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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-09-22 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • •
YOUR HIMITIWI DAllY PIPIR
TUESDAY . SEPTEMBER 22 1981 '1HANCI \OU N l t 1 Al H UllN1A /':l (·t. Nl'i
Huntington WWI veterans' group fades away
By PIDL SNEIDEBMAN ... ..., ........
For the Huntington Beach bar-
racks of the Veterans of World
War I, lime bu not been an ally.
The group, founded in 1980,
quickly ~ame a local fixture.
Me mbers organized Armistice
Day tservices by the city's war
memorial, volunteered at \he
Veter a n s Administration
Uospital in Long Beach and
Rugby
Union
bombed
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP>
-A bomb exploded today in a
building housing the Eastern
Rugby Union's offices, hours
before the group was to field a
team against the touring South
African Springboks, the targets
of recent anti-apartheid pro-
tests.
There were no reports of in-
juries.
Meanwhile, in New York City,
lawyers for the state asked a
three-judge federal appeals
court to reverse a district
court's decision and block the
game, at least temporarily.
While the blast from a "high
explosive device" at 1: 17 a.m .
left only minor damage at the
headquarters, damage in the ad-
joining offices of a dairy pro-
ducts company was estimated at
$50,000, said police investigator
James McGrath.
Radio station WWWD said a
woman telephoned at 1:10 a.m.
to say a bomb would go off soon
"downtown." Disc jockey Dale
Lane said the woman bung up
without idenU/ying herself.
Thomas Selfridge, president of
the ERU, a co-sponsor of the
Springboks' tour. said his offices
susfained about $50 worth of
damage.
Glass blown by the blast lit·
tered State Street in front of the
row of renovated buildings
known as Canal Square.
McGrath said the bomb had
apparently been placed in a
closet 2'f.l feet from the rugby of-
fice in an area accessible lo the
public during business hours.
Asked if t he r e h a d been
threats against him or the South
African playe rs, Selfridge
replied, "No, there never have
been. It's contrary to the protest
thing and this may or may not
be related."
Fearful of a riot, New York
st a t e officials tried to stop
tonight's scheduled rugby match
pitting the Springboks , South
Africa's national team , and the
ERU squad. Schenectady is 10
miles from Albany.
Selfridge said the game would
go on t onight in Alba n y 's
Bleecker stadium despite the
bombing. Police said they were
(See RUGBY, Page AZ)
Turkish jet
crash kills
I 00 soldiers
ANKARA, Turkey (AP> -A
Turkish Air Force F-104 .jet-
fighter crashed today into a
bivouac area prepared for an
upcoming NATO exercise in
western Turkey, and reports
from journalists on the scene in·
dlcated at least 100 soldiers oo
the ground were killed. All the
victims were believed Turkish.
Turkish military sources said
86 bodies already had arrived by
helicopter at hospitals in Iatan·
bul and that Gen. Haydar Saltik,
commander or the lst Army,
rushed to the site of the crub.
The military sources, uldnl
not to be named, said three
Istanbul hospitals had been put
on alert to accept the dead and
wounded.
The sources said that it ap-
peared all the cuualties were
Turkish.
The plane hit a bivouac area
near the town of Babaeski about
30 miles from the Greek border.
Reporters who reached the re-
11 on of t.be crash eaid the
Amertcan·made F·l04 crashed
lnto the bivouac area at about
noon. Allled troop1 bad not ar·
rtved at the scene or the exercile
-code-named "Dhplay
Determination 81."
Troops trom the United Statel,
Britain, Greece, Italy, and
PortUlaJ were to come ubore
for the exercise in an am-
phibiOUll landinC ThW'lday.
participated in the city's aM\lal
Fourth of July parede.
There were pot luck lune.bes
with the women 's auxlUary
every mootb, first in the Boy1
Club building on Yorktown
Avenue, then in the Masonic
Temple on Pal~ Avenue.
But time has taken Ila toll.
Today, the average age of the
nation's World War I vela is 88.
Of the Huntington Beach bar·
racks' '5 cb~er members St
are known dead. The tatt of hve
other charter members IJ a.
known.
This year, the group hu main·
tained a membership Uat ol ZI,
but many ot these men are to
convalescent homes and
hospitals or have moved from
the city.
Dunng 1911, the group con-
tinued to hold monthly meetings,
attended usually by five or six
members.
Finally, on Sept. 8, these re-
maining members voted to re-
tire the charter of the Hun t·
ington Beach Veterans of World
War I, Barracks 2360.
"It was an organiution that
w as doomed to die." observed
Harry M. "Cap" Sheue, the only
active charter m ember In the
barracks at the time of its dis·
solution. "Every year that
passed, more of the World War I
vets passed away. That's what's
happened to us."
Al 83, Cap Sheue 1s someuUn@
of a local legend for his work au
a pioneering sports coach. The
athletic field at Huntington
Beach High School is named for
him.
In 1960 he was one of the men
rounded up by the late Lloyd
Huddleston to form a· local bar-
racks of the Veterans of World
War I organization.
According to Sheue, this aroup
was formed by World War I vetl
who felt they were not getting a
fair shake from the American
Legion and Veterans of Foreign
Wars, which were dominated by
World War II returnees.
T he barrac ks ' first com·
<See VETEIJANS, Page AZ>
Ex-Mesan sought
One of two girls dies. after shooting
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEIU.. ....................
A ground and air search con-
tinued today in the Cleveland
National Forest for a former
Costa Mesa ma n and Irvine gun
c lub employee believed
res ponsible by authorities for
the weekend s hooting of two
Lake Elsinore girls near a forest
campground.
The object of the search is
__ Fuel ready
at Diablo
Tiuke plant
SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP> -
Operators of the Diablo Canyon
nuclear power plant say they
will ignore protesters and "im-
m ediately" start preparing the
reactor to receive fuel in hopes
of starting ft within two weeks.
A federal decision Monday to
allow Pacific Gas & Electric to
begin loading and low-power
testing of the plant sparked re-
newed pledges or opposition
from the Abalone Alliance, a
coalition of some 60 anti-nuclear
1roups.
The alUance 's attempt to
bloctade the plant and prevent
the fuel loading bas resulted in
1,365 arrests in seven days of
land and sea assaults on the site.
On Monday, 368 people were ar-
rested.
Thomas Francis Edwards, 37,
described by Oranee County
Sheriffs Department Lt. Wyatt
Hart, as a "mountain man" and
"gun buff."
Kelly Cartier, 12, and a close
friend, Vanessa Iberri, 12, were
s hot Saturday by a man who,
witnesses said, stopped a pickup
t ruck. called to the two girls and
fired at them.
Miss lberri died about 8 p.m.
Monday at Mission Community
Hospital. Miss Cartier, who un-
derwent brain surgery Monday
afternoon, is described by Hart
in satisfactory and stable condi-
tion.
Hart said investigators believe
Edwards may be biding out in
the forest that includes vast por-
tions of ea.stem Orange County
and areas in Riverside and San
Diego counties.
Between 12 and 16 deputies
(See SEARCH, Page A.%)
Space shuttle spill
may delay mission
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) -Highly toxic fuel spilled
while being loaded into the
s p ace s huttle Co lum bia's
thruster rockets today, loosening.
some of the spacecraft's protec·
live tiles a nd r a ising the
poss ibility of a dela y in its
second mission, officials s aid.
Technicians on the launch pad
were w earing p r otective
clothing, and no injuries were
reported.
"There were a limited number
of tiles debonding," s aid Dick
Young, spokesman at the Ken·
nedy Space Center. "We know of
a small number, but we don't
know how many."
Kukowski s aid officials "don't
know yet" if the tiles could be
replaced while the shuttle is on
the launch pad. If n.ot. the shut-
tle might have to be returned to
its hangar or the Vehicle ~
sem bly Building, which would
almos t c ertainly delay the
scheduled Oct. 9 launch, officials
said.
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration officials
s aid nitrogen tetroxide spilled
at about 1:15 a.m . when a
.:quick-disconnect" fue l-line
connector malfunctioned while
th e forward reaction control
system thrusters •ere being
loaded. The highly toxic fuel
s pi lied down the shuttle's
starboard side.
The spill forced the closing of
the laun ch pad to all but
emergency cleanup workers.
Sandra Day O'Connor has been unanimou,,ly confirmed by the
Senate to become the first woman jushce of the Supreme Court.
Shortly after the decision by
the Nuclear Regulatory Com-
m i uion , Gov . Edmund G.
Brown Jr., a foe of the Diablo
plant, filed a petition in federal
court to reverse the NRC de-
cision. Brown's petition said the
commission "has not satisfac-
torily resolved the outstanding
questions of seismic safety,
security, emergency prepared-
ness and Three Mile Island·
related safety matters."
Jim Kukows ki , a NASA
s pokesman in Washington. said
the initial estimate was that
about 25 of the more tha n 30,000
thermal tiles , which protect the
shuttle astronauts from re-entry
heat. were damaged and would
have lo be reolaced.
"It's pretty nasty s tuff, .. Mark
Hess, anothe r s pace center
spckesman, said of the fuel.
She'll 'be busy'
Sandra O'Connor confirmed 99-0
WASlDNGTON (AP) -San·
dra Day O'Connor, confirmed by
a unanimous Senate and the first
woman justice on the U .S .
Supreme Court, promises to be
"very busy, very fast" after she
is s worn in this week.
There is no clear indication,
however, how s he will vote on
social and constitutional issues
that come before the court.
The 51-year-old Arizona ap·
peals judge won a 99-0 endorse·
ment in the Senate on Monday
as the 102nd justice in the 191·
year history or the nation's
hiehest court. She will be
youngest of the nine members.
Mrs. O'Connor will be sworn
in for her lifetime position in
ceremonies Friday afternoon at
the Supreme Court ~ullding. But
because the ceremony will be
conducted in the courtroom
itself, the recording for posterity
will be limited.
White House officials said Presi-
dent Reagan may attend the
ceremony.
.. My hop'e.....is that 10 years
from no'f, after I've been across
the street and worked for a
while, that they'll all feel 1Iatl
for the wonderful vote they gave
me today." a smiling Mrs.
O'Connor said at an appearance
on the Capitol steps with Vice
President George Bush and
Senate leaders.
The court opens its 1981-82
term Oct. 5.
Reagan bailed a "happy and
historic day" and said in a state-
ment that Mr. O'Connor's con-
firmation "symbolizes the rich·
ness of opportunity that still
abides in America -opportuni-
ty that permits persons of any
sex, age or race, from every sec-
tion and walk of life, to aspire
and achieve in a manner never <See SUPREME, Page AZ>
The alliance objects to nuclear
power as unsafe and says the
Dlablo plant is particularly
dangerous because it is built
near an earthquake fault line.
Carl Zicbella, a spokes man for
the alliance, said of the federal
decisioo, "H there's any change,
it's just more determination. We
are going to do everything possi-
ble to stop this plant before
nature does it for us."
Several hundred protesters re-
mained at the site today, their
ranks !;ied by the many ar·
rests. blockade bad iotten
under wa Monday with dem·
on s trators p artially blocking
Avila Road, which goes past the
plant's main gate.
M a mile-long convoy of buses
loaded with PG&E workers
rolled by, deputies used choke
bolds on demonstrators to clear
the path.
Coast councilman
faces traffic raps
Laguna Beac h Cit y Coun-
cilman William Wilcoxen has
been ordered to appear in South
Or ange County Municipal~ in Laguna Niguel Sept. 28 to fac
charges of vehicular hit and run
and reckless driving, accor · ~
to Orange County Dist rict A ·
torney Del Wright.
Wright said a "notice to ap-
pear " was mailed to Wil coxen, a
long -time Laguna Beach at-
torney, late las t week.
Wilcoxen was not immediately
available for comm ent. A
spckesman at bis Laguna Beach
office s aid he was away on a
business trip.
Wilcoxen, 49, who was ap-
pointed to his City Council seal
July 28, is accused of repeatedly
,rear-ending a Laguna Beach
woman's car in an incident Aug.
21 on Pacific Coast Highwa y.
However, in past statements
he has denied the charg~s. "My
driving did not e nd a nge r
anyone," Wilcoxen said in an
earlier interview.
Wilcoxen also maintained that
the police report on the incident
contained incomplete and inac-
curate information.
Eflekhar Tong, 51, of Laguna
Beach, told police she was driv·
ing north on Pacific Coast
Highway near McKnight Drive
in Laguna Beach at 1 p.m. Aug.
21 when she was rear-ended by a
man driv\ng a white Me rcury
station wagon.
Accordirig to the police report,
she claims her car was struck
four or five ti mes while both
vehicles were proceeding north
<See IDT-RUN, Page A%)
"As is the court practice,
there will be no TV, no photo-
graphs and no tape recordino,"
court spokesman Barrett
McGum said in a printed state-
ment released today.
'Secret' meet facts demanded •
ORAIGI CUil 1111111 •
Low clouds, fog late
night thro ugh m i d ·
morning hours. Mostly
sunny afternoons. Lows
tonight in 60s . Highs
Wednesday, low 70s at
beaches, low 80s inland.
Reporters and artists will be
admitted to the ceremony, u
they are for all court sessions.
There will be no public ad·
mission, however, except by in·
vitation.
Two "picture opportunities"
are scheduled shortly after the
IS-minute ceremony.
M cGurn said alficial court
phot.osraphers would be on band
but added, "I know of no plan to
have any pbotosraph tueo ln
the courtroom durln1 the
ceremony.''
Chief Justice Wuren I!.
Burger will administer Mn.
O'Connor's oath or office. and
6,000 acres bum
QUINCY <AP) -Firtmta
hope to complete a Uae todaJ
around a Uabtn.ln1·caUMd fin
that hu blackened ••1Y t,000
acres ol Nortben Calllomla.
Referendum group. asks. answers on Newport Center
By STEVE llAULE o1 .. ..., ........
A Newport Beacb 1roup t.rytna
to force a 1pec:ia1 election on the
approved Newport Center ex-
pansion project bu demanded
answers CJD a "secret" meetini
between dty council memben
and top.rantln1 Irvine Company
execut1ve1.
Tbe que9tlona. which -came UJ>
durin1 a Woaday pre11 con·
ference called by the rllera·,
dum aroup, were directed to
CouacUwoaum Evelyn Hart. llre. Hart, oee ol two COUDCil
members atttndln• the con·
fttence, hotted a noon·~
AUJ. M wltb lwO eoundl eof.
leap• and four Jntne C..·
puy olftdala Just hcMan btfGn
the CCMldl llPPl'O'fed t.be 1ntDt
Company's $123 million ex-
pansioo plan.
"Who called this meeting?"
ulted Bobby Lovell, a member
office. If somebod y has a
problem with that -I'm sorr)'."
The 'Councilwoman previously
explained that s he m et with
council colleagues Mayor Jackie ''] th•nk that Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer • a & well as Irvine Company
m e et ..t n g W. Q Preside nt P eter Kremer, • · S Shelton and two others from the
Wrong. . " development firm. The purpoee
--'-of the meeting she s aid, was to
discuss construction of a new
of the referendum group which road.
l1 call.lna itself RAP -Resi· Members of RAP said they
dnta' Action Plan. • were concerned because two c1·
Coundl.oman Hart aald that ty counc.Umen -Don Straua
Robert Shelton. an Irvin• Com-and Paul Hummel -were not
paa1 vice president, bad Uked told of lhe .private meetln1.
for the meetifti. StraUll and Kwnm•l Wet'e th•
••1 didn't have any tl'OU.,.e only councll memben to vote
wit.b tba. I meet with U\YOIM," 11alnlt the exJ>anslon project.
Hid Mn. Bart. "We met at my ''J think that meetlnt wu
houat because I don't have an <See CENTI&, Pase AJ)
INSIDITOUY
. Don Ponorini entna the
Rama ' co ntr ooer•~
IWttpitoMa. WUI tMJi lip
him, or not? SH &Jot Cl .
11111 ,...,_..,...,.Ill ..............
1.1 ==I= :: 11.i =
A =-Al ~,_ :
.• -Ct! ......... ,._ ,..
E.. =
I
•'
---... ·-··----~-:"'..-..-------. -~·------~---------------~~-----............ ._._...
A2 ••
BIRMJNGHAlf,
Bettv Slmt' Dl• • _....,._._
son '11 980,000 ltOllM b a
SlOO·a·chance raffle lau r•ulted In her indktaneot OD cbar,. o(
promoUna a l~Wt"Y. wa.an ·
legal ln Alabaua ~
Mrs. Sima tW'11td b•n•til t.o
the district attornei MM!hy
following the •dlctmct bJ U1e
Jefferson County srand.iwJ.
The ratne i• oa. ·ati~t er
Art Hanes Jr., and **·
was freed on *380'~:'11
arraignment on tbe 111l1de·
meanor cbaqe. It earrles a
maximum ~atty of •e year 1P
prison and a~~ ;
Hanes sald ;llfu. Sima will
plead innoceat at tile ·~ · •·
ment. No d8e h .. been f'{
the hearing. ' ..
Mrs. Sims allegedly sold a ral·
fie ticket to an invesUptor tram
the state attorney general'1 ~·
fi ce of Consumer lh'otection.
Under Alabama law, a raffle
J • r · T-bill yield1.
declines Ji>r ·
second week
SEARC~·.}~ ··' ~
' ... are searcbini tlMs' torest on foot
while two alrpl111es ,fr&>m tile
Aero Squadroo. pBot.i by·volun·
teer reserve ~~ties, are scaa-
ning the naaeecrterrain. " Hart said Edwards' 1 apn· •
s i d e r &cU • ~ f • ~ dangerous." · .c ..
According to-sberiW~,.of·
ficials, Eclwardlja ~uAlf'1s.¥
months ago liv~ Vt Cotta ~·
and worked as a ral:lle JHAer
al an Irvine gun club. H\rt said
Edwards is now livi~ oul o(his
reddis h·orange 19'l~ pickup
truck ouUitted with a wbite
camper . The license number is
IBJX 675. . • ·
Hart said i&w~ti&8t~J -.ave been m cont.ace ._.. !:Clwlll'~
ex ·w1re and ta1Duy IW4tmltVs
and are keeping a .. c oo
other places be mig~ &d.
"We know that be-'Went -.0
the forest, but wed~ kpow lf
he came out," Hart said.~
Hart said the search or the
forest will continue "until we
a re convinced we've cover~
it." :
Hart said tba$ a r:_~ , of Edwards' pdt"te~at • 't
he served a prison"' 'in
Maryland on robbery.rfiiated
charges. •
Edwards is described a i feet
1 inch, 200 pounds, tMldinl, wtJ.b
reddish hair and a mustache.
The weekend· s hootio1 oc-
curred near the Blue Jay camp-
ground about 15 miles east or
San Juan Capistrano. .,,
" "' . . ~·. Mn.aiiW..W-.wln&·
ed to ram. tM MUH beeausf
~er family b8d been unable to
HU \lllder t.otar•• bltlt bater•t nte•. SM told repiltt~tt t.M
fa9llly'1 .. IMncial -.eel la IO
mlklb ,reaUI' than the poulbill·
ty or being arrested.''
Sbe aald proceeds from I.he
raffle wwld have helped meet
~ troo> a recent family
llloeaa ancl Mlp put her IOll,
Mike Wheless, thr'outb medical
school. Pa.rt of the proceeda
would lllave go.e to charity, she
tald.
Sia• •placed ads In a local
newspaper in July advettlaing
the raffle, and the Jefferson
Cowuy district aUorney's clftlce
began receiving Inquiries about
rafnes. ·
Mrs. stms initially hoped to
sell 750 to 1,200 tickets for an
Oct. 19 raffle, but later lowered
that goal to 550100 and moved
Weed trimmer
stolen from
Mesa'mari . ~
G .ardn s-ett-~• ~wner
Yonelltlllt •Keh .. • didn't bave ,
any luek geWnc .bis f!l80 fted
trimmer from Co8ta Mesa police
Mond&¥.
Kobara, owner or Larry
Kobara Gardeaing and Main·
t.enance Service of Costa Mesa,
told officers he •as doing yard
work at 191 Mesa Drive at about
4:30 p.m . when he was ap·
proached by a man who claimed
hew~ a police-officer.
The mao to&d Kobara be was
checkWl!I Yar stolen weed trim·
mer.s. aaid he Ulought one of
those in Kohara's truck was a
.stolen-item and confiscated it.
KQhara told police the mu
was dltving a Ford auto with
lar1e •t.eDDa, a car that looked
like an unmarked police vehicle.
Police told him lhey have no
officer on their roster by the
named used by the alleged police~~ • t ' I • •
Si1iklwle
pops plug
WINTER PARK, Fla. (AP) -
For the second time in two
m onths, the Winter Park
sinkhole bas popped its plug,
dropping its water level about 20
feet.
Tbe ''pood" at the bottom of
the Win&er' Parle riater began
gurglinc and draining m&o •
.. aone~o'°b .. 1~ underground
lim~ cavems and tunnels
on Sunday after a1oTt'lY building
up following the first drop.
"I just noticed all the crud go-
ipg to the middle," said a
p\:>liceman patrolling a fence
enclosing the 350·foot-wide,
150-foot·deep crater, which
beaan opening in the Orlando
suburb on May 8. The water
level on Mcledq dropped about
•,jae ~Gilly nine minute.
CIHIM*t edYent.ine 71411U.M71 •
,All othef depefoM;•I• Ml·~1
Robert N. Weed
~
Thomas A MutJ>hMllt
Ed1t0<
MAtN°"tCE
no Wnt e.,, SC '"'" ~,.. c A -I -K llo• U .. , <-•i. A.W\I , CA •Jt1•
COD,rl9fll "" Ot-(M Sl l'wllll\hl"9 C_.., ... 0 nr~ \f<Wt~ 1ttu-.tr•t1on\, •d1for;•t ..,. .. ,., or M 1 v 1\•m+t'\h ,....,..,,, m•v Ot ttOtOd«•d •ulhovt.. .. , _fllo\_ Of c_r,...f O•lltt
the rame to Dec. 19. Hanes aaJd that everyone who
bouabt a Ucket wlll have his
money refunded.
The rame attracted the atten·
tlort of state 0Cficlal1, and an
a1ent from Graddick's office
purchased a Uckel from Mrs.
Sims as part of his investigation,
according to a spokesman for at·
torney general Charles Grad·
dick.
This month, a couple living in
New Jersey successfully raffled
off a house in the Washington
suburb or Annandale, Va., re·
aJiling their asking price of
$113,000 and netting about
S'15,000 after expenses for the
Annandale Boys Club soccer
program.
But officials there were active
in the event, with the c~airman
or the Fairfax County Board of
Supervisors drawing the win-
ning name from a giant drum.
From Page A1
RUGBY. • •
protecting the South African
players.
No demonstrators have been
arrested since the Springboks'
arrival in Albany on Sunday,
though a handful of pickets have
maintained a vigil outside the
two motels where the team is
staying.
U.S. District Judge Howard
Munson ruled Monday that Gov.
Hu_gh Carey acted improperly
when be told Albany Mayor
Ezraslus Coroing last week to
stop the game. Carey cited what
he said was an "imminent
danger of rioting" because of
the planned protests.
Munson said Carey's action
"seeks to destroy the very con·
stitutionaJ protections that have
enabled a century.Jong struggle
to bring about racial equality.•·
A state police report given
Carey last week estimated that
up to 15,000 demonstrators could
show for the game.
The racially mixed Springboks
came to the United States.as an
attempt at good will on the part
of the white·ruled government in
the bl ack·majority nation .
Protests have forced the team
underground, their whereabouts
often kept secret.
A game scheduled for Chicago
was moved 75 miles from there Saturday \,O Racine, Wis .
Protester s appe are d . even
though sponsors tried to keep
the 1ocation secret and barred
spectators and reporters. There
were two arrests al the game
and two more at a Chicago
airp~ as the te am left for
Albany.
A Springbok s contest
scheduled for New York City
wa s can cel ed , moved to
Rochester, then called off there.
as authorities in both cities
feared violence.
From Page A1
WT-RUN. • •
on the highway.
Mrs. Tong said she was finally
forced out of her lane and the
station wagon "fled northbound
toward Newport Beach." Mrs.
Tong didn't come to police bead·
quarters until the following day
CAug. 22) to fill out an accident
report. police said.
Based on a description of the
:Ration wagon and a license
plate number, Wilcoxen was
pulled to the side of the road
Aug. 22 by a motor officer who
spotted his car.
According to Wright, who is
prosecuting the case for the dis·
trict attorney·~ office. he asked
for and received additional in-
formation on the incident from
Laguna Beach police last week,
which led to his decision to press
charges against Wilcoxen .
Ir convicted , Wright said
Wilcoxen could spend up to six
months in jail and be fined as
m._ucb • $500 .
Mesa burglar
bats $4,200
A burglar who sh attered a
window with a baseball bat
escaped from McNeilly's An·
tlques lo Costa Mesa with rings
valued at a total or $4 ,200, tollce said.
A witllell told officers she saw a youn1 man flee fr&m-ttte
driveway in front of the store at
1 a.m. Monday carrying a bun·
die.
Officers said the burglar took
80 gold rings and 10 of silver,
leaving bis Louisville Slugger
bat inside the small shop at ~
E. 19th St.
..
" Cont.empt ref used
L06 ANGE'L£S <AP) -A ,....._. judfe refuted to find • I • Tom Brlidley aad follce
~l*~IMW' Ds7t Gatee In coat.mpt c:omt Monda.Y for falling to
... ow up for a cou_rt-ordered
deR911Uon bearlna.
\.
DeltYNll .........
··Cap" Sheue holds ongmol charter document tSsued to Huntington
Beach Veter~ms of World War I . unth gold stara bestde names of
deceased members
From Page Al
VETERANS DISBAND. • •
m a nder was the l ate Arne
J ensen. Other charter members
included former State Sen. John
A. Murdy, clothing store owner
Barney F1eischer, banker H. F.
Rampton and Col. Ted Davis, an
American Indian.
The women's auxiliary, which
now has be'.:i. disbanded as well,
was formed in 1961.
According to Cap Sheue. one
of the organization's main goals
was to press for more govern·
ment aid for its members.
"The World War I vets were
the only veterans of any war in
our hi story who received no
benefits ... Sheue contends.
"There was no GI Bill for us.
no money for schooling. I went
back to college and never got a
dime from the government. And
we had no low-interest housing
loans like the World War II
veter ans got."
Sheue says the world War I
vets did not wi n a legislative vie·
tory until 1979, when they were
gr anted heaJth benefits through
Veterans Adminis tration
hospitals.
The retired Huntington Beach
coach was drafted in 1918 while
attending Baker University in
Kansas. He fought in the Alsace·
Lorraine region of France
"World War 1 was the worst
war in history," Sheue main·
tains. "It was fought the way no
other war was fought -in the
tr e nch es . So m e times the
trenches were only a couple hun·
dred yards apart The slaughter
was somethmg terrible.
"It rained all the time. We
were wading in water up to our
knees. The food was lousy. The
wbole thing was lousy. The fl u
killed more people than the bat-
tles did."
Sheue was knocked out of ac·
lion by chlorine gas that wafted
out of the trenches from an
earlier battle. He spent nine
months in various hospitals.
Ollie Dowhen. a Fountain
Valley resident and member of
the Huntington Beach barracks
since 1964, served for 18 months
beg i nning in 1917 , also in
France.
Dowhen, who helped move
heavy artillery equipment, re·
calls that World War I soldiers
received limited rations.
"We ate canned salmon for
over a week." he recalls. "We
had 1t stewed . . fried . . . "
"We had a kitty to buy our
own food. We'd put money in the
kitty every pay day. Then we'd
pay the people in the field for
things like fresh vegetables."
Dowhen says his pay for over·
seas duty was S44 per month.
During the pas t 12 years.
Dowhen has served as com·
mander of the Huntington Beach
veter a ns barr acks. His wife
Lillian headed the a uxiliary dur·
ing these same years. Both say
they will miss the friendshjps
that evolved from the veterans
group .
Cap Sheue has been keeper of
the framed charter document is·
sued to the Huntington Beach
Veterans ·or world War 1 bar·
r acks. He bas pasted a gold star
bes ide the name of every de·
ceased charter member.
Sheue says the charter docu·
ments for the veterans group
and its auxiliary will be kept by
the Huntington Beach Hi storical
Society.
"I think all of us fell kind of
sad ... he says or the decision lo
dis band. "It's kind of like going
over the hill. We've re.ached the
peak. and now we're going over
the hill .... "
400 on jet safe
TOKYO <AP> -All 400 people
aboard a British Airways jumbo
jet were reported safe today
after the pilot reported a fire in
h is cargo hold a nd made an
em ergency landing in northern
Japan.
You can't keep these a secret longl
Good fashion news travels
fast-especially when it's
about these sensational
diamond earrings! A ·14 karat
white gold, $650. 8. 14 karat
yellow gold, $310. C. 14 karat
gold, $800. D. 14 ka·rat
gold. $835. E. I 8 karat
yellow gold, $850.
•
•
• I
From Page At
CENTE·R. • •
wronc." Strau11 aatd when
reached by telep1'one acWlna
that he wa.s nOl lnlotmed ~ UM
6(e\·toaether at Mrs. Hart'• •
home ... We weft A91the·mtddle
of a very major '-dJlw ...
that meeting wu totally lll-s>-
propriale." •
Strauss said ... W&iev• de-
cisions were reachMI la tile
prl v ate meetlnf that should
have been dJtcuesed In pubUc.
Councilman John Cox, who at·
tended the RAP .puu ·con ·
rerence, said a.a.. rMereedum
group is trylos t. oae tlae
"secret" m~ U •I publicity
gim mi ck to get Deeded
signatures to lor' a Hf•ea·
dum on N"''*"'.'Celltff.
·'They're a bUl'lch of ~c~ .
tionists who are dolnl every·
thing possible to stop denlop-
m e n t i n Newport," Cos
commented roUowine ihe presa
conference. '
"These are vtndictife, -vicious
people and it gal11 me ho~
they're trying to sway the publie
with false and m•e•di•C lltate-
ments," said Cox. •
Members or RAP uid they
questioned the thnina or the
private meeting, coming hours
before a final vtlle oo Newport ·
Center.
Cox. who favored the Newport
Center expansion. project, s&Mt
he thought the presa cClftlereace
itself was a "publicil.)' atunt" to
get media exposure on the ref·
erendum mOYemeat. ·
The refereruUn-~oup bu Ult·
ti l Sept. 30 lo either 4,?50
sig natures or l'egistered
Newport voters. If it meets the
deadline, the council •ould be
forced to repeal aPtwOvaJ of the
expans ion project· Of c all a
special election.
J erry Collins, an Ini.ne Com·
pany official who aUended the
press conference, said his firm
has no second' thoucht.a on the
private meetin1:
·'It was a helpful .Md really
very conventional ••1 to com·
municate and excbantetpoints ol
view," said Collins. "Tlaal'~ a '
right that eveeyc)De hu. '
"We're surpriled Ulat anyone
would try to m•e an· iasue out
of it," he added. · /
Members of the referendum group predicted that they'll
reach their signature quota by
the end or the o;t~. but t.bey
d i d not s ay llo• many
signatures they've c .. lected to
date.
From Page A1
SUPREME. • •
before even dreamed a_,ut in
human hi~y.'1 < ,
The vote. follo~ lour holwS
of laudatory speeches by con·
ser vatives and liwals •like,
was a victory for Reagan aa well
as Mrs. O'Connor.
Opposition to Mrs. O'CoMor'a
views on abortion mel~d when
Sen . Jess e Helms, R ·N .C ..
leader of the most. eonaervative
wing of tbe Senat~. aaid he
would support the nomiaation
"becau$e I have faith in the
president."
Sen. Jeremiah nemo11, Jl-Ala .•
w h o a b s t a in e.d fro 111 an
otherwise unanjmoos .Jod.iciary
Committee vote for confirma·
lion last week. sajd be dldr,t
want to be the spoiler Moaday.
''Some colleagues aaid I'd be
laughed out of U.e Senate if I
voted against her1 •• Denton told
The Washington PoSt:.
Mrs. O'Connor •l~adfMlly
refused to incUc•te how sbe •
might rule on any~sl)ttiftc isaue,
although she expressed personal
dislike of abortio.n and busing
for school integration and .sup-
port for the death penalty.
I
I ....
I
--------------------------.,,.
Rivals upt ighl
over Stone• tour
The llollln1 Stonea will
gather plenty of greenbacks
durin& their upcoming U.S.
tour but American roe~
rivals 1ee it as bucks out of
their pockets.
"I 'm out there trying to
make a living tourlna. and
the re's no d oubt that in
several markets we have not
sold nearly as many tickets
because the Stones h ave
taken over." says Eric
Bloom of the Blue Oyater
Cult, a ''heavy metal" band.
Major rock bands can
make big money , Bloom
s ays, by selling out the last
couple of thous and seat.a in
an arena. That gives them a
percentage of the gross profit
in addition to a fixed concert
fee.
But with the Stones quickly
selling out one s how after
another, be says it's increas-
ingly hard to peddle those
last tickets.
Lt. Gov. Thomas P. O'Netll
Ill, son of the U.S. House
Speaker, launched a cam·
p a ign for the Democratic
nominallon for governor of
Massachusetts.
-~ .......... \'ice Prestd(•nt (;eorqe Bush 1teft 1 1s applauded by country
0 ·Neill announced his can-
didacy formally on the day
he turned 37. The lieutenant
govei:nor under Gov. Edward
J . King and former Gov.
Mic h ael S. D ukakls is
challenging both of them for
the governorship.
music star Ruy Acuff on his arnual for a roast celebrating
Acuf f's 50 11ear s m country mw.'1c.
'
/
Or. Armand Hammer to-
day said he is confident
Poland will weathe r its
economic crisis and his Los
Angeles-based Occidental
Petroleum Corp. 1s ready to
invest $140 million an a joint
venture there.
"In spite of all the bad
news. we have. confidence
that Poland will come out of
its crisis aJI right," he said at
a n ews co nferen ce in
Warsaw.
You can break a lot of
things parachute jumping.
but all Bruce McLaughlin did
was break a record, by com·
pl eting 235 parachute jumps.
T he previous record was
233 1urnps in just over 18
hours set by an Englishman
severaJ years ago, he said.
"In spite of all the prob-
lems, it was worth 1t," said
Mc Laug hlin, of Easton ,
Mass . after the series of
jumps, which began at Taun-
ton Municipal Airport and
ended 22 hours later .
-~.....
Wus1c1an <iumcy Jones gets a hug f rom Lena Horne as he visits
her backstaqe ofter a perfo~rna.nce of her one-woman Broadway
. ~hou1 "l.Rrw llnrne. I he Lady and Her Music ..
McLaughlin said he made
the jumps to publicize
parachuting and raise $4,000
in pledges and dona tions for
United Cerebral Palsy .
Coasta l
F air UlrouQh w-..ldt, •o<t91
I-CIOUllJ In nlgnt end m•d rnorntnv
t>ours Llllle lempereture c11enve
Hl9hs IO<Wy ltnCI WeOMldt• tn the
low 70. •I Ille bHCM S 10 the IOW IOI
lnlencl Ov9"\19hl lows 60 lo 64
Sunn• Skies prev•lled .cr•s much
of Ille n•tlon -.Y. from IN Sovlll to IM Ofllo Valley, bul e COlcl fr ... I
moved Into tne C.ntrel Pf•lnt encl
r•ln ••l sc•tterf'd •<'0'' th• NorlMrn sttlft.
Sevtrel c fllu •IOnQ the Gulf Coesl
r eported new record IOVIJI tam
per•lures durlf\9 llW Nrly momlnQ,
bul by •fternoon, temperatures .crou IM Soutll llad cllmbecl 10 90
while • f-cMKH In_,,.,.,., Tuu
,.. 4K heel '"' tels SllOwors ...., • f.., 111unoer11orms
moved ,,,,._,, IN GrHt uk•S r•·
Qlon, -t-r•turH In Ille SOs Slrtlcllecl from u h Superior lo New
EnQl•ncl
T iie SoulllwltSI ll•d m lld fem ~
JMr•lur•'· The N.tlon•I Wt<rtlltr Service Hid
most of II• M iian would heve wn-
tlllnt IOO<t'f. but sl'owers were llk•I•
lo 'prud ecross Ille cenlr•I Ap-
pelM:lllen stalH Into Now Envt...O A
few ,,,_n t lso _,.. HP«IHI to
ll"Ot!r ov.,. ti. Peclloc NortllWtst,
•nd soultwrn Florlde could look
forw•rd to oc•llerKI lllundtnlorm'
Mercury stays same
Cto1ca90 IS
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Cleveland 61
Columb\1$ ,,
D•l·FI W1h 93
Denver " 0.s Mol"tt 11
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Mp1 .. s1.P 61
N.sllvllle 19
New Orle•n~ 14
New York 72
Norfolk 11
Okla City tl
Oma Ila 76
Orl•nclO " Plllltdpf! I• 71
Phoenl• 101
PlluburQf\ 11
Pll•nd,Mt M
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~--~· ._ -
Oronge Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 22, 1981 s
'One~stop' processing
center to open in '82
Oranae County ~ovl!rnment
will open a 'Jone-atop" process·
1ng center for development
permit.a -a move that officials
say could help reduce stagger-
iOI prices facing both home
buyers and renters.
0 p e nin g or t he center.
scheduled for spr ing 1982.
together with changes an the
way development applications
a re reviewed, will cut govern-
ment processing lime, which. in
turn. will cut developers' carry-
ing costs. Those savings will
then be passed on to the home
purchaser . or in the case of
apartment complexes. renters.
The center will be located in
what today is a conference room
in the county Finance Building
at the com er of Ci v1c Center
Dr1ve West and Broadway.
Environmental Management
Agency officials estimated it
will cost $410,000 to transform
the large room for 1ts new use.
but say the expe nditure is
justified.
Streamlined processing of de-
velopment applications s hould
end up saving the county $1.2
million annuall y, t hey ex -
plained.
I lome buyers could reap sav-
lnu. too, Supervi1or Harrtett
Wieder, among a delegation ol
officaals, said al a press con-
ference held Monday. Citing
figures provided by the EMA,
Mrs . Wieder said procesaing
lime for major developments
could be cut between 46 and 2U
days. ''Those decreues lo proc·
essing time lranalale to a sav-
ings or up to $15,148," ue said.
Reducing processing time by
eight months on a Sl00,000 home,
she added, could cut monlbly
mortgage paymenlS by more
than $202. for a total savings of
$78,835 for a loan car ried at 15
per cent over a 30-year term.
"Obviously, rapid processing
<reduces> the cost of building
<and > lowers monthly payments
and , in the case of reatal hous-
ing , should reduce rents," she
s aid.
The "one-stop," "fast-track"
app r oach to processing
or development pe rmits was
hailed by representatives of de·
\ eloprnent interests as a positive
st~p
··While a shortened permit
process may not be the cure for -------
lbe high costs of new housing
curc-ently plaguing home
buil4era and home buyers alike.
ll urtahlly Is a step in the right
direction." said Frank Hughes,
presldeal of the Orange County
chapter of the Building Industry
Association.
Ways to improve the process-
ing of development permits have
beea under examination by an
ad h~ Development Processing
Review Commi ttee and the
EMA since January 1980.
Developers have complained
that securing necessary ap-
provals for construction often
seemed an impossibility because
plani had lo be reviewed by dif-
ferent departments , all located
in different places.
And they have claimed plan-
ning pfficials seemed more in-
tent in blocking projects than in
helping them reach fruition.
"The staff altitude," EMA
Director Murry Storm said at
the news briefing, 1s the most
important thing we have to deal
with . and the most dif
ficuft."
-Fredenck Schoemehl
BUBBLE BOY'S BIRT HOA Y A btl' who has
lived longer than any other person born
without immunitv to disease ct'lcbrated his
10th b1rthda.'· :Vtoncl a~· ins1dl' his plastic
isol;.1tor. with ch<H'olatt• c·ak~. llo h Cnmmu·
nion and a bundle ol sienlized "S.tar Wars "
-~-.....to~·s o a,·id. whose last naml' he.is n('\'l'I'
been r eleased at his parents· rcqut'~t . "c.i~
born with a rare disc'ase pre,·enting ht~ boch
from produC'in~ crurial rells thc.tt fight inft•c:
lion Ht• is known a~ the "BubblP Bm nf
Houston. Texa~.
A Short
For All Seasons
The coolest things for summ er
are the hot est things for fall.
Pleated Corduroy Shorts ...
they're perfect.
1028 Irvine. Newport Beach.
Uilifomia. Phone 642-7061
' I
I
s Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, September 22, 1881 ,
I ..
Libya closer to Soviets
Volunteer
plan to
be pushed
K hadaf y tak es f irst steps towar d alliance with Russians
TRIPOLI, Libya <AP> -
Ubya Ls takin1 the fint atept
toward allytn1 itself formally with the Soviet bloc.
In July, two Soviet wanblpe
were allowed to dock for the
first lime ln this North Afncan
Port on the edge of the Sahara
Deaert. The next month, Ubya
welcomed the fll'sl visit by a
minister of the Soviet-backed
aovernment of Afghanistan.
PrevioUBJy, Llbya bad been
cool to the Afghan regime and
had objected lo the Soviet
military intervention in a fellow
Islamic country.
Capping the trend, LJbyan
leader Col. Moammar Khadafy
gave a fiery speech Sept. 1 call-
ing on bis country to joln the
Soviet camp.
"We are now in need or allies
against America, because we do
not want to surrender to
America," Khadafy said.
If the Soviets are willing to
embrace the volatile Khadafy,
they would probably seek their
first military bases in the
Mediterr anean. according to
senior West European diplomats
here.
Libya bas been friendly with
the Soviets since Khadafy seized
power in a bloodless coup in
1969. Libya has purchased $12
billion worth or Soviet arms in
the past five years and generally
supports Moscow's line lo
foreign affairs.
But Khadafy is also a radical
Arab nationalist and religious
Mos lem .who rejects com·
munism as atheistic. He has
repeatedly warned against
granting footholds to either the
United States or the Soviet
Union ln North Alrtca or the
Middle Eut.
"We are determined at Ul)'
price not to fall under the ln·
fluence of either of these two
world powers," Kbadaty aald ln
a 1974 interview. But that stance
seems to have chan1ed.
Fout Western diplomata here,
who lnalst.ed on anonymity, said
in interviews that Ubya lt mov·
log closer to the Sovleta for two
major reasons:
-Khadafy Ls afraid the Unit-
ed States is trying to overthrow
him. The Libyan media have
given wide covera1e to U.S.
"We,ar e now in
need of .a llieB
a g ,a i n s t
America.''
press reports -denied by the
While House -that the CIA
wanted to topple Kbadafy.
-The Libyan leader la
becoming increaslncly con-
vinced the Arab world needs
Soviet support to counteract
American backina for Israel.
Libya hu a plan to mer1e with
Syria, which la.st October signed
a 20-year friendship treaty with
the Soviets.
The United States and Ubf a
have not been friendly since
Khadafy came to power, closed
U.S. military bases and na-
tionalized at least 51 percent ol
foreign oil companies.
The U.S. State Department
baa critlclled Ubya 'a mWtary
Intervention In nel1bborln1
Chad, lta support for ht1b oll
prices, and lta backing for the
most radical win111 of the
Palestine UberalJon Organlsa·
lion and othec.1roups viewed as
terroristic by the Unlled States.
Relationa have worsened since
Pr esident Reagan took office.
The State Department expelled
all Libyan diplomata from
Washington in May, and
Secretary of State Alexander
Haig Jr. bas often singled out
Libya for criticizm. In a speech
in Berlin Sept. 13, Haig called
Llby a "a country which finances
terror and assassinations in
countries far from its borders.''
Libyan rears or the United
States were reinforced, Western
diplomata aft.id, when U.S. Navy
righten shot down two Llbyan
war planes about SO miles off the
Libyan coast Aug. 19.
The dogfight took place while
the U.S. Navy was holding war
s ames in the Gulf of Sidra,
where Llbya claims territorial
waters up to 100 miles from
shore. The United States rtt·
ognizes only a three-mile limit,
and U.S. officials said they held
the maneuverf! in the gulf in part
to challenge the Libyan claim
and demonstrate America's de-
termination to take advantage or
the freedom or the seas.
Khadafy is also edging closer
lo Moscow because he is
gradually coming to think the
Arabs need more help from the
Soviets in their confrontation
with Israel, Western diplomats
say.
Bank lets lellders keep 8112%
BUFFALO, N. Y. CAP> -Say-
ing "we listened to people," of-
ficials of the Buffalo Savings
Bank have decided they would
let 900 homeowners keep their
8'h percent mortgages after all.
"We made a mistake and we
fixed a mistake," bank Presi·
dent Ross Kenzie told reporters.
Kenzie said he had given a lot
of thought to the matter over the
weekend and decided the bank
hadn't realized the impact the
recall would have on small
homeowners.
Buffalo Savings last week
began recalling 900 mortgages
written in 1975 a nd 1976. A
clause in t h e mort1a1es
permitted the bank lo -recall
them after five years if there
were changes in the state in·
terest ceilin g on mortga1es.
Since that time, the state celliftl
on mortgage interest bu Mell
done away with, permittlAI
banks to charge whatever the
~
DlllJ Piiat
Classifieds
-RE Portable KENMOh s,so D\nette dishw~ ~~s $35. Lge. tbl & h 0 u s e
market will bear.
Buffalo savings now charges
17 percent to 18~ percent for
conventional mortgages. Those
who renogiated were to have
been offered a 14 percent in·
teresl rate.
Kemie's announcement came
as affected homeowners began
prot esting t he move, bot h
through picketing and by urging
families, unions and other or-
ganiutioos to cancel accounts
with the bank.
~/:e~veable roof $30
646·0000· Thurad•y, September 24th
7:30-9:00 P.M.
"Sold everything I
advertised in ·the
P i lot ."
~~~1 @ 642-5678
At Murdy P•rk, Huntington Be•ch
<Golden West & Norma Drive>
Hear Gerry Reed speak on
"SOLAR APPLIACTION"
Learn about Tex Credits and
Utility 6% FlnanclnQ
WASIUNGTON <AP) -Preti·
dent Rea1an aald he will em·
bark oo a "major prognm" to
1et volunteer 1roups to take
over tuks that "are no~ being
done very weU by government."
"We have drifted as a people
too far away from the volun-
leriam that characterized our
country,'' Reagan told a gror.ip
of bu~inesa leaders. "We have in .
a sense abdicated and turned
over to the government thinas
that used to be the functions of
the community and
neighborhood.''
The President said he soon
will deliver a major speech on
the subject to a business group.
"If you take the various ways
or helping people, the one with
the least overhead is the private
effort," be said. "Next is the
community or local effort. The
highest of all is the federal gov-
ernment."
Reagan said the federal gov-
ernment ignores the nation's
diversity when it tries lo set
rules and regulations to fit all
people.
"Volunteerism in the com·
munily can take over, and do the
things that are not being done
very well by the government,"
he said.
Judge places
guilty midwife
on proba tion
MADERA (AP) -An un·
licensed midwife here will not
go to jail for practicing medicine
without a license for delivering a
baby. but a judge has barred her
from attending any more births.
Rosalie Tarpening, 55, was
placed on probation for two
years Monday after Superior
Court Judge Clifford Plumley
suspended a one·year jail term.
A jury had found Mrs. Tarpen·
ing guilty or practicing medicine
fllegally and endangering the
lives or the mother, Graciella
Pacheco Villa of Fresno, and her
baby. Gabriel Villa.
The child died at Madera
Community Hospital less than
an hour after birth at Mrs.
Tar pening's office on Nov. 28,
1979.
Plumley declined to impose a
jail term because Mrs. Tarpen-
ing had been "a woman with an
absolutely dean. clear record."
charge it ~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
ca II 540-1220 toll·f ree.
Gerry's a member of the L.A. County Energy Commission
and ,,,._yor Bradley's Solar Cl1y Committee.
For More Information. Call:
~~~~~~~REE<ls SolAR·DAyCORp.
(714) 191-2111
A seafood dinner special.
Gulf Shrimp baked
In devil butter and
served with all the
down-by-the-seashore
accompaniments:
New Redskin Potatoes
Buttered Com-on-the-Cob
Creamy Cole Slaw
Gar11c Toast •
AND
a Strawberry Crepe Dessert.
8.95
Featured through October 4.
ReseNations Accepted.
Newport Beod"l/752-«J?.3/ 4880Compus
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Moll on Eost F\:JCtflc Coast Hlghwav.
Glb9tfRot:JtWOl'I ~ • M/DC/MCIVISA
•
15431 CheMlc•l Lane, Huntington Be•ch c:-trwct Umm • ..,.
. Lifeline
'lelepbOne Service
What It Is and
how JOU can get It.
If you're a residence customer of Pacific Telephone and
you make a limited number of local calls a month, you might
be interested in our Uf eline Thlephone Service.
Lifeline allows you up to 30 local calls every month for
S2.50 plus tax. Each call made over the JO.call allowance is
extra. (The 31st-40tb calls cost 1~ each. Every call over
40costs15C.)
Installation, telephone sets, and other services and
equipment cost extra.
Lifeline is available to residential customers only in most
areu of Los Anaeles and San Diego as well as Orange
County, Bakersfield, Rivenide, Fresno, Sacramento, Santa
Rosa, San Francisco, San Jose, Stockton, Modesto and
parts of the East Bay, Peninsula and Marin.
Want to know more? Call your Pacific 'Telephone service
representative for detaJls.
@. Adllc 1'1•Slhol•
'
.............
PRIZE SALMON Forrest Sondrud of Tacoma reeled in a
$10,000 prize after catching the elusive "million dollar
salmon" last week. An · auto s upply firm had offered $1
million to anyone catching the fi sh during a Sept. 6 fi shing
derby and charity benefit. But the company offered the con·
solation prize t o anyone hooking the fi sh later.
$587,000 giv en
to combat racism
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP>
-The World Coun cil of
Churches has announced a
$587 ,000 grant to 46 groups in 17
countries to "combat racism.·•
The South-West Africa People's
Organization guerrillas get the
largest sum.
SWA PO. target of South
Africa's military incursion into
Angola last month, is to receive
$125,000 for "administrative and
legal defense costs in Namibia
(South· Wes t Afric a > and ad·
ministrative costs in four coun·
tries which border Namibia, .. a
council statement said.
The guerrillas have waged a
15·year bush war against South
Africa to gain independence for
Soulh·West Afri ca. called
Namibia by the United Nations
and black-ruled African nalionc;.
Min e r a l ·ri ch South-Wes t
Africa, between Angola and
South Africa on the Atlantic
coast . has been administered by
South Africa since World War I
under a League of Nations man·
date repudiated by the United
Nations in 1966.
The rest of the grants will go
to groups ranging from the anti·
apartheid African National
Co n gress , $65 ,000 : to
Transafrica of Was hington.
which promotes a "Progressive
U.S. policy towards the nations
of Africa and the Caribbean,"
$27 ,000; and an Irish anti-
apartheid movement "currently
focusing its activities to stop the
1981 ru gby tour " or South
Africa's Springboks, $4 ,000.
Choice Prime Rib
Now just $8.95
Save $1 off the regular price of our
bi~ complete Prime Rib dinner through
October 4. Then top off a great dinner with music
and dancing on stainless steel in our lounge.
Stuart, you did It again.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY • SANTA ANA
GARDEN GROVE • TORRANCE
CERRITOS • LAKEWOOD • ANAHEIM
f
. . . .
. . .
~ . •
·: .
·= .
' . ~ . .. . .. ..
. .; • • • ~ ,• .. . • . •
•,
I
'Famous' take to • air
Mondale calls for chat. as governor hosts radio show
FRESNO (AP) -A famOQI
talk show host bad a famous
caller on a radio staUoo here.
Gov. Brown, smoothly han-
dllnl his second stint on a talk
show, received a call Monday at
KMJ from former Vice Presi-
dent Walter Mondale.
Since both are Demo<-rata,
there wasn't much dlaa1ree-
ment during Mondale'• few mo-
menta on the air, but the 1ov-
ernor did politely tell Mondale
that be would have to move on to
other callers.
Most people bad queaUom for
Brown and be bad queaUona on
farming and pesticide use for
several guests be uked to ap.
pear.
During bis call, Mondale de-
fended the Carter admlnistra-
tion 's farm policies, notin1 that
net farm income exports in-
creased every year.
Then Mondale charged that
President Reagan's admlnittra-
tion "put in place a fiscal pro-
gram that guarantees delic.ij.s of
$60 billion to $100 billion over
the next seve.ral years ... That
is going to be paid for by the ·
highest real interest rates in
American history."
Brown sounded at eue du.ri.na
the three-hour ahow In the heart
of California's farmln1 area
which bu been cool to many ol
bis alJibuslness policies. The
governor defended bla approach,
saylnl be and farmers airee on
moat luues except farm labor
where be supports the United
Farm workers.
Fresno County Farm Bureau
President Don Rosendahl told
Brown that "I hope in the future,
you'll listen more to agriculture
than in the pa.st." • Brown, who appeared on a Los
Angele9 talk show week& ago,
was to be on Sacramento station
KFBK today and is scheduled to
appear on Modesto station
KBEE Wednesday.
Orange COut DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 22, 1981
BLOCKADE BUSTED -A National Guard nuke group has been trying to blockade the.
truck full of sheriff deputies breaks through a plant since a week ago today. There were
human blockade of anti-nuke protesters at more than 180 demonstrators arrested Mon-
Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant near day.
San Luis Obispo. The Abalone Alliance anti·
Bitter remap battle stall,s legislators ' pay issue
SMOOTH JOB
Gov. Jerry Brown
SACRAMENTO CAP> -.A pay
boos t for legislators, which
would raise their salaries to
nearly $31,000 annually, bas
been stalled in the wake of the
bitter battle over reapportion-
ment.
The pay raise bill. AB2240 by
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown,
had been intended to move
through the Legislature during
the 1981 session, which ended oo
Sept. 15.
But Republicans, upset over
Democratic-controlled re-
districting plans which cut back
on GOP legislative and con-
gressional seats, thwarted
Brown's timetable when they re-
fused to vote for most bills
which required more than sim-
ple majorities.
SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUAUTY SHUTTERS
The bill was left stranded on
the Assembly floor. and will not
be considered until the
Legislature convenes in January.
If approved, the measure
would have gone into effect on
Jan. 1, 1982, and lawmakers
would see the raises show up in
their pay envelopes at the begin-
ning of the next session, begin·
ning the following December
and January.
However , the Republican ac-
tion means the legislators' pay
raise coul(, be blocked until
January 1981 at the earliest.
The pay hike amounts to a
total 10 percent boost over two
years, bringing their salary to
$30,921. Legislators currently
.earn $28,110 ~uaJly.
The measure would also in-
crease the salary of the gov-
ernor to $88,897, from the cur-
r e nt $49,100, and raise the
salaries of the lieutenant gov-
e rnor, attorney general and
other major state officers. It
would not go into effect until
after the c urrent governor
leaves office.
Designed,
Finished
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The best in Italian cuisine. Live en·
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Restaurant Writers' Award winning
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Featurln1 Sunday Brunch 11-3
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I
ADJUSTED INCOME. JOINT RETURN $50,000 $35,000 $25,000 $20,000
ESTIMATED TAX BRACKET 50% 40% 25%
WHAT YOU'D HAVE TO EARN ON A )/ )/ )/ 0 /
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Minimum deposit is $500. Available Oct. 1.
To earn your maximum tax-free interest at the
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return or $7, 930 for a single return. Your savings
will be insured to $100,000 by the FSLIC.
Interest bonus. Reserve your account now and
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daily Tor an annualized yield of 18.8%-until
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NEWPORT BEAOI: 2?00 W. Coast Hwy./ (714) 631·2611
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•
,. ..... ---..-. ·--.--.~--------------.... --~ .... ._..---~----
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT truea4ay, September 22. 198~
Legislation .helps
county court system
Regardless or the type or law
they practice, Orange County al·
lorneys s hould be pleased with
recent action of the state
Legislature, which, iC approved
by Gov. Edmun~ G . Brown,
s hould help clear some of the
backlog !acing the local Judicial
system.
As the Legislature wrapped
up business berore adjourning its
1981 session, two bills cleared the
Assembly and the Senate -one
which will add more judges to the
superior court bench, another
which will create a division of the
Fourth District Court of Appeal
that will meet in Orange County.
The county today is served
by 46 superior court judges and
rive commissioners who handle
juvenile court matters . l-'1ve
.s uperior court judges would be
added under the legislation
authored b y Assembly man
Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana.
a nd s upported by county govern-
m e nt officials. A s ixth judge
would be add~d to Harbor
Municipal Court i n Newport
Beach. Workload figures re·
leased by the state Judicial Coun·
cil Indicated the new positions
were sorely needed.
Another Robinson bill that
cleared both houses will place a
four-justice appeals court
division in the county. Today.
local attorneys must travel to
San Bernardino to argue appeals
cases. Robinson's bill was
handled capably on the Assembly
floor b) Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson . R -Newpo rt
Beach. because Robinson could
not be present due to minor eye
surgery ,
Gov Brown has given no in
dication on how he s tands on
either bill. We hope. however ,
that he will be sensitive to the
legal needs of the second largest
county in the s tate. needs that
h<:1ve been well demonstrated by
the slate Judicial Council's own
s tudies
Gun law reversal
Something rather remarka-
ble is happening on the handgun
control front Just when it
see med some improvement
might be in the cards. it appears
the reverse may be happening
Not long ago President
Reagan's tas k for ce on violent
crime. headed b y Attorney
General WilJia m French Smith ,
came out with a series of recom·
m e ndations to modes tly tighten
handgun controls.
They include a waiting period
for handgun purc hases. a ban on
th e importation o f parts for
Saturday Night Specials and
m a ndatory imprisonment of
persons usin g a handgun in the
commission of a crime.
These points. incidentally.
are all included in the Kenned,·
Rodino Handgun Crime Control
bi 11 which now has nine CO·
s ponsors in the Senate and 55 in
the House.
Other legis lators also have
introduced bills d esigned to
tighten controls on handguns.
Unfortunately. this doesn 't
necessarily mean progress.
The National Rifle Associa-
tion has la unched a campaign de·
s igned not only lo block these
measures. but actually to weaken
the existing national gun law. the
1968 Gun Control Act. passed by
Congress after the assassinations
of Dr. Martin Luther King and
Sen . Robert Kennedy.
The ~RA i s backing a
m easur e that goes by the mis-
leading title, McClure-Volkmer
Federal Firearms Reform Act. It
actually is two matching bills.
S . 1030 b y Sen . James Mc·
Clure and H . R .3300 b y Rep.
Harold Volkmer. Astonishingly,
these measures now have 54
senators and 152 representative~
as cosponsors .
The e ffect of the so-called
"reform" act would be to extract
the few teeth in the modest exist
ing gun control law.
It would remove the require
ment that inte rs tate gun sales on·
ly be made by licensed gun
d ealers. making it possible for
a lmost anyone tu peddle guns
across state lines.
It would weaken existing
penalties for firearms law viola-
tions and make it easier for a
criminal to avoid a federal prison
sentence .
It would enable anyone. in·
duding criminals . ·to buy
h<1ndguns legally by simply fill-
ing out an application.
And it would des troy the
record-keeping system that now
enables police to trace guns used
in crimes.
How any of this would re-
motely benefit the "law-abiding
s portsman" so often touted by
the NRA is difficult to fathom.
We question whether the ex·
tent of support for these out -
rageous meas ures might be at-
tributed to the great financial
generosity of the NRA to con-
gressiona l campaign funds.
Alternatively it might be that
too many gullible members were
mis led by the word "reform·· in
the Htle of the bills and didn't
bother to read them.
In any case. the NRA is
ready to spend plenty more
money on the ir promotion, in-
cluding a television docume n-
tary.
Those who don't care to take
this step backward to pre-1968
days would be well advised to
write their senators and con-
gressmen and urge opposition to
S .1030 and H. R 3300
Do controls work?
Those who ins ist that "gun
control laws never work" may
have some explanation of the
following statistics. compiled by
Handgun Control In c . of
Washington. D.C.
Last year, according to the
.statistics. handguns killed:
-48 people in Japan
8 in Great Britain
•
34 in Switzerland
52 in Canada
-58 in Israel
-21 in Sweden
-42 in West Germany
10,728 in the United States
Obviously gun control laws
don't work perfectly. But it would
appear that \hey can have a cer
lain deterrent e ff ecl.
Opinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. ,Reader comment Is Invit-
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626-0560. Phone (714)
642~1.
L.M. Boyd/ Early alcoholics
In the 8th century epic poem
"Beowulf," the monster, Grendel
went to the mead hall every night for
12 years to devour drunken warriors.
Those stalwarts weren't powerful
enough to deal with Grendel. To get
s mashed in that place repeatedly
meant certain death, seemingly. But
the warriors went there anyhow, ror
the well-known one more drink.
Typical, typical. File this under
"Early Alcoholics."
What's the most widely reported
trivia statistic or all lime? So in-
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
quires a client. Probably the highest
wind ever recorded -231 mph. atop
New Hampshire's Mount Washington
In 1934.
Q . What's the latesuount
worldwide on babies born per
minute?
A. It's now 234. Asia, 136. Alrica.
41. Latin America, 23. Elsewhere. 34.
If a milLionaire is somebody with a
net worth of more than $1 rnJUlon,
you can say there are now about
520,000 of same in the United States
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
Tltom.s A. Murphlne
Editor
Barbara Krelblch
Editorial Page Editor
..• QUICK~ MONDM.Ef
TME FLIT fll .........
Brown's confidence solid
WA S..UNGTON Jerr} Brown. the
Don Quixote of American politics. was
supposedly the medfly's biggest victim.
llis opponents gleefull y predicted that
the confusion over s praying operations
against the pest would drive the last
nail in Brown's political coffin.
But the governor doesn't see it that
way at all. In recent interviews with my
associate Bill Gruver, Brown said the
reports of his poht1ral death were. in
Mark Twain's oft quoted phrase. "an
exc.iggeration ...
11£' is c·onf1dent of victory in next
} ear s race for the Senate seat now held
by S. I Hayakawa, and the main reason
for this confidenCl' 1s the anticipated
bloodbath over the Republican nom1na-
llon. Brown will happily hold their coats
while the various GOP candidates nail
away al each other over the next year
THE SITUATION seems made to or
der for a loner like Drown. In addition
lo llayakl:lwa , Republican contenders
lo date include President Reagan's
d<tught c r Maureen, Reps. Barry
Gold\V ater Jr and Paul McCloskey. San
Diego Ma yor Pete Wilson and
California state Sen. John Schmitz.
They represent all segments of the GOP
s pectrum, and everything they say
about each other can be recy<.'led by
Brown for the fall campaign.
While Brown relis hes the opportunity
provided by a badly divided Republican
Party, he's not counting on his own par-
ty for much help He denies charges
th<.t th e Dem ocrati c Party's
acknowledged weakness is his fault : 1t
has been in disarray for years, he con-
tcndi., \\1th som1• JllSltt•c
According lo Brown. Californians· al
legiance 1-. h1-.tor1t·ally to md1v1dual
polit1c1ans not to parties, and he's
count111g on that lie may he n.•garded
as a flake h~ 1 hl· rest 11f the C'ountry. but
('
-JA-CK-AN_D_ER-SD-N -~
men• eccentricity 1s nr1 great naw m a
~talt' that once had a press agent and a
tap chtnl·er contendin~ for thl' Senate
and elcNcd tht> tap dancer.
There's another reason for Brown s
npt1m1sm . "California i:-, a media
state." he s<1id ··vou have to relate to
mass mecha 1n order lo garn politi<'ul
credibility · And <.'ven his worst
enem1e:-, will tonl'ed<.' that Brown knows
how to work the media skillfully
MEDIA C'A M{>AIGNING can be ex-
pensive. but Brown si:11d he has already
raised $1.2 million for his Senate r ace
and will get more when he's actually
nominated. Mel:lnwh1le. of course, the
divided GOP will be s pending milhons
cm the primary campaign an expense
that Brown will large!~ be s pared
On the debit side. there arc issues
that would daunt a less formidable
polit1t1an
There is, first of all . the mt>dOy "The
growers and the farmC'rs. whom this ad-
mrnistralll)n has ser ved so well, ally
themselves with the Hepublit•ans and
s eize' upon th<.' medfl~ as fodder £or
tht.•tr political opposition," Brown said.
Hut dep1('l ing his critics as insect-eaters
docsn 't obscure the fact that Califor-
n 1 ans are upset by the medfly spraying.
Brown's tactic is to blame the federal
gcivcrnment for the medfl y mess, con-
tt•nding that he would have had the
s1tuat10n under C'ontrol if the feds had
JUst kl-pl out of it. It's a no-lose argu·
ml'nt If the federal program works,
thl're·s no way to prove that Brown's
wouldn 'l have done just as well , if it
falls, it wtm 'l be his fault
i\notht!r nt!gati ve issue. Lhe so· called
· rnmputPrgate" the improper use of
st.1lc t•nmputers fur political purposes
b~ Brown aides has already faded
from tht· public's memory, the governor
said It never had the makings of a ma-
Jor scandal anyway
AS FOR TH f. brief attempt in
Sat'ramento to impeach him. Brown
s hrugs 1t ·orr as '"grandstanding" that
backfired on its sponsors
Brown doesn't expect to win the
Senate scat by default. He plans to
make tt•c hnological progress the
pos1t1ve issue of his campaign. "Here 1n
Callfom1a. we have perhaps the na-
lrnn s greatest resource of technical
people and we simply haven't used it
enough,' Brown said. "We can once
again be C'ompet1t1ve in this world .. I
"':rnl lo talk about 1t. help it come about
and see it happen "
That's an issue well-s uited to
C:.il1fornia but il can also be ex-
µanded lo appeal to the entire nation.
~·or Jerrr Brown still has his eve on the
White Ilouse ·
Federal pay complaints exaggerated
Contendrng the cc1lrng on federal pa)
1s creating a brci1n dra10 ."
Congressm('n an· searching for a way
to lift the pa) ltd on governm ent
salaries without getting burnt by public
reaC'tion.
And reaction may be a mild term for
lhe wrath of the voters which C'Ould re
suit from Co ngress voting pay increases
to employees alrec.idy receiving salaries
of $50,000. an amount greater than the
income of 95 percent of the people.
But the' pressure is on from those at
thl-! top levels of government who com·
plain that the ceiling has caused a s1tua·
lion where aides and assistants are now
drawing a~ much pay as the heads of
agencies. This is lh£' result of the an-
nual cost of living percentage increases
granted federal e mployees ll keeps
raising the lower ranks up lo the pin
nacles of pay alongs ide their bosses who
are denied COL because of the pay hd.
Yet it is those annual percentage in
creases which have put the whole pay
s tructure out of kilter and afforded
many federal employees salaries com-
pletely out of lune with the private sec-
tor
Instead of looking for "a~s to
further compound lht• prolJlcm of ex·
t l·ss1ve govt•rnrnl'nl pa~ the con
gres .... men should bt> rC\'IC '-' tnJ: the ~·n
ltrt• payroll :-.c·hc•ml's, down~radrng thC'
fARL WATERS
s ubordinates' pay For even the: current
ceiling pro\'ides salaries \.\htt·h are ex
ccss1 ve The basis for terming lhem ell.
t•ess1ve goes n~ht bat'k to lht· undeni a·
hie ratt that 11 rcprl'Sl'nts an amount
grl'ater than that 1 t>t·1•1 \ Pll b)' ~5 pl.'rcent
Clf tht• {'tttit•ni. \\-ho OHl!>I Iii.I' taxes to
:.upport the i:ovrrnm<'nt
THE NATION·s founders. who pro·
vided that there shall be no nobility in
this country. never intended that those
on the public payroll should emerge as
the elite of society
In addition Lo the complaints about
com1>act1on of "alartes at the top. con
Trivialization of tennis
Enough talk about world wars, great
social issues, economic disasters,
famines and revolutions. Today, let's
talk about something that is really im-
portant. lhe trivialization or tennis.
The game of tennis is a refined
recreational activity among the
cultured classes meant to have a civiJiz.
GIORGI MAIR
ing influence on mankind. It originated,
I'm told in India, and was the mainstay
sport of the British aristocracy for
many years.
Admittedly, it was saddled with a
quaint scoring sy1tem that counted
Polnt.s u Love, 15, 30, (() and 45 instead
or 0, 1. 2. a. and 4. But, aside from that,
it wa graceful, tast and interesting as
contrasted with baseball that ls
awkward, slow and dull.
IN FACT, lb@ only way to alv@
broadcast announcera enouth to HY
durl.na your baslc somnolent bueball
bore wu to load the game ~ with
meaningless statis tics. "If Cosy
Kurtzenbaum hits this next pitch. it will
break the National U?ague record for
number of hits by a red-headed Latvian
born east of the Pecos during a game
where the consumption of beer in
section 39 exceeded 14 barrels and the
sum of the digits of the dale totalled
less th1U1 14."
And. that's what they are starting to
do to professional tennis as evidenced
by the recent U .S Open. While all
America was trying to carefully follow
the pressure play-off between Bjorn
Borg and John McEnroe, the an·
nouncers were beginning to lay on the
meaningless statistics.
We were told how fast the ball
traveled on important shots: the
number of successful first lry serves of
each player : the number of unforced er-
rors: the length or Borg's hair and the
shortne11R of McEnroe'" temper; and, on
and on into the boring night.
Tennis Js a game that can be seen. un-
derstood @nd enjoyed by almoet anyone
without adding \he Inanities or the
statistic blather. No, It ls not the end of
West.em Civilization as we know it, but
It marks a shift rrom the game to the
1tatlsUclan and the announcer. And,
that's not what it l'9 all about -
'
knt ions arc mad!! that the limit is re-
sull 1ng in a brain drain of government
executi\C!'> This is somewhat of an ex·
at:gerat1on
In s upport o f that contention
fi gures arc cited s howing 95 percent of
1 hl' l''ec·ut l\'es bet ween ages 55 and 59
rl't1red in the period between March
Hl78 and last August. But most of that
<.'Xit was due lo the generous retirement
pre)\ 1sions for federal service which
grunts a lop paid 30 year employee a
$28.000 annucil pension at age 55, still
~ 11u ng enough to go out and get other
£'111 ploymC'nt Another part of the ex-
l'<'uli ve group leavrng is the normal ex·
oclus which occurs in a c hange of ad-
ministratton
To argue th1:1t they a r e leaving
bt•cause uf low s alaries and op-
port11nit1cs for higher pay elsewhere is
strelchmg the truth For every federal
em ployt•c leaving for higher pay
elsewhen• thel'e are a hundred or more
clinging fast lo their Jobs which pay
lhl'm mon· than they could earn in
private industry.
NO BETTER demonstration showing
t hl' government already pays more than
it :-,hould can be found than in the case
of the air t'Ontrollers. For every dis-
s.it1s fied controller that went on strike
there were dozens willing lo lake the job
al less pay than the strikers were get-
ting If all of those now drawing $50,000 .
salaries were to quit tomorrow there
woulrl b<.> a surplus of a pplicants for
their jobs 1:1t half the pay
And s urprising as it may seem to the
federal fat cats. the replacements
would bC' JUSt as qualified and capable
as thost• now holding the jobs, if not
more !'lo. ..
The congressmen who fear reaction ir
they vote to raise the pay of federal
workers a re justiried in those fears.
Thos e who vote higher pay could be de-
reo ted al the next election.
GlDDIY GUI
Trouble with the projected "cbutity
centers" is that, much Uke a church.
the folks who need the message woa'l
b around to receive it.
J'JC.
I
~
EQUAL WORK -Patrice Munsell. 21. who 11pp11 11 1
claims she is no women's libber , nonetheless \1 1111 • 1:
decided to add strips of electricians' t a pe to n •
a roadsign previously mentioning onl~ the
I'. Pinocchio 100 i
/~ Italians turn out for pupp et ·s I
I I I
I
FLORENCE, Italy <APJ Pinocchio, the
wooden marionette with a nose as long as his lies.
turns 100 years old this year. Or is it 1983'
To avoid a lot of arguments not to mention I long noses -Italians launched a two-year centen~
'" Dial celebration that wiU keep everybody honest. •'9 Ice cream parlors dished out free sherbet to r ' thousands of children while Italy's president and
~ premier sent flowery messages to start th1•
4 festivities throughout the Italian province of
Tuscany.
I Pinocchio first appeared in print J uly 7, 1881.
I. by the pen of Carlo Lorenzini, a penniless
journalist who started a series fo r a children's
magazine. Two years later , the series was
, gathered into a book. Some date the puppet's birth t from the date the book was published, other from l . • the magazine pieces, thus the controversy ~ • Lorenzini took the name of Collod1. his natl\ e
village about 36 miles from Florence, which later
became a shrine of Pinocchiana with a permanent 1 garden recalling the puppet's adventures I On Sunday, Italy's defense minister donated .t
I • tent town for underprivileged children to sta)' 111
while visiting the garden. A northern Italian town
gave a skillet with a 20-foot handle to simul ate thl'
episode of the puppet's adventure where he wa~
mistaken for a fish by a fisherman and nearh
fried to death.
Florence's Communist Mayor Elio Gabbug
rs' gjani opened an exhibit of Pinocchi o books. dra"
ings and sculptures. It will be followed by a him
and theater festival, shadow plays and intern<1
tional scholarly seminars on the hidden melining-.
-theological and sexual, a ccordmg to tht·
t •• sponsors -of the book.
. At the opening ceremonies were Lu1g1 Com I • pagnone, who has written a ballad about the pup·
1 r ·pet, and two men who wrote books analyzing
I Ir: I
l I
I"
Pinocchio as a literary effort.
A plaque marks the house in Florence when·
Lorenzini lived and .wrote his book and store win
Shores Interiors
~lal • Commrrdal
--26SO Avon St , .._ So•t fro"'"· use 09oin
Newpon Beach 1922 HARIOR IL VO.
_,., 642-2255 ~ COSTA MESA -548-11 56 ~~~~~
l Before you buy any make of car,
1 • call me. I'll save you time & money.:
t'' Benefit from my bu~ng clout. I pur· office. Low overhead No salesmen 1
··MEN
WORK ING
Al' ........
>'to111 k r F'ou r women work on
1 1 (''' \\hi eh is installing c able
\\ <l .h
J , or '83 ,.
· hd ay celebration
Y. t l h :-t .it ues of Pinocchio for the
11 1t1on
hl·t·n Vl'rtf1ably translated into 87
111ud1 1h original editors claim 162.
-.LlhJ•'<'t of more than half a dozen
1 · one 1n lMO by Walt Disney, 400
'"" 111 Englis h editions, hundreds
• I llin11s and even a papal letter.
'hf' ... oft spoken smiling pope who
d 1 \ , 111 l 978. liked to tell his au-
l1011k of his "Letters to Pinocchio"
• 1.tl d1.1raclers in the dctys when he
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 22, 1981
for blind approved
DEAR READERS: A Federal Avladoe
Admla.lltratloa nalla1 effective Nov. 2t wUl
allow fteJl:lble travel CIDet &o be Hfely 1torecl
bat 1WJ wtUala reach of bllDd paaaen1er1.
Flexible canes are Ion&, Ulla, UJbtwelJbt and
u1111ly white or metalllc·colored.
~ t.be aew rule, canes caa be 1tored
under puaea1er seat• a1 lone aa they lay Oat
oa the noor, don't stick out In the alale, and
don't block a window exit.
The rule only applies to fiexlble travel
can~• used by the bllnd and CIOt &o heavier,
shorter walklnl canes. Telescoping or fold.Inc
canes already can be carried oo board and
stored ln the same fashion as carry-on lug-
1age.
Under the previous rule, Oexlble canes
were stored In cargo bins aometlmes lnac-
ce11lble to blind passengers. Four years ago
the National Federation or the Blind peti-
tioned against th.ls rule on the grounds that
bUnd passengers bad restricted mobiUty dur·
log nights and they couldn't retrieve Oeldble
~anes without help from night attendants.
Where to donate g lasses
DEAR PAT DUNN: Sometime ago 1 bad
an address for a place in the East where old
eye glasses and lenses and frames could be
sent for distribution to the needy I've lost the
address and have several extra pairs of
glasses I'd like to donate. Can you find out
where I should send them?
D.C .. Newport Beach
A YS has no address for the East but
Dr. Leon Axelrod or Laguna Beach bas been
collecting old prescription glasses and lenses
for years to distribute to the needy In
Ensenada and Tecate, Mexico, with the help
of these cities' Uons Clubs. Donations can be
delivered to Dr. Axelrod at 330 Park Ave.,
Suite 4, Laguna Beach.
Help for stroke viclitns
DEAR PAT DUNN : My father-in-law
had a stroke last year. He went through the
available physical therapy at that time and
made good progress, although he didn't re·
co\ler full use of his speech or the use of hll
right side.
Today, my mother-in-law and father·ln-
law are having emotional coplne problems.
Are you aware of any coUD1ellnl for stroke
victims and their spouses at minimal or no
cost? They are both on Social Security and
huve no other Income.
J .D.B., Newport Beach
The Orange County Cbap&er of the
American Heart A11oclaUon 1ponaor1 a
"Stroke Club" for stroke patients and tbelr
famllJes on the first and th1nl 1'1larlday1 of
each month at the UDlted Metlaodbt Clnuch,
1%741 Main &., Garden Grove. Tile lfoap It
very effective in helpin& famWH and pa·
tlents adapt their Uve1 and emodoaal reac-
tions to this new reality, accord.la& to a Heart
Association s pokeawoman, wbo says you can
phone 547-3001 for more Information.
Refund has~'t arrived
DEAR PAT DUNN : I sent in the re·
quired information about my family's Levi
purchases from 1971 to 1976. I still haven't
been reimbursed, according to California's
settlement with Levi Strauss & Co. I know
that a small amount of money is involved,
but I do want lo get what I have coming. Can
you give me the address where claims were
filed ? I've misplaced it.
L.K .. Fountain Valley
Write to Refund Disbursement Center,
P .O. Box 15396, Sacramento 95813. lnclade
the Information provided ID your orl&lnal
claim form and let A YS know what bappeaa.
<:111 a problem" Then wn te to Pat
Dunn Par will cul red tape getting
the answers and action you need lo
s11/1X' inequities m go~mment and
business \1a1I yoJr questions to Pat
Dunn Al Your ServtC'e. Orange Coast
D<11l11 /'1lfJI P () HoI 15611. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As
man 11 lt'ller.~ <1s po.~sible unll he answered. but phoned
rnqume~ ur 11,llers not mcludmg tile reader's full •
11umt'. addrt'ss and husmess hours' phon• nurAber
ca111101 hf• c1m.~1dned Tltr.~ column appears daily er·
cepl .'iurUkll/.\ "
4
TAX FREE
I . chase cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions Get prices from us.
l. 100 for corporate fleets. We can ob-any make of car Then compare for tr.rr.-::::;;:;;;==!!!!
lain substantial savings for quali-yourself (And tell your friends l
fled individnls. We do the Pfite Call. 9 to 5. Robt Hixson Equipment IT'S A SIGN OF THE TIMI.S. Today, people are not as
l1 11Herned with how much money they earn as with how much
mlmev they are allowed to keep after taxes. The fi nancial goal
of the so's 1s d ear .. earn the highest yield and pay the least tax!
.~ sllopping & haggling, Ours is a busy Co. ask for Virginia 714 645-4ml
• We we• I II .... • ...._wide piool of Nlloll _.,
e ....,_ te ... • lit Hie flit-lltg of -HIXT chlm.tg
, . • -·•·~WlttlTerror'torrAY/CAILET.v.
I : -di)
I • : ~~"'.]' l, lJLi»Ac1 .. .c;--•
I
I I
I
I • I>
, ....
:~ •••••••••• t714t957-0282···········=·
Transcendental Meditation®
Program
Ushering In The
Age Of Enlightenment
In This Generation
NEYtR WAX YOUR CAR ... AGAIN
"*'8" IT!
FOR IMFORMA TI~ CALL
754-6404
MIMGAUTO
llAUTY CEMTIR
1110 r<>MDllOSA Aft. COSTA ...au. OH HWOH l OIAT 7»tl'M
, llAtNOllll«
AT NEWPORT BALBOA, THERE'S A PLAN FOR EVERY
~AVINGS INVESTOR. Everyone has different financial goals.
\t Newport Balboa, our Savings Counselors'are ready to help
l'.1l h 111div1dual determine w hich of o.ur many investment
,tt·wunt:. will meet their needs.
It m.1y only be one, but more likely it will be a combination of
three t•r four accounts-all working together to safely meet the
inv~tment goal of the 80's ... Earning the highest yield and
paying the lea!>t tax
Here are rust two of our more popular accounts. Ask a Savings
Counselor for details:
T YPE MINIMUM fNVESTMENT
DEPOSIT FEATURE
:\lnnt'y MM(..e1 $5.000 Earn high rates cm
insured accounts for l'mtit <. hC'dc." Au ount
a fixed period of time;
to access your funds,
simply write a chttk.
E.lrn high. insured yield
thats free of ftderal
mcome tax
CURRENT YIELD
Up to 16.5%
U .61%
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£. ___
..
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./ -••
··fWTN~~ HNClli Tt49 ..UCIH ,.,,
JatOll ~-Jf and ~ Of the Hatlonll
I TUBE TOPP~RS 1elw.li to Clalnl I cllvlM
lnfklenol 'PO'
~THON
A COit*!,.,, '-1 and IOUI'
COft\IO oonl•tanll #llO
compate agllntl o~e
lllOChlf a.re IMh.lted In Ihle
~eel OOmeCIY 0-
aflOW,
, ly" 11tea) ..... Donl9¥y,
Cerota O~.
• •~ """ .. r-,,.,,,.. (I Ht) John
II I .,I>\\
-~.. , •• NIW9
t(UNQ""
c.in. .... ,_ <IM•h. bOth
M I boy and 11 I man, u
the peat "*9M wtlh Ille
MUie
I TMAIUM HUNT
M•A•t•H
A lootblll lleto Cleet• a
perp1ex1no peycllOloglcal
ptoblem IOr Hawtleye •nd
B J, when he 11111f.,t •
wound 111111 _... .nd Ill•
ear-
l HAWAII FIVE.()
G El.fCTRIC
OOMPAHV(A)
()) C88NEW8 0 ABC NEWS
Q)N8CNEW8
(R)ON VACATION WITH
MICKEY MOUSE ANO
FNEHD8
Animated. Jlmlny Crlckel
lrlM hi• hand II produclno
Na own TV lhOw, ~I first
mutt track down Illa vaca-
llonlng tiara.
8:30 l'iJ 8ULL.8EYE G» 'rifE MUPPET8
GUML LOretta Lynn
9 KCET NEW88EAT
Host: Clet• Robena.
6Ii) STUDIO SEE
"Cobbler" Two cobbl.,•
lhOw kl<I• hoW to. make
their own lhoes, an annual
jousting match In South
Carolina (R)
(J)Q!NEWS 19l 8AAHEY MILLER
While Irate citizens com-
plaln ot pornography be4119
dlspl•yed at • dlttln·
gulthed an gall«y, Barney
•nd hit wife face a marltal
crisis.
@ MOVIE
1't * * "The lu1 Of The
Mohk:ans" ( 1936) Ran-
dolph Scott, Henry Wiicox-
on Bued on the llory by
James Fenlmora Cooper
Fon Wiiiiam Henry 11
attacked by Indiana du!1ng
the Frencn and Indian War.
8:a6 IJ EDC'TOfUAL
1:00 8 C88 MEWS D H8CHEW8 8 HAPPY OA't'S AGAIN
Richie, Ralph. Potsui. and
Ferule rece4ve notleet to
report tor Army physicals D A8CHEWS l'iJ YOU ASKED FOR IT
Q) OOCXWI DUGOUT
• JOKER'S WILD
8l) OVEAEASY
GuHt: writer Charlotte
Chandler (R) 0
KIDPOWER Dick Van Dyke is the on·
ly adult In a comedy-mus ical about
.. adults in training" called children in
"How to Eat Like a Child" tonight at 8
on Channel 4. <See s tory below>.
8 1.AV'E.AHE AHO
SHIRLEY AHO COMPANY
"Shirley'• Operetlon" fJ EYEONLA.
Hoell Inez PedroH, Paul
Moy« Featured a IOok al
the latest warm-up ctolh·
Ing, board a IUb·ChNer
plane. a IOok at the latest
craze In cigar• 0 MATC+4 GAME
G) BASEBALL
Lo• Angeles Oodoers ••
San Franclaco Glents
ti) TIC TAC DOUGH
@E) MACNEIL / LEHREA
REPORT
6Ii) NEWS
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE
A quadrlpteglc'• remark·
able family; a Detroit
houael\Old that receives TV
programs from all ovw 1"41
wor1d, Chef Tall prepares
coq .., vln. Vicki Lansky
discovers "under a dollar"
$p0f'la ltema
@I YOU ASKED FOR IT
(t)MOVIE
• • • "Manny's Orphans
( 1980) Jim Balter. Malachy
McCoun The bOyl at an
0rphanaoa rl•k their <:hart-
tv lund In an attempt to
help lhelr soccer c9ach
pay back e $40.000 Clebl
to the mob
RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
Barry Tompkin• and Tim
McCantef recap divisional
baMball s11nd1ng1 and
1nterv1-somtt of the
gama·a loP pt1yera
~WELCOME TO MIAMI,
CU8AN08
Fl0rlda 1s clouded wJlh
prejudice anel problems for
Mika whO mull come 10
grips wnn his Cuban 11¥1-
(ir.,.ovtE
*'It "Saturn 3" ( 1980) Kirk
Oouglu Fatrah Fawcett
A peir or se1en11a1s working
tn a space llatlon are
menaced by a mad gonlus
and Illa randy robot 'A
tlon Ill brought under con·
tr()( by thrae ,,,.,,
CD MOVIE • * *'~ "The Mlstllae Of
October" (Plt1 1) ( 1974)
William Devane. Manin
Sheen. Event• within the
Kennedy Admlnlalrallon
during Ille 1962 Cuban
MIUlle Crlall ere ~led SI 6Ii> NOVA
"Bllndnoll. Five POlnll Ot
View" The ellona ot live
~ struggling to Hv•
tl'lelr vision lhrougn druga,
surgery, counseling and
determination are
explored with them and
!Mir dOciorl (R)Q
(tfJ MOVtE * * "From Hell To VletO·
ry" (1979) George Hamil-
ton, G80tQ41 Peppard Four
ltllnds from d lllarant
countries muat leave Parle
In 1939 to fight tor their
Individual countries tn
Wor1d War II 'PG'
($l 8tZARRE
John Bynor allows you
things stranger than trutn,
large< tnan Ille, and Lanier
than anything you've aYer
seen
@MOVIE
• • 'Valentino ( 197111
RuCIOlf Nureyev. MIChelle
Ph11tlps The Illa and loves
ot Rudolph Valenllno, the
movtos' legaN!ary male
MX symbol, are recall.a
by acquaintances anel
"scoop" ·hungry reporters
11ter hos untimely de1tn
R'
8:30 fJ ®) 1.AVERHE &
SHIRLEY
Laverne and Shirley's
nelQhbor Rhonda Lee
goaos the roomma1e1 Into
1 game or truth. (R) O
($)1.A~·A·THOH
A comedien hoet and lour
comic con1e1111111 whO
compete ag11n11 one
anotnar are featured In this
uncensored comedy geme
show. 6Ii) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT 1:00 fJ CJ) MOVIE 8:36 (0) HEART, SOUL AHO
Pl.A8TIC (TIME
APPROXIMATE) ()) TIC TAC DOUGH
lI§J ENTEn'AIHMENT
TONIGHT
Q! THE MUPPETS
GUMt: Linda Laonn
®DOUGLAS
MACARTHUR: THE
DEF1ANT ~EAAL
Hal HolbrOOk narrat .. thl•
documentary exploring
MacArthur's powerlul
<:harecter 11\at both made
and deatroyed his car-
©) MOVIE
• • "Coast To Coast"
( 1980) Dyan Cannon. Rob-
ert Bl•ke A runaway
nou-tla and • tcrappy
trucker haullng cattle
coast to coaat become the
IAlfget of a wlld crc>St·
(;OUl'llry ch-. 'PG'
7: 1&. OOOOER PRE-GAME
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hoata: Steve Edwards.
Melody Rogers F .. tured
a tour of Howard Hugnes'
pleGel ol buslnest In Los
Angele•; a took et wnat fl'•
Ille• to be on the road with
rock pet'lorm«a D FAMILYFEUO
CHANNEL LISTINGS
E> KNXT (C.BSI
0 KNBC (NBC I
0 1<1L A llnd I
(I) KABC IABC I
0 KFMB IC.BS!
6 KHJ TV tlnd I
IIl) KCST (Afl(I
(I) KTTV (Ind I
II) KCOP TV !Ind I
ft) KC.ET (PBSI
CD KOCE IPBSI
* • '"' "Salem's Loi"
( 1979) David Soul, Jemes
Muon A novella! returns
to his boyhood hOme to
put en end lo troubled
memories bUI find• that •
slnlater myatary shroud•
hit town (A)
D Q!PAOJECT
PEACOCK
"How To Eat Like A Chlld
Flltaen youngllers join
Olclt Van Oyl<e lor a unique
IOok 11 I.he manners, lan-
guage and loglc of "adults
In training."
8 MOVIE ••'it "The Dion Broth-
.,.. .. ( 19741 Stacy Keach,
Frederic Forrest. Two
brot"-<s head Wast In _,ch of IN>fe exciting
uvea .. 0U1laws 8 ®J HAPPY DAYS
Howard's new bowllng
panner Clecldw that How·
ard 1a tl(>hl up her allay (R)
~MOVIE
• • '" "Three The Hard
Way ( 1974) Jim Brown,
Fr-ad wu11amaon A myst•
rlOua genocide organize-
O On TV
l Z TV
., HBO
c 1(10('!1'1••1
t t WORI NY NY
IP IWTBS1
l IESPN 1
s (Show11m"1
0 SPOll1ghl
0 tCabll' NPW\ Nf'lwork)
9:00 a a Mov1E
• • • "C>n, Godl" I 1977)
G80tge Burns. John Oen·
var God lpf>eatS before •
...,petmarkat manag« and
eonv1nee1 him 10 eprNd •
m4KUge of good w111 to
Skeptics (R)
fJ l!ll THREE'S
COMPAHY
Helen. Infuriated by Stan-
ley, seet.a IOI-from
Ralph Furley (R) 0 re MOVIE
a a • • "The Spirll OI St
Louis" ( 19571 J-SI-·
art. Murray Hamllton In
1927. Charles A. Lind·
betgh t>ecorMS the first
man to ll'f nonat09 across
the Atlantic Ocean to Par-
le.
(Q)MOVIE
• • ··Mountain Men"
(1980) cna111on Heaton.
Brian K•llh Two lur
trappers enjoy the frM-
dom or the wllder.-In
the lu1 ltw years before
the enetoachment ot cMH·
zatlon 'R'
(J) ll1E WACKY WORLD
OF JONATHAN WINTERS
Host: Or.on Walles
(%)MOVIE * • '"1 "Stay Al You Ara"
( 1980) MarC4111o Maatrooan-
nl, Nulasal• KlnSlcl A
married, ml0dle-90ed man
emt>arka on an affair with •
1-.-age glrl who may be
related to him
t :30 fJ ®) TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
Henry 11 Ored tor being
unpatriotic when eo.mic:
Cow takes on the White
House IRl
TI!Mtre of the OMI I*
l0tm a drllll'ltltlo vw-'on Of
a Aobett r roll poem (R)
MOYll • • .. 194 ,.. ( 1979) JQt\rl
a.iu.n1. T~o Mlf\ine
AJtll IN bOMl>ing Of Peatl
H11b0t. ~thern caltlor-
nle cMl4ane and mlll1ery
l*ec>nnel rMCt wttll unbr ~
died par\lc fO -of • ~ "'** In lllel# own MOkpt:d 'PO'
1CtOO •••• Nlwe 111 HAAT TO HAfllT w.,.. ttl9 Hant .,.. v-
llonlng In ......... J9nnlfw
acdd41111ally C'IPIUr.. I
murd11 on film. (R) Q .PtaDm
"VOCM De YlftHI Buena"
All eumlnallon Of the dH•
tetent L.ltln groupe. thW
h111ory, ouatom1 •NI cul-
lure It pr-ted
(H) IT NONO AOOM
ONLY
"The Magle 01 The Start"
Miiion 8er1e llOlll thla
ap«;lal with ...,c>«•tart
Lucilla BaN, Jeck Lenunc>n.
Walter Matthau end Dick
Van P111en performing
magiGal lrlcka Ind comedy
rou1"-
10:30 G) HEWS
• INOEP£HOENT
NETWOAK HEWI flD FAST FORWARD
''Security" Repotl• on the
mlcroelectronlc revolullOn
and the multitude of new
syatema for sec:urlng pao
pie,~· Ind prop-
erly are IHtured
6Ii) ll1E PRIME OF MISS
JEAHBROOIE
"Dorothy And Juliet"
tmprtlSMd by Dorothy All·
sopp'a natural grace. Mias
Brodie bellevaa lh•I het
atuOenl may have a greet
Mura u a dancer (R)
@MOVIE
•• "1941" (19791 John
Beluahl. Toshlro Mllune
Atter the t>omblng of Peart
Harbor. Sou1hern C111t0r-
nla clvlllans and mllilary
pereonnal react wHh unbri-
dled panic to ,_. of a
Jepa,,_ attack In their
own t>ackyard. 'PG'
10:46 (%) MOVIE
• • • • "Adam'• Rib"
( 111491 Spencer Tr1cy,
Katharine Hepburn A
mureler trial creates havoc
In Ille marrlaoe of a wom-
en lawv-< and her hu•·
banO, an usiatant dlstrlc1
attorney
11:00 IJ D fJ ()) tIDI at
HEWS 8 SA TUfU>A Y HIOKT
Host Paul Simon Guest
George Harrison. 0 HEWL YWED GAME
Q) MOVIE
• • "Tarzan And The
Huntreaa" ( 1947) tlOllnny
Welumullar. Brenda
Joyce Tarzan tries to atop
a zoological ••~lflon
-.1 to the jungle 10 ~
lure animate for various
~OOI
ti) llEHHYHIU
Benny's Weal Country
Charac1er h.. lhe bee1
ldvlce a tether can give lo
Illa ton
II) DICK CAVETT
Guest: John Gielgud (P811
1 of 4)(R) CID RACE FOR THE
PENHANT
Barry Tompkin• and Tim
McCarver recap dlvl~al
baseball 11andlng1 and
lntarvl-aome ot the
~·11opptayw1
W)MOVIE
•·~ "Woman By Night"
( 1978) Ajlla Wiiton, Lor-
,..... OeSelle A young
man wno dr .. ma ot an
lnetedlble woman find• his
tantuycomlng true ·R'
11:30 fJ ()) AL.ICE
Allee ClltcOYWI thal her
lllta hutblnd left • aluble
lntWrance policy. but wno
It the beneficiary? (R)
D Q!TONIGHT
Host Johnny Carson
Gueat: Bun Reynold•
D O A8CHEW8
HIOHTUHE l'iJ LETS MAKE A DEAL
ti) 8T AHLEY SIEGEL 8il KCET HEW88EAT
Host· Clete Roberta
~ CAl'TIOHED A8C
N£W9
(t)MOVIE
• • • "Cousin Couaine"
( 1975) Marie Cht1111ne 8af.
rautt. Victor l.anou• Two
French lamlllet wllh mlO·
die Cllll Vlluel .... apecl
tnelr chllOren are having
an attaJr 'R'
®MOVIE
• • • "Alrplanel" ( 19801
Robert Hays, Julle Hager·
ty Aller an alrli.-'1 cr-
falla 10 lood poisoning, •
narvou1 former war pilot la
l CBS 8 8:00 -"Salem's Lot." Talented
Davld Soul and James Mason star In a
vampire tale set i n modern New
Enlland.
KOCE 9 and KCET @ 8:00 "Blind·
ness: Five Points or View." Five pe<>ple
try to save their vision with medical
treatmenU;.
NBC 8 9:00 -"Oh , God' .. John Denver
is a hapless prod"-ce clerk who rinds God
in the form of George Burns ln a movie
of miracles.
Pfeaeed Cito .-YfOa and
muat contend with on-
bOerel lly.1erla, a Mcratlve
c;ontrOI tower and cllche•
lllled memorlea 'PG'
MOYIE * * 8 "Norlh Oaltu FOr·
ty" ( 1979) Nick Notre, Mac
01v11 Grouplea, ptll-pop-
p4ng and d-nlghl penytng
begin to take their toll on
two 1un-1ov1no but o--
111e-h111 too1b111 pllyera. 'R'
~ JM>NIGtfl-
12:00 8 MOVIE
• • "The Brothers
O'Toole'' ( 1972) John
Aalln. Pal Carroll A pair of
alick drlttara rlOtl Into the
aleepy. bfoken-oown min·
Ing town of MOiybdenum,
Colorado. In the tll90s
D 0 FANTASY ISLAND
T1ttoo purch-a tantuy
ol 1111 own, and IWo glrla
rallve the CMI W81 ere In
an anemcit to find their
own Rhett Buller (R) 0 MOVIE • *'"' "Hudaon's Bay"
(IMO) Paul Muni, G-
Tlerney Fur trapper•
found the 1ucr111ve HUOaon
Bay Company In 17111-cen-
tury North America. CD AOOKIEB
Two hillblHlel blame a
coun•ry-tetn singer tor
the d .. 1n or their alllar
12:05 IJ ()) MCCLOUD
McCloud triea 10 p<otect a
union olflclal and at the
aame time lra<:k down a
hOOket WhO paints her cil-
ent• blue (A)
12:30 a a TOMORROW
Gueatt: Cathy Laa Croaby,
the rock group Air Supply.
Brill•l'I author Jon1th1n
Ra ban.
G) MOVIE
• • • "Anatomy or A
Murder" ( 1959) J1mea
s1-1r1, 0... Gazzara A
amall-lown attorn ey
datenels In Army lieuten-
ant wno 11 ac:culed of klll-
lng 1 men auspecied of
attacking hit wtte
@MOVIE * * "C>n Godl Book II"
( 19110) George Burna.
Suzanne PIMhette. God
returns to Earth and
<:hoosea an Innocent
young glrl to spread the
meaaage that He tllll
e1tlal1, !hough she It the
only peraon ~ can IC1u·
ally -Him 'PG'
(%)MOVIE
• • • 'C1ddyahac11"
( 1980) 8111 Murray, Rodney
Oangerllel<I The demenl·
ed ground ... keep« of •
1w1nky country <:lub waoea wer agalnal the
gophers Inhabiting hta 1ur1.
'R'
1;'00 ., lfCIS'EHDENT
~t4JWS
• • • •;, "Murder On The
Orient Expr ... " (1974)
Albert Finney, Lauran
B.call e.tQian sleuth Her.
cule POlr01 lnve&llgllN the
murelef ol an ""-lean
lndualr'lllllal aboard a lu•.
urloua and famoua train
1:108 ~
• • ''OeaG Men On The
Run" ( 19751 Petet Grave.,
~llherlne JUSllce When I
man talt• over tor• mur-
d«ed teOerel offlc:jaf. he
9Ullpec1a that the death
wu pert of a taro-plot
Involving the ...... 1n111on
of I ptealdenUal candi-
date
9 NEWI
1:ao CD MOVIE ••'A "Sangi Sangi You're
Deed" (19&$) Tony Ran·
dell. Senla B«gar An
A merican In Morocco
bee-entangled In the
llChllnM of aplee ptotllng
~ Ille United Nlllona
(C)MOVIE
• • • • "The Conforml11"
( 1971) Jaen-Loula Trlnllg·
nant, Dominique Sand•
Directed by Bernardo B«·
lolUCCI A plllfoeop/'ty PfO•
faasor atruggie. to main-
tain aome Mmblance of
normalcy amid the terror•
of Fuclat llaly rn 1937 ·R'
(S)MOVIE
• • "~turn 01 The Dra-
gon" ( 1972) Brue. Lee.
Chuck NOrrll A manlal
ana o•pert )o(irneya from
Hong Kong lo Rome to
help a friend who la In trou-
ble with the mob 'R'
t:ll6 D HEWS
2:000 EHTEATAINMEHT
TONIGHT 8 MOVIE **'it "Sllvet Loda' ( 195.4)
John Payne. Dan Duryea
As a wedding "pr1941nt,"
an innocent men !Inda hlm-
setf IOCCuaed ot murdet
and muat f-to exonerate
h•maelf.
a!HEW8
@ MOVIE
• • •;, "Tne Outsider"
( 1978) Sterling Hayden,
Craig Waaaon. A young
ldeallal trevels to Nort,..,n
Irelan<! to j<>ln Ille lrllll'I
Republlc'a struggle tor
lnOepenOence 'R'
2:1& fJ HEWS
(%)MOVIE • *'"' "Stay As You Are"
( 19801 Marc.tlo Mutrolen·
nl, Nutaula Klnakl A
marrled, mlddle-ageel man
ernbar1ta on an affair with a ,_,.-0-gl!1 Who m1y be
related lo him. 2:308 H£W8 ~-HEWS 2:46 8 EDITORIAL
2:50 8 MOVIE *•'It "The Lawyer"
( 1970) Barry Newman,
Harold GoulO. A doctor IS
acqulttec:I 11ter a MCOnd
trlal tor hla wlle'a murder
3:00 CS) BIZARRE
John &ynet' ahoWS you
lhlnga 1tranger than lrvlh,
large< than Ille, and anlar
than an)'lhlno you've ever -s:a g NEWS
• MOVI£'
• • • "The Hired Hand"
(19711 Piiar Fonda. War-
ran Oat• A men ratums
10 his family 11111 seven
year• only to leave again to
help hie friend S!308 MOYIE
"Thie Vanishing Land"
(1973)
(C)UOVIE
• • • • "R•urrectlon"
I 19801 Ellen Burstyn, Sem
Sheperd. Alter a -fAtal
auto accident, a women
llnd1lhatshe1'181 Ille abill·
ly 10 ...... 011111$ bu1 .. pef·
MQUted becauM of her
UO 001* W/!CfCY WOftl..O
~ JOMAn4AN WINTIM
Hoe•: Orton w .....
CZ)MCMI
• ••• "Adam'1 RIO"
(1949) Spencer Tracy.
Katharina Hepburn A
ml.lfder t11af C1Wiea llaYOCI
"' the memaoe ot • --111 lawyer and her Ill;-.
bal>d, an aulatanf Cllttrkt
tltt«ney 4:~(1)MCMI
••• "Seeln• Uk• Old
Tlmea" ( 1910) Goldle
Hawn, a-y Ch.... A eon i-i.cs tewytir le torn
~'*~·· hutblr'ld·furned•b1nk
robber and her upllght
~· llu9bend who '• running tor California
1tt0tneygenetal 'PG'
9MOVIE
• • • "AU Thal Juz"
(1979) Roy Scheid«, J ...
tlCa Lange. The tumultu·
oua llfe of a p<otaaaJonal
danoar la followed from
auccesa on the at age 1 o
pe<aonll cr1-'R'
Wedne•da11••
Day• inee 1nol'le•
&:46 (%} ••'it "HoneyauckMI
ROM" ( 1980) Wiiiie Nelson,
Dyan Cannon Wl\1le on
tour. a Ta•.. country-
westarn 11noer becomes
lnvOlved wHll the aeducllva
daughter of his a;Oe!llCk
aven though l\e 11111 loves
hit ally·ll·hOme wile 'PG
8:00 ~) • "Sarah And The
Street w ..... ' Ce Ce
Oonoughe, Barbara Grusn
A typlcal IMn·aga girl Is
confronted on th<! street
by 1 stranger who ptacea •
watch In her hand and says
she must pay by lomorrow e:so D •• "King Arthur. The
Young War Lord" Oliver
Toblu. Michael Gothard
King Arthur learns lhe las·
aona ot ma.Jlhood While
iead1119 his troops Into bat-
tle against Ille Saaona
'PG
7:00 (C) * 8 "The Kid From
Not-So-Big" ( 1978) Jen-
nifer McAlllster A l:?-yaar·
old girt finds he(Mll In and
out of trouble Whtie run·
nlng tile town newspapef
'G'
1:00 (S) • * "Chandlar" 1197 t I
Warren Oalaa. Leslie
Ceron An ••·Security
guard, now acting as prl·
vate eye, Is aet up tor a
murda< lrarna wtlen he
accec>IS an Ullgnment IO
gu1rO a s111e'1 witness. D • • "Oh Godl Book II"
( 19801 George Burn a,
Suanne Pleahene God
returns to Earth and
cnooaes an Innocent
young girl to spread the
message that Ha 11111
e•llll, though She ti Ille
only person who can actu-
aUy -Him 'PG'
t:OO (C) • * • "Las Girls"
( 1957) Gene Kelly, M11V
Gaynor An American
mualcal show hits the
European circuit when
compltcationl ltlM
10:00 ti) • • "Jungle Gents'
( 1954) Bowery Boys.
Petrick O'Moore When II
Is O•IGOveted thll one of
the Soya can tocata dia-
monds by smell, lhey are
sent to Africa
(-sl • • • "l ea G1rls"
(1957) a-Kelty. MIUI
Gaynor. An American
musical allow hits the
European circuit when
compllcaUona a•IM 0 •• "19'1"(1979)
John Beluanl, Toshlro
Mllune. Aller the bombl119
of Pea.rt Hart>or. Southern
Callfornll CMllana and mll·
ltery peraonnel react with
unbrlOlec:I panic to news of
a J~ 1ttack In their
own bad<yard 'PG'
, ,:00 0 • • "'1 "Curea OI The
Wayne, Ctwole Undtl. A COWtao1 t1Clilt 14 the ,_,.
of • ~ WOtnlfl wflo ""' ~ tlWMlerled with the
lo.t Of hit rlr'IClll. ~·**'"A Uttll
Aomanff" ( 1919) l •v·
r-OllYlll, Ollww Lene
Alt l6d«ly -11\Jet jolne two )'Oll(l9 runawaya In
loY9 on a m.o 111111 ICfoae
IM Euf~ OOr'ltlnene
wftti tN Chlldfen'• l*enl•
tl'ld Ule poiioe In hol put•
aull. 'PG'
I -AFTERHOON-'°• **'Ii "V.,,ltlled" (Par1 2) ( 11170) Rloll11d
Widmark, Skye Aubr~
• ••• "TlleH11ty
HHrl" I f950) Roneld
RMQMI, PatrlCMI Heel
••• "l.<><*11-*ln
Anger" ( 1959) Claire
BIOOm, Ric.hard Burton.
Bued on Iha play by Jolltl
Oaborna Al the IHI
moment. • man ~· 111a1 he love& anCI "-I• hie
wife. CV .,..• .. ,900 .. c19111
Ro.. De Niro, Donald
Sut~ The day-10-
day 1111 Of IWO Very dllfer-
ent 20-th <*'ltury Miiian
famlllaa la por1rayed. 'R'
I :00 (Cl ....... "The Prlaoner
Of Second Avenue" ( t978)
Jack Lemmon, Anne Ban·
croft Baaed on Ille play by
Nell Simon An advertising
e•ecu• rve IOMt his )ob and
n1a aan11y becauw ol the
receaalon Ind the hectic
Manhattan pace. 'PO'
Sl • • "Cllandiet" ( 1971)
Werren Oatea, LH ll•
Caron An ex-security
guard. n-acting u pri-
vate eye, II M1 up for a
murder frame when lie
accepts an ualgnment to
~ard a a111e·1 witness
2:00 D •• "The Abdication"
(1974) Liv Ullmann, Pet11
F1ncn Becauea of hef lo\19
for a Cardln•I, Queen
Christina cau-• atlr
throughout Swec:len by
abdicating end convening
10 Cathollclsm In the 17th
century 'PG
3:00 lt' * * ''Shipwreck"
( 1978) Rob«! Logan, Mikki
Januson·Olton. A widow-
er, his two daughters, a
repor1er anCI a runeway
are stranded on an •llolal·
od •aland aher encol.tnler·
Ing a vlotent storm 11 M8 ·o·
3:30 0 * * '"1 ' Rogue Male'
(1979) !tater O'Toole. John
StandlnQ
(S) • • • "Return From
Witch Mountaln" ( 1977)
Be1te Davia, Cllrlllopller
l ee A power-mad arlato-
crat and hla greedy ternale
<:Ohort attempt to uploll
the supernatural abllillea
of two children from outer
apace lor lhelr own evil
purposes 'G'
4:00 0 • • "l<1no Mhur. The
Young War Lord" Oii..,
Tobias. Mlch•al Gothard.
King Arthur leama the lel·
sons ol manhood wtllle
leading hla tr0091 Into b91·
tie aoa1n11 the Suona
'PG'
4: 16 (?} * * 'h "Honeysudlle
Roae" (1980)Wlllie HeWM>n,
Dyan Cannon Wlllle on
tour. a Tei.as counlry·
western singer becomN
Involved with the MdUC11ve
daughlet of his tklelclclc
even thOUgll he a11H loves
hlf 111y-a1-11ome w11e 'PG'
6:00(t).• "Serth And The
Street W....," Ce Ce
OonOllQl!e, Barbati Grutll.
A typk:al ,_,.age glrl ts
confronted on the atrMI
by a at.ranger wflO ~a
watch In her hand and aays
11\e musi pay by tomorrow.
&:30 D •It •'it "Murcter On
The Orient E•preH"
( t1174) Albert Finney. Lau-
ran BacaH Belglen lleuth
Hercule P()(rot lnveatlgal•
I he mur d4lr ol an American
lndualrlalltt aboard • lu•·
urlous and f1mou1 train
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batluk
~TH16 SHORE
~E COSMOS CAUS ..
ANO IHI! MOST INIRIGUIN~ GUe'.SilON WE
i;..cE is •••
Wl-10 IS
PAYING FOR 'THESE
CAL.L.6f
Kids study up on the fine art of childhood
By JERRY BUCK
A~T.....,_.,._
LOS ANGELES -If you can remember play-
ing hooky, annoying your sister or getting sent to
your room, here's a special ror you. Dick Van
Dyke stars in "How To Eal Uke a Child," adapted
by writer-producer Judith Kahan rrom the book by
Della Ephron. Channel 4 will broadcast the
"Project Peacock" special tonight at 8.
Van Dyke is sort of the guest adult among a
cast of 15 young people who humorously and
musically examine such weighty Issues as ''bow to
practice the violin," "bow to laugh hysterically"
and "how to beg for a dog."
Miss Kahan turned to adapting the book after
spending a solid year working on a pilot that didn't
stll.
"I came away feeling why should I ever work
again, let alone for television," she said. "I was
discouraged. Why try to write another comedy
after that experience."
Then the people at MTM Enterprises, where
Miss Kahan had worked both as an actress "Doc"
and "Mary" and as a writer-producer, suggested
she look into "Project Peacock."
·'They said it was a chance to do what I want-
ed and. not have any interference from the
network " she said. "I went home and started
looking Utrough my collection of children'• books.
One of them was 'How To Eat Like a Child,' which
I'd gotten as a gift.
''The main thing was how do you take a book
that's mainly a book of lists -bow to torture your
Anchortnan belittle~ ratings race
NEW YORK (AP) -Anchorman Dan Rather
say1 he'• oot oblivious to the ratings, "but I'm
rat.her bemused by au the attention that goes with
it ••
· 1111 comment.I came after the CBS "EveniQ&.
Hews." wh.lcb b• ancbon, rell to lut plue ln tbe
ratiiP f« t.be lint time ever. · ·u cnaalltJ doesn't 1e11," Rather aaid Wedi?~·
day "I clun't now what we cc do about tbal Tbe late.at A.C. Nlelseo fisqra 111 CBS
ft•lthed behind NBC and ABC in the ratlnp com·
peUtJan f« nlpt.ly newt In the week of Sept. ·'1·11,
s ix months after Rather r eplaced Walter
Cronkite.
CBS dominated the rivaJ networks in the last 16 years that cronk.ite had the Job of anchorman.
Since March 9 Cron.kite hu concentrated on his
"Unl•erte" sclenee aeries and bu taken • vaca·
lion.
lo Rather'• ais moot.ha on the job. CBS~ e•e-
nlnc news prosram took. ftnt place 1n tb• ratinp
every week but three, and ont of U.O.e Uma ,.u
wben Ratber was on ?Cation.
sister, how to have a birthday party. You can't
just have people reading them. So J had the idea of
an adult coming into their lives. I guess I had an
idea of a Utopia where adults didn't live."
The element that she adopted to make the
book come alive was, of course, music. For a time
she also toyed with the Idea of animation. but
abandoned it. Curiously enough, Walt Disney Studios also
was bidding tor the book as an animated film. She
met with Miss Ephron to ouWne her ideas tor the
show.
"I think she lilted the idea of actual kids doing
it, and liked the music idea," said Miss Kahan. "I
think she was worried that it would become too
cute it it was animated."
She said some or the lines in the special were
"stolen directly from the mouth" of Cbriatopber
Kampmann, her 14-year-oJd stePIOD.
While at MTM. she met and married writer-
producer Steven Kampmann, who was producing
"WKRP in Cincinnati." They 've now teamed up to
work on projects together.
Christopher 's dog Bandit, a blue merle
English collie, appears in the special.
Kampmann, keeping a straight race, said,
"I'm an actor. I've done some writing. Here's lb.is
dog, no a8enl, arrives from San Francisco, and
Immediately gets on a TV special. It's caused a lit-
tle tension in the house."
Miss Kahan said she thought of playi.nc the
adult role in "How To Eat Like a Child" for
"about a minute and a half."
"It caUed for a star," she said. "Althoutb I've
worked a lot I've managed lo maintain my
anonymity.''
1031
FM
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
DlilJ Pilat
TUESDAY~ S&PT. 22, 1-981
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Barry Manilow listens closely dur i ng recent Hollywood r ecording session.
Pet beagles Biscuit, on piano. and Bogel join Manilow .i lltme pr~
•
B4
B7
,.,. .............
She's, all thumbs
while walking fingers
through Yellow Pages.
See. Page B2.
D
0
Manilow still.
on high note
By The Associated Press
Barry Manilow. the pop s inger)i pop s inger .
maintains a work schedule perhaps ~ore suitabll' to
a young man seeking the big-time tha for one of lhl·
most s pectacularly successful enter ainers of tht•
dav
· The 35-vear-old. Brooklyn·born Man1low -ren•nt
ly started a 44-city tour of the t.:n1ted States and
Canada which will keep him on the road until
l>cl'cmber .
Before starting the tour. Mantlo\\ put th(•
fini s hing touches on his 10th album. '"If I Should
Love Again." for Arista records Tht• nt•w dts<:. <t
slick pop package of Manilow's St!emingl~ palt·ntl·d
romantic ballads. ha~ a tough act to folio" a ll
nine of his previous albums went platinum. tndtl'al
mg sales of more than one million each
Manilow·s fan appeal carries over to the s mall
screen. He received an Emmy award for his firs t
television special, in 1977. and three s ubsequent
specials have consistently earned high ratings
The Emmy is Just one of se\'eral prest1g10u~
awards Manilow has garnered in JUSt a dee
ade before the public lie received a special Ton~
award following a sellout Broadwa~ engagement.
and was given the Grammy for bl'st pop \'Ot·al
performance in 1979.
Docs this man sound lik(• ht• nt•ed ~ a sctond
l' a I'<..' l' 1"1
Obnoush· not. but ~1anilo" ma\ '>ltll haw• ht.,
s ights set ei'sewh('re Quiet!~ and "rthout fc.tnfan'.
Manrlow has been working se\'cral times t•ath \H'l'k ·
with Nina Foch. the actress and atting t·oal'h. lo
ll'arn the thcs pian·s trade.
Between touring and studio work. Mandov. l'an
usually be found either in his stud10-offiee o\·erlook
mg Hollywood on Sunset Boule,·arcl. or at his lux
urious Bel-Air home There he sit s at the gr<1nd
piano. trying out ne\t tunes for th(• n1t1eal t•ar!\ of
hrs pet beagles. Bagel and Biscuit
And pe rhaps thinking of an Oscar to .10111 the re~l
of his collection.
Ma111/011• oft1•1-; wput 111 cnqmeer Michael Deluug at sound mixing board.
Acting coach Nma Foch is teaching singer, compo1er the T heipWn's tr<M!l
-----... -. -----~
•ANN LANDERS
•ERMA BOMBECK .
• •
•HERB CAEN
ODDBALL RESTROOM -Portable toilet for
"Otner" holds no mtcrest for Jack Hill. wait·
Daily Pilat
.........
ing for ride at go-cart track in Visalia.
FREE POP
ORGAN CONCERT
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DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your advtce
encouraging "communlcaUon" and "frank
guidance" in an effort to get sexual
satisfaction stank. Why didn't you accept
your role of advice columnist and telJ
women what to do when communication
and guidance won 't work? ( have tried to
"communicate and guide" for 10 years and teeth ol the deceased. The implication was
failed. that they are all a bunch of thieves. My husband couldn't care less about · When mother died rour years ago. my
what I want or enjoy. He is interested only f a\bet insisted that I take her wedding and
in his satis faction. and to hell with et\~agement rings. 1 w:1s so dist~aug~t I
anything else. s aid, "No, I j ust can t. Mother s rings His idea of good sex is so far-OUt it belqfti with her ...
would shock even you. You couldn't Priat it . 1 • Just before tbe coffin was closed. the
if I 7Nere able to find the words to describe 'f urrentl dittctor called my brother over
it but I can tell you this: he gets his jolliff 82ld gave him my mother's rings . He told
rr'om inflicting pain on me. I have told him him I would feel dirrerently after some
time and time again that I hate that kind of time had passed. and insisted that he keep
so-called love-making. but he says he's the lings for me until I was ready to accept tired of the same old thing and wants them.
something different. Well. it's different all Of course. he was right. A year later I
right. Ithink the m an is nuts. regretted m y dec is ion. Imagine how
I've tried everything from quiet rea· thrilled I was when my brother handed me soning to fighting back. Nothing works. I my mother's rings. . .
have even thought of suicide to escape the I don't know if this funeral director
pain and humiliation. but I have two small was the exception or the rule, but I felt it
·children who need me. was ~ story that deser ved to be told. I will probably never see this in print, THANKF1JL IN WILMETI'E
but it makes me feel better to write it. I
could never tell anyone. So thanks. Ann . DEAR WIL.: There are scoundrels in
for listening. -ALSO FROM ILLINOIS every business and profession. Thanks for
DEAR ALSO: Your resignation t-0 be· your letter In support of a group that has
log violated and abused bothered me - a had a lot ol bad publicity lately·
lot. WHY do you feel you must take it? Do you /eel awkward. selj-con$Clous -
For heaven's sake, woman, get some lonely? Welcome to the club. There's help for .>
counseling and find out what to do about you in Ann Landers' booklet. "The Key to
this loooy bozo. There ARE alternatives. Popularity.·· Send SQ cents with your r equest
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is and a Ieng. stamped. self-addressed envelope to
in response to the person who asked Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11995. Chicago. Ill.
whether morticians remove gold from the 60611 ·
Yellow Pages hang-up
Telephone book s are like dictionaries
-if you know the answer before you look
it up, you can eventuall y reaffirm wh at
you thought you knew but weren't sure.
But if you·re searching for something
you don 't already know. your fingers could
walk themselves to death.
THE TROUBLE with me js I never
learned how to speak Yellow Pages. It's a
language or the 20th century. born of
frustration, nurtured by obscurity and
dedicated to the theory that by the time
you find it. you no longer need it.
In the language of Yellow Pages, a rug
is a "carpet," curtains are "draperies."
milk is "a dairy product" and cars are ':in·
dustrial automotives ...
A plumber is a "plumbing contractor.··
an electrician is an ·'electrical contractor'·
and hi·fi 's are listed under Sound Syst~m~
and equipment. . : .
ROACHES ARE listed under Pest Con-
trol, exterminating and fumigating. a taco
is under Mexican Food Products. a tailpipe
under Mufflers and Exhaust Systems, and
a pencil is under Advertising Specialists.
One of the most frustrating encounters
in the Yellow Pages is trying to find a doc·
tor. who is listed under PhJ.sicians, who
are subdi vided to M.D.s and D.0 .s. who
are also li sted under Physicians and
Surgeons, group. associate and corporate
practice, and who aren't in anyway and
whose phone is being answered by a doc -
-llMA IOMllCI
AT WIT'S END
t~s , ~ng ser vice . . See Physi-
dans'abd:9bl'geons Exchange.
¥<Su shnuld begin to worry about
yourself when you begin to think like the
Yellow Pages. Recently, 1 wanted to call a
flea mai'ket and caught myself just in
time. ~a·maFket would definitely not be
urrder !", 'but probably under something
like SWap ·Meets. J turned to the Ss and
read, ·-see Flea Market. ..
·· • 1 DON'T KNOW what the answer is
with the growth of private enterprise and
the.. ne~ ,lo consolidate them under a
• gen,eral'heading. But just for kicks I turned , •to .. Survival Kits•· and was hit with . ··See
First Aid Supplies, Sporting Goods head-
ing.··
I know this. No one will ever convince
·me that when Alexander Graham Bell was
sitting in his Boston boardinghouse March
10, 1876. with battery acid burning his leg
and shouted his first frantic message into
the transmitter. ''Mr. Watson, come here. I
want you~ .. it was the despair of looking
under HELP in the Yellow Pages and find ·
ing, "See batteries: Dry cell. wholesale.
retail. charging and maintena nce.·· that
did it.
Pisces: finiSh project
Wednesday, September 23
By SYDNEY OMA RR
ARIES <March 21-April 19>: Change or
policy is necessary. Present course could
lead to dead end. Emphasis on variety.
news concerning travel and special rela;
tionship with member of opposite sex.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20): You now
are on solid ground -views should be stat·
ed in positive manner. Focus on land, ter·
ritory, home and relations with older in·
dividuals.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20): You dis·
play ability to be flexible, versatile. You're
asked to prepare s hort report. You will be
rid of burden whicli was not rightly your
own in first place. ·
CANCER C June 21-July 22 ): New
source of income could dominate scenario.
Focus on independence, originality and
contact with individual who aids ln loca~
ing missinl( mateiral.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22>: Events take a
.. different turn ... Circumstances will favor
your aspirations. Maintain confidence ,
wear bright colors, promote fresh concepts
and welcome new contacts.
VIRGO <Aug . 23-Sept. 22): What first
appeared to. be a crisis will tum out to be
cause for celebration . Horizons expand -
communication received which encourages
education and travel.
UBBA c Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Focus oo re·
llOIOSCOPI
BY SIDNEY OMARA
vilft>n review and practical ways or fulfill·
ing ~ wishes. Study fine print. You
can. tear down for purpose of rebuilding on
1l more solid b~. Romantic involvement.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Change of
policy affects plans . Individual w~o "pulls
strings" is capable but uncertam of ac•
lions. Protect your own interests. Co~·
municatioo received from .. a very special
person.'' •
SAGl'nABIVS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21>:
Long-range plans affect lifestyle and ~re
related to communication, travel. Family
member seeks added recognition.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Delve
beneath surface indications. You could be
on brink of striking pay dirt. Define terms,
see people as they are, steer clear of se.lf·
deception. Credit check is part of scenario .
AQUA&IUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Past ob·
ligations surge to forefront. Avoid bein&
trapped by legal maneuvers. Utilize past
experience -put lessons to work. . ,
. \ . Pl8C88 <Feb. l9-March 20>: Flnith
t-athet· Olan' Initiate project. Persistel\~e
will pay d.tYidenda. Steady effort achieves
pal. Co-worker Join• in overomlnc ob-
.· ttacl•.
~1111ot.,.,__S.......,._,ln< ---
"Boy, you really are unlucky."
Pf ISOllAllTf Q.&A.
BY MARILYN AND HY GARDNER
Allen's wish:
different life
Q: Woody Allen has achieved ·uch g~at success in his lifetime -films, com-
ed y, as a Broadway playwright, TV,
author, records, nightclubs, concerts, etc.
Does he have any regret in life? -Alex K.,
Cincinnati
A : Yes t hat he 's not someone else'
Woody adds that of all the famous men
who ever li ved , the one he 'd most like to
have been was Socrates. "Not just because
he was a great thinker ... he says. "because
I have been known to have some rea-
s onably pro fo und insights m yself.
Although mine invariably revolve around a
Swedish a ir line s tewardess and some
ha ndcuffs'. ..
Q : I understand that because of her
te,nder years, 16-year-old actress Brooke
Shields had a problem while filming some
of the steamier s cenes of her new movie,
"Endless Love ." Watching her in the mov-
ie, I see the problem was resolved. How
did they do it? -Cindy R., New York City.
A: Leave it to director Franco Zef-
firelli. At all the right moments. he simpl)·
pinched Brooke's big toe good and hard.
Guess it proves that you really can't
always tell what's going on by simply look-
ing al a person's face'
Q: Is it true that Christina Crawford,
who wrote "Mommie Dearest," tripped on
a pile of books on the fl oor of her home and
wound up in the hospital? -1\1. O'Shea,
Jersey City, N.J .
A: J oan Cr awford ·s adopted daughter
did wind up in the hospital. But it had
nothing to do with a fall. She had surgery
for an embolism and is m aking excellent
r ecovery
Q : Why has Christina Onassis gone in-
to hiding? -Mrs. Charles Q., Pittsburgh
A: F'riends sav it ·s because she has
bee o m e ove rwe·i g h t. T he s hipp in g
billionairess has put on about 10 pounds
since she divorced her Russian husband
last year. She doesn't even want to see her
curre nt boyfri e nd , 21-year -o ld Niki
Mavroleon. until she wins her own private
Battle of the Bulge.
Send your questions to Hy Gardner. "Glad You
Asked That," in care of the Daily Pilot, P.O. 80%
19620, lrvme, Calif 9271.f. Marilyn and Hy Gardner
will . answer , as many questions. as they can in their
column, Out the volume of mail makes personal
replies impossible
HERB MEN
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
Poridering
Peutagonese
SAN FRANCISCO -Caenfetti · Will
Due rst is tired of hearing the neutron
bomb described in Pentagonese as "an
enhanced radiation device." That. he sput-
t e rs, "makes it sound like a kitchen
gadget. Wh at does the Pe ntagon call
napalm -a dry skin remover ?" ...
Mighty Chevron, fretting over the al-
leged "bias" of TV re porting, has issued
an elegant brochure pleading for a little
accuracy. please. "Take. fo r insta nce, .. we
read , "Mike Jensen 's cover age for the CBS
Evening News of 1980 first quarter oil
profits." Mike Jensen is with NBC ...
Good 01' Charlie Bates, the retired FBI
chief who became a household name dur-
ing the Patty Hear st kidnap. will run for
Sheriff in S'Mateo, where the race is wide
open .
OF WORD games there is no end
You've heard of teetotaler s. No? Well
anyway. Tom Tollefson knows an E. Bay
commuter who drives around the Bay and
up the Peninsula to avoid the bridges. He.
says Tom, is a tolltetaler .. Clunk.
Living well is the best revenge and
other gnomic utter ances: The fa mous
Marin slogan of a few years ago -"I
Want It All Now !" -is out of date. The
new philos ophy, notes Gordon Clay. is to be
found on the li cense frame holders on
many a Marin Mercedes: .. Too Much Is
Not Enough" ... Further Marinade: In
Sausalito, flashes an awestruck Barbara
del Amo, the St. Vincent de Paul Society
collection truck bears personalized license
plates "SVD P2" and that is mahty sheek
JOEL G R EY o n the pho ne from
Detroit .and cracking up: "Last night Liza
< M innelli) and I played the Pine Knob
Theater . in Pontiac He nrv Ford and
Ka thy came to see us. and after the show
his car wouldn't st a rt. Of course it was a
Ford. Nol only that, it was raining . I just
sent him a gift jumper cables and an
umbrella" .
THE MOVING finger: At the Press
Club, Art Blum and Carol Hunter howled
simian-like over the m enu. which reads
"Bon Ape'tit'." Maybe that monkey from
the S. F. Zoo DI D make it as a member and
is on the food committee ..
Kinda kicky : the new store called
"Think Big." on Geary between Powell
and Mason, which sells hugely oversized
lead pencils. tennis r acquets. baseba ll
bats. choc chip cookies. beer can openers
and other whimsy-whamsies .
Todd Barka n doesn't fool around at h1::,
Keystone Korner. Out on his ear into the
street went the d runk who holler ed ''Hey
old man. when you gonna retire?" as Sax-
man Sonny Stitt came to the end of a
breathtakingly beautiful l2-minute solo.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
MY
OPPONENT
SHOULD
SE
DISQUALIRED
FOR RUNNING
UNF"AIRLY
FAST.
ttlt Al"'!~ 811lll•fll All "•Ofll• A .. MVt4 • Ottl °'ICIJOO T,10.,,"'9"" 't Hpt 5)1"4 I~
., •• f l
Diabetic diet changed
DEAR DOCTOR: My husband is only
%9 and has developed diabetes. His mother
has it, too. Our doctor has suggested that
he take more carbohydrates than he's used
to•taking.
I'm surprised at that. I've always
thought that the diabetic's diet should be
hig h In protein and fats and low in
carbohydrates.
As my husband is overweight, here's
another thing I can't understand. Aren't
carbohydrates f attenlng? He needs to lose
at least 30 pounds according to our doctor.
How can h e do that with a high
carbohydrate diet? -MRS. F.
DEAR MRS. F.: On a well v.aried diet
a' patient will be t aking about 30 percent of
t~e total calories as fat. Protein will ac-
count for about 12 to 15 percent or the
c'atorjes. That leaves about 50 to 60 percent
of calories coming Crom carbohydrates in
the diet.
Years ago doctors used to prescribe ~lgh fat diets for diabetics. Now we are
a\vare that high fat diets with a high
p¢rcentage or saturated fats may cause the
<tevelopment or atherosclerosis. This condi-
tion is likely to develop earlier in diabetics
a nd be more severe.
T rou1 HEALTH
DA. PETER J . STEINCROHN
Therefore. while fats are lowered in
the diet, the percentage of carbohydrates
is increased. The body is conditioned to
handle these carbohydrates without in-
terfering too much with glucose tolerance.
according to many studies.
We 're not s ugge sting t h at th e
carbohydrates should be taken in the form
of sweets. They can be supplied by increas·
ing the intake of breads, fruits and cereals.
The amounts taken will depend upon the
patient's weight-reduction problems and
blood sugar levels.
Your doctor is likely aware of the need
·not· to fill your husband with a dispropor
tionate amount of fats. ' • • •
Dr. Steincrohn welcomes questions
from readers. He cannot answer all in·
dlvidually but will include those of general
interest in his column. Send your questions
to him in care of the Daily Pilot, P.O. Box
1510, Costa Mesa, C§lif. 92626-0560.
Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. September 22, 1981 83
·~-........ COOL CAPER On a hot afternoon in Miami. and Ken Lanca!-tll'r' 11 . rind a pdl'k ht•ra·h
Lenette Lancas ter, 13. F.hzabeth Kaiser, 13. ffi<tkl'!> an l'Xl'Cllenl ~pot to 1·001 orr
YES, FOR EVERY
MOVIE YOU RENT
DURING SEPT.,
YOU GET ONE
~--<! COLOR CAMERA
Tape your own
Special events
WEBER'
INCLUDED
$1495.
TOTAL
DISCOUNT
BIG SCREEN T.V.
333S.EUCUO
PH.T1M711 OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK WORLD NEWPORT BEACH
149 RIVERSIDE AVE.
PH. 54-2213
NOBODY HAS
MORE BUSINESS
FLYING TO
HOUSTON
THAN WEDO.
-
't'
11 :45am non<ttop
I
ALL NONSTOPS $95.
More than ever, business
is booming in Houston . And
Continental Airline is one
reason why. We're zipping
business men by the hundreds
' in and out of Hou ton day and
night. With more flights than
any other airline.
And there's no lower fare
than Continental's. Just $95
one-way Coach with no
strings attached. But seats
are limited. So call your
travel agent or Continental
Airlines and fl y to Houston
in style.
~ Pm11ll BircJ
CONTINENTAL AIRUNES e
•Effec.:1ivc 10/2S.
~ .,
M Orange Co81t DAILY PILOT fTut1d1y, September 22, 1981
,
THE .-
fAMILl'
c1ac1:1
by Bil Keane
'look! My new jeans have a belly button!"
by Brad Anderson
"My shoes, my shoes ... did you bring
me my shoes?"
Jl'DGE PARKER
81GGl885E by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"Maybe If you got In first, he might follow suit."
DEN!WIS THE ltlENACE Hank Ketchum
"No, I don't think you can HEAR an ear drum. Joey."
by Harold Le Ooux
I
MAV9£ WE CAN HEL.P WfTM
THE CHORES, GARF'IEU7
24 lndlned
25F.-de
2tSummlt•
27BltltlWfb
21 Penllrltlng
21~
~ 31C..
ebbt.
S2 Tl'Ylte
33 8t8llCflel
36Aowet
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40 Alt: Ult.
41Mlny ..
48footpltt ... *""' IOl't 51 "'*'°' -52 lnlpelnt
6311&ebbt.
54-~
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5t '*° 90111ClllMllS
t3 '1lll Didi
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WELL,WE1D
LUCI: TO $~~
MoRr= of You ...
;.,
PMNIJTI
~~D10
MEET VOOR COUSIN
AT TME STATION?
NANCl'
GoRDO
ER---
SLUGGO
ANO I
BORROWED
IT
~·n
FOR •ETTEa ea,.. WealE
DAorJY-L~ENCE
GETS "TWO DOU.ARS
RWEEK,AN' I
ONl'/ GET A
Dou.AR!
WE 'u_ ~VE YOO
MORE, M\CHAeL ...
BUI YOO'l.l HFWE
To~KFOR
II .
TCU. MER s.ftl ~IZf
VOO BECAUSE VOUU SE
.n.OIN6 A CJ>PY OF .. WAR AND PEACE "
".,. ·a ..
:£ 1[1"·
by Charles M. Sohulz
by Ernie Bushm1ller
WE1RE
PLAYING
COWBOYS
ANO I'M SUPPOSED
10 SCAt..P HIM
ANO
INDIANS--
----___ ___, ~
bv Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
by Kevin Fagan
£11'"'ER WEtolV-4 ."91" ~1'
"'t~ llUO OM l'l\'i~,
<JlJ. l'M 6tt~ U.UffDCO'ftt>.
eu.,.. J: KNOW
HE!'P t..n<e 1"0 see Yoo.'
-
<Kange Coul DAIL V PILOT /Tuesday, September 22, 1981 * ..
Repertory adrai.tly presents 'Ah, Wilderness'
j
I
ay TO• ft'nJ8 ..............
lf fOU're lookine for the bleak, emotional
oatharall ol "Loot Day's Journey Into Nl1bt" or
.. A 'Moon for th• Mllbetotten" ln South Coast
Re,..-toey'• revival ot a Euaene O'Neill play,
you'll probably be pleaaanUy dl.aappolnttd.
"Ala, Wllderoeaa" wu O'Neill'a token com·
'ed,y , a IMJDOl'Y play Uk• the others, the differ-ace
beln1 tbat tbele were the memories tbe playwrl1ht
withed he'd enjoyed. It waa "Father Knows Bett,"
circa 1933, by com ·
parlson.
It's alao a play with INTERUISSIQN ~ which virtually everyone lftl
ean hlmWy, even thou1b
the setUq la a amall
Connecticut town In 1906. The theme la "cominl of
ate," and the process probably haso'f changed all
that much ln three quarters of a century, even if
the mores and circumstances have been drasUcal·
ly altered.
You won't find O'Neill's morphl.Df addicted
mother, antagonistic father or reprobate brother .,Joe McNeely is comforted on tlw ·•morning ofter"
in "Ah, Wilderness" -those characters have been ~. Anne Gerety 08 his mot1* m South COO$t homogenized and humanized. The playwright, ~
himself, ls undeniably visible, however, in the Repertory's revival of Eugene O'Neilt's comedy,
character or 17-year-old Richard Miller, who un· ''Ah. Wilderness."
dergoes a dramatic transfromation on a memora-•
ble Fourth of July. and, in its waning moments, tediUJO. Some of This young man, splendidly interpreted by Joe O'Neill's scenes would be drastically scissored
McNeely (who also has played the O'Neill role in w_,re they written for today's audiences,
"Long Day's Journey"), strikes out wi.th quixotic "particularly the beachfront sequence in which the force at both the "system" and the fates which I f all t t th Th h xb t separate him from the puppy love of his life. He young overs m Y ge oge er. oug e aua ·
could be Romeo in "Romeo and Juliet" or James .lag. the show remains interesting, thanks primari· ty to Benson's sensitive staging. Dean in "Rebel Without a Cause." The symptoms, · Rqbert Cornthwaite and Anne Gerety are
. so recognizabl~, are youth and rebelliousness. , highly convincing as young McNeely's concerne<l
McNeely 1s the focus of an SCR production ~ rrents though Comthwaite teoda toward overem·
handsomely mounted by Martin Benson which ;<. sis ~n posturing caricature. Both project the ~,tackles the inherent pitfalls of excessive length ';-4 . i•tering male and rem ale Yietvpoints toward
l1te ~-o/ ll'le ta""91 •IO -
-•OOIA ,,_ -°"*1 OI ,,., ... '°'*"'lot w.ww.p o, .,.,, ~ .
I t· ~ All AG£$ AOMIT-nD ~ .,. 0.-llAUll-• ~
l I
0 I .
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~ ·~:
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~ ALL AGES ADMITTED P.,ental 0...de.nc. SYognt.O.
~ AESTAICTED Unclllf 11 1equirn ac:company•no
P11.,t 01 ~oult Qu.1ro11n
® NO ~E UHOEA 17 ADMITTED (Age htntt rNV ... ')
tn c.ne1n area.t>
All Ill ll!a A#«> (l!j Ft1.MS AECEIVE
THE SEN. Of THE MOTION PICTUllE COOE OI SELF llEGUlA TIOH
•garden carts
Model A's••••
*typingtables
wheelbarrows•
recreational
vehicles*goff
carts* model
trains•bikes
*pianos· cars
refrigerators
*skates·•····
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad. Call
642 -5678 and a
friendly ad·
viserwill
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
~~ire Sho!1 at :~ ::el
Z't* E 1 :It
: • • £1 '.' :•!'!!'4'•
~ 8 5
~~•t y N ~I 6: 8: 0:0
hO vt IOftM'V ·i vnd M Or1 .... n a.to.w
Yowr AM cat radio ti .,...,,_.. ... llnoAM
car redeo w.th tf"'''°" c:.clt90fy PO&ll1on, t»f• vour own AM pof"1ol>i.
r~.
~~·a1U1.11~1 Co·fHture r.....,_n d IPGI
~i;,~'&v ~G ... llM IR)
gl Muiray ftW'ES IRI o·Fe1ture u...rn......_IPOI
·1 lurrah and hallelujah!"
-9hela 9lnlon, LOS ANGELES TIMES
tllCW..~1 .. llRll(M\O; .. ~-NOWPLAYING
·-.... .Ul'l.UA ...... Cit.IT PUlA lltN ~·m9 '5-c... ... CeolJ ...... S...1711 •a.... ---·-eep Ulft !Ill_,
I0.11191 ~~J
.,_ACCIP1U ..... ......,
...... ,.
f-TAI• fllUl IHllWMM IOll-VI~ 9611•••
ST-•tn ... °''"Of 11u1 ~91110 ,_.__
CDMIWF ·-~""' ----···~ •••••Mir
JOHN BLAIR
BELUSHI & BROWN
..
For Back to School ...
Quicksilver pants 1n ~cotton
In great colors of It blve. ton.
navy. chocolate and black
AL'S GARAGE • 56 FASHtON ISlAND
NEWPORT BEACH • (714) 644 -7030
,.,~"' Euons' exciting two year uoyo!f9"1t ~Pacific.filmed
personally narrated by Gene Euma. a cameraman
the teleulsion show "Roota". ,.
Sept. 22 & 23
~-Wll.
EA TllEATRE ·COSTA ftlSA
1'9th St. at N•wport llvcl
•.24, Thursday u. .... M..,.rt llldl
Via Lido at
MewporillYd.
SHOW TIMES: 6:30 p.111., ~lO_P·•·• IO:lO p.111.
Ad•il••: $1.N .
"TH E TEMPERATURE IS HIGH AND
THE ACTING SJZ1UNG IN
'BODY HEAT:" -n rrwMepnne
"A MELODRAMA SOAKED IN
ATMOSPHERE, RICH IN OIARACTER
AND TAUT WITH TENSION~' -s.1urderR~
CoNTINENTAL.
DIVIDE
1' UNIVEIS.'L PICT\JRE
!!! ......... _ .....
a
~ Wl~Nt,f t~1 !1U1 't'1"4
~
...... :..u:.--:.=.~ C>'*llt, _If., ..._ ~ •rm~• .,.
MwP••· ..... ,~.=~==t: ,........ = .................. -.. OCt.. ., <--._...,, .. ,._ ~
• --. ••• 1•1 ........ ..... CAl'f .k ..................................................... __..
NMlllUIW ............. , ........................ .._.CCII_, .......... ... ................................................................
===~":·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:j== .......... .._ ...................................... ..__ .......
T-rMll'9r •••................... leM~ ...... De¥W MlQa ... , .......................................... ........ ............................................................
:::-: ... ~.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·=::'•.
:::.-;·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=.!:I ..._ ...................................................... .,.,..
society, Mias Gerety affectlq lhe Victorian stance
and Comthwalte the more worldly approach.
The splnsteriah au.nt i.a delicately underplayed
by K Callan, wblle James Gallery riotoualy
portrays ber bumbling suitor, the family black
sheep with a weakness for spirits. Mark Herrier,
Pamela Hutain and the altemaUn1 duo of Sam
Helfrich and Richard Stanley enact tbe other
young members of the family.
Longtime Oranee Coast CoUece teacher Jack
Holland makes a rare ataee appearance u the
stormy fatber of McNeely'a llrlfriend (what a
....... Anllllsa....
Weekd•y1 7:00 & .. 00
Sunday12:i»-
4: 00-7:0().9:00
~---·
TWO OF THE YEAR'S FINEST FILMS,
TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME.
U llO'ftU e.u 990 4022
.aana.u Or lllQI 634. 3911
AllCOUIGflULl
Orlllgl 63 7 0340
MCIOIUMIS f lOCf Allihelm 111 6441>
MISSION llflltf.ltl EDWAlllll lllllTOl 'i.lr Juan C;powano
Co511 Mesa ~o t••• 4q1 454"
UIWAIUll SAOOU~Cll AllAN£1M OlllVE·lll
El IOfO !1111 ~ ~n.ttie1m 8/q 'Jlj!J()
Scrooge he'd make in ·'A Christmas Carol"). Irene ~~~~~~~~~~===~=====~ Arranga plays the lady in question In that In·
terminable scene, while Mark Dreaaler is the
brother's Yale buddy who leads McNeely astray.
.. Ah, Wlldemess" as a llu'owback to a more
sedate time, sedately depicted, for th01e playcoers
who also enjoy a good book at their leisure. It's
filled with such expletives aa "gOlb" and "beck,"
and offers a full evening's entertainment at the
Fourth Step TJieater, 655 N. Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa, where it plays nightly except Mon·
days through Oct. 18.
•BARGAIN MATINl!ES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Perform•nces before 5:00 PM
(Excettl S,.ml Enpf11Mlltl Ind Holidays)
,,_..,.,.__.CMW'J. '
"ARTHUR".,..
It: .. t:AI.-0:-. O:l9o -
"STllllPEI" _, t:tt. "•· -
"" -----"UNOEA ~RAINBOW" ... -•.n·•-·-_._ --·--· "'RAIDElllS Of THE
LOSTAlllK" -lt:tl, .......... -
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
"'VK:TOlllY" ... -'·""·-·---·· ..... "Eft OP: THE~ 911 -··--_.._., ... __
"NINETO~"_, __ .,,,_ -----''Tte CANNONaAU. lllUN ..... -···----.----... .,.. __ _ ... __
"IM>OY HEAT' t111 ,., ..............
foculty at Canatewooc:I
213/531·9580 --·--· "RAIDElllS Of' THE
"l'tf'8'1' lllONOA Y IN OCToeat'· t111 -·---·-LOSTAllll(" ...
,. __ __
,,.._ ___ _
"THE CANNONeAU llllJN•• ... ···--........ TO AVE" '"' --
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAl tc IN
foc"'Y Al Del A.mo
21J/6M-9211
"VlCTOlllY ... •t:tt.--"EYI! Of' THI Nl!EDU" t111 ......... I I
I I
... ,.-. ... -.....
"fOURIEAeoNI'"---.-. ... .,.,,_ ... _
"HEAVY l«fAl." 41111 ,,,.. __
"TAllZAN, THI Alie llAH" .. I --"Cttl.ECff a CHONG· a
MCSDMA•t111 ,_....,_
"CHE2CH a CHONG'S NEXT lllOVll'' ,.
1::8 ......
..~~!:'
s.o.•.1111 . ..... ,,. -Soultl Coo1t Hlway J ol ltoodwoy
494-1514 ... .,.. __ __
"llOOY HEAT' 4111 ,,.._ -"FISTS OF AMY" fll
.,.. ____ ....
•• AftTHUR" -,_ ...
.......... ,a...7.JD \.,.J:U \~llfll"~ .. u
IMPOflTHT NOTICE! CMllOflfN IHIDf" 12 F"H! """',... ,..,.., -'"'•'"•:JO• Sol Sv• "'" •:oo ,. Cllf.R SOUND • 'IOUll AM CAii IWJtO IS 'IOUll SPfM(JI
of llO AM CAii M0t0 -™ OllfOI ~ JOSl1lOlj
-....: Ml l'OllTMEJ.t•.U Clltf-ll ClllM--s a Git M lltlGtO
<U•AHll~
ANAHEIM DR IVf·IN
_._,._ ___ ,._
"'°"IVATE LHIONS" (1111 ..... =...-,, •• _.,ti ol l•l'l\Oft SI "l*U NtGKT t111
179-tllO QM H-
TWO -"9 -jTWO fW ne ;..;;;.;;;;:;.--
"THE CHINEll! CON•CflON" I "Oft04NAlllY ~" t111
-I -"AITS OP: AMY" 91) "THE ELEll'HANT MAN" 1111
Ctfl( II 50UllO . C... H -
8tJl .. A ~A~•
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN ---.---"CONTINENTAL DIVIDE'' ... -U11eot.11 A•• w ... ot •-"COAL .. ..._ •• DAUGtfTElll" ...
121·4070
H lJ"4 1AIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE IN
Son °'~ """ OI -"""' (So)
__ .................
'11.AlOl!lllS OI' THE LOST MIC ... -~--f62•2Al1 C111E Ft SOUllO
..... ___ Got_~-'~-~--0,_;3_°'_)
.----"" I _,_,._
"THECHINI!-~" _.._,._
-"'°"IVATI ~UONI'' 1111
"FIST9 0, AMY'" fl -"INIM.IU LOVE" 1111
CIMt H SOUllO C.. • H IOUllO __ .,_..,....,
"THE CANNONeAll MIN" ... -"NINE TO ..W" -
Cltll H SOUND
A "A(HrA
LA HABRA ORIV! IN
.. --·-·----,.,.,,,_=-''AN AIRIHCM Wll~,
IN LONOON'' 41111
-"HIU NtGHT"' 911. CINE fl SOUMO ------"CONlJNl!NT~ DIVIDE .. ,..
_.., -• h«ll -• ,.. .. -"COAL ......... DAUOHTlll" ... 171-1162
lo I •4 A ~ A'"''•
LINCOLN 0111\/E IN
... .,.. __ _ .,.. __
''800Y HmAr• fl
l•"<:°"' A•• W ... ol lno"
121-4070
• A."4 •I
ORANGE OPIV( IN -----. ---··eooy MIAT" tit -"AmNCM~ .. 1111
J•, • •
MISSION DQIV( IN . . .
•, ·. .
WA~Nf Q ()IJ1\d IN
W-Awe 1"o1Clf .... ll ....
'
,...,,.._.,,.. __
"OMHIAllY ...._...A -. "THI IUPMAlff...,... tit
•
..... .......... .... ..,.... ....
COie .... .,,...
-Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuttday. September 22, 198 1
NIUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSIN•U
NAMI ITATIMINT
TN lollowlno person• ••• <101110
IMIJIMt•U: l MPElllAL DYNASTY CO., MU
Hewl*t 91vd •. Nftfport Beech, CA ....,
Tltnolhy Penchl Weno, HO
Iron-51., R-.ho P•lo• \/tr~,
CA. '027•
~rleno S.ldano, 2M1 Werwlcl<
....... LOt At19elh, CA. '°°31
TlllS llv•IMH Is condu<ttd by • O-N<t1 Plr1"9"111p 1------------
Tlmothy "-nc"' wa110 "'IUC •m Tiii• s1a1-1 wn lllto •1111 tno l------------C911nty C1er• 01 Oranoe County on
Al'Q. 21. 19tl ,,_
Pullflshod Oranoe Coul 0.,1.,. Piiot. 5eot I, I. IS, n . 19'1
"''"" "'CTITIOUS 9UStN•U NAME STATEMl!NT
TIM 1o11ow1no P9rton •• doing o...i-
~ ~ \llT ll AEA L ESTATE
ENTERPRISES, lfO , '041
~c~rtllur Blvd., # JIO, Newport 8MCll, C.llloml• 'lMG ilntllony M Vllll, Ul Ewnlno SIM
Lt n•. H•Wpor1 8••<11, Ceillornl• nwo. Tiii• busl"""'° ts conducted bY •n ,,.. dlvlciu.t Anthony M. \11111
Tllll """"""'I .... llltd wllll Ille CtunlY Clerk of Or•nve County on
Aug. 1 .. 1 .. 1
ft6 .. 2'
P\11111""° Oraft9* Co41 \I Oal t y Pl lol, sept. 1, •· u. n. , .. , ,.,._,,
rtllllC NOTICE
MCJTICI 01'
Al'"UCATIOM l'O,. CMAMOlllN
0-lllMUP'OI'
Al.COMOl.IC
.. .._
UHIT•D STAT•I OliTltlCT COUltT, CENTllAL OllTltlCT
Ol'CAU ...... lilr CASI NUM918 CV .. t lftl
SUMlllllC*I CONTICOMMODITY HllVICll, INC .. • _ _..'*""'.-, PLAIN·
Tll'l'tll ..._ VICTOlt M. IAOOOTI,
olM "-u MAlllOLO OAOOITT, DIPlrND..,.,,
TO THE ABO\IE HAMED OEFEN· DANT
You .,. -•Y ,..mrr>ontd -rt· QUlrt to_,,. ........ KAANITZ, COM·
PARET ~ SARROW, l"rolOtlenel
Corooretlon, pl•lntlff'• attorney,
whoo ador .. , h . 4'2' Wll•hlr•
8ouleverd, 5'111t 100, LOl Anoetet. CA toOtO en an.-er to the compleln1
wllkh I• llertWClll MNed -you within lD def" _, 1trvlo Of lllh
wmmont -you, H CIUslYlt .. .,,. doy ol ....via. If 'rOU lt ll to dO 111,
judgment by clef•ull wlll be t .. t n •oa11ul you l'or tl'tt rellet dem....-.:1 tn Ille complalnl
OATEO""'ll 11, ltll. EOWAROM. KRITZMAH,
CLEAi<
B' Tina Brown,
Deputy Cltrli
(SEAL OF THE COORTI
Publl•he<I Oranve CCNtrl ()ally PllOt.
S.pl u. 7', Oct.•, l:l, ltll 417141
"'IUC 1tncE
91VlllAOl 1.ICINH flCTITIOUI auS.IMISS
t •l .. I MAME ITATaMINT
Tt Wl\om 11 May C~orn Tiit followlno person• ar•e doing
Etsu•o TOKU DA eno Yu•••• llvllnn•H· crtoroe TOKUOA •rt •llPIY"'9 to the CI \I IC CENTER 0 R IVE
Ot1>utmen1 ol AlcohOllt 8ever•oe APAR TMENT AS$0CIATIOH, 1011
Control 11W "•I" OH ~LE BEER A Ettl IC-A-. A,..,,_ltn, CA
~INE IPU8 EAT. Pl I to Hll tllOS alcol'lotk beYt<-• al sm W•rner, ILOEFOHSO RAMOS, 1'» EtJt
Hunttnotofl BN<ll. CA.,.... 1'111 Street, Sant• AN. CA '2701. Publl.-Or-CCNtsl Ot ll'f PllOI, JOSE G. ESCAHUEL.A. m1 S-111
S.,.t. 22, 1"1 •112~1 Diam-.~ AM, CA
PUIUC NOTICE
flCTITIOUS 9USINEH NAM!! UATEMENT
Tll• loltowlno P•rson. •r• doing Duslnena.a· EAGLE COMPUTER SYSTEMS.
1"1 S. IUl<lley, Stf>!A Ma, CA t270S EC S Ei.ctronk C.tculttor Service,
• Cetllornl• corpor•llon. 1'19 S Ritchey, Santa Ana, CA 9270S Tl1I• busi"fll IS (Ol'IOV(.ltCI by a Cor•
POC'i llan. EC S EIK1ronlc
C.kulelor Servi<:• Wiima J Gentry S.C.ITreti
Thi• Jta1emtnl w•• llltd wllll Int Covnty Cler-ol Or•noe County on
SALVADOR CAii.Al TO. Utt
Nortll A~. Orat191, CA.
WALOYR A. P IZZOTTI , •
Wllllatntbuf'V, Irvine, CA '2714,
SONIA MATILL.A, II ... Kirwin
Clr<ltt, F-ln \lellt y, CA.
FRANCISCO FEARER, 121Soutfl11-
llnolS, • 4, AnMwlm, CA.
LUIS TEJEllA, 147U fffthe'11111 RCNtd, T1nttn, CA 'MIO.
ISRAEL PAAOO, U Tlgtr LAno, trvlnt , CA97714.
E\IERAOO GODOY, ua. Wut Rf ytnar, Set"4I AN, CA
JOSEPHSTOCIC. U7SHoneywood
U"f,A~mHllll,CA
AAHOOLFO M FEAHAHOEZ, ••O Soulll At1.,11lc 9oulev•rd, Maywood, CA wno
T Ill• bu•l,..u h conduct..S by •
Mral P«tne~p. Frencttco ,.,.,..,
1'1""1t r1111 n•t-w'" 111..s w1111 -
Pullll-Oranve Coa•t Dally P11o1. County ci.n of O.anoe c-tor °"
Sept. 1, 1. u. n. "" ,..1~1 Sot ti, 1t11.
•uo 1t, 1 .. 1
rtJIUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 9USINISS
NAME STATIMEHT
P011• Pullll"'9d Oranoit C:O.rl Delly Pltot,
S.p1. 12, 1'1, Oct.•. 13, ltll 417HI
TN loll-lr>O P9UOn II ootno ""sl , ___________ _
nus -"CTITIO,,. •UllNUI A. H l(ELLEY ASSOCIATES, 1601 NAMllTATaMaltT
Oow SI. Sulle 14S, N•wPOrt IM11<h, CA Tiie lollowlno P9rte1n• ert clolno ~. blHl"fUat:
Alc!IMd Hendy Kelley, IO' SuHnNll ( 11 CA l IF 0 RH I A BE$ T
Pl.,CostaMHa.CA'2'17 MORTGAGE HO IOI, • llmllu Tiii• bullMH I• conoucttd by •n In-.,..,,.. ... .,...,; 111 CALI FO .. HIA BEST dlYldut( MOA TGAGE HO 102, a limited
Al<l\trl Ii. Kelley par1ner,,,..,; U) CALlfORNIA alUT
Tl\11 st•-nt ••• 111..S wllh t"* MORTGAGE NO. 10J, • llmllad Covnty Clerk ot Oranoe County on per1.-rlhlp, »• E 17th Slrae1, Svlllt
AyV. tj t .. 1. 214, c .. ta Meta, CA •1U7,
' 1'1..aJ CALIFORNIA 8E.ST MORTGAGE
PulllllNd Oranve CCNtll Delly Pllol, CO .. POAATIOH, t C.tlfonlla COfllO'• ~. I I u n 1'tl ,._, llOfl, JOI E. 111'1 51....i, Suite >14, C"1a ...,, '' ' ' MeM.CAfi.27
NlllC NOTICE Tiii• l>Ullnes II (-UC""' ..., • <W·
POratlon C•llfornl• 8Ht Mofto•oe
"CTITIOUS 9USINISS Col1). CralQW. 9•11tty,
NAMI STATIMINT CllelNnal'IOf mit 9"rd
Tiie loll-Ing --Is OO•no bull-Tiiis _,,._, ... 111..S wlttl -
.. :: .. ~ON INTERNATIONAL •11 County Cltfll of 0 ··-C-ty Of\ ~la. trvlrw. CA '7714. ' Sept "· t"1 P't1tt11
Rl<ll•rd S. Oeyton Jr., Jll 1 Pllbll.,_ 0r8f9 C-l O.Uy Piiot
M410nOfla, ,,..,,...,CA 92714. s.pt 12 1' Oc1.' l:J, 1'11 411Ml TMs _._, I• condl>cl9<1 by •n ln. · • ' •
div..,.. 1-------------Aldwrd S 0.Y!Ofl Jr
Tiiis rial-w•> tlltel w1t11 1no c-IY Cltr~ of Or•nve CounlY on!-------------,..,.. ll, 1 .. t l'ICTITIOUI IUllNIUS
1'1H671 NAM• ITAT•MaNT
NU•nc£
Pub011'4d 0r.,. C:...•• Otlly PllOt, Tiie 1011-tno perton• •r• CS.1"9
S.ot. I, I. u. t2, '"' ...... , i.islMM .. : AIU)OHAUT SAi.eli, Hlltt ,_.,.,
Nnea .. ~ w•11A&.,.....an
AT,NfVATII MU ...........
111 ......... c-t ........ c. .................. -~ .. 0r.,..
111 ,,.. Matt•r ., Ille ••t•t• et
LA•1t•NCI I Mll.l..•A •h, 1.AWlt•NCI! 1'-aNT MIL.Lllll.
O.C..IH.
NMlct I• ~ elWfl t ....... -.. ,..,... wlll ...... ,... ........ ..
1M II..,_ ... '"' ....... .._ject .. C4lflfl~ ..... ..,.., c:-1 M
•• afl•r tllt tm•r• c•m,,.•11ty
t.MWll .. ! .. & -1'1 OolM!lrM, c-• llw. CA .USI *' •r of ...... 1•1, at ... "'"' .. Mltclltll .... H11att11. Atltt11ey• al l.aw, Ill
H•w~I Ctftttt Ori••· "'"• 14', ,..,.."" 9e«ll. CA ..... C..-.Cy flf o. .... ~ .. Callfenlla, ttl -
'""" tltte -lne.rnt. Ill eftlll i. all t11e ort•lfl ,..., jlAlllfft'f 11tua11t 111 UM
City of eor-•1 Mtr, ce....tv flf Or•noe. SU4lt oe Ce'"'°""'•· Hrt1<111ar. ly lltscrl"'9••1oi-..
l••lt· LAC t, a1ee .. JIM C.,_ .. ,
Mer trec:1 H-,._ ..c.-.. In ._
I,..,._., 41 & o OI mtlW41-m•P'
of Ortnee c-ty. Term1 ...... <•Ill In lewt\11 m-y
of Ille Un-~·on co.,flrinetlon •I ••I• .• , P•rl C••h ono btta11c•
•vlde11ctd t.'f not• tecur•• t.y
MtrlO-cw Trwt De-' Ofl Ole,,_.,.
ty M .. 111. hn pw ~nl • •-1 t.kl te be Oft*jt.11 w ltll l>ICI. llld• or ...,.., ao llt In wrnlno end
Wiii lie rec:.l•ad •t the •fore .. kl offk• •I eny tlmt •"9r tM ll"t puOtkallon
,..,... Md IMf0<'9 ............
OattCI 111a lllfl Cley of s.ot .. 1•1 Wiit..,,.. II. Mllltr,
E-~ .. the E•lele Of Mkl Oecacleftl WellKt L.. MlkMff It,
... ......, .. Yw
Mltc!Mll&.._
lltN ..... C...~ .• .-1• --..na-..c.-....
P11bll-Or-Coe.al 0•11'1' Piiot. 5-pl u. , .. , 41.o.lt
PUILIC Itta
NW.U
NOTICE Ofl Dl!ATH Ofl
CU.•STI H. OLDHAM,
aka CEL8STE HAND
OLDHAM ANO OF
PITITION TO AD ·
MINISTER ESTA'fE NO.
A-1103'1.
To all he i rs .
beneflclarle$, crt(jltors
and conUnget\t crtdl~rs of
CELESTE H. OLDHAM,
aka CELEST E HANO
OLDHAM and perSOnj
who may be otherwl~~ tn·
terested In the will and/or
estate: A. petition has been flied
by James E. N ltch In the
Superior CC>Yrt' o f Oran ge
County requesting that
James E. Nltc h tJe clP·
pointed as personal
representative to ad·
minister the estate of
Celeste H. Oldham, aka
Celeste Hand Oldh am.
Costa Mesa. Ca. (under
the Independent Ad·
ministration of Estates
Act> The petition Is set for
hearing in Dept. No. 3 al
700 Civic Center Drive
West, Santa Ana, CA 92701
on October 14. 1981 at 9: 30
a .m. •
I F YOU OBJECT to the
orantlno of the petition,
you Should either appear
at the hearino and state
your object ion s or file
w ritten objections w ith the
court before the hearino.
Your appearance may be
NOTICI 01' TllUSTlrl'S IALI In person or by your at-
w. .... .--m torney.
T.1.-.~ IF Y 0 U ARE A
NEWPORT HOME LOAN, 1Nc. as c RE o 1 TOR or a cont· ouly eppoln19<1 TruttM under IN I • d 1ot1owlnodlK<r111ec1...., °''"'"WILL ngent c r editor of the e -
SELL .AT PU8LIC AUCTION TO THE ceased, you must file your
HIGHEST 8100ER l'O .. CASH claim w ith the court or
IP•YHI• .. tltne of .... 1" lawful present It to the personal tnoney of '"* Unlttd Slelftf ell r'911t, . . uue eno 1n1.,...1 ._.,. .... "'Md,_ rep resentat1 ve appo1 nted
held..., 11-Mid OteCI Of Trust 1n by the court within four
,,.. ,,,_,.., lltrtlnetter de1er111tc:1: months fl-Om the date of TRUSTOR . KE NN ETH A.
SAMPSELL, an unmarried mall first Issuance Of letters as
BENEFICIARY: Hl!WPOAT provided in Section 700 of
HOMELOANTRUSTll01 the Probate Code of AKM-Febro,atry t, ltlO .. Instr, •
Ho.•'" boot<,,..,.,... ,.., °' Ot· California. The time for
llctet Records '" '"' otlk• 01 ,,. fillno c laims will n ot ex-~•con1er of Or-Coun1y; Mkl •..s p lre prior to four months of trust deol<rlbH IM foll9wtno prapt<· 1y· Lot 117 of rrecl NO ... 1n .,.. c1. from the date of the hear-
ty of ec.ia -.. c-tr ~ 0r-.. ing not iced above.
St••• of C.lllwftla, n -,..., r• YOU MAY EXAMINE corded In ~ 10. oeoes II to u In. f I c•u•lw mtKell-s ,.,..Ill In 111e of· the le kept by the cour t.
lie• of., ... COllnl'r recorde; of Hid If you are interested in the
countv. E•ctPI tlltrtfrom •II o11, ciH. estate, you may file a re-
mtnerats end 0111er llydrocarbons, quest with the court to re -11e1ow • .-otll of SCIO 1•1, wlt'-1 Ille • r19111 of wrtec:• -rv. at re .. rwc:1 1 celve special notice of the
ln•t•umtMSof recon1L inventory of estate assets .,!~ P11u1rn 0r1w. eosi. AMM. CA and of the pet itions, ac-
.. 111 •11,_ _,ess orcom"'°".,.. c; o u n ts a n d rep or t s
•t11n•tlon '' "'°""' •bo.,., no warrenty described In Section 1200.5
'' 111.,.., as to II• cornptet-u or <or· f the California Probat e rKtrwnl." n. -fklfry -r HICI Cod
°""of Trvst, by reeson of• llr•ecll ., e ·
d•l•ull In '"* obllgellon• •ecured Law Office of DAVIS AND
INretly, lleAtofor• •xe<llltCI •n<I .,._ KILLIAN
llwre<t lo,,.. Underltoned. wrlttWI 3901 MacArthur Blvd Dectarlllten of Default Md Dem-·'
tor Sal•, -wrltton notice of ll<M<ll Suitt 202 and ol electlon to ceuH 111e un· Newport Beach, CA 92660
dertlO"fCI lo stll u ld !>'Q9erty lo (714) 7S2.a41 .. ll!ify Mid ob119tllon1, •nd tMrMlter . tne unoon1gnec1 cau-wld notk• of Pubhshed Orange Coast llr••"' -of •tec:tlofl • o. Rec:or-Daily Pilot, Sept. 21, 22, 28,
Mey U, 1•1 " Instr No "'7' In -1981 41 43-81 140S6, P•oe 1146, 01 uld Oii lcla1 lllacoro..
Seki Witt Wiii bt -· but Wll'-t covtnetll or warranty, •KPrtU or'""
p11ec:1, ~rc:11no uue. -»Ion, or encu,...,,,Meel, to pey tne rwnalnlng
pdnclpjll """ OI IM note(Sf H<U~..S by Mkl o..ct of Trinl, with lnt•re•t es
In Mid-· provt-, MVMICtl, If any,
under ll'e ~ 01 Mkl 09td ol TNSI,
IH s, cl\ar99s tnd ••Pt"Hs of the
Tr111t• -of the 1n.in. <r•ltd b¥ ..Id DMd ol Trvst. Seid s.ete wlll 1119
lleld on~,. September lO, ttll
at 7:00 p.m. et "1e CNgman ""*-entra11<t Ill the Civic Ot11ter 8ulldtna.
JOO Ees! °*Pmen "-·In t"9 OIV
of Or-. CA At .,.. time of ,,,. lnltlal ,..,.,.tc.atlOfl
of tltls nouce, Ille total -ot "1e unpeto ll•t•n<t ot Ill• oblloatlon
MCured b¥ Ult -deterlbed de«! of
tru" -nttma1eo cotll, ••11911MI and f<l••nces 11 W.7•.IS To 0.-
termlrw IM opontno bid, you rney <.all
1714)"1 ....
OATEOAuoult JI, 1•1. NEWPORT HOME LOAN INC..
n leld Trusl•, By T 0 SERVICE COMPANY, ...... By OWi• h t.,us,
AlJl•tent Sec:r .. orv
One Cltv Bl...,. w .. 1.
O.a11g1,CA.,...
1 14~
PuClllSIW<I 0r"'91 C-.t Dally Piiot, s.111. 1, n, 12, 1t1t JtT7-t1
"'IUC Itta
Ml P'l IUOll COU•T Of' CAI.I l'Otl NI A
COUNTY OP ottA-• lntll9M-ot
Ille Appltu110f1 Of In rt: TOOO MICHAEL AL8AE.CH1
a mt,.,, by
MA"Y JOWIL..SOH
l'orC ....... ofH-
AlteDt OllOlllt TOIMOWCAUH l'Olt CNAllOI Of' NAMI
MAAY JO WIUOfC "-flltcl t Ptll· 11on In IN•~..,..,...-•"-'no "111'-r to ,...,... tilt -from TODD MICHAEL ALaRECHT to TOOO MICHAEL Wtl.SOfC.
II ls ,.,.e.y or....., !Mt all -lnltrfll..S Ill m. matt.. etor ... 141 •P.
pear befOrt this <_, In °*"""*'' Ho. J at 7'GD Clvk C.-r Ortw WHt.
S.nl• AN, C.ltfomla,., Oct. 21, 1•1,
et tO:lO o'doo a.m .. encl ''-" afld
tlltre -c-. " M'f tr.r ....... ... ,, .. kl P91ltlcwl tor ,,..,... Of ,,.,..,.
-Id not lit trtM9d.
It I• tur1twr orwed !Mt • C:<ICIY of
"''' --Ill -cauM be l'Ubfl"*' In Orantt COHI Dally Piiot, a
n•••P•P9• of 0tMre1 Clrcul•tlOfl, ~lallMlfttN.s~.tlfftllOftC•• ........ ""'C:-UllY't _.,~lot .. , ...... ,.'*...._ Dated s.t. lf.. 1111.
R-ldH.P...._, J~ .. .,.
5-'lorc-1 Pullllllled Or ... C-1 0.lty lll'llof, s..t, U, 22, !t, OCI. 6, ttll ...,..,
"'IUC llTICE
NW<IU»
NOTICE Of TRUSTEES' SALE
On ~-0.r JO, '"' •• II 00 t.m. Flrt1 Amerlten Tiiie lntur•nc• Com-
pany H Trustee, or Su<cn-Tru•I•
or Subllttut9<1 Trvit•, of 11w1 certtln
DMd al TrUJI ue<lllltd by \lln<enl J
S.,,r.ce, An uirwnarrltid ~Mt, •nd , .. c.or-July 10, 19IO •• lnstr...,.nl NO.
ICIO:D, In -1:1MO, r>a99 1'32, of Of fl<l•I Record• of Orenot Counly,
Calll~, -Pll•-nt lo lhat <Af·
lain Noll<• of Oefavll -ElectlOn to
Sell Iller...-recor-Mey 21. '"' u ln\lrumenl No. 1*4, In 0001< 1401'2.
paoe ,,.., ol Offlclal llKords ol .. io
County, wlll unotr eno pur'l<ant 10
Uld o..c:t of Tnnl Mii •I pullll< 611(
tlon tor caSll, ••wtut mono o1 Ille Unll·
.cl Slelel of Arnerlc.e, ti Ille meln en trance to First America Title ln1urance ~,, lo<aled fl 14 E
Fifth St., In I,_ CllY of s..i· AN,
CalltlWnle, all 11\at rlQllt. ti -In
'''"'' con,..ved 111 -Id by II under laid o..cl of Trusr ti. pr-r ly 1th .. tltd 111 MIO Co I •n<I Slel•
ducrlD..s•'
Lal .. of Tr.ct 6191 •• per m•p , ..
<or-In a-1t7, -19 to 41 tn-ctuslY't of MIKell-. Mel)5 •Konu
of MIO Or-Co;inly Tiit •lrwl -reH or other common
d.,1-tlon 01 uld properly 1:1141 M•roene Clrc ... ,,..,,..., C•
H•me-addrenof tlle lltMllctery
•• w-·~ 111e sel• •• ,,.,no con.. du<l•<I Aot:>trt \/. Moynaro etld
Er-tlN MeynerO, IS.S Woody Hiii Or Ive, El Ojon, C.. "2020
OtrecllOnl to Ille ebov• pr0j)er1y may be oCJl•lntd by rtquotllno .. ,...
'" wrtllno '"""Ille llentfklery wllllln 10 ""' lr.im llle llrst Plllllktllon of lllts notice•.
S.IO Mitt wlll bt ,,.... wlllloOUt cov• nant or warranty, • .,,,.. .. or lmpllto,
es to llllt, poHesllon or encumbra11c1K
lo MllSl'f 1ht unpaid baltnce dUe Ofl I"* note or notes -Ure<! by told 0-
of Tnnt, to wit: W.llO.•. plu> Ille
1011owt111 utlrneted costs, ""-~
eM --ft a1 Ille ti-o1 !114t lnlll•I o..lllkMlon ot this Hof lo of S.te·
Advantft M,...0.00 Inter.It on Advance• S12J.JO
l'o,__, Cost• i 1.2J9.7t
Otltd. Auo. JI, 1 .. 1 First Anwrlc1111 Tiiie
·-Mee Coml>lllly By Llnd<I C. Andreoli,
Aul. Secretary
••t Ivy SlrMt St<> 0'*90, CA. '1101
C1141 2J1. 1 n• Pubfl'11ed Ora!IQll Co41•1 Dally PllOI,
S.pt I, 1S, 22. '"' ~W.-.1
l'tCTITIOUI 9UllNEU NAMI ITATIM.NT TM tcil'9wtno ..,._ t• ootno b\111
MU•: Lene, HUfttl,._. .. ec:ll, c.lltornta _________ ...._ __ MONTGOMEllY'S BOATWOAKS UNLIMITED, 1432 ~1,.. AY't., Apt
I 271, 81dg., h , N ..... pon IMec:h, CA. .,...,
l'tCTITIOUI aUllNISS NAMlr ITATIMINT
TM JollOWlno --Ii dolll9 bu.i· ...... ;
A CHILD'S WOALO, >St Welnut,
<Mtt MtM, CA '2•it. Oltfle J, Slllplty, 2S2 Wllnul.
c..i.-...CAn••· Tlllt .....,,...., It conc:IU<ted by en '""
dlvldUlll. Ol-J SNPltY Tiii• -......-_, llltcl wltll !tit
C-ly Clttf• Of Orange County on
A ...... "'1
.,._ I
"lcllarcs A Jtcllman. 1tltl
lhlll•• L•n•. Hllnllt19IOn ··~"· -----------Callfomla ,._ l'ICTITIOUS .VllN•U Merllyn 0 . JeOman, ltltl NAMIUTATWMaNT
Reno•r UM, H11ntlno1on •••cit, TM ...__ ~ It ,,.... loutl·
Calllornlf nw. -... Tiii• MlnH• I• c~IN ~ • AYTE·WAY , 1401 O•t•w•r• 0t1Wrat _......_. Str•el, I 1, Huntln9'0fl ettclt, CA
~lyft 0 , JK-INtll ""41.
Tlllt ~ •• fllef wl"1 Irle GL.eNH WA Y NE WHIT ·
C-trC....Of0r .. c:.untT9fl .... TINOTOH, 14117 l)elew-51rwt •• ,,
ltf!llltr I, "'1 H-lftfW\ a-11, CA..._ , P1'911 Tlllt ......._ It c~ !rt ..
Pvt.lllMCI Or-. CN9' Oettr ~. IMMW.I.
Q••I Aoy Mon1oomtry, 103
511ptrlor Aw .. Apt. 11n, Bl6o ••.
N.,._. IM<ll, CA. t»J
Tllla °'*'*'I•~ by an lft-
dM~.
°'99 Ill. Monl-ry
This tt.ttmlftt was lllltd with IN
COIHllY (lerll of Of•ntt County on A419,Jl,ltlt
1'1MMJ
PYllll-Or-'°"' 1>e11r l"ltet,
..... '· .. 15, 21, , .. , llSMt
lefll. I$, JJ. !t, Ort f.. "'1 ., .. , ~_ft.,....,, -Ill ..w.r
Tiii• ......... -........... -rwwuto .... ~ ..,....., t-------------Cownlr Clefll l'f Orefllll Ctullty on 1-------------ltYllll-Orenoe Coe•t O.lly Plkll, ~ tlll( tt91, ti, !tit.
s.,t. 11 .. U, 21, t .. 1 .,..., •-------------PU1111 I f'Vll41 ... C)r ... Gtelt 0.llW 111'1'-t 5oet1t. 22, 2', Oc1. 6, II, ttl1 4115"41
Ford satellites bought
The International Telecom·
munlcaUons Satellite Oraanis•·
tlon (INTELSATl Hid It will purchase from Newport Beacb·
based Ford Aerotpace 6 Com·
maalcaLlou Corp. tbn:e addl·
UonaJ INTELSAT VA lnlema·
tlonal comm unications
sate 111 tes
IUllCOUNTY
w th $27.6 million ror Laat year. •
Cost ot the new 11atellltes is ex
pectt.-d to amount to about f1 5
million. l'xclwsive of orbital in·
centlve payments and provlsloM
for innatlon.
j
BUSINESS
quarterly cash ciivld end. In tak·
Ing its action t h e board
specificallY' did not chan ge the
basic quarterly dividend policy
but oiily acted to omit the third
quarter 1981 ca11h dividend.
Rockwell lntern aUonal 's
Dcfeue Eledroele1 Operatlou,
Anaheim. bu announced a ma·
jor o r&anltallo nal reaJl1nme nt.
The restructurt111c o f the opera·
lions involves the creation of a
n e w DEO s taff or11~inlution.
marketlna and communications.
and restatnng or two key busl·
neas positions vice presi·
de'nt·i n ternalional operations
and vice presld e nt·business .
INTELSAT Is a 106·member·
country organization that owns
and operates aatellltes used to
provide about two·thirds of the
worlds internatlonol trans·
oceanic telecommunications
links, und almost all overseas
television relays. •
The board of directors of Hun-
tington Heach·based Merc ury
Savings, now a federal savings
and loan ussocialion, has voted
to omit the association's regular
. .
Rampart General Inc., lrvlae·
base d developer and builder of
residential and industrial prop·
erty and manurac turer a nd dis·
trlbut.or of metal and prebullt
con crete fireplaces, reported an
unaudited los11 alter tax benefits
of $1.3 million, or 48 cents a
s hare. for the year ended March
31. This compares with a profit
of $431,200, or 17 cents, for the
previous year. Total revenues
were $17.9 m1lhon compared
Nttmed to the new position of
vice president·mark etlng a nd
communications 1s J oseph H.
Garrett, former director of
OEO's W ash in gton , 0 C., office.
W illiam E. B enso. former DEO
vice president of business de·
velopment. has been appointed
vice president·lnternalional
operations . Ear l e S .
W ashington, former director o f
DEO strategic development, has
been nam e d vice presi-
dent-business development
Workers in dark on plan
SAN FRANCISCO !AP> -
Mos t Americans know of the ex·
1s tence of workers' compensa-
tion known in some slates as
workman's compens ation -but
they know little about how it
works and what it does for
the m . a r ecent s urvey indicates.
and some thought employees
paid.
Almost h alf were not
aware that workers· compensa·
tio n covers all medical bills .
t pres ident of Fireman's Fund
I lns urance Companies .
Researchers found that eight
of e very 10 respondents in a na·
tional study had som e general
awareness of how the insurance
syste m ope rated In their state.
But Lhc s tudy also established
lhat
About h a lf didn't k now
workers ' compensation covers a
s ubs tantial portio n of lost in·
come resulting from job·relaled
accidents and illnesses.
"In fact, employers pay th e
entire cost of t h e progr am in all
50 s tates and the District of
Columbia, valid medical c laims
are completely covered, and in ·
come protection is g u a r anteed
under stat e system s. which
have existed s ince the 10005, ..
say s John C. Richman. vice
Given the low awareness level
of benefits a nd o f the system 's
operat ion in general. Richman
s ays, "lt's not very s urpris ing
that only half the responden ts in
our study felt they would re·
ceive a fair level or w o rker s'
compensation payments without
litigation. When you just aren't
sure what you're entitled to re·
ce1ve. one of the easies t things
to do is get a lawyer • •
Jus t under h alf d idn't know
tht.•ir e mployers paid the costs
fo r the s ystem. Many tho ught
taxpayers were footing the bill.
Richman confirms that litiga·
lion, whether in court o r before
state hearing officers. con-
tributes in a maJor way lo lhe
cost of workers · compensation
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTI NGS
HEW YOAIC (APl tlarUL 14\4 ·u Hr•ntnt ,..,.. 11 I OMoCH '"",~ JM\16 Sts•~~H*lll• >114 nv.
HASOAO ~tlon• CIOwC1> "" '"IMS 1111 JOY> 11 Olll'erro ,..,. -~P l2YJ lJ'h UPS AND DOWNS .,,.,..,no hf9Mst blOi ColrTtt 10Yo 1~ tmretnd • •14 onerTP 1~ 17\oo StertSI M J1"J Ind to-offers by ColoG.. '-"' Intel lit 1614 PCA Int "" "'° Str•wCI :lllt\l'J 2714 marht ,......"es of ComCIH ,,.... 40 lntrcEnr 11'1 1~ Pellll8 tJY> IW. Sll4Mlru lS lS'k ' p.m PrlUl do not CmlSllr 1l 14\l'J lnlmlGl 10 101/o P<G•R :llM -5-rEI ""' 11'1 lncluderNllmarll1111 CmwTet 13'h IS tnBkW511 '"" 11"-li ... te p • ts'· ISY> Srb s • 1'14 1~ mark-w comm-Co11Pep VV. 1' lwaS.UI lff't JOV. P•r:Zt 12\'t IJ'h TOK s »14 -HEW YOAI( IAPI -Tiie loll-lr>O 11111 Inion 1or -.Sey. Cordh •~ 11\1. Jemllfly 1711. ,,..., PH\aEnt nv. '"' TIME OC " I .,,..., ._ Over · IM C-•• Slocl< 81<1 Aw. CrosTre ~ ~ Jtrlto > 11 JI"-Penlelr 11~ 101_~ TT•mpem•s JO-. ~ stoc:kl eno w•rrMlll lf\at llave -up • U l,,P 12 llV. CuttrFd • 11~ ?~ JJ011!7,y"..~ 7-1• "-PtopEap .,.,. v.. tfldm -t1 Ille most --the ..-1 -on AFi!IPtol I~ 1214 Cycllron -r-• ~ l7 .... :f!"' Pelrlt l 17'4 a v. TecumP 6010 •,!.,, peorront=r..of <'-. ~rdleli 01 volume A\IM CP .......... Ol•De• • ""' 1~ l<at•St pf 17 .. 17"" Pettibon '""' 1S'.lo hlcmA • .,. , .. Accur•¥w '"" 11"J OaylM•I 21 211h l(et,..r Phll•N•I ~ 27"1 Tenant • I~ 11v. No wu1•ll tradl;:f, ti.low P ••• Incl· :~~~ ,m :t ~~i~· •,:r:·~~ ~=~!~·;··::~ 'iE ~=a:-~ :i: ~E l~~r.' ~: ~ ~jEc::s'=~~~PE~~:~::
........... J0>4 )114 O.w•yEI ) ll4 l(ellyS<t 44 4S Pl .. tlM .... "' T.!)'Cl'IS ~ S?. Allcotnc O •h •v. 01.Cry• lOVt 22 Keuflel ~ a v. PotslS • 614 'frtcoPd 1M Jt'h AllH "-'• ""' OlsnCru ll lS 1(1m11a11 JOit, toY1 PresGM •14 ~ TroyG II h 1"° 21'1 Am•r.. '"" I~ Oocull ' ~ 21' I( no1111 1\l'J '"°' PrtSl•yn Jtl'> -TylOllfd 11\4 ll'lli 1 AFurn • 414 Ootl,Gn 1~ IP'> l(IOofG ~ » Proor1> '"" 2 UnM<Gll !t!Ao 20 AGrH1 1~ ,...., 0or,1oe ' IS',., .. KnapeV ISV. .. PbSvHC t~ I~ us Enr 114 1'111 1 AlnGp s ""' U"" Or •ICI\ 1' 1'111. l(retot II 11\'t ,P11r1Ben ZN ?314 US Sur 22 2214 J AMl<rol ~ '1 OunllO • I~ 12"' Kullekt Ill'. 1~ P\11~ II """ US Trelt 11-. "'-4
•N•t•ns 12Y> llli!. lhlrlrn.• _ """ 1s L•nc•t" 21\'t n ~"'"' 1714 """ UV•B"' »I'll ~ S AO..esr 17l't 11 ~•t11Vnc t1"-11\l'J l-A•• S Siio A991nPr IM IN Un•l!"I 13 14 6 AAHMo 1211. 12 .... E<Ofll.ab '"" 17 .... LtneCo ~Joi Aaycl\m e\<'t lO UpPenP 11 II"" 1 AWelO l '°"" n EIPHEI ,.,_. 10"0 Lllnvs _. a .... lloymnd llVI I~ \IN IR 11" 1W. I A....Sll• 1v. 1-EICltrBe S-.. 6V. LldStor IM 1,.. RMn ' Diii t4 VelHU t Ul'I Ullo • A"ISA 14"" ,...., EleHucl '~ IO'A Lln9u1 )1'4 a2 RoecU!.o 41¥. o vanDu• 16 i.Y. 10 Ar19AGd t)\'J ts EtMocll • '1,·~ '!~ Laoe,clrn 10 1014 llot»My l! 1! \lt kfO , 11 Ill'. l! AnlaCp UY> l>t'o EnrO.v ., r-MC14 ~ nlll R-ten • • \lktreS 7.... 7\lt ' ApPl•C 17l'< II EnrAMllld ~ ~ MGF O s '°" ~ ROMM " , ..... VIC19oCp 9" lf't I) Apl<IM • ,...,. IS EnAs• U\'t ,,_ MHlGE ·~ IS lllu'5to~ 1• t•V. VaNlllll 17'1'1 ""' 14 ArdenGp 'I'll Enlwllll t\lo '"' M ... IP1 S-6 s..ttlttr J'Jo 4 WlhEnr 11-11"' :: AWICola «IV> 41 Eq\llSL q\ 1014 ~mP 4t~ ~ s.f5,uec:•t~~ ~ _. .... Welcltrn 116 4\lo 7 ~::~~~! l~ :~ ,,W11 'o:1~~~ ;:r:~, • .... si'Paul :" !~ =~:' !~ .. !~ii B•lrdCe 71h 7'4 Ft brlTk l'4 ,.. Marlon • w. 114 ScrlPt>H 74 7t WO.e r s fn4 •14 lltllyPP ~ '"'° FarmGp 1N • MautLP ~ Jl\l'J $ensor M\lt ~ WHotd '114 ...... r:
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Your unhappiness about your Job hH now·
reached al1rmln1 pea.kt, with the Bureau of Labor
Stall1Ucs reportlna that a1 many u 24 mlWoo
Americana -a tull quarter of our work force -are
d1ssati8fied with their work.
Tbe coet to employers rum into blWoo.a of dollara a year In absenteeism, r educed output, poor
workmanahlp. The coat lo our natJon la incalculable,
for Ulla attitude la deeply erodil\a our ability to com·
pete successfully ln world market..
Why? Are you turned olf by your work.In( en·
vlronment, supervision and company pollclea or the
actual nature of tbe job you bold? Is the reuon that
you reel your ~ job s hould be
more than a I way to pay your a. .c
I bills? Are we ..::;
w ltnessing a .. A-.-01111·---------
I fundamental IJ[llA PllJIR change in the
attitude of
1 American men and women toward worldn1 itself?
Whatever the causes, ii the BLS repo,rt ia to be
believed, business and labor must get to1ether on the
problems and possible solutions. And some pro1rams
do suggest progress for you, as an employer or
employee, to study and possibly adapt.
PROBLEM: Millions of young mothers in today's
work force are on rigid schedules that keep them
away from their children and are a basic cause of
dissatisfaction. Adding to this is the difficulty in find·
ing child care.
SOLtJTION: Flexible work schedules that let
employees choose their own working hours or days
(within limits). Some companies have lO·hour, four·
day weeks; others allow employees to select lbeir
own starting and ending limes with everyone at work
at specified "core" hours. Mothers also are aided by
companies that take an active role in finding child
care.
A unique "Employee Assistance Program" has
been developed by National Semiconductor Corp. of
Santa Clara that's worth exploration. Begun u a
c~ild·care referral plan, it now offers counseling on a
wade r ange of personal worries. "With 8,500
employees at this location, our size approximates the
population of a small city.'' says Charles Sporck,
president. "We address the most typical problems
of a 'city' of this size."
PROBLEM: Employees are frustrated because
they can't voice their complaints or offer proposals to
improve attitudes and output.
SOLtJTION: Open up the lines of communication
between management and workers, so both sides can
benefit from gripes and recQmmendations.
In Detroit, General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
have created "quality circles," small groups of
workers whose duties include smoothing out relations
between personnel. In Stamford. Conn., the huge
business machine manufacturer, Pitney Bowes, is
beefing up a communication program that goes back
30 year s. The program culminates in yearfy
jobholder rf!eelings involving workers and corporate
representauves.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HEW YOIUUA~ fO'INf ~ •"11'-~~'I· s.p, "·
'°Ind °£':57 :r. .. ~ ~+l?.J IO Tm MS.It>&• Ml.II*·"'• t"Ji IS Ull 10&.0f IOS.51 IOa.4' IOUI + 0-'7 lot Stll au.• JU.ti J2A.14 JJ'.ts+ 2.17
llldu• . • • .. .. .. .. . • • .. . . .. '·'°',AGO Tren .. .......... ...... 116,JOCI U111• • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. I ,41 S,200 U Siii ..... ,.... ... ••. ... 6,001,100
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YOAK IAPI Sell. 21
_., f-~
OKll-111 Un~ 371 TIMI laiue• 1'11
-lllQll• • -·-· "' -AT 4'MEX 00
NEW YOAK CAPI Soop. 11
METALS.._,
Toci;,4
l3I 111 19' s IO'f
Prev. de.Ji
1027 .,
I .. 1 2~
.!=... ~7~ cellh a ..-.M, U.S,
~---~··--l.lilc -c...a·~·-·Till V.911 ......... _... ... A......._7HO<eftbe ....,,._ N,Y,
~'441-•"rflelll. .............. troyer .. M.Y.
SILVER .-.,
HEW YOllK tA .. I -H.W-, & ~
lih••r MGrlcley 110.UI, 11t1 tUOO.
E ........... 110.-, .. to•. f*'<-
ui.r 111.M , .. 90"42.
I
"
' ..
-Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuae.dfty, Auguttt 25 , 1981 . •
,,
18 mg. •ta(, l3 mg. nicotine ev. per cigarene by FTC method.
•••••J •O~Dlf....OCOCO
.. ,
A .----," ·-... --.. ·---·-/"··-·
'• -~
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Oetermin~d
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh.
..
.. . .
llilyPilat
TUESDAY, SEPT, 22, 1981
CLASSIFIED CS
Tony J)or sett regained
th e NFL rushing lead
zn Dallas victory. C2 .
It's still up • ID • air
Pastorini, Rams. a couple of · days . away
By JOHN Sf;VANO °' .. ~ ...... --Dan Pastorini's future with
the Rams is still llP in the air.
That may sound ambiguous, but
it was meant to be.
It's been learned t he Rams
have made an offer lo acquire
Pastorini 's services and
Pastorini 's attorney, Bob Cohen,
has countered with one of his
own.
And, although the two sides
are talking, they are still in the
preliminary stage of negotia-
tions with the nilly gritty of
bargaining yet to come.
Cohen, whose office is based in
Beverly Hills, expected to hear
from Rams General Manager
Don Klosterman today. This was
after both sides m et twice on
Monday.
"IT'S REALLY too early to
tell yet," said Cohen of negotia-
tions ... But I would think -pro
or con -we s hould have a feel.
for things in the next couple of
days.
"We don't want lo drag this on
and I don't think it's to their (the
Rams') benefi\ to drag it on
either'."
One way or another it would
appear an answer would be
forthcoming Wednesday. And it
should be interesting to see just
what transpires in the next 48 ,
hours.
Pat Haden. who took a severe
s hot to his chest in Sunday's
game against the Green Bay
Packers, reported to Rams Park
for treatment Monday and. said
he should be able to do some
throwing by Thursday (the
Rams' first full day of practice>.
JEFF RUTtEDGE, on the
:>ther hand. is eagerly awaiting
the verdict on Haden so he can
-;tart preparing for a possible
start in Chicago Monday.
One thing seems certain,
whichever way this scenario
goes. somebody is bound to be
unhappy.
Haden has stated on more
than one occasion he would be
Ferguson
bubbles
like rookie
Joe Ferguson is a 35-year-old
veteran of 12 big-league seasons,
but had little trouble bubbling
like a rookie Monday night
"I was keyed up just to play,"
said Ferguson. "There's no
sen se ever feeling sorry for
yourself. The best thing is to try
to make things happen."
. Ferguson, who was released
by the Los Angeles Dodgers in
June and signed by the Angels
Sept. 1, singled for two runs in
the second inning to start the
team on its way to a 6-3 win over
the Chicago White Sox. For
Ferguson, it was his first
catching appearance since the
1980 season.
• · 1 • ve tried to . be positive
about the transition," said
Ferguson. who had pinch-hit and
made' sporadic . outfield ap-
pearances s ince being signed.
"This is a good club, we just got'
. into one o f those negative
momentums." '
The win snapped a six-game
Angel losing streak and was the
second win in 16 games.
Fergus9n 's single off Britt
Burns, 9-5, came alter Burns hit
Don Baylor with a pitch and
Bobby Grich followed with a
single to send Baylor to third.
with Grich advancing to second
on the throw to third.
The White Sox made it 2·1 in
the third when Jim Morrison
and Bill Almon led off with
si ngles and Ron LeFlore
grounded into a double play as
Morrison scor'ed. .
The Angels stretched, their
lead to 4-1 with a pair of un-
earned runs ln the fourth. With
one out, Gricti reached second
on third baseman Morrison's
throwing error. After Ferguson
walked. Brian Downing singled
to score Grich as Fer1uson
moved to third when· UF1ore
bobbled the ball in reft for an er·
ror. Ferguson scored on a
sacrifice Oy by Butch Hobson.
Steve Renko, 7·4, entered the
seventh with a four-hitter, but
homers !>Y' Harold Baines, hia
seventh, and Mor?Uon, bil 10th,
and a single by Almon brou1bt
on ri«tlt·hander Don Aue, who
retired the final seven men for
his loth save.
Baylor's 16th homer mad~ it
6•3 In the el1hth. It was hia llltb
homer as an Ansel, setUn1 a
c lub record. Downin& then
doubled and scored on a 1ln1le
by Bert Cam_paner:la.
upset by Pastorin1 's presence.
Rutledge isn't overly enthused
either because Pastorini, plus a
healthy Haden. might mean a
demotion to the No. 3 slot in the
quarterback pecking arder. 1 Indeed, somebody's going to
get the short stick in all this.
And it's hard to fathom t he three
quarterbacks co uld live
harmoniously under the condi·
lions.
"THE RAMS CAN have us on
the same ·team, but all of u~
won't be happy,'' says Rutledge
of the possibility.
"What's upsetting is that if
Pastorini signs they can't work,
all of us. Whoever becoa;es the
third quarterback won 't get any
wor.k. .
"And, if he ( Pastorini l comes
in and Pat is healthy. they're go-
ing to have to decide who is No.
3."
That choice would seem to be
limited to Hade n or Rutledge
b ec ause as Rutledge ra-
tionalized, "They're not going lo
bring Pastorini in to be the No. 3
quarterback.·· Then Rutledge
added, "And if they put me No. 3
I won't be happy."
Rull~e is banking his future
on what Malavasi promised hi,m
last week.
"I CAN ONLY go by what ~ay
told me and he said 1f there was
going to be a quarte rback
change that I'd get the first
• shot," Rut explained. "I believe
Ray, he's never lied to me "
Still, Haden as No. 3 is even
more difficult to envision
Currently. without Pastorini·s
presence, Haden would almost
have lo be considered the No 3
man because of his injury.
Ha den i.ns is ts he will make
ever y effort to star t against
Chicago, but if his physical ap·
pcarance Moncfay is any indica-
lton toward that goal he still has
a long way to go.
In the meantime, the Rams
continue to negotiate with Cohen
to see just what kind of price tag
~astorini has dangling from his
neck. One thing's for sure. he
won't come cheap.
PASTORINI WAS making·
$350,000 as a member of the
Oakland Ra11.1ers . . and that
money wai guaranteed
··Dan 1s enthusiastic about.
playing with the Rams," srud
Cohen. "The Rams are s till a
good foo(bali team and they
have a good defense, which 1s
1m portanl to a quarterback. too.
··He'd like to com e to the
Rams provided we can negotiate
a good contract that both sides
ar e h appy with
"So far dealings have been on
a very professional level. but
we're still at the give and take
~tage, .. he added.
"By Wednesday. hopefully
we'll know whether we hC:1ve
something going or not." l'Cll lla.d.t'11 talks ll'tlh .lol11m1e .Joh11.~un arzd ,...,,,d /!rio·• r1lf•, " 1111 1111llf1'd .\u11du11
He's seen UCI grow over the years
Ault was second student, basketball player and currently is an Anteater booster
By J OHN SEVANO
Ol-Delfy ...... 5'.tt
Usually this space is reserved for
jock-type stories. The ones where hometow~ heroes or former campus
stars reminisce about the' past and the
present
This story. however. will be a little
different Because as good an athlete as
Dave Ault was as a youngster, his con-
admit. he had to fight just to make Lhe
squad. As a m atter of fact. his favonll'
remembrance of that year was when
VC I played the UCLA freshmen at
Pauley Pavilion which. at the time.
LOOKING BACK
d1rl'cth involv•!d 111 mud1 11f l <'I ...
h1sl<>r): SIOCl' the Ul\IVl'fSll\ ., h1nh 111
19<i5
tw1 ' \ln1%l all the money has to
('llOH' through volunteer giving. When
you ha\•' ;.i sut·r·t·ssful program like
IJaskt'tlwll 1t makci-it easier to get
pPnµlt· 1D\t1ht·d "'hu normallv wouldn't ha\ I' 111'1'11 -
"I a..,1 \'C'ar· ... t('am was the best UCI
11.Js l'\t r lrnd And. l\evm Magee 1s the
finest pl.ty<·r that's C'VC'r been."
tributions away from the playing court featured a pretty fair center named
far exceed those he made in high school Lew Alc indor (known presently 'as
For Opl'ncrs, Ault was the• seC"ond o.;tu
dt•nt en•r to enroll at UCI He \\as aho
th•• person ""ho proposed the bill to hav<'
Campus llall changed to Crawford Hall
in memor~ of Wayne Crawford. lhl
sc·hool's first a thletic director who tl11.'cl
of cancer
l':ven mun• significant. though, might
be /\ult s pre1H'nl partu:1pat1on a' 1
m cm bt:r of thc• UC Irvine Sporb A-.
... opates .• m organizalton that s literalh
keeping the school's athlt>h c program
1m their fc<'l
\fost 11f tht> money raised. says Ault.
"ill go to n·c:ruiting and scholarships
\11\th111i,: 11 fl uH•r \\Ill have to be dealt
"'11 h ll\ thl· board. but some finances
C'o11ld 1x1 ... s1hl~ go toward the construe·
t 111n of a new gymnasium.
and college. Kareem AbduJ.Jabbar>.
That's not lo say Ault wasn't good in The Anteaters, as Aull best r<'called.
his s pecialty. As a 6-2 guard on the San-g~ve the Bruins their best game of the
la Ana High basketball team, Ault was year, losing in the end by a mere 15
good enough to receive Century League points. What was J\ull's contribution to
honorable mention laurels his senior the game? Less than one minutt> of So far thi::. yC'a r the Assoe1ahon h·1.,
n11s1•d SJS0,000 more than double 1h1
.unount of 1980 Of course 1t has hdµcd
hm. •hat l 'CI ""as finall~ put on the mJp
""1th the emt•rgcnce of Rill Mulh~ .in
l\C'vin MagN• and the re~l of the I l J
b.1skctball lcam
I thmk 11 we l'Ould build a facilit,Y
t h.11 c•rnilcJ hot1Sl' li.000 or 7,000 people
:ind thl'\ 1th1· basketball team)
c•,tahl1,h a rl'putat1on. then people
\\ould lo\1• t11 pla;. 10 Southern
l ;tl1fon11.i. '>a_\ s ,\ult
season. pla.>
And. he was good enough to make the Aull finished his freshman season.
talent-laden UC Irvine freshman team eventually hurt his ankle taler ;.ind
under Coach Dick Davis, where the An-never played basketball again
teaters finished 19-5 during their first Why. then, is this 35-year-old N<•wport
year of experience. Beach resident being featured'1
Granted. Ault didn't play much. 'I'll Well. it seems Ault 1s dirccth or in ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:.:.:.:....:..:..=.:..:.:.:.:.::...:..:..::.
.. Acing in 1>1 v1s1on I 1s really tough
.1<lmits /\ult. om· of the 16 bo;ird mt•n1
"I'm hopinJ:? that within a year there
\\ 111 ht· tlt:f1nitc plJns finalized for the
I ~t-r \l LT, P age C2J
..........
DetroU manager "Sporkl/" Andenon blow3 a bauball-mc bubb~.
G . h ' • ' 1'T 1 ? uess w o s natt.()n s 1 ~o.. .
Trojans take over top spot: Oklahoma ranked No. 2
For the third Wt't.'k in a row
t•ol ll'g<' foothall has a new No I
team
Thl' TroJan ~ of Southern
Cali forn1a rl'pl .tt'('O 'lotre Dame
at Lhl' tou of Thl' Associated Pn•ss poll today, setting up a
1 2 shoolout "'1th runnerup
Oklahoma on Saturd a~· In Los An~cles. -
M 1chigan. the p r eseason
)eadC'r, was bumped from the
top after losin~ to Wisconsin on
Se-pl 12. And the Wolverines in
turn bounced Notre Dame out by
trouncing the I n sh 25 7 this past
wt.•(•kcnd
TllAT OPE~EO the wa\ for
Southern l'<tl and Oklahoma.
last weC'k·s ;o..;o 2 3 teams. to
mO\'l' Up uS(..', U 21 ·0 Winner
ovt'r Indiana, rt'C'c1ved 46 of 65
first plaC'e volt's <1ncl I ,25R of a
possible 1,300 points from a na
t1onw1dc panC'I nf sport s 'wnters
and sportscasters
Okl a h o m a , idle over the
weckC'nd. received 15 first-place
ballots a nd 1,203 points. The
Sooncrs return lo <irtion against
Southern Cal Salurda) afternoon
in the Los Angeles Coliseum .
M eanwhile , Notre Dame
skidded from first place to 13th,
while Michigan climbed back in·
to the Top 10, jumping from llth
lo seventh. The Wolverines also
received a first-place balJot.
Georgia's defending national
champidns we re defeated by
Clemson 13-3. ending a 15-game
winning streak, and fell from
fQurth to 17th. while Clemson
made the Top Twenty for the
first ti me lhis season
PENN STATE, idle last
weekend, r ose tro m fi fth to
third with two fi rst·place votes
and l ,09'l points, while Texas. a
23-10 victor, over North Texas
Slate. jltrnped from sixth to
fourth with one flrsl-place vote
,and 1.038 points.
Pill \\t•nt rrnn1 :-•'•11th 111 r1flh
w1lh 97fi prnnb folJ.1\\Jng a 38 -7
niut of Cinl'1nnat1 :ind l c'I.A
'aultt·cl from ninth lo s1:\th ""1th
912 µ01nh aflt•r t r11 nmini::
W1scons1n 31 l:l
'.'lext came \11<·h1i.:t1n with 003
points. follov.ed h\ Oh1" Stale
with 832, North l amlina \\Ith 806
and Alahama ""11 h 1!iti Ohio
State. also No h J;1s1 "ec·k. beat
Mich1gun Statt 21 LI '\orth
Carolina. up from 1111 h, u u:-hed
Miami of0htn49 ': .111.I \I 1ham<1,
~o 12 a wcl'k ag11. t uriwd hdl'k
Kentuck~ l!I to
The S<•cond 'J ('rt c 1111.,1.;ts of
llrq:~ham Youn~ '"""'""'PIH
SI al 1• "fotr<· Dame. Miami of
l'lnrnla, :"Jc•braska, Washington,
< il'or ~ia. Arizona State, Clemson
:rnrl Southern Me thodist. This
'' <'l'k also marks the first 1981
,q1pc arance for SMU. which
".1tlnped Grambling State 59-27.
L 1\ST WEl::K'S Second Ten
t·nr1s1sted o' Michi gan. Alabama.
HYl . M1s!'1ss 1ppi State,
Washington. Mi ami, Nebraska,
\rmma State. 1-'lorida State and
\.\'1,s1·o n~1n Florida State
dropped out a fter losing to
"it•bras ka :14 -14 , while
Wisconsin's lo~s lo UCLA cost
thl• lladgC'rs thl'ir ranking.
As a running hat•k ~.cltson fligh's Theo Langford averaged 9.4
yards a carr~ and orc d three touchdowns, in the Chargers' 45-13
victor) O\•c•r Santa \11.1
But thert.• ""as a .:real deal more than that to Langford's ef-
forts Friday night. including one of several outstanding blocks
which appeared to be a 100 percent flattening of an opposing
player. and for IL Langford is the Daily Pilot's Player or the Week.
A trans fer studf.'nt from Chatsworth High, Langford missed
·Edison's opener. but he more than made up for it Friday with
touchdown runs of 9 and 7 yards and a
21 -yard d ash with a screen pass for a third
touchdown from quarterback Ken Major.
Langford carried the ball only in the
first two quarters In the runaway and is
the other haJf of Edison's one-two running
punch <he and Dave Geroux alternate
between fullback and tailback).
"This was Langford's firs\ game in
our offense," ~uys Edilion Coach Bill
Workman. ''He's aoing to get better What
he did didn't come as a s urprise to us."
Lanaford's gains were for S, 10, 9, 9, 4,
7 and 22 yards over the ground. each In a
bull-dozing manner for the CIF Big Five
Conference's No. 1 rated eleven Theo Langford -"
\
" Cl Oranoe Ooa1t OA!L V PILOT tr'u11day, lepliM\IM 12: 1_, .-----------------~· ~ ................................ ________ .... __ ,,.. ____________________________ _,
Wi~ ei~'wiM for Detroit •
Coach su8pended
for allowing beating
~--""wtaa ... la 10 pr. .,. "1ou1 &U~'-declllee1 a1aln1t Baltl~. liifted a tt•·hltw IUld
pltcHd Dettt&fto a 5-l victory over
th ortolel Monday llilbt ln American 1Aa1ue
acUoe • . . 0.., Darwla pitched a three-hitter
u Tesu d~ Seattle, 4""1l ff}t ltl tlird
ttras.llt wtn ,,. . . ala Wale. DAtenea a~~
u Cfevel_,. ·~ Ole New York l ... ' .... IM1nc atreu to three 1'9>• wl&ll a M victory. It ... Ollly
,·~ 1ecoad wiJa for c1 .. tlud !.-' atn• 1amea . . • Dan ••a.&• drove in fouf runs wttfi a homer and a sinale
and Bolton rode a five-run
· third IDninl to a 9-3 decision From AP cll1patei.e. , over Mllw aukee tor tu
AURORA, Colo. -Overland • seventh victory in el&M
High ScbooJ football Coach Kenneth • • 11met. 1U1ht·haftder Nall
Milano has been 1uapended with HY w~ .Sckenley waa the wtDl.&ai
for allecedly allowing the beattnc of a player by pitcher . . . ... w ... .,_ drove lD two ""9
his teammates, said Cberry Creek School Dil· and'~two mere. Q, atve Minnesota a 1-2
trlct Superintendent Dick Keeppe. victor ovill mtsiJ.k·1&;•1ued Kansai Cit1. ,
Jerry Warrington, father of selllor ~War-Da•e .fbd Ma UU.. also knocked In ,
rington 16, said his son wu Cotted to run ·two runt~ u tbe t6 d·place Twins cllmbe4
through a gaunUet of other playen foUowtna to w6tNn' '2~ ••m~ of the Royals . . . Tbe
Saturday's practice when lt wu leemed he bad garne ~t•nn Oakland and Toronto was
attended a beer party Friday night after posq,on.d by rain and wlll be played tonight as
Overland's 7.5 victory over U ttletoo High. part of a t w i · n i g b t dou b I e · header
·'I had no problem with the gaunUel. My · · · BaltlftlOl'e-S E~ Manay beeame just
son was part of the team and has to abide by the the second Plafer to eam successiv• Amfrican • -1-~ ..1-'-'-i " Warrin.,.,_ aid League pla~ di the week awards . . . Larry rules a.i:CUJ~t u.iu .... ng, •"""' 1 · Gara, the most·conaisteat Kansas ctty pitcher,
But aft.er running the 1auntlet, Warrington has been lost to the team indefinitely betJ'Jle et
said his son had taken off his pads and football a bonf!' ch4P oo his pilchlng hand . . . Bel1
shoes and was leaving when he w• grabbtd, • a&ye..ee ol 'Cl~elaad did not travel with the
hauled back onto the field and puftlmeled " tftm to ._. ftait because of soreness in 'bjs
second time. ' riJhl~.
"That was a bad deal and could have rotten
out of hand," the elder Warrington said. His son Carlt°" sets NL' strikeout record
suffered bruised ribs. a bloody noee and facial Ste\'e Carftoa became the all-·•• bruises, the father said. tim e N\\tioaal League strikeout
A witness to the incident, Rick Birney, said leader Monday; aiaht but the Moo-
he arrived late at the practice when he "saw treal £xpo6 defeated Phila4Ae1Phia in ·
this kid with nothing on but football panta run-the 17tb u.inl, 1.0, a(ter Carlton had left the
ning across the field toward the gate." game. CUttdb pitched 10 innings and •truck out
"He got to the gate when tile Irids caught U·lo. nue !¥• -.ial:to 3,118. ~ •• ...,. ••
him," said Birney, wbeee am plaf• on· tht! bdel·~ ~tr with one out In the 1'1Ul .
freshman team . "The kid was brewaJlt back to · 'innin1 «•v~ th~ Expos their winning run
Coach Milano and they were face-t~race. I saw . . . Chris Welsh blanked
the coach push him in the chest and make him Cincinnati on three hits, and
back up. I saw him punch or pt191l him in the San Diego exploded tor slx
race. It was hard to tell which. runs in the sixth innina to de-
"I yelled at them, 'Leave that kid alone ,' feat the Reds, 6-0 ... Mark
and the whole squad yelled at me to mind JOY Lee's wild pitch in ,Utf 13th
own business. I felt threatened and turned to inning scored Jolla ~
leave." Jrom third base and the ~ew
Milano couldn't be reached for comment York Mets posted a +-It de·
Monday and was reportedlyoutoltown. ·c~ion over Pittsbur1h --=--.... 1 ••• .loagul n And•Jar and
Carlton ~ 'Jrace Satter combined GI\ a
Quote of the day
Hank Stram, dapper ex·coach and cur·
rent TV and radio color amouncer, deny-
ing reports that he has ~ suits: "I'm
lucky if J own 200."
three-ltltter and Darrell Porter and Keith
lleT ..... Mocked in the game's only runs
with spcrjftce roes lo lead St. Louis to a 2.() wtn
over Ut~ Chicago Cubs ... Rookie third
baseman Rubi• Bl"Mks of the New Yott Meta
was aalned "atlonal league player of tlile week
after going J.2.for-24 durine the previous week.
From Page C1
AULT SEES GROWTH •••
facility. l think · Irvine has a
tremendous athletic future."
It· s also had a pretty good past
. . . and AuJt r emembers it well.
"Every time I go by there I
think about the first years," re·
calls Ault. "There were dirt
paths, no landscaping and when
it rained we bad mudslides.
"Irvine offered me the op·
portunity of opening a new cam ·
pus. It was like the pioneer days.
Naturally, t here wasn't the
tradition that other universities
had but. at the sam e time, we
were able to establish our own
tradition.
·'It was a friendly campus that
was new and really quite small
(a little more than 1,000 enroll-
ment). It's a major university
now (15,000 enrollment)."
0( course with time usually
comes growth and that's what
UCI is experiencing at th4'o mo-
ment. From a ni ce quiet ca.tnpus
tucked neatly inside Southern
Orange County, UCI has
blossomed into a bona fide
"name" university.
No longer can tiny CrawfON
Hall (capacity 1,500 ) eecom·
modate the university's n~.
Alas, the tiny gymnasium hM
worn out it.9 usefulness.
NFL standings
. ·' \ . ' ,.
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Western Dlvlalo•
W L PF PA Pd.
All an ta 3 0 92 34 1.000
Rams 1 2 72 73 .333
A ME RICAN CONFERENCE
Western Dlvbioll
W L PF PA Pd.
San Diego S 0 114 68 I.Oii)
Kansas City 2 1 87 85~ .e6T
Oekland 2 1 63 29 ,16't
HB's Smyth
records win
·LONG BEACH -Randy
Smyth of Huntington Beach was
the winner in the PriDdle-ltA
dtvbion of the Prindle CJ .. M ·
S'eciation Points race "lltn S.Nnlay andd Sunday.·
Wfnna-in the Pttndle·'8 Class
•was Da•e Ba ngs ton ; Dana
Pmal. and in the 18 Novice
dh"ision the winner was Dori
Tassin, Tustin.
a..T....,W~;
'°ltlN~E-U -1. G .. Alwell, A~; l. Oen li'ffrv, S.11 Fer.,.,,.,; J. Joflft "IMI•,
Colt• Mfta. 1~ -1. ~.,..Y_ LAtlt,.....,.
~
• '""' -1 ....... lnlf91, "_.,...... ~ l. 1 Stn• 0-1 ... -.. ••:.a.~..._ ........ c....-... ...e -I . .>dttl Cle,,., SM .,..._, l. .... , ..... ,, c.m MHe, >. Ed a.-,·....,.,, ....-m.
, I li'ltlNDL•·ll -1. De..,. ••Ats ..... 0... .. e l11t, J. Mer¥1n Fre ce, A11eMl111; Tllf'rf "'-~. IMll ...,..
Ayres tops rivals
Bruce Ayres of Newport
Harbor Yacht Cl ub defeated 18
, 1rivats· Sunday to win the iicbock
Trophy for the Leh11taD·l2
Clas. . ..
JOHNSON & SON
Presents ...
San Francisco 1 2 62 75 .333
New Orleans 1 2 30 64 .333 Denver 2 1 47 JO ~-·• Seattle 1 2 .. n. ,.ta Eutena Dlvtsloa
Dallas 3 O 91 48 1.000
Philadelphia 3 O 57 27 1.000
NY Giants 2 1 47 38 .fJl7
SL Louis 1 2 64 Ml .333
Washington O 3 47 83 .000
Cotral Dlvlaloa
Detroit 1 2 7J 7l .m
Green Bay 1 2 56 75 ·.383
Chicago 1 2 54 61 .333
Minnesota l 2 49 81 .333
Tampa Bay l 2 48 80 .m
Eaderal>WIMo•
Miami 3 0 86 %7 UCll
Buffalo 2 1 80 23 .E
Baltimore 1 2 42 91 .333
New England o 3 52 77 .eoo
NY Jets O 3 40 100 .000
Central Din.to•
Cincinnati 2 l 75 11 .fJJl11
Houston 2 1 · '6 39 .#7
Pitt.9burgh 1 2 81 71 .aaa
Cleveland 1 2 37 'IO .m .
1/ .•. .
,1 '
·.
.......
~Of '•I
The--'.
• SUNO.'f'
Att•nt• over
Clevel•nd
' 8a&;b8" tOday
<J.t W. dat-18 bueball ln 1886:
The BalUmore Oriol•, who for ao many
)'Hr1 laed lan1ullhtd ln tbe American LMc• cellar u the St. Louis Browns,
cUnc.Mld tbe fl'anchlae'a fint leatue cham·
plonahip ln 22 years by deleaUn1 tht
Kan1u Ctty A'1 e-1.
1 On fh1a date in 191W: ~ • l)rooklrn Dod1era pitcher Karl Spooner set a major Jea1ue record with U
1trikeouurln bia nnt 1ame.
T~y·a birtbd•ys :
New York Yankees Manager Bob Lemon
ia 81. Dodien Manager Tom Luorda is
64 .
USC's Allen named player of week
MIJ'CUI Alle•, the USC tailback [il
wtt .. 4M yards ru1hin1 and six •II•
touchdowns through two games, was
named Pacllic-10 offensive player of the week
wh.Ue linebacker a.a Rlven, who made 16
tackies as Califern1a won ita ftrst game, was
selected aa defensive player ... Wide receiver
TlJb Keane and defensive back Ken Thomas of
Sao Jose Slate were named PCAA players of the
week ... lo ScllembecbJer admitted that he
bad serious Cloubts about his Michigan football
te'lm 'f"til the Wolverines defeated NotH Dame.
I
Q)icago gains Soccer Bowl '81
Fr..c.a Mathieu broke a scoreless •
· tie,ift a sh~t a~r twq overtime
periods.to catapulf the Chicago Sting
to a 1.0 win over Sao Diego and a berth in Soc·
cer Bowl '81 against the New York Cosmos
Saturday in Toronto . . . Federal Judge Hany
Pregen. took under submission the motion by
the NFL to move a retrial of the suit of the Los
Anceles Coliseum Commission and Oakland
Raiders against the league away from Los
Angeles ... A federal judge overturned Gov.
, "'Huglt Carey's cancellation of a match Involving
· t11e contl'overaial South African Springboks'
,.-l'Ugby feara
Televlson . radio
Following are the tap sports events on TV
tonight. Ra&lngs are: I 1 I I excellent; 1 1 1
worth-watching; 11 fair; 1 forget it. . n 7:30 p.m., Chennet 11 ./ ./ ../ ./
OopGER BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Fran·
clsco.
A.....uncers: Vin Scully and Ross Porter.
It wUt be Fernando Vatet.zuela (13-.f) going
egalnst !aft F~lsco's Ed wttltson In the series
-opener tonight ln (:.andtestick Park. The Giants are a helf-oame behind the Dodgers in the Na·
tlonal League ~st where Houston hotds the lead.
The Dodgers are four games back In third place.
,.. RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at San Francisco, 7:30
'p.m., KABC (790); Chicago at AnQels, 7:30 p .m .,
ICMPC (710).
Dorsett regai11s
NFL rushing lead
f'OXl30RO, Mass. (AP> -Alier rushing for
, more than 100 yards in each of his first two games .
. there were few things Tony Dorsett badn 't done
this year. And he took care of a few of those Mon·
day night.
For the' first time this season. he broke loose
for a lodi nm, and also scored his first touchdown
of the year as he piled up li2 yards to regain the
National Football League rushing lead and spark
the unbeaten Dallas Cowboys to a 35·21 victory
over the error-plagued New England Patriots.
"That was oh so sweet." Dorsett said of his
75-yard touchdown run, 45 yards longer than his
best previous run of the season. "It was due.
"It Celt good to be in the end zone again. It's
been a long time since I scored a touchdown, only
one a ll summer (in a preseason game against Los
Angeld).
"Let.dial the learue is fine, but going into the
16th game, that's wh~n it will mean something,"
Dorsett added. "Right now it means nothing.
That's not a goal of mine."
The Cowboys have won Z2 of the 23 games in
which Dorsett has rushed for more than 100 yards
in his pro career.
Dallas Coach Tom Landry called Dorsett'a big
plax "Super. The way he's been playing you knew
be was going to bust one."
Steve PottttlOft Ron Malerstein
Big plays hit
in abundance
L
There were enough big plays for a season in ~~
last week's prep football action -and one or them
which will not be forgotten at Marina High wu
turned in by defensive lineman Ron Malerslein, a '•
fi·O, 200-pouad senior who scooped up a fumble anclrt
~eturne4 it 68 yards for a touchdown. ' ·~
Malerstein's big play was just one ot many in
Marina's 47-0 laugher, while Corona del'lllar's liat
of big plays included two of 50 yards or more <Bill 1 Bright's 50-yard touchdown play with a pass from
Eric Woods and Steve Patterson's 55·yard punt re-. ~
turn for a touchdown. ... r
<Last week's plays of so.yards or more>
77-Todd Williams (El Toro), TD pass from,
Mike Douglass
SS-Ron Malerstein (Manna), TD ruo with
fumble
53-Curt Wenzlaff I Estancia>. kickoff return I
55-Steve Patterson <Corona del Mar>, TD run
with punt return
50-Bill Bright <Corona del Mar>. TD pass
from Eric Woods •
SO-Eric Reinholtz <Ocean View), pan from"-'
John Heinle
Season
80-Lance Martin !Corona del Mar); 77-Todd
Williams <El Toro>. 71 Creg Locy <Mater Dei>;
'67-Jef( Frandsen I Marina): 68-Ron Malerstein
(Marina); 58-Curt Wenzlaff (Estanda); 55-••
Damon Sweazy <El Toro), Tony Bell (Capistrano
Valley>, Steve Patterson (Corona del Mar); 52-
Cr aig Rakhshani (Edison); 50-Kevin Beres ( Mis-"I
sion Viejo>. Eddie Nunes (Westminster). BiU " .J
Bright (Corona del Mar>. Eric Reinholtz <Ocean ""
View ).
J
(Last week's statistical leaders)
Rushing
l Curt Wenzlaff <Estancia). 17·104 ; 2. Damon
Sweazy <El Toro>; 3. Rod Emery (Fountain
Valley), 17-100.
Passing
1. Matt Stevens< Fountain Valley ), 17·27·1, 288,
yards. 1 TD; 2. Mike Douglass <El Toro), 7·14·1.
179, 2 TD; 3. Eric Woods <Corona del Mar>. 9-12.0,'
163, 3 TD; 4. Jim Mccahill <Estancia>. t-17·1, 141,
2 TD; 5. Steve Anderson (Costa Mesa), 13·21-0, 132,
1 TD; 6. Ken Major <Edison >. 11-16·0, 125, 2 TD: 7.
Ken Laszlo <Marina), 6·7·0, 119. 3 TD .
Receiving
1. .JoeJ Seay <Fountain Valley >. 8-158; 2. Rob
Berry (Newport Harbor>. 8-144: 3. Eric Reinholt&
<Ocean View>. 5·111 : 4. Abel Cachola <Estant1a),
5·84 : 5. Greg Bohn <Fountain V aJley). 5-66.
Scoring
l. (lie) Rod Emery (Fountain Valley), Theo •
Langford <Edison,. Curt Wenzlaff <Estancia>, ~ill ,
Bright (Corona del Mar >. 18 eacll ; 5. 1eff
Frandsen (Marina l. 12
Swedish sailors lead
MARBLEHEAD, Mass. <AP) -Swedish 11;
sajlors Hans Wallen and Henrik DuBois •ere the 'f
winners out of 84 starters Monday in the second
day of competition in the Star Class 59lh annual
world championships out of the Eastern YachC·
Club here.
Both were brand new to competition in the •
class.
Alexander Hagan or Kiel, West Germany, win·
ner in tbe opening day on Sunday, finished •
seventh.
Blls.eball standings
.U.ERICAN LEAGUE
Wat Division
IUnsas City
.J(-Oakiand
, l'Miatlesota
Texas
Chlcqo
Seattle
AaJela
W L Pct. GB
22 18 .550
19 18 .514 l'f.z
20 21 .488 21,'z
18 20 .474 3
H 2t .400 6
16 24 .400 6
13 25 .342 8
East Dlvtlioll
Detrott 25 16 .610
Boston 24 16 .600 'f.z
Milwaukee %4 18 .571 l 'f.z
Baltimore 21 18 .538 3
x-New York 21 19 .525 3'f.z
Toronto 19 18 .514 4
Cleveland 19 22 .463 6
ll-Fint-half division winner =t=l:----o.t,..., .... ._..
0.....-etT ........... relfll C....._.l ..... Yont
MlllMl9M 'f.1(-Cll'f 1 Ttut4._...1 ftlef't._ ('rte• , ............ Hl ........ , ....
•IJ " ......... (\'~ .... , ...... 10.-•ll,11 j)elrtlt llcltetu••r .. ., el ••1t1Mtrt l~Nl,11 I m~ M 11M M<ca.ty IMI et 1• T ,......_,,_ltllMMIMt-lt),t,11
1 J ......, NI ...... Ton II, ......
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Dlvlslo•
W L Pct. GB
Houston 26 14 \650
CinciMati 23 17 .575 3
x·Dodgers 22 18 .Si50 4
San Francisco 21 18 .S38 4Ya
Atlanta 20 19 .513 5'f.z
San Diego 13 29 .310 14
East Division
St. Louis 22 17 .564
Montreal 21 19 .525 l 'f.z
New York 20 10 .500 2'f.z
Chicago 17 21 .447 4'f.z ,
x-Philadelphia 17 22 .436 5
Pittsburgh 16 24 .400 6'f.z
x-First-half division winner .....,...le.-
SL Uwld, CNUll .. .._,.., ,, ..... ...,...i.o 07,,.,....,
N-Yn ~. """*""' J 111.,...,.l S.11 Oltee •. ClflCIMetl 0 °"',..,..,..,... ~·--....... \V..._.. IMI et Sell l'Bftdlct 'Tt."=~·~• ••CNc-1•• .... 4-4> '°'It'""" <aM¥ WI et New Ytr1l lktlft .. ,,
" ,.ltllMt1t•1le (lt11t1wen ll·tl et MeftlrHI ,,_ ... ,.,0.,),11
All-(l'Wry 1·11 et ...... CW-._,,11 CIACIMl•O (Senw tt-11 .... IH• .. ca~M).11 .. )
... J
•MONDAY a
Chlcegoonr
Loa An1ll1t
Hin ' 'T #...._.<...._H)etK....OW~
1 I ~ .. ~l09¥ .. , .. ,_(amllwMt,11
·. Pate's Pick
at JollnS111 & Son ~~\ .
Jotinson & Son · ~"~ at · . . ·,
sm ·'7000° 11
'2700 :..••'
'81
Lincoln Mercury 12 9 K 2616 HAllal ILYD. . • ~ ,.._ • ·. Afftt. aaved ~~ctt. COITAt•IA • , , Rf.',lt ...._,of COfttrect I Ult 540-5630 \ ~ :•i ,, "/ • • :10:.="''',. dn."'
.. .. '· : ..._ ____________________________ ___
-
1 3 7 7 2 7 3 7 • ·---
~ • • .. · ~
AMl!AICAN LEAGUE
Ana.le 8, White So.a 3
CMlc:AbO CALll'°"NIA
L•l'l9•• If ~ ~ •, ": •• , " .. $Qwl••• lb 4 O O O 8el'll411t< I 4 0 I 0
Helr\\l'I Cf 4 0 I 0 8U#l9\l'I u 4 0 0 0
L1111no.dh • o o o Fo•d" • o 1 r l'IC~ ( 4 0 0 0 lhylO( dll ) l I I
811"*' rt • 1 1 1 Grctc11 211 > 1 1 11
8trn,,d20 'o o O Freo11.,,c ) I 1 2
Morrl\1'1 Ill > 1 J I Oow l'lll'IQ H • I t 1
Almon u > 0 l 0 l'f•rlow 11 o o o O
Toi••• ll l r' HOllW>llltl 1 0 0 1
Campnn lib 2 O 1 1
Sconlrt ID • 0 O (I
To1•I• >1 • I ~ "°"'''""'" .. Clllcaoo 001 ooo 100-3
Callfornl• 0211 200 Ob-4
E-LeFIOre, Morr!ion'. OP-Clllc-ao I,
C•lllorl'lla I LOB Cllk -4, CellfOffll• •
28-Ford, Oownll'IQ HR a.1 .... (7). --·~~"' H~~ S.ylOr I ••I SB--C•mpenerl•
C•k.... '" If R 1:11 II 10 • 811rn1 IL, "'I 1 • J > t 2 F•rmer 1 O I
Call ...... la
R•n•o (W, 1·•1 •\oo I J ) I
A•M IS, 10) 1\, 0 0 0 0
Burnt l'llC'-010 I IMHer In Ille 1111 H8P
by8urnsca.vtor1wlce) T-1 41 A 11,CMt
11 .. s. ••.• .._..,
Mllw•wkM ocn ooo 010 > • 1
8o'1on OOS 211 00•· t I• 0 H•••, Por1er 141,-. <•> el'ld Simmon•;
Echnlev •l'ld a.om. .... w Ecker•l•v. U . L-HHI, .. ,. HR BoJton, Sl•plelvn II)
A 14,JH
l,..._J,T-... 1
Clevel•l'ld 000 lllO 1171 J J J
Hew York 000 000 000-~ • l walu end Oler, Mav. Freiler Ill.
L•RO<lle ('I ellCI C.rone. W-W•ll•, , ••. L
Mey, •·11 A 211,101
Tletn J, OrlolH I
Oelroll 000 102 010-J 11 1
B•lllmore 000 001 000-1 • 1
WllCO.IC -P•,.lill, McGr.,,or. Sl-.rd
111. Marti...1 (II encl Oempwy, GrellAm
w Wllco•. 11-t L M<Grevor " • HR-
B•lllmore, Owv•r U) A-10,.,.
"--" •, MarlMn 1 s. .. 1t1e 000 001 000 I l 2
TH.. 000 JOO OIW 4 I 0
Slodd•rd end Bwlli~o. freo••, O•rwln
and SundDero W Oer,.ln, •·I L
S-••d. 1 I A J,lfl
Tw ... 11, ll*Y•h J
MI l'lnHOle 210 120 0C»-1 11 I
ll•l'ISA> Clly lllO 000 000-2 10 1
Wllllamt el'ld Wy-r, H•mmeker. Ge,.
(J), s11euinoer (6), Paschall Ct> al'ld
W•ln•" w Wllll•ms. ..a L Hammaker,
1-l. A-14, .. ,
Nation al League
~lst,Cllht
SI Loui> 000 001 100 2 1 0
CllltMIO 000 000 CIC»-0 ) 1
And11Jer, Slll1er t•I eno Porter, K reYK.
Hern•nde.I (7), E•>l'#lck (7), Ge• ... 1 II) •nd
O•vl>. W Andujor, 1 •. L-llr.ovec, l·S
A l,U.1
"•-1,Pllllli.tl
Pllll 000 000 000 000 000 00 0 I C
Mont 000 000 000 000 000 01 1 1 1
One oul wt.en w1nn1no""' tcored
Cel"llon, A Reed 1111, 8rll\•lar CU). LY ..
(ll). Cllrl>I-fUI J Aeecl llT) •l'ld
Morel•nd; BU<•I•. Aeeroon (11), frym.n
(U ), B•llr'I-CUI, Smllll (17) end CA'1tr
W Smltll, 1-0 l J. Reecl, 0-1 A-24. '"·
,._....,11 ....
Cll'IClnnell 000 000 ~ l 1
Sen OleQD 000 Ota. 00• 6 11 0
L•lll•-. Br-n '"· Combe Ill •nd O'Berrv Nolan Weill\ -G-td• w Welsh •• l Ll'lbr-. I I A s.sot
-4.(111¥.otHl
PlllsburQh 010 000 001 000 0-J I 1
New "I' or'k 100 100 010 000 1 4 12 1
Tien\, Scurrv (I ). Ttkul•• Ill, Rol>IMOfl
et>. Lee (I,) •nd ~ .... Harris, Allen C'I,
M•rth.oll 1101, LH Cll 1121, BOll•no Ill) and
StN rns w 6oH•no. , I L l ... (I.I HR-
PlltsbvrQh. T...,,.,.,_, 1121 A I ,,.
Top 10
,_..,UJttlMISI
4MUUCAN LEAGUE
G Aa 11 M l'ci..
Lan.lord, BoSlon 'n 1"3 U 111 U.
Herwhrton, O•l•nd '6 171 ti 12J Jll
Peclorek. Se.ti,. en 1S1 43 llt 331 Zhk, s..on• t2 ,.. 40 104 m
Heroro•o, Clw¥fJl•nd 13 * Jt tl JU
Remy, B"'1on 79 lit JI 103 12•
C-r, Mllwau~ff 95 l74 U 11' lll
Almon. Chluoo " 114 ..s te 112
Oll•er. Teut '1 -.. 111 .JU
Mumpllry, New York n 110 42 "' l 10 "-"-Arm••· o.-.ano, 21, ,_,.,.,, Mllweu•M,
211 Murr•Y Be"•more. " Grkll, A-It, 11, LullMlll. Cl'llt-11 . "-··-·ft Arm•s~ 0.ld.,.,, ''· Mvrr•y, B•"lmo.-.. ... OQllv,., MllwaukM, 66. Wlnlleld, New
York, M. Murplly, Oekl.ond, .01 PM:lorelt.,
Sultle, "°· B Bell. l tHS, 60
,_...._ It o.dt .... tl
c1 .. ,, 9etton, •·•: Twrec. 11011on, •a; 011klry Kew Ywa, II.), c ..... r, TuH, 1 i,
Mtnll'IU, 8•11lmore. t>-•, Y11c•o ... 1c11
Mll••11•H. ,... M<O,..... ••nlm..-.
11 I , MWfl\, o.tr9ft, l•S
Nltfl~AL LIAOUI
0 AS II H ""' MMIOO, Pll\\llur9f\ 14 211 JJ • ,)11
llOff, Plllledttol!le ~ •I '1 It. .Jal
Conopelon Clnc;l,,,,.11 t4 ll• U lit Ill
OawlOn, _,lrHI t l JM 61 Ill Jll
ao•or. ~ ti ltl U 114 .N
Grlttev, Cln<IM<tll '° W S1 111 >u
How. Mou"°" .i nJ •I 101 214 8rooll\, H ... y-• Jn JI IOI )U
O..rlleM, Clll<eoo /) 1lt :M " )II
BIKk"•', Chic-tt )t, U 114 Jll .. _"_ ~<hmldl, Pt\llOOtlPl\lt, ,., ; 0.WIOl'I, -reol, U. 1(111\)MM\, H-yorll, 10, Fos•r
(ln<IM •ll, 10. l'fef\d<IC;k, SI loul,, ti ._ .. _,_
Fo\l•r. et11c1n11etl, >t, Sc11mldt,
Pllll•d•lpl\le. 1' ll11tkner Clll<*99, U,
Col'lt•O<-. <.1Mtl'IN ll, .ii C-•· -r-.•1, .,
"'"'""" " Ooci.!Mtt I Seever, Clnclnnetl, 11·2; Va .. no•I•, ~rt, 1:1-4; C•fllon, Pllllll(lelplll•. lt"4;
(•mp Allent•. t 3, II-•·~. N ; Rlloden, Pllbbu<Qf\. I l, Humo, Clrl<lllN ll,
•, llutll-. PNl-lplll•, II J
NFL
Cowboys 35, Patriots 21
SU.. .. ,°"''"" D•lle• I 10 1 II lS
New Enol•nd I I I 0-11
DAL Jdln""" l'I pan lrom Wnlle (~
ll•nUO) •
HE C•lllOult4run (Smllll lt.1< .. l
OA L FG Sep(left :r.
DAL Donall JS ($eplitft klek)
HE· ColhnsJrun tSmlth•lck)
NE TalU!>U • rul'I tSmlln kl<lll
DAI. OvPre. l P•Si trom Wllll• (S.p\ltft
klclt.I
OAl FG Sopllen :r.
DAL ~tl'r, lntenllonal orouncllno In -
•-by C••an.MQll
OAl FG Soepliel'I 21
OAI. FG S.0.lel'I H
A 61,2'1
1 ........... , $ .. thlk1
R USH 1 NG-Dallas. Oorull lt·IU,
Sp rlno• 14-U , Jonu • 14, Cotbl• 1·1.
Howllouu l·O, W"lle S·mln111·t . Now
El'IQl•l'ld, Telupu ..._,, Ce lllOult I 1', COlllM . " PASSING-Dall•s Wllllo 24-~. 21t H.,.
Enol•nd C•vaneuo11 u , .... , ns Jatkton,
0-1-0,0
llECE!lllNG Oellu . Sprlno• lt 12,
Oorult •·11, Hiii 3-•t, 8. JollnM>n l-•I,
Ou Prte 2·9, Pear.on I 19 Ntw El'IQI-.
Moro•n •-414. H•ualbeO ).9), Je< .. IOn )..II,
COllll'IS 3 11, A Jdll'llOn l 14
Community college schedule
(AN-al1:••·"'·· " .... Meotlldl P'lltOAT
N-.<..,..._e
ianl• AN ••. GOlclen Wnl •t O•-
CoHI
Oewrt •I H•v-ILi• Y99'1S) JV
SATUllOAY _........._.
S.ddlebatk •t Or-CMll
San Bef'Nlrdll'IO al LA Soulll-sl It)
Alo H-•IP.+Gmor (I 101 Soutllweotem •I Ml !.en Jacinto (I )1)1
Moorlllf1< •I W.st Lot ....... 11. 301
MlreCosle el Hancock (I JOI
Cltru\ et l'ulte'1on
l ono Beach CC al Cerritos
E••l lotAnoeln•I Alvor>lde
Mt San Antonio el Glendale
Groumonl el A•llOIWI WHttm
S.n Oleoo CC et 541,, Ole9o Maw
l'resnoat Bell~lleld
Compton at Los A~s Yellev
L~ Anoti" CC al S.Me B•~r•
LA H•r11or •I Vonlu••
E .. lem ArllOf\I •I Pe-•
CenVOl'IS •I Ple•ct
s.tnl• Monie• •I P-nla
Sequoias •I T •l't
Portervlllt •I Ant••-V.ollov
Gl•ndlle (Atil I •I lmj1erl11 Valley
High school schedule <-...... ,
THUllSOA'f
Sa n Cltmef'le ••· Ellancoa et NtWll0'1 H•rbOr
ll•lel'ICI• at lrvl,.. l• H-· .. ~--., Sant• -a -1
IC•lell• at Tustin
Sunn.-Hol" vs. El OoraOo •I Ve lane I•
Troy"' Al'l•/\olm et Le Pa lme Park
l'lllOA'f
Westm1ns1er •I HHrport Harbo•
Edi'°" <II El -n•
Fo11n1a1n V•lley vs St Paul .rt C.rrl~
COii-
Merlne-. FOOl/\111 •I TU111n l.O• Am19DS at H"'1tl1191on S.acll
C11>rHS YI Ocean 11i.w at We>lmlnsler
Meler Del •I Lot Altos II)
S..rvll• et Santa Merl•
Soulh Torrance al Blt"°l> MonlQDmerv
Corona del Mer Al Cae>ltl•-\/alley
El Toro •I Mlsilon 11 .. ,0
1.aoun• Hiiis vs Uni¥fJrllly•l lrvl,,.
C•nyon 4'1Gellr
H•wlllor"* vs S..-1• A,.. al S.A Bowl
SA V•llev vs. S....1-•I Gerden Gro ..
VIII• P-el L-89Kll Wllta1
Peclllu •• Bolw Gr-L• Oulnle at E-ranu
Sol'IOr• V\ Brto-Ollnde al U Hebrt
S•n Btmardll'IO at fuller1on
l119M ...... .... MatNlla •I Ut .. llN ,...,, ..... _ .. ...._.
11.,.clle AleMIW tt W..let'ft .......... lffftl .. ,,.,_..
IAfUllOA'f
LM Altlfll• ..,._ C..w -.. •I N-1
H•rlllo9r
0.k l"arll \la, ~I-ot lrvlM
Kel'nMy .,._ PfMtlt el ti MOOltM
Ot '*'4 019 .. "' Leer• al u ,..llN l"etk
aetMltat 0..W Hll" IJp m I
IA11 t-•t I •llfllffaec-wl .. l'lot .. I
CoHt •r•• re1ult• LAGUNA •••c:M ...... , c1.u•
tetMM9W L.NllCCI
Lo• ~•I Tourl'l•m•11t: A l'lltfll -1.
Cllerl9t l(eitfmari, U-1>--1'0, a ffltftl -I ' Pete R~. •17 _..,, C P'llfM -I. RMI
Q11l9l•y, tl-»-11. 0 Fllollt -I J~
lrowl\, .,_24 .. E 11119111 -t. Melo• S.-n, 111·• a.
NASL plavott1 S11'1tlrlNAU
( ..... ., ..... ,
~TllNe
Cllk"'OD 1, s.r. 01-0 n Oil IClllceoo WI!\$ M<le .. 2·11 "'""""''tCU-IOCClll llOWL 'II
Cotmos v1 Cllltaoo •1 Toronto
Deep ••• fishing NIWl'OllT (0 .. 0 ·1 L•cl•r ) -U
•"Olen: "'4 bonllO, II Wftc:t !Mu, 21 cellco
bu" 1 t v•tlo .. tell, 14 rou th ll, tSO maclt.erel
DANA WHAllP' -128 anolen , .. baM, '·°" llOnlto. I nallbut, 11 •O<k "'"· IOS m•<"-•'"•'· OCIANStOE U an91trs '1 bonito, '9
<•llco b.us, l Ml'ld O.H. 1 llellbul, 110 rock
fish. 10J m«kertl.
SIEAL SEACM '° •nolen· uo rock cod,
2 cow cod. J llno cod, » bonito
LONG llEACM lle lmHt .. ltrl -11
anolert VO bonito. 4 yellowtell. tOO nick
11111 1-.•1 Wller11 -JI •nol•rs t
Y•llowlell, 2 llarracuda, 121 bOnllo, IS celko
ban, » beu, 30 rock '''"·
Transamerica Open
tat~ P'r.,oclto)
1'1'11 ·-Sl"'ifl Scon M<C.11'1 def Lerrv Ste•ellkl, I• .... ,. 1•. Nlcll S.•lellO Ott C11r11 Dunk, 1•. w ,
M•ll Ml1Sllell Cltl !.em Glamm<11 .. , 1•, 1·S, flrn Gullit.>m> clef Tim WllkhOll, ........ ,,
... , FdU 8....,.,ono C1e1 Jell BorowlO , 1•.
• 1, Jimmy Connor\ Ott Ferdl T .. O•l'I, ~.
43
Merk Edmond>m> Cltf Trey Welllt•. M ,
• 7 JOM Sadri <Ni Bll1cr> Wallt, 7 •, W , •.J
Women's tournament
Cat Atl.e""°)
P'lnl 11-Sl"'lft
Wel'ldy While clef Kim Sands, •·I, U , • >.
M••v l ou Pl•let. clef Sll\en Rolllnw.n, M ,
... 2
High school women
........... alllt,l:IT-1
Slf't'"
ll•rvn Wiiiette II.I IO\I "' HelftbaUQI\, ,.,
to OOl\Ofrlo. 4-4, def H~ ... •-O. Kell Wiiiette (L) fem 1• 1•, won ... , T11"" ILi
toit O_., 0-6t won ... t
o.wlft Smllll·Stepl-.n• (I.) def P--T•,,...r. ... ,,
O.I Aller>-E•rley, •->; Cl4rf. Bovl.on<au ... 1.
ForkH<l·Goclt•ev (LI won t•l, ""· ... ,;
SChw•rnt.ln-Holh•nd CL) won ... 2. l<HI ~1, won._,
Monday's tr•n1actlon1 I ASICl!TaAl-1. N .. leMI .. _ ... Au.let ...
NEW JERSEY NETS -H•m•d Mike
OITom•»<> e~oc11tlv• vice presl0t11t end director ofoptretk>M, tflec11v• Oct t
HOCKEY .......... " ... .,......_
MONTREAL CANAOIENS-SIQMd OM
lloldvc, torwerd
SOC:Clll
..... A..-k ... S..cet L-•
ATLANTA CHIEFS -Sold Cerl SIFOflQ
and Br11ce S•v•o•. defender>. to tNI
Portl•nd TlmDet'\.
Area high s chool football log
SUNSET LEAGUE
Edl1on (2-0)
22 EIOor-0 4J $el'lleAN IJ
~r.»~~:~N
Oct. t-Mlot« 0.1 t•I DCCI
Oct. I-I'll (el W"lmlnst•r I
Oct. U --OCMn \llew (•I Hiii Oct. ~Wntmlrmer (•I OCCI Nov . ._... HUl\llf'1910n Btacll
NO<r. l~lr\ V•lley 1•1 lllQ A)
Fountain Valley (2-0)
l• Senta AN Vell•y 0 28 El Toro 21
Sept. 2S-Sl Peut <•I Cerri tot)
Oct. )-Servlte (ti U Pelma)
Oct ........ LAll-
Oct. IS-.1 Huntl ....... Beall Oct.~ ... (et OCC)
Oct. JO-Oc9en View (ti Wmstrl Nov • ._... w.stmll'ltl•r NO<r. 11-EdlllOtl Cet 81Q Al
Huntlngton BHch (0-2) ' ,_ .. ,,.., ,.
0 II Dor.-11
Sept. U-Los Amtoot
Ocl >-« 9ol11 Or-
Oct. f-San CleMonto Oct. 15'-"-laln Yelley
Oct. 1>-et Wotll'llMtff
Od. »--4Mr1N
N ..... ~ Nev.l~Y ...
Wutmln1ter (1·1)
-H Le Olllnta I
• Peclfla U Sap!. U.-.1 Hewpo'1 Hartlor
0c t 2 Compton Oct ._...~BeachWllW>n
Ocl. I~ View tel 1411)
Oct 2~unllf'191on Boan
Ck I tt-fdlson tel OCC) HO\I ._Fol.w>leln \/All•• HO¥ I >--Mat'IM
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
Corona del Mar (2-0)
14 H11nlll'lglon Btacll • ., cor-... Mar 0
Sept. u.-.1 cepiw-V•ll•r Oct 1--tll'll..oily (•I ,,.., .... ,
Oct ._~enc le Cal N--11
Oct. 1'-S--• tat Newport>
Del tJ-£1 TOf'O (•I Mlulonl Ocl ,.__lrvlnt (al H_,I)
Hov. ~le Mew (et OCCI Nov. II PIHPOrt (el OCC>
Coit• Meta (1-1)
0 s.tnleAN 21
JI Santi.., 0
S•pt. 2-lO• Alem1to1 (el
NeW-1)
Oct 2-"-1 Hertoor
Oct. ~vonlly (I I H9W116rll OCI. I._. lrvlM
Ocl. U-S.00-11 tel SA Bowl) Ocl, JC>-EI Toro (al Newport)
NO'¥ . ......cor-ml M.or (el O<;C) HOV. t)-Est.Mle (I I Newport)
El Toro (0-2)
I• '*"'"'-\lelley 11 21 "-""" v eci.v 2't Sept, 2~ 111111 ...... Vle)o
Oct. t-lrvl,,. (I I MV)
Ocl, 10 IMwpen H•r-(et MV)
Ocl. 16-£.&IMlcia (et OCC>
Octt u-cir-•1 Mllf' Cel M\I) Oct »--OllsU MtM tel ... _,.,,)
NO\I . .-UlllWf'tlty (el Ml•loftl
NO<r. u~ ... o (ti SA a.wll
lrvl"9 ( 1 .0.1 )
·~ ...... u uei-llMUI
..... t ... \f..._ ..
n u
Oct t-EI Toro (•I MIS.Ion llle!OI Oct .• ~ ..
Ocl.1~-0cl J)-M ......_, Hertlor
Oct 2'-COM Ill Ne.,port
Haroorl
Hov '-EstAr\Cle HO'¥ t>-Onlvonltv
Newport Harbor (0-2)
l M•rlM 31..
1 CYPffl& 1t
S.P1 U-w.stmlfoa1et
Oct. J-CO.le -Ocl 10-Et Toro (ti Min tor> Vle)ol Oct. 17--tlnlwrslty Oct.U -ININ
Oct. JO-E11M1cla tel OCCI Ho¥, -Sedd191>1<11
Hov. IJ.-Cor-cNI -l•I OCCI
Saddleback (1-1)
1 BUOftlP-• 0 Minion Yle)O 1 Sept, 14-U HeOfe (tt SA llowll
Ocl 1-E•t-le l•I SA llowll Oct.,_ Irv!,,.
Oct. lt-Cdlllll (•I ... _I) Oct. n-c.oste INN l•I SA llOwfl Ocl. »--Ulll..nlty (el lrvlMI
Hov ....... ~H••-HO'<t. n-EI Toro (•I SA .... ,
University (1·1)
10 NMWalll 0
0 T111tln 1 S.P1. U-UV.-Hiii• (el lrvlM)
Ocl. 1-c.or-••~(ti lrvlMI Ocl ~teMeM (•\ .....,.,.,,
Del 17-N9w11W1HllW Ocl U ---EltMcle (tt lt\llM) Oct. ao S-1 l d4 (et CrvlM)
Ntv . ._f!I T-(.i MIW.01
Ho.. 1>-el lrvlnt
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
Capltltfano Valley (1•1)
17 II Two 14 o e...,_ •1
s.cit.~ .... -Oct. ,__..,.'--CetOt*\Oft .. I Oct ............ O<I. 1.._.,.•1911 \119.jt
Oct. 2-0... NIM fl p.m.)
Oct ........... ~" NO\I, ~ HNlt (MM\/)
N ... ~IMOllMMI
Oene ..a(M)
Laguna Beach (0-0-1)
IJ lrvl,,. IJ
Sep\ U-.1 Elsl.-e
0c1 2~l• 1•1 wni.ml
Ocl t Los AmlgM
Oct t•-Oona Hlll1
Oc I 2>-« 5-n Clenwnlt
Oct. l0--411 Cac>lstr-Velley
Hov •-Mlulon Viejo
Nov It-........ 1'41111 (•I MY)
Laguna Hills (0-2) ll .,..1.. 2t
t Ellontl• S1 S.pt. U-Ol'llwrslty !al lrvlM)
Oct 1 -GenftN (el Mii)
Oct. t-u Quinta tal Mii> O<I 1•-S.. Clemonle (el MY)
oc 1. n-« Mlulon vre)o
Oct. »-De,,. Hlll1 (el MV)
NOV ~Voller (et MV)
NO'¥. n~ BNcl'I (et MY)
Ml11lon Vlefo (2-0)
u T 11t11n 07 1 SOdelltCIK ..
Sept U-EI Toro
Ocl. 1-R•n<hll. 'll•MllOI l•I
Bol .. Grandel • Oct .,__ll'ldlo ti p.m.)
0c1 1._.. c:eotst•-Y•ll..,. Ocl.2~Hlllt
(kl.»--« Seft C-• HO'¥._...._.._,.
HO\I l~Hlll•
S•n Clemente (0-2)
1 Fellbt'OOll n
o c~•1 Mar •t
S.pt. 1~slllntle (et N-U
O<t. 2-Mlyf•lr
Oct. -Hllf'oClfl9W\ 9Mcll Ocl. I~ Hllll (•I MYi Ocl.~llNcll
Ocl. »-Mltelon Yltjo Nov. 7---OoN Hiii• (I p.m.I
Nov. l~str-Vellty
OT HE AS
Met•r D .. (M)
1• Ctl• o • Dot ""9lltos 14
Sffl. U--el L.oe "'"' '""·"'" Oct. f-Ootpl (et IA...,.,
Oct. t-MI-Cet OCC> Oct. 1t-Serv ... let M e.wti 0<1. n-.M Sl. l"•I
O,t, tt-a1.-Amt t (at IA
INwll ...... ..__.,..~(et IA .... , N ..... 1s-.t11 ............. I.,
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. September 22, 1981
IJ~1dley has ~right golf future
Wi ll remain. an. amat~r un til after the Mast ers
One of the brlJ(ht youn1 stars who wlll remain
on tbe amateur horlion at leut until after the
Masters tournament next year Is Brian Lindley, a llJWARD L.
HANDY
graduate of Estancia High School.
Lindley gaimid valuable experience ln tht: U.S.
Amateur tournament recently in San Jl'ra.n.clsco
when he lost 1n the cha mploJ\llhlp finals ln an extra
hole to Nathaniel Crosby.
"I didn't really figure l had the match won Boros, a two time U.S. Open champion la
when 1was4-up after eight holes." Lindley Hyl of joined by Dow Fin.sterwald, Art Wall, Dick Mayer,
his afternoon round ln the 36-hole finals. Ed Furgol and Walter Burkemo u the latest en-
" I got what r felt was a bad break on the ninth trants in the group of playera 50-and-over. Nine
hole when l hit an eight-iron five-feet onto the others were previously entered.
green and it backed up against the heavy rougjl. l tn addition, more than 100 top profesalonals
had to take a sand wedge and chop down on the from the current PGA tour wUJ also be competln1
ball. If I 'd have been able to putt, I could have in the 5215,000 tournament with the City Of Kope
made it in two •· the chief beneficiary.
While Lindley can re-live the entire fi~al 36 • • *.
holes, shot-by-shot. he isn't grieving over the out· T HE FALL P GA qualifying region al for
come. Far from 1l He's happy lo have gone as far California will be held at Crystalaire Country Club
as he did. in Llano with the Southern California PGA section
Crosby, the son of former actor-singer Bing, is in c harge. This is one of six regional sites with the
an charge of the Crosby Clambake al Pebble Beach top 120 players moving to the qualifyi~g school in
each year. Did he invite Lindley to play there next Huntsville, Texas, Oce. 28-31. The regional ii set
spring·~ . . for Oct. 6·9.
"He said l s hould send him a card to play m Entry forms have to be in the PGA office in
the amateur part of the tournament," Lindley Florida by Wednesday.
says "But 1 don't know how much it costs. I'll * * •
wait and see" THE RE AR E STILL openings for the Will
Jordan Memorial tournament at Costa Mesa Golf BY GAJ NING A SPOT in the semifinals, a nd Country Club to be held Wednesday, Sept. 30
Lindley and three other players including Crosby with starting times from 8 to 1 that day. The $50
automatically qualified for the Masters . "I'll re-entry fee includes golf and dinner along with other
main an amateur until after that lime," he says. things. The fee has been reduced from $100 ln or-
.. How many players are there on the tour who der to fill the field.
have never play~d in lhe Maste rs? There are quite For further information, contact the Will
a fe w of them and I don't want to miss this op-Jordan Memorial Day, P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa
portunity. 92626.
"Right now I wou Id say J would try to play on * * •
the PGA tour after April. I don't perceive s taying The seventh annual Airporter Invitational
out any longer than that." tournament will be held Monday at Irvine Coast
When he does turn pro. he has a very re alistic Country Club with some outstanding prizes being
approach t6 the s tuation. "I'll know within a year offered including two for the first hole-in-one.
or two if r can maKe a living out there," he says. First prize in the event is a week-end for two,
"If I find I can't , McDonnell-Douglas has told including airfare and accommodations at the
me my old job will be waiting for me." r_F_r_o_n_ti_e_r_H_o_t_e_l _i_n_L_a_s_V•e;;~;;;as;;;;;. ;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiii~~ He's an electrical engineer but quit the com·
i>any this spring to concentrate on golf. . . ,. IHVESTMEHT
Lindley says he was more nervous m has ~Ir· -TllE SALES
quarterfinal match than he was in the finals with EARL'S H 1 g h c a 11 be r s a I es
Cros by and a s lightly partisan crowd. ~-· .. n-personnel needed for
But the junior varsity golfer from USC has ~~:-;.'::~ expanding 1nveslmen1 lirm.
come a long way and he as looking forward lo the \• .. •<• ,_ 5,...,,., ...... °"°' Broad base of investment
Masters and then the spring PGA quahtymg '""'s .......... K ......... ., products for 1tcensed real
school. "Six to eight months will not make that cot1••u 641-121t estate andtor NASO Sales.
much difference and I very much want to play in .... :...:::4'~1 : ~=•tiees
the Masters." * "' * -c.-~-PERSO .... .._L !l o• Olo9of...., t< •Hf?~ .. I "~
J ULIUS BOROS IS ONE of six entrants added IMVESTMEHT
lo the seniors field for the Southern California The fastest draw in the COMPANY Lo C t C t Cl b ·n West .a Daily Pilot Open tournament at s oyo es oun ry u ' _Classified Ad. 642·561.$ _ .44 4
Buena Park Nov lt..:_·8~·:_ _____ -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;d~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;~
. II.. l::t · ~~ ll(l} ~.
~(/~
#
As you 're probably aware,
there is a very important fund
raising campaign going on in
our city to build the Irvine
Boys & Girls Club. The Club.
part of the long established
and highly-acclaimed Harbor
Area Boys Club. will offer our
young people many excellent
programs and activities
designed to improve
character, strengthen values
and broaden horizons. It will
fill a void that now exists in our
" city for this type of
youth-oriented facility.
Because of the worthwh ile nature of the Boys &
Girl s Cl ub, the Kresge Foundation o f Troy,
Michigan. recently awarded the building fund a
$75.000 "challenge" grant. This means that in
order to receive the contribution, the private and
corporate citizens of our community must raise
t he rest o f the money -about $300,000 -
necessary to start building the Club. We are
hoping to break ground this fall.
Working together. we can meet this challenge and get the Club built
for our children. In fact, if each household In Irvine donated only $10.
we'd be there! If we don't do it. no one else will ... so please fill out
the coupon be low indicating your donation and send it to Challenge,
Boys Club of the Harbor Area, P.O. Box 10297, Costa Mesa, CA
92627. Thank you.
Slncerely,
IJ~4.k
Dave Baker
'M>odbridge
Spec. for lhls meaHge wu paid'°' by Pltcheu. Perricone and McCllntock Fund Raising Chairmen --------------------------------------------Name ...............•....•. -... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · -· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · • · · .
Company if applicable ....•.•.•••......•.......... --..........• -................. :
Address ···················•••Ii>••····························
I tNe want to help meet the chattenoe by donating
s ..............•. to t he Irvine Boys 6 Girls Club •
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The check la enclosed.
. nd led cerd ................ Please se a p ge .
.,
\
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, September 22. 1981
------·-... ~
1980s decade
of referenda?
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
Uthe 11770!; wure l}l decade of the lnittative ln
Callforniu, cllmuict..'C! ~ puuge of Proposition 13
ln t!n8, th..-1980s show slans of becomlng the eru or the r t!ferendum
Jwst as the first initiative attempt of the 1970s,
the proposed Envitonm ent Act of 11>?0, lost badly
at the polls. the first statewide refe rendum of the '80s also figures to lote.
Thut will be next JW\9's vole on whether to re-
verse the Legislatur.e;s decision to build the •
bUlion-dollar Peripheral ·canal project. It most
lllte ly will lose becau$e it pits Northern Caftfor .
n lans ' des ire to protect their water supplies
against Southern Caliroroi~ns and their seemingly
insatiable thirst for water.
.,
L'GAL BILLS ·
5%il'me r Tennessee
...............
Iranian revolutionary guards hit ground during shelling near Ahwaz, as war continues along 300-mile front.
New federalism called sham
...
Students
excel
Never mind the doubts over whether water
from the canal is really needed in the south .
Southern Californians h ave never voted down a
m ajor water project a nd they can easily outvote
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
the rest of the state
But the firs t in-
itia tive or the modern
era also lost , by a 65·35
p er cent m argin. Yet it
s purred a political move·
ment that's still
states.
aliv~ .and has spread to other
Poljt1cian s didn't at.art paying attention to in·
itiatives until afte r Proposition 20 passed in 1972,
placing controls on coastal development after the
Ugislature had refused fOf' years lo pass similar.
but more m oderate, restraints.
..,,t.>dv . Ray Blanton is
./lceyaring to au<'lion
cpnstruction equip-
·ment to h elp pay
1 gel fees st emming .
Uo;n his con v kt ion
"o)! federal c o n -
·ptrac~. extort ion
d m ail f11aud
rges
,
~atlle Cory says Reagan 'less than honest" r egarding cuts
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
controller of California has ac·
cused President Reagan of not
being honest with the elderly,
the handicapped and the states
in connection with bis budget
cuts .
Controller Ke n Cory told re·
porters Monday, ''but the White
House has made a sham of it.
•'The White House ha s been
less t han honest with the elderly,
sidered by th e administration
will shlft more than $500 million
in costs to the state of California
in the next nine months. He said
Reagan is financing "tax cuts at
t h e federal level -by tax ID·
creases a t the state level "
UC Riverside ha& an-
n ou n ccd tha\ eight
Orange Coast s tudents
wer e amo n g 1 ,015
degree n ·c·ipients
They're a lready paying attention to the
statewide referendum, althou gh none bas s ue ·
ceeded since the 1920~. Local referenda have been
common all along, bec._use they need r elativel y •
few voter signatures lo quallfy for the ballot.
t
entries
t laughs
"T he White. House has called
fo r a n ew f e d eralis m , a
partnership of the states and the
fed eral g overnment, under
which states would have greater
fiscal responsibility and relief
from unnecessary a nd cost-
increasing federal regulations"
-the poor, the blind and the dis-
abled," Cor y added. "The
federa l safety net (of basic
social programs) is being cut by
the White House, causing the
truly needy to fall into s tate tax-
payer hands."
Cory said c uts in human
ser vices programs being con·
Cory said he was meeting with
members of the California con-
gressional delegation ~o discusa
the situation. He urged Congresk
to look at future budget cuts lo
determine whe ther they will
force increased costs on the
states.
Th e) arc Ann
McClellan of Corona del
Mar. Wilham Guyang,
R onald H <1ys a nd
Ronald Spicer o f Hunt·
lngton Beach. Karen
llartmen a nd Alison
King of Irvine; Jill
Sheppard of Balboa a nd
Jeffrey Hamilton of
Fowita1n Valley
•• DEA~~co~~~~CES •• ,. ..... m • ., "· "" ,, Lighthouse draws
D ~-L ~ z ~ BME 1 H UA~~ ~~~~~~u~. *~e ~~~il;r~!s Point Loma' s view given hitih marks
I McFARLANEJ, age 94 A quests In lieu or Clowers • ~"
resid ent of Huntington donations be made to the SAN DIEGO CP ) -Like wors hip-Point LdmaJs h ad th e distinction of Beach. Ca Passed away on Manrea Jesuit House, PO d f · · b · h 1..: • h Friday, September 18. 1981 Box K. Azusa. Ca. 91702 ping pilgrims, thous an s o v1s1tors emg t e m ghest ml e nation
in Huntington Beach. Ca Services under the direction arrive daily al the old Point Loma At 462 feet above sea level, it's
Mrs Oucommun was born or Harbor Lawn Mount Olive lighthouse to gaze at one of light -fueletl by whale oil -was
1 n Te ha c h a p 1, Ca on Mortuary of Costa Mesa California's most popular panoramic visi!>le from 28 miles away.
December 17, 1886 and came 540·5!5~. vie ws . But, bec&U!le of its height, fog easi·
to llunlington Beach. Ca in For many, lhe location -which l y o bscured the lig ht a nd the
1923 \\here she married Jack SANTOPIETRO happens to be the mos t southwestern lighthouse was abandoned 00 years Ducommun Beloved mother MARIE SANTOPIETRO. . f . I U . ed S t h. N 'II b f ( orBetty DillonorHuntington resident of Irvine, Ca point o the contmenta nit ta es agot 1s o em t-r ,in avoro a-new
Bea<'h. ca .. also s urviving Passed away '?n September -comes close to a r eligious ex-tower buUl at the water's edge.
are 3 grandchildren, Ann 19. 1981. Survived by her p erience: miles of seashore, 6,000 After (ailing into disrepair. the
Dillon Wong. Kristine Dillon husband Fra nk P Sa n· foot mountains to the eas t and Mex· lighthouse got new life in 1933 when it
and Jeffrey Dillon Friends topietro of Irvine. Ca. a son ico to the south. was given to the National Park
ma\ rall at Pierce Brothers Michael Santopietro or San "Primarily they're drawn by the Service. Restored to its former
Sm.iths' Mortuary until Diego. Ca .. a daughter M.ary view. ll knocks you out. It ranks as charm, the quaint structure has at·
9:00PM on Monday evening Steigel"Wald of Irvine. Ca . a one of the outstanding h arbor views tracted more than a million visitors a
Ma:.s of Chmllan Burial w1U grandson James and a in the world," says Pa rk Ranger Bob year for 2(j years, according to Valen.
be celebrated on Tuesday, gr anddaughte r Jennifer, Valen. a gu ardian at the 116-year-old It annually ranks as one of the top September 22. 1981 at also or Irvine. Ca. Rosary 8:00AM at St Mary's By the will be recited on Monday landmark for four years . three most -visited n ational monu·
Sea Catholic Church with September 21. 198 1 at F o r others, like Valeo, it's a ments in the n ation, Valen said. New
Father Daniel Johnson.7:00 PM at t h e Bro wn chance lo reflectback to thel~. York's StatueofLiberty 1s No.l.
pastor or the church as Colonial Mortuary Chapel At times. "especially when the Sightseers can tour two stories of
celebrant Interment will be Mass of Christian Burial will wind is blowing har d," Valen vis-the tiny lighthouse and view rooms
made m the Good Shepherd be celebrated on Tuesday. ualizes old San Diego through the authen&i<!ally (urnished to represent
Cemcter} Pierce Brothers Seplember 22. 1981 at eyes of Robert D . I s rael , the the 1880's period The tower,
Republicans in the st ate Assembly are trying
to call a referendum because they're not happy
with the reapportionme nt plan worked out by the
Democratic legislative m ajority a nd Gov. Brown ,
a lso a Democrat.
But rc•ferenda aren't as simple as initiatives
Designed solely lo reverse government actions,
they can only qualify for the ballot if a major
s hare or the state's populace is genuinely upset
over a new law
While initiative backe rs have many months to
obtain the 550,000 valid voter signatures needed to
qualify a measure for the ballot, r eferendum
s ponsors have little time.
No referendum can qualify for the ballot after
the effective date of the law it seeks to overturn.
That means there can be no referendum on an
urgency bill which passes the Legislature with
two-thirds majorities "ill both houses. And it is dif·
h cult lo galher 550,000 voter s ignatures within the
30 day and 60-daY. waiting periods between
passage of othe r bills and their effective dates ,
But many other bills become effective each
Jan. 1 and if they're signed early enough, referen ·
dum ba('kers could have ample time to gather the
signatures needed to put them to a public vote.
Among the mos t gleeful observers of the birth
of the s tatewide referendum is Joyce Koupal, who
with her late husband Ed ran the People 's Lobby,
a Los Angeles-based grass-roots organization that
qualified more initiatives for the ballot during the
1970s than any other group.
Now working from Sausalito as a cons ultant to
pros pective initiative sponsors, Koupal calls the
referendum "a healtby~heck on government You
s hould be able to renrse them when they do
things that are a bunch of baloney."
To those who fear that a stream of r eferenda
delaying new laws would paralyze government.
Koupal r~plies. "Th~re.'s no law we can't live
without for a year or so, until the next ele ction. So
why not let the people decide when enough of them
care?"
r Ehos 1s a columni3t based in Santa Monica J
" ATT LE <AP I -
rtiere were som e "big
1 e rs" when Seattle
ose a nickname
'"t.y.fte city c hose the
• n~me "The Eme rald
City" from 13,000 en-
tries in a ('Ontest by the
8e attle King County
Convention a nd Visitors
eau. Some recom-
dat1ons we re real
Qi. said Tom J affa .
thd ,f>ureau'!. vice presi~
d'e nt and assistant
• len.eraJ manager
,~.Outing the selection
meetings, the judges
were often '" hysterics ...
said Jaffa "Som e sug·
gestlons "ere facetiou s.
others bitte r and some jtl~t . didn't capture the
.t~ltitive nature of Seat·
>Me..Maybe o n purpose ... ,
• lfany entries focused
.on' Seattle's celebrat ed
ptecip1lat1on and on the
Kingdome A s ampling·
-:rbe Green Weenie.
The Big Wart
1Kthgdome 1
~j-City or Crocodile
nars.
-The Duck Pond
.._;--Ho me of the Peoples
rwpublic of Artesia
-Seattle, It's Not a
Four·Lellcr Word
-T he Big Dripper
Smiths' ~tortuan directors. 10.00A M at St Cecilia's lighthouse keeper from 1871to1891. however. h as been closed since struc • 536 6539 · Catholic Church, Tustin. Ca COl'RTNEY Interment will follow at Holy ln 18.55. whe n the brick tower was tural cracks appeared in 1969.
J o H N p A T R 1 c K Sepulcher Cemetery Visita· built, San Diego was a rowdy Spanish The lighthouse s h ares the 8 1-acre
COL'RTNEY. a 11 year resi-tion Wlll be on Monday. ~P· settle ment of 650 persons, many of park site with the CabrHlo National
dent or Ne\\ port Beach, Ca tember 21. 1981 from J :OOPM them gold seekers. gamblers. set· Monument, w h 1 ch h o n o r s the
Pa-;sed away on September to 9 · oo PM a t Brown tiers and soldier s from America and Portug\Jese mariner Juan Rodriguez
19, 1981 He was a graduate Mortuary. In lieu of flowers Mexico. Cabr illo, who found San Diego Bay in
of South Western Uni versity the family prefers donations "The Israels used buckboards to 1542 a nd named it San Miguel.
in Los Angeles. Ca and be made to the American get to town (now Old Town), 10 miles Because of its magnificent view,
Firms seek computer
seroice technicians
worked for 25 years for the Can cer Societ y Brown away. And their children were rowed the area atlta~ huge cro wds during Hort on and Con iz res s Colonial Mortuary directors !L By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Prescription Pharmacies. He FOSTER to school," said Valen . the winter wnen tha.sands of migrat-
was also a partner of Studor THELMA MAE FOSTER. Near the tip or the peninsula's ing gray whales pass nearby on their
Dear Joyce: My son ID the Army ls
taking eltttronics cOUf'ses. When bjs
bitch ls over, wheR could be rlnd
good-paying work wldk>ut having to
go back to school?
Wholesale Drug Company in resident of Santa Ana. Ca eas tern s lope. a busy whaling station way lo ~xico's warm lagoons.
Los Angeles, Ca . as well as Passed away on ~ptember was in oper atibn where sleek Navy
be1 n~ a World War II 19, 1981. She had been a subs now moor. • lnterps:eter s orde r e d 1 Veteran He 1s survived by lifetime resident of Long For nearly 40 years, t he Cape Cod·
his wife Jane of Newport Beach. Ca. prior lO movmg s ty le lighthQuse served as a beacon
Beach. Ca . a daughtertoSantaAna.Ca.Sheissur lo marine r s . The las t of eight NEWARK, N.J . tAPl -New
-C.J .. PortJand, Ore.
M a rcelyn Co urtney o f vived by her daughter Linda Jersey must pay for sign language Manufacture rs of hlgh-tech elee·
Newport Beach. Ca., son L. Wiggins of Fountain lighthouses bmlt on the West Coast interpreter! for hearing-impaired tronic office equipment are practical·
Daniel F Courtney o f Valley, Ca .. and her 2 during the 1850s -30 years before college students who can't afford ly s hanghaiing co mputer s ervice
Florida. s isters Irene grandchildren Julie D. and the r ailroad reached San Diego -them, a federal judge has ruled. technicians to maintain and repair
Broni.ton of Santa Paula and Christie A. Wiggins both or their products.
Rosa lA>e Mettler of Lodl Fountain Va lley, Ca.l _.111 '6ftftl'( IUC 16111¥( Sod t · th d th t Ca. Mass of th e Resurrec: Gr aveside services will be l'UlllC NOTICE nr9'.ft< ""'"' PU ""'"' espera e 15 e nee a some
lion will be held on Wednes-held on Tuesday, September ----------co mpani es pay b ounties lo PICTITIOUS I USINUS ~ICTITIOUS IJ.lllNHS ,.CTITIOUS 8USINUS e mployees for experieneed recruits 22, 1981 at lO ·OOAM at Rose NAME STATEMENT NAME STATt MINT llAMI STATEMUIT . -----------.Hills Memorial Park. Wh tl· Tl'le fvl-lng --Is OOlllO bonl· The lollowln9 persons are dolf\t Tiie followln9 persons.,. doln9 <llnl11 recently, business machine
ti.er. Ca. Services under the ness n 11u11-sn b4\l11asus repairer was cons idered a r elated
"IRClNOTMHS
SMITHS' MOITUAIT
627 Mam St Huntington Beach
536·6539
rAC1FtC VllW
MIMOllALrAa•
Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac11tc View Drive
NewPort Beach
644-2700
McCORMICll MOITUAl•S
Laguna Beach
494·~15
Laguna Hills
768·0933 San Juan Capistrano
49!H776
HAI.Iott LAWN-MT. OUVI
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
rtHClNOTHHS
llil NOADWAT
MOITUUY
110 Broadway
Costa Me.a
642·9150
IALT2 •G80M SMfT'HI~
wHTCL.IP' CHA ... 427 E 17th SI
Costa~ 84~9371
direction of Harbor Lawn-ciS~~l.\;ae~~-~~R~:c1~.A~~11~ Sp~:~~~ ;v~~':1:.~PHA~~·1n';,'!~ To..~~=a:!~.~~~s. s but separate occupation fro m that of
Mount Olive Mortuary of Mesa,CAmv. &H<n.CAnw ' "'ANK LEGRAN D, s To<ilon, compute r service techhician. The in·
Costa Mesa. 540-5554. s. R. Ru1•owo 1, o c <Steven James w lllo;.s. 11101 ~"°"· H••POrt11Mch,CAt2tt0 c r easing use of computers and MARKEL Ronald), 211"' Rully Ave., 8•111o• Avt • 10•, Hu"llllOIOll eu c.11, GA"Y LEGRAND. s Toulon,
JA ME S PA T RI C K lsl-.CA"'61. '1M7. Nowl)Of18e«h,CA~ miCrOproceSSOrS in o(fice equipment
This l>utlnen ls t-ucted by an In· F. 0.Yld Wrl91!1, IU2' -ll'IQIDn flll• DU•lne .. 1' tOndu<led 11' • bl th d ' r r These orke rs MARKEL, resident or Costa c11v1c1ua1 Av..,e.1111-...,CA .0106. ~ralpar1 ... rn.1p. urs e IS me aon.d . w Mesa. ca. Passed away on s R. RutSllowskl, o.c. Tnl• .,..,1,,.., 1s conc1uc11c1 .., • Fr-LeQr-also are called "Ciel engrneers" or
September t9, 1981 . He is ,,,:::~~ ;~!n:i!.o,.;::~~v •: ~,.,., j.:;;:'!'1:j99, ~.!.~:,, '::9::! ;:;,.:;! .. ,=.11,"" "customer engineers" although rare·
survived by his parents Mr •uo.1•. 1'91 This ,,.1_,, ••• 111.0 """ ,,. ~. •• • .-1 ly a re they graduates of an accredit·
and Mrs. W1trren Markel, ~,..., ~°"uo".~~.~t• ot 0••"99 eo..11~ Put1HJNc10r•not"'-••O•ll:1;:1ot, ed profession a l-level school of brothers Warren W. Markel Publlllled °'-eoasi Dally Piiot, "' Pt 1 lef\.11, 1t,0c1 •. u. '"1 .,,,., engineering.)
B C D Id Sept. 1. I, IS, tl, 1'91 3'1M1 of anning. a. and ona Pu1111~ 0r.-. co .. 1 o.lly ~-1-----------t Working at the site of the problem
M. Marlrel of Ramona, Ca. s.p1 1·' u. 22• ,.,, ,.._., ' PUIUC MOTi[ -business offices -technicians use
and sister Cindy Luke of many kinds o f tools , s uch as
Fort Bragg, Ca. Graveside rtlUC Nl1I£ .• ,. ~ .. 1~.ou1T?T•.u!,•.N .. •Tu voltmeters, oscilloscopes and solder-servlcea will be held on Mon· ••1uc •TIE -.. ... da" ~ember 21 1981 at · rv · ~•CT•nous 1us1 .. ••• ,.. touowino "'~' .,. dol119 • ing equipment. urooA'M at Harb~r Lawn "'°""'lfVITlltOllOI NAMUTAHMelllT.. '='rfot. A 90WS '" "0 " IE•t Some technician s s pecialize In
Memorilal Park. ~rvlces The '-"Y !MIWtltll 011tr1ct1 .. TIM 1o11ow1no --1• dolno "'"'· sf,...., c.i. ~wi. ceu'°"''' m aintaining certfun ~s oC equip· ~~ ~, f under the direction of OI'•,,.. c-tv. c.i11or111•. •111 ,.. ooM RACITI JEWELE!lls.lie)f , Patri ci a Gu•rr•tt•, 11 w. ment various m.,...., s o word
Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive r1~~-~ .. "."'~:ci!~O:-: N•;:.:e~":;.~!~~:.~c~:'f". ,.._,Arc8dla,Callfon1l•t1-prooessore, for ex~te, or mini·
Mortuary or Costa Mesa ce1vect e1.,.. 011tr1ctt' Mrl'4ftlm .. ,,.. Callfoml• c~ttloft • ~· """ ,....,. No, ' "°'*' o,. c omputers . Otbet"s service many ~-•fflcu "' '"'• 0 ••• .,., 11"' e1.,.,.,c.1a1MM.c.11i.r.i1.;a»:-.... T:i:"'=.~:':::::::!: ~ • kinds of machines. H.lng to install -----------1 ...,.lneMw WI '°""' .. Wflkll ti This llullneu Is cOftCNCted by I .. y •Ill .. lllltllkly ......... ... .. POf'•llon ref P1"1Mnlllt1. and test new equipment, responding =.~1~1 :.::_~ :'oo!':,~:C'=: ~~n~f.'.f.ci~/.,'· 1""" n 11 ;:.~tel w11t1 "'-to customers' questions and com-
PH:Ttnous eu.1 .. .u ea111orn1•. •or"" ~ "c1tt11 °' o ... ._ C-'• 141 S. plaints and offering ad'fice on bow t o lllAMlllTATSMaNT ...... I .. : THltEE ltl~T ANGi.I! Thll 1ta1 ...... 1 ... ,...., •111\ h bar·~ l-1. ., maintain the equJpmeM are also part Tiie fet .... I def 0 E A It ,_ IE 0 U C • It S , e ' .. • ....,_ ., "' --· .,. .. Sfll!CIPICATION HO. E-lD. ~~ f:t"' o1 Or•nve _,.,. Of\ _'\ ........ .,..,Or ... Coelt Delly 11'1'"-of the job.
"" o LL o s" 11" v • 11 s 11•,,,.. • ...,.1 .. "'"" "*"" · · ,. --'· u . n. "· 0c1. '· 1"1 ...., Most employers ar e looking for ~_r~:,;~w::!~~~~ :!':'::::'':'Z~. ;.~~.~~ eoeat 0e11r.;,; • • PllUC •TIE lr ainees
1
wi
1
th th~1~uivallnenlnt of~wo
· ,..,. .,.. 1,,..,. °""'*"' 1i.c., • St1•<lflteu ... ,, 111, "'""' '" -ti' _t years, o e eclro11.n;S .tra g uvm if:,:..~~.= .....,.., fW1Mf ~ ,,,., -. ~-..... K vocational schoohl, d>tnmunity col·
tMt ....._. ,, cOfllllK•.., • ur-•• 111e .-. .. aHrH•: .... _... le des or lhe armed toll.eta I~ ~ltfter ... .,.,t. e '
,-1,..,.. 1""'9't eo., 111<. 1.; J . .._ IY.__, But requlrementl_Jlonllt tnd there. .u. owrec11. ""'*"' ='Joe..c•-. Computer service ifetbnlclan.s1 as C:::., '=-: :-..:~ ': ~........., comr>anY repre1enllfi"e.· must pro-._ o. "" °'*taa .... '· u Ject their employtt'• IN1e: People ~--~~ _.c.!!;:, w......... skUb are high prto~' ~t~OMno.tiy,.. :~~or...,c-t~".:',':i Once hired, nni ieotinicians 10
~--------....-. ......... ---------4 throutb trainln1 Malcm that can la~ crom seve~al~ to several mohltw, dependlq Od lflUlpmeat.
Thtn . tbtY aC'CC>al aperteQced
tec1mtclans on ~ tU U.., c•
make It alone.
CAREERS"· ------·
N~tionwj~e., beginning computer
service ~lfn.1.ciahs average about
S14,000 annually. With five years of
ex p e rien <:l ~th i!y make close t o
$20,000. At ttm top are senior techni·
cians e arn•ilst: about $30.000, but
hig hly skill~~ roubles hooters can
earn even more. Traditional business
mac hin e r~pairers <those who
service or(fii~ary typewriters, adding machines,~\$.). ~rn much less.
The bright ,,rde: Com puter service
technicians tlne a great deal of in-
dependenc•. rdnd they can see the
fruits of thelf labors : a fully oper at-
ing machine. "
In the shadows : Many technicians
are on caJI £4, llours a day and m ay
h ave to drlvel long distances in some
areas.
J ~W"' .... --........ _ _. ..... ,.,,1 ....... ,....,....,.,. ...... _,_,,..__
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/TueSday. September 22, 1981 • cs
The tnarketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
Orange Coast re.~1dent s bought 42l'f of
all new cars sold in the county Last year
even tlwugh tliey compnse 011/y 3or, of
Ifie county's populatw11
~CLASSIFIED
INDEX
......... --
•••••••••••••••••••••• "°""' f.or 5416' H~H• For S• ' HC*ltl For S• Ho.I••• for Sdt Ho.tMI for Sdt Hocnta for S* H04'MI For Sale Ho.11fl for S• ...••......•.........•. ••····················· ....•...•••••••.••..•..••..•...•...••.•....•.• •········•···•·•••··•·• ...••.................. ····················•·· ....•..................
· GtMf'el I 002 G..,.., I 002 G~ I 002 ~ I 001 G.._., I 002 G....,.. I 002 Ge.rel I 002 GtMral I 002 ·······5:;5:soo······ ·······,·u;;,T$······· ····:·sisir;c;w;;~·· ..... iiFiiOut(··· ·~~;:~~·;·~;:;:~;~·~ ····~:::~::;:;:···· ............................................. .
Tt Ptact YHr U, tall
642·5678
HOUSES FOi SALE ., ....... .
K.11 ... i.1 ... 1
k.,lt.Jf ~Nfh1itl• : :-_;:~ dZ: tr.~\ "
t 01~4• "' ,. U•"• 1"14M ti two ........ ..,,.11,,
..... AC\llf!; ~ ., .. .,. . .,
....... Kr.11'1
l411tft•fhlh
t •t~n .. ''iV""I , .. """''Ii ... ~:n~~~~, ..
,..,,.,.Jw•nl ·~"ll •IUI
""ni• "~· ".1 .w.t" 111ur.,t~ I ... wn-
¥.""""'"°"' \41.hll.-Uwnr '•'•
REAL ESTATE
At''""'•'" tof '•'• ""•""""""lot \•Ito kt11tfli'f1~rh
hU-\1Aru t'rt•Jl''fl\
< ttmttt'n I uh· t n "' t 111tt1n..-11••I1•tt;1;1·1t'
I Cll\dl;n11~wm\ \Al• ,,..,.._"" t Al,, ,41.-
u • .._""'' 'fl.,."'"'"' ll'Mwn..l1c .. rh INhoH1..t l••flVtth .... , fot ~h
"11it1d• Un14 l,tt t'n ...
\t111',H1tn °""'''' k•'\11rt lif•Alit f tJ l'tOI•
I Nt uf l uuhh Pniv
Uvl ut ".t•'t 1'100
H.tn.ftr'\ ~"'"' f1rM .. Kr.I•,,,.,., t \1 lil.,n•1
lh··· t '\l11t• Y..l'lt..,t
RENTALS
UtA.t'"C"" •u1nt1rihfitt tlw ..... , l nhu A1\hr·11
Huu""" hHMul I nl
li.indt1m1'"""1, t ... 1n
l undon11n1uni" \ nt 111.n"-iu~'" ~"'" T owi nf'MN'\t I ,.
l~~l•u·"' t urn ·~ .. ,~'"' "~' twrn
""'" \ 111¥1" -'1""' turn Ht l n• k1.-1~v H1111n1 ,, ho,.r1f
Hl"-•"I' \luhl'
11\lfl'\t llHtlltl'•
'um""'' M· nt .. 1
\ .... '""'' k1-"h t. H•nl•I• h•"'.,''" '·•••wn ,,., H•~• flffu,. k1>hl•I ~'""'""'"'thnt•J lf'lldw,H1 .. 1 k..,~411
""'"'( M, r11•l" \4 •lll('d
\l1~1 H"nc"I"
COSTA MESA l.O\'lll\'d In Npl lll(tb DHPEIATE! Nel lt1• Gale R11nc·h. Est11tes &At•rea11t• ' I n Beautiful l Slot)' 2 Bdrm lht'i.t' 2 &Inn llntlb art' 4 lid rm 2 bu pool hom l' 2 Hdrm , l ba I yr old La11un11 Hills, beaul Tr)' 4 BR 3 BA 34<Xl bQ ft /') /) '
2 bath l'OO<k1 in C'ost11 truly pride of Oltt'tl1·~h1p Assume lu balanct-lu1n Adult <'omplex Take view. imported marbll', l'ool and citrus at (_.o{e ' 0 l!wpor/
Mesa 2 car attJl'ht>tl Th,· lo~ 1nter"~1 loan °~S.~tc~~~tRnoEALte TY over ULUine loan pool stte ya rd. 4 r
1
a $74.5,IXX>
·~ ... 11•,.,
:~~; EQUAl HOUSING
::: OPPORTUNITY
111 ••• ::~ Ptlbhlltr's Hotk:•:
,...,, All real esl•te ad· :::!! v e r t I s e d 1 n l h i s ,,.,, newspaper is sub1ect l
:::~ the Federal Fair Hous·
::~ Ing Art o( 1968 which
1,,,. makes It illegal lo ad
1••1 vert1se "any preferenl'e,
:::'. I 1 m 11 at ion. or d 1 !>
:·,":'. <'nm1nat1on bai.ed on
rare. rotor. religion.
sex. or national origin.
:·;:: or an mtention lo make
1)'" any such preferenre.
:~:: limitation, or ll•~
'"' crlmmation "
garage t;r,•at lut·at1un ran b,• u .. ~umt'd :in1l th1• '"'" ~ -garage, equestnan Ol We know 1tll lbnt·hu
call for mort-dtta1l~ own,•r 14111 help ftnanrt' ~7991 • RED CARPET S625,000 Propert1t'~
546-2313 <.'all lur trl()r\' tnfo1 m11 No need to travtl all over 754•1202 I Jensen & Co. 7S9-CY706 nUAIL COUNTRY
t100 1hk111i: pri,t' town to look for garagt Evei.. 644 5742 or "' THE REAL
ESTATERS
FtXat
STEPS TO SAND
3 BR & U~:N nl'l>tb our
attention Unng sho' l'ls
and paint brllhh Muke
$S's Owner ~ill 1·;irn JI
lo~ interest
@ SE.A COVE PROPERTIES
• 714.63 1·6990
$93,000
R-2LOT
S4!l5,0oo sates . you'll rind them 951-11269 RE.AL ESTATE
right hm 1n Classified. The fastest draw tn the 17 ~J 756-1611
2 ADULT HOME
S88,900
To place your garage West a Daily Pilot IA YRONT s~i!, ca!!,6'2-56 · Qasll/~~56'18 BOAT SUP SANDY
CE
BBDBIE ILlllS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
CH.ARMING DUPLEX
BEA(.,11 Deck & Patio.
Lge. lilt' & cheery 3
bdrm + den. 2 bath
ll(lme Open beam cell·
ing, brick BBQ, 2 car
garaee + extra parking
SS9S.000' Owner Agent
673·9187 or675-7000
EUROPEAN
MANll HOUSE
Magnificent 6 bdrm.
Vlt'W. ffi31lSIOO 7200:.q ft
with 7 baths. !> frpk:..
large wine Cl'llar. s pel'
Lacular 20· high entr).
circular robblestont'
drivtway on une full
acre Special feature 1s a
huet rowttf') club b1ze
REALTORS
67~55 1 1
LOAN ASSUMPTION: COM dupfH with
9ood ffnancin9. Each unit 3 bdrm 2 batt.,
fam ily room. Clo1• to ntrythln9 at
$429,500.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2 515 E. Coo If Hwy., Corona ~ Mor
675-5511
1\\11 .....
::,; This ntwspaper ~•II not
"'" knowingly a('('epl any ,.,.., advertising for real
;:;; estate which is ui viola
~~:: J!on of the 111 .. , __ _
1'1.US a '!rrlall ht>mC' that
nteds fliunl!' \ g1 t>JI
bu v for h u ii 11 e r o r
starter hum1• f.111\ \'/\
terms .ivatlJbh~ <'.ill
R1_ght now' 546-2313
S1n11h•,, fincl ,1 1.1an1lt'r I ar11J buy loda} T\\u 11111
Pl II :!It', H'IJ:Hdll'
li<l1 m~ each "1th full
huth:. 'lwet. pradt' or
014 nersh1p, hidden J\\,1}
1 le\el C"OO<lo w11h pool
Jnd t·omm11nllY rl'r
room 'lt•ur S 'cuu~t
l'la7a 1·all about term'
+ IACHELOR UNIT
Situated Best Central Area Costa
Me~a Ideal For Owner In One Unit.
Ot he r Two Unit s Help Make
Payml'nts . DHASTJC PRI CE
HEO UCTION. OWNER ASSIST
FINANCING. SlS0.000 Call To See
Immediately
t'nterlainment room with 2 frplcs No\\ under There'i. an easy \\ay for
ronstruclion you lo sell that bicycle
People who .ire seeking
an apartment look first
in Class1r1ed Will your
ud be there? To place
your..ud-' caJIG42-51l7R
~~:, ................ .. ..,., ...... EltRORS: AdY•riiHn
5hMld dltdl thtir ads
THE REAL
ESTATERS
752 1700
{!:;; doily cmd report •~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS
:::: ron iMlllediate!y. The SLASHED CdM FIXER
a:. DAILY PILOT 011-..s $24,500 OC EAM VIEW ~~ labllty fw tht flnt White p1c:kc:t fl'lll't' -.u1 ll1·tlu('(•d O\•?r ~o OCHI'
~:~ le cornet l•Hrtion rounds flu\\ l'r I ii lc:ll ~ 1 11 t• r ' a re tr u I' ,,.. ty ) J rd load' or us1•ri 111ut1\ .itt'd • 5 l:ldrm:. ;::;, °" · bm·k 0\\11t•1 \\tit l'Jl'r~ llugt• '317111) mom "' ~.. \\Ith small 110\\n 1·all l s umc: !1 1.'. fir!tl ' :1 :·;~; now 1Jrtv3le beache:. Only :~:: HHttsfwSde @ SEA COVE S3111.ooo Call673·!155-0
m. ~~~::::::::::!?~~ ;;~~~E.~!~:o I f JJi§il1
:·.;· 4 BEDROOMS I 5 BEDROOMS I ~:;, POOL-SPA EASTSIDEC.M. -----
DE AMU BAYSIDE VILLAGE
Super Mobilt' ll omc Two
Bedrooms +Two Balhs -Second
Story Sun Deck Owner Will
Carry Fin<1ncing Submit Offers
i\J)k1ng $.57.500.
759-9100
#2 C°"°'ate Pino ........ c..tw
IEACHD~LEX
$30,000DWN 1011 steps to sand. Huge
assumable lsl. Owner
will l·arry 2n d
Ovtrs1zed lol Pr1ct>d
right ' Call today.
673-llSSO
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
The fastest draw in the
West u Daily Pilot
_Class1f1ed Ad 642-5678
Rick Aldttttte
Rltr. O.••lo~r
731 -4444
TRIPUX
'Three 2 bdrm. 2 bath
furn units Step:. to
beach Good '>Um ·
mer winter h1stor~
Priced at S39!>.00tl
675· 1752.
associated
Bl!Ok EllS-llEALTOllS
101 ~ '/tr Balb.,o •?l 'Ud
you no longer use. Just
advertise it 1n the
Classified' C111! ~-5678
I O>/•°lo FINANCING
$668 PER MONTH. ..
when you take over existing low
interest loan on 4 bedroom home
NEWPORT Rl \'I F:RA . reaturing
f'renth doors. I treplal'l'. i 1 !
bath:. plu s r:11s1.•d "c>OdC'n deck.
nl'w c·Jrpl'I & paint Only
~l l l.~><l. mi 1501ur752-7373
NEWPORT BUCH OfffCE
2670 Son Miguel Dri•t
17141759·I50 I 17141 752-7373
~..1o· Lovely 2 story home on A fanl11st11· Ea~t.1111.'J The Bl1&est ~rketpl1et ·
BUSINESS, INVEST· quit t cu 1 d t' ~ ..i r . home 5 &Jrm J tiath. on the Or.qe Coast FORMER MODEL CONDO ~ MENT. FINANCE Easts1de Costa Mc:.,a ~ k\ Ii I( hh ",iii.. 1 n
.. ,. Secludtd masttr s111lt l'lu~l'b drlll Jll I h ~
,.,.. Covered paLIO Custom good 1 t•:. ~· • • r 1• n I ~ :::•.~ dts1gned pool and :.pa $168.500 \ mu,1 ~el'
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
ADS
""'If'•"' •11o1.-11
k ...... "" .... "•"'•<fl ln\f'\lm.-nt •>vi•o11t
'"'''lftWM \t.•111'°"
\J1""'"'."' .. '"'" \ltJini' "',.nlHt
\t11r\~ .. c•·" 11• ..
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
PERSONALS &
LOST & FOUND
,,.."'"''""" "t nt• l •' .... ...
• ..... '''11'f' ... ~, .. ~t"'nd ,, .. ,..,.,,,wh
....... 111111,.. ., .. , ...
SERVICES
"'wr\ "lhtt" tun
£MPlOYMENT &
PREPARATION
'\Ii tkiJOh ln ... rnn hhn Jun "··n•f'•I •t,.111 .. •M"1 \I ' t
MERCHANDISE
~"" ...... "''" ··""· ,.,. ......
K•''W k..iidm-\1•1•-•l•I
t •"it'•' t. t •1u1,1f11• 1 t l.;I• ••• '''""'fl ''"' t11rr\lt1.1or•
l1•t•W"' ,. I ..... , ..
..... ""'~ J,, .... ,.
J ...... f\ .. , ,.., .. ~
"•' "'"'"'' \11·• • ll•nt•""
\t1,1t-l1 .. l!t"U\1 'A .. 111!·11
\lu·tt11l ln.1run1•nl
•Ml111 •vrt• 4 t ttt,.•V l'tt
•'••1'110'\ & ••rt'" 1w-.,,._ "•• f\,r •
"'•ofhf\lf .... d
""'"'" Rf"ltl.tMf •"' 0.1 ~~ •.r:IJ-o U1t r ~''"''
BOATS & MAR1HE
EQUIPMENT 1,.,, ... ,.1
t'11fh ''•'"' "" 11, t\ ... t ~ ... ,h .. ,, .... , , ...... .,.,.,,
h •• , .. k'""'1 ' •• , , .. ,
ito.Jt1l•"'•I
h ..... """•P"' 1~ .. ~
ht>•t' """t<I ',~. ... l..ih 'lntU"
TRANSPOaTATION
'~" r" '1 l ,,n1p.-r ~ '4.I• tt .. .u
t •r1,rn I At \1111h1lr H•rm.,....
\l•A11f' \t ...... "•M t
\t~·Jf' ,.,. ... ,.,, """' lt.11"" 1,,,,,.1
lr•1Wr\ l lll+h
.\l.ll1t Y n u r 1'111 I
AUTOMOBILE
•••• , ... , .1
\n1~w, 1 1,, ... .,
Hr•,.,..,,,.,~\ ••ft•t It
\t)o>fl• M.1· t k·•I '"'·•"' .... ,, 14~• ..
'""" \wt11l t 4\HI
'~'''"' """''"'' AUTOS. IMPORTED
lrt'MI"
\ 14 Ht1fl1't•o
\wot• '~···" ..... i. ~ ..... ... ,,.
l"11
tl•hWfl
t d1••• t. .. 1
H•tn•lo• J .......
Jt'0\411
t\•lrl\i111u\oh J "·' ... \h ",,.Ho ,.
\lo. \h,K ....
t't111h I <I
111 Ml 1·1 ..
f'•H\1 h1
"•'lhlllll "'"""'"l"'' M11,1·1
~t1•h
.._.h.ttu ,.,,l ....
'''"''"'"'! \oia ... ., ... 11
\•ti\!•
tu"' '"I
'""'"'"1 \\II ........ , .. ,1111 .. ,
~"m"''" l"°''''"''"' '"''"'"• ''""'''
AUTOS, MEW
AUTOS. USED
, .. "~('"''' , .. ,,, ....
\uu.:1111
tht.;t• ..... tm.,..u.tl
l.tmulll
'tl11u•t11 l ........ ,,
'tlU\l•ft,i.
l"4blfflnh1l1
l'111h•
l'h Mrnfth
l'1•M•"' lh1.t~h, ... I
\• ....
"'' Grtat assumable finanl· ~6-2313 :~:~ mg ' Only St69,900' Call
for details. 646-7171
.... ....
!Jiii
·~· ...
"' ... ... ... ...
.....
;;u., ..... .. ,.
I I ...
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THIMIUNG
Lllll tht' :.pet'IJh"b al
You (on St-ff II find II
1 rode I! Wrth o Won! Ad
642-5678 1
-J
One Coll Set •t<~ TOWt-f'tOME? I
th e ('ondom1n1um 1n -------~
formation t'l'nt1•r 1sr1.1. 11llt> ttt•m" with a
Tourh.stont• ftt-alt' !>Jill f'ilut l'l.i~~•fied
9631&1 \11
:.
Rf!>IOfNTIAL R(AL £STATE SERVICES
PRIME OCEANFRONT DUPLEX
Beach lo\'ers '. In vcstors '. En JOY
dramatic ocean views & beach life .
Extellent .su mmer winter rent<1I
1 n co m e & w r 1 t l' offs Su p e r
tond1t1on. 3 BR up. 2 down. plus
guest suite. $675.000
OPEN WEDNESDAY 2-6
3212 W. OCEANF«OHT
Al.SO OPEN wm 1·5
1415 UST IAY
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
STAINED GLASS IUUTY This
super 4 BR f amily home near
South Coast Pi na ha been
mod1f1ed & customized " lots of
stained glass windows. Big ya rd
for the kids! Easy access to
eHrything SIS!l.900 Jerry
Thompson 551-8700 IR55 >
HARBOR RIDGE LEASE Super
panoramic ocean, bay & night
light view from this 2 BR. den
formal din rm & 2 BA home.
Decorated like a ·~todel" in the
1 earlh tones. Commumtv tennis court~ & swimm ing po0I. 24 hr.
gua rd ed gate . Availab le
immediately $2500/per month.
Dona Godshall 644 -6200 IB.56 )
cars0bikes·
·skateboards•
trucks "baby
carriages•tea
carts •trikes
rol lerskates •
walkers·toys
•wagons .. ••
scooters*hot
rods•coupes •
trailers*hard
tops•
9093
She II cuddle 111M into this c-01~ poncho 10 ketp 1he cold 1w1y1
011wstr1n1 neckline 11111!
tr1n1e 11 the nem and bubble
tr<m ••Ill c.able st11oes-1ny &orl
would i()'rt 10 WU! th S tO \Ch~
l\nii of syntllet1c worsleO
P1nern 7U7 Sim 6. 8 10 Incl
r---
.... @
If It's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.Call
642·5678 and a
friendly ad·
viserwill
hetpyou
turn your
wheels into
cash.
WRAP UP • rrut Skirt look-choose front or b«'-w11p style-
to tum with blezer 11e11ets and
1001 best tops. No frtt1na pro1>-
1tms-w1lk 1n 1nd button to 111
P11nled P1tt1m 9093 Mtoo
W11tl Sizes 24, 2S 26" 28 30. 32 S1zt 26'n tKh llM1 t'
yaid1 604nc~ f1bl"
Sell4 WO llf llCll pe11111. AM SO. t. •dqettwn hlr e lMM141lfll.S.•• lllAITill ttem~.4'2 0111~ fllloe
ZU lhlt 11111 St., llft Ttl\ ltT
11011. """ llMll. ADOIDS. ZIP, Sill_. STTU llllllKl
Wor~in1 woman' Loo~ srwt. tit
$111111. dress lot Im-MW • WWII-
• rabt wrtll our NEW FAll-WINTER
PATTERN CATAl.00 Coupoc1 lot
f,.. $2 peltl(n IASldt-JOlll ------~ clloietl Selld SUO au. cun ms .. StOl llCll 11$.11 •• a..
Ut::..t*=-. 1•• •· ----WI llld c.tlloc-ldd SO&
S2.00 10< each panern Ado
50C mh pattttn for post11e
and h1ndlin1 Send to: Alkt ...
Httdlecfaft Dept. 101
01lly Piiot I
1oa m Old ChtltM s11: ...,
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STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
AcOOfdlng to California Bu8'ne11
and Proteaalona Code (~. 17900 to
17930) all peraona doing bu11ne11
under a flctltlou1 name mutt tile 1
statement with the County a.tk end
hav• It publlahed four tlmea In a
newspaper Mf'ling the ., .. In which
th• bu1tne11 la located.
The 1t1tement 11 required by law
and 11 neceatary In protecttng your
bualntM n•me. Moat blna rtqUlrt
proof of tlllng to open commercial
accouru.
Almost ntw 3~d. 21/J ba. oil bedrooms
with bolcoaies. Highly upcJraded in a
COlltt..,ietlt Costa Mesa cna. SI 74,500.
BEACHFRONT CAPE COO
Corur cottog• on pri1nt OetOftfront.
R•etntly remodeled 2 bedroom for
eftioymtftt now of a N•wport SIA'llmtr with
$100,000 down owntr will carry.
$499,500. 631 -1400
WATERFRONT HOMl:S.1'<
RfAI ESTAH
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631 -1400
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THE BIGGEST
GARAGE SALE ON THE
ORANGE COAST
IS IN THE
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS
642-5678
DA ILY PILOT
Take thne lo mu and
thop at homt. Jt'a aim·
pit wltb Dally Piiot
Clauilied Ac». And ii
you have aom&llln1 to
Hll, call a frie.dl1
ClaHlfied Ad-Vltor at
la ...
...... ltldbaldtlae. lll4'1t ... C*"'l
The DAILY PILOT provldu both
tlllng and publlcatlon aervk:ea. Wt
htvt •II Utt fltCtlHry fOffnt and
matnt'6n 1 daffy Nrvk:• to the Orange •
County CouftlM>uM. EltMf _, br one
ot our COftftnleftt office• or ptloM tM
LEGAL DEPARnlENT MMn1, ht. ,.._·~"2---~_,.,.. ___ ""°""'JiO" _____ ...... '"" __ '°""' ___ . ____ ,·t ~~~------~~--.....,;,_,_--'
I
• l
Walker&Lee
Real Estate
RfSIOfNTIAL R(Al £STA ff SfRVICfS
SALUTES
THE 198 1 DESIGN HOME
17 MUIR BEACH CIRCLE
SPYGLASS HIU
Spon~ored b~ .\e"port .Ir
Chamber of C:ommt:'rt'(' lo bcnrf11
ORAMGEWOOD
A nt'\\ ho mt· for :1 hu~ed chi lclrl'n
Open ror µuh l t( \le\\IOg
September 1:.1-:ti 'I 1<·ket!> may bf'
purchased at lht> door
Presented at S2.-tOo.ooo
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
SlllC & flNlt EVERGREEN
C S 8 0 H H R E S P Y C D 0 R U K R R
N W T A H T D P A I J 0 V H R C 0 Y E
Y 0 E C E P R l 0 U 0 A R E 0 X N R P
R X R R M U l 0 H W I l L L P E l R V
E A A D C 0 W l 0 B E W M M A X A E S
P I H E N l P E 0 C E L T S I R 8 E
I M W G R E R H Y I A 0 B P E R
W R A T R G 0 H V Y U J Z E L L
S M C I H L R R T Q X J U R D A
T 0 R W l D 0 I E 0 S T 0 M H D
P Y A Y W B 0 S L 0 C K J U A D
l 0 I l R 0 H H G A R A D E C H
I S E A A 0 I Q R U R R E D 8 R
0 E A E E L T R Y M X A W N 0 A
N 0 E N E H P 0 I L N l E Y C C E
11W1NC11cn: Hlddln ~ i:.low ~ fofwwd, bid!·
wwd, up, Oowl'I or dlegonelly. Find Hdl Ind boa It In. " p
~oil! YM Bristlttone Pint ,,,
Rtdwood Pint Ctndltbtrry "'
Htmlock Holly Rhododendron t JunlpW Cedar Wu MV'11t
lillenolil ~· MoMtle
Tomorrow: Look
O •-ro-lofto11 ol "'• '°'" IC•O'°'>lod -cl• bo
low IO '"'"' lo." •"'Ole -d• I GAHADE l1 ltfl
.... ....
t.
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....................... •••••••••••••••••••• ...................... ,., ....................... ... I 044 ... .,.,..... I Mt ... ..,.... ..._. N lier .. _._ 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-.e IOOJ • d 100• ,. ___ .. ....._ JO ,.--"-u~-••••••••••• ....................................................... ,. -
... ,..,. • _,... ----IOU E•tellent flnancln1. ·-------· ••••••• .... •••••••0 ••• NMl'saDI El111oce • economy! •• •.•.•.•· .... ·.·•.·.·.·•.•.••.•.••.·.·.·.•.••.•.••.·.·.·•.•.•.••.•.••.•.•.•• ••••u•••••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. Unlver1lty Par It L.fDOtSLI C)~o,fd or ... h OCEANFRONT New C .... W...4Ulll k2S rtnll t.bil SotnJsh t 04 m<>MA l BR condo below marit, Fordem 2:200.q I\. 4BR. m down. owe loe znd • n tr u Pu 11 • Modular Type Homn. With 204:(, down, owe etyle i bedroom famlly U .... D" ISLE ~ New elf1Ml 4 Br Vic S20,000 dwn. 11·118r~ 30 Z'r)8A, ram rm, formal • Boufbt •nothtr. •BR. luted la.od, 3 pvt bchs, u"'~ AITD Small home near the beach! " "' lo d 1 0 t w/no ptymmtl 2 br, 2 2"'BA, ram nn. pool •"' 24 hr ~Y Oshln1 • 1 E"ct'ta'ng Opportunity' Wide chann"l t orl1n putlal vu, r •nJ&&wn.s.a1"'83 n rm ecora or ba , lmma r . wt /ex .... _.. •· l:M . ~ nea•tlve Owner wlll Plueh c&rpeU · arae .. · " ownr/eontnctor Ctnan Home Spa.ManyXtr11 lo pottnt.11 J 1 .., ...,.,......,__ ____ pier from •900 '1 lr11de meke ofr cbef'• llltdlen! Children view from spectacular arerutectural evall. s.m ooo. OWM• DISPllATI! Mf.11513 G: n Alt.~ 1 · 1.11 1-------wn df.llua 1221.000. •JIN 1rtOK!l•1
designed 4 bdrm, S bath, pool home. -"' --115,000 down, 1.allt uver •000· • m.ew. MlW Trailer •I pvt beach, R 'H lnvatmtntl fltnlJm• .. 31~ f'ee
Slip for 2 larae boats St 495 000 llDUCIDSIOOI paymentl. Exec Back Wuillridl)e -ntft -Treuure Island , 75'-2li7 Cire•t loc Super clean 3
· • • · Cameo Shorn Eltale, 3 B • Y VI t w Coo du Cf'ffbidt Wiiow WUT OCIANROMT ffAHM lllM'( !-.,! ~.~ • Sch, 18500 l"YISTOIS Br 2"' be, frplc, New br, 4 ~ bUrtv ate MS-51?1. Prw onJ 4BR , 38A 2000 sq rt Triplex. XJnt terms 111 IDUll IRI ..,......, " DaJGHT paint, dflll, cpe. '750.
UDO ISL! HOMES beech. me ctyd., HEAi OCl»f boflDmePrwln/cl~~ooolt~OOOum :"!°n't ~a~l S800.000 JRuaEt NU.AW!dl S3SBAr N2 cbaE. HACH/~Hoi 1 'I Seller will CllTY Ill mi 8"2wtndl•eves.
fi'eatured on Home11 Tou""" this lov.nl)' w/spaci0111pool,Corever POOLHOME "'"#· -· .. ••->'... 148,500 with low low 3 year old, 7 unit c.or.. .. w.r JJU d. . . ,.. •" " harbor .t e>«ao view • Br 2 n. Na-. '"--v• Owner I All 857 2100, MODEL. Outstand1n1 do 2 .. B 2b l ra 1t1onul ·p IOUS Sl 3 bd 3 " 04I '-"' \AKI "' .... .... I .... fi wn. yr. 6 r, a. townhouse, ...... 63141 .. s ac • eu om rm. $686,000leasthold. nltnl to ell, low down ~·--OCllAJilllOMT II ew warn areal 111anc fam rm . Min. age l8yn1, ~ ~--28R . "Honeymoon Cot
bath home. newlv redecorated Priced A (}/ :P Ownerwillhelpflnanre. S~Sttrttr 3 bdrm. z bath Im '°t· Prlctd for lmmed sml peu OK Across MoW6tHw taae" canyon 11tew,
losellquicklyat$475,000. Mustsee. '-'-<ll JTMIV ~· CallA ent&4f.7434. Nlr•ly detailed 3 Bdrtn maculale horn• with ::a:::b~·000· Agent. from bch Mary J1nk Pitt noo atove. DO pell, adlta. • REAL ESTATE f44·6397 home In California sueat house'1or I bdrm 675-2311 640.761 Rltr. 631-1154 ....................... 87$.14&4
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus FASTMOVI Homes Seller will •et. Incredible ocean Trellerat RVpark, V.blk -(\· lge. recreata·or' r<"'m & 2 pata'o". Beam IRVINETERRACE Owner packing and w1U coopera~ with rtnanc· v ew. 14.SO,OOO. 1·-------1ca•hryldt/
500
lo Huot. Bch JS.800. • "' .., 58r, fee land, assumable finance thia 4 Bdrm Ina. Shows likt new Realonomlcs 67W700 Crypti I l213)9"·S9153.
cetllngs Great for entertain Ing. VIR ut at 10.5.$%. OWC Costa Men North home. home. Close lo park HIWPOITHTS. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Mo.t.a. Dewri $420,000. Best pril'c for the monev. lg 2nd TD up to 7 Y"'· This quiet cul de uc w/tennis &r swimming. Sl98,000· No Down Two adj. lots. Wstmstr I ~ ' 2400 ~ Thia is v11lue, loe1tton & home is look.ing Cor a Call Cordec.lill. Owoer/Agent. ll'ls-8700 Memorial Park 1500 .. on · 2 II 2 IA CONDO &675-7._ each 842 8342 before ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• f10anclng In l package family ! Will consider Adjacent to Newport ...., Sam 1"90cMledHec: .... PEHIHSULA POINT IEACHFIOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean v1~w at
wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq fl f eatur·
mg marine room Sl.385.000 •
WEST OCEANFIONT
Triplex units. xlnt financing $600,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
i l 1 ..... ,, d· (Jr •• ~. k ol~ o lo l
\\'f .:--;f IY ~
TAYLOR CO.
h'.1-.:\LTO l\S -.111 ll' l!H(j
OWNlR WILL RMANCE
2·STOIY DUPLEX -NEWPORT
200' TO EXCITIMC. HACH S279,SOO
A very handsome building! Original
owne r and beautifully maintained.
4·Bdrms, 2 baths & lge sundeck in
~pper; 2 bd~ms . l bath & darling patio
Ill lower. Fireplace in each. OWC lsl
T.D. & Note of $230.000, int. only .
$49,500 down payment. No loan fee.
WISUY N. TAYLOR CO .. UALTORS
2111 S-Joetql!MNhRood
HIWPOIT CEHTH, M.I. 644-49 I O
$S,OOODOWM
For Sale by owner
Sharp 4BR JBA. liv rm.
ram rm, lrg lot, trees.
Next to Greenbelt in H 8.
Assume loans See
anytime. $134,500. Open
house. 1671l Diane Ln.
536·0794 or 847 ·~.
Ddebout
Bay&Beoch
Reci Estate
11oos9.FT.
Ideal ramily home! 4
bdrms .. formal dining rm., huge paneled Cami·
ly rm, & pool. Vacant
and lone ly k40,000 with
s100.ooo down.
A&L 76G-8311. 14% loan ror7 years with Crest area-sea Wind CAMAl..flOMT · Pvt Courtyard, pool, 41R + ftOOL. Jus t $20,000 down ' Section. 1123,.xl Ciood Pvt comml.Dlity. Buy or Paclflc ~em<>rlal Puk Jacuzzi Ttnns. $440,000.
Fuuy MOH rast terms option S~5.000 Call compa!'ton dble. cry11t Owner/Agent 6758100 "
&RUT
FAMILY HOME
FIXEI buyers CaU~1151 I _,.._...... 1_ 67~8700 o;.67s.722S 3rd tier Pim. Court . 67•7 ..... Irvine Terrace pool oyM .. __ , '"· -askfa $33)() 542·6981 ~ ~
l house from Ocean
Blvd . CO i 3 BR .
famlly rm, + lanai, a
ba. 11 1e"' of orean.
Children • pet11 OK
Avail ammed l yr
lease SlllOO mo AJk for
Gtna.
home needs TI£ but ta JUSTUSTIO 541-772' OWMrHot C...rcW LACOSTA
pneed below market Beautiful 3Br Wood· & R:ctl p___.,, 1600 Ciotr course frontage and owner will finance OCI! .a...-~ '-r-• •1 S 1 BO 2 ba on bridge Broad moor ~"'"' 2 Mstr Bdrms. sty. re·••••••••••••••••••••••• pacious New listing! Call Greg w1V1ew oC htlls. H1ub 85· IY ~ ... ER duced to S125 900 T o C d ..._, /T the 4th lee lll8 000 low Aatle-Rltr. 75111221 " "'"" · w oa 0 •"' _, ow1t-down. O~neriAeenl. MESA YaDl sumal!le loan. Cul·de New cust bit 2 sty, yeara new liloeft for .. 1700 675_81000r67S.722S __ _
Th ....,.,~ d sac loc 2 swuiy patios "'-n~h Normandy 3 BR John Manhall ... •••••••••••••••••••• ----~~--ree uauvums an a motivated selle r ' &'"'d;n home Can be 1---------tArrowhead Country Club
pnvate yard with bnckl 1165 000 split. 1895,000, owe 3711 Reduced to $128,500 lot on fairway . Un ·
Co1toMeta 102 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~B~i oor a$ cul de·~c g' . Seashore. 673--&7§ 2BR. 2BA Condo. 1 yr obstructed view of lake. s':!a~~ :.n1~·:·.~: ~i \\budbrldqe Trade Luxury Newport new Highly upgraded 542-100, eves64&-8S50
Owner very anxious. Really home on ~ acre for In· --------1 T 1 I e . W a I~ l o w a 11 l•--------t SH.AZ.AM , 1 come Units or" Equity R!Xllll carpets Wall paper TEHMS, fiOlf
Family Cun in Eastside *Cote Re:&Jty 55 1·3000 $280 .000 Act now 1 FIMAHCIMG Landscaped, enclosed HOISISI
Costa Mesa. Formal liv & Investment o20 Barra11u ""'">·'"in•. Broker Co-Op Agent OH UDO patio. Pool, Tennis. jac. Mag01Ckent Palm Spr· OCEAN FRONT. On the
ing and dining rooms. 631 4516 h S!ll,000 +assumable lSt ings 3 Br+ den. 3~ Ba, Beach. Pvt Rd. Split separate family room , 640-5777 T·~---L yi..to _....:... . oFn t ish 3hobdrm coun try l~/83. Open Fri.Sal &r on a raiNay in popu lar level. JBR. 2BA. lllOO p a r q u et rl o o rs , 1~~11111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1'1~!!!~ ""~ Q Eat...., at 1 l% renc me on an ex Sun. Or by appl. 32031 Co Cl b fireplace, charming I-lmmac. 2400 sit condo. Get last year's interest tra wide lot. Recently re· Via Tonada. San J uan Canyon untry u , mo. No pets. Rer req.
Patio and yard. Large M ..... Ywdt Priced ror qwrk sale ralenow!Fullyassuma modeled.Try20'7. down. Capo.OrfAll""z.comer Every conceivable 673·2875 .,._ Own /AAo t 675-1""0 A•sumable lo"" Owner .... realure incl. private ten 3 b b J . romer lot. Owner will 120/o lllhnit --'-'=.;:___""" ble 30 yr large lst 4 " ~·· or Del Obispo Agl nis courtandwalklosta r. 2'i'a a. asmme
help. Low interest Sprawling 3 bedroom LUXURYCOHDO bdrm, ram rm, lg yard ~1!~:.acii'1~w''f81 must Pac ific Compan y ble locat1011. Submit Creek. Avail. now. $1250
financing. Only Sl4S.000. Ranch style home. 2•,., Gorgeoiu 2 Bdrm 2 bath 642·5161 or~l07 •4!!98-!!!564!!!0,!!4,98.!!!5000!!!!!. !!!!!!!lj your trade for beach mo. 673-41.9S; 673-1479.
Call 645-~ bath Dining room. Cozy condo 1 n s er u re di HEWPOIT CREST -= h 0 u 5 e . s 7 7 7 , 0 0 0. •Small I Br. frplc, single
fam i ly room. Two Orangelree Terrace Ab solutely prime ' D ... J_••/ 7141~3.5619 orcozycouple 5495.Ulil
COLDWeu
BANl(eRO
-L~--
lHIH IS BfOUGH!
This 3 Bedroom pnde or
ownership home IS large
enough for an y sized
ramily. lsl TD. IS 8.75~
and owner will carry a
2nd T.D with reasona·
ble down. Just listed, won't last. Call Robert
M llliken 63J.l.266
fireplaces! Close lo the complex of green spare. former model 3 BR, 0..ln S:. 1100 pd. 549·3232.
beach Owner will help tennis courts. pool. s pas Jbath. mas.ter suite ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPAC IOUS 5Br, 3Ba.
you with f111ancmg Sub-a nd c I u b h u o us e I wtpvt retreat overlook '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 12 Units Costa Mesa. Corm al dinnn. tam rm mil Terms Today' Call Spacious Ooor plan with · 1 rt l S600M , S125M dn. 10'1t w/wet bar, grdnr mcl. 979.2390 lort. FaolastJ1• •-·ation. mg enntS rou ' poo 5' •-------· ' ""' and spa Good assuma Net $5000 per year, Avail now. Sl200 mo. __ 'far~ R~ltors high balance assumable bleloans. LID~H 631 -2 lSO, 2043 2049 Reat &tat. /\gt 760-8311
8% DOWN loan Sl39•950. C/21 = C..tr M~DY Wallace. he..... 2100 Lg Harbor View Hills
64" 357 Brand new Co untry ••••••••••••••••••••••• home. Pool, S"", view. ~~rge Costa Mesa eon· v-French 4 bdnn + den Eos~ SOUTH LAGUNA Gardener. poJ"" service ...,, 3 Br 21 , Ba. wet bar, M-L-• -.....-1. with 4 baths Stained Rare opportunity to buy 2 d h -~ Gated Estau area. 3000 incl. 11700 per mo. 7 AM car garage 11n muc Huge 5 bdrm, 3,_ ba. glass & special wood ex. a privately owned apt f F ,.._ l 3 pu •w•"""" aft 6 m re FU 11 ~ • h 1 · c so t anwttc ""ean o ... ,,_oA»V, er o pri. e over 3000sqft Westchrt ter1 or You have lo ouse on n •1ne o. v1ew Prot decoraled. 2 -='-=68=-·62115==-------Sl28,SOO. 1711i AT PRCliPECT 646-8118 hurry with financing at I a o d ' 6 s pa c 1 o us $549 000 d i
TUSTIN 731·3lll IJY)", & owner will townhouses. 2 & 3 bdrm yrs. · ortra e or Cost•Mfta 3224
DO Ya SHORES carry 2nd T.D. floor plans, l:n:l' to 2300'. Palm Shpnndgs ordLake ••••••••••••••••••••••• 26000
TO LAST Irvine. California Home,
4 Bdrm, l story. very
clean. At end or tree· lined pnde or ownership
cul de sac. SJ,875 down lo
VETS or seller will ns·
sist the financing. Only $125,500. 75z.i700·
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Pool, Jacuzzi overlook '48,000 gross income Arrow ea con ° or NEW EXECCONDO
bay. Galaxy Dr. Formal Asking S72S,OOO OWC ,house 2 Bdrm. 2 full ba, micro,
din. rm., 2 frpl cs terms & possible trade ~·347o S.Sl·82l5 ~ar dr op, pool, jar.
$685,000 fee . 642·2510, for duplex or '> Bkr VIEW HOME '79Slmo. Ait 75'·1202
646'·4848. 953·1220. Beautirul Turtle Rock Br11nd new 2 Br. Condo. 2
LOW DOWN OWC '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~lncOfM Praperfy 2000 View Horne comps well Ba. 2 car gar. w/elec.
OR LEASEtOPTlON S• C.._.. 1076 •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• at 1465,000. Consider door, Crplc, cbshwasher. ( br, 3 ba exec. home on • , ..................... DUPLEX/Sc.to AM AAA Bonds for part of micro. washer &r dryer,
Sussex Ln in Westcliff. ~ $16,650 large equity. Submit. pool. jac. balcony No
Just redone inside & out pets. Avail. Sept. 15th. Avail. now'. $285,000. OWC with S16K Down. $800Mo.54G-Z53.
Owner /bl!,r.)52-2550_,_ MJ,000 assumable long MEAR-NIW ~ terms loans Nice. well IY OWMIA/EXEC. mainlamed area. Close Lower 3 br, 2 ba, with 4 Br 2 ba . EaslbluH SAN CLEMENTE IS toCiv1c Cen1er. frplr, lge din. area. bit· COOL home un do Owner FOR EVERYONE' R&H lnvestmenls S51 ·3005 tr hange 1n ins. Cenred rear ya rd. 2 ELEGA~CE ftnancing. Interest only Very desirable and ar 752.2197 --~e> car gar Near 19th & H_ ....... _ yr... H A 01n~1on or "" As It 1 n g a ppr a 1 5 a 1 fordable 3 Bdrm home Newport f700/mo. l yr .-vur •W o.es . llarbor Investment Co ~ is what you get ID this located close to the ltof Es.. lease. No pets Wkdays Three at tr a c I I\ e -gorgeous Plan 4 in Cam-S24o.ooo. Prine only beach and shopping. As· w-.a....~ 2900 1213)"•• 9192 tnds & bed rooms "Ca rm e I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 I &7 4828, 642·0350 MAKE AH OFFER I 9ITW"U ......,. • w r pus View 4 bdrms. 2~, sumable f111ancmg with • ....................... _,e'"""v.::es=-\i..:.7.:..14::...:.)67=5--=-3'56=.'---Model " New carpelmg ·-------•I LESS'TH.ANREHT ba. Good location near OwwrO.Speraft! a low down SISS.500 PRIVATEPARTY.seeks EASTSIDE cutelBrcot·
C.Opper plumbmg. Lux· IAYSHOIES Only $760 mo and you UC.I pool, park and Need quick escrow 496·4950 3 Income Properties. b eac hrronl ho me. tage, semi-furn .. S430 ~i!n~~~le~:~ Custom cottage with the can own tlus 3 Br , .. , ba SCh!>Qls Bea ul 1fully decorated e --~~~~~e wc~~la r :re::· lselopt or purchase Mr mo. lsl "last. Blue Chip
t!l68 inviting took of hidmg in home Located on a rul HV Homes. 3 bdrm. 2 ba L. Priced to sell ! Gr a Y. 499 16 35 o r Properttes8S7-2040 631~~00 your own woodsy set· -Lo.-.~ de-sac street. tblS nice High assumable 30 year IOgO 415-861·0458 For lease . Exec rondo, 3 M.I. tll1g High beams. bnck ho m e real u r es a fmancmg at 12.5'1 rixed _ ..,.,_b"" br. 2\'t ba. rront & rear
garden paths to pnvate~-------•I spacious family room, Asking ~.000. land in ~5.5El\ Rewtoh pvt yard, spa & pool Nr
spa Beautiful wood SHA.IP EASTSIDE lge lot wilh spnnklers eluded CALL NOW ' ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• CdM Fwy Avail. Oct lS. Cloors aUwithaneyeto 6-l'LD Call now on thtS one. Own er /Agent. Prin S-J... HCHIMtftl..w.ct
955
_2700 h N d .... y w.... Full pr1~e $125 000 cipals only. Come for ID Co.J.tr.o 1078 a·MJJww M: ..:;.::;:::..:.:.;::.=.._ ____ _ aul ent11: orman Y O"L 150/oDO " ' · ,... •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• •CHILDWELCOME• h '2""' do 751 3191 spection Sal/Sun 1·5 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• •--......-1-'-~ 311u. warmt A treat to Owner will finance to w u-,, wn. · 700-9596 ~ --2BrlbaSMo
behold ' qualified buyer Well 714 64t 0763 ....................... JBr2ba S600 642-5200 located. good looking 6 't523 C.otPU5Dl:IRVltfC: OWN ER ~OUS. love-Reduced to Sl28.500 2 2925 C'ottege A\e 3 Br 2 Ba. Fam1Jy Home. C lS /d rd REMODELERS units + 4 car garage + "'l ly 2 sty m estab nbrhd bdrm. 2 ba condo. I year Costa ~1esa. CA rrplc, carport, w/d, dis-P Nrpsdo, ya 'gar DBJGHT Sl0,000 total cash down new Higl\ly upgraded. hwasher Oct I to June 0 gs, ample Mrking. Below ~._.._1...y.._ 103 Tile, w1w cpls Wall 1S.675·7••1eves. Fresh&Clean96G-3989 3 Bd rm hou se with llXgross. rv9ml .. -1 •--leach 1048 OWC balance. Payable w ._,_... S2 000 t 12"' paper. landscaped, enc Trade Luxury Newport Qu1·et Ea•ts1"de Sharp parquet noor and guest Col How 644-7211 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ...... , • per mo a "· or C ...&....1 J 122 " d TRADE OR LOW D/p trade for 4-plex. Asking patio, pool, jac. tennis. home on .'"> acre for ~n· oroH _..Mar 2BR. reored yrd, lndry ~r~e:.'pos.rtJuBsetacohutos~ ! ~ DEfAIJLJl.1.1. MO"'UAUFYING S26s,OOO.Ownr,631721S S91,ooo +1st TD Open come Units or? Equ1t~ ........................ s pace, dbl carport. ,. Sun J.6 or by appt. 32031 S280.000. Act now . Oceanside or hwy. 3Br Adults prer No pets. large comer lot m the l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I t !: • forcessaleoftlu!l4 bdrm Ocean front mobile Via Tonada SJ C orr Broker Co-Op Agent 2ba . Wa.sher Gar Nr Avail lmmed. S4.50 mo.
Westclifr area. Owner ~ home. SJ.5.000 down and homes 2 Br. Pvt beach. HARBnD ~I HID A 11 paz corner de 1 631-4516. everything. $850/mo. 673-023l financing available take over loans Asking adults Ull hlLAn Obispo. PaclficC.O. 675-2763 =-=="'-------
S.167.300. $120,000 ~2~or499-38l6 _ QPPnDTUHIJY 498-5640, 4,98.500() "ON IBE BAY " Elegant Executive Home
Oc E RO Ull ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I designed ror entertain· LEASEOl'T10H 631-2242 ANF NT·New Prime 4S 'X140 'r: 9911w1TS Luxuriousllevel,IBr. mg:fireplace,wetbar&
SUPMI! S&ftU!
Executive home with 4
bdrms and a pool in ex·
celleot area. Creative
financ10g available On·
ly $178,000 Call today
97i·S370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
MlSAYBDE
$20,000 down and owner
will carry 2nd and will
prov ide additional
financing help on this
lovely 4 bdnn home with
s parkling pool. Only
Sl39,000 Call now
979-S3'70.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
DESPSATE!!!
M.l .PMHSULA
No down payment. but
the buyer must pay all
clos10g costs on this 4
Bdrm, 2 sty beach house
w guest 111-lawquarters.
Near park. Sl81.000. 5
year loan at 17'k.
759·1616
1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Luxurious custom COO• re:i~al~n~y. peJ p~ob~~~·.1 waterfront lot With exist· S.ta AM I 010 "" 11" Ba. gounnet kitchen. den I Just SSSO! 115578 do 2500sq ft 2rrplcs 4 · g p· d Ii r ••. • ( f4-7PIHes I fabulous \•iew, comp Plus Ea-·ide dollhouse . . . • ... hr s~unty, rtS· hmg 111 ier an 5 p or .... •••••••••••••••••• .... r ·1 ho ""' bdrms. 2\'t bath5. Sl 150 ~ '"' ht P · C S2 300 000 • Lgt y • • --um. A VaJ 5 rt le rm with large (ncd yd ror Pl.er rrom ...... "". l"'"' yac . nee o . • "'._, . "' .,_ V Lo D $,."" M 7""" l""" mo. $195,000.642-4623 down 499·llIB ol<IU v y includes cleared lot. ap-3 Bdrm. Poot. country ery w own ,_., o . .-""" kids. JustS500! 15482
JUST LISTED proved plans and kitchen Only S99 soo Owiter .... Cent.! Mewporileedl 3169 Reotimes631-4.555 Fee H•tiHjtoe leocJt I 04 L.,..a H• I OS permits ror a luxunous S ' ....................... E side Jbdnn, lt,<,ba. cul· 4 BR l~ ba. seller•••••••••• .. •••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Bdrm 5 bath French SW&,._ BAYCREST s bdrm de-sac.rrplc,stove.encl
motivated . Terms , HottSEPIOPBTY Regt>n ry home with TaxWrfh.Off home w/pool, largt yard backyard, nice area
Terms, Terms. Call ow c ~.acre. 2500sq ft 4 br, many extras. Foit&cntwPouiWt $2000 LIDO ISLE f700. 5*3666or548-4471
quickly7S2-6499 • • • 2~ ba. Cam nn .. 3 car THmA•ailablt -..,._ 1 _ _.Es........... IL-&p...t...-lo.d.: charming 4 bdrm. 2 ....:•:..::;k:.::d""ys::.:·------$50 00 gar. No qual Low down Call Paresetter Homes ~r ... """ an. ~.,..... bath, newly redecorated • Cl bdnn 0 sJOOO/mo. 26s11 Stetso~ for details and appoint •••••• .. ••••00••....... WelccMw St800 mo. Yearly Bill ean 1 , dupl~x.
"J Pl 831 ""'"" ment. 646-5<92 Mobft. HOMtt Grund 675-6t61. Of( street prkmg,. QUJet. Super sharp 3 Bdrm, 2 ...::..;.:...:· :=.=..;·"°""='------Fa S 11 OO lidi I -=~""-'-'~=""----! S325. No pets. Avail 9/'JS. WIMBl.£DON bat~. 2 miles rrom ...... MNJ-1 105.Z •••• ~ •• °!.............. 714176't{;7292 YILUIALIOA :"-848~·24~74""".-.,----ocean. Only St40,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxuriously appointed Lrg exec Home. 4BR. VII 111'£ Call 645·9161 2 WITH .&. v1~ '77 Skyline 2BR . 2BA two bedrooms or one and 3BA. den. Nr Hoag Hosp UM "' ii:n Fam rm. Across rrom den. Fabulous ocean on Bluffs 111 CM. O~an Elegant single family Condo w/vu·short drive Beach. Pet Adult Park YACHTTIMESHARE view. Maid service. View, Simdeck Jae. t875
home Professionally de· to beach &only $20,000to 536·5881, M>4311 Business for sale, com-$2000 per month. Six mo. Nancy 642-4S73 (8·3) d and I d.s ped assume existing 10%
Pl-ln rv Real: y
corale an ca · loans! Priced right. HEW MEW MEW plete. Joint venturi! or months lease. 631·7300 Bill 645·5218 wknd's. ISUHOCOTTAGE 4 bdrm, 3 ba. library. Ownr/Agt. Greg Astle. ORANGECOUNTY s e 11 outright . Realtor. AvailOct l.
Exclusive listing of this Air, alarm. amenities~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!I 759.1221 1 9 8 I B e a u t y • (805)646·67U7. Fantastic Townhouse. Nice. Clean 2BR. lBA.
adorable home on full galore. r-HOM~ microwave, frplc. bar. IMYESTOIS ocean view. trplc, ever· New carpet, fenced yrd.
size lol. 2 Bdrm & Just Ill Re * COM)()* windows. prired to sel . Prime 2 yr old single ything rumishtd. 1895 encl gar .. No pets. S500
steps to s hops .. but 0 CARPET ''s.~ Yilogt" kl,500. (PF3115A·Bl. family residences show Mo. 760-9117 ~DI .~CMla!~· .. 2546
2778
Orange quiet! $319,000. 754·1202 Nr beach. 3 Br. 1 yr old. Owner wiU help finance MULHI! ........ J r ..._ ______ 11114_~~!!.!!:!-~..!.!L--fl u--t bl I 4 ~ " pro echve net return o ,.. W~aJ.._.. Assume 12''""' In ' No grea asswna e oan S 2 BR N H arde 67 ~ """6900-6~1-1400 --------i qual. 1247,:;00~ pp No Mtwport.._. 1069 $B r
98
.
000
nearS Mb a.rinerrrs. REALTORS 1253 + over S2S,OOO lax pectacula r view. wpt gts, g n, ' ~ "-·1s1·de f'iwer Upper. 3 • • 1 t i...OllLEHOME Div. write·"(( in lsts years. P Oceanfront 3 br. 2 b1, 2 S500 per mo. lst. last & .,....., ~ agts 213 /833 ·1369, ••••••••• .. ••••••• ••• • · u IDl o er. "' • "' d f' 6 o A ( roressionally managed, story. Avail. after Sept ep. 714'675-0769 LE.y _.,....• br, 1 ba,spa.10\1"/o 10· wkd ys 213/831·5734 FHLAHD 64 ·l 44 gent or 714JS27·5'00 8 to 9.5% assumption, 8th. WinterllOO or year· lbdnn du.,....x, E. side, SA """ $120,000.Agl.642·1..S23 eve1. Quality best describes ...;646-;.::.;;...=-=1046-=-----. h S do 1 1 ......... N ~ LfTlU ISLAHD College Pk. fixer upper 3 thi.s Bluff rondo. Ne w INVESTORS!'! $.30,000 OCEAN lllEZES wit only l2,000 wn. Y ease '"'""' 0 pets. sunny pvt yrd, am pet
3Br 2ba.S285.000.LOW br 2 ba tam rm. TIYS20,000DOWH carpet.floors,appl,fix · under market. Only Close tobch.Thislgdbl Prio only. Call t7141 Agt,548-5.SZ1. olt.$375/mo.Grdnrincl.
down. Owner I Agenl. IU0,000. oWC Sll0,000 lst BEACHWALK · sharp tu res and bath counter 17500 dn. z.ooaq rt home. wide is on an oveniJed 784-2072 ult for Ron. 548-7855, 845-7.,1.
675-7611 or67~00 TD. &42·W3A . townhome. Super buy tops. Sun fi lled mom Xlnt appreciating area. comer lot. 5Star part. A 'Z2 units. Newport Beach. Very pvt 3Br. 28a, rrp1c.
1141900. Btr. 84S-0709 patio off FR. lots o( 1174,500.631·5476 must to see. (SD7467). luxurious. Financing HMMt U.fu ' bt4 patio. 1'795mo. Ann
CoNH .. Mlr IO PrlcedletowMrilt .,.0 ft.ll.t.l lfYI.-. natural It. Approx 2500 ·-------•I MUUtWN avail. Sl.540,000. 752-2514 ....................... 845-9161,979-1942 ••••••••••••••• .. •••" Village CJ'ffk Condo " .,.._. ~ ft C U P Johnson TOI ..... hlmd 3206 I 2 B 2 e
CDM•UFFS 3br. ate. mirrored wet ~:.R ~~si~l:~~ !~a:n.~ eie NEW EJllMD ~~~~ FOUIPLEX •••••••••• ............. £=:t!ide. ;~rpet::
•
Above beach. below bar, deror. paper &r ,,.,., M -• S20,000dwn.OranaeCty. Little Island. 3 bdrm, drapes. h·ups, enclsd
Orean Blvd. Semi priv drapes, g1r. opener. Bkr"8-<11QI BAYfltlll 17141521-Stt 5*96 den. $1250 mo. Lse Dot· ger. 1700. No pets.
Rd. Out of tnCfic. 180 $129,900. Owner/agt, Hwlkgt• Under martet. Owner Whelan• lJelM0--098'1 87~ Savage Wilde • Co
degree view Ocean &r Elsi 751-1317 S46-2313. H..._, I 04 bu 11 d er r eady t o *EXCITING* .... P1 > 11 l207 i-6'7~S..::.:9006=·-----R ~ l l RS • Jelly Crom every win· •.ooo DOWN, 3 BR 2 Be. ...................... negotiate. Great terms ............. tr...&.. n--1 Estate •••••••................ uxury COndo. large 2 C.._O. dow. Prop line high tide. E/11ide home on R·2 lot. "* WAYatROMT * lHI...., to qualUied buyer. DYWW-l'tlCCll Newport on \he Beach. Br. lYI Ba .• diabwuber. ntWft_.M Dblelnvest2yrs.Clear, Price 1165,000. Take l&OWMdlllf PLAM"X-Brand new 4Br 4ba With o r without 38r. 281, some ocn dbl oven. dbl carace
Gracious and eleaanl land loci. ll,U0.000. over pymta of 11650 mo. Only MS K down. OWC 3 bdrm, din. rm., liv. bayfronl with boat dock fumltu~. 3411&4 Grftfl· 11iew, cute. lllX condo. w/opener. larse fenced
llvin&inthll5Brc._tom OWC. PIP APPt only No quallf)'lna. or get rest Townhouse 4 rm., ram. nn .. FIP.2YJ lnva!lableatlll50,000to brier Home In Laauna NIMll'SIOI 1875 mo. Call wknds yard . sardener.
home. Elecantly ap· (714) 67Hm,a13-2210 new loan.5*~ bdrm, or 3/den, 3 'ba. be, xtra tarce porcelain $113$,000. ()pen Dally HlllaniceitSltarpart. C .... W...4 u.lh 67 3·9157 or wkdys privacy. Avall. UH M50
pointed llvin& room and1-------•I 5l•OOM Prof dee; boat 11ip. tubw/ceramic:tUewaU. UJI 1old. ZZ'74 Channel a,. .... ,.. wltb 2~ down. OWC 873-tOle Mo.14U71S.
formal dining room COIOMAD&MAI MISAYllDI pool/t en nis, only •Ooor.Hovtredpatlo Rd.BalboaPenlnsula. Beautiful 20x53 Lanttr UV.% AITO. Small New,cuatom,luxury3br bedrooma.Zstoryconclo
w /mirrored cellln1. 1-JLOf 3 Ult baU., pool, ipa. M
1
• ,990. ()pm Sal Ir SI.Ill are.as. Pr1oeSZ30,000,S% CAU.'75-2311 Home . 2Br, 28a. This Is ne1allve. Owner will home. 1 block from + huie peUo + family
Richly paneMd remlly Charmlns beach cot· v down,uaumeS.O,OOOLlll'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! tMButBQytntown. trade · make offer. Ferry, t fr'Pka. Jae. 2\; room + firtpla~. Ten· room and library with tace. fca••-'•• 2 Bdnn S38 io.ooo. :,n.":.,1.11um. 'uo.m.MO--sm trult deed at TWT.. Xlnt • HLIW• ldl 1229.000. ba, f"· M~to-mo or yr. nis court.a, awimmlna =h:.:.u:c!':i!: :1~·,:~rr.a~~':~ c11 .m !':~ ............ !~ ~~~~.i;il~ln:t 4~ ~:~DW.-tlSI :'PiJJ'Mlttbeclle. I ;,!~"::!.':::.°2~: DUPLIX/Smlli.. ~~~~n rum. ~:~: ~~~'iA~cuM~:
ttrrace over 1011 ~ara•e. AlkJn•m&M. II.. ytar '"'""" ,.. · onv e auy nJo ep 12xJOm....,.bdnn. OWC wftlt $J6K '.S t.,bt1-.... ~·1114M4TT. __ ..... _ bit la • '1)1 -A11ume 1.75 .... owe lH.... 2nd tru1t deed due Wanted ~atbl. u ••• 000 LL. .. ....RIV-· DR. course -nml • or a11 •PPGUltment to ,......, "·" 1 .... "'".. i... CUJSIC -· •urna~ •••••••••-"•••••• .. • -w BBQ, w« blr and •Ill· M.taJU•ust Jbd. 2 Br2bl.~ynoew. TOWMIOMl7 -r-v" _.. OWMr or ... ,.,.. '°" .... • MOllllM)MI term ioa.. Nlee. we Cclaclo, O<ftll view, 3 It lt'1 Ume to p1111 ror uaat
PnMat.eclltll.J00,000, R'!lll!IP.!l'11!11!• Call UM •llfdalilta at •»lit. daily after 5 pm. taaere IOU mlfllt COii· •.a.a-malotaleed area. Clole I~ Ba. 0.11 Bhlff1, •acaUoe trip. hf ntn 7 n
•
-or•,,_,,,_, lbe co1domlalum In· .(.1f•'':>l!!!7eNG5~!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!J elder offari11 JO\tr. -toCl•lcc..tr' -i •-'"' -.... ~ ~• form1doat'llll&er. '::' ~ wtlll u ad la 27CllHllW',a.aA llltff......... ,...., -· ttc. .. _ 754-1202 TOUC'..._. a.kJ ftact •Mt ,_ ... Ill t ~ t Job W 11 lad ....,, 'IDIS .._ PtllrlUatO""'t. ..,., ..........
•• netr·n nan a an •• a
I
"-"U.twlf•ll tt.MtU.f~:d.111 t•••ll ~alS$ ... "'1hbill .,_, .... ,~ A.r•tuoaliU...... Or1ngeCoast DAILY PILOT/Tunday. Stptember 22, 1981 CJ •t••••••••••HHHtHt t••n•ttt•Hteeutuett !ht. t • d ~.a tttetHt•nonueet••• tttH•••••••••o•nnt• T
C •CTA -11 I. • ~.. tH•H•••••U•••••••••t .. • .a • ......__ ' I .... .... JU4 .... NH ...................... ............. 17' c.•w.. MJ c........ JIJ4 rlf ..... ....... rlfalWlhUllfww. ........ ...... 4100 ..... • ... ••••••••••u•n••••n•• •••••••• .. •••••••••••• HEW 2 bdrm 2be,1tovt ••••1•~~~ ............. ••••••••n•••u•••••••• •••••••••nn•n••••••• •tt•••••••••••••••••••• •••u•••••••••••••n••• •••••••••••••0 •••••••• •••••••• .. •n••u•••••1
U11iqu1 lbdrm coll•&• II 4C."1'PAll rtfrl1. w1b, carpeta1 ato Octulroat, a br, 2 NIWLYDICOI. taslllde 18R Ul!l pd .._. Jl40 Ntw..,..._.. JHf llAl:AMMOTa 1111 WutcUff N.8. Wint Willi pvt yrd Ptrf (or I Matr 8dnn 2~ Ba. drtptt. J19Uo. dbl car, ba, suo 3 br, l ba, noo. l It ... pd, met 1ar L.r1 )'rd arta SmaJI Ptll ........................... :.~-.~.............. Willy rtotall now avail rlnantfal lntt 100Gll.I
1ln11e,or ciuf~' No Ukt nu, •tlQO. Kids I.Jae 50 M'7 . Stfl -Juot Jut d/wa1her, pool, Adulta OK. l3$0 mo. 1441420, 2Br, frt•bJJ painted. Oceanfront for Winter 1112 ft up Color TV )at noor. ~Ml·~ ~1~ 385 t s req OK, pet,amaybt. V\lla Balboe Dia. z matr < 2 a> ue. 17 o e or -5073. asso clean. l500mo. RentalJ. Furnished ' Pbonu In room. 2274 llVICUTIYI
Joaiollanhau bd 2 ba l800. IG51.ll or J!li.llll-410 . Watalde Dl.\ple.a Modem 28, 1~ 81 Twnbae unfum. 8. rolrtr M9U, New port 81 vd CM r.A
NEW CONDO 1 I ' SHORTTF.RMS Apt . 2 8 r . l 8 a 1ari1t. JM Pillo, frplr: MAl.-S WAU Oce.antront lat'p 3 Br. 2 844-7..S SllTIS
1 BR 'C:t!,ENT lte 81oneolU.ludlyfew. Beacbrentalabyweek Downataln wtth ftl\ced adlu no peU 276 2 •a Br. Townhouse Ba.Upper,2ear1ara1e. Vtarly on the beach rN
1., op ner 1:[·4:.1 Rtal ln CO.ta M11a '1 o h. 87$..f~ •ru1ll yard, enclad Avocadol515rno.+dep ApU PaUol, •lnale' frplc,yurlylHH.11000 Bachelor room , HlllTA~H
l lt!ll• • NEW!ST sated 20 2 Br Wlnttr ~tal. up. iaraae. cupeted, s.mo.eu.sm double ur 1ar1ae1. Mo Mi· kllcbenette, 1280 +' Pl.AJA
Townhome VILLAGE per w/ocean view drape1, etnt.n.J be•llnf. Blch Unit hot wtr pd nur Hunt. Harbour. 1 BR VtraalUea. Pen 1ecunty depoail of S280 N.ew luauryolflce 1r.ce
•Two JU2 Wl!STa..lf COMMUNlTY.z•ser Adulll, no ptta. Avail No pell, oo rbUdren. aY1U now' s.m mo. 1184 ldrtn.QK. . lhoUH,15.opermonth 2306 W Oceanfront in lrv1u'1 bus Ht
••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Luiurloua f our 2Yt8a.1'00 18001q.ft. J!2w .. S-7019. QuJel.S415+tecurity. EICamlnol46-31127 HWlll111tooHArbour2br f44 S3U, $48·042$. Newporl Bea c h , center' EalyFrwyac •
EJr1ant 3bdnn 2bt house bod room, lbree bath of pure lwcury. Ga.race,, t-.&-~-37 S41J..$4.tl Tl().58.29 Liri• .,1 ,,b•lor, n-~. juat S3'76 ! Eaetlltol area 7SHlll0 873 154. ceu Avail. now! Call
111.neconomiralprare! home. Burned celllnp bydro·tubs ln mutor _..._ '°BEAUT1>1JL 2 Br ZB "'u •" .... forkldatoo!•a.M .Plus Uve at Newport Beach fordetails J~l $$96' Feah1N'S l&t lnllvlncroomandtiml· :~!~i '~!dlbdln~a ieit.'ieA.•N;•;c•pj;;;• Meu Verde, uoo·aq. ~: mrlode (n.u!aatalde, sunny studio ~/all the !i~larfe2tr.piol, <P.C.HJ SJOO weekly j 51·11ll H0.4Jl0 ~:~:k ~~tpcl~~'. ~n"c•!~~! b'I room Secluded pool flreplacee mlcr:':IV: Rent Incl Ou 4i Water. fplcl, lndry, disbwshr, v~~ .pa , no pel.ll. !a1tuntraa1 .• ~"'~, pooLo~ 6681S! !.~ n e Knot Mote I. •DllUXI OfffCIS•
, • "'. • NlleU • ie yard Space ror boat • mo enc oscd aaraee Adult& " • •..-· ..,..,_ .. .....,. ii rounds . Children Sr or trailer. Simo montl\ oven1, fenced patlof & · no ·u mso · ' Deluxe 2BR. ZBA. Upper dePotlt, too l UC22 1,2 ' 3 room. No leaaere pelu~ welcome ! 11556& ~ards. Private .. eleaanl hlNHt , .... 3107 ai:MaceAve S40.'400 Balcon1 Enrl gar. wall Rentimes ·4MS F Versailles lBr. fum /un S-r....... 4200 ~ulred. Adj. Alrporter
_1\«'ntimes 631·4MS f'~ ~e1~{~. basis · Agent r~ng Fon:!.,}! m1 lndutea 8 .. j, .. ::::• .. • .. •••••• 1 Br 1 ba u~ded to j 1at c11r~~· lrplc, Hu NT 1 NG TON 8 A y Cf um. $550 mo. yr round. N~~;~0;•9•/·~· h:,'i:,~· otelc 83.1-3123. 9· 1?.
H__,,&........_•--h 3•40 Harbor--View Home, m a .. ....,, la an , 1 ac , NO.), 1 Br. l Ba do N So',...,. P'·-con· Ava 10/l. .. oo mo . CONDO all Wedeve.6'2-(957 -r kl S250 Up . Hunt. Br h. _,...,,_...... 6 minutes to SC Plau or Bay Side 14.W Adults · r · ...,.t ...... Ten· 642·1M33 p 0 tom ocun, p1&r ng. c d I ••• HOM.EFOR·~·~NT··· r:u~~~'. e=1::p41::·. o.c. Alrport.'JU.t east of no pets. Sava11~ Wilde & ~~~ p~/ volleyball. Bund New Condo In ~.~~rt~ ~.~~r~~~:; l :: R ~r.'t.L~~ .A~r ~5~~5 • va II n II w 11~n~~ch~~28st~:
4 Bd u..~ F d • Newport Blvd. & llO. of C:O. 475·66Cll. Am. t mo. 951-0222 water oriented project Incl. Water & tr uh paid. beach. 831·0300 -· -. rm ..,,,, ence alarm aystem, seperate San Diego Frwy. Slut· C~ ......... ...,_ JIJ ~ 21tr, 2Ba, frpJr & bltns. Comm POOi AduJt.s no 2 B 2 B bllt h Voc:etioll..... 4150 I 7TH STlllT
yud & garage Kid!. & maldtl&uest apt. 11500 Ing 1t $1000 a month. •••••••• -_. 2 Br. 1 Bl. Pool. garage. Lush landllcaplna, 2 jac, ti 1525 + l'!Oode · it r a ~ lo br ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MISA ~~l:~~~;e ~2000. Mo 759· . 631-5439, 2473 Oranee Walk to ~ii .. ~i~·3•9r No pets. 1485 Mo. 1385 A 1 pool, 2 car gar w/opnr, r.e~l no fee 59-z&: · Yrly+g•Ji ~~7~0 ~~ OCF.ANf'RONT 2 & 4 Br 2 or 3 room office suites.
MIWPOITHGHTS Ave. Costa Me:u . Zba dplx · 1., 1900 Baker.64l·O'l83Btwn!l-1, adlta, no pets '7~ mo ..., B~k to Be h 2~R u · a Avail Wlnte.r Wee.kly/ A/C, plentyofprkg. Util B~~~ r~~:U~n~m!u~: Like new rustom built Child OK, no PC!U'. Dnv~ Mon· Fri. S.S.SUS ZBA Adults a~is u.4 Versailles, nice. 1 br. Monthly 67~7873 Incl. Avail: now. Call
family 2 bib to beach three bedrooms, tw ..,........., .. ht.d by only 719 Heliotrope. I Br. stove, gas paid, Brand New lBrCondo 111 20thStreet sSSl4!1 ocean view, mirrored New dlx wtr 2 br condo ~oaucs 67s.t700
Totally upgraded baths, formal dining ....................... Availl0/3.lnZ.9406 pool.Couples preferred. water oriented projert, · clst.S62S.SandyS42..6l4!1 Kona, HI avail. wntr/ Costa Mesa. 250 tq. ft
Ga rd en er In c I room. Ealing aru 111 a..o. hlmd 37 Duplex al beach. 3 bdrm Ref's. $330. &4W1Z1. Crplc, bltns, aar w/opnr. ld~:pe:~~i~~~. c:~~~ I Ir 3 bl! kit wklue•¥1"9.87~0604 suite $175/mo UUls In
Sl2001mo ~014.5 kitchen View Sl500 per •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba fantastic view ans Over 30. Upper l Br. pool & jar. 1540 mo yard, enclsd garage, a.U utilities pd 1&45 yur· C AN CUN MEX I cp cld 779 W 19th. St
2 8 1 b bea h month. yearly lease. Stpe~ lo f'!!.>': tBr, great mo. 8'1~13611 Quiet 311 W Wilson 545-311S <Bnghton Spr· w/d hook·up. S42S Mo. I 644-8494 Oceanfron°l l'ondo ror 7-U·~,_. -----r a c cottage 631·7300 Realtor. ~tlo, .... c. ear S435 ~.631·2177 U1 s Pro ~v 0921 Deluxe 2 bdrm. 1 bath. rent Nov 21 t.o Dec 5 ac· BA YfRONT OFFICE
$600 mo f11'5l & lll!ll SIOO -.....:.=. WJDter. OPEN 328..., L.,.,. lttNcffn ..._. od ' I r j . I k rleaning aUut1lpd 619 Exrlus1ve Big Cyn Sapphire~ l bd •. . Al~ostnew3br2balg. N1ce2Br.1Ba upperm Avail now!Superlarge3 priv patio, pool. Conv comm ates4.83l·7339 ~ eet. amtona ,par
Mam 5i,1~ lwnhse 2 be. 2 ba, pvt. . DR rrR With fi~p~.ce living rm/w fireplace, 4-plu. k25 per mo. 679 Br rrplc lndr hook-up Westcliff loc. S650 mo ....... to~ 000 _m~lc 7~9'40.
Gorgeous 3b l .. A gar, pool, tennis. Sl250. l 11 M. lcrfrOllt hwasher · t.oporc N' 1
1s-mlrrowave 2 ca~ gar/"!' Center 116. ~I 4 'u n 11' b 1 Jg Ed'. da ~3412ev 644·9842 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huntington Beach. 419 . .r pa 10 nvme 64().8126, C97·5471 3 Br. 2 Ba Waterfront. • 1 ve. ew Y elec o--r pnv p l 2 B T ....iE BL'""""" B Main St. al a bar&atn ~'price L1dolsland clean3bdnn WinterSl<tiO. YrlyS1400 landscaped. U SO . ~--:-. a io r . wnhse, lodry, inger/BolsaChic1. '550. '" vu~ 2 r 2~ 380sq!tatS2lOMo only '550' Children & b . . ' 673-3245 644 1535 675·6611 S'150 & wl 644-4998 or patio. Adults. no pets. Mo. lst. & last $250 Ba., enclsd gar, pool. "Oay ~m{lltlt, s· M eo' pets welcome ' •9643 2 a, 2 car gar, lrg patio, . Sbr new 2 be 2 ba a l in 7S9-S412. S425/Mo. dep. 7S5 W secunt . 3711. S675. 64G-S296 &953-1220 L ;o~t;'1 s"t1ced .a Y ierra . gmt .
Plus centrally loc11letl '1._lOOl mo. 559.1623. lolM>o ,.... 3707 old CdM nr beach l 1c NEW ~REED APTS. 18th. St. 646-9507. Spacious apt avail now. Near Hoag Hosp. 2 story, Ma le I Female RooJJl 641 1324
2br. 2ba home wl WESTCUffCOHDO •••••••·~·•••••••••.••••deck. gir, lndry.' ~: lBRw1thLOFT.BACH Familyapton.ly,l child,2 Bachelor. 1 & 2BR. very nioe 3 Br 2 Ba. mate Service in So H.IOfflClS
sp11c1ous grounds Jllst Two bedrooms. Two 2 br., patio, ocean view. 644·6l78 (BUil with LOFT. from $350. bdrm, l ba. Ulil pd S425 From 1325. • Close to frplc , d/w, laundry rm, ~:~~$. Yi~fM for rental 2 deluxe offices availa
k25115305 baths. Dining room. Avail. now. 1700/mo. 709 2 bdr ~rplc, _rec room, pool, w/$300dep. C G & SD F w y . garage. f620 Mo. Adults. 1213)630-J040. bit on the Peninsula. 892
Rentlmes ~ 4555 Fee Fireplace Adults No Balboa Blvd. 779-1189. h h ~ 1 ba .. ~II wood Ja~um, gas & water 642-1010 Balconies patios pools no pets. 548-02:.l. & 9« s .If High ceilings
1 BR 1 balh nr beach pets. SMOper monlhyrly 2 bdrm. I ba, gar. ldry, ~ 61;:a~eihng, fpc. ~~~i~~~tsc~o ':'!~~131 H..t'--lleach 3140 jac, tennis. lndry rac: WINT ER RENTAL-4Br, NB Ocean View. ~· to w llruss~s. Air cond, SJ85 1mo. Y~rd. A\•uil lease~!!l·7300, Brokrr. disb .. asher, fpc S650 · · .,...., _,,_ H U N TI NG T 0 N 2Ba dplx rum /unfum Bch L H S29• skylights, new cpt & 10 1. SJ6,8Jl2 LEASE/OPTION wanter. 6'7~7083 (2 13) Costa M"41 1124 or531·2LSO. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• GARDENS 4901 Hell HB some oc~ view 5304 M IF 6:;~ °:fte7 "· wood noon. Frontage on ttR.PoOL 4 br,3 baexec.homeon 258·3760 _••••••••••••••••••••••• 18~.stove &refrige,utils THEWHIMITIH Bolsa Chica & Heil Seashore Dr S8oO mo. M -h-~lB .:.. Id Newport Bl $1.25 str
Jn Hunl.ington o~arh nu Sussex Ln m Westcliff. Winter Rental, 9 19 to z Ir. 1 •-~ paid S3J5 Mo. 2 Br. stove Luxury Adult unJls at af. 844»1323 85l-8070 teac er w/ mo o 67.,::c3c;6606=-----..., -~ & refnge 1425 Adults fordable livina. 1,2 & 3 --------daughter wants lo shr cplS, nu drpr1, Spiirkhng Just redone. Avail. now. 6-12. 3 Br. 2 Ba. S650. Newly decor. as pd. · · • Br. Well decorated. NEW bachelor unit, no 2br lba upr duplx · gar your house, or find Alrport-6 offices +-lg pool. Only s795 Call St 300 Option price Balboa Pier. Savage, encl gar., POOi. dshwr no pets. 646-i&:m Olympic slw POOi. light· children or pet3. 1 adult SS75 yrly d/w avl lG-1, same. Pref. F w/child, divided rm. 55' sq It. In·
962 7780 ' $285,000. 752.2550 Wilde & Co. 67~9006. Adults. 642-5073. 2 br, 2 ba. pvt patio ed tennis cow1, Jacuz.zi. S325 + SLSO security 311 a,; 36 St small deck bul not nee 957~ cl. ma1nl + utal 641·8070,
2 br. Iba house, dble gar, E Bluf rondo 3 br 2 ~ ba, YEAILT! l Ir To .. •~ l~nhse, POOi. lndry rm . park like landscaplng. S4.5·7988or96G-2686 see Thurs9/24 .. 4-6pm. M/F to sh;:-2 br apt, C M ' JA·hrs -----
1 g e re n c e d Ya rd 83S Amigos Wy #9 $900 Cute 2 Br. rum. Wllt with Newly decor. gas pd., ul1ls pd, 2 cluldren ok, Most beautiful bldg In H...tlitC)toa llcJ C.p wlslraight M. S22S + "'1 Share 2 ore swle m pre·
Kids pets OK Av111I 21J..54H460,S41·48U . garage. Upper with lots encl gar., pool, dswhr ~1~~~~~t~~~~e~d;; H.B. Horbiw 3142 Delightful 2 bdrm J!lils 754·~ :~~ir1ub;::O~~ia·c~ii
now $575 mo Nr MtwDOrtCl"fft of light:S6oo. Agent Adults642·50'73. Harbor & 19th, or call 1 846-0619 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MrLainCoodoSecgate, Share 4 Br home 851·6226
Bushard Garfield 3bdrm.~'2ba.Newport 67~3890. Spacious 2 Br lh manager,645-5647. I 2BR.2BACONOO Deluxe Adult Bayport pool,spa,tennis.S8o0 between bay & ocean ...=..:.-=.;:==------
833 7381 da1s eve~ r on d o I n q u I e l 2 & Jbdrm & bach apt. Laundry fac , pool $395 Large Garden Apt. 2 Br Adults. Upgraded. Refr. ~~nndtoh o ~~~l tn1~1~ g 759-LS94 Newport Beach Avail Professional Office in
H..tlngtan neighborhood nr beach. Clean Rent negotiable 548-9556 pr1Vale pauo, garage. wash/dry~. 968-4176 Overlooking Huntington Versailles, spacious 2 1mmed 67~2637 !.fl L ~::.~~to~~h. Avail
HorbOw J242 Amenl1es mrl spa, POOi. 53.S-6786,67~0318. Mature adults. no pets 2 br, S3SO + S350 dep Harbour 2BR, 2BA bdrm. 2 ba. Security Pa r k New p o r l 645.4212or548-llG6 • ••••••••••••••••••••••! hghted tennis courts, Ocean front . view 2 & 3 HEWPOIT Eas ts 1 de . S4 7 5 Mo. Crpts. drps. Bit-ins. nr SlSOO mo. Boal slip avail gate, club house. ocean Townhouse To Sha re
Across from ~ater 3 saunas. 2A hr sec Now Br. 2 Ba. 2 garage Af'A.ITMEKTS 642·0461. shops. All adult, no pelS through Peters Landlllg view. S750 wlprof person Tennis. Need an Office Home
Bdrm AvJ1I 1mmed avail at 1900permo Winter. $600 Up. 640-4784 2 Br Av11I $320 mo. 2 Br. 1Ba.571 w Joann. 1 89~41194 ill.3) 592.3584,282.1136. _ S57·199'1 spa, many amen1l1es Base? 5 rrun N. OfJohn
S900 yrl \' 846 4457 & Call Brure~l 2269da. Owner Plus ullls. No children. h Id OK ~5 u., ... 11ir. ... CH & 1 ... y 64().7499 W a Y n e Air po r I 8464655 8512205evs wknds no pets nowaterbeds c 1 ·no pets . ...,,· l br condo, leMIS. POOi. Bach condo, I blk from "'""' '""' • Secretary lo answer ~ ·-' ~blocktobeach lbdrm · · Sierra Mgmt. Co clubhouse, washer, bch, Harbor Pacific. 2Brsharp,yrlyS650 FloshareHBCondo W O phone & visitor ealls lrviM 3244 BAYSHOR~. 4BR.3BA parking, utll pd Yrly' 2450c~~~!lvd ~H324. dryer, refrig at, last & rrpl. pool, jac. $42.:S mo 2Br.hugederk,fum or mo.Call Eves&Wknd's St87 mo 751 ·9705.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Home. Across from S390/rno_ 675 ·6876. --------dep. S405. 768-7633 213·592·3171 aft 6 00 unfum. S750yrly 968-4723__ wknd 's552-6827. Woodbridge $59S mo. 2 Swim Beach. $1400 mo. 534-3740. TIIE SEVlU.E 2 Br I\.; M•wDlxZ ll -wkdays JR. PROPERTY Female to shr Westchrr Br 1 ba rondo. View 21J.385·2176,21J.4U.32S2 • --Ba. Adults, new crpls, 2 ba, gar, decks. yd, Spacious I Br Apt. Avail MANAGERS 0 b fuJ
Port parking 951 4543 Steps beach/bau 3 Br 2 Captstrc.oleoch 3711 drapes, patio. gar., grdnr, kids/pet ok. $62.5. on .9·15. Pool. laundry Newport leach 3'69 apt. wn r. Iba. Ltd LID 0 IUILDIMG orfers choice of economy
singles SIOO up, to deluxe
2·4 rm Bay View Suites.
SSSO to Sl250. I w /bath.
3355 Via Udo. 673-4156
B1 d . J · ••••••••••••••••••••••• warlr pd Call 1·5 Avail 10/L fac., frplr, garbage ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S-6173 673-0364 k1tch use. bte hsewrk ue Ba. patio. gar. SBOO/mo On the beach 2 br winter &36 4120 ' Lorri wkdaS47-9571 disp .. garage & parking NO FEE! Apt & Condo S. CittMftte 3176 s24 Omo SI OO de P · 3 Br. fam rm. dlbl yr1L57:L4436/645-7573 rental vacant. No 2619 "E" Santa Ana evewknds54.6-5434 space. Adults only , pets rentals. Villa Rentals. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S48-4077
garage, central air, pvt LUXUlYIAYFltONT sm~kers or ,pets. SlOOO $475. __ Lge 1 bdrm, 1 ba, up-c6nsidered. $425 Mo 675·'912Broker Outstanding value! J ust Female to shr Westchff :~~. C~~~~1t~v~l1m~ 3 Br 2 Ba. with boat slip. mo md all ut11496·7901 LUXURY DUPLEX stairs apt. Dishwasher, 842-8807, 5PM lo 9PM , PAR" NEWPORT '450 rents this roomy 3br apt. Own br. full ba , Ltd
med . Suzee Miller Avail. Oct. lst. M1ny CostaMts0 3724 2Br.2t,.;8a.dblegar carport,kOOmo. Tues. lhn.iThul'll. Fri· ft w/dblegarage&loads of kilch use, S240 mo ss9.9400 amenities. S3500 Mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1650 aq rt. with every 640-llW7 Mon."8AM·9PM COU..,.YCLUI extras! #8358 548·4077
VIEW OF
MEWf'ORT HA.JtlOI
Office with water view
Approx. l,000 sq. It. on Bro er67~~12. SUS CASITAS x~ra. huge rear yard 3 Bd, 2 ba, nr So. Cost Near beach 2 Br. 2 Bo. LIVING ;:n~~fs'd~/5st~~i:l~~ F rmmle wanted, non·
BLUFFS 3 Br. 3 B~. Furn. 1 br. apt. S345 & with RV gate. Adults. Plza $495, upper unit. endsd gara~. carpets & Bachelors. 1&2 bedroom b h 0 I S ( smoker, Irvine condo Fam. Rm. Pvt Jaclllll. up. Encl. gar. Adults. no $675. 673-6336, 642-9666. 641·8657 wk:nds or wkdys drapes, blt-111$. IMO Mo. apts & townhouses. .!~ es n Y 310 ' S22S + •:i ut1I S59-7416.
SllSOMo.644-2300. pets. 2110 Newport Bl. Want Ads Call642·S6781 aft 5. 536-092l From 10 644-1900 Renllmes631·4s.s5f'ee 752'9069·
W Coast Hw y 1rn 1645-1100:..... __ _
Sf'YGL.455 LUSE
$2200 per moot h for a 6
Br. 41, bath house with
great views Gardening
service included
548-4968 btwn8&!iPM F to Share N1~ 2BR Hse ~ . ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• 2bdrm. l~ba . frplc. 200 mo + Ut1I CM Pel
Professional & medical
office space 500 & 1000
sq rt Near Lake forest
&SD Frwy
HARBOR VlEW 4 Bdrm Uigma IMcll 3741 • • carport, beam ceilings, OK. 642. 7 2~ ba, 2 story wtramily ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • lndry ocean \'iew $475 =~--
D.M. ManhalRltn
76G.083S
rm, formal dining, view, fumluxstudio.spa.TV. : S-DAY WEEK SPECIAL : 493-Zl.10 Mature responsible MF big yard, privacy. m1Ud service:. phones, · Share 2BR hse 111 HB S16001moyrly Sl.2.5 wit. 499-:1221 s-to AM 3110 Walk to Bch S22S mo
••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-2292, ~1524 Pam
BAYFRONT Penthouse . .-wportlMdl 376' • 8 O.y1 • 3 linel • 8 Ooll•rt Adult Condo, Park
Harri.son & Assoc.
714 493-3754
EMEIALD IA Y Professional Bldg. 2 Rm
office suite, 1510 No.
Coast Hwy Laguna
Bearh 610sq It w 11o,·ely
ocean view Sl 2S sq rt.
497·2471 or544.3339
RENTALS Bnghl and large 2 BR + ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Bristol, I Br. 1 Ba. S450 Senous Student IBR +
den Secunty bldg on e It's easy to place your 8-0ay Week Class1f1ed by mail, and 1t e S57-5707or67>9452. ~cnic~~ ~~gs8PlpC:(
super Lido Peninsula • costs JUSI $8 -that's only a dollar a day! To Qualify for this • tbdnn coodo. pool. spa, 1ac. frplc. S235 + ~, uul loc S2000 mo yrly • I ff • nr hospt. & park. Park 751·8133 spec12 o er. you must be a non-commercial user offering or 1 ea n s . s 4 3 5 F
2br. 2' 2ba S795
3br, 2ba S87S
3br. 21 2ba $925
4br.2ba S825
Le Raisor Rl!.r, 83J.8600
University Park. 4 Br 2t1
Ba lease on greenbelt
$825 Mo No pets Avail
10· 17.. Ag! 973-4772
v ERSAILLES. 2 BR • merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the price mus t • !213J436-5962arterSpm 18'25• non-smkr New
2b · cl bho --ly redec •BR 3BA home Sublel share prime
a. secunty u use, • be rn your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad • So.th L-lll6 HB S250 lllrludes ut1I Newport Blvd office pool, s pa , r e rrig. --r--S'150 mo winter needs eight days selling time Or just one. • ...................... 536-0194 Call 24 hrs,646-1036
• • Adult r~ndo for rent Prof M 1F share spacious AVOID HIGH R&fT
Waterfront Homes, lnr. YEAR-ROUND FUN:
University Park. 2 bdrm. Ul-1400
2 ba S600 mo. l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
611 8250 WINTER RENTAlABr,
Soc1a1 Ac11v11Jes D1
reclo• • F1ee Sunci.y
Brunch • BBO's •
Parties • Plus more
Logwio l.ach 3241 2Ba dplx, fum /unfum.
••••••••••••••••••••••• some ocn view. 5304
OCEAN FRONT Moblle Seashore Dr. S800 mo. Ho;nes s1000 mo Obi 851·~_..Q__ ___ _
wide 499-ll16 Bea<'on Bay, 3 br. dock,
co.or
Spectacular Ocean
Vte". 2 Br 2 ba CO-OP in
South LaRuna Fully
furnished Avail yrly.
wmterorshort lerm
Waterrront Homes lnr
631 1400
• BEACH HOUSE • Cozy
IBR. frplc. beamed re1I
mg Court yard S Lag
~Smo 49H486
Execut1 ve·style family
home w dramatic entry,
la rge master suite. dble
~arage & beautifully
landsraped yard 1 Kids
& pets OK ' A bargain at
tennis. 2 yr lease, $1700,
refs req&J::...S-86=17~--
Rent S500. 2 br stove &
refrig, la1mdry rac, gar
w work benrh. N Hts.
quiet streets, Adults.
646-2032
OVERLOOklNG
l5 acre pnvate park, 3
Bd 2"'2 Ba . 2·sty
S7001mo K1ds OK. no
pets
John Manha.ll
6.11-1266
only 16.50' Hurry ! •5469 lavtr.f W /Doell Ren~m~ G3HSS5 Fee 4 br ji,; ba. SISOO mo. No
GREAT RECREATION:
Tenncs •Free Lessons
(pro & pro shop) • 2
Heaflh Clubs• Saun1
• Hydromassage •
Swimming • Goll
Droving Range
BEAUTlf\JL APTS
Singles 1 & i Bed
rooms • Furnished
& Unlurncshed • Adul1
LMng • No Pets •
Models Open Daily
9 lo 6
Oekwood
Garden Apertmenta
IMwpott a..cti N.
88() frYll\fl ta! t61M (714) 645·11 04
fMwpoft Buch s.
1700 16th SI IOover al t6thl (714) 642-6113
Oceanfront. Sharp 2BR.
$625 Mo Winter Adult
61S·3382/213-795-~1.8 2NICENEWERHOMES pets. submit on kids.
Both ha~e 3 Bdrms. 3 CIR Rltrs. Bill or Linda. Yearly or ~int.er, fully bath, dining roo111 . den. 63l·Oll84 646-5006 furn. luxunous ocean·
fireplace and you can S C.....'.......,_ 3176 front 1 Br. Apt. Sleeps 2.
walk to the beach. Loca· • ...._ & Call 213/44>4028.
t1on . 3 Arrh Bay, a •••••••••• .. ~··••••••••ocEANFRONT2&4Br.
private gated communl· No~ a mirage. S27S rents Avail. Wint.er. Weekly/
ly Sl.000 mo th!5 coiy ,CQttage w/a~ Monthly. 673-7873. N o r t h La g u n a , ut1ls ~aid. #49111 Also.
oceanside of highway, sparkling 2bdnn w/all t--------•I $125-0mo. A(t 494.7551 major. applian~! Low WIMTmUMfALS --deposit ! Avail. now ! OCIMROMT Clean 2bdnn house with Must see! S;.175! #4924 gar. frflc. ynl Walk to Renlimes6Jl-4S55 Fee 2 bdrm, l bethS4?5.
bch. 750 497 3898, N 0 .h .. B ...... 3bdrm,2bel.b'825. 494·2S76 • ear °" . ~ r ,.,., ~-..-c..--...· -Ocean view. Call Betay.
LoCJ-oMic,.f l25J day• 08·0500: ev • • • • • • • • ••• •• • • • •• • • • • • _.49C=--f727="-------
Shores 3 Br 2 Ba beach. W__._._._ J2tl tennis $850 No pets ,........_....
associated
(l 0 • f • • I • ' • ',
" ,. ~ . .
831-2327 •••••••••••••••••••••••
--Avail. DOW 2 Br. l Ba. 2 bdrm, 2 ba, nreplace, 1 Lob fol'ftt J2SS Water & trash paid, CAr ear, on0ttan. Wffll·
....................... aarage. Adults, no pels. Jy/ llonlb!,y. m.9112
Lg 48r, 3Ba. exec home $450 + S400 deposit. 'Elegant 2 BR z Ba, view,
on the water Prof de· A&enl,nofee,~2000 loclda piano, china,
corated, lg cov.ered C ... ... UnenTV.etc tl500 mo pallo, great home for en· CMlzlR Ull Aflo ''46-3zss' '
terta1nlng. SHOO mo. ,.,,......, 1400 ~---='...;.:;:'--==----• S86·8430 ....................... VenallJet lBr. film/WI·
HtwportlMdt 3269 lkj c..,_ Mc&.• ~d.':r~~E:e~ •••••••••••••••••uu•• BeautltuJ 2 bd~1 den, 842-4'57 . end unit, attacneo dble ~~o=------Seavlew 4 Br3 Ba. f•m1ly garage. Tuteflllly dee. PACIFICSUNSET
rm, dining rm .. ocean fl Mo to Mo SHOO mo VIEW
night llfht views. Pool' 1e4.~ors73:@5 ' is atepe to aand. LI 2
tenniA. l.800prmo. DIM Point. nlcelY furn, z bdrm w/carrr· bal.
Watedront leue, 4 Br 4 BR 2 Ba, W/D, atlacbed ~aj;c. 1t1 Inc IS$5
Ba family nn top con· 1ar, w/opener, sec .. dltion, docUor 40 boat. rplc, pet». Pool, Jae ... Junior Bdrm. VenalllH.
hJOO. tenn~ adltl, DO pett. Bee. r1e. kH Mo . '50,!1>79 IU·HU, 50 ·0425,
c 8.r4 81, cleutabarp, Harbor View Kaolll NB 21..-.ll""'l ... =l::.l0;:;.:.·-----1
.. ,, to temil 6 beach. Br 3 be .. Loaf or alut Octallfrcmt 2 br, l ba.
WOO mo. lau1olNpt. tum. tteeo. fTS.1U4, A•aO ""'1J/111011lbl1 Morl>cw1f7JP.11D winier ....
Fantastic ocean view. 2 2br, 2ba Balboa Island 17th &Tustin SA e Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one e br .. 1 ba. POOi. garage. apt. John 85l·lm4 9 5 o
•
avail. now. f650. No pets. Eves & wknds 67~7975. nly 8()' -NICE ! class1f1ed line of type. Minimum ad is 3 lines. Please print e 979.0075 _,,..__ JOO to 11oosq rt
•
plainly . • ,.,_ .......... _..._ .,__t...L....~ Prof Female, clean, Mike Supple95J.4040 ,.-..-.....-...-u quiet.mature.toshare3 Prime SA IO<'al1on • r ------------------------------,. orURfw11isMd ltOO bdrm, 2 ba Balboa Pen belweenNewporUSan· ••••••••••••••••••••••• condo w/ocean view la Ana Frwys. Pleasant • • S E A W I N D kOO mo. Carolyn window offices with re·
• • VILLAGE 67~ ception & telephone
.., M IF 35 or older to share answering services. Sl85
• • •• ew 1&2 bdnn luxury lg 3 bdrm 2 ba rum apl ~o 973-.-"4592=·~--adult apts in 14 plans 1 pool Costa Mesa S280 -
• • Bdrm from $465, 2 bdrm mo util inrl f'llME IA YRlONT
•
from SS35. Townhouse · 548-l200 1400 sq fl office space
• rrom $610 + pools, ten-available Oct. tst in
• •
nis, waterfalls, ponds ' F rmmte to shr hse, Newport high rise with
Gas for cooking & heat Balboa Island Pvt nn bank. restaurant &
• • ing paid. From San w bath S240 mo + '• marina Yearly lease
• Diego frwy drive North util. 675-~ SI 65 sq fl anclud1ng
• on Beach t.o Mcfadden Flo shr 2 br CdM house, jarutorial For appt call • 11.m • then West on McFadden Oct l, b)() tnd utlls .Mr Sehng~
• lo Seawind Village +dep Refs.67~5831_ COSTAMlSA.
Add $2.80 for each •ddHlon•l llnt for 8 ttme1 e <7141893-5198· M .. straight. ll3S/mo. Furnished. Sl75 to S250.
• • IOOIM 4000 Isl, last. S3S deposit. ulil. meld. Call645·9161
• •
••••••••••••••••••••••• avail IO/I. 754-7166 Room CdM Home ~ hslilln1....._. 4450
• Publish my ad for 8 days starting • r.;:~e non-smokn.er ~:... 4JSO F~~·;~;e'&/;,r.·;:~;;c·e·
• •
o. 700.0S53 a er ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll rtasonable rates. Classification 5pmw1cdays. Stor:.~ sooto4000S.A
e •• LagunaBeach~olor lnn. on BalbOa Peninsula MESAVERDEbR' Name 985 No. Pacific Coast nextto Fun Zone (10'i"a f\ PLAZA
Hf4'.Y· Laguna B.each. x 20~ ni 1525 Mesa Verde E. C.M.
..
Address e Daily, Weekly, Kitchen 673·2!Ml.67~:11~ 545-4123 available. Low wanter Storage Garage for rent.
•
'city Zip Phone • rates. 494-S294 East.side Costa Mesa S60 PIUMELOCATIOH
•
Balboa lnn. $90 & up 642-~ Approx. 4000 ~ I\, 1500
la Check or M.O. enclosed 0 weekly. Kilchennette, l"U.I!-.__.__. 4400 sq ft air ronditaoned of· 19 • ocean frool. 67$-8740 vn~t "-fi c e w Is pr ink I er s.
C ••••••••••••••••••••••• r d k. • harge my ad tO: • Room wild!. priv. Nrbus. ence par 1ng uea. la shopping center & OCC. MIWPOIT Available immedlalely.
W • Adults. 1162-7~ PIMMSULA Prime Hunt. Beach in·
• 0 # Exp. • BR ai BA. Enjoy Jae, Spacious executive or-dustrial park · Call
lanai area, tennis, jog. ficu across from City 894·7257. Ask for Mr.
•• • • in iJs Hall. Allaervica availa· Campbell. '• D * Exp. • g g tra' ' lake. 5 min bl .. u ...... 1· F Tr from John Wayne e, 'o"'"""-· rom 225 OCEAHSIDI
Airport. lat & last. 1q.ft. up at rea.sooable Office/comm'I. """"'"""
=
L 754-1°'4 rutals. No lease re· ~UNY r:::-.:.:::-.wE-;LL-PAvTHEPOSTAGE -::.::::-.:.::::~ • E'Side ~ large iuunc1.call6'~3002 ::~.;::. ~i,;:J·
• rm w/frplc. Private en-THI RIGHT Retail St~. Best beacll • : 11111 I NO p ST GE : • tranre. NICE! J..sl/laat SPACE location In N~rt ! e I NEc~sstRv l e ~~C::~r:d~nfy3.00~~~: THEllGHT ~~,1~ts,i~401 · St.
• I If MAILED I • 5 PlfCE
•• 1 IN THE ~· CIOle to O.C.C. Pool, non GUAIAMTB! Cho~IT A1 L SPtlonACI W
I! ' UNITED STATES = • smkr,1170. 300to8000Sq, Ft. Prime ice ora Oft "' W t rfr""l offi · C:Oast Hwv in Newport
• .. •
St.S-2510. a e vu cea 1n -J BUSINESS REPLY LABEL NB s $:200 Newport Harbor with Beadl. l,000 lo 3.000 aq. • > • Cbriafi!A~!ra1t. N':: boat slips available. ft.•vaU, (71'~7100.
,.,llUTCLASSPUMITNO U.COSTAMESA,CAltfOllNIA ~ d i .. k Plusalooelistot1-clal c •••• ,.t....I
• i x • r naer non am r . I ,.... · ~
851_ 1910 aft. 6 PM. amen It es. Temflc le11· ..... 4475 • ! POSTAGE WU 8£ PAIO BY AOOfilESSEf 8 • lnl terms now 1vall1ble ........... ,,,, ...... ,,, .. Or1n11e Co11t Dilly Piiot Eaatalde Colta Mesa, l Call Today! JL..a ca...•_ • : • 1 • =~: :~av~tebt~tbla'7"':.5in~ 1714167M662 On eaitioa~a. aH
• o. 111•11 P1•1at • cld. ulli.. Call Christina foot and 11.M tnmc to
• ~ S5'7· 1"5117. the Ball* Ferry pMltt
I I • z rmi, szio earb. 1315 U•e llle Dally Pilot In tront ! Grut place for • Box 1MO • • Both. r. bk door. Lr& "Put Resull" ~ervlce boot Ito,,. al'\ abop, Of·
• 1 : • doit M ·S4'71 directory Your ~~·· etc. f7J.ftu,
1 330 W • l1y It. 1 Nlce hmdlNd room ill MrVlct 11 our
• 11 Co1t1 MeN, CA 82128 1 • prhate home. Costa specialty. ~~:J:r'.: • ' I • ;;.ca11 Mfr IPM. Callta·'878ut.m ' wta~,.. • • • •• • ••••• •••••••••.••••••••• . •-:-r:.• C~ll tod":r
)
... Or1npe Coast DAILY PILOT /Tu11day, September 22, 1981 . .
• I
Fiii H•ctv-• IHMuc..... Meto.try P.wt.cJ RLL ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••--••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Kf'lll MecHWCOMSTI. ROB ERTS CA RPET CERTll"JEDFlRl':ARM CO MPl.t;'l'fS1':tt\'f('f.') W11nl' RtJ\J.J..Yct.t:AN BRI CKWORK Srn1tll •:~WARD'S P~IN'rlNG
fU.IR&. Cu1tom homts, fram· REPAllt. Rl'StMch, ~ INSTRUCTOR tnch C'a1pt'utry, till t'lt•i llOUSt;• Cull Cm~ham Job~. l'J~wpnrt , <.'ti!ilii l 0 , l,N.T. f.XT B,Y
67 8-fta Ing, rcmod . French la y.AIJ !l•paln nll Hpectil or hund11w1 \'l•IH'rft~-. plumbinl( Ci1rl Fr1wt .. l 64S5123 Mesu , Irvin e. Ht'f& r no F l!:SS,ll~~ALS r-• ulV doo~,11tyU.:ht.a li P1tlo 613'(1491} de!f11~1·!1-17359'7 vainllllll rrc•i• nt Ev'-•rt • hoU! k b'15317~ XI.NT Rt:~s NO
hoti.AU..youj)!y covers 842 4088 N St /N s .. -%31l~S .... 1~1 M't!t'JlUl!i CHARGE EST ' fora M2 5260, · o um o ... mpuo o,.._itg · ~uvpl1t•' rurn1~ht<cl, Fr~lt·• PattOt> Pltintcr DISCOUNT rOR UN : JOdayad StalnSpttlal~. Fast ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cl)11111lt·tt· h11c111• uvin tru~twonht..96711003 f orajobdontri.iht. t'llRN -~ .. \ h GHWtclC • SOH _dr · ~t...~·l~ CLEAN·UPS l.AWN lcoaoti-, t•lt'\. 11l11111b111i:. llou:owl1>anuii: il1Jnt• Larry 1~900lle'"~ , . , Dr~ltL("Y UuildersSince ~7. CttMtlt/COMf"tte Muintcnunl't' 1.undM'P l'tr Iii 111$1 th1>1ou11hh· Cull art1•1 fXl'fo'RT BRICK & < US TOM Pulntwi; & "' "ddlt od lln fi'rt'r r~t 1142 t19iYi ". · . • • • sl11n1n" lntrnor & c>. PILOT " ions. rem e IJ, ••••••••••••._••••••••• · ' l lOM !-;l'tl'llOn:M~::-.1 SPM 'lfi21l>7S !*i26711Ci M'sour> Sm.ill JO~ & tenor Oon 7?!1~72 S. plans Freeest Rea.s CONCRF.TECONSTR Clt!11nups l're;.•Tnm 11 l 1lr fl1111r' f\•111·111.: Jlt·llublt maturr >Aonlun l'('pa1ra ~'11111-rarLn~~ •
VICI Lit' 11311542 !>49_2170 1'1t1os, w11lkw11 y~. H11uhng Ma1ntrm1nc••· pl um1>1111¢, n·p1111i.. all will do htlLC>l•dt'uninr, in Rdb Ml ~.7r.07m4 · INl'lo;RIOR EXTt:1<1~.>K. Do•o•ICTlTN~r llUFFMAN &SON dr1vew11ys, blo<·~ w1111~. AnueM8114til IHK'.\ of bfll(lll )Uh> 21! Nl'Wport f'('lllllhU°iit H••yu .. ot-"URY n,~bldeouball/(&O~IOI I .
v.. Add Remodel . ratJoii wood deC'lul, p.'ltlO over Tree trimming & rr } r~ l'\V !179 z.;r~-. . 81:1 flCill6 I ... , -vn \l!ll50flll e r ast J AtkFors-dro Cabtnets Repalrs h~ers 953~ v 1 1 1 ~ H d oodb....-Bmkwurk, blO(·kwulls. ~'\.8255
\'our D1uly Pilot Lit 1306llllll 646-8586 THOMPSON'S ha0u1:ng ~e~a~~na~~~.' •• ~~.~ •••• :=!°! ••••.. Ruli.Jlilr <irt',it >Ao~k 1 wood frocr~ <.:unr1'1:l<' INT EXT PAINTIN(;
.Serv1rt' Dltc<'lOf) c-1.1--t ~~. --CONCRETECUNSTll mQw1ng Reas. b'i3 395:1 ' llAHDWOOI> Fl.OO HS ~~~~~~p~'1~,,~71:!::., l all ~ 1111~ 1 ~.~·. l'LO ~ ~!.,~ .. ~41l Xlnt work. low rate~.
Representut1ve -...._.., 1 .1~ no1133 642· 8' Cl .... , """ la 11b~u~~ •~ """'" • 557 2783 761}~ JU 5671 d 322 ••••••••••··~• .. •••••• ~ --TREES eanl'd&Wuxl·d llousedl!anma Lt lh > 646 IS97 ··usTOM INT EXT -!it-•·-_l!!ll'•'lll!!!l~~I CustomCablllets,elc. Pool Decks and PetlOS, T d Anyt1mr,83:! ~IS A XlntJob l1i>A rate\ Mo i..... " CllAR RENOVATING Masonry. Sport & Tennis u1!".pe1awnreremono',ed1~_r1134ea7n6 Ha··•Ln l'all todo\' !lf'.H ._,,, •-'t f'XP~:RTSERVICE Ac ~ 00-3749 Courts L1r. 374067 Bob. ,......, " """"' • ""..,;, ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOW RATE:S
1 •• , ... ,:::: •••••••••••• c ___;::---&Sl 196§/847-7078 Gon ialesGardenini: ······uu·Mj:j()1i.~······ CLUM Uf' YOUR ACT • A a l' M ()\>I NG NU BROOK642 1403
I ·\<.!('Td for ~m. bu~1 . f'R o. ,.... ..... r NO JOB TOO SMALL Mamhmanre, lree trim-& SnP11l M, O\ UI" Joh~ llous~leaning 631 l!lll3 £xper ' prof . low raw~ RAJ.PH ·s PAINTING ttn.M· I l "' s ••••••• ••••••••••••••• min fl . spnnkler!> F'ree • .. ., Quirk. cu reruJ "l'fVll't' ~ · • i.a es u , " G 1.-:N'L CARPENTRY Brk & Bile Lie ~1449 l'ull ~1lKF.G.il; 1~1 Houusitting MZ !MIU 1':.xt 1~1 Rru:. l'mmpl
om;lete orrtce )l'r\ INSIDE& OlTT'SIDE Dale. homc96J.8767 est ~ '1~ ll.1111 deanup, conert>t~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• STAR\'ING CULL"',(',L', 1.t cl f rt't'C!il 964 5566
Notllry Rea.s ~~5834 Fast.effirtentservire Ans.8~2182Beeo2313 DOMI S Reu r..itl'~ 'I 1~·inoval OumpTrul'k UON 'T IH~t:MPTY, STUU~N1'SMOVlNG All Paintmgint $450 ext AtDh•ft 95J.ll?<( ---lrt!e trimminl( & ,... "Ul''k'" a"'76"" 'l'lllHST\ OHLt)Nr:l.Y Sli50 Neal. complete Ft,;, • -~ -. Draptrits mo" al . ge 11 ma 1 n "' ' ~n ""~ "" CO Lie ~Tl24<1J1; •• ••••••••••••••••••• Co lete Remodehng ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 en an c e . ha u 11 n I: I Cle U y ln'...un'<I &II S4Z7 Free t!Sl, l'l'fs &SI 7292 Or1vt~•ays, parking lot Res1 m New or 30', DL<;COUNT ' landi.taoin" 631 !1180 Gfl ~ our Act 'it't'Urtl\ l'hc." will ''l WAT<'ll L'SGROW' AVERAGE RM 5.15 rep111r~ !>e alroating old look Li 7 yrs in Custom, handmade Loe .... ,. • I Gara1:rs .ii.,ht llauhnll ''1ur h1iuw planh It Int l'Xl Quahl~ work S&,ti ~:.phdlt 631 <I 19!1 M p .. Gtt1•ral .r--ices I ton trul'k ~ li31 11/'J~ ·~·ts Ciill c·11 7587 * T>Au llmthers Mm cni: • O • ,.,, a re a r a sst of matenal. Work "' .-. • l '" '" p · an 6"!>·5lv1 L1c. -962·83_l4__ -_.11. .. 1r~."•R _'""''3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11,Al'}.I~G&ll\'\ll' "'arateL .... ---.. rum pt lourtt•tiu~ L' I h l I S PLI LTREu --.....~ ""'~""" J 'I -kr It t " .... _,, Si.>rv1t'e ~57 05011 or r.x ousepuut 111~1111) A I A rt\IH Com pl int1ext 25 yrs D ti DIVORCMY-MAIL I lS. ~' II~ ,cnt \ ••• •••••••••••••••••••• 5-10 8448 Wt• do the JOb right' &ii~lJ;oollrlg Striping CHARRENO\'ATING rywo FromS60714S4270:IO &lll!.1" K ..... TE7PM • LJ::EP<1intt11" 119-1344!1 Comm res1d Fn!t!l!~l 6'.5-3745 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H r /C I IN~'iOI <\Gl'NA rainhng ~
Lie :zl97li2 1>458181 ---ALLTEXTURES& AirCond/Heatinq autn9 !eon-ups • u,·12117 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'OLLEGt::STUDENT Ha~~~illmg by tcal'her Carpet Senk:~ Drywall Clean&de1X•n fhid,~1~8634 uft :r Jrrr,>~7'/hlil< 1 iw s:..'75 .,., Fall SJll't'lal. t•xt int f.xp Int ext job for
101 ini: rare vark run' ·w··.:••••••··~··••••• dable Reas.631-2004 Handvman 1 11 1-:ES SlllH 11 l'Hl\1 Landscapinq paintmie l'ro( j<,nhl It'~~· Alt>x55211l31
Nutnlprh848-Z>78 . eCareCrplCleaners ORYWALl, ACOUSTll' •••••:••••••••••••••••• 1;J1.1i.:r 6.. \,1r1I 1'11•J11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'rN•e~t St1.'\l•S47 12111 Quahl) plg 1)1\\e:.l ratt>)
la •• . Sti;;r~ctl~!~~~ls 14 yr.; exp Fully lir'tl & HOME IMPRO\'fo.\H.\T Ill'~ F11·n·-1 i\i Xlil llnt J..xt l.111bqmg. um f'AINTINC l'l'ST0\1 in 0 l' Nt>at prompt btrlttllMJ "'nrk 64c 3716 ms11red 5325549 REPAIR PLl'MUINli lllAt:Ll'iCi St111li•nt h:" "ilt:1tm11~ ll1:ha1Jlr l'Jll I work 25 yrs.· l'xp M.in \ ~t'rv 84~56114,6~71~9 •••••,~•••••••••••••••• "v guar .,. '-'CC • ' I k l'I \:'\'!WORKS ' . . T •• llab~:sit'tmli( mi home 1 Sh • -a. t . 1 carpentry . eh•t'. tile ~1· tnH IA•,,i.,I 1at1• · • • I lo<-.11 rl'(~ LI\' 1140:~11 INT EXTl'AJN 1 .. G ••. · · \ : ampoo & steam clean c nca Real> fr&' ei.t "'" Juh Pr11111pt l'Jll 'i!i!l 1'17f; ~!l'J Jli:!ortil'.; 111>1•; Donded u~ cl l-'n•1·l·~t I 1t'tl Rd~ f ree Est \ r "' UIJ. nr ll'IOTIJ. Color bn11hteners whl ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ' cu:1•"'"' i: ~1 t>.12S.182646575!1 l'rpts 10 min biearh ELECTRIClA.-.; pnrcJ tou.,m11ll ~21111 l hdnk~uu Jolin bssofts ll utlhl~,96JWll ......-"'"
llall. hv dtn nns 515.1 right. fret> c.~11matc on Carpcnlr) Ma-.-mr) Housecleanit<J 1••••••••••••••••••••• .. rtnl' p.i111L111a: liy lltt<hJrd OLYMPIC PAINTING tr yon're not reading the avg room S7 SO. rouch large or small Jobs . Roofrni: l'lumtnn~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• H111IJr 11':,,on'. t:ulll'J!t• Srnor l.11• 111~. t:J }rs uf INT EXT fHE~: EST
!JUie ads in Classified. $10. rbr ~ Guar elim Lie 11396621 673 ~9 Un wall Stu('ru Till' HOllll\ 'SCU'.,\:-0:1:\G I I 11~t r aN'l'f>lln)( ~I u ha111>Y :'\ 11 l'll.'>lomer~ c; 0 0 D Q l' ,\ LIT y
you.',-. m~sing a lot or pet odor t:rpt repair R ESIU l'OMM 'L Remodt'I ~ ti4ti !l9'J\I !-.1•m1 e a lhoruui::hl} •knt:; Jll ag1·' !168 !i6lll I h.ink )llU 1;:11 +110 WORK nt,.~ rnformallon as IS } rs exp Do work H1ghl) qualified. No Joh \\>ANT \lJ}uN ~ 1'1<··111 hou.w ~••~<tl5i I IJ:.~•trl·tl \<l,, )uur oni· f'ind >Ahal ,0 u \\Jill 111 LUW RATF:S 554 19113 ~\!..&$some great buys myself. Rers 531 0101 Loo small. 631·ZOOI Clas~1fed Adf. ~2 Mi78 St'll 1dll' 1lern~ ti-12 SIJil! 'top ~hnJIJ>llli: 1·t'ntrr Dail.)' 1'11111 Clai.sir1L'<l~ Want \ds C'all 6421678
S,,W.tm ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'ht Paptr HanJer. Prof SPRINKL,l':R INSTA LL
1net1ll ~rator qua I Repair & Yd Clt1111 ups
freUJl Stqyt'~1·4281 L11ndsupma 645-~7
Orchard Walkovtrina lie
Ex'pert w tallllUon ••••• ••• •••••••. ••• •• •• Rua. r t , ~1~78 Tlt.f: INSTALU:I.>
AV £RAGE 110/ROl.1. All K In~. Guaranteed
AU ldndl Free e.t Refs John 111!3 1667
•3309M Nonn ~ ~ Tr9t St,..kt
l'losttr/Rtpair •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••• TREg DESIGNS Neat pattl~. & tf'xturt·~ Pruning. S<'ulpturina
Fr.!t.fjt. l_t}-t 439 Top, ThUl, Removal'!.
PLASTER PATClllNG Clean U2_ 631 2Sll
Iott ext :.>yr.. ellp JAYE TIE:E CARE
Neat work Paul s-15·2977 Com plcte service and
~ •••••••••••••••••••••• McCORMACK PLMBG
REPAIR & REMODEL
Stoppagl'S Reas. ralel>
L1r. 1294378 675 9194
TOrHATP~
New construction, rt
model1nj! Spel· 111
restauranb & comm 'I
wo rk Lie ~40432 1
636-2030
Rep1pes, i:as lines. r<· model~. new ronst St
Clair's Plumbini: J.11•
406056 645 3503
Drains from SIO MJ111
Crom SIS Plumbing n·
11a1rs_.Epipe 642-~
RtmodelincJ/bpair ...•..•.••••...•.......
General contrart1ni:.
home improvement~
Also dam11i:e repair., lbt
class work Lir ~ ll7!18
Roofing .......................
BALBOA HO<lf'ING CO
Spel'll1I Fall OHer
Free e~t biJ bl.13
WANT Al"TION''
Clas~1rl'd Ads 642-5678
stump gnnding 10 >rs
exj> L1r ln.s ~6-9:nl
AMERJCANTREf:
SERVlct:
541)-1193
Tlltorift9 ....••.................
Private expert tutoring
by Credenuul~ teacher.
Mos t subiert areas
Your holl\(! ~l!Ol
lnd1v1duahzed program~
in ~horthand. typing &
orflre skills. 64 l-Q678
Window Citaninc) .........•.............
Orii:ina I Window Wa~her
Avi: 3 br home, S35
631 7698
"Let thcSunshmt ln
Call Sun.shine Wando>A
Cleantn&. Ud 548 8853
WINUllW CLEANING
l'omm'I Reb1d'I
F'reee~t Jim,, 631 1918_
II \OU \\illll )UUI .ul-
1 crl"1111: mrs3aKt' tu I'{'
.id1 lllllll' pl'lllJlt• JI '""'"1 "'"1 c1.1,,1r1t·d 1~ thl.' \\,I\ 1111:0' l'Jll '\1111 •
h-12·567H
C~"Z.k~ 4475 11110-;;:rtw.ity SOOS ~'!rct1"• Trwt 5035 !~s.~~ ..... ~?!.~ !~.~~~.~ .... ~?!.~ ~.~!.~~ ..... ~!.~~l~~lf.~~ ..... ~!~~1 ~~If.~~ ••••• ~!_~~ ~~'f.~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~.~!.~~ ..... !!.~
·····~··••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I BEVERLY HILLS l'l.EHICAI. P<>SITIO~ Dt>h\'e_r:Y men O\l'r l8 for Drivers deliver bakery
... W,T EXEC STES Free to quahr1ed Lenanl · Prime Prop. Uluffi.. Pvt AUTO ROUTE ., . & T\' 1 .. 1 , , I' 11m1· PleJ~i· rall LA I 1mes tu horn.-~ in p r o d u e t s l o
" k L 1 I t I res Condo wants sero1d "'0 '11 '1!'> 11111 · • C M 3 6 k t F · I \ htnited number of s a e ren as ore.sa es, r .,.t't:tl p,111 Time Pl•r,11n St!nau 1~ wekinit rl'h,i t.31 ?25.l( \I • . am am l>upermar es ,a r Y
'fltl"lllhwd offl <·e !>Ulle~ '.'d e o g 3 mes. et r ;~esSJOP~n 'o Y[ X~nt Ill lleln t·r OJll} Pilot rn bll', depl.'ndJhlt• 11•~11111' I CLERK t.ronom' l'Jr requirr.ct '!'om to mid aflt!moon.
Jrea\·a1I Cor~ublease l \om plet cl) s et-u11 Fosler752-118'fln} tr ''\1•"-porlL1 .. 1l'h ,ldJ''l '°rde,1)!n«rJNllh lll'"-1 i ll llprn7.im Wed I :\u <'uller t111.: Call771 47SO rn11nt'or~rwpci11 ·, most C ho1ce bea ch loc 1x·r >A eek • fall fJ~h1011s & ~por1111i: Thur~. r'ri ~hr 6i5 ~~-S4~1~rmo + 41>01111~ llang glider mfg nds
t'Xf'IU:'1H' ofr l'Omplex-. li75 41~ 6'13 1401._ lluurs \Ion thru r n I J!OOd' l'rint a<h & wm p Ju 1dr11111 1• \1 003 64G 584 dri\'cr Valid Ca he
t'5 QUl('l, hanc:b<1me ~et-jHF.AUTY SllOP equip A.MOP ~-~~/ I \JlJlrll'\ .J Jlllo5 301'~1 ffit'rt'l.tl' tt1 appl nnl} 751 4ti5:! good driving record re
lll\i.lfb }OUr l'IJ pul its ment and r1xtures ror e~ lluurs ~Jl ~Sun 12 131274 .1 -12 •1 1.1-1 I DELIVERIES quired l:nlH E Walnut W~t'fbot foN,ml Call ~a I e I n r I u de l> Lost & FOWtd \µpm' 51\M Lo 7.\~1 I Da} hln Way Su1h• :!t12 I Clerk TH11'1 SA ~7 31184.
Qo3Pltl\<d &-n·1ce!'> lnr ll ~draul 1 l' rhac rs, ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Earn111 1l~ :cpprn:-. :i.425 Be,erlyll1lli; r'ullnrµa rtllml• l'art lime Saturday & DRJVEHSCrossrountry
al f.7~-1 1 975-0W> fur hairstyhni; stationl>, A.Mouncftl'ltftts 510~ JOLEE MILLER 1 1wr ruo. 1'<111 H:yan Bilrn1?u.1ltutoro;nl'l'llt•d 1 64696().1 Sunday mornings l\lu"t No sperial llr req d
p;u11uular.;and\IL'>Arng_ mirrors. hairdryers.••••••••••••••••••••••• \•"\I 11 1 ,. 'h•'· ll11llJ111I t>1:?~321 t.qu.11 h 11 11 r fl J, f 11 r <'ollci:I' Pmrr,..ur. net>d::. hJ\elge \tat1on>A a1?011 MarGrcgorYachl~.1631
lndUstHalRetrtal 4500 :.ham e.P"~bow ls and LADIES I Opp11nun1h f.mplo1rr l\orean Eni:h>h :! hour n•lrJhkC'h1ld1"1rdorrn \dnorp1rkuptrm·k r.d Placentia,Costa Ml'Sa
••• , ................... lounge~. pla) l'ases For the ultimate Ul re I I rl a ' r" r \' 'i• l font RYuur h1l1km e or ~~1,k1ng rec·ufrdl lnl'l' f.am free toys. have a b.500~1l'ft 3front offil'ei..2 a_llsuppltes lflOrr la xat1on. Call Relaxa as openings for stud ents of all I HJb~31llt'r . l11rl nan·H·~t· f.11 1:11 ~h mine l'llrhwa arl'a n or cons1~tso ce1H•r llouseorUoyd ToyPar-
lar..:t'!lri\'f' 111 rear Ca ll 631-9754 ·after fl. t1onSpec·1al1St ages and l e\'e l s Graduate huu,r·krep1n)!. wkcl;11' S5 Iii $1) x:i hr 5 cl<•) 7148!1S:llfl8 1111? bundles lo llaill l) 8406912 11.~ 3 nhast:' pc111 rr JO' ca 11898·6800 17141951 94-1!1 I w est m j n s l e r ch II II (' 011 "'a e. i Jll.1111 •·1>111 \t•'A port 1111rl. 'A ... J.. \111111 Ill Cook for llB prt• \t'h•HJI rdot ne>Aspapl'r l'Jr " Let's l?O mlo 1 \'tsa & ~ t' :icrrptr<l 1 " "' \11 l11•1d ;i;c11;w~ 1x•r,011 1-·nu11t.rn1 \ .1111·1 hr' !I I ).1 F SJ 35 11<.•r hr ril'r!> F'arton Trarnee. print
l'll.'lft '·•11;~~h1t111·r St IUS TOGETHER Prmceton. ~ .. J I Sdwol lla..l i urucr I C..ill Pally9601!7Rll Good ~1art1ni: ~dlan mg & packai?lnJ: Co " .,.. """"' insert i rule BABYSITTER I' 1 N 1 F \' I with rt')!Ul.ir ~rh .. dul1•1I paid benefits 4 day 11ork
llillllMf ft ,pact'. r1tlwr !100 1 'ha I!' a htllt• mo~t·y & a PS YCHIC·ESP '11•1·•1 'l~T1;cl ll\'r'on '", " l!l'rt ' t•ll lani • • • • * • • • • • * • • • • •' innea~t·~ week 979-7660 .isk for
,4(1.orpt<lufftl·1·&1!1t(13q lot ur lime.Let s ht'ar READINGS 546-6985 k1·1p11urt111ulcl w;\1 ror: COPYCLERk rail Mark ft ~ 11r~1''I Ct ofCue 'our ideas ( l&!>lllr1ed Ad I •BY * lo h·nl l•ll'>> anti flTll •BOOKKEEPING 1 lmm1•d up1mrn1: for FT Don Wilham~ FR Ef. PRE·SCJIOOL &ll<!O~qft>Ah~l' LLJ\r Sllt\'r =w 11424300 2-1 AMANDA d11 •11· h '"' 11111•'11 IO k1•) II\ lolll h I JlO"l llOll \'.irtl'I\ or fi424:J2lb('f llA~t In CM Ill exchange for l1•J1't" l,1111·1'-.; A t'St I hr' 1\1 1•ktl,1 " \l11nThur' 1 l>t1i•r,ifit•d 1.,11t·r11•nu• 1lut11•, lllt l \\Jiiin.Jo: nn orart2PMdady th heJ 7525525 UJ:r1~~ MS I ~H g, peril•nn•d 111 A I.I. ol I l'\1 t ~ l'\1 T I 1·11,lunwr.1 1•op\ 111)!. 1·01 mo er:. ~ --Jrt.'.1 ' ' ' I COST.A MESA matters of llfo All rt'Jd Lost & Fovtd 530 Help Wa~ 7 100 1!111 k "1111111• ;~.~rnt:~~I~' 1111'11· 111,11·n•,1r11 11urJ.. 111 l.1tm1: l11111li111t &. hot 1-'ull & part-lime TelJers Rent ah w~ 4600 p r l' sc h 00 I!. . 'A r l 1 tngl> art' pr11 <Ill' & l'Oll ••••• •••••••• ••••••• ••• • •• • • • • • •••••••••••• •• • I 11•• !Ill ·'"' ur.il•· !\JI l I". \ DENT Al Excellent opportun1t) • L bl h-·• I I F' I s JI I llJI L.'it.1·\ \.'k fur Frt•l.1 In" 1,111111 u1111on11111t1 '•'1.11 11~111: " irpo1t ...... ~ ................ t'~ J IS "'· t•\Cl' Ot':t r1denlldl Call OO'A OllOI . ma m;, l '"'' <\lummum r.1111 "ulll'r Ill ... u-,, I ... l-:l\µer ortho J!.~1,tanl for exn<>nenced ""'~on
I r I l I d& bid I I ll I 11 .. H \I!' Sl' .... 'L'({ n I hi 'Allh ,,.,, urm11n11 ,, .. ,.1 , .llLI "·' btn r .... ,.. 'IOI; l 11r,o 1'"'111nJ 111n .dn ginr 67.,0836 1111: r>An >A •"I '1,,1111 \llhl ho ,,1~.1 · ••< 1•1,1 t• u .. ~ or ru11 11m1• po~111on an aurarllve sa,rni:~ & lh Id C /2 1 ~ _...c........ ;;to I th () 't1r1 1 I I r I" I "•1n111.Jll) ('t'''·' \11--. ·• •••••••••••••••• XI r l "'U.111,11 ~I :, \ r II ..... e~,...... m... 0 FREE •. ~ 111r air \'l'.111 111·11 11.lll'll\\11 llall~f' I ' ' I.Ill il•) '" n 11111\ ' .,. nl salllr} & hene ,,, oan Hoth pos1l1ons or •h1l1lkJ<)k111gfor~IJdrm 1 640-5357 640.4287 ne _:,,jbq~oft h1gh sl'hool M411 11.11X I >l2t:!l.' h111· f:J,t l .\1 li4t0 U.\ll Jrt"1 fil!i24-l-1 , ... u 11 t1: r 11 i· I I• !WI 1405 fer ,ar1ed dutll'S PT •vt ft eawoul>ll' rent answel'T"I Y ,.._...... p .. 53 ~ \M •ir '''"" CARRIERS tin l'll'Jllt'r~ 111 hµm po 111on 1s appro\ J undeP s.iw mu 1 Cost.c OESPERATt: OW!'\ER insert 1 rule enonaD 5 vi ''" JP' fur 1.1, ••·· 11 k . I 10 hr' \\Ill t r J 111 I DENTAL. da~s a w~k. includes
\le:.a llwitmJ..'lon Hcaeh I must sell <'o~llnental Lo t&fot.wtd 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1111,1r.tt111~111l111• tit pt 1 TELLER ·111 rni.: WANTED 75!19!101 Wa nted m.iturl' l'll Sat until !pm Call I.m-
ar·• rt•fbrr"·' l' ,11 Hr~Laurant ~ anlastu· S EXECUTIVE 't•Hl'' f.I ht 1 • """" fl\ 1111· _:'\1·w11<>rt lkat·h !count.or hi·lp. dr\'l·lean thus1asl1<' woman for ila 7c4 1801 . ""'. p "' .. u .. leJse ur~at l"rn'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• I· Ir II I 111 \ t ' I L l \\I I I . t ( Cf I .. ""~"'··r\d:Jfl()ti4i!-13(~) .. < ' " .. • I ,, '•irl'J r .. 1r~ '11 .. ~'l'r\ 111)! pi:Jnt. ft1nw. gOtxJ vus 1 1011 II 0 l l't.' ORA~GECOASTS&I l-lhr' I SltOOOO I *SUITE* I hr 1 1111.1 ~ S \ln1111111.fnr 111•1,011l'1lh ''.'I \ T1m1·,1~t-• • IJJ) Appl~ 111 person Mgr front de~k Xlnt l700ADAMS.C ~f Bkr 1!411 lli09 1 :!I.I .r.11 it•ll li. 11 1' µinf.: J 111 ltt' ( Jll Jt•)' :>4Q.rr.!J;, Cro"' n Cleaner". 5935 benefit~ call ~ 55811
, .... October I st 1_ .___. FOUND ADS I 2~ llour f:st'OKl'l'.I H 1 Hh 1pt11tKll' .11111 Jhch (' \SllJLll~ .. , A H R I E 0 E fd'i~lf) \\ould 11~1· '" l "'voes""~-· 5015 1·953-1 822 MC/Vi~a1 1AHIM.Al OS,PITAL I 11 I<• h.1111lll• ~ums 111 J '' r. . ""rncr \t', DefttalOffiuM9r Full lime help wanted pporTill'lity ARE FREE -'.Hl I 111 •• .1rlllll\ I . (' ' I l'anlt•cl rur .111t11 11.1\h Ill COU~UtHEL.P Ex per1enrt•d. h111hl .\ \ns br nu sfir ~" irnd~ ln\t'Stmenl qualr l furlolal <.tn•-.-rc•d111t11111 I • 1 11111111 ' •lll,t .tn<tllJi: ~Ill'' H1·h A 1111111· '""'g\ 1 >A .. 1 " ·"' 11"' no · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •lult•'' llp•·11 11 ,1 • 11 1 ''d k 7A '1 l motl\aledandpro expnet·Mm1mumt\p I\ 01rnb for hou"• tu C ' & rrhnJl1on m ''' ·~· . h . . t "'"'"'"i tune I ion' r ,1rt':i' fill ·~' J a~' a 'A " o • . n·n.l 549 ~ INVESTMENT all: Ste' e 111 R s.ix ..!X j~ . '''" 111111 &.... 1.11 ~11..1 111p t .. ·mllh 1•"""·1nt l' \Siii EH 2 p M Oa!'d, Donuts J(ress11 e oHtrc !!> ">eek mg req SJ SO per hr to •11n~~m11k1n~ rl'lirl'd . COUHSB.IHG 642-5678 \ttrac·t1 \1' l..i1h1·' ..... ul.J 'urruuntlmi.:' ()uahr11·d ' llOlSEWAHr:S\l.ES 49392005<. I :,~:h;1~~e~:;~n!1t~~!I ~J~t Call 833 3333
t hri)l1•rn licntil'man I \\t' can help }OU d1:. lcl\eto 1"'11.1" \Ull 1'.ill ASSEMBLER I Ill.'""" 111;11 ol11:c111 .1n Full nr I' llme; ,\ppl} Count1•r help & r T I rellent lll'rounl1n i.t.
•l'l'kh 'm df1c·rnn Jpl , l'O~er your 111\t.'Slml'nl l.yn11orLa11m·a11,t1m1· I Fl.Fl'TRll \H'.1'11 Jpplr~Jllun ,1111"111• of lro>An l!Jrd11.m• 1024 sJnd>A1rh f)CN111 want ~t-rretanal and human Gai. Station Altendanl.
1r h~kp~ room' nr hus I potential 2 Free con LARGE REW .ARD 953 9363 r ..... 1J:!.'i 1. n11t ""' \ llr In 1nl' \\'e,lthff 1 'n ed. hour.. Nt:F.OEO II relations skill!. to takt' M r With some t'Xper hnc·.1.lnlrt'C1•ri•11tc• wltateonsdurrngSl'p 2Ct01amondRmg9 11 tl•1tr11n11 '"" ln1n1 lh11111 ill • i\M toJP~GansDeh l ftlm<' lmmed open· I J 11 \ n' II rr : 5 RI le m be r CJ II ror r n I Newport area. i'r Lido l.Ji..1111.1 II. .11'11 II• , .. 1, .1n • •. v ·.:i~·, 752 5401 . an art1 ,-e part an man a)! mg 644 5l63
r l d t G ate E :\1 ·l"l'lllhll'I "''t h CASHIERS ) 1111: our bir;inei.s orrrre i.4~ 13002111r. I orma ion an <1pp 1714 6'10·~ re ompany Counter heln F'T & PT I "'.xrelJunl b"n"r11 GeneralUfftl'e • R1 r k Keeler 631 0213 -E rl \llltl1•rinl! "" 1., :.1 ;1, PomonoFint I .. r. ' ' ' \\,1n1t·ll hw in Ht•tl111uto I Agt Lost Jade pcnclant. rer SCO S 't'lllhll 1,,1~·r lfriJu•I" <'allbetween9&11AM pac k .ige 1ncludrs Appl)° onl) 1r }OU can
,1 "' 11111, s111i:h· mali· Langular. It green. '11 :!4 Hr' WI IHXo ,.:II m.111,111 11, ,11.r,1, Nderal u T DTE M GJr} s Och 6i5 2193 medical 111.,urance. $1500 mu:. t er "'ork 1n g 1 n t'J~~!ir i;.is t'7!lli MoMy to Lo. 5025 New p o r t F' ash 1 on Cosfl/Checks \hi ht, 111 •N hJ,11 1,.,1 EOE, M/F/H Dell Hr L A Timr~ to I plus bone.t. 1f quahr1ed today' ronstruct1on 1n -: ••••••••••••••••••••••• c en l tr. r I.' II' a r d .. M r.vD/MC/V"t•a h II I home• •ft H ,. • c .•1 Newport Center duslr} Bldg desll(ll or e'Fi:'/ln•"st/ Widow has money to loan (2131248-6220 ~ IOAT • ~·.'.~1.~·,·~ t"~~~.1 i~~ !~·~.~·~ ·11111111~ 36.\M ~s.,;,5(,wmo "+ 64(~~ face looking ror all
........ c.~••••••••••••• ror RE SI0.000 up :-lo Lost-Female Germ;m plu' TELLER \I \RKETS I bonu~ Dependable car DENTAL ASST around rlerrcal help
c.reditrher k.nopenJll) ShorthairpotntenLl\er SOPHISTICATED For~'nd &.JrdSh1ft, needeu 546 14111 or l'ha1n1de eiq1cr Slrong bookkeeping
Sll.Siftts& 5005 l Jll Den"on As!ior &. ticked• whit e tip on I.ADY \\1 ·II•• 1'''"11 I'·''"' t Sta11mi,:hlu11t•1S.l '.IO !164 49112. nel'essar}. ~ day work abihttrlt Accurate t\p-
Opporn.uty b'73 7311 tail. Answe rlt ·Amr' 1 h1:n1•l1h 11111," Po,ition imrned a•ail We prnm'ofo to m,1nag1· 1 lkli\'en Man ror ca riv week. JO hrs La~u111J tnR 60·65 min & spelling
•••••r v •••••• ......... Mort9a-, Tnnt Losl9'8 816312291 J-:)o.('ORTS 24 llllS 4 DAYWORKWEEIC in Nwpt lch fo r mentlnui-•r1"1u11f11111 AM T'cmelt horn(' de· lltlls, i70427S No s mokers Salary ""' 1 In m 1 n I( I' 11 o I O d..,..-5035 .__._,,j • di th rommensurat.e w1lh exp t'hcmu·JI Sl.•r\ll'I' Busi ee s Found S1benan Hu.\k\ 1'11 1 .:. 1111 from t·"·"t career oncnRV "' v I wi '" h\'en F.ron11m1ral rar Dental Assist.ant Call Dorothy9S7 1234 II.''>) J.,ll(Ulld '\ll(U<'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blk >Ah1te blue evr~, Whtt1in1Wflf,call ll>A1 ~\1111 1111111 11• \ w/prior exper in a W\;1;! \C\ltr.r.H ~ adulllt o~I~. 211 hrs IX'; Cha1rs1de part lime .
. m•if ~ne,pne1e,-,Jn . SattlerMtg.Ca. male Tl•mer mix tn I 971 -0342 .1f111 " I bat1lc or savings & tu;;td ~lt'ltJ. da) ;>;o t•oll $.t50 per i:uod salary 631 10i3 General
11111 train S,'iO.OC~ 1-'ull All l)pes or real estate l'olor , very old mah· Cr\Sll ORCIIJ.:C'k. lo ~li \lt Wi bonSt I mo nrt takt' home + lea1·emessagc ATTENTION
1mount n·q Will 11.,1 1111eslmenu.sinre 1949 Bouvier blk femalt• l'h""' 1 ;111 fn1 1pp1 an. fi:ll 961~ bonus + gas allowan«e o I Ch d N PAINTERS Relr ievtr. aoJd male Tra•el / 5450 1'1•r.ut1111•I 1>1•111 We~tmmsler Garden ~nla airs• t' • urse. l'A HPENTERS '-UllKlO + Cull Collct:l SptciahinC)Wi ... We offer the sut· L.iguna Beath G N B pleasant group PLUMBERS \I l)n• r 11 !t Ii f' \1 2ndTDs N B Animal Shellrr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tt.LO~ll l:H.Hld·:Lt:\ 'roq,• area 6l! 5466 practire f:JCperi nrc
i..i llfil 11111 644-3656 WANTEIJ ,\1rhnr 111 IM 1 71~ 491 ~ot f: of: cestfvl applicant dnt 1!14 !l'l....33
1
Delll l'r.v dn\er ~nd sales pr•rerred ~.;,. lt22 e 1 ELECTRICIANS 642-2171 545:0.U I -to Houston or IJall.r, t wa~es &' benefrts as u ~ """' DRY WALL tr you wanl .vour ad-Found rem Irish seller F W d I lluntcn"'un lll•:wh I ra1n el' Moonhi:hters DES"' CLr.a"' FLOORING WEPAYTII F.MOST Vir ll ami lton & orl orth epartmg ,A,~1 •1a nt \1 .1nJ ger wel as room for a~ ""'.!:'.,' ... ti'· and c·o llel!e !lluenh " llilU\ lertiS"tng message to re-f or your TO's & notes Brookhurst Hf!6'12 6854 Lo!. An1i:elt·~ b"'"l't•u Traditwn;tl \\omen, •ancemtt1t. Contoct ...... ~ " >ACl<'ome. E.ii.11) earn 3PM·11PM shift, Mon We now offer a unique ro~her ~~sit ci:~~~.~ ~! Al UennlSOl'I Assoc Lost Golden Relne~er September j ii nil 11 Boul IQUl' ~·1111 rr--.unu· "' now to explore .... $10 $15 per hr l all an er thru Sal Will train Sea oppty for that needed 67~7311 Would l1kl' muncl trip 111 ,,,1 ~ill>. IJ,llf\ l'ilut. 'b'litie P1•NlflnE'I Ut•IJI 1 PM. t:I Toro Area Lark Motel , C M xtra income Exper on 64~h·~-~:~ to go' Call Now' Puppy 5 to 6MO Old p I ea s I' l' a 11 11 J ~ ~. p o Box IStiO. Cusl:i ' pon1 I s. 53'7·4840 951 264 2. or Ga rd en 646· 7445 btwn Noon & ly. Refs req . .. ..,,.o 54J.ll 1dlejt~ms 642-5678 Medium golden color 768 5837 6PM Real btale
....---------------::::::::::; Flea Collar \'ic Eldon r..:_,,:·· ...:._. & Mt»a, 92Jlt.1\ !{>lilt, ( "1 Applications beift9 ac· (;rove 638 4005 ·
.. ,.
Use Answer Ad service
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• •,l'f\ we take your messages
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r.~Jlis service is o~ly $7 .50
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. car1 642-567&.
C M 6 4 6 · J 4 3 9 ""' , ...... ~: ASSIST>.MTMGR ce~td btwn IOAM· CHECKBCAI DELYERYDRIVERS DRIVERlrliliJ St,.,iceSystt.M
RE'jr-· .. RO'. -pa......,_ need~ a re-A 0 rl rlrt\rrs PARTTl"E 848-8961 _ " '"' rvnun Cl11ldrrn ~ ~hot• ~11111• 3p cah " lmml'd p Lime open m
1.ost. Lge d1amond fgold ·····················••j ~airs l'lper nl'('(·~ .. ar~ I (714) 49~8888 1ng~ uva1lable ror de Must be21 yrs old Om· EdwardJarobson
& 8 ma 11 diam 011 Jobs Wanted, 7075 Will train nKhl iw·r~on Child t'are nN.-ded in m) 11 ... er) driver5 Must be ing our vehicles. Good GENE RA L OFFICE-
d ruby'gold rings. c M •••••••••••••••••••••••j Gd pav &h(·nl•fit' \I"' I 631 -9205 home \1 F Mature lo\ 21 >Allh good dming re drl\'lng record Eves & Full time pe rmanent
CountryCluborDenny's Exper malt' prJll1t·al p t1mi• help n1•1•1frtl in g woman 673 3705. rord & able 10 work wknds aft 5 Start.rnit employment ror am
on Harbor. reward. no nurse, basir horn" nur~ Stndr R1tl' Boott•n , :-. t 644 4473 evt•nrngs Start:; from pay $J SO hr. Me ·n· 1-:d·s b111ous person, 40 hr mg care Good l'llok reg I ''I· C ITIZEllioJS P1zz0 16532 1'-ach Blvd k ht & .Quest ions 894 4562, ordiet.~J.Ol2Sl7141 .11,1 f"ll CLASSIFIED SJ,S0-$41hr +Lips App· "• ,.., • w · some 111~ s 1213~3-76.S2 _ _ -AllTO.\lllTIH; FED SAVIHGS & lyda11} after5pm Mc& H.B.847-1214 Saturdays Various or
Los t . Sibman Husky HetpWOf'hd 7100 HOTMAN' LOAM ADVERTISING Ed 'i. Pizza 17th & More famtliesaregellmg C1ct duties Apfl> 1n
rem approx 4 mos old •••••••••••••••••••••••! C'h 1 1 d 1 · rr 3300 w Cst Hwy ... , SALES Tusltn.._C._M. the ramping "bug" this Person J ewe s by • _ e\ roe ca ~r u t.•r:. • •" 1r h Joseph. So. Coast Plaza . Blue eyes, white wired AC.COUHTIM.G I full or pitrt lime> Jll'rrna year you ave a CM
b r w n . mar k 1 n gs CPA Firm tn Hlll!t111glon 1 ncnt positions tn vouth EOE & MFH The Classified Dept. or Nee~ 1port1 ~l~mg ~~:,a~!u 'ft ngoe~
19/Tustm. CM Rtward Beach needs CPA or for a:.sistance 111 the the Daily Pilot ha~ an •tulpm•nt f Classrried Ads 642_5678 64.2-2060 __ _ CPA Candidate '? JOUl bod\, service. or ne\\ lannaid opening ~lh aClasslf'iedAd.
Found: Brindle wfwht audit start. I 2 yrs car departments \'aned on one or our telephone ~1 •1 p•1 .A.
chest Fem. dog. lame publlc accounting uper inl e resting tusk!. l)p Sharp & depend. w Sile!\ sales dcska. The person • II ' I DI ....... •.• .. • ....... ":
root1no tags. NB Animal preferred. Send resume portunily for advance o_pen. 646·li66C~--we seek should enjoy Shllr.6#~ lo: PO Box 981. Los mentSeeMr Stude BARTENDE R· Ex telephonesales.beablc Al~mitos,90720 HOWARDChe•roltt per1enced ror new lot}pe45wpmand have SCRAM-lETS ACCOUHTIH~ Dove Quail Sts N e w P ort Be a «' h a pleasant personality.
ANSWERS Am e r i r a West NEWPORTAF;ACll Rest!Ba r Apply in Classified or telephone
Telephone Co. is seekin11 llJ.0555 person btwn 2·4. Tues sales experience woulrl
Agenda -Twice an A~counting Clerk ---day thru Sat 107 21.st Pl be helprul We otrer ex
Cycle Induct Ex per m payroll. !(en Automoh\'e I ~n<! The Rlfil c e 1 le n l r om pan >
CEILING ledger, posting, imoic PIX RECE:PTIOHIST Beauly benefits including
They say children will ing & A/P. Call Velma Immediate openings for Hair Stylist with cllen· medkal. denial. hfe in
hln · alert person for recep tele for elegant new surance. etc Sala ry ~~=.~~~hat': ~n:~e~ ~Hl97. hon desk. Mu.~t have gd. Newport Bearh salon commensurate with u
Today my 8-year-old sp eaktn~ voice & filS-3828. perience PLUS great ACC~ clerical skJlls. Need s(). Beauty commission program. If chopped a hole in the AD AGENCY meone who is willing lo you are ambitious and
CEILING. Growing Newport Seidt work Ii (uU time <An Exper 'd fadolist tor want to be paid for your
Found.Grey FemaleCat. a dvertisin g a•enc" tact. Eva llauser. t lea ant l}t w Newport efforu, please dll ror
n-6 •-1 Id .. I lucb bt.auty salon. DCtween mo"' yr o seeks uper. accounts tnterv1ew ·
Magnolia ' Ellis. F'V. recelvable/mcdla bllt. ..!7~·-Penoonei Dept
·4533 Ing clerk ad agrtcy H · IEAUTY 642>4321. Ext, m
penence desittd. not es· ,,....._ w.. OIAMGE COAST
sentlal. Xlnt. salary • Looking EO add to our D "'ILY PILOT b"trlts. Call, Steve staff 3 aulst.anla t a "' _..... ........ ""-'-................................. ~ Koskela WeU's Rich, m1nlcurlat1. Rlch.ard 330W. Bay St.
Oro", Town send. Trade your old 1tuff for Ouellette Salon, 200 COlta Mesa 714---new , 1oodlH with a Newport Canter Dr. E/M . ...,r..._ __ • ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-~"I Clwfnlhd,1Gff71 H.B. le1Ud.M-MN1!!
I , .
•
for C'Lu.'lir!f4 Ad
ACTION
Q U
A DAllY PILOT
AD-VISOI
'42·'411
For <.:lt1ss1ried Ad
ACTlON c;.111
Daily Pilot
AJ>..VISOR ea n
r1eld Sales Supervisoc
~imited opening~ a\'a1lable in the Oranl(t'
Coast aru. -for .selr-mot1' ated. career
oriented indl\'ldual who can work with
F'1eld Sales People Tta1n. motl\11le und
get .results.· Station wagon or , .. 11 nere£sary Exceptmnul earnings plus Job
related bener1ts .mulable fqr the n l(hl
people If you ran produce_,' results not
,tu.s t t14lk ;ihout tl. call: 1960-0i.q4. fM Unlmilw. Ask for Mr. Cha.rh.
a P 3 .4 •
...
U it all aftd put cash in ;;;;U1T;;;~t!
DAY WEEK
&Days
3 .Lines
Special flat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan-
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less . Cost is the same for '8 days
or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678
8 Dollars TM ftflW DOiiy Piiot 8·Day W.•k It's a Classified PLUS
--W.e.d 11octw,W9ilhd 7100 W-"d 7100 H .. w.-. 71 --····················· .........•....•..••.........•....................•..•.•.•........... HtlpW..-1 7100 ..-.w....ct 7100 HtlpW..a.d 7100 tlpWlllhd 7100 ~~~~~ ....... ~!.'.! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ___ ... lliliiililit JAMfTOI Mechanic's helper ,_. REAL~ATE O~l Ra.leash Hilb"°'"' In neededw1thsomeexper ,,~........_-Ntw"-S. 5,,._ SECIETAIYP/T S.Cy/lecHf Y ... ,._,Hospital --..... tit "' So t.ools644-2410 ""-~ .-..... Perm . part /{1me Entrylevelpo11tiooana Part/time Variou~ •-Nhport 0-a~h has an me Exp•ri•nc•d pena1·on For Southtm California COM .... -Ct"• t • f · It o d c 11u '"""""...;"'~ "" ' " ~ .. -_... '"" secretary lnsurat1ce ex-ast growinc. exc in& duties pen 1 ays ur~..., _,...,~ 1m1ned. openlll" for a Medical MslStaDl Back plan Adm1'nlstrator Builder lookJno for full Ti ... r llin ho 7 . d t . AU 'n N t B h ·-"b'&' • "' r,,.. o se g uses per1ence necessary a ver 1S1ng agen~,. 1 e w po r ea c openmp aTill .. -janitor Monday·Fnday, office exp for busy needed by rast &rowing lime sales person. Must d k' w d H • l Will I · c t pol t 1
•• ~~ala. dav shift. Xlnt fringe Laguna Office Must Irvine Co. Poslta'on be Lie. CommlOraw aysl.a wee . I e neeh ounl uarynei& ,rvmthe ·grehta enE1a 6445463. __ _ ~ 1 OllA! 1censee to earn l e tr a n except o r1 u I or e r1 person. x benefits pkg. for 1n· k n ° w E K G & available Immediately. Cal 957·1100 skills to manage, broker person. Costa Mesa. cellent typing and or W Arr.ESSES Flexible ra 11•• terview cafl Joshua Ve.!!!.2unl'ture.496·~-Smokersoeednotapply.1 _________ commercial real estate. S3H08;? ganizatlonal skills re· Exper 3/yrs min .
friendly ~ ~·a Wlilskey : <7141645-57fll. MEDICALFRONTOFC Call Barbara8SH204 RIAL ESTATE Income from mgmt quired. Please call Fltlme avail. Apply in
must. • ' A • .0.E. M/F F.ar:n pract1ce.exper, UlS 13 per hr. to start. Must while you team. Super Secretar.y, full time, Madelyn (714/833-3960 person. Jolly Roger, 400 :,~ 1 • b111ing,collel"110ns &lyJ>-have car Call Marla PROFESSIONALS benefils,lifeinsurance. w/cons1der P /llme, SfC'Yllt&rB'T. So.CoastHwy.,Laguna MllflSPA JAMITOI in g 4 ~ d y s wk . 1145>5355 WANTED health insurance & den· must have good sl11llJ. ,.._ Beach AnMAllf ' lmmed. opening for a Benefits. Lovely area Se~~~t ~p ___ l_40_h_ tal plan Contact Ken, Will train on Vector Busy N B. architectural W11tress wanted, dinner
Good ~:;.rot~arly '°1an1tor lo work full NrJohnWayneA1rport curay e.rsonne . r Cometotbeactlon.Most 675·6700. Graphics. Apply .•n firmntedssbarpperson ho~e Exper nee Call
ns1111 a ••Lfit \ime, Mooday thru Fri· 9SS-20'l2 ;,e::101 ~w~n ~h~n: wanted area Ill So Calif. person 9-4PM Executive with &ood skills tlYPe 65 bet ween 9 a m 1 2
21 years GM. " " dar. 9PM to 6AM shift MEDICAL ASSIST Mon-Fri. buyer's can afford to R o w I n c ' 3 9 0 l w Pm )Ii. Vi eboon d 'l &U_-4848.
E II r be f, -=-=------'-----pa.. Ca II L 8 r r Y Mat' Arthur Blvd, Ste persona ty .or pn es WA 1T 1, ESS Watler p call Jl; xce · nnge ne its Front & back, p/time w ~ SALES 211. Newport Beach rront desk. Wendy ' lease 'or ~ package. For interview. EKG 's, Vena puncture. PEST COMTIOl hi tes1des. Ba I boa Local home center needs 714-752_7179 64().flln. wlcar for wicker backet
polntment. 9. ~ call· Scott Wheeler. typing.645-l7~. TECtMCIAH lslandRealty.67J..8700 k.itchen cabinets & ap-lunchserv 9 »L30PM, Monday thru 'f\lt1a1, f14·t7$·0700. or come in : Leading pest control al , SECRETARY Service Station Atten M F Earn Sl50-Sl75 wkl.
645·73M A4 v a n c e d He a 1t h Medical com pany needs route ltctp/.....,-pplie' arniecen ~e esapebsrsoo lnu.t eElxy· Crowin a Irvine pension dant. Pull-Timi' days Must be neat. persona· ,.,__ Chiropracue Asst/ · d ~ • " CdM 673-3320 · 97 ,.,, 1 J ~tehr. Sl~ Bristol St. Receptioni&t Beaut technician for stea y ror CPA office Im· necessary. Great opp'ty admin1strallon & con· S _-t t tt ble & ene,rgel1c 9-v14 .... ~ 8~rt . wle 100, Npt. busy office Good ap· ~b.Ent~ylevelposition. med ia t e opening for right person Call s uit ing Co needs erv1ce sawn a en· ajllOAM oral?.Ql
We ate sm !Mil ell. EOE M/F pearance. healthy, en· e tra10, no exper 494.~ Brenda :63&-5000. qualified ~cretary to dCahnt. full llmNe. acpply X·Ray erowinc Com I(. l!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I h . . kno 1 d 1 necessary. Call Tim ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I work directly for Co. evron 1251 o. oast REGIS.,._ED
t usiastic, we ge 0 979-6021 between9-l2. RECB'TIOHIST -=Sales president XI n t Hwy, Laguna Bch x.• "Y'TECH a. ing for a · LlGAL ans. billing, peg board """ c e. P ti on i>c t. e . RIC9'TGSEC'Y computer very helpful Pre·School Teachers for law om~. mU5t be NEW DISCOYEIY Secretarial skills man-Sewing mach operator Exrerience required quire-.e~ j Great career potential wanted. Certifitd & ex intelligent. congenial. 0 d Ii datory , shorthand needtd for gluier mfg S . bl ffi ~ StWall NB. w firm IS Call631·5664 per 2"'1 & 4/yr olds diligent with gd typing pens oor t.o Wl m1ted helpfu.I Financial &/or sewing suspenst00 sys a a r y negol1a e o 11c~h I seeking a fnendly de· Newport Beach Call skills Great opp'ty to income for you ' The legal background will ~HE. Walnut SA Newport Beach Area te~p one vo,.._inh pe11dable ind1\•1dual. MlSSIHGS 640-8820. Ask for Susan break into the legal ~nswerto stress&stress assist candidate 547:11114 MedtcalOl'fice.Sendre·
tYPlllJ skills. ~ "t.i M ut have mm 11 yr F 11 . Costa M s e c:r et aria I g u i Id m~uced lll health It IS Smokers need not apply sume lo Classified ad ~ua~!'nsitot. ~-"C1Cfoar8 -~ 1e&al e~J!l.r 548-2283. -u time m. esa or Cheryl. 847 6041. I being used by NASA. the Contact Mike: 857-1204. SHl,,ING/IECY'G 11704. Daily Pilot, P.O
,. w 1'atL "''-~rea. Caltf. ~rivers P/time,7days.2hrs.dai Swedish Japanese & Smalldistribuuoncom BoxlS60.CostaMesaCA 536-7513 • ~ Legal Secretary wtexp m license. good dnvmg re ly AM delivery, L.A. IECEPTIOHIST I Russians' lo handle all SECRETARY/ RECEP· pan y look1·n g for 92626_
Giil. ~ Civil ht & Family Law cord over21 S TIONIST t g & =• 1 Send resume & Salary · C 1 M Times. 100/wk. Lagu.na Growing comput er kinds of stress. Now • ypan responsible ~rson to u-rcL.-JL.
R U d ~ a 1 ary Beach.494-11496. software hollle seeking available in the US answering phones ho l lit' e ,.... -eta ~ s p req. Geiler & Martin lOam to lpm T d 1 rt Sal 1 c run ware use u 1m ••••••••••••••••••••••• To open & ·c.-. l&tO Dove su 135 556-046()_ P/TIME EV-..l ..... GS sharp person for Recep-Sales are booming. must ren mpo es. n Airport area. Call K.R "-"'--s SOOS
9 Wi l l ... I -----'=---......... D"'I" t ionist & multiple expand. need dis· l200W Coast Hwy,N.B Ad c _,..,_ c~:tamers & ~~ l 1ta":fi S~~,;.~~~~m:x& MODB.S/ESCOITS y c.=~ general office duties. tributors Be the first to 631·6941. ~.1;:rn ompany , E·a·;;·A·r:i~~~;;~~01i:h~-·
Refr1g froet rree. clean.
x Int StSO. 548·8513 or
~~
Stove, full ~ite range.
works fine Stoo. 548-8513
or548-~
Washer, clean , works
good S85. 548·8513 or 548·4485 _____ _
Dryer, gas. clean. works
good S8S 548·8Sl3 or
548-4485
Maytag It. dryer, perf
v.ork1ng order S125 ea
_966-1295 art !,30~
Old but runrun~ G E. 1.8" ref Sl2S 26 ' uprght
fre~zer SlOO P P
640 1581
Freezer. Whirlpool,
white. r.f. 11lnt cond.
S250. 645 Sl65
llcyci.s 8020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BM X Bikes S2SO & S325
S4SO lo r both 673-444=1 __ _
Beau Custom built
Cru15er l5 spd. Front
and rear drum brakes.
Mu.st see $7~. 9fll.1Ml
BEACH CRUISER · Mur·
ray Monterey tan. brand
new S1S. 645-8748 moms.
Ann
ltodt Cl'lliMr s 100. 642-4606
ltiilclilt9 Mahriola 8025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sales-tlOJls •bJuce . Top Doll.ars9SJ.Q971 o Must demonstrate good reap the rewards for SECRETARY L P/SH-..u!. o~ gra~ic /.r·~ts. ~..,,, ~u ...--~ ~· penence necessary. Adults with outstanding typing & phone skills interview. call Ron 85 WPM. M·-t be -•·a· A ll'Tt"9 u-1 ea orl w"a'r 2 :::te.....,rs Desi &n ~Ulft over 18. Apply between 3 Models needed. All types ti It. ... '"u I d . f ,...... sbadet. -~. & 8 weekd&)'S 1888 Men,women&ch1ldren attrac vepersona11es Apply in person ParadtSeMarkehng ble It. accept Jl/~.el openings o~ $3.~eaWallsizemaps IEOWOOD2X6'S
cord lteep9l1. WW train. Placenlla Costa Mesa No ex nee. 548-7162 who enjoy workmg witb M u n 5 0 n Mg ml 548-3265 responsibility For ally ..., .-a png. m 8 c $3.~ ea 644-1032 after 6 4' to 20' long Xlnt deck
C t _, ah d .. • 10· 15 yeti" old youths. Systems. 350 E. FIScher OC · 97 0077 opertrs & shpog dept F h load · · D:a5pe!'~. • ... .! ..... Looking for interesung NewspaperDehvery Evenings 6-9 p.m Call Ave CM Airportarea 5-will train Gd co ~M-ing. res amvmg ·~ ~ -.r. b T LA Times to homes in 642 4321 xt 343 -Sales SECRET"•Y benefits Call Deltronic Double sided,smallanll· weekly Save at ~/l't Coast Hwf. Cft. part time JO · YPlllg. 1 • • e · Receptionist needed w/ p f Sdtt ..&.. -k desk ., Id J1m ,646-988Sanytime. 673-7 no shorthand ~uired. Balboa Peninsu a between 2 p.m. and 5 sometypingtoworkfor ro .~,.. lntemationaltradmgco Corp.CM queoa .r romo
4 -"""·-·20hrs.perweek1J1cludes 3 30am·6am ~50 /mo ~AskforAndrea glider mfg. SA /Tustin Marketing Reps to sell looking for sharp ~0413 bank (Ideal for twin Alum sliding 'glass
•UUIU'St weekends. Office on 548-844lor646-1431 p / t 1 me to F /time? area. Call:S41·ll84 a product that is wanted Secretary. H /yrs ex· Stock clerk F/J' 4 day children. l $650, 84(}5443 doors. 8'. w/frame. $75.
PRODUCT Coast Hwy.6-16-1431. NURSE Housewife ~stude.nt Restaurant &neededbyeveryone. perience. Accurate typ-work wk. Knowledge of after 7pmds wkdys ~;;~frame, StS.
CONSUL'l'ANTI' .. , Macbine&SawOperator, RN or LVN , p/time. needed for lite office HOSTESS Earnmgpotenllal. iog. s horthand or boating hardware de· ..!!!l'!Lmewlcn · -· ------
TopolthtUne ' Fabrication ex per pm's & night! m small work, typing, filing, gd d 1 d . ~g~r~~g speedwnting necessary sirable apply in person. Antique armoire solid C.-ros&
Cookwareappli•ces f /time pvt. conval hosp. Above phone vo ice Self· F/time ays, app Y ai· Xlrit benefits. dental Lancer Yacht Corp. 1939 oak, beveled mirror. Eqtli,..... 8030 lnbetterat.o~~ 641·8400 average starting salary starter 851·8393. 4000 ly b,etween 3-Spm •QuahliedLeads plan. Close to 0 C DeereAve.lrvine,Ca S2000BO 548-5103mom ....................... .
Contact ~~ M19111l--d -I Apply at The Gardens, MacArthur Blvd. Ste Coco s Famous Ham· •High Income Airport Call Norma JUPUER A.rt'1q-ueSe<:ret.aryDesk Nikon FTN ~ 7.oom
i.o • 'w:!~~~5T~~u1t\1~~= 450 Glenneyre. LB 3000 N.B. ~~c~~h~il~d.~.~41 LIQUIDYHE (1W8J3..8.97J!:_ t.N1f1 t!OO 20milhmeter S.SOOBO Goventesf ,ype•wt • 11 Must be expenenced Ill "94·8075. -Plt1me temporary filmg EHEl.YSYSTIMS SECRETARY/Recept Thi rd grade. unmed1ate 642-5872 Wtthcases.551-4532
woman to.~ ~hild. all phases Send resume Nursing R.N Ass 1st ant ass 1st ant. Opp 'ly to Re~•I s.it•st .. ....,.. ""!!A!!I!!. !!754-!!!0>8!!!!!I :!!7!!54-!!C6!!!35!!1!i!!I A1~port law firm Gd ·full time employmetil ANTIQUE 35M M KOW A Willeomider'live~or ·toAd111C6.Da1lyP1lot. D.N.S.Work3week.ends learn bookkeeping A.~ """' = ~kills. bright self· Benefits, Harbor Area W1thF1ashS100.
out mlllt speakEngliah. P.O. Box l560, Costa amonthonly Weneed Afterscbool.ok.979-3666 MAMA~ . SALES starter. Non -smkr For information Call AUCTION S57.al93
S44·1Jll Mesa 92621).~ Ca. your expertise on the ask for Kalb . Fully experienced in Progressive company Josie, 851·9025 ..:.9SS=-=·l,_,_794,,._,,____ Canon S14XL·S sound HAllS1'TUS~;;_ MANAGEMENT"" Look°: week.ends Bnng you're quality women's ap· ne~s professional peo. SECRETARY TEACHER -lnrant TONIGHT & PM movie camera. Stzo. Some folto.jnc. lJll for working partner h a P PY fa c e & I .E. IHYESTMIHT pa re I. Please ca 11 pie to sell imprinted qualifitd secretary. MIS· De.v~lopment Program. Elmo ST 1200HD 2 lrack
I)' atlftos-~. o fw expandmgwholesale knowledge.Joinus Con· Earn while you learn. 1114 JSS7·60!0oraP.P1Y.ln sportswear. We furnish sion Viejo area p/t1me Member of JI ERITAGEMITIQUF.S sound proJ . S230.
Ktnt S loo: iness.96()._§489 valescent Hospt Bearh H E R I T A G E person : Mr Elliott s. pre·qoal1fled leads. Sl000/mo.TI(}4088. transdisciplinary team. Q•'"-a.iMt• 551·1!~9 ____ _
Hou•-Lerztt Maacer/secretary £or area Mr s Slone · INVESTMENT will !;.C.Plau_.____ large commissions.~ s~m"•Y-Special F.d. important. Ever;1~gmustgo' KonacaTCSLR,31enses,
to w•~ ;j-m~s oee gi-rl mtdical office M2·8044. teach you creative lttollSdesPtnOtl re-orders. Professional ~ -JackiePopp,546-5760 AMERICANOAK manyextras S400.
-T I ' t t Nursing financing, 1031 Ex· H1· Fashion discount management training Newport Beach law of. EUROPFURNITURE 5S9·5821eves. Ragft'dr , days YP n1 impor an · seminar provided. nee. Word processin", TUCHS..OAYCA.IE week Medical office exp de-NUISE:S AIDE changes. investor de· store Full & Part-time Chance for advance w i 11 1 rain Caryn"· 4 :JO.G::.lpm. M-F. Bric·Bnic, Bronzes Certs 1035
sirable. but n<>l essen· Exper'd . all shifts. velopmenl&counseling avail. Sat·Tues 11·6 ment.n~ &44·6Sl&. S3.SO/hr.642·04ll OnentalRugs++ ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSEKE!PER. ijve· tial. Salary open ~nd Conv hospt Npt Bch Exper counselors re Wed.frill-8. ----• Saletakesplaceat Kittens CFA. top qual.,
u1. stable-fttature for resume to p 0 Box Bnng your smile & 1om ce1ve l<>O'k comm. The is 646-7835 -------•Planning firm looking for TB..IPtfOHE HERITAGE ANTIQUES Burmese.2. Hlmalayan.
father/1 ebilll. R'l'fs l'ecl. 2159 MISsion VieJO, ca us~ Free mjr. med , den· an unusual opply for --------SALES-r/TIME bright secretuy to han· SOUCrTOIS 18335 Mt. Langley 4• Siamese,'· Sl~S2SO.
830-5411 "' •. ~ tal&lifeins Topsalary right person. Confiden· RETAIL The Los Angeles Times die vaned office work Need l51mmediat.ely to 1 FOlJNTAJNVALLEY lnq 1nv1ted. Terms. Housell:Hper/~e-in 16 M" ... "GS Call : Mrs Slone, tial interview Call Circulation Dept cur Gd.benefits,lypingand work easy evening 3blk.sSof405fwy _548·8581 help Mre for a.mte S YT' """"" 642·804.4 Vince 546-5880. renlly has positions shorthand a must Sal hours. Great for stu lat Euclid) -------
old in tove~et for boat rentaloperation BUILDERS available in sales as a negotiable. Call: 8·5 dents. J.9. Mon·Fn. No AuctShirnonGnll H1malayanKrttens,CFA.
Call .. •..,.,• . in Hunt Harbor 'II 641-8820 NancyWahl 11· C II 9 1213 881·8921 grand champ lines . .....,.c.oo 't.-.J • Knowledge satling & PAIT TIME REAL ESTATE representative. You Se . . se ing. a 66·0151 -raised on love SJ..50.S200.
CHI.DC-.. boat maint/repair nee. Person to deliver Daily SALES EMPORIUM earn an hourly wage+ cretary afterlpm. Applonc" 8010 838·2776.
Ex per hoq.,eke~ outboard eng. repair Pilot auto route in South This is ou-r36th year sell· generous commi.ss ions B OREO? Teleph""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pers1an"'-k-it-te_n_S2-00--3
care for ·~I d~ hel ful 213271·2677 Laguna area 7davsper 1ng fine Southern Call 957·236l.ext.l204 v•~ HARBORAREA d I .,,, SOO R•
Penh,.ula t.biit' week. J California homes is • Workthehours PHOMEPSSOH APPLlANCESERVICE ~u:ss..,.., to 1 eg.
and super\lif',ah er MAbmMG Hours: Mon thru f'n Perhaps you would en· Cllllllg SALESIETA.JL YOU want • Pllime phone person Webuyusedappliances
school bOOn For 10 and Need Sales persons look· Approx 3.30to5 JOPM JOY joining a firm active and • need Feminine attire Fun needed lo call & set We sell recood .. guar DOCJS 1040
12 yr old Hl94'l AM tb 6 ing for marketing op-Hours Sat & Su.n Ap-in luxury residential store, must be sales We are m desperate app'ts for busy Solar appliances. S49 JCT17 ..................... ..
PM &hn·Pwt. CaJl''Wk portumties as booking prox SAM to 7AM Earn areas such as Big Ca Hrl Df onented n'IP'T' Open need of secretaries/ with Energy Co. SC SO/hr + I IUY AJIP\.IA.NCES KEESHOND Pups. AKC.
days Mt e •J!!n.d agents for mot1vat1onal approx. k 25 per mo nyon. Spyglass Hill. u..r • ings in all locations No or without shorthand. bonus. Ask for Al Les 957-8133 Champ sire M F Pet &
wkods 10.S,'73-1~. a n d c e I e b r 1 t Y Ca II Mike Bush at Irvine Terrace. Lmda phone calls Apply al who type al least 50 LIQUIDYHE s h 0 w p v t Pt Y personalities Post1ve 6424321. EOE This d1v1sion of the F EMSGYSYSTIMS NewThennidor4s· glass 213/697 134.Sart6pm ~ Houseleeptt-. u-.1nt-rot environment·excellent Isle. etc. Wickes Com""rues wiU Back Street. ashion wpm. cook t o P w gr' d . ; senior c~ ta H'i\ra l!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!l If you are presently ac· ..-Island 754·0581 754·0535 die/broiler. model DGT FLEA PIOIU:M? •. area M~'°'· C?l4l ~onmen~acenh.l':'}k lf~ounr C! live in real estate sales soon open a new Home I XI li'll Please call or come by 45, retail $700. ~II S450 p EST FREE e I e c.
67C6760-· e ma• IX '"' PAITTIMf do you have immediate LmprovementCenterin Sec/Lega . nt s Is foraninterview. "•04•co t . II .d ,,. ~· 53&-7513 Crew Supervisors. work & unlimited access to San Juan Capistrano. ~· 80 WPM. Sal Neg. ;i TELB'HOMf '>.:' • .., • hronicaf Y11 rt slinyou!
INSTALLER: Qua ............__ "~w--"-...tl, P /lime evenings & the president of your andweneed helpNOW !' Soleprctner.673-9201 fVICKI HESTOi SOUCrTOIS Frost Free Refrig. fo1me o a _c raw gl. individual ~ ~bet"'~ SJ...-50 & weekends. Supervising company,orishehidden SECRETARY --S6.00 per hr.Evenings Avocado, left open $150. Y' n ~ 1' n s6~~ c8028s
s la 11 Exe ~~1! £Im ween . the door t.o door sales away in an ivory tower Both full and part-time 2 person omce. pvt com· & ASSOCIATES and weekends Call 546·1.Q~ ---. c~oelrlemctanent Y -N·
Telephone Systeftf~"Top 'ts.oo an hr. Work full or crew of youngsters Ex· removed from the scene f>05il1ons are available munity in South Laguna. <Specialists in Mike 964-:IMO Apt sht sto•e 1 -
Pa ". Chuck Pe.rry, part time Naugles cellent earn1n~s for 0 ·den · ·i in SALES and for ~ ..... _631.9~---4 AKC Cocker Spaniel ,. D th h ur pres1 t 1s ava1 a-F/time, typing, bkkpg, Temporary T 1 _.._ ~ ~ 714/M-12Bl. r 1 v e r 0 u g person with abl ity to ble. Do you need addi· CASH! ERS Retail ex filing. Start immed Clerical Personnel) raYt -r-Y ""'Y' • Png1da1re washer dryer pups M IF Buff, 6 wks INSUIA•C E-State restaurant We are cur· motivate. Van or large tlonal trairung lo help perience wanted In· Swede499-4567 N.B. based wholesale S 3 5 0 A m a n a StS0.$250.641-1672
Farm. P'ln Vly, needs hrentl yk s eek1ng carisoeeded.Call youmcreaseyouream terviewswillbeheldas t.ourCo.~quahfled Refrigerator w ice AdorableBloodhound,F, staffh~p.Xlllt.,..~. omema ers. senior MediaMerd1.ants ings' follows SECUTAIY 540.0400 persontomanagel.Jcket 9wks AKC S300 •••.1·-. ( Citizens. & retirees who 213·'27·Zl56 EOE ro---_... mg/consumer div1s1on. maker S3SO. 64l-l672 4,;.. c...~m" ·11oc ...:'""':.=...:.;•:.:::-~---"--.... -"---1enjoyworklngw1thpeo-Experienced or inex-r-"'50HVD"'ll Must be familiar with Whirlpool washing '" . .._. V'"" ' J anitorlfflueekte.. le, serving top qu.ality PBX ANSWRSERVICE perienctd you may well Motl. Sept. 2 ht S• J-Cttphtr.o 18004Skypark Blvd. ATC /IATA computer machine, 2 spd, '4 cycle Sib Husky pups. AKC.
needtd f/fime l>r ·c111 ood. Noexpntt. We are F/time, da)'5 & Pttlme profit from our color tAM-lPM Help bU5yeitecutive run Ste.~lrvine systems. Xlnt salary & SSO. West1J1ghoUse Frost xlnt markings, Sl95 Pvt
. val. bollpt. JOnt'bftlen.t anxious tot.rain you! Ap-eves. Expr. helpful. Pay video tape listing &sales TllH. Sept. 2Zltd show. Good people skills SECIET"•Y l.f. benefits. Call Diane. Free SlOO. 557-~3 .R_arty, SJS.3485. incl lnsunnM sl~k ~ 1 1 T depends on ex pr. tFaining program which , ........ JPM needed for interaction -Ad bl Lh :-;-·:1•· "Y n person. ues. c•"l777 we reel i·s the Ca'nest """ l . b h f Secretarial """ilion in Mon . Wed., It. Fri.. Magic Chef Micro Wave ora e asa Apsa & incentive-p~ra ed, •· lhur lOAM to ,,....,. Wed.~· 23-...1 with mu ti· ranc o · ,..,.. 10-c 752 ,.,.88 G p u p p 1 e 5 A K c .. ·1 bl rv act1've Ne"8rt Center .. pm, ·v• · as range combo, SIC • · Apply ~r1r1 tor. .nu. No telephone in· PIX RECIPTl-...IST ava1 a e. 9 12 ti..t~ fices. Good office and S4 W te K' 11•/840-1677 af\er4 340 Victodt..'Clf.a ~ q.,_~irles """ We are not a franchise, AM· ,__ secretarial skills. Be ap. Realtor's fice. front TYPIST-P /T oven 00. as ing .. · Immediate openings for branch or subsidiary preciattd Cor your de· office position ~uires WESTCIJFF 00·4097 Dishwasher '50. 645·3164. St Bernard, ll\le yrs.
Se!U ~ rih ~ ....... alert person for recep· just headquarters. SAM JUAH cislo.n making abilities. good telephone voice, TYPIST: Accurate. JS Washer and ~ry~r gd female. AKC, good w/ Dal~:PiloCClamill'*ul 2'5'lril~CM. ~i~~!e:~~~us!~f~~gt Wehaveopeningsfor a CAPISTIAHO Ca11 Mrs.Hilger661·l211 typing, SH & ap· wpm, general orrice cond.S65ea.m1Sc.1tems kads.$100.645-2335
la a atmpr. .n.-,.. . _,, clerical skills. Need so-few highly-motivated 32051 C-.0 NOW. pearance. Real estate duties. 549-31M2. 6*4fll8 MUST SEU.. AKC reg.
uatc lasllCitdAds 642-5678 meone who is willing to persons who have a de-Capkltw Secretary, ---1 experience belpf~ but 2 Dishwashers, port . Cawn boxer. 18 mo. best
work It. full time Con· sire to be more sue· Bookeeper for woman not essential. Pfrefer TYPIST wood tops, l3lO It. $250 bloodline. SJOO. SJ&.6107
M Ha cessrul. For an In · APPlYEilLY designer. Advertizing local ruldtnt. For Jn. Good salary to start 0B0.960-9574aft.7 m AKC Irish Setter pups,
lact: rs. user. terview appointment up helpful. Vaned resp terviewcallMrs.Duhl. Full time Job. For an· 2 Pair GE washers I. show or pet, all shots, CONNELL
CHEVROLET with the sole owner & We offer a good startlll· g ...., a self starting, quick WnltyM. T.,....Co. lerviewscall: d SlOO •-....,,,, . wormed. l2 wk!. ready founder, call Wesley N. ·.., 1-.-11.....;... 64"' •t I 0 5411-zzn ryers, .. ...,.,.., pair. wage and automatic in· t b i n k i n I m a t u re ..__. _..,... Call aft. 7. ~9574. to go. SlOO. S1 E. 18th . . '\.,. ll.1;1• t fl, :
' I " I ' \I f " \
Taylor. c~aae alter 6 mo. and woman. 631-4801 TYPIST I REC E P . Litton Coming top elec. Houst D, C.M. anytime. "'"';~~Co. opportunitiesforadvan· ••SlCllTAlllS** TIONISTP.R&du.nd de· stove w /microwa ve Cocker Spaniel AKC 546-1 200 cement. This ls a.n ex· 5..,....,.,,1y Xerox850/311u17.sttir v e Io pm en t de Pt. above asking S600 cash pupa, champ sired, 7 2111 San Joaquin Hills cellent chance to jomln _,,.. Personable, organ lied . • wk s . Buff . M I F .
MorefamlliesaregetUna NewportBeach ipetent lsting O.,.Coauluitor Type80$18,000 aelf-atarter. Varied 84669lhfterno<>M. 122s.szso PP. 151.4953 ' the cam~ "bui" this 644-49 0 :~rr~~d grow !i'th the P001'ER Ii RecpttnO/Fl.rlSl0,200 r e a Pons i b i I i t i e a . Gaffers & Sattler Elegant eves art 4PM.
1 year. l you have a new store In our expand· BRUMnELDDiv J:'~WtantOulnn SS /8Swpm. Excell. as stove, dble oven. AFGHAN Pu&. AKC. tJumperedlhl~'!,1not1 &et· Have somethin& you ind com"""Y· AMP,IMC. e nA&YEO. Ee. benefits &op(Ay. to ad· 150 rfect.645-8532 Top c i.·mp ra-.... ,·-. n~ us • HI t now want to .... II'. ""···1"ied • ..-· H a o-'"" -our 4020 Blrd1Est"l4 ., ..... An G•" RANG"' Bl I ,,. ll\D '" ....... Cl llied Ad .... ., ..... u, •• n .,...... .. ""' N rt-··-Jr vance. """".. a area. ""' "" ue. c ean Famous Ped. E1qws' ite ... , a 111 1 · adsdoilftll.842-5171. Weal Coast Re1lonal ewpo ,_,._, ree 548-5760 30". with griddle St2S , .. 1 ,;S200~ ..... ,...,.-·1 COMIJOl4 OUI s a I ea or c tor a $41-6102 ~ ""_., ..
.. · ' 11·1y P1·1at .................. ····:.: TIAMI!! ae c n t. r v I 0 rd e s--~ nrtST ~-K r t I "'"to Y• 8041 . II .t. --111 1 -":'r· St1t1·sl1·cal with word oxars enmore ros · ree ""--cootd.lnator. M111t have H .. vy phOnea, ccurale f I LS r ••••••••••••••••••••••• proven abllity to deal ty pin&. s horthand processorca111bllltyfor rerg, cul, runs Bla C'k purt male
At IUILDHS IM· w/C>Wldecontact •type help(ul . .a mo to at.art. Newport !Mach Real rfect · 963-646l neutered Lab, 4 yn, lov·
PAIT TIME EYDllS
We are preuntly afelt:lnf adult• wilh
ple•unt penooalltlta who would be
intbwted In worktna In Sales • Promotion
with Daily Pilot Carrlen 10 to IS fW1 old:
UnlimJted eal"llln1a a vaUable to riSM pmoo.
Hra: S:JOPM to l :IOPM, lfooday tbrv
Friday. Some Sat1.1rda1 naUabUtty. For
appolnt.mtftl. call: '42·4321. ult Cor Ben WUllacna.
POllUM wltll ill 50 +WPM. PreviouatX· Eat ate lnvutment New reh1gerator frost· es people, &ood watch _._ per preferred, but not~--&...u...;z.::z.:.__ Finn. Ml.mt be accurate leaa, cross top fr~ezer. do&. 646·9'71 or S41-ll80
.,.••• .... ,_ ... pt I*. For •Pit. call Gale SIC'f, LllAL • willing to roovert lo co Io r w bi le . SB 7 S. Neutered male eel ander ;, It.... al Eatab. Npt Center law CRT Word Proceasor. -""'"'a.:...=.cu.... ____ -1 r p
' Equa!Opportunlt)' 171414'M503 firm needa exper leaal Shorthand,dlctaphone &i Electric Stove: 30", dou· ~la~!!:.:~. art
!mploYft'll/F/VIH •W·D Hcretary wliood tn· aecretariaJ 1Jtlfl1 p,... ble oven. seU clean,
Avenidl>Ael'OIMrto In&. dlctaphont ft ferred.541-2111. 1otd. Like new. Stso. Fwallut IOH
RETIREE for beach &9 E. ahorthand tlllla. Real V ET E RI N A R Y IUo •••••••••• ............ .
p a r It: I n a I o t . · Eatat.t Utltatloa •fern· H~P1TAL Refrtaentor, very clean,
(11014f.14H, 14&-. lllwlt Oii land LM law. N.S. rillt Ume penoo a11tocle.fl"Oltll.50. ~ t Stcrtta~/ reeept)onltt Salar1 competitive lloolbl\ISattododeaa· • cha lien ~J . 1~---:ia=~---1
; PeoplewboneedPeople wWl bu.~ ~ Kllll Ina , batblo1 and IAH .. .., .... , •aha•· • Tb • ...... ..._ • -I bru1bt11 lnlae. W.f p•a-• .. i. • ORANGECOAITOAILYPl~OT J at••-~ ..... 0 ~. op pay, ....... _.,.._ &PY i...t ;1 ,._.Ill·
uow ..... YIT:i_-COITAMllA.CA.11121 •• OArt.YOIPR~RY ' ._.....,...._ .. Hut to•tt•l11 -.-.. ---=l..l~•ltJll!JMl
,.. --'YIW(.oyl• SBRVlCE -.iv ea:..=•• ::t. lo atll? ""''ln.~ ....._ w to_.? ._·-.. ---"· Aff IOUAL POllTWITY ,. ,: • ii·" a.._'"! , •• • - -••••••• .., ........... , ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .., "":" t& nU, D
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..................................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... WE PAY •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... . l\l~G I
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H 'KSPRING buuttrul nav> blue Lawnmo1trtt Top of line WANTED I , Yamaha SR2SOe, INO. TOP DOLL.AR OIAH•ICOUNTY'S "15 Ptuaeoc Sunrf, rt·nll um \'W Suptr Bl'ttlt, "111 Rl.ISt C1maro. PS. PB ~ ~ 1 ~1-~ .~~tR:!ct m•~:nh ~[1~1u~r:'!tt~~!.~::~,~~ ~r io'G~" · p~1011~u~Jt r=~ Tr~r to;,~,:t 1~~1t~~c~: :ii0C:1~11/:, FOi USED CARS ~T , :~v~f,'ifd rood Btst 1 ~~~f. =io~utoiz~~ :.~iet~e~ ·~11: ~~'~
sno ~~('( $;Wt th-I tahlr l'OUl'h i.l\•rro Kl}' new.._91195 $48.8798 -AlAMMAGHOt4 Q Po"ck t750 oeom <1131 l.om1 ~080 ~ \i "~' u~i·ll '.1
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'' 984 tlOJI l.uv('I) W1ckt'rch11n11in11 '••'••• J 9030 "74 Suzuki JI(), 5700 m1. POMTIAC/SUIAIU ....................... '13h bus oranlt' white ll13~Carol1n_
\\Ullft SVJ, (U~h uni) tbl $4$ Twin bfd mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Utfndtd forb ra1.~l'd 2480Hatbur Rlvd '77 Por.srbt'.911S Sunroor 1 pauen;er CM•rolet tt20
"?Ill .... I ~Ullll) honlt' t:h ild ' d\'hllht fl rr b I r k. p '"It s 1 0 : Bolt 1ur ror 40-SO ull. hers~~ w.01'21 C<>Sl'A M~A Sale:it servarr V1'1tn s11.ooor1rm I • m Ir h. or 14 t• x h11 U•l ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .o tn111nr ht-d. h11ht.s. t1l't's. camera llltt SU. All xlnt NRfl&du., Uatrall> loc s5100 1.__ T _, 9170 549°000 549°14$7 R C ._Ca $411 !200 S2400 • CMv. '12 MUSTSB.L &DllKl!I Must Ht' SIMJ(I cond 644 !l(8l I ar rt'flertor 15 ,.. ~. nPww oy arver.m . I 4!H rm
M ,, h .. •n) Ubl lli•d 646 1467 Ch,art1. many $0 ta ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE IUY Roll~ Ro)'Ct' BMW Por&chr 1964 1·ubr10 et. COYalitr
... Rtfr11. W1&$her. dryer. R<.:A 3 h I RDF 1''TRAVEL TRLR l~OJ moor while. cherry 1m11 rond '$8 VW Van All New Nrw J Car Wauon Air. ~ r• 1llr'"'' ~i.ih1 ~land <.itrl ' · whrtr l'olon111I ~tovr. IO\'ei>tat. roffer s o c anne i fllr rond f6SO 080 CLEAN CARS N r~ •h l't' • :1rll or tr.ilk P. I' 675 0451 N~ds Paint SlZS(I "
11 .tr.,, •. ,,,,m,llt'h l.rkt• \l)lt' drl!,St'r. rJb tbl, end tbh. & rn1st· wlm~un~o~t ~{1r!~ 54811Ml ANDTRUC.,S t'wport ii( 6406U4 or67565~M1kt· 644·9676.Afler6 !t~~rm1.n1i .. t1&cbtrr~k~s .. rapdwtor .. 11 "u't •"'' tn ari 14 huh'h, <lt'~k l'O<'ker It e nu 84 7 llS 32 or '. • • " '74 IMW 2002 • n .. M ~
111111.11< Ouh S110.111r SlllS tiH59'77 5317731 S30. FdA6A & USC11G ahpl A..toSt"ict,Parts '61 3561' Por1irhl· llllt '68VWConvert1blc S2ooo tilt wheel . more ! la~ 1 "r r n M ..rt J • prove man Ill uta l' & Acctuorin 9400 S•roof, 4 1pd. w t11un roof ori11 Good 080 Good Ttl'('S Runs SwN·theart • 14677, tl;. , 1 , !17 4 r 1 Ii 1• M (JUt't'll lh•rrvl~ n rouc h King !lltt' waterbed. 4 rafl S200 Sea s wine ••••••••••••••••••••••• I OWlll'C all ~··n 1rr re 1·ond SSOOO bsl work Good !179-6573. 751·9221 OHLY S7f95 ~ ... ~"·•~'· t1n~llmf' ll ~dt' 11 bt'tl 2 \f) old posthvad~~rd.Lakenew awveNQ 2lll9 Chev 3SO 4 bolt mlln, rnn" Ofll!lllal 1·ond1 544·_5,i9la.skforMar_l'. eve1 HOWARDCM•,,,.t w1•1·~1·111h If no DnJ>w1•r SI~ OB04ll0 5800 ~S,_§42 4606 -loat1, rower 9040 re bit, balanrl'd. $700 lro~. Very low mlleagt'. '80 Porsche 911SC Tiirga, Volvo 9772 Dove/Qua1J S~.
1•J .. ;1w kt>t•p lr) 1n11 Of"OC)t Sdt 8055 Pool table and JUkt' box ••••••••••••••••••••••• Turbo 400, reblt' w /5hift j 1222M DY 17 14•9711 1850 lo m1. all xtras 557 63S3. •••• •••. ••••••••••••••• N 1-:w PORT BEAC:tl ~'ti ~ .. 1 ,~ 111,"'· ~ Luv ••••,••••••••••••··~··• Both Xlnt concl S29S eu 12· Alum Gameflsher stick $350 Turbo 3.50. Dat1un 9720 orn1&tttsB46:ti48 #I VOLVODULEI 83).0555
.:,, ... i-. $KS Sh-l'lll'IM ,Apt SJ le, everylhan.g 675-~9 sk1ff.New,neverbeenin rebltw'shlftlt1tS250 All HIGHIUYER INORANt:~COUN'J'Yi
i l!f-1 ~ \l'l'OHY!157 571~ must 110. soru beds, T~s Green·stnpeddln. or()('c waterS4SO. I rirrn 714/549·7835 Top dullar.s for Sport' • SEE us FIRST!
L'l 1 1 Culiforn1t1 King Site chairs. 160 OBO all 640-032$.J7S9-5299 btforelOAM,.aft9PM Cars. llui:s l'JOlPl'f!o, S"'L11•,savic• Wt'haveagoodst'lerllon rl•ll l'tlUl'h U\l'""'' ht'd pallCI rum All Md '--ts SLS 'FXL' t rn. ' 9 . .... "'IW I; of N£W & USE IJ \Int o111l S:.'IMJ, l 1<11•1•11 c1 u11't1t y tlt'lllS G' VP e 1c1nr C•t<."3 " l'IJ 18 'llh mot"'Rovr..-,!!R 4f'tlarc,s. oodmo~t~ ldl x 15, 14 ~. Auw., !111 Currvra Turi:a AND LEASING Chl!vrolets!
1111\I i-.1,1 ihr~ \Int ""a r1l·e~ 114645110 5 USA mags, S7S Mtr w1 . • .«JUU eew ... arau t>run AskforlJ'('ll1l:H Owt·kSulc OVERS£A.1>DELIVJ.:RY t<indS;iu,.,1 h3l !iOlli u ·t) ~ · ror,!MxJ6",be\'ell!d,$35 <.:ull6'2·5LIM 1vers11I mounts. re JIMMARIHO 6450222 67:13329 EXPERTS
an) rm~ Purple queen vt'lvt•l \l'rsed chrome wheeli. VOLKSWA.Ga.
• ·•I 1 J 11 1n1 .1 K 1 n I( Ho"ts I060 bedspread\ $35 folding SUPa SHAIP S400 18711 Beuch Bhd Rolls Ro yu 9756 E"•Lttl"'E
\\ ... , r111·ct hu11t U" t·a 1_p1ab'" s10 u1 ~118 , ... G...... «11218 • ·····i·b1l~L·r~·rN··a.·~.1.·· -I; " .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• II ..,, ..., ... -"''" ..., lltfNTINGTON l>L'A('I' Ill~~ ......... --........... ,, 111
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COMMEll
CHEVROLET
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546-1200 11Jr ""'''•'t !AiO l~I ~mJllho;:,.~ ·~l'~mlo~n: 6stil~~tsE~~.~'i:Ja l\\nGMC~•'WC.Vll's sl~~i~~o:~.~.~~,>:~ 842-2000 ROY l!lti6c:us··!TaArboMrL~}A\ll
•1 S1•f.1 l\ ~ 111\tWJl, l!m Cht'~tnut ~eldinK 16 S161500 AY646 9000 YOUR EXOTIC 72 l>Jt 12\At \c·n rlt>an 6 46-9 303 540.9467
.! Jtu,1 "" l\••11 t•hr.. r.1.\ i·J ~ 646 9111 962 3119. cu~tom ownerstaterm rood SJoo ~82S8 ll WE MES> fRR CARVER M '80 Chevette 4 dr hatrhbk.
Jtr, lo m1 , o wner
transferred abroad
$4450 497· 19l6
tlri. ''141\l'llti;mrh"l h.in.<li. good dres~age Windsor pool tublr Yr26'Pact'Wahoo.xlntft:.h "·~o fo If-&... &IRm"'·"C "RS Xlnl Iran' ~1200nr r ROLLS·ROYCC 78264 GLJ6Km1lt'l>t'XI "11~1 b I uh t;.tS 7;~1 l Sl500 \Ct 6 old. exr au d('l'l'Sl) 11 or dtVt' Ownt!r r1n11nre .... I r -""" "' he~t lii1 2514 Jft Spm 1S40 J~mborn 14 rn t} J \ J 1 I IJea UI
", S.htl \\Jlnulllrt'""'r 831239ti r .c...wv . .,.,.,.""' •. i. tp ,tlllll IMPORTAl'li'T .1hu11 <IU ii t ...o-.-rnnd p PSS2729!1 pro!>pe<' ' f ' nrt(''· •• ,.,. """',,.,.n N n I S29 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1111 I> " ,...,~ a .. c~
l\llP hrlhr1t .! 111vh1 · Musical 760 138il,6JI0061 NcmCfo'TO ~EW~,TYr '1l'n·o kUUO rr11 '<Int ·12 1••. •dr •1·.•I ru"ltnJ IH011Sthold Goods 8065 · K 1 ~JIM• HJJ .mu 'liH Gt>IO c1osto svN..11.An "" " " • ... ''·tn I ,( ., '" 14.111 n11r ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnstrume..ts 808 .~CL1\SSIC.1!129• RF:ADERSAND M n1rs Saab 9 760 auto. a l, It hlw \hiJl'll r.,,, '1111
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I I ..... \'lit lull 5'1t• llrtll prf' .... ., 'IJnd S:l5 :l K S699. 645-1~5 Boats. Rfftt/ W• 'Ek 9738 69 Corona, run\ i:oud ''l'Jo't'U Jrn rm S.11 $22.'iO 831 0580 492-8500 hp r>lont•r "' t·.iw SKo 1 I . .. Motdo SSSOor best offer !>IX itl'Ji --P • '•1 'l:lfi \1 0(1 I hp rciul"r hit-. tlil•· Brand .Shl4 Paarl Snarl• Charter 9050 OVE I C 9933
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rnl'nl Jnd (l\tllrt•., fo r Pianos & OnJmts 8090 BOAT SLIPS FOR Rfo:NT AM FM 8 trk, 23K m1, 1 n t. Io m 1. S2•1.1111u TOP DOl.LAR $S SlliUll St>ll for r.r,oc.r us I d) p1n.,lrqllni: 1 l' S Pontioc 9965
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ll\dr.11111<' fh.11" II Bald141n L'pr1;:ht 32· &34 ' 6751!4S7 ..... ti.. 9709 JIMSLEMONS I , ,tral Jl lil1tN1 \1lS1 'iJ Lemans Sports Cpe. h~1 r\l\lini: ...ia t tt>n' 1'1ano Grl'at l'ond ' tJ42 46449SPM "'••'" IMPORTS \\I. Dunt• Hu~j!) "' SELL' I l4hile 14 blue lnl. ne14 h I 't h a r n sh ... Ut: VOfts 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''11nd Str~t J.o.u·~r mu't h -c mtrrhr'. Jlrr r)l'r~. · a _o.,_an) 1 1 ..,., .. \"ant to -01 S'ltp f11r 4S' 1·1-111fl"r"•r lll1 rt ~ ""'" ~,.,u P one _i;_, .. ,11 111 or i•ng carb, xlnl l'nnd. h l I I w•7 '01 .,. ·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·59 Buo ~ve Snnt,· '• "uh ,1,11 Sl""'J . s "m poo '
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hiunlH'' di~pl.i\ lil'f''. Piano, l'ha.~ f'ould~. uµ 21J 449 4'156 Lo m1. xlnl l'OOd. air. 8 trs. nm' ~.11n1 '' ,.,., till 12'i614.l:l 93tifl I fi!I CJm<H'O \lnl 1on1t I 1'168 Pontiar F1reb1rd ,11! )Uppht~ and m11rt: rrght consolt• ht'aut1ful I . 1 ·79 \'W l'11ml•n1hll• "'hi 14 e ~"'"'5 • \'
11 l J II ~31 •r.•. I 11r ··ftor t'• -,•o 831 .,....., W anter:t shp for :J6X 13 Irk. r rime cnnl I 1 I tra n~ 14 nr r ... , 1111' h 1 1 1 o n r • ...,1. l on\ H. dUto A orig
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"1UI' ll grand.mmtrond _,.,., u .. •. r. offer 552-1256 IMW 9712 & hnmhuo :L'1t"~I 1111 "'d" 1·1a--.1f1a .. J1(•.clc11l ""ll I llf1·11m1· m1·mh1·r .. h1p pp962.0070 Npt oval sup or rent. ft~ ,., ' ~· '" ·' ft~ C ass1r1edAds &12-5678 'lllt 1.inlll1t· .. SROO • I i.mall boat S250 'ii Ondge \'an 6. auto.••••••••••••••••••••••• lmn1.11 ~I i .'inu
•11,3 ti!llil• tSpori11tg Goods 8094 67J.44U rustom SL500 or bst ofr ",. :'llM Cir llt-.1! 1151 62l1t Autos, Ntw 9800 Autos. H•w 9800 Autos, M•w 9800 1 "T'.t~~ RACQUET BALL j,;_;,jT;bl~~·x·~~~;~j~;jjl'°at!• ~ & 675 lllOOS .. ·C~l:;ves (';~~~ ~t~~dr1!:~~I \~ r~1,~: ,
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llJOI hn SJn Joaquin "ood brown relt. mov Siu 9080 "' $ mainl lull \('r\l(t' n· r
h I lam1h nwmhrr,htp 1ng must sell S4so ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must !>ell7Z Dodge\'an. " ' rorf!, ,1\,111 '•'14 t•n•• /mportantnewsregardt'ng.· -----. ·1 "·" · 1 16' Regalia 8S hp Merr cusl int . ~ood rond . ,. I till• t 1111 <ltJn l>li;i,phtr~ 5.52!16<ri OBQ_!7J.7586 ;67>03S4 runs & ,;mks great: nel4 eng.CB.6r)I sltck 41 tWNl m1 .1111<1 I'S l'H 1•11ll l.11n1"' l.1ltli· ,Wo,h1•r l>rH•r. Sltltl I s1800 S4S l283 S2200 645 fta!O \(' all cont: 31i 11011
/1·11 th (llll\C1(1• Llmp1·r ShPll s:rno I MEWWETSUrT SADDLB.iu .. I( 51h :!:19'•
't1 " th .1111 1111 11 \\ .111.·r hell S250 ORO Bodv Glove. SI L, S7S or ransporlaffon Avtos WCl!ftd 9590 I IMW '81 MBI 380SB.
\. • 1 "oudfum :!11.ik fl4:ill:l!l3 · bestofrer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28402Marl{uentl'l'k"'1 Brant! n<'" J<han!'<'CI fum ,1~1t1,1"t'I'1111 11r IR\l'liEGotscu:e 536-91132 Campen.5*/ WEPAYTOPDOLLAR '11ss1onV1t:JU drsrirn. 1411111• \\ \\-hltc•
"''" >11i il~•I \H.\IRERSlllP Rent 9120 ror t op used ars · AVERYPKW' IPalht'r ~unroof. ll)ade<I 1111 ,, .. ·,111,• t11hr.< SlltMI 1>44SJ19 ----••••••••••••••••••••••• roreij!n. domestics or IEXIT5F'WY 1 wtth '"lr:i.• •",t.100 Pi t .. " urrboard·S'7" Round 10•2 Camper Four Star rlassirs If your rar 1s '" -~ ...... ~:.'. 11,1dial arm ,,1w. Hlark & pin. New Hardly rid w refrt~ernt.or & stove. rxtra clean. see us 83 1-2040 495.4949 party, 97!1-SDl" krly-. :.'>7 1,,;7 Ul'l'kt'r. 10· ~lnl rnnd den Lots of colors. p 0 r 1 a poll y . A 11 FIRST! Clo~ed§unday~ •
71 3000
d111 t.tl1lt-,..._fl rh;ilr.. up t. aw 11 mo" l' r ( r on l Serious uycr.s 55fi·t724 Sleeps ti In excellent 'lnvent'rv 1mm.11• SISM offer Pl'
1'.t1ll'hh r 11.1111.,h l4aln111 1 $22!'> &H 531!1 s ingle bf in Custom Butane. Queen size bed. ~ $1 000 000 total 1•qu1p. lru & ' 1,
nph1 lo11ff1·1 l!Orn l 1·11nd. 1hrnw. SIOO 1,Jwnedger. llotstlck._ condition. $900 Call k ....
0
7606776 Solt~•"""' 54!1 I:~\~ $70 Bnlh rerond REMINGTON . Model between lOam Spm OF .... EWBMW'S
" 'fli! l!ltK' Ml·n·rdt•' Bt•nt, 4 Simmons hult•" h··d ~01.1 II-Ii 9905 ~7r1 }2 1~aug~ f ~ch. 6311657 Sales and Leasmi: Jl ''>I, 1 rq ~nod l'on1l.
hkt> nt'l4 mo Enrl tahlt• j Fluo~5Cfftt LicJf1b S~9S ~~Re~ ofrer l~:;I '718' Cabover w13 burner Iii In or-. C_.ty , compel1live price~ ~;, S2300 S'i8111~aft 5
6. l:irnJ'. \i'i S..'il !Ml7J If h t t 8' 2 b lb stove. lCe box. porta -~llenl service and 11art' II( ou pu · u s. ~·127Saf'terSJ:>m potie. :.leeps 4 S450 292SHarborBl\'d '77 2400 $9700
ESTATE SALE
s.pt. 24/25/26
407 GU,, J..nohfim
:-O:r \1 a1owlaa Oran1ZI.'
Tim•: Sam GarGCJf
H~8:30 am
\nlQ t uphnl. l>m1n~ IJ
till-.1 1; nl't>dlt•1lt c hr' r h · 1 1 1 ti 1 .. ,
Wrdllt'~oOO. Pal )(la~~
l' ~ Coll rrt ion " U.
\ 10 .I II :I fo' r I~ (i 0 ll d
f11rn 11uri• V.Jrbll' lop
tblc•, l,ols or lo<1b &
hr 1l' hrnck
Htlttt Howland.
Roll T11p Desk. bt.ind
new Sl:?.S
515 31l5
Ortrn1o1l black chnint( tbl
'w br:•~~ arrent11. •I lac
qurr match1n11 t•hrs
SMlO. Brn.1111 new rrom
model ~311S
o•:SIGNERCOUCHES.
4 hr•nd new cl.IStom 6 parson It& sofas In btot>o lb~ISf. small ct• p1ttc print Spec11J ordered, never used.
Ca II f110J48.34M for
~I!..
e'C'l'llenl for l?Uragc or 546 9490 COSTA MESA dept c:o;id rood fH2 ;295 ~hop II ave so al SLS ea Sto~. RHtourant, ---979-2500
963 400t lar 8095 8' Camper Shell, ice box. __ _____ Good selectton or pre 79 450St
1-:nc} rloped1a 1981 un
openrd Sl65 114 as S375 I
Junror Bntanntra S10.
Gre at Book sr l .
Ch1ldcran S50
••••••••••••••••••••••• sink, tbl. cpl $175/besl viously owned BMW & S32.SIXI
BEAUTY SHOP equip ofr S48-431S other fine car.s rn ex ~ 63i0
ment and fixtures for rellent condltJon sale ln cludrs '81 J(J(~D. met jlr). 'un
roor. gry lthr 1111. 'JOO mt.
fi73 Jffi9 pp 8.11·3643
Hydraulir chair s ,
ha1rstyltng stations.
mirrors. hairdryers. Nr~port Rearh Tennis s hampoo bowls and
Club F'amtl) Mmbshp lounges. display cases. SJS.0756
S 7 s 0 . 1 n c I t r a n s r all supplies and more Motoriud _.,, t 140
I 723 8093 Call 631·9754 or, aftt>r 6. •••••••••••••••••••••••
<penme Weddml( gown call 898~_ Puch Mo-Ped. 2 yrs old.
& \'etl Size IOor 12. Sl75 , Radio, Low mi Yellow. $325.
642 5872 HIFI, Steno 8098 Xlnt cond. 642-0046 __
Y A C H T C L U 8 ••••• • ••••••••••••• •• •• Motorcvdts/
MEMBERSHIP Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr · Scoot.rs 9 I 50
One of Newport 's rinest wrnly. Free delivery. •••••••••••••••••• .. •••
facilities Save S600 from $148. 646-1786 '74 Honda Motorcycle 19K
normal membership ONTVdecoderbox,lotal· miles. Perfect cond.
Cc es Contart Mr. ly legal. $12.5 installed 1000.~3758.
Jackson. 714·540-7.f!O _ _!'..{antenna. SJ&.6467 "17 Husky 380. '80 Honda
T o m m y A r m o u r loots & MarW lll5S. Best offer. MacGregor woods & put· Ii
ten. Colltctors items lt1 p•.t '81 k A ... K"" 1 ..... 20 F 8»-~?3'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• awas-J a:. ... .
rom · ----~,... 9010 miles, brand new. Paid
Womens 10 s~ bike. llke ••••••••••••••••••••••• SlOOO eskinl '900. Call
new S.SO, AnUQue rattan National Children's Ora., ~541-•or~. che1t~.857-4UM non-profit needs your CadillaC1to<Jo.Carta
Ntw full aiJe bed.I. eo~· cl.ft of boa'ta. ctn1 l~nd Wbateverdae Fad
s*tt. 2·pcs. • *lll1> etc Ubem tu oeoU( Roll 'tma«U.manet ~1_ a'!~Ddaw 1uard1, tloD advan~. (2U) •~aClmn.dAd ..DH!t 'M• -C1llffO!r!MH fll
--·
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us lhf opportunity
to consider the purchase
or tradt·ln of )'OUt dean
Porsche Chetlt with Us
Today!
We also.have a lease
company that lt>asP~
other makes of autos,
trurlts and vans For ad
dillonal mformauon on
leasing please call
71419?2-lZIO 714 661·9611
For a good deal and good
a rter sales service see
& CREVIER
• 176 280C •
Xlnl cond Pvt Pt}
~59711
MG 9742 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'78 MIDGET
23.000 mi, AM.FM Cas~
k4oo call675 S7!l6
MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES-SERVICE-U:ASINo '70 MGB GT. lo ml. 11200
208 w. 1tl. SANTA ANA or best Dys. 834·5107.
71 4J83S.3171 arter 7pm 673-~31 ask
CLOSED SUNDAY for Mike.
nt' Most bdH!tcj Optl
P.tOfYOlr ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMW ~Or '72 Opel GT: New paint,
1 ___ ,.~le clun. 4 spttd, 1m/fm.
---S0/080. 96().8357 McL°':~W!! "13 OPEL MANTA: runs • =. .......... , iood S'700
1l14J SU.SJJJ i----~.,;,.._...;;:;-'4
rtad what )'OU wu t in
Dllb Piiot Cl91lfieda .•
...,. __ ....__ ____ .. _.
The High Cost
of Waiting ...
198 1 Coupe O! VJltt
--
1979
BASE PRICE
$11 ,385
+
1980
BASE PRICE
$12,899
1981
BASE PRICE
$14,345
1982
BASE l'RICE
$15,249
Ove1 the 1111 3 ye1r1 tilt tlt9f price ot a Cacllllac Coupe cle VIiie 1111 I~
""'" br mort tllan 11ans1
The tllgh cost of w1111no 11 un1011un11e .but 1111 • lacr
Al Neber's C10J111c, ou1 year·end 011coun11on 11l rem11n1ng 19811. ooupl
eel with low 13 8% a p 1 0 MAC financing, m•~• 011r cart d<>vbly allrec-
llvt
Oottn'l 11 make stnH IO buy yc1111ntw1891 Cacllllac loelty btlore 11'1 loo l11t•
13.8% 1.p.r. financing ends Wtdne1d1y.
•
• • • • •
Ylll HlllTlll llllY PIPIR
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER ::n . 1981 ORANGE COUN r Y CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
ass; ~,
' '
Huntington WWI veterans' group fades away
By PIDL SNEIDEBMAN
.... Delly ........
For the Huntington Beach bar·
racka o( the Veterans of World
War I, time has not been an ally.
The group, founded In 1980,
quickly became a locaJ fixture.
Members organized Armistice
Day services by the city's war
m emorial, volunteered at the
Veterans Administration
Hospital in Long Beach and
Rugby
Union
bombed
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP)
-A bomb exploded today in a
building housing the Eastern
Rugby Union's offices, hours
before the group was to field a
team against the touring South
African Springboks, the targets
of recent anti-apartheid pro-
tests.
There were no reports of in-
juries. '
Meanwhile, in New York City,.
lawyers for the state asked a
three-judge federal appeals
court to r ever se a district
court's decision and block the
game, at least temporarily.
While the blast from a "high
explosive device" at 1: 17 a.m.
left only minor damage at the
headquarters, damage in the ad-
joining offices of a dairy pro-
ducts company was estimated at
$50,000, said police inves!igator
Jam'es McGrath.
Radio station WWWD said a
woman telephoned at 1: 10 a.m.
to say a bomb would go off soon
"downtown.'' Disc jockey Dale
Lane said the woman hung up
without identifying herself.
Thomas Selfridge, president of
the ERU, a co-spon.sor of the
Springboks' tour, said his offices
sustained about $50 worth of
damage.
Glass blown by the blast lit-
tered State Street in front of the
row of renovated buildings
known as Canal Square.
McGrath said lbe bomb had
apparently been placed in a
closet 21h feel from the rugby of·
fice in an area accessible to the
public during business hours.
As ked if there had been
threats against him or the South
African players , Selfridge
replied, "No, there never have
been. It's contrary to the protest
thing and this may or may not
be related."
Fearful of a riot, New York
state offi cials tried to stop
tonight's scheduled rugby match
pitting the Springboks, South
Africa's national team, and the
ERU squad. Schenectady is 10
miles from Albany.
Selfridge said the game would
go on tonight in Albany's
Bleecker stadium despite the
bombing. Police said they were
protecting the South African
players.
Turkish j e t
crash k ills
I 00 soldiers
ANKARA , Turkey CAP) -A
Turkish Air Force F-10• jet-
fighter crashed today into a
bivouac area prepared for an
upcoming NATO exercise in
western Turkey, and reports
from journalists on the scene in·
dicated at lea.st 100 soldiers on
the ground were killed. All the
victims were believed Turkish.
Turkish military sources said
65 bodies already bad arrived by
helicopter at hospitals in Istan·
bul and that Gen. Haydar Saltik,
commander of the lat Army,
rushed to the site of the crash.
The military sources, asking
not to be named, said three
Istanbul hospitals had been put
on alert to accept the dead and
wounded.
The sources sai<l that it ap-
peared all the casualties were
Turkish.
The plane hit a bivouac area
near the town of Babaeakl about
30 miles from the Greek border.
Reporters who reached the re-
glon of the crash aaid the
American-made F-UM crashed
into the bivouac area al about
noon. Allied troops bad not ar-
rived at the scene of the ex~clle
-code-naiqed "Display
Determlnadoa fl."
Troops from the UnJted States,
Brltatn1 Greece, Italy, and
Portuaaa were to come ubore
tor tbt exerclae In an am,-
phJblout ~Thursday. . .. . ..
participated ln the city's annual
Fourth o! July parade.
There were pot luck lunchee
with the women's auxiliary
every month, first ln the Boys
Club building on Yorktown
A venue, tben in the M asonlc
Temple on Palm Avenue.
But time baa taken its toll.
Today, the average aee of the
nation's World War I vets la 86.
Of the Huntington Beach bar·
racks' 45 charter memben, 34
are known dead. The fat.e o( five
other charter membera la UB·
known.
This year, the group bas main-
tained a membership llat ol 24,
but many of these men are ln
convalescent homes and
hospitals or have moved from
the ci~y.
Dunng 1981, the group con-
tinued to bold monthly meetings,
Sandra Day O'Connor has been unanimously confirmed by the
Senate to become the first woman justice of the Supreme Court
She'll 'be busy'
Sandra O'Connor confirmed 99-0
WASHINGTON CAP) -San·
dra Day O'Connor, confirmed by
a unanimous Senate and the first
woman justice on the U .!\.
Supreme Court, promises to be
"very busy, very fast" after she
is sworn in this week.
There is no clear indication,
however. bow she will vole on
social and constitutional issues
that come before the court.
The 51-year-old Arizona ap-
peals judge won a 99-0 endorse-
ment in the Senate on Monday
as the 102nd justice in the 191·
year history of the nation's
hlehest court. She will be youngest of the nine members.
Mrs. O'Connor will be sworn
in for her lifetime position in
ceremonies Friday afternoon at
the Supreme Court building. But
because the ceremony will be
conducted in the courtroom
it.self, the recording for posterity
will be limited.
"As Is the court practice,
there will be no TV, no photo·
graphs and no tape recordings,"
court s pokes man Barrett
McGum said in a printed state-
ment released today.
Reporters and artists will be
admitted to the ceremony, u
they are for all court sessions.
There will be no public ad-
mission, however , except by in·
vitatioo.
Two "picture opportunities"
are scheduled shortly after the
15-minute ceremony.
McGurn said official court
photographers would be on hand
but added, "I know of no plan to
have any photograph taken in
the courtroom during the
ceremony.•' 'See SUPREME, Pare A%)
76 more protesters
arrested at Diablo
SAN LUIS OBISPO <AP> -
Seventy-six more protesters
were arrested today at the
Diablo Canyon nuclear power
plant, brin1lng the el1bt-day
total to 1,4'1.
The aITeat.s came at the main
gate and in the ruiged back
country around t he double·
domed plant, which is prepartna
to load nuclear fuel in the next
few days followtne a teat license
approval Monday b y the
Nuclear Re1ulatory Com-
mission.
In addition, aever,1 small
boata today launched the firat
sea assault on tbe plant ln
aeverald~.
"We want to resume lancllDa
people near. the reactor to atiow
b ow vulnerable it h t o
sabotace," 1a1d Mart l!vanott,
apoteeman for the Abalone Al·
Uance, a coalition of some eo an-
ti -nuclear groups which ia
sponsoring the effort to blockade
the plant.
Anti-nuclear groups also COD·
tend the atomic plant la unsafe
because of a nearby offshore
earthquake fault.
Flfty·elght people were arrest·
ed on treapaaain1 cbar1ea at the main 1at.e today u they tried to
block about a do:r.en buses and eo
to 80 ean carrytnc conatructioo
worken to the '2.3 billion plant.
Pact.Ile Gu le Electric Co.,
which be1an buildinl the plant
oa the central Califoml1 cout in
1'78, said it would lpore the
proteat. and "immediately"
ala.rt prepartna the reactor to re-
ceJve -tuel ln hOpea ol 1tart.lna It
up for lo•·power t"Un1 within
two•eeb.
Shortly alter the NRC ap·
proved teatins Mond11,
.01-. DIA,BLO, .... Al>
attended usually by flve or six
members.
Finally, on Sept. 8, tbeae re-
maining members voted to re-
tire the charter of the ffunt-
lngton Beach Veterans of World
War I, Barracks 2360.
"It was an organization that
was doomed to die," obaerved
Harry M. "Cap" Sheue, the only
active charter member In the
barracks at the lime of its dis·
solution ... Every year that
passed, more of the World War I
vets passed away. That's what's
happened to us."
At 86, Cap Sheue is something
of a local legend for his work BE
a pioneering sports coach. The
athletic field at Huntington
Beach Hlgh School Is named for
him.
In 1960 he was one of the men
rounded up by the late Uoyd
Huddleston to form a local bar·
racks of the Veterans of World
War J organization.
According to Sbeue, Ulla group
was formed by World War I vet.I
who felt they were not getUne a
fair shake from the American
Legion and Veterans of Foreicn
Wars, which were dominated by
World War II returnees.
The barracks' first com -
< SH VUERANS, Pa1e A%)
Ex-Mesan sought
One of two girls dies. after shooting
ay F&EDEBICK SCHOEMEID..
ot•Dellr ..........
A ground and air search con-
tinued today in the Cleveland
National Forest for a former
Costa Mesa man and Irvine gun
club employee believed
responsible for a weekend shoot-
ing that has left a Lake Elsinore
girl dead and another with head
injuries.
The object of the search is
Thomaa Francis Edwards, 37,
described by Lt. Wyatt Hart of
the Orange County Sheriff's
Department as a ·'mountain
man" and "gun buff."
Kelly Cartier, 12, and Vanessa
lberri, also 12, were shot Satur-
day by a man who, according to
witnesses, stopped his pickup
truck, called to the two girls,
then fared at them with a small
caliber weapon. The incident oc-
~urred on a trail near the Blue
Jay campground, located about
20 miles east of San Juan
Capistrano.
Miss lbeni died at 8:05 p.m.
Monday at Mission Community
Hosplt.al in Mission Viejo. Miss
Cartier, who underwent s urgery
for the head wounds she suf-
fered, was described as "doing
fine" today by Hart.
Hart said lnvestigatora believe
that Edwards may be hiding in
the mountainous forest terrain
that Includes vast portions of
eastern Orange County and
areas in Riverside and San
Diego counties.
He said a decision to "re-
evaluate" whether the search
should continue would be made
early this afternoon.
Between 12 and 16 deputies
are searching the forest on the
ground, covering dirt roads and
trails on foot and with four-
wheel drive vehicles. Members
of the sheriff's Aero Squadron, a
volunteer group of reserve
deputies, are assisting in the
search from the air.
Harl said Edwards is con-
sidered "armed and
da~gerous."
Shuttle flig ht
d e lay seen
due to s pill
CA PE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) -Highly toxic fuel spilled
while being loaded Into the
s pace s huttle Columbia's
thruster rockets today, loosening
as many as 200 of the
spacecraft's protective tiles and
raising the possibility of a delay
in its second mission.
"The tiles are actually falling
off the vehicle," said a NASA
SOQrce in Washington. "It is go-
ing to affect an area larger than
originally estimated, maybe as
many as DI tiles."
The ship bas more than 30,000
tile6 to protect it from the heat
of re-entry.
No Injuries were reported
when a fuel line connector
Ibaltunctioned and three to four
gallons ot the toxic fuel spilled.
The nitrogen tetroxide
destro~ or eats out the bondin'
mat.enal, the NASA source said.
The area affected la directly
under the crew cabin, just below
the fueling ports of the forward
reaction control system. That
system is a cluster of small
thrusters that steer the sblp in
orbit.
Jim Kukowski, a NASA
spokesman in Wuhhurton said
earlier that the lnitiaCesumate
wu that about 25 of the Wea
were damqed and would have
to be replaced.
KukOW11ki said offtclals "don't
know yet" if the Ulea could be
replaced whlle the sbuttle la on
the launch pld. If not, the abut·
Ue mlcht have to be returned to
lta hantar or the Vehicle Al·
aembly BulldiJl1, whlcb would
almost certainty delay. the
acbeduled Oct. 9 launch, ofllciala
· said.
SOUClff JN SHOOTI NGS
Thomas Pranc1s Edwards
Th e manhunt is b e ing
coordinated from both the
,sheriff's headquarters in Santa
Ana and a U.S. Forest Service
fire station at El Cariso Village
a few miles from where the
shooting occurred. The Forest
Service is assisting deputies by
providini maps, technical in·
formation and keys to gates.
said fores t spokesman Carl
Corey.
Corey said camp registers
also are being inspected to de·
termine If Edwards had been
slaying in campgrounds in the ,
forest.
Hart said the search of the
forest will continue "until we
are convinced we've covered it.,,
Hart saJd that a record check
of Edwards' past revealed that
he served a prison sentence in
Mary land on robbery·related
charges.
CSee SEARCH, Page A2)
DIES FROM WOUNDS
Vanessa lberri, 12
l:V ST~LE CO 'DITIO.V
Kelly Cartier. 12
Russ s eek 'open'
dialo g u e w ith U .S.
UNITED NATIONS <AP) -
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko told the U.N. General
Assembly today that the
Kremlin wanted "normal busi-
nesslike relations with the Unit·
ed St.ates" and not confronta-
tion.
Gromyko, who meets Wednes-
day with Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr .. mixed
criticism of Reagan administra-
tion policies with an offer to
open a dialogue with Washington
"in order to seek mutually ac-
ceptable solutions to con·
t.roversial problems.
"But we are not begging for
such a dialogue, we are propos·
Ing it," the Soviet foreign
minister told the 155-nalion
world body.
"For our part, we reaffirm
'once again -and the U.S.S.R.
delegation is autjorized to say
it from this rostrum -that the
Soviet Union has not sought, nor
is it seeking, confrontation with
the United States of America. It
would like to have normal busi·
neaslike relations with the Unit-
ed States," Gromyko decl~.
The Soviet forelp minister
accused the Rea1an admlnillra·
tion, In the name of reusertinl'
"American leadership" ln the
world, ot "wblppln1 up the arma
race," preuurtna NATO allies
into acceptlnc "mllltarl1Uc
achemea alleb to their ln·
. tereata," and undermlnin1 ''the
baalc prlnclplH of Sovlet-
American relations worked out
earlier as a result of tremendous
effort."
Haig sat impassively in the
Assembly hall as Gromyko ob·
jected to the ·'setting up of a
wide network of military bases
and the stationing of American
troops on foreign territories."
In the Western hemisphere,
Gromyko said, "hostile criminal
intrigues against Cuba on the
part of the United States. which
have of late been stepped up,
must cease."
DRAIGI COAST llAIHIR
Low clouds , fog late
ni g ht through mid ·
morning hours. Mostly
sunny afternoons. Lows
tonight in 60s. Highs
Wednesday, low 70s al
beaches, low 80s inland.
llSIDI TllAY
Dan Poatorinf mten the
R.a m I ' co n t rover• JI
IWeeplf~. WIU tMJI aign
lrim, or not? See Page Cl.
11111
AmLemlft .. = .... : ................ ............ et ......... .......... e :-.. CW§CI ==--~
:.:._ M
••
Al • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuetday. September 22, 1981 .
Los AngBks experiences 'holt~st summer ever'
By The Attoda&ed Preti
Summer 1neaks out of town
undl'r cover or fo1 and low
clouds toniaht after another day
of 80·dearee weather, teavlna
Southern California with tts hot·
lel>t summer l'Ver.
fo'or the past 311'11 months, the
DVl'rage high te mperature lo
Los Angeles has s urpassed the
previous high set in 1883, accord·
mg to private weather statisti·
cian Ken Levitt.
"It'• absolutely the warmest
ever -by far, the moat spec·
t•cuJar I've ver a en," Levitt
said.
. From June tbrou1h mid ·
September, the aveu1e peak
temperature in Los Anaeles wu
86.9 dep-ees, beating the record
established 98 years ago by 1.1
deareea. Levitt also said that
when the mercury only rose to
79 on Sept. • and 5, Los Angeles
fell only four days short of
breakjn" the record of 88 con·
· Cap .. Sfleue holds orrgmal charter document issued to l/untmgton
[jcach Veterans of World War I . u.nth gold stars beside names nf
cil!ceased members
From Page A1
secuUve days of 80·degree-plus
hlaha, also •et ln 1883.
Temperatures have been
hlaher than normal throughout
the summer, but June -whlch
was an average 10.3 dearees hot·
ter than normal -took the
greatest credit for selling the
best record, Levitt said.
No letup in the heal is in sight
and the National Weather
Service predicted the high today
' and Wednesday in Los Angeles
would be in the mid·80s despite
overc11t s klea throuch tbe
mornln1.
It's bttn a smoggy aummer,
too, and the South Coaat Air
Qualtty Mana1e ment Diatrict
has drawn plans lo cut the
number of first·staae smoa
alert in half in time for the 1984
Olympics by shifting the em·
phasls from an attack on
nitrogen oxides to an uaault oo
ozone.
Thomas Helnsheimer, AQMD
chairman, said Monday the dis·
o.lty ................
Ollie and Lillian Dowhen. of Fountain Valley headed Huntington
Beach Veterans of World War I barracks and Its women's auz-
1l1ary for past 12 years
trlct would coo~ntrate on re-du c in 1 em salooa of
hydrocarbons, w ch react wtth
nUroaen oxldet aod aunU1bt to
form ozone. Hoy.'ever, because
strategies to redice ozone make
it more difficult to control
nitrogen ox.ides, he said, efforts
to attack the ,urogen oxide
problem would be.delayed.
heinshetmer also said acien·
lific evidence s uggests that ex·
cess nitrogen oiddes in the at·
mosphere actually help to
reduce owne levels .
But state Air Resource. Board
spoke1man Bill Sessa ulled
Helnahelmer's strate1y "a
throwback to the antl·smoa ·
philoiiophies of years ago." He
said nitrogen oxides reduce
ozone when first emitted then
drift downwind where they ln
crease ozone level"
Helnshelmer said 936 first·
stage alerts were r ecorded in
the district in 1980
Bonill trial d e layed
on lawyer question
By The Aseoclated Prell
The trial or Freeway Killer de·
fendanl Williarn G. Bonin has
been delayed another month
because a Superior Court judge
decided lo allow Bonin more
time to decide who his attorney
should be.
Judge William Keene Monday
reversed his ruling of a week
earlier that private attorney
William Charvat could not
represent Bonin, who is charged
in the sex·torture slaying of 1.2
young men and boys between
August 1979 and June 1980.
Ins tead, Keene ordered
.Charvat and Bonin's court·
appointed counsel Earl Hanson
as well as the djefendant to pre-
pare themselves for trial Oct. 19.
··on the 19th of October we're
going to start thls trial. . .in one
of three ways," Keene said.
"Under Plan A, Mr. Charvet,
if you desire to come in, we will
From Page A1
commence the trial. Plan B is,
Mr. Hanson, you will start the
trial if Mr Bonin wants you as
attorney of record. Plan C, Mr.
Bonin, is that you be prepared to '
act as your own lawyer. Mr.
Hanson will be appointed ad·
visory counsel in the event that
does occur."
Keene also ordered that Bonin
remain in Los Angeles County
jail until the case is decided. He
had been scheduled for trial Fri·
day in Orange County Superior
Court. where he is charged with
seven murders three of them
duplicated in the Los Angeles
case.
Since 1972, the bodies of 44
young men and boys have been
found dumpe d nude n ear
Southern California freeways,
h-ence the Freeway Killer tag,
but investigators say they may
not all be related.
DIABLO ARREST S. • •
California Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr., a foe of the plant,
petitioned a federal court in
Was hington l o reverse the
NRC's dedsion. Brown said the
NRC "has n·ot satisfactorily re·
solved the outstanding questions
of seismic safety. security,
emergency preparedness and
Three Mile lsland·related safety
matters."
loaded .38 automatic pistol. ..
Sheriff's officials identified
the m an as Douglas Winchel . 25,
of Vista. An alliance spokesman
said Winchel was protesting, but
insisted. '"He is not one of our
people. . . He was just hang·
ing out ··
From Page A 1
VETER ANS' GROUP FADES AWAY. • •
Carl ZicheUa, a spokesman for
the alliance, said of l.t).e federal
decision, "If there's any change,
it's just more determination. We
are going to do everything possi·
ble to stop this plant before
nature does it for us."
SUPREME. • •
Chief Jus tice Warren E .
mander was the late Arne
Jensen. Other charter members
included former State Sen. John
A. Murdy. clothing store owner
.Jlarney Fleischer, b,anker H. F.
·'Rampton and Col. Ted Davis. an
American Inruan.
The women's auxiliary, which
now has been disbanded as well,
was formed in 1961.
According to Cap Sheue. one
of the organization's main goals
was to press for more govern·
ment aid for its members .
"The World War I vets were
the only veterans of any war in
our hi story who r eceived no
benefits." Sheue contends.
"There was no GI Bill for us,
no money for schooling. I went
back to college and never got a
dime from the government. And
we had no low-interest housing
loans like the World War II
veterans got."
Sheue says the world War I
vets did not win a legislative vie·
lory until 1979, when they were
granted health benefits through
Veterans Administration
hospitals.
The retired Huntington' Beach
coach was drafted in 1918 while
attending Baker University in
Kansas. He fought in the Alsace·
Lorraine region of France.
"World War l was the worst
war in history," Sheue main·
tains. "It was fought the way no
other war was fought in the
tr e nc hes . Someti m es the
trenches were onJy a couple hun·
dred yards apart. The slaughter
was something terrible .
"It rained all the time. We
were warung in water up to our.
knees. The food was lousy. 'fhe
whole thing was. lousy. The nu
killed more people than the bat·
ties did."
Sheue was knocked out of ac·
tion by chlorine gas that wafted
out of the trenches from an
earlier battle. He spent nine
months in various hospitals.
Ollie Dowhen. a Fountain
Vallev resident and member of
the Huntington Beach barracks
since 1964, served for 18 months
beginning in 1917 . also in
France.
Dowhen. who helped move
heavy artillery equipment. re-
calls that World War I soldiers
received Umited rations
"We ate canned salmon for
over a week." he recalls . "We
House raffle off afte r a rre st
Woman indicted on ch.arges of promoting. a lottery
constitutes a lottery. the rarne to Dec 19.
had it stewed ... fried .
"We had a kitty to buy our
own food. We'd put money in the
kitty every pa.y day. Then we'd
pay the people in the field for
things like fresh vegetables."
Dowhen says his pay for over·
seas duty was $44 per month.
During the past 12 years,
Dowhen has served as com·
m ander of the Huntington Beach
veterans barracks. His wife
Lillian headed the auxiliary dur·
ing these same years. Both say
they will miss the friendships
that evolved from the veterans
group.
Cap Sheue has been keeper of
the framed charter document is-
sued to the Huntington Beach
Veterans of World War I bar·
racks. He has pasted a gold star
beside the name of every de·
ceased charter member.
Sheue says the charter docu·
menls for the veterans group
and its auxiliary will be kept by
the Huntington Beach Historical
Society.
"I think all of us felt kind of
sad," he says of the decision lo
disband. "It's kind of like going
over the hill. We've reached the
peak, and now we're going over
the hill .... "
Several hundred protesters re·
m ained at the site today, their
ranks thinned by the many ar·
rests. The blockade had jlotten under way Monday with dem·
onstralors partially blocking
Avila Road, which goes past the
plant's main gale.
As a mile·long convoy of buses
loaded with PG&E workers
rolled by, deputies used choke
holds on demonstrators to clear
the path. No injuries were re·
ported. The demonstrators have
had little s uccess with the
blockade s ince the first day
when workers had to be carried
out of the plant in helicopters.
Undersheriff Arnie Goble said
his men moved into the rugged
terrain around the plant to flush
protesters out or the wooded
areas, where the demonstrators
could gain access to the
facility's outer fence.
Despite alliance requirements
that protesters undergo eight
hours or training in non·
violence, San Luis Obispo Coun·
ty sheriff's Sgt. Leon Cole said
one of Monday's arrests in·
volved a man carrying "a fully
Burger will administer Mrs .
O'Connor's oath of office. and
White House officials said Presi·
dent Reagan may attend the
ceremony.
··My hope is that 10 years
from now. after I've been across
the s treet and worked for a
while, that they'll a ll fe el glad
for the wonderful vote they gave
m e today,'' a s miling Mrs .
O'Connor said al an appearance
on the Capitol steps with Vice
Pres ident George Bus h and
Senate leaders.
The court opens its 1981·82
term Oct. 5.
Reagan hailed a "happy and
historic day" and s aid in a stale·
menl that Mr. O'Connor's con·
firmat1on "symbolizes the rich·
ness of opportunity that still
abides in America -opportuni·
ty that permits persons of any
sex. age or race. from every sec·
lion and walk of life, to aspire
and achieve in a manner never
before even dreamed about in
human history."
The vote, following four hours
of laudatory speeches by con·
servalives and liberals alike.
was a victory for Reagan as well
as Mrs. O'Connor. Bl RMINGHAM. Ala. (AP> -
Bettv Sims· olan to "sell " her
son's $60.000 home through a
$100-a·chance raffle has resulted
in her indictment on charges of
promoting a lottery. which is ii·
legal in Alabama.
Mrs. Sims had said she want·
ed to raffle the house because
her family had been unable to
sell under today's high interest
rates. She told r eporters the
family 's "financial need is so
much greater than the possibili·
ty of being arrested."
Hanes said that everyone who bought a ticket will have his ·----------_;_-------------------------------
Mrs. Sims turned herself in to
the district attorney Monday
following the indictment by the
Jefferson County grand jury.
She said proceeds from the
rame would have helped meet
expenses from a recent family
illness and help put her son,
Mike Wheless, through medical
school. Part of the proceeds
would have gone lo charily, she
said.
The rafne is off, said lawyer
Art Hanes Jr., and Mrs. Sims
was freed on $300 bond, pending
arraignment on the misde·
m eanor charge. It carries a
maximum penally of one year in
prison and a $2,000 fine. She placed ads in a local
newspaper in July advertising
the raffle, and the Jefferson
County rustrict attorney's omce
began receiving inqwries about
raffles.
Hanes said Mrs. Sims will
plead innocent at the arraign-
ment. No date has been set for
the hearing.
Mrs. Sims allegedly sold a raf·
n e ticket to an investigator from
the state attorney generai's Of·
Cice of Consum er Protection.
Under Alabama law, a raffle
Mrs. Sims initially hoped to
sell 750 to 1,200 tickets for an
Oct. 19 raffle, but later lowered
that goal to 550..600 and moved
ORANGf COAST
Daily Pilat I
Thomas P Haley
P1.A>4·1het ""'° C"'4f E •t<.ut·•• (.Ht•<-•
Robert N Weed Pr-.c:tent
Tnomas A Murptline
Eo1t0t
~JHcnaet P Hllf"ey
-.4"'90--...
L Kar S~hultz
OlrclOt, OI 0.11oont
11.enneth N Goddard Jr c .... -o...ctot
Befnard Schulman a..-Chertes H Loos
~IJIO lO~O< '
Cilrol A. Moore ..,....,_
CleHlfled edvertlalng 714/U2-5e78
All other depertment• 842-432.1
MAI N OFFICE
llO Wf\I B•• $1 CMI• Mow CA
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VOL. 74, N0.'285
money refunded.
The raffle attracted the allen·
tion of stale officials. and an
agent from Graddick's office
purchased a ticket from Mrs.
Sims as part of his investigation,
according lo a spokes man for at·
torney general Charles Grad·
dick.
This month. a couple livine in
New Jersey successfully raffled
off a house in the Washington
s uburb of Annandale, Va .. re·
alizing their asking price of
$113 .000.
From Page A1
SEARCH. • •
Edwards is described as 6 feet
1 inch, 200 pounds, balding, with
reddish hwr and a mustache.
The weekend s hooling oc-
curred near the Blue Jay camp-
ground about IS miles east or
San Juan Capistrano. .
Closure. p lanned
on freeway ramps
Caltrans officials say three
southbound ramps on the San
Diego Freeway in San Clemente
will be closed periodically for
the next two weeks while they
are re1urfaced.
The ramps are at Camino de
Estrella, Avenida Pico and
A venlda Palluda. Closure
perlodl will be lrom two to row
hours. I
• l
You can't keep these a secret longl
Good fashion news travels
fast-especially when it's
about these sensational
diamond earrings I A 14 karat
white gold, $650. e, 14 karat
yellow gold, $310. C. 14 karat
gold, S800. 0 . l 4 karat
gold, $835. E. 18 karat
yellow gold, $850.
SLAVICK'S
RN~ 5'nc. 1917 r: .. tuon lalAnd, Newport Cmier, Newport 8ffch. 714/6"·1390
Wt104rint~ I l.Aprw1 tlllk / M""°" Vleto f ~ °""f' I Tlw City
Loe Cmttot tt lfN Malt
Mto C,...., Loe~ Is.rt °"PI I.As V ... '*-.. ..-.·._........ ... ,..._~ ......... ~a...
A
.........
----------
Rival• uptight
over Stone1 tour
The aoma1 S&oaee will
1ather plenty or sreenbacka
durtn1 their upcomln1 U.S.
tour but American rock
rivals see ll as bucks out of
their pockets.
"I'm out there tryln1 to
make a Uvinc touring, and
there's no doubt that in
several markets we have not
sold nearly as many tlcket.s
because the Stones h ave
taken over," says Erle
Bloom or the Bl•e Oya&er
Calt, a "heavy metal" band.
Major rock bands can
make big money, Bloom
says, by sellin1 out the last
couple of thousand seats in
an arena. That eives them a
percentage of the gross profit
in addition to a fixed concert
ree.
But with the Stones quickly
selling out one show after
another, he says it's increa.s·
ingly hard to peddle those
last tickets.
Lt. Gov. Tbomaa P. O'Neill
Ill, son of the U.S. House
Speaker, launched a cam·
paign ror tbe Democratic
nomination for governor of
Massachusetts.
Vice Presutent George Bush 1 Left J 1s applauded by country
music star Roy Acuff on his arrival for a roast celebrating
Aculf's 50 years m country music.
O'Neill announced his can·
didacy formally ~n the day
he turned 37. The lieutenant
governor under Gov. Edward
J . King and former Gov.
Michael S. Dukakls is
challenging both of them for
the governors hlp.
..............
Dr. Armand Hammer to-
day said be is confident
Poland will weather its
economic crisis and his Los
Angeles-based Occidental
Petroleum Corp. is ready to
invest $140 million in a joint
venture there.
"In spite of all the bad
news, we have confidence
that Poland will come out or
its crisis all right,'' he said at
a n ews conference in
Warsaw.
Drawings by the late musi·
cian John Lennon are on dis-
play at the Claremont Hotel
in Berkeley.
The drawings were done by
the one-lime Bealle in 1969,
according to promoter Ran-
dy Cox .
Musician Qumcy Jones gets a hug from Lena Horne as he visits
her backstage after a performance of her one-woman Broadway
show "Lena Home. the Lady and Her Music··
Some of them include sex-
ual scenes from his marriage
with-Voko Ono.
Ho hum, a ditto day
Temperatures ~ FORECAST
Coastal
Albeny
Albuque
"'"arlno
A-vlllt
Low cloueb, log l•t• n10111 ll'lrc•u9fl Atlanta mld·mornlnQ hour\. Sunny •lier· Allanlc Cly .-s 8altlmore
Coastal, Inland ,_ In .o. Coe•tal 81rml"9fw'n
lllQl'I 1-IOl, lnlano tow IOI Water 811maro
67. BOlw
IEluwhe,.., 1111111 •arlablt wlncu Boston
ucept -.i to toutllWftt 10 to 11 8rownsvlle
knoh 1n -·-· s-11 •ttl 10 Buff•lo soull'lwnl .,. to l IHI N!Qflt and Cllarhtn S.C
mornlno ._ clouds wltll P<ll'1la l •'· Cllarlstn WV
tar-n clffrlno. C,..yenne ClllUQO
Cincinnati U.S. summary ~~~~'!:
Oal·Ft Wlll Sunny tlllet pnvaOed 1Kr .. s mucll Denver
of the nellon Mond41y, fn>m IN Sovtll Des Mol,...
to Ille ONo Valley, but • <Oki frant Detroit
mo,,.., lf'llo tt. Cltntral Plains and OUlutll
ra in wu sca tterod acrou tllt Hartford Nortllem Nlet. Htlllf\•
S.verel cllln alonQ IN Gull CoH t H-lulu reported new rtcord-low tem· Houston
Ptr•tw.s dUrlfte tN Mrly moml"" 11\0Mplls
but by a llernoon, temptreturu J IKks4\vlle
ecrou U. Soulll l\ed climbed to IO Kens City
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tO " OntarlO IS •s Palm 5'>rll'lll It to Pewdene
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S.nJ•M
end southern Florld• could look -----------------------
lorwerd to scetltl"ed tllundtrstorms
Senta Ana
Senta Crw
T-Vellty
California
A1IO. from Ille lln09. Ille N•tlONl
Wtatller Service Mid WtdnUdey
-uld lie mostly felr 111 SoutfMm
Ctllfornla, wtlll valley llloM In the
.. •nd ta. afttr ovemlQM lows In the
-r!Ot•nd.O.,
Mounteln lllQl'll wlll be 111 Ille
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Sun, moon, tides
SOUTHERN CALIFOR NIA
COASTAL ANO MC)(JNTAIN AREAS
-Nltflt -rnorlll .. low clouds elld locel loo In Ill• coa atal aree1.
Otlltrwhe l•lr wllll lllOll tem·
ptreturH from neer 70 et tlle
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e R-11 .. aeen<lff: Jeff Mty, OorOoft Reed, Oki! .,...._ MIN Moon 119" W....-y 2:09 e.m., rous¥CI ' Mii 4: 27 p,m,
We 11·e Listening •.•
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Call the number below and your message will be recorded,
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The same 24-hour answerin1 service may be used to record let·
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Tell us what's on your mind. 1
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--
Orange Coast DAILY PILO'T /Tuesday, Suptomber 12 1981 •
II I A3
'One-~top' processi~g
center to open in '82
Orange County government Home buyers could reap ~av
wlll open a "one-stop" process· ings. too, Supervisor Harriett
ing center for development Wieder, among a delegation of
permits -a move that officials offic~als, said at a press con
say could help reduce stagger feren <'t> held Monday Citrng
ing prices racing both home figure~ provided by the EMA,
buyers and renters. Mrs . Wieder s aid processmg
0 penlng of the center, time for major developments
scheduled for spring 1982. could be cut between 46 and 212
together with changes in the days "Those decreases in proc
way development applications essing time translate lo a sav
are reviewed, will cut govern-ings of up lo $15,148," she said
ment processing time, which, in Reducing processing time by
turn, will cut developers' carry· eight months on a SI00.000 home,
ing costs. Those savings will she added. could cul monthly
then be passed on to the home mortgage payments by more
purchaser, or in the case of than $202, for a total s avings of
apartment complexes, renters. $78.835 for a loan carr1~ 15
The center will be located in percent over a 30-year ter'lfr"
what today is a conference room "0bVlously. rapid processing
in the county Finance Building <reduces I the cost or building
at the comer of Civic Center <and l lowers monthly payments
Drive West and Broadway. and, in the case of rental hous
Environmental Management ing, should reduce rents." she
Agency omcials eslim ated it said
will cost $410,000 to transform The "one-stop," "fast-track" the large room for its new use, but say the expenditure is approach t o pr ocessi ng
justified. of development permits was
Streamlined processing of de· hailed by representatives of de
velopment applications should velopmenl interests as a positive
end up saving the county $1.2 s tep.
million a n nual ly , they ex· "While a s hortened permit
plained. process may not be the cure for
-'-~~'"--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
thl' high ('ll"l\ o f lll'Y. hOU!.lnl<(
c u r r ~· 11 t I " I' I u g u 1 n ~ ho m 1•
bu1lclc•r:-. <rncl lmnH· tiuy1•1.., ahkt•
1l <'4°rlainh ,.., i.1 "h'I' in lht• right
d1n.·1 t1nn, ..,.wJ Frank I lugh1•
prt'!'>lllent of thl' (Ir JO)!l' (•nunl \
chapkr or lht' llu1ld111g ln<l uo;tr \'
J\ssol'i:.it11111
Wu~!'> to 1mpro\t tht prot·I!..,..,
in.: of d1.:Vl'lopmt<11l p1•r1111t:-, lrnn·
l.>t:en w1d1·r 1•xaminat111n hy an
ad hoc Ucveloprnt•nt Pr Ol't'~:.mg
H c' 1 t• \.\ Comm 1 tt t· t• J 11 d th t •
1-; M J\ sinct• J anu.1n 1980
l>e\'l'IOpt•r:o; h;I\ t· c·om1,la1nt•<I
th ut secunng n1•1·c:-s ar ~ ap
prov als for t•onst rurt ion oflt>n
s et•mcd an 1mpu:-...,1u1hl} heC'aus1·
pl an:. had to bt• n·' 1t0 v. l'd h~ d1t
fcrcnl dt•parlmt•nh .ill lcll'att"d
111 diffrn•nt pl an·.,
J\nd the~ ha\ t· t l.11rnt•tl plan
n1ng offt cwb ..,ec ml·d more in
l<•nt tn hl1wk1ni. l•I Ojt'f'l~ th.tn Ill
helping tht·m r<:ad1 fru1t1011
Thl .,1,1 fl atl1Cudl0 EM;\
D1rt•<:l1Jr Mur n Storm ..,,lid .11
tht• ne~:-. brtl·f1n~. 1s tht· mosl
important thmg ~t· ha\ 1· to d<•JI
\\1 th ,ind thl' 011,...I rill
f1t ult
A,. •• ..__.
BUBBLE BOY'S BIRTHDAY A bo" who has
lived longer than any other person born
without immunitv to disease celebrated hi:-.
10th birthday Monday ins1dr his plas t k
isolator. with chocolate cake. lloh Commu
nion and a bundle of st<'rilized "S.tar W<Jrs
to~..., lhl\ 1<1 \\ ho"l' 1.1 .... 1 n;1m" I ..... 111·
bel'll n•le.1~1·<1 ;11 ht~ p;111·nh '" 11 111 ,, ",, ...
born with :1 r.in• dt~va,t· pri•\ t'1tl 111_ 111 ... 111111\
from pro<lut m g c·1 u1·1.il c·4 II'• Ii.it t1~ltt 1111· •
lion lit 1s kn0\\11 "" till H11hl1l1· H11\ "'
llou:-.lon . Tt0'<1 ~
A Short
For All Seasons
The coolest things for summer
are the hotest things for fall.
Pleated Corduroy Shorts ...
they're perfect.
. '
1028 Irvine. Newpor I Beach.
California. Phone 042-7061
--· -------~------·------~-----------------------------------------
H/f Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Tueaday. September 22. 1981
mffiu~rnm
Reagan revising
spending cut plan
WASIUNGTON (AP> -Presl·
d~nt Reugan, who will deliver a
nationally televised speech on
the economy Thursday night, is
rcfigurlng his latest round of
spending cuts after being told by
Republican leaders that it is
.. not realistically possible" to
pass a package that would delay
Social Security cost-of-living in·
creases.
Reagan, in r esponse to ques-
tions from reporters, told them
today to .. tune in at 9 o'clock"
Thursday night. Asked if he
would tell Americans the "tough
facts" about the economy, the
president replied, .. Yes."
Sovie t delegation
arrives in Poland
WARSAW, Poland (AP> -A
high-level Soviet delegation ar·
rived in Warsaw today to dis·
cuss economic cooperation with
the beleaguered Polish govern·
ment.
1978 promise to Congress and be
"a grave mistake."
Vance's stand, in a letter to
assistant Senate Democratic
leader Alan Cranston of
California, could strengthen the
hand of opponents of President
Reagan's proposed $8.S billion
sale, which faces a close vole
next month in Congress.
Transport plane
crash investigated
INDIAN SPR I NGS AIR
FIELD, Nev. <AP> -The
military is investigating for the
cause of the crash of an Air
Force C-130 transport plane in
which seven soldiers perished
and 20 others were hospitalized.
............
. Secret
Service
'stymied
..
WAStUNGTON (AP> -Secret
Service a~ents trying to protect
U.S. presidents are frequently
overruled by the White House
staff for publicity reasons. a
former agent told a Senate com-
mittee today.
"I have personally seen many,
many incidents during which the
Secret Service strongly objected
to a movement or situation in·
volving a· president or vice presi-
. dent and stated that the agents
could in no way provide ade·
quate secu rity under the
circumstances. and yet they
were overruled," former agent
Charles M. Vance said.
He said the objection usually
came from a White House staff
m ember who said the movement
or situation was needed to
sec ure ''press ex posure.··
"public impact" or a good
camera angle.
"I strongly believe that . . .
when the Secret Service raises a
bona fide security objection,
then political, personnel and
protocol arguments should be
overru l ed," he said in :
testimony. The delegation was headed by
Nikolai Baibakov, deputy prime
minister of the Soviet Union and
chairman or the Soviet State
Planning Committee, Poland"s
PAP news agency said .
The four -engine turbo-prop
was carrying 68 troops on night
maneuvers when it crashed
early Monday and burnfld for
four 'hours. Most of the injured
apparently were hurt from the
impact or when they escaped
through side exits. said Lt. Col.
Mike Wallace, an Air Force
spokesman. MET OPERA OPENS A capacity audience performance 1n ~ew York City was the
of 4.000 attended the opening of the 89th Belhm opera '.'Jorma. James Levine conduct
Metropolitan Opera season. Monday's initial rd thl' produl'lion.
Vance, who was supporting
legis lation to create a Presiden·
tial Protection Commission, was
assigned to the White House de-
t a i I under former President
Ford
Belgian rule
resigns o ve; flap
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP> -
Premier Mark Evskers sub-
mitted his government's res-
ignation to King Baudouin on
Monday after the center -left
coalition broke over aid to th~
steel industry.
Neu' executions
announced in Iran
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) -
Iranian newspapers have an-
nounced new mass executions,
including 31 backers of the main
guerr illa organization fighting
the Islamic fundamentalist gov-
ernment of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini.
Federal Reserve loosening credit grip
WASlilNGTON (AP) After
more than a year of tightening,
the Federal Reserve Board has
begun to loosen its tight grip on
the nation's credit supply. lower·
ing the interest penal ty it
charges big banks b y one
percentage point.
The penalty for loans to the
Fed's biggest and most frequent
borrowers was lowered on Mon-
day from 4 percentage points to
3. The s urcharge is interest
tacked on to the record 14 per·
cent rate the Fed charges all
member banks.
Rumors of such a move had
c irculated amonli( private
analysts late last week as the
nation's money supply continued
to grow even more slowly than
the Fed governors had hoped.
The high interest rates that
have stifled the nation's housing
industry and much other busi-
ness have been widely blamed
on the Fed's tight money policy.
A brief statement from the
royal palace said. "The king has
accepted this resignation.·• It
also said the k ing asked
Eyskens, a Dutch-speaking
Christian Democrat. to stay on
as a caretaker premier.
The afternoon paper Kayhan
reported that 31 people, iden-
tified as members or supporters
of the Muj ahedeen Kbalq guer-
rilla organization. were put to
death Sund ay night in t he
capital and in seven other cities. welfare benefits to he cut
And although the Reagan .ad-
ministration has backed the in-
dependent Fed's policy as a
weapon agai nst inflation,
several administration officials
-apparently fearing economic
recession -have said some ac-
tion might be taken to make
sure the money supply does not
continue to grow more slowly
than the policy dictates.
Easing of the penalty will not
by itself allow banks to suddenly
make lar ge amounts of new
credit available to private. bor·
rowt!rs. But it should make at
least a bit more credit available
by lowreing the big banks' bor·
rowing costs.
Vance opposing
AWACS to Saudis
Skyu,alk toll 113
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -
An Overland Park. Kan., dentist
has died of injuries he suffered
on July 17 when two skywalks
coll apsed at the Hyatt Regency
Hotel. bringing the death toll in
the disaster to 113. E.O. Gerster,
63, died Friday at the University
of Kansas Medical Center ,
authorities said.
WASHINGTON <A P ) -
Welfare benefits for nearly
700.000 families will be eliminat-
ed or reduced by new rules de-
signed to save the federal gov-
ernment and states $2 billion an-
nually, the Depar tment of
Health and Human Services says.
the start of the new fiscal year
Oct. I. also will tighten limits on
how much welfare recipients
may earn or own.
WASHINGTON (AP ) -
Former Secretary of State
Cyrus R. Vance. a surprise ally
for opponents of the proposed
sale of A WACS radar planes to
Saudi Arabia, says the deal
would upset lhe military balance
in the Middle East. violate a
~j
Daily Pilat
Classifieds
- -RE Portable KEN MO ~ oinetle dishwasher $35 Lge tbl & 6 chrs . s e h 0 u d o g ble roof $30 ~ removea
64& ()(XX) --~-
"Sold everything I
advertised in the
Pi lot."
~~iI @ 642-5678
charge it~-by phone
From South Lagul'la & North County
ca II 540-1220 toll-free.
F•E
The changes in the $14.7 billion
Aid to Families with Dependent
children program, effective at
191• l•l111r
Thursday, September 24th
7:30-9:00 P.M.
At Murdy Park, Huntington Beach
(Golden West & Norma Drivel
Hear
Gerry Reed speak on
"SOLAR APPLIACTION"
Learn about Tax Credits and
Utility 6% Financing
The new rules, released Mon·
day. were proposed by President
Reagan and ordered by
Congress in its fiscal 1982 budget
reconciliation bill.
States administer AFDC. the
nation's biggest welfare pro-
gr am, and the federal govern·
Gerry's a member of the L.A. County Energy Commission
and Mayor Bradley's Solar City Committee.
For More Information. Call.
~~~~~~~~REEds SolAR·DAy CoRp.
(714) 891 -2616
A seafood dinner special.
Gulf Shrimp baked
in devil butter and
served with all the
down-by-the-seashore
accompaniments:
New Redskin Potatoes
Buttered Corn-on-the-Cob
Creamy Cole Slaw
Garlic Toast
AND
a Strawberry Crepe Dessert.
8.95
Featured through October 4.
Reservations Accepted.
Newport Beach/ 752-f./J23/ 4880Co~s
Drive I 2 Blod<s South~ MocMhur.
Long Beach/ 598-9638 /Mol1no Foclfieo
1'.11oll on Eost PocWic Coast Hlgtiwav.
Gllblrt~ R9tt0Jf'Cntt • f'i/DC/MC/lllSA
15431 Chemical Lane, Huntington Beach
CM\t~e<t Lie-• JUl279
Lifeline
Telephone Service
I What It is and
how you can get It.
· If you're a residence customer of PacificTele~hone and
~u make a limited number of local calls a mont . you might
interested in our Lifeline Tulephone Service.
Lifeline allows hou up to 30 local calls every monlh for
S2.50 plus tax. Eac call made over the 30-call allowance is
extra. (The J lst-40th calls cost )()¢ each. Every call over
40 costs 15¢.)
Installation, telephone sets, and other services and
equipment cost extra.
Lifeline is available to residential customers only in most
areas of Los An~eles and San Diego as well as Orange Coun~, Bakers eld, Riverside. Fresno, Sacramento, Santa
Rosa, an Francisco. San Jose, Stockton, Modesto and
parts of the East Bay, Peninsula and Marin.
Want to know more? Call your Pacific Thlephone service
representative for details.
@Pacfflc llllep"lone . ...
I .
..... -~--------··~--------------------------',__ __________________ ~-
'
\
ment s hares the cost. The
changes are expected to save
the U S government $1 .1 billion
m fiscal 1982 and states $900
million. Over five years, the
s avings are estim a ted at SS
billion for the states and $6
billion for the fede ral govern·
ment.
About 3.9 million families now
get AFDC benefits
And bank officials and others
active in the nation's credit
markets were bound to see some
importance in the fact that the
Fed governors were easing a
rate rather than raising it. ----
Choice Prime Rib
Now just $8.95
Save $1 o ff the regular price of our
bi~ complete Prime Rib dinner through
October 4 . Then top off a great dinner with music
and dancing on stainless steel in our lounge.
Stuart, you did It again.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY • SANTA ANA
GARDEN GROVE • TORRANCE
CERRITOS • LAKEWOOD • ANAHEIM
,
Recruit drowning
held accidental
SAN DIEGO <API -The
Marines said that last month's
drownina or a recruit during a
swimming test was accidental,
but said the command's water
survival training program will
be reviewed.
No misconduct was found, the
Marines said.
The statement came Monday
after a Marine investigation into
the Aug. 27 death of Pvt. Ran-
dall C. Chris tian, 18, of Dallas,
Tex.
Chrisllan died of a phe-
nomenon referred to as "dry
drowning," according to the re-
lease.
Although the cause o( death
was found to be asphyxiation by
fres h water drowning, the
pathologist report indicated that
the duration or submersion was
not necessarily the critical is-
s ue. The chief factor is the
amount of fres h water inhaled
and subsequently absorbed into
the bloodstream through the
alveoli of the lungs, according to
the pathology report.
Witnesses said Christian,
described as a strong swimmer.
went down three times before he
was pulled from the trainine
Search e xte nded
LONG BEACH (AP) -The
search for two fishermen and
their 42-foot craft, The Scrap
Iron. extended to Souther n
California waters Friday, after
two weeks or unsuccessful
search orr Northern California.
Designed,
Finished ~
Installed -----
pool at the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot.
A Texas congressman called
for an investigation of the
drowning after a Marine wrote
home that lifeguards stood by
and watched Christian struggle
without moving to help him.
Pvt. Greg WashlJ'lgton, a
friend of the victim, said later at
a press conference called by the
Marines. that the iqstructors
were not at fault, but added that
the death .. could have been pre-
vented.'" .
The Marines. in th'eir pre·
pared statement Monday. said
the more than half a million
recruits have passed through
water s urvival training at
MCRD s ince 1963 without a
drowning
·'This record attests to the
concern for safety that is pres·
ent in this phase of training,"
the statement said. The training
··is designed to challenge each
Marine to reach his full poten-
tial," according to the release.
The investigation has been
forwarded to higher head-
quarters for review, in ac-
cordance with standard prac-
tice. the statement added.
The pathology report said,
"Drowning continues even after
removal from the water , as any
water in the lungs continues into
the bloodstream through the
lung lining thereby aggravating
the process of axphyxiation to
vital organs and causing an
eventual overload on the heart."
----~ ..........
Orange Coatt DAI LY PILOT/Tuesday, September 22. 1881 H/f
Stars . missing from sets
But television shows go on wi thout Estrad a, Coleman
TO RETIRE Re p Clair
Burgen e r , a five -t e rm
R ep ublican who ha s
represented Imperial Coun-
ty and portions of Riverside
and San Diego counties. has
a nnounced he will retire
next year.
LOS ANOELES <AP> -Erik
Estrada and Gary Coleman
didn't show up for work but
· · C Hi Pa " and .. D lff' rent
Strokes'' are carrying on
without them.
Estrada's estrangement with
MGM, producer of the highway
patrol series, seemed on the
brink ol settlement, but studio
spokesman Bill Barron said
Monday, "No contracts were
signed last Friday, and we're
starting a new episode today
without Erik." Decathlon star
Bruce Jenner is again filling in
for the missing Estrad a.
Over at Tandem Productions.
Gary Coleman did not answer
his call lo begin the new season
of "DIH'rent Strokes." Said
Tandem spokeswoman Barbara
BrogUatti: "Since Gary did not
show up, the lawsuit is now in
force and we're shooting a
chapter in which Gary wlll ap·
pear only by a telephone con·
versation a one-s ided con
versation."
D rug smuggli11g
suspp,cts d e po rte d
LONG BEACH (AP) -Thir-
teen foreign nationals the Coast
Guard rescued from a sinking
ship off of Baja California are
suspected of drug smuggling
and will be deported, a Coast
Guard spokeswoman said.
The nationals. all men from
Ecuador or Colombia, have been
turned over to the Immigration
and Naturaliz.alion Service
following their rescue Saturday
some 320 miles southwest of San
Diego and 260 miles out from
Quadruplets make quick debut
B abies born to Whit tier couple during 2-m i nute span
WillTIIER <AP) -Four of
the Medina children made thier
world debut in a total time span
of l wo minutes. making Tammy
and Mitchell Medina the excited
parents of quadruplets .
The Whittier couple learned
four months ago that Mrs.
Medina would give birth to four
babies. but the birth or their two
sets of identical twins Sunday
still overwhelmed them, Medina
said Monday.
The Medinas introduced their
healthy brood John Mitchell
Jr., 4 pounds 13 ounces: Kelly
Ly nn . 4 pounds 10 ounces;
Shawn Mitchell John, 4 pounds s
oun ces, and Regina Lynn, 4
pounds 61fi ounces -to re-
porters at a Whittier Hospital
news conference Monday.
"I'm still in s hock knowing
they're ours," said Mrs. Medina.
The couple has one other child, a
2-year·old girl.
Chances of quadruplets being
born is one in 800,000,-said Dr.
Vellere Bhupathy, who delivered
the babies at Long Beach
Memorial Hos pital where the
mother was transferred for the
Caesarian section delivery.
He said the Medina quads are
even more unus u al because
their mother did not take Cert.iii·
ty drugs. and had no complica-
tions, allowing her return with
the babies to Whittier.
Medina, a metal plater, said
he has rece!ved job and promo·
t1onal offers, and the couple has
been offered d onations of
cloth ing and a year's supply of
milk.
The Medina babies are the
second set w be born at Long
Beitch Mefl"orial this year. On
July 4 Marsha and David Hill of
Golet a bec&me the parents of
three boys and a girl.
itla
HaJa, said Lt. j .g. Kathleen
Donohoe. public affalra officer
for the 11th Coast Ouard Dia·
trict.
4 /ace escap e,
k idnap ch a rges
ONTARIO, Calif. (AP>
Four state prisoners face escape
and kidnapping charges after
they broke out of a San
Bernardino County jail bus and
held a woman and child hostage
here for more than four hours
before s urrendering, s herlff's
deputies said.
Cheryl Burkhart. 30. and her
3-year-old daughter, Holly, were
uninjured by the men who broke
into their condominium Monday,
Sheriff's Detec tive Geor ge
Stipes said. The escapees sur-
rendered peacefully following an
afternoon of telephone negotia-
tions with police.
Dea11 vis i tin g
in LA stabbe d
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
Ohio State Unjversity dean was
slabbed at the parking lot of his
downtown hotel and was
hospitalized in guarded condi-
tion, authorities said Monday.
Donald D. Glower Sr., 55, dean
of t he Ohio State College of
Engineering, was stabbed four
times Sunday night in an ap-
parent robbery attempt at the
Figueroa Hotel, Associate D~an
Robert Redmond said in Colum-
bus, Ohio.
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I I
.,.h., r•I<' on thlJ account will~ 70% ol th<' irwr•gt' invntm"1t y•<'ld on ont'·ytor U S Trt'uurv bills; ratt' dt'tt'nn•nt'd monlhly Al:Jovt. figure5 •11! Nwd on 12 61%. dt'termlr>t'd by alK"tion St'pt 3, an() on curttnt tu 1.tbl~ Sub<itanUal lnter~l pt'n•lty •nd Im• ol IH ••t'mption for Hrly wtthd~wal.
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TUESDAY, SEPT. 22,-1tl1 She's. all thumbs 0
D
HUITllGTll llACH/flUITlll VllUI COMICS 84
while walking fingers
through Yellow. Pages .
See. Page 82. STOCKS 87 ..
Mineral rights ~helved
Huntington postpones decision k> .s~~Tex.as oil firm
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Of -li'df ...... '""
Huntington Beach City Council
members have postponed a de-
cision on whether lo lease city.
owned mineral rights to a Tex-
as-based oil company.
large enough to allow the ... ti f
water flooding and other ad-·
vanced oil recovery methoda.
Iota, is owned by the Huntinet.oo
Beach Company, according to
Petrofina officials.
The company , American
Petrofina lnc., is seeking the un·
derground rights to some 3,200
lots in the city in order to Corm
what is known as a unit, an area
Though the city owns juat ~
of those lot.5, company offkl•
said the)' consider a lease a.,._.
ment with the city important
because it will influence other
private holders of tbe j!'l~hta to
lease to them. • ' ~ The lots are owned ~1
numerous individuals and com·
panies. The largest block, Mt
~
TOM MURPHINf ~It
Fur-Ocious snarls
at trash problem
BEACHES & BYWAYS DEPT. After lamenliRg the
trashy condition of Pacific Coast Highway along the new
st ate beach park areas of El Morro and Crystal Cove. I
am now informed that the responsibility looms .as a
rather technical question.
The problem in this area. of course. has been the new
influx of beach tourists who unload all their trash along
th<.' hig hway shoulders. And it's still piled up there as we
approach the waning days of September.
So who cleans it up? The state parks servictt? The
Caltrans people? The wind? To date. it's mainly been a
combination of nobody. maybe with some ass i.tan ~
from \'agrant breezes
SOW THE TECHNICAL question involved here 11·
articulated by one Alan Wallace. a Crystal Cove resldeitt
over the past dozen years and sort of an unofficial gate
guard for the rove community
Wallace interprets the situation as depending on
which side of the highway the trash ends up.
.. If the tras h stays on the coastal side of the hiShway.
then it ·s up lo the state parks people to pick 1t up,"
Wallace declares. "and they have a $24.000 budget to do
JUSl lhat. ..
On the other hand . if the debris gets dumped on the
inland side of the highway. it's another story. If tfle junk
remains within 15 feet of the paved highway lanes, then
Vanous officials debating on who should clean up hig,.~JI,,..,,.
it's the respons ibility of Caltrans. But should the trash
la nd more than 15 feet from the pavement, Wallace con-
tends it belongs to the upside property owner. In t his
case. that would be the Irvine Company. . ,
Then there is the trash twilight zone. What if thejuhk .
starts out on the coastal side and blows on prevailing
coas tal breezes to the inland side? Who is the trashee
the n'>
You see. in this day and age, even pickup of trash . or
not picking it up get to be an extremely technical ques-
t ion
ALL TIDS ASIDE. it may develop that Wallace's pet
miniature Schnauzer. known quaintly by the name
.. Fur-Ocious ... will solve the upcoast trash problem ~
Crystal Cove. t ;;l
It happens that Alan Wallace and his friend Fu/..
Ocious have this daily habit of going down on the bea~
for walks.
.. We have this agreement that Fur-Ocious takes me
for a walk one day and then I take him on the next."
Wallace explained.
Anyway, the other morning, Crystal Cove was en·
veloped in a heavy beachfront fog and it seemed like a
good idea' to let Fur-Ocious take his walk without benent
of leash. .....,.
This was when the wily deputy sheriff snuck up rrom
the rear when they weren't looking and laid a leash law
violation on the pair. .
Thus it is that Alan Wall ace, 55, law-a bidiftl 1at~
w a tcher. furniture-maker a·nd jeweler in Lag\lna's
Sawdust Festival, has a day in the South Co~nty
municipal court on Oct. 22 on a charge of breaklftC the
beach leash law with friend Fur-Ocious.
"IT'S A $35 FINE," Wallace acknowleges. "I plan t9
throw myself on the mercy ol the cous:t. And in t~in1
about the highway trash ~j I've decided tO' -·•
with the court to allow fne to pick tit '41 \bat lnland·side
trash. in Heu of the 35 bucks ... " • ,
Now that sounds like it WOUid be a l>fet\J JVC>d ~
bargain for the government, f• Just~ 18$.flOt. ~.few '
the people who littered tile .,.. "°'fld be l500 per ton, tu' comparison. · • ti -.-.~!' I\ ,jo
But of _course they don't 9"' eatcb the Ut~ , ~~ ..
G.R. "Bud" Tippens of
Petrofina told reporters after
the cowicll's action Monday that
il "substantial" yield would be
expected from the lots, but he
would not say bow lari-e.
In a presentaUon before tht
coulleil, Petrofina spokesman
Gary Btuner said the company
anlicipa\es a $4 million invest·
' ment in the lots, lf the leases are
secured, before any pumping
begins. .
Petrofina officials said the
single "unitized" operation of
the lots would decrease the
number or wells needed and aid
beautification efforts ln the
downtown area where they are
located.
But the biggest benefit to
those who lease the lots is
money, the Petrofina officials
said. The company offered the
city one-sixth of the market
price of any oil produced on city
lots as a royalty, plus an annual
rental of $25 per lot. Once oil is
produced, leases would be effec· tive as long as paying quantities
were produced and royalties
paid, according to the draft
agreement.
A city staff report estimated
revenues of $80,000 to $200,000 a
year for the city if it agrees to
the leases.
Council members, who were
urged to accept the deal by city
staff members, said they did not
know enough about it to vote on
It Monday. They agreed to
schedule a study session wkh ci·
ty staff and Petrofina officials
before making a decision.
_ Tippens said after the meeting
that .Petrofina already hu lease
agre"ments on 1,300 of the lots
and expects to secure agree·
ment.s on almost all of them
within a year. Leases on just 75
percent of the lots. or 2,400,
would be needed for the com-
pany to apply for state permits
to unitize the area, Tippens said,
Hut he. said the company will
seek as many leases u possible. The company, ranked 178th on
the Fortwie Magazine "500" list
of the 500 leadin1 U.S. com-
panies, operates some 4,000 Fina
gas stftions in the midwest and
fMtdthwest, Bruner said.
·Photo booth
holdups work
of s ame man?
Two outdoor photo processing
booths in Huntington Beach
were robbed Monday . possibly
by the same man who allegedly
has staged eight similar film
booth holdups in Huntington
Beach and Westminster during
recent months, police said to-
• ~ "day .
In the first incident Monday, a
tnan who indicated he had a gun
, trirapped inside a piece of • •clothing robbed the Fotomat,
5932 Edinger Ave., of about $160
at 12:30 p.m ., police said.
Fifteen minutes later, a
similar holdup was reported at
. ~FHm $lop, 6935 Warner Ave. In
the. second incident, the man
ned with about $50, police said.
Huntington Beach police Sgt.
Ed McErlain said the same man Ms believed to be responsible for
'the two holdups.
McErlain said police in·
vestigators believe the same
man may be responsible for two
other film booth robberies in
Huntillgton Beach and slx others
at the Fotomat booth located at
Gol4en Wes t Street and
_We •t minster Avenue in
Westmimter.
Police name
victim of
HB smashup
Huntinetoo Beach police have
released the name of the
motorist who apparently suf·
fered a fatal heart attack while
drivlna and knocked down three
trees before hi• auto came to r<est.
According to police, Durward
Bryant Hulsey, 61, of Long
Beach, was eastbound on In·
dlanapolis Avenue near
MJ11Cb0lia Street sunday evenln&
...,_., Ida auto 1uddea.ly veered
j eff the rolld, atruck the trefll and
came to re.t at a nooct control
chuMI fence.
. Hulay WU pl'ODOUDced dead
·on arrival It PacJllca Holpital.
Hi• puaea1er, Pearl Mae Cbm•, ... allo of Loq S.ach,
wup't lnjured ln the accldent.
Delly"1!e4 ..........
Unsightly oil pipelines on the bluffs above Bolsa Chica State Beach in Huntington Reach will be couered
with soil by November. in preparation for a blujftop park.
'Coverup' planned for pipes
Huntington seeking don~tions for bluff landscaping
Hundreds of unsightly and
dangerous oil pipelines on the
bluffs above Bolsa Chica State
Beach in Huntington Beach will
be covered with soil by No·
vem ber in preparation for
landscaping of a proposed sea
view park.
But the plans of city officials
to plant trees. shrubs and grass
have been set back by denial of
their application for a $50,000
state Urban Forestry grant.
City officials say they are now
relying on public donations to
gather the $50,000 seed money to
complete the park.
Amlnoil USA Inc .. has put up
$25,000 on condition that It be
matched by private donations.
City planner Mike Multari says
city officials are optimistic that
the proposed park can be
landscaped by next spring.
Multari sald the 1 \.'.a-mile-long,
ask other oil companies operat-
ing in the city to donate to the
blufftop part fund. He did re·
quests for donations also will be
sent out in the city water bills.
Multari said the l ~ mile Jong,
50-foot-wide bluff is actually
state property but that state
recreation officials seemed to be
dragging their feet on beautify.
ing it.
Huntington Beach officials plan to plant 75 trees. 150 shrubs and
grass on unsightly bluffs to form a sea uiew park above Bolsa
Chica Stale Beach
·'Their attitude seemed to be
to wait until oil operations were
completed before improving the
area, but now we know that oil
operations are going to last a
few more decades," Multari
said.
A city ordinance passed last
Ma y requires that the oil com-
panies operating on the bluffs
must cover the rusty. loose and
unsightly pipes in part because
they pose a hazard to people who
visit the beach.
The proposed park also will in·
clude a bicycle path, benches
and s tairways to the beach1 Multari said
Oil storage t.anks probe due
By PATlllCK KENNEDY
Of .. DM!y ...........
Huntington Beach Fire Chief
Ray l>icard says Ms inspectors
will be che<:king the condition of
hundreds of crude oil storage
tanks in the city following the
rupture of a backyard tank Mon-
day.
The 20,000-gallon tank behind
a house at '127 9th Street burst
open near the top and soaked a
resident's backyard with about
1,500 gallons of thick. black,
sticky oil.
Crews operating vacuum
trucks were still cleaning up the
mess today.
·'That was a r are occur·
rence," Picard said. "But it
could happen again. We have
Drug use claimed
near Edison High
Huntington Beach residents
living near Edison High School
complained to city officials Mon·
day night that students are using
drugs in their neighborhood.
Edison's dean of supervision,
Ron Kuno, said today that last
year there were.some problems
with off campus loitering and
drug use by students, but he said
the school hadn't received any
complaints this year.
''I thought the problems were
resolved last year through the
use of two police officers U ·
signed to the city schools," he
said
Sheila Cook, spokeswoman for
the lS residents, from Regatta
Drive and Polynesian Lane, told
city council members Monday
that school officials have told
her they don't have enough
employees to police the stu·
dents' actlviUes.
Several of the resl<lenta told,
clty ol'ftctals that they have ob-
served marijuana 1mokiq and
dru1 aales ln their nel1hborbood
and 1n a fleld near tbe camJIUI.
The resideata also complalned
that the studenta ail <>n tbelr
lawns, litter the area, 14Je lbeir
cars in the middle of the 1tnet,
refu1e to move for trafftc and generally create a nullance.
They 'Hid the wor1t Um• are
before school and during lunch
time.
'Tm really sorry that Mrs.
Cook didn't come to the school
with her complaints," Kuno
said. "If we have loitering stu·
dents we call the police and they
immediately come out and re·
move them. If the students have
drugs or use drugs, they're ar·
rested," Kuno said.
Kuno said that about 25
Edison students were arrested
on drug charges last year dwing
school hours.
"We'll do everything we
possibly can to work with the re·
sldents and the police to ~o in there and clean up the area. • .
Body of HB
man found
The body of a Huntington
Beach man wbo apparently
drowned after dlvinf in Vall
Lake near Rancho California
b11 beer> recovered by Rlvenlde
County authorities.
A coroner's 1pokesman said
the J>od7 ol David Foeter, 21. of
118 lltlea Ave., aurfaced SUaday.
Fo1t• dlnppear.ct S.pt. e
while dlvtnl olf a fttbiq plat·
form ln dO-foot-deep water, tbe coroner'• lpok•man Hid.
hundreds of storage tanks in this
city."
Picard said he didn 't see any
need for "emergency inspec-
tions" but that fire department
officials would put high priority
on checking the strength of the
tank walls during annual inspec-
tions of the facilities beginning
tbis month. . "Usually these tanks might
spring a small leak about the
size of a pencil near the bottom
or they might show some rusl
near a seam," Picard s aid.
"But what makes oil opera.
lions safe in the town lot areJ
near homes is that the oil ls so
thick that it's not very volatile,
It 's very difficult for this crude
oil to catch fire," he said.
Picard said there are mor•
than 100 crude oil pumps and
storage tanks in the residential
area downtown. The tanks store
oil until it is emptied into a
truck, he said.
Some of the independent oil
pumps downtown send crude in"
to underground pipelines t
storage facilities blocks or miles away.
Pk:ard said the owner of the
backyard storage facility thal,
ruptured Monday admitted he
made an error by leavln1 bi1
tank full for too long a Ume.
Picard said the wall of the tank
was in poor shape and apparent·
ly had been weakened by rust
from the moist aalt air .
Other fire department officials
say they still are 1nve$lil(at,lng whether to luue a cltaUon to lbe
tank owner Robert Vlrue, 46, ol
Huntlngton Beach.
"ll's possible that the penalty
is already Imposed by the ex·
pense of cleaning '-I> the mess,"
said Division Ohief Fl'ank Kelly.
Kelly estimates that the east
of clea.nin{ up the backyard
would exceed '4,000 and lnclude
replacing the fir'9t four lacbel ~
top~
Tbe ...uchDce la owned by •
man ud Ma wife who ~ ro1aJUet ~ the oll opw
ln tlMlr Mayard.
4 4
l
o s e a o a s a
·•" ~,.« .._,~
U.S. Wo rkers
u n happy at job
' Your uobapplne11 at>oul your Job h11 now ·
reached alarmlna peak1, wlth the Bureau of Labor
StaUallcs reportlni lhat u many aa 24 million
Americans -a full quarter of our work force -are
dinaUafled with their work.
The cost to employers runa into billions of dollars
a year in absenteeism, reduced output, poor
workmanship. The cost to our naUoo la Incalculable,
for this atUtude is deeply erod.lnl our abUJty to com·
pete successtu.lly lo world marketa.
Why? Are you tumed oil by your working en·
vlronment, supervision and company policies or the
actual nature of Lhe job you hold? Ia the reason that
you feel your 0 job s hould be
more than a
way to pay your ""' /«
bills? Are we ·
'w i tnessi ng a A ., a
fund am_en ta l -,,-1-ut-apa_IJ_l_I __
change an the ,1111
attitude of .. ----------American men and women toward workinl itself?
Whatever the causes, If the BLS report ls to be
believed, business and labor must get together on the
problems and possible solutions. And some programs
do suggest progress for you, as an employer or
employee, to study and possibly adapt.
PROBLEM: Millions of young mothers in today's
work force are on rigid schedules that keep them
away from their children and are a basic cause of
dissatisfaction. Adding to this ls the ditriculty in find·
ing child care.
SOLUTION: Flexible work schedules that let
employees choose their own working hoors or days
(within limits). Some companies have 10-bour, four·
day weeks; others allow employees to select their
own starting and ending tim~ with everyone at work
at specified "core" hours. Mothers also are aided by
' companies that take an active role in finding child
care.
A unique "Employee Assistance Program" has
been developed by National Semiconductor Corp. of
Santa Clara that's worth exploration. Begun as a
child-care referral plan, it now offers counseling on a
wide range of personal worries. "With 8,500
employees at this location, our size approximates the
population of a small city," says Charles Sporck,
president. "We address the most typical problems
of a 'city' of this size."
PROBLEM: Employees are frustrated because
they can't voice their complaints or offer proposals to
improve attitudes and output.
SOLUTION: Open up the lines of communication
between management and workers , so both sides can
benefit from gripes and recommendations.
In Detroit. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
have created "quality circles," small groups of
workers whose duties include smoothing out relations
between personnel. In Stamford, Conn .• the huge
business m achine manufacturer. Pitney Bowes, is
· · beefing up a communication program that goes back
30 year s. The program culminates in yearly
jobholder meetings invowing workers and corporate
representatives.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORKIAPI Fine! Oow·Jonet •vv•.
AMERICAN LEADERS
+A . --1>'1
+I +I
+ "' + ... _,..., . "' . -+ "" • Vo • v. . -
NEW YOltlC CAP)· Sa .. s, 4 p.m. orke =-~"-,:..: "1.~~:' 1= g:::.~:OMll' el S~111""1l:i. -14
Oot'chstGH 2S2.600 11¥9 • Vt Rnrtlnt A lts,000 ,,._ -14 GtllH Pet 17',000 12 -• RaneerOll ISl,700 1¥t \lo ~rol.ew 112,000 16\IJ + 2v.
tor Mond•v. Seo. 21. jTOCICS
JD Ind °l:.rS7 ~ir,., ~~+Ir,, JD Tm J.t5,ll M .tt J.tl ... ~+ I.XI IS Utl 104.09 IOS.51 103.4t 104.tt + 0.61
.S Stk m.• J31 " 114.24 12'.U + t .17 INkll J,709,400
Tren 17•,JOC Utllt . .. .. . . . .. • . l,4U,JOC U Stk . . . . . . . • • •.001, 100
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( CAPI Sep, 71 Prev •
AdYa1'<9CI TOO.~ ~h !>Kiined 711 1021 Undlenoe<I l71 •1 Tow! lu u.1 1111 , ..
New hlollt ' , ...__, '" J&S
WH.41 AMEi D10
NEW YORI( IAPI Sep 11 Prev
AdYar>e.cl Too:" d1l.
¥:""" DI .,..
hanged 117 102 otal 1r:u.1 ,,. m ..... " .... s 2 New lows ICI' '°' O..lfC... 0 120,000 ,._ + ""
HouOllTr 100,200 ll-¥o METALS HWlllOll 0 tt,IGO l2V. + I Wano II 9',100 21 • lllo c...-14-71'> c.11111 a ,.I.Ind, u.S
UPS AND DOWNS ·~::, .. u.~.
NEW YORK (AP) -Tlw IOI-Ing Us1 ZllK '9111 ~a PWftCI. dell-.
-. ,.... -Y«lt Sloo E•CN"Ot Tl• S7.a7 Metals w-<Of'llPMll• 111. AIKks and wamwltl tl\at have QOM I.IP ... ......_.7MOuntsejlllUl!d,N Y.
ttw most •nd ~ the most IMIW<I on Mffcwy a.MO.GO,.., flflll. r:;c~~ ...-~ies1 al voturne ' f'lat,......_.OOtroy ot., N.Y.
No. aacur~L .::.= bel-'2 ere Incl· SILVER .-CS. Hal ',;,;/ "9 Cila"9K ere the dlfferenc• -1111 ciravlout cloilno "k• and Mlfmv'•~·
Na,,,. l..a1 Cll4I Pct. t 5¥Mleam JD + ~ Up •1 2 2 ICDT llldlllt ~ + '-Up U .2 J Fllmwavs 41'> • "' Up 12.S 4 T•Kfl Ind ,__ + " Up IJ.S GOLD QUOTATIONS l 01 .... ~ Ind ~ + V. Up I I.I 6 &mpOE pfA l'-t "' Up 11.S 7 Envlr1Ch Cp llVt • 1 Vt Up 11.J
I TllermoElac n 71"' • 1" Up t .S t W1tCoNA I '2A • 2 Up t .1 10 COoper I.Ml 21 • 2V. Up U II Je-tcor 4'4 + -Up I.• 12 AldMadl1 11 114 + '-Up 1.2 It OllEd J,tallf 27 + l Up I 0 14 0-U'OH tOlo', + • ~ Up 7.7 , U SMllrG Jpt .U + 2111 Uf' 7 .1 M ~E~ ooJ/A • " uo 74
Name LMI Ola Pct.
I ,t,PL Cp 4\1. -~ Oft 11.1
1 Un~lt Min '"" -" Oft IU J Ma Fld CV pf %1'4 -J\Q Off 12,3
L..._1 momlflo llxlno ..... U. off U.2S. L..._: .n..-fixing ..-2.00, off SUO. f'arl•: ~11.1ngun.n,off$10A7.
,.,....,., 1461.ft, .. to ....
ltwkll: lale flxlno Me0.00, .. t I .•• MU.• .....
"...., a "-= 1 ... 1" dalr, civoet> M6t.•,..,,I JD.
........ , '""'"dally quMel ~-• .., $1.JD,
........ , 1 .. 1y dally cwotel flllrlutlld
M1.10,oft$1 .••
i ~fB w• = t~ g;: :::t
l $c:ov11 2.,. ,. -.-fi 10·1 SYMBOLS ~ti Harv "' -,.. U ~atlM I 12 .... -2"" t .I
u '·°"" Ji -, ... -....... -.-~lllClll 10 a flOCO I~ -I" Off I.I -----r-of-... 1t Man!C1rt I ltVt -IVt Oft r-! ---••Ill -Oii IN -~ tJ llltlHarv s.76Pf 20"--'"Off .-., ---.Cll••••on a,.ci.i .,. mro U I"• WestFr1 IC* -911 Off 7.1 -or ,.,_.. noc _..,._ • ,.._ 14 Tr..,.c_n Inc 4'--'-Off 7.S .,._lll"'9follo=-:i:-u Trltou Inv Jlli -\lo Off 7.1 -~ ~ ClllLt 2.'_, """ -1'4 Off 7.0 ~· °' --.... <Ml p11a _... -.....,.. ""'""if>O....,....., 17 IUoGran p! nh -I~ Off •A 0ee1-•• paid 1n •••••dint 12 -"'·
GOLD COINS
NEW YOlllC IAJl'I -~~le• ........
tf flldC--.~•ltfl Fr1etv·1~ •
• ......,..,,.....,.,.,.,..,.•,-.10.aa. ........... 1....., ............. ,,,.JS. ........... t.t.,..., .... UM.ti, ... ..... .......... ~-. . ..,.,.,,~ .. ~
""'Sit.ti.
Sour~. 0Na·"""'•
642-5678
~ .. Plfld ell9t flOC-~ .....
.,._ M ,_, -om"'"-......., °' "° CICltllln---......... ~-~ ...... .., .... ____ _
..... Ill _ .............. M>lelMd ... .. 111 ...-,.11_...,. __
....... 111 ..... ........,,.11-----............. ., .. ~-••• 1 .... ......,. re.--_ .. Ml ..... 11111111
c...eattN •WllM fll!rltuled •·-
----WllllM -~ ........
~t o few words to work for you
in the Diiiy .....
I
~ • • • ., ..
AMl!AICAN LEAGUE
Ana.le 8, White Sox 3 C:MI~ C:ALl,,CHIMIA
l.eFlo,._lf ~~111-= allrllM
5q11ltt1 111 • o o 0 8enlq111 ct • o 1 o
Helr'1ll Cf 4 0 I 0 fhHltln H 4 0 0 0
L11il1Uk c111 4 O O O Ford rl 4 0 1 t
FIM( c 4 0 O O 8•,lor dh 1 1 I I
Bein.a rt ' 1 1 1 Grclch 211 J 1 1 n ltrlllrd 211 J 0 0 0 FrtOU511 < 3 I 1 7 MOrrl&n 3D J 2 1 1 Oownlno II • I 2 1
Almon u J 0 1 O H.,.tow 11 o o O o Totals ll J I , HollM>n,., I 0 0 I
Campn" 311 , 0 I I
S<onlrs 111 ' o o o
Totel1 JI t I • s.u...11, ..........
Chic 990 001 000 100-l
C•llfotnl• 020 200 02Jr -.
E-LeFIO,.., Morr11on. OP Chl<-OO I,
Celllornlt 1 LOB -(;Ille~ 4, Cellfornle •
28-Ford, OoWl'llno HA-B•lnts (11. ,.,,,_
1~~ e.,1or (It) SB-C•mpen.I•
Cllk... II' M It llt ee SO B11rns CL. 9-SI I • s l 2,r J
F ermer 2 1 1 O 1 c.w .......
Renko IW, 7~1 •\I> 1 J J I 4
AHt CS, IO) J>. > 0 0 0 0 I
Burn• plltr.G IO I better on tM 11h HBP
llY Burns CB•ylor lwlct l T-2 • A 21,04'
.... s. ••.• ,_,J
MtlweukM 002 000 01~) I 2
Boston OOS JI 1 00•-• 14 o
Hetl, Po<Wr 141.""""" C.l end Simmon•.
Eckersley end Ge<!<Nin. W-Eeke"i.y, ._.
L-HHs, 9-7 HA Botton, Sl•Pl•IOll II) A 14,SH
,,_.._J,Y-1
Cleveland 000 020 IC» S S l
Htw York 000 000 000-0 • l Welh end Oler, Mey, Fru ler Ill,
LAAoche (t i -C..-one W-Welll, 7 t l -M•y, .. 11,A-20,IC»
Tletn J, Oftelel I
Oelroll 000 102 Otc>-S 11 2
Battlmon 000 001 ooo-1 • 1
Wiicox -Perrl1'11, McG.--r, SIOOderd
Ill, Mertl,,_1 (II -0tmPMY. Grt"""'
W-Wllcoa. 11 .. l MCGreoor. 11 .. HA-
Balllmoro, Dwyer 121 A-10,.,.
.. _.. •• MarlMrl ' Suttle 000 001 000-1 l 1
Too 000 lOO 01• 4 t o
SIOdderd end Bulling, F r..,ve. O.,.wln
el\d Sundberg W De rwin, t I l-
Slodderd, 11 A Siil
Twlll17, lleyei. J
Mlnnesc>la no 110 --7 11 I
Ka nws City <no 000 000. 1 10 1
Wllll•ms and Wynegar; HemmtUr, Gale
131, Shelllnger 161 , PHchall (ti end
WtlMn. W-Wlllltms. H . L-Htmmeket,
1-3. A-14.16•.
National League
~112,C:-•
St Louis 000 001 1oe>-1 I 0
Chic-000 000 000 0 l 1
Andufer, Suiter \ti •no Por1er. Kre-. Hernenci.1 (7), E••lwkk 171, Gel..,I (t i •nd
O•vl\. W Andu)er, 7-4 L-l(reve<, IS
A-l.•34"
IE•-t, ,.MIU .. 0
Phll. 000 000 000 000 000 00 ~ •
Mont 000 000 000 000 000 01 1 1
One out'"'-'"'""1"9 run KOnd C•rHon, A Reed ( 11), Bruut•r 1111, Lyle
(!)), CllrlJl-IUI, J A-(111 •no
Morelend, B11<rls. Aeerdon (Ill. Fryme11
(141, Be,,,,_, (U). Smit" 1171 end CArter.
W-Smllll, 1.0. L J. RMcl,().I A-24,lt1 "-··--· Clnclnn•tl 000 000 OOC>--0 l I San 0 tego 000 00& oo. • 11 0
Lelbr•l'OI Br_,, 161, Combe Ctl •""
O'Berry, Not•ll. Wel.r. end G-><11 -
WelYll, M L lfll><tl\dl, 1·1 A ~.SOI
llMU •• ,.,,.'")
PlllSDUrg!I 010 000 002 000 0 J I I
New Yo<I\ 100 100 010 000 I "4 11 I
Tl•nl, S<urry (II, Tellulve (II. AOllln'°"
(•I. Let 1111 tnd PeN; HetTI\, Allen ....
M•r>l\all ( 101, LttCh 1111 Bolla .. (13) •""
S1 .. rns. W 8olleno, 1·1 l LJ. 0-1 Hll
Pittsburgh, T~ 111) A I .,..
Top 10 t .. _ °" lU et llttl)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
G Ae II H "<L Un•lord, Boston 't1 363 SS In llf>
Henderson, Dell•-.. 171 " IH lJI Paciorek, Seattle 91 "7 Q 111 l31
z 1u,, s.eenie n 31• «> 104 m
Hargrove, Clevelend 13 lM Jt '3 l2S
Remy, Boston 71 Jll ~1 101 314
Cooper, Mllweu~... U J74 U nt !11
Almon, CNc-'1 Jl4 4S 9t >11
OIJver, Tu•• •3 • /19 111 .JI? Mumphry, New York 17 310 47 '16 JIO
H«Mll-
Armu, 0.klend ll. Thomas, Mll••u•et,
10. Murra,, Benlmore, 1' Grkll, A-11,
ti; lurlnsl<I, Cllk-. II
1t-••1tM l11
Ar-m•11 O.kland, ••. Mu,.-r•y, 8af11~. .. ; OQllvle, Mllweul<M, 66, Wlnlleld, New
York, ... Murp11v, OOl•nd. Ml, P.cloro,
!>e•llle. 60, 8. Bell, TnH. 60
NFL
Cowboy• 35, Patriot• 21
k-• ., °"',,." O•tlti I 10 1 11
Htw E1191-1 I 1 C.:-JI
OAL JOl\nson • 11<1n lrom Whitt CS..
lien ll<kl HE C.l-...4runCSmllhkk k)
DAL FG Sep(len 26
DAL -Oorwtt 7S (S.l)tlen ~IOI
NE CoHlnU run ISmlll1 kl(I()
NE TetupuJtrunlSmllllkk kl
OAL DuP'" I P•U frOM While fS."'ltll Ii.IOI
OAl l"G Sei>llAn 1'
DAL SeltfY, ln1tntlONll Qtovnc11"9 111 -
•one o, Cev""'"'911
DAL FG Sei>llen J1
DAl FG Stptltn JS
A •1,1'1
fM!wlll,..1 Si.tlotkf
RUSHING-Oalln, Oortell t•·1U,
Sprlno• '4·42. Jones • H , Coslll• 1·1,
Ht,."outt 1·0, Wllilt S·mlnu1-I Ntw
Enolen4, Tetupu ...:i. C.1-.n 1-:it, Colllns . ,.
PASSIN<;-0.llas, Wllll• J+~. na. H ..
Eno••M. Cav•RAUQll I• lt-4, us. Jec:k1on.
0 1.0, 0
AECEIVING-Oallu, Springs 11·71,
Oorstll +22, Hiii :S.4', 8 . JOllnM>n :S.•1.
Oul>r•t 2·~. PMrson 1·1' New Engl-,
Morgen ..,, H•"81beck ).t), Jec:klon .).41,
(OlllM ).12, A JOlln~ 1 14
COLLEGE
Top20
The TDP r-.1y 1 .. ms In Tl\e Auocfat.o
P,..u co11eoe IOOlllell poll, wllll llrst-plece
votes In perenl-. wuon's record end
tol•I polnh.
I USC C4'1 140 1,251
1 Oklehoft\A OSI 1.().0 l,Jlll
l Penn Slett UI 140 1,091
• Teus Ill 140 1,1131
S Pllli.,....Qn 240 flt
•UCLA ~ 912
I MIC"198" (11 1·1.0 903
I 01110 Sl•le 240 m
t North Caroline 240 ...
10 . .o\lelleme 1-1.0 S16
11 Brlgl\em Younq ).()..(1 s~
12 MIHIUIPC>i Stale 240 S'9
1l Notre O.me 1-1.0 S.-
14 Mltmi. Fla. 140 .ut
U Ntl><Mkt 1 1.0 412
It WHl'llnglon 240 J7I
11 Georvl• 1-1-.0 3'5
II. Arlrone Sule 240 :165 " c ltmson ).-0.0 n1
20 Sou1i.rn MelllOdlSI )-0.(t Ill
Community college schedule
(All-af1·•··"'"--l l'ltlOAY
N~-"'-e
Senl• Ant •'-Goloen Wes1 •t 0taft9e
Coesl
Oeltrt •I Nev-(Las Vf9tsl JV
SATUltOAY -..-. S.Ocllebeek •I Ortn9t Coast
Sen Bernardino el LA Soull\wHl (II
RIO Honooet Petomet II lOl
Soulll-tem et Ml San Je<lnlO (l;Jl)J
Moorpark •• Wm Los A-le• 11. JOI
MtreCosta et Hencoo 11 JOI
Citrus el Fullertcin
Long Beach CC at Ctrrllos
East LosA-IM•I Al•e,.loe
Mt Sen Antonie> •I Glende le
Gronmont el Ari-W"ttm
S.n Diego CC •I S.n Ole9o Mew
Fro1Mel B•tnf1tlCI
Comp-et Los Ano-le• 'V•llty
LOI Angela& CC at Senta Bart.er•
LA Hert>or •• Ventur•
Eoltm Arl1one et Pewdent
Ctnyon• et Pierce
S.l\le Monlce et P-nl•
Stquolet •I T ett
PMJtrvll-IAnlelOPt Vell•Y
Glendale IArl1.l •I 1"'9frlel VeUey
High school schedule
Cwl1111•>
THUltSOAY
S•n Ct..,..nte vs. Ell-<la •I N•Wllllf1
t1erbor
Ve1enci. at lrvlne
l e H-e •I-Seodlebe<k ti S-le N>41
B-1
l(attll• ti Tustin
Su11n, Hlll•vs El Dor-et V•lencla
Troy"' ...,,_Im lrt U Palm• Pert
FltlOAY
WtSlmlMler •IN""'"°" H•roor EdlM>n .i El ~
Founteln Valley •• $1 Peul •I CtrrllDS Colleqe
Merine ... FooClllll •1 TvsUn
Lo• Am•vos at Hunllnglon llta<ll •
C yprou v• OUen View •I WHtmlnstor
Meler Oeo ti l~ Altos Ill
Servile el Sent• Merle
South Torrence et Bl\hoP Montoom ... y
Corona Gel Mer et Cepl11r ..... Vtllty
El T9f'O •1 Mlulon Vlelo
Legllnt Hiiis vs. Unl,..rslty e1 1rvlne
Ct nyonetGellr
Ht,.1-vs Sente Ant et SA &owl
SA V •lley vs Senti-et GMClen Gro,.. VIiia P-e1 Lonv BNcll w 11...,,
Pt<lll<ael Bolw Gra,_
La Quint• at E-ranu
Sonora v1 Bree-Ollnde •IL• H•llt•
Sen BtrNrdlno •I Fullerton
lue11t """ ~ ~la .. w ,..._ ......
.... _ .. HOr'(e
11.W.A'-ltOtotW....,,
L ...... loMcllet• ......
tATV•OAY
L"Al.,,.....,._c.to _.,. ...........
Hal'a.r
OelcP-v W .......... MINllle
Ko!Wltd'("" ClrMtot ti llt ..._"°
O•r9tn 0-.,._ L.Mre et 1..o "'-1"'8 ,. ..
aet .. 11 et 0-Hiii& (IP m )
(All9-tl1 ·-.-Wt• ..... )
Co•st •r•• rea11lt1
LAOUMAeaAC:MMaM'ICWa
Cat,_...... L.Me CCI
Low l'f•I Tournemtnl. A Fllt1ht -I,
C11orl•& Kaufman, l>-1>-IO: II l'ltellt -t.'
Pett A-1. ~11 -.t; C "lent -I. aert
Oul9ley, tl·»-11; 0. Fl19ht -I. J-
llrown, .,_,...._., E Flltlll -I Maf9< S.-r~ 111---..a.
NASL Pl•voff• H,,1.INAU , ...... , .....
a-nr..
Chkego I, Sen 01-0 12 Oii CClllUVO
wins Mrin, 1·11
'---P-•G-IOCCllt 90Wl. 'It
Cosmos•'-CPll<-et Tor-
Deep •ea fishing
MEWPOltT COney•a L9Cktrl -•I
env••" 4t4 bonito, 11 wnd lleu, JI calko
lltss, I I ytllowCell, 24 rocll 11111, ISO
"1•<ktrel
DANA WMAllF 1a -!en 114 -· t,Ott bonito, I l\•llllut, 17 rock 11th, 105
m•<l<•rel
OCEANMOI U englers: !! bonito, ..
c •ll<o t>eu, l send bus. J "•"""I. !10 rock ll•h, 10} rnac:bre•
SEAL ••Ac:H -90 •noi.rs. l!oO rocll cod, 1 cow <Od. J 11no cOd. :ll 00n110.
LONG •EACH Cetlftlt11t Plttl -11
-••ro 110 bonito, 4 Ytlio..1ell, 100 rock
11s11 COtttt<t'• wiwortl -S1 •nol•n. •
ye11ow1a11, 2 llerracucs., 121 bonll111, U callco
llau. lCI lleU, JO roe II 1111'1 •
Transamerica Open
l•t S.A "'•11Cl1<el
l'lnllt-SI ......
Scott M<Celn dt4 Larry Sttfankl, 7 ..... 1.
1.. Hl<k S.vleno Off Chris Dunk, , .. , W ,
Melt Mllcllell oei S.m Glemmelve. , .. , 1·5,
Tim Gullikson Off Tim Wllklton, ....... ,,
._4, FrlU 8uellnll'IQ dtt J•ll 8orowlat, ,_.,
... 1. Jim,,,y Connon def Ferdl Teygan, ..0, .. ).
M•·~ Ed-dof. Trey Waltkt, .....
._ 2, John Sedrl dof Bu1cll Wells,, .. , W , ....i.
Women's tourn•ment
Ct'IA--.1
~lnt ll_,.M .....
Wendy Whitt oei. Kim Seftdl, ... ,, u , .,J;
M•ry Low Pl•t• def. SuMln lttlll-, M ,
... 1
High echool woman ............. tt.••T"-7 ~ Keryn Willene Il l lost to Helrllle lllfl. M .
to Donofrio, ._., def. Nolles, 6.e; Kell
Wllle1te (LI !Ml 1_., ,_., -.. J; T-fl.I
IMIO..,O..,won•·I
~ Smltll-~ns tll dof P--r-.... t; def. All-Earley, W ; dtf. 8oylan<eH, .. ,;
Forl<U<l•Godftty Ill -4-l, ....... ,,
S<11wensltlf>.Holl-Ill won ... t. lotl ~7.
won.._.,
Monday's tr•nsactlon•
eASlllTUU.
NatleMI ....... R A1-let ...
NEW JERSEY NETS -Nemed Mike
OlTomauo tn<utlve vice pretlOenl -
dlrttlor of-•llons, eftKtlve Oct. 1
HOCKEY ...._,_ ... .,..._
MONTREAL CANAOIENS -SIQned 0...
BcMdu<. toriovd
IOCClll .. .,,.,...,,_k..,.lkc.,...._
ATLANTA CHIEFS Sold Cerl Sll'Of'IQ
end Bruce !.tv<'IQe, defender~. to tl\e
Port lana Timber\
Area high school football log
SUNSET LEAGUE Edison (2--0) Westminster (1·1) Oct 7-EI Toro let MIMlon Vlefol
Oct • Saddletae« Laguna Buch (0-0-1)
17 L•OUlnle n EIOorado d S.nu.t.na
o t Pacific. ' 15
Sept. 2~1 EI Modltnt Oct. 7-Mllllll.•n
1J Sept. J~I N-r\ t<e,,,.,,
Oct 1-c.omoton
Oct . ...__, .. 0.1 let OCC)
Oct. !~Ina <•t w .. tm.,,5terl
Oct. t>-<>c.an View lal HBI Oct 1'-Wntml..ster (et OCCI NCIY . ._,... Huntlnglon e.ac11
No.. 1)-.Ftn. Valley l•I BIQ Al
Fountain Valley (2--0)
Oct . ._ Lono Beach Wiiton
Oct 14-0c..,n View tal HBI
Oct. l~untlngton 11tac:11 Ocl 2.._Edbon lelOCCl
Nov '-l'ounleln ve11e,
Nov I-Int
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
Corona del Mer (2-0)
u Hunllngton Btacll
t• Sent• ANI Velley
JI El T-S.pt. U-St. PM11 (at C•rrltosl Oct. )..-.SeNlt. let LA P•lmtl Oct_ ...... _
o 41 s.~~r~:::;~tr...., V•ll•y 11 Oct. 1-Unlwnltv fet lrvlnel
• 0
Oct 1S-•1 Huntl"91on lltkh
Oct. l~na (et OCCI
Oct.~ Vltw l•t Wmstrl
Nov • ._,... W..tmln11er
Nov. 1)-EdllOft Cet Big Al
Huntington Beech (0-2)
0c I -Esten< It Cel Newpot't)
Oct l'-Saddi.tleck (•I HeWpof1)
Oct 1 El Toro C•I ¥1ulonl Oct ,._lrvlfte (el N-portJ
Nov 4-<osla Mtw (al OCCI
Nov. IJ Ne•port Cel OCCI
Costa MeH (1-1)
0 s.ni..t.na ,.
11 S...ti.., 0
• CotOflot de! Mar 0 EIOor-
Sept. 26-Los Ate"'ltos Cat II Ntwpof1)
Sept. a-l.M Ami91>1 Oct. ,_ 8olsa Gr-
Oct. t-Sen C-• Oct. t~lnVelley Oct.,,_.. W..tmlnsltr
Oct. »--Marillt NOY.~NO•f.l~V-
" Oct J_,._,H • .-
<>c.en vi.w C0-2)
~«Hice " e LO~ 1• ..... ~C8t ... )
OC1. ,_._, Hiii• c .. ·-...,_,
011 ...... .....,,. O« ............... , ..... ,
Oln.D-'P CotMa> Oct. ,._,._...II Vall .. lat "=· ~ ,__,... ..... .................
0<1. ~IWnlly (at N--1) Oct. t._.. Irvine
0<1. 22-Sadd-ll l•t iA 8owll
Oct. »-El Toro Cel N-tl
Ho...~-Gel M-r let DCCI Nov. l>-£11M1clA let N_,..I)
El Toro (0-2)
l!st8nota (2-0)
11 •
• c~ 14 " ............. ' lttJ. u -s.11 c1e"'e11te lot ~ Et 1-1 ~ ............. u:u: , .. ..,. .... .
~(at~ ..... , .....,T-c•oco Od.~(8'1 ....... 1
Oct ._.,,.,.,...,_.COCCI .............. ..,.. ...... ~ ...... ~) .,.....,,...1)
• • •
Oct l~UMitMI
Oct. n -.c ~·He.-
De 1 1'-CdM Cal Newport
Herllorl
Nov. t-EstM><I• Nov. t>-Unlwrslty
Newport Harbor (0·2)
J Marina 1S 1 Cy~ 21 Sept. U-~1"5t .. Oct 1-C.OSU Mew
Oct t~EI Toro (el Minion
Viejo I
Oct. 1'--Unlwnlty
Oct. n -trvlne
Oct JO-EsWl<IA lat OCCI Nov-~k
Nov. 1>-Cor-09! Mer Cat OCCI
s.ddteb•ck (1-1)
' a ....... P-• 0 MIUlonVleJo T
Sept 2.......U.Hao<a (•ts'A8owll Oct. 1-Esi-la (et SA &owll
Oc1 . .-1rv1M
Oct. 1'-Cdllo\ <•t ,..._I)
Oct. n-cosu Mew (el SA Bowl)
Oct . ....Vlllwrslty Cet lrvlntl No.. • ._,...~ Harllor "°"· l)-£1 TMO Cel SA 8owl)
Unlvenlty (1-1)
to N-111 0
O Tustin 7 Sept.~ Hiii• (al INIM9
Oct. 1--C..-del M• (at lrv!IM1 Oct.~-.. Cat ..._u Oct. 11-41l ~H«Wr
Oct. ~It IM lrv1Ml
Oct. • l lf M hell (OI l"'IMI
NCIY. t-EI T-lat Mi91tM) NCIY,t ....... INIM
SOUTH COAST LEAQUE
Capt9tr•no Valley (1-1)
11 atT ..... 0 ...... _ ...... ~ ..... Oct.) ....... lat G'*' 0 ,..,,.1
Oct,,... ...... Oct, ti ................ ..
OCt. ,._.. 0.. "'"' "~"'.) O<t ......... 8Mlll NO¥.~ ...... (.atMVI ...... , ....... c........
Defttl ... (1-1)
IJ Irvine U Se"' 2~1 Elsinore
Oct 1 Ma9no1la (at""'"'""'
Oc I ' Loi Amlp Oct 1.._0ent Hlll1
Oct 1J. .i S.n C...,_• Oct »-et c;.pjttr-VallOY Nov t-Mluton Viejo
Nov 1>-l..eQune Hlllt (•I MV)
L•guna Hiiie (0-2)
U lrvlne 29
• E&t-la J7
S."' U -.Ulll,..nlty lat l"'IMI Oct l~ Cal M'VI Oct.~ Quint• CatMVI Oct. ,._.Sen ci..-e (al MV)
Oct. 2~ MIMton 'Vie.lo Oct. JI>-<>-HHls (.C M'VI Nov.~ Vtlltey Cat M'V) No.. t~ 8Mcll (et M'V)
Minion Vlefo (2~)
V T11ttln 1
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Sept. U -EI Toro
Oct. I-Rancho AlemltoJ <•t llotwG,..I
Oct t-lndlo Cl p.m.)
Oct. ,..._.,. ~r-Valley Oct.~Hlll• Oct ....... Sen a.-. Nov ._..~ .. ec:ll
Nov. 1>-0ene Hlns
S•n Clemente (0-2)
1 1'•11.,.._ 22 o Ccirone cl91 Mer d Seot. l'-€11M<le Cat N-1)
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Oct ....... HUlll1""""' IMtll Oct. 1~ Hllll (at¥Vl Ocl.~le•fl Oct.--..V. ... Vll)o
Nov. 7--at 0.. HIU, Cl p.111.1 NOY, t~Je,._V81~
OT HE AS
Met., o.i (1·1)
• t•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tu~lday. September 22. 1i81 H /F
ldndley has bright g'olf future
Will remain. an. amateur until. after the M~sters
One of the brl&ht youna atara who will remain
on the amateur horbon at least until alter the
Muatera tournament next year is Brian Undley, • llJWARD Le
HANDY
1radu11t.o of Estancia High School.
l..lndley gained valuable experience tn the U.S.
Amateur tournament rucently ln San Funcisco
when he lost in the championship flnals lo an extra
hole to Nathaniel Crosby.
"I didn't really figure l had the match won Boros, a two-time U.S. Open cbamplbn la
when l wu 4-up after eight holes," Lindley says of joined by Dow Finaterwald, Art Wall, Dick Mayer,
his afternoon round in the 36-hole finals. Ed Furgol and Walter Burkemo u the latett en-
" I got what I felt was a bad break on the ninth trants in the group of players 50-and-over. Nloe
hole when I hit an eight-iron five-feet onto the others were previously entered.
green and it backed up against the huvy rough. I In add1Uon, more than 100 lop professionals
had to take a sand wedae and chop down on the from the current PGA tour will also be competing
ball. If I'd have been able to putt, I could have in the $215,000 tournament with the City Of Hope
made it in two." the chief beneficiary. While Lindley can re-live the entire final 36 * * ,.
holes, shot-by-shot, he isn't grieving over the out-THE FALL PGA quallfying regional for
come. Far from it. He's happy to have gone as far CalifornJa will be held at Crystalaire Country Club
as he did. in Llano with the Southern California PGA section Crosby. the son of former actor-singer Blng, is in charge. Th.is is one of six regional sites with the
in charge of the Crosby Clambake at Pebble Beach top 120 players moving to tb_e ~allfy~g school lo
each year_ Did he invite Lindley to play there nai Huntsville, Texas, Oce. 28·3~ regional is set
spring? . \ for Oct. 6-9.
"He said I should send him a card to play In \ Entry forms have to be in the PGA office in
the amateur part of the tournament," Lindley Florida by Wednesday.
says .. But I don't know how much it costs. I'll * * *
wail and see." THERE ARE STILL openings for the Will
Jordan Memorial tournament at Costa Mesa Golf BY GAINING A SPOT in the semifinals, and Country Club to be held Wednesday, Sept. 30
Lindley and three other players including Crosby with s tarting times from 8 to 1 that day. The $50
automatically qualified for the Masters. "I'll re· entry fee includes golf and dinner along with other
main an amateur until after that time,'· he says. things. The fee has been reduced from $100 in or-.. How many players are there on the tour who der to fill the field.
have never played in the Masters? There are quite For further information, contact the Will
a few of them and I don't want to miss this op· Jordan Memorial Day, P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa
port unity. 92626.
"Right now I would say I would try to play on * * *
the PGA tour after April. I don't perceive staying The seventh annual Airporter Invitational
out any longer than that." . . tournament will be held Monday at Irvine Coast
When he does turn pro, he has a very reahst1c Country Club with some outstanding prizes being
approach to the s tuation. "I 'II know within a year offered including two for the first hole-in-one.
or two if I can ma1<e a living out there," he says. First prize in the event is a week-end for two,
''If I find I can't, McDonnell-Douglas has told including airfare and accommodations al the
m' my old job will be waiting for me." Frontier Hotel in Las Vegas. He's an electrical engineer but quit the com-1...:_...:....;__: ______ -,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;iii
pany this spring lo concentrate on golf. . . ,. • INVESTMENT
Lindley says he was more nervous an his 1tl!.'-· ~ Tiii: SALES
quarterfinal match than he was in the finals with EARL'S H 1 g h ca 11 be r s a I es
Crosby and a slightly partisan crowd. "'-~·,.,.T_ personnel needed for
Bul the junior varsity golfer from USC has ~~.:";.'::~ expanding investment firm .
come a long way and he is looking forward to the ~ ...... ,_ 5,.,. •• '""' 0..,. Broad base of investment
Masters and then the spring PGA quahfymg 1<•"S""•"-"''°"'"'••• products for licensed rear
School. "Six lo eight months will not make that co .. •••u641-1289 esta1e and/or NASO Sales. ... ..__ • bc .... c.nmluiMt much difference and I very much want lo play in .,11,10,0 .,,A495-0401 • LAedl ,. ...... ,
the Masters." * * * ,..,~~-PERSO .... "'L .... Doop•...., ........ ·-.. • """
J ULIUS BOROS IS ONE of six entrants added INVESTMENT
to the seniors field for the Southern California The fastest draw in the COMPANY
Open tournament at Los Coyotes Countr y Club in West. -8 Daily Pilot ...... 4 4 Buena Park Nov l-8. C lass1f1ed Ad. 642·567.....t_ ..,,....,
II-. Rt ~~II(}~.
~~~ ~
As you 're probably aware.
there is a very important fund
raising campaign going on in
our city to build the Irvine
Boys & Girls Club. The Club.
part of the long established
and highly·acclaimed Harbor
Area Boys Club. will offer our
young people many exoellent
programs and activities
designed to improve
character. strengthen values
and broaden horizons. It will
fill a void that now exists in our
" city for this type of
youth-oriented facility.
Because of the worthwhile nature of the Boys &
Girls Club. the Kresge Foundation of Troy,
Michigan. recently awarded the building fund a
$75,000 "challenge" grant. This means that in
order to receive the contribution. the private and
corporate citizens of our community must raise
the rest of the money -about S300.000 -
necessary to start building the Club. We are
hoping to break ground this fall.
Working together. we can meet this challenge and get the Club built
for our children. In fact, if each household in Irvine donated only S10.
we'd be there! If we don't do it, no one else will ... so please fill out
the coupon below indicating your donation and send it to Challenge,
Boys Club of the Harbor Area, P.O. Box 10297,posta Mesa, CA
92627. Thank you.
Space for thts message was paid for by Pitchess, Perricone •nd McCllntock
Sincerely,
£J~£
Dave Baker
Woodbridge
Fund Raising Chairmen --------------------------------------------Narlle ............•... · ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · ... ' .....••..
Company if applicable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • ..............•..•.......•..•..........• :
Address ........ , . . . ...................•......•.......••.••.•.......•.......•••
•
• • • •
IUISI CIAIT I YDUR , llllTDWI UllY PAPIR
TUE SDAY. SEPTEMBER "ll. 1981 \ll·ANt.f COUN fV C A ._lf O~N IA 2~ Cl:.NTS
Huntington WWI veterans' group fades away
,
Bf PIUL 8NEIDERMAN ... D91tf,.. ....
For the Huntingtoo Beach bar·
racks of the Veterans of World
War I, tlm6 bas not been an ally.
The group, founded in 1980,
quickly became a local fixture.
Members organized Armistice
Day services by the city's war
memorial, volunteered at the
Veterans Administration
Hospital in Long Beach and
Rugby
Union
bombed
SCHENECTADY,. N.Y. (AP)
-A bomb exploded today in a
building housing the Eastern
Rugby Union's otrlces, hours
before the group was to field a
team against the touring South
African Springboks, the targets
of recent anti-apartheid pro-
tests.
There were no reports of in· juries.
Meanwhile, in New York City,
lawyers for lhe state asked a
three-judge federal appeals
court to reverse a district
court's decision and block the ,
game, at least temporarily.
While the blast from a "high
explosive device'' at 1:17 a.m.
left only minor damage at the
headquarters, damage In the ad-
joining offices of a dairJ pro-
ducts company was estimated at
$50,000, said police inves!lgator
James McGrath.
Radio station WWWD said a
woman telephoned at 1: 10 a.m.
to say a bomb would go off soon
"downtown.'' Disc jockey Dale
Lane said the woman hung up
without identifying herself.
Thomas Selfridge, president of•
lbe ERU, a co-sponsor of the
Springboks' tour, said hb offices
sustained about $50 worth of
damage.
Glass blown by the blast lit·
tered State Street in front of the
row of renovated buildings
known as Canal Square.
M~Grath said the bomb had
apparently been placed in a
closet 21,o) feet from the rugby of·
flee in an area accessible to the
public duririg business hours .
Asked if there bad been
threats against him or the South
African pl ayers, Selfridge
replied, "No, there never have
been. It's contrary to the protest
thing and this may or may not
be related."
Fearful of a riot, New York
state officials tried to stop
tonight's scheduled rugby match
pitting the Springboks, South •
Africa's national team, and the
ERU squad. Schenectady is 10
miles from Albany.
Selfridge said the game would
go on tonight in Albany's
Bleecker stadium despite the
bombing. Police said they were
protecting the ·South African
players.
Turkish jet
crash kills
I 00 soldiers
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -A
Turkish Air Force F-104 jet-
fighter crashed today into a
bivouac area prepared for an
upcoming NATO exercise In
western Turkey, and reports
from journalists on the scene in·
dicated al least 100 soldiers on
the ground were killed. All the
victims were believed Turkish.
Turkish military sources said
65 bodies already bad arrived by
helicopter at hospitals in Istan-
bul and that Gen. Haydar SalUk,
commander of the 1st Army,
rushed to the site of the crash.
The mllitary sources, asking
not to be named, said three
Istanbul hospitals had been 'put
on alert to accept the dead and
wounded.
The sources saJa that it ap-
peared all the casualties were
Turkish.
The plane hit a bivouac area
oear the town of Babaeski about
30 mUes from the Greek border.
Reporters who reached the re-
1 Ion of t he crash aa1d the
American-made F-104 crashed
lnto the bivouac area at about
noon. Allied troope had not ar-
rived at the 1cene of the exl!rclle
-code-naaqed •'Display
Determination 81."
Troopa from the United Statel,
8rltain1 Greece, Italy, and
Portu1a1 were to CO\fll ubon
for the exerclH in an am·
pbibiOUI lancllnc Tbunda:r.
partlclpated ln the city's ll.DDUal
Fourlh of July parade .
There were pol luck lunches
with the women's auxlUary
every month, flrst in the Boys
Club building on Yorktown
Avenue, then in lhe Masonic
Temple on Palm Avenue.
But time has taken its toll.
Today, the average age of the
nat1on's World War I vets is 86.
Of the Huntington Beach bar-
racks' 45 charter members, 3'
are known dead. The fate ol five
olber charter members ls un· known.
This year, the gr.oup bas main-
tained a membership list of 24,
but many of these men are in
convalescent homes and
hospitals or have moved' from
the clt_y.
Dun.ng 1981, the eroup coo-
tlnued to hold monthly meetings,
Sandra Day O'Connor has been unanimously confirmed by the
Senate to become the first woman justice of the Supreme Court
She'll 'be busy'
Sandra O'Connor confirmed 99-0
WASHINGTON (AP) -San·
dra Day O'Connor, confirmed by
a unanimous Senate and the first
worn an justice on the U.S.
Supreme Court, promises to be
"very busy, very fast" after she
is sworn in this week.
There is no clear indication,
however, how she will vote on
social and constitutional issues
that come before the court.
The 51-year-old Arizona ap-
peals judge won a 99-0 endorse-
ment in lhe Senate on Monday
as the 102nd justice in the 191·
year history of the nation's
hi.chest court. She will be
youngest of the nine members.
Mrs. O'Connor will be sworn
in for her lifetime position tn
ceremonies Friday afternoon at
the Supreme Court building. But
because the ceremony will be
conducted in the courtroom
itself, the recording for posterity
will be limited.
•'As is the court practice,
there will be no TV, no photo-
graphs and no tape recordings,"
court spokesman Barrett
McGum said in a printed state·
ment released today.
Reporters And artists will be
admitted to lhe ceremony, as
they are for all court sessions.
There will be no public ad-
mission, however, except by in·
vitation.
Two "picture opportunlties"
are scheduled shortly after the
15-minute ceremony.
McGuro said official court
photographers would be on hand
but added, "I know of no plan to
have any photograph taken in
t he courtroom during the
ceremony.'•
<See SUPREME, Pa1e AZ>
76 more protesters
arrested at Diablo
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -
Seventy-six more protesters
were arrested t oday at the
Diablo Canyon nuclear power
plant, bringing the el1bt-day
total to 1,441. ·
The arrests came at the main
gate and in the ruHed back
country around the double-
domed plant, which ls prepartni
to load nuclear fuel ln th• nest
few daya followlnl a test llceDH
approval Monday b y the
Nuclear Regulatory Com -
ml11ioo.
In addition, several 1mall
boata today lauacbed th• tint
sea aaaault on tlle plant In
several daya.
"We want to teaume IMdlDc
people near. tbe reactor to tbow
how •uln•rable lt la to
ubotqe," •aid Mart l:nnott.
apolleaman for tbe Abalone Al·
Ha11ce, a eolllt.loa ot aom• • m-
ti-nuclear 1roups which is
sponaortq the effort to blockade
the plan\.
Anti-nuclear uoups also con-
tend the atomic plant ii unaale
beciaU1e of a nearby offshore
earthquake fault.
Pilty-eiabt people were arrest·
ed on trespaalnl char1ea at the
maln 1ate today u they tried to
block about a doaeo buae1 and eo
to ao can carrytna comt.ruetioe
workers to the •.a billlon plam.
Pacific Gu • Electric Co.,
wbJcb betan bulldin• the plant
Oil UM central California C081t In 1m. a.us lt would tpon tbe
prote1t1 and • 'lmmedlat.17"
atart ~the reactor to,..
eel ve -fuel In bOpel ol •tart.lnt tt
up for low-power taUD1 wttbla
twoweea.
SbortlJ after tbe N RC ap.
pro•ed hf U ni M$)nda7. < ... DIASLO, Pa1• Al)
attended usually by five or six
members. ·
Finally, on Sept. 8, lheae re-
maintne members voted to re-
tire the charter of the Hunt·
initon Beach Veterans of World
War I, Barrack:a 2360.
"It wu an organl,zatlon that
was doomed to die," observed
Harry M. "Cap" Sheue, the only
active charter member in the
barrackl at lhe time of its dis·
solution. "Every year that
passed, more of the World War I
vett pused away. That's what's
happened to ws."
At M, Cap Sbeue is somet.blna
of a local legend for hls work u
a pioneerlna sports coach. Tht
atblellc field at HuntJn1ton
Beach High School ls named for
him.
In 1980 he was one of the men
rounded up by the late Lloyd
Huddleston to form a local bar·
racks of the Veterans of World
War I organization.
AccordJng to Sbeue, this group
was formed by World War I vets
who felt they were not geltlng a
fair shake from the American
Legtoo and Veterans of Foreign
Wars, which were dominated by
World War II returnees.
The barracks' first com·
(See VETERANS, Page AZ>
·Ex-Mesan sought
One of two girls dies. after shooting
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL °' .... ,.. ..... A ground and air search
Unued today in the Clevel d
National Forest for a form r
Costa Mesa man and Irvine g
club employee believe
responsible for a weekend shoot·
ing that has left a Lake Elsinore
girl dead and another with head
injuries.
The object of lhe search is
Thomas Francis Edwards, 37,
described by Lt. Wyatt Hart of
the Orange County Sheriff's
Department as a "mountain
man" and "gun buff."
Kelly Cartier, 12, and Vanessa
lberri, also 12, were shot Satur·
day by a man who, according to
witnesses, slopped his pickup
truck, called to the two girls,
then fired at lhem with a small
caliber weapon. The incident OC·
eurred on a trail near the Blue
Jay caJDpground, located about
20 miles east of San Juan
Capistrano.
Miss lberri died at 8:05 p.m.
Monday at Mission Community
Hospital in Mission Viejo. Miss
Cartier, who underwent surgery
for lhe bead wounds she suf·
fered, was described as ''doing
floe" tod~ bf Hart.
Hart sald investigators believe
that Edwards may be hiding in
lhe mountainous forest terrain
that includes vast portions of
east ern· Orange County and
areas in Riverside and San
Diego counties.
He said a decision to "re·
evaluate" whether the search
should continue would be made
early this afternoon.
Between 12 and 16 deputies
are searching the forest on the
ground, covering dirt roads and
trails on foot and with four-
wheel drive vehicles. Members
of the sheriff's Aero Squadron, a
volunteer group of reserve
deputies, are assisting in the
search from the air.
Hart said Edwards is con·
si der ed "armed and
da~~erous."
Shuttle flight
delay seen
due to spill
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP> -Highly toxic fuel spilled
while being loaded into the
space shuttle Colum bia 's
thruster rockets today, loosening
as many as 200 of the
spacecraft's protective tiles and
raising the possibility of a delay .
in lta second mission.
"The tiles are actually falling
off the vehicle," said a NASA
source in Washington. ''It is go-
inl to affect an area larger than
originally estimated, maybe as
many as 200 tiles."
The ship has more than 30,000
tiles to protect it from the heat
of re.entry.
No injuries were reported
whep a fuel line connector
m alfunc:Uoned and three to four
gallooa ~ the toxic fuel spilled.
The nitrogen tetroxlde
desttoys or eats out the bonding
material, the NASA source said.
The area affected ls diredly
under the cnw cabin, Just below
the fueling ports of the forward
reaction control system. That
1y1tem is a cluster of small
thrusters that ateer the abip in
orbit.
Jim Kukowski, a NASA
spokesman in Wu~~' aUd earlier that the lnlUaf'etumate
waa that about 25 of the tiles
were damaced and would have
to be ,..aaced.
KukOWUi 1aid offlciall "don't
know '9t" ii the Wet could be
repleeed while th• 1huttle LI on
Ul• launch pad. If not, tbe abut.
tie ~ bav• to be retuned to
ltl lt..,... or the VMicle M ·
HIDlllJ BuUdlna. wblcb would
alaoet certainly d•la1 the
¥hMuild Od. t lauacb, otftclall
•aid.
SOUGHT I N SHOOTINGS
Thomas Francis Edwards
• T h e manhunt is being
coordinated from both the
sheriff's headquarters in Santa
Ana and a U.S. Forest Service
rire station at tl Cariso Village
a few miles from where the
shooting occurred. The Forest
Service is assisting deputies by
providing maps, technical ln·
formation and keys to gates,
said forest spokesman Carl
Corey.
Corey said camp registers
also are being inspected to de·
termine if Edwards had been
staying in campgrounds in the
forest.
Hart said the search of the
forest will continue "until we
are convinced we've covered
it."
Hart said that a record check
of Edwards' past revealed that
he served a prison sentence in
Maryland on robbery-related
charges.
<See SEARCH, Page AZ)
DI ES FROM WOUNDS
Vanessa lberri, 12
IN STABLE CONDITION
Kelly Ca rtier. 12
Russ seek 'open'
dialogue with U.S.
UNITED NATIONS (AP> -
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko told the U.N. General
Assembly today that the
Kremlin wanted "normal busi-
nesslike relations with the Unit·
ed States" and not conlroota·
lion.
Gromyko, who meets Wednes-
day with Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr., mixed
criticism of Reagan adminiatra·
lion policies with an offer to
open a dJaloeue wilh Washington
"in order to seek mutually ac-
ceptable solutions to con-
troversial problem a.
"But we are not begging for
such a dialogue, we are propos·
ing it," the Soviel foreign
minister told the 155-natlon
world body.
"For our part, we reaffirm
'once acaln -and the u .s.S.R.
deleaatlon is autjoriled to ·~ lt from thli rostrum -thal the
soviet Uruoo hu not sought, nor
is it aeekln&. confrontation wilh
the Unit.eel States of America. It
would like to have normal bull·
nessllke relations with the Unit·
ed States.'' Gromyko decl~.
The Soviet forelin mlnilter
accused the Reaaan admlnlltra-
don, ln tb9 name ol.r,uHl11Qc'
"American leadenhlp" ln the
world, ol "wbippiDI up the U'IDI
race," preuurlnl NATO .Wea
into acceptlDI "mUit.ariaUc
ach•mH allen to tb•lr in·
. ter .. tl," and und•rmln1q "tbe
baalc prlnclpl11 of So•l•t·
Americ• rtl•tlou worked out
earlier as a result of tremendous
effort."
Haig sat impassively in the
Assembly ball as Gromyko ob-
jected to the "setting up of a
wide network of military bases
and the stationing of American
troops on foreign territories."
In the Western hemisphere,
Gromyko said, "hostile criminal
intrigues against Cuba on the
part of the United States, which
have of late been stepped up,
must cease."
DIAIGI CUil WIAIHIR
Low clouds, fog late
night tbroueh mid ·
morning hours. Mostly
sunny afternoons. Lows
tonl1bt an 60s. Highs
Wednesday, low 70s at
beaches, low 80s inland.
llllDIT•Y
Dan Portorini mtera the
R..a m •' cont r o 11 e r • u ~-Will thq ftgrl
him, or not? Sn Page CJ.
11111
~ ----~~~-~~~--~~~~~--~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;,_'-'-1-~~~~---:F~--~~~~~~~~ .......... t~--~~~~~---~~--~-,_..--.--...-
..., .... ~
TUESDAY, Sl:PT. 22, 1•1 She's, aii thumbs 0
llGUll lllCl /llUTI 1:1111 COMICS
STOCKS
Faculty l11red hf UCI
.,, .
Two-pronged, attack planned on. area h·ooMng costs
By RICHARD GREEN °' ... .,...., ..........
UC Irvine administrators plan
a two-pronged attack against the
problem of high-cost bouain1.
which is hampering the recruit-
ment of faculty.
UCI Assistant Vice Chancellor
William H. Parker said UCJ
next year will be able to offer
low-interest mortgage loans to
professors interested in jolnlog
the faculty. He explained that,
under a plan adopted Friday bv
the UC Regenta, lo&DI at 12 ·~
cent lnterelt will be offered to
110 professors throu1bout the UC
system.
Fifteen of these loans will be
made available at UCI, Parter
said. Tbe current market YI·
terest rate for mort1a1e loans la
18.5 percent.
The second portiGn of UCl'a
attack on the housing cruls,
Parker said, iavolvea the COO·
struction of faculty hooain1 on
~'· ~ ~
I 1 mM •••PH111 ~
Fur-Ocious snarls
at trash problem
• <I BEACHES & BYWAYS DEPT. -After lamenting the
trashy condition of Pacific Coast Highway along the new1
s tale beach park areas of El Morro and Crystal Cove, 1
am now informed that the respon&ibility looms as a
rather technical question.
The problem in this area, of course, has been ftle new
influx of beach tourists who unload all their trash along
the highway shoulders. And it's still piled up there as we
approach the waning days of September.
So who cleans it up? The state patks servicfl? The
Caltrans people? The wind? To date, it°S mainly been a
com bi nation of nobody, maybe with some assistance
from vagrant breezes.
NOW THE TECHNICAL question involved here is
articulated by one Alan Wallace. a Crystal Cove resident
over the past dozen years and sort of an unofficial gate
guard for the cove community.
Wallace interprets tbe situation as depen~ing on .
which s ide of the highway the trash ends up.
"If the trash stays on the coastal side of the hiJ.hway,
then it 's up to the state parks people to pick tt up,"
Wallace declares ... and they have a $24 ,000 bud,et to do
just that."
On the other h and. if the de bris gets dumped on the
inland side of the highway, it 's another story. If the junk
remains within 15 feet of the paved highway lanes, then
V.arioua official$ debating on to1M> lhoMld clcoa MP Mfll• tnaM
it's the responsibility of Caltrans. But should the trash
land more than 15 feet from the pavement, Wallace con-
tends it belongs to the upside property owner. lo this
~ase, that would be the Irvine Company.
Then there is the trash twilight zone. What if the jun~
s tarts out on the coastal side and blows ~n prevailing·
coastal breezes to the inland side? Who is the trashee
then?
You see, in this day and age. even pickup of trash, or
not picking it up get to be an extremely technical ques-
tion.
ALL TIDS ASIDE, it may develop that Wallace's pet
miniature Schnauzer, known quaintly by the name
"Fur-Ocious," will solve the upcoast trash problem at
Crystal Cove.
It happens that Alan Wallace and his friend Fur-
Ocious have this daily habit of going down on the beach
for walks.
"We have this aareement that ~-Ocious takes me
for a walk one day and then I tak~ •him on the next.~·
Wallace explained. "" '
Anyway, the other morning, Crystal Cove wu en-
veloped in a heavy beachfront fo1 and it seemed ll~ a
good idea to let Fur-Ocious take his walk .without bene,ftt .
of leash. 1
univenity land au.rroundiq the
campus.
Parker said be expects to 10 to
the Resenta within six moothl
with a proposal to build 200 unita
which would be sold to UCI
faculty at lesa than the market
coet for housing. The boualnl -ranstne from coodomlnluma to
.detached slncle-family homes -
would be built ln the aoutb-
campua area near where 100-
Wlita ct faculty apartments are
now belnl constructed.
By attacking the problems of
high-interest rates and Ure b1ll1
cost of real estate, Parker said,
be hopes the faculty recruitment
a11d retention effort will be
enh~ced at UCI.
Beeause of the prohibitively
, hlgb cost of bousin1 in the
Oranp County area, UCI bu 50
f•culty positions open at any one
'ttme, Parker said.
"Housing is the major lasue in
f acuity recruitment," Parker
said. "Typically, it takes us two
years to fill a faculty position.
"On the average, our first
choice isn't interested ... so we
~ entt up looking at our second and
·tlti~ choices for faculty posi-
tton1."
Parker said internationally
known scholars recruited by
UCJ say they like the university,
tta programs and Orange C-Oun-
ty, but just can't afford to buy a
house in the area.
"We were recruitinl a na-
tionally distinguished profeuor
of German who rejected our of-
fer at the last moment because
•f hqusing costs,." Parker said.
"He bad purchased a home
several years ago and if be were
to sell it, he'd lose bis low-
interest first mortgage."
Having 50 faculty po~itions
open at any one time means UCI
is forced to hire temporary peo-
p l e to provide instruction,
Parter said. He added that the
university's research and public
service programs suffer from
.the open faculty poaltiona.
The blgh cost of houslne burta
faculty recruitment more at
UCLA, UCI and UC Berkeley
than at the other six campuses
in the UC system, said Parker .
Real estate near these three
campuses tends to be somewhat
more expensive than real estate
near the other six campuses, be
said.
Ancient sea
mammals
UCI topic
A full-day symposium entiUed
"Mammals of the Ancient Sea"
will take place Oct. 10 at UC
Irvine.
Top experts on local pre-
history will present the latest in-
formation on the fossil resources
of Southern California, includinJ
details of fossil finds in Chula
Vista and Calabasas. Tecb-
niq ues for collecting fo11il
marine mammals also will be
discussed.
The program is jointly
sponsored by the American
Cetacean Society's Orange
"l County Chapter, the National i 7Riatory Foundation of Oranae
County and the UCI Student Af-
fairs Lectures. Admittance, in·
eluding lunch on campus, ls $35.
UCI students who bring their
own lunch will be charged SlO
for admission to the lectures.
LB seniors
get flu shots
Senior cit.isen nu shot clinics
wlll be held each Monday dwtn1
October at the La1una Beaeh
Free Clinic, 460 Ocean A'H.,
from 12:JO p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
l lnmuniaatiom are offered at
no cbarte to adulta a1e 55 and
ol~er and for all people with
~ ~dlnnlc health problems. People '~alUTli~ to eg1s. cbictem or
Ulck• feat.hen 1bould check
witll their doctor before recelv-
illl their shot. For information concerniq
fl• shots and other clinic
seniel!ll, call the Lacuna Beach
Free Wnic at 4M-07Sl between
lt a.m. and 5 p.m . weekdays.
This was when the wily deput)' sheriff snuck up Iron> ..
the rear when they weren't looking and laid a lealh law
violation on the pair. ) · • ' '
T hus it is that Alan Wallace, 5.5, law-abiding gate-
w atcher, furniture-maker and jeweler in Lacuna's
Sawdust Festival, has a day ln th• ioutb County
municipal court on Oct. 22 on a cbar1e of bl'eak1Da the
beach leash law with friend Fur·Oclous.
·•'rr'S A $35 FINE," Wallace acimowled1es . "I pl.n "-
throw myself on the mercy ol the court. And m tblmia
about the highway trash problem, I've decided to ple
with the court to allow me to pick up all that lnlud·lide
trash, ln lieu Of the 35 buCU. , •" I
Now Utat sounds like it would be a prettr 1aoc1
bargain for the 1ovenunent, for Just.a '35 fbte. l'lllel for'
the people wbo littered tbe area.._..~-~ .... by
comparison. ' -.-~ "' , ,
But of .coune the1 don't ..... •ateti die u~ ...
84
87
. , .while walking fingers D through Yellow. Pages .
See. Page 82. """
o.ty ........... " •ldlltf'll K.-..
LIFEGUARD RUN -About 130 runners
showed up for the Laguna Beach Lifeguard
Association's second annual 10-kilometer run
Sue Peterson of Laguna Beach and Robert
0 -Coffin of Capistrano Beach. Age 50-59 win-
ners were Gene Drucker of Santa Ana and
Bill Conroy of Capistrano Beach . City ;Saturday. Winner in the men's age 20·29
division was Rene Komero of Dana Point,
while Rita Folan of Placentia took the top
spot for the women. Age 30-39 winner s were
1 lifeguards said the run earned their associa-
tion $500. which will go toward construction
of a new headquarters building,.
'Secret' meet facts demanded
Referendum group.asks.answers on Newport Center
B)' STEVE MARBLE
... o.9y ........
A Newport Beach group trying Co force a special election on the
approved Newport Center ex·
pansion projed has demanded
answers on a "secret" meeting
between city council members
and ~ranking Irvine Company
executives.
The questions, which eame up
during a Monday press con-
ference called by the referen-
dum group, were directed to
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart.
Mrs. Hart, one of two council
members attending the con-
ference, hosted a noon meeting
Aug. 24 with two council col-
leagues and four Irvine Com-
pany officials just hours before
the council approved the Irvine
Company's $123 million ex-
pansion plan.
"Who called this meeting?"
asked Bobby Lovell, a member
of the referendum group which
is calling it.self RAP -Resi-
dents' Action Plan.
Councilwoman Hart said that
Robert Shelton, an Irvine Com-
pany vice president, bad asked
for the meeting.
"I didn't have any trouble
with that. I meet with anyooe,"
said Mrs. Hart. "We met at my
house because I don't have an
office. If somebody has a
problem with that -I'm sorry."
The councilwoman previously
explained that she met with
council colleagues Mayor Jackie
Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer
as well as Irvine Company
President P e ter Kremer,
Shelton and two others from the
development firm. The purpCl8e
or the meeting she said, was to
discuss construction of a new
road.
Members of RAP said they
were concerned because two ci-
ty councilmen -Don Strauss
and Paul Hummel -were not
told of the private meeting.
Strauss and Hummel were the
only council members to vote
a1ainst the expansion project.
"I think that meeting was
wrong," Strauss said when
reached by telephone adding
that he was not informed of the
set-together at Mrs. Hart's
home. "We were in the middle
of a very major decision and
that meeting was totally inap-
propriate."
Strauss said he believes de-
1 cislons were r eached in the
private· meeting that should
have been discussed in public.
Councilman John Cox, who at-
tended the RAP press con·
ference, said the referendum
group is trying to use the
''secret" meeting as a publicity
gimmick to get needed
-signatures to force a referen-
dum on Newport Center.
"They're a bunch of obstruc· tionists who are doing every-
thing possible to stop develop-
ment in Newport ," Co-x
commented following the press
conference.
"These are vindictive, vicious
people and it galls me how
they're trying to sway the public
with fal se and misleading state-ments," said Cox.
Members of RAP said they
questioned the timing of the
private meeting, coming hours
before a final vote on Newport
Center. ~
-Cox, who favored the Newport
Center expansion. project, said
he thought the press conference
itself was a "publicity stunt" to
get media exposure on the ref·
erendum movement.
Councilman faces
hit, run charges
Laguna Beach City Coun-
cilman William Wilcoxen has
been ordered to appear in South
Orange County Municipal Court
in Laguna Niguel Sept. 28 to face
charges of vehicular hit and run
and reek.less driving, according
to Orange County District At-
torney Del Wright.
Wright said a "notice to ap-
pear" was mailed to WUcoxen, a
long-time Laguna Beach at-
torney, late last week.
Wilcoxen said today the
charges against him are "utter
nonsense" and that he will plead
innocent.
Wilcoxen, 49, who was ap-
pointed to his City Council seat
about two months ago, is ac-
cused of repeatedly rear-ending
a Laguna Beach woman's car in
an incident Aug. 21 on Pacific
Coast Highway.
However, Wilcoxen denies he
rammed the car. "I did not
rear-end anyone's car four or
five times," he said.
In past statementa he has also
maintained lhat tbe police re-
port oo the incident· contains in-
complete and inaccurate in-
formation.
Eftekhar Tong, 51, of Laguna
Beach, told police she was driv-
ing north on Pacific Coast
Highway near McKnight Drive
in Laguna Beach at 1 p.m . Aug.
21 when she was rear-ended by •
man driving a white Mercury
station wagon.
According to the police report,
she claims her car was struclt
four or five times wbile both
vehicles were proceeding north
on the highway.
Mrs . Tong said she was finally
forced out of her lane and the
station wagon "fled northbound
toward Newport Beach." Mrl.
Tong didn't come to police head-
quarters until the followin" day
(Aug. 22) to rm out an accident
report, police said.
Based on a description of ti*
station wagon and a licens'e
plate number, Wilcoxen waa
pulled to the side of the road
Aug. 22 by a motor officer who
spolted his car.
According to Wright, who is
prosecuting the case for the dii--
trict attorney's office, he ask~
for and received addltional iJ>.
formation on the incident from
Laguna Beach police last weet,
which .led to bis decision k>
press charges against Wilcoxen.
If convic ted, Wright said~
Wilcoxen could spend up to siS
,months in jail arid be fined If
much as $500.
Drunken-driving law hailed
Laguna group leader says legislators deserve · pat on back
By JORN NEEDHAM ...............
The leader of a local anti-
drunken drivint 1roup aays
1tate lawmallen deserve a pat
on the Melt. for puainl touiMr
law• dealin1 with drunks.
Linda Scbmldt of La1uaa
Beach, wbo beads the 0r_,.
1Coun'y chapter of Motbera
A1 afnit Drunk Drlv•ra
(MADD), 11.ld tbe n•w laws
would ~put drunken driven
ill Jail eliminat. aom• plea
bar~ CW'IWltl.y .,.. walt-
ta1 for'-Governor Brown'• •llaature. Ti• Ont 'WOuld 1\lftm tlae-
penaHy for ftnt-tim• .,..._
drlytq ·-· U .... UM bW, ftnt ........ could DO .......
l•t off with only • llD•,. tiut '
would face a minimum of two
days in jail or a 90-day license
restriction, Mn. Schmidt aaid.
The restriction provides that
the coovtcted offender could OD·
ly 11se b1a car for driving to 1'0l'k
or to ID alc.obol treatment pro-
pam.
In 8Cldltioa, there would be a
mandatory ftne of from '375 to
·$500 and the offender would have '
to complete a treatment pro-
1ram. Tb• bW a1lo provtda for in·
created peaJUes for 1eecod IDd
th1rd olflDMI. "What tbla bW
1meau II tbai an)'one who II eon·
lvicted ot dnmken drivtnc la io-
las to~ 10me time lD J'1J,"
·Mn. taid.
· Tb• MCODd a1ttl-drunken drtv-
ln1 bill would elhntnat•
challeac• to drunken drlvinl
' arrests based on blood alcohol
levels.
U Brown signs the bill into
law, people wtth a 0.10 blood
!alcohol content would b·•
!deemed dnmk.
A third bill would require that
prior chart• of dnmken drlvlnc
be counted u drunken drivinl
offeme1, even lf the c.barte II
plea bu1alned down to • leaser
offense, llke ~-drl¥1Da.
Pasaaae of dM Lbree billa •M
uabed by MADD r•P .... •ta. 1ve1, Mrs. Schmidt 1ild. ••1
ally feel like we are ftaaUJ ettta1 1ometbln1 ae -
ompl11bed. Tb• l•1l1latora
ere Vflr/ 1J111patbede to ut and
ey delerve a lot of credit tor
elr work."
~
Dlllyl'Hat
TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1911 She's. all thtltnbs
while walking fingers
through Yellow Pages.
See Page B2 .
0 ~
IRVINI . COMICS 84 D
STOCKS 87
F acuity l11red by U CI
Two-pronged. attack planned on. area housing costs
By RICHARD GREEN
0t -o.llY ~ s.-UC Irvine administrators plan
u l wo·pronged attack against the
problem of high-cost housing,
which is hampering the recruit·
mentor faculty.
UCJ Assistal)t Vice Chancellor
William H . Parker said UCI
next year will be able to offer
low-interest mortgage loans to
professors interested in joining
the faculty. He explained that,
undli!r a plan adopted Friday bv
the UC Regents, loans at 12 per.
cent interest will be offered to
110 professors throughout the UC
system.
Fifteen of these loans will be
made available at UCI, Parker
said. The current market in·
lerest rate for mortgage loans is
16.5 percent,
The second portion of UCI's
attack on the housing crisis,
Parker said, involves the con·
struction of faculty housing on
~ !"'-\
TOM MURPH IN I ,~If
Fur-Ocious snar Is
at trash problem
BEACHES & BVWAVS DEPT. After lamenting. the
trashy condition of Pacific Coast Highway along the new
s tate beach park areas of El Morro and Crystal Cove. I
am now informed that the responsibility looms as a
rather technical question.
The problem in this area, of course. has been the new
influx of beach tourists who unload all their trash along
the highway should~rs. And it's still piled up there a s we
approach the waning days of September.
So who cleans it up'? The state parks service? The
Cal trans people'! The wind'' To date, it's mainly been a
combination of nobody. maybe with some assistanc·e
from vagr ant breezes
NOW THE TEC'HNICAL question in volved here is
a rticulated by one Alan Wallace, a Crystal Cove resident
over the pas t dozen years and sort of an unofficial gate
g uard for the cove communitv.
Wallace interprets the ·situation as depending on
which side of the highway the tras h ends up.
"(f the tras h s tays on the coastal side of the highway.
then it's up to the sta te parks people to pick it up ...
'.#allace d eclares. ··and they have a $24 ,000 budget to do
JUSt that.''
On the other hand. 1f the debris gets dumped on the
ml and s ide of the highway. it's another s tory )( the junk
re m a ins within 15 feet of the paved highway lanes. then
Variow official& debating on who should clean up highwoy troah
it's the responsibility of Caltrans . But should the trash
land more than 15 feel from the pavement, Wall ace con·
tends it belongs to the upside property owner. In this
case. that would be the Irvine Company.
Then the re is the trash twilight zone. What if the junk
starts out on the coastal side and blows on prevailing
coastal breezes to the inland side? Who is the trashee
then'?
You see. in this day and age. even pickup of trash, or
n.ot pi cking it up get to be an extremely technical ques·
lion .
ALL TJUS ASIDE. it may develop that Wallace's pet
miniature Schnauzer, known quaintly by the name
"Fur·Ocious." will solve the upcoast trash problem at
Cryst al Cove.
lt happens that Alan Wallace and his friend Fur·
Ocious have this daily habit of going down on the beach
for waJks.
"We have this agreement that Fur-Ocious takes me
for a walk one day a nd then I take him on the next."
Wallace explained.
Anyway, the other morning, Crystal Cove was en·
veloped in a heavy beachfront fog and it seemed like a
good idea to let Fur·Ocious take his walk without benefit
of leash.
This was when the wily deputy sheriff snwck up from
the rear when they weren't looking and laid a leash law
violation on the pair.
Thus it is that Alan Wallace. SS, law-abiding gate·
watcher. furniture-maker and jeweler in Laguna's
Sawdust Festival, has a day in the South County
municipal court on Oct. 22 on a charge of breaking the
be;ch leash law with friend Fur-Ocious.
'"IT'S A S3S FINE,'' Wallace acknowledges. "I plan to
throw myself on the mercy of the court. And In thinking
about the highway trash problem, I've decided to plead
with the court to allow me to pick up all that inJand·aide
trash, in lieu of the 35 bucks. . . "
Now that sounds Uke It would be a pretty lood
bargain for the government, for Just • S35 fine. Fines for
the peo'?le who Uttered the area would be $500 per U>ss, by
comparison.
Butof_course they don't ever catch the lltterbugs.
university land surrounding the
campus.
Parker said he expects t() go to
the Regents withJn six months
with a proposal to build 200 units
which would be sold to UCI
faculty at .less than the market
cost for housing. The housing -
ranging from condominiums to
detached single-family homes -
would be built in the south·
campus area near where 100·
units of faculty apartments are
now being constructed.
By attacking the problems of
high-interest rates and the high
cost of real estate, Parker said,
he hopes the faculty recruitment
and retention effort will be
enhanced at UCI.
Because of the prohibitively
high cost of housing in the
Orange County area, UCJ has 50
faculty positions open at any one
time. Parker said.
"Housing is the major issue in
faculty recruitment," Parker
said. "Typically. il takes us two
years to fill a faculty poc.::if n. "On the average, r first
choice isn't interested ... so we
end up looking at our econd and
third choices for faculty posi·
lions."
Parker said internationally
known scholars recruited by
UCI say they like the university,
its programs and Orange Coun·
ty. but just can't afford to buy a
house in the area.
"We were recruiting a na·
tionally distinguished professor
of German who rejected our of·
fer at the last moment because
of housing costs," Parker said.
"He had purchased' a home
several years ago and If he were
to sell it, he'd lose his low·
interest first mortgage.·'
Having 50 faculty positions
open at any one time mearis UCI
is forced to hire temporary peo·
pie to provide ins truction,
Parker said. He added that the
university's research and public
service programs suffer from
the open faculty positions.
The high cost of housing hurts
faculty recruitment more at
UCLA , UCI and UC Berkeley
than at the other six campuses
in the UC system, said Parker.
Real estate near these three
campuses tends to be somewhat
more expensive than real estate
near tb.f? other six campuses. he
said.
Trustees OK
new Irvine
teacl1er pact
Representatives of the Irvine
Teachers Association and the
Irvine Unified School District
Trustees have ratified a one·
year contract calling for an 8
percent pay increase for 660
teachers in 25 schools.
The contract was approved
Monday night by the trustees.
Me mbers or the Irvine
Teachers Association ratified
the contract earlier in the day.
Tentative agreement on the pact
was reached Sept. 8.
The cost of the salary hike to
the school district is $1.1 million,
said Ron Upton. He said the
average teacher in the school
district is paid $22,000 per year.
This is the first year in the
eight-year history of the Irvine
Unified School District that
teachers started a school year
without a contract.
Representatives of the school
district and teachers association
agreed that this year's negotia·
lions were the most heated in
school district history.
Normally, agreement on a
teacher contract is reached in
early summer, well before the
start of the new school year.
School started Sept. 14 for
15,200 students in the Irvine
Unified School Distric\.
Ancient sea
mammals
UCI topic
A full-day symposium entitled
"Mammals of the Ancient Sea"
will take place Oct. 10 at UC
Irvine.
Top experts on local pre·
history will present the latest ln-
ro.rm ation on the foesil raourcn
of Southern California, lncludlna
dmUa ol foall flnda In Olula
Vilt a and Calabaaaa. Tecb-
niq ue• for collecUnc foull m•rlne mammala alto will be
diacUMd.
Tb• pro1ram ls Jointly
aponsored by the American
Cetacean Society'• Oran1e
COUDlY Cbapte~l the NaUonal
Blatory Foundauoo ot Oranae
<' County and the UCI Student ,\.f· -~~-----------------... fall's Lectures . .
Deify ,.... ,,_.., oi.nn .....
EYEBALL TO EYEBALL -Dr. Richard Sarlitl
gives eye examin ation to Arthur Kroner of
1 rvme at the Third Annual Health Fair for
Irvine Senior Citizens, held over the weekend
at the Irvine Senior Center. 3 Sandburg Way
Seniors were also checked for hearing and
blood pressure. The senior center is adjacent
to the Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course in
Irvine.
'Secret' meet facts demanded
Referendum group asks answers on Newport Center
By STEVE MARBLE
Of -IMl!y ~Sutt A Newport Beach group trying
to force a special election on the
approved Newport Center ex·
pansion project has demanded
answers on a "secret" meeting
between city council members
and top-ranking Irvine Company
t!xecutives.
The questions, which came up
during a Monday press con·
rerence called by the referen·
dum group, were directed to
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart.
Mrs. Hart, one of two council
mem hers attending tbe con·
ference. hosted a noon meeting
Aug. 24 with two council col-
leagues and four Irvine Com·
pany officials just hours before
the council approved the Irvine
Company 's $123 million ex· pansion plan.
"Who called this meeting?"
asked Bobby Lovell, a member
of the referendum group whkh
is calling itself RAP -Resi·
dents' Action Plan.
Councilwoman Hart said that
Robert Shelton, an Irvine Com·
pany vice president, had asked
for the meeting.
"I didn't have an> trouble
with that. I meet with anyone,"
said Mrs. Hart. "We met at my
house because I don't have an
office. If somebody has a
problem with that -I'm sorry."
The councilwoman previously
explained that s he met with
council colleagues Mayor Jackie
Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer
as well as Irvine Company
President Peter Kremer,
Shelton and two others from the
development firm. The purpose
o~ the meeting s he said, was to
discuss construction of a new
road.
Trash con tract
topic in Irvine
The Irvine City Council will
meet tonight to consider
whether the Dewey's Rubbish
Co., Ir:vine, should be given an
exclusive contract to pick up
trash in residential and com·
m ercial areas of the city.
Toro Disposal. competitors of
Dewey's, have complained that
the garbage contract shouldn•t
b~ awarded without open bid·
ding. The council will meet at
7:30 p.m. in the Irvine City
Council chambers, 17200 Jam·
boree Road, Irvine.
Members of RAP s ajd they
were concerned because two ci·
ty councilmen -Don Strauss
and Paul Hummel were not
told of the private meeting.
Strauss and Hummel were the
only council members to vote
against the expansion project.
"I think that meeting was
wrong," Strauss s aid when
reached by telephone adding
that he was not informed of the
get -together. at Mrs . Hart's
home. "We were in the middle
of a very major decision and
that meeting was totally inap·
propriale."
Councilman John Cox, who at-
tended the RAP pres s con·
rerence, said the referendum
group is trying to use the
"secret" meeting as a publicity
gimmick to get n e edea
signatures to force a referen·
dum on Newport Center .
"They're a bunch or obstruc-
tionisls who are doing every-
thing possible to stop develop·
ment in N e wport," Co·x
commented following the press
conference.
··These are vindictive, vicious
people and it galls me how
tl':ey're trying to sway the public
with false and misleading state-
ments." said Cox.
Members of RAP said they
questioned the timing of tti'l
private meeting, coming hours
before a final vote on Newport
Center.
Cox. who favored the Newport
Center expansion. project, said
he thought the press conferenc"
itself was a "publicity stunt" to
get media exposure on the ref·
erendum movement
Councilman faces
hit, run charges
Laguna Beach City Coun·
cilman William Wilcoxen has
been ordered to appear in South
Orange County Municipal Court
in Laguna Niguel Sept. 28 to face
charges or vehicular hit and run
and reckless driving, according
to Orange County District At-
torney Del Wright.
Wright said a "noHce to. ap·
pear" was mailed to Wilcoxen, a
long-time Laguna Beach al·
torney, late last week.
Wilcoxen said today the
charges against him are "utter
nonsense" and that he will plead
innocent.
Wilcoxen, 49, who was ap·
pointed to bis City Council seat
about two months ago, is ac·
cused of repeatedly rear-ending
a Laguna Beach woman's car in
an incident Aug. 21 on Pacific
Coast Highway.
However, Wilcoxen denies he
rammed the car. "l did not
rear-end anyone's car four or
five times," he said.
In past statements he has also
maintained that the police re·
port on the incident contains in·
complete and inaccurate In·
formation.
Eftekhar Tong, 51, of Laguna
Beach, told police she was driv·
ing north on Pacific Coast
llighway near McKnight Drive
in Laguna Beach at 1 p.m . Aug.
21 when she was rear-ended by a
m an driving a whjte Mercury
station wagon.
According to the police report,
s he claims her car was struck
four or five times while bo~
vehicles were proceeding north
on the highway.
Mrs. Tong said she was finall1
forced out of her lane and tht
station wagon "fl ed northbouna
toward Newport Beach." MrS,
Tong didn't come to police head-
quarters until the followin~ daf
(Aug. 22) to fill out an accidenl
report, police said. ~
Based on a description of
s tation wagon and a licens
plate number. Wilcoxen w8'
pulled to the side of the roa~
Aug. 22 by a motor officer who
spolted his car.
According to Wright, who is
prosecuting the case for the dis·
trict attorney's office, he asked
for and received additional in·
formation on the incident from
Laguna Beach police last week,
which led to his decision to
presr, charges against Wilcoxen.
If convicted. Wright said,
Wilcoxen could spend up lo six
months in jail arld be fined as
much as $500.
Drunken-driving law hailed
' Laguna group leader says legisfators deserve pat on back
By JOHN NEEDHAM °' .. ~ .........
The leader of a local anti·
drunken driving group says
state lawmakers deserve a pat
on the t>ack I or passing tougher
laws dealing with drunks.
Linda Schmidt of Laguna
Beach, who bead• the Orqe
County chapter of Motbtra
Againat Drunk Drivers
<MADD>. 11ld the ne• Ian
would help put drunken drivers
in Jail and ellmlnite aome plea
bat1a.lniu.
·· Three bfll1 currently are wilt·
101 for-Governor Brow11 '1
sl1aature.
The first would 1tlfta Ult penalty foe llnt·Ume .,..._
drlvlnl off ....... ·u.._ Ute bllJ,•
llrst ottenclera could no lonpr
1el on with O!llly • nu, bat
would face a minimum of two
days in Jail or a 90-day license
restriction, Mrs. Schmidt said.
Tbe restrlctiefl provides that
the convicted offender could on·
ly use hJs car for drivln1 to work
or to an alcohol treatment pro-
1ram.
In addition, there would be a
mandatory nDe of from $37S to
S.SOO and t.be offender would have
to complete 1 tr .. tmeot pro· rnm.
Tbe bW Illa ~ for iDo
creued peDalUee for HtoDd imd
third affeGM11J (•What _. 11111 meamllthllt•,_._.. .....
Ylctad "' ... drlyllll .. , ..
arrests based on blood alcohol
levels.
If Brown signs the bill into
law, people with a 0.10 blood
alco,bol cooten·t would be
deemed drunk.
A third blll would require that
prior charges of drunken drlvinl
be counted u drunkea drtvine
offenses, even if the charse ii
plea bafcalned down to a leMer
oftense, Wte reckleea ~Yiae· '
lillto=--·--··-~ Mn. 9'.-Niil ;·----TIM..-ml&-411 tnsi ~
••• bill woalcl •ll•t•t• cbau..,. to di t•• 111,...
111111 CDllT
.
...,,..
TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1tl1
4.
COMICS 84
STOCKS 87
She's.all thumbs
while UXJlking fingers
·through Yellow Pages .
See Page 82.
0
0
Game law tilts to softer line
Mesa abandons tough regulations.after electronic machine.advocates protest
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Oftllei)Mty ...........
The squeaky wheel got the
grease as about SO electronic
game advocates -most of them
business owners -descended on
Costa Mesa City Hall to protest
proposed tough regulations on
quarter-ir-play machines.
After two hours of public
testimony Monday, City Council
members abandoned a stance
against the games for a new or-
dinance proposed by the Plan-
ning Commission that opens Just
.
about every business door in
town to the electronic marvela.
The lengthy hearing waa
called by Mayor Arlene Schafer
so that council members could
direct planning officials and the
city attorney on the direction a
new game control ordinance
should take.
The council will look at an or-
dinance draft during a study
session Oct. 26 and then air It
during another public hearing
Nov. 2.
Electronic games have been
~
TIM MURPff 111 ~-,,
Fur-Ocio"Q.s snarls
at trash problem
BEACHES & BYWAYS DEPT. -After lamenting the
trashy condition of Pacific Coast Highway along the new
state beach park areas of El Morro and Crystal Cove, I
a m now informed that the responsibility looms as a
rather technical question.
The problem in this area, of course, has been the new
influx of beach tourists who unload all their trash along
the highway shoulders. And it's still piled up there as we
approach the waning days of September.
So who cleans it up? The state parks servic~? The
Caltrans people? The wind? To date, it's mainly been a
combination of nobody. maybe with some assistance
from vagrant breezes .
NOW THE TECHNICAL question involved here is
articulated by one Alan Wallace, a Crystal Cove resident
over the past dozen years and sort of an unofficial gate
~uard for the cove community.
Wallace interprets the situation as depending on
which side of the highway the trash ends up.
"If the tras h stays on the coastal side of the hi~hway,
then it's up to the state parks people to pick 1t up,"
Wallace declares. "and they have a $24,000 budget to do
JUSt that."
On the other hand. if the debris gets dumped on the
inland side of the highway. it 's another story . If the junk
rem ains within 15 fee t of the paved highway lanes, then
Variow officials debating on who ahouJd c~an up high1A10J1 tnuh
it 's the responsibility of Cal trans. But should the trash
land more than 15 feet from the pavement. Wallace con-
t ends it belongs to the upside property owner. In this
c:ase. that would be the Irvine Company.
Then there is the trash twilight zone. What if the junk
starts out on the coastal side and blows on prevailing
coastal breezes to the inland side? Who is the trashee
then'?
You see. in this day and age, even pickup of trash. or
not pi cking it up get to be an extremely technical ques -
tion.
ALL TIDS ASIDE, it may develop that Wallace's pet
miniature Schnauzer, known quaintly by the name
.. Fur-Ocious ... will solve the upcoast t rash problem at
Crystal Cove.
It happens that Alan Wallace and his rriend Fur-
Ocious have this daily habit of going down on the beach
for walks.
··we have this agreement that Fur-Ocious takes me
for a walk one day and then I take him on the next,"
Wallace explained.
Anyway. the other morning, Crystal Cove was en-
veloped in a heavy beachfront fog and it seemed like a
good idea to let Fµr-Ocious take his walk without benefit
of leash.
This was when the wily deputy sheriff snuck up from
the rear when they weren't looking and laid a leash law
violation on the pair.
Thus it is that Alan Wallace, SS, law-abiding gate-
watcher. furniture-maker and jeweler in Laguna's
Sawdust Festival, has a day in the South County
municipal court on Oct. 22 on a charee of breaking the
beach leash law with friend ~-Ocious.
••11T'S A $35 FINE ... Wallace acknowledges. i.1 ~lan to
throw myself on the mercy of the court. And in thinking
about the highway trash problem, I've decided to plead
with the court to allow me to pick up all that inland-side
trash. in lieu of the 35 bucks ... "
Now that sounds like it would be a pretty tood
bargain for the government, for Just a 135 fine. Ftne:t for
the people who littered the area would be ISOO per toss, by
comparison·.
But of course they don't ever catch the lltterbup.
resulated by ordinances
stipulating that a business
permit is required for each, no
matter where it ls lnstalled.
A moratorium oo lnstallaUon
of games was approved three
months aJ(o.
Police have complained that
you ngsters are turning to
daytime burglary for money to
play the electronic 'marvels
when they should be in school.
Some owners of businesses
near liquor stores and conven-
ience markets which house
three or four electronic games
have complained that youths
congregating in those shops
create a noise nuisance and clut-
ter small shopping centers with
mo-peds, bicycles and trash.
But only two Costa Mesans
turned out Monday night in
quest of laws clamping down on
game machines.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Touhey
argued that children are turning
to truancy or arriving late for
classes as the result of passions
for playing the machines.
Mrs. Touhey, a teacher at
Killybrooke School, told the
council her own son had taken
money from her purse to play
t h e games without her
knowledge.
Touhey told council members
they would hear of "no problem
as long as you listen to the peo-
ple making money on them
(games)." ·
He said he is concerned with
the games' influence on
children. "That's the issue, not
the games.
"Many of us wish we had a
better handle on television and
its effect on children. Now it's
too late."
About 20 others , mostly
owners of businesses housing the
machines and distributors from
throughout Southern California,
urged the council to go easy with
regulations.
Most argued that the games
provide badly needed income in
stores that operate marginally
in Costa Mesa.
Spokesmen for 7-Eleven stores
claimed the games actually
have reduced crime lbrouRhout
the chain by filling the conven-
ience market with game
players at limes when armed
robberies occur.
Dick Corbit, owner of a liq.
or stor e at 1011 El Camino
Drive, Costa Mesa, argued that
Extra Time
Classes due
·in Newport
Registration opens Wednesday
at Mariners Elementary School
in Newport Beach for Extra
Time Classes, parent-paid
en r ichme nt schooling for
c hildren residing i n the
Newport-Mesa School District.
Classes to begin Oct. 5 for fees
ranging from $20 to $70, include
piano, chemistry, vocal music,
ornithology, French, Spanish,
calculators, puppetry, German,
journalism. computers, sewing,
art. biology, drama and radio
announcing.
Enrollment will be between 3
and 6 p.m. Wednesday and from
8 to 10 a.m. on Thursday, ac-
cording to Marion Robboy,
spokesman for the PTO-
sponsored program.
Additional information may be
obtained from Mrs. Robboy,
645-5558; Judy Zimmerman,
646-1701, or Peggy Lucas,
646-91S3.
youngsters in liquor stores have
more supervision than when left
to run the streeta.
He argued that kids buy candy
in the stores. "Are you going to
ban candy from liquor stores?"
he asked.
When the squeaking wu over,
the council voted that an or-
dinance should allow the in·
stallaUon of up to three games in
any business in a commercial
zone.
Installation of more than three
games should require a special
use permit to be reviewed by the
council every year, they suggest-
ed , much as entertainment
permits are now reviewed.
The use permit would be re-
quired even if games were in·
stalled before passage of a final
ordinance.
Abandoned were plans to con-
fine the electronic machines lo
large shopping .eenters and ban
them from all liquor stores and
convenience markets.
Tiu! COllllcil ordered city aides
to re~ possible methods of
controlling use of games during
school hours and lo come up
with ideas for parking bicycles
and mo-peds around shops hous-
ing the games.
Councilman Donn Hall was the
chief council opponent of a law
that would clamp tough regula-
tions on the machines.
He argued that less interven-
tion is the new direction of gov-
ernment and that government
cannot legislate morals that
should be dictated by the family.
Detfy,.... ..........
ROCK INSCRIPTION This plaque was placed on a four-ton
boulder at Corona del Mar's Inspiration Point during recent
ceremonies conducted as part of Newport Beach's 15th an-
niversary festivities. T. Duncan Stewart. who selected the
boulder and was instrumental in preserving the Inspiration
Point blufftop. said former Newport Councilman Braden
Finch was a champion of preserving the Corona del Mar
coastline.
'Secret' meet facts demanded
Referendum group asks answers on Newport Center
By STEVE MARBLE
CM .. o.lly .... SWI
A Newport Beach group trying
to force a special election on the
approved Newport Center ex-
pansion project has demanded
answers on a "secret" meeting
between city council members
and lop-ranking Irvine Company
executives.
The questions, which came up
during a Monday press con·
ference called by the referen-
dum group, were directed to
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart.
Mrs. Hart, one of two council
members attending the con-
ference, hosted a noon meeting
Aug. 24 with two council col-
leagues and four Irvine Com·
pany officials just hours before
the council approved the Irvine
Company's $123 million ex-
pansion plan.
: 'Who called this meeting ?''
asked Bobby Lovell, a member
of the referendum group which
is calling itself RAP -Resi-
dents' Action Plan.
Councilwoman Hart said that
Robert Shelton, an Irvine Com-
pany vice president, had asked
for the meeting.
"I didn't have any trouble
Marine winne r
in Newport run
J oe Jenkins, a Camp Pen-
dleton Marine Corps sergeant,
posted the winning time In
Newport Beach's 7.5-kilometer
run in Fashion Island which
drew 566 contestants last
weekend.
Jenkins placed first with a
time of just over 23 minutes.
Robin Dubach of Newport Beach
posted the top lime in the
women's category. She was
clocked at just over 26 minutes .
The run, about 4~ miles, was
part of Newport Beach's 7Sth an-
niversary celebration.
with that. I meet with anyone."
said Mrs. Hart. "We met at my
house because I don't have an
office. If somebody has a
problem with that -I'm sorry."
The councilwoman previously
explained that she met with
council colleagues Mayor Jackie
Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer
as well as Irvine Company
President Peter Kremer,
Shelton and two others from the
development firm. The purpose
of the meeting she said. was to
discuss construction of a new
road.
Members of RAP s aid they
were concerned because two ci·
ty councilmen -Don Strauss
and Paul Hummel -were not
told of the private m eeting.
Strauss and Hummel were the
only council members to vote
against the expansion project.
"I think that meeting was
wrong,·' Strauss said when
reached by telephone adding
that he was not informed ofthe
get-together at Mrs. Hart's
home. "We were in the middle
of a very major decision and
that meeting was totally inap-
propriate.''
Councilman John Cox, who al·
tended the RAP press con·
ference, said the referendum
grou p is trying to use the
"secret" meeting as a publicity
gimmick to get n eedea
signatures to force a referen·
dum on Newport Center.
''They're a bunch of obstruc· tionisls who are doing every·
thing possible to stop develop·
ment in Newport," Co-x
commented following the press
conference.
"These are vindictive, vicious
people and it galls me how
they're trying to sway the public
with false and m isleading state·
men ts." said. Cox. Members of RAP said they
questioned the liming of the
private meeting, coming hours
before a final vole on Newport
Center.
Cox. who favored the Newport
Center expansion. project, said
he thought the press conferenc"'
itself was a "publicity stunt" to
get media exposure on the ref·
erendum movement. The referendum group has un-
ti 1 Sept 30 to gather 4,250
sign atu r es o f registered
Newport voters. If it meets the
deadline, the council would be
forced to repeal approval of the
expansion project or call a
special election.
J erry Collins, an Irvine Com·
pany official who attended the
press conference. said his firm
has no second thoughts on the
private meeting.
"It was a helpful and really
very conventional way to com•
municate and exchange points o(
view." said Collins. ''That's a
right that everyone has.
"We're surprised that anyon4l
would try to make an issue out
of it," he added.
Ne1vport sets
'reflections'
An evening of reminiscing on
the early days in Newport Beach
by some of the city's longtime
residents is scheduled Wednes-
day at the Newport Center
branch library.
Billed as a night of "reflec·
lions, recollections and rem-
iniscences." the 7:30 p.m.
event will feature talks by T.
Duncan Stewart. Bill Grundy,
Dorothea Sheely , Robin
Lawrence and Ca rt er
McDonald.
The program, to be videotaped
as a permanent historical rec-
ord, Is being held in connection
with the city's 75th anniversary
celebrations. The branch library
is located at 856 San Clemente
Drive . There is no admission
charge. .
High-cost housing h~ts UCI faculty
University plans two-pronged.attack on high mortgage loans
By RICHARD GllEEN ..... ...., .........
UC Irvine admlnistralon plan
a two-pronaed attack a1ainat the
problem of high-cost bou.alnc,
which is hampertn1 the recruit-ment ol faculty.
UCI Assistant Vice Chancellor
William H. Parker said UCJ
next year will be able to offer
low·lnterest mort.aaae loant to
professon Interested lnJolninl
the faculty. He explain that,
under a plan adopt~ Friday by
t.be UC Rqenll, loas at 12 per-
cent interest will be olfered to
110 profellOl"I t.broulbout tbl UC
system.
Flftea ol tb8H loans wUl be
made available at UCI,· Parter
said. The current market In·
terest rate few mortca1e loam la
lfl.S pettent.
The second portion of UCl's
attack on the bou1ln1 crisis,
Parker said, involves the con-
struction of faculty hou•lnl on
unlveraity land aun-ouncllnt the
campus.
Parker 1aid be expect.I to ao to
the Regeau wtWn slx montbl
with • propotal to build JOO unit.I
whlcb would be •old to UCI
faculty at le11 than the market
cost for boUahlt. Tbe boullnc -
rd1tns from coadominlama to
detached abaslwamlly bom• -
would be bunt In tbe IOUtb·
campus area near wbere J.00.
unit.I ol faculty apartmenla .,..
DOW beina coutnaded.
By au.a--. t.IM J)l"Oblema ol
hlth·intAlrelll rat• ud tbe blP
cost " real tlltate. Parker~ be hopes tbe faculty reerul
and retention effort will be
enhanced at UCI.
Because of the prohibitively
high cost of housing in the
'Oran1e County area, UCI has 50
f acuity poaJt.iona open at any one
.ume. Parker said. "dCJUlinl 1J Uie major iHue ln
faculty recruitment," Parker
aald. "Typically. !t ta1'e1 us two
years to ftlJ a faculty poaltlon.
"On' the avera111 our fint
choice llll't lnterestea . . . so we
end up looklna at OW' MCond and
thlrd dtoicee for faculty posl-
tJOG1."
P arktr said lntemaUo•aUJ
known 1cbolars recrwted by
UCI ,_, &MJ lllle tM ulY41'111,y,
Ill Pf'OCl'UDI 9Dd Oruce Coan· ty. but )Ult CM'l alfof'd to fNy a
boQ11 ln the area.
"W• were rffnalt.lac a a•·
tionally distinguished professor
of German who rejected our of•
fer at the last moment because
of housing costs," Parker said.
••He had purcbaaeJl a born.I
several years ago and ll he weN
to sell it, he'd loae bis low-
interest fl.rat mort111e. '•
Having 50 faculty position•
open al any one Ume ~eans UCI
ls forced to hire &emporm')' a.>eo-
pl e to provide Instruction,
Parker said. lie edded \Mt tbe
university's re11earch lad public
aervlce proll'•m• suffer from.
tbe open faculty poaltlons.
Tbe -colt., boulnl buJt& faealt1 nawt••t more •. UCIJAf UCl:Jlllill UC .... .._
than ll tbe Clllliir Ila CAmf"ll• ID the UC 1~ utd ...._,
;
•
tlll llllTIWtl ·IAllY PAPIR
ruE SDAY. SE PTF.MBfR 22 1981 OHAN<;f COUNT 'V C Allf OANIA 25 CENTS
HuntingtOn WWI veterans' group /tides away
8y PIDL SNEJDERllAN ... ..., ..........
For the Huntineton Beach bar·
racks ol the Veterans of World
War J, time bu not been an ally.
The IJ"OUP, founded ln 1980,
quickly became a local fixture.
Members organi1ed Armistice
Day services by the city's war
memorial, volunteered at the
Veterans Administration
IJospital in Long Beach and
Rugby
Union
bombed
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP>
-A bomb exploded today in a
building housing the Eastern
Rugby Union's orfices, hours
before the group was to field a
team against the touring South
African Springboks, the targets
of recent anti-apartheid pro·
tests.
There were no reports of in·
juries.
Meanwhile, in New York City,.
lawyers for the state asked a
three-judge federal appeals
court to reverse a district
court's decision and block the
aame, at least temporarily.
While the blast from a "high
explosive device" at 1: 17 a.m.
left only minor dam age at the
headquarters, damage in the ad·
joining offices of a dairy pro-
ducts company was estimated at
$50,000, said police investigator
James McGrath.
Radio station WWWD said a
woman telephoned at 1: 10 a.m.
to say a bomb would go off soon
"downtown." Disc jockey Dale
Lane said the woman hung up
without ide.ntifying herself.
· Thomas Selfridge, president of
the ERU, a co-sponsor of the
Springboks' tour, said his offices
sustained about $50 worth of
damage.
Glass blown by the blast lit·
tt~red State Street in front of the
row of renovated buildings
known as Canal Square.
McGrath said the bomb had
apparently been placed in a
closet 21h feet from the rugby of·
fice in an area accessible to the
public during business hours.
Aske d if there had been
threats against him or the South
African players, Selfridge
replied, "No, there never have
been. It's contrary to the protest
thing and this may or may not
be related."
Fearful of a riot, New York
state officials tried to stop
t-0nigbt's scheduled rugby match
pitting the Springboks, South
Africa's national team, and the
ERU squad. Schenectady is 10
miles from Albany.
Auto theft
ring busted
in Mesa
Investigators today raided a
Costa Mesa business they say
was home base for an auto theft
ring operating in Orange and
San Diego counties.
Two men were arrested at the
Pro Fab Auto and Auto Parts
Distributors, 3042 Enterprise St ..
in an industrial complex west of
the Costa Mesa Freeway.
Authorities confiscated five
Toyota trucks, a Datsun turbo-Z,
a Lotus Elite, two Honda Ac·
cords and parts of various other
autos.
Booked into Orange County
Jail on suspicion of grand theft
auto and suspicion of possessing
stolen property were Leopold
Frank Schulz, 31, Huntington
Beach, and bis brother, Anton
Schulz, 41, Coe4 Meaa. .
Orange County Sheriff's U .
Wyatt Hart said about $250,000
worth of autos and auto parts
were located at the Costa Mesa
business alte. Hart said the al·
lHed theft ring specialized in
trucks and sporty compacts.
He said can were stolen and
tbeir identification numbers
chanied. The vehicles then were
t<a&d to umuapectina cuatomen.
Hart aald a tip from an
anonymous cltiJen trl11erecl a .
Hven·week lnvestlaation lnvolv· lllC eiebt .,end• -police de-
pa.rtmeata In Colt.a ll•a. ffmt· 1actoa BMcb, w .. tm1n1i. uc1
S.Ota Ana, plua tb• Calllcnla
Bltbway Patrol, tbe 1tate 'Deianm...t of Mot« Velda pcl tlle NaUonal Auto TMft
........ well u Ute Or ....
County Sberiff'1 Oftlce.
participated in the city'• annual
Fourth ot July parade.
There were pot luck luncllel
witb the women's au}lillary
every month, flrat ln the Boys
Club buildin1 on Yorktown
Avenue, then in the Masonic
Temple on Palm Avenue.
But Ume bu taken its toll.
Today, the average a1e of the
nation's World War J vets is 88.
Of the Huntinrtoa Beach bar·
racks' '5 charter memben, 34
are known dead. Tbe fate ot five
other charter members la •· known.
This year, the croup bu m~
talned a membership Uat of M,
but many ot lbese men are ln
con val ea cent hom ea and
hospitals or have moved from
the ci~y.
Dunn1 1•1. the 1roup coe·
tinued to bold monthly meetintl,
Sandra Day O'Connor has been unanimou8ly confirmed by the
Senate to become the first woman jwtice of the Supreme Court.
She'll 'be busy'
Sandra O'Connor confirmed 99-0
WASlllNGTON (AP) -San·
dra Day O'Connor, confirmed by
a unanimous Senate and the rant
woman justice on the U.S.
Supreme Court, promises to be
"ver y busy, very fast" after she
is sworn in this week.
There is no clear indication,
however, how she will vote on
social and constitutional issues
that come before the court.
The 51-year-old Arizona ap-
peals judge woo a 99-0 endone-
ment in the Senate on Monday
as the 102nd justice in the 191·
year history of the nation's
hiehest court. She will be youngest of the nine members.
Mrs. O'Connor will be sworn
in for her lifetime position ln
ceremonies Friday afternoon at
the Supreme Court building. But
because the ceremony will be
conducted in the courtroom .
itself, the recording for posterity
will be limited.
•·As is the court practice,
there will be no TV, no photo-
graphs and no tape recorcllnes."
court spokesman Barrett
McGurn said in a printed state-
ment releued today.
Reporters and art.ista will lte
admitted to the ceremony, as
they are for all court sesaiObl.
There will be no public ad·
mission, however, except by in·
vi talion.
Two "picture opportunitiee"
are scheduled shortly after fhe
15-minute ceremony. .
McGurn said official court
photographers would be on hand
but added, "I know of no plan to
have any pbotoerapb taken iD
the courtroom durin& the
ceremony."
<See SVP&EMI!, Pase ,U)
76 more protesters
arrested at Diablo
SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP> -
Seventy-six more protesters
were arrested today at the
Diablo Canyon nuclear power.
plant, brhi1tn1 the elcbt-day
tot.al to 1,4'1. .
The arrests came at tbe main
gate and in the ru11ed back
country around the double·
domed plant, wbJdl la prepMlna
to load nuclear fuel ill tbe oat
few days followlaa a i.t UcmM
approval llonda1 by the
Nuclear Refulatory Com-
mlaaloo.
In addltlon, Hnral 1mall
boats todaJ launelMd tbe ftl"ll
Ha HllUlt OD tb• plaat In
• Hveral d.,a. "We wut to resume I...._
J*)ple ....r.tM nador to lbow
liow ••laora blo It l1 to
1abotq9," aut Man S•Miaft,
...... far tbo AHIGM Al·
Uaace, a coalltian GI eoaae • ...
ti-nuclear croup• which i•
sponsorinl tbe effort to blockade
the plant.
Anti-nuclear sroups alto COD·
tend the atomic plant la unsafe
becaue of a nearby offlbon
earthquake fault.
Fitty-ellbt people were arrwt·
ed on trelpauJna cbar1n at the
m°' aate today u they tried to
block about a doaen bula and eo
to • can carrrtq conab'11c:tiaD work .. to the •.a-bllllon plant.
Padftc Ou • &lectrte Co., whlcb betan buildln1 tbe plaat
oa the ceatral CaUfclnd.a eoMt la
1171, Mid It ...... 1,... tM
protelta and "immediately"
ltart ~ tbe Naetorto ...
colve-w Ja llOpes ol ltal'UDI lt
up tor ... ,.,.... --wtdda two.-..
Aortl1 aft« tile NBC ..-
pro••• t,&•li•I MondaJ , ( .... ~. hit Al) •
attended uaually by rtve or six
members.
Finally, on Sept. 8, these re-
malninl memben voted to re·
tire the cbarter of the Hunt·
infton Beach Veterans of World
War I, Barracks 2380.
•'It wu an organiution that wu doomed to die," observed
Harry M. "Cap" Sheue, the only
active charter member in the
barracks at the time of ita dis·
•
solution. "Every year that
passed, more of the World War l
vets pused away. That's what's
happened to us.''
At 86, Cap Sheue la aomethin1
of a local legend for his work u
a pioneering sports coach. Thf
athletic field at Huntington
Beach High School is named for
him.
In 1980 he was one of the men
rounded up by the late Lloyd
Huddleston tQ form a local bar·
racks of the Veterans of World
War I organization.
According to Sheue, this eroup
was formed by World War I vets
who felt they were not 1ettin1 a
fair shake from the American
Legion and Veterans of Foreign
Wars. which were dominated by
World War JI returnees.
The barracks· first com·
<See VETERANS, Page A%)
Ex-Mesan sought
One of two girls dies. after shooting
11.r F&EDE&ICX SCHOEMEID.. ..................
A ground and air search con·
Unued today iD the Cleveland
Na ti on al Forest for a former
Costa Mesa man and Irvine gun
cl ub employee believed
responsible for a weekend shoot·
inc that bu left a Lake Elsinore
elrl dead and another with bead
injuries.
The object of the search is
Thomas Francis Edwards, 37,
described by Lt. Wyatt Hart of
the Orance County Sheriff's
Department as a "mountain
man" and "gun buff."
Kelly Cartier, 12, and Vanessa
lberri, al.so 12, were shot Satur·
day by a man who, according to
witnesses, stopped bis pickup
truck, called to the two girls,
then fired at them with a small
caliber weapon. The incident OC·
«urred on a trail near the Blue
Jay campground, located about
20 miles east of San Juan
Capistrano. SOUGIIT IN SHOOTINGS
Miss Jberri died at 8:05 p.m. Thomas Francis Edwards
Monday at Mission Community
Hospital in Mission Viejo. Miss T h e m a n h u n t i s be i n g
Cartier, who underwent surgery coordin ated from both the
for the )bead wounds she suf· sheriff's headquarters in Santa
fered, was described as ''doing Ana and a U.S. Forest Service
fine" today by Hart. flre station at El Cariso Village ·
Hart aaid investigators believe a few miles from where the
that Edwards may be hiding in shooting occurred. The For~t
the ~ountalnous forest terrain Service is assisting deputies by
that mcludes vast portions of • providing maps, technical In· easter~ Orange . County and formation and keys to gates,
areas in Riverside and San s aid fores t spokesman Carl Dieao counties. Corey
He said a decision to "re· ·
evaluate" whether the search Corey said camp registers
should continue would be made also are being inspected to de-
early this afternoon. termine if Edwards had been
staying in campgrounds in the Between 12 and 16 deputies forest.
are searching the forest on the
eround, covering dirt roads and Hart said the search of the
trails on loot and with four· forest will continue "until we
wheel drive vehicles. Members a re convinced we've covered
of the sherifrs Aero Squadron, a it."
volunteer croup of reserve
deputies, are assisting in the
search from the air.
Hart said Edwards is con-
si dered "armed and
da!!~erous."
Hart said that a record check
of Edwards' past revealed that
he served a prison sentence in
Maryland on robbery-related
charges.
(See SEARCH. Page AZ)
DIES FROM WOUNDS
Vanessa lberri, 12
IN STABLE CONDITION
Kelly Cartier . 12
Shuttle flight
delay seen
due to spill
Reagan sends tough
note to Brezhnev
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP> -Hlchly toxic fuel spilled
while bein& loaded lnto the
apace shuttle Columbia's
thruster rockets today, loosening
as many as 200 of the
spacecraft's protective tiles and
raisin& the possibility of a delay
In its second mission.
"The Wes are actually falling
off the vehicle," said a NASA
aoarce in Washington. ''It l.s go-
inC to affect an area lareer than
orieinally estimated, maybe a.s
many a D> tiles."
The ship hu more than 30,000
tiles to protect it from the beat
of re-entry.
No injuries were reported
when a fuel line connector
malfunctioned and three to four
1allon.a ol the toxic fuel spilled.
The nitrogen tetroxide
destroys or eats out the bondinl
material, the NASA source said.
The area affected la directly
under the crew cabin, j ust beJow
the fuelin1 porta of tbe forward
rdetion control system. That
1y1tem la a cluster of small
thrusten that steer the .ship In
orbit.
Jim Jtukowaki, a N ASA
1poteama in Wasbiuton aald
earUw tbat the lnltlueaUmate
wu that about 25 of tbe Wea
were dam.,ed-4nd would have
to be replaced.
ltu.bwUi •Ucl olftdaJ. "dm't
bow rwt'' If the tll• could be npland wblle th• alluttle ii oa ~ laaDeb p.t. U not, Ute abut·
tle mllllt Wt• to be returned to tta 11.,.r or the Vehicle M · ... ..., BuUcllna, wbJeb WGQld
alm0tt certainly dela1 tb•
1ebeduled Oct. t lau.ncb, offtclall
•aid. •
UNITED NATIONS <AP> -
President Reagan has sent So-
vie t President Leonid I.
Brezhnev a letter denouncing an
"unremitting and com·
prehensive" military buildup by
the Soviets, but expressing a
willingness to "establish a
framework of mutual respect"
with Moscow.
The letter was sent Monday
and delivered today, on the eve
of wide-ranging discussions
scheduled here Wednesday
between Secretary of State Alex·
ander M. Haig Jr. and Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko.
While the text of the letter was
not released, Dean Fischer, a
State Department spokespaan,
provided reporters with a state·
ment be said wu baaed on the
letter.
It quoted Reagan as saying
the United States ls "hopeful we
can succeed in establishing a
framework of mutual respect for
each others' interests and for
'mutual restraint In the resolu·
tion of international crises."
The president also aald the
United States is prepared to take
into account legitimate Soviet
interest U Moscow ia willinc to
do the same with American in·
tereata.
U tbe Soviets airee to aucb an
approach, Reaian aald, tt could
lead to 1 "IOlld and more endut·
lq bula for U .s. ·Soviet rel•·
tlou than we ever had before."
The Reaaan letter wu dla· ·
clOled here within an hour alts
Gromyko l11ued one of the
barahat denunclatlon1 of tile
Untied Statea tn_yeart durtal a
address to the U.N. General As·
sembly.
Gromyko accused the West of
making "no s mall effort to
shake loose the socialist founda·
tions of the Polish state" and re·
affirmed that other Warsaw
Pact s tates will provide
"fraternal solidarity and sup·
port" to Poland.
Fischer quoted Haig, who sat
quietly in the audience as
Gromyko spoke, as saying it was
a "disappointing speech ... we
·found it entirely defensive in
tone." .•.
DRAIGI CUil llATHIR
Low clouds, fog Jate
night through mid ·
morning hours. Mostly
sunny afternoons. Lows tonight in 60s. Highs
Wednesday, low 70s at
beaches, low 80s inland.
llllDI TllAY
Don Pcutorini ntn1 the
R.o m 1 • co nt rover• Ii
ttDeepdaku. WW t~ riQft
IUm, or not?~. Page Cl.
11111 . . ., . ...,,.. ,,, ............. LM..... M ...... ew ~ Al =:.. .:: ~ C'A-1'
ill
\
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTtr~ay. September 22, 1881 N
. NYSE COMPOSITE T RA N ACTIONS
ouot&t ..... ••a.1101 Ya&o11oi.TN1 ••••o••.••ow1n.••C1P1C, •••. Ntfo.. oanon •llo c••<••••tt •roe• 1a~uue•1Net1oo•nt••~.,.. .... n.1t
....
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 0.86
' CLOSING 845. 70
·•" ~ .. ~ ... ,~
U.S. workers
unhappy at job
Your unbappineu about your job haa now·
reached alarming peaks, with the Bureau of Labor
StaUatics reporting that u many aa 24 ml.Won
Americana -a full quarter of ~ work force -art
dlssatiafied with their work.
The cost to employers rum into billlona of dollars
a year in abaenteelam, reduced output, poor
workmanship. The coet to OW' nation ta incalculable,
for this attitude is deeply erodinf our ability to com·
pete successfully in world market.a.
Why? Are you turned olf by your working en-
vironment, supervision and comp~y policies or the
actual nature of the job you bold? Is the reason that
you feel your ~ job should be
more than a
way to pay your a. i«
bills? Are we .; I witnessing a A •
1 fu nd am.e n l'a 1 .IJ.,( .. 111.._M_IJ_l_I __
change ID the r9
a tl it v'd e or . ----------American men and women toward working itself?
Whatever the causes, if the Bl.S report is to be
believed, business and labor muat get together on the
problems and possible solutions. And some programs
do suggest progress for you, u an employer or
employee, to study and possibly adapt.
PROBLE M: Millions of young mothers lo today's
work force are oo rigid schedules that keep them
away from their children and are a basic came of
dissatisfaction. Adding to tb1a is the difficulty in find-
ing child care.
SOLVTION: Flexible work schedules that let
employees choose their own working hours or days
(within limits). Some companies have 10-bour, four-
day weeks; others allow employees to select their
own starting and ending times with everyone at work
at specified "core" hours. Mothers also are aided by
! companies that take an active role in finding child
care.
A unique "Employee Assistance Pro1ram" bas
been developed by National Semiconductor Corp. of
Santa Clara that's worth exploration. Berun aa a
child-care referral plan, it now offers counseling on a
wide range of personal worries. "With 8,500
employees at this location, our size approximates the
population of a small city,·· says Charles Sporck,
l president. "We address the most typical problems
of a 'city' of this size."
PROBLEM: Employees are frustrated becau.se
they can't voice their complaints or offer proposals to
improve attitudes and output.
SOLUTION: Open up the lines of communication
between management and workers, so both sides can
benefit from gripes and recommendations.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS NIWYOMIM"I-..._,_ __ ,,.. ......... _____ _
~ -. lf'°"'9 nel~ 91 ...... -
liom.Ptrl I t71,200 12\IJ + ~
HudllOU t JOl.200 :Ml!. + 2
"-rOll m .200 Ai -"' Gul~ll t 115,000 17\IJ + h ~,. a .ooo 27'4 -v. w.,.. 71,JGD v-.. ---,...roL.., .S,IOO 1..... -\4o Ad9m11tn i.,ooo 13 • flt T--• 1 4',700 J -V. Oon:lll1Ga1 '1..00 IM -"-
METALS
c...-r .....,1V. ca1111 • ,....t'MI, U.S.
detOflatloN.
LaM -.. c9flb • pound. IMc.,.. _,., ................ , ... . tie.,..,,... .. ._,....,.,.." .. ..
A ........ 7MDcantsalllGUnd,N.V. *"'"" .... per ..... --M4.•troyea.,N.Y.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~I monWfte fllllfl9 .-0.JS,....., P.,1$. ~: ---fllll"' ...u.• . .,, ,..., .. ..... , ....,_ '"'"'9 t.m.17 ..... ...,. ,, ...... , .. u ...... ...
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