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1981-09-23 - Orange Coast Pilot
• • • • • • • ORANGf COAST YOUR HOMETOWN DAILY PAPIR WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1981 OHANGE COUNTY. CALIF ORNIA 25 CENTS .,, .. ..,..... Curiosity didn't kill the cat. but it did startle this New Orleans kitty when it encontered an armed SWAT team officer. Search goes on • ID shooting of two girls By FREDERICK SCHO E Mf;llL Of .. CNlfy ,.... St-" Frustrated by three days of fruitless searching in the rugged Cleveland National Forest, Orange County Sheriff's Depart- ment investigators have decided to reevaJuate how they should purs ue a man sought in connec- li on with a weekend camp· ground shooting that.left one girl dead and another with serious head injuries . ln vestigators were scheduled to meet today to go over what in· rormation they have to decide whether to continue combing the rugged wilderness 20 miles east of San Juan Capistrano or target othe r areas where the suspected ~unman might have gone. Activity in the forest portion of the search waned Tuesd ay night after a search command post that had been set up al a U.S. Forest Service fire station in El Cariso Village was closed. lt had appeared for a time Tu esday afternoon t hat !>earchers had spotted the vehi· cle belonging to Thomas Francis Edwards, 37, a former Costa Mesa resident and South Coast Gun Club employee. who was named Tuesday in a $500,000 murder Wclrrant issued in South Orange County Municipal Court. Me mbe rs of the sherirr·s Special Weapons and Tactics team were flown by helicopter into the area only to discover the vehicle was not Edwards' red- dis h -orange Datsun pi ck -up truck outfitted with a white camper s hell. Edward s, described by s heriff's offi cials as a "moun- tain man" and "gun buff," is be- ing sought in connection with an unprovoked shooting attack on two 12-year-old Lake Elsinore girls, Vanessa Iberri and Kelly Cartier. The girls were s hot Saturday on a hiking tNlil near forest service-operated Blue J ay campground located in the forest midway between San Juan Capis trano and Lake Elsinore. BB 'demolition derby ' hurts 4 Re_agan silent on delay s in Social Security WASHI NGTON <API -Pres1 dent Reagan apparently has ruled out proposing a delay in Social Security cost-of.li ving benefits as part of a new round of budget cuts, congressional sources said today. But Reagan. making lhe final decisions on cuts to be proposed when he addresses the nation via television Thursday night. still has under consideration rec- ommendations to delay similar increases in several other sociaJ welfare programs. according to the sources. who requested anonymity. The sources stressed that the pres ident has not m ade de · cis ions on his package. and stressed that changes are possi· ble. Meanwhile, Reagan told a group of senior citizens today that restoring the economy to sound health will require slashing "many things that we wish didn't have to be cut " But the president, who will speak at 6 p.m. PDT Thursday, refused to identify the targets of cutbacks expected to total S16 t)illion. "Tune in, 9 o'clock, Thursday night." Reagan said when asked ir he had completed work on the blueprint for the I a test round of proposed cuts . The president had been con- s idering the package of cuts for fiscal 1982, including the three· month Social Security delay from July 1 to Oct. 1, 1982. across-the-board cuts in virtuaJ- ly all government programs and a S2 billion reduction in his ad- m 1nistration 's defense buildup. But he was forced back to the drawing board earlier in the \\eek when th e two top Republicans in Congress warned him privately that the cuts faced probable defeat in Congress if they were submitted in that form Appearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Donald R. Regan m aintained that the president would stick "very stubbornly" to his budget and tax cuts despite mounting political and public pressure. .. I want to r eass ure the Congress and the public that W s administration intends to follow through on its program." Regan told the House Budget Commit- tee That means, he said, as many mor e non-defense spending cuts as necessary to balan ce the federal budget and no retreat on the tax cut enacted just last month. Robot charming P assenger stuns onlookers NEWARK. N.J . (AP) -He chatted with admirers. Upped the skycap and professed love to a ticket agent and a metal detec- tor. Then with a blink of h1s lights. the most high-powered business traveler Newark In-• ternational Airport ever had wu on his plane to Miami. The first pea:-son to cross his path was a stunned-looking ticket agent handlin g passengers for Eastern Airlines Fllaht 7. With Uibts flashine rrom hls head, Slco, a 6-foot-1 aluminum and flbeqlass robot, booked two aeat.a in first class, saying bis com pan ion would be alon1 shortly. Then, to the shock and ddi1ht or the pusen1ers in the airport, tbt robot said to a puslng ticket aaeat: 11You are beautiful and I will nner toraet. you. I mean that frotn the botloQl of my main trtn•t•tor." \ ~ As the onlookers hurried lo take pictures, Sico told a man trying to change film rolls: "l know how difficult cameras are to handle. I used to date one. I think her name was Polaroid. Boy was s he rast." orr the robot rolled on its four wheels down the boarding ramp and Into a waiting plane. Sico took a seat in row 1-A, and was followed shortly by the r est of the Miami-bound passengers, ln· eluding Robert Doornick of New York, the man behind the machine. Stc9 is one or four robot.a, wortl\ an estimated '250,000 each. created by IntemaUonal Robotics Inc., a S.year-old New )'ork corporation. Doornlek said tiis company is developlfta t.he robots for use in reaeareb laboratories. Amonl other thln1s, tbe robot.I are •iOICI to handle dan1eroua cbelllicala. The _company mo hOI* U.. (See aGBOT, Pa1e U) ~ • Delly ............ .., llklle ........ Traffic muest1gator examines damaged Huntmgton Beach police car aftt>r a series of accident!; on Paci/ 1c Coast ll1ghway The cruiser was a total loss Woman l oses • gems 10 purse t o b a ndi t s A woman who told police she kept her jewelry in her purse because she reared that burglars might someday enter her home lost it all to armed robbers in Costa Mesa Tuesday. Anette Pena, 46. of Garden Grove was buying wine shortly after noon in t he Brooks ide Winery, 2925 Bristol St.. when two men, one brandishing a pistol and the other a six-inch knife, entered the retail outlet, police said . Police said the gun-wielder, who wore a blue ski mask, de- manded the s tore's cash from the wom an clerk while his 'partner held his knife to Ms. Pena's throat. The women were tied with apron strings, a tee-shirt placed over their beads and forced to lie down behind a counter. The assailants, both described as Latins with Mexican ac- cents, took $150 from the cub register and then rifled the two women's purses , omcers said. Taken from c lerk Sally Billard or Newport Beach were two rings, her wallet and $15 in caab, officers said. Ms. Pena lost about $3,l!IO in jewelry, a wallet and $85 in casb, police reported. Tbe two men fled on foot with loot ulued at a total ol $4, 700, Police •ald. The wom• freed tbem Hlns from tbetr l001e bUMDn11 wt e.u.d police. Decree signed LOI ANGELB8 CAP> -A f ederat Judie has 1t1aed a clecrM that allows tb• lon1·· delay..t IGllltnld.lon of the '1.6 bil~ ~ Jl'hftay. Ono/ re plans eyed b y f e d e ra l p a n e l By DAVID KUTZ MANN Of ... Delly ...... St ... Disagreeing with its own lawyers. -a feder al licensing panel has ruled that it wants to hear more about the adequacy of medical treatment for the general publi c if an accident were to O<'cur at the newly ex· panded San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. The decision by the three- m ember Atomic Safety and Licens ing Board Tuesday represented an important pro- cedural victory for opponents of Southern California Edison Co. 's two new reactors at San Onofre. The Edison Co. is seeking . operating licenses for the $3.3 Pot f a rme r s rout poac h ers GARBERVlJ.LE (AP) -Five would·be m a rijuana thieves were ambu1hed by gun·toting growers protecting their ripen- ing cash crop, a Humboldt Coun· ty Sheriff's spokesman said. One ma11 was wounded. A pre-dawn aun batUe broke out Tuesday east of Garberville near the village of Harris as the live raiders entered a marijuana field, Capt. James SlnUc said. One of the raiders was wounded in the abdomen. The othert fied, sald Slntic. The WOUQded man was reported in 1t.abM condition alter sursery at Redw9C)d Memorial Hospital in FortU!i'9. billion units, but first must prove that both on-site and off- site emergency planning for the facility is adequate. A subpoenaed witness who testified Tuesday for plant oppo- ·ne n ts : Dr. Irvin{ Lron of UCLA. estimated that Crom half to two thirds of the 89,000 people who live near the plant could suffer from acute radiation ef- fects, contamination and in- juries in nuclear-related acci· de"t. Ti.h is v ie w differed con-sid~ably from that offered last month by the utility's health specialist. who said an accident would lead to only mild exposure of nearby residents. The licens ing board's decision Tuesday ran counter io the opin- ions of lawyers for both the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Edison, who ~aid federal regulations don 'l require that special medical facilities be in place to handle mass decon- tamination of thousands or peo- ple who live within 10 miles of the nuclear installation. N RC lead counsel Richard Hoefling argued that his in· terpretation of the rules indicat- ed there was no need for a "mass detailed plan" to provide for care or the public if radioac- tive gases were to leak from the powerful oew reactors nearinc completion three miles south ol San Clemente. Instead, Hoeflln& said, the re1· ulaUons required that plans be fn eftect for treatment of on-alte personnel that cou ld be H · panded to handle memben ol the public ittbat wu ~eaary. <SM ONOPa E, Pate A.2) •) Woinan drive r arrest e d By P IDL SNEIDERMAN Of ... Oelty ...... 14.wff A 20-year-old woman driving with a s us pe nde d license touched off a series of traffic ac- cidents along Pac ific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach Tuesday night that demolished a police patrol car and injured four people, including a police officer and a pedestrian who al· tempted to help at the accident scene, police reported today. The woman who police say trigge r ed th e accidents, Charlotte E. Bolt of Bellflower, was treated for cuts al UCI Medical Center and was placed in the jail ward on suspicion or felony drunken driving. Huntington Beach police U . J ohn Foster said the woman was driving with a suspended license and was scheduled to appear in court today in connection with earlier traffic offenses. Foster r econstructed the series of accidents this way: -At about 10 :40 p.m .. Ms. Bolt sideswiped another vehicle while eastbound on Pacific Coast Highway beside the Bolsa Chica m arshlands . -When s he railed lo slop after the accident. the driver of the sideswiped vehicle gave chase. -Near Newland Avenue, Ms. Bolt's Fiat convertible, travel- ing at an estimated 75 mph, rear-ended a Huntington Beach police car that also wu east-bound at about 35--40 mph. -The impact threw "the police car 134 feet toward the beach. T he police vehicle flipped , landed on the driver's side and fell back onto its wheels. The <See MISHAP, Page AZ) ORAll;f COAST llATHIR Usual low clouds late tonight and morning hours Thursday. Lows tonight 60 to 66. Thursday highs at beaches low 70s, inland near 80. INSIDI TDDAY The JamH11 that Jo g• togetMr' ta 1tafling togtthn -on . a 93-dafJ jaunt from Florida to Ohio. Sn Page 812. tllll • 111 • • • • OrangeC.OutOAJLYPILOT,Wedneaday, September23, 1981 ............. ~1<\Jregon adventurers tfrom leftJ Craig Zuger. Scott Roberts and Cene Dou.ms arrived m St Louis today. ~·df re-creating the return of Lewis and Clark on that mtsSton·s 175th anniversary 'l•,)IJ :~~Following in footsteps ~,~Trio in final stages of ·3,100-mile Lewis-Clark trek rbu, bu t ST. LOUIS (AP> -Wearing 1 ''!'°buckskins but paddliDg i-"!'fiberglass canoes, three Oregon nadventurers were on the last leg Ht today of a 3,100-mile journey -no:.rom the Pacific Ocean on the t~l11sth anniversary of the arrival <t of explorers Lewis and Clark. 11oU. "I imagine the first thing we'll JH...do is take a shower.'' said Scott ~oberts, 30, of Monmouth, Mo. -The modern-day explorers left ,._Astoria, Ore. in the rain March j 23 to re-enact the return expedi- 1, lio n of William Clark and j Meriwether Lewis in 1806. They i ~ were to end the trip today at the i. Gateway Ar~h in St. Louis. Aon Samsel, 33, of Lincoln Ci- • ty, gave up after crossing the ockies. Accompanying Roberts oday were Gene Downs, 33, of alls City and Craig Zugar, 25. r Salem. Traveling b y cnoe aad orseback -with a 5ppport van aking the place of pacl hol"leS t:be group r ehed on tbe l'ig{n'1 expedition's Jour1lall te uid~~em. ·'We 've follow e d thei1' ootstepl day by day." Roberts J e A1 Thf ll"el'Tlmedt lawyer sald vaculteod re'sideats could ower at. relocation centers out· I side lite 10-mtle emerg-ency plan- : ._,. ning zone if they were foamd to ' j)e contaminated with radioac-r, tive materials. , Edison lawyer David Pigott of ~--San Francisco agreed with ....Poefling's interpretation, saying mthat for planning purposes it was ·tbfequired only to look at medical 1~eare for a "r•stricted group of ~eople/' in this case plant employ~or visitors. 01' Pigon 'laid there •as no specific requiremeat i.. Mftd acilities for protection of 'fbe public a~ lerJ!. This view elicited 1tronc com- plaint.a ~m Anaheim lawyer Ph ylH•""G aHagb~r , who repre.ettl .anti-nuclear oppo. nents ol Ucmsing of the t,..... reactor plant expansion. t Ms. Gallagher said she was "surprised" to hear Nuclear Regulatory Commission lawyers argue that there was "no r esponsibility for the public health" i nv o l ved in the emergency planning issue. She sald that public health consideratlons were clearly spelled out in guidelines w• said Tuesday in an interview at a campground just north of St. Louis. "We've eaten the same foods. We even dress the same." Lewis and C lark were trailblazers or a land route through the Louisiana Purchase territory to the Pacific. Their task also included strengthening Am erican claims to Oregon and gathering information about the Indians ol the Far West. Leav- ing from Wood lliver north of St. Louis, they began their trip up the Missouri River, taking two years to make their way to the Pacific. But they returned in a speedy six months. At times, Roberts said, the gro\lp camped on the original campsites, although much has been destroyed over the years. "Our main goal was to record the changes and the thinas that r e m aiaed the sa~." said Roberts. "And I can ~JI you, the mosquitoes. ari stiJI, ls bad as they were l'S years _,o. ·'The major chabges have been mack b y ma.n. We 've changed ti•ers, removed Indian villages, t_nd created power . P9Ji~e r inil cat· Moght· in hit-run death Police have located and im· pounded a dark-colored foreign car they believe was the vehicle involved in the hit-and-run death of a ~year-old Newport Beach man in the pre-dawn hours last Saturday. The vehicle, Newport Beach traffic investigators said. was fouad 'in a shopping center park· ing lot in Whittier. The car ap- parently ~d beea abandoned by its driver. Police were to search the vehi· cle today in hopes of finding cloes that might lead to the Iden- tity of the driver. Dol\ald B. Warner was killed after bef'lll •truck 'by tte vehicle es' be er~ Balboa Boulevard at 31st Street in Newport Beach. Police were told Warner was walking in a crosswalk and wu heading to bis home, located just a block from the scene of the fatal accident. Witnesses were able to pro- vide police with a description of the car and its license plate number. by the pemment follo""81 lhe • Three~ Island nuclear po#w . u .S~ ... rebels in i:eDM~aniu:e tw.::.:~ ~. CAIROJ -~t (AP) -Presi- foUo:::irief deUbfhtl•• · dent Anwar Sedat said Tuetday TueMay,OWnnanJam•Kelley the United si.tes bas been buy- said tlM penel did not believe that Cng ScM~made weapons from mediealCOllliderationswerecon-Egypt and flying then> in ftnedto•on-aitearrancemenu Am ericaD . pl an es to an~l - buten.dedtothe1eneral publlc co mmun ut rebels 1n uwell. Afghani~. CIH..,._. -.entslng t14/l42·M78 AM•"'-dllpertmenu 142·4>2.1 plants and dams . The changes are phenomenal. .. In their journal, Lewis and Clark spoke of waiting two hours for herds of buffalo to cross the river in front of them. The modern-day group saw two buf· falo. Roberts said. "And we saw absolutely no grizzly bears,.. he added, "for which we are all very thankful.•· To avoid problems, the three decided to shoot no game. "But people along the route gave us different things to partake of," Roberts said. "We had deer, elk, geese, fish and a r attlesnake dinner." To maintain the spirit of the expedition, Roberts s aid the group refused to stay in hotels or lake a break at fast-food r estaurants . Instead, they lear~ to eat vegetation such as cattails and pawpaws . · "It ~very dillicull for us to maintain the pace that Lewis and Clark set," Roberts said. "But the opportunity to relive history makes us proud. We 've learned a lot." From Page A1 MISHAP. • • ' impact tore the seat loose from the floor, officers said. -Ms. Bolt's Fiat's electrical system failed, and the car came to rest across the traffic lanes. A pedestrian attempted to help push the auto to the side of the road. -A woman driving an east· bound pickup truck. distracted by the sight of the demolished police car, rear-ended the Fiat an d threw the a ss istin g pedestrian 30 feet toward the sand. The injured officer. Sgt. Arden Beavers, was taken to Pacifica Hospital with multiple injuries. Io a telephone interview from his hospital room this morning, he said, "I feel lik~ I've been b~aten by an ugly stick.'? He said his injuries do not ap- pear to be serious, and he ex- pected to be released from the hospital soon. The pedestrian who assisted at the scene, Grant Bjornestad, 26, of Costa Mesa. was taken to Huntington lnte rcommunity Hos pital after complaining of pain. The driver of the first vehicle allegedly sideswiped by Ms. Bolt was treated at Pacifica Hospital for a leg injury. He was iden- tiried as Kirk Lochart, 25, of Stockton. The driver of the pickup, Diana Stinnett, 31, of Huntington Beach, was not injured in the mishap, police said . Man treated like garbage DALLAS <AP) -A 6'.year- old man who fell asleep lmide a downtown trash container got a harrowtna ride in the city dump where be was deposited in tbe path ol a bulldozer. Police said the man, a transient identified only aa John, was treated at Parkland Hospital for cut5 and bruJ1e1. "1 hollered, begged, ban1ed and pleaded, and the trash came in on me -end there I wu -ump- teen thousand Umea1 ln out, •crush: in, out, cnaah; la. out • crush ... " · i J.. Diablo blockade slows Protesters ranks depleted ; officers, guard sent home SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP> - Anti-nuclear demonstrators scaled down their blockade at Diablo Canyon atomic power plant and there were only three arrests today. but protesters in· eluding freed rock star Jackson Browne vowed a full -scale blockade aaaln soon. After a small group of pro- testers wearing black armbands were cleared a way from the plant's main gate this morning, the nine-day arrest total stood at 1,496, surpassing the 1,414 ar- resu that occurred in a 1977 an· ti-nuclear protest at Seabrook, N.H, · The arrests left the ran.ks of protesters so depleted that San Luis Obispo County Sheriff George Whiting said he sent home 750 California Highway Patrol officers and National Guardsmen. Construction workers, who bad beeo bused into the $2.3 billion seasi1de plant, came in private cars today and pa:ised From Page A1 ROBOT. • • • robots may be usefuJ in coaxing autistic children to com - municate. To get research money, the corporation leases the robots for promotional campaigns. Sico was on his way to a performance before automotive executives at the Miami Convention Center. The airport performances also help publicJze the machines. The robots travel with con- trollers such as Doornick, whose clothing conceals buttons for !K> commands, including walking, moving the head and arms and emitting a ppropriate beeps. buzzes and sentences. Some of the speech is re- co rde d , but Doornick can transmit sounds to a computer in the robot by speaking softly into a hidden microphone in his shjrt cuff. The words are passed through a synthesizer that turns human-sounding talk into the voice of a robot. · By now, Doomick said, Sico is a veteran or airports. I Typically, he said. the robot is dropped off at an airport door with its luggage. Remaining within sight or Doornick. it then calls for a skycap to take the luggage to the ticket counter. Once at the counter, the robot hands the skycap a few dollars from one hand and the ticketing agent a credit card from the other. If the agent. who usually is warned in advance of the visit, asks for a signature, the robot suggests the receipt be placed on the floor for an identifying "tire mark ... Al Newark, one man circled the robot muttering: "I don't get it. .. "Don 't be confused, I can't figure out you hum ans either," Sico said. Anti-drug group raps legislator SACRAMENTO (AP) -As· sem bly Speaker Willie Brown is being accused of blocking an an- ti -drug paraphernalia bill after getting $15,500 from the in- dustry. Carla Lt>we of Community Ac - tion Against Drug Abuse told a news conference Tuesday, 'Tm concerned when I see campaign contributions coming to him from the paraphernalia industry the day after the bill passed the Senate." through the gate wlth little dif· tlculty. But the Abalone Alliance, an umbrella organization of 60 anti- nucle ar groups which is sponsor· ing the protes t , said a full blockade al the gate would re- s ume Thursday. "l plan to come back and blockade,'· singer-songwriter Browne said after Municipal Judge Kenneth Chotiner ar· ralgned and released him Tues- day. "l consister my actions and the actions of my brothers and sisters to be patriotic." Browne, who wrote and re- corded such hit! as "Doctor My Eyes," "Take It Easy" and "The Pretender," spent four days in jail after his arrest Fri· day in a "hum an c hain" blockade at tbe gale. Al his arraignment, Browne pleaded no contest and was fined $120. He and sever al others were given credit or $30 per day for the dars already spent in jail. • 'Th1s is an emotional subject for me," Browne told Judgt Chotin er, who asked dem- onstrators not to get arreeled again. Browne, however, said that after seeing his family he would be back. Although no full -sc ale bloc kade was planned until · l Thursday and no more sea land· in gs until Friday, Alllaace spokesman Mark Evanoff said, there may be some kind of demonstration at the matn IN later today. Evanoff said the main thrust of todays 's protest will be about 30 p eople inliltrating the '732· acre Diablo property on foot. As their numbers dropped, protest organizers considered and then rejected Tuesday the idea of submitting to arrest themselves -a step that prob. ably would end th• confronta- tion for lack of leadership. And some local residents said they plan a separate march against the plant Sunday. ........... S1co the robot waits for a skycap to ptck up his l uggage outstde the terminal at Newark International Airport. en route to an automotive exectll1ve show at the 1\-fiam1 Convention Center Wall Street takes sharp skid today NEW YORK <AP> -Stock prices fell across the board to· day in what analysts said was continued skepticism over in· teres t rates a nd President Reagan's economic program. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which had been up 9.51 points for the week, erased that gain after an hour or trad· ing, falling 12.75 points to 832.95. Declines led advances by a 10-1 margin on the NYSE. Although some interest rates have d eclined this week , particularly the prime lending rate, analysts have said many investors remain skeptical about the Reagan economic package an d future budget deficits. Reagan is scheduled to addrea the nation by television Thurs· day night, and some analysts have said the market is in a holding pattern until then. Some Wall Street analysts also blamed the early decline on a prediction Tuesday by 0tae of their flamboyant colleagues, Joseph Granville, that the Dow Jones industrials will fall to 556 to 650 in the coming weeks. "We've been edging toward a selling cli max, but t think Joe~ tripped It over," s•id Larry'j Wachtel. senior vice preaideftt ot . Bache Halsey, Stuart SMtlllll6 Inc. ' !"~ Quartz alarm clock Reg. $19.99 Sale SI 0. 99 V antacJe by Linden • All black w/ white dial • Includes travel pouch and bracket for easy mount m auto or boat • Runs approx one year on one AA battery ~-~---11 ' ~ 'f ~ I\ , ... .. -----· ---------- -~ .......... Author Alex Haley 1 dark suit 1 helps unveil a plaque installed at the Annapolis City Dock commemoratmg the arrival of Kunta Kinte. Haley's forebear m "Roots." or1 an English slave ship in 1767. Helpmg are Maryland Gov Harry Hughes I lower light 1 and two Armapolts residents who organized the ev ent. Carl Snowder1 1left 1 and Wendy Hinton Fabled eat ery . "' up for sale They used to sing that you could get anything you want at Alice's Restaurant. Now you can get the restaurant itself for $225,000. according to a realtor who has listed it for sale in Van Deusenville, Mass. The building, a converted church in the tiny Berkshire Hills community, was made famous in lhe mid· 1960s by the Ario Guthrie movie and song •·Alice 's Restaurant." The restaurant was made in· to a home after Alice Brock closed her restaurant two years ago. Although he is blessed as the favorite filmmaker of Pope John Paul II, Knysztof Zanussi has been unable to show his biography of the pontiff in Poland. The Polish director's .. From a Far Country" re· ceived mixed reviews when it was shown outside com· petition at the recent Venice festival. but the pope warmly endorsed the film after a private showing at his sum· mer home in Castel Gan- dolfo. According to many critics. the problem has been satisfy · .. ing the backers -the Italian state radio and private U.S. and Italian producers - besides the Polish govern- ment and the Vatican. PrtoeeH Julia••· who stepped down from tbe throne of The Netherlancb last year. r eturned home from a hospital after auc· cesaruJ minor 11ur1ery. the government •aid. A spokesman did not dis· close details or the 11ur1ery, performed two weeks ago in aa university hospital. He said the princess will make no public appearances for a while. Juliana , 72, abdicated April 30, 1980, in favor of her daughter, Beatrb. President Reagan said be will nominate Beverly E. Ledbetter, general counsel of 'Brown University, to be an assistant attorney general. A $425,000 bid for a bullet and bomb-proof limousine once owned by Elvis Preale)' has bee n ·rej ecte d , a spokesman for owners of the car said. The 1969 Mercedes Benz limousine, owned by El Pres World Wide Promotions Co. Inc. of Hayward, Calif .. re- portedly had been sold al a classic-car auction at Caesars Tahoe. How eve r , El Pres spokes man Ken Newman said the $425,000 offer, from an unnamed San Francisco Bay Area lawyer, was reject· ed because El Pres had set a minimum $600,000 bid for the vehicle. Movie director Michael Cimino is suing a couple who moved to re· possess about 150 acres of land that he bought from them while r i 1 ming "Heaven 's Gate " in n orth we st Montana last CIMINO year. Documents filed in state District Court say Murland and Virginia Searight notified Cimino they were can<'eling the contra ct because he was late in mak- ing the $4,700 quarterly pay· ment due April 15. The land lies along the North Fork of the Flathead River. Cooler Thursday 7S to t5 '" u. Yelle~ -10 to• 1 .. IM m°""""lns. Lows at """' S1 lo 61 In COHt.11 -volley oreos end Cl lo U lnllleMOUM.llM. FORECAST Coastal U9llt vorloOle winch '°"111-•l to west 10 to 11 knoh In ottert>OOn Westerly •-II t to J f"'· L-c1- ftl911t end t"O"'l"9 "°""' wlttl some 109 locolly ~ _,,..,n woters . Portly sunny In •fl••- Temperatures U.S. sunimary ... lbuQUe Anchor- A"'9•111e ........ AtlOftlC Cly Boltlmoni Tiie lost day of summer DrOUQlll BlrmlnQtim sunshine to mutll of the SOUtll. Dul 81iwnorek rain COflllnued ln Ille Hor111eHI Bois. Temper .. .,,.., cllmlleel lftlo 1,.. IOI Boston In IN SouUI, whl .. In Ille ~m Buffalo Plolns tlley -•• lft llle ~. Tem· Cllorlttn SC perotures 1f1 Ille -111 _,.. coo .. r, In Cllarlstn WV Ille 50s to IOI. C ... yen,,. II wlll bt • \UfW!y day 100.y over Cllko,o mucll o1 ttw notion ClnclM.tl Showers will 1111 sc•"•red over Ille Cleveloncl Pa< Ille _.._SI and .... u-r Ml•· ColumDUI llSSll)Cll Volley 0v ... H-EnQIOnd, Oal·FI Wiii cool •••.,,...will <Oflll-Oe"•er Tiie H....,.,. '""'" wlll remain In Oe• Molnn Ille Mis ..,. a while the IO<ltftem Detroit 11•11 •I u. notion wonns Noto t•IOI Hartford Sout,.ern T .. es and mucll of ,,,. Helene ' 5ovt-Ht Win re«ll ,,.. '°' wltll tlle H-ulu _,, .,.. rNC:lllno 100 HOU\lon Tem_. .. _ ·~ ttte notloft at lftO!'tlPll' mldoltert>OOn reftQed from •1 In Ja<hnvlle Mon'"ller, Vt . to 100 In 81YIN. Kens City Celll. LHV-s California Tiier• wlll De 11111• <ll1noe In Sout!Mrn c.tlfornl• _.the, lllrov9" ThurMloy, wltll fair days -tow c-lneu nll!M encl mornf119 "°"'' Llttle Roek Loulsvllle Memplll' Mloml Mllwou•M Mplt-St.P Hel/lvllle Hew OrlMft,t New Yor• al0"9 Ille~-Gusty winch ore U · 0 111• City pocte<I 1" .. *-11. Omelle Hlflls M 0.-9f9 County Deec:llet Plllledpllla will be In .. -10l. Farther Inland, PllOenJa <ounty lllGM wlll rMCll IO to IS 1-Y. Plttsl>ur9'1 7Sto10n....-y.Lows.60to... Ptt•ncl Me Valleys un ••pact 11'9ftt In IN up. Pttanc1' 0.-e per~ ~. <oollng lllflltly Thur.. lloplO Citv dey. Lows lft the_, Mis and low llkhm- *M.unt.tlna '"" .. -1 ...... on ~ Sall LO• ~ ..... ..,_.,,, S.•111• coeatol ~· Thursday morftln9. St Lovls H lflls todey 7t to M, Thursday '2 to St ~-Tampe 71. Lows• to •. --~1 WHI to ~ wlft4' IS to u ~· ... 1'19fn mpfl ltll• ~ .., deMl1a, 1,._ Wlclllt• NATIC)M Cl'Mll"9 ID• I• lS mpfl ~y. Nortl'Mrft ._, 11'9ht tOdey n to"· Tll11!'14ey .. to '4. Lo.. J6 to '6. Sovtllem ~ llltlll _, too te tot, Tllur..., ts to till. Lows U lo 75. CALll'CMINIA ••konfleld lemow .. _ •'9 ••• 811MP •1rt11e HI Le .. 51 " 17 11 " 13 S1 72 .. .. 51 17 50 11 .. ., ,. 11 ff S) " n " 7S SJ ,. S1 " 50 u S1 60 S) .. "' tl M 17 " .. jj " 0 n "' " l5 • 7S " n 67 SS ., .. 11 S7 ,, .. tl M 70 6J tO .. ... " " .. u " ... " ... . . ., ts ., 11 S1 IO 60 ., n u " SI " .. .u 13 St 13 " " " " . 11 • IS 71 12 ., .. 61 Ml Le 15 u '4 .. " ,. 77 • ,, • •• • Cot.ollna Culv.,. City Eur.-a Fresno LOkeAr..-..0 Len<ost ... Lont eeedl Los Anteles ... rysvlli. Moftrevla ...... , ... .. Moftt ... y Mt.Wll_. .. _ ... N-portllNcll 0.klend OnlJlrlo Pelm5'wt.,. Powdeno P-llOOles lllvenka 11 ... llulf Redwood City "-*' ......... Sell nos Sen hmllf'dlno Sen Gabriel Saft 01990 Sen Frencltco Safi Jow S...IJIANI Sent• Bot11ere Senta Cnu S...teMerla Sent• Monie• StO<lll., Tllermel Torr9M.e Yllft\O CANAN .c .... ,., IEd!noflloft MofttrMI att.wo 111 .. 1,,. 7S It M 17 11 • ,. ... I.I •l " ., 16 " 1S ,. ff Toro..to 60 Ve"'o- " WIMIP<tl SS SS u M u ,. S7 " • .. 71 u SS eo..-eermuda B090l• C11receo FrMPOrt Guod•l•I•• GU-.l- Moftl0909o-t Morlf.e Moal<o City MOfll.,.,..J .... ~ rANAM tO .. .. .. • ... " .. • 0 " u Sen Ju..,, P.111 T991Kloelpe Trinidad V•ra Crut ... 71 a IO " • 7J 74 n • 70 IJ • 72 • .. Sl ~ Amst•rdem ...... ,,. ... ·~-:: 8•1rul ., ::~;,, .... " 90901J1 St eruuel• ., •'Alt'el S2 Celro "'1 Carec:e1 4 c-~ !! Out>llft ,, " , •1111 IUf't 11 c;.neve ff Hev- 7' Heltlftlll HOfltK°"9 JeniNi.m Ml Le Kin 71 .. ,... .. llfft41 SJ 4 I LGf1CMft S2 4' ~IO • 0 MMllMI .. 41 Mote- 01.0aAL S1 • .. 50 .. • Ml Le IS " IO n 6S "' 94 • 12 n ll "' tO ,, 'IO JS tS 70 7' "' • n IS n 94 n .. .. • 75 'IO 72 .... u " .. • 7' " .. • u .. " .... .u .. S1 S7 c • M n M 61 • St 0 10 61 " " 'IO n S1 • 11 1$ 7' " " S4 M S1 M S1 11 " • 7J • • Nortllonl end C..ntrol GallfO<ftto •Ill be,..,-"' mlld In ,,.,.. or•s .. day. t11<ree1lft9 clouds over ftC>rtll..-Catlfomla ,..,.., IHdlno to a <llontt 1111 ,..,. allMQ ftOrtll coast '°"""' -,,.,,....,. c ...... Thurs-day. P-'my ~I fol or law <IOuell -----------------------------------------" ...... ar:::--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ =~~I ... 11 '4 " 9S " lft<••••lno IOflltf\I and Tllursdoy merftln9 wllll aome local frlule l\Ortllef~. Extended outlook COAITAL., MOUll'TAIM AlllAI - N19"t .... mrftlll9 IOw <._., eftd locel fo9 Wiii lie fll<,....I .. .......,. Otl'MNI• lelr ...., c-r with 111111 t~rllMft ii .. '2 el IM lleecMt. ' ~ ...... ~ ........... • SURF RIPllT ... ..... . ... 111191• 2 ,.,,IJI MGftQ 1 H""port t SMOleeec-tl' 2 Out._ fer Tl!wMly: Little d1M19. ... -I 2 J J ... '" ti n II u .... .... .... '"" .... Dir t I SW I 1 SW I . ~ IW t I IW We're Listening ••• Ollo n • Perla 72 S1 IUe tit .. Sun, moon, tides ftlnl lew t:02 e.m. 0.1 ftlnl llltll 7:Ca.m. u Se<Oftf low "'"'·""· 2.J Se<Oftf.. ''" '·""· 5.7 Sllft Mtl •:• p.m., ,,_ We11ftK. tley6:Ge.m. M90ft "-WIMlrietdey J:ot ··"'·· •b•:21,.m. What do you like about the Daily Pilot! What don't you ilte? Call the number below and your me11a1e will be recorded transcribed and deli~ered lo &be appropri1te edJtor. ' The same 24-hour answertnc Hnice may be used to record let· ters to the editor on any topic. MaHbox coatrtbutora mutt Include their name and telephone number for verlrlcatlon. No clrculatiof\ call$, please. Tell us what's on your mind. .... --------. • .,,,J Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfNedneaday, September 23, 1981 8 Gas tax hike OK'd OC supervisors give. approval to two-cent increase Wtth only minutes to spare, the Orange County Board or Superviaors hu become the first in the state lo endorse a two-cent per 1allon in.crease ln the state tax on the sale or aasollne and diesel fuel. Tbe two-cent fuel tu lncreue, u.nder legialatJon atped Tbun· day by Gov. Edmund O. Brown Jr., cannot be imposed unless It la ratlfled by boards or aupervilora representln1 COUO· ties contalnlng 87 percent of the atate'a pOpU.laUoo. Enrollment drop larger in county The tax fncreaae w fenerate about ta.t bUU new revenue over' the next years tl\at WOl.lld .be. UI er aae a projected $2.4 b "elicit lo the 1tate tram tton fund and Jirovide 1uf l money IO that new hi&hway Jecta can be built. Orange County auperv acted on the resolution of port shortly after 10· a .m . day. It wu just minutes l tc that the Los Anfeles C ly Board of Supervisors t a By GLENN SCOTT °' ... .,...., ........... First-day public school enroll· ment declined al a larger rate in Orange County than it did in the rest of the state at the opening of school this month. According to statistics com· piled by the Orange County Departme nt of Education, 328,492 students were enrolled in classes from kindergarten through 12th grade this month. That's a 1.4 percent reduction from last year's 333,187 opening day enrollment. Last year the decline measured 0.9 percent. State enrollment projections call for a 0.3 percent decline this year. The reduction last year ,... was 1.2 percent. However. Orange County seems to be reflecting a slate trend toward larger enrollments at the lowest grade levels. Last year, for the first time in several years. kindergarten enrollment in the COWlty increased. Reata House, attendance specialist for the county educa- tion department , said the number of kindergarten students should surpass last year's total. The statistics don't show that increase so far: 19,975 children showed up on the first school day this year compared to 20,758 last year. But Ms. House said parents often enroll children late. Statewide, kindergarten enrollment is projected to in· crease by 1.5 percent to 310,666. The trend toward higher enroll· ments at lower grade levels, ac· cording to state schools superin· tendent Wilson Riles, is based on rising birth rates. "Next year , we expect the statewide enrotrmenl to be higher, and it will probably con- tinue to increase each year for much if not most of this dee· ade," he said. "The relatively low numbers FV Boys Club plans dinner for Thursday The board of directors of the Boys Club of Fountain Valley will sponsor a spaghetti dinner Thursday, to introduce mem· bers, parents and supporters lo the club's new executive direc· tor, Mark Chow. A native of Monterey Park, Chow worked as program direc· tor for the Los Angeles Boys Club before moving to the Foun- tain Valley post. The spaghetti dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. at the club, 9840 Talbert Ave. Donations for the diMer will be $4 for adults, S2 for children. Reservations can be made by calling the club, 968·5252. Boys Club school year hours will be 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. On Saturdays, the club will be open from 11 a.m . to 3 p.m. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified Gemologist. AGS DIAMONDS where do lhey comt from' We know that South Africa is the bigges t producer of diamonds in the world (more than a third of the total last year), but there were· 17 other countries that produced significant amounts or diamonds, too. There were 3.7 million c arats of gemstone-quality dl1mond1 mined lo South Africa, 2.2 million carats ln Ru11ia, 1.7 million in Namibia and ball a million in Zaire. Lesur amounts came from other African countrlet, and from Indonesia, Brazil, India and Venezuela. South Afrcla'a output was also lhe bl1best in quality. Their 3.7 million carats of gemstone diamond• repretenled 47 percent of their total diamond output. Ttie rest were industrial -arade diamond.I, which are used ln fine toolmaktna and other UHi. Zaire wu lhe blC•nt producer ol ioduttrial diamoodl, digiq of students in the upper elemen· tary and secondary grades are because of the state's low birth rate from 1965 ro 1973," he added. First day enrollment for Orange County students In grades .one through eight was 194,139 this year, a decline of 0.9 percent. Tbe state enrollment is expected to increase by 0.1 per- cent. In grades nine through 12, enrollment on the first day in Orange County was 111,613 this year, 2.8 percent fewer than last year . The state projection ts for a 1.4 percent decline. In Ocange County, the Santa Ana Unified School District is reporting the largest first-day enrollment increase of more than 2,000 new students, from 25, 926 to Z'l ,996. School district officials said Tuesday another 3,400 students have been enrolled in the last week. giving the district more than 31,000 pupils. Santa Ana , with its old neighborhoods used for low· income family housing, is a common area for migrating His- panic and Indochinese families to settle. In contrast, the only other dis- tricts -Irvine, Saddleback Valley and Placentia -lo report increases this year are in areas undergoing new residential con· struction. Final attendance figures are to be collected in October and will be made public around Dec. 1, said Ms. House. similar action. Oranae ty holds about eight a)ercent state's population; Los An County about 30 oercent. Supervisors in · San D County -the stat.e's t largest -also are expec take action on a .resoluti support. . Orange County offici through the county Trana lion Commission and Transport.ation Coalition, up of representatives of m businesses, fought for passa the legislation to enable crease in the tax from sev nine cents per gallon~ eff Jan. 1, 1983. Local officials ve said the county must receive more revenue lo stave off a pre- dicted transportation-cr~is. During the discussion ·of the resolution, Supervisor Bruce Neslande requested a report from the county Counsel's om~e on what steps would be necessary for s~pervisors to im· pose a fuel tax. increase great.er than two cents per gallon. The tax m'easure contaias a provision permitting counties lo impose greater incre~es if such a move is endorsed by the board of supervisors, city councils1and a two-thirds vote of the cowtty's electorate. Nes~ande suggested (h•t supervisors may want lo con· sider seeking an additional fuel tax levy because .of wha\ be termed "acute" transportation problems in the county. -FR.f:DERICK SCHOEMEHL ........... LOBBYING DANCE -Canadian Indians. watched by mem· bers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. perform tradi- tional dance in front of Calgary booth at Baden.Baden. West G~rmany Tut:sday. Calgary is hoping to host the · 1"8 Wm~er Olympics. and the dance was part of the city's pro. motion. ! Picture of a man about to make a mistake He's sboppina around for a diamond ''bar1ain1" b.ut shoppina for "pm" alone ian't the WU. way to ftod one. It takes a akilled profeasional and .cieociftc· m.n.: . . menu to judp the more important price determlnlnt factort-Cuttina. Color and Oarity. Aa IA AOS jewel· er, you can rely oo our iemoloJic:al ttahU~ and tthica to properly adviae you oo your nut impOrtant diamond purchue. Stop! In IOOft and ... our ftoe · ltlecdoG ol ,ems abe will be proud to wear. out 10.8 mlWoft carau, but only MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 4 percent ol Zalre'a total output wa• 1em1tone 1rade. Ruul• 1823 NEWPORT Bl.~ cOsTA ME&\ t waa leeond ln botb r.mltoM SI 'tlM8 IN THI aAMI LOCATtON and ind u at r la I d Im ondd~~~8!1!nk!Atn!!•!--!!,.!i0;0•!!1~r;!i!!!!!!!!l!r! lfr oductlon .· ... s Orange Coa1 DAIL V PILOT /Wed.ne1day, September 23, J 981 ......... sU'PERMARKET SNAFlJ -Sampson's store manager Cecil ~pson holds some or the tickets that the Augusta. Maine S\\pet'market is giving out for next week's horse race con- t~t that offe rs $1 ,000 prizes. Sampson's officials are still tt.ving to figure out what went wrong with their promotional contest last week. It was only supposed to have two winners a~veek but ended up with dozens wit ti ··winning ticJ<ets. · · 6 ' ... I' , '!. J> ' ~ Cons'ervatives • await vacancy on high co11rt WASJDNGTON CAP> -Even before President Reagan's first nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court takes her seat on the' bench, conservatives unhappy with bis choice of Sandra Day O'Connor are talking about vacancies to come. Five of the court's elgbt cur- rent justices are over 72 and there is recurring speculation that some may retire. "We'll let this one go by the wayside and hopefully· it won't happen again," conservative fund-raiser and direct-mail ex- pert Richard Viguerie said of Mrs. O'Connor's confirmation. Viguerie, who notes he spent "a great deal of time, money, energy and resources" fighting Mrs. O'Connor's nomination, said he's ''hopeful" Reagan will pick someone more conservative next time. That was echoed by Sen. said Eleanor Smeal, president or the National Organization for Women. "We'll have to see what the political circumstances are the next time around.'' Women's leaders also point with considerable distress to Reagan's nomination of 17 men and no women to lower federal courts -cited as a possible in- dication of the Republican chief executive's overall plans for the fede ral judiciary. Only one nominee is black. Reagan's record contrasts with that of his Democratic predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who appointed 40 women to the federaJ bench, more than all previous presidents combined. Ch ief Jus tice Warren E. Burger and Justices Willfam J . Brennan, Thurgood Marshall, Harry A. Blackmun and Lewis F. Powell are over age 72. · .. ,.,. ........... SHARING SECRET Hill Bro\\ ninj.!. ;1 Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Baile\' Circus animal handler. d1seusses the coming show with 0'1ckie. a -l·Yl'ar old g1raff t> The com · l)lned circus a rrived in Seattle Cenlt>r !:> Coliseum on .Mon da~· Performances will run through Sund;n ------------ Charles E. Grassley. R-Iowa. ·•President Reagan probably realizes that he maybe let them (his conservative s upporters) down to some degree. And he will do something to rectify it." Grassley said. Refugee asylum cuts proposed Some conservatives bitterly U .S. wants to lower ceiling on admitting Indochinese attacked Mrs . O'Connor for WASHJNGTON CAP> -The what they perceived as past Reagan administration has pro- staoces in favor of abortion and posed that the United Slates ad· the proposed Equal Rights mit no more than 120,000 Jn. Amendment. dochinese refugees next year. In the end, however, the lowering the ceilin g from Senate approved her historic 168,000. nomination by a 99-0 vote Mon· Attorney General William day. French Smith said the figure W o m en · s g r o u p s e n · should be enough to ensure that thusiastically backed the 51-other nations that provide initial year -old Arizona appeals court a sy lum for th e refugees. judge. • particularly Thailand, do not ·•We're hoping she ( Mrs.,-eve rely restrict their own ad· O'Connor ) won 't be tokenized:-llJll ·ssions. · .. An admissions ceiling of up tries such as Thailand which ac- cept those fleeing repre!.sive neighboring rt'g1m es in thl' ex- pectation many will be !>ellled elsewhere The adm1mstration also rec· omm e nded that the Unit ed Stat es allow 53,000 r e rugces rrom l'lsewherc in thC' \\.Orld tn the new fiscal yt·ar sturting Ort. I , in<'luding 113.000 from tht• Sew 1ct Union The refugee r1gurcs :.ire sub- 'Nf>~ro., rPplac.-.d J<'<'I lo cungrt·s!.ion:.il approval 11ndl'r a ""'"" 1mm1gration law pass<'d last.) l'ar Smith nntt•d th<.1l although the l't•iltng on rl'fuget''-from Viet· nam. Lms :.i11d Kumpuchea or C:.irn ho<lia .., 11>8,000 this year . the l'111ll'd State's expects to ad- mit no mnn· than 125.000 10 th~ yt•ar t•ndmg Sl'pl 30 Hut. the .1ttorne\ general said, 11 th<· go\l'rllm<·nt had set a I <!5,000 rl'fugt·1· c1·il1 ng a year ago. \\.c Y.ould have risked sl'nou., reaction amnng the first· asvlum nation<, " Buy a house, get a free car GM off er seeks to. attr q,ct buyers of unwanted real estate to 120,000 . . . is based on our best estimates of new arrivals In first -a sylum areas. th e possibilities of vol untary re- patriation and local resettle· ment," Smith testified before the Senate Judiciary Commit· tee. OMAHA. Neb (AP) -Acting Chief E L. Stokes has ordered that the word "Negro" no longer be broadcast over Omaha police radios or appear in written re- ports by offi cers. Stokes said the word will be replaced by the term .. blaek " Smith said tt1a t the ad· m1n1strat1on 1nt c•nds to dis· courage lnllochinl''ie resettle· mcnt here l•xrept in instances m which lives are endangered. lie said the pol1c' was one of ..humune deterrence.'' intended lo withdraw the U S. welcome tn at fo1 those Y.ho ~eek to come to Amenra onl~ to improve their lot fin:.incially. TROY. Mich . <AP > - Burdened with expensive homes th once belonged to its ex- ives, General Motors Corp. an offering free cars to al- t buyers for more than 100 ces of unwanted real estate. M is calling the promotion y a House -Get a Car," hopes it will help liquidate ut $10 million in residential · est.le holdings acquired by from employees transferred her areas. e want lo reduce this inven· of houses in the Detroit a and we think this is a uni- kind of marketing program l ought to be given a try," ert D. Burger, vice presi· in charge of GM 's sales and ketlng staff. said in a state- l Tuesday announcing the ram. f it works here, we may try sewhere in the country." urger and William O'Keefe, head of GM's real estate opera-. lions, announced the promotion at a news conference in one of the houses, in suburban Troy. The house sells for $122,000 and comes with a 1982 Chevrolet Cavalier, sticker price $9,538. O 'Keefe said some or the houses have been Oil tbe market for a year. He Mamed high mort1age fn&erest ratetr for dif. ficulty in 1ellin1 the homes. AJthough GM hM more than 100 u nsold houses In the metropolitan Detroit area, only about 78 -those costing more than SM,000 -are included in the offer, which runs thr~ Oct. 31. That number may in· crease, however. "We have to continu~ to move people for their own develop· m ent as well as the needs of the business, O'Keefe said. "We're constantly moving people. We may have more houses next week." The average cost of the houses is about $92,000 but the prices go as high as $204,000. The model or car available depends on the value of the house it accom- panies. More expensive homes (""Will include cars that are higher \ priced or equipped with more options. GM said. House buyers have the choice of keeping the cars or deducting the value or the cars from the cost of the homes. Those who keep the cars must pay state sales tax and license fees on the vehicles. "All over the country real estate dealers are offering pros· pective homebuyers various types of incentives ranging from boats to furniture to complete wardrobes." Burger said. "We 're in the car business What better incentive can you offer to a homebuyer than a new car?" elize celebrates independence itain. lowers Union Jack over Caribbean nation LMOPAN. Belize CAP - ain's Prince Michael of Kent ded over the documents of pendence to Prime Minister ge Price and wished this gling nation "all possible g fortune. peace end pros· perity." British jets flew low over the M ayan -s t y le cap ital of Belmoran a s messages of goodwil and support were read to a crowd of about 3,000. The Union Jack was lowered over this Caribbean nation between Mexico and Guatemala at midnight Sunday, ending three centuries of British con- trol. The new nation promptly ap- plied for United Nations mem- bership, sparking strong opposi· lion from Guatemala, which continues to claim Belile. Britain's message from Queen Elizabeth II carried firm as- s urances of support should Guatemala decide to press its claim with force, altbougb such a move is not considered proba· ble. Price. who baa worked for more than 20 years for indepen· dence, told the independence gathering that the estimated 1,600 British soldiers stationed in the country would remain for "an appropriate time." He said they would be "6ot as a colonial power but as a welcome partner . . . to preserve and promau peace." Nicholas Ridley, Britain's minister of state, said, "The birth of the new Belize has been difficult and is a bit late" because of the Guatemalan dis- pute. Britain gave internal self-rule to Belize. formerly British Hon· duras, in 1964, retaining control only over foreign policy and de· fense. · "You inherit a sound economy if not a rich one. and your friends will help you," Ridley said. Guatemala bases its claim to . Belize on its contention that Bri· tain did not carry out an 1859 treaty that called for construc- tion or a road from Guatemala City through Belize to the Carib- bean. In exchange, Guatemala WflS to recognize Belize's boun· daries and British control. Placing a ciassified is twice as easy! -- you can use Classified over • • ..... ~----.-..~- week ads. ' .. "We believe that this level 1s th e maximum that may be needed to maintain continuing first asylum in Southeast Asia." he said. First asylum nations in the case of Asia refugees are coun- Stokes order said the change was made bcrause "Negro" is no longer accepted by the Na· t1o nal Cr im e l nformal1on Center, an agency that keeps na- tionwide crime records . Under l1 S lay. a refugee 1s dl·f1nt•d a.., someone fleeing per s<•cutwn and not m erely pursu1nJ,: f1n <11w1al better ment. Avco Thrift g ives everyone the c h ance to earn high interest. You don't have to have a big account to feel ,velcome at Avco. And' it doesn't take a lot of money to earn high intf.:!re!:>t. w~ haw pl2111-; to fit everyone's needs. And people who can mukt:> you feel at home So come on in. Our people will put you in the best company. ·14.50" annual ratll ol Interest Term Investment Certificate hl\<''I ,,, h11t .. a, $5tl<l for •" h"n ,, """' ·~ 'ltl dav' (1111he evt'nl of ,.,ul~ woth•lr•'"'''I. ma~imum 111i11re51 p.11d '' '' O". Paasbook Account bm)S Imm dllttt ol u.-poSll ln1vw,1 (om poun<lt·u d .. 1111,1. 1i.'"' q 11,111t·d1, M111,1nui11 d,•pu~ll 'l'• .. L::J/JAVCO THRIFT 25252 Cabot Road Laguna Hills. €a)ifornia 92653 (714) 581-1700 620 Newport Center Drive, Suite 101 Ne~rt Beach, Calif om a 92660 (714) 644-9490 ----· ------------------........__.__._ _..__ __ _ Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. September 23, 1981 s ~·' [' ·~UffiU~ -I . '· I I Brown vows no deficit · Governor promises to limit spending to balance budget SACRANENro 'AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr . bas promised to limit spending rather than talse taxes to and he attacked "the nuclear crazies" who want to build more and more nuclear power plants around the nation. budgeted welfare and Medi-Cal costs. ' balance his budeet if revenues ,continue to fall b e hind estimates. Brown made his comments in a 2~·hour stint as guest host on a listener call-in show on radio KFBK in Sacramento, his third of four scheduled radio talk s how programs in four different cities. "With President Reagan's cut· backs, we're looking at a darker future... Brown added, saying Reagan "gave away too much" in his tax cuts. . -I The Democratic governor also defended his signing or reappor- li on men t b i ll s which. Republicans have denounced as gerrymanders, and Brown criticized What he called the "narrow ~onomtc .interests" of farmers who want the unlimited use of pesticides. Brown repeatedly defended bis handling of the Mediterra- nean fruit Oy infestation against crilics who say he should have ordered aerial spraying ear)j.er. "We have a financial squeeze, but we will have a balanced budget. We'll have no deficit because we'll cut back.'' Brown said, acknowledging estimates that his $25.6 billion state budget may be S200 million or more out of balance because of overly op- li m istic estimates of tax rev· e nu e s a nd hi g h er -t h a n - Campus crime held serious problem SAC RAMEN'.fO <AP > - California's public schools re- ported more than 100,000 violent incidents in a recent fi ve-month period, ranging from petty van· dalism and drunkenness to as- saults on teachers. State school Superintendent Wilson Riles released pre- liminary figllrea this week from the first report of its kind on crime and violence. Riles said the figures show the serlomness of campus crime. From Sept. 1, 1980 to Feb. 1, Hiil, 105,3!8 "incidents of crime and violence" were reported in the schools or at off-campus events like rootball games. Riles said. He did not say how many of those were reported to law- enforcement authorities. or dis· tinguii;h between minor and serious crimes. All the public schools con- lributed to the report, li sting crimes that were reported to their administrators, including those in whic h no one was punished, said a spokesm an for Riles, Vic Biondi. There was no comparison with previous years because no such statewide statistics have been compiled. But the state's largest school district, Los Angeles. has report· ed a 3 percent in crease in crimes over the previous year, using the period from July 1980 through June 1981. Statewide, Riles said the inci- dents included: 20,320 crimes against stu· dents, school employees and others. including assaults. rob- bery and threats. 59,246 cri mes against prop· erty. which the schools said caused damage of more than $10.3 million Thursday, September 24th 7:30-9:00 P.M. At Murdy ftark, Hunttngton Beach (Golden West & Norma Drive) Hear Gerry Reed speak on "SOLAR APPLIACTION" Learn about Tax Credits and Utility 6% Financi09 Gerry's a member of the L.A. County Energy Commission and May04' Bradley's Solar City Committee. For More lnformat1on . Call REEds SolAR· DAy CoRp. (714) 891-2618 15431 Ctt.mlcal Lane, Huntington Beach c..lfkl L~ • JWl278 BOY and GIRL SCOUT STOCK REDUCTION SALE Challenged by several callers who criticized his delay in Med· fly spraying, Brown said "we a r e getting the Medfly under control," and he added a sharp counter-attack against pesticide producers and growers. "t wi ll not sit back and let self serving propaganda over· come the moral responsibility to Investigate the medical and en· v1ronmental consequences of the widespread use of chemicals, and I intend to pursue this no m atter how much propaganda. no matter how much political opposition. no matter how many millions of dollars of campaign contributions people put up against me," Brown said. Challenged by a listener who called the reapportionment bills he s igned la s t w ee k a Democratic gerr yma nder , Brown agreed that the ne w legislative and cong ressional district lines probably would help Democrats at the expense of Republicans. but he defended that as a proper political move. REACTOR CAVITY A view down on unit one o f t h e nuclear reacto r cavit \ at 0 1ablo Can~ o n Nuclear Power Plant s how-; th<.• reae .... tor a:-, the circu lar object in the center. Cyli dl'rs to far left and far right are stea J,:l·m·rators. Man sentenced in coupon mail fraud SAN FRANCISCO IAP> -A San Bruno man convicted of mail fraud in a $416.000 coupon scam has been sentenced to five years in federal prison and fined $10,000. U S. District Co urt J udge Marilyn Hall Patel said she did not believe Osca r Colin's testimony that he earned only a tenth of the S180 ,000 in· vest1gators said he netted in one five-month period. Colin. 43. was accused of re· beli eve $18,000 represents the ceiving large numbers of unused total you made ... d iscount coupons and arranging Trial Jurors were told Colin with g rocers to get r e fund had four women packaging c hecks from coupon c lear· coupons and r eceived an inghouses . estimated $.U6,000 in one year "I do not find it believable." for coupons sent in for redemp· she told him. "that you did t1on not know how grocery coupons A~s1stant U S. Attorney Ploy we re used, handled and re-Dawson said Coh n would split deemed. You made substantial the money with the grocers. amounts and have not leveled . none of whom were charged in with the probation office. l don't the indictment covering the period from early 1979 througje May HIM. JI Colin was convicted Aug . 19 on the 18 mail fraud counts. each ol' which carry a maximum pena.P ' ty of fi ve years in pr ison and ·a 1 SI .000 fine. 1 Ms Pate l gave hi m five, years on the first· count and g- suspended sentence on the next ten, with a $1 ,000 fine for eac~ She suspended imposition of se lence on the other seven. ------------------------------------- GROCERY SHASTA SOFT DRINKS .............. 12 01• 2 3 c QUla..nHDH NOODLES AMD SAUCE •••. 4 '/z oL39c UllYS TOMATO JUICE •••••••••...• , 01.69c IUWMY PAPER TOWELS ••••.•..•••••• 1to11 69c IOSMfTA REFRIEO IEAMS ............ JO OL 79 c UHDSAY JUMIO PITTED OLIVES •• ,Joo 11w •• 79 c 5".INCHlllO c• DEODORANT SOAP ....... •Ii• .• 4 I I 00 Ll•fl PUS and CARROTS •••• 16 oL2 /8 9c PRODUCE SWiil' "M" JUICY OIANGES .................. 5 u,,_ I oo PINTO IEAMS •..••••••••••.•• 2 9c111. Mo.INTA'" •AOWH IAITUTT MEAT liCKYFAIMS ~ . .._ (. , FtlYIMG CHICKEN ....•.•.•.•• 69c •. ~l~~flj EASRlH FlESH MEATY 59 '11r,;;i,~ PORK SPARERIBS ............... I •. n..DUYOUHG BEEF LIVER •••.••....••.••••••• 89c•· MAHHIHGS IHF j 6 9 ~w-..li~ll' SEVEN IOME ROAST ........... I it.. MAHHIHGS HfF 2 59 IOMELESS BEEF ROAST . . • • • • • • • 111. IAI MALL IHf DIMMER FRAM KS ............... I 6 ~- ... M IULI( I ~9 SLICED BACON • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • .)111. HOltTHHH SLICED HALIBUT ••••.•••.•.•••• 2 9~. DELI FROZEN NSCHH SAHDWJCH MAT! PROCESSED CHEESE SLICES 12-. 99c, Save 20" on EvelJ Item In Our Stock PEARS •••••••.•••••••••••• 3 Ut1. I 00 ~Sfll IB.L PEPPERS ................ 29c111. DIUMAH THIM CUT MEATS ••.••••••• 2•1z .._] 9 c llPl&SWHT CASAIA MROHS .••••••••....•••..•••• 9 c •· VAHDllAMP FROZEN FISH FILLETS •••••• 12 n. I 6 9 NISH IRUSSaL SPROUTS •••••••••• 39c,.._ MOH'f Ordlrs Soll CltKkC..W.11 CardsAY ..... S..e 0.. leys. 6lrtl. •0W111e1 9d C• ScMt U111fonn1, Jewlll1. Acc"Mrfn. ~ & lock PackhHJ •lpMHt. Q•111 '""' Jockets. , ..... , iltlrts, S8drt1, Shorts, llOll1e1, Swe.._.a. ...... T Slllrh. Mah & J.Rpen. . MUllt IM POI llST SIUCTION. llOKIN Sl%1S. ~TO STOCK pN HAND. NO SPECIAL OIDllS. SALi IMDS TUISDA Y, SIPT. 29 14210 CULYIR DllVI PHONI: 112·3130 HOUISc Ma tin Pri. I O.t, Set. IM, S.. ll·L Orange C.Oast DAILY PILOT/WednHday. September 23. 1981 Diehard fans gathe r to honor cow boy h e ro at National Tom Mix Festival . DUBOIS. Pa. tAP> -There's more pine than cactua In northwest Pennaylvanla. and It's unlikely any poaae from here ever &alloped off after hombres who bushwhacked a Well• Fargo atacec:oach. Out in this city, dlehard rans 1atbered to honor the memory of Tom Mix -that tou1h, fear· less and virtuous straight· CON FI RM E D C on se rva tive economist James C Miller 111 has been C'onfirmed by a 97 ·2 Se nat e \'Ott:• a s c h ai rman of ~h e Federal Trade Com- mission. Garage ope n e r s a danger? EVANSI'ON, Ill. <AP> -Automatic devices that close garage doors ca n b e extre m e l y dangerous to young children, and the deaths of two children have been attributed to the d evices, a m edi cal journal says. Dr. Leon Satran, a p e diatrician at the University of Minnesota, detailed the fatalities in Pediatrics. a medical journal published here. In one case. he said a 6-year-old girl was play- ing with friends in a garage. The children tried to leave as the door was closing after a car drove away. apparently playing a game. The girl was trapped under the door and died of as phyx- iation. the report said. In the second incident, a 3-year-old boy was trapped under the door and pronounced dead at a hospital, Satran wrote. Although it was not known who acti vated the controls on the door. the boy's mother often scolded him for playing with the controls, the journal noted. Both incidents oc- curred in Minnesota , ac- cording to the report. Satran suggested that · t~ .~ontrols should be placed>\Qut of the reach of children, where the operator has a view of the vicinity. A car also should be locked if the transmitter is left in the vehicle. and the garage doors should a utomati call y r eopen when striking an object. rather than continuing l o exert downw a rd pressure, he said. Deer relocated TIBURON (AP > Nearly a ll of Angel Is land's overpopulated deer herd has been trapped and moved to Mendocino County, the s tate Department of Fish and Game said. A s pokesman said 165 deer have been re located since a roundup began three weeks ago. f Auto & Homeownetrs- ;:,.... Quotes By Phone , FMIOS tlSmla ., shooter they atiJl love as "The Kina ot the Cowboys." Fans and the local Chamber ot Commerce put together the second annual National Tom Mix Festival, a four-day rodeo, carnival and mm celebration to honor a local 'boy who made aood . The circus and film star hu not been forgotten 41 years alter his death ··People need a hero rl~ht now," aald Serge Darrlarand, a General Motors Corp. enlfneer and Mix look·allke who rode ln the festival parade wearln1 his cowboy duds and a pair of chaps that had belonaed to Mix . More than 11 ,000 people at· tended ooe or more of the ac· llvlties last year. and this year's turnout appear~ even bl11er. or II unlzera said Wllh hh1 raven hair und dark, (lf.l(jhln1 eyes, Mlx had a charisma that loyallsts claim hua not been matched by any celluloid cowboy since -not even by John Wayne. On screen , Mix didn't drink. smoke or s wear. And he ter· rified mm crews with his der· SPECIAL! 11mo1 TISSUE a--..w:r 2-Pt.Y f ACUL QUAUTY ~Mfr.er-I 17.Soz.SIZES r lng·do. using hve amm11nition l(\ his early films and perform· Ing stunts with his faithful mount, Tony the Wonder Horse. Three other states, Texas. Oklahoma and Calirornla. have claimed Mix as a native son, said Richard Seiverling, festival gen eral c hairman. Mix 's publicists always maintained he was born in a log cabin In Texas, "but we know he's a Pennaylva· nlan," said Paul E. Mix, • cousin. Most or Mix'a 350·•00 films were silent, but he was ooe ol the few a ctors to make the transition -to sound, Selverllna said. The cowboy actor died Oct. 12, 1940, in a crash or his 1937 supercharged automobile. SPECIAL! .. WMWAM&UM1 9 FOR DAILY OUl MYCIO( -, ..... ,Slll·111 70 oz. • 13 0· 171 ~·~~.~~·mu 4 ROLL PAK • Ln-'«~ 1. 79 2401·141 SIZE • BUY NOW! INSTANT COFFEE ::.···2.99 SPECIAL! NON -DAIRY CREAMER 22oz.123 SIZE • SPECIAL! iii~~~ 100'% ACaYUC • 4 ru • auo.TO COUMtS (4 u.) • VAllH ATO (l •L) YOUI CHOICE BBC PILOT "IAZOI POINT" PENS USOITtD COlCMIS LADIES' VICTORIAN LACE BLOUSE Georgette crepe wtth luscious lace delatl Choose from many pretty styles SPECIAL! 12'' Jl 21 ft. AD PRICES PREVAIL: WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT! ' Master Card . AGREE Helps slop the greas1es between shampoos SHAMPOO SPECIAL! MAALOX SUSPENSION LIQUID TM£ NUMaH ONE ANTACID 12oz.179 SIZE • SAVE *1.00 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23rd THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 26th I oz. operaltCin Operates on one .. AA" llallery (included) 1.3 g w11n 10 000 hours of .~"1~i9 ~110 7.99 ..... 1. .. OPDl7DAYeA ... K"°" , :-) ~~ .... -YOUfl COllY-.... C• I ~ \ ' \ COMPOUllDlll& YOUR PllEIClllPTIOll ' TO THE MOST EXACT IPECIFICATIOllS ' II OUR IUSlllW! Ytur 13,,.., ,W.actst 11 pttlllfld II lfllf C.r1HUI c.MUllJllM • ywr preacrlpt1111. We llllltv• yeu wlll bl pl111111 wltll Ille 1p1rt11111 cltanllnua II eur plllr1111ty dt111rlllllllb. • NORTHERN "SALON PRO" STYLING WAND wttll CHIOll£ HANDLE Styles and curls hatr tn seconds Comes wtlh fold-up safely heel rest H~ 5.99 llOUOR COUNT VASYA VODKA ~,,-.ft,.. ::. 6.99 SOAVE BOLLA WHITE WINE • -----. NORELCO 750ML ·2.99 LADY BUG LADY SHAVER HOF-BRAU BEER Close. last comlortable 12 eL CMS ~~a;:,~'.~~~ :~c~~~-s. 2 3 .8 B 1.3 9 112127 6-PAK i:..· -~~~__,1 ....... l ---------510.00 REBATE MR.COf'F£E 10-CUP COFFEEMAKER Au1oma1tcally swllches 23 99 :;:r~~~;c~e'o •• :~Do::_ 4·00 •ton" • KOOU REFUSE CO'Nr'A~ER £9!P.H!\'RST 250 14 95 wlt118ullt-ln 53 95 Eleclronlc Flash "" .. a. l'nce • ·~~;.-foo ·==-10.00 32 GALLON c-.. •s..11 .... Sl•• ,.c .. u • fw Cott lttt1 It< 1"' rtN11ll<K'l11• K-K•• l1111t1 e SAVEaoe ARRID EXTRA DRY SOLID DEODORANT 2oz.149 SIZE • u. SAVE *2.00 PORCELANA M•DICAT•D CR•AM Helps lade age spots. lreckles & brown spots ~~·4.99 SAVE *1.00 VICKS DAYCARE MULTI· SYMPTOM COLDS M•DICINE • ......... .... .... It -111 ,.-. ..... *"" '""' • ""'°"II• •1 • t-" • s.. ... °'" SIWll '" ,_ toUlt .. Kl ............. 12 95 ;.~===-::: 43 95 .................. . .._ _____________________________________________________ __. SAVE 79e MURI NE STtlttLE m DROPS In Plastic Dropper • SAVE•t .9& CENTRUM NIQM POTENCY llUlTMTAMM .,._,_UL f'GllMlU 100 i::m 6.99 ........ SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK ' 900 AM T0930PMMONOAYTHRUSATlJRCAY • 9 00 AM TO . 00 PM SUNOA'r SAVE48e • ~1.11 54a.H14 w IJl-J07 1t t4...,...c .... .-... HUNT. •ocH-AdetM a•~ -1tW'.n1•111 a ,..., _ hecft a Geftlelid . . ~T 1020 IMM, w..-"-• 1~1-Clllfff Of. & Welftllt IL TOftO -MSnftoc"11e~..... •.-oN N.IO-mrl .......... ......,. ,OUNTAIN VAUIY -Mepolle a Wemet IANTAA~-1111 S..-............. .. 6 4 l I 'I ., • H I l • ~···~·--· EYE-CATCHING -Doris Sinks, owner of Downtown Optical in Fl. Collins. Colo., has q uite• a collection of eye charts in different A -., ,. ,. ... J ., ., • • : l --:-;,. ~ ~= . .... "' . . . .. -_.... ' ... ..,: . . .. AP~ languages in the display window of her busi· ness. The charts. from left, are Russian, Greek, Chinese, Arabic and Hebrew. Speedy train debuts in France M 0 NTC HAN IN, France north from the central city of run from three hours and 48 (AP) -Pres ident Francois Lyon towards Montchanin, a sta• minutes to two hours and 40 Mitterrand drove his country's tion on the special new track minutes. It will drop to two newest technological achieve-between Paris and Lyon. hours in 1983 when a special Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Wednesday, September 23. 1981 ~ RO LEX Give style to time for all your days. Giid your momenta as they deserve --------. ---with an elegant watch by Rolex. From an outstanding collection: the Oyster Perpetual Dateju•t In 18 karat yellow gold .:ase and bracelet In dramatic contrast to the rich blue dials of ltJpis lazuli. Lady's: $6,500. M an'a: $9,825. Bailey Banks&Biddle . World Renowned Jewelers Since 1832 SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA First le~/. Bullock'• wing. (714) 751-5640 , .... m ent -the world's fastest train Public service for the TGVs high-speed track is completed. -at 160 mph on its inaugural starts Monday with the elec-Paris-Gen"eva drops from five Alao In Lo• Vqia• In thr Fo.hlon St.ow • ••} run. trically powered tr ains speeding hours and 40 to four hours and 20 and then lo three hours and 40. L-=====================================================-----;~~ l', The train system. he said, "is between Paris, Lyon and other Unlike the Japanese "Bullet" a s ign to the whole world that southeastern French towns, and train, the TGV can switch from France intends to stay a great Geneva, Switzerland. Eighty-its s pecial track to regul ar lines, innovative nation, well placed in seven trains are on order. TGV the race for high technology." is an acronym for "train a making it potentially the next grande vitesse, .. or high speed generation of Trans· European Mitterrand briefl y took the train. Expresses. The TGV travels at controls Tuesday from engineer about 30 mph faster than the Jacques Ruiz as the train sped The tratns cut the Par is-Lyon "Bullet." tiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii~;p;;m...-.. ~~..-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir-~~~~ • We .. 1etal111i1t9 • ...tloewW. ,.., of .,..... -y 0 e ._." to ...W • iii Hie fllt.cill4) of -MIXT cMatl) 0 • -•le '0..-d•Wltli Ten-or' forrAY/CAILI T.V. • ~ t-"'-'41fl"Acn<-'~ ! : ••••••••••• t714J957-0282 ••••••••••• : REAL VALUES , on item s from appl es~u ce to zi ppe r s . Dll.IJ p·llDI' are adverti sed every day 1n the Transcendental Meditation® Program Ushering In The Age Of Enlighcenmenc In This Generation HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER. 1 ..... ~'s Healt Foods . ""' ,,.,,: ,, •.•. ,, 1, .•. , •• ,,,, ,,,, •• ,., 0,,,,,, flll Hcwbor View Center 644-7733 1628 San Miguel Drive, Newport leach Let your feet make a place for themselves. MAKE Y ALKJNG FUN AGAIN Awil.tbk 111 diffmnc l!yln, including doga. AU llllH and rwo widths, fo. men, women and childtm. Madr o( gnlu~ lftihtr and IHOlabk. Thty late practically f~ t1w•1 good, l>Kaux ontt you pu! than on you 'U ~ wane 10 1ab thml off. I l • irkenstocli HOURS:MOH.·SAT.11·7•SUN.11·6 EJCperl Rtltlollng A val/able "ESPRADRILLE" by JAQUES COHEN One of our new extension phones can do a lot to improve your home. A new room calls for a . newphone. It'll make that extra space someth ing to enjoy. (Instead of something that's an extra 15 or 20 feet from the nearest phone.) And if you're tired of jogging through the house to answer ca lls, an extension phone can do a lot to impro'le your existing spa ce, too. Family room. Laundry room. Wort< room. Any room. Of cou rse our extension phones are more than just . practical . We've got models that ca n tu rn an ordinary phone call into an adventure. (French phones, Mickey Mouse phones, sleek bed- side phones, nostalgic turn-of- the-century phones and many more.) So come into a GTE Phone Mart. You'll be amazed at what a great pick-me-up a new exten- sion ph~:me can be. AZUSA Foothill Shopping Center HUNTINGTON BEACH SOUTH 101~ Adams Ave. MONROVIA 412 So. Myrtle MONTCLAIR Montclair Plaza REDLANDS Redlands Mall SANTA MONICA 13016thSt. SOUTH BAY BElLFlOWER Artesia Center COVINA (See West Covina) CUCAMONGA (See Rancho) DOWNEY Stonev.ood Shopping Center HUNTINGTON BEACH Huntington Center LAKEWOOD Lakewood Center Mall LA PUENTE F\Jente Hills Mall LONG BEACH The Market Place MARINA VIiia Marina Shopping Center -1 NOVATO 1450 Grant Avenue PALM SPRINGS Sunrise Square Shopping Center PANORAMA Panorama City Mall RANCHO CUCAMONGA 9799 Baseline Rd. ROLLING HILLS ESTATES The Village Shopping Center SAHTA BARBARA Loreto Plaza SAN BERNARDtNO Central City Mall SANTAMARIA Town Center Del Amo Fashion Square THOUSAND OAKS Janss Mall WEST COVINA Fashion Plaza WEST LOS ANGELES 1006Gayley Ave. WHfTTlf R Whittwood Shoppi~ Center .,: ... .. ii• I ., .... , . . · . . . . . . .. 1•.-1• '''•'• , ... ·I : I '\ -!" H f I ....... iii>;. ·u.:; I• CoMt DAILY PfLOT,W9dnetday, S.pt•mber 23, 1181 r u .~~pt family rapped hook controversy EW YOik <AP> -A former tor for PJ'.-&'"·ff•U lac. baa t tined lhlt the a>ubliablq hou11 b ckled tO f Ubfly prft•UI'• and re- , ed lo prom* a 1'74 book ctltlul o the l)Q Pdftt cllemlcaJ company d the Du Pont famJly. ram Clvta, tht former edJtor. t tified ln UiS. Dl1trlot Court here l Fort\lhe 8eolt Club, a subsidiary o tbt BoQk--of·th•Month Club deal· In with books of interest to ex· e tives, c.celed plans to offer the k ,after 9"ln1 contacted by a Du nt officlaJ. The testimony came durin1 the t al on a S2 snllUon suit agalnat the emical company and Prentice-Hall Gerard Zile. author of "Du P!>nl: yond the Nylt>n Oirtain." 1'he fttitness dlalmed fall\are to blicize tlt~ &eok ltunted utes. Cavin clahned' Ule p1i1bU1ber also r uced t.he first tH1bUnc tun from a anned B,000 cgpits to 10,000 copies, aking it len lik•ly Lhat the book uld seD. n responae, Ou Pont said that at request. F. Harry Brown, e>t· uti.-e 'vice preialdeflt of FortWJe, ad proOf of the book •·and at once appreciated It.a unsuitablllty for tbt Fortune 8oolt Club. ''He Nlcommtnded to Itta cbalrman and president that distnbuUon of the book be abandoned," the statement Hid. In a press rele31e issued before the trial belan. the publiahln1 house de· "He recommend- ed the book be. aban- doned.'' nied Zilg's charges and declared "Ou Pont never pressured anyone." Zilt. 35, of Brooklyn, Is seeking $1 million damages from Prentice·Hall, charging breach of contract. He also· is seeking Sl million from Du "Pont for aflegedly inducing breach of con· tract. Cavin said that had the Fortune Club incident been publicized before the book was published in November 1974, the book might have become a "real big seller." Going out of business in Santa Ana Men's exclusive clothing Entlre stock 1 /2 price or less , Final 7 days! · F•l1Ml'redlcfleM: our 91101rtported lined corduroy sport j&Cttets. M9. Our $32.SQ Grayon shoes. S9. Our SlOOto &165 La Jolla jackets now $29.95.. Our S32.SO imported cotton pullover krrit sweaters from LeRoy, $10. All remaining Louis Roth. Lanvm. Jame! Edmonds, Aquascutum, Deltori. ManctHas. LeBaron. Charles l.yoM saiU & sport coats. haU prit<e Pl1.1111*any additional bargains such as ·SIO bargaiJ1 tables Everytlffngln the store is marked lit price or lejs. No exceptions. No distressed goods were pur· chased ror this sale. Nothing removed from the premises. We· re even marking down Fall goods. just received i111tock One store only we·re closing onl} this store in F~h1on Square. Santa Ana. OUr othtr stores, in Beverly Hills. Sherman Oaks and Las Vegas, continue In business as usual. But we don't want to load them with surplus goods removed from our Orange County store. They need an the space they have Cor incoming Fall i\ems. ~ goueveeytbing. - Men 's suit& & /fport coats Slacks & leiaure jacket& Shirt• & aport shim Kn.it shirts & sweaters Nel'kt1eB & shoe$ Some wom11n "'sports apparel The savings are sensational. Entire stock 112 price or less. Ou rs is not the usual men's store No Cormala merchandising. Every single item was Individually select· ed. Our taste 1s based on style. not fashion What's right. not what's "in" at the moment This is one s<.1le the d1scrimmatmg business or professional man can appreciate. Louis Roth. l11Baron, la Jolla, Lanum . Bally. Damon. Parker of Vienna, ll'Rov. Liiv DachP. Delton, G1 ueiu-hy.°F'tPnch SJumu. .J & M. 81/l Blass. Char/PS Lyons, Oleg Cassin1, & othera All lop quality goods. Also our expensive fixtures. ;.mtiques und art ohject.s must go. Everything m this 30 by 130 ft ston• must be gone by 6 pm Tuesday. Tell your friends And say goodbye to thit fine little shop or ours. ~ ~o~rE FACTOR /JERRY ROTHSCHILD~ •3 fes?!lon Square. 2800 N Main. Santa Ana. 558-7111. Cast! & bank cards only. All sales final. No CO D's. Moo Thu Fri 10 to 9, Tue Wed Sal 10 to 6. Sun II to 5. GENERAL ELECTU AMIRI CASllm RECbRDEft AM/FM SUPERAllO PORT ABLE 49.99 .._,,_.._,..,_ .... _........_ ~-....... ~--.-...-AlllQll~-~~ ......... 700_1MS __ oul llUl. "'*',,, ~ -•11'.h lonO-- C..WATIUO IAY£ H .11 -. 7·1111 49.99 ----- H1111ti111fto11 Bt•a(th PLUS STORE EAQ4 0# THlSI r'tMS Af.AOll. Y A\IAILA8LE F"OR SAlE AS ADVERTISED We sell first quality and discontinued merchandise from Sears Retail and Catalog Distribution. "Was " prices quoted arc the regular prices at which the items were formerly offered by Cat alog or in many Sears Retail stores around the count ry . Ettecth1e t-2W2 SAVE 140.00 Electronic touch microwave oven Cooking convenience at your fingertips. Probe cooks food to preset Internal temperature, theo s huts oven off. Digital timer. #9970 Regular $519.95 379.88 Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as MEN'S ULTRESSA LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS was 11 .SO WOMEN'S PURSES w ere 18.00 NOW 6.99 NOW 6.97 SAVE 40o/o SAVE 60°/o WOMEN'S RUNNING SHOES SEA RS WINN ER 11 SUEDE UPPERS were 16.99 NOW 8.99 MEN'S SNAPPER SOCKS SOCKS THAT SNAP TOGETHER PKG. OF 3 were 7.49 SAVE 2.00 NOW 5.49 lluntini:ton R1·ad1 !14~15 /\11a '"' \tlam' & ~a~nolia (7 fl ) 9f.:1. '.!61\li STORE HOl:RS · ,._ fTI lt:•t:• s.1.-,11:-:• _, .. , .. ,, .. ,\,k ;iltuut St· a r' n1·d it r11an,. Wed., Thurs., Fri •• Sat., Sept. 23 -Sept. 26 II I FEATURING EUREKA'S MOST POWERFUL UPRIGHT! s139's Model2068 TRADE-INS ACCEPTED WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! DAYl ONL~ EUREKA'S MEW' UGHl'Wll•HT VACUUM WB•HS ONLY I J LIS. PERFECT FOi 9U1Ck PICK.UPS EASY TO USE-· EASY TO CARRY ~-------_----~ --_ --~ -_-: ....:.._ -----·-------- ELECTRONIC DIGIT AL IA 1llll00'1 SCALE FM/AM ELECTROllC omTAL CLOCK llADIO C.•AT41.tl IAfE 1'.11 ~7 ..... 28.99 IAL!PMU ... n.IUM.llPT.17. ... ldlO °""'....,. _ Sll41• Mot\ ""'1 I'll tM ... tM. llittl. 11•1 • See Ow Entire Line of Eurekas at Sale Prices! • Family Owned & Operated • 23 YMrl 111 S...Loceffon NEWPORT VACUUM CENTER 1832% NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA . •' AT THE IN'TERSICTION OF MIWP.ORT & HARIOR ILVD. • a ~. 646-51 .. P•rldng Lot In Aeer Of lhHdlnt CtoHStr~ey HOUIS:. l:JM:l• Oii Ut11t1s1._. l'tllcy: tt 111t .. 1s llOI ~·•as tlducd • 1SP"•ll111<Mse 1t 1s fl 1t1 re&111M pr1Ce A specrll pwdlm, OIOICI' llOI rfdllted. 1SJft t11tslM!I" wilue Ow u1teftl11111s to,.,,.,~ acM111sed rltai 1a sloe.~ Mlon,.. slletwes H y011 local s1atsllcillld111111111 GI ""ldmJsed 11eat .,.._ lllt Ylt ,.,od a sNail4 • rleln llOl -'r¥e dllt IO lllla e:ste11 cY~b lllt swe will 1U11C • C#te-sy c.o ~1111CMCij 011 tt1111tSI f• t11t ''"'tollt 1111!Msed" Ille silt price~ n1111btt ll11s as ftOI wv 1ocltH1cu1111 cterst·out Slits • to SlleC••I pw~StS •e ~hes •• 11ttet5#1ly h1111tet to stoc~ m11ab!t Orange Coast DAILY PILOTtNtctnetday, September 23, 1981 ~~1==~====~'1~~~==~~ Actress' pay off clai~e d NEW YORK (AP) - A biography of Bette Davis says the actress and billionaire Howard Hughes paid $80,000 in 1938 to her first husband after h e r e portedly caught them in bed together and recorded what went on. Her husband. Harmon Nelson, received $70,000 from Hughes and $10,000 from Miss Davis to destroy the recording, according to excerpts from .. Bette: The Life of Bette Davis," in the upcoming issue of Us magazine. -·i. The book. by Charles Higham, also claims that film s tar Joan Crawford made passes at Miss Davis, who re· fu sed the advances. A s pokeswoman for Be tte Davis· agent, Ma rion Rosenberg. said m Los Angeles. "This biography was written without Miss Davis' con- sent or knowledge and there will be no com- ment ." The spokeswoman identified herself only as Ellen. Asset 's proble m s J h e a vy SAN JOSE <AP> - Some folks sink their mon ey into real estate and hog futures . But Susan Swanson invested , in an Indian elephant - and ended up with a 212-ton problem. A yea r ago, Ms . Swanson . 35, put up $13,000 for half-interest in Butch, a 10-year-old male pachyderm. "I alwa ys wa s fa sc inated with elephants.'' she said . "Some people buy cars. I 'd r ather ha ve an elephant." But by spring. h er ge n e ral partn e r, Lawrence Jefferies, had backed out, leaving Ms. Swanson holding the trunk. ~ ~nC\J CLAIROL Ntre'n£A.WJ 1 ........ ·· NICE N EASY SHAMPOO-IN HAIR COLOR Wide choice of nolurol shompoo·ln colors .,....... .... . . . . . ANACIN FAST PAIN RELIEF TABLETS SALE PRICE 100 toblels for sole , po1n relief. GERITOL TABLETS HEALTHFUL DIET SUPPLEMENT OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERIY JUICE COCKTAIL DRINK "8·oz. While Stocks lost• limit 6 per cu1tomet Under terms of a legal settle m ent with Jef· !~--------------""' fcries, she was awarded the partnersfip's assets Butch. She is required to sell the animal eventually. Meanwhil e , M s . Swanson boards Butch at a ranch in Tehachapi a nd works on getting him jobs so she can get some return on her in- vestment. "I was thinking ... an elephant would be a great mascot for some of these computer com- panies. Elephants are -intelligent, and they have a good memory," said Ms. Swanson, who ow·n s a dog-training SUNSHINE HIHO CRISPY SNACK CRACK EIS business. She· s tried renting ,,"'lll::1ii~~~~~~~iiji~iii~~~iii~i--' him to the Republican . Party. And recently. she landed him a job in a parade at nearby Pacifica. "It's hard to get him a job," Ms. Swanson says. She says there also are unexpected costs ln· volved. "Every time we put him in the truck, he blows a tire." ..,...-,... m•cy .:Purv°iyort of Oldtlme Neighbor1in•••~· IOl • ..,...Dr.• ~.~,- C.11142-5171. Put • few word• to work for ou. ORTEGA · ZESn GlllN CHILI SALSA' SUPER PRICE 1·01. While Stocki lot! I limit 6 per cu1tomerl .... ··~--:-..... _._ .. --~· \. _,.... "' ...... ) • MfLON COVll • IONOID POI. TUTU flU VllTUAllT IUMIMATIS COlD Sl'On CAMPMASTER 33" 1 75" SUEPING BAG .~~G :~,~:~~ 14'' flll. 100" 1 lppet'. •HOUIS •MINUTES • RCONOS . .,.,,. • DATI •DAT • CAUNOAll •STOP WATOI NIT & I.A' TIMI •"I<''"'~' - lsAvEl ~ CASIO SPOIT/STOP QUARTZ WATCH REG. 19.95 1495 Quartz ochon In block 1port COH. lightweight. fUllY ASSEMBlED Stained hardwood, block or brown vinyl cushion. QUARTZ HALOGEN SPOTLIGHT 7'' Pl1191 Into cigarette light«. With 10' cord. ROBITUSSIN DM SYRUP 6-8 HOUR COUGH FORMULA A-oz for relief of coughs due to colds PRlPARAl!ON H PREPARATION H HEMOllOIDAL PAIN llLIEF REG. 4.59 ~ 1upposllorle1 for poln reltef. A value buyl ,...rAt•YALLIY •'6M1 ........ & ....... . .,... ....... ~ , .......... . \ l"=l I TOILET SEAT PADDED VINYL SPECIAL BUY I'' Heat aeoled foam cuahloll MOI. While Stocki lost I _,, TMISI All llG, SUPER STEMS 7" TO 10" BY LlllEY SPECIAL IUY ____...399 .otl-or . or 60-01. wperglouea. TAYLOR CALIFORNIA CELLARS llG. 4.59 3~· Burgundy. Chobll1. Rhine or l!OM. REVLON AQUAMARINE SHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER 16-zo. Nonna!°' dty shompoo. Regular Of )(.body cond1honer. 'CAREFREE FEMININE PANn SHIELDS REG. 3.99 1011 of 41 ponly shields. Co1T1for1oble I 1ecure, Sove l CllTA MUA •DJL rM -C.. .......... c.... •bll ......... _ ..... ...... c..... f ___ _. .. ----r----------·· , ..... ·- BONUS SIZf NIVEA LOTION MOISTURIZING SKIN CARE I I , I I For the family's akin core. 10-ounc•• w••h 3·ouncn free. ' 1 REG. 2.69 ; I 144 ' KLEENEX HUGGIES DISPOSABLE DIAPERS SALE PRICE Box of I 2 toddlers or 24 newbo1ns Con· ven1enc• lot you com fort tor your boby. 2 79 YOUR CHOICl l .OO Mfl . MAil-iii atlAU WMlN TOU tU'f 2. SU STOii fOIDllAIU. A DOW GUARD ANTI-FREEZE TOUI CHOICE •CHICllM •'°II •VlGlTAIU ~ ~ ~~~ ~····"" .,.. . ' .... ...,,, .... tl -t\ OR SUMMER COOLANT Prepare your cor fOf the com· 1ng cold weother. I ·gallon SALE PRICE BETTY CROCKER FUDGE BROWNIE DESSEiT MIX WONTON SOUP ORIENTAL SOUP BY MARUCHAN'S 1.9 IO·oz While Stock lost' l imit 6 per cu1tomer. HORMEL DEVILED HAM SPIEAD SUPER PRICE 3·oz. White Stock• lo1t I limit 6 per customer. WIHMl•U. •1117W.1 ................ . ...,,..., Orange Coat DAILY PILOT JWtdnHdly, September 23. 1981 Abandoned children need a way station The children in Orange Coun t y's Albert Sitton Home lead a fragile lire. They are the abused and the neglected whose parents In m a n y cases have pulled security out from under them a~ if it were a rug. They are the c hildren. authorities say. who could easily become involved in anti-social behavior. About one ·lhird of them do. The Sitton Hom e is run b\ Orange County government but -as a n article in last Sunday's Dai- ly Pit« explained. it is becoming overcrowded almost on a daily • basis. The home is where police officers bring c hildren once they are removed from their homes . Recently. however. county of- ficials h~ve had to seek s pecial court clearances to add more beds to the cramped quarter .. Because of the severe lack of s p ace a nd great need for a healthy environment. a non-profit volunteer committee has been or · ganized to raise the estimated S6.5 million lo construct a new horne next door lo the Sitton Home on Th e City Drive tn Orange The new home. at least for now . is being c alled Orangewood It would h ave seven acres of s pace instead of the existing two. and it would have r oom in a coun- try cottage setting fo r 154 beds. rather than the often surpassed eapacity of 88 a t the_§jtton Home The fund-raisin-g"" committee held a· breakfast last wee k to kick off its efforts and it m ade note of a $117,000 donation already ex tended by the Junior League of ~ewport Harbor. The Sitton Home. and e ven- tually Orangewood. is intended to g ive the unfortunate c hildren a chance to regain their footing and their future. It can be a critical wav s tation in their lives a nd one that deserves the com- mitment of those who can afford to s upport it. An ill-timed gift Even though no public funds were used . Nancy Reagan ·s purchase of $209.508 worth of fine china for the White House doesn't look very good at a time when her hus band is calling for delays in cost-of-li ving pay m t•nts that could affect.: • -Social Security pens ion ' and disability p aym ents. from July l. 1982 until Oct. 1. Railroad r e tireme nt pensions . from July l until Oct I -Cash assistance to the needy. elderly, poor. hlind and other disabled people from Ju l~ I to Oct. 1. -Food stamps. ft'u m April I to Oct. 1. School lunc h <:hild nutri- tion programs from July I to Oct. 1 Indeed Mrs. Reagan·s new china policy is in stark contrast to the temper o f these ti mes with millions of dollars in federal cutbacks and concern about peo pie who are hard -pressed to put a meal on the table on paper plates. While the rest of count r~ is drastically economizing, the President's wife is ordering 200 finger bowls, ramekins and berry bowls . Even if she did bu\' Amer- ican . u s in g fund s fr o m S822.64l privately donated to the White House Historical Associa- lion . the purchase of Sl .000 place Sl'ltings gives rise to the barbed criticism of .. Hollywood kind of taste." It's nol as if there were a s hortage of fine porcelain for ~late dinner~ Almost t:.'Ver" administration chose a new pattern. Even An- drew Jackson. fresh off the fron- tier. acquired a French porcelain dinne r set for 440 and a dessert set ser\'ing 412. all for S2.500 in lht.> 1830s The current <:ollection. start· ed by Mrs. Benjamin Harrison in 1889. was so lur ge by 1917 that ~rs. Woodrow Wilson s tarted its µublic displa~ in a special China Room . The last full sernce was ordered by L~ ndon J ohnson White House staffers fret about having to mix patterns al banquet~ But all the pieces are predominantly ivor y colored with different borde rs a nd it could be part of the c harm and heritage of dining '"1th t he Pres ident to use c h 1 n a s l' n · i c e fro m J a m es ~ladi son ·s or J ohn Kenned y's times. Granted the nl'w chma 1s a mu.1or gift to the White House <:1nd therefore to the nation . Nan- t·~ Reagan could ha\'C~ dis played more sens it i vit v b\' at least de-la~ ing the la\'ish acquisition until more prosperous times. Bickering costs state If California s tarts getting short shrift in Was hington. much of t h e blame c a n be placed ,squsre!y on the shoulders of dis- putatious members of the state Legislature who can't seem to agi::ee on anything any more even when the interest of the state as a whole is at s take. Now t he Ass embly a nd S~mate, unable to agree on opera· tfo n a J policy for the st a te 's federal lobbying offi ce in the na- tion's capital. a r e working toward setting up two separ ate lobbying systems . I A joint lobbying operation. esl~blished in 1979 to promote Catlfornia interests at the federal level.. began to fall apart when its director left for another job. Unfortunatel y, House Speaker Willie Brown and Senate Pres ident Pro Tem David .. • Roberti seem unable to reach agreement in contr ast to their predecessor s Leo McCarthy and James Mills on personnel and objectives for the Washington of· f1 ce. So the office is being dis- banded Now they're talking about two separa t e operation s in Washington which m ay well be a very effective wa~· of diluting any clout California might have lefl Contributing to the rift is the apparent inability of Re publicans and Democrats in both houses to agree on a bipartisan operation that would cut across party lines to defend California's interests. With federal aid to the states being chopped in all direc.tions. the lawmakers could ha rdly have picked a worse time to let their arguments deprive California of a unified front in Washington. Opinions e_,,.99ed In the space above are thOse of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex- pr-Msed oo t9'1S PeOI are t"°5e of their a uthOrs a nd artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Addrta 1'"8 c>euy P ilot, P.O. Box tS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626-0560. Phone (714> ~,. L.M. Boyd/Dress code 1t•s againat \he law in Palm Beach, Fla .. for a man without a shirt on to wait more than 150 feet lnland from a• ocean beach, unlest he's on his own property. Nothing unusual about such a law. But how 1far should a municipality go ln legialating dress codes. Start naked ii out, unless the costume is apr.=ri•te to the sport, 1 aoppoee. No• 1 Wear 'em , lf you 1ot 'em. men. Mandatory ties? Pleut, no. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Do you have bedbugs ? Get cockroaches. They eat bedbuga. Do you have cockroaches. Get toads. They eat cockroaches. Don't know what you can get to eat toads. Dogs s pit them out. Household snakes won't do, not for everybody. Q. How many Inches does the average woman add to her bultllne from age 25 to 50? A. Four lnches. From 34.2 to 38.2. Thom1s P. Haley Publisher 'tlloma1 A. Murphlne Editor • · B•rbaira ISr•lblch Edltorl•l l='~ Editor -----~~--~~~~----------------~----------------~----~--------------- I • . . ~~ SovietchenricalS .mCuha? WASHINGTON -Top-secret in· telligence reports indicate that some of the Russians' deadly tricbothecene tox- in, or T2, which has killed thousands in Afghanistan and Indochina, is stored in Cuba for possible use against the UDited States. Secretary of State Alexander Haig first brought the suspicioos of Soviet chemical-biological weapons use into the open in his West Berlin speech last week. It was the first official confirma- t H>n of my March 1980 report on evidence of this terrible form of warfare conducted by the Kremlin and its surrogates. CIA sources told my associate Dale Van Atta that T2 was the primary ele· ment in the mysterious "yellow rain" that brought painful death to tribesmen in Afghanistan. Laos and Cambodia. The lethal substance, dropped like crop dust over inaccessible mountain and jungle ar eas, brought convulsions . bleeding from every body opening and quick death. THE INTELLIGENCE community at first suspected nerve gas as the deadly agent. But nerve gas would not have produced the hemorrhaging. Then, early this yeai, actual samples were ob- tained by the CIA and the Defense In- telligence Agency. They identified the "yellow rain" as T2, derived from dead· ly bread molds that are widespread in the Soviet Union. A top-secret report to President Reagan from the Joint Chiefs ol Staff warned : "(T >here la 1t-1nllic ant evidence that the Sovieta ... their al- lies have used toxic clt9111;eel WN,.U in Southeast Asia an• Af gh..aisUul, and the 1979 Sverdlovsk incident revealed Q -J1-c1-11-a-11-11-1 -.td what we believe to be Soviet activities with deadly biological weapons." The Russians explained the Sverdlonk ind· dent, which reportedly llUled hundreds. as an outbreak of anChr~ ·trom a chemical-biological we~ °'*" following an accident. · · • The Joint Chiera warned tMit enn small nations a ppear to bne chemical warfare capabilities. If, u the latest in- telligence reports suggest, Fidel Castro has supplies of T2 in Cuba. it pose9 p ·serious threat to ow se~. It wou&i also explain Cutro's re~ Ulftats to send diseases into \he fJ'*d Staaea ii we meddled in Cuban arrain. · DIA ANALY8TS heard eTe4tble testimony from a former Cuban army lieutenant who defected durma the ref· ugee exodus last year. He 1.pi be a.-.• spent nearly three years tn a 376-man chemical warfare battalion and had been an instruc tor in c hemical· biological weapons. His testimony was chilling. He said he was trained by Sov1et inslM.lctors and used sophisticated Soviet equipment. "During training," he told his OJA in· terrogators. "pictures of United States cities were shown as possible chemical and biological weapons targets." THE CUBAN officer s aid he was told that toxin strategically placed in Mis· sissippi could contaminate full y one- third of the United States. The lieutenant was not able lo identify any of the poisons he was trained to use as T2; the Soviet instructors were not specific as to the makeup of the various chemical and biological agent.s. He did aay the biological weaponry included .. the use of lueets. germs and bacteria using rats and flies, roaches and con- tamination of fills and water sources through the use of capsules, etc." He pinpointed the site of Cuba's prin- cipal chemical warfare training center la the town of Llmonar. about 80 miles· eest of Havana. Footnot e : In an authoritativ e forthcoming book on the subject. titled "Yellow Rain," journalist Sterling Sea· grave cites. as proof that the Cubans have T2, the death or a Cuban in Ha vana last year. His symptoms were distinctly those or a lethal toxin. ~· 1 Legal gambling still . a iOsing game There's nothing more satisfying than getting mad. I thoroughly enjoy it once in a while and I want to thank the New York St.ate Department of Taxation and Finance for getting me. off to a great. angry start today. This morning r got up early and turned on the radio to make sure the world hadn't come to an end during the night. <I always do that because if the world does ever come to an end, r think I'll just go back to bed.> As usual, the world hadn't come to an end, and right after the weather report there was a commercial, paid for by New/ York State taxpayers , saying what a good idea it was for everyone who wants to gel rich to gamble on a numbers game,• the New York State Lottery. The New York Off Track Betting Commission ha~ comparable advertising telling every one what a good Idea it is to bet on horses. WELL, GAMBUNG on numbers or belting on which horse will run fastest is not the way to get rich and New York State ought not to suggest to its citizens that it is. When these gambling bills were pro- posed before the state Legislature, the argument for them was that people were going to gamble anyway, so the stale might as well take gambling away from the crime mob, run it honestly and make the profit itself. How come, I'd like to know, if people are going to do all this gambling, the state has to buy radio and newspaper commercials to try to get them to gamble? Why don't those commercials teU peo- ple what chance they have of winllllng in the State Lottery? The State takes 45 cents or every dollar bet. Does that sound like a good deal to you? Who but I~'' -AIDY-108-11-Y --..: " the dumbest and most desperate amon1 us would take a chance like that? The radio statiooa give the wllmine numbers every d=::I, favorable publicity to ~ . i-. the radio • Mtiou oa_. •a ... llltl' Ule • names ol the ""-' ,._,, -~~t · would be some l1't. · ALL YOU HA VE to do to see who thil kind or betting appeals to ii to stand outside a New York State Off Track Betting Parlor any day or the week and watch the people who spend tWr t~ hanging around boplng to 8'Jl h1tky. They are the duds, the derelkts and the huma.n disasters. Why does th• state prey on these poor ,devils wbo c1n't take care of themselves? New York State pays millions of dollars a week In wellate le its indigent citizens. Does it m ake any aeme ror tbe state to hand out cnodwt fw tood * lodging one day aJl4 tak' ll a'ffay ~ next at the bett.bl8 window, so the at.Me will have money for the welfare pay- ments again the following week ? It is absolutely the dumbest thing I ever hea rd or. This is robbing Peter to pay Peter. HOW CAN WE leach kids that hard work is the way to success if they hear radio commercials paid for by their government suggesting that the way to set rich is to bet money on a horse or a number? How can Americans who pro- fels to believe in such classic virtues as honesty, thrift, hard work and in· telligent action allow a ny part of the government they formed to run a gambling operation? Gambling is a destructive force. Peo- ple who apend their money on that, don't spend il somewhere else. Tiie ,,. .. who blows $2() on ·the OTB parlor doesn 't have it to buy a new pair of sneaks for his son. What good does that do for the legitimate businessman who runs the shoe store or for the man's son? I like to gamble. l go to Saratoga once a year and even Las Vegas has a terri- ble fascination for me. If blackjack was whiskey, 1 could become an alcoholic. I'm glad no casino is readily available to m e because I need to be protected from myself. But for our own govern- ment to promote and m ake money by taking it away from the weakest among us in a gambling operation is the lowest form of taxation. Now, l've been angry for today. I feel good and I can get at the day's work. Alice-in-Wonderland view ·~of ~~ safety I ~ 14 ~· r '~ ' American. s are notorious for their to scuttle the llSV --~ "'f ,dr911ped, lit.dead. the central teault.a ?f love affair with their cars and the good and too ..r.. ••.. _ · r. 'De telts wiJ1 be released for tile pubbc Reagan administraUon ls notorious for Peck, admial8lratot Of •111 to judge by it.self. its love affair with the Big Buck Traffic Sef.ty Agency, tat tllat U be All of thia meana more ~ertcana Broncos of Detroit. A lot of people will allows the RSV to be Ml• f'JllMllerdal· will be kllled and maimed on, the hi1h· die because of these twQ love atrain. l_y, then nerybody will •fed all cart ways in the yea~s to come. It re· The feder al 1o'Yernment bu financed to be \hat technoloctully "vanetd AM minds me of primitive societies where the research and production ol an un-that safe. bum an sacrif11ces were made to the GlllGI MAIR usual car e'aU"' the Research Safety Vehlele (RSV). tt la a car that marks a quantum leap r~ard in safety and technology without Hcrltlclnc bandltnt ot economy. The RSV was built by I CJ"OUP of engineers inclu'dln1 eome rrom Chrysler. Jt uses a ataDdard Imported car body end it able IO wttM\add cdl• l11lon1 two to four Um• bMUI' tbp mOlt' American can on the market. Tb• new Rucan ,.°'at the Depart~ ment ot Tr,..pottatlon LI dlttnntned f •; • "' 1od1. 'nle current admlnt.uadon is re. HE GOSS 01' ""*' Mt •Aft~ID· · vlvinc that ancient practice with its Wonderland rulOlll•I to •&>' Uaet, human sacrifices to the God of Greed. since General Moton eu't meet t.be RSV standard, It would be IUed bf peo- ple who eot GM can 8Dll "" kfiW or maimed ln tllem. Obvtoully, t.bla would ~ ebe bUs la Detroit I lol of badla ... "' ....... Ill that happen llO IDltta' Wll it ... a Uves. Mr. Peek bee Ibo M~ •t blt depart.llMllt't •Ulll,ai can 1llGld up ln ~-will' .. ell.._. lr09d 10 tbat tbe Amerl~an ii"' 1 performance wlD Mt be IO ., la Ua• put au can .. • "pW" Or "fj,ii" p.. ... Jap .... an .... 1 flDCe lut ,..,. .. 1ucla • tlit ,.. • .et poor• Clli ··~ .W'sr 1'111 IM J don't remember my Mom using any but band-me...<fown dlsbe1 -but l sure remember Ute areat meala lhe served on t.befn. NOSl'AWIC • -~ ~. . """··--.... ""' . All 1 Or•nge Co•at DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. September 23 , 1981 ~.,,..~ ........ ~ .......... ----..... --~.-..--....:..----~~--..... ~ ........... --.............. __ ___ 1~~ ~n~wRs· a~d!. b'~nes ',. ' ~' I. ': . \ • ·_)'~ t.EaM4N , t<I.;_ ' ~e you evit''&Wd tM~? If not' take the kids • ~ ..., up weekeflcJ lo1l ~ ''*"'' DINQifGtc ls South Coast Pla&' llotel's It ay ~ thit ~people vitliting from other Alrt.111 the alace te go for chi chi l~t\~ns•theae, countries know More •tot.It it than those who live in .da19 or wu tlits t'he exception to the rule?• • • the county. • . • I wllkld ill with Dot Clock, the now recoverlng A &J'OUP from the Ja~e Bird v}atchers Socie· ""-lr-.aan 4<>f ·South Coast Rep's super-swank, ty ._t t.Jtrou&b last summer and after seeing 4S \iftAf-*etent ~·simply Sterling,'' and Kay Brown ao species of birds i.n one mornlag were 10 pleased with 1'eet 9arbara Grady and Harriette Witmer and tt the'experience they fO(. a Tokyo television network teemed ·t~e there we r e a di1prq,.rtlon1t• to film "The Birds of 'J').itker.'~ · rRamlk!r of liar faces there. ' ·So, if ybu fihd y~ wa\chtne TV in 1ome Walt.et Bu1Nu1hs and Don Koll were dining -· for-'IJ!! spot ~ eomet~nt ootllts on seemln1·t.be at separ=ables on the upper level. Oft.the low_~~ ~ . , about Orange Courtty's bitdS. d9ll't be confused. lewel, G a Watson's red hair glowed 1n the 'un I · Probably, it is 'labQUt Orange County birds. from U1' llc)'ttgf\t. ·she was with a large •roup -· ., · · • •' • perhaps March or Dimes people -Gw~nda 's' · THE IRVINI: WsTOltlCAL SOCIETY1 A <.ton· favorite tftne-consumer. tradkUon iJ\ terms somehow. Certainly we'1e told .' ~iAt*t t1'e wall. in a booth, sat two media.pea., that Irvine is ~e "youl\ldl fastest" growinV area in pier cSeet> 1J1 tonversation -Mary Lou Hopkins and the west, yet here I have a note referrin1 to the Chris Aillfe!'Aft: ~ • ' Fiesta de Fandaneo herd on the m~m cf9Unds ~ lt'1l hard for me to judge -t~t not being my last &anday. , . .' daily hanit>Ut (actually, :mW. ~ay seems to be my ~~ The tf'Vifte Hist*1t'1 ·MUsewn'iS' pteturecf. in a • ., .. Slid line drawing, arid 'a not. ~xplaint ~at it was t~ • .. cooking win• of a fv1r1 house built bY,~ame& lrvlne . I ' •• t ~ uta.-~ . · • ' , \Vttl, the \hings one learns on dti11 jbb. • * • . OTHER Tiii.NOS LE¥'NED: l'hiv,'before me a letter (Mm l>atrid a Green, Newport 'Beach Ebell • \ ~lub Pft. Ch8'rtflad lo which s he notes that the club 'ie' tbe•oldest 'Wom*''s organizattOll in the Harbor At'ea. It. was fou · ht la>9 ~ 1t1rted the first 'library in the <:ifY-l, , , Anomirr item c~ out of the blue, but seems in daily hangout for lunch these days -not 'hie, but kt.e~pinl -t'1'. Newpo 1 • ~·s 7Sth anntversery -.,elebra· filled with familiar people. too 1 -so it may be the« ion. every· day is like that there. A clasemate of miAe at UCI, Joon (\ynes, 'Vrite~ It could &ecome an informal club that way. th-at her m~r. Vera Gay, had her 9!nd birthday • • • rec~ntl~. ftemarlu~ble, ~Rough , i" itself. but 1 ,·• SMAIUNG OF RESTAURANTS: Ther¥~ a ·~~ b~nd t9'it ft)eerna ta.~Jlrs. Gay, in her ldn·age n~w wmnkle in the fund-raising game th41nk lite da~_'played piano for S..f•rday night dan~es at tile Lord, and the Natural History Foundation of Or anger Paylljm and that was in..,. · . County"'6'wor1ced it out in conjunction ~ilh Caao's. :<. t' · • • • • Called the first annual "Feed Your Bones," the 't THE ontER SIDEOFTRECOIN: Oh~. dear. party ls ~ oniy free, but the people tapped won't they're at it ag~in. ~ . necessarily be ··the same old crowd.,. . Every few y~ars we seem to get a group of ~me n:l>lain. newcomers in the area who feel it is beholden upon On SOnday from 4 to 10 p.m. C and after that hour them to bring those of us who have been Hving in the for HbatlOfts) the restaurant is donating 40 percent of outback "uf to code,·· so to spe~k. They s pend a each guest's dinner and drink receipts to the NHFOC goed dear o time and energy explaining that "in the to hdp""~·JJINPam of unraveling the fossil hlslor)' city. we do ... ·· Weh . whatever ... Cl understand of the OOUnty. t he current thing ,is net to have cherries jubilee. Ap· .. The-fossils to be di1played at the party will · . pears to be passe.) " . carr~ out 'the theme of Ne~rt Beach's 75th-all· • •. I've noticed tt.t they tend ~ move in prides. nive~~. lM Portholes of Time... • ,.~ anture-a lot Witl't their auand held 19oseiy at the wrist l,-1 'ifdditton to the fossil display <whoever or A. 'while tending JO hold t...,.. lleads •1i'tti. higher than w.Majever they arel, ·there will be a mariachi 'band _4, t1\e rest of· u~.· •. • ·> "' ahd diaWings .for door prizes. Use of an Hawaiian Well, ladies we thank you for .-the effort in our condotninium i's the .. biggie." • behalf. We always thank newcomers for their efforts • • * in our behalf. It keeps US' on our toes and gets the Sf'.EAKING OF DONATIONS and animals and adrenalin r.unning. puth': · l'lert'l a note here from the Tucker Wildlife . ~·ve-focnid, how'v~r. that if we keep our collec· lattetu•v 6p hl &lodjeska Canyon in which .the~~•· tive sm.ses o( humor tht' neM 1rm1p to be res~less ~d thanks to Florence Schroeder of ·~una Hills wtth' those who-tell u1 ••flow te do things" are those She donated $3,000 to their wildlife rehaWlitatiOI\ who. are . cur!'lltlY ~ qn the' scene. It's called P">tram. ~ ' ' "wa1tln11t out, ttahlk. •. ~ \ . ".. ' .. ... ' • ~ ·, \ .. • . ' I . ~ EGYPT With 7 DAY NILE CRUISE December 18th -January 3rd -Space Umlted Call ... GOING PLACES < 714) 64 l ·8064 or 893·3S9S WILLARD JORDAN MEMORIAL GOLF TOURNAMENT & BANQUET Wednesday, September 30, 1$81 Name ,,.._ Prln11....... . .. ................... . ······· . Home ........ . .•.. T•...,_ City .................. . ....... Business .. , . . .... 'City ........ . . . . State . Zip. . .... Men's Handicap Fllght Men's Calloway Flloht Women's Handicap Flloht Women's Calloway Fllght Golf & Banquet $SO. to $100 ..... Banquet only $2S..... Gifts Accepted ... Tee Off Times 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. Make Entries/Checks Payable To: WILLARD JORDAN MEMORIAL GOLF TOURNAMENT Depertment of Lel1ure Servlee1 P.O. 8011200, Coate MeH, CA 92927 Coate Me1a Golf end Country Club (540-7500) 1701 Goff Course Drive, Coat• MeH --~~~-L •~~~~- C '011111UUNI Pcr•4•rnuuM!c FIRST PERFORMANCE Save $4.00 on a dynarmte hairstyle! Shampao, Performance Cut'". and Blow Ory (normally S18.00J are yours !or only $14 00 when you introduce yourself as a hrst-t1me customer with tt11s coupan GET YOUI DBUT PERFORMANCE FOR $4 LESS! Co•M.M 2701 ~lh-41.fllO Cotte M.MI ,.._ 714-140-6 I U .....,.,.. ICM s.t. ... 0!1er Good llw\l 5""' 2tl 11181 So. CCNlllf ..... JllJ lrt .... #140.A lh>-l - Co•M.M ,.., 71 4-714-1768 ........,.,.. 10.t s.t.t-6 - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT }Wednesday, September 23, 1981 Army guide warns against pushy conduct in West Germany HANAU, W"t Germany (Ai'I -A U .s. Army 1uldebook dl•· couractna came poachln1. marl· Juana 1mualln1. •·getlin& arab· by wlth fraulelns" and dama&· lna cornflel<b has been l11ued lo 7 ,000 U.S. soldiers in West German war games. "You ain't part or no conquer· l"g army,'' it warns. The book, written in a breezy, tongue-in·cheek s tyle, is for a~erage foot soldjers, for those who the book says will be .. mak IJ)g war, not love in Germany." lt was distributed to members ot the 4th Infantry Division, Fort Carson, Colo .• who are part of a EARLY RECORDING Paul McCartney 'Locked' Beatles song due LONDON (AP) - Arter some 20 years un- der lock and key, the on · ly complete Beatles re · cording never put on sale may be released sometime next year. the Daily Mirror reported. The tabloid newspaper said the song, ··Please Leave My Kitten Alone, .. was recorded in the early 1960s but .. re- jected when the Beatles put together their al bum ·Please Please Me.' " Since then, the paper said, the recording has been locked up at EM I Records in London. The Mir ror said the reco r d compa n y planned to release the son g las t year, but shelved the idea when former Beatie John Len· non was shot to death in New York City. The newspaper quoted an unidentified company official as saying: .. Ob· viously we would not have released the record at such a time. It would have been totally inap- propriate. "There is other un· finished recorded material of the Beatles which has never been released, but ·Kitten· is the only co mpl ete tr.ack," the official was quoted as saying. Former Beatie Paul McCartney, who with Lennon wrote many of the group's hit songs, still records with EM I. The offi cial quoted by the Mirror said the com· pany would "probably inform Paul ,·· eve n though "we don't need llJlYbody's permission to r~lease the recording because it was made for us before" the Beatles formed their own com· pany, Apple Records. Tony Brains by. press spokesman for M cCartney, said he knew nothing about the 's existence or the ibility of a new B les release. Any such J'lans "would have nothing lo do with Paul whatsoever." he added. 12 grads from BYU Twelve Orange Coast students have graduated from Brigham Young Unive rsity in Provo, Utah, with bachelor's degrees. They are J ack G. Walle r III of Costa ,M esa; C raig V . Southwick of Fountain Valley; Nathan M. An· d e lin , C ath e rin Blickenstaff, Sydney L. ~ldou s, Nancy A . H erboo , Susan L . tnouye, Jan U. Kinney and Steven Lew, all of Huatinctoo Beach; Scott P. Hoopes of Laauna Nl1uel ; Constance •cKlbbin of N•wrrt Beach, Ud Ruse! S. 'Douchty of San Clemente.' 17 ,OOO·troop torce alrllt\ed from U.S . bases for the unnual · · Keforeer" reinforcement ex· ercise in West Germany. The book is an official publlca· lion of the 4th Division Public ACfau-s Office, Fort Carson, and was aistributed to soldiers there before they c-ame to West Germany Linder a picture of an inran. try man wearing a t e utonic, horned hat, and a ball and chajn on his f~et , the book says. .. Whoopie, now 's my chance to rape, burn, pillage, and jaywalk all over Germany " "Wrong ... th e book adds. "You ain't on your own block." The .0-pac• book outUnea such no·no's as. "free·lance hunUna or target pracllce wlth live furry targets," putting nails tnto trees. and "vlolenl stuff: rape, hom lcide and things th Mt have a bad errect on the German com- munity, drug sm uggling for one." "lf the Germans use their right to handle a case, they ain't fooling ," the book warns . "German justice is severe. They have a different idea about sen· tencing, parole and probation." Keeping down maneuver damage to West German roads •• 5 New route 59. We're growing all over Orange County to serve you better than ever before. For example, Route 59 (through Orange-Santa Ana via Grand) is brand new and offers direct service between the North- east Anaheim Industrial Park and the Dyer Industrial Area during weekday peak hours. Realignment for better service. In response to customer requests, we've realigned Route 78 (Laguna Hills-Costa Mesa via Irvine Center Drive) Route 46 (Cerritos- Orange via Ball Road) and Exp~ Route 202 (San Clemente- Orange). ... _ and farma la atrt11td to lower the number of claims to the U.S. 1overnment, which pay• 75 per· cent or the dama1e coats. A mlle of asph alt road shredded by tank treads would cost $12,000, a drainage system is worth up to $5,000 and a reflector post costs $10, the book says. ·'The list goes on and on, but you can -see we ain't talking chump change," It adds. The guide also gives soldiers a lesson in international politics, to define their role in the NATO alliance, which it says, "lS na· lions, including us Yanks, 1anaed up to form." "In the lut 30 years the Sov· lets have beaten the snot out of the aatelllte nations It controls or wants lo control, whenever they take a llklng to freedom. "Now the world is watching the r ed bear waiting on the Polish borders, just itching to smack ·em into line if they try to pull away from big brother." It adds: "Her e's one last kernel of pure corf\ into this rah, rah, Reforger pep talk to think about. Rerorger is the time lo show the world what kinda stuff American soldiers are made of and that your suit ain 't green UT 'cause It'• moldy." In addlUon, the &utde tlvea ad· vice on how to get around on West German transit, lncludes a short phrase book, comparison of European and U.S. clothing shes and a short section on German cuisine an<t tavern eti· quette. "Relax and enjoy yourself but don't get gr abby with the frauleins or you'll see just how fast German hospitality goes sour." it says. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842•5878 ~ Extended servke. We've extended Route 141 (New- hope Street-Slater /Segerstrom Avenue) to improve coverage in Huntington Beach, Irvine and Saddleback College. We've also extended Express Route 209 (San Clemente-Northeast Ana- heim) for better service to Cal- State Fullerton. More frequency aad additional trips. Buses will be coming more often on Route 45 (Orange-Newport ' via Fairview) Route 47 (Fuller- ton-Santa Ana via Anaheim), and Express Route 203 (San Clement.e-Long Beach). There will be more trips on Route 54 (El Modena-Huntington Beach via Chapman), andRoute74 (Huntington Beach- Irvine via Tulbert). And there will be more frequent service and addi- tional trips on Route 66 (Tustin- Westminster via McFadden). Back to sdlool service. All the popular routes that serve schools will be running again. These incl~e Route 36 (Seal · Beach-Northeast Anaheim), Route 70 (Sunset Beach-Santa Ana via &lin~r) and Route 91 (Laguna HillS-San Clemente via Mission Viejo). If you'd like· to see how we've grown your way, call 636-RIDE for free detailed maps and route schedules. D1Hr Piiat WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1911 CAVALCADE 8~3 STOCKS BS Ray Malavasi gives Rams' game for Chicago. See B6 . :-:""---...:: 0 a SPORTS 86 J apan's Elvis fans dance and preen o n sabbath only TOKYO CAP> -Elvis out- ranks Shogun at Harajuku, whe re leather jackets read "Lonely Boys," "Brentwood Bowl" and "Rock and Roll." Japanese rockers with heavy shades and ducktail haircuts show up each Sunday in this trendy Tokyo district to dance and preen. They wear the best ~sos gear J apan Inc. has to offer. This mild rebellion is for the Sabbath only. During the week most of the Amegur a -the Japanese term com es from American graffiti -work in of· fi ces or factories. Some are stu· dents. The jackets come from bouti- ques catering to Amegura, but decoration is left to rockers born three decades too late. Old edi- tions of Life magazine are in de- m and as guides to proper dress. The music Is right -courtesy of Sha Na Na, Chuck Berry and Son y but there is little cruisin'. Tokyo poli ce close the streets to wheels -and open them to dancers. Amegura pose at Harajuku, trendy Tokyo district where fans of "American Graffiti" gather. Japanese rocker shows off 1acket bought in Tokyo recently. Elvis is still in with Japanese youth who combs hair into ducktail style. Long-simmering Iran, Iraq feud slo gs o n a nd o n and on BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) -When the lonas simmering bordef feud between Iran and Iraq fi ashed into war last September, each side predict- ed a speedy victory. One year later , with no end in slgbt, the two Moslem oil giants on the northern side of the Persian Gulf still are slogging it out on the moun· tains, marshes and dusty plains of a 300-mile bat· tlefront that hasn't changed since early in the war. Other predictions -a worldwide oil shortaae and $100·a·barrel prices for crude -also have failed to come true. Today there's an international oU glut., and the few nations still cbargin1 $40 a , barrel face mounting pressure from customers and competitors to cut prices. Olof Palme, the United Nations envoy who beaded one of four international peace-making ef· forts, said in April that both Iran and Iraq con· ceded the war would not be won on the batUefront. But a diplomatic solution bu proved as elusive as a military one. Iran says it will not neaotlate for peace until the last Iraqi soldier ls removed from Iranian soil. Iraq has vo9.'ed to keep fightina until Iran rec· I ognlzes Iraqi sovereignty over the 120-mlle Shatt al-Arab, the southern boundary between the two nations and Iraq's waterway to the Persian Gulf. While Iran says the war started Sept. 22, 1980, when Iraqi troops capped several months of skirmishes by pushing across the border into Iran, Iraq recently said the starting date was Sept. 4, The war probably will continue until there is , a change of leadership in one or both countries. when several score Iranian troope raided four villages Just inside northern Iraq. Analysts and diplomats wtio lut year pre· dieted the war could last no more tban a week now say it will probably continue until there ii a change in leadership ln one or both countries. In Iran, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's Islamic rundamentalist regime has survived an escalating war of assassination and bombing by leftists who have killed a president, a prime minister and other top leaders of the rulin1 Islamic Republican Party. In Iraq, where political diaaent in recent years has been countered by exile and executions, Presi· dent Saddam Hussein's Moscow-oriented Baath Socialist Party still seems firmly in control. "Every family that lOHS a aon ln bat e ls given cash and a new hom~." reported one Iraqi passing through Beirut. "Saddam fa ao busy visit· Ing the most wretched vlllqes that housewives joke they have to keep their parton Udy because you never know when the president will drop in with photographers and television crews." Another Iraqi aald the penunent "ls very careful to make sure there are no 1horta1ea." Most ol the looda come tbroulh Jordanian porta abd by truck acrou tbe desert to Bqbdad. In Iran, the effecta ol the war are more pro- nounced. But they are probably aaravated by tbe pollUcal turmoil and economic dllloeadoG result· I • ing from Khomeini 's revolution. ·'There are shortages which the aovernment blames on the war," said a young Iranian who re· cently arrived in Beirut from Tehran. "It's mbaUy food -chickens and eggs and other raw prod· ucts." •'Quite apart from the political turmoil in Iran . . . economic problems are apparently becoming unmanageable," said a· recent article in Arab Report and Memo, a Beirut economic newsletter. ·'The only safe statement that can be made at th1J point is that for the next few months Iran's economy looks set for further deterioration.'' In the 1970s oil was the m8in money-maker for both countries, with Iran pwnpmg 5 mllllon or 6 milllon barrels a day before the revolution. But by tbe time the war broke out, Iran was producina on·\ ly about 1.5 million barrels wbllt lraq wu pump- . Ing 3.5 million. The war bu hurt oil exporta from both coun· tries, but Ir91q bu been la a better po1itlon w weather the louea beuuae ol btftler c• .... serves and a population of U mllUoa compand to Iran '1 38 million. I '. '·'• •'· '·' . " ... . .. $ . • . I • I • ' '. ' I i .. 1.· .. . , • t l { f OrangeCout DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, September 23, 1981 •ANN LANDERS •HOROSCOPE •STAN DELAPLANE BONING UP Stanley H. Kaplan instructs a class preparing for the Scholastic Aptitude Test in New York. He runs a special school which caters to improving SAT scores. PATfERN MAKING NOW EASIER THAN SEWING! and have fun doing it ••• with <:Patte'tn1. 'Unlimited PATTERN FlnlNG SHORT CUTI . AS NEVE~ SEEN BEFOREI e NO FITTING e NO PINNING e NO WASTED MATERIAL Fit your figure perfectly • make patterns for any member of your family in ANY SIZE• guaranteed fit with each pattern made• Eliminate difficult pattern alterations, costly sewing mistakes. • Sew sleeves and collars in minutes with this method. FIT PANTS LIKE NEVER BEFOREI Whether you are an experienced seamstress or a beginner you'll be making perfect fitting patterns in no timel It's the most simple, easy and inexpensive method f!Ver devised • Save up to 80% each year on family clothes e Sew great fitting fashions for even the hard to fit. • Solve long and short waisted problems. • Learn to make store patterns flt properly TWO HOUR CLASS FOR ONLY $3.00 WITH THIS AD (Regular admission $5.00 -discount also applled to friends) FREE BASIC DU88 A.ND 91.ACK PATl'SRH A.ND IN8TRtJCTION IDT TO ALL WHO A'ITUID Morning ClaA -10 A.M. or Ev.nine Cle• -7:00 p.m . ONE DAY ONLY! TUESDAY, SlnlMIEI 29 HOUDAYIMM 3131 lalSTOL STIEET • 1171 Pan .. ,,. Ui>•..,•19<1 inc COSTA MESA All equipment 111aii.ble el ci.u --------------- Big eek. Small Price. Unneeded items taking up place in your space? Sell it a II and put cash in your pocket with the new Daily Pilot 8-Day Week. We can put you in touch with more buyers because our classifieds have an extra day to sell every week. Get results with the ads that last longer. Get the 8-Day Week special classified rate. Call 642·5678 today! For an EXTP.A day, coll today 642·5678 Open 8 to 5:30 Monday..frtday, I to noon Saturday. The new Doily Pilot 8·Day Week it's a PLUS DAY WEEK B~s 3 Lines 8 DOilars Special ftal , ... fer .. -c.•IMf'dat...,. efferlllS ••re...._~ la lite •41 ,__., '-· c.t I re••lll .......... lllft 7W ......... ,. { I .... , ................... ,111111& '---------------------~ .... ------~--------~ _; - ' ' "..... . •• \ I ..... Night shift n11rse • grtpes DEAR ANN LANDERS: It's lime someone brought out into the open one of· the principal reasons for the shortage of· nurses. There is no problem getting nurses to work days -it's the night shift that is in trouble. I h ave worked the night shift for years, and three nights a week are all 1 can handle. I hustle for eight hours. changing dressings, monitoring post.ops, keeping IV's open, giving shots and clean- ing up messes you wouldn't believe. For this the hospital pays anywhere from $9 to $15 an hour. In the mornings I drive home so bleary-eyed I pray the guardian angel will watch over me so I can make it safely and get the kids off to school. While I'm at work my husband says he is lonely. so he feels he has the right to go to bars, drink, play shuffleboard and dance with pickups. At this point I don't need anonymous phone calls to tell me he is fooling around. Any wife who 'does her own laundry can smell another woman's perfume and makeup. r suggest that night-nursing be con- sidered hazardous duty, as well as ''incon- venient." I hope my marriage survives it. -FLAT FOOT FLORENCE J N NEBRASKA DEAR FLAT·FOOT: It's not the job, Flo, It's the alley.cat tendencies of the man you married. With a prowler like that, you'd be wise to work the day shift. Even then, he'd probably fool around, but it wouldn't be so easy. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is in resp0nse to your answer to the girl who had to share her baby-sitting money with her younger sister. who did not earn a s much. I'm sure this mother thinks she is do- ing the older girl a favor by teaching her to s hare, and the younger one. she figures. will feel equal to her sister even though Big Sis earns more money. Take it f.rom me. that well-intentioned mother is ha rming them both. I grew up the s ame way. Ever ything. · even earned money. had to be split down ~ the middle. Well. now JO ye~ ltlte'r. ,"Lit· tie Sis" still thinks I should share every· thing I have with her. She has never learned to live on her hYBbaad•e income and has become accvstomed to-tbe notion that it is MY respoMibility tt. setd her money when she Is short -wbith ts often. I don't blame my sister, I bt'ame my mother. She did this terrible Udttt to her: So tell that Mom in Hillside, Mich., to wake up and smell the bacon. Earned money is harder to spend th8n the kind that is handed over. -STILL ·SHARING IN NO TOWN PLEASE, U.S.A. DEAR U.S.A.: Your letter i1 required reading for all moms e•erywbere. Thanks for writing. <Are you 11-cetd.91, Wftllde?) DEAR ANN LANDZftS: You mlssed' som ething quite obvioUI when the woman , complained about the person who honked the horn in front of her home every morn-in~ when she stopped by to pick up her neighbor for work. Why in the name of common sense should it be necessary f01' a rider to 1teed a daily honk? Surely a iterson who is be- ing picked up as a favor ought to have the decency to be ready to step outside tor BE outside l when the driver appears. lt should not be necessary to wake up the e n ti re pea-pickln · neighborbO<>d. - BEHOLD MORPHEUS DEAR MORPH: Right y-• are. Sometimes we miss Ullnga llieC-. tMy ARE so obvious. Th1nk1 for tit~ neat catch. I s alcoholism ruinmg rout' ltje? ICnow the danger signals and w~at to db. Read the booklet. .. Alcoholum -Hope and Help." by Ann Landers. Enct01e SO cenU ~r re· quest and a long, stamped. self sed en- velope to Ann Landers, P.O. dx 11995 . Chttago. Ill. 60611 New height for service A truly terrifying day is coming for people who fly in airplanes. It has nothing to do with the air traffic controllers· strike; when that labor dispute is over and long forgotten. this perverse new twist to air travel will just be catching on. If you are not a phoneaholic, none of this will affect you. But to the millions of us who are phoneaholics. the new plan about to be instituted by the airlines is destined to change our lives. A phoneaholic is a person who is ad- dicted to the telephone. It's a terrible dis- ease; like alcoholism, it is difficult to cure, and even when you think you've got it licked it can pop up at any Ume. For those of us who are afflicted by phoneaholism. it is not possible to look at a silent telephone without picking it up and dialing it. If it's there, we use it. We can't stop. IT'S NOT THAT we enjoy talking to other people so much. It's just that we can't help ourselves. For me to be on the telephone 100 times a day is not unusual. How bad is it? On my recent trip to Bri- tain, when l checked out of my hotel I found that I had spent more on phone calls than for the room itself. Which brings us to this new develop- ment. A fledgling corporation is launching a new service that will make it possible for air travelers to both make and receive phone calls while in the air. That's right. Very soon, if you are traveling by air, you will be able to make a phone call to anywhere in the United States while you are still on the plane. This is not some farf etched notion; the technology is complete, and the service is expected to be operational by next summer. What this means for phoneaholics, of course, is that we are going to lose the one place where we have always been assured of being free from our disease. On the ground, you are invariably within seconds of a telephone. Even when you're driving. you can pull over to a pay phone. But in the sky -whatever the traumas of air travel . ' 801 Gllflll which wiil be released when the phone is returned. ~ ~ · ··we have commiasioned st~s that indicate between '20 Md 30 pew-C1SW of all people who fly will use the ~ep~ on the airplane at least oceasi011ally,'\ Sbetten . s aid. "What this means is that, once our program is fully operational, we may be grossing as much as $200 minim.a year." ' I . INITIALLY, AIR Fone plans to off er service only on widebodied jetJ operalinc in the U.S. Four telephones will be ·in- stalled on each plane. 1f the s'-"'•ln works as well as Goeken expects, ~~ be ex- panded to smaller jetB, too. • • Goeken said that the 'fethnok>ay' ls available to allow incoming calls to be made to flights . but that CM airlines have resisted the idea. ·'They don 't ··w~nt Ute fligh( atten- tendants to be spendtn1 ·all of their time a n s wering the telephone and pagibg passengers," he said. "So, as our next step. we are developing a portabte telephone that a tra9eler c'"' buy and ., i , c arry in his briefc~. It won-i 'WOl'k while , he's on the ground, but whdl"he mes he can be linked to our air·to-ground network, and someone on the ground can catr blm right at his seat on the plane." ·· Asked about the )Jossible ftegative ef. fects of Air Fone on phoneaholics, Go4en . expressed sympathy, btit said 'there was nothing he could do. "If you have• a prnbfem, try'\• resist using the phone. he said. "But I'm itvin1 you fair warning. From now on When JOt1 fly, the telephone ls going to be right there to tempt you." -we have known that there is no way for r-------------------.. us to make a call. and there is no way for the phone to ring. For a phoneaholic, a plane flight has always been the one way to go cold turkey. No more . "THERE HAS always been a demand for this," said Jack Goeken, t he president of Air Fone, the company that is develop- ing the service. "Travelers miss being able to make phone calls while they're en route· somewhere. Now they'll be able to." Here's how the Air Fone system will work: Portable, self ·contained telephones . will be installed on airliners. A traveler will insert any major credit card in the slot next to the phone. This will unlock the phone, and the traveler will be able to carry it back to his seat. Then he will be able to direct-dial anywhere in the United States. There will be a Oat $7.SO fee for the first three minutes, regardlesa ol where ln the U.S. the call is made. Each additional minute wU1 cost a dollar. Tbe char&• will automatically be bllled to the credit card, Punch ...... By PHIL INTERLANDI of Laguna Beach " Q ''Mr. Wilken& want.a you to i08 on out or here and keep Jouin& right Into the sunset." I Scorpio: focus on obligations Thursday, September 24 ARIES (March 21 -April 19). Chall enge, involve m ent, intensified rela- tionships dominate significant scenario. You'll h ave more res pons ibility . ex- perience greater pressure. TAURUS (April 20-May 20 >: Transac- tion is concluded. Older individual plants stamp of approval. Property or land could cha nge hands. Evidence will be pieced together. You'll get complete story. GEMINI (May 21-June 20 >: Flexibility is keynote plans change, associates and r•latives say one thing and mean something else. Be aware, alert and dis· play versatility. C~ft (June 21 -July 22 >: Data is coltected you are able now to cash in where experience, knowledge and talent are concerned. You take a '"different turn.'" LEO 1July 23-Aug. 22 ): Conventions are defied -you get opportunity lo ··ad- vance'' in unorthodox manner. Moon in your sign emphasizes independence VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: Clandestine conference could involve your job. future . Be prepared for r evisions. reviews. "test questions." Leo. Aquarius. Scorpio natives play key roles. You le arn from experience. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Romance. adventure of discover y, outlet for creativi· ty -these are featured. Imprint style. utilize charm and '"powers of persuasion.·· SCORPIO tOct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Accent on obligations, career . honor. renewed rela- tionships, family ties and property or house payments. Can cer. Capricorn pers ons figure prominently. SAGITTARIUS 1Nov. 22-Dec. 21 >: Focus on abstract designs. long-range potential, mathematical principles and spiritual values. Travel plans s ubject to re- vision . CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19>. Pay- ments, collections, special promotions. ad· vertising campaigns could all be part of important. colorful scenario. You'll be dealing with older individuals. AQUARIUS <J a n. 20-Feb. 18 >: Current situation is not stable : you are completing rather than initiating policy or project. Preparation necessary for steps towards greater independence . PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20): You meet vigorous. creative, stubborn individual. You'll have opportunity to gain new allies, to becom e interested in vital subjects and to improve employment st atus. STAN DfUIUNf AROUND THE WORLD Weigh trends in dieting SAN FRANCISCO -A day of sun s hine, says the morning forecaster. A few scattered thoughts. cle aring toward noon. The first thing a cowboy puts on in the morning is his hat. Col. Bill Sterling, who was head of the Texas Ranger s. told me that. "It gets blamed cold som etimes out on the range," he said. "So when a cowboy puts his head out of the blankets. he puts on his hat to keep it warm ... THE FIRST TIONG I put on is my glasses. I don't even know if it's sunny un til then. I don't even know where I am. ' I said to the children : "I'm poor old blind Pew, I am. Fetch aft the rum." Then I put on my glasses and found I'd s pent the ni ght in my place in North Beach.· The alarm clock radio finis hed the forecast and the voice said : "'There's bad news from the Middle East ... " I turned it off. Who wants bad news·• Got up and put on the coffee. So to press. THE MORNING paper falls outside the door. After the columns and comics (these are the flavor of the world > I hit the front page. It's a record of yesterday's disasters. A diet pill is rais ing hell with fe male ins ides. The Medfly flies on. merrily, mer· rily. Haig doesn't like the Russians. Women are the dieters of the world . The re's no fe male without a scale to weigh on 1 Voice from the bathroom: ··oh. m v God ! No~", · The FDA put a stop to this latest one. which burned off fat so fast you could throw the girl away afterwards. I DON'T WEIGH on bathroom scales . I weigh on those penny-in-the-slot weig hing machines. I don't care what I weigh. I want to get rid of the pennies which gather in my pocket. How does it happen that you get pen- nies by the pocketful in change but the~ never buy anything'? Just sit there. sag girtg in the pants pocket. Actually, I h aven ·t seen a penny weighing m achine for a long time. They dis appeared g radua lly . Like Coca-Cola straw fans and ice cream sodas and the 10-cent hamburger I clid see a fancy machine in a gr and drug store. It was shiny chrome and steel. The message above the slot : '"Please in· sert one dime." I WENT ON a non-saturated f al diet at one time. The health magazine I wrote for 1 and where I got my symptoms> said but· ter clogged your heart. So I went on margarine. I couldn't persuade the cook to leave butter out of the fr ying pan "It's a m atter of life and death.·· I said. But it wasn't her diet. She was on grapefruit a nd tomatoes or something. So som etimes we ran out of margarine And whether or not. I had to stuff butter in to the mechanism . Then the m agazine changed directions. lt wasn't butter, it was s ugar that did you in. By this time I was loaded with sugar. I s hould have stopped m y subscription while they were still on butter. I put on my glasses and looked in the bathroom mirror Not bad. not bad. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT HERE I AM AGAIN --- &ACK IN UNCERTAINTY. Test raises acc11racy DEAR DOCTOR: I'm 48 and have been havtn1 lacUgestion badly for the past six montbs. It comes In the form of nausea a few hours after earintJ. Oft.en this Is complicated by vomiting. Fat and greasy food bother me most. I'm overweight and a female. I've been told that the fair, fat and 40 com- bination Is likely to 111ake me a candidate for g.U8*09es. · I bacl some routine lntestlnaJ X-rays taken a few years ago. No siones showed up on the X·rays. Jn spite of tbJs d9 you think I 1bould take the time to have gallbladder X-rays? My doctors says I've . been puttlllg them off too Ieng. -MRS. Y. DEAR MRS. Y.: With your recent his- tory of beln& unable to retain food com· forta bly, we think you'll acree that pro- crastination will get you nowhere. Disregard t6~ X-ray findings in the ser{es you had t~ften some years ago. Oc - casionilly such a film will reveal unex- pected stones in the gallbladder. However, special X-r ay procedures are necessary to detect stones in the 1allbladder. UntU recently, patients were required T rou1 HfAlTH OR. PETER J. STEI NCAdHN to swaJlow a special mixture the night before filming. Gradually a new method is replacing this diagnostic procedure. It is called sonography, in which high frequen - cy sound waves are trans lated elec - tronically to produce an image on a screen. Accuracy r ate is about 98.6 percent. Although this method is reliable, we offer this suggestion: If you continue to have symptoms in spite of negative visualiza· tion by this sonography method, better have the older method used as a checkup. Dr. Stefncrohn welc~s reader matl but i8 sorry ~ cannot answer personally. lAtters of general interest w1ll be anrwered in hb col· umn. Send JIOUr queatiom to him in care of The Dt.dl11 Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560. Costa Mesa. Calif 92626-05600. Orange Coast DAILY PIL01 /Wednesday. September 23. 1981 * aa -~-....... HAPPINESS RETURNS -New York Yankee pitcher Tommy J ohn, holding son Tommy Jr . looks on as his wife coaxes a laugh from son Travis during taping for '"Good Morning .\ml'l'H'a Tra\'IS ha~ onl ~ recently re COSTA MESA TENNIS CLUB 557-0211 c,Ol/H/111 I ITALIAN • AMERICAN Delicatessen • Bakery 1191 I AOAMS '"' M.1gno1oa1 HUNTINGTON BEACH TAKE OUT 962·7998 • 963°4466 ~ q .).q UHlT 6 -c::;;:i ~ ~ t=::::l c::J r=i-cr-r:: PIC~ ur oua MOll1Ml T COUPONS SHlllGS Ill All DUtl OtrUTMlllTS DELICATESSEN • BAKERY • PIUA TUE·OUT • CATERING t'O \'t>n•cl from ~t.·vere head tnJuries sustained in fall from a "t'l"Ond-slory window. Huntington Beach r·" I I ' '""' 1-h~~ ..... oJ P1{>T Newport Beach 14(MI Paetf1r C<tcl\I Hv.v Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner l'i Conveni.,nt Loca110M ~ .---...;,;;,..-----------~-----------------'"---...l ............ · ...... Our Distributors Can Make A Small Fortune and Do It Pleasurably. We are a fast growing co mpany based in Orange County. We 've developed a Pleasure Plan which is our unique multi-level market- ing plan. We offer a variety of sexy ling.erie sensuous concoctions , marital ' toys" and some won- derful gag items. Call us and we'll show you how you can generously add to your i ncome -and do it pleasurably. ·The Pleasure Company (714)1 551-9799 Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT 1Wedn1tday, September 23 , 1981 Douglas wins contract Do•1laa OU Compaay of Callfo.mla, b ed ln Coala MeH, has been awarded • SS7 million Navy deJense fuel supply coo· tract for J p.5 Jet ruel. Produc· tlon will take place at Oou&las Oil's P1ramount refinery. Length ot the contract Is one year. • Benlley Laboratories lac. re· ported net income for the three months ended Aug . 31 of $943,000, or 20 cents a share, oo revenues of $16.3 mUUon, com· pared with net Income or Sl mUlion, or 23 cents, on revenues of nearly $13.8 million for the like period In 1980. Joseph Stemler, BenUey president and chief executive officer, said COUNlY BRIEFS operaUng income for the quarter waa up 70 per«nt over last year, but' was reduced Crom 39 cents a share to 20 cents becau&e of one· time, merger·related expenses of $1 .7 million. The meraer with American Hospital Supply Corp. is expected to be completed ln December • La Mesa Energy Corp., Hun· tington Beach, has acquired the petroleum marketing assets ot Lerner Oil. Under terms of the sale , La Mes a took over ownership ond operation of 100 Lerner servi ce stations . pri miarlly in tbe Southern C1l1fornla area. Thi• ls the second major ~cquisltlon for Li. Mesa this year Earlier, the company purchased lbe remain Ina bUllnets of Mars end Martln Oil In Los Angeles. The Lerner ocqulsttlon brings the La Men distribution system to 122 . ervlce statlonis with total volu me sales of $200 million. • Bank of lrvtne board of 4ir~ tors have •pproved a 2·for·l s tock split, e Hec tive to shrtreholders of record on Sept. 15. Bank of Irvine has 379 shareholders and had issued 361 ,659 shares prlor to the split. Capital as of Aug. 31 was ~light· ly in excess of $3.2 million. San Diego utility anized Chief operating officer shuffles top mana SAN DIEGO \AP> -Thomas A. Page, the 47·year-old presi· dent of San Diego Gas & Electric Co., has reorganized the utility's lop management after getting the additional title of chief operating officer. He created three new group vice presidencies and gave those jobs to men ranging in age from 39 to 49, the utility said Monday. The promotion of nine other oCficerS' including R. Lee Haney to treasurer, was a nnounced at the same time. Named group vice presidents were Jack E. Thomas, Richard Korpan and Alton T. Davis. The title of chief operating of· ficer was given up by Robert Morris, 60, who served as presi· dent of the utility from 1975 until being made chairman of the board last April. He will stay on as chairman. P ge succeeded Morris as pre tdent or the company. while re iving a pay increase over rris' previous $125,781 annual lary. No one would say what age is making now. P age, who was with Gulf States Utilities before being hired at San Diego Gas in 1978, is a certified public accountant and li cen sed professional engineer . ceiling Passbook • interest up WASHINGTON (AP > - Federal financial regulators have agreed to raise the interest ceiling on Americans' passbook s avings accounts by one-half per centage point. They rejected a proposal for an increase three times that size. Treas ury Secretary Donald T. Reg an said the increase voted by the Depository Institutions De regul ation Committee was needed "to strike a blow for the little guy" who cannot afford to invest in high.interest s hort· term accounts. He also said the move s hould help stop the outflow of money from passbook accounts at the nation's savings and loan as- sociations. many of which are in financial trouble. However, that theory was challenged by Richard Pratt, chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board which over· sees the federaJly insured S&Ls. Pratt said .J,he--change would not stop the butnow but would only add to the S&Ls' problems by forcing them to pay higher in· terest on accounts they already have. COLI.ECTORS CORNEA "-~•Sta--·.. D~ GeN c .... '461.9' Slf,,_ CJ. llt.U • .,. s.tl Kr-rrendl M1UI $411.11 Mec>le LHls $411.. $411.M 50Pnos U..M .-.. to'% s11 ... r 8'"" ...._. te'tSs.11 -Coeol Ptue v.. .. '"·· ·-.. CONSTRUCTION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • Residential • Commercial Buildings: Takeout Commianent required along with leaees. • Land Leans Op to one year 50% appraisal. When you're away and someone's trying to reach you. an Answer Page beeper lets you know-instantly! CONTACT: • Jeff Johnson • World's largest computenzed paging agent. • Inexpensive-less than a dollar a day. • Available with options: (want single-tone, dual-tone or silent tone?) • Wide-area coverage-15.000 square miles. • Direct dial access. • A location near you, plus field representa· tives at your beck and call. • 24·hour service. We never sleep. • Daily rental or month·to·month. • Free unlimited beeping, free delivery and free full maintenance. • Quantity discounts. • Call today for literature and a free demonstration! With Answer Page, you may be out of reach. but you'll never be out of touch! ~~Sl\JER Pfl[jE 731-7777 • 953-5782 Call IOll·tree 1·800·252·9161 Or call mlorm~tton lot lhe Answe1 Page olt1ce nearest you Al)'l'''1 1 H,., I Rr t~ l'C'"ll NEW ISSUE South Orange County/ Irvine 7141851-4-050 • TomWikher Nonh Orange County/ Rivenide County 714/851-4126 • John Httshfcld San Dieao County 714/299-9330 Herit9Se ~~~~~ @t Accounts lnsureJ to $100,000 lOIW HOUSlli Ll!NOl!A •garden carts Model A's···· •typingtables wheelbarrows· recreational vehicles"gOlf carts•model trains•bikes *pianos•cars refrigerators *skates•••••• This Is not an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy these securities. The offering is made only by the Prospectus. lfit's got wheels, you'll move it taster In a Daily Pilot classified ad .call 642-5678 and a friendly ad· viserwill help you turn your w heels into cash. 400,000 to 450,000 Shares SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BANCORP A Proposed Bank Holding Company for LAGUNA NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY (In Organization) Common Stock (No par value) PRICE $10.00 PER SHARE For a Prospectus and a Subscription Agreement, please contact the company by mall or by telephone. Southern Callfornla Bancorp 310 Broadway Laguna Beach, Callfornta 92651 (71•)67s.3765 or (71.4)~7-6S11 T81111• ....... PSA manager moves to county Montero operations chief at John Wayne Airport Kirk Montero, f o rmerly manager of station customer service for PSA at Long Beach Airport, has been appointed to that position at J ohn Wayne Airport. In his new position, Montero will be responsible for all of the rurline's operations at J ohn Wayne Airport, where PSA will inaugurate service Oct. 1 with daily flights to San Fran· cisco. • Donald L. Umland has been appointed vice president-finance of FHP, a Fountain Valley· based health maintenance or ganizalion. Umland previously served in the same capacity with Phototron Corp. and Kern Foods Inc • Kathy Hoffard has joined Newport Balboa Savings and Loan Association as an assistant vice president/banking services in the Westcliff Plaza head- quarters office. She is a graduate of Orange Coast Coll ege. • Michael W. Patterson has been appointed assistant vice president and commercial loan officer to the recently opened Mission Viejo National Bank. A bus iness school graduate from the University of California al ON THE JOB Santa Barbara, Putterson li ves in Mission Viejo • George L. Morton has been named manager , material for the rectangular connector unit of ITT Cannon Electric. Foun· lain Valley. He 1s responsible for production control and inventory planning. Morton lives in Costa Mesa. • Michael C. Mlller has been a p-~ pointed commer cial lending of· ficer for the headquarters office of CommerceBank in Newport Beach. He lives in San Juan Capistrano. • Helen Erb has Joined Wells, Rich , Gree ne /Townsend . Newport Beach, as broadcast producer. Prior to WRG IT, she was a broadcast producer with Della Demina Travisano & Partners of California Inc . where she worked on such ac· c ounts as Lloyds Bank o f CalHorma. Singapore Airlines and Ralston Purina OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND William T. Tf'Der has been ap- pointed diret•tor of operatio11aJ and regulatory compUance tor Orange.based TRW Information Services Division. Tener, who li ves in Garden Grove, will be res ponsible for ens uring that the d1v1~ion's various services and operations meet all pertinent legis lative and regulator y re· quirements • Craig Edwards ('aldwell. chairman and chief executive of fie e r of C . E . Caldwell En lerprises Inc. has been elected chairman of the board for Western National Bank, Santa Ana • Richard Radant has joined Orange National Bank, Orange. as assistant vice president and ope rations manager. As opera· lions chief, he will s upervise teller functions. persoruiel and training. • Jan Harris has been named manager or the Mission Viejo branch of Allst ate Savings and Loan Association. A resident of Lag una Niguel. Ms. Harris is a member of the Saddleback Valley Chamber or Commerce. P<I. Up Cl~ Up :ILJ Up 23. I Up 200 Up 20.0 Up 16,7 Up IU VP 15.2 Up 10 Up 1'.J Up 14 J Up 10 Up 11.l Up IU Up l:U UP 121 Up 111 Up 1'A Up II.I Up II I Up II I VP 111 Up IO~ Up 105 Vp 10.0 Up 100 Up 100 P<I. Ott 21.1 Ott , ... 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J SI -~ &: r " · · -..-.J•• · GltStUt 1 • J tOI 11 it -Ml I .2t I .. 2•.,._ li'K ' 1111 1·2't Ullll Ult U 190 '7~h 1 --- ''""' I .... 3 l1J ~ '-Ol~I Pf 1 : 6 J :r-· · ·· · GltSU pf4A , 1100 JOv.• t\l't Lowe• ·!J. 139 })4 ..!' · Pac ... 11.o •7111'.+'. ~ llC ' UO 6 11 .-.+ Ii\ ICOR t.14 6 ti ''"' "' artiwGI ).llll ' s I~ "" OIO or . r. . 0111tUtd I D • 1S1 111<\. Yt Ubrll • l . ..., ~ -· 'IQ ,. .. II. .. ii ltS dl~I .t4 10 .,, "~. " Wec!lov '.Ill , ,,. u .... I"·~ i.e ' 11 ~"' .i'&"f n: 1i ~ : .... " .. °""°" '.t.ots 24 10-14 Ut:kVS ··~ 6 ,.. 12r. .... :•lmlk 1:20 • IS » • "' .tlit i tlll1t 11~ \lo edt"f u •.. • ""'" .. ~ MGM Grand a ton for sins If you visited lhe plush MGM Grund Hotl'I in Rl'no !>\·tween August 1978 and September 1979. you might want lo return to the scene or the crime on De(' 11 when there's going to be a court hearing to determ1nt: 1r the hotel 1s doing ntiht by customers who were hoodwinked. It seem~ a lot of shenanigans went on Ill thl' new· ly opened hotel during that ll·mooth period Here were some J>n nks :.erved in the hotel casino were routine· ly watert-<l down Liquor was recycled Wailers and waitresses would swoop through lhe )(Junge after a s how. pick up drinks that were not finished and bring them to bartenders ror reuse . If you ordered a drink by brand name, you may very well have been served something else In fact. once a bottle or name·brand liquor was emp· ty. bartenders made it a practice of refilling the bot· tie with a cheaper liquor Sometimes. when confronted with an order for an exotic drank, the bartenders would simply lt'Bve out the alcoholic part <That will teach 'em lo order a fro~en daqu1ri J Well , either somc·t>ne s01tched or else they 1wrved a ltquor free drink to the wrong person or the Chivas Regal people began to wonder why they were not getting any ~ reorders from t h e h o t e I 1:, e. Whatever t h e ' r eas on. these cute prac tices we re brought lo the attention or the authorities MllTOI MDSllWITZ The federal Burl!au or Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms issued a complaint and got the MG M Grand to admit that during those 13 months 1t had re· rilled 16,000 bottles with cheaper liquor than was '" there originally. <They drink up a sto rm at these Nevada casinos l To settle lhil> action. MGM Grand paid a fine of $125.000 in January 1980 That's fine but what about all those poor cus tomers who were bilked by not gelling t he drinks they ordered or getting served a drink that had been mixed Lhe ntght before for another customer" These d ays there arc a lways lawyers to take up the c udgels for the downtrodden consumer I mean. it's bad enough losing at blackJack, you don't have Lo be stuck with watered down drinks on top of Lhat So MGM Grand was sued. and 1l has now reached a tentative settle m ent with the s hortc hanged eustomers These are the terms ( all two of them >· l IC you were one or those who were cheated, you will now be able to go to the·hotel and see a cocktail show at half·pric e. 2 If you don't want to see the show. you will be entitled to gel two free drinks anywhere in the casino Hows that for a s porting proposition? Of course you have to return to Reno to collect your compensa- tion. Is anyone going to Oy from Texas or the East Coast or the Midwes t to collect two free drinks? MGM Grand routinely offers that to people Just to get them Lo come (and play the slots). Anyway, Judge Grant Bowen of Reno has set Dec 11 as the day ror a hearing on lhe settlement. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORIC CAPI FIN I Dow.J~ •"9• HEW YOllK (API· s ••• ,, Tues Prlu •nd .... < ....... of ""' llUHn most KllVI New York Stock E•<fltnoe llSUfl, lrodlftQ ...,lonallv el more -n '1 hHCO Ill< 1, 146, lm 3"" V. MACOM M>,100 n.. -\It A-r TAT 6lt,.OO Ml'o SloreeTKll 611,000 Xllh du~I Slll,100 ... fUOll i wt,.00 ll So\ltllRc>y 11 t2t,.OO .,...,.. Clllt1Svce •.JOO M'"' MoOll s 4lJ,'lllO 1'14 Mer•IOll -• .oo S1 , • M '27 .300 s..-Gen TtlA E 1 Jlt,700 JOV. CoattelC.p JIO,G JS-" WarnrCOf'I M ,000 43"" AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YOllK IAPJ. 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Up JO I ~ :~·: Up II f Up 101 Up 10,1 Up tt Up U Up 7.7 Up 1.a Up IS Up 7.1 Up 6 7 Up 6.1 Up •.• Uo 6.6 H-l.etl Cllll P<t. I ClllMllw p4 2..-. -19\oi Off M..0 2 Ar<•t.e Cp IOI/\ -,._ Off •• t J Pt<IMCe pf t S\4 I>"' Off n .. • W•fnoco 1~ -1°" cm u.a S E"""OE Pfll 3\'t -""' Off 12.J 6 Sw1tAlr1 I l2 4'11 Ofl 12.0 ~ ~:n~~ 111' 31..... ~14 g:: lll t Arote ., .. ,.,., Off IU 10 l'•l•dllel 15 ,._ Off 11.1 II Arcet.I 2. llpt 32\lt -4 Off 11.0 12 OflEd i.tODf 1414 -7'11t Off IU 1a PecS<lert wl "°" IV> Off U u .r.vx c. ,.,.... -1l!lo 0tt u tS CenlC. l/lfA Slll'I -S-. Off t .S •• ewe t.i • .i 4 Off • 1 17 LJl'tdl CSr1 12 -'°" ~ GOLD COINS NIW YGllK (AP) P•l<H lei. Mofwley ~told C91N, <..,.._red With Frld•y't prl(e .,,........ 1 troyo1 .. Mt7 oo.1111t 11.u . • ..,.. ..... 1trov01. ~.00, llP 111 tl *•ic-!IO pt10, 1.1 troy 01 .. Ut•.oo. p1"" uuo. Attt4l1ee 100 <,_.,, .tlOJ lroy 01 • .._S.00, ...... 116.U. ~t:O.-· ......... tor r...-v. Sep 11 STOCKS lO Ind 20 Trn U Ull U Slk lndu• Tt•n Ulll• U Slk °""" Hltll t..ew Ci.te Ota ~1.lJ 1$S «> .. II W 7~ 0 ti Ml.23 J.S.t U :M.S. 11 150.U • 1.11 IOS 21 IOS • ICM SI IOS 10 • 0 " llD '5 J3.4 • 1 n1 SS XJD .. • 1.03 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK !API Sep ll Ad••nced Todey ... O.c11ne0 lit Unc 11•1'191'1 'Tote I ISWH ... IQ Now 1111111• l Ntw towt 1)4 WtiA T AMf X DID NEW YORK IAPI Sep 22 AG1ttnced T"":L Ol<llneO ru Un<ll•noecl 203 Toltl ls-l 711 New hlQl>s I New lowt 60 METALS T••• ,,, ... JOO 1,Sll,taO SIG,100 7,1",000 Previ da* '" 31'1 '"' • ... Prt"Y ";h l3I •• "' s '"' C•••tr u~.e1 .,, cenu • Pouno, u _s du11nallortS LtM -Ctnls a POll"d ii-c 4'14 c.m1 a pound, dell•••ecl Tl• $7 •• , Met.ti• W•O comPOSllt lb Ahlm-7...0ctrtts• pound, N v Mere"" MCl.00 per fl•ill, "'"'"""" ~.00 lroy o~ .. N Y SILVER T,...,.., Ha11dy A H1rmen, t 10 •30 per trOV o.111<e. 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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /WednHday, September 23, 1981 _______________________________ ....;. ____________________________________________________________________________ __ fl SPOR'rS COlUMNIST BUD TUCKER t, ·Pastorini ,. • . a tran-s1ent I, ') • If there is an ounce of decency in the manage- . ment of the Los Angeles Rams, they will consider . the broad and overall picture before employing Dante Past.orini, the transient quarterback. • You see, there are concerned parties to be con- r sidered here. Some will welcome Past.orini warm-' ly. Others will suggest, indeed insist, that the guy '• be detained at the airport. '· Certain merchants in Orange County will send , a limo for Pastorini. They would be the · haberdashers and shoe salon operators and ;-automobile dealers . . DANTE FAVORS DESIGNER threads and Gucci footwear and can afford lo change them dai· ~· ly. His record for adorning telephone poles with t• sports cars is, to say the least, enviable. t Past.orini will also be greeted with considera- ., ble warmth by the tavern managers or the com· munity. The man is known to relax with a taste of t; the grape at day's end and if the atmosphere . features disco or rock and roll, he will not put the . knock on the joint. Therefore, it is not out of the question Pastorini could arrive in Orange County by means of a parade down the Santa Ana Freeway. . On the other hand, there is a faction which " would just as soon see the Medfly came to town. This would be the gentlemen of the working press, ~ the sports writing people, who have sufficient trou· ble protecting their profiles without inviting an ad· ditional threat. . _ Pastorini's last reported altercation with a _ sports author came off as frighteningly one-sided with the quarterback winning on an early TKO and not a glove was laid on him. WHAT IS EVEN MORE distressing to the sports writers is that this bout was reported to have covered a great deal or ground inasmuch as It began in a cocktail lounge and concluded in a parking lot. To cover this kind of area is quite ;; out or the quesllon tor sports 1ournausts wno are : not in the least accustomed to scrambling. Not that they are all that great at fading back and staying in the pocket. for that matter. The scribes have not had it well in this area in recent days. The most disturbing report involved George Brett of the Kansas City Royals who had been idle <See TUCKER, Page 89) MalavaSi m.ellows after • ~ Ram coach says decision will be reached on , Pastorini soon By JOHN SEVANO 0( .. 0.-, ......... There was a definite calm in Coach Ray Malavaal's voice as he ad· dreued the media at hls weekly breakfut Tuesday. It was a nice chan1e from the cordial, but somewhat tense and jum· py Malavasi who had met with the media in weeks past. or course. winning has a habit of making such transformations. And, for the first time in three weeks the Rams were able to get ln the W col- umn at the expense or the Green Bay Packers. The Rams' performance wasn't pretty -as Malavasi admitted -but It was the final result that counted. "l wu pleased with our runnln1 game. We blocked better than we bad been," analyzed the coach, "and our special teams played better. "One thing J didn't like ls we cot more sacks (against Rapis). A cou- ple of times we Just missed people. If we're fJOing to work hard on anything this week it will be pass protection.'' Pat Haden will be happy to bear that and so will Dan Pastorin! who, ll appears, ls close to signing a con- tract with the Rams. Happiest of all, however, must be Jeff RuUedge who figures to start against Chicago Monday. The Packers, who entered Sun· day's contest with seven sacks ln two games, added aix more to that total against an offensive line that's been highly publicized as possibly the best in the NFL. Pastorint couldn't have been Im· pressed by what be saw -and It's a cinch Haden's image wasn't much better. "I'm a UtUe disappolnted i.n that area," said Malavasi or his offenaive line. "It's hard to say why certain things happen but sometimes you've got to give the other team credit." o r course the offensive line Isn't the only thing occupying Malavasi's thoughts these days. With Pastorin! joining the fold a dlatin,ct possibility, the coach ta a.Lao going to have to unscramble a pot.en· tially tense quarterback situation. Haden made It a point to call Malavasl Monday to a11ure lb~ coach he would be ready t.o play against Chicago. Rutledge haa indicated, too. that he's ready Ir called upon. And both have voiced their oplnion -more than once -that there ii oo real need for another quarterback. Management, however, doesn't feel the same way and even Malavasi, who indicated earlier thlt year he had no desire for Past.orini 'a <See MAIA VASI, Pafe Bl) OMly,.... ,......., ·~ " .... Marina High football coach Dave Thompson will be guiding his Vikings Friday night as they seek their fourth straight victory. Sunset powers test fonnidahle non-league foes ! It's Edison-El Modena; Fountain Valley-St. Paul ; and Marina-Foothill topping prep football slate this week I • By ROGER CARLSON Of -Dally ..... ,..., Three Sunset League powers are involved in , their non-league games of the year Friday night 1 and Sea View League entries take their final i tuneup prior to league play next week as another • slate of games fills the Orange Coast area prep ~ football calendar. i It's El Modena High, with its giant-filler I reputation, eyeing Edison Hlgh's 24-game winning I streak, it's unbeaten Marina High faced with its first stern challenge or the campaign -Coach Ted Mullen's unbeaten Foothill Knights and its a re· match between CIF Big Five powers St. Paul and Fountain Valley, the division's No. 2 and 4 ranked teams in a prestige colUsion between the Angelus and Sunset cir cuits. Here's a look at games involving area teams this week: Edison vs. El Modena Coach Bob Lester's El Modena Vanguards enter with an identical situation to 1979 when they shocked the Chargers, 28·27 at the same site. The Vanguards are l·l with a narrow loss to Loara preceding a victory over Kennedy and Edison is ranked ·No, l in the CIF Big Five Con- ference and Orarfge County with a 2-0 mark. Edison has never won at El Modena's field , but Chargers Coach Bill Workman discounts any jinit theory. "I don't think a field makes a tackle or misses a block, .. says Workman. In 1979 we were (al· headed and the coaches blew it. Every coach on the staff will tell you that. "I just hope it's interesting, It'll mean we're still in the game." Not to be out-done with the quips, Lester coun - ters: "Our contract is through this year and we've had two good, close games. If this one isn't de· cided in the fourth quarter too. I've told Workman he can take his contract and . . . " El Modena relies on running backs Rex Moore (6·2, 210 jr.) and Jim Torok (S-10, 160) behind quarterback Steve Sanders (S-11, 185 jr.). Up front, where El Modena always seems strong, are guards Jerry Heidrich (5-10, 200 sr.) and Tom Sharp (6·1, 200 sr.). Moore, who transferred from Foothill High. was a sophomore starter and is the brother of Stanford star Rob Moore. Lester says his team's biggest concern is Edison's running game. "Both their backs, <Dave> Geroux and that other guy (Theo Langford), they come out or the same mold," says Lester. "The of- fensive line is making some nice holes, but both of them seem capable of making their own boles. And the defense is keeping them tou1h. It never ·givea anyone any klnd of field position. "Every time we play we're throwing out of our o.,wn end zone. "Kida are bard to read, but we've never really been awed by Edison. We may gel blown out . . . maybe not." EdiJon is ln nearly 100 percent shape with only centel' Jeff Boydstun (neck> and defenalve back Eric Ory (due back for the Millikan 1ame next ..-eek) mlu1n1. "We'd better be up for El Modena " aay• · Workman. "Year-in and year-out It'• oae Oi the top prOJl'am& ln Oran1e Oounty and be (Leiter> knows bow to pt hll people up. Both achooll reapect each otb•r. EJ Modepa's lnalde four on defenae, the two Unebacken over the two iuarda, are Just auper, and Ute evfl!fY El Modena team, the)' Ult amack your Upe opeb." • • T1llrsay .,_ Ill s-s It 7:31 ) Sal Clemente vs. fsl.11cia (at Newixirt Harbor) Valencia at lrvile La Habra vs. ~leback (at Santa Ana Bowl) fri*y Westm111ster at Newix>rt Harbor ~Ila vs. foothill (at Tustin) Edison at El ~ Los Amigos at Hllltilgton Beach St. Paul vs. fOllltain Valley (at Cerritos College) Cypress vs. ~ View (at Westmmsterl Corona del Ma' at Capistrano Valley Lag111a Hills vs. l.kliversity (at Irvine) lag111a Beach at Elslllore El Toro at MiSSIOO Viejo SllDy Los Alanitos vs. Costa Mesa (at Newixirt Harbor) Oak Park vs. Woodoodge (at Irvine) .... Estancia by 12 Valencia by 7 Saddlebactl by l Westminster by 7 Mmaby2 Edisoo by 7 Htg, Beach by 7 Even Cypress by 7 !:<IA by 6 Lagll\3 Hills by 6 lagooa Beach by 3 Even Los Al by 7 Woodbridge by 3 Fountain Valley vs. St. Paul St. Paul's Swordsmen (2-0) were a 23·6 victim of Fountain Valley's march t.o the CIF Big Five Conference finals in 1980 and St. Paul Coach Mari- jon Ancicb says he hasn 'l forgotten the lessons ap- plied. "They most certainly controlled the football ," recalls Ancich. ''And we played like a bunch or chickens with their heads cut of( last week (a 25-13 win over Burroughs High of Burbank> and if we do that again we may lose by 80 points. "This is kind or a mental game, we know Fountain Valley has been waiting for us. And yes, we've thought about them a couple of times during the summer. "Yes, this is a prestige game for us. We in the Angelus League have run into some real obstacles lately with Sunset League teams, it's become one of the hotbeds in America. "I said 10 years ago if they <Sunset League) ever get any coaching no one is going to beat them and right now they seem to have two machines go- ing (Edison and Fountain Valley) and another one <Marina) is coming on." St. Paul's game flows around quarter'3ck Alex Espinoza (6·2, 175), wide receiver Andy Stankiewicz (5-8, 160) and fullback Manuel Juarez (5-11 . 187). "Our front line has executed pretty well, but we haven't played anyone with the size or Foun- tain Valley," says Ancich. "We haven't prepared offensively Tor St. Paul's defense," says Fountain Valley Coach Mike Milner. "We're not good enough to overlook an op- ~poneot to prepare for someone a week ahead of schedule. "It's their passing game against our secon· dary that concerns me. We haven't done a very good job thus far defending against the pass and they are talking about their quarterback and how they can do things with the football. "Every time we've played St. Paul it's been a highly physical and intense game. Last year we won the physical battle and the war, but we've lost a lot of those kids (graduation).'' Marina vs. Foothlll Mark Templeton, a 6·2, 195-pound senior tailback out or Foothill's multiple offense, keys an attack which figures to be Marina's first test of the season after three straight laughers. "We feel real good about our progress," says Foothill Coach Ted Mullen, but Marina looks about as tough as I've seen. It runs the veer real well and the kid <Ken Laszlo> throws well. "It'll be a test to see if we can stay with the big boys.'' Foothill's arsenal includes quarterback Davy Joe Long (180) and two alternating at the slot C Phil Timson and Laird James), while the de· rensive line boasts guards Greg Sellers (220) and John Healy (205) and tackles Scott McPherson c 195) and John Bosko (195). Thompson echoes Mullen's comment: "This is a big test for us, we'll find out if we·re looking good," says Thompson. "Foothill's defense (coached by Bob Salerno> is a multiple look and aggressive and presents a lot of looks. They apply pressure and do a good job of it." The Yikes' veer has yet t.o produce a back with a 100-yard game, but Tony Valente, Rick Tobin and Brian Brown have operated in a fluid fashion, while Laszlo and receiver Jeff Frandsen (11 recep- tions for 321 yards and 6 touchdowns > has given Marina a solid offensive look. Foothill has allowed one touchdown in two vic- tories, Marina has allowed one field goal In three routs. Estancia vs. San Clemente Estancia's Eagles, ranked No. 5 in the Southern Conference, are up against another team with unique formations and Coach Ed Blanton is concerned. "We were up against a winged-T and slot against Cypress and Laguna Hills was a lot or mo- tion with pro slots, doubling with motion and used a nine-man defensive front," says Blanton. "Now San Clemente has a wishbone and double slot with motion and a four-four defense. "What we have in our next three league games is blast, power and sweeps." Mike Griffin is expected to be back in Estan· cia's attack at offensive guard after recovering from a moped accident. San Clemente is trying t.o recover from a 42-0 lacing at the haqd of Corona del Mar last week, but Blanton says he's not about to start comparint scores. ''The last team we played that was cominc off (See SUNSET, Page Bit) Moreno withstands the pressure fQr first win From AP dJspatches It shouldn't come as a surprise that a wily rookie left-hander out of the Mexican leagues pitched a 1-0 Angels win Tuesday night featuring a screwball. . This time, however, bis name wasn't Fernando ValeQzuela. Moreno, a Mexican winter league teammate at Navajoa of the Dodgers' senaatlonat rookie left hander, picked up his fint ml,jor· league win by rour-hittlna ChJcaio for 8% lnninga in only the second ~ start of bis blg·leaauo career. And Moreno paJd proper bomace to the better-known Latin screw baller. "I feel Valensuela haa opened the doors for Mexican pitchers," aaJd Moreno tbrouJb Interpreter An1el Coach Preston Gomez . It took those doors a long time to open for Moreno, a 25-year-old Venezuelan who toiled seven seasons in Mexico before Gomez discovered him during a1scouttng mission while baseball went on strike. Moreno complied a 58-39 record south of the border, including 11·2 for Gomez Palacios of the Mexican Outlaw League this summer. Moreno bad been Ineffective in five relief appearances arid a pre· vlous atart with the Angela, which purcbued his contract from 'lalt Lake City of th• Pacific Coaat League on Au1. 9. · "I felt more relaxed tonllhl. J. feel when J plt.cb every lour or five d~• that J wlU have better control," aald Moreno, who walked four and l\nack out one before Don Aase appeared to register the final out and pick up his 11th save. "Bob Clear (the Angels' bullpen coach> said day after day that be thought Moreno was getting closer and closer," said Aniel Manacer Gene Mauch. "He was gettiog more comfortable. Ttie difference toni&ht was that he sure dtd relax. He 1ot a big llfl when be 1ot out of that fourth." The White Sox mounted their only rally against Moreno when Ron LeFlore led off the fourth with a sinele, and Tony Btrnasard waa sale on an error by 1econd-bueman Bobby Grich. But Moreno retired the next three men and didn't allow two men on a but untll ·waltinl Greg Luslnskl and Chet Lemon in the ninth. ''It was a very comfortable o· for·3," sald Luzinski, who three times bit balls lo the warnin1 nae in center field. "I was a couple inches from three homers.·• Indeed, Moreno, 1·1, pitched a very precarious shutout, 1etttnc U putouts o n rty balls. Ruaa Baumgarten, 5-9, may have pilcbed better in defeat, but two ol the tbrte hits he allowed resulted in the game's only run in the teeond in· nlng, wtten Burt Campanerit' alqle drove in Grieb. "Th~y're fll tough ooea," u.ld . Baumearten, wh9 lost 'bta fiftb 1traiaht 1ame. "Tbil came la com· parable to a •butout I Uarew 8fa.inlt Tuu ln MA)'. But at teut won that one.·• l Switzer has nothing but praise for USC t'rom AP dlapakks NORMAN. Okla. -If flattery [iJ matters In football, then Oklahoma • • . Coach Barry Swiller may have already won Saturday's e~e a1ainat use. Switzer praised the firat·ranked TroJant enoulh oo Tuesday that a victory by the No. 2 Soonera would look like the upeet of the year. "I plan to go out and win that ballgame,'' Switzer said, but save little reason to belleve it could happen. Oklahoma's defense will have to be over· achievers to stop Marcus Allen and the USC of· tense that payed the way for his 242-yard rushing average so far this year, be said. "I can't overemphasize bow good they are." be said. ''I mean they are good. They are awesome." Switzer joked that one injured Sooner cor· nerback was actually burl by watching the film of the Trojan victory over Indiana. "I think be saw one of those student·body- right sweeps crunch that Indiana cornerback and his leg went limp." USC hecame the third team ln three weeks to take the top spot in the Associated Press poll, and Switzer had no argument with that. •'I think that without a doubt, Southern California is the best football team In the coun- try," he said. "I don't think that in the 16 years I've been in Oklahoma ... any team presented the challenge that these people do." . Quote of the day Dan Qalsenberry, Kansas City Royals' relief specialist, after recording a save against Toronto: "The thing I got most ex· cited about was forming the world's only Q·initialed battery with Jamie Quirk. He was glad this one got away MIAMI -A 17·year-old fish· ll erman who set out aboard his in· flalable rah. to ply the waters or Bis=' cayne Bay hooked a big one he was glad got away. Miami police said Evelo Rodriguez hooked a shark. Rodriguez began yelling, hoping to frighten the shark away. The shark began biting through the raft. Passersby called police to the scene. Wockenfuss leads Detroit victory 1• w-...... drove ln t.bnt Ill runt wtt.b a pair ol bomel'I u Detroit defeated Baltlmore, 8·S, T\aetday nJ1ht tor their fourth conaecuU~ vtc· tory . . . In other American Lea~ue acUoo, lteltla Dntmrl&M 1ln&led ln &l~eJ 11et1•noa home from second bue wlth two out ln the top of Ole 13th lnnln• to 1lve Oakland a 3·2 victory over Toronto ln the fl rat came o r a doubleheader. ln the aeeood 1ame, SUve McCaUy won bis fifth 1traigbt game at the A '1 won, 4·2 . . . Ted Sim· moaa drove ln four runt with a homer, a double and a alnale as Milwaukee rallied lot a 10.8 victory over Boat.on behind veteran reliever aome Flaeera . . . 8o Dia.a , bad three hits, b1cludin1 a WocMn/uu two·run double In the thl.Nt inning, and Le• Barker struck out 10 aa Cleveland downed the New York Yankees, 6-4 . . . Kea Qay earned his first winnin1 dec1Jlon in more than a year with relief help from Aaae Rawley, and SeaWe defeated Texas, S-2 ... Larry Gara pitched l four-hitter, and CUat Bu· die and Wlllie Wl1Ma each singled home a run In the fifth lnning, boosting Kansas City to a 2·1 win over Minnesota . . . A common auault c harge was withdrawn against Oakland Manager BWy Martin for attacking an umpire during a game aaalnst Toronto at Exhibition Stadium May 29 . . . no.1 W• Cbol became the first Korean·born player to join a major league roster when he ,signed a contract with Toronto. Sutton blanks Atlanta on three hits Don Sutton blanked Atlanta on ••• three hits and Tony Scott collected three hits, including a run-scoring single Tuesday night to lead Houston to a 3-0 victory over the Braves. Sutt.on is now 10·8 ... In other National Lea&Ue action, Tom Seaver and two relievers combined on an eight· hitter and Cincinnati took advantage of a pair of errors to score two unearned runs as the Reds &.-downed San Diego, 3·2 . . . " Warren Cromartie and Tim Wallach knocked in two runs apiece and Steve Ro1era pitched a five·hitter as Mont· real captured a 6-2 victory over Philadelphia . . . Pinch hitter Jerry Morales' sacrifice fly drove in S&eve Dillard in the ninth inning, giving the Chicago Cubs a 4-3 Sutton victory over St. Louis . . . Jason Tbompsoa's three·run homer capped a four-run third inning and powered Pittsburgh to a 5.3 wm over the New York Mets ... .Pitts· burgh veteran first baseman WUUe Stu1ell hinted strongly that this would be his last season as a player . . . Montreal has signed a working agreement to field a Class A team in San J ose in 1982. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, September 23, 1981 Baseball today On tb1a date ln baaebaU Ln 1919: Plncb·hitUna for rookie Geort• Fotter, WUlle May& of the San Francisco GiantJ cracked a pitch from San Dleao·s Mike Corkins for h.la eootb career home run On thia date In 1982: Loa Anaeles Oodcers speedster Maury Wtlls stole his 96th and 97lh bases of the season to break Ty Cobb's one·uuon ma· jor league record. The Dodgers, wbo started the day lead· ' ing the secood·place San Francisco Ghanta by rour games with seven remaining in the National Lea1ue race, lost to St. Louis while the Giants bear the Houston Colts, 10·3. Thus began a late Giants comeback that would carry Alvin Dark's team to the NL PeMant. On this date in 1957 : H1mk Aaron's ninth·innin1 home run off Billy Muffett gave Milwaukee a 4·2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals and enabled the Braves to clinch the National League pennant. Today's birthday: Chicago White Sox pitcher Dennis Lamp is 29. Pryor seeks to fight Leonard Aaron Pryor, the Cincinnati fighter who is the World Boxing As· sociation jwtlor welterweight cham· • pion, says he will seek a bout with welterweight champion Sugar Ray Leonard. Pryor has a four.round exhibition Saturday in Las Vegas as part of the undercard for the Roberto Duran·Lulgl Mlncbello junior middleweight bout ... John Feeney impressively beat Dave Smith to take the British bantamweight boxing title at Bethnal Green, London . . . Security holders or the Civic Center Redevelopment Corp. voted to become a subsidiary of Anheuser Busch, giving the giant brewery ownership of Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis. Televison, radio F~lowing are the toP sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: I ./ / 1 excellent; / ./ " worth watching; 1" fair; ./forget it. II 7:30 p.m., Channel 11 ./ ./ ./ I DODGER BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Fran- cisco. Announcers: Vin Scully and Ross Porter. The Dodgers send Jerry Reuss (9-3l to the mound to face the Giants' Tom Grltfln (8~) at Candlestick Park. The Dodgers are in fourth place In the National League West, five games behind Houston, while the Giants are in third, four and a half back. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at San Francisco, 7: 30 p.m .. KABC (790); Chicago at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (7 10). . Hockev -Kings vs. Vancouver at Victoria, p.m . Fernando's luck runs out SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -f'trnando Vulenzuela, the Los Ancelea Dod1ers rookie pitching sensution, deserved a better fate 11a1ut th~ San Francisco Giants Tuesday nlaht. Valen2uela, blddinte to become the majon' first 14-came winner. was betrayed by a.n lrulde· the park homer and suffered his first defeat in more than three months, S·2. "He pitched good enough to win," eald Manager Tom Lasorda aner Valenzuela, 13·~. WU touched for Cour runs and seven hits ln six lnntoca. Jack Clark singled with one out in the third In· ning and Larry Herndon lashed a liner to rtaht with two uway. RICK MONDA V, usually a center fltldtr. raced in from his right field position and attempt· ed a shoestring catch. But lhe ball bounced in front of him and skipped away as Herndon circled the bases with a two·run homer that placed the GianU ahead to stay. "It was a snap clecision." Monday said. "lob· v1ously thought I could make the catch, but the ball was tailing away:• Herndon, who had three RBI and is now 6·10 agains t Valenzuela this season. was she~pish In discussing his game-winning blow. "Luck wu on my side,'' Herndon admitted. Curiously. Valenzuela's last previous loss was 2· l at St Louis, June 11th, when George Hendrick or the Cardinals belted a two-run inside·the·park homer JOHNNIE LeMASTER'S single, pitcher Ed Whitson's sacrifice and Joe Morgan's single added a run m the fourth. Darrell Evans' triple and Herndon's single gave the Giants a 4·1 lead in the fifth. Valenzuela, whose six strike-outs increased his National League lead lo 168, worked six innings, allowing seven hits and four runs. The Giants en· tered the game with only one run in 21% 1nnin1s against the Dodgers' standout rookie. Whitson. 6·8, retired the first nine batters before the Dodgers opened the scoring in the fourth on Steve Sax's single, a wild pitch and Steve Garvey's two.out single They added a run in the sixth on a homer by Monday, his 10th o( the season. The Giants concluded the scoring with an un· earned run in the seventh off Bobby Castillo. Enos Cabell led off with a single. went to third on third baseman Pedro Guerrero's throwing error on Clark's grounder and scored on Evans' single. Greg Minton pitched the last two innings for . his 17th save. Edison's drawing power is favorite subject ., " NFL Rams vs. x-Ch1cago, even Atlanta 2117 over x·Cleveland Buffalo 3 over X·Cincinnati Transfers generally mean one of three things to all parties concerned Houston 3 over x-New York Jets x·Pittsburgh 41/1 over New England Oakland 2 over x-Oetroit What's the most talked about item in CJF Southern Section football? Edison High, you say, with its 24·game winning streak? You're close, but Edison High and its drawing power for transfers might be the better answer. PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON It began in 1978 with Mater Dei High's Mike Dotterer (now at Stanford), exploded with Kerwin and Dino Bell in 1979 (both are now at Kansas) and now encompasses several standouts this year, in- cluding three from Chatsworth High, two from Huntington Beach H1gh, another from Fontana and still one more from Fountain Valley, at last count. of our kids are home grown. We get them from our junior high school, unlike some other schools in the county." Transfers mean one of three things -(1) the parents are making a move for one reason or another entirely separate from football considera- tions (2) dad wants junior to play in a program that will benefit his son's chances to become a bet· ter player and/or recognition (3) someone evil is running around illegally recruiting players. That'll gel you thinking, the rest is up to your imagination. There's no accusation, just a little something to think about. No. 1 is obviously very honorable. No. 2 is honorable, too, since parents have certain rights. No. 3 is very bad, very illegal and very hard to prove. The editorial department of the Daily Pilot took a comprehensive look at the Edison picture during the summer. ran an article in depth and concluded that wrongdoings were at a minimum at Edison. No one that I have discussed the article with seems to have come away pleased. Edison Coach Bill Workman has told this writer the board wasn't washed clean enough. Others have Implied the op- posite. Recruiting charges are usually by inuendo on· ly. A coach might say something like: "All College football Tiii• __.scolltget-11 K ....,lt. IATUltOAV WHT S.ft J-St. el CtlHOl'lllt 1 ........... -11.11 Otll•llomt et use ICOllM.,m, '1> m .. Oi. n Of>lt St. ti SIM!few11 Wnll~ttO....., Ariz-SI ... w~ SI. ROQCIH Ctl Sitto Fulltftoft t1 Ari-, n .......... v....,. .. Collw-L-INdlSt. ti ...,_.,._l.tl v-..., n Air FMU ti.._ MHic., n IOUTMWHT Ttus Tedi et .. ,._," ut ... Mlltttt..........,,11 ~ Ttus St. ti L.t"'8f, n Sen 0 .... St. et Oki-$1. Mleml,Flt.ttTtu.,n Ltul"-Tecll9t Ttus A&M," SMUttTCU,n Sovt..,.,. 11Clflol1 •I TlllN, II TtUMnl ....... w.tl Tun St.," MIDWSIT •ru-St ... Ctftertl MicNetll · ""'9"'1 et Clftclnnttt, n Ml-I, Ollie 9t EllAtm M"N .. n, 11 Wldlltt .._MI,.._ St., 11 UCl.A•l- l(tftt k .. ·-M. l(tfthlCltl' .. 1(-0••• • K-k N..,yttM!cNttll ._llfle~ ti MIC'Mttft SI. o,.....•.tt~ LtvltwllltM ~I ,,_St. .. Hellr- ' llllftOI• SI. Ml Hor1 ...... llllft01t, n Uc.fl et Hot1'm•rn hllSt.tt~U. HOl'9 Otme ti P\lnlue W"t.m Mklll .... ti WIK.mlll IOUTN ~54. ttTlleCl-1," T tltM ti Ete1 Ctrollnt, n Soutll CerollM .. ~ Mwnpflh St. ti G9of'9lt T Kl! Rkt ti l..tulsl.,.. St.," EHt T-St.tl ~11,ft Arkt-n . MIUIM.,_. ti J•O.-, n Fltrlde ""'-Mltalu'"'4 SI. et Jtcll..., ... _Col_ .. Htt1'I c.r.i .... -.. ... , .... ti Hor1'I c.otlnt SI., n Sollt"""Mltai. .... ti Rk,_ Horth Ttut SC. Ill s.ut-....,, LtullltM, n A\lhreelT- JKll-Clle S.. tt T....-.G ... "-•" Altbtmt ti Vtftllfrblft, n OulltMVI ........ Wlllltm A #My tt VMI W•ll• ........ ti Vlrtlftit Tech ,_ .. ~Ctr911nt," •AST •-et•mir 1.tf• ....... ~ Ct ... '9t1Ctnwll Ht1rc._ .... _. ,. ....... Ltflllfl ~-~ ~ .. ~ftlll ,.._,_ .. ,,._ Ctw• M ... W..1 V11'91ftlt C-klltttYtlt ************ ... : JOHNSON & SON : • • • • • It • • Presents. . . : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . .. .. . , ............... : .. • NR.11 : Ack of • The Week • •SUNDAY• • .. • .. • • .. • • • • • ,. • Attanta over • Ctevetand • • • : Buffelo over ! • Ctndnnatt • • • • • 1t '* MONDAY • it • • • Chlcego ov~ it "* * * * * * * * * * * • • • • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * • * * * * *.;.,it. Loe Angetea it !hWsM Se Th • : at Johnson & Son ,, e i !1ohnson & Son EXCfflNG i ; Lincoln-Mercury * ••• '82'• * ! • J626 HAllOl aVD. ..,. : COSTA.... AT JOHNSON ' SON : :._.,\1~~\!0·············•••*****~***************** • ( Al any rate, the issue was sixed, here, until Los Angeles Times writer Sam McManis' article on Monday, which quotes Workman as saying: Miami 21;, over x-Baltimore .x-Philadelphia 9111 over Washing1on x·Green Bav 21h over Minnesota x-Seattte 2 over Kansas Cltv "Fountain Valley has four transfers starting this year, Marina has three . . . , " and the writer goes on to say Workman maintains be was misquoted in the Daily Pilot during the summer and as a result. he now uses a tape recorder when talking to re· porters he doesn't know well. x·San Francisco 6 over New CXleans x-Oallas 101;, over New York Giants x-Tampa Bav vs. St. Louis, even San Diego 3 over X·Denver College x-USC 4 over Ok lahoma UCLA 11 over x-lowa x-Nebraska A over Penn St. x-Texas 71h over Miami, Fla. x-Michigan 20 over Navv Ohio St. A1h over x-Stanford Asked to comment on Mc Manis' article. Workman told me the following on Monday. "No. I never said I was <misquoted) in the Daily Pilot articles that's how you can twist words. They (Times) put the rest in. I said sometimes I use a tape recorder if 1 don't know the reporter I'm talk· ing to." X·North Carolina 15111 over Boston College Alabama 2'4 over x-Vanderbllt Brigham Young 10 over x-Colorado X·Misslssippl St. 2 over Florida Asked about the four transfers Fountain Valley is starting ( lnd~na's Trey Martens is in · deed a starter for the Barons>. Fountain Valley Coach Mike Milner says: ''I'm sending out a search team this week to find these people (the three others).'' Notre Dame 71h over ><-Purdue Washington 1 over x-Oregon x-Georgia 9 over south Carolina Arizona St. 7 over X·Washington St. SMU 10 over x-TCU x Denotes home team Workman says he did not say four starters, but four players. (Milner Is also looking for those <See EDISON'S, Page 88> (From Herreh'a Reno Sport• Book) Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dlvlslon Kansas City x·Oakland Minnesota Texas Seattle Chicago Angela W L Pd. GB 23 18 .561 21 18 .538 1 20 22 .476 Ji.ii 18 21 .462 4 17 24 .415 6 16 25 .3~ 7 14 ZS .35t 8 East Dlvlaloa Detroit 26 16 .619 - Boston 24 17 .SSS l \AJ Milwaukee 25 18 .581 1 \Ai Baltimore 21 19 .525 4 x-New York 21 20 .512 41h Toronto 19 20 .487 Si.ii. Cleveland 20 22 .476 6 x -First·balf division winner ,.....,..,lc*W .. .... ,.Ole..-. Oelil8M M, T ..... 't-1 llR eot1M 111ftnlnlll MllW ..... tOlltlNlla 0.1 ........... ,,..,.., Cltwi.M6, ..... Y-4 1(-~t.~1 ltettltl,T-1 ,...,.,._ CJllc ... ITl"WI M l et Allllt• IWltt M!. ft MllwMt9 C"""' M l et ....... lf-.. Je. ....... C"9trt WI .... ltlftWt CO. _.,..,., IM)ft 0.1 .... ( .......... -..1 et Ttt ..... Co.My .. ~~ .... (Dlftfty M l .. Ntw Ytrll (.._,.I >t,:cl:M..U CltMf.,,. Ml et Ktftset Cltr ·~•111.ft SiMtttt (~ ).f) .. Ttlltl C~ ,._,I. fl NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Houston 27 14 .659 Cincinnati 24 17 .SSS 3 San Francisco 22 18 .550 41'2 x·Dodgers 22 19 .537 5 Atlanta 20 20 .500 6"" San Diego 13 30 .302 15 East Division St. Louis 22 18 .550 MontreaJ 22 19 .537 .,.., New York 20 21 .488 2"" Chicago 18 21 .462 3"" X· Philadelphia 17 23 425 5 Pittsburgh 17 24 .415 51h x-Firsl·half division winner ,....,.,k_ Stll FrMCIKO S, °""'" 2 Cllk89t 4, St. Louis J Pl~ S, -Vert. J Moftlt'Ml I, Pllll-lllf\lt t Htvllilfl ~ Allllfttt 0 C11tei-t1 J, ,.,. Oltte 1 , ... .,..o.-s ~ Clttwt t~I ti S.n FrtnelKt !Griffin M l. n Hew Ytrll Cl.vncll 4-ll et Olkeeo IKr\lkew , .. , Pltt.-9'1 CR.....,.n 7•Jl ti Mefttl'MI I~ .. ,_.,., ~II .... '"°"' 1.t) ti St. L..tvh ~ft t-')." Atltn'8 c-..r k l .. ~ IJ. HMll,. t•1l, n CIMC_.a CP•tDrt >11 ti Sift 0 .... CWl9e ).71," Orange Cout OAJL V PILOT M'edneaday. September 23, 1981 From P~ge 87 EDISON'S DR AWI NG POWER • • • three amona his squad, but lt doeao't appear he's going to find them.) Marina. Incidentally, has two lranaftra who ~tuwot three. But as for being misquoted by the Dally Pilot, Worknaan says he was not. ··this (the subject or traMfers > Is the last thin& l want," continues Workman. "I'm 5uppoaed to be a football coach. "I'm tired or listening (readln&> other col\C.bla' quotes who won't reveal them1elves·and I'm really sick and tired of taking the heat. "l~ cuts into your personaJJife and It's not fair. I th\Xlt my approach is going to be to answer ques- tloM,'dn football only and let it go at that." 'Workman had just about had lt up to bis eyebrows during the summer, since everyone in credtlbn seemed bent on examining and probing the E&son ship, but printed very little when no dirti tlnen could be found. "Do me a favor," said Workman earlier this year. "Look all you want, but when you do and don't'find anything, print that." Well. we did. Nothing foul was found and it O 'Donnell . le ads " OCC polo win .... Orange Coast College, led by Lance O' Don· nell 's ·four goals, won its win over Long Heach Poly. Ocean View is now 1·2. was duly reported. or course um la a hometown newspaper so we have no objectivity. rte ht? Others also look, can't find anythlna wrone. so drop it. Is that objective? At any rate, it seems doubtful the subject is going to go away. Not as long as Edison ia a power. or as long as there Is a coach ready to im· ply something wrong (usually to cover hla own inadequacies) or a sportswriter who dlacovera Edison has a transfer or two in camp. * • • CHECICJNG AROUND -Ertc Kramer has taken over as cross country coach a\ Estancia High . . . Taking up the slack for departed Wayne Hu.gbes as Estancia 's athletic director is Glenn Sherry, with help from new athletic department head Don Burns ... Newport Harbor ffigh's sophomore football team tangles with Westminster at 4 p.m . Friday prior to the varsity game at Newport. They're calling them the super-sophs at Newport after two impressive victories ... When Notre Dame tangles with Navy Saturday among the Middies will be sophomore quarterback Marco Pagnanelll, who ran for a pair of touchdowns against the Citadel in Navy's opener. Marco's brother, Jamie, is a fullback at Huntington Beach . Speaking of Huntington Beach, look for the 0·2 Oilers to be 3·2 when they enter Sunset League bat· tie . . . After absorbing a 15·6 upset loss to Pacifica last week, Westminster Coach Barry Waters says: "We're embarrassed." ... El Toro takes its case to the CI F council meeting Thurs· day in hopes of switching from the Sea View League to the South Coast League. Odds are 10·1 against El Toro. With the assistance of an experienc~ counador and an IBM 3031 computer, in just an hour you can ~lect the courses and professors that meet your career needs. Earn your degree by attending classes in the evening, one course per l]lOnth. If bu~ss or personal needs confiict, you can change your schedule by phone and make up the course later. Financial For complete ad copy and art services advertisers all along the Orange Coast rely on Daily Piiaf op~oing wat e r polo .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ga m~ o f the season Tue:tday with a 12·8 win over Cypress. The Pirates , trailing 3· 1 .at.. the end of the first quarLer. rallied to tie it at the half. 4·4, then pulled away in the sec;o~d half. with the help ,of a well-rounded s co r1 n g all a ck and goallJ.' Steve Simmons' IS s aves. Adam Sofio added three' goals for OCC whil'e Alan Laidlaw had two Tracy Willms, Roy McCormic k and Todd Mel berch all added one. In high school water polo action, Laguna Beach, paced by Mike McGil's fi ve goals and fo ur eac h b y Andy Alston and C hip Pau l son . d e feate d Lakewood, 13·8. The Artists are now 2·2 on the-year. Corona del Mar was outscbred 3·0 in the final quarter .and dropped a 7 ·4 ·decision to Long Beach Wilson. The Sea Kings led twice, at 2·0 and 4·2 Corona del Mar was ranked fifth in CI F 4-A going into the game whill! Long B eac h Wil'son was rank ed second. Corona del Mar. 3·3, traveled to University toda.y, Mark Marino scored six goals and Matt Karl added three t o help Oceah View to a 12·11 sudden death overtime ov·e tt o ut o f NY 111i le fe ature l':I EW YORK <AP) llrjt;,tin's Steve Ovett, thCllltmer world record hordU in the mile, has wiaaftawn from the in· auif.l Fifth Avenue Mi cause of a viral in ion, it was an· noETuesdav. ' l's manager, An· dy rman. notified F'red:ILebow, president of -New York Road Ru9rs, whkh is put. tan~ ether Saturday's na ally televised ra , of the ailment. e road race, to be 'l'u m 82nd Street to i;2 Street. was to be Ovd.t'.Ji first appearance in •e,United States. 1 Ulher top contenders 'I ntM d e I r e l a n d • s E ..O nn Cog hlan , ·tho ~of the indoor best \li"l.f m the mile (3:50.6) ifl r world record o er John Walker of e Zealand, and Steve Sc America's top lmi•r and a graduate of ! ftlCkvine. ~ ~1·• Phillips hos pita l UW ORLEANS (AP> f everish New 0 ns Saints Coach B PhllUps was ad· m d to a hospital T day nigh{ for Ob· se ation and tests. of· fi e ls said. a.m physician Dr. rles Brown sald Ups relt ill early G•Y eveninl(. was not immediate· inown whether ips would be unable ach Saints practice ns or Surfday's game against the ancisco 49er1. T h eae are J u ll ne tests. He't just a fever," satd. n, •bo will be at111•i«tbecue. THE IOTALLY IEW 6.2 LITER DIESEL. 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The 6.2 liter Diesel is avail or a two-Actual highway mileage lower. Fuel economy · a~med at truck use. An engine wrth mighty and four-wheel-drive models. comparisons exclude trucks with same power· diesel power. Power to haul. Power to tow. 4WD DIESEL a tr1ios offered by GMC Truett DMsion. Some P t t k ._..._,.,loads nd h 28 EST EPA ESl ower o a e on . ..,.. .. , a eavy •LAZER KWV MPG ICITYI Chevrolet truclta ere equipped with en_g!nes city traffic. But an engine that scrimps !AVAILABLE AUTOMATIC oviADAIVEI produced by other GM dlvieions, subsidiaries. CK on fuel as 1 diesel can. affiliated companies Y<IOrldwide. See your dealer HIGHIST 1M EmMATEQ MILIAOE !Wiays popular• a utility or sport vehicle, tor detaila. RATING OF A1fY R.1J1.1A1a PICKUP-the four-wheel-drive Chevv Blazer gains a HAULS UP TO 13.IOO LBS. The new SIX OR VB. Thanka to the new 6.2 titer whole new dimension oombin!@ power and 6.2 Liter VS Dieael generates massive torque Oiele', the fulkize Chew Pickup, Suburban economy in the available 6.2 Llt8r Diesel. · for tO:V. A ~ equ:=: full-site Ind 4WO Bflnr now offer emadng miluge 2WD cMlm. 30 HT ~ EPA EST '82 D' Picitup or .ubu . can h1ul as ratings-~ a fuef that'I treditionelly SUMMaM ~ 116.Y! Ml'O 1cm1 much 11 13,500 lbs .• including ltleff. prioeCj lower then ~. ~ CAllM.At\.£ Al.llOMAllC OVlllD'llVll traffer. passengers, cargo end equipment. ,..- 'I __,,.. .......... Brad Parks will try to defend hts title this weekend in Nat~ng! WJ!e,elehcn~Champt0nsh1ps. Baseball puts up a false front .Split season makes races ·as phony as plastic grass By HAL BOCK A .. S,.,U Wl1tw Presenting . drum roll, please, maestro . . . the t eam with tht? very best record in baseball. the Cincinnati Reds Take a bow, Manager John McNamara. Nice job. Enjoy the spotlight, though, because when the mini-playorfs begin Oct. 6, you guys could be sit· ting at home, finished for the season. Now how can that be? How can a team finish with the best record in baseball and still not qualify for the playoffs? Only in this abomination of a split season, where good is bad and up Is down . could such sM,llness take place. Cincinnati made the mistake of being one-haJ! game behind the Dodgers when the strike hit June 12 . In the interest of expediency, their 35-21 first- half record was sacrificed by the people in charge when play resumed. And even though the Reds' 23·17 in the second half had the best overall record in the two leagues ~oing into Tuesday's games, they were assured of COMMENTARY nothing. Unless they can catch Houston and finish first for the second half, or unless the Dodgers catch Houston and Cincinnati finishes second to LA , the Reds can head for home. That's ridiculous SOME BASEBALL PEOPLE, who aren't afraid of their shadow, speak their mmds on the issue. One of them is Whitey Herzog, manager and general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals. Her zog is a traditionalist and the Cards voiced op· position to the split-season plan when it was first announced. Nothing has happened, not even bis club's first-place standing in the second-ha1'. to change his mind. "l think it's a farce, .. Herzog said the other day. "Wh at are we playing for? There's no in- terest in it. .. That seems to be the opinion of the Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies, Oakland A's and New York Yankees, who all earned playoff berths because they had the good sense to be leading their respec- tive divisions when baseb3.Jl went on its summer vacation. All four teams have strolled through the second half, simply because winning or losing isn't terribly vital to them. They've got their postseason spots locked up. The important games for them begin in a couple of weeks. By then, the Reds and their best record in baseball may be Jong gone. TR\'JNG TO MEND the anguish of the strike, baseball came up with the split-season concoction to create races and Interest. The effort was un- derstandable. The result has been lamentable. Herzog is a bottom-line guy. The bottom line in box scores is the attendance. The Cards came into r.hicago this week for a vital series. Here were the From Page 86 MALAVASI. • • services, has mellowed on his stand. ''We're definitely interested," said Malavasi. ''It's a matter of making a decision. I think som ething will be done by today or tomorTow. "l think he < Pastorini> has a stron1 arm and could help us somewhere down the line." It's the "down the line part" that has the other quarterbacks worTied. It wouldn't be logical for Malavasi to keep four quarterbacks, so tt would figure Je(f Kemp is on shakiest ground. or course, there'• also the ot.ber headache of who to make Nos . 1, 2 and 3 amonc tbe rest. "I don't foresee any problem1," said Malavasi. "It's only a problem.in LA becauae you (the media) make it •problem. "I'm not gotnc to bring him in to 1tart. He'a not even ready to start. We could alto brin1 blm in here and find out we've 1Dade a miltake. We're not Immune to makiq mlstakes." For the Ram•, makint them la one thln1, · however, and admittin1 them is another. • ~ • • ..,____ --~-r .:;-~ ...... ~ .... ·.; ~--=--------·-• Cubs, winners of nothing since 1945, bidding for the quarter-pennant, just 31h games behind first- place St. Louis. For the first game of the series, the teams drew 3,634 rans. For the second one, 4,351 showed up. "We really packed them in, didn't we?" Herzog noted. The fans know phony races when they see them. The New York Mets swept three games from the Cards over the weekend, the Jut one with a dramatic two-out, two-run ninth-inning homer by Mookie Wilson. That pushed them within 2~ games of the top. The next night, 7,429 hearty souls showed up at Shea Stadium. • "Two-and-a-half games out," grumbled Herzog. "They're not 2~ out. They're 13~ out." Well, this is true, only if you include the Mets' miserable 17-34 first-half record. Details, details, details. BASEBALL IS SELUNG us terrific pennant races. Look at that -going into Tuesday's action, s ix games separated the six teams in the American League East. Toronto's annual also- rans were four games out of first place. Four teams were separated by"1.hree games in the American League West. Texas, playing under .. 500, is bidding for the title. If you really want races, baseball's got 'em. But they're not the ones that show up in the stand- ings every morning. Try combining the standings for the two halves and here's what you get before Tuesday's games: National League East : St. Louis 52-.42 , Philadelphia 51-43, Montreal 51-44. The Cards are one game up on the Phillies and 1~ ahead or the Expos. National League East: St. Louis 52-42 , Angeles 58-39, Houston 54-43. The Reds are one- half game up on the Dodgers and 4~ ahead of the Astros. American League East: New York 55-41 , Detroit 56-42, Boston 54-40, Milwaukee 55·43, Baltimore 52-41. The Yankees, .Tigers and Red Sox are tied, all within three percentage points of each other, with the Brewers one game back and the Orioles l'h behind. • American League West: Oakland 56-'1, Texas 51 -42. The A's are three up on the Rangers. Split- ting the season erased those races and replaced them with phony ones. That fits in nicely with plastic grass and 10-man lineups. Afric ans indicate no boycott plans BADEN·BAD£N, Germany CAP) -African sports leaders gave a further indication Tuesday night that they are not planning to boycott the Ul84 Olympic Games io Los Angeles. ·Delegates from African national Olympic committees .met to discuss the controversial tour of the United States by the Springboks' ru1by team from'South Africa. Afterwards, Ananl Mathia of Togo, president of the association of African NOCs, told newamen, "We are extremely happy with the meuures taken to fight racial discrimlnallon in sport. We are pleased with the efforts made by the naUonal Olympic committees of both New Zealand and the United States. "All men who fight against racialism, whether they are on national Olympic commltteea or not, are our friends. . •'The question is not in terms of a boycott of Los Angeles or not. We are qreed that the New Zealand and U.S. Olympic committees have done everything In \heir power to protest a1aln1t raclalJam." Mathia'• comments foll~vu Monday aty Abraham Ordla, presidentof the Supreme Council for Sport in Atrlca. Orelia aald ~ COUDOll bad been reatralMd lo ill policy oa Lot Ancel• by tbe stand taken by the USOC and by Juaa A.atoa.lo Slmaranch, president of the laternatloDal OlJ1D· pie Coannlttee. Orelia relW'Jled bome to Nlcerta Tu..U.,, ,.. POrtedly recalled by )lb l'O'f91UD911l. · ' . .. I t•• Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOTtNednetday. September 23, 1981 Call i-class on wheels .-- National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis is thriving 'r• J • II • There'• noth.ln1 erippUnc about the NaUooal Foundation of Wheelchair Teanll' fOWldatJoa. Stnce lt.e lncepUon aome three yeara a10, tbe oraanlaalion. beadff by South La1una'1 Brad Parks -wbo Just ao happens to be the aport'a de- ret1d1n1 natJonal champ'on -bu received able support, to aay the leut. Everyt.hln1 about the foundation t. firat clau. For samplers, the board ol 1ovemora Utt reada like a cross aectioo between the world'• all·Ume film and television freata and a tennl.I hall of fame. Take a look at th11 lineup under the aub- heading or Special Aasistance: Deal Arnu, Jr., Arthur · Aabe, Vic Braden, Beau Brtdces, Lloyd Bridges, Chad Everett, Roy Emerson, Charlton Heston, Rod Laver, Norman Lear, J ohn Newcombe, Dennis Ralston, Ken Rosewall. And that's just a sampling. Corporate sponsors include names like Wilson, Kennex, the ATP and USTA. But for all intenta and purpoees, much of the credit hu to go to Parks and coordinatin1 director David Saltz of Newport Beach. Together, the two have traveled to all comers ol the world, giving talks and exhibitions. Parks has played against handicapped and able-bodied players -usually pros -lo major and minor tournaments, including most recently, the U.S. Open at Flushing Meadows, N.Y. TIUS WEEKEND, THE FOUNDATION will host the National Wheelchair Cbampionahips at. the Racquet Club of Irvine. It's sort of the coup de grace for the top wheelchair players across the land. And naturally, Parks, winner in the first two nationals, is the top seed and favorite to defend bis titles. Once again, this event will be first class -like the rest. Since this is the International Year or the Disabled, all the more so. How does a $100 a plate dinner at Sheraton Newport grab you? These guys don't mess around. It's Friday, with guest speakers Charles Pasarell, Frank Hammond and Braden, presiding. While guests marvel and partake of the cuisine, they can watch Park.a and Co. give an ex- hibition of wheelchair tennis in the center of the Sheraton Ballroom. Saturday and Sunday, the tournament picks up full steam with the finals set to begin at 1 p.m . Sunday. Parks is a good bet to be there on the court Sunday afternoon, but he won't (o unchallen(ed. At least three others -Randy Snow, James Worth and Davfd Kiley -will be out to knock off Parka. All four have played one another on numerous oc- casions and though Parks has stood out, there h:ive been some hotly contested matches. Snow, of Dallas, is the No. 2 seed and would appear to have the best shot at an upset. Gerulaitis ge t s short suspension NEW YORK CAP) -Vilas Gerulaitis, a semifmalist at the U.S. Open, has been suspended from the Volvo Grand Prix circuit for 21 days for minor-Offense fines totalling more than $5,000 over the previous 12 JDOntbs. M. Marshall Happer, the administrator of the men's International Professional Tenni5 Council, made the announce- ment Tuesday. Gerulaitis, who accumulated $2,000 in fmes at the U.S. Open in addition to the $3,9>0 he had pre- viously been fined over the past year, began serv- ing his suspension Monday. Gerulaltis originally had 14 days to contest bis fines at the Open, but last Friday his agent notified Happer that he would not ~er with an appeal. The fines at Flushing Meadow occurred during Gerulaitis' fourth-round victory over Ivan Lendt for abusing a ran, in his semifmal loss to J ohn McEnroe for verbally abusing an official and for missing one news conference. m ZINTEL I I THE ONLY CHANGE in this weekend's Ten·. t nia Legends Champlonahlps at the Industry Hill• 1 Tennis Clu.b is the replacement of Clltr Richey for Roger Taylor. , , .. , Otherwise, the competitors remain the aame .. , 1 That Is, Keo Rosewall, Fred Stolle, Marty Rietff0.,,!1 Owen Davidson, Cliff Drysdale and Australian .:, greats-turned Newport Beach areata, Rod Laver and Roy Emerson. ., , Want a clinic on how it should be played for . ,, yourself and/or It.ids ? Go to the Tennis Le1eodl Championships. Finals begin at l p.m . Sunday. But there ~lll ·~ be plenty of action in both singles and doubl• ~ before then. Play starts at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday and a pair of sessions will be held Saturday at l p.m. and 7:30 p.m. =~ Rosewall, the 1979 champion, is on top of tbe ' point standings, followed by Laver, Stolle and Emerson. • • • THE NEWPORT HARBOR Area Chamber or Commerce will present the Seventh Annual Wimbledon West Charity tournament, be1innin1 this weekend, with finals set for the John Wayne Tennis Club, Oct. 4. Some or the top players in Orange County will take part in the tournament which donates funds to New Directions, a women's rehabilitation Center, • • • ROBERT UTRICH, tennis director at the Old Ranch Tennis Club in Seal Beach, has announced the appointment of Jim Haley, noted teacher and player as head pro. Assisting Haley on the staff are Robin Kahn, head women's coach at Long Beach State, Debby Gilchrist of Newport Beach and a past member or USC's 1980 national championship team and Bob Webb, a top juniors coach. From Page 86 TUCKER • • • from hostilities since he allegedly belted a pho- tographer with a crutch during the first half of the 1981 split major league season. This time Brett was reported to have encoun-, tered a sports author in an Orange County lounge and a scutne ensued. Apparently, the wrlter was • going badiy and a colleague came to his rescue. This reporter was also whacked by George Brett who teportedly was quite willing to lake this ... pair al the same time and, presumably. any other or their ilk the two writers might care to summon. The significant thing here was that the second combatant in the action with Brett was a girl. ONE'S n Rsr REACTION is that it woW,d be . entirely bullish for a 6-foot, 200-pound infielder to put the boff on a lady. However, In fairness to / George, it should be pointed out that it is not in the least easy to distinguish a female sports writer from the Other kind. Generally speaking, they wear pants and ' shirts and loafers and short haircuts. U Max Fac- tor and Elizabeth Arden depended on lady sports journalists, they would starve to death. 0( course, if WOmen persist in entering lhiS I bus iness and demanding equality, it will ~ sometimes include a punch in the nose. But back to Dan Pastorini. Nothing personal, but the sports literati or the area prefer • quarterbacks who raise.their glasses to the writers rather than their dukes. Quarterbacks like Bobby Lane and Frank Filchock and Billy Kilmer and Roman Gabriel ex- changed toasts with most anyone, includin1 :\ journalists. They were the best kind. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Martin thre ate n s boycott UNIROYAL STEB.ERS METRIC SIZE A1.Ptt11 ltl.IM£AIC AEl'\.ACEMENT PRICE P 185,180R 13 CR78x13 63.97 P195{75A14 EA78x14 68.95 P205{70R1 4 OR78x14 73.98 P205{75R14 FR78x14 75.65 P205{75A15 FR78x15 72.59 P215{75R15 GR78x15 80.79 P225{75A15 HR78x15 85.52 P235/15R15 LR78x15 89.95 1 ~ ... { •.. Orangi1Cout DAILY Pl"-OT/WednHday, September 23, 1981 · From Page 86 SUNSET POWERS • • I (2.() LOIS WH L11un1 HJU1 lut year ... rec.it Blanton. L.,una Hilla exteodecS Eatancla into a lu\· second 18-14 Estancia victory, low·ll&btH by tbt· lost ol fullback Steve Kralaa <neck). who 11w hla football career ended by the lnJury. Corona def Mar va. Capletrano Valley Corona del Mar's Sea Kinas. No. 10 in the South•m Conference, are involved in their third 1tr1i1ht road game and the foe, Capo Valley, la trylns to bounce back from a 41-0 loss to hl&hlY re· larded Esperanza. "Quarterback was a question mark for u1," says CdM Coach Dick Morris. "But Erle Woods .,. has really come into his own. "Capo is big aaain with a front line averagin& about 22S pounds, but most are Junion. ·. ''Offensively they run .?verytbing ever devised . \n football and they create a lot of defensive . problems." Defensive tackle Mike Staub is questionable for the aame because of a lingering back injury. Newport Harbor ve. Weetmlnater The Sailors' passing game has netted only 19 of 62 for 271 yards in two losses, but Newport , Harbor Coach Hank Cocbrane's major concern Is -with the running game, whJch has not lived up to ,:. expectations. ·: At least ·a dozen passes from Greg Selby : sbould have been caught, according to Cochrane, • · which backs the theory that Selby is a SO percent passer. Westminster will enjoy a big advantage in size and Cochrane is hopeful that the recent play or Rob Berry, Dave Cadigan, Jamie Kitchens and Tom Lucas will rub off on others. Coeta Mesa ve. Los Alamitos The· Mustangs got their passing game going last week in a 21-0 victory over Santiago, but are up against a much better roe in Los Alamitos, which relies on quarterback Chris Alvarei and a defense keyed by tackle Jon Skeele (175) and linebacker Doug Prochnow (170). Steve Anderson was 13·for-21 and 132 yards last week for Mesa with a half dozen receivers in the picture. Laguna Beach ve. Elsinore ~lsinore awaits with a 200-pound backfield, ·. while Laguna Beach Coach Walt Hamera is hopeful tailback Beddie Arabe will be at full _ strength after suffering a shoulder injury. "We're still looking for some receivers," says Hamera following a 13-13 tie with Irvine in the Artists' opener. "Evan Chalmers was right on the money every time against Irvine, but we ju.9t coutdn't handle the ball." Huntington Beach vs. Los Amigos Robert Faust (6-2. 230 sr.), a two-way tackle, returns to the Oilers' lineup after an ankle injury, and several other Huntington Beach players ap· pear to be at full strength, which isn't good news fof Los Amigos . "People have been stacking up against the run," says HB Coach Greg Henry. "We've got to throw well to get th~m off our backs." Ocean View vs. Cypress ' "We just haven't created any offensive run lanes," says Ocean View Coach Ken Moats as he prepares for 'Cypress in an attempt to snap out of an 0-2 record. "Cypress throws the ball better than anyone . we've played and has a secure defensive front. They read well and contain welJ, so we have a challenge." lrvlne vs. Valencia Irvine's Vaqueros get their toughest non- league test or the season with up-and-coming Valencia, which may have arrived with its No. 5 status in the CIF Central Conference. Irvine's success (1-0-1) rests on its ability to .. e~ecute (two penalties and one turnover against Laguna Beach), no turnovers a week earlier. University vs. Laguna Hiiis Laguna Hills threatens University's secondary with quarterback Bill McVicar, who seems to pass in the neighborhood of 200 yards per game. University's major theme will to be to try to culminate a drive after dominating the issue last week, only to see it go down the drain when a '74· 'yard return with an interception by Tustin dropped Uni, 7-0. Woodbridqe vs. Oak Park . Woodbndge's Warriors try to rebound from a ·7-6 loss to Orange Lutheran, and they'll be doing it ' · against a team with the same predicament -no · senjors in a first year of varsity c:ompetiUon. Oak Park bails from Agoura. ·::.George Allen new ·::fitness chairman :·.. WASIUNGTON (AP> -George Allen, former '. caach of the Washington Redslcins and the Los . Angeles Rams. was sworn in Tuesday as chairman · of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and ' , . Sport.I. . Supreme Court Judge Byron R. Whale, a former . · college football star, administered the oath in a ' : ceremony at the Washington Touchdown Club. ',: Allen, who earned a reputation of building win· ning, veteran-dominated teams, said he would ex· I , tend hiS maxim Of "the future iS nOW" tO bil new · post. . "I have specific goals and objectivei that I will ,• b'e announcing with the council very soon. I have ' ,..ot taken this job as an honorary position," he ,. said .. ,, On the lighter side. Allen said he agreed with a , lriend who urged him to take the job and work for \he federal government . ., "The bureaucracy doesn't move the ball that " well, plays tough, physical defense and puntl a . lot," Allen quipped. \ New le~gue set LOS ANGELES t(AP> -President. of five . Western universities have agreed to form a new NCAA Divilioo II football league to be known as . tbe Western Football Conference. . The acbooh ar:e Cal State Nortbrld1e; Cal Po- . ly <San Luis Obispo); Cal Poly (Pom09a>: the · Ubiven~y of Santa Clara and Portland State Vnlvenit.y. Wblle some of the schools compete 'tn an already established conference in _~el' sportl, eacb la an NCAA Division u football lDdeptndent. A IPC*esman for the preaidenta said tbe WFC . llM = academic ttandardl in excet1 ol thoH ... • .~f.lt WM t:.t~:l:~~t other uniYertW• oa tbe ., Mme levet will have the opportunity to Join. It's official-Jefferson a Packer EV AN CHALMERS Leads Laguna Beach GREG SELBY Newport quarterback . CRltEN BAY, Wis. <AP> ..:.. The Green Bay Packer& completed their trade for John Jefferson Tuesday when they announced a1reement with the all-pro receiver's agent on a aeries or four one· year contncta. Jefferson. who with James Lofton wlU Jive the Packers one of the most potent wide receiver tan· dems in the National Footb.,it Leafue, was expect· ed to arrive herf' today to sign the agreement. The trade with the San Diego Chargers, an· nounced last Thursday, was conditional on the Packers signing Jefferson, who had not reported to the Chargers this year because of a contract dis· pute. The first announcement of the trade said the Packers would pay the Chargers undisclosed future draft choices plu~ other considerations. Green Bay Coach Bart Starr said Tuesday the Packers wUl send Aundra Tbompaon, a tlfth·year receiver, to the Charier• as partJaJ compen11t1on. Starr declined to specify the draft cholen in· volved. t ·'The basic agreement ls a aeries of four one· year contracts," Bob Harlan, the Packers' cor· porate 8.9slstant, said "We've acreed to eliminate the last three years of the contract John had with the San Diego Chargers. "Everything that will be signed by John tomorrow will be In line with the contracts we have with our other players," Harlan said. "It was very important that we keep hls contract In line with those of our other players." That apparently means that Slusher had agreed to the Packers' demand that they not pay J efferson more than they are paying Lofton. The Saving Place ... MSC-49 Deer Hunters'. Model #5100 19.97 Prtm_. Lantern HUNTING AND FISHING LICENSES SOLD IN MOST SPORTING GOODS DEPTS. 29 • 4 7 Model-4500 "Standard'' double mantle (naHegulo- ted.)' Primus• Ouldoonman Two bUmel regulated P<opone stove 24.97 9.97 • F1HM'7tt end tmmun111on .,, '°'d tf' ttt1C1 comphen• wtth Fedtfal. S•ato Olld locol i..r. AH _..._. 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No drlllirQ. 22.88 ............ VQJd tddt lkld:Jd ~ ........ tllelde. lueded Hunting CMov" Sueded cowhide polm, nylon bock ond fully lined. 14.97 .,_,, .. """""9 Knh 3" atolriess steer toldlrQ lock blade. Sheath. R44-M62 4.4 Mag Shells 20 Ct ...................... 8.87 R357·M·3 357 Mog Shells 50 Ct. ................... 8.87 Orange Vlnyt Safety Vest Blaze Ofonge tor out- dOofs. One size ms all. 39.97 Cdelt'fk ""'-Eosv·to-llght and qulcic heating 5000 BTU, Remln9fon • Nlgh-veloc:tty Center-fire Cortndges High speed. soft JX)lnt Box of 20 cartridges. Medlmoller CUl9S up to 20 lt)e. meat. lmoqCNpe ...... f.4. Available At Your Local Kmart ~' Store •t I 'W' . ', .. . . A•"ICAN L!AGUE Angela 1, White So• O CMICMM> CALl""NIA .. ,... .., ... Le,..,..," • O 1 t lettlqiu. cf • o o o l•rmr4. a 4 O 1 o e11tlflll, u • o o O ~,. • 0 0 • ,.,,, rf , 0 0 0 L111I~,.., 3 0 0 0 layktr,.., 3 o o Uvltllfo, rw 0 0 0 t Gtkll 2b 2 ~ cf : ! : : l't,.;11t.c o 0 O N....,i rf ) O I O OOW"lft11. If 0 0 -.1111a~."" I O t O Harlow, II 0 Morrlton, -J O I o Cmpn,., Jib ) 0 I 1 Alft'IOft, • J oo o konlri, 1b Joo o Tote!• • 0 • 0 Tot.It JI I l 1 "'-~· ...... Clllcaoc> 000 000 000 O CellfoNlla 010 000 001C -1 I! -Grlell, ........... OP -C.lltotnla 1 LOa -Oii< ... 7, Celltotnl• 4 28 -- rl-. SB -Grltll t. Cllk ... ,, " • ... •• to Bau1T111"" Cl.. ~tl • , I I ' 1 c ....... M-M(W, 1-11 '"" ' 0 0 ' 1 A-CS, II) v, 0 0 0 0 0 T -!:JD, A -lt,12'. ....... v-.... c.......... oos 001 ...... 10 0 Ht• Y-120 100 000--4 11 I BtrUr, Mol9 ltl ...., 01.u; RltNl11, M<G-'f ..... *'-· La~ ... and Cer-W-11trhr «•71. L-•1 ... olll CM ) S- Mot199 W . a.-U ..... _._..,. ......... , SHttle 000 000 JOO-J 1 0 Toes 000 100 010-2 1 o Clo . Rawl., Ill -Buttino; Bute...,., Comer C7I -~0-W-Cl•y C 1-4) l autci.r 10.ll. s-•-•ev <•>. A-12,121 .. ..,... 2. "-Ima ' MlnMIOIA llOI 000 OOC>-1 C I IC enst1 City OOI 020 00•-2 1 I Arreyo, O'C:-"" v-..... (ti -WY" ... '; Gwra -Wtlllan W-G11r• (~I. L-Atnl\'O CM ). A-1',JIO. , ...... 6, on.wt I Oelroll •1 201 m--.. I 1 hlllrnore 210 -ooe>-3 • o UJdur, Ceppurello 121 and Perrt•ll. l'l•nt9an, s1 ... erll4) encl Grtllam. w- C-ullo (I~). L-S-•tt ().7) HR- Oefrolt, Wocllenluu 1 171. A-t,tOS. .,_.. ......... . Mllw•uU. 002 no >01-10 10 o I OS ton 010 321 MIO-I I J l Vvcltovlcll, ~nerd <•>. l!Hlarly <•>. "'-" (7) ---.; Ojoele, Slenloy 14), CIHr (7), 81.w11tneler Ill end ~•n. W .J Flnoer1 CS·)). L-CIHr Cl·Jl. HR- Mllwa.a ... 51...._ Ct•l. BoslCWI, Pitrer ftl, EvtM lltl. A-",JU. "lltSTOAME A'tl,at•Mftl Otlll-020 000 000 000 1-J 11 I T0<0ftto 100 010 000 000 0-2 t 1 Un.SenireOd, -'-171, Owclllnko ct>, Beef'll Ill --....n, Stieb, Mcle119hlln (10), LH I (1)), ~ IU) end Mer1IN1 W-8Hnl (t-1). L-l.-11·111 HCIONOAOM• A'••.-....,.2 -011 0»-4 s 0 Tor 10 000 -101-l I I c llY #ICI Ho<rlll; ~. Mwrrrr -~l-""'d Wlllll. W-M<C•llY 11W l. L- ~ ..... r c:i.m. HR-O..-, 5-on<er co , Teronto. MtfWl'p 1141. A-IS,,,., NATIONAL LEAGUE Giant• 5, Dodgers 2 LOS A .... LES SAN ,.AMCISoCO •lll rlt Ill •111r"1111 su,Jb Lenclre•,<1 Monclay,rt M•rPll ... Cettlllo,p Foot••"1 G..-vey,lb ....... " GIOerJer,Jlb Scloscl•,c Rwuell,H R.Smltll,lltl wetu .u J llftMton.-i T"°""u,M Vtleni:lt.1> Mll<llell,rt Tolalt S 1 I 0 MC>f'9en, 211 S 0 2 1 5010 C.bell,lb Sl10 J 1 I I Cl•rk,rt C 1 1 0 I 0 O t 0 .Evt"',JD J 1 J I 0 0 O 0 Hor-.tt C I 2 3 0 0 0 0 Je.Mrtn,<I I 0 0 0 I 0 1 1 All••,< 'O O o J 0 1 0 L•Mtlr,u J 1 1 0 )0 0 0 ~:.1,=:: ~ g g ~ ~ g ~ g Mlnton.p 1 O O 0 I 0 0 0 0000 I 0 0 0 000 0 '0 '0 ~;; ~ Toi.11 n st s IC-. ......... LOS A_... 000 101 000-t Sen ir:-rencttco 002 110 1~ E -~rT'ero. OP -San ,rencltGO I. LOii -LOI ~ t , S.. ,ran<ltco t. Jtl Belt..-, Le,,,,,_ Jll -O. EnM. HR -Hemdon Ul, ~ 1101. Sii -Je. M•rlln, ...,,_,, S -~llMWI 2. LM ....... IP Veteniuele CL, 1).S) • CHllllo \.'> l'onl•r I~ '-•,,.. ... M • I!• 1a IO 1 • ' , • 2 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 J Wlllbcln !W, M l ·~ 1 1 1 s 0 Hollend ,., 0 0 0 Minton cs. l1l 2 o o o 1 HOiiand ptkllecl to 2 belttn In '"" tlh. WP -V•leftzlale, W1111s-on T -J· 11 A -21.M •••• P ...... J Cln<lllnttl 000 020 11•-> I I SM Oie90 000 •t 010-2 I J S..vor, l'IJ1c9 Ill, H..,.... l'l -Berry, Ekllet~. S11ow m . """''""" m -K en11ect\'. W-:>t•ver CU ·2l. L- Elcllel ....... t 1•7). S-HIHnt C 11 l A--C,7 .. .._.,.,. ...... Atlente 000 000 ~ l O HowltOfl 102 to0 00.-J 12 I Perry, --...Sien CS), Monl•f1n<o 161. G•rtler (I) and °'""911, 5"111CWI end ~ W-~ (1M). L-"9rry C7_.I. A-72,,.._ ............. , 11'1111-i,Na 100 000 I00-1 s 2 Molrtrttl .. 011 1111-4 10 , •11tll"9fl. aNMUr 4'l .... a-; R09tn -C•t'Wr W-llOQ11n (11-1) L-R11lllv«1 111-41. ... _,,....,_ ..._ ......... Pltlaltvrvl\ 014 .. 000-S t 0 H-'I'-010 .. 100-3 10 0 "'*'· Ct\R "" ScUtTY m •"" Pitne. Scott, s.r..-m. LMCll <•>. OrO>Co m t11cll S1HrM, W-tlllbr 16·>1. L-Scoll 14.101. Hit-•• Vo.-11, Klnom•n 1111, Maullll C•I. Pitt...,.,,., T~ton 1131, A-4,US. C-•.c;.,....1 St. LOUii 010 OJO 000.-J t 1 Cllk... 000 010 011-4 6 1 '-"-..,.. m. LltMll Cll, Slllrlty Ct1 ..,. ...,_; llH, Mef1lftal (I) -Dnls W-Menar. (Ul. L~lfteH ll·J). HR- ClllC ... , -...rm. OVrtlmm m . A-4.~1. Top 10 , ............. , AIMltlCAN L!lMUa • A• " " ""' u 11at0<t. ao.ion ta at D 114 • lltll. Seattle ., -41 tOS -R H~, Ot111...a W Jlt M 111 IP lf.ctor•"· .. attte n ,., c.J 111 .m ••mr • ....., ,. m u tti .:ra. Heroro..., Cllvo•-M ., 40 t4 .m C C-. Mllweull.. .. Pt 6f ltl II• Olvltr. Tean •4 m .. 1.22 .Jll Mumphry, New Y-11 110 41 " .J10 AlmOll, CN<... tJ JH 0 .. . .. .._ .. _ Arm••, 0-lclnd, JI; T!Wln\H, Mllw ..... , JO, M11ff•Y. hltlmort, It; l!Vtftl, CMtt .. . 1•; Orkll, ..... 1•1 L1Ulnt1al, '"''"°• ta. ._ ..... ,. AfMe•, OM.land, ... Mll"tY, klll-, ... Otlhlle, Mllw-.. , 67; Wll'lfl91f, Hew York, u . Event . llO&IOll, 60, Mu•!>'IY· Oell•ncl, Ml; Peel-It, s.attlo, liO, 8 ... II, Tun .Ml I PMitltl9t Ct.,_..._,, Cloer. Botion, •1. Toner, &oston, •t; Gulctry, N-York, 11.J; C-r. TeHI, 1·2; D. Mertl,_1, aa111..-., 1>--4; Vuclt...,kll, MllwaukM, l).C; McGteeor, lelll....,., 11·•. "'"'r "· 0e1ro11. •~s MATIOftAL L•Aou• OAa • M ~ MUIOO, Pt~ 74 UI rt • .Ml ROM, Pllll-1()1\I• •s 1'0 ., "' .m Conupclon, Clnctnnell ts m 56 120 .Jl7 11.-er, o.lllitn tJ JM 41 111 .m l•OOlll, N-York .. "7 JI I03 tu Grlttey. Clnctnn.MI '1 lS7 St 1U 114 O.wton, Momre•I n aS4 M 111 .J14 Durellm, Clllc-76 2lt U 90 .Jll A Howe, HOUJlon t1 .n. 41 101 .210 Buckner, Chk:eoa t3 J71 f1 II• 101 M-R-Scllmldl. Pllll-lphlt , JI; Oewt<ln, Moflt· , .. 1. u ; l(tnomen. N ... YoO<, 21; ""'*" Cln<lnnt ll, 20; H...,,,.lclt, St. Loult, 17. .. _ ....... l'oslor, Cln<ln11ell, 10; Scllmldl, Phllaoe1p11le, IJ; Buck,,..., Clllceeo. u , c ... cepclon, Cln<lnNlll, U ; eerier, Moftlr .. 1, .. Pttc-, Ct O.CklMt) • Seevt r , ClncinneU, 1l·2; C.,llon, Pnlladelplll•. 12·•. Cemp, Allanle, t .J, •evu, DMtan, t..J: Rhoden, PllUllllrQll, I->. H11me, c1ncln11•ll, a.J. Veleu•lt, O....n. 1J.t: 1(-r. Houston, 1-4. Pomon1 Fair TUHOAY'S •HULTS 11191 .. , .............. , APPALOOSAS "ltST •ACE. S111rl0119S. Mr. BoleroJtl CP.,llnel UIO U.0 2.10 lllo Choll IAqulnol UO t IO Ev'• Gold Doller I Ontiveros) 2.10 Al.., receo· Mtrll. Five, SPottlCI w .. .,., Time. 1·011/S. U UCACTA CHI peletJ U.SO OUAaTE•HOttHS H<:O..O ltACE. lSOyenh. Lady WIM (Clleved 1'.90 •.Ml 190 •.«> 1CO uo Corrinne, S•oal Flrey Conwt CPtullnel Mr. l(Hk• CHertl Alto reced· Oltkoy'• Men, Twin s.twty Time: 17.«I. TH tao •ACE. COOyeros. C•ll Me Nick CCreaoer) • co 7.20 uo Tiny '"•II (Hartl 4.00 4.20 Sticky Flneers CBroolltl 7.IO Also raced ~ Hlofl. Bao ven ""'-· Fl•mln9 Cat, Big Wink, Alem0> Flrlt, Supreme Nellve. Time : 20.10. U EXACTA (Ml peletW&.00. TMOltOUOMl•EOS ,OUaTM ltACE.61111'1.,._ Cons<rlptlon C°"'9el •Ml 120 UO Never CllelleflOe CStelll1191) 6.00 ..00 No Duk• ,.._, C.00 Alto r«ICI: II. Ne*Mle, Br<rl Reil .• Klrtlot IClet,E ITraplto,P.C C-. Time; l:tJVS. ~"'™ •-ce. • ,.,,.__ Skyrlcte CCrwl J emn w. CJlnl Jeckle Oo IC .... 11 .. 1 AIM> •-Tip Crow, Eoole, G_,,-s "-Time. I IU/S. SIX TH •ACE. 6 lur10n9s. S Ml 1CO 2AO C.21) 1• ,. Z~rttl. 511-aN Brion! hie 11'\eftal 2.MI UO 1.llO Tlp't AllO• C'-sl 1 CO 2UO Fresh H-ICl'\ltl >.OO Alto rec.ad: RIO Llncta Flo, Our 011<0 Oen, Beotnnlno N.w. Time 1 114/S SEVENTM •ACE.• IUf'loftgt. Ol1<re1r-ry IMeNI) >.oo 2.MI 1.10 Llttle karat C5pencer) >.40 1AO Piece o · c-. CRelllyl J.00 AIM r~ICI R-" Belle, l'M 1>M'9 FIM, Marlo o. .... ux, Nodla Rrt, COCM Mlstr-. Time: l' 114/S. UGMTM •ACE. I I/It mllet hco hco CWlnl-l •.CO t.IO UO Fl90Nllell ICrvll 4.20 1 ll0 P•• rlu <Or'le9e I uo AIM> reuct: NII•'• lttu, Oanelle' H-. E•ole't !Ast. Ptrty SM'6t Time: 1 4'4/S. U EllACTA (4-7) palet "51.SO. MIMTMltACE.tf11t._ Vt lfl SI•• (Herrlt ) • co 4.00 100 Honor JOhn l~s> 3.00 2.410 Felcon l(lno c Rosaret ) 2 60 Also recect. Toole'• ICnlofll, Herc11lotft Jr • GrMk Ao19, Bold Telte, Mllllltt Dull.e T lme: I • lOJ/S. TENTH •ACI!. t111r9-S. O<H n Chemp (~I) JI Ml 7.. 4.JO V•lentlne L.w I~\) t .IO 4.CO Gtr11tld <FrNl..-1 4.JO Alto rec.O: W.W. So Far. 111"11"9 Ee.ho, Merkel Cllemp . Time· I IOllS SJ EXACTA (441 paid ~ SO $l PICIC SIX U-2·1-4-~I paid u .nt.o with I) wlnnlno ll<keb cs111 '-te•l. u Piek SI• contoi.11on palO UI tO •1111 Cl5 wlmtno lie ••ts lllve """*>> llLEVENTH ltACE. SY> l11tlonf1. Marble Court CMenel UO •.OO 100 M11•'1"*'-" IHerrlt) 4.20 100 llillotlvlly CC-tl 100 Alto raclCI: El Oor-Bob, OIKO Letll, Beeu Bl-. Totollet, "'"-Broti.r Time · 1 04- TWELl'Tit ••ca .• ,.,,._. Clllc 's Cedet (G41merl 21.00 t .00 S.JO ~llawm,... P,._. ILAQ.,.l 3.00 100 NHrlle CR-) t JO Alto •Keel Pro-ue Out. G•ll•lll Plo•wro. Aeve•n RI.,.,, PIM._ ..... Pro•lne. Time : 1; 11 SJ UCACTAtl1-4l palcl'17t.OO. Atle.-.C. -10 .. 10 Hollywood Park TUllSOAY'S ltHULTS , ..................... _.....) l'laST UC•. One mlle pece. Ge11's OWlt CWlllltnu) I.JO 4.IO 400 Mollltf,.., Oreem CMomeoue) U.IO 10.llO wtm.rMwll I Meler l 16. JO Alto rec;ad: Andy's ldlNI, Cec-Ollef, Tiie C_,,, Awerd, Oukk Letty, The ....... Tlmt Fw Elvlt, Howdy Scoet. Time: 2:012/S. ti axaCTa CHI palet $1" 10. Play Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS ... F\A\NS COUNT ~ A L-OT MOR'E 'THAN 1?>RAWN ON MOST R~COVERY SHOTS ANO IHE. NUMDlB"' ONE ~ev ' IO P INO 'fOUF\. e> \N GOOO wo ... ~INO ~0-~ le "TO t-o<.EEP VOUR liMO,-IONS . UNOEP. CONTROL. Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT,Wedneaday. September 23, 1981 I llCO.D ttAC•. Orie mlle -. •• Mt .. tlle Alire Uteli.. I t • t... 1 liO MltltrOCL..,..Nl •• 4.JO •. Helell Cltllwrefl) ~-Al .. r__,. T91141ftdtMK, JIM Me, ,,_.. 1••11< Me-. ""411'• flMGll>•· aur.....,, .. Y. '"Mt CemlllQ. Winnie One Time Time: 1:011/S TMtaD llAC8.0ne"lllol*• Olen Inn lltutllltfl It.CD 1 • UO T.,.1e111 c••• 1.co •.«> J-• """""" c ..... ,. , .. Alst re<.H. Velde't l.H, aorel•, Slly •w~IUllol. OIHal 1!11tlM , Lhbon LN, Glemt11r I.Alla. Tim•: 2:tt ti aXACTA (M l IMllO Mn 00 ,OU.TM ltACa. One mllt troL ,r .. felll Mlchele (LOflOO) 1J 60 t liO 4.00 kte't MIM!oft ( .. Yl•H) S • ).40 Rip Sii.,., Cllltf',_.) JOO A l•• ••<•ti. Rene Ex11reu, Etan O'lmer.,..., MeHl•ll, Gutltef, 511..- ROCIM'f, Cheri-Hawk. Tlmel 1'cat. "'"'"•ace One m1 .. -• Dornlnelor H-r Cleyleu) it,oo s Ml c lO Golda Meir (SlltfT..,) t .00 UD Lo0tn'1 Orum CSlle<r..,l t.40 Alto raclCI: "-le• Gin, Ancty't )1i1119H, Popl•r OrHm, O•ll•uOll, 0 I( 't R11Uy, l r91'1tll- Tl'"4: 1. "'"· O EXM:TA Clo.st ... let ..-.JO, SIXTM •ACa. One mlle Pt<•· Tiie Gel'll CVtll_l......,..l c .0 l.JO JM Stalker (...,_,_,, J 00 UO ltOH N . (Sher,..,) UO Alto r•<•CI : 8 ryen, Bl111 Summ er, Hl9hltncl Byrd, Hal Cherie, Hit ..... R11n Timi· l ;OO. s•V&MTM RACE.Onemll•Pt<•· • M••<leno IL.onool 7t.OO 1'.IO 11.00 Cenlt M-(TGWnle'fl 4.MI JM FKlllon Ad!We C8Mletl S.IO Alto rec.s. -I H_... Poplar, Recine Hee rt, Altlllltft Wre11, Nallv• werrlor, Open HOUM, Retell For Ille Sky . Time: 1.•. JJ ••ACTA 11-.1 ... let Ul0.00 '2 ,IClt SIX (2+~10.J•ll pela '1,110.00 wlll> llve wtMlnv tlcll.eb Ciiva "°4'Mt). U Pk lt. Sia contOlellon peld M,S,IO wllll I .. wl,.. 1'111'19 ll<km lfour -->. I! IOMTM ltACE. One mile pace. ROMlllt H-ver CBeyl .. •I S.10 4.40 l CO '•I• Tru1'1 CTretchlordl 11.20 S.00 Jeremlell'1 Boy CTeilMrl JO.to AIW rec;ect: Alm N Fire, R.,..., Chene., CrulM•••Y, Su9er Sue, Looking Gleu, S<orl11111 Drive. Time · l :OUfS. U EXACTA C .. l l paid Ult.00 NINTH •AC•. Ont mll•-• Adept Boy Cl(uef)lorl 11.00 S.00 liO T.., Percenltf cs1..,..,....,,, 1 20 uo MIOlllf Spry IAubinl J.00 .. Also re<H: A,,.., COii knlgllt, JohnMy Tollver. s.ntll't Twlt*le, Aum Time, Hen· Clover. Time : 2 01115. U SXACTA l~l paid $1Clt SO Tl!NTH ltACE. One mlle pace. T'--1Cro9Nnl 1000 •. lO J.MI Olmanle H_, CO.-.) S.IO 100 Royel E-rd CAlll>lll) 1.MI Also reced: Semlnol• Clllef, Bound ""' GIOf'Y, Mr Gr.,._m Boll, Cloer Nlol\I, -..1u Farwesl, L• P- Tlme 2.02:1/S. U EllACTA (1-101 pelet Ml.CO AllenOanc• -•.•D. Paclflc-10 •taJltlJ~• •USMINO LEAOE•S ... .,_ ......... use ., -. Rl90j , ASU 41 * Nelton, UCUI Jt 143 W .. lllot'I, ASU JI 201 Brown, Of'990fl 70 ao La ADI NO PASSE RS 0.- A\'lo. 140 1$10 121.S 100.S ..,., Alt. C-. .,.._ Tl>I .... Slngler, OSU 63 J1 SI• ' "'' I RemMy, UCLA ., 27 311 s IU.O Paoet. ASU •' » '" • nu Marur, USC 1• IC 1t7 I llo.I Cowen, Wuhlnoton 10 13 1n 1 171 • L•AOIMG 1t•CEIV••s ltec ... Y• TOI l'orct, Cellfornl• 10 U6 1 White, Slenfon:t U )63 I Slmmoni, OSU U 211 7 Portee, Cellloml• 11 11' 0 Mowr,Or-11 163 2 TOT,;L O""EMH 51"91••. osu Allen, use Ful<ller. Artr- El••Y, Sien!°"' P-1.ASU .... ,. Y• •1 560 62 ... IA SIO It .SS .. '10 High school ranking• di' ... , ..... ~. 0-...... •o U2.0 Ul.l ms JOSO 1.E .... CH l I• J. St. P.,1 CJ.01 11' 1 LOS Anlli CJ.01 110 4. "-'-111 Ve"" CM l Ml6 S. Blsl\ep Amel (J~) 71 •· Loyola IJ~l 70 7.M ..... CH l .. '· FOfllant 11·1) 40 9. St. l'r-1112.01 JI 10. StfVlle CMI JO Cl',....,.,,. c ..... .-. I. E-renr.• 11.0l J. L ynWOOd 12.01 3. Oowrwy IJ~l c. Loar• IH I t . •1tellClt CM l •· e 1 oor-11-11 1. Foothill (2.0) 1.EI M-11-1) t VIiia P-11~1 lt.C..--.CMerCM> Cl'C-•IC--• I Min ion VlejO 12.0) 1 Pl111X (2~1 l. SI 8emerd 12.0l C, Ceplltr-V•ll•y I I I) S Vtlencle U~l •. Artetle 12.0) 1 L• MlrtcM Cl·ll I. Cll•l Bree-Ollnelt Cl·ll LA Qulnte I 1.1) 10 An-Im C0.21 THIS WEEK' SCHEDULE Community college ICO 122 IOI .. • ~ • ... ., ,. 12' 11' .. .., IO Ml • • • JI Frlclley s..te ANI Vt. Golcten We9' ail 0•ell98 Cont Coll-. SelurO.y -SecklteCM<k •I Or-Coett C.oll-. High achool (tlltlfMl•t7:• ............ > Tll11~1dey -San C-• VL EttM><le et ...._port,Haf11or; V-lt ail lnrlM; I.A Helllfe VL s-tMlck et $Mlle ANI ·-·· l'rlclley -Wettmll'U•r ti N••Porl Harbor; M*r Del et LOS Allot Cl); Laoi- aH<ll et EISlnon; CYIH'HI v1 Ck..., Vltw ail W.~; ~ Hlllt vt. Un'-"'ty et lrvCM; St. ,.,, vs. "-talll V•lley et C.rrltol; Lot Am'91M •I Hvntlnvton lle«ll; C•ron• dtl AM• et Ceplllreno Vellt'f, l!ClllOfl et l!I ModeNI; El Toro te M ....... Viejo; MertNI n. F·Mlfllll et T\19tlft. ..,........, -Le Alemltos vs. C•te !MM et .. .._.... HerllW/ OM If-vi. w.-. Dr .... at ltvllle; II_. el OeM Hlllt Cl!. ·., W•ter poto CDMMUIOTV ~UH Or .... CMlll , .. c.,.._1 laf'O ........... Or-.neeC-1 I • 4-11 Cypren I I t t I Ortlll• , •• ,, t<•rl"f : Wtllmt 1, McC.nnkll I, L.tlo9-t. Mtlter<ll I, IMte J, O' °"""911 ' LaWlltM7,C-... -• .,_....,~ '"-l•tell Wlltoll t 0 1 >-1 COf'Of'ltGlelMer 2 0 J ........ kw•"' o..,_. CoroNI clltl Mt• t<orlng: TeylOf 1, ,.....,.. 1, Jec.o«Jt 1, lmClen\lno 1. 0c-v1tw 11. ~ .... ,...., 11 kenll'to.to1..-. Octtfl View t t t ) t 0 1-11 L-Bo«ll POiy J 2 t t 2 0 0-12 Oc••n View tcortnv: Mon,. •· Ken J, T-lker I, McGerr'9* 1, Moellef 1. THIS W£EK'S SCHEDULE College Frldey UC lrviM vL UC S... 0'990 " Ml•• Mer Cc p.m.I. S.t11r.S.V -UC 1 rvine el UCLA C 111. Community college Toda y -Selllt ... ,,. •I S"ectctl•OU• ().)()). . Frldey -Or•-Coa•1, S.OOlebe<ll ti Ml. SAC T0<.1rname111; Golden Wetl et Cue•l•T__...... S.l11nloey -Ml. Sec T--· Cwetle Tour..-! High ac:hool Ctll ...... lltl~."'·-~-· W•d....O.y -L-Boe<ll Wll'°" •I Coron• oat Mer; Merine el C•Pl•treno Ve lley; Ltltftfood el i.-"OllN Boecll; "- leecll Pofy VL 0c .... View •• Goldefl w.st C•l. Th11rlodey -N-por1 Her-. C..-cllal Mer. E.11ancle, lrvlne, ~ Beecll M • Sou111 CoHl To11rnemen1 •I Ne•DOfl Herbor. Frldey -So11lh Cotll Tournem enl, Coron• oe1 Mar •I B_.. T...,.,......m. Stlurctay -Souln Coa11 To11rnemen1; BuerwtToumemen1 TranHmerlce Open ClltSH,rNCkee) ~ .............. Pel•• McNemtre Clef. Jofln Fltioor•ld. •·•· t·•· •·1; Pel Dupre ctel. Harold Solomon, .. 1, ... ,, 7-4; Phll Dofl1 def. WoJtell FllMlk, •·1, ....... ,; VllAY Amrllr•J def Nick S.vtano, ... ,, M , ... ,; Tim Gvlllll-. --Torn GulllkliOfl. M , W ; _,_ l(rlek oat. Mtll Mllc""ll, •·>. M ; 11111 k enlon def. Scott McCain ... 2. •~; John Stctrl ctel Mttt An9er, 1-S, .... H , John McEnroe Clef. lruce M .. -. M , .. I; Merty Otvlt oet. 800 LllU, ... 2. J.1 ; 0..... Mayer Clef. Vince Yan Petten .... 3. 7·S; Flotcoe T.,,,.., def. 1'eler Fleming, 1·S, t-3. Men's tournament let O-.•, Swltu<1• .... I l'lnlllwMSI ...... 8 1orn Bot11 Oii MeU Wllendor, .. ,, .. I; Victor Pecci def R•Y -r• ... 1 ... t; Menual Ortnlff Clef S.ltn Terouy, ~ 1-4, Toma .. Smid Oii Jtft Norboek, .. ,. t.O; RlcerdO C-Clei. Pevel Slotll ... ,, 1-4, •-1; Jo,...Lult O.mlenl dsl Slanltlov 111,_r, W . •·•. • l , Yvan d11 P uqul•r del Paolo Bertot11c<l ... 1. 1-s. High school women l..etMM ..... 11, .._. v .... ,. SI ..... Wiiiett CLBl Oel. Defpot, t~. def, Ro..,.,.,, .. 1, clef -In, M ; SIUrm CLBI _, 1-4, "'°· ... ,. Jencle-.. 1 ... 1 ... 1 ~ Smllh-C-ey (ll l Clef. Gl,..llre<kloy, 6·0; def. v .. Trenne, •.O; Oel. Oom•· Brownlno. .. J; Forltetdl~rey CLBI -· .. 1, ...0, .. J; Hollen6-Sc:,,.rut•ln ILlll - .. 1 • ...0 ... 1 THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE T~•• - . How90r1 Heroor •I a. ... riy Hlllt Ct:JO). C-dsl -t i Soutll Tor· 1ence 12:•1; Wooctbtld99 •I Senl• Ana Valley Cl l. Tllurtdcly -~ H-el El Toro CJ.•>; E1unclt el Corona clltl Mer U :JOl. S.OOlebklt Ill Irvine Ol; _..,.. el Le9uM Hiii• U). F rlde• -ltvlN et~ BN<h CJ:JOI, Corona Oii Mar. lnrlNI el Wutml"sl.,. Tourna....,,. s.111rd.ty -w.stmlnst•r Tournemenl Hoble-16 National• CetOc-City, -.I ""' .... 1. La rry Peter_, CL.os Allotl; J. Allen E911w CHtwttlornal; I., Ml .. Wood CA"9tlft, TH••) ~ ........ 1. Hol>leAlter, Jr. (CtplJtr-le«lll; J. Enlo Oeme (Recite, Brulll, i Jef1 Allor IC'eolsl•-leech! NASCAA point IHde,. , ....... Sept..J 1. OerrellWAltri. , ... t . 8ob!Jy Alllton J,111 J. Herry Ga11I J,411 c. •k 1ty """° UIS s. Terry~ J.J7S •. Otto EarMerdl •.t• 1. Jody Rldtey I,,_ •. R lc"-1 Petty I, 1'0 t. Btflll\I P-2,toM 10. o .... Men:b t,911 NASCAA money IHd•re ( ............ , I. ll~AlllMll t. Oe,,...I Weltrljt l. "kMnll ...,.., 4. ltklly Rwdd s. Otle~ . ~.._ , . ,.,,., LlrrllefN t . HtttVGft • Jottyll ....... 10. CaleY .......... _ .......... ~·. ti40 t""''r '\~ ~'\!' ~'~"~"'""'"'~\,; f\ COOL APPf'Of\CH t S PARTICUL.AAL Y ES5E.NTlAL.. ANY TIME. \HEREi'S ENOUGH Q~SS A~UNO THE e>ALL CAUS&. A "FLVEF\." FOR EXfl'MP\...Elo... IN 'THIS SITUATION A $IX-IP-ON -oR EVE.N A SEVEN -WILL.. lJ6UALLY 'TRRVE.L.. A9 f:AR AS A NORMA\.. FIVE.•\RON,_ e>UT 'TME ''HOTTtf.F\'' YOU ARE. 'HE MOR&:. LIK&LY ~ R~E "'TO ~~U>O\-<. SUCH CONStCll~R'TION IN ~aLtl~ING 'fOUF\ C ue>. t fJ.3 J PGA atet11Uc1 , .............. , ICIDltlNO LIAOlllll I. TOfrl l(fte, ... k J. Brue• Llotr.k•. 70.10. J ltt• ,......,, 70.14. • Curt.It Sit_,., 10.61 s. Jerry Pele, 70.67. AVEltAOll O•IVINO OISTANCI! I. Oen Pohl, V't.2. 2. Freet C-lts, 27' 1 ). Tor-n Pul11•r. 114.1.' F11o1..1y Zoeller.,,.' s em SanOar, nu D•IVINO P .. tCIMTt.OE IM ,Al.WAY 1. Celvln ......... 111. 1. Miiie Relet, .751 I, 1111 "•"· .752. 4. Jee• ReMer, ·'" s Larry Nelta11 •. 740, O•aaNSIM ltl!GULATIOM I, Celvln ""'8, 721 l . Jkk Nickl_,., .71•. J. BNCe Lletl.11.e, .7Clt 4, Torn l(li.t, .702. S Jol!MyMllter,."7. AV•ltAOE PUT"n PEit aOUNO I Torn w-. JI ti. 1 Al•n T •pie, :rt ro J. MO<rls H ... lllly, 11.14. •. F•""k CCWI-, :rt.17. S. Ttt,.., ._,, 21.'3 • PE•CINTAO• 0 .. su ..... a• HOLES 1. Bruce Llotr.k• •. m l . J etry P•I•. 21• > Torn WlllliOfl, .JOt c Rey Fl-•. 107 \ Tom Kite, .205 •AOLE L•AOE•5 I. (lie) L-rd T~. LOii Hlnlite end Bruce Llel.1.ke, 10. • Ill•) Bobby Wadlilnt, 8otlby Clampett, Terry Olelll - Bruce Douol•u. t. ll•Oll LEAOE•S 1 Tom l(lle, :Ml. 2 Vence He.mer, UI J M•rk Lye, nt. 4. O•ve Ek llelber119r, n7 S Curtis Sir..,..,""- l'RllE MONaY Ll!AOEltS I. Tom kite, 13.SS,12•. 1. Flay Floyd, ~1.t1•. J Tom Welson, ~UMI ' 11•..ce LleUke, $»4,ttl. S Helo ll'Wln, S27t,.,. t 8111 R099n, ivo.•11 7. Jerry PM•, ut1 ... 1. I. Cr•lt Sladltt, UOS,11'. t . Curtlt Slrengo, $200.903. 10. L.trry H•l$00, '1'3,>42. Women'• volleyball c.--Sente Cltr• def. UC lrvlne. 1s-11, 1~13. l~IJ. COMMUNITY COLlEGI Lo"' Beech crw c o11eoe "°' Orenoe Coatt ColleQe, 11-IS, I~•. 1S-IO, IS-10 MIGMSCHOOL trvlneOlf. El Toro. I,,_., 14-1', 1s-10. IS... N ... port Hert>or dsl. Coslt -... IW, •~u. 1~10 Ellencle dlf S.001-k, IS-J, ls-4, IS.. THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE College TOO•Y -UC lrvlne •I Ca l Slate 1..0> ........ 11 JOI. Frld•Y -Unl.,.,.lly of San Frtne:IKO el UC lntlne 17'1111. " Community college 'Tllurlodey -GolOen West el EI Cemlno CJ:Jlll; ra1199Coesu1 S.nle Monica (Jl. Friday -Golden We>t, Orenoo Coesl .i Golclen-Toumement. St111rd.ty -Sactctl-k el St nl• Ana Tourna..-1. High school Tod•'f -La9un• Beech •I Glend•I• Tourne..-. Woodbridge el G•rcten Gr~ U.atll. Tllurldty -L.t OUlnle at OceMI View (7); New-1 H9'tlor el El Toro 13 UI; Ett.n<le et Co.-Cllel Mer U:Ul, ~lelMKll. el '"''"* CJ:Ul, Wocldllrldlle•I'-'' Ill Selurctey -Oce"" View, N•wPOrt Herl>or, lrvlne 11 Wes11nlntltr Tournemenl; Lao\IN Beecll at G-Tou,.,..menl CroH country rankings Cl,+.Ahoft I. 11-.t• Ve...,; 1. Simi Velley, J Footltlll; 4 VIiie P-; S. £1 Oor-. •· U•lvff'llf'f; 7. CW-WI MIWJ •• Ht-y Park; t . T'1ouMnd Oe1t1: 10. 005 Pue«>!os- Cll' J.A a.,. 1. Meter Del; 1 Ctftyon CSt11911tJ, J. ,...,.. Ptt11, 4. Norco; S Sen Ctetneme, •· Rowland; 1. W•lnut, I . L• Cen-; '· Mor>-ltbello; 10. S.11t1n Cl .. ~AGlrlt I. U11lftnlty; L G..te Mew; I. T-....,. Otlll; 4 ...... Ill; t. N ...... ,., Ptf'll; 6. '••'8111 Veltey; 1 •....... ; I . T..slln, t lllel Wnt TorrtMe -l"IM. Cl' >-A Olrtt 1. Stn Merino; t . Walnut; J. S.11111•. •· Mire COIU; S. llllf"rOUOhS <Ridoecrftl), •• Beverly HHlt; 1. 111"'°9 ~ery; L L•t••• l eacll; • Norco, 10. Arroyo Grende. THIS WEEK'S SCHEDUJ.E Community college Frlet•Y -Or~ Coest, Sen bltQO tNM •I Fullwlott 12:•>; Mira C.la , Citrus et Stddl-lt C>l; Ge!Oen Wetl el Ce11yons ,,.. vllellonal Hlah 1chool CtN ....... efJ1t."1.•IMtMtNI Tllu......., -EltM<lt et Cot-clltl Mer, Seclct...,.k et ltvlM, N-1 H•t11or el El Toro; Merine vt. Pacific •I l rvlnt; unhrerllty at Colt• Mesa . Sttw,..y -Corolla ctel -I nvltetlelltl Cl e.m.); Dena OWall View, ~ lffcll, "-laltl Vellay •I Dena Hiiis 1111111.ileNI; Mfter Del n. S-e M Creto P-. l ------------------~-No faney gadgets.\. needed ;,~:·~ By Al.MON LOCKA8EY ,... Olliff P ........... ·-U oJ Ever since the odvent. of !.M lnte rnatlon:.l Offs hore ' R&le 1 lOR >. it's been virtually an''llc· ceptcd fuel that one has t.6'htve a new boat with all ·sorts «1f'tx·' otic materials und fancy new gadgets to win yacht races.'.' • All or which costR moneY·ind edges the sport of yachting back to the days when it >Nais a millionaire's pastime; re: &he old definition of yachting: 'lb or ~o i.tl'ntlem«>n go out ancVrace their yac:hts and one "sob" win& it. " I SO IT COMES LIKE a Math of fr es h air to have o ne gentleman brag about his hold "out designed" yacht. Tb~bor· BOATING t l It res pondent was Jim Lind~an of Balboa Yacht Club after >Nin ning the Class A division ~ the BYC 66 Series. Writes Jim i , .. "She's 46 feet long a nd grgssly ovt•rwt>i~h t Iler underwater line!> arc said lo be obeQlete (with a bustle. vet > ··There are 'no sophisticated hydraulics with the exceQtion of a h y draulic backl!ta y tightener The boom vang Ls still t h e old Clark Sweet r.-bber strap. ··There 1s not a single exotic m atcrial sail aboard -just plain old dacron and nylon. ··Her interior 1s beautifl.IL All so lid oak Two co mple te "h eads'" and th eyr1 are enclosed. A galley that .would shame any kitchen at home1 Big com Cortable over-sized bunks . Even the two pipe berths in• the fore-peak have pads. 1 • "Add a l ar ge contoured cockpit with padded seats where the ere" can relax in comfort oul or the wind. .... .. ''SHE CARRIES all this with great djgnity and 1t has never occurred to her to change.flttts as ha,·e !>O man) of her sisters She still slugs 1t out in IOR and her competitors s till dub her.-'the boat lo beat · 1 .. Don't shout about tl, but she wa!> one or the e arly on~ to boldly display her name on the s heer stripe ins tead of• ihe transom ,, "So H you spot her while •saH· ing your bright. new, shiny "Stale of the art" macbme , please give her a wide berth in passing because 1t would bl!eak her old heart if she should ever learn what has really happened to her .. Her name 1s Raider an Encson-46 Sail of Sal)ots L set Saturday, in N~wpor t Fourteen perpetual trru>t\ies "111 be up for grabs Satur.day when the Pacific Yacht. ;ind Balloon Club stages the 18th ian· nu al Sail o r th e Sabots in Newport Harbor. •: The regatta is open to all Sabol sailors under the age of 16. Yacht club members hip J!\ not required. The event nOfplfllly draws upwards of 100 boats. In addition to the perpetuaJ trophies, take-hom e trophies will be awarded to the fi!V 10 that rinish without winnitfPone or t he perpetuals. Perpetual tro phies 'tre : Reuben E . Lee. first to1 to finish ; 0 . W. "Dick" R1cblird, first girl lo finish ; Hermaf),Tate. youngest boy; Audrey Dtvvens M e morial . youngest ,.kiri ; George Strom Memorial, tlht to finish from a local yacht' 8ub : Henry Erbe, first PYBC t16llt to finish; Lou Benny, fi rst s'(jpper· n av i gal o r ; 8 o b S h f'e'I d s Sportsman Award : W.C. SChock. first out of the area b6at to fi nis h. o ... Ot her s are: lnternattonal Sabot Association trophy; ·first member lo finish: Pat ltoyce, first unaffiliated s kipptff' to finish; Sea &out Trophy1,•lfU'St Sea Seoul to finis h ; Girl i&:out Trophy, firs t Girl Sco\lt to finjsh; Dick Sweet TropbY,iMrst Horace Ensign student to ftflnh. Entries should be ma(fed t.o Race Committee, Pacific ~cht and Balloon Club, Box ''15'2, Newport Beach 92663. (: Prindle-16 race ... starts aturday0.,1 Prindle ·16 sailors liom throughout the U.S. wll.Jt~nd plenty of wind for the elgblb an- nual noUonal champioo1b1p're· gatto scheduled this yelf at Honolulu, trom Saturday lG Ocl 4. Wealher condition& otfr.the shores of WeJld.kJ are cONIWed ldeal for catamaran sailing with tht normal tradewlndJ ww.din1 up to 20 knots. 19~ Charter boat& will be anillllle for 1tlppen -aDd ~,... dttrc from the mainland. t •• Ed, left. Sandra, Leslie. Lynda and Leigh Barreto near trial's end Congress has final say Nixon libr ary OK at Duke up to nation's legislators WASillNGTON (AP) -The debate ov er the proposed Richard Nixon library at Duke University has been conducted ln academic halls so far, but Congress will have the last word. In the process. there may be renewed questions about how far the government should go in maintainlns museums hlghllght- lng the aclevement.s or former presidents. The Presidential Libraries Act, passed in 1955, gives Congress 60 days in which to veto rrYY a1reement for the establishment of such a library. The question would be re- viewed by the House Govern- ment Operations and Senate Governmental Affairs commit· tees. The members of the GQv· ernmental Affairs panel include Sens. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla .. and David Pryor, D-Ark., sponsors of a bill designed to limit the museum part of presidential libraries. In addition, the 1974 act giving the National Archives control of former President Nixon 's papers provides that they must .,. • ..._. remain in the Was hington, D.C:, area. NEWS ANALYSIS That act woul<i have to be amended to move the papers to the Durham, N C , campus wh e re Nixon attended law school. Even among Nixon's stoutest foes, there appears to be llttJe sentiment In Conaress to block the proposed Ubrary ii Nixon, the Archives and Duke reach an agreement. In fact, Pryor said opponents of the Duke facility were being "very short-sighted." Questions may well come up, however . about what Pryor called "the shrine syndrome" in presidential li braries. Probably few scholars at Duke or anywhere else would deny that the Nixon papers are a treasure trove for historians and should be available for study. Presidential libraries. however, are not just libraries. T h ey are al s o m u se ums celebrating the achievements and personalities of individual presidents. Chiles and ·Pryor have in- troduced legislation since 1979 to curtail the museum function. They have bad little support. Time cools puslona, and few Am e r icans th ink it inap- propriate to honor both Herbert Hoover at West Branch, Iowa, and Franklin D. Roosevelt at Hyde Park, N. Y. But Nixon? The Idea was too much for some Dute faculty and alumni, who araued that the bu I ldlng would becom e a m e mo r ial to the president driven from office by the Watergate scandal. Duke President Terry San- ford. however. insisted that the library would be "primarily a research facility" and trustees of the university decided to con- tinue negotiations with the former president. Nixon's attorney, R. Stan Mortenson of Was hington, declines to d1scuss the statw; of the talks. or even whether any talks are going on. Duke of- ficials have indicated they will insist that the museum part or the library be severely limited. ]tJgging family of 5 eye big reception • in Ohio At existing presidential libraries, the museum is much the biggest draw. Figures sub- mitted to the Senate Gov - ernmental Affairs and Ap· propriations Committees show that in 1979, 120 researchers and 69, 778 museum visitors attended the Hoover library. At Hyde Park the figures were 336 re- searchers and 215,582 museum visitors; at the Harry Truman Library in Independence, Mo., 219 and 219,067 ; at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kan .. 127 and 127,026 ; and at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library in Austin. Tex., 173 r esearchers and 480,521 visitors to the museum. FINCASTLE, Ohio CAPl - Over three moQths, members of the Barreto family of Naples, Fla., say they've jogged an average of 15 to 20 miles daily. It bas all been in one direction: away from home. : .. They say they've logged 1,132 miles on their jogging shoes dur· ine their 93-day trek. Their goal is to , run into the As hl and j;o)lege stadium at halftime of the homecoming football game Oot. 11 to a cheer ing crowd, col- lege officials say. E<J and Sandra Barreto, both 45 a nd physical education teachers. and daughters Leslie, 21 , Lynda, 19, and Leigh, 18, left home June 20, bo und fo r Ashland. Ohio, and have bee11,. running ever since. according to college officials. It will be the 20th anniversary of t heir graduation together. By Monday afternoon, they were in the southe rn Ohio hamlet of Fincastle and well ahead of schedule, with just 157 miles to go. "Our muscles are hard as boards," Barreto said. To go on the road, Barreto quit his job as jogging coach at the Raquel Club of Naples. The daughters, all college students. are on a break from studies. "Aside from a few calluses, everything is as we predicted be fore the run," Barreto said. Although they may run 15'lo 20 miles per day, Barreto said he is e mphasizing patience and persistence rather than speed and distance. "A day is a day is a day," he said. "We never know how a day is going to turn out. Some of these roads aren't too much fun. "But I like to tell people we take time to smell the fl owers. And we do like to see the cows and horses. the trees and grass and flowers. There's a lot to be seen ." They occasionally double back a mile or so or stop early for convenience. and are followed 1 by a van which carries supplies. including lots of linament. They jogged across the Ohio River from Maysville, Ky., to Aberdeen, Ohio, on Friday, then returned to spend the night in a Maysville church. "This kind of run is just not m ade many times by women," Barreto said. "We've worn out four pair of shoes, and we will have another new pair waiting for us at Galion, Ohio. "We are teachers but there is more than one way to teach," he said. "We concentrate on health, exercise and ~et. This is our way to emphasize physical fit. ness. Sometimes we can do a better job on the road than in the classrooms." He said some 25 to 30-com- panies are sponsoring the run. Barreto described his as a closely knit family and, because they are Catholic, they have stopped frtlquently in parish homes and churches. Barreto said he and his wife taught seven years in Ohio and 14 in Naples. He's always been a science and physical education teacher. His wife taught art and English most or those years but h as s witche d t o t eac hin g physical education. He said his daughters also are thinking of becoming physical education teachers. Congress honors rescu ~r of Jews WASHINGTON CAP > Congress has voted to give honorary American citizenship to Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish c;Uplomat who saved the liv~s of tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during World War II. Final passage came on a 396-2 House vote. Rep. J ack F. Kemp, R-N. Y .. said President Reagan will sign the resolution. Wallenberg will become onl y the second person to be so honored. The first was the late British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. W al le nberg, with U.S . cooperation. was assigned to the Swedish Embassy in Budapest, Hungary, in 1944, and helped Jews escape at a time when thous ands were being taken to Nazi extermination camps. Wallenberg was seized by Sov- iet authorities in early 1945 after the Red army drove German forces out of Budapest. Only 4 mg tar Defenders of the museum- library network say this misses the point. They argue that of course there are more tourists th an scholars and that the museums are educational in themselves. Critics s ay they give former presidents too much p ower to aggra nd ize themselves. The Chiles-Pryor bill would limit presidential libraries to 40,000 square feet , which is ~mailer than any but the Roosevelt and Hoover buildings and less than half the size of the Johnson library. Only I mg tar • Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1981 MITZI KELLER SPECIAL DIETS SLIM GOURMET C4 cs C12 Food for the Holy Days Chullah bread and honey , sweets customary On September 29. the shorar will sound, and Jews the world over will celebrate the beginning or the Jewish New Year with the observance of Rosh Hashona. Rosh Hashona begins a 10-day period known as the High Holy Days, which culminate with Yorn Klppur, the day or Atonement. As with other Jewish holidays, Rosh Hashona has its own special foods which symbolically and creatively reflect the themes of this time. For this occasion. the popular chullah bread is baked in spiralling. well-rounded loaves. to sug- gest hope that the coming year will be enriched with increased good fortune. Also customary are honey and sweet dishes. which symbolize the hope that the days ahead will be sweet and happy. This year, greet your friends and relatives with a heartfelt "L'Shanah Tova Tikasevu" - "May you be inscribed in the Book of Life for the next year" -'and offer a delicate Holiday Orange Sponge Cake and a traditional Rosh Hashona Honey Cake to sweeten up the New Year. Both desserts take on a special flavor lift with the zest of orange juice. The heavenly light and deliciously moist sponge cake is a real show-stopper, lavish to behold as well as sumptuous to eat. Orange rind and juice perk up the taste of the sponee batter. The orange flavor is further highliJhted by festooning the top with a spr inkling of con- fectioners' sugar and colorful orange slices. One hint -beat the egg yolks until thick and light· colored for that characteristic gossamer texture, but be careful not to overheat. What could be more delectable for a happy and healthy New Year's wish th• a traditional honey cake? And Rosh Hashona Honey Cake is a fetching creation spiced with cinnamon, allspice and ginger. A can or bracing concentrated oranee juice adds savory surprise to this rich and handsome cake that would do any hostess proud. Both these stunnma desserts will provide a happy ending to a Rosh Hashona dinner to re- member with pleasure for years to come. llOUDA Y OllANGE SPONGE CAKE l'h cups silted cake nour 1 'h teupoooa bakln1 pc:IWder ~teaspoon salt 6 eggs, separated 1 cup sugar t tablespoon grated orange rtnd f ., 1 cup Florida orange juice 1 teaspoon cream of tartar l Florida orange, sliced Confectioners' sugar Sift together flour. baking powder and salt. In large mixing bowl beat egg yolks until light. Gradually add sugar; beat until thick and light colored, about 5 minutes . Stir in orange rind. Blend in dry ingredients alternately with orange juice. Beat egg whites with cream o( tartar until stiff but not dry; fold into batter. Pour batter into ungreased 10-inch tube pan. Bake in 325 degree oven 50 to 60 minutes or until cake tester comes out clean. Invert pan over neclt of bottle; let cake cool completely before removing from pan. Before serving, sprinkle with confectioners' sugar and garnish with orange slices cut in half. Yield: One 10-inch cake, about 12 servings. ROSH HASRONA HONEY CAKE 314 cups sifted all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon baklne soda . 1 teaspoon gr9'1Jld cinnamon 'h teaspoon ground ginger 'h teaspoon ground allspice 'h teaspoon salt 1 cup honey 1 can (6 ounces) Florida frozen concentrated orange juice, thawed, undiluted 'h cup vegetable oil 11.l cup brewed coffee 4 eggs ~cup sugar 1 cup chopped nuts Grease and line two 9 x S x 3-inch loaf pans with waxed paper. Set aside. Sift together nour, baking powder, baltlng soda! cinnamon, 1ln1er, all· spice and salt. In small oowl, combine honey, orange julce concentrate, oil and coffee. In lar1e bOwl of electric mixer, beat eggs; acld su1ar, con- tinue beatin1 until Ulbt and fluffy. Blend ln dry in- gredienta alternately with orange Juice mixture, Fold in nuta. Pour batter into prepared pau. Bate in m degree oven 15 minutes; reduce beat tom degrees. Cos>tJnue bakinl 4.5 minutes lon1er or un- UJ cake teata done when cake tester la lnaertecl in center. Remove loaves from pans. Cool complete- ly. Remove waxed paper before serving. Yield: Two 9-inch loaves. - Fad diets can do far more harm than good. See why on Page C5 . Do·-ahe ad dessert Liqueurs give luscious taste Take the heat off entertaining with extraordinary desserts that you can make in advance. As more and more women work outside the home, this strategy is becoming an integral part· of menu planning. The desserts are luscious and do not sacrifice quality for their do- ahead advantage. Even your most discriminating guests will enjoy the hint of imported liqueurs which in· spire these desserts. The Frozen Tia Maria Mousse Cake is satiny smooth and 'chocolatey rich, and freezes well for several months when tightly wrapped. For an extra touch, take a simple shot glass, fill it with Tia Maria and place in the cake's center circle for a special sauce at serving time. A terrific refrigerator pie blends an orange custard with Drambuie, imparting a touch of unassuming elegance to your meal. And it's a snap to make if you use a frozen pie shell. The world's easiest and most elegant poundcake is laced with a Courvoisier-based sauce for a dessert which actually improves in fl avor up- on sitting. FROZEN TIA MARIA MOUSSE CAKE 3 cups ( 12 ounces > chocolate wafer crumbs l stick ( 112 cup) plus 2 tables- poons butter, melted 8 ounces semisweet chocolate broken into pieces 14 cup boiling water 1h cup sugar , divided 4 egg yolks, extra large 12 cup Tia Maria 4 egg whites, extra large •14 teaspoon cream of tartar 2 cups heavy cream Additional Tia Maria for sauce Crust: Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Lightly butter the sides of a 9x3· inch springform pan. Mix the wafer crumbs and melted butter. Press the mixture firmly against the bottom and sides of the pan. Bake for 8 minutes. Let cool. Mousse: Melt chocolate pieces with 1/4 cup sugar and the boiling water in the top of a double boiler. Remove from heat. beat in egg yolks. Return and cook over hot water for l minute. Add Tia Maria, blend thoroughly and set aside to cool completely. Beat egg whites with cream of tartar until stiff: add remaining 1/4 cup sugar gradually and beat until stiff peaks form. Fold into chocolate gradually. Whip cream and fold into the mixture, blend well. Assembly: Set a small shot glass in the center of the baked springform pan.• Spoon in the mousse mixture around the glass and fill the shell. Smooth out the top, cover with plastic wrap and freeze several hours or overnight. Decorate the cake with chocolate s havings, if desired. Or if time permits, make attractive chocolate leaves by painting the underside of fresh leaves (ivy or rose are good choices> with melted sem isweet chocolate. Place leaves on saucer and freeze. When ready to serve; remove the s pringform sides from the cake. Slide onto a serving plate. Peel away the green leaves from the chocolate and arrange on top of cake. Fill the center shot glass with Tia Maria and serve as a sauce for each piece or cake. Serves 10 to 12. •If desired, a chocolate cup can be made or purchased to replace shot glass. ORANGE DRAMBUIE PIE 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1 cup orange juice 5 egg yolks l/4 cup sugar l envelope unflavored gelatin l tablespoon butter If.I cup Drambuie ~ cup heavy cream 9-inch prebaked pie shell 2 very small navel oranges 'h cup orange marmalade or apricot jelly Mix cornstarch with 'h cup orange juice in a medium size bowl. Add the egg yolks and sugar; beat well. Pow· remaining 'h cup juice in a medium saucepan. Sprinkle on gelatin, and bring to a boil, stirring until gelatin is dissolved. Remove from heat. Gradually stir a few spoons of hot Juice into the egg yolk mixture. Then com bine both mixtures in the saucepan. Return to heat and cook 3 minutes more stirring constantly. Remove from the heat and stir in the butter until melted; add Drambuie. Cool rapidly over ice, then place in refrigerator until completely cool. Whip cream until thick ; fold the cream into the cooled mixture and pour into pie shell. Melt the marmalade over low heat. SUce the oranges, unpeeled, into very thin rounds. Dip each slice in melted jel- ly. Starting at the outside arrange the slices on top of the pie, overlap- ping each slice, and covering the entire top. Refrigerate until ready to ser ve. Makes 6 to 8 servings. ROYAL COU RVOISIER POUNDCAKE 21 .. cups flour l teaspoon baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 2 sticks ( 1 cup> butter l cup sugar 6 egg yolks, lightly beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 't3 cup water See Do-ahead desserts, Page C7 Holfday oro.nge spon91 cake mole~• ta:stJ/ l " .... --.... .... ,,. . tf yoo've r'rf!Nf!Jl fl't~ SUW.-Instant Coffee. you're In for a delicious surprfsst You see. Sunrtse Is real full-bodied coffee, blended from choice coffee beans and Just enough chicory to get rtd of any bitterness. And right now, you can save 60¢ on any size Jar. So go ahead ... try Sunrise Instant Coffee. And st.Jtprise yoursetf t C The Nestt6 Company. lnc.1981 · For complete·ad c and art services . . advertisers all along the Orange Coast ''lt'I rich, and It's not bltlwo" Oovldlltown "' rely on l Peanut Butter Ice Cream SandW1ches are good make·aheod snacks _.., f Cake, ice cream hard to beat The all ·American combination cake and ice cream -la hard lo beat as a dessert. Cer· talnly one or the handiest ways to serve this flavor duo is as an ice cream sandwich. The Peanut Buller Ice Cream Sandwich es given here are easy to make, a nd arJ! a wonderful hot.weather s nack to serve when friends drop over or when you're planning a backyard party . The sandwiches start with a rich, chewy brownie layer featuring th e flavor or peanut butter chips. These little chips, tnade from real peanuts, provide important • nutrients, including pro· teln , niacin and riboflavin. They're easy to use, too, for they blend quickly and smoothly with other in· gredients. Ice cream that's been softened, then re-frozen in a square cake pan, provides the sandwich "filling." PEANUT BUTTER JtE C REAM SANDWICHES l quart ice cream, softened slightly 6 tablespoons margarine 2 cups < 12·ounce package) peanut buUer chips 2 eggs % cup sugar stability, and if over· beaten they can break down and lose volume. A beginning cook may be so fearful of over· beating that the mer· ingue may not be beaten enough. Meringues a re also affected by high humidity. There is a way to make meringues prac· tically foolproof -it's a secret ingredient you may already have on your kitchen cupboard shelves. Marshmallow creme, made with real l teaspoon vanilla lf.J cup all·purpose flour 1/4 teaspoon baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt Line a 9-inch square pan with aluminum foil ; spread softened ice cream evenly in pan. Cover tightly and freeze until firm. In s mall sa ucepan , melt margarine and chips over low heat until melt· ed and smooth ; remove from heat. In small mix· er bowl, beat eggs until foamy; gradually add sugar and vanilla. Blend in peanut butter chip mixture. In small bowl, combine flour, baking powder and salt; s tir by egg whites , i s the perfect addition to mer- ingue because it makes the mixture more sla· ble, so it can be beaten to fullest volume without fear of overheating and having the meringue "fall". T his meringue recipe is so easy you'll want to substitute it whenever you ne.ed a soft mer· ingue. Simply beat egg whites with a pinch of saU·untiJ th~ form soft peaks, then add a jar of marshmallow creme .. hand into chip mixture. Spread batter evenly ift a well·greased 9-incb 1 square pan. Bake al •351 deg.J'ees for H to 30 .') minutes or until inserted. cake tester comes out clean. Cool on wire rack 10 minutes; remove from pan and cool com· pl e tely . Cut into 9 squares measuring 2-% x 2·~ inches. Split each square horizontally . Remove ice cream and foil lining from pan; in· vert onto cutting surface and remove foil . Cut ice cr eam into 9 squares measuring 2~ x 2~ in· ches. Place each square between two br~nie squares; cover tif)ltly and freeze until firm. Makes 9 sandwiches. and continue beating UD· til stiff peaks form. Jt_ S ince the. marshmallow creme ~ provides all the sweet· ness necessary for mer· ingue, there's no need for the tedious addition of s ugar spoonful by spoonful, as is often specified in metineue recipes. Top a-ch ocolate cheesecake with ~ flufff . ' cloud of M&y·to-mak't. ~~ meringu-e. fos: .1. desstt'.,~ I that's both Hcl"and lilk .. 1 See Merinpe, Pa1e Cl . ~,.j -"~I .. l • ' . ' I I I . I ' • "'""' ,,,.. t:o1n $1/1 ,,., .. ,. .... ,... 8 ,., *1 sweet eorn ... ,., 39~ •. Jonathan apples hall avoeados 3 ,., *1 ,.,. ,,... 4 ,., *1 e11e11mhers •••• tf ......... 3 .... ,.,$1 hartlett pears ,,.. .. ,. .. ~ ,., .. ,. .. ,. .. ftr••n brwut "I· •ti.ti 1111ltlple fita111l11 IS & ntl11eral .... prll• *16 · . l60 ... lrwl• ,. ... ,., •• ,. •• ,. .. "I· •6.40 e-1200 tr too "" ••It '"'' • ,.. .. ,. ... ,., .. ,. ••rbt sehellated ealel11111 ,... •1·'° & 11119111111111 *714 120 .... .. .. '"'' bakery flrMn ••rbt tNI ~I 7 9r1ln hr11d *129 24 II. IMf ... ........ ,.,..n •rlltt 1111w;4 41nl1h *179 , 1•11 rolls ..... ., 4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!M9dnesday, September 23, 1981 meal speneer steaks *it~ .. ,. ..... *119 .heel rlhs , •. h1r-m-haeon *149 , •. ~Hf short rlhs *1'9 ••• euhe steab *298 ••• side of heef *119 , •. hlnd~uarters *169 ••• raw al111011d1 •.i• • .., *149 , •. ,.. •• ,. .... ,.. ,.229 walnuts ••1• • .., ., 1. lish f r11h 1llwer salmon ..... ., .. ., ,,.. sllwer 11l111on ste1b snow erah legs ...... .I L 2 lh . 1111n9enen eraa ..... hallhut steab cleli · $298 : .. I .. *2\~, $598 .· ~ .•.. ' •laek forest ha111 2~. *31, , I ~r9l11la peanuts ., •. *157 ,.,.,... •••• ,,..., ,.. ........... , ,.. ..... nit ,. 44 . havartl eh1111 .,,...... L ..::· .. 2 I .I pea11iit 1111fter • ~, 111aearo11I 11 •• .n. .. $~ . •• *3V ; .1 . . .. ,,. ..... ..... .,. *149 .... ,,... •• ., fig •• ,. t6 •. .... & ...., ·99•: ._. •·. I spike 11111111119 s •· 89• •arheeue •eel . ti.. . $M·8 .. ·&•. grocery .,...w. water ehelfnllfl s •. ss• tO II. llone4 wheat thins ! . CllEF TOii WAftlM ti llPe ..... • •••"' If Iii 111.,1ft lltn 11· FrWly, ........ ,ts, ""' ·-~ •··· . A W.W Ft .. JAPMESI elEF ~ ... · .. •••lr1H11 TOFI frWlf, s.,t. IS , .. ....,..,, ..... 16 .... , ,..... ...... . . .-------~-----.--,. 1 SAYE so• · · I I 11111ttu ...... Jlllewlu.hu~f11Mrt ·•· I ....................... , .. ~.. ., I ffllt•f'llllft•r.T ... ...,.tllr.. ·1 I .... tlwlt/8-t/lt . : .,1. L-------------~--~-~ ...................... 't••• .................. . .... ...... .... ,..... ·. ..."" . ............... ' ...... •··· , / . . 1~ . ! I j .. Figs: One way to fight the common cough 81 MITZI ULLEA uncovered, while atlr· ~ ·were conducted prac· messaged their bodies some for lncxp\"n-.1vr rln1 to thicken. Add ·op· tic ally In the nude. We with the insides ot fresh f3cial:i. .Act4 If you have a n1 tree tlonal honey to taate. llUll llll~I <c_l~z .. ..______ get our present word figs 10 their skin would TO f'REEZE FIGS '<'Ct• we have>. you are Cover; cool naturally. • gymnasium from the be perfect. R1n st· Wl'll an cofd \lllldoubtedly beln1 lnun· Strain tbrou1b linen Greek word gymnos Figs clear the skin of wuter. Puckagc fag s , t•ted now with rt11. cloth, squeeztn1 to ex· meaning naked. blemishes. If their Juice whole, in plastic ba)(s S n after &tving box· tract all Julee. Bottle. The games were held is allowed to dry before t"n•cie ly fJc01uJ f reeze: two or tlirc·r limes as many if 'rOU IA ant Mough for 11 dJaly body loner Hut af you wish lo rll\SC lht.•m OH under your ~howt•r. first pay a plumtwr an annual r e· laant?r S11arlan athJeles who bathed in icy moun- l a 111 sln•ams h ad no such plumbing prob- ll!m:; to friends, you prob· Retrl1erate, oc freeze. ln September when most it is splashed off with When f1.:s arc ctefrosl y have ripe rtga on tllroulhout the year. tants were expected to of the figs matured. At cold water, it tightens ed . they will be lt>ss tree, ripe figs In the Freeze your remain· During the seventh be superb athletes wbo that time, figs were the skin and deters firm . bul e<:1ually cffer Egerator, overly-ripe ing figs for future in· century B .C ., the also had exceptionally classified as beauty wrinkles. lave. l• spoiling on the ternal, or external beau· Spartans originated the beautiful skin since herbs. For days before If you do not have a Freei.e 3G5 hgs so ·• od and a wealth of t y treat m e n t a Olympic games. Contes-moat of the contests the contests, athletes fig tree. buy and freeze you'll havt• out> for a dua o~n figs on th~ tree .--~~~~~~~~~~.;.....~_;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tl omislng future lnun- " ons. When you consider the -mems figs provide with their many natural vitamins and trace minerals, you r ealize it's a pity to waste them. They contain Vitamins A, B-1, B-2. C; niacin, calcium , phosphorus, iron and protein. FIG SURPRISE Figs Brie cheese Fresh mint leaves, minced Cut figs in half; cover in ·de with a thin layer of rie; sprinkle with a la r or minced mint. R ssemble figs. Chill, reeze. Cut diagonally erve. repare a Fig Cough Sy up to freeze for win- te s ills. l make it for m Mother's aging Fr nch poodle who has a he rt condition. a nd oft n coughs during the n i ht des pite medica· tio . Mother gives him 1AI teaspoonful to quiet hi so he can rest. Fl~ COUGH SYRUP - I 1597 & 1 pound ripe figs, unpared, sliced , 1 1.-'J cups cold water : Juice of ~ large len)on • . 1 Raw honey (op- tiodal) Bring figs, and waler to a boil. Cover : boil 5 minutes; simmer for 45. Add lemon juice; boil, Sweet bread puddipg rou MWArs IAVEI WITH $TATER BRO$. lOW-lOW PRICE$/ AVAILABLE AT ALL 4l CHECKSTANDS * /llllt:EI Effie 1-RIU IMI Im If-II ,,,, LB. FRESH •••• LIYIR LB 99c IEEF a.vat AOAST • 1 s• •ouN••oN1 t• ;~···· •OAST LI • 1 •• llEF CHUCK -nus '2" UOUL-HUT1.1 lf(F llOUNO -I IN • 1 •• •UMP •OAST LI AAlllOUA llAA •1 •• SLICID 8ACOll 12oz PORK SALE PORK LOIN •la CHOPS •17• II ~K lOtN ClMTEll CUT CHOPS s1•• Lii POllK LOIN Sl•LOIN •OA•T •1•• LI PORK LOIN COUNT•Y•l8S sis• l l FRESH RAINIOW TROUT f AESH WESTEJIN $159 OYSTERS I OZJAR FAUH FllOZ£N WHITING MOUNTAIN DEW,REG OR DIET _ .-~PEPSI ,.,,;, • ~~-~~~err~ t~ ~~.-= ---111~ '\ ,..,~-2 ·' ~;;,1~12·0Z ! ~ . ,;~"l ' •• I CANS $EIMCE #EU ArAIAIU #I trl}ll(I wfTH tHMt! IJlll Olil t' 410 COLI SLAW rRC!.H Clll C!<fOOAA CHllSI SUCEO 10 OAOtR aOILIDHAM llllU JUAN IOOZ BURRITOS IAIDOfORD ... suet 0 COOKIDHAM i.worrs IAOWN' SLAVE SA USA GI HEIA£W NAflONAl BlH SALAMI IAll M SLICED aACON While t he variety of bread pudding s is plentiful. there's always room for one more that offers a change in tex- ture, flavor and is very nutritious too. I SKIPPY 4-VARIETIES c ·-FOOD ................ 1~oz 22 CUP A SOUP ~cS~~~N SOUPTIME :m}~1(8 I t 12-0z55c REGP11 5r (~R~!~~!E~1~E 2 9 C LB :~: This bread pudding is filled with raisins, marmalade, eggs, milk and the unusually sweet tast e of Gjetos t , the specialty c heese of Norway. Shredded and blended together with the other ingredients, Gjetost 's ca r a mel-like fl avor enhances the flavor in creating a delightful dessert that is perfect served either hot or cold. Here Is the recipe. GJ ETOSf BREAD PUDDING 4 cups milk 4 eggs 'h cup s\lgar 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1..-ii teaspoon salt 8 s lices b r ead, cubed If.I cup gol den raisins lf.i cup s hredded Gjetost cheese 112 cup o range marmalade v. cup sugar In saucepan, heat milk untH bubbles ap· pear a r ound edge of pan. Remove Crom heat. Separate 2 eggs, set whites asidsi. In bowl, blend 2 whole eggs, 2 e 1g yol k s, s ugar , vanilla. cinnamon and salt. Gradually beat in milk. lo buttered 1~ quart balcing dish, com· blne bread, raisins and cheese. Pour egg mix- ture over all. Bake at 325 deerees tor 50 minute1 or until knife inserted Jnto center co me& out clean . Remove from oven. Ca refully spread marmal1de on top of ' pu ddln1. Beat eg1 wbiln uDtll foamy. Gr....Uy beat lD re· inainlaa ~ cup aucar until m{sbare bolds swt peaks. Spread over °'armalade ualln1 f.:~P• '° ..,_ of Bate 10 mlautea • IOGI•~ or Ulltll 11itr· lalU• la ...... Serve .. ,. .. ~ .................... I 1Z·YAfUETIES · 'JELL-0 .............. . . . . . . . . . ~oz 61 C • TASTERS CHOICE REG • 39 COFFEE ......................... oz 2 f ciiiiR ................... .' .... &4-0z '336 I LAUNDRY DETERGENT • 99 ·oxYDOL .................... •~oz I I ZH EARTH TONE "llAPKlllS ················'*cr 86c .KOTEX • 81 ' 111111 PADS ............ »CT I • LAYS SOUR Ctt!AM I ONION' • 1 s POTATO CllPS ...... ~oz I I CEATI FRESH BREADED • 64 .FISH STICKS ........... ,~oz I I CERTI FRESH BREADED • 89 'FISH STICKS ........... 2~oz 2 N(STEA ICE TEA MIX 112-0Z• 12• ...... ...... Cllil • Nll LITI 111&TPlll 1111 ElllI 111111 a NEW FAffDOM ,.NYOAY PANTILINER$ •..oz•2•• WHOLE. 11.lcto ..... N(SCAFE INST ANT DECAF FINA TEO • COFFEE ~zt42s FLORIDA TAUIWfET FllOZEN OAANOE I JUICE 12·0Z• I 17 la-Oz •1• l~Z •1• 12-0Z •1• 17-0Z •1• U O-OZ 11.11 •SO-OZ 11.11 • ., , rt-t 17.H trt>L ... POTATOES Plll..HUAY HUNGAY JACt< IHSTANl MASHED I HAPllCWAIHl!o' 'AVITI1 VERYHRRY OflMO A· 1 STEAK SAUCE . t SALAD OIL CHI I SALAD OIL CHB • CHILI W/BEANS ~~~ PUFFED WHEAT MAUOWEAl SWISS CHEESE ~~ COFFEE = RINSO ~=NT • DISH LIQUID ~!fKTEA BROS DISH LIQUID gm~R BROS DISH LIQUID :~~:ER BROS ZIPLOC BAGS r:le'i~R If TASTERS CllllCE '""" ZIPLOC BAGS ~~A" &0z 73c 267-0Z $1.19 ..01 S1.9J ,!>0/ 85c • 1&-0l ggc I ~oz 57c &-OZ $1.29 2·0Z Sl.41 1&0l s219 no1 Sl.83 I 32-0Z $1.13 32.0Z s113 . I . 20<JT Sl.10 COCA COLA ()II S"'!TE HO Ol'°81T HOllET\lf'IHSPAIT( NOTINIHD!O ,~ s117 1116-0Z Sl.9!1 U-Ol $1.77 GARLIC SALT lAWAYS t SEASOllED SALT lA-Y• t RC COLA Olll IWTI Oii MO Of( OI IU91LE UI' I OADI ATnlR!HO OADB IN INOIOI I.OZ $1.79 It ~~!r .. ... . . ""' $taal RC COLA 1111 ~ . . I/It« $1.89 frvrll UP =::.~i:LO: .. w f '1.29 K' I.It °" IWAll "'IE . • .. 2L CITRUS DELllHJ ~~ t . :···~It CU CllESE ~ I ~ 1' \ ~_;.;;.."---'!'--~~~...;o..;..._~--'1.r~~~~~~~--~~~~'~ ,,~ ONIONS US NO 1 SWEET IROWN FANCY !~o~~!!ltCIOUS 2 9 C LB ·:· ,._~l...,i~~:l 8!~E~~~~!c~o~!5'3 3 ~: STAYfREE WI PADS ... ., ~ ,, •• "" STAYUEE MIMI PADS ! 'FROZEN 'FOOD SWAJISDM OltlllU . ::::·., .. FRIED CHICKEN .... .. ! 8 s3.09 IA #J #13 w ........ rn1saURY DIMtlCll .•.. ·~· '" • s1 69 ~ """"' '~.1ovu1 ''01 • • • .sl.84 FllD CIKl£J .!:.~~.",::~"' ... ~ ,,,. ! S1J8 ! . Sl.59 . sug nSH STICIS i.::'i':t~~~ ! PEPPEmE FAIMS ems ,\': ....... "'~~i"v.~~~·,".'O ~ .. SAU l£I PUIG cm ClfftE CUE ~"iWk~~fU!l(l OR SWMSll llllTS ~p~~ IAU<"I ...... ()fl • .. ! ! •1' • Sl.46 I '1.57 arr, ... s2.12 • .... ! ! "1'01 $1.99 •0183' ••G•• 73' SIMSOl llEMf ASTS ::~N.,:j~0w~~~~.Aul "" SCI~• ECCS ~~:~~( 'H.~ .. MOWN$ ! ""n 83' ,. u.a• ~~~y "'" ! "JOl 5gc l ------~-~·~ .. ~----~-------.-----------------~ --------·-w=~~--------..... ~ .... \ ·----------------...,,.,,.. -~------ Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT ,wednesday, September 23. 1981 Fad diets may fill you up with empty caloriei 81 IVNE ROTH way to diet it to avoid ducts the body cun· 1 ~ c up Io w fa l untll cris p Makcis 4 skillet. Add wine, lemon ~ ~i:ro,•:~oves <" American con.umen fried foodJ and fat of all not manufacture the e•· lllll'IAl Dim lemon yogurt servings juice, and dillwt'ed Ar are beiat bllt11d by a types, 1lvt up desserU sentia1 am ino acids ln rlll "'2 teas1:>00n ground POACHED OILLED ra n ge mu 5 hr o o m s Arrange flsti lot Uie barraae ol publis hed Lo ravor of a plece of protein so ,you mu1t acinger SCALLOPS between the scallops; bottom of a h•tY>' fad diets promlaln1 fresh fruit, cut down on supply aome every day. ""' teasµoon garlic 111• pounds fresh ('Ovl'r and cook over low skillet. Add onlon.i,.r· quick wel&ht l011 for lit· sodium lntue If you are Eat a varlety of plan and be satisfied tr powder Ml'allops hPat for 5 to 8 minutes. rol. pars ley, vinec1r. Ue effort. Some of the not an athlete, and send vegetables of all shades lose two pounds a week. I<'!! cu P t 0 a 5 t e d ':i cuµ dry white or until cooked through b'ay tear. and cla.v.t•· dlets are coasldered to the s ucar bowl o n a of green and yellow -Here are som e rec· bread crumb~ wine Makes 4 servings. Add just enouKh "ffter be dan1erou1 lo your vacation. most are low in ctlorles ipe1 lbal show how to Olp each c h icken 2 lablespoon::s lemon BOILED CODl'1SH to cover the fish. llrAnC health. If followed on a T r y to eat smaller · a nd high In vitamin enjoy delicious food on thigh into a mixture ol JUiee 4 fres h cod fi sh to a bolling point, ~QMer lon1 term basla. portions of meat. choos· content. Be sure to have a sensible welaht·loss the yogurt. ginger, 1md 1 teaspoon dried steaks, l inch thick the skillet, and l~r Ju1t u you have Ing the leaner cuta at one kind or whole grain diet garlic powder : then d1llweed (O r 1 table I small onion, diced heat to keep Uquid-1 J•st learned h ow to be a two or three meals of eac h day. LEMON GINGER coat lightly with bread spoon fresh dill ) l carrot. peeled and below the boiling ~t. careful s hopper and theweek. If you have a great BAKED CIUCKEN c rumbs. Place into a 1, .. pound s l1 ce ct diced Simmer for 10 ls>t_.3J5 consumer of products In the place of meat, deal of weight to lose lo TIDGHS non»tick baking dish. fresh mushrooms t sprig parsley minutes, or until ,nph and services, so you choose more poultry get into optimum condl· 8 broiler chicken Bake an a 350.degree Wash scallops and pat 1 .. c up tarragon flakes easily. MakM1 4 have a responsibility to fish, and skim milk pro-lion, set up a long range thigt... oven for 35 minutes, or dry. Place scallops in a vinegar servings. safeguard your future .--~..:_~-~-~_.:.~~~~~--''"--~_;;.~-"'~~-"-~~~~~~~-~~-~~~~~~~~--''--~~~~__...;.~~~~~.:;__~~~~~~~~~~...;;._~-~-~.,~£~ health when trying to 1 • lose weight. 1 • Mybestadvlcetoyou FOOD PRICES ARE LOW 1111 ~0~o ~~gket !~et~~o'r~~~ ~ i· Fad diets that have " glaring imbalances, de· · '• .. , pend on one or two ~~:.f~{31~i{fl AT VOrtS-GUARArtTEED I vecetables, and grains). When the menus are out of balance, there can be a serious effect on the acid /alkali balance ol the body. If you eat like this for a few days, the body will manage to make its own corrections. But after that ther e is stress on the buffer systems within the body that are called upon to k eep the n ecessary acid /aJkali balance in perfect propo rtion - and this stress can lead to physical problems of .serious consequence. No quick weight loss is worth the damage that can result. No matter what the sudden experts" prom- ise they have dis - cove red abo ut manipulatirw food to fool the body into drop· ping poundage, your fi rst priority should be to m alntain the healthy biochemical balance of your body. It needs nutri1nts to function well. n needs food cooked properly so the vitamin content is retai n ed . And it especially needs trace minerals that help in t he absorption and metabolism of the food you eat. Balanced nutrition is not just a matte r or s wallo wing rood. If what you are swallow· ing has empty calories Clittle nutrients for body m aintainance and build- ing). or is not present in suitable proportions. it can go r ight through y ou with o ut b eing absorbed i n to the m e taboli c sys tem through the s ma ll in· lestine. When you decide to cut down drastically on calories to lose weight, it is extremely impor- tant to take in a variety of foods that are high in· nutrients and to plan your menus with care. It is possible to cut d ow n to a m e r e thousand calories a day, if you use a calorie c h art and co mm on sense You can eat more and still lose, if yo u s tep up you r physical activity. A sensible and safe Wine class slated Reservations are now bein g accepted for a "safari" of California wine coualry sponsored by Coastline Community College. A deposit of $75 must be paid by Friday, Sept. 18. The total fee for the trip, which includes air fare to San Francl.aco, coach transporta tion, two nights lodifu1 and some meals, la $275 per person. The balance of lhe registration fee la due Sept. 30. Tlle eJtcuralon itself will take place Monday through Wed- nesday. Oct. U · 14. The tour will include observatlona of "the crush" at the wineries, dlscuaalons of the wine· maklnc proceh, and an evening with a wine master from the Napa Valley Wine Consultant Co. Private. tours of several wineries will be conducted. Participanta must be a1e 21 or 'older. More ln- f orm atlon ls available fr o m th• c:olle1e . 983-0llL -__. -----r# ~ --· WE'U. DOUBLE Tltf DIFFERENCE OUR QOARA/"fT1!£ OF VONS LOW PRJCES to convince you d Vona comm11men1 10 low pricu. we' re making ttus offer If you can find lower pricee overall lh1s weelc al eny octll!f s~rk~ Vons will pay vou dou~ the difference Just shop at Vons Buy 25 different items worVi $2Q or mO<"e Compar~ poce'> on lhe same 11ems dl any other ~uperrn<1Mlet •tt lheor IOI.di 1s lower bnog your d~lced Vons receipt and lhe othl!f' moncet s pncet to Von~ dnd we II PilY you double the diffe<ence m ca~ Vons-l ow pnce' you con beheve "' LONDON BROILl 9 .9 STEAKS 1r• TllBLE KING &Er -eC>NElt:')S-TOl'ROUl"tO u1o1n 2 '"""'"""' oYft h "" ""9 rn<.~ lb 2 29• MEATS '\ltl f ~l""f(1 Nf.r-I .,....... Porterhouse Steaks l& 268 '"fWt J'\,...1,f't{• f;c")""'fll«"OC. ,,.. 2 58 Top Sirloin Steaks ls "bet 1\r"'<,fill, ~,....,_,,,, 'h':Wj ... 18 2 59 Sirloin Tip Steaks '"'"'' .. """ 1r" ..... rr"mf • fteeJ Cube Steaks l8 2 48 hf\.1p.,.. 6't,J. ~"" 2 19 &neless Family Steaks 'P """" Sneed Beef Liver "' ) 98 }96 l8 .89 SLRVICE SEAFOOD l'Mln( Fresh Dover Sole Allet ...,,. rt "'"" i. Cl AW'\ rffOtf ,., King Crab Ill }99 18 2 29 1e4 98 FROZEN f OODS Hunttl'lffOn leech "221411,,..r & lfHtft9dala Cotta MeH 115 I . 17tti ltraet end Orante A•• PROOOCE ""I 4111' A\• ""'I "If 11iro • Iceberg Lettuce ~f ... ~JIJ \Ill I""'~"'" Grun Pippin Apples ... , ........ "'•.., .. Salad Tomatoes 1J/ ~'' fl\V' <1>111 ·~t Fruit Snacks •• .. .. .. • w .\ KJwl Fruit I ~ '-' Valencia Oranges ..• 49 ~ .33 8 .35 3~.99 ... 29 I• .98 DELICATESSEN .• r"t "'' "'f • "11 V H•.tri Borden Singles Cheese "v ,..., ,.."~t1Df Knudsen Sour Cream '·' •I Bil.•' V't.N "11 Lawry's Taco Shells t'1•V '"" .t.H()U 'VP~~\'('\ Claussen Kosher Pickles l'iltt/ F~(j •)Q llo\f ~J -.T"'fftK. Holfy Beef Wieners !h"I ~"" \d"'"> 'Al~O f)Q(«;~, Blue Cheese Dressing } 37 .99 }15 11s ) 59 }29 EAL TH f, BEAUTY 'HO f' BAKERY IT~ l!UO'o/ AVAl.Jl8U. ()Ml~ 4T ~TOllU W!Th ..OT" IWIU\' (ASL l'Oll MMlST SlOllC CM.I. PMrJl-.c ~ usrro M llOTT()OI C1' Tl1IS PllCE. roozr.-Y.~ .OCOOollf l!OrWClA 89 ButW-Coolde.s • 129 FRf.SH ~ OOll O\<V'01-I UI &OZ Shepherds Bread 6~.99 fA 4 99 VONS BAKERY 6PAOl-Olt f QO r«JT 000 lltM Vlrtety .._mburger Buns tpl\(Jl~V~ Schab otnner Rois ~;c:r~~ ~Chip Cooldea LIQUOR 01 ~llTU <;Oln SQm PriceTM TequAa Aff...t•A• Olit t.",t4J It 1101 "'ij'ft Mkhelob Beer 178 .67 .99 }19 .95 Huntt"f'on •••oh 210l2 8Hch Blvd. Huntlftfton a .. ctl '"1 Attanea lrvtne 47~ aarranu Ad. San Juan Capletrano 32051 Camino Captttreno a Oel0ttf1po lrvtne dOO lrYlna llvd ~ VONS 12-0Z. -SH,\lol.P()() OR RINSE. U"lrT 2 EA tl'lrtllase o.et Im"~ P"Ct 2971 GROCERIES . GROCERIES ~!IT\ A· I Steak Sauce 14-0'.K(l!Tl. Heinz Tomato Ketchup ~Sc Sauerkraut 1101 (111'-~Tt> fl\/O!<; Shasta otet lkveniges .98 }07 .45 .23 • lllOU'<f. CM-!T'Y East Point Shnmp »QK£ en. Sunllte Sunflower 0 11 I }<X1'ICE CAI' Pet Evaponited Milk ~~derSoap }69 172 .48 .99 lf,"T .m ~ en.-~Ol'?'-HEAV'IDUTV J 72 1111 k Uqu tergent g q )49 •lB 1\1>.G Slim Price Rke BEAUTIFUL WOODHAVEN., __ ~" STONEWARE .5-PIECE PLACE SETTING CHOICE OF 3 PATTERNS 59 ~~~ WITH EACH • & EVERY 5.00 P<JRCHASE nos WEEK FEATURE: DE88ERTDl8H r 'ountaln Vall•y 18201 Harbor & !dlngar Caplttrano laecl'I 34081 Doheny P1rk Dr & VIC1orla \ ' 111q ) . ,. ~ ...... I • I ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ,Wednnday. September 23. 1981 Frozen dishes can look great, and be delicious at same time Part ot the run of cooklna Is the joy of pro· ducln1 a recipe that looks fantastic The easy way to create visually beautiful dishes without last·mlnule panic is to rely on dishe11 that can be frozen. A frozen soufne, for example, like the Cran- be rry Soulfle pictured, can be as dramatic as a hot souffie without the las t -minute problems of rushing hot souflle or guests to the dinner la· ble . CRAN BERRY ORANGE C REAM ' CHEESE ICE CREAM CAKE 1 cup graham cracker crumbs 3 tablespoons sugar Comblnt1 crumbs, sug-2 envelopes un· yolks ln saucepan. Cook, ur, cinnamon and butter flavored gelatine over medium beat, atir· In is mall bowl ; blend l cupmllk rina constantly, unlll well. Press firmly over 6 egg yolks, slight· mixture just comes to thebottomandaidesofa lybeaten boiling; d o not boll.~ buttered 8-lnch spring· 1 cup cranberry R emove from heat ; form pan; chill. Beat juice cocktail cool. Add cranberry cream cheese in large 6 egg whites juice cocktail. Chill until bowl until son and nut-""-a teaspoon cream mixture mounds slight· fy. Soften ice cream In a of tartar ly. Beal egg whites and chilled large bowl; beat 1h cup sugar cr eam of tartar until into cream cheese until ~ c up orange foamy, gradually beat Frozen desserts can be made at leisure and saved for parties. Cran berry Soul/le f for e· groundJ 1s nch and de· licious -the perfect ending to a light meal Cra nberry Orange Cream Cheese I ce Cream Cake would make a perfect birth· day party cake lh teaspoon ground cinna mon just blended. Rjpple rel· navored liqueur in 1h cup sugar; con- ish through ice cream· 1 c u p h e a v y linue lo beat until mer· cheese mixture lnlo pre· cream, whipped ingue forms stiff, glossy pared pan -lt4 of the 1h cup cranberry peaks . Fold meringue ice cream ·chee!14' mix· orange relish into chilled gelatine ture and 3""-a tabl.!spoons Fold long piece of mixture; folk in liqueur cranberry orange relis h waxed pape r in half and whipped cream. al a lime, until 2/3 of a lengthwise. Tie and tape Fold in relish. Turn mix· cup of the relish and all securely around the out-ture into prepared dish. of the ice cream-cheese s ide or l·quart soume Chill 3 to 4 hours or until mixture is used. Smooth dish to form collar and set. Ju.st before serving, top with a spatula and h old soutfle mixture carefully peel off collar. cover with plastic wrap. a bove dis h until it sets. Decorate with additional Freeze overnig_ht, or un· Combine ""-a cup sugar, whipped cream if de· til firm. Remove dessert gelatine, milk, and egg sired. Makes 8 servings. from freezer 'h hour .....=~~__:_~~.:......_~~==--=.:.:...::...:..:.....:..:..:..::....::...::....::...:..::..:.....:..:~.=..:....~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~:::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3 tablespoons but· ter or margarine, melted 2 pack ages (8 oun ces each > cream cheese 1 quart vanilla ice cream 1 cup Cr anberry Orange Relis h 1"2 c up heavy cream, whipped (op· lional) before serving. Spread Temaining ~ cup cran· berry orange relish over top. lf desired, decorate with whipped cream piped through a pastry bag fitted with a small star tip. Makes 12 serv- ings. C RANBERRY SOUF· FLE "3 cup sugar ... Meringue From Page C2 m the same bite. extra fl avor, use white wine. The c heesecake is given new glamour with marshmallow crem e meringue, spread over the top of the cake in at- tractive swirls, then browned quickly in the oven. Cool and serve us· 1ng a sha rp knif e moistened with water to cut neatly. C HO COL ATE MERINGUE CHEESECAKE 1 c up c hocolate wafer crumbs ~ cup margarine, melted 2 8 ounce packages cream cheese 3 eggs, separated "3 cup sugar When company's com· mg, prepare dramatic Pears Magnifique, made wi th fr es h p ea r s, coconut macaroons. and marshmall ow creme meringue. After peeling and coring, poach the pears in water . or for 3 tablespoons cocoa 2 tablespoons water Dash of salt 1 7 ounce jar mars hmallow creme Combine crumbs and margarine; press onto bottom of 9-inc h s pr· See Meringue, Page Cl 1 • ANNOUNCING ··w Joseph A. U>rig, M.D. Family Practice NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS MEDl·CAL. MEDICARE. CHAMPUS 'M'.>AK MAN'S COMPENSATION I NSURANCES ACCEPTED AS PAYMENT IN FULL 547-0341-80 I H. Tustin A.•~. #305, SClftta ..,_a 801 M~dkal lld9.·Nextto Newpott Fwy. ···········COUK>H············ : THE ECO#OMIC AOMWTAGES : : OF All EMUREAll llAM : ~ : • • • • • • • • • • ......... • • • • • • • • • • • • OR llflW TO IHI RUT CLASS Oii A tuHET • The economies of o Honey Baked Hom ore such • that you get more mecrt for you morev Mae • servings PEW pourd Mea1 that's ~s lean ord • tree of excess fol · • Ifs octuoly less expensive than almost onyttTig in • the mecrt counter of you ~et Ard. • becOJse It's pa-cooked. there's no st'flnkoge Even • after the horn is gone. the bone moi<es a supefb • soup • Every spiral slced Horey Bolced Hom IS l'lckay • smoked. baked 30 hoJs and tcpped With a honey • and spice glaze ... a pocess you cOUdn't dJplicote In yo..x own kitchen • The resut Is a table teody hem Reody to be • ertoved al day long With eggs h the monino ord • patotoes at rig'1t Ard as o snock or sandwich • ln-betweer\ • As o o.koy centerpece or n ycu ~nch pol a : Honey Baked Hom Is the perfect choice. ~ • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :·_NONE'l IAKEO HAM: • --... llOOE Coast~ • (N)67.).Cl()()() • • _. n. Vlage c.r... • T2Zl so &oodu11 (/<18at Rood) • • • (7M) 6.)6..2461 • • • ,... ... 1°"'81 PllzoNo-m . 2~1 ~Wa<, • • (AtfllOIOAoocl) • (714)&l7.Jll2'2 • • --·-· 19()(iq lleoch a..u (At GOl1llild ,_,to ~1) • • (N)M«i75 • -·Wl9tt l~(Acl01111o'nl0¥QtoolOl:rQe) • (114)~ • • ._ ... 7\.634"""Y m(Aorctlo~~ • (N)~ • ....... Wt;~,_ ~IOO'l'O'lsP'CICOl"Qc.rter) • 8 • (1~08Mleel • ti ==~---.-....c-... . .... ................ . : O#l 11171' •AU IT Mall : : 30¢ OFF PER POUND: : ON CU HONEY BAKED HAMS : 8000"'!" llPl 30 wmt COUPON ONLY : ········••omoiit••·········· • Best of Fryer Collfemio O..wn Chuck Roast Sofewoy 0\#ollty .... 8 I llo6-Cvt c lb. ·1·· (llfNt 2. -0... Um!! ti. It) I Ocean Spray leverages *100 32..oz. 3 lottlea (Plva O.po1h) : :::!.•129 Bottle 1u...i•2 ... ....._o........,.su 11 Aqua let 3:t 88° 10-oz . Can 1~2 . .--..0...~2 .. 1 QUALITY MIA T! GROCERY LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PRODUCE! Arm Pot Roast -~· .. 1149 C-i1BrusselsSprouts=.: ~ 99' Chuck Short Ribs ~ .. s1n ~Cauliflower ~..: ~ 99' Boneless Steak ~'t:l. ..... 1219 z:t BirdsEye Peas ,._ ·:..~ 44' Cross Rib Roast ~ .. '209 ~Potatoes O'Brienr..: 'lo.~ 99• Beef Stew Meat "';:....-.. '1" ~Frozen Dinners ~ ·;: 59' Whole Fillet Butts-~=-. 1353 2-{_'PartV Pride Pops ;: :"'7 99• ___ , __ ,. Pork Spareribs ,,:-_:., • 1139 :-S CinnamonSchnecken:\99' DAIRY C-£>Ancient Age -... ,,-:., i.zs999 Green Cabbage :C-£ Smirnoff Vodka ..'!. : . .z'1099 Yellow Onion ~Gilbey's Gin .. i:.. :~ 1999 Shallots ........ ""' us fllD 1 -........ C-£1Paul Masson a=. l'.!. '2" Town House Raisins :,.:. Almaden Mt. Wines .'.! '329 Citrus Delight ~ .CE [•Blue Nun .--2::'700 Fresh Cut Gladiolas Bell Peppers ,::., " 19' .. 29' ~ 69' ·~ 11se &X.99' -'1" • 39' BAKERY Honeydew Melons • 25' Fresh Ground Beef'"t=:~.':. '1" Smoked Sausage -·-.. 1219 Pork Sausage ':::=: .... '121 Safeway Burritos ¥..:.. 't: 69• TrophyBeefFrltters --• '1" ~nudsen Yogurts ~ 45• :Ft' 30-SticeBread~· ~ 59' I 0 f.15 iJ t .j :I j.1114'1 DELI & SEAFOOD r::!:CSklnlessFranks_ ~-:, ~21 ~ VarletyPackMeat~=·,,/171 m;e Mrs.Paul~ Flllets'1'i2:,.~l71 •Fish Cakes °='='" • 89• ~range Juice -=r =. 1159 ~Mar-kes Burritos 2 ·~ 1100 t!$.ucerne Choe. Miik =: 1231 :-£>Fresh Bagels ..;,. 2~ 1100 •AJ>JjesauceDcnJts=.-:f 111 • iact Toothpaste ~ 99' ~n Cereal ..;,.. ~ 891 •Enhance Shampoo :.:. '1" ~WhipplngCream l_... e::.1115 ~Kellogg'sRalslnBrani:: '1" •Buf Puf Cleaner Sponge ..!2•• We've Given LOW PRICEI a Great Name ••• ::?. .. •299 Bottle • 1000 ...... Dr., .... ,......_. • 616 Ma.C..........,, L ......... ., ........ .., .......... a.:.-...... ". •Jl41 S..lrtlW,s-teA.. • 14417Clllllr ......... ..... ' I • I By MARTIN SLOANE Today we will res ume our refresher course on organized refund.lni and coupe>o-lna. Keep in mind that the refund form is the key that opens the door to a gold mine of manufacturers' offers. More than 80 percent of all refund offers require that you send in a form along with your proofs of purchase. Most refund forms are about the size of a dollar bill. The individual forms are bound into tear-off pads. Manufacturers work hard to 1et these pads displayed in stores because they pro- duce more sales for their products. Some companies pack the pads of refund forms into the cartons that contain their products. Others attach the pads to their product displays. Many companies ask their salesmen to post the pads on supermarket shelves or wherever the stores will permit them. Since I began writing this column two year s ago, many s upermarke ts h a ve awakened to the growing interest among shoppers in saving money with manufac- turers' refund offers. This has led to policy • 4 4 • • 0 - changes ln many stores that prevloualy dl•· carded the forms or banned them from their shelves. Many stores are helping their customers save money by settin1 up refund-form cen· ters and bulletin boards. J look forward to the continuation of this trend. Shoppers whose stores sliU do not display refund forms should discuss this problem with the management. Although the supermarket is not the only place we refunders fintl forms, it is the start- ing point In our nationwide bunt. First, look for the tear-off pads on the shelves or on the store bulletin board, Some stores give out refund forms upon request at their courtesy desk. An excellent source of forms is the backs of specially marked packages -what we call SM Ps. AB you walk down U\e aisles, look for the color burst and the bold letters on. the front of the typical SMP that ;mnounce: "$2 Refund. Details on the back ol the box." You will find specially marked packages along almost every supermarket aisle once you start looking for them. Also ask the store manager whether he or she has any new refund forms. ~---------------------------------------, CLIP 'N' FILE REFUNDS lw..a ef .._•I Un Iver.al PToduct C-1yrn11011 lrorn Ka• .. Mui or ~'""' ...._. P..._. "IM tt-aJ Pllds or -UPC lnitn Kotea Mall! or MIN ,,...,. ..ct -Clip out tNs Ille ..ct.._ It wlltl slmllar c-...H ~ trwn y-cwnnt 1w-. Expires Dec. J1, ttll. -bev.,. ... ,..._ ott.rs wlttl lle'vlff ... ,_,., ...... .....,.. MAYIELLINI! MOlst..,.. ~ $1 It.._ Oflw. Sef!d llw pie. Si.,, COllec1'"9 tlw ,..._ proot1 of ~-wfllle r.ciulred r9funll lorm, lhe Unl.,.rwl P...-.c1 OoC1e t...m .,y loolllnt for.,. required,..,.,,,. form1 et .,. _......,.,.'-In box ol Moisture Wttlp Protecll.,. Fec:lal Molttutl-,._. _ _.end .........,,,.,, -wtwn It.,.,. wttll frlendL 1ollon or J......ce crMrnl or from MolstMte 1Mllp C- Off9f1may noc1111 •,,.II-In •11 •tMI of llw counlry. Allow end M•"-It-,._. 1ullel ..ct•,...._ receipt 10-• IO rec.el• Mell refund. with tlM price clrcled. Eaplre1 Dec. i1, ltll. Tiie ................ ..._,.. .,. _. St4.IL Tililt ..... , RAVE ~r <:Me. Recelft e SI refund end e 50< .... ..._. .. .,. •..,... ••• .. Jn.M. '°"'*'· Send tlw ~r.cl reluncl form, the frol'll coftt.,. CLAl lltOL COHOI TION Beeuty Peck Fr• Oflw. lltecelft penel from A-8ody Oftty Soft llody Weft -t1w ,.._, • Clelrot Condltloft INuty Peel. For • ,_. ri-k, -rec:elpl wHll t1w price ctn: led. EJUll'" Dec. J1, 1•1 IN ,.quired reNnd form encl IN f ....... -4 from 1-e TENDER TREATMENT.-'--P~ Co. lltecel\'9 e Clelrol C-llofl Beeuty Peck TrMI-. For • ._. refulld of !O ,.,IS"' SUO. s..41 lhe .-.qui..., reNnd form - peck, Nf:ld lN lotm -the front_, from._. Clelrol Ille front '*'911&1 frwn Tendlr TrMltnent llwnpoo, condl· Condition &Nuty Peel< TrMlrnent. l!xplres No'I. JO, 1"1. tloner °" l\elrdrns. SeftCI -penel lor Ste-. i-fot Sl.90 OR. SCHOi.L'S I"-Powd« 7~Cent Call Refund ott.r. end ltlr .. lor $2.SO. EJQ11re1 Nov. JO, 1•1. SMMI the required refunCI lonn, Ille -'""" -<-TOHI LIG+4TWAVIES SI Cftfl Refund Olter. 5efld .,_ ,._ tel,.r llOttom of 7-ounce Or. Sclloll'1 Fool ,,__ -llw quired Mund form end.,. lnendlenl Maline from U. tide r99l1ter .-.celpl wllll lhe prke cln:led. Expires Dec. JI, 1•1. -I of eny LIOfltwew\. E•plre1 Dec. JI, 1'11. FLICKER S.vlnoa. Aecelw • 1x .. 1 refund -• U<ft Bonus I Tiiis offer doetn'l requlrw • torm: coupon. Send IN requi...., r-form, the wotd "Flkllet'" GILLETTE AIGHTS O ~. P.O. lox 40tt, "*" from -Flk ur S'J -• reolller receipt wlttl U. pric .. of 1k ello, MIM. sun. It 51 refund. 5eftd llO., "New'' Flkker -""ten loClon cln:led. E•plre1 Dec. JI, 1•1. Jlkker1 from t1w Right G cep end 'f04I -· ...,._ KOT EX t"MI ~Cant-I. Recel.,. vx '°< .... <-end ZIPc-one _.,.,.piece ol -r. ExolrnJ._JO, or • SI.SO ref...O. Send tlw rM!Ulred refund form -two t"3. ~---------------------------------------~ • • .Do-ahead desserts tasty From Page Cl 111 tables poons cornstarch 1 cup orange Juice 6 egg whites 3 tablespoons butter I tablespoon grated orange rind 1 2 cup Courvoisier 1 ~cup sliced almonds Butter and line bottom of a 9-inch loaf pan with waxed paper. Sift n our, baking powder and salt twice. Cream ··the butter and add sugar gradually; beat until light and fluffy. Add the egg yolks and continue beating until mixture is very light. Gradually sift in flour, a little at a time beat· ing well. Stir in vanilla and water. Beat egg whites until stiff. Fold into nour mixture. Pour the batter in the prepared pan. Bake in a preheated 300 degrees F. oven for l v. hours. Meanwhile, make the Orange Courvoisier Sauce. Orange Courvolsler Sauce •':I cup sugar Mix s ugar a nd cornstarch in a small saucepan, add juice Cook for five minutes over medium heat. stirring constantly. Add butter and stir until melted. Add orange rind and Courvmsier. Pour half the sauce over cake while sauce is still warm. Sprinkle with almonds. Pass the r emaining sauce as the cake is ser ved. Makes 6 lo 8 servings. WITH ATIACHED COUPONS The quicker picker upper! Bounty starts quicker, so you finish quicker! ' I ® Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, September 23, 1981 To S~ven Seas ® Buttermilk Recipe TM Dressing from your curr t dry mix . We're so sure you'll prefer the delt- c1ous flavor and convenience of new Seven Seas® Buttermilk Recipe .... dr~ssing .. we'll send you a coupon g6od for one (1) FREE 8 OZ. BO TILE OF NEW SEVEN SEAS® BUTIERMILK RECIPE1M DRESSING. Read the details below and send us an C"mpty envelope of your cu rre· t dry mix No more dry mixes, measuring or lehovers! With new Seven Seas® Buttermilk Recipe,,.. you can pour real buttermilk dressing straight from the bonle Tastes deltcately seasoned, creamy smooth En1oy 1t soon! Bigger &better from Lawrys. DI . . . . . SU.PER Sl.ZE . . :: ·:. . ·:: . : : .. . . TllCO SHEllS \ ' -= u•.• ..:•"• '. ~: ..1\ol \J' r•l l' ,, .. ,,, , ).•., ,,., I ,I 1•11. .•1' . ... 'l'..~. •• l ,. ... •.\, '. . . . .... ·' lfl •.J' .• ... ,,. ., ' ·'· .. -' I •, .. .: . I \ ,.4' ' . • ' . ' '. ' ~.I '. ' ' _, -.,...,.._.. ... .., .. -\ -------·-____ , ___ ._ ------·--------- Coat DAILY PILQT/WednHdey, S.ptember 23, 1981 You llnow the old and ult. Blend ln 8·12 mlnutea or untll ping nursery rt.yme . . . 1bortentn1 wttb putry Uahtly browned. Cool for St rawbe rries for a bo~ the QMten of -.1endw or two kntve1 5 minutes oo muffin tJn. aarniab Heart.a. the bated 1br11e until coarn crumbs Remove ab4 cool com· In small sauce pan tarta. Th• ktne ate about the ab e of peu pletely on wire rack 1prlnkle ge latin over some, bat the J(Uve of form. Add water 2 to 3 before addln1 flllin1. water. Let stand about 5 Re art.a atoM the others. tUle&pooM at a tim e Mailes 10 tarts. minutes. Add pureed Once you've tuled an4 blend wtth a fork. 8 T R A W I E R a Y strawberries and heat them, yeu wUl read.Uy Form pastry Into ball YOGURT ftWNG eelatin mixture until undera\and wby a ap~ ·rou <nit thinly on •Acupwate.r gelatin ls dissolved. Add n u rs·~ T y r ~ y me ltfhtly noured· svface. 1 tableap9on un· nutmeg and yogurt and chatacter, or aayone, Cut dough lhto 4-lnch flevored1elatin coo l until slig htly wo uld s ripe :whole cl'r<?les. U JbUy arease .,. c up p u r e ed thickened, 30 t o 40 Whe a t Strawb•rry i n V'e rted muffin tin strawberries minu tes . Fold i n Yoeurt 1 arta ... as (bulges'> and shape eacb l4 teaspoon 1roond whi pped cream a nd many aa JOU nu eat or circle-around greased nutmeg pour rllling into the carry -they're thAt tins, pinching edges to 1 carton (8 ounce•> shells. Refrigerate 3 to 4 good. form rim. Prick dough strawberry yogurt b o u r s u n t t l f J r m . And i( ye\a'rt caught with fork. Bate In pre-1 cup wh ip p ed G a r n i s h w I t h a Whol e wheat tarts are filled with strawberries and yogurt /or a de· hcwus and nut rrtious dessert treat . -o "'c e Ua • · j u d t e .heated 400-degree oven cream or whipped top-strawberry slice. samplesthe se~oryloot, ·;--....... ~~~~-....~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__.:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ he '• beund ad ua - derstand and fcraive. Make a 111th'ly smooth pastry douetl of wh.te wheat ftoar. Cu\ cir~Jea a nd cover tbe bottom side (bulges) of a mumn tin to bate the small tartlet crusts._ •' What d o )'O U 1 et besides pttre bliss? Well, the whole wheat crust adds fiber as well as B· vitamins and Iron. The tilling, wttbout ex· cess calories , )'ields calcium and vitaiain C. Ir that sounds like a nutritional p'reseriptton -you'll never (ind one as downright good to eat. W H 0 l f; W 1t'i AT STUWBP8'Y VOGUlt1' 'l'AR'l'S I cup whole ·wheat fl our ~ cup earich ed fl our 1 te&sJ>QOn s alt ~ cup shortening 3 to 6 tablespoons cold water Strawberry Yogurt Filling <see below> Stir totethtr fl our s Easy la·yer e d d essert Although practically everyontt tov~ parttea. teens seem to enjoy t he m most. The r e 's always an otcas1on to celebrate wheOlet It's a birthday, toettiall vic- tory or straight "A" re- port card. One of the first con- s id er ations with any party is a menu that is quick and easy to pre- par e . Now, thanks to new baking ingredients and simplified iDSU'ue· tions, 5011\e recipes are a snap. Seven Layer Bars are a good e1nantple. This recipe takes just seven in g r edient s a nd one baking pllft, a fork and a knife. Teens will appreciate being able to make the bars right in the pan. G r a h a m c ra c k e r c r umbs, cocoaut, nuts a nd raisins combin e with peanut buttet chips which measure easily - no sticky cup to wash - to c r eate a che wy, nutriti«N5 dessert. Peanut butter chlps prcwide the peanut taste and also famish small amounts or pr ot e in, n iaci n a nd ot her nutrients. He r e's a lip: You d on 't need a tta~ to e njoy deuttTts Hk e t hese. Famllh!s w ill love them, too. SEVEN IA Y£R BARS ~ Cui» bolter or margarine 1 ~ cwps graham cracker crumbs <about 11 cr acken > t Y.t cups OO<!OIJUt 2 cu~ C12-ounce package) peanllt butter chips 1 C•P raiilns or semi-s weet• clleeolate chips · 1 -c lip ct\oppe d wah•ut.s 1 ~ cup• 04-ounce can ) nreeteded con- densed milk (Det evaporated) . Preheat oten fD 350 degrees. Aaee b.uer or marg8ltne ia 13 x t x 2-lncb pan; ptaee in oven to melC. JlfmoYe pan from w.i · lpliink1e crunat.i•..er butt1t or mar1artoe Hd ,tre11 down -.itb fqrk. !Ayer ~oconut, peaMt buner chips, ralstn.a or llerBl- aweet c~ocolatt" chlps and auts ovtt cnnnbs. Drlule 1urfec-e with coMlenttd mUk. Bate at 35G d41p .. tor• to U minv•et o~ ~ntll 1olf'ti6 WOWi: coel; cut lato NIJI. Ab••ft 10 bin. • 1 • • . money. Read our newspaper. and How's this for a ~ood answer discount coupons, food news and cash in on advertised va\~es, oney every sing\e week. consumer reports ~hat ca~ i~~v~s ~~up~rtant for busy wo_~~n We a'so save you time_. W d Y E>ther responsib1llt1es. mana ing a home, ch1\dren an man - 'n thegmarket for fun? We cover weekend e;~er nd tain!Tlertt and special events :r~~:~ t:':'hole ;ackage of movies. Recreation, sports. o . , ou a lift' Whenever inter esting news and ~eatu~es ~e;~~e~ling a li~tle you have the time. So if you ve shopworn lately' get some he'P· Get the paper. What'• In It tor you? Th• anawer appear• on every page of Daily Pilat 6A2·4321 I 1] I I \. Candy shop ch:ocOlates from honle kitchens· Can you ma. k e s h ould I eel 11t1b'tly g lo 11 .) Ke ep l n 1 covered baking sheet: c ream y . mouth . warm to touch.) Stlr chocolate between 84 to decorate top of coated watering chocolates at finely chopped pieces of 86 degrees, dlp room cen ter with s mall home like the ones you mini-chips lnlo melted l•m peralure centers a m ount of melted see In the candy stores? c hocolate until com· comp I et e I y Into chocolate, using tip ol Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. September 23. 1981 a) ' I , Profess1onal-looking • chocolates are easy to mak e 1n a h o me kitchen n 1; H , I Ii'! •ff Of course! This seem· pletely blended. (Note: chocolate. one al a lime, fork or bat pln. (To keep iogly difficult task can This ls a vital part of with a fondue fork, table chocolate between 84 be mastered with these procedure and cannot be fork or hat pln. Gently and 86 degrees whlle easy-to-follow instruc· omitted. This unmelted tap fork or hat pin on dipping, place Jar In th tloll!. chocolate ''seeds" the side of cup to remove wa rm water.) Coating u Wilb just a s m a ll coaling and develops the excess chocolate. Invert 'I'll cover about 6 dozen n amounlof practice, you c .~r~y~s~ta:l:s_.:.:.ne:c:e=s:s:a~ry:._f~o~r~c~a~n~d~y:._o~n.:..._w__::,a~x....:..p:a:pe_r_-~_ce_n_t_e_rs_·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~•· can have an impressive .-w array of professional· I. looking chocolate coated ( candies from your very own kitchen. Bt.rlTER CREAM CENTERS 1 p ackage (3 ounces) cream cheese, softened ~ cup butter or margarine. softened 4 cups unsifted con· fectioners' sugar 1 ·~ t e a s p o o n s vanilla Beat cr eam cheese and butter or margarine in large mixer bowl, un· til s mooth. Blend in con· rectioners' sugar and vanilla. (If necessary, chill until mixture is firm enough to handle). Shape into l·inch balls ; place on wax paper· covered tray or baking sheet. Cover loosely : chill 3 to 4 hours or over· night. Centers should reel dry to touch before coating. Remove from r e frigerator a bout 20 minutes before coating. Variations: Divide mixture into three parts. Add % cup flaked coconut or v. teaspoon peppermint extract and 3 drops red or gr een food color, or V4 tea· spoon rum e xtract to thirds of mixture as de· sired. CHOCOLATE CENTERS Ir.I cup butter or margarine, softened 1/4 cup heavy cream 1 ·~ t e a s p o o n s vanilla 3 c ups c onfec · tioners' sugar ''l cup s emi-s weet chocolate or mini chips, melted Combine butler or margarine, h e avy cream, vanilla and 1 cup confectioners' sugar in small mixer bowl ; beat until smooth. Gradually blend in remaining sug- ar and chocolate. Chill about 1 hour or until mixture is firm enough to handle. Shape into l · inch balls; place on wax paper·covered tray or baking she et. Cover loosely; chlll 8 to 4 hours or overnight. Centers s hould feel dry lo touch before coating. Re move f r om refrigerator 20 minutes before coating. Makes about S dozen centers. Variations : Di vi de mixture into three parts. Add If.! c up fl a k e d coconut or 'Al teaspoon peppermint extract or 1.4 teaspoon rum extract to thirds of mixture as de· sired. NUT CLUSTERS •,'2 cup broken pecans or walnuts Melted chocolate <left over from coating> Fill 1-inch paper can· dy cups about half full with broken pecans or walnuts. Pour about 2 , teas poonsful melted chocolate into cups until full. Shake cup slightly to settle chocolate: fill to top. Makes 8 to 10 clusters. EASY SEMI-SWEET CHOCOLATE COATING 1 ~ cups semi-sweet chocolate mini-chips 2 tabl es p oo n s shortening Cover baking sheet or tray with wax paper; fasten with tape. Chop 1h teaspoon mini-chips • into tiny pieces ; set aside. Place remaining mini-chips and shorten· ing in a 2-cup glass measuring cup or 1 ~ cup wide -mouth jar. Place measuring cup or jar in pan of warm, not hot, water that covers bottom half of measur- ing eup or jar. (Do not let any water mix with chocolate! Jr this happens, the chocolate wlll thicken and Ugbten and cannot be used for coating.) If necessary, keep pan over low beat but do not allow the water tem· perature to exceed 12S degrees. Stir constantly unUI chocolate ii completely m e lted and smooth. Remove cup f r om water: coatinlte 1Urrln1 until chocolate ii cooled to 88 degrees. <Cup • , Mii l lGMIS l!S!IVfO NO SAl( 10 COMMfl(IAL Of "IUS 0 1 wMOL!S•lU S SOM! SO•I OllN~S NOi 4VA1l0 l! '°" VfNIUb COu"''' fl\i, od only effKti.,. ot Hughe. El Roncho and Hughet UdO WI WILCOMI FOOD ITAMP IHOPltl•I Bulk or Po1t1e' .. Does Not hceed 12% Fot LEAN GROUND BEEF LB Doe' Not E•ceed 15% Fot LEANEST GROUND BEEF l8 2.19 El Roncho RANCH STYLE BACON tB 1 .49 BEEF BONELESS - TOP SIRLOIN WHOLE ~G. WEIGHT l0· 16 lBS USDA CHOICE Ul.2.29 ta·· ftou"Cf ot Sq"°'• • 2 TIER T ABlE •MAGAZINE RACK w .... hoolit •WAUMIRROR Ith 7h l6 2 1-et TVTAIU 11.M 9 99 Y0t;,1p g~ C.tO<ef)' WAU UST ·'·" GROUND BEEF ~ DOES NOT EXCEED 300/o FAT FRESHLY GROUND 3 LB. PKG. LIMIT 2 ER Q.e.. Ready w/Fr.sh Eggt .. 8 oz eo STUFFED BELL PEPPERS . . EA .69 Young & render• Sliced or By the Piece FRESH BEEF LIVER LB .• 99 E R Porl< & Seoson1ng E R Sweet or Hot BRATWURST SAUSAGE LB 1.69 ITALIAN SAUSAGE Frozl!n Defrotled Northern Center Cul ~ HALIBUT STEAKS ···~·····························L•. Poc1foc Fillet froz"n 0.-frosred Jumbo S111t RtllH •ID INAPPI• LB 1.89 SCALLOPS Pon Ready hozen•Uelrosteo F•UH •IX IOU tB 2. 99 MAHI MAHI LB 1 .69 2.49 lB 7.99 LB 2 .89 FOITER FARMS FRESH DUCKS FOITER FARMS FRESH ROASTER GRADE 'A' CALIFORNIA CHICKEN • ., Ul .• 99 g UI •• 79 YUBAN COFFEE Reg • Diet• 2 l•ler SEVEN UP . Nob•Ko 19 oz CHIPS 'A' tfOY 1001 )Of 1 LB. CAN ALL GRINDS LIMIT I • A&W Root le•r • Su•wtl O•!Jt?V• 2.8.8 1 .39 1 .79 FOLGER'S INSTANT COFFEE 4 .09 12 Pocli Reo or D•el 12 0 1 Cont PEPSI COLA. Hollywood 32 01 SAFFLOWER Oil 101. oz 3 .49 1 .99 CAMPBELL'S 22 TOMA TO IOUP ..... • -6 Pock 16 oz. N R Bottle, 2.19 COKE • TAB • FRESCA 700' 3.49 REYNOLDS WRAP 46 oz Aul Vor I Boby D1ll1 2 19) 1 .39 VLASIC Dill PICKLES . Hl'fty Toll 15 c• 1 .39 KITCHEN BAGS Gollon .79 PUREX BLEACH 40 count Soft,.., .. , Shee" 1.79 PUREX TOSS 'N'-SOFT 16 oz Salted or Un1ohl'd ~::::.Rs .................. 63 c U S D A. Choice 8 oz 1.89 LAMB KABOBS EA USD A Cho•CI' 1.49 LEAN GROUND LAMB LB U S D A Cho1CI' Small loin RACK OF LAMB LS 3 .29 U S D A Choice Lomb LARGE LOIN CHOPS LB 2.99 SMALL LOIN LAMB CHOPS Pl!ODUCT OF U S A USDA CHOICE La.3.59 Plo1n lob•I 6 Pk l 2 oz cons ~E:ii~.~~-~ ... 1.25 Nopoleo'1 Brandy 7SO ml RICHELIEU VSOP Plo1n lob!'I 80 Proof 7 50 ml BOURBON 6 .99 4.29 ~ffi)]j:Jil!Wi~ iiiiiFFERei Noodle, ~o;·o:. Scot Poa~oe SIDE DISHES ... -.... ~~~: ....... • 9 WEXFORD CRYSTAL BY ANC HOR HOCKING AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS !l1i11~r·~ ~JI, •• ~ P L UMROSE 2 ·98 SLICEDHAM........... • THIS WEEKS SAVINGS 150UNCE Hollywood Fresh 'n Not A.II Vor 16 oz Swin Mm 4 Pock 2 .69 ~~ ICI TIA TUMBLER SALAD DRESSING 1 .29 PUDDINGS .98 West Poe Contonentol 16 oz. Knudsen Aul. Flovors Round Y, Gol. VEGETABLES .89 ICE CREAM 2. 19 KiNERET LATllES .... 1.09 Shiroltiltu ... 1.5 01. Con 19 BAMBOO TIPS ................ • ~:;~~'.~.:~'.~. ~-~~:~~.'.27 Stuffino Site • 29 LARGE BELL PEPPERS ............ te. • Moruson SJliro Mito ... 3'.2 o~. Ptcg. SOY BEAN PASTE , ..... 1.91 -.r 69C Magen David 12 oz Hughl's Monterey Reg Cut Rondom Wt FRANKS • KNOCKS 2 .19 JACK CHEESE . lB. 2 e28 1 lb pkg FARMl•.IOHN MEAT WIENERS SPfCIAl SAVING EACH WEEK ON FEATURED ITEMS fOOOS Qf Tff£' f.lfl£m' IN out,,. ... ~ otn Golden Oro9on WOii.TOii IKllll 12 0 •. 55• Ptcg. Shiroltiku Po,,ko ... 7 oa. Ptcg. 39 BREADMfAl ................... • Shirokikll T.,;yolJ Nori ... 1 01. I 71 SEASONED S!A WEED ..... • MCC ... 11.6' 0 1. Con I 19 TERIYAKI SAUCE .. .. .... . . . .. • Ert·loroe ... 12 o ... (Morion!) 89 PRUNES ................................ EA .• "1CIS lfflCTIYt 1 OATS I e M. ~., ll'f. )A ..._ wtO., .,,. '° "" 1"1~ AIM>H\Y l,..KflYI AT .. VO!ifS fl •AJ<HO & UDO limit r19hh tMervM Ne tatM to deoi.ts II . .. ·'I " 'h It' l J td ,,, . ' I~ ') 1! 1r: ~ I' ... ,, ii J'• '•! 1· I ) ,., , J I I r .. 1') I rf 111 ''I , ... •If 1p '" 11; '" ti ., ti • r1 .. .. '" ,, lfl Ill '111 t i; n 10 h '} II l l ~ n J'.) II Q h w ') b '" .. ____ ._,. ____ ._. _________ ~ -----------. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednetday, September 23, 1981 -Orange sections add zest to chiffon pie '• Before you pull out gradually adding sugar. v. cup sugar 1 pint vanilla lee your recipe box to look Spread ov e r p I e . 1 teaspoon grated cream • for an old d.....-t recipe Gafnish with reserved oranee rind 1 can (5~ ounces) favorite, let ua share orange segments and Mix Ing red le n U chocolate syrup, chilled two ot our favorttea. coconut. thoroughly. Press firmly Fill center of each After careful teali.Dg, 1 pie (8 servings). into 9-lncb pie plate. pear with lee cream . . here are-two recipes O a ANGE C R U MB Bake al 350 degrees, 10 Press two filled halves · •that are euy to prepare, CRUST minutes. Cool. toaether; stand up in yeta.reftt forkines.The l 'h cups g raham PEARSHELENE chilled dessert dish. ea qui s It e looking cracker crumbs 1 can ( 16 ounces) Pour chocol ate sauce Mandarin Chiffon Pie l,A., cup margarine or Bartlett pear halves, over pears. J\ chiffon pie made Wtt h Mandarin orange& ii easy to prepare but lookfl elegant. and the French Classic, butter, melted chilled an~ drained 3 servings. Pears Helene , are .-=.=..::.:.::.:..!....:::.:.:.=.:=--~--~------_;__._ ____________________________________________________________ ~----------~--~----~~~--~ perfect for an afternoon or evenine meal. llANDAlllN CIDFFON PIE Or;anee Crumb Crust (see below) 1 can (11 ounces > M andartn oranges l 'h tablespoons lemon juice 1 envelo pe un - flavored gelatin 4 eggs, separated ~cup sugar a,, teaspoon salt · 1 cup whippin g cream 1 tablespoon sugar l,A., cup shredded coconut, toasted Prepare pie crust; set aside. Drain oranges, r eservine syrup. Add lemon juice and enough water to reserved syrup to make 1 cup. Soften gelatin in syrup mix· lure. lo saucepan, beat egg yolks until lemon colored. Stir in syrup mixture, sugar and salt. Brin1 to boil; reduce beat and simmer, stir· ring constantly , 5 m i nutes. Set ·aside several orange seg· ments for garnish. Cut remaining segments in half; add to gelatin mix· lure. Chill until partially set. Beat egg whites un· til soft peaks form ; fold into gelatin mixture. Pour into crust; chill un· lil firm. Whip cream, Fast, easy dessert • ·-fec1pes While tbe hostess is busy preparing an ex· otic dinner, .ome simple and delicious desserts may be just what she needs for that final touch. For the busy cook. here are a few sugges· lio n s for easy-t o . prepare, light dessert and drink recipes to finish the feast with a flair. CHOCOLATE MOUSSE An easy recipe that re- quires only one minute's blending of the following ingredients: l2 squares semi-sweet chocolate, 1 heaping teaspoon instant coffee, 4 eggs. 1 cup boil· ing hot milk, and v. cup licorice liqueur. Chill in glass bowl or ch am · pagne glass and garnish... before serving. PECHE FLAMBE Peel and halve 4 ripe peaches. Place them 1ide by side in a flat heat-proof serving dish. Sprinkle with 2 tea· s poons susa r . When ready to serve, pour ' warmed 6 o unc es almond liqueur over all and llllite. SAMBUCA CAFE Because coffee or a coffee-flavored after dinner drink provides the rmaJ expert touch to dinner, coffee liqueur makes a dellcioU5 addi· lioD to hot, black es· presso, or to a reeular cup of coffee.. One-half ounce per cup la a ll that's needed. Best of all, because these desserts and drinks are so easy lo prepatre, lbe cook can com e out of the kitchen and join in the festivities, too. Quick tips for cooks For a quick dessert, yOu can't beat cold fruit cocktail topped with a nun of sour cream and a 1prlnkJeolnutme1. A qwck·mix upside down coffee cake makes a party out of Sunday breUf ut. Simply place a layer of dralMd cltn1 peaclt lliftl la a ftll· buttered cab paa. Spoon a rtch *4:\dt mix OD top aact Mk• act«dlnl to · paek.,. dlrectionl. la· Mrt to ..... Sprinkle , ............... . ... [ ........... '*' .... ,... ,.. Added .... LOWER PRICES OVERALL BACKED BY MARKET BASKET'S Tri.pie Th• Differen ce AED·X PLANT & FLOWER SALE!l Choose From Many Varieties Of Foliage And Blooming Plants . All Red-"''". ~ X Priced. MILD BROWN ONIONS !.69 AU OUAHllTY llK'-HlS USUIYm MO SAU 10 OEAl.£11$ Oii FOii ll(SAl( Oii COMMERCIAL USE MACARONI & CHKHE KRAFT DINNER woe °"'' .11 SJOillfl *''•nu-."°' ett1 "" FRESH HOT GOLDEN 1 5 FlllED PllC( CHICKEN ~~~:.'=', OECOllATOll 011 OESIGNO ... ,,, 8 I BOUNTY FT. lllU PAPER TOWELS • C•t Cullt< f ru • 'H Mushrooms .. ., pkq . 79 -. Sliced Peaches 19·11 65 c1n • hllf..., ,.,...,,.. frOJt• ffl Potatoes .59 6.89 ~s 3.59 Aut<ld fll•trS '-~ Yoplait Yogurt 2 fAllMH STYLE 011 LOW CAL .llllSOMAIO COTTAIE CHEESE 6 0/ 1 00 ctn1 • 6S·OI 1 00 c1n • •1.00 OFF! ANYT·FAL COOKWARE ....................... •1.00 OFF AllY I I ,,. T·l'AL COOKWAMI I MY• OI' YOUR CHOIC• I 1 00 l.,, • .,,,....., ... ctllfl9ll,..,.,., ('"'""'I o -.,, h,_ftlH.;:,~.'!...~!.:~ ~-••••MD-XCOUPOll••••• Ctat Cutttr -. Apple Juice m i;c;·;;· llqu~ m c';s~;;;;~"· De~""' NABISCO PREllUI SALTINES tHZ . •• 1 .49 , ... , bfl 37.oz 1.79 "' IS-H 2.81 pkg .87 l.H'*f °'"'""' ffi Tide •U 113 F.-Clle!lft M1111<1 ~ Light Chablis 111·11 ,., .ltllHMwt Illes .... s......-lltC m E & J Premium Wtne ~1 3 .99 MARKET BASKET tFllOM flDWllAI 011118£ flllll JUICE "C:· AED·X PLANT & FLOWER SAi.al AA Arl'f'f Ot Clllr1 African B! Violets ~ 1.49 . .,.. Decorative Special B! Schefflera 11 . 99 ~,., ., .. ,Ottk ~ Rabbit Foot ~Fern ~ 2.49 ~-Or ~Tia , .. ~ raa ,.. m e~Wo~M! , ... 19 99 !Ja' Fern ,.. • OUAlllEll POllK LOIN SllCEO INTO .. 149 POii CHOPS ~ chl~~nhe~east .. 1. 29 FIM•~ ffi Stewing Hens " .39 l t•M "'" Pof110ft ~Smoked Ham ,. 1. 09 .. , ....... ._.," ~Rump Roast " 1. 98 FRESH fllNK J98 mmLE 01 llALF SALllOI . .. ------~--__. -· .,_.,_. ---~ -.. . • t l HARVEST O~~~sg : = rMMVIS~r,~· ·g , PEACHES . ~ . DKUXI c11n9 Hll'les 2t 01. c.n• WTllte Off.,_ 2• Oz. lo.f• Off Sit.. ltOl.ftl TCICI • s.ndWIOI • ··~ Orange Co ast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, SeRtember 23. 1981 C l l LARCE END I 118 STEAK "199 Wh en Barbara Man· drell isn't on the road per form ing . h er favorite number 1s her /our-layer dessert PORK SHOULDER 99 ROAST Fr~n Plentc Style lb • • ~ 1 -If LONDON BllOIL ~-2'1:/ STEAK ·~ eono.dlleef l• • Toe> ttound •. •• • 157 ... QUARTER ~ ~ • I ~ ;!!2~~~l~n. ~ • .. lllde lllCt Slr10ln CllOpS .. 1s1 LADY LEE 139 SLICED BAC~~Pttg LAROE IND RIB ROAST ' . leg••· .)L. • ....... & .. .,. 1 le)' hya-. ii"*' ~ evtn lower IM11 11Wir c~y -'ltcft•t ~ .. a l'tlNll.of • lna~n' R""8"1'1 pNftMMIOMt• ' ' 't -.e.-.-s or, .. ,._.,,_...,. ~ .. 'It flllMI , llu ..... di "Y ~..._ ewry '1mf'~ -.,. f ! 4 . ;O~ · t ft 1 .et • ,.,,,.. ,.., )!Ka. ,.. , ....._,ofafft~ ..... ;. • ~flr ...... lft ,.tcifta • ........ ·,09, OWt'llll ,_. ..... . -~BONI! 128 -~~K ROAST lh FRESH FILLET OF TURBOT Or Butter FISll •• COLDEN DELICIOUS APPLES • •' WIStllngton Eltrt Fancy ~-25 ~ Available Tl\Ur1. Fl'1 Sat oniv RED CRAPES F1avorf\ll, lltfreslllng ".59 ~ GREEN CABBAGE F<tsn. Nutrtttous ... 15 ~ l HASS AVOCADOS Oelleate Flavor ·~-29~. SNACK·PAK RAISINS , ........ , .. -flfen ..... s.m·-· -Wft l ... _C_ t . . , •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT twednetday. September 23, 1981 ft's time to get a grip on sunimer squash IAY BAUAJ,4 GIBBONS crock, 1lass bowl or pared green or yellow Any ml nut e n ow other non metal con· squash •<>mebody ls goin1 to ask lainer. Stir in remaining • ... 2 smaJJ or t large you ti you like summer ingredients. Cover und onion, sliced squash or iarden-fresh refri1erate. Wait a day t red or green beU 1ucchini. If you say or two for flavors to pepper. seeded, diced "res" you're going to blend. Keep refrigerat~ 2 cups peeled, diced ( nd yourself in ed. Approximately 30 tomatoes (or 16-ounce possession or a warted calories per quarter· can) yellow blllyclub or a cupful. t c uptomatojutce green striped baseball Here's a south-of-the· 1 or 2 cloves garlic, bat. border ratatouille that minced Super-size squash can can be frozen . 2 or 3 tablespoons ~ cul up into bile-size minced parsley, or cllan· cubes and prepared any MEXICAN tro h~aves way you'd cook sliced SQUASH STEW 2 teaspoons fresh (or smaller squash or zuc-6 cups cubed un-half teaspoon dried ) chini. Squash cubes also can be eaten raw or served in a salad. However, you'll still have lots left. Here are some low-caloric: ideas: REFRIGERATOR SQUASH PICKLES 4 cups cubed green or yellow unpeeled raw squash Non-iodized sail 1 onion. thinly sliced 6-ounce can undilut· ed cider concentrate, thawed H alf-cup cider vinegar Club soda or seltzer (aboutlquart> 1 or 2 cloves mashed garlic 2 tablespoons dillseed, or mixed pickle spice SLIM GOURMET oregano leaves l teaspoon cumin seeds (or ball-teaspoon ground cumin> Salt, pepper, to taste Optional: 1 or 2 fresh chili peppers, minced <or add red pepper flakes or hot pe~per sauce to taste> Combine ingredients in a large pot; heal to boiling. Cover and sim· mer 10 minutes. Uncover and continue to simmer until vegetables are tender and thick. Serve hot or cold. Store left· overs in the refriaerator; or divide into single-servina por- tions, label and freeze. Reheat gently. Makes 10 servings , under 45 calories each. ITAUAN STUFFED SQUASH 1 large zucchini squash (eggplant size) l pound lean beef round, around 1 onion, minced 1 clove 1arllc, minced Half-cup low-fat cot- tage <or pot) cheese 1 and one-half cups tomato juice 4 tablespoons grated sharp Romano cheese 2 tablespoons Italian-seasoned bread· crumbs Quarter-teaspoon dried oregano or basil Split unpeeled squash lengthwise into 2 h1Jves. Scoop out some of the centers lo make a depression. Combine chopped beef, onion, garlic and cottage cheese with a few table· spoons or tonrato juice to moisten. Pile the meal mixture into the 2 squash halves. Sprinkle the meat filling with grated c heese and bread· crumbs. Arrange the squash hal ves in a s hallow nonstick baking pan. Zacky Farms or Foster Farms Fresh Bisi of Fr_yer1t~:~ Bike uncovered. In a preheated 350-degree oven 30 to 35 minutes, basting occasionally with remaining tomato juice mlxed with the herbs Slice each squash half in thJrds to serve Makes sl.x servings, 170 calories each. Mort V4!gttal>U ideaa! Send a 1tamped ulf· addrtutd envelope and 5() centa to Slim Gourmet Unheard-of Vegetables, P.O. Bo:r 624, Sparta, N .J 07871. Dice squash into l ·inch cubes and spread in a shallow layer in a glass dish. Sprinkle liberally with non-iodized salt. After 30 to 40 minutes. rinse off the salt. Callfornla Grown-Consists of Breasts, -. Drums, Thighs & Wings Limit 2 Pkgs. per Customer Put the squash cubes in a big pickle bottle, 'Ge rma n dinne r rolls In Germany, ttus re- cipe is called Armer Rit· ler ... which translates into Poor Knight. It is a traditional family dish that claims its begin· nings from the knights of old who developed this idea as a way to make stale rolls into another meal. It's actually a kind of French toast in which chunks of day-old rolls are first dipped into sweetened milk ; then rolled in prepared pan- cake batterbefore browning in butter. Lat- ter-day knights have added a special touch by serving with a delicate s auce made with German Mosel wine. ARMER RJ'ITER <Poor Knight) Cu{ leftover diner rolls (either hard or soft rolls> into pieces. Dip each in milk that has be en sweeten ect wnn s ugar (about 1 tables· poon sugar per cup of milk>. Allow to stand un· li1 milk is absorbed. Drain, coal with pre- pared pancake baller, and brown on all sides in butter in a skillet. Serve warm with White Wine Sauce (below ) and spi nkle with confec- tioners s ugar. WHITE WINE SAUCE 'h cup sugar Dash of salt l tablespoon corn- starch l cup Germ an Mosel wine 2 tablespoons but- t.er In saucepan combine sugar, salt and corn- starch. Gradually stir in wine. Cook and stir over medium heal until thickened and clear. Stir in butler. Serve warm or chilled. Makes about 1 v. cups . Peachy pleasure During fresh peach season, you'll get ever- yone's vote when you pass the serving bowl of Ginger Peach Dessert. It's light and refreshing and easily prepared by djssolving one 3-ounce package of peach or orange flavor gelatin in 1 cup bolling waler. One 7-nuid-ounce bot· tJe ginger ale Ls added and chil l ed unti l thickened. Then 1 cup sweetened diced fresh p,eaches, drained , is folded into the thickened Jelattn and the mixture t.t epooned lnto a aerving ~wl. It takes 1bout 3 boun to chlll until /lrm. This a..sert yields fi ve aerv· •••• L .'·t j -a Zacky Farms or Foster Farms Zacky Farms or Foster Farms-Whole Legs, Zacky Farms or Foster Farms-Consi sts of Breasts, Drums & Thighs Value Pack Fresh Fryer Thighs or Combo Fryer Breast Drumsticks Pack Wmgs Callfornla Grown Callfornla Grown Callfornla Grown per per lb. I . Monterey Jack or U.S. No. 1 ",,f\ I -~·~ ~~', _; ~t.flf' ,. -\~) ~ \ . -~-e. . ..,, : ~~~ \ .\>:.· l~ .'i \ • ·;,~ ~~y .,\\~?y '0----- Ralphs-1 lb. Loaf Giant Size Lake To Lake Russet MiklCheddari Potatoes Egg Sesame Tide Bread Detergent Olfef encl• OctOMr 14, 1111 3IO 11~ ST., COSTA •SA IUCI\ & CMRO.D ,ASH • VUID, laA •LS MIMTICfllll IUCll CUlYD ... AT WI.Ill, !Ml j ) 39 loz. • pkg. : 77 41 01. II box ~, .. CISTAD •1-.z 1•- 411 ll llm.--·=·-··-····-., ••• ~ am , tC)WOYll •• "JoMofl Anclr-·· ( 1171) AM-Margret, Pet• ~111h. A )'OUng mM'a ham boylll'll alfllta of romance ~ ac:M04ll MtOnO t"8 atlld Md alutty Enottttt man of Iha Vlct0tl11n 111 'A' tfl)H80a..AIC PMVIRI~ OOT~A Husl>atld-~ wife ~IQ Jerry Stiller 81\0 Anne M..,• introduce ttle rnov- 118. ac>«ial• and ac>Ot1• 1"'81111 coming 10 Home Box Olflol In October I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, September 23, 1981 DI TUBE TOPPERS CBS 8 8:00 "Hay wire." Lee Remick and Jason Robards star in the adapta· tion of Brooke Hayward's best seller about her show business parents . KTLA 8 8 :00 -"Cool Hand Luke " Paul Newman and George Kennedy star in a movie about a rebellious convict. ~ tooetlon study 01 ltWrltorlel Alrlea ll )MOVta! * • "T .... hic;rldlbll Voy- age or Stlngray'·Capt Troy T9mC>Ht !Ind ttle m1g11ty 111\lp 8tlllgr ay try to aloe> the evil -IOtd, Titan, lrOfTI tal<tng ovet Iha •Orld '0' 4:00(C JMOVll lhr.. bladl alat•• fl'Oll'I tM gM\tO beoom8 muei08I llUC>8f1IMI, !Mit ewntuelly IUtfef ltOtl'I lhe ~Of alatdom 'PO' , 1:aC> ••• ~The Abdl09110n" ( t11a) U-. UllnWln, ,..., PltlGh e.c-of Mt IOYI few a Cardlnel, 0- Ctvleuna ~ a 111r tnroughout Sweden by •bdleatlng and oon_,lnO to CathOllCleM In the 11111 century ·PO' 12:00 ••• ~"Red Duet" -EVBIHG- l.1)0 ID. Niwa * * "Night Of The Jug· (.O)MOVWE t oi.r" 11eao1 J.,nea SrOlln. ' cim Gorman A format polkl8 olflc8f launcl'IN a I d1f1*118 _,Ch througll the ltr .. ta of New York City IOf hla mlsalng deugh• ter. mistakenly kidnapped KCET @ 8:00 and KOCE 9 9:00 "Great Performances." Danpy Kaye conducts a benefit performance with the New York Ph1larharrnonic. 1 Photo at leftl 8 * Jc>Mj)ll Anclr-t (lt/7) Ann·Margfel. P•ter Firth A ~no men'• nam. b0y1111 •"•Ir• ol fOM81\Ce C&UM acendal arnono the ata1<1 and atulfy Enguan men or the V1¢tor1a11 •• R 4'16tD MOVIE a • "Murder Without Tl8rt" ( 19631 Cretg Ste· vlJllt, Joyce HOl<len An 1nvea11ga10< llndt hlmMlf w11h 1 barrage ol murder• 10 solve ( 1~32) Clark Ga.bll. JMn HatlOW A plantallOfl tor• men ceueea l'TIM'ly pt00- 11m1 with nit unwlee cl'IOICe 01 IOYer• • * • * "Rot>ln And Thi Seven Hood•" (19U ) ,,.,.,,.. S1natr1. Deen Mat- lin The reed« of a Ctllee- go oano oon••.. • tatoe amounr 01 money to one of Iha City's orphanlQll KUNOl'U "'11ght To 0t1on" I TIWAIUM HUHT M•A•t•H Th• c:ompany'• young K0tM11 plngpong chatl\pl• on pereuao.t Hawtotye and B.J. to lend him mon- i tot 111~trlng HAWAI f'M>.O G ll.ECTRIC COMPANY(A) (J) Cll8 HEWS 9 AeONEWI ~=EWS • • • "A lJttle Romanc:e" ( 1979) Laur-OUl/ler, Olene Lane An elderly con anl1t joint two young run. ewaya In love on a mad duh aero .. 1he EutopNlll conllnent with the c:hll· dren·a paren11 and the police In hot pursuit 'PG' CB) CHARLIE. THE LONE.SOME COUGAR An Ofphaned cougar lttttan II ralMd by a lumbermen until the cal hears the call ot the wild (Part :n 8: 16 CZ) "X' SHORT SUBJECTS 8:30 G 8ULL8EYE ID THE MUPPETS Guest: Leo Sayer S) l<CET N£WSllEAT Heist· Clelt Aobl<ls Cl) STUDIOSU "Sampler" St Louis kl<la operate a pizza parlor. Chi- cago Glrl Scoutl play with an earthball. watch an apple harvest In VMmonl (R) (l)Q!NEWS (!§) BARNEY MILLER A wild-eyed gunman lorc.s Barney and h11 men to do time 1n 11'1111 own jail 1n the company ot a loony ventriloquist and his ob~dummy 7:00 1J CBS NEWS D N8CNEWS &J HAPPYDAYSAGAIN Fonzie, Potala, Ralph and a burglar cause panoemonl· um 1n Ille Cunningham l'IOUse while Rlcnll IS Sl<ik In bed with the llu fl ABCMEWS 8 YOU ASKED FOR rT ID OOOGER DUGOUT 61) JOt<ER'S WILD fli) OVEA EASY Guest. Dizzy Giiiespie (RJ ~ MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT (I) TIC TAC DOUGH 0 ENT£RTAINMEHT TONIGHT TUNED FOR FUN Oanny Kaye will lead t he New York Philharmonic Orchestra in a be nefit concert from Lin· coin Center in New York tonight at 8 on Ch annel 28 and at 9 on Channd 50. Jane Fonda. ttle lo& Ange. le1 Doctor'& Symphony, a locua on the world of bin· go 0 ID FAMILY FEUO 0 LAVERNE ANO SHIRLEY ANO COMPANY "Flt City Holldey U EYE~LA. Hosts Inez Pedrou. Paul Moyer. Fe&lured en lnler· view with lee Majors, Los Angeles County Fair hlQnliQhll G MATCH GAME • BASEBALL Loa Angeles Dodgers 11 San FrancilGO G11nts g) TIC TAC DOUGH fl!) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT Cl) ALCOHOL: SPEAK OVTI This 1111• c1111.1n special gives vlew9fs al nome 111e opponun.ly lo sound off on the I~ ol aJcOhol and lo get straight answers lrom some of lhe nation's top e"oens on alcohollsm Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE A visit to a soler generat- ing plant, pan 2 ot last night's story on a Quadrl· pteglc whO plans 10 enter Iha Boston Marathon. C11n1e Mann discovers animators who are b"ng- 1ng Daclt 30s•aly1e car· toona, 0. Marina Granich on how pet lllh can relieve stresa ®J YOU ASKED FOR IT ©)BASE8ALL ChlcaQO White Soa at Call· for n1a Angels tS) THE WACKY WORLD Of' JONATHAN WINTERS Host Orson w1111es Day Masucre' ( 1967) Jason Robards. Georo• Segal In the 1920s, underworld kingpin Ar Capone llllQll the bloody warehouse slaughter ol seven rival gang members II) MOVIE • • • 'h "The Mia&llas 0 1 Oclobl<" (Perl 2) ( 19741 WINiam Devane, Martin Sheen Evenls within the Kenn9dy Adrr11nlatraHon dutlng !tie 19e:1 Cuban M1aslle Cl'llll• ar• dep1c1ed &l) OREAT PERFOfV,tANCES "Live From Lincoln Center Danny Kaye With Ttle New York Philharmonic" Cele· bral9d ent8'1alner Danny Kaye conducts a gala Pen- Slon Fund Beneht perform- ance ol the New York Phll· harmonic from Avery Fis,_ Hall al Lincoln Cen· ter ~MOVIE * * "Shlpwrecll' ( t978) Robert Logan, Mikki Jami· son-Olson A widowet, hi. two daughters. a rlC)O(ter and a runewey are atr8nd· ed on an Isolated tlland aNer encountering a vio- lent storm at-· ·a· [HJMOVIE • * • "C1ddyshack .. ( t980) BUI Murray. Rodney Dangerfield The demenl· ed grounds-keeper of a swanky country club wagea war aoa1na1 t .... gophers Inhabiting hl6 turf 'R' C_SJMOVIE Cl! THE MUPPET& Guests Shield• and Yer nell 8:00 II Cll MOVIE • • * "Seema Like Otd Tlmet'" 41980) Goldte Hawn, Chevy Cha&e. A soh-l'learted 11wyer la torn bit-her hopeleU ••• hul Dan<l· lurned· bank robber and her uptight preteflt husDand Who II running tor Cal1lorn1a attornev qeneral 'PG' ( H) REMEMBER WHEN: PAGE ONE Dick Cavett tells ttle story of the American lree preu 111 prlntera and publlshMs, tleadllnaa and by-llnet. scandals and acooos (Q) ALMADEN JUMPEJI CU88IC (S) LAFF.A-THON A comedian ho.t and lour comic contestants wtlo compete against one anotner are featured 1n this unc:ensored comedy game sl\ow (l)MOVIE • • • •;, "The Postman Always Rings Twice' ( 1946) Lena Turner, Jotln Gartlekl A young woman plOts to murder ,,... hus- band with the help ot one ol the man's employees 7: 16 G» DOOOEA PAE-GAME 7:30 tJ 2 OH THE TOWN Hosta Steve Edwaroa. Melody Roge<ll Featured· an interview wltn actress CHANNEL LISTINGS f) KNXT ICBSI 0 E)ICNBC INBCI 0 l<TL A (Ind I ~ 8) KABC IABCI c O K.FMB tCR'.>I • 0 KHJ TV l ln<I I ,, 11:> KCST tABCI l ID K TTV (Ind I s Ci) KCOP TV llno I 0 &;) KCET 1PBS1 ct ~ KOCE (PBSI * * * "'Haywire' f 1979) Lee Remick. Jason Robards The shat19f1ng e•perie<lCe of growing up amid lhe lame and glamor ot Ille Haywerd lamlly IS dramatized (R) 0 OJ) REAL PEOPLE Featured· a woman whO hves OU1 '* food tenta- siea, the "mid tlugger". a llzar<I collec;tor, Buddy the wonder dog; • pog on wel- fare. • woman who strips forGod IRI &J MOVIE * •*'Ir "Cool Hand Luke" ( 1967) Paul Newman George Kennedy A young man on a chaJn gang wllh an unqUeN;hal>le thirst ror freedom defies 1111 authOl'I• ty gaining the admiration of nis fellow convicts U (1}) THE GAEA TEST AMERICAN HERO Ralph, Maxwell an<I Pam team up to head ott • con· spiracy lo lake o'ier the US oovernrTHWlt IRI G MoVIE • * '" "Tiie St Valentine's On TV Z TV HHO l(inH1'a,. f IWORJ NY N Y !WlBSl I ESPNI IShowhmPJ Spat11qnl (CaDlt' New~ Network I OMOVIE * * "Tne Rip.Oii' (11179) Edward Albert Karen Blacll A gang ol ,._i lh....,es double-Cross one another over $6,000,000 1n d1a~• 9:00 Cl) OREAT PERFORMANCES "LMI From Lincoln Cenier Danny Kaye With The New York Pnllhar monlC · c;.,. br ated enter181nef Danny Kaye conducts a gala Pen. SIOn Fund Senelil perform· ance of Iha New York Phil· harmonic lrom Avery Fisher Hall al Uncoln Cen- t9f '.%)MOVIE • * • Ceddyahack' (1980) Brll Murray, Rodney Oangerlleld Tiie d1men1. eo grounds-keeper of a swanky coJntry cluD wages war agllnat the gophefs 1nh1blting his turt R' 9:30 0 CHJ AN AMERICAN ADVENTURE -THE ROCKET PILOTS Three lest plloll who rttkecl their li111s helping to put tne Unlled Slates Into apace are prollled 10:00 &JG m> NEWS G ®J DYNASTY Blake tak• the stand 1n h11 trial, Claudia ravaall the detalla 01 ,_ allalr With Steven, And Matthew goes berserl< In the courtroom (R) by • pt~thle c;rlml Ml 'R lS)MOVIE * * • "The Greet Texas Oynamlle Ch ... " ( 1978) Claudia Jennings, Jocelyn Jones Two ,..,,ale bank robber• outwit police as they ravage the male populace with blazing shootouts. dynamite blutl and outrageous dlagul ... R" 0MOVIE • • '" "Tne Outsider' ( 1978) Sterling Hayden. Cratg wuson A young 1dlallst tra.,..s to Nor1hern Ireland to jOln the lrlah Republic's 11rugg11 for lndeplndenc;e 'R' 10:30ID MEWS «I) IHOEPENOEHT NE'TWOAK NEWS &l) AMERICAN PEA8PECTIV£: ANOTHER VIEW "El THtro Campealno" A 1()()1( 11 taken at the history ol the worl<l-¥enowned Farmworller1' Tlleeter end the art ol playwt!Qhl end c11rec:tor Lula v~ CID RAOE FOA THE PENNANT Barry Tompkins and nm McCIN9r recap dMslonal baaeball 1tandlng1 and Interview aome ol the oame'a 100 DI•--• 10;46 lZJ MOVIE * • •;, ' Honeysuckle ROM" ( 1980) Willie Nelson, Oyen Cannon Whtie on tour, a Texas country- -t9fn singer t>ec:omn Involved with the Mducllve daughter of his aldeloci• even thougn tie 11111 loves hit •••y·•t-home wile 'PG' 11'00 a o a CI> ®J a MEWS . &J SATURDAY NIOHT Host Lily Tomlin Guelll Jamas Taylor G MEWL YWEO GAME G» MOVlE • • "Tanen And The MM· malda·· ( 19'48) Johnny Walnmuller. Brenda Joyce Tarzan atrugoies to 1t0c> the 8C1M tles ol peet1 thlevea on Iha Atrk:an eout «I) 8EHNY HILL Benny hat a rival 1n Henry Mc:Gea for the nand or a c:harmlng widow f:lil DICK CAVETT Guest John Gielgud f Part 2 of 4)(R) (Hl MOVIE • • • "lt'a My Turn ( 1980) Jill Clayburgn, Michael Oo<lglas A Dril· Mant Chicago math profes- sor rl8llze1 !tie problem• in ,,... U11e-tn relationship when Iha l1ndl a ,_ love while In N-York l or her lather's retnarrlaQe 'R' 11:30 II Cl) WKRP IN. CINCINNATI Travil changes the lormat ol tile rlldlO station from "elevator mulle" 10 hard rock and tne complaints start rockk'I and ro111n· In (R) IJ Cl!T~IGHT Host Johnny Carson U ®l A8CNEW8 MIOHTUME G LET'S MAKE A OE.AL «I) ST AHL.EV 81EO£l &ii KCET MEWSBEA T Ho.t Clete Roberta Cl) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS MOVIE • • '" ''The Warriors·• (1979) Michael Beck, Dor· say Wright Blamed for Iha murd9f ol a char1sm9llc leader al a New York street gang convenlion. members ot a Coney Island gang mutl light their way baclt lo their home turl 'R' 11:'6 (Q) MOVIE * * •;, "It's My Turn" ( 1980' Jiii Clayburgh. Mlcllall Oo<Jglas A Dril- NBC C!) 9:30 "An American Advt!n lure The Rocket Pilots .'· A profil e of three test pilots. llant ChicaOO meth prof ... eor rNIU.es tne problem• In her llv•ln rel•tlonshlp when she find•• new love wtilll 1n N-York lor her rat,,_., remarrlege 'R' -MDIGKT~ t2;00 9 MOVIE * • • "Captain Eddie" (11M51 Fred MacMurray, Lynn Ball Famed aviator Eddie Rickenbacker t>ec:omet a wartime hero eNer llylng num9fOUI mis- sions and destroying • record number ol enemy olanea fl OJ LOVE BOAT A runaway slows away In the cabin of en old man. and Julie falls tor an old Doyfrlend who hu become aprlest IA) G MOVIE • • ·~ "Rogue Mala" ( 19711) Peter O'Toole John Standing A man who made an unauccesalul aasaaalnallon attempt against Adoll Hitler becomea tile quarry ol Nazi egents CD AOOKIES A retired police olllcer tries to lake charge ol an ln..-tlgatlon (C)MOVtE * * * "Les GirttJ"' (1957) Gene Kiity, Mitzi Gaynor An American mu1lca1 show Ms the European circuit I when eotnoltt".Ahnn~ IHI¥ 12!06 II CJ). MOVIE •'.I. "Tiie Maatet Gun- llghter'. (HHS) Tom Laughlin, Ron O'Neal A gunflgtltet heuntld Dy • shameful deed sets out to r~ his honor with a pistol and • samurai sword 12:30 a a TOMORROW Guest Henry Wlnklef G» MOVIE • * * "The H9f08S 01 Telemark" (1985) Kirk Oo<Jgras. Richard Harri• A water plant 11 destroyecl 1n World War II to slave oll <Mrman devllbprnenr 01 an a1omlc bomD 0 MOVIE • • • "All That Jazz" (19791 Roy Scnetoer .i..- lllCI Lange The tumultu- ova Ille ol 1 profeulonat <lancer Is followed from eucceN on ttle atege to PeflOnal CllHS 'R 12:36 Cit) MOVIE • • • ··c addysheck • ( 1980) Bill Murray, Rodney Oangerlleld. The dement- ed grounda-keepet ol • swanky country olub wages war egalnst the OOPl*'s 1nt1abUlng hlS lurt 'R' 12:45 (t) MOVIE • • • ·~ "The Postman Alway• R1ng1 Twice" ( 19-481 Lana Turner John Garfield A young woman plots to murder her l'los- bend with the help ol one ol the man·a employeet 1:00 Cl) INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS (SJ WHA rs UP AMEAICAI Tak• a ahor1 look al ttle fives o f midgets and ctwarta. melt• • 1111 run with lhl world'• fHllll bike: arack the myaterlel ol a nut mu-. rl<M the range with up1r1ng cowboy• 1:108 MOVIE * * ·~ "Cly Rape" f 19731 Peter Collleld. Andree MarCOYicd A ter11fl80 rape victim mlatllkenly 10en1111e1 an Innocent man H her •...it•n• 9 NEWS 1:30 II) MOVIE * • 'II "The Condernneo Of Altona" ( 1gea1 Sophia Loren. Malllmillan Schell A dying 1>u1o>etaman trtes to paas his 1>u1lneu on to his younger son wnen tlls psychotic older boy l>ICOmes a recluse. 1:569 NEWS 2:00 0 ENTERTAINMEHT TONIGHT 8 MOVIE • 'h "Cell 01 Tiie Yukon" ( 1938) Richard Arlen. Lyre T elbot A co11 .. and • wild dog become the compan· Iona of a female writer and a trapper In Yukon terrltO· i NEW8 !C)MOV1E ***'It "The Prisoner 01 Second A\IBnue ( 1976) Jack Lemmon. Anne B•n- crolt. Bated on tne play by Neil Simon An ldvartlllng e~ecu11v1 loses h11 JOb and hi• sanity because ol Ille recession and the hec1iC Manhallan pace PG !l)MOVIE * * "Return Of The StreetllQ.hlM' Sonny Chi· ba. 'A' 2:1511 NEWS 2-.30 0 NEWS 0 FAACTUREO FUCKERS 2:46 tJ EOOORIAL (lJMOVIE ••• "1900 ( 11177) Rot>- .,, Oe Niro. Donald Su1nertand The day-to- day lite 01 two very d1fler- ent 20-ltl century Italian lamntes 11 oonrav"'1 'R' 2:50 tJ MOVIE * *'~ "Never Love A Stranger" ( 1958) Jotln Drew Barrymore Lita Milan Based on a novel by Harold RoDl:>lns A man'• lasl·PICed walk on the wtlel s1d1 of Ille wins him • lop rung on •tie crime syn· dlcat• laddet 3:00 G» MOVIE ••'Jr "Ghost• 01 Berkeley Square" ( 1114 7) Robert Morley, Felix Ayfmfl< A derk •nd dusty old man. Ilion Is const<le<ld "home by two long·-dH<I military ottlc«s. OMOVIE • * "The Rip.Ott" ( 19791 Edward Albert, Karen Black A gang ol jewel thllYel doul:>le-c;ross one another over $6.000.000 in diamond• 3:10U NEWS 3:258 NEWS 3:30 8 MOVIE * *'II "Hunt9f& Of The Wiid" ( 1974) Documentary. A white man Stu&r1 Prtn- gle, d...,otea n&111ly 20 yH rs of his Illa to an on- Thur11dctfJ~• DoytlmP tlot•ie• -MORNING- 5:00 0 • "Tne Awakening" f tll80) Charlton Heston. Susannah York An archaeotog1s1'1 daughtat becomes possessed by 1111 malevOllnt spirit ol an ancient Egyptian queen 'R' 5:30 S' • • •·~ Tne High And The Mlgnty" j t954) John W•yne. Cle ire Trevor An IMrplane with :12 P•~ gers aboard runa Into dan· ger en roule lo San Fr•n· CISCO 8:00 CC,• * 't "The Prince And The Peuper" ( 1977) Mark Lester. Oliver Reed A prince and a t>egger boy change Clolhet and ldenH· tlH 1n medieval England PG' 7:00 0 * * • '"' 'My Body· guard ( t 979) Cnrls Makepeace Adam Baldwin The new kt<I 01 a Chicago high school makes lrtflnd6 With me ichool outc~st and 1ogeth· er lhey stand up 10 ltle cru· el gang wh1Ch nad PM· 50CUled them l>OtlJ. 'PG' 8:00 'Cl • "Boy Who NevM was·· An unlikely group 01 kids outwit a pair ol villains 1n an asseasina11on attempt against tha pres•· dent of Burundi ($) • • • "Executive Sulle ( tllS-41 W11i1am Hol- den. June Allyson When the tap ••ecutlve ol a fur - nlture company suiters a letal hean a1teck. a mad power play ensues among the 111ce presidents 10 IOI 1111 cnair 11:00 C * * * '> ' My BO<ly- gu a rd ( 1979) Chris Makepeace. Adam Baldwin The new kid Bl a Chicago high school makes lrtends wtlh the school outcast and logelh- er they stand up to the cru- el gang whlCh hid per- secuted tnem both 'PG' 0 ••*'""Murder On Tne Ortenl Express ( 1974) Albert Finney. Lau- ren Bacall Belgian sleuth Hercule P0tro1 investigates the mur<ler ol an American lndu$1rlaliat aboard a lux- urtoUs and famous tram 10:00 Cl) • ''\ "Let'• Go f'favy' 11951) Bowery Boys. Allen Jenklr\I Ttle 8owory Boys enlist 1n Ille U S Navy 11:00 D •*•'It "Ouackser FOl'tune Has A Coustn In The Sron•" (19701 Gene Wiider. Margot Kidder When htS lovet1hood Is lak· en away, an Irish manure merchant lurns 10 other eccen111C but more palat· able ways 10 make a hvlng Cl) e '""The Trell Beyond"' ( 1113'4 ) John Wayne, Verna Hillie A cowboy journeys to the Northwest territory In searcn ol a gol<l mine ano a m1ss1ng girl. fCI • • ·Sparkle" l 1978) Irene Cara, Lone11e McKee OurinQ the 1950a. (1) • • ,_. "Stey All You Are" (1980) MarcellO M••· trolannl, NaatUlla Kintlll A married, middle-aged rnen embarks °" an allalr With • t--· girl WllO mey be related 10 tllm 1:00 tCJ * * * "The Counl Of Monie Criato" ( 193'4) Rob· en Donat. ElllH Landt Ba.Nd on ttle novel by Af1x•ndr1 Oumaa An Innocent man unjustly imprisoned for 20 yl8rt mikes a daring eacape to wreak rlYlnge on the men reeponalbl• Si *** "Ei<ec:ut1ve Suite" ( 195>4) Wiiiiam HOI· den. June Allyson When Iha 109 IXJICUtlve of a l\if. nlture company eutt.,. a ratal heart attack, a mad power play -among lhe lllCI prffidenll to flll n11 chair 2:00 0 • • • Simon" ( 19801 Alan.Arkin, Aoalin Pendle- ton Sclentlall al • Dlzarr• ty misdirected think tank convinc:e • bumbling col· leg• professor that ha la an 11118'1 from outer apace 'PG CZ) • •'It "Honeyauckta Rote" ( 1980) Wiiiie Nelson. Dyan Cannon. While on 1our, a Texaa country· western singer 1>8Coml8 1nv01ved with the Nduct!Ve daugtller of hit sidekick even thougtl tie 11111 iovea h111tay-et-nome woe 'PG' 3:00 (CJ • • '"' "The Prlnc:e And The PauP9f" ( 1977) Mark Lester. Olivar Reed A prince ano a beggar boy cnanoe clOlhes and ldenli· hes 1n medieval England 'PG' 3:30 G • * 'h "Spy With Thi Perfect Cover" j 19671 Robert Lansing, 01na Wynter An ArnerlC8n CIA agent eslabllst>u a perfec1 cover lor himself In thl world ol International esplonege, as the toolc· allke of e foreign lnduslrl- allst ($) * * "The Incredible Voyage 01 Sllngray''Capl Troy T ..,,pest and Iha mighty Ship Stingray try to slop Ille evll aea lord. Tl1an. lrom taking over the wor10 o· 4:00 0 * * * '" "My BOdy· guard' ( 19791 Chris Makepeace. Adam Baldwin Tne new kid at • C hicago tll gn school makes lrl8flds wun Iha school oulcast and 1ogelh· .. I hey •••nd up IO lhe CfU· el gang wtlleh had Pef· secuted them Doth 'PG' (l ) • * * • "'Adam's Rtb" ( 1949) Spencer Tracy, Katf'larlne Hepburn A murder trlal creates havoc 1n the mamege ol a wom· en lawyer and her hus· band, an asslstanl dlstrloC attorney 5:00 ((:) • Danger On Oan- moor" A convict on the loote and a mysterious 'old women plunge • trlO ol youngsters into danger, suspense and lllC•tlng adventure 5:30 ($) ***'It "Tiie High And The Mighty" (Ill~) John Wayne, Clalra Trevor An airplane wilh 2:1 pusen- gMs •board nins Into den· ger en rou11 to San Fran- cisco. JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batluk AND IH IS IN IURN LEADS 10 '"IHE exGUISITE CONJEC.TU~E ""THAI OuR UNIVERSE MAY 0e ONL.Y A SINGLE ELEMENT,A~Y P~ICLE IN IHE COSMIC AACHITEC.TU~E OF AN EVEN LARGE~ UNIVE~ · .. SAYt . FOR EXAMPL.E.J AN ATOM I re .~ E~MOU::. .-tGCC>ru'ION ! IHIS HAS WIDELY COME ~ 9E KNOWN ~ HG '"1l4E LAWRENCE ._ WEU< THEORY OF 'THE UNIVERSE.' Deaf TV actress translates her views By J ACKJE HYMAN ._ ............. ,.,._ LOS ANGELES -Wh en Linda Bove was born, .her parents -both deaf themselves -were dis· •tressed to find their daughter had inherited the im· pairment. "I asked my parents a long time ago, when ·you found out I was deaf, were you upset? My father said yes. He knew what he bad gone through and be was concerned ror my future," she said. He needn't have worried. Miss Bove, an animated and expressive actress wboae sip "language ls translated at interviews, is a reJU)ar performer on television's "Sesame Street" and author or the Muppet book "Sip Lantuac-Fun." Reagan speech live NEW YORK (AP ) -The three major televl.alon networks said Tueeday they will broad· out. Prelldeot Reaian'a apeech on the et000my Thursday nllht. Soolteemen tor A BC, CBS and NBC a.aid &bey would CarT1 the 6 p. m. 1peecb. CBS said it blld allo NC'tived a requnt trom t.be DemocratJc Part1 tor dme to retpond to Ru1a. llanba Mat '"'*""' for tM nttwortr, ·Hid k .. CBI'' Polki alwQa to protride llme rw : Ylewt otber ... Uae prtsldmt'•· • She has appeared on Broadway with the Na- tional Theater of the Deaf, performed for a year on the soap opera "Search for Tomorrow" and was featured in an episode of "Happy Days." She currently stars in the touring company of the Tony Award-winning Mark Medoff play, "Children of a Lesser God," which came full circle recently by returning to Los Angeles, where it was introduced at the Mark Taper Forum a year and a half ago. Taper artistic director Gordon Davidson later directed the acclaimed Broadway version, as well as the touring company and the London produc· tion, which opened recently to rave reviews. Mias Bove bas won critical praise for her portrayal of a deaf woman who falls in love with a bearint man, played by Peter Evans. Although the play touches on many issues affecting deaf people, it remai.ns at heart a love story. A central problem between the couple ts the husband'• tmi!tence that hia wife learn to lip·read Hd speak. She contend• that 1ince abe could never do either of tha&e thin1a well, ahe would appear as an lnlerior or tmltation bearing person rather tban an l..ndJvtdual tn ber own ript. "Tbe problem ls unusual but the problem of ' dependence vs. independence happens l.o all rela· Uontb.lpe," said Mru Bove, whole huabpd of 11 year•:..~ector Ed Waterstreet, 11 also deal. 1 •JUSUnGentandlq1 -one likes to bavt tbe other dependent on him -it's a universal strug· gle.'' In "Search for TomorTow," she played a deaf woman who runs away from her parents to seek independence and falls in love. On "Happy Days,·· in a part she suggested herself. she played a deaf woman who has a fling with Fonzie. Miss Bove said she would like to work with a writer to create more parts for deaf actors, "but l haven't found anyone yet to do It with." ' She's currenUy taking a break from "Sesame Street" to tour with the show, but wtll resume filming after the run ends next February in 'Boston. Daily Pilat ''One reason for my signing on 'Sesame Street' is to help children who have learning problems,'' said Mias Bove, explalnlng that al1n- in1 -an often-colorful, comprehensive language that can be "spoken'' as fut as verbal En1U1b -••ll':---...::::::l-111111:;._----------' has been found to be helpful not only for bearing. impaired youngsters but. alao for chtldren who are non.verbal because of other problems, lncludlng some forms ol retardation. ''Sign lanaua1e ls visual. rt•a a natural thing for them," she a~d. Miss Bove, who met her husband when both were 1tudenta at Gallaudet Colle1e in Wuhlncton, D.C., uJd she lan't worried about whether any children ~be may have miabt ln.ber1t her impair· ment . 642-4321 Direct or collect, to suNcribe to ~ homdOl.Dn paper. tr.. . .. Diiiy Pilld . . ' r I ... r •' ·.:,.i. o: t.<.j tH . fl flt! •th I) I t IO > I I , I ' Orange Coast DAILY PIL01'/Wedneaday, September 23, 1981 . - vest in estiv Encounter international! y ·~~ renowned performing artists ,. in a unique and intimate setting.-1 • See arid hear the coming young a-rtists ·' ,. J grow under the \ . . guidance of the finest Master Teachers~ • an Become an integral ' ,.,. part of the F~stival's 1· e WHAT IS THE FESTIVAL OF LEARNING AND PERFORMING? It is a local foundacion serving as a liason becween young performers and internacionally recognized arciscs. The Festival provides opportunities for the young performer to learn and perform before renowned concert and opera singers, symphony direccors, drama, dance and other coaches, . teachers and artists co learn from this rich association . continuing devotion to the l~arning and performing process. Fronusp1ccc "fircbird" created by Gcrd Slang for Hack-land Glass of Norway with famous internarional luminaries of the professional world of theacre, opera and dance . You become a vital part of rheir progress co their own international success . Your contribution will provide the creative armosphere for the development of young artists wi rhin chis communiry, and will help rhe Fesrival provide its imporrant supportive role for all the ~xis ring performing arts in rhe Southland. THE FESTIVAL REQUIRES FUNDING TO: I ' ~· . . .. .· . Artists of great stature coming co the Fescival enrich the area wi th cheir knowledge, their professional "know-how," and leave sharp, indelible imprints on minds and ears. Audiences attending sessions, concerts, lectures, mini-concerts and Gala Concerts are doubly enriched by observing the fine professional ac work in an informal situation and watching the growth of the young talented performer. Present its heralded Master Class Sessions for the aspiring singer and pianist, which have elicited such critical acclaim from the press, audiences, performers and Mairer ' Teachers alike. rr. " ... After 11 years of growing accomplishments, the Festival is recognized by the Internal Revenue Service and the State of California as a Non-Profir, Tax-Exempt Educarional Foundarion for Public Benefit . Augment existing disciplines -to broaden rhe base of the Festival to offer more opportunities in dance, drama and musical theatre. Mainrain the necessary requisites for effective management of the Festival's business . BECOME A MEMBER TODAY. WHY SHOOLD YOU CONTRIBUTE ? You may remember with warmth the teachers and persons who took the rime and parience to guide you and open new vistas for thinking. Only later do you realize the growth from this experience. So ir is with the Fesrival. Join the many other distinguished parrons of the arcs, firms and corporations in supporting rhe Fesrival's continuing devotion to rhe learning and performing proccu. You will help bring ralented young arrisrs together Your tax deductible concriburion enticles you co become a Festival Associate, with invirations to "membership only" " events especially presenred for you. A public service sponsorship of lhe Orange Coast Dally Pilot BOARD OP'DlllECTOt.s r----------------------~---------------------, I D YES. I would like tO become an in.tegral part of tht festival NAME 1 I I of Leaming and Performing. My check is enclosed. I I D PLEASE SEND ME MORE INIORMATION ABOUT ADDRESS I I TI-IE FF..STlV AL. I I FESTIVAL A~IATES OTY STATE ZIP I I ., Mute." Circle ........................•......... $2}00 and over I Bcnefa.cror . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • ooo and over I Guan.ntor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $}()() aftd ova TELEPHONc----------------1 Patron ... . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2}0 and over I I Spontor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S 1 oo and over Kindly make check or money ocdu payabJt to and mail co: I I = ~;J~~ .. ~~ .. ~~· .~ .. ~~~~~M:~~~SOY: FESTIVAL OF ~G~~2 PERFORMING • I . I '"' ·' I ' I NON-PaOFIT, TAX-EXEMPT EDUCATIONAL POUNDATJON Santa Ana, California 92702 I , I fOR PUBLIC 8£NEPIT. for mort information pleaac call (714) }43.()}4) ~ I ~-------------------------------------------~ 1 \ ' '--e PJ I "• ···-•.• .. •.• .. •.w,.• Ci 'Brigadoon' comes to Sebastian's By TOM 'ft'n.18 e<_..., ... _ The fraflle ma1lc of the romantic musical "Bri&adoon' baa emer ied ooce a1ain from the ml1t1 ot Ume and settled over SebaaUan'• Weal Dlnner PlayhOUM ln San Clemente. An oldie but a deflnlte toodle, "Bri&adoon" ls an earller product of the "My Fair Lady" and "Camelot" team of ~erner and Loewe, a fanclful tale set In the ScotU11h hlghlands and blessed, as are the aforementioned ----------:~~~~· with a marvelo"8 llJlllllllll The melodic story of two American tourists ----------wh o stum b le on a backwoods town that materializes only evtry hun- dred years is rarely done on local stages, which in Itself is puzzling. Certajnly the show's scenic re· qu.iremeot.s are as simple as any musical's with Its permanent rorest backdrop and a lilUe dry ice now and then to create a fogty effect. At Sebastlan'.s, director Dan Verre has mount· ed this musical m emor abilia with a deft . if sometimes heavy band. His producUoo is rich in ensemble veneer, aided by some impressive choreograpttic work by Patti Hubler whose HJgbland nlngers are in fine form. A stneular flaw in the Lerner-Loewe script is the matter of fact matter in which the romance between the leading characters is ignited , but Stuart Larson ·and Dale Wencfel overcome this de- fi ciency with exceptional singing voices. Larson may be a bit young for the role, but bis lyrical work is first rate. The non-singing second banana , who's given an over abundance of co mic shtick work by direc- tor Verre, ii nicely done by Rick Allan, and Doney Oatman as the hot-blooded Scottish lass who pursueg him is excellent, particularly in her rendi· lion of the energetic solo, "My Mother's Wedding Day." Outstanding in his vocal work is Amick Bryam as' a . lad whose wedding sparks near - trage<ly. "THE TEM PERATURE IS HIGH AND THE ACTlNG SIZZLING IN •BODY HEAT." -Tin~ M•~.111nc ·~AMELODRAM A SOAKED IN ATMO,SPH ERE. RICH IN CHARACTER AND TAUT WITH TENSION:· -SaturdJ) it<"lC"' I 3( )[ )\~ I 11 :AT \, tl1t· f1'f11/>f''llf11r1· ""'' tlu· ''"f1t'n\t' he,!lfl\ If you want 118 Cord Straight Legs, We've Got 'em. AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 Our four basic colors are oll·whrte. It blue, !an and navy In M"ll. cotton. 16% polyester for shrinkage control Vet.eran actor Ray Erlenbom doe1 a nne sace turn a.1 the town patriarch, while Irene Zelonka's blushing bride displays some fancy footwork. Kim Mowrey Is a bit subdued as her jealous suitor; be could use a blt more nastiness in his interpreta- tion. " Musically. the show Is in excellent form under the baton of Jan Ritscbel, but Allan's shenanigans In one of the key numbers, "It's Almost Llke Being in Love." are overdon~. The poignant "There But tor You Go I " and "From This Day On" are splen- didly SWli by Larson and Miss Wendel. Llke its elusive subject. "Brigadoon" only sur- faces occasionally, so playgoers should catch this one while it's still around. Performances continue nightly except Monday through Nov . 8 at Sebas- llan 's West, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. • CALLBOARD -Auditions for Stephen Sond- heim's "A Little Night Music" will be held Satur- day at l p.m. and Monday at 7 p.m . at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach . . those auditioning should bring music and be prepared to sing ... the cast calls for nine women and fi ve men wbo sing, as well as two male and two female non-singing roles ... JOHN BLAIR BELUSHI & BROjVN CONTINENTAL DIVIDE A UNIVERSAL r1nuR~ The Evons • c,-.:ciling tutO _llE'or uoyogc in the Pacific.film ed and 1Jf''30na//y narrated by Gene £001111. o comeromon on the releulsion show "Roots". Sept. 22 & 23 Sept. 24, Thursday r.n. ... Lide Tlleatre -Newport Bad! MESA TMEATIE -COSTA lllSA Via Lido at 19th St. at Newport M•d. Newport ll•d. SHOW TIMES: 6:30 P·"'·· l:lO p.111., I O:l O P·"'· Ad111i11m: USO MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ,,.., ~"'9 o/ ""9 t•Mg:t o IO~ ,,.,.,...., •CIC>ut ""9 si..-t•O~ otl • ~..-. conlltlf"lf ~ .,,......,g 0~ h ll C""Of9n r;:;i All AOES AOMIT!CO l!:!J c;.,,.,,, AuO••nces ~ AllAG(SAO ... nT!'o ~ Paten1ai Guidance 5'.IQ9elle<J AU 1:1 {i!iil AHO (81 FtlMS RECEtV( P<l SEAL Of Tl1E MOTION PICTURE CODE Of SEV' REG!Jt.ATIOH STARTS TONIGHT OM.. Y ... l fll I LAUOHIRI 6:00 8:20 10:35 CAM«>NBALL RUN IPGI 8:00 NINE TO FIVE(PGI 6 :00 9:45 Call In Y oar Questions at (714) 895-5050 ucl fet a Ire• <>raaic C:O.aty ruoau '9ld• "Alcohol: Speak Out!" Wednesday, Siptembcr 23 7:30 p.m. KOCE/50 AJcolaollam lsn'tjtlst a problem ... It,'• a CRISIS! ................. ._ .... c.,. • .. ......... t ........ -. .. ,. ''" I ii 5i 3 8 3 2 2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, September 23, 1981 JOHH RAITT, IROADWAY STAR '" CfJNCER1' Irvine Bowl, Leguna Beach Friday, Oct. 16, 1981 • 8 P.M. Ticket• $50 -$25 -$10 -SS 1 ha -uellble-lofll Benefit ei>onsored by LAGUNA BEACH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH T •c••I• may 11e Obi••*' b't ca111na 49 l·l40 I or IJ I ·7f01 or wnt. to 3390 I llH L•Mnl, D-P't. CA tJUt "Hurrah and hallelujah!" -Shella e.n.on, LOS ANOEl.ES TIMES NOW PLAYING . ' • l OWAllOS MUii lllU rlA/A IOUllTAlll U llU OAIY!·lll SCMITM CCIUl rwa iv ... ,1q. ' .. • <r,1'1!.1 ~ l ,., <'1 I I !toollt eo...i l'WI• c.., ~. Mt .. \4. 1111 • ClllfOOMl S UOIUM OlllU II [ft .. $ ~UACA 1 ••"'I' '· ' ,, . II l0to '>II '>8llO • r&UU ACCUTY •uw .. s ~IU WUJ FOii '1'111 EaAGlllllfT w"'"""'"" 991 391'• •BARGAIN MATINEES • Monday thru Saturday All Performances before 5:00 PM (Except Special Engagements and Holldays1 LA MIRADA MAU o M11000 o• Qoi•c,onl LA MIRADA WALK·IN 994·24 00 THI. _,IT~ MOMl'f CAiii •~ "ARTHUR" <POI u ................. , .. ,. "STRIPES ' ,....,., • • • .. •• •t fJ'l ..,...neuau• •• • u UNDER THE RAINBOW .-01 ,.....,., ........ .. ....... ""'. 1 ....... .... MAIUUIOfit fi>ttD •I.AM• AU.l.N I .. "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" 1"'1 U .Jll.l ·M.1•,11&.1..a LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK·IN 'VICTORY" 1 .. "" .. , 1 ''· ...... .,.., .... , .. , .. ' EYE OF THE NEEDLE 1•1 , .... , .... , .. .,...." •• ''· .... 11-. NINE TO FIVE tN! ,. .. u ,. 111 tt11 .,..,.'"' ·~· ~·-THE CANNONBALL RUN' 100! ,..,.,.., ........ . .,,.,.,.__ 1-.••. 1.-n Al, .. T1.._lt.ATVlll 'lt•a. ................. "BODY HEAT" 1•1 ..... ,. ......... . lcc ully ct Cc1101ewcco 2 13/531·9580 ....,...,.. fllOltO • ltARI• M.I.* ... "FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER" 1t11 "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK",,., n--~•ITWMO 1 ••• )_JI ......... .. ---- "THE CANNONBALL RUN" -1..a.1..•.1-=a "NINE TO FIW" - I ,_ 1 'It, I~.. ""YtlW I OI M l· .... t II, t<4* H ti "FOUR SEASONS' tPOI "' 1 J6. te-..M llAT·tt• ... ~ "HEAVY METAL 1•1 t ,. ........ . .... _ .. _. ___ J ''TARZAN, THE APE MAN" 1•1 J., ... LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WALll·IN 'CHEECH & CHONG'S NICE DREAMS 1•1 11•.•• •• CHEECH & CHONG'S J.ocuOy Al Oe4 Amo NEXT MOVIE" l"I 213/ 6 34 •9_2_1_1 __ ..------·-·-· •. IUI VICTORY !NI ............ "EYE OF THE NEEDl.£" lltl ..... ,. LAGUNA "STRIPES 1•1 ·~•.•n.1 • S.0 .8.1•1 JU ,. so. COAST WALK·IN Scull\ Ccc•I H•wcy cl lrooowcy 494-1514 ........ _,..Nlllll•a. "BODY HEAT ' <•1 ,,..,_ ...... "FISTS OF F\JRY" lltl ANAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ''•••01 '' ot lemon St , .. m et NM •WV CAN 8UY "ARTHUR" IOOI , ... ,. WMf ....,...,.UtO._ 1itCMAD KAl"Pl-M TO"°" PRIVATE LESSONS (R) l"UM "'°'"PIO" DAT lflf "HELL NIGHT 1•1 CtHI JI SOU•C• 179·91.:.50.:,__ __ -.-_ TWO ....Cl La ..... f TWO Of';;;~-;;..;. .. ...-~· "THE CHINESE CONNECTION" ''ORDINAR~OPlE" lltl "FISTS o7"F\JRY" "'' "THE ELEPHANT MAN" {111 CIHI 11 SOI/HO C•Ht II ~HO 8UINA PARK BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN \1ncotn -'•• w•1t Of ~nott ___ 121·40_7_0 __ FOUNTAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE·IN Son O•eoo l,..,y al lrookhunl (\o) 962·2411 WI ~1"'41NSllR .IOMN H LUIM AMI 9'.Ntll "'°"" "CONTINENTAL DIVIDE" IOCll ...... 'COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER" IN! ......,......,_ "°"'° • «MIM AU.etl .. • AAIOERS OF THE LOST ARK !NI ~119 GREASE '"'' Clllf I• 50U~O Hl·WAY 39 DRlllE ·IN 11eotn 9,.0 So •>' G-,Jto•n CilO•f ftHwCh' 891·3693 TII0-"9-• llOI -TM_fO _ CTON•• I _._ro_ "THE CHINESE CONN£ I "PRIVATE LESSONS" 1•1 "FISTS O~f\IRY" 1•1 owa "ENDLESS LOVE" 1111 CINl J1 SOUllO Cl'ft It SDOlt..;;.D __ _ .......,. •"*k.M • ..,...... ••wean "THE CANNOH9ALL RUN" -...... "NINE TO AV£" - ClllfllSOU*tO LA HABRA LA HABRA DlllVE ·IN ... ____ .....,._ ''AN AMERICAN W£AEWOlF IN LOHOON" 1111 ...,. "HELL NIGHT" 1111 CIHI ! t SD\JllD -HwM A.ltO ..-.,.,.,.. "CONTINENTAL DIVIDE" t"t ~ ... -• ""' ~ -~ -& --COAL MINER'S DAUGKTER" -a n -1162 ftll!NA PAlh LINCOLN DRIVE·IN hn<oln Ave W•\I Of cnott '21·4070 • 1~ANGI ORANGE DRIVE·IN M"9--lll-N_ll_ "IOOY HIAT 't11 -"A•l'ICAN atOOU>'' 1111 .... I Afrrf Al I 'LIAN MISSION ORIV l ·IN ·~ ..., ., • • • 1 • ~ WARNER DRIVE IN WO-~ ., ... OI Hoeft llod ...... _,.,.._ ..... --·-"BODY HEAT' 1111 .... "AMERICAN GIOOLO' 1111 Sonto Ano,,..., • Slo'• c 0•1•9• 558·7022 --Ml-1.1.MOMIM •N~ CON I L YAQUI M7·Htl .-.00 "' CU\OAO ' "HUGELY ENTERTAINING!" ff<cJM >vfA~ro • M ~: ~ ISAAC STERN IN C HINA ........... a.... WHkd•y1 7:00 & t :OO Sund1y1 2:00- 4:00-7:00-t:OO "POL VESTER" In ODORAMA (R) II "FOX AND THE HOUND" (PG) "ONCE UPON A MOUSE" Ill "HEAVY METAL" "UNDER THE RAINBOW" Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wtdntsday, September 23, 1981 81GG£0RGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "P J is in there oil alone wostin' some of his smiles." "The doctor wlll be with you In a moment." .. '9ARMADl'KE · by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE MENACE Hank Ket~hum t~ l!J~ II ~-13 [jJ il ~ 1 ~~ f ·2-S :l'"'""',..foou•S-•,.-..,--1:8t~~ "When will I be big enough to get to the school bus on my own?" ·-rm not sleepy ... you wanna talk?" Jl"DGE PARKER bv Harold Le Doux MAl\E IT 'YOU'VE OOT A MC> PACKED TWO. IN 1HE CLOSET I GARt'lt:LD r:;;=::::::::==::-:r W~Y, LDRD you HAV~Nlr PLlJSHBOTTOM ! l:?EEN BY FO~ ® !Wo D,AYS .' AOAOSS 48 Com9leined t Mengtt 52 Muttera 5 Uttered thoughts: 9 Portlla 2 words t4 Ewopeen 5e Gotd: Sp. 15 Monldeer 57 StleCk 1e Vlolln tnllcer 5e DevtM 17 Copyfeed 59 Prepotltlon 11 W1'1"1 to Frtndl river 11 Hummingbird 81 Ser..,. 20 Atted! 82 LM: V11. 21 Pro: 83 Colonltt 2 wordl 84 Poemt 23 FootlnO 85 Fruit drink• 25 u.. [)()Wffllt .. 28 COlftPIM pt. ' That It: 27 lndlgem 2 wordt 2t CM:,Pref. 2 Shortw.,... 32 AMlyn 3 In,...,.... 35 UCMn 2 WOfdl 3' Hutting • Melhwol1I ' 37 Hood 6 lowi>rioeO: 31 Rlc:fl elk• 2 WOfdl 3ta.t ·~ 40 "--1....,, oomy -. .. " a USSR rW • t Fem. tuf. t MIMI 42 Quebec '° ~ "*.... 11 Aeootdli a: 43 ~.. " 2 WOf'dl ... Hlldllll 12 Coup ,. -.av..,. 1il'll** ....... 21,... UNITED Feltwt Syndlcttt Tutecley'1 Puale SolYtd 22 Pronoun 24 eur.. 27 Havent 28 Bone: Pref. 30 Golf lhot 31 UK't r1Yer 32 lllllflg 33 Vlriout M Aquitlc ... 2wordl 358'** MY•poee -~ ' • 1 2 3 .. 14 by Jim Davis e 00 0 PE..\NtTS Tl'MBLE" £~08 VOV lHOOGHT VOO HEARD A CMOCOLAiE CHIP COOKIE CALLING YOU, DIDN'T YOU ? by Charles M. Schu lz MAV&E IT WAS A D006HNUT WHO'S A VEmlLOQOIST .. hi------"""'"" ___ _, '{£:5 <-rr·s WE Ari YOU '{()l) t\NOW, OF COURSE:, Pt.ACE:!i' IN OlJR FOITT tJ~- WHV W~'Rf: Hf;RJ:! PAPeR: 11 WAl\JTFli: PAJ...E- by Tom K. Ryan VOO'RE A MOl\M'H O'A!RPl)e rA'llN&1He ~11..1-,POV! FACE SP'/ 1b Sl\lfAK 1Tl.OOPS ~EWS 10 ~HAWK 1Rl ~E'' ! ____ v SHOE ecw~.aA~ ... ~'{WE'~ 9e ~IN& ~~l»J~OJ . NANCY--W~AT ON EARTH IS THAT AROUND YOUR A FLEA COLLAR NECK< BRABBLE I ~· 1' l<JtOl&l kMA1 'f O 00 t ~No-4 I~ ~INAU.'f ~INC, AH'6C'f\OtlA1t, AllO I t\?N'1' KHolA> "°w 1'o rt~'f ! _ .............. ,, ,, l'VE. SUN WAJtf1HCJ "f.~ 1'0 ~ 1"1M ll>A-4 ~~ '(~ 'IEA~~ ANO NOb) I OOtf'f KNOW lllMA'f 1"0 00 ~ FOR BETTER oa Fea •ORIE I ReMEMBeR WHEN BREAD WA~ 2S4 A LOF\f f\NO ~I~~ 45 A R:XJND! I'M TAKING NO CHANCES by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushm1ller ---I'M GOING TO THE DOG SHOW ;!. .JUS1" PeRFORM E!P A COMF't..E!!,.-E! F'A'fl SN,.. e>YPA55! OON'T RSK ME. WHRT l Rf.MEYeER~ I • I ----.. ......--..._.._ ___ ... -------.---· .. ._ IOVTN ClOIUT Ala OUALITY .-M ..... •TOllTltlCT" MUltl ... 90.lao NOTica CW "VIM.JC MIA•1 ... TO «*ti Ma TNl ... llUAllCI T-Yemerneto cw•• CNIOlla f'Oll AIATIM .. tT Thi• .__, WM llled w'llll IM AMOMOOff'ICATtOlll~ C.-ty Ci.rt. OI 0.:-CO<inty •" s.,,. VAll!AMCI lfO. .. NIUC •Ill "CTITIOUI •u11•1u NAMI ITATIMl•T TIMI lollowlnt .. .._. It dolt19 lutl. ....... : lVHlllSE OOL0$MI TH, ,,.,, IM<ll 8'oHv.,CI, HUllll"l\Ofl llM<ll, C.1Hornlef2'MI lllOClan CtalQ '-'-· »to .....,. Tlmbt<, SAnteA,.., Ce, f'21t1 Tllb ..i,.., 11 c~-11y.., '" lll'Wldllel ~c.~- Orange Coeet DAJL Y PILOT/Wednetday, September 23. 1981 DI ltMOOQ, ICSltM&.L & MUat•nlll A ... 7 . at &... C.... .,,. ...__,.., ........,._ ,. ............ c.a. ..... ,.,., ..... Orenoit C..llt °""' ,., ... iept. •. "· n. ao, "" ,.,.,., PICTlTIOUS a1111 .. 111 .. ,.... ITAT•M•T Tlw ""'-'"' --h ....... ...,.,. ...... : C & C lllEWPO•' IHVE$TMINT OROVP, 170 ........_, C-1.,. Orlve, _..,.. Beoclt, CA.,._, PtCTITIOUt 9Uttll•U llMMI nan.,. .. , TM .......... -..nt ete .. , ... !MAJ-·· PIC'fltlOUt •lltl••U "AM•HATIMUIT , ...... -.. --I• Otlftt ..... ....... ltlY l"A(TO .. t , IUJ '"'"''-A••., .._ •11, ""rllon a.-11, Ca ~ Mary Leutu Cer1t••. ISU ,,._,,1., An., $11 •11, H••Hrl INC;ll,C. nw,a IN,..., Mae CMri.. fiat,_..,,.. .......... •11. ~ ... , c.. ~ Tiii• ... ,,,..u h 0114111(-llY a _,., ...,,,..,.tlllll. M«y L. Carrloe T"I• .. ._, •• 111 .. •1111 ... c:.uMy c-. Of 0r.,. Ceunty ... -........ , .. ,, CALll'O"HIA •INCH INC .• IOI K ln1• ...... "••••" •e•Cll, Celltwnle "*' .Jf/M Gl-·Leltoy.,, C.lllo<nte, SOJ 1(1,.., llllMd, H••P0'1 lucll, C•11'°""4t f*1 Tiiis ...UW.• la <9'141\i<IH Dy .,. In ......... Pl,... "*,.... 0r.,. c:-.i o.i1r ,..,.. "u •m .... t, 1', tJ, Jt. Itel •otNl 1----------- PIC'TITIOUI lutt•IN llAMllTATlllll8•T T ... ,.. ... ,Ill --.,. 001111 ....., __ ; WESTl•H I HV ISTMEHl fl'ltO...,...,llS, IM61 MllllU11 A"8., l,.,,IN, Ce •114 ..... ,_ 0.. lrltlt, IOJI leni. c;e.,. hit,~ llff<fl, Ca. f'ICTITIOUI I Ull•IU llAMAI ITAT•M9•T TM ,_llhll"tl -00111 e re •01,., ..... ,,.. .... Al•OllC SUPPLY AHO PITMIS$ •€MARCH CEHT•ll, lt11 H••..., 11...:t , "-1 &eecll. CA ..... ,.HY SIOLOGIC A L EVALUATION$ INC., >It Alv•r- Slr•t. ~ hecll. CA '2MI. """'lleMok•• lvelllMI-IM. $ ......... l . McCllnlO(il. ~ PICTI nous ........... •AMenAHMe•T 'lie ........ --Is fllne ... .i M'4M acHOOL l"Olt IA$1C O"'ICI $1( I LL.I, a. I rv1"9 A..... Swlla 21•, H••-1 llM<ll, C.lltomla t»M l••M•• l Lo119, llJ1 Oetuy Orio , Hewpor1 IHCll, Celller11le ti..o Tiii> --. •• <-'"' .,., .,, ,,.. dlv141w! f'ICTITIO,,. •u11•1u •AMII ITAT•N•T Tll• fOllOWlfte --· er• dOllll 1111 ...... , .. TUCKE" lllllHTAL COMPANY, 440 Hemtlton, c.i. Mete, CA mi.. PAUL E TUCICllt, '11 I I MNlllO, CM1e IMM, (A.,,.. CH•tSTO~I" ,. TUCKE•. tOt W let-11...:1., H--1 IH<ll, CA. Tllll Dualneu ,, CO"Clll<leel by • oenerel~. Peu1 E. Twc-.r ...,,. t i. 1•1 PllCIM llULI U11 fl'l1119t NOTICE IS Hl"f:9Y GIVEN t ... I ~-1.,_, Or-~ 0.lty PllO\. ... ~II CMlt At. OW!tt,, ~ s.tit. U, JD, Oct. I, 14, ltll OJUI _,,, Olttrkt HMtlflt ... ,Cl Witt - Tllll •et-t -111 .. w1111 1t1e Co1111ty Cl•U. 01 °'-C...nly ... AutualU,1''1 ,, .... , P\IMI...., Or-C:0.11 0.lly Piiot, Sept J, ••••• u. "'' ,.,,.., INTERSTATE 5aMINAllll$ INC., • Cal ltgrNe COf'Ptt •ti.,, 110 "-POrt C•""'' Orlve, Ht•POn 8eecll, CA '2..0. Don I(, Me11N, »••• lrenctl111 ·~.tell'-c:...kl,._, Ce.,,.,, ,,,..,,.,._ ~1911, Ill< (a C.lllWN• <.,....,•Jeni, ., • .,,_ <•, 1rv1..._ C.. '1114 Tlllt .ce~1 .... lllN wllll llw cw111, ,,.,11 of o,._ c-1, .... S..t ••• "" flllt ............ Wff fll.0 Wilt\ , .... c ... ,, ,., ,,.,_ of Or..... <:eullly .... Sept ...... lllOTIC• OP PUILIC MIAltNIO TO II MILD I 'I' Titl OllA'IOll C:OU•TY PL.A••l-0 COMM11110• Off THI lllVINI COAST LO(.AI, ~ITA&. P•OOltAM PICTITIOUI l"IHlllS 111.._. ITATIMIENT TIMI followl"O perso"' ••• Oolno bu.1l"9HM. ROOEWAY INN, 1.00 S.E. Br~lol St .• Sent• AM, C.llfor"'e '2707. Clwn & ~ tr.c .• • c..tllo<llle COf'PO,..llon, ICIO SE. BrhtOI SI,...., S...ta AN, C..llfor"'• •m1 Tlll1 l>Usl,..t It <ondllcteel b,, t COt· DOrallort a-a H--o. Inc. Jame1 CMn, Dret1oen1 Tiiis 11e1......,1 wes Ill .. wtltl t11e Cou111., c 1er11"' Ortrl9t c_, o .. ~ lemi.• 21, '"' • •ullllc NMlfll " t :JO e.m .. M tHu,.so.v, OCTOIE" 1, 1•1. '" ,,.. Or~ ~ 96erel"' ~Ito-. Cllem•ra. 10 CM< CMtlltt Plea, Sen· le ANI, c.alHornte, to C-lder tlw ,,. -Me OI an OtOtr lor •lie._ -<nocllflcell.., 01 •etlence Ho, MJt ,_, H41lMCO M4TElllALS, IH · CO•PORATEO, el 600 Wffl Vk""1e s1r .. 1. c..i. Mew, C:.tlfonlle. TN "1111.., '°' OrWr .. AM1-t would '""''• <on"llfl-e wllll ltute llJI "' Ille Sowttl Coell Alf Quallty ~· NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN INI Ille Or•f\Oe Cou"h Pl•Mtno com. ml•ton wlll llOld • DUll4k ,,.., .... on O<:IOber •. 1'11 lo 'onllOtr flntt •P. provel Of tll• ., .. ,n .. Cout lout CMttel Ploevtem ILCPI IOr ,,_ t~· •<re ., .. toui.ci •tono tlw Ounoa Cou111y Coesl be'-' uo""" a.ec Ii encl He..,..,, Baell. The INlne Coe11 Loe at Goe11e1 Proerem w" prtvloully •ppro-........ Orengo County PIM· nlno Cor11m1a1ton t nd Bo••• ol Su-.rvlaort end 111Dml1tt O lo llMI Ct llfomte Slate Coe1i.t Com"llttlon Tht c_., Commlulon Allf'owd Ille m.111 Dlstrkl R11 .. t elld R911Uletloftt by Jtnu.ry 1, 1"2, reduction In emla. tlona 1mor 10 INK atl•, Mid would ... 11111re ,,,. Gom_, 10 <•• .. fMlrk c .. 11110..,...,.._"-"11tem1u1en1 <re•te • PIAlllc nui-.ce. R111e 11a llrnlli ,,_ •-I OI ..otettte 0'9'ftk fl'l7tMJ COlftPOWllCll '" paper ,..,,k coeu .. o PuDlllNll Orenee C..11 Oelty Piiot. operelloM. sot. 23. llO, Oct 7, 14, • ., 015-41. A COj)y of.,,. .,.,,tl•n I• •••H•bl• for l~llClll et 1N Office of IM H•erlng B .. ,., om . tUo E•it Ftalr Drlw , Et Monte, c.i11om1a. Mid et .,. """"91m Offlet , 1.,0 Etil h it R .... AA-Im, '-'" ....... LClll> on July· JI,'"' wllll mocitnc..1-------------tlonl. Ti. moclllk etlOfll ,,.,.. llffn '"° co.._ .. ., l"to the l.«et Co.ui.1 Pro- D••m encl Ille revleeCI Pl•ll •111 •con-------------- Ndert.s for eQll>rOMI 11y ,,_ Pt-lno "CTITIOUI eUSINIES.S C.on1rn1 .......... , .. lwerlnQ. NAMI STATIMl•T c 0 M pl 1 AH c E w I T H T H E T ... fol!Owlno .,_, ~ ••no M l· CALIFOltNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT· local Cou1a1 Proor•m• era 1latuterll11 uempl from Ct::QA ,.. Qulre rne1111 pursut nl lo Secllon JOllO.t , Olvl1lon u. ol Ill• Pu.itc Rtto11rces Codt 1'\11.1 es: NAUTILUS TRADING COM· PANY. 19JI N-·· Blvd . Co-tee Mew . C••ll«nl• n.11 Alvl" Semm.,..r, IOa EmHald Bey, L•ou,.. 6'ec11, C.lllcwnla UU7 Tllh lluslNls It C-.Cltd Dy .,. ,,.. dlvlclul l. AMllS....m.,..r Tiiis ............ , ... Ill .. Wllll - C011nty c1er11 Of or.,. Countv on Sep. letnber 11, 1•1 ,,.,.," __ ..,, ,,...., ... _ .... -.,,It or., or wr1ti.n l~h •I IM IMlert .... II It ..... ""1..S lflet wrll. lell •l•te"*lt. be tlitwnlt19Cl lo Illa Hearlno Boerd II•• d•n i.1ere 1iti IMleri"O --Id be llOfted Unotr .,.,..11., of -Jury 04TEO· ~I•. t•1 SOUTH COAST Atlt QUALITY MANAGEMENT DISTRICT HEARING BOARD J•Ult DI• Cler-Of,,.. &oerd P1111111111ec1 Or-Coul Dally Piiot, iept. J), "" 1"17111.J Tiie _,,,. wlll <OtnMtn<a "' I JC p m., or et._., "'9r'Nlter H posiltlle 9M •Ill m lwlcl 1,. llw Commtulon't He.,lno Room In I,,. Ounoe County Hell ol 4dmfnlslr•llon, 10 Civic Cenler Pfau, S.nte AM, Callfornl•. All Pt•tens •I-l•vorl"I or -""O tllla D•-1 .,. ln•119d to pr-nl 1 ... lr •lewl befor• Ille Pl_,tno CMI· ------------- Publl"'9cl o.-..,.. Coast Delly Piiot, -------------•t_J1.t_1 Sep• u. ao. Oct. 1. u, ••• 415'-41 MUC "111£ PICTITIOUI eut1•11t NAMISTAT1¥1•T TIMI following oersen It clol"O lllull· ,..., *' E C ELECTllllC ~ W ... llMMI Blvd • S<;tte US, Hewporl Beac11. C t llfenlle '2M.) A"*-J. Kofl>u1. 41~ lllll09tv .. w Drlw, O.vetelld. Ciiio 4'11"4 Tiits 11us1,.., It conouct .. by •n 111 dlvldllel Andr9w J . IColllllt Tllla si.1-1 we.1 111.0 •1111 IM County Cter-01 Orenoe Cou,.ly '"' AllOUlf SI, 1•1 fll6fm Publlllhtd Or-Con! Detty Piiot, s.ci.-r 1, t, II, U. '"' ,....... PUil.JC ..ncE PICTl'TIOUS •Ust••ss NAMe ITATllMl•T TIMI lottowl"O ,,.,...,,, ••• ctoino 11\!tlNsaes: MUIRL.ANOS ASSOCIATES, '60 N•Wll0'1 Ce,.ltr Orin , Sulle t600, Ntwport11Mc11, t e. ~ M, Ruuell l(ru•, IJH Pltctlm Pteo, L.equne S..Cli, Ce. 92•Jt Cllrlltopllff J Fertev. 71'0 Pe"' Ave-. Leoo-hocll, Ce. OHJI Oougles Menon CH •Trusl" u~ d•r IM Oouol•• MtltOn allCI Su..,, Mellon Fernlly Tru1t1, 2760 O...oe Wey, Laguna Betcli. Ce. '26JI Su-.""-'-CH •Trull" u- ,,,. OauQt• --end 5.,..,. Mai-Fe mtty Tru1t1. 27•0 Quede Wey, l •-llH<I\, Ce . '2lJ1 Tiiis llWMllOSt la c..duc'" •Y • Cflf· pout Ion Tlllt IMMJ..._, It <-<led lly e ..... ,., IN"IMnl\lp, '*'K.H._ ,.,,.,. p ~11 ......... ,..., ,._ I Oelt~tP7""'11ol Pu1111.-Or9119t Cotti Oelty Piiot, Uv --........ .._, 1 ' S..t. ll, 2J. JD, Ocl. 7, 1 .. 1 ..,...., s.oi .... u, JO, Oct '· '"' ~· lllUt•let• S.mtne,.. 111<. J...,_y A. eot.n, p'"'°"" Tllla tlel-1 Wtt 111 .. wllll IM COllllly Clerll or Or•noe Coun1v 0<1 Aut. JI, 1,.1, OAVIO a. MADI, Att_,•Lew 1111 0...litl'Mt, ---... .,.,, lleecll, C.A .,... Tiiis ~ ._., lllect •1111 '"' Cwnty Cler-of Ortnoe COVnly .,. A""'91S.. ... P1"'1J Publl-Orenoe C..11 0.1111 ~lee S.P' .•• "· u.. JO. .... 400t-t• f'Ufm l"tCTITIOUI I UlllllUI 1'1111111~ Orengo co .. 1 Dolly Piiot NI.Ml ITA'TIMINT S.pt. 2, t, ,., t:J, '"' ,.,._., T"' lollowlfll per-It dol119 bull· -------.,.----r----1"" 1 .:'Me1t1CAN AOVERTISIHG .--,,..,~ OISTltl•VTOltS OF NEWPOllT, --------------1 COSTA MESA. UJt2 Arufle11, Mii l"ICTITIOUS IUSINISS HAMI STATIMIHT tlon VfljO, Celllon>le .. ti lllolNrt Wllllem Jo11n1on, IU Mellldy ........ Coli.. 111\ew, Celllornl• PUIUC •nee ~ICTITIOUi IUSINIEU NAME STATIMIENT Tiie I01towl119 pertont ••• dolno bull-'" THE CAR PHONE COMPANY, 3100 Alrw•v. S<.llte IJD CAKI• MeM, Celllor .. te '1616 0.¥1d P W•lmar. "°j Clienrwt, NewPOf't Bee<ll, C.lllornte ""' Ron Benn•11. lll UnlYerslly A .. nue. LOI Gel01, Cellloml• tSOJD Tlil1 buslneu h conctuc1ee1 llY • .. nere1 .,._.,,,P O.•ICI P Weimar T'lllt Uel......,I wes llled wltli Ille Counly Cler-ol Oranoe County on AU(llllt 21, ltlt ' f'ICTITIOUI IUll•lt.s lllAMI ITATIMINT flle lofl-"9 __,la dol"t ~ n•H el DESIGN STUDIO WEST, ml·A W W•rner A...,w, S.nte jlne, CA t21CU CATHY RENEE DAVENPORT 1111 El Cemlno Orlw, Coli. M• .. , CA t161' Tnlt .,...._. 11 <Oftduci.ct lly .,. In dl•l411e1 C..tttyo.v.._, Tlllt IU-t Wal 111.0 •1111 llM Co.;n1y c,.,, of Ore,. County on s.c>t ' •• "" Tiie followlno perto111 ere dolno .... , .... -. EOING ER SUP"'-Y, Hit W. IE• I~. •f., SMI• Ana, CA tt7CM. ltAYMOHO E. SMITH, ltJI MenM Vltlle, Viste, CA 9MN. '2621 Tiiis llusln.ia II Conclu<t911 by el\ f,.. ,,,.... ~1.-J Puottsneo Orenoe co.11 Delly Piiot ~u1111.rwo Orenoe Cotll 0.11., Piiot. S.p1 16, n, JD. 0c1 7, 1•t 001 .. 1 ALBEllT PIHAMOHTI, 11)1 Acee le~. F•ll--. CA~. ANGELO CASSA II A. ff'2 Bellflefd l -. Mumlnoton Buell, CA '2W. BENNIE CASSAlllA, n11 P:eu.I Ave., l...of'O Bellt1i, CA •11. HAllOY l . K•UEGElt, 1100 F .. Or., Viste, CA t2013 Tiiis bull...st h cond11clM lly • ""''" ... .-n111p it.ymond [ Smflll Tiiis ~-.,,. llltd wlttt lhe C•unly Cltt~ •I Orenoe Cou,.ty on AU(I 31, 1 .. I. fl't"717 Publlshed Or-C4etl 0.lly Pllo<, Sept '· •. 16, 23. t•1 ~· dlvldlMI, S.pt 1. •. "· u, 1•1 m..-1 ,.,,.,.,, w .>oflil-. Tf\11 __. wet fll.o wllli Ille Ceumy Cl-01 Ore"oe County on1--------------A ..... stJ1, 1•1 1VU NOTtE ""1a P11bllllhtd 0renoe eo.u 0.11., P1lo4. Sept-2. 9 .... 2l, ttll ,......, ltOTtetr OP TltUSTlll'l IALI u.11 .... n....,. T.S. He.t.lllW T 0. SIRVICI. COMPANY ea duly apj>Ojnt..S Trust• _, '"' loll-l"tl O.tctlbeel -Of ltutl WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE PICTITIOUS •USIHISS NAMI STATIMl .. T T "• •ollowlno "''"'"' ••• aolno llvlll!fl1e1. H A A B 0 U R L Y N H APA"TMENTS, ,_, L......, SI., HUlll· ....... lleecll. (,t, .,... VlltGIHIA M IUCCELLA, J.S41 COUr1tlOt Clrcle, HurlllflO'lon llHC:ll, CA tl!Mt FRAHICLIH J, BUCCELL.A, Ull Cou11110t Circle, H1.tnlln91on hecll, CA •1M9 Tlll1 ""'"-9 II C-..C:lotd Dy •n I" dlYlclllel HOTlCIOll T•UITll"S SALi T.S ..... t17W NOTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEN, tllet on w.--.,. Oc-r 1. ltll et •:oo o'ctoca t .m OI Ml4 dlty, '" ,,.. ottk e ol REAL ESTATE SECUlllllTI ES SE"VICE, IO<eted e l 2020 Hortll Broeelw•y, Sull• xi., '" llw cllv Of Sen- •• An•. C-y Of e>nng., st ... of Cetllor,.le . AE4 L ESTAT E SECURITIES SERVICE. e C•lllor111e <orporellon, n CIUly e_.,,t..s Tl'Vtt• under .,,., __,,, to tht power of •••• con1.,,..., '" that <er1•f11 Dwd of Trull e u culed Dy ltOIEllT L mtuloll. Wr111., ~"""'' e<e •Ito 111v11 ... T1'ew m., lie -119 IM Pten PVIUC lllTICE Tiiis 11us1,.. .. Is cond11<led lly e ....... , C>eflMNlllp HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (~e«Me el lime OI Mlt '" le_.\11 money Of Ille U"'led stet*"I •II rltlllt, Vtrolnl• M 11..c~l• Tiii• fie.._.., ••• 111.0 Wllll Ille Counly C,.,., Of Of'•-Cou,.ly on WALLIS -Merell JI, t•, I" ·-lli» of Ofllcltl Re<orctt Of Mid Coun ty. ei P•" 1ns. Recoro•r · lnalrvm-No »SJ7, Dy ,...., of • llreecll or deleu11 II\ peyme"I o Dttlorrnance ol Ille ObllO•llo"' aecur.-,........,.,, IMluellno '"'' llfN<ll or Clel•ult, No(ke of Wlllcll we.1 ,. "1119 COtnmlulon et llw -... eddr'fll 1-------------D<"lor t• or •I COfTtmen(-t of, the K ... dul .. PUblk -1"0. •AIM21 ll'UIUCltOTIH NOTICI OP COllllDe llllATIOM For 1"'1her lnlonntllort, p,t,_,s ere lnvll..S lo cell Community Plan11ln9 •I h+SJl7 or vlsll ,,,. office loc;eted el * CIYk Cenlff Ort .. WHI, S...t• f'ICTITIOUS IUllNISS H-1 STATl,_.lllT r t.e 1oi1-1no pel'10fl 11 dolno bu•I· MU es: .., .. C.ALt""•IA n ATI l.UDe '10MMIMION .. Ana, C,t, "102. Pwllttthed Orenoe Coe11 D•liv P11o1. Secll t3, ,,., .. ., ... , PllUC lllltE NOTICl!OI" e ULK TltAHIPI! II ,......., .. lect6M .... .... C.llfefW• C.V-let C..I NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN TO THE C"EDITORS OF OE MURL TOSH, Trenllttr'or, tllet • bula transt., •• •lloul lo ......... .,., Tr-leror, wllou lluslneu •Odreu I• 701 Hewpor1 Bl..., .• In llw Clly of COAe M•te. County of Oren ... Slate ol C .. for,.la, -ell of""--... 11. "HIN,,_ -~"--UW<I "'1ttoll'! Ill,... ... ,. last !»II. 1tO ler •1 lino..,. 10 Trenste,..., ere. Ual H•wl>Orl atvel , Ccai. Mew. CA f21tl7, to Donald lit Vatdlt1 ..,., Cvnthle L . Ve1t1t1. Tr•"''•""'· """°" l>llsir<ess ...,,.,., Is •11 Peclfle Coetl t110flwey, Sp, 1'8, L•Oll"• 8eech, CA, In IM Clly of Leou"a 8eKll, C.ounty ol Ort1109, s s.1• of c..lltoml•. of 111e ron-11111 deacrllltd perso,.•I pro~•rly of T'r•n1f.,w. to wll All stoc:i. '" Ir-. ll1luros, '"""',. ,.. ... , tnCI 1000 wllt ol • certeln WOOOYS' ALIGNMENT, 10 Beh r s..._, eosi. -... C.tttorlil• .,.,. W1111Mft Eerl P..-, IUQ Greno. b,., Hu11llngton Hert;our, C•lllo<nlo T1tt1 llusl-s le <oncN<led by en 1 ... olvlduel, Wllllem Eert Peoe Tiii• tlel•"*ll .... llled Wllll , ... County Cten. of Or-c°""'' on Sep. !ember JI. 1tll. ~t711M Put>ll-Or-COMI Delly Piiot. :Mc>I JJ. lO. <kl 7, 14, ltl1 41-1 fl'ICTITIOUI IU'1•1SS N-lr l?ATIMIENT Tiie loftowfng pa,....,, II dolfto o.i.11. ,,. ...... CAVANAUGH LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE. >on Klllyl>rooke Ln., Cm• Mne, C•ttlontle •»• Tl_., J-C.•"""911, J077 K ltlyllrooll• Ln .. Coale Mtse1 Cirtlfornle nt• Tlll1 t1Us1neM la <"""'<tto Dy .,. 1,.. dlvldvet Tl-y J. C.•eneug11 Tltlt lle"-1 WM 111 .. with Ille Cou11ty Clertt Of Ot-enoit County 011 ~ lember 21, ltl1 l"llT\llll LIAH "' TIOILAlllDI A•O SUIM9•0ID LANDI .. IANTA C.A'TALl•A 11#.AND .., STATS OP CAllll'OaNIA ..... Ulsfa c.nmtw. ICotlc• 11,......,., 91,..., .... tlw .. Ill· ,,. .. _"' s .... , .... ...,. ---r .... lendJ lo Seroe• C....ltne ,,...., Com,el'ly (P"C JUt II e l Se111e C.lell,.. l"-'f Mii Ujllt'e Doum41ttr JI, 1t11. nw Htstl119 ..... to ,,.. tatatld ~ '"""rt twenty-nlrw ,,.reels of 54-. I.And, ._ of wtNc:ll .,.. 1 ... ,,,_ '""" .... " Mf _.,. _., fleMll.. Tllere .,.. cwrre11tty 114 1'9Cr•••..,... _,,. .....,_ 111s1e11•. °' ...... 411 -_,.., II)' Ille ~·· (lltrwftll-. II It _le......., 91.c tM -of .. s. ... '--Comml•IDll ""'" ,.._ ,,,.... to tlw Olrnmlt11srt .. 1'1 C>nDMf rM01"'9 ttlet It .... IH e .-it.ilefl "' """ '° ·-Cwtel11 SlM._,,.,. lldltl....,, .... -....... , ...... Sen. M Ruuell Kruw Cllrt~ J Ferity °""91 .. _. SuMnMellOn• • Tlllt ... ..,.,,.,., wu llled •1111 Ille Count,, ci.r11"' o,.,. Coun111 on s.c>-lember 4, 1911 M. •uSHu.1t .. UU: ... N...,.... c.ter Dr.,••· 1 .. IC~ llMOI, C.. ,,_ PUllll-Or'"Of C0.11 Oall11 P llQ4 S.Pl '· "· Jl, lO. '"' .OJG.11 rvlUC lll'TICE PICTITIOUI eUSllftH NAME STATIEMl•T T,.. loflowl"O ,,...tont •rt dol"ll ""''-·= OUALITY ASSIMBLY, JOl ... A Helledey, S....I• ""•· C.llforr>le '2702 Olvltlon of HorM Eerttl StelloM of Amtrke, Ille., a Ulell c9'poretton, 801 .. A Hell..Uy, SIWlle Ane, C.llfemfa '2102 Tltlt l>utlneu 11 <ondllalid .. ., e GOf· ,.., .. Ion. -... EMW! Steilona of Amen u , Inc Joelln Rayl'IOI"'' Secret¥y Tlllt --· ., .. 111.0 wllll llw c.un1y Cltr"I< of Ore"oe Counly '"' A119us1 31, 1•1 PH977t P\llllllN!d Or-c:o.11 o.11, l'tlol, Sept_, 2. t, It, H, ltll ~1 PlllJC .a lllCTITIOUI eUSINllS NAME STATIMINT Tll• ronowtno ,,.,Mina ere dot"O ou11"'9u •· "GENOA ENTERPllllSES, 4'6 Mornlno Cet1von llloed, Corone oet Mer, CMlfornle 921t2S -CerVfllM, $ Morn! ... ca. "VP" Rf9CS. eor-. def Mer, C.ll-lofnte tb25 Jolln Mly..,., :1111 Prlacllle Orlw Wnl. C.O.lne, C.llfornle t llti Tnh .,...,,,.,. It conctucl•d lly • .. Mr at s>ertnerslllD. Jolln Cert•l•lw Tlllt NI-I WaJ flt .. Wtlh Ille Co""'' Ciera ol O••rtoe County Ofl Auoust 3t, 1•1 flt"711 l"ubll.-Orenoe eo.11 0.11., PllOC. Sept, 2. 9. ,., :t>, ltll JtfMl. l"ICT"IT'IOUI eUllN•n NAMI ITAT'IM••T TM followl"O "*''°"' ere ctol"ll butl-H: CM PROPEltTtES, LTD . 17902 S•YI'"" 81od., S..ii. IOt, 1,.¥1M, Ce. '2114 Cllerlts MllleylO, 17'02 511VNf'k Bl•d , s..ti. tOt. lrvlne, Ce. '2714 Lo.;!s A. Clc~I. 17802 Sllyper11 Blvd , S<ilt• tot, lf'Wlnt, Ce 91714 Tltls bu11 ... u ,, COnd11Cl•CI .,., • llmll..S ,,._..,,,.,. O..rlHM~.,,. lllle -W..t rett CCWIY•veel lo --P1""9 ,..Id by II undltr MMI Deed of Trlrll In Pullllllhtd Or9119t COhl Delly Piiot, Sept 14, 1"1 .... ~., ... ,..,,..ttr dele'tlbed: Sept, ,., 2>, JO, <kl, 1, ... , 4102.tl T"USTOR. DON GABRIELE, en 1-------------11nmarrled men -SUE MAGEE, en Ull"'Mr1.0 --. e1 Jol"t tet\enll BENEFICI Alll Y I R VI HGl------------- AOEUO.., en ""'m•rrlef men •• to PICTITIOUI IUllNIU rv1uc •ncE Ml -~ 11~ l"'-'*"1 -AH· 111-ll STATI MINT OR EA A~LSC>lw, • llflOle -. •• T lie lollowlno ,.., ......... dol119 I• en lllldlvftltcl f1' ,,,..,.,,.,,.,MARK llualneu et STOCKWELL, • >1"91e in... .. lo .,. A PETITE CAFE, 500 Hewp0r1 Undlvl-11% lntereal end PETE Cent., OrlYt , H•WPor1 BH Cll, CA Sl(INTEK -TALLIE J. SICINTEI(, nt60. flu~ -wile e1 to .,. undlvlO.O ( I ) G E RA L 0 It U 0 0 l P H 1,.,._ ,...._, -HEIL SUPEltF~ VALENZVELA; 111 DORIS JOANN •nf MARIEM SUPlltl'~. ,,_ VALENZUELA, t l'I Moll Rlw r Cir· .,,., wtfe et 10 •11 -••ltlecl »% If>. <le. ,_ Vettev. CA t210I lerttl Tlllt ~II <OftOue-Dy •n '"· "--,_,..., IS, IWIO et llltlr. No. dlvlduel (~ -wife!. 1111'.,, ._ •--. ~ It of Offl<let Geuld R. VelenrWl• Rec-'" the offk.e of Ole 1tec:0<dt< Tiiis Rt-I "" 111 .. wltll tlw of Ortnoe County; MICI 0..0 of !rust Co'"''" Cler-of Or•-Counly on dH<r"-' IN IOl-lno ~r1V LAI 1 Aut. 16, 1tl1. of T,_, No 101'0. 111 IM c:o-111 .. Ora19, $(MIO of c.lllWflle ••per meii> 'kAW-... -•7S, -"4 -•• llllttcefl--.... In ,,. offlc. .. Pl .... ,.Ullll-Or ..... C:0.11 Delly Piiot, ~ .... u .:io.0ct 1.1•1 ~· tM (_, ,_,"' .... <O<inly, • ..., •loo•-.. .,..~,_..,,., 1115 .... of h 111or1....-1er1y llS 1 .. 1 Of IOI -------------115 Of Trect JOI, 1,. Ill• co;.111ty of NU MmCE Otef1911, Stet• Of C.llf0f'11la, ea per ,,...p t9C°"'91111111ao111•, ..... , II - U , Ml-1..,_ "'--I" llW office of UW <_, rwcor..-of Mid c_1.,. tteS tnolrw A .. ., Coll• Mtte, CA f'ICTIT'IOUS IUlllllll NAMI STATaMINT Tll• fott-tno Pfftont ••• dol1111 butlNU• SOB CONSOL TAHTS ANO FUN· DING, KOLL CEHTElt, WEST TOWEllt, SUITE JllOO, -000 -Artllur Blvd , H_, Beecll, CA '2W. COtded -... 11, 1tl1, I" 8-1Cl14 of O"klal R-1 of .. Id Ceunlr, •I peoe 1211. AKOrOtr't 1"11'-1 No »an, WILL SEU AT PUILIC AUC TION TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASH, lewfllt ,,_y of tlw Ulllt ed S1•1H, ett peve«Me al Ille llmt o Mlt. •II r1o11t...t111e end lnt•r•l1 llOW lle1d llY 11. Is Tn.stee, 111 -10 t ... I,. Al pro,,.rty slluele In Mid C-IV etld s1ett. OtKrlbeel es follows Loi It In Block "IC" 1n Trect Jll, '"the Clly of Newport a.ea., •t IMwn'"' • M-. , .. cordeo 111 Boa 11. i>eoe'I J3 10 >t In ctu1lv• Of Mltctll~ Mtos Iii tlw Offlo OI ... Rec ........ of Mid 0r.,,.. County TIMI ,,,_. ~. or Ollwr <onvno,. de1lon•1ton, H "'"·of Ille ••• p,_ ly "''•1"9llOYe -rll>ecl It l)U,_-t9'1 10 De 11.,. ¥Ir-0r1 ... Hew110r1 ••tell, C.11,,,,.,, ... T'IMI "'*"'llMCI ,,.,et>y CllKlelma ell llebllHy IOf eny lllCorrecfNU Ill Hid II .... -.,, or 01,,., <-0.SIOflellon S.ICI Ml• Wiit lie rn.-wlllleut wer. renly, ,,.,,..., or lmpo..s. ,..,.,dtno lllle, ~•taloll. or enc""'l>renc.et, lo H 11t1y .... ll'lncltNt Delena Of Ille Nole or -Dlll'9ellon tecur .. l>y 1eld o..o Oii Tnm, '""" ,,.,_, -~r ......., M P<"OYIOtCI IM-.ln. plus •Cl'fencet, II •n11. _, llw term ,.,,.ISl Pu1111.-Orenot C:0.11 D•lly Piiot, Flower Shelp """-• -no-H 0. Muri TMll F10rtal tfld locelHI el 1'11 Ne•POr1 lllwG., '" tlMI Clly Of CO.le 1-------------S.pl U , JD,Oc.L 7, U , 1•1 4151 .. t I• Ce tall"• lllend. Tlle •ts•11lltl -lflGell-. Ille Md -....... ..,.. .... '"to .. Commlwlall tor'<· lion •1 ltw! time. n.. --...V."'9 Je11wery I, t"2. wwld De for Ille opere t1011 •net me"al•l'll•nt ol .. .,.,.,..., eno Mil>rnffOtll ••fld• fer "cnnous 11111•111 ,.<,..atlone t .... 11 .. 0 PUfpoHa. '" NAME STATIMl•T Tlllt llele"*ll WM lllM •1111 ... Counly Cleftl of0r81199 Co..mv Oii S.. 1emt1er•, 1•1 . .. c If • llTWI ..,,_ Of ""''"°" -llo•••fl•n I•"'°""'•-. no .. .,,.111, '' 01~ • to lb c.,...1 .. _u or cor-rect,.uJ ... Tiie i..tk tery-. .-. 0.... of Tl'\ISI, tty ,..,., of a ~Hell cw OtAHNA R RATCll. tUI Orelle rd Ori,.., s.nt. Ane, CA ftl07 WILLIAM L. SMITH, •t .. nCI Flewer Court, H._PCH'1 hec:ll, CA '*l. ,,.. .... -,.,._,on'"'" ..,..enc.,. •ftel plut l•t. cl'Mlroes •fld .. ......, of Ille Tn111 .. -Of llw lrW!t c,..i.o by U ld O.eel Of Tru.t. Tiie tOl•I emo11n1 of Mid obl1Qe11ort, lnclllcllng reuo,.ellly etllmeteel ,..,, <lte•OH .,.., ••pen-of Itta Trvu.e, •I 1t1e time 01 '""'•' e>vllllullon ol 1111 Nollet, It J1IJ-02. Mua, C°""h •f or.,.oe. Stet• of C•llfornte, .,., thet IN foreool"9 bul~ '"""'' wltt i. con..,,,,mat..s on or 1------------- ef'I., ""-· , ... 11111.,..,"' Oct-. 1•1, lllrelugll E9<r.>w H•. tt2-UJ3t el I ... H <,,,.. .....,,,,,..,, OI IM l.eo- Beecll Offke of Security Pe<llk H•· llontt .,_at a1 Forest A...,.,. In Ille Cfty 01 L•oune Buell, Cou,.ty ol Ore,,.., llleleof C.lllor11le. Clalons OI <l"llcltlor• of Tr•"lltrcw me y De Ill• wllfl Security Pee Ill( N• tlotlet a..... .t ''--eu wl 1or111 ellov• Tll• te 11 ••It ror llllno <redltors' <l•lms '' Frtclty, lht '171 day of O.:lot>er, tt11 Clelmt ""'" i. o.. -llrnety llled only II Kl.,.lly , .. celv•d by llle escrow CMP.,lmen1 Defore <lo9t of t>uslnets 011 .,,. •t>ove soeclllect elate for llllno clelmt OATEO Sepe., 1•1 Oeneld It Veldtr C"""'I• L V•IOtr T..--... P uDll111ed Ore19 Coett Delly Piiot, S.P' 23. , .. , .. ,, .. , ruu NOTlCE NOTICtr 01" UL• JOE ABAHOOHATO wlll sell, D11,...11•nl lo Cellfomla Clvll C-Sec:· lion JOS2, •• publk •uctlon I« c..,. lo lltt lll9llut bidder, tlle follew1n1 CllH<rllleO ml"'no ~I f#f C & F llllSEAllCH, • 118rt11er1-Np, lo u llsty ....... I Vll>r~leblt I llDM Cl) Solrel1 J Stffl lor Trv ...... ' Ouel a11w fie!·-tr•ll•r s. o .. ,., -·'°' T ... e\IC'lton •Ill lie lwld In IM rNr per~lno IOI e1 16741 BeKll aou .. verd, 14untl"9fcn Beech, Celllomla t2M7 el 10•00 • m on ._Ide.,, OcltDller 7, .... Oettd ~-, II. 1•1 J-A. ScllmlHtno Alftltreylor ~A"-doNto tli/O Von Kann.,,, Suitt ,00 N--1 B .. cll, CA •t..o "'-' I 14/UM7t0 PublllN<I 0r.,,.. Coen Dtflr Pltol, S."'9Mbt< tl, 1 .. 1 41~1 •lv1111>e1 IMlft for recrN11one1 moo.. ""' 1ot1ow1,.. per-h dlolno l>lnl· 11111 •Ill ,,.,. i. <onsl-.it. Moorlfllil nan., -.... ..., nw Oty of Av•lon "'•'* TOTAL LEARNING CONCEPTS. 1"~~~!",:: :=-.Ion to lht ~~12~.sllMloll, -l"OIOn Beec:ll. ••teull '" llw 0•11 .. 110,., secur..s •HOOt!l, ICINOALL a tlw~, _...afore U9o<Ul.9'1 -0.. HAHl-.OTON ~~..-~":, ~ ... '!r:c, • o:: SI .. • LMldt c.nmiu1cw1, •II '""'"t· Mlllon S Gr!Qv, 1"22 Gloucester, A ~rus .._, U. c_.,. lor S.t•, --111 ... no11c. of Mec11 4 "'""-"'-11"··"""t" end 01 t lec:llen to <•111• ,,.. u,.. Tllla bwl..._1 h <OllClllC led Dy a oeneret~ Ole.-rt.cell td Cler11et -l"vlled to com-en H""llno&on a.oc11, Ce 'f .... 11°'•,.llel IM• provl.i-l>v •llMr T'llh tluslnHt ts conducted by en ,,.. "~r:•=:!!;. ~1 Delly Pllof derstoneo to .. 11 ••Id ~-rly lo --.-Mlllfy Mid Dlll ... llona, Mid llw,..tt.r _s._P_. '_·_•_•._1_3._JO_. '_"' _____ .o_•w_•I ~';:::':.~ ~~:' .. ~· ;:~~ Tlllt 11 .. -... wn flied "'"" '"' Counly c,.,_ OI o.-• ._ CO<inly '"' S.Ot. 14, '"'· DATEOSept-10.1•1. REAL ESTATE SECUR tT1£S w11-..11,. M ._,l'llment to mM1 dlvlduet •1111 !,.. lleft Of wrtllnt to -fell-· Mlltort s. Gr'19o 1"1 ecNr&S: State ~t CtmMlulon, Tlllt ~I ..., 11190 •1111 lhe ll07 Utll "'"'· S.Cr•-t•. CA Count11 a.... of <>reno-County on Sep. f'ICTITIOUS IUSl•llS •Ml4; Alt-Ion· .. n., L.wul• <' .. I t•mlJer •. ,,.., """"' ITATIEMl•T m.1mor~~ Cttt>m·JJ17 '"'"' T11e 1o1._.,. ...,.., I•-... butl· Tllla It NOT • """"" r~ fw ,.Ubll-Or ..... Coe11 D•llr Pllof ........ Dldt,""1_,elyM'""lt"'lol';'°'CO!ft-S.pt.t,16,13,JO,t•t 3"1..ft la l GRAPHIC MURALS Cll) met11 on "*tentlft 1.._ Pf1or to R I c HAR 0 GUNST G RAPH I c stall recommenctfllen lo , ... Com· ••llJC i.1Vi( MUR"'-LS CCI THE WALL AltTISTS mlnlen, c:.onwn....1 "'ll'lt be rec:el-l"U ""'"' ldl GllAPHICS UNLIMITED (e) In , ... offk.e "" ,,. Cotnrnl•lon no --------------IGRA ..... IC MUllALS UHLIMITED, 11' Iner lll.,,Oc-loeler 2, 1•11,.oro.r10.. PICTITIOUl•Ull•tru Merino An""'· B•lllo• '"•nd, contlO.r.O NI.Ml ITATIEMINT C.lllomle tM1 f'vlltl-Or9119t Coefl 0.lly Pllcot, Tiie IOllowl"tl Ptfwn Is""'"' flu.ti-Rlc llerd Gun11, Jlt Mer111e Sep!. t>, 1"1 41.._.1 neu •• AYOftut, Betlloe 1.ien41, Calller11I• MORGAN EHVIROHMENTALS, ""1 1..i.s-1 Ofwns Wey, Cosl• Mew, ca.. T111s l>utl,.., It <-..ctwd llY en I~ '2U 7 dlYICIWI CP,.nos M. D•Dney, llH T'oml)te RfcfWfd Gunll "CTITIOUS I Ull•trH SI., Apl.17 .. 10, A,..lielrn, Ca Tllh ttat-t -flt .. wltll Illa NAME STATIMl lllT Tiii• tlusfMss II <onclu<1ed b\' •n ·~ County Cler\ of Or•noe Counly on Tiie followl"O per'°"' ere dOl"O dlvlduef A119ust JI. 1•1. ... ,,_," """'" ¥. 0.Dney PllUC llTtE PVIUC NOT1CE May H, I'll. H IMtr. Ho. U4U '" book t.on, -•n. Of "'" Offtci.1 lilKordt S.lcl Wit ""411 .,. -. ""' ........... ~171111 Pullllllhtd Orenoe C:O.sl Delly Piiot, s.ot. "· n. :io. Oct. 1, '"' etH1-41 CO-cw WMrenty, ••P'ttt Of Im-------------- plleel, ~nit .. 1111•. _ ........ or PICTITIOUS •u111111u Nil.IC •TtE encvtn11renus, to .,.., ,,.. r-elnlno 11rl11<lpitl ..,,, 1111 t1't llOteCtl aecureocl lllAMI STATIEMINT lly MICI DIMd of Tr11tt, wllll lllte,..11 • Tll• fottowtno pe<son1 ••• dolno I ....,. I butlnH•H. n Mld,..,etrovtO.O,ectvenc.,., I Mly, Jl ENTERPRISES, S4 Sandpiper, under Ille..,.,.,. OI Mid 0... ol Tr11t1, SERVICE, • Calllornle <oroor•lto,., u Tr\111 ... By CSEALI 0. J. Mor .. r. Ill Prn!Otnt '°20 H Br-ay, S..11• JQI S.nte "IN, CA '2106 "'•"'*-· C7141 ,,..,... \. P111111.-Or ... Coell Delly Piiot S..p1, "· u .• ..., JD. 1tl1 ., .... IMt: c-... •"Cl open .. , ol tht Irvine. CA t211e. Trwtl• -of ti. INSb er.et .. 11y JAY C. FENSTElllMACHER, "4 SU ... ltlOll ~·T A id o.ct fll Trust Seid Mlt •Ill • Se..._,lper, lrvtne, CA .,71•. OP T'Mll STATI M id on "-'tdty, Ocl-r I, 1"1 et C 0 N S T A H C E 8 0 .. CALl"Dtt•IA 1·00P.M. .... O...,manA--FEHSTEltMACMER. S4 S•ndDIDer, POltTMSCOUNTY ··-'° ... Cl.tc C.ntw a .. 1 .. 1,., JOO lrvlM, CA m... OP Olt .. O. Eut ~ A-, ,,. 1,. Clh of Tiii• 1>11tlneu ta <onduct•d by • c.. ,.., ...,. or-.. CA. oenerat _,ne,...Np. "°"Cll OP IALI Al tflt ti-of 1M lnlllel M!tc.110. Jey C. Fens•rmecl'Mlr OP ltlAL fl~ ltTY et 11111 nofl<e, the lofel emo1.tnt of .... Conttonc. 8 ,,_ .. rmec,.., AT PltlVATI IALI l"ICTITIOUS I USl•EU NAME STATIMIHT N'410 PllUC MOTICE Tiit IOllowlno person• .,. dOl"O 1------------- Cl) CHAMPION KAWASAKI Tlll1 1181_. WH 111 .. wllll llw BMW, m CH .. MPIOH MORIWAKI Cwnty Cler11of0.-count., on ~ USA, 1• H•,_ Bl•d ., Coste Mew, tembef •. 1•1. llllD•ld •• , ... ct of .... ol>ll9et1011 Tiii• ... ......,,, ..... llled Wftl\ ,,. ESTATE OF MARIOHS HOlllTOH. W<urect Dy !M .... dltt<rl--01 County Clerti of <>reno-Cou,.ty °" CONSElllVATEE tru1I -Htim.t.O COS1'-e--. ~ 14• ltll H o I I c t I > II t t e II V 0 I v t " •net actve11<•t 11 Ul,12• 71 To .s.-f'l1-7 llla t 111• """•••lon•CI, •1 co,. t•rmlne ll'le -•no l>ld,.,.,., may <•II Pulltt~ Orengo Co.II Dally Pltol, .. rotor of ,,,. ut•t• of MAltlOH ... ,..,. PubllSlltd 0tM191 C:0.R 0.lly Pllo\, ~1.....,1.•.11.n,1•1 ._., butl"91tet· BMG Petrote,;m Pertnert. 'ClOO MeArtlluf eo.it ... erd. Newpor1 Beacll "* leet\~ "" tn-fl'Mfll Group, «lOO AMcAr11i11r Boulevard, H••ll0'1 Beedl, C.llfornte •..o Tiii& ....,,,.. .. It COfldll<ted .,., • ""' ""' f)trtlWf'slllp. T. Mk lWll ..._,. _..,., tNrtrwr T'lll1 flAI-wet filed wltll Illa COllllty Ctef11 OI OrA'!Gf Counly o" ~ lemller 11.1•1 fll11tU PUl>ll,_ Ore-C:0.11 Otlly Piiot S.11! tl. JD. Oc1 I, 14, 1•1 o•M1 DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? II row h•v• juel lll•d ' •ur 11ew Flctllloue wtl11ees Nam• •nd II••• flOt r•• eul>fftltt•• II tor thillllc:etlon, pl••H do" t torg•1 '"•t Ill• llmllallon I• 30 C1•r• trom d91• of llM"9 Tll• DAILY PILOT w lCI publlt lt yOUf ••••ment •er 14 t to Ou r clrcwltllon lncNdtt ,,.. •ntlre Ore 1190 Cotti • ,.. •lld '-9111 "'""' •PP*•• 111 •II •dltlon• In order to tubf"ll 1our "Cf"ITIOUI IUllNI .. C•. '2ll.Z7 P 17t t7S Chemplon Motorcyctu Inc. <• P-1"'90 Ot'"Of eo.11 Delly PllOI NAMI l,..T•M•NT Tiie lollo•I ... ,,_,..,,., .,.. dol119 1>4111"9UH: Cell-• <OfllOf'e!lonl, 1'90 Har-Seol t , 16, H, JO, ttlt Jtll .. 1 BlvCI., Cosi. MHt, Ce. '1•:11 1--------------Tlllt lllltlneu 11 <onolu<lto Dy • <Of· CllEDEXO, JMU Fl Herllor llvd , Coste Mew. C.lltotnl• t•i. ""'* E ....... JH1 'l'ul:Oll Cir· cte. Cosi. Meu, C•lll-a ... Cllrlttel E. eer1on, JOSI Yillt°" Cir<,., c~ Mete, c.111om1e ••• Tiii• "°"'""' Is <ClftdUct..S fly .,. Ill dlvtcluel. Clltlttel E. B•rton Tlllt "9'"'-1 •H 111..S wltll 11111 COUllly Clerk of Of' ..... C-l'Y el\~ t .... .,., JI, '"'· _., ... ~ Motorcyc~ Inc. _,1Nvlteut1 .. , Vke PreslOtftt Tltlt nat-. was lllef Wiiii ftle County C""11 Of 0..--•noe Counly Oii s.p. 1emt1er 4, 1"1 POiiet l>\lblllhtd Orenoe Coe11 0.lly Piiot Sept •. "· 11. JO, '"' J~ ''"Ill ~-----------Puo11.-0r-. Coefl 0.11, Piiot s.ot. u. JD. 0c1.1, , .. '"' •nu PICTITIOUS IUll•IU "AMI STATIM .. NT Tiie followl119 "'"°'" ••• Clel119 .,.,,,,,....,: PACIFIC llEITAVllllAHT SYSTEMS, ISIS Sun l•11d, C•st• l"fCTITtOUI IWl•lll M•M. Ce...,.... llAMIE IT A T'1I Ma•T 11100 $. °""""9t 141 In, 1'4$ Mat,1 T'lle foltowlfll ,,...... •• clOlfll .,.,,,_ ,.I., Celte Mela, Ca. m26 "9H H : Sam M. W-, JOit La-Or., OltAfllGE COUNTY IUSIHESS CowtaMete.C•.t2tott ll"OICIE,.AGE, ... HIC-Ol"f Sir-, J-.... ...,_, tllOCaM•llla St, Colte MMe, Celltomte t»>t All• L-. Ce. '1701 l"r-E. ~ .... H~ltot'Y TNt IMIMU la ConCIU<IN lly • SI., C..tll-... C.IHornl• ... oe ... , •• _,~. Tllla lluel-It <-.CtW lty e11 Ill-ROii S, Cllemeler1elll ff¥ldlle1. Tlllt ... "'-'t ... filed wttll .,. Fr-IL C:-c;_., Q"1: tf o....,.. COUl'lt)I Ml S.. Tiii• ._._ -. n1ec1 wt1'1 11w i.m11er •. '"' coun1rc~ot0r-.c.......,011a.. PtmN lemllltr 21, l"1. Pt1tDI "'*ltMCI Of ... Coaat Delly Pltoc Pullllllled 0r.,,.. C:0.11 o.11,, ~llM. '9pt. '· 1•. U. JO, 1•1 •011_.1 Sep!, 2J, •• Ckt. 1, ... 1"1 41,.., PICT1TIOUI ._, ....... llAMl ITAT'IMWT rvu 1100 (7U) "1-0M. Sept. 16, 2J. ll0, Ocl. 7, 1"1 O~I S. NO Ill TOH, eon .. ,.. ..... Wiii Mii el Dal•: ...,._ I, t•I prlY8le Mle lo llla lllOl'Kt eftO betl T.o. SERVIC~ COMPANY, NIUC llllCE llldOer ,._.IN"""' •llCI <on•tttl-PICTITIOUJ IUllMllS M Mid Trvst .. , ,_,.llltlter -loned enCI IUl>jKI to NAMI STATIMIMT By OWis Teletw. conllrmettan l>y Mid Sc.tp.,lor Court T ... .........._ 1 .......-... bltM-AMl&t.lnt Se<r-y f'ICTITIOUI IUll•IU on Septembff 12. l"1, el 1119 ....,, Of ·--..... ",_, '-.. 0..0tyBowte W..1 •AMllTATl. ... NT 2.00 P.M ·~erwlelllltfltt ..... "' .. o~·s AUTO SALIS, 7• w. 0rMgs, CA.,.::"' . TIMI 1011-1 ... ,..r_, are dOlllO •II•••• .,, •••.• , .... •fllu of 17tll •C.COlleMHt,C..mt7 (71410S... blltl-ut: WILLIAM"· FROEIEllG, >SSJ, Gor-ll'M Olton, JtOO 11111.,., p ..... ,,,. Orenet Coeal Delly Pl~ THI SHADE SHO,., ,., Old C•mlllO Mira Coste, s. .. Clef'IMftle, A .... ,.._. hem, Ce. Stitt ... "· n. '"' Jt7MI N•wport, ,...,,.,,, ... 11. C.lllwnla C.lllONlle •II ,...,., title, llll•l"lld ..... Tlll1 .,.,...._,, 11 c~teocl lly tn In. t2M3 Hlat• of Mid 111\AlllOH S. HOltTON, dMckiel, · • lll•berl w. •"d 1111••••11• L. con"""""·-"'•ltllt.tlt,._I,.. GordollOh-. PIU ma Mertltlenct, u .. Prim,_,,.._ ..... Mre11tr..tMld-1WKecciul!W,Dy C Tllh c'~,!_~ ~!_~.:: ~ -------------Y•ll•y, Cel"~=•llCI =~·~i:nl,.of .=.:. ~=-:.:~-.. "!: OIHlfY ....,,. .., __ ~.. _. "'1('TIT10UI MllUllU Tlllt ~ •• ftled Wllfl Ille lllAltlON $. HOlllT~ 1,. eN tt llw r• tember 4, '"'· lllAlll tTAT•MaMT C"'"'Y Clen of Ore-County 911 P1111thNct o.-..,.. c...st Ott~'':.: i.!,':.< f1~1~01etu T..,,":', s.,..,. :•c1111E AY1V•1J1, ,..,, ,.,M7V ~~:F?:.s ~1F~~ Sffl. t . "· u, ao, ,.., ,_., " .. 1'111111"-CI o.-919 eo.11 De lly Piiot, 11om1 fECHNOLOCV' lltllSEA•CH s.pt.1',U.»,Oct.l,t"1 ~I. 1 .. c:11, c.et a, mon ll9rtkuler1,, O"OANIZATIOH (21 o.~ T.llt.O. m CIH<rllled •: Loe 16 of Trect H•. 110, W.M.l.F. c•> Wf'll MAl(ll IT l'LY. --------------1-m•11,....... In._ 11, •• P ... , -yo Mnll'r •. J1 Mid II"' Mllcell-. .._, :!:" 91.-, 0..,...,., C.llforllla 1 ____ ,._-.......,.__""_'_i.c. ____ 1 -.conb of Or.,. C...CV. Cel"-le, ~I LM 9'elft, US Del• St-t, PIC'TtTIOus eu.t•lll .... "' ""'" -..... ,_. lw Mid Cotlt #Mst. c.t._,.,a t»t7 .._ ITAH ..... T llAtNrty -""'91 lllt Ill _,. .... ellf J•t•l'lllell ,, ... <IH Ille•, ·~· T ...... .. ""' lie tK•lv .... Ille olfl<e •f lie .... -.... ""'" ....... llwll-WILLIAM Ill, l"llllOEllE"G, ...,,_., l"ernrHI Ori .. , Merlller City, N NHl for 111• Ell•t• •I MAlltlOH S. C.lllomla N21 JOHii COUNTY L TO .. ta1 0.... ltTO Tlllt llutlllftt la <OlldW<IH lly • St., N......,, 9"cfl, CA ttwo, CHO ·"· • .!. ~':,. 11~.,!'191 IN -· ~11. OAN 0.Ll()M, 11102 G1111nt-.. ,II -_... ,._, tr ... ¥111tlwll L. se.i.. Cour1, L91111'11 .. ..,_., CA .. n. llver•CI le lht HMI 1 Mml!'_llre 1 ttr Tll .... --.. -lllN w1111,1.... Tiii I "'Htlelly, at ...., I me .,,., f rt1 _._.. .... • ._.._, • <Oftlhoet ... ., • '"*'k•tlell .. "'"""""' .... ...... COlltlt\' C19'11., Ow'~ COW!ty M llmllM,....,.,........ 11'\eltl"I ................. wlll 111t ,. .... ,,. ""'· Otlll Del..-I'll-_,...., ............ •-: CAii! f'1"'91 Tllh ........... WM Ill• Wlttl ... ., ,.11 Clllfl -...., C,.., h ....... ,._,.,.. 0r-. O.•t o.i1y l"li.t. c-1., e...,._ .. o.-enee c-tv ... of -11 ,,... .. 1111 --.... ._ n. ........... t.9, 16, U, I.. JIS.Hl ..... U, ""· llMeruen.ct .... totM._,.ltrc-t: Pt,_ *' -<eflt IWI of ._ •-t Me P\11>11 ..... Or.,.. C.0..C Delly ftl... to KC..,_'1' .. eMwr lly C:.rtlflff S.,C. 1', D, .. Ort 1, Hiil 4llS41 <lleCll -Ille ~ .. M '8ld ., <MfWll'Wl9ell ., tele _,. .. ~ PICTt.,...,. llUtl .. 111 '9JC l9llC( C..rt, T-.,. 1W1t1 -lftMl••-.._ trAftMllltT ·~ ...,_h#M 911 IMw-. Tiie .......... ~ .,. ...... K<~ 16 .. ~~ IMll -PtCT1TUIUI 9Ulttll01 '*"-9 •: f'ICTITIOUI •utt•IU -atfd M ef ...... ., _.,.. tf ·····"'•"• 10 1 PWllllca l l ,11 l•llCI •PPtOpriete c.fl1 •"d a Clltcll to THI DAILY "ILOT, "0 801 IMO. Cotl• Meq, CA mi. We 11 Ito Ille rHt 1101 llllormtlloft •bout l•g•I 1dv1,,ltl11t pltHt G'tff Ml~Jl&t in Th• ftll-1111 l>ffaon• «• 4lol11t bull-.. : J It •1 fl'llllAtlMS & AC· CUSO"lfS. 1*1 "''"''· H1111t....._ IHcll, CAllllensle,.,. ltMIC rTAftMINT .. I WP0411T-Ml$A AUOIOLOO'r llAMll rTAftMl•T ,_..,..,_ •. l.K,._ <Mt9K tMll 1111t Tiie loll9.tnt ~ •t• Cl•lat AND HIAlttNO AID C.,,.,llt, 1116 Tiie __,. ,.,_ .. Wlllt IMt-~llr •v,_. .._ lflt ... ,,..._ llUtlll9tl•1 0r._ A .... , ...._ "·<'all -.., -••· IHml-1911., t1t .. , rec_...... ef <-' IHAICIY'S "'l:ZA "ARLC>tt, 014 CA...,. IH OllllCT ILIC:TllOHIC W9YMK•, tl'llMIW ltlltt _......., ttttt ~ ....... C.111 Mt-. Cellfwlli• HOWA"D T. MIJtOO. M. ID,. MAlllllt•TIHO; (1) Ollta.C:T IL.•C. IMur-INll 111t ..... _,. -Mllff, , ( J ernet ... ••Y-M II, 1701' l"rlll'll, "-lftllln ...... Cellfwrllt .... Tflh ---.. ~.., a11 Ill· ............ J'"'" H. R e,"*'11 II ffll• ltilflellwrt -Ill• """ -c:-tr, '*'fl er--... c:-, •11 • ......., ... -. t'l!t:t7 C:Ll•tCAI. AllDIOLOOIST, 111•1 T"ltONtCL 1111'! .._ ...... U..-. TM rleMa....,,... .. rejtd Mr •M C A P •H11!1t,...IA1, IN'-, • Mef1M U.., II H ..... , .._II. CA ........ CA-.n. e ll llNt. c.1'"""9--tlllell flW6. JAl:HI VINCINT .Alllll.IY, 0 tad .....___..__ I Tiiis ......._. l.1 cieMW;-"' • <• O•aM It. MN10Q. •M1 MerN U111 " .... -..., L..-Iii ..... CA • : _...._.,, tl1 _ _.._ Lo.-lfw1• ..... 11Mct1.CA--. _,,, ~i..::; C&Pa-w1-.111C. TMe ...... 11~_,.1111111> TMl...._lt~!lyet1~ , __ 11 ,. , ,.._, ..... _. ........... ---• ,_,,.,,1J•. ..._. .... w1w•1.,..... .. 0.fl'f!WI"~ ...... T....... J.I..... c.•- Tfllt ........... -fl.. .... .. 'nlft ........ -..... ... .. Tlllt ......,_. -rllte .... .. ...... -·-= Olftl flf Or ... c:-.t, MC-.. CMtl ttf Or .... ~ .. C-~ C .... ef Or .... CWMy"' --.:---.... t:""..::r.' ~ ""· ....... ·~ ""· .... , .. ""· '!!!.. ~ ~ Pt,.. ~ .. ~,..._,,. PWI ..... Or .... C.... o.ll'r ....._ .......... 0.. a..°""'..... ,,_,__Or .... C.-o.ty...... PW! .... Or-. Cs111t Oe1tr ....... •••• '*"' t.• .... n,"" "'°~ -... tt.a.a.od.1,191 .,.et ..._ .._n,a,oa..1, 1.. ....., ._. ''-•1.0. !WI • ltv...r. ' I j I I ... .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedneaday, September 23, 1981 FEMALE WING WALKER -Carol X. Lynne walks on lower wing of plane during stunt in recent air show at Lebanon, N.H. The PT-17 ............. Stearman piloted by Wayne Pierce of Winter Haven. Fla., flew 100 feet off the ground at speeds of 150 mph. Met opera opening wild Normally staid first-nighters boo controversial soprano By MARY CAMPBELL leave, and did. • _ ............ r-.r NEW YORK -The Metropolitan Opera began its season with the most disruptive opening in years, as scores or . normally staid first-nighters booed soprano Renata Scott.o's attempts to sing "Norma." and one heckler was even carted off by security guards. But if Monday night was an artistic disaster, it was a finan- cial triumph as the Met grossed $365,000 from ticket sales. Prices ranged from S6 for standing room to $200 for box seats. It was the largest gross since open- ing night 1966, when the Met moved to Lincoln Center and charged even more for the best Laughter, snickering and murmurs continued from throughout the audience as Miss Scotto sounded alternately shaky and s hrill , swooping through some passages and butchering embellishments. Boos were mixed with applause for both Miss Scotto and conduc- tor James Levine at final cur- tain calls. though there aJso was shushing directed at the booers. Mezzo Tatiana Troyanos and tenor Placido Domingo were more enthusiastically received. the last time "Norma" was heard on a Met opening mght . New York Times music critic Donal Henahan said in his re- view of Miss Scotto, "When the music lay in her most comforta- ble middle voice, her tones penetrated the house nicely. But when she was forced lo sing run out in the upper regions, intona- tion and vocal technique desert- ed her. She scooped and slurred and wobbled." A usual Met Opera opening night has a standard opera star- ring a famous soprano _and a reasonably well-dressed au- dience which politely applauds everything. , seats. The trouble began as soon as the controversial Miss Scotto made her entrance in her Met debut as Bellini 's Druid priestess, one of opera's most fiendishly difficult roles because it requires great dramatic power and coloratura agility above high C. Ruben said Miss Scotto had not canceled any of her four up- coming "Normas" -all sold- oul well in advance -and Met offi ciaJs would not comment about opening night. Miss -Scotto, 47, has been a source of controversy among operagoers for some seasons. The Italian soprano is a favorite of Levine, Mel music director, who frequently gives her the prestige of singing in new pro- ductions and on evenings that are televised. This season, she is scheduJed to sing 42 times. more than any other leading soprano. Aside from the problems with "Norma," the 30-week season promises more than its share of triumphs, particularly after the disappointments or last ·year. when a labor dispute caused the season to open late. Before Miss Scotto sang a note, a man in the balcony yelled "Viva, Maria Callas," and added an obscenity. Securi- ty guards removed him. Met spokesman David Ruben said two or three other people who made commotions were asked to Operagoers have heard "Norma" sung beautifully at the Met in recent years by Joan Sutherland and Monts errat Caballe. The late Maria CaJlas made her Met debut in it in 1956. New productions are planned of Rossini 's ··The Barber of Seville," Puccini 's "La Boheme," Offenbach's "The Tales of Hoffmann," Mozart's "Cos i Fan Tutte'' and a Stravinsky triple-bill, "The Nightingale," "Oedius Rex" and the ballet "The Rite of Spring." Sixty percent of the season has been sold by subscription. Most of the operas in the first five weeks are sold out. DEATH NOTICES FOSTER Costa Mesa. S40·SSS4 THELMA MAE FOSTER. i\LBRIGJIT resident of Santa Ana, Ca CHARLES C ALBRIGHT, Passed away on Septem ber J R . resident of Corona del 19. 1981. She had been a Mar, Ca. Passed away on lifetime resident of Long September 17. 1981 Born Beach. Ca pnor to moving F ebruary 20, 19 13 in to Santa Ana. Ca She is sur Redlands. Ca He is s ur· vived by her daughter Linda v1ved by his wife Josephine. L Wiggi ns o f Fountain son Charles C. Albright lll Valley, Ca .. and h er 2 of Balboa Island. Ca. and a grandchildren Julie D. and sister Helene Wheeler of Christie A. Wiggins both of M a r y I a nd . M e m o r i a I Fountain V a ll ey, Ca services were held on Tues· Graves ide ser vices were day, September 22, 1981 at held on Tuesday, Septem ber 2.00PM at the Paciric View 22_. 1981 at l~.OOAM at Rose Mortuary Chapel. Interment Hills Memonal Park. Whit-at Pacifcic View Memorial tier. Ca. Services under the , Park. Newport Beach. In direction of Harbor La wn-lieu of rtowers memo rial Mount Olive Mortua ry of contributions may be m ade ' Neptune Society ' to the John Wayne Cancer F u nd Paci fi c V ie w Mortuary directors. c• EMATIOH aUlllAL AT SEA 646-7431 COURTNEY Our literature tells the complete story of o ur socletv. JOHN PATRI C K COURTNEY. a 17 year resi· dent of Newport Beach, Ca. C.11 for lrM per11ollo °"" u IM'l. Com.ta'' Passed away on ~ptember 19. 1981 He was a graduate of South Western University , f'tHCIMOTHHS SMITHS' MORTU.UY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-0539 PACeHC YllW MIMOllALPAllK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1l1c View Drive Newport Beach 644-2700 "'I in Los Angeles. Ca . and worked for 25 years for the Ho rt o n and C o n g r ess Prescription Pharmacies He was also a partner of Studor Wholesale Drug Com- pany in Los Angeles. Ca., as well as being a World War Tl Veteran. He is survived by his wife Jane of Newport Beach. Ca .. a daughter Ma r c ely n Courtney o f Newport Beach. Ca .. son Daniel F . Courtney o f Florida, sisters Irene McCoaMICIC MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9.415 Bronston oC Santa Paula and Ros a ~ Mettler of Lodi, Ca. Mass of the Resurrec· Uon will be held on Wednes- day, September 23. 1981 at ll:OOAM at the Holy Cross Mausoleum. The family re- Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 HAae0a L.AWM-MT. OUYI MOf'1uary • Cerretery Crern1tory 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mesa ~SS54 P'lllClllO'f ... S e&&.•OADWAY MOnUAIY 110 Broadway CostaMeu 642-9150 quests In lieu of flowers donations be made to the M anrea Jesuit House, PO Box K, Azusa, Ca. 91702. Services under the direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa. 540·5554. REYNOLDS FRED HUNTING REYNOLDS, born on August 1, 1918 in Oak Park. Illinois and waa born to eternal llle on September 21, 1981 In Santa Ana, ca. at the 'age of 63. He Is survived by his wife Dorothy. daughter Vicki (QeraJd) Brousseau, IALTI •••Ott son Fred, ailters Jean Tuerk IMln4 & tvnaL and Dorothy Heckendom WIPC...,. CHAra a n d e Ir and ch l Id re n . >• -. SI Funeral services are pend· 421 E. '"" · ln1. Pacific View Mortuary, ' ~:D:J~ Newport Buch dlrecton. • ~ ... ._._._;:,,,,.. _______ ,,,... '44·2?00. I Philly cleans up its act PlliLADELPHlA (AP> -Philadelphia -one of the oldest cities in the country and the fourth largest -is cleaning up its act. The city has become so dirty. in fact, that tourists have been writing angry letters to newspapers, prompting a sweeping cleanup campaign. "My mother always used to say, 'You may not have much money and your clothes may not be new. They may be patched. but if you keep them clean, people wiU respect you for being clean'," said W. Wilson Goode, the city's managing direc· tor, who is responsible for keeping it clean. Goode, who grew up on a North Carolina sharecropper's farm, believes Philadelpbians would do well to consider his mother's advice if they want to earn the respect of visitors. '·we can have the best managed sanitation de- partment in the world, but if people keep behaving like pigs there's no way we can clean up after 1-7 million of them," Goode said recently. Al the sight of the streets, there is a common re· action among visitors and newcomers. "What detracted and disgusted me was the filth I encountered -trash everywhere," Richard F . Young of Bowie, Md .. wrote The Philadelphia Inquirer. Goode said, "The city has not paid enough alten- li on to maintaining cleanliness . I think Philadelphia's not a lot worse than many other cities. There are cities that are cleaner - Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburgh. We may have a neck-and-neck race with New York City." The city spends three times the money -$39.2 million -to collect nearly twice the amount of trash -1.9 million tons a year -as it did 20 years ago, even though it! popuJation has dropped by more than 15 percent. It has now added $5. 7 million to the budget to hlre an extra 320 street cleaners, but Goode aaJd, "It's going to take a year or two to turn this thing around, to get people to chan1e their habits." One survey found that pound for pound, the city has substantially more money to clean up trash than the average town. But that la not enough. Under a drive begun in June, with the 1lo1an·"A Great City la a Neat City," Mayor William Green appeals to the public in radio ads to clean up aft.er themselves. Potters and banners also serve as re- minders. By Aug. 1, more than 1,400 Ule1al trubina cit•· lions bad been lasued. Lall Monday, 5S of 72 people ordered to municipal court to anawer lhe c1taUona did not a~ar aod will be fined ttoo. Slx ot the 17 who appeared were acquitted, but the otbera were nned $100. "It's not the City Council or tbe Mayor wbo throw dirt everywhere," Green told re· porters. "It's people." Doomed from the start 'The Last Ambassador' provides insight in Vietnam NEW YORK <AP> -The dialogue appeared ln no newa re- ports -it is fiction, tbouah perhaps not whoJly so -but there if no doubt the emoUon was 1 common one during the fall ol Saigon ln 1975: "But for it to end ... tbia way ... '' "lt was doomed from the start. Why? Because the, for eigner has always been doomed in Vietnam. The Chinese, the Portuguese, the French, the Japanese, now the Americans. . . They were aU driven out." She put her finger to Walker's lips. "Did you think America would be exempt? Because you felt you were protecting the Vietnamese against the Com- munists?" Thus Jc anne de Clery, Hadden Walker's French-Vietnamese mistress, appeals to th~ American ambassador as he begins to see the futility or his single-handed effort to resist the onrushing enemy. "We wanted to do the story, and I wouJd say our predisposi- tion at the beginning was lo do it as non-fi ction," says Marvin Kalb, the NBC News correspon- dent who composed the scene, with his correspondent-brother Bernard, for their newly published novel, "The Last Am- bassador." ·'To do somethi.ng like that as non-fiction," Marvin Kalb says, "s.nmething that happened less than 25 years ago, means you have to do it without the documentation. And if you do that, you end up with an in- complete account that is nawed for that reason." "The Last Ambassador," as fiction, probably contains as much insight into at least one aspect of the dramatic war story -the human aspect -as any historical account could have. The Kalb brothers covered the story as journalists, Bernard largely from Southeast Asia for The New York Times and later CBS News, and Marvin primari- ly from Washington, as CBS News· chief diplomatic cor- i:espondent. Marvin Kalb is the author of five books, and the brothers col- 1 aborated once before on a biography, "Kissinger." "The Last Ambassador," COMPOSES SCENE Marvin Kalb based on actual events and the reporters' experiences, pursues the crumbling military effort in Vietnam where journalism could not -into the government meet- ing rooms and the minds of some key -though fictional - players in the drama. "Many years ago, when J first got back from Moscow." Marvin Kalb recalls, "I already had a couple of books out, and Eric Sevareid came over and said, 'You must keep writing, because to put what you know into a minute or a minute-15 is the most frustrating experience you can have.' "The flavor, the mood, the ex- citement, the personalities, only come across in the longer, writ- ten form," he s ays. "In 'The Last Ambassador,' we were able, really, to approach what human beings go through when faced with the most awful pressures.'• "It's a book that can be perceived on several levels," Bernard Kalb says. "It's about the impact that a country called Vietnam Chad on the lives of a handfuJ of people. But it's also about human reaction to catastrophe. The word 'lest' is used a lot -test or character. test of integrity, test of honesty. CBS CORRESPONDENT Bernard Kalb "You're surrounded by death and sorrow," he says, "lltld you become inured -even the most sensitive become inured, or they get out." ·'There's a scene where Tony CaUell, the CIA man, knocks lhe people away from the plane with a rifle butt," Marvin Kalb says. "You talk about tests. I could easily imagine a scene like that as a kind of black act of manli- ness. Without that kind of reac- tion, the plane would have never left the ground. In one, Walker, the am· bassador, is begged by a Viet- namese friend, a fellow collector of Oriental porcelain, to help move his priceless artwork from the country. "Something must survive that will proclaim to the world that Vietnam is a nation not only of violence but of beauty. Thal the Vietnamese can create works of art that are delicate, exquisite, tender. Thal the genius of the Vietn4mese is no less than that of other people.·' "The suggestion for the' character. the Vietnamese character, was a friend I had met there," Bernard Kalb says. .. His presence has haunted me for a Ion~ lime." I Mark Boudreau checks plants groum organically m hts garden in Urbana. Ill. Organic farms seek match Botanist forms group to bring knowledgeable together URBANA, Ill. CAP) -In the Midwest, where chemicals helped make com the king, it isn't easy to track down an or- ganic farm. But organic farms do exist amid the rolling fields or Iowa and the fiat, rich acres of In- diana. It is also difficult for organic farmers to find workers they can afford. But such people also exist, and a young botanist named Mark Boudreau has founded an or- gan izalion to bring tbe two together. It's called SaUva, a botani cal term meaning "cuitivated" or ·•sown." "The situation is room and board in exchange for work on the farm," said Boudreau ... The length of stay can ran1e from a weekend to an enUre summer - whatever the worker and the grower want." Boudre•u. a recent 1raduate of lhe University of Illinois, had worked on organic farms in Britain while studyin1 there. When he returned lo the UoJted States ln 1979, be patterned Saliva after a group that ar· ran1ed bis farm Jobi in Britain. "It'• very difficult to flnd ex- perience " Boudreau said. "II you• te 'ntereated ln or1anlc a1ricu.lture, it's enn dlfficult to 1et a formal educatJon ln It." Orsanlc f armen eschew the uae of chemical ~Ucld• ud artlficlal f ertlllzera . Saliva has placed about ~ workers on 50 organic farms in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Missouri and Minnesota. Farm owners and workers pay $8 a year for the service. "The idea is to immerse the workers in the environment of an organic farm and have them become part of the family," said Boudreau, who also runs an or: ganic gardening program for the city of Urbana. TbArganic farms range from tiny vegetable and berry patches to large cash grain operations. Workers might be asked to plant and harvest, feed or milk animals, scoop manure, repair buildings and equipment, clear land, cook and can fruit and vegetables or sell produce at local markets. Livin& conditions at the 13 Il- linois organic farm a differ. One near Anna advertises "no hot water or indoor toilet." Another at Rushville encourqe1 ·•natural medicinal practlcea, alternatives to present-day birth experlea.ces, child ral•lnl and education." One at Freeport promises a "lar1e brick house wllh adequale apace for workers,'• and anoth er at Cobden enc:our11es •orken lo "brlDI mualcal lnatrumenll" a.ad pleda• to "bell> worken 1tart aJo. proceu of aearchilll for land lo area." Some farmer• are- vegetarians; others discourage the use of alcohol and tobacco; many welcome handicapped workers or those with children. Unlike the highly specialized farms typical or the Cornbelt, organic farms are diyersified. Farmers usually produce fruit, vegetables and grain, ana raise meat or dairy animals. Some have bees for honey and maple trees for syrup. •'There is a greater tendency for a closed system on an or· ganic far m," Boudreau said. "You grow the grain and feed lt to the livestock and keep the manure on the land." Boudreau said a common mil· conception is t hat or 1anlc farmers can't earn enoulb to make a living because of thelr relatively low crop yields. He said that even with ytelda alight· ly lower, organic farmers save money by nol buying expensive fertilizer and chemicals. He said many of them also save money by usin1 aJtemaUve energy sources such aa wind, solar, alcohol or methane. Just as the farms vary widel)', ao do the people who want to work on them, Boudreau 1aid: "There are some who jutt want a cheap way to 1et out o1 tbe dty and into the country. 811t a lot of our memben are th&aktel about fetlinl tbeir own land ..... nU-laC food, eo they want UM pne. deal apen..ee;• Orange Coast DAIL V PILOTtWtdnesday, September 23. 1981 * The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678 Orange Coast residents bought 42% of all new cars sold in the county hut year even though they comprl!e only 30% o/ th e county's populahon. ' CLASSIFIED INDEX .... ...... .... w. ·.._..,_Wt .._..,_Wt .......... Wt 1"-'"FerWe tto...FCN'We ....,...,.,.Wt ..,Wt ........................................................................................... ~······················ ••.........................•.•.....•.......•......................... ·············•····••··· "._,.. lotl!e••r.. . IOOJ .,t··tOOJ 1.irtl . 1062 •••o• 1001 1901 ,....,.. 1002 'Ge•r• I~~ ~~····················~······················· _ ............................................. ···••••········•••····· .•••••...•..•..•.........••...••....•...•.... ·····•·•·•·········· '' ,.. '• a.. ea• BAY FRONT &42·5678 llllSlSFOISllE ...... ,., II.I .... hit .. l\oJlluo l'oiv•··· • l ... '4 ..... 1W.1h I •M••l '11•1 l-.ll ... . 0. ...... M rJTllf• ~OtilM•lft \ .u,, llwMlllJl• ... llf•• ~ I"."' .-.ua•ht•'" IM•Mllllh l.11\lft• \1•\WI 11 ....... , .. ~ ~ri:' ....... :.h ~-Jua• t •liH .. lt•fW ,.._•Al\1 w ...... .. !IWl-1 ... .... "'""'"'''" -l•l"-•'41• aw mm "' ..... ,.,. ...... "-•lot'wl• Hwri~t\\ ~ .. ,,.,,h l't•'411 l.G4• ..... l M'lmt"1•1 l"ruprrh (~lftUi.trl,~11' lJrwt&t•ir" l ~\ '41 .. l~t"'bf.)ltt,rd llWiltfW't'roptrh '~"'•' "'"""''h i,,., , ... lwl. \1.-.l< ll•w I rlr l'rl MtMMft ,..,_,, t(,.,,.,, hrtJ111•tu t•r'4' tM ul \ wnh Vrot1 (Nl °''-'•Ir t'HN tt•~~ ••rnh ••'"'"" k••I t._ .. 1.,, t-."tu11n•• ktiri bt.i. "•"trod IENULS Hw~ t'u1n1<rihfod """'~ l "''""''hf'od UCN\n t't.un\tt t "' l~m1r~ttiun\ turri l'MOOnHl'MWihlt. l nt To.Mouw' •'l.un To•Af\w'"' l nl IJupJ4'\t'I • Utft Uuplt\t' l nt Apt.\ t'l.rn Aph lnh1rn APl-,•vrri~lnl Koom' "°""'' 11<>.rd ''°''h "•••1 .. Cw~ llot.1omt11i '-'"'"""' ktt\\•I' \ M'lhOft MtlU•I\ llAll . .... 11111 llfl• """' 1111<! EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY llllh ltrf/ ............. Mottce: :: All real estate ad "'" vertlsed In thl 1 :: newspaper Is subject to ::t the Fedenl Fair Hous· 1""' Ing Act ol 1968 which :~~ makes It Ulegal to ad· 19"! vertlle "any preference, ,,.. li mitation, or dis· :: crlminatlon based on ""' race, color. relicion, Y2 PRICE SALE (llJST) Recently widowed seUer near panic ! Price reduced kom $1,400,000 L.H. to $795,000. Compare current listings. This 5·6 bedroom home on premium location is If.I MILLION L~ than rJ?Ost! Make no mistake, this is a distress sale. Excellent financing . Price non·negotiable. To preview call Dick Drexler 759· 1221. R&" M * of Newport Beach sea, or national origin, ,.., or an intention to make :;: any such preference, i--H•A•U-,_-•.._--.-1 BIG + POil 1•-<> limitation, or dis · --.; Bd th · ::: criminal.ion " An exquisite orferlnc: 5 rm WI swimming 1 , Elegant I& spacious 3 pool and jacum · solar llNEIWllfflWIE 2·STOIY DUPUX~ AA.CH 200' TO IXCrTIHG MACH 127'.500 A very handsome building! Ori~inal owner and beautifully maintained. 4·Bdrms, 2 baths & lge sundeck in upper; 2·Bdrms, 1 bath & darling patio in lower. Fireplace in each. OWC 1st T.D. & Note oC $230,000, int only. $49,500 down pmt. No loan fee. WISLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. UALTOIS 2111s • .....-....... MIWPOIT ClHTH. till. 644-4910 11~; This newspaper will not bdrm + family room, 1 heated. RV area. As· -I ho I sume FNMA 1169,000 •-------•I•--------,, knowinflY accept any ev. mew panoramic ~:,: advertising for real vista of 'harbor, ••. < '-"' esute which IS in viola· coaslllne, ocean & night RED CARPET' ~~ t of the law. lights. Prestige, com· 754-1202 , r..., fort, luxury & security. ,,... I•-------• Reduced, now S'739,000 E: HIOIS: Actwerttsen (Owner rmancingl. Agt, 64~SS60. .-.W ct.ck.....,. ads l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I ~~ :~.: ·~ T~ IMVESTOl'S ~ clahlJ. DBJGHT 1w DAILY PILOT au•H ASSUME 8\.'1% loan or ~ hbllty for tt. fint 90% financing available ;:: l1correct lt11ertlo11 at only 12~%. A lot of a;w ORIJ. house · 5 bdrm. 2 ba. On·w --in-t-er_R_et_re_a_t-. _O_as_is-in ~ •• ,:', ··-------• ly $l09,900. Call now .the sun. New l yr old 2 11"' ~ forS. with cathedral ceilmg, EUl(ftAN MANllHOUSE Magnificent 6 bdrm. view, mansion. 7200sq I\ with 7 baths, 5 frplcs, large wine cellar, spec· u cular 20' high entry, circular cobblestone driveway on one full acre. Special feature is a huge cowitry club-siie entertainment room · with 2 frplcs. Now under construction. IAYSHOIES IAYlllOHT Desirable eastern ex· posure racing Harbor Island. Private pier and slip. 3 bedrooms & co11· vertible den. Large bayside ~rnce ideal for entertaining or ju.st sit ting in the SWI. $950,000 L.H. 17 I 4167l-4400 IJIJI Ul-2121 HARBOR .~ ,. A9'1~·53'10. bdrm + den, 3 ba, furn lkk Aw.r.tt. :~~; ...................... LL$TATE Indian Wells Ra~quet lltr. Deffloper <M Ge.rail IOO _...,..,.____ Club, Palm Springs. 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Prr"'On•I\. ~· ~••lt lu,.,. s.till Tr1t\tl ';.4.,1 SEIYICES ~'hH~ lllff'tf111'\ .._,.1 EM"-OYMENT l ,_mUTION 'rt.ooh ln,Hijirtl(Jtt 1"'6 JtAt "'•"'"'' i•li• ll•l~V.•nl"' \1 4 t ' ·~" MERCHANDISE AMM4t.t-...... ~"'4:1•1Mf'\ lllj)O "~"'""' IO I• :~.':; \l•lrrt•I NW ""'' ~ "'""'' .... " • ttlif•""'" hi •l•• t •h oo.11.\ ...... _, trnlo \ow ·~1 •\inulyr. IUlu c..., .... '41• ""'"' .. .., l............W l.r•.d• ~ ,, .... ,r, "1:• lnnlQf\ ..r.> \I-"~""''' "If.• li11~ .. n•"""'' -M1.attll•MOti1' Y.41nt.-d ••I ""'"•' ''"''""~"1"" ""' OU.rt" rur" • t q1iuv 11)1.\ Ptt' ..... ~= ~~~~~,.~~ .. -· .. W"t1nr f,f.o.b '""' ~Off ftf"'\h Ur_,,,_ ft•t '"'" j.7•.r.dH>lht1 '\tt'rf'tl ,.,... ..... BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT (.,f'nf'h\ Wiii Ho.I' \hurt ""'"• r ... ,.., 8o_., \l•nft• t tt•t1I• .. ~, ftoi.111 ., ... " -fto•l"" H.t.,. f ti.rt•r .. ~, llo1h ,.ul .. ,,,., &.,, "'P" l)o, ~-.... 111 Mo .. h~f'Cf'"'I .... , hh SlflflU .. ,,., TIANSPORUTION A1uti1A 'llu t •l'l'IP-'f"' \.lit.-K'""' vuin UtnnC'(1r, 'fl.)J \lolltlt 11""'"' lfl6U ~otOf l\flf"\. " • ..,., .. IJfl"' MOlot um, .... ,., "'"' YI~• Tttt~r"' l r•\rl .,, .. Tt•l"'h I t1l1oh •11<1 ~vto "'"Kt f'•th ...... AUTOMOlllE ~nwr•• J..Jl•I AIK*"l\k*'\ lt•Ult \ •J..• M" '"•'klln \'tu' k.._ ,,.., ~•h k••, kt•I ·~»· ••1'1«10fl\t'11 I» ''""l.) ..... I.a. jJfl! Avtu LA tUlft~ .,.. '"'l~··ft;,,..I t)l/O• AUTOS, IMPORTEO ..,,.,...,., /itti .\ILt Mu""o Vo\C h•h ,,,, .. \w.tin 11 ... i,,' 'fi,tJ llllV. ~di ::=ri Jil~ 'fib IJ•hli*ll lfi..\I fc'H411• lfiit ..... , v;;i; 11-•· or.r. Jtt&!U I y;)1 Jt'fbt'i\ •ti.&.: l\•tm .. nulfh1i. ,.;.11 ~1u1I• "'" \11ih.,1I; '''°'"' VdU .!Ill \11-ll '41ll! ~Ill ·~11 .... l;•nh111 ~iii 11C'W.'.ntl li'ilM PIJ'" rtt• .,j,,.1 Hrn11wft v;,1.1 Kuil<ro M11\t• ~· .... "'"'' 'la; .).ol.tll ...... 1 !\iulMrY '1W r_,, •• , '~ rrn~m~ V'i•i "''" .. ··~"" ~:;., \.,l\U Ir.it AITIS, NEW lntM t.tl .,, AUTOS, um lif"M't•I ,. .. Ill\ WO ""'' .. ... 1. , .. n.u ... Wll l '•MtfHt WI• 1"-"''"•fl4 -\lU°'•'•' ~ \•tftlM" .;.r. 'uM1Mttt•t -l•llf"U°41r '1"11 l'lMU• f'(ll °'''""' "'"' ~·"'·' ...... lmtwu11f ... u loWH'\fht 1'<11 )f4,fn1k .. ,j ~1-ttMf'\ ...... 11'«),l .~'.~:J"" It.I)• l'1i1thl ., •• i l"Omuoftt -· ...... , .... ..... fhYHI" th1t1I '"ti \t•.:.• ...r.1 rounds flower filled mer/winter history. trade for unit Ill Corona -~ yard -loads ~f used Priced al 1395,000 del Ma r Call John 1-.1111 bnck. Owner will carry 615-1752 Bellamy752-6855 •------.. with small down-<all · Come to the actlon Most wanted area in So Calif buyers can aHord to pay . Carr y Larry Whitesides , Balboa Island Realty. 613-8700 now CiOOOTaMS! MOIUHOMIS @ SEA COVE T~?cr>~~=~o Coz~~~1~:'11v. PROPERTIES shows like a model. ing room with fireplace. 71'-631-6990 1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 t..arge asswnable loan. Great year round living = Owner will urry a 2nd or weekend retreat. Flxa 900/o Al•cllMJ and the price is only SS9.500. 1be fastest draw ln the STEPSTOSAHD Nopaymenlsoo2ndfor S75 ,000 Call now 759-1616 West ... a Daily Pilot 3 BR & DEN needs your 2 years. Super sharp 2 979·5370. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!I!!! I Cllssified Ad. 642·5678. attention. Brine shovels +den condo, 1 year old, A and paint b~h. Make pool & teM.is.1175,000. LLS'l"A TE Si's. Owner will carry at , ,.. low interest. REAL TORS @ SEACOVE . PROPERTIES 7 ·~·~)-6990 l•ct.oS.te Fe Estates & Acreage Try 4 BR 3 BA 3400 sq fl 'l(l!!mll, Pool and citrus at !Ii! n~.ooo We know aU Rancho Elegant 4 Br. custom 111 ftU PLropeC~Y Nellie Gale Ranch. "" A _.. .. , Laguna Hills, beaut. RWESTATE view, imported marble. 17141756-"ll pool size yard, 4 car ---TH---..-.---- garage, equestnan lot - $62:5,000. TOWHHOMV Jensen & Co. 759-0700 Call the speclallst.s at Eves . 644 ·5742 or the condominium in· WHA n UNIQUE 951·82169 formation center. AIOUT INquE Selling anything with 1 Touchstone Realty Daily Pil<X Clasinfied Ad ___ 963-;..;;.-.......C1167----.. __ _ S P E C I A l.. I N is a simple matter .. SPYGLASS-Large and just call 642-5678. lovely rive bed room . 1.A:==-==..="-=='----1 --===""-""'=---=-"-'-'-"-I three bath, Nantucket Model. Ocean view and super assumable financ· ing. 1695,000fee. LUXURY PLUS AN IN· CO ME -This new cu.stom duplex in Old Corona del Mar has a three bedroom i.mil, and a two bedroom unit. Best quality on the market. 1469,000. FINANCING ANO DECOR -Truly beautiful CdM duplex, owner will carry great financ111g. Dream house 111s1de and out 1475.000 FANTASY LI VING- Privacy/ fi re place, atrium, amily room. plus three bedrooms. community pool, spa and tennis ... lhls home has it au for 1.195.000. LO C ATION AND GREAT FINANCING- Two bedroom, two bath, Townhouse. Fireplace, patio, adult living, bring your decorating ideas. 1135,000 ree. £!E llDBll ILlllS ca. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE VIEW: IA Y & CITY UGffTS G<>rgeous View From This Single Level Two Bedroom, Two Bath End Unit. Decorator Wallpapers And Drapes. Plantation Shutters. Separate Master Suite. Shows Like A J ewel ! $255 ,000. A "Joy Of Newport'' Listing. SPECIAL CUSTOM tA YFiONT FH UHD Four Years Old . Ca thedral Ceilings, Parquet Floors & New Carpets. Lots Of Wood & Glass. Three Bedrooms & Convertible Den. 31h Baths. Separate Dining. Huge Family Room With Wet Bar. Kitchen With Pantry. Breakfast Room. Sauna. Study. Three·Car Garage. Wood Deck Overlooks Bay & Dock. Owner Will Carry Large Second. $1,600,000. ·--_ ... , ....... 759-9100 •u c_,.. ........ .... ,..c:..: LIVE ON 11iE BAY- One master suite, plus • den. Beautiful kitchen and baths, wetbar, com· mwiily pool & spa, and great location 1318,000. THAnWHAn II~~~~~~~~~~~ UHlquE AIOUT U~IOOf 11()~fi Realtors, 67~ ,, ...... .. . ... , ... ,, •u.r. RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES YOUHG JXICUYM Townhome i n prestigious Turtlerock. 2 BR. 2 ~ BA. Form. Dining Rm . Country kitchen w /family area & greenhouse window. Double attact>ed garage & terrific financing . $1~.~. Fee. IN NEWPORTCENnR 644-9060 ,. , NEW EXCLU. DUP.UX COM D..cly IKo.e property So. of Hlc)hw.y • corwer lot. Sillgle 1tory _... ••MW by gm"OCJH. for edra prl•ocy. Wei priced at !25,000. u 1.1400 ' GRAND CANAL ON WATIR LOIY & lonty 2-story, 4 bed. -.. • .... Uttle Is. EaioJ Y'"" 'ro.cl r.ac..._, AJao I ~ ,...... mt. Tie for 2 both. $675,000. 67Uto0. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE S.•. Roni.,• Proporov M..._,.,..N 2436 W CO< Hwy 31~ M.irone A•t Newpor1 &~n &11>oo lwnd '31·1400 '7Utoo STARTING A NEW BUSINESS? Accordlog to C1llfomla lllllMtt and l'rota.-on1 Code (S.C. 17900 10 17ts0) IH S"rlOnl doing Mt9'"tl under a ftdllou1 n1M tNllt tie a statement with ltle County Qeft Ind fllYt It publllfled four tlUMI In 1 n•..,...... ttf'Wlng ttlt "91 In ~ .... bullntM .. locettd. Ttlt .... ._rtt 11 rlqWM by l1w and 11 ,...,...,, In prolilctlng ycNr MtllnMI ....... Mott ... ,..... proof of fllng to optft cottMMrcl1I ICCOUftll • Ttlt DAIL. Y "LOT pt0Wtde1 MUI Hltftl Ind pubklttoft MAtce1. We ltevt .. U.t MCelH'f fofMI Ind ,... ............... ~. CouMy Cotatho1111. ""* -"' .... .......... 11 .............. LIGAL DIP~ -...,, Id. attlt_,.11..,llllDAlftd ..... REALTORS 67$.5511 llST IUY IH CDM: 3 ..._ J bdrWI dliplt• cloae to beeclM1 M ..... Newly P'W.d ..t c..,.tff .ct ••• rOof. Try $45,000 •• oWMr wil Wp wftfl tht rest. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 251 SE. Coot Hwy .• C.... dlf M... 675-5511 • SISKDOWH • DUPSATI! 4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home. Assume hl·balance loan owe slraight note. succ~ REALTY ~'1991 Find what ypu want in Daill Pilot Classifieds. Find out abOUl tbe h1gb earning real estate sales career opportunities wit h THE REAL ESTATERS L1cens1ng school fees completely refundable lo school of your choice. Extensive sales training. For in formation, call 751 6191 • 10%DOWN • Owner WILL CAR RY 2nd on lowest priced 2 bedroom unit in complex. (Juiet. private location. Assumable low interest loan ' 759·1501or752-7373 $8000 DOWN!! Bring paint brush & broom to save $$$ on th is 3 bedroom fixer in quiet Costa Mesa area . Creative seller says "Seil '." 759·1501 or 752-7373. MEWPOIT IEACH OFffCE 2670 Soe MHJ-1 Dri•e 17141759·1501 17141752-7373 ~ Walker&lee Real Estate llfK & ,,Nft LOOK C It A T L H A E P H A A U 0 S 0 0 L H S C II 6 W T A C 8 E W U S M H L P V M A E M 0 V E T A L P M E T H 0 C C I R M~ll Y I C W A T C H J 8 H R H L S M V 0 I ML 0 I£ H HR E £SS JR V 0 H 0 0 0 V N S H A R £ 8 I I T M 0 A E 0 K P G 0 T R L T C E P S H I A S I 8 E G U A E 6 P E A G W E T 0 Y R Y H 0 S P R C Z H Y E T I V K 6 H P I E 0 L I C S V £ E X S S R A S l 0 A B V I U £ I A S N M V C E R R D A P H D R G I D E P N L U T S R H l G II E V B U N R A Y T S 0 Y B E H Z T I C W L I S S N I R 0 S l 0 D R A 6 E R E E A Y D Y Q 0 HS Al NIN VA H H 0 HR.OST : ~ .. -.!, up, dowll °' dlleaMffy. Find Mdl Ind boll It In. ,. ~~-, lttlold0 s. eo1111111p1a11 .: an s1111 oi.w " INl*t G1u Surwy u Qlela Elpy ViM e R~ Scan W•h TomotYow:~ THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS DAILY PILOT I \'. I ',I I Y \ TAYLOR CO. HJ ,\I ·1 <>Ii~ .. :111 I 1'1 lfi GtoaGIAH COLOMA&. llAUTY llCi CANYON COUMTIY CUii CALL FOR COLOR MOCHUH Gorgeous view overlooking the 8th grel'n of the excl usive Big Cyn golf course. El egance personifioo ! Bum by lhe finest builder in Newport Beach for his own personal residence on the most pri me site in area. 4 Bedrms plus luxurious master suite, lge formal DR, fa m. rm. billiard rm. refrigerated wine rm & 61h baths. lmJ)Orted marble. crystal chandeliers & Jots of ~ood paneling. Call to see - S2.t50.000 WESLEY M. TA YLOI CO .. UALTOIS 211 1 s.J~,...•ood MEW'°RT CEMTH, M.I. 644-4910 LINDA ISLE MASTERPIECE Finest location on all Linda. 76' of bavfronl. Hoom for up to 8.5' yacht . G Bedrooms, 7 H<i ths. billiard room. lrg. bar & 'fV room . wine ce~lar. formal dming. sep. guest wtng, maid's qtr-; Bob or Dovie Koop , rltrs. 75~· 1221. R&" M* of Newport Beach SSOOODOWM! Lease OptlOl'I this cozy 2 bdrm coUage Cleaned. pamted. vac:anl and re ady Noquahrymi: Ul-2242 QSunho\\ lkalt~ .. NOTICE how Daily Pilot ('lass-iried ads display their messages with legibility and impact' Our ads. we are proud to say, re· a lly get results Phone 642·5678 fi)\~eacti f9' Red Estat~ WESTCUFf Beautifully remodeled four bedroom. three bath home Lovely coun· try French family room and k1trhen. AJI new ap- PI 1 an ces Cu s t om drapes, carpets and wallpaper Generous rinancmg. S299,000. Ul·7l00 H.I. SELL idle items with a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 642·5678. Smart 'n' Super! I Princess 4 Ways! . I 9147 Orange Q>ast OAIL V PILOT /Wtdn11d1y, Stpttmbtr 23, 1981 D~i ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~.~ ................ ~.~ ...... , ....... '!'.~ ............... ':-:..~ ....... ~~ ..... J!~~ ~ ............ !!.~~ ....... Fw W. l~~~~~~ ..... J ~~~~.~!~~ .............. ~ .. ~.~.~ ...... . ~ .......... !~~ !~~ .......... !... .. ............... !~~ ........ ~~ ... !!~~ Eb~~~~:. ~rl~~~rln3 T ...... Ylt.. M;;;;;ti~ .. ·to.~ ~..... t I ]~~!:':~!!? .. ~~ ... ~~~ ... ?!~! M.•DOWM ' rot,,,alt by owner Sti•rp 48R w , bv rm, tam rm, I.rs lot, t.ms Nt""~ Gree1bttt in HB Aalvme loans Sae 1 COM &""5 $120 Im mac MOO all condo •••••••••••••••••••• .. • •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Trade Lu•ury Newport A Y CR !81 $ bd rm ··--------------.~ Above beach, below NllDOMHOUSI Priced for quick ulr 0 ..... 0...,.,..1 OCEANFRONT·New home on \.t 11crt tor Jn homew/pool.larseyard UNDA ISLE ()(-81 d St i ,; Own/Al(t S7S.l~ .k Modular T Pf Homes t'Omt' UniU or~ Equity 12000 LI DO ISLE Exc1tlng opportunity! Wide channel Rd"gut ~ t"tTac P ~ l:~~Ba .. ~~~.Y•rt u ...._..._. 1041 ~!:~ufluuJ; d:::;.~;d Jeued land~ 3 pvt IK'hl: ~21~.oot ~ct ~01~; ~:it~~ ~tJ • anytime. $154JOO Open house, .111U Diane Ln view fro m s~rtacuJar architectural . de1ret view Ocean ' $1.-&-.L ~ •••••• ••••••••••••••••• HV llomea. s bdrm, 2 ba 24 hr aeamty, fishin1 63ro e ~ o P g $taOO mo Yurly 8111 d ed I h Jetty from every w111. Jnnill -4 Lot Kiah auwnable 30 year pier from S3UOO 10'~ HSI 0 d "1s-esign 4 b rm. 5 bath, poo ome. dow Prop lwe b11h tide la~ Fw A Lltlt fl.oanctna " 12.$~ fixed. ~wn '99-:11111 TRAIL& p ARK .r-::u::!.:n ~~=-- Slip for 2 large boats. Sl.495,000. Obie invest 2 Yl'I Cltar, Spacious 4 bedroom 2~ !.J..i 1 t Asking '235,000, land In Tr.Iler at pvt buch. on Colorado River nr Ytl.U IAUOA ~ t4or . .... .. , ln ~ln~U. l' C Separate maid'• ~uarttrt plus 3 Br & 2 811. Unob8trurted vu•w or mountaina. Orfered II 1475-1000 furnis hed. 7141M9-W land Incl h ,2$0,000 bath eite(utlve home. 1 acN + ..... 11 te. &en eluded CALL NOW ! Tre asure I & I and. Parker Am l.50 Spaces Lux urloldly. appointed OWC PIP Appl only Sunlte11 ,formr1aJ dlolna !fi.t.~:1,~!~~ ~wn18er 1Ae:;~~ fPrin La1un11 lk h. S8SOO with room lo expand twobedl'OOIDl oCQlle •nd LIDO ISLE HOMES t7 141_673 W!I, 813-22!.L room. am 1y room. beach. Ownr bu In· c1pa on y. V..me or ID· 499·3818 s1so.ooo with s2so.ooo den P•lnilou1 o°'an Featured on Homes Tours this lovely , ________ , rornaotk [Utlplace.. One eluded flana for (Wit.om apectlon Sat1Su11 Is. .~~cH/ .. "=++Ja down. owe balanC'e II vltw &hid ith icf. I I · 3 bd 3 coarw...1 .. DB.u .. 1 year young Uparadea 760-~ "'"'"-,.,,., C "'• h szooo ... ,. moqth. 4Shl trac 1t1ona s pac10us. custom rm. v.-~ aalorel Close to South villa 175,000. Sper -$48 ,500 with luw low 1.,,. uar. lv 1 cas on months"~leue 831 ., 300 bath home. newl'4redecorated . Pru·"d. lt-2 LOT tacular vlewal d 2 ' Sr 2bn <'as h Lease bbl'k 1f de· " Coaat Plat1t. BeauUfully ON TY HAI 11 ISIJND own. yr, -. . sln~d 714 1752 2213 or Realtor. LO sell quickly at 75.000. Must see. Charm Ina btach cot quiet cul de sac street M l~I REAL B ram nn. Mlfl age UlyN, -'-"- 1 - 1 --bo-- RCTc1ylorCo ... )(• '!•>()() Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Bcarn c eilings Great for e ntertainin g . S42o.ooo. Ut.>st prite for the money tage, featuring 2 Bdrm c llf d 1 lls 97g..2390 · 494-C7731 srnl pets OK Across 7U/644·~by o11.1ler Fantut <' own uH. +den, large living room a T or ea ..:..0,.. 'IIRAOEORLOW Dt p OPPllTIJNIJY from bch Mory Jank IMYESTOIS ocean view,~~ ever· with f1repl11ce, double _a__ MO 9UAUFYIMG p r i m e 4 s • X l 4 o . Rltr 631 1004 Prime 2 yr old s1ngl" ythln& fumlahe tk95 &llralle. AakJ.ng S269,500. Owtter W• Fillmce Ocoa n front mob1 le waterfront lot with exuil '77 Skyl~lRll. 2BA family residenres show M""'o.._. 7'-=W.~91~1~7 ---- fo'or 11n appointment to 11 a sh11rp low main· homes. 2 Br. pvt beach. ina pier nnd Klip for 45• ram rm. Across from projective net return of aee, call~ 11.51 tenanre 4 Bdrm home adult.a. yacht Pn~ or $2,300,000 lkuch Pet Adult Park. 125r~ + over 125.000 tax S Ptr tac u I a r vi 4! w • ·, ' • HERITAGE PENINSULA POIHT~ACHFROHT Panoramic bay & ocean v iew at l!!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I wedge, from priml' la ge lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath c ustom home. 3 sq. ft fe:itur. . • REALTORS IEOUCID StOOK Cameo Shores Estate. 3 br. 4 '' ba , private ~ach, enclosed <'lyd . w/spaciou,, pool, forever harbor & ocean view $695.000 leasehold. with custom apa and s.9·~ or 49'J-3816 includes cleared lot, ap-645-4381 write off Ill Isl 5 years p Oceanfront 3 br, 2 i,., 2 88Q interests you, sec . d 1 d -rofe . lonally m~naged story Avail •fter Sept lhis brand new Select Cbarm111g3bdnn.2 bath prove Pans an NEW MEW MEW Sb u ' 8th. WmterlBOOor year t t N ti permits for a lu.xurious S 8 to 9 5<'{ assumption, Property. Fantastic + gues ap · 0·w"n Bdrm 5 bath French ORANGECOUNTY with only Sl2.000 down ly lease SUOO No pel.5. Cloancing! Full price Emerald Terrace alk h 1 9 8 1 Be au t Y, Prin only Call l7 14l Agt,S.S.MZT. S22S,000.7Sl-!Jl»l to beach. Asswne loan Regency home wit microwave, frplr. ba y 784_ 21172askforRon l-!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!11 Owner will help f1nirnre many extras windows. pnced to sell. mg marine room Sl.385,000. $295,000. Peg Allen. Rlt r. . Tt,,. A•elllWt S.Cl 500 (PF3ll5A-BJ 22 unils, Newport Beach . w ............... REH TORS COUNTRY RENCH 85'l rinan<'in& available al lJ', for 30 )'ears on thu;, .beaut1lul t uslom hoQlt\, 111 this exclusivt> gu~r~ gated, water· oriented community New, count ry !rench estate. 4150 sq ft with the finest appo111tments and cra!tsm ans hip. 4 Br 3~2 Ba . spacious fami ly room . librar y , 4 fireplaces and lots more. $745,000. WEST OCEANFRONT Triplex units, xlnt financing $600,000. 494·7578. Call Pacesetter ltome11 'MULH1:•.RN luxurious Financing OCEAN FRON T New for detail<> and appomt ~ a\'atl StiS40,000 752 2584 2 & 3 bdrm. 2 baths. firepla ce & garage. From S750 87S.9lll ======---t Modular Type Homes, ment 646-SQl2 RWTOIS FOURPLEX MESA DR MAR leased land. 3 p\1 bchs. • MOllLEHOME DIV. 4 Bdrms, Sl49,500. 5 24 hr secunty, fishing (7141527-5900 S20.000 dwn Oranite Cly HotnH U..fwmtMd Bdrm. St6S,OOO 3 Bdrm pier from S34.soo 1or; OCEAN IREEZES S40 3666 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~~~:.: i!:t~e good dowLon.~~l:tJA~cb Bay Close to bch.1This lg dbl VVl1elari ~~!!'! ......... .??.~~ BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ~rwv~ R£Al ESTATE 644·6397 3-11 llo1 ,,clr-Q,,.,. NB 6/':J 6161 760-0835 VA TERMS / I IRVINETERRACE •••• 5Br, fee land. assumable VI R lst at 10 SS'k OWC lg 2nd TD up to 7 yrs. Tlus 1s value, location & f111andng 111 I package I K,\LJI 110\,\I Rf. \I TY 63 1-7370 "' wide is on lll1 oversized Re I Estate San Cl tmenle 3br w MyLossyourGam comerlot.5Starp~rk A Cl woodbum111g fireplact ! Musi sell. 4BR. ocean /tJm musttosee_(S07467) -.00, Must see' 115'57 view, bch hse 20"? dwn WLJlf:. MULHl!._R._. ""' Bal. AITD Pvt Pl) '.X7/e1· ~" Also DanaPoinlJbllrm 499·3144 REAL TORS PRIME E'SIDE overlook111e the waves! 2 llOM~ MOllLEHOME DIV. Costa Mna 4 U..ih tiled baths & dream GREAT OCEAN VIEWS ) wllh 20,,..;. down. OWC kitchen' S650! 14981 fromlhisS BRJbahome 0· ·u ,._1 f-. --l714 527-5!_9 1.,, .... , AITD Small Rentlmes63t.4555Fee wtfamily rm and 2 wner w1 .. ., p mance ~ • frplrs!, Mother·rn law great assumable loan. 4 f•-------•1 nega11 ve Ownt>r will lcrlM>a ltbtd 1.106 ran have own private Br. near Ma.riners. *EXCITING* trade makl.' offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA YaDl apt if desired. Large a~ $198,000. Submit offer. $229,000. Little Island. 3 bdr m. CONDO sumable ~year loan 646 ·1044 /\gent or Estate Sale den. St250 mo. Lu Oot- StS.000 down. Excellent $295,000. 646·1046 W 1th or w l thou 1 DUPLEX/Smta Alto t!e 640·099'7, 675-eOOO ltnancmg, owner may L09una Vlla9f R.E INVESTORS! I' S30,000 furniture. 24x.64 Green owe with SUiK down lolboa p.... 3207 Agl. 766-8311 4BR +POOL- FIXEI Lrg family home w1lh pool, 5 Bdrm . 3 Ba, 2 hrep1'1 ces, and f reat terms. Owner w1l sell VA or .on a contract Full pnc~,$164,900. GOOD AIU -GOOO INCOME Four units, each has one bedroom1 one bath, with separate yards ana garages. Copper plumbing and well maintained. Great financing. $198,500 Fee . Ir vine Terrace pool home needs TLC but 1s priced below market and owner Wiii finanre. New listing' Call Greg Aslle-Rltr. 759-1221 carry balance on AJTD 497-1761 under market Only brier Home ui Laguna S-13,000 assumable long ••••••••••••••••••••••• at 123 . 2 Bdrm, double • SiSOO dn. 2400sq ft home Hills nicest Sslar park term loa"-'> N1t'e, .well Newport on the lleacll. garage, terrific area. LocJ-aH• 1050 Xlnl appreciating area Gl'HNtof Paril mamta111ed area <.:lo~e 3Br 28a some ocn Ar.king S95,000 Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• S17!..500.6315'76 Beautiful 20x5J Lancer loC1v1cCen1er view', rute'. ha condo. 5'0.llSI HORSENOPBTY Home -2Br. 2Ba Th u. lb R & H Investm ents S875 mo Call wknds ~.acre.2500sq fl 4br, NN lheBeslBuyuitown 7522197 673 9157 or wkdys Codo Mna I 024 I 2"" ba, fam rm .. 3 car -t.n -H•tincllon lch 673·6098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I gar Noqual.Lowdown HARBADRI06£ 12x60 w1tfi 8x50 ex IMVESTORS Ne>A ,rustom.luxur)•3br ... ~ .. HERITAGE . • REALTORS U~l()Uf ti()MfS S3000/mo. ~71 Stetson Uft panded area 2Br. 2Ba DELIGHT home, I bloc~ from MOYE IM! Pl. 831·8636 Just listed 3 Br 2 ba t2x20 master bdrm F' 4 r 1 21 P .. Seller will C'arry al 1:1', err). rp cs. ac. , re s 11g1o us ... esa H--'L-•--L I040l-... ... '-1 1052 REN A I SSAN C fo: C'"'rs•c b M Verde1 Fresh&clean 4 ..., • .,.-~ -.,_...n""r" MODEL Outslanding ~' 3 )'ea r old, 7 un11 a.r r o-to-moor yr REALTORS, 675·6000 BR 2 fireplaces Huge ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• view with great finam· MOIUHOME lo>A•nhouse.i~ 631 4361 ly 1250 mo. Can furn 2443 E .. 1 Coul Hi!lhwty, Corou drl Mu WI HAYI 50 °"THI HST usr...s ... TOWH covered patto. Large nY $20,000 DOWM 2 Wln4 A VIEW 1n1t Priced for 1mmed SAl.ES Mobile H°"" 73CHl68~_968-no.o_ __ shady bark yard Only BEACHWALK · sharp Condo w/vu-short drive sale al $495.000 Agenl. 2706 Harbor.Ste200 A Paris 2300 J bdnn. 2 ba, 2 car gar, '" ENJOY IEACH LIVING 4 BR + huge bonus r m & den -short jog to ocean . Great community w1pool & clubhouse. OnJy $179.000 + land. Owner will carry leasehold. Subject to tenant lease March 1982. Seller flexible on financin g. Jane Paquin 642·8235 (857) DOUILE WIDE MOllLE HOME! Located in adult park m Irvine. 24 X SO coach. 2BRS, 2 baths. nice yard , cove r e d patio deck , covered parking area. Close to I s hopping , re sta urants a nd freeways. Loan 1s assumable . $45,000. Marion Frizzell 551-8700 (858 1 RESIOENllAL REAL ESrATE SERVICES SALUTES THl I U I DESIG .. HOMl 17 MUIR IUCH CIRCl.E SPYGLASS HIU Sponsored h v Newpo rt Jr. Chamber of Commerce to benefit ORAHGEWOOO A new home for abused children. Open for public v ie wing September 13-27 Tic kets may be purchased at the door. Presented at $2.400 ,000 IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 '::!:.';' S@\\c41~-"£~s·:: Mloo4 ~<UY I ~ -----0 1--et ....... ot .... '""' 1tt0...e.led -· b.. lo-IO lorM IOOlf ""'Pit -di I l KH CC /J: I' I I I . . l I S U T Q E I r: You ougll1 lo '" my car. . {' f f I . -You know how ce11 roll otr lllt llHmbly line? I think mint I S U N P 0 T j ••• - . ......... ,-~ .... , -,r--..l' ........ 1-41 • ~~ :W~":.:, ":::/ .__ .... _ _.. _ __,........i ..... -... '°" ...... ,... ..,. ,. 3 ........ 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl39.SOO 6'5-0:.l3 townhome Super buy lobeach&onlyS20,000to Dan Bibb. 540-5937 ••••••••••••••••••••••• between Bay & Bearh. Sl41,900. Bkr. 848-0709 assume exist mg IO"i 675-2311 640.76 -railer at RV park.,, blk StOOO per mo yearly. 1st COLDWeu BANl(C!RO MESAYBDE LWlOR LEASE OPTI Otit Sharp 2Story, 4 Br. 3 Ba. new carpet, redwood spa, easy rare yard. As· sume 9~"'' loan ION,. down lo qualified buyer Sl65.000. D. Bourke, Realtor. 546-9950_, MO 9UALIFYIMG loans! Priced right CelMff Loh/' to Hunt Bch S:>,Soo & last req. + cleanmg 4 BR Franciscan· by.the-Ownr /Agt. Greg Astle C ,,2 1500 1213)944·~ dei>0111t Children OK.. no 759 1221 MEWPOITHTS. ry,,.. pels Avl t0tl5. Sea w I paol. $178,500 • St98.000 No Down •••••• • ••••••••••• • •••• Mountain O.Wrt 67~2916 Bkrll48·0700 OwnertAgenl 675 8700 Pacific Memorial Park Resort' ' 2400 C -.t t leach 3211 WILL CARRY S50 000 Super sha~ 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2 miles from ocean. Only St40,000. Call 645 9161 & 675· 7225 t•om panion dble crypt •• •• • ••• ••••• •••••• •••• a,..s r.-> :Jrd. lier Pim. Court, H 1..._....... ••••••••••••••.••••••••• CANAL FRONT kl $3 200 542 691!1 Rtmode6td OCllWmllll Condo ocean Vit'W, 3 Br ... .:.wport•--L 1069 · as 11&..: "' · --Pvt Courtyard. pool , 211 Ba. Dana Bluffs. ""' ~ Pvt. community Buy or C ,_, T $440 ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• option. S255,000. Call ommerc-J3l'U1.ZI enns · pool, Lennis, etc S'l50 675.87000r~5.7225 Property 1600 Owner A.:ent G75·8700 & 492·6700 THEllUFf ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675·7225 Great loc Super clean 3 PLAN "X" Ow.rHot Co1tdo11tinlMms/Town· LA COSTA Br 21., ba. frJ>lc. New bd din I & R........, hoYHsforsalt 1700 Golf course frontage paint, dtps & cpt. S750. 3 rm, rm · iv 2 Mstr Bd~~~sty, re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spae1ous I RD 2 ba on 496·6642 wlcn~&eves rm .. fam. nn .. F/P. 212 ba, lltra large porcelain dured to Sl..25,900 Two the 4th tee SQ!.000. low tunning 2 bedroom! tubw/ceram1clllewalls yearsnew.6311266. Reduced to si2s.soo. do.,.n Owner Al(enl Fealures spa<'lous en· & noor 4 covered patio John Marshall 2BR. 2~A Condo 1 yr 615 8700or675 7225 t q . maste r s u 1 le .lkr. TO 1r. .. CH new H1ghlv upj?raded . 1 d b h ., ~ areas. Pnce S230.000. 5'1 ·r 11 e. w a i 1 t 0 ,. 3 11 Arro>A head Countr) Uub w cera m1r l1 e at • Approx 1'2 mile~ to down. assumt S40.000 lSl rarpets Wall paper lot on fa1r>Aa y, un plush crplS l.ltr9Uirhout. beach beaut Ir u I trust deed at 71,r; Xlnt Landscaped. enclosed obstructed vie"" of l11ke. & sunny chefs kitchen , : OPEN HOUSE . REALTY /' townhome Mexican Ille __ _ land lease fi853 oo per paho Pool. Tenms. Jar _542 1045,eves6468550 A steal al onh S4~: entry, hreplace. 3 k111g H.titgt.M year. Can't change until i--------•I S9 •4981 sz bdrms. 2'1 ba Huge HorbOw 1042 year 2003. 14"!-1111 only IUUTIFUU.Y l.OOO +assumable Isl PALMSPl.INGS Renumes631-4S5S f"ee covered patio. charmmg ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd trust deed du e "'' ... r... 1 135 8i, Open Fn.5~3& Approx 5000 !>q rt C dt4M.-1212 min1 yard Near260acre 1986-81. Call owner for MAIN'T"""..., Sun r b> appt 1 Esl ate best area Ol"OMI regional park Great LUXUIY COHDO appl. dally after 5 pm 3 bdrm, 2 bath Westchff \'ta Tonada l>an Juan walled&. gated. will ron. ••••••••••••••••••-••• 1--------•I va lue only Sl 31.500 OM THEWATEI Home Close to schools. Capo orr Ahpaz, t'Omer sider exchange $800.000 BR. "Honeymoon Cot· ISLAMDConAGl 64.5·0303 3br. 2•2 ba 48' boat shp m4>766-84?.S park & t.eMIS Room ror or Del Obispo Agl 13230188 tage" Canyon view. Exclusive lisllng of lhlll lea se avail St00,000 expansion Good finanr· Pac ir 1 c Co mpa ny stove. no pets. adlts, adorable home oo full eq uit y tS429 ,500 1 ing SJ~.500 498-5640.498-5020 O.tofC~ S850 673..1464 Sile lot 2 Bdrm & JUSt Consider 1rade for home LIDOISU Property 2550 OCEAN FRONT On the steps to shops. but _or ?~ Owner,846·6855 203 down. OWC lge 2nd Duoltits/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bearh Pvt Rd Spilt quiet! $319,000. 44 wino payments. 2 br, 2 01t1tiit• S• 1800 PI.IE B LO·Style horn e level. 3BR. 2BA SllOO W attrfroftt Homts Irv int I 0 b a . i mm a c . w I ex · • with million S \ 1e11.• Most mo No pets Ref req 67~6900 631-1400 -t~ _,Olla ••••••••••••••••••••••• pans1on potential. Just •12···u··~··•c•••••••::•••• unique property in Yue 673-287~ ____ _ r THINKING $335 '"'!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!~~!I nits osla mesa c11Vallev New3Bdrm 2 -LEASEOPTIOH .OOO.Agt,963..8182. ,-S600M, $1.25M dn ior: Ra, spa: sunken llv rm. 3 br, 2~ ba, Jas mine TOWtit40ME? Net $5000 pH yea r Creek Avail . now $1250 SALEIYOWMB Luxurious custom con· Call the specialists at WESTOCUHFIONT OCEAMAONT 631 ·2150 2043 2049 HV gar,l·ustomfeatures mo.67HJ~31479. -LITTLE ISLAND do 2500 sq. ft 2 rrplcs. 4 the cond ominium in Wallace thruout ~ mui to p S 3 Br 2 ba. S28S.OOO LOW bdrms, 21, baths Sll50 formation center Triplu. Xlnt terms & $195,000 cCllh doww AgL m 41 ~ ~2 SPACIO US 5Br. JBa. mo. St95JOOO .§42·~23 hs R 1 prime locatK>n. $600,000 Seller will cany S600,000 l tbluff-lMxu formal dinrm. ram rm down Owner/ Agent . Touc tone ea ty A ent 67~161. balance interest only 5 as ry Real Estate w wet bar. grdnr incl 675·76llor675-8700 JUST LISTED 963-Cll67 years Cho1C'e corner Rare OPPort un1ty to bu) ExclHMcJt 2800 Avatl now S1200 mo .a ... _a p....L...~ 1007 Excellent f1nanc111g d I bd 3 b h a pn\'ately owned apl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aot 760_...831_1 ----4 RR 1 ~. ha. seller k OCEAMFIONT upex 3 rm. 111 house on lr\'lne Co ... -•••••••••••••••••••••••moti va ted Terms . Universi t y Par 3 bdrm. 2 bath im up.2 bdrm,2balhdown land ' 6 spacio us SOUTHLAGUMA Lg Harbor View Hills T T c II Ford.em Z!OOsq ft. 4BR. maculate home with Can converl 10 large townhou.~es. 2 & 3 bdnn Coted Estate area 3000 home Pool, spa, vttw PICTURES~E q~1~~: 752.::;s a ~\2nBA~ ~am 0";1~::;~:: guest house &ior 1 bdnn hom e floor plans. 1:.io· lo 2300· sq rt Fantasl1r Ore an Gardener. (D>I service Celebrate Newport s big H S M X apt. Incredible ocean lalboa lcry Prvp. S48.000 gross income \'1ew Prof derorated Z incl. $1700 per mo. 7 A~1 Birthday by seeing one IP!;~111Titt••~••• ome pa ' any tras · S450 ooo ·~ Asking Si2S.OOO owe yrs 5.549.IXX> or trade for 10 3 PM 64~~. aftu 6 or the ni~t old homes IHNtJ,fefntp j;.S!l·~lJ_ ---~:~~nomics 675-6700 •67S.7060• terms & possible trade Palm Spnng.~ or Lake 768·6285 on the Po111l' 4 Bdrm WooclM~ for duplex or ~ Bkr Arro,.head condo or C t M-- 1 • 24 and family room all College Pk fixer upper 3 -L-• ..... Wtllo 953 1220 houst' os • ~ ' carefully cared for 'New b r . 2 ba. ram rm c~~ I w --------s. c..... I 076 499 3470, 551 8215 ...................... . kitchen. and lots or Sll0.000 OWCS80,000Ist 4BR , 3BA 2000 sq rt 21R21ACOHDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"come,.roptrty 2000 NEWEXECCONOO character and old navor TQ 642 1.523 A.Bl home w 1 St49,000 assum Adjacent to Newport ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• VIEW HOMl 2 Bdrm. 2 full ba. micro. he fin Prine only St99.000 Crest area Sea Wind 4 Pl.EXES l:lca ut1ful Turtle Ro<'k gar dr op. pool, JIC. re PrictdlttowMrtrt Owner Agt 857·2100. Section Sl23.900 Good \'ie>A Home comps >Aell S795 •mo 7SH202 • 642-5200 VillageCreekCondo 552·5555~--terms. 2 Bdrm . 1 bath Near So at S465.000 Consider MEAR~D~ j PETE ' BARRETT ··· REALTY ~~rr. a~~·c:;1r~::erw~ StytW. StarfN Roy McC.., Rltr. Coast Plaza Temf1r fl.AA Bon~ for part of Lower 3 br. 2 ba, with drapes. gar opener Nicely detailed 3 Bdrm 541-7729 SAN CLEMENTE IS rental area Superrond1 large equity Submit frplc, lge din area, blt- St 29 ,900 Owner agt. home in Cali forni a "!!!I!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!! FOR EVERYONE lion ins. fenced ~lH' yard. 2 Homes Seller Wiii F This lovely family home N l"'h & El a 751..!ll1_546 231!_ oc1:•a..1£11~ <'ar gar ear :n cooperate with financ· '"""""'"" 1 has 3 bedrooms. superb 3 2·2· l. Super rond1t1on N rt SiOO , 1 '!l!!!l!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lllSl!.000 DOWN. 3 BR 2 Ba, ing. Shows like new BY _..,,ER can'/on \•iews, a hu~e Near break even the 1 ewpoN •~ mwo.kd yr E's.de home on R·2 lot. "'"" d b f u d IOX ease. o pe....,. ays home. Close lo park N t bit 2 t patio, an 11ssuma e irst year. n er (2131"u 9192 i...ds & Co-a ~Mer 102" Price St65.000 Tak" ew cus . s y, r . S252 500 ...,... ; w .... , .... .., • "w/tennis&swimming. F hN d 3BR inancin g · gross 17 4'""5 "'U! ••••••••••••••••••••••• overpymlsofSl6SOmo. Call fordetn;ls, renc onnany 498·4950 551·3005 (Change in ev_es l ru·......,. 434 llGOHIA 0 ~ua 1~l!Ss split.S895.000,0WC. 3711 '••RED CARPET, tage. semi.furn .. k 30 N l'C ne or gel ... & den home. Can be e 8 ~el EASTSIDE cute I Bt rot· New elegant • Br V1<' new oan Seashore.673-~78 l"lngO 1;.. 754-1202 · PALM SP'llNGS mo. lst & last. Blue Chip tor 1 an pa rl i a I vu, l BR condo below markt, Trade Luxury Newport Approx 5000 sq ft P!Q!>erties MHOCO ownr/coot ractor finan. $20,000 dwn, IJ.718rk 30 home on ..., acre for In· Rulhun Est a 1 e , best a re a. ; Clean !bdrm duplex avail. $:>751000. _y,.r loan assum. 546-1883 come Units or? Equity MAKE AH OFFER! walled & g11ted, 1.110.000 orr street prking. quiet· CdMC ......... Dpb w lttt At..clncJ 3 BR 2ba or 2+ guest owner's unit. Plus 2Br rental cottagt. All in sharp cond w/e11cel loca· lion. Owner will ca rry lee 2nd TD. Best buy in town foronJy S280,000. 644-7211 OWHEIDESPHATE! S280,000. Act now • ----eq uity. S8oo.ooo total S32S Nopets.Avail 9l2S. Sl5.000 down. take over JUSTUSTED Broker Co·Op. Age nt S. J.. 3 Income Properties I 323 0188 848.2474. payments. Exec Back Beautiful 3Br Wood· 631·'516. Caplt....., 1078 Eastside Costa Mesa H..tln..._Hart.o.. Lrg ex"c Home. •BR . B V, C .. o b d d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner will ca rru .,._.. " .. a Y 1ew on n ri ge Broa moor r.-• .Lt..L...U_.. llot 1 Luxury condo on the 3BA. den. Nr Hoag Hosp ,,. 791 P I f Us ff . .,.., r;wa.---r 1111 -,o Priced to sell! '" 6 · 5 · nns.<!!!_1.Y wlvlewohi · 1 1>'' 35' Gellastyear'smteresl Reducedto Sl28,500. 2 water. 3 bd-rm . 2'1 onBlurrsmCM.Oceao SlftR !! :~~ro~1e21:.!!Y ~~~: bT!' :w;rr~~:s~f1a4 ~~·Ji~~g}a~!~~ NEfl~ ~~~':f.· ~~.slfi~.~ ~i~.wN!=~;~·<~~ 3 Bdrm. F'l"eedom Home mot Iv ate d s e II er bdrm, ram nn. I& yard Tile, w/w cpts Wall J eq uity. Will trade for Bi II 645·S218 wknd's. w/frplc. Beautlfully up.. St~.000. 642·5161 or640-8tC77 paper, landscaped, enc home . condo. or H Avail Oct t &raded SJ14.000. with ·rg\\bodb Id ti I • t is ClMlJW'fjl ™" (714/1146-6855 Nic7 Cl=..:e"""an'--28-R-. -1-BA-. S b ~i r ge MEWPOITCIEST Pl o, poo . Jac. eon . ,,...._ " terms. uper 1 181.000 + Lst TD. Open ltol 1sa.....e.... New carpet, fenced yrd. • RED CAR~ ReaU1 AFbso 1 utmode Yelp r3i m9eR 1 Sun 3-6 or by appt. 32031 714 6410763 w_..__~ -.900 tncl gar .. No pd.s. S500 l~~~lllbjll ...,. , ormer . ' Via Tonada SJC orr 2925 College A\·e 9'nru ' lst & lasl 2S411 Oran&e 02 551·3000· 3bath, master suite i\lipat corner del Cnsta:i1 esa,CA •••••••••• .. ••••••••• .. "O"CMS48-27ft 754-12 4t%tlh rranu .,.,.,., lrvh1e. w/pvt retreat overlook· Oblll' po, p ..... lfic Co. PRIVATE PARTY. seeks --.::::...._.=-=;.,.:;.;..::..:-__ Ina •·nnis court pools -be a(' h ( ro n t hom e, 2 BR Nwpt Hgts, garden. Uplex. won't last ror ---------1---------i • ""' ' · ~-.~·o., -..,_ •• ,.,. b u v e r w h 0 needs DESIRABLE a.nd apa. Good ass um a· L"""";;!;"'"!!!;-~~~~1i-------• lse lopt or purchase Mr. ~ per mo. lst, 1-st ' , MEAi OCIAM bl lo ... !!!! Gr ay . 499· 1635 o r de n. 71"7S-C77• neirative in + shelter. e a.... ..=.&.:-. I Price m .ooo. S% dn. POOLHOME Ali.so Model In Rancho C/2t =c.tr 11tt11 1090 98 lllTS 4U·861·04.W !bdrm duplex. E. side, ~~11er:~::~e·,~C:: ~1~~t ~081811~1~~ C:.;:: ~~~m".012q~. vs~~i~e~ 640-157 0;uc·i;;;;.~.. c 14-7 rttm I •...t• ~~s~ft~~~~~ 1:i~ Drive by 514 Marigold Owner will help finance. glass entry. ExcelJent M.M•Offw! Shan> 2 Bdrm end unit ....................... S48·7855,MS-7J>l. COM. If interested call, _,C:o::a::ll~A=-&.::::tm=i.;..;1146-;.;;..;..7434~.--1 location near : go lf. Huge 5 bdnni .. 3\lt ba, condo !n quiet adult Vtry Low Down HHMt Fw hllitd Very pvt 3Br. 28a. frplc. J~o~hn~B~e!!lla!filmx(7~$2..~89$Sm~ll•-~~~::~-·l ten n Is . poo I· s Pa . over 3000sq ft. westcllrr. complex. Centrally Ow.tr ... Ceah! •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• patio. S715mo. Arftl • ..! s hoppln&·Sr. Citizen 646-811! located In Tustin, near hltoa 18*d 1106 MH l81 1 m.oo ~e~~tt~ ~~lycom· DOV•SHOllS • .. hops and freeways. s..a . as .. ;e• .. f"uu••H••••• Love ly, 2 Br 2 Ba. ,. ' · Pool, lacnmi overlook l,000. T11W,...Off f r. a. am Y ome. Eu t side. car11ets. bay. Galaxy Dr. Formal Fest hcrowPos.... rplc, carport, w/d, dis· drapea, h·ups, tnclsd din . rm .. 2 fr plcs. I"-&P""-&....1.. hwasher. Oct. l to J1U1e &ar. S700. No pet s. '"5,000 fee. 84.Z.ZSlO, ~ •-..--IS. 675·71.Sl eva. -Sa vage Wiidt & Co W.... eor... .. Mir J 122 1:-~_.S_.,·9008~. ---- LOW OOWN ·OWC lmt ATPRaiPECT •• .. •••••••• .... •••••••Loury Condo larae 2 OR Lr.ASE/OPTION lie* lwn "ON nfE BAY" Br. tt,o, Ba .. ctiih•11ller, 4 br, a be ate. bome on 1--~~ ........ ~~1 -714/76'-72'2 Lu•urioul 1 level, 1 Br dbl oven, dbl &•ra&t s-x ~ ii Wtttdiff. Ptop&e •'-> DMd people t t,o, Ba, IOUl'1b« kltchtn. w /OJlllftO, lartt ftneid Jlllt rtet.. lnlide t ovt .-.w ahrt1I ~ u.. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I f 1b11lo1a1 view, comp. 1 ar 4 . 1., d 1 a, ,.. , =n:~.s:o.ooo. llrTraa.mure... lU:i.t:r.-=: \tfa. ~:u.. ..... ·L~ ' ' l • , I. I I \ ~ ' I • I j I I Afatw•h......_ ti,at 1 taU..... Orange Cout DAILY PJLOTM'ldnetdly, Stpttm~r 23, 1981 ........... "•' "'-""··· "•' Uwfw •••• .. .... c;;w;.;.· ...... iii4;;;.:;;.................. • .............. 4 ....... 4JlljOMa...., . : ······· ................ .... . . . . . . •. ........ ········ .............. ...... ................ ... .... ................ flirt;: JIU ...... .......... ••••••• ...................... • .. • ................... ·········-· ......... . ce.eiMll. lU .,.... .... ~· c...... l27 ... .,.,. .... J1H 1 Br ''°" .... p&Jd ....................... z'Slde Cit. Vtn ..... Cull ... .,...! M/Pa0toldlrto1Mn ll1TW ..... Ml.WiM ·: ........................................................ -........ ....................... · • ~ Dtlu11 Adult Ba1port rm w/trJk. Pri¥1 .. • E•t1bll1aed ltfl. 111w.r.,1ba1w111.-. fla11ela& t::!; r •,W· ·1 lbedl'OOCftl 1 '°'1 do 1~ Octutre.t. a..-JIR.. Coedo Out1t11dla1 truce. MICll .llt/lut rubncl la,,_ Maa. pool C-.. .._. .. 11C..0par.4_1q_ • bq · • l'llll v,..,.,4&rs8a,ftmib bdrm, Iba, walk to eus . -r • Put~nu Vh• rtq•lr ... htt/mo. Luse Clluttle . ...-..llil · •D&UDClftC•• ~m ! 'fr~~·~ ~j, d.~TJ r:"ll·~' bach,Jte, l.tnlLla. No No Wiater Adil 18r.1tove6reh't&t,uUll OYertootm, R•.....a rem1l1 oaly. Jn•. Peraonal attention 6 r--· JJllO i.uli-"8.-::,. nls courta, awlmmlDll tenn~. fllOO~":\o. ool l • •'ltu •ft OCEANrRONT 1 •4 Br £'14 ~$~.!.Br. aove Harbo11r. 181;1 JBA. ,.._~ &~1 eaemlaa.. nm. r rmmte to allr hit, ~rtd. ~ ~ . pool, U\ln11..J1cunl. AvaU Wlmar Wtftb'i ••· -· Adv.lta, ruoo mo. bl ••P avail ~to 0.C.C. Pool. non. ·-Jll Balboa ll1lad.. Pn rm !!9!.tl. ~ .tA........: . tte .. ttr. a150 Mo JIODtiilx m.mi !!OP!t!.MMJ13 thro~Lucla1. 1mkr,SJ10. HOt.•aU wlbatb. -.Olmo + ~ $HO Up. ff•t. If~. •44TI • · 2 br, 2 ba, pvt patio ma~auJI. !llll.f'lS.W. Carpel. dra~. air. _.1'SR VEJU~R _ twuhae, pool. lndrY rm, Lat-a.... J141 NI. Spe, pool. tllO mo. r to lhr 2 bt CdM bouH, tT•lleaA.MR Unique lbdrm roll•ae Wlnal94TALS ~ pd, 2 children Gill, ....................... ~ llonla. Noe· ~ Oct. 1. &100 IAcL utile IO_.T SUP wllb pvt yrd Ptrl. for OCIAMNOMT -tmo! lltlt!Mt+.S. Oceaulde ol Hwy No. drinker noa smkr. CoO l ' de .It. .m " 11aal• or couple No 48r4 Ba.cktanfiaharp, 2bdrm,lb&t.h $475. potll. lt78 Maple. or La1.2BrlBa idUJ&.oe. Hl-ltlO aft. I PM. ~rs• st a Y M •tr•IPt IW/mo ........ .._ ,.. • ts $315. Ref's req next to tennlt & beach. bdrm. be 9m Harbor 4 11th, or caU b'. 1700. artU JollDIGG Sit/Sun. a •I •~le OO~· ht IHt Us depoatt' .._. ._ .... H• 47S2 l lSOOmo. lt.muofNpt maoHer.~*1, U.·1$$4, eve1 Of lMI Euttlde Qmt.a w .. , l fa . . .cfor miiii avill 10/L7ff=7l• ' lo 6000~A ...... NEWCONDO 8oborDovie759-1221 La.r1e Oardeo Apt. 2 Br. Ill. Br. privMI bl&b ms. 1 HS M/F noumk.r sbr SR c .. s.. ., ... FOR RENT prlute patio. 11ra1e. Downtown La1 una Br. share bath '271. iD-2BA Wdbrdae Condo: '7MM2. 2 BR, double aar. eltr WISTCUFf Mature adll!ta, no peta. Beacb. Walk ever· dd. utlll. Call CbriatJaa , ms + ~ l&Jl NO-M23 ____ _ &•t opener 631 .4361. Luxurious four F•.a.a.d J4 ~o;&11de . IOS llo. ywhere. lBR w/frplc. 5S'7· 15-61 · NB Oetu View.*> to evea. · 171HS1mT Ml:.mJ - --bedroom. three bath ...................... 2 bd 2 ..... (''-I . 1450 Ind utll. nu. 2 MDI, sno each. "75 ~/~ ~~8il7 l295. Share wfreflned reap COSTA..SA E'slde condo 2HR 11, bu. home Beamed ceilings lltC Mdell rm, · -· .&Apace, 1 L1e 1 bdrm, 1 ba, up. d4-.i2 Botb. F •bk door Lr1 · ~~!!!! · · Id M/F DI r ' 2or s roomotncuuit.a frplc. ear. '6so1mo inUvlngroomandfaml. Beaut1r:r'rtidl:.1en, faJ~!~t:~~·1~eek· stalra11•-:.00Dlahwasber, Mtwpertlwlt Jl6t whldow.Pvt.l.11·5118 p~..'lcNwptxUa.;ev~'! A/C,pltsyols>fta.uui S48·3Sel ly room. Seeh.ldtd POOi end unit, attached dble carpo • mo. • ...................... Nke fumllbed room In apt. 710-*5 Incl. Avail aow. Call •2Br.JBa.Condo.Mesa slze yud Spacetorbo1l iaraae. Tuldl&lly dee. ~le&rcfl2,R2Ba,bfew, 64IMllt'1 Oceanfront for Wlattr private bome. Co1t1 RENTAL NEEDED · Rtt!onomlC!I t'IH'!OO Verde. Child OK Ne~ or tra11ler. '~8SC month Mo to Mo, 11400 mo. J:ic TJ. 1no$ c na. 3 Bd, 2 ba, or So. Coet Rentala, FW11llbed • llH1. Call Me.r ePll. Prof ladyneedahometO Cotta Meaa. ZIO'M. L decor sazs 833-8974 year Y baSIS . Agent 8"-0M3or87 eo, . etc. 1500 mo. Plu. -· upper lllllt. unfum. Brol!.er.'15-4tU. Im I ahare Cdm/NB area suit•. 117S/mo. Uu& it- $.195 ~nts ~his roomy 2 1631 l·1b300!.v · H arborViewKnollsNB2 V~naiJ&41-I ... ~ fu-Jun ~C:s8657wtndaorwkdya NO tFElsEVI'~~~ tWela.a.w.11 41ot For =· a 67us0obua,53M1&9 . 77cldl ... .111 W. 19th. St. bedroom retreat with ar ~r iew . ome. Br 3 ba .. Lona or sh.rt ~ ' rn . . mi 1 • wanaaa111. •••••0000 .. •••u••••••• y t I 2b /2ba ---.. .... ·-"""'""~·-----encbed yardtorkids & beauufule.ecuuvH Br. lerm. SlOOO. 673-1824, tum . f.U511510 mo. yr Eastaide lBR. Util pd. 17S..12Broter SIAU•MOTa :sotricestoacreen,cbec.11 ~enf::V. ~ ~ ocea~~ BAYFRONTOFFICE pets! Hurry! #MSC Also 3"'1 Ba , landscaping, 673-5281 675-25'3 round. za'792·3468. Eve. Lrc yrd area. Small pet& Wkly rtntala now avaU. ref's• employment, wiU . Tom64C).4200da 500 feet, janitorial, park· u It r a · mod er n 2 b r alarm system. seperale M2-4t57 OK. $350 mo. ~. 1112 • up. Color TV match ou with the ri&ht inc, etc. 1eG-tMO. w1drtam kilchen! k2S' ma1ds1guest apt ILSOO 3425 1 BR Vera1illea. pool, 833-2650 Pbonea In room. 227• Roo Y te' Wik to bcb. M IF, no· Hunllo•U>n Beach, 41t Children OK•.#~"'" Mo 759.0279 jac .. sauna aym, 24 hr 2Br l ...,Ba Twnhse mma · smkr, abr Jbr. 2ba in u 1ns't ....,.. •••••••••••••••••••••• sec auard iii> 631"666 ' llo rpl ' Newport Blvd CM N B Extras Glony •1 · Renhmes63HS55 Fee MEWPOITHGHTS EW 2 bdrm, 2 bl, stove. I • • c~rlage, pvt pa • f C, Bacbelon, w bed.room &49·144.5 30DayGuaranlee s.0.w"36.S . -~ ftatl210Mo. 0-.Poilt 3226 Like new custom built refrig, W/D, carpet.s' PACIFICSUNSET 1 ta, 00 pets 27 6 apta"t.ownbo'9et. Uve at Newport Beach S1erraMimt.C.O . ....................... three bedrooms, two drapes, patio, dbl gar, VIEW AvocadoS51Smo. + dep. Fl"Om '510 8"-1900 (P.C.H) 1100 weekly. Responsible, neat F lo Ml-1324 2 sty home, 3 decks. 3br. baths, formal dining J ·ac.'150552·8672. bdlS steps /LO slAd. Lbl 12 541-1510,~5722 Oceanfroot Laree S Br. Z P ine Knot Motel. 25-XOofhritbthlud shr 2 brCorona del Mar M.t-15 2ba kit Ii 1 room Eatmg area lD ·11.a 8 lboe D'-2 rm w carport, a , Bach Umt bot wtr pd Ba U 2 ~0640 house, 12116 Incl. ut11s ~ • • v rm ups rs, k h V $ j I a ..... mstr ldry rac. lti.J lac te.ss avail oow' tU5 mo 984 . pper, car1arqe, 1\--.CdSI 7714 Bobl7$-B7aft. 7. 2 deluxe ottlces avail•· sep. lbr, lba. hv rm. kit itc :: iew.1 is:>° per bd 2 ba llOO. 962-5121 or 851.9417 E1Cami00646-362'1 · frplc, yearly Juse.11000 Sa tr..... 4200 -·--r · ble on the Peninsula. 89'Z dnstrs. S8so 779 2639, mon . year y ease. 64S·Sll8. J lo Bdnn V 11__ Mo. "2-JM.3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• If &""'ERNISA •tr~..,• "944 s/f. High ceilinp 525-S»Sl llJl·7300~ealw.r Be one of the luclr.y few.. un r · eraaiua. Large Bachelor. ~ew. l BR VeraalUes. Peo-Newport 3 Br. I house ""'A •••'•1 4lSG w/trussea. Air cond, H.t"'9f•leacJt 3240 Exclusive Bi g Cyn. Rent in C.OSta Mesa 's :4er5::r :::~u~:· mJd~rn , ~astud~. thouae,15.opermooth from ocean, park101. Accepted ....................... sltyliahts. oew cpt • ....................... twnhse.2br,2ba,pvt. NEWEST gated 20 751·9110~/Ageot . ~·: ~ pe . 644 ·530, 548·8636 , Wiily avail. DOW. M~ be /18 Id s~~ woodfloors.Frontageon . HOME FOR RENT gar, pool, Lenrus. $1250. Townhome VILLAGE . -· o. 751·91100wper/A.cenl 17S.177S. da a~ r w mo. obr oo BalbOa Peninsula Newport BJ. 11.25 s/f. 4 Bdrm. '675 f~need 640.8126, 497-5471 COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. 6210 Oceanfront, 3 br, 2 Deluxe 2BR, 2BA. Upper. Versailles lBr fum/un. Yee .......... 4250 ui ter wants to ~ nextto F\m Zane (10~ ft 673.6606 yard & garage. Kids & Lido Island. clean 3bdrm, 21,!i Ba. 1600 · 1.800 sq. ft. r· S7SO. 3 br. l ba, tloo. Balcony. Encl gar, wall fum. 1650 mo.'.yr round. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• your ~c;:;e, or/ ~wdd x 201i\ ft) -'A""1r""po=rt=.'-6-o-f-flc-es--+-I& pets welcome. 545·2000 2ba, 2 car gar. lrg patio, of pure luxurY.· Garages, ( ; f ~ )5'9 ~~ ~ 7 /9 8 ~ ~ lo jjll ~arpe~, frplc, Call Wed eve. 642-057 OCEANFRONT 2 le' Br. ~~,:;l nee ~~ • 87J. 673-3930 divided nn, SS< sq ft. lo· Agent, nof~. Sl.,HIO/mo. S.SS.1623. hy?ro-tubs in m.as.ter (7J41761.4601 :J•IM33l0 l. 00 mo. 1 BR PEN'1110USE APT Avail. Winter. Weekly/ Sh · B h Storage Garage tor rent. cl. ID•lnt + util Mt-8070, Brand new. 3 br. 3 .ba WESTCUFFCOHDO ~~~~s f~J;J1 b:~l~: SHORTTERMS Bra~d New lBr Condo in VE RSAJLLES. N; Moothlx.673-7873. be~:~n \./ &, c:er:n~ Eutaide~Meu $60 24-hrs . ho~e tor discnm1nat1ng Two bedrooms. Two fireplaces micro-wave Beach rentals by week water oriented project beach. 631-0300 New dlx wit 2 br condo Newport Beach. Avail Sha~ 2 olr suite In pre· family. 2 blks lo beal'h. baths . Dining room. ovens fenced patios cit or month. Agt, 67S·8170. frplc bltm gar w/opnr' Lge bach, pvt lc quiet, Kona, HI. avail wntr/ immed. 87S-2637 aft 6. Offkt...... 4400 atlg1ous airport a~a. 37S Totally upgrad ed Fireplace. Adults No yards' Private elegant 2 B Wi •-R ·-• pool '• 1'ac h•o mo ' NwptHgta.k2S.Nopet wkbaeynll0.67~ P ._ N •••••••••••••••u•u••• sq. n. For details call G a r d e n e r 1 n r I .,,.., . · .. . r. n..,r en...a, up. "' " ~ · · a r ,. e w p o r t 851-6226. $1200/mo 0145 J>t!ls . ..,.,.,,permonthyrly livmg only LS mmules per w/ocean vi ew . 5'5·311S (Bn ghton Spr· 631-2299 CANCUN .. MEXICO Townhouse. To Share MIWPOIT . . ~~=-"'· lease. 6~p:MJO, Broker f~m Fashion Island, 7 Adullll, no pets. Avail ings Project) 2 Br 2 Ba ~ bllt lo heh. Oceanfront condo for w/prof person. Tennis, PB•es.l A Profess1onal Office 1~ \~~/ ba~. nd ~a.ch1 LEASE10PTION mmut~s lo S.C. Plau or now. S6oo. fi7S.1019. Nice 2 Br. 1 Ba. upper in Yrly. gar, adlts, oo petJ rent. N. 21toOtt5, ac· spa, many amenities. Spacious necutlve of· New'afrtt.o Beach. Avail 10115~1/r · \31 4br,Jbaexec home.on O.C.A1rport.Jusleaslof 5-toAM 37H 4·plu. k2Spermo. 679 S62S+util.67~1706aft• comm_t.es4.838-73311 ~7dl fices acrou fl'Olll ~ity 00~12:'5a-itM · Sussex Ln Ul Westchfr. New~rt Blvd. & 50· of •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• Center 16. 963-0S.Sl Versailles. nice 1 br ..... lo S... 4300 F rmmle wanted, non· Hall. AU services avail.a· --=-==-==-'==-==-4 IR.POOl Just redone Avatl now. ~an Diere Ftwy. Start· 2BR, lBA. Nr SC Plaza. 2 Br. Twnhse. lndry, I ocean view, mirrored •••••••••••u••••o•••• smoker, Irvine condo. ble. 'optional'. From 22:5 Need an Office Home ' ln Hunt111gton Beach nu : 1300 0 pt ion price ~~ ;.139 '-:1: Oooth Rent Incl Gu " Water. patio. Adults , no pets. I cbt, $525. $andy6'Uld 1225 + 'h wl. S5&-7416, sq.ft. up at reasonable Base? 5 min N. Of Job.a ' cplS. nu drps sparkling 285.ooo 752·~ · • range SSOOmo ~ s.c2stMo dep 755 w -~ .... "·•e~ 7S2·90S9. rentals. No lease re W a Y II e Air po U · ! pool. Onl) $795, Call E Blufrondo3br 2~.ba, Ave.,C05taMesa. . lBlb.St.6.ts-9507. . 1.~rUllkldl ~·..., FtoShareNice2BRHse quired,call673-3002 Secretary to answer ~ 962-7780 835 Amigos Wy 119 S'900 Dtlplt1n,_. 365 Apa tMCah u.fwL . . all utilities pcU54.S year-l..r<f' inAod ~ 200 mo. + Util. CM. Pet HIWPOITCIMTa rbone & viajtor c~ ! 2 br. l ba house, dble gar.' 213-541·4460_..541-~ .............................................. F.:i~~ :':a~J>'tiil~~~~ ly644-M94 ~A ... =!!:::-~ OK 00-4457 PrHtigioua, full service 187 mo. 751·~7 • !. lge fenced )a rd ... ~C I Bal.lslstudio,IBSprwk . ...._,...,. 3101 wlS300d Del.uxe 2 .bd.rm. l balb, EXEC offices. lndds wk.nd'sssiaz7. ! Kids1pelS OK Avail "'w ~ Pis ca.IJ between S.SPM, ••••••••••••••••••••••• :fi.1010 pnv P.•UO. pool. Conv Oldest"la..,estaaency Ms~1aurer• 2resBR~~blem' 'tt'BP. rcpt ec xerox wider· LIDOllUI•& ~ s57 s 3 bdrm, •2 ba Newport 675·3613 Bach SJ6.S, I Br 1 Ba. Westcliff loc. S6SO mo. ·• " '""" · 1 •. • ff hoi ol ~~w 5 mo • r ro ndo 1n quiet Bay Side. $450. Adults, Sharp2Brbouseonlower da67S.3412ev644-9842 inSo.CaJ.if.aincel.971 Walk to Bcb. 1225 mo. ~J'OWldpk&.tele•"•n· o ersc ce economy BlJ.~~~~~ysGe~~•eld neighborhood nr beach Apa,.....fwoallllecl nopets.SavaeeWilde& Easts1de. Garage. N_o nu: BWFFS 2 Br. 2.,., Credit.s·ABC.NBC,C~. 960-2292,64i-8524.Pam. ~~:189decor. cont. rm. ~~~:~~~~~~~~ Amenl1es lllCI spa. pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.O. 675"'606. dogs. SSSO mo. Avail Ba enclsd gar POOi Cocmo. Phil Donahue Serious StudenL lBR + ...::..:.:...:..:=.:..· -----S6SO t 11250 1 /bath 48R, 2BA. S700 mo 19811 lighted tennis court9. lo.....__,~......._ 3707 C ...&....1 ._._ 312l now. Call Wayne agt, f67S. &4().S296U53.1220 · lo all ,.:w"'olfcli!o•· wbo ba. nice, quiet apt. Nr EXECUTIVE 3355 v? Lido'm~lS6 · Gloucster HB Bus hard saunas. 24 hr see Now --Ol'09CI _,_. 646-8816. .... ~ .. OCC N drugs Pool 1 · & Adams. 968-<991 ,, I t S9()() r ••.••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . WINTER RENTAL-4Br, need a place. j ; I 0 $235 ·"' ·1' SWT'ES VIEW OF S b 1 b h a c!:i ~ :. ~d Wrnter Rental. 9·19 to Walk to heh. Quiet 3 Br $250. I br dpb 10 qwet 2ea dplx fum/unlum ac, rp c. + uu . IN pan1s -sly e 2 r ome ruce . -a, 6-12. 3 Br. 2 Ba. S6SO. 2ba, dplx, gar, $900. safe courl for non aome oc~ view. S3o4 Newport Beach,641-1899 751·8133 HlllTAH MEWPOITHAllOI w Id ble. garage., only 8Sl·220S ev~ ~knds Balboa Pier. Savage, Child OK, no pets. Drive smolr.er wlprev rental Seas. bore Dr '900 mo Servlni all lheS. Coast Prof M /F share spacious • .. .,, .. Office with water view. 1395. Ch1ldref_I OK· •9646 BA YSHORES 4BR.3BA Wilde & Co. 675-9006. by only. 719 Heliotrope. ref. 954 W. 17th. 548-0358. 8SU0'10 . . 2br, 2ba Balboa Island r-.&Aolfi Approx. l,000 sq. fl. on Also: stunning ram1ly Home Across from Avail 1013 !nZ.940& G d G apt John 851 ~ g.5 New lu11ury ice space w. c 0 a 5 l Hw y, home nrlheHarbour w Swim Beach $1400 mo YEAILY! · D-.Poilt 3126 2br lba \IPI' duplx: aar ar en rove.895-3482 Eves &wknds6's.ms. · In Irvine 's busiest (7l4)~7lOO. enclosed yard. dble gar 213·38S·Zl76 iu.441.3252· Cule 2 Br. furn. will with Duplex al be~ch. _3 bdrm. ••••••••• .. ••• .. •••.•••• S67S yrly d/w avl 10.1, center! Easy Frwy ac· "'pi..:..ro::..:fe=s:...::si=-on;..::a.;::;;:I "-&-m-ed- 1 -.c-al cit patio!~. 119601 "'-'~--garage. Upper with lots 2 ba, fanta.suc view ans 1 bdrm, 1 be apt. Bike/ 311""' 36 St. small deck Open Sat. too! 1().5 Pro! Female, clean, cen. Avail. now ! c au office spa-. 500 le fDOO Ren times 631·4555 Fee Steps bearhlbay 3 Br 2 of light. 1600. Agent mo. 675-1368 walk lo beach. No pets. see Thurs 9/24 .. 4-6 quiet. matuft, lo $bare 3 !or details. ..., '"iae 3244 B:i;.~:j.1~~~s-~1mo 675·3890. Lanp,atlradfye 6"·6493 ·~~ ~:o 2w%c~l!°~i~~~ SS ·1231 '4M JO ~sfh ~ear Laite Forest ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'.! --2 & 3bdnn & bach apt. 1 bdrm with fireplace FotmtoillValty 3134 Deli&htful 2 bdrm Trade your old 'luff tor kOOmo.Carolyn Find what you, want in Har~lcA.ssoc. Woodbridge S595imo. 2 LUXURY IAYFRONT Clean. Rent negotiable. DR , LR . porch. dis· ........ ~ ........... , .. McLain Condo. Sec &ate, nrw fioodles with a 67~ Dally PUotClusifieds. 714/483..37S4 Br 1 ba condo View 3 Br., 2 Ha. with boat slip. SJS-6786, 675-00lB. hwasher. stove. Newly C.Ozy studM? apt w/all ~a· pool. spa, tenn.is. IBOO C aul ied ad. MZ-S6'18 Port parking 951·4543 Avail Oct lst. Many Ocean front . view 2 cit 3 landscaped. 1650. Jor appliances! Nice 759-1594 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Birdie amen111es. $3500 Mo Br 2 Ba 2 garage 675-6611 Fountain Valley area, a V .11 . 2 3 Br. ram rm , dlbl Broke;67S5-4912. ~ter.aiOO Up.64-0-4784 Shrnew2br.2baaptin ~~.'.:.:~~;~~l!br': :J:~1• ;s·~.P~~:rlty • 8 DA WEEK PE. c • garage. central air. pvt BLUF 3 Br 3 B~. er. old CdM,nrbeach.frplc, In no.rthHimtiniton Bch aate, club house, ocean • y s IAL • yd. commWlity pool & Fam Rm. PVl Jacum ...... block LO beach, lbdrm, deck. gar,, lndry. t'MO. only 53251 Hurry• 15312 view. $7SO • • • spa, S700 mo A\'a1I 1m StlSO Mo. 644-2300. parking, util pd. Yrly. 644-6178 (Bill) Renlim~631-4Sss Fee SS7·JJ87 med Suzee Miller CAMALRlONTHME 13901mo. 67S -6876,Q~Aca~a.3bdnn,2ba. Hn•"'rl' •.....-...a..~•4a MEAlllACH&IAY • IOay1 • 3ltnt1 • IDollar1 • SS!l-9400 N rt Sho 4 BR 3 534-37((). ocean view. After 5pm -...,.•-- i ewpo res ·. 1167""""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Brsbarl>.yrlyliSSO • lt'seasytoplaceyo r8-Da Week Cl f db I d t • Ba. I year lease. $2,000 2 Br 1 ba. Wrnter. ~ blk lO ca ~ '""· THE WHWR.E TUI 2 Br hugedeek furn or u y ass1 1e y ma I • an I mo. 1st & last Gwen bcb. S460. Dolly 67H630, L.R . din nn. BR Util. L dult . al Un!um. trso'yrty. · e costs just $8 -that's only a dollar ~ day! To Qualify for this e Henr). Jackie642-6514 Fpc.1"'1 blkocean. l47S uxuryA .. lmitsat · J .R.PROPERTY I ff t be RI CHARD SOWERS c . trc.oleaclll7ll 67Hm fordable liVU11. 1.2 " 3 MANAGERS e specra o er. you mus a non-commercial user offering e SPYGWSLEASE RLTR •• ~r.~•••••••••···~···· Costow..o 3124 gtym:i~~::r.•ut:i!: 675-6173 673-0354 e merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the prrce must e S2200 per month for a 6 114·598-~--On the beach 2 br Willier ••••••••••••••••••••••• ed tennis court, Jacu.ui, 3 llDIOOMS be in your ad. The cost stays the same whether your ad Br. 4""' balh house with HARBOR VIEW 4 Bdrm rental vacant. No MEWLYDICOll park like landscaping. 21A1HS • needs erght days selling time or just one. e great views. Ganlening sm~kers or .pets SlOOO 1 Br. gu pd, encl gar Most beawtul bid&. in 11.. • • services included 2"'i ba, 2 story w1family mo uicl all Ulil496·7901 d/washer. pool. Adults H B -1s MONTH D.M.MwsholRltn brm.rormadldlning.view. Co-adllW. 3722 M2·S0'13. . . 646-061.9 ~lnt~d.Sl.Alovweall.roowuw·t, • Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one • 76"0835 1g yar , privacy ..... ~ ~.,.... f ~ $1600 moyrly ....................... 2 Ir. I loADt 2BR.2BACONDO (213)966-1711. • class1 ied line ·of type. Minimum ad IS 3 lines. Please print • RENT A.LS Beaut. tum. X·lge 3 br, 2 Newly decor. etas pd. Adults. Upgraded. Refr. U beU ble' 2b 2ba • ~ Plainly. • BAY FRONT P tho ba, gar./washer. so. of wa!lh/dry. $695. ••176 n .eva . r, . 2br. 21.ttba S79S en use. hwy $850 &75-2'763 encl gar .. pool, dshwr. -• Renllog at ooly $.»S ! 3br.2ba $875 Bright andlar~e2 BR +·. · Adults.MZ-5073. 2 br, $350 + $35;0 dep. Features plush carpet.a e ,.------------• 3br,2~ba $925 den. Security bldg on Oceanside of hwy. 3Br Crpll, drps. Bit-ms, nr throughout , fully 1 _ ------------------., 4br. 2ba S82S super Lido Peninsula 2ba. Wa.sher. Gar. Nr l Ir ToMJllW shops. AU aduh, no pell. equipped cbers kitchen • I I • Le Raisor Rlty, 83J.8600 loe S2000mo yrly everything. 1850/mo. Newly decor. gas pd • 893-4894 w/all major appliances, • I I • University Park.48r 2h 675-2763 encl aar .. pool, dswhr. 2Br, freshly painted, much more! Low de· Ba. lease oo greenbelt VERSAILL ES 2 BR CoahlMfta 1724 Adul_ts.M2·SC773. clean.S.SOOmo. po&it!I S482 et • S82S Mo. No pets Avail 2ba. secunty clubhouse, •••••••• .... •••••••••••Spacious 2 Br. I Ba. ~ Rentlmes631"'555 Fee. • • I0.17.Agt.973-4772 tool, spa, refrig . CASA DE ORO Laundry fac .. pool.~. 1 br condo, tennis, pool, S.Ci...t. 3176 University Park. 2 bdrm. SO mo Willier ALL UTllJTl&S PAJD 548-95.56 clubhouse, washer, ............. •••••••••• • • 2ba S600mo WatedrontHomes. lnc. PRIVACY & OUIET dryer. refrig. 1st. last &t 2bdrm, l~ba , frplc. • • 641·8250 631-1400 Com pa re before you Lille new 1 & 2 Ar. Apts. dep. $405. 768-7633 carport, beam ceillnp, w-aln_u_t_Sq .... ua""'re 3 Br. Zba rent. Cuslom design wlgar or carport. Up or Spacious l Br. Apt. Avail lndry, ocean view. k 75. • • condo. Air, POOi. gar features: Pool. BBQ, down, balcony or patio, on 9·1.S. Pool, laundry 413-2710. • S6SO, Gary54.9-881S __ WINTER RENTAL-4Br, cov 'rd garage, sur· POOi. spa, bbq. lawtdry, f~c .. frplc, garba.ae 5-te Am 3llO • 2Ba dplx. fum/unlum, rounded with plush lush shaded landscap.. d1Sp., garage &t partmc ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • t.,... le«Ji 3248 some ocn view 5304 landscaping. Adult Uv. me. $460 & up. Malure spac~. Adults only, pets lbdnn condo, pool, spa, • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seashore Dr S800 mo. iog at its besl. No pets. adults, NO PETS. Mesa considered. k 2S Mo. nr bospt. ai pert, Parts add M IO • • OCEANFRONT Mobile 851·8<170 1Brfum. S44S Pines. 26SO Harla. 842·8807, SPM lo 9P~. Orleans , 143 5 • "' H . 1ore•chaddltlon•lllntforltlme1 • H~mes SIOOO mo Dbl Beacon Bay. 3 br, dock, 2 Br furn 1520 549 2447 Tues thru Thurs Fri· (213)436-Sl2att Si> wide. 499-JH& tenn is. 2 yr lease. S17oo. 365 W. Wilson, MZ-a7l . M~OIT Mon.'8AM·9PM · er m. • • •BEACH HOUSE • Cozy refs reg 675-8617 SUS CASITAS 4 ,Aanen'S Near beach 2 Br. 2 Ba .• ~~ ..... ~! • p bl' lBR . frplc. beamed Cell· OVERLOOICl .... G Furn. l br. apt. S3C.S & 2 Br. Avail. $32() mo. enclsd &araJe. carpets" Adult condo for rent. I u I Sh my ad for 8 d~ys starting • ing. Courtyard. S Lag " L dulll drapes bit ms S550 Ko • S59s mo.~ is acre private park. 3 up. Enc pr. A . no Plus util.s. No children, 536-1»2i · · · Fantastic ocean view. 2 i Classification :·· Bd 2•1 Ba . 2-s t y pets. 2110 Newport Bl. oopets.nowaterbeds. br. 1 ba, pool. praae, 2NICENEWERHOMES nootmo Kids OK. no ~4968btwn8"5PM. 24SONewportBlvd. MAll.SWAU avail.now.•.Nopets. Name Both have 3 Bdrms. 3 ts 1--•~L 37.1• Costa Mesa 2 It 3 Br. Townhouse m0075 -----------------------bath. dining room. den, pc h 11 -...... __.. -p •-in •-... , ........ """""""""-----fireplace and you can John Mars a ....................... 111E SEVILLE 2 Br. 1~ Apu. at ...... s '"' • Af •11 •• Fw hMd Address walk to the beach. Loca· 631·1266 Furn luxstudlo, spa, TV, Ba. Adults, new crpta, double car aaraies. ... ... ,.. h••• HOO -----------------------li~n : 3 Arch Bay. ~ ·~~t~;nphones. !raat~~8 ·ps.·1~~·11'~~5: ~~!!ait=.ur. s····E···A···w·····,··~··o·· = City Zip Phone •• private gated commum· -636-120 HUNTINGTON BAY " ~ os~·~"t a gun a • ~':~~ ••• ??~! 261: "E" Santa Ana CONOO VILLAGE Check or M.O. enclosed D • oceanside of highway, lavfr'OlltW/Dock '47S. 2 Br. 1~ Ba. Patio, New 162 bdrm l111ury • Ch d t SUSO mo. Agt. 494-7551 4 br i i'! ba. $1500 mo. No LUXURY DUPLEX carport, washer/dryer adult aptl in 14 plant 1 arge my 8 O: • Clean 2bdnn house with pets. submit on kids. 2 Br. 2.,., Ba. dble gar. incl. Water6truhpaid. Bdrm from$M5 2 bdrm IA ~ • gar. frplc. yrd. Walk to CIR Rltrs. Bill or Linda. 1850 aq ft. witb every C.Omm. pool. Adults, no from 1535 To~ ~ O # Exp bch. 1750 497 3898 , 63108841646-5006 xtra, bu1e rear yard ~ta.S52:5+'500C:it. from t110'+ J100111 ten· •• ·----• 494·2576. __ Newport Crt!St 2 Br. den, with RV &ate. Adulta. &ent, no fee.~ · Dis, waterfalla, DCind.1 • 2.,., b d 't Very '675.67U338,M2-M66. ~Block to Beach. 2BR, Gu for~ i Mat· 0 # Exp • / ....,.......,. 3252 r.;n·vat!. Mon'i'.:':1 to mo. es!Jllde~. Modem 2BA. Adulta. k 75. 124 in& paid. From San • · • •• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• A t 2 1 B 20tb Street. S3Ml• Die10 ..._, drive Nortb L Sho B Ba be h 25. Call 1·992·5310 or P . r. a . Be .. • "T = -· te:~fs~ ~. N~ ~~s: aft 7pm.642-3MS YWHIOUMDR#t: ~~~rt'e~~~ ·d~:Pe~:i~.:d :.:::=~~= r==-.:.:::-.wfli.-PAYTHEPOSTAGE-::.:.:::-.:.::::, ·--N~~2Fshommodel v111a ~~!:~:1~:n'~~c~r:pk. =~~~ L~~~~~!ff:e~\~~: ~~~d~~~ ~a~!: ~~14~= v111a1e. • I 111111 NO POSTAGE : •• 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 car garage garage, & all~ paid! No ""la, no child. ren. .. ... -1 ..__ .._ • I ... ECES I M Ir. I l Only S6SO! 115561 Plus : Parties • Plus more n..1 ""•• -----·~ SARY 1 •·•• agn ic en ocean spacious retrtal over· GllEATll!CAEATION: .,.. ... et. .. 1.5 + ltalrity. SpacM>ua apt aYall DOW' .......... _•••••••u• ~·· j' t?: ..... . view. Sll50 Mo. &Sl·7770 rem11•Ftetleatol'c 541-5442 770.SQI 81chelor. 1 6 JBR. Roo m Cdll Rom e . If MAllEO meua1e. ~!~~~~sf1ly SSOO! (P'O &l)(Olhop)•2 BEAUT1FUL2Br.2Ba. P'rom •. * Cbe to Female DOD·••oktr. INTHE L.-. ,.,_. 3ZH Renllmes631·4SSS Fee liallhClubl•Saunt Mesa Verde, 1100 aq. ft. G G 6 SD F w l . SIOO Mo. 'J90.GIU after UNITED STATES • ....................... • Hyd1om111•~• • fplc, lndry, dlabnhr, Balcoolea, patiol, poolt, St!ail wkd!g!. • BUSINESS REPLY L.ABEL 'O •• Lf 4Br, SBa. exec home W• ~-..... $wommono • 011 encloled prafe. Adult.a, Jae, ttftDia, IDdry fie. Lapu Beadt ll«or lu '• It l _ on lbe water. Prof de-z • 3 bdnns. 2 bathl. Onving ~noe no pett. 91150 II U N T I N G t 0 N 115 No. Pactflc eoaai > • .corated, l~overed fireplace & aarase. IEAUTIFULUTI: 31031hceAve. 540-4400 GARDENS901Heil1fB Hw7, Lapu Beaca. '•a fl•ITCl.AMN•MITfllO 11.COSTAMIU.CAllf'OllHIA l .,. p1Uo.1reat e tor en· From $7SO. 675-llll. ~~!*·~ 1F~r~i::'~ 1Br1 ba, UNndcd CGa-Bolu Chic• • Heil Oall7, W'*1Y, Dcbea • t -~ w•, .... A .... 8 .. A,.,._,,,,,.E • •• tert1inln1. SUOO mo. &un~•M.tll do.NrSo.C.tPlu.Ttn· •tm 1val11ble. Low •later • ..._,._ __ ,......., '_..._ ,~ • •·f'30 S.C..._.. 3276 Llvi11o •No Ptta • nl1, pool, voll~ball, NEW bacbelor1 UIUI, no l'!tet.....-Or1nge Co•lt Dilly Piiot ....................... d·;'" ........ , ..Lii .. _ -• Mt.,.rt INdl l2'9 • Near Bc.h. 2 Br 2ba. Model• Open Dally 1 ""· ...,., mo. 7.QZ22 .........._ °' ...... 1 ad1llL Balboa laA. llO • up • ~o. 1••11 Pilat I ....................... Oceu view. Call BetaJ, 9 10 e Ait. ::r~ ~=wtt1. WHlll1. ltltcheaa1tt1, • • • .L_ ISAC.PYTPAll ~•Y• 08·0500: ev Otkwood l8r.1Ba.Poa1,aara1e. or~ fr u • 2 Mstr Bdrm 2~ Ba. leN-8727 Gardllt~ I No•· ••o. UILSA 1 BR, P'rplc. D/W, J::: Roomwlkl.prty.Nri. 1 Uk• ftll, ~/mo. Kids Ill bomnr lba be•~ Nlwpoft ..... N. ·~•!i.,.'4l.o7'3Btwn .. l, ~~.d~+~ ~-~. occ'. • lo11MO I • OK.petamaybe, w/all uWIU. pd. an 0§\)lrv!ne.llltfllll ........ n . J!lll ·~ --·-~.~ • I • JollnllanbaU lmlJor•Dllk! Prictd to (714)~1'04 Almoltanlbr2ba&a. I bdrm, 1 ba. TTH •• •&.A...., ltt, : I now ... ,.. • at-ml ,,. ... al 11'15. Nil . ........ ..... .. llrilla rm/w ftrtplaff, ,. .......... lit. tall ............. .! .... Cotti MIU, CA t2IH I : haurtoua adrm 1100 1eui St..lt>Mt ti ...,,, mkrnavt I ctt pr/w llOa dlt. .. f! alu &nit. laM. t ilfi 11111.U.M* wl........ie (714)1MZ•11iJ eJec. opener, llri• Pldo I b • r •. I Mi ~ 1 fro-• le~• •1111 rin•t .-i ·U d ~ • ::Mm# Air re lit • laa&. • ••••• RVMt\X .. ' ' ' -- Orangi eo.t DAILY PILOT JWednnday, ~tember 23, 1981 f 11 Bil '1.IJPWlll ~l) AU.to41-ply .t·ld In~ DMY N.or SlmCI DlllCTOIY DOlTNOWI ..... s.... y °""Dally Pilot Service Dlrert.ory Re~tallve Ml-M11. nt 322 c--........., •••••••••••••••••••••• Custom C.b.intta, etc. CHAR RENOVATl.NG Offlc.e ...... 44001 ...... W..ted 46 .......... Lost&Fo.d noorersoaols 535oHelpWmftd 7100HelpW..e.d 7100 HelpW..ted 7100HelpW.t.d 71004-lpW..tecl 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C>pporhMlty SOI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••.-.•.,..••••••••••••••••••••••• IMllAU>IAY lyC>doller-ht "•••••••••••••••••••• Attractive Ladiei. v.ouJd lAss1stant Manager IAIYSma Ci\SHIERS Counter help & p T DENTALASST Proressiooal B&dg. 2 Rm Family would like lo IMYISTMBn Loll: J•de rndant. rec love to party \Ill you CalJ I Tra~it1onal Women's Need special person lo wanted for auto wash in sandwich person wanl· c h a i rs Ide exp er office suite, 1510 No. trade investment quall· CCMM&IHG tangular, green, vic LynnorLaurieanytime Boutique. Send r<'sume keepuurllyrold MGM Nwpt Bch at Irvine ed. hours NEt.:DED 11 necessary. 4 day work Coast Hwy. Laguna ty Opals for house tow .. ~1 d'-Newport Fashion 953,9363 toAd117~.Da1ly P1lot. student busy and pro-areas." .... "" AMto 3 PMGar·y·s n..•. v.eek. 30 hrs Laguna Be.Cb 61osq ft w/lovely t u" ._... e can '"" P you .,.. Ce n le r reward ----P O Box 1560 Costa d 1 d .,....._, vo::u H II 77" """'5 . ren . .,...,..--cover your investment (213)2.ui2o I M. 9.,.,...,,,,..,,,..·c uct1v~ Y orcup1e 752·5401 i ~-.,......~'-----ocean view. $US sq ft. Non-s moking retired r 1 2 Fte n --ro•• 5450 e~J....£-V,,.,._IN<N_ ~ !.:.. weekdays Mon-Thurs 4 CASHIEtt ---p T DentalAsstStant d7-247lor5'4-3339 Christian Gentleman poten _ia . . e co . Lost : female German ....................... "SSIST" ...... MGR PM to 8 PM OUT Turtle Cashier pos1 llOO IO Counter help P1T & I Cha1rs1de. nart lime, sultallons dunng ~!> Short hair pointer (Liver ANTED Airline ht'kel , A • _,,' Rork home 752-0138 da fashion Island Retail call between 9 & 11 AM " S~blet /shst~ pf;.me seeks sm. eClicellcy apt tember. Call for ID · & ticked> white tip on to Houston or Dallas· Ch1ldren s shoe st?re, 833·1276evAskrorFreta Store. Experience pre· __carD_Dell l!!k2193:..-re~ov~~=~!:e 6311073 ,..!,"!r.bnrt .._.:. 036° ice. or bsekp& roo1n1 nr bus ro_rmatlon and appL tail Answers "Ami" fort Worth departing sa.les exper_ necessary. ------rerted Must be availa Deliver LA. Times to ---- vauuo • ..--1 Cline1,1 xlnt references. Rack Keeler 631·0213 Lost9/SiSl6Jl.229l Los Angeles between Will tram nght person Banking ble eves & weekends homes 1t1 H B. & C M. Dental Cha1rs1de Nurse. AVOIOHIGHl&fT a Answer 1581, A . ---September 7 and 14. Gd pay &bener1ts Also, TB.LEI 644_5070 3-6AM S400-$450imo + N B" pleasant ~roup 17tbftTUltlnSA 64.2·430024bn. .._._to•~-50" Lost. Golden Retriever Would like roundtrip p,t1me help needed Xlntoppforpersonw1th pract ice Experience Bea b H , I -Y ._ ., Puppy 5 to 6MO Old St ide R'te n~•Ar' SC b t , b I l --E.O.E bonus. OependaLle car f red '""1122 Only80'-NICE! Eaguna c osp1ta ....... •••••••••••••••• Medium POlden color. Please c all da ys. r i °"""' ,. . as1c yp1ng a I I y, c •"ulER needed 546 4481 or ...(!re er .U"Mr -· -300to UOOsq ft mployee. 4 yr Laguna Widow has money to loan F C llo Ed 768-S837 Pla_u math aptitude and ab1ll· ~· 964 98 MlkeS.....J:!IM-4040 resident Needs 2BR f RE $100CXI N lea oar. Vic I on ---AUTOMOTIVE ty to handle sums of HOUSEWARE SALES __ ·4_2_. -DESKCUIK ~ ho i.a b Oct or · • up. ° C M 6 4 6 3 4 3 9 b!DloyfMftf & o d Full or Pttime. Apply Delivery Man for early JPM llPM sluft. Mon Prime S.A. location use 111 guna Y credit check. oopenalty. REWARD' f'rwparotioft •LOTMAM1 money uts~an ing Crown Hardware. 102• AM Tames home de-lhru Sat WiUJram. Sea 7 t b . Up t o · 16 0 0 . Call Denbon Assoc · C'" 1 de 1 ·Cf working condJt1ons. fr. k M M between Newp>rt & San-Responsible. ellcellent S73-7311 · Lost: Lge diamond /gold ....................... 1°evro et _a er o e~ mge benifits, pleasant Irvine LWesLcllCf! N~ livery Economical car. La r Ole I . C ta Ana Frwys. Pleasant r eferences. Bruce. & 5 m a 11 d 1 am 0 n Jobs Wllllhd, 7075 full or pa.~·L1me permah surroundings Qualified adults only. 2' !l hr.; per 646· 7-445 btwn Noon & window offices with re-497-4189 Mo.eyW.t.d 503 dtrubytgold rings. C.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• nent pos1Uoos to youl person may oblam an CHECl9CAI day No roll $450 per 6P~ --- ception & telephone ••••••••••••••••••••.. Country Club or De.nny's Ex per male practical for ass1St~nce m the application at Irvine 0 r. needs a few gd drivers mo net take home + Drivers deliver baken auwerin&servicu. t18S .. '-tt/lll...t/ IMYISTOIS on Harbor, reward, no nurse. basic home nurs-body, service. or n~w (ice, SJ25 University Dr. 493--8888 __ bonus + iias allowance. p r o d u c t s t (, permo.~ RiM.u WAMTED questions. 894.4562 , mg ~a re. Good cook, reg t'ardepartmenlS Vaned !Hine Phone (7141 Child Care needed an m) Westminster. Ga rden supermarkets Early PllMEIAYROMT ....................... Limited offer. Take ad· (213)593-7652 Cardiel. SS3-0128dS.7lACJ k ~t~~~~~n~o:a:~~an~~ ~2-5325. home. M f Mature lo\ Gro\'e_illa ~·5466 -mom lo mid-afternoon. 1400 sq ft office space ...... vantace of lax-free Ill· Found: Brindle wlwht ompan!on a1 oo . ment.SeeMr Stude. ing woman 673·370S Oellvery dnverandsales Cal!J714™L_ - available Oct., 1st .in O~ SOOS tereateamings .. PLUS. cfhest Fem. NdoBg, 1!ime1 ~nyvfhelie.t ~uspe~d~b~~ HOW>.RDChenolet ,otnaftCIFint &44-4473 tra~ne.e 11Moonlightefs Hang glider mfg nds Newport high nse with••••••••••••••••••••••• 714851-8392. oot.notags. An1ma G Lad 3421682 Dove QuailSts. Fedtnll Child monitor '681 pe1 an ~o e~e stuen s dn,·er Valid Ca he ba~k . restaurant & Swimm in & po o I u~~ Trwt Shltr 64-t·3&56 __ _rrtna_!!_ ~ -NEWPORT BEACH EOE. M~ mo, Must hav<' 3 mos welcome. Easily eam good driVUlg record re· marina. Yea_rly lease Chemical Service Bual· ""'":.:.:~--ir035 Found. Grey Female Cat Need a break . Mature 1 3~0555 exp. Comr.lete care or: Sto.St5 per hr. Call after quired 1.2alH E Walnut $165 s~ ft includlng ess Lau N'g I .,..... ~ oAt 6 &I old woman will lake "'" l......w Id feed cl th& 1 PM . El Toro Area SA 547311114 . . . U n . ao na I ue ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'ween mo yr b 'Cluld I Sh & de nd W yr o g1r . , o 951 2642, or Gdrden --· -'"'"·"----J&Dlton . For appt ca area. No exp necessary, Magnoba & Elll.s FV ~ arge ren. c ean Automoll\e arp pe . ages bathe her. supervise he1 Gro\·e 6J8.46«> Eam free toys, have a Kr.Selin&~ will tr1io. $5(),0CXI. Full S.ttt.rMh).Co. 545-4533 J:!lL!:ef252·9768. 'IXRECB'Tt<>HIST ..Q2fil,.646·:1i66CM -play, oversee her de ---HouseofLloydToy Par COSTAMESA amounl req. Will net All types of ~I estate Found: browntblack w H•lpW..ted 7100 lmmediateopenmgs for BARTENDER Ex -portment Salary plu~ DRVBYDRJVBS J'.840.69L Furnlahed, St7S to $250, '40,000 + .. Call Collect. iovestmentssmce llM9. white Lab. M. lrvme nr ••••••••••••••••••••••• alert person for recep-pe ra e need r or new ~nvate room & board !m med .. P time open Earn Xtra Money for utll. iocld. Call 6'5-il6l Mon · Fr 1. 9 · 6• PM . S~ ill YMCA. 646-6759, SSl-8106 ACCOUMTIMG I lion des~. Ml.l.5t have gd. N e w po rt B e a <' h e~kpelo a.v~e~l a~fric~la~~ in gs a va.1lable for de· Holiday speodmg. Hard 4c.l-867·0lli ladTDs Found · blk & whl CPAFirmmHuntington s pe_ak1ng voice & Rest Bar Apply in hvery dmers _Must be workers rewarded here .__,......, 4450 Free to qualified tenant: '42·2171 545-0611 Al k . M I F' Beach needs CPA or clencal skills Need so-person btwn 2·4 Tues· Orange County 'D01 21 with good drivmg re· 3 evu per wk. Call ._..................... .. t t.al sto •--~as an a amute. • C ... da meone who IS wilbng to day thruSat 107 2lst Pl 301.677-010. Ad paid fo1 cord & able to work Forstore&office space a":aettn re,aa!ICa, WEPAYTHEMOST Beach & Ellis. H.B CPA anw Le to JOm work & fullUme Con· , b em loer. Larry 9:30 to I JO atreu0nablerates video games, etc . For your TD's & notes. 342·1375 audit staff . 1·2 y rs tact· Eva Hauser (BehlndTheRltz) $;~.1~gfu_ s1al~:s rl~~ 968-1214 ----500to4000S41.Ft Completely set-up. AtDenni.sonAssoc Found Small male mix publicaccounungexper . . Beauty CLASSIFIED lyda11yafter5pm Me& ~actor) Tra111ee. print ME.5AVERDEbR. Choice beach loc . 673-7311 d g B n wt blk preferred Send resume ~e~~ ~~~~\e:~1 c~:~ 'DVEITISING Ed's Pizza . 171h & mg & packaging Co PLAZA 6?S.4W 6'13-l40l. . Prime Prop. Bhdfs. Pvt s~ort'hai/we>cean vieV.: to P.O. Box 981• Los ft I Tustin CM p11dbenefits.4day work U2S •esa Veroe E. C.M. BEAUTY SHOP equ11> res Condo wants second bi b school. 843-0018 Alamitos.90720 Newpon Beach salon ~II rt' -'.J-"'-' week . m7660 ask for 54L•IZl ment and fixtures for TD S30 OCXI 1 yr Xlnt L B 1 -h "CC""""-.-t .... G 61S._1828. '11¥.Lil Delivery men over 18 for Mark ~ I I I d . • · · ost. rown eat er A ""'""" Beauty Th Cl 'fied "'A"' f L.A Times to homes in · -----s a e !1C u ~s . rates. Prin only. Mr Wallet Contain s America W est e ass11 v.=..-o C M 3am -6am fREEPRE-SCHOOL PllMELOCATIOH Hy.draullc cb3;irs, Foster7~8871 jewelry 497 041 Telephone Co is seeking ;l~~:~·td n~a:1~~s!~~~ the Daily Pilot has an Economy car required In C~ Ill exchange for Approx. 4000 ~ ft . l.500 ha_1rstyllng .stations, 613-6518 REwARD ' . an At· counting Clerk. AUTO ROUTE Bea ch beaut y salon! o/:rnng N o c o I I e r t i n g mQ!her1 fielp. 752·552.S sq f\ air coodilioned of. mirrors. hairdryers. •..omu•it•/ -·--Exper in payroll. gen. N d P rt T' P on one o our telephont S400.S4SO mo + bonus F'ull lime help wanted (ice w/sprinklers. shampoo.bowls and P.na1• L~est~ie~::fsh~po~~red~ ledger, po6Ung. invoic· loe~eh,~rD!~:Pi~~~ 675·3828. sales desks. The person 64&-0637or646·5844 Ansv.•ering service no fenced parking irea, lounges., display cases. Lost Ir "-cl blind e'5e. lJ yrs old. Vic 111g & A p Call Velma Newport Ueach. 7 days IEAllTY we seek should enJO}' exp nee Minimum typ. Available immediately. aCllsuppUesandmore. ·~·•••••••oo•••••••5••1•0•0 ~rv_·mo:n~anta Ana Ave \714 )847-7791. ~rweek r-s~c:_.__ telephone sales. be able t .. 50 b t Prime H1ml. Beach in· all 63l·!n54 or. alter 6, •"' -to type 45 ~'Pm and have DELIVERIES mg req ...,. per r o du~trlal park. Call caU898-6800 ou~ Monthru F'n Look1ni: add to our a pleasant personality start Call. 833 ·3333 994.7257, Ask for Mr Let's go into •••••••••••••••••••••••Old blond male Cocker ACC~ Approx 3.30to5 30PM staff 3 ·assistants & 2 Classified or telephone Part time. Saturday & ~OE ____ _ LADllS s · I Vi s E ff AD AGENCY Hours. Sat&SW\. manicurists. Richard sales experience would Sunda)' momin"c Must Gas Station Allendant. CampbelL IUS T~a panie · ic. · · unt. G B h A 5AMto7AM Ouellelle Salon. 200 ,.., OCI!.• ~IDE 1 have a little money 41 a For the ultimate in re-Bch. 963-9591. rowmg Newport eac pprox -Newport Center Dr be helpful We offer ex ha,·e lge station wagon. M F' with some exper ~.11 lol of time. Let's bear laxation, Call Relaxa· L t S 9120 9 advert is1n g a genr Y Earnings approx $425 c e 11 en t compan y van or pi ckup truck Gd f time Jmmed. open· Offlce/comm'l. 800-1200 lion Specialist. os : un. · pm, seeks exper accounts per mo Call Bryan N.B. benefits in cluding dr1v1ng record nee in 644 ~-__ _ aq ft. Clolle to 5 Fwy, your ideas. Classified Ad (714)951· .... •9 Himalayan cat, tan w receivable/media hill· Holland 642-4321. Equal 1ir.ya.1y HIW medical . .1--tal. life 111 Work "onsis•r of del1\'er· ba .. _ ...__ l •..,,17..., Sitter 11227. 64.2·4300 24 """" brown face paws & tail · d 0 E lo ~ ll:;ftAo. ""'' • "' General Office n ... , SUU)!!!· ........ ..., bn (Visa & M.C. accepted) "H II .. 'r I . mg clerk a agncy ex· pportun1ty mp yer Movie & TV Cast mg surance. etc Salary ing bundl<'s to Daily Apply only if you can Jlet&il Store . Besl beach · 0 Y • very ragi e penence desired. not es-commensurate with ex· Pilot newspaper car· location in N':;f,'w rt! COSTAMESA Lost&Fo.d 5300 Woodlake Condos , sent1al Xlnt. salary & Serv1ceisseekingrelia-perience PLUS great riers muster working in ••••••••oo•••oo••••oo•• G r e e n f 1 e I d & benefits. Call. Steve BABYSl'IiER Reliable ble, dependable people G d 1 todays construcllon in $'750 Mo. 116 . St. P r e . s c hoo Is . we 11 Mac A r 1 h u r . s . A Christian lady for 18 mos for designer jeans. new commiss10n program II oo start in~ sa ary dustr)' Bldg design of S1 W 673-1401 established. excel loca· Children & parents Koskela Well's Rich. boy East CM 646-4348 faJI fashjons & sportmg you are ambitious and with regular scheduled fice looking for all .ET•• ir••cE tioo.Laod&bldgiocl. fO ADS · R d Green , Town send AM_orev_es. ___ goods Printadv.&com· wanttol><'paidforyour increases around clencal help. -~"' C/21 M.w-rtc.tr. lllJ grieving. ewar · 714·9~·0900 merc1als. By appt only. errorts. please call for Call St rong bookkeeping ~~e H~a~ooN~ 640.5357 '4M2 7 (213)821·3191 Bank mg ( 2 I 3 > 274 7142. 94 24 mlerv1ew Don Williams abilities Accurate l)'p- Beacb. 1,000 to 3,000 sq. DESPERATE OWN ER A1£ fl[( Lost: young M Dobie, red yea LER Dayton Way, Suite 202. ~~~~~~~ ~;·:~~r~-J~: Ing 6().65 min & spelling ft. avail. 714 645-7100. must sell Continental l'..U... & tan. no questions Accounting Jl9Aoo Be\'erly Hills. OR• u~I!. CO •ST No s mokers Salar y R F I wa; REW A RD 831 5479 llUING CLBJC IOl'UIVEEDIUG "'"vs; "" ----commemurate with exp. CothlMtM estauranl. antast c 64~5'71 · · --Irvine ad agency needs ro1itioa illlllltd ••aH * """m-" DAILY PILOT DIMTAL Call Dorothy9S1-1234 Share for leas. Approx SlelalOseOOO.· great terms. Found. 5 mo old Male gd. billing clerk. Must f 10 key b y touch 330W B S E ho ..,,.., il 11 , tigerstnppedcat.Green h• Mwpt lch or Diversified experience . ay l. xper ort ass1stan1 GENERAL OfflCE ....., ava a or part. Bkr 843-0709 WANT ACTION? eyes. Vic Pacific Ave have bkpg background, Cllf"ffr o.ial•d iitdi• nec. lnterestingwork. m· Cost.a Mesa for full·t1me pos1t1on. Full·l1me permanent Buay Shopping Center. · Clusifed AdsM2-~ 646-6707 be verulile. accurate, / • llt 111 b __ EOE/MF Xlnt salary & benefits. employment for am Retail sales offices or ! Want Ad Help'> SU-5678 nex1ble & detail minded. w prior HP9r a ~ teGoodut accurate t~p. CLERICAL p~JON ~ 1405_ __ _ bilious person. 40 hr C II A .. ·"' 1"• u Aft Found: very old Siamese 10 k b tou h & gd bo"k or sa•hln• & mg. opportunity ""'' a •ICJ wun or er ey Y c · ,.. with fast growing food P/time Please call D.....,.... wk., some nights & 2P)(.M2-9400 F. vie. Pac. Cst Hwy & typing skills req'd Will '°°"· 631_.,..,•C.M. '"'._ Saturdays. Vanous of Ground Floor, 600 sq.ft. Superior. 61~1LS5 tralllnbeon f~CRC395 MEX· company. Costa Mesa ,.7:.1( Wanted mature en· f1ce duties. ApflY in tollet,ca~.close in ~ "REWARD" Lost Imp. ce. ne1t.s. all rs. We ofhr tlae HC• area.Ms.2444. .__ thusiastic woman for person Jewe s by 1731AnaheimCMS295 Q 'l:f}At. box Tax papers L-1-81 Brecke,752·6171 u11M CllPllk.t xW BOOKK EEPERA/R 711, llpm-7am. Wed , pos ition of office Joseph.So.Coast Plaza C -1..1 Harbour Bay, CM. Call we199s &" t:.e.fltt CK Irvine company has im-Thurs. Fri. S4 thr. 675 Mgr/fifronaltldesk~"'~lot J;L. 1 • 1"'-• • 4475 642·5726 ACC0"""5 REC .,.. CK l"OOM for ad-mediate opening for Pa u I a r in o . C M bene its c 548-........ ..... \A/~. .---&.. 5350 c• -C person with Cull cha rge 751-4652. Class1f1ed Ads. your one· Find what you want in ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• VY(;tnt-fo TLUI ••==•••••••••••"• Hospital ~rate or ••"celllMtlfto ~~:: exp. to handle AIR & re· Clerk Typist. stop shopping center. Daily Pilot Cluslrieds. XW~Loc. ~ ..A b·J. J.,...A1J. EXECUTIVE fice . Fanuliar with col • ftOW ~· lated duties. Musttype & Fullorpart·Ume ·~ ~ On Balboa Peninaiila, all Vf, ~ ~ (/UITl I lection procedures, in· posslblltift. operate 10 key by touch. ~9603 foot and •IM traffic to I,,,.. L: J.., ,. :J. tllJE surance co & self paid Gd. co benefits, salary College Professor. needs ' IMlalbolFerT)'puses r~V&ii~1v~1 * M * accounts. Call : Irene Applcotiolllbeillgoc· negotiable with exp. reliablecbildcarerorln-1 illfto11l!Orutplaeeror b Z4 Hour&C;CORTS RulL&40.ll950 uphd W... IOA~ Call:754-li31or sendre· fanl. Your home or book •tore. art lhop, or. 11-tfe phlte 7 '53-llU -MC /!isa 3PM col sume alt: Wayne Dem· mine. Beachwalk area. f lee, etc. 673·2943, -1 For', .... 1 ··~· red•·-''on AMIMALHOSrtTAL 17141 ing Controller. Charles 714.895-3878 11a.ano. ~ ""=«> """ Part/time Va rious E. Smith Company, P.O. -'-"~----~----. MWnBICSTIS & relantion massage. duties. Open 1 days. 631-9205 Box 19129 Irvine. ca. Cook. Needed for Pvt A limited ·number of Steve 10-8,548-21117 Newport Beach. 64-t·5463 92713. ~;:~1.5 hrs per day. wpedall.led office auitee CITIZENS Cooll for HB pre srhool areavail.foraubleaM ,,,,.,,,,~ ._t"MtCDllf•Y lt~nmlfD FID S"Yl .... GS & CASlllEIS hn9-IM·F'3.35perhr. llloeeolNewport'•moat Use serv1·ce Escorts "'-NUWDLU "' " c nP u 9flO.f?88 eulmive olc. com\)Sex· 24Hra. '41-0l80 ELECTRO MECH. LOAN -=-8=---"'a.-.....Y="--=-=-'--- •· Quiet, bandloa)eltt· when placing your ad ... a c~,.L--L. Electronics co. In 3300W.CstHwy,MI u TDTI M~ ................. I •'-• ~ ..... it.a D · 1 P' I ~ Laguna Beach needl an COPY CL.Ilk · -JOW' co . ..-a1 Y I Ot ad number Will AM /MC/VM E/M auembler with Im med. o-ind for Frr bell root (orward. Call: • EOE&MFH Dlll'~ ........ ~ Senbe lnc. appear In your Classified ad aolderlna le E/M IS· MA...-u:> position. Variety of •t (71,)975·07'0 for • we take your messages SOPHK'TM'ATED sembly ex.pet. Requires For 2nd.UrdShlfu dutle$ Incl. waiting on ' ~ Nlllll gd. manual dexterity. St1rtin1l4upto$UO. c1.11tomen. copyin1. col 24 hours a day ... you cal I I llW Ability to UH basic test We promote to manage lat1n1. bindin1 ' bot llAmW.ON AMiii ..... S..ee 6 1q1•pmnt. "Puf17 ........ ,,.,,.....w.. :\,, Ofter UL Lii.i. Act. .• 1'twlllCUl,b1lllO. in at your convenience r.sco~.'24 Ha :'~:.?.'\.!~::':'bi~ kno~'~rou :i:~~auperv\sion frorr ~~:~~~-o_c Airport during Office hOUrS and get plu,t. U$t resull·gettlng Dal\)' WANTACAREER! ••••••••••u•o• th t ...... W ........... al Pilot Classlntd Ads to Co&ta Mesa C o u n t e r h e I p , , e resPonses 0 your au • • • t7 l..OJ42 We olferexc.U. pay and reach the Oran~e Coast mw. WillonSt. dryclunera, IO·Spm, I this service is only $7 .SO c.wtORCJfEC& ~D~~~U:.wm man~~one64M678 631·_. 0 111n . w 111 train. I KIDS- SUMMER JOBS. ... week. For more ioforma-............... eo. i. 2 m1. rrom.Coatt wrwia Beach ~7,,..*;...::990=1''------- tion and to place your ad '1:C:P :;~: .. •ml.from~• •9233 A•~=e'!~etlc ca II 642-5678. by AMANDA 'JOit moted tmo town! . Hunlinlto\ Beuh M/F needed tmlMdi•~ PRE£QUG110N Pleuecallfouppt. Tben aet :=l•tecl IGtU6 lyforfullorp/Umepotl· ANSWIUD BY PtflClmel Dept. with tile 0 -' Ml. UoD. No ~per. eec. Wt PIDfl TILONJC Bm1L£Y 1't1're die_.. ••1 PttiCWI Dept. wiD train. CaD 9tln ll CALLm.GNOWI m.-.-&O.I . loftldJ•lllet-.aod m... Honey Baked Rama: • • •••-•H•u••• • Hnk!I J!l ..... I fl>M, Earn $30-$60 P4I' week. Trips & Prizes. C. ..-. Clmceltt6M6tt\ .• I I l ' 1 Ortnoe Coast DAILY Pl'°'OT fNedneday. September 23. 1981 5011 it c\li and put cash in yOur P.OCket! L DAY WEEK 8 l)ays 3 Lines 8 Dollars 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 ~call today 642·5678 n. rww Dally Piiot 8·Day Week It's a Classified PLUS ~!!~ ..... ?!!C! ~!!~ ..... !!!!~~!~~ ..... !!~. ~~!~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~~ ..... !!~ ~~~ ..... !!~ ~~~ ..... !!.~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~ .. ~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~ ...... 1!4.~ General JAICTOR MAHAGS PIX HCrnONtST IECB'llONIST SECllTAIY SERVICE STATION A1'-Waitress wanted. durncr I IUY Al'ft.I ALlllA Newport Villa. 400~ forboatrent.aloperation lmmediateopeningsfor for lawomce. must be Sa.ifs ~ 85WPM.Mustberelia-TENDANT,p/Umetve11 house Exper nee tall Les 95 33 1111,ariaWay,N.B ~too in Hunt Harbor alert personforrece"-intelllgeot, congenial. Prof.S.lfll~ ble "a ccept &i wltends Neat ap between 9am 12 L f g"d te'!IO:st fn 1·3:nwn 642-5861 Knowledge sathng & ,,. d"l' l th gd t -Marketing Rell6. o seU responsibility. For atty c:iarance i, handwril· 613-4848. --fareregc SIIJ., iGad1 r=·" . a Let Volt Temporary lion desk. Must have gd 11gen WI yp1111 a product ... ~tis wanted I """"' N olU .. Services Mftd you on a Janitorial boat maintlrepair nee., s peaking vo Ice & skills. Great opp'ly to & needed b;':veryone OC Airport area 97S.OCT77 at'"l~PJ _,., ewport WARRANTY 1SERVICE cond. 841>-MSl or 5361 Hawaiian boliday. En-lmmediateopeningfor outboard eng. repair clerical ski.lb. Need so break into the legal Eirntng potential. SECIEIAIY v · · · I rv1ne Engine dis 20 ;-u ft Side by~" e. joy a weell ot sun, sand f u 11 and part t 1 m e1M!l?Jul. (213lZ'll 2677. meooe who Is willm~o secret aria I g u i Id •• hr. 1 dln Service station atten· tributor bas l~m ed frost free Frig a e Janitors · ex.-..r'd only k & full » 0 •1 "'"l .-.O.~-.i.OOO lntemahoo.a tra g co. d t f 11 U I o,,..n•"g for expenen~ed andsurflt ourupen.se. · ' ,... Matwe~Msw~! wor .. me. · "' . ...,.. · •Co.Training looking for sharp an· u me, appy ""'"' ' Coppertone. U 0 . ..,Am• 111· •--'-y 'or de· ApplyinpersonatSpon E ._ tact: Mrs.Hauser. ~--...IST Q ·"''ed'· ds Choron 1251 No. Coast warranty processor 642.~1 1, """' ~ ..,.... ' Chalet 16242 Beach Blvd, •• arn between ~.50 & R"'"...-.. _... • UAJUI '"""' Secretary. ~/yrs ex· Hw La una b Wlll process warranty ~~J..! ~ tails and eligiWity re-Hunt&niton Beach ..... oo an hr Work run or Grow i o g cum pule r • High Income perience. Accurate typ-claims & servi~ work Refr1ger11wr as ne\Y, ~e- quiremeots. Tbe least -part time Naugles software house seeking LIQUIDYHl 1ng, s horthand or Sewing marh operator orders including related luxe Gt: 20.8 cu ~~o you eould walk away JAHfTOI D r 1 v e th r o u g h sharp person for Recep-EHB~Y SYSTEMS speedwriting necessary. needed for gilder mfg correspandence. tele. frost. power-saver.inti w1lh is a job. Long and Raleigh Hills Hospt m restaurant We are cur· tion1st & multiple Al :1i4-00lll ~'154.~ Xlnt benefits, dental =&6_s:~~~~ sys. follow up & customer 1n warranty fU.S 1bort tenn wigrunents. Newport Beach has an re n t I y s e e k i n g general otrice duties plan. Close to O.C 547.:11114 billings Must type & Balboa &i>971S _._. _ 1mmed openuig for a homemakers. senior Must demonstraU! good Sal 1 di h" h Airport. Call Norma· operate 10 ke' NewThermidor4~"Jlass NEYRA FIE Janitor. Monday-Fnday, c1tnens. & retirees who r--. typ111g & . phone skills: ra:ro'nn:·re~ N¢. ~~h (714)833-8970. LAP /SHIPPING DEPT ca 1cu1 a tor. Gd co cook top wlgridtO& & YIT day shift. Xlnl fringe cnjoyworkingwithpeo-AdMWstrator Apply 111 per son . area. Salary+ good SECRETARY/Recept lmmed. openiAgs for benefits.salarynegolla broilcr,MdlDGT~Ye benefits pkg for in · ple,servingtopquality Experienced pension Mun son Mg_mt. benefits.Call64-4·7100_ Airport law finn Cd. M/F lapng mac h ble with exp Call tail S700 Sell lf50 Temporary Services lerv1ew call Joshua food No up nee Weare plan Administrator Systems. 350 E. Fischer 1k1lls, bright self· opertrs & shpog dept 754-1931 or send resume ~041~ __ :__ Whiskey (714164>571>7 anx1oust.otratnyou' Ap-needed by fa.st growlllg Ave.C.M. SALES starter Noo -smkr will train Gd . co alt WayneDemmgCon Refrii.: s1115 WlJa.luu·. 546-4141 38-48 CamJX.L' Dr Newport Beach Across from OC Airport E.O.E. MiF ply in person Tues, Irvine Co. Position RECEPTIONIST Progressi'Ve company Josie,851-9025 benefits. Call. Dellronil· troller Charh.'l> E Smith dryer.' i:as range~ J " ... ITOR Wed . & lhur. IOAM lo available immediately Irvine Mfg Firm needs needs profes:11onal peo-SIU'IETAIY Corp.CM Com pan). P lJ Hux hwas hcr Sl2S~ ~ 4PM No telephone in· Smokers need nol apply. receptionist for front or pie to sell 1m printed """ S ~0413 19129 Jn in~ Ca 92713 646 58-!8 lmmed opening for a qumes Ca11Barbara857l204 f1ce . Will assist with sportswear. We furnish Type 55 wpm , /H SIGNSAL~PERSON Janitor lo work ru11 H..,i.s marketing & ad-pre-qualified leads, helpful._gd phone NeiUNeonlot, X-Ray PortabJedi.shwasher,llke I time. MO!l<iKy lhru Fri 2956 lriltolCM. Security Personnel. 40 hr min1strative duties. large commisslOf\S, 90~ personality, bkkPj: REGISTStEO new s2oo ' Equa OppEmployer day, 9PM to.6AM shift Mfft :rte6~01S4i:w~o ~h~n: Must type 45-SS wpm, re-orders Professional lm?wledge req. for R.E. __gl·l;t7_4_ X·RAYTtCH 76().~ Excell fnnge benefits Call 549 4464 for in· management training office Ill Lagwia Hills Stock clerk Frr 4 day Experience re~um•d Washer dryer. Fniimtte GllL ... AY Retail decorating shop. To open & clolie store. 9·5. Will handle customers & phone ' salespersons abseMe. Design & constt u.{'l shades, also some re- cord keepinc. Will tram. Custom Sbade It Drapery Shop, ~ E. Coast Hwy, CdM. 173-1830. package. For interview. Mec hanic's helper Mon-Fn. tervie~ ___ seminar provided. ]70-9513. work wk Knowledge of Salary ne ~ot1able Top Of"The Line."'llh call. Scot\ Wh eeler. needed with some ex per ,EST COMTIOL Ch f d y boating hardware de· Newµort Bea<·h Are:i new S4oo 552·]115 liz 714·975·'1700. or come m Some tools. 644-24.!Q,_ frl'LAllCI ..... RECEPTIONIST a nee or a vance-SECHTAI s1rable apply in person Med I om Se d Ad v an .. e d He a Ith ~ """" Am bilious. pleasanl ment 77<Mial2. for elec. contractor. Lancer Yacht Corp. 1939 ~cat Clice r nd red l lcyclei 0 , Medical Assistant. Back Leading pest control personality w/some lyp-S L"-"'-.r,.... Geo ofc AIR AIP D A I . C sum.-"· asst le a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Center. LJOO Bnstol St office exp for busy company needs route . & hea nhnn I A IO.W"!gl~vn • • • • eere ve. rvine, a #704 , Daily Pilot P 0 BMX Hlkei; S2SO Al $325 North. Suite too, Npt Lk a 0 guna Office. Must technician for stead•· lllg skills vy r:-.. e For lovely children's payroll, billing, ex per. Experienced stock room Box 1560. Co!ita Mesa CA S4SO for both Bch.EOEMIF o w EKG & J"ob Entrylevelnnc1t1ori' e,xper. l~~~~anielsonl store Retail exp. pref wB /contracdtor pr~f. & parts counter person 92626 ~73 444_1 Venapuncture.496-2636 We train, no";;~per. Assoc . .,..,,.,._, Fulltime Petite e1nefits.Cgll sftartmg f l T pos1twn 17 14 ) .. -~-u -~ L£GA1 IECEl'T /SEC "Y Small N.B. Law firm 1s seeking a fneodly de Governess type .. lure penda ble 1nd1v1dual woman tocareforcblld. Must have min. 1 yr Will Consider live in or legal ex per. 548-2283. out muat speak Ena.li31L Legal Secretary wlexp 111 5"-ltU Civil lit & Family L:iw Send resume & Salary HAtlSmJST req. Geller & Martin Some following. Friend· 1800 Dovesu 135 __ ly atmosphere. John Liquor Store. Stocking & ... K .. 1e=11=t=S=a=lon~: 642-'-=-=6Z\2=.'---C a s h Re g 1 s t e r e x HAii SmtST penence ne<'cssary . MAMICUllST iwer 18. Apply lielween 3 Orange County's ,1 & 8 weekdays. 1888 Salon needs you. Placentia, Costa Mesa. RIVE GAUCHE SALON 540-8117 HOUSICLf>MBS to wor k for Janice's Raggedy Anns, 4/days week, 8-4pn. 67~?:5¥· HOUSEKEEPER. live- in , sta hie-mature for father/l child. Refs req. IJG.5411 Houselteeper/live-1n &. help ca re for active S yr old in lovely Irvine home call: 835-341% Housekeeper. live-111. for senior citlz.en. La Habra area. Must drive. (7141 LOAN PlOCESSOI Local Newport Beach Savings & Loan has 1m· mediate opening for a loan rrocessor. Conven liona Real Estate loan experience required BUSY OFYICE. Salary commensu.rate with ex- perience. Full tnSurance benefits & paid career apparel. Please rail Ms. Denny Parisia 714-645-6.505 Newport Balboa Sav111gs 1100 Jrvu1e A ,.e Newport Beach MIFEO.E. 675-6760 eves & wk ends. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!19 INSTALLER: Qualified Looking for lllteresting individual needed to in· part time JOb Typlllg. st a 11 Exec u tone no shorthand required Telephone System. Top 20 hrs. per week includes pay. Chuck Perry. weekends Office on 714/956-12.llt Coast ~646-7431 INSURA NCE-Stal e Manager Traditional Farm, Ftn Vly, needs Women's Boutique staff help. Xlnt benefits. Must be experienced 111 942.7435 all phases Send resume Ironing i;ierson to iron to Ad ll 7<l>. Daily Pilot. clothes m your home. P.O. Box 1560. Cost:i Must be uper, have _Me~ 92626-t'660, Ca ref's 675-4125 , 8-S~anager1secretary for wkdys. one girl medical office Typing important Classified Ads are the Medical office exp. de· answer to a succa&ful 11rable, but not essen· garage or yanhale! It's tial. Salary open. Send a better waytoteUmore resume to· P.O. Box -le! 2159 Mission Viejo, Ca 9291(). Daily Pilat ··· · · · · · · · · -..., . . Sales fralnee For District Manager nus hlillJy successful local_ newspaper has an opening for a tc.amee m the circulation department. Basic skills will entail supervision of 10 to 14 year old boy and gir l home delivery carriers. Areu of supervision will be delivery, collections and sale.s Recepliomst needed w1 Marche. We s tport u ary. a or ap 1S4 -1924 Charl ie re,__ Beau t'u~tom bitllt MEDICALFRONTOFC necessary Call Tim some typing to work for Square, ll9 E 17th St.. p't /r esume. 642-3482 Thompson ....................... Cruiser 15 sp(j Front Fam practice, exper, ins 979·6021between9-12. glider mfg SA /Tustin ~~ 542.4714. Kathy. . -A11tlqw1 8005 and rear drum braJes. bilhng. collections & typ-Plastics wood and metal _!rea. Call 547-3884 s~•r9••y Bu1ld1og maintenance ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must see $750 968-764l in g 4 11 d Y s wk fabr1cai100 Pay accord-"'"iu;'-superMvisor.hSl,8005 per Eary Americana htho BEACH CRUlSE R ~ Benefits Lo\el). area Ulg to exper Full lime RECEPT/TELEX SAL.l!S"/TIME qualified secretary, Mis-mo. ust ave yrs graphic pnnts S20-S35 . b·~ d Nr John Wayne Au·port. 641-8400 F a s l g r o w 1 n g The Los Angeles Times s 1 on Viejo are a · exp. Supervise remodel ea World War 2 posterl> ray Monterey tan. ran 955-2022 Pre-School Teachers pharmaceutical co Circulation Dept. cur-Sl0!19/mo.Til>-4al!I_. __ ing of apts for 'rental SJ.0$S t>a Wall Sile maJ)l> new Si~ 11458748 m,rns M seeks exper individual reotly has positions s1UO•r9•111y and resale. oversee SJ•· nd "-'•1032 aft·•r •, i\nn EOICAl. ASSIST wanted. Certi.fied & ex-~"'"'""" f d ..., • .,.... ' ' Front &. back, pillme per 21, & 41yr olds to greet visitors available 111 sales as a Newport Beach law of· maintenanrc o bl ngs. PM 8eachCnai~r EKG ·s. Venapuncture. Newport Beach. Call Operate telephone pulse representative You'll rice Word processmg, ~tr~~[ n::!~Pi~lysees1~n ~uble sided. small anti 5100. 642-4606 !l'.{>in& 64>1720 640·8820 Ask for Susan system, Telex & tele earn an hourly wage + w i II train Caryn : thei· r duties. see that que oak desk From old Lad1l's Peugeot 10 speed. I copier. 2/yrs ex per. with generous commissions. 644-Ml6. b k Id l f s Medical or~h!!I)' --good front oHice ap· Call957·2J6l.ext 1204 landscaping 1s mam an 1 ea or t"in e\iellcml lOO Ch 1 ro pra ct 1 c As st P1t1me. 7 days. 2 hrs dai-pearanre Call Sandy for ta1ried. Take ad lo any children.I $650, 1140-5443 552 Tll.5 .....__ Recept1on1st. Beaut ly AM delivery, L.A. mterview (7141642-7511, ••SECHTAllE.S•• Stateemploymentoffice aft~r 7pm wkdy ' \lrn~IOsp.«Jl:lnllshlm· busy office Good ap· Times. SIOO/wk . Laguna ext 10. SALES RETAIL Type60SlB.OOO in Orange C-Ounty. DOT ..11.!!Ylime wknds port Like newS125 • pearance, healthy, en _Beach 494-8496. Restaurant Feminine attire Fun Xerox8S0/3(1irS7 sc»i.r 899 381-010 Ad paid for Antique armo1re ~olld 552 iil.5 thus1as11c, lmo""'ledge of ,m MEEVEHIMGS HOSTESS store. must be sales Recpt/1'50/FimSl0,200 ~employer oak, be\'eled mirror. B llcf ~oh•025 ms b1lhng. peg board C ...._ Fl. d 1 d oriented. FT PT Open ExpConsultantOurs TEACHER Infant $200080 S48 5103mom .~ ••• ~.~••••••••••·U ••• computer very helpful ~ lime ays, app Y ai· mgs in au loeauons. No Liz Reinders Af,y, Inc. Development Program. Antique Secretan Oe~k REDWOOD 21.S Great t'areer potential YotdttCcrrien ly bet.,...een 3·5pm phone calls Apply at •"""B" ch"'•t'"•EOE . b f S200 • ~all 631 5E64 Adults with <>Ul3tandmg Coco's Famous Ham· Back Street. Fashion N:;' 1~1833'.'aoo/Free P It 1 ~.~ Mhnem er 0 &l2 5872 4' to 20 l<K1i;! Xlnt 4tck --i r b u r g e r s ' 4 6 4 7 lsland -----... po trans..,,,cip ary team -. 1ng f'n•,h load arriving MEDICAL SEC'Y attract ve persona Illes MacArthur Blvd, N.B. Special Ed. important New porter Inn Monthly w~ekl' Sa'" al -lft . who enJOY wor1ong wrth -Sec t Legal. Xlnt skills J k" p <•" 5760 ...... ' • ...,. Fountain V_alley M.D. 1().15 year old youths. Retail req. 80 WPM Sal Neg. flUIRELATIOHSSEC ac ie opp,....... A"1l~E J1m.&1b!ll85anyt1me needs expenen<;e<S fro~t Evenings 6-9 p.m Call ASSISTANT Sol lne 673-9201 For OC ad agency. Exp. TUCHEl-DAYCAR.E SH Alum ~lidin.I( ld:is:. ~me; decepoonss~se~> 642 -4321 , ext 343 MAHAGB ~c r requtred. Excellent typ-4 :30-6:~m.M F SU ... D YSEPT 27 door~ 11 w frame, f75 or ays pr w . e-between 2 p.m. and 5 Fully experienced in SECHTARY lngsk1lls.979-7000 --SJ.50/hr.642-0411 " A ' 5 II-" trtim('. ,•1s· quires excellent cle~cal p.m. Ask for Andrea 2 person office. pvt com-Planning firm lookmg for ----I 0-4 ~5 >15:1:..i 7 & vmtten commun1ca-p F ~ quality women's ap-mumly 111South Laguna bright secretary to han-TH.B'HOHE 11cn Jamboree Rd .~ B lion sk1lls. Apply CSA /lim e to /lime . parel Please call Flt1me, typing, bltkpg. SOUCITORS F dk f' ~ 8983 Com~ros& Inc 17601 E 17th St. Housew1fel_studenl t710SSHi080 or apply Ill filing Stert immed. die vaned office work Need 15 immediately lo _br~ in a1'21 6· Equipment 8030 T u' 1 1 n 0 r c a 1 1 needed for hte office person: Mr. Elliott's, Swede 499-4567 Gd. benefits, typ11111 and k 2 rass twin ,,.., s tor I .................. ~ .. . 7141838.8000 E 0 E work . typmg, filing, gd s .C. Plaz.a. shorthand a must Sat. hwor eGasy efve n1ng kin g 1 Ha vllo1nd fine (;<1no.n .'ii IXL s ~d --· --· -phone voice Self· slU'm••y negotiable. Call 8·5 ours. reat or s tu-china . 81 Ill' 5800 . ... 0 M"'S"'~,,. RdollSdn'enoe """ """ 64 8820 N w hi dents. J.9. Mon-Fri No 968•7..... mo\lt-«im.,ra. so ~!gl starter 851'8393· 4000 Ht-Fashion discount TOPltESIOEMT I· · ancy 8 ·-selling Call 966-0151 -..-_ ElmvST l200HDHr.tck Full lime Ill Costa Mesa Mac Arthur Blvd , Ste store. Full & Part·llme S• Jw C-'-trano Secretary after lpm I Oak Curio cab, "1SO. Fr sound 11 ro J , $~30 area Calif drivers 3000, N.B. H "'r". BORED?. -· --wall clock, S22S P1tc~r 55111"' r ood d · avail Sat-Tues 11 ·6. elp busy executive run ·~ icense. g nvm& re· REALESTAn Wed-Fri 11·8 show Good people skills Telephone ~shbasinS75,63l 5919 Kon1<"J I'< SLR. 3 lenses. cord,oc!t~~ary SALES 64&-7835 needed for interaction Workthehouni PHOMEretSOH ,AppiGftces 8010 man~ t•\tras $400 1oamtolpm Thisisour36lhyearseU-RETIREE for beach w1lh multi-branch of. YOUwant ! f /time phone person!'••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 55!J 582le~es - _556-00iO ing f ine Southern k · I t fices. Good ofhce and needed lo call & set HARBORAREA Cots 8035 --California homes f7 ~4 {846.~4~4~ 846~8086 secretarialskills. Beap-We are in desperate app'ts for busy Solar APPLIANCESERVICE •••••••••••••••••¥•••• MTODELSDo)/E5£?!?' 1 S Perhaps you would en· eves. prec1ated_ .. ~~ yob~lit.dees needofsecretanesl with Energy Co k .SOlhr + Wewbu) usedU apdpllaocei. Kitten~ .Cl"A. top ~al.. _ op u'ars......-_.,.,_,_ JOY )Oinmg a f1nn active cis1on milllWg a 1 1 · or without shorthand, bonus. Ask for Al . -~ se reron ·· guar Burm.·.,e.2 Hamal an. Models needed. All types. in luxury residential SALES CLEll-letoll Call Mrs. H11ger661·1211 who type at least 50 Ll'tMJIDYHE yehanc~ 54V077 4. S1am~·~l'. 4. s100. 0. ~en. women & children. areas such as Big Ca-Office supply company NO~ --wpm IEHBGY SYSTEMS New Thenrudor 45 • glasi. I nq in' 1ted Terms. NoexJ.>net.~77~ nyon, Spyglass Hill. bas full lune positions Secretary, 754·0581 7540535 coo k top w grid 548-858i Irvine Terrace. Linda available Will tram. Bookeeper for woman Please call or come by dle1bro1.ler, model DGT Himalayan Kitten~.:~FA. MUISE l.sle,elc. NewportStalloners,lnc. designer. Advertiiing foraninterview. Tr.a-..-...r. 45.reta11S700SellS450 ~ranil l:hamp ~nes. RN or LYN . p/timeil If you are presently ac-557·9212, Mr. Emmons exp helpful. Varied resp 1 a.mrnvnw: 640.4150_ raised on lo\'e SISQ,$200 pm 's & rug.hls in sma uve m real estate sales r""' a self startmg. quick IVICKI HESTON SOUCITORS al hos Abo ~.. Magic Chef Micro WaH' 838 2ii6 pvt conv . p. ve do you have immediate su mr th 1n111 n g mature S6.00 per hr Evenings Gas range combo. s c p k s21V! 3 averagestartingsalary & unlimited access to ~ woman.631-46(17 &ASSOCIATES and weekends. Call oven $400 Wuste King ers1an illen uu, Apply at The Gardens, the president or your COMMBCIAl I .E. <Specialists in _Mike 964-lHO _Dishwasher SlJO 645-3164 adul~ S,<,11 to SIOO,,l,teg 450 Glenoeyre. L.B company,orisbeh1dden Tiredofsellinghouses7 Temporary 5469'..lG~ ..--- 494·sa75. away 10 an ivory tower days a week? We need SECIETAIT Clerical Pe"""'""'ll Tra~el A-y Mnr. Washtr and dryer gd D ·-40 one licensee t.o learn the 0_......,,.....,& ..... or '""'""" N.B. bas5·-;hole~s0ale cond. S6Sea misc items ocp ,,.., Nursing R.N.-Assistant removed from lhe scene. ..-__ .... .,.. •••••••••••••••••'"!~·· D.N.S. Work 3 weekends Our president is availa-skills to manage, broker P<YITER & 5 4()..0400 tour Co. needs quahfied 646 4'178 K EESllOND rups l'.1'..C a month only We need ble. Do you oeed addi-commercial real estate. BRUMFIELD Div person t.o manage ticket· 2 Dishwashers. port Champ ~Ir\' M f P'~t & your expertise on the tional training to help Income from mg mt AMF, IMC. mg/consumer div151on. wood tops, $200 & ~o , h 0 " p, 1 PJ y weekends. Bring you're you increase your earn-while you learn. Super Has an opening on our 18004 Skypar1t Blvd. Must be ramiliar with OBO. 960J5_71 .in ipm 213 6!1i l:J:IS aft 6.J!.ln. ha pp y race & 111gs"' benefits : life insurance: West Coast Regional Ste.~lrvine ATC /IATA computer 2 Pair GE washer .. & knowledge. Join us. Con-Experienced or inex-health insurance & den· Sa I es 0 f c f o r a systems. Xlnt salary & dryers, S!OO & ~o pd1r FlEA PlOlllt!f7 valescentH0&pt. Beach periencedyoumayweU tal plan. Contact Ken. secretary /order SECIETAIYllE. benefits. Call Diane, ~allan 71 950-gs14 Pf.ST fREE_~_(e e area Mrs . Slone profit from our color 675-6700. coordinator Must have Secretarial pos1t1on in Mon, Wed . & Fri.. Litton Comma top eler tron11·Jll) r1dsJour 642-8044 video tape listing & sales proven ability lo deal active Newport C~nter lO:~pm, 752·0788. " home C\I all craw • .,,g & ~~~------i lrainin& program which w/outsidecoot.act&.type Reali.Or's office. Front -stove w /mic row :n~ f I) 1 n I! 1 n s er ls Nu.rslng we feel is the finest SALIS ~ + WPM. Previous U · office Pollition requires TYPIST-P /T above. asking S600 cash permoneotly 63S·80211 MUISESAJDE a\'ailable. Localbomecenterneeds per preferred. but nol good telephone voice. WESTCLlff 642-4097 846-6914alte~--_collect M_ Ex per'd • all shifts We a~ not a francluse. kitchen cabinets " ap· nee For appt. call Gale l y ping. SH & a p · TYPIST: Accurate. 35 Gaffers & Sattler Elegant Adora tile Bloodboutld. F. Conv. hospt. Npt. Bch. branch or subsidiary-pUancesalesperson. Ex-at pearance. Real estate wpm, general office fas stove. dble oven. 9wks.AKC.ml 1.111 Bring your smile & join just headquarters. perleoce absolutely 17141493-4503 experience helpful but ~utles. 549<1W2 -~rlect ~8532 494-54116 771>-l~ us' Free mjr. med .• den· We have openings for a necessary Great opp'ty 26131-D not esse_ntial. Prefer TVMST GAS RANGE Blue, clean IS1b Huskv pups iKC tal & hfe ms. Top salary. f w h ghl otivated local resident for in· '""' 30" th ddl Sl2S '· • • · Call · Mrs Slone. e • .. .!."'::a d for right person.Call AvenidoAeropuerto le 1 callM. Duhl Good salary to start w1 gn e iclntmarkmgs.SI :"Pvt 642-8/U4 persons .. .., ve a e-Brenda:sa&SOOO. E.0 .E. rvew n . .· Full time JO. b For in· 548·6102 -part~53&-;HSS~•L ~~.,...o..:------i sire to be more suc-WHltyM. T,-&-Co Se K f f • cessful. For an in· • .,_.. • terviewscall. an enmore rost-ree Adorablr Lhasa ':tJpsa flart·lillMoffiu. terview appointment Sates Secretary/ receptionist lteltort 644-4910 548-2271 refng, LS cu ft, runs pup p 1 es. '* ~ c . . Selecteil applicant will recei\'e hbersl startlng salary, regularly scheduled raises, bonus opportunities and many fringe bentflt.s such as company paid dental and health plan. group life wurant.'e, vacation and sick leave. Co~pany vehicle is furnished dunng working boun. Type. file. 1nswer with the sole owner & MEWDISCOVBY challenging opportunity SKyllillmr TYPIST / RECEP -~st,S_l.50!11}.3-646_1 _ 714 84Q1Q77after L phones Hrs flexible founder. call Wesley N. Opens door to unlimited with busy Laguna Hills Heavy phOOes. Accurate TIONIST P.R &. fwid de-New refngerator frost St Bernard. l~ yrs. t. . I • .. Applicants must be over 18, have a good drivine record and be neat appearinc. Hours are generally u AM to 9 PM, Monda)' lhru Friday. Some overtime is available. ll you are qualified and interested in learning the circulation bu11ness contact the Daily Piiot at 300 W. Bay, Costa Mes.a belore 10:30 AM or after 2 PM dally. Ask f« Don Williams or Ken Goddard. Umlted opentn1s 1vatla(ble in the Or•l\le Coi1t area. for tel ·motivatA!d. CMHr oriented individual who can wort wtUI fielcl Sales People. Train. motivate and 1et results. Station w•aon or vu 11ed 11ary. Exceptional ""'IAD. plu Jo~ related benefits IVlilable tor tll9 :Jilht people. If you can~ nillltl, ~just talk about lt. call: .._. ftr lat.rvlew. Aall for Mr.awtce. Call Nanc 754-6841. Taylor income for you ! The Law office. Top pay, typing, shorthand velopmtnl dept. less. cross top freezer, female, AKC. goed•w WelltRyM. TcrvtorCo. answertostress•stms benefits.~. belpful.S8SOmotostart. Personable, organ1ted color while $875 kids SlOO 645.2335 f1AIT11MI ."EALTo'RS induced ill health. It is Secretary, full time, 6 1-tlH self-starter. ya,r1ed 673-4424 MUST SELLAK©'~g. Person to deliver Daily 2 lll San Joaquin Hills being used by NASA, the w Icons ide r PI time. r es po n s I b i l tt 1 es Electric Stove· 30", dou· fawn boxer 18 mo.'lbest PilotautoroutelnSouth NewportBeach Swedish. Japanese & must have good skills. SEC:t"Y UGAL SS /65wpm. Excell ble O\•eo. self clean. bl~hne Wl.53N10'7 Lagun• area. 7 days per 6 910 Russians to handle au Will train on Vector Eltab. N Center law benerrts Ii oppty. to 1d-gold. Like new. Si50 week. ---=-.:...:.....:..:.."--=---1 kinds of stress. Now Graphics. Apply in firm n ex.per legal vance. Santa Ana area. 983-3395 /\KC Irish Setter ~ps. Hou-·. M-'"'ru Fri. I~'...._ available in t he US. rrson W M Executive secretarv w/-...1 tY"' 544-5780 . show or pet, all~ts, ·~ ., .... , -_-:-r'f~ S •~ ...__,_ t , •"""' ,.. Refrigerator. very clean. wonned. 12 wks#~dv Approx3:30to5:30PM for CPA office. Im· a!Cllareuuuw.Wg,mus ow Inc ., 3901 ing, dictapbone & -T autodefrostSl.50. to go Sl00.3!110.: h. Houn: Se.t Ii sun. Ap-mediate opening . expand, need dis· MacA rthur Blvd. Ste shorthand skilll. Real • uu 893-9060 prox SAM to 7AM. Earn dt·26S6 tribQl.ors. Be the rust to 211. Newport Beach Estate liti.ption w/em· Statistical with word ---House D C.M. a ime approii. s.us per mo. Rece~onlst. Light typ-reap the rewards. For 714-752-7179 phuis 00 fand use law. processor capability for Refrtg frost free. clean, Cocker Spaniel AKC Call Mike Bush· at interview,calJRoo Salary competitive. Newport Beach Real xlnt S15-0. 548·8513 or pups, champ s"ll!. 1 ....... ...,1."""E Ing, !avypbooes.Xlnt Paradildlarteling SICllTAIY 640-tllCI Es t ate Investment $48-448S _____ wits Burr. *I F ....,. -uu fringe belidlta. Mon-Fri. Ult -G · Irvine · · ..., M·-' ...... te 1"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 Full-Time. SSOO hr. _._, row111g pension ~= .,,rm, -· ""accura to\'e, full size range S22S·S2~0 PP. 1i~9S3 r:: adminiatraUon Ir con· ~' Ii wlllinc to convert to works One. SlllO 548-8Slj ~~ll.fl 4p • , 'L-PAITTM 861-114$1 ClaulfiedAds 6'2-5678 suiti n g Co. needs Entry level poa in a CRT Word Processor. orSfS.4485 AFGHAN Pups 4'fKC Crew Supervisors, work I •11 ,., .... , ............. :.. qualified Secretary lo fast 1rowing. uctUoc Shorthand. dlct~phooe It ~r. clean, works Top Champ Gr .. ire P l time evenings Ir • I work directly for Co. advertlsiq a1ency in secretarial 1lufls pre-good sas 548.8513 or Famous Ped. E~lte wee ken di. Superv'islill • • P r es I dent . X Int lrv!M. Gresl pot.Ual femd. s.•. 548-4485 J!l..ROO_ea. &ti-'_'7 - I the door to door salet • Secretarial sldlls man· for tbe ri• penon. Ex· v E T E R t N A R y =;:;__- crew of )OW'tOten . Ex· : datory . shorthand c:.ellent tyPlq ud or· HaiPITAL Dryer, gas. clean. works 1-----••- cellent earnln11 for : pan TIME rvnlW'f belptul. f'Ulanclal Ii/or aanlut.loeal skills re· Needs hall time non &ood 115. $48-8513 or P U R E 8 R penon with ability to • Ml U"""9'1 legal bacJciround will qulrtd . Pleau call Moo thruSettodo':.ean· 548·4485 SAMOYI!:.,.. motlvafe. Van or lar1e We are pre1entl1 ieeklng adults with • auist cand idate. lladt l)'ll ('IM)UH!llO i n s , bathtna an d Mayt~I It dryer. ptrl & mo. old ~a.1' w~atl car ls needed.Call pleaaut peraonelltlea who would be :' Smokersneednotappl,y. SIC"TMW"_... brut b lna. lrvl oe. work1n1order.Sl2Sea shots.Only $100t...,in& MedlaMercbanll inttretled in working In Salel It Promotion : ConlactMIU:IS'J.1204, ,_.,. 552 ISU •129SafU· P bome. 7~ t"" 213-427·2'158 E-0 with Di.Uy Pl4ol Carrlen 10 to 1S yean old: : SECRETARY/ RF.CEP· Bm7 N.B, atcbkectu.ral . . Old but NU\U\' GE a " l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!B!!!!! PBXANSWR SERVIC! Vnllmittdurntn1uvallable to rig!K penon. • TIONJST, typing Ii ~a::-~rn: V1hr..., .... ,... ref SUS. 26 ' upraht fntt.Y• ••~04S F/tlme, da)'t fr P/Ume Hu : S:IOPM to 8:10PM, Monday tbru a n1werln1 ,bonu. I ) I l ":1 Pa rt/lime . Va rious truur SlOO P P ............... ~ .. . na. Eiipr. belpl\lL Pay Friday. Some Sah1rd1y avl11Ab&Ut1. Poe Trend Import S.lea. IJlc. w P mail. .. 1!r :.:.,..1 dlllita. Open 1 day1. 1511. Neutertd male ~r d e p end• on upr. Q potntment. call: '42·4121, ~ fOt Ben ~ IJDO W.ColltHwy,N.B. f:!'°:' hak. lt'udy, Ne w port Buch . rreue r. WtllrlpoO[ l year, fre•.-rl : · H0:1m WlWatns. ; l ff:m1 MMS. wllile1 ti t, .int cond . ..§.lam ~ .... ;.~;;•,,......._ Make your ldv~ ; Peoplewho.....SPeop&e r•ice.StaU. Atten· WARIBSIS m . Fru klttt••· •· I l~-dollar '° flftlw! nnau~r COAST DAILY PILOT J Tbtt'swtlalth& w t. hU nm. 4111 !1ptr. J/7n mla . black. 2,...... ~~-= :. "'""~ ~W.CA... • OAJLYPILOT CdM.... . rttlmt 1..U. ,._,Iii ...... aQUiila wt~ a ~=Ii~~~¥-~ "~ aaow._e:c:,~o;.=,,,.ijlllJ(.O'li• /· SERVIC!Dlllr;CTORY ' llflm, loll1 ...,,_. Dlllr'PU11a-u1MA.1 ma or tlll• ••••paper. •• .......................................... llallllout! • o...t llWJ .. 1.a,_. II• •Im.-.··· " ,,,_ .... Jw\gl~ Costo Mesa. CA • Eq\G OpportlM"lity ~ • .: . . .•.....••.••••.••.••••....•.•............. · ' l Or17 Coll1 ~LY PfLOT fN•dnnday, S.pttmb9r 23, 1081 •• .ft.-:...a., ......... ·-- I t I ) I J '. COHHEll CHEVROLET 'JI.'>< 11.trl••I f11.,J • •"'I \ \1 t _.., \ S4i>-I 200 DeSANFIS CHEVROLET • • • • • DRANlil COAST YOUR HOMITOWN DAILY PAPIR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNI A 25 CENTS Wom a n • tnggers demo derby Four injured in crash that demolished police car By PtDL SNEIDERMAN Of ... Deify ...... ,.... ~ 20-year·old woman dnving with a s uspend ed li cense touched off a series of traffic ac· cidents a long Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach Tuesday night that demolished a police patrol car and inJured four people, including a poUce officer and a pedestrian who at- tempted to help at the accident scene, police reported today. The woman who police say trigger e d the accidents. Charlotte E. Bolt of Bellflower, was treateo for cuts al UCI Medical Center and was placed in the jail ward on suspicion of felony drunken driving. Huntington Beach police Lt. J ohn Fosler said the woman was Fosler r econstructed the series of accidents tbJs way: -At abouf' 10:40 p.m ., Ms. Bolt sideswiped another vehicle while eastbound on Pacific Coast Highway beside the Bolsa Chica marshlands. -When she failed to stop after the accident, the driver Qf ". . .like beat en by ugly stick." the sideswiped vehicle gave chase. Near Newland Avenue, Ms. • Tbe police vehicle rtlpped, landed on the driver's side and Cell back onto its wheels. The impact tore the seat loose from the noor, officers said . -Ms. Bolt's Fiat's electrical system failed, and the car came to rest across the traffic lanes. A pedestrian attempted to help push the auto to the side of the road. -A woman driving an east· bound pickup truck, distracted by the sight of the demolished police car, rear·ended the Fiat a nd th'r e w the assisting pedestrian 30 feet toward the sand. The h\jured officer. Sgt. Arden Beavers, was taken to Pacifica Hospital with multiple injuries. o.tly ~ ... ,....~•le..,,." ....... , driving with a suspended license and was scheduled to appear in court today in connection with earlier traffic offenses. Bolt's Fial convertible, travel· ing at an estimated 75 mph, rear·e nded a Huntingto n Beach police car that also was easl·bound at about 35-40 mph. The impact threw "the police car 134 feet toward the beach. In a telephone interview from bis hospital room this morning, he said, "1 feel like I've been Traffic investigator eiammes damaged lluntmgton Reach p<>l1ce car a/tt'r a !)eries of.accrdents on Pac1/1c Coast Highway The cruiser was a total loss <See MISHAP, Page AZ> ~earch fails t~ t11rn up slaying suspect By FREDERICK SCHOE MEHL Of llM Dally ~1144 St.ff Orange County S heriff's Department investigators have suspen~ed their around-the· clock search of the Cleveland Nati<rnal Forest fo r a man sought in connection with a weekend shooting attack that left one girl dead and another · with serious head injuries. The search of the rugged wilderness area 20 miles east of San Juan Capistrano was called off Tuesday night. A temporary search command post loca:ed at a U.S. Forest Service fire station was closed. It had appeared for a tame Tuesday that sear chers had s potted the reddish-or ange 1979 camper-equipped Datsun pickup truck belonging to Thomas Francis Edwards, 37. The former Costa Mesa resident and Irvi ne gun club employee was named Tuesday in a $500,000 murder arrest warrant signed by South Orange County Municipal Court Judge Blair Barnette. Members of the s he riff's Special Weapons and Tactics teatn were helicoptered into an area of the forest south of El Carisa Village only to discover that the vehicle was not the one they-sought. I Edwards, d escrib ed by sheriff's officials as a "moun· ~ain man" and "gun buff," is be- ing sought in connection with the unprovoked shooting attack on two 12-year·old Lake Elsinore between San Juan Capistrano and Lake Elsinore Miss Iberri died Monday night at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo: Miss Cartier is in serious but s table c9ndition An. all-points bulletin for Edwards'. arrest remains in effect. girls, Vanessa lberri and Kelly Cartier. The girls were shot on a biking trail near the forest·ser vice operated Blue Jay campgrowid located in the forest midway with head injuries at the same facility. Sheriff's U . Wyatt Hart said the search for Edwards wiU now focus on places he might have beaded for based on information ·~-.......... Curiosity didn't kill the cat . but it did startle this New Orleans kitty when it encountered an armed SWAT team ~fficer. E dison High t r ans f e r s u es offic ials Former Huntington football player ruled ineligible by trustees. By PATRICK KENN EDY Of tM Delly l"llet Sutt A student football player who transferr ed lo Edison High School in Huntington Beach is s uing distric t officials for permission to play football at ·Edison following his recent But the Washinglon s have since moved back to the Hunt· ington Beach High School al· tendance area and district trustees declared him inellpble to compete in sports at EdiSoo for one year. According to CIF rules, once a According to CI F rules, 9nce. a player is declared eligible, he re- mains eligible. athl1!tlc dis qualification by scbool trustees. Jeff Washington, a Junior de-r enai ve back, transferred to Edison from nearby Huntington' Beach High School during last year's football seaaon. • Officials of the Huntington l .. ~ach Union High School Oil· trict declared hJm eligible to play for his new school because he and bis father bad moved lo an apartment in the Edison at· tendance area. ( player is d eclared eligible at a school, be remains eligible even if he moves to another area but stays in the same school. But district officials have the right to establish tbelr own rules, sccdrding to CIF official.a. Was hington ' 1 a tlorney Stephen Berser won a tem- porary r estrain1nt 9rder In Orange County &apertor Court on Sept. 11, overnaU.ni the dll· tl'ict ·a dJaquallfiutJon. But Washington. accordlq ~ CIF rules, can't play football at Edison until he has practiced for at least 10 days. Officials say he is currently practicing with the Charger football team. Friday, attorneys will appear before Superior Court Judge Luis A. Cardenas who will hear Ber~er's request for a P.re· limlnary injunction voiding the district's disqualification until a trial is held. Washington is one of five stu· dents who transferred to the powerful Edison Charfer team after the end of last football seuon. Star senior runnlni back Thf!O Lansford transferred from Ch ataworth Hl&h School and moved In with lrtendt 1D HUnt· inaton Beacrb. He wu warned that .he would be declned la· ellatble for sports ual•s a parent or le8al auerdlu Uftd with him 1D the Ediloa att.d· ucearea. H1a t.U-. Paul Lantford. tau llDM tai• oftldal r•ldeHe bl Hunttqt.oa lneb,"' aeecJl'da.., co• dlatrlct ontclala. Tbe Landorda I are living with Linda Griffiths and her sons Fernando and Derek, two other transfer foot· ball players from Chatsworth. Edison has won 23 straight games and is the two·time CIF Big Five conf~ence champion. T een h e ld in co s tly .f ire STOCKTON <AP> -A 14· year-old boy Vias detained for al· legedly seltin1 a tbree·alarm fire Tuesday that caused morE than $1 million damage to nine shops at a neighborhood shop- ping center here. A nlrith grade studeqt ide:n· tltied by witnesaea at the acene was held for lnvest11aUon of arson, and two ,,ther youtba were beina sou1bt, aaJd Capt. Gary Colline. Two tlrefl1btera suffered at.rained backs and one was boapitallled briefly for hell PIT straUon. · known about his background. Hart said investigators also are following up on reported sight- ings in Santa Ana, Costa Mesa. Garden Grove, Big Bear Lake. Riverside and San Diego. Hart stressed, however, that investigators will continue to make periodic checks in the Cleveland National Forest area as part of the complete in· vestigation. An all p(Jints bulletin for Edwards' arrest remains in ef- fect , Harl said . In additi9n. rangers at stale and national parks have bttn notified to be on the lookout for Edwards, who. llart said, enjoys camping and "living off the land." The search for Edwards began immediately after Saturday's shooting after a witness ob· served the license plate of his truck, jotted it down on a cardboard carton and turned it over lo sheriff's deputies. Tt)e license number is I BJX 675. Hart said Edwards is believed to have been living out of his cam per s ince m oving from "" Costa Mesa about six months ago. Edwards served a prison sen- tence in Maryland after being convicted in the 1960s of con- spiracy and robbery. W a ll S treet t a k es s harp skid t oday NEW YORK (AP> -Stock prices fell across the board to· day in what analysts said was continued skepticism over in- te r est rates and President ' Reagan's economic program. The Dow Jones average of 30 industria.ls, which had b~n up 9.51 points for the week, erased that gain after four hours of trading. falUng 14 .27 points to 831.43. Declines led advances by a 10·1 margin on the NYSE. Although some interest rates have declin ed t h is week, particularly the prime lending rate. analysts have s aid many investors remain skeptical about the Reagan economic pacJc aj!e and future budget deficits. Reagan is scheduled to address the nation by television Thurs· day night. Some Wall Street analysts also blamed the early decline on a prediction Tuesday by one of their flamboyant colleagues. Joseph Granville, tbal the Dow Jones industrials will fall to 550 to 650 in the coming weeks. "We 've been edging toward a selling climax, but I think Joe tripped it over," said Larry Wachtel, senior vice president of Bache Halsey. Stuart Shields Inc. D e l ay of o ld age benefits rejected WASHINGTON <APl -Presi· dent Reagan apparently has ruled out pfoposing a delay in Social Security cost·of-living benefits as part of a new round of budget cuts, congressional sources said today. But Reagan, making the final decisions on cuts to be proposed when he addresses the nation via television Thursday night, still has under consideration rec- ommendations to delay similar increases in several other social welfare progr•ms, according to the sources, who r equested anonymity. But he was forced back to ·the drawing board earlier in tbe week when th e two top Republicans in Congress warned him privately that the cuts faced probable defeat in Congress if they were s ubmitted in tbat form. Appearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Donald R. Regan maintained that the president would stick "very stubbornly" to his budget and tax cuts despite mounting political and public pressure. The sources stressed that the president has not made de· .ORANG( COAST WfATHfR cisions on his package, and stressed that changes are possi· ble. Meanwhile, Reagan told a group of senior citizens today that restoring the economy to sound health will r equire sldshlng "many things that we Usual low clouds late ¥onight and morning hours hursday. Lows tonight 60 to 66. Thursday highs at beaches low 70s, inland near 80. wish didn't have to be cut... INSID' TODAY But the president, who will I speak at 6 p.m . PDT Thursday, refused to identJfy the targeta ol cutbacks ~ected to total $16 bUlion. "Tune ln, 9 o'clock, Thursday night," Reagan said when asked it he had completed work on the The /amil11 that jog• together ii 1taJling together -011 a ll-dG¥ }OMrat from Florida to Ohfo. See P.Ofl~ 812. blueprint for the latest round of tllll proposed cuts. The president had been con· slderinc the packaae of cull for c-;= fl1cal 1982, includin1 the three-, 9 month Social Securlty delay , from July 1 to Oct. 1, 11182, ~I."!!:!.. acros1-the-board cute ln vlrtual· ly all rovernrnent pro1r1m1 and a S2 bWJon reduction ln bla Id· mlniltnttion'• defenH buUduo. , I -.... -... -... • OrangeCout DAILY PILOTM'edne1d•v. September 23, 1981 'Lewis and Clark' trek draws to close DEAD A'f 12 -Chief Dan ~l· Georae. the actor who ~, portra~ l wise old Indian 1 •• in Hollywood filtns end once was n oml11ated' for an Academy Award. died today •,'at age82. s : I)• r , ... :;:'·T~!ff~c .. ;:staDed as ··rigs flip :)t' !> Two rigs overturned on the J • Riversid•.Fr.eeway near Corona 11 this moaning, snarling traffic ., and leavm1 motorists en route :'l to Orance County waiting up to ·1·1 two hours in anail-pnecl traffic, according to the CaHfornia ti HighWIU' patftJ. ST. LOUIS CAP> Oreaaed In buckskin• but paddlln1 a flber1tus canoe, three Oregon adventurers ended their 3..100. ml'-journey from the P1clfic Ocean today on the 175th an· niversary of the return of ex- plorers Lewis 1µ1d Clark. Alt.bough St. Louil ts celebrat· Ing Lewis and Clark Week, there was n0 welcomin1 ceremony for the men, who left Astoria, Ore., in the rain March 23 to re-enact' the return 1806 expedition of William Clark and Meriwether Lewis. Bystanders watched in· differently as the men clam- bered from their canoe near the Gateway Arch. "I imagine the first thing we'll do is take a shower," Scott Roberts, 30, of Monmouth, Mo., said earlier of the end of the trek. AnD Samsel, 33, of Lincoln Ci· ty, gave up alter crossing the Rockies. Accompanying Roberts today were Gene Downs, 33, of Falls City and Craig Zugar, 25, of Salem. Traveling by canoe and horseback -with a support van taking the place of pack horses -the group relied on the original expedition's journals to guJde them. "We 've follow e d their footsteps day by day." Roberts said Tuesday in an interview at a campground just north of St. Louis ... "We've eaten the same foods. We even dress the s ame." Paciric. But they returned In a speedy six months. At times. Roberts s aid, the group camped on the origmal campsites, altheugh much has been destroyed over the years. "Our main go was to record the changes and the thlng'ls that remained the same," said Roberts. "And I can tell you. the mosquitoes are still as bad as they were 175 yeal'JS ago. ·'The major changes have been made by ma n. We 've changed rivers, removed Indian vlllages, und cre ated power plants and dams. The changes are phenomenal." ln their journal. Lewis and Clark spoke of waiting two hours for herds or buffalo to cross the '" ......... river 1n front of them . The modern·day group sa w two buf· fa lo, Roberts said. "And we saw absolutely no grizzly bears." he added, "for which we are all very thankful." Diab lo prote ste rs slow down SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP) - Anti nuc lear dem ons trators scaled down their blockade at Diablo Canyon atomic power plant and there were only three arrests today, but protesters in- cluding freed rock star Jackson . Browne vowed a full-scale block ade again soon. After a small group of pro- testers wearing black armbands were cleared away from the pl ant's main gate this morning, the nine-day arrest total stood at 1,496, surpassing the 1,414 ar- rests that occurred in a l!rl7 an- ti-nuclear protest at Seabrook, N.H. · The arrests left the ranks of protesters so depleted that San Lu is Obispo County Sheriff Geor ge Wh iting said he sent hom e 750 California Highway Patrol offi cers and National Gu ards men . Construction worker s, who had been bused into the $2.3 billion seaside plant. came in private cars today and passed through the gate with little dif· f1c ully o• The acddent:reccurred at 5:21 d·, a .m . jmt east of bnperial Road 1' when the . two vehicles. ooe a ti.) trash truck, collided in the east- a' bound lane, according to a CHP Lewi s and Clark were trailblaters of a land route through the Louisiana Purchase territory to the Pacific. Their task also included strengthening American claims to Oregon and gathering information about the Indians of the Far West. Leav- ing from Wood Ri ver north of St. Louis, they began their trip up the Missouri River, taking two years to make their way to the Oregon adventurers 1 from left J Craig l uger. Scott Roberts and Gene Downs arrived m St Lows today re-creating the return of Leuns and Clark on that m1ss10n 's /15th annwersary But the Abalone Alliance. an umbrella organization of 60 anti- nuclear groups which is sponsor· ing the protest . said a full olockade at the gate would re- sume Thursday. spokesman. J 1. Although &here were reports of ·" injuries it ·was unknown how 1~, serious t.he-y were and if any car .,,. drivers bad been effected. n. C H P spokes m an Larry Robot traveler lights up airline's day .. I plan to come back and bloc kade." s inger-songwriter Browne s aid after Municipal J udge Ke nneth Chotiner ar- raigned and released him Tues· day "I consider my actions and the acti ons of my brothers and s isters lo be patriotic." Kleasner said traffic in the west- J\ bound toes was backed up at least five miles due to motorists ogling the accident. ,.. In the eastbound lanes. traffic was backed up less than a mile, he said. Cleanup crews were ex- pected ~ clear the accident by 9:30 a.m., be aftded. Because of the bottleneck con· ditions on lhe Riverside freeway, traffit 'tondiuons were no better on the coanecting ~ Newport freeW'U'. A'-"a r9Sult, a number ef minor rear end col- ' lisions were being reported, said Kleasner. Former Pilot .~· edito~joins , Ve gm ·P«Pef Thomas Keevil. former editor of the Onmge Coast Daily Pilot, bas been appoialed editor of the Las Vetas 4leview-Journal, it was aifMlmced by Earl Johnson, general manager of the Nevada news pa~. Keevil, 53, replaces George !ti.. CoUier as editor of the seven-day r, Las Vegas paper which has a I circulation or 89,019. Collier wrn -be assuming another position in . the Donrey Media Group. A graduate of the University , of Missouri school of journalism l· in 1951, Keevil became editor or 11 a weekly, newspaper group in Randolp,ti County, Illinois, and moved to Rivtcside County in California "ere he was editor of the Beaumont Gazette and later served ait publisher of the Yucaipa News. Keevil wu appainted editor of the Costa Mesa Globe-Herald, 1 forerunner of the Daily Pilot, in 1954 and continued with .the Dai- ly Pilot through July 10, 1981. Keevil was president of the Orange County Press Club in 1960 and president of the Orange County atapter of Sigma DeUa Chi, the Society of Professional , Journalists, in 1964. A resident of NewPof'l Meach, he is manied I a n d IHu twe daughters , Katherlfte and Constance. Se rvice r esumed NEWARK, N.J. (AP> -He chatted with admirers, tipped the skycap and professed love to a ticket agent and a metal detec· tor. Then with a blink of his lights, the most high·powered business traveler Newark In· ternational Airport ever had was on his plane to Miami. The' first person to cross his path was a stunne d-looking ti c ket agent handling passengers for Eastern Airlines Flight 7. With lights flashing from hls head, Sico, a 6-foot·l aluminum and fiberglass robot, booked two seats in fir!t cla11, saying hls com pan ion would be ·along shortly. Theo, to the shock and delight of the passengers in the airport, the robot said to a passing ticket agent: · "You are beautiful and I will never forget you. I mean that from the bottom of my main v ansistor... ' As the onlookers hurried lo take pictures, Sico told a man trying to change film rofls: "I know how difficult cameras are to handle. I used to date one. I think her name was Polaroid. Boy was she fast. .. Off the robot rolled on Its four wheels down the boarding ramp and into a waiting plane. Sico took a seat in row l·A, and was followed shortly by the rest of the Miami·bound passengers, in- cluding Robert Doornick of New York. th~ man beh ind the machine. Sico is one of four robots. worth an estimated $250,000 each. created by International Robotics Inc., a 5-year·old New York corporation. Doornick said his company is developing the SAN ~C~ CAP) - Ferry •el-V1ce-bet.tveen Sausalito and San FrMcisco n&IMaed to- day. The feri-y serme 'Was inter·· rupted Monday whtle repairs were made to a ferry drive shaft. "~""- Sico the robot waits for a skycap to pick up his luggage outside the terminal at Newark International Airport . en route to an automotive executive show at the Miami Convention Center. 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"'""'""'' oubll\I""' .,...,, " •I ut Wr\I a. • ..,,.'1 "'O a.- IMO, (O\l.t 'Af~ (111•-v.,1 •1'~ VOL. 14, NO.:. 2M Pot farmers rout poachers GARBERVILLE CAP> -Five would-be marijuana thieves were ambushed by guo-t0Un1 growers protecting their ripen· lng cash c:rop, a Humboldt Coun- ty Sherifrs spokesman said. One mari was wounded. A pre-dawn gun battle broke out Tuesday east of Garberville near the village of Harris aa the five raiders entered a marijuana field, Capt. J a met Slntic said. l ro bots for use in r esearch l a b orato ri es. Among othe r things, the robots are designed to h andle dangerous chemicals. The company also hopes the robots may be useful in coaxing au tistic c hildre n to com - municate. To get research money, the corporation leases the robots for promotional campaigns. Sico was on his way to a performance before automoUve executives at the Miami Convention Center. The airport performances also help publicize the machines. The robots travel with con· troUers such as Doornick, whose clothing conceals buttons for ~ commands, including walking, · moving the head and arms and emitting appropriate beeps, buzzes and sentences . Some of the s peech is re- corded, but Doornick can transmit sounds to a comQ.uter in the robot by speaking softly into a hldden microphone in bis s hirt cuff. The words are passed From Page A1 through a synthesizer that turns hum an-sounding talk into the voice of a robot. By now, Doornick said. Sico is a veteran of airports. Typically, he said, the robot is dropped off at an airport door with its luggage. Re m aining within si~hl of Doornick. it then calls for a skycap to take the luggage to the ticket counter. Once at the counter . the robot hands the skycap a few dollars from one hand and the ticketing agent a credit card from the other. IC the agent, who usually is warned in advance of the visit, as ks for a signature, the robot suggests the receipt be placed on the floor for an identifying "tire mark." At Newark, one man circled the robot muttering: "I don't get it. .. "Don't be confused , I can't figure out you humans either," Sico said. Browne, who wrote and re· corded such hits as "Doctor My Eyes," "Take It Easy" and ·'The Pretender .·' spent four days in Jail aft er his arrest Fri· da y in a ''human chain'' bloc kade al the gate . Al his arraignment, Browne pleaded no contest and was fined $120. He and several others were given credit of $30 per day for the days already spent in jail. "This is an emotional subject fo r me." Browne told Judge Ch ot iner, who as ke d dem - onstrators not to get arrested again. Browne. however. said that after seein g his family he would be back. A l t h ou g h no full-scale blocka de was pl ann ed until Thursday and no more sea land· in gs u ntil Friday, Alliance spokesman Mark Evanoff said, ther e 1may be some kind of demorlstration at the main gate later today. MISHAP CREATES CHAOS Evanoff sa id the main thrust of todays's protest will be about 30 people infiltrating the 732· acre Diablo property on foot. beaten by an ugly stick." He said hls injuries do not ap· pear to be serious, and he ex· pected to be released from the hospital soon. The pedestrian who assisted at the scene, Grant Bjornestad, 26, of Costa Mes a, was taken to Huntington Inte rcommunity Hospital after complaining of pain. The driver of the first vehlcle allegedly sideswiped by Ms. Bolt was treated at Pacifica Hospital for a leg injury. He was iden· tified as Kirk Lochart, 25, of Stockton. The driver of the pickup, Diana Stinnett. 31, of Huntington Be ach, was not injured in the mishap, police said. As their numbers dropped, protest organizers considered and then rejected . Tuesday the idea of submitting to arrest themselves -a step that prob- ably would end the confronta- tion for lack of leadership. And some local residents said t hey plan a separate march against the plant Sunday. (i)uarh alarm clock Reg. $1 9.99 Sale SI 0.99 Vanta~ by Linden • All black w/ white dial • Includes travel pouch and bracket for easy mo unt in auto or boat • Runs approx one year on one AA battery :~--_-.~ ~-, I • i .. , I ............ Prlaceu Jullan1. who s t e ppud do wn fro m the throne or The Nelherhtnds lu t year, returned home from a hospital after sue cessful minor sur1ery. the government said. A spokesman did not dis- close details or the surgery, performed two weeks ago in a university hospital. He said the princess will make no public appearances for a while . Juliana, 72, abdicated April 30, 1980, in favor of her daughter, Beatrix. President Reagan said he will nominate Beverly E. Ledbetter, general counsel of 'Brown University, to be an assistant attorney general. A $425,000 bid for a bullet and bomb-proof limous ine once owned by Elvis Presley ha s b ee n rejected , a spokesman for owners of the car said . The 1969 Mercedes Benz limousine, owned by El Pres World Wide Promotions Co. Inc. of Hayward, Calif., re· portedly had been sold at a c l assi c -car auction at Caesars Tahoe. A11t fwr ,\/eI l/aley 1dark suit 1 helps unveil a plaque installed at tfw 1\nrmpol1s <'It 11 Dock commemorating the arnval of Kunta K111te. Haley .<: forebear m .. Roots." on an English slave ship in 17fi7 lfelprnq are Maryland Gov llarry Hughes l/ower r1ght 1 c111<1 lit'O Anrtapol1s residents who organized the event. Carl Snowden 1 /eft 1 und Wendy 1/1111011 H o w ever , El Pres spokesm a n Ken Newman s aid the $425,000 offer, from an unnamed San Francisco Bay Area lawyer, was reject· ed because El Pres had set a minimum $600,000 bid for the vehicle. Fabled e<tlPry up for sa/p -i:h cy used to sing that you could get anything you want at Alice's Rcst<turant. Now you C'an get the restaurant itself for S225,000. according to a realtor who has listed 1t for s ale 1n \'an Deusenville, M ass Tht• bu1ldm~. a converted c:hurch 1n the tiny Berkshire llllb community. was made la nrnus in the mid 1960s by the Ario Guthrie movie and son ~ "Altc·e·s Restaurant." The restaura nt was made in· to a home <1 ftcr Allee Brock rlost.'d ht>r n·stauranl two yea rs ag() Although he is blessed as the ravori\e rilmmaker of Pope Jobe Paul II, Krzysdof Zanassi llas been unable to s how hi& biotraphy of the pontiff in Polan4. The Poli sh director's "From a Far Country" re- ceived mixed reviews when it was shown outside com- petition al the recent Venice festival, but the pope warmly endorsed the film after a private showing at his sum- mer home in Castel Gan- dolfo According to many critics, the problem has been satisfy- ing the backers -the Italian s tate radio and private U.S. and Italian producers - besides the Polish govern- ment and the Vatican. Movie director Michael Cimino is suing a couple who moved to re- possess about 150 acres of land that he bought from them while f i I mi n g ''Heaven 's Gate " in n orthwest Montana last c1M1•0 year. Documents filed in state District Court say Murland an d Virginia Se aright notified Cimino they were c a n celi ng the contract because he was late in m ak· ing the $4,700 quarterly pay- ment due April 15. The land lies along the North Fork of the Flathead River. It's going to cool off (~onMal n to as In tl'tt valleys Md 10 to ID In tlle mountai~ LOW> al "lliM S1 lo '7 In coulal and valley a,...s aftd 40 to H In It•• mountal"' FORECAST It ... 111 .,. •llgMly cooltt 1n1ano on Tllu•.O•y ottwrWI\# Oran~ co .. t T • .... ath•r Call\'°' U\U41 1•1• n19lll and e m p e ra .. u re S morn1n9 le>• tlouch Co•U•I low 60 1n••nd l>6 Co.•IAI "'•Oh low 70\ 1nl•nd to w .. 1~r t.7 E l\t'Whf-rf' l•Qhl v•r ••t>lt wind\ Alb•nv nlo111 and mom1no "°"" M<omlnQ AIDuque •oulllwut 10 wn1 10 to •I knots In•'· Amarillo t•rnoon W .. ltrly •wtll I 10 1 1 .. 1 A"'ev flle Low night ..,., m~n1n<,1 tow c loud$ Atlanta "'''" '°""' loo P•n•y •unnv •It••-Atlante Cly noon• B•ltlmor. U.S. sunintar)' Tll• l•\I <My Of wmm•• Of0U9IH •un•llln• lo mucl\ Of tho Soulll, llUt r•1n '°"ttnUf'd tn tne N0t1fWest Tt mperaturH climbed Into tile~ In th• Soutt'I. wtu•e tn the \outf\em P l•lns lhty were tn IN '01. Tem~ pttr•turet In trw north w•f• coo~r, In tM SOs to 10$ t 1 "'"'' bl • \Ut'lny d•v toc:t..v ov~ mucf\ of tr. n•Uon Sllowtt• will be •ott0tfl! over tho Pe< •lie NM ll-•I •ncl IM u_, Ml•- ~hs1ppt V•ll•v Ov« Ne-• EnQl•nd. cool •••"'-' .-111 conhnLil' T llt NMhorn \t•tt• wlll rtmalft In tM SO. ..,., 60l wllilt tr.. >OUtMrn 11•11 of tho l\llhon warm • Into tr.. ~. Southern Tfl'••S a l\d much of tr'\• Soulll•Ht will reacll ti. 'Ol wltll tr.. df'W'r1 •re•~ r..chlnQ 100 T ~MPffaturts a,ound t~ na tiof'\ •t m fd atttrf"loon reno~o trom ~1 In Montpel•t t Vt to 100 "' Blytlle, Call I Cnlifon1ia Soutll••n Ca l1fornl• •l\ould D• mo•tlv wtv1v Tr...rr.clay 1>ul t ooler, wllll M>t'M nloht •ncl mornlnQ low cio<Jdl a•onQ tho to. .. tal "-•· tho Nelloftal Weather Service torecHtl Low cloud•. loO eno IO< .. drlule In Blrml,..,.... Bl•m uc• Bol .. e~ton 8 townsVll• Bllflalo Cllarhtft SC Cllartstn WI/ Clley•n ... 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" oa.iaftd 7• u p-"*" " 41 RM 8hlff M ff "Mwood City ... ~ ~·"*""' ll '° S.llnH • oM s..oi.oo u .. 11•• co.•IAI mo<>ntaln •loOe• ll!Ould ----------------------pan1a11v <1 .. r Tllurr.clay atte....-, luvlno lalr Non temperaturu lrom t S to IS local gu•tY w .. I to •outllwut wind• of tS to JO mpll '"°"Id lllo* tll<OUQll thf moUftlAln• andtl'le-ru Hlotu In Ille uppor _,,,end An· lelope llalky •llOuld m In the eo., wnll• In ttw -· Otwrti -'"' lower Cotor-Alw• v•llo• hlQll• will tM In t!W 'Oo T empe••tu••• .-.id drop •llgnuy In Ille v•ll•'I'•, wllltll wlll MW lllgll• aroun.J ao and low• around 60 C IOud• alOnQ Ow .,.acM• I tom SM· t• 8afb9r• twtll 10 l onv Beecn •ncl Orange C°"""' 1llould ci.ar Dy afwr- noon H IQM .-.Id m In tho 70l ....... ?:£_,_-!D ____ R_f R_IP_DR_T Lac ... T ... , •• .... ,Mu . ,., ·-... -, .. , . ........ T-. u ., San Fr•nc:lko 1• SS S.ftt.8..ti.ra 70 t2 Stockton • Thermal " 11 Uk Ian " Barstow • • .. 8'9 ... , 11 40 BlslloO " .. Cal•llna 1S ,,. L•keAr.-n SS Long S.acll 16 M Monrovia ., SI Newport~ IS ., Ontario . '° ti P •• m S«wlnos " .. PH-ne .. ,. San Bemanllno tJ SI SanJow 12 SI Sanle Ana IO ., Sant• Crv1 as .. T-1/alley IS f>AN AM NI BarD.clol as Bermuda ao 8090ta H C1mKao .. FrMpott t2 GuaoalaJa .. IJ Guaoel-'IO Monteooe.v '° Mar Ida u MukoClty ,, Montefrey • Neu au .., Saft JUM , P II .. Tegvcl9i1lpe .. Trinidad • ll•ra Cnn '° CA HADA NI Ca19ary 54 Edmoto'°" n Mont•••• u Ott••• • R .. lna .. Toronto S1 \lancou .. er •1 Wlnnlpev .. Le ,, n }4 ID ll ~ IJ 7S 10 ~ 12 n n .. IS 7l Le .. 41 .. 41 41 .. 50 .. LOI ........ will nave 111ghi In IN mld·10• H1111II1>9lon lie« 11 Hunllftgton Pier S.nta Arw 111 .. , ntty «ltllSt . .._, 22MSt.N-1 8alboAWldQe S.llCr- 'l 2~ 2~ 24 I '"'' '* felr -, .. , ., ., ., ., Su~ moon, tides Extended outlook COASTAL. MOUMTAIM AllllAS - Nlgllt •ftd mornlno low clOVCh •ftd IOU I I09 ...... be dkreatlno SUftday. Otllerwl• l•I• ...0 cooler wllh hlgf\ lemp.,alu,.. 6' ton •I Ille .. eclles, MOnOAy Frt09v II """ 00 ,..,_ ,,_ "°""' -· DY 6 30 o m ratl be!Qre 7 P 111 ono '°"' cooy ... 11 .,. _.,_..., s.tuni.., eno Sunoay 11 'f<lll oo no1 ......... ~' CIOllY Oy f t 111 <*I llelof'e I 0 ..,,. """ ¥!><" L'OPY ""II Ile ..... Oofleny llM<h S...Ct-Pler Tr•l•lter ,,, t 1-t -'* ... ... " IT ·Strwll t-2 II-' 17 Cotton•s Pio!"' 1·2 telr t6 Trestles 1·2 felr t6 San OftofN M flllr .. Se<oflCln..., Flrll low F(nthlgtl Se<ofld low S.COftCI """ TOOAY •:Slp.m . u TMUllSOAY 1:4'a.m . O.J 1:11 •.m . . .. 1:.Wp.m . u 7:.Qp.m . s.a Tomor.-•s Udff• H19": 11:17 a ,m .. ~: 1:6111.m., S-t OIN<tlerl: West 5..., Mtl 6:4' p.m , rlMt T,,.,,_., 6:.Ua.m, Moon 8"s 4:27 p.m .. ,,_ Tnurs- .S.y):11•.m. "eportlng AQMKIH: Biii Kr-r, 5'"" leil\. keel"*• DICll ~. Larry Didi, LMrY Moore, Jim He,....,. We're Listening ••• Whal do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your message wUI be recorded transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. · The same 24-hour answering service tnay be used to record let· ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include their name and telephone number for verification. No clrculatlon call!\, please. Tt>ll us what's on your mind. 642·6086 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/w.dnesday. September 23, 1981 H /~ Al Gas tax hike OK'd OC supervisors give approval to two-cent increase With only minutes to spare. the Or ange County Board of Supervisors has become the nnt in the state to endonie a two-cent per gallon increase in the state tax on the sale of gasoline and diesel fuel The two-cent fuel tax increase, under legislation si1ned Thurs- day by Gov. Edmund 0 . Brown Jr., cannot be imposed unless it is r ati fl e d by boa rds of supervisors representing COUD· ties containing 67 percent of the state's population. Enrollment drop larger in county T h e tax lncreaae would generate about S2.6 biUlon ln new revenue over the next five years that would be used to erase a projected S2.• billion deficit ln the st.ate transport•· tion fund and provide sufficient money so that new highway pro. jects can be built. Orange County supervlaora acted on the resolution ot sup. port shortly after 10 a.m . Tues· day. It was just minutes later that the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors took a similar action. Orange County holds about eight percent of the slate's population; Los An1elee County about 30 percent. By GLENN SCOTr ottMO.ity,.....S._.. First-day public school enroll- m ent declined at a larger rate in Orange County t han it did in the rest of the state at the opening of school this month. According to statistics com- piled by the Orange County Department of Education, 328,492 students were enrolled in c las ses from kinde r garten through 12th grade this month. Th at's a 1.4 percent reduction from last year 's 333, 187 opening day enrollment. Last year the decline measured 0.9 percent. State enrollment projections call for a 0.3 percent decline this year. The reduction last year was 1.2 percent. However , Orange County seems to be reflecting a state trend toward larger enrollments at the lowest grade levels. Last year, for the first time in several years, kindergarten enrollment in the county increased. Reata House. a t tenda nce specialist for the county educa- tion department, said the number of kindergarten students should surpass last year's total. The statistics don't show that increase so far: 19,975 children s howed up on the first school day this year compared to 20,758 last year But Ms. House said par e nts often enroll children late. Statewide. kindergarten enrollment is projected to in- crease by 1.5 percent to 310,666. The trend toward higher enroll- ments at lower grade levels, ac· cording to state schools superin· tendenl Wilson Riles, is based on ris ing birth rates. "Next year . we expect the s tatewide en rollmen t to be higher, and it will probably con· tinue to increase each year for much if not most of this dec- ade," he said. "The relatively low numbers FV Boys Club pla1is dinner for Thursday The board of directors of the Boys Club of Fountain Valley will sponsor a spaghetti dinner Thursday, to introduce m em· bers, parents and supporters to the club's new executive direc· tor. Mark Chow. A native of Monterey Park, Chow worked as program direc- tor for the Los Angeles Boys Club before moving to the Foun- tain Valley post. T he spaghetti dinner will begin al 6:30 p.m. at the club, 9840 Talbert Ave. Donations for the dinner will be $4 for adults, $2 for children. Reservations can be made by calling the club. 968-5252. Boys Club school year hours will be 2:30 lo 6:30 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. On Saturdays, the club will be open from 11 a.m . to3 p.m Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Cntif1~d Gemologist. AGS DIAMONDS wherf.' do lhf.'y come from? of students in the upper elemen· tary and second$1'y grades are because of the «ale's low birth r ate from 1965 to 1973," be added. First day en rollment for Orange County stude nts in grades one through eight was 194, 139 this year, a decline of 0.9 percent. The slate enrollment is expected to increase by 0.1 per· cent. In grades nine through 12, enrollment on the first day in Orange County was llJ.,613 this year, 2.8 percent fewer than last year. The state projection is for a 1.4 percent decline. In Orange County, the Santa Ana Unified School District is reporting the largest first-day enrollment increase of more than 2,000 new students, from 25,926 to 27,996. School district officials said Tuesday another 3,400 students have been enrolled in the last week, giving the district more than 31,000 pupils . · Sant'll Ana. with its old neighborhoods used for low- income family housing, is a common area for migrating His- panic and . Indochinese families to settle. In contrast, the only other dis- tr icts Irvine, Saddleback Valley and Placentia -to report increases this year are in areas undergoing new residential con- s truction. Final attendance fi gures are to be collected in October and will be made public around Dec. 1, said Ms. House. Supe rvisors in San Oie10 County -the s tate's third largest -also are expected to lake action on a resolution of support. 0 range County offic ials, through the county Transport&· li o n Commission and the Transportation Coalition, made up of representatives of major businesses, fought for passage of the legislation to enable the in· crease in the tax from seven to nine cents per gallon, effective J an. 1, 1983. Local officials have said the county must receive more revenue to stave off a pre- dicted transportation crisis. During the discussion of the resolution, Supervisor Bruce Nestande r equ ested a report from the county Counsel's Office on w hat s teps would be necessary for supervisors to im- pose a fuel tax increase greater than two cents per gallon. The tax measure contaln.s a provision permitting counties to impose greater increases if such a move is endorsed by the board of supervisors, city councils and a two-thirds vote of the county'& electorate. Nestande s uggested that supervisors may want to con- sider seeking an additional fuel tax levy because of what he termed "acute'' transportation problems in the county. -F'REDERJCK SCHOEMEHL. ............. LOBBYlNG DANCE -Canadian Indians . watched by mem· be rs of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. perform tradi- t1onal dance in front of Calgary booth at Baden-Baden. West Germany Tuesday. Calgary is hoping to host the 1988 Win~er Oly mpics. and the dance was part of the city·s pro- motion. Picture of a man about to make a mistake He's shopplna around for a diamond "baraain," but shoppina for "price" alone Isn't the wise way to ftnd one. It taltes a skilled professional and .cientllk ioatru- meots to judae the more impor1ant price detenninlna · facton-Cuttioa. Color and Clarity. A.a an AGS jeWel- er, you can rely on our ~oaic&I tnlnifta and lthb to properly advl.e you on your nex~ ift'lportaal dllmODd purobale. Stop In ~ and ... our ftoe llledJoD 0( aems she wlll be proud to wtar. We know that South Africa is the biggest producer of diamonds ln the world (more than a third of the total last year ), but there were 17 other countries t h at produced sig nifi cant amo unts of diam onds, too. There were 3.7 mi lli on carats of gem s tone-quality diamonds mined in South Africa, 2.2 million carats in ltussia, 1.7 million in Namibia and half a m I Ilion in Zaire. Lesser amounts came from other African countries, and from Indonesia, Brazil, India and Venezuela. South Afrcia's output was also the highest In quality. Their 3.7 million caratl o r gemston e dlaroond• represented 47 pe.rcent ot thel.t total diamond output. The relfl wer e i ndustrial -grade diamonds, which are uted ln fine toolmaking and other uaes. Zaire was the bl11eat producer or industrial d!amonds, dilline out 10.8 mlllloo caratl, but only MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 4 percent of Zaire'• total ~ was gemstone trade. Ru••• 1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA waa second in both felMU>De HYEAA81HTHESAMELOCATJON and l n du atrial d am ond-~~!B•!n!ll!A!m!•!rtc!a!"1!-~M~h!llH~C~l'l~•~~!!~~~~!f'HON~!!l!IMl!!!M0!.!1~!!I IP~odu ctlo n . _ A4 s ---..,...__. .......... ._~ ....... ..-~ ............. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Wadneaday, September 23, j981 Conservatives • await vacancy ' El!J AP W"-"'t SUPERMARKET SNAFU -Sampson's store manager Cecil Wilson holds some of the tickets that the Augusta. Maine s upermarket is giving out for next week ·s horse race con- test t hat offers Sl.000 prizes. Sam pson ·s officials are still trying to figure out what went wrong with their promotional contest last week. It was only supposed to have two winners a week but ended up with dozens with ··wi nning tickets " on high WASlQNGTON (AP) -Even before President Reagan's first nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court takes her seat on the ' bench, conservatives unhappy with his choice o/ Sandra Day O'Connor are talking a bout vacancies lo come. Five of the court's eight cur- rent justices are over 72 and there is recurring speculation that some may retire . "We'll let this one go by the wayside and hopefully it won't happen again," con servative fund-raiser and direct-mail ex· pert Richard Viguerie said of Mrs. O'Connor's confirmation. Viguerie, who notes he spent ·•a great deal of lime. money. energy and resources" fighting Mrs . O'Connor 's nomination. said he's "hopeful" Reagan will pick someone more conservative next lime. T hat was echoed by Sen. Charles E . Grassley, R-lowa. ··President Reagan probably realizes that he maybe let them (his conservative supporters) down to some degree. And he will do something to rectify it," Grassley said. Some conservatives bitterly attacked Mrs . O'Connor for what they perceived as past stances in favor of abortion and the proposed Equal Rights Amendment. I n t he end. however. the Senate approved her historic nomination by a 99-0 vote Mon· day. W o m e n 's grou p s en - thusiastically backed the 51· year -old Arizona appeals court judge. "We're hopin g she (Mrs . O'Connor) won't be tokenjzed." Buy a house, get a free car ·GM offer seeks to. attract buyers of unwanted real estate TROY . Mi c h . (AP > - Burdened with expensive homes that once belonged to its ex- ecutives,. General Motors Corp. began offering free cars to at- tract buyers for more than 100 pieces of unwanted r eal estate. GM is calling the promotion "Buy a House -Get a Car," and hopes it will help liquidate about $10 million in residential real estate holdings acquired by GM from employees transferred lo other areas. "We want to reduce this inven- tory of houses in the Detroit area and we think this is a uni· que kind of marketing program that ought lo be given a try," Robert D. Burger . vice presi- dent in charge of GM 's sales and marketing staff, said in a state- ment Tuesday announcing the program. "If it works here, we may try it elsewhere in the country." Burger and William O'Keefe, head of GM's real estate opera- tions, announced the promotion at a news conference in one of the houses, in suburban Troy. The house sells for $122,000 and com es with a 1982 Chevrolet Cavalier, slicker price $9,538. O 'Keefe said some of the houses have been on the market for a year. He blamed high mortgage interest rat.es for dif. riculty in selling the homes . Although GM has more than 100 unsold houses in the metropolitan Detroit area, only about 78 -those costing more than $11>,000 -are included in the offer, which runs through Oct. 31. That number may in· crease. however. "We have to continue to move people for their own develop- ment as well as the needs of the bus iness, O'Keefe said . "We're constantly moving people. We may have more houses next week ." The average cost of the houses is about $9'l,OOO but the prices go as high as $204,000. The model of car available depends on the value of the house it accom- panies. More expensive homes will include cars that are higher priced or equipped with more options. GM said. House buyers have the choice of keeping the cars or deducting the value of the cars from the cost of the homes. Those who keep the cars must pay state sales tax and license fees on the vehicles. .. All over the country real estate dealers are offering pros- pective homebuyers various types of incentives ranging from boats to furniture to complete wardrobes," Burger said. "We 're in the car bus iness. What better incentive can you offer to a homebuyer than a new car?" Belize celebrates independence Britain lowers Union Jack over Caribbean nation BELMOPAN, Belize <AP - Britain's Prince Michael of Kent handed over the documents of Independence to Prime Minister George Price and wished this fledgling nation "all possible good fortune, peace and pros- perit).1." British jets flew low over the Ma ya n -sty le ca pital of B e lm opan as messages of goodwill and support were read to a crowd of about 3,000. The Union Jack was lowered over this Caribbean nation between Mexico and Guatemala at midnight Sunday, ending three centuries of British con- trol. The new nation promptly ap- plied for United Nations mem- bership, sparking strong opposi· lion from Guatemala, which continues to claim Belize. Britain's message from Queen Elizabeth II carried firm as- s ur a n~s of s upport s hould Guatemala decide to press its claim with force, although such a move is not considered proba- ble. Price, who has worked for more than 20 years for indepen- dence. told the independence gath ering that the estimated 1,600 British soldiers stationed in the country would remain for "an appropriate lime." He s aid they would be "not as a colonial power but as a welcome partner . . . lo preserve and promote peace." Nicholas Ridley, Britain's minis ter of state, said, "The birth of the new Belize has been difficult and is a bit late" because of the Guatemalan dis· pute. Britain gave internal self-rule to Belize, formerly Britis h Hon· duras. in 1964 , retaining control only over foreign policy and de- fense. '•You inherit a sound economy if not a rich one. and your friends will help you," Ridley s aid. Guatemala bases its claim lo Belize on its contention that Bri- tain did not carry out an 1859 treaty that called for construc- tion of a road from Guatemala City through Belize to the Carib· bean. In exchange, Guatemala was to recognize Belize's boun- daries and British control. Placing a Classified is twice as easy! ' Just sey 'tlliarge it" you can use your VISA or MASTE~.CARD to place a DAILY PILOT Classified over the telephone, ilfe~Uding 8-Day week ads. Call (714) 642-5678 illy 111111 Tbe Orange Coast's largest marketplace , cou1·t said Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women. "We'll have to see what the political circumstances are the next tirne around." Women's leaders also point with considerable distress to Reagan's nomination of 17 men and no women to lower federal courts -cited as a possible in· dication of the Republican chief executive's overall plans for the federal judiciary. Only one nominee is black. Reagan's record contrasts with that of his Democratic predecessor, Jimmy Carter. who appointed 40 women lo the fed eral bench, more than all previous presidents combined. C hief Jus tice Warre n E . Burger and Justices William J . Brennan, Thurgood Marshall, Harry A. Blackmun and Lewis F. Powell are over age 72. SHARING SECRET -Bill Browning. a Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus animal handler. discusses the coming show with Dickie. a 4-year -old giraffe. The com - bined circus arrived in Seattle Center's Coliseum on Mon - day. Performances will run tnrou~h Sunday. Refugee asy lum cuts proposed U.S. wants to lower ceiling on a dmitting Indochinese WASHINGTON CAP> -The Reagan administration has pro- posed that the United States ad- mit oo more than 120,000 In- dochinese refugees next year, lowering the ceiling from 168,000. Attorney General William French Smith said the figure s hould be enough to ensure that other nations that provide initial asylum for the refu gees, particularly Thailand , do not severely restrict their own ad- missions. "An admissions ceiling of up to 120,000 . . is based on our best estimates of new arrivals in first-asylum a r eas . the possibilities of volunta r y re - patriation and local r esettle- ment," Smith testified before the Senate Judici ary Commit- tee. "We believe that this level 1s the maximum that may be needed to maintain continuing first asylum in Southeast Asia," he said. First-asylum nations in the case of Asia refugees are coun- tries such as Thail and which ac- cept those fleeing r epressive neighboring regimes in the ex- pectation many will be settled elsewhere. The administration also rec- omme nded that t he United States allow 53,000 refugees from elsewhere in the world in the new fiscal year starting Oct. 1, including 33,000 from the Sov- iet Union. The refugee figures are sub- 'Negro' r eplaced OMAHA, Neb. (AP> -Acting Chief E.L. Stokes has ordered that the word "Negro" no longer be broadcast over Omaha police radios or appear in written re- ports by officers. Stokes said the word will be replaced by the term "black." Stokes' order said the change was made because "Negro" is no longer accepted by the Na- t ion a l Crime Inform a lion Center , an agency that keeps na- tionwide crime records. ject to congressional approval under a new immigration law passed las t year . Smith noted that although the ceiling on refugees from Viet- nam , Laos and Kampuchea or Cambodia is 168,000 this year. the United States expects to ad· mit no more than 125,000 in the year ending Sept. 30. But. the attorney general said, if the government had set a 125.000-refugee ceiling a year ago, "we would have risked serious reaction among the first· asylum nations." Smith s aid t h at t h e ad- ministration intends to dis - courage Indochinese resettle· ment here except in instances in which lives are endangered. He said the policy was one of "humane deterrence," intended to withdraw the U.S. welcome mat for those wh o seek to come to America only to improve their lot financially. Under U.S. law, a refugee is defined a s someone fleeing persecution and not m erely pursuing fin ancial betterment. Avco Thrift gives everyone the chance to earn high interest. You don't have to have a big account to feel welcome at Avco. And it doesn't take a lot of money to earn high interest. We have plans to fit everyone's needs. And people who can make you feel at home. So come on in. Our people will put you in the best company. 14.50" onnual role of lncerest annual rare of lnlerest Te rm lnwestment Certifica te l11ws1 .,, hnle ii> S.500 lord\ ,hmt ,, um,•"~ ll() days fin lh<' event of t1Mly ~v1thdr.,w11I maxunum mlerest pard Is t> O". I Pa•sbook Account Earns from dare of deposll lnrer11~t com pc>undcd dally. paid QuJttNly Minimum dcposll S25 This Is a limited off<'r. available ro Catuomta residents only ~!!AVCO THRIFT 25252 Cabot Road· Laguna Hills, California 92653 (714) 581-1700 620 NeWQOrt Center Drive, Suite 101 N~rt Beach, Calif om~ 92660 (714) 644-9490 I, .,..1 ......... SAILING FASHIONS ProfessionCJI models displa~· the de signs of Bonnie Strauss of a sailor mode dur ing the 01H.•ning show of the California Mart The Spring sailing fashwn show was held T uesday during the Californ1<.1 Colll•ctions three·da~· e,·ent Work topic of OCC 111eet The reasons why people do or don't work will be examined during a three-hour seminar at Or ange Coast College Thursday. The "Psychology of Motiva· lion•' session is scheduled from 7 to 10 a.m. in the college's Fine Pl& Arts Hall 119 with admission posted as $2. o Claude Farley, Huntington Beach behavioral consultant and psychologist. said the course will cover basic m otivational skills . llllar le111l11ar Thursday, September 24th 7 :30-9:00 P.M. At Murdy Park, Huntington Beach (Golden West & Norma Drive> Hear Gerry Reed speak on "SOLAR APPLICATION" Learn about Tax Credits and Utility 6% Financing Gerry's a member of the L.A. County Energy Commission and Mayor Bradley's Solar City Committee. For More l nformatwn. Call REEds SoLAR· DAy CoRp. (714 > 891 -2&1 e 15431 Chemical Lane, Huntington Beach CGntreCI lk-•am:711 BOY and GIRL SCOUT STOCK REDUCTION SALE ----· ------r' ----..___. .-----~ Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Soptembor 23, 1981 H/F A S 1• , l Brown calls pro-nukes 'crazies'-] SACHAM~NTO <APl -~v added, rt'fualo a to name In·) 1terv1ng propaganda overcomt' because we'll cut back," Brown Edmund Brown Jr , actmg as a divlduals he coMldered to be the moral responsibility to in· said rudlo talk show host, branded as "nuclear crazies." vesllgate the medical and en "With President Reagan's cut· ··nuclear crazies" those wtio ··T here 1s a t r emendou s vi ronmentaJ consequences of the back1t we're looking at a darker wunt to build more nuclear ·pl'essure for ghe buildine up of widespread us .. or chemicals, Cutur~." Brown added. saying power plants. the nuclear arsenal as well a! und I intend to pursue this no Reagan "gave away too much" But he told reporters after the the proliferation or nuclear m:itter how much propaganda, In his tax cuts. broadcast Tuesday that the com. power plants arO\Jnd the coun· no mutter how much political • . ment was not directed toward try," Brown warned. opposition, no matter how many Challenged by a .hstener who ··r esponsible" advocates of The Democratic governor wu millions of dollars or campaign called the reapportion ment bills nuclear power guest host for 2·~ hours on contributions people put up a Democratic gerr ymander, "That was a generie comment K FBK in Sacramento, his thlrd against me." Brown agreed that they would referring to the general push for of folll" such proerams in four Questioned about whether his probably help De~ocrats at the more and more nuclear weapons cities. S25 6 billion s tate budget may be expense of Republicans. But he and more and mo.re nuclear Whitt defending his handling low because of overly optimistic de~e.nded th at as a proper plants. The advocates who over· of the Mediterranean fruit fly esti m ates of tax revenues and pohticaJ move. state that case really don't level crisis, Brown criticized what he higher than·budgeted welfare "The Jines that were dr awn I with people ~s to the availability called ~~e "narrow economic In· a nd ~ed i Cal costs. Brown follow the tradition of every re· , of alternatives and the im terests of farmers who want promised budget cuts rather aooortionment in t his state. It ~ port a nee of strategic arms the unlimited use of pesticides. than a tax increase does represent probably the limitations." Brown said. Criticized for his delay in "We have a financial squeeze. majority party. but there's ··There 1s responsible debate medfl y s praying, Brown said, "1 but we will have a balanced nothing wrong with that, "he s- and dinloP.ue on both sides." he will not sit back and let self-budget We'll have no deficit aid I I Tick e t s g one in 3 l1ours to Stones event Med fly found back • in LA area ~i .. Lone fem ale 'm ay have hitchhike d ' to airport SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -All 65.000 tickets for the Rolling Stones rock concert on Oct. 17 were !'>old out within three hours after thev went on sale. More than SI million changed hands in the sellout A st.'cond show was scheduled for OcJ. 18 to meet the demand and the paC'e of ticket sales con· tinued through the day. Hundred:. of Stones rans had lined up at ticket outlets as radip stations leaked word Tuesday that the tickets. shrouded in secrecy to thwart counterfeiting errorts, would go on sale . More than 300 people were queued up at a BASS ticket out- let in San Jost.' over an hour b<·fon.· the orficial sales ao- nount'cment was made. "ThNc s a difference between a normal <:oncert and an event. This 1s an event," BASS Presi- dent J t•rr\ Seltzer s aid. Tickl-ts for a second show \\ere printed with the expecta lion lhal thl' r1 rst COnC'erl would sell out quickly Al SlS.50 each, plus a SI service char ge. they did SHASTA LOS ANGELES <API After a three week pause in dis - t'overies of Mediterr anean fruit flies in Southern California, a lone fe male fly has been dis· covered in the Los Angeles area. County Ag riculture Com· miuioner P aul Engler said the fi nd Tuesday al Los Angeles In· ternationaJ Airport could mean ·'either it was hitchhiking on an international flight or there is a new infestation in the airport area ... The adult was found in a veh i cle carr ying fruit im- pounded by fruit inspectors al the airport. Engler s aid. Sinion s uppo rlPd in museu m f l ap LOS ANGELES <AP l -A Superior Court judge slapped down a challenge by former trustees to the way millionaire industrialist Norton Simon is runnrng the museum that now bears his name. Judge J ulius M. Title ruled Tuesday that Simon and the cur· rent trustees or the Nor ton GROCERY SOFT DllHKS •••........... 12 Oil. 2 3 c QUICl ..... TIMOH HOOD LES AND SAUCE •.•• • '!J ei. 3 9 c UllYS TOMATO JUICE •••.•••••••• 46 oL 69c IUWHY PAPER TOWELS ••••..••..•••• t on 6 9 c IOSloltTA c REAIED IEANS .••.•••••••• Jo o'I. 79 UHDSAY JUMIO PITTED OLIVES •• ,Joo.,_ •• 79 c CClft SNJMGft&D DEODORANT SOAP •• a.ff1 alu •• 4 j I OO LlllYS PEAS and CAltROTS •••• " oa.2 /8 9 c PRODUCE IWllT "M" JVICY OIAMGH • • • • • • • ... • •. • .... 5 Uu. I OO Simon Mu seum of Art or Pasadena had committed no im· proprielicl-in the handling of the museum'1t permanent coll ection of art McCart h y to SPPk Lt. Governo r p ost SAN FRANCISCO <AP > Formt:r Assembly Speaker Leo Ml·Carthy has decided to seek tht' Dl'mocratic no)llination for lieutenant governor. the San Francisco Chronicle reported in Wednesday 's editions The n ewspaper 1taid the Democratic assembh man from San Francisco will announce his dcc1:.1on Thursda) during a tour to four cillt's The move would m ea n M cC ;.irth.\. toppled from the As sembly speakership last yt:ar in a bitter and di visive fi ght among lower hous e Democrats, has abandoned ideas a bout opposing Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. in next year'1t Democrati(' primary for the l ' S. Senatt.' MEAT Re agan sig n s GOP p Pt ition WAS HI NGTON <AP ) Private citizen Ronald Reagan !'>1gned , the petition against the California Democrats' referen· dum plan. saying 1t "violates t he s pirit and letter of the California Constitution ·· Reagan, 1n Rose Garden ceremonies Tuesday attended by top California Republicans, said that in the De mocr at- drafted plan. ··there's even one congress10nal district up in the San Francisco area that tr avels across the bay twice without a bridge, rncorporating parts of , thre<' counties solely ror political purposes.·· H'fl zardous l Pa k INDJO <Af'J ' A truck leak- ing hazardous material onto the · freeway forced closure of a 20·m Ile stretch of Interstate 10 eH ly toda y. a Ca l ifornia{ Highwa) Patrol s pokeswoman ~ sairl ~ ) ,I '1 I I • J 'I '• ) '• :1 ., ~i I) ,. ·' •' ., lACl(Y FARMS c FtlYING CHICKEN ......•.•..• 69 •· U.STO ... FRESH MEATY I 59 PORK SPARERIBS •...•.•...•... • •· Tltte>ER YOU ... G c ' IEEF LIVER •.......••.......••. 89 •· MANHt ... GS IHF I 6 9 IM/llrJ~fr SEVEN BONE ROAST • • . . • • .. • • • 1b.1,1,,r.......;a.-... ... MAHHl~S IHI 2 59 BONELESS BEEF ROAST . . . . • . . • • ~- IAR M ALLIHF DINNER FRANKS IAR M IUU SLICED BACON ............... ............... I ~~. I "'9 .)lb. ...otTHElt... 298 SLICED HALIBUT • . • . . • • . • . • • • • • tb. DELI FROZEN 1 r t 'I PIMTO llANS .•......••••.... 2 9c1b. MOUMTAJM ftC)WH llSCHER SANDWICH MATE ' c PROCESSED CHEESE SLICES 12 os. 99 I '1 'u 1 ., .,, I Save 20" on Eve1J Item In Our Stock ;wr .................... 3 L.M.100 ~m1 e IBJ. ,.PEI s ................ 2 9 I b. IUPI ASWHT CASAIA MELONS •••••••••••••••••••••• 9 c •-. NISH IRUSSB.L SPROUTS •••••••••• 39c'"· DBJMAH 39c THIN cut MEATS ••••••...• zv1 O'I. YAHDIUM, 1 69 FltOZEH FISH FILLETS .••.•• 12 n. MOHJ er.rs Sold CheckC.W.1 Card1A•alllllt S..e Oii loy1, Girts. hWllin a.cl CMb Scotlf U11lfonn1, Jew• J• Accessories. C1 ... lag & lock PacklftCJ Ecpllp1M11t. Clloose ,.._ J.ckeh, ,..... Sllirts. Sllirt1, Shorts, llou1e1, Swe......_ S.Cb, T Sllirts. Hah & J-pen. HUllY IM FOi IEST SIUCtlOM. IROKEM SIZES. UMIT!D TO STOCK OM HAMD. MO SPECIAL ORDERS. SA.LI IMDS TUISOA Y, Slf'T. 29 14210 CULVIR DRIVE PHOHI: 512·3130 HOUl.S: ......... Frt. 10.t, s.t. I 0.6. S-. 1 l·S. , . I I I I I I I j l. l -..... Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, September 23, 1981 HI F A7 ... ~\ 'ilV RO LEX ,,,~ ~ Needlework recovered DEAR PAT DUNN: On Marcil 23 I ••lied two contest entries to tile NaUooaJ Needlework AuoclaUon In New York City. I wrote ln April aaklng If my lnaured package bad arrived, bu& received no answer, ao I wrote •C•ln aod was told ln July that my package bad not arrived. I nJed a claim with the post office and learned tbat the package bad been delivered aad signed for on April 3. My last letter to the H•oclatloo has not been answered and I am very worried because my eatrles were an afghan and a chrtstenbig dress which bad woo two blue ribbons and one "best of show" prize at the 1980 Orange County Fair. la there anytblng you can do to help? J.P., Fountaln Valley A VS contacted National Needlework As· sociation and learned·that your entries had been sent to a contest held in Chicago. rather than to this area's contest in San Francisco. Your entries have been recovered, however, and the as~ocialion 's executive director prom· ises immediate return to you with apologies for the mixup. Deaf get tax help DEAR PAT DUNN: Does the Internal Revenue Service have any special services to aid the hearing-Impaired with their tax ques· Uons? P.E., Costa Mesa Yes, if an individual has access lo either a TV-Phone or a teletypewriter machine they can call toll-free to (800) 428-4732 between 5:30 a.m. and 3:45 p.m for assistance. Deaf taxpayers who do not have one of these special machines in their homes can contact their local service agency or organization for the hearing-impaired. • We -est•lalllliMJ • ...ticNlwlde poo' of .....,. wy 0 e -..n to mMt • ill tM flai-lilcJ of _. MEXT cW~ o • -•le 'ObMMloll Wlttl Temw' for r .+. Y /CAILI T. V. • : ffiil : • ~""pc)AT'I • : ~~ l IPACtf'.C-}-: : •••• , •••••• 17141957-0282 ••••••••••• : Transcendental Meditation® Prog ram Ushering In The Age Of Enlightenment In This Generation Whi 's Healt Fooc:IS /11w N1•11: It•·•· II I I·•· l••i1f1· jlfl••I., Olllj11 ff/I tt.bor View Cellhr 644-7733 1628 San MICJHI Drive, Newport leach Let your feet make a place for themselves. MAKE 'II ALKJNG FUN AGAIN Availabl~ i.n diffnmt Mylc:t. 'includi.nlJ cl<>s• All siKt and ""o wwlllu. fot imn. womm and ch.ildttn. Ma<k of g~ultW lt:ac~ and rnoUbk Tiwy Lui pnnically (attvtt; dw's 11ood. b«ausc once you puc chem on you'll MWr wanr 10 tab them off I \ irk ens tock HOURS· MOH.-SAT 11 -7eSUN. 11·6 Expert Rflsollng Avallabltl THEQRIGINA "ESPRADRILLE" by JAQUES COHEN For thoM of you ~ho won't Httle for second best Blue or beige C80VU with rooo wedge trim At this low price why not got bolh colora ~AREAT19.99 . Lt MD-~M:Rn.D ~..... 14280 Cutww DIM -552-3130 Mon lhru Fri 1<>-8. $al. ICM. Sun 11·6 Billpayers aided DEAR READERS; Did you know there are many legal protecUoDI available to Callfomlans who are behlnd ln their bills? Attorneys Peter Honi1aberg and Ralph Warner have made the lawa and lecal strategies avallable so the average CaUtor· Dian can handle bill collectors and mlnlmlze deb& problems. Now In Its fully revised ftltll println1, "Blllpayers' Rights'' includes Information to help consumers handle bill collectors; atop credit harassment; file a claim of exemption on wages; protect exempt assets Including tools or trade, a car and money In tile bank; deal with stlldent loans; check credit rating; decide on filing for bankruptcy; and un· derstand chi.Id support obligations. This newest Nolo Press sell-help law book Is available In bookstores, or can be or· dered from Nolo Press Distrlbutlng CP.O. Box 544, Occidental, Ca(lf. 95465) for S7.95 plus tax and 85 cents shipplng. • c;111 a problem'' Then wnte to Pat \..'"'I l>unn /'ot will cul red tapt'. getting • .J. the answers and action you nud to soll'f' inequ1tre.~ m government and r-t • husmt'ss Mail 1w"r questions to Pat 1 I Dunn. Al Your Sermce. Orange Coast t arly Pilot. I'<> UoI /56() Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As 1a1111 letter.~ as po.mble u•1// be ansW(>red but phoned nquines or letters not including the reader's full 11aml'. address and busmess hours' phone number cannot bt> nmsutered This column appears daily ex- cept Sunday., Give style to time for all your days. Giid your moments as they deserve with an elegant watch by Rolex. From an outstanding collection: the Oyster Perpetual Datejust in 18 karat yellow gold case and bracelet in dramatic contrast to the rich blue dials of l!Jpis lazuli. Lady's: $6,500. Man's: $9,825. REAL VALUES Bailey Banks&Biddle World Renowned Jewelers Since 1832 SOUTH COAST PLAZA. COSTA MESA First level, Bullock'• wing. (714) 751·5640 " Alao ln I.AU v.,,... In th~ Foolllon Show on items from applesauce to zippers Dll.IJ Pl.IOI~ are advertised every day in the HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER. One of our new extension phones can do a lot to improve your home. A new room call fora new phone. It'll make that extra space something to enjoy. (Instead of something that's an extra 15 or 20 feet from the nearest phone.) And if you're tired of jogging through the house to answer calls, an extension phone can do a lot to improve your existing space, too. Family room. Laundry room. Work room. Any room. Of course our extension phones are more than just practical. We've got models that can turn an ordinary phone call into an adventure. (French phones, Mickey Mouse phones, sleek bed- side phones. nostalgic turn-of- the -century phones and many more.) So come into a GTE Phone Mart. You'.11 be amazed at what a great pick-me-up a new exten- sion phone can be. AZUSA Foothill Shopping Center HUNTINGTON BEACH SOUTH 10100 Adams Ave MONROVIA 412 So. Myrtle MONTCLAIR Montclair Plaza REDlANDS Redlands Mall · SANTA MONICA 13016th St. BELLROWER Artesia Center COVINA (See West Covina) CUCAMONGA (See Rancho) DOWNEY Stonewood Shopping Center HUNTINGTON BEACH Huntington Center LAKEWOOD L.akev«xxt Center Mall lA PUENT£ F\Jente Hills Mall LONG BEACH The Market Place MARINA VIiia Marina Shopping Center I NOVATO 14~Grant Avenue PALM SPRINGS Sunrise Square Shopp1~ Center PANORAMA Panorama City Mall RANCHO CUCAMONGA 9799 Baseline Rd. ~- ROWNG HILLS ESTATES The Village Shopping Center SANTA BARBARA L0<eto Plaza SAN BERNARDtNO Central City Mall SANTAMARIA Town Center SOUTH BAY Del Amo Fashion Square THOUSAND OMS Janss Mall WEST COVINA Fashoo Plaza WEST LOS AHGEW 10Ci6 Gayley Ave. WHITTlER Whittwood Shoppi~ Center ·: ·• '4 •• =· I ~ I .. --- IUITllGTll BiACH I f IUITlll VllllY Diiiy Piiat WEDNESDAY, SE.PT. 23, 1911 CAVALCADE STOCKS SPORTS 82-3 BS 86 Ray Malavasi gives Rams' =---game plan for Chicago. B6 . 0 ~ 0 Minimum standards studied for HB students • • • • 81 f: ' : ~ By STEVE TllJPOU °' .. ~ ........... Students In the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict soon may be required to achieve a minimum academic average before they are allowed to partlripate i n ex t ra - curricular activities, including !!Ports. Presently. the district doesn't require students to maintain a specific academic standing to ~ ~~~~~~~~~-TD M MORPHINE .w~~ Political gamesmanship WAYWARD YOUTH & SUCH: For lhe second lime in recent months. one of our coastal city coun cits has done a complete El Foldo after st arting ef fort s to crack down on the profusion of elcctront{' games. pla~·ed with money, in local stores. The first s uch cit\' to make the Irv was Fountain Valley But when m'er chants s howed up to loud!) protest any prohibition against the \'ideo mone~· makers. the City Council coll apsed its lent !'llow it's happened again. Costa Mesa had draft ed a s imilar law which would have limited the number of video s;!ames that have increasingly found homes in corner markets, liquor s tores. laundromats a nd like establis hments. Mesatown also had placed a moratorium on ins tallation of an~· new games over the last three months BUT ONLY TlOS LAST Monda) night. when the Mesa City Council glither ed in session. stort' owners a lso gathered with them to decry a ny new control law When the last echo of debate faded a\.\-a~. the Temptat1ons of the devil have haunted every generatwn Costa Mesa lawmak ers appeared Lo be opting for a law that would a llow JUSt about any busmess m tow11 to operate the electronic amusements. Store owners argued that the gam es. with names like Astro-Wars or Zap t he Spaceship. are real money-makers that h elp keep small business con· cerns afloat. In a nother rather bizarre twist to the pro-game arguments. merchants of som e all-night busi nes~es said that the gam es are so popular that clus ter s of pla~·ers a re often present during the wee hours when stores are likely to be struck by stickup artists. These businessmen envisioned the clustered gam e players a s deterrents to armed robbery THIS MAY BE. But if \'ou've ever observed the video game players in action. they a re so absorbed by fl ashing lights. miniature ex plosions on the screen and streaking \'ideo rocketships. you have to wonder 1f they'd even notice a repeat o f the Long Beach earthquake. T he only wa~· you might get t heir attent ion would be if the video screen abruptly went blank. Anyway. during th e Costa Mesa ordinance hear- ing. a couple of citizens did s how up to compla in about the games. s uggesting that the attraction of t he video m ar vels was caus ing youngsters to com - mit truancy because they couldn't tear themselves away in time to m a ke it lo Englis h or math classes. EARLIER, POLICE had even suggestC'd the lure o f playing the games was so m agnetic that the younger people were committing daylight burglaries in orde r to finance the video habit a t t wo-bits a cr a'ck. . Alas. there are indeed many perils a nd pitfalls out there in the world to lure youth down the sordid roads of sin and degradation , j In times past . there were no video gam es or X· r ated movies to turn the youth of our nation into lounge lazards and n a mby-pamby boys. -There were. ho wever. pool halls, pinball machines. burlesque houses and. som e generations back, bootleg gin. YOU ARE LE FT t o su s pect that ror every generation. the devil has been able to create some way to lure the weak or unsuspecting off the path or righteousness and down the devious road toward a s inful, indolent lifestyle. Despite these lures, most people finally reach the paint where they put satan behind them and turn to h ard labor in the ir declining years. This qualifies them to crjticize video games a nd other lusts of the n ew generation. qualify for extra-curricular ac· tivities. But district officials say stu· dent athletes must pass four courses to qualify for SPorts. ac- cording to Cl F rules. This means a student athlete could be getting four ''O" grades and still qualify for sports. according to district of- ficials. District trustees agreed Tues- day lo the formation of a 17· member committee to in- ves tigate s u c h new requirements. District Superin· Campaign donation rules OK'd Candidates for city office in Huntington Beach next April most likely will be governed by new campaign contribution rules that limit individual dona- tions lo $.100 and require dis· closure of all expenditures 48 hours prior to election day. The city 's previous campaign contribution ordinance had been criticized as vague and unen· Corceable by the Orange County Di strict Attorney's office after charges were brought that it had been violated by candidates in the 1980 City Council election. The new ordinance received una nimo us preliminar y ap- proval by the seven-member Ci - ty Council Monday. It is expected to become law 30 days after the second reading scheduled Oct. 9. The p roposed ord inance places a $1,500 contribution cell· ing on independent political ac· lion committees donating to an individual candidate . There is no limitation on donations to ballot measures. Late expenditures. or dona· lions in excess of $200 must be reported within 48 hours after receipt, the document states . A II expenditures and dona- tions one year before and after election day must be reported by candidates for City Council. city treasurer, city clerk and city at· torney. Violation of the m easure would be a midsemeanor offense punishable by $500 or 180 days in jail, or both. The previous ordinance sought lo limit individual donations to candidates to $200. It didn't set a hmitat1on on political action committee donations and didn't require late disclosur es of ex· penditures. HB traffic signals due Huntington Beach officials have approved the installation or stop signals at the intersections of Main Street and Ellis A venue, and Main and Florida streets at an estimated cost of $185,000. The signals are meant to con· trol traffic near the Five Points Shopping Center which is fre· quented by senior citizens living nearby in the fed erall y sub- sidized Wycliffe Gardens apart· ments on Florida Street. City Council m e mbers ap- proved signal plans Monday and voted to open the construction projects for bidding by private contractors. Suspect sou ght in BB rape case Police are searching for a man who allegedly picked up a 19-year-old Huntington Beach woman hitchhiking in the downtown area and raped her in his vehicle . The incident took place al 8:20 p. m . Monday in a field near the intersection or WaJnul A venue and 22nd Street , police said. The man's auto was described as a black two·door Triumph TR·7. He was described as Caucasian, 30, overweight, with short dark blond hair. Edinger Avenue work continuing Reconstruction work on Ed· inger Avenue between Golden West and Gothard street.a in Huntiqtoo Beach will continue for the next six weeks, clty of. flciala say. Ediqer will be narrowed to one lane in each direction duriAI the construction1 which enn· tually wUI extend to Bolaa Chica Street. tendent Frank Abbott, on whose recommendation the committee was created, stressed that he wants the committee to consider what the minimum standard will be. and not whe ther there should be such a new standard or not. The committee. which Abbott will oversee formation of. will consist of students, p arents, teachers, an athletic coach and an assistant superintendent. The trustees asked that the commit· tee be formed by Oct. l and re- port its fmdings by their second m eeung m November. The proposal originally was targeted to partlc1palion In athletic programs only. but Ab- bott said It also should apply lo participants In bands, drill teams and all other activities. He a lso slressed that any minimum standard should be applied to all schools in the dis· trict without exception. The only school in the district which has anything resembling a minimum academic require· m ent now is Ocean View High School, where it has not been ful· ly implemented. At Ocean View. s tudents will be required to have a C average If they are to participate in extra-curricular activitie!I. A systemwide requirement probably would supersede Ocean View's new program, however. Abbott told the trustees that rour other school djstricts In Southern California currently have or are considering similar requirements. Most of them re· portedly requir e a C average of students who participate in ex· tracullicular activities. A citizens· group m Huntington Beach doesn't want neu: huildmg~ downtoum to n~l' much higher than the old ones. many of which hove bef?1'1 condemned as hazard.<: m the el1ent of an earthquake Three-story limit pushed Huntington group urf!eS lotl( profile for downtown buildings A group of Huntington Beach volunteers is mounting a cam· pa ign to limit the height of new buildings in the downtown coastal section of the city to three stories. City officials have proposed a six-story building height limit with the possibility of allowing even taller structures if several landowners consolidate a large parcel of land. for the April election. "Huntington Beach is the only coastal city locally that isn't screwed up with high-rise de· velopment." said Coffman, a "City Council has ignored ma- jority." The city's development pro- posal is contained in the state· Los Angeles County firefighter mandated Local Coastal Plan and a Huntington Beach resident <LCP). The city's proposed LCP of four years. w as rejected l ast week by Coffman noted that t he coastal commissioners who ob· citizens advisory committee for jected to sections dealing with the LCP document had recom· coastal wetlands and affordable mended a three-story building housing policy. he ight limitation but that city of- The proposed building height ficials overruled the suggestion. regulation was not an issue with "The City Council has ignored commissioners. the majority of people in the city Dan Coffman, chairman of the wanting to keep a community Citizens for Reasonable Coastal atmos phere d ow ntown ," Development. says his s roup is Coffman claims. circulating petitions for main· The proposed charter amend· taining a low-profile downtown. "' m ent would limit buildings to Coffman. 29, says the group three stories, or 35 reel high, in will try to gel 14,000 valid voter the coastal zone. Coffman said signatures by Dec. 1, lo qualify a the coastal zone is identified as proposed city charter amend-1,000 yards inland from the ment limiting buiJding heights mean high tide. It also would limit density to 25 housing units per gross acre, down from 35 units per gross acre proposed by the city, he said. He said volunteers gathering signatures are going to shopping centers. markets and door to door. Downtown Huntington Beach is destin ed t o be changed whether redeveloped in high rise structures or not. Fifty-one old buildings in the downtown area have been con· demned as unsafe in the event or an earthquake The Main Street s hopping area is comprised or mostly un· reinforced brick buildings that were built in the 1920s and 1930s. City officials passed an earth- quake ordin ance in 1979 and identified the unsafe structures. Recently, the ordina nce was a mended, giving landlords one year after the city's LCP is ap- proved b y coastal co m · missioners to eithe r improve their structures or to tear them down. -PATRICK KENNEDY Onofre medical care eyed Federal licensing panel views emergency plans By DA V1D KUT'lMANN OftllleDelly,_ .... Disagr eeing with its own lawyers. a federal licensing panel has ruled that it wants to hear more about the adequacy of medical treatment for t.he general public if a n accident were to occur at the newly ex- panded San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. The decision by the three· member Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Tuesday represented an important pro- cedural victory for opponents of Southern California Edison Co.'s two new reactors at San Onofre. T,he Edison Co. is seeking operating licenses for the s:u Dallton untta, but first muat prove that both on-atte and off. alte emerlftncy plannin1 for the facility 11 adequate. A aub~n~ed wltne11 wbo tatlfied Tuelday for plant oppo- ne n ta., Dr. lrvlDI Lron of UCLA, estimated that from hall to two thirds or the 89,000 people who live near the plant could suffer from acute r adiation el· fects, contamination and ln· · juries In nuclear·related acci· dent. Thia vlew differed con· aldtrably from that offered lat month by the utility's health s pecialist, who said an accident would lead to only mild exposure. The licensing board's decision Tuesday ran counter to the opin· Edi son must prove that . planning is ade- quate. ion• or lawyers fo r both the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Edilon, wbo said federal regulations don't require that special medical facilities be ln pl ace to handle mass decon· lamination of thousands or peo- ple who live within 10 miles of the nuclear installation. NRC lead counsel Richard Hoefling argued that bis In· terpretaUon of the rules indicat- ed there was no need for a "mass detailed plan" to provide for care of the public tr radioec· tlve sues were to leak from the powerful new reactors nearin1 completion three mile• south ol San Clemente. Instead, Hoeflint aald, the re1· wationl ~ that p1au be in effect for treatment or on-site personnel that could be ex- panded to handle members or the public if that was necessary. The govei:nment lawyer said evacuated res idents could shower at relocation centers out· side the 10-mile emergency plan· ning zone if they were found to be contaminated with radioac· live" m aterials. Edison lawyer David Pigott of San Francisco agr eed with Hoefling's interpretation. saying that Cor planning purposes it waa required only lo look at medlcal ca re for a "restricted aroup of people," In this case plant employees or visitors. Pigott said there was no specific requirement to build facilities for protection ol the public at large. This view elicited strong com· plaints from Anaheim lawyer Phyllis Gallagher , who represents anti-nuclear oppo- nents or llcenslnt or the twin· reactor plant eKpanslon. Ms. GaUaflber said she waa ''surprised' to bear Nuclear Re1ulatory Commlulon la-J8'1 arcue thllt there wH 'llo responslbilll)' for tbe publle health" l n~n tilt emer1eney pl ) . ___ .._. _ ___..... Orange Coaat DAn. Y PILOT /Wedneeday, September 23 , 1981 Bl ~I•• Nel Mir\ Nel W I•• N•I ~In N•t !.olu Nft ·~·j\1t""'u'1~0~ i; ~Ed~i:~\~~ c{1:.'~ =w. ,"jrt"°'~c•t c~ M~;r, ,~,ci' 1r~.c~~l'£' ~r.iiir ~' m -\lo I" • , • ,,1 ,i~ " Mef'c,.. L I ~ M . t m iU::.. (,.; -= It . ,., • ~It\ Not • ' t II. MO I 10 • 172 :1 ~ Me<•IUI I M Wl'I • '-" ~ , ~ lW.-l'I ti 11 lti . I • Ill =r 1 Jolt » I MeN'l.r ' •• I i:-.. " -i '"" \Cl •• > .. • I P [n;:i. tlO\f C"O m 11 II I l'I 11 ol0t7 ~d "'Mewll',.Ulf 2 ._ '-NH .1 t 14~14 -ftf't . 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'J, ~ " , n-::: ·"' 14 ""-t:t& 113', +· · 111 I • ~··· •• -,j ~ " :U::, Ii ,. • -one\~f'1 pqe. atones for s i ns If you VISlted the plush MGM Grand Hotel ln R~no between August 1W78 and September l!r79, you might wWll to return to the scene of tht' crime on Dec 11 when there's goinlC lo be a court hearing t o dt.'lermine If the hotel is doing right by customers who were hoodwinked. It seems a lot of shenanigans went on at the new ly opened hotel during that 13-month period. Here were some Drinks s erved in the hoteJ-casano were routine· ly watered down. -Liquor was recycled Waileris and waitresses would swoop through the lounge a fter a show, pick up drinks that were not finished a nd bring them to bartenders for reuse. If you ordered a drink by brand name, you may very well have been served somethtng else. In fact. onre 11 boltre of name-brand liquor was emp ly, bartenders made it a pracUce of refilling the bot tie with a cheaper liquor Sometimes, when confronted with an order for an exotic drink. the bartenders would simply leave out the alcoholic part. (That will teach 'em to order a fro2en daquiri > Well, either someo)ie snitched or e lse they served u liquor-free drink to the wrong person or the Chivas Regal people began to wonder why they were not ~elling any reorders from th e h otel Wh a tever the reason , th ese c u te practices were brought to the attention of the 1tulhorilies. lllTDI MDllDWITZ The federal Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms issued a complaint a nd got the MGM Grand to admit that durmg those 13 months it had re- filled 16,000 bottl es with cheaper liquor than was in there originally. <They dnnk up a s torm at these Nevada casinos.) To settle lhil> acLion. MOM Grand paid a rine or $125,000 m January 1980. That's Cine but what about a ll those poor customers who were bilked by not getting the drinks they ordered or getting served a drink that had been mixed the rught before for a nother customer? These days ther e are always lawyers to take up the cudgels for the downtrodden consumer I mean. it's bad enough losing at blackjack. you don'L have lo be ·Stuck with walered·down drinks on top Of that So .MGM Grand was sued. and at has now reached a ten tative settlem ent with the s hortchanged customers. These are the terms < all two of them J • I. If you were on e of those who were cheated, you will now be able to go to the hotel and see a cocktajl show at half.price. 2. tr you don't want to see the show. you will be entitled lo get two free drinks anywhere in the casino. How's that for a sporting proposition? Of course you have to return to Reno to collect your compensa lion. Is anyone going to fly from Texas or the East Coast or the Midwes t to collect two free drinks? MGM Grand routinely offers that to people Just lo get them to come <and play the s lots) Anyway, Judge Grant Bowen of Reno has set Dec. 11 as the day for a hearing on the settlement. That's the time customers will be able to make their objections known. They can come there and demand three drinks . There's one other problem. How are the patrons who were there during those 13 months going to be in· formed they have something coming Lo them? Easy, we'll use the American solution. advertising. A s part of the settlement , MGM Grand is directed to place ads m airline magazines and newspapers to let peo- ple know they have a rebate waiting for them This will be a copywriter's field day STOCKS IN THE SPO TLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW 'fOAKCAP) Flnel Oow.Jontt e~ tor Twetd.ty, Sep n AMERICAN LEADERS -" -tYt ..... --,.. -"" -114 .... -... _,.,. ..... P<I Up 10,t Up IU Up II.I Up 11 4 Up tO.I Up 10.1 Up t ,t Up LJ Up 7,7 Up 7.6 Up 7.S Up 7.t u, L7 Up •.I Up U Uo tt fl'<I. Off 46.0 Off IU Off 11.t °" ll.t Off tt.S E t>..O 11.t 11-1 i! liJ ~ ii:: g; t:t °" t; STOCKS 30 Ind :II) Trn IS VII t5 Siii lno11s Tran Ullls U Slk °""" H.. LMW C '"9 0.. W .22 tsS.«> Ill. 11 1<15.70-O.li lAI 23 >SI. U :MS II l!O.th l 11 IM 71 tOS • ICM.S7 101. 10 + 0 It DHJ J:J.I." m SS JJO ... + l.Oi WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORK (AP) Sep. 22 T..S.y Actve11uo ... 0.Cllr>ed 116 Uncll•1199d '" Total IU<lft ttOO New lllgtlt 3 Ntw lowt l:M W"AT "'-'EA DO HEW YORK IAPJ ~ 22 .\CIVenceo T~L Oe<llMCI m uncl)•"9'0 10] Total I$-. 171 ..... lllilM I Hew loWI tO METALS T_, S,IM,JllO t,S2t,t00 JIO.IOO 1.1 ... 000 Pnv de" 711 J1I 1171 I ltt Prtv. ";J, ,. ,. "' j "" c.,,., ....... 7Yt """ • po11'1d, u \. o .. u n .. OoftL Le .. *4CMlS•~ l11tt ft\4 '...U • ,,_,., oellv- Tlfl 11.•1 -I• w .... compOSlte lb a .. M._ 7...0 c..,tt • '*"'°· H Y Mettw? $AAD.00 per fl.ttll. l'tel..._~.001,..yOI., H.'I'. SILVER HEW YORK (AP) -H.tndy • Her~ silver lltdey St .tlll, off IO*· Enoelll•rct silver $t ltO, ell •o ••. Fat>rlc.i .. \I0.6Ja, ..n IO.S14. GOLD QUOTATIONS ~: mominv fl•lllt k51,00, off kOO. ...,._; ~ flalne J.4M.SG, off IS.st . l'«k: .._,_ ll•lllO Ult.AO. Ill> to.U .. ,.......,., MJI t?, off U.01. bric Ii: ·-· fl•lllO ..suo. off u.oo. J.4Jl..OO •ti! ... M•IMIY ll Me.-: (CNlly d•ll'f qwttel ~JO,effU.SO 1.......-1 (only .. lly QWOUI M1' !O, off U.to. I ....... : cw, ... 11, quotel fe~k..,. ». Off u.n. SYMBOLS Switzer l1a nothing but praise for USC From AP dltp1tcbea NORMAN, Okla. -If flattery [i] matters in football. then Oklahoma 4 • . Coach Barry Switzer mtty have a lready won Saturday's game against use. Switzer praised the first·ranked Trojans enough on Tuesday that a victory by the No. 2 Sooners would look like the upset or the year. "I plan to go out and win that ballgame,'' Switzer said, but gave little reason to believe it could happen. Oklahoma's defense will have to be over· achievers to stop Marcus Allen and the USC of· fense that paved the way for his 242-yard rushing average so far this year, he said. "I can't overemphasize how good they are," he said. "I mean they are good. They are awesome." Switzer joked that one injured Sooner cor· nerback was actually hurt by watching the film of the Trojan victory over Indiana. ''l think he saw one of those student-body right sweeps crunch that Indiana cornerback and his leg went limp." Quote of the day Dan Quisenberry, Kansas City Royals' relief spedalist, after recording a s ave against Toronto: "Tbe thing I got moat ex- cited about was forming the world's only Q·initialed battery with Jamie Quirk. He was glad this one got away MIAMI A 17-year-old fish· erman who set out aboard his in- flatable raft to ply the waters or Bis· l!I cayne Bay hooked a bag one he was glad got away Miami police said Evelo Rodnguez hooked a shark. Rodnguez began yelling, hoping to frighten the shark away The shark began biting throl.Jgh the raft. Passersby called police to the scene. The first offi cers there saw only the erratically bob· bins r a ft. As they prepared to dive in. Rodnguez popped to the surface some distance away -near another offi cer. "When he Cthe bfficer> realized the other men were getting ready to rescue a shark. he called them on the radio and stopped them," said Miami spokesmau Mike Stewart. • • • ••••••••• ¢40 ·-Wockenf uss leads Detroit victory lolm Wockeafua drove ln Lhree Ill ru.111 wtlh a pair ol homen ., Detroit defeated B•ltlmore. 6·3, Tueaday night for their fourth conaecuUve vie· tory ... In other Amutcao Le.11ue 1ct.too, Keith Drumrllllt ain1led in ltlekey lletHle..._ home rrom aecood bue with two out In the top of the l3t.h Inning to •lve Oak.land • 3·2 vlctory over Toronto ln t he llrst 11me of a doubleheader. In the second 1ame. &eve MeC1Uy won bis flflh strai.aht aame as the A's won, 4·2 ... Ted Sim· moaa drove In four runa with a homer. a double and a single as Milwaukee rallied ror 1t 10-8 victory over Boston be hind veteran reliever Route f1.a1en . . . Bo Dlu bad three hits, including a Wockmfuu two-run double ln the third inning. and Len Barker struck out 10 111 Cleveland downed lbe New York Yankee1, 6·4 . . . Ken <lay earned his first wlnnlng dedalon in more than a year with relief help from Slaaae Rawley, and Seattle defeated Tex.u, 3·2 ... Larry Gura pitched a four-hitter, and Clltlt Hur· die and Wlllle Wllsoa each singled home a run in the flflh inning, boosting Kansas Clty to a 2·1 win over Minnesota . . . A common assault c harge was withdrawn against Oakland Manager Billy Martin for attacking an umpire during a game against Toronto at Exhibition Stadium May 29 ... Doug Won Chol became the first Korean-born player to join a major league roster when he signed a contract with Toronto. Sutton blanks Atlanta on three hits Don Sutton blanked Atlanta on ·•• three hits and Tony Scott collected three hits, including a run-scoring single Tuesday night to lead Houston to a 3-0 victory over the Braves. Sutton itllnow 10·8 ... In other National League action, Tom Seaver and two relievers combined on an eight· hitter and Cincinnati took advantage of a pair of errors to score two unearned runs as the Reds :~ downed San Diego, 3·2 ... ' ' Warreo Cromartie and Tim Wallach knocked in two runs apiece and Steve Rogers pitched a five-hitter as Mont- real captured a 6·2 victory over Philadelphia . . . Pinch hitter Jerry Morales' sacrifice fly drove in Steve Dillard in the ninth inning, giving the Chicago Cubs a 4·3 Sutton victory over St. Louis ... Jason Thompson's three-run homer capped a four-run third inning and powered Pittsburgh to a 5·3 Wlfl over the New York Mets ... Y1tts· burgh veteran first baseman Willie Stargell hinted strongly that this would be his last season as a player . . . Montreal bu signed a working agreement to field a Class A team in San Jose in 1982. 0 sos s a t s t 3 &$352$,35 2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOf,wedneeday. September 23. 1981 H /f 117 Baseball today On thl• date In bueball ln UM: Pinch·hltUn1 for rookie Georae Foeter. Willie Mays of the San Franclsco Glint.a cracked 1 pitch from San Dieao·a Mike Corkln1 for h14 800th career home ru.n. On th1I date in 1982 : Los Angeles Dodge rs speedster Maury Wllls stole hJs 96th and 97th bases of the season tO break Ty Cobb'• one.season ma· Jor lc-.ue record. The Dodgers,.wbo started the day lead· ing the second·place San Francisco Giant• by four eames with seven remaining In the National League race, lost to St. Louis while the Giants bear the Houston Colts. 10·3. Thus began a late Giants comeback that would carry Alvin Dark's team to the NL PeMant. On this date in 1 ~7 : Hank Aaron's ninth-Inning home run off Billy Muffett gave Milwaukee a 4·2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals and enabled the Braves to clinch the National League pennant. Today's birthday: Chicago White Sox pitcher Dennis Lamp is 29. Pryor seeks to fight Leonard Aaron Pryor, the Cincinnati fighter who is the World Boxing As· sociation juruor welterweight cham-• pion, says he will seek a bout with welterweight c h a mpion Sugar Ra y Leonard. Pryor has a four-round exhibition Saturday in Las Vegas as part of the undercard for the Roberto Duran·Luigl Mincbello junior middleweight bout ... John Feeney impressively beat Dave Smith to lake the British bantamweight boxing title at Bethnal Green, London . . . Security holders of the 1Clvic Center Redevelopment Corp. voted to become a subsidiary of Anheuser Busch, giving the giant brewery ownership of Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis. Televison, radio Following are the top SPorts events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ ./ ./ ./ excellent, ./ ' / worth watching;' I fair; ./forget it. II 7:30 p.m., Channel 11 I I I I DODGER BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Fran- cisco. Announcers: Vin Sc ully and Ross Porter. The Dodgers send Jerry Reuss (9-3) to the mound to face the Giants' Tom Griffin (8-8) at Candlestick Park. The Doctgers are in fourth place In the National League West, five games behind Houston, while the Giants are In third, four and a half back. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at San Francisco, 7:30 p.m .. KABC (790); Chicago at Angels, 7;30 p.m .. KMPC (710). Hockey -Kings vs. Vancouver at Victoria, p.m . Fernando's luck runs out SAN FRANCISCO (APJ -Fernando Valenzuel~. the Los Angeles Dod1era rookie pitchlng sensation, deserved a better flll~ 111ln1t thtJ San Francisco Giants Tuesday oJaht V&leMuela, bidding to become the m~on' first 14·game winner. was betrayed by ID lnaide· the park homer and sutrered his firtt dt1feal in more than three months, 5·2. "He pitched good e nough to win," uld Manager Tom Lasorda after Valenzuela, 13·5, WH touched for four runs and seven hits in alx lnnin&•· J lick Clark singled with one out In the third in· ning und Larry Herndon la.shed a liner to rt1ht with t wo away. RICK MONDA V, usually a center fielder, raced in Crom his right field position and attempt· ed a shoestring catch. But the ball bounced In front of him and skipped away as Herndon circled the bases with a two-run homer that placed the Giants ahead to stay. "It was a snap decision." Monday said. ··1 ob· viously thought I could make the catch. but the ball was tailing away " Herndon, who had three RBI and is now 6·10 against Valenzuela this season, was sheepish in discussing his game-winning btow ... Luck was on my side," Herndon admitted Curiously, Valenzuela's last previous loss was-' 2 1 at St. Louis, June 11th, when George Hendrick or the Cardinals belted a two-run inside-the-park homer. J OHNNIE LeMASTER'S s ingle, pitcher Ed Whitson's sacrifice and Joe Morgan's single added a run in the fourth. Darrell Evans' triple and Herndon's single gave the Giants a 4-1 lead in the fiCth . Valenzuela, whose six strike-outs increased his National League lead to 168, worked six innings, allowing seven hits and four runs. The Giants en· tered the game with only one run in 21~ innings against the Dodgers' standout rookie. Whitson, 6·8, retired the first nine batters before the Dodgers opened the scoring in the fourth on Steve Sax's s ingle. a wild pitch and Steve Garvey's two-out single. They addM a run in the sixth on a homer by Monday, his 10th of the season. The Giants concluded the scoring with an un· earned run in the seventh off Bobby Castillo. Enos Cabell led off with a single. went to third on third baseman Pedro Guerrero's throwing elllor on Clark's grounder and scor ed on Evans' sirtf'e. Greg Minton pitched the last two innings for his 17th save. Edison's drawing power is favorite subject NFL Rams vs. ><·Chicago, even Atlanta 21;, over ><·Cleveland Buffalo 3 over x-Cincinnatl Transfers generally mean one of three things to all parties concerned Houston 3 over ><-New York Jets x-Pittsborgh ••17 over New England Oakland 2 over x-Detrolt What's the most talked about item in CIF Southern Section football? Edison High, you say. with its 24-game winning streak? You're close, but Edison High and its drawing power for transfers might be the better answer. PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON It began in 1978 with Mater Dei High's Mike Dotterer (now at Stanford), exploded with Kerwin and Dino Bell in 1979 (both are now at Kansas) and now encompasses several standouts this year. in- cluding three from Chatsworth High, two from Huntington Beach High. another from Fontana and still one more from Fountain Valley, at last count. of our kids a re borne grown. W~ get them Crom our junior high school, unJike some other schools in the county." Transfers mean one or three things -(1) the parents are making a move for one reason or another entirely separ ate from football considera· lions (2) dad wants junior to play in a program that will benefit his son's chances to become a bet· ter player and/or recognition (3) someone evil is running around illegally recruiting players. That'll get you thinking, the rest is up to your imagination. There's no accusation, just a little something to think about. The editorial department of the Daily Pilot took a comprehensive look at the Edison picture during the summer. ran an article in depth and concluded that wrongdoings were at a minimum at Edison. No. 1 is obviously very honorable. No. 2 is honorable. too. since parents have certain rights. No. 3 is very bad. very illegal and very hard to prove. Recruiting charges are usually by inuendo on· ly. A coach might say something like : .. All No one that I have discussed the article with seems to have come away pleased. Edison Coach Bill Workman has told this writer the board wasn't washed clean enough. Others have implied lhe Op· posite. S•turdev'UOllf9" toolball ochedl.ll• WIEST <>411-¥S USC 81 Coll•um 10..nNt 1, l p.m .) Ol'llo SI. •I Sttr1lord S.11 JOM St. •t C.llforlll• ICl\e""'I 1. 10:JD e.m I w .. 111~ el Or-oon Arlr-S4 .. WHhlnglon SI. ldello el H-•11. 11 Clll POiy C,.,,,._191 c.al Poty ISLOI, n I.• ve,.,. at iuuu Paclfk lledl-etCel llltMrWI Whittler . s... Franc:IJCO St S.11 01 ... v. et ~·Pttar Cel St.-e Nortllrldgit el UC Devit Hurnlloldl St. •I OcclderU I Cl eremon1.-et QMpman S.11t •a .... "" Chico st. C•I si.-. H•y.o•rd ., Puott Soulld S.c:rernento St. at St Merv't llOCJUaS C•I Sl•I• Fullerton et Arl1011e, n llrlollfl'I Youno et Color.., l.OftO llNCll SI at Nev.0.1.at ll•OH. II Air Fott• et N-Me•l<O. II iOVTMWIEST T•ut Teel! al h ylor, 11 Ute!\ S'"9 et HeullOrl, 11 S-....... Te-54. 81 l.amet, n S.11 1>MoD St. et Olol.....,.. St, Miami. Fla • Tuet. 11 LOlll•'-Tacit •t Tellff Aa.M," SMV e tTCU,11 Sou111em llllnolut TlllM. II TtKt Mrllnflon ., West TuH SI • II MIDW .. f ,.,._ 54. 81 (Mitre! 111'1<11191111 lllltte"•t ClllCl-1. II Mleml, ONo et l!Mlern Mkllloen, 11 WlclllW 5ta9111 I~ St., n UCl.A .tl- l(ent St. M I-• St. l( .... "'.y .t 1(- 0r•ete • K-St NeYye1Mk1119'111 llowllno G.._ at Mkhloen SI. Or'90" St. "'MlnnelOle Lovltvlll• at Mis-trl p...., St ... He41t~ 'llllllOlt St."' Horllltnl lltlnol1, n Ulellel~m tell SL atONoU. Not,. DetN et Pvl'OUe Wfftenl Mlcllloan •I Wlt<OMlll SOU TM Appel-IWI St. et Tiie Cl~I. 11 Toled0111Eat~IN,11 South c.ro11ne"' co--oi. M~I St. .. 0.0.ol• TKll JI ic.. et L.oufslene SI.. 11 East T--st ... M~ll. II "'ru-..... MIMIMllll»t .. Jee~-." FIOf'lde n. Mluk11pol St. •I Jae•-. llottofl Colleot ., Ho<1h C-lne Meryland ., Nortll CM-OllN St. II Sout-n MIM lta lpol el II k ,,,.,_ Not111 T .. ff St. .. ~-LOu~. n AulMlmM T- J•OSO'!Vllle SI. et T.,_....C:Nlttanoota, II A14tbema .t Y9"dffblll, 11 Ovl!altVlrv!Na Wllll.,,. & MMy et VMI Wall.a F-•I Vlrwlll'• T~h Fur,.,.. .. W..wn C¥OllN, n a AST llr-11 et Army 1. ••• .,.,.. .. Columbl• Coloelt at Corlllttl HOiy C.-et Harv•nl ........ Uflilll Oartrnoulll Ill Mll _ _..t ()elew-et Prine.._. ''"''.,.•SW«11te ColOf .-St . .t West 111'91111• ConMCtlcvtet v ... ************• ! JOHNSON & SON : It • It • Presents. . . : It • It It It It • It It • • • • • • It It . , ............... : It • ,. HR's • . ... • Pick of • • Th• Week ... • • • It • *SUNDAY* it • • • Alfanta over it • Clevel•nd it It • ,.. .. • · B&lffalo over it it Cincinnati ,.. It • • • • * MONDAY • ,.. • • • C hlcago over it '* * * * * * * * * * • • + • • * * * * * * • • • * * * * * * • • * * * • * * *~ Loa Angelea it .. : Pete's Pick Se Tih • : at Johnson & Son e I j e : ~lohnson & Son EXCfflNG : • Lincoln-Mercury * Al '82'• * • : 2626 H~ avo. nl• : : COSTAMISA AT JOHNSON & SON : : ,, •• \1~;\~!q ••..• * •• ** *. * ** * •• ···~ * ·~······ * * * • .,, "*** ............... At any rate. the issue was sixed, here, until Los Angeles Times writer Sam McManls' article on Monday, which quotes Workman as saying: "Fountain Valley has four transfers starting this year. Marina has three ... , " and the writer goes on to s ay Workman maintains he was misquoted in the Daily Pilot during the summer and as a result. he now uses a ·tape recorder when talking to re· porters he doesn't know well. Miami 2'h over x-Baltlmore x-Phlladelphia 9'h over Washington ><·Green Bay 21;, over Minnesota x-Seattle 2 over Kansas City x-San Francisco 6 over New Orleans ><·Dallas 101/1 over New York Giants x· Tampa Bay vs. St. Louis, even San Diego 3 over x·Denver Asked to comment on Mc Manis' lftticle, Workman told me the following on Monday: "No, J never said I was (misquoted) in the Daily Pilot articles, that's bow you can twist words. They (Times) put the rest in. I said sometimes I use a Lape recorder if I don't know the reporter I'm talk· ing to." College x-USC •over Oklahoma UCLA 11 over x-lowa JC-Nebraska 4 over Penn St. x-Texas 71;, over Miami, Fla. x·Mlchigan 20 over Navy Ohlo St. 41;, over x-Stanford x-North Carolina lS'h over Boston College Alabama 24 over x·Vanderbilt Brigham Young 10 over x-Colorado x-Mississlppi St. 2 over Florida Asked about the four transfers Fountain Va lley is starting <Indiana's Trey Martens is in· deed a starter for the Barons), Fountain Valley Coach Mike Milner says: "I'm sending out a search team this week to find these people (the three others>." Notre Dame 71;, over X·Purdue Washington 1 over x-Oregon x·Georgia 9 over South Carolina Arizona St. 7 over x-Washington St. SMU 10over x-TCU x-Denotes home team Workman says he did not say four starters. but four players. (Milner is also looking for those <See EDISON'S, Page 88) ·. (From Harrah's Reno Sports Boot!) Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division Kansas City x-Oakland Minnesota Texas Seattle Chicago Angels W L Pct. GB 23 18 .561 21 18 .538 1 20 22 .476 31h 18 21 .462 4 17 24 .415 6 16 25 .390 1 u is .ast s East Division Detroit 26 16 .619 - I Boston 24 17 .SSS 1 'h Milwaukee 25 18 .581 1 \.'l Baltimore 21 19 .525 4 x-New York 21 20 .512 41h Toronto 19 20 .487 51h. Cleveland 20 22 .476 6 x -First-half division wlMer ,.....,.,_ ~l.Ok..-0 Oafi!Mf M, T.,_ ,_, 1 tft _.,.,. If t""'"-J MllWeulla!. ~ --..it 0.t...it•.-._... , ................ v ... K.-. .. Clty2,~1 leattle a, T-T!.r,.. ._ Cfl~ CTl"OlltMI ........ Cwtft ,_..~ n Mllw ..... csie. Ml et ........ (T-M~~ C....,,. t-71 .. a.ft.....,. (0. ~ t~~-(~ !Ml at T•-(OeMy .... , " C .......... COIMt M l et.._ Y«ti C..._... >~1:11aMta (llffttr11 ... , at ltal'IHt City CL=t~ WI .. Te-..1~ ...,-1, " NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Houston 27 14 .659 CinciMati 24 17 .585 3 San Francisco 22 18 .550 4\.'l x-Dodgers 22 19 .537 5 Atlanta 20 20 .500 6',; San Diego 13 30 .302 15 East Division St. Louis 22 18 .550 Montreal 22 19 .537 ~ New York 20 21 .488 2'1'l Chicago 18 21 .462 31,.\ x-Philadelphial7 23 .425 5 Pittsburgh 17 24 .415 sin x-First-halC division winner ~·tcS.11 Fr-ltco i, ~ J Clll< • ._ SL Lev11 a ~I~ i ...... Yor11 I M_,t,....16, ""41acltlpllle 2 HOVI 14'1 J. Al '"""'8 0 CIM'-11 a, S.. 0Meo 2 y....,.,._ 0-.-. (II-I t-11 et S.11 FteMllCO (Of1ffl11 M ),11 N .. Ywt! 11.yncll .._,, et Cllk._o (K"*- 7 .. ) ~lthlMH'Oll Cll'-11 7..JI e t MOftlreel (..,.._ ... _ ... , ~1111-..... (,...._ 1·tl el St, I.Wk ClllW1I" M l,,. Atle"te (~ UI 81 MOii~ (J. Nleltre .. 71, II CmclftMll ,,,,_.. >11 el S.11 Di.et (wt. ~71," \ FEMALE WING WALKER Carol X . L ynne walks on lower wing of plane during stunt in recent air show at Lebanon. N.H. The PT-17 Stearman piloted by Wayne Pierce of Winter Haven. F1a .. flew 100 feet orr the ground at speeds of 150 mph. Met opera opening wild Normally staid first-nighters boo controversial ~oprano .. leave, and did By MARY CAMPBELL A-1811N1~1W~ NEW YORK The Metropolitan Opera began its season with the most disruptive opening in years. as scores or normally staid first-nighters booed soprano Renata Scotto's attempts to sing ··Norma," and one heckler was even carted off by security guards But if Monday night was an artistic disaster. it was a finan- cial triumph as the Met grossed $365,000 from ticket sales. Prices ranged from $6 for standing room to $200 for box seats. It was the largest gross s ince open· ing night 1966, when the Met moved to Lincoln Center and charged even more for the best seats. Laughter, s nickering and murmurs c011tinued fr om throughout the audience as Miss Scotto sounded alternately s haky and s hrill. swooping through some passages and butchering embellishment9' Boos were mixed with applause for both Miss Scotto and conduc· tor Jam es Levine at final cur- tain calls. though there also was shushing directed at the booers. Mezzo Tatiana Troyanos and tenor Placido Domingo were more enthusiastically received the last lime "Norma" was heard on a Met opening rught. Ne w York Times music critic Donal Henahan said in his re- view or Miss Scotto. "When the music lay in her most comforta· ble middle voice, her tones penetrated the house nicely. But when she was forced to sing fuU out in the upper regions, intona- tion and vocal technique desert- ed her. She scooped and slurred and wobbled." A usual Met Opera opening night has a standard opera star· ring a famous soprano and a reasonably well-dressed au- dience which politely appfauds everything. Ruben said Miss Scotto had not canceled any of her four up- coming "Normas" -all sold· out well in advance -and Met officials would not comment about opening night. Aside from the problems with "Norma,·' the 30-week season promises more than its share of triumphs. partit:ularly after the disappointments of last 'year, when a labor dispute caused the season to open late. The trouble began as soon as the controversial Miss Scotto made her entrance in her Met debut as Bellini's Druid priestess. one or opera's most fiendishly difficult roles because it requires great dramatic power and coloratura agility above high C. Before Miss Scotto sang a note, a m an in the balcony yelled "Viva. Maria Callas," and added an obscenity. Securi- ty guards removed him. Met spokesman David Ruben said two or three other people who made commotions were asked to Miss Scotto. 47, has been a source of controversy a mong op er agoers for some seasons. The Italian soprano is a favorite of Levine. Met music director, who frequently gives her the prestige of singing in new pro· ductions and on evenings that are televised. This season, she is scheduled to sing 42 limes. more than any other leading soprano. New productions are planned of Rossini's "The Barber of Seville,'' Puccini's "La Boheme," Offenbach's "The Tales of Hoffmann," Mozart's "Cosi Fan Tulle" and a Stravinsky tr1ple ·bill, "The Nightingale." "Oedius Rex" and the ballet "The Rile of Spring." Operagoers ha ve heard "Norma" sung beautifully al the Met in recent years by Joan Sutherland and Montserrat Caballe. The late Maria Callas made her Met debut in it in 1956, Sixty percent of the season bas been sold by subscription. Most of the operas in the first five weeks are sold out. DEA TH NOTICES COURTNEY 'Ne"port lk:H·h. Ca , son JOH N PATRI CK Daniel f Courtney of COURTNEY. a 17 \'CUr rl'SI Newport Beach. Ca .. sisters dent of Newport Bc•uch. Ca Irene Bronston of Sant;i Passed away on S(•ptember Paula. Ca and Rosa Lee 19, 1981 lie was a j!raduah• Mettler of Lodi. Ca. :\lass of of South Western l!nivl•rsil\ !he Resurrection\\ 111 be held in Los Angeles, Ca and1 on We<lnesda~. September worked for 25 vears for the 23. 1981 at 11 OOAM at lhl' Horton and· Con v(•r s1• lloly Cro::.s Mausoleum The Prescription Pharmacies family requests in lteu of He was also a partner Ml rlowers donations be made Sludor Wholesale Drug Com to the :\tanrt·sa Jesuit pany in Los Angeles. Ca . as House. PO Box K. Azusa. well as being a World War 11 r.a !:11702 Ser\'lces under the Veteran He 1s survived b) d1rect1on of Harhor Lawn . his wife Jane of Newport Mount 011\·e Mortuar~ of Beach, Ca . a daughter Costa )1esa 540-5~ Marceh n Courtne' I)( REYNOLDS -..--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;:;;'1 F R E D H t.: !': T I N G Neptune Societ y REY:-O:OLDS. born August 1. c1tEM.t.TIOff eu1t1.t.L.t.TSE.t. 1918 tn Oak Park. Illinois 646-7 431 and was born to eternal life Our literature tell s the on September 21, 1981 in complete story of our Santa Ana. Ca at the age 63 soc1etv He 1s survived b~ his wife ~111 .. 1 ... pon10110 Dorothy. daughter Vicki ~~2':;:"~"~· ~;;;;;:::;:':;:':;m;:./;:lk;;r~ <Gerald > Brousseau. son • Fred. sisters Jean Tuerk and Dorothy Hcckend orn and 6 grandchildren. V1sita - t ion will be held tonight We!dnesday September 23. 1981 from S:OOPM to 9.00PM with a Prayer service a l 7.JOPM at Pacific View Mortuarv Chapel. Newport Beach. Ca . Mass of Chris-tian Buri al will be held on Thursday, September 24, 1981 al 10 OOAM al Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church, Newport Beach, Ca. Interment al Pacific View rtHCI llOlltHS ' SMn'HS' MOITUAJlY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536·6539 'ACIRC VIEW MIMOllAL,AJlK Cerretery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1t1c View Drive Newpart Beach 644-2700 Memorial Park. Friends l*CO.MICll MOHUAllts may make contributions to Laguna Beach the Right to Life League 494-9415 Pacific View Mortuary Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 HAal04l LAWM-MT. ouv• Mortuary • Coemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 directors. WIDLUND CHARLES A. WIDLUND. resident of Costa Mesa, Ca. Passed away on September 20, 1981 al the age of 00. He Is survi\•ed by a niece Marian E. f1eener of Long Beach. Ca. Funeral services will be held on Thursday, September 24. 1981 at 11 :OOAM a\ Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Chapel with Plane, copter collide; 2 dead A light plane and a helicopter collided over lhe Meadowlands Sports Complex today at East Rutherford, N.J., killing at least two people and in- juring two others, offi cials said. A dispatcher said the dead were aboard the helicopter, which crashed on a Meadowlands park- ing lot. Officials said a passenger on the plane suf- fered minor injuries and its pilot was hospitalized for back injuries. * Two rlrefighters In Chicago plunged 16 noors to their deaths Inside an elevator shaft while fight· ing a fire in a 31-story downtown office building, authorities said. Seven other people were lnjured. The blaze was Tuesday night In the Willoughby Tower. * Five Cahforma cities left without air service after Swift Aire and Golden Gate Airlines sus- pended operations will get temporary relief start- ing this weekend, officials say. The Civ il Aero nauli cs Board said --------- it arranged with other PLACES ai rlines to have planes flying to San Francisco ------and Los Angeles from Modesto and Stockton. Los Angeles will be lied also to Sao Luis Obispo, Bakersneld and Santa Maria by the temporary flights. * The tail engin e of a Puerto Rico-bound Eastern Airlines jet exploded and forced the aircraft to make an emergency landing ln New York, and ln Miami an Air Flror1da DC·lt on the ground lost power In one engine and tuled off the runway. No injuries were reported In either Incident Tuesday. * President Reagan, back at the Washington hote l where he was shot six months ago, acted like nothing had ever happened. Joking and smiling, Reagan and bis wife, Nan- cy, made a brief appearance Tuesday night at the Was hington Hilton Hotel for the annual Am· bassadors' Ball, a fund-raising event for the Na- tional Multiple Sclerosis Society. It was Reagan's first return to the hotel since be and three others, including While House press secretary James Brady, were shot in an assassina- tion attempt March 30. ~. ..... ClllOTMHS IB.1 .. OADWA. Y MC>al"UAIY Dr. John A. Lundvall and Pastor Tony Curto official· Ing Friends may call at the mortuary on Wednesday . September 23. 1981 from 4:00PM t-0 9:00PM. Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway * ' 10 8roedway C0tt1 Meaa ~2·9'50 IALT2 .... OM SM1lt • TVTHIL.L WISTCUflP CH.A ... 427E '7thSt Cotta Mesa &4&-9371 , ' :1 Mortuary directors. Cadillacs t.o Go-Carta Whatever Ole Fad RoU 'em olt the market With a Cla.sslfled Ad Call Now! 642·56'78 A Marine guard accaaed of maltrea&aelll.. aad assault aboard tbe aircraft carrier USS &aDaer bas been acquitted ID SH Dleso loltowl•I • apeclal coart-marUal trial. tlle NHY HJ•· The tbree-offtcer Jary deliberated aa lteur Tuesday befol'e reachlal tJte •ttdttt. Ma11De La•ce Cpl. Lollll PIU•aa el Sana- aab, Ga., wH charted after a nan-la U.. •lalp'• brtS complalDed , .. ,, Pitt••• tl•Pl*I ud haraued him. 3 5 ll&B!i!C333 CJ 13 2 SJ 2 3$232233!33 Doomed from the start 'The Last Ambassador' provides insight in Vietnam NEW YORK <AP) -The dialogue appeared In no news r&- ports -lt 11 fiction, thouah perhaps not wholly so -but there ls no doubt the emotion was a common one during the rail of Saigon in 1975: "But for It to end . this way ... " "It was doomed from the star t . Why ? Because the. roreigner has a lways been doomed in Vietna m . The Chinese, the Portuguese, the French, the J apanese, now the Americans. . . They were all driven out." She put her finger to Walker 's lips. ''Did you think America would be exempt? Because you felt you were protecting the Vietnamese against the Com· munist.s?" Thus J1 anne de Clery. Hadden Walker's French-Vietnamese mistress, appeals to the American ambassador as be begins to see the futility of his single-handed effort to resist the onrushing enemy.· "We wanted lo do the story, and I would say our predisposi- tion al the beginning was to do it as non-fi ction," says Marvin Kalb, the NBC News correspon· dent who composed the scene, with his correspondent-brother Bernard, for their newly published novel, "The Last Am· bassador." ''To do something like that as non-fiction," Marvin Kalb says, ·'something that happened less than 25 years ago, means you have to do i t without the documentation. And if you do that, you end up with an in· complete account that is flawed for that reason." "The Last Ambassador." as fiction, probably contains as much insight into al least one aspect or the dramatic war story -the human aspect -as any historical account could have. The Kalb brothers covered the story as journalists, Bernard largely from Southeast Asia for The New York Times and later CQS News, and Marvin primari· ly from Washington, as CBS News' chief diplomatic cor- i:espondent. Marvin Kalb is the author of five books, and the brothers col· laborated once before on a biography, "Kissinger." "T he Last Ambassador," CO MPOSES SCENE Marvin Kalb based on actual events and the reporters' experiences, pursues the crumbling military effort in Vietnam where journalism could not -into the government meet· ing rooms and the minds of some key -though fi ctionaJ - players in the drama. "Many years ago, when I first got back from Moscow," Marvin Kalb recalls, ''I already had a couple or books out, and Eric Sevareid came over and said, 'You must keep writing, because to put what you know into a minute or a minute-15 is the most frustrating experience you c an have.' "The flavor, the mood, the ex· citement. the personalities, only come across in the longer, writ· ten form," he says. "In 'The Last Ambassador,· we were able, r~ally, to approach what human beings go through when fa ced with the m ost awful pressures.'' "H 's a book that can be perceived on several levels," Bernard Kalb says. "It's about the impact that a country called Vietnam (had on the lives of a handful of people. But it's aJso abo ut h uman reaction to catastrophe. The word 'test' Is used a lot -test of character. test of integrity, test of honesty. CBS CORRESPONDENT Beniard Kalb "You're surrounded by death and sorrow," he says, "and you become inured -even the most sensitive become inured, or they get out." "There's a scene where Tony Catlett, the CIA man, knocks the people away from the plane with a rifle butt," Marvin Kalb says. "You talk about tests. I could easil y imagine a scene like that as a kind or black act or manli- ness. Without that kind of reac- tion, the plane would have never left the ground. Jn one, Walker, the am· bassador, is begged by a Viet· namese friend, a fellow collector or Oriental porcelain, to help move his priceless artwork from the country. "Something must survive that will proclaim to the world that Vietnam is a nation not only of violence but of beauty. That the Vietnamese can create works of art that are delicate, exquisite, tender. That the genius of-the Vietnamese is no less than that of other people." ·'Th e suggestion for the' ch aracter, the Vietnamese character, was a friend I had met there," Bernard Kalb says. "His presence has haunted me for a lon11t time." Mark Boudreau checks plants groum organically in his garden zn Urbana. Ill Organic farms seek match Botanist forms group to bring knowledgeable together URBANA, Ill. (AP) -In the Saliva has placed about 300 Midwest. where chemicals workers on 50 organic farms in helped make corn the king, it lllinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Ohio, isn't easy to track down an or-Michigan, Indiana. Missouri and ganic farm. Minnesota. Farm owners and But organic farms do exist workers pay $8 a year for the amid the rolling fields of Iowa service. and the flat, rich acres of In· "the id ea is to immerse the diana. workers in the environment of It is also difficult for organic an organic farm and have them farmers to find workers they become part or the family," said can afford. Boudreau, who also runs an or- But such people aiso exist, and ganic gardening program for the a young botanist named Mark city of Urbana. Boudreau has founded an or -The organic farms range from ganization to bring the two tiny vegetable a nd berry together. It's called Saliva, a patches to large cash grain botanical term m eaning operations. Workers might be "cultivated" or "sown." asked to plant and harvest, feed "The situation ls room and or milk animals, scoop manure, board in exchange for work on repair buildings and equipment, the farm," said Boudreau. "The clear land, cook and can fruit length of stay can ran1e from a and veeetables or sell produce weekend to an enUre summer -at local markets. whatever the worker and the Living conditions at the 13 11- grower want." linois organic farms differ. Boudreau, a recent graduate One near Anna advertises "no of the University of Illinois, bad bot water or indoor toilet.'' worked on organic farms in Another at Rushville encoura1es Britain wblle studyint there. "natural medicinal practices, When he returned to the United altemaUves to present-day birth States ln J.979, be patterned experiences, child rabin1 and Saliva after a group that ar-education." One at Freeport ranged his farm Jobi ln Britain. promises a ''large brick house "It's very dlfflcult to find ex· wltb adequate s pace for perience," Boudreau said. "U workers,'' and another at you're interested in orsanic CObden encourages worken to agriculture. It's even difficult to "brlnJ mualcal instruments" get a formal education in lt." and pledaet to "help worken Or1anlc lannen eschew the start slow proceat of searcbJ.na use of chemical pesUcldet and for land in area." artlllctaJ fertlllJen. • S o m e f a r m e r 1 a r •· vegetarians ; others discourage the use of alcohol and tobacco; m any welcome handicapped wor kers or those with children. Unlike the highly specialized farms typical of the Cornbelt, organic farms are diyersified. Far mer s u s uall y produce fruit, vegetables and grain. and raise meat or dairy animals. Some have bees for honey and maple trees for syrup. "There is a greater tendency for a closed system on an or- ganic farm," Boudreau said. "You grow the grain and feed it lo the livestock and keep the manure on the land." Boudreau said a common mis- con ceplion is that organic farm ers can't earn enough to m ake a living because of their relatively low crop yields. He said that even with yields slight· ly lower, organic farmers save money by not buying expensive fertilizer and chemicals. He said many of them also save money by using alternative energy sources such as wind, solar, alcohol or methane. Just as the farms vary widely, so do the people who want to work on them, Boudreau said: "There are some who Just want a cheap way to get out of tbe city and Into the country. Bat a lot ol our memben are t.lUDklDI about 1ett1n1 their owa land od rala· lnl food, '°they want &be prac- tical experience." • • • • DUNCE COST YOUR HOMETOWN DAILY PAPER WEDNESDAY. SE PTEMBER 23. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF OR NIA 2c; CENTS Woman • tnggers de~o derby Four injured in crash that demolished police car By PmL SNEIDERMAN Ofttllo..ty .......... A 20-year-old woman driving with a suspende d license touched off a series of traffic ac- cide nts along Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach Tuesday night that demolished a police patrol car and injured four people, including a police officer and a pedestrian who at- tempted to help at Uae accident scene, police rePorted today. The woman who police say triggered the accidents , Charlotte E . Bolt of Bellflower, was treated for cuts at UCI Medical Center and was placed In the jail ward on suspicion of felony drunken driving. Foster reconstructed th~ series of accidents this way: -At about 10:40 p.m., Ms. Bolt sideswiped another vehicle while eastbound on Pacific Coast Highway beside the Bolsa Chica marshlands. -When she failed to stop after the accident, the driver Qf " ... like beaten by ugly stick." the sideswiped vehicle gave chase. -Near Newland Avenue, Ms. • The police vehicle rlipped, landed on the driver's side and fell back onto its wheels. The impact tore the seat loose trom the floor, officers said. -Ms. Bolt's Fiat's electrical system failed, and the car came to rest across the traffic lanes. A pedestrian attempted to help push the auto to the side of the road. -A woman driving an east- bound pickup truck, distracted by the sight of the demolished police car, rear-ended the Fiat and threw the assisting pedestrian 30 feet toward the sand. The injured officer, Sgt. Arden Beavers, was taken to Pacifica Hospital with multiple injuries. Huntington Beach police~ John Foster said the woma as driving with a suspended lie se and was scheduled to appear ·n court today in connection with earlier traffic _offenses. Bolt's Fiat convertible, travel- ing at an estimated 75 mph, rear-ended a Huntington Beach police car that also was east-bound at about 35-40 mph. -The impact threw ·the police car 134 feet toward the beach. In a telephone interview from his hospital room this morning, he said, "I feel like I've been IH#y ............ .,. •kMN IC..._ Traffic investigator eiammes damaged Huntington Beach police car after a series of acc:1dent.~ on Pac1/1c Coqst Highway The cruiser was a total loss <See MISHAP, Page AZ> Search fails tO t111-n up slaying suspect By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of U. 0.lty ~ IUff Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators have s uspended their around-the· clock search of the Cleveland National Forest for a man sought in connection with a weekend shooting attack that left one girl dead and another with serious head injuries. The search of the rugged wilderness area 20 miles east of San Juan Capistrano was called off Tuesday night. A temporary search command post loca~ed at a U.S. Forest Service fire station was closed. It had appeared for a time Tuesday that searchers had spotted the reddish-orange 1979 camper-equipped Datsun pickup truck belonging to Thomas Francis Edwards, 37. The former Costa Mesa resident and Irvine gun club employee was named Tuesday in a $500,000 murder arrest warrant signed by South Orang e County Municipal Court Judge Blair Barnette. Members of the s heriff's Special Weapons and Tactics team were helicoptered into an area of the forest south of El Cariso Village only to discover that the vehicle was not the one they sought. Edwards , described by sheriff's officials as a "moun- ~ain man" and ·•gun buff," is be- mg sought in connection with the unprovoked shooting attack on two 12-year-old Lake Elsinore between San Juan Capistrano and Lake Elsinore. Miss lberri died Monday night at Mission Community Hospital in Mi ssion Viejo; Miss Cartier is in serious but stable condition An. all-=points bulletin for E dwards', ar rest remains in effect. girls, Vanessa lberri and Kelly Cartier. The girls were shot on a biltlng trail near the forest-service operated Blue Jay campground located in the forest midway with head injuries at the same facility. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said the search for Edwards will now focus on places he might have headed for 6ased on information --~ ......... Cf!,riosity didn't kill the cat . but it did startle this New Orleans kitty when it encountered an armed SW AT team ~fficer . Edis on High trans fer sties officials- Former Huntington football player ruled ineligi ble by trustees. By PATRICK KENNEDY OI .. o.lty,... , .... A student football player who transferred to Edison High School in Huntington Beach is suing district officials for permission to play football at Edison following his recent But the Was hingtons have since moved back to lhe Hunt- ington Beach High School at- tendance area and district trustees declared him ineligible to compete in sports at Edison for one year. According to CIF rules, once a Accordi ng to CIF rules, ~nee.a player i s declared eligi bl e, he re- m ai ns e~igi ble. athletl'c dlsqualificatlon by school trustees. Jeff Waabington. a junior de- f enslve back, transferred to Edison from nearby Huntincton Beach Hleh School durtnc last year'• football season. o rnctala of the Huntington Beam Union mgh School Dia· trlct declared hi9 el11lble to play far bil new school beeBUH he ancl bit fatMr had meved to an apartmmt lD the ldllon at-tendance area. player is declared eligible at a school, be remains el11lble evea if he moves to another area. but stays in the same school. But district officials bave tbe rl1ht to establish their own rules, accordtn1 to CIF offtciala. Wu hln1ton '1 attoraey Stephen Beraer won a tem· porary restralnln1 order ID Oran1e County 9uperlor ~ on s.pt. 11, overrulln1 the ell· trict '1 dilqualiftcatlon. But Wub.lqtoa, accordlnl to CIF rules, can't play football at Edison until he has practiced for at least 10 days. Officials say he is currently practicing with the Charger football team. Friday, attorneys will appear before Superior Court Judge Luis A. Cardenas who will hear Berger's request for a Qre- Umlnary i..Qjunction voiding-the district's disqualification unW a trial ts held. Washington is one. of live stu- dents who transferred to the powerful Edison Charger team after the end of laat football seuon. Star senior nmnin1 back Theo L•n1ford tran1ferred from Chatsworth Hilb School and moved in with friends tn Hunt- ln•toa Beach. He wu •U'Dld that hi would be declared ln· ellstble for 1port1 ual .. 1 a parent or lecal auardJaa UYed ... ._ ...... in ... EcliloD ..... aaee-r-. Kil r ....... Paul ......,onl, U1 ilaee Ulm cedal n1kleaait la H=..,_ ...... MC« 21 I ea• dla ct aftktala. The Landordl are living with Linda Griffiths and her sons Fernando and Derek, two other transfer foot- ball players from Chatsworth. Edison has won 23 straight games and is the two-time CIF Big Five conf~ence champion. Plane c rash es at airport A single-engine airplane being flown by a student pilot crashed ahorUy before noon today at John Wayne Airport. There were no injuries. Steve Kozak, airplane plans and proirams officer, said the plane'• 8Qline failed as the pilot' wu practlcin1 "touch an4 1<>" landing and takeoff maqeuven. "It hit Runway llL (left) 'and ntpped over," Kosak Hid. Ruaway 19L la the aborter~ the al11>011'1 two runways and ta aued eJlclustvely by print• aiftraft. • .,. known abOut his background. Hart s aid investigators also are following up on reported sight· ings in Santa Ana, Costa Mesa. Garden Grove, Big Bear Lake, Riverside and San Diego. Hart stressed. however. that investigators will continue to make periodic checks in the Cleveland National Forest area as part of the complete in· v~stigation. An all points bulletin for Edwards' arrest remains in ef- fect , Hart said. In addition, rangers at state and national parks have bee n notified to be on the lookout for Edwards, who, Hart said, enjoys camping and "living off the land .. The search for Edwards began immediately after Saturday's s hooting after a witness ob· ser ved the license plate of his truck, jotted 1t down on a cardboard carton and turned it over to sheriff's deputies. The license number is I BJX 675 Hart said Edwards is believed to have been li ving out of his campe r s tnce moving from Costa Mesa about six months ago. Edwards served a prison sen· tence m Maryland after being convicted in the 1960s of con· s piracy and robbery. Wall Street takes sharp s kid today NEW YORK <APJ -Stock prices fell across the board to- day in what analysts said was continued skepticism over in· terest rates and President 1 Reagan's economic program. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials, which had been up 9.51 Points for the week, erased that gain after four hours of trading, falling 14 .27 points to 831.43. Declines led advances by a 6·1 margin on the NYSE. Although some interest rates have declined this week . particularly the prime lending rate, analysts have said many investors remain skeptical about the Reagan economic paclcajZe and · future budget deficits. Rdgan is scheduled to address the nation by television Thurs· day night. Some Wall Street analysts also blamed the early decline on a prediction Tuesday by one of their flamboyant colleagues, Joseph Granville, that the Dow Jones industrials will faJI to 550 to 650 in the coming weeks. "We've been edging toward a selling cli max, but I think Joe tripped it over," said Larry Wachtel, senior vice president of Bache Halsey. Stuart Shields Inc. Delay of old age b e n e f its rej ected WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi- dent Reagan apparently has ruled out proposing a delay in Social Security cost-of-Jiving benefits as part of a new round of budget cuts, congressional sources said today. But Reagan, making the final decisions on cuts lo be proposed when he addresses the nation via television Thursday night, still has under consideration rec- ommendations to delay similar increases in several othel"-.. ocial welfare programs, according to the sources, who requested anonymity. The sources stressed that the president has not made de- cisions on his package, and stressed that changes are possi- ble. Meanwhile, Reagan told a group of senior citizens today that restoring the economy to sound health will require slashing "many thines that we wish didn't have to be cut." But the president, wbo will speak at 6 p.m . PDT Thursday, refused to Identify the targets of cutbacks expeded to total $16 billion. "Tune \n, 9 o'clock, Thursday night," Rea1an sald when asked ii he had completed work on the blueprint for the latest round ol proposed cuts. The president bad been con- sldertna tbe packa1e of cuts for fiscal im, includi111 the three- month Social Securlty delay from July 1 to Oct. 1, 1m, acroeartbe-board euta I.ft virtual· ly all IOVemment pro1ram1 and · a S2 billion r«tuctlon ln hll ed· mlnlatntlon '1 defense buUdvo. But he was forced back to.the drawing board earlier in the week when the two top Republicans in Congress warned him privately that the cuts faced probable defeat in Congress if they were submitted in that form. Appearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Donald R. Regan maintained that the president would sticlc "very stubbornly'' to his budget and tax cuts despite mounting political and public pressure. .ORAIGI COAST WIATHIR Usual low clouds late tonight and morning hours Thursday. Lows tonight 60 to 66. Thursday highs at beaches low 70s. inland near 80. · 118101 TODAY 'l'ht tamHy that joga togetMJ' u st(JJling togethn -on . o 93-da)/ jaunt /rom Florida to Ohio. ~e P.oge 812. fNlll llGlll lllCH /SDUTH CDIBT DlllyPlllt WEDNESDAY, SEpT. 23, 1981 CAVALCADE STOCKS SPORTS 82-3 BS 86 \ D ~ ~--Ray Malavasi gives Rams' O game plan for Chicago . 86 . ._..,,. i . Onofre opponents _gain win on medical issue By DAVID KUTZ MANN ., .. ......, ........... Disagreeing with its own lawyers, a federal licenstn1 panel has ruled that it wants to hear more about the adequacy of medical treatment for the general public if an accident were to occur at the newly ex- p a nded San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. The decision by the three- (;, T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN--1.~~ Politic al games manship WAYWARD YOUTH & UCH: For the second time in recent months, one of our coastal city coun· ci ls has done a complete El Foldo after starting er forts to crack down on the profusion of electronic games. played with money, in local stores. The first such cit y to make the try was Fountain Valley. But when merchants showed up to loudly protest any prohibition against the video money- makers. the City Council collapsed its tent. Now it ·s happened again. Costa Mesa had draft· ed a similar law which would have limited the number of video games that have increasingly found homes in corner markets. liquor stores. laundromats and like establishments. Mes atown also had placed a moratorium on installation of any new games over the last three months BUT ONLY THIS LAST Monday night. when the Mesa City Council gathered in session. store owners also gathered with them to decry any new control law. When the last echo of debate faded away. the TemptatlOl'l3 of the devil have haunted every genttation Cos ta Mesa lawmakers appeared to be opting for a law that would allow just about any business in town to operate the electronic amusements. Store owners argued that the games. with names like Astro-Wars or Zap the Spaceship. are real money-makers that help keep small business con- cerns afloat. In another rather bizarre twist to the pro-game arguments. merchants of some all-night businesses said that the games are so popular that cl usters of players are often present during the wee hours when stores are likely to be struck by stickup artists. These businessmen envisioned the clustered game players as deterrents to armed robbery . TlUS MAY BE. But if vou've ever obs erved the video game players in actfon. they are so absorbed by fl ashing lights . miniature explosions on the screen and streaking video rocketships . you have to wonder if they'd even notice a repeat of the Long Beach earthquake The only way you might get their attention would be if the video screen abruptly went blank. Anyway. during the Costa Mesa ordinance hear· ing. a couple of citizens did show up to complain about the games. suggestin~ that the attraction of the video marvels was causmg youngsters to com- mit truancy because they couldn't tear themselves away in time lo mak e it to English or math classes. EARLIER, POLICE hadoeven suggested the lure of playing the games was so magnetic that the younger people were committing daylight burglaries in order to finance the video habit at two-bits a crack. Alas. there are indeed many perils and pitfa,Jls out there in the world to lure youth down the sordid roads of sin and degradation In times past. there were no video games or X· rated movies to turn the youth of our nation into lounge lazards and namby-pamby boys. . -There were, however. pool halls, pinball machines. burlesque houses and, some generations back. bootleg gin. YOU ARE LEFI' to suspect that for every generation, the devil has been able to create some way to Jure the weak or unsuspecting off the path of righteousness and down the devious road toward a sinful. indolent lifestyle. Despite these lures, most people finally reach the point where they put satan behind them and turn to bard labor in their decUnina years. This ~lifies them to criticize video games and other Jus the new generation. member Atomic Safety and Li ce nsing Board Tuesday represented an important pro- cedural victory for opponents or ·Southern California Edison Co. 's two new reactors at San Onofre. The Edison Co. is seeking operating licenses for the $3.3 bUHon units, but first m ust prove that both on-site and off. site emergency pJanning for the 1 facility ia adequate. A subpoenaed witness who testified Tuesday for plant oppo- ne n ts., Dr. Irvin{ Lron of UCLA, estimated that from half to two thirds o( the 89,000 people who live near the plant could suHer from acute r adiation ef- rects, contamination and in· juries in nuclear-related acci· dent. T his view differed con - siderably from that offered last LB/acing claim in jail death By JOHN NEEDHAM Of ... 0.Mf~SUft The City of Laguna Beach has been hit with a $2 million wrongful death claim by the widow of a man who died July 22 while in police custody for a d runk in public offense. The claim, riled by Beverly Hllls attorney Gus Vletas, says police did nol "adequately pro- tect and care for" Robert Gary Wardman, a 35-year-old Laguna Beach spa salesman. The claim was signed b y Wardf!lan's widow, Dorothy Wardman of M issioo Viejo. Laguna Beach City Attorney Marc Winthrop was not availa- b I e for com m e nt today . However, City Manager Ken Frank said he will recommend that City Council members re- ject the claim. Irwin Sobol, an associate at- torney in the legal llCtion, said a lawsuit would be filed if the S2 million claim is rejected. A series of investigations into the jailhouse death or Wardman July 22 culminated in the SUS· pe nsion of Officer Gordon Charles Maine, 29. for "un· tr~hfulness ." Witnesses, including fellow police officers. said Maine ac- cidentally dropped Wardman on his head wruJe taJcing him out of a patrol car at the re ar of the police station. Wardman had been found un· conscious at 1:20 a.m. by Maine on the sidewalk in front of Main St reet Bar on South Coast Highway and taken to police headquarters. Paramedics con- c I u d ed that Wardman was drunk . and did not require medical attention. Wardman died while being rushed to South Coast Medical Center the following morning a fter an officer checking jail cells noticed the spa salesman didn't seem to be breathing. According to an Orange Coun· ty p at holog ist's report, Wardman died from a severe skull fracture, an injury b e could not have sustained Crom a fa ll such as the one behind the police station. Officer Maine was suspended for 20 days for not telling his superiors about the ran until threatened by another officer to do so. M alne res igned Crom the Laguna Beach police depart- ment Aug. 30. Acting Police Chief Neil Purcell said Maine's letter of resignation stated he could not accept the punish- m ent. Bas k e tball tourne y s et The Lasuna Beach Recreation Department will sponsor a three.on-three basketball tour nament at the M aln Beach courts Oct. 3. Wlnnen and l'UJUMn·UP will ad vance to the regional compe(i- li(>D to be helcf in Fountain Valley Oct. 24 and 25. Tha.e iota.rested ID'>' plct up an entry form at the recreation departmeat office, located at 515 Forest Ave. The deadline for re- tumlAI the fonn la Oct. a at 5 p. m . T b•re la a $4 fee for participation ln the tournament. For more Information oall 49'7·33ll, extension 203. month by the ulillty's health specialist, who s aid an accident would lead to only mild exposure. The Ucen.sing board's decision Tuese1a1 ran CO\lDter to tbe op~- for care of the public if radioac- tive gases were to leak from tht: powerful new reactors nearing completion three miles south of San Clemente. I t was required only to look at care for. a ''restr icted group.,, ions or lawyers for both the Nuclear Re&Watory Commission and Edison, who said federal regulations don't require that special medical facilities be in place to handle mass decon- tamination of thousands of peo- ple who live within 10 miles of . the nuclear installation. N RC lead counsel Richard Hoefling argued t~al bis in· terpretation or the rules indicat· ed there was no need for a "mass detailed plan" to provide Instead, Hoefling said, the reg- . ulaUons required that plans be in ellect for treatment of on-site personnel that could be ex- panded to handle members or the public if that was necessary. The government lawyer said evacuate d residents could shower at relocation centers out· side the 10-mile emergency plan· ning ione if they were found to f>e contaminated with radioac- tive materials. Edison lawyer David P igott of San Francisco agreed with Hoefling's interpretation. saying that for plannin1 purposes it was required only to look at medical care for a "restricted group of people,'' in this case pl ant employees or visitors. Pigott said there was no s pecific requirement to build facilities ror protection of the public at large. This view elicited strong com· plaints from Anaheim lawyer Phyllis Ga ll ag h e r , who represents anti-nuclear oppo- nents or licensing or the twin- reactor plant expansion . Ms. Gallagher said she was "s urprised" to hear Nuclear Regulatory Commission lawyers argue that there was "no responsibility for the public h ealth " i nv o l ved in the emergency planning issue. 'TIS AUTUMN As waves wash the shoreline at Crescent Bay Beach in Laguna Beach. a couple walk hand in hand enjoying the sun - shine. warm temperatures and a special day -the autumnal equinox, when d ay and ni ght o.tty ,_,._.a., Rk ..... KetMer are equal Autumn arrived Tuesday and strolls in the sun will be more limited in the next three months as daylight hours get s horter . Guru's cult to depart Laguna Christians to re-establish services and hir e new minister A spokeswoman for founding members of the Church or Re ligious Science in Laguna Beach says her group has re· ceived assuran ces Cr om followers or an Indian guru liv· ing on the church grounds that they will leave by Oct. 3. Sueanne Lewis, director of the Religious Science congregation which took back control of their church earlier this month, said a final meeting between her group and disciples of Eastern ~oly man Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh has been scheduled for Thurs· day night. Mrs. Lewis said her group did not have to make good on their threat to force the cull members to le ave the church through legal means. "There doesn't seem to be any question that they will be mov- ing out as soon as possible," she said. "I have spoken with their attorney and he said they would be out in a matter of weeks.·' However, Mrs. Lewis said if the Bhagwan ronowers did not vacate the premises by Oct. 3, she is stilJ prepared to serve legal papers on the group and have them removed through the courts. J oel Edelman. spokesman for the Bhagwan group, known as the ''orange people'' because of their orange-tinted clothing, acknowledged that the two groups would be meeting Thurs- day, but declined comment on whether his gro up would be leaving the church. In earlier written statements. cull leaders said they would not ''They will be · out in. a matter of weeks." be forced out by what they called an "insurgent group" not current members of the Church of Religious Science in Laguna Beacb. Mainline members of the Laguna Canyon Road church took bac k contro l o f the san ctuary Sept. 3 dur ing a tumultuous meeting at which the Bbagwan-dominaled board of directors was forced to resign. The Religious Scientists took control or the church's financial records, which are now being prepared for an audit, according to Mrs. Lewis. She said it does not appear that any church funds were sent outside the com· munity. The orange people established themselves in the church last November after the departure of the former pastor, Dr. Henry Gerhard. Gerhard had become a disci· pie of Bhagwan after' visiting him in Poona, India. Upon his r eturn to Lag una Beach , Gerhard launched a campaign to change the doctrines of his church toward the teachings of the religious master, angering the then 000-member congrega- tion. He later resigned and now lives in Sacramento. Al his invitation , the Bhagwan fo llowers look over control of the church. Sunday services were then suspended and its name was changed to the Utsava R aj n eesh Meditation a nd Holistic Arts Center. The Religious Scientists say they intend to reestablish Chris- tian worship al the church and hire a new minister as soon as possible. Auto· theft operation broken? Two coast brothers facin g ch ar ges in Mesa r aid Two Orange Coast brothers are facing multiple criminal charges in the wake of a mulU- agency raid on a Costa Mesa auto parta distributorship that investi1ators say m asked an auto theft and resale operation. Investiaators from eiaht law enforcement a1encle1 armed with a search warrant entered Pro Fab Aato and Auto Parts Dillrlbutors, *2 ~terprise Sl., arreatlna Leo F. Shull 81, of Huntincton Beach, and Anton Sbul1, 41, of Cotta Mesa. Lt. Wyatt Hart of the Orance County Sheriff's Departmept Hid lnve1U1atol'I believe the !bub brolben were operlttnl aa auto tbeft aDCl ....... •work tbat t&*lalbed l~ small trucb and sporty compacts. Vehicles, Hart said, were stolen, brought to the industrial park building where identifica- tion numbers were removed and replaced wlth numbers from de- molished vehicles of a similar type purchased from salvage yards. Once outfitted with the new numbers, the stolen vehicles were sold, thus general· inf income for the ring. Hart Hid. The two men were being held at or-.. County Jail in lieu ol szs,ooo each, Rart said. Both were 'nitially char1ed with 1rand theft auto and pol&eNlon Ol •tol• property. Jn adcUUoa t.o recovertn1 aeveral ~ftfcltt, lnchadln1 a • Dats un 280Z and an expensive Lotus Ford, Hart said the build- ing yielded scores of parts believed to be stolen. Hart said two people whose vehicles bad been stolen in re- cent montbs were brought to t.be location to identify their can. Hart satd about $250,000 In stolen property was recovered. Agencies participating in the seven-week long inve1U1aUon, prompted by an anonymous Up to ln vesti1aton. lncluded tie 1herirf'1 departaa•; police clt- p 1 rt menu in Santt :.~ Westminster. Hun~ and Costa Mesa; Ca ltfonda Hlpway Pl&rol: DeparbMI& el llator Vlldel-..:.1111 tM * Uoeal Aato1'1ft IL .. IRVlll l1HyPlllt WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1911 CAVALCADE STOCKS 82-3 85 Ray Malavasi gives Rams' game plan for Chicago. B6. D • o· Who's to pick up trash? Irvine decides Oct. 27 By RICHARD GREEN °' ... ~ .......... Irvine 's so-c alled "Trash War" was debated for about three hours Tuesday night before City Council members said that on Oct. 27 they'll answer the controversial ques- tion: ''Who should pick up trash in Irvine?" The City Council is consider - ing granting a five-year ex- ·~ ----------------~ TOM MURPHINI ,w~ Political gamesmanship WAYWARD YOUTH & SUCH: For the second time in recent months. one of our coastal city coun cils has done a com plete El Foldo after starting ef- fo rts to crack down on the profusion of electronic games. played with money. in local stores The first suc h city to make the try was Fountain Va ll ey. But when merchants showed up to loudly protest any prohibition against the vide o money- makers. the City Council collapsed its tent · No w it's ha ppe ned again. Costa Mesa had draft · ed a similar law which would have limited t he number of video games t hat have increasingly found homes in corner m arkets. liq uor s tores. laundromats a nd like establishments. Mesatown also had placed a mo ratorium on installation of any new ga m~s over the last three months. BUT ONLY TffiS LASf Monday night. when the Mes a City Council gathered in session. s lor..e owne rs olso gathered wi th the m to decry any new control law. When the last echo of debate faded away. the -·d::t: !"•\1lLY ..,,-r :::"l~!l ~·""' --T!'-~-~-="" A ~ - --=-S ,:_P.:.:1.1 I TS Temptatwns of the devil have tlavnted every generation Costa Mesa lawmakers appeared to be opting for a law that would all ow just about any business in town to operate the electronic a musements. Store owners argued that the games. with names like As tro-Wars or Zap the Spaceship. are real money-makers that help keep sm a ll business con- cerns afloat. In another rather bizarre twis t to the pro-game arguments. m er chants of some all -night bus inesses said that t he games a re so popular that c lusters of player s a re often present during the ~ee hou rs when stores are likely to be struck by st ickup a rtists. These bus inessm e n envision ed t he clus tered game players as deterrents to armed robbery TIDS MAY BE. But if vou've ever obser\'ed the video game players in actio n. they are so absorbed by flas hing lights. miniature explosions on the s creen and streaking video rocketships . you have to wonder if they'd even notice a repeat of t he Long Beach earthquake. The only way you might get tMir attentton would be if the video screen abruptly we nt bla nk. Anyway. during the Costa Mesa ordinance hear - ing. a couple of citizens did show up to complain a bout the games . suggestin~ that the attraction of the video marvels was causing youngsters to com - mit truancy because they couldn't tear themselves a way in time to make it to Englis h or m a th classes. EARLIER, POLICE had even suggested the lure of pla ying the games was so magnetic that the younger people were committing daylight burglaries in order to finance the video habit a t two-bit s a c r ack. Alas. the re ar e indeed many perils and pitfalls out ther e in the world to lure youth down the sordid roads or sin and degradation In times past, there were no video games or X- rated movies to turn the youth of our nation into lounge lazards a nd n amby-pamby boys. -There we re. how~ver . pool halls , pinba ll · machines. burlesque houses and. some gene rations back , bootleg gin. YOU ARE LEFT to suspect that for eve ry generation. ttie devil has been able to create some way to lure the weak or unsuspecUng ore the path or righteoµsn ess and down the devious road toward a sinful, indolent lifestyle. Desplte these lures. most people finally reach the point where they put satan behind them and tum to hard labor in their declining years. This qualifies them to criticize video games and other lusts of the new generation. tension to the contract under which Dewey's Rubbish Service, Irvine, picks up trash in residen- tial areas of the city. , However. representativ~s of Homeowners Associations sug- gested Tuesday night that city residents might be better served by putting the contract out to bid. Others suggested that the city should remove itself from th e matt e r and l e t the homeowners themselves con- tract for trash collection. KenneU1 Stone, who identified himself as a Newport Beach res- ident setting up a business in Irvine, presented the council with a 00-signature petition r e- questing that busillesses in res- idential areas be allowed lo contract for their own trash col-lection. OC rejects mental care plan Orange County Supervisors sent a letter today refusing for the second time a n offer to ex- tend mental health services for indigents at UC Irvine Medical Center throug h June in ex- change for a $4 million payment. T h e offe r was made b y Uni versity of California Regents who threatened to halt the men- t a I health treatment for the county's poor people on F'riday unless the offer is accepted. Without the Medical Center. the mental health patients will be moved to Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk, according to county officials. Uni versity officials claim they will continue to accept emergen- cy -or life-threatening -cases brought to the medical center by law enforcement officials. Irvine Mayor David Sills sllid that in 1976 the city engaged lo an open-biddi ng process and selected Dewey's for collection at homes and businesses in res- idenUal areas. He said that the city decided to grant the exclusive contract after residents complained that litter, noiae and excessive truck traffic was being caused by the f o rmer sys tem in whic h homeowners and homeowners associations contracted for their own trash collection. The ~ontract given Dewey's in 1976 had a provision calling for the City Council to consider re- new al in 1981 without engaging in an open bidding process. "Before 1976, we had a large number or trash contractors and there was a good bit of con- tusion,'' said Councilman Afi Anthony. ''There were safety coocems with trash truck traffic and kids gping to school. I don't know a single person who wants to negotiate with a trash con- tractor." Under the prpent contract the city sends trasb collection bills to homeowners on behalf of Dewey's. The monthly charge for trash collection has risen from $1.80 to $3.25 per month over the last five years. "It's true our rates have in· cr eased," Anthony said, ~·but we -are about in the median level in Orange County in terms of cost for trash collection. Quality is of concern and our streets a re clean, the trucks look good and we're not paying top or bottom dollar." • However, Larry Carlin, presi- d e nt of the Walnut Square Homeowners Association, says Dewey's has caused complaints in h is neighborhood r anging from "trash trucks breaking the streets to leaving (trash can ) lids open." Tom Holt of Irvine presented a petition signed by 100 peo~le at the Groves Mobile Home Park, asking that the residential trash contract be put out to bid. J oseph Gascone o f the Smo ketree Hom eowne rs As - sociation also asked for com- petitive bids. ··A compan y doing a good job shouldn't fear competition." he said. However, Sheriff Brad Gates and some other police chiefs have continued to object to the closure of the medical center for county-government-funded pa- tients. Gates has charged that no other locked facilities are available in the county and be said that some violence-prone patients might end up in jail for lac k of proper facilities. 'TIS AUTUMN -As waves wash the shoreline at Crescent Bay Beach in Laguna Beach. a couple walk ha nd in hand enjoying the sun- s hine. warm lemper atures and a s pecial day -the autumnal equinox . when day and night Deolly""",...., ·-........... are equal. Autumn arrived Tuesday a nd s trolls in the sun will be more limited in the next three month~ as daylight hours get s horte r. I The regents initially called a halt to the mental he alth services contract with the coun- ty after failing to agree on $8 million worth of disputed bills fo r a separate contract fof medical care for indigents. Ono/ re medical care eyed The county is required by slate law to ensure medical and mental health care for those who can't afford it. Federal licensing panel views emergency plans The $4 million sought by the regents is intended to be a "good faith" payment toward the dis- puted S8 million. Robber gets cash, jewels f By DAVID KUTZMANN Of ... Delly ...... ...., Dis agreeing with its own lawyers, a federal licensing panel has ruled that it wants lo hear more about the adequacy of medical treatment for th\ general public if an accident were to occur at the newly ex- panded San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. The decision by the three· me mber Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Tuesday represented an important pro-An Irvine COl~ple were tied up cedural victory for opponents or and robbed of Jewelry and $300 ·Southern California Edison Co. 's in cash l~te Tuesday ~ter a gun-two new reactors at San Onofre. m.a n w~th a ~toc krng mask The Edison Co. Is seeking shpped mto the_1r home thro~~erating licenses for the $3.3 an_ unlocked side door. pohce bilhon untta, but first muat said today. prove that both on-site and off. Kenneth a nd ~a_rg a ret site emergency planning for the Lockwood ~ere_ not m_Jured_ in facility is adequate. the 10 p.m. mcident, pohc_e said. A subpoenaed witness who ~he robber was described as testified Tuesday tor plant oppo- bemg 30 years ?Id, 5-~oot-8 and nents Dr. Irvin" Lvon of 190 pounds. Pohce said he was •, . 'Clo ( wearing a watch cap, dark pants UCLA, estimated that from half and a long-sleeved shirt. to two_ thirC:S of the 89,000 people who bve near the plant could Y'limpics slated at Coast YMCA The annual Orange Coast YM· CA 's "Y'lympics, ·• an evening of competition in such events as, ping pong, doughnut rolling and a lying contest will be held Sept. 28 at the YMCA facility in Newport Beach. Competition, to begin at ti: U p.m., is to be between service clubs from the Harbor Area with a cost of $15 per club plus $4 for each club member. The "Y'lym- plcs" will begin at 6 p.m. with a buffet dinner. State initiative wrong in story In a story appearing ln the Sept. 16 Dally Pilot, the wrona state lniUaUve _. · cited. The story should have re..S, "Under the terms of Propoeitlon '· an Irvine city entel'ta1nment tu would have to be approved by Irvine voters before lt could be implemented.•• The Dally Pilot reinta IAY er- ror. suffer from acute radiation ef- rects, contamination and in- juries in nuclear-related acci- dent. This view diffe r e d con- siderably from that orrered last month by the utility's health specialist, who said an accijlent would lead to only mild exposure. The licensing board's deci.ion Tueadar ran counter to tile oPtn- iona o lawyers for both the Nuclear Regulatory Commllaion and Ediaon, who said federal regulations don't require that special medical facilities be in place to handle mass decoo- taminaUon of thousands of peo- ple who live within 10 mllea ol the nuclear installation. NRC lead counsel Richard Hoefling argued that his in· terpretaUon of the rulea indicat- ed there was no need for a "mass detailed plan" to provide for care of the public If radioac- tive gases were to leak from the powerful new reactors oea.rtoa complftloo three mUea aoulb ol San Clemente. IAatead, 8oellin1 aald. tbe rec- ·ul8tlou required that Dlans be ln enect for treatment Ol oo-aite personnel that could b• u - P-.Oded to handle members ol the publJc ti that wu neeeaary. The government lawyer said -ev a c uated r eside nts could shower at relocation centers out- side the 10-mile emergency plan· ning zone if they were found to be contaminated with radioac- tive materials. Edison lawyer David Pigott of Edis.on m qst ,prove that. planning is ade- quate. Sa n Francisco agreed with Hoefling's interpretation. saying that for planning purposes it was required only to look at medical care for a "restricted group of people." in this c ase plant employees or visitors. Pigott s aid the re was no s pecific require ment to build facilities for protect ion of the public at large This view elicited strong com- plaints from Anaheim lawyer Phyllis Gallagh e r , who re presents anti-nuclear oppo- nents of licensing of the twin- reactor plant expansion. Ms. Gallagher said she was "s urprised" to he ar Nuclear Regulatory Commission lawyers arg ue that there was "no respons jbility for the public h e a lth " i nvo lv e d i n the emergency planning issue. She said that public health consi~erations we re clearly spelled out in guideHnes issued by the government foll owing the Three Mile Island nuclear power in Pennsylvania two years ago. Center expansion referendum near? Opponents of the Ne wport Center expansion project said today they are less than 1,000 signatures away from forcing the City Council to repeal the project or put it to a citywide vote. The referendum group, known as RAP, Residents' Action Plan, said it bad collected more than 3,500 signatures of reg- ist,red Newport Beach voters by Tuesday evening. The petitioners must collect 4,246 signatul'es by tbe end ot the month to qualify for a referen· dum. Otriciala from the city clerlc's office sald all the signatures must be checked against county regl1traUon records, a process that could lake up to • week. Aceorctiq to county election codes. the city clerk'• office aaid, the election ~uld have to be held by early Februar1. SUcb a apectal election would cott rouPlJ ao,ooo. Newport Ma7or J actle Heather. on vacaUOb wbn the referendum movement began, said she has asked for legal opin· ions to,. see if a referendum vote could be delayed until June when the state · primary is scheduled. Mayor Heather s aid if a special election is called. it will "produce a very unproductive, divisive period in thls town. It will wipe out local government. "l just can't Imagine that thia ls what the educated citizens want to see happen. The referen- dum ls being led by a band ol people who Ol\IY know bow to stop things from happening, not make them happen." Bobby Lovell, a leader ol the referendum group who said ahe collected '3 si1nature.a in two hours Tuesdu1 remarked, "lt'a very clear that the cwnu want to see t.hia Luue put to a vote." The Irvine Company ea- panalon project, approved. bJ die council tn •late Auiuat, ln~l-. a tuxuey hotel. about 700,000 square feet of omee apace ..... ~lddal ....... ----· ___ __... ___ ..,._ ..................... _ ... __ .... ____ _ -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, September 23, 1981 SPORTS COlUMNISl BUD TUCKER Warm we lc ome for Pas torin i? Some would prefer Medfly If there is an ounce of decency in the manage- ment of the Los Angeles Rams, they wlll consider the broad and overall picture before employing Dante Pastorlni, the transient quarterback. You see, there are concerned parties to be con- sidered here. Some will welcome Pastorini warm· ly. Others will suggest, indeed insist, that the guy be detained at the airport. Certain merchants in Orange County will send a limo for Pastorini. They would be the haberdashers and s hoe s alon operators and automobile dealers. DANTE FAVORS DESIGNER threads and Gucci footwear and can afford to change them dai- ly His record for adorning telephone poles with sports cars is, to say the least. en viable. Pastorini will also be greeted with considera· ble warmth by the tavern managers of the com· munity. The man is known to relax with a taste of the grape al day's end and if the atmosphere features disco or rock and roll. he will not put the knock on the joint. T herefore, it is not out of the question Pastorini could arrive in Orange County by means of a parade down the Santa Ana Freeway. On the other hand, there is a fac:.tion which would just as soon see the Med.fly come to town. This would be the gentlemen of the working press. the sports writing people, who have sufficient trou- ble protecting their profiles without inviting an ad· ditional threat. Pastorini's last reported altercation with a sports author came off as frighteningly one-sided with the quarterback winning on an early TKO and not a glove was laid on him. WHAT IS EVEN MORE distressing to the sports writers is that this bout was reported to have covered a great deal of ground inasmuch as it began in a cocktail lounge and concluded in a parking lot. To cover this kind of area is quite oul or the question tor sports JOurna11sts wno are not in the least accustomed to scr ambling. Not that they are all that great at fading back and staying in the pocket. for that matter. The scribes have not had it well in this area in recent days. The most disturbing report involved George Brett of the Kansas City Royals who had been idle (See TUCKER. Page 89) Malavasi :mellows after win Ram coach says decision will be reached on , Pastorini soon By JOHN SEV ANO O( .. De4ty .......... There was a definite calm in Coach Ray Malavasl's voice as he ad- dressed the medla at his weekly breakfast Tuesday. lt was a ruce change Crom the cordial, but somewhat tense and jum- py Malavasi who had met with the media in weeks past. or course, winning has a habit of making such transformations. And. for the first time in three weeks the Rams were able to get ln the W col- umn at the expense of the Green Bay· Packers. The Rams' performance wasn't pretty as Malavasi admitted -but It was the final retult that counted. ''I was pleased with our runnin& game. We blocked better than we had been." analyzed the coach, •1and our special teams played better. "One thing I didn't like IS we got more sacks (agalnst Rams). A cou- ple of times we just missed people. If we're going to work hard on anything this week It will be pass protection.·· Pat Haden will be happy to hear that and so will Dan Pastoriru .w~o. It appears. Is close to signing a con• tract with the Rams . Happiest of all , however, must be J eff Rutledge who figures to start against Chicago Monday. The Packers, who entered Sun· day's contest with seven sacks in two games, added she. more lo that total against an offensive line that's been highly publiclzed as possibly the best in the NFL. Pastorini couldn't have been Im· pressed by what he saw -and it's a cinch Haden's image wasn't much better. 'Tm a little disappointed ln that a rea," said Malavasi of his offensive line. "It's hard to say why certain things happen but sometimes you've got to give the other team credit." or course the offensive line isn't the only thing occupying Malavasi's thoughts these days. With Pastorlni joining the fold a distinct possibility. the coach la also going to have to unscramble a poten· lially tense quarterback situation. Haden mide it a point to call Malavasi Monday to assure the coach he would be ready to play against Chicago. Rutledge has indicated, too, that he's ready if called upon. And both have voiced their opinion more than once -that there is no real need for another quarterback. Managem ent , however, doesn't feel the same way and even Malavasi, who indicated earlier this vear he had no desire for Pastorini's (See MALA VASI, Page Bl) Detty~~ .. , .It ............ Marina High football coach Dave Thompson will be guiding his Vikings Friday night as they seek their fourth straight victory. Sunset powers test formidable Don-league foes I t's Edison-El Modena ; Fountain Valley -St . Paul ; and Marina-Foothill topping prep football slate this week By ROGER CARLSON Of llle 0...-, ""4 Staff Three Sunset League powers are involved in their non-league games of the year Friday night and Sea View League entries take their final tuneup prior to league play next week as another slate of games fills the Orange Coast area prep • football calendar. It's El Modena High, with its giant-filler reputation, eyeing Edison High's 24-game winning streak, it's unbeaten Marina High faced with its first stern challenge of the campaign -Coach Ted Mullen's unbeaten Foothill Knights and its a re· • match between CIF Big Five powers St. Paul and Fountain Valley, the division 's No. 2 and 4 ranked teams in a prestige collision between the Angelus and Sunset circuits. Here's a look at games involving area teams this week : Edison vs. El Modena Coach Bob Lester's El Modena Vanguards enter with an identical situation to 1979 when they shocked the Chargers. 28-27 at the same site. The Vanguards are 1-1 with a narrow loss to Loara preceding a victory over Kennedy and Edison is ranked No. 1 in the Cl F Big Five Con- ference and Orange County with a 2·0 mark. Edison has never won at El Modena's field , but Chargers Coach Bill Workman discounts any jinx theory. "I don't think a field makes a tackle or misses a block," says Workman. In 1979 we were fat- headed and the coaches blew it. Every coach on the staff will tell you that. "I just hope It's interesting. it'll mean we're still in the game." Not to ~out-done with the quips, Lester coun- ters: "Our contract is through this year and we've had two good, close games. If this one isn't de· cided in the fou rth quarter too, I've told Workm an he can take his contract and . . . " El Modena relies on running backs Rex Moore (6·2, 210 jr. > and Jim Torok (5-10, 160) behind quarterback Steve Sanders (5-11, 185jr.). t.:p front, where El Modena always seems s trong, are guards Jerry Heidrich (5·10, 200 sr. > and Tom Sharp (6·1, 200 sr. ). Moore, who transferred from Foothill High, was a sophomore starter and is the brother of Stanford star Rob Moore. Lester says his team's biggest concern is Edison's running game. "Both their backs, <Dave) Gerowc and that other guy (Theo Langford), tbey come out or the same mold," says Lester. "The of· fensive line is making some nice holes, but both of them seem capable of making their own holes. And the defense is keeping them lOU,gh. It never gives anyone any kind of fi eld position. "Every time we play we're throwing out of our O'l"n eod zone. "Kids are hard to read, but we've never really been awed by Edison. We may get blown out . . . maybe not." , Edi.sOn ls in nearly 100 percent shape with only center Jeff Boydstun (neck) and defensive back Eric Ory (due back for the MUlikan game next week) missing. ''We'd better be up for El Modena " says Workman. "Year-in and year-out it's one ol the top programs in Oran1e County and he (Lester) knows bow t.o cet his ~le up. Both schools respect each other. El Modena• inside four on defense, the two llnebacken over the two suardt. are Just super, and1 lite ev ry El Modena team. they ust smack your Upe open.·· Tlllnay 1"1•• Ill fJllll$ at 1 :38 ) Sal Clemente vs. £stama (at Newl))rt Haroor) Valencia at Irvine La Habra vs. ~leback (at Santa Ana Bowl) FrWay "'lill £stanC1a by 12 Valencia by 7 Sadd lebacll by l win over Burroughs High of Burbank) and if we do that again we may lose by 80 points. "This is kind of a mental game, we know Fountain Valley has been waiting for us. And yes, we've thought about them a couple of times during the summer. "Yes, this is a prestige game for us. We in the Angelus League have r un into some real obstacles lately with Sunset League teams, it's become one of the hotbeds in America. "I said 10 years ago if they (Sunset League) ever get any coaching no one is going to beat them and right now they seem to have two machines go- ing <Edison and Fountain Valley) and another one ( Marina) is coming on.·· "It'll be a test to see if we can stay with the big boys." Foothill's arsenal includes quarterback Davy Joe Long 080) and two alternating at the slot (Phil Timson and Laird J ames), while the de- fensive line boasts guards Greg Sellers <220 > and John Healy (205) and tackles Scott McPherson CI95) and John Bosko (195>. Thompson echoes Mullen's comment: "This is a big test for us, we'll find out if we're looking good." says Thompson. .. Foothill's defense (coached by Bob Salerno) is a multiple look and aggressive and presents a lot of looks. They apply pressure and do a good job of it." WestmWister at Newix>rt Haroor Marina vs. Foothill (at Tustin) Edison at £1 ~ Los Amigos at Hoot1ngton Beach St Paul vs. f 001tail Valley (at Cerntos College) Cypress vs. (keai View (at Westminster) Corona del Mai' at Capistrano Valley Laguna Hills vs. lbversity (at Irvine) Lagooa Beach at Elsinore £1 Toro at Mission V1e10 Westminster by 7 Marina by 2 Edrson by 7 Htg. Beach by 7 Even C YPI' ess by 7 Ccflt by 6 Lagooa Hills by 6 Lagooa Beach by 3 Even St. Paul's game nows around quart~rback Alex Espinoza (6·2, 175), wide receiver Andy Stankiewi cz (5·8, 160) and fullback Manuel Juarez (5·11, 187 ). ·'Our front line has executed pretty well, but we haven't pl ayed anyone with the size of Foun· tain Valley," s ays Ancich. "We haven't prepared offensively for St. Paul's defense," says Fountain Valley Coach Mite Milner. "We're not good enough to overlook an OP· ponent to prepare for someone a week ahead of schedule. "It's their passing game against our secon- dary that concerns me. We haven't done a very good job thus far defending against the pass and they are talking about their quarterback and how they can do things with the football. The Vikes' veer has yet to produce a back with a 100-yard game, but Tony Valente, Ri ck Tobin and Brian Brown have operated in a Ouid fashion. while Laszlo and receiver Jeff Frandsen (11 recep- tions for 321 yards and 6 touchdowns> has given Marina a solid offensive look. Foothill has allowed one touchdown in two vie· tories, Marina has allowed one field goal in three routs. Es tancia vs. San Clemente Estancia's Eagles, ranked No. 5 in the Southern Conference, are up against another team with unique formations and Coach Ed Blanton is concerned. "We were up against a winged-T and slot against Cypress and Laguna Hills was a lot of mo- tion with pro slots, doubling with motion and used a nine-man defensive front," says Blanton. "Now San Clemente has a wishbone and double slot with motion and a four-four defense. SltlrDy Los Alamitos vs. Costa Mesa (at Newl))rt Haroor) Oall Park vs. WoodtJ1dge (at lrvrne) Los Al by 7 Woodbridge by 3 "Every time we've played St. Paul It's been a highly physical and intense game. Last year we won the physical batUe and the war, but we've lost a lot of those kids (graduation)." Marina vs. Foothill "What we have in our next three league games is blast, power and sweeps." Fountain Valley vs. St. Paul St. Paul's Swordsmen (2·0) were a 23·6 victim of Fountain Valley's march to the CIF Big Five Conference finals in 1980 and St. Paul Coach Mari· jon Ancich says he hasn't forgotten the lessons ap· plied. · Mark Templeton, a 6·2, 195-pound senior tailback out of Foothill's multiple offense, keys an attack which figures to be Marina's first test of the season after three straight laughers. Mike Griffin is expected to be back in Estan- cia 's attack at offensive guard after recovering from a moped accident. San Clemente is trying to recover from a 42-0 lacing at the hand of Corona del Mar last week, but Blanton says he 's not about to start comparing scores. "They most certainly controlled the football," recalls Ancich. "And we played like a bunch of chickens with their heads cut off last week <a 25·13 "We feel real good about our progress ... says Foothill Coach Ted Mullen. but Marina looks about as tough as I've seen. It runs the veer real well and the kid <Ken Laszlo) throws well. "The last team we played that was coming off <See SUNSET, Page 810) Moreno withstands the pressure for first win From AP dispatches It shouldn't com e as a surprise that a wily rookie lert-hander out of the Mexican leagues pitched a 1·0 Angels win Tuesday night featuring a screwball. This time. however, his name wasn't Fernando Valenzuela. Moreno, a Mexican winter league teammate a t Navajoa of the Dodgers' sensational rookie left bander, picked up bis first major- teague win by four-hitting Chlcaao for ~ innlngs in only the second start of his big-league career. And Moreno paid proper homaie to t he b etter -kno wn LallD screw baller. "I feel Valenzuela bu opened lhe doors for Mexican pitchen." said Moreno through Interpreter AD.fel Coach Pl"~ton Gomez. 7 2 7 7 7 32297 7 It took those doors a long time to open for Moreno, a 25-year-old Venezuelan who toiled seven sea.sons in Mexico before Gomez discovered him during a scouting mission while baseball went on strike. Moreno compiled a 58-39 record south of the border, including 11·2 for Gomez Palacios of the Mexican Outlaw League this summer. Moreno had beeo ineffective tn five relief appearances and a pre· vious start with the An1els, which purchased bis contract from Salt Lake City of the Pacific Coaat League on Au1. 9. "l felt more relaxed tonltht. I feel when I pitch every four or ftve days that I wSU have better control," aald Moreno, who walked four and •truck out one before Don Aase appeared to register the final out and pick up his 11th save. "Bob Clear (the Angels' bullpen coach) said day after day that he thought Moreno was gelUng closer and closer ." said An1el Mana1er Gene Mauch. "He was gettine more comfortable. The difference tonight was that he sure did relax. He aot a bil llft when be got out of that fourth.'' , The WhJt~ Sox mounted their only rally a1alnat Moreno when Ron LeFlore led off th• fourth wlth a eln .. e . and Tony Bernazard wH safe on an error by seeond-bueman Bobby Grtch. But Moreno rellred tbe next three men and didn't allow t'wo men on a bue untJJ w1Wn1 Gree Lualoskl and Chet Lemon ln the ninth. as z as asaaa··. "It was a very comfortable o· for-3." said Luzinski, who three times hit balls to the warning flag in center field. "I was a couple inches from three homers ." Indeed, Moreno, l·l , pitched a very precarious shutout, 1ettin1 13 putouts o n fly balls . Russ Baumgarten, 5-9, may have pitched better in defeat, but two of the three bits he allowed resulted ln the game's only run in the second in· ning, when Burt Campaneris' 1in1le drove ln Grich. ·'They're all t.ouah onee, '' 11ld Ba umgarten, who lost bis fifth st.rai1ht fame. l'Thls same la com· parable t.o a abut.out I threw 'faln&t Texaa ln May. But at leut .._ that one." • Dilly Nit 0 ~ WEDNES~AY, '0. SEPT. 23, 981 ~ Ray Malavasi gives Rams' 0 IRllll l:lllT • CAVALCADE 82-3 game plan for Chicago. 86. STOCKS 85 Can N-M schools · beat poverty spiral? lb J ERRY CLAUSEN Of .. .,...,.......... I John NicoU , superintendent of the Newport· Mesa Unified School District. contends that the public educational environ· ment created by the wealth of the Harbor Area probably had as much to do with the financial and physical growth of the area as any other factor. The wealth remains. But the b.) ~--------------~· TOM MURPHINI ,~~ Political gamesmanship WAYWARD YOUTH & SUCH: For the second time in recent months. one of our coastal c ity coun- cils has done a complete El Foldo afte r starting ef· forts to crack down on the profusion of electronic games. played with money, in local stores. The firs t s uch city to make the try was Fountain Valley. But when m e rchants showed up to loudly protest a ny prohibition against the video money· make rs. the City Counc il collapsed its tent. Now it's happene d again. Costa Mesa had draft - ed a s imilar law which would have limited the number of video games that ha ve increasing ly found homes in corner markets, liquor stores. laundroma ts and like establishments Mesatown also had placed a m o r atorium on insta llation of any new gam es over the last three months . BUT ONLY TfDS LAST Monday night. when the Mes a City Council gathered in session. 'st-Or e owners also gathered with the m to decr y any new control law. When the las t echo of d ebate faded a way . the Cost a Mesa la wmake rs appeared to be opting for a la w that would allow j ust about any business in town to operate the electronic a musements. Store owner s argued that the games. with na mes like Astro· Wa rs or Zap the Spaces hip, are real money-m a kers that he lp keep small business con· cerns afloat. In another rather bizarre twist to the pro-game argume nts. me rchants of some all-nig ht bus inesses said tha t the games are so popular that clust ers of players ar e often present during the wee hours when s to res a re like ly to be s truck by st ickup artists . These businessm'en envisioned the clus tered ~a me players as det e rrents to armed robbery. TIDS MAY BE. But if vou've ever observed the video g ame players)n actio n. they are so absorbed by · flashing lights . miniature e xplosions on the s c reen and streaking video rockets hips. you have to wonder if they'd even notice a r epeat of the Long . Beach earthquake The only way you might get their attention would be if the video screen abruptly went blank. Anyway . during the Costa Mesa ordinance hear· ing. a couple of c itizens did show up to complain about the gam es. s uggesting that the a ttraction of the video m a rve ls was c ausing youngs te rs to com f ti \1T LY ~~I ~E !'i-·"'j'f1?~_.=--'===i:o. s P·;,~ TS • c::Jf TemptatWM of the dmJ have hmmted ~ gene-ration mit truancy because they couldn't tear themse lves away in time to make it to English or math classes . EARLIER. POLICE had even suggested the lure of playin g the games was so magnetic that the younger people were committing daylight burglaries in order to finance the video habit at two-bits a c r a ck. Alas, there are indeed many perils and pitfalls out there in the world to lure youth down the sordid roads of sin and degradation In times past, there were no video games or X· rated movies to turn the youth of our nation in to lounge lazards and namby-pamby boys. -There were, however. pool h alls,· pinball machines. burlesque houses and, some generations back, bootleg gin. YOU ARE LEFI' to s uspect that for every generation, the devil has been able to create some way to lure the weak or unsuspecting off the path of righteousness and down the devious road toward a sinful, indolent lifestyle. Despite these lures, most people finally reach the point where they put satan behind them and tum to hard labor ln their declining years. ThJs qualifies them to criticize video games and other lUsts ol the ne w genera ion. back with certain reportin1 in· struments tbat are supposed to tell you what they've learned. lethal combination of Propoei· tion 13, lhe Serrano-Priest slate Supreme Court decision and declining student enrollment baa plun~ed lhe ooce·afnuent school district he administers into a poverty spiral. Proposition 13 limits the tax.es the school district can collect on rapidly rising property values. The court decision structures the amount of money the state can allocate to a district based on numbers of students enrolled. The net effect is that the once· wealthy Newport.Mesa district isn 'l wealthy any more. '·But I've bad some reserva· lions about the d epth and breadth of the instruction they bave received. Very honestly, I think many people of this area share this concern. "There had always been a direct correlation between prop- 1erty values and the school system," Nicoll noted. But. while market values or properly in the Costa Mesa- Newport Beach area are in· creasing by leaps and bounds, tbe ability to tax property is limited. "More is expected from us !the local schools). Our inability to meet those expectations is killing me," NicoU confides. "How," he asks, "can you tell a family that moves into a "Maybe the dollars have been spread too wide trying to do all things for all children. "Leaner budgets," he ad- monishes, "actually may help us rather than hurt us in defining the principal objectives of what an educational system should be." He see s more pa rental participation and interest in the schools and a move toward s tronger basic educational values in the future. Cohen is chairman of the dis· trict-appointed Educational Resources Advisory Commit· tee's subcommittee on instruc· lion. ' As such, Cohen is responsible for coordinating a group of parents, educators and "citizens at large" that will recommend a new. comprehensive educational EDITOR'S NOTE: In a three-port 1erie1 ~ginning today, Daily Pilot wnter Jerry Clausen continue• ht. ezploration of what has hap- pened to the Harbor Area'" school 81/St~. why and what'• being done about it. Thursday's story wtU deal with grau root! efforts to overcome problems created by shrinking budgets. $450,000 house that their kid c an't have a shot at music?" Before Proposition 13 aud Ser· r ano· Priest, the local school system's music programs may have been second to none. Choral and instrumental music were introduced early, at the elementary school level. Special emphasis was given to oth er elective·type classes at lower and middle grade levels , including drafting , typing, special reading and libr&ry pro- grams, foreign languages, shop classes and others. Psychologists were hired lo counsel youngsters in the formative middle school years. Computer analyses of achieve· ment were initiated. The district rode high on a crest of property tax funds in a booming coastal area. Now, curriculum for the most p!rt has been taken out of the hands of t he local board of trustees. Mandates that go with state funding and prescribed state and federal programs are the order of the day. With more than 90 percent of the district's current income go- ing to pay teachers and oµier personnel, the board is left with ' little money to provide more than the basics of education, says school board President Kenneth Wayman. Local control and elective· type classes ~ especially at the lower grade levels -are a thing of the past. program fitting the needs or all public school students in the dis· trict. His subcommittee is just one of four charged with studying the current district financial s ituation and recommending future use of facilities, property, material and personnel as in· come wanes. Cohen's concerns about good basic education and the primary UNDERTAKES STUDY James Norvell J • John Nicoll. Newport-Mesa Um/1ed School District supermtendent . le/t . and Ken Wayman. school board president . t ~ll owners of h1qh· priced hemes educat10r1 1s limited to basics ' goals of public instruction are even further enunciated by the preliminary findings of James Norvell. Norvell is a me mber of Development Management As· sociates, a professional fund- raising organization with head· quarters in Newport Center. His firm has undertaken a study designed to determine the feasibility of raising and inje<:t- ing private funds into the sag- ging public school sys tem. Raising large quantities of money for the Newport-Mesa Schools Foundation, patterned after a fairly successful private endowment organization sup- porting Beverly Hills public schools, will not be easy, he con· fides. Norvell 's c ompany has planned and managed fund· raising <:ampaigns for the South Coast Repertory Theater, the Newport Harbor Art Museum and the Salvation Army. Originally, Norvell s.ays, the firm planned to complete a pre· Iiminary school fund-raising re- port last January. But it began running into problems and lots of nagging questions from parents and members of the business com- munity. By February, Norvell says, he knew he needed more answers. The initial report is now expect- ed this month. The problems encountered by field surveyors indicated that businessmen aren't confident that money isn't being wasted by the public schools. And there was the question of district land holdings that could bring in money to be invested for Interest that might be used to provide educational funding. "First. though," he adds, "a majority question whether the 3 Rs (r ead ing. 'riling and 'rithmetlc) are being main- tained -it's a question or quality." "Surprisingly," he adds, "business and industry are not the sole proprietors of the source (money). He says the coastal area is rich in individuals willing to pump money -large amounts of money -into worthy causes. But in the final analysis, he contends, those individuals are faced with the question: "How is it going to benefit my kid or my grandchild?" Many of those potential donors, he contends, will finally throw up their hands and de· termine that personal needs die· tate sending their family's off- spring to private schools they easily can afford. "And, frankly." he admits, "it's a tough sell to get business or industry interested in this thing. Corporations have limited funds available to them despite what people's perceptions are. "Fluor <corporation of nearby Irvine ), for instance, has to justify to its stockholders why it's giving money away ... ·• "Many businessmen believe government has gone awry - from the federal to the local levels. They just don't believe what they are hearing -that 'We're <government agencies> man aging our money well.· " At the Newport-Mesa school district level, Norvell contends, the doubt revolves around three major topics: · The land acquisition and holding problem (now generally solved by dis trict a nnounce· ments of plans to sell j)r lease vac ant lands>. -Teacher tenure and seniori· ty systems. -Overhead. "I don't share it, but there is a question about too much administration." Norvell says he'll tell the Newport-Mesa Schools Founda· lion "what we believe they can raise in a year, but it's not going to make a dent in the needs." He adds. "M y personal feeling is that a long-term, viable solu· tion will be a pol,itical solution. not a private one ... School bo ard pr e sident, l a w yer a nd former school teach'er Wayman agrees. Private funding organizations that would provide money for dis trict -wide programs and grass-roots after-school classes oJrered at a handful of schools are helpful, he admits. '·But they ar e s top-gap measures," he says. "The real question is 'what kind of commitment society as a whole will make toward public education." LOOKS INTO ·BLACK BOX' ·Stanley Cohen To many area families, that's disturbing. So disturbing that school board member Betty Jo Balley of Newport Beach refuses to run for re-elecUon in No· ember. NB Center protest advances The quality of education for children In Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, she contends, now is determined in Sacramento. Her opinion is echoed by , leaders and parenta throughout . the two-city school dialrict, But Newport Beach developer Stanley Cohen says the • circumstances may not be all bad. i "It's been my experience,'' be says, "that wheneftl' people 1et together socially ln tbJa area now, the education of our children ls a principal topic. "Before," he confide., "I just sent my kids on to achool. , "In a sense, the school system baa been like a black box. You send yOW' k14a off -they come ... Opponents need less than 1,000 signatures Opponents of the Newport Center expansion project said today they are less than 1,000 si1natures away from forclnl the City Council to repeal the project or put it to a cit,vwide vote. The referendum group, known as RAP, Residenta' Action Plan, said it bad collected m«e than 3,500 sl1naturea of reg· lit.erect Newport Beach voten by Tuesday evenln1. The petiUonera must collect 4.2'6 tip.atures by the end al the month to qualify for a reftN!n· dum. Ofnclala from the elty ctn•1 office Hid all the 1l1na\ww must be tbed::ed. agalott eountJ r egistration records, a process that could take up to a week. According to county election codes, the city clerk's office said, the election would halve to be held by early February. Such a special election would cost rouably $20,000. Newport Mayor Jackie Heather, on vacation when the reterendQIJ'I movement began, said she h.u asked for lecal opin· tons to see it a referendum v~ could M delayed until June ,rhea t he 1tate primary la scbeduled. Mayor Heatber uicl if a apeclal election ls 1 will ''produce a "'1··: ~ dlvlll•• pertod tn n will wipe out locaf government. "I just can't imagine that this is what the educated citlsens want to see happen. The referen· dum ls being led by a band ol people who only know how to stop things from happenin1. not make them happen." Bobby Lovell, a leader of the referendum group who said she collttt.ed 43 sitnatures ln two hours Tuesday, remarked, "It'• very clear t.bal lbe cltisena want to ate tbll ..._Ill to a vote ... T he lr•tn• Compan1 H · panaien ~. appratHd b)' tM couqdl la .._ A-.•.;•llllld• a I Orange Cont DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday. September 23, 1981 N Bl NY E CO~JPO ITE TRAN ACTION OUOT&1'JC>tl$ IMCLUOC t••Ol,0111 '"9111&• YOlliC lollOWIU PAICJ,IC, "'"· IOUON, OlfllOlf AllO CllllCltfllAfl UO<C ta("AllGUAlllO RCPOllflD IV Utl lllA\0 AINO l"'UI"&' \el" Ntl 'WI•• N•I !Mil•• Ntl 'Wle• Ntl ~1n Ifft ~~n1~~i'°+ic.·:~ ': ~:~~~· :~E:~:1'~~ ";SAEtl,. ''i~~ ~,~;_7;'1i~I~ c~lt~iil'o=c~ -• • -H•MIW\ iJ · 4 1'6 • I • ~ ~~ ) 'ti 1 17S ij ~ ii t • f 110~ .to 16 lfi '4~ ._ ~~stn pl: ff i -:dll M41,,M J i 1 -1W: ~ICa 1.4t t S7I \II W'~· Nrl ~h• ;t' 21 I .,I •.•. . ,., • .... tn•· Mra<yi(. . '~ "' I'' .44,, l .. ... , .. 'i .. .' Pff>O• '"'" cr.q :?fleP 1 II Uftl+ ~ -t 01~1 ~ WCMP 1' 1 ....,_I\.. 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' ,n· 1 ~ = f · ~:t f -ll~lt! ... to ,..,!. 1 AO > IO t \' xi I, .. tt I '°' Na"i-M 12 \tJ --" Oii .4014 t~.. 11 • iiJv t IY • S4 ts + \; 11 , 1 ....... . Dow Jones Final OFF 4.76 CLOSING 840.94 I ~ MGM Grand atones for sins H you visited the plush MGM Grand Hotel in Reno between August 1978 and September 1979, you might want to return to the scene of the crime on Dec. 11 when there's going to be a court hearing to determine if. the hotel 1s doing right by customers who were hoodwinked . ft seems a Jot or shenaniglllls went on at the new- ly opened hotel during that 13·month period Here were some. Drinks served in the hotel-casino were routine- ly watered down. -Liquor was recycled Waiters and waitresses would swoop through the lounge after a show. pick up drinks that were not finis hed and bring them to bartenders for reuse -If you ordered a drink by brand name, you may very well have been served something else. In ract. once a bottle of name-brand liquor was emp· ty. bartenders made 1t a practice of refilling the bot· tie with a cheaper liquor Sometimes, when confronted with an order for an exotic drink. the bartenders would simply leave out the alcoholic part (That will teach ·em to order a frozen daquiri. > Well , either someone snitched or else they served a liquor·free drink to the wrong person or the Chivas Regal people began to wonder why they were not getting any ~ reorders from l h e h o t e I . 1 ·, ~ Whatever the ' h ...... r eason, t ese ...a.. .:i. cute pr act 1 c es .t11-L.;;:..h•-------°'~r~~~~~f!t ~~ MllTOI MOSKOWITZ the authorities. The federal Buret1u of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms issued a complaint and got the MGM Grand to admit that during those 13 months it had re· filled 16,000 bottles with cheaper liquor than was in there originally !They drink up a storm at these Nevada casinos,) To settle this action. MGM Grand paid a fine of $125,000 in January 1980. That's fine -but what about all those poor customers who were bilked by not gelling the drinks they ordered or getting served a drink that had been mixed lhe night before for another customer? These days there are always lawyers lo take up the cudgels for the downtrodden consumer. I mean, it's bad enough losing at blackjack. you don't have to be stuck with watered-down drinks on top or tbat. So MGM Grand was sued. and it has now reached a tentative setllement with lhe shortchanged customers. These are the terms < all two of them> 1. If you were one of those who were cheated, you will now be able to go to the hotel and see a cocktail show at half-price 2 If you don't want to see the show. you will be entitled to get two free dnnks anywhere in the casino. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS I•> ', 11 t • J11 ... . " 1•. .,, '• t ' ., ., 1•. METALS 2'1,200 us . .oo 114,'IOO 160,000 1'S,200 W.,000 lt,900 .. • .ooo 79,000 11,900 ..... \\ " .,, I 2'. I '. I'• $1o< .. 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