba 19.te4. 1, •.• WIMTll llMT ALS 'all Oct i87 S42s UD Two bedroom• Two 8 Ibo p· Sava e decks Pool ' Spa. rov with t.On Prom SSS<> uta e r. • c.'ihtld"~. ._ o. IU:H lft¥ell1Mftu runi. 2 story• bdrm, 3 :~:,~~ ~l&SO 5• R_entlmes631~1''" b,•ths. Dlnlnfl room wTide 1 Co~~s.aoos. 1 · ercd parkln.1 Adu.lta, no Fr-pk, rec' room, pool, ~~u21u1• 00 pSI. Im Mo. NZ-11011 WM "10 •fPM . 7 117 be, w/d, clole to Bay. -2 Br 1 ba nr beach t lreplace. Adults. No ----peta. JaCUUI 1111 & Wiler ..__14 --!1'H· lllnl nun .. rrt 4 •rvtt SlOOOtmo. br, zi,; b•. Jumlne $385 tmo 'vard Avail pet.a.$450permonthyrly AVAl.MOWl 2BR H•SA. k85 paid Adull.6 nopda.J83 l.u11 8uhtlor. new, .!l~on.srut.M n,uw Crttk. Av~. now $1250 lOll SJ6-83l2 lease. 631·7300, Broker Cute 2 Br furn units 28R 2 B.A '515 Hamllt.o11, CM ~II modern, £ut1lde. Nnr bta~Br ,a. Ba 2 ldrm, l balb. Near So. 2 Bdrm, 2 ba, wld, I 'mo 67,_..195, 673·14711· 1 BR 1 blth nr beat"h LEASE/OPTION with garage. Upp!!r S600 3118 W. W1llon 631·$583 Q!.631·200. -' private pMlo; 1'0 p«A. ndldt t~4r Co11t Pl111 Terrlflr houae from waler. 4br. Harbor View Hills, S3.85tmo V~rd Avail 4 br, 3 ba exec bOme on yearly. Lower $5 15 . 1 Br-;-tove&refnae. utll• '350 ~. • •• M'o. ratal aru Super condl· 1125/mo. new crpt, paint. Av1lll 1011. ~12 S1111aex Ln in WeatcUrt. Agent 675-31190. paid 1375 Mo. 2 Rr. ttC>Ve Delute 2BR. 2B~. Upper. _... : _ tloo. W1terfrontHom!ll, Inc Imm~. SL500Mo. ----Just redone. Avull. now 2 & 3bdrm & bach apt. ~tHleld & refrige. "2.5. Adult.a. Bttkony Encl 1ar, wall • • 873-m> Boon1eA ent644·002 H.t'"'°" $1800. Oplion price Cluo. Rent negotiable ---=-no ts.646-4382 to w11ll t11rpet, frplc, MA__,WAUl 3-2-2·1. S1,1per t'Ondltlon 3 Br. 2 Ba. Family Home. •Small I Br. frpk,single H.n,ow 3242 ~.ooo. 75.2-2550 535·67 675-0318. FAMILY Am Avail now lBr u lain A-<ail 10/1. kOO me. 2 • 3 Br. T~se ftrtt e u d lOX b h ....i .. ., 3232 A<'rou Crom water. 3 u ~ r a. u.. f f . h 1 2 apt. Dilhw11;5her. water --.. •••• M'6 ~ 'car· a ~. r I Near brt1k even the frplc, carport, w/d, dis· or cozy couple. $495. Utll ••••••uu ............. E Bl I ndo 3 b 2 ~ b Ocean front .. .i .. w 2 & 3 Sparkllo~leltl lrl{ apt.s . . ps S.2·04 Apts. Patiol, a ti Y ar. n er waa er. Oct. 1 to June ..... ....,.. . Bdrm. Avail immed 835 Amigos Wy 19. $900. Br. 2 Ba. 2 1111r11ge or am1 wit or & trish pu1d, rttrport 0... f'oillf ~ H ff . a . lr()tt. 15. 6J$·71Sleves. Coato MtM 322 $900 yrly 846 4457 & 213-541·~. 541.41113 Winter. $600 Up. 640-4184 ch~dren. Near p11rk No Adults. no pe~. SS'7S + ......... r............ bl :. !! • RED CARPET leltoa P1d 1 .. 1 l 107 ...................... 846·"55 NewDOtf Cl'ftf Owner. rilR 2 BA '5l5 S300 deposit. Agent, aQ Coodo.t.~!"l· ocn•u df(k, · • ~ • 4 00 ••••••00•00 .. ••••0 •• NEWEXECCONDO l"IM 3244 3bdrm.~\1b1 Newport Cep&1tr.oleaclu371 2BR l~dM k~ fee ~5-~ fplc.~mo 5P&r*'8 -~. D •• 754-1202 OCE.\NFRONT, winter. 2Bdrm,2fullba,m1cro, con do in quiet ...................... l98W Wllsoa 63ISS83 2 br 2 ba pvt patio .. •9i·~.~C1QO -.lt1c ~r ·l-}l-itJ"i;, • Al Z br, 11r.;'patio, utils pd, J:r dr op, pool. jac •••••• .. ••••: .. •••••• neighborhood or beach. On the beach 2 br winler · -~-twnhse, iiOOi. lndry rm, H.t .... lledl 3'4 hoe SI.a. •. C1cMf - Cl '575. Adults, oo pets. 95 /mo.Agt154-1202 Wooc1br!d9t Amentiesincl 5pa,tp>I. rental vacant No MEWPOIT utils pd, 2 ctuldren ok ......... ~ ..... -.. C.O k~ •·!1 11 ( MAKE 4H OFFER! 8751 Brar>d new2 Br. Condo, 2 Somerset. 2 &Inn, IYI lighted tennis court5 , smokers or pets $1000 APAITMIMTS k2.5/mo1 lsUdast +de· TNIW.....U'J'IS S...a,. l•t • J 2·&lory FAMILY HOME Ba, 2 car gar w/elec. b 1 c 0 n d 0 sounas. 24 hr sec Now molnrl1UuW496-790.J.._ 2 Br. Avail. S320 mo. posit 11178 Maple. nr I.uxu Ad'*unltutel 1Jc, ltn,ols, ft. ~· 3 Income Properties. 3BR 2BA, frplc, w/d, lit do_or. frpk. dishwasher, ~8:'~~fdryer. S700 mo availatS900permo CotlaMno 172 Plus ut1ls No children. Harbor & 190!, or caU forda'Jc bvatg. u a. s B tJ N ~ T Ghflf~ 'I East.Ide Cost• Mesa blk to bay bch. S800 mo micro, washer & dryer. --Call Bruce8S1·22169da. ....................... no peu, nowaterbed.s mana er 645-S!Wl. et VI ell derorated GARDf:Ni .L .., ., q ,, Owner will carry W 1 n t er rent a 1 pool, jar .. balrony No QUALITY&LUXUR\' .J:ll:.._2205evs wknds 2450NewportBlvd For rent 2 bdrm. l ba CX,mpicsla pool,11cht: Bet.a ~6it"a •'"n l'n ~ Pricedtoaell! (2131476·7138 wknds pets Avail. Sept l5th TurtleRockStewart BAYSHORES 4BR.3BA SUS CASfTAS ~Mesa duplex, garage. pnvate edtenniH~iit,J.eOui. ~~ , , ··I.·~ Cl '. • 1 Mon ' Tues 1714 1 S800Mo.S40-22S3. •5Br.3Ba,SW0mo Ho'me . Arross from Fum. 1 br apt S.145 & TIIE SEVllJ..E 2 Br 11>! yard Cllf l'iOOrno perk ~Ile land!lca,lai1 ~-'I • · ~ 675·3935 SPACIOUS Woodbrui&e Biscay Swam Beach. $1400 mo. up. Encl. gar. Adults, no Ba Adults new crpls 8.11·103 Most ~autlful bldg fn )9lll CONHcWW. l122 1 Bdrm condo nr So •4Br.3°Gor~o 213·385·2176 21J.441-32S2 :S~4~1~~;Ts~MBI. drapes. patio, gar : Large Ga~pt. 2 Br H.B -"'"•••••••••4•••..._ • • ~JIN'. .. ..................... Coast Plaza. Woodsy at· PROPERTIES Steps beachtbay. 3 Br 2 --water pd Call 1 S. private patlO. glr'igr ---~19 _ Deluxe Adult la~ J ~ ~ "IA YROHT" mosphere Security 752-15119 Ba patio gar $800fmo LocJ-o '""-3741 636·4120 Mature adults, no pets Deluxe poolside xtta Conclo. Outsta W'C' ' Completely furnished kSO/mo -----rt' 613·4'36~1:;73 •••••••• .. ••~••••"•0• 2619 "E" Santa Ana Easts1de SUS Mo . lu1e 2br, 2b:a, bltl'll, Pentb ~11te V .--.! • • ~l~o~!g~~\'e deluxe Condo. l Br 1"'1 Waterfront Homes. lnr ~oodlbr~dge S:,S'~o. 2 LUXURY IA YFROHT Furn lux studio. spa, TV, $475. 642·0461. dswllr. l~ miles beach. O\ttl~g • •• Col>l:i Mesa. CA Ba.. large private 631-1400 --P~rt p:rk~~~ 951·~~~3 . . maid servlre. phones, LUXURY DUPLEX 2 Br l Ba 571 W Joann. 1 Adlts, no pt!ts "50 IDO Harbo~'j . I .8 patios. Avail. short NEAR .... EWDPLX B d lBr.2Ba.withboatslip. Sl25wk.499-222'1 2 Br. 2\11 Ba. dble gar child OK no pets SJ7S 536·831i. •$1SOOatcr. I p a ', • rm. 1650Mo.759·1092 · ir ie Avail._ ~t 1st, Many .-wportleoch l769 1650 sq ft. with every S1erca 'M1mt.. Co -2BR mACONDO t~upPetets ,' • Lower 3 br, 2 ba. with 3 Br. fam rm. dlbl amenities. S3500 Mo ........................ xtru, huge rear yard 641-1324. Adull.s 'upgraded. 'Re. ft <21i1stz.*4.m ·UW. • , ~ Tboramdee oLnu~~aycrNe e,.'?'In~ "°9-o leoc:h 1141 frplcJ lge din. area. bit· garage, cel\tral air. pvt Bf'!!ker67~12. --Oceanfront. Sharp 2BR. with RV gate. Adults. 2 hug;bedrooms Growid wuhldr)'. ~. 968-4"1 • P"h coado.. 1 bli Jr~; I r ,.. u1 ....................... ins, fenced rear yard. 2 yd, community pool & 2BR, 1BA frplc, hrd wd $625 Mo Winter Adult $675. 673-6336_.. 642-9666 fl · · d/ -----'-"' ----:.-=-bcb, Utr'6or (tat'lfk!, . 1 ~ come Units or? Equity Charming. N end. 2BR. car gar. Near 19th & spa. S700 mo Avull 1m floors. open beams. Xlnt 675.33821213-195.3018 Westside Duplex Modem oor'. fully carpete · 2 br, $3SO + '350 ~p. ftpt, eoioL' ,_. ...... tnQ I j • S280,000. Act now! 2BA,lrplc,Ubrary,den/ Newport. $700/mo. I yr med. Suzee Miller area f79Smo 631.5416 --Apt 2 Br. 1 Ba . bu1lt·ins Super location. Crpts, drps. Nr Bearit 113.5s,-.U7t dt~OO Broker Co.Op. A&ent dining, deck. ocean, lease No pets Wkdays 559·9400 · · -Yearly or Wanter. fully Over SO Adulu. no pets. Blvd/McFadden. All .,..,... ~. 631-4516. hillside views, magi" 1213)2.54·9192; wknds & Lg ~B r . 2Ba. newly furn. luxunous ocean Downstairs with fenced SJSO Mo. Apply Apt. B. adult no . 893-4814 .~Yi • · . ..U. I s I .J • • . 103 ON. 4.pJex. 15 avail I garden wt gardener eves (714,67s-~-'--_ furnished Villa Balboa. front I Br. Apt. Slee~ 2. small yard. enclsd 568 W Wilson.~4417 iu-fr hi . ted l"IH • lff4 1 Riverside. Lo nef cash Washer/ dryer $900 mo. £ASTSIOE cute I Br cot owneL_87H174 Call 21314451Q28 -garage. carpeted. Quiet-Adult$ over JS. 2 cl;~o. ~nio. pain • h ...... .--... ...... ·,,t,;., Clow. Depreciate 17,000 yrly. Avail Oct 7th tage, semi.furn .. S430 CAN Al FR 0 NT OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br drapes, central heatmg Bdrm. Downstairs. S38S ~ ~l ~· ~ ~-- ut yr. Income Sl9,000 497·531§_ mo, 1st & last. Blue Chip SPY GUSS LEASE HOME Avail. Winter. Weekl y I ~~1,r~i:is ~o secc~i:~~en Av a ii ~ct. Beaut HW>tm&t.on °jfart>oufibi.' ~m ~WI .~ )1U'~' yr. Sl79,<XKI. 675-7270dys, wport leoch l 169 Propenies857-2040 S22oo per month for a 6 Newp()rt Shores 4 BR 3 Monthly. 673-7873. 548·5442 770.5629 landsrapmg. No pets. Juat tia7S ' Sltcellent area micro·w•*· ~-~· 67S·6222eves. ••••••••••00•"•"••••• For lease: Exec condo, 3 Br, 41, bath house with Ba. I year lease. S2,000 BEAUTIFUL 2 Br 2 Ba LEEWARD APTS. 2020 for kub too! •11486 Pt11' ,.r. Next Co .,,~ --------•1BAYCREST 5 bdrm br. 2"'2 ba. front & rear great vieWll Gardenmg mo. Isl & last Gwen WIMT81UMTALS 1 Mesa Verde. llOOsq. ft Fullerton~M.63l·~-s unny studio wlall the "senior db:Url tealer. home wf pool. large yard pvt yard. spa & pool Nr services 111cluded Henry, I OCEAMFtlOHT fplr. lndr.>. dishwshr. N~w Dtx 2 IR exlru $arlWnC J)OOI. StlOO mo_. 0.ys. ~ 98 llMITf' $2000. LIDO ISLE CdM Fwy Avail Oct 15 D M McnhalR"" RI CHARD SOWER S, 2bdrm,lbatbS475 enclosedgarage Adults. 2 ba, gar. decks. yd, sa.111 , 5pa' SJ25! ~w $vet.83).-0:JIJ: , . • un "l charming 4 bdrm, 2 955·2700 . . RLTR 3bdrm,2bathS625 no pets tsso d luls/ k $62S depostt too'•~ • I 14-7Pltires I bath, newly redecorated Easts1de 3 Br. 2 Ba. pool 760.0ll5 _714-598-567_1_ 3103.Mac_eAve 54_0.4409 1~.a~fio \. pet 0 RegU!!iet~..W ~ Ntwpottled D6' Sl800 mo Yearly Bill +pool house. ~·n Call RENTALS BLUFFS 3 Br 3 Ba · Lornwkda547·~71 HUNTINGTON BA°t 0•:•e~f~,!!~:"'w•~l •• V Grundy 67' "161 ......, I Br I ba, upgraded con , ... .,_ "'" ~ ery Low Down • """ · Christina 557 2783 or 2br. 212ba S795 Fam Rm Pvt Jacuzzi do Nr So Cst Plza Ten· eve wkods546-S434 CXl°'JDO Rentals l'uruishe.I''' Owwer .... CasJl! 851·5117. 3br.2ba $875 Sll~Mo§"-2.300. n1s , pool. volleyball. Lge I bdrm. 1 ba. up 2 Br 11/i Ba. Pal10, W\!uni.Brom.67~ BAY VIEW CONDO 2Br New 2 br 1i,., ba 1300 sq 3br, 2~iba $925 WINTER RO.IAL·4Br. aduil k50imo 95?·1Yl22 stairs apt. 01.Shwasher, carport. wuher dryer l'lO J"i[' NA. & CofjijO s..a Tex Write-Off Foti lhcrow.Poulble Iii". & Prillcipah VltkOIO.. Rldilyiers 714/76~7292 2ba. nicely furnished ft water landscaped. 4br.2ba S82S 2Ba dplx, furn unfum. Ag_t carport,S400mo. 111d, Water!ttashpa1'-t 1.a1S.rQ\\ta aJs Sec bldg. $1200/mo yrly luxury condo Gar opnr, Le Rai!Qr Rltr,_833-8600 some ocn view 5304 2 bdrm. 2 ba. rireplare. I 640-0097 Cotnm. pool Muhl, oo en • 2 Br 1 Ba Pool, garage ---""'ls '550 + $600~1+ r microwave, frplc, pool & l~ leoch 324 Seashore Dr $800 mo car gar. on ocean. Week No pets S48s Mo. 1395 A 3 Bd , 2 ba, nr So Cost A ~l no fee 545m'' VILLA BALBOA !Br + spa.S750.645-4045,M1ke ...................... 8518070 J.t!Monthl .978-9172 Baker.6410763Blwn91, Plza S4il5. upper unit. ~ -PAii ~~~at~~ ~lhp:i~~lse; •CHILD WELCOME• OCEANFRONT Mobile San c~........ 327.6 Steps to Ocean, Lennis, Mon.Fri 641·86.57 w~or wkdys t,., Bloc:k to Beach. ll:IR. C0":1J:Yc•u.lll . views. SlSOOfmo yrly. 2 Br l ba $5.50 Homes $1000 mo Dbl .. ••••••••••••••••••••• jog. bike. 2 BR. 2 BA. 1 Br stove. gas paid. aft 5 2UA Adults. S4~ 124 ~ Waterfront Homes Inc 3Br2baS600 wide.499·lH5 -Not a mirage! $Z75 rents Wntr pool Couples preferred. Easts1de lBR. Util pd. 20th.§.tre'-'! ~!L · -~ ' Nodogs. Cosey I BR . frpl c . u!lb paid' #4981 Also inrlds \ano. ina, . OK $350 mo. 644 8420. dupes. frpllc. Hdlsd aptslctotfa~ ··' 631·1400 ' Cptstd~.yard,gar • BEACH HOUSE • this cozy cottage wrall Elegant2 R~~ \'leW, Ref's $J!l.646-S7Z7. Lrg yrdarea.Smallpets I Br bu1ll·lm, Cll'IJels, Bachtto9"t'2 ro,otn j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! f'resh&Clean960-398!1 beamed ce 1I1 n g sparkling 2bdrm wall linen, T e . 1 mo Mesa Verde. lge 2 br. 2 833·2650 yard . enclsd garage. :rrona •tt ' W ·191X ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ VILLAIALIOA Charming2 Br l ba. brirk Courtyard S Lag. 1.595 ma1or appliances ' Low Ag_tn.646· ba. adults, nu pets. 2 BR 1 B -1 f d w d hook up S-125 Mo OceantrOftt large 3 Br •• f C. M. TR I PLEX. good Luxuriously appointed frpk, gar. laundry facil. mo. 495·4486 de posit! Ava1 I. now• S400/mo !17!J. l6S8 • a. sng g' ar. nc 536...:..0921 _ Ba. Upper, i car earao, area. assum. loan. OWC. two bedrooms or one and Backs up U> golf course :> rooms imfum except Must see! $375! #4924 ~~~ail~~~~lo f~~ u)nr Almost new 3 br 2 ba Ii: Y~. grdnr pd, • mi to A~ail now' Super large a frplc, yearly lease. $120( priced righl. Prin only den. Fabulous ocean $.550/mo. lse Waterfront G E box Frplc. gar. 12 Rent1mes631:..~ Fee round 2l~192 3469 Eve. hving rm w fireplace. ~~h S4~ture 67~·~hild Br. frplr, lndry hoqk.up. Mo. 642·}143 Bkr, 979-UIJ view Maid servire. Homes, Inc. 631·1400 m1 to ocean util by • Near Bch 2 Br 2ba . 642 4957 microwave 2 car gar w ' ~: -4 u n 1 t b Id g Ed . 1 8R ";Vmaflh». p~ YACHTTIMESH.ARE S2000 per month. Six Quiet Easts id;-Sharp own e r S 8 o o mo· Ocean \' i e w Ca 11 ~AClFIC SUNSET elec. opener. priv pal10 2BR, IBA. I child OK. No inl(er Bo~a Chica S.SS:O thonse, 15«ldl!f rnon61i Business for sale. com months lease 631 7300 2BR fenced \rd lndn· 494 0154 Sall Sun ls. 492 4016· e\ VlEW $750 & util 644 4998 or ~ 2563 "D'· Elden Mo ht & last. S2SO 64+· 5! . UI! ·04(5, ~ plete. Joint venture or Realtor spa~e . dbl.t·a'rport Exerutivestyle family 494-8727 ___ 15 steps to sand. Lg 2 759:,.54l2 :__fil5·8074 ___ -secul'l!L ~3!!1 __ ~ID ..,j., (~~~t,~ right ~~~;~s~:~/f,;~h~~.~~· 67~~3·a·u0112311s,1~~ ~P~~ ~aor~: ;a~:~:~:~e~~~i~ ~~:!':!~:~ ...... ?~.~~ 85l'trl~-9m4fla7~.'c!1°:~ ~ •••••••••••• •.• ········~··••, •• ~= .:; .... ;· IHVESTORS )'thing furnished $895 ~arage & beautifully Avail now 2 Br 1 Ba. , Pnme 2 yr old single MQ...7~9117 Elegant Executive Home landscaped yard' Kids Water & trash paid, Junior Bdnn Versailles •• 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL ~ • ... , .. !,··.;. family residences show ;...-------· designed for entertain & pets OK' A bargain at ga rage Adults. no pets Rec fac $495 Mo • projective net return of Spectacular v1e Y. ing fireplace,wetbar& onlyS650'1lurry'l!S469 S450 + S400 deposit 644 -5369. 548 0425, 125<;{: +over $25,000 tax Oceanfront 3 br. 2 ba . 2 den • Just ssso · =!>578 Rentimes63J.4M5 Fee ~&.en!. nofee~2000 -751·9110. • 8 Days • 3 Lines • 8 DoH1r1 : CJ write-off 111 lst 5 years. p story AvaJI. after Sept Plus East.side dollhouse 2 NICE N 'EWER HOM ES CCNMlotetW-Bea rh rental, Spac )l,' "' rofessionally managed. 8th. Winter S900or year with large fncd ~d for Both have 3 Bdrms. 3 F.niisMd l400 br. compl furn Steps to • Its easy to place your 8-0ay Week Oass1fied by mall all'd l1' • .r 8 to 9.5~ assumption, ly lease Sl.200. No pets k~:nt1~~~'.~et' bath. din.mg room. den .••••••••••••••••••••••• sand $625 mo yrly, Ul • costs lUSI $8 -thats only a dolla r a day! To Qualify for 'this. • •• with only S12.<XKI down Agt. 548·~ ~~~~1~0cf ,;~a~~\~:: l i9 Cairyon Md.Aain ~-540.8632 I rt t be I f ~ Pnn only Call 1714 1 E.s1de3bdrm.112ba.cul lion 3 Arch Bay, a Beautiful 2 bdrm, den. I _ BR Versailles, pool, • spec1a 0 er YOU mus a non-Commer~& user 0 ~TN"I~· :· 184·2072 ask for Ron. de·sac. frplc. stove. enrl private gated commun1 end unit. attached dble JBC .. sauna, gym, 24 hr • merchandise for sale up 10 $800 per ad. and the price mus( . omts U..tun.islwd backyard. nice area T full d rd S6SO 631 6666 be d Th t th h th A HEWPOITIEACH ....................... S700 S40..:.lf.6 or 548.4471 ty s1.ooomo ga rage aste Y ec. ser. ua .__ · • 1n your a e cos s tays e same w e er you,r av,· • '· Prime duplexes and lolboa lalmd 1206 wkdy_s___ :"'o r t h Lag~. Mo to Mo S!400 mo. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. attractively needs eight days selling time Or JU St one ' ! triplexes In CdM & Bal oreans1de of highway. 644·0SS3 or67J..8585 rumashed. 10 mos S8So • • .. • Peninsula Large as· ·~t·t•1•••1"1•••d•03"b•d ..... • Clean lbdr'!l duplex S1250 mo l\gt 494 7551 0 p . - 1 f-- 2 673-9060, A&t. sumable loans. Low low I e s an . rm. Off street prklllg, quiet --ana oint nice y um --• Use one 0 d n each bo It. i....~ t 4 0 ds mak"' n• : .. down. OWC2nd. ~en. $1250 mo. Lse Dot· S32S. No pets. Ava119 25 Laguna HMJ-1 )25 BR 2 Ba, w ID. attuch~d Oceanfront 2 br. 2 ba . W r I X l"'\.VVU W r ,.. 0 111 ' • C/2 l MewportCntr t1e640·0997,67S-600 848·2474. .. ..................... gar. w1opener. sec. A~ail weekly monthly e . classified line of type Minimum ad is 3 lln9s. Please pt.,-,t' · 640. 357 lolboo ,.,.... l207 Lrg exec Home. 4BR. Shore~ J Br. 2 Ba beach. fplc, patio. Pool, jac.. wanter. 752_:!466 • plainly .............. ••••••••• 3BA. den. Nr Hoag Hosp tennis SSSO. No pets tennis, adlts, no pets. 6210 Oceanfront. 3 br, 2 i "'=4 2100 3e;r.~B~ ts~mi;e~cc~ t~e!'.uJ~c~~·a~c:a~~ ;~.2~~t 325 ::~;~·~~Knolls NB2 ~~·~SO·J~~·~.baj !7~k •• r-------------------------_-..;-.--,r 1 ••••••oo••••• .......... view. cute. lux condo. mo. Nancy 642·4573 18·31 ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• Br 3 ba Long or shrt < 213 I 596· l 7 09 or --------•I S87S mo. Call wknds Bill 645-5218 wknd 's Lg 4Br, 3Ba. exer home term s'iooo. 673·1624, 1714l761--4601 • 1 • ~ Wmtrialc.do 673·9157 or wkd ys AvailOctl. on the water Prof de-613-5261,67~2543 SHORTTERMS Terrific 5300 sq ft in· 673-6098 Nice. Clean 2BR. !BA corated. lg cover ed COltdo W.U.S Beacbrent.alsbyweek • , t 1 • dustrial condo with 1200 New. custom, luxury 3 br New carpet, feored yrd, patio. great home for en U ~ 3425 or month. Agt, 675-817(/_ • • .c sq ft of ovvlce available home. I block from encl gar,. No pets $500 tertaining SllOO mo .... ~ .................. $700 mo. 2Br. 2Ba. frp lr. J( 'I ! ~ in Fullerton. S120,<XKI of Ferry, 4. frplcs. 1ac, 2"'1 Isl & last. 2S46 Orange 586·8430 -NEW 2 bdrm, 2 ba, slove, pool. only avail Oct & •• f: · ''.~•: , t auumable financing ba.,ar.Mo-to-mooryr. "D"CM548-2718 .-wportleoch 3269 refrig. WID. carpets' Nov.548·~ ( . a_nd selle~ will help ly. 1500/mo. Can fum. 2 BR Nwpt Hgts. garden, •••••••••••• ........... drapes. patio. dbl gar. S..to AM l710 • , , . finance th as 3 yr old 730--0682, 968-~ ssoo per mo lsl last & Sea view 4 Br 3 Ba, family ~c $750 552-8672. ....................... f • buildine. Priced to sell Cepistn.o leaclu 1218 dep. 71H7S.m69 . rm, d1n111g nn, O<'ean & Villa Balboa Dix 2 mstr 2BR I BA. Nr SC Plaza • . f • . • a~ ~·~ Exclusive .... ••••••••••••••• .. •• night hght views Pool & bd 2 ba S900 962-5121 or Re~t incl Gas & Water • , withW1lliam,,,.Cote ndo, ocean view, 3 Br. EASTSIDE tennis SU.xlprmo 645.5118. SSOOmo.646-M97 • • . I .a · '., t Cote Realty 21,; Ba. Dana Bluffs. 2 bdrm, 1 ba. fpc. dble 1._ pool tenrus etc S750 detarh gar. Large Waterfrontlease.4Br4 llVINE • add$260 8 i•-·· & !nveslment 492.6700 • · yards. S600 per mo. 2401 Ba. family nn. top con New 2 bdrm condo for • " • for each lddltlonal llne for times ~ 640-S777 Ele anc.e & economy ! Norse Ave. 642·6368 dlt1on, dock for 40' bo:it lease. Min· Park View! lolboo r.-. 1107 I • ·• ~ rents this Spanish BToro l2l2 SJ900 Xlnt loc Nr UC!. $700 ....................... • I ~-:-;-..: '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~style 2 bedroom family ....................... mo. Call (2131 258--3563 Bach. S36S. I Br. I Ba • p bl' h d f S d t t• '1 • • : ... _.,.. LehforS. 2200 home near the beach! Elegant3bd.rm2bahouse 4Br4Ba.clean&sharp, before8AMOraft7PM Bay Sade. $450. A.dults. U IS mya Or aySS ar lnQ J' ,,., •' ....................... Plush carpets & large al an economical price! next to tennis & beach Be one or Lhe lucky few,.. no pets. Savage Wilde & • • I . (' 1 ~ THE PRIVACY OF chef'sk1tchen!Children Just$S95!Featureslge StSOOmo.RemaxofNpt. Rent in Costa Mesas Co.675-6600. . =Classification 1 . ') ESTATIUYING &petsareOK!114981 tiled kitchen, massive BoborDovle759_;_122l NEWEST gated 20 2 bdrm. 1 ba, fireplace. ~.~.r;;. Can be yours on this Renlimes 631·4555 Fee brick f le & enclosed WESTCLIFf 'fownhome VILLAGE ulil pd. SS50 mo Name I ~ .. ..; ,.,.,, 2+acre homesite COY· Great loc. Super clean 3 · 1dren & Luxurious four CO MMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br 646·5143•675-QISO Add l · • ,, ,r e red with mature Br 21,; ba, frplc , New petsare welcome !llSS66 bedroom, three bath 2"" Ba. l600 l800sq.ft. CotOftodefMcr ll22 'IA reSS t,•.c ~~! • 1voc1do trees with ac· paint, drps & cpl. $750. Rentimes631-4555 Fee home. Beamed ceilings ~f ~ure lu~ur~'. Garag:s. ....................... • • cess to a private lake & 491HiM2wknds&eves. unt~hoch 3240 in Living room and fami Y ro·tu 5 tn m.as. er Wallt to bch. Quiet 3 Br City Zip Phone riding trails. Sl2S,OOO. o--cWMar l2U •••H••o•M••E••F•O••R•R":,:~· .. ly room. Secluded pool suite. formal dm~ng 2ba. dplx, gar. S900 = ____ _._.,___re ~' Down as low as 10%. In· ·-.,.... size yard. Space for boat r!>oms, wood. burnmg Child OK. no pets. Drive Check or M.0 . enclosed 0 . 1· lerat as low as 9%. .. ..... ~................ 4 Bdrm. S6SO. Fenced or trailer. Sl.850 month fireplaces, micro-.wave by only. 719 Heliotrope ., \.! i' AGENT 723-8333 BR ... Honeymoon .cot· yard & garage. Kids & yearly basis Agent ovens. f~ced pellos & Avail 10/3,972-9406 • Charge my ad to: I ...... t , . tage Canyon view. pets wekome. 54S·2000 63 308 yards. Pnvate .. elegant , • ( I lt8clllet, ,._, stove. no pets, adlts. A t f 1·7 · Living only 15 minutes Duplex at be~ch .3 bdrm. ta :,.a ,' ::. t tiroY" .673-1464 gen ,ooee. Harbor View Home. from Fas}lion Island, 7 2ba.raol.aslicv1ewS97S ... 0 ~ # EJCp. • 1 ,.,.... 1 <:·, · oo•••••••••o••oo••"" asmlne Creek. 2 BR & Brand new 3 br, 3 ba beauliJul uecutive 4 Br minutes to S.C. Plata or mo. 675-18 L.:_~1 _ Ore100 ranch for rent. den, ocean view. Tennis housefordiscriminating 31,; Ba .. landscaping, 0.C.Airport.Justeastor L.-,attracffyt • • • I .... 1 ' ~Imo. 200 acres. 2 br and pool. Lease Sl,750 family. 2 blks to beach alarm system. seperale Newpo.rt Blvd. & so of 1 bd~ wit.b fireplace • 0 # Exp. . I.• . ·. fl house , stream fW0.1212 Totally upgraded m•ids/guest apt SlSOO Sao DaegoFrwy St.a.rt· OR, LR. porch. dis· .,~. Lakeview. Or will sell, EAN FRONT. On the G a rd e n e r i n c I . Mo. 159·0279. Ina at Sl<XKI a month. hwasber, stove. Newly • L I • !" ::-~.:;!~3l4lor Buch. Pvt Rd. Split ·~'::·~~1~tage. ~EWPo.THGHTS. ~3v1~~J!ta2~!a~range 67la5~~lslcaped . S6 5o. ta r:-:::.::..-:.-wE-:-LL-PAYTHEPOSTAnE--~==.::::,. •.:.· .. ·" t level. 3BR. 2BA. SHOO $600/mo fll"St ti last. SlOO Lake new custom built . .., 9 ¥ , 1 IHI~ mo. No pet&. ~f req. cleaning, all util pd. 619 three bedrooms., two Dtpitlff Fw1I 3650 Unusual Bach apt. $275 • I ~·t ·• ; 4 bcti.p 2100 873.2875 Main SJ6.l45J, baths, formal dini~g ....................... includes util. Needs • 1 111111 NO '°5TAG( 0 ,j ~. ··~ •••••••••.............. Blks to ocean, l900sq.ft · room . Eating area in Steps to Beach. 28R, part TLC. 67~. • l · : ~ · NEC£SsM)' l i ~' SOUTH LAtiUMA 3 BR 2 Ba, dramatic Want Ads Call642-S678 kitchen. View. Slsoo per furn. Lower Duplex. Jm· 1 Br. + Den. flreplare, ,• '. . •, '. • fJ ~ ... J•l..EO ; ,. l "~~ -..: .. , ' Gated Estate area. 3000 split level. Fplc, Sl,050. Mewportleodt J26 month, yearly lease mac Yrly. Mature Cou· large deck, enclosed !. '" :ff( "~ .. ~ft. Fant&lt.ic Ocean Non smoking family dis· ...................... 631·73001 Rott.or. pie pref. SSZS. 631'31115 ~rage. 1 year lease. 1e RX 1 UNITED ST ATU d' . M w. Prof decorated. 2 count . Submit on ,..o 77""' .. 7 .f 1,.., $.Sff,OOl1ortrade for children & pets. 404 AHltw.nfw.w.d • . .r""'. 3 1•. w' -I ,·.·i;,·1·:~ Palm Sprinp or Lake Fernlear. appt. 675-6675 ; Ji.:. .................. Coste MtM 124 E BUSINESS REPLY LABEL , , Arrowhead condo or 845·26e8 ..... ..._., 3706 ...................... . ... IWLYDICOI. 1•"' F111srcL•s.sPE11M1rHo u .co'"'.MES•.<•t.•'0"'11•·., a 1 ::=; . house ... ••••••••00•00000••• "' • b g , : i •"'tJ.1. 4tt-3470.~1-821.S To·Dlace your Steps to Ba1; !Br, great I Br. au pd, encl gar • ,!! POSTAGE wu 19£ PA1>81t AOOAESSEE • ' ) ff .··o1~•r.1, ..,. Patio, frplc, gar. S43S d/wasfier. pool. Adults a: p 11 • " VllWHOMI "Fasl Result" winter, OPEN. 328~ 642·5073. • < Orange Co11t Dally 1101 §1 l '1"'.~~ 8eaulllul Turtle Rock Service Direclory Sapphire M44lU 2 Ir. I .. ~ '° I •1 Pilat " Vlew Home rotnpe well 8BR, pool; spa -IRVINE TERRACE. . • II r ,, I 1t $48&.000. Cooalder ad ···· Call Now Beautifully redecorated executive 311 M.'-Yfr°"' Newly decor. 11 pd. : • , • • ... / • MA Bondi for part ol 642·56 71 bo $1500 3 Br. 2 Bt. Waterfront. tncl ear .. pool, dshwr. • <.> ~ ', • : , laraeequky.Submj , ht. JU me mo. WlnterSlllO. Yrly$l400 AduJta.842-507!. • I' ill •. ~ ' ~ ' People who need People Tbat'a what Ult DAILY PILOT SIRV10£DrR.ECl'OR ll all about l ~~3US 6'4-l.S3S 8011580 -llrT••••t • 111t •t.artinl up In. busl· Newly decor. au pd . • ' 330 w. Bay St. ' aeu of your on? A ead car .. pool, dlwhr. e I Cosia Mt11, CA 12621 d sood • ., to tt11 ,..,ae ~·· !0§071 • •, • lbout Clllil wM.btfl d• •d· line aometllla1 1.01& -w..K ;;::.,.u;.. e • . .,.._'tt..u:~ ·················~··· .. • •••• e:t.;...1en1ce .....,_ .. odlw M••; • H111acll•• ! ·-•••J Waj ,.,..... .... , .. . ............................................................................ , ...................................................................... ········································~····· M.HALICCIMITI. llaampoiO •-*m cleao. CUTtrJE.Dfi1REARM COMPLETES!RVJCP'.S Z.OWAR_D'S PAJNTINO AV£RA0El10/ROLL TILE lNSTALLEQ. C1&1to11 IWJmM lrain· Color ~1 wbt INSTRUCTORS teach Carpentry, tile, elec, E.pertln bcM..atokl1. HAITMUOMIT CO , INT, !XT BY Allklftdl.P'reust. AUKi.ftdl.Ou.aranleicL. t11, remod. Jrencb crpta • 10 m1D.. bJeach. all upeda ol hudfun concrete, plumbln1. auppllea harnlihed, Brickwort, ..,...ill, PROFESSIONALS. ,,_ Norm~<*!e ollftld " do0rt.ak:rt0la6pallo Rall, Uv/dln. mu 115 : C t . ·Bf_._ palnUa1. Free ut. lnlltwo -wood fnce. Coofrete XLNT REFS . NO Hani lhtee and aet one rttlt"6u · co ¥1 U • 0 . 40.. ava room '7.IO; cqvcb .. • .. utecleuilnl dooe p !.!~ 0. I cuo m p et. c e A R G E £ s T . hunLfor tree Bob Rinn ..................... .. · ' SlO; cbr a Gu.at, elim.1 I lboroulbly.Callaft.er 11-ttl*. c . .-.. DISCOUNT FOR UN· .rn: 12 TREE D~JGNS.:." petodot.CrJJtrtpalr ....................... main ~p11.-.,,,!Q.f7!1 1.97 J'tJR.N _. in Sc\11 ~ •MWIClllOM 15 yrt trp Do work CLEAN·UPS/l.AWN tcaance, tlec. plumbing, R liable mat w.,..a.... CUSTO=--~nttn1 • ......,.,..,. ~:'T~. a:ov ,.. . Bllildert8'1et lN1 m Rell. 531 0101 Malnttoanee-Landscp c. 1-87 :iu do ~~m~ ••• ;:::................ •-•-•-I"'· tiot • .......... •••••••••••••• Clt!an·u . 631·2:5 Addltlou. ttln0delln1. . . • r Hit ~ lf'dweodflloort Ncw9ort Ptnhuu~a aWWIW~ .. ~· H Neatpatctiesartextuttt - S>laN.Preu1t.Reu. c-.f/C•c... Cleanups TreeTrlm'1 ....................... S7S.5'18 · •A·I ~* ~ ,T75-~72 H J..1 43' JAYI TlllCAU Ll 2110 ••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Haulina Ma!nlenance HARDWOOD FLOORS Top Quallty. Special INTERIOR/EXTERIOR ' -Complttt aervire 'and 1-=~HuU:.:;r&.:1r:a::l111AN!S.--,~SO==N=~ CONCRETEOONSTR. Amle&48-14 Cleaned6Wa~ Reliable. Great work! care la haodlina. ZS yra Realdent.lal/Comm'l "8 •"•• etump grlndiDJ. 10 ,,. Add · Remodel · Patios drlP1tlo1 , walkwaya, Tree trlmnalni 6 re· .bJ!rtime,132-4811$.A. ~~d!p~.; ... 8!!!; Call exp. Co!Yl4)C!UUve ral.H. Rusooable•Ful ....................... ~Ll~9D C b• _ _._ VtWlYI bk>ck waUa ~..,r. !!! _.,_, overt! . 7JO.W 9S.).825.S McCORMACKPLMBG AMERJC•""TR"'•'. a u-· Repain ood de.i:., • moval, clean·upe lraab H..., . • • BC II O v ING _ JNT/EXTPAJNTlNG REPAIR 6 REMODEL SER,,.VI'cr l;flCj c. ~--a R~a·~~ver-haulin& 'main~ance, •••••••••• .. •••••• .. ••• HousXlne~cle~~-Ul/H vy. ,. St R tes c. C....La.......& ~ ll&J) • 'IJI, ....... -.... mowln . D•··. 6'1 ouup JO""' t . &NW ra ... ~·per .. prol .. low rates. Xlnt work, low rat.es. oppaget. eu. ra . ~ 1193 -.._., THOMPSON'S !..~ "' °" Call Y' 968-2538 Quick. careful,aervlce. 557·2'783/'18j).~ Lie. ztmll 87.}-91 ---.--...................... TREES •Small Movtnc Jobs 1 · ouo Ttltortltt CultomCablneU.etc. CONCRETECONSTR. C ILMIKE646-1 HHMtlttilg 551· CUSTOMINT/EXT TOPHA.TP'fmn•lllJ ................... ~., !!!i~!!!!!!!i!!!!!!i!!I CHAR REMOVATl.NG Llc. 842-8482 Top_ped/rc:moved, clean H I I •••••••••••uu•••• .. •• S1'AJ\V1NG COLLEGE EXPERTSERVICE New conatrurtl9n, re· Prlvatr expert tutoriM Ac ~1748 Pool Decks and Patios, uee. lawn~. 751·3476 r!~o~:-0~ °';~~ DON'T BE EMPTY. STUDENTSMOVtNG LOW RATES modelloa. Sptc Ip by Crtdentlaled teacher. ••• ••••noo•••••••• c_..,. .. , Muonry,SporU,Tennil OonzalesGardtning ulcktuv J'.z.7638 ' THIRSTYORLONELY CO. lJc. lfTLZ4..436. NU-BROOK~l4Q3 ~1te11ranta II comm I Moat subject atf foram ... _l PR ; Courts.Uc.37a7. Bob, Maintenance, tree lrim· . ''Security Ph•" wUI sit lnau.red.Ml~ RALPH 'SPAINTING work Li e. #404321 Your ho e 846-:llOU " = .,.. " •••••••••••••••••••••• ••1.1....,."'-·7078 ming, , ...... ft .. 1An. Free c1....-u.y-•ct WATCHUSGROWI · 638-2030 . . • , aales lex, F/S. GEN'LCARPENTRY "" ._,,.,., ..,......., 0 .._ t(J -A your house, plants & E,xl/mt-Reu-Prompt. . lndlVldualiJ.ed prog w l)lete office serv. INSIDEA:OtrrSJOE Dr¥rift est 646·7038 1 ~:!~~~.'~.~~ peta.Call631-7587. •lr';,oC:~'!~0t!':,gu~ Led. F~esl 984-5566 Re~•· &as lines, re· 111 shorthand, typing & .Reu.~5134 Fast,eMdeotaervice ••••••••-•••••••••••• DOMl 'S Reas rates 1(---'-•--~ 5 1 .. 5 0500 AIJ Painting-int M50 ext m .e~s. new const St omce skills.641·0678· • '""" DISCOUNT• ' HAULING •-D,.MP _...,.. -erv ct • l · or ""' Clair a Plusnban° Ltc • ,.... 953.az:s.s oNIV • tree trimming & re· • " •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• 540-8'48 eoSO Neat, complete . ... W•• ~ • ~· ,.•,••••••••••••••••• CompleteRe--'-1'-o Custom, handmade. Lge mov a I gen ma In· JOBS, Uk ror Randy. 1 •••·n7-.. Fttetsl ref.5851·7292 ~-~35CkJ •••••••'=•••••••••••M•• ypay1, parllin& lot Reaid. /comm ~:·or assl or material. Work le nan c e, ha u Ii n g , 641..&427 INAsO LAGUNA ,_.... Ex\, house pa.intin& only Drams from 110._ Malo Orig anal Willdow WUhcr epaira. sealcoatina. oJdlook.uc·d.17 ynin uar.Refs.846-8803 lands l!J!ill .631·9180 H~a.---.sns 543-2117 ........................ Wedot.bejobri&bl! from SlS._PlwnblD& re· Avglbrbome,13$. . SAS Asphalt. 631-4199 M p I b "--I J -r Fall Special. ext/tot LEE Paintinl.894-3'49 patrs, reptpe. 642·9033 631.7_6SB . __ . 1rea. r. a om o .... ,.... G ....... s.rnc.. t SS7-7S68 Mawv ~a. intlng. Prof. Ranbl. --- c. 862·&ll4 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TREES/SHRUB TRIM 1 l ""-u7 ~-1 COLLEGESTUDENT a..odt._'•--i. "Let thtSW1Shmeln" ALLT,,,V"'l'lmeoc •· ••••••••••••••••••••••• reees ·'"""ve ... ._., ....,____.. H ..... RE'DAJ R c_.. tlt---t...... ""''VACA;>.. D1 vo1cr. •y ......... L G ' d I Ellp. Int/ext. J. ob for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca ll Sunshine Window ' AW• L$ -rw·.....,.-Drywall.Clean&de n· " -._ arage yar cean-BRICKWORK: Small PAINTlNO-aJSTOM G I . .... ~ coat.lnc ·Striplng •••••••••••••••••••••• dab! R 631·.,,,...,pe From . 714-842·7030 ups. freeeAJt.SS7-8211 J'obs. Newport, Coala leu! AlexSS2-al31 enera contract an&. Cleanin Ud. T /--' .. .,.,__ w c e eas ~ -work, 2S yrs e .. p. Many home improvements. --rqai nmau. r•~tst. e areCrptClea.ners . . AUL1NG-Student has Mesa. Irvine. Refs. local rers. LJc. M03!Ml. qutllty ptg. Lowest rates Also damage repairs. Lsl WINDOW CLEAN~ • 3973112 645-8181 Steam clean 6: upbols. DRYW AU./ACOU~IC A.Ir C~ lge truck. Lowest rate. 675-3175 Bonded, lns'd. Free est. 1D 0.C. Neat, prompt clasa work. Uc.1196-ln98 Comm~/Rtsld l ~~ Truck IDOi.Ult unll .14 yrs exp. Fully lied 4'c Rod c.."""'~· a... Prompt. Call7"" 1976. F 1 p · Pl •• Hutc"'~ .., ... ""ll aerv. 848-~1 636-7149 Free est Jam, 631·1918 • .m911 Work auar .... -16 msured 532-5549 , ....,........ "-Th _.. _.J bn rp cs· aboll· ano.crs !!!!!!!!.!:! _..... -· looA... . • .................... · ....,.,,, . H-..a. au .. you, o . Forajobdooerigbl, Fin In · b RI h d lNT/EXTPAINTING ,_,, .-,.,alttlng, my home, 1 ROBERTS CA RPET Bectric.. ..":'91, •• Y.111,• ••••••••••••••• Hw~~ Larry7SO.qeves s· e paL.UJIJ >'l3 c arf Lie Refs Free Est ••••••••••••••••••••••• Use the Daily Pilot ·""ft VI t ri _.. ... ,.._.. --tnor. 1c, IN. yrs o · ,,..,,_· 06'7 . BALBOAROOFl.NGCO. ,..,i up, or co a, REPAIR.Realretch,rt· u••••••••••••••••.••••HOMEIMPROVEMENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERTBRICK& happyN.B.customers. _.1 SpecialFallO!fer "Fast Re~ull"servace C,1111'42-84112/646-57:i!I lay.Allrepalrs. ECTRICIAN.-pnced REPAIR PLUMBING ROBIN'SCLEANING Ma•onry. Small JO ..... •· Thank 0" '"'1,..10 P•---'--F t ...,,.,,.,.3 ..... , ,,.. ti b b 1 673-3490 right free estimate on · . · " "" "' ... "" ...,..... _,, ree es . u • ....,,. directory Your nn,.,.part me ays t· larg~orsmall 'bs carpentry, elec, tale. ~rvlce atboroughly repairs. fi'rl>lc facings. NEWPORTPAJNTING ••••••••••••n•••••••••c.....i..L•-U11f: Ann• At home: 1 NoSteam/NoShampoo Lie • .......,.,. JO 67· .. 0359 Reas. Free esl. No job cleah house. 540.0M7 Refs. 551-4.SSS, 760-7074 Comm /Indus /R-ld The Paper Banger, Prof. ....,_ .. ,.. servirt' ts our 5'5-7 rkSU..5323 S ·' S ' "~ .,... • ' ~o 1 --••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ) '' or wo ' lain pecialist.Faat RESID /COMM'L toosmalJ.64.S-281 _1 _ WantaREALLY CLEAN Youdon·taeed agunto Freees . Lowrates. lnstall.Decoratorqual. SPRINKLERINSTALL spec1aty dry. Free est. 839-1582 H' hi ded Carpentry . Masonry HO USE? Call Gingham d r .. be 1142.737 Free est. Steve547·4281 Repair & Yd Clean·upc. Call 642-~78 ext 322 ~idl~ Items wi.t~ alMake your shopping U:: Y11 1aJO..Nojob Roofing·Plurnbin~ Girl.Freeest.645-5123 ~1:::a.na:1n'Uie0D!~~ AVERAGER.M$.1S OrchardWalJcovering Landscapi.og. 645-5597 ~Pilot Classified eaalerbyuslnatbeDaily sma ·631· Drywall-Stucco Tile WANT ACTION? Pilot Want Ads! CalJ Int/ext.Quality work. Expert installation ANTACTION?1 _·S678. Pilot ClutU!ed Ada. Sell idle items 642-5678 Remodel. J.B. 646-9990 lasslfed A 642·5678 oow 642-56'18. Dan ~5107 Reas. rat.es. 631-4576 Want Ads Call 642·5678 Classafed Ads 642-5678 ~·huoc•tau.fw.. IOCNM 4000a..tthto51m't 0 Offlu l..W 4400 -....aa..tal 4450 ...... /lill---'/ A•a.c111111h/ fl•notaall 5350 W..t.d 7100 H..._Wllllhcl 71 90 .._.,,.~ ••• •••••••••••••• • • ........ I ·T ••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• £1.... Pef'IOllllll •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••···~··· "9wpert letd 316 Balboa Inn Bi-weekly $90 w ,..emu B b t t I l .... ,. & K't h tt FtosbareHBCoodo $250 Huntington Beach, 419 n t.ilnhr 120~ 1••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost & ,..... Applications now being a Y s 1 • er. 1 e .. t..''..·.~:• .. u•••....... uprroo: ~~ e. mo.CalJEves&Wknd's. MainSt 14308 Beach Blvd. Btwn 1...._.. ....................... GnatCa .. •f taken ror furniture de· h?usekeeplDg, wlcdi)'I .. .. "~f.._21r. sm. ocean . · 96M723 380s9 rt a\$210 Mo 2 F""'.ys. Civic Ce~ter Opport.lty SOOS Aw•Cfmlllh 5100 Escorts livery drivers. Xlnt driv· 7 30am·6~m. NewpOn adults. Room ~/kit. priv. Nr bus, Female to shr Westclirf Sierra Mgmt Co Shopping Center, pnme ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24 Krs. 641·0180 mg record required Call _Mr. Hood 7~. -~ ~· 66-8lS2 shoppt0g cent.er 6: OCC. apt. Own br, full ba, Ltd 641· 1324__ Joe 979·8889or645-1.260. S w i m m i n & Po o I LADIES Catlt/Clltcb Moo-Fri 8AM lO 9AM. IAIYSITTB · •\ •• Adults. 982-7520 k1tcb use, lite bsewrk. H I OfffCES Retail Store · Best beach Chemical Service Busa· For the ultimate In rt· . · 646-7579 a to 6 Exper prefered. Ni'..&.•IEACH&UY BR" BA. EQjo.y Jae, S24 0mo SlOO dep. 2 del~e offices avaala location an Newport! oess. Laguna Niguel laxataon. Call Relax•· .A.MEIP/MC/Vlsa Assemblers . We wall CalJforappt '.Ur sharp, yrly S6so lanai area, tennis, Joe· 5411-4077 ble on the Perunsula. m S750 Mo. 116 23rd. St. a~a. No exp n«essary • lJOn SpeciallsL train. Apply 7 AM. ~11112 : Z Btliugedeck, furn. or gins traill, lab. 5 min Female to shr Westcliff & 944 s/f High ceilings 675-4185,673-1401 will tram. '50.~. Full (714)951·9'49 Tn1•.t 5450 MacGregor Yachts, t631B -ank--ID-g----=--.· dirf14m S750yrly fro m Jobn W ayae apt. Own br. full ba, Lld w/lrusses Air cond RETAIL SPA.Cf amount req. Will net (Visa & M.C. accepted) ....................... Placentia, Costa Mesa TllLER Ai rport. lit ' lut. kilcb use S240 mo k l'ght t & $40,000 +.Call Collect. · WANTED: Airline ticket . 61S..ill"· 75'·1°'4.552-tlll7 ua .,... . . s Ya s, new cp Choice locatioo on W. Mon -Fri 9·6 PM UlSertlrule to Hous•An or Dallas-Automotive ' , " 67J..0364 ......,.,,7 woqd floors Frontage on Coast Hwy in Newport 408·S67·0lll PSYCHIC-ISP .., Ve~). Les lBr. furn /un. Close lO O.C.C. Pool, non· Resp. person to share Newport Bl SI 25 sif Beach. 1,000 to 3,000 sq. IEA.OIHGS Fort Worth departing Jhm Msilo fu . $SSO mo. yr round. smkr, SlJ~~ ""'10 beau ti fu I New port/ 673,6606 -(t. avail. (714)64.HlOO. Freeskaleto .... qn~l·s~:CS .... te. snaanlest =. •IY '* Los Angeles between I I Ykolnsin ~r C Wedeve.642-4957 .,...Ml · Balboa apt. w/same. Airport-6 oHtces + lg ,. ___ ........ . "' ..., ........ September 7 and 14. s oo g or an am- Xlnl opp for person with basic typing abiliKy, math aptitude and~­ty to handle sums or money Outstanding working condJtJons. fr· inge benlfits, pleasant surroundings. Qualified person may obtain an application al lrvinl"'of· flee, 5325 University Dr, Irvine. Phone (7.14) S52-S32S 1 BR PEN'mOUSEAPT NB .. S~a. pool. S200 mo. 3BR 2BA furn, l house divided rm.SS< sq ft ID· ~re-video games, etc . A.MAMO~ Would like round-trip. bilious in dividual to \'<E;RSAILLES N; Christian Morals. Non-from ocean. yrly, cl.maint+uti1641.80701 lewtala 4475 Com.pletely set·up Experttoc~d an ALL Please call days work In the parts dept. beacb.&3!-0300 · d ri nk er non s mkr. 8S1·050Stxt.380,67S..4709 24-hrs ....................... Choice beach toe . mattersof~fe.Allread-768-5837. ' as a pick·up and dehv. 2•'(f; 1 ba sle to the 546·9890. Mer6, 851·9190 F rmmte wanted, non· Share 2 ofc suite an pre· XW SlloP.Loc. 675-4185, 673-1401. . ~gs ~re pnvate & con· driver. Must be over 18 be·ifch y'rty psOct 1 Eastside Costa Mesa, 1 smoker, Irvine condo. stiglowi airport area. :ns On Balboa Perunsul~. all BEAUTY ~OP equip-C1denhal. Call now, --~ & yrs. old and have a good ~ (2131787 7307 · Br. private bath $.125. 1 1225 +Y.i util. ~7416 sq rt For details call root and auto traffic to menl and fixtures for 673-0836 ,,..,....._ driving record. No exp. 2w;;Z B • 1 bl.k ID ~h ~ Br. share bath '275. in· 752.9069. ' ssi.6226. ~he Balboa Ferry passes 11Ha die . 11 ~ c 1 uhd ~ s : O•• FIEE .. atlOtl ••••••••••••••••••••••• nee. but an interest 10 a · r· cld. utils. CaJI Christina f Sb . BR H . ID front! Great place for y r au IC c 111 r s, anwfl'td._ ,,._,.. •-~ w~ 7075 V.W. helpful Call Rob· ly, gar, adlt.s , no pets 557.27830r851.5117. to are NtC!! 2 se. Professional Office I~ book store. art shop, of· hairstyling stations. . 1 ule -r ,.._.. ---842·2000. '11sb+ uUl675-1706aft4 2 S2 0 h ...., 200 mo.+ Util CM. Pet Newport Beach. Avail rice, etc. 673-2943, mirrors, hairdryers, inaert r ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTOMOTIVE 3 ~.'2~ Ba. 2 story Con· rms, 1 eac . .,,,5 OK. 642·"57 now. Mo to mo. 673·3930. shampoo bowls and SCDlll I~ Exper male practical cW,'·jo ft . boat slip in· ·!'bk door. Lrg Mature respoosible M/F 645·'212or~l.!§L_ lounges, display cases. """'1.Lhl nune, basic home nurs· •LOT'~! PCMIOlll Fln t eluded. $120() per mo. 0 Pvt. 631'5476 Share 2BR hse in HB. Need an Orhce Home MW~ EXEC sm all supplies and more. AUNIEIS ing care. Good cook. reg Chevrolet dealer orfers ~ PropertyHoule,642-:IOO ls,Motela 4100 Walk to Bch. $225 mo. Base~ s min N. Of John A 11.m~ted number. of Call 631-9'75' or, after 6, IWft ordiet.~128(TI4) full or P~·time perma· EOJ..M/~ 11642-1010. ....................... 960-2292, 642-8S24. Pam. W a Y n e A ' r Po r t specaah~ office swtes call 898-681» Relish Siege -H .. W ..t.d 7100 f':~t a'::~=eto1%0~~~ Banking -- Lido Bayfront Duplex SUI.ARK MOTB. Serious Studeiit. lBR + Secretary to answer ~e avail for su~ lease lll•n..... Bring -Viking -....................... body, service, or new Ta.&.ER Spac. 2br. lba. deck Wkly rentals now avail. ba. nice, quiet apt. Nr phone & v1Sator calls ex~l:Si!::r7°~!~~~ Oppott.ity 5015 I never i~~Uer d1S· *ACCOUNTING car departments. Vaned Pen-lime IHIO. Lease. 675-1611 1112 & up. Color TV OCC. No drugs. Pool, ~~~·s ~.sJ,5 1 97 OS· es. Quiet. handsome set-••••••••••••••••••••••• cos. rr 1 wanted to break 1 O ·It e Y b Y t ouch . tnleresting tasks Op-Cashier or rust om er VersailJes. nice 1 br, Phones in room 2274 JIC, frplc.1:!35 + ...., utJI ---ting lets your co. put its IHYESTMen' an arm. I'd rat.her do it Diversiried experience portUl'lity for advance-con ta ct uper pre· ocean view. mirrored New port BI vd C M 751-8133 LIDO IUtLDIHG bes~ foot forward. CaJI: COUMSILIMG the old·fasbioned way -nee .. including lite but ment. See Mr.Studt ferred Must be able to clst,S.S2:S.Sandy642"6149 646-7445 Nwpt-resp employed orferscholceofeconomy Qualilaed Services Inc. w he d SKIING accurate typing. Good HOWA.IDO.•rolet work Sat Call Mr 1 Ir 3 Wiiiet. YBearlyh on the beach male to shr 2Br apt singles SlOOup, todeluxe at 171' )975-0740 for co~e~a~OUf 1~!~~e:t Lost & Fo9d SlOO opportunity with fast Oove/Quat.ISts. LeVan 642-7411, 360 E a c e Io r ro om • across rrm bd\ w/M/F 2-4 rm Bay View Swtes. particulars and viewmg. potential. 2 Free con-growing food company. NEWPORT BEACH 17th St rll~lllis!:pd$54Syear-kitchenette, S280 + undr 31>. non smkr $550 to $1250, 1 wtbath. llldilatriata..hll 4500 su.ltations during Sep-••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa area 13).0555 Y · secunty deposit of $280. 642-1714 3355 Via Lido.673-4156 !ember. Call for 1·n· _645 ....... ·.-..2444--=.'------0el 2 bdrm b h 2306 W Oce f t ------••••••••••••••••••••••• Wtt • 1 at . cean ron · Roommate wanted, So. v1n.1 Of 6500sq rt. 3frontomces. 2 formation and appt. IJND A.CCOUMTIHG priv patio, pool. Conv New P 0 r 1 Be a c h • Csl Plaza Condo, partly .:n 1 d Ric It Keel"'r 631·0213 fO ADS CPA Finn 111· H• .... lnotnn Westclitr Loe. S6so mo. 67J.4154 r s •--'· 1 HEWPOIT HA.llOI arge rave in rear " ..... ,,_ urn. pa, ..,.UJ.Q, poo · doors. 3 phase power.» Ail ARE flE( Beach needs CPA or da67S·3412ev644-9842 Live at Neurnnrt Beach $300 Mo. Call Mike Office with waler view .· C 111 p C H 5-rv kl unalOOor " .. '03'77 Approx 1,000 sq. It. on sq ft. 1779 Whittier St. MofteytoL.o. 5025 PA Candidate to join E BLUFFS 2 Br. 2\.'J l · > 100 wee Y· '"""° ""'""_.. w. C 0 a 5 t Hw y C.M. 540.93.2. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'.U. audit staff. 1·2/y r s Ba'., enclsd gar. pool. Pine Kn ot Mot el. F 18·25 noo-aWAr New· ._._._W 'd h ,__ .,_ publicaccoUl'ltingexper. S. S40-S296&540-7SS9 645·0440 ly redec 4BR 3BA.home. (7.1•>54s-7i~. --"'""lllD cmhd 4600 1 ow u money t.o ..,.n 642-5671 p~ferred. Send resume ir-. a.--.t...&. .. 200 HB • .,~,, . I d ut'l Build to swt omces for ·~··•••••••••••··~··••• for RE. Sl0,000 up. No 0 Near Hoag Hasp. 2 story. ~r-• . _,.,, lllC u es a. lease Loe al Harbor St n g le proress100 a I credit cbeclt, no penalty. to: P .. Box 981, Los very nice 3 Br. 2 Ba ........................ S36-0794 Center on Comer of Jef· w~man ':"ith 5-yr.·old Call Denison Assoc. llEWAIDI Alamitos.!10720. frplc , d/w, laundry rm, Newport 3 Br. 1 ~use Female rm mate ID shr frey & Walnut in Irvine rhald lookin.c for 2-bdrm. 673-7311 Lost small black remale r•-------• garage. S620Mo. Adults, from ocean._ parking. w/same, CdM area. Suites startl.ng rrom soO apl. Reasonable rent Mori Trwt cat vie COM, hu ye11ow A.CCOUMTIMG ooeets.5411-023>. ~5~J!?5 avail. now. clea7n &Lindai:tSP· S300 mo. sq ft . Call Denise. (under S40l!lmo.) Costa DJ:r" 5035 collar w/bell, while fur ADAGENCY WINTER RENTAJABr. · 675-281 557.2792 Mesa/Hwitington Beach ••~••••••••••• .. ••••••• uader neck. Ans to Growing Newport Beach 2Ba dplll, fum/Ul'lfum. YocoffM._.. 4250 Female to shr lg 4 bdr. Profes-;ional & medical area preferred. Call Sotffer~Co. Lupine.Anyinlorpleue advertising agency some ocrf vie w. 5304 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ho~e in Costa Mesa. I office space. 500 & 1000 Answer Ad M90. 642-4300 All types of real estate ,~c•=ll~MC~·=Sdlll6-.-... ____ 1 seeks exper. accounts Seashore Dr. S800 mo OCE~NF~ONT 2 & 4 Br. ch aid OK. S365 /mo sq ft. Near Laite Forest 2.4 hrs. investments since 194.9 LAIGIUWAID receivable/media bill· &Sl-8070 Avail. Wmter. Weekly/ ~0984 weekdays after &SD Frwy ly_ O....&...L..... l,.t S~· · in& clerk ad aincy ex-Moothly 673-7873 & ...-... ._,_... • 2Cl Dl1mond Ring. 9/14. ri _._,_ .. not S.C.._.. 3176 · · :""l'm Harnsonlc A5soc. Family would like to Newport area, Nr Udo. pe ence..._.QJ, es· ••••••••••••••••••••••• New dlx w/f 2 br condo 2 females lO sbr lg 4 bdr 7141493-375' trade investment quali· 2-dTDs 7141640.2438 senlia1. Xlnt. salary & Outatuding value! Just Kona, HI. avail. wntr/ hse in Cos ta Mesa ty Opals for house lo 642·2171 54~0611 1~~----.-......-------1 benefits. CaJI. Steve kSOrentslhisroomy3br wkl seasn .675-0liOC S200 /mo. 546·098 4 EMERA.LDIA.Y rent.5'9·:!:1Q WEPAYnfEMUST Loll: jade r=t· rec· Koskela Wel l's Rich. w/dble garage & loads or .~to irL-4300 weekdaysafler6:30pm. Professional Bldg 2 Rm Non-smoki'ng reta· red For your TD's & notes. taniular. t green, vie Green. Townsend. eslru ! tlll58 ...._ --. office suite, 1510 No At Dennison Aaoc Ne wp or t Fashion 714-~-0900 Landlord pays all ulils ...... ~ ................ G••IH Coast Hwy. Laguna Christian Gentleman Cen ter, reward .~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! on this rozy studio nr CutUv~expenses! forW..t 050 Beach 610sq ftw/lovely seeks sm efficency apt m7311. 213 248-6220 ACCTS PAYABLE & beaches. Only S300 ! Eatablt~be.d 1971 •••••••••••••••••••••••ocean view. Sl.25 sq ft or hukpgrooms nrbus Prime Prop. Bluffs. Pvt REWARD: Diamond Receivable, P/time, ap- M294 Featured LO Time Mag. S~~ d7·2471 or544-3339 line. xlnt references. res Condo want.s second studded cover for wrist Utude 'ambition very Rentimes631-4.55Sfee Large Cllen~ele . on BalbOa Peninsul a ublet/share prim e ~.~.141300A .. ~!~e r 11581 • TD. S30,000 1 yr. Xlnl watchdial.67$-4234 important.Nr.So.Coast Personal attention & next to Fm Zooe (lOYJ I\ r ..... ~ •u" rates. Prin only. Mr Pl 754-1533 S-. AM 3110 careful sc~g. Time Newport Blvd 0 flee. w d hse · · Redo do Foster7S2·8871 Lost: Female German au. x 20i,, ft ) Call 24hrs,~1036 ant~ . ID n ....-~~=-'~---Sh h · · Ll •.. hool "----lo 21 Saving! 67:J.2!M3,673-l9~ . or vicinity. Single male ort urpomler ( ver "''ersc \AIUllM: r. Automotive PIX IECIPTIOMIST lmmedia~ openings for alert person for recep- tion desk. Must have gd. speaking voic e & clerical skills. Need so- meone who is willing t.o work & full time. Con- tact: Eva Hauser. CONHRL CHEVROLET '.>0411Mt~·r H.1.f '•t-1\\1~_,, 546-1200 DOW MEY SAYINGS ~ual Opp't}'. EmplQY~T Banking TB..LER , , flosiffoft lftwntd oYGil i• M wpt lch ·for CCN'ftr oriaff<d iitclf w/prior Hper In a baalt or 1avi"9l .. ... .1•'• Wa ofhr t!M ..- UHM "',ec.t "tiM --.-UT·o·.·oun--llj WCICJH & a-.fth••f4 Need Pan Time Person w.I oa "*" for','6- t.o Deliver Daily Pilot in •a .. ce!Mftt. CMf,~I Newport Ueach, 7 days • M W to ..... Mle per week ponlbtltits. ., Hours. Mon t.hru Fn Approx. 3·~tos ~PM Applcotiom btiitt._ Hours:Sat&Sun. cepted btwt1 IO~fl'- Approx. SAM to 7 AM 3flM col Earnings approx k 25 (7 I 4) ;. _ per mo. Call Bryan • Holland. 642-4321. Equal 6 31-920 !' ~ Opportunity Employer. T Housa...a•TES A.YOIDHIAUI~ t b "u. SELL idle i~ms with a & ticked) white tip on years old. Transporta· 832-{i'34 Offlct lliltal 4400 l7th&~inSA eac er . .......,'196 Daily Pilot Classified tall. Answers "Ami" tioo needed. Mon. thru Thtllglrt~ -=-~~=-""""-"-=='----• .. -------•I 0••••••••••••••••••••• Onlyll&'-NICE' Sell adleitems 642-5678 ..-A~d~·-------Losl9/8/818:U-2291 Fri. 1:30 lO 6. CalJ Amy on the en.Cont CITIZEN FED SA. VIMGS ,i& LOAM 3lOOW.CstHwy,M •• "Gay ate 16~7 W~tcli!f. N.B. Want 300tolt00sqft · FOUND: Male Samoyed -642~·""'9990 ......... '------Contact~~~". financial mst. 7000s.r. Mike Su 953-4040 dog, 1 yr., Adams & Aluminum rain gutter in· ' DAILY PILOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• L a rl est G a y Isl. (loor.Ageot54l·S032. ~ Ma nolia H8.91JG.0162 alaller. Must be exper, CLASSIFIED " EOE&MFll ., S W I 11...1 D Male/ em•le RooJD· HEWPOIT HfWflORTIEACH ;-,. foUl'ld : Siberian Husky. h.aveowntraosp. E A ,... lllll,lt e.rvlce in so1 p-••... full service exec. of· 0 ·~~ Bl"/whlte, blu"' •yea 542-1242 ADS VII I •GE Calif. .R.C. for renta --fices from $397 ''On ~ .. ... ~ ~ needs(·l~7PM3040 Spacious executive ~r-Call" exec. offi~ from male. Terrier mix trl· Any a1e for toy de· New 1"2 bdnn luxury 1"'!!!!!!!!!!.)G.!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!I fices across . from 9 ty $l~. lncld.~ secretarial, color. very old male. monatraling in fine dept. You Can Stl h, r1l'od It, Trocle It With o W1111t Ad adult apt.5 in 14 plans l 1~ Hall. AIJ.semces av11la· phone ans .. word pro-Wr!'.'W·,.t+o Yull Bouvier, blk female. stores. S4/hr. + comm. Bdrm from $465, 2 bdrm NB Ocean View. 00' lo bit 'optional'. From 225 ceasing, Telex, Qwip. C7'I' 1 V"I' Retriever, gold male. E a r n s you .x l r a 1 from $535, Townhouse Bcb. Large H~. $295. sq.ft. up at reasonable m EH EADQUARTERS ~ --' b. J. J,,,,.,f N. B. Animal Shelter C b r I s t m a s S . (642·5678 } For Classiried Ad ',', AC.i10N ,f Call a ..• , ... , Dally Pilot , • .'~ AD-VISOR :1 • 642 5678 from $610 + pools, ten· M/F. 673-ID, Aft 7. rentals. No lease re· COMPANJ~ Uf • ~ ~ l'.l\Vrl 644-365&. (213)376-4611 n.ia, waterfalls, ponds! Fem pror nnte Deeded to l-'"'qw::.'red::.==.i..::• c:.::all::.m=-=-=3002~--l----17~14!.!.!/85~1-068~1~-l,..,..,,ll. l:W\DJ..,. ,:J. Found fem. Irish lttler. --------Gu for cooking & heat· shr 3 Br 2ba house, Bal f "1Yt7 ilr' l/l v '::c I V I c . R a m 11 ton Ir .Aaembly inc paid. From San Isle. Yrly lff. Sandy U!CunYE b fe ~7 Brookhunt.HBl42-8854 MOEXPIUllCE7 Diego Frwy drive North 67J.7U3 or Anne at SUITES UIC. OfftCI 11 .,. d e·--~ u -1-c •1T-·Y oo Beach to McFadden 87S-5"9ews. IN SPACI YI • .. oun · ._ ... ....., at. .._ ttltn West on McFadden HlllTA.el Rent one or all rour Vic Swan 'Phalarope. llP9U9CI! to S~a~lnd VHlage. Prof. F, mature, to •hr • ........ ....... Call between 3Plll A hu1e Nwpt coodo, pvt ,..__ suites in u ... most pre-6Plll to ldentJ.f . 7$1·?m (114) ue. comm. Vu, pooJ, ltnnla. New luxury office space stiaious area <I Newport 't1r111lll 1~•0 2 • 3bdrm. 5 atepc to Rentne1.79'J.«lleva in Irvine's buaiesl Beach. Reception , H u ad. beach ' ocean M teacher w/JJ mo. old cent.er! F.asy Frwy ac· ~~~~-hc:~~or':!...ib~ch ••••••••••••••••••••••• Use ,,,..,,, Ai service when Pl.acing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear fn your classified ad Yiew.'$700 ' $750. Sl16 dau1bter wanta to allr ceu. Avail oow! Call Staallprt, N.B. 771-2241! your bouat, or find ford«alll. 01·2142 d ya : 140 8935 -.I, /hUd s11.12•1 640-4230 ' ~ "11nh< >''. lkalt' evet/Wlmda. 11me. J"n:J. w c • • but not nee. 957-.S . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $7.SO week. For more informa- tion and to place your ad ca 11 6'2·5678. EXECUTIYE *SITE* 24 Hour ESCORTS 22 SlllSllATfl IJlf 18C011'1·MRU w ...... ,.,.. A11 tl1a ,..,.. . ...,. ....... , .... v ... Otrered Apply at the !telly om~ H.,..iyw; 2102 Buthatu Center Dr .. tzoa, Irvine , m.1'41 (Nr. llacArtluar 81. a • trwy) Hn . w or 2715T Rd., L•IUD.• Ni.f\ltl, •.-a (Cron V1D1J Pkwy. e:rit) Hn . W or WU Btacb Bl . UIOI, H.ntln1ton IMch.Hn.a. IE~~ l!.,..vacas ~'"'sii'"11' Of-. Cd Stnlct fo1t Ct'tdil ApprevGI ,,.,."°'"" I Find what you want lo Claulfied Ads. )'OU(.mac-Pai1x Pilot Clu&lfieda. • stop shopping ctnW.,•. 'Iii"' Pilat ................. ~~ .... I 1. II q Ir r11111 Sales Su11ms. !;~; ': Llmltea Ol)et1b1p availab1e lo the 0rlft • • ·~ Coast area, for aelr·motlvated car~Pit : , • o~leoted lncUvlduaJ who can ..On •I • : Field Sales People. Train, moti vate : : " get reault1. Stalloo waaon or vu .. : • necmlJ")'. Excepuona1 eanun11 ptus-a : :: related benefits available f0r the '1ib ·• ~ • r~le. If YOU can produce results, ~ :· ~ iL C&U.;. ~OIH .. ~"' :-• lk ror irr. Cbarii:e r • • I . ... · ll > ,._ . lJ .... H •• " •• IQ II, la ,, l1 12 ,. ' '· :,~::~-:--... -'f ... ""'~w1..w==~=,~,~~.~~~~w~ ... ~~.l.:.~1~1~·~m~tw.~bt!!,r ~~l1i:.~!t98~1~· 7 IOI~~~ ..... !!.~ !!'!!!~ ..... ?!!'! ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~!.~ ..... ~!.~~ ~.~.~ ..... ?!.~ ..... !!~ ...... ?!.~ ••~T. ..... ~ .......... '" ~·m-•u• .. 9t~T. ..... -H ...... , INSTAl.LER: Qualltltd Modtla nttded. All typea. 15 per hr t,o •tart Ml.lit Ii ..., llt S.ltt llCllTAIY CLDICALPOUTION H ANaa Nunt, O...ralOftlet lndMdutl oeeded lo In· lfto, WOl'OID • chJld"ll. bavt ur, Call Marla p l•u ~n( t:i'e hont1 Full or pan llme help tor &1 WPM. Wlllll be rela P/Uae . ...._tab ·,:tic~ 'tint,{!:~: APPb OQI~ lf ~cu •t e l l Euc 1a tone Non nec.5*.J1S2. peronaUty Oui/otrtce Mt ternlty 5totf Noex· b l• a a cce pt am 7·11, u,..'fam. Wtd, nm. M .. lbr. 1'15 PaahrlDo , C .... pr • .,..r mu1t•r work In • In Ttlephont Sywtan. Top MC7J'EL Prt·School T~aoben appeara~ce aod 1 1• pertence ntre1ury. rnpootlllPlty. ror atty tod.ly1 eon1tNCtlon In· pay Cbl&ck Perry, ffl&bt d.U duk. I.a· wanted. Ctttl.Nd 6 41· curate lypkt. Growing ~7 57)4. ___ !JC .,...flH'T! DUI CUii d111try. 8lda clttlsn of y 4/W Ult perienetd lhture MIP ,er. 2~ ' 4/yt <>Ids. Newport B tar h SALIS HT41L / IPM·llPlf abltt, Mon. flee loollln& tor all J SU RANCE -State pref CM atta Call for Newport Beach Call Archu cct1UaJ firm Non F 11>ine atUrt rµn HCllJAIY t.bru Sat. WUI train S.• around clerical btlp rann, "'-" Vly, needs ~14.11 l40-llli0. Ask tor Su.an am~rr prelerl'd Coll ate::• muil be 1110 ~ewpo; :adJ law of Lar\ Motel, C M. St rou bookh eplnc 1talf help X1nt beoefrta-MOT&. orCheU!. t.nlic beti.mi v aod LZ ortcnlect rrtP'r Open-~j-1 o 1 ~111'· ....., f-:.lllL;::!=o-----1 '*144S btwn Noon ' ablUUtt A«urat~ typ-~ 1.435 ._ -Dt'sk ctert, part/Ume Proditc .... A.ttlst. 5'S 3693 1n1s In all lotatlons No ~ 6Sl~ra o. arr .. It Ill wtta CUllVTYftST 11· in& SO.S$ mut lupellln1. Ja oltor/flo11aekuper, ~ml Need eicper'd person Retail phone calla Apply at .....__ -le-fo~ •ltaut e=::; O..W lab""'* typilt DllV• l'IZIA) No tmoker. Salary needed f/t.lme for ton· Nrw•Pl""'r DeU ~ery with Ooorint. dfapenes ASSISTAHT llack Slrt•·t. Fa1hlon Stcretarlal Planalol rt 9Ncb aaloa. fo r ln volcla& and PARTII'UtE commensuratewilbtxp val. lwtpl. X.l.ot benefits ,,... backaround 'tor ordtr'. ltland llnn lookLni ror bri&tit a-traJ amc.. won. '° 111111 be Z1 old Drlv· Call Do~ll6'7 ~ Incl ln1uranef', sick P•Y L.A. Tl""'* to homte in lna. tchcdulina. b11lina MAMAGEI aec retarl to handle WPll. NJ Umt loa1 Inf our wti"ctes. Good Gtotral Office work ' IOCenhve prolfTlm. ::;J:~~a~~ns;s:,~~! Strret•rl•I •kilt. 3114 Fully upetlf'IH't!d In cs~~ ban~, of ~ ~ Gdd term emplormmt, Sood clnvln1 ~ Eves 1'yplna, U&bt bookkeep-Apply Bevuly Manor, Airway, SuJlf' D. CM. qualit y womf'n s op ~,. ene ts, YP DI an wkl\da aft. 5. Startlfta In,. Part·Tlme. Mon· ,MOV_lctof!!S~ 548-S44tor846-l4.ll . 5*1801 f7~~)t:, ~c;rsacppr; ~ MOTOIOPUSS ~~~~~::,: ~:i~-. 5:~ Pl11UO/hr lh'n' Ed's f'n . l JAMTOI HUltSI V/tlme 7daya 2hl"5.d•i pel'$on . Mr ~lllolt'a, CaUlornla Motor Ex &4118&0 ~c Wahl· Ptua lU Beach Blvd Gentral RN or LVN, p/tlme ly AM dell~er 1 A s c Pl press Co. 11 81K'ct111ful --· · X · H.8.M'f.1214 • A'M'tNTION Ralei1h Kills Hoept. in pm'• & nighta In smal n' SJOo/wk {:. •.. -au . Callfomla common car· Secretary llA&n'l lid mt PAlNTERS Newpart Beach bas an pvt. conval. hosp. Abovt Bem8:. ~· gW'la ltlTAIL SALES rier who 15 progrl!Sslve BORED? Pn .... •....t......... H I I er I · nds c RP~ERS Im med. Openlng tor a averaae start' sal ry ec · In health food store. Full & growing IS expanclinll I £ -Ua~ ~"'°"· ~ driver. Valid C1. lk ~LUMBERS Janitor. Monday·Frid11y, Apply at nielll!ard!M P/TIMllY941~S & P/tlme UYlll Call it's Soul~m C1Ufoml1 Wor .. '"'&ho ..... ~I add to our " e c car.form· &ood drivlnJ re«>rd re· duy shift. Xlnt fringe 00 0 1 L 8 C ~ Shi le 544-<TT rl'&ion w11l1•1i dept & au... ...., •taff S Ullltanta ' 2 fant. Your home or qulttd. 12Qlll E. Walnut ELECTRICIANS benefits pki; ror In -t9t S07$ enneyre, · ., ••~ r al 70 seeks additJMal pe0ple YOU want' •J1lcurlat1. Richard mlne. Bttdlwt~ area. SA.54-7-3118'. DRY WALL te rview call J<ls huu -·· 1ot6C RttollSCllHPtl"IOfl l h I bl k d Oiw.Uatt• Salon, 200 714.a loRIV ERS Croucount FLOORING Wh!Jkey · (714)645·5707. Nursing R.N. Ass1stan Adull.t with outstanding Hi -F'uhion discouul w l Sile• <' Mroun Wt a re In desperate "•~rt Center Dr, Compoloa ~ekeeper. No special lie. req~: We oow otter a unique E O. K M /F U.N.S Work 3 weeJcend.i attracUvepenonaLiti~s store. Full & Pt1n ttmr 'l'bl' mdlvtduals we seek need or 1«retaries/ with N.~.. Chauffeur for wldoftd MacGreaorYachts, l631 oppl>: for tba~ nttded ---a month only. We neec. who enjoy working wrth avail Sal·'I'ul'~ 11 6 should I.It> airr~sive. re or without shortha , llYaYH• u elderly lady. Live-lo. lacenUa Costa Mesa. xtra 10come. Exper un· J ..... ITOI your u perUise on the 10-JS yc1 r old youths Wed Fri 1111 1101111 or1t•nted . harrl who lYJX" at least ~,.. II I _. Non·umkr Waterfront ly. Ref1. req, "'" weekends Brtng you're Eventrias S-9 lf.m <'All ~783.S wpm · oy ,, •TV Cutlna bome Pvt .rm 646-'56S ature person to run dry .... ......_ lmmed opening fur a h a P P Y r ace & 642·4321 ext 30 ---lliorkang, maturt' &r pro . •·••• S.m~ la Mekint relit · 55Hei1 541-aU • clunln1 ace.ncy ~oln Senk.Sm-J anitor to work Cull knowledge. Joui us. Coll between 2. P m and 5 Re•..il ~ Ct'imunal They must l'lea~ call or come b\•: ,-=-bit, :Eble people • . laundry combinaliob in 1.o1• • 6 I lime. Mond:ly thru Fri valesctnl Hospt Beach .2.J!1 Ask for Andrea '--hav4· a high tnergy ltvel for an in~rview. ..~ fM des jeam, new Cook for KB pre school Laguna ~ach Good -day. 9PM to 6AM shift area Mrs Slone - -MonllCJH"M•n r & a pruv~n truck rel'Ord 14 fall I • 1portin1 bn ~l M·F $.US ~r hr. pay ' benefits. Call : Edwanl Jacobson Excell. fnnge benefits 642-llG44 · P /t Im t lo F 11 me • LA 's most surl·e~i.ful in 'alt) that llldicat~ a IVICKI ffESTOJtl: ·: fOOdt'.'PrilltadY.lrcom-Cal1 Patty9I0-3'1al 8»578'7or&'J3.19'19eves. GENERAL OFFICE package Forlnlerv1ew ----·-lluusew1fe /s tuden1 ladies resale :ind dis desire to surreed A • .... -merct•. By IPllt only, Co 11 o t e r be I p Full-time permanent call Scott Wheeler Nursing needed for Ill~ offi ce ro t l m1111mu111 uf 2 year» -· ~ .. Ult)2'74·71U. 9424 drycleaners 10-6pm' DlYCWMMG employment ror am 7H 915-0700, or come in NUISE.S AIDE work, IYPIJ\¥. Mmg. id un 1 5 0:7 u u~iog 3 1hn•l0l l!ellmge1per1enre & ASSOCIATE$ · Dayteo Way, Sl&ite 202, 40/hrs . w1i1 t rain'. CO!-JNTERHELP bilious person, 40 hr Advan ced Health Exper 'd ' all sh1fh phone YUl('t' Self c~w ::/u':': :l'~~:~: LSrrqum.-tl (~;,~IJI )~~.., BenrlxHWa. 7S9-9901. ~1ullt i me . tt~ .. ~!!t wk . some nights & Center, l300 Bristol St Conv. hospt Npt Bch :a~t:rth8Sl·83981 ~d 's~t T A 1 .. F. N T Jo: I> 1 Clencal Personnel.1. Bllinauat twon oeeded, 4 Cou.nter htlp, drycleao· IEaeaofers, CdM,u•.r ......... , s.aturdays Various or-North, Swte 100, Npl Bnng your SITlJlt' & JOln ~ Nr B ur \ . e MANAGl!:H \liho LS ID I you met'! the abovi- b our da y r o r ing plant.,l/lJ.Jne ood rn reetoys,bavea lice duties Apf ly in Brh.EOE M/F us!FreemJr.med,den ...,_ terestl'd in PAHT qu:1hl1l.it111n.'& would Korean/Endiah. 2 hour pay. Apply In Pe~o. Houseot lJoydToy Par· p e rson J ewe s by tal&ltfein.' Top~otary P1time temporary. f1hng OWNERSJllPuflhl'ni-11o hkt• lll 1mn 11 wmmng 540-0400 day fo r V ie t · Crown Cleaoets 593s t -~12 Joaeph,SoCoast Plaia --~--~--Call Mrs Slont•, assist ant Oppl~ 10 :.tore Qu:ili(il'd l',111 te11rn tn llll'ln.irkmi:an D\_.Wte/Eof1is h . WamerAve H B . EXECSfC'Y CM. LEADPBSOH ~-8044__ learn bookkeeping diduteshouldhaH C!Lo 4 du~try.11orm111tC')o1110 ,, ..... ;' u .1l·f'.t3/hr. 5 day I • • 2 years exper 60wpml ror 2nd & 3rd shifts Ocean Operdlor Aflt'r school. ok !J'W 3666 ~rs mel·h exJ)t'r an!I ll !>Ubrnll )OUr lelkr uf In work week. Apply in COUNTaHB.P t · 8"0 General Plasllr Co Will lrain Immediate open•nl{s a~k !orKnthr: mm of $25,000 to 111\l''l trrest & •1uahhc·Jt1ou:., pe~\ f'ol:!olain Valley 3 days a wk, 7AM to s?o~~a~!. •4 day '::ek. Must have mech ability. em p Io y men t up · REAL .STATE in thi:. prof1tt1ble and eA in i•onfuJemc. t•l 18004 Skypartc Blvd. 'J .,. Ste.~lrvine •11111' Sc~0.91 Diil, corner 2PM . Dandy Donuts. for 4 weeks job starts Flll INTO & bl lingu al Call partun1ties for qualified HewH.-SolH citing bullmts~ Prtn c •LI"'"'"" ..... , .. T "/Newland. F.V. 493-9200 SC Oct. s. FedUal offices! between 8AM & 2PM applicants with USCG For Southern Callfonu:i c1plei. only All rcpht·~. "" ~"" E. ,.J. Counter he lp & P/T downtown L aguna "ELLY SERVICES m~~--license. 25 Ton gr(ISS Builder looking for full ('Onfidcnual (.'all llOW EXPRESS CO. SECRETA.IY R.E.' ,,.,t> Secretarial pasilion :lh;~ active Newport Cent~t ltealtor's office. F~ offi ce pas1lion requif~,.., good lelephune voit'i, Bookkeeper needed, 5 to sandwich 5t:rson want-8-Spm, Wed. off. Call 001'. I\ Legal Secrelary w/exp Ill f in Dulles will m<.'lude time sales person. Must for appt Call Answer /\d 17Sl Su Santlil Ft Ave 10bi1, permooth. Gniat ed, hours EEDED 11 lect: Miclin, Inc. P.O. We are m' ,,,_,rtanl need Civil lit & Famlly Law a r bor Pat ro I & be Lie Com m/Draw #@,_S.2·430024hrs. Lo~ Angt•ll'll.CA 90021 eeeood job. 64&-2lJ3 or AM to 3 PM Gary's Dell Box 93, Alpha Ohio, w .... ., Se d & S 1 passenger for hire Cal19S7·1100 \t11.-nt1011 Tl.'d Regner. 1141•1391. Ask for Shelly. 752-5401 .sJOl. 1513)429-9'95. or clerical, secnitarial & n Gre~uml e& .. a a.r> Salary range SJOOO to RETAIL R e I! 1 11 o ,, I !;; a I cs t y p 1 n g . S II & a If·'• pearance. Real eslat!a.•11 upenence helpful liUIJ •: not essential Prefer:.i local resident. For trio"; terv1ew ca.U Mrs. Duhl We•yN. Taylor~ -=::..;-===-==-==:.:._1.:-Co -word procetslng help. req. ei er , .. artm $1800 mo. Managt-r 1 CAllmS unter belp rrr &r P/T Factory Trainee. print· After your children are l600l)gvesu ~ QueenswayBay Martna R.l.INYESTMEMT WAMm call between &• U AM in4 & packaging. Co. enrolled Ill school, enroll Liquor Store Stocking & cata!Jna island Earn while yuu leam BUILDERS \\ t' orfer an cxtellt'ntl1 Irvine/Newport ~acb 6'5-2l93. paid beoefils.4day work yo ur se lf 10 Kelly Cash Regist er ex Long Bearh HER I T A G~: salary. fringe henef1t area.Earl)'AMdelivery Oellver L.A. Times to week. m.1660 u k for Services. Never a fee. perience necessar> Call for appt INV ESTMENT will E~PO~IUM I program.<·urnpanyrar. of L.A.1\ma. S4.2S +. homes In H.B. & C.M. Ma rk. Callor comeby over l8 Apply between ~ 213-43.57676 leach you creatn•e & curter ndvannment CaUJeu·St1-Q23S M AM. '4Q}$4SO/mo + FOODSEIVICE & 8 weekdays. 188f I Office ReceptJorusl Wed f1ne nr1n.e , 1031 F,x opporlun1t1e:. with a Realtors 644-4"1 t . ' tA8mERS . ~ded~~~~~e1 c:: WOUIRS 2102 Business C~nter Pla~enl;!a~(:osla ~es~.. nesd3 y.Sunday '4 IO ~~~~~:~t ~:~~h~:· sohd & '>Ul"t~lul rom wanted for all&o wu b in 96'...-Z. Food service workers Dr. ' '208. I r \ In e. Look mg for lllleresung 1 1 rvioe Coast Count rv IS com11g pa II} Qu11li fled (•30 * .. SECltETAIJES•.-1 --.-.. Nwpl Bcb ' Irvine n...uvery .,.....,_ __ & .. ed. needed by Huntington 833BI ·!~l l~_'.'facHArthur part time job TYJ?lllg, Club. 644 ~ • ;e~e:~~~~~r~h;~s and we need '11dJte:. 11o11l he tontarterl Xerox8SO/:tlhrt7.SOl:11'• ~ ~ .,.., ,....._, ~ Be b Cit School dis ... 405 r rwyl rs 85 no shorthand reqwred p-----11o1th1n 2 weeh for Type60$18,000 ... ~,. areu. . Room ror Advancement. . ac Y · or 279ST Cabot Rd . 20 hrs per week mclude~ art Time salesperson. an unusu;il uppty ror HELP! further screenmg Recpt 1'50/FunS10.20Cr:.'• CASHIER-CLERK HBarea.536-25915 ~cl. 3 brs. per da!;I Laguna Niguel, 831·0M2 weekends Office on H B. gift shop right person Conf1den £ o t: M Jo" ExpConsultant Oun1 •. '· ~ptndabie, U:»4:30 14~3sr.~:"sJ&.~lf 7""j <C.rowo Valley Pk w) ~astHwy.646-7431. 963-6900_ t1al interview Call Sehool. noon ~upernsor Liz Reinders Agy,ln~,.i(.' sbllt'i'lncld wtnds. App-or1 Rlnl(S exit> Hrs. ~Jor 847 3498· MANAG EMENT Look Vloce546-S880 This d1v1s1on 11r lht' "1on Fri ll tS I JS SJ 95 4020 BirchE&'64EOQ r • ~ GHt Shop, J ohn WHAi IFOODSE~VICE Hunlmgton Beach. llrs 111g for working part ner PAITTIME Wickes Companies will per hr Ander.en School Newportlm8190/Free •· Sa~~~-~~ Part Ume. Saturday " LOll 1KITCH~ 8-S for expanding wholesale Person to deliver Daily REAL ESTATE soon open a Dt'W llom~ 760 3490 -111111111111!!!!!11!111!!!!~~~~.! S4M07g Su.nday momiop . Must 3077 S. HAllOI ILL["·'Ir.f...G1rt• bus.!!l~Ss ~6489___ Pilot auto route Ill South SALES Improvement Cenler m Set> Lel(al Xlnt :.kill• SEC'Y, LEGAL '·~;~ have lge. statioo wagon. I SANTA AMA ~ .::J ~ Manager serretary Cor Laguna area. 7 days per This IS our 36th year sell San Juan Cap1slr11nu. req 110 WPM Sal Neg Estab. Npt Center 1l w ~=~ALES vao orplckuplruck.Gd. <HarboratCamage) SERv1ces one girl medical office. week 1ng l ine Sout he r n and weneedhelp:-JOW " Solejlrctner 67J.920l firm needs exper telil -P/tlme. Apply: dWrlvin& record ~el'. <JblksNo.MacArthur ) Equal Oppty Employer Typ1og 1mport11nt Allpouprrsox. 3M!"loSlh.30ruPMFn Calif ornia homes Bo SEcnr-r•ny serrelary w/good typ• - C r orll consistsof deliver-979-0747 M/F/H Medical olfice exp. de ..., Perhaps you would en th full and part-lime .u;1""' ing. d1ctaphone .._,. ~~~f) N' 81024 log bundles lo Daily Apply IGam-Spm sirable. bul nol essen Hours ~at & Sun. AP· JOY Joiniog a rirm active pos1t1ona .ire a\a1lablt• ~ per!ion oHu:e pvt rom shorthand skills. Rnl , ~.-.:u _ Pilot newspaper car------tial. Salary """" Send prox SA111 U> ?AM. Ean1 10 luxury residential in SAL ES an cl fur munlty in S<1uth La~una E Ii . . • riers. MANAGER GirtFridav resume to -PO Box approx. $425 per mo areas such as Big Ca CASHI ERS Retail e11 F limt. t)p111g, bkkpg P~~:~! o~r:,!'~~:'i':~:·i CASlllOS UtaT1M: MARKETS For ~d' 3rd Sbills Startin1 S4 up to k . 50. We promote to manace· meot ••upervislon from wtt.bin. WANTA CAREER? Costa Mesa 511 W. Wilsoo St 531-96<8 Laguna Beach 4lN-11233 Hmtingtoo ~ach • SG-9118 Penonnel Dept. 537-4840 Good starting salary Must have food service We are a sma)I, but 21S9 Mission VieJo, Ca Call Mike B u~h at nyon, Spygla:.s Hill. per1ence wantt•tl In r1'1n11 St.irl immed Salar y competiti ve~, with regular scheduled experience and be able growing Company look 92690. 642-4321, EOE Irvine Terrace, Lmda ten'h.'Ws will IJt' hrld .1~ Swrde 49!1.1561 640 6960 ., ~·" increases. lo supervise personnel. mg for a secretary I re Isle, etc follows ~l·1etar). Call: Samtol:~mMon.lhru cep t1 o n ist Re MANAGER PARTTIME lf youarepresenUyal' Hookt•tp1•r fur woman SEC'YILEGAU Don Williams Fri.Salaryopen. qu1 remenl.s·good front forboul rentaloperat1on Crew Supervisors work live in reulestate sale~ Mon.Sept.2 1Jt c!t"it;nt!1 Ad\1•rt1l1n11 Newpos1tion open111 00t'•) 642·4321 bef. llAM orrice appe41ra1.ce, good 1 n Hunt H arbor p time e venln gs & do yuu have 1mmediati• 9AM. 3PM r \p h!'lpful \"anc•d re:.~ well estabhshed lrvme ' or art 2PM daily SLICER lelepbo~~llsvo0f1c,e. good Kbonaotwmleadlllgterespaa11lrinogac& weekends Superv1s1ng & unllm1led acces~ to T .... s. Sept. 22nd re•1 J ~elf ~tJrtlllf!. 4111ck office. l·E2 yellars elC\ Portion coolrol person. typlllg sou . ice 1s in " • the door to door salt'!> th~ president of vour 9 AM . 3PM t h 1 n k 1 n 11-ma t u rt pen ence xce eot typ DIMfAL 9am to5 .~m Mon tbru Huntington Beach on outboard eng repair crew of youngster& Ex company.orishch1dden woman 631400'/ mg skills Salary opep.-; Wanted mature en-Thur. 6am to 12 noon Main Sl Ask fOf' Chet hel,e_Cu_I l2g >271.1677 cellent earnings ror away in an ivory tower Wtd. Sept. 23rd Call Frari,llJ3.3622. ·,,, i th"•lastlc woman for Sun . W1il t ra i n . SJ6.7S13 M...:.....•...a...,·..a... person with ability to remo\ledfromthescene 9AM· 12 Hooft SECRETARY S /R~ ., ..., *• SO/h '"' _.......,"" .._ o .. ~ I net-dell for In ine 'rrart KY Po'il1'00 of offi c e .... r.. G""'•ur-r Ma1nta1n aquar iums, moll\•ate. Van or lar"t' ur presi...,.ut is ava1 a "" I I ·t .. • • I ~· " bl Do __ .. dd SAH JU•H ~;'<'"'"' ulfH·(• \lust r.ntry eve pas11on 10 a Mgr /front desk. Xlnl FOODSERVICE PRODUCT. ets.,J:all Lucy 675-2159 car Is ot'eded Call e. you '"""' a ' "' ha\ t escm11o e~pr It r.. E fast growing, exc1lrnj' ~ benefits call: ~55118 WORKER CONSULT• .. ......, M • .. ..,rn..--. Media Merchants llonal tralnmg to help CAPISnAHO •t h "' advert I . g 1J ""~ '"' ,..-.:;11nv 2l3-4Z7 2756 EOE you inC'rease )Our earn O t•1 S ,, on t ru r r1 sm agency .., 0..... Office McJr' I For sandwich and salad Top of the Line MAHAGEM&n' -_:_ -'"85~ I 32c!!~ Emplo~tt pa)~ h1•alth & ln ·me Great poteo~at'. E1per1enced, highly assembly and food pre-Cookware appliances Tlt&l•.IR.lt I Part time gra\leyard Experienced or mex -r>'""'<1 dental llelll'f1b Call for for lhe nght person er~ motivated and pro-paralioo. Sam lhr u In betterstores •ovvroou; answering service no pen enced )OU may well I .i(IVt SS2 4000T0111 • cellent typmg and <tr-: gressive olfice is seek· l :30pm Moo. thru Fn. Contact Brady Market exp ner mm typing profit from our l'olor APPl y EAJll '( gan1zat1onal skills re:' iog inlelligeol we ll '4.00/hr. J!!.&.....800-642-47!! $1200 req call·6J10140 v1deolapehi.tlllg&sales SECRETARY quired P lease ca~• E 0 E We offer a good startan)? 1 1 Ht<al F.state ln\e!>tment Madel.vn ~7141833-3960 • qualified person wtth ex-HAIR STYLIST -training program which rom pan> M'i!kmg rxpr cl w ••• celleot accounting, CLEAN UPAND Some folloWlDg Fnend PHMO.TOSTART PFBlX ANSdaWRS&ERPVJCE we feel is the finest wage and automall<' m 'Pl'rPta r~ HellUlrl' SEC'Y/lllCEPT. ,:..; sec~larial and human MAINTENANCE ly atmosphere. John ime. ys time available. nease after 6 mo dlld mt•nts T)p1ng 6S 70 Busy N B archiltttUMt , ~lations skills lo take Spm lo 9pm Mon. lhru Kenl Salon: 642-6212 Mo•=• M<. el'es Expr. helpful. Pay We are not a franchise opportu111ties for ad van-"'µm . d1rtaphone. or firm needs sharp pers0~~ ~o active part in manag-Fri. Sala.ryopen. HOSTESS Part •-r II 171 11-'7~ 132 _ de Pends on ex Pr branch or subs1d1ar)' cement This is dn <'~ I 1o1a1111at1onal skill~ & a with good skills Hype~-mg our ~iness office. · . "' u 54()..1777 JWlt headquarters cellent rhanre to J<>mm • f · dJ E 1 ..... lle ot be oe f1"t OTHER°""'ITIONS · · ~ """" nv We have unonlllgs for a our competent, exi:.llng ti f ho & ..... ,..""' w1 e & bee S agh tt N dS I I k ,,.. Lu rated near 0 C persona ly orp nes time evenings Serv0 M••"'m~ I profes~ronal mannl'f w Pm ) • r' e n Y CHECmCAI package i nclude s AVAILABLE n r. P e I ee a ~persons oo . PBX few h1ghly-mot1vatcd staff and grow with th~ I\ Ir p o rt <.:a 11 front desk We ndy..; medical insurance, $1.500 Bender ~OOSI mg for marketing op-MARRIOTT HOTB. persons who ha Vt' a de !'ew store m our t•>.pancl ~ 14 !17 5 0865 N () N. S.0-0772 .,. • needl a few gd drivers. plus bonl.IS if qualified. FREE ~RE-SCHOOL HOSTESS Pfr, private portunities as booking PBX OP ERATORS s1rt to be more sue mg company •-Newport Center lootChM lllbelexc7~~oc~~for country club, exper. 00. agendt.s for mot1 ivalional Presli'gio·-hotel ti~· im cess ru 1 For an in SM K It ONLY Service Station Allen:·~ Cblld rll.~ needed l.n my ,,.,.. ,...,,., m ers p. _,......., Jy. Call btwn 2 & SPM , a n c e e b r i t > ""' ..., t · t t COME JOt .... OUR ecreta r)' recrpt1on1st danl. Full-Time da)'.('; '9! ~ med opparturu•1·1"s for erv1ew appo1n men " CdM 6 ~ ~ • .. bome. M·F. Mature lov--,..-.......L....1----....... ec ..... cWc.._...__1_--Full & part-time Tellers. Gene, 549-0377 personalities. Postive " wrth the sole owner & TEAM!!! rh11ileng1ng opportumty k ,,_, .. ; 101 .Oman. 673-3705, .,...,. •· -Excellent opportunity envtron menl·t'Xcellenl qualified applicants in founder call Wesley N llA WIHHY!!! 11o11h bu~) Laguna l11lls SERVICE STATION · .. 644-4473. C r o wl lno,&'1.b brid ge for experienced per50n Holel incomeBpotenhtialk frfunct ~~:a.communira t1ons Taylor Law olfu:e Top pay. ATTEND&n'' ..• Cl ~•55 porce a .. 6'5-2073. in attractive savings & rr:w mgton eac As or • W It N. T~ C6 •t IU.ILDERS EM· I heMflts 8»6660 Full or part ti'me Ev..;,:·.' r."111' IFIED DENTAL ASSISTANT loan. Both positions of-Mir;nPORTIEACH L.S36-7513_ The po5ihons available ts 'f • A -· , M••1tlOTTHOTa are hour I y & REALTO PORIUM 'th II SECRETARY mgs &week-ends •,.•:• ·~ Excellenl oppt'y tor ex-1er varied duties. P rr ,." M-'--• ~ w--1...~1. 2111 s J · u 115 w 1 o I M • T . Gl:a..J:.~ , MIUll~ ·· · Exciting, establis hed "'w-c"'~"""""" supervisory, vari ed ,an oaqwn n.1 • • Suppart:it>ctgpersonnel acs ~-==!· per dental asst . (EDA pos1l1on is approx. 3 hole! has immed. op Earo between SJ SO & sh1fls Newport Beach wen 90f, 'fOU •t 90t functions Good variet) SERVICE Station attenU .. l'll ft Preferred), some ft ok days a week. includes SS oo an hr. Work full or I r I 6"" .o19 I 0 it mode & ~ .. &1 f 1 b Sat til 1 Call L" portuo1l1es avail fo r yo u a re peop e -~"'--_ Equa·l Oppart unlt} • growth oppartun1ly to assist owner w/lu~. ""Pu ~notoec.4 day · u.o pm. tn· part lime. Na ugles t d& uld ' · II • Tbe ~ Dept. ot .. .. . , & da 7<• 1801 ~alil1ed applicants for onen e wo en)Oy a R .. ctp/'""'-• s 80 wpm. t.tpe 55 islands & gen. ma • ... & wora wa UI ... guna Bch, · ....,. · D r 1 v e th r 0 u g h th t d .. ~ Employer M F v 111 I 0 k b • ...., Pilot bas an 494-978S ORANGECOASTS &L e foll0Wlllgpos1tions . grow onen e com for CPA oCCi<.'e Im 11opm , I ey y touch Full lime Apply· • openina · l?OOAOAMS CM ROOM Sft-t. CCllMtr restaurant. We are cur-pan). come see us d 'ie11. port Center loca Botts. 2490 Fairv~\}.. oaone ofourtelepbone DENTALASST. E O E • PIX~ t ren t ly see k ing We ofC er excel! co m e •ate opening RETI REE for beach 11on Good :s.alar> & Rd CM -- .. •-d-""" . ....__ ,....,..0 Ch ai r s id e e xp er · · · ...,..ron homemakers, senior benefits lllclud1·n., un ~:2656 _ _ P a r k 1 n g ·t o t I f t • t ..,. ......, •oc ,...,_, Full da -R ~H__. .._.. • >t' n e 1 s "r en e Sewing mach oper~' •• Melt: should enjoy necessary, 4 day work t ime ys answenng •• • _.. ._., citncns. & reurees wbo 1forms & a free meal per RECEl'TIONCST f7 14)846-8414. 846·8086 640 Sill '"'" teJepllooe sales, be able weelr:, 30 brs. Laguna s e r vi<' e • ma lure C Cltricol enjoy wor1ung with peo-shift. Apply Ill person, for law office. must be .!_ves_ -----needed fOf' glider mfg totype'-Swpmandhave Hllls,T7M27S responsible person. No We are seeking people pie. servUlg top quality Moo -Fri, 9AM Noon. iotelligenl, congemal, SECRETARYP/T sewing suspension l ys. a pleuan& penooaUty. Dental Assistanl exp. nee. Call . 892-1212 oriented persons who food. No exp nee. We are Personnel diligent with gd typing SA.LES P e rm Part 11 m e l~H E. Walnut SA. Clasa~ or telepbooe Chairside, part time. E.0.E. have a sincere interest anxious to tram you! Ap-MARRIOTT HOTS. skills Great opp'ty lo ~erretary Insurance ex 547-:1184 aalet perience would good salary. 831-1073 Full time help wanted l.nalulure withlhe Mar-ply in person. Tues. 900NewportCenler Dr. break Into tbe legal COMMEICIA.LR.l. 11er1en C'e rlel'e~sary SHtPPB ~ be )ae Ill. We offer ex· leave meaage. Answering service no riottCorp. Wed, & thur. 10AM to Newport Beach seer e l ar I a I g u i Id Ti red ot selling houses 7 lloun. & ~alar~ neg Will Must have UPS & 0.1: c e TI 0 t c 0 m Pa ti Y Dent.al exp nee. Minimum typ-We orrer excell co. 4PM No telephone in· Equal Opp Emplyr M/F 847 &04 1. days a week., We need tr a 1 n ex c e pl 1 on a I exp e r Gd benefits b flt 1 1 d 1 lng req. tJ.50 per hr to benefits 111cludmg a free qumes. ---one licensee lO learn the person Custa Mesa salary 0 ....... Hrs 7:JCH·. eoe • nc u. ':1 ' Ort.ho office needs sharp slarl. Call: 833.3333 meal per shill Apply in ":?: Receptionist. Full-Time skills lo manage, broker 631 1~ r-" medical, dental, life lll· g I r I t o l r a i o fo r EO 9AM N M PIX REC9'TIOHIST Ne wport Center Law commercial real estate Mon ·Fri. <WRHSEr·~ auraoce, etc. Salary fronl/back olftce. Den· E. rri~~~loon, on 2956 tolCM. lmmediate""""ings for Ortices. Call Nikki or Income from mgmt Secretary, full lime. F V vic.55&-~. COIDl,lleDIUl'ate with U · l al background nee. l!.••,.._.a M El'\&'Mff4 I .,..... Art occ 2411 h I w eon s ider P time. I PLUS t ..,,._...,... AHIOTT HOTB. - -~ --a ert person for rece p---· -~----· w 1 e you leani Super must have good skills. SHIPPIMG/UCV•G :~:a°i:ioo t:!'!~;~r 644-1405. i~iocal aptk. ~~p,lex. 900 Newpart Cenler Dr. Mer ha n i c. s he Ip er lion desk. Ml.L'll have gd. Receplionisl needed w/ benents: hie iruiurance. W di train on Vector Small distribution com . ...,., dMorefamWes are gettlng ayswee .«>WmO. NEWPORTBEACH needcd withsomeexper. s peaking voice & some typingtowork lor health insurance&den-Graphits. Apply 10 Qan y look i ng lfr ,_ aft am an th ri "b "lhls ~-3381 So t ls 644 "•10 I . l kills N d I lat I Co t l K want ao be paid for your e cam g ug • ·. Equal Opp Emplyr M/F _l!Le_~ _ . .,, ___ . _ c erica s . ee so-g Ider mfg. SAtrustin Pan. n ac en. person 9--tPM Ex.ecullve responsible person to efforts please caU for year. I you have a Gas Station Altendaol. M E D ASS ISTANT meone who i.s willlngto area.Call .547-:m84 filS-6700. Ro w In c 39 01 runwarehol.mlulltime. illtervi~w camper that's not aet-M/F with some exper. OUSECLEANING . needed for front/back work & lull time Con----MocArJhur Blvd, Ste Airport area. Call K..B .. Pe_..:..__, Dept linl 111ed, sell it now F/time. lmmed. open-Li I h ore. Family practice. tact: Mn.Ha~er. RE C E PT I G IRL 211 Ne wport Dearh Anderson Companx:; •..-ca · wllha CJauifitdAd in 644-~ Ye n · exc ange I F RIDAY . F /lime , Sales Lady 549 .. ' M2-alt,Ellt.2'T7 , . . housecleaninJ or work rv.~2·0636 general ofc. Nr. So. L ig ht in g f1xlure 714 7S2·717L -·1343. ·, l.. OIAMelCOAST by hour. tl42-2846CM Medic al AMistanl Back coast Plar.a. 754.1533 showroo m Full Time SICUTA.lY S~ . ·. ·: DAILY PILOT l HOUSECL.EAHEIS office exp for busy It /T CM Noey> nee. 548-9341 Growing lrvane pension Energetic person wilYf>' aoW.BaySt. 1 1• to worlr: for Janice's Lkanguona ... orEticKe GMus,t r btcepf ff'yphtM l Sales adm101stration & con ed to wort in our ship- L'-·JI.. R d w "' or usy 0 1~e .us .... lnAI DIScoviray s u It 1 ng Co needs ~· depl. Flexible~, -I aue y Anna. 4/days Veoapunctun.496-2636 -have good tvnong sk11•~. "'"" "'.'"" ·-EOE/llF week 8-4 fi7~2514 -H -· "' o doo t Ii t d qualified Secretary to u '"' part lime. .SO 'I ~ · · MEDICAL FRONTOFC P...ac. pleas ant telephone ·pens r 0 Im ,mi e wo rk d1 reC'lly for co. pe r hr . Ca ll P atti I OUSEKEEPER, live-Fam practice, exper, ins Ail • J hlillor personality. lnttrest to income for you The Pr ca Ide n t XI n t -~~SS25~-.·-----Cleric in. stable-mature for billi u · E · d le1rn genenl omce and answer tos~ & st~ MAUIOl'THOTa lalher/1 child. Refs req 1 n gn.g, ~i,;ec~":&~y!" plx:ner~;~ein i ~~;::~~ beginnmg bookkeeping. mdoced 111 health. ll is ~c;:t:;.aJ5b~l~b~~~ SHIPPING/UCllViNG I Gl•te:Al TYPtST m.5411 Benefits. Lovely aru . needed by fast growing 89'1·1~15 ~~i':ti~ ~~~a~~~lh~ helpful F\nanclal &!or DEP~ • Pr ....... W bu op-I ousekeeper/b ve·in le Nr John Wayne Airport. Ir vine Co. PosH ion Russians to handle all legal barkgrou.nd wlll l~med e>perung for •Sil~ I porhlilt1 for clerical help care for active 5 yr 955-2022 avaUable immediately. Ha n sornttblog you kinds of stress No w ass 1 5 t can d 1 dale & mexp person ~ work I poeWon ill busy boteJ , oldin lovelylrvtne home MEDICAi.ASSiST Smokeraneednot apply. want to sell? Classified available 10 the US. Smokers ~notapply in all femle ship/rec ::,:.er • offlce.Jr~I ' call:W-2412 f'ront & back. p/tlme. ~al1Barbara8SH204 athdoilwell.~8. Sales arebooming.musl Contact Mike.8571204. ~=:·l.!'~t~~tZne~ ~,. to~~:: Ex~H.:..~, to ~:~~~·~~,;r.uncture, .~ai·1y Pi•1· .................... ~t~"r:.'e!'~dn~:~~ E xpse~'!:c~~ tor g~11 : DellTontc corp.· u... 11~ olltr actll. c a r e for Balboa Medical ;:. reap lhe rewards. For eistebllshed Orange --~5'S-O(Uo..;...;o=--.JH•ti!tii eo. ~ lndGdi.n& a Peoloeula Point boSH Chiropractic As s t / lnterview,caU Ron Count1conlNCtionflrm. " ~MtalpertbUt.App. ud tupenlae after Receptionist. Beaut. , Parad~Martcetlng Shorthand, typing Ii Ur/SH ..... ~ 11 • ,.,_ MJl·Nooo. KIDS -' scboot boan lar 10 Md buo office. Good •P· ART TIME EYBllS 548-~ light bookkeepinc. Call lmmed . openln~~ ••·rrt ... wl ~J'K~i:.:, ·~;: pearance, healthy. en· • We are prueotly 1•ekln1 adultt with 7S4·7411. :~~,..1 ;r~p,t~, HOr9. SUMM~R JOBS. da11 -ft I PJI, and lhusluUc, knowled~ or • pleasant persol)1lltlea who ·wO\lkt b• Sate• SECRETARY/ REC'EP-wlll train. Gd, ~U C..Dr. ii; Int. blllin&. pea board· .: lnt.tretted In workinC In Sal• It .ProfDOden Pm. S• .. a1h TJONIST, typing & beneftl.t. Call: OeltrvKti "'1m_...._rt1MC" .. ,, 1°' mM oomputu very helpful • with Dall1 PHot Carrler11ot.o 15,.an oldl Marketing Rejle. to sell a ns we ring phones. c CM ·~ --.Y" • Great career potent.I al Unllmll.ed ••mini• anllable to 11Cbt pnon. a product that la wanted Trtnd Import Sales, In~. orp. ~ -- Call 831-$1184. Hrt: 5:30PM to l :aOPM , Monday Uirv •neededbye~c. l.200 W.CoutHwy,N.B. 50-0flJ i:·'\,W .. .._ " Earn S30-S60 per week. MISS911• F'rtday. Some Saturday nallabWty. hr . Sami.n1~a.t: _!31'694_L____ JEal ·•••#• •--~ Trips & Prizes. Ctll .... Full time In eo.ta Meaa • =:.m.ent, call: "42·4321, ut '·" Ben • uo.~.ooo ' ~ •Co. Tniaina IP "OU Third 1nde .• ......_. ..... .;a. .. • ;:i' Cll•c• ti''°"'''' aru. Calif. drivers • • • Qulll\edwdt • ruu ume ~A ,.... licenn, 10CJC1 drtv1n1 re-• j * Hip loco ba'ft • Mnb to olftt Ot Beae.fltl a.-Mtli) a .. Mf cord,OVtr2l UG!Um mt &oa*tr>.0,.etUef hr lllfaatioa ClltJ I ....... ,... CalUla.r)' WYsL Ir. th D~Pllot ... ,... !(.@ ...... ·-:::-Al:TMm:TM-ea ~...... . .. ,,.. ..... la I ... ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ~nday, September 21, 1981 Cl.I .... . ~. sen it atland put in your pocket! caw a ::. -. ' . DAY WEEK 8 l)ays Special flat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan- dlSe priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for '8 days or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days. .. 3 Lines For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678 ' .. •. ,•, 8 Dollars TM tWIW Dally Piiot 8-Day W.ek It's o Classified PLUS -..r.' ... i . ..... w...., IOtS toll ,.., Mlle at I,.. IOIO . ...... ...... ,..... t04CI .... Sena,,.... v... t570 ... W...-.4 • :!~ •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• ...... ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• We ta IOIJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I A.cc....;,., 9400 ••••• • •• • •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• • T'" c KER f 1 t•· CF" •-,. .. _, _,,. ·.......__._, A·· ... -• -1• ••••••••uuu••••••••• r• SH ... •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Chevy Suburban WI IVY • c. A -Jn a II t Eary Americana I tbo-...-DI "' ..,,. .,._.., .,.,,.,. vr-...,..,IOD _._I IM SU w c · Development Proanm, 1rapbic print.I, ~ Burmese,2. Himalayan, DesitD, 111• wkh tOM Helium Bouquets de· CLARIN_!.'T · Vito. IAIGAJM r~b~t.~a~n~~~. $;~: Lo ml, xlnt cond, air •. 18 USEDCAR.S,TRVCKS p/H"'e. Member of ea. WorlcfWar 2 poll.era '·Slam~.'• $100.$250. and cNaa SUOO firm. livered. Perfect for Good condition w/ cue trk , cru1s~ cont ' t1 t COME rNOR tralidi.ci..11---team U.$5ea.Wall siuma"" lnq. Invited. Terma, '31~ eve occaamf73.4Ut f7S 9U8291 32'Eddycral\F/li crar Turbo400,reblt l w/sb1ft steering, trailering CALLFOR .......,,. ..-5'8-ISl'I twn GMC395FWC, V8's stick $350. Turbo 350, special, ~ or make -..a·-••• 111 S~lal Ed. Important. SS.SS ea. M4-Ul32 alter S ........ llOWOOO ZX6'S Kimball Swinaer SOO, 3 custom ownerstaterm reblt w/sbift !Cit S2SO. offer 552·12!16 nur;11;C ~r~~ Jackie p ~5'180 PM malayan Kilt.eos •. CFA, Sofa a '°"8eal '300, 4' to 20' laQI. Xlnt dttk· keyboardl (1 ft) 16 SOO AY646-9000 Muncie 4 spd w/alum -ormlC'r·~ Doublieslded,smaUanU· er.and cbam~nea , bllllb -· Qa. bdrm in& Frt&blroldanivin1 --~1295 26'PaceWahoo,xinlfish bellhousing. Hurst Allto1WCllhd 95'0 CHEVIOUT ~~~:.';.~ ~::-~1~· r:u::.: ~~:°low. $71)0. ::r:=~~7~, weekly. Savt at 55</ft. ~Fw~··'1oas oNr dBive ~,finance. ;~~J~9 ~: ~f!~"ro ·;·~·;~~~~;·~z~;· H1J2rN/k~~~8w SUOlhr.MZ·Otll hlldre > ....... ""'H" P · ... i 1200 3 •--*'·" . Jim Nf..Su me.,; · · 5 ip. 29 •000· u f ·9PM ror top used cars ... , .1.-7 --==.:.=:..::.=:::..:.:=--i c n. ~ • ....,. ...... ers1an .. Uen • wp: -· nw . p ket or. A-1·--' ....................... 76().1388,631.Qll&l Am, al .. ·--Taa'HOMI after 7pm wkdys adults S.SO to SUKI Rea. queea hit. MORE! :~ER"'"" aT:_:--t Exec . dull, chair, •CLASSIC',_• WANTED. VW Shell. rore1gn, domestics or 54t-Ull Souc"OIS anytime wk:nds. S.S..9MS 77MI01 !.':"--'IUJU<i>ll .... vora Y<:Vtra .. ~'. erect. enu. 2. other desks ..,..,, . bl , 88. C clauics If your car is _,., .,., ...,... ""' b id STEPHENS43FT. su1t1 e .or Ja on· ulra cll!an, s~e us Need 15 immediately to Antique armoire solid DoCJI 8040' p&eee ll• rm Mt. Sota ltO-W wit cb11rs, s s e Xlnt cond. ~2160S version, good condition, FIRST• Awtot, ~ work eaay evening oak, beveled mirror, •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• cha ir, loYe aeat, ot'. 2 E ly Ame, bar tools chain, misc. Items 28, F 1 1ln Twin reasonable. Mon. Wed, ••••••••••••u••••••••• hOllrs. Great for stu· OB0.548-Sl03mom. KEESHOND Pups. AKC. tomu .... St0-J.S7 .. :: S50 ~ • :rea: 752~orM4-S834. 8 r er · new Fri arter S:30. All day A•Hlt t70t dent.I. ~9. Mon-Frl No Antique Secretary Desk. Champ sire. MIF. Pet• 10· c.....t wood d.lnina striped din. or occ Car phone Livermore =~cg, s~~tc"'t~! w~eltends. 6'>3172 ~ ..................... .. aeiJing. Call 986-0151 13111 s how . P v l ply . table w/I caned wood la cbain tl5 all Colem~ Satellite L Z P LCP SIOK 551•8758 4 ures, mOW1led u x 15, 'S9 Bug Eye Spr!~. '4 •'kr lpm. 642--5872 2131697·13'5 aft 6 pm. lu tber elaalra. l soo stove ' old b~ hardly lOlOA 11 dlannel deluxe, , Fleetwood Marauder un· Jc rstd. New eng. chl'IJI. "'! .. .------~.4A~·nel1P1••.cct1 1010 R.UPIOIUM7 080. Gold Love seat, 1.11ed 111.S Canvas dome autochannelaea~hand 19 Fanla5,>:_·_~HPMhler1c 1versal mounts, re-trs, rims, paint. N~ -~ ....-$30 B-na. ' · • selection visual display crutser, ••uu.:m w r versed chrome wheels I • trans work. receipts . ....................... PEST FREE elec· · tent, mlaalng pole, .LS. dial bead for IMTS w/brakes. Full canvas s.coo #I h10reftComty SlSOO Firm. SS7·91121 fHONIPtaSOH HARBORAREA tronlcally rids your FormalPeruDia aet.6 Medlcinechesta,11.Sea. $12:50~2389 coever Lohrs,642·(Xl82; · 557.1218 •2925 HarbcirBlvd. Eves. PIUme phone person APPLIANCESERVlCE home of all crawllna • chain, 2 ... vet, Xlnt 551·5118 · 644-11.22 needed to call 6: set Webuyused appliances f I yin g ins ects cood, .... Qwifn alu UUlity tralr w fiat bed MUSTS&Ll ~~-=----EARHTO COSTA MESA IMW •.PP~la for busy Solar We sell ttcond., guar. permanently. 635·8028 Iola bed, .._ piUowt, Suo., tow bar for sm. Word Pro cess er loatsC .. ~~/ 905 1>. 535,000.00 9 9-0 ~r&y Co. SC.SO/hr. + a llances. ~3077 collect. new, @II.-.-> carszs. 56-8215. typewriter, Enon QYX ...,...,. " boaua.AUforAI: llUY APPLIAMCES DobermanPuppies,blltlc 9 drawer~ maple J•Wa: w/di.splayAsswnelease ....................... HYouAreAn Ufy":,YHI ... 957 .. 133 tan,(7 weeb>sbots,S75 cbest fl2S.61bdnn set, f--&.. orbuy. •IMMAC28'·34'BOATS UP.l*WCAR -..-Y SYS ....... $ ~ .., 3 fUO m.ao ._ 9515353 6"'1 mo. plans prepaid .. GET HADY" -'""' New Ti.-.do 45" ol ea. pc . . t au ..__.,, . • 'rom l*lmo. includin o 7Sl-0511 75'-053S -nru r "ass !IM-6161 "-"-m aooll uu .a"•·. am..., mem.--.p u-•t"'..... ,. • MECHANIC 9!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 cook l o p w I g rid . . ., .. .., .. 71JO.ll!:Z2 ._ • .... sUp, letsoos 714/964-5994 h the job f = dJe/broiler model DGT 4 AKC Cocker Spaniel ble/2 Ill-Md! benches, Hieb quality office lotlh, Sllll tN we ave or you. TNYet4-cYMIJr. 45, retail fioo. Sell kSO. pups~!' Buff. 6 wits ~!!1lld wood, Seo. ~~:Bda:.~~ !~~ furnilu~. Mmt see to ....................... ~:nceeflill~~t s~!Y G~~Yd N 8, buea wbole11le 640-USO. SU0.-...64.1·1672 _._ • I appreciate. Assume tbls atereo 2 bar stools •· bu Hobie 14 · Sa ii boat. Hutsell in ""rson. lour Co. needs qualified M a y l 1 o p 0 r l 1 b 1 e Adorable Blood.bound. F, Lanoe cnientutfed anU· ' • I ..,ue or y. ~ • .. cba1r _ ....... ,_ • mirror, (custom 95l·5353 Yellow & White. Xlnt AUMMAGMOH penon tomanaptickel· wuher/ dryer Xlnl 9wks, AKC, blO. que · • _....., ot· made) ~174 cond Must sell. S79S PAUTl"'C/SUl"•U mg/consumer division. cood S220 · 4lM·58m~ll85 tomu ,••IJl7 · Like new Execulone OBO 846-l91B """ " ""' Mt11t be familiar wil.b · &5394 Shi.bl donblell y Bron......,.cou b 8 ft steel work bench KlSOO Charter Key · Harbor at Fair Costa ATO/IATA computer . Nee:~ to~ay l100. W-9 c:&bioet ~.: w/atorace Is e l.ec Telephone System. Ideal for Bay or Wood. ~M~es~•------SY'Wms. Xlnl aalary & Frost Free Refr1g , .th $80 75U330 lorTV ••• r~~way. 1100, folding Voice over page, 20 in· bridge Lake . 12 ' E&BIJTO butefits. Call Diane, Avocado, left open SISO. wi . . co •-· ptnC poaa tble oo caslU's struments. Own your Sailboat. complete S3SO. liAN"I Mon, Wed., ' Fri., ~1038 Sib. Huskl'. PIQll. AXC, ~at.al a.ad brom.e Ugbt $50. S4.5-0Dleves/wlmd.s own system in your new 833·3411. $35,000.00 t~Spm, 752-0788. A .. lilt stoYe xlnt martillo. S195. Pvt rooure. hlO BEAUTY SHOP equip. orfice. Chuck Perry, Snowbird l2. Needs some FlOHT EHD '· ,_ $39 63f.9386 rt 536-311.S. . m4Gt. ment and fixtures for 71•1956-1281. repair, some Lido ac· MECHANIC nrlST,-B'T. . . Adorable Lhasa Apsa Girla *-r, wtlite, xlot s 1 I e . Inc I u des ; cessories. SI.SO or best of· Excellent opportunity to SSw pm, salary com· Frigidaire wasber/dryer Puppies, AKC . rood, •lkMDI mirror Hydraulic chairs, Pets 1087 fer.S.S·SllS. · menaurate with exper S 3 5 0 . A m 1 n a 7141Mo.7matt.e • SllOfinD 81~11 h 1 l r t t . ••••••••••• .. ••••••••" inc rease earnings Pumanent p/time, 3 Re frigerator w/ice r · · · 1 1 rs Yin: .5 ; ions, Blu~ & gold Macaw. Sallawayinyourown21' Ma.ny fr111ge benefits. dm per week 9--"m. maker SJSO. 641-1672 In search of adorable Dec 81 Ml.• pc, brdwd, mb rrors,b11r 1ryersd, baby, hand-fed, tame, Venture. Salls, motor. See Gary Hutsell in I t tj I T' 1 . . medium site yowig dog. Fr. Prov. Gd cond. s ampoo ow a an $700 Curtis 960-4653 trailer many xtras. person. n et'Da ona ra ng Whirlpool washing Pref male pedigreedor Druaerw/min'orS125 2 lounges, display cases, · Askin Sasoo 840-~9 AUMMAGMOM Co., lrvlne. Call Norma, machine, 2 spd, 4 cycle not. ·Have 'loving home. cbelta '7ha, deal & cbr all auppUes and more. "-s & 0..,.... 1090 , · · POHTIAC/SUIARU ~O. S.SO. Westlngbouse Frost 6*-33'75 1125 or~ aet S3SO Call 631·9754 or, after 6, ....................... 14 Jmloro Harbor al Fair Costa TYPtST Free SJ00.557-8393 St B d 1~ CoucbP5.IJU7'7 · callSllMIQ H .Baldwin Upright $450. m-•163 Mesa Good salary to start. Magic Chef Micro Wave f~ma~rn~C goody':i SolidOakParqllf!ldin rm F .V. Racquet Club ~13bno . Gr~•!hCo~.r 13' Sailboat with trlr, -=-===------- f\all time ,iob. For m· Gas range combo, SIC kids . s10o.~m set, 1 cb.aln, m•tchina lifetime membership, 1 ogany 1m• · .. 5 sails like new. S7SO. EARN TO te.rviews call: o~en kOO. Waste King MUST SELL AXC reg china. 5 pc llaboc Bdrm xlnl facilities, S800. 847·7017 586-4178 $35,000.00 54&-2271 D11bw11ber S50. ~3164 fawn boxer. 1B mo. besi aet. BrlDdllft. 857·-0217 9113-61166 Piano, Chas. Foulds, up-SELL OR TRADE IMMIDIA TE TY•P IS T I RE C E P · Washer and ~ry~r gd bloodline. . 536-6107 llabotuy • poster bet. IAC9Ulf IAU ri&hl C0050ie, beautiful, 2S ' H ELMS-sl ps S· OPIMHG TIONISTP.Rlcfundde-cond.Msea.rrusc.rtems Malclttaa dreuer Rancho San Joaquin tlS0.831-6208 comple te w/sails· FOl velopm e nl dept. 84f.40'18 fnetoY• 804 w/mlrror 2 n ight t ·1 be •ti · SporflltcJ~ 1094 motor·4whltrlrN B Personable organiied 2 Diahw b rs po t ...................... tanda -Drop lea! • '':1 t re~:rr Ip. ....................... dock avail. $13 ,SOO HEAVY UHE self-s tarter Varied wood to::~ & ~Black pure male ~rm lble, 2 c~. •17 •Pl ee. · PoolTable,xlntcond .. aU 772-9370 MECHANIC re,s p o ns i b i I 1 l I es. OBO 96().9574 a.ft 7 m neutered Lab, 4 yrs, Jov. SlOO Eod tables 135 W uber /Dryer, SlOO. ~· brown felt, mov •8' Flipper, xlnt tst kids Excellent benefits. See SS.J 6Swpm . Excell. 2 Pair GE washers ·., :;! P!?fl:ini00!1 •• =b Mtri• ' · i'~~e[_,Sb~ ~2:8· ang-must sell. $450 boat, good cood. S2SO Gary Hutsell inperson. beilefits Is opply to ad· . S3SO · ·....,.. or.,_. A1J · a ._,, · OBO 67~75116· 67~03$4 96J..SZ72 ALAN MAGNON vuce. Santa Ana area. dryers, SUIO&c /pair. w H) R LPOOL d is. mate~ dill rm la· 845-8383. . I PONTIAC/SUBARU S.S..S760 ~all aft. 7 960-95'74. bwuber, coppertone, ble, 4 clta.in, bed rm aet. IRVlNEG-Ol.FCLUB lotlh, Slpl/ Harbor al Fair Costa Wtlon Coming Lop elec. good for partJ 548-9860 Mlllt Mil. Call eves thru MEMBERSHIP MEWWETSUfT Docb 9070 Mesa VET ER IN ARY stove w/mlcrowave orS.S-3036 . Septa . Sllll SUOO. 644-5319 BodyGk>ve,szL,S7S. • ...................... ~~------ HaiPITAL above, asking S600 cash. Cocktall tallie, ele,ant, . 536-.:12 BOAT SUPS FOR RENT Aaltos forS. Nttds full Ume person 846-'9l• afternoons. FwMt•t 105 a lau top IXS' 280. Radial arm ~w, Black &t NPT. BCH.. 2l', 2.S', 28 ....................... . ~onlhruSattodoclean· G It •·Saltl El ••••••••• .. •••• .. ••••• ~1215 Decker, 10 , xJnt cond. Surfboard·S'7" Rou d 32',+34' IMPORTANT 111 I b ll hi n g and I ers.. er eganl I BUY ms. 644-5311 . . !' PM N<mCE TO bt' ' h · I v fas stove dble oven * * * * Wall mirror 3 head-pin. New. Hardly nd· M2~9-S R u s ang . r ane. 1SO rfect 64S-3532 • Good used Furniture" boardl Di&etAble chan· Lawnmower, front den Lots or colors, Want to rent Slip ror 45· AEDADVEERRSTISANERSD 552· Ul.3 ' . . ' I • throw SlOO. Lawn edger I I r· c l . GAS RANGE. Blue, clean Appliances-OR I will delier, pull lamp1, Table 17 0 •Both re con d · s n_g e in us om . Sailboat. Newport area The price of items WAITllSSIS . 30 .. with griddle $12S. sellorSELLf'orYou lamps, Zealtb con$0l~ IM7_9i1os · Seno~ buyers. 556-1724 213/449-~. advertised by vehicle Exper. 3/yrs min . s.&-6102 MASTllSAUCTIOH •te~ wllll am/fm. •~ Hot stick. W1nted· slip ror 36X13 dealers in the vehicle rtt1me avail. Apply in Sears Kenmore frost-free 64M"6 11~'625 X 2' XI' woodfl&m, 20•k ~.Ugllh Store, l1illwwl, power .boat, xlnl ref's. classified advertising peaon, Jolly Roger, 400 re frig 15 cu ft runs furn w/2 drnws, lots or High output. 8. 2 bulbs, lw lotS Donna : 540-9712 dys. columns does not in· So'. Coast Hwy., Laguna rfecl 1150 ~1 I IUY FUIM'TUll mite. Sll-71M excellent ror garage or ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• elude any applicable Beach. · . Lea 957-8113 Diaill.1t111•1chrs shop. Have SO at SlS ea. liEAUTY SHOP equip-Npt Boal slip for rent, taxes, license. transfer WA J TRESS I Wa iler Sears ~uds Saver Wash KING INNERSPRING a 963-.oo4 ment and rixtures for small boat. t!:SO fees, finance charges, w/ear for wicker backet macbme S60, Sears gas EXTRA nRM mattress 517·lS'r1 Encyclopedia 1981 un-1 a I e . In c I u d es : 67~ rees for air pollution con· lunchserv. 9:»1:30P.M, dr er S60. S4M039 set, never 1&9ed, worth 4-S. IOS opened. $165 (wu 1375). HY d r aullc cha irs, loGh, S~ & trol devit-e certifications M·F. Ea.mluo.1175wkl. New refrigerator frost· $530 sacr $248 del --r Junior Britannica $70, hairstyling stations, Sid 9010 or dealer documentary be I to f ' . . •••••••••-••••••••• · · Must neat, peraona-HS, cross P reezer, J Never used queen n, Apt •ale ••erytbing Great Boo k s el, mirrors, hairdryers , ••••••••••••• .. •••"••• preparation charges un· ble 'l energetic. 979-0747 color while S87S. worth 1399, cash only m1.11t IO Mia bedt TVs ChlldcraftllO. shampoo bowls and 16' Regatta, 8S hp Mere, less otherwise specified • alUPAM for •PJ!l. 673-44:2'4 .. I S:21B del. Usually home. Callforala Kine ·Sile 838--3843 loung-es,. display cases, r uns &c looks great, by the advertiser. WrMDOWWASHll Electnc Stove : 30 . dou· 754.7350 bed, patio rum. All Moving, mlllt aell new 5 allsuppliesandmore. SIB00.548-12113 ~/ Mut~ bave exper. 'de· ble oven, self clean, MUSTS&L quality ltem1. Give pc dinnette set. Wooden CaU 631-9754 or, aft.er 6, Clinsia 9520 11!1!aablecar.14tr97IO. gold. Like new. SJSO. Mahogany Dbl. Bed away prica. Ma-4590 s pc p1Uo set with um· calJ1199-Qg ,_.,o;Wiofl ...................... , 983-33:95. w/mattress Nightstand u e brelJa. GE Refrigerator. TY,I.... •• .. •••••u••••u•••••• •w•o•rd-P•ro•<eaa&&ln•I--• Refrigerator, very clean. lcdruse.rto'match. Like Wv rm, clD twn. +Iota Stulfed dWr also pie· HIFI. Sttno 1091 Cmpan. set/ PltET11EST autodefrost SISO. new. Must see to ap. more. Miil aell. All gd turea,milc.611--0ICM ..... ~................. llilt tl20 '57T-lllD WOID m.9060 pred ate. Only $1000 or qualltJ. Im Mesa Verde Newport Beach Tennis Beautiful Color TV: 2 yr. •u•••••••••••n•• .. ••• IN TOWH! ·PIOCISSOIS Ref rig frost rree, clean. best o rte r . Mar I a Dr. IHI, C.M. Sat/Sun· Club Famlly Mmbsbp wrnty · FTee dehvery 10~ Camper Four Star IEST Offa! xlnt SlSO. s.&-8513 or 631 -7797 art 6Pll /Moe. $750 , incl tranar. 1148.646-1788 w/refrigerator & stove. __ J_~) ~4411.c; weekdays, anytime ....... IN 1-723-8<83 ONTVdecoderbox.total· P o rt -1 -potl~. All C .. 11111...., · . weekends. U ~answer ••••••••••••• .. ••••• .. ExpenaiveWeddinggown ly legal, $125 instaUed Butane, Queen s1r.e bed. ltlJ W'lllh to ei.tpt Stove , full size range, pleue keeptryin,&. Bone TnUlr, 2 wtll, 2 6 veil. Shie lOor 12. Sl7S. w/antenna. S36-M67 Slee~. 6. In excellent works ftne. StOO 54U.S13 20 sofas new M Lov· U .___ ·--• eu,5872 Complete port video condition. 1900. Call or548-448S • ' · sma ---m1open, · between tOam -Spm, -=-=-='-'-"=------; eseats, t88. Sleepers, .•t111 YA C H T C L U B aystem,JVCrecorderw. 6317657 'llllll;L ~ IJJ.1441 Washer, clean, works $199. FACl'ORY95'7·57~ Cbeat1ut 1eldin1. 18 MEMBERSHIP Panasonic camera+ ex-1-="'-·~~-----11 ~ ......_ good SSS. 548·8513 or 10 Section Play Pen bands IOOd dre111age One of Newport's finest lrH. fl300. 551-ll'9 ~~!~~.·~~eb:2 ~~~~ 1940 Ford Sedan Deluxe, 548...SS Couch, rust color~d. prot~ tl.SOO. Aft. 6, fac1Utiet.Savel500from lotlh & W.W potle sleeps 4 $4SO ooncours trophy winner. l4J.)4tl Dryer, gas, clean, works Best offer. Oak OinlJI& 131.z.. normal membership E .. p 1 • M&-!149o · · und l l' " ._. leocll good. SSS. 548-8513 or Rm Table w/6 cbal.n. H ti ...... IN feet . Contact Mr........................ f"° up resoraion. ,H• a+• S.S-4485 Grandfather's Clock ... ~:::.!•-•••uu Jacbon, 714-S40-7430 e..nol tO I G 8. Camper Shell, ice box, l2,SOO. 8Sl-62.26. , Mayt~g &t dryer, pe rf :rr Cb~ ~ e:~· Dia. llaJt&i/ waaber/ Tom m y Armour ••••••••••••••••••••••• sink, tbl, cpt. $175/best 1i~~c=~ab, 'd workingorder.l12Sea anta. · dryer 4 pc wl MacGreeorwoods•put-WANTED! ofr MB·'315 We'll Buy Or Sell Your Clean Import On CaMi9nment1'' Call Our Used Car Manaqer TODAY"' '.Bll-2040 495.4949 Soddleboc~ BMW Miuion Viejo WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR USED CARS AUMMAGHON PONTIAC/SUIAllU 2480 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 549-4300 549-1457 PORSCHES WANTED Allow us the opportunity to consider the purchase or trade-in of your clean Porsche Check with Us Today! •.1631 H11b0o Blotd Ulrdt!'n Grav,. ...... ZJ,JJ WEIUY CLEAN CARS AHDTRUCKS COHMElL CHEVROLET ~11.irlxor H111t <OSI\ \H.S\ 546-1200 HIGHIUYEI Top dollars for Sports Cars, Bugs. Campers. 914's, Audi's Ask for UIC MGR JIMMAlllMO VOLICSW AGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 142.zooo WEMEID YOUIEXOTIC &HmSHCJ.lS Earle Ike Ke~:to~e::~xrfBI 9e6-1295aft3:30PM 631·6220· Ir./~ pe11o 'aet. e; ten. Collectors Items BoatTrailerfor24'Sklp. · '57s. 76().904l ~,ll000, 111&. MAG 11: lkyclH IOZO Floral coucblloveseat. flcua trw,pgallmlac. From$50up.a.5737 Jack.557-1588,77$-7058 CoayCan,1ct. 4Wa..1Dri ... 9550 1tuM..._11.~ Wang Lexltron &c all ....................... ~t 1cond. ~ 2 ~ aft. S • .-. · WomeDJ 10 sp bike, like National Children's Org., ca~~r ~con;mac~I. ....................... "' ... ~~~~ :·;:0.,0 7 TOYOTA-VOL YO ~rWPequlpment. BMX Bikes $250 Ir $325 ;:a~!!Y S:1.~1 x l Full tlae canopy bed new '50. Antique rattan n~n·profit, needs your ~~inook. 'Stc;ve, °r:Jrlg~ 'H7e4aAvyMd~"JHpY m'·J'!• 5 1Jn0Mlw kSOforbotb · w/mattreu SlOO. cbelt'30.157--0o.t lift of boata, can, land furnace l.978mdJ f1SOO ... uu"' " 6'T.M441 C • 11 f o r n I a K i n I Dreaaer to ..di, $100 . ......, ~c. Liberal tax deduc-536-07S6. · · tires, bucket seats, air :°fiOTANAGENCY Beau Cutlom built Waterbed, built ap, 2liD Ladle a.pd bl.Ile, lwte I IOll tio11 advantages. (213! cond. Power st~ring, ,NEVER A FEE Cruiser. 15 apd. Front man1 extrae, $1000/blt $15. M6ll Qirt1 llAM, flO ............. : .......... 930-0552 Motorn.d.... lilt wheel. Low oule.age. and rear drum brakes, ofr.Mlllteee.•JJIO SIH J Soccer Ballt, FenderD,hmAmp Ac.bllla6maninflatable ....................... f31t5.CallSS7·1868. •lakellysuvica Muatsed750.•™1 2R,111t1wiftll, dln"5ea. Leathr 6 Yiayl, flO. pre-CBS I UO Xtra $475. Evinrude 2R.P. PL.ouch Mo-lPedy.:•~ Yl"I~. --"· tHO -irttll "k•"M""•l"added t Sol 65 lowsat --w m ~w ....w ~ Tip Ollar Pid For Your Car! nu ·················~~···· We Meet or Beat Any Bonafide Deel Come See Us Today!! $ SADDl.MA\.IC IMW 28402 Marg\lerite Pkwy. M isaion Viejo AVERY PKWY. (EXITS FWY.> 131-2040 4tMt4t Closed Sundays ·················••>••• --~- lll'Njlllll d d .:11: WANTS~ TO BE · YOUR #1 Volume Dealer in Orange County Discount on All Models lurbos Included -·- 1979 210 2 dr. sdn .. air, AM radio, red n18XZMI -·- 1981 200 sx Hardtop, SL, c tWse, sunroof, auto &c 'Much much more. (4480) 1979 210 Hatchback Aar, cassette. 4 spd., sharp• 1006616) s4999 -·- 1973 Pickup SWB, 4 spd., AM radio 06571W) $3495·'. -·- 1978 210 2 dr , air, auto .. lcx!af br. (~WCPI S3888 ~ -·-......,... t 'I itW ... 1025 a ,pu Clean! .,.,5.Botb•iwMZ-9703 Xlntcond.~ · ...................... . It ............ ;~......... cl.rs, 2 awi.e.I k pu cbra Je.-y 1'7 Jack, IQ..5222 ~ .._... Ford 9X7 Flatbed. Nd.s Ectua l Opportun y llDWOOOJX6'S $«10lbltofr.16-'190 ........ -...... Acoutlc '75 Amp, 170 .... n I tOlO Molwcwdft/ Mtr aambld. kOO _OBO ~Jr I to20' Iona Xlntded· S.WSotidWalnmdreuer, RllS, •·12'•. Graphic •• !!!!!................ Scoohn tlS ovr$300.64$.71J0lilte JOHMSOH I SOM L11tc••t1u:z 2628 Harbor Blv . 1978 T eoU.t1a Costa Mesa S40-5UI Oy. WI ~ fresh iOact arrivill Illas bdbrd, 2 nlaht E•••l•lt• TIFFANY IQ. Xlnt for kybda or Boat aear for *50 tall, ...................... ie ~T f'2S"O pictup xlnl .!1t1 Saw at ~1n' standa ' 2 II wall mlr· aold rtMllM bracelet Jlr. tlOO o.80. For IAlo. Ntp (tatrail) los SlOO. ,, Honda Motorcycle ltK coad, all eatn.s, '3SSO. J.a.y Jim ~anvtime · r o ra U007bsl ofr. wtdl1'nMll. llatofter .u.sm Radar reflector us. mllu. Perfect cond. CallS4MGS. '•' 111411Wm> ' · IG-7JIO cmr Twr ta&. Selmer Mart Chart•. muy soi ea. flOOO. 5*37SI. J.IAYTICH lum . tlldl111 1la11 Dialal table, brn lat· ... •llOT vn, almolt brand new RCA 3 channel RDF 'T1 Huaky & '80 Honda ~] C!:Jrwc:k R ll E rlence required. doon. I'. w/trame. '75. quer, lebn (2 w/111D1). fUOO ~-' h O o. Bo at I rl 11 1158. Belt ofter. 2~ on, door ~~ o ry neaotiable. s· w /o frame, hS. Upllllnc.lleO.• th 1u m 1'71 Trum.pet, Bundy, lop w/mounu SSS. Flatea 8*GOO :: ~:~ SGJOOBO new port Beaell Area MMm m-4811 •••••""'-*-•-• .. CODd ..... forstudent.. '30. FAA 6 USCO ap-'81Kawud:iKE125: 20 I 551 •141eal otftce. Seod rt-c...,.• I r Grwpbedroomor .......__.. IOIDe !1'70 'f»m l pron d 8 man l:nllatable mU... brand new. Paid i---...:==--- •Nlt to CW.lnect ad 1 'p 1 IHO IMaa ,_Ml. Built In an1r Hed. Stars · raft HOO. Sea 1wln1 tlOOO Wini •· Call '71 F 250. 4X4. New rblt t11Df. Dal.l.r Pilot, P.O. ...\ .. •••••••••• .... •• mreo P!O . ..,... Craftau lJ" Rad la I .ut'TAI I Mil' ltOye $30, *-• Ed 54to•w a41114. ~ S~ER ~~R~. ~,Oae&all .. CA Ikon rrN -..1.oocn. Bro1blll Pl'tmlere f/pe arm aaw •/ ataod, 1MP1ulCopy,S100. IMh.P""" fMG ...._.,.__S./ · JOmUJhmeer. $450080 llldtt. bdnD Mt, mt l>ladH t4n. ~ bp _. ........................ ...,1se.r.p fl601-.a=1 ... ow_.;:;..;:.oN_. ___ _ Wlf • Or Wltbc.... 45iJZ -..rt. 1rt.•r •IKIDcl 1140. 7721' ... JACI ....................... •Toyota pidao1p, new ......... _........ 011 IOWA llu.t nerllkit l/1ft old DrtD ,._....a ... Ill 1Mft IAlhril Im mac, kept out water, AJIDOlt ..,, Clliaook, pop Wlat, radio, l'llDI srtat, ...... ,, •• Wit-',..$100. tlY rm, ctfD nn. tablle, t',:•1::-:_1 1ctnmlllk15 llObn,.......,NJcov· top,fllllyeqlll.p.Odm11. _!TOO.-.- .....,..._......... 517 lamps. pictlll'H, etc. ,.... ..;. •' 11.ltft ~ mVBr-..O -..sm 1917~ .-...... Barilud ,_ HOD SlaL-8 towad •W tab Mal fOll. 6ta ·=:· ...., w/cw Ult -... (TIA)--Nlws. Tm.I tl70 l Too Nii. bed. Low OJilllA. a... • :~d mnl• caatra, Sl20. Sii-Ml. • .. w/a.e a..MW!':°,.u,, lJ' Al•m Oamtfi•btr ........ -............ mllea1e ea11De. Aak IJCa . ltn lJ. • llmolT-..-OUrad: .a. llld • truw., .... • lAdlll .... ._ .. ~ *11r.Ntw,Dl'ftfbeebs 'Me To, a.tr, •W'Diat .... -..110 .,..9!!Jcs:::;::;:.u.4 _____ J ton• proJ., USO. na, ,..r cmd. IM'• • w/11 It ..,, ..... .a. ~ ...... ,. ftt.er':; .. ra for •otorcyelea. -9171 ~= ~K!!Z~-=-:::-::-:---t..t.!!!!.;!!!:!!!!!L!!!!!!!!!L ~ --... -•n•I• .. Mc ,... .. rm .. ... ......... "_. ..... .. ·aii;;H._.. ,.. ........ Or edll 'h ,.._ ,_. ll'ra:DUPPll l''TIAVILTIWl i. Dodll V• 100. 04 .... a 1wM ..... wttl •an. , ,,,,..., .. ...., _.._.... ,.., .... ~. eerad. 111_. mt .... J. w,~ OVER ... .... For Your Good VW. Porsche or Audl • • 4 ' ~. , VW -PORSCHE-AuDI 445 E. Cout HI way at Ba.yalde Drive Newport Beach moeoo Premium prices .. paid for lllY uaed car <forelpotdomaUc> In &ood conditloft. 8"U. ! 2 dr., stereo cass~te. 4 apd., sliver. <rT•ViJrO., s35gf. -·-1974 260 ~ CJ>e .• s •l)d .. A1c;·rna11. (018121) !. ' I a i I \ . . . MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • ATLAS CHRYSL.Ell_,.. YMOUTH t9'ie Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa Tel 546-1934 3 blocks aaiiAh of San Diego Freeway oft Harbor Blvd Complete body shop. Sales. Servi~ Parts. Servi<:41 Dept open Monday thfu Friday 7.30 AM to 5.30 P.M and 8 AM to 5 P.f.1 . on Saturday • IEACH IMPORTS MPove Street, Newport Beach Tel. 752-0900 Call us, we're the specialists for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot & Saab ·~ THEODORE ROllMS FORD Modern Hies. service. parts. body, paint & tire depts. Competitive rates on lease & dally rentals. 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 642-001 o or 540-8211 • ~ JOHMSOM & SOM UMCOLM MEICURY 28~ Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Tel. 54()-5630. 57 Years ,Cl( ~lendty family service -Orange County·s oldest Lin· • cotr·Mercury dealership. MIWf'ORT rwous Coaat Highway, Newport Beach Tel. M05640-17&4. The Fem1rl HMdQuan.ra. NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street Newport Beach Tel 833· 1300 At the triangle ol Jamboree MacArthur & Bristol behind Victoria Station Sales Sefv1ce Leasing & Parts Fleet discounts to the public • NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 54~9100 Orange County s Largest Cadillac dealer Sates Service Leas· ing G) DA YID J . PHILLIPS IUICl<-POMTIAC-MAZDA Sates • Service • Leasing 24888 Al1c1a Parkway Laguna Hills 837-2400 llU MAXEY TOYOTA USEO CARS 19202 Beach Blvd . Huntington Beach, 962-0829 Outstanding selection of used cars for Immediate delivery. And while on Beach Blvd., stop by our new car lacll1ty up the street • ALAN MAG MOH PONTIAC-SUIARU 2480 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 549-4300. Sales, Service. Leasing Mr Goodwrench · 0 RAY FLADllOE Uncoln·Mercury, Honda, Isuzu & British Cars 16-18 Auto Center Dr .. S.O Fwy -Lake Forest exit Irvine Auto Center, lrv1ne83CHOOO ''The Llttle Cheeper OeelM' BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd Westminster Tel 892·6651 Orange County s oldest and largPsl Pon11ac dealership Sales Service Parts UNIVERSITY HONDA 2850 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 54~9640 1 Mile South 405 Freeway Sales service parts & leasing 0 SAHTA AHA DATSUN 2001 E 17th Street Santa Ana Tel 558 7811 Your• Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer 0 MIRACLE MAZDA We've moved' Our new location 1s 1425 Baker Street. Costa Mese. Tel 545-3334 Stop by & v1s1t our brand new showroom and see why we·re the #1 Mazda dealer In Southern California Sales, Service, Parts and leasing ALLEM0 0LDSMOllL£>.CADILLAC SUIARU-GMC TRUCKS San Diego Fwy at Avery Exit on Camino Capistrano in Laguna Niguel Tel 83H>8001495-0800 • SAM DE SANTIS CHEVROLET 401 S El Camino Real, San Clemente Sales, Service. Leasing And Parts Orange County·a NEWEST Chevrolet dealer. · GroWlng Your Way Exit Et Camino off-ramp 831-0580 4i2-&500 OR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED N THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT REP. COSTA MESA DATSUM 2845 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 54~64 10 Sen11ng Oranqe Counlv tor 16 vPars 1 Mile So 405 SUNSET FORD, IMC. (Home ol Will e the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd Westminster Tel 636 4010 FRANK PROTO LINCOLN-MERCURY Service and Pai ts Department always open 7 days a week 7 30 AM lo 6 30 P M 848-7739 0 COMHELL CHEVROLET .2828 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa. Over 20 years serving Orange County• Sates. teasing. service. Call 546·1200: special parts line, 546-9400: body shop line. 754-0400 0 CHICK tVERSON PORSCHE-AUDl-YW 415 E Coast Hwy . Newport Beech 673-0900. The only dealership 1n Orange County With these three great makes under one rooll ROY CARVER ROUS ROYCMMW 1540 Jamboree Road. Newport Beach 64~6444 Satea, Service Parts And Leasing I Southern California Edison Co., operator of Unit 1 al the San Onofre Nuclear Generatinc Sta· tion, has been given an ... verace" ratlne by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for radiation protection, emereency preparedness, fire ~afety and plant security. • NRC public information of· Acer Jim Hanchett said 21 of the nation's 72 licensed nuclear re· actors were given below average ratings In a report to be released this week by the com· mission. The report, wblch took a year to prepare, shows no safety hazards at any of the plants, Hanchett said, but several were not operating at desirable safety levels, he added. Hanchett said San Onofre was one of 36 nuclear plants to be eiven an average rating. "The NRC is taking the positlon that even the plants rated below average are acceptably sale, but management in certain areas ls not as strong as it should be,·· be said. Hanchett said surveys were i.ken at the 72 nuclear plants during 1979 and 1980. "Many of the problems encountered at that time may well have been corrected by now,'' he said. Hanchett said the NRC plans to conduct yearly surveys ol nuclear facilities, and a second report should be released by mid·1982. He added that the plants were rated in 17 areas including management control, plant operations, main tenance, employee training, radiation Rrotection, environmental pro· tection, emergency planning, fire protection and security. Data for the nuclear "report card" came from inspections by NRC officials and reporta the utilitiet r.Je with the NRC when problems arise at the plants, Hanchett said. Meanwhile, discussions con· tinued today between Edison and NRC officials over proposed chances in operation of the emergency cooling system of idled Unit 1 at San Onofre. The 14-year-old plant has been shut down since Sept. 4 when two valves that allow cooling water to enter unit l 's reactor in an emergency failed to open during a routine shutdown. Edison is seeking NRC ap· proval to change the emergency shutdown procedure at the plant in order to avoid having to replace the vafves. That would be costly and the plant would have to remain out of service for an extended period. said Hanchett. Girls wounde d by gunman identifie d Two young girls shot Saturday by a gunman as they were walk- ing in the Cleveland National irorest were identified today by tbe Orange County Sherlff's1 Department. . They are Kelly Cartier, 12, and Vanessa lberri, 12, both of Lake Elsinore. · Miss Iberri is reported to be in critical condition and not expect· od to live, according to Lt. Wyatt Hart. Miss Cartier is In serious condition with head wounds, he ~aid. • According to Sgt. Gerald Horton, the girls had been camp· lna with their families and were walking along a roadway in the national forest about 2 p.m. Saturday when the gunman pulled beside them and fired uveral rou nds, apparently without provocation. The sbootiria took place near the Blue Jay camp1rou.nd about io miles east of San Juan Capa.trano. Horton says the shots were believed to be fired by a man tlrtvln1 an oran1e Dataun pickup lruck. Re said there are wit- nesses to the shooting and at- tempts are being made to find the owner ol the truck. Train kills boy COROORAN (AP) -A Santa Fe freicht train struck and killed an ll·year-old Corcoran boy who apparently • H playlnl oa tracb near bere, authorities aaid. Bryan Ashford and a 1J. tear-old companion bad left for Hanford Saturd ay mornln1. Deputy ltlnp County Coroaer Jfuk Vermuon aald. Alblord w 11 t lJled 11 they relumed ,r.ome. ORAIGI COAST Dlillf ............. Huntington Beach fire olfictal Frank Kelly checks oil spill /or fire danger at home of Tom Conlon today. Oil fills back yard of Huntington home By PATRICK KENNEDY Of ... D.ity "'91,.... A backyard crude oil storage tank ruptured this morning in Huntington Beach, covering the yard with a 4-inch thick coating of black, sticky oil. A jagged 2-foot break near the top or the 20,000-gallon tank was higher than a concrete retaining wall and about 1,500 gaJlons of the crude spewed over the dike, onto a picnic table and then seeped over the yard, according to fire department officials. 'Tm afraid we're going to have to have a whole new back yard," said resident Tom Conlon, 64. "But when you have an oil pump behind your house you ha ve to expect that som ething like this can hap- pen." Conlon says he doesn't own the well but receives a royalty for the pump and two storage tanks stationed in his back yard. Tank owner Robert Vigue, 46, of Huntington Beach said he SUS· pects the moist salt air corroded the 25-year·old tank, causing it to break under pressure. Vigue, who has two other pumps and storage tanks in the city, said he didn't realize it was in poor shape. A truck equipped with a special vacuum for cruile oil was hired by Vigue to clean up the mess, he said. Fire depart· ment officials say the entire back yard will have to be dug up and replanted. Fire Department official Mik e McKay said the "crude came out like a stream. Unfortunately the break was so high that the oil went over the dike." Mrs. Conlon, 70, said she was awakened by the break at about 8 a .m. today. "It frightened me," she said . "At first I thought it was thunder, but when I looked out.side our back yard was full of oil." Fire department officials poured sand around the blac~ slow-movin~ puddle to prevent at from spreading to the street. Fire department officials say there are numerous residential storage tanks scattered throughout Huntington Beach. Judge's trial in Newport By The Associated Presa The trial of a San Diego municipal judge charged with soliciting prostitution will take place in Newport Beach with re· tired Municipal Judge Kiernan Hyland or Sonoma County pre- siding. Hyland selected the Orange County Harbor Judicial District after granting a motion by the defendant, Judge Lewis Wenzell, for a change of venue from San Diego. The first preferences of Wenzell wer e San Francisco, Alameda or Los Angeles coun- ties while the district attorney's office proposed a change of venue but preferred a location closer to San Diego. Wenzell, 39, faces eight misdemeanor counts. No date for the trial was an· nounced. Layton waits for jury SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Larry Layton·s attorneys say the former Peoples Temple member is "doing just fine" as jurors in his murder-conspiracy trial today began their third full day of deliberations. Layton, 35, is charged with conspiracy to murder Rep. Leo Ryan, D·Calif., and U.S . diplomat Richard Dwyer; and aiding and abetting in Ryan's killing and the attempted murder of Dwyer. Ry an, three journalists and a temple defector died on Nov. 18, 1979 in a barrage of gunfire at a remote jungle airstrip outside the temple's Jonestown settle- ment. Dwyer was wounded. ••••• YOUR HDMITDWI DlllY PAPIR Bellringer's songs gonge She's removed after playing pop tunes on carillon ST.° HELENS, En1land (AP> -The bells of St. Mary's •tarted a dJng·dona fight here between bellringer Eva Gamer and her · parish priest, the Rev. Vincent Hughes. Mrs. Garner, a pop·lovln1 pensioner, made Sundays swing with foottapping versions of "The Teddy Bears' Picnic," · · DaMy Boy,'' and other upbeat tu.Dea in addition to the uauaJ Beethoven and Mendelssohn. Her light touch on the com· plicated keyboard of the 47·bell carillon at the Roman Catholic Church in this glasamaldng town won praise from the Jesuits who ran the church. But they moved out last April and a new team of "renewal" priesl.8 mov4Kl in, led by Hughes. The new priest, feeltne the music was less than heavenly, issued a stop-the-pop ultimatum. Mrs. Gamer refused and quit 51 "You can't play hymns and sacr ed music all the time.'' years of playing the bells. ''You can't play hymns and sacred music all the time, you would go round 'the bend," the unrepentant, 60-year-old widow s aid. "After all, the bells are for the enjoyment of local people." Hughes, 50, said Mrs. Garner had been playing "these rather trashy .songs" alnce he arrived and he is looking for a new keyboard player. But a replacement won't easl· ly be round. The carillon, one of only three in Britain, is operated by levers, feet and stout blows of the fist to make the bells ring, and Mrs. Gamer said it look her three years, three hours every night and all afternoon on Saturdays, to team to play it. Storekeeper Mary Foy or· ganized a petition co get Mrs. Garner's job back. "Almost everybody round here has been married to Eva's bells," Mrs. Foy said. Poor nations due aid Reagan strategy excludes those who support terror~sm UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. unveiled the Reagan administration's new strategy for economic development of poor nations today, but said those supporting international terrorism will not get help. In a speech to the U.N. , General Assembly, Haig said the world body and elobal 4 banks lower • prime rate NEW YORK (AP> -Four major commercial banks lowered their prime lending rates ooe·half percentage point today to 19.S percent as the coet ofbanka' funds and loan demand continued to slip. The move -led by Chase Manhattan Bank, the nation's third·largest bank -was quick· ly followed by No. 7 Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust, No . 8 Bankers Trust and No. 9 First National Bank of Chicago. Just last week, banks na- tionwide lowered their base lending rates to 20 percent from 20.S percent, where the prime rate had stooci'slnce early July. One smaller bank, Southwest Bank of St. Louis. lowered its prime rate a full percentage point to 19 percent today. _Lowering the rate was in ·'response to current market conditions," said Chase spokesman Charles Francis. "The raw material of banks is money and it's costing less" than la.st week, he added. The prime rate is what banks use to calculate interest charges on short-term loans to corpora- tions with top-grade credit, although some banks make very short·term loans at rates below their s~ted prime. The lower prime reflects the declining cost banks have to pay for the money they lend. Other key rates, such as those on Treasury bills and certificates of deposit, also have tum bled In the last two weeks. Federal funds, an important source of mnoney for banks, traded at 15.25 percent today after being close to 20 percent in early July. Federal lunds are overnight loans of uncommitted reserves among banks. Many economists predict those rates will continue to fall slowly in the weeks ahead because of evidence the economy is performing at a sluggish rate, which could eue the demand for credit and allow rates to fall. The prime rate reached a rec- ord high 21. s ~ercent in December 1980. economic development are threatened by "the willful viola· lion of the national integrity or both Afghanistan and Cambodia by the Soviet Union and Viet· nam. "The world's hopes for peace, for security and for development will be jeopardized if ·might makes rigbt' becomes the law of nations," Haig said in prepared remarks. Haig said security from ag- gression is an essential ingre- dient for economic growth in poor nations and that t he Reagan administration will in· crease its help for "proarams essential to deter international aggression and to provide the domestic security necessary to ca rry out sound economic policies. "We have no intention of pro- viding foreign· assistance, moral comfort or the prestige of in· te~aUooal PQlitic~l plaUQr~ to countries that foster inlema· WARNS TERRORISTS tional violence," Haig said. State Secretary Haig Haig's criticism of Soviet in· tervention in Afghanistan and iUI support for Vietnam's occupa- tion of Cambodia reflects the rirm stance he is expected to take in his meeting Wednesday with soviet Foreign Minister An· drei Gromyko. The chief purpose of the meet· ing with Gromyko will be to agree on details for the start of U.S.-Soviet negotiations later in the year aimed at restraining deployment of medium-range nuclear missiles. He said Sunday that while the administration is ready to talk seriously with the Soviet Union, he wlU tell Gromyko the Soviets must not intervene in neighbor· ing Poland. Communist officials ha ve repeatedly warned Poland's independent labor federation Solidarity against c hallenging government authority. Haig met here today with U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who is seeking U.S. support in his re-election bid. The ''strategy for growth" Haig outlined in his speech is aimed at bolstering economic development in poor nations. It emphasizes private investment rather than government.backed aid wherever possible. "Our common objective should be to stimulate domestic and international private invest- ment," he said. "We must en· courage and support the in· dividual investor." He said developing countries s hould be integrated into the in· ternational trading system more fully than before. He also said less time should be wasted in laying blame for the plight of poor countries. Compensation seen for Iran hostages WASHINGTON (AP) -A Presidential Panel recom · mended today that the U.S. gov· ernment pay each of the former American hostages in Iran $12.50 per day as compensation for their ordeal. If the proposal is approved by President Reagan, each of the 52 ex·hostages held in captivity for 444 days would be entitled to $5,550 in compensation. The nine -member com- mission, which included former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, released its recommendations after three months of delibera- tions. mission fell far s hort of the figure suggested by Brice Clag- gett, the attorney for the hostages and their families. Co nsidering the execution threats, torture and other mis- treatment of the hostages, "you would be on the conservative side if you were to decide that a court would be likely to pay a minimum of $1,000 for each day of captivity for each hostage," Claggett had told the com· mission. DIAIGI CDAIT llATHIR 7 die • m C-130 plane crash The compensation recommen- dation was one of six specific proposals contained in the com· mission's report. The panel said the tax-exempt detention benefits it was recom· mending are similar to thole &iven lo Vietnam prisonen ol war, and interned civilians in Vietnam and to the crew ot the USS Pueblo, which waa detained bf NC>rtb Korean authol'ities for ll months in 1988. Night through mid· morning low clouds llnd fog along the coast, otherwise fair through Tuesday. Lows tonight near eo along coast, 66 in· land. Hlghs Tuesday low 70s al beaches, 80s inland. · 20 i njured . as transpor t burns in Nevada deser t INDIAN SPRINGS AIR FJELD, Nev. CAP) -An AJr Force C-130 transport plane car· rylng 68 people on an Army training mission crasb-landed and burst into n ames early to- day near a remote desert land- ing strip. Air Force Sgt. J oe Wiles said seven people were kJlle<l and 20 were hospitalized. Lt. Col. Mike Wallace, an Air Force public inform ation of· fleer, said be was told the runway ,at Indian. Sprtnp, '5 mUes northwest of Las Veau, WU unlit, poss[bly U part o( the tralnln(.exerclse. the Nevada Te!t Site, the na- tion's nuclear weapons testing grounds. "I fell the buildinl shake," uid Mary Ann Miller. wortlng In an Indian Sprln1s conven· lence st.ore 1"'11 miles away. "Tbe sky was aglow, the plane was totally engulted ln names." said Jessica Hilt, 25, • nurse w h o flew to the scent ln Valley View He>1pital'a "Ftigbt for Life" reacue helicopter. "There wu a lot of men with arm and let fractures. It wu mlraculOUI that there wen DO more aerioua ~urlea. "When you bear about a plane Tbe crub octurred one mlle noJ"th of lndJan Sprlnca Alr Field, an &lntrip aftl.Uated with Nellis Air Force Base and near <8" PIANB, PaJe Al) •Reno NEVADA • Las Vegas CALIFORNIA ; AIR CRASH SITE 8t11~ MOT' Laa Vego.s In addition, the commlaslon recommended that: -The maximum payment ai· low able on claims for damage to or Ion ot rraonal property be Increase from U0,000 to $50,000. -The medical and health benefits relatina to the hosta1a· detention be authorized without ltmlt. -Exiatlnc leCillaUon re11unc to hottafe benefltl be amended tC> cover hlture bott81e litua· Uont. Tbe 112.~ per day compenaa. tloa rec:ommeoded by the <.'Om· llllDITDUY Ezdted about the Rama' firat wm? Eniot/ U, ·~cauae Ua•re are pro~ ah•od. St~''°""·~ CJ. llDll A.-u..era .. .._ ........ .. ......... ............ ~ .... Cl ..,.., a ~ ........... ~ .. ~ .. • ........ Al ---.. ' .'11.• I ) ' \. ~----~------~----~----~--------~-------,_ • • • • • o,_. Cout DAILY PILOT (Monst1y, S•ptemtnr 21 , 1981 180 aJTested at 'Diablo 7 ~day total in nuplear power plant protest 1,290 SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP> - With a dectslon to atart up Oiablo Canyon at.on\lc power pl mt looming, a.en a.nll·nuclear blockude or the plaut r'M\1118d today with more than • •· rests. brlngln1 lhe soveD.-J total lo 1,290. The Nuclear Regulatot7 Coni· mission gave Paciti• :Oat ~ Electric Co. interim apjf'OTal to- day for low-power teetiJtf' at the plant, a move that could •part a new push by protesters. PG&E spokesman Dick Davi.a said that if the liceow Ir. 't>-• • proved, "We wtll start the teaterw, all or whom have un pro.cesa lmmecllately" to load dersone t.be non·v1olence train· the reactor, start the nuclear lnt required by the 1ponlOl'in1 chal._ rea Uon and belia l•tl Abalone Alltance, have Joined at u.; to 5 percent ot the,... tlu protest tor today'• tor'1 capacity. t bo'wdown ailtce laat week. 1'C>Uy's arreata ~can ~1 "1'blt ii the day," said pro- before '1 a.m. 11 MtU.Olf'U,ea tester ftunell Cutler, 23, of San· cleared a path t.htoup a ~ ta Barbara. "We're 101n1 to be row ol blockaders Jt t.be Ua here till the end -the end ot gate to allow three emJity bu.Ml this .PJbt. We're a new wave or to leave t.be $2.3 billion plant, people who haven't been busted. ud a atalt.a..u later u • mll• · Ther~·· lots of us." l01a1 convoy of busea '6ade4 wWl Tbt Alliance said It might PG&E workers rumb'-d'imo Ole :a.Pt,ad d4:1D<>lialrators all around plant.. , • Ulti"7~acre sit& lf testing is ap- Severat buodred •~ l)l'O· proved. ROUSES AUDIENCE ChristO'pher Cross 8roa+n sights, ua students told By RICHARD GREEN Of ... o.lly ~SC.ti Students should seek a broad- based education and avoid ~ mature specialization, Monaete vice preside nt How~ Schneiderman said today l:a" a speech marking the start of UC Irvine's 17th academic year. The former Dean qt' VO school of Biological Soi ... s. who is now chief of resea&ieliand . , Woman dies in free way auto crash I t A 27-year-old Lou9 Beecla woman was killed and three other people were injured •ll'lf today in a single·vehide er• on the San Diego Freewa,y near Harbor Bouleva rd in ~ Mesa. California Highway Pa~ QI. ficer Joe Morrison said W_,y Searles was killed wben a vu driven by Donald Kniss, 21. of Huntington Beach, slamm ....... to a tree. Kniss was booked on suspicioQ of felony drunken driving and manslaughter at the j~il ward at the UC Irvine Medical Center. Morrison said he s uffered bruises and cuts. A sister of the dead woman, Robin Searles, 22, of Long Beach, was treated for injuries at Fountain Valley Community Hospital and released, Morrison said. Another passenger, Bruce Reyes, 24, of Long Beach, re- mained at the hospital today wi th a broken s pine, broken right leg and a collapsed hang. Morrison said. Morrison said witnesses told him that the van was north- bound on the freeway and a hi&h rate of speed about 12:45 a.m. when it went out of cootrol, struck the center divider~ thsi Ira veled acro!'s the traffic tanes lo the should er where it 'Struck the tree Magazine sold ... Police have arrested a a- year -old Costa Mesa man for suspicion of selling heroin tn>ar his home. allegedly to.nftleta In exchange for sexual f&'Vors mid money, according to officers. Free flu shots ·~ due for seniors ·' South Coast Medi~~ South Laguna will s~ '* senior citizen nu31 vaddn1 clinic Oct. 13 and 38'.{ , to 6 p.m .. and o~ from 8 a.m. to 11 a.tn,. The clinic will be Ute hospital's board room. Trial ope ns • JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP> -A former U.S. Army officer, Joseph Helmich, went on trial today on charges of selling to the Soviet Union secret.a. development for Monsanto, tdd about 1,500 s~nt.s, In Campus Parle that maay'ol m~·~tbelert i m porlant dlsco•6'rfes Jt~• made by people able to lh'n from several fields of exp~. He pointed to Charles Darwin as an example, sayiag that Darwin's theory of evototien was b ased in part o n an economk theory put forward by Adam Smith. Sehneiderman's speech at the ~.nvocation ceremonies was preceded by a short address by Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, who announced that about 10,500 stu- dents are expect4ifl this year at UCI, the hilhest enrollment in the history of the University. Chancellor Aldrich, 63, who has four more years before man· datory retirement, said that more than $60 million in con- struction is now under way on the UCI campus and on the Univers ity Medical Center in Orange. When classes start next Mon· day at UCI about 3,000 students will be living on campus. Student fees this year at UC I are $272. A $75 increase in fees will be levied next winter. DMty ............ " •k•N K...._ Women ~.point at UC Irvine convocation ceremonies today. They say there are 50 women on faculty and 424 men and thct 23 women have tenure compared with 348 men. Summer's swan song sultry Orange Coast beaches got a final summer workout over the weekend as thousands spread towels on the sand to soak up the near-tll degree tempel'atures. LifeitJards from Seal Bead! to San Clemente said the ocean put on a perfect show for sommer"s finale with 4-foot surf and not a trace of riptides. Huntingtoo Beach· lifeparda said they made ODIJ flw.e Qcean • • rffcues during the two days while guards in Newport report- ed only three. There were no rescues reported in Laguna Beach. The mile-long stretch of city sand in Huntington attracted 73,000 visitors over the weekend while 105,000 people visited Hun· tington slate beaches during the two days. In Newport. ~uards estimated ,. ' • • 85,000 people turned out Satur· day and 90,000 showed up Sun· day. Guards in Laguna Beach calculated 10,000 beachgoers vis· ited the strand Saturday and nearly 15,000 came out Sunday. Beach air t e mpe r atur es ranged from 78 to 80 -warm readings for even the dog days of s ummer. The water tem- perature hovered around 66 in most locations. ~ ~d _. in s_ex, drug case '. . Held in Costa Men ·~ oa $15,000 bail is Metro Verner All· drews of 740 Weelo Drive. Investigators said Andrews was arrested Friday anemooo after two female agents posing as narcotics buyers a llegedly made the second of two heroin purchases. Police said they entered An· dre~· bome with a search war· rant and found five, quarter· OYnce balloons of heroin and a dictating mac hine r e ported stolen earlier this year from a Costa Mesa business firm. Andrews is being held for sus- picion of heroin sales, possession of heroin for sale and possession of stolen property. (Jn~Jre, .fie~r_ing draws protest Federal .Mfar~~llN"•· ·a:· 8UlU of a atudy, Alliance Organizers said the rally was -all&cy of "inergeejy ~t • anben said, that shows the also being held to show local plans fot ~ • rea~f:/!11. rathrc st1tion located on sympathy for the demonstra- der 'con~ctfoa a( tie. lafl 1 ~ 10Ulh of San Clemente lions being held al the nuclear Onorr-; N'\lcteat G~U.ltt si.: fOwM '-e converted for use as a power plant at Diablo Canyon lion resumed in An.tlelnl ~~ 1\(>n;nuclear facility. near San Luis Obispo. and dl'ew a small protest. " • 1 > A Bout ~ m'e~err·• of~he l Orange County Alliance ·fot' p I d • t ~rvlval stood on the sidewalk a ace en1es s ory m front of the Anaheim Mar- riott Hotel. They held a banaer which read, "Convert 81n D • b d 0;?~~e·~~ogan was ln reference 1ana ore . et .. alfled edven111n9 7141642-5171 ~ other depenmen11 642~1 Al'N OFAC£ LONDON <~P) -Buck· Ingham Palace has denied a newspaper report that Princess Diana was "bored with her role" as Prince Charles' wife alt.el' only teVtb weeks of mar- ria1e. the day-to-day routine of a royal." Quoting unidentified sources, It also said Diana wu fiodina it dilflcult to treat "servants u servants" at the royal family's Balm or al residence in SeoUand, where she bu been livinl with her husband and bis parents, Queen Elir.abet.b II and Prince Philip. . ?:.::::...~~~:io~T'~.~~. ~w. (" tA111 .. .. Totally untrue,'' s_ald .-Wbael Shea, ••lace press ~ of t.b• reeort ln the -.·a ~ Uibl«>ld owned by Aattralian •ewtpaper mapate bfel't Murdoch. The newspaper said lt waa ataadina by lta report. The Sun artlcle said 20-year• old Diana wu bored, lo1ln1 weight md ftndlq lt "almOBt lmpoesib.. to adapt heraelf to Although be denied the report, Shea 1aJd he would oot bother to uk foe a retraction. "U 1 rang the Sun every Ume they ran a story like thJ1, I would not have anythinl else to do," be aaid. Singer Cross moves amphitheater fans • Br IOEL C. DON °' ............... Rldlna the crest of hla hit UUe track from the movie "Arthur," Chriatopher Cross roused a near-capacity Irvine Meadows Amphitheater audience to hls special brand of love songs Sun· day evening. The 30-year-old Texan treated the crowd to a 9C>·mlnute set, which included current hits such as "Never Be the Same," "Sail- ing,·• "Ride Ute the Wind" and "Say You'll Be Mine." Many k:now Cross for bjs hl&h· pitc hed vocals. On 1ta1e. be cemonstraled his command of the guitar;offerlng a number of lead guitar solos. C ross appeared n on - expressive and barely uttered a rew words on s tage. All his energies were poured into his music and dazzling the en- thusiastic audience with his pre- cise attack and ability to set a romantic mood for much of the evening. The majority of hit singles came by way of Cross' first album, which has sold more than three million copies. In 1980, he took Grammy Awards for best a lbum, best song ("Sailing'') and best new artist. Cross seemed in awe or his quick success and was brought back on stage by a standing ova- tion to perform an encore medley of tunes from the Beach Boys. As he crooned the lyrics of Driver being sought in NB fatality REVIEW "Surfin' U.S.A.,'' fans swarmed down to the stage to sing and dance· along with the more up· beat, fast-paced music. Though he played for an hour and a half, a few concertgoers were overheard lo comment on the brevity of the show. Perhaps they were r eally expressing their enjoyment, having been s wept away b y Cross· ex- cellence. ' Coming to Irvine Meadows ·on Oc t. 2 will be Jefferson Starship. Odor leads to raid in Huntington Unusual odors coming from a Huntington Beach home led to a raid on what police described as a sophisticated lab for the illegal manufacture of m etham- phetamine, a powerful stimulant commonly called "speed." Police arrested three men and confiscated two truckloads of lab equipment in the raid, which took place at 15711 Plymouth Lane A fourth man in the case is still being sought by police. Huntington Beach p olice narcotics Sgt. Carl Vidano said some neighbors told him they had not been suspicious because they thought the unusual odors were coming from the highly publicized chemical dump ex· cavation at Bolsa Chica Street and Warner Avenue earlier this summer. Witnesses who saw a 26-year-The dump and the house that old Newport Beach man run was raided are both located in down and killed as he was walk-the northwest part of the city. ing across a Balboa Boulevard A Cler in vestigati n g an crosswalk early Sunday, have anonymous tip regarding the provided police with a descrip· odors. however, police obtained tion of the hit-and-run vehicle a search warrant to raid the and its license plate number. residence. Vidano said. Newport Beach police have In the garage, bathroom and not released the name or the service porch, officers found registered owner of the dark-containers of volatile hydrogen colored foreign car that alleged-and ether, as well as oxygen, ly struck Donald B. Warner. No nitrogen and other C"hemicals arrests have bee.n made. and equipment, Vidano said. Warner, who hved less than a Wh en officers arr ived Thurs· blo~k from the scene of th~ ffltal " day evening, they arrested one accident al the intersection of resident, Daniel M. McDaniels, Balboa and 31st Street, was 32. described as a paraplegic. taken l'? the trauma center. at Two other residents who arrived Fou ~taan Valley .community hom e while the raid was in Hos~1tal where he d1~d. progress also were arrested. Witnesses told pohc~ offi,c~rs They were identified as Stuart that Warner a.nd an umdentif~ed Robert Pryor, 20, and Michael male companion were crossmg Richard Dahn 24. Balboa. heading in the direction All three w~re jailed on suspi, of the b~ach , when the car cion qf possession and manufac. knocked him down. tupe'°of illegal drugs. The three Police said they were told the were released Friday after post- d ri ver did not ha ve the ing$5,000bail each. . vehicle's lights on. Warner's A fourth resident ned when he companion was uninjured. s aw a poLice vehicle near the From Page A1 ·PLANE • • • dropped out of the sky you can envision a lot," she said. "But there were a lot of people up and walking around. It was not as bad as I had envisioned.'' S he said t h e heli copter brought back to Nellis "seven stretcher cases and two men who were able to walk onto the craft." She said the nine men they brought back were con· scious and "did not seem to be suffering badly. "I was quite impressed with how calm everybody was at the scene," she said. "I think it would have been different if it was a civili an craft ." In Washington, Capt. Virginia Prbyla , an Air F o r ce s pokeswoman, said the plane, attached to the 463rd Airlift Wing at Dyess Air Force Base ne ar Abilene, T e xas , was believed to be carrying nlne c rew member s and 59 passengers. She said the plane was taking part in a night trMning exercise of the Army's 9th Infantry Division from Ft. Lewis, Wash., to simulate Air Force-Army airlift operations in combat con· di lions. As dawn lit the area, the charred remains of the plane were visible to reporters a half· mile away. All that remained of the craft waa a tail section and part of the left wing one engine and about five feet of fuseta1e. Wallace said the plane was carrying flares and s moke grenades to be use ln t.be train· ing exercise, and those ignited ln the crub. The plan• came to rest north of the end of the runway and polnUn• perpadlcutar to it. Wallace 1ald the plane came in Oat and akidded alon1 the dllert noor. A tan1le of emeraency ~ebicles and erewa was 1tm •praytnc the wrecka1e down u ruab-bour trdflc, mostly workers en route t.o tbe test lite, buued by on Hlchway t5 just a hall·mlle away. hom e, Vidano said. Officers pursued the man in a 60 moh vehi cle chase through the hous- ing tract, but the man eluded capture. he s aid. This fourth resident of the Plymouth Lane home, identified as David Lee Corbett, 24, is still being sought by police. Vidano said ··speed" is sold on the street for $75 to $100 per gram. . He said police are analyzing the confiscated lab equipment to determine if any other drugs s uch as PCP w e re bei ng manufactured at the residence . Mesa w e ighs electronic • game issue Proposals to restrict the in· stallation of electronic games in shops and stores throughout Cost a Mesa will be aired by the City Council when it meets tonight. The council is scheduled to r e- view recommendations by the Planning Commission and order attorneys to draw up an or- dina nce governing installation and operation of the games when it meets at 6:30 p.m . at C~· ty Hall, 77 Fair Drive. To be reviewed are sugges- tions that games be banned from liquor stores an4 convenience markets and that lnslallation ol the devices be allowed only in larger shopping centers. Also to be debated are pro- posals for restricting game use by children during school hours and banning game centers from buildings within 300 to 500 feet of residential neighborhoods. State backed DENVER (AP> -Colorado State Treasurer Roy Romer se.ys Colorado will become UM first aute to au.,.,,ort CallfonWI'• law1ult aialnlt \be federal P· ernment over It.I allelM failure to collect mWIOM ol dollan ta oU leue royatti•, tbe Dea..- Post hu~. ........... Donna Daley. 9. of Ridgeland. SC . strikes a pose $imiJar to the Statue of Liberty, in background. Donna 1s going blind fr om a retina disease and wanted to see the statue before she loses her s1ght . R edford hot candidate -on screen Actor Robert Rectrord may be big at the box omce but he would bomb at the ballot box if he ran against Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, according to a poll. The poU which ran in the Desert News of Salt Lake Ci· tv s aid Hatch also could h an· dily defeat three other poten· tial Democratic opponents if , the election were held now. The poll was conducted by Dan Jones and Associates. who questioned 600 people by telephone. It has an error margin of plus or minus 4 percent. In the poll, Redford 1ot LS percent to 88 percent for Hatch wlth 14 pe rcent un- decided. Former Gov . Geor1• Wallace'• bride, a 32-year· old coal-miner's dauahter. haa be en name d by her father in a Sl .2 million clvU sult. The suit, filed io Walker County (Ala.) on behalf ot James Taylor, a m ining ex- ecutive, contends bia estate wu wrongfully divided among bis children while he lay in a coma in a hospital dia~etea center. Named as defendants are Lyada l4e "UH" Taylor WaUace and her older sister, Mona Taylor Watlon, two of his four children. Taylor cont e nds his daughters refuse to return the money and property. Jacqueline Kennedy Onaa1ls' 375-acre estate on Martha's Vineyard is in an are a that may be claim ed by the Gay Head Indians, mem- b e r s of the Wampanoag Tribe. Mrs. Onassis bought the land in 1978 and built a mans ion on it, four years after the tribe said it might sue for the return of 3,400 acres of is land land it claims the state took illegally in 1870. Since then, the majority of tribal members have decided to settle the claim for 238 acres. But Frank James and 42 other tribal me mbers are seeking permission Crom federal court to sue for the full 3,400 acres, according to their atto rney, Robert C. Hahn . CBS News reporter Lemuel Tucker was "slammed to the ground" and s uffer ed three broken ribs by a guard when he tried to enter a restricted area at the Solidarity Day d e m ons t ra t io n i n Washington, Tucker said. Tucker , intervie wed by telephone from his room at George Washington Universi· ty Hospital, said doctors had told him he also had sus- ta ined a bruise on his left lung and possibly damage to his spleen. Anothe r t y pical day Coastal U1U•I -nltht to mld.fl'IOf'nlng f°' and '-<tel* •'°"II Irle COlllt, otflerwl•felr lllf'oulll T~y. COMt•I low .0. lniaftd ... Coast.I 11'911 mkJ.10I. Inland mlcMOs. Walitt ... EIM• ...... llvltl ........ 1. winch ll1ro11111 tonight except wast to IOVttl-10 to 11 knob In Mta,_, s..it~ •-II 2 to J IHI. Hlglll •nd morning low cloudlNU b11t mostly c-lnVb\I an.-. Temperatures V.S. summary AINny Alb;>QW Am.rlllO AIMYHle Atlanta Atlante Cly llalllmon Blrmlngltm S-la1 _,. "'""Y -,_, of trw lllsm•rck nation but .,.,.. ..,.. ,_ -l oloe tM o,...t L.Mi" -s~ 0,.... lloslofl Illa Pacific Horlllwut and Haw ar-nsvlla Enolal'MI. lllff•lo TIW ..., pranllacl s..n.say over llW Cltarlstn SC so1111tarn 11•11 of tM nallon •"41 Cllar11tnWV throwgll .,. Mhals.ippi Valley and Clleyeruw tM Rocky Molallalns, wltlt mlld tem· Cllk eQO perat11res a tone IN coest of llte Gulf Cincinnati of M .. ko and In C.llfomla. ClaYelancl It was partly clolldy over Ill• Columbul GrHt Lllltas, al'd W..n _,. the 0.l·Ft Wtll r11la In the Pacllk Hor1tt..st al'd Denver a<rOH H-E...-. Des Molnff Hltlts-.. In IN-. o,.... Florlde Detroit ..ct ~ Teus on Solndav. -Ovtlltll r•ac-lntD IN tOs owr ttte 1119" Hartford Plains. T-atures ,.. __ 100 In Helena tlte CallfOmla dnert, but _,.. In tlte H_.Ylll sos e nd 60s In Orego" end Houston Waslt......... lnclnat>ll• Temp6raturn •round Ille nation at J acksnvlla mid~., ,...., from a 1-of ., In K•ns City s.un , ... Merla, Mkll., 10 • ltlgll of LH Ve991 103 In Palm 5c1rtngs, Lllll• Aock Suftlt\IM w .. forecast today o-LoulsYllla most of IN Mtloft, --no-Mamptih lite .,_ Mlululpcil Valley and the Miami Pacific Hor1-<OHi MllwaukM California llle ~..-et of log encl low clovdl -_..o perts of Soutltarn Callfornl• ffrly today wlll t l'ffP *" -h Ilea< ... -... to lite Mlft of .. ~I V•lla'JS ... In IOtlltftt and •rlY TWIOey, tlle H•· tlellal w..ei-Service wlct. Mpls-St.P HaSllvllla Hew Or._ HewY- ., HI Le "'-- 6! SS • 54 .. " 71 42 76 JI n 56 .. " n • .. ,. 72 .. 71 u • 71 '° • 7t • n u n 51 01 .. 54 71 51 ., 4S 70 50 70 50 .. 54 ... '° 62 41 57 ... 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We're Listening ••• TVHOAY Ftnt 1.. n :os a.m. o. 1 ~lrst ltlgtl •:, ... m. •. 1 Second low II:•,. .m. 2.7 Second 1t1t1t S:St pm. U ~ -6:SI p.m., r'-t Tllftday 6:" •.m. .._ ,.._ T...-Y I! .. •.m,, 19t1 J:ltp.m. What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your message will be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answerinC service may be used to record let· ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number tor verification. No circulatton calls. please. Tell us what's on your mjnd, . 642·6086 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MOnday, September 21, 1981 H /F J\3 EXERCISE TIME -Joh~ Evans takes hi s three dogs for a run near his Northampton. England, home. The canines are Siberian huskies and need this kind of exercise to ........... answer their instincts. For the 200·pound Evans. taking the dogs for a walk means he just goes along for the ride Americans singled out Terrorist group targeting U.S . presence in bombings BONN, West Germany (AP) -T he terrorist Red Army Fae· lion evidently bas decided t o take advantage of t he wave of a nti-Ame r icanism in West Germany and target U.S. of· fi cials or ins taUations for urban guerrilla attacks. Since Aug. 31. the ultra-leftist group has taken responsibility for the bombing at the head- quarters of the U.S. Air Force in Eu ro pe a t Ram stein that wounded 20 people, including an American general. and for the grenade attack in Heidelberg that s lig h tly wounded Gen. Frederick J . Kroesen, the U.S. Army's commander ill Europe. Arter Tuesday's unsuccessful attempt on Kroesen's life, Franz Josef Strauss, a former defense minister and now state premier of Ba varia. quoted German in· telligence as saying further al· tacks on Americans "are to be reckoned wit h." The Red Ar my Faction -also known as the Baader -Meinhof gang -said in letters to news or ganizations that the attacks were part of its "war against im per ialist war '' d ir ect ed "against the centers, bases and strategy of the U.S. military machine ." Observers note the Ra ms· tern and Heidelber g attacks follow a strategy pursued by the Red Army Faction in the early 1970s during another period of anli·Americarusm fueled by the Vietnam war. By targeting leaders of the 260.000 American troops in West Germany, the terror ists c an avoid indiscriminate killing of Germans that would further tarnish their image a mong the populatton . U.S. installations are often in m ajor ur ban a r eas wher e gunmen can blend into the populace. Wi th thousands of civilian employees and depen- dents traveling in and out of gar· risons daily. sealing off suc h facilities is difficult. The Red Army F action began its previous campaign against Am erican interests in May 1972 when it set off bombs at the headqua rte r s of the U.S. V Corps in Fra nkfurt and the headquarters of the U.S. Anny in Europe in Heidelberg, killing four U.S. ser vicemen. After a nationwide s earch. police cornered gang leader An· dreas Baader the next month in an a partment near the U.S. m ilitary s hopping a r ea in F r a nkfurt. Ot her a rrest s followed. Baader's successors launched new attacks four years later. But mindful of America 's im proved image, they chose promi- nent West Germans, including the solicitor general, a banker and a n industrialist, as t argets. Things are different now. "As it did at the time of the Vietnam protests, this group is trying to exploit anti-American trends, which today are triggered by the arms policy of the Reagan ad· m in istr a ti on ," wr ote th e Co l og n e S t a dt -A n zei ger news paper. Interio r Minis t e r Gerhart Baum said in a newspaper in· ter v1ew that he had been warn· ing for months that the Red Army Faction was gearing up for a new campaign and that U.S. interests were the likely targets. Although most West Germans conde mn Red Army F action violence, the U.S. image here has suffered in recent years. T he anti-Ame ricanism stems from a mix of fears that Presi· dent Reagan is leading the West to a new world wa r and an emerging German nationalism. Cong r e.ss to d e bate ... • air waves a c c ess WAS HINGTON <AP > - Tha nks to the Federal Com· mun i c ations C omm lssion . Congress will soon debate the future of two laws that affect what Americans see and hear on television and radio. The laws are known as equal lim e and the fairness doctrine. Broadcasters say if they're re- pealed, political campaigns will be covered as never before. Mo re debates will be staged because there won't be any con· cern a bout equal time . The public will be exposed to better, mor e hard-hitting news pro- grams as well as to a greater diversity of opinions. Stations won 't be afraid to speak out in editorials as newspapers do. Consumer . church and labor groups see it differently. They predict the major T V networks will use their power to limit the diversity of ideas presented to the public. Independent political c andidates won't have a prayer of making it on the air, they say, nor will individuals or com- panies attacked in those hard· hitting programs. Fairness will b e s ubme r ged b y sens a - tionalism. Vince Wasilewski, president of the National Associat ion of Broadcasters, says the laws have turned the job or delivering )lews and information "into an inhibiting , self-concious, often confusing minuet ." Andrew Jay Schwartzman, ex- ecutive director of the Media Ac· cess Project counte rs : "The right of the list ener, not the broadcaster , is paramount." L ast Thursday. t h e F CC picked sides. It decla red, in the most forthright and clear man- ner ever, that Congr ess should repeal the equal time and fair· ness laws. "Government shouldn't de- termine what the people hear and see." says Mark S. Fowler , the new Republican chairman of the P'CC. "Broadcasters who abuse their right of free speech in t he marketplace will face what every boor, every zealot and every loudmouth faces - people will stop paying atten- tion." The fa irness doctrine. pro- mulgated in 1949, states that broadcasters must provide time for contrasting views after air· ing progr ams on cont roversial issues. The equal time la w, adopted in 1927, states that if a broad- cast er airs a m essa ge by a political candjdate, he must of· fer an equal opportunity to oppo- nents . Also recommended fo r repeal by the FCC was the re asonable access law. It states that it is il- legal during a campaign for a broadcaster to refuse to sell time to a feder al candidate. our 1:xist s<Z-lhng shirts and pante ... straight 1~ cuffcz.d cords ;~;-and 11drrow wa1cz,; both com<Z. in <Z.ight 9rvzat colors. shown witb our gnl.9t look inq cotton flennil shirts,in tradj- tiorel tartan an:i cla5sic patt<Z.rns. 44 feehk>n island, newport center H/F Orange COut DAILY PILOT /Monday. Sept•mbtr 2°!.J 1981 Gold prices rise in Europe trading LONDON (AP) -Gold prtca lu.mped u much u $13 an ounce ln t.radln1 on Euror.an marlleta today 11 the dol ar declined a1aln1t key currencies for the o1nlb 1tral&ht tradina ae.alon. The weakness of the dollar helped boolt bullion in the tradi· ttonal see-aaw pattern on forei&n marteta. Dealers attrjbuted the dollar's weakness to declines ln U.S. Interest rates and doubts about the Reagan administra- Uon 's economic policies. U.S. to sue Colby over CIA memoir NEW YORK <AP> -The federai government plans to sue former CIA Director William E . Colby for publishing his 1978 memoir, "Honorable Men," before clearing all editions with his former employer, Newsweek magazine has reported. The magazine sajd in its cur- rent edition that the suit was the Reagan administration's latest ·effort in s topping leaks of sensitive information and show- ing that it will not tolerate breaches in the legal contracts · of government employees. Fund cuts over morals approved TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP> - A state budget amendment that would cut off funds to schools that host groups advocating sex between unmarried people is constitutional, a Florida judge has ruled. "In the present case, the Legislature has not prohlbited speech," circuit Judge John Rudd ruled. "It has come to a decision that educational funds are to be used to educate stu· dents, not to provide recognition for, assistance to, or meeting facilities for groups to advocate sexual relations." Airline employee crushed on plane LONDON (AP) -A World Airways rught attendant was crushed to death in a crew LA COUNTY elev a tor Sunday aboard a Jumbo jetliner c&IT)'lnc more than aoo paaaenaers acroN the AUantic Ocean, U.S. aviation offlcla11 said. Karen Willlama, 2.&, waa "crushed between the elevator cab and the door frame" on 1 flight 32 from Baltimore W asbinf ton-International Airport o Gatwick Airport, south of London, said Wallace Emory, chief or the FAA fleld office in Frankfurt, Weal Germany. Whistle blown on Stones concert .' PROV1DENCE, R.J. (AP) - Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr. and promoter Frank J. Russo said a local television station deprived the city or a 0 major cultural event" by revealing plans for a Rolling Stones concert. ·But John Sweeney, WLNE news director, said he was only doing his job when the station in- terrupted reguJar programming at 10:30 p.m. to announce that the superstars of rock would stage a practice performanc~. Divers find 100 gold bars on ship LONDON (AP> -Divers lift- ed at least 100 gold bars worth an estimated $20 million from the torpedoed World War II cruiser Edinburgh in the Icy Barents Sea, the British govern· ment said. "I 've found the gold, I've found the gold," diver John Rossier, the first to bring up a bar, was quoted by the Sunday Times as saying. Bulletproof Elvis auto auctioned STATELINE. Nev. (AP> -A bullet and bomb-proof Mercedes Benz limousine that once belonged to Elvis Presley was among about 150 classic cars auctioned at Caesars Tahoe. The limousine, complete with wet bar and valued at $600,000, was sold to the highest bidder for $400,000, said casino spokesman Phll Weidinger. Cerritoe/Lakewood 11881 Del Amo Blvd. in Cenito11t Pioneer, 3 blodtt Eut ol 605 Fr.eway, (213) 924-11514 Cbat.worth/Nortbridp 9143 De Soto Ave. at Nordhotr, (213) 882-5912 Encino 17031 Ventura Blvd., W•t of Balboa, (213) 986-6830 Hollywood 7080 Hbllywood Blvd., Comer La Brea Ave. at a.ta Medi· cal Center, (218) ~7 Lona Beech 4101 Atlantic Bl'Wd., Cof'MI" ot'Canon, (218) 4116-88?4 'lbrra.nc. 20040 Hawthorpe Blvd. at 0.1 Amo Blvd., In the 8-t Pla&a C.tet, (213) 642-31511 I Solidarity ey~s threats by Reds ) ) ) WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Solidarity leaden, accused of tumln1 their independent labor movement a1a.ln.at communilm and the Soviet Union. wlll meet Tueaday to dlacuH the new threats from the Soviet and PoUab fovemments. The union's pretfdlum meet· ing was delayed from Mondy ,....,..... POPCORN, POPCORN EVERYWHERE -Chefs and assis- tants from the Academy of Culina ry Arts , Mays Landing, N.J ., put together what they claim to be the world's largest popcorn ball in Peekskill. N.Y. The popcorn ball consisting of 4,000 pounds of popcorn. 4,000 pounds of sugar and 2,000 pounds of syrup, was made Sunday to raise money for the Peekskill Health Center. amid aisna that the Communlat government ma., be preparin• to move a1aJrut it tn reaponae to the Kremlin'• demand last week for a crackdown. Jijnckle y says he's not a hobo WASHINGTON <AP> -John W. Hinckley Jr., the man ac· cused of shooting President Reagan, wrote The Wubingt.on Post that hls cross-country wan- derings were part of an atterppt to find and be near actress Jodie Foster. ··You and the other jouma.li5ts make it sound like I was some kind of hobo or something," Hinckley wrote in the unsolicited letter dated Sept. 7. "My recent cross country ventures were necessary because New Haven was so Car away. I would have traveled to Budapest to find Jodie Foster. Now that I am in Maryland, she and I are much closer, in· more ways than one." Hinckley is being held ln the stockade at Fort Meade, Md., pending trial. The Post said the reference to closeness lo Miss Fost~r was un- clear. After the attempt on Reagan's life March 30, investigators found an unmailed letter to the atress, then in her freshman year at Yale University, in Hinckley's hotel room. That let- ter asked her to "give me the chance with this historical deed to gain your respect and love." Hinckley's travels in the months before the shooting have prompted publis hed reports, never confirmed officially, that the FBI believed he was stalking the presidential candidates last Call. . In Radon, meanwhlle. Solidarity membera al the • Rado1kor shoe factory I threatened today to go on l buneer strike• unleaa iovtm· • ment officials meet with them to discuss the "traatc food 1ttua· tion" In their central Poland $ province, a union spokesman said. The factory is the workplace ., of new Politburo member Zolla ' Grzyb, the only Solidarity 1 member on the ts-member rul· ing body. No other details of the threatened strike were provided. Poland has been suffering from c hronic food shortages for · several years. East Germany urged the Polish government today not to be deceived by voices of moderation within Solidarity ?- and warned Waraaw's policy of accommodation was paving the way to "counter-revolution" ln Poland. • In one or its longest and most ~ critical commentaries on de· velopments in Poland. the of· ficial AON news agency said the crisis "has in the past two weeks .., reached an extraordinarily •' dangerous level for the Polish · 1 people and socialis t s tate • power." AON said the major question facing.Poland and the rest of the Soviet bloc was whether the re· gime in Warsaw would finally muster the strength "to strike back at counter-revolution with all its means." -· Solidarity's leaders are ex- pected to decide whether to soft. pedal their political demands wben the union's national con- gress resumes on Friday. The Soviet note charged that the first part of the congre5s "became in .) effect a permanent tribune from • wh ich slander s a nd insults sounded" against the Soviet Union. Book claims LBJ accepted payoffs as VP ., WASHINGTON CAP) -Lyn· don Johnson accepted envelopes "stuffed with cash" when he was vice president and later used the power of his presidency to amass enormous personal wealth, according to excerpts from a biography. The biography. ''The Years of Lyndon Johnson," was written by Robert A. Caro, who in 1975 won a Pulitzer Prize for bis biog- raphy of Robert Moses, a former New York City and state official who died earlier this year. The first of three volumes in Caro's biography of Johnson is to be published next year. Ex- cerpts from it were published as an article in the October issue of The Atlantic Monthly. Johnson, who died in 1973, was raised to power first in the House of Representatives and then as a U.S. senator from Tex- as by the emerging oil, gas, sul· fur. defe nse and s pace in- dustries of the Southwest, Caro says. "For years, men came into Lyndon Johnson's office and handed him enve lopes stuffed with cash," the Atlantic article says. "They didn't stop coming even when the office in which he sat was the office of the vice presi- dent of the United States. Fifty thousand dollars, in hundred· dollar bills in sealed envelopes, was what one lobbyist for one oil company testified that he brought to Johnson's office dur- ing his term as vice president." When Johnson assumed the presidency in 1963, his aides were quoted as saying that estimates which put hls wealth at $14 million were too high. "Privately, some now admit that it was far too low.'' Get 2 \\lars for the Price of 1 All 16 Holiday Spa Health Clubs are joining together in celebrating the big, new super facility in Montclair by offering 2 full years for the price of 1. Come into any Holiday Spa Health Club. Space-age engineering and design. Luxurious facilities for men and women. The finest progressive physical conditioning equipment available.Names like Dynamics~Nautilus~ Paramount• and Universal~ With program directors to show you how. Plus Olympic-style swimming pools and in· door jogging at most locations, giant hot hydro-massage whirlpools, steam rooms, saunas, hourly aerobic dance exercise classes for women and more! Find out how much fun fitness can be. Shape up ... slim down. But do it now, during Holiday Spa Health Club's big Montclair Expansion Explosion Grand Opening celebra- tion. Get 2 years for the price of 11 Hurry! Call or drop by today for a free tour. With 16 locations in Southern Califor- nia there's bound to be one near you. Holiday Spa Health Clubs for Men and Women W•t Los Antelel 1914 So. Bundy (near Oljmplc Blvd.), (213) 820-71171 OR.ANOE COUNTY Bu ... Parll 1510 So. Be.ch Blvd. South of Lincoln Av1 .. (714 l 82&-0381 ~ M ... 2300 Harbor Blvd .. <Behind ThrU\y Dntrl. (7141 5'9-3368 MIMAon ~ 24401 Alicia Pkwy. at San Oieso Fneway. (714) 770-0822 Oran,. 622 Eut Kat.eU1 Ave .. W91t ofTuatin Ave .. (714) 639-2441 w..taauwr 67&7 W•tmln1ter Ave. 1t Ooldeft Weet., (714) 894-3387 Saa DMfo Announdna OW' new11t location, 405 Camino Del RJo South, (714) 297-6062 ' INLAND LOCATIONS Moat.clalr AnnouncinJ our new location, 9386 Monte V1.9ta at 1-10 in the Montclair Entertainment Plau., (714) 626-2411 IUvenkle 4020 Madl10n (at AtUnaton), (714) 887-131& San Bernardl.IM> 333 North H St. at 3rd (oppo1ite Central City Malll, (714) 886-1381 " I ) ., .. , .. .. ~UffiU~ Fly losses deductible? $10.5 million in damage claims filed with state LOS GATOS (AP> -Losses caused by the Mediterranean frult fiy eradication project may be tax deduct.Ible, a 1roup of ac- countants has suggested. Deductible or not, $10.S million in clalma allegina damaae from pesticide sprayine had been filed with the state Board of Con· trol by today. M08t of Lhem are for aerial spraying of malathlon, a chemical which can damaee automobile paint, according to the medlly project. The California Society of Certified Public Accountants re- ported fruit and vegetables stripped from gardens at the behest of the medfly project do not qualify for state and federal tax deductions. But, the society cautioned, "now ls the time Lo accumulate . and record coats lf trees, ahrubl or plants have been severely destroyed and must be replaced." Paul Sweas, tax manager for a Palo Alto firm , said the amount deductible, after a $100 exclusion, can include the: -Cost of removing plants and shrubbery. _Cultural center plan~ed for LA -Cost of replanting and restoring properties to their ap- proximate value. -Cost of stripping and prun· ing as required by the project. -Cost of labor, fertilizer, spraying or similar items as- sociated with observing the stale rule. SACRAMENTP. (AP) -The state is planning to build a multi-cultural center in EXP08i· tion Park in Los Angeles, says Parks and Recreation Director Peter Dangermond. pi c Games. H e said the Stripping fruit and vegetable Legislature has appropriated crops from backyard gardens $400,000 for planning. was required of residents within A consultant to Dangermond, the Infested area earlier this Nellie Arnold, said the stale will summer. use $3 million to $4 million from Since mid-July, 13 months state park bond funds approved a(t er the initial Northern by the voters las~year to pay for California medrly outbreak, construction. Privafe funding helicopters have been bombard- Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Monday, September 21 , 1981 H/F FONDA PAINTING -Henry Fonda's painting ·'Third Floor Rear" is one of 36 works ex- hibited by the Swope Gallery in Hollywood, • AP_...,.... the first lime Fonda's art has been collected for public view. The ailing actor was unable to attend the recent opening of the exhibit. Synanon pays ID head shaving Dangermond says the state hasn't yet given enough atten- tion to the cultural contributions of the people of California. Addressing a meeting or the California Committee for the Promotion of History, which e nded Sunday. Dangermond said the opening of the center is to coincide with the 1984 Olym- will be sought to augment that. ing more than 1,260 square miles Dangermond said, "We are with malathion. FAIRFIELD (AP) -A Solano heads six years ago. very late in getting around to The medlly lays its eggs in County jury has awarded more The July 15, 1975, incident east three-week trial, attorneys in the case said. emphasizing the cultural con-more than 200 varieties of fruits than $1 .S million to two of Marshall in Marin County tributions of people to California and vegetables erown in Sebastopol men who said brought Richard Marino and Robert Rand of Palo Alto, one of several attorneys for the alcohol rehabilitation center- turned-church, said the award a nd in California. The Los California and plays host to Synanon members forced them Calvin Smith each $80,000 in Angeles project will be a multi-slate crops valued annually at from their pickup truck, inter-general dam&ges and $750,000 in will be appealed · cultural center. $4.7 biUion. rogated them and s haved their punitive damages following the Signal mu l r------D~E_S_K_S_IN_C ___ ---- LONG BEACH <AP> -Police in the tiny com - munity of Signal Hill have been the target of numerous complaints ranging from false.arrest to wrongful death and brutality. the Long Beach Press-Tele~ram reoorted in a copyrighted article. The newspaper cited city and court records and interviews with principals, witnesses and at- torneys in the article Sunday. Signal Hill is a 2.1 square mile community of 6,000 surrounded by the city of Long Beach. The department has been under fire since the jail death of football star Ron Settles in a case the Los Angeles county coroner bas ruled was "death at the fiands of another. other than by accident." Attorneys for Settles' family have filed a $50 million \vrongful death suit. In its review, the Press-Telegram said that a pattern emerged in many of the cases: Motorists were stopped for routine traffic violations, and the encounters escalated until the motorists were charged with resisting arrest or assaulting of- ficers. The motorists subsequently said they had been beaten by officers either in the field or the police station. This scenario roughly approximates the circumstances of the arrest or Settles. Angry mob dispersed LOS ANGELES <AP) -Police outfitted in riot gear broke up an angry mob of punk rock fans who were apparently enraged because vice- 1;quad officers halted a concert they were attend· ing. Some in the crowd of about 300 refused to go home after the show at the Apollo West Theater was stopped Saturday night and pelted police with rocks and bottles, police said. Other angry rans kicked at burglar bars on windows of nearby shops. Police arrested one person for investigation of felony vandalism. Police had stopped the concert about 9 p.m. after neighbors complained about noise and crowd problems in the neighborhood. said Lt. Paul Koble. Star 'fears for life.' LOS ANGELES CAP) -The wife of porno- graphic film star John Holmes says her husband, whom police want to question in connection with four Laurel Canyon murders, is hiding out because he fears for his life, it was reported today by the Los Angeles Times. The newspaper reported that Sharon Holmes said her husband believes underworld figures want him dead. She did not elaborate. She said that after the grisly July 1 murders, Holmes was arrested July 10, ostensibly on an un- related grand theft charge, the newspaper said. He was held but released on his own recognizance Ju- ly 15. Police, who apparently told Mrs. Holmes her husband's life was in danger, then kept him in bid· ing at various motels for the next three days, try- ing to convince him to cooperate with their in- vestigation, according to the report. Shark dies at Sea World SAN DIEGO CAP> -A great white shark, believed the only one in captivity, bu died at Sea ~orld marine park. The five-foot-long female was caught by a commercial fisherman off San Die10 last week. A spokeswoman at Sea World said the cause of the death Saturday night was unknown. ln recent montha, three other great white sharks were caught alive. Two died in captivity, and the other was released alllng back into the ocean. Sixteen days was the longest any of the rare species lived ln captivity. Acid case arreat told NEW ORLEANS (AP> -Fed~al authorlUes have announced the arrest of the third and final person wanted ln connection with the 11180 murder of a California coed who had cauatlc acid thrown in her face. FBI spokesman CllCf Andenon aaid Bobby Ray Savace, 22, offered no re111tance when arrest- ed Sunday ln the city's Uptown area. He aaid Savaee wu located with an uaiat from aienta of the federal Drue Enforcement Adminiatration. The FBI 1potesman said Savqe wu one of three men charted by Los Antele1 police with the Au1. 14, 1980, 1la)'i.n1 of Patricia Worrell, a 1tu- dent at l.M San Fernedo Collete of Law. He said Illas Worrell dJed 10 days after cauttic acid wu thrown in her face at ber home ln north suburban Sylmar. COMPUTER DESK Available In left or right returns, this practical desk is designed to accomodate CTR screens or typewriters. Choose oak or SMITH-CORON~ TVPETRONIC. 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Monday · fridey 9.7 S.turdty96,Cloetd~ INC (714) 751-3587 MEMeERS Of THE TRADE WO.COME • ·-.... --.. --...... -... -.. ~ .......... --· ...-·-·-· f•····~-~-----­. • I r \ OrangeCout OAIL:Y PILOT,Monday, September 21 , 1981 ·Ga8 ·'iax boost can save state highw ays As.:one Sacramento commen- tator pointed out the other day. state Sen. John Foran h~d to negotiate a political mlnefield in ta.king on the battle to secure an increase in the state's motor ruela tax Jrom &even to nine cents. Jn thes-e limes of Ught fiscal policies, dominaWd by <tax cuts. any move to··do the opposlte might have apptan?d ®omed from the outset. · · But the• San Francisco Democrat pro\red himself to be both.courageous and Sldllful. And that ls why Californians are as· sured that the state's deteriorat· inc and overcrowded highway system wm be improved. The facts were clearly with Foran. Legislators, be they Republicans or Democrats, could not avoid the plain and simple truth that without an increase in the tax on gasoline and diesel fuel the state's freeways, highways and major streets would continue to crumble to the point where, as Foran was fond of saying, "You would be driving from chuckhole to chuckhole." Transportation systems can· not be malntalned nor expanded without money. Existing rev- enues are tapering off because of declining gasoline sales, while maintenance and construction costs are soaring. Projections showed that th e state's transportation fund would be anywhere from $900 million to $2 .4 billion in lhe red by 1986. The new law, a lready signed by the governor. also includes ih· creases in driver's Ucense, vehi· cle registration and truck weight fees, and could raise up to $2. 7 billion over the next five years. It stipulates that the gasoline tax increase, scheduled to go into effect Jan. 1, 1983, must first be endorsed b)C county supervisors representing two-thirds of the state's population. The other fee increases will begin next year. Orange County supervisors. having urged passage of the bill to meet increasingly serious highway needs. doubtless will be prompt to join in the necessary 1 endorsement. AJ1{4CS needs support Bet:ween now and Oct. 30, the Americart populace will be learn· ing a lot about our Airborne Warning !.. and Control System (AWACS). But the question is, will enou gh be known ~bout a pro· posed $8.S billion sale of five A WACS planes and related equip- ment to Saudi Arabia? Also in- volved are missiles and gear to enhance 62 U.S. built F -15 jet fighters Saudi Arabia has or· de red. ~ The Reagan Administration p l an is in trouble. but not necessarily dead. In order to block it. both houses of Congress must veto the plan before its 50- day consideration ettds. • Proponefits say the pact would strengthen U .S.·Saudi ties : give the U.S. a foothold ; albeit a small OM, in the Mideast. pro· vide ~artier warnin& against mis· silei and planes and help defend the oil fields. Opponents, who include Sen. Alan Cranston. D-Calif., contend Saudi A WACS use would com· promise Israeli alr 59ace. reward a nation not always supportive of U.S. Mideast goals. and enable third party countries to obtain our secret radar equipment. It would appear on the whole. however, that the arms package can be of benefit to the United States. On that basis. we would support it, even though we sus- pect this is part of a much larger overall settlement between the two countries. details of which probably will not be forthcoming immediately Due to the sophisticated and c lassified n ature of the s ur: veillance plane. not enough has been made publi c yet to gather the needed support for tt\e sale. This past week, more details were made public as the ad· ministration came under pres· sure. There should be no objection to positive modification of the proposal. If more U.S. control is required, if limitations on the use of the plane are imposed, if other fine tuning is required. both we and the Saudis probably can li ve with this. Opening the courts Passage or a bill lhat would bar the closing of most pre- liminary hearings in criminal cases could be a significant vic- tory for the public. Under curr-ent state law. a preliminMy hearing -during which testimony is taken to de· termine if a defendant should stand trial for a crime -may be closed to the public and press simply on tbe request of the de· fendant. And in most cases, a defend· ant's attorney. arguing that an open hearing could prejudice a possible future trial, requests the closure -which then must be granted. But statistics show that about 90 percent of mminal cases are dispoted al in one way or another during preliminary hearings before going to trial. Sometimes evidence is ruled insufficient to warranJ a trial, but much more often plea bar1ainl.ng at lhi$ ~vel permits the defendant to plead guilty to a lesser charee· tn order to avoid • racing a more serious trial in open court. Under the bill just passed by the Legislature. a defendant may be granted a closed preliminary hearing only if the judge can be persuaded that a n open hearing co.uld present "a clear and present danger .. to the right to a fair trial, should one be ordered. This is fair enough . If there is genuine danger in pre-trial publicity. the defendant should and will be protected. But more than that. the public will be pro- tected from an increasing prac- tice of closed-door justice under which too many criminal cases simply avoid public scrutiny. Since Gov. Brown lately has been expressing great interest in the criminal justice system. he should have no trouble signing this bill. But. s ince there are those who would pref er to see a veto, it might help if concerned citizens took time to urge the governor to affix his signature to AB 277. °"'niom e•twe!l!Sed In the space abo•e are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex pressed on this page are-those of their authors anc:t artists. Reader comment is inv1t ed. Address Tht Daily Pilot, P.O. BOx 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <714) 647~4321. L.M. Boyd/Hypnotist's trick Maybe-you've seen t~ st.ace hyp. notiat seemingly put some subject In· te a 4ieep sleep, then wtth the help ol aHl•tants, 1u1p end aald party borilodtally between 1wo chain with .. p)IOl't only under the n~k and ukles. Loon .,_ l'emmable. lat it lla't. Almost any trim 1ou•1 clllten, anlaY)OOCb:M. ta.a remain rllld tbtt ftY ft:lr1 a UUle •lllle, at leut. ORANGE' COAST • ·Daily .Pilat There's a sort of termite called the Bazooka that shoots glue at Its enemies. Q. Wesn't Elvia Presley's real name Jessie? A. That wu the name of h11 twin brother wbo died at birth. What t.ele\llalon folk bereabout call a "script" 1t1 referred to by British televisloa folk as "wordies." Persuading 'stupid' smokers WASHINGTON -Cigarette smokers will be interested to learn that a leading New York advertising agency considers them to be illogical, irrational and stupid. That's the description used in a con· fidenlial 1975 report by the Ted Bates ad agency to Brown & Wi!Uamson Tobacco Corp .. the maker of Viceroy cigarettes. The confidential report -seen by my associate Tony Capaccio -notes that many smokers perceive their habit as "dirty" and dangerous, and think only "very stupid people" get hooked by it. "Thus," the Bates report observes, "the smokers have to face the fact that they are illogical, irrational and stupid. People find it hard to go throughout life with such negative presentation and evaluation of self. The saviors are ra- tionalization and the repression that end up and result in a defense mechanism." Needless to say, the cigarette com· panies' ad men are more than willing to help cigarette smokers bolster lheir de- fense mechanisms against attacks of self-loathing. Their enthusiasm in this endeavor cost the tobacco companies a record $1 billion for advertising in 1979. according to official government figures. IN A SECTION defensively titled, "How to Reduce Objections to a Cigar ette," the Bates report acknowledges that there are "not any real, absolute, positive qualities and at- tributes in a cigarette." So to reduce ob- jeclions. the advertising must give smokers a rationale for their illQgical. irrational and stupid behavior. A Brown & Williamson internal docu· ment, dated March 3, 1976, entitled "Viceroy Strategy." notes repeatedly Q -JA-CK-AN-0-fRS_O_N -d • that its advertising campaign must pro· Vide consumers with a rationalization for s moking and a "means of repressing their health concerns about smoki11g a full flavor Viceroy." The company's strategy report con- cedes that smokers of "full fl avor" cigarettes those which have plenty of flavorful tars are particularly prone to guilt trips. and thus badJy in need or encouraging advertising. "FUU.. FLAVOR smokers perceive cigarette ismoking as dangerous to their health," the strategy report observes. "Given their awareness of the smoking and health situation, they are faced with the fact that they are behaving ii· logically. They respond to this in- consistency by providing themselves· with either a rationaJization for smok- ing or by repressing their perceptions of' the possible dangers involved." The B&W battle plan pursues its Freudian theme tn describing how Viceroy's competitors have dealt with smoker angst: "To date, major full flavor brands have either consciously or unconsciously 'coped' with the smoking and health issues in advertising by ap· pealing to repression." In Brown & Williamson's view, the whole smoking scene is rampant with dingbats irrational puffers repress· ing their reasoning processes and un- conscious puff artists desperately try. ing to cope with the task of selling a product with no positive qualities. A BOUT T HE only positive ap- proaches proposed by the B&W strategists are "to communicate effec· lively that Viceroy is a satisfying. flavorful cigarette which young adult s mokers enjoy," and what they call the 'feel s good' campaign." The latter is a frontal assault on the s moker of breathtaking. Napoleonic simplicity· It "appeals to the smoker by r~pressing the concerns he may feel about smoking by justification: lf it feels good. do it; if it feels good, smoke it." Footnote: The Bates report and Brown & Williamson documents I have quoted were placed under a protective order by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker in 1979. These papers -and hundreds more which the cigarette in· dustry requested be withheld from the public remain under lock and key to this day Ideal TV • season JUSt a pipe dream Net work television executives who choose what shows we'll watch, and television critics who comment on t he m , both have tough jobs. The network executive has a hard time coming up with shows that are any good and the critic keeps having to find new ways of saying how bad the shows are. The basic difference between the network executive and the critics is that the executives say they're giving the American public what it wants and the critics say that isn't good enough. (The other difference between critics and executives is about $200,000 a year in salary.) ~ I DON'T WANT lo get caught agree· ing with network executives about much of anything but they do have some points on their side. They don 't go out looking for bad shows any more than publishers try to find bad novels to print. The network decision-makers may have bad taste or they may be poor judges of what the public will ac- cept, but the woods are not full of great writers. If big money produced great art, then good plays, good music and good painting ·wouldn't be as scarce as they are. You can't make anyone sign a television contract that promises a great situation comedy. Network executives are caught between conflicting pressures, too. On the one hand most Americans agree that some television is too sexy and violent, but on the other hand they seem to like watching the sexy , violent stuff. What's a network executive lo do? TELEVISION CRITICS are tough. I've read some of the columns about the upcoming television season and the -AND-Y -RDD-Nl-Y -~ reviews look about the same as they looked las t year, terrible. I 've daydreamed about the kind of reviews I'd like to read about television some- day. The preview of the new fall season would go something like this: "The long creative drought in television seems about over. In pre· viewing the upcoming fall shows, this critic was impressed with the overall quality of the presentations. Viewers are going to be hard-pressed this year to choose from the wide selection of ex- cellent programs scheduled by the networks. In addit ion to first-rate dramatic works. good comedy and en· terlaining variety shows, the networks have agreed on the following in· novative procedures: -There will be no reruns. -Advertising will be cut to four commercial minutes an hour. If the networks wish to promote a show of their own,. they have agreed to take it out of the commercial time. There will be no Saturday morn- ing cartoon schedule for children. -BECAUSE OF the success or the NBC experiment last year , there will be no announcers on any sports con· tests. You wilJ see a football game as you would if you were there and if you don't know the score, that's your prob· lem. -The networks have agreed not to compete with each other with com- parable programming at the same hour. If one network schedules a good documentary, the other networks will have cultural or entertainment shows, not good documentaries. -The local option time from 7:30 to 8 :00 p.m ., now occupied mostly by bad game shows, will be eliminated and network news will be expanded to one hour. Andy Rooney. will do an essay five nights a week for one of the networks, to be announced." That'll be the day. Placebo effect works with liquQr too We have learned a lot lately about the "placebo effect'' in medicine, and I have long held the same applies to li- quor. Finally, this year lhere is some clinical confirmation of my belief. TRE PLACEBO EFFEcr, of course, ls the psychological trick ol giving a pa· Uent a harmless medication of no value, 111111 HARRIS which he thinks will help blm. And help him it does, in more cues than not. lf you believe the pill you are awaUowlng la an aaplrin, it la •• UkeJ.y to rell.eve your bead.ache aa a rtaJ one. Now 1 paper in tbe Journal of Ab· norm.al PJycbolol)' reporta tbat much the tame seem.a to be &rue about cetUnc blP aa Uqvor. JJa a tat livea to UlrM dozen maJe students at the University of Wisconsin, only five were able to tell correctly if their glasses of tonJc also contained vodka. Moreover, the !ltudents who believed their glasses contained vodka lost their sexual inhibitions just as rapidly as those with alcohol in their drinks. Whal the drinker e~ct1 seems to de· termine bis mood more than the actual chemical composition of what he drinks. THIS RAS BEEN my observation and experience, as a relative non-drinker all my adult lHe. I can aet high on a glass of ginger aJe IJ lhe company and lhe 1>lace and the occasion come to1elber right. t also know people who have the rep· utatlon forbeing ferocious drinkers, yet l have seen Uiem take oo more lhan two drtnkl al a party aod act ama1h.cl. lt ls a psycholostcal mecbaftlam lb1t 1oes lnto hl1h 1ear, and not the etrHt of the liquor at all Gin them two abota or a liquid placebo and I am convinced they would act exactly the same way. v IT IS MY guess that the most impor· tant frontier in human discovery awaits us: learning more about the mind-body relationship, the subtle and diverse ways in which each affects the other. lllllY Ill The trouble wtlb 1 critic la that -like a prophet ol old -once be polnt.a out a aln or makes • prophHY or doom be bates to be proved Wl'Or\I. F.K.. DRAIGI COAST . Daily Pilat ~ MONDAY, SEPT. 21, 1981 HI F CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION 82-3 84 87 Delly ...... """9.., •leto9N ·- , Sh,aron Gless 'Will replace Lynn Redgrav e on "House Calls." 0 0 See. Page B7·. Whale , fish I I , I catch attentionL 1 . . of students Officials at the Orange County Marine Institute in Dana Point say they have a full schedule of events for the 30,000 students ex- pected to use the facility this year. Ins titute spoke~woma n Kathleen Costello said two boats are being chartered to take stu· dents on cruises off the coast where they will s tudy the marine environment. The program is called the "Floating Lab." Miss Costello s aid a gr abbi ng device is d ropped over the side of the vessels and underwater life is brought to the surface for the students to obser ve. Programs are desi~ned for students from kindergarten through junior college. Sessions are held onboard the "Su m Fun," a converted sportfishing boat, and the "Kelpie," an 85 fool schooner built in 1920. The instit\Jte ·also sponsors sailing class aboard the Kelpie, where students ac:t as the crew. Included in the education outings, which are available church groups, scouting or ga nizations or communit groups of 24 individuals or more is a session in the lnstitute's lab where samples collected on th boat trip are studied. The institute building, loca ' in the west basin of Dana PQin Harbor and open from 10 a .m. t 3:30 p.m. daily, houses sever salt water aquariums featurln local marine life. Sur rounded by whale bones , Kim Beckman, 8, of I rvine, now understands how Jonah must have felt in Bible story. Suspended from the ceiline the main room of the building · the skeleton o f a 27-foo adolescent wh~Je washed up · Hu ntington Beach two year ago. Miss Costello said the had been severed, apparently b a ·large ship's propeller. Crossing fish and undulating plants in the aquanum fasctnate Kevin Rausch. 2. of Capistrano Beach dunng tour of institute Wendy Perry of Irvine gives daughter Jackie, 2'~. a chance to touch nose of whale and imagine what whole creature would be like. ::::~~L..d T he skeleton was prepared f display by the American Ceta cean Society, and donated to th institute by the Bowers Museum of Santa Ana, where it wa housed formerly. · · Beginning in October. Orang County families will be able · spend a weekend onboard th Pilgrim, a replica of the sailln ship that author Richard H Dana sailed along the Callfomi coast more than a century qo. T h e Dana P o int Ocean Institute Foundation, the fund· raising arm of th e count)'·. owned study center, is currently involved in ratsing private funds to purchase the great sailing ship. . · Jim Perry of Irvine holds daughter Jennifer , 5. up for a closer mew of the whale skeleton. Carcass was prepared for display by the American C:etacean Society and donated by owers Museum Up to four families c an be housed on the vessel, they will . take part in aclivit.ies simulating life on a square ·masted s hip. ' Persons wishing informati9 on the outings should call the i stitute at 831-3850. ~\ .. ~\\\ DB's r e putatiQn boiled in oil TAR & F EATHE RS DEPT. It has now been divulged that some time back. two rotters from elsewhere. disguised as consultants. skulked about our coastal region and have now held one of our fair est cities up to the contempt and ridicule of the nation . T his arrogant pair of knaves had t he nerve to besmirch and malign the good name of the city of Huntington Beach. I. for one. refu se to sit still for such vapid insolence, done in the name of the,gov· ernment of the United St ates. Wh at h a p -~ pened was the dis- p araging duo 4fl' served as cons ul· r..'\. ~~~!rtt~e~~eofut~~ TOM MURPHINI -~I', Interior to study . our California coastline and pick the ugliest places where they figured they could get away with drilling for more off shore oil. SO THE PRETENTIOUS pseudo-pundits picked Huntington Beach . This was accomplished by the two of them driving up and down the coastline. as- signing scores of 100 downward, and searching for places upon which they could look down their noses. which are no doubt long and thin and sniffle a lot. In this 100-based scor ing by insolence. Newport Beach got a 98. Laguna was awarded 89 and the area between Corona del Mar and Laguna , a 96. Hun- tington Beach tra iled in with 48 points. Now I happen to be an honor a ry citizen of Hun· tingt on Beach . I have a fra med certificate from the mayor to prove it. And I prot est t his ba rbar ic atroci· ty of scoring. WHAT MAKES THESE TWO yahoos think they can downgrade Huntington Beach t o a 48? For starters, take the beachfront itself. The r ogues from Interior probably were impressed, with \he rocks and hea dlands of Laguna and Corona del Mar and dis- dained th'e fla t, o pen s weep of Huntingt on 's beachf ront. The facts are, however , t hat Huntingt on 's sweeping s horeline is very beautiful to those who like to gaze upon open beach and open sea. Further, Huntington's sandy beaches and equal- ly s andy surfbre pk are delights to s wi mmers and surfers. The city and· state beaches boast one of t he longest open strands in Southern California . The municipal pier is certainly one of the finest you'U visit anywhere. NO CITY HAS GONE to more effort to beautify and landscape the immediate highway -ocean front area and authorities are working valiantly in the ef · fort to upgrade the older downtown sector. Addit ionall y. you have to look hard to find a nicer boating-oriented community than .Huntington· Harbour. But what did the disparaging duo do with Hun· tington Harbour? Why. th~y . rated it. separately~ Huntington Harbour got a 71. Amazingly. in their consulting contortions, the pair gave a low 51 rating to what was identified as the area .. between" Newport B~ach and Huntington B.each. Thi s is amazing because you always believed · the two cities sh ared city boundary lines right at the Santa Ana River. Verv little in between. It's hard to rate a line . · ALL OF TIDS CONSULTING work cost the U.S. Department of. the Interior $250,000 and took seven months, which. in these days of tight money, seems almost obscene. The two that Interior sen( here to knock Hun- tington Beach s hould have s.tayed there. In lt\e in· terior, th at is. · And kept t heir oil drilling rigs wit~ them . Surf er operating under beautiful Huntington Btach P.Wr' light a. 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" 1.tiM ii 1•1 ,, ..... ...,..., t :·l .l: • :: ~ .. ll tbe receukJQ never left, accord· .tt '° .., 11,._ " 1 ,,.. • • •• 1i11 Met11h 1,• • 1 u . ... ,,... 1 1 ~ ;is.c11 t.M , rtt ,.,.._ "' in to UCLA ec:onomtst.a . CF!t a • ............. ~. 0 tr ~ Visa invades China mainland ll'f> the beginning or lhe end for the Chine'e They've let Va~a into the country You remember how al w11s when you got your f1rsl cn'<lil card? It was s hiny and new, lt had ma~1cal powers. T his little piece of plastic could tub· i;u tute for money. Little did you realiie what it would lead to. a wallet stuffed with plastic and monthly bill~ for which you need pay only a fraction 10 that lht• 1s:suing bank can build up its loan volume. YotJ didn't think you we.re applying for a loan wh~n you s igned on for a bank card. But that'g what tl turn(.'(1 out to be for millions or cardholder s. They got you on I.he rolls by issuing cards free of charge. Now most banks arol.Uld the country are charging for their cards or chargmg some kind or fee ror each transaction And you 're so locked Into debt that you can't pay it all orf and tear up your cards . This i1> what the Chinese have lo look forward to . Visa lntf'rnational reported earlier this month that sales volume in the People 's Republic of China topped lhe $1 milhon-per-month mark during the second quart<.'r ~ of 1981 That's , how much wai. \r ~ 1•harged on • , Visa cards 1n 4 i t h use th re t-,.. __ a..;.__., ______ _ months. It's 8 MllJOI llSIOWIJZ puny amount , or course, but Visa has been 111 China o nly a little m.ore than a year. Only 150 merchants in 12 cities honor the Visa card, which IS coming into China in lhe wallets or tourists . When it gels in the hands of Chinese consumers, watch out! Chana has a population of l billion. Visa is already ensconced as lhe wo rld's la rgest credit card Some 14,000 financial institutions, mostly <'ommerc1al llanks, issue Visa cards -and 94 million of those blue white-and·gold pieces of plastic are now circulating. T he United States has more than two. thirds of those cards -64.4 million -but the biggest t.:red1\ Junkie or them all would appear to be Canada, where there are 8 7 million Visa cardholders. That works out to 35 Visa cards for every 100 persons : we have onl y about 29 Visa cards for every 100 persons . That lca\'eS lhe rest of lhe world wide open. In Britain, there are onJy 12 Visa cards for every 100 persons. in Spain six, in France three. In the entire A~ia-Pacific area, there are only 2.2 million Visa card holder~ lfoy, much was cha rged last year on all those Visa cards? $46 billion. And to s how how rapidly this credit business can grow, Visa's charge volume in 1975 was only $13 billion. Nothing was said about the security precautions being taken in China to detect bogus cards. Perhaps at this stage it's Celt that if a tourist can get to China, it's unlikely he or s he will be carrying an invalid <:ard That's not the case here and Visa announced Q\•er the summer that it's introducing some new tough system s lo cut down on fraud. Fraud and credit losses in the credit-card in· duslry now amount lo more than Sl billion a year - and Visa members get socked for $400 tnillion o( that. One of the new devices is a special te rminal that can read ·the magnetic strip on the back of every Visa • card If a store is equipped with this te rminal, a sales clerk simply takes the Visa card and s lides it through a slot in the machine. The machine reads the card number and automatically dials a processing center where a computer issues -within seconds -one of four mstrucllons: I okay. 2 no way, 3 -pick up the card. 4 better check for authorization with the issuing bank The terminal will speed up the authorization process at checkout counters. Merchants will get in· stant reading. And they won't have to annoy the customer by asking for additional identification. 1sa International expects to have 10,000 of these terminaJs in stores by the end of this year A year rrom now 1t expects to have 130,000 working to catch thiefs So lhe Chinese really have a new world to look forward lo If anything will undermine the Marxist economy, 1l wtll be Visa Gold metals quotations London: morning fixing $459.25. up $12 25. London: afternoon fixing $463.50, up $16.50. Paris: afternoon fixing $546.64. up $9.69. Frankfurt: $461.03, up Sll.99. Zurich: late fix ing $459.00, up $14 .00, $462.00 asked. Handy & Harman: (only daily quote) $463.50, up $16 50 .:ogethard: Conly dally quote) $463 50, up $16.50. Engelhard: <only d ally quote) fabricated $486.68, up $17.33. Gold coins NEW YORK (AP) -Prices late Friday of gold coins, compared with Thursday's price. Krugerrand, 1 lroy oz .. $474.75, up $7.75. Maple leaf, 1 troy oz., $474.75, up $7.75. Mexican 50 peso, 1.2 troy 01., $573.50, up $9.50. Austrian 100 crown, 9802 troy ot., $448.75. up $7.75. Source: Deak-Perera Metals Copper 84%·87Y.I cents a pound, U.S. destinations . Lead 40-46 cents a pound. Zlnc 49'>4 cents a pound, delJvered. Tln $7.8867 Metals Week composite lb. Aluminum 76-80 cents a pound, N. Y. Mercury $440.00 per Oask. Platinum $446.00 troy oi., N. Y. Silver Handy & Harman, $10.650 per troy ounce. Piiot Logbook -Ill• Candid comrnentm'Wi uclurfw~ fn tM Pilat ' ' ] ~ .... , ;suwavw a H /F They don't yell fore; they just yell duck . '. From AP dllpatcbes OMAHA, Neb -Playen al the Lakeview Golf Course say J .R., who has been following them around the l!I course for about a month now. unnerves them with her critical stare. But, they add, al least she doesn't quack during a backswing. J . R. is a duck who has been making the rounds with human partners she carefully selects each morning. "It was eerie," one golfer said recently. "I was putting on the sixth green and I got this feeling of presence. l looked around, and there was this duck, watching me." Course pro Dallas Wendt said J .R. was given to a family as a gag. After she was raised, the family freed her on the golf course. They visit her once a month. Wendt said J . R. waddles to tbe clubhouse every morning to select some partners. She usually returns to the clubhouse after six or seven holes, rests a bit and then goes out for another round. emtMr 21 . 1981 Schmidt, Rose spark Phlllle1 A linale by Pete .... drove ln the 10-abOd run and Mike Sd•ldl added bll 27th home nm u an In· 1urance meuure ae the Philadelphia Phllllee teOred fo~r run1 ln the seventh lnn1na Sunday1 to down Pttteburl}a, 5-4. Left·bander Ip~ 8-$, picked up the victory . In dther -~luMlal Lea~ue contnt.a, Nolaa Ryan sutvl ·a ibaky fl"t lnnlna and went on to pitch a aeven-hitter as Houston beat San l''ranclsco, 7·3. Ryan was staked to a 4--0 lead ln the first l.nnlna, but the Giants got to him for three runs In the bottom of the first . . Claudell Wasblalton singled home the game-winning run with no outs In the 11th inning to give Atlanta a 3·1 verdict over Schmidt S u n Diego B 111 GalJlc!Uola struck out 13 batters and scattered thre~ htta en route to his fifth victory as Mont· real• dfsllbsed of the Chicago Cubs, 4-0. The rlgh\·haftder had a no·hltter unlil the fifth when Leoa Odr'laam slammed a double to center . . . Mookle Wll1oa, whose error allowed St. Louli'to co ahead in the top of the ninth inning, hJt a two-out, two-run homer in the bottom of the nlnU.'\o give the New York Mets a 7·6 vie· tory'p(fef'the Cardinals and a three game series swe~p. . Toln Paciorek doubled home the win· nlng nm tn the seventh inning as Seattle defeat· ed Kansas City, 3·2. Perez's homers sink Yankees 1'dht Perez drove in three runs wlfh a palr of homers Sunday as the Boston Red Sox defeated the New York Yankees, 4·1 behind the pitching of Bruce Hurst and Bill Campbell. With their sixth victory in seven starts, the Red Sox ,...--------------------. .. bobs\¥ their second-half record to 23·16, bofaferu\g hopes for a playoff spot. , . . . In Quote of the day other American League action, Lena Sakata John McKay, Tampa Bay Buccaneers rapped four hits, including coach. wondering whether the injared ~· two home runs and drove in Lyon Caln of Atlanta would be ready to ' . rive runs to lead Baltimore to play against Tampa Bay: ''Let me know if an 8 · 2 victor Y o v e r Cain is able " Milwaukee. Jim Palmer, 6·8, who lasted one-third of an in· ning against Milwaukee in his last start, burled a five. hitter . . . Jim Suadberg's bloop single to right field scored pinch-runner Wayne Weiskopf flawless in victory Tom Weiskopf shot a flawless, final round four-under-par 68 Sunday to win the inaugural LaJet Classic golf tournament and boost his career earnings to more than S2 million. GU Morgan shot a final· round 69 to finish two strokes behind in the to~rnament held in Abilene, Texas . . . Saa · dra Haynie, a 20-year LPGA veteran, shot a four-under-par 68 to overtake Marlene Floyd and capture the Henredon Classic golf tourna· ment. Haynie's four-foot birdie putt on the 11th hole wrapped up the victory. Perez Tolleson with the winning run as Texas nipped Mmnesota, 4-3 . . . Jim Morrison belted a two-run homer to help Rlcbard DoUon and the Chicago White Sox stop 04kland, 11·3. Morrison's homer. his ninth of the y~ar. came in the sixth inning and scored D'dtsoi\ . . . Loa Whitaker stroked a one-out double to snap a l·l tie in the top of the ninth in· . nlng, and Jack Morrla hurled his 14th complete game to spark Detroit to a s-1 victory over Cleveland. Baseball today On this date In baMbaU In 1'13: After once tra1lln1 .the dlvlalon leader• by 12&..\ aamea, the New York MeU catapult~ lnto the first place ln the Na· tlonal t.eaaue .t:ast as Tom Seaver beat Pittsburgh 10·2 at Shea Stadium. On this datle in 1970 : In just his el1thth major leafue start, Oakland rookie Vida Blue no·hit Min nesota. 6-0. On this dale ln 1964 : Chico Rub'a aixth·innlng steal of home was the game's only run as Clncinnati nipped Philadelphia. 1-0 at CoMle Mack Stadium. Unranked Kiyomura upsets Bunge Unranked Ann IUyomara of the • United States defeated third-seeded Bettina Bunge, 6·4, 1·S Sunday to win the Toray Sillook tennis tournament in Tokyo . . Alexander Ha«ea of West Germany and crew member Vincent Hoeacb won the first race over 84 starters in the Star Class 59tb annual world championship sailing competition at Marblehead. Mass .... Long-distance run- ner Maurizio Scarte11inl set a world mark in the 2,000-meter steeplechase, a non-Olympic event, with a 5:22.2 clocking in an Italian armed forces meet . . . Herb Undtay set American records in the half-marathon and 10-kilometer run in the Maple Leaf Half-marathon at Manchester, Vt. Lindsay, of Boulder, Colo .. clocked• a 1:01.47 io the half-marathon and 58:37.46 for 20 kilometers . . . Rick Mears won the accident-plagued Michigan 500 race for lndy cars . . Gerry Minor of the Vancouver Canucks suffered a small skull fracture during early morning drills. Televison, radio Following are the top sports events on TV ton loht. Ratings a re: ./ ./ ./ ./ e)(cellent; ./ ./ / worth watchino; / / fair; / foroet It. e 6 p.m .• Channel 7 I I I I NFL FOOTBALL: Dallas at New England. Announc:trS: Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell and Don Meredith. Althouoh the Cowboys are 2-0 and New Enoland has yet to win its fi rst game, Dallas Is on· ly a 2'h ...polnt favorite In tonight's 941me. Coach Tom Landry will send Danny White to the firing line with Tony Dorsett leadlnq the rushing attack. The Patriots have Sam Cunningham back in the fold and are expected to start Steve Grogan at Quarterback. RADIO Baseball Chicago at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). Football -Dallas at New England, 6 p,m., KN·X (1070). Hockey -Kings vs. Winnipeg at Victoria, 7:50 p.m., KPRZ (1150). From Page C1 RAMS WIN ... a result didn't have a chance to proted himself. H'i "Just call me lucky," a downcut Kadeo tried to joke. "Jt'21 11 1ood thlnt l slowed the fUY down1 I with my chelll "It's really a duy-by-day thing," he said more ·• serious ly "I i·an'l breathe deeply nd when lt'i la • the stemum like this 11 bothers you In everythlQf you do " Haden with his fourth major Injury ln folW years tried lo talk positively about an early re· turn But his appearance would seem to indicate otherwise as he stood an the lockerroom with bit left arm in a iihng and hi~ upper body f1rched to re~ lieve the pressure in his chest. "They're going to take more X-rays tomor· row." added Haden. "With a little bit of luck I hope to be able to throw again this week "I TRY TO STAV positive but things keep hap·• pening to me that makt 1t difficult to be an op· timistic person " • The person who stands to be optim1stlc now Is ' Rutledge. who rigures to inherit the No 1 job and start next Monday in Chicago. ironically the same place he got his NFL baptism as a starter in 1979. ''I'm excited .. admitted Rutledge of the pros· peel ··t guess 'now that Pat is hurt I'm the quarterback." ..• Yes. but for how long·1 Dan Pastonn1 s shadow as still looming I a decision on him is expected early this week) and . If Haden recovers·. Rutledge's promotion could be a short one ··1 realize that." said Rut, "and l certainly feel bad for Pat. If he's healthy, he's our No. 1 guy. "Whal they end up doing concerns me but J have no control over it They're going to do what they feet they have to do "l would lake to thank the job is mine until somebody takes it away or I prove I can't do it." The Rams. for awhile, almost proved they ' forgot how to win Ironically, it was the Pat!kers < l·2J last year, too, who helped start the Rams on their winning ways after a 0·2 start "WF. NEEDED THIS win badly,"' concurred Rutledge. who was 5 of 10 passing for 70 yards and one TD .. Losing can be a habit JUSt like winning." "They are a ll must wins now," added Malavasl. Are the Ram~ turning the corner? "We won't know until next week," said Thomas. ··u we come out like this next week, an~ if the defense has the same adrenaline. we'll be all right. ··If not. it w1ll 1Je the same old soap opera." From Page C1 JEFFERSON • • • for San Diego again if 1t came down to 1t. New England's garµ,e plan: 11 guys on 33 IT WAS RUMORED that when Jefferson was traded to Green Bay last week, he had asked for a contract that would at least match. if not ex· ceed, the recently signed contract of Lorton. "l haven't even talked to anyone about that," Jefferson sajd in response. "I don't think it's fair to compare me to anyone else." Translated, that means to stop Dallas, you must stop Dorsett Nonetheless, the thought of teaming with Lof· ton excites Jefferson "I think we'd have the same kind of tandem as Boyd Dowler and Carroll Dale." FOXBORO, Mass . (AP) -If the New England Patriots keep ·•11 guys on 33" and hold him under 100 their chances of being 1·2 should improve. says Coach Ron Erhardt. The Patriots' leader isn't r esorting to numerological voodoo to shake his team out of its winless ways. In fact, he's being quite logical in pre paring to play the Dallas Cowboys in tonight's National Fotball League game. New England will be hard pressed to stop Dott~U. In their two previous games, the Patriots allowed Baltimore's Randy McMillan to run for 146 yards and Philadelphia's Wilbert Montgomery to gain U7. They also have allowed 103 more rushing yards than any other NFL team. But Landry doesn't plan to tilt more toward running plays. Tony Dorsett is "33," his uniform number. He is off to his best start in five pro seasons. having gained 132 and 129 yards in his first two games. In the 22 games he has passed the 100-yard mark on the ground, Dallas is 21·1. "We try to really go with what goes good for us . and the running game has been going good. 6n TV to night Channel 7 at 6 So it makes sense that a team has to stop Dorsett to have a better chance of stopping the- Cowboys, who are unbeaten after two games. We don't really worry about the opponent," he said. "You can't let him out al all. Eleven guys on 33, Erhardt s aid. .. Dorsett is running better. He's running more." New England defensive end Tony McGee doesn't 'th.ink the Patriots are as bad as the 469 rushing yards they've aJlowed. He leads the NFL in rushing and has gained 7 l yards per carry tops in the National Football Conference. He also has caught eight passes for an average gain or 8.9 yards. "He got married in the off-season and spetll more time in Dallas and worked out more, .. said Cowboy Coach Tom LandrY.. "This has made him stronger and more confident. .. "We did a good job last week in a 13·3 loss to the Eagles until we had to gamble and then when you gamble they can add 50 or 60 yards," he said. "We just need to go back and play our defense the w•1 we should . We have to have 10 or 11 men arQUftd the be.II. .. On offense, New England could get a boost NFL standings JOHNSON & SON Presents ... NATIONAL CONFERENCE Western Division W L PF PA Pct. Atlanta 3 0 9'l 34 1.000 Rams I z 7Z 73 .333 San Francisco I 2 62 75 .333 New Orleans l 2 30 64 .333 Eastern Division Philadelphia 3 0 57 27 1.000 Dallas 2 0 56 27 1.000 NY Giants 2 1 47 38 .667 St. Louis 1 2 64 80 .333 Washington 0 3 47 83 .000 Central Division Detroit 1 2 71 71 .333 Green Bay I 2 56 75 .333 Chicago 1 2 54 61 .333 Minnesota 1 2 49 81 .333 Tampa Bay 1 2 48 60 .333 Pete's Pick at Johnson & Son Johnson & Son Lincoln-Mercury Z6Z6 HAUOa ILVD. COSTA..-SA 540-5630 .. . AMERICAN CONFERENCE Weste11l Dl•laloa W L P' PA Pct. San Diego 3 0 114 68 1.000 Kansas City 2 1 87 85 .667 Oakland 2 I 63 29 .IM7 Denver 2 1 47 30 .867 Seattle 1 2 44 57 .333 Eastern Dlv11lon Miami 3 O 66 27 1.000 Buffalo 2 1 80 23 .887 Baltimore 1 2 42 tl' .133 New England O 2 31 41 .000 NY J ets 0 3 40 lot .000 Central Olvle1-! Cincinnati 2 1 7~'·'u .M'T Houston 2 1 46 39 .667 Pittsburgh 1 2 81 77 .133 Cleveland 1 2 37 70 .333 ....,._ ...... Af-tetC_ .... llllff •It M ClftclftMCI ,,. __ ...... v-Jeh N-E. ........ 411 """"""" 0..leflll M °"""°" ··~ ....... ~ .......... a.111..... • ··--.... ~-et.....-1(~ ... lty .. ~ """ ~ .. tM...._ •• N.., vn o......«.,..... $1 L°""' .. T .... ..., s.110 ...... ~ ............ lt-•etCllll ... I ' Any '81 Lincoln or Mercury · ~~\ .. ~o~ •: ·(,· 1za~AP •. .. *'..I--·-----~ . , ....... '"Grwell" NR.'s Piek of The Week * Tonlgh1 * Dalen Onr New EftCJIGMI SHE ·s7 000° 12700 18 I u.. • llll'Clry Amt. aayed depend• on length of contree1 & amt, down. Mlnlnwm 26% dn . .a 1 mos.oontrect. .. I from the return or wide receiver Stanley Morgan and running back Vagas Ferguson. Both missed the first two games with in· juries but Erhardt said Morgan may start and Fergu'son could be ready to spelt rookie Tony Collins, the AFC's fourth leading rusher. Lofton, cornered b) his locker after Sunday's game against the Ram!> an which he caught five passes for 73 yards and one touchdown. s aid that the addition of J efferson would be a big boost to the team. Dallas, the only team the Patriots never have beaten, led the NFL in scoring last year and New England was second, but neither has been over· oowerinll on Monday nights. The Cowboys are ~-9. and the Patriots 2·9 in those games. 'Tm happy for him and the team that we got him ." he said. .. He's too good a player not to • play "ONE GOOD THING about it is that the de· fenses wouldn't be able to star k up against me. John couJd definitely help us become a winning !ball club."" Pre p football ratings Orange Coaaty Prep Top JO Dally Pilot football rankiags ; Said Starr ... Jefferson could upgrade our pro· gram tremendously. It would take a great deal of the burden orr L<>flon It's so difficult for James when he's constant I\ be1nl! double-and lriole· teamed. You're always trying to free him up or hide him."' Pos. Team, record Ne.a game I. Edison (2-0) El Modena (1-1) 2. Esperanza (2-0) La Quinta O·l) 3. Fountain Valley <2-0) St. Paul (2-0) 4. Estancia (2·0 ) San Clemente (0·2) 5 Marina <3·0) Foothill (2·0) Back by the chow hne. someone as ked Jef· ferson if he at any time had considered Canada as an alternative. ··1 hadn't talked to anyone about Canada. if that's what you mean. But if that's the only way. I guess I would be cruy· enough to go." 6. Loara (2-0) Garden Grove (1·1) 7. El Modena O ·l) Edison (2·0) 8. Foothill (2-0) Marina (3-0) 9. El Dorado (1-1) Sunny Hills O·~) io Servite <2-0> SantaMaria <1-u Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Weat Dlvlsioa Kansas City x-Oakland Minnesota Texas Chicago Seattle Angels W L Pct. GB 22 17 .564 19 18 .514 19 21 .475 17 20 .459 16 23 .410 16 23 410 12 25 .324 East Division Detroit 24 16 .600 2 31-7 4 6 6 9 Boston 23 16 .590 1-7 Milwaukee 24 17 .585 a,, Baltimore 21 17 .553 2 x-New York 21 18 .538 21,'J Toronto 19 18 .514 31,'J Cleveland 18 22 ,450 6 x-First-half division winner ....., •• Sc#91 ,_, ....... , 9Mloll4, .... Ytt11 I 9•111,_.l ,Mll•_. .. , Detroit s. Cllwt.tM 1 Cll l<.9eo 11, 0.:1..W ) Sotettlt 2. IC-City 2 , ............ , T....,..,._ Cll~l8 .... M) .. A111tt9 (lt-0Ml,11 111111w.-.. ,.._ ... , •I ~.,. (Ee--.., M )," Oetn11t (Wiien ~· .. l•ltl ....... (lilc°"'91r 11..JI, n Oeklelld (U11•erwe•d l ••I •t Ter•nl• (9fftftlftlW 2>10)," (I_...._ (w.tft Ml .. -Yerll (..,. .... ), II lllllllMMMI ("'"'9 M) 411 IC-Oty (Ow• W ),11 SHtt .. < ......... Ml M Tt ... CDerwtl!M>,11 ;Oft,_, - NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Houston 26 14 .650 Cincinnati 23 16 .590 2""1 x-Dodgers 22 18 .550 4 San Francisco 21 18 538 4"'1 Atlanta 20 19 .513 5"7 San Diego 12 29 .293 14'1-l East Division St. Louis 21 17 .553 Montreal 20 19 .513 1"'1 New York 19 20 .487 2""2 Chicago 17 20 .459 3"'2 x-Philadelphia 17 21 .447 4 Pittsburgh 16 23 410 51r'l x-Firsl·half division winner ~··"­CIMIM•ll S, ~ 1 Mofltrffl 4. CNulO 0 Pl\ll ......... S,Pl~4 N.._ Y-7, SI.. IAul•' Allltfli. i, SM Oi99D 1 I 11 lnnl-1 HOlltlOll 7, WI F'rtlMIKO J T•r •O-. St. '-""'' IAndUI• M) et Cl\lc-(ICr- 1·41 PllllMtl!IMe lltvltio~ 11-S Of c:.tl-12-41 et M9111'"1(~Is11)," Pl~ (Tl-Ml al New Yortl lH.,., .. ).4c!i~t-tl (L.tlllrll!Cll Ml et Sen Dl-.O IL.ollet 1-4),11 Onl'( -tc-....i I' ~ . ' ,, .. AMERICAN LUOUl Blue J•ya &, Angeli 3 CALlf'Oll•IA .. r 11 .. TOllC*TO Dowfllnt.lf 4 I I 0 -~· .. Bllflffll,116 , I o o 1or9 ,1tl 4 0 1 0 Grl<ll,Jtl 4 I 1 I WOOdt, If 4 0 0 0 l•ylor,• J o 1 1 .. rti.141,rt J o o o Ott,c 4 O O O MeyWy,lb I I I I Ford.rt 4 0 I 0 \leler,Oh I J I I Sc Oft Ir•, II> J 0 ' I 8.M•rtl\l.c 4 I 1 ' HooM.n,• J o o o Griffin,• 4 O J O Benlqur.<I 1 O I o T .Cox,• > I 1 I Herrl•.P" O O o o .t.lno-,» I 0 0 0 Herl-.cl O 0 0 0 Totell >t J t J Tolell » • ti • sc-"'1..-.. C•lllornle JOO ODO oo.-4 T0tonlo 021 102 Ob-4 E -r•y, T. Coa. OP -C:.lll«nle I, Toronto 1 LOfl -C:.lifornl• 12. ToroMo '- 18 Oowntne. !Mylor, e.n1q,., HR -Mobtrry 11'1, lleler 110, T Co• U l. S -Benlqwr Call- Z#\n ll ... Ill Jeff•rton A•M I~ " 1"' 6 J , 111> > " ... '' '° 4 4 ' ' J t t 0 0 0 I I Te,...-. L .. I ~ 4 > J 1 0 Nlur••' Ill> I o o O o BomN<-(W, ~tl 4 , 0 0 J t J eciu.on 1"1 2 o o J I MC LAIUQllln IS, II I~ 0 0 0 0 J HBP Je<kton tOownlAQl. WP -u.i. T J 0 . A -20,SIS. MlnMn >. ltoyelt I IC•n•u Clly 100 100 __ , II 1 Sulllt 000 001 JOx-J I o Lton•rd -w.1,,.,,, 8ennlster eno 9ull· 1119. W 8-1~1tr 17 .. I L-L-..rd 110·11). HA IC•nus Cnv. Olis Ill. A-.,111 Wlll1e Soll II, A's J 0 0 lt ll0 000 002 001-l 4 I Clll<•OO 000 OlJ a.a-II IJ 0 NOrtll, Kfn(llnen 17). ll"CUUOllll" Ill -H .. ,,, OotMln, Hoyt 171 •no Fisk. w- Oouo" t• 11 L Norris (ll·l l HR-Oekl•nd, M<Ket UI. Clll<-. -rrltoft (t i A 11,a .. Tl-' S, ,..,.._.I 0.1roll 001 000 00.-S ti o CltWtlend 000 001 000-1 S 0 Morrh end Woclo.en!uu; 8rennet1. Spjll.,., (t) •~d OIAJ W Mof'rls ( 1).Sl. L-Br- 11 II A t,930 ~ ............ 1 Mllweukff 020 000 000-2 S ) 9•ttlmO<e CJ 000 10•-t II O (•lflwt ll. Clt••l•nd 111, Clure 141, Muell., IU. Porl., Ill. Pelmer •nd Oemp .. y W Pelmer IH I. L-Celdwoll Ill t ) HR S."I,,_.., Sell.Ale I Ill, Mt.II· ••1 I ltl Mllw41111<M, OQIMe 112). A-11,'57, lt•S.•4,Y-... 1 Ho• Yor~ 100 000 --1 I 0 Bo•lon 000 lOJ OOa--4 10 o JOM •nd Cefonor. Hurst. C•mPCMll , •• end Atlon1on w Hurst (2·01 L-J ol\n (M ). HA Boilon, ,,_,., 2 111. A-lS,otl. A-l4,TWIMJ MIMoot• OlO 100 __ , s 0 Tt~IJ 001 000 102--4 U I H .. •"'· Co<btll (I) •nd Butera, Hougll •"d Sund1>er9 (W-Hou9 ll Cl·ll l - Corti.11 II SI HR Mlnnosote, G•ttl (I) ... , .. , NATIONAL LEAGUE Red• s. Dodgers 1 Cl•CINNATI LOt. ANGILEJ Collln1,r1 Mtjln ,rt Grlttoy,ct (n<P<n,ss F0>ler.U Orltun,11> KnlQlll,JI> Nol•n.< o. ..... tt> Soto,p •brllM .. r ... 4 1 1 o s .. ,11> 1 o 1 1 I 0 0 O A Smltll,IJfl I 0 0 0 S I • 0 Howe ,p 0 0 0 0 S I I 0 TllOm .. ~ 4 0 1 0 • I I 0 Mollfley,rt l 0 0 0 3 I J J Garvo,11> • o O O • o o O Johntton." • O I 0 • 0 3 I Sc los<le,c ) 0 0 0 J O 0 I lloenlcll,d 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 Wolss,H 4 I 2 0 P-er,p 100 0 Letlflra,IJfl I O 1 O Nltdnlur,p 0 0 0 0 Total\ » s 13 s Merslll.a. ),0 1 O ken by I..,_ C1nt1nnlll 200 100 Ol0-5 l O> Angel.. ODO 010 000-1 OP Ctn<1nN ll I, Los Angele• I lC>e - Cln<lnn•ll •. Los A"9flH I. 28 -Gotllns, Nol•n SF OHier C•lllw!U 11' H It •• a1 10 Solo t w .•• ,. t 7 1 1 2 t L•tA_... Powtr CL. I 71 Nlt denl""r Howe T J O A s 2 2 1',560. Eirfl"4,C-t l J 2 0 0 0 2 2 I c111c•eo ooo ooo ~ J o Monlrttl JOO 010 OOa-4 6 O Grlllln -II Ill. Srnltll 161. Gelwl 111, Tldrow (1) •nd Bleck-II; Guttlcll.-. -c .. 1., w Gultl<kson IS.II L-Grllfln (J •> A 40,ISI Pt11M ... S,PltMin4 Pollll>ur9'1 200 010 001--4 t I Pllll•fltlPlll• 000 100 40a-S 11 O Solomon, r.•u••t (1) and Pene, Proly, L,lt (71 e nd Morelend. W-l yle l .. Sl. L- Solomon II 51 HR Pllll-IPlll•. Scllmldl 111) ... 31 .... Metl1,~IMlsA St L.oul• 203 000 001-1 I 0 Ntw York 000 002 m-1 2J J Sortnten, Bair (6), KHt 111. Do~ (1), Syh1 Pl. Llttt ll (I), Sutler It) •nfl Poner; Zachry, So.Ir-U), MeNNlll ISi, ~o (I), Allen ltl end Sleerns. W-Allen 1'-SI. L Sutt ... (~) HR-St. L.ouls, Hef\MIO 1111 A ll,lJ7 .,..,,..,,P .. •1 All•nt• 100 000 ODO 02-J I I San 0 1-000 011 000 l»-1 t I P Njellro Hr•-Y Ill, Cemp 111) lllfl Bt-1<1. 0-., l(u,....lu., Lucas !II, Mwre 1101 •ncl K""*"t W-Hr-y !M). L- Mure IS.IO s.-c..mp llSI. A-2.-. Att .... 7, Glolllb J Houllon 401 002 000-7 •• o Sen Fr•nclKO lOO ODO ~ 7 0 lly•n •nd Pujols, Ll,,.llt, Alpley (1)1 are1111no U>. Hotl-161, Tufts 111 - M•v w Ryen , .. SI. L-Ll,,.11• 10..). tOt-Houtton. Scot! t41 A-16,124. Top 10 ·--• 17S.1 lnJ) AM•ittCAN LllAOUa 0 Al • If "'1. l entlorfl. 9olt0ft " Ut SC ta .J:M Zh ll. S.9'tle 11 JI> 40 104 .m Paciorek, S.Mtle ti W 41 Ill .at1 R.H-""-0.1-" 379 11 12' .111 t4argro,,.,c1.-..1-t2 JIJ 1' ft .m Remv. eo.ton n >14 ., "' .m C.C:OO,.r, Mllw ..... " t4 31'0 .. 114 .t1A Oll•tr, Tues n JM ., la ,JIJ Mwmptiry,,....... Yon n llO ,, ,. .J'lll Almon, CN'-to 311 .U '* ... .._ .. _ Art'nlt, 0.kl-, 21; ThOmet, MUw..-.., 70, MUffrf, Belt.,.,.,., 1t; Ortell, ....... IM; LurfMlll, Olk-. 11. Pia A RE.ALLY "CUP.LY '' OOUC>LE -e>REAKING PUTT ON A VE.P..V FAST GREEN IS ONE OF GOLF'S S TERNE.ST C HALLENGES, t:>UT THERE. IS A WAY T O MA~E T HIS S TP..OKI: E A SIER THA T'S USEO e>Y A L OT OF GOOO PLRV ERS. -~-------- ......... A ........ Ol*MM. .. : Mwfey, ... ._.., ... o.ii... ..................... .... YMI, .. ; ....,_, ~ •; ~-.... '"'""··· ....... Ct ........ C~. ~. •11 T-. ......_, N , M<o,...,, .....,.., 114; °"'*"'·....., Ym , IW, C-, T-. r.t; v-.c--. Mltw...._ IJ-4, Men'll, 0etrM, IW. NA~~-.v• ... a .. M. .... ............ • •1 •I , .. ,., c~•c•IMM• • '" ., "' .at O.w-,MMtrtNI .. M .. tff .m or1 ... ,.c: ...... 1 .. -"'" .J'IJ ...... ,,..,.._ "., 4.t tt4 .... "-·....,... t1 m 41 tt1 .11• •11e11.-. awe.... t1 .. J1 IU .t1J .,..., .... Ytrll '7 JM a " .Ill Owtu1ni, OWc-.. 11 m J4 • .111 ~ Dmilllft ., J11 • • ... kllfn ...... ~; o--........ ,..,, U; k...-_ IMw Yen. a; I'.-, Cln<IMllll. a: HeMrkll. 14. LM!I, 11 ._ ...... Fttltr. C:lnclnne ll, 1t; St111"1 .. , .............. 1J; ~. CllkAlfl, u : c:-~loll. CIM~ll • .a: C:.W • .....,_., "· • "*llille!thl..._.I haver, Cincinnati, ll•l l Veit• ...... ~ IM; Cer11Dll. Ptlli.M .... e, 1M; Cemp, Allel'lle, .. I; •-. .......... N ; R~. ~ltt11M'911. W ; H-, Ctnci-tl, W ; R11"'-. '"9111 ..... , 11.s. HFl. Rams 35, Peckera 23 laloe.,.....,.. . > Or"" l•Y O 10 • 1-n LOIA....... 0 1' 7 ,...._. GS-ElllsJ""' l~NdlllUI LA -HW'rls JI ""' wlltl """* (GorRI lllclll lA-Tylff J""' !Gerra) llk lll GI -FG $t9MNd 1t Gll -FG~U • G8 -FGS~ .. LA -Hiii JO -Ir_.. ltllt'"9e IC_.,... llklll LA-8rfn J""' !Gerral kkkl L.A-T\'tff I""' !CorT•I llk ll) GI -l ollon 1' put lrom OlclltY ISt•nefi.11111.lcll.I A -•1 ... o• LA. First fl-1t tt 1111.ii. .. y-as.in .o.1n Pess11111 Y•'* 11 • Return Y•rfls to ICM ..,. .. Mt 15-,.., .. ,,.1 Secllt by S-to 6-47 ...... ts Ml 1 ... , _ _.... 44 J.2 P-ltlft.y-11.f5 l•IJO Time of "--Ion n :Jl 17:2' 1 ..... ,,-.....c. RUSHING -Gf-. lay, NI"""-li.4S, ,,._n .. 27, _._.. MS, AtklM S-IS, Okkey 2'1J, Ellls .... LAii A ....... Tvtff 25-IOI, 8ry-..... ~ ).JI, J. T,__ •12,R~M. PASSING -Gr .. n 8ey, Dic key IS-:rt-l·IZS, WIVtetMwst !H~ LOI A~ H-n 1-2-44. Rutledge ).1~1-70. R ECE l\llNG -GtMft 8ey, LAtton S-73, Coffm•n S.16. G. ~It J·U, Je-1·5, Hucllletly 1-S, Atlllnt M, Middleton 1-4. LOI Aneeles. w.,,,,., 1.1 .. 0 . Hiii l·JO, Cllllfl• , .. , O.nnllnt 1.,, Tyler 1-4. Bears 28, Buccaneers 17 Sc-...., ....... T.,,,pe e.., 1 o 1 >-11 Cllk-.O O 14 7 1-a Tl -WH111"9(on Jt lnt•r<991ed -IY_..,. ... llkkl CHI -Softy I""' (Nie'-lllcll) CHI -J. Fllllef' • ....... return INle-kk lll Tl -HouM 11 PHI lrom Wllllem• IY_..,. ... 11.lcl<I CHI -E'f-1""' INlelten llkll) Tll -FGV....,,lenJJ CHI -Wllllems II pHt from Ev-(NlelMflllkkl A-60,UO '~ 1...-..C• RUSHING -T-lay, Ecll-01).11 .. Wllll•ms ).11, Wlldw 1·4, T. Devis M, R. tell l•J. Olkego, P..,.,. 21.+I, s.Ny ,...._ E¥eM:M. PASSING -Tempe l•y, Wllll•ms 11·.0·12•2. Clllc190, Event 1).11-126-1, Pr(tlln•1~. RECEIVING -T-.. y, Gllff S-IGlt, Howte Ml, -.... T. htl 1-47, WI._ I·•. Clllceoo. W•tts 1·>5, P•Ylell 1·4. M•f'9•rum 1·15. Swlley 4-19, E•rl 1·11, Wllllem' 1-Jt, ea.:· ....... , ... Bronco• 28, Colt• 10 lclwelly~ lleltlmore O O 10 ._,. Denver O 14 14 t-a OEN -Egloff 7 -•,,_,Morton 1"91n- lort ltlcll.) OEN -W•lton,, PHS from M- , 1St.lfttor1 Ueki llALT -FGWOOC121 IAL T -OICMy ~ rwn IWOOCI llklll OEN -WebOn 11 -· lrom ~ 1Stelntor1 kkkl OEN -Wa.._ a pest trom ~ 1Stetntor1 kkkl A -74,tOC I ......... ~. ltUSHING -8elllm«w, Okllrf 1).115, D ixon S·21, McMlllen 1·11, JonH t •1. Oen.,.,, p.,..... 14-4.S, P..-i 1M7, C- ._.,, R..., 1-2. lytle 14, w ...... 14. PASSING -e.ttlm«w, "-7.1 .. 1..S. O.nwer, ~ »a.+2'1, o.eorv 4-S-0-90. RECEIVING -llalllmore, McMlll.., •Jt, C•rr l·I•, Oklley 1-IJ, Dl•on 1-4. 0..-, Wiiton 7-10, Prntlon 6-46, Rwd ,_.,Odoms )..». ""-s 1·JO, ~ MO, Wrltllt 1·14, Monnl"' 1•. Egloft 1-7. Q1nta 20, S.lnt• 7 kilro.,~ H ... Orte.. 0 0 0 7-7 NY Gla..ts 0 IJ 1 ~JO NY-Sl*tl 12-Slmmt (0..lell.kll) NY -FGJO~ NY-FGSS NY -T~lrllfl Ill HO -w..,,. w1i-1t1<ara llklll A -.. ,tl4 .............. lln ltUSHING -H-Orie.,.,, R ... n G. •H, H-7~ Wiiton W. 1-t. N-Yort. Kotar ... lrteflt ..a. "9rYY .. u . Te~ ... IO,Slmms44. PASSING -H9w Or"'-, Scott J.IJ.1 .. 1, WllMlfl 0 . 11-f.).1-15'. -Yorll.. Slmnw ... ,....,., lnn.r0.140. •ECEl\llNG -"-on.-. CIWMder •71, Wll-W. ~. C:.W S.f2. 0""" Mt, Harris .. ti, HW'd'r 1-12, Tylff MO, ........ 14. N-Yn, 511"11 11-101, "9RIM l-11t, •rtt!M Ml. ~ 2-a. I(..., l-14, ..... Ml, Tertw l•S, ~ l·S. Aeidwl 20, S.ahawka 10 ~" ...... S..ttlo • ' 7 ..... Oalll-, • • 7-• OA IC -"""'*eft 1J ""' I a.tit 11 kll l SEA -FG ...,.._. 2' OAK -.....,_ 2t pen from .........., lltk k blec:llH) SEA -M<Cullum a peu '"""' Zorfl l.W• f'9r• ll.kll) on OAK -~ I '111'1 la.fir llkkl A-4$,72:5 ··-· --· 0 ¥224 F8'con1 34, 4 .. 1'917 .... ., ........ ., San frMCIMlo 0 It I 7-t1 Atl•nta t7 I 11 ........ ATL -J.C._. It-· ff'tftl ..,_ .... !L«ll.IMlnt llldt) AT l -FG Lwrllllurtl 47 ATL -Celn II-· fr-lkttk ... I I lwc 11.1111n0tkll 1 SF -YOIMll ti peu f..-~ llllllr ltlclll SF-FO ..... ~ ATl -JM!llfll U peu from ....._ .... I LllCltllunt 11.kkl A Tl -Pridtmore 101 lnltl'c•i.n r...-.i (LllCkllllf'lt 11.~ll) A Tl -FG l11tlr.llunl II SF -~n 12 peu from ~ lllallrllklt) A-JUSJ ......... tMlttlc. ltUSHING -San Frenclsco, C...... .... P•llon 12·JO, Eatley •11, Elllotl •11. Solomoft '"' AllelM, .,..,.... 11-eS, ~ 12-41, ltoeir-._It, Me~ ).It, ,,_ M. PASSING -San Fr•ncltco, ~ U.,.27•2. AllMU, a.ntt-1 It-ti-.... J-tl·l·I .... RECEIVING-San Frenclsco, Cleftt NJ, Yowng ""· S.IO"'°n ).)6, CootlW •2', WlllOft 2..)4. P.n.n M6, ..... r l·tt, ,.-. 1-5. Atla!M, .,.,_. +-11, c•n ,. .. ~- 1•2. Jeckton 2-42, Miiier J.12, frMCll Mt. StHfera 38, Jet• 1 o IC-.llyO."'" NY Jell 0 J t p~ 11014 PIT-Oevlstr.'" ITl"OW11tlcll) PIT-FGTl"WIU PIT -Poll.,.., U run (Trout II.kl!) NYJ -FOl...Hflye PIT -......._ I rwn IT'9111 ltlclll ::i =~~~~~~!11t1 .. ·~ NY J -Mc:Noll 17 -s '"""Ryan (U.y •\;;; lklt) • ' A-u.m ~ • ....,,_ """"*• RUSHING -H-Y-, MC ... 11 7-4. Newton 7-16, .....,_.,,. .... H I, Telld N , Olerlllnt M, IAwlt 1-4. H_.-M . P1$ bwroll, o.vte ,., •• Pollard '""· ....... IJ·U , lrdsll•• 1·41, Tllert1t•11 1·1t Slel._,,,_ M1, Golqwlt1 , ... S"'°" !>1. _, PASSING -How Yor11, Todd ll·Jt.1-..,_ Ry•n J·S·4'-t. PltUl>wrtll, lrMtll•" t•Jl.tuO, SIDlldt l-2·174 . RECEIVING -.._ Yor11, Mdtell 4-Jt, G•tfNy ,_,,, ~ )·U, I . ~ 1"1, NeWIOft t-1•. Welbr 1-12, oter111"9 Ml. A111u1tynlO 1-9. Plttsbllr9". Stell.,...... 1-114, Smltll , ... , Sww 2-M, CllMlft ...... MA, POllerd 2' 14. t ": ff~/ - 0 2 c a c 3662 SS as s J s 2 ,_ ____________ _ ........, . ., MMWIY'a •HULT• ,_ ...... ....., U.4'&.00MI •••n 11.ACL t rw...,.. *· .. ~Ubl.I It.. .... .... OrMI .. °"1 (~I U1 a.a Slll .. '1 l'llly l~I La Al• r.-· ~ •• , CwrtWI .. "!.. AIMW"a 919 It• a. T ..... T!Me; f •ttt/S. .. 8&ACTA (N) _..,US.• ............. HC:OWD •ACll. all,.,.._ leftflfT ... (Anllt ....... ) t• 4M U1 T'-tt,.. Oelllll cer-...iw> a.a a.a p..,..,..,....,,,..,., .... ·=~:-:-~er.y,R=-'f.. °I:'~ lt11fta. Tl-::t7 .... TMt•D•ACa ......... a11ty ..._. l~I 14.a s.• Ut ~rt""11•-MMO•l1t,lla41l llM 1A llrlM l'llfle (.,..._) 4.a Al• .............. a.ui. ·~ °"' ••tt MeelJH, llll• Cll•rtor, hw•-"Ntur-9, Catlnwtlfly, l .. y a.me. Ttm.: :1'.1', at 8aACTA (M l 119id ...... T"°"°"9•a•80I l'OUltllt ltACll. • NtMftOI. ll'ltltftl p,_ 1-..e1 UO L• ... 1a1e of err-(<:.empe11 >.• .... S1re11ry(z.mllt8Ml ..... Also r.c.d: Goorge Gelle, Slleefe, Ty..,.. Ce9,All1ulfo, Tl,.._I Ii ID/S. l'IPTH llACll. 1111• mllK. Jowrnoy AllMCI IMtMl 11.60 s.• W Gummo-. ICrwl L• 4M Rwll-11~1 a.• Alto r-: Snowbllnll, Ar.,.nct, ~It Time: 1:.-zn. II X TM llACll. • furlontl OMllc ..., owrlsl •• 4.11 1• Clllef aeld ltuler !Jlnl SM .,. CllOcll My TlrN IC:rwl U0 Also raced: Aletere, Worm l•Pfftt. Tlnko 8old s... "'-fl'• Potky, or-...._ Tim•: 1: 1ws .. HV8•TM RACE.• turlonga. Slll11ttl"9 HUI (Or19ge) 11.a S.411 UO Meje11lc Wells ISptMer) J.411 UO Haifa T-""" IMenel 2.JIO Al .. reced: Wntern Tll11nfltr, Mot•, Geno'• Ore•m, Oete N M•n, P0<llet Pleewre. Time: 1: 112/S • lllOMTit •AC•. 61wlongt. lolcl •.t1 (~) l .40 Wtlll Ll~y llAVYtl Oeldale G<Mlfllnt !Mane) Alto r...i: fmpef'Of -. ltodloO .. ~T ...... Time. l:OM/5. at aXACTA IS-11 pokl Ut.JO. •IMTM •ACa. 6fwl0ngt. lmproulve ..... , (Mena) uo ,_. uo SMot for IN Mom! ( eo.o> J.60 1.411 Hanelel Print• I ROftdl S• Alto reced: .t.rr•nt 01'1 .. , 81111111"9 ._.. dlt, Ooc't Helper, Speefly T-. Rwn OI .. Nor111. Time: 1:111/S. TllMTM •ACa. 6 lurlofl9'. P.UIM Fleet (()rWQel II 10 .... SM Fl-1"11 llllrlgw !-I 4.60 1• lOOll• ~ IROWlosl 4AO Also raced: Recl119 O.ll9M, M•rMf'• fun, Prac:e-Poll<y, MINIY OOy "'°"· l(oon N'Sll'cy Tlma: 1·11. It aXACTA IS.ti t»k1'100.f0. aa ~ICX SIX (U-J-S..).51 pee. '1,1121• •1111 S1 wlmlng tk lleb w .. --1. U Pk:ll Sia t OfttolMlon paid $21 •• with -wllW\1"9 tlcuts llOur ..., .. 1. •LIVllllTH ltACI. 11111 mllft. Fon Cel9M"1' (Slalll~I 17.JO 1AO SAO P•rtOllt (Harris) UO J.ID un--.en !MtMl MO Alto r.ctd: llleck Hood. M•t~I H-y. Afflencle, ~. lluul.W, C-lor c-y. Tlmt: l :GIJS. TWe LPTM RACE. 11/16 mllel. Wllet't YOIK e.e, (-) 4.40 3.00 2.40 l(lf111 Wel<o l~l J.40 La lltC ICtwl UI Alto reced: 8111y'l Commender, 0 .... O..mpll"I. '#l9vlft Tum, Quick DI~ Tlmt. I •llS. t.1 I XACTA (._.) peld Ul.to. Ane-.. -11,llO. Hollywood Park SATU•DAY'S LATE RllULT T••TH •ac•. Ono,..,, .. pace. .Rom•n 0-1 IOtsamtrl 7.40 S.00 ..... Sltc19t...,,,,.,.r !E¥ansl 1t.40 llA Mester \111Ut !Toddl 7.40 Aho racefl: C.bong• lfltel, Ca llnul, Glloeh lotlell, 5coot9r Key, F,...ty 5'11"W, l(endell• toy. Time: 2:002/S. U EllACTA IH I pekl stll.111. Atte.-..-14,U7. 0..0 1ea flahlng ··•~OltT (Aro• L•••l•IJ-tJll -lers: 7JS borllto, 11 bels, U9 meclt-, J ,..11ow1e11, •nick <od. 10....,..s L«WI - 147 e"'i.n: ti bonito, It yell-tall, 14 cellco .... I -bass, ., ,.. .. COd, 9S ~el'OI. OA"A WMA•~ -11' ano1ers: .._ N lleftl10, ttni<Ullll, l,Oltm.clt.,.I. laAL UA04 -11' .....,.., MO ,.- flt.II, I 11"9 coo. 7IO bonllo, l Mnd ..... 10 Ytl1owt.911. Women'• toumament ( .. T ..... ) ...... pt .. AM Klyogmura 6flf. lletllN 9-• ._... 7..f. IK~ureWIM~ ............... ) Grand Prlx toum•ment , .. ,..._, lklty) ............. ManllOI Or-dtf. ~ R .......... '°' M , M . IOr-*t wlM 115,000, lt"'94 ... J7,M0). Wortd of DoublH lilt ...... v ... ._11, l'IA.I ........ Pettr McN-re4491nz °""a.a"" *'· B• lllU•SWI 51'111111. 7 .. , M , 1 .. , s-7, "4 (MC,.•rnar~ tpltt Mt,•, ~ Smltll •P4" PD.-1. Tennis LAaend• toum•ment IM.,_, ... Y.I .......... Ken lt-41 dllf. Cllff °'YMtte, 7 .. , ..a. w.terpolo COi.Lil•• UC:l,.._'hll rm• I ...... l.UCl ..... I .UCI"._ 1 1 t ..._. MaflfeN I t I t-4 I! uc1n1•--.:v.,...,. ............... UCl .... 1 uc1.-.,.. t 1 • ._. LMt9Mdl... t I I t--4 UC 1""'9 _....., ~-1, C:......... l,Q1e• MUI, ........ ,.,_ .... J, .............. Ute tt. UC IM 1111'9 I cee...,.._uc; .... ....,., Lelll ........ \IQ.Al rsQlk4~.._, a~ ...... 11. ca...,_.,, uc._. ..... u. lies.. 1111'9• ........... ua.A •• ~'-UK• NIJYC's Power breezes - SAN FRANCISCO -H.11 Roler, Ulppered by Biil ~ of Newport Harbor YKbt was the overall neet •lnDer St. nanctt Yacht Club'a Boat Series. Power also won the Keet. Kilborn Tro)lhy for yacht.I rtt lng 32 to 18.9 feet under t.be 1n.-1 tern aUonal Oft1hore Rule. , Second in the 69·boat nee~ was Great Fun, aklpperW by Clay Bernard. St. Francis •JlOATING Q Yacht Club, and third was An· nabelle Lee, Blll Crum, St. FYC. The five-race series wai sailed in moderate to stroag winds on San Francisco Bay. - The only casualty was Irving Loube's Bravura, Richmond-: Ya c ht Club, which went aground ln the final race Satm--1 day. Laube was sllghUy injured in the mi.sllap. Winner in the Richard Rhee Trophy 9ertes for yaehts raUn 30 to 32.5 was Ron Melville's Bigwig, Balboa Yacht Club,. with Dave Ullman at the helm. The St. Francis Pe rpetual Trophy was sailed for this year] b y a fleet or e ight Santa Cruz-SOs. The winner was Silver Stre ak, skippered by Bob ' Brockhoff, Santa Cruz Yacbfl . Club. ~ The City of San Franciac~·1 Trophy was won by Great Fun , and the Atlantic Trophy winner was Annabelle Lee. Final class results: ST. FRANCIS ~ER~ETUAL -I. Sl~"''t! Slrtell, .. ar.ICMlf, s.m. Cnir YC; I. 0. I •K•. L...,., ~. SMla Cna YC; I. llWldll, Ml~• Ir-. llCYC. CITY OF SAN FltANCISC:O -I. O,_ Piii\ Cl•Y llamenl, St. ,YC; 2. Swlf-., O.W. • COftnor, SOYC; J. temau..,, Llrry ~ ) H~~NTIC Tfl~Y -1. A-lie L.-. ... I Crum, St.~; 2. ,....,,.,.., '*' ~ CYC; J. GMlt, J9lwl .. ..,....., .. ,.HYC. KEEFE..CILaORN -I H'911 ltoler, 1111 P-.... NHVC; I. SIK• oit.,_, ll"'l"C; I. I~• retlonel, ~.e.ttr'-, SI FYC. RICHARD ltHEEM -I. 81t•lt, _.. .. Ullman, 8YC; 2. Im..._, Myron E~ Richmond, YC; J. SNne ..... 11, 8111 P-'- NHYC. 'NOSA's Argosy crowded ,. I• ., F o rty.five boats in five classes turned out Saturday and Sunday for Newport Ocean SaiJ.- i n g Association 's annual: Argosy. The yachts raced fratrl-l Newport to Cabrillo Beacb" Yacht Club on Saturday, and from CBYC to Newport on SUD· day. Newport to Cabrillo Beach: PHRF·A -1. Gedi Master, Bruce Hanson, V~C ; 2. Cau., Pajamas, Carl Last, VYC; 3. 1 Vol·Au-Vent, Kent Enderle, LSF; 4. Runaway II, Johd' Wiebel, VYC. PHRF-B -1. Gizmo, Gary' Hinscbe, LBYC; 2. Flapjac,k, Rick Orcl>ard, Capo BYC; 3, Kaneobe, A.R. Cutcliffe, BCYC~ 4. Fire Crest, Pat Gluier, VYC. PHRF·C -1. Fun Won, Bruce SeWe, CBYC. •, ORCA -1. Tiger-Tiger, Lyle Willits, ~C ; 2. Black Widow,·· John Savage, LBYC . SORD -1. Momentum. Peter Tong, SSYC; 2. Michegass, Joe', Greenblatt, Sl BYC; 3. De-, fiance, Richard Nowling, ~c;; 4. Sor cerer, Dennis Rosene; VYC; 5. Salacious, Richard- Schie.singer, SSYC. •, Cabrtllo Beach to Newport: PFHR·A -1. Outlaw, Setb Horrel, BCYC; 2. Cats Pa-~ jam as, Carl Last, VYC; 3. , 1 Debra, Richard Rauff, SSYC ; 4. Pursuit. Robert Babson, BCYC . PHRF-B-1. Flapja~k. Rkk • Orchafd, Capo BYC; 2 . • Kaneohe, A.R. Cutcliffe, BCYC; 3. Fire Crest, Pat Gluier, VYC; 4. Gizmo, Gary Hlnscbe, LBYC. PHRF-C -L Celebration, Jan Fluegge, SSYC . 0 RCA -1. Defiance, ltugti Towle, VYC; 2. Tiger-Tlpr, Lyle Willits, SSYC. ' SORD -1. Micbe1a11, Joe Greenblatt, Sl BYC; 2. Momen- tum, Par Tont, SSYC; 3. Van- tage, Dick Seward, LSP; 4. Sorcerer, Dennis Rosene, ~; 4. Shangbaier, Kopen-Morrow, VYC. ,BCYC'e Thorne ·tops µdo-14 fleet ... KING llARBOR -Gary Thorne of Babla Corintb.l" Yacht tlllb, Newport Beadlj was the wtnaer or tM J..itdo.M District Cbamplonwblp Mil• here Saturd., and Sunda1. RulUMIMlp ln the Gold nee& was Pete Jefferso~. Jllulon Bay Yacht Ch1b, and third w11 Gu7 Ralfee, •taion 881 YC. Winner ta tile &Unr Pleet I ( CODIOlnklD) Wal .nm &artl, Al1mltoe 'Bay Yacbt Cl•b: tecond WU 8lll l'rllcla. J Barl>Gr Jeebl aoa. ud wu o..te> S.cbel, kiiYc. 4 -- -_ _.r ~ --------~ -------------------- HI F 0 Orang• Co Ht DAIL v PILOT ,Monday. September 21 . 1981 ca FACES OF NEXT WAR? -Soldiers of the U.S. 8th Mech anized lnfantrv Division donned masks for a decontam.inalion ex- I" "'1 .,. ....... ercise in West Germany r~~ntJy. Tf:le ex- er cise followed a s imulated chemical 6t tat·k during maneuvers. :.Syphilis control :.studied ATLANTA (AP> -A 33 per- cent tncreue In reported aypbtlil oeaea 1lnce 19'77 has beatth otrlclal1 recorfaiderlng "·bow to conltol sexually transmitted dlseasee, a doctor at the Centera for Disease Control ,Hid. , In Ullllt, %1,20' casea of syphilis weu 11eported in the Unittd states, up from 20,391 in um. the COC H id in ill Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. In · 11775 there were 25,561 reported cases. 2J,T31 In 1976, 21,658 ln um and 24,874 In 1979, the coc said. ''This is a very dramatic In- crease ," aaid Or. Stuart Brown ol the CDC's venereal dlseue coOlrol division. "Thirty percent is very substantial and worthy of QUI" attention.·· · Chefs replace glim~lers. He said the most slgnifieant 1'18tipect or the 1980 figures, the btest available, is that they are the result-of a congressioftally lllaf\dated shift in e mphasis toward eurblng gonorrhea. , The effort reduced &onorrhu and pelvic inflammaf,p(y dis - use, but resulted in leb lnoney and attention to syphilis control. Ensenada seafood fair brings tourists to port ENSENADA. Mexico <AP> A· roaring gambling casino in its h eyday, the bustling beachfront hotel was the stomp- ing grounds of Hollywood's "in" crowd. Playboy Ali Khan was a reg ular. Heav yweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey was a hos t to high rollers. Humphrey Bogart arrived by yacht. And. a~cording to legend, an unknown young singer named Bing Crosby entertained with Xavier Cugat's band at the opulent grand opening Oct. 31, 1930-. But the halls of the Hot~I Rivier a del Pacifico turned quiet 40 years a.go when all gambling was banned in Mtlxico. The long·deserted landmark comes alive this week as food lovers from north and south of t h e border gather for Ensenada 's fourth a"nual Seafood Fair. C h efs from 35 area restaurants co mpete fo r culin ary prizes and recognition during the two -day even t Wednesday and Thursday. Drawn by food fit for kings, an estimated 2,500 persons pay $10 QEA TH NOTICES each to sample abalone. lobster, l'erviche, swordfish, shrimp and scallops. Last year's best-of.show win- ne r . The Tiger 's Cave o f Ensenada, swept the top prize with specialties that included abalone stuffed with a shrimp filling. A non-profit affair. money raised goes toward restoration of the elegant old building local· ed near Ensenada's fishing docks. ·'The whole idea of the show is to build the tourist trade," said Fred Krall, a San Diego chef who serves as technical director of the epicurean extravagan za. Competition, which includes a rtis tic creations of lobster, salmon and trout. has attr acted r hefs of all rank -even a new entry from the USS Stein in San Diego. .. MMS 3rd Class Wells Ford likes the idea of a challenge and w e h ea r h e's quite ac - complished. One of his main dishes is called the Stein fish· r ol l ," s ai d K ra ll , w h o coordinates judging for the event .. B y the way," e'Xplatned Krall, ''MMS stantli for Mess Management Specialist." Restaurants setUnc ~P booths for the public must furnisft at least 150 twf>·OuMe pottl~ each day. he said. 1'he beauty of the event,· 1ay11 Krall. is the vatltation of seafood dishes. "Very seldom do you fidd~ or three or Ille sam e 4isllle8. '' he said. Mexican chefs, more familiar with fresh seafood, hold. an edge in preparation over Ameria.o counterparts, whe aJ"e uMd to working with frdZen seafboa, ~ said. But the Americans ahow more artistry and are sharing those talents, adae.A Krall. Another diffeJ'"ce, said Kra1f. is the Mext9r1s-"te"ftd to-·WU mor e 0-eSh seasoflir1gs like cilan- t r o. s ubtl e p eppers and tom a toes. The blend is miklet' than you expect, but still with tile distinct Mexican Oa11C>r. "The Aml!rican chefs ttncl lo use more sauces and e)CO(ic dried herb&." But no one loset, says Krall. "The big winner is the public." the numbt!r of cases of con- • gtµlital syphilia declined because o( veneral diaease control and ~lter prenatal c are . The number of cases of congenital sypllills has stabilized, with 111 in 1980, the CDC said . There were ~l ca&es reported lri 1m. States differ on how to best ~ontrol syphilis, Brown said. Some work lo reduce the ·nvmber of cases, and others Joc\1'9 on preventing complica- tloRS. Since 1969, syphilis amon& men increased by 50.8 percent and deu eased am ong women by 19.1 pe rcent, lhe CDC said. From 1977 to 1980, the CDC said, rates ror both men and women began to increase. The increase from 1979 to 1980 was 10 percent for women and 4.4 percent for m61. The highest rates of syphilis were reported in San Francisco, Atlanta. New Orleans, Memphis and the District of Columbia. Cities with the lowest reported r a tes were Wichita , Kan ., Omaha,· Neb., Tulsa, Okla., P ittsburgh and Des Moine•. Iowa. Coast firms fined over air pollution OUCOMM\JN made in lhl· Good Sheph d E L I Z A B ET ll /\ !'I N C'emeleQ P1en·p llrol rs D U C 0 M M U N . Smiths' Mortuan d1rct ors I Mc FARLANE>. age ~I A 536 6539 re!lidenl of Hunt ington COl RT:'llEY ~ach. Ca. Passed away on J 0 II N P A 1' R I C K Friday, September 18. 191.ll COURTNEY. a 17 vear resi 1n Huntington Beach. Ca . dcnt of "'-'"J>Ort Reach. Ca Mn . Ducommun was born P:bsed awa' on September in Tehac hapi , Ca on 19. 1981. II(• was a graduate December 17. 1886 and c-a me of South We.,tern l'niversity to Huntington Beach. Ca in in Los .\ngclc11 C'a and 1923 where she married Jack worked for 25 years for the Du com mun, Beloved m•>ther H •1 rt on and ('on I! re~ s of Betty Dillon of Huntington Presrript1on Pharmacies Ill' 19, 1981. Survived by her to Santa Ana. Ca. Sh~ Is su r· " Four Orange Cou t businesses husband Frank P Sa n-v1ved by her daoghter Lind a ·were 1uccessfully prosecufed for topietro of Irvine, Ca .. a son L Wiaglns of P'ou'tttafn air pollution control violation1 in ~fichael Santopietro of San Valley. Ca . and her 2 Au1vst by the South Coast Air Diego. Ca .. a daughter Mary grandchildren Ju.tte 0 . and ·Quality Management District, Steigerwald of Irvine. Ca .. a Christle ~ Wiggins both o( according to district officials. grandson Jame" and a Founta in Valley .. C a . tfhe four are Stripcoat In· • Beach. Ca .. abo SUf\1\'tng \\<IS also a partner or Studor are 3 grandchildren. Ann Wholesale Drug Company m Dillon Wong. Kristine Dillon Los Angel<'s. Ca . as well as and J effrev Dillon Friend s b c i n g a W or Id W a r I I may call a·I Pierce Brothers Veteran He IS 'u" I\ ed b) Sm iths" Mortuan until h1i. '>'1fe Jane or Ne"'port 9:00PM on Monday evening Beach. C:i . a daughter MassofChristlanBurtalwill Marcelrn Co urtn ev of be celebrated on Tuesda}. Ney, port· Bear h. Ca.: son September 22 . 1981 al Oan1<'l F' Courtne~ of 8:00AM at St Mary's R) the F lorida. s isters Irene S.ea Catholic Church with Bronston of Santa Paula and Pather Daniel J ohnson. Ro a Lee Mettler of Lodi. pastor of lhl• church as Ca Ma-,:. of the Resurrer celebrant. Interment will be lion will be held on Wednes -i:;;;;;;;;:;::;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;::;:;;:;:;;' l d a " . Se pl cm be r 23. 1981 at ~ l l OOAM at the lfol) Cross NICE llOTHEIS ' SMfTHS' MOITUAllT 627 Main St HUnltngton Beach 5~539 • 1• 'ACIFte YltW MIMOllAL 'Al I Cemetery Moriuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 644-2700 Mausoleum The fam1l) re qu<'sts in lteu of flowers donations be made to the Manre-a Jesuit House, PO Bo" K. Azusa. C'a 91702 , crv1ces under the d1re<-l1on of II arbor Lawn· Mount Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa 540 55!>1 SANTOPIETRO MARJE SANTOPIETRO, resident of Irvine. Ca Passed away on Septet111ber granddaughter Jennifer. Graveside ~ites will be . . also or Irvine, Ca. Rosary held on Tuesday, Septembel' dustnes ~nc . o_f Huntington will be recited on Monday 22 1981 at lO:otAM at R~e Beach, whJch paid a $520 flne; Se ptember 21. 1981 at Hllls Memorial Park, Whit· Smith Tool Division of Smith ln- 7 ooPM at th e Brown tier. Ca. Mrvices under tbt temational Inc. of Irvine, which Colonial Mortuary Chapel. direction of f-\ariM>r LaWll· wpaid two finr.s totallinc $390; Mass of Christian Burial will Mount Olive Mort\lat y of 'Sngard Coatinfs Corp. of Hunt· be celebrated on Tuesday. Costa Mesa. 540·5554. ingten Beach, which p aid a $26() September 22. 19111 al MAbEL fine and the Wood ShQp of Hunt-~~t~~~:'c:~rc~~ T~s~~~~i~;, M1lK~L~ ~es~e~'[0~ ~~~ ington Be ach, which paid a $2$ Interment will follow at Holy Mesa . Ca. Pas!led away on fine. . . . Sepulcher Cemeter). V1sita· September 19, 11181. He Is Stnpcoat wa~ cited for faJJure lion will be on Monda y, Sep-survived b}I hie pa.teftts Mr. \o·obtain oerm1ts to operate two tember 21. 1981 from 3.00PM and !llrs. Wa?Ten Markel, eletttic ovens, while Smith Tool t o 9 ·00PM at Brown bl'oUunWarren W. Marltel 'was twice cited for operating Mortuary. In lieu of flowers of Banning. Ca and Dollald equipment contrary to condi· the family prefers donations M. ~rkel of. RamoH. Ca. ·lions set down in a permlL be made to ~he American and 11ster Cmdy Luke. of Eltgard wu cited for allowing Cane.er Sor1ety .. Brown Fort. Br2gci Oa. Otav~idit eic~sstve vi1lble emissions to Colonial Mortuarvdir«to,.. serv1cn wll bHleJ(Jten Mon· escape f t h t FOSTER day. Septefnber 71 , 1981 at rom wo ex aus THELMA MAF. FOSTER, 11 :OOAM at Harbor Lawn srstems, and th.e Wood Shop was resident of Santa Ana. Ca. Me morilal Park. Service• cited for allowing wood dust to Passed away on September under the dir ecti"on of escape. 19. 1981 She had been a Harbor Lawn·Mount Oltve lifetime ru1~eiit or Lo,ng Mortua.ry of C:~a, ~eta. •()fff • ) d Beach. Ca pnor to movmi 540·55S4. • Clft 8 8 Ue DEATHS ELSEWHERE a f0"1nder of the AmericlHI SANTA BARBARA (AP) ·&amtto•s Restauraats Inc. has 'filed a SZ million libel suit ~against the Ventura County dis· lrid attorney's office as the two "stdn continve a to.month batUe 'over alleged health code viola- tldn1. Paul Chow. right. and father Hmg Gar Chow recall the hell on Angel Island in San F'ranc1sco Bay dunng tour rhey took m 1974 Angellsle anything but for Chinese ANGEL ISLAND STATE PARK <AP> -" 'Angel Island. Shhh ! · 1 heard that so much from my fathe r. it's almost like one word . 'Angel Is land . Shhh!' •· Paul Chow vividly recalls his father's admonition. Between 1910 and 1940. some 175,000 Chinese c ame to the United States. Most, including the elder Chow . awaited entry t o Cam Saan -the Golden Mountain, as they call ed California -at the U.S . Immigration Station on Angel Island. Like better·known Ellis Island In New York Harbor. where legions of Europeans first saw their promised land, Angel Island was the first stop for Asian immigrants. B ut many recall their stay with only bitterness . They were locked up like criminals. They slept stacked on steel bunks six high. The reward for rebellion was a bare, win- dowless closet. For decades this s habby chapter in American history lay virtually unexamined. Humilat· ed Chinese-Amer icans -nearly all of those who entered at Angel Is land were Chinese -would not speak of it. Besides. many had entered with false papers, "paper sons" whose documents made them sons of merchants. teachers and U.S. citizens. Those were the privileged, exempted under the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, the first U.S. law to deny entry to a specific ethnic group. Now the unpleasant story is being told -by Chow. whose Angel Island Immigr ation Sta· lion Histor ical Advisory Com- mittee wants a museum created in the decaying barracks, last used in 1940. And told by Felicia Lowe, a Chinese-Am erican filmmaker from San Francisco who is in- terviewing d e tainees for a television documentary. Chow. a state transportation engineer. stands in what was the m en 's dormitory on an Island whose hilly paths and secluded coves in the middle of San Fran- cisco Bay now draw cyclists, hikers and boaters. On the peeling walls of the dormitory are poems in Chinese. written by immigrants to ex· press outrage and anguis h. The immigrants called t his place ''The Is land." "Angel" seem s to mock memories like those held vividly by Howard Tom Tom was a bewildered 14 · year·old when he arrived on Angel Island in 1922. His father was a naturalized U.S. citizen who returned lo China to get his wife. Howard and a baby son. His family was "separated within two hours. We didn't have a c hance to say goodbye." Tom recalls lying on his bunk in the locked dormitory, daydreaming of pals in China. Through an interpreter. an im· migration official separately grilled him a nd his parents. seeking to determine if they were, indeed, a family. "How far from your house to your neighbor's?" they each were asked. • ·'The three of us all gave tile wrong answer. I stretched my hand out to represent so many feet. I didn't tell the interpreter how many feet each arm (length > r e presented." Tom said. The family was detained for two weeks and released only when a Chinese minister in San Francisco vouched for them. "After 40 some odd years." Tom visited the island as part of a special tour. "I was really up- set." There are some Chinese who say t he period is too painful lo relive. Genny Lim, who wrote a his- tory of the era, says a "promi- nent, older" Chinese·American woman was horrified by the idea of tourists, calling it "exploita- tion ·· MllCOIMICIC MOITUAlllS J Laguna Beach IA;~~:;:i:·~-A~t -Speed control fix Frank J. McNamah, b . The story is ugly. Detainees recount suicides not mentioned in official records . Modest Chinese women. shocked by lack of privacy In toilets, covered their heads with bags . 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768--0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 BLOOMlNGTON, Ind . <AP> JuUu1 Herford, 80 a leader In the field of choral mu.sic who taught at Columbia University. the Juilliard School of Music.* and Indiana University,· died Thursday. LOS ANGELES <Al'> -R afael Me11d ei. 75. a classical trumpeter and composer, died Tuesday. Mend ez was best known for popularizing "Macarena," a bullfighter's song. who helped subd'oe \ltf)ftH · 1 d~ accueed of attlWnptfy to · auauina te PresldeDt ue Rea1an in Mardi, died.f"rl. - day, u.n. 'd•,ye d4t •· ., . for Chryslers This history began to unfolft in 1970, thanks to Alan We iss, then a range r on the island. Weiss noticed characters carved on the walls and s howed them to superiors. "No one was Interested," said Weiss during a recent tour with Chow's "1'0Up. HAllOI LAWM-MT. OUVI Moftuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave • CoSla Mvsa 6-40-5554 rtlllCINOTHHS -.lo NOADWAY MOITUAIT 110 Broadway CoslaMesa 642-9150 IALn .... OM SMfn4 I tvrHaL WHTCL.W CHAPIA. 417 e 17'th St Costa Mesa 64&-9371 , ~--~~~~~~--ca ti Ht-H'lt. Put a few went• to for CHICAGO <AP> -JallM!'I S. Kemper, 94, an in- surance and financial ex· ecutlve and a former U.S. ambassador to Braail. died Thursday. Kemper retired as chairman and chief ~x· eculive officer of the Kemper Group. one of the nation '11 largest IMurance and financial firm•. ln Ul98. dereotn1 su~gei-y__}or • <\ l> ET RO J T (AP) -Tb e bleedtng, ulcer. He ·~•1 ~hryaler Corp. ls recalling about presi~ent ?f a Ca~h •· l~,080 191 model can to cor- Unlon distnct ~ltcll, • •rert speed co•trol s71t-ems LOS ANGE~ (A.,1 _ • t *bicb c.."OUld lltlck and tail to dis- Actreu' Sera I~ 82' • ftl-cturiag normal brakinl, died ~. She yed •dte Molt.maker 1ald. u ~8ftY crotebetY r . s •• • "With heavy braldq, the car U )' Holly1VOOll•ctor.. Will stew down and the 1ystebl ill finally diRftga1e," said a JERSEY 6RORE, l'a. ',Cftryaler spokesman who uked 1AP> -}?E ..._ ~t 1 'bot to be WenWied. "But we're 8r.,IG, *"ettewtt.e ,jdt bidnc people to di9coatinue far1e1 aeed irducn.1 u•-a them aayway until the com,.,.. lb the •Mttrp "• .,.l Uait~ aai. . .Sled?/~. &• ac~Ht ••rt can be In· d•1· . . ~·-__. , ""'9 the pl'Oblem ta otal)' ln MON"I:CLAJR. N.J. IA P> 110LLV'W000 (.KP) ~.··be ''f'elume" positio• of the -Retired Rear Adm . El· ffollywood'ca.Ul'ff dlr~ctor .'speed tontrol optloo, ownen are lery W. 8'alle, 87. former lbyu ~lmtell. SS, who .. belnS told not to use tbe entire chief commissioner ot the uv~ ~I breab to ••cb· aytteai ,,....,•ler said Allied Jnillla.r)' 1ovemmenl , .. rt ~ ~ c Scott, ""-• _ .. 1 • _1.,. Ln Italy durlnr World War Faye -nun away · T.,_t ARllil No. 3 U.S. ntomaker 1 .... n . died Friday. ClU'tl=~ 'E . lt. would aend letters to tbe -dlld .-.~ . .,...,. ~ tllil can vsinl ta. WATERVILLE Malle .,.,of. ~ 1 e lo .. UM .,.t.m1 -ataa- (AP> -J.-I. iojie, •· • o. 'Sil...-• · • *H "11fpaaeat on Ute Cbml• ' Imperial but optional on all other m odels -until the switches can be replaced. The problem has caused at least one accident in which there were injuries, but no fatalities, Chrysler said. The automaker said the sticking switch problem was corrected late in t he 1981 production run. "T here will be a recall. We estimate that 4,500 of the 150,000 that have the control systems may need the repair, but we're 1olng to replace it on all the cart," the spokesman said. "Basically, it's to avoid lhe situation bappening at some future date." Chrysler aaid it will send notification letters to owners "lhortly,'' and will belln 1up- pl1ln1 ltl dulen with new parts to correct the problem ln late October. So he invited a scholar who de- termined that they were the poems of Chinese immigrants. Enthusiastic Asian-American college students then began to pry loose the island's history. Restoration work goes slo•ly. A state grant of $122,000 la ex· . hausted. and $1 million more is needed. Chow doesn't want to rush tile project . Yet, "Patience Jr:ows thin when I see people dytq" before they can vlslt Ute laland. He wants survtvon of the dtten· tion to be purged emotJooall1, u his fat.her wu when be returned in 1~. • "H"e stood betOfe his bunk and cried. 'Today I can walk ta and for1lve America; ".Chow re: call• hlrn nytq. "Re walked home wtt.h me ancl he •M free.'' .. Onofre rating 'average' Southern California Edison Co., operator of Un.it l at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating ~a­ ti on, has been given an "averaee" rating b y the Nuclear Regulatory Commiaaion for radiation protection, emereency preparedness, fire safety and plant security. NRC public information of- ficer Jim Hanchett said 21 of the nation's 72 licensed nuclear re- act ors were given below average ratings in a report lo be released this week by the com· mission. The report, which took a year to prepare, shows no safety hazards at any of the plants, ,Hanchett said, but several were not operating at desirable safety levels, he added. Hanchett said San Onofre was ooe of 38 nuclear plants to be eiven an average rating. "The NRC is taking the position that even the plants rated below average are acceptably safe, but management in certain areas is not as strong as it should be," he s aid. Hanchett said surveys were taken at the 72 nuclear plants during 1!179 and 1980. "Many of the problems encountered at that time may well have been corrected by now," he said. Hanchett said the NRC plans to. conduct yearly surveys of nuclear facilities, and a second report should be released by mid-1982. He added that the plants were rated in 17 areas including management control, plant operations, maintenance, employee training, radiation protection, environmental pro- t ection, emergency planning, fire protection and security. Data for the nuclear "report card" came from inspections by NRC officials and reports the utilities fi.le with the NRC when problems arise at the plants, Hanchett said. Meanwhile, discussions con- tinued today between Edison and NRC officials over proposed ch a nges in operation of the emergency cooling system of idled Un.it 1 at San Onofre. The 14·year·old plant has been shut down since Sept. 4 when two valves that allow cooling water to enter unit 1 's reactor in an emergency failed to open during a routine shutdown. Edison is seeking NRC ap· proval to change the emergency shutdown procedure at the plant in order to avoid having to replace the vafves. That would be cosUy and the plant would have to remain out of service for an extend ed period, said Hanchett. Girls wounded by gunman identified Two young girls shot Saturday by a gunman as they were walk· ing in the Cleveland National . Forest were identified today by: the Orange County Sheriff's! Department. They are Kelly · Cartier, 12, 2*d Vanessa lberri, 12, both of L$e Elsinore. Miss Iberri is reported to be in critical condition and not expect- ed to live, according to Lt. Wyatt l Hart. Miss Cartier is in serious condition with head wounds, he •aid. According to Sgt. Gerald Horton, the girls had been camp- ing with their families and were walking along a roadway in the national forest about 2 p.m . Saturday when the , gunman pulled beside them and fired several rounds, apparently without provocation. The shootlrig took place near the Blue Jay campground about 20 miles east of San Juan Capistrano. Horton says the sbota were believed to be fired by a man drlvtne an oranee Datsun pickup truck. He said there are wtt- neHes to the sbootine and at- tempts are bein1 made to find the owner of the truck. Train .kill8 hoy CORCORAN CAP> -A Santa Fe freltbt train s truck and killed an 11-year-old Corcoran boy wbo apparently was playtn1 on trackt near here, authorities Hid. BrJan Albford and a lJ. 1ear-old companion bad left for Hanford Saturday mornln1. Deputy Kins• County Coroner Hant VennatqJl said. Ashford was killed •• tbey returned 'home. t , .. • • ' ·· &Uringelr's so,ngs gonged She's removed after· playing pop tunes on carillon ST. HELENS, En1land (AP) -The beU1 of St. Mary's started a ding-<lonl fight here between bellrinaer £va Gamer and her ·pariah priest, the Rev. Vincent Hug ha. Mrs. Garner, a pop-loving peqsiooer, made Sundays awtn1 with foottapping versions of "Tbe Teddy Bears' Picnic," · "Daany Boy," and other upbeat tunes in addJtlon to the Usual Beethoven and Mendelssohn. Her Ught touch on the com- plicated keyboard of the 47·bell carillon at the Roman Catholic Church in UUs glaumaking town won praise from the Jesuits who ran tbe church. But they moved out last April and a new team of "Nmewal" prieats moved in, led by Huebes. . Ttle oew priest, feelln1 the music: waa less than heavenly, issued a stop-tbe·pop uJtJmatum. Mrl'. Gamer refused and quit SI "You can't play h y m ~n· s and S(JCred music all the j time." years ot playing the bells . "You can't play hymns and sacred music all the time, yoo- would go round the bend, .. the unrepentant, 60-year-old widow said. "After all, the bells are for the enjoyment of local people." Hughes. 50, said Mrs. Garner had been playing ''these rather trashy so.ngs" since he arrived a nd he is looking for a new keyboard player. But a replacement won't easi- ly be found. The carillon. one of only three in Britain, is operated by levers, feet and stout blows of the fist to make the bells ring, and Mrs. Garner said it took her three years, three hours every night and all a fte rnoon on Satur days, to learn to play it. Storekeeper Mary Foy or- ganized a petition to get Mrs. Garner·~ job back. ·'Almost everybody round here bas been married to Eva's bells," Mrs. Foy said. Poor natioris due aid Reagan strategy excludes those who support terror.ism Delly ............. Huntington Beach fire ol/tClal Frank Kelly checks oil !pill for fire danger at home of Tom Corilon today. Oil fills back yard of Huntin~ton home By PATRJCK KENNEDY Of Ule o.lly ...... SUit A backy_ard crude oil storage tank ruptured this morning in Huntington Beach, cover ing the yard with a 4-inch thick coating or black, sticky oil. A jagged 2-foot break near the top of the 20,000·gallon tank was higher than a concrete retaining wall and about 1,500 gaJlons of the crude spewed over the di.ke, onto a picnic table and then seeped over the yard, according to fire department officials. "I'm afraid we're going to have to have a whole new back ya rd," said resid e nt Tom Conlon, 64 ... But when you have an oil pump behind your house yo u have to expect that something like this can hap· pen " Conlon says he doesn't own the well but receives a royalty for the pump and two storage tanks stationed in his back yard. Tank owner Robert Vigue, 46, of Huntington Beach said he SUS· peels the moist s alt air corroded the 25-year-old tank, causing it to break under pressure. Vigue. who has two other pumps and storage tanks in the city, said he didn't realize it was in poor shape. A truck equipped with a special vacuum for crude o·ia was hired by Vigue to clean up the mess, he said. Fire depart. ment officials say the entire back yard will have to be dug up and replanted. Fire Department official Mike McKay said the "crude came out like a stream. Unfortunately the break was so high that the oil went over the dike.'· Mr.s. Conlon, 70, said she was a wakened by the break at abo\lt 8 a.m. today. "It frightened me ," she said. "At first I thought it was thunder, but when I looked outside our back yard was full o( oil." Fire department officials poured sand around the black slow-movin~ puddle to prevent it from spreading to the street. Fire department officials say there are numerous residential sto rage tanks scattered throughout Huntington Beach. Judge's trial in Newport By The Associated Presa The trial of a San Diego municipal judge charged with soliciting prostitution will take place in Newport Beach with re· tired Municipal Judge Kiernan Hyland of Sonoma County pre- siding. Hyland selected the Oranee County Harbor Judicial District after granting a motion by the defendant, Judge Lewis Wenzell, for a change of venue from San Diego. The firs t preferences ot -Wenzell were San Francisco, Alameda or Los Angeles coun- ties while the district attorney's office proposed a change of venue but preferred a location closer to San Diego. Wenzell, 39, faces eight misdemeanor counts. No date for the trial was· an· nounced. Layton waits for jury SAN FRANCISCO CAP> - Larry Layton's attorneys say the for m er Peoples Temple member is "doing just fine" aa jurors in his murder·conspiracy trial today began their third full day of deliberations. Layton, 35, is charged with conspiracy to murder Rep. Leo R yan, D-Calif., and U.S . diplomat Richard Dwyer; and aiding and abetting in Ryan's- k i 11 i ng and the a ttempted murder of Dwyer. Ryan, three journalists and a temple defector died on Nov. 18. 1!179 in a barrage of gunfire at a remote jungle airstrip outside the temple's Jonestown settle- ment. Dwyer was wounded. UNITED NATIONS CAP) - Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. unveiled the Reagan administration's new strategy for economic development of poor nations today. but said those supporting international terrorism will not get help. In a speech to the U .N. General Assembly, Haig said the world body and «lobal 4 banks lower • pri1ne rate NEW YORK (AP) -Four major commercial banks lowered their prime lendJng rates one-half perce~tage point today to 19.5 percent as the cost of banks' funds and loan demand continued to slip. The move -led by Chase Manhattan Bank, lbe nation'• tbird-Jargest bank -waa quick- ly followed by No. 7 Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust, No. 8 ·Bankers Trust and No. 9 First Natiocial Bank of Cbica10. Just last week , banks na- tionwide lowered their base lending rates to 20 percent from 20.5 percent, where the prime rate had stood since early July. One smaller bank, Southwest Bank of St. Louis, lowered its prime rate a full percentage point to 19 percent today. Lowerins the rate was In "response to current market conditions,'' 1aid Chase spokesman Charles Francis. "Tbe raw material of banks is money and it's costint· less" than last week, he added. The prime rate is what banks use to calculate interest charges on short-term loans to corpora- tions with top-grade credit, although some banks make very short-term loans at rates below their stated prime. The lower prime reflects the declining cost banks have to pay for the money they lend. Other key rates, such as those on Treasury bills and certificates of deposit, also have tumbled in the last two weeks. Federal funds, an important source of mnoney for banks, tnded at 15.25 percent today alter being close to 20 percent in early July. Federal funds are overnilht Joans of uncommitted reserves among banks. Many economists predict those rates· will continue to fall slowly in the weeks ahead because of evidence the economy ls performine at a slugctsb rate, which could ease the demand for credit and allow rates to fall The prime rate reached a rec- ord high 21.5 ~ercent in December 1980. 7 die • ID C-130 plane crash 20 injured.as transport burns in Nevada desert IND I AN s p RI N 0 s A IR the Nevada Test Site, the Da· -------------. FIELD, Nev. CAP) -An Air tion's nuclear weapons t.eetlng Force C-130 transport plane car-grounds. ~:!i:.0:8 r::fs~~~~ ~~a:~.1::~ "I felt the buildlni •hake," and burst into names early to-said Mary Ann Miller, wortdq day near a remote desert land· In ~o lndian Spring1 convta· log strip. Air Force Sgt. Joe ience store l~ miles away. Wiles said seven people were "The sky was ~Jlow, the plane , kllled and 20 were hospitalised. was totally eogulled lD fiam•," Lt. Col. Mike Wallace, an Air said Jeulca Hilt, 25, • n..,.. Force public lnlormatlon of-who flew to the 1cene In fleer. said he was told the Valley Vlew Hotpltal's "PUOt ru.oway at Indian Sprlnga, .S for Life" rescue helicopter. mUea northwest of Lu Ve1u. "There wu a lot of meo wttb was unlit. pouibly u part ol the arm and le< fracturet. It wu trainlD(_uercise. miraculous that there wen no The cruh occurred one mile more serious injwiea. north of Indian Sprinea Air "Wben you bear about a plane • lt/R CRASH SITS • Field, an airstrip affiliated with Au•...,. IAa Vtg(al Nellis Air Force Base and near (8" PIA.NE, Pate U) r economic detelopment are threatentd by "the willful viola· lion of the qational integrity of both Af.g!>an.istan and Cambodia by the Soviet Union and Viet- nam. "The world.'& hopes for peace. for secUrtty and for development will be jeopardized if 'might makes right' becomes the law or nations," Haig said in prepared remarks. Haig said security from ag. gression ls an essential ingre- dient for econoQlic growth in poor nations and that the Reagan admin.isttation will in- crease its help for "programs essential tQ deter international aggres,sion and. to provide the domestic s~urity necessary to carry out sound economic policies. "We have no intention of pro- vidini foreign assistance, moral comfort or the prutige of in· ternation'1, political platforms to countrieJ that foster intema-WA RN S TE RRO RI ST S tiooal violence, "~Haig said. State Secretary Haig Haig's criticism of Soviet in- tervention ln A,f ghanlatan and its support for Vietnam's occupa- tion of Cambodia reflects the firm stance be is expected to take in hia meeting Wednesday with soviet For~jgn Minister An· drei Gromyko. The chief purpose of the meet· ing with Gromrko will be to agree on details for the start of U .S.-Soviet. negotiations later in the year aimed at restraJning deplbymenl of medium-range nuclear mis6ilc;s. He said ~day that while the administration is ready to talk seriously with the Soviet Union, he will tell Gromyko the Soviets must not intervene in neighbor- ing Poland. Communist officials have repeatedl y warned Poland's independen t labor federation Solidarity against challenging government authority. Haig met here today with U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who is seeking U.S. support in his re·election bid. The "strategy for growth" Haig outlined in his speech is aimed at bolstering economic development in poor nations. It emphasizes private investment rather than government-backed a id wherever possible. "Our common objective s hould be to stimulate domestic a nd international private invest· m ent," he said. "We must en· courage and support the in· di vi dual investor ." He said developing countries s hould be integrated into the in· ternational trading system more fully than before. He also said less time should be wasted in laying blame Jor the plight of poor countries. Compensation seen I or Iran hostages WASHINGTON (AP> -A Presidential Panel recom · mended today that the U.S. gov- ernment pay each of the former American hostages in Iran $12.50 per day as compensation for their ordeal. If the proposal is approved by President· Reagan, each of the 52 ex-hostages held in captivity for 444 days would be entiUed to $5,550 in compensation. The nine-niember com· mission, which included former Secretary Of State Cyrus Vance, releued its recommendations after three months of delibera· lions. · Tbe compensation recom.men· datioa was . one 'of six specific proposals contained in the com- mlssicm'a r.e~. Tbe palleJ said the tax-exempt detention benefits it was recom· meqding are simUar to those • given to Vietnam prjsoners of war, and interned c~villana in Vietnam and to the crew of the 'USS Pueblo, wbicb WIS detained by NOl'tb Kore• autbori"--lor 11 ..,.*in 19$8. In llCllllt4on. th& commtaaion recoftHJ'!tnded that; -,. The Jaaxilnum payment al- 19"ible on claims for damaie to or lo. 1of ·rNOG~ pn>perty be l•er•a1• .from 140,000 to ·po,ooo. t . -The medrcal and health beneflta Nladnt to the hostqa' detentlcJa be 1utboriaed without limit. -~ le.Stlatlon re=• t.o bc11taC9 beDeftta be am to co.• future boltaC• attua-U... 1'• .._. per flay eompeua· ~_...-m_.. by tbt eom· mission fell far short of the figure suggested by Brice Clag. gett, the attorney for the hostages and their families. Considering the execution threats, torture and other n:iis- treatment of the hostages. "you would be on the conservative side ii you were to decide that a court would be likely to pay a minimum of $1,000 for each day of captivity for each hostage," Claggett had told the com- mission. ORlllil COAST WlllHIR Night through m td- morning low clo4ds and fog .along the coast, otherwise fair through Tuesday. Lows tonight near 60 along coast, 66 in- land. Highs Tuesday low 70s at beaches, 80s inland. llllDI TlllY Ezcited about tlw Rami' ffrlt win? EniOll it, becouie there are prob~• ahead. S.e atone•, Pogt CI. llDfl 1-----------l -~~---·~--~ ........ --~---...-.... ----------•mber a1 . 1981 L NY E COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION 0\1.0f•TIOll .. l'ClUDI TUOUON , ........ •oa• MIOWIU 111..:1r1c, , ••• I OUOlt OITltOlf AllD CINCINNATI noc• I CJIA•M• AWO 81"0•TID 1• TNI lll•H ,010 lleJll•IT , ' .. - Dow Jones Fir1al UP 10.37 Cloalng Me.SI ~ Visa invades China mainland It's the beginning of the end for tM Cbin~. They've let Visa into the country You remember bow it was when you got your first credit card? ll was shiny and new, It had magical powers. This little piece of plalllc could sub- stitute for money. Little did you realize wbal It would lead to: a wallet stuffed with plastic and monthly bills for which you need pay only a fraction so that lhe issuing bank can build up its loan volume. You didn't think you were applying for a loan when you signed on for a bank card. But that's what it turned out to be for millions of cardholders. They got you on the rolls by issuing cards free of charge. Now most banks around the country are charging for their cards or charging some kind or fee for each transaction. And you're so locked into debt that you can.'t pay it all off and tear up your cards. This is what the Chinese have to look forward to. Visa International reported earUer this month that sales volume in the People's Re public of China topped the $1 million-per-month mark during the second quarter ~ of 1981. That's l' . how much was ); ~ <' h a r g e d o n 'r , Visa cards in 4 , ! those three .. __ ., __________ _ ~u0:~h~ ,;~;: n t~ lllTDI lnllllTZ of course. but Visa has been in Chana only a little more than a year. Only 150 merchants in 12 cities honor the Visa card, which is coming into China in the wallets-Of tourists. When it gels in the hands or Chinese consumers, watch out! China has a population of 1 billion. Visa is already ensconced as lhe world's lar1est credit card. Some 14,000 financial institutions, mostly commercial banks, issue Visa cards -and 9' mUUon of those blue-white-and-gold pieces of plastic are now circulating, The United States has more than two- thirds of those cards -64.4 million -but the biggest credit junkie of them all would appear lo be Canada, where there are 8. 7 million Visa cardholders. That works out to 35 Visa cards for every 100 persons; we have only about 29 Visa cards for every 100 persons. That leaves the rest of the world wide open. Jn Britain, there are only 12 Visa cards tor every 100 persons, in Spain six, in France three. In the entire Asia-Pacific area, there are only 2.2 million Visa cardholders. How much was charged last year on all lhoae Visa cards? $46 billion. And to show how rapidly this credit business can grow, Visa's charge volume ln 1975 was only $13 billion. Nothing was said about the security precautions being taken in China to detect bogus cards. Perhaps at this stage it's felt that if a tourist can gel to China, it's unlikely he or she will be carrying an invalid card. That's not the case here -and Visa announced over the summer that it's introducing some new tough systems to cut down on fraud. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS . .,,; '"' . '"' . - -YOAI\ W I -fi.. IOl-ng i.11 ,,,_ ~ -Yen Sloe>. Cac'-90 11oc1<a -_._ ... '-..,.,. ..... .,,. -·· --... - -'IOlll(~-a-.---... c;iw,.. "' .,. --oct .......... _. .... ~ -......... -~II'; tl....,. llWI ~Pttl I UJ,200 ,,.., ... Dor<llllGU 1'7,IOO 11\lt '4 018H Pel 171, 100 12 -~ Aet1'111\1 A 171,000 is-. V. ~rOll 1,.,aoo • ~ PwtroL-112,a "'" • 11 .. G<lllC.11 G 107,000 1'"• • ~ Hud180ll G "'·"°° :17~ • ~ HouOll Tr 11,AOO 19"-• •.i.. WMthlrO I n,l11XJ 1•v. -1'4 METALS ~ M-.-t1"°' c:enh • _ .... U.S. llHllnet,__ UN ._ant• e ll'OllfMI. IMc 49\to -• '*"'°· ........... T•t 1-*7 ..... -~IW I~. A....,._..1"40 c.ib e ,...,,.,, N. Y. 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