HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-10-07 - Orange Coast Pilot,, .......
IUlll mllT YIUI HDMITDWI llllY PAPll
WEDNESDAY . OCTOBER 7. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
·Ex-envoy: 'Palestine key to peace'
By. STEVE TRIPOLI ................
The solution or the Palestlniu
problem is the key to peace ln
the Middle East. a former am·
bassa(lor said Tuesday, and that
solution is part or both the
legacy of slain Egyptian Presl·
dent Anwar Sadat and the issues
behind the saJe of AW ACS radar
planes to Saudi Arabia.
Robert G. Neumann, former
U .S . ambassador to Saudi
Arabia, Afghanistan and Moroc·
co, made the comments In a
speech before the World A/fain
Council of Orange County at the
South Coast Plaza Hotel.
NeumaM said Sadat, who wu
assassinated in Cairo Tuesday,
risked the alienation of the Arab
world by recogniiing Israel, and •
made peace with that country in
the hope that Israel's govern·
ment would grant the Pal·
estinians self-rule in return.
He said Sadat recoenized that
solution of the Palestinian
probJem is vital because the is·
sue ''forms a platform on which
opposition of various types
gathers." He said such opposi-
tion keeps the Middle East un-
stable.
But Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin did not
respond to Sadat's initiative, aA
other Israeli leaders might
have, Neumann said.
Dlltr NII,.... tor a.tM M9rY
HI-YO, HARVEST FES.TIVAL -The mechanical bull pen at Irvine's Harvest Festival just may
have been the happiest spot in Orange County last week as a goodly percentage of the more
than 30.000 who attended the event •·got into the saddle" just as this youngster did. The home-
grown fair, held at Heritage Park. closed Sunday after setting new attendance records.
Jury hears deputy's honors
Man involved in Tahoe death was OC officer of year
By The Associated Press
The sheriff's deputy involved
in the shooting death of a Fresno
man at Lake Tahoe is a former
officer of the year from Orange
County who had received·
numerous commendations
there, a coroner's jury has been
told.
A jury in Round Hill, Nev., is
bearing testimony in the Sept. 19
~eath of Timothy Calton, 23, to
dete rmine whether it was ac·
cidental and whether Douglas
County Sgt. Les Osman followed
proper poHce procedure in the
case.
Calton aJlegedly was shot as
he l ay spread-eagled on the
ground alter being arrested on
s u s picion of an apparent
burglary of a church at the
south shore of Lake Tahoe, not
No cheers, boos?
rrough rally ground rules ignored
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
The ground rules of an all·
candidates rally sponsored by
the Biscayne Democratic Club
were tough: no booing, no cheer·
Ing.
"Anyone who boos a candidate
will be arrested and prosecuted t,o the full extent of the law."
erogram chairman Allen
Goldberg promised. "It's not
Ulere words: It's a promise. You
wlU be arreattd immediately f«
dleturblng the peace. I can make
theae charges •tick."
One lady in the back or the
l"OOm at-Wublnston Savings and
Loan WU the ftnt to lpon bll
1 ulllmatum. Sbe let out a abort
l!ter when City Commluloner
limon Wilker took the podium.
Goldberg ordered ·• policeman
to make an arrest. The
'policeman s hrugged his
shoulders and rejected the or·
der.
It was one of several light mo-
ments at the political forum,
held to air tbe issues before the
Nov. 3 election.
"It's an American custom to
c heer and boo,'' sald com·
mlujon can~idale Stanley
Shapiro. "Look around you," the
polltlcal hopeful challenfed
Goldberg. "Do you see any
crimlna.la."
"I see a few," retorted one
member ol the audience or mott·
ly retirees.
Goldberl later explaJned that
he had laid down th• 1Ulf CJ"OUnd.
rules because ht bad bMn told
troublemaken would try to dil·
rupt the forum.
Car from where the inquest was
held.
The shooting occurred as
Osman was attempting to
handcuff Calton. It was later de·
termined that no break-in had
occurred.
Osman was employed by the
Orange County Sheriff's Depart·
menl between 1963 and 1979, said
Lt. Wyatt Hart, the depart·
ment's spokesman.
"He was an excellent
e mployee, an outstanding
employee," Hart said . Osman,
he noted, was promcfted to
sergeant in 1968.
Charles RikaJo of the state
Division or Narcotics and In·
vestigation testified that he re·
viewed Osman's record in
Orange County and found only
one negative report among
many positive ones.
He said Osman was cleared in
an investigation after he was ac·
cused of verbal abuse. He also
was voted officer or the year in
1973 and James Musick, then the
Orange County sheriff, told
Rikalo he would rehire Osman.
Rlkalo also said be found no
confllctini statements in his in·
tervtewa of. officers and
paramedics who were at the
scene of tbe sbootin1.
Another state invntigalor wbo
arrived shortly after the early
morning shooting said be toot
blood samples from the victim
and the sergeant to tat for any
presence of al~l Ol' dru11.
Agent John Compston said
Catton bad .009 percent alcobol
in. bis bloodstream md the ol· fl~er bad noae.
"He (Sadat> met a very dif . Ce rent man (Begin ) who
nickeled and dimed him to de·
ath,' · Neumann said.
Neumann said that the failure
or u .s. foreign policy to deal
with the Palestinian Issue
"limits the closeness we can de·
velop with any Arab country"
because it creates the percep·
tion that the U.S. will not deal
with Arab countries on an equal
basis with Israel.
* * *
Israel covets its special rela-
tionship with the U.S. and op-
poses the A WACS sale not for
security reasons, but because
Begin's government fears that
the U.S. will develop a rela·
tionship with Saudi Arabia equal
to its relationship with Israel,
Neumann said.
Neumann said the AWACS
sale Is a danger ''of ver y remote
significance" to Israel and that
Begin's government knows it.
* * *
He said neighboring Arab coun-
tries already blanket Israel
with radar surveillance, as
evidenced by their sighting of
Israeli jets on their mission to
bomb Iraq's nuclear reactor.
But Neumann said the A WACS
sale is crucial to the protection
of Saudi oil fields, which i& Im·
portant both to the future of
peace in the Middle East and to
U.S. interests.
<See MIDEAST. Page A.2)
* * *
No coup in Egypt
Officials say gunmen acted independently
CAIRO, Egypt <AP> -Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat's assassins
acted independently of any
political group or country and in·
eluded one Moslem fanatic.
Defense Minister Abdel Halim
Abu Ghazala said today.
"There is no coup," Abu
GhazaJa told reporters. "It is an
individual group and they are
not even related to any group or
country."
Abu Ghazalla said that the as·
sass ins numbered four , but did
not specify how many had been
Cops raid
house, CM
IDan dies
By JERRY CLAUSEN Of .... CNlty ...... ._
A Costa Mesa man, who police
described as "mentally ill,"
died on an operating table early
this morning after police rushed
into his barricaded home and
fired at least one shot.
Detective Lt. John Calnon said
Arnold Nash Broyles, 37, rushed
at officers while wielding a knife
in each hand jost 'fnside his
home at 867 Presidio Drive at
about 12:50 a .m.
Calnon said Broyles shot in
the chest, dropped to the floor of
his family room and rose again
still clutching one of the knives.
Officers wrestled the weapon
from his hand, Calnon said.
without furthe r injury.
Officers initially were went to
the home at 9:38 p.m . after
Broyles' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Broyles Sr., drove to the
police station to report their son
had chased them Crom the home
with a knife.
Four officers, aided by the
younger Broyles' psychfatrist,
Dr. Richard Green of Newport
Beach, attempted to talk the
barricaded man from his home,
Calnon said.
After about two hours of un·
s u ccessful pleading, police
called in a lO·man SWAT team
to rush the home.
Broyles was shot as he re-
portedly rushed at officers who
kicked in a side door leading to
the family room.
He was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital
where he died during surgery,
police said.
Calnon said the Orange Coun·
ty District Attorney's office and
Costa Mesa detectives are in-
vestigating the incident.
He said it is believed Broyles
died of a single .22 caliber rifle
bullet fired by an officer stand·
ing four feet from him.
The officer's name will not be
released, Calnon said, until an
investigation substantiates the
preliminary findings.
killed and how many arrested.
There have been conflicting
reports on the number of people
who took part in the attack that
RELATED STORIEs-A4
EDITORIAL COMMENT-A10
occurred during a military
parade Tuesday. But one
military source told The As·
sociated Press there were four
in the group and that one had
been killed. Other sources said
* * *
six people were involved.
Egypt moved quickly today to
a ssure political continuity after
Sa d at's a ssassination by
scheduling the referendum on
his s uccessor for next week.
Members of Egypt's Parlia·
ment met in e mergency session,
eulogizing Sadat and preparing
to formalize the nomination of
Vice President Hosni Mubarak
to succeed him. The nomination,
a foregone conclusion , meant
Mubarak will be the only can-
<See EGYPT, Page A2>
* * * 3 ex-presidents
to attend· funeral
WASIDNGTON <AP ) -Presi-
dent Reagan will not attend the
funeral of slain Egyptian leader
Anwar Sadat but asked former
presidents Jimmy Carter,
Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon to help lead an America! del·
egation to Cairo.
In announcing the president's
decision to stay home, White
House spokesman David Gergen
said today that U.S. security
agencies were unanimous in rec-
ommending that Regan re·
main home.
Carter and Nixon already
have accepted Reagan's invita-
tion. but there is no firm word
from Ford, Gergen said.
Secretary of State Alexander
M. Haig officially will head the
delegation.
Also being invited lo represent
the United States are Senate
Republican Leader Howard
Baker, Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd . Sen.
Charles Percy, chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
<See REAGAN, Page A2)
Pacific mineral
mining called easy
WASHINGTON <AP ) -A
huge Pacifi c Ocean source of
valuable minerals, including
scarce ones the United States
must import, can be mined easi-
ly, government scientists say.
The Immense ore deposit,
loaded with billions of dollars
worth of copper, silver and other
minerals, lies on the surface of
the ocean floor under interna·
tional waters off South America.
the scientists said Tuesday.
Scientists of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad·
ministration said the deposits
they discovered on submarine
dives last month were carried
from deep within the Earth by
past volcanic activity.
"The ores are incredibly rich
and they are on the s urface
a round old volcanic vents," said
Dr. Alexander Malahoff, chief
scientist on the dives. ''You
don't have to dig out millions of
pounds of rock lo get to them."
Even though the minerals are
8,500 feet below the ocean Sur·
face. Malahoff said, most of the
technology go get to them
a lready exists. There are no in·
ternational treaties restricting
recovery of the minerals. NOAA
officials added
"It's up to industry to start
looking at it as an economic re-
source," Malahoff told a brief·
ing at the U.S . Comm erce
Department. NOAA 's parent
agency.
U.S. officials have expressed
concern about the nation's de·
pendence upon foreign countries
for such s trategic minerals as
molybdenum, and the nation's
low stockpiles of some of them.
New sources of these minerals,
such as the recent find, could
lessen this dependence, they
say.
M alahoff said the undersea
ore deposit. estimated to exceed
25 million tons , is in a lifeless
area because or its depth and
coldness. It therefore could be
mined with virtually no damag-
ing environmental effects, he
added.
Using the deep·diving sub·
mersible Alvin. scientists found
the mineral cache in an area 350
miles west of Ec uador, some 220
miles east of the Galapagos
Islands.
DRAlll COAST llATlfR
Student, 6, wakes
building residents
Considerabl e clouds
tonight through midday
Thursday. Gradual clear·
ing Thursday afternoon.
Cooler days in the inland
areas Thursday . Lows
tonight 57 to 63. Highs
Thursday in the upper 60s
ALBANY, N.Y. CAP) -A
first-grader says she knows
what tale she 'll tell her
classmates when "Show and
Tell" lime comes Friday.
Marta Mahan, 6, was credited
with saving the lives of sleeping
tenants in seven apartments
Tuesday when she i'nored her
mother's order to nee the bum·
in& apartment building, fire of.
flcials aaJd.
Instead, she ran throuch the
thre4'-•tor)' brick bulldina about·
ina "nte!" and knocklnt on the
doors ol the other apartments to
alert the tenants, mosUy collete
students, to the 2:30 a .m . blue,
said her mother, Joanne Mahan.
''I CUell they Hid if it WUD 't
ror her, tbey'd all be sleeplnc
\
still," Ms. Mahan said. "The to mid 70s.
bulldi~g went up like a. llSIDf TODAY matchstick."
Marta, wh~ has three uncles in Hugh Mulligan's TV set the Albany fire department, was h .
helped out the back by tenants must ~ve .som.ethzng
she had awakened her mother wrong wsth it. Find out
said. ' what programs are being
"The little girl did a good viewed on Page 82.
Job," s~d Alb~ny Fire Chief llDf I Joseph Fitzmaunce.
Three people, includin1 an
Albany firefighter, were treafed
for minor U\juries In the blue,
believed to have been caused by
electrtcaJ wiring in a flnt-noor
apartment, fire officials saJd .
Ms. Mahan was "anary" at
the cirl for disobeylnl orden to -
to outside, ''and I kind or >'"Jlod
at her, I ,Juesa," the said.
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•••••• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday,·October 7, 1981
MIDEAST WARNING
William E: Colby
From Page A1
MIDEAST • • •
Saudi Arabia, a nation the siie
of the U.S. east of the Mississip·
p1 River but with a population of
just five million, is "enormously
vul nerable, s tra t egic ally,··
Neumann said.
He said the small population
limits the size of Saudi Arabia's
a r med forces and that AWACS
radar would greatly increase the
time the Saudis would have to
respond to attack. He said
g round·bas~ radar cannot de·
lect attackek until they are just
two minutes from their target.
Further, Neumann said that
an attack or any size, even with
adequate warning, would re·
quire outside help if it were to be
repelled. That help, be said,
would come from the U.S.
The A WACS sale therefore is
·'a plan for greater and greater
coope ration bet ween the U.S.
and Saudi Arabia for the defense
of t he <Persian > G ulf,"
Neumann said . That defense "is
in the national interest of the
US .... he said.
Neumann said fears that
Saµdi AWACS planes would fall
into unfriendly hands Ir the gov-
ernment were overthrown are
not justified.
Saudi Arabia "is one of the
most slaQle countries in the Mid·
die East, ·bar none," though its
s ystem of gove rnment may
seem strange to us. Neumann
said.
Neumann said Saudi Arabia's
population i s s table and
homogeneous, in stark contrast
to fran," where various ethnic
groups create friction.
Neumann said that con·
g ressional rejection o r the
AW ACS sale will solve nothing
a nd will force Saudi Arabia to
reassess its relationship with the
U.S.
He said the Saudis will seek
similar equipment from Britain
and that Britain will supply it if
the A WACS sale fails, that anti-
A m erican elements in the Saudi
government will use the rejec-
tion to argue that the U.S. is not
even-handed in Its dealings with
Israel and Saudi Arabia, and
that the Saudis may seek other
strategic relationships, perhaps
with the USSR. if the sale is re-
jected.
The U.S. can help bring peace
to the Middle East if the govern-
ment can prove that it is in·
terested in solving the Palestin-
ian problem and get the Arab
world to accept the existence
and security of Israel at the
same time, Neumann said.
'Keep eye on Soviets'
Former CIA chief says Sadat's death spells changes • By DA VlD KUTZ MANN
Of MM CHllJ Nit .....
f'orroer Central lntelUgence
Agency Director William E.
Colby told an Oranse County au-
dience Tuesday ol1ht the V.S
must keep a wary eye on Soviet
activities in the Middle East now
that Egyptian leader Anwar
Sadat is dead. '
In a speech at UC Irvine,
where he was interrupted at one
point with minor heckling by
students, Colby said, "I think we
have to be attentive enough to
show <the Soviets) that they
won't have a free run in the
area."
Sadat, assassinated Tuesday
in Egypt, had expelled Russian
advisors rrom his COUJ)try in the
* * *
19708 to allan himself more
c l osely wlth the West ,
puticularly the (J .S.
Colby, U.S. intelllaence chief
from 1973 to 1976 , said that
Sadat's death could result in
various changes in relationships
between Arab states and Israel,
with whom Sadat had forged a
corttroversial peace agreement.
Of thcje so-called Camp Davtd
accords, which angered other
Arab leaders, Colby said, "I
hope they are not jeopardized
and that the transition of power
in Egypt will be successful ."
The bespectacled Colby, who
now lectures and writes about
American intelligence gathering
acti vities. praised Sadat as
"courageous a nd effective" in
the search for peace in the Mid·
* * *
die Ea11t.
"He obviously has been a
tar1et or some ot the moN! ex-
treme elements, .. he s aid or the
various attempts lo assassinate
Sadul in the past.
Colby said CIA officials in
Washington would now try to
identify the perpetrators of the
assassination, what implications
could be expected In the region
and the overall efrects on the
prospects for peace.
On a related Middle Eastern
matter, the former CIA chief
said he supported the proposed
s ale of sophisli~ated radar
planes to Saudi Arabia'. "I don't
think it's a threat to Israel." he
said of the proposed AWACS
sale
* * * Haig pledges support
United States said full partner in peace effort
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. said today that t he
United States is a full partner in
the Middle East peace process
begun by the assassinated
Anwar Sadat, and pledged the
administration lo "pursue his
work."
Haig told a news conference
that the United States "would
view with great concern any ef-
forts by external powers lo
manipulate the tragic events of
the last 24 hours · ·
His statements were the fir'St-...
policy pronouncements of the
Reagan administration on the
situation left by the assassina·
lion of the Egyptian president
Tuesday
He said the shooting of Sadat
appears to have been an as-
sass ination, not a co up.
Moreover, he said, there is no
evidence of external involve·
ment in the assassination .
··our pursuit of peace in the
Middle East must continue to be
guided by the Camp David ac-
cords," Haig said. He said the
administration will continue ef·
forts to complete the peace
terms fashioned by Sadat and
I sraeli Prime Mini ster
Menachem Begin in conferences
at Camp David, Md .. with then·
president Jimmy Carter.
Haig said the administration
was heartened with word from
Cairo that the Egyptian govern·
me nt shares the determination
of the United States to continue
the Middle East peace process
begun by Sadat.
Haig said the assassination
has not shaken administration
determination to sell $8.S billion
worth of U.S. arms. including
A WACS surveillance planes, to
Saudi Arabia. He noted that
Sadat supported that sale, which
Israel opposes.
He said that ·•we would make
a mockery of all President Sadat
s tood for" were the AW ACS sale
to be stalled or blocked because
of his death.
Haig also said that defeat of
the A WACS deal in Congress
would suggest that ''equivoca-
li on and uncertainty have
become the characteristic
American style in the conduct of
American foreign policy."
'Wonder Woman' unit launched
Creators promote foundation to battle sexism
NEW YORK (AP > -The
creators of Wonder Woman, the
glamorous comic book heroine
who bounces bullets off her
bracelets, celebrated her 40th
bir thday b y l aunchin g a
celebrity-spangled foundation to
battle sexism.
Actress Maureen Stapleton, a
board member of the Wonder
Woman Fo1.4J1datioo, said, "The
foundation promotes the idea of
Adver se
weather due
By The Associated Press
Rain. snow and gusty winds
were forecast for Northern
California today, but ending
tonight.
Heavy rain was forecast north
of Shelter Cove with a chance of
snow in the mountains down to
about 5,000 feet. Snow down to
about 5,000 feel was also
forecast for the Mount Shasta
area and northeast California.
ln the Sierra Nevada, snow
was forecast down to about 5,000
feet in the northern a reas and
about 9,000 feet in the southern
areas of the range.
women as people of achieve-
ment. The name Wonder Woman
has a lot or utility: it spells
som ething right away."
Miss Stapleton, who concedes
she is not a comic book fan, was
joined Tuesday by singer Judy
Collins and Ms . m agazine
publisher Gloria Steinem to in·
augurate the foundation. whose
board includes figures in enter-
tainment, publishing, govern-
ment and sports.
The foundat ion premise is
Wonder Woman's dedication "to
a fully integrated society based
on mutuality and interdepend-
ence ." said Jenette Kahn.
publisher of DC Comics.
Bac ked by $100,000 from
Warner Communications, DC's
pa rent company. the foundation
will award educational grants to
women "far less visible" than
Wonder Woman "who, if they
only had the assistance, could
realize their full potential." Ms.
Kahn said.
The first grants, to be present·
ed in November 1982, will· go to
women age 40 and over in honor
of the 40th anniversary. said
Karin Lippe rt , foundation
coordinator.
When he began writin g
Wonder Woman in 1941, the late
William Mar s ton , a
psychologist, had to argue with
his editor about the idea of a
woman hero, according to his
widow, Elizabeth.
"Bill said, 'Why on earth don't
you have a woman for the hero?·
They said , 'It can't be done.'
And Bill said, 'Like hell it can't',"
Mrs . Marston , 88, said by
telephone from Arlington. Va.
Len Wein, the comic book's
editor, said Wonder Woman
herself is becoming mo r e
liberated to "keep up with the
times."
·•For many yea rs. Diana
Prince <Wonder Woman's alter
ego) was a shadow of her beau.
Steve Trevor. Now she's in-
dependent. In a couple of r~cent
issues , Steve complained
because she was always having
to save him and it was beginning
to embarrass him,•· said Wein.
Wein, who wrote the strip
about seven years ago, said he
used to read Wonder Woman as
a kid and found that boys had no
problem identifying with her im-
age a s a "s uper-strong ,
patriotic'' conqueror of evil.
Ms . Steinem , whose Ms.
magazine displayed Wonder
Woman on the cover of its first
issue in July 1972, said she
began reading Wonder Woman
as a 7·year -o ld in rural
Michigan.
-"" Heliopolis Watt/iring
·'She was the only -superhero
that existed for little girls," said
Ms. Steinem , and the character
gave her a "sense of strength
and a sense that fairness just
might triumph." , Aerodrome • move gains
,
APPARENT SUCCESSOR
Hosr11 Mubarak
I NTERIM PRESIDE.VT
Suf 1 Abu Taleb
Garde n e r he ld
in hit, run
NB a c cide nt
A 3l·year·old Newport Beach
gardener has been arrested in
connection with a hit, run incl·
dent last month in wbich a 22·
year-old man was struck by a
pickup truck and suffered head
injuries, police report.
Thomas Laurence Blair was
arrested on Seashore Drive in
west Newport Tuesd ay three
blocks from where the incident
had occurred three weeks
before.
Police said they were able to
track Blair because a witness to
the accident copied the license
plate number of the pickup.
According to reports. John
Hildreth of Newport Beach was
crossing Seashore Drive when
the pickup hit him. Police said a
rear-view mirror on the truck
clipped Hildreth in the head. The
pedestrian received emergency
treatment at Hoag Memorial
Hospital.
F o llowing the in cident ,
Hildreth told officers the driver
of the pickup stopped, ran. ove.~
to him, said "you look all nghl
and then fled.
Blair is being held in lieu of
$1 ,000 bail. police said.
•
From Page A1
EGYPT
·1
••• • dldute in the referendum 1'uet
day
Under the constitution, the
election to succeed Sadat was to
be held within 60 days, and ob-
servers noted that the timing or
the referendum faJls within that
period.
I J
Meanwhile . police an d
military intelligence sources
suld Sadat's assassins were ex·
tremlst Mos le ms, that they
pumped JS bullets into him ~nd
that 22 Moslem fundamentalists
were arrested aft.er Sadat. wu
murder e d by men lo army •
ratagues during a military l
parade Tuesday.
Officials said Sadat's body r4· 1
malned a l Maadi military
hospital and will not leave the
hospital until the funeral Satur-
day in Nasr City, a northeast
section of Cairo wher e Sadat
was slain.
Although the speak~r of th_e
parliament became acting pres•·
dent on Sadat's death, it was ap·
parent that Mubarak already
was in charge of the govern-
ment.
Sadat's National Democratic
Party nominated Mubarak as its
candidate within hours of the as·
sassinalion, and the parliam.enl
session was the next constitu-
tional step in the election pro-
cedure.
Abu Ghazala. who was seated
on Sadat's left at the military
parade when Sadat was s~ot .
was grim.faced and forcibl y
restrained himself as he spoke
to Parliament in the televised
session:
With bandages on his right
a rm and left ear for the minor
injuries he sustained during the
attack. Abu Ghazala said he
would have preferred being the
victim than lo have seen Sadat
killed.
''The armed forces will
always remain a shield for this •
country," Abu Ghazala said with
a shaking voice. · .. And U is in-
tact. and I swear to you that
every soldier and officer would
have been prepared to sacrifice
themselves for Anwar Sadat."
A parliamentary committee
proposed giving two residences
and a special pension to Sadat's '
family, and the measure was ex-
pected to pass.
The proposal would turn over
homes on the Nile River in Giza
across from downtown Cairo.
and on the beach in the Mediter-
ranean resort city or Alexan-•
dria. The amount of the pension..
was not mentioned.
Mubarak declared a one-year •
state of emergency seven hours.
after Sadat wa s mortally··
wounded by a squad of soldie~
who sprayed gunfire and hurled
grenades at a stand where
Sadat, Mubarak and other~ ...
l ea ders were reviewil'}g a:.
miHtary parade commemorat-
ing the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. • (
"We wi ll continue in the name j
or the spirit and soul of our .•
leader and our constitution. . . •
We will abide by all treaties anct :
commitments made,·· Mubarak\
said in a broadcast to the ~
shocked nation. :
His state ment s ignaled :
adherence to Sadat's peace trea·· .
ty with Israel and his alliance ·
with the United States. Mubarak, 53, was unhurt in :
the attack that reportedly killed •
seven Egyptian officials and' (
security men in addition to the :
62 ·year -old pres ident and ·
wounded 2y men, including four
Americans.
Armv sources s aid the six as·
sassins who leaped from a truck
in the military parade were
Egyptian artillerymen. a lieuten·
ant and five enlisted men. with
Mos lem fundamentalist lean-
ings <,J' International \~J
I ---...... .... , ' --'1 .. d•t ~::t! SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
Sierra Club says it is on the
brink of success in its drive to
collect a million signatures from
people who want to see pro-
developmenl Interior Secretary
James G. Watt fired .
~ ................................................. llfl!llll ... ~,,
Cairo
(: !at.. ~> ~ ,\ I ,' ti
I ~
I ..JI / ()/
""-.!,
"' ) The Citadel
<'-'
.~ ..........
Cairo suburb of Nasr. where Egyptian E're8ident Anwar Sadat was
shot, is pinpointed.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomas P Haley P'~t"""9f end C"~t E U<ti1ll•t 0Htt..•r
Robert N Weed "·-· Thomas A Murphine co. ....
MtchHI P Harvey -.....,o-_
L Kay Schultz
0..C. OI Ot* t•<Oft•
Kennell\ N Goddard Jr
c..t.IM!-0.-IOf
~rntrd Schulman Cont.OW
Charies H \.001 -.....·-· Catot A Moore, .......,,...,
CIHtlfled ed'lerti•lng 714/642-5678
All other dep.,1ment1 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
IJD w .. t ll•t \I (O>I• ""''° C • ""•ii Addrt" 801 tS.0 (0\1• MO\• (A •1t1•
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ll•tCll """''~IOI\ IW.o<h IOI"''•"' "•"•• ''"'" l ••u"I• e. .. 11 _,,, to•\I A ""0,. •~Q·0".11 •Cl•l•Of' " •vett\-\•tuf'll•r~ -1.,,..,.,, frip Oflllo ·~· Dv ...... , ... ,.....,, •\ •I JlO W•\I lll•t \11••1 , 0 DO•
I W ( o•IA """"' C •"'°'"'" •i.1t
John Hooper. the conserva-
tionist club's public lands
specialist. said Tuesday he was
certain additional paper work
would confirm that the cam·
paign is near , on or over its
goal.
When the campaign started in
mid-April, the club said it in-
tended to present copies of the
petition to Congress to pressure
lawmakers to convince Presi-
dent Reagan he should give the
ax to bis most controversial ap·
pointment.
From Page A1
REAGAN • • •
mittee, Hou!le Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill and Rep. Bob Michel,
House mlnority leader, as well
as Defel\Se Secretary Caspar
Weinberger, U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations Jeane
Kirkpatrick, and a member of
the Joint Chi~fa or Staff.
Former Secretary or State
Henry Kl111tnger and Sol
Llnowltl, a former MlddJe Eaat
peace neiot11tor who 11 an •d·
viaer to Hail, alao were lnvited.
Gersen aald Rea1an made the,
deellloa not to 10 "w\lb areal
re1ret."
l
F40 Cool white fluorescent tubes
• Check your light fixtures for old,
dull bulbs.
• The most PoPUlar fluorescent size.
• No dealer sales
• Li mit 1 case per customer.
Subject to supply on hand
prices good thru 10-11 ... 1
CROWN HARDWARE
WISTCUllf
10248"1iitAft> " ............ 642-1 IJJ .............
h•t•• 1 ,_ w..t • • tt..clwwe 'Stan
COIOMAD&MAI
11011. CMilt ....,.
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Wllltdln °'*' 1hurl; Tll I P M.
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i t . .
,_,. ___ _
,.,...._....
/
Burton r~covers
from surgery
Actor Rl9bard Burton waa
reported /" sat.isfactory con-dition !p lowing emeraency
surgery to repair a duodenal
ulcer, said a spokesman at
St. John's hospital in Santa
Monica.
Burt.on. ~. was admitted to
the hQs pltal Thursday night
and underwent surgery Fri-
day morning, said his doctor.
Melvin Richards.
It was not known when the
Welsh-born actor would be
released, hospital officials
said.
Vice Chancellor Joseph
Watson was due in a meeting
at UC San Diego when hls
secretary handed him a set
or keys and pointed to a car
outside.
Sanna Borge kisses her husband Victor Monday night at the
home of the Finnish Consul General in New York after he was
knighted by Finland The mu.ste1an already has knighthoods
from Denmark. Sweden and Norway.
Watson J:Ot into the wrong
one by mistake, but the igni-
tion key worked. Meanwhile,
Chancellor Richard Atkinson
discovered his car was miss-.
Ing.
The theft was reported to
campus police, a nd they
found Atkinson's car parked
in front or the library where
Watson had left it. It was
driven lo the campus police
station to be 'dusted Cor
prints.
,.,. . .,.......
Watson, meanwhile, found
his car missing from in front
or the library and also re-
ported it stolen.
No, doctor, an officer told
him, explaining the mixup.
Although her grandfather
is appearing in a show just a
few blocks up Broadway. ac-
tress Cathryn Harrison says
she hasn't seen Rex Harrison
in 10 years .
But Miss Harrison. a cast
member or "The Life and
Adve ntures oC Nicholas
Nickleby," adds that "we
talk regul arly on the phone."
The actress. the daughter
of s inger Noel Harrison,
made her remarks at a party
following the opening of the
8'2·hour. two-part play based
on a tale by Charles Dickens.
In a TV "farmly reunwr1. .. entertainer Danny Thomas is reunit
ed with adults who once played hrs children on .\-lake Room for
Daddy" senes -Rusty Hamer. center. and Angela Cartwright.
right The reunzon occurred on the set of ABC'.~ "Whatever
Miss Harrison, in her 20s,
s ays she hopes to see her
gra ndfather while in New
York, where he is starring in
a revival of the musical he
made famous -"My Fair
Lady." Became of ?"
Coastal
L~lll •••1-ble wl~ MMllll-Sl lo ••st 12 to 11 knob In 111unoon Westerly s-ll 1 lo l f•t Consloer•·
bl• low cloudlneu lllr0\1911 ton19111
wltll only pert1-I CIHrln9 WIPdnnd•Y
alter..-.
U.S. summary
R•ln fell owr most of Ille n.tlon
T1Msd•Y. bul •kles ...... ,.,, In the
Sov111w .. t and Soullleul and Ille
wuttt.r-WM c.rtso -'Cl <OOI ov•r the
Grtal Plllnl •nd the Rocky -.,,.
laln1.
Sii-•" •ncl tllunotrsno-rs ••· tended ~om toutllern Hew Mulco
acrou Te .. 1 Into Ille tower Mil·
llHlppl. A flash flood WllCll WIS In
effect few Por11ofts of "°"'" centr•t Tftl'H nortll of Sin llntonlo, Wllert
""" tncllft of rain fell Hrly TUH· day.
Rain a ho spread ove r Ille
nortlleasW<n P.11 of the n.tton, In
eluding H-Yon, H-Jersey, Pen-
nsytw.ni. -western Hew England.
There alto wa1 r•ln from Waslllngton
Into north-stem Catllomla. S-en _. lortust tor 1o01y
owr N-Yon, H-Enotano •nd
tlle not1hern Gr.al l •kH reolon,
,,,.,_~ owr I0"111em Tuu.
ano rain f,,,..,, Ille northern •nd cen-
tral Pacific Coast Into Ille no'111trn
RoOleL
Ctouch t*les w..-. upec11Pd over
pat11 of ll>e IOVthern Pla ins, incl
stiles wllt be pertly c '°"°Y ~ ctHr
elHWMre.
California
Sou!Mnl CaOlomt• wllt be mos1ty
1•1r today -Tl!UrMSay, ••Cec>I tor 1•" nlgllt -early morning clouds
•ngcoast.
0r•f'11119 c-.ly Wiii lllVf lllgll\ boll!
*Y• lft u. ~ .OS to mkl 70..
.__s S1 to'3.
V••ten cen aJQ>Kt 11'9f\S tn ,,,. up.
111iW 10I - -IC>s todey. I few dlOrMs COOier Tl!UrMSay. Lows upper
,.. to low .OS.
Sovtll--.rly winds IS lo JO mpf\
.... y --••ny TllurMSaY In Ille -t•lnL H19ni In tlle .OS. L-1 In --· WHt to IOUthWest wlncb JO to lS
..... In ~ lOIMy -Tllu~ay,
lfft ll• 75 to 11, tows tn Ille 501.
~n ._rt 1119f\S H lo t S, IOW1 111
Mostly fair skies
windy •n the tnounta•nr.. Coe1UI •re•
"'''" In Ille 7°" U Ctpl w•rml1'>9 10 tow 80\ Dy Sun<s.y tnl•nc! ••ll•n
Lows In 50\, Mount.In r.M>rt level
11191\l mcmly In Ille '°5 wllll 1-s 35 lo H
Tempera titres
lltbany
All>U<llte
An<llor-A'1\evtlle
lltl•nla At11nlc Cly
B•lllmore Blrml"9f>m
e•sm•rclil
BoiH
Bolton
BulfllO
ChlrlslnSC
ClllrlstnWV
Cheyenne
CllK-Clndnnatl
Cleveland
Columbus
O•l·FtWtll
Denver
0.•Molnes
O.trolt
F1lrb.lnks
Hartford
Hel•n•
H-lulu Houlton
1nc1n1olls J •<Unvlle
K•ns City
L .. Ve9o1s
LlllleAoo
loulsvlllt
M.mpllls
N\l1m1
Mllw1ukte
Mpl>-St P
.... 11 .. 111e
HewOrlHM
HtwYorll
Norfolk
Okla City
Om•ll• Pllll..SpNa
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Pt11nd,Me
Plll nd, Ort Rapid City
Reno
Rk llm-
Sllt Lah suni.
St. Louis
NATION
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61 SI
IJ 51
17 SI
" J5 IS 41
S7 47
•7 SI ....
IS •1
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70 SS
72 S6
11 SS 71 .,
14 .,
63 ...
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.. 50
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II 61
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56 4S ., "' .. .s
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71 SS
S4 lS
63 M 63 ~
18 :M
17 M
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Ml S3
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4S 41
Wet• --\trr.o•••~ \to•1•"•'Y Oulv4ef amnn ---===
C~l,ottNIA
Appl• Valley
B11t.ersfletd
Barstow
Beaumont Big Bear
Bishop
Btytlle
Culver City
Eureka
Fresno
L1nc11te<
L-Beacll
Los11,.i...
M1ry1vllte
Monrovia
Monlebetto
Monterey
Ml Wll'°"
HeHt•s
Newoo11 Bea<ll
01kl111(1
Ontario
Palm Sprtnoi
Pasaden.
PatoA-
AlverslOe
Reel Bluff
Redwood City
Reno
Sacramento
Salln•s
San Ber.--Olno
Sin Ga~lel
Sin Ole90
Sin Franc;ltco
San Jose
S•nt•llM
Sant• B•--· Santa Cna
Sant• Monica
SlOCklon
hlloe Vall<ty
Tllerm•t
Torrance
NOAA U l 0.• fll (.-.... ,
PAN AMIAICAN TllMl'S
11 .U llc1p&.1ko " 1S
17 SS BerblOCK 17 1'
t2 '° Bogo1• "' 41 H 55 Cur.c:eo t) 11
" 2' Guadelalar• 11 s• 7t 37 Gu-louoe 17 15
'4 U Hoene 17 7S
to '° Montego Bay 17 n •7 S6 MHlllan 17 15 11 49 M .. rldl '5 73 ~ 41 Mutco City T1 '°
17 !I MOf'lterrty 16 11
M IO Nauau • 1J 71 41 San Ju•n, P.R '1 1' n Sl st K1tu ., n
11 55 Teouclgatpa 71 .. " '° Trlnld..S IO 75 ~ ~ Ver• Cruz 17 73
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71 34 ., 53
71 " 90 SS
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Sun, moon, tides
Flrtt lllQfl 7:111.m. a.t
Flrtt low I t:SO •.m. o.t
Second lll9fl S:22 p.m . 4.5
S.CotlCI -C~l 12:401.m 0.6· S4lfl Mtsll6'.)I o.m. RISH wec1ne .. CS.y 6:511.m.
Moon rlMS 11 2:11 p.m .. seh
Wednclsclly at 12:17 a.m . St P-Tampe
St St. Marie
Wulllnotn
Wlclllta to s' ., Sl Yuma ,. 6S ~':;'.; ..,, • ..,1n11 over HOt111un Crime highest
Calllomll, •ltll ClleM• of rain over .. t1ntr1I Callfornll. Strong 9usty ·~ • '""'••lone~ Sllow9rs tapering SACRAMENTO (AP) :y.1~tict!.•;!'~~~"'=: ':··. -~S~Rf RIPIRT -The Sacramento 11111 to .-s.ooo fMt 1n -.-1t1. • m etroplolitan area bad
t,AIOOf"t In IMIOUtll. Call forni a ' s b I ghest
Extended crime rate in 1980, rank-
,.,, ,.,. ..,, ........ ._. ing sixth in the United1
I u•look ._.. ..... Mn ,... ... .... Dir States, with nearly one c. Zuma 2 a 11 t r w out of every 10 persons
t_.'coASTAL, MOUNTAIN AREAS -~.:::.i.::c.. : ! :~ : : : being a victim of crime,
N lr ••c.ept -nlglllt and "'°'""" Still Dle9D County 2 3 u 1 r w a c c 0 rd i D g t 0 F B I .,.l"".._<_ ..... ____ ...., ___ .. __ '_"_~_-_1..ou ___ "_Y ___ °"' __ IOOll __ '°' __ TllurMl _____ Y_'_L1_tt_1e_c_llan9t ___ . ____________________ __.figures.
We'Te Listening •••
What do you like about the Daily Pilot'.' What don't you like'.'
Call the number below and your message will be recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answenng service may be used to record let·
ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox cont ributors must include
their name and telephone number tor veriticatJon. No circulation calls. please.
Tell us what"s on your mind. •
..., __
~~------·-·-·---,, .... --~~··
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981 s
Onofre repair 'OK'd'
Allegations of shoddy work dismissed in NRC report
A soon-to·be·released report
by the U.S. Nuclear Reaulatory
Commission concludes that aJ.
legations o( s hoddy
workmanship during repairs to
Unit 1 or the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station are ground-less.
"Our basic conclusion Is that
we couldn't find any evidence to
s ubs tantiate the alleaatlons,"
N R C s pokes man Jame s
Hanchett said Tuesday.
The federal agency put an in·
vestlgalor to work on the matter
in late June after three former
Atlantic Nuclear Services Co.
employees claimed that a 14·
month repair job at San Onofre
was characterized by shoddy
work, drug use by employee.
and overexposure or worken to
radiation.
Videotex program
planned in Viejo
The charges were made dur·
inlt Atom.le Safety and Licensing
Board hearings in San Die10
dealing with Southern California
Edison Co. applications for new-
ly built Units 2 and 3 at San
Onofre.
Unit 1 has been in operation
since 1968.
One of the three workers,
David Nightingale, 32, had
claimed that he was guilty of
"very shoddy work" when he
helped install metal sleeves to
repair corroded piping in Unit
1 's steam generators. About
1,000 t e mporar y w orkers
handled the repairs .
By KEITH TUBER O.My ...............
Bank of America will
participate in a pilot home
videotex program beginning in
the first quarter of 1982, It was
announced.
T he pilot is managed by the
Times·Mirror Videotex Services
Inc., a division or the Times-
Mirror Corp.. and will involve
150 homes in Mission Vie~o and
200 in the Palos Verdes area.
Participating households,
selected from a combination or
Bank or America customers and
random interviews, will use a
terminal and a color television
set to receive the service. Those
in Palos Verdes will use
tele phone hook-ups while the
Mission Viejo group will have a
two-way cable hook-up for com-
munication.
·'The bank will participate in
the Times-Mirror pilot, one oC
the most innovative in the coun-
try. to gain ~xperience and data
on consumer acceptance of
vide o home ba nking," s aid
Stephen Yotter, bank vice presi-
dent and head of retail elec-
tronic marketing.
"We expect to evaluate this
pilot carefully before making
any decisions on expansion or
the service ...
Jim Holly. executi ve vice
president and general manager
o r Times -Mirror Videotex
Services, said the system will of·
rer a lot more than banking.
"There will be a broad range
or information and services, in-
cluding a lineup or hard news,"
Holly said . "We'll have the AP
wire, excerpts from the L.A.
Times publishing system, calen-
dar and large chunks of Times
classified, as well as consumer
news, career guidance, college
information, money and finan-
cial matters and health tips."
By using th e system,
Extension
of Farmer's
Market OK'd
The certified farmers market
program operating at Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa has been extended through
next March, an Qrange County
Farm Bureau spokesman has
announced .
The farm bureau was granted
a six-month extension for its
market from the Orange County
Fair board on Sept. 24.
The certified market, open to
the public between noon and 6
p.m . every Thursday, offers pro·
duce to consumers direct Crom
selling growers at reduced cost,
the spokesman said.
The market, located in a fair-
grounds parking lot at 88 Fair
Drive, Costa Mesa, opened July
23 as the first such operation in
Orange County.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. H UMPHRIES
Ctrtifi«l Gtmolog11t, AGS
GOLD STRIKE
at dam site
The days of gold strikes in the
American West are not over.
Two construction companies
digging earth to build a dam up
in Oregon struck it rich recent-
ly. As they moved earth tor the
big Applegate River Dam, they
hit what has been estimated at
$2.5 million in gold ore. With so
many workers involved in the
dam project, it didn't take long
for the word to spl'ead, and the
rush was on. Amateur prospec.
tors lined the river bank thicker
than fishermen on the opening
day of trout season. There have
been reports of these prospec·
tors averaging about a ball
ounce of gold a day. At today's
gold prices, that's a pretty eood
day's work. However, the two
construction companies, under
a mineral rights agreement
signed with the federal 1ovem·
ment, which owns tbe land,
must turn over 20 percent of
their find to Uncle Sam. Tbe
amateurs will be harder to col·
lect from. Gold fever la a condi-
tion that sWI lives tn the West ..
households will be able to pay
bills by computer, transfer
funds and check c urrent
balances, Holly s aid . Also
available will be programs for
shopping, concert-ticket buying,
vacations and travel. a host or
games and a local community
bulletin board to advertise
garage sales and other ac-
tivities.
"People on the pilot program
will be able lo send letters to
each other electronically." Holly
said. "Ever y household will
have an electronic mailbox."
The pilot, he said, would last.
about nine months . Bank or
America is not co mmitted
beyong the extent or the test.
"We plan to ask a lot or ques-
tions, to find out what people
like and what th ey don't ,"
Holly said. "There will be an
a wful lot of marketing r e -
search."
Two other former employees.
David Pierce, 27, and Max Man-
ning, 49, told the federal licens-
ing board of witnessing drug
abuse and other examples or
poor workmanship.
Orticials at Atlantic Nuclear
Services Inc .. the firm contract·
ed to handle the repairs, deni~
the allegations. Edison Co. of-
fi cials said that any work that
was done incorrectly was quick-
ly repaired following inspec·
lions.
o r the investigation that
ensued, the NRC's Hanchett
s aid, "The t rouble with the
charges was that they were sort
of cosmic in nature. They were
not very specific."
,.,...._....
SOLEMN TASK -An Egyptian Embassy e mployee in
Washington lowers the Egyptian flag to half st~ff after as-
sassination of President Anwar Sadat was confirmed Tues·
day.
MEM8£R AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY
1923 NEWPORT II.VD .. C08TA MESA
33 YEAAS IN THE SAME LOCATION
8antcAmerieard-MM1ef C'*ft f't40M .....a40t
I
•
r
:-.
,(
h
l'
1
h
j
I ~
.. s
Sadat death complicates Ar.ah-Israel peace try
WASJUNGTON tAP> The
Egyptian and Israeli am
bassadors have predicted the
Camp David peace process will
urvlve the assassination of
Anwar Sadat. but U.S. and
diplomatic sources agreed the
death of the Egyptian leader
greatly complicates efforts to
devise a lasting Arab-Israeli peace.
Sadat slaked his career and
his life on the Camp David ac·
cord and on good relations with
t he United States. His death
Tuesday raised immediate ques·
lions whether his successors
could, or would, follow that path.
Though Sadat's successor,
Vice President Hosni Mubarak,
is considered a staunch friend of
the United States, it s imply isn't
known whether hi s government
will be strong enough to follow
Sadat's policies -unpopular
among Egypt's Arab neighbors
a nd a mong Sadat's domestic op-
ponents.
"We fare very very worried,"
s aid an Israeli source here who
didn't want to be identified. "It's
a very severe reali zation how
shaky the situation in Egypt is.
and how shaky the peace is."
There was no mis taking
Sadat's in fluence in American
efforts to establish a firm posi
lion in the Middle East
··sad at has been the linchpm
or our policy," said a State
Department official. "This is a
very serious blow." While
Sadat's fate was still m doubt,
former Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger said of him, "If there
is an indispensable man in the
diplomatic process. it is Sadat."
Later Kissinger said. "The
Camp David process was based
on fundamental realities. Presi-
dent Sadat recognized these re-
al ities, but he didn't invent
them , and therefore these re·
alities still exist for us to build
on. I think it would be a terrible
mistake for Ame rica now to give
way to despair, to think that we
cannot go forward.··
Egyptian Ambassador Ashraf
G horbal said his country will
continue to pursue peace in the
Middle East and close ties with
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5678
the United States.
"Cairo has confirmed that lt
continues its policies as charted
by President Sadat and over-
wh el mlngly supported by the
Egyptian people," Ghorbal told
re porters outside his embassy
here. ·'The peace process under
Carpp David will remain the
. . policy of the country. A
close relationship with the Unit·
ed States will remain a cor·
nerstonc of Egyptian policy."
As the Egyptian ambassador
faced reporte rs, the embassy
flag wa lowered l0-half-$laff.
Israeli Ambassador Ephraim
Evron said his government was
"very much relieved" to hear
that the surviving Egyptian
leadership feels bound by the
peace treaty.
He said of Mubarak: "He was
a party to the whole negotia·
lions . He was at President
Sadat's side throughout this
1 period He obviously was in
agreenfent with what Sadat
did ' He told ABC News. "I
don't think there's any doubt he
will follow in President Sadat's
f•)otsteps.
Though Sadat and Is raeli
* * *
Prime Minister, Menachem
Beein, slaned the historic Camp
David peace accord in 1978, the
final phase of the process, giv·
ing autonomy to the 1.2 million
Palestinians in the Israeli·
occupied West Bank and Gaza
Strip, has remained elusive.
Sadat and Begin only recently
agreed on ne w negotiations.
which opened Sept. 2_3 In Cairo.
Once there is an agreement on
autonomy , that would be
followed by elections among the
Palestinians for a self-governing
authority. That would be
followed by a Clve-year transi-
tion period after which a final
resolution would be made on the
future of the Palestinians. •
But State Department officials
were encouraged at word that
Sadat 's s u ccessor will be
Mubarak , who was in
Washington just last week to
confer with President Reagan.
There was agreement among
diplomatic-observers that
Sadat's death underscores the
instabilJty in the Middle East
and the potential fragility of a
policy based on one person's
leadership and influence, as U.S.
policy was on Sadat's.
* * *
AP .......
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. left, shakes hands with then U.S . President Jimmy Carter and Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin following signing of Middle East peace agreement March 26. 1979.
Assassination could mean more support of AWACS
WASHINGTON lAP J -The
hrst congressional test of Presi·
dent Reagan's arms sale to
Saudi Arabia has been
postponed in the wake of the as-
sassination of Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat, but there
were signs the slaying could
sway some opponepts to the ad-
ministration's side.
In the Senate, where the $8.5
billion package faced a rormida-
b le front of c ritics . some
Democrats and Republicans
alike suggested on Tuesday that
the president may now be able
to argue more convincingly that
it i s essential to bolster
moderate regimes in the Middle
East.
The Hou&i! Foreign Affairs
Committee. meanwhile, put off
at least until today its scheduled
vote on a resolution to veto the
sale. The panel was still re-
garded virtually certain to rec-
ommend that action. The deaJ
can be killed only if both houses
disapprove it by Nov. 1.
But there were conflicting
signals in the Senate. One of 19
Republican opponents im-
mediately switched in favor of
the sale of AWACS radar planes
and jetfighter equipment, and
other senators suggested the is·
sue should be put off indefinite·
ly for re-evaluation.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah,
said, ''I'm going to reverse my
vote on A WACS and support the
president. We have to have the
safeguards this deployment
makes."
Hatch was one of a dozen
Republicans targeted by Reagan
and his strategists for a heavy
dose or presidential lobbying.
The Senate GOP leadership
estimates it would take that
many switches from the ranks of
the opposition and the uncom·
mitted to forestall a veto.
Senate Democratic leader
Robert C. Byrd urged the Senate
to "take a step back ... unW
we see how things fall into
place."
Sen. Alan Cranston. D·Calif.,
assistant minority leader and a
leading opponent of the sale,
predicted there would be a delay
in floor consideration.
Any postponement would re·
quire White House agreement to
interrupt the timetable leading
to the Nov. 1 deadline. Before
Sadat's death, the White House
had written off chances for a
favorable vote in the House and
acknowledged that it faced an
uphill battle in the Senate.
Summing up the changed
circumstances, Cranston said,
"On the one hand, it will be
argued that if we've lost a friend
in Egypt we must not jeopardize
our relationship with another
country in the Mideast. Saudi
Arabia ... on the other hand,
with the unstable ~nvironment
in the Middle East it will be
argued that providing those
planes with their secret equip·
ment to the Saudis, they will fall
into the wrong hands. Thal argu·
ment is underscored" by the
shooting.
Even before Sadat was slain,
the administration pushed the
argument that it was in the best
interests of the United States.
and also Israel, to bolster Arab
regimes considered moderate.
But some senators were citing
the shooting as further evidence
or their contention that the
highly c lassified Advanced
Warning and Control System planes sho4l_ld not be shipped in·
Cambridge
Less than
0.1 mg tar
to the volatile Middle East and
Persian Gulf region
At a minimum. Sen. John H.
Glenn of Ohio called for joint
U .s .. saudi crews to protect the
planes. The Saudis rejected the
suggestion over the weekend
and Secretary of State Alex-
ander M. Haig Jr. advised the
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee on Monday there would
be no s ubstantial changes in
terms of the deal
UAW aids PATCO
DETROIT (AP> The United
Auto Workers is giving $100,000
to help families of striking air
traffic controllers. The money,
approved by the UAW executive
board , will go to a fund
established for the Professional
Air Traffic Controllers
Organization by the A FL·CIO.
•
~UffiU~
Co11rt rejects bias case
Panel refuses to hear case on preferential admission
WA S HINGTO N CAP > -
Preferential admissions for
mlno rlUes a t the Un.iver slty of
California 's professiona l schools
ha ve been left undistu rbed by
the U.S. Supreme Cou.rt.
The court refused Monday to
h ea r a n appe al b y Gle n
DeRonde, a white s tudent who
was rejected by the UC Davis
la w school in 1915 and then
challenged the university's pro-
g r a m of givi ng prefer ential
treatment lo minority appli-
cants.
The refusal to hear the case
was unanim ous. with the court's
ne west mem ber, Justice Sandra
O'Connor , not participa ting.
T h e univers ity's lawyer ,
Donald Reidhaar , called the ac-
tio n "welcom e news , even
though It's not surprising."
De Ronde, who graduated from
a nother law school, now prac-
tices law in F airfield a nd helped
a rgue his own case. He said to-
d ay. "It's just a national dis-
grace tha t they ducked this issue
again ."
Unlike the racial quota system
s truck down in the case of Allan
Bakke, a white applicant to the
UC Davis medJcal school, the
p rogram chall e n g e a b y
De R ond e did not set fixed
q 1•otas.
But it gave minorities who
met the school's minimum stan-
dards extra "points'' on their
Embezzling
conviction upheld
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
The conviction of powe rful
Teamsters Union leader Michael
Rudy Tha m on charges of em -
bezzling union funds has been
up held by the 9Jh U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals
Tham said he will a ppeal im-
mediately to the U.S. Supreme
Court. If the conviction stands
he loses all his union jobs and is
barred from holding union office
for five years.
T ham. 58, was recently elect-
ed president of Teamsters Joint
Council No. 7 of San Fra ncisco
with 100,000 memb~rs and was a
gene ral organizer of the lnterna-
t i o n a 1 Br o t h e r h o od o f
Teamsters.
H e was sente nc ed to six
m onths in pr ison and fined
$50,000 on May 21, 1980, by U.S.
Dis t rict Cour t J udge Stanley
Weigel. The s entencing ca me
after convictions on 15 counts of
embezzlement and four counts
of fa lsifying union records.
He was acquitted of t hree em-
bezzlement counts and one count
of making a false entry in union
records.
Tham was convicted of em-
b e z z 1 in g $2 ,005 .42 f r o m
T ea m s ters Un ion Local 856
while ser ving as secr etary-
treasur er in 1976 a nd 1977. The
government alleged that Tham
s pent union funds on travel and
entert ainment at Lake Tahoe
and in New York, prima rily on
behalf of J immy "The Weasel"
F ratianno, c:1 reputed Mafia hit
man .
T he governme nt also alleged
Tham s pent union money OD
g ifts a nd entertammen t unrelat-
ed lo union business. He con-
c edes the expenditu res were
made from u nion funds but
claim ed the money involved un-
ion business.
lie said he s pent money on
F r atia nno beca use F ratianno
was trying to develop an eye and
dental health care plan for the
union. But Fr atianno testifi ed
the expenses had not been con-
nected with any health plan and
the only discussion they had had
was on a possible contact lens
venture.
applicat ions , the s a m e treat-
ment afforded other groups of
students such as low-income and
handicapped. .
A state appeals court accepted
De Ronde's argument that the
program discriminated a gainst
whites in violation of the state
c onstitution , n o t ing that
m inorities were admitted with
lower scores OD entrance ex-
aminations than DeRonde had.
Other students. including some
minorities. were rejected with
highe r scores.
The court d id not o rde r
DeRonde admitted, however.
saying there was no proof he
would have been admitted even
without a minority program.
The s tate Supreme Court re·
versed the decisio n and upheld
the program. Thal ruling was
left intact by Monday's action.
The stale court said the uni-
versity could rwte the scarcity
of minorities among la w stu
de nts and lawyers, as evidence
of past discrimination a gainst
m inorities.
Citing th e U .S . S upreme
Court's Bakke decision. the state
court s aid preferential tre at -
me nt for minorities was allowed
for t he purpose of pr omoting
diversity am ong students . It also
rej ected the argument that the
California Constitution s ets
stricter standards than the U.S.
Constitution in so-c alled reverse
bias cases
De Ronde, 28, wante~ the high
court to re-e xamine the Bakke
decis ion. He contended preferen-
tial admissions are really dis-
guised quotas .
"It's politics. not law ... he s aid
after le arning of the re fu sal lo
hear his appeal.
Reidhaar. the UC lawyer , s aid
a contrary decision "would have
been devastating with respect to
mi nority a cc ess to our pro·
fessional schools."
.. If the university were forced
to return to making admissions
decis ions only on the basis of
p a pe r record s a nd ignoring
race, we would find that our
m ost highly selective sc hools
would revert to being nearly all-
white encla ves." he said
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981 s
.,. . ....,.._
Catholil' Chure h 1n Onla r111 T tll'sda\' GO\'
E d m und c; Brown .J r was a mong l·-.tim <t ted
1,500 fJl'r-.ons a lll'nd111g ~t•J'\'ll'l'~
CHP FUNERAL Orapt'd in iJn Aml'ncan
fl.i g, a caske t containing the body of sl<1 in
Califo rnia Highway P .itrol officer .Johnn~ R
:\l art1nez \\a~ carried rnt o St Gl'orgl' ~---=::..._~~~~--~~~
Tougher UC entry
requirements due?
Police sue
over reports
in files
SACRAMENTO <AP I Stu
dents cntermg the University of
California in 1984 could fa ce
tougher a dmission requirements
if a two part pla n wins approval.
said a me mber of the UC facull}'
pam•I responsible for admission
policy
George Miller !.a id the ad-
missions pa ne l plans to make
two m ajor recommendations to
tighten requiremen ts fore
ing high school s t ud ents t o
carry a full academic load dur·
ing tbc senior year before enter·
ing UC. and requ1rmg added
mathematics courses
The ma thematics recommcn
dation would inc rease the high
school requirement from two to
three years. with courses that
indude a minimum of elemen-
tary algt>bra. geometry and in-
termediate algebra.
The other proposal calls for 15
of the 16 high school units re-
quired for universit y admission
to bt• academic unils. and that at
least seven of these units be
taken between gr<Jdes l1 and 12
i\<'l'ording to Miller. such a
pol1('y would prevent a high
school student from completmg
all of has requirl'd a('ademic un-
its by the end or the junior year
a nd then only l ake elective
courses as a senaor. a practice
crat 1('1zcd by some! educators
Mi ller's comments came at a
confort'nce at UC Davis of some
450 high school counselors from
about 2QO Northern California
school!>
T hi.' recommendallons. 1f sub·
m ilted. would have to be ap-
proved by the Acade mic Senate
and the Boar4.or Regent:. before
going into errel t
Gary Tudor. director of ad-
m1 ss1ons at UC Davis. said the
"board is looking for ways of
s t reng htening t he st u dents '
problem solving skills "
I.OS ANG E L ft:S tAP1 Three
police· offal'ers accused of keep
ing items :-.ud 1 as pocketknives.
liquor and marijuana cigarette
holdt·~ confl' .. taled a t rock con
cert.., have sul·d lht <:tl' over un
fa vora hie rt•ports placed an their
pt•rsunnel flll·S
At ISSUC In thl· SUll. filed Mon
<la) m Superior Court. J rc 1le mc
n·co\·ered by police from trash
receptacles outside concerL-; last
year by th1: rock groups Who
and Pink Flovd.
A pohct· !>pokesman said that
srnce ('<>nl'crt patrons must con
S(.'nl to searches. o ffic e r s
routinely give t hem the option of
throwmg illegal items rnto trash
bins or being barred from tht>
t·imccrt. T he officers then root
through the bins. confiscate s uch
thmgs as wt•apons . liquor and
d rugs, and turn them into the de
partme nt.
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Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, October 7, 1981
Marines stash weapons
Indian Ocean area • ID
REGISTERS
Former First Lady
Pat Nixon has reg-
istered to vote in
New J ersey's Nov·
e mber gubernatorial
e lection. The Nixons
moved into their Sl
million Saddle River
home on Fridav and
had until midnight
Monday to registe r
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642•5e78
WASHINGTON CAP> -The Pen·
ta1on soon wlll lncrease stockpiles of
weapons, ammunition and other sup-
plies in the Indian Ocean area, a
move that will enable a Marine
brl1ade lo fight twice as long in a
crisis there.
Three ships are being loaded at a
mnitary terminal near Southport,
N. C ., and will sail this moo th to join
$even other storage vessels stationed
near the British-owned island of
Diego Garcill, some 2,300 miles from
the Persian Gulf, Marine officials
said.
The officials, who asked not to be
identified, said the m aterial aboard
the three adcliUooal ships would in-
crease from 15 to 30 days the length
of time in which a Marine brigade,
flown to the region in an emergency,
could fight without being resupplied
from the United States.
This is considered critical because
the first few weeks of fighting could
determine the outcome of any battle
to keep the Soviets or any other
hos t ile force from over running
Persian Gulf oilfields
T he move was announced prior to
the assass.nation of President Anwar
Sadat of l!:gypt. It was not known if
the change in leadership in Egypt af·
fects the U.S. plans.
Free t o
the Public
FOCUS ON COMM UNITY HEALTH
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The Pentagon has dealpat.ed a
12 ,000-mao Marine 1lr-1round-tuk
force based ln California u the first
major combat unit that would be
deployed to the Indian Ocean area if
the need arose to defend U.S. in-
terests there.
In a crisls, the Marine force would
be air·tifled to a position near Its ob-
jective. There, according to the of·
ficials, il would draw tanks, artillery,
fuel and other supplles and equip·
ment unloaded from tbe depot ships
with which the Marine unit would
rendezvous at a friendly port.
The plan also provides for deploy-
ing several Air Force fighter
S'qu adrons a nd some supporting
Army elements from the United
States to back the Marine brigade
unit, the officials said.
Embezzle r fined
FRESNO (AP> -A former In·
ternal Revenue Service revenue of-
ficer was fined $1,000 and ordered to
make $100 restitution for embezzling
federal income laxes. Lee Ochoa,
now of Utah, pleaded guilty to steal-
ing government money while
e mployed at the Fresno ser vice
center.
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LOS ANGELES <AP)
-Lynn Redgrave, dis-
missed from lhe CBS
ser ies "House Calls'' in
a dispute wilh Universal
Television, has signed
for an NBC series to be
produced by comedian
Johnny Carson's com-
pany.
Miss Redgrave will
play an English teacher
in "Teachers Only," a
comedy set in a high
school, Carson Produc-
tions president John J.
Mc Mahon said Tuesday.
The series also stars
·Norman Fell as the prin-
cipal, and features
Adam Arkin, Richard
Karron, Kit Mc Donough
and Norman Bartold.
Taping or the show for
mid-season replacement
on NBC will begin Oct.
20 at the netwo rk's
Burbank studios.
Actress Sharon Gless
was named to replace
Mi ss Redgrave in
"House Calls," which
also stars Wa yne
Rogers.
Miss Redgrave filed a
$10 million damage suit
against Universal
Television for what she
alleged was ''wrongful
discharge" from her
role in the show. She
contended Universal
had refused her request
to breast-feed her infant
daughter, Annabel, at
work. Universal claimed
that the dispute grew
out of a demand from
h er husband and
manager, John Clark,
that her sal a r y be
doubled.
McMahon said it was
·'never discussed'· during contract negotia-
tions whether Miss Red-
grave would breast-feed
her baby on the set of
"Teachers.Only."
Endowment
largest
MOSCOW, Idaho (AP)
-A ,graduate of the
University of Idaho Law
School has given the uni-
versity an endowment
to educate the h·an:
dicapped that could be
worth $2 million -the
largest bequest ever re-
ceived by the school, of-
ficials say.
George T. Warren of
Palm Springs graduat-
ed from the university in
1914, getting his law
degree in 1917. He died
July 15 at age 89, leav-
ing a commercial build-
. ing in Los Angeles to be
divided between Idaho
and Loma Li n da
University in California.
Wit&
CMIYOM.Y.
SAYE~AND
MemlSTARTS
OCT. lit.
CIU.M HOURS 9-9
w. ... 1
. I 0-IMI
'. Orange Coa1t l"'AILY PILOT/Wednetday, October 7, 1981 AT -
Gun lobbyists No. I on list of internal election expenditures
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -Tbe Na·
tlonal IUne Aaaoclatton, which
1pent more tban '800.000 com-
murucaUna to mtmben about tbt
1NO federal electlonJ, bead.t •
Federal Election CommWJ.on list
of ll'OUPI that made aucb ex·
pendltures. ·
or1anizations, labor union• and
corpor.Uons durina lhe last elec-
tlona. The bulk of It waa spenl by
unions.
While federal election law pro-
hibits unions or corporatlona from
contributing money from their
treasuries to political campaiana.
partisan communications to their
'own members, stockholders, of.
ficers and executive and ad·
mlnlstratlve personnel are al·
lowed.
Such expendlturea may In-
clude dlatrlbutlon of literature,
phone bank.a or voter eneoun.re-
menl drives aimed at the mem·
bera, officera or abareboldera,
usually urgiq the election or de-
feat of candidates. All such spend·
inc over $1,000 muat be reported to
the commission.
The NRA led tht Utt wltb •a.m for internal political com-
m un lc a lion , followed by the
American Federation of Slate,
County and Municipal Emplaytee
with $S32,531, and the AFL-CIO ~lth $441,06'.
ChamMr of Commerce of th•
United State9, $158,llO; Oblo AFt,.
CI01 SHt,ut; CommunJeatlona
Wor1en cA America, sel,475; and
Int e rnallonal Union of
Bricklayers, $85,W.
The FEC reported tbal at leut
$3,9'71,~ WU spent OD Internal
communications by membership
SAVEllBe
SAVE•t .30
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illlll High Potency
Vitamin Supplement
with Minerals
lor Adults
100 Pt.US 30 6 99· Tlll£TS •
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3 oz.MR 1.99
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5 oz. BARS 79c
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PAMPERS
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• EXTIA AISOllOfT
PAI Of 24
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PUOflO
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Others in tbe top 10 were Unlted
Auto Worken, $402,281; Uniled
Steelworkers, S209,Sl2; National
Education Aasociation, $183,836 ;
C.11141-1171.
Put af .. WOrft
to work for out
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7th THRU SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10th
TRANSFER YOUR PllESCRIPTIONS
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20-30 or 40 WT
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CLOCK RADIO
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buzzer alarm . ...
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TOMATO
JUICE
ltUllNSTDrS FUCY
PINK SALMON
___ &9c l~--1.79
SH 0 P 7 0 Ay S A W E [ K •' n n I\ M T n q 1• n p M Mn N ri.~ ) 1 H P • -.. .~ 1 1 t} r · ~ 1
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VICKS
HEADWAY
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Relieves head m1serl6
due to colds
• 16 CAPSULES
• 20 TAll.fTS
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TABLETS
Fast Sate Lasting
Rehef from Indigestion
ASSOllTtD fUVOltS
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f'AST r All KUU
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tufT. ·Uctt-..._A lrl111hent-~ lf •I• a,....,_ ...... a Oafftetd ~ -1• l!"M· Weill~,.._
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•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/W1dntaday, October 7, 1981
NOMINATED -Stage
a nd screen st ar Max·
im i la n Sch e l l h as
been nominated as
director of Munich's
Vol kst h eat er llis
no m ination m ust be
approved by the city 's
cultural <'ommitt~e.
Charge lifted
FRESNO <AP > -A
charge t hat Chowchi lla
Justice Court Consta ble
No rman R. Sc h a lk
owned an unregistered
machine gun has been
dis missed on grounds
that police imprope rly
searched his home.
DEAR READERS: The job you wan t
may be the job t hat wants you --the
challenge is how to sell yourself to a prospec· live employer .
According to the U.S. Depart ment of
Labor, a job interview is a showcase for
merchandising your talents . During the in·
tervlew the employer judges your quali'1ca-
tions, your appearance, and your general fit.
ness for the job opening.
To learn how to increase your chances,
send for the booklet, "Merchandising Your
Job Talents." It's $1.75 from the Consumer
Information Center, Dept. 208.J. P ueblo, Colo.
81009. You'll also receive a free copy of the
Consumer Information Catalog, which lists
more than 200 free and low-cost publications
or consumer interest.
Is charity 1oorthy ?
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've received a lot of
solicitations from v arlous charities and
although some of them sound very worthy,
I'd like to know how I can check to find out If
they are authentic.
E.J ., Huntington Beach
Write to the National Information
Bureau, 419 Park Ave. South, New York, N. Y. 10016, phone: ( 212 > 532-8595, or the
PhllanthropJc Advlsory Service , Council ot
Better Buslntts Bur awi , 1515 Wllson Blvd ..
Arllnl(t<>n, Va 22209, phone!· 1703> 278·0100
They can t.ell you whether the or1amut1on ts
a legitimate charity. Be especially cautious
about donating lo organizations with names
that llOund like well·known charities. but re-
a lly are not the same.
Try reflector bulbs
DEAR PAT DUNN: I boucbt a pole lamp
and wonder If I would save money by utlng
reflector bulbs la It rather than regular
bulb1. Someone told me reDed or bulbs give
olf more light than regular ones, but they are
more expensive r.o buy .
,r G . W., Huntington Beach
Even though reflector bulbs are slightly
more expensive than standard in candescent
bulbs, they a re well worth it in terms of
energy savings. A 50-watt reflector bulb
designed for use in pole lam~s or other bell·
shaped fi xtures -directs light as if a 100
watt bulb were being used Refl ector bulbs
can be purchased in almost any lighting,
hardware or home center store. and are ef-
fective because they direct light out or the
fixture where much of the standard bulb's
light is trapped.
• <;111 a problem., Then u·nlf• to I'm \.. l Vunn l'at Wiii cul red tap!' yeti mq
• the ansu.>ers and action you need 111
sult't' 1nequ1t1es in g11Vernment and r-, • /Jusmess .Wail 11our questwn.~ to f'at
Dunn. Al Your Sero1ce. Orunye Coast
Dqily Pilot. P 0 Ho.x 1561>. Cosio Ml'sa . CA 92626 A~
many lett£•rs as possible will /Je answered. hut phont'd
inqumes or letters not including the reader·s /ull
nam e. address a11d business hours· phtml' 1111mher
cannot be considered This cvlumrr appear~ dmll! l'I
Cl'pt Sundays ,.
Let your feet make
a place for themselves.
ESCAPE •••
To LaVonne
Aerobics MAKE YALKJNG FUN AGAIN
Old World Shopping Center
7561 W. Center Ave. No. 36. Huntlngton Beach• 893-3753
For a totally supervised
wor kout where every muscle--.-
in the bOdy is exercised
to peak endurance?
Join to Lavonne Aerobics
Want a strong, lean, flexible
physique?
Do Lavonne Aerobics
Tired of exercising on tedious
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Leave your troubles behind at
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a stimulating hour of --M-1---~>-Aerobics Dance Call today
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• Free Child Care
's a
no one can pay you more interest
than Bank of Newport on the new
tax exempt ''all-saver'' certificates
So why not save at Bank of Newport where you know you will get the best service and, of
course, you will also have the satisfaction of helping the economy of your own community. On
October 1, 1981, Bank of Newport will offer a new ''TAX-SA VER" CERTIFICATE of deposit that
pays you up to 70% of the average yield of a 52-week T-Bill and allows you up to $1,000 in
interest, tax free; up to sa.ooo tax free for couples filing a joint return.
Imagine that! All those great Bank of Newport personalized services and the new "TAX-
SA VER" CERTIFICATE available from your nearest Bank of Newport office. Since, legally, no
other bank, savings & loan or thrift can ofter you more interest on a "TAX-sA VER" CERTIFI-
CATE, it certainly makes sense to save where you know you'll be getting the best banking
service available anywhere.
TAX SAVER
CERT.IFICATES
NOW AVAILABLE
ON SATURDAYS
9AM • 1PM
Tbree Jocado:N ln Newport BMch: hcUJc Cout Highway at Avocad.on eo.eooo,
Do99r • Sixteenth SttMc/84&-9833, Thirty-S.C:Ond Slreet at LaFayette/87M333.
'
' . ., -
.. ~~
PARK1119 LOT 9ALI
and 9KI 9WAllt t
SAT. OCT. I 0, I 0 A.M.-6 P.M.
AS
LOW
AS
·•. .
breastforms by c:>a+.va fJ
Call Linda today for a free no obllgat1on
consultation (213) 592-4479 (7 14) 840-7200.
Pay No Income Tax
In 1981, 1982, 1983
And Legally Recover
Taxes Paid In
1978, 1979, 1980
Yo u can invest dollars a lready spent , a re currently
s pendi ng and wi ll spend in the future for taxes, into
tax sheltered investments that :
a ) aver age a 510<tk t ax write-off
b ) are highly profit motivated and
c ) have a history of pos iti ve cash flow
and a ppreciation
Learn how this can be done by attending a com-
pliment a r y 90-minute se mina r -enjoy some
refreshments and gain more fin ancia l knowledge in
90 minutes than you ha ve been able to acquire in a
lifetime. ·
LIMITED SEATING
Call Now To Schedule Your Reservation
759-1401
Gerold L . Kozak, Financial Servkea
• \
Orango Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
~------------------------------------------------....,.------------------------------------------'Marx'
plaintiff
• WIDS .
NEW YORK (AP) -
A federal judge has
ruled that a Broadway
play about the Marx
Brothers "constitutes an
unauthorized approprla·
lion" of Grouc h o ,
Harpo, Chico a nd Zeppo.
The q allng by U.S.
District Judge William
C. Conner was the first
step in a trademark·
copyr ight infringement
action for unspecified
monetary damages.
' [l makes producers or
the musical ''A Day in
I lollywood, A Night in
the Ukraine" liable ror
damages.
The play closed last
week after 587
performances.
\ \
The suit was filed
shortly before the play
opened in May 1980 by
Groucho Marx Produc-
tions Inc., a Los Angeles
firm that licenc;es com-
m er c i a I exploitation
rights for the comic
characters. Susan Marx,
the widow or Ha rpo
Marx, was a plaintiff in
the action as tr ustee of
the licensing firm.
\~~~~---<I -~-.......... ~LBUM COVER -Ringo Starr strikes a pose
Call 642-5678.
for the cover of his newest record album
"Stop and Smell the Roses, .. lo be released
Nov. 1. The new release will contain song~
-McCartney and George Harrison.
f
-written for Ringo by former Beatles Paul Put a few words
to work for ou.
I Le Tour -Sale
I
,. -
Le Tour: Reg. S254.95
NOW $204.95
•
Super Le Tour·
Reg. S319.95
NQW$269.95
Christmas Lay-Away
Special:
Lay-away any Schwinn
Cruiser before Nov. 15th
& receive FREE
Grab-ons!
8850 WARNER AVE.
848'-1221 545-0
--~~~-r-· J~~~~~
('cN11ma11d l\.:rl'ornuuM:c
FIRST PERFORMANCE
Save $-4.00 on a dynamite hairstytel Shampoo.
4 Performance CUt•, end Blow Ory (normally
$18.00) ere vours for only $1-4.00 when vou Introduce
'/OurMlf as a finrt~rre customer with tn11 coupon.
· •IT YOUI DmUT PaFOIMANCI
POI 14USSI
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tin.a nhli~' •• nd assortnu•nt' a rt> limilt>d, 'o hurr) in!
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We sell fin;t quality and d~continul"<I
merchandise from Seen Retail Wld
Catalog Di.5tribution.
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~im Retail stores around tM country.
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w
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CRAFTSMAN
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EXTRA HEAVYWEIGHT
FLANNEL SHIRTS
Were 9.00 to 10.00 Were 12.'19
NOW 3.99 NOW 8 .49
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pbM
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For complete ad capy and art serv'ices
advertisers all along the Orange Coast
rely on
'
.... \
•• * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedn ad y, October 7, 1981
A seeker of peace
lost to the world
Once again. bullets from the
assassins· guns have exploded
upon the international scene. t his
t 1me taking the life of Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat, a leader
w hose policies were considered
pivotal in the quest of peace in
the volatile Middle East.
ln an interview not too long
ago, Preside nt Sadat pondered
hi s own futur e death and
declared. "l would want written
on my tombstone tha t. ·He has
lived for peacl' a nd he has dil·d
for principles ...
That m av h ave been as much
a prediction· of his futur e as it
was an epitaph.
Wo rld leadershi p mus t be
heavily s haken today. not Qnly at
the loss of President Sadat at a
tim e so critical to e fforts for
peace and conciliation. but in-
rleed in the way he was lost.
President Sad at was the third
major world leader s truck by a~
sassins' bullets this year alone
President Reagan was s hot
on a Washington s idewalk on
March 30. Little more than ont.>
month later. on May 13. Popl'
J ohn Puul II was attacked and
s hot during a public appearanCl'
in Rome. Now P resident Sadt1t
has lost his life.
This horrify in~ r ecord of
violen t assaults clearly un
derscores the need for more pre
cautions and s tringent efforts lo
protect high officials who might
be exposed to attack by the de
ranged or the fanatic. lt may be
a sad commentary on the state ot
the world but 1t is indeed a fact of
life and death today
In his tribute lo Mr. Sadat .
President Reagan said, "Anwar
Sadat was a courageous man
whose vision and wisdom brought
natio ns together . . h e sought lo
free his people from hatred and
war . . mankind has lost <1
ch a m pion of peace."
M ay the Middle East in
particular and all of mankrnd
find other leaders of vision and
wisdom lo earn forward tht·
pursuit of pcacl'. ·May the~ als<>
be a ll owed to pursue that gu::il
without being subjected to the
\'iolence against ll'.:tders h1p that
h as m arred the record in 1!)81
An unseemly display
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb has of
ficiallv announced his candidacv
tor the governorship of Cahform~
.ind is reported to have S2.5
million in ca mpaign funds to
bolster his effort
In what appear::. to h<ive betm
a less than prudent display dur
1ng the semi -annua l R epublican
stale com·ention at Palm Springs
over the weekend. candidate
Curb may ha ve taken the wind
out of his own sails and ma'
well have cap~ized his trip to the
top office in Sacramento
In an outcn· that must hc.ive
<darmed his aides. Curb madl·
personal a nd unsubstantiated
c harges C1gainst a Los J\ngeles
Herald-Examiner reporter who
had the 1mpertinenrl' to tlll'ck on
his veracit v.
Curb charged reporter Linda
B r eakstone with writing
·negati-ve" s tories about him and
accused her of having an ··un
usual" und a ··special .. rel"
I ions hip with '-' key aide to his
c hief Republican rival. Attorne~
General Geor~e Deukmejian
He was p<Jrtirularly affront
L'd by hl•r audaeit~· in checking a
Curb press release that claimed
t30 prominent s upporters of SCln
Diego Ma~·or Pete Wilson had
switched their allegwn ce to Curb
<1 flt'r Wilson dropped his run for
the governorship and l'nlered thl'
L' S Senate race.
Reporter Breu ks tone had
th<•cked 45 of the 130 names <md
found thev eitht>r had not
au I ho r 1 zed· l ht' u::; l' of the 1 r
namt>s. or had bel'n for ('urb all
a I o n g . o r ,,. e r l' 11 o t f o r m l' r
Wilson supporH.•r ....
Th 1 s . o I c.· o u 1· s l' • \\ as a
legit1matl' pieC'l' of jnurnul1st •<·
f<.i('l che<:king
But 11 so 111c·c.·nsed Curb ht•
told thC' reportt:1·. 1 m going to
gt>l you. · and later SC11d that
meant hl· wanll•d to Sl'l' her firl'd
from her 1ob
'.\1eanwhik. Deukmej1an ;.md
rC'porter Brl'uks lonl' both dis
m1~sed the eharge of hc.·r ~pee1al
rehitionshq.l with a Ocukmejwn
aide as "ridiculous ...
Regarding his personal at
tack o n the reporter. Curl> lalt:r
said ... p ·rhap!> I was not at m'
bc.·st ·
I nd<'l'd hl• "as 111 •t Rut 11 "a:-.
<1 revealing und 111rorrnat i\ l'
p\•rformance
Million·dollar suµporl to thl'
<·onlran. Curb demonstratc.·d un
al'Ute ·latk of re!-.lra1n1 la"t
\\ L'ekencl and prob.1bl~ s hould
hone his stall•smunship -.kill"
before setting his ~1ghls on ""'
h I g h a 11 0 ff I (.' (' a !-. t h l' I.!() \
c·1·norsh1p of Caltforn1;c
Who needs this job?
On the s ubject of lieutenant
go,·ernors. w e note that at least
o ne has so low an opinion of the
1o b h e decid e d it jus t was n 't
worth his time
Illinois Lt Gov Dave O 'Neal.
declaring the post to be without
c hallenge or redeeming value.'.
has cleaned out his office and
q uit.
The job. he said . ··need~ to bl'
restructured to be v1abll". or
C'l se .1ust abol is h e d As in
California. the Illinois lieutenant
governor is elected only as a
replacement in case the go\'ernor
is out of s tate or incapacitated
Beyond t h at, h e docs nothing un
less assigned s pecial t asks b~· the
~overnor.
A number of states already
have elimjn ated the sec·ondar~·
post as a pointless waste of tax
payer money . An d, at least so far
as Califo rnia is concerned . it has
•
rc:irel~ even served as a stepping
stone lo higher office
However. in the case.• of II
linois. al least five Republicans
ha,-e indicated thcv 'd like to
s c.• n · e w i t h CT o \' '.J a m t• s R
Thompson. who ''ill be scekinl!
n • <•lectmn to his third term m•xt
,\·par
That's beC'ause they suspett
Thomp!-.on might dcp<1rl bdorl'
the end of his term ln run for u
L' S 5<.'nate st.>at 1n 1984 If thC1t
-.h ould happen. the second in
command would take over thl'
top state office for the balance of
I he term. And governo rs. as Wl'
ha\'e seen. stand a fair chance of
climbing up the political ladder
Except in s uch unus ual
c1 rcumstan ce5. we must agree
with O 'Neal that a lieutenant
governors hip 1s something less
than a demanding office
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex
pressed on this page are lhose of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1n111t
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92b26 Phone (714)
642-4321. .
L.M. Boyd/Women hurt more
A man jilted by a woman tends to
recover from thjs sad situaUon more
quickly than does a woman jilted by
a man. That's the claim of t he
rnatrlmonial expert.,, Out Love and
War ma.o does not quarrel wtth this
nndlng. It la bis belief that a rejected
woman never really gets over some
bit or bllttnM!5& about It.
ORANGE COAST
lllily Pilat
Each day beginR at East Cape,
easternmost tip of Siberia, before it
begins anywhere else on ~arth.
Telephones in Sweden have no let-
tel'S oo their dials. Neither do the
phones ln New Zealand. Dials in
France have a Q. But dials in Den-
mark have no W.
Moh dominates many unions
W ASlllNGTON Attorney General
William French Smith has announced
that the Justice Department will make
s treet crime iL-; No I .target. But the
war on muggers should not blind the at-
torney general to the ne'ed for attacking
the wholesall•rs of crimes
Organized c-r1me ha:. become the na-
tion's third largest industry The Mob
has taken over legitimate businesses
and infiltrated labor unions
With union penswn funds rapidly
becoming the largest pool of such
private investment money in the nation.
their control U~ the underworld pOS<'S a
threat to the N:onomy
THIS SHOlll.D tome as no s urpnse to
anyonl' at lht• Jus tice Department. ll
was detailed four years ago in a still-
secret 65·pagt• report prl·1,ared b) the
department':. organ11ed ('rtme strike
force chiefs. Dougla.., Roll<•r and Peter
Vaira Their ('On<:lu<.,1ons a rc sllll valid
today. accordini! to an update by my as-
sociall' Tony Capacc10
.. A maJOrlt) uf lhl' locah tn mo..,l ma
JOr c1t1cs of the Un1tl•d States in the ln·
tcrnat tonal Brotherhood of Teamsters.
lintel and He:-.taurant Employees
t•nion. l.ahon•r.., lntcrn.1t11tndl Union of
North Amcnr u <:1nd the lntcm<1t1onal
Longshoremen's Association are com-
pletely dominated b~ organi1ed crime."
the report s tates.
Th~ report's authors nOll'<I gloomily
that "the officwb 11f thc<.f' unions are
firmly cntr<'JlCht'lJ. lhcrt• JS little hope Of
r1.>movi ng them by a free election
process."
The report concentrated on mobster
infiltration in Chicago and Cleveland,
but concluded that organized crime also
has a s ubs tantial foothold in the New
York City area
IN FACT. the re port stales. "ex-
peril•nced investigators from the Labor
G.
-JA-CK-AN-0-IR-SD-N -~
Department list over 100 unions with
members of organized crime or their
assotiat<'s in positions of power "
In Chicago. "the syndicate's influence
1:-not only heavily concentrated but dis·
<·1pl1nl•d. the :-.ecret r eport states.
adding 'The control comes directly
from the tup of the Chicago organiza-
l10n
Of all the· Chicago unions, "the most
striking and dramatic evidence of the
hoodlum element is in the Laborers
International.·· the report concludes.
Two of the union's important officials,
Al Pilotto and Vincent Solano. "also
hold a position of power in the Chicago
syndicate," according to the report. It
claims that they "are two of the five
la•utenants under Joey 'The Doves'
Aiu ppa, who controls the illegal ac-
Uvities in the city." Pi lotto, says the re-
port, controls "Labore rs International
president Angelo Fosco."
MOB CONTROL of unions would be
bad enough if it were limited to the un·
ions the mselves . But as the report
points out, "the most significant result
of organized crime influence over the
labor unions is the resulting political in-
fluence."
The report cites Cleveland as an ex-
ample: "The Cleveland area is primari-
ly an industrial community in which the
unions wield a tremendous amount of
political power. Corrupt union leaders
are able to dictate their wishes to
political candidates. Judges and pros -
ecutors must curry their favor ...
Through this power of the unions, "or-
ganized crime has a definite say in the
political and economic life of the city,"
the report concludes.
One citation in the report bears
special s ignificance in tight of the
R eagan a dministrati o n's ties to
Cleveland Te amsters official Jackie
Presser. "There are organized crime
figures or close associates of organized
c r ime figures in virtually every
Teamster organization in the Cleveland
area,'' the report charges.
For some reason, the strike force re-
port has been gathering dust at the
Justice Department for four years. But
Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah, has also ob-
tained a copy, and is reviewing labor's
links with the Mafia.
Judges could select better juries
Thl' l)rtgu1:tl puq.t<h \' 111 ...,pletl mg a
1ury "a" lo ac·h1eH• .is mlll·h 1mpar tialt
l_\ a:. poss1hll'. -;o lhat hoth ... tdt':. tn a
t'USl' rould :.tart a trial with u rlcan
:.late I nstl•ad. hkl' al most ever~ thing
else that ht•<·omc.., 1nst1tutionalc1ed .
lawyer'i now -.t•ek for ·partial" .1uror ....
On thr whole, thi·.r do not look £or
proSpec·t1n• 111rors who art• informed.
but who arc relat1velv uninformed. or.
better still . ignorant The:, do not
generally, empanel lhe law's model or
.. reasonable man." but those whose
crnotlons and passions can be most easi·
ly playcrl upon
THE t EGi\L proft>s'iinn ma~ Jump on
me for thc:o.c slatem£>nts hut they a re
not mine alone though I hilve been say
1ng much the scimP lhtng for many
~·c•ar-.. They come. lh1-. l•m<'. rrom a top
Nev. York Judge. \\ho n•centl:i called
for <·hani::es 1n the 'ilatt• l:rn that would
givl' JU<lf~t>i-tht• right to i-.clect juries.
with th£> advice of thl' trial lawyers
.J11dg1' Milton Mollen . Presiding
Ju..,t1<·<.• of thl' Appellate Division in New
York. test1fi1.•d in a ~late Senate hearing
th.-t "whul the law calls for is 12 fair.
SYDNEY HARRIS
impartial jurors," but too often at-
torneys take up interminable court time
··poi.luring a nd looking for partial
Jurors."
l 'nder the curr~nt voir dire system in
mo..,t courts. it may take days or even
"1•f'k.., to Sl'lcct a jury. white cases pile
up, C\'iden('e withers. and witnesses
c \ a porall'
.Judges m federal courts already have
th1~ discretwn. so it is no legal innova-
tion or heresy; but m the lower courts.
\\hi c h are c log ged beyo nd all
semblance of JUSlice in lime. both
prosecution and defense lawyers seem
more concerned with their own personal
records of rnnvictions or acquittals than
with a fair and speedy trial.
SOMETIMES an attorney wiU want
more women on the jury; sometimes
more farmers. or more blacks, or more
professional people; and he rejects
otherwise competent prospects simply
because they do not fit these desired
categories. Obviously. this is not a
search for impartiality, but its con-
trary: for people with a presumed built-
in bias.
Jury selection has turned into a con-
test of prejudices a nd preconceptions.
Each side seeks jurymen who are "un-
reasonable" on its particular a ppeal -
to sex. to class. to race, to region .
Judges could surely do no worse: they
are bound to be better, and far faster
White House dish report forgot tax break
To the Editor
I respectfully s uggest that your
editoriaJ questioning the propriety of
Mrs Reagan's acquisition of a new set
of china contains one inaccuracy.
The editorial states that the china was
purchased "at no public expense." The
MAILBOX
beneficent philanthropists who set up
the fund to refurbish the White House
for Nancy Reagan were most careful
that their "gifts" we re made to a
charitable organization so as to qualify
as an income tax deduction. Thus, the
new service cost the taxpayer at least
$500 a place setting and more probably.
given the state or affluence of µte
donors. $700 per plact' selling.
CHARLES E. McCLUNG
Speculation
To the Editor
I have recently rN1d "The Spike," a
book that is very revealing to plain
everyday newspaper readers. The book
clearly ou t lin ~11 h ow t he p r ess
manipulates the news. usually In the
direction of the lett.
The case In point is your recent
be&~ "Stocks plunge further in reac·
Uon to speech." The stock market was
lowet -that Is the fact. But. the reason
you point put is purely specul•tlon
Perhaps Mr. Granville's remarks to the
British people in London, to the effect
that they should sell all they have In
England and U.S. Stock Markets had
more effect on our market than Mr.
Rea~an 's attempt to cut further U.S.
government spendi ng.
Eight to one Americans sent letters of
support to our president! Give the guy a
break
JANE H. CA IN
Nuclear strategy
To the Editor:
I found your Sept. 28 editorial about
Oiablo protest costs most interesting.
The editorial stated that serious safety
questions existed, and still exist at
Diablo Canyon. The editorial concluded
by advocating the use of federal courts
rather than people's blockade to stop
nuclear power.
I think we need both strategies to put
the nuclear genie back in the bottle. The
civil rights movement did not worry
llbout the costs of civil disobedience
during the southern sit·ins. Ttle real
focus of the media should be the coals to
the environment ir Dlablo melted down.
Otherwise, the coverage has been sood.
Keep thbse articles coming. •
RANDVTOLER
'
Teddy b ear origin
To the Editor:
Regarding your Sept. 20 article on
Sleiff's visits to the U.S. and his toys,
you stated that his company originated
the Teddy Bear more than 75 years ago:
There is some controversy over this as
the s tory als o goes that Morris
Michtom. founder of the.Ideal Toy Corp.
put two toy bears in the window of his
candy store in Brooklyn, N.Y.
He sold them and got the idea at the
time because of the s tories and cartoons
in the newspapers of Teddy Roosevelt's
e n counte r with the bear to ask
Roosevelt to allow him to call his bears,
Teddy Bear. Roosevelt answered and
said yes. So you can see Teddy's history
is a bit chaUenging.
THELMA KIMBLE
With tM lncreuiq DWDber ol iDlriel
lD Use ru:e for a.; Ha1uawa'1'Mlll tt
betlu to NMIDIM • 10 K .... r .K;
l
• • • • .. $
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7. 1981 A 11 •
Laguna gymnastics students keep it
...
• in
I
balance
STRETCHING -Members of Richard Beckner 's
c hildren's gymnastics class. sponsored by the City of
Laguna Beach recreation department. stretch muscles
before beginning hour long progrum. Cluss mt:.>t•ts Tues-
day afternoons in the girls' g~ m at Laguna fk<JC'h Jl1gh
School.
MAKES A FACE Tacy Higgs, 8. grimaces as s he balances
on right leg, holding her left fool in her hand. Class leaches
balance s kills.
BACKBEND -Emily Comp. 10. is helped by coach Jerry
Broband as she executes a backbend during hour-long class
on Tuesdays .
San Diego
gays push
candidates
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The gay-
oriented "San Diego Democratic
Club" is mailing 1,200 leaflets
asking support for its favorites
in City Council races on the Nov.
3 election ballot. ·
Dr. Brad Truax, the club's
pres ident, said another 3,000
leaflets will be distributed in
restaurants and other establish·
ments. He estimated Tuesday
that the campaign will reach
10,000 gay men and women m
t he San Diego area.
A fundamentalist Christian
group calling itself the Commit-
tee for Community Responsibili-
ty has announced plans to dis-
tribute 15,000 leaflets giving
what it calls the candidates'
stands on homosexuality and
other issues.
But Truax said his club's ef-
fort is "not being done as a
response to them ... What we
want lo do is increase our voter
influence."
Old coffin found
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
<AP> -A two-ton decorated cof-
fin dating from the 3rd century
was unearthed near lndjija in
northern Yugoslavia, the Bel-
grade daily Dolitika Ekspres re-
ported. The coffin, believed to
nave belonged to a Roman, was
the fi rst find of its kind in the
area, the newspaper said.:.
BALANCING ACT -Instructor Richard Beckner leads Molly Green, 5, along balance bar.
Class centers around development of basic tumbling s kills and use of gym apparatus. Next
six -week class begins Nov . 10.
PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR:
Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports,
GOP selling
its own 'stock'
WASHJNGTON (AP) -Betting that President
Reagan and the Republican Party are selling bet-
ter on Main Street than on Wall Street, GOP of-
ficials are offering buyers a piece of the Grand Old
Party.
It's all part of a pyramid-style recruiting pro·
gram. The return promised is inspiration rather
than money.
Shares in the GOP are going for $25, a price
set by the seller, the Republican National Commit-
tee.
But unlike stock sold on Wall Street, there's no
resale value to GOP shares.
Instead of hoping for a bull market in their
political stock, buyers have to settle for whatever
feeling of belonging comes with being a small con-
tributor to a political party. For an extra $10,
GOP shareholders in Southern California will get a
chance Friday night to hear three hours of
political rhetoric and to sing "Sharing in
America." a s ix-stanza song that a party
spokes man said "sounds like a Pepsi com-
me rcial."
It all will happen at the first Republican
"shareholders convention" in the Long Beach
Center, a couple of hours drive south of President
Reagan's California ranch.
If it's a hit -and party officials say all 10,000
seats sold two weeks ahead of time -the show
will go on the road with shareholders conventions
next year in Houston, Miami and New Orleans,
with others considered for some big Northern
cities.
The conventions were the idea of Richard M.
DeVos, a founder of Amway Corp., the home
products firm that recruits people to sell to their
neighbors.
As chairman of the Republican National
Finance Committee, DeVos is trying to apply the
Amway technique to political recruitment.
Each of the people who attend the convention
in Long Beach will be asked to tum in three names
of likely recruits.
GOP spokesman Gerry Sangster said every-
one will be asked to call the three people they
recommend and try to get them to become active
in the party.
There'll be a follow-up call, Sangster said, in
which people will be asked, "Gee, did you call
your three people?"
If the answer is no, the party worker will
volunteer to do the calling.
For star quality. the Long Beach shareholders
convention will offer Ronald Reagan on film and
Hugh O'Brian and Carole Lawrence in person.
The president plans to spend that evening at
his Camp David, Md., retreat but will deliver the
keynote address to the shareholders convention
via video tape.
O'Brian, the actor who turns up occasionally
on such television shows as "Fantasy Island'' and
who campaigned for Reagan in 1980, and Miss
Lawrence will tell the audience why they are
Republicans.
After the president's taped speech, there will
be a nominating convention-style cascade of
balloons and the USC marching band will enter the
hall .
The idea of it all is "to get these people en·
thused and excited," Sangster said . "We want
them to run out and call those three'people."
It is unclear from the schedule when t.he 10.000
voices will join to sing "Sharing in America":
"From a dairy in Wtaconm
"To the Lights a~ Broadway
·•From the lokes of Mjnne10ta
"F'rom a ranch m Sante Fe
"At a South' Dakota mountainlide
"On lhe beach at Tampa Bay
·' P~ get toget.her
·'To 1hare the American "'°11·"
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' .. •
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~·· Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
"GUERNICA" STAMP A new Spanish stamp
issue m arking t he homecoming of the
Picasso painting .. Guernica .. will go on sale
Oct. 25. The stamp will be sold in com-
memorative blocks with only one to each
sheet as shown.
Pair awarded $208,000
'Bumped' couple complained Delta 'wasn't ready '
ClllCAGO (AP> A retired
judge and his wife complained
that Delta wasn't r eady when
they were. and a jury a warded .
them $208,000 for being bumped
from a night -believed to be
tbe largest award made to
airline passengers denied their
seats .
A Circu.it Court jury agreed
with former Illinois Supreme
Co urt Justice Thoma s
Klucn:nski and his wife,
Melanie: that t h ey s uffered
"humiliation, indignity and out-
ra&e•· when they were told all
seats were filled because of
overbooking on their Delta
Airlines night to Flori<fa on Feb.
19, 1976.
The award against the airline,
whose ad vertising slogan is
"Delta is ready when you ere,"
was more than twice the amount
requested in the lawsuit
Delta said· it would appeal the
award, which the Civil
Aeronautics Board says is one of
only seven such awards listed by
the CA B since 1961 for "dis -
c i minatory bumping." CAB
guidelines require that airlines
provide bymped passengers
with an equivalent flight for free
wit hin two hours of their
planned departure time.
two hours later, but chose not to
accept.
Arrington was found not lie·
ble, but Delta wai. ordered to
pay both hus band und wife
Sl00.000 punatave damagl!s and
$4 ,000 compensatory damages.
"These people 'ruined' their
"I wanted to
give them a
lesson."
o wn weekend They had
alte rnat e t rans portatrnn that
would have gotten them there
two hours-late r, .. s aid Delta
lawyer Comehus Callahan
"There is no ques t1on " that
the "absurd" verdict will be ap·
pealed, Callahan said If upheld,
he added, it would · ·g1vl' n se to
a whole host of suits for offended
feelings. ruined wl'ekcnds, and
r eal and imagined social of·
fcnscs "
The Kluczynsk1s expressed de-
light with the verd1rt
··As a cillze n. I "'anted to be
heard," said the 78-year-old re-
tired Justice ... , wanted to give
them a lesson."
Mrs Kluczynski, 61, said the
experience of being bumped was
so "terrible" she had to take
v1tamm B to quiet her nerves.
Bill Jackson, a manager of
public relations for Delta, said
in Atlanta that the airline felt
the puniti.ve damages "In
particular are improper because
punitive damages are permitted
on ly when the defe ndant's
behavior 1s proven outrageous
and irresponsible."
The c a se is the seventh
lime a bumped passenger has
been awarded damages by a
court. according to James
Weldon, legal assistant to the
director of the CAB's Bureau of
Com plii:tnce and Consum er
Protecllon.
Cons umer advocate Ralph
Nader sued Allegheny Airlines
111 1972 for bumping him off a
flight from Washington. Nader•
was awarded $25,000 in punitive •
damages by a federal court. The
a wartl was eventually over -
turned, and Nader decided not tOI
pu rsuc 1t further
• . ,•
Job exam bill sign e d a s alimony reform The Kluczysnkis had been in·
vited to join Al berto-Culver
Chairman Leonard Lavin at his
Florida farm to witness the birth
of a horse.
Hotel rooms cheap
RENO 1AP1 1'11 celebrate C1rcu!> Ci rcus President William
~ Pe>nmngton said
• I .· :
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A spouse seeking
alimony may be ordered to set? a job counselor to
deter mine his or her ability to work, under a bill
signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
The bill is AB213S by Assemblyman Ernest ~onnyu, R-Saratoga, which was supported by a
m en's-rights group.
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"The Magic & Beauty Of Roller Skating Is Bac k"
Friday 11111*1 &-8 30 Public Session &:1o:3o Christian Skate Night 8-10 30 Public Session
?~~toon Adult Morning Skate
8-11 :30pm.
Adult Night (18 and older)
l* Nipt WMnesday
10-12 Noon Adult Collee Klutch
3:30-5:30 Publtc Session
8:~10.30
~~Public Session
8-10:30 Discount Night
10-12 M1dn1ght
Late Ska1e
Sattnlay
11·1 00 Tiny Tots
1·3 30 Public Session
3·5.30 Public Session
7-9:30 Public Session
9· 11 · 30 Pub lie Session
11-1 A M. Late Skate
2·5 00 Publtc s:::':J
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9·11 P.M.
Adult Night
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CALL ABOUT OUR
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Jerry Le~s Sbte-A-111on
Oct. 30 9 P .M.-6 A.M.
JJZll A...W.•leeartot.
L• .. • H• Cal,_.. 92613
83Q.;68 I 2 .
The bill, effective next year, will allow a judge
to order either spouse to be examined by a voca-
tional rehabilitation counselor before the judge de-
cides whether to award alimony or change the
amount. The counselor would evaluate the
spouse's earning capacity and could suggest a
training program.
Attorneys for Delta and Ar·
rington Travel Center, the agen-
cy that obtained t he reser va-
tions said the couple we re of-
fered another flight scheduled
the opemng or a 623 room addi
taon, the C1rC'us C1rC'u-. hotel here
~ill offer S13·a-mght room rates
th1i. fall. company offlc·1als !>aid.
The rates will be 1n effect for
the months of November and
December, and possibly longer.
When its high-ris e addition
open!> Nov 1, the Circus Circus
will huve a total of 725 rooms.
making it one of Reno's la rgest
hotels
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Oty (714) 324-1784. Hemet (Diamond VeDey) (714) 658·2281. Hemet (714) 652·2733. lndlo C7l4) 347-2761. Palm Desen (714) 346-5511, Palm Springs (714) 325-7471, R!Ytrslde (714) 781·8080. Sun
Clty(714) 679-8857. Su 8enudlDo c:o..ty-Callmcsa (714) 795-2521, Del Rosa (714) 889·0231, 40th Street (714) 889-0231, E Street (714) 889·0231,Montclair<?14) 621-5021. MOWltVanon (714)
889-0231, Needles (714) 326-4561.0ntario (714) 986-6771. P1ez.a (714) 889·0231, Rcdlanda (714) 798-2399. Rialto (714) 874-041t, VictoMl!e C714) 245-7757, Yucaipa (714) 797-1191. ._ .... ~
Carlsbad (714) 729-5926. Carlsbad CP!ez.a Branch) (714) 729·4955, Otl Mar (714) 755-0231. East Vlslll (714) 758-3550. Encinitas (714) 436-9232. Escondido (Country Chtb VIDlfc) la i}
(714) 741·4974, Escondido (714) 74. 3-8334. Fallbrook (714) 728-8351, La Jolla(. 714) 454-3261, Oceana C714) 433-1794, Ocunsldc (714) 722-1131, Ramona (714)789-5096. LE! •
Rancho Bemardo(To opm In 1981), Rancho Santa F"« (To open In 1981). San DleQo (Rancho Paiaiqultosl (714) 485-5910. San Marcos (714) 727-4800. Solona Bc.ach (7141755-6671. ~~3
VakyCenter C714) '49·1316. Vista (714) 726·2880.
..
u-~~-----------------------------------------~
Dilly Piiat
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 1981
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEVISION
82-3
87
89
Neivport Beach firm's
financial, legal problems
snowballing. See Page 84 .
D
D
Microscopic camera cr.eates a Med fly art form
PASADENA <AP> -Until
now, about the best thing that
·could be said a bout the Mediter-
ranean fruit fly was, "If you've
seen one, you've seen them all."
But und er a n e l ectro n
micr oscope, even the pesky
medfly is seen In a different -
even beautiful way.
It h e lp s to h ave t h e
microscope, and the camera at-
tached to it, operated by a scien-
tis t with a keen sense or
aesthetics.
Jean-Paul Revel. the Albert
Bil!ings ,.Ruddock Professor of
Biology at Caltech, prepared his
seem ingly unlovely model by
drying it in a s pecial high-
pressure apparatus to preserve
its s urface features.
An electron microscope pro-
duces an image by scanning its
subject with a thin beam of elec-
trons, using the signal from the
reflected beam to reconstruct an
im age. The flv had tn be coated
with a gold-palladium alloy to
produce a surface with which
t he electron beam could in·
tcract.
Al a magnification of just 20
limes, Gevel's pictures already
show a medfly that is so big it
looks as if it could conquer the
world, not by eating all fruits
and vegetables, but by stepping
on any army that argued with it.
A head-on shot of the fly, at a
m agnifi ca tion of 30 times,
Closeup of Mediterranean fruit fly in magnification makes the bug appear an alien and somewhat eerie
creature. Caltech scientists dried the /ly and coated tt with a gold-platinum alloy for photographing.
Like peas in a pod, eye lenses and "eyelashes" of the Med/Ly are shown in a blown-up electron
micro~ope photo by scientists at Caltech at Pasadena.
I makes the viewer even happier
tha t the fly is, in reality,
s omewhat small e r than a
housefly. Its outsized, compound
eyes -relative to the res t of its
body -and the complexity or
the hundreds of six-sided lenses,
Is evident, as ls the forest of hair
across the insect 's body and
around its mouth.
Another in c rea se in
magnification -to 230 times -
pro duced a photograph that
could as easily have come Crom
Caltech's astronomers as from a
biologist.
It's the edge of the fly's eye,
and the sea of lenses on the
curved surface that create an
image of a well-ordered planet
seen from a spac~craft, despite
the "eyelashe.§" in the fore -
ground.
When Re ve l increased the
m agnification to 1,800 times, the
result was a photograph in
which reahty was lert behlnd.
Instead, the resulting image is a
sort of impressionistic scene of
flowers -a kind of lily perhaps
growing on a d ark plot of
ground.
At a magnification of 6,000
limes. Revel's images seem to
h ave become a lmost totally
abs tract , only s uggesting,
perhaps, somett\ing from deep
in the sea. The picture actually
is or sensory bristles at the base
of the medfly's antenna.
Com-r~like ln'i$tles cover the back of ~Mediterranean fruit fly thorax in this highly magnified photo by
Caltech's electron microscope camera.
Al' .....
Tiny sensory ln'i$tles stick out like whukers in thu closeup of a Med/Ly head magnified 30 times and
specially photographed at Caltech 'f)y scientuts with a seme of aesthetics.
Navy tests on Sylvester turned out to he just lot of hull
MADISON, Wi s . (AP> -
Sailors became cattle ranchers
for six years to conduct fertility
tests on a bull exposed to a sub-
marine communications system,
but Sylvester just grew fat.
The bull was bought in 1974,
when it was 18 months old, for
f300 on orders Qf William
Clements Jr., then deputy
secretary of defense and now
aovernor of Texas, newly ob-
tained N1Vy documents ah6w.
Sylvester waa kept at the
Nav1'1 tubmarine communlca·
tlanl tat site near Clam Lake in
northern Wllcouln and wu •bot
'
in 1980, for reasons not ex·
plained.
Navy officials concluded tests
on the registered Hereford bull,
costing a total of $13,000, were of
questionable value, according to·
the documents.
The memos were obtained un-
der the Freedom of Information
Act by Stop Project ELF, a
group opposed to the Navy's ex·
tremely low frequency land·to-
aea submarine communlcaUona
sy1tem.
ProJ«t, ELF bu beeJI uted at
Clam Lake for about a decade.
Some envtronmentallata aay not
enough is known about its long-
term effects on people, animals
and the environment.
Navy officials did not com-
ment on the disclosure.
Jenny Speicher of Stop Project
ELF said documents indicated
the bull received health
checkups, as well aa sperm and
hormone tests, to determine if
the low-frequency signals were
affect.tna fertility.
•'They did general tests lite
check the bull's fur and eyes to
aee U anything looted ab-
normal,'' she aald.
She aald the Navy noted
Sylvester grew to be a "fat,
paunchy somewhat short-legged
animal who moved freely and
quickly when called to come for
ground feed" but did not know
why it gained weight.
"They (the Navy) don't know
if it was bored and just ate too
much or if it was because of en-
vironmental conditions," Ms.
&peicher said. "They didn't
know the medical history of the
bull, or much about ralsln1 the
animal.
The document& 1tve tbls ac-
count:
Clements to'd former Rep.
George H . Mahon, a Texas
Democrat who was the House
Appropriations Committee
chairman, that the Navy was
test.ing a bull at Clam Lake. A
Nov. 19, 1974, memo from U .
Cmdr. Norman M. Karns Jr., a
public affairs officer, aald
Clements later learned there
was no bull at Clam Lake and no
plans to buy one.
Karns wrote that Clements
was "most upset" and told a
Dtfenae Department secretary
he wanted a bull at the site.
Thus Sylvester found bla new .,
home and lived in a makeshift
barn.
According to the memos, some
Navy officials soon questioned
the study's value and said the
Navy could be open to criticism
for doinl research without
proper safety ~auU001.
In W1S aeveril Navy offlclals
recommended the bull study be
ended. One officer, Capt. Paul
E . Tyler, bead or a Naval
Research and Development
Command divtaloD offte., Niki
reaulta would "-11 Mne to...-·
. f\lle the naive ud M °"llatle ...
dltional value to the ...-t."
~~------....-.--~.--........ ·--..-·~·!1"99·~·~-..... -.~··
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7, 1981'
LOVE A PARADE The Mountaineers in
Richmond. W. Va., love a parade. A crowd
gathered recently to watch the Cherry River
8 TENNI~ LESSONS
s15tANOF IALLS
·coSTA MESA
TENNIS CLUB
557-0211
GOOHMI T
ITALIAN • AMERICAN
Delicatessen • Bakery
------,
81111ADAMS1a1 M3gno11.i1 HUNTINGTON BEACH
TAKE·OUT 962-7998 • 968·"68
Navy admirals go through a
gath'ering.
4 _ 1 PC 4 ...... •
•ANN LANDERS
•HOROSCOPE
•DR . STEINCROHN
Coffee user
DEAR ANN , LANDERS : Several
months ago the re were Page 1 stories and
a lot of chatter on the evening news to the
effect that coffee caused cancer of the pan·
c reas. The s tudy was m ade at Harvard, no
less. AJthough the results were t.ClCOnclu-
si ve, a lot of people we re scared off coffee.
The sam e study went on to say the decaf·
f e rnate variety was even more dangerous.
After that s tory appeared. you wrote a
column saying it was a lot or baloney the
same kind of foolis hness that frighte ned
people off saccharin and cranberries. You
also blasted the misleading experiments
that gave the impression hair dye could
ca use cancer
Apparently you were right on. Ann
Now h ear this: Researchers at the
University of Minnesota Medical School re·
cently announced experiments that proved
h eavy use of the coffee bean actually pre·
vents the growth of tumors in animals .
At a m eeting or the Amer1l·an
Che mical Society in New York. Dr. Luke
K . L. Lam said it was too early to tell
whether coffee prevents the growth of
tumors in humans. but the rats that were
fed large amounts of green coffee beans
developed fewer than half as many tumors
as the rats that weren't fed coffee beans
a fter both groups were injected with a po-
tent carcinogen. So first we are told cof-
fet' causes cancer and now we read it pre-
vents canl'cr'
Whv aren't all sludies kept out of the
media until there is conclusive evidence'!
Cancer is the most frightening word in the
English langu<ige. When it is linked with a
product. people becom e emo~ional and . for
no good reason. a whole indus try can be
ruined.
Thanks for helping us sort things out.
Your column is more than advice to the
lovelorn. It·s the best source of legitimate
informa tion for millions of people.
LONG-T IME READER IN WASHINGTON.
D C
DEAR D.C.: You can count on me to
keep my ear to the ground and my fingers
Jn the keyboard of the typewriter. I serve
m no commercial boards and have no axes
EA
thankful
q Allll WIDEIS
to grind. My sole obligation is to my
readers.
DEAR ANN LANDERS Twenty-four
.• ·car~ ago, when we were very .young, ou~
married life together was going badly
t My fault.>
My wife became pregnant and gave
birth to our second son. On the basis of
absolutelv undeniable fact. I knew the
child was.not mine.
Perhaps out of a sense of guilt, or my
deep love for her, I never brought the m at-
ter up. The boy is ~ow tat.I a~d handsome
a nd has fille d our ltves with JOY He does
n ot in anv wav resemble his brothers or
s isters.
Recently, on the way home from a par·
l v mv wife <who had had an extra glass of -.~i.ne l~ said too much. Suddenly the te r r ible
hurt I had all but forgotten came back.
She is unaware of her ··slip"' and now.
after all these years of happiness. I am
templed to discuss this matter with her
o pe nly for the first time. .
I 'm not thinking of divorce or
recrimination. I love my wife more than
ever. but I wonder if this one ··tie·· b.et~een
us s hould now be confessed and forgiven.
o r would it tear us apart'! HURT AND
HOLDING
DEAR H&ll: Wail for a quiet moment.
Ask your wife if there is something about
the past s he'd like to discuss. If she volun-
tee rs the information -fine. Otherwise.
leave it alone, If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
A no·nonsense approach to how to deal with
lzfe·s most difficult and most rewarding ar-
rangement. Ann Landers' booklet.· Marriage -
What to Expect .·· will prepare you for better or
for worse Send your request to Ann Landers.
PO Box 11995 . Chicago. /11. 60611. enclosing 50
cents · and a long. stamped. self addressed
envelope
His TV not for real
Huntington Beach
Pacific Coast Hwy So of Pier
Newport Beach
1400 Pactf1c Coast Hwv -~ t=i c::::i. c:::::l r:::::J '-''--'-'---'--ill PIClU,OU•llOllfHlYCOU'°NS B k·~ t L h & o · ner '"11111stull ou1101,H1•un• rea ':las , unc rn
DELICATESSEN • BAKERY • PIZZA
TAKE-OUT • CATERING 15 Convenient Locations
Paid Advertisement
Lovely lingerie
a nd all manner of othe r w onderful thing s
What does one have to do to
have a Pleasure Party or team
about Pleasure Company dis-
tributorships.,
S impl e . Jus t ca ll T he ·
Pleasure Co mpany at
714 /551-9799.
Remember the Tupperware
parties? You invited your
friends and they munched on a
couple of cheese -topped
crackers and picked out
matching plastic containers in
three sizes.
It's the same kind of thing -
sort of.
Almost every night of the
w eek women are getti ng
together in the comfort of a
friend's living room.
They sip white wine. or a
cocktail, take turns trymg on
see-through nighties, and ex-
amine sex toys which are
spread across a table.
Pleasure Parties usually open
with a sensual quiz and a game
or two to gel things started.
After this ice-breaker, the
Pleasure Company's unusual
product line is introduced.
Items on sale are of pleasura-
ble size and s hape. Some
vibrate and tingle. Some can be
seen through. Some are edible
and others are tasty and can be
applied to your favorite dessert.
All in all a fun lime with
friends.
An yone interested in booking
a party can call 714/551 -9799.
Some hostesses choose to
have the entire line of products
presented, some prefer to see
only the lingerie.
Each party lasts about three
hours. There is a time to bear
the presentation and explana-
tion of products, a time to try on
lingerie. and a lime to order .
Some of the products gen-
erate laughter and interaction
among the guests, lending a fun
atmosphere to the party.
Barbara Murray and Tom
Moss got. the idea for this busi-
ness at a Saddleback College
EntrepreneurshJp class. The in-
s tructors Ryan and Eckert sug-
gested they "look at where t.be
Uaea are."
MWT&Y and Mota saw b~e
crowd.I at Hale. Exotic dance
1how1.
Barbara Murray shows some of the revealing
nighties the Pleasure Company has to sell.
Another suggestion was to
look at best selling books.
Ms. Murray ordered Shared
Intimacies by Lonnie Barbach
aod had to wait a month to get
it.
It then occurred to them that
there was no comfortable way
for women to view and
purchase sex-related items.
"Women,'' Ms. Murray says,
"who wouldn't dream of walk-
ing into a sex-oriented book
store, are quite willing to go to
a friend's house and buy all
sorts of revealing lingerie and
sex gadgets."
Since their beginning in early
1981, The Pleasure Company
has grown considerably.
They now have a dozen a~ti.ve
distributors and more are JOlO·
Ing every month.
Mr Moss says, "This can be
attributed to the high quality of
our lingerie and to the unique-
ness of our multi-level dis-
tributor plan which allows one
to virtually go into business for
tbemsel ves.''
"We spent a lot of time
aearchlne tor just lhe r11ht
quality and appeal. be~ore.~eci~ing on our hngerie line, said
Moss.
"We also test market new
items and delete any items
from stock that are not well-
received by the women who at·
tend our parties."
Start up cost are low for the
distributors, and the multi-level
plan is easy to understand and
profitable.
Anyone wishing to become a
Pleasure Company distributor
can call 714/551-9799.
Ms . Murray. a licensed
therapist, feels that the parties
are more than just a fun-packed
evening. "They are educational
and some of the questions asked
at the parties indicate that we
are performing a truly valuable
service to the community," she
said.
Mr. Moss and Ms. Murray
have both spoken to several
community college classes, in-
c I u ding Human Sexuality
classes.
Those who are interested in
either booking a Pleasure Party
or becoming a Pleasure Com-
pany distributor can call
714/551·9'799.
RIDGEFIELD. Conn. tAP) This TV
set is on the blink again, lighting up the
s creen and m y life with all sorts of weird
and at times welcome messages.
Workmen have been laying some ca bk
<1round here, and maybe it got fouled up m
mv antenna or something and shorted out
the whole reception system.
Anyhow, I thought s ure I heard one of
the sportscaste rs say during the pro foot-
ball game the other evening, .. Howard, we
haven't heard a wo rd from you a ll nig ht.
would vou care to analvze that last play for . . us')''
And the sitcom immediately after that
was preceded with the warning : ··The
following program may be uns uitable for
adults: it contains violence. nudity. coarse
lan guage a stupid plot a nd dumb jokes.
but sub-~ormal adolescents may find it
mildly amusing ..
ALL WEEK LONG this sort of thing
has been going on.
There was this boxer in a bathrobe at
the televised weigh-in whining, "I'm gonna
get the tar whaled out of me. T his is the
worst rematch my idiot manager ever got
me involved in. I don't expect the fight lo
go past the first round. unless I lose my
marbles as well as my mouthpiece with the
firs t big one he throws ...
And here was this dude in the laun-
dromat saying to the housewife, .. Don't
take our word for it about Zilche's Soapy
Suds. We're under a federal indictm.ent
right n ow for faking these washing
machine t ests.··
During the break in a cartoon show, I
could have s worn I heard the toy sales man
say ... Kiddies. before asking your pare.nts
to buy you this miniature flam~ throwing
tank which is really a hunk of Junk, s hop arou~d and see if you can find something
constructive and a lot more fun. like a set
of builcling blocks or a magic kit.··
There seems to be some tongue twist-
ing in the talk s hows, too, with people say-
ing things like:
"OUR PANEL THJS afternoon on the
side-effects of halitosis in public trans port
features three of the biggest bores and
bunglers in our nation's capital."
"As a seven-term congressman, J am
con vinced that one sure way of saving tax-
payers' money would be to cut the size of
the Congress and all sta~e legisla.ture~ in
half. With today's media reachmg mto
every home, the people don't .need th~l
many representatives. It was different m
the days when you had to ride a horse to
get to the s tate capital... .
"Today's guest is not really ta.len~ed !n
any field, but s he's the producer s hve-m
g irlfriend."
"If I were managing the Yankees. I'd
want George Steinbrenner s itting right
there on the bench next to me. He knows
Save money and shopping time.
Read the llilJ Pilaf
HUGH MULLIGAN
MULLIGAN STEW
more about the gam e and handling players
the:tn any dugout martinet. ..
LATELY, EVEN T HE news shows
don't seem to have the right ring to them
··At the United Nations today Soviet
Foreign Minister A.ndrei G~omyko un·
veiled a policv of unilatera l d1sarmamenl
and the re moval of all Russian troops from
Afghanistan. Angola and the Polis h border
·Borscht Before Bullets.· he called the new
Five-Year Plan ...
··OPEC ministers mee ting m Vienna
have slash ed the price of oil to S4 a barre~.
effective immediately. Said She!k Yam~m .
who led the fight to roll back prices. ·~ JUSt
got tired of blowing 20 bucks every time I
pulled m y Caddy up to the pump." · ·
··The Secretary of Education today a n·
nounced the recall of more than a quarter
of a million 1981 hig h school graduates for
def eels in reading and writing. College
consumers complained that the late
models were plagued with dangling
participles. mispl ~ced modifiers .. s p.ljt in-
finitives and unrehable vocabularies .
.. Four New York City detectives have
quit in disgust over the anti-crime wave
that has been sweeping the city. For the
fourth dav in a row. no felonies were re-
ported in· any of the five boroughs. and
charges were dropped against two teen·
agers who turne~ themselves in for playing
a radio too loud m a remote corner of Cen-
tral Park.
"THE STOCK MAR KET recorded
huge gains again today. sending the Dow
Jones average to an all time high. as the
dollar continued to climb on all money
markets ...
··The undefeated New York Jets and
New Orleans Saints today completed final
workouts for the 1981 Super Bowl Game. as
both coaches were s igned to 20-year con-
tracts.··
"U.S. Open Champion John McEnroe
has apologized to a line judge whom he in·
advertently brushed with an errant lob
s hot in Saturday's semifinal match and of·
fered to pay for dry cleaning his blazer.':
"British trade unions staged a massive
rally in downtown Liverpool last night in
s upport of Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher's economic policies. The four-
hour long parade was le~ by a n IRA
bagpipe band s kirling 'Maggie Is Our Dari·
ing. · ··
··President Ronald Reagan has con-
vened an emergency Cabinet session to
consider further income tax cuts because
of the anticipated huge budget surplus.
Hard-liners hope to see this year's IRS col·
lections curtailed completely. until the
economy settles down a bit ...
"No one in Britain today ran the mUe
in under four minutes."
••After these announcements. we wUl
bring you lbe fi nal movement o( Schubert's
Unfinished Symphony.·~
..... ·~·--; .
EE If
t I Ir~ H: Hl A NOI of Laguna Beach
7.c·rrn' Maybe that'll stir 'em up!"
OROSCOPE
W SIDNEY OMARA
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CHAllfS
McCAii
He's only
doing hi~ job ,
To put the best face on our s leeping
president. who . is inclined to a good e ig ht
hours o r m ore d a ily of the refreshing s tuff.
we could say tha t a s leeping preside nt
d oesn't lit•.
To put the next best face on the m a t ·
ler. it could be a rg ued that the president is
u s ick man or a senile man a nd has been
ordered by best medical ad vice to ha ve
h eavy s ession s in the arm s o f o ld'
Morpheus.
[f the latte r is right. the person who
ur ges that our preside nt get off his duff
a n d do his JOb is in d a nger of being la beled
un patriotic .
IF THE FORMER is true. Mr. Reagan
and those who urge him on with his efforts
to revolutionize their country to t he r ight
will have only the mselves to blame in '84 .
Mr. Reagan's successor m ay be a n a m en a -
ble fellow. but not to the boys in Reagan 's
"kitche n cabine t ..
If in fact the president is naturally
bone lazv. like his accla imed hl'ro Cal
Coolidge.' then the less he i~ awake t he less
harm he wlll do
But the truth lies som ewhe re in a mong
all these s peculations. If my h ypothesis is
th a t Mr Reagan is merely a salesm a n
an Arthur Godfre\ for whoever runs the
c·ountry right now· it all fa lls into place.
A salesman works in fits and slarts. and
needs a lot of rest to keep the old tongue tn
\\Orking order.
As you dou bt less have read . the presi
dt.•nt h <1::. hung a picturl' of Silent Cal
Coolidge 111 the Ca bi net room of the White
!louse. This presumes that Mr. Reagan
thinks he h as som ething in common with
the plain man from Northhampton. Mass .
or wish{':-. hl' h ad
THJS PL'ZZLES Ol'R HJGH politic<1l
thrnkers It puzzles some low polit ical
thinkers. among whom l nu m ber rn~·self
Silent Ron'' That won't qu ite wash. We.·
have a president who is about i.IS silent as
Bob Hope or Cha r ise Fin le~.
Ronnie would have <.1 ppalled Cal wit h
his ver bositv. C<.11 r a n Massa chusetts o n
t he principle · "If you don't s a y a nything
you won 't be called on to repeat it ·· Our
rww prc·s1dent h as been hoisted by th <.1t
purtic ulur petar d several times <1 lre ady .
Coolidge wrotc his own 1okes Ronnie':-.
... m ell of the lam p. Ho ll ywood-style
THERE WAS HELL to pay the other
da~ when '.\lewsweek ran a piece called
l'll phem1st 1ca lly ... A Disengaged Preside n-
cy .. L'nide ntified presidential :.tides said
'.VI r Reagan would rather reminisce about
the good o ld days w he n he starred in B·
g rade movies th an spend time r unning the
coun try
~Y private s u::.p1c1on. which I have
made ampl~· public. is the:it :\<tr Reagan
\\as not hired. b' th e men who hired hi m
lo run. as a work.ing man. He was hired :.is
a salesman
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
....... 1 .........
TO SE I
OR NOT TO SE: i
THAT IS t
A. SILLY GUESTION .
~--··--······ .. 'lJ
ignore freeze
IHH fOR . I s aw a docto r
, 1 '"'"" .1ho fur ~hat he diagnosed
·1•11 •h1111hl('J'. I can ha rdly brush
t 1 .111 • 11' I h1• l"'<C'ruciating pain.
11·11 l.i mo\ 1· it in a certain posi-
'' 11 '" .... for '''H'r.al seconds . I
11 11 I • \I"' a ll 11i,i,(ht \\ilh lhb agonizing
•In I .1111 1\ •H n out \\ hl'n morning comes.
J 111\1' t1i1•ct ('\C'rythin g but the
fl •1 1111•1 11. 1 hurning. ice cold feeling
"·l 11r fht' 11nw I \Hap it in a wool ba by
11t:.1 • ('\t'" 111ght. hut gN no relief.
l h•· t':\l'H j, •• hurt.., <,O badly I can't
•• 11 . I ln ht•(·'"''' I'm afraid I'm losing
111 11"' of thi.., :o,lw uldt'r and suffering this
In lht• r l''t or 111' lifr.
J'llt' 1fnct11r arfvhC'd injections when I
1\\ l11tu 111n111h.., ago hut I re fused because
fl.1tt· n1•t«tl1•-. I'm 5){ ~·.-ars old. Can you
• \\t• .111\ '"t.:.~1· ... 1 ion-. that might help? -
1!.. •. I .
nl "•H \lH~ .J Wl• can o nly g uess
11 1"•1lil··r11 1;-; h11t"'1tis Why a nd how
'wi: .111 \' • cl1111 1 k nc1\\ But we presume
'•111 11111 of I doing anything for the
~1·111,1! p.1111 h1•r·;111-.t> ~ou thought it would
• ·'"·'' II\ 1twlf Someti m es it does:
hH 11in •s it du1· .... n t
' WJwn µ~11n J>CI s1sls the patient usually
Ii nit:-. motion tn the affected joint. And the
nultc motion is li mited , the mo re likely will
v~t net inns produ ce stiffnes s and ~1 1 rt.•ased mobility. At Inst comes what is
IC\ h1 d lh • 'froien joint.''
ol!C' c. pcr1~ncu will help other pa-
• \
T YOUR HfAlTH
OR. PETER J STEINCROHN
tie nts with beginning symptom s . They w ill
rem e mbe r that the longet' joint motion is
restricted the more likely will a ny move-
m ent c ause intense pain.
If j oint pain does not disappear within
a week or so by use of heat. as pirin a nd
mild e xerc ise, the p atient should ask for
medical help.
This will like ly include the needle so
m a ny patients abhor . But the cortisone-like
inje ctions into the joint are very e ffective .
Exercises and 'other physical therapy a lso
he lp. E a rly treatment will usu ally preve nt
frozen joint complications .
Our advice. Mrs . J .. is that it's about
time that you visit your doctor again. He
will institute the necessary treatment to
unfreeze your joint. T he procedure may
take time and be painful, but anything 's
better than what you have been going
thro ugh the past few months.
Dr. Steincrohn welcomes reader questions
but cannot answer persona.I mail. Letters of
widest tntttest will be antwered in thU column.
Send your questions to hf m in care of the Daily
Pilot. P.O. Box 1560 , Costa Mesa. Calif.
92626--05(,().
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7, 1981 83
THAI BREAKFAST GUEST Sl'n. John TO\\ l'f'
R -Tcxas. left, a nd Scn S I Ila\ akawa. R
Calif .. h :.ive breakfast wrth Gt.•n Prem
·~·· ....... Ttnsulanunda. pnnw m1111:-.lt'r of Thi.1ila11 d
Thv :-.l'!)='>tclll tonk pl:t<'l' Tt1l1:-.d<1\ morning at
Bl :.11r llousl' 111 \\\1:-.htng lon. I> C
~·················· ie Pu! '38 0 ., wpri.. •n r.iy •
l??7??77?7 7777 77 ???7 77???7 ?77?7 77 777???????????'~
r--Contused :~ ~ TV M'''"'" Parn : ('. ~ = >14 4')b1n4y1•.ir~ •
• f :or tir<•f'lllHI' C.ill :
,.... ,.... ,.... Depressed Overwhelmed :~ . ..., ,. NtWPOR I PAClFIU\ • ~ (7 I I) 9,; i ·fl:!ll:! : ••••••••••••••••••
HOUSE OF
TAILORING
ALTERATIONS FOR
MEN & WOMEN
SO. COAST PLAZA 5408491
lowl'r Ll'•l'I by Corouul
,..._ ,....
('. ,.... ~:Anxious ,..._ ,.... ,..._ ,.... ,.... ,.... ,.... ,....
('. ,....
. ..., ...., . ..., ....,
Lonely :~ . ..., ...., ...., ...., ...., ....,
~ ...., . ..., ....,
('. ....,
,.... HAVE OCCUPATIONAL OR RELATIONSHIP STRESSES ~ Shores Interiors
Rh iltf'nllal • ('om mi-rclal
.....,.... 2650 A'"" !'II ._
NetA pc•r l llt•.tch
~: CAUSED YOU CONFLICTS OR INDECISION? ~
-r 642·2255 --·
~: Because you deserve to feel good about yourself. Gold, Silva & A.sso· :~
,.... data, Ltd., has developed a dynamic group experience at an afford-·...i
~ able fee for singles (ages 18·35); designed to show you how to feel ~
,..._ good about yourself. For more information, or free consultation, call: ·...i ('. ....,
('. ....,
Ca ll 642-5678. ,.... ~GOLD. SILVA HYl'NO~IC.. . ..., ~~&'ASSOCIATES 964-3553 >N'>l llANTC., ~ Put a few words
to work for ou. ,..._ . ....,
,....l l lll ll l llll l l lllll l lllLllll l l l l llllll l l l l l lll
SALE!
FLORAL PRINT
TOWELS .~· ., I
_,•'"'~'-'
."'! '
, I
;, ,'~~1 ·..,,.,•-t:l-t:.4~U'DliJll'
Choose either a dehcate floral or
bold floral print Truly soft and ab·
sorbent Hurry 1n while they last.
BATH TOWEL 1 99 ORIGINAll Y 10.00 TO 11.00
NOW WHILE THEY LAST . . . . .. . •
HAND TOWEL
ORIGINALLY 6.50 TO 7.00
NOW WHILE THEY LAST .
LIBBY 24 PIECE
1.49
....,......_'
GLASSWARE SET
In two colors Tawny and Gold Set
Includes 8 each of juice. beverage
and cooler glasses. 7 g g
ORIGINAll Y 9.99. ......... NOW ........ •
SALE PRICES 6000 WtllE QUANTITIES LAST!
.... • 1
•
,,_.
-·
( . "
~:~. _.'P · ,-•..... ~ ,__...,,.,
'-.. , .,,,,,,. v ASSORTED SOLID
AND WOVEN STRIPED BATH TOWELS
Thick and uwsty towels 1n assorted fashion colors
COMPARE AT 10.00 TO 14.00
/
HOWWHILE 3 99 5 99 THEY LAST . . • AND •
..,,.
14290 CUMr DrM -552~··
Mon. thrv Fri. tM, 8lt. t04. S..I'\. 1 t-1
\.
I
l
. --~----------------·-----..-..-----------~ -------------... ·-·-·-·-··---•• .... -.............................................. a••11z•z•••s11a ... a ... a••a .. a•
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, October 7. 1981
rnrn~~~~~~
Problems plague firm
Receiver appointed f or financially troubled company
"Thif> lhing 1s really snowball-
ing,·' sald Laguna Hills attorney
Roo Soll In r eference to the
New port Equity Funding lnc.'s
financial and legoJ problems .
"I've been contacte d b y al
least 10 attorneys wanting to
know information about Ca5es.
and the company is being In-
vestigated by the Department of
Real Estate, Departmen t of
Corporations" and the U .S
Postmaster General's office.
Soll is p l anning to take action for
i n dividuals in two Newport
Equity-organized partnerships.
On Monday, Oran ge County
S uperior Court Judge Edward
W allin approved former
California real estate com-
missioner Milton G . Gordon as
receiver for the financially
troubled Newport Beach
m ortgage brokerage firm;
whose problems, authorities
say. are jeopardizing $37 million
worth of loans for between 2,000
and 3,000 investors .
Newport Equity also faces
ban kruptcy proceedings and a
state probe into allegations of
securities fraud. A p etition filed
in Orange County Superior Court
by the state Department o f Real
Estate tndlcatt!d that the firm's
o mcers, including its chief exe-
cutive. Donald M. Suth erland.
have abandoned the corporation.
·'There has to be someone in
charge." Wallin s aid. "There
may not be serious losses, but
we just don't know right now.··
The Department of R eal
E s tate soug ht r eceiver·ship ''to
prevent panic amon g In
vestors," said Deputy Attorney
General David C haney.
C haney s aid that without re-
ceivership for Newport Equity,
more I.ban Sl million in monthly
Interes t payments and payoff
proceeds could not be handled.
In addition to taking c harge of
Newport Equity's b ook s and
r ecords. Gordon will oversee the
dis tribution of loan payments to
protect inves tors m 315 limited
partnerships s et up by Newport
Equity .
"M y thoughts on the receiver
being appointed are that it's
fabulous," Soll :.aid. "I'm glad it
w as done It will protect those
inves tors who haven't lost their
money by taking away the
management r esponsibilities o f
the officers. 1f indeed there are
any
•
"The receivership doesn't help
my c lients, though. The property
is long gone. T h ere's nothing to
collect and distribute.'·
Soll r epr esents the Investors in
Newport Equity Trust 287 and a
number or individuals in Trust
286 who los t $286,000 earlier thls
year At a meeting of investors
of the firs t trust on Monday, SoJI
said u decision was made to
comme nce with le gal action. He
said he expects to file an action
by the end o f tht.' week or early
next week. but a d ecision on ex·
actly whom to file the action
against s till is bein g determined.
"W e have s everal options,"
Soll s aid .. We could file agains t
Newport Equity itself. in which
case wt"d take the action in
bankruptcy court assuming
the comp a ny is n ot capable of
proving it is s olvent. I 'm not
sure that's a viable action.
bec ause o f the chan ces of col·
lectmg from a bankrupt com-
pany It ·s futile.
"Or. we could lake actfon
agam~t individuals -the of-
ficers of the company "
Soll said it 1s like ly he will file
similar actions on behalf of the
parties in both trus ts
Cash conv inces car-poole rs
Ride-sh a r er s a lso enjoy occasion al s n ooze on the way
B y GLENN SCO TT pollution s haring program:.
01111.D.ityPoetsu H But it was money that ul Schmidt, an engineer , said he
Like many other s. Ross timately convinced them a year calcula tes a m1nirnum expense
Schmidt. Nick Matyas and Ed ago lo lry s haring rides of Sl8 per wee k to drive his car
Keane, e a ch o f Costa Mesa. de Ea c h had b een riding an to work Sin ce each man rotates
cided to start a car pool lo worK' Oran~ County Transit Distnct driving by the week. his ex·
for one important r eason -express bus that traveled penses are about $24 per month
money . through t'o::.t a M esa t o less thanhalfthecostoflhe
That's not to s ay the trio who Rockwell Hul when th e monthly bus for('.
work at Rockwell lnterna· fare rose to S56. they s witched to The car µool also 1s more con-
tional's Anaheim Divisio n 18 a car pool ven1cn1. they s ay. because they
miles from home didn't ha~ The three explained their can leave later a nd return home
o ther purposes in s haring rides. system this w eek a fter driving faster tha n in the bus. which
They could get to work and to Matyas· home in Schmidt's m<.1kes more.' stops.
home faster tha n they could on white Volkswagen hug One uf the other benefits of a
1--~-N_ll_~-·-~_E ____ 1_ PUIUC MOOCC
'l~ITtOU• •UStNUS NAMC ITAflMINl
T "• fuUuwlne P•' '°"' •r• dth•I bu,lneu.a•
NA TUIU•I INl1 ll10"\, ltO
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8•Mfel petlrwt"'IP
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Co..nly Cl••~ ol O••~ ('ountr on A11911\I j t 1 .. 1 l't.,,,,
P11bllllwd Or-(CWl\t Oelly PtlO'
$•Pl JO Oct I 14 JI t•tl O .. ll
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l'tCTI rt°'-lj IUtlNl.U NAMI: UATIMfNT
l"• 1ouow1~ P• 'o"' •r• oo.no
bu•lneu .,
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Judy P N""n•m .,,... Oun "
Clttlt tounl•1n Va1l•y < atllo1t'H•
tl70I
Tnl• buslneu 11 <1>nouc1ta OY •
o•ntrel p.tl'lnfl Ullp
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r11l1 •'•'-""""' .. ~, 111.., wftll 11 .. COUl•IY '"'~Of Or•OQO c o.mty on \•P
lemt»r • '"' f'111.,.
,.CTI tlOUI •UJtMaH NAMI llAUMINT
1'tJBllC MOOCE
l'ICTtTIOUt IUllNl!SS
NAMl IT4fl4"11NT 'P\• roUO#IAQ "''°"' ., .. GOtft9 O\ol\ln•u •t
HAR80U N lV NN
Al0ARTMENT$, I .. ~ lyllll \t., Hunt 1no1on IHoKn, lA .,....,
\llRC,INIA M tlUCCELLA, <»01
l WrhlO. ( frt kl th,nUnQ1on B•Kh
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C.ourhl°" (If< le Hut\tlllillon IM«ll
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fnh °"""~\ " tc"'<IUCIW bY •fl In Olvldll•I
v11g1nl• M llucoll•
Tiii\ •t.t•n••lt WH Ill.cl wlOI ti.
County I.•••• Of O•enge County on S.pt !4 1 .. 1
PwOlf\rll'd °'"'"""" C o.t\t C>•itf Pilot. ,U..,. hpt lU Oct I • /t ... 1 UOl t1 Punll.,_, C>e1-o-(O.\t O•llY Ptlol. s.111 1• n. JO Oct 1. , .. 1 41cn.a1
P'UBllC NOTlCC P'tl8UC MOTIC£
rueuc NOTICE
lllCTITtOU• I UllNllU
NAMI! $TATfMI NT
The lollowlng per'on' •r• Ootng
bu,ln••• ., JORAOCO NO t EAST, L lO 41
At'l'tfrun. trYlne. C.e 9'11U
Jorodco Ho t E ut '"' . • Gen.rel PArtfttr t• H•w.cl• C.Utpore
11on1, 41 111 ... ,,un, '"''"'· c. .,,,4
Tnh t>vsl"'u '' conouc 1011 bv • llmlt•d P•rtne•.ntp JORAOCO NO t EAST, INC. .
JowOflM.Grimm
~··· p.,,,.., Prlt\ldtflt
Th•' st•t.,...nl w•• t I.cl wllh W.. Coul\ty Ct•"" of 0.M>Qe C o..ntv on S.1>< ""'°'" 11, 1'191
SCHUMACHElt & HtCll!fY
A l •w AU«l•t""'
1'17tlM
TATIMeNT OP WITHDaAWAL
P•OM PAaJNeAIM" Ol'IA•TllllO
UNDllt
lllCTlflOUI eUllNe lJ NAMtl
Tiie lot-Ing ""'WI he• wlthel,. .. n ., • e•n•r•• •• ,,,,,, ''0"" '"'• 11ertnerwp -••llnQ "-' i... fl< 1111011' 011•l1'eu nemt ol $WEET Al t(f MU,tC et 1•01 1•1euntl• A••llue, Coot. Mtt<t, C•1tf0tnl• .,.,,
Tne lkllllOU\ butt,,." nom• \tol•
m•n1 tor tn. pertn•tr"'I" w .. ""'°Oft A119u1t 10 tta t •~ Ille County ol
Ot•no•
lJ -.,tt N•""t •nd Addt•\\ of '"•
t>erton WUM'••'''O
"-'•'' Oev1oun 111 Pel"'•' $trttt (O.I• Me .. (elllorn•• •~t7 ,,..,. °"' • 10"'" 1'1M1N
Publl•lled 0.-C°"'' O•lly Piiot. S.pt JO Oct I, 14, 11 1'111 '21M
ruauc MOntE
l'ICTITIOU$ IUSIHESS
NAMf STATllMINT
1 n~ 11111ow1nq ""'_, " Ck>1no ®" n''' ., l AI lESCOUllE M E;Otl.A I SERVICES, INC (UI I £SCOULI(
NURSES REvl!dR., INC, UI
HO,P•t•• Ro•O Ntwport B•acll
( •lllorl\t• ,,...;r Sylvie l e1o<ouhe . • t 111totnte 1or
PIH•l•on. 150) .... S•Hhor• Orlv• NtWPOr1 0..ach. (1lllo,.1t11e tl..U
rtu' bu\IM\' '' t onou1 teo bv • t. ,,., oo,•tton
l tt\4..Wll• M.Ou 41
s.tn.1c•• 1 nc
Svh'•• Leiit.OUll• Pr~-"t(.W"I T"h U•t•,,....•• -~ tit.cl w tlf\ .,,_ County Clerk of Or•-CO\ltllY, Sec>
l•ml><lr IS, t'lll
1'171 .. .S
Puo111r.o 0t•"9' t uell ll•lly Piiot
S•P1 30 Oct l 14 JI l~I •)00.41
UATEMlHT 01' WITHDRAWAL IM0,.•11 Stnot f'ROM PAtnNfRSHIP l'ICTITIOUS eUllNIU S"ll• ltt Ol'llltATINO UHDE II KAMI[ STATl!Ml!NT New-1 _,._ C• ., ...
FICTITIOUS I USINfSS NAMl Ill• 101•0"'"11 p.,\On\ ••• ooino PuOllV..0 Or-(<Wiii O•lly PllOI
rueuc NOTICE
Tne lolto"'"'ll "*''"'' ,,., Nlln<l••wn bu"ntU e• S.pt lO, Oct 1 14 71 t.,.I 00'1 t t l'ICTITIOUS IUStHES\ •• e t1rnrr•I per tn~t l•um tno IUCKER REN I AL COMPANY, NAME SfAffMllNT
P••lnt,.n•o Ol>P••t•nv u"'1er ,,.. f11 OO H•mHto<1 CCi\le""'w CA'1U.. ••BLIC ""TlCE rne tolto•tnO "'""°"' er• doln1o
tltlOU\ 1><.1\lntt• " ..... C)f (AVCO llH F AUL E TUCKER, "' Et rv l'IU ualneuH Monrovl• 8 t LMl•~H t.• "7U1 M•dl1<>,(0lll•Meu,Cll9?.:I• 8 ~ M PUlll•C Rrl>ORTIHv.
Tnt 11t:i11.,_;, l"'•l•wn ~'1mo ll•to 1 C'1RISTOPHE" P TUCK EA,'°' UOS EH1 1/tn Strttt ~ult• 171 S.nt• ment for 1,,. .,.,t,,.,,111,, w"' lllM on W 8• 1>04 Blvd , N••OOrl 8eec:n, CA l'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS Ane Co '1Jln
Jenuery I i•eo '" 1n. County ot Tiii\ bU\11\0\ I\ (OnGuCltd by • , NAME STATfMl!NT W1tll1m ~UllP ..... Patm~l10
Ot•nve v-erwr •I OArlnt"-f'Up ltH tollowlf't9 e>tr~OtU .,. OOlf\O lrcl• Fount•ln V•lfPY r. 91108
Ttlt hJll ~1'• •nd •d<Jren or trv. Pa\#1 E Tu<l\.er bvtlnetS ., M•rtN NUl'W'\411y M•OUlt"f' 18114 IHl'"""•llttd•l,.•"9•> RllHARO M fn1, >lelf"'-1 ••>111«1 with the CALIFORNIA INSURAN CE P•tmtttOCl•Cle FountA1nV•l ~y LI
SCHAI 8EPG l 2 Summr•wl"d C.oun1y (1tr~ ot Orll\09 County Oii SPFCIALtSTS, 1100 E"'t Fou•tn 91109
lrvlnt C• "7114 Sf.pt 14 ''" Strttl Sent. An• C• 9?70S Tn" DU"""" I\ •O<•Ou• 1•0 l>Y •n Ill Roc,_,,,.1 M c,, ""'"'"II 1'11-C•lllornl1 MO•IG•ll• S.rvlet I• olvlouel
. l'U-Publl\n.d a..,.'°"" O•llY Piiot, Callfo•nl• COfPOfltlOl\I, 2100 Eut W•ll•••n M•QUlre
PuOll•""" UfAnq. "°"'' O••I• P1101 S•pl "· 13 30, °'' 1, 1.,.1 ~t Fourtn St•eet, S.l\te An•. Ce 9?70l I ~'1114 Nu••ll411y M•Qul,.
S.pt lO 0..1 I " 11 "" 431>4 II Tnl• DU>IMU I• condu<t.0 bV. CO• Tn11 •1••-nt -~· '10() '"''" 111• por•llon (O\lnty , .. ,.._ ot Ot•noit <f'•int1 on S.C, P'tlBUC NOTICE
P'UBUC NOTICE l'IC11TIOU$ IUllNfU
NAME STATIMllNT l'ICTITIOU$ IUStHEU I no to11owlnQ P0110n• ere doll\O
CALIFORNIA tomoer 1t 19'1
MORTGAGE SERVICE "111t ll
By R1vmono M Benlord P11bll>M<I Or ·~ ' OI I o •••• P1101
11> Pr .. 1ci.n1 1Sopt lO Oct 1 14 71 I'll 00~1
T P'lt\ st.tement w•' fllfld •HP\ tr•
County Cltr~ Of O•«•Of County on S.P· temoer 2'1, 1'1111 NAME SfATEMlt:NT OU•ln•" '°' Tl\o IQll-lr>Q .,..,_,II dOlng DUii I A PEllft CAf'E, 500 N•WPOrl ruauc NOTICE
nen •• (.enter Ori•• No,.Port Bo•ch, CA 1'171fU -------------111 OIRE(f ELECT ,.ONIC .,~ Publl1r.GO..no-Co.st OellyPllot MARKETIN(; !11 OIRFCT ELEC 111 GE RALO AUOOLPH Stpt .JO.Oct 1 u 11 t .. 1 4JOl><tl
TRONICS, U11l H•""1 R...O l "9une VALENZUELA 121 DORIS JOANN 1-------------
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMllSTATfMENT
Nlouel, CA..,.17 VAlENZVEI> '"' Molt Rlvt r Cl• J AMES '11Nf ENT E.AR LEY .... Fovnt•lnVelley,CA '1IOI
15111 H-Roed l •Qu"" N1g..,.1, CA I Tn,. t>uil"""" c-..c1.o by •n In '1'77 Ol••Ou•I '~Ind wtfe1 Thi• ~In"°'' I\ <o<>OV<'.l•d by en on G••1td R Voltnt"911
dlvlOu11 TM• 1w1•'""'' wn lllld wllh the
J E••~v County C•tr> 01 Ot1nge County on
This stat""'"'' •'-' t1lllJd with u .. Auo 1• lCllll Counly c1 .. 1 nt Or1noe ~ounty ol\
S•Pt u . 1 .. 1 1'1-1
Pu1>u,..,, 0.envo C4M'1 Oelly Piiot,
Ft7tltl S.pl ... ll 30 Oct 1 1 .. 1 _,..I Pubt1'hed Ot•-l""" O•lly Pilot I S.pt t• U. 30 Ott I 1'e1 40w,~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'tlBUC NOOC£
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHfSS
NA.Mil STATEMfNT
ruauc NOTICE T ne tottow1"0 Pf'' "'on~ ., .. doinQ butlneu .,
POP CO. 1•1~ l •Qu"" C.An•"" Ad
lllCTIT10U$ IUSINESS l 1gun• IHiKh C•lltornoA 9~11
NAME STATEMENT I Tom J ... ,I>", IJIB <>••°'"''" Tn• foflowinQ oe-rM>n\ are-doano Sutlt St, Lao,,n• ""'tr ,ii <.Al1totftiA
bu\ll\OS\11 9701
CREOEXO. 33001 r 1 Horbor Bno•t1• A ........ ~ IJIA C.••~
81•0 (o'1•fN~ Celllotnle0•1' ntyr• No S'l LIVun• I!••<"
Fr•na E Bert"". 3051 Yu~on Ctr (.alllotn119?fo}t
cte CO'\ ta Ntew C•hr0tntt •1'26 Thi\ t>us1rws~ '' ond..,t I• o or •
Chrl\1•1 E 8.,1on, .JOSl Yukon igtn~r•I C>Arttw-r ,nip
Clrclo, Costa fNw, C•1llornl• •Z.16 Tom J Ha•I>"•
T "'' tk.l~lrw-n '' conduct.a bW •n In Tn1' st•trfT"etrnt ¥W•' fllr-o """" ,,_ OIVIOU•I Counly Cltd~. ot Or~l'W)ll \.vunty on Sf'P
Cnrl\taol E Derion ltm~' 111 1'181
Tn1s •~tement ... , 111.a w11n tnt
the bus. they could relax as Their story is timely because car pool. added M atyas, is the F•cTmousaus1Hus
th d d d b HAMii STATEMENT
r n• tot10•1no o~r '°"' ere-dol"O
t>ut l,,f'\\ .,
(0vn1y Cten. Of Orenqe County OI\ Sep-Publl$'-O 0t""I)" t•mber Jt 1'111 S•Pt 30, Oct 1 I• JI
F11lltl
o.1\t 0•1ly Piiot 1991 .,, ... 1
passen gers two o f ever y ree M o n ay \A.a'> es1gnate Y occ:as1onal c hance t o s nooze on Th• 10110 .. ,""' ~·""'" 00.nq ou"
weeks and they COijld do their several agencies including the t h e \\ay t o work . which 1s neun
A EROBIC SUPPLY ANO
FITNESS RESEARCH CENTER 2'11 N•*P0'1 81vtl Nowoort 8tKh, CA
•1..0 s hare to ('On serve gas. case traf. trans it djs tnrt as "Share A · something isola ted drivers can s.ni4H~~ .. s:~;,'~; ~~~1~ .. M:~:o
fie con gestion and reduce air Ride -Day,' to promote ride-only daydream about. ce11forn1•~m PHVSIOLOGIC AL
l11ALUAllON5 INC. )19 Al~•r\trHI NtwtiOr1 8t«h CA 91661
Pny\10109101 Ev11u1tlon1 tnc St-L McCllnto<lt,
-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===========;i Rov F J-'"m•no Cot\t~ Mt,. -=~~~==================::;;;i-=-1C•llform• 9?&11
SALE!
H••sh ~~&p~!~~
Soft suede uppers and cushioned insoles. /.vallable 1n col·
fee/rice, copper/brown suede combination
REGULAR 32.00 24 .99
6000 THftU SUN., OCT. 11 ....
IRVINf • 14280 C&Jtvs Drive -552-3130
Mon tnru Fn 1C>-9 s.t 10-6 Sun 11-5
Let our designer create
Beautiful Window Treatments
SA VE 25%-O N F ABRIC
S A VE 20o/o O N L ABOR
Transcendental ~1editario n®
Program
Ushering In The
Age Of Enlighrenmenr
In Th is Generation
Lag . Bch. 494-22 ~8 o .c. 6 n-23 11
l n•1 b\J\ttw\\ t\ c onauc.t.,o bv •n '" dhlduel
Roy F f '"" oo Pre\>tdli"nl Thh ''•tf'Mitf"ll «•\ t11toa _.,., ltw fn., n t tt,,.,...., ... , ht.ct wltf\ the
County (kon:Of 0r•"9f'fouf'ltvt>n~ County Cl~r~ ot O'•hOt COYntr on
t•m~r 18, 1"'1 !><!pt 1• 1""1
,17tU> 1'17tnl
Pu Oii\""" Or~,..,.. ( °"'' !Jft•IV P1lut, PuOl•~ll.-0 <><•nvo C.0.•1 OAll~ Piiot, S.pt JO ()(1 I u 1• 1'11 Hill t i wpt 11o 1l 30 Ort I 1'111 .OS4-11
P'tlBUC NOOC£ P'tl8llC NOTICE
l'l(.TITIOU$ I USINESS FICTITIOUS eUSINESS
NAAIU STATl:MENT NAMf STATIEMllNT
Th• '01tow1no P.r"°'1 ''doing r>utl I T "• followinv P•''°"\ •r• doln9
""' •s I bu\lnf'\' ~' OESIGN STllOIO WFST )J?IA SOB CO NSUllANlS ANO FUN·
W w.,,..., A><•n°" C..n14 An• CA DI NG, "<Oll CE NTER. WEST 9210• TOWE II Su• TE JOOO, 4000 Mee Arthur
CATHY RENEE DAVENPORT f11vd N••rort B•ecn CA'1'60 ----------------------------I 11fl f lCM1'1•no 0ro..p (O\t•M•"' (A OIANNA R RATCIL 1•01
St. Andrew's Presb yterian C hurc h
600 St. Andrewi, R oad
~ewport Beach
Depar t hle nt of M u sic Ministrlet
St. Andrews
BOY CHOI R
for hm·~ in
grade~ thn•t• through '-I'<
rel1ear!lrng Wednesdcl11s Ii f)().fi 45 p m
pretl!(•ded hy 1J hq/11 '!111/P('r <11 5 J/I p m 1
St. Andrews
CHOR ISTERS
fo r girls in
grades three through s ix
rehearsing Wednesdays 3 30.4 3n p m
.,.,. Ort,,.'" 01 IVO S.m• An•, CA 92101
Tnlt Ov\mH.I j' (onc1Ut'f .. t! OJ' •n In W tL• tAM L SMITH, ., Senf\
dlvtdu•• Flower Cour-t N•.,.()Ort Be•c"· CA
C.1ny Oe>-nl'(I• I ,7 .. l
Tn1s ua•e~t wA\ fil«I with th• T'"' C>u11ne'' " tonduc.ted by a
County Cl•t• of Otan~ County on QflMtAI P•ttner\'11p
S.p1 14 t4'1 Ol•nn• R•tcll
F17 .... Put>h•-0--(o.\I Doll• Piiot S.pt 16. U 10 0.-t I 19et 4101 •1
ruauc NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINEU
NAMll STATEMENT
The f0Uowon9 "'"' ~n\ •r• ttal"9
butlMS.~M ROOEWAY INN 14()() s E erostot
SI S•nt• An~ Celllorn•• "7707
C~n & thJAr"O inc .a CalUorn1•
corporat1o<1. 1400 SE 8ros101 <;tr ... 1
S•nta Ana Cal1to1n1A H701
Thls bu.,,,._..~~ .... ronduc tet1 bi; a c 0'
potetlOn Ctien ~ Hueng, In(
Tlll< U•temP"I w•\ ltlfd •1111 lhe
Count, (It'~ of 0••"91 C°"nty on
S•e>t 14 t<iet
F119191 PuOll\""'1 a..,. Coe\I Oetly Piiot,
s.-pt "· 73, lO. 0<1 1 ,.,., eo5~1
l'UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS
NAME ST4Tl:MENT
Tn~ 1,,,1owtr>Q 1'4''""" 11 lloll\Q t>u•• n•u .,,,
CAI lf"ORNIA RUNNERS, JJO)
Lomo••dl l•11un• Hiii>, C•lllornl•
•JSU Ctartnu An, r V•'<lll Jr 1701
• omb•rcu l•ULm• tUll' C•l1for-n1• tJUJ JllllY'W'\ CMn P'•i•<H-nt Hu\ ~•nf'\\ I\ <V'l(.fVCted by •n In·
l hi\ \\.ell'f'l"'lli(IJ'1 .... , t1l"(I wUh t"P dlv•O..,•I
County Clu~ OI O•onOt <.ountv on S.-p I Cle,....e R Fusw ll Jr
ttmber 11 "" FltlMll Th" \111f'<n"nl ... , ttlod ;.,tn tilt
Publl"-<1 Ot~l\Qt '°''' Oelly Pll1>t (O\lnty C.l•r• ol O<a~ County on Sep.. 1 t•"'°"' t9 1W 1 S.pl 13, lO Ocl I .. 1'191 •11111 I 1"111ff'
Puoll~l\e(l O<•noe Co.•t Dally Piiot, P'tllllC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS
HAME STATEMENT
Tl\~ IOhOWtnQ Def\1)(1 ,, dOlno °'"' nt"' ., BRISTOL & MACARTHUR OEN
TAl ASSO<:IATES, :W.10 '> Brl\101 StrHt, S.nle AA•. Calllo•n•• OVQ.1
Ttruo Y•memoto O D S . t .. S 81utbird (.enyo" l 19un• Btlth
C•ll l0tn•• m~1
Thi$ DUslnttl '' conclu< IMI by en ln-
Olvidu•I
ruauc NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUS eUSINEU fllAMf STATEMENT
Tn. lollOWlnQ l>"'t'WI " dotno bu•I
MU°' II & L CUSTOM MAll l Nf SERVICE. 71U Pt•ont11, Apt 11
Cff1• Mtu. CA 'I?•»
RAY P lEKOWICZ. 7115 Pl•on ti•, A~ 11, Colt• Mtu, CA '162'
Tnl\ buil~s I\ <ondUCl.0 by •n Ill
Olvldu•t Rey P.L ... owlct
~pt JO. Ott I, U )t t .. I Oa..t1
PUIUC NOTICE
f'tCTtTtOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
n .. lollow1110 o.r~ I\ llolnQ bu11
ne\\ a\;
TOMS FARMS ANTIOVES, t .. S r 0<on10. c"'w ~ .. c 11uor,.I• '1•76
T ,,.,,..., H e., ""'· 11'llO Htohwo 71 COf'ONI, C1t110<nla '1170
Thi\ ~l..si '1 c oncluCl.O l>y el\ In
dl~lduat
rueuc NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS 8USINllS
NAM• ITAT•MI NT
T ht lotlowlnq per'°"' ore dolno b<i\ln•u •• THE SHAOE SHOP, Ht 010
H••POrl, ~ e.ecn, Callf0f"11• .,..,
II obert W end R •d••n• L. Mortntend, It .. Prim.-, F-te ln
V tllty, C..tKoml1 trnll
"w Mon11te'ICI Thi• <le...,_I wu flied w it\ the
1'1JtU1 -------------Pu1>1t1nro 0.-&~ CCWlst Oelly P1to1.
Sf.pt 13, JO. Oct 1, ll, t'llt 415W1
PUBLIC MOOCE
LEGAL NOTICE
NllWPVltT-MllSA UNtl'tEOKHOOI.. DISTRICT
N.UC• tnvttlflt , .. ,
NOTICE IS HEllEBV GIVEN ti..t
In• Bo•rd of Educa1lon 01 tilt
NtwPOrt·MPW Unlfl•d x'-1 01•1•1<1 of Oren941 eo.i..tv wlll rtctlvt HeleO
bid\ UP lo 2 IS p rn on 1M Utll d•y ol October. 1'111, •I 1114! offi ce ot uld
Scf>Oot Olstrlet lout.a •1 1157 Pt•ct n-
111 Str .. 1. Coot• MPW, C•llforni•. •1
•htch 11,,.,. .. 10 blO\ wllt be publicly
O(Mlled •MO reed for SWEEPER
P'UBllC MOT.:£
FICTITIOUS I USINE U NAME STATEMENT
fn~ tQllOWlr'19 ptt\0"1 I'\ dOinQ bu~t
M,\.\
(A VANAUG~ I AN OS(APE
MAINTEN4N(f_ )O/f .. , yb<OO ..
L.n Co'lta ~. C•hforn1• ~1'16 T1motny J.,,,., C ... n•uo~ JOll
1(11tvbrook~ Ln ro•t~ Mt'" Celllornle 9262'1
Thi\ tM.lilr'tP\\ 1\ ('t1N,•1• ltd nv •n ''' dlvlOuel
T•motPW .J t ••A""tll~Qt"!
Thi\ si..ttmtof\t ._.., t t"'1 #It 1t"' tM
County Clerk OI Or-(o>;nl1 on..,.,.
temo.r 2t t9'1
All 010• are lo lie In 1ccord1nct •111\ Publt"'tcl Or•nQt (ue>I Oe , PolM, (Ol\dltlons, ln•tructlons. •"d s.tpt 13,30,0ct 1 "1~1 41S1~1
Specoflc1ttons wl!lcl\ •rt now on tilt tn
ltw ott1cr of the Putcn•\mQ D lr•clor
of se1d S<noot 01"' Ill 1857 Pl•ctntl• Str•tt. Coot• Me .. C•lllor,,le 91627
ruauc NOncE
A Pertonnenct Bond mo be ,. l'ICTIT IOUS I UStNESS QUtrtd •1 ttw d•K••l-of ,,,. Ol•troct NAME ST4TEMENT
HO B•OOtr mey w ltndr•w "'' Bid for r f\e fOllO'tllrlnQ prf'rs.of' I\ 001nQ bJ\ • IM"Od oo 10<"\y I••• 1•51 dey1 •Htr ,_U •t
tllt d•t• Wt lo• tnr openlr>Q tnor~f HAUT q vs IR A 01 ... c. ((IM
l ho Board ol Education of tn• PANY 1951 NtwPOrt llt•d Co\1•
NtwPOrt·MeW Unlll•d Sctlool Ol>trlct I Mo e, C•lllom•a '7"71
tt\ervrs ltw right to rtt~t •n't' or 111 Atvtn S..ntm.,tr IOI ( "'•' •IC:J R•v
Bid• 1nd no1 necuwroly ac<ei>t the L•Oul\I Be.etn C"•torn1, 4~17
tow•st 8 1d t no to w•1vr •nv In Tn1' t>.J\1,,,.,.-'' t onouctf'rt h" •n ,..
form•IUy or trtf'QUl•rth •n •nv B•CI ,. dlVtdU•I
l f'•v•O Alvin ~rtfT '"' NEWPORl ·MESA UNIFIED fn11 S1etrm ... 1 .... 111"'1 ... th In•
SCHOOL DISTRICT ol County (.~"' Of O•-lwntv on S•D
Or-County Cl tltornl• tembe• ll, 11111
Oorotlly H•roo rllhtr, (P M
Purchu lr>Q Otrt<tO• I fl41 7M>J217 OATEO. Sept ,. 1'111
Pu1>ll1hed Or-CCWl\I Oetly Pilot, Sept lO Oct 1 1'111 001_.t
ruauc NOnt£
l'ICTITtOUI I USINIU NAMll STATEMENT Tne lollowlng perM1n\ .,.. dOll\Q
t>uttne\s as
NEWPORT MESA AUOIOLOGY ANO HEARING AIO CENTER. 171•
Orenqe A_,.,., Suite F, Cost• Mewo,
CA t2•JI
HOWARO T MANGO, M EO , CLINICAL AV OIOlOGIST, 701'1
Marll\• ~. Hu<\llnQIOft 8eKh. CA ., ...
O'EBRA R MANGO, 20 .. 1 Merln• L•M, HUfttlnqlon 8e.acl\, CA.,... Thia _,,,..., 1, ·--by en fn. dlvlou11.
Howerd T M41nvo
Thi• 11411-1 ..,., 1111<1 •llh the
county Cl•rk of Or1noe Countv on
S•PI 14, 1 .. 1 ,,,,.,..
Pul>lllNd Orenoe Cou1 Delly Piiot.
S.ot "· »,JO, Oct I, 1 .. 1 .OU.al
PUIUC NOllCE
FtllltU
Publl•ne<I Or1noo (Nll Da11v Pilot,
S.pt 1J 30, Ott I I• IQfl 11<.& ~I
P'tlBllC NOTICE
NOTICE TO COHTRACTOllS CAlLIHG l'OR llDS StMol Oostrott NFWPORT MESA
UNIFIEOSCHOOI 01\T RICT 810 De.all.... , IS 0 CIOO pm o•
1114! 1'1n dey C)f 0<101>"• 1'191
Pl•co Of B•d Rt<O·P1 1157 Pl,.ct nli•
St (011A~W CA"1'71
Prot•<t 10,.n11f1, •tton Name
REPLACE CHllLfO A. HOT w,o.lER
PIPING AT CORONA OEl MA R HIGH SCHOOL
Pl•Ct PIM'I• e,. o<1 lllt IUI Placon
ti• St CO!lt• fN"' CA 97t11 1no 2 .. 5 Bur SI , <:Ml•~"' CA '161• NOTICE IS HEA(!IV GIVEN ti..t
1ne •bel••~Nt'nl'<I S<'-I Olitrl<t of
0•1nve County, C•llto•nla •<11"9 Oy
•nd throu9n 111 Go•un1ng Bo••d. htrt l n •••~, ref•rff'd lo ·~ "OISTRICT," will re<l<tve up to, DUI
not t•ttr thlM"f ow .tbove~,t•tect time,
w•l•d b161 lor 1r. •ward OI •contract tor tn• .oo .. proj..:t
Old• si..11 be re<t••t<I II\ ll'M pt•o 1oenllf1tc1 e1>ow end snail oe -noo
• .,., 11Ul>l1<ty ,..,, ·-Ill ,,,. -... 1l•l.cl time -PIKt Tner• will lie• N/A <k~lt r91111t...t tor ucll Ht ol bid document• to
HMS14J guerenlee tr. ,..turn In QOOcl conclltlon
FICTITIOUS aUSINIS.S within N/A Gall• alt•r t!W bid -nln9
HAMii STATl:Ml:NT d•I•
l ne lo11Qwlf19 1>9'"'"' •rt dolno E•cn Old must contorm eftd ... b<nlneuu ••soonslve to the tOftlra<t OO<umeno
BMG ,..,,oleum Pen,..rs .ooo E•cll lllO oNoll 119 eccompenleo by
MeArtnur &ouleverd, Pffwl!Of'I BHCll t,,. M<U<'lty •ofHTI>CI to in'"" contr.ct
'1660 CIOCurnem• -b'I the ll•t °' P•~ BunMOos(;uy.11• An ln•Ulm..,t wb<ontrKIOf'L Group, 4000 MacArt,.ur Bowl•v•rd, The DISTRICT , ... ,.,.,.tr.. riont to
Newport &eech, C.llfOf'nl• tlMO ttle<t •"Y or •II Dkls or to welw any Thi• bUtll\OU 11 condUCl•d by • lrr•gul•rltlfl Of' lnfonn•lltl•• 111 el\y
tlmlted pert,.."l\lp olos or In tlle l>ldellf\O
Ileen -Ga'1'9tt•. M 1 .. vest,,,..,t The OtSTRICT ""' GC>lelMC! '""" Group J. Mk-' -· A Gener•I lh• Olr•clor ol !>.p<ortmef'll of In· P•rtner Cluttrtet R .. •tlons tht 9'tM<•I p,.v•fl Tnls 11111-t .... lltod Wltll Ille lnq rete Of pe• diem waoet In t,,.
COUl\IY Clenl of Ot-County on S.p-loulll'I'( In wtolcn 11\h -It Is to 119
temb9r 16, 1"1 perfo•nt.cl 10< eecn <••ft or Wiii Of
l'tl'tnJ wor-m•n l1"ded to U Kute ttw cvn
Publlthed Or•l9 Coett O•llY Piiot tr•ct. T,,.... ••tH .,, on flte •I itw
S.ot 23,JO,Oct. 7, u . 1 .. 1 ots.ei DISTRICT office loul•d •t ''" a m u s ica l. recreational. s piritual and
socia l minis try lo boys and girls" Tiii\ 11.tt.......,,t wH 111.0 wl\n tn. Coullly C .. ra .. Of•"llO County °" -------------Pl•centla SI., Coste Mew, CA m21
Th is month only "IUC •TV'( Cootn may be -•l,.o °"' r-'. A
Pt"717 111111 COPY of !NM rettt "'-" toe po~ el
1'111UI Pu&ll-Or9f\Ot CO*fl O.lly "''°'-t-------------tne too alt.
Countr Cl•<I< of noe Counrv on
S.Ot 71, '"''
"'UQ•lft ,t 1'111
Choose from thousand$ of fashion fabrics Satins
sheers. textures. Lei our de9igners help you create unl-
qu• window treatments that reflect your style and taste.
All wilt be expertly C\Jltom made and lflStalted on
time at prices to make you very happy. Custom rods end
Installation 11 regular prlOM.
Come tee whtt elegance we can g ive you within
your budget. But hurry ... Thi• month Wiii soon be gone
nettle cReek . H 0"'
St Andrew's Music Ministry
also includes
T HE CAROL CHOIR
for boys and girls
in grades one and two
rehearsing Wednesdays 3 3Q-4·3Q pm
F'or furthef ln!ormution contact
St. Andrew's Music Office at 631-3821
or Church Office 631-2880
.,
Pul>llM*S Or•nvo Cont Delly Pltol, s.c.t. 1•, 71. JO, <>ct 1. 1 .. 1 ..,....,, Tile fOrtODlnQ acheclui• l1f pet dleftl S.ot. 23, 30, Oct. I, 14, 1'111 411 ... I FICTITIOUS I UllMl lS ••99• Is -upon • _ .. "'9 M'; of
PUIUC MGTtl
'ICTITIOUS eUSINllSS .. AM. n ATIMllNT Tr•• fon-1rwa perMfl' •re 11o11111
MIMHU.
.I .It 't "RrAltMS & AC CISSORIES, ll01t f'rlmt. H.-.111\Qton
I H<ll, C•UIOf11le .,.4'
Jam•s N R•ymona 11, 1107t ,rlmt, Huntl1'qlon e..t<ll, Call,,,,nl• ..... Tllll llUllMU ll <~i..t •y M lfl
tlh•leluel
J~fll .. 9YmeNll Tillt ~ _, Ill~ wltll IN
COwnty ClWll t( OrMttt Cowr<ty "" lttlo Mll\IMr 1&, ,_, '"" .. ,llOllllMd Ol'tfttll tae.i O•llY 1'1161., ~. n.a.0tt r, 1.a. t"1 ••~•
\
"'auc NOntE
tJIC'flTIOUS 8UllNllS fllAMl ITAHMaNT
TIM lo0-'"9 .,.,_. It 1101nt 111111-
MU H
wooov~ A Ll~NMENT. 7'7
OH•r Sl...-t, COJI• IMM, Cell~flle nt'6 w1111•m Earl "-of. t~ o ... ,...
lllt. Hvnll1'!9ton H°'"*''• C.llfONIMI Tiii• ~a I\ <endllcltd 111 All lft.
dlY1411HI
WIHlem C:llfl , ...
""'' *'-""*'' -fll ...... -eoi.111, C*" .. °' .... ClMltY .11 ...
""'"'' tl, ,., .,m.,.
l"llDll"'-0 Of ... Cont Dally f'U.., a...t U,JO,~ 1, 14, ttet 41-..i
NAME STATI MI NT el9hl 111 "°""5, Tiie ra1• tor Mt!My
The fotlowlnv penons are ctoln9 •n<l o,,.r11m. wor11 tNlll .,. 11t ;,.st
blltlneuu. 11-•llCI-"-"
OHL PltOPl!RTll.S, Ottt 1111\ ltJfltllllem.ndewry-ttleCOH StrMt, Suitt 101, 'TUtttn, Call._.., TltACTOtt to -"'9 (.mlt<t h
..,._ ••er"49, ...a Wl*I '"'' woe~ JoM It. a.I.....-, W 0.--Hiii .._, Nrn. '11 119y Nt lea .._. ttw
une, ..,,..._."'· ~"°""'.., Mid tllklflM '""' • ... ._.llllMI l .~.1..r.ei.r. U7~eft99Hlll une, ttt1 ... 'IM ltr .,.,.. 1., * •llK ..
ANllMllTI. c.tltol'tlll ._, "'9 t M "ec:t. •
J.iwi '" $(111111,.. 11t er..,.. kll ... ...._ me'I """*-Ille •.., UM, AMN!m. Cellfwnie tmt a ,_,,..of~"' CUI .._.. ~ Wllttr T. Slflll, MU .. tttfl tNcll•w .. .......-. ........
f'IM ......... Ot--.c;.i ..... tMS A,.""'911t ........ •.., .. lf,... Tlllt llWI-• Is <~ttf .., • ....., wfll . ~ ,,._ .. ._._,. ..... r•I ,..,.,.,.. u.." ._c-.i Tiii..,....,.
.,,.,.,,. ,., .. .., IMll .. ]j\ .. "'"" ...... Ill
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j
SDG&E earnings up 8%
But $1.65 per share figure is down 7 cents from 1980
BRIEFS
San 01e10 GH & Electric an-
nounced earnings of $1 6~ " ~hare for the 12·month period
ended Aug. 31. The earnings re·
port showed an 8 cent gain ov4!r
lbe $1.57 earned for the 12-month
period ended July 31, but a 7
cent decrease from the $1.72 a
share earned In the 12 months ··
endetJ Aug. 31, 1980. Earnings
for the last 12-month period
were depressed by an oil ex·
cha nge reserve totaling 57 cents
a s h a re. SDG&E released its
earnings In connection with fll.
ing a r egistration stateme nt
with the Securities & Exchange
Commission for the sale of 1.3
million shares of preference
stock.
The board or directors of
£t:CO Inc., Santa Ana, declared
a quarterly cash dividend of 7
cents a s hare, representing a 17
percent increase over the pre-
vious rate of 6 cents a share . The
dividend Is payable Dec. 1 to
shareholders of record Nov 16,
a n d is the 32nd consecutive
quarterly cash dividend paid by
the company .
mtinugc.'CI )Ointly by Daniel In
t e rnutional , a s ubsidiary of
f'luor Corp., and by Ralph M r arsons, hai; become oper;i
t1onal. The JOIOl venture or
Daniel and Parsons was formed
in 1976 to perform construction
m a nagement services for the
project. working with lntema
lional Airport Projects, an arm
of the Saudi Arabian Ministry of
Defense and Aviation.
Newport Beach-base d Com·
prehenslve Care Corp. 's board
of director s h as approved a
second quarter dividend of 4
centi; a i;hare payable Nov. 19 lo
s hareholders of record Oct. 30.
•
Saudi Arabia's new King Ab·
dulaziz Airport, a multibillion-
d o 11 a r constr1,1ction effort
The final 30 ocean front homesites,
mos t with unobstructed whitewater
views. A walled a1nd gated private
residential communit y in San
Clemente. Private beach and private
Swim and Tennis Club.
From
$250,000
I nl1•rt•st 011/y /tmmcm).! m•111/11b/t•
(714) 498-2830 or (213) 277-94 70.
Only
Answer Page
offers you
all this:
• Calllorn1a s largest paging agent
• Inexpensive •• less than 75C a day
• Wide-area coverage ·· 15.000 SQuare miles
• A lo cat ton near you, plus lleld representatives at your
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• Free unlimited beeptng. tree delivery and free lull
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• Quantity discounts
Keep tn touch with hOme. ott1ce. answering service.
school. kids . babysitter. etc Save time. gas and money
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@). R~Sl\IER PRBE
731 -7777 • 953-5782
Callloll lree 1·800·252·9161 Or call 1nlorrnat1011 lor the
Answer Page office nearest you
COU.~I 90f!IMll
-.c-.... _ -·-,., ... , o.i. c-$411.TO Sllw« Cl. lt.47
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COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS
SERVICES AVAILABL£:
0 Answerin g service
0 Quote prices
0 M•ke e ppolntmenta
0 Letters •nd typing
0 Word processing
0 24 l'lour d1c 1a t1on ~
Speclallzlng In:
0 Confe renc e room•
0 Payroll
0 Mall llS18
0 Tetu
0 F•c s tmlle
0 Paging
Cen1fled tervlce c a ll d lapatel'llng. Ofder laklpg
•nd Ctedlt cnec klng
An swer Netwo rk 1'1811 Solution. Call
lliSWEA NETWaAK
953·1234
CONSTRUCTION
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK.
• Residential
•Commercial Buildings: Takeout
Commianent required along with leases.
• Land Loons up to one year 50% appraisal.
CONTACT:
• Jeff Johruon
South Orange County Irvine
714 1851-4050
• Tom Wilcher
North OranKt! County/ Riverside County
7141851-41 26
• John HcrshfelJ
San Diego County
7 14 299-9330
Herit~e ~?~~~ (::)
Auuwn~ lnsurl..J IO $1lX\LX\1
l OUAl llOUSlllC LENDER
LEASE FACTOR ON
LUXURY LEAS ES
1982 MARK VI,
LINCOLN TOWN CAR
CONTINENTAL. CALL NOW
OFFER IS LIMITED
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7. t 98 1 B'S
8AN,.laLD MOLOlll
Banfi.eld heads Martin
Peter E.H. Banfield has ~en
named president of Martin Avia·
lion Inc., one of the largest air
craft cha rter , sales and service
centers an Southern California
The company as located al John
Wayne /Or ange County Airport
Ban(lel(i lives in Irvine.
Bechtel Vice Prns1dent John
V. Morowski of lrvme has been
elected a director of Bechtel's
three principal oPt?ra tmg com
panies Bechtel Power Corp .
Bechtel Petroleum Inc. and
Bechtel Civil & Minerals Inc He
will continue to serve as general
manager of t he Los Angeles
Power Div1saon
Richard M . Holder has been
named comptroller of ITT Can·
mon ElectriC'·North America in
F'ountain Valley H e will
supt-rv1se financial operations
for 111' Cannon units m Foun-
tain Valley. Pomona and Santa
Ana , and Phoenix, Ariz , und
Whilby, Ontario Hold er lives m
M iss1on Vie JO
L. Donald Damato has been
appointed Vil'(.> pr esident and
manager of Toronto Dominion
Bank of California's O range
County office m Irvi ne That of.
f1 ce will move into permanent
quarters at the l'Orner of Mam
and Red llill streets. near tht•
ON THE JOB
San Diego F'rcewuy and J ohn
Wayne Airport, in Novem ber.
Richard L. Erb has been
n;,med vice president and
general manager of the Dis·
neyland llotel In his new posi
tion. Erb will be respons1bk for
the 60 ;icre l'Ompl1:x which in·
dutles more than 1,121 guest
room:-. and J50,000 square feel of
c·on vt•ntion fa<'illtics
Lee S. Ovitt Ill has Joined
I ll'ritagc Hank in Anaheim as
v1t·e prbidenl controll er. Ovitt
::.pcnl 12 yCCtt's at First National
Bank uf Orange County. and
mC1st r'l'l'ently served as vice
prcsidl•nt of financial planning
a nd analysis for llome Bank •
David l.. Sprague, former
ma rkellng manager ror the
Electronics and Space Division
of Emerson Electric Co . has
joined Trvine·based Linear
Instruments Corp as national
::.a ll's managcr
John X. Shapiro has been ap
pointed senior vice president of
Kra co Ente rprises Inc .
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
:::~1:0 BevMgt BlllC>Co BlrdSon Blrtcllr Blyvoor Bonen1 BrwTOIT1 Bucki.-Buflol\ ~~rtt.~
CPT s C•IW1Sv C•nreOH Cap En
C"OS• ' CplnAr II
CereCp CnVtPS C~rAlv CllrtnS i ChrtHOu • CllmLe. ChuUll
Chul>C> Clrllco
CiltSoG• ClltUIA
MUTUAL FUND
Compton. a manufacturer of
uuto sowtd and a uto accessories
Uc lives in Newport Beach
Vincent .P. Lomonaco. vice
pres adeot of operations of
Anaheim·based Allee Corp., has
been elected to the company•s
board of directors. He rills a
vacancy created by the resigna·
t1on of Willis R. Threlkeld .
treas urer a nd l'Ontroller. on
Sept 11
Stt-ven W. Miller has been ap
po111ted upplications en gineer
for Costa Mesa-based Staco
l'owennet1cs Inc. In his new
pus1t1on. Miller will work with
customers in the selection of
Staco's Lighting Power Reduc
tor for the control and reduction
of operational e ne rgy costs for
both fluorescent and high in·
tensity d1scfl arge 1 HID J la mps.
Ann Yuhas has been elected
vres 1dent o f the Technical
Sen aces Div1 s 1on of Irvi ne·
based Falcon Grou p Inc. In ad·
dilion she as executive vice
pre:-.1dent a nd treasure r o f
tht> parent c:ompany
Linda Roberts has been as·
..,,gned to Wells Fargo Bank's
Westm1n::.ter office as assistant
man ager-operations
N•,.... York A\!! Ken<1I WI Alla DWI KMSlnd Coeur s WlnOM 0 YubeA \ SlvKlng OHS.Cur Blocl un Accu un ~":(G~ g BlotchA NulEn un NutEn ChllOPI Synlch un
Permflr RooV111 Slo.nTec
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NEW YORK IAPI Oivld 7.13 2 "I LI Mun 6 '1 Nl lJonus 9 S1 Nl NouT ll 03 NL lnvH I t '3 t 43 S1rel Giii 21 " NL Tiit IOllowlng QUO> Hllnc 10 09 10 • Purlln • 11 NL John HancoO. N•I Avie 9 12 NL Opln 111'1 ll U SunGrth t" 10.10 tellons, :;:::11.a by Mont II I.. 9 .. Thrllt I.. Nl Bond 11 .. .,,,. Nellnd ,. °' N T .. E• IS .s ,. .Q T •• Mgct 13 SI "13 t ... N•ll "UO<I-NI WS l jO .,. Trend 21 .. Nl Grwlll 100910t 7 NelS.cur1t!H Vht• u .. ,, ... TmpGlb 21.«> .... •llon of S.CUrlt~ h Fre I II a 10 ~ln•nciel Prog Belen l ,ll '·'° B•l•n •JI 10.1 Vono 11.JS 12,..0 T1T1pl Gt 1 11 1 ... Oulerl, Inc., u e Cnt Slls 11 ~ 12 50 Oyn1 6 61 NL Tu Es I 01 1.17 Bond 7 tS J 11 Ouuer '.M .Q NL Tmpl W 11 " 19.SS Ille prices •1 ... le.. Cllert FO II .. 10 4J lnOU\I J •S NL Kaulmn 1" Nl OivlO •II s 2S Relnbw J S4 NL Trns Ceo • '° '·•1 !':.~ l\e~ur= Chp Olr 111' NL lncom 6 50 Nl K~:i:,e,:, Funcb613 l.ll Gr•th 1 JI 1 ts Aever• 1 5' NL Trns Inv 1 )4 1.,.
..,10 1~1 .,..,t CC~onun1."11 F·'J!."6 NL Fs01 ~~v:spl""i•'• 13 _ Grow , ., IO.ll Pr•ld s.w 6.111 Seltco Stcur. Nl TTrud•~ ~q 10 .s 11.w val .. 1 or boual>t ~ -~• ·~ ~ .. ., • Inc om S .S 6.09 Eqult 10 O , .-d 10 • NL (O lue pl~ sales GFurnd•I~ 101 ~ 111 ?! GOrl'.,.c1o11 •1 2: t1 •,.1 H1n111'!,ldd 111 eo10 111 >t13 Slo<k I 9S t .•S Grwlh IS 20 NL Tw"C Gt 11 t0 NL I n ~ u "" r Tu E• •.'3 1.0S lnco 10 SI NL TwnC Sel 1J.41 NL tllu~ ~!.. HI Yid 6 U • 11 lncom • 03 6 ff Mun B 6 16 6.41 Falrfla 6" 1 S3 StPeul 1""'"1 USAA Gt 11 06 NL
I -• lncom S '3 6 U NelRet • 91 1 SI Opln 12 '3 13 IO NELlle Fune!. Cepll 13 16 u 00 USAA Inc 9.. NL :~o~n F ti.t s NL Ooln t'7 10 SI Opln •to I 11 Su mm I .. «> 11:'2 Equtt 11 l3 It '1 Grwth ll.U 1' 41 Uni A<eu _,,811 AOV 1J U NL Tu MQ 1'.11 1116 Tu Ea 6 IJ \,1' TKll 11 SI 11... Grwtll Un 11 09 Specl 11 • NL Unit MU1 UMvell 13.. Nl Colu Glh 10 It Nl 44 WIEQ I 16 I., Toi RI II,. 13.09 lr>eom • 11 10 OI S<udder Funds. Alulur• IJ 1' NL Cwllll AB I 10 I 19 &4 Well 1111 Nl Key\ION Mau All Eq 19.16 20.ll Com SI 11.11 AIM F-. Cwllll co 1 SS 1 .. FnO Gth 4.97 s •3 Cus 81 1ue 13.14 THEk S.23 s.. Devel 4'1.93 Cv Vld 13 n 1'.41 Comp 80 1' ~ 9 C» Founders G-... Cul BJ IS 13 1l S4 NeutMroer &.rm Ir>< om ' .. EdMln 12 11' ll 11 Comp Fd I" t 67 Grwlll I U Nl Cus 84 • tO 111 Enrgy 11.» Nl Intl Fd 1617
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Fd In 7·., I .. Cons111u unevell Opllon S '2 S .. Lul11111on ~p NlcllOle 11.26 NL Ultra 7 U
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NL Con Inc • 30 10.•• NL Flduc 22.16 2U2 Nl HI lllC 11 a 12,44 lncom l.U •O :.~ {t1u~l1 U:! ~:~
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N Y E COMPO ITE T RANS ACTION
0\IOTATIO'-"NCLUOI TaAOUOM •Ml NIW YOallt, MIOWIU, , .. (.,IC l'IW 100011. OIUOH ANO CllftlN'IUI lTOC•
• •ct1a.t1011u10 1 1 "'D•TIO I\', ... 111a•o ••o llllUINl f ~ '1 Why cereal
costs so much
lo 1950, there were 26 brands of ready-to eat
cereal on the market By 1973 there were 79 different
brands
In 1954, the l4p eight cereal brands accounted for
57 percent of the" total market. By 1964 the top eight
held only 47 percent or the market. Today they have a
htUe more than one-third.
<;om flakes once represented more than SO per-
cent or the dry cereal business. lts s hare todllY is leas
than 10 percent.
Today, there's probably no cereal brand lhitt can
claim more than 6 percent of the total market.
Looking at that
array o( rigures, an
unins truc t e d o b ·
serv r might draw
the conclusion that
this is an industry
where competition
has flowered. Top
brands have lost
lllTll lllllllTZ
their market power Concentration is far weaker to·
day than it was yes terday.
But things are not always what they seem. Those
figures are deceptive because they do nol show that
while brands have indeed proliferated, the number of
producers has not Six companies make virtually all
the drY cereal we eat. They are : Kellogg, General
Mills (the Big G Line). General Foods (Post), Quaker
Oats (Cap'n Crunch. 100 percent Natural), Nabisco
!Shredded Wheat ) and Ralston Purina <ChexJ And
three -Kellogg, Gene ral Mills and General Foods -
do the lion's share or the business. about 80 percent.
Now that high degree of producer concentration
bothered the antitrust lawyers at the Federal Trade
Commission. In 1972. they brought an antitrust action
!leeking to break up the big cereal makers. The FTC
a ll eged that we were all paying too much for our
breakfast cereals because of the monopoly power ex-
erted by these companies.
The FTC, in its complaint. proposed that Kellogg
be eviscerated by taking away a bunch or its brands
and setting up three new companies. The FTC asked
that General Mills and General Foods also be re·
quired to yield some or their brands to a couple of
newly formed companies. Out of the lhree companies
would come eight.
FTC's idea was that the more companies there
are. the more competition there will be, which is pre-
sumably good for the cereal eaters.
But lhe thing is, you can't just tell companies
they control too much of the market a nd have to slim
down. It's usually incumbent on a government agen-
cy to demonstrate that the companies reached this
s tage by collus ion, conspi racy or some other illegal way
Did the complaint charge that the companies
conspired together to drive competitors out of the in· dustry? No.
There was no proof or any of this. The FTC's ac-
tion was based on the novel theory that the cereal ~a k ers. without ever getting together to plot. acted
in s uch a manner for example. by bringing out all t~ose new brandl> that the "eCCect.s of <their) prac·
ttces are actually the same as if they had engaged in a conspiracy " •
That's certatnly a novel theory. It's tantamount
to saying, "You may not have engaged in a con·
sp1racy but what you h ave done is the same as what
you would have done if you had indeed conspired."
Last month AJvin L. Berman. an administrative law
Judge., rule~ that the FTC had no grounds for bring.
ing this actton. and he recommended that tl be dis-missed.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORl(tAPI Flnel Dow JonH .. II' •or Tuudey. Oc1 •
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
. ~. -t
• 2"' ., .. . ,.,. ... • 2•. '•
NEW YORI( (AP) -Tiie followln9 llsl lllOWS ,,.. New Yorll Sto<k E\ch•ft9P JIO<U eno werunts 11\et l\evt 90f'e uo
IN most end "°"'" lhe most 1>.ned on perc•nt of ,.,_,. rtoerdlH• of vo1um<1 lo< T.,.Mle,.. ..::. •:.r'!'no ~~'?.:':,:~~·.~~~ Olfferenc~ .,.._ \M Pfevio..s <•~•no P1ltten<IT~v'1pr c•. Ul"S
I Sntl'~~~. 1..as:,"' .~i. UpP<1iu
2 Fllmwv SOii! •'-• 1" Up st 1 ! ~"W~~·.. )~ ... : ~~ 8: ~·~ S Olnot Inc 13V. t~ Up 1•. t ' NwstEnoy • 11'11 • ,~ Up 13.1
1 ""•n Affrcll '"" + ~ Up t3C I 8..-gutl 8 St' • \lo Up ti t t Gooper Lei> lol"r • l"r Up 11.3 IO HkleMng • IJV, • 11,4 Uo tO ' 11 tfabtttl 111< ~ + 1¥> Up 9.9 12 OomtM g I 211.-+ 1'~ Up 'I 13 St l>lrit •2'1> • 3~ Up 9 I t• NwttEng l Ill pl 21 + 1-. Up ' I Is P.trlc11P1' ....... ,.,, Up 9 1 • Armtl ltul> .UV, • 2~ UD I t DOWNS Ne,.,. Lal CllO 1 lntlHerv S.7'clf 1' -2~ I OkltGE IJf • -~ J EICO<"Cp ._,. -t
t LUOrlrol I 21"° Ult S PllEI t,Slpl N -S • l'4•11ce1Coro n¥1 -'~ 1 Intl Htn 9Yt -._
• Moc1111cms-,. ..... --.
' Atl"Cll 30f JD0 UV. :T ~":rcl: ,::: = ~ 11 EAL wlO J~ -V. ,, i!r•11IC0 n 17~ IV. 14 illnd SIYt -)Ill 1S .UT•rm 7¥1 v, I• A'°L Cp 4 -Iii 11 AXX Q It -I
GOLD COINS
Pel.
Off 11.1
Ofl II I °" 'J Ott 1.0
Off 1A Oil 7,J Oii 7.J OH 1.1 Ott •• Ott •.• Off ,,,
Off ..,
Ott •.s Off ••• Ofl .. ,
Ott s.•
011 s,•
MEW Y()ltl( IAI") -PncM l8tl ,,,,.,,_., ...... c--.~""""rlde't'•~•.
·~ 1 tny6L, $4Jt.00,8"Q,Cll. ........... , t...., .... ..ut.oe .... .., .•• ....._JI,.-., l.J....., N.. UM.a, ... .......... ,-. ... v.r .... ........
S..WC.! Dellt4"elWll
~... ...,
JTOCl<S 0 H low C._ CM
10 Ind rsf.., 11'r.1 W 7• IS.1• J ol 10 Tm ~, •• Jn OI i.J II ll7 0) t SJ
IS Ull 103 1' 104 t1 t01.0 103 tt • 0 ts
•S Slk "7 St loll~ J>J t 7 33& 91 I II lndul l H9,IOO Tr•n 917,600
Utlls ..-.ooo U Slk UJUOO
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( tAPI Oc1 6 Pr.v
TGCUY d•y Mv•nuo ... 1031
C>.<lin.cl 7'16 s.c• Unchtnged Jl9 3311
Tot•I IHUH tlSJ '"3 Ntw highs ' 13 New lo•s JI 31
WHAi .... HOO
NEW VOAIC IAPI Oc1 4
PrfY
Tod•y d~h AOVencH! J08 0.CllMO ,., 12l v:.~·r,r..:. 117 tit IS2 719 N•w hight • 6 New tow' 10 ,.
METALS T-•Y
c~•1-cenls•POUnd, u.s ou u ....
lion•
U M -..2unU•-"
Zlfl< tt•t. cents• PQllrld. o.11wrec1
Tia U ~ Metels W-c-lt• 11>
AtolM-7.-.0 CMll • ~. N V -rcvry $02.00 .,., f ••••
l"i.tlttwft lolCM 00 lnlV Ot . N Y
SILVER r ... ~.,
HendyAH•rm ... St.:l!Pffll"DyoYnu
GOLD OUOTATIONS
•~r ... _....,......._
Selk..-~llOidP'IUI T "'"""'
~· mornlno "•'119 '°4 . .,, off '6•
SYMBOLS
l
---..-
TH£
F"MILY
CIBCt8
by Bil Keane
•
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VI P)
I
"Mommy, what did I do lost Thursday?" "You're not .kidding me, Ajax. You're reading It
upside down."
'9:\R'9:\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE '9E:\ACE Hank Ketchum
"Your timing Is way off!"
"Close 11! Theres a draft!" "There's N...WAYS a
draft in there!"
Jl'D6E PARKER
'AVALAHCHE' 15 A HIC:>H-RANDALL. FORM5.0NE WHERE'D
OV06£T PICTURE, LINDA MAY.' JT'5 AN OF THE REAl~AT50f THEYOtc;
OPPORTUNITY THAT FEW ACTRE55£6 HAVE. THE THEATRE HIM UP?
LET AL.ONE ONE WHO H~ AND 6CREfN'
JU5T TURNED Et6 HTEEN'
t;.\R•·1•:1,0
ACROSS 53 Glvet ald UNITED Felture Syndicate
1 "Nu1tl" 57 Riot: Tuesday's Puzzte SoNed 1 2 3 4
5 TV perta 2 WO<ds
10 Arrtwd 61 Young enlmll 14
14 J81 -62 Awsy.
15 lnnef 2 WO<d•
18 SmeMy CM Preeege
17 PtleM I: 65 Automaton
2 words 68 '*°b'a
19 e.lted brothef
20 More MPld 67 Seegulls
21 lnttllled: 68 Jugs
2 wordl 89 Good thing I
23 Mf. Flynn
25 •oon: Suff. DOWN
2t Bird
29 Betolltn ' Catlrlmln
3' Currier llfld 2 Int• -
3 Mlf'lnert
35 ...... F«ller 4 Relltl'M 24 fooUlelllr 43 Alotmlnta
371.ab..... 5 T~ 29 Sexy phOtO 45 Acted~
38Y~ 8MI'* 27~ 47Compleee
dlty l*legt Pfovtnol 49 a.in probtlm
3t Virginia -7 One --21 ........ 52 PetfOll
41 o.ttoy time 30 Nedi pett 5S ,.......
42 &~ t 0.... 31 QlsuO 54 Vlrioul
44 IMC word I T.....i 32 Gt., lf'9dl U Algolal
45 MulfwOOm 10 .._. r1gM 33 ~ M Rm
4e Rote &owl 11 Dntg e.g. M "--
.,.. 12 FtenCtl.. M ao,.t
.. L4flllr ta HIMfl ........
IO 11111111 1t.... ~ •
,, llllpor: PN(. 22 ~ 40 a....
by Harold Le Doux
1 THOUGH1' YOO A6KE'7 ME.
10 OINNE.R
by Jim Davis
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7, 1981 81
PMNl:TS
11 ACE SCHOO. FOR JlJ5T TMINK .. A SCHOOL
61F'TED CHILDREN~~. -rnAT 61VES '1XJ ~NTS !
HOW ASOOT THAT, CHOCK ? l'M GONNA APPLY!
Tl'MBLEttEEDS
:\A~C\'
SLUGGO, I BAKED
A PIE--·COME
OVER
GORDO
•T~K \' "l:\KER BEt\ :\
~ ~ EXl~ltNC.E AS A L.JVlf¥:1 ~15M OAAW~"t>ACl.D6E I
1 FIND ~5EL.f PL..A60E.D wm-1 DOOBi6 AND QO£STION5
A80UT fHE fVlEANIN& OF ~
EXl6TENC.E .
~ IC-1
BRABBLE
, llOll> A~ 'iOI) ct:)l,.U, I~ O~
~lfl E£0Nc>M1CS CLASS. .,,...,lr:ll.L,,
OH, BOY
FOR 8£TTEROR FOa WORIE
M'{ f AMIL'{ EAT LlKE
t'<ING·S-Wt·\\\ .. E. I
FINISH OffTHE
SCRAPS ~
--------,
A~e 't'oo suee 'rt>lJtt
READIN6 1lW Rl~T?
by Charles M. Schulz
TME FIRSTTMIN6S l1M
60HNA A5K FOR A~E
SOME NEW SKATES ANO
MA'18E. A PAAT SOARD ...
by Tom K Ryan
by Jef I MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
I COULDN1T FIND A RECIPE FOR
APPLE PIE SO I MADE ONE UP
by Gus Amela
by Tom Bat1uk
AL..k. 1 K~ I GUS ' /S fHAI
SINCE: 400 St6NED UP RlR /HAT
1FAIVlOU~ PHIL.050PHER5 STOW-FJ,>-mAIL.WJ~/ lX)U'Uf ~LJ..<,>
BEEN A PAIN !
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
by Lynn Johnston
YER\-\ , BlJT WHRT
MFt<E.S ME CLEAN OfF
EVER~E WES~1
'15
1
-....------.-........ ~:...:-. . --::-
•• . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
A,. ........
HOME ON THE RANGE Thl'l'l"" nothing likl'
fronticr-styll' l1fr 111 ,, t l·modl'll'd c.·o\ t>n•d
wagon. s a ys Flour \Varnl'I'. 28-~·l·a r old
former mu·-.,t· and hu..,hand Hl·d 11 "ho q ll1t
an SS0.000-a 't·ar 1oh ''1th l 111' t•rsal Stu<.ltt>s
·to gl't out of I he r~l race and Ii ve off the
lund · Thl' coupll· moved into the wagon four
yt>ars ago that Rttd handmade out of scn1p
lum lwr The.·~ lin· b' hunting fi:-hmg and
... wappmg furs for lll'l'L'ssilit>s
Jars for those jelly beans
Candy containers have a pr esidential touch
SAN FRANC ISCO <A I' I Jel
ly Be llys, the jelly t.wans made
famous b,y President HPagan.
a re getting lhe ir very own
presidential j ars eompliments
of the Republican National Com
mittee.
About 600 glass apothec-ar'
' jars were delive red to ller man
Goelitz, the family owned com
pany that manufactures the
president's ravo rite cand~, s aid
Eileen Borgeson , c·o o wner of
Crystal Haze Design::.
Th<' des ign company e ngraved
a l \\ o inch pn•s1de ntial seal on
each jar and sandblas ted Ronald
Reag:rn's s igna ture b1•lo w the
seal.
But thl' San J ose public rela -
tions com pany hired by Herman
Goe l1 lz wa:-. mu m a bout the
pres idt•ntial p.u·s.
"We are kc•cp1ng all of this in-
formation conf1denlial, · s aid
Cath~ Blankt>nsh1p of the San
Jose fir m "It s JUSt nol ava ila·
blc for public l'Onsumpt1on "
Report criticizes
bilingual classes
WASH! NGT O '.'i t /\ P 1 The g o \ crnme nt
should stop promoting l11hn$(ual educ ation e1 • lht·
primary "a.Y lo tl·ac h non E nglt.!-h s peaktnf?
children. an 1ntern<1l O(•purtmt'nl of Education r<'
por t s ays .
According to lht• n •porl. while the technique I"
helpful in·somC' s1tu at1om._ 1t1 others 11 ma~· be in
effecti ve and even h a r m ful."
Instead. the r epo rt recommends inc reased
funds for lcchniquC'., s uch as ''itructured 1m
mersion:· in "h1ch ..i r h1ld a sk., q ue sllons in hb
native lang uage but thi· tc:.acher responds only 1n
Englis h, and plac ing -.t udcnts in regular classl!s
s upple me nted with extra Engltsh ins truction
In bilingu a l edul·ation rlas~t'S students arc
laughl bas te .,UbJl'C ls in their nall\'C languagl!
while getting s pecial Engltsh 1n::.\ruct10n
Ac l u all). the <'andv is In
ll'lld cd f or a s ome wh a t
!>pe<'t:lhled consumpt10n
J'hl' one pound-size jars. at
a bo ut $6 e a c h , wtll be the
R eagans· g ifts t o v i s itin g
dign ita ries. s aid 1-'red Biebel,
d e put y c h n irman o f th e
Re public an Nationa l Commit
t ee
"They're the s a ml' as the cuff
links and lie bars. · he said. "We
buy all of the gifts for the White
lluu se ··
Kickbacks
targeted
S ACRAMENTO <AP1
··Kic kbacks" from
..1uto r epair bus ine sses
to insurance agents or
adjusters would be pro·
h ibited by a bill s igned
into la w
G ov Edmund Krown
Jr. 's office announced
h is approva l of AB3554
by A sse mblym a n
Herschel Rosenthal. D
Los Angeles.
Among the ~pecif1 c
kickbacks his bill pro-
hi bits are free or dis-
c o u n l e d r e pair s ,
e mployment by a re pair
fac i lity , and direc t
ownership of m o re than
3 percent of the facility
Too many cale ndars Land firm "'IUC NOTICE
M IAMI (/\P l A fC'Cler al official adm1lled the
government's · supply 'i) ::.te rn ts not infallible"
aft er 3,800 calenda rs wl'rc sent to the M1a m 1 office
of the Equal E m ploy ment Opportunity Com
mission, which has IOC e mployC'<'s.
The calendars were for 1981. whi<'h ends in 31 2
months
At a price of SJ per ca lendar. the shipment
was worth Sl l,400.
may buy
vinyards
HOTICEOI' OEl'AULT AND
ELl!CTtON TO SELL
IMf'OltTANT NOTICE
II' YOUA PROPERTY tS IN
FORECLOSURE BECAUSE YOU
AAE BEH I N D I N YOU R
PAYMENTS, IT MAY BE SOLO
WITHOUT ANY COUR T ACTIOl>l. •I'd
you ..... IN ~· rHJnt IO IH'•"9 Yotir u count In~ t~ndi"9 t>y p•yino all
01 your PH I due P•Ymenh plu•
permitted tosu and U"'1ftlU within
lhrH month• from 1114! dete or recorda·
lion of 11111 nollu Thl1 •mou"t i1
.. ..... ,'1 l'ICTITIOUt au11 .. us
"CTITIOUt •UM .. U J ......... tTATUMNT NAMa ITATeM9 .. T fne fot-1"9 ...,...,. ert 4"111'
the toli.-1119 ...,_It~ -I llMltlneu M
MU t t It M I HTlR,.IUSIH, U OO A41eme
Tllll ... llWAY •USINfU A ... -.c..uMeu.C:.lllwnle t1'»
COM PLll x. l TO., .. I.Ind• hie, •-n "· M(COy, ... "'•lrwlncll Hewpon IMtll, t alllO<Tllt t1MO l ane, C•LI Mlt .. , C:.IHornla mlt
Lat C. ie/W\lf\h, 'M LINN ltle. Frenclt Xewle r lhelOtn. 1111
H••PGrt llaKll. C:.llfO<nlt tiMO Oriole O.tw. C•lt -M. CeUlefilla Tlllt butlnen It <.,,Oll<ltd by a »62t
llmlttf _,_~ Thi• llutlMU .. C-Ctad llV •
1..tt c. 5emml1 oener•I _,,,,.Mlp.
Tlllt ti.le,,...t wet filed •1111 Ille tll-r1 11 Mc;C.y
c;ou111Y Cltrt. Of 0.-CounlY on S..-Tiii• ~I ••• llled wllll Ille
l•rnber U. 1•1 County Cit~ Of OfMOa C_.y on s,.p. ,.11011 t•m lNr 11, ,.,
Pu111l.-Or-(NII Oelly PllOt. 1''7111)
S.pl. JO. 0<1. >. 14, 21, '"' 41"-tl PulllltNO OfonQe Goat1 Dally Pllol,
SUPE llttQll COUllT OP CAl.IPOa .. IA
COU .. TY O" OlltANOI t• Chk C-Ori.,., Wnl
S-AM,C..l ....... t M•tttr fll U.. Aclol>\IOfl Petllloft Of
JERRY PEDIGO
CITATION l .. aOtlATll
CAM •UMala AO U6CI
THC PEOPLE 01' THE STATE OF
CALIFORNIA,
lo l'RANKIEY RAY MOORE
Y °" •n ,..reoy cited end r9e111lr.O to
•-•r •t • Narlno In tllh court on
O.cemllar II, "'1 tt t .d • m. In
Oep•rtl'(ltl'll 14, loc41ed et JOO Civic.
Cent•r Drl"•, Wei t, Sant• Ana,
Ca lltornla, •nd IO OIYt any legal
re•M>n wrir, K C-1"9 to the ~erNled
petition llltO wllll lhh court, tlle
Sept. 10, Ocl 1. 14, 21, '"1 .,....
PICTITIOUS aUllMHI
NAM& tTATIMl .. T
Tiie fol~ --It 801ntt boltl .......
JOHUOOVHTY l.TD., 1301 00...
SI., Haw-1 9"cll, CA n.60.
DAN 0.1..EON, 21t02 Ounni~
Court, L..-N)Ouel, CA '2671. Tllla _1,..., 11 conductt4 lly •
llml'9CI INl<tMr'Ullp.
OenOel.-.
Thll --•• tit• wlUI .. i:ountv C.lerll Of Ol"•noe C-1r en Sept. 14,1 .. I ,.,NJW
Publl-Or .... Coast D•llY PllOt,
s.p1 "· n. JO. 0c1 1, 1w1 ..,_,
.OOpllon \ftoUld nol bt _o.,.CI and ------------orffr•d
Ottt O S.p1emtie1 21, "" LEEA BRANCH , .. , ...
by Joyce A H-Y9<
OllPlllY
lltOIElltT It. WYATT
A"9""Y
1111 K•leK• A-.
S•lte 1 .......... Gattttnll•-
tllt) 111 .. ttl
Publl\hod Or-Cotti Delly Pilol,
Ocl 1, U, JI, 211, l .. t •3'0-41
PUIUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS a USINEH
.. AMI! STATRMl .. T
Th• lollowlno 1>erto111 ere dolno
bu>lnu.~ ••·
S.T.M ENTERPRISES, lllSS
Petm . Fovnt•ln V•llty, Calltorn•a
92108
Chrlu oplltr Cok• N .. h. '1st
Touton, Fountain V•lley, C•lllomla
'2108
S<on Goodton, II/SJ P•lm StrMt.
Fountain Valley. C•lllornl• •1708
Thll t>utlnau " conducted by • oener•I pattnenhlp.
Cllrl>tot>Mr C. N .. 11
Scollo-2\0n
Tlllt tl•ternanl w.s tit"" wllh the
County Clerk of Oran91 County on Oc· •-r 5. 1'91
1'11-
Publlllled Or-Coal! D•ily Piiot,
O<t I, 14,71,79, 1911 •3117 II
Piil.iC MOTlCE
'ICTITIOUS a us1 .. 1H
N;IUllE STATl!Ml .. T
T lie foll-lnO pa..-11 doi"9 bu11
n•\t •$
OEMUllL'S FLORIST, 2•H INln~
Aonut, Suite l•Bl. e o•I• Mo•,
Celllornla t2t?I
Cynlhle LH V•IOtt. 1111 H
Pecllk Coal! HW"f, Ho 1'B, LeQU,_.
II each. C•llfomlt .,.51
Thlt l>usi...U II <ondueteCI by en In
d!Yldu•I.
Cynllll• l " Velcl!tr Thlt J1"1-I WM lllecl with thl!
County Cltrt o1 Or.,91 Covnty on Oc
•-rs.1•1
ruauc NOTICE
CPP _.
NOTICE OF TlltUSTll 'S
SALE 0" lltEAL .. lltO~EaTY 1'11MJI ,. _ _,.Na. TT0-4414
Publllllecl Or•llQI Coast Dally Piiot, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
Oct. 7, U , 71, 21, 1911 OU .. 1 ON OCTOBER )I), 1911, •I lhe l'IOUr of
,,,IUC NOTICE t t S t .m AT THE FRONT EH·
TRANCE TO THE OLD ORANGE
COUNTY COURTHOUSE, l.OCATEO
OH SAl>ITA ANA llLVO . BETWEEN
.. OTICI TOCOtnaACTOltS SYCAMORE ST AHO BROADWAY,
CALLINOPOtlatDI SANTA AHA, CA , PRECISION Scllool Ol1trlct· NEWPORT-MESA RECOH\IEYANC E CORP . AS
UHIFIEOSCHOOl. DISTRICT TRUSTEE. TITLE TRUST OEEO
llld Oe..sllrw 1 OOo'clock Pm Of the SERVICE, AGENT,..--eu h
l"lldeyofOc-r, 1 .. 1 IUSO VENTURA BLVD . SUITE
Pleet ol Bid Receipt: 11U7 Placentia OO·A. ENCINO, CA. '14», •I'd -SI., Coste Mata, CA '16?1 ltltPll<>ne number II 1213) ...........
Project lclenllllc•llon N•me. DOOR preMnl Trust"· •Ill wll el pul>llc euc·
REPLACEMENT AT ESTANCIA lion to the"'"'"'~· tor CUii In
HIGH SCHOOl. AHO CORONA OEl. l•wlul tnoneJ o1 Ille UnllN Stain, ll'>o
MAR HIGH SCHOOL tollowlno d .. c rlbed real property
Place Pl-•rtonllle 1151 Placentl• '"U•l•d In the CIT'!' OF COSTA
SI., Costt Mesa, CA -1'IU Baer SI., MESA, Counly Of ORANGE, St•I• ot
Cott• MaM, CA '1626. C•lllornle, -OHcrlbed Al loll-I, to NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllet wll
Ille Aboft-nemed Sc-I Ohtrl<I ol THAT PORTION OF I.OT ,. 0 1'
Or•not c.o..nty, c.alltornla, KllnO by TRACT W, AS SNOW .. 0 .. A MAI'
SUPEllt10ttCOU1'lOl'CALll'Ollt .. IA and thr0U9ll 1\$ Governing Bo•rd, lltECOlltOEO IN 900tt 1', PAGE tJ
COUHTYOl'OlltANOE lla re l n •ller r e le rred to .,, 0 .. MISCILLA .. EOUI MAPS,
PHUC NOJlCE
100CMc C...... Ottwe, W"1 "DISTRICT," wlll recel•e up to, bul llt ECOltDS 0 1' ORANGE COUNTY,
..... not later llWI Ille •bov•-•Llted time, c,OALLLIOWSFO•:HIA, DESClltlaED AS to led blos IOf ,,.. •w•rd of • conlr«t
MAit :~::E~ C•llfen>I• t !IU lorB:::: = :"!:~ • .,.., In ""' l)l<Kt PARCEL, AS SHOWN ON A MAP
PETITIONER RI VAN NGUYEN l'IL EO IN BOOK•. PAGES 10 AHO
RES 0 E t T T E IO<rnlllled -..... -Miall ... --II 01' PARCEL MAPS, IN THE OF-p NO '!ME:~E~l l And pvl>llcly r•ed AIOuct al IN -V•· FICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER
SUMMONS IFAMIL'I' U WI ••• ,.,,time-place. OF SAID COUNTY
CASE HUMaEa : D 1' 11 1' There will be a N/A dltpo>ll .-.ciulreCI AKA 1140 SEA 8 LVFI'. COSTA lor e.cll HI ol Did CIO(umotol\ 10 MESA CALI FORNIA '1U!t
.. OTICEI ouor•'1t.ae ti. return In Q<>od condition THE UNDERSIGNED TRUSTEE
You MW --· Tiie <-' "'0 within NIA deY> •Iler IM Did -nt1>9 DISCLAIMS ANY LI ABILI TY l'OR ft Cl .. •,.t"'ty..,wtt._,.,_ ... ,,.. d•lt • INCORRECT I NFORMAT ION
llo.,d ""'"' .-'""9ft4ll •lt11"' • E•cll t>IO mu1t contorm a nd be FURNISHED dey1.lt-thelnfer1Ntlofo M-. I t Ille ont IOOC t 11 you with llO -k the adYI(• of •n re\C)Ont,.. 0 c rac umen t SAi 0 wla wlll be made lo w ll>tY tht
•llorney '" tlll> ..... nor, you Sllould dO Each bod """ bt accompanied t>y OC>llg.,tiOM -urecl Dy •nd pur .,....,, to to promptly .., that your re1ponw or lhe wcurlly rffferred to In tlle conlracl ll'>o ,,.,..., of sa~ conltrre<J tn • ter
l
plt..Slno,ll •ny,m•yl>ellled°"tlrne. dO<um.nb-lly llle lhlolpr--4 ••Ill Ood or Tru'I eucuteo Dy
AVl$OI 1<1beonlr«lon GEORGE E EMRICH and LUPE v ll•d II• •Id• ............. If I TM DISTRICT rf'Wr ......... rtohf IC EM A ICH. HUSBAND .,,., WI FE, .. role<• eflY or •II tMcls or 10 ....... •nY T R v s T 0 R t 0 p R E c I s I 0 N
1r.-vMI _.. -lflr c-r• u•. tlll 1rroou1¥lllH °" ln,.,,...,.llllH In eny R E C 0 kV E y AH C E C 0 R p • • t
• ...... ci. • _. ~-u._ ,...._... llldt or In IN blddlnv. TnutM tor Ille -it -wcu.ity ot
.. Ill,. .. • ..._._ LH i. l-.C... The DISTRICT hM -.Olned trom p R E C 1 S I O H M O R T G AG E •w;, ~~:;-.oliclttr •I consejo oe IM Director ol tN ()epartmenl Of In• SERVICES. INC .• H 8-llcl•ry, det
un •boO-ldO Ht Ht• uunlo, O!tberl• du1trl•I Retatlon1 the ...,,.,., prev•ll· ed HOV. 11, 1'90, ano recorded H
h.cerlo 111medl•l•men1t, oo tat• •no rel• at par diem ·-• 1" the ln>trumel'I No 921 on NOV U, 1'90.
mener• w retCMJett. o ••t9tclon, t i loc•Uly In Wfllcll tllls WO<ll Is lo be In -k/reel lml. -/Im-14.J, ol performed for eKll craft or type of Olflcl•I RecOfOI In Illa Office o1 ttw ~.!;..:C:ouna, ~ Mr reQillraele • wor"mon -to aacute IN <Oft· counlY Rec:Ot'Ger ol ORANGE County,
1
1 TO THE RESPONDENT lrtct. Tllne ratn •re on Ille at Ille Sl•I• ot Callfornl•
The palllloner ha1 llltO • pallllon OISTR ICT office IOCAltd el 11'7 THE lolal amount of tna unp•ld
concerning your mMrl•Qll 11 you 1•11 Pl•cenll• 51•• COISle Mesa, CA ll2'2J. b•l•nct of lht ••ICI obtlottlon• to rne • r~w •llllln lO deyt of tM COPIH may be OC>Ulned on raqlleSt. A t-lher with aov.ncn, •nd etllm•led
d•le t11a1 lhl\ wm..-s '' wrWd °" copy of "'"' r•tn Shall be POSl•d •I costs •nd e.._._ Ii sn,ou 1'
you your Oef•ull may .,. enltred .,,.., IPle lob •ii• THAT notl« of b<'MCh of WKI OC>-
f llt c our I mo ontor • juoomenl The lorevolno ""9Clul• Of per diem llot tton .,., ole<llon to u ll w lo rH I
I
<onlainlno lnjun<llve or o!Nr ordert w~ge• I• -upon • WO<kl"9 <Ny of properly wu recor-et ln11rument
concernlno dl•ltlon ot property, elglll 111 llouu. The rate lor holiday No 11611 on J UNE 25, 101, In
spousal ~. child c1 .. 1ody, chlld •nd overtime wort! Shall be •I le.at -k/reel , _,;...._ -, ol Of· llme •nO __,,.If llclal Rl'Cord:l 1n ll'>o ottlct of tN Coun-suPOOrt, •ttomey lees. COJtl, .,,., >U<h II shell ... m.nclalory -""' CON· oUoor rtllel H may be or•nlod D1 tllel TRACTOR to -the contr.ct 11 ly Recorder of ORANGE c-ty, St•I•
court Tllo ~rnl>llmtl'I ol waou. •••rded, .,., ""°" any wbcontractor or f~~t;'.'.:i~ sale It m-wttl'IOUt cov·
IU l"9 ol money or pr-rty, or oll'>or under him, to INl1 nol lau t,,.n ,,.. on•nl or werreflly regardlnQ 1111•. ~~;1 •t11hol'l19G &>rocredlnqs m•v alto u lo ~led ratn lo •II -rt<men poiseuloft or tneumbr...ces, or u lo
D•led 5eplemtier 13, '"' •l,,.mpcloonY~_'!Y thtm In lhe .. ec11tlon of i111<1r•Dlhty ol lllle
LEE A BRANCH u -· THE -ICl"'Y or •ny ofl'>or per'°" Ho 111-r moy wllhllr•w hi~ bid for or per.-s ,,..., pUrcllaw •I Hid wl~
Ci.,..,, a 119rlod ol lor'ty llw l•SI O.yt atler O A T E 0 I h I > 1 9 I l'I o • y o I By NANC'l'WAGGONER lllede l0Mtlorllle_,,l1>9otblds SEPTEMBER,1911
Deputy A peynwn\ bond -• performance PRECISION VAN DAO & LINTNlfllt, INC. boftC1 Wiii t:. required l><'IOf lo Ul'C,,._ RECONVEYANCE
llU Well 111f1SI.-, llon Of IN c-ract. Tiie INlyment bond CORP, AS TRUSTEE
5.,lte 2t2, 11'1•11 Ila In Ille IOrm Mt torth In tN llTLE TRUST OEEO
S.11ta AM,~-t17t6 contrect doe-ts. SERVICE COMPANY.
11141 Ml~ Gowmlnv lloerd AS AGENT
Pullllthed Or-Cotll Delly Pllol, By Oorollly He,..,.y l'ltller By· Erroll S. Stlllm•n
Oct. 1• 14• ll, JI, 1"1 4Jtt.at PuteheSlno Olr.ttO<" Published Or-Cot•I Oelly Piiot,
PlCTITIOUI IUSl .. I H NAMI STATI Ma .. T
T,,. lollowlno peuon1 ,,.. ootno
butl"'''·" WALK IN VAULTS, UOtl Cltmom
Clrcle, lnilna, c.alitomi. tttu
Merilee RvVI Helrl1>9, l1 OO dala.
Irv In•. CalllO<"nl• '2714
00n Bond, I !!0'1 Clemon• Cl¥c It.
Irvine, Cetll0tnle '1114
Tiii• butlneu It COftduCl•CI lly •
O«ner•I ~p
Merllte It Htlrl1>9 "''-' Pullll•lled Otenoe Coa11 O•HY Piiot,
Oct I, 14, JI,"· 1 .. 1 t>IUI
NS·a.5071
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
ALFRED MAYNARD
BROOKS , aka A .
MAYNARD BROOKS, aka
MAYNARD BROOKS
ANO OF PETITI ON TO
ADMINISTER E STATE
NO. A-110553.
To all heirs,
benefic iaries, creditors
and contingent c reditors of
Alfred Maynard Brooks,
aka A. Maynard Brooks,
aka Maynard Brooks and
persons who may be
otherwise interested in the
.will and/or estate:
A petition has been tiled
by Clayton Merle Brooks
in the Superior Court of
Orange county requesting
that Clayton Merle Brooks
be appointed as personal
represen tativ e to ad-
ministe r the es ta t e of
Alred Maynard Brooks,
Costa Mesa, CA (under the
Independent Administra-
tion of Estates Act). The
pe tition is set for hearing
in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive Wes t, Santa
Ana, CA 92701 on October
28, 1981at9:30 A.M.
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the pe t1t1on,
you shOUld either appear
at the hearing and state
you r objec tions or file
written obje<.tions with the
court before the hearing .
Yo ur appearance may be
In person or by your at-
torney.
IF Y O U ARE A
C REDITOR or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de-
ceased, you must file your
c laim with the court or
present it to the personal
representative appointed
by the court within four
months from the date of t irst issuance of letters as
provided in Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing c laims will not ex-
pire prior to four months
from the date of the hear-
ing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interested In the
es tate, you may file a re-
quest with the court to re-
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and of petitions, accounts
and reports described in
S e c t ion 1200 of the
California Probate Code.
Mr. K eith William s,
Esq., Attorney at Law, 660
N ewport Center Drive,
:: 1447, Newport Beach,
CA 92660 (714) 744-4477.
DEATH NOTICES
1'1'111'11111 c I\ uf Gard1·n
1;rn11• t ',1 \111 ll.1l•I H 1'1·111
run~ o t h 111n l.11 n \ .illl'
SAC RAMENTO <API
The Newhall Land Co.
will be aJlowed to buy
vineyards or a winery,
under a new law
Sl.'92,71 IH of Seotember 21, 19'1 end "'lllC NOTICE ='o:~!c':;:,,.. u"lll your account l-------------
Publl....., Oronoo Cotti Delly Pllo4, Oct 1. 14, 21, 1 .. 1
S.pt JO, OC't 7, ,,t 421M I
Published Orange Coast
Dally Pilot. Oct. 6, 7, 13
1981 4382-81
,
I
PF.l'RRl ':'\(;
C ll AH LF.S .I 1'1-:l H
Rl':'llG re~1rl1•nt 11( <-.1-..tJ
:'11 e~a Ca for 111111" th.in ;!;!
yea r.~ Pa!>.,1•d ,1\\ a1 .,,.
October 5. l!IBI lk 11.1-.. ,,
Prol·urcml'nl \l,111.11!1•1 1111
lhe .\en>Jet <1ntn.rnl·1· ( '11111
pany 111.' ,,., 'lll \ 11 i•d In h1 '-"'re M ar~. s1111., Charl1·-.. .t
McCOtlMIOC MO RTUAR IES
Laguna s...,11 h
494 941 '>
Lagun,1 H.r1 ..
768 ()IJJJ
San J Jan C.\po.,tr.~11 ..
495 1171
H.UIOtl lA.W,..._MT OLIY(
Mot1uary • ~·me1e1y
Crem.i1ory
1625 G1&l!'1 Ave
CO'ila MP\a
540 ')').,II
PfllCE IROTHIRS
HU llOA.OWA.Y
MOITUUY
110 Broadway
C0$18 Mesa
642-9150
l~LTZ HIGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLIFJ CHA'El
427 E 17th <:;1
Costa MP<;a
fi46-937 I
rtHCI llOTHIU
SMITHS' MOlTUAIY
627 Main St
~iuntington Beac h
536·6539
< .1 1111.111 K 1'•'111'1 u11i.:
K1·\ 111 .ind 1-.u h. l'l'un 11n1: .di
11 f ( ' o-.. I ;J \I 1• ' I ( •'
d .1Ut.!hl1·1 \'wk1 I 11f I 11 ... 1.1
\I I' ' .1 ( ,1 ,1 II d "
,,:ra1ul1 l11lol1 .-11 S1·111n •-.. \\ill
'11 lll•l cl 1111 I h11r~<l.H, ! 11·
l'lht 1 I( )!IHI ,II \J°1·lr<1-...-
( h.q••·I \\llh Ht•\ B1 11t1 1\111
ti!· p .1-..1111 1'11•.,11111•r1.in
l 'h111 I h of tlll' ( ·.,, 1•11a11t of
t 1r1al 111g ln t1•r1111•n\ .,,., \ 1c1·~
llllll1t'd 1,1l1·1\ lnllll\\ln j.!
~l'I \ 11·1·-.. t1lllf1 I tht• fl1ro•1 111111
nf H.olll lll-1j.!t'I1111-Sm1t h ~
r ut h il l \\ 1·-..1!'1111 ('h:qa•I
:\lo1 1U.1n· •if 1 '"I.' :\11•"1
Gov Edmund Brown
Jr announced the sign-
ing o f SB610 by Se n.
William Campbell, R
Hac ienda Heig hts.
ThC' bill exempts the
m;i jo r S outh e rn
Ca lifornia lando wner
fro m state restrictions
on o wners hip of bus i·
n e s ses r e l a t e d t o
a lc oholic beverages.
Newha ll o wns some
r es taurants that s ell
drinks. Under the state's
tie d -house law, des igned
Kt II' lo prevent monopolies in
I I "I-K \ II\ P•""e'I the liquor industry . the
a\1.11 on t)(-111tw1 ~ •. t!IKI 111 co mpany h as bee n
t ht· 1'11 \ or <>1 ·•111!•·. "·' I Ii• •~ barred from owning a ~ur ''" 1'(1 hy hi ... p.m·nh '>JI bus iness in any other I\ J lltl (,fl' )I.U r\ "ll h II hrothi·l Seth \\'11l1am "uhn phase or the trade, such
;1nrl m.11t'nwl ~ranclparN1t!. as grape growmg or pro-
W11l111m .incl Sandra S1·~11·l'1 · cessing.
of ('ornn;1 <Id ~t ar. C a .ir111
11.1tt·rnal J(r.mrlmulhl'r 1.ou ....UC •TlCE
\nn H o h1n!.on o f l',llo s ------------
Unle u 11\t obllqallon btl no
lortc losed UPOn ~rmih • lonoer
119rlod, you h•ve the 1~1 r '9111 to •IOC>
lorl'Clo>Ure only b'f INIYl"9 ,,_ ttttlre
amount ..........., by your crodllor
wltl!ln """ montM alter Ille O•t• of
fKOrd•tlOf'I of 1""' document • whl<-~
dale ol rl'Cordl"9 ·~•~ ,..reon.
To find oul IPle •mounl YO<i mutt
pay, or lo.,, ... !or peymenl 10 •tOP
IM lorecloourt, or II your pr-rty 11
In IOrl'ClolU"' tor ... y -· rHWlft, tontecl Proleulonel Community
M•n•o•mtnl, m•n•olnq aoenl lor
PtPP9•-Vlllit9f Condominium Al
toCletlo" <rt 23n6 Birtcher Ori••. El
Toro, Cellfom1•
II you eflY Quesllon•. vou V.OUIO con-
l•ct • l•ywer ot IPle 111>"""nment•I •DetlCY wf>lell mn Nlve lnwred your ,.,.n,
REMEMBEA, YOU MAY LOSE
LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 NOl TAKE PROMPT ACTION
NOTICE IS HElltEB'I' GIVEN t!\411
pursuant to Artkl• VI, Secl lont e end•
of tlle Oe<larallon ol CoW!flanU, C°"
dlllons eno Autrlctlons, recorded
November 1, 1'7l In -110.2. P•9" .-..in,.,,,_, rl'Cor-Aprll n.
\'l'rdP!-., l 'J S1•n 1t·e:. w ill bl'
h1•ld 1111 \\'ednl'~d<i). Oc-tob<>r
7 19RI .11 11 OOA'\1 ut St i\n-
c1 r 1• " -.. I' r l' :. h \ I <· r 1 a n
l'hu r r h. Newport Bear h.
Ca · Dr John /\ Huffman.
.Ir offi cinllng Private inter
menl 1n Rn ant Po nd.
~1 a 1 n •. r " c 1 f 1 r v 1 l' "
Mo1 tuun. N 1•11 port Bf'uc h
lt77 In -171S4, P"Vff I-IS of Ot
flclel Recordt, Or•no• County.
Cellfornl•, • -.Ch of Ille Obl'9•11on
or payment of aueuments ha1 oc-curred. Nollet or said IM'HCll .,,.., llHt
•H flled IOr record on JtnlHl'Y 16,
'"'· In -11116. P1199 IU7 of Mid Ottlclel R«-Ho P•Yrnent o1 Pftt
dve amount• heS occurred, lller·etwe,
Ille Pep~ Vlll•ve C~lnlum
,.,CTITIOU5 •USINI U Auo<l•llotl dMt hereby ell'Ct to Mii or
.. AMaSlATI Ml .. T c •uH to be sold, the lollow lno
Th• tollowtno pe,._, 11 001"9 bull-det<rlbecl reel -rty 10 1tll1fy the
neu .,., o1>11oetlon
ORANGE COUNTY llUSIHESS Unit I ol lot 1 •lt...,'90 In Traci l 'M6,
BAOKEltAGE, _. Hickory Str..C. H per map recor-In BOOlt M,
COSI• Meta, CelllONll• ••• Peou • •nd 1', Inclusive of Ml•-Franws E. Connor, 1161 Hickory ctll•11_,. ""-;n Ille OHie• of IN
St.,Co1LI Mete, C.IHOfnla •a» Or~t County R«Ofdff
Thi• ...,.._.Is c-.ce.ci by •n 11'-Tiie r9Cord "'"'90 OWNrs of IN pr•
dlvldual perty mare commonly.•-u l>t.S
l'r-E.C-Soulll Wt ln11I, •SSU, Ane htlm,
Thi• st•t-wH """' wltll Ille Celllornl• .,. s.tem fl•Huta.,.1 end
C{)Unt y Cler'll Of Or.,. County on Set>-F•l•k El-,HtAUyel. cl1r1·c·tor",
MILLt:tt tember 21, '"' Oal.O: ~ tt, 1"1 "'"IM COUNTY 01' 0 1'AHGE \JYRO" II MILLER. re
s1denl of Lal{una Bearh. Ca
for th\' pnst 20 years. Passed
a way on October 4, 1981
PvbllsNd Of-... CoHI Dally Pli.t. STATlOFCALll'ORHIA I
5ept. U , Jll, Oct. 7, 14, '"' 41S441 ,._. WOOC1 VIII ...
Survived by I son Myron ----------Miller, Jr of Laguna N ig uel. ,,amous eu11 .. us
Ca . and I daughter Marjorie .. AM• STAT•M• .. T C11pp or Santa MMlea, Ca . 4 Tiie IOflowll'O Plf'IOfl .. dolflt _._.
8l'flndrhlldren tltld 3 great neul.e~~ f!NGINEEl'llHO SU VICI$, arandt'hlldrcn Graves ide ""*' S.-Clrclt, Hutlllfll'Dft ..... II. 1crvlct:1 will be held a' c e11Mn11aftM7 raclflt' View Memorial Park Uule AlfontO "•Jo, '51! IOf'W.
on Wedn •sday, October '7. ~;--~1"""" e-;11, '-11'°""•
11181 at IO>OOAM with Rev. • TMt ...._ii cOfldUte.ci by •n 1,,_
Bnice Kurrie offict1tin1 In .WllhMi...A. ._...
Utu of llowttt Ole ramlly .... 1'MI ......,_. -m• wlttl • CIUHtf t'On,ributloos be <*llllfY~•Or-C-'un..., ••d• to t bt Amerlc•n ....., .. ,..,.
<?mn cttr Socl•t r PacUlc ~0r.,. c:e.tt o.u~';:: Vlew N9rtuary d1rttt0r11 ,..,.. -.Ott.1. tt 21, ,., 4UM1
NIUC 9111CE Condom"''""' A11oci.110n l y: T. Oltwlct b lft
On ~ "· '"'· before -· IN IHldt~. e "9IM\' Puflll< In
e ncl for said St.le. perione lly • ._
PHrM T. Devld b .... k-le "le le
lie 1M 111-Y of -'Of110ratton ti.et e11e<11ted ttlt wttllln IMtr-t. k-
IO me lo "' Ille ~ wM ew.<uted
t,,. wllflln I...,_ on 1it91\e" ef IN
c•r••r•ll•n 111ere111 11t m••· •n• .ell_.....,. le -tllat well tor·
iP«•llon t i.<"'911 ttlt lllllltllft '"'""" ment llY-' '° lb ,,.. .... ..,.., • , ..
... vtlon of lb ~et Olteeton.
WITNESS f'Wf MM -efflelel -·· 1MtllyA.9tlr<ll au..a .. Mon.-n .....,. ........
....................... 111 ............ ~ ..... 11'1*1 .... er.,. CM" Oen., '1191,
1)(1. 1, 1 .. 11, a,.., ( ..WI •
NOTICE COHTltACTOlltS
CALLING "Oa llDS
School Ol llrlcl NEWPORT-MESA
UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Bid
Oe•dllne 1 00 o'cloc.11 p m of thl! IStll
d•J Of Oclober, '"' •
Place ol Bid Receipt· 1151 Pl•"ntl•
Street, C°'I• Me1t, CA '2417
P roj e ct Identific a tion Name
l'IBEROLASS SURFACE OF POOL
AT ESTANCIA HIGH SCHOOL
Plett PlaM •rt on Iii• 1151 P lecentla
SlrHI, C:O.t• IMH , and 1'95 e .. r
SlrMI, Cos~ M.He, CA.
l>IOTICE IS HEREB'I' GIVEN IMI
tht •bo•• Mmed ScllOol Olstrlc t ol
Or•ft90 CoutllY, c.a111ornl•, eclinQ ~
and lllrouoh lit Gowernlno Board,
Pl•relnetter rtf•rr•d to •s
"OISTRICT," wlll rl'CtlVt up lo, bul
not lettr I,_ ,,.. abov.-.t•ted llma,
H aled bldS for ttw awerd Of• conlracl
tO<' Ille -project. Bids •llell DI received In tl'le Place
Identified -..... -,,,.II be opened
•I'd publlcly reed aloud a1 the •bon·
ll•ted lime end piece.
There wlll ti.• H/A de-II nqul<ff
tor each Ml ol llld documenll 10
ou•r•nt.e tN return In -" c-lllon
within NIA den ett.tr Ille l>ld -•no
d•t•.
E AC h DIO mull COnlorm .,.., "' re1ponslw to IN contrecl documtnb.
Eacll ltkl 11\etl De acc-nlad by
the s.curtty referred lo In lM contrecl
documents -b'f Ille 1111 of pr_.i 1ubeonlrecton.
Tiit DISTRICT rete,..,., tN r'9111 to
reJact eny.,. all tlldt or lo wal.,. any
lrreoultrlllet or 11\fom\ellllet In tnY
bids or In tN blcldlft9.
Tiie OISTltlCl 111H llOWlned lrom
Ille Olr9Ctor Of tM Detltr1ment of In·
dultrl•I Relations .... ~·· ll"Y•ll·
lno r•t• of par diem •eoe• In the
IOCallty In w!W<ll llllt -IS to ...
perlormff for Nell cr.n .,. tnie of
-r'kmM needlld lo t tt«.,,• '"' con-tr.ct. n.. r-etet -on Ille Ill Ille
O•STl'llCT office lou ted at 1157
P lacentla SI,. Costa MeM, CA 92627.
Cot1IH ll'ltY be olltallled on r~. A
<OtlY of a.. rem ~II ti. ,..... •t , .... Job •It•. TM f ........... K"9duM Of per diem
..... It ~ "'*' • wortt"'9 !Say of etoM m '*'"' n. ra .. • rw l!olldey
t lld ovtfil-WWII llltll be at letlt
time end --'Ill"
II INll W ,,...,.,_ ... , -tM COM·
Tl'IACTO. .. _,, tlla ctlft!T«t k •••,,..., n i..-n..,., -*'tontrec1rtf
uMer 111"1. • pey Mt leM "*' tM
sei. "'9'1'*1 '-'" to ell --~ ern ... .,.. ..., IMf'll In -e..c"'*' .c IM COftl>'eci.
H• bl4Mw may .,itMrtw 1111 bid for .... i. .. ..,,.,,. .... 1411 .. l" llfttt
, .. -· ..... "' -fll*llfl9 ef ...
A "''"""' llelMI Miii e ~· lleN wlll W ,.....,_ '"9r .. -• IMI\ .. IN ~.t. TM "1"*" ._..
........ "' .. """ ...... In -celltrect----. 0.--.. ......
e>erot11r HetW'( ~
~~
"11411ltl!M OrMOt Caetl D<tlly Plttt. ...... ,Od.7,"'1 UIMI
rvauc NOTICE PUIUC NOTICE PUlllC NOTICE
Tile 'll'wl>Ort-lltu unified S<hOOI Ohtr1ct 1...Uy 1nno..nct<I IU policy for free .,,., reouceo prlct w1h
for children un1ble to ~1 tlle full prtce of .... 11 str>t<I wnoe r lht H1tlon11 School l unch •r><I S<llOol
Brukfut Pl"09r101S.
l ocal scllOol orflc hh hevt 1dopl t d the following fA11tly 1lu and l•cOl'!t crltt rf1 for dtttrelnlng
t l t9lbtl lty
f NllLT
SIZE
CAl.IFOllJllA H IGl81LITT SCALE FOii Fii([ 00 RCOUCCO PAIC! IO lS
CMldren frOlll h •11lu with tncOll'fs 11 or ~low tht folio-Ing
ltveh 1rt t llglblt for free or reduced price .,..h.
INC<JIE ELIG lllll TY GUIOCLl~ES
S.pt-r 1981 to JuM JO. 1982
GROSS IHC<>4E
~ llOH!lll y ~
FREE REOUClD FR(( ~ f A[( llEOUCCO
1· J0-108 Sl09· 15l S0-467 '468-664 JO·S,600 SS ,601· 7, 910
0-142 143-203 0-617 618-878 0·1.•00 7,101-10,530
0-177 178-252 0-766 767-1,090 0·9.190 9.191-ll,090
I 0-211 212-301 0-916 911· 1,JOJ 0-10,990 10,991-15,630
s 0-216 247-350 0-1,065 1,066-1,516 0-12 .780 12,781-18.190
6 0-280 281-l99 O· I ,211 l,21S-l,128 o-1•.s10 11,511-W,llO
0-315 316-148 0-1,361 1.365-1.941 0·16,llO 16,m-23,m
0-3•9 350.197 0-1,Sll 1,514-Z, 153 0-18,160 18, 161-25.840
""' "'~n AOO ITI OllAl
FNOl Y
MOl8l • AOO 134 U9 Slit $213 St ,790 U,550
·~ f .. lly of one •ant • pUpll wllo h 1111/Nr sole tlll>POrt. lntlllvtlonollzed cMldl"tfl .,..
e1w1y1 -1119111btr fMt11tu. rosttr cMldren ire one ...-,.r fu11tu only 1f the weH1re or
ploc-nt agency Nlntttns 11911 re1pon1tbt11tlu for tlle child.
r .. 117 ••111 • group of ,..lattd, or non,..llttd t ndhldtMrh ""'°ere l "'lng u one ec-lc ..,.,It,
Children from f11111llu ""'°" lncc.e h at ~r belCllt ttoe tew.h ,,._, .,,.. 1ll9tbh for frtt or "41U<td
prlte .....
Application fonM ire being Hnl to all hOlllS Int letter to pennh. Addlll on•l coplu ,,.. t"llllble
at the prl1Klp1l '1 office In each Jchool. To dhcour•ve the poulblltty of •hr911re1entttlon, t llt
tppllc1tlon fo-cot1taln • ttti-nt tbo.,. tllt ,.,.ct for 11.,..tu,.. cert1f7t119 ti..t el l lnforwtlon
f\ll"llhilH 111 tM 1ppllcatlon h t,,.. •nd corl"9Ct . All •ddltlonal •tt'-t h added to Ml"ll tMt the
•ppllc1tl1111 Is btlflt •de In c-t10ll with tllt rKt1pt of federal fwndJ , thet •chool offlcl•h ..,.
w.rtfy tllt tnfb,..tlon In t"4r appl ltet1on, alld tlllt !lellbt•ot• •hreprenntttlon of tnfo,.,..tlon lll1
1ubJKt tllt •Ptlllctnt to pro1tcutlon ullffr appllcablt state and crl•ln1l st.etutes. ~plication•
.,.y be Jlboltttd at •111 ti• during tllt year.
In urttt11 cuu. foster child,.,, •re •ho ell9lt11e ror fl'ff or l"ffu<td price ••h . If • '•111 lies
fo1ler ch11dr911 1 hlflt with lll9 tnd whhtt t6 •PPl1 for ••h tor tMa. tllt r .. 11, should -\act
tlM ICllool.
lln4er tlle pro•hlot1• of tM policy the pl'IM1pel of tt<lt ""°'' "111 reYtw 1ppllutl011t •lid •w"1nt
•11ttbl1 lty. If pal"tflU .,.. dhHthfl•d wtt~ the Nllllf of the pl'ln<:IPtl. t"'1,., ltfah to dlUIOI•
the dt<hton with hi• on ao h1fo,..1 besh. If tllu w1sll to Mk•• fo,..1 &PC*l , tllty.., •k• •
,..quot 11tller orally or In wltlttQ to llr. '"" C. C.rwr, CooN1Mtef' of Stlidlllt S.Nltes. P,0 , loll
1'6e, fllwllort letell, 92663, 7IO-lZ6' (O'f I lleat lllt te t Hottl the "9cltfllfl, Tiie MllC)' e911U llll tfl
outline of tllt ,,..rtn9 proc:e<N,..
If I t .. 111 .....,, be<-1 UMllP10~4 01' If f-117 th• ti..flttt• ""' f•l11 tlleul• COll~t Ult ""'°!
to fllt • ...., 1ppllutlon. SllCll clltllOt• ,,,_,. •II• tlll clllldl'eft of U. f'•H1 tlltl~lt for ~ltl•1
IMMflU If \lit , .. n, ll!C-ftlh at or llt1GW tllt ''""" • ._. •llOW.
In tM °""""'of clll1' f9"1ftt IK"llV-· "° tlll1• •111 M dftt~ .. ~ 111t111t Mc.-.,,._,
llU, co1er1 or Ntl111111 orl9l11.
Ctt~ .0 .. 1 •'"' t1o1 offlGt of tM rooe s.mce ~r-t lllt • COll7 of \119 '-1•19 Mllq -'lldl..,
be ,..,,_. li-1 •111 lntt,..,Wd Pl'V•
1t1oa11tM10....c.... Oeltv , .... Od.. '·.. --'"' .\f.' -
····~
1 •
. ~ -..... :--.,--------~--· ...... --. ....,.---------
a.-00 1• NeWS CHAAUE'S AHOEl.& 0 TAEA8UM HUNT m w·A·a•H
Hoel Or.on W ..... GU.I
Bull ~nolell.
10;00 D '9 NICtQ.I AND
Dnta
Two country~'"''*' F.oetel•egenb try to ln!il
Irate a trucll llljecking ring
9Ge HIWI
• MUDAA-.v'NOU£
A )'OU/lg WMI Atric.n
danc. ecllool <Mdieatecl to
the ...,QI for a eot11empo.
'ery Air lean dlflCI form 11
proflled.
(Q)MOVIE * * •.; "llOfkN" 11980)
Roger Moore. J1ma1
Muon A dappat. woman·
llallng frogman IS callecl In
Jo tllwart Illa plan1 of
axtort1on1111 who llave
llijacked a tuPpl)' 1t11p 1no
er• 111<e11ernng to destroy
llOO lllor11l s .. oil nga 'PO'
ts:l MOVll * • "Stone Cold Deed"
( 1979) Paul WIHlam1, Aieh·
atd Crenna A cop end 1
smlff.llme crime bOH join
loroes to ttno the man
rl$p(lntlble for a MrlN or
proetllut• kllllng1. 'A'
B J recelYM • ...WI lrom
an Oki COiiege lrletld who
proceeds to play practlcal
jokaa on Ille M 'A·s·H
members. C8 HAWAII FlVE-0
fl) Ci) £U5CTNC
OO#IPAHY (R)
MODERN MAGIC -84'trnurd Hughes
stars as a sorcerer of old who runs a
seedy garage 1n .. Mr. Merlin .. premu.·r
ing tonight a t 8 on Channe l 2.
D eoeeY WfTON
Bobby Vinton performs
some ol 1111 b!Q08SI hlla
trom the S1111d1 Holll 1n
LuVagu
(I) C88NEW8
Q!NeCNEWS
MO\l1E
• • •.; "Som-n•re tn
Time" C 1980) ChrlstOl)hef
Aaev•. Jane Seymour
l:'tMOVIE
• ••.; "Freaky Friday"
(1977) Jodie Foster, Bar-
bara HarrlS Tiii wor1ct 1s
turned upside-down for a
mother and daughter whO
magically switch bodies
one fateful day 'G'
t:30 0 BUUSEYE CD WELCOME BACK.
KOTTER
&ii KCET NEWSBEA T 'iii STUDIO SEE
"Rac:e Car Family" Stew-
ardess Nancy James lakes
Iler two dauglltara to lhe
1>'11 at the Lagoni SECA
rac:etreck, a m1ss1te
launching In White Sands.
N Mex. ls witnessed. (R)
(f)Q!NEWS (H)CH~Of
THEATRE STREET
Prlnoess Gr-g1"es us •
look behind lhe walls ot
tile Vaganova Choreo-
graphic: lnatllute -also
known as the Kirov ballel
IC.t>ool -10 explore the
drHmS ol t\00 Russian
d•nc;eocs who hope to lol-1
low tn the loolsteps of Bar-
yshnikov, Nureye" and
M1karova
7:00 6 C88 NEWS 0 NBC NEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
0 YOU ASKEO FOR IT CD THE MUPPET'S
Gues1: Lena Horne.
G) JOKER'S WILD fD OVEREASY
"Employment' Guest
ac1or Burgess Meredllh. Q m MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
(3TI4EMUPP£TS
Guest Phyllts George
(Q)PSY~UNO
The dramatic story ot one
man's determination lo
b<llBk his own rec:0td tor
crossmg tile u S by biey·
d e
ZJMOVIE
• • • "Cheecll And
Chong's Next M ovie"
( 1980) Richard "Cheech"
Marrn. Tl'lomes Chong
Two potheads have
numerous small adven·
lures while roaming tile
Slreets of Los Angeles In
searCh ol the "per1ecl
high " 'R'
7:30 6 2 OH THE TOWH
Fe11ured The Righteous
Brothers. a group 11111
helps motherscope wllh
choldreri's bad habits. the
woman who acts as v1n11y
license plate c.nsor e a FAMILY FEUO 0 LAva.HE & SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
Alie< gelling the royal
dull-oH lrom two fellows.
LllV«ne and Shirley spend
the night In an OShkOlh
bus station.
0 MATCHGAME CD M'A0 S'H
Wnole seuung down to hs-
len to the Army-Navy
game, the 4077th Is bom·
barded and lel1 wllh an
une•plod1d bomb to
delu"
Q) TIC TAC OOUGti
Eli) OVUt aASY
m STEPPING OUT
A unique group of 40 1n1t1-
lutoonahzed mentally hand-
icapped people prapar e
for their first public per-
formance at the Sydney
Opera House In Austrafll
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
A technique for qu11tong
smOklng 1nvollf1ng vitamins
and acupuncture; a com·
pany that produces expen-
sive go-cart v8'slons of
automobiles
(C'MOVIE • * ... , Colfer The Waler·
Iron! ( 1933) Claudelle
Colbert. Ben Lyon A
waterfront reporter tails In
love wilh e smugoler's
daughler ·o ·
(Q) NHL HOCKEY
Los Angeles Kings \fS Naw
York lstonders
8:00 6 Cl) MA. MEALIN
(Premiere) Merion the mag·
ocoan. now running 1
gatage. 11 ordered 10 train
an appren11ce on magic: 0 fB REAL PEOPLE
Fea1ured 1 convention of
lattooed people, a wom-
en's basketball 1eam th81
only plays men, a fashion
Show lor dogs. a bord psy-
chOlog1st
0 MOVIE **'"' "Treachery And
Greed On The Planet 01
The AP" ( 1974) Rodd)'
McDowell Ron Ha•l)lf
Galen, the Ol!lmp, and
Burke set a trap In ordor 10
win a horse r •ce D MOVIE
• • • • ''The Brodge On
The Ro"er Kwao' j 19S7)
Wiiham HOiden. Alec Guin-
ness Duror1g Wortd War II,
a Brl\lah colonel and 1111
men become part 01 a pris-
on labor camp gang forced
by lhe Japanese 10 bull<I 1
Jungle bridge 0 MOVIE
• • • "How To Save A
Marriage And Ruon Your
u te" (1968) Dean Martin.
Stella Stl\fens An unm11-
ried man hlS an affair wolh
1 woman ha behaves os his
lroend's mistress
CD P.M. MAGAZINE
Q) MOVIE • * Shaton Ponra11 01 A
Mistress ( 1977) TroSh van
Devere. Patrick O'Neal A
beau111u1 woman llabllually
drawn to married men
hnds her Ille unfutflllong
fil) STEPPING OUT
A unique group of 40 onsto·
1u11onallzed mentally hand·
ocapped people prepare
for their llrs1 public per-
lormance at lhe Sydney
Ope<• House In Auslrelill
@!NEWS
(H)MOVIE • • * • "C hinatown "
(19741 Jock N1chotaon,
Faye Dunaway During Ille
1930s. a private detact111e
tnvMtlgates a case 11111
CHANNEL LISTINGS
0 KNXT ICBSl
0 KNBC CNBCI
0 KTLA (Ind I
Q) KABC (A BCI
Q KFMB !CASI
(} KHJ TV (Ind )
IZ!) ICCST CABCI
Q) KTTV (Ind J
ID KCOP TV llnd l
fD KCET (PBS)
l1D KOCE t PBS)
O On TV
Z l TV
H HBO
C IC•n""'"" I
t tWOR> N Y NY
II tWTBS>
l 1ESPN>
$ (Showtom(>j
0 Spolloqhl
8 l(ablP NPWS Nelwork)
I reveals 1 trail ol corrup-
tion, Incest and murder A'
S)MOVIE •
a * '• "It's My furn
( t980) Joli Clayburgn.
M1Ch881 Douglas A brll·
ltant Chicago math profes-
sor realizes lhe problems
1n ~ ltv&-1n rellllonlh1p
when she llnds • ,_ love
wtule In N-York lor her
lather's remarriage 'R'
0MOVIE * • •;, "Seems Like Old
Tomes" ( 1980) Goldie
Hawn. Chevy Chase A
sott-hearted lawyer 11 1orn
between her hopeless e•·
husband-turned-bank
robber and Iler upll<Jhl
present husband wllo 1s
running for C1hlorn1a
attorney general ·PG
8:30 6 Cl) WKRP IN
CINCINNATI
(Season Premiere) Carl·
son s old recept1on1St rek·
ondfel a romanlic flame
and Wl(RP recewes a
bOmb lhreat (Part I) CD ALL IN THE FAMILY
On 1he Sllvlcs' second
anniversary lhe family
recalls how lhe wedding
almosl d1dn'1 take place
(Paf1 I) m NON-FICTION
TELEVISION
Pesticides And P111s For
Export Only" Tl'le export ot
res1roc1ed med1ca11ons and
drugs 10 Tnord World coun·
troes os examined (Perl 21
8:35 Z l MOVIE
• • • • "JulJus Caesar"
( 1953) Marlon Brando.
James Mason Bauo on
lhe play by W1t1111m Shak&-
speare Pol11tc81 onlrogue
and 1reacnery culminate In
murder on anc:lenl Rome
0
9:00 6 MOVIE
Coward 01 The Counly"
(Premlefe) Kenny Rogers,
Fredric Lehne. A sensitive
youlll 1s deemed • coward
tn Ills small Southern town
beceuse he honors a
pledQll he made 10 hos
dyo"i._lather not to light CJ Qt OIFTAEHT
STROKES
Arnold Is blamed when Mr
Drummond ordars the
removal of all vending
machines lrom lhe school
(RIO CD MERV GRIFFIN
EE) NON-FICTION
TELEVISION
"Pest1C1des And Pills FOi
Export Only Tile e~port of
reSlrocled medocatoons and
drugs 10 Thord World coun-
t roes IS examined (Part 2)
@)MOVIE
• • Sco11 Jophn Kong 01
Aagtome' ( 1978) Solly Dee
Wiiiiams. Art Carney A
gilled black composer
mal.es an Indelible mark
uPQn ragllme musle
Cl MOVIE * • "The Baltimore Bui·
1er· ( 1980) James Coburn,
Omer Sharol A smoll0tlme
pool hustler must r a1se
$20.000 end win s big
tourn•men1 before Ile c;an
11ave e rematch woth an old
opponent .• who nas never
tost 11 any oame 'PG'
9-.30 0 3 THE FACTS OF
LIFE
Natalie s tlrst date spreads
some racy stories 1b0ut
her (A) m MUQAA.AFAIQUE
A young Wesl Alrocan
dance school dedocaled 10
the search ror a coo1empo-
rary African dance form os
prololed
r SJ THE WACKY WOflLO
Of JONATHAN WINTERS
10: 16 (8) ST ANDINO ROOM
ONLY
"Oumm111 The Third
Annual Adult Ven1rllo·
qulsm And Comedy Snow"
Slelfe Allen pl1y1 hOSI lo 8
number of talenled vole.·
lhrower1 end 1heir manne-
quin lnends. wtio man~
more oft.., tllan not to
"ou1sm1r1" lhe people
controlling them.
10:30 D PLAYOFF
HIOHUGHTS
... NEW$
Q) IHOEPEHOEHT
NETWORI< NEWS
~COSMOS
"One Voice In The Cosmic
Fugue" Or Carl Sagan
eiq>1ores the origin, evolu·
tlon and d1veral1y of Ille on
Eanh (A)Q
10:M (Z) MOVIE
• • •'A "Woodslotk ·
11970) Documentary Many
of the lop mus1<:al groups
of the tale 60s per1orm al
the famous ooclt conc8't
held In Belhlll, N-York.
1n 1969 ·G·
11:006 B D Cll®JQt
NEWS 0 SATURDAY N10HT
0 NEWL YWEO GAME CD THE JEFY'EASONS
Q) BEHNYHILL
S.nny as Fred Scuttle pre·
sen1s hos verlllOfl of tlla
Orange Blossom Special
fil) DICK CAVETT
"The loxes Mystlquo"
Guests Poul Burka, A C
Green. Dale Robertson.
Maxine Messinger (RI
~MOVIE
1r • • •;, "Bloodbrolhera"
( 1978) Rlcnerd Gere. Tony
Lo Blanco. A young m1111
dares to break family trad-
ltoon by wotlling In 1 "°'91·
lal ward for Children rslher
lhan In Ille h68V'f COOSl•UC·
toon business 'A'
O MOVIE
• • "Phobia" ( 1980) Paul
Michael Glaser. Sunn
Hogan A group of mental
patients are murdared
according to their lndlvldu·
al feats 'A'
11:30 6 Cll WKRP IN
CIHCIHNATl
Andy arranges tor WKRP
to sponsor • conc$1'1 by
lhe Brltlsll group "Scum ol
the E8t1h .. (A)
u aTONIOHT
Host Jollnny Carson
Guest. Buddy Hackett O ®J A8CNEW8
NIOHTUNE U FACE THE MUSIC
ID TI4E 000 COUPLE
In lhe throes of a hang
over. OSGar throws Felt~
out of the 101r1men1.
II) ONE STEP BEYOND
"The H1untlng" A young
man is ovenaken by a
-rd p11en<>menon alt.,.
he mercllelsly lets hta besl
friend die.
fil) KCETNEWSBEAT
m CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
MOVIE
• • "Middle-Age Crazy
(1980) Ann-M11gret, Bruce
Dern A Texas developer's
1uccesatu1 )Ob and t>eauto·
lul wtle mlf\IOll 10 drlYe
lllm 1n10 1 mid-life crisis
'R'
11:45 (~MOVIE
••I "Touelled By LOY9"
( 1980) Deborah Aallln,
Otane line A nu,..,ng
lralnee tries lo bring •
handicapped girl out of 1
deep depression by
encouraging her to corra-
TV finds Mary Martin
ByFREDROTHENBERG
A~T•lev"*'W~
NEW YORK -Larry Hagman·s mother re-
members the time she saw her son get a belly full
of lead. Yeah , she and 100 million other
Americans. Hagman's mother is not your sit-al-home.
walt-for·sonny-to-call type. She's Mary Martin,
musical star of Broadway and ijollywood. Her son
is Amerfca's meanie. J .R. Ewing or "Dallas."
But Mary Martin has been around. She
guessed the assailant was Blog Crosby's daughter,
Mary (J.R.'s mistress, Kristin), who was leaving
the series.
"Who would have thought, when I was maktnc
all those movies witb Bina, that hla dauchter
would shoot my son and have an Wetitimate baby
wllb him."
Movies and the theater were Mlss lhrtln •a
Ital•· Jt'a only later in her career that TV found
a.tr. Sbe'1 DeYer bad a aeries, a prerequisite for
TV ....._, ahlloqb Hr "hter Pan" •r:ci•J iuld llw ~ wta. llbel llttman the
UIOl.U.let.s '"o.u.i''~ .......... Now, .... Ital ...... I MW ~. a co-bolt
wtU. tonmr ...ntuter Jim Hartl oo PBS' "Over
& .. J," <kmlllat et 5:IO oo O.eMel !O and 1:IO
aaaue1 •••. PfOF•m pl .................. •ad
lllfonnldali ..... for u. --......... ftftJI ~~ S..1'' hd be.-andaond 1t)' JJup ...S ,.._ Blair. Tbe prod~ felt ll
I
needed a woman's touch .
"Jim's like another son. We're a perfect
match. I'm over and he's easy."
At a lively 68, the world renowned Peter Pan
had to learn to play the other side of the couch. "It
was very challenging. From June to September we
taped two shows a day. I had to learn to read a
TelePrompTer, and I didn't know much about
finding the cameras. The cameras had always
found Peter Pan."
Miss Martin was only apprehensive about a
few of the interviews. "One of the first ones was
Janet Gaynor, and we know each other so well that
I was afraid I 'd embarrass her with my .
knowledge. It worked out fine."
T hen t here was a show with her 1Sx
grandchildren, includin1 Hagman's daughter
Heidi, an actress, and son Preston, a pllol, and one
with ol' J.R. himself. "I broucht out a aide or him
that the public hadn't seen before. Re played the
nut.e. did some tai chi (Chinese exercises), we
wblstJed and cooked together. It wu 1reat fun."
But Mlss Manin admit.I that the mother-son
rel1tlonlbip •. ,., .. a rocky road for awhile. We
didn't talk for three years. when J wu away Uvln1
ln Bruil. Now, wllb my cblldren and
If Helcbildren, I'm 1ettln1 • aecoad cbance, and I
love lt."
K.,man•a 50th birthday party wu lut "eek.
lt wa Ta.as t.beme, ol eoune, aad Min Martin
danced d1lco with J .R. ,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedne~day, 8ctober 7, 1981 89 •• • ...
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS B 8:00 .. Mr . Merlin " Premiere
show a.bout a magician who trains a n ap·
prentlce in magic.
ABC «J 8:00 ··Bridge on the River
Kwai. · Willia m Holden and Alec Guin·
ness star in the World War ll story <>( a
J apanese prison camp .
CBS fJ 8:30 .. WKRP in Cincinnati.··
Season premiere has Carlson's old re·
ceplionist return to rekindle a romance.
NBC I) 10:00 "Nichols and Oymes ..
Two country boys investigate truck hi·
jacking.
sponcl wttll ,_ telol, Elvie
Presley 'PG'
==-~-=
12:00 0 MOVIE
• • • "Roman Scana.ia"
c 1933) EddMI Cantor, Aulh
Ettlng A man tlkaa a tun-
lllled daydream journey
back to Ille time of Cae181
and Iha Roman Empire
D ®l LOVE BOAT
"The Understudy" JoAnne
Harris, "Married Singles"
Polly Beroen. Steve Allen,
"lost And Found" Sanay
Duncan. Jim Stattord (A)
0 MOVIE
• • • "The Fug11ove Klno"
( 1960) Marlon Brando.
Anna Magnini. Based on a
story by Tenne-Wll·
llama A wandering guitar
pl1y8' kindles passton In
lwo very d1tferent women
CD MISSION:
IMP08818LE
Thi IMF reconstruclS an
entore neighbOrhood u
well es a man's lace 10
obteln necessary evl·
dance.
Q) ROOKIES
A trlend of Ayker's. once a
cop, 11 now a drunk wtiO 1s
framed for murder
fil) INTAOOUCTION TO
PHILOSOPHY (SJ MOVIE * * * "Tho Jerk' ( 1979)
Sieve Marton Bernadene
Pelers A cnromc screw.up
mekes m1111ons on a waord
invention only to lose It a11
on consumer damage suits
'A'
12:'05 6 Cll MOVIE
• • • .., "Secrets 01 Three
Hungry Wives" ( 1978)
James Franciscus, Jessica
Waner Three aocially
promonenl women are sus-
pected ol murdering a
handsome ptaybO)' (R)
1 12:30 o a TOMORROW
Guell S1erllng Hayden
fil) IT'S EVEAYllOOY'S
8U81NE88
"Sole Propr1eto11 And
Partnershios"
1:00 CD WOVIE
• • • "Shop Of Fools"
( 1965) Vi vien Lel gll,
SimOIWI Sognoret A motley
8SSOl1ment Of pa1Mfl09'$
os l0tc:ed to share dole
quarters whole tra...rtng 10
Bremerhalfen.
Q) INOEPEHDEHT
NETWORK NEWS
~MOVIE
• • • '"' "My Bodyguard··
( 1979) Chros Makepeace,
Adam Batdwln The new
kid 81 a Chicago high
schoot mekes lroenOs woth
lhe SGhool OUtCHI Ind
1ogetller they stand up to
the cruet gang which had
perseculed them bolh
'PG'
ft MOVIE * * "Tiii Rop-Ott" ( 1979)
Edwerd Albert, l(aren
Black A gang of 1-111
1tileves double-C¥011 one
anolher o\fllr S6.000.000 In
dllmondS 'A'
1:o5 !!:t) MOVIE * • • • "Chinatown "
(1974) Jack Nicllol1on.
Faye Dunaway During the
19309, a prlvale det9Cllve
lnvoallgates 1 case tllal
rtvtalt a trail of c;orrup.
Uon. inc41SUnd murdat. 'A'
1:10 8 MOVIE
• • "Beach C1sano.,1"
( 11165) ~rt Jurgens. Mat·
line Carol Tllrae young
Slcillans become involved
wltll a poor nobleman
Whom tllay believe 10 be
wealthy
9) NEWS
1:30'1) MOVIE • • * "It'• A Wonderlul
Lii•" (1g47) James St-·
an, Donna RMCI A man's
guardian lng4ll diverts him
trom aulelde and Showa
him wllat Illa hometown
would be llk1 II he were
-born
1:40 (Z) MOVIE
• •'II "Stardust Memo-
riff" (19601 WOOdy Allen,
Char1one Aampllng. A suc-
cessful dir9Clor faoes a
personal c:rilll as Ila lroes
to make some major detl·
sions on hos Ille ·po·
1:46 0 MOVIE
• • 'h "Palmy Days'
(1931) Eddie Cantor.
George Rafi Fortune-teU-
1ng con artists invade a
l11t11onable health soe
2:00 0 ENTERTAINMENT
TONIO HT
QINEWS
$'MOVIE
• • 'Return 0 1 The
Stree1hghlet Sonny Chi·
ba 'A
2:166 HEWS
2:300 NEWS
2:40 8 NEWS
2:46 II EDfTOAIAL 2:60 8 MOVIE
• • "Aun Like A Thief'
119671 Koeron Moore. Ina
Balin. A young girl aids 1ne
1ungle escape of an Ameri-
can mere.nary wanted lor
nos lnvolvemenl In I South
American Jewel h11St
3:00 (C) MOVIE
• • "The Baltimore BUI·
tel" ( 1980) J-Coburn,
Omar Sharif A smllt-tome
pool hustle< mull rBJse
S20,000 and win a big
1ourn11ment before he can
have a rematch wilh an old
opponent •. wtio has never
tost at any game 'PG'
l:'tMOVIE
• • • • "The S1un1 Man"
119801 Pe1er O 'Toote,
Steve Aallsb8Ck Wanted
by lhe police. a disturbed
Vietnam ve1er1t1 finds an
unsure tuwen on I mov~
.. , where • World WBI I
epic Is being folrned 'R'
3: 10 (%) MOVle
• • • "Ch1e<0h And
Chong's Nexl Movie"
( 1980) Richard "Cheecl'I'
Mann, Thomes Chong
Two potheads have
numerous small adven·
tures wllile roamln{l the
sireets of Los Angeles In
search ol lhe "per1ect
nign A'
3:15 0 MOVIE
• • "Ktd Millions" ( 19351
Eddie Cantor, Ethel Mer-
man A 8roolclyn lomboy
Inherits a fortune
3:30 MOVIE * * "Tuck EVftlllStlng"
Fred Kelter. Joseph
MIJC'(Wir• A ~ng glrl
111Mt1 #' lmmor1al family
known 111111 Tuc:k1 ·a·
1;46. UOYll
• • "9.0 s ~•clllc'
C 1914) RICllMO Atttllbor•
QuOh, EYI 8¥10k Five a11
Ctltn eurvlvor1 stranded on an ftland l*ng uMd for
llomkl tM tlng gr~ wtlh
the prOl>Wnl of eai.tenoe
4:48 • M0\111
"KentllClly JubllM" (195 t)
J«ry ColOnna, Jean Por· , ..
(l)MOW
• • • 0.t ·w ood11ock"
( 11170) ~!My Many
of tlle top mutlcal group•
of the 1111 '0()1 perlorm 11
the 11mou1 rock ~1
held In S.th4M, New Y0tl.,
1n 19611 G'
•
.... EllAU.
Tlaur•day'•
lDayC l•t-Movie• I
-MC>RteotG-
6;00(CJ * * t "A<;rOSS The
Wide Mfasourl" ( 195 I)
Clark Gable Ricardo Mon.
tatban A band of ''"
!rappers enters It••
uncharted te1r1tory of the
Blac;l(fool Indians where
they encounler a hottlfe
chief and h11 warrlOta 'G
6:30 0 • • "Phobia" ( 1980)
Paul Mlcllael Gl11or,
Su11n Hogan. A group or
mental patlenls are mur·
dared according to their
Individual leers 'R'
1:30 (C) * * "Sir Gawain And
Green Knight"
7:30 0 * * 'h "Toby And Thi!
Koala Bear" ( t981J Roll
Harris Love action and ano·
mallon combine 10 teO lhe
lale ol a young bOy and nos
pel koala 1n Aus Ir a••a s
lrontter days 'O'
8:00 (~) • • • "Manny's
Orphans" C 1980) Jim
Bak8', Maleclly McCour1
The bOys al an 0<ph1n19e
nSk theor charity fund on an
allempl 10 help 1neor
soccer coach pay back a
S40.000 debt to lhe mob
PG'
S Ir•·~ The Sheep·
man" ( t9S6l Glenn Ford.
Sh1rley MacLaine. A sheep
owner a11empts to ou1w1t
his enemies whole herding
hos animals through caltle
country ·a·
10:00 Q) * * Provate Eyes
(1953) Bowety Boys, Tom
Ryan. The Boys Ir 11ck
down I geng OI lur smug.
gters while helping a d•m·
sel In dis 1•1$$
CC) • * • Ir "The Emo·
grantl" ( 11172) Max von
Sydow, Liv Ullmann A
Swedlth pe8$811t family
endure the hardsnips ol
frortlle< Nie wMf'I they
come 10 America on the
1911'1 century 'PG' •
tS) • * * "Fame" ( 19801
Ir-Cara. Barry Miller
Several gilled studenls II
a New York lligll sc:hOol lor
the pe<lormlng ans eapen-
erlC41 various set backs and
successes of b01h person·
al and protasstonel
natures ·pa·
0 * * "Tiii Man Woth
Bogart 1 Face" C 19801
Aober1 Sec;cht, OllYll Hus
sey A man decides to
change 111s tllestyle and
phya1ca1 eppearenee to
resemble hrS screen idol
'PG'
11:00 0 • * "Double Dyna
mole" (1951) Jane Russell,
Groucl'lo Marx. When a
young bank clert< auddenty
becomes wealthy lhrough
a generous r-ard for sav-
ing a gangster's Ille, he
finds l'lomMll accused ol
having Slolen tho money
Q) * •.; "Lawless Range"
( 1935) John Wayne, Shella
Mannors An undercovw
•gent IMHtogllH lhe
cauM OI 8"<Tllngly ser>MI·
fess raid• occurring 1n 1
remole mining region
11:00 tD a * ·~ Uood 01y f OI '
A Hangrno·· ( 105111 r,-.J
Mec:Murra~ Magg If
Ma)'M Wh•n 111 u ·taw•
men c:ap~tt • llain 9'*
ltf' t k ill4lr, Ila II dllfTll~
10 find that Illa IOWI ~
pla prefer 10 trunk I'll(
c:aptlve u l>tlng gu I' ~~~nc•P•ble ol 1!• ~
' e • • "W11pam 1
Edmond O'Brl611 •
Beroen A cowboy a
the dNlh ol hll Ill~ ,
0 * * '" 'SMma LI~· Old
T1m11 t 111801 O•ldle
Hawtl. Crievy Cno• A
toll·hHrted lawyBr 16 IOtr\
bet-her hopel&4' tit~
h u1b1nd-lurned 1>ank'
robbef and no1 upugl\~
presenl huabanC1 wtlO 18
running lor Calllornl(
111orney general PG'
ll ) Ir • •.; "S"rdust Mem·,
ortes" 11980) Woody ~len.
c11ano11e flamplong
C41Sl lul dllec:lor 11
pe<tonal CroSll It tilt
to make some ma1or d
alons In his Illa PG' .,.
1'00 IC' •••'It "Tilt Pro
01 S9Cond Avenue
Jack Lemmon Ann
crofl Based on tile l>ftlY'~
Natl Simon An odver119ff»
executilfe loses hos )Oh a~
rios sanity bee11uiw ot tt>e
r-ssoon and th4" he<:llc
M•nh11tan pace PG
$ * • '• Tile Sh0<;1J
man" (1958) Glenn Ford,
Shirley MacLaino A sMl!p
owner attempts 10 Outw~
hos enemies whlle nerdong
nos animals through lottle
country G
1:30 Z • • * 'Cheet ,, lln1l
Chong's Next M u111e
I t 980) Richard Cheech
Ma"" Tnom<1~ C'nonq
Two p o lhPotls '-•E
numerous sntall . .o~n
lures whole roaming ~
s1roe1s of Los Ang1·1es In
search ol "''' p1,rle<:t
hogn ·R
2:00 0 • • • , 1 Love '1"'111
Alice B Toktd~ • t"68
Peter Sellers l eogti Tay
lor-Young A n11dcJl1W1Qed
Los Angeles lawyer •eaves
hos Orode·IO·be >lrJndt'd al
lhe a•1a1 and l.o•·t<J•""'" a
lreewneetong hopf,ol G
3:00 C * • Sor Gdw.un Ant.I
Green Kn1gh1
3:25 z * * • K•$S Mf' Kate
11953) Ka1tiry'I GrJy~on
Howard Keel Two ~l~•s
once marroed bf'C<:lmP
partners 1.1101,.~soonaoty
and hnd that they arqu .. as
much on stage M lhey do
oll G
3:30 0 * • The Gre;11 Man s
Whiskers 1t•H11 0.-a,..
Jones C•ndy (tlbae_.
Abraham l ontotn iii~s
11me out of ho~ camf)ulgn
lor a l11t1egor1
S *•'>·The Horth A..,·
nue lrregul9'S t U}1~)
Edward Herrmann. Bllroa-
ra Harns The new m1n1s1er
on 1 small town organ11es a
group of dotty women "'
his congregation 10 sloP
the "°"" ol church funds 10
crlmtnals. 'G
4:00 0 • * '" "Echoes 0 1 A
Summer" ( t976) Richard
Harris. Jodie Fosler A te1·
m1nally Ill 12-ye11r old Q"'
gives her 1t1us1on-litle>d
t81her and ner nlondly
determined molht>r the
courage 10 a'cepl heo l~le
PO'
4:30 'C Ir * * Manny •
Orphans ( 19801 Jim
Baker Malacny M<:Court
The bOVS al an orpnanage
risk tlletr charoty luna .,, an
anempl to help lheor
soccer coach pay bt#t:k a
$40.000 debl 10 '"" mob
PG
5:00 H • • SecrPI Valle)I
Hugh Keans-Byrnl' Nf'•Qh·
borhood k•ds help old man
McCormack thwan me ·~·
lams who are trauduleollv
ass•ssong h•S 11rel< ng
home on the se<.•el ;,11tev
G
5:15 Z * 1r• The Toutl•
( 197 1) Ellloll Gould 6•bt
Anderson Oorected by Ing·
mar Bergman A happ1f)'
married woman becomes
tnvolved tn an altoor wo4h an
unbalanced archePolO!nSI
'PG'
JOHN DARLING by Armstron & Batiuk
W ELL, Al LEAST 1 HOPE I HA1' CHESTER P. 01N6 . THE
FRIED CHICKEN KING. HA5 SOME (;~ASP OF IHE IV
e>U INES5!
NOW IHE: WA.Y 1.
S EE. rT ... WE CAN
TAKE. THIS STATI~
TO IHE TOf' OF THE ROOST BY SIMPLY
APPl..YING'THE ~
PRINCIPLES "THAT HELPED MAKE M'I"'
FRIED CHICKEN FRANCHIS ES 50 SUCCES6FUL!
••• OrangtCout OAILV PILO'TIW1dnt1a1y, October 7, 1811
• I
'Phat'1 next /or
original 'A.nnief'
BJ "~" lllAaaun ,., ......
NEW YORK -Jt'1 a lf&y, ralny day ln New ;'York. But th• ori1lnal 1tar of Broadway'•
"Ann1e" has no doubta the sun will come out
tomorrow. "At least I hope so," aaya Andrea McArdle.
She made her Broadway debut ln the still·
runniu hit back In April 1977. Then, she was four·
foot-two, weighed 75 pounds and only was 13 yean
old. She's since grown out or the star orphao's role.
Now she's just· over rive-root-four. wel1hs l1'0
pounds and is nicely filled out aa a youne lJdy of
17. But she's still performing, now in "They Say
It's Wonderful," a salute to the music of Irving
Berlln. She bowed in it Wednesday at the $t.
Regi..1-Sheraton's elegant Kini Cole Roedl, co·
starrine with three older Broadway folk -t,.arry
Kert, Terry Burrell and Debbie Shapiro.
"I like to keep busy," Miss McArdle explained
durlns lunch -St. Regis Cheeseburler tor two -
at the hotel. "I don't like sitting at home wtth
nothing to do."
No problem there. She's in "Wonderful"
through October, has a club date in Atlantic City
just after she turns 18 on Nov. 5, then may test for
a sequel to the bit movie musical, "Grease."
And in December, Miss McArdle, who hM re4I
hair, blue eyes, and a pleasantly poised manner
that belies her tender years, will make a pilot for a
TV variety series produced by Merv Griffin. She
says it'll feature college-age musician11 afld the
big-band sound of the Forties.
Auditions
set for
thriller
Newport-Pacifica
films has scheduled
auditions for lead parts
in their coming fe~ture
film. "Obsession With
'rerror," Saturday at 9
a.m.
The studio is located
al 3303 Harbor Blvd.,
Suite K·7, Costa Mesa.
Needed for the film
are a maJe between the
ages of 25 and 30, a
"Robert DeNiro type,"
and a fe male of the
same age, a "Sally
Field type."
Newport-Pacifica
plans to begin shooting
the psycho logica l
thriller later this month.
For more information
call 957·0282.
· UA MOYIES
Brea 990 4022
• EDWAllDS NEWPOtn
Newpon Beach 644 0760
EDWAllOS MUNTIMGTON TWiii
HuntingtOll Beich 848 0388
EDWAllOS YIU O TWiii
MISSIQn Vieto 830 6990
lDWA .. DS ClllEMA WEST
Westminster 891 393~
ClllDH>ME Or~ 634 2553
•....d
Ill-WAT JI DlllWl·lll
WesllNoS1er 891 3693
I?!!!!!!e9!-~A~
7:00 1 :30
I Cc=::==::zD* W=::ic::ss:::at if 1* Z.JT (f"OISHOWS AT '1:00 t :JO
I 091&.Y ..... I LAU.H (Al AT 7:00 t :J O
cown....-rA&. DtYWDC ( ... ) AT
7:15 t 1JO
RYAN O'NRAL SOP1 .. (RI • •1uln1 Seddlet (Ill)
OllLY ..... I
LAU8M IA)• Seems Uk• Old
Tlmet (l"G)
I ~=~iu
ONLY (f>Q)
BILL MURRAY
ST•INS (R) ARTH UR (!JO)
Robert DeNiro · P-obert Duvall
I "SNAK! f'llT FIGHTER" (A)
II "fO)( ANO nt1 HOUND" (PG)
"ONCE UPON A MOUSE"
Ill "--PMAN U"
"*TRIPES" (R)
Mtdntgttt Sllowa Frt.-Sat.
HE WANTS
W@OlJ
TO HAVE
HIS BABY
-.YMYNOU>S
MniiNITY
POJ :_: ..
HIWUll IAlltlUCll OW ...
fl roio H I »to M4&1* N.IO U ll
OWAMI -ITOl Mil-v,.,. .. S 6210
~· ..... S40 l4U (llW..-S C•MA WUT
EN .... C ... C:OTlll W-M• H t )93S
Co>IJ ..... 919 4ttt l'lln GITT CllTlll
Or-6>4 9711
-·· •. , Id*''
."0.-· \•..-1 atOI,..
IUlllA PUil Dll"f.IM ............ .,, 4010
DllAllGI Dlllfl·lll o.-~u1on
HOME ENTERTAINMENT AT ITS BEST!
I VIDEO• fA!JJ~:~ I 369 E.r 1 l'th Strwt #7.. ~ ~ O>lt• lhu, CA 92627 •v/'» I (714) 631·STOP or 631·1861 10,.,,:-b a•~ fl
$ WATCH A MOVIE TONIGHT 1" .. ~"0"'"g
$ IN YOUR OWN HOME! "1~1
We have in stock these latest releases.
"MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD"
"A BRIDGE TOO FAR"
"SOYLANT GREEN"
"BACK ROADS"
"THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY"
"HOUNDS OF BASKERVILLE"
"'SANCTUAR¥ OF FEAR"
And, we have a huge stock of Nostalgia
movies fun 11ntertainment for tonight!
"The Great Caruso" with Mario Lancia
"Day atthe Races" with the Marx Bros
"Man With The Golden Arm" with
Frank Sinatra
"Mr. Robens" with Henry Fonda
"Farewell to Arms" with Gary Cooper
"On the Town" with Gene Kelly
"Svengalia" with John Barrymore
D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation"
"At War With The Army'' with Dean
Manin and Jerry Lewis
"Mr. Hulot's Holiday" with Jacques
Tati
"Topper" with Cary Grant
And, just in, these serials:
"Gangbu11 ers.. •u-E•Cl•A•l •l•l A•N•K•
"Don Win slow of the Navy" TA'E 'RICES
"Dick Tracy·· TD~ T·121 -SU.75 •.
Flash Gordon's ''Conquer fll11.l ·500 -St.ti•·
the Universe" limn Z to • ant-•I
'W. eteo hhe vidM tao-t '"' • w ide t•noe of c.e~I• Co~• •" and fit1 1 Use of °"' cOfnptete 1roc" et'ld, whU• vow ,. h ....... ovr V14Ho T•oe .. ecordel• COIOt Vfd.O <•~M. Vtoeo Diec M.c,l\ln ... ,..,,., col~ T\f• .• V ld.o .-.m ... end ••• Sc, .. ., TV• Come ,,.. *"'° brOWMll
They hove brought to life some of the most
memorable characters in motion picture history.
DeNiro as the obsessed Travis Dickie in "Taxi Driver"
and the relentless Joke LoMotto in "Raging Dull:'
Duvall as the hypnotic Dull Meachum in
"The Great Sontint"ond the nopotm-kwing
Colonel Kilgore In '1'pocolypse Newt"
Mow they ore together in "Ttw Confessions:' ..
one of the most controveniol and provocative
movies of the year. T~
A R:EERT C>iARTCFf ·IRVVN WN<LER PRXLCTON
FU3ERT Cl: NRJ • R:EERT ~L l~CXHESSCNr·~&.lwmgll.IU:SS ~H • OWUS CUN'llG • EDFLAl\QERS • CYRl.ClJSAO< • FDSE CffGORKJ ~·!fdl<.El'fl:TH MCMLLAN • &J-~~..D..i GRErmv CUN: 8-c:l .JJAN [)[)O\I • Beaedaithl r04lbV.Dofll CffGOOY OlN\E M91C tJt 0ECRES CEU!R.E ·Orettlrd~-ONEN FOZMAN·A SC· Prm.cedbV RINN WNKLER rc:J~RT 01ARTOFF Orcud~ll.IJ~·RMd the n(M!I franF\xilcet.Boc*5·0-,...."'*'_.._.,,_s--~
Qlo,rq~ MD.t.ll>llCl0""1AtlH•0•lff• ......... .,.,~.A,-.-;,,;; ..............
STARTS FRIDAY
...,. uun OM1Gt ....._
,__ Vally DrlYt l.n 0.-•noe Duve In Pt.11 Citv
•.•• , 658 7022 634 9282
WIJTMNllTU UA MIH
893 0546
-I
-
. 'Ihe1fench fjeurenam:.~ r-woman
........ ... .. ... ······ ... u t d Art .ft ... -·" .. .... DI 8 18ut
NOW PLAYING
MllSIOll VllJO
Mo~~IOI> V1t111 Mdll
495 6no
NEWPORT 8£ACN OllAllCl WISTMllllSTER
NawOQrl C111~Clolt1~ C111e111a W~~I
b44 OlbO b3• ?~~J 891 393~
''POWElll'UL''
-David Ansen, Newsweek
fiil ,.....,. MOIUON~rl,jfQ/'IMltllUt MOIS.llllllJtSL
~ p..,._. n.oMMl'tNfRMOS.OA-,..~~ O•••o.-.,,___ ... ...._.._ ......... ..._....
*BARGAIN MATINEES *
Monday lhru Saturday
All PerformencH before 5:00 PM
(Except SPtClll Eng1gtmenta 1nd Holld•ys)
LA MlllA[JA MAI I Morocso ot lotecron1 LA MIRADA WAUC-IN 994·2400 ----CM -I .. AltTHUR" -.-. ........... ~-. .... M T-. IHI.I: ... 4 ... U&. le& It:•
.,. .. 0--.a.L. J.t.Ca ...... ··so FINE" 1111 ,.,., a:a ....... ,. .........
-·~'°"--°' "GALLIPOLI" -.... ,, ... , ... ,._..
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN .a. . .__.,.._.
.. ,..INCE OF THE CITY" 1111
••· •••. r:11. , ... -----n--"ONL Y WHEN I L.AUOH" 1111 , .................. .
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
focully Al Del Amo
21J/6,.·9211 -·--------,~~~-~r..-ft.
LAGUNA
--·IMOM.L.111• "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK .. !NJ --. . .._ tt:•.1::111. ..... ' .......
~.,...,-.
"l"ATERNITY .. -, ... ., .. -·-···-
foc ulry ot Condlewood
213/531·9580
I .. THE CANNON BALL RUN" -, ... tr: •• tli•M T.0..• t:JI• tlttl
"NINE TO FIVE .. 1N1
I •. l'M U T ON&.¥ tt•. 1t:el
_,,\'\._AMI> _ _.,_
"THE FRENCH
LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN"
....... , ........ -·· 1 ·-
OYAMO_•_W ......
·so FINE" Ill) , ................... ~--
' --·-..... 'l'IAIOVIS Of' THI L09f MX''
•l:lt. -· &:•. -· .... lt:ll ...
so. COAST WAlk·IN
Soulll Coosl Hlwoy
01 l roodwoy
494-1514
•a.·-~-"PRINCE OF THE CITY" ,., -. .... ... .. ,_ -· ..... a:at
..,.,.. O"'l&Al • MiCm •A.-oa.
"SO FINE" Oii .. , ................. ._ .
IMPORTANT NOTICE! CNILOR£N UND ER 12 FREE! Harl)., an• WJtMf Mii\ Uuw ft1 4 .lO • 5'1 Sul\ H .. t •·OO '"'
C!Hf.11 S0UH0 • YOOll AM CAii MDIII IS YOUR Sl'lMEA
1f Ill) AM CAii AAOIC) 'lilTlt l(lH(OON .ccl$S()j!f fllOSl11Jlj
-llllNG AM fllOl!TAIU 1•11U CINI-ft OIWMIS GO Oii AM MDI()
ANAHllM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
l••••oy ti 01 l•tt1on SI
179·9150
----·--"CARllON COPY" IN! -"TAKE n.IS JOB
ANO SHOVE 1r · -
t.mVM~·-...,,.. I --·-Mwwn "ESCAPE FROM NEW YOAK" 1111 "THE CANNONllAU. RUN" ,._ --"BLOW OUT" 1111 "NINE TO RY'E"' -
9VINA PAllK
BUENA PARK ORIYE·IN
l•l"lC~f\ Ave We st of ltttott
121·4070
I O UNrAIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE·IN
Son 01•00 lrwy 01 1100~1111111 (So I
962·2411
·-·--"' .. ¥1. "PRINCE OF THE CITY" 1111 -"HIDE IN PLAIN SIOHT" rel
CIHl A 50\IHO
.a n M . & ... .._ &J10 A..,,,_
"MOMMIE DEAREST" fNt -"LITTLE OAALINOS .. 1111
Cllll II SO\JltD
tA ~ABllA
LA HABRA DRIVE IN -·-·-·-'""' ... -171-1162
Aul NI' PAlll•
LINCOLN DRIVE ·IN
hnCOlf\ Ave We .. ol l f\On
121-4070
· ''1ANr.f
CiNl 11~ _,,...,_
PATERNITY' !N I -CAOOYSHACK "''
ne ..,. P\JM llO_.. Cd.,.
"ARTHUR" iPOI -"STRIPES" 1~1
CIH! 11 SOUllD
S.ocll Bl•O So 04 G.l<o•n G•OYe lttt,.01
891·3693
-"OAEA8l" INI
CllO( II SO\JHO -----·IC..n--"ONL Y WHEN I L.AUOH" 1111 -''SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES" !NI
CO•( ,, SO\JIOD __ .. ____ _
"CARBON COPY" --··TAKE n.IS JOll
ANO SHOVE 1r· '"'
.. .., ... ·~ --·~ "MOMMIE ~AEST""'
"UTTU DARLINGS" 1111
ORANGE ORIVE·l"t:J
Sa"'o Ano f,...,.
' Stole COll•O•
558·7022
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WARNE~ ()PJ\,f IN
---· "SHAKE fllT FIOHTiiR" 1111 -"WAAAtORs·· .. ,
rtNeo'*"4 ·~ ·-"IO FINE" 1111 -"IUZINO IAOOLEI" t111
Shanghai's
desirable
rock lobster
Classic Chinese cuisine is as
old as its culture and considered
by many to rival the finest cook-
ing in the world. As most of us
know from reading the ads for
Chinese restaurants, there are
certain basic styles : Cantonese,
Peking, Szechwan, Honan and
Fukien.
And then there is Shanghai.
Shanghai is also characteristic,
but doesn't rate among the
classics as a regional Chinese
cooking style of its own since it
represents an integration of
Chinese cooking with many
other ethnic ideas. Thi~because
Shan g h ai is a great cos·
mopolitan city. and in cooking,
as in everything else, people
borrow customs and concepts
from the people they live with.
So perhaps it would be fair to
say that the Chinese dishes most
people prepare at ·home in this
country are Shanghai style. We
have adopted and adapted -
and made the Chinese connec·
tion.
One of the best of the connec·
tions is the Shanghai Rock
Lobster. It is Chinese in concept,
but it has some definite Occiden·
tat culinary viewpoints. It is
suitetl lo current American
tastes, needs and, importantly,
available Ingredients. The
sweet. easy to handle seafood
used in the recipe is South
African rock lobster . The tail
contains a solid piece of meat
that is easily cooked, as easily
removed from the shell in one
piece. sliced put into the rec-
ipe. What makes this meat so
desirable is its texture and taste,
which are due to the icy current
(that comes up the western
coast of Africa from the An-
tarctic) from which the South
African rock lobster is fished.
Ir ther e was ever a
''Shanghai" recipe, this has to
be it. Two of the ingredients are
apple juice and catsup. Whoever
but an American would think
that these particular flavors
would especially enhance a
Chinese dish? They do. Rock
lobster from South Africa,
catsup from the pantry shelf,
and apple juice from Oak Glen
combine with the Oriental
culinary technique of sweet and
sour.
The rock lobster dish will.
naturally, be served with rice.
In this case, Rickshaw Rice, a
deliciously different way with
the Chinese staple. It has an in·
gredient that unquestionably
makes the dish Shanghai-style.
That 's aromatic bitters ,
the venerable liquid blend
of herbs and spices. A taste for
this flavoring and seasoning was
carried by seafaring men of the
19th century to every port or the
world. Certainly to Shanghai, ~
the single gateway to China in
laHyPllat
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 1981
SLIM GOURMET
SPECIAL DIETS
USING HERBS
C-4 ce
C11
'
those days, and one of the Shanghai Rock Lobster not totally Chinese , but tastes very Oriental world's largest seaports.
Bitters has a unique quali·
ty of blending a nd "marrying"
other flavors in any dish in
which it's used. In other words,
it makes the connection. In this
case, the Chinese connection.
SHANGHAI ROCK LOBSTER
16 oz. of frozen South
African rock lobster tails
l 'h cups apple juice
'h cup vinegar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup catsup
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1-'l cup sliced carrots
'h cup diced green pepper
1 cup pineapple chunks,
drained
2 tablespoons corn starch
14 cup apple juice
Drop frozen South African
rock lobster tails into boiling
salted water. Boil for 3 minutes·
after water reboils. Drain im-
mediately and drench with cold
water. With scissors cut away
underside membrane and re·
move meat in one piece and cut
into chunks. Combine next five
ingredients and bring to a boil.
Add carrots, green pepper and
simmer 10 minutes. Add pineap-
ple and simmer 5 minutes. Dis-
solve corn starch in 14 cup apple
juice and stir into hot sauce.
Cook until thickened , stirring
constantly. Add lobster chunks
and heal for 5 minutes. Serve
over Rickshaw Rice. Yield: 6
servings.
RICHSBA W RICE
4 cups steamed rice
3 tablespoons of rendered
chicken fat
1 clove garlic, finely minced
~ lb. fresh mushrooms,
lhlnly sliced
1 can (19 01.) water
chestnuts, drained and sliced
See...._, Pace a Blueberry-Mandarin ~ideal deuert
I ,
The supermarket is
on!y the first stop
for refunders ... C5
HHiCf)OH ...
Blueberry-Mandarin pie
makes the connection
The Chinese are not high on desserts. But Americans are.
Again, we'll go the "Shanghai" route. When the Chinese serve
dessert it is usually fruit. Any classic sweets in Chinese culture,
and there are a number of them. are served during the meal -not
after it.
The dessert, then, for an Oriental-Occidental connection should
be fruit-based. And this Blueberry-Mandarin Pie is an ideal solu·
lion.
As most people know, mandarin oranges come from a small,
spiny Chinese citrus tree. It bears loose-s kinned fruit, in a color
that ranges from yellow to reddish orange. There is speculation
that the name "mandarin" came from the color of a Mandarin's
robes. If you want to know , the fruit is also called kid-glove orange
or, here we have it, tangerine.
But for our Oriental-type dinner, we'll call them mandarin.
Blueberries we always call blueberries. Americans know them
very well indeed, and know that the name came from lhe beautiful
blue color of the berry itself -a color that reflects the summer
sky. It ls during the blue sky summer months that the fresh
blueberries are available. And that's when Americans are always
looking for one more way to put them on the table.
Try this new color combination, Mandarin and American Blue.
It's not only pretty, it's a delightful connection of good tastes. Even
old China hands, who don't serve desserta, will be happy to see this
appear as the curtain closes on the South African rock !obiter din·
ner.
BLUEBEaav MANDARIN PIE
1 can (11 oz.) mandarin orance aegmenta, well drained
1 qt. fresh blueberries, rinaed and drained
1 cup sugar
3 tablespoons qulck·cooldn& tapioca v. teaspoon aalt
~ teupoon eroudd nutmee
1 pq. pie c1111t mix
2 iati)elpooaa butter or marsartne
2 tablelpoou cream
ReHrVe some orance aecmenu aod blueberrl• for aariliab. la
See Olt11!91I, Pase Cl
a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, October 7, \981
Pork & Peas Cantonese delight
1'he ancient Chinese >
celebrated the birthday•
of both the sun 1tnd the
moon
The birthday of the
moon hlls in lhe
autumn and is combined
with a feast of
thnnk5givlne for the
harvc&l -so the
Harvest Moon Festival
' is one of the most impor·
tant celebrations in the
Chinese calendar.
To add the Oriental
version of thanksgiving
to your list of holidays to
enjoy, serve an easy
Chinese style entree -
Pork and Peas Can -
tonese.
Begin the feast with
• delicate won ton soup,
available in frozen con-
c en tr ale at
supermarkets; add a
side dish of fried rice,
available both canned
and frozen, to comple-
ment the meal.
PORK AND PEAS CA N·
l can (8 ounces>
bamboo shoots, rinsed,
dra ned, and cut in half
crosswise
2 tablespoons dry
sherry
Lettuce leaves
Orange segments
In a small bowl, com ·
bine first 6 inRredients;
set aside. Heal 1 table·
spoon cooking oil In
large skillet; sau te
mushrooms over high
heat until their liquid
has evaporated, about
two minutes. Remove
mus hrooms and set
aside.
In same skillet, heat
remaining 2 tablespoons
' oil over medium heal;
add salt. Add garlic,
onion and red pepper
and cook and stir for 2 to
3 minutes, or until onion
is golden.
Increase heat to high;
add pork, peas and barn·
boo shoots. Cook, stir-
r ing constantly, one Pork tastes fine in Oriental pepper steak dish TON ESE
(4·5 Servings> Pork a11d Peos Canto11ese minute. Add mushrooms
and sherry. Cover pan
a nd cook one minute
more. Stir in broth·
sauce mixture and con·
tinue to cook and stir un·
til sauce has thickened.
Remove from heat.
l teaspoon sugar perature •
l tables poon corn-l tablespoon cooking
1 s mall onion, diced
1 sweet red pepper,
diced Pork pleases ID Oriental dish starch . oil 2 tables poons soy
sauce
Dash hot red pepper
12 lb . fr es h
mus hrooms. trimmed
and quartered
2 112 c u p s d i c e d
cooked pork Try pork in oriental
recipes and add a touch
of the .East to your menu
choices. You will be
pleasantly pleased with
a light touch of oriental
cuisine.
Also, try varying the oil
rice to pilaf, wild or
brown rice, if desired.
2 medium onions,
thinly s li ced and
separated in rings
2 inches In large skillet,
combine olive oil. pork,
union rings and garlic
Cook until onion as
tende r , s tirring often
Season with marjoram
and sail. Add chicken
broth, wine and pepper
strips Bring to boiling.
reduce heat. Cover and
simmer for 15 minutes
or until pepper is tender
and pork is done Blend
together cornstarch and
water, s tir into meat
mixture. Cook and stir
until mixture thickens
and bolls. Add tomato
wedges; heal through.
Serve over hot cooked
rice tossed with minced
pars ley Garnish with
fresh marjoram sprigs.
if desired. Makes 6 serv
ings •Or use l cup hol
waler a nd I teaspoon
chicken bouillon
granules.
sauce
l 'h tablespoons bot-
tled barbecue sauce
2 tablespoons cook·
ing oil
1 package < 10 oz I
frozen peas, thawed or 2
< 6 oz > pack ages frozen
Chinese p ea pods.
thawed
Line a serving bowl
with lettuce leaves;
spoon meat mixture into
it. G amish with orange
To round out this
nutrient-dense main
dish, serve whole spiced
peaches and hot tea.
Pinch salt 1 clove garlic.
minced a.. c u p c h i c k e n
broth, at room tern · l c love ga rli c.
minced segments. Pork Pepper Steak
has succulent strips of
pork tenderloin
sea soned with onion
rings, garlic and mar·
joram simmered in a
wine broth along with
green peppers, then
thickened.
l teas poon mar
joram
• • .Lobster .
From Page Cl
12 teas poon Angostura
aromatic bitters
Salt and pepper to taste
Heat chicken fat over medium
heat in a heavy ·pot or large
skillet. Star in garlic. Add
mushrooms and water chestnuts
and stir-fry for 3 minutes. Add
Angostura bitters and salt and
pepper to taste. Combine this
mixture with rice until grains
are evenly coated . Place in
casst'role and heat in moderate
o\'en <350 F > for 20 minutes.
Yield 6 servings.
Piiot advertising is
good business for
Amer ican State Bank.
"Dally Pilot help wanted
ads have conslsteolly
brought us the best
personnel."
• • .Oriemal-Occidental
From Page Cl
large bowl combine remaining orange segments and blueberries.
Sprinkle with sugar, tapioca, salt and nutmeg. Toss lightly until
well mixed. Prepare pie crust mix according to package directions
(or use your favorite recipe for 2-crusl pastry>. Roll out half of
dough on lightly floured board or cloth to a 13-inch circle. Fit gent·
ly into a deep 9-inch pie plate: trim pastry overhang to ~ inch.
Spoon fruit mixture into shell : dot with butter. Roll remaining
dough into an l l·inch round. Cut 4 or 5 slits near center to let steam
escape. Place over filled pie shell. Trirri overhang to 12 inch. Turn
edges under together flush with rim. Flute edges. Brush top with
cream. Bake in a preheated hot oven (400 F. l 45 minutes or until
crust is golden and j uice bubbles up. Cool on wire rack at least two
hours. Just before serving garnish with reserved mandarin orange
segments and blueberries. Yield: One 9-inch pie.
NOTE : Ory·pack frozen blueberries can be used.
Tomato wedges are
added for color and
nutrition. This pork en-
tree is s erved over a
parslied bed of rice. It is
so easy to make and de·
licious you will want to
try it often.
For variation, try
your favorite herbs or
seasonings for different
flavors or textures
Pork is a n utrient·
dense food , high in
nutrients for the amount
of calories consumed.
Pork is especially high
in protein, thiamin as
well as other B
vitamins.
The next lime you
want a light. nutritious
entree for g ues ts or
family, think of Pork
Pepper Steak. It's an at·
tractive and nutritious
entree for anyone with
an eye to the East.
P ORK P E PP E R
ST EAK
U-;i pounds pork
tenderloin
2 tablespoons olive
12 teaspoon salt
l cu p chick en
broth•
• 2 cup dry white
wine
2 small green or
red peppers. cut in
strips
2 tablespoons corn·
starch
3 tablespoons cold
water
2 tomatoes, cut in
eighths
Hot cooked rice
Minced parsley
Fres h marjoran
sprigs, optional
Cut pork tenderloi n in
to thin strips about 1'2 by
Bargain Food Basket
19th and Placentia, Costa Mesa
In Vista Shopping Center
Prices Effective Oct. 8 Thru Oct. 14
Co• ill md .... °"' frit•., Htclten ..ct receive CJOod old
fa.Waa1d ovtrafllt co.Iv penoaallzed 1enice.
Grocery
~u 139
SPAGHEnt SAUCE ••.••••.•• 12 OL
un<>M, COUHTIY STYU 2 /9 9 4 CUP-A-SOUP ••••••••• 2 ,._
SMUCICHS 8 9 4 GRAPE JELL y •••••••••••••• II OL
HEALTH-AIDE 7 9 4 PINEAPPLE-COCOHUT JUICE J2 OL
IASSIE'S 1 A 9
FOOD STORAGE BAGS •.•••• 1 s ct.
RSCHH 894 llSIDT MIX •••••••••••••••• 2•tJ •·
MAllSCO 694 SHACK CHIPS ••••••••• All •erietW•
Produce
uo nun
YAMS •••.••••••.•••....•••.•• 39!
RIPE AVOCADOS .••••.••• 5I1 °0 .
YOUHG 'H' TIHDH 5 I 1 0 0
CARROTS ••••••.••• I ......
RIPE TOMATOES • • • • • • • • • • 3 I 1 ° 0.
~~ 4 100
JONATHAN APPLES • • • • • • ••·
Meat
M.U*tlHGS IHF
ROUND STEAK 198
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ll::t.
MA ... HGS Hff 1 6 9
IEEF ROAST •••••••.•...• s .. u.oo... lb.
MAHHIHGS HEF IONB.f.SS 2 5 9
IEEf ROAST .••••••••••• _,or clod lb.
MAHMIHGS IHF 2 6 9
TENDERIZED CUIE STEAKS • • • • . • • lb.
YOUHGnHDH
SLICED IEEF LIVE:R ............ 89:.
WISCOMSIH 1 9 8
MONTEREY JACK CHEESE . • . . • . . • lb.
HO.-ntDM
HALllUT STEAKS 2 98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
[el
PEPSI COLA
IZoL ..... 299
Deli
LUCiiie Kuehn
Communit y Relations,
American State Bank
Newport Beach
-•llOID 794
IOL.OGMA •••••••••••••••••• OL
-•IPOID 794
l ..
COOKED HAM ••••••••.• • • • > ...
l
,.,. ,,. .• ·meal hell peppers 31 ... ,.,$100
l••H •1rl11tt•
1
hruuel sprouts 49• ,.. heel rlhs
i ••• ,.. ~9 ltaHan squash ;, •, •. , euhe steaks
artleholces ,..,. ,.,.. 79• ...,,.., .......
•••••• ,11, 49• :: . ehlelcen hreast
..... ,. ........ ••ll•lt• !» .......... ,. ... ., pllll•
apples ;,•••· ,.,$100 18Ul8ge •• . ,.. -. ~9· ..•. ,,,. ...... p,. .....
. rome heauty apples ., ••· .1 1 . grouna vea .
INI• n11• hr••n vitamin e 250 •Hl1t11•• ...... ,.
too tth ,.,. 1.20
side of heel
•1l4.11rttr
fish
*119, •. hallhut fillets
*269, •. turhot·
*1''. •.
eoelctall shrimp
*179, •. ,,...
*249, •. fillet of sole
*119 ,,...
*169 sea hass
... 2'4 cleli ·
250 .... ,. •. uo ;~;,.. suhdltute
1111 $661 • ••lfl• 7 n . $279
INI• 1111• hr••n ••rktt ttp11 "~~: .. !.. 100 .... ,... s.•1 wild honey s ••· ••• $299
$
319
.. ,.. s ,....,. turkey hreast
2so ·~:. "•· u1 pudding & ~le .1111111 47t ••· .,,... ... ,. .. .,
.... $750 .~e~.ool sna• ml• 79t 181189e .
I II.
*49• ....
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*398, •.
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*279, •.
*349, •.
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98• ,,... ,. ... ftr••n •• ,... ..,. •••• ,.. $259 ..... tarter or
vitamin e 1~000 •"'"" ... lfllnuts .. ,. ,.., ••· eoelctall 18uee
11•1 r19 . 7.22 INI • ._ ---------~~
$662 • tall nr•tn ••rht $259 ,,,, ltrail mix ••1• •elf ••· · ............. ,,... ••11 "'• tt.e '"'•
250 .... ,.,, 16.91 ,. ........................ ., ••• ...... ,. 11llhnll. grocery .... *1557 .............. ,
1"'• 1111• "'••n ••rktt ripe olives vitamin e t200 .1n1t11••
250 Ith 111· t7.tS .. · ...... ••a . $ 69 .... *1557 lee eream .... ,... .....,. 1 P"'
7.S 11.
~----------------....ill
............. ,. ..... ,... $179
poppy eoffee e1ke ••.
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Orange Coast DAILY PU..,OT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
C11re dis .J~.es and bland food ~th garlic
I
By BAaBAtA G IB· tr it' the inconven cloves. PMI each clovf minced aarllc with 2 Or try lhil: Combine 1 BUTTER Combine 1
BONS 1encf' <and s melly wllh a shup pointed l'LIM GOURMET table1poona lime or or 2 cloves 1arlic and 1 clove peeled aarlic. 4
'fhrouchoutmostoflu flnaersl that keep you knire. Or , maab each -4 lemon)ulceancl 1 table· cup low-fat cottaae o un ces butter Co r
hllftory, aarUc has been rrom mincing up a lltUe clove with a kitchen estoon soft butter <or cheese lo blender and mar g a.r In e > an d 8
as much medicine u garlic ('very lime you mallet and simply pick maraarlne) Spread the process s m ooth. Toss ounces fresh f arm er
foo d peas 1 n t need 1t, why not make off the p eel. lt'lnely mixture over l pound or this mixture with 2 cheese <or pot cheese> in
, penkillin ror everything up your own In s tant mince the garlic and put GARLIC -Mash, peel, promptly afte r rcmov· rlsh steaks or fillets pounds lean ground beet blender or food · proc-
from ast.hm• to zymosis fresh garlic to keep on It Into a jar. Add white then mince the garlic i na the amount you before brollina. Makes round until thoroughly essor usin&. the steel
Its eure-all stutus con-h a n d i n Y o u r vinegar until the earllc and spread it on a n need, so garlic doesn't four servings, under 120 blended. Then shape the blade .. Process s mooth.
tinues refrigerator, botUed in is covered. Screw on the aluminum pan or sheet defrost and refreeie in a calor ies each (with mixture into 8 patties Refrigerate in a covered
Reports from foreign vinegar' Here's how: lid and store the garlic or foil. Freeze un· clump. fl ounder , sole or cod>. for broiling. The meat conta1ner. Use a s a
juurnalll claim th1tt FRE S H I NS T ANT inlherefrigerator.Use covered,sogranulesare Some ways to use GARL l C HAM · will be m oist and spreadfor cris pFre nch
.:arlic has been useful In GARLIC as needed. One teaspoon separate. When frozen, garlic: BURGERS -Improve flavorful. Makes eight or ltalian bread. Spread
treating atherosclerosis Garlic is the equivalent of one scrape garlic granules GARLIC BASTE l''OR the n avor of very lean servings, 175 calories is under SO calories per
<in Germany). men· Whitevinegar m e dium c lov e ; 4 into a s mall glass jar BROlLED FISH -ground beef by mixing each. tablespoon (less than
ing ilis (in C hin a). Separat e an entire calories. and store in freezer. Mash 1 to 2 cloves or in 1 teaspoon minced half the calories of bul·
u n em ia (in Austr alia), ,...h_e;;...H_d_o_f__.!g;!..a_r_l_i _c _;_i n_t_o _ _..::.F...:R::...::::O=Z:..::E::.::N..:.......:l:..:N..:..:S:::..T~A..:.N:...:T:.,_.::..:R..:.e:.....t u::..:r...:..n~j :::.;ar:.._.;t~o--=..:fr:...::e;..=e-=.z~er:_._..;..t .;;..e .;;;.a..;..s.:.;.p...:.o...:.o~n...:.s__:.o..;;.f_.,;_f ;;...r e:::...s:::...· h:.;.__fr_e_sh__;:g;...a_rl_ic_..:.pe_r_:po~u:.....n..:.d_. __ F_A_R_M_E_R_S_G_A_R_L_I_C __ te_r_l ·--------
a rthrilis and penumonia
(in J apan >. colitis Cin
Russia), diabetes (in In·
<ha ) and hypertens ion
(m Switzerland>.
Not every claim has
been substantiated, so
you might not want to
ke ep garli c in your
medic ine c hei.t. But
garlic is a sure-cure for:
hland and boring food
Three grams of garhc
P otato
s alad
I t r e at
John Montagu, <Ith
Eufl of Sandwich, made a lasting impression on
food history by invent
iug the sandwich.
His mini -meals o f
bread slices or c rusty
t olls filled with a variety
of m eats. fish or fowl
ar e s till popular
luncheon fare today. In·
crease your enjoyment
und enhance navor b}
adding s pi cy brown
must ard magic to sliced
hcef, turkey, cheese or
ho l og n a i n yo ur
~.indwiches.
Ile art v and robust, not
hut. just right. the flavor or s picy brown must ard
i~ decidedly different
from yellow mustard.
What makes the dif·
r~·rence? Brown and
} c l low mustard seeds
plus a secret blend of
spices combine to give
this must ard its unique
ness.
It goes ever ywhere
too. into salads, sauces.
vegetable dis hes and
casseroles. That extra
zi p contributes gusto
He re's a suggestion. To
go · with your favorite
sandwich. try a .. Pe rky
Potato Salad." Just add
spicy brown mustard to
t ne mayonnaise and
savor the delicious tang.
P ERKY POTATO
SALAD
4 cups diced cooked
potatoes
:i. cup c h opped
<'C'ler y
12 cup c hopp ed
green pepper
12 cup minced onion
1 teaspoon salt
•1:1 cup dairy sour
·rream
1 ~' cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon brown
mustard
2 tabl espoo n s
vinegar
1 large tomato. cut
up
4 bacon s trip s,
cook ed, drained and
crumbled
Combine all ingre
dients in large bowl :
mix wel l. Cover a nd
chi II . Serves 6-8.
O r ient a l
flavore d
chic k en
SA YONARA CHICKEN
1/4 cup all purpose
flour
12 teaspoon s alt
lifl teaspoon pepper
11'2 pounds frying
: chicken pieces
; 2 tablespoons oil
~ v.i cup waler
• 1 teaspoon soy sauce
, 1 pac kag e I 10
ounces> frozen Japanese
: s ty le vegetables in
,sauce
Combine flour. s alt
•a nd pepp er . Coat
c hic ke n pieces with
f lour mixture, a nd
' brown well on both sides
in oil in large skillet.
I Turn chicken skin side
up, a nd add water.
Bring to a boil; cover
and s immer 30 minutes ,
o r until c hicken is 4 tender. Place chicken on
platter and keep warm.
:Add soy s auce and
vegetables to skillet. Br·
ing to a fWl boil over
medluftat, separat-
ln1 " el wllb • fork lnt Ir•-'
quent17. lleduee bellt;
cover and almmer 2
miaut••· Serve o•.r
ddftle; wit.II hot -*td
nee, ti •1rect. Ma. 1 .......
YOU GET THE BEST VALUE FROM THE ~ow PRICE LEADER ... LUCKY.
f"LADY LEE 149 i ~!:4M~rt~ T~~~3n
or W3ter Piek
BLADE CUT 87 ~tL~£K ROAS~b •
FRY INC 54 ~~t~~~~rn craoeA lb •
CROSS .,198 RIB ROAST
Bonel~s Bono'° Bttf Chu'IC
COTTAGE
CHEESE
Laoy LH. Ot Ctn
159 NO
Umlts
... ,,.469
f"LADY LEE i CIDER
Keg Buys
,. .. 259
mean utla savba§s.
Key 8uya are 1tem1 priced below their everyday
discount prices as a result of manufacturers'
1en'lporary promotional aJtowanca or uc:eptional
purchases. You11 fin4 hundreds of Key Buy
ilema every time you shop.
f"LADY LEE 149 I> ~5>~9GNA 16 oz ptg
T·BONE lb 257 STEAK
Bonded Bttf LOln
LADY LEE "'"' 139 BACON
Sllcl!d
FRESH lb 178 TROUT
c~ar Springs. 6·10 oz.
ICherrv Stone. EHtern C13ms lb 991
NIB LETS
COB CORN
Frozen.• ur Pkg.
.99~ ..
lverydag low prices.
lnttead of a few weekly apeciab,
acrosa-the-board low pricin1 can reduce your
overall food bill.
The larger slu u the bdta' bug.
Wt"'°''"''" 1ht taracr slr.c or any canoed,
bottled or patlca~ item 10 alwayi be the better
buy. Even when '" tower the price of a smalltt-
1ized item to ttflect a manulllCt\lrtr'I allowance,
we llltomaticalfy reduce the larpr elit, tdo.
f"HARVEST DAY 39 d>e~!!'~ 6Ct Pk~•
TOP SIRLOIN lb 257 WHOLE BEEF .,138 STEAK BRISKET
~~s 8onO«I Bfff l.Oln Bo~s Boncll!d Beef 7·9 ltx
BONELESS lb 197 SIRLOIN "218 RUMP ROAST TIP ROAST-
s1r1<>1n cut BOnCle<I BHf llouno Boneless. 8onoecl Beef 11ouno
7·BONE 119 PORK "158 E!!oU~K ROAST Lb LOIN ROAST
Slrtoln Cut. 3 lb Avg
DELICIOUS
APPLES
lll!d or COid. Northw~t X·F3ncy
... 29 ~ ...
PASCAL
CELERY
Crtsp anCI Crunchy
BARTLETT
PEARS
TABLE
CARROTS
Firm end R'esl'I
lb .15 ~
ITALIAN
SOU ASH
FRESH BEAN
SPROUTS
Fuji lrlncl
lb .29~.
Lower prices overBll .
Orange Coost DAILY PILOTIWednosday Octobar I . 1981
~ ~ ~ Supermarket only first stop for refunders
By MARTIN SLOANE
New refunders are often sutprised to dis·
cover that the s upermarket is only the first
stop in the hunt for the refund forms that will
turn their box tops and labels into cash.
Many drug, discount and variety stores
now display refund forms.
Refund forms frequently appear In
manufacturers' newspaper advertising; ex-
amine these pages thoroughly for forms.
There are a lso refund opportunities in
many Sunday newspapers. Check the color
comic section and the advertising inserts .
~efund forms can also be found in many
magazines. such as Better Homes and
Gardens, Woman's Day and Reader's Digest.
These offers often will not expire for
som e months. Many s m art refunders have
thumbed through old magazines at rummage
sales or second-hand stores and found refund
form s that were still c urrent. An old
magazine that you can buy for as little as a
Tide Tide
Laundry Laundry
Detergent Detergent
Fam11v Size Giant Size
171 Oz BOX 49 oz Box !607 !206
[Safeguard
~~!es~~~p .50
Tnese pr1c~ effttt1ve weonesoav onooer 1 tnru Tutsaav Octooer, l 19s1
•••••••••••cool'ON •••••••••••• : THE ECONOMIC AOM4NTAGES :
: OF AN EPICUREAN IMM : •' . ~ . ~ . • • • • • • • • • • --·--"1••·• ............... .. • • • • • • • • ~i 01f HOW TO GO FIRST CLASS Oii A 11/00ET i • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
The econom10S of a Honey Baked Hom ore such •
that you get mOfe meat fOf your money. MOfe •
servings per pc:xind. Meat thofs arwoys lean and •
free of excess tot •
Ifs octuotty less expensive than almost anything 1n
the meat counter of your supermarket. And. •
because ifs prEH:ooked. there's no stviri<oge. Even •
ofter the ham as gone. the bone makes a supero :
soup . • Every spiral siced Honey Baked Hom is hickory
smoked. baked JO hours and lopped with a honey :
and spce glaze a process yCAJ cOUdri't duplicate •
in yCAJr own krtchen.
The result ls a table ready ham. Ready to be •
erjoyed al day long. With eggs In the mOfring and •
potatoes at right And as a snack Of sandwich •
in-between •
As a culnory centerpiece Of In your ~nch poll a •
Honey Baked Hom is the pertect choice :
: HONEY BAKED HAM:
• --... 31CX>E Coost ~ • (714)613-9000 • • ,._. The I/loge Center • 1222 So &oolttvs! (Al Bal Rood) • •
• (714) t>Jb.2461 •
•• NW· llel Tower l'tlzo Na1h • 24001 Roymord WC1( •
• (At8TaoRood) • (714)&37.J822 • • _,,_,_ --·!Q()OQ Beoctllt..o (Al Ga1leld next to~ a) • • (714) 84&-M75
• -· 14l9tt T1.tt'n(Acr01Strorn JavotootOrorQe) • (714)997-Q960 •
• ----· ~ ~ ffi(Rord'o~age PloaQ) • (714) 3Ab.Jl!I04 • ........ S06MrQtcnAve (n~~center) • •
• Q~~ •
: ==:i==.i:::::=..-a=:.rr=.:=."i:= :
: O#f IU7f •AU IT Mltfll :
: 30¢ OFF PER POUND:
: ON Ollf HONEY BAKED HAMS :
: OOOD'MtUOCT.15 WtTHCOUPQN ONLY: ···········COW091 •••••111f ..•..
dime can produce several dollars' worth of
refund and coupon oppo•tunaties.
trading with nt•1ghbur~. at coupon dub meel
in gs und by mail "'1th refundt•rs tn ott)er
1·111t'' I will h•ll \OU mon• ahout lhest:' tct"h
niqut•-. 111 futurto {0olurnn'
Don't forget to check my "Refund of the
Day" listing for refund forms that you can
write for. These forms can be obtai ned for
the price or a post card and, occasionally. a
stamped, sell-addressed envelope.
Procter and Gamble will usually send
you a refund form and reimburse your
postage for any offer that is available in your
area Whenever you see a Procter and Garn ·
ble product fo my refund listings, you can
write for the form by addressing a post card
to Box 432, Ci ncinnati, Ohio 45299. Be sure to
mention the name of the offer
You can also ask non-refunding Criends
and relatives to help you look for forms.
Many refund ers have dozens of helpers who
bring them all the forms they can find These
helpers are rewarded with an occas1onal re
fund or gift offe r.
Other good ways to obtain forms include
M argo1ne
Cube•
I-lb.
Corl on
.,
47 c
V\f ashington State
Extra Fancy,
Red Delicious.
Just Arrived!
Over 500,000
Pounds From Washingt~n
Boneless, Full
Center Cuts
Safeway Ouality
Beef Round
Flavorful, Tender
and Juicy! • SPEC/Al •
l'""'' 1 ~fth.U Qi\,•t ll,....t 19C
1 oolhpau~
lnclud~•
7S Off .... ,,_,,.Cl.U.
_....,. 7-o•
Tube
II V1~· London Broil Steak ( \ ~ ·> tf!-;:.' Pork Spareribs ~ \~).:,. :\ Medium
T MJB Coffee n Cragmont Beverages
· .... ,r:ti.f ~ !f. s .... ''79 f Fto1en·
..., '• Dofro•ttd
Sofewoy s 199 Quoliry e .. f Top
Round lb lb 139
3-lb Con $ 5 99 '~· ,. II Lunit 1 '"'cho-. <hi•' l1""+t H IJ
Halibut Roast lite Beer Cireen Cabbage
ftoaen ot
Defrotltd.
Toil or
Coll or
P0ttion ~b.198 Freah
ond
C"'P lb.19<
QUALITY MIA T!
Rump Roast ~~ ... ~ • s1su
Beef Cube Steaks ~":::::... , s2•9
Chicken Fry Steak >:. ... ~-:.~· • $199
Tip Roast ~:~ , s219
Ground Beef ... ,.._ OW.Mii • s19e ,. "'""'•
s.·~"" Boneless Stew Beef °e::<~ .. '198
Corned Beef ,...:?.:. m.:: • s1H
SEAFOOD & DELI
Fresh Perch Fillets • Sf8
Fresh Butterfish Fillets • Sf9
Fresh Western Oysters it: '119
Cod Fillets ,...c. .. -• s21e
Bits of Shrimp "7:..~ i: 1129
Raw Scallops -I: SSH
Thin Sliced Meats ......, ~ 59'
Smoked Sausage -"=:... • '248
Safeway Burritos 3 ~ 1100
BAKERY
C-i' Honey Bran " ~~.r I• 1 age
C-S• Raisin Bread .... •. ggc ,,.,,
~Donuts .... "t. s1•s
C-£· Cinnamon Rolls .. ~ .• ;'11 5129
LIQUOR BUYS! =-: Kamchatka srs
n Gordon's Gin , . s999
IW
2::i. Seagram·s V 0 s1549
:7i Blue Nun . ~'·• ... 2 . s700
FRESH PRODUCE!
Artichokes
Romaine Lettuce
Fresh Yams
Champion Raisins
. 69'
FROZEN ~ Carlo Rossi Wine s299 Won Ton Wrappers
t 39'
39'
14 . .; 99'
... 99'
t5"-81Meat Pies ::=: 3 :.~ s1oo
~Van de Kamp ,_ ... 79'
C-£, Henry Weinhard 12 ~ s4•9 Grapefruit Juice ........
DAIRY Cashew Nuts
•Mar-kes Burritos 2 ~; '1°0 ,..-l'Lucerne Yogurts 3 ;"' s100 Porn Porn Bouquets
·.:-· '199
.• s29a ...
...... s12s
•Cheese Pizza '! ~ '1'9 ~ s2~ -.,.. Orange Juice . • ·-HEAL TH & BEAUTY
C-S> Lake To Lake !. :.~ $148 GROCERY :-:. Colgate ... ·~79' .....
~TomatoJuice ~-Yi 79' ~ c Ch 79' _... aZt: ottage eese .......
•Peaches 91:: .. "" 7: 59' ~Cookies C:::!:'O.. ",.. .. 99c Lucerne Eggs ... .. , °" 99'
C-ii Ultra Brite ,., s13e ,J/111...,.,,, . ...
Vitamin C ...... -s2u ,,,,~ ....
\IMO ...... Dr .. .._..,... IHdt • 6H ..._ c ... ..,,.__,, L ..... .._.
•IHlk ....... s.t.A ..
llegulo•
and
Diel
•
3 s100 Ouo•I
8olllt1 o::.::.,
Fresh Broccoli
Serve With 3 9 Melrtd (
81111•• lb.
Flourigard
Dental Rinse
_.... :: .. s 119
Botti&
Efferdent
Tablets
20' Off lobel
=::.s 1'9
of 60
Excedrin
Capsules
~s1•s
&
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
Apricots add swee t flavor
1
to Cantonese pork chops
I "Cantonese Holiday and simmer 35 minutes, RICE ORIENTAL raisins
Fll1ht now leavlnJ Oate If necessary. add more ( M ekes I servlaC•) ~ c u p c h opped
S. Destination : Manila water during cooking 3 tablespoons butter celery
Ba)' in the ~hilipplnes period. Add water or margarine ~cup peanuts 1 and Hong Kong.'· chestnuts, scallions and l cup uncooked rice Sall
B r eak away for a celery; cook about S ~· cup c hopped Melt butter in large reaUul venture to the minutes more unti l onion skillet ; add rice a nd
lands or coconut palms, celery is tender. Add v. teaspoon ground onion and saute until
tiny thatched huts, ex-apricots and cook just ginger golden brown . Ad d
cl t in g market places, until heated through. 2 cups chicken .broth ginger , chick.en broth,
and endless areas or rice Season sauce to taste or bouiUon apricots a nd raisins.
paddles. with sail and pepper. 1 cup diced dried Simmer. covered, about
Prepare, too. to enjoy Serve with parsleyed apricots 10 minutes or until rice -
\.
I
Sl'rve these Can·
tonese Pork Chops
made quickly in a
~killet Ca nn ed
apricots and crisp
vegetables add flavor
!!IUrprise
some Oriental and rice. 11'3cupdark seedless <SeeCIUNESE,PageCt>
Island specialties -~~:__~~~~~~~~__:~~~..:..'.~~::'.:.~::::'.~~:.::::.::_:_~~~~~_:_~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~;;;;;;;;;;..~~~~~~~~~~~ sweet and sQur dishes.
bowls or steaming rice
plus fru its s uch a s
&,P.r icols and fl avorings
llke ginger and soy
sauce.
Canto n ese Pork
Chops, a skillet dish
flavored to sweet and
sou r perfection, com -
b i n es pork chops,
vegetables and water
chestnuts with apricot
halves.
S ince th e ir roya l
beginning in C hina
around 2200 B .C .,
apricots have often
added exotic tang to
Oriental dishes.
The canned forms of
apricots are ide al ,
especially for this rec·
ipe. since the fruit is
ready for adding to'the
dish. straight from the
can.
Actually. this pork
ch op dish becomes a
qu ick. simple s killet
su pper that's easy on
the budget. This recipe
uses a s killet, but of
course, a wok works
well, too.
T h e Chinese s tir-fry
method, which allows
t he water chestnuts and
other vegetables to sim ·
mer with the cooked
meat o nl y a few
minutes. makes the dish
easy-to-prepare in less
than an hour.
The drained apricot
halves are added the
last few minutes of cook-
ing and heated with the
other ingredients. Then.
pork chops Cantonese·
s tyle are ready for serv·
ing.
T h e perfect serve·
along is parsleyed rice.
S im ply prepare hot
s teaming rice, toss with
freshly chopped parsley
and serve in a colorful
Oriental bowl -with
chop sticks, if you wish.
Of course, Cantonese
fruits and rice team up
in other dishes too -
like Rice Oriental. This
recipe's simple and
quick .
Uncooked rice is first
sauteed with butter and
seasonings, then com -
bined with chicken
broth, raisins and dried
a pricots. Simply dice
the dried apricots no
other preparation 's
needed. After simmer·
1ng the rice a few
minutes, toss with
peanuts.
Rice Oriental is ready
for serving, especially
w it h roast pork or
poultry. or course. the special
ingr edien t of dried
apricots not only adds
flavor and color, but
nutrition too. Wh en
eaten "as is," .,., cup
dried apricots supply at
least 75 percent of the
recommended dietary al·
lowance of vitamin A
needed each day by
adult, teen-ager or child.
And, for a ta s ty
cookie, perhaps to serve
with hot Oolong tea .
bake these Cantonese
Apricot Bars.
The crunchy topping,
which is spread on top of
the cookies after baking,
combines dried apricots
and coconut with
almonds to make a tas-
ty, delicious delicacy.
E njoy these apricot
speci a lties from t he
South Seas soon.
CANTONESE
PORK CHOPS
6 loin pork chops,
l·inch thick
2 tablespoons salad
oil
1 can (30 ounces)
apricot halves
~cup water
2 to 3 tablespoons
soy sauce 1 large clove garlic.
crushed
IA t ·e a 1 p o o n
powdered ginger
1 can (8 ounces)
water chestnuta, drained
and sliced
5 1c'1.lions, ellced
2 cups dlasonally
t Uced eetery
Salt IDCl pepper
Brown eboPI oa both
1lde1 in belt oU in lul•
1kl.Utt. Pour oil neea
fat. Drala •rnP .from aprt~ laliO ...... Md
add ...... .., A••· ' 1arUe _.,,....CO..
Ral hSSu er
69
•
Fresh
Fryers
Limit 3
per c ustomer
Whole
Grade
A •
Eastern Grai n
Fed Shoulder Ralphs Fresh Ralphs Golden Premium
Ralphs Monterey
Jack or Mild
Ralphs
.Natural Grain or
Fresh Pork
Roast
per
lb.
Italian
Sausage
per
lb.
Ice
Cream
Cheddar
Cheese
Honey Ruff
Bread
79
1/2 gel.
ctn. 98
8-oz.
pkg. 09
Ralphs-Frozen
From Fl orida
Orange
Juice
6 oz.
can
•
Ralphs
Old
Fashioned
Donuts
Only at Ralphs!
WITH EVERY $75.00 ORDER
Muat be on one tape. No accumulation of
reglater tapea.
•
12 oz. Cans
Sugar Free
Dr Pepper
Crisp
Iceberg
Lettuce
each
•
Dishwasher
Cascade
Detergent
19
I
.
Feature Item of the Week
Hearthside Sculptura
$toneware Dinnerware
Saucer ree
TICKET*WORTH $8.95
Plus another Ralphs excluslvel
Addltlonal ticket• on sale at Ralph•
Adult $6.95/Chlld $4.95 Save $2.00
~~'~.tg (§J i ~ .. ~ Veach • plua t•x
·Ticket• m•y not be ... ch•ng•d for cH h •nd •r• non-lr•n•l•r•ble. Ticket 1ncludH
adm1u lon lo •II •llr11ct1ont Including epecl•culer Speclel Etfecl• Sl•ge. Food or
merchandtH not included. Full del•1l1 •I •II R•lph1 merkel1. Otter t ubjecl Offer enda October 14, 1981 with each $5.00 p~rchese
to ch•nge w1thoul nohct
Prices Effective Oct. 8 thru Oct. 14, 1981
You're doing
yo&l'slwe •••
·~,.....to ............... .....,... prlcit.
ot i.f .... prW to lnlllel ....... rMuDl l R ...................... ,, .......... ,,.....
Adwerttled IWfN In Shi• Id et• tN Mme Pflc• or lower In 1H 1torff. Prlc• otfter then
11111.,1111• ..,..._ m8J • .,., d1p1,...11 upon loe1I competition, coet fMtOR or ,..., •• • toc.tfon,
31111• ST., CISfA D .. , mm PUU • ... LmA e
UIWlll UI CIUll R. IT wuit. IWll
-... IJWNIT)tiS 12MllWll.._ ......... .
172'111' ST. ll$TI
... , ... cmama
v We're doing
ours.
•Copyright 1111 by R11pn. Qrocw1 company. All rtttn,... wed.
we ,...,v• IM right to limll or retu .. H'" to comme~i.1 ....,_ or notHa .. ,..
.. , .... ~llACtt
411 ll LOMA. W1101 -llct ..... 9fYllTIM IUCll
MAHI.IA & .... ~-•l.lET
.~.
15471 S . ...st, EflllSIO
st• llllS: S.11...,, ... -
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. Oc tober 7, 1981
. Meatless dishes now pop ular
MeaUess main dishes however , Is already 2 tablespoons bul-GARDEN BR 0 W N
are ealning In popuJari- cleaned and sorted and ter or marearine RICE
ty, but not just for the ready to use as It pours 2~ cups chicken 1 earllc clove,
obvious reason. from the package. It's broth minced
Economic pressure ls failure-proof cookin& 1 teaspoon basil 2 tablespoons but-
mollvatlng many con-directions produce 1 cup parboiled ler or margarine
sumers to select meal· plump, lender grains of brown rice 2% cups waler
less entree alternatives, brown rice thal are 1 can (12 ounces) l ~ teaspoons salt
but these dishes are also never sticky or mushy. who 1 e k e r n e I corn, 'I• t e a s P o o n
becoming favorites of Make the most or drained nutmeg
those who simply want fresh asparagus by com· 'h p 0 u n d 1 cup brown rice
to eal lighter and those bining ll with fresh iuc· a s p 8 r a g u s , c u t 2 cups small broc·
who want to redu~e chlni, onion and canned diagonally In I -inch coli flowerettes
cholesterol or calorie in-corn in a seasoned mix· pieces ~ p o u n d
take . ture of brown rice that 2 medium z.uc-mu s hroom s , thinl y
For meatless dishes ha s si mm e r e d in c hini, cul in '.4 -inch sllced
that won't shortchange chicken broth. slices 1 c up c h err y
flavor or nutrition, lry This colorful, satisfy-~ cup grated tomatoes, cut in half
brown rice and vegeta· Ing dish is sprinkled Parmesan cheese 1 cup shredded
ble skillet meals. Brown with optional Parmesan (Optional) moz.zarella cheese
rice is a great source of ch eese to creat e an Cook onion in butter in Saute garlic in butter
vitamins, minerals and elegant entree. IO-inch s killet until in 10-inch skillet. Add
natural food fiber . Raid the garden <or tender but not brown. water . salt and nutmeg:
The hearty, nutty the produce d e part-Add broth and basil ; brmg to a boil. Stir in
flavor and wholegrain m e nt ) to prepare bring to a boil. Stir in rice. Cover and cook
texture of brown rice Garden Brown Rice. r ice. Cover and cook o ver low heat 40
makes it something Seasoned with garlic ove r 1 ow h ea t 3 5 minutes. Top with broc-
special, and these days and nutmeg, the nutty minutes. Stir in corn, coli. Cover and continue
it's a breeze to prepare . brown ri ce simmers un· asparagus and zucchini. to cook over low heat un·
Not so in the past. watched while vegela· Cover and continue to t il liquid is absorbed,
Brown rice used to re· bles are prepared and cook over low heat until about 10 minutes. Stir in
quire tedious sorting the cook relaxes . liquid is absorbed, about m u s hr o oms a nd
and washing, and indeed BROWN RICE SKILLET 15 minutes. Sprinkle tomatoes: heat through.
some brands still do. 1 medium onion, with cheese, if desired. Sprinkle with cheese.
Primavera Brown Rice 1s meatless main dish Parboiled brown rice, chooped Makes 6 ser vings. Makes 6 servings. ~~~~~~---~--~------~-~----~~------~-~--~~..---~-~--~~~-~~--~-----~--~-.:;_-------~-...-:;.--~-
wb-yo. "'1•2 Rt. or...,_ pedui .. ol
l<rallteaa .....__..or
Whole Wh-t 'n Honey Pancake Mix.
Fii '" Ill~ coupoo and m<lll ro oddr"o'5$ below Enclow rt>.> rnp •• ~mq ~ fr<>m box or bi><j ol <>ny Krusiea1 Pa~ M;x
12 b OI larger)
NAME -----------~-i
ADDRESS ----
CITY ____ __,TATE:. ____ ZIP _
Offer good only 111 U'>I\ Vcwl where pr'lhlhrrd. 1.;xed •" r""'1ltlt'd
bv law This certJk,,t.-mu!il accompany y<JO• •<'que-1 ~·~l l'l'ldy "'" l'1 •"P'oduc...l ()ff;,r apor~ March I I 'lH2
MAn. TO: ContinmralMils. P 0 Soi. PM 347. EJPMO. TIWIS 7W66 Alow6-~weel<sfor refund ro.vnw '"------:1JTJ1J'lT-______ ..
·~ (J
a
W e're so sure you'll agree Krusteaz
makes the lightest tastiesfpancakes
your family ever put a fork to. that
we'll give you a $1 refund just for
trying 'em. Everything's in the bag so
all you do is add watE'r and stir.
You're ready to cook up perfect
pancakes with ease Krusteaz.
The new Daily Pilot
8.·DayWeek
it 's a PLUS
DAY WEEK
8~
3 Lines
8 DOllarS
)
SHOW OFF YOUR HAIR
ANDSAVE25C
Show off your hair, not the itch of dandruff, with Head [, Shoulders Regular
or Conditioning Shampoo. Ifs effective, yet gentle enough to use everytime.
CUT ALONG DOTTED LINE
Save404
on the
Robust Flavor
of~
Nescafe " Instant Coffee,
Regular or Decaffeinated.
Either way you drinl~ it,
you get the same
l~ind of robust
flavor that won the
world. Clip the coupon
below, and either way
you buy it, you save 40¢.
·--------------11 1t9E8E STOl'\E COUPON
I SA TO THI DIALI •: This COUPOn will be re· K deemed only et follows: For •mount spec!·
fled plus 1' for hendllna. provided coupon la received from customer on purchese of
I listed merchendlH . Proof of purchaH of aulllcle'lt stock of merchandise to cover coupons submitted must be shown on re-quest. (Fallure to comply may vold ell cou·
I 404 pons submitted for redem.ptron.) Redemp. lions not honored throu1h bro kers or other outside aaencles. Coupons ar• non· transferable end void II UH Is prohlb·
I lted. teu C!J rHtrh~ted or llce nH 11 requlr•d. ~ustomer muat pey eny sales te11. Cash r1demptlon value: I/I~. lz.e j J'O• ltlOblfO'TIOH MAIL TO· TMI I on ony s or NI.I TU COll .. ANY.1.J!'.'C., ... o. •ox 1100, of Nescott~ Instant Coffee. n• c1n, N.c. 21 ..... orn• 0000 ONLY
"egulor or Oecoffelnoted. L7.~t~·t;.u ONI coul"ON MAT H
I •IDHMID .... UNIT OF ~. DUCJ "'"° CHASID. eooo °"'""ON NllCAFlt INSTANT 40¢ CO"IL HGULA• Olt DICA,,atNATID. AN• OTHltt UH CONITITUTU ntAUO. I I EXJllW D£~:>1, 19a1. IUl41 .. ________ _
t~ I
I
.I ,,
'· ,,
..
" I
,.
,1
.,1
·'
.,
•J .,
•'
.,
[
II
'
OI Orange Co.st DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7.1981
Many small meals can help a hiatus hernia
By JVNE ROTH
Many people over the
a ge or fort y have a
hiatus ht!rnia but either
don 'l know it, or ure not
bothered by it. It is only
wh un the a nnoyin g
symptoms of heartburn,
pain, or dtscomCort a rise
t h at i t b ec o m es
necess1try to make some
cha nges in what you eat,
h o w often, and how
m uc h
Most patient!> feel bet·
ter if they eat six small
meals throughout the
day, rather than three
large ones.
The re are :.eve ral
Co rms of hiatus hernia,
but basically it is de·
fined as a protrusion of
a part of the stomach
above the diaphragm in·
to the chest wher e it
normally doesn't belong.
A sliding hiatus hernia
is t he most co m mon
type, and can cause con
gestion of the gastric
mucosa 'that can result
in the pains of gastritis,
o r s ometi mes m a y
cause ulcerations
If yo u h ave e x
p erie nced discomfort
and ha ve h a d your
problem diagnosed as a
hiatus hernia there are
several things that you
can do to lessen your
symptoms.
Discom for t seems lo
a r ise af ter e a tin g a
particularly large meal,
or if there is an emo-
tional upset or physical
exertion after eating.
Thal is why s m aller
m e a ls a r e r eco rn
m ended, and why it is important lo relax quiet-
ly after eating.
Overweight pa tie nts
m ay feel much better 1f
they lose the e xcess
weight slowly and then
keep it off. For some.
anta cids are of gr eat
value as they neutralize
the hydrochloric a cid of
the stomach.
Patients also find t hat
elevating the head of the
b e d or s leeping on
several pillows seems to
give additional comfort.
A modified bland diet
is often recommended
for hiatus hernia control
when symptoms become
annoying.
The particular foods
to be eli minated because
they cause gastr ic ir-
rita tion are black pep·
p e r . ch il i p o wd e r .
tomatoes. tomato juice.
citrus Juices, chocolate. peppermint. excessively
fatty foods. coffee. tea.
c h oco l a t e . co l a
beverages. red pe pper.
alcoholic bever ages, and
som e drugs.
It 1s "rise to take the
t im e to di s c uss the
reslrictions thoroug'hly
wit h your d oc t o r .
Program
lowers
guidelines
By DON Kt:NDALL
A .. ,."".,..
WASHINGTON -The
A g ric ulture De pa rt-
ment, in a belated an-
n o unc eme nt . s a ys
f e d era l i n co m e
g uidelines have been
lowered for a nutrition
progra m that provides
supple mental food for
2.2 million mothers and
their s ma1 1 children.
Th e p r og r am .
popularly called WJC,
provides government
food packages to help
m eet the nutrition re·
quire ments of pregnant
and nursing women, in-
f an ts a nd other small
children.
A monthly package of
special food costs the
government about $28
each. Items can include
milk, cheese , cereal,
juice. eggs and infant
formula, depending on
the recipient's category.
Under previous rules,
a family of four could
have a maximum in·
come of $17,S60 a year
and qualify for aid. The
new regulation puts the
maximum at $15,630 a
year.
Details of the change
will be publllhed ln the
Sept. 25 issue of the
Federal Register, the
government's official
notice ol rule cbanaes.
Al\houP otftelal1 uJd
they h.r no .Umate oa
how m•y people wlU be
cut frvm ta. propaa.
tbe1 Indicated U.OH
WO•ld IN drop ... a u., C!DVte .. ,. ......
r••lew or r•· certtneaua. al eUclbW·
tJ. No e1tl le wa .......... . ..
llteMllla ......
1111&
because some people
tend to go on a stricter
than necessary Cor m or
the bland diet
ser ve11
l t ablespoon but·
ter or margarine IPICIAl 01111 '-Alt Cove r and simmer over low heat for t5·20
m in u t es , o r u ntil
c hi<-k e n 1s coo k ed
through. Serve with hot
cooked rice, if desired.
Makes 4 servings.
MEAT LOAF WITH
Ju ice
l slice white br~ad
1., teaspoon Rall
sail und mix wdl. Spoon
into a loaf pan and bake
for 1 hour. 20 m inutes
before meat loar is done,
drain peach slices a nd
pour ~, cup juice into a
saucepan; stir in corn
st arch and heat a nd
s tir until mixture ii>
th ic kened. Add peach
sli ces and pour m ixture
over meal loar Makes 4
ser vings
Here arc severa l r e·
c ipes that wou ld be
s utisfactory for a pl!rson
on a bland diet
JELLI E D TURKEY
ROLL
l four -pound
turkey roll, thawed
1 • cup apricot pre -
'·• teaspoon salt
Arrange turkey roll in
a roasting pa n. In a
sm all sa ucepan, com -
bine apricot preserves,
butter a nd s a lt. Heal
and stir until preserves
are m elted. Spoon mix·
lure over tur key roll,
covering the s urrace as
much as possible. Place
in a 350 degrees oven
and bake for 2 hours, or
until tender. Slice and
serve. Makes 8 ser vings.
POACH ED DILLED
CHICKEN BREASTS
4 s k inl ess and
bone less chicken breasts
'• cup lemon juice
112 cup water
2 sprigs fre!>h dill
1 2 teaspoon salt
A r r a nge c hi c ken
br e a s t s i n a lar ge
skillet Pour lemon juice
and water over chi cken.
Add s prigs of dill and
PEACH SAUCE
1 p o u n d l e an
Rl'ound beef or veal
1 egg
12 c up l orn a to
1 can ( 16·ounce 1
pt•ach i;licei.
I/~ tcuspoon corn·
starch
Combine ground meat
itnd egg Pour tomato
Juice over white bread
sli ce in a bowl, crumble
bread tnto fine pieces
and add to meat Add
L~:'.:, ., ~ . (JlJJ • I o .
8UF LOIN
FRESH T·•ONI
SllOULDI• $149 IEEI' LOIN
STIAK l8 IPOaTlallOUSI
I E£f LOIN BONELESS
TOltSl•LOIN FRESH FllOlEN IEEF UlllOl [NO .. ••• $139 •laSTIAK
......... LB 1£EF I ONUHS 1111
SltlNClaSTUK
'11/eES-EFFEC I UDDIO 40 Z
SLICID MIATS 1-RIU Mr$ OANOUI SANDWICH
llAM OCT I -If I'll AOAll
llAMltAnllS
STATEN Bll0$. CElfTIFIED #FAT HOFFY YEOAS
WllN••• IS UNCONDmDNAUY BELLA DONNA ITALIAN
CUARANTHO TO PLWE YOU SAUSAOI
l l •2••
LI •27•
L8 •2••
LI •1••
L.•3
3 •
.6 ~ USDA CHOICE
~ AMllKA• LAMI
Ll•OPLA.Ma l,•1••
SHO\Jll>Ell •22• CllOH Lii
••• CllOIPS L• •2••
i:olN c11on LI •32 •
FllO? NOT TO UCUD 30% FAl
---' "a.:::. Mo&
OARDlll ••• . us 39•
FllUH CUT Pf PPER JACK CHllSI .. LI • 11 •
• 1 "• LI
SLICED TO OllOER KllUSl
ROAST au•
EA 79c
llH OROUND
EA t4s• SEAFOOD SPECIALS •••••an11s
•o z89c
lfff IUID[ CUT
L.'I"
OOVEll SOlE
CHUCK •OAST flLUTS
noz
ti-OZ
Lii
•14•
HEF llOUND ION( IN
lll • 1••
FflUH SKINLiSS
aUMlt•OAST IPl•CllflLUTS
•17•
llE[F ROUND ION€USS
•2••
FlllSH SILYEll HALF OR WHOLE
TllP•OAST ll SALMON
•20• FRUH LEAN NOT TO U CEED 22"' FAT • 1 •• FllfSH llAJHIOW
••OUN••••• LI Ta OUT
PURINA
ASSORTED HI PROTEIN '
BRAWNY
TOWELS
1-ROll
DOG
MEAL SO·LB
.79~.
~--·
s144~ -e , ,__ __ _
'
Lii •2••
l ll •1••
Lii •2"•
ll s1i•
• FROM FLORIDA OCEAN SPRAY GRAPEFRUIT $142 ,,.. JUICE 48·0Z
JIFFY CAKE MIX 1 ••" • ,fj, 36c .. COFFEE FOL<lER~ • IOI): s4.15 PEARS IH$TANT .... CUFF EE mf~~s Hvl{( • '"' s2.39 ..
ELECTRASOL 8£~~r:,~{::t" • .. Ul Sl.87 ...
• LAUNDRY DETERGENT ,,.. CHEER FANCY LITIL[ ROCK l!ARTlETTS
29CLB
• LAUNDRY DETERGENT -.OXYDOL
49.oz $I 9 9
84-0Z s320 lj; TREESWEET ... }1.18 1 AVOCADOS .
• OVERNIGHT DIAPERS wPAMPERS 12-CT $I 7 9
• NEWBORN DIAPERS
"PAMPERS .. JG.CT •273
I · FLEISCHMAN~SWEET UNSALTED QUARTERS 97 c MAR•ARlllE .. 1~oz I BOOTH FROZ. X-CRUNCHY ORIG. PORTIONS • 16• FISH . . 12·0Z I FLORIDA·FROZ. TREESWEET GRAPEFRUIT 89 c JUICE . . . . . . . 12-oz
BLJIJ ~~~~s° JJ\jiN8r~L
MARGARINE COLD. 8W1:R XE
1e.oz49 C I ao.oz 2 99 I
FROZEN FISH
BOOTH CRUNCHY CORN FILLETS
12oz$ I 7 9 I
l!!Ei'F5'8P I
ST ATER BROS SJ.1.C~O/Wll~'!{O CHt: SE FUOD
149
12 0Z !
MJATIIS o Re 10A FRIES s115 ru OR CRINKLES ........................... l2-0Z
PIE SHElLS MORTON ............................... 1001&5c
TORTE !~E L~~,u ................................ 21-0z s2.58
Tom Cnr SARA UE $2 58 ~ FVOOE NUT, , •••••••• , •• , , , , • • • , , , .. t~ 15-0Z • ('llftllTC'.,E sAllA 1.EE. srRWeRv s2 54 °"""' M OR BLACK FOR, CAKE , •••••• , , , • , , • , ••• , • 21·0Z •
LEIOUDE ~~~~v. ~1~( •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •2.oz 59°
I ''.!!L':..'!°-llO! I
811.lD ~~::::~ ................. ,~ 11.18
~·--Ulll9,..,..,.
.... M·.~ ......... : ............ ,,k 11.71
~~ ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• 1rt.t. ··-~·
_, eocmlM .................. 1 ~ 118.11
. JUICE "'"''E OA ...... .... Gl .. PEflHJll ORORA1<Gl
PLEDGE JOHNSOl<S REG LEMON OP WOOOSCENI ,.oz s2.26
GLADE MIST . v•R•nies ! , oz 97c
BATHROOM TISSUE i~~~~oRrEo !ou 99c
BOUNTY TOWELS ili¥c"J::: ! '"0Ll 83t
CORONET f~~~~ TOWELS ! 1 ROll 63C
I TASTERS . CHOICE F PEEZE OR EO OEC•FF N•TEO
,COFFEE
GALA II TOWELS ~~~~"~'0R ! , POLL 59c
CRACKERJACKS e ,·. •30ZB01ES 59c
YORK MINTS 81Tf Sll f • .... PERRIER ~AWg"s~r"'"'ER NO RETURN I
YALVOLINE bf~~ I
VALVOLINE ~OROI~ I
GRAPE JUICE WHCHS • -TOMATO JUICE Ll88VS I
I TUU
BEflV CROCKER HELPER NOOOl(SICREAM OR
HOOOLESICHEESE
CAT FOOD IAIGHT EYES
4-VARIEf!ES
• I
12oz S1. J5
llOl 7gc
J20Z Sl.09
l20Z 95C
g.oz s2.19
•e.oz 77c
TENDER YlffiES ~5E;T I i«n Sl.38
l 1~5~r .. ~ S1.19 J
KE. L RATIO. TINDEii CHUNlll
Hl'ICHEHl 01'1 H lfl\JllEA
MllUll RICE OUCK
·~L· s4.13
t•.oi Sl.32
ELBOROll E o" t ~97°
LAROE FANCY RIPE HAS$ '
33C EA .,:~ ~:::
COLUMBUS DAV "ff ALIM FOOD FESTIVAL''
TOMATOES ;:r.~~u
BREAD CRUMBS .~=~~mo
I
1eot 87c
1Dl 55C
IOOl.ES m1':.!r .. e. . .c145c , '-~---------.--... ..... .,,
j . .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981 ~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trifle: English cookery
·filth long tradition
The trifle Is con -
lid red by mltlly to be a
partlcuJar ltlumph of
Enallsh cookery, a
fabulous finale lo any
meal. It is a dessert with
a long and illustrious
history.
One or the earliest
ireferences to it in a
London conrectloners
journaJ, dated 1770, gave
,nstructions for making e trifle by covering the
r.ottom or a dish with
'Naples biscuits broke
n pieces, mackaroons
od ratafia cakes wet all
itb Sack pour on a
ood boiled cust a rd
hen cold. then a whipt
yllabub over that.'·
Over the years, many
variation s of th i s
T-Yhimsically worded
priginal have been
pealed. Here is a de·
Jicious version that pre·
~rves the traditional
ght and airy quality of
true lrifie. But it is
ade in much easier
Jas hion with modern in·
gredients. A frozen
l>ound cake is used as
\he foundation of the
dish.
. Cake s li ces line the
tlish. Then candied fruit
'and cubes of pound cake
p_re folded into a creme
tle menthe flavored pud·
ping mixture and poured
pver the cake slices.
jWith a crown of whipped
cream and red cherries, ~his trifle is beautiful to
'behold.
Another glamorous
looking dessert us ing
<'ake as a base is equally
:scrumptuous. In this re-
t;ipe for Banana Coconut
JJake, Date Nut Cake is
tayered in a baking dish
with banana and ~oconul and then sui
!fused with a custard
!mixture that is then
l>aked until golden
brown.
CANDIED FRUIT
TRIFLE
I 1 package <3'•
ounces) vanilla pudding
;and pie filling
• l \l!a cups milk
' ·~ cup heavy cream
' 2 tablespoons green
!creme de menthe
1 l package f 10~
lounces ) frozen pound
cake
I 1 cup minced
candied fruit
Sweetened whipped
cream
Candied chernes
1 In a saucepan. com·
lbine pudding, milk and
I
~ .. Chinese
' t From Page C6)
is almost lender Stir in
celery and cook until
r ice is tender. Mix
lpeanuts into rice mix
;ture and s eason to taste
with salt. Serve as an
'
accompaniment to roas t
pork or poultry.
I CANTONESE·
APRICOT BARS
, <Makes one 9xl3·lncb
I pan of bars) t V.. _cup butter or
, marganne
[
1/4 cup shortening
·~ cup firmly packed
light brown sugar
: 1 cup all-purpose
•flour
111 teaspoon ground
ginger
!Topping:
' 2 eggs
1 1 cup firmly packed
1 light brown sugar
: 111 teaspoon ground
ginger
lf.z teaspoon salt
I 1 teas poon grated
I lemon peel
, 2 tablespoons lemon I juice I 1 can (4 ounces)
!s hredd ed coconut.
toasted• I 1 cup diced dried I apricots
• lf.z cup blanc h ed I slivered almonds
To form bottom layer,
be al butter, shortening
l and lf.z cup s ugar
together until w e ll
mixed. Blend in flour
and ~ teaspoon ground
ginger. Pat into greased
9xl3-inch pan. Bake 10
minutes in 350 degree
oven. Let stand a few
minutes; spread with
topping.
To prepare topping,
beat toeether eggs, 1
cup sugar, ~ teaspoon
ground ginger. s alt,
lemon peel and juice;
stir in coconut, apricots
and almonds. Spread
topping over bottom
layer; return to oven
and bake 25 minutes
more or until topplng is
golden b'rown. Cool; cut
into ban.
•NOTE: Tout cocomat in 1ballow pu tn ISO
de1re• OHD about 10 mm .. • UnUl iolden ,~!f.u.,_.: llir fNquegU1.
I
cream and cook accord· Garnish with whipped vanllht extract
I n g t o p a c k a i e cream and cherries l,11 teaspoon sail
directions. St.tr In creme Makes 6 to 8 servings. In 1 \11 quart buttered
de menthe; cover and BANANA baking dish alternate
chill.. Cut cake into 10 COCONUT BAKE layers or cake cuber;,
slices; cut each slice in· 1 froien date nut bananas and coconut,
to thirds. Arrange 8 to 10 cake, cubed ending with coconut
slices around edge of 1 \AJ 2 I a r g e r 1 P e Blend remaining ingre·
quart dessert dish. Cut ba9anas, sliced dients and pour.over all .
remaining slices into 1 cup shredded Bake at 350 degrees for
cubes. Fold cake cubes coconut 50 m lnutes or until
and candied fruit into 4 eggs, slightly golden Md set. Remove
pudding. Spoon into pre-beaten from oven •nd cool on
pared dessert dish. Chill 4 cups milk wire rack.
Candied Jo'rutt Tn/le is
today·s vrrs1on of the
t radll1011al l!:nglish
dessert. It 1s made
quickly With a frozen
pound cake and instant
pudding f lauored with
creme de menthe.
until ready to serve. ~~~1:....:..:tr.i:__l:..:.e~a~s~p~o~o~n:..:.s~~M::.:..::a~k~e~~~6~t~o~8~s~e~r~v~in~g~s~.~.!!!!!!!!!!!~!!::~~::::::::...:_~..:::..::~~~==~!!!!!!!!!!!!!
•
AT VOltS LOWER FOOD BILLS
AREYOURS-GUARAltTEED
r '' O\t '"' l"IOrC" o ,. 1 iJf I Pl.l(r t-o\ (-4
\0'<,11<1<.;q'1V' f .... "lll\ 1',~K
t '""'I ( ] tPwr hA~~ •l'.t!f j,n-,•t f"'tl J-'f'f,. } 79t
PRODUCE
~ ~ 1 I t r•
Large Bell Peppers
I I'
Romaine Lettuce
Fresh Limes
I • •t-ir., "1 \
Red Rose Potatoes .
Hawaiian Papayas
Bulk Peanutc;
.15
... 29
.. 10
n-39
.69
.... 99
,,,,,, •• ,,., •11ot•1•11 349
Hanging Boston Fern·6"' •
EAL TH & BEAUlY
t"•C 1)CJ..,f
Johnson's Baby Washcloths }07
}35 " 1/ ""t{ IOOl \ /'U'lf"f Signal Mouthwash
"t'\J , ........... """" ..Atilt '1 ~ 1-f[IP'ft"""""" 99 Summers Eve Douche •
I'>' ti 11£(;. U'1Y ("'l l<IOt' lO OH ' Secret Roll On Deod.
LIQUOR
l,il~-\<O"OS ... ~
Selection Chardonnay
'\ ITt 1.; "'""°'JI# Smtmorr Vodka
I ,,, nt '.i111A~l llCMOOo Jim Beam Bourbon
I f)l rrtfi
Oordon's Qin
}87
269
919
999
219
1149
3 59
999
WE'LL DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE
OUR GUARANTEE OF VONS LOW PRICES
10 C'onv1n< t' yuu of Vons • on 11nltmrnl to IQIAI prK"l'f>.
we r!' rn11Kill<J th•~ ofter II you c<1n find lowPr plK!'s
overdll lh" wt>t>k al dlly other su~rmork~. Vons
will P<IY Y'"' d•'.'Ublf' lht l1Herence Just shop al
Von> BU\< l'J ,jifferPnt ttf'mS wonh ~20 OI ITIOI ..
l omport' pr',., on llw !>ilmr item> at any Qlhrr
,uµermdl'l ... t 'II ttieir IOl;ll IS ft)Wer brtng your
1t .. rr11L1"d v .. n , ,., <>1p1 dn·t the other markets prices
tu \ioni,, .t11d ,,.., .. ll p,,y you c.Joubl(· IJlf" t.J1fh•r••11, ... in
_,,1 V1i1 > t '"" pn<f'• vou can tH-111'•""'
LONDON BROIL 199
STEAKS ,
•HI f Kt" kl I I l'•t f '> • P lo'()() '(I •I J 'l.l • nO/(°'" 1,P,CK
•.\! IJyf ! 11 \io .. f n It, ... , I''",. •t) ~ ztf Y l jl '""' ,., Im ' • 4 I l ~ff 2 (J>u1rh•~ r.tttf I rrnt ff"~ r1rif t t 0')1
CREST 139 TOOTHPASTE
t1 •• OO'<CE rr mr 1<t , '-'" '11'< r I t'w\ll 2 fPur,.h4'1~"" ,,,., h•'f'Jlt r.-.i I>'• ,. I 851
''I/ f .\ .. "i"i .\, t"
1 , , 1 l\c " , ~ " ~ , ,. t·• ''" ,1 ,,..l..l r ,, , 4 ''J ~I 'JO/ J°'"' ... NDJOICE.5 ~TRAtNEO-"-SSlD V"-R
t IMlf 24 tPur•ho..-~· llm<t r<q pr1H 221
DELICATESSEN
-W¥,i:<lt.I '""-·•P'!
Ball Park Beer Franks
11' I f 'II.I Of\j ...
Vons Cooked Ham
J 57
239
'• <• •• J 25 Precious Mozzarella Cheese
, .,. I" I-r~ t6A.l(f
Poni's Pizza Crust
I ,Ji;• fl '°" .-f
Gallo Sliced Pepperoni
-,. • >/ rr., f-lf'.f .....
.89
.85
.85
.88
Cottage Cheese
• •I J'"ff\A.1,f 11 l\il. ·~I''
Rich's Turkey Franks
'HOT' BAKERY
n"t ~~ML•.JW '\Y.-.t.A8ll O"'l 'W' At ~10Cll ~ 'llortt_. •tnr t\A"r ltl '-"\£ rQfl "4(.Nff' 'nMfic 1 "I l .~ .. > .... t ""'l~f\f'lt H'f£0 Af N1nn .... ',, ·~1' 11 .. q
I r"I •I 1: I 1~1 '1\VJ 1 IYJ
Pumpkin Bread
'"' .......... ,..,.,t, French Rolls
Ut.ll l\,.t "''' 1'Pt ~f Bears Claws
............. ,, , "'""~.,.
Lemon Meringue Pie
)1 9
6 '.-.69
2~·.89
2 39
tu•1't .. , ...... .fLl,10 ~,u_ IAvr .. " ... 489
Black Forest Cake
VONS BAKERY
~r11.rJ\ ,,A,., POMlr., Al"\,C~f
Assorted Donuts .99
Jt•I~( I\ .79 Hawaiian Dinner Rolls
MlO"<"t O~l'll!Al -10l~~ Chocolate Butter .71
4,, >tft ,.,.«Jtr
1 00'\ Wheal Bread .89
IH'Vr.i.f 285 Carrot Cake
MEATS
Beef Chuck Stcak'l J 49
B~n~le;~ Family St eaks , 2 1 9
Beer Cube Steaks
.-, •• t " I I I • lo I I I
Sirloin Tip Steaks
Flanken Short Ribs
248
248
.. J 89
Fre.sh Pork Loin Chops , J 99
F;esh Turkey Drumsticks "• 6 5
Fresh Turkey Thighs ... 99
·~ •• •"111" )59 Fresh Hen Turkey Breast ''
.. } 99 A..., '•H ~ ,_ I/ ~""'• -.. /I -.
Jones Link Sausage
Mi:W [!IC.-J#4ji(•l•1•)
,,..,,,.,, \\1 .... ,
Fresh Rainbow Trout
Ill ' ' t ' ~ • t ..._ ~ Fresh Sliver Salmon
r~r""''"°'' Dungeness Crabs
''" "" ,..., ,., Y.f" f ""''"' ... Imitation Crab Meat
.. )39
n 2 79
"' J 69
.a 3 98
Ii 9'.•l'~ i~li•I•l •l-"'I ffc: P.v 1 c.. HOF HON 1 oPru • nquet Pies .33
IJt'V""-, (A,""t
Minute Maid Orange Juice )09
•r ''""' t~"'rn11"• ,.,....~c•• 79 Green Giant Vegetables'' ·• •
'".''""' l .. _
Sara Lee Pound Cake 219
GROCERIES GROCERIES
~ .f ""I t
Tomato Catsup
Contaclina Tomatoes
Ranch Style Beans
''"'' Kerns Nectars .
Tang Powdered Drink
Spagh~tti O's
109
.54
.45
.39
242
.39
dl4 ,..... .\l ... A,f , ....
Instant Miik
., ,. ~· Slim Price Pinto Beans
J'; .... "". Betty Crocker Bisqulck
"'" "' llJljl • Yardley's Lavender Soap
t .... kl\• I~\"! Wt
Ivory Bar Soap
••If'" ... liff Purex Powdered Detergent
BEAUTIFUL WOODHAVEN
STONEWARE Ut#"'~~
5·PIECE PLACE SETTING
CHOICE OF 3 PATTERNS
59 ~~~fACH
• & EVERY 5.00
PURCHASE
THIS WEEK FEATURE: DINNER PLATE
293
J 59
J 80
.99
.89
219
HOURS: 6 AM TO MIDIUGHT AT MOST srom
PRICES EFFCC1'1V!Tltl.IR& Tl1IW wm~ OCT. I TO OCT. 14. 1911.CAl..L.(213) 57~1 400 f'OR LOCATI<>" OF STOR! 1'1£AA£Sf YOO NOT ALL l1Vl5 MO P'llCES IN llilS /ti) EFnCTM AT vom. 3334 w. mt Sf .. L09 MQ!l.ES, ''°° w. PICO .. VD., l.ot ~
l'T ~ 6571 W. IOnt .,.., L0e NtClO.o. llM DllOO MO I.AS V!OAS. 8Al..£S '" lt!TM. ocwmt1EI Ol'ILY. l'IOST STORES Of'£N 6 N'1 TO ~ 7 ~YS A WUX.
HuntlngtOn 1 .. ctl
St22 ldlnter I lf)ringdele Huntington IHCh
21082 IHCh llvd.
tiuntlng1on 1 .. ch
Ut1 Atltntt trvlnt
4730 lerrtnce Ad.
,ounteln Veney
11201 HerbOr 1 ldlnter
Cott• Jffaa
1• f , 1.,._ "'9.t end Orange Awe. Cepl9treno 8e.ctt
340l1 Doheny Perl! Dr. I Vlctortt
lrvlne
'800 lrvtne Blvd
Sen Juen Ceplttrtno
320S1 Cemtno Ceplttreno & OelOl>ltPo L-.....Htle
24141 ~·-· '•""'•• • """ .
I t
-
Cl• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7. 1981
Stir-fry cooking hints
Shr·fry cooking has u
lot to recommend It to
tod1ty's busy
homemaker.
It's one of the qulcke2't
Witys to get dinner on
the table. p~nticularly 1f
you own one of the
popular new food proc·
essors.
The time cons uming
part ol Oriental cooking
always has been the in-
itial step or preparing
food for the wok -the
slicing and shredding of
innumerable vegetables,
meat. or fish into paper-
thin strips.
First, a word on woks.
Be sure you have the
right type for your
stove, so you will be able
to property control the
oil temperature.
If you have a gas
stove, you can use the
traditionaJ shaped wok
with a sloping bottom,
designed to rest on its
own metal collar.
If you have an electric
stove, you need a flat·
bottomed wok which sits
directly on the electric
burner.
Easiest of all to use is
the new electrified wok
w i th built·in tern ·
perature control, which
is sold in the household
section of most depart-
ment stores.
Stir f ry beef and
tomatoes can be pre-
pared in a j iffy using a
food processor. which
cuts about ten minutes
off the chopping time.
But even if it means
doing all the slicing by
hand, lttis dish is just too
good to miss. For conve·
nience and fresh flavor
the year round. use
canned whole peeled
tomatoes.
Quarter the tomatoes
and set aside: mix the
Juice with soy sauce and
co rnsta r c h for an
authentic Japanese
flavor.
I ngred1ents are added
to the wok <or skillet> a
few at a time and stirred
constantly Total cook-
ing time is about five
minutes.
Vegetable tempura is
another J apanese dish
s ure lo please every
palate.
Sift dry ingredients as
directed. Mix one egg
with one cup of liquefied
instant nonfat dry milk
for extra protein rich-
ness.
Stir into dry ingre·
dients until smooth Clf
you use a food proc·
essor. you've already
s a ve d about ten
minutes).
This batter needs to be
refrigerated for at least
one hour for best con-
s istency and coating ac·
lion.
Make the batter in the
morning and refrigerate
all day, if this fits your
s cheduJe better.
Just before dinner. dip
s elected raw vegetables
into the refrigerated
batter m i xture a nd
deep.fry in a wok or
electric skillet at exact-
ly 375 degrees for about
one minute.
VEGETABLE T E M-
PURA
< Makes a bout 6 cups)
l cup flour
l teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking
soda
1 slightly beaten egg
1 cup liquid instant
nonfat milk
l 'h to 2 pounds pre
pared raw vegetables•
4 cups oil
Sift fl our, salt, and
baking soda in medium
bowl. Combine egg and
liquid instant milk; stir
into dry ingredients un·
til smooth. Refrigerate
at least l hour. Lightly
coat fres h vegetables in
batter. allow excess bat-
t e r to drip from
vegetables. Fry in hot
oil (375 degrees F.) in
wok or electric skillet 1
minute or until golden
brown and crisp. Drain
on paper towels a n d
ser ve with your favorite
hot m ustard or soy
sauce.'
•Prepa r ed raw
vegetables: broccoli and
cauliflower flowerelles.
carrot strips, bell pep-
per rings, green onions.
mushr ooms, sweet
potato st.rips , dJagon al
sliced celery, and egg.
plant cubes.
FOOl> PROCESSOR
METHOD:
degrees F . > 8 to 10
minutes.
STl8 FRY BEEF AND
TOMATOES
<Makee1about 4 cups>
11\4 cups (14 ~
ounce can > whole peeled
tomatoes and juice
2 tablespoons soy
sauce
l tablespoon corn-
starch
1 pound round steak
2 tablespoons oil
1 large crusbed
garlic clove
1 cup Cl medium >
sliced onion
FREE!
aAVEW
ONE f.OZ CAii FllOHN
SUMaHIM•STATa
LEMONADE
FllEE WITH POllCHASE OF rwo 6-0Z CANS AT 29 EA
FREE!
SA.YEW
ONE 1 S.CT. Pl{Q
ASSORTED VARIETIES
CAAEPAEE BIO
PACK OUM
FllEE WITH l'\JllCHASE OF
TWO 15-Cl Pl(QS Al .59 EA
FREE!
SAVE ZS"
ONE IUNCH QAl!l!N
ONIONS FAE£ WITH PURCHASE Of
TWO BUNCH£$ AT 25 EA
t cup < 11. pound>
s liced mushroom11
' t cup ( l medium 1
green pepper strips
H~f bouillon cu be
Hot· cooked rire 1
Drain tomatoes; re·
se rv e juice . Cut
tomatoes into quarters.
Combine reserved Juice,
soy sau ce. and corn·
starch ; mix thoroughly.
Cut s te ak in ·
to thin strips. Heat oil in
wok or large skillet over
high heat. Stir fry meat
and garlic 1 to 2
minutes : push to one
U.S. No.•
Russet
~Ide . Add 01111111 and
mushrooms ; s tir fry 2
minutes Add grc\'n Pt'J>
per and bouillon cube ,
crushing cube. Stir Ill
soy sauce mixture and
reserved.tomatoes llcat
to boiling. stirring con
stantly. Redu<'e heat ;
cook l minute Servt>
over hot cooked rice, 1r
desired.
Not e S teak and
vegetables mily be
sliced 1n a food proce!>
sor To slice easily ,
steak s hould bc·µartially
froien.
S1rvtn9
Su9911llon
Potatoes
WITH COUPON IHOW I ~ POllCHASE LIMIT ONE
The makings for cnspy
veg etable tempura in-
clude a wide variety o/
gardet1 favorites
Savings With
Beel Loin Bonel-
T~ Sirloin ~teak
FBJtJ!
Oltl t.fAOl
~ .. VOLT
TRAJISlaTOR BATTEUllS
FREE WITH POllCHU E Of ONE Hit •'IOlT Al 1 45
es
4 48 FREE!
SAVE ...
•11 .. U Wlf• MIT -ltUlalT
ONE 1-LI
Dl!l!P PRIED
LB. POTATOES FllEE WITH l'\JllCHASE OF Of!E
HOT l ·H CHICKEN Al 1 et ll
S-tonOr .a Reel Leaf ~Lettuce
Assorted V arietles Family Pack
8'n1n1 m Squash
!hit flf llklftg
Pippin Apples
81thSIH m Jergen ' s Soap
Cascade
8t9G
Cheerios
Campbell'•
~Tomato
~Soup
3 1.3-oz 1 00 tubes •
Ultra Brite
Toolhpnte 111~1 S•tt l1t h
$2.000FF
ANY
Anal•.....,. CAU
8" OR LARGER
AT ALL STORES
WITH
HOT BAKERY ONLY
c-. z9e
to • 10
. 79
Mar'" 811~'1 Froun ~ Orange Juice
m Ivory Liquid
°" Fi'~~~ °" A1pcp1i~ Ju ice
Top 4 $.._,00 Ramen :.;. .&
ll-01 1 00 can •
22~1 1 15 OU •
Shouldtr
.95 ffi Pork Steak
U S O.A ChOltt Shouldtr
64·01 1 49 Dtl • ffi Fresh Lamb Chops
~Whole ~Fryer Legs lb.
10 2. 63 m ii'it>0 Rr;;;5r"d
~ R'i b0 sr;~•k End lb 2. 24
10 1. 69
ID 1.98
lo 1. 98
.99
ID .98
l'lc1tte Srylt m Pork Shoulder Roast ID
flllh ~Beef Liver
op CHI Cun11
I\ Macaron i & Cheese 1 ~:t . 26 flt lift ffi Halibut Steaks
U S D A ChOlct Slf1oin ~ Fresh Lamb Chops lb 3. 19 IO-OI 1 00 pkg •
Suave Riverside Gracie A Frozen Basted
4 10• •• 01.S.._,OO
cana £
~Shampoo Or $._.00 ~ Conditioner·:-~ £each ~Tom ·~ 69e ~ Turkey lb....... ·-·
5 ~z~ 1.00
M1rtlet BHket lom110 S1uc1
2 1<k>z. 1 00 pk gs. •
Amerlc1n Beauty
fh1n Sp1911tn1
«C'-if>
!)ANNO#/
"-9'
=1.J ~ ::;.;
2 ~!:1.00
Dennon Yogurt
I Flrttn
~ fe;:--~ ~?!' ~
2 84-oz. 1 00 btls. •
Hlltcre1t BIHch
'~
1 00 t2-oz.
• ctn.
Birds Eye Cool Whip
F1011n
. 89 85-sq .
fl. roll
Bounty Paper
Towels Decorator Or Oeslgner
~;):·~-
3 ~:!,'~ 1 .00
Del Monte s.,111 Ptn Cru m Slyt1 Coin or
Cut 01 f11nth Styli G1een Bunt
1 00 e1ch qt. c1n
• 20·50 wt.
Castro! GTX
Molo1 Orl
ff,~ o~~~~
.. ~ '"' Gt[ID~ ~---.._.. ,. .. 3.croe~~
Your Choice :" ChooH From A ....,_
Wtdt V1r1tly .,..
1.00 .. ch
Kellogg
All purpon or
scrub brush
1 0 00 1.75·1tr.
• • btl.
Smirnoff Vodka
80 Ptoot
2 00 each
• 4-bulb~ck
Sylv1nl1 light Bulb1
1s.100 win
R.M. laundry BHkel
Almond. Gold Or Choe
2 1.5-ltr. 5 00 btl1. •
Cribari Ml. WlnH
Cl!lblil. 8v1plldy Or Vin II••
1.00
R.C. Or
Diet Rite
2..flr.
btl. N Ch
Fredi Ho an
Anal~
Fl'ledChlekee AT All STORES WITH
"HOT" FOODS DELI
...... llOTOOl.Dmf
ru&DClllCltDf
rAIGL~~s·· ClllClDIMl
AU OUAHTITY lllGHTS llESEIM.1> l'lllCES Eff£CTIVE WO> • OCT 7 TMllU TUES .. OCT 13. IM1
SAVE ADDITIONAL •s.3I WITHANNIVERSARY1COUPONS-
,~···::~="' r•······---~ ,~·-········"''~·-·······"''•, ......... "' • llimm TISSU• 1 1 INST ANT 1 • lm:mmJ' 11 ~' SARA LEE PECAN 11 KROGER coa CORN oR 1
: '30 4 CH6AR9MIN :: Ot s:gr;J~T :: 432 1.00 OFFll 03 ~·~; :: m ·~au :
I •• UJOllllO 50 .. AllH WO •• 2 oo·· 1 oo· I "°"" • I I VUl(IO I I RADIANT VALLEY I I -I I -I I u:'!.-l,. ,.._wmi .. 111 ·= • 11 VITAMINS 11 ·~:a· • 11 ~ • I I aAVa =-~ == ~ I I SAVI! L11111 °"'••Of "-0 •u coul'O• 0.1 •I SAVI!. 111111 GIOI OO.L•• ou •o tOll'Vlt ..,. •I SAVI! L•••t """ "'" ,., "" COllPOlo °"' 11 SAVI u•11 °'"'"' PU ,.. ~ 1111 • ~.31 --... ,_., ~··_, \.i21 COii,.. ... ,. .... , llllCHVI ""' OC•.1· ~ 00 tollPt• "'" ll•'l• llllCl!fr •U tc~f '-25 Ctll ...... OllU "'tCfM•H OC'J' \.i1 I _ ... ,. • .u '"""" .. llCJ~I llCT , ,.. Nl1 llCT .!.J..l'!I • •••v •UO OCT 11 .... • • •••u .... O<I 11 ttll • ,_ '"'' Kl 11 .... • r-''"' llCT u ••• ••RaO.Jl COU..VN•• ••AED·X COUPON•• ••R~D-Jt COUPON•• ••RED·Jl COUPON•• ••RU>-Jl COUPON••
Put nour, salt, baking •
soda in processor con-
tainer . Add egg ,1nd li-
quid In s tant m ilk .
Process al hilb speed 1
mlnute or until s mooth.
,. •......... "' ,,.. ·--------"\ ~y-·--------"' ,, •......... "'·'· ......... 9\ I I FRESH = ~.,Di MARKET BASKET TALL I. I. I
I 4U 1 00 OFF: I .,. CRISP I I '37 KITCHl!N . I I .,, 11• "' 1 00 I
I • "",., • I CARROTS I I BAGS I I 1 00 OFF I I • OPP I
I ODVSUY 111 2 37 .. 1 oo·· . .. 1 W 11 ~ 1 1 . ._. 1 • ,.... W181•D•• 1• au&LflL Note: Vefetables may
be rro1e11 after frytna.
To rebut, bake 1n ainaJe
l1Yer on cookM 11Net in moderate oven (37$
I
I
I s •• ... • •• ..... • •• ,. .. ClllellmN~ . •• I
I &AVll L ..... •w• .,, ,.. -:; I un !Jiii! .... 1-1. "" ... c~ .,., ttu,.. • I •• v• IM1 ... l><t .. ,. ~ - -I I MVll =· .,.., ..... *""' ..... a.a \tl!t ..... ·--\W~ 1 00 C.....,..t-.Y lfrtCTl¥f .. I OCT I \.;10 PU J-t lfffttl9' Mt KT 1 '";J°"' \a1 ft ,__, ---1C1 ''-""' ~ 00 M fllllf fl'l'ft!M-Kt;,,r ~ ,._, ___ ,,_ • .._,., ICT II TteT • t•! KT TJ tWT • W IC1 IS,., -• • -TWI OC' II TWI • .!!_-,81
••MD-X COU..ON•• ••Rl!D·X COUPON•• ••RED·X COUPON••_. ••R•D·X COUPON•• •iitftSD-X COUf'OHllii•
I
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Octobor 7, 1981 J: 1 1
Preserve nutrition while preserving herbs I
I
By MITllE KELLE R sound health health, and more de-C r u 8 h Store 1 n boiling, removing lop i.1>rir1tt water
H's lime to harvest , Basil, and tbym~ con· hC'ious meals. 01111~ HIRBI airtight containers. scum before tilrarning Cove r . b o i I l 0
and preserve the herbs tam most basi<' amino Freezing is the best a TO F REEZE through Cine linen . Cool m1nute11 ; uncover. ~)lace you·v~t(rown. acids, ws doe3 dill seed, C lean, wrap, and nuturally Pour ltQuid ovc:r low rl;.1ml' <i>ilot
II b way to preserve max· r 1 I er s cun provide but not dill leaves. imum benefits, but 11 r eeze leaves in one nto a g uss contuUH·r . l1~ht 1 for 12 hours. Cool;
your body with a wealth By preserving herbs number of herbs such as in water before prepara· preserve maximum col· I ab e I e d packag e ; and top with l inch of !.train. prebs out Juice
0£ nutural vitamins and yourself, you know what tarragon, bas il, and lion. or. Dry barks, '1owers. fl owers in another, etc. oli ve oil to keep air from Repeat 3 times adding
t r a c o m i n e r a I s process you used to re· mint do not freeze well. roots, seeds in the sun to Any discoloration will coming to putrify It .. frchh herbs but not Ji .
throu.chout the winter. ta in t h e maximum They tum a dark, unap· TO DRY rapidly dry the juices . not alter benefits. SYRUP quid Afte r the final
Although some of the b e nefits Whe n you pelizing brown. Outdoors : Place a Take Indoors at night. TO J UICE Benefits from flowers. cooking, and strammg,
vitamins are lost iq the pur c hase h e rbs in single layer on a large. Indoors . Hang with Crush in mortar and roots, seedi. and ba rks add 2 pound!> sugar to
drying process, many stores,youhavenoidea So it is better to dry nat,shallowtray.Cover s tems up in la beled pestle <or b e tw ee n are best preserved 1n a cverypint ofliquid
are not. And the rich col· or wh at process they those naturally in the with cheesecloth and set p aper saks from raft· layers of waxed paper>; syrup such as that ror Clarify without boil·
lection of trace minerals have gone lhrongh. sun. in an airy spot for a few ers of a cool, dry, dark wring in cheesecloth to herbs: ing Cool Store in stone
is otherwise not availa-So preserve your own Harvest leaf crops at weeks turning each room. Or dry on flat extract juice. Clarify; To each pound I 2 pots covered with loose·
ble . h er bs and eat som e bighnoon;rootcropsat piece ever y day . Dry lrayslnanovensetvery thenfreeze,or s tore. cups) of bruised herbs, ly securt'd, p o r o u s
H e rbs contain no everyd ay ror better sunset. Wash carefully herbs in the s hade to low for several hours . "Clarify the juice by add 3 pints (6 c ups 1 paper. cholesterol, but many .-~~~"--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;:.......:~~~~~~~~
are rich in the amino
acids that are essential
to good digestion and
T r ifle
with a
trifle
Whal do you do when
there's no time to trifle
with dessert details, but
wben you want to pro·
duce an extravaganza
that appears as if you
had nothing lo do but
create works of art in
the kitchen?
You turn to recipes
like thi s Ras pberr y
Coconut Trifle. It is
based on an old English
recipe, but it takes ad·
vantage of convenience
foods such as raspberry
preserves, coconut
cream pudding and pie
filling mix, frozen non·
dairy whipped topping
and frozen jumbo waf-
fl es
R A S P B E R R Y
COCONUT TRIFLE
One half 10-ounce
pkg . frozen jumbo waf·
fi es o r•ginal or but·
termilk wafnes. thawed
12 cup raspberry
preserves
2 to 3 tablespoons
cream sherry
One 3~-ounce pkg.
coconut cream pudding
and pie filling mix
2 cups milk
One 4-ounce carton
fr ozen non ·dair y
whipped topping .
thawed
2 tablespoons toast·
ed coconut
C ul eac h wa ffl e
diagonally into quarters .
Combine preserves and
sherry in medium-sized
bowl : mix well. Add
waffles; toss until waf-
fl es are thoroughl y coat-
ed a nd preserves mix·
ture is absorbed. Ar
r ange in l·qt. glass bowl
or casserole Prepare
pudding mix with milk
according to package
dir ect ion s . Re m ove
from heal; pour over
waffles. Cover. chill un-
til set or overnight, as
desired. Spread whipped
topping over pudding to
cover. garn ish with
toasted coconut. Makes
6 to 8 servings.
VARIATION ·
Substitute 2 t easpoons
brandy extract and 2
tablespoons water for
sherry.
Rice fo r
all r ecipes
Rice. of any type or
form. is interchangeable
in recipes calling for
cooked rice. However. if
the recipe calls for un-
cooked rice. use the type
rice specified in the re·
cipe as cooking times
vary.
Types of Rice:
LONG GRAIN: cooks
up fluffy and separate,
can be used in all re-
cipes; most wide l y
available type.
M E DIU M G RAIN :
shor t and plump; cooks
u p tender, moist and
clingy; especially suited
for rice puddings, rice
molds, croquettes and
meat loaves.
S HORT G RA IN :
almost round, cooks up
very clingy; not availa·
ble in all markets.
Forms of Rice (These
r epresent varying
degrees of processing):
BROWN RICE: least
processed, outer hull re·
moved; n atur al light
brown bran layer r e-
quires longer cooking,
has chewy texture, nut-
Uke n avor .
R EGULAR· MILLE D
WHITE RICE: most
com mon form , most
economical to buy.
PARBOILED RICE:
steam processing before
miHing changes st ar ch
structure; flrm, lluffy ,
separate gra lns.
PR&COOllfm RICE:
ru lly cooke d be for e
packaclnt; l'ehydrates
in minutes.
When Joe Hughes says
he wants low prices ...
"''' A1\,HI~ ~Hf AVI D NO ~Al( lO~OMMUC1•1 DE•1t•~ O•
...... •l\A(U~ SOMI ~Ofl DAIN•~ NO! .. ,, ... , ... ,( I'< YfNTVU co., .... ,
Th" od onlv eHe<li•• ol Hughes El Ron<ho
ond Hughes lido
WI WILCOMI FOOD IT AMP SHOPPERS HE MEANS IT!
ROUND STEAK
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONE-IN BEEF CENTER CUT
1 .75 LB
U S D A choice beef round cul
SWISS STEAK
2 .19 lB
fl Roncho Oven Reody
HAM LOAF
U S D A ct.orce beet round cut
OMAHA ROAST LB 1.99
FRESH PORK
SPARERIBS
EAS~~RA~lA~~OURS I 2 9
VERIBEST LB. •
All pvrpo\,.
SPANISH ONIONS lB • 19
USDA
CHOICE GJ • US D A. chooce beef round cut bone 1n U S D A cho•<• beef cenler cul
RUMP ROAST LB 1.89 BEEF SHANKS LB 1.49
U SD A choice beef round cut Bulk or pott1e\ doe• not e~ceed 22% lot
BONELESS RUMP ROAST lB 2 .59 LEAN GROUND BEEF lB 2.19
US 0 A cho•c,. bf!ef boneleu eAlrO lean I? 'll roll '"9 • hot• \DQ"
LB 2.59 JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE STEW MEAT EA 1.69
r-~~~~~~~~~~~____;~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
Pocoftc fillets ----~
FRESH RED SNAPPER .......................... w . 1.59
1w;itD'nlil'lila•1 .. LB 4.99 Froren/defrosted coc:ktoil mt
COOKID IHRIMP ......... 1B 4 .99
lorge Alo"'on frozen/defrosted 2 9 DUNGDmSI CRABl ...... LB. .5 , ..... _._ ................... y_., Froren/Oelro\ted
MAHI MAHI LB. 2.89
LAKE COUNTY BARTLETT PEARS LB .35
Shorokoku 10 • or con K"ruko Kompyo 1 05 or. pkg
BABY CLAMS l .C9 t'oot:S rr Ult f P!Ct'T ........... ~..,.. DRIED GOURD STRIPS .IS
Snirokoku K11\une Udon 3 oz cup 19 Ol Toltyoruke 7 76 or con
NOODLES .7S TOFU PICKLED VEGETABLES 1.09
Shirokoku Aptsuke M<!nmo 1eo.or>ed J or con
EA .55 Shirok1ku Arore 6 oz bo•
BAMBOO SHOOTS I . IS RICE CRACKERS .99
~ Mililf.\'.t~
w.,,1 Poe 16or bog Sltced 6-01
LB .
El Rancho
RANCH STYLE BACON 18 1.49
El Rancho \wrM or hot
ITALIAN SAUSAGE LB 1.69
Gr A •lulled ch•cl..en lor roo>tong
LARGE MEATY FRYERS lB .79
FRESH
CHICKEN LEGS
GRADE
A'
WHOlE
I• C"llo
CA RROTS
LB •• 69
f.A .1 9
~-:a~:::1ANS ..................... • 6 9
WEXFORD
CRYSTAL
BY ANCHOR HOCKING
----AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS f:tl~1 ................................. I. 69
THIS WEEKS SAVINGS
·.·:;~:·:· FOOTED WINI/ w ... 9ht Wotch ... , Porn••goono 9"' p"PP""dg .. Form\ 12 Ol
CHICKEN DINNER 1.65 APPLE TURNOVERS 1.03 Pono 16 01
PIZZA CRUSTS
16·oz cvp .89 PRECIOUS RICOH A 1.29
Ronrono Single Ser•1n9 8-or Oonold Duck 12 oz . 99 ORANGE JUICE 1.09 JUICE Sliced 6-oz t<roft 8 oz
GALLO PEPPERONI 1.69 GRATED PARMESAN 1.99 ITALIAN ENTREE'S
23 5 0 1 12·oz. boll
CELESTE 3 19 DELUXE PIZZA ........ •
69C
SPECI AL SAYING EACH WEEK
ON FEATURED ITEMS
~'ff~%1:LLA .............. 1 • 69
rx'cEORIN TABS .... · ....... 1.89
Vitomin E 200 l.U. 100'• 4 99
NATURITE . . . . . .. ....... •
l
DICARLO FRENCH BREAD
DISCOVER A NEW WORLD OF
ITAltAN STYLE FOODS
1·8 oz Tubs
SOFT IMPERIAL
Minestrone• lentil• Split Peo 20·ot
PROGRESSO SOUPS ...
1-LB. LOAF
PARISIAN
POLY BAG
Wi\hbone 8-01. dreuing
ROBUSTO IT AllAN ..
12 pk .. 12 ot cons
COKE, TAB, SPRITE
........ 79
3 .89
Proo•e~so ltolion ... 8 oz
BREAD CRUMBS .
.• 79
.65
... 59 R99 • Sourdough 6-Po\
THOMAS' ENGLISH MUFFINS ........ 99
ltolion or Crushed ... 28 oz.
PROGRESSO TOMA TOES .. . .89 2·8 ·01. lvbs
DIET IMPERIAL.. ....... ....• 79
Schillong I 5 01. pkg.
SPAGHETTI SAUCE ....... , ............... 39 Mi'11 leaf • Oonlsh Shortbread • Gong. Snop
POGENS COOKIES ........... 6-oz. boo .99
Bron • Corn • Apple • Siu.berry 6-Pok
VAN DE KAMP MUFFINS ... 1.25 Minute Moid chilr.d ... 32 01.
ORANGE JUICE . . ...................... 89
Rogu out. vor ... 32 01. lar
IPAGl&lli I 49 IAUCI .... _.___ •
Plain Lobel Choblis e , Vin Ro .. • Bur911ndy
:.t~~·.·.......... . 2.49
lombruKO • Bianco 750·1!11
RIUNITE ................. . . ... 2 .49
Evon Willloms llcxli lob.I 7»ml 4 99
90-PROOF BOURBON . . •
NfCIS tlftCtM 1 OAn
•• "" TtUl'.S. ()Ct •
"""'wtO •OCT 14, "" h•t~ •O °"41' OftClM' Al ""°'1tt ll •ANCllO & UOO wt~
lfMtl rig~lt '•*"'"'· No '°l.t fo 0.01.n. 1~
I
I
I_
·--~ ---.-:!---e"'--;-. 0
e Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7, 1981
WAGERS ON CONTEST
Gov. Hugh Callen
'Energy'
contest
heats up
CONCORD. N.H. <AP)
Gov. Hugh Gallen has
10 ga llons of New
Hampshire apple cider
L'OREAL
PERM
IXTUIODY
PllMAIHT -~·--RIG. 3.54
Normal. ColOf Tr~ or
Hord To Wove IMmlllos.
riding on the energy. ~==============~ sav ing e ffor t s o f ~
Peterboro.
If the 5,000 townspeo-
p I e come thro u g h ,
Ga lien will collect 10
ga ll o n s of M ass -
achusetts cranberry
juice that Gov Edward
King b et o n W est
Bridgewater. Mass.
T he t owns are en ·
trants in the second an-
Q u a 1 energy conserva-
tion contest sponsored
by the Northeast In·
te rnational Committee
on Energy.
Ten towns in all are
p articipating one
each from the six New
England states and the
four eastern Canadian
SELSUN
BLUE
ANTI DANDIUFF
HAii CME SHAMPOO
REG. 3.99
provinces, Gallen aide ~--------------" J e nnifer Murray said ~---------------.. Friday.
The contest runs from
Oct. 14 to Oct. 17. The
winning town will be the
one that conserves the
most energy during the
four days.
Last year·s winner fo r
conserva tion was St
Ste ph en 's, New
Brunswick. Monterey ,
Mass., won for the best
co mmunity effort.
King proposed the
wager. According to Ms.
Murray, Gallen cabled
back: "You're on ..
may the best communi·
ty win."
Crawford
daughter
raps film
ALLENTOWN , Pa .
(AP> Cathy Crawford
doesn't approve of her
mother being portrayed
as a "monster" in the
film "M omm1e
Dearest.··
The 34-year -old
woman. who lives in
rura l Lehigh County
with her husband and
two children. said the
fi1 m . based on Christine
Crawford's biography of
her mother. ignores the
COLGATE
RUOllDE
TOOTHPASTE
REG. 1.69
NIYEA
CREME
MOISTURIZING
SllNCREME
REG. 2.19
6-oz. lor with 2-oa.
frff. ~omlly Nlln core.
7-oz. ~ covltlft 01 It cleoM.
MEN'S
RUGGED BOOTS
~o~lg~o~Rl~~l~er-look 1 0"
upper In ton color
DUPONT~~
DACRON II® PILLOWS
QUHNSlll
Am•SAU
I .OU.
2 fOI
512
l lNGSIU
Anll SAU
9.'9lA.
2 JOI
514
LATCH
STANDAID SIZE
A"ER SAU 7 .49 EA.
HOOK RUG KIT
REG.,8.99
Wode sel&<:toon of
pott•rns. colors
•IOYE LATCH HOO«-
RIG. 1.44 •.• 99e
599
TOUI
CHOICE
fOUaCHOICI
• llAZIL NUT
•CllWIH
• FIUIT NUT
• NAZUNUT
CADBURY ·::~°':s"
CHOCOLATE BARS
~~!:}n·o~~n your 79 c
fovorote flavor & sav• IA.
GRAY OR NAVY
MEN'S
SWEATSHIRTS
OR SWEATPANTS
REG. 8.99 6''
& 7. 99 C~~~~I
Woshoble blend ol co non & ocrylic
Elastic on legs Small thru X lorg•
IF PERFECT 2. 79
Bone or Whole with pollern &
color choice Slight orregulor
ities on no way oflecr usoge
Potterns shown may nor be 1n
oll stores While Stocks los1' 119
TOUR
CHOICE
• l'OWl• fAILUU
INOICATO•
Panasonic
AM/FM CLOCK RADIO
~F~~oSm~l~~!.95 2995
look case So•e' fRC6SS
COLONY
CHABLIS
TOUR CHOICE
• CITSTAl CHABLIS
• PINK CHAIUS
• GOlD CHAlllS
• IUIT CHAIUS
• EMEIAlD CHHllS
REG. 219
3.59
Q& sea a
,......
BUDWEISER
BEER
12-PACl-
12-0Z. CAMS
REG. 4.49
TYLENOL
TABLm
REGULAR STIDIGTll
PAIN RELIEF
SALE PRICE
IOO't toblets fOf aspirin· 1r .. pain ,.lief.
S&W
BAKED BEANS
DELICIOUS UICI
OYENsnu
SUPERPRIQ
CONTAC
c.c:~.r!"I("',. .. ..-..u..e ~ ...... ~.)
CONTAC
12-HOUR
DECONGESTANT
REG. 3.39
229
20 copsul .. fw ,.u.1 from cold 1ymptoms.
existence of ad opted ~::::::::::::========~ ~=::::::::::::::::::::::. twins Cathy and Cindy .o1111 ~--------------1111111.. ~----------------.... .,. a nd only acknowledges
th e pr ese n ce of
Ch ristina, also adopted,
and the actress' younger
adopted so n ,
Christopher.
The film. sta rring
Fa ye Dunaway .
portrays the actress as a
ne urotic child-abuser,
a lcoholic and insecure
s uperstar.
STYLE
HAIR SPRAY
REGULAR, UNSCUmD
OR SUPER FOIMULA
ltEG. 1.54
8·02. keep your style b4toutlful, longer. I ,ollon for y°"r car'•
cooling 1y1 .. m.
TOUR CHOICE
•HONEY
•CINNAMON
HONEY
GRAHAM
CU CIERS
BY SUNSHINE
SUPER PRICE
MARY
KITCHEN
~ir,-.---TJ1111 1EMPllNG COINED
IEUHASH
SUPER PRICE
Both Christin a and
Christopher received
noth i n g from the
Cr awford estate when
the actress died in 1977,
but Cathy and Cindy re·
cei ved a modest in ·
heritance and have con·
tinued to defend t heir!
mother's name. ~===::::::::::=:::::::::: ""==============~ ~===========::;::;:::: ~==:::===========~ After viewing the film .,. .o1111 .o1111 .o1111
at a local theater, Cathy
said, "I just don't like
m y moth e r b ei ng
repr esent ed as a
monster, because shE
wasn't.''
SMACK
RAM EN
OllBITAL
lllSTAlll SOUP
SUPllPllQ
IMITllMT• llACll ................... ......... ~-.......... • 11111 .......... Allmlt"
~ ' I
MARINERS
COVE
RlllGWl»mU
CLAM CllOWDll
SUPER PRICE
ALPO
~~~DOGFOOD
WISTMl•STa
AtlUTllTIOUS
PIY111AT
REG. 45• EA.
COSTA MISA
•mt 1M-C.. .......... c-.
•61!7Wtt ................... . . ...... ,
•UM .......... _
..... ........ c-.
•
Daily Piiat
WEDNESOAV, OCT. 6, 1911
CLASSI Fl ED OS
..............
0 z s a a c a a a
The Oakland A's
return to first -half
season form . See D2 .
a s s
A storybook finish
Astros get a headstart on Dodgers ...
HOUSTON <API Alan Ashby•
called it his own Walter Mitty
story.
Here he was -a line-drive hit·
ler with only four home runs all
year -getting the game-wlnni~
homer with two out in the ninth
inning against a team he used to
sneak In to see.
Catcher Ashby's stor y-book
two-run home r T uesd ay night
carried the Houston Astros to a 3-1
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers in the first game of their
National League West playoff
series.
THE SECOND game in the
best-of.five series began at noon
today with ll ouston·s
knuckleballing J oe Niekro (9-9 )
facing the Dodgers· Jerry Reuss
( 10·4 )
''I'm elated beyond words,"
said Ashby after his homer into
the rightfield stands off reliever
Dave Stewart. .. l kn ew it was a
homer when I saw it in the air .
. and it's not like J 'm a home run
hitter , either. H's a Walter Mitty
dream.··
Ashby's decisive blow settled a
pitching duel between Nolan
Ryan, who twirled a two-hitter,
and Fernando Va lenzuela, who
battled hard before leaving after
eight innings with the score tied
1·1
Houston's only run off the 20
year-old rookie sensation came in
the sixth on a two-out single by
Terry Puhl. a walk to Phil Garner
and Tony Scott's bloop single to
right just off the glove of second
baseman Davey Lopes.
THE DODGERS tied it 1-1 m
the seventh on Steve Garvey's
400-foot homer that hit the
yellow home run line in left cen-
terficld.
to sneak 111to Dodger Stadium and
got caught a lot because I was so
slow." su1d Ashby "I used to
idolize <former Dodger greats>
Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale
It sounds sill y, I guess. but
those are special memone!>
"It was a lucky swing, quite
frankly," Ashby said .. I'm no
home run hitter "
"lt wasn 't a bad p1t('h ," said
Stew art. "I thought it was a good
fastball shoot, I didn't think
he'djacktheball outofthepark I
d1dn'tevenknow who he was.
"I can't ~cc us losing a game
like this they're not a home
run-hitting team," Stewart
added "Every team has some
luck ··
RYAN , WHO no hit the
Dodgers the last time he pitched
against them , retired 16 batters
in a row during one stretch.
.. I thought Nolan's stuff was
better than when he pitched the
no·hitter." said Astros· Manager
Bill Virdon. "This was a big win
for us . it's important that we
win at home ·
After today's game. the scene
s w1tchl·s to Los Angeles for the
Wllldup
··The pr<'ssurl' ts still on them
llhe A!>tros l," said Garvey,
"because I know the effect we 've
had on them in LA
··Two h1ti. 1s not going to win a
ball game. Hyan threw hard but
his breuking pil<:h wasn't as con·
trolled as 11 was on h1!> no-hitter,·
G arvcys;ml .. r kn('W I hit the pitch good
t•nough to gu out of most parks.
But hen· vou <·an never be sure "
Uut it took Ashby·s first career
homer off th(• Dodgers to settle
thl• ISSUl'
U od~cr Manager Tommy
Lllsorda ..,aid he• \.\Cnt to reliever
SH•\.\ art hl·c·ause we felt Fernan·
do I who gave s ix hats 1 had
pitched long enough We wanted
to tr~ to get some runs I believe
in our bull pen ...
"This was a typical game for
us,·· Ashb:. explained "This 1s
our style going down to the la te 1n·
nings Wl· played four extra in·
n1ng g.imes 1n a ro-w with
Philadelphia lui;t ~·<'ar in the Na
lional Lcugue Championship
Falcons look ripe
for a Ram plucking
Bruised Atlanta is licking its wounds
By JOHN SEVANO
Of Ille OMly P'lltot Statl
If ever the Rams were going
to catch the Atlanta Falcons al
the right moment for a defeat.
this would seem to be the week
Consider this·
ble 22 5 :l Sl'nC's advantage
aginst tht Falcons bul all five
dl'feats were in Atlanta. includ ·
ing thret.• of tht.• past four mel't
in gs
D11tf<11'r., /)1lt'e11/11p1'' 'n1·, 111,.,11111,,1·u/1 h fJ"fl 1/11 1/ir1r 1p11 • "''"' their first run Tuesday
"I remembered when I was a
kid in San Pedro ahd I used to try
the Falcons a re on a two
game losing streak. having lost
to Cleveland and Philad<'lph1a
the Falcons are coming off a
physical Mond ay night contest
with the Eagles.
"The key lhing on Atlanta I!> to
stop their running game." says
M alavas1 .. The} have two ex-
c·cllenl running backs 1 Lynn
Ct11n and William An drews I and
an excl'llent orlt'nsive hne Guilty of a monumental absurdity
Nobody came in on the noon balloon from Saskatoon, but.
Nobody came in on the noon balloon
ffom Saskatoon and asked me. but.
Baseball may be years getting over the
harm done by the great walkout of 1981 but
tlte real tragedy is that one side continues
to blame the other and neither fa ction re-
alizes both were guilty of monumental·
absurdity
lf you are looking for a sign of the times.
tfle training camp of the Los Angeles
Lakers opened and the first two stones
d-.alt with off-season endorsements of the
piayers and whether the millionaires were
happy.
If you look closely. you see where the
San Diego Chargers a re challenging the
Rams for the title of soap opera team of
U~e National Football League.
'·I challenge you to look into any walk of
liJe. sports or entertainment and find a
q\Ore pitiful trio, from a talent standPoint.
tt\at CBS' Irv Cross. Jimmy the Greek and
Phyllis George.
H there is a better pro football player -
from a standpoint of effort and consistency
than J ack Youngblood of the Rams.
please name him
1t is doubtrul that even Lt. Columbo
could solve the mystery as to how New
England Patriots coach Ron Erhardt holds
t\iS job . Almost to a man. NFL ex-
ecutives and coaches will list the Patriots
in the top four tea ms with regard to
personnel.
Angels general manager Buzzie Bavasi
BUD TUCKER
s ays he is sick and tired of making
millionaires out of baseball players who do
not produce and it 1s a mortal cinch the
Angel fans are sick and tired of looking at
them.
Steve Garvey 1s approaching the end of
a contract and the Dodgers may not be
able lo afford to sign him to a new one. if
for no other reason than huge infant first
baseman Mike Marshall will do as good a
job a nd work somewhat cheaper.
If you think television does not create in-
stant broadcast talent, consider that Fred
Dryer stepped right out of a contract
hassle into the booth.
Fred Lynn says he did not tell a writer
that he had no responsibility to anyone to
stay in shape during the baseball strike
and the writer ~ays Lynn did make the re-
mark . . One of them is telling the truth.
The national a wa rd -winning fe male
s ports writers and sportscasters are stag-
ing a convention in a room at the Hilton
. Not a banquet room -a room.
As soon as professional SPorts makes
room in the courthouse. college football is
waiting to get in
The UCLA football radio broadcasts
may put the sleeping pill industry out of
business
Those who explain the collapse of so
many soccer franchises as a case of the
American' public not understanding the
game may be guilty of an understatement.
In his recent remarks about an ex·
pansion franchise for the Coliseum. Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley sounded like
a r idicu lous Politician ... or is that redun-
dant?
We should not put the knock on Dor
Meredith's whistling on Monday Night
Football because it may be the most con·
structive thing he does.
As a means to eliminating income taxes,
President Reagan might consider replac-
ing the revenue with a small surcharge on
all football wagers . . It could be called
federal vigorish.
lf you wrote down all the guys who think
they have a shot at an NFL expansion
franchise for the Los Angeles Coliseum.
you would have a longer list than Madame
Ram's former husbands.
A harness race driver is less important
than a thoroughbred jockey because stan·
dard bred horses are more intelligent.
If you need further proof that Howard
Cosell is egotistical, consider that Fred
Dryer said he wanted legal advice on hjs
contract hassle from Cosell ... and Cosell
took it seriously.
the Falcons are be:.it up
both offensively and de
fensively
because of the Mond:.iy night
affair. the Falcons have one less
day to prepare and or nurse
their wounds.
YES, INDEED, if the Falcons
were ever ripe enough to be
plucked. this would seem to be
the time
"Yeah. they must be pretty
banged up," admits Ra ms
Coach Ray Malavasi. 'but then
Cleveland probably thought they
were catching us al the right
time . too. after our Mondav
night game with Chicago " -
What the coach fails lo Point
out, though, is that Chicago isn't
as tough a Philadelphia
they're not even close.
Of course. not all is bad with
Atlanta.
Despite losing their last two
games. the Falcons are still tied
with the Rams and San Francisco
for the top SPot in the NFC West
(all at3·2J .
And, being at home is a def
inite asset. The best remedy
possible for hangs and bruises is
61.000 fans yelling and scream
ing to get a person's adrenalin
going.
There's no doubt -regardless
of the timing the Rams will
have their hands full.
THE RAMS OWN a comforta
··we have to stop them from
getting f1v<.· or -;1x yards on fi rst
down ..
Mala\ as1 feds confident the
defensive secondary can take
('are of the n·sl 1f the Rams· first
obJccl1\ c 1s achieved
Offl'ns1velv. Malavasi feels
JUSt a~ g1x>d: although Wendell
T .' ler <not to mention Pat
Thomas 1 has been li sted as
"quC'stion;.ihte•· for the game
because• of a hamstring pull If
Tyler can't go, Malavasi indicat-
ed Mike• Cumun would gel the
call
Ac tu all.', the Rams· success
wll I. one'<' again. hrnge on Pat
II a den It ·s apparent that as
lladcn 1mprovt•s so do the
R;.im s.
llADF:N WAS 21 of 31 for 205
y ards and on e t o uchdown
against the Browns. More im·
portantly. he hasn •t thrown an
interception in his last 71 passes.
Haden's efforts have moved
him to seventh place among
NFC passers Atlanta's Steve
Rartkowski is 12th
··Our big job will be to keep
our concentration ," s ay s
Malavasi "That s houldn't be
hurd though because everyone
knows wc·re up against a good
foot ball ll'am
"T know if "4e beat this team
we·11 be sitting right on top of
our division.··
Atlanta knows that. too'
Sea View title dreams at stake for Estancia, Corona del Mar
Battle of unbeatens tops Friday's league action; Edison goes for 27th straight and Marina risks its streak
lb ROGER CA RLSON of, ... o•ly Plllt Staff
A battle of unbeatens figures to give the win-
rler the inside track to the Sea View League foot-
ball championship Friday night, Edison goes for
Its 27th straight victory and Marina seeks its firth
sU'aight non-league triumph as high school action
continues into the fifth week of the campaign.
Title dreams are at stak~Friday night at
Newport Harbor where Estancia's Eagles (4·0, 1-0
in league> and the Sea Kings of Corona del Ma r
(4·0, 1-0 in league> collide.
The coaches -Corona del Mar's Dick Morris
and Estancia's Ed Blanton -echo each other
~hen discussing the merits of the other and the
task at band.
"A lot or teams can run well , or pass well or
p\ay defense well," says Morris, "but the thing
about Estancia is that they do everything well.
"We have to establish our offense and hold on
to the ball. If we do it could be a matter of who
&cores the most. l tblnk we can score, but I don't
~nk we can completely stop Estancia."
~ What wut it take to beat Estancia? "Three
tfUChdowns, •· says Morris.
·'Corona del Mar creates a lot more problems
tlaan tut year," says Blanton. "(Eric) Woods
<J;dM'a quarterback) is really coming into his own
•nd he bu added the ntra touch to the offense.
''Corona del Mar ls known for its defenae and
f:• year Is no exception. It's a readio150 (Okie 5·2
fenae> and there are some kkll u.p front. that
ayed lut year wbo are bigger and strooaer. l
nk ll'll take three touchdowns to wtn.··
l
The Eagles swept past Saddleback in their Sea
View opener, 21·0, without tbe services of tight end
Jamie Aiken, who is expected to return to the
lineup after a brief encounter with mononucleosis.
Estancia, ranked No. 4 in Orange County and
in the CIF Southern Conference. has bombarded
four Opp()nents lo the combined tune or 121-26,
while Corona del Mar has an ~-19 edge.
"Our offensive line is starting to get
together," says Blanton. A few weeks down the
road we're going to be all right."
Estancia's offens ive wall includes guards
Mike Griffin (6-2, 225 ) and Mike Brockert (5-10,
155), along with tackles Mike Smith (6-6, 245). and
Marcial Gallardo (6·2, 210) and center Steve
Dethlefsen.
Defensively the Eagles get a lot from Chris
Crandall Cthe fullback ) at nose guard, while Alex
Shively and Mark Van Doren have been keeping
the opposition off balance from their llnebacking
positions.
Corona del Mar's bread 'n butter front line in·
eludes guards Pat Duddy (S-11, 200) and Todd
Parker (6·0, 185 ), tackles Steve Blake (6·2, 175)
and Glenn Rogers (6·2, 245) and center Dave
Stassel (5-10, 19()), whose snaps on punting ailua·
lions defy improvement.
ft's t.he skilled positions. however, that are go·
Ing to put the polnts on the board8 and t.hls la
where Estancia appears to have the edge wtth All·
CIF quarterback Jim McCahlJI (41-87·5, for 59$
yards and 6 TDs> aod tailback Curt Wln1laff (92
corries for 562 yards and a 6.1 everage for 9 TDs).
Corona del Mar counters with its split backs
(Bill Bright and Lance Martin) behjnd Woods
t44-57-3, 469 yards and 5 TDs).
"Yes," agrees Morris. "this one is extra
special."
Elsewhere this week: '-
Mater Del vs. Edison An early-season look made this game appear
to be one of the more attractive non-league games
of the 1981 season, but two losses for Mater Del has
taken off some of the luster .
Nevertheless. it is a resumption of a rivalry
which has seen Edison win the last four starts in
the five-year series and the Chargers, ranked No. 1
in the CIF Big Five Conference and Orange Coun·
ty, are working on a 26-1ame winning streak.
The workhorse in Mater Dei's game is
tailback-linebacker Kennedy Pola, who has car-
ried 77 times for 523 yards and 3 TDs, but an ex·
peeled strong passing game has melted con·
. siderably.
Tony Locy is Mater Del's quarterback and has·
completed 26 of 74 for 337 yards ln four starts <85.1
percent).
Edison counters with its aolJd run. pass. de·
fense setup, revolving around runners Dave
Geroux and Theo Langford, passer Ken Major, a
fleet of receivers. includlns the fluid Gree
Eskridge and a defense keyed by linebacker Rick
DI Bernardo.
Ediaon has trampled four atraJaht noo·leque
1981 opponents with the vast majority of damage
accomplished in the second quarter.
Millikan vs. Marina
Marina High's Vikings return to action after a
week's rest with a 4-0 record, bent on making it
five straight non-league victories against the win-
less Rams .
The latter was down by a 41-7 count at
halftime last week to Edison and although the
Yikes are not expected to equal that mark.
Millikan isn't expected to be able to handle the
passing of Ken Laszlo, receiving of Jeff Frandsen
and running of Tony Valente, Brian Brown and
Rick Tobin out of the veer
Frandsen has already caught a school record
seven scoring passes and Laszlo has equaled the
school record for TD passes in one game (3) twice,
already. Marina is Orange County's No. 3-ranked
team.
Fountain Valley vs. Lakewood
An.er last week's nail-biter over Servlte, t.he
Barons of Fountajn Valley have a much eaaler
task (on paper) with Lakewood, which bas Lott all
three non-league 1981 starta.
The Barona < 3· 1) 10 wtth the u.me tblnc that
keeps them one of the ·more lnteresUna t.el.IDI lD
lhe ClF Soulhem Sectlon, puser deluxe Mau
Stevens, excellent receivers ln Joel Seay and Utbl
end Greg BollD and ta\ I back Rod Emery.
Lakewood bQ nlne mW'lline atarten, lDclud·
ina quarterback )I Ike Terescb.uk, who hit IO.t per·
<See SBA VIE•, Pa1e DI>
t
•
DZ Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
ipe says his head
is feeling just fine
Frum AP dispatches
BEREA. Ohio Despite a saek-s
1ng by Rams linebacker Jim •••
Youngblood, quarterback Brian Sipe
of the Cleveland Browns ins1sL<> he's fme.
"It really wasn't a big deal," Sipe said
when asked about the mishap in Sunday's Na·
ttonal f'ootball League gam e at Anaheim.
where the Rams beat Cleveland, 27-16.
.. Or John Bergfeld <team physician) and I
are the best judges of how I feel and what
should be done I did lake a pretty good shot but
I feel fine today. Nope, no headache," the
quarterbaek said
Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano dismissed a
suggestion Monday that he might have taken
Sipe out of lhe game for a while after the third-
quarter tackle. with assurances \here was no
need for it.
"Al no time did he or Or Bergfeld indicate
he wasn't all rig ht," Rutig liano said "He's fine
now and was fine last night on the plane coming home ..
Quote of the day
Nebraska f ootball coach Tom
Osborne: "Any time we lose a game it is
m y fault. If our players ar en't good
enough. then J s hould have done a better
job recruiting. If our players don't
perform well, then we should have done a
better job of preparing them "
'Suspended coach files lawsuit
The s uspended football coach of
Overland Hi gh School has filed a
laws uit claiming that a "gauntlet"
used to discipline a player who attended a beer
party in violation of tra ining rules was nothing
more than normal discipline Big Ten Com-
m issioner Wayne Duke expects the college foot-
ball television situation lo stab1hze itself at the
NCAA winter meetings 1n St. Louis in
December Billy Taylor, the New York
Giants· leading rusher the past two years. was
placed on waivers. the club announced _
Place kicker Matt Bahr, who played with the
San Francisco 49ers for four games filling for
i OJ u red Ra y Wersching, was tra ded to
Clevela nd. . Hard-lur k Ken Coley, the top
quarterbuck for Alabama is s uffering injunes
Brooks' NHL debut ruined, 5-2
Rookie Mark Osborne scored his ~
flnll Nalionlll Hockey Leatl:U • goal '
und John Ogrod•tkk added a pair of
t.-llh.:11 us Detroit ruined the debut or Herb
Brook• us Rangers coach with u 5 2 victory over
New York ... In oth~r NHL opening n1aiht ac-
tion, Blalr ('bapmao and Mlb Zook scored two
goolis each and Remit Fedtrko chipped In 3
goul uud an assist , pacing St Louis to a 6-2 win
ovt>r Pittsburgh Right win& Rlc:k Valn's
two goals within a 40-second span 1n the first
pe riod sparked Toronto to a 6·1 win over Win-
nipeg . Michel Goulet scored two goals to
lead Que bec to a 6-5 win over Hartford . . •
Rookie Lars Molin scored the winnin~ goal in
the second period us Vancouver buill a three·
goal lead and held on for a 4 2 v1etory over
Colorado.
Celtics won't give up on Ainge
The Bos ton Celtics won't give up •
on signing Danny Ainge, Celts Presi-
dent Red Auerbach says. "We never
give up," Auerbach, who is also Celtics' general
manager, told an audience. "We have to have
some meetings to discuss it" . . . Tulsa selected
former California Surf player Laurie Abrahams
while Montreal selected former Surf player
Stephen Feeney in the NASL's dispersal draft or
players from the four teams that folded last
month Four and a hair months a fter he was
declared '(inne r or the disputed Indianapolis
500-mile race, Mario Andretll may learn Thurs-
day whether the $262.000 first prize is his or
Bobby Unser's . Funeral services are
sche duled today for Edmund R. "Eddie" Held,
winner of the National Public U nks golf title in
1928
Telev1s1on, radio
Following are the top sparts events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: • ' " " excellent; " ./ " worth watching; " " fair: " forget It. e 5:10 p.m., Channel 7 ./ ./ ../ ./
BASEBALL PLAYOFFS: New York at
Mil waukee.
Announcers: Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell and Don Drysdale.
The last miniseries to get under way will pit
the Ya nkees· Ron Gui dry (11 -S ) against
Milwaukee's Moose Haas (11-71. Milwaukee won
the second half of the regular season and had the
best over-all record in the East Division of the
American League. The Yankees won the first half.
RADIO
Baseball -New York at Milwaukee, S: 10 p.m., KNX (1070). HOCKEY N.Y. Islanders at Kings, 7:30p.m., KPRZ (1 150).
T HURSDAY'S TELEVISION
Baseball -New York at Milwaukee, 12 . 10
p.m ., Channel 7; Philadelphia at Montreal, S· 15 p.m ., Channel 4.
THURSDAY'S RADIO
Baseball -New York at Milwaukee, 12 : 10
p.m., KNX (1070); Philadelphia at Montreal, S: 15
p.m , KNX (1070).
Now Royals need a break
A 's in the driver's seat going into game two today
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP)
The Kansas City Royals are
wondering when they arc going
to gel a break
(( the Oakland A's have their
way. though, the Royals won't
have to wonder about 1t very
much longer
·w e're not going oul of hert'
I I ." s aid Oakla n d third
baseman Wayne Gross after the
A ·s downed the Royals 4-0 Tues
day 1n ga m e one o f th e
Ame r ica n Lea g u e We st
divisional playoffs "They've got
to beat us three out of four, and I
don't think they can do that "
The A's triumph l eft the
Royals needing a victor y today
to avoid the prospect of having
to win three in a row at Oakland
lo take the best-of-Cive series.
FRANK WHITE. the Kansas
C1 t v second baseman. said the
Royals were not emotionally
down because of the defeat
just frustrated at the manner in
which they lost.
··We 've been in tougher
playoffs before than this one
·with Oakland," White said "We
know \\hat 1t takes . Oakland
doesn't compare with the New
Y o rk Yank ee teams we've
played in the past. ..
Gross· three -run home r 1n
the fourth following a two-out
thro wing error b y t hird
baseman George Brett -all
was all the offense Oakland
starter Mike Norris needed to
out·duel Dennis Leonard.
The A's third baseman. who
hit just 206 this s eason . also
made the defensive play of the
game The Royals had the bases
loaded with one out in the fifth
when White drilled· a line shot at
Gross. who nipped to second lo
double off John Walhan for an
inn1ng-endrng double play
"IT'S FRUSTRATING," ad
milted White. "I s aid to myself,
·When are we going to get a
break?' We keep getting men on
base and can't get them in. None
of the calls going our way,
nothing. It's been this way for
two weeks "
Fountain Valley
downs W estminster
Fountain Valley High sped
past Westminster in cross coun-
try action Tuesday, 18·43, as the
Barons' Bob Erickson and Ned
Mosher finished in a tie for first
place.
·'I think Eric kson can go
fas ter but like with everyone. we
wanted to lake it easy since we
have three meets this week."
said Fountain Valley assist ant
coach David Licata.
Fini s hin g fourth for the
Barons was Danny Reynoso,
fifth was Steve DeWenter and
sixth was Don Mitchell.
Norris. who gave up just four
hi ls but t wi('l' had to work out of
bases loaded jams. agreed that
Gross' catch was the dirference.
"No doubt about 1l. That ball
goes in. that's two runs a nd it's
a whole different gam e." said
the A ·s right hander "This is
probabl) thl' best game I've
thro\\O all year The pitches
were around thl' plate and really moving ..
Norri~ may ha ve done his best
work against Brett. who, in addi·
lion to making an error . was hit
less in four and left five runners
on I.Hise
· · 1 t hrew him some of the
damndest screwballs I ever
threw in my hfe ... Norris said of
his success against the 1980 AL
batting champ. "I just cross my
fingers. say a little prayer. then
try to do what the scouts say to
do.··
LEONARD, WHO shut out the
A's twice during the season, was
almost as effective. U.ntil sur-
r e nd ering a solo ho m e r to
Dwayne Mu rphy in the eighth,
he had pitched 25 1·3 innings
without allowing the A's an
earned run.
"I thought I pitched well,"
said the right hander, who gave
up seven hits before Renie
Martin came on in the ninth.
"They capitalized o n two errors
one by George and one by me
We got guys on but couldn't get
them in. and that was the
ball ame.''
Mano Arulrettl
Brewers
don't scare
Yankees
MILWAUKEE <AP> -Lou
Pinie lla, a s might be expected,
likes the New York Yankees'
pitching.
But Yankee Manager Bob
Le mon says he has plenty of
r espect for the Milwaukee
Brewers' offense.
So does Ron Guidry, 11·5, who
1s to be the Yankees' starting
pitc her agains t Milwaukee's
Moose Haas. 11-7, tonight in
game one of the best-o f-five
American League East playoffs.
"MILWAUKEE HAS a good
c lub ," s aid Piniella , t h e
Ya nkees' vete ran outfielder .
·'Cecil Cooper is as good a hitter
a s t h ere is in the league.
Gorman Thomas can beat you
with one s wing.
.. But I don't think lhey're as
good as people thought they
were going to be." Pinie lla said.
··People thought they would be
more explosive. r read in s pring
t ra inin g where <B rewe r
catchen Ted Simmons said he
didn 'l think they'd be shut out
all year. Well . it has n't exactly
wo rked that way.
"I think we 've got lhe
pitc hing... he said. noting the
Yankee st aff's 2 90 earned run
average "ll 's a well balanced
pitching staff. and well com·
plem entcd as far as lefty-righty
is concerned."
BUT LEMON sees the
Brewen' as one of the best
balanced and potentially most
explosive teams in baseball.
"I s ure don't see any weak·
nesses ... Lemon said. "I liked
th e m in s pring training .
espec1all}' after they got relief
pitcher Rollie Fingers to go with
all lhal power. Som e of their
guys JUSt needed a nother year's
experie nce. and now they've
m atured "
Guidry said one of his primary
concerns will be to keep Paul
Molitor and Robin Yount. the
first two hitters in the Brewers'
order. off the bases.
"Milwaukee has a tough
lineup," Guidry said. "But lhey
don't have the speed of Oakland
or Kansas City If you have a lot
of speed to go with a lot of
power. you can do a lot more
things."
Andretti ready
for Grand Prix
He's anxious to try out Vegas course
~
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of .. DMty ~ S.lf
There are several points or
s peculation for the Caesar's
Palace Grand Prix Formula One
race to be staged on a man
made track in Las Vegas Satur-
day, Oct. 17.
Mario Andrelti, the world
champion in 1978, isn 't in conten-
tion for the championship this
yea r and may be looking
elsewhere ror a ride when the
1982 season begins .
But right now he figures his
Alfa Romeo is as competitive as
an y or the turbo-charged cars
that have dominated the circuit
this season.
"IT'S REALLY anybody's ball
gam e yet," Andretti said by
long-distance telephone from his
home in Pennsylvania Tuesday.'
"No one has tried the course in
one of our cars and there is real-
ly nothing to base an opinion on.
"The turbo-charged cars may
not be strong there. That's what
l'm hoping for. The Alfa could
be quite des irable ror that
particular track."
There have been reports out or
Italy that one or four driver s
contending for the current world
championship has expressed his
displeasure with the track that
is 2.2-miles in length and was
cons tructed on the parking lot
next door to the casino.
"Sure, you are going to get
people e xpressing their own
opinions," Andretti says. "But
no one should say anything unW
we get on there with our race
cars . Then some will love it and
som e will hate it.
'Tm very anxious to get out
there on the track and J plan on
being there early next week. But
I have no idea how the cars will
react to the track. I've seen film
or the track and cars running on
it but I have not driven on the
track yet."
HE ISN'T PLEASED with the
performance of the Alfa so far
this s eason But he doesn't
figure to give up for the last race
of the season.
"We have a muc h better
Kings tangle
with Islanders
INGLEWOOD -The Los
Angeles Kings find themselves
in a new division when they open
the 1981·82 National Hoc key
League season tonight 17 :301
against the defending Stanley
Cup champion New York Is-
la nders
Now a member of the Smythe
Divis ion along with Calgary.
Van cou ver , Edmonto n and
Colorado, the Kings also have a
new coach <Parke r Mc Donald >
a nd some new. young talent.
mos t notably 20-year-old left
winger Steve Bozek
B ozek. from North e rn
Michigan University, will be try-
ing to fill the skates of the in-
jured Charlie Simme r who is
still nursing a broken leg suf-
fered late last season.
Playing on the same line with
Ma r cel Dionne and Dave Taylor.
Bozek has scored five goals dur·
ing the pre-season.
chance than some people thlnk,"
he says. ··we have done • lot ol
work on the car but we have not
been satisfied with things up to
now und neither have the AJfa
people for thst matter. Jn
seve ral races, we h ave been
c lose and have been com ·
petitive.''
Andretti says he is thinking
about a change for next season
but says nothing definite has
been worked out yet
"I doq't know about ne xt year
right now," he says. "I haven't
talked to enough people to have
things in order yet. But I have
talked with several and right
now I'm in the middle or three
different negotiations.' Yes, I
would s witch teams for next
year if the opportunity present-
ed itself."
Andretti llas been declared the
winner of the 1981 Indianapolis
500-mile race but Bobby Unser
has protested the decision of
USAC officials .
"I UNDE RSTAND a decision
should be forthcoming in the
next dav or two." Andretti s avs.
'Tm s ure that everybody wants
to get it over with.··
The race on the Caesar's
Palace circuit will probably de-
termine the world champion for
1981 and among those in conten-
tion is J acques La crite. one of
those who criticized the track
before he had seen it.
Others in contention include
Carlos Reutemann, Nelson Pi-
quet and former champion Alan
Jones. Andretli is not in conten-
tion this season but is one of two
Americans in the race
While his attention 1s on the
Formula One race in Las Vegas
next weekend, he also is very in-
terested in hil> son Michael's
driving career which 1s blossom-
ing.
"l 'd rather not watch him
compete," Andrelli, Sr. admits .
"It is really very difficult to
keep my compos ure when he is
out t~ere on the track. He'll run
the entire Super Vee series next
year but we haven't nailed down
a learn yet ..
ONE DRIVER who has been
on the Caesar's Palace track is
Canadian Grand Prix winner
Gilles Villeneuve, a lbeit he
was n't in a race car. He walked
the course twice and said he was
pleasantly s urprised at what he
found.
"I had heard so much about
how tight the course would be, ..
Villeneuve s aid "But I was de-
lighted to find that not to be the
case. I really believe that we
will reach speeds over 160-mph
and will probabl) aver age 93
during the race.
' I was also very impressed
with the course construction.
There are good runoff areas and
the surface is very smooth. It
will be a very inte resting cir cuit
and there are plenty of places to
pass and will prove to be an ex-
citing venue lo decide the 1981
championship ..
The Forumla One cars will
get their firs t c hance to test the
track on Wednesday along with
the Can-Am cars that will race
Friday. Qualifying will be held
Thursday during the four-day
extravaganza.
* **** *.,,.,, * * * * * • • • • NFL standings 1: JOHNSON & SON :
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE • p e nts •
Western Division Western Division • r Se • . . :
W L T PF PA Pd. W L T PF PA Pct. « it
Rams 3 2 O 123 96 .600 San Diego 4 1 0 162 120 800 • •
Atlanta 3 2 O 122 78 .600 Denver 4 I 0 106 54 800 : it
San Francisco 3 2 O ll3 106 .600 Kansas City 3 2 0 124 132 .600 « ,.
New Orleans I 4 O so 105 200 Oakland 2 3 0 63 62 .400 • it
Eas tern Division Seattle 1 4 0 68 101 .200 '« it
Philadelphia 5 o o 109 , 53 1.000 Eastern Division
900
'• it
Dallas 4 1 o 126 78 .800 Miami 4 O 1 125 83 « •
St. Louis 2 3 O 94 117 .400 Buffalo 3 2 O 127 67 .600 ,. it
NEVER WAX YOUR CAR AGAIN... ~;.~:~;~c •. .J LU; .~ ·~ ~~~!~~~··d l ! ~ :* :!! E: , ....... 'Greell .. !
Ml.. ITI Minnesota 3 2 0 103 115 .600 Central Division -ti it
1"1.-·lllAflftQ
...... lt1 ..... •ttftt
4\t l•I 1116,:'
.,.,.,wl(-r ,..._ ~"''' •t 't'ovr ~
1( .... StO'• ,....,.,,..,..."""'., .. I
COIT.A-841·1289 11:111...__
···-~15-0401 -c.-.c...,-
"•• Diop~ .... ..., ~I
Tampa Bay 3 2 O 96 80 .600 Pittsburgh 3 2 0 128 104 600 « •
Detroit 2 3 o 97 99 .400 Cincinnati 3 2 o 112 112 :600 ti MR.'s • AS LOW AS 119.95 2h~::.~·, ~ ! g .. : .. ::.~;,:~~d ~ ~ g :: .~ :·~ ~~;::. ~
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Frtend :. ~:~~:: AT JOHNSON & SON : ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~**********~······~··················~········~
'
\I
I I
"
J l1t k \./urns
anning's
st thrill
When .Jim Fanning was
111 11• 1 Ll\t'r dt•vt'lopmcnt of the Mon·
'"' lt1:,, biggest ('har ge from
11111 l'lh h or bat 1n the major
1 • it 111 1h1· dugout much closer to
• 1.: •1 1 I 1111llng b1J,!ger thrills.
llllt' 111a n;igt•r of the Expos when
11111 ~I• ll.111· fired Dick Wilhams
""' I .11111111).! ~ guidance, the Expos
, 111 111" tr. nf their final 27 games,'
1 ··11~' ind a i.wl'<'P of the se ries
11. I l'1lhhurgh
. • •11•:11 thrill \\hcn I'd s ign a
1 ht mJJOI lt•agues I'd get
I d c·e Ill) pitchers throw-
" ',11d 'That was my big
,, 11 ' b1)!gt•o.,t lhr11l
1 '1•11, \\O' lht• ... <·ronct half title in the
1 , 1 I 1 r I >n 1-.wn by one-half game
11 •I •·t1!1•r1•d postsC'as on play for the
t q1,111->1on reached Montreal in
I ''l!.111 .i hc!>l -of five intra-div1s1on
l'h l.11ldphi.1 Phrlhes. defending
I 111p11111: .. tnd first half winners.
I I '1111111 l'.il
11 , •.. 111 "'' 1111nd the t hought that
1 111111 I· .inning said when the
, 1 01111 h.1lf ·I tned to stay
1 t 111111! in m) pocket until it
1' , 1 I 0111o:ht of managing never
11 1 1111trl \le lla le asked him to
1 .i1111111)! a man prone to un·
1 I 1• I 11 lw l'llJo' cd the JOb.
1•11 I h.ivl' now. I'd have to
1111\t'• hl'!>atcl
\n 1 II\., t r 111.11 FJnning will move back
111. 1 Iha.., l;t'a!>on as the Expos
, , 11' 111·rm.1m·nt s uccessor to
I• 111.111 111 l'htladelphia. Dallas
1 it, I 111 !>ur h rumors after last
11111 h1· r t.'turned to manage.
• ·1 h1· rnJ\ ~o to the \h1c ago
, 1I•11 1 and ~l'neral manager
... ·, Rustlers
lo wins
•I 11·11 Wc..,t Colleges both
• ,, 1IPr polo games Tues·
1 -...1nt;i Ana. 10·8. while the
I ,11ntn11 17 3
11 • 111 t• ..:.11nl' Golden West
tillo rr.111 ... or e squad. it went
111 r•1;:1lt•!> 1t·bounded from an
11 111 pu ll ll ut the wan
I ,,, c·ra ll 1 s cored three
, 1111.11 quartn Adam Sofio
111• 1!11.11 Chns ,\l\'es gave the
• .ind \~Jth 1 22 remaining, Bill
1111.ll 1•11.11
1.11 tc•r' out sick so I was really
"111 !>aid Fullerton. "I was
''"" the wa) Alves. <Roy> I•"'' \\'lllms (all freshme n > • "It'' 1• Simmons made great
1 11,1.,u;?hout the game."
1 11\crall 1 got plenty of
,, ti lob. or experience for
I \ I \ 111'
111 •1 .11-.' Y..a!> the leading scorer
ll1111do Y..hlll' Carl Salyer and
I • 11nng honors. both with
• 1~IC'1mmo '.1.. \1 1• ... a H1gh grad) and Guy
11 I•· of -.ophomores who help
I 1, Wt· a ss1!'.tant coach Jim
• \11..,smn \'aeJo High gr ad)
1 '-•'\\ iort llarbon. along with
, , II 1111 ddt·n~e ..
~,11 1111 i011l'r Rnms
, tt tJll rih 1 wPr Cleveland
lio\o F I\ l • 1nr1 l 0111· r x-New York Jets
t1 111• lptua q over x New Orleans
A tl,1lt11'10r1 ')over Cincinnati
• ~ lllSdC, City I OvC'r Oakland
" ~1 11c.ton l ow•r Seattle
111 n n.1y l' over Tampa Bay
r '' '~ J 1.v• r Washington I ,., 'i v .. r < San Francisco
1" ''"' r J• 0111•r Detroit
11 (J11-qo 1 , ovr-r Minne!.Qta
r 11J•'i, nd,.. Nl'w York Gia nts even
Rultcslo 1 ov..r Mi ami
( ollf' ~f'
l'ir>r C 11 71' >over Ar12ona
• ''"''Mi• :n ovl'r Boston College I t•11rgh l ovn x West Virginia
t1 ''" fArnl111,12ooverWake Forest
1 Q 1 P. ov,,r x Michigan State
1 rn n HI 1 11•·r Virginia
1 "'·' 1 11vt'r x Texas
I" " • Mlc;c,issippi
I •l' 8 r \IN Kcmsas State " r. U a 011,., Baylor
< tow,1 1 ovttr Indiana
11 Ao ove r X·Stanford
' r ,,, ">tc1t(' 6''~ over x·Wlsconsln
" DMOlf'S home! team.
1 I r•1111 llarrnb '& Reno SPorts Book >
Or81"1go Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Wednesday, Octo ber. I 1981 03
From Page 01
SEA VIEW LEAGUE TITLE. • • ' •. ~
cent or his passes in 1980 for 795 Y•rda and 8 ·ros
Sen Clement• v1. Huntington Beech
The Ollet1 or Huntlniton Beach C2·2) are
favored lo make ll three straight with winless San
Clem ente the victim in this oon·leaeue game.
Riehle Carrillo completed 80 percent of his
passes last week (8 for 10 for 97 yards> and the
Oilers' •defense is eyeing a shutout. Huntln1ton
Beach has not held an opponent scoreless since
whipping Cypress in 1974, 42·0, which was 65
games ago ..
Ocean View et Western
Ocean Vie w has been unable to ho ld any oppo·
nent to less than two touchdowns in a 1·3 record,
but Western hasn't been very explosive in compil·
ing a 1·3 mark with a 9.7 victory over Sonora the
Pioneers' best offensive output.
The Seahawks of Ocean View are still at home
plate with their running game with their best out·
put from a running back being Robert Cronk, a 5·8,
160-pound senior who chalked up 68 yards in 9 car·
ries against La Quinta and has a n overall figure of
167 yards on 33 carries (5.1 average).
Quarterback John Heinle's favorite target ap·
pears to be Eric Re inholu (14 catches for 193
yards >.
Westminster vs. long Beach Wiison
The Lions are eyeing their best start sin('e 1975
a nd 1f tailback Herb Campbell and quarterback
David Neville get the backing to produce their
normal yardage, Wilson's 1·2 Bruins could provide .
it in this non-league conflict.
Campbell has rus hed for 368 yards on 57 car·
nes in his last two starts (both winners for
Westminster> a nd Neville showed his ability in the
season-opener with a 184-yard effort against La
Quinta (also a winner for Westminster>.'
Wilson boas ts seven returning starters on de ·
fensc
University vs. Costa Mesa
It's power <University ) vs. quickness <Costa
Mesa> in this one as the Trojans of Univers ity send
running backs Mike Fiscus and Ri('h Sorensen
against the quick passes of Mesa's Steve Anderson
in a Sea View League encounter.
Anderson. without the services of tight end
Steve Cook. passed through Newport Harbor with
a 16-for-27 performance. good for 170 yards and a
TD. Six of his da rts went to tailback Brian Head.
Univers ity extended Corona del Mar to a 10-7
decision with a solid defense. led by linebacke rs
· JeH Frei and Mike Miller.
Newport Harbor vs. El Toro
It's no-run (Newport Harbor) vs. all-run (El
To ro) as the latter sends All-CIF running back
Damon Sweazy against a traditionally tough de·
fense
Newport's Sailors a rt' strugfthng <O 4, o 1 in
Seu View Leu((uc uclion >, while El Toro barely
turnt'd the l'Orncr las t week (l.J , 1 0 In league>
with a 27 26 dt>cision over Irvine.
The Sa1lorl;' punch 1s carried by qua rterbuck
Greg Selby < 48 for 112 for 6S8 yard11 > and rec ea vcr
Rob Berry <23 catches for 354 yards>
El Toro t'ountcrs with Sweaty ( 107 carries, 512
yards and 3 TOs>.
Newport llarbor's 0-4 start 1s the worst since
1962 when the sailor!> lost theirfirst rive e n route
tu a 8 re('ord
Saddleback vs. Irvine
If nothing else. it figures to be clo:,,e Irvine s
2· t 1 record includes a o ne-point victory, one-point
loss. a tie and a 28-25 victory over Laguna Hills .
Saddleback 's quit'kncss is keyed by runner
Kendle Newson, while Irvine's running punch is
coming from J Unior J o hnn y Salinas, while
quarterback Jim Gasho exploded for 202 yard!>
with a 13-for-20 perform a nce against El Toro rn
Irvme's Sea Vaew League opener. Each is O·l In
league
Loa Amigos vs. Laguna Beach .
The Artists are still trying to figure out just
what it takes to win (more points) after a 13· 13 tie
with Irvine and 16·14 and 13-12 losses to Elsinore
and Magnolia, respectively
Los Amigos enters with a 2·2 record. including
a 21 7 victory over Western last week
Lagun.a Beach 's offense revolves around
quarterback Evan Chalme rs and the blocking of
fullback Dam<m Berryhill
LA Baptist vs. Woodbridge
The Knights of LA Baptist entt'r wllh a :J 1
rt'l·ord. including a 13·0 victory over F'11lmor e. i.o
Woodbridge appears to have its hands full in seek
ing its first wrn after three free lance starts
Sophomore quarterback Bill Russell lead!> the
senior-less Woodbridge Warriors, having complct
cd 22 of 51 passes for 254 yards a nd 2 TDs
Indio vs. Mission Viejo
lndto's HaJahs invade with a 3 1 record and
lhc No. r ranking 1n t he Southl•;is tern Con
fcn·n('e again:.t the 4·0 Diablo1>, th11 Cl F' Central
Conforence'!> Nc1. l team
Palm Springs (27·7> was one of lnd10's v1 c
time;, so M1ss1on VieJo's defense, which has given
up only two tou('hdowns. figures to be tested In
dao·!> most recent game was a 43.39 loss to one of
the Big Five Conferen('e's top teams Colton
La Quinta vs. Laguna Hills
Laguna l11l ls !O 4 > continues to struggle
des pite the talent, while the Aztecs enter with 2 2
c redentials. including a 16 0 victory over Sunset
League representative Ocean View It's the final
non league tuneup for each
(Ill pmes at 1 :JO unless Dttlenise notedl
Thursday
TMpme
Uni vs Coste! Mesa al Newixirt Harbor
La Quinta vs lag Hills al M1ss1on V1e10
Friday
£stanc1a vs Cotooa del Mar at Nwpt lfrbt
Saddleback at Irvine
Mater Oe1 vs £d1soo at OCC
The line
Costa Mesa by I
I a Oum ta by 6
ftn Valley vs Lakewood at Veteran~ Stad1urn
[staoc1a by 7
Saddleback by 3
Edison by 18
fin Vly by 7
Marina by 20
Hlg Beach by 9
Ocean View by 6
Westminster by 4
M1lltkan vs Marina at Westrnnster
Sao Clemente at Huntington Bcac.h
Ocean View at Western
Westminster at Lon~ Bearh Wilson
Los Arrugos at Laguna lkilr.h
lndro at M1ssmn V1e10 (8 p rn J
Saturday
Los Am1p,os by 6
Indio by 4
Newport Harbor vs ! I loro ot M1ss1on V1e10 [I Toro by 6
LA Baptist vs WoorHmdge at Irvine LA Bapt15I by I? t
Ainge takes a job
J>HO\'I), l tah I A}' Dann) Ainge. rrustrat
t•d 1n h11> IJH1 to h•a\'(' the Toronto Blue J ays
bas.:ball team .111<1 Joan thl' Hoston C'ellics basket
trnll tl•am, ha:-ll<'l'l"Plcd a pa rt-time basketball
l'Oac h1n g po..,t :it Brigham Young l'n1versity.
school off1<·1:ib :,,aul Tul'sdJ\
A1ngt•. 22, v. a' an ,\II. Ament an player last
st·a:,,on al llYI :.i lll·r a \'t•ragm~ 24 4 points per
!W fll('
Frunk Arno l<l BYl' has k l'tball coach .
v.oultln'I rl 1sr(11..,., lurn mul·h Ainge "AOuld be paid
Jll' s .11d ht• told .\1nge ta ... t ~car he could have the
po!>l urnn g r •Hhwt1on
\1ngt•. a third ba..,t•m an with tlw American
Ll'agul' llh1l' J c1 "" I his past season. v. anted to get
out of his 1·0111 1<1('\ "1th T oronto so he ('Ould sign
"1th ll\l' I \•1111·-. of lht· ~;1t1onal B<tsketball As
s111·1a t111n ·
But a L'S Drslnct Court JUry in New York Ci·
t v rult•cl l;ist v.eC'k th<1t thl· Hlut> Javs didn't verbal
1; n·:-c·111d i\1ngt•'.., cnntr.H·t an rl01scussions June
JO 11
They're not pretenders, they're contenders
Forget hindsight, University's Curtis did the right thing against Sea Kings
Second-guessing -it's part of the game and
something you'll bear on nearly ever play. Even a
coach will second-guess himself, such as Universi·
ly High's Rick Curtis.
Curtis was down on himself for not going for a
field goal in the closing minutes of a 10-7 loss to
Corona del Mar last week. opting to go for 1t on
fourth-and-one at the CdM 10.
Hindsight is always 20·20. but regardless of the
fact his team missed by inches, Curtis did the
right thing
Fourth-and seven? OK. go for the tie But
fourth-and-one with a chance for a v1ctory7 You go
for it, none of that Ara Parseghian business .
University played we ll enough to win and
didn't deserve to lose. But if the Trojans had gone
for the lie. settled for a 10·10 game. then Curtis
would really have been se('ond-guessing h imself.
So would havt' a lo t or others, including his
players.
University. by the way, picked to finis h last in
the Sea View League, proved it belongs in the list
of contenders. not pretende rs.
• • • VOU CAN ADD Westminster High to the list of
conte nders, rather than pretenders, in the Sunset
League following the Lions· 10·0 thumping of
highly regarded Compton.
Coach Barry Waters has the Lions going in the
right direction in his second year at the helm after
several years at Edison High, where he was one of
Coach Bill Workman's top lieutenants
It was Wate rs who was the man in charge of
Edison's defense in the 1979 drive for the CIF Big
Five championship, capped by that 55-0 rout of
Redla nds at Anaheim Stadium.
Westminster is ranked No. 9 in Orange County
and is considered a definite threat to be 6·1 before
the Lions tangle with Edison in Sunset League
play. • • •
FIRST·YEAR COACHES APPEAR to be go-
ing in the right direction on all fronts within the
·Orange Coast area.
Greg Henry has Huntington Beach on a two-
gam e winning streak and going for more; Costa
Mesa co-coaches Jim Hagey and John Carney
ha ve a 7·3 victory over Newport Ha rbor in their
pockets; Curtis' University High team is 2·2 and
obvious ly a threat to anyone in the Sea View
League ; and Terry He nigan has Irvine at the 2·1·1
level, contrary to last year's 0-10 mark.
PREP SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON
EL TORO lllG ll'S attempt to get out of lhe
St·a \'a•" Lt•ugut• and into the South Coas t Lt'ague
fell on near-dt•Jf edrs recently ac; its proposal
found onl\. tht• Sun.,l't a nd Sea View c 1rcu1ts
agn•t•able.' tlw l'('!>t nf Orange Counh· shol the
Charger!' dov. n
" • •
~1 ARI ~A lllG H'S \'IKISGS, 1dll-laq "t·ek
bet·aui;c of thc•1r trip to lh1v.a11 a \\Cl'k earlier than
the r egular !.ca:,,(m, return to the wars against win
less Millikan Frida) and receiver Jeff Frandsen
will bl' tn ing to add to his school rc{'()rd of W\Cn
touc hdown µa:,,ses alread.' p1 ckc•d up an four
game!>
Ma rina 's opp onents to d ate !aside from
Foothill ) haven 't really comprised an awesome
lineup, but the Yikes are trying to beef up the '82
s('hcdule, so f:tr with little success.
Contacted, aC'cordin~ to Athletic Director An·
dy Donegan, have been Esperanza. Capistrano
Valle} and Estuncia. but ~o far. no takers.
NFL statistics
Esperanza High dnc•sn't •;cem to be available
lor a n~ of the an•a ... bt•ttc•r ll'amc, Edison High.
.1cC'ord1ng to Athll·tt(' D1 rt•('tor L,\man Clower. a lso
,1ppr11a<'h1•d th1• i\1t1•t''" hut to nu av<1JI
* • • ElllSO:-\ m<.ll'S ('II \tt<a:Rs ma_\ be :-.:o I tn
a Int of a n::.is. h111 l hl'\ 11 c l'l ta111h "anting 111 the
<«1t1·iwr,\ of Ira\ l'I Jf'fSt·~ ~
<:old on \\ h1tc•' Wh) duln't ttwy go a ll the way
and ust· v.-h1lt• nun11Jl'rals on\\ t11t1: .wrseys''
F:d1su11 '" .ihu d01n~ a number on Dally Pilot
stat1s llC's
Slut1..,t1c·.., J?t•n1·1,tl l ~ rl'fl<•l't on an area 's list of
t11p hack-.. hut IU!>t ho w t·.in you rate a team's
liacb whl·n th1•\ onh pl.i v half of the game. or
It's:. ,
:'-1 :l\ lw \\l'0 ll h;1 \ t' lo look at aq•rage g ain per
ea r n. ro.1t ht•r th.in lot.ti .' :irdaJ!C'
"'or 1nst.1n1·1<, Edison running back Dave
l;l'11H1x ha:. "onl.v" :179 ) a rd!> to his c redit 1n four
_ga mt·s hul thal ' nn tll~I -1n carries a 9 4
<t\'t'I ;1g(• pt•r 1·;11 r.'
Tht• q11 ark111111 k. f\f'n \t.1Jor. is a nother exam
pie Ill' onl.' t·o111plt'l1•tl f1v1 pas!->es last week -but
that's all hl' thrt•\\
Edison's I u rl•t·orcl amounts to a 145-27 ratio in
points hul il l ha lfttml' 1t s 112·7 112-0 vs El
Dorado. :u O v:-. S<1nta i\n.i. 28-0 vs. El Modena and
41 7 \'S Millikan l Com btncd Sc('ond quarter scores
s how F:d1son running \\ ild by a 78-0 margin
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Montgomery. Phil 73 J!KI 5 :1
LEADING PASSERS Di('kcy. Baltimore 71 385 5 . ..\
PA PC Yds Avg TD Brown, Minnesota 93 354 4 O
Mrtn. Den 11 2 72 1071 9.56 10 Tvler. Rams 90 354 3.9
Fouts.SD IRI 115 1530 8 45 12 . L F:/\OING Pl'STERS
Todd. NY lfiO 98 1160 7.25 10 No Yd-.; Avg
Montana.SF 144 93 1124 7.81 7 Mclnally, C1nri 22 1099 50.0
D.Whitc,Oal 142 86 9896.96 6 Guy.Oakland 30 M96 49.9
Frgsn. Bflo 156 84 1137 7.29 11 Swider. Tmpa By 13 599 46.l
Hart. St L 74 ·42 541 7.31 4 Jennings. NY Gnts 29 1300 44 .8
Brdshw, Pitt 155 84 1289 8.32 7 Cater. Buffalo 19 847 44 .6
Andrsn,Cin 166 101 1147 6 91 7 LEADING PUNT RF.TURNERS
K rmr. Minn 114 64 809 7.10 6 No Vds Avg
LEADING PASS RECEIVERS V1g~nto. M1ami 7 156 22 3
No Yds Avg TD J Fisher, Chi<' 15 22.'i 15 0
BRAND HEW
1981 vw
DIESEL RABBIT
FACTORY STI CKER
$7945
DISCOUNT
$950
SALE PRICE
56995
l2634) (184699)
Lofton. Gr Bay ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,Brown, Minn 31 512 16.5 2 G~oth. N Orlns 1-t 177 12.6
28 25J 90 i 1M1tchell.St.L 14 166 11.9
28 525 18.8 l Irvin, Rams 12 138 11.5
BRAND HEW
1981 ISUZU
PICKUP FACTORY STICKER
S6478
DISCOU NT Stlwrth, Pitt
Largent, Stl
Winslow.SD
Lewis . Bflo
Newsme, Clvlnd
S. White. Minn
Three tied with 24
28 42l 15.0 2 LEADING KICKOFF R ETURNERS
28 342 12.2 4 No Yds Avg
26 425 16.3 3 Tullis. Houston 5 226 45.2
25 320 12.8 3 Roaches. Houston 12 422 35.2
25 364 14.6 o Verser . Cinci 7 231 33.0
• Nelms. Wash 8 235 29.4
Pavton. Minn l 1 317 28.8
LEADING R USHERS • LF.ADING COR E RS
Dorsett, Dallas
Campbell, Houston
G. Rogers, N Orlns
Sims, Detroit
Andrews. Atlanta
Cribbs. Buffalo
No Vds Avg TD
99 592 6.0 2
116 512 4.4 2
112 490 4.4 l
116 477 4.1 5
86 439 5.1 1
89 397 4.S 2
k-Septien . Dallas
k-Lowery. Ka ns as City
Tyler, Rams
k·Franklin, l'hiladelph1a
k -kicker
Two tied with 37.
$683
SALE PRICE
5 5795 ( 1299J ( 70436 7)
IRAND HEW
1981 vw
DIESEL PICKUP
FACTORY STICKER
$8345
DISCOUNT
SI 150
SALE PRlcE
IN Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981 ,.... ..... __________________________ ~ ~...------------------------,.
NATIONAL LEAGUE PLAYOFFS Aatroa 3, Docrgera 1
WaST PL.A YOl'l'S o-o.
LOS ANOILIS HOUJT°" .......
L-,. 2b • 0 0 0
L•ndrH,CI • 0 1 0
Baker, II 3 o O o
Garwey, lb 3 1 1 1
Monday, rf 2 o o o
Guetrer, Jb l o o o
ScloKla, c 1 3 0 0 0
Ru1w11. u 3 o o o Val'niu'la, p 2 O O o
John11n, p11 1 O o o
Stewan. p o O O O
••r II M Pull!. rl 4 1 2 0
Garner. 211 l 0 0 0
Scott. Cl 4 0 1 1
Cru1, II 4 0 0 O
Ctdtno, lb 4 0 2 0
Howe. lb 4 O I O
Garcia, u l O O O
Reynoldl, pl\ I I I 0
Ashby, C ) I I 2
Rya n, p lo o o
Tota l5 11 1 2 1 Tol•I• lJ l . 3
Sun by 1,,.,1n91
LOI A~lel 000 000 100
Houlton ooo 001 ocn
Two oub When wlnnlnQ run sc:orf'O
OP LOI A,.IH 1 LOB Lo. AnQeles
I, Houston 6 lB c-HR Garwy
Ill SB -~2
Le1A_...
Valenr ... 1a
Slewar1 IL,0-11
H ........
IP H II
I 6 I
.. 1 2
Ryen (W,1.01 9 1 I
T 2 22 A «.836
Ill 11 50
I 1
2 0
American League playoffs
A's 4. Royals. O
WHI Pl1yofl1
G1meOne OAK I.AND ' IC AN SAS CITY
alt r II Iii elt r II M Hnd rsn, 11 Murphy, cf
Drohl. dh Arm•t, rf Grou, JO
Spencer, lb
Huth.<
McKay, 2b
S11ni.y,u
4 0 0 0 Wll~. 11 • 0 I 0
3 2 1 I While, 2b 3 0 0 0
• O 1 O Bretl, lb • O O O
• 1 I 0 Aikens, lb • 0 I 0 ! ~ ~ ~ Olis, cl • o o o
•OOO MCRH ,dh 4 000 ' o 1 o Hurdle rl 3 0 I 0 • o o o Wetl\1n. c 2 0 0 0
Wshngln, u 3 0 1 O
Tol•ll 35 • I • Tot•ll 31 0 • 0
Scantly,..,...,.
Olkland 000 JOO 010 4
Kensas Cltki 000 000 000 o E Nor I, Bretl, McKay OP Oekland
2, Kanw1 lty I LOB Oakland s, Kan1 ..
Clly 7, 2B Spencer. HR Grou (II,
Murphy (11 o .......
Norrl1 (W,1.01
Ka• .. 1 Clty
IP It II
9 • 0
Ill 11 50
0 l 2
Leonard IL,1).1) 8 I • I I
Marlin I I 0 O O
T 23SA 40S'12
Baseball playoffs
NATIOHAL LIAGUE WIST
Friday Houllon al °""9e" (Cllannel •
Ind 11al1 OSp m.I
Sa turday H0<mon II OOdgers, s U
pm. II necessary
Sunda y -HouSlon at Dodge,., 1 OS pm ,
llneces .. ry
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST
Thurodey PhilaO<tlphla •t Montreal
ICh1nne1 •al S IS pm I
Frld•y Montroal ot Phllaclelphl•. I OS
pm
Saturday MOntrut at Pnlladelphla,
10 OS • m .. If ne<eswry
Sunday Montrut at Ph1la0etphl1, I OS
pm II neceuary
AMEltlCAN LEAGUE WEST
Frld1y IC1nw1 C•tY al 011'l1r>d ICl\lf\-
nel 7atS10p m I
S.tur<Wy Kin.as City at Oa1'1and 1 10
pm
Sunday Kanw• Coty at Oaalar>d, • 10
pm
AMEltlCAN LEAGUE EAST
Todoy New York at Mil..,•u1'H (Chan-
ntl 7 •O 10 pm I
Thursday New York al MllwoukM
!Channel 7 •t I? 10 pm I
F rlday Mllwaui.ee at N•w Yori. S 10
p,m
S•turd•Y M11wau1i1.tt at New Yor", 1 10
pm
Sunday Milwavl<H •I Now V0'1', • 10
pm
All llm .. POT
All uro .. art best-of-flvt
Hollywood Park
TUESDAY'S ltESULTS
,_ .. s1...it11t ha..-u m .. tl119)
l'lllST ltACE. One milt pact
Glamour L-VS (Kumaierl 21 ID 10 40 1410
V1klrllle 1Todcll 6 00 S 10
Able Way IWllllomsl 9 ID
Also ract<I· Lisbon l6d. Ll11rd Lips, Stly
Bucksllot, Flamino A, Mr Grallam Ball,
Jtmt1 Rllytllm, Henowr Star
Time 2:01 2/S
U I XACTA 110-81 paid U'3 .0
SECOND RACE. One milt pect
Scrambling Rall ITrtmbloYI 6 ID l ID 2 '° Nenacnl CRltclliel 6 10 J.40
Rllythm And Blues (Caml>btlll , 40
Alto riced. Hot N Bolhertd, My
Trutll4'ar1, Rtbtl Victory, Slumberln9, An
dy's Bi ron, Jerrydot's Htltn
Tlmt 2 OS
THIRD ltACE. One milt trot
Bold Streak !Wishard) s oo 3 '° 2 «>
No Bet (Tremb41yJ I 40 4 00
Wyn Darnley ( Pori.erl l 10
Aho raced Gutlgtr, Sare'• Minion.
Ht11HP091)1n ComancM Abbe Mt11l111.
Rip Sliver. Snooc>y R-..y
Time 1 Cl3 2/S
U IXACTA c-..11 paod S'1 SO
l'OU ltTH ltACE. One milt pace
Summer St>-!Tessterl I Ml •IO •.00
Et Rev Rko CCr•nel 6 '° S.00
0.Mrl Chris (V•ll•r>dlgl\ilm) S.IO
Also raced· Bou Hlllbllly, Pine Halls ...
lion, Pine Hall S.turn, Golden C.rd, Flu
Time. B•by J-'s Way, Granc1p1 RoC111y
Time 2 11'2/S
l'l l'TH ltACE. One mile pace
Sta lker CTodcll 1l 00 I 40 l Ml
Highland Byrd ITodcll 10 00 s 00
Ha l Cherie (K-trl 4 IO
Also raced Al1Slllan Wren. Radk at, An-
dy'I Slll~r.Julle Harper
Time 2 001/S
U IXACTA (HI paid SUI SO
SIX TH ltACI. One mile pace
Eastwood Prll'Ct (Wl5"ard) 110 s 00 J IO
P199'1 Bruiser (H..-.1 6.IO S.40
My Soncty !Rltclltel l .IO
.t.tso ractd; Race Chief. Thorlow, True
Tricia, Htndovtr, Winter Polnet. C-y
Lobell
Time: 1 :5' l /S.
t•YINTH ltACI. One milt pact
Vocal Kar..,.. (Shtrrtnl 2t 00 9 10 4.IO
Tact HtMY (Balter) s ID 4 «I
Ory Seel! (L19hthtlll 9.40
Alto raced: Hund~•d Oollart, Deep
Wood&, Gary Golfer, Mr Wiiiow, Cenny
B,..t, Playboy Butler, J lw Tall!
Time t '9?/S u •••CTA 11~1 paid m uo
U PICX SIX (~....._,_,, paid U,41S.IO
with """" wlnnl119 tkktls lllvt llOr-1 U
PICll Six ~OMOlatlon paid '30 10 WOl'tft 117
winning lkUts (four hortffl
a IOHTH iu.ca. One mite pact
Ullderrttecl (Copelanctl U .00 UO UO
Ptt.r Onedln (Hudon I 2.IO 2.«I
#Mrclano <Longo) 2 «I
Al .. rec.ct: Taf'POf1 Black. Sovtt>wn,
TIM Nlck.i 1(1119, Nallvt WarrlOI', Time
Sq;Nirw ....... SliofteY "-'tit ..
Tlmt : t:••IS· U •XACTA Cl•I peld $ft.JO
"UITM •AC«. OM milt,_. ~lfllll C~l ta.a•• •a
OlMemt HeNwr CLAifllitl •·• UI _.,..._, T--" C"""""l IM A._ reciM11 ~ v ..... P...-.., ,.,...
tl' ,...,..,, T"' PwCllMw, "'-1~ Jack. l'IMI ....... S-'a T'wtllkle.
TlfM: 1:JU/S. M IUCTA CMtl .. i-tMl.tt.
TaNTM •ACI. One mitt pact
llenoml ILlgihttlllll n 00 14 00 7.AO
Thuncltratorm (Aublftl 9 00 4 •
119 5'>r 1119 IC .......... I uo
AIM raced Chit! Nakt. Olewt E,..U..,
Bye Away, KnlQM'a H.,_r, VtnOOl''l loy,
Coull•r'11,._, Fro.ty Chilrle•
Time 2 014/S
U IXACTA 11·91 paid t1•1 JO .t.111-. 1,063
COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOG
Golden West (1-2)
Bakenflekl ll
• Sani. Ana J7
J1 LA Valley 1
Oct 11> Siont• Monlu
Oct 17-Mt San Antonio (•I DCCI
O<t. 24-atS.n Oie9oMow
Oct lt -Groum«!I lat OCCI
Nov. 14-at CotrrltO•
Nov. 21 Fuller1on tal OCC>
Nov 21-0<'""91 (oa$1
Orange Coast (1 -2)
Palomar l
" S•dd-1' H I Pe.-.,. ,I
Oct 11>-EI Camino
Ocl 17 •I Cerritos
Oct 2• Fuller1on
No• ' •t Mt San AntO'llO
Nov 14 San Ole90 Mew
Nov 21 1t Grossmom
Ho• 21 Go!Mn Wnl
Saddleback (3-0)
31 Ventura 19
24 Ori,. Coast U
21 LA Soulh.,...I >
Oct 1~Antolope Volley
Ocl II •t P11omar
Oct ,.-S.n Ole90CC
Oct 31 .,.., Southwellorn
Nov I Santo Ana
Nov 21 at Citrus
NO• 21 R1vtrsicle
' I
I •• Deep sea fishing
NEWPOllT (Art'• laMl"91 '3 an9ters
•JO t>onllo, •S bass, 1.0 maci.erel, 6 rock 11111,
1 trigger 11111 IDauy'1 Leeker) H
anglers 170 bonito, 2 wnd baH, I utko
ban, ISO IOCk COCI, 210 ma<kerel,, cow COd
DANA W)IARI' ,. •noters .. baU, 671
bonito. 127 rock f 1\h • .tS m.clilerel. I co• coo
MORllO IAY IVlrt'I La111111"t l 12
anglers 3 11"9 cod '3 roo cod, U red rock
cOd llS bass. 10 rlld sn1ppu s ... NT ... MON I CA ,. •noter\ 27
vello•••ll 10 bonito, 132 mackerel, 40 roci.
bASS
MARINA DEL REY 21 •no••,. ,
v•llow1111, 13' bonito, 2J bau, s m aoerel,
14S roci. 11111 aar91 47 anoltrl IO Dir·
r•cuoa, SO mackerel
SAN PEDRO (Und St. Landlfttl 1S
anglors 2S yet10W1a11, ISO calico b•U. 100
oonlto l l'wb O' Call) 11 1no1ers llO
Donlto, 36 Ullco ba••. 1 wnd bau, 4' rock
11th, 10 mactotrel
LONG IEACH (lelmo"l Pieri 21
anglers ~ rock 11111. • cow cod (0-'•
Wllar1) 18 anglers tl yellowtall, "'
c al1<0 bau. 2 sand bus
SEAL IEACH so ""Ille•• J72 rock Cod,
1 cow COd, I ting coo .• l)Of'UfO .. <•hco ~ss.
2 wna bass
OCEANSIDE .. angltrs 24' bOnlto, ...
ca lico ban • wr>d ba\\ I rock 11111, 121
mac kt rel. S2 rock cod
Cross country
HIGH SCHOOL
FO-.ln V1lley 11, Weatml.,.Wr •l
I Er1c~ton IFVI 18 J9 2 MosNr CFVI,
IS J9 l _,,on (WI lb OS, • Rtynoto
(FVI, 1• 11 s OeWenl~r IFV), It 21 •
MllChPll tFVI I& 21 ' Kontos (W),
16 l8 • Brown IFV) II 7l • Mann !FVI.
17 3' 10 Ramsey (WI. II SI
WOMEN
HIGH SCHOOL
Foumat11 Valley U , WestmlHler >J
I McCraCken (W). 18 J1, 2 Crablrff
IFVI, 1' 06, 3 Pringle IFV), 19 lO, 4
Whlsllor IW). 19 S4. s Miii• (FV), 20 °'
ipcrts. women's \OC.Ct,.
Women's soc:c:er
COMMUNITY COLLEGE Or•-c .. 11 •. Pa&M .... o Oran~ Cots1 Korl11g Beauchamp 1, Culp
1, Robinson I, Var1an1an 1
NHL
CAMPIELLCOHl'lllENCI
Smy-Dlvlsleft
W L T 01' OA Pb V•ncouver
Calga ry
Edmonton
I 0 0 4 2 2
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
"'"'' Colorado 0 0 00 0 0
0 1 0 2 0
Norri• utvl1...,
Toro11to 1 O O 6
SI Louis 1 0 0 •
Detroit I o o s
Clllcago o 0 0 0
Minnesota 0 0 0 0
Winni-O I 0 1
Quebt<
Boston
Buflato
Montreal
H•rtlord
Wot.LU COffFEltaNCI
AdlmsDlvhlell
I 0 0 6
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 I 0 S
Patrkll Divis...,
NY lslonders 0 0 0 0
PlllladelPhla 0 0 0 0
WHhlngton O O O O
NY Rengers 0 0 2
Pltttburgll • 0 I 0 2
T-y'1S<-
Outbe< 6, Hlr11ord S Detroit s, NV Rangers ,
St. Loulst, Pltubur(lll 2
Toronto•. WIMI-1
Vancouvotr 4, COlo<-2
T-y·10-
New Y-ISl-rset Kl,...
Washt"lllOfl at Buffalo
Pllllbuf'Vlt al Chlcego
Color-at Ed,._ton
Women'• volleybell
CCM.J.-Oa
I
2
2
0
0 •
s
0
0
0 •
0
0
0 s •
2
2
2
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Pt peierdlfte at. UC lrvlM , 1$-IO, 1 .. 14,
1~12 COMMUN1·n cou.•o• ao-Wlt.t Nf. C~tta, IU, IMS, IM.
MIOM~
#Mrl1111 Clef. £cllton1 1$-J, IM, .. IS, 1$-11..
•ai.nci. dlf. Htwpot1 HM'Mr, IM, •u. 1._1', 1S.U, ts-5.
Mettr Doti*"· $1. JOMt1M. IM, 1W, IS.11.
l'-\eln V.tl9\t dlf. Hlllltl,.,..... 9Ncll.
1 .. 11, t•U. 11).IS, 1 .. u. 1)4,
. .
Superchellenge tournement
Cat-..., Awlralt.I
l'ln1 •-~
Vltu ~altl• Clef l(lm W-klt, .. t.
.. J. Pete< McN-• Clef J-11 Krltll, M , u .1 ..
Women's tournement
lat~·-·"'-·'
l'tnl•-si....-.
Ha ne Mlndllko•• defa111tt d lo Sondy
Colltn1 due to • l>aclt Injury, Virginie W-
dtf. SMrry Aclttr, .. J. 1•. Anne Smith Clef.
Virginia Rwkl, •>. ,,., Wendy Turnbull
def. Trey 1.-11, 4•, 6 1, 6..J, Joanne Ruuen
cltf. Jennifer Mundel,>•. 6·2, 6·2, Mary Lou
Pt1tek def Anne White,'"'· 1-4
Women
,; HIGH SCHOOL
Mlri.att,•~-•
SI ..... . Cll UI IMI lost to Flt ttory, o ... cltl.
Kirk, 6-0, Cltf Howell, .. ,, Albe<1s IMI -
1)-4, 4_., won .. , -y !Ml lost 0-., 0-.. -
'**" Nghiem-Tom (M) clef ElllM>n-Hepburn,
.. 3. cltl. Lott-Smith, I S, cltf MlllOlto-Slllm,
.. 2. St•nflefd.Lotllo (Ml loll ~-4. won 1.s.
won 6·3, C...y·H1rrl1 (Ml won••. lost 4-6. won .. J.
Utllvenlty IJ, ~ltlteO 6 s1,.. ...
Brlsllk• IUI lost lo Strombeck, 1-4, clef. T.
Pllam, t.-3, clel M Pham, t·2; S19et CU) loSI
t-6, won •J. loll ,,., Corfm.,, IUI lost ).6,
1-6, 2·6 -Bradshaw Wlllllrs!Mn CUI clef NOUY9f>-
Walktr, ..0. clef Gff-Hlnojow, •1. clef.
Lanwng-Tren, •2 Connelly Mlddltton CUI
won 6·1, 6-0, 6-1 Holablrd LucH IU) """'
6'4, 6-ll, 6-0
E11aMla U , N--1 Ha..-t
Slft91es
S 0 Me1ra IEI lost to Steiner, .. ,, -
Bloci., •·2. Turner, 6 2, C O Mura CEJ won.
6.0,6.0 ... 2. Carey (El IOI( ...... on .. 2, 7-4. o-..
Lancaster·CunnlnQ1>1m IEI dtf S.mml"
Andrews, ..0, clef Smith Ellison, •2, dtf.
M•Cktl·G•loy, M , Ehle" Doan (El """' 6-4, lost 2-4 S-1 , Barbarlon·Cl•velclence (El
lost J.6, 2-4, won• J
El TOt911, C-'A! Mffa t
Sl"91ft
Hinson ((Ml lost to HelnbaUQI\, 0-4, loSI to
Oono4rio, t-6 lo.I to Cass. J.6. Bar.._.
ICMI lost. 0.. 0.. 0.. Slmtno<ls tCMI lost,
1-6,0·6, 1-4
DwMft
Os1ko-Ne11e ICM) 1011 to Pope Nous, ,.,
lost to Boylen H ... schlld, 1-4, lost to Tartnef'·
Earley, W . Clausen P1lr1Ck ICMI 101t, ,_.,
won, •·l, lost .. ,, Sllreve Hugtws CCMl lost,
t-4, l-4, 2-6
Water polo
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
~WntU,ltle H-J
Rio Hondo 2 O O 1-3
Golden WHI •• 3 3-16
Golden Wnl scorlnv Sutton •. Nady 2,
Hemllton 1. Kendall ,, Wright t, Jenkins I,
Elliol I, Giibert I, Oovoch I, Lund 1
a...... WH I 17. El C•mlne J
El Camino O o 2 t-3
Goldon West I 3 2 •-11
Golden WHI scoring S..lytr •. Chacon •.
Oe1Vallt3, B•ker l , TllomH 1. Nady 1, Gri ll
1
Or-c .. at 11, Saftte AM I
Santi AN 3 J t t-I
Or•nve Coast , , J J-10
Or1~ Co.t>l >£0'1"0 0 Donnell J, Soflo
2, Atvu 3, McC<>'mkk I, Hewkons I
PGA statistic•
(~Ocl.41
SCOltlNG LEAOEltS
1 Tom Kite. 69 M , Bruce Litll1't. 70 06. 3
Ray Floya, 10 n • C.,,.tls Str•noe. 70 '° s Jerry Patt, 70 61
AVEltAGE DlllVING DISTANCE
I D•n Pohl 280 I 2 Frlld COUPies. in s 3
Tom Punier, 17S 1 • Fully Zoeller, 21S.0 S
Biii S1n0er, 273 2
DltlYING PERCENTAGE IN l'AlltWAY
I C1lvln Pttto, 112 2 Mlle Reid, 761 3
Biii Roveo. 7S0 • Jae• Renner, 741. s
L1rry Nelton 740
OltEENS IN ltEGUL.ATION I C•lvon Pti!te, 721 2 Ja<k Nl<ktau1, .no.
l Bruce LleUke. 110 • Tom Kite, .70S. s Biii
Rogers, .6'9
AVEltAOIE PUTTS PEii llOUND
I Tom Wttson. 1161 , Al•n Taple, 2170 3
Morris H1tats•y. 2117 • Fr1ni. Conner,
21.11 S Tommy A1ron, 21 '4
PE ltCENT•GE 01' SU l ·PAlt HOLES
1 Bruce Lletlke, 213 2 Jorry P•te, .216. 3
Tom Watson. :I09 • Rey Floyd, 20I. S Tom
Kitt, 20S
EAGLE LEADlltS 1. Bruce Llerkt. II 2 llltl Leonard
Thompson and Lon Hlnklt, 10 • lllt l B~
Wadkins, 8otic)y Cl•mpett, Terry Olelll -
Bruce Oougleu, 9
llltDIE LEADEltS
1 Tom Kite, 362. 2 V•nce HHfntr, 351. 3
Mark Lye, lS2 •Mark O'Meer1, 3'9, S Dave
Elchtlberger, 347
~· -·
NASCAR point leaders
1. 0 1r,..11 Waltrip •.1as
2 BobOy Alllson 4, 1J2
l . Harry G.,t 3,IU
4. Ricky Rudd 3,620
S. Dalt Eamhardl J,'9t
6. T trry L•bonlt 3.-
7. Jody Ridley 3,447
I . R le hard Petty 3,«M
9. Oaw Marct1 3,163
10 Benny Parsons J, t 11
NASCAR money leadera
1 BollOy Allison .-.ns
2. Oarrwll Wattrlp Ot,M
l . Rk herd Pwtty M0,$00
•. Rkky Rudd Jtt,J3S
S. Oale Earnhardt 301,JIO
t. Btnny Pa,._,s 2•,02S
1. Terry Labonte 2a,-.S
I. Harry G.,t 21J,22S
9. Jody Ridley 1'2,490
10. Mol"Q8fl S,,.pard. 1a , 1os
Tueldey'e tranHctlon1
tAHllAL.L ·~i....-
BALTIMORE OltlO\.ES SIOMCI Dennis Marttn11, pllchtr, to a flvo-yHr contract.
TORON'tO BLUE J AYS -Oulrlgtlted
Pllll Huffman -ken Scltrom, pltchtrs,
•nd Oen Wllltmtr, catc,,.r, lo Syrac.,.. of
the lnternetlonal LHQUe. ......... u..-
CINCINNATI REOS -Anl*HKtd 1ftllt
O.vt Conc.-.iclon. sllorUtoi», lla«l •vreod to• flvo-ytar contract.
,OOT.IALL
...... ,, ..... L .....
CHICAGO BEAllS -Welvef Ha 111
Nltl1111,-.Cl<tt SlentdJ-R-to,kk w .
NIW YOlll( GIANTS -Welffd 8111y
Teyler.~be<k.
SAN l'RAHCISCO .. 1115 -TrlidM Melt
eetw, kkar, to Ille Cle'flleM •r-tor en
YMIS<lotM fraft cllokt .
HOQt•Y ........ , .. ..., LMlille
.ST. LOUIS 8LUH -ANieftM Alelll
LMllellll. °""'• lo Sa" LllM City ef lie Ct nlral Hockey LH&U•· Rehirnotl lllk
WllMll, ..._tn.10 hit Jt1111« Item,
l All this work • • •
• • • to have it end • • •
• • • like tl1is!
APW,...._.
HEARTBREAK The Do<lj!cr!'l went was called out : Ken Landr<.•aux tries to
through a lot of , .. ork at thl' Astrodome in stop Kiko Garcia from compkting a doublt•
Houston Tucscta~· night only to lose pluy. lie failed : and catcher Alan Ashby
From tht• top. Steve Gan l'~ puts the tag on puts an end to it all as he homers in the
_th c sliding A rt llowc at fi r"t _b_a_s_c_l_lo_,_v_e __ n_i n_t_h_i_n_n_i_n.;;;.g_o_f_f_r_e_li_e_v_e_r_D_a_v_e_S_t_c_w_a_1_·t_. __ _
Indians want to b e paid for extra work
CLEVELAND t APl The
Cleveland Indians may have
been trounced by the Kansas C1
ly Royals in the final regular
season game of 1981. but the
players want an extra day's pay
for that 9 0 loss.
The makeup game, which de·
clded the home-away ratio in the
American League West series
be t ween the R~yal1 und the
Oaklnnd A's, was the only one
played Monday. Other teams not
in the playoffs finished up on
Sunday.
"We 're making inquiries lnlo
the matter," said Don Fehr,
lawfer for the Major Lea1ue
Players Association. •·one of lhe
player representatives asked us to check on the matter or an ex-
t tra day's pay. We look al it thi1
I
the players worked an
day and they couldn't
anywhe re e lse· on that
way
e)Ctra
work
day."
"We have not been contacted
about an extra day's pay," said
Indian Presldenl Gabe Paul.
''The American Leaaue said we
did not have to PA)' them extra, so we don't plan lo. If the leape
say• pay them, we wiU." . ..
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
• t a; •::SO a a cs a oz I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. Oclober 7, 1981 DI
The marketplace on the Orange Coast . . 642 -5678
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
IHI 11t;e. Ho. .. t For Wt Hottset For SCllt -Mou1" For Sale Ho4tl•1 For Salt 1 For S-. Ho.Mt For Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
C.IMNI I 002 GIMNI I 002 GtMrol H>02 G...,.., I 002 twtral I 002 G....,,al I 002 ••.....•....•••...••.....••......•••••..••••.....••..............•.....••••....•....•.•.....•..•................... ·················~·····
Te Place'"' Ad, can
642-5678
HOUSES f 01 SALE
1.-a.1
I llolboo bJaJld
lt.llboa Pt<1111>ul1 c..,..1r .... llh!b c ....... t1t1lrlar c ........ . °""'"""" ~.:::.. \tJa)
Hunt1114r1on Biorf\
''"* IAC-11<••• t..acUN H1lb
IAfUNl\11 ... 1 Mau~\-1t~
::"ri:' ... ~~r ~Jdnl•s>t'tr•no '6JIU An.a .,.alllorb
fWMll IA1•u
°9'tstm1A-.l•t
MUCMle lllNf,.i ~11<
IEll ESTATC
IOIO
IOIJI IWI 1011
llZi
lllM 111111
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
IUl , .. .....,. Motfce:
:: All r eal estate ad
:: vertised 1n thi s '* newspaper 11 subJect lo
:oc.1 the Federal Fatt Hous
10t111 iog Act of 1968 which
::;: makes it illegal to ad
1 vert1se "any preference.
::: h m1t1tion, or dis
•M criminatlon based on 11°" race. color. religion.
sex. or nallonal or1g1n, ~~~~:.~~ ;:w~~1.. :: or an intenlJon lo make
S.orh Pr-••t I)!<• any such preference, ~~~;>PL:'~·:u .. ~ ::;: Jim 1 tat ion. or d ts
lomm<>m.1 p,_,,, uoi crimmalioo " Ct."'6onun.'6m\ ~1. Pw ~ft l l\ili )I.IC' HUJ •tou.M11 to bt '41,\~4 IM
LINDA ISLE M~TERPIECE
Finest location on ull Linda. 76' of
bayfront. Room for up to 85' yacht 6
Bedrooms. 7 Baths. billiard room. lrg.
bar & TV room. wine cellar, formal
dining. sep guest w111g. maid 's qtrs
Bob or Dovie Koop, Agt. 759·1221.
RV M * of Newport Beach
~ESAVBDE I Ava1l 1mmed. Chance to
buy lovely 3BR home
Situated on qwet cul-de·
sac Assumable loan or
S98,500. SelhnR price
SlH,900 Owner Anx
IOUS
USTSIDI
$155,000
Only SIO,<XXI down gets
you into Uus totally re·
modeled 4 Bdrm home
Large comer lot, Kot
pond too' Won't I.isl. call
now!
WESLEY N
TAYLOR CO I ~ HEA LTOl{S !-.lllt'l' W·H
OWMH WIU FtHA.MCE
2·STORY DUPW_.,.EWP'ORT IEACH
200' TO EXCITING lfACH S279 .500
Handsome buddinf!' Orig. owner
Beaullfullv ma1nt. 4 Bdrms, 2 Ba &
lge sundet·k in upper. 2 Hdrms, l Ba .
& darling patio in lower Fpk m each
OWC ls l T.D $230.000, 111t. only.
$49.500 Dn. No loan fee
WESLEY M. TA. YLOR CO., REALTORS
21 I I Son Joocpi Hilk Rood
MEWPORT BEACH, M.l 644-4910
THIMKIMG • SI SK DOWM •
0 / '(lewporl
REALTORS
'71-Hl I
SOU™ OF THE HIGHwAY. Tradltiot1ol
dupWll ~Ill ff'Olll tt. bHch. 3 yr. old
reor 1111lt 2 bdrm & 2 bath. ff'oftt •It old«
W Ilk• with ) ~ J beth, Int orH of
Old CdM. Off•t-.ci at $398.500.
COLE OF NEWPOIT REALTORS
2515 E. Coaat Hwy .. Corona •t Mar
675-5511
1....,_ Pn>c><rtl ll.100 lnd'"lrl•I J>ruµtth ll~I Loo fur lool• l,n)
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
ad\•er:.t1s1ng for real
estate wluch IS m viola
_!!!>n_ or the law
Cote Realt PROPERTIES t "' ® SEA COVE
& lnn•sttnrn{ 714-631-6990
Tow.-.OME? DESPER.An!
Call the spec1ahsts r1t 4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home i----------------lhe condominium in Assume hi-balance loan 11.o111i.. u..,. Trlr Prk> aAl \Cwne n l>t-Mtr1 kf'........,-l lt(A; Ou~f'lu Prup ~ :: ~ ~'::~~~;~ ~
H•n<l1., htm• 1,,,.,., llw ·-------Dlltll L.wtl....__. Hu.I FAlllt t •tl\•"I'" ..,,.,..•) ...... Tft"lllln'IJ
11ra1 u1 .. •'h ntf4 ?l<AI HRORS: Act.HfiHn ( and lncluded 1
RENTALS lhotlld chtcll HMir odi 2 up & 2 down on u
""""" rurrn,hl'<I ""' HUGE lot, providing ad :::~ ~::~·.~·t~ ~ doily and repo;t ~ dillonal off st parking :=:::::~: t~;· l4W ron llMll~. TM to the exasllng ~ car
r .... ,,,_,... tu•• ~ DA.IL Y "LOT ass.Ml garage Fant as t I l' ~;~~'~::,,•• 1.: labllty for tt.e flnt financmg, low down and
640-5777 - ---
0up1n., 1 "' x..i lt1corr•d intertlot1 low interest payments ~~ t~::,. !':: Olllly Asking only sr79.500 m WHA. rs UHl9UE A~•.,.,",., 1 •• .,,., · best rental area, steps to "IOUT UMl""UE ~:~·, lh,.rd ::::; r--------beaC'h ~ ... ::~i.'t~;': ili:Ho.s.1forSalt JACOBSREALTY TRULY A FlND Old ~.~~~:~~~J, ~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67~670 CdM: South of tughway. r,~~,:,'~ .. "'ii!~; :~ G.-.ral 1002i._ ___ -.-.-.---.-•' architect' own custom I
•Hlir• K••••I "'" ,. 1 home Beautiful details
I !:!~~·11:~~t:1 l~ 1·TEMMis·~·POOL. si~!::'.:',.,tgH throughout SSZ5.ooo
~~=·~.~.~.., ~ .5 acre estate, 4 Br 41) Delightful. charming & I READY TO MOVE IN I
BUSIHESS, IHVEST· Ba, has it all. Patrick spacious 2 Bdrm. 2 ba. Completely remodeled Tenore. rltr7S9-1221 dining room condo and decorated three MEHT, FIHAHCE Right on the front with a bedroom plus homt> ~;:~~:.;'.:; i;:;~ beautiful big oce an and Pool, spa. quiet and lov '"'"''""'"'''I'""'', ~111 coastline views 2 frplcs. ely localton $395.000 fee ~;;;:",':t.~:m..i ~ 2 parking space::.. lt'MI!>
11,.,.., ............. 10.oi courts. spa, pool Near "'""c .. nTth ~ Del Mar rare track
IF Y OU LIKE
PRI\' ACY This house
has a t•ourtyard bounded
by a six foot wall. four
bedrooms. 212 baths.
and beautiful deror, plus
excellent owner ftnan<'-
mg . S420,<XXI fee.
AHHOUHCEMENTS, llG CANYON S3l9.ooo.
PERSONALS & CONDO STEAL! '
LOST &fOUHO 2 & 3 Bdrms avail LAGUMAIEACH
,,.,.,.,,, .. ,.,.., ,1,, S l 8 2 . O O 0 S 2 3 5 . OU o Oceanside of lughway m
•., ~, •• 1 \1J1 w terms! Must hqu1date \'1ctor1a Beach area. '' I;',!,·~~!~~·~ ~ now Patrick Tenore block to sandy beach 2
!:,'::'.'/;~. ~ Agt 759·1221 Bdrms. dining area,
Tmtl· ~' fenced back yard Lot:. LAST YEAR'S PRICE
Imagine hvmg m a San
Joaquin model. lower
unit, two bedroom plus
den for only SUi0,000
SERVICES
Vf°Hf~ lJtrt\1W\
EMPLOYMENT &
PR£PARA110N ""°""'' 1n,tr1iH l1ott J1U1 W •Ah •I•
ll<IP '41nl"" ~ t. t
MERCHAHOIS£
4.At"'vn ~PP'••Aft"\
\y(\100 H1nrlt ..
kwldJnw. '4.uu .. h
( ltnftb. t 'IV•Sl'ttt ril
I •l\ t .. ,.
htttO,•N
H1rn1\\oltt
'••'•lt•~tt llonn
H-..iw-hokt l,Ut.J• Jt•rtr\ u,~•rc-k
)lafl'UntH
~l\.CtrlAMt>U
,.,_,,
-
;••c. Find out about the high·
•ui• earnmg real t'!>lale sales 11"' career opportunities
with THE REAL :;,~ ESTATERS L1cens1ng
"'" school fees c'Omplet~ly :~ refundable to school of
.....,. your cho1C1! Extens1\•e
:: sales lrauung for m !: formation, call 751-6!91
of paneling. Privac)
S269.SOO
P'A.TIOHOME
Separate 2 Bdrm 2 ba F' o u R u N 1 T S I N
home, family & dining COSTA MESA All ha\e
rmi. Mexican ltle palto one bedroom. one br1th.
AC Attached dbl gar. se para te ya rd and
frplc, community pools. ""!ltrage An excellent in
sauna. spa Monarch vestment opportunity
Summit in Laguna with very good fmJnC' I
Niguel Move right in ang. Sl98 <XX> fee
m2.ooo · I
497-1081 FINANCING ANO,
=~ 2.5 AC.ESTATE l M !~ New huge 4 Br + 3601 . DGnnR tnarmaR·. ..,,~ deg vu lo Catalina ' ltlALTDltl 4'M·IOAI
DECOR Tru l}I
beautiful CdM duplex.
owner will carry great
financi ng. Dream house
inside and oot $475.000
,;o;K
l(Jt1 Pool. s pa. elertr gate & I l.oQu ... a."'" _ -
""' much more Call Patnrk •l!ll!-111!!1!11!11!19111111!!1~
formallon center. owe straight note
Touchstone Realty SUCCESS Ri'~ALTY --~~; ~-7991 --
~ant M_f!m>? ~78 !k_ll ~ lit2·567
l'!ESIOENllAl R£At ESTA![ S(RVICfS
IRVIME TERRA.CE -fEE lAMD
Walk t o Balboa Island. l>ay ,
beaches & Fa:-.hirm Island from this
deltghtlul 3 HR 3 bath. tounlry
k1tthen home. BnC"k p<1t1os. beamed
ceiling::., wood floors & a prestigious
corner lot:iil1on Sl.i5.000
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
Siii( & ffNlf COLOR CITIES
L A S N 0 S E R R C E U G B A E L C H
M E S V A E 0 A K L T M L 0 C S G
R O N 0 P U P T 0 H I E B U R R 1 E A
A V T X T E N I M R A ( l A A A T W N
O H E A T I V 0 U Q B B N C M R I A R
A M E I X H N M N 0 l L L 1 M R E V Z
B L H L J W H B W G D L A U K I I 0
K W E N E S 0 R 0 S 0 S C C E N E 0 S
E E A G R T U E l L K l P 1 K A R l E
E R X G Z B H E I N 0 I D L 0 A Z E G
V S 0 A Y E Z M E Y R A V E N D l T L
E 0 T S V A R E M D E L B G N H E l R
E C C 0 H E R V C 0 8 0 E L T C A A H
C D D Y V G R G I T M C L D M K 0 T E
I W N E E R G L E Z A H P U E D D A W
: ow~ ' •
wwd, llP. c1orM1 0< dlefont!IV. Find Mdl Ind box It In, ..
Ambw OIC GllY GA Hml 61991 WI ~ ... uctll4inf'l.1U'-\\ .,,,,.d
'11.1,•<•l ln,trwn • n1 '"'~-t rum &. t qw1p , .... ,
f'11rit.,. • t>rC4" '-''*'nt Marh1tw\ "ip>r\1nc Goc~h
~ Tenore, Agt 759-1221 .... ...
llOol.l
~JM
oot6
loll&
ll'IW
STOM THA. T'S WHA. T'S Bick AL Gr.n KS OIWlll CA " 3 BDRM CU Blue AZ HIHI SD Vtrmltllon MN ~ , EASTSIDE UMl9UE A.IOUT C.rmlne TX R• NE Vloltl lA
...,,.,, Ru.t1ur int b•r
'••s-. y, lbci:io Hit I"""'''"'
Quiet cut.de sac in I Jllltil(lJf Ii( 4t(' Gol•CD llubySC Whlt1PA
prime E. Side Mesa Rea'ltors. 675.6000
IA.YCUST
Large custom built
family home on quiet
street 4 bdrms . formal
dming rm .. huge family
rm • 2 fireplaces. pool
and even a dog run
S389 ,500 Attractive
owner financing
17141673-4400
\ Ill\""'" ol
fl.irhu1 l11\l',tnwn1 l'u .
AXY
SIOl,000
3 Bdrm huge back
}ard great for first
time buyer don't miss
this one Call now!
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
-..JJ .-.-
Dalebout
Boy &Beach
Real Estate
MEWP'ORT SHORES
Professionally decorat-
ed Three bedrooms
Open beam C1!1liog in bv·
1ng room Swedish
fireplace Lovely
atrium Convenient to
ocean and beac h
$152.900
631-7300 M.I .
ASSUMABLE
lOY2% Lovely 4 Bdrm 13f• bath,
very private. qwet area
Refinished kitchen. onl)
Sl23' 500 _ 645-9161
OPEN HOUSE
-REALTY ;i!>
Dir
UHBELIEVA.llE VIEW Harbor.
ocean & city lighti,' Exclusively
in Spyglass 2 story. 5 BR &
maids qtrs home also jacuzzi.
plumbed for pool + 3-car garage.
S895.000. Mary Lou Marion Appt .
onl~. 1714 1642·8235. CD591
WOMDERFUL WILDWOOD
Beautifully upgraded smgle
detached home in Woodbridge
corner location. 2 BR & den. fam
area off kit chen or formal dining
rm. Ii\· rm w (pie. 2 full baths.
atnum & much more~ Alan Beel
55 1 8700. ( 060)
BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT 3 BDRM STEAL!
Parquet entry Brick Tomo"ow: Flctionll Dttecttv.
frplc Tiled kitchen • .. 1111!-lll!l .. !!!-!!_!!_llll_lll!!_!!!_!!!!!_lll!!_!!!_•_lll!_lll!I_~--------------------------------, Pantry Family rm """"'•' r\111 \la1rt1 """ r Ai:l•h \hnM t ~IP nc ... u rt. .. ,,
Hoah. Rf'nt ( hrh"r
&tb!wid
Roal• Shi" l><Y< llo•h"Pff<I'~' lloob~.,.
TRANSPORTATION
;\Jr('r1f\ t ·1mprn S.lf Kf'nl
rJrc1nC' ( "'-\ lloboltllomn
MGUlf ()dn Sfoot,n•
'4<Anr Hm\.5'.flf' Rtnt
frttltn Trill"''
Tra1tf.n Lltllh
Aw\o Yn1n Yuh
AUTOMOBILE
"trwral AnL14uf"!-\ l•·u1~ MtNt<tlllOO \ rh" h•1i 'Jiil.rh ff••• ffi,it •"'htt ""' r Jr""'~
\ "" \ul11 l..t-•1i1rHc \UlC>\ W .. ntrd
AUTOS. IMPORTED
t,,tnc1.al \ I• Hum.-;1
\1ft\1
\1J•t1n Hr.It")
H>I\\ '.,pr. ""-l·i41
lhll>w.n
f .. rr•n
t'1•l Uond• 1 • .,u4
Jt'l'tf'ft l\i1rrrwn.nt,h1• Lombor&lliN
\4iull•
'4f"fl't'dt ~"' Iii. """ •>i• p,.,., .....
Vru~....,.,
t'unch~ Kmaull
llDtb RoJr< Ao, tr
S.•b ~ sunaru
To)uU Tr1urnpft \.ol'kt,..u:ea
\of-\\1
AUTOS. NEW
AUTOS, USED
11-r•I Alll' e .. o
C•d1ll1n l•m•rn (,,,.Holfl
t'.'ltJ},lfr
l'@mfl
l!oftltMftt•I
Cof\-f'llt
~ .. ~it
lmprri .. 1
...,,...in .... "'. lrltron ri.:':.:t.t<
'""" r•1r11M>U11l l'otlllor
t'INM!tr!Mrtl
VtU ''"""Ml
,.,. Xlnt rond Lrg yrd Good
~,t local.Jon. A.c;sume 9 20'' '
""'' Only S92.<XXI Won't beat ,::! this! Patrick Tenore,
~;: Agt 759-1221
'U"
mo 411!)
•IJO ;uo
t lSll ----""' t--------1 lfljl•
'''"'' HA.RIOR RIDGE
""" An exqu1Slle offering
Elegant & spacious 3
; :=1:~o~!a::u~~:a~i~
.:· vista or harbo r .
u. coasthne. ocean & mght
~ lights. Prestige, <'Om
·~ fort. luxury & security
Reduced. now $'739,000
,,., !Owner financing ) Agt. ;;~ 640·5560.
~;~~ l1111i!!lllllll•~!!!...!!!...!!!!llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llll
;;\i liiil 1i!!!!!!!!!!;!!i1 n·
'll:oJ J111 ~ ~;i:o .:r.
;..., \'>..~fl r.i. ~-'"'="" ~-,;A I ~~ ...... 1s.~.1.•.1.• ......
:;~ 4 IR21A
!~~ CM.FIXB
11.. This could be a cutie for ~~ the Isl home buyer at
~ ~~~a::ii~; :~~~1!~1°ed
:;r:] $112,000 or submit your
~ offer. ~ 759-1616
mllllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
W<tter hlter & ~oftner
Spa Enclosed offstreet
RV pad. Giant patio
Storage shed Fruit
trees OWC lg TD al
lJ't Very Oex1ble Low
6% lst TD. Only $175.000.
Bob Licata. Bkr759-1221
EXECUTIVE
ESTATE
Custom golf eslatt•
homt 4200 sq fl 200
fairway frontage' 5BR,
4Y2Ba. formal din rm,
recreation & hobby rms.
2 frplcs. fam rm. sun 1
deck, porch. pool & spa!
Panoramic views Crom
most rooms. 3 car gar
Storage galore For
personal preview call
Bob Licata, Bkr
759-1221
Vsr the Daily Pilot
"fast Hesult" ~erv1ce
dtrectory Your
servi ce 1s our
specialty
Call 642·5678 ext 322
IE
810111 ILllRS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
VIEW: IA Y & CITY UGiHTS
Gorgeous View -Single Level
Two Bedrooms, 1'wo Baths -End
Unit De corator Wallpapers &
Drapes -Plantation Shutters -
Separate Master Suite -Shows
Like A Jewel! $255.000. A "Joy Of
Newport·· Listing.
For Classified Ad
ACTION
Call a
Dally Pilot
AJ>.VISOR
842·~ --......... ,.
A Salute to
Women In Bu1ine11
Coming Sunday,
October 18 , 1981
in the Daily Pilot
A tribute to the
Orange Coast's
SUCCESSFUL WOMEN
in business
The Orange Coasts
Successful Business
Professionals of 1981
Th is is the
Actual Size Ad
Fo1 best reproduction a
clear black and white photo
ol any size can be used
Your message will accom· pany the picture in this
space 11 you choose not to
pubhsh a picture, 1111 the
space with your message
National Women in Business is October 18
\jhrough 24. To honor area women in business. tn-
~ustry and commerce. the Daily Pilot will publish a
special lnbute in its October 18 edition
Our Salute to Business and Professional
Women is an exceptional opportunity to introduce
a new or longtime associate to the people of the
Orange Coast, or to honor awards. achleveme"ts
or contributions.
Bustnesswome" SalUte notlces will be two
column by two Inches each, with 1 photo ~ pr~
vtde. The cost of each "ottee " only ~
I
l
\ I .. 0 Collt DAILY PILOT /Wtdntlda , October 7, t9e1 ..... ,_. "'* ...... For Wt ••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• =.~~....... =.',:.~ ....... =.~.~..................... ~.~ ....... ·.~~~ ................................ ~!~ ~ ....... ":":..~ ............... ':':..~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~~~~ ..... . • • tOoJ .................... ,.i ~ .. :~!~ ..... " ... !~ ...................... , ~!~:~ .......... !~ !~:~ .......... !!!-J !! IMOOP1MI ~~ •••• !!! ......... ~ .... !!!! ~~~ ... !!~~ °'!:'/. 1100
CONDO 1-Zrm P'Ndom Home ..... aw owe lat. " llOK It 1K DOY• SHOOS oc• ... ..-ONT ...................... . WITH YU w tc' Beat&lf\llly u BeautJful 4 Bdrm MIS on thl.t 4 Br. 2 Ba. home. ~ 12 Unit• Cotta Men UMD• 1eo.0001 LIMOA JSU ra ed: '114,000, wlrh built bome~l~wOeoldt cul Mtn /Vallt)' view ! ~00,1·G!t:10r0v= IY OMB .... SlZSM dll IK.
h 't lNel 2 8* '"Ba E ltl l 1 Wid I termt Supert> dt He. ID •nsv en Hlahly u&>CD"ldtd! Juat 1 New cu1t. bit 2 1ty, Net UOOO per year •lf'fttt.alr.s 'mi. to xc DI opportunty. e agoon / · Wut E1tatu Larae suz.soo•.,..R. Realty din rmt' 2 frpra FreochNormandy3BR 631 .21 so, 200200
btath ..... '° ... vlew rrom spectacular architectural TUITLllOCK .REoranPET famlb' room w1th Wet• .,,,30.)4, MU,000 ff 842-2510, ' den home. Cao be Wallac_e. __ aumt lK fbianelnl,i designed 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom, H16HUMDSI """" bar and COlY fireplace. &Alb Foretf IOH 84MM&. epllt. 85.ooo, owe 3711 2000 h-! o-Astle, dark room •-den. Slip for 2 larde Beaut.lful L1.11k b 4 754-1202 Owner wW btlp flnance ••••••··••••• .. ••••••• •-· ... -~ 111¥ OWMt Seaabore 873-~71 .... ,,.,.,., Ti."ma .... ex • B d r m 3 b a t h SZZl.000. -_,_ tA ' . •••••••••••••••••••••••
boats. Sl .350,000. MarOreaor model with DON a;EN. S 15,000 DOWN ~[f pa4~~·a; r~o!o~:t S.. c....... I 076 MAKE AM OFFB!
hardwood Cl uora. REALTORS Movn youlDto thilS Br beaches OwntrwllJu· •••••••••••••••••••••••
ASSUMI t ¥4"e LOAH
Owner will carry 2nd.
No quallfylna. Nlcel. y
dttorattd 4 bdrm home
with loU ol amen!tltt.
Only SlZB.900. Call today
979-SflO.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
ASSUM I t >/4"e LOAM <>wner will carry 2nd
No qualifying. Nicely
decorated 4 bdrm home
wtth Iota ol amenities.
Only $121.900. Call today
979-SflO.
ALLSTATE
UDO ISi.i HOMIS
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath home newly redecorated. Priced
to sell quickly at $475,000. Mu'st see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420,000. Best price for the money.
PENINSULA POINT llACHFIOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. rt.
featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
WEST OCEAMFIOMT
Triplex units, xlnt financing $600,000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
ahulteu, and bay d7 2 . 5 8 a cu 1 to m slat In finl.IK'lnJ or wlll Shorecllrfa. •BR. Clolf wln~owed b~ukfas~ 000 ......... In U ........ 1044 town home Lots of ronaider tndel Sbowo Couru. Beach Club. Dec
nook. Great hnanclnJ. By Owner. Two 2bdrm •••••••••••••••••••••" amenities. Aasume a lit by appt only Pri.D only po1su11on Owner/Agt
Prime neighborhood houses on l lot suo.ooo. 11i...1£.&TI TD at low IOl.et'elt rate. ~.ooo. Pnnconly Ron will finance •5886
$350,000. Aalumable 1% lat T.d. "KOA • OWC. Call Vldue Rico, Jackson556-1*>0 S.. J.._ owe carry 2nd. 20th " u a pin. Spotleu s Br 2 Att W ·NOO Capittr.o 1071 Pomona. Call wltdaya Ba home w/pvt aatcd ILUFFS •••••••••••••••••••••••
only , 640-7M4. pat.lo entry. ~r new Sat story Unda plan. Brl1ht, Spacious 2bdnn.
carpet.a • aucrowave. with 3 Br 2 Ba. Thu e~d 2ba Condommium l yr MODO~ Cloaeto1chools "1hop-~thas~nbeamc~1I· old. Auume $70 ,000 48R Mesa Verde Home. plna. Only $129,000. Call inp" a pnvate locati~ l2't•"k only Sll0,000. Day
Owner will do 1baroed fordeta.Ua. Mtwport'-dl 10'9 with a lrg covered patio lime (2l3) 329-7756 After
ewq/quulatly1· f1Pedr obgury'..rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/11a BBQ. AJI new tn 6 l714) .._5028 "' 9 11 DO\Ulo..I ~riot + a spa ofC the lrg --..... I... I 006 Prine only . .8kr W.m7 ~o "" matr suite. Only 137,000 OHier lffll lbtah
•••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ult for Ed. OWC Westclllf 4 Br 2\.1 dwn to assume Iona e-I .·.It•
I, t ,. l I 'I
·,. l .'1111() I J.5,.e IMIB.IST l"' down. cute cottace.
3 BR 2 Ba. full lot.
s.150,000. Ownr/agt.
1-861.-3
w.lt yoll"OWll .......
Defer down payment or
interett on thl1 new
Balboa Island home.
MlWNIOI
2 bouaes -1 lot. Xlnt
cond. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Ready to move in with all new
appliances. 1 Br. 1 Ba
rented. Reduced from
$179,SOO to $169,500. 395
Flower. best Easts1de
Costa Meta location.
Need $40,000 eash down.
Owner I Broker 673-1312.
THIMO*-
TOWHHOMI?
Call the apecialists at
the condominium tn·
rormation center.
Touchstone Realty
963.al67
Ba. only 1219.~ Norm · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-K M .,.,_, 1 term hoanc1n& (no ..... _ .......... u_ ... uey Cn.uueyrtrs. balloons}. Total price -Forr ..... ~ I IOO S31-1266or~ $219,SOO. Call Ownr/Agt -
WEST OCUHNOMT
Tr1plu. Xlnt terms &
for info OJ' lo see 553-1006 ••••• • •••••••••• ••••• •• wltnds & art 6PM or OCEAN FRONT New
SS6-4ll2 9-S wkdys Modular Type Homes, leased land, 3 pvt bchs.
H~ Hh. a...r 24 hr set'W1ty. hshmg
434 Catalina Or. 2BR 1 pier from $34,900. 10'"i
ba, open beams, hardwd down. 499·:1116
3 Income Properties
Eut11de Costa Mesa
Owner will c1rry
Pnced to sell!
• com~® r•t.
114 641 0163
2925<'ollri1• •\ • ,.
(°11\ld '.\1l''J ('\
Trade Luxury Newport
home on 1,.; acre for In·
come Uruts or? Equity
$280,000. Act now !
Broker Co·Op Agent
63HS16
98 UNITS
'14-7rtex.tl
REALTORS > • • y I• ,1 • • '. " ~. ') t> IO I
lllH~.lltr
675-2"'
COl'OHdelMlm-1022 MEUYBDI
~·1tf~!ns ~~ s~~~~ 11.ACH/~ffordable
$50,000 down. 631·5476 or $48.SOO with low lo.w V•ry Low Down
494-039Seves. down. 2 yr, 2 Br. 2ba, Ow••r~ c-LI,
* * LEYEUG£! prime location ll00.000.
This beautifully appQint· -'A""'g""e=nt""', =67=~~16=1---1
ed 4 Bdrm Northwood OWNER Will
\\ 1 ·~I I '1 '\
TAYLOR CO
HL:\1.TtH\~ ·,1111 I' )!l·lf
OCIAtROMT
DWUX GIOIGIAM COLOMAL MANSION
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FIX & SAVE
Irvine Terr. pool home
features 4 Bdr, rec rm
w /pooltable & much
more! NeedsalitUeTLC
but owner will cll'T)' Lst
T D. at approx. 13% and
owner i.s flexible! Greg
Astle, Agt.. 759-1221
COM>O
SlS,000 down Excellent
financing, owner may
carry balance on AITD
at J.2"1o. 2 Bdrm, double
garage, terrific area.
Asking $9S,000 Call
540-llSl
. · e. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
home featum its own LOSE M-..EY pool, spa. and separate "" playyard. Owner says That's right' Owner
try small down. This willin& to take a loss on
seller 1s 0 enulnely this property. Duplex. 4
.. Bd + 3 8d unit. Asking motivated. Take advan· 1344.ooo. Call Darrell
tage! Just reduced to Paah for more details,
$239 • OOO rltr 63l·12Jil6
\\OOdhrtdge
Realty
fam rm. M111. agl.' l8yri., ~ -
DEVB.OPBS
506 "I" STREET
sml pets OK. Across
from bch Mary Jank
Rltr. 631-~lllM~--1 bdrm. 2 bath apt over 3
car garage. Bay view ~*-EX-CIT-IN~G .-1 4SX 110· lot. ~.000.
TiUe lm & Trmt Co
Lewis 9SJ.~. ex 7371 E1tah 5*
Trust/Est11teSale W 1th or without furniture. 24x64 Green
brier Home in Laguna
Hills mcest Sstar park
SW'St
TaaWrtt.-Off
fast &crow Postlblt Im. Ir PrW.Jpch
Wtk.-.
Rldray.n
714/766-7292
Owner will carry.
Magnifies views. Up-
per 3 bdrm, 2 bath &
lower 2 bdrm, 2 bath.
Completely furnished.
For winter & summer
rentals. Owner has left
state. Bring offers.
Priced at $750,000.
llG CANYON COUMrlY CUii
A true picture of e legance.
Overlooking the 8t.h green. 5 Bdroms,
6Y2 Baths. Formal ~ Rm. Fam.
Rm ., Billiard Rm . Abundant
w/marble & crystal chandeliers.
l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I SSl-3000 492tB1rr1no l'kwy.lr•i11~
1
_______ _
OCEAMDUPW .
35' FROM SAND &n .. afParti
Beautiful 20x53 Lancer
Home 2Br. 2Ba. This is
the Best Buy 111 town
E/SIDE4 UNITS Owner will trade $150K
equity for notes or house
111 good area S600 mo
net income.
associated
B~_ .. t W ~f~ • l.'S
; • .,., t,.' ,.... • ' 'fl
$2,150,000. Financing available. ·
CALL FOR COLOR BROCHURE
WESLEY H. TA YLOI CO.. UALTOIS
2111 s. Joocpiill ... ltood
HIWPOIT CENTER, H.1. 644-49 I 0
CDMauFFS
Above beach. below
30 YRS AXED
ls hard to fmd. Cbeclt on
this 4 BR. 114 ba, Seller I
is cooperative. Call now 1 752.1499
Plan IV Realty
Ocean Blvd. Semi priv SHARP EAmtDE
Rd. Out of traffic. 180 6. PUX
degree view Ocean & OHLY SISO/o DOWH Jelly from every win-11.ACHHOUSE
4 years old, 3 BR 3 Ba, No need to travel all over
1900 sq.ft. Totally re· town to look for garage
furbished.. Xlnt usuma sales ... you'll find them
ble flnancini. $235,000. right hen in Classified.
NEWPORT COASTAL To place your garage
dow . Prop line high tide. Owner will finance to
SO. COAST PLAZA Obie invest 2 yn. Clear, qualified buyer. Well
land incl. s1.2so.ooo. located, good looking 6 Dollbouse. No qua I. 3br, OWC. p /P Appl only units + 4 car garage + l~ba. $122.000. 7S4-0439 673-22 0 ample par1dng. Below 11 Find what you want in t714! 673-6525, 1 limes gross.
PROP. sale ad, call 642-5678. Daily PilotClassifieds. --------•! Calit0w644-721 I PAlnBSHI' 760-9501or960-5580
CORONA DB. MAI
Excellent view propcr-
ty-4 Bdrm, large fa mi·
ly room, community
pool. Excellent assuma·
ble financing. "29.000.
642-5200
j PETE
' BARRETI . REALTY
........ mda.._
Owner leaving town, will
carry AITD. Submit on
down payment 3 Br 2~
Ba.
MewC..._M_._
On top or the world. pre-
stige Spyglass location,
you will rllld this Can·
tastlc S Br house with S"'
Baths + Ubrary. pool It
spa. Quality throughout
Warm woods. higb
beams, bevel leaded
glass. private elevator
are Just some of the
features too numerous to
mention. Truly for the
discriminating. Call for
private showing. Of·
rered at 12.300,000.
RCTaylorCo 1 . '
• REH TORS
c ..... o.n.~ c...
-Cracious and elegant
livi n I In this 5 Bel rm
custom home. Elegantly
appointed livin& room and formal dining room
with mlrrortd ceiling.
Richly paneled family
r0om and library with
rich paneling, built-in
bookehelves. Expansive
terrace overlooka aolf
COUl"H and hll buiJt·ln
BBQ, wet i.r and apa .
Prueakd at sz,J00.000.
D.M.Mllot••
7'NHI
•&MTS Located In Npt Hat•
u.est 2 Bdrm unlt.J are tna1Y pridl"owntnhlp. TM low IJMrttt lou
ttJI be .....s -tM °"'* wUl ... ftuDCt.
CaU fof _.. IDIOl"ID•·
lfn. Aakl•I prlce .....
LINDA ISLE WAilRFRONT ~EW!
Hew o• th ••rbt! Fo r•al, b1tt
comfottaibl• ''tlotM e111 tt. water" wltlt
tip for 2 boah. eo.,llllfioMI Hty•flow
floor ,a. In thf1 lonly 2-tlory hoflW
wftli 4 bed. + MClick ......,.... Spaclotn
11•1•9 roo•, fo,...I dl•l"9 roo•, p--• kffclwtt ,.. ... f-'ly roe.
wftll ttep-dow• bar for Hloyablt
.............. Collrlywd ttlfry,,.. paffo
& dtcb. Owwen fttxlilt e111 filt.cillCJ &
will coHld•r trade 'or ••aller
''wcrfwirOllf'. S 1,595,000. 63I·1400.
UNOBSTRUCTED VIEW-COM
OwMt-wll help ............... .
locaHo. wttti fon•• VU of lay, Oct•
' .... UCJllh. Co .... pmC1Cy! Secwtty
1y1tn1 Ir tit•oted G1110ftCJ •Hiio" S
llo•H. Clote to new P1llca11 Hiii
Df•elop•tllf $615,000. ~ OWltff
wcmh to lean the co.try! 6734900.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
s,,i,, Rtnt.S• p,_,,, M~'"""'
2'36 W Co.st Hwy JI~ Md,_ A•<'
New,ior1 S..ach &lboA IWnd
Hl-1400 67Ut00
Dir
IAYSHOIES IAYFIOHT
Enchanting Ca pe C.od with 63' on
the bay. Spacious rrm including
plank floors in fam rm w/teak
bar & stone f plc. 4 BR lovely
garden & brick center courtyard.
$2,000,000 incl. prime land. Cathy
Schweickert 642·82.1.5 (061 )
GHAT OPPOITIHTY ''Carlton"
Plan w/view ! This best buy
features assu mable financing,
flexible terms & top notch
location. 2 BR, 2 BA + den.
Owner anxious. $229,900. Rose
Gammon 752-1414. (062 )
-=~::' ~\\~~-&t.~s·::
-----Nlt4 ., °"' l. l'Oll.ul . ._ ............... "'"'" ,_ icro..iiw .....i. boo .... 00._, __ .. _.
Dll'LEX
Sl60,000hru.it
The perfect dual f.Jn NIGEL
(}AILEY &
ASSUCIATES
ownership property with '-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2 almost equal 2 Bdrm, 21•
ba units with masters.
stone hreplaces and
wood ~amed ceilings
ALL~ ~OVERSIZED LOT~ pvt patios and
decks. $320,000 with 10%
interest fmanong.
644-7211
f.Jn NIGEL
GAILEY &
ASSUCIA![S
C AMEO SHORES
ESTATE. 3 BR 4"'2 ba,
private beach. enclosed
ct yd w /spacious pool
Forever harbor & ocean
view. ~.OOOleasehold.
COLDWC!U.
BANl(eRO
-LO.-,-IOM
SIOOODOWM
Bring paint brush &
broom to save $$Son this
3 br fixer in quiet Coau.
Mesa area. Creative
seller says sell! 759-lSOl
or 752· 7272. -
Walker & lee
Real Estate
75'1 I SO I
FIXER
Needs some n..c but has
loads or potential. 3
Bdrm 2 Ba located in
Mesa del Mar. close to
parks, schools & shop·
ping. Submit your
terms. Asking Sl.29.500
**B2BA BROAlllOOR
En1oy Woodbr1dge's
super amenities and the
"Good We" in this up..
21121ACOMDO
Adjacent to Newport
Crest area Sea Wind
Section. Sl.23.!K>O. Good
terms.
loy McC...., lltr.
541-772'
Quaint 4 Br + 2 Br unit.
unobstructed vu. owe
+assumable tst TD at
911.3, Ameruues galore
Hurry, call Delia, Agt
631-1266
H•tiwatae Ida l2x60 witfi 8xSO ex
panded area. 2Br. 2Ru.
l2x20 master bdrm
graded patio home at l11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ end or cul-Oe·sac. Low
interest assumable loan.
CLASSIC
MOll.EHOME
SAUS
S165,000
\\OOdbrldge
Real1y
ssf.3000
tl2'Barrnu P\.ioo). lntnt',
XLMT RMANCIHG
University Park
Fordem 2200sqft.4br.
21., ba. ram. rm. formal
din. Decorator home.
Spa. many extras
~-8513
4 IDRM IEAUTY
Only $275,000 w/terms.
Great location. Patnck
Tenore. Agt7s&-1221
2706 Harbor. Ste 206 A
540.5917 SACRIFICE
S20I UDUCTION OHL y $7K A real home. fruit 1.rees.
DOWN fenced yd. 2 BR. 2 ba 7'
spa in 8 x 18 enc Porch Versailles 2Br. 2Ba pen· Adlts & sml pets CM
lh.se. ocn view. $135.000 &45·6456 Assume Sl28,000 or S&.L ..==-=...;==----
loans at l7%. $1828 mo.1------~~I LEA.SE No qualifying. Ovd IAYFIOHTMOllU 0"10H .Ll0-2270, Hm642·2682 _ New on market: 2 Bdrm. $5000 dwn and blly in 6 ________ , 2 ba. nghl on the water
mos. for $129,900 w/10% DO SANDS with park111g for 4 cars dwn. l Br dlx condo LI $95,000. Waterfront
w /partial vu. Take ad· l ldnn • 2 latll Homes. Inc
vantage! Rae Rodgers, Assumable loan 631-1 400
Ai\ 631·12Jil6 ~Ti~
OPEHHOUSE
DALY 1-' Brand new condos in
Costa Mesa located at
2277 Pacific Ave. Great
financing, great buy!
Come & see. Redhill
Realty, 673-7300.
ReJhtll~Realty
1;-;-:~ -;-:wo
$86,650 DUPLEX
Investor's dream. Live
1n one & let tenant help
you pay Nice area Ill
Santa Ana S16K dn
R&H INVESTMENTS
752-219'7
CORONA.CA.
21 units on golf course.
break even, pool Many
units have r1replac.-es
Assumable financing.
sales price 1189.000 At
J Jansen 1714)536·~1
9r C 2131821 794.9
One or Newport Beach's
fines t ocea nfr ont
duplexes, totally un-
obstructed panoramic
view 2 & 3Br uruts in
prime cond Owner's un-
11 has frplc. beamed
wooden ceilings. lg out·
door decks Assumable
loan at l2'1. owe
$150,000 Agt 759-0104.
160·8237 __ _
Dana Point Triplex
$1SS.OOO. On Paymenl
$50,000 WEBB BKR
83!Jl70AM
J 9UAIL
A.!~S~~
HOME +UHrT
OWC11'1 INT
Only 3 yrs old. beautiful
Costa Mesa 3 Bdrm 21,
Ba home + s attractive
umts OWC A I T D at
11"': int w 24'( dwn
8UHITS
Less than DJ.000 pr unit.
less than 25~ dwn. 10~
int on 1st TD, 101't'1 111t.
on 2nd. owe low interest
3rd.
THMS.TBMS
2 great Costa Mesa
fourplexes Buy w/onl}
15'", dwn . Seller will
carry 2nd TD at 10'1 int .
lst TD at J l L1'1
Quail Place Properties
752-1920
1
-. t ... ,.. 'Jtrll Aft lw1t1.,..,.., OrangeCoastOAILY PILOT/W9dnffday.October7, 198t D7
~~~ ......... a J t Ill ......... 3 t,. U.fJll I t Id • t;~· .. ~w···;;·~· ...... ;;;; ....... i •.. .............__ ..... ••••••••• .. ••••••-•• ......... , ........ ••••• •••••••·.:;;;........ • .. :r.';: ....... ._..... • ....... ,_ ........ u1iu, .. 1.tkw-..••h1 u..rw.. Af • hrw• u..n. , ..._ 4 ._..to Sllirn 4JOO ::--' C..... .. ..., H2 Jl~ Me.wt J•6t Oct nl t Ht . •••••••• •• ., ...... , ............... •••••••••••• •••••••••• .................................. ..
-• • • 1100 ...................... • .................... "';? .... ,-,., ........... :,,. ..,~ i:i:O w.a..:t A~!· IASTW , ......... IMdt Jl40 Mrw,.,+ .._. l l•t t..1W\a Bead! Motor IM· I•-------• :::::~,·1~·:.~!:·:..e.-..~·: -...c:..... WDll• •••un / no _ .;.,. • 2 Br. l Ba. poolaide apt., •• , .................... •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• 985 No Parlf1C' Coaat •.,.IDJ .. ._ ~ va:... z b 4tD, ba 9SA 4 b r ,, 4 b 1 b o m fl In · ,_.._ la1111ctry rm.. rlole to aJL HU Hwy, ~•IUYll BtaC'b V l ~w Pool Home I r, I • octaa H famrm,ronnaldin, ~1bort1 Avail lit ()(eanlroot l Br winter No ~ Call tor appl NTINGTON BAY l br, lba,11r.rrpk . l,,.. Daily Weekly K1tthtn
•10.000.DO,oooequjty. v::·J.~1•· poola. 11_!?1•1.,_ccndoh •• ~~-to kloJ.Amoomo.1 rut.al.~ vu, up-TSLM ~l.Ma-1803. ·,.Br l~Booa P .. tlo blk•'!,~21230ttut 1vail~ble. Lo~ wlnter llt"'9111trorT · ....... u • •••m, -t. r least. Ron Jackaoo ataln. f7s.31113 2 B 81 ,_.. 6
• • • • .,.,._,., r1tet 494·5ZIM TtO-TSJ C....W... lJJ4 1pa. Sorry no 111ot1 la --r. tnl, tne..., car. carport, wuher/dryer Rutland Ro.d Wntd1tr --
.-......... --•••-•••••••••••...... 1125/mo U.lfllltr aat W OCEANFRONT APT Upper Apt MIQ llo. 7'5 Incl Wat«• truh paid Area $500 mo I BR Balboa Inn l90 • up _.... HOO Cbarmlni t.i.lde ~ 3 '3HJll · ESrCUFJI' 3 bedroom, Wlllttr rent.a.I, l br, StOO Hamilton 710 0134, Comm. poot Adu.JI.I. no Community pool Walk weekly Kitcheoneue.
WllllN 8d 1 Ba, •tmo. Patt,y, 1 •tory wkh pool, ramlly mo, utib ind. No ~ti. .Pl-4402. peta. $SZ5 + S!O<I depolsll. t 0 1 b0 PP1 n & C 1111 ocuo front. 67511140 __
....................... Alt 559.9400 llMT'1.S room, 2 fttti>laces, din S48--lt30,17!71!4 Lrc rlun 28R, 1ar. A eol noree 5'5-2000. _ en H48, U3 3522 Qr XLN'T pvt ba • ent nr
Lot w/plana Bkir haa 730-8INJ • • rvu 3br. 2b1 11'15 in1 room, 3 pallol, ttr I br, lovely tum, pool, adult.a, no peta. "3$. 2118 • 1475 3 Br 3 Ba Pool M4-1018 Hoag, DO smok/k1tchen ~t :'°r~:.1 bu,y or SPACIOUS ~~· :.,".ba tlZ5 etc. Mo 64M47'1_ 1pa, 1Ym, .sec. 1uard ..:Jl" Pl1rmtia. 545 7i!L paUo. K.Nk OK No peta: Npt llgti 1 Br. $375 '275:_M4·1<X3:>
Oldrsl ' lar&tsl agency
in So c allr sin<'e 19'71
Crrdlls AOC.NRC,CBS .
CU!lmu, Phil Don1hul'
• "tol(•
to 1111 new ellenl~ who
needaplact> Bd 3br°Zba ms Hllla 28rtb1.Hardwood,nrs, 50.0wn/a 631·M66 •28r.28a.Nea.r8o C. M6-91168orseo.7484. Garage, call Pete CondonHd.,profperw n eout'~tua~ So. t.e'Rabor ~ open burn, rrplr OCEAN FRONT·Balboa Plau, S.A. Lwuuy Coo· 2 br, 2ba. crpt, l>W. encl 673-5285. lsl&dast to occupy Ira unfum rm
mo.Ph · S Y •t· Tb L .. $785/mo 631 ·5478, dlxwlnter3Br,2Ba.llSO do, w/pool, adults only. car. upsta.an Nrbeach. YEARLY 38R, 1 ... A. $300 mo Uul pd Call Serv1na all oCS t'ahl
••••••••............... ere ecurity. e a11e1 ·2 atory ~eva mo. IBr, '500 mo. No .13S8874. 142.&132 N'"W '"a-. ""int 1°bl" Bobby at 730 6•78 or
....... ,_ '' 1d "50/mo. t wobae. on wa ter Cood /Bo b ....2!..~ dlta 673-.0 · "' ........ ,... " 557 9051 d G ~ 82 ....................... W1t.rltootffomes.lnc lbdrm, a/c fridge" 2~~ ~l ap,lge3 .BrJ :..&11 ' NwptHcta,lgelbr,l b•.2br,l ~ba.sm.patio fromocun S675 mo -Gt1rtn rove. 34
.....
Open Sal LOO' 10 S ..... ..._.. l I
06
13H.OO frpk pools • courts' a. u l'rpt, p.tJnt umor l Br Versallla stove, •m. yard, wat.tr 7711 ElliJ Mer Apt O Util inrl 21H1 33rd t'um except bed. $l5CI.
....................... Wutslde Z Br I 81 Adult• only, no pets: ~ef's. $1.250Mo.m.9735. Rec/fac. tee. Sd5/Mo. pd. 310~ La~rle Ln. ~50. Owner,8'1iJu5 835·~ lit & la.t + s:;osfl' dep
Fum ZBR, pttlo, (l'\)lc, Houae, encl.ad ·1arage, 1/yrle~ae. ~. 730-6CM6, 3 Br. 2\'J Ba. 28t.ory Con· ~~~9[~69, 5'8·0425, 7eo-07~ '"'" JIU * Lux JR 1 8 R Incl uul, k1tch pnv i:z=l\:::ZIZ~E= 1ar,waterfrontw/dock. patio, w/d hook-up, D o r 1 1 C 111 r k ; do.1885H per'!'f.;Proper. l .~. Spacious I Br. Garden ....................... Versailles. Rerrlg. Nonsmkr.rem,oo peb I•
1 Grand Canal Winter carpeta • curuins. No 213)37J.l320after m. ty ouse. ou·lMO Ir Apt. Pool Ir rec: All uuls Beaut Woodbndge ron Secur. or Beach~ mo 962 9801
~mo. pet1. S42S +security. lmmac. ' Br 3 Ba. 2 842·lOlO. pild Adult, oopeta. do. 2 Br l Ba, nu plush 760-UI0, 640 04!!_ Rm 10 lg Me All far . 1
673-tl!il ~·5442or77~5629 frplc, micro-wave. Seavle':" ~ Br 3 Ba, family 1959E~ P~~Mesa carpet, levelors, prof V.nailnr.tllw mile fr OCC S2I01mo. ,..
..... ,.._. ll0
7
3 Br 11.i ea. rrplc, D/W, formal L & O. Oen r~. d10m1 i;m. ocean • ap ve. AptS. decor~ted, pri~t comer 2 Br 2 Ba Commt • 1 pr~957 ~
••••••••••••••••••••••• blt·in itove, dbl car gar, w/wet bar. Northwood rah~ li&bt vtewa. Pool~ 414-1 ~TOH location Avail 11/1 flSO 875.3787. Y poo Lido waterfront w >lip,
3 br, ;iv. ba, winter, pool, patio, ucl Me!dows. .857.9311. enmsS1600prmo lbdrm. crpt1. mini-P tmo. 752-8318 luxury coodo. uUJ 1ocl,
"Gay Roommate
Cont11ct Serv1c~ '
Larg es t <:11 y
Male l'l'rnale Ho11m
malt! ScnH'l' In So
Cali! G RC for n ntal
needs. 11 7PM
1213>&»-3040 $695/mo. 3ll$ Montero. backyard. s prinkler Woodbridge,new3bdrm. Wattrfrontleue•Br• blinds,gar,sharp.S375. LocJ-olHd 3141 OMTHEllACH pvl Rm & Ba 1650 1·879·S991,213-335-4696 system. $800 w/pool 2~ ba detached home, Ba.famUyrm,t.opcon. Owntr.549-2042 ....................... WIMTBIEHTAL 675·4140or91Jt4620
Oceanfront. Lovely res servict: Water pd on Greenbelt. Nr pool dltion, dock ror 40. boit. Woodsy wallpapered 1 Lux 1 br, ,aC!'061 mam 3 Br. 2 Ba S850 Mo CM 111 pvt home, kit & -llll!!!l!!!l!!!!!!!!!l!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!lmm!
area, 4 bdrm, 2 ba fplc Marguent.t~3666 and lagoon. Dec 1n SlSOO. Remax of Npt, ::=;=~.~: bdrm with new carptts. beach, hi·nse see bldg Chris. 956-5871 _ lndry pm , resp Mover
washer/ dryer. Winte; Back Bay view. Nr Earthtones. 5998-8348 Bob orOovleKoop,Agt. •eclor•FreeSonday Adults,nopets.msmo. Lse . Harry Kaye 2 Br 11.; Ba. Adults. no ~5.&&2·~
rental. Sll.90 mo OBO Airport. 3 br, 2 ba. re· Rancho San Joaquin con· 759·1221 Brunch • eeo·1 • Ask for BW,631·12.66. 494.7754 pets. '425 NWPT BCH, qwet pvt re·
1213 ) 476·7738, !714 1 dec ,gar.,blgyard,lge ~emeotly loc. Charm· 3 Br.288 251.0rY crpt:I Port1es •Ptusmoie EASTSIDEsharp l BR. Hewpotfleadl llH -~21682 _ s1d.S350 675·~ atlo 50.642-~ 111g, cbttrful, 2bdrm & dn · ' GAEATAECllEATION. bltns, pvt entrance, •••••••••••••••••••••••Furn Yearl)t lea.se 2 Br 631~~
Steps to Bay! Lovety 3 Lrg exec SBR, 3BA .. Fam den overlooking golf pes. &42·33S8 te11111s•Freelessoos gar .. no pets. $425 mo. Oceanfront for Winter frplc, garage 1595 Mo. Need room to renl last
bdrm home. 2 ba. fpc, rm, pool, gardener :U::Ties~!.~~~:m: BLUFFS. 3bdrm, 3ba , ~i::"~~t!".0tL~ Call 540·11S8. Hk for Rentals. Furnished & 210'1st. St 631·2914 wknd m Oct lhru Jan
washer/dryer Winter $1 250 mo. Agt Judy sec. Eves: 851 9331 0 ram rm. formal dm rm, • Hydromuuge . Larry or Pam. an 6PM, l!flrum. Brolter.875·4912 2 Br 2 Ba Condo wilh Will pay up to S20(),mo rental. S790 mo Icon· 979·53'70, ~7618 11001 844 2300 Sw1mm1ng • Goll 979·JM8 Pam NO FEE! .Apt. & Condo frplc ., completely re wh1 rh has to mrl ulll.
sider yr round $11501 Nice clean 2 Br 1 Ba days: 9~-0302. mo. · · Dnving Range Eastside 1 BR, utll pd. rentals. Vdla Rentals. carpeted &I painted lndry, both & k1tch fa c
12131 476·7738, !7 H ) New carpet. paint, S72S. 3 BR Orangetree WI..,....._..... IEAUTIFULAPTS: quiet location. No pets 675·49128rolter Pool Adults S675 Mo Would prerer M1ss1on
675 3935 __ drapes Enclsd garage, Patio Hme. Fresh decor, "•'"" """"1.., Singles 1 & 2 Bea S32S mo Call 540-ll58 p 645~ V1eJo to San Clemenk
LoC)lme ltodl 3141 fenced yard. No pets. gar opnr, adlt comm.. I Br Little Isle SSOO ~o~:,~,,:S~~·~~.~ _ask for pave M ARI NEWPORT S.. Ci.-tih areas 97~:2>8 dys SS2S 1.St + seeunty 2546 all amenities. No pets. 2 Br Iba $600 ~ 3 B •~ 8 COU......,Y CLUI 1176 Room ror rent, Christian ....................... Or .. "A" uo277' 552-4146 8:J3.Dl7 3 Br 2 ba S850 L1Y1ng • No Pels • r. 1 n a. 2 car garage "'" ...................... . Whitewater vu Emerald ange ....... 8 · Models Open Deity Condo l mmed oc LIVING TO WNHOUSE 2Blks couple looking for 8
A Proft:.slOrlal Sen lee
For Prof~s1ouitl
Poopk!
3orrires to screen 1 h1•<"k
ref's & employmt'11l will
match you with th1· rt&ht
Koommate'
30 l>a) 0uaran\t'I'
25', off With thl\ Jd Bay ~ Br 2 Ba +Loft· 3 Br 2 Ba Near ....... IHdi 124 3 ~!:i:....c.u.!::k 9 10 6 cupancy. SS7S So. C Bachelors. 1&2 bedroom rrom Bch 3BR. 28A, M F, non smoker M:iny
tennis.pvt beach pools. PaularinoSchool. Large ...................... ~ Oakwood Plaza area. Call Rosie apts & townhouses. downstairs. 4g liv rm & extras S2001 '3 uul
l..3SO mo. A 494-117'1 back yard. 2 car garage OCEANFRONT Mobile 631-1400 673-6900 Garden Aii-rtmenta 848·2262 F!!>m 'Pt$l000 644.1900 frplc, modem kitch up Av_ail Nov l.4!13-7864 ey_ Oron¥ Co:8S 1-7714
Newport lloc:t. 3169 S700 Mo. Sierra Mgmt. H~me11 SlOOO mo Dbl Newport BMc:h N. Eastside . Large 2 Br .. 1 BR Versailles Pen· stairs. S6SO + saso dep Large, Cos1a Mt!sa area.
•••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Co.641·1324. wide.499·lH6 S.CS...... 8801.,,,n••••'f>I"' natural wood ceilings & lhouse.S540permooth <Rerundabltl492 TI43 near bus. working adult MASTfo:R VISA
BAYCREST s bdrm 2Br.1Ba.enclsdgarage, Co.oP •••••••••••••••••••••• (71 4)645·1104 cabinets, 2 co vered 644 ·5369, 548·04 25, Sc.ta.AH lllO ~~~~·ht!~lt~rf~ wRtcht~t l-llllll!Jlll!llA•c•c•t!P1111ted!!lllll-llllll
home w/pool,largeyard crpt.s,drapes,niceyard. Spectacular Ocean 3bdrm, 2ba. wa lk lo tMwportBeec:hS. parking spaces, 2 cov-751 ·9110, 645·624 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642.5765 $2000. LI DO ISLE NO PETS $4 75 Mo . View. 2 Br 2 ba c0-0p lll beach, golf, tennis No 1700 l&lh St ·Dover a1 16,., ered balcorues, uulilies Owner/ enl 2 Br IBa.-ttnclsd pauo & -· f toshr 2br(.'Ofldo 111 H B
rharming 4 bdrm, 2 S48-6680 South Laguna. Fully pets. S67S 492-7913 aft (714) 642-6113 paid. $600 Mo. Potential 1 BR PENTiiOUSE APT garage Adults only $500 HoMfi , Motets 4100 ..,. same Tenm~ pool
bath, newly redecorated 1 Br. duplex, E/side, sun furnished. Avail yrly. m. rent reducuon ror hght v E R S A 1 LL ES N r .!1.Q· 75l 1350, 541Vi001. ....................... W D S2SO t · z ullh 4. ~1800dmo67.~~early Bill ny pvt yrd, sm pet ok. wlnterorshortterm 'So""-LCNpllO 321 ·I ~:~::;rduties.Pls call btuch. 831·0300 WHfwlilttter lHI SE.AL.AOMOTR dep
6734743
_run Y, .rvl61. $375 /mo. Grdnr incl WaterfronlHomes lnc ...................... .a.-+.,-+ 1 -·-·----Wklu rentals now ar1I Male ~45 i.hr 51H lba
""T."!"'" _. 31-oows ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·' v YIU.Al.ALIO.A 54878.sS,MS-7:.ll. __ 631·1400 __ Qua10t beach home, 3 U.fwal•d Large l b drm ~ 5285 lBR Ca rpets. $112 & up. Colur TV lbenrSCo Plaza ~"'~
Luxuriously appo1nted NOV 1. Very lge attrac· TOP OF TifE WORLD bdrm, 2 ba, ocean view. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wfdishwasher, carport. 2 UTHS drapes, swve Nr Shop Phones 111 room 2274 Spa S225 + shan• u111~
twobedroomsor oneand tive 3-4 br,2ba. North 5 br, 2 ba, din area, An old charm e r Ci .. eral 3102 ldryrm Westslde $400 S67SMOMTH ping, P1ut,Church Isl Ne wport Rh d ('~ 6414913
den Fabulous ocean CM $695.641·3937 stove, washer/dr}'er S750/mo.Call8JS·SSOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ___ &45-fi625 __ 1.29 ~th St, lower unit, + Dep Call Eves for 646-7445 NB pror gentleman will
view Maid service 4BR, 2BA S&SO mo Clean hookup, gar .. encl yd, w.......... 129 S280 CM hideaway 116418 1 Br. 1 Ba Small yard. xlnt cond Avail now ~ 847·3li60 L1,·e at Newport Beach shre beaU1 homt ,. n1 r
$2000 per month. Sill & neat. Pets/children $1000.9641661aft.6,pm ....................... $330HBbwigalow 115364 garage No pets $400 j 213l966·171l_ _ ~FwNllMd lP.C.H) $100 weekly ovr 30$37~ 71JO.ll!02
months leue. 631·7300 OK.AvailNovl.631·2246 LAR GE 3 BR 3 Ba , HOME FOR RENT S3SODanaPt tbr 116407 Mo. 367 "A" Hamilton I Br condo, $550 mo. orU•fwwilhed 3900 P ine Kn o t Mnt el Single Mom 1n lrv1n1·
Realtor. •NICE Eastside CM rammn .. rplc, bi1 yard. 3 Bdrm. S62S Fenced $375San Clem2br 114924 60·0763 btwn 9 I Mon· Versa ii I es Ca 11 645·0440 wan LS rmmtt' S200 mon
Fantastic Townhous;:-2BR IBA form din rm ocean side or hwr at yard & garage Kids & S.USHB2br view 115312 F!!___ _ 213/830-2323Richard _ •5•••E•••A•••W•••••1··~··0•• v.;otiotllftlhlk 4250 1hl)',ch1ldOK 5529224
ocean view, frplc, ever· rrntibk y~. n shwr-old Shaws Cove Sl.250 Agl pets welcome 545·2000. $485 SA 3brhome ™19 • IMSTAHTIM! I bdrm oceanfront $450 " ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGUNA lieath Mt!llow.
ything furnished. $895 rash tub. Fridge. Pet 494·7551 ___ __ A enl, no fee!..__ $650 B~lboa 2sly 117526 2 Br. 2'-t Ba 1650 sq. ft. mo. All util paid Call VILLAGE OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br straight, no1nmok1·r tor
.llo 760-9117 OK S675 6 mo lease 2 br, l ba, Cliff section. Avail now 2 Br. I Ba. ~nllmes 53H5S.S Fee Twnltse w/every xtra. 10.4 pm, 67~1642. New 1&2 bdnn luxury Avail Winter Weeki> 3 br. J b11 house I '~
1706 w. OCEANFRONT 752·2282 days. 642·5261 442 Montere y Dr Waler & trash paid, lalboctlsac.d 1106 big dbl gar & yard. Modem 3 bdrm. 2 bath. adult apts lll l4 plans 1 !12 nthly 673-7873 blocks lrom V1l"ll)r1a
Deluxe 5 Br 2"'2 Ba eves & wlu:wfs ~o 494-0154 garage Adult.s, no pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults Pet OK. '645 Mo. Crplc , dshwhr, garage 1 Bdrm rrom S46S. 2 bdrm PAL M SPRINGS. Pvt Beach Ocean \lew , S233
Ref's. Sl3JO Mo. Avail. 2bdrm , 3ba, lovely Comry 2br bch home-;-S45o + S400 deposit. Small I bdrm over g~r 673-6336 642·9666. house from beach S800 from SS~. Townhou:1e home pool ijac In Ex f!lO ut1 b ind (all
thru 6·15·82 675-9932, twnhse, pool, gar. c/p, spectacularocean view ' A ent nofee.545·2000 apt. 1400 per mo+ util, QUIET ADULTSover3S mo Yrl .675·1642 from $610 +pools. ten elusive Tenn1:. Club (,reg,494 ~
213/446-6684 adults, no pets, S6751mo Plush w w carpeting & Co.dcu11W-Mature Slllgle adult only unfum l & 2 BR fro~ 1 Br. Ye,;;ly, gar;g; ms . ..,. aterfalls, ponds' area _j800~ 13239743 Room matt! wantt.'d. non
Westcliff. 3 bdrm, den, 3 548-«26. custom drapes hlgl\tighl U11fw.W..d 342 ref. Eves, wkends S32S. Beaut. landscap· parking, step to beach, Gas for roolung & heat Lrg Big Bear cabin Pool smoke r. 2 br .ipt, $l00
b a . n r sch Is . pk , •EASTSIDE CO'TTAG E• ~odern Interior! Sunny •••••••••••••••••••••• 675-8829 mg. No pets. LEEWARD $440 Mo. 673·3958 or ing paid. from San table, color TV. 2 rplcs + '• utlb JI B nr or1•a11
water/gardner pd. S975 Tiny 1 Br. ror quiet kitchen W/~W applr. A IE OHEOF lalMto ,...... 3107 APTS 2020 Fullerton, 544-6899 Diego Frwy dnve North Sleeps 14_Jl4 545 69~ Eves, 960 8179SandrJ
mo a vail thru Apr s111oleS395aJIUt.1lspaid steelat$t75.1$"993 THEL·--~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CM.631·0397 L 28 onBeachwMcFadden f." 30 Pror Non~mkr ,,.,,o,,.,. " Renumes631-4.555Fee -·~" Bach S36S 1 Br 1 Ba g r.oceanvu.,nrp1er. then Weston McFadden Trade your old l>tuH for Se . ...., . ......., Stove, fnge.Nodogs. Rent in Costa Mesa's · · · Lg 2 BR 1 ba. $425/mo. $600 yrly Chair lih t s d v 11 new goodies w11h a eks ~hard h.<.nl! Brh
Ilg Cp Cc.do 233S Elden 116 960-3989 LoCJ-a...,... 3252 NE w EST ga t,,ed 20 ~~~~~~ :i1~ts& ms dep, laund facil, Res_p_, _ _c.1?.L_642·~12 S141:S~~l:s 1 age ~ssihed a_!!.. 642 S61.8 area An:.wer Ad • 505
2 Bdrm and den, end un· 2 bdrm. l ba, sgle car ••.•••••••••••••••••••••.Town home VIL'tAGE '" adults, cat OK. 2009 Ma· --642 430024hrs
it. attached dble gar gar Newcpt,ule,painl Niguel Shores garden COMM UNITY.2&3Br Co.67~6606· ~~~2~tm. MgrtlK.548-5861 -' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Tastefully dee. Sl400mo No pets. Avail 10115 home, 3 Br 2 Ba ., 21>, Ba 1600 · u.>G sq. rt. Fwwor_...,. to mo. 64+906Q Rent $495 548 Bernard garage. beach, pool of pure luxury Garages. Oceanfront, 2 bdrm. Twnhse apt 2 BR n; ba • •
orrun1tB641>3627 $850. hydro·tubs In master backunit.lg~k.pking cp~. drpS. gai stove: • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL • Brandnew2Br.Condo.2 492-6700 661·3526. sui te. formal dining for 2 Lse $595/ winter, patio. water pd Small •
BAY VIEW CONDO, 2 Ba, 2 car gar w/elec Mluioll Viefo 1267 room~. wood burning S72S/yrly child & pet OK. sm mo • •
BR · 2 Ba . nice I Y door, frplc, dishwasher. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r1replaces, m1cro._wave __ 615·7673, 64().2092 545·6169 • 8 Days • 3 Lines 8 Dollars
furnished Se<" bldg micro, washer & dryer, Lake Mission Viejo ovens. fenced patios & Winter rental. Lg 4 BR 2 2 Br. Townhouse. adults • •
st200imoyrly pool, Jae. balcony. No Waterfront Executive yards. Pnvate elegant ba Ocean View furn or only, no pets S42S Mo It s easy to p lace y o ur 8-0ay Week Cla ss1f1ed by m ail and 11 •
VILLA BALBOA. I BR pets. Avail.1mmed S750 Condo Spectacul3'r IJvmg only. 1.5 m111u1es unfur. 5304 Seashore. 7~W 18lh.Sl.646-9S07 • COStS JUSt $8 -that S only a do llar a day1 To qualify for th 1~ Mo. 540·2253. view, large 2 Br 2 Ba., rn;im Fashion Island. 7 851·8070 • ., • +den, 11;. ba. Pror de· decorator furnished or mmutes toS.C. Plaza or Brrrpanl~. bnl~~.lmBicr~Cwon3d,·oe.. Special Offer. YOU must be a no n-commercial user offe ring
corated With woodsy • 3 Br 2 Ba Condo, nr unfurn $1 200 Mo oc Airport Justeastor OCUMl.AYVIEW ' ""' ·~ h d r I 800 • views Sl5001mo yrly S C Plaza, SA. Pool. 631-76&6. Newport Blvd & 50 or Large 2 Br. I Ba. new de garage W/oPentr, wheat • mere an 1se Or Sae UP lO $ per ad. a nd t he pric e mus t •
Spa, Sauna. 1650. Cb1ld San Diego FTwy Start· ror,stove&rerrtge.$650 carpet, pool & Jacuzzi. • be tn your ad The cost stays the s ame w h ether your ad
ON SEASHORE 3 BR 3 OK.549·3232. ~wportleadl l269 ing at 11000 a month Yearly 1ncld utils SSJOMo.545-Jlll:, needs eight days selli ng time o r 1usl one e
Ba w/3 car garage Cottage·slyle lbr $2801 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631-5439, 2473 Orange Adults no .673-6372. 2Br.2Ba.No ctuldren.no •
Ocean views. rully Fully·equipped kitchen W STCU Ave.,CostaMesa C ......... ._._ 3122 pet.s.S450Mo. • U •
rumished.Mo tomo.on &lowdde~it' !6418 E FJ WESTCUFF NB -•• ~.'::::........ 642·4975 se one wo rd in eac h box About 4 wo rds m ake one e 1~:t~~~~omes, Inc Plus. on 1 rruss thlll 2 ~e~;0~~'. 0th;e/ baut~ Beaut. 1200 sq ft. 2 BR 2 Walk to bch. Quiet 3 Br Avail now' 1 & 2 Br • c lassified ltne o f type Minimum a d 1s 3 line!> Please prtnl •
631·1400 bdrm hideaway wi!arge home Beamed ceilings Ba . fplc, dining rm. 2ba, dplx, gar, $900 Carport, pool & laundry • plainly • encl~Q1yardfork1ds& inlivingroomandfami· rerng. Adlts, no pets Child OK , no pets Adults. no pelS $41.5 &
pets .. nlyS395.~6454 ly room Secluded pool ~S.640.7814 OPEN 719 Heliotrope. S440Mo +S26Sdepos1t. •r:------------------------------,. Renl1mes 631·4555 Fee -972.9406 931 W 19th. St. MS-0492
LARGE FEN"cED YA RD Size yard. Space for boat Mcte.A,...Vllage • I r----.-----r-----,..-----...-----
••••••••••••••••••••••• Kids OK. 2 BR 2 1 Ba. or trailer. Sl850 month t BR, pool, tennis & club Lg 3Br, 2Ba, lower. 3 blks 2 Br. I YI Ba. Adults, I • CitMral l202 DtW. dis,,,.,.al, utll pd., yearly basis. Agent $450. 646-0IO; 642-2029 _ to bch, dsbwsh.r, frplc, crpts, drapes. patio, • I I •
•••••••••••••••• .. ••••• S600. Avitif lO/lS. Call 631-7300. soft wtr, patio. $850 mo. :;:_4i:o~ter pd. Call 1·5 • I I
RENTALS Bob,845·9161, noree. E Bluf condo4 br 2 ~. ba, Apwlew• ,....1119d lse. 573.s157 2619 "E" Santa Ana S475 I •
YEARLY-WEEKLY · F 8JSAm1gosWyl18.S99S. •••••••••••••••••••••••Ocean view w/frplc.2Br 2619 "1 .. SantaAna S46S • I. w 1 N T ER. 2. 3. 4 . =omloill Vally 3234 213·541-44601541.41113 lc6oa lsa.d 3706 1 Ba $600. per mo. lo I $ 1.00 I •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• . t mok 2437 "C" Oran e .. _ 75 • I • BDRMS, NEWPORT HOME FOR RENT BAYSHORES. 4BR,3BA ••••••••••••••••••••••• quie nons er, $4.50/mo, 2 Br 1 Ba. nu I
BERACH&BALBOA. 4 Bdrm POOL $950 SHome . Across from Cwul1entsemralrl 2bdrt 1m'ssloboa, B d ~bdrm 2b paint,carpets&drape~ • 1 10.60 1 • J . Property Managers Fenced yard & garage wim Beach. $1450 mo. en a ran ne~ 2 , a, • 675-6173 Kids & pets welcome 213-385·2176, 213-441·3252 675·0349. _ ocean view loft, gar i~~af:~i~~·~ic~o;r I I e
S280 CM Bungalow #64t8 545·2000. ent no fee. LUXUIY ·~ YFIOM'.I' B~ ~:~o~T~ S Jh~r~ ~ ~/mo 644·1S34. Must 559-6221 • I 13.20 I • ~C~ls2~i!~e := ttw;tlwgtareleod 3240 3Br:2Ba.wtlhboatslip. Br. 2 Ba. wilh 2F or tM. Steps to ocean Large 3 CUTE STUDIO APT • 15.80 I e
•••••••••••• .. ••••••••• Avail. ~ct. 1st. Many IF $375 each. Bryan B 3 B M Best East.side loc. S295 • I • S425Newport8ch #6312 HOMEFORRENT · amen1t1es $3500 Mo r .. a . any Add-60f S47SLag 8ch2br 114993 4 Bdrm. noo. Fenced Broker 675-4912.. 673-1388. amenities. n100 Mo. An· mo. Util incl. 640-2981 • •'-· or each addition a I llne for 8 times I
$550 HB 3br bse #9628 yard & gange. Kids & lalMto ,....._ l707 thony days642-5757, eves SJ6S. l BR. gar. mce Joe I •
SS95 El Toro3br 115566 pets welrome 545-2000 USTaUFF ••••••••••••••••••••••• & wknds 631~. 136 E. Bay, drive by then • •
Rentimes631-4.555fee Agent,nofee. 4 bdrm'. 2\.2 ba, family 2 bdrm rum, laundry, CostaMeta 3124 c1US4 l·S33l,e\'S64&·232S • p b h I
lalboctl..... 3206 •WALKTOBEACH• room, .fireplaces. Clea.n ri~eplace. dishwasher ....................... 2 Br. l"'-i Ba. frplc, prv u lis my ad for 8 days starting I .
••••••••••••••••••••••• Must lease 2 Br 1 Ba
with front yard, yearly pso negotiable. 643-2949.
lalboct ,.... l207
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. utils pd. $675/mo. 113
Exec lBr 2ba, ram rm. executive home. A11a1I Winter re ntal S550 MEWLYDECOI. patio, garage. S52.5 Mo • Classifi·cati·on I •
(rplc dining rm. 963-5191 now Sl,SSOmo 673·7083, (213) 258-3760 l Br gas pd encl gar 543-5478. ! I _ _ 642·51Bl, 640-8107 art.er 5 ' • Charming Quiet Cul·De· d/washer, pool. Adulu SPECIM.Offll Name I
Sac. SBR hse. 1 ~ BA. EXEC HOME Costa M..a 3724 642·5073. l D.A YS I •
Garden k:itth. Avail im· H.AllOI VIEW ....................... l I r. I .. ~ Liii I Add es
rned S750mo incl 4Br.2YaBl.FamUyrm, CASADEORO • HW, ct••'·.... r s 1•
gardener. 842·1835 1st Din rm, 2300 sq. fl. No ALL UTUJTIES PAID Newly decor. 15 pd. prf•ale. ,_ c ·t last + dep. 842·133S No pets. St700 Mo. Drive by encl gar., pool, dshwr. All adult, no pet apart· • I Y Zip Phone I •
ts first 1806 Port Abbey Compare ~fore you Adults. 642-5073. ment. Apply now & save I •
Watchlbewaves! Roomy Family welcome 3 br, 2 call7S2-6499. rent Cuatom design llrTo#l•w 00 move lo costs 1 Mo. • Check or M.O. enclosed 0 I
2bdrm overlooking the ba twnhse. Close t.o play. features: Pool, BBQ, Newly decor. gas pd., rent+ ~&et'urity •
Bay features sparkling ground, Shope & schools. • cov 'rd 1er1ge, s ur· ttlCI gar., pool, dswhr. BACH. . .... " ... $375 • Charge my ad to: I.
E. Balboa Blvd.
673-5350
cbefa kitchen w/break· $SSO/mo. 752-2197 Luxl~ri~~~ree rounded with ufilush Adult.s.642-5073.
1
BR ·· · ·· ·· 1475 • I Pru111t0b~es~. all
2
smtoajorriesa~ 2sty, 2 br, l\'J ba condo, 2 bedrooms. Two baths. ~1n~~:!'~ ~d ttsliv· SLap1undclou112 Bpoolr. l_.!a. ~::i. ·5.;~. "88Q: ·g~rs:;! • O # Exp . 1 •
.. "' car gar., children OK, Richly decorated. Muted · 0 pe · ry ac., · -s. or carport. • I • renting at '650! #7S26 ~ ...... ..-evs tones. 3000 square feet. 1 Br furn. S44S 548-9556 2650 Harla ...,,9 "••7 •
Rentim-131 •nc: Fee ~ """'"""" 365 w Wlbon. 642 1971 · · · · · ·'" ....... • O # Exp. 1 e .... -...... Overlooks lotb \ft of · · PllY .ACY & r.en E.sidt 2 Br 1 Ba du11lex, I ,.~.,u-1222 batt"&...c..t. golfcourse.$.1500mooth. $375/mo. Dtluxe Mobile 1 • --' bdrm , 2 ba, la liv rm, Yearly lease. n Rue Home. Mature adults. no Like new 1Ir2 · Apts. •& gar, mature adults L . ie'R~··~it·;;;;;;·c;;~ ~~mm:.~·~!~~: ~!ay4 .~~1;~ °!:~i ~!· Q~v·d~~~~~.· ~::~~~= ~:u':. .;:::,~3666
... 2 •• r=::-.:.:::-.-wfLL-PAY THE POSTAGE-:.::.:=:-.:.:::: .• 1
•
taat" Canyon view. • .........,,,, pool spa bbQ laundry '" * •
atove,nopeta,adlt.s.SBSO ~i':°O!n'!f.~permo. l3l·?300,Realtor. IMdl 3741 lnluab
0 1ba~ iartdscap: •••;·i~·~~:·;;5 ..... l 1111 l NO POSTAGE : • incl &rdnr. 173-1484 979-5370, 110-7928 ....................... g. $460 • up. Mature • • I t
SPACIO US 5Br. 3Ba, 1-~=-=""-=-'==---1·-------1rum IUJt studio". 1pa, TV. adult.I, NO PETS. Mesa 181·3074/613-Zlal I NECESSARY I •
formal dinrm. ram rm Charmin& quiet 3bdrm HARBORVlEW•Bdrm maid aervice, pbont1, Pines. 2650 Harla, tWta ....... >HO • I tr MAILED I
•l 'flfA bU", lfdnr incl. houst, l,..bl. avail Im· 2~ ba, 2 ltorJ •/family wit. •2227 Mt-,..7 •••••••••••••.......... I !. IN THE
1
•
Avail now. $1200 mo. :C1·.~r.~tf::t~ b'l;'0,':~~~~i!;, wport.... 376' LUXURYOUPLEX THIWtWRITIH • J UNITED STATES ~ •
Al\. 7'°"311. '"-des! ... or8S7.-7. $l800/mo1r't.r. ...................... 2 Br. 2~ Bl. dble 1ar. Lwiury Adultunita at af· • f BUSINESS REPLY LABEL ,. •
38R, 2BA. OMan .. ....,... __ OCEANFRONT 2 • 4 Br 1650 sq ft. ~th every fordable living. 1,2 6 a '• E
Pool. Beaut.Hull IZOOO ..
42
BAYFRONT CONDO. Avail. Winter. Weekly/ xtra, hu1e rear Jard Br . Well decor ated. 1 W • ~ • mo. Luu Option. .. -·"•aDd1 .. -2BR+ MonthlY.llJ.1"13. with RV fate. Adulta. OlympktbtpGOi,U1ht· '•a l'l .. ST CLASSP£AMITNO U.C0$TA MUA,CA~IF0"NIA ~.
•7211 .......................... _ -.... -t'lJ.Cm.MZ>tlM ed t-.. 1-........ J ... ..i .. e at •• t I y I a 'I dea. a.c.tlJ Wdc oa to OtuD. t.eru111,· • ............. w.., ac-• .15 llOSTAG( wu BE PAC 9Y AOORESSEE wi• 81111ar \'ft KUia • .....,._ _... 2 Br. auper Llclo Ptnluula Jot. bin. 2 Bil, 2 ·BA. t Br. l Ba. Pool. pn.1e. parlt lllte landtc1plnJ. = Or1n11a Co11t Dally Piiot 8 •
Home. Prh.W.. = • bo9t dp. Anll. llD· loc. Pouillll .Up avail. Wntr .17J..35111 No peta. tel5 Mo. im A Mott beautitul bld1. m • : •• i • :'.u.~ =" &991. •H •••· •.us. ••11M>1111. 2c~;. ': ftnplw:-1 ~~~~:14ll38twn9-1. a.a. ~ • °' Dll.IJ Pl.lat I • ,_..~ ..,__ VEJtSAJU..ES. 2 BR 2 ' oceu. . •2 Br. t Ba. ... AvaJI. • ;; ~ ... &:: ....... .. ·-·-~......___.. tr/ Jtaatl!lf. m.1112 w • l!!!!!!!. --,.__..., ..,__ no•. lehildOK.nopeta. I
ell. llA. It..,,.. pool, •La. r1trt1: PAC1n~:15n aaDMult.~. •. ,. Bo• 1580 J
... PtlM.-D /llO.Wlllltr. s.s ...,_to.-, LC l SPACIOUS 2 BR. un W I .,
Mi• •lcar]IOl't. bal, ADUL"l'S Ital dqe. : I '(¥¥ • •Y or• ldrJ rec. m11 tnt • 1r1 ltl,..., w , ntrilf, Co1t1 Mt11, CA 12121
Mil/mo. No ptll. me
MI It, Ul·TIH 6 1 ............ • ........... , ••••
•
t
........... . ...
Orange Coast DAILY P1LOT/Wednelday, October 7, 1981
______ P..,1"""'9 C..,..Wtla ~ti H..,_• I...... ,..... L .....
Fill .......................................................................................................................................... ······••·········•····· ............................•.................
81b)'11tUna. my home. We Cart~l Clt!IMn AUTl..:.XTUR~• JACKOFAJ.J.TRAD~ A·ZHAUUNG BRICKWORK Smell CNTtEXTPAJNTlNG Tht0ry P1ano-SiCht tee TlLELNSTALLt;D
t..-.11 Et11de C.M • 1 4 yn , Stum rle111• upbols Oryw1U. Clean" depen Plumbi_n&. elertr1e11. Construct.ion " mlden Joba, Newport, Coat a Xlnl work, low rata. In& Collc&e. P ror All Kindl Guarantttd. «UIUIL Frr wkdys. 6429"0 an .Truckmounturut dab!e. ~e . heating Odd Jobs U1l c tan· .631-11322 lit•u. Irvine, Refa. 5S'T·27&'SnlM).9508 Trave ls An)' aat l!_efa JoMttM91D 1117 Pl' lft 5 Work uat. 6'5·3718 DRYWALJ./ACOUSTIC &38-40&8 --...._ C Senke 57$-3175 CUSTOM INT/EXT Grace. W.02_. -TN•ef s.r.ket 1\;t', AJ.Ly~y Older pe"'°" wlU bab)'all Shampoo" tleam clHn 14 yrs exp. Ful.I)' Uc'd & HOMt: IMPROVEMENT ••••••••~•••••••••••• EXPt:RTBRlCK' EXPERTSERVICt: ,,_hr/I... •••••••••••••••••••••••
fore In my homt, M°'1 Fri, Color bn&hteoners. wht insured. 532-SM9 REPAIR, PLUMBING, T 0 w n &r C 0 u n try Masonry. Sna.11 Jobi & LOW RATE.5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOUTH A.MERICA 30,~a,ad •1!1.h.~ S482f1_4 _ crpt.., 10 min bltarh DRYWALL TAPING hcatln&.c~nt~,tlec. H 0 me maker a. repalra. Frplc fac:ln&a NU 8ROOK6'2·l403 N1i•lp•tchrt &leitlu~:1 TRAVEL.Sf~RVIC~
u1 the Widen Hall, liv/dln rms Sl5: All textures &c arousllr, lilt Free est. No Job too horn em •kers & home Rels. 551~.160-707• RALPH'S PAINTING fTwe est. HJ. l Of My specalllty. Call Ter)'
DAl.T ••••••••••••••••••••••• avg room S7 SO. rouch freeeal K.evU\6159088 small.~28ll health .aides to work HARTMASONIT Ext/lnl·Rus Prompt INTlExTPATCHWORK JacltsonTours.]59-0873
PILOT CiUWtcKISOM no. chr ~ Guar eUm 1!1...-fri .~ Carpentry MIM>nty W/lhe"lderly&disabled " rk b Us Ll''d Freeesl 1164-5566 Reatuccos·Textures Trees.rrice pet odor. Ct,>t repair ~ c Roofing. Plumb1nG 1n their homes Call u.s at Bric WO • lockwa . FREE EST .... a""8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIR't)Cl 8u1ldersSlner UM7 IS yrs ellp Do work ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drywall ·Slucco-Tlle 6311-1'20 wood fences. Concrete All P1untin&·inl SCSO ext ---_....,_-<UM_. -TREE DESIGNS
DlllCTO.T Additions. remodt!Hng, myself Refs. 531 0101 ELECTRICIAN pnced R_emodel _J~.B. 6-9990 pa ti u •. r om PI eo&.e $650 Neat, complete PLA'STER PATCHING Prunlll&, Sculptunna DO rr NOW I pllln5 Free est Rt!.llM N s N-;;::--right. free estimate on ~ landaupes Ltr 368294'• Freeest, refs 851 7292 Int/ext 1) yrs HP Ll '310942 :>4&.2170 o team/ o ...... mpoo laroeor smallJObs Carpentry Electncal ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-U91 -I L.c ......,7 Top, Thill, Removals, Atll For s..tr. c ---SLIUI Speciall.st ••asl " Pl b p u W R,... .. 'Y C' o •N ----Ext. house pamll.ng on!y Neat work Pau .,.,_u, Clon·u . 631·~13 Voll" Dally P1l0t HUFFMAN & SON dr Freetst 839 1582 Lac 11396621 613 03S9 um mg a111 n11 ant a ~ .,..,,. Brick-Block-Concrete We do lhejob right!
Service Dimtory Adel · Remodel Paho1> ROBERT'S CARPET R ESID.tCOMM 'L D•al~~::~k;p~~l7 ~~P}~:e~.1 ~~~~m VBoer~ ~!57·.,1:lc,~!!>nd9906ed LEE Paintln 894-3449 ~:'~~~.t............. JAYE TUI CAH
Represent.alive t:ubinets Repairs REPAIR Restretth. re Highly qualified No Job ROBIN'S,...EANING -__ b_,..._,,,. .!!!"'_......,._ --COLLECESTIJDENT McCORMACK PLMBf' Complete service and '42·H7f, ed 122 l,ic U0688tl 646-~ lav all renain 613 3490 l~small. 631..:..~ & IMPROVEMENTS• "~ "~..... hi Mo•'-Exp lnlltlll Job for REPAIR & REMODI::L 5tump gri.ndlng lO yrs "' ~ --R I h 1-.... Reas. free est 645-Gt23 ..,.,rv1ce a uivroug y -"J I · S R ate exn Lie Ins. 640-9308 !!!!!l .. •1!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!1!11!!1•1 ltMOdtt Sptcicii1t C."""9 ,....,.., • *t""' 1 h M0-08S? ....................... ess ! Alex M2·0231 toppagei. eas. r it ,... Ace~ Cu)tom c ,1rpentry /Coacnt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• RESIO 1COMM 'L ~use. •A I MOVIMCi• Quality Pt& -Lowest rates Lie 11294378 67591lH AMF;RJCANTREE .... :;::::?............ decks. patios J S Coruit •••••Ttf"oM'rsoN~s·••u Cl::llTI FIED FIREARM Complete Ma111tenance Expertise Housek~pin3. Top Qualit)' Special In O c Neat prompt Drams from s10 M11111 SERVICF:
ACCTG forsm bus1 , PR <.:o Nol>ud}· doe:. 1l bel CONCR£TlWONSTR JNSTRUCTORS tuch l · supplies furo1a be ' l'lrt in handling ~yrs serv Ma·5684 636-n'9 ftotn $l~ Plumbing re ~!!93
qttlltt, sa.lts tax, FIS. ter' L1r 'd & bonded Lac •393:113 642-8482 dllf a.spe:., f4nbandgun ~~ Er11MPRO~EM~NT tn.iatwort.h . 957-8003 exp CompetJIJve rates. INT !EXT P~NTING l!a1rs M&M_._642·9003 Twtorift9
Complete omce serv Free eM Call Joe . ---e ense. ~ I e oors, enc1ng. CleanUpYourAcl Co Noovert1me 731).1353 L 'd Rf F Et ,___...,,•a11•ftf ..... •.••••••••••••••••••
Not o ••• 0 La•• ••n•5i1 l'oolDerk.sandPataos,G-""--&... plumbing,all sm11ll Houseclearu.n",apt.o;& --· • ic es ree 5 ,..,..... .. , .. "' Id d led urams ary . ......,.,54 ~-,,.,., ., Masonry,Sport&Tenn1s a.--....., Jobs 28yrseyi 979-2265 officesu~ "831·1993 •,\BC MOVING Exp , -~1067 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n iva ua a1 pru,. Acct Bkkng for small rauos.deckm~.exl s1d Courts Li<' 374067 Bob •••:••••••••••••··~··•• ---~ --prof., low rates Quick, OLYMPICPAJNTINC PROPYTY '" shorthand, typU..g &
business. Marv Goens 1ngs, land.'>cape deMgn~ &SI 1966 847.7078 ' CLEAN·UPSILA\\N HordwoodRoon LETTHE MOUSE rarefulservice M2·0'10 INT/EXT FREE EST MAMAGfMEKf 0Hice sk1llb 64106'78 7 1'·646 -17~1 E ves & int work Free est -Maantenance-l.andsrp ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEANYOURHOUSE 1 G 0 EGE GH QU WORK Orange "· area. lS yri. Will tutor high ~chool L1c,bondl'<IG3!0.WI NOJOBTOOSMALL Freeest 6429907 llARDWOODrLOORS CallSue&Sl-6878 STARVN C LL HJ AL \.<I math.algebra 213-862-1636 Brk & Blk. [Jc 351449 Cle11nups . Tree Trim'" Cleaned & Waxed Th~,-ou h &-Reliable STUD~NTS MOVING LOW RATES ~-1903 experienre t:all fortnfo 642-67~ Alpllatt • REMODB.JMG • Dale, home963·8767 .. An lime 832 4881 s A • g CO. L1c. ltT124-436 International Paantang and rates
••••••••••••••• .. •••••• Rm add & ne" const Ans.~ 2182 ~£ 2313_ Haullng · MIWltenance 't · ,,.. -f.xpenenced Good rers Insured. 641-8427 High Quality Int Ext _96~ 182 Wiltdow c:aec.w.g
Driveways, parking lot Res Comm Quallt) C • TIW Arrue~l4 H ... IMJ _5S2·9522IS46-Sl96 WATCHUSGROW_! _ Free Est~ 1831__ R d ._1.-..:. •••••••••••••••••••••••
repairs. sealcoatan~ Guaranterd Lemma tto"'tc Trel' trimming & re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt!liable llomemakers •TwoBrothersMovmg • tmo 1'*"'1 -..-· Original Window Washer . ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I l h llaul cleanup l'oncrete II I h Saint Laurent & Sons ••••••••••••••••••••••• S&S Asphalt 631·4199 <.:on~1ruel10t1 1 B 270 791 ) Hansens (.'erarnle Tile mova . c ean-ups. ras . • w1 c eanyour omeor Prompt Courteou s BestinPamt&Paper General contracting. Avg3brhome.S35
Uc. goo.~ n ho · hauling & ma111tt!nance. removal Dump'l'rur k a,Pt 760-1793,BaS-6049 Service 957 -0500 or S48-0850 831_1351 home improvement s 631·1~
ALLSTATE PAVING oors s we rs. tubs mowin&. Reas 673 3953 Qu ick serv &12 7638 General Housecleaning 540-8«8_ Al d 1 'Let the Sunshine In" MocHALE COHSTR. caJ! llrt 4PM, 557 11211() yn~r DU'tP JllBS R I I so am age repairs st Seall'oating. Striping ~ '' e 1ab e References PADDED WAGON C t p~ cla~ork Li e 894 9798 Call Sunshine W111dow Rep11rs. Comm Res Custom homes. lrllm C .. lld C~ T d ed 1 & Small Ptto,·ang Jobi. Own trans 962·0510 • ut °"' _Cleanin Ud S41Hl85! mi:. remocl. Fren('h ••••••••••••••••••••••• opple lremov ~c ~~n C ll MLKE646 39 Mo~ers 2S yrs exp. I.Jc 4 I Roofing -Free est 1139i362 doors. skylights & pauo DAYC •RE UJ!S, awn_~v 1,,1.,..1_!i a --·l I Ex p lady does apt & Careful, Courteous Bonded. Ins Refs Color ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• 645·8181 cove~ 848 31\52 "' Cardt'nmg, landscaping, HAULING & DVMP house cleaning. Please and Cheap -197-4056 ~rt 963-0011 Dick __ BALBOA ROOFING CO The Dta....t Martetplact --Spec ial lo working l & JOBS,ask!orRand). k •. & ..,..VO. Babysat ling. full time. Co eftttr nare_nls Cftt ,,.,, u .,., ree trimi:ning re· 641 84.., t'all Carol alt. 4, ~ P~ p--.i.... Also s yughts on the Orqt Cout
ho 0 ,. (' rp .a:. -V'W'.r<LJ moval . ffi""'r clean up. '' ..,..... ""f plastenng my me near "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 'd F ..,~ 7L., 349 llousecleaner by Ole day ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · . D1AllV Pll 1¥'1' 540-~ Compl mt rxt 2.S yrs CHILDCARF: ns reeest. "'1 -TREES 'SHRUBTRIM Own transportation FaU Special. ext/ant The Paper Hanger, Pror Fr~~sl. --R3·6743 "' I.I IA#I ----My homt!, nex hrs, C M M s ..,.,, H p t ng P f R bl f FIED ICllbysffttag CllAR RENOVATING area Tari~9!!l5 owing 15-_,, auling Garage & yard clean 646-9001 Fam 1 t ·St ro 547 ~1 · install Oecoratorqual Orange Coast Roo ~ng CLASSI
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~3749 Ctuld 1 --ho & DumpangS2S 7549904 l!l>S F~eest 5578271 EXPERT EUROPEAN r~ ~ ·--Freeesl Steve547-~ Reroofmg, repairs 1111 ADS
Babyslllillg, my home, I French dN. hdwd noors. h care, ovmg me. or9SS·0095rt\ark HAULING Student has SERVICE Reliable. re· Fine p;unlmg b)' Richard WALLS BY BOBBY 646 2389,548-l~
yr & up, nr Victoria. mould 1n1c ~h e l van ~ r~~c!dnr~rd ~-~ons. Gntral Stn~ lge truck. Lowest rate re re n res rree est. Sinor Lie. ins. 13 yrs of Quality, rast service Sprink!Hi You Con~ 11 find It, c M. 642·84821646 5759 R 0 u g h & r I n I s h -y ' -•• • •••• ••••••••••• ••••• Prompt. Call 759· 1976 581-~ happy N B customers. 18 )'rS ~ ~1-0922 ••••••• •••••••••••• •••• frode II With 0 Wonl Ad
Loving mother of 2-will Complete ser.1ce~ fr~e CltOftM9 Senictt Air COMl/HtatiiMI Than~oo, John HotlffsjW-Thank 1ou 83l·44JO Any type wall l'OveranR SPRINKLER CNSTALL
care ror your child, esl Bund1•d l1r d W .. d ............ ; .... • Rod,_S40-8634afl ! CLUNUPYOURACT ' ....... .":::? ........... LARRY'S PAJNTING I n s la 11 e d b Y Repair&YdClean-ups ~42•5678'
M·Th aft. lpm or all 644 40lS in ows carpels loo~s Fo r Small Ma chine HAt;LING·S2S 631-1993 1 Respans1ble retired cou Int l'Xl.Syrsexp Journeyman paper LandscaplllJI ~$-5597 l~ ~
wknd. F·Sun. Barranra SL''L di 1 IS th a I Home· rondo. oHH e Sh 'be .. · ---1 pie will care for your Reas rree est. 645·9383 hanger Ins. hr. work The fastest draw in the c,., 1 e 1 cm w1 . 1 997 8139163J..9168 ops a ar 1nspec -------& Culver. Irv Carol Daily Pilot Class1r1t!d -· -lion ser\'m• 548 7227 AU.ArcMMd Haillnq home. Der tSth -April Sell things fast with Dai-grnld Ralph Caruso West. a Daily PalOI.
M2·9522 Ad Want Ad lle_!p• 642 5678 J..U.pm_I Jim, 5411-3964 lOl.h.. 675·0681 ly__P1lol Want Ads _ 991-1036 Classified Ad 642-5678
o ... Coll ~•Kt
fo\I Cr~t App<oval
~~.~.'!~ .. ~~?.ol~~:.~~ ..... !~.~~ ~1:.~~~~ ...... ~!?.o ~::'!~!!.~~ ... !~.~~ ~~:!.~.~ ...... ~~~~ ~~ ~~!~.~ ..... ?.~~~ ~~!.~~ ..... ~!~~ ~.~!.~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~.~ ..... !.~~.o
F, 30P rof, non smk r. 1617 Westchff ~ 8. Want SUIJ sq ft back office Need 2 br unlurn ho!!!>e Lost Wed nr \nhgua & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Banktng COSMETICIAN ELfClltOHtC
seeks shar'd h.~ng Bch !an ancial inst 7000s f multi use Space in b) 10 5 or 10 31. td~t or Sant1ai:o ~m black & Scltools Ii ASSEMILY REPUIUC FEDERAL Wanted to manage large ASSEMILY :;:a4300A~~~ Ad ,505 Isl floor Agent ~I 5032 In 1ne lnpduslfra a I rnr Lag Rt'h. patio. SIOOO w h 11 e rem a I c r al lnstntcttClfl 7005 ~:,~at'; ::~s N~~d SAVINGS t:o1' smellc Dehpbt in fhnen~; Coil winder & assembler
~::L-..!'"· NEWPORT ,\ 1 rport er el'l ur max No children peb Re 1 urn Re w a r ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• girls for first and se<:ond has openings ror 11 l Y n e 1 g or o o u for expanding O C Co
Male non-s moker t11 PENINSULA .ir11~t 75•per sqrt 6449971 6465775 R"t shirts Must speak and r ume :'llew Accounts pharmac) Days, Mon Mrg or delay Imes &
share 2 bdrm No pets 540-lllXl • .. t L f •' 1 c l Chri 1.2-"L...-'-E Counselor & 111 p tame Fn 644·2111 transformers Exp or Sparwu~ execuu ve or LAIS I( 11m '-a 1co a s~ ~ understand English x
$2()()/monlh. 1st and last f1t'e> Jl'r~~ rrom Cil) I Prime Mot Id! Loe. 8.nit1tu/lft•ttt/ (: leneyre & Mountain PRE SCHOOL & per helpful. w1H tram re Teller l.11guna Niguel C.OURIB/CLERK walling to learn Call Call75H139 after~"l llall All sen ·1l'c!.availa M>prox ltoo fl suite Fiftonce Rd Lag H<:h HEW,\RO DAY CARECENTER hablej>ersoo.~2t026_ branch 831 1940, F lt1me. needed ror ~0·9264
Pvt entrance. pvt BA blc, 'opl1on,1l' From 225 Prkg full \en . 0 11 the ••••••••••••••••••••••• 949 7928 792 V1ctona. CM 495·0850. New port med.kcal lab V Al.OR
HB.GirllS.25 Ne"ly re ~q ft up at rea~onablt• "ater lusittHs Lost Sm!Siamcst' Fem <corner Victoria & Assemblers Mlf H EO.E Permanent pos1t1on for ELECTRONICS
dee S2SO SJG.0794 r<>nlJls "fo leas!' re l'omt!'>et'1tno"' Opporlwlity 5005 f'Jmily gne\-1~i: Bai: Plaeenlla) those who enJO) lite
54 yr old male tugh srhool qua red, rall673 3W2 Mew~ An:hts ••••••••••••••••••••••• Canvon 833 3544 ENROLLING NOW ' ./ BANKING clenc11I. telephone work.
teacher nds Maturc MEWPORTCOOER TokataBBktnc). !LOSING LEASE. qull J rou~d smokl'Y i:ray 1st 10 children enrolled ELECTRONIC LOAN PROCESSOR driving & know area
female tfousemllll' · C llJud t111gbusaness.selhni.:ro1uxt altered M tabby, "'" $10 00 Discount Hrs Local Newnnrt Be~ch well Call Kare n M I k & Prest1g1<1u.-.. lull St!n 1t·e a ' 1\ LL supplies Jnd • 6 30A M 6 OOPM Part ,... 640 0140 g.~ ya~d~ork' :\'I p~~~ & i-::o:c oH11·rs lneld\ 642 4&H forappt 10-.ee turesanrludtng AndrosSt,( M ~6772 ume students accepted AS~EMBLERS Savings & Loan has im _·_:::.o. m__
pvt bath Gar SJOO mo rcpt. set wrox. undc•r :"EWPORT BEAC H "r Da~pla~ rases. wllilmg IF o u n d Go I d en !i48-346S mediate opening for a CUSTOMSlREI'
.. o.C/\~<a"noon&"''e§ iirounclpk g,1elex&.111 <Jl' Airport 340to 11001 room chairs, Rcauty Re tr1e\Cr, female loan processor Conven· Ab1litylodeal w1thpeo· ....., ...,,,.. " ' f Jobs Wonted. 7075 tional Real Estate loan dd' Female share 3 Bdrm t1que del•Or l'on rm sq ft. Mi 7722 _ I Salon hairdryers and
1
Beach Blvd McFadden ••••••••••••••••••••••• Previous experience experience required pie. type 55wpm. a 111g
house w same $170 mo 644 71~9 OFFICE SPACE hydrnuhc rhaars m1r H B Wes Im • n s le r Work ang student girl with cabling. harness-BUSY OFFICE Salary machine. phones and
+ 1.,. ut1ht1es Sand~ EXECUTIVE 18~9 i.q ft e nl 1 H' ror~. shel\·es and ~!ants ~3 582~ needs free rent m ex-mg. soldenng and work commensurate with ex ~:r:pr:~~~~ Caebl~r~~
Days 645·2223 £I e SUITES ground floor with ~1gn Al~o. make-up, ~hampoo l'ouncl Germdn Shorthair change for office work ing with small sub as perience. Fu ll 1nsuranee 901 W 16th St NB
S46·37J§__ rights t1\'aJ I Grl'at lora and h~ir produCtl> Pvinter Female. 2yrs. or hsekpng Answer ad semblles benefits & paid career 646.0586 __ _
IN lion ni•ar () l a1rpon <.:all 63l·9754 or old Vie Uack Bay Also 115()4 642-4.DI apparel Please call.
Estimator
Wanted R oo fing
estimator Old expand
ing compan) Look111R
for md1\1duals "ho are
familiar wilh the con
structaon industry No
roofing exp nee S<1lar)
Comm iss ion Ca ll
642 1222 r <L3.1>2t
Executi ve Secretary.
Established Or11n ge
County Bldng firm
Shorthand required Straight, empl lady to HERITAGE Call agl I\ Josephson after6_,_89S-6!l00 Rabbit tame will ga'e R r'""-d -I d 1 We orrer a stable work Ms. Denny Pansia DELIVERY DRIVERS shr rum apt nr O('C Dot •., • s p I to oood home 557 l209 I e ine a > • av a a as environment wtlh an ex-
1
Aplheallons now bean ° Send Resume PO Box rxl\ t 1 I ,. ,..~ 752 1111 " I m m 1 n I( u o <> traveling comp for fam1 Newport Balboa Savings " 17~ lrvme 9Z713 w1same.,,..,,,, o a · ·', 0' "'••v. luxur.. office spa('c Ch I ~-uus Lo D II l cellenl salary µackage, · taken for forruture de· --1 540 3233 X288 ,,, Nt:WPOHT BE..ACll 51~1 e,m. ica . .::..:r~1ce a, i st og, sma cream ly .with child or Sr llOOlrvmeAve. I . . •11 Ir v to t:'~ bus1 r -.1 ~u ="ll'"l>Ort Rlvc1 ll!O sq ness ,Laguna "11 i:ue.I thasa-Apso r:ri.•x .. La~~ C1t1zen675-6838 including cumpany paid Newport Beach hvery drivers Xlntdn\' FACTORY HELP J.Qorogi I renter' Eas~ l'rv..> <H' ri at SlSS S1errJ l\1gmt area 'l;o exp nect>Ssar), Park area Snook) Medical, Lafe & Dental M!F' E 0 E Ing record req Call Sh1pp1ng Dept tramee
M/Fshr2bdrmupper un i ce:.s \\a1l now' Coll Cu &II IJ2.I. will tram $.50.~ full Re"ard_SJG.0321 ~Wmlhd 7100 Insurances Pens 1on l~ .... l!ll!!!~l!!!!l!'ll!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!' Mon -Fri, 8am·9am A11 female dept Creal
beach in Nwprt S320 ~ fo r drtJtb I amount req Will net Fc1und pt Siamese t1gor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plan, Savmgs Plan with Barber concession I 64§._7579 company benertts ullla.642·~e,es 551-1231 640.4230 OHace space near lloai: $.10,0QO t CJll Collect . , ACCOUMJAMT high interest rate. 11 DELIVERY PERSON Deltron1c Corp C M Wanted female non · llosp Zlarge room~+ Mon Fri !Iii PM facecl,f'yg cat,Bristol Degreed ornrdegreed paid holidays per year man offi ce. private "anted to deli ver 545-0413 •DfLUXEOFRCES• kitchen+ bath 800 !>Q 4088670111 &S11nla Ana 557~ apd l week paid vaca Country Club Send re· smoker. S2jX5 mo Steps Sh a c r n l r or 1 n sume to 111 Big Canyon nowers part time Musi Furniture store needs de to bea eh Newport 1 2 & 3 room ~o lease ri> ft SSOtl Mo Call Ed I c 1-· CR EA M '( l t f ound pl ~rm ep vestment stock broker lion arter 6 months This Or Newport Beach. have good dn'"mg re pend able girl, p time for
631·357t ~l~~~~d811"~1 ~1:-f°rter Wells 673 J.SIO I Ne.;..port i;;ach l0t F~ll ~~.b~kMta~~~~~ ~ol starr Responsible for r,:~:i7~t'!11~l A~pl~ll~ ~ahf92660 co rd PI ea s e c a 11 lite office work. selling &
Chnsllan F lo ~hr hig • 1 _price SIS.!XXJ, 533·4242 f' d Wtu Sh h d maintaining several sets person or call 833· 1887 late dusting $4 soi hr to
house in H B No pel~ or S~.10 l P llunt Hrh REDUCED!!! MOMy to Loan 5025 ~~~e • 'ar ;th S~P ~r Ii. oboor lk1sm.1l~enepraartl nleedrs.!'e'rP, 7 I 4·54L778 I A • B~KE~TORE • Deliveries. da}s & eves start Please apply '" cluldreo S275+S.SO dep ( arpet, dr..o pes. air lla'e presllRe ~e"port · .. ,, • ssas anager or Your car Gd pa} Ca ll person. Tl.les·Sat at 1931 17301 Beal'h 842 2834 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 7380 cash mgmt & review and mi>-mech for Schwinn de N 81 d C M 968 3880 t't'nter Dr addre!.!> JI W1dow has mone) to loan ,.... aler Must have prior todi!.l 497-4IBB__ • e~~rt___!'__:_ •
8 A LB 0 A IS I, t\ ""() B 0 AT SLIP terrific low rent Onl) :1 ror Ii E SIO.!XXJ up No f OtJND S11\er grt>) J>OO explanation or \'ar1ous I ,.. s lore ex P. Sal a r Y Dental GARDIHY .
BA YFRONT Share 3 ii bl .... left. Rt!cepllon, µhuni·~· 1 r red1t check. no penalty dtle. approx 12 lb ~O 5 profit and cash proJeC· IRIVElt INC. ORTHO ROA ASST Some experience pr" Br 2 Ba withH'ortM. a•a o t Wntn you cop1er+morL' t:all Denison Assoc ~1 r 17th & Irvine lions Please call "jj;,~1A;' J!Q~.544-9835 __ Ex per needed . rerred W1lltra1n Mu;t
lF. S375 each Brvan leoseowdN•H 24oo 631-2242 673 7311 5483888 75~0 =-EO=:..:E=-=·---cS.D Fwy&PauJa rmo1 loaMu~r · c hairs 1d e 25 30 havevahdCalifdrlver's
613-1388 . to6000~ft.offictt. l\7ENTURE CAPITAL Found Sheph('rd.whtM Cosla Mesa,Ca92626 lmmed open ng, exp hrs /week Pleasant lie Salary negotiable
HICE. PRIVATE Coll Susie or Randi on' equity basis. new Pll Bull. bdndle M ACCOUNTS Equal Opp Empty M/F req. PT. flex hrs. Full working cond1t1ons Xlnt 540-3275 ___ _
Large room avail Oct 15 675-8662. j business ideas. prerer Shepher~ m~~· Ced M PAYAILECLBK ~~:o~:l boo~.&;r benefits H B Rose. CENERALOFF'ICE
Own entry. Must see to TH STREET s 0 fl w 3 r e & h 1 g h Lab, .Ye ow at. or Rapid!) growing In Assembly 846•2888 There's no business like
apprttlate UXI mo Isl 17 technolol(y M l"B Ammal Shellcr ternational company IMMEDIATE BOOKKEEPER DENTAL show bus! Become part
•· last req. Cal ,pref COST A MESA lusineu Retttal 4450 llSS-9863 6-44 36S6 seeks entilus1ast1e !!elf OPENlNGS T . ru11 F C r Seb IJ. . l'f I QI 2 3 ff su 1~~ . d d f ustln. ·lame. / . Newport S.OCh G.P. o as ans 1 e 111c 646-3375,_aj!_~ ___ or room o ice 1 " ••••••••••••••••••••••• M ......._ T t Pe"Oftols 5350 starling'" ivi ual or Getungbackintothejob highly o r ganized. People oriented person A r. plenty of prkJ;: l lltl Ret:i ll Store Best beach OD •• .,..dC)t'S. l'VS 5035 ....................... position an our A/P dept k t' "bl ftffds PT hyqitN1t .ct needed imm-'·atal• for
Room for rent. 4 BR hme incl Avail no11. Call location in 'llr wporl' tt I EXECUTJY[ Good typ111g & 10 key mar e responsa e. exper. non-FT choir ·si. cnsis-box oHice d1~io~ 'App w1spa. Clase to bch 3 Realonom1c-; 675 fi7CMI S7SO ~·11 116 23rd St ••••••••••••••••••••••• capab1ht1es required Top pay, bonus. smoker Good salar}
pror people loolonj? for Costa ... ~... 250 sq ft ,,7.,41ft5. 673 1401 Satfft.r Mtn.. Co. * SIJIT[ * A p expenence helpful never a fee' A IR. A I P. Pay rol 1 tont. ly in person onl} Sebas
t $27• ""~u ., " T •litepack1n°• Growing mfgr & 4 642·524~ tian's. 140_PicoSC rm m a e " mo •uttu ~175 mo l'llls an All types of real estate Xlnt opniJrtunity ror ad-" -~ 968 1734 ~ • • RrT •1L SP •c.. r· •electroruc assemb• service oriented bus1 G 1 · cl" 7•19 w 19th St "''" " "' 1nvcstmenl'is111rc 1949. 24 Hour ESCORTS vancemenl Outslandin° DE..,.•• ~H enera u """ ft «NI 0 Great " •warehouse• nesses. 832· 7300 "'""'"' '"""' s d ronsl et h I lrvme,lbrm nice2trr r13350 """sq ...,.,.,m S-.d~'-ili 953·1822 MCIYiso compensal1on&bener11s wk•--ho Ex p e r dent al 31 ru ion ep
P k t l I ' expo:;ure lfarbor Rlvd r-2-~TD-.., -'.L' -I t k or Cn.<><:lo me CASHIERS needed Good compan} ar wes ap , ava1 BAYFRONTOFfln Call ""' s For total stress reduction m a p easan wor ing VICTOR wanted fol' auto wash in lechmean Partial dept benefits & working at
now, ps5. 857 ~ . SOU feet. Janitorial. park I Realonom1t'l> 675 b'70CJ 642-2 I 7J_54S.061J & relaxation massage environment Contact Temporary Service "' w pt Bch & Irv in e Process & rinash. etc mosphere tJ SO nor hr le Great II B apl ~ 'hr ing etc 700 9440 WE PA y ntE MOST Steve 10-8 SoiS-2817 Pat Mills. AMF Sc1en· ,, Salary open Call M-F', "'" w same Diane :i:11; ~l:lll ' Store for renl or IC:l\e ~ ---:-line Or1 llmg It! . 18011 556-8520 ~as. 644-44§Q___ 549-2002 start Apply m person da 'S S48·l3ISl'H'' i\1 rport·6 office" t IJ? l200 sq rt :-<ewport & for your TD's & notes Allracll\'e Ladies wnuld Mitchell s . Jnrne. As semblers We will CASHIY only SEBASTIAN'S 15C
· d1v1ded rm.55'o;q fl in I Harbor Bl vd C'M AtDenntsont\ssoc love1o partyw you Call 551 9051 train Apply 7 AM Designer Ave Pico SC
Female non-smoker ful cl marnl t ul!l 641-8070. 646.1741 531.7420 673-7~11 Lynn or Laune anytime EOE M/F MacGregor Yachts, 1631 HOUSEWARE SAi.ES HVAC Ge~eral -
Cly fump. 2bdrS300m rondo Sol 24 hrs -IC -, ._, . l .... VES .. ORS 95J.9J63 '1111111111~~~~!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!1!11!!1 Placentia, Casla Mesa Full or P/Ume Apply . Sr.~ Executive seek111g Ill· st laza. ''7 uu . · onimerc1uo " '1 ---1""' Crown Hardware, 1024 M•-· r.
641.3583 ev Share 2 ofl' suite 1n pre R-~ 1 4475 High yield trust Deeds Alf'Obk lmtnlctor Auto 1 !W t '·ff) NB m1mum 11ve years ell d1v1duals ror busmess st1g1ous airport area 375 <nnO s s r II ed c 11 G ~ c IODY ir.~ 1r.1<1>'Y rvme es cu per cons engr ofhce nr expansion in Orange M/F rmmte to share 3bd. ~q rt For detail<; call ........ v............. a e, we secur a re .. '-..G!0 .... "911111'111RYf Ex per only Newpart ~ ~ 0 C A' Co 'I &
2ba Condo c M S22S mo .,.1 6.,.,., p RI M E AR F. A o f CIR financial 85S·44SS Escorts Beach area. 759-1458 Ex!X!rience nee Contact CHECKa CAI 1 · · irport. mm County.~
JlOOdp. lmmed. 646·666S "" ''" NEWP ORT BEACll 330 Bkr 24 llrs 641·0180 rude & housekeeper for Mike Warner, 67J.0900 needs a rew gd drivers nst projects.
. --AVOID HIGH RENT to 470 sq rt Suitable for Cooth/CMcb rth 'ti s 11 1 _!63-'-_493-8888 Dabl, Tay}!~~ssoc ~EHEIAL OfftCE
F. Straight. shrlBR apt 11th &Tust111 SA oHi ce or commercial lutlto•cefffMlh/ AM£ii'./,MC/Vlto ~oo~t~~P:'."1Mo~·F;i AUTOMOTIVE Childcare --1114~~ Our rapidly expandlllg
5C.9MPMarea 646 541 3 l)nlv "" 'I/ICE' Call6i!l 8811___ -p--~/ Permanen• .,.,ctv.D#:! p•991< I Cheerrut. reliable m DRIVER/RECEIVER I l , ""' ~.' ...-..:-....1 • "'"""""' -·., di 'd I _.,.,._,, Crowing ro. has x.lnt OP· ntemal1ona company 646-S41J 300toll00 ~q ft 2500 Ft undeveloped Lot ,_ ••••••••••••••••• -· COU.................... v1 ua '"""'""'to pro-t ( D . /R , is seeki ng a n en· ---~~--M akc Suj>ple9S_~404o ~ spa re avail. High rise •••••• .. ••••• .. •••••••• psvCHJC·ESP AHSnauMCi "'-" vldecare for3children2 PY or nver eceiver. thusiasllc self starting Shr lrg luxury home f t bid AMowtc....... 5100 I saVICE Dealership or foreign aflemoonsperweek. Qr. Gen knowledge of individual for a general
w/profperson. lsllast + COSTAMESA water ron ng '" · READLNGS PIT b I led auto parts experience rasional full days. Our plumbing products F'urnished Sl1S to S250 Newport,.~ch SI ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• by AMANDA e p wan no exp preferred. CalJ Glen for Cd M home only. ear & Good working cond office p0&ilion in our
dep. 546-3'28 ulll in C'ld call645·9161 · per Fl uuw polentaa WOMEH"SCEHT~ FREEQU&5TION ~.~:::;:.~~taS::rvice an appointment. ref 8 must. Salary net( Salary open. Fringe g~~syipn~g~PP~::"~
NB 2BR, 2BA Pool. ten·
nls, Jae. Nr bch S285 mo
f . 22·30. 549-5795_
Wh i t e M 28 seeks
house/apt to shr w/sta·
ble penoo. 8'2·'444 (5·6)
Shr 2bdrm, 2 ba Mature
Fem1le SZZI Incl. util.
--~xt.42.
Cut llviJllexpeases!
&stablisbtd 1971.
rea&lll'M In Time Mag. Laree Cllcntcl-e.
Perso1111 1tte11tion le
caretw .aeenlna. Tl•S.vtnf! ttOU*ATIS
for many uses. Newport Pregnancy le.sling. 1m-ANSWERED BY C U E 0 E ROT CAIVa 640•9290 benefits. The Bath Marl, 17TH STREET Arches Bldg. 642-4644 _ med. results I.ow cost PHONE _.!.._' 83J.3333 · · -'-ROLLS ROYCE ---'-'---=---------675.4830 (Mr. Peters). f i Ii n g requ ire d
COST A MESA tndntrf .. ltftlhll 4500 abortion All methods of CALL 673-0836 NOW • AMSWllJHQ Clerical Outstanding rompenu-
1500 sq rt ofindividua l ••••••••••••••••••••••• b1rth control ava1124/hr ••••••**•••••••• S9V1CE AHD-.eW GIMaAl.OfftCE DRIVaWAMTED tion & Xlnt. company
oHi crs. & reteption. ron Rent. 1125 sq ft. S400 mo. help hne. 547-9495_. __ CHORES UNLIMITED Part lime & FuU lime 64CM444 P/tlme. 1.5pm, van ed Male or female. FT/PT. benefits. Pleasant work·
rerence rm. reasonably 1355 Logan. 111. CM AAA Credit in 30 day1. Personal to comm'! graveyard & evenings, AUTOMOTIVE duties. 18orover. Coale Apply in persoo : Irvine ~~~t.en;~i;o":rr~~· ;~nf
priced call. 67S·Sll6 ____ Guaranteed Free •erv1'res ..... ~.•794 no exp. necc. minimum D-~T-...1..../ Mesa Mf& SS6·2294 Florist,1.2llMartin. 1 1 R I 61~00 " ....., " ~ r-. Shi I Scientific Drilling l . eaonomics ___ CostaMeuoffBa.ker& Brochure. Call Allee. BEAUTIFUL Mexican typin~required.Call HewCtrllft .. ory r ey. lt.ICTIOMCS'f!' J80UMitcbellS .. lrv111e.
M.l .OFRCES Fairview 1380 sq rt S52·704S ladies seek mature s111-631·0140 E.0 .E. F\111 lime Monday tliru i--------forskilled&semi-skilled 557-9051. EOEM/f
2 premium omces avail $395. mo sq. fl. Sot9S. Lott & Fo9d 5300 cere gentlemen ro·r mar-Artist/Production. Busy Friday. Dealership CLlllCAL or we lrllll applicants '!!!!!!l!!!l!!!!!!!!~!!!!!l!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Prime loc., new carpel, JD. Property Mgmt ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• riage. Irvine Publish.in& Co. background necessary. ,..,.TM w/aood math back --------·
wood Ooon. sky tighti. 751·2181 (714)538.()()27 needs production artist Contact Elsie Tompkins Looking f°' Interesting ground. Calif. Air Na.·
openbe.am ceiUngs.a/C'' l...tabW.ted 4600 COEDS-Would love to formaga.zineandpromo al work ? T ypln&, no tionel·Guard .• Prlor
t44 "892 Ml ft. at Sl 25 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fOHMB ADS party with yau. Call Sue work. Paste-up 4r type shorthand. Offict loca· militar)' helpful. Call
persq. ft. Call Mark. Klk1 Lease or lease option unu or Ka lhy anyli me spect ln& sit.ills • must. lion on PQI. s.days per Ci n d Y Gehr I n• at81~. wanted Executivefami· Alf flEE 953-9363 Needs to know atal week,S•t•Sun.W-7431 71'{979·7313
Jy, xlnt credlt. seeks c ""'er:..a:..:ld:.=.l:...ne-•---es-H-a-.1v camera 1·2 yrs exp.
bd ~ / 1 •-l'.a. ,.... ~11 Contact: Rt>bbecca 5-6 rm nume w poo QI .,_ (5eS·18·8324) report at 549-~ X252
spa. Following areas. 642-5671 once to 910 Darrell St., i...;...;~;..:;..;._-==----
Blg Canyon, Irvine Ter· Colla Meaa CA 92627.
race . Shore Cllfh. Th nk Peul. H u b or R I d a e . Lolt . tee F blk • wbt 1 12'1>
Spulau . Send Inquiries Alaskan Ml.l1mute do1 , P.,.11111Stmca5UO r...:::::..::=~-----i to: Ad na5, Dilly Pilot, lndl1napolis l Newland, •••••••• .. ••n•••••••u
P.O. Bos 15e0. COila H.B. Kida btutbrolten. A T ... .tC-.
.... ....... Rewlrd.91).4115 Ea~lllodfliq.
CadlDacs tlD Oc>CuU Loi&: teys., btlN tnap.oll 11 /F' ~
ft1tem tJlt Fad &,ype by,._, vie. Nfpt 115:11!1!$ llCJX.lff
for Clualfied Ad
AC110N
CaU1
Dally Pllot
AO.VISOR
&G.5178
W ... flf U. muttl BlYd Brtllol Cluallltid A.9t JOUf' ._
... ,. ClaullW~ ~--· , .. ~ c.u...,.
,,.,....., ... .
c" ...... .. " .... n•> "uo.to1
IAIYSmll
needed part lime our
home. Own trana~·
tioa. ~ lft.er 5 PM
CIHslfttd Ada are UM auwerto•~ •• ,. ••• Jard .... , ..... abtt:as.., • ..U_.. I .
COOi
Raleicb Hilla Hotpltal tn
Newport &1ch b11 an
lmmedl1te openift& f~ •
cook to work 1econd
shift, 10:1> AM tO 7 PM
Experienced In th
boapital atttln1 pre· ferred. IPeAel4,,....
beolfttl. "' ........ uU1 larMra DuH
l7H )MU1ft, S.O.K ,,, 1-
Ge11ual n.a .... ..,cw.
Currently hu t.tii follow·
Inc l>O'itlon 1vall1ble ........
Ttmpoury po11tlon, cvmn" • 1 weetttftd UY 1 Hperimc!e l ft\\ ....
PIMH call for In 1p-P0t11tm 11t. t :IO·SPll, tlo.clar Wu Frida,. ... ,..
, Orange Coast OAJLY PILOTtWednetday, Octor>er 7, 1981
I 0
Sell it all and put in your pocket! -
DAY WEEK
8Days
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.
3 Lines For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678
8 Dollars TM rww ~Hy Pilot 8·Day W.ek tts a Classified PLUS
._.W..t.d 7100 .... W..W 11oojH .. W.W 7100 HelpWmhd 710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• twpW-.d 7100 .... Wllllhd 7100HetpW-.ct 7100.Afpllamc" IOIOCah 8035Fwwltwe 8050 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
HA.llSTYUST MA.HA~ PA.RT·TIME HCIPTIOMST Saleswomen/Men SIUl.!.EIS HARBORAREA Part Himalayan lc1ttem S leeptr t'ou<·h. l<•.n Substitute cafet eria •SICUTAIJES• .,,., APPLIANCESERVICE 10 $50each w1flower des1gn,J !•t11d b!~~ :~'!g~~ve~ ~:~r~~perjw~ !, .. Yo~~~ work S4.l9/hr Food ;:.:u~iS:r!!ere:f!i~':. THE FIDlliTID R.E./Mlrt.~l8,000 TEas1tem Onicon Sl.ng1ndg Wewbuy used11 apdpliances 957-6257 S350. 4:;~ $200. ~till
"" .... ..., " c·rvtc• ""'·""· Newµort ~•rw• •ht80,fuJk"'""'IBS22.000 e egram 0· nee ' -ete recon .. 1t1ar. Himalayan K.Jltens. CFA ~ oxper'dpref.857-4686 631·4408 or write P 0 ~ "~.... 1·oys people, le can ban· ---" -· s1'nger• who love to pll ua-.. n -"' I - -Mesa Unified School asstpropertymgt $16,200 ° ap ances. ,,,r-Nu $175 770 8688. eves 8 ower ...... i.w11g .rn1 pi.
HA.IDWA.l.ESALES Box 8088T. Newport Dist Apply at 1857 dr!~hbiounsy~~"'M· usHout ~ ExpConsuJla.ntOurs perform io publlc Must I IUY •-•"""'"ES 551-5663 Sttll in tk>x Reg $3S
F'/time pos1uoo in retail Beach, 92660 Placen1111 Ave C M .... • ......... ..._. "' ls htrtng proless1onal re· 4020 Birch Est '64EOE h a v e r e I I a b I e Al",..~ each Ai.king $25 earh hardware store See MA.MAGIMENT 760_3Z73 Wed·Thurs·Fn 4-8. Sat tail salespeople. Call N rtl8l3-8l90/Frff transportation (714 ) Les 957-81.~ DocJs 8040 49!_5237 Steve. H.W. Wnght Co . Executives...,, ..... key 8·S Apply in person. personnelforagreatop· ewpo 670-1212M·F,S.5 Refrig_ 1275 Washer, ....................... 1 1 C b
... ~iu " Richard Ouellette Beau· portunity with our grow· Secretary dryer gas range KEESHONO Pups AKC la Jan urio ca inl'I ~A.~o~::~c~:LES-=if:~t::~:i~,~~er:. Phe:it1Fi.;:r~~~~';u~ + ~r~a~°:.':>mNpt.Center ingcomp11ny. BORED? Easte~!tf~~ingmg ~.::sher $125 ea: ;~a:~sirep~t :~~& beaulifu~:;,'1~22~ ••
Full or part time. Apply Xlnt income potential eas ob 84{).6912. _ RECEPTIONIST 12131721-5100 Telegram Co needs 2131697-134S afl62_m Henridun tho rm rl11n.1
in person :C rown teaching simple bust Physical therapist ass' Ambitious. pleasant (CallMoo-Fri,S.SJ Worklhebours s rngers who love lo HOT OFFER! SHIH TZU pups, AKC. cab1n t't , ~t'nt'1 , ~
Hardware 1024 Irvine ness system neede-dforgrow111gN.B. personalityw/sometyp·SANDWICH SALES YOUwant' performinpublJc.Musl COLDCASH! S250andup Cashonly ~rm1>tt 7609~-
(Westcli(f) NB. 1213)596-25M -office ~0407 ing skills & heavy phone GIRL Hi .... comaussion h a v e re I 1 a b I e fi:B-93(11 Sofabeds. twin <'Or11t•r
M ....... CUllST H IJ D Ison & .,, Wt! are ID desperate transportation (7141 Cel S2S for your opera· ----='-.C group .. I J 11 I c • HOMEu•""'RS "'..... 'RESS,_. .. TOR exp 1 • arue Short hrs 951·4543. bl nd f t Sib Husky p11"" AKC ft "' m.naL eded f _..'"""" need or secretaries/with [!0-1212 M·F, S.S. e seco re rigera or. . ... ~. . COLLEGE STUDENTS ne or progressive wanted (or in-hous ~oc 64o.Q66. Birdie -It's costmo you P l xlnt markina• $195 Pvt stora.se, S\2.S 1>11 i5i'l
Ea S6,hr hou k beauty saloo in Irvine or without shor1 hand. Stationer y store 10 .. u 0 · ...,, rn se eep-print shop in NewPo Secretary . Mature w h 0 t Y pe at 1ea51 Corona del Mar needs Sl44 or more a year in ~-rtl,_536;_34&. King Silt' Ut-aul> Rt'~l
Ing in Lrvine. CdM & B57-46B6 Beach. Mmimum I y G-~ .. ECB'TIOHlr ST woman, p/t, 1·5. Mon SOwpm. exper'd saleslady Full· electric bills. Donate Bassett Hound, 12 weeks, Mattress SL~ ~1!·!116'\
Nwpt Ap prox. 15 MA.SSEUSE&RECPT. expr on small orr-se uvuoppty. ormature. Fri Phone.misc.duties · d your operating second AKC Reg S200 Good aft 7PM
hrs/wk. Girl Friday Must be attractive and press. r com pan business person who can C~l.!!!.omin 646-8838 Please call or come by lime. 5 ays, xlnl work· rerr1geralortooneofthe with Kids 675 5897 SU R f' LU S F' 11 R :-, Home Services h I be fit w o r k w 1 t h o u t mg conds Especially char·1l1es listed below -SAJ.L'• · ave P easanlpersonah-ne 1 s SEC•rP••y foraninterv1ew rinechentele.6'4-7482 • BEAGLES AKC S200 "' 5SB-502'l ty .Applyinpersononly ARCAMERlCACorp superv15iononaper~a· _,,_ get a receipt, and 0 80 Entry tableSZ> Tdllta
HOUSECUA.Has 12 noon to 8 pm Circle E7014/IA3).f 3232AKeny ~:;.~b~.su~t;:ue'a~~11ls ~f~~:~~·~:lbo~l~~~!U lVICKI HESTON I T.aclMrW..e.d Southern Cal1Corn1a l2wlcs Allshots ble lamp~ S2S ea ~l ag
to work for Janice's Massage & Heal th Spa ~ 1 rm ct~o 962_8311 752_0322 G 0 0 d t Y Pi 0 g & • • Toddler program ECE Edison wlll pay you S2S ~9155 Stereo console S150
Raggedy Anos. 4/days 2501 E Pacific Coast ~-shorthand required. Call & A.SSOCIA.TES & exp w1toddlers !"fr Your donation is tax de Cash onlv 642 3785 ~al
week, 8-4pm. 675·2514. Hwy. Prestige Womens shop i REST A.UIANT HBP 675·5460 (Specialists in Tern Susan, 640-88Z0_!1/ B durlible. Free pickup by AKC AFGHAN onll'.. ~
Cd M h · Part lime mature -----Cl · 1 T£"CU£& the charity nus special HOUNDS 2 ftoufth s ftha1r "l""I"'. Housekeeper, & Cook, MECHANIC HELPER m. ust ave s1ncer~ · Se Porary enca '""' n~ ff · ,..,._ be ' ' ' • wgp" t Qu I Counter "Alp Ideal for cretary for construe-p I 0 er expll't!S """'em r 3 ADORABLE 7 '"eek '"""" 1400 s· <-"'. 1•r1$!•1I, live-in, 3 adults, no VW shop experienced merest in a 1ty Ap "" · lion co in San Clem\e ersonne I needed Ear 1 y 18 l98l ft .,.;uv r, '' · children. Own pvt. rm & w /tools. Dependable & pare I. Send reply Care o co 11 e g e s l ud en ts & childhood, elementary · · old puppies Rodewa) Inn S:1t am
ba., color TV, lrg beaut. res nsible548-Sl81 J Moon 177F R1vers1dd hoF memFakl eni:blll ·3, Mh on· exp In \yp~, 10 1~?. 5 40-0400 credential or child de Children's Hospital 67S.I 0_59 only
homeinAnaheimHJlls. MECu" ..... C I AveN_B926&3 -ri ext e rs :p1~!~~°::t g,ca nr 1 velopmenl Ptrm1t 3 orOrangeCounty Golden Retriever Pup Beaut glasi.1nl:itl.lwff1•1•
Public transp nearby Own tools";'"'/y e P 'time. days or eves No Airport. area Call Ron (7141 ~ 1 4 hrs a day School age (7141972·1.2A2 pies. AKC $200 $175 & end table:.. < unU.'111
Sal based on ex per · rs xper exper nee F'rom our of aft 2 p M for a ppt 18004 Skypark Blvd childcare center Call Can leave a lsl week of por a q i.t) It· S~5n
Must speak Engh sh in brake & front~nd pre· ft ee 10 S A or your 9SS·OSS4 Ste 235, Irvine 552 561_8__ _ St Vtnc-ent de Paul No'!_ ~5 72164 673 4743
Ref's req. For app'l c1111 1 ferdredl. bGd r~a y / home Eamupto$10 hr Restaurant Mature SECRET ARY SEC'YIRECEPT T£ .. CH£8'S "IDES (7141633·9190 AKC Irish Setter Pups 2 645·8480 Mon·Fri me tea ene J s o Read easy sales S<'rlpt person day and evening ADMI..._. ASST. TRAINEE EA ~ "' f' · Sundays. S/day work OV"r phone llelen .· hours Racquet ball f""lll 3 d k ~·SO/h t Substitute bilingual Th S 1 . A . 10 wk s, s hots
'
... SUR .. ""'"E CLERK week Apply 3000 East " TO $ 15 6 00 ay wee ' ~-r 0 a1'des needed by the Hun e a valton rmy wormed. t?S. 646· 1942 " "'""" · fil31469-21647 ' ..@b. 973-tul bet 9.4 1 • start 1 girl offi<'e Great <7141547 """l ~· Local office seeks Coast Hw y, CdM --tington Beach City -""°" AKCCOLLIE personwithgoodtyp1ng 644·8022. P/TIMEEVEMHGS RESTAURAHT Growing automobile oppty lo learn & ad School Dist 31hrs per 16 cu rt upnghtenergy F,Smosold,tncolored
skills Pleasant phone Medical C~ 1 El Roberto NOW hiring coach building Co needs vance Must bt' good day. 5 days per week saver While Wes t lots or white, family
manner & abihly to Front office pediatrics Youtt.Ccrritts P T day & evening dynamic seH-starter speller & have typing Language nuency re
848
ingho9usek,fl Syr old raised. w1shots. lea~h
work under some pre· Some insuranceexpnec Adults with outslandin countt'r personnel In w/all around skills to ab1htl', 557·1300wkdyL_ quired . Englis h & -44 7 as or ue trained S200 SS\ 9Ql7
ssure Insurance bkgd 549.0474 __ lerv1ews lOAM or 2PM take charge or front of· SEC'Y/RECEPT Spanish, English & Lao O'Keere & Memtt bltn r-....-10 You 8045 attracllvepersonaltt1es M d h F d face Type 65wpm, ~ helpful. Xlnl benefits & MOO EL r 1 who enJOY ""'rkin" wit on ay l ru rt ay ed Entry level position m a llan-Hmong. English & oven & range top, xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Aloal1·on. EOE Mr. Or · ema e. pt . -v " As k ror Maria, 43 know! ge of bookkeep f t · . V t E 1· h •· d $200 cc7"" 2 "'" t $10/h U I 10 15 Id th I as growing, exciting ie namese. ngus "' con · · ·..,, -1 Lo" able, gentle, white rock. 833·9511. ime, r nu sua -year o you s. Fashion Island. N_.B. ang, payrol & good com· d l Ca bod " En .. 1 •• h & • -work. CallSS7-24J6 (9·Sl Evenings &9 p.m Cal ~ munication skiUs essen· f ver •sGmg agency '"i Ca~tone1::.· Eng~sh & Refrigerator Hotpo1nt. lab/Shepherd mix 11 LCllldsc-"-'--6 4 2 · 4 3 21 , ex t :14 R.tall SalH lial. R Slramen Co. 779 rvme real potentia side by side. copper mo. Neutered, all shots
E x p e ;r-F'i tr";'; e MODELS/£SCORTS between 2 p m and Kron Cho<'OI at 1e r in w_ 16th St CM 548-6611 for the right person. Ex Fa rs• S4h?JS/hr Apply lone xlnt cond. S250 (2131 592-4184
Capistrano Gardens To Doliars9SJ.0971 .m Ask for Andrea South Coast Plaza has1"'!!!"1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I cellent typing & or 735 141 l . H B 64S·516S HAPPY.HEALTllY uod ls eeded All full d · i-ga01u 11onal skills re 536 8851 Nursery 321.36Migue1Jto ...., e n · types P TIM E lyp111g. general an part lime pos1-S~CRETARY (EXEC 1 quired Please call '-----Upright dbl dr fridge, KITI'ENS
Rd. SJC. 66Hi666 Men, women & rhildren office. S days, 12 40.4 \Ions available Enlhus1asllc, efficient & Madelyn: m4l833-3960 TEUPHOHE S65 Ne-.• Sears. under Box lra1ned 646 3107
Legal Noexpnec.543-7762 Orange Co A1rpor 546-KR_O_N ___ organized, w/bkkpg Semi retired person for SOUCrTOIS ~arranty, small office s Mo. black wluteremale
FreelanceLegalSec'y& NEWSOELIVERY area.Ji11Ward,9SS·J63! JtNSUPEIYISOI exp.4dayWk.Pdvac.& receptionist at South Experiencedonly S6per sizefndge,$100. cat Lovable Work
Legal Word Processors 2·5am.M-F SUXl+1wk 7.J0-3·30 PM Mon.Fri holidays Send resume. Coast Mortuary. Call an hr Part lime evening~ ---~'-=-=6373'-'--. 752·1338.._Home645-lJJI
needed. Please call lrv,CM,NB.95J.8110 _ R.E.IHVESTMENT Strong leadership abili-will contact. Write Box AM only 640-9371 Mr and Saturday mommgs Kenmore washer/dryer. FREETOYOU
Hilda at 975-0044 Prine. Nurses Aides. 7·3.30pm & Eam while you learn. ty. Cheerful, dedicated #945 , Daily Pilot, PO Eitzen Ask for Mike.9!)4-~ elec .. xlnt cond, 3 yrs 1 yr old female G~rman
Qnl lease. pilime. 3'3().7 :30pm & H E R I T A G E to good patient care. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. ----Telephone opera ton old, $.1()()/pr.615-~SO Shepherd, \'ery loving.
Legal Secretary wi1:xp. 3-ll:JOpm . Sm. conval INVESTMENT will Beac h area Xlnt 92626-0S60.=·---S.rStoA.ftettd. answering service fo1 20cuftsideby sideFIF' needsroom lonm
in Civil Lrt. & Family hospl nr C.M fair teach you cr eative benefits Call Mrs SECRETA.IY Pumps. minor lube those wholikea10bw1t~ Frigidaire Refng Cop· 83l·8743afi ~m
Law Send resume & _grounds.~3061 financing. 1031 Ex-_fil~642·1KM4 ____ 1 lmmed operung m N.B. work, station ma1nt a challenge Man) rtone $225.&f.2..~..L_ FwwHwe 8050 salary req to: Geiler & ...,URu1e.ir ... DES changes. investor de-sal-for Sec'y w/good typing Full lime. Apply Mr benefits 362 3rd Streel Wh 1 1 h d
M 6000o S S " ~-I & IJ .. ~ Botls.2490F81J'viewCM "C"LagwiaBeach. tr poo was er an ••••••••••••••••••••••• artrn, l ve t le All shifts, Convalescent ve opment counse ng OUTSIDE SA.LES skills. Lile SH & gen. of--dryer. installed and * * I BUY * *
l_JS N.B. Hospital Beach area E~per counselors r~-'OSITIOHS OP!M fief' ex per Salary open Service stat.ion attendant TRUCK Driver & produt• operating now S8S ea
Liquor Store · St.ocking •-It b er· p rt ce1velOO"'rcomm The is . Call0ee,644-186S. 3·10PM . Apply at Shell lion trainee. 21 yrs. old ""7071 Good used F'um1tun• & · "' x n en its. re-ce an unusual opply for Selling reader ad adv. to · ,,..... Cash Register ex classes starting now. right person Confiden· localmerch~ntslnapro·l•--------1 ~~a~10~ 17th & Irvine Gd_!lnvin rec.548-9831 Refng, very clean, au to Appliances OR I wlll
perience necess ary, Earn while you learn l1al interview Call tected territory Xlnt. A.DMl .. STIATIVE v _B TYPIST defrost $150 sellorSELLforYou
over 18. Apply between 8 Call Mrs Slone Vince 546_S81ll comm1ss1ons & bonus SECUTAIY SERVICE STATION N B electrical engineer 893-9060 MA.SYERS A.UCTIOH
& 3 weekdays 1888 642·~ programs. good Co. Corporate banking of Mature person for ing firm . H eavy O-l-de_r_R_e-'f=ri""g."'-'d"'b.ldr.$65. 646-1616 83).9625
Placentia, Costa Mesa Nursing benefits Apply Pen· fice seeking a pro\•en self service gas & car technical typing Gram Run;s good. New ofc sz I IUY FURNITURE
MA.l~E
Are you a jack of all
lrades? Interested in a
full time position? We
need a service person lo
do minor repairs for
maintenance equip
menl. Mon thru Fri.
schedule. Excell co
benefits. Apply 10
person:
J .C .r&MY
24 Fashion Island, NB
E.O.E. MIF
MAINTENANCE
General maintenance
duties Exceptmg ap
pltcations Newport
Arches Marina Call.
9·5. Judy or Harvey
642-4644
Manager Trad1llonal
Women's Boutique
Must be expenenced in
all phases. Send resume
to Ad • 7~. DaJly Pilot.
P 0 . Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, 92626-0.500, Ca.
Have something you
want to seU ~ Classified
ads do il well Call
NOW I 642-5678.
LVN . 3 ll.30pm Sm nysaver 1600 Placentia sec retary Requires wash Apply 1701Tuslln mar & spelling skills a refrig, undrwrnty SlOO I Les 9578133 conval. hospl nr the REAL ESTATE AveCMorcall.642·081L Xlnt skills llOwpm typ AveCM ____ must Min 80 wpm 645·6373 -
C M Fairgrounds Im PROFESSIOHALSi--------• ing. s horthand ldtr SERVICE TECHNICIAN Other duties mclude ftl Refrig, frost free. very Ki~~RlN~Ff~~a~tlr~s~
mac .. gd s tarring WANTED SA.I.ES taphone for heating & air cond1· ing, It phones & general clean, worlcs fine $250. set, never used. worth
549-3061. COMMEICIA.LR.E. t1on1ng co.mpany _ office Salary <'Om-S48·8513or548-4485_ SS30. sacr S248 del Nursing Come 10 the action "'1osl T" d f Iii ho Newport Center loca-Permanent position for mensurat.e with exper W h 1 Non certified aids S4 00 ,, ire o se ng uses 7 t 10 n • X Int s a I a r y qualt(1ed person w iJ yrs Good company benefits as er. c ean. works Ne\'er used <iueen sz.
per hr Excell working wanted area'" So Cal.Ir. days a week' We need Outstand111g benefits & or more ex per Pd Call 546_·9995___ good S95 548·8513 or Yr'orth S399, cash only
d . buyer's can afford to one licensee to learn the f 1 h -., Holidays & p~'it shar TY p 1 ST RE C-E P . 548-4485 $218 del Usuall} home con 1t1ons and benefits. Pa Y Ca 11 Larr Y skills to manage, broker pro I s anng ror ron· •vii F old ht 7•• 7350 EOE Bavv1ew Con Whites ides. Balboa commercial real estate fident1al 1nterv1ew sub-1ng, & med benefits TIONIST P.R & fund de· r1eezer. ~ .... ':! uoodpgrig . ,,..
velescent Hospital. Island Really 673-8700 Income from mgmt m1t resume to Jackie Laguna Niguel Call velop ment d e pl cean. w.,...., g $75 MUSTSELl
642·3505Carol. while you learn. Super Ek, VP 1:Jl·~OO Personable, organized S48-B5l3or548-448S Mahogany Dbl Bed
Ortlce benefits: ure Insurance: A.MBJCA.M SEWING self-starter Vtiried ReJrig, frost free. works w/mattress Night stand Giri~ RKept6ollisf/fyphf health insurance&den· STA.TEIA.HI Drapery workroom res ponslbillt 1es . good. $200. 548-8513 or &dressertomatch Like Ad Agency neeos· front N Ce D 5 5 / 6 5 E 11 548-4485 . M Must be good wit num tal plan. Contact Ken. 500 ewport nter r. needs sewing machine w Pm· x c e . new. usl see lo ap. office appearance to NB EOE M F .. h r·t •-t d GE D' h i Onl S 000 bers. Full time. split 675·6100. I operator. Mon· Thurs. .,.,ne 1 s "'opp y. to a -1s washers from prec ate Y l or greet clients. answer s la An Co d b ff M s hirt afternoons orr 7-5:30 Must speak vance. an a area no conversions SSO est o er aria busy phones. & perform 546 5760 h 6 3 l 7 7 9 7 r P 964·2239askforMike various ofrtce duties SALES Fabnc store. full SELL idle items with a ~n_glish.642·1..843. =·-=..;"""------eac Make offer weekdays ,aa~)~,n:~
,A.RTTIME
Crew Supervisors, work
P/lime evenings &
weekends. Superv1s1ng
the door to door sales
crew or youngsters Ex ·
cellent earnings for
person with ability to
motivate. Van or large
caris needed Call
Media Merchants
213-427-Z756 EOE
You don't need a gun lo
"draw fast" when you
place an ad in the Daily
Pilot Want Ads' Call
now-642·5678.
Send resume to Basso & or part time Daily Pilot Classified WANT ACTION ' WArTRESSES ng.1255 weekends H 00 answer
Assoc P0Box8030 Npt 646-4040 Ad.642·5678. _Qass1fed~·S678_ Exper 3/yrs min Kenmoreappls.port di s 1 k ---1 -h a h SIO I d ease _,,try1no Bch92660 -Salesperson needed. I •1 p ~ r11ime avail Apply in w s er • ge ryer =-"!L: =
RECEPT tTYPfST womens clothing store in : II y 1·1m · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·. "··: Soperscon. JoHlly Roger, 400 ~~be~a~~~~~~2s ~~~~~~e ~ w~1;1:S~tto~
Full or p/tl~e'. send re· Laguna Beach. Salary Be.ac~~st wy., Laguna SZ75 . 3 shelf cuno. gold
Sume to-. PO. Box 1311. + comm1ss1on + GE refrig, 11', $100. & d . H l · t 91 • · h ecoratt\'e top S7S, Lazy Costa Mesa, CA. 92626 clothing discount Ask Sal~ W~ Mm ( o pom S'J7 • uprC1g I ti Boy Recliner xlnt rood
--for John, 494-1134. Part time. SPECIAL TY re e i er· " a S 646·2959
RECErTIONsT/ Trainee FASTNER co packag 640-tss1 -eoid F1o 1 Sor HOSTISS Sales ing and light misc Kenmore washer & gas lone ra a L
Personal assistant to Prof. SdtmMlCllt For 01·str1•ct Manager . duties. M~t good have dryer, xlnl working shaped ll!i"xS6" Xlnt
successful. very busy -r-"r communications to help cond, Sl25 ea. S22S pr cond SSOO 968 7559
eiiecutive Must be ex Ooily This highly successful local newspa~r our counter sales 'In 846·7694 752·IJ23 Marketing re""'. to sell a bas an ,opening ror a trainee in he New full s1•e Bed Mat t rem e I y attra ct1· ve. ,..., I d teresling work with g"""' Ref rig. 30 cu " Side by ~ · -Product that is wanted & .C1.rcu at19n epartment. Basic skills """ " tress •· Boxspn·n"S S60 superbly groomed & twill entail SU""rvlsion of 10 to 14 year surroundino~. SERVCO Side S32S. Dishwasher "' " · · needed by everyone. ,... -....... 7"" 5832 anvtime have a vivacious ~Id .boy and girl home delivery FASTNERPRODUCTS. port$125,b&wTV ,N-1.!:: · Earning potenllal. Ar r personality. Duties in S50 amers. ea.s o supervision will be 711 W. 17th ~t CM D·l. Port S3S, typewriter (all Returning to Michigan
elude light secretarial 1n $4• co'o~Tram· ,oooin. g dehvery, collections and sales. ....645....._-68117~'-'-------ca s) . 542·8798 must sell Living room ~lee.led applicant will receive liberal ( 't •· ..._. w II II extremely qwet. pretty •Qualified Leads ist.aruog salary, regularly scheduled Weekend aide, Sal/Sun, lkyci.s 1020 urni ure .. """ 1 se
one girl office• con •High lncome fl"l.lSeS, bonus opportunities and many 3 30·11. Reliable ••••••••••••••••••••••• as group/separately,
siderable local dnvmg A.abattsSolcrDI•. rlnge benefits such as company paid Newport Villa, 4000 CRUISER S20~ obo. 760·3849
Benefits mclude lots of ental and health plan, group life Hilaria Way, NB Boys'26",likenew,$95, anyt1me.CdM .
variety & freedom, 537·71 lO urance, vacation and sick leave. 642·5861. Call David, 673-4728. Queen bed & Frame SB5.
great starting pay & un· Ask for Midi• m1,>any vehicle is furn ished during -dresser nightstand &
limited growth poten-rkmghours. Merc!M.clM ..... tW1rWsl025 mirror Mo. sturdy book
ti al. Good education. pplicanls must be over 18. have 11 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••0 •••• case $20. misc. items
s lab i I it Y & s e tr S L-. •/TIME ood driving record and be neat IOOS lEOWOOD ll6'S 1-SS. Coronadel Mar · I A ~ ppearlng. Hours are eenerally u AM motlvat on A MUST The Los Angeles Times 9 ~M •. Mooday t.hru Friday. Some 4· to 20' long. Xlnl deck· Tel. 700.1236
Write very detaUed let· Circulation Dept. cur-vert.ime ts available. ing. Fresh load amving 5 pc liv. rm set. Like new,
ter including ambitions. rently has positions I you are qualified and Ullemted in weekly. Save al 55</ft 1275 or best oiler. Call
qualiJicatioos, personal available in sales as 1 ~earning the circulation business Jim, 646-!llllSanrtime. Pam, 6JHY7S7.
description Ir desired representative. You 'll 'COl'ltact lbe Daily Pilot at U> W. Bay ~ .. PLYWOOD
salary. Write Box •&46, 'C.osta Mesa before 10:30 AM or after 2 G......, .... Sl Daily Pll"' PO Box l560. earn an hourly wage + p~ dai'f>on uuu I s1~. Olsheel. .,.., generoua commissions. •· ror w111· K Godd rd Cost a M u a , CA "" 1ams or en a . Call 957-2111, ext. 1204. 92J626.0060.
Field Sales Supenisl' IOJO
Redecorating Sale! Like
new furniture & Mi.sc
din rm set. SlOO. Hide·a·
bed, le chair. Sl75 Desk,
$2:5 Queen bed. m. Cof·
fee & end tables. set, SSS
Lamps , S2 S each.
MORE! 751-3478
KIDS-
STUDENTS
........................ \
PAIT .TIME Mm
"' art prtlHtlY '"-··· 1duJta •IUi 1 t PUIOHJllltt wtlo...,ould bt ~
Umite4 openings 1vallabl~ tn lhe Orange Cout area, for aelr·ll¥ltlv1ted
career oriented individual who cari ~ with Field Sales People. Traln, motivate and get results. Station
,wagon or VIII neceuary. Ex~oo.i
earnlQ11, plu• job related benellta
avlll1ble for the right people. u YoU ~an produ~ multa, not jusf talk about
it.. c1U -... for interview. Allr for Mr.Cha~.
Gettin« Mimed, selling
xtn furn incl sofa.
lovese.t, dininl table '
4 chain, watetbecl, TV.
hmp1. 1to11eware.
blender, ete. AJI 1"1
than U&O. 142·1124.
la ...._ la ..... Promotiw :
Piil Cantm •• '° ~ ,..,.. old: :
-I .... u ............. : •
lln: l :•M lo l :llPM. lloeda7 "rv '*"· ._. llhlrda1 avaUalltlkJ, L'or I'!£ •. cl.IJ: Mi·"21. mt ~or lea
I la~:
. .
"
•s~T 'j ' .~~'CA -. u...-·.: ~ ~~ ~ ~ : .. •.•....•.••.•.... ···•••··············•·••············•··•··•
·~
.
Brand new !><lfJ dnd lo'" seat, green wht!at. al·
l'ent pillows llt•:t1111f11l
Pd $1700 ask1nl( $1150
080
Stereo H f\ 1 JI> \I rn111I
SISO -Ill munll I ahl<' • 1111
chrs 1 S50
1142 4!!/!>-1
Teak d1n1ng 1·onrrr1111l·•·
tablr . 1·h a1r~ U Stl
Rossignol sk11' Burt Inn
dt 0 g_s s l25 I03 20311
QI.J I::!::~ SLZ •
su:El'EI<
couch & mJlch1111: 11111·
seal BIJl'k It wti 111
rabrl(' "' chrmnt• tmn
Great tunrtil ''"' S32~
set Ca II ll75 1~11 eH'
and weekend
-Dresser. Sfl \all solid
oa k. white. $.IS
75-l il&i
M apl~ l.11n1ng 111hl1
nomar lop " to 1·111>1 .. 1111
chairs S25o !I rlr J" t·r
dresser w mirror £:,15. I
glass show <'a.''' ~ ur
new s~ars "Jkr ~oflfll'r
$95, Sampsonitt· IUKl-\.Jl!t' Cull set S2S antq Sonor,1
record pla)t'r \\ rernnb
SlSO 6~6 115S 3&1
Ra lea.!" Pl1 C ~1
Smked glass tbll'. ~ ca11e
back t•hairs S:l25 2 b.;r
stools S2.'i t•a after :1
673-1388
~augahyde l'ofa SiS Xlnt
cond 2 Twn bNI' & I dbl
~ea 673 38.'l I
Fabric Sora & Lmc~Jt
tan background nor;il
print w 1ornngc' hrown~
& greens. Sl25 <:1.>0il
cond. Will dehv4?i' local
k_~l 6259
3Pc Babyline bdrm ~l'I
crib + matlrt'l< ... C'h:m!!
1ng tbl dresser goo<l
_cond. Sl2.S 968·2504
New 2 lamps. 2 end Ihle'
coffee lble H o JYr11·1·
lags shll on f>.14 !>.11!1
full s1 box ~pru1R &.m.11
tresi.. new. SIMI
6731:.'~
New Ortt'ntal k1~ •llt'
bed set. t 91 r<:s com
plete, S2,750 Orn rm set
7 pcs, \walnut 1 mark tn
J.9~ S2000 642 41l\!I
Antique v anit) w mfrror
& stool,~ Sohd Wll()ll
rnd pedestal thn lbl 2
Ives. 4 chairs. S2<kl Son'
reel to reel tape rec. $75
760-9672
Dinette ~el 4 C"hnir~
woodgrain lonml':i likl-
new 52000 B 0 !Jit_~l-
Kennedy tool cadtly S95.
17' Frzr $120. Eler dryer
& bfw ronsl TV ~O ea
846·6787
New full-me bed, mat
tress & box spnn,gs, S60
Call an,ttlme. 7.50 ~
Sofa bed, SlOO Chnir &
side table. SlOO
675-3«5
Wroug t iron 48". rollnd
glass table. 4 cllalrs, 4
bar stools. Xlnt l'ond
$L50. 833·3415 an~m
s· soh. lovueaf. 2
match1.11g cha.I~ ~arth
tones, xlnt cona. ~
all. Aft. 5 & we!Aiends.
CaJI; &3H73>
1
•
IEAUTIRll!!
'66 Porsche912
• • Mech Perft'ct • •
S4000
#I VOL VO DEALY
IN ORANGECOIJNTY'
SALES, SERVICE
AMDWSIHG O\'ERSeAS DEl.l\'l::R\
EXPERTS
EARLEIKE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
646-9303 54~9467
'6.1 r 1800, resU>red In &
out. hl·allh forces sale. must sacr SJG.1643
COHMRL
CHEVROLET
:X!M llJrla>r Ill 1 <I
I 't IST \ \1 ·-~ \
546-1200
•*CLASSIC!•• '64 IMPALA
Oragmal Owner
BODY NEVER
DAMAGED
SllOO Runs fantasuc • 1
497-4189
111111
DeSAl'llFIS
CHEVROLET
401 S El Camino Real
San Clemente
831·0580 _i92-S500
Conette 1970
White. air, cruise. Xlnt
rond 19.000 m1 SI0,200
Week days only
1 714 )~~
Ford 9940 ..................••...
·74 Granada
Slim
642 2Sl_Q
497-4119
1-------Autos, Used
F'or sale 57 Fairlane, as
is. ca 11 f>4S-6348 ask for
Barr}' for 11\loevs.
~rcwy 99 50 •.....•.......•••...... .....••............•... AMC 9905 '79 Zephyr 6 cyl. 4dr auto.
PIS & P/B vinyl top Im ••• • • •••• •••••• •••••••• mar 897 8'23 1976HORNET
S0,000 miles
$25()()
556 4353 eves &
weekends
9'55 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'75 STARFflE J?OOO. __ 642·9386
99 I 0 Transportation car gd
gas m1 Rwu Xlnt t600
.§42·6084_ --'80 Buick Century LTD.
4dr, 6 cyl, loaded. 17.345
.!!!.!.,j1400. 1714)631-0700.
adiloc '915 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COMTIMPlATIMG
CADIUAC7
We specialize in le11ses
for the business ex
ecuttve • prolesslonal
L-..S.t.dlo.
OfMewltll
C.-.Ct
Mow II Stoat
/!l()()H,ttl•• 1\lv\t ( ,,.,.,, , ...... '>«> • 1100
·74 Cutlass, runs well, nds
some body work . ~/080. 960-9213
...,...... f9'0
••••••••••••••••••••••• 'SO DELUXE rebll eng
frnt end, generator, new
tires, battery & brakes.
l"WIS xlnl $2,SOO or 8/0
548-9268 ----,..... HH , ....•••.•......•......
'68 OTO, cherry cond.
Ct.EAN FAST CAR
$1'8S
•Mll
• • • • •
llAICI l:UIT YIUI HDIRlll DlllY PIPIR
WEDNESDA Y OCTOBER 7 1981 ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
·Ex-envoy: 'Palestine key to peace'
By STEVE TRIPOLI °' ... ~ ..........
The solution of the Palestinian
problem is the key to peace in
the Middle East , a former am·
bassad<tJ: said Tuesday. and that
s olution is pa rt of both the
legacy of slain Egyptian Pres!·
dent Anwar Sadat and the issues
behind the sale of AW ACS rada r
planes to Saudi Arabia,
Robert G. Neumann, former
U.S. ambassad or to Saudi
Ara bia, Afghanistan and Moroc·
co. made t he comments in a
speech before the World Affairs
Council of Orange County at the
South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Neumann said Sadat. who was
assassinated in Cairo Tuesday,
risked the alienation of the Arab
world by recognizing Israel, and
made peace with that country in
the hope that Israel's govern·
m e nt would grant the Pal·
estinians self-rule in return.
lie said Sadat recognized that
solution of t he Pa lestinian
problem ls vital because the is·
sue "forms a platform on which
op pos ition of var ious types
gathers." He said such opposi·
tion keeps the Middle East un-
sta ble.
But Israeli P rim e Minister
Menac he m Begin d i d not
respond to Sadat's initiative. as
othe r Is r aeli leader s might
have, Neumann said.
......, ..... ,...llof a.t..SWY
HI-YO, HARVEST FES.TIVAL -The mechanical bull pen at Irvine's Har vest Festival just may
have been the happiest spot in Orange County last week as a goodly percentage of the more
tha n 30,000 who attended the event "got into the saddle" just as this youngster did. The home·
grown fair. held at Heritage Park, closed Sunday after setting new attendance records.
Count~ mulls airport order
Supervisor s confer in closed session, delay Wayne decision
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tlle Da!IY l"lie. S-.ff
The Orange County Board of
Sup e r viso rs m et in clos e d
session for more than 90 minutes
Tuesday to discuss a judge's or·
der barring implementation of a
county plan to regulate which
air carriers can use J ohn Wayne
Airport.
S uper visors took no action
* * *
following the closed-door meet·
ing. They did agree to consider
the matter further next Tues·
day.
Officials familiar with the is·
sues said the county has two op·
tions. It could a ppeal the Sept. 25
ruling of U.S. Distr ict Court
Judge Terry Hatler J r. or sub-
mit a new airport access plan
that would be acceptable to the
* * * Panel questions
airport site delay
Members of a "blue ribbon"
committee assigned the task of
na ming a site for a regional
airport have expressed concern
about a recent Orange County
government report that says no
such facility will be built prior to
2000.
"Staff studies have a way of
becoming self-fulfilling propb·
ec ie s," s aid James Cav a ·
naugh, one or several business
leadersservineontbepanel.
The committee, on a moUon
by Cavanaugh Tuesday, asked
the county Board of Supem aon
for "clarlflcatlon'' on aasump·
lions contained in a plannin1 re-
port recenUy sent by tbe COWlly
to t be Southern Calllornla Al·
aociatlon of Governments, a re·
glonal phmnln1 body.
One assumption 'Wal that a re-
1lonal airport w°'fldn'l be built
·•p}ior to 2000. Another was that
J ohn Wayne Airport would re·
main the principal public airport
serving the county through the
end of the century.
Committee members suggest·
ed the assumptions were "con·
tradictory" to the ir task of
selecting a site fo r a regional
air port.
Cavanaugh, who with Henry
Segerstrom, Is serving on a sub-
committee of the blue ribbon
pane l, said, "We think Oran1e
County needs a new aJr carrier
facility . . . <It > needs to be
planned and well in operaUon
before the year 2000."
Segerstrom, the developer of
South Coast Plua in Costa
Mesa, said laneu11e lo the plan· ,
ning report prepared by the
county Adminlttrative Office's
Forecut and Analy1l1 Cent.er,
CSee PA.NEL, Pate .U>
court.
J udge Hatter rejected the pro-
posed a ccess pla n a fter at-
torneys representing the federal
gov e r n m e n t and P ac ifi c
Southwest Airlines claimed the
proposal was discriminatory
and anti-competitive.
The county had proposed to al-
locate 35, or 8S percent, of the 41
jet departures permitted daily
from lhe airport for a three-year
period to AirCal and Republic
Airlines, the two carriers that
have served Orange County the
longest.
PSA , which would have re·
ceived only two departures dai·
ly, initially brought legal action
against the county. It claimed
that it should be entitled to eight
flights daily.
T he fed eral governme nt
became a party to the lawsuit,
s iding with PSA. Attorneys
representing the Federal Avia·
l i on Admi nistration, Civil
Aeronautics Board and Depart·
ment of Transportation claimed
both in court papers and oral
arguments that the plan violated
tenets of the Airline Deregula-
tion Act of 1978.
AirCal, which took the side of
the county in the le1aJ dispute, la
"ser iously considerin.1 " filing an
appeal to Hatter's ruling, said
s pokesman Mark Peterson. It
would be free to do so re1ardles1
of whether the county decides to
appeal, officials said. ·
Official.a said privately that a
decision by the county to pursue
an appeal could place some of
tbe county'• use restrictions on <See .uaPOaT, •••e Al>
"He <Sadat> met a very dif· ferent m an <B e gin ) w ho
nickeled and dimed him to de·
ath," Neumann s aid.
NeumaJUl said that the failure
of U.S. foreign policy to deal
with the Palestinian iss ue
"limits the closeness we can de·
velop with any Arab country"
because it creates the percep·
tion that the U.S. will not deal
with Arab countries on an equal
basis with Israel.
* * *
Israel covets its special rela
tionship with the U.S. a nd op·
poses the A WACS sale not for
security reasons, but because
Begin's government fears that
the U.S. will develop a rel a
tionship with Saudi Arabia equal
to its relationship with Israel.
Neumann said.
Ne umann said the AWACS
sale is a danger ··or very remote
significance" to Israel and that
Begin's governm ent knows it.
* * *
He said neighboring Arab coun-
tries already blanket Israel
with radar s urveilla nce, as
evidenced by their sighting of
Israeli jets on their mission to
bomb Iraq's nuclear reactor.
But Neumann said the AWACS
sale is crucial to the protection
of Saudi oil fi elds, which is im-
portant both lo the future or
peace in the Middle East and to
U.S. interests
<See MIDEAST, Page i\2)
* * *
No coup • ID Egypt
Official s say gunmen acted independently
CAlRO, Egypt CAP > -Presi-
dent Anwar Sadat's assassins
a c ted independentl y or any
political group or country and in·
eluded one Moslem fanatic,
Defense Minister Abdel Halim
Abu Ghazala said today. ·
"There is no couo. ·· Abu Ghazala told reporters. "It is an
ind ividual group and they are
not even related to any group or
country."
Abu Ghazalla said that the as·
sassins numbered four, but did
not specify how many had been
Cops raid
house, CM
nian dies
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of tM Dally "llll S\ldt
A Costa Mesa man, wh o poli ce
described a s "m entally ill,"
died on an operating table early
this morning after police rushed
into his barricaded home and
fi red at least one shot.
Detective Lt. J ohn Calnon said
Ar nold Nash Broyles, 37, rushed
at officers while wielding a kn ife
in each hand just inside his
home at 867 Presidio Drive at
about 12:50 a .m.
Calnon said Broyles shot in
the chest, dropped to the fl oor or
his family room and rose again
still clutching one of the knives.
Officers wrestled the weapon
from his hand, Calnon said,
without further injury.
Officers said they were sent to
the home at 9:38 p.m . Tuesday
afte r they said Broyles· father ,
Arnold Broyles Sr., drove to the
police station to report his son
had chased him and his wife
from their home with a knife.
Four offi cers , aided by the
younger Broyles' psychiatrist,
Dr . Richard Green of Newport
Be ach, attempted to talk the
barr icaded m an from his home,
Calnon said.
After about two hours of un·
s uccessfu l pleading , police
ca lled in a lO·man SWAT team
to rush the home. .
Broyles was shot as he re-
•ortedly rushed at offi cers who
.icked in a side door le ading to
the fa mily room .
He was taken to Fountain
Valley Co m munity Hos pital
where he died during surgery,
police said.
Calnon s aid the Orange Coun-
ty District Attorney's offi ce and
Costa Mesa detectives are in·
vestigating the incident.
He said it is believed Broyles
died or a single .22 caliber rifle
bullet fired by an offi cer stand-
CSee DEATH , Page A2 )
killed and how many arrested
There have been conflicting
reports on the number of peopl e
who took part in the attack that
RELATED STORIE$-A4
EDITORIAL COMMENT-A10
occurr ed during a milttary
par a d e T uesd ay But on e
military source told The As·
socic1 ted Press there were four
in the group and that one had
been killed. Other sources said
* * *
six people were involved
Egypt moved quickl y today to
assure ~>0htical continuity after
Sa d a t 's assassin a t ion b y
scheduling the referendum on
his successor for next week
Member!> of Egypt's Parlia·
ment met in eme rgency session,
eulogizing Sadat and preparing
to fo rmalize the nomination of
Vice President Hosni Mubarak
to succeed him. The nomination,
a foregone conclusion, meant
Mubarak will be the only can-
<See EGYPT, P age A2)
* * *
3 ex-presidents
to attend funeral
WASHINGTO N <AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan will not attend the
funeral of slain Egyptian leader
Anwar Sadat but asked for mer
preside nts Jimm y Carte r .
Ger a ld Ford and Ri chard Nixon
to help lead an Ameri ca! del·
egation to Cairo.
In announcing the president's
dec ision to stay home, Wh ite
House spokesman David Gergen
said today that U.S. security agencies were unanimous in rec-
o mmending tha t Regan re·
m ain home.
Cart er and Nixon a lready
have accepted Reagan's invita-
tion, and Ford agreed to attend
today, Gergen said.
Secretary of Sta te Al exander
M . Haig officiall y will head lhe
delegation.
Al so being invited to represent
the United States a re Senate
Re publica n Lea der Ho ward
Bak er. Senat e De mocratic
Le ader Robert By rd . Se n.
Charles Percy. chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Com·
<See R EAGAN, P age A2>
Pacific nrineral
nrining called easy
WASHINGTON CAP > A
huge Pacific Ocean source of
valuable minerals. including
scar ce ones the United States
must import, can be mined easi·
ly, government scientists say.
T he immense ore deposit ,
loaded with bi llions of dollars
worth of copper , silver and other
m ine rals , lies on the surface of
the ocean fl oor under interna·
liona l waters off South Ameri ca,
the scientists said Tuesday.
Scientists of the Nationa l
Ocea nic and Atmospheric Ad·
m inistration said the deposits
they discovered on submarine
dives last month were carried
from deep within the Earth by
past volcanic activity.
"The ores are incredibly rich
a nd :.hey are on the sur face
a round old volcanic vents," said
Dr. Alexander Malahoff, chief
scientist on t he dives. "You
don't have to dig out millions of
pounds of rock to get to them.··
Even though the minerals are
8,500 feet below the ocean sur·
face, Malahoff said. most of the
tee h nology go get t o t hem
already exists There are no in-
ternational treaties restricting
recovery of the minerals, NOAA
offi cials added.
·'It's up to industry to start
looking al it as an economic re-
source:· Malahoff told a brief-
ing at t he U.S. Commer ce
De partment. NOAA 's parent
agency.
U.S. officials have expressed
concern about the nation's de-
pendence upon foreign countries
for such strategic minerals as
molybdenum, and the nation's
low stockpiles of some of them.
New sources of these minerals,
such as the recent find, couJd
lessen this dependence, they
say.
M alahoff said the undersea
ore deposit, estimated to exceed
25 million tons, is in a lifeless
a rea because of its depth and coldness. It therefore could be
mined with virtuall y no damag-
ing environmental effects, he
added.
No cheers, boos? ORANGI COAST WIATHIR
Conside rable c lo uds
tonight through midday
Tbursday. Gradual clear-
ing Thursday afternoon.
Cooler days in the inland
are a s Thurs day . Lows
tonight 57 to 63 . Highs
Thur sday in the upper 60s
to mid 70s.
Tough rally ground r ules ignored
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP> -
The ground r ules of an a ll·
candidates rally sponsored by
the Biscayne Democratic Club
were tough: no booing, no cheer·
ing.
'·Anyone who boos a candidate
will be arrested and prosecuted
to the full extent of the law,"
p r ogram c hai rm a n All e n
Goldberg promised. "It's not
me re words: It's a promise. You
wlU be arrested immediately for
disturbing the peace. I can make
these charges stick.''
On1e lady In the back of the
room at Washington Savlng1 and
Loan was the first to lpore hlJ
ultimatum. Sbe let out 1 abort
jeer when City Commlaaloner
Simon Wilker took the podium.
Goldber• ordered a policeman
t o m a k e an arr est. T h e
p o l icem an s h r ugge d his
shoulders and rejected the or·
der .
It was one of several light mo·
m ents at the political forum,
held to air the issues before the
Nov. 3 election.
"It's an American custom to
c heer and boo,'' said com·
mission c andidate Stanley
Shapiro. "Look around you," the
political hopeful ch a llenged
Goldber g. "Do you see any
criminals."
"I see a few,'' retorted one
member of the a udience of most·
ly retirees.
Goldberg later explained that
be had laid down the stiff ground
rules because he had been told
troublemakers would try to ells·
rupt the forum.
INSIDI TODAY
Hugh Mulligan's TV set
must ha ve som ething
wrong with it. Find our
what programs ar e being
viewed on Page 8 2.
11011
At 't-..W. M L.M.~ Att ............
C ........... M c......... '"'" C-kl ., c.-.. .,
~~ .. ......... "" ......... , ...... It... CHt
........ tU ..............
• a I
, • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, October 7, 1981
Ex ;.Cf A chief wains of Soviet acts
By DA VlD K lJTZMANN oi-.CNM,.._ .....
Former Central lntolliaence
A&t-ncy Director WllllMm E.
Colby told an Orange County au·
dience Tuesday night the U.S.
mufil keep a wury eye on Soviet
•ctivlties in the Middle East now
that Egyptian leader Anwar
Sadat is dead.
In a speech at UC Irvine.
wht1re he was lnttlrrupted at one
point with minor hccklin1 by
studcnta, Colby said, "I think we
have lo be attentive enough to
show t the Soviets> that they
won't have a tree run in the
area."
Sadat, Mssassinated Tuesday
in Egypt, had expelled Russian
advisors from his country in the
1970s to uhgn himselr more
* * *
c lo se ly with th~ Wesl.
particularly lhe U S.
Colby, U.S. intelligence chief
from 1973 to 1976, said that
Sadllt's death could result in
various changes In relationships
between Arab states and Israel,
with whom Sadat had forged u
controversial peace agreement
Of those so·called Camp David
accords. which angered other
* * *
Arab leDders. Colby uld, "J
hope they are not jeopardlted
and that the transition of power
in Egypt wlll be successful."
The bespectacled Colby, who
now lectures and writes about
American intelligence gathering
actlviliet;, praised Sadat as
"courageous and effective" in
the search for peace in the Mid·
die East.
* * *
·'He obviou&ly has been •
target of some or the more eJ<
treme elements," he said of the
various attempts to assassinate
Sadat in the past.
Colby said CIA offi cials in
Wuhington would now try to
identify the perpetrators of the
assassination, what Implications
could be expected in the region
and the overull erfecti. on tht•
prospec~ for pt>U<'t'
On a relutl!d M1ddk Eu11tl'rn
matter. the Former CIA ch1er
said he supported the proposed
s ale or sophisticated radar
planes to Saudi Arabia "I don 't
think it's a threat to Israel." ht-
said of the proposed AWACS
sale
*
Haig pledges support * * From Page A1
EGYPT • • •
didate in th<.' rnfenmdum Tues
day. United States said full partner in peace effort Under the constitution, the
election to succeed Sadat was to
be held within 60 days, and ob
servers noted that the timing or
the referendum falls within that
period.
'11/DEAST WAR .V J\'(;
~\!1l/1Um 1': Colby
From Page A1
MIDEAST • • •
Saudi Arabia. a nation the size
of the U.S. east of the Mississip·
pi River but with a population of
j ust five million. is "enormously
vulnerable. strategically,"
Neumann said.
He said the small population
limits the size of Saudi Arabia's
armed forces and that AWACS
radar would greatly increase the
time the Saudis would have to
respond to attack. He said
ground·base.111 radar cannot de-
tect attackers until they are just
two minutes from their target.
Further, Neumann said that
an attack of any size. even with
adequate warning, would re·
quire outside help if it were lo be
repelled. That help, he said.
would come from the U.S.
The A WACS sale therefore is
.. a plan for greater and greater
t'ooperation between the U.S.
and Saudi Arabia for the defense
of the <Pe r sia n ) Gulf ,"
Neumann said. That defense "is
in the national interest of the
U.S.," he said .
Neumann said fears that
Saudi AWACS planes would fall
into unfriendly hands if the gov·
ern ment were overthrown are
not justified.
WASH IN GT 0 N (AP) -
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. said today that the
United States is a full partner in
the Middle East peace process
begun by the assassinated
Anwar Sadat, and pledged the
administration to "pursue his
work."
Haig told a news conference
that the United States "would
view with great concern any er-
f orts by external powers to
manipulate the tragic events of
the last 24 hours."
His statements were the first
pol icy pronouncements of the
Reagan administration on the
situation left by the assassina-
tion of the Egyptian president
Tuesday.
He said the shooting of Sadat
appears to have been an as-
sassination. not a coup.
Moreover. he said, there is no
evidence of external involve·
ment in the assassination.
··our pursuit of peace in the
From Page A1
DEATH • • •
ing four feel from him.
The officer's name will not be
released . Calnon said, until an
investigation s ubstantiates the
preliminary findings.
"We expected him <Broyles)
to go lo UC I (Medi cal Center),
not to the morgue," Broyles' dis·
traught mother sobbed this
morning.
She and her husband disputed
police reports that the two of
them had been c hased from
their home by a knife-wielding
son
·'There is no way he chased us
from the house with a knife."
she said.
The parents said Broyles, who
had a history of mental prob-
lems. had been despondent for
about a week and that Tuesday
night's episode was triggered by
talk of his seeking hospital help.
Mrs. Broyles said, "He said,
·1·m going to take these knives
and 1f anyone tries lo take me to
the hos pital. I'll kill myself'."
From Page A1
Middle East must continue to be
guided by the Camp David ac-
cords." Haig said. He said the
administration will continue ef·
forts lo complete the peace
terms fashioned by Sadat and
I s raeli Prime Minist e r
Menachem Begin in conferences
at Camp David. Md .. with then-
president Jimmy Carter.
Haig said the administration
was heartened with word from
Cairo that the Egyptian govern·
ment shares the determination
of the United States to continue
the Middle East peace process
begun by Sadat.
'Officer of Year'
in shooting death
By The Associated Press
T he sheriff's deputy involved
in the shooting death of a Fresno
man at Lake Tahoe is a former
officer of the year from Orange
County who had received
numerous co mm endations
there, a coroner's jury has been
told.
A jury in Round Hill. Nev . 1s
hearing testimony in the Sept. 19
death of Timothy Calton. 23, to
determine whether it was ac·
c1dental and whether Douglas
County Sgt. Les Osman followed
proper police procedure in the
case.
Calton allegedly was shol as
he lay s pread-eagled on the
ground after being arrested on
s u s picion of an appar ent
burglary of a church at the
south shore of Lake Tahoe, not
far from where the inquest was
held.
The s hooting occurred as
Osman was attempting lo
handcuff Calton It was later de·
termined that no break-in had
occurred.
Osman was employed by the
Orange County Sheriff's Depart
ment between 1963 and 1979, said
LL. Wyatt Ha rt . the depart·
ment"s sPQkesman.
"H e wa s an excellent
e mployee. an outstanding
employee, .. Hart said. Osman.
he noted , was promd'ted to
sergeant m 1968.
Hart said Osman in February
1974 was named "officer of the
year " for 1973 by the Saddleback
Ve1lley Exchange Club for his
work in organizing a burglary
prevention team.
Charles Rika lo of the state
Division of Narcotics and In·
vestigation testified that he re-
viewed Osman 's record in
Orange County and found only
one negative r eport among
many positive ones
He said Osman was cleared in
an investigation after he was ac·
cused of verbal a buse. He also
was voted officer of the year in
1973 and James Musick, then the
Or a nge County sheriff, told
Rikalo he would rehire Osman.
Rikalo also said he found no
conflicting statements in his in-
terviews of o fficers and
paramedics who were at the
scene of the shooting.
Judg~'s plea
to drop sex
charge denied
A San Diego Municipal Court
judge facing a jury tria l in
Newport Beach on charges of
soliciUng prostitution, has failed
to have the misdemean or
charges against him d ropped.
Judge Lewis· Wenzell argued
Tuesday before Orange County
Harbor Municipal Court Judge
Selim Franklin that the charges
should be thrown out of court
because prosecution was dis·
criminatory.
APPARENT SUCCESSOR
Hosm ."vfubarak
1.'\/TERIM PRESIDE.VT
Su/1 Abu Taleb
From Page A1
REAGAN • • •
Meanwhile, poli ce and
military intelligence sources
said Sadat's assassins were ex
tremisl Moslems. that they
pumped 15 bullets into ham ~nd
that 22 Moslem fundamentalists
were arrested after Sadat was
murdered by men in a rmy
fati gues durins a malitan·
parade Tuesday
Officials said S~iat's body re
mained at Maadi military
hospital and will not leave the
hospital until the funeral Satur
day in Nasr City, a northeast
section of Cairo where Sad.it
was slain.
Although the s peaker or the
parliament became acting presi
dent on Sadat's death, it was ap·
parent that Mubarak already
was in charge of the govern
mcnt.
Sadat's National Democratic
Party nominated Mubarak as its
candidate within hours of the as·
sassination, and the parliament
session was the next constitu-
tional step in the election pro-
cedure.
Abu Ghazala, who was seated
on Sadat's left al the military
parade when Sadat was shot,
was grim-faced and forcibly
restrained himself as he spoke
to Parliament m the televised
session.
With bandages on his right
arm and left ear for the minor
injuries he sustained during the
attack. Abu Ghazala said he
would have preferred bemg lhe
victim than to have seen Sad.al
killed.
·'The armed for ces will
always remain a shield for this
country," Abu Ghazala said with
a shaking voice. "And it is tn-'
tact. and I swear to you that
every soldier and officer would
have been prepared to sacrifice
themselves for Anwar Sadat.·•
A parliamentary committee·
proposed giving two residence$
and a special pension to Sadat's·
family, and the measure was ex
peeled to pass.
I Saudi Arabia "is one of the
most stable countries in the Mid-
dle East. bar none." though its
system of government may
seem strange to us. Neumann
said.
Neumann said Saudi Arabia's
population is s table and
homogene<>us. in stark contrast
to Iran." where various ethnic
groups create friction
AIRPORT ORDER • • •
The lrial was moved from San
Diego to Orange County after
Wenzell argued successfully that
he would not receive a fair trial
in San Diego because of pretrial
publicity
mittee, House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill and Rep. Bob Michel,
House minority leader. as well
as Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger, U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations Jeane
Kirkpatrick, and a member of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The proposal would turn over
homes on the Nile River m Giza
across from downtown Cairo.
and on the beach in the Mediler·
ranean resort city of Alexan-
dria. The amount of the pension.
was not mentioned.
Neumann said that con-
g ressional rejection of the
AW ACS sale will solve nothing
and will force Saudi Arabia to
reassess its relationship with the
U.S.
He said the Saudis will seek
s imilar equipment from Britain
and that Britain will supply it if
the A WACS sale fails, that anti·
American elements in the Saudi
government will use the rejec·
lion to argue that the U.S. is not
even-handed in its dealings with
Israel and Saudi Arabia. and
that the Saudis may seek other
strategic relationships, perhaps
with the USSR. if the sale is re·
jected.
airport operations 10 jeopardy.
among them the 41 flight-per·
day "cap" and a rule preventing
airlines from serving destina-
tions more than 500 miles away.
The latter restriction already is
subject of a separate legal
challenge by Frontier Airlines,
which operates two flights daily
between Orange County and Las
Vegas. Those flights continue to
Denver.
If the county decided not to
purs ue an appeal. and submit a
revised access plan. any appeal
that AirCal might file against
Hatter's order would be con-
s idered moot raising the
possibility that AirCal would sue
the county.
O fficials admit the pos-
sibilities r aised by the court
order are "confusing" and
··complex."
* * From Page A1 *
They say, however, the county
expects to have a clearer idea of
how it should proceed Oct. 15,
the dale by which federal at·
lorneys must s ubmit a set of
proposed "findings of fact and
conclusions of law" which Hat-
ter requested they prepare.
The county will have an addi-
tiona I 10 days to submit its
response to the proposed find·
ings. Hatter's formal order
would follow sometime later.
Officials ·said Hatter's ruling,
in essence. has placed the coun-
ty back on "square one" in its
two.year-long effort to design an
acceptable access plan that
beyond permitting addition of
new air carriers to the facility
wi II set standards for reduction
of jet noise impacts on persons
living below departure tracks.
* * *
The U.S. can help bring peace
to the Middle East if the govern-
ment can prove that it is in-
terested in solving the Palestin·
ian problem and get the Arab
world to accept the existence
and security of Israel at the
same time, Neumann said PANEL QUESTIONS. • •
"It is not tenable over time
that a million people or more
<the Palestinians) live under
foreign occupation without hav-
ing some say over their own
fate." he said.
"counlervenes the purpose of
this group."
Cavanaugh, president of Al-
lergan Pharmaceuticals of
Irvine, said the committee's ac-
tion should be viewed as ··an in·
quiry" not "a complaint." NeumaM said the peace proc·
ess started by Egypt under
Sadat i s not n ecessarily
jeopardized by Sadat's as-
sassination, but that it is too
earlytotell whatthei m pact is.
Com mittee member Henry
Wedaa. a Yorba Linda city coun·
cilman, said he didn't want the
impression left the committee
was taking a position in opposi-
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
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MAIN OFFICE
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VOL. 74, NO. 210
t1on to the board of supervisors .
Wedaa said he was "beginning
to sense·· people ··are concerned
about where we're going or not
going."
The committee, at its Sep·
tember meeting, adopted a res·
ol ution urging s upervisors lo
delay any plans for expansion of
John Wayne Airport until a re·
gional airport site was selected.
Supervisors reacted with some
displeasure the following day,
suggesti ng the co mmittee
should attend to finding a re·
giona l airport site, as was the
charge, and not concern itself
with the future of John Wayne
Air port.
And in a tollow·up letter,
Ralph Clark, board chairman,
said, "The Orange County Board
of Supervisors is very concerned
that the Blue Ribbon Regional
Airport Committee may be wan-
dering from the critical task
which we hope It accepted H lu
challenge."
The committee was formed ln
February in conjunction with
su pervisors' approval of the
John Wayne Airport Maater
Plan, which ouUines Sl~ mllllon
ln improvement.a for the faclllty.
Wenzell 's attorney. Peter
Hughes. contended t he San
Diego district attorney's office is
prosecuting his client because of
a previous philosophical dis ·
agreement on criminal issues.
Five prostitutes. all of whom
have · been granted immunity,
are scheduled to testify about al-
leged sex acts with Wenzell.
they asserted occurred between
Sept. 15, 1980 and April 2, 1981.
In ruling against Wenzell 's re-
quest to throw out the charges.
Judge Franklin cleared the way
for jury selections to begin to·
day.
Former Secretary of State
. H enry Kissi n ger a n d Sol
Linowitz, a former Middle East
peace negotiator who is an ad·
viser to Haig, a lso were invited
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin will attend the funeral of
Sadat, the Israeli government
announced today after a cabinet
meeting to assess the aftermath
of the assassination.
Mubarak declared a one-yeat
state of emergency seven hours.
after Sadat wa s m ortally
wounded by a squad of soldiers
who sprayed gunfire and hurled
grenades at a stand where
Sadat. Mubarak and other
leaders were reviewing a
milit<1ry parade commemorat-
ing the 1973 Arab Israeli war. ·we will continue in the name
of the s pirit and soul of our
leader and our constitution .
We will abide bv all treaties and
commitments nrnde," Mubarak
said in a broadcast to the
shocked nation
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-I
WISTCLIN'
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Burton recovers
from aurgery
Actor lllcllard Bartoa wu
reported in satisfactory con·
dltlon following emer1ency
auraery to repair a duodenal
ulcer, said a spokesman al
St. John's hospital In Santa
Monica.
Burton, SS, was admitted to
the hospital Thursday night
and underwent surgery Fri-
day morning, said his doctor.
Melvin Rlcbards.
It was not known when the
Welsh-born actor would be
released, hospital officials
s aid.
Vice Chancellor Joaepb
Watsoa was due in a meeting
at UC San Diego when his
s ecretary handed hlm a set
or keys and pointed to a car
outside.
Sanna Borge kisses her husband Victor Monday night at the
home of the Finnish Consul General in New York after he was
knighted ay Finland. The musician already has knighthoods
f rom Denmark. Sweden and Norway
Watson got into the wrong
one by mistake, but the igni·
lion key worked. Meanwhile.
Chancellor Richard Atkinson
discovered his car was miss-.
ing.
T he theft was reported to
campus police, and they
found Atkinson's car parked
in front of the library where
Watson had le(t it. It was
driven to the campus police
s ta tion lo be dust ed ror
prints.
Watson, meanwhile, found
his car missing from in front
of t he library and also re-
ported it stolen.
No, doctor. an officer told
him. explaining the mixup.
Although ber grandfather
is appearing in a show just a
few blocks up Broadway, ac·
tress Cathryn Harrison says
she hasn't seen Rex Harrison
in 10 years.
But Miss Harrison. a cast
m e mber of "The Life and
Ad ve ntures of Nic holas
Nickleby," adds that "we
talk regularly on the phone."
The actress, the daughter
of s inger Noel Harrison,
m a de her remarks at a party
following the opening of the
81 ~-hour, two-part play based
on a tale by Charles Dicke ns. ...........
l'1 a TV .. family reun ion ... entertainer Danny Thomas 1s r eunit·
ed with adults who once play'ed his children on ··Make Room for
Daddy .. senes -Rusty Hamer . center. and Angela Cartwright.
righ t The rew11or1 occurred on the set of ABC"s · Whatever
Miss Harrison, in her 20s.
s ays she hopes to see her
grandfather while in New
York, where he is starring in
a revival of the musical he
made famous -"My Fair
Lady ." Became of ., ..
Coastal
Sunny Thursday
Th• coHI from Sent• Barber•
soutll to Long hecll •nd Orange County wn forKHI for lllQM In 1111
upper60s.
LOI Al'IQtle$ should be sunny by
Tl'lurl<l•Y •ll•rnoon, hllvlng 111911i In Ille mld·70s.
~ ... ........,
ConalOerable c1ouos ••I• tonlollt lllrougll mldcley Tl'lursctey Sunny
Tl'lurlday •fternoan. Lows 10t11ot1t SI Temperatures 10 u Cooler Tl'lur..S.y wltl'I 11'911s In tlle lO.. E•M-. from Polnt Conception
to tllt MHl<•n borctu Ille •ln01
lont o111 wtll be from soulll to
soutllwest •I S to n 11 .... ts. Wnterly
wll'lcll of 12 lo 20 knots wlll prev•ll
over Ill• IOU!flern w•l•rs. One to 2· loot we11 to south'"11 swell
U.S. summary
Sevel'I lncllls of rall'I fell In PM"ll of
MMillle•ll -IOlll"<"'lrel Te1tes to. deJ end • flal>-flood watch wes I•
Swed
HHvy rein elso COl'ltlr>wecl ecros1
Ille PecHk NO<"l'-51, el'ld shoMrs
el'ld lhul'ldenllowers 1111 New El!ill•nd
•nd Ill• -All.ntk Coest. A csow_., w.-•••Y »ve•r·
old ••<-11'1 Sotattle end Olympl•.
Wasll., <-'no suttorecl -· ou1· •99s. offk lels sey. Tl'•• N.t..,...I W..tner Sotr•k• seld
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l U ll'l<llff fell in OIJ"'lll• durlno •
1'-llovr .. rlocl 11\111 ended Tue~y
1119111. In Tecom., the loolbell lleld ti
Sl•dlum HIQll Sc'-4 ••> put out of
t<tlOfl wflefl • »-Inell storm dr•ln
ruptured end unlus....i • debris·
1-n flOOd. Tht si.dlum u-"'' •
12 m llllon restor.tlon last r••r
A wutller .. rvlce ottlcl•I u lo
river lewis -. "ll04dlll0. .. IMlud·
lftt tllOH nur Mount St Helens.
II Ive rs dr•lnlnt Ille southwest
W•1lllngton volceno ll•v• been dred9ed since lb IUy II, 1'10, erup.
lion <'°'99d ,......., wltll debris
G•le w•mlnvs -• POiied tor Ille New Entl•nd coHt, Ill• ustern
Grut Leltes -the coests of o.._
•ncl WHl'llnQton. Tiie N•tlon•I We•tl>er Service
lore<ast lor todey <•lllQ for rtll'I
e<rou -Enolend to 111e Mst•r" Gr••I L•kes. Sc•tl•r•d lllUn·
derllorms -. -Mt lot Teu1,
.... MMilllem PYlns, Ille -r Ml•
llUIPC>I V•lley, Nsteni 0r99Qf'I end
W•lflln;ton st.te •nd nort~n VIAii.
California
Tiie N•llonel Weetller Servlu IOA<est c~. c~ _.ttwr for
.sovtt>ern CAll!orNe ~ Tllun-
dey, wltll -oustY wlftds In IN
-l•lnS-*-1:s.
Winds uP to 315 lftPfl 5Nulel Mow
mell'llJ """°""' tne ~ de-11 elld Al'l'"°Clf Velley, _,.. 111911..,,.,.
"retu"'1 Sllaulel be from 15 to IS.
Tiie lower deurlt •l'ld lower
COlortldO RI_. velleys 1'-ld hit,... ).1911t from IS to ts. Tiie ,,.,.,.....,_ Wiii ....... )0 mpfl 941t(•, Mtfl !emper9tu,... In 1t1e 60I
end lows ln tM 40s. Tiie velleys
:Should .. -y by ~., ... .,.
-...-. wlttl,,.... In tlle 70S..
hly""9tDelnry ......... ~
Albeny
Albuqw
Amerlllo
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Atlanta
Allentc Cly Baltimore
Blrmlnollm B1$1nercll
BolM B~ton
Brownsvlle
Buffalo
Cllerl1tn SC
CMrtstnWV c11erenne
Chluvo
Clnclnnetl
Clevel•nd
ColUmbus
Oel·FI wtl'I
Denver
Des Moll'IH Detroit
Duluth
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SI 1.01 S.nle An<t Blytl'le ••
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Hartford
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Honolulu
Houston
lnclnaplls
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I -I -TOOAY
ll:SOe.m. O.•
Se~~o:-=::c•> pow M P'lrstllf911 TMURID~!, •. m. U Tr1e_:~~f:;_.1 -"•· "'"' -12:41 p.m. 2.4 1'1111 1 .-.. S.C-11"'1 6:J4p.m. 4.t ~=;: n 1 -U S.COftlllow(P'rleley) l:IU.m. O.J
Sen Onof,. t -U '61n _.. at 6:2' p,m. llltn Thun-TOMOAllOWS fl OU: H"" 7:)0 em ~ 11:41 p.m .• Swell dlf'9Ctteft MYIU:lh.m.
Sovt....._ MMn rlMs at J:CM p.m. s.11 r-. RE..oltTIHG AGENCIES: ~ ,.,_, -.W Sell!, JeM ll9-, dey _. ll:J1 e.m.
OevlCI «>!~• ~ry Dick. Grtt ~viii-.
we're Listening •••
What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number below and your message will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
Ttle aame 24-hour answering service may be used to record let·
lei's t.O the edit.or on any topic .. Mailbox contributors must Include
their name and telephone number for vertficaUon. No circulation calls, please.
Tell ua what's orr your mind. .... 842~086
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981 H/F
Onofre repair 'OK'
Allegations of shoddy work dismissed in NRC report
A soon-to-be-released report
by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission concludes that al·
legation s of s hoddy
workmanship during repalrs to
Unit l of the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station are ground-
less.
"Our basic conclusion is that
we couldn't find any evidence to
s ubstantiate the allegations."
NR C s pokesman James
Hanchett said Tuesday.
The federal agency put an In·
vesllgator to work on the matter
in late June after three former
Atlantic Nuclear Services Co.
employees claimed that a 14·
month repair job at San Onofre
was characterized by shoddy
work, drug use by employees
and overexposure of workers to
radiation.
Videotex program
planned in Viejo
The charges were made dur·
ing Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board hearings in San Diego
dealing with Southern California
Edison Co. applications for new-
ly built Units 2 and 3 at San
Onofre.
Unit 1 has been in operation
since 1968.
One or the three workers,
David Nightingale, 32 , had
claimed that he was guilty of
"very shoddy work" when he
helped install met.al. sle~ves ~o
repair corroded p1pmg m Unit
l 's s team generators. About
l ,000 t e mporary wo rkers
handled the repairs.
By KEITH TUBER
OeMy• .... ...._ • ....,
Bank of Americ a will
participate in a pilot home
videotex program beginning in
the first quarter of 1982, it was
announced.
The pilot is managed by the
Times -Mirror Videotex Services
Inc., a division of the Times-
Mirror Corp., and will Involve
150 homes in Mission Viejo and
200 in the Palos Verdes area.
Participating households,
selected frofll a combination of
Bank of America customers and
random interviews , will use a
terminal and a color television
set to receive the service. Those
in Palos Verdes will use
telephone hook-ups while the
Mission Viejo group will have a
two-way cable hook·up for com·
municalion.
"'The bank will participate in
the Times-Mirror pilot, one of
the most innovative in the coun-
try. to gain experience and data
on cons ume r accepta nce of
video home banking," said
Stephen Yotter. tiank vice presi-
dent and head of retail elec·
tromc marketing.
"We expect to e valuate this
pilot carefully before making
any decisions on expansion of
the service."
Jim Holly , executive vice
president and general manager
of Times -Mirror Videotex:
Services, said the syster:i will of·
fer a lot more than bank mg.
"There will be a broad range
of information and services, in·
eluding a lineup of hard news,"
Holly said. "We 'll have the AP
wire. excerpts from the L.A.
Times publishing system, calen-
dar and large chunks of Times
classified. as well as consumer
news, career guidance. college
information, money and finan-
cial matters and health tips.''
B y us ing the s y s tem ,
Extension
of Farmers
Market OK'd
The certified farmers market
program operating at Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa has been extended through
next March, an Orange County
Farm Bureau s pokes man has
announced .
The farm bureau was granted
a . six-month extension for its
market from the Orange County
Fair board on Sept. 24 .
The certified market. open to
the public between noon and 6
p.m. every Thursday, offers pro-
duce lo consumers direct from
selling growers at reduced cost,
the spokesman said .
The market, located in a fair-
grounds parking lot at 88 Fair
Drive. Costa Mesa, opened July
23 as the first such operation in
Orange County.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Cutified G~molo1111t. AGS
GOLD STRIKE
at dam site
The days of gold strikes in the
American West are not over.
Two construction companies
digging earth to build a dam up
in Oregon struck it rich recent-
ly. As they moved earth for the
big Applegate River Dam, they
hit what has been estimated at
$2.5 million in gold ore. With so
many workers involved in the
dam project, it didn't take long
for the word to spread, and the
rush was on. Amateur prospe<:-
tors lined the river bank thicker
than fishermen on the opening
day or trout season. There have
been reports of these prospe<:-
tors averaging about a hall
ounce of gold a day. At today's
gold prices, that's a pretty good
day's work. However, the two
construction companies, under
a mineral rights agreement
signed with the federal govern·
m ent, which owns the land,
must turn over 20 percent of
their find to Uncle Sam. 1be
amateurs will be harder to col·
lect from. Gold fever la a condi·
lion that still lives in the West.
,
f.
households will be able to pay
bills by compute r , transfer
funds and check current
bala n ces. Holly s aid. Also
a vailable will be programs for
shopping, concert·ticket buying,
vacations and travel, a host of
games and a local community
bulletin bo ard to advertise
g arage s ales and other ac ·
tivities.
··People on the pilot program
will be able lo send letters to
each other electronically." Holly
sa 1d "Every hous ehold will
have an electronic mailbox."
The pilot, he said. would last.
a bout nine months . Bank of
Ameri ca is not committed
beyong the extent of the test.
"We plan to ask a lot of ques -
tions. to find out what people
like and wha t they don't ,"
Holly said ... There will be an
awful lot of marke ting re·
searc h."
Two other former employees.
David Pierce, 27. and Max Man·
ning. 49, told "the federal licens·
ing board of witnessing drug
a buse and other examples of
poor workmans hip.
Orricials at Atlantic Nuclear
Services Inc .. the firm contract·
ed to handle the repairs . denied
the allegations . Edison Co. of-
fi cials said that any work that
was done incorrectly was quick-
ly repaired followin_g inspec·
lions.
or the investigation that
ens ued. the NRC's Hanchett
s aid. "The trouble with the
charges was that they were sort
of cosmic in nature. They were
not very specific.''
.............
SOLEMN TASK -An Egyptian Embassy e mployee in
Was hington lowe r s the Egy ptian flag to half s t'.iff afte r as ·
s a ssination of President Anwar Sadat was confirmed Tues ·
d ay.
-------------....
H/F Orange Coast OAILVPtLbT/Wednesda9. October 7, 1981
Non-commercial
flight cut,. begins
WASHINGTON (APl Cut
backs in non-commercial air
, traffic in the New York, Chicago
~nd Cleveland areas take effect
today under an order designed
to reduce the number of delayed
flights .
The Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration order. announced
Tuesday, affects general avaia·
lion airplanes flying under In·
strumenl flight rules. It will be
in effect through Oct. 19, when a
nationwide program for private
generaJ aviation planes will be
implemented.
· Young in ru11o f f
for A tlant a post
r • . .
t I
, ,
~
ATLANTA <AP) Former
United Nations Ambassador ;\n·
drew Young a nd slate Rep.
Sidney Marcus meet in a runoff
election for mayor on Oct. 27
after eliminating five minor can·
didates in a votf> apparently de·
cided largely along racial lines
Complete· but ·unofficial re·
turns Tuesday gave Young, 49, a
narrow lead over Man·us. 53, in
their battle lo succeed Mayor
May nard Jackson. the first
black ever elected to the city's
highest office. Jackson, who sup-
ported Young, was barred by
law from seeking a third term.
Wreck searched
for 17 v ictims
MOERDIJK, Netherlands
<AP ) -Slate police and civil
aviation investigators searched
the wreckage of a Dutch
domestic airliner today for the
remains of 17 crash victims in-
cluding a New York s hipping ex-
ecutive, Eugene Bernard Kelly.
Hard-sell rwte
scuttle d b y GOP
, WASHINGTON <AP l -On
While Hou se orders ,
Republicans have scuttled a
hard-sell fundraising letter that
told r e lucta nt contributors
President Reagan was personal-
' .
. .,.,, -..
ly interested in "why you're
holding back."
Lyn Nofziger, the president's
political director, said he was
s hown a copy on Sept. 25 and re-
garded 'lit as "about the limit of
fund raising letter hyperbole."
He s aid he immediately asked
the National Republican
Senatorial Committee to quit
sending the Jetters and was told
the mailings would end.
$260,000 awarded
in suicid e case
PONTIAC, Mich. <AP> -The
family of a young man who shot
himself to death in the hospital
where he was a mental-health
outpatient has been awarded
$260 ,000 in a negligence finding
against the hospital.
St even Goldstein, 23, an-
nounced at a group therapy
s ession that "he was going to
solve all his problems and com-
mit s uicide," bought a rifle, re·
turned to the third floor or the
hospital and fired a bullet into
has head. said the Goldstein
family lawyer. David Kratze.
5,000 re tu rn
aft er d era ilment
MARYSVILLE. Wash. <APl
About 5,000 people evacuated
when a train derailed and seven
chemical tank cars overturned
were allowed to return to their
homes today
Burlington Northern railroad
officials said conditions were
··safe for people to return to the
area" where 24 cars of a 76-car
train jumped the track Monday
night.
Builde rs push
for loiver rat,es
WASHINGTON <A P ) -House
builders and sellers have joined
auto dealers in asking im-
mediate government action to
bring down high interest rates
that have crippled their in·
dustries
Sadftt death will slow peace try
WASHINGTON <AP> -At
best, the assasslnaUon of Egyp.
lian President Anwar Sadat will
slow progress toward U.S. ef-
forts to achJeve a com ·
prehensive Middle East peace
and a security consensus to keep
the Soviets out of the troubled
oil-rich region, experts say.
Egypt's continuing coopera·
tion is considered essential to a
U.S. policy already beset by dis·
pute over an American arms
sale to Saudi Arabia, friction
with the Israeli government of
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin and the loss of Iran as the
anchor ally in the Persian Gulf.
U.S. officials were optimistic
that the new Egyptian
leadership, expected to be led by
Vice President Hosni Mubarak,
would carry o n Sadat 's
moderate policies . Mubarak
co nfe rred with President
Reagan in Washington onl y last
week and is regarded as a U.S.
friend.
The big question, though, is
whether the new leadership will
be strong enough to continue
Sadat's policies at all in the face
of OPPOSition at home and from
other Arab leaders, such as
Libyan leader Moammar
Khadafy, Sadat's arch-enemy.
The answer won't be known for
some time.
Sol Linowitz, former Middle
East peace negotiator and now
an adviser to Secretary of State
Alexander M. llaig Jr., called
Sadat ""an irreplaceable man."'
"It would be naive to assume
that once this tragic event has
happened, you can be s ure how
the Camp David (peace) process
will be carried forward, whether
1l will have the same kind of
commitment, the same kind of
urgency about it," Linowitz told
* * *
N'EWS ANALYSIS
The Associated Press.
The search for peace between
Israel and the Arab world
already had snagged on the
question of Palestinian
autonomy.
Since the fall or Iran's late
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
in 1979, Sadat was the only Arab
leader or stature who was openly
supportive or U.S. foreign policy
in the region.
Experts now wonder whether
anyone in the Arab world can af·
ford to step forward to embr ace
U.S. goals.
··The image of the only Arab
leader making peace with rsrael
and betting on the United Slates
being eliminated may well make
others or that persuasion quite
ca utious." said William Quandt,
a Middle East specialist on the
National Security Council in
Jimmy Carter's White House.
"It is not a good sign for
moderation."
Moderate Arab stat es such as
Saudi Arabia had broken with
Egypt a fter Sadat began to
make peace with Is rael. and
virtually none supported the 1978
Ca mp David peace accords
between Egypt. Israel and the
Un ited Stales.
U.S. officials were encouraged
by a statement by Egypt's U.S.
ambassador. Ashra f Ghorbal,
Tuesday that Egypt will con·
tinue the Camp David process
and that "a close relationship
with the United States wall re-
m a in a cornerstone of Egyptian policy ..
* * *
Sadat Assassination Dlagr~m
••••• •••··~~n~ ••••• ......__ 7 gm 9',Q
•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ------------------·
I
I
I 1:::113
I 1:::03
- -----.Troops Open Fire a
Cherge Aewlewtng St8nd
Reviewing Stald~ ...-J. ~. ' ~--< Abu OhUala f Muberek
s.ilet
.............
Truck . shaded. earned attackers who killed Egypt1ar1 President
Anwar Sadar. Chart shows where Sadat Egypt Vice President
/losm Mubarak ana Def ense .\11111ster Abdel lla/1m Abu Ghazal/a
were m reviewing stand ..-
u.s readiness hike warning to Libya
WASHINGTON IAPI -In an
obvious warning to Libya. some
elements of the U.S. Rapid
Deployment Force and
American warships in the
Mediterranean were under or·
ders to m aintain increased
readiness today after the as-
sassination of Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar SadaL ..
The Pentagon described the
measures as "prudent steps"
and stressed that no troops in
the United States were on the
move and no ships had been
given special sailing orders an
the Mediterranean.
Officials who asked not to be
identified indicated that the
move was intended to make an
impression on Libyan leader
Moammar Khadafy or others
who might be tempted to create
instability inside Egypt, a strong
U.S. ally under Sadat.
··we have full confidence in
the Egyptian transition
process," the Pentagon slate·
ment said.
The announcement came after
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. was quoted by senators
after a briefing as saying
K hadafy's government may
have known in advance of
Sadat's assassination by Egyp-
tian soldiers riding in a military
parade.
Sen. Roger Jepsen, R-lowa,
said Haig reported a broadcast
by Radio Tripoli within minutes
of the attack ··was very intense
and very voluminous ... so in·
tense that in the secretary's
judgment. it had to have been
Cambridge
'
Le ss than
0.1 mg tar
prepared ahead of time."
The radio announcer urged
Egyptians to revolution and said •
they should "march on the
hospital" and destrd'.V Sadat's
body. Jepsen said.
Commanders have a wide
range of options to increase
r ewdiness, ranging from keeping
their forces within easy reach to
assembling units and equipment
for air movement overseas.
Sources said no transport
planes had been ordered into
position to pick up any troops.
\ t
·; . ...
.~TI ill TI~
Methane _gas leak
closes 3 schools
OCEANSIDE (AP) -School
ts out today and tomorrow for
about 1,300 students al three
•c bool s b eca u se or a
"dangerous" methane gas leak.
The Oceanside School Board
Tuesday order ed the schools
closed for at least two days and
possibly the rest or the school
year beeause of a toxicologist's
finding that methane gas lea.k-
ing from a landfill near the
schools had reached a haiardous
level or 65 percent
The board m ade arrange-
ments for sending the displaced
youngsters to three other schools
beginning Friday on shortened
class schedules
N ew blood test
eyed for actor
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
judge is pondering today
whether to allow a relatively
n ew blood test, cons idered
highly reliable by the medical
community, to be used as
evidence in the upcoming
pate rnity trial involving actor
Chad Everett and a woman who
claims he fathered her son. who
is now 8.
The court battle, which has
s tretched out over eight years
and is scheduled for trial later
this week. could be heavily in-
fluenced by the blood test.
Major earthquake
'if' in Bay area
STAN FORD CAP 1 More
than 25,000 people could lose
their lives if a major earthquake
strikes the San Francisco Bay
are a, according to a report from
Stanford University's Commit·
tee on Earthquake Prepared·
ness.
T he committee. headed by
Pro fessor J a mes Gere, CO·
director of the Blume Earth·
quake Engineering Center at
Stanfo rd. said in 1ls report that
there is at least a 30 percent
chance that the San Francisco
Bay area will have another
large earthquake within 10
years.
'· Accordine to results of
se'veral careful estimates, the
total loss of life to be expected in
a major earthquake striking the
bay region could range from 500
to 25,000 or more," the report
said, adding that the life losses
would be affected by the quake's
magnjtude and timing, the reac-
tion of people caught in the
quake and their preparation for
It.
Ku1vait to buy
drilling f inn?
ALHAMBRA IAPJ -Officials
of a Southern California oil-
drilling company are confident
that a possible congressional in-
vestigation will not delay the
$2.5 billion sale of their firm to
the Arab kingdom of Kuwait.
"We do not feel that such an
investigation will have any ef-
f ec t on the c l osing of this
transaction," said Bill Walker, a
s pokesman for Alhambra-based
Santa Fe International Corp.,
which is involved in oil and
natural gas exploration around
the world.
R eporte r ba1111Rd
on Curb's plane
LOS ANGELES <AP > -Lt.
Gov. Mike Curb's campaign has
refused to allow reporter Linda
Breakstone. who wrote critical
stories about the lieutenant gov
ernor. to travel on his campaign
plane.
Curb's campaign manager.
Ken Ri etz, did not return a
telephone call Tuesday asking
about the incident.
Last week, Curb's staff of
rered reporters seats. on a first-
come, first-ser ved basis at $218
each. on the plane that will take
Curb to news confe r e nces
Wednesday to announce his can-
didacy for the R epubli can
nom in a lion for governor. The
conferences are in Sacram ento.
Fres no , San Francisco. San
Diego and Los Angeles.
ACTRESS DIES G loria
Grahame. 51. winner of the
Academy Award for her sup-
porting rule in .. The Bad and
the Beautiful. · has died in
St \'incent ·s Hospital in
:"llew York of an und isclosed
i llnl'SS
Border 'Patrol
agents warned
of 'threat~'
SAN YSIDRO (AP J -Border
Patrol agents at the world's
busiest border crossing have
been alerted to a bizarre threat
offering a $1,000 bounty for kill·
ing an agent or immigration of·
firer in San Diego, a n immigra·
tion official said.
Robert Mitton. deputy district
director of the Immigration and
Naturalization Ser vice, said
Tuesday that word of the threat
was sent from the INS regional
office in San Pedro to the San
Ys idro port or entry on the U.S.-
Mexican border.
The warning posted Monday
says .. a confidential infor mant
of unknown reliability'· told the
Sa n Pedro INS office of a
"'rumor circulatmg within the
Tijuana-San Ysidro area" or the
bounty offer.
Mitton said offi cers s hould
"do everything possible to pro-
tect themselves." adding that
some officers are carrying re·
volvers between their homes
and work as well as on the job.
some for the firs t time
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7, 1981 HIF AS
Shakeup in Sacramento
B .T. Co llins to r epl ace Gray D avis on Br own 's staff
SACRAMENTO <AP> Fast,
talking B.T. Collln!l, the unique
Republican in Gov Edmund
Brown Jr 's top echelon, is to
take over as the Democratic
governor's chief of staff.
And the man he replaces, 38·
year.old Democrat Gray Davis,
the governor's carefully attired,
polis hed top aide Cor the past
seven years, says he hopes to
run for the state Assembly in the
43rd District. the West Los
Angeles seat currently held by
Democrat Howard Berman.
Both men announced their
plans at a restaurant reception
hosted by Brown late T uesday
Said Davi s, "If Howard
Berman vacates bis seat, It's
quite likely I'll run for the 43rd
District After seven years I'd
hke to do !>Omething in my own
right ··
Collins. who left an arm and a
leg in Vietnam. is currently
director of the Califo r nia
Conservation Corps. lie h as
boasted throughout his nearly
seven years with Brown that he
is a Republican and a con·
servative one al that.
He told reporter!> he will be
Brown's chief of staff "for the
las t year whi c h is the
toughest "
Brown himself Is an all-but·
formally·announced contender
for the Democratic nomination
for the U.S. Senate seat held by
Republica n incumbent S I
Hayakawa
··Where else could I get a real
JOb?" quipped Collins. 40 "If I
don't like it 1t·h1ef or staffl' I'll
quit in tears ··
Brown's office said Collins and
Davis will hold a JOtnl press
br1ef1ng Wednesday 1n
Sacramento to announce the
s hakeup. Later in the day. Davis
is expected to announce his
poli\ical plans al a Los Angeles
news conference.
Davis' post as chief of staff is
regarded as th<.' most powerful
non-elected post in state govern
ment When President Reagan
was governor, his c hief of staff
was Edwin Meese lll.
While Davis is reslramed in
demeanor and careful never to
contradict the governor. Collins
is outgoing, blunt and highly vis·
ible. He recently was featured m
a 20 -m inute nationwide
television mini-documentary on
the CCC
R1'.'PLACEMr:VT
B T Col/ms
srr:l'J>t\·<; 1xnn
Del Mar couple
sought in theft
DEL MAR <API R Mark
Golden , an attorney ,
psychiatrist and· owner of the
local weekly newspaper , hasn't
been seen since Sept 16
He told friends he was gomg to
llawaii on business But police
say he told prospective tenants
whose deposits he already
had collected he was going to
J apan for two years with the
Stale Department
Today Colden is sought as Ray
Charles Stoekle, accused on
eight counts of grand theft in
California and wanted in
Wi sconsin for parole violation
and escape while serving time
for armed robbery.
Municipal Judge Napoleon
.Jones issued an arrest warrant
for Stoekle and his wife, Jeanne.
also identified in the affidavit as
Lulu Jene Larson. wanted in
Wisconsin for failure to pay
alimony lo her former husband.
Jones set bail last Friday for
the couple at $100,000 each
In the <.'omplainl issued b}
lkpuly District Attorney Robert
Blum, thL' plump and bespec
tacl<'d Stockle. 51. and his wife
were actuscd of renting their
$180.000 home eight times al
once and acct•ptmg a total of
Sl0.450 in deposits before leaving
lO\\n
Tht• Stockles n•qu1red Sl ,300
dt.'pos1l each in renting their
home to eight individuals for two
years. s tarting last Thursday
The rent was S650 a month
The Stoekles took their two
children out of school and were
las t reported seen Sept 16, San
Diego police Detective Dave
Englbh said .
Stoi>klc told friends he was go-
1 ng to llawa11 on business,
English s<Jid, but told prospec
t1vc renters he was with the
Stale Department and being as-
'iigncd to Japan for two years.
The Del Mar News· Press. tht
newspaper Sloekle bought tn Ju.
ly, was quietly closed up thret-
weeks ago
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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 1981
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEV ISION
82-3
87
89
---
Newport Beach firm's
financial, legal problems
snowballing . See Page B4 .
Huntington protests sl1ir on its coast
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .... CHlly PIMt --
Huntington Beach officials are
sending a formal letter or pro·
test to rederal authorities over a
report that identifies the city's
9-mile-long coastline as odorous
and unattractive.
The report commissioned by
the U.S. Department of the In·
terior and released last May
found the city's extensive oil
operations wlSlghUy
City Council members
criticized the report Monday for
not recognizing a new city or-
dinance r equiring oil pump
operators to clean up their
project s by (encing a nd
landscaping the developments.
City officials also noted that
the bluffs a rea a bove Bolsa
Chica State Beach is scheduled
to become a sea view park next
summer and landscaped with
grass. shrubs a nd trees
Presently, there 's a mix of
pipelines and oil pumps on the
bluffs.
·'We're suggesting that they
come back and take another
look." said CQuncilwoman Ruth
Balley.
The report gives the city a low
aesthetic rating because "odors
and noises of oil development
and power plant are the major
liabilities to the area "
Huntington Beach was given 11
mark of '8 on a scale of 100.
T he report also stated that the
city 's ocean horizon is
"dominated" by two existing
offs hore platforms within the
3·mile state waters.
·'The modest housing aod old
downtown area of Huntington
Beach fronting the ocean is clut·
tered with oil wells scattered
.helter-skelter ." the report
states.
Pay • raise offer OK'd
Coast co llege instructors accept 7% increase for 1981-82
Coast Community College Dis·
trict full -time instructors have
overwhelmingly approved a 7
percent pay raise for the 1981·82
school year.
The increase is expected to be
approved tonight by district
trustees at an 8 o'clock meeting
in district headquarters, 1370
Adams Ave.
During mediation sessions last
week, t he district initially held
to the 5 percent offer, while the
teachers asked for a 9&ri percent
raise.
When the district increased its
offer to the original 7 percent
figure, teacher representatives
agreed lo present it to their
membershjp for a vote.
The pay raise, retroactive to
J uly t. 1981, covers the final
year of the teachers' three-year
contr act with the djstrict
A FT spokesman Aronson said
negotiations for a new contract
will begin in February.
Along with the pay raise for
full -time teachers. the college
district trustees also will con·
sider a similar 7 percent raise
for the district's 900 classified
employees. The group includes
non-teaching per sonnel such as
office workers and maintenance
employees
RES/G.\".'i POS'/'
Robert \'ollmer
The pay raise proposal affects
a bout 700 full-time teachers at
Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa, Golden West College in
Huntington Beach and Coastline
College, which offers c lasses
t hroughout the district.
Ed Aronson. spokesman for
American Federation Teachers.
which repres ents the faculty,
said 56 percent of the eligible in·
s tructors voted Monday and
Tuesday on the pay proposal.
Huntington, Mesa
bus run nixed
FV01anager
• • qu1tt1ng
• a surpnse
Robert Vollmer, city manager
of Fountain Valley since Jan. l ,
1980. has resigned unexpectedly
Personnel director Bill
Ackerman said Vollmer, 53, sub·
milted h.is resignation to the City
Council Tuesday night, citing on-
ly "personal reasons."
The resignation was effective
immediately. City Comptroller
Howard Stephens has been
named acting city manager.
An official statement from Ci·
ty Hall today said the council ac·
cepted Vollmer's resignation
with regret.
The statement said council
me mbers "noted that the city
has continued to do well in all
r e s pects during Vollmer's
tenure as manager.··
Vollmer. who was paid a
$47 ,500 annual salary. was un·
available for comm1?nt today
He was appointed to the Foun-
tain Valley post after serving as
city manager of Palos Verdes
Estates for 14 years. He was
selected from among 100 appli-
cants to succeed long-time Foun·
tain Valley City Manager James
Neal.
Although the plans for select·
ing a new city ma nager have not
been completed, Councilwoman
Barbara Brown said today an in-
terim city manager probably
will be appointed in the coming
weeks to oversee city matters
while the council recruits a
permanent successor to Voll·
mer.
Mrs. Brown said the council
has no one in mind immediately
fo r the interim post.
He said 344 approved the dis·
trict offer, while 51 rejected it.
L a s t Jun e . the college
teachers rejected a similar 7
percent pay r a ise by a 2·1
margin. But th e fol lowi ng
month. the district learned it
would receive substantiall)f:less
money from the st ate than had
been anticipated.
District officials then cut their
pay raise offer.to 5 percent
FV appoints
fire chief
Richard E . Jorgensen, 44, has
been appointed fire chief of
Founta in Valley, succeeding
Tom Feierabend, who resigned
in May during a dispute with the
City Council.
Jorgensen, a battalion chief
with the Buena Park Fire
Department, will assume the
$40,800 per year post Nov 1.
His appointment was recom·
mended Tuesd ay night by
former City Manager Robert
Vollmer and was approved by
the City Council.
Jorgensen was among 17 peo·
pie from around the state who
applied for the position.
Man killed
in p arking lot
A white man in his late 20s or
early 30s was found stabbed to
death in the parking lot of a
Westminster savings and loan
early today, police reported.
Identification of the victim is
being withheld until the next of
kin is notified, police said. The
body was found at 6:45 a.m. next
to Household Savings and Loan
at the southwest corner of Beach
Boulevard and Westminster
Avenue
A segment of a public bus
route that runs from South Coast
Plaza through Costa Mesa to
Huntington Beach will be delet·
ed during the mid-day beginning
m February.
The portion of route No. 80
<Victoria Street) will be used
during peak commuting hours
but not from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m.
each day, the Orange County
Transit District Board of Direc-
tors have decided.
The cutback in service on the
route was part of modifications
made to 27 local bus routes by
the directors. The change will go
into effect beginning Fe b. 7.
Route No. 80 links the Santa
Ana Civic Center to the Seacliff
Shopping Center in Huntington
Beach The portion to be deleted"
during non-commuting hours
hours is in the southern part,
from South Coast Plaza to Hunt-
ington Beach
The segment runs from Bear
Street to Baker Street. do~n
Fairview Road to Newport
Boule vard and to Victoria
Street, north of Magnolia Street
to Atlanta Avenue, to Orange
A venue. 17th Street and Main
Street in Huntington Beach.
The Costa Mesa Traffic Com·
mission, a city committee, had
objected in a letter to the district
about the deletion.
But Ed Buckley, district
service development manager.
said Monday the buses on the
route haven"t picked up the
minimum 12 passengers per
hour set as a minimum require-
ment.
Seventy percent of the riders
on the route are commuting to
work or school, so there is little
demand during the middle of the
day, he said . The district figures
to save $00,000 per year by cut·
ting back service, he said.
He also noted that service on
other bus routes through Costa
Mesa, including routes No. 43,
Wayne statue hassle ended
Actor's likeness expected to be installed at OC airpor t
After more than two years of wrangling, it ap-
pears a larger-than-lire size statue of the late actor
John Wayne will be installed at the airport that
bears h.is name.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors,
without discussion. Tues day approved an agree-
ment that will permit the statue project to move
forward.
The agreement is being entered into by the
county, proprietor of the airport; Bruce Nott.
founder of John Wayne Memorial Associates, a
group promoting the statue project. and Wayne
Enterprises, headed by Michael Wayne, a son of
t he actor.
The revised agreement was drafted after
county officials objected to a proposed contract
submitted in July. They argued the county could
have been held liable for protecting the copyright
or the 9-foot statue.
Under the new agreement, the county simply
agrees not to actively merchandise the statue.
Nott proJ)()sed the statue project ln 1979 s hortly
a rter the airport was renamed John Wayne Airport
following the famed actor's death.
The statue will be based on a cuting prepared
by Michael Summers, a Glen Rose, Texas,
acu1ptor retained by lbe associat e& to develop tbe
llkene.u.
In other acUort Tuesday. lhe supuvlsora took
action on these issues:
T RANSPORTATION: Requested the federal
Highway Administration add t he San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor, a proposed 14-mile route
from MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to
the Santa Ana Freeway north of San Juan
<.;ap1strano. to its list or projects eligible for
federal funding.
DANA POINT: Authorized installation of
parking meters to charge 2S cent.s per hour al the
165-space parking Jot at Puerto Place and Del
Obispo Street at the Dana Point Harbor.
WATER DISTRICTS: Initiated action to allow
534 acres of land known as Sycamore Hills to be
annexed into the Laguna Beach County Water Dis-
trict from the Moulton-Niguel Water District.
BALL OF ADMI NISTRATION : Bolstered
security measures for the county government
center In Santa Ana by orderin1 a $17.000
automatic rolling grill system to replace wooden
parklng gate arms for the basement 1ara1e.
FLOOD CONTROL: Selected the PRC Toups
engineering nrm of Sant.a Ana t.o conduct a study
on whether to mike lmprovemellta to the Gr-een-
vllle·Banning nooc1 control channel between Ed·.
Inger Avenue ln Santa Ana and Glsler Avenue ln
C~Ui Mesa.
a
I
45, 51, 53 and 57, will remain un-
ch anged.
Meanwhile, the board of direc-
tors also decided to add a new
route running north-south
between Huntington Beach, at
Warner Avenue at Springdale
Street, to Cypress College, at
Valley View Street and Lincoln
A venue. It will be called route
No. 21
Expansion
of club
rejected
Huntington Beach officials
have denied the proposed ex·
pansion of Huntington Harbour
Bay and Racquet Club.
Doris Ahadpour. co-owner of
the club with her husband, asked
city council members Monday
for permission to build 42 guest
cottages. a 600-square-foot gym
nasium health spa, add 26 boat
slips and to put a fence around
the property.
L ast month, city planning
commissioners also denied her
expansion request because they
ruled the proposed structures
would cover up four existing ten-
nis courts and sandy beach and
would viola te the recreational
open space zoning for the area.
City council members unan·
i m o u s ly agreed with that
earlier decision.
Purchased by the Ahadpours
for $4.2 million last year, the
faciln.y has been closed one year
for $1 million in remodeling,
Mrs . Ahadpour says. She has
said the proposed expansion is
needed to save the waterfront
club from bankruptcy.
She said the proposed guest
cottages would only be available
to club m e mbe rs and their
guests for overnight stays near
the boat slips by the club, local·
ed on Warner Avenue just east
of Pacific Coast Highway.
But several local res idents, in·
e luding one with sever al hun·
dred signatures on petitions.
complained that the cottages
would actually be a waterfront
hotel and would b e inap-
propriate for the residential and
recreational area.
Two residents spoke at the
hearing and said they represent·
ed groups willing to pay several
million to buy the Ahadpours
out. But the club owners' at·
torney Bruce Werlhol said it
wasn't for sale.
City approves
2 parks plans '
Plans for two community
parks in Huntington Beach have
bee n approved by city olllcials.
They include the 2-acre Helme
Park, near Ellla Avenue and
Chapel Lane, a nd the 18-1cre
Langenbeck Park , near
Ma1nolla Street and Garfield
Avenue.
Clty otnctlla uUmate It wtU
1 cost $109,000 to develop Relme
Park and '686,'700 for Lanaen· beck.
..
Alex C. Watt, a federal geog·
rapher and coordinator of the
report, says the study equally
recognizes natural scenic beauty
and what appears to be ap·
proprlat.e and pleasing blends or
architecture.
He said the report will be used
by federal officials next June to
help decide which oil tracts in
Southern California s hould be
leased for private oil explora·
lion.
Ile said the general purpose of
the report is to determine which
area s would sutrer lhe least
scenic damage by development
of oil platforms in f ederal
waters three miles ofts hore. He
said the report indicates that on
the Orange Coast Huntington
Beach would have the least to
lose by development or ocean oil
derricks
Delly Net SQff ..._
KNOT TO WORRY Es1:<1pc artist ~like Griffin is lied uµ hv
Matthew Miller . ct 13-vcar-old s tudent at Owver School 1n
Huntington Reach Gri°ffin. of Costa '.\1es<.i. de mon!-ttratect ht...,
prowess at rt'cent M·hool a~st'mhl ~ 1 ll' h<.1d 110 t l'll1thll· gt•I
ting frcl'
Two facing trial
in HB Illan's death
Two men accused of lowering
a truck cab onto a Huntington
Beach man. causing him to s uf-
focate, have been order ed to
stand trial in Orange County
Supe rior Court on murder
charges .
Following a preliminary hear-
ing, transient James Dunagan.
26, and Willie Wisely. 28, of Hun·
tington Beach, were ordered to
appear for Superior Court ar·
raignment Oct. 12. according to
Orange County Deputy District
Attorney Mike Jacobs.
The district attorney's office
has charged the pair in connec·
t1on with the March 9 death of
J-luntington Beach truck driver
Robert Bray, 61. Bray was
Wisely"s stepfather
According to police. Bray was
found pinned between his tilt·
away truck cab and the truck
chassis on Springdale Street
south of Edinger Avenue .
The death initially was
thought to be accidental, but
further investigation led police
to believe the truck cab was
lowe red on Bray intentionally
Huntington limits
campaign donations
Huntington Beach officials
have approved new campaign
rules limiting individual dona·
tions lo candidates for municipal
office to $300.
The new law also limits dona·
lions by a political action com-
mittee to a single candidate to
$1,500. lt doesn't limit donations
to ballot measures.
The ordinance also requires
pre -election reporting of all
dona tions received and spent.
The campaign ordinance was
unanimously approvecl Monday
night by Cit y Council members
and becomes law 30 days later.
It replaces an ordinance that
the Orange County District At-
torney said was vague and unen·
for ceable.
That law attempted to limit in·
dividual cont ribution to can-
didates to $200. But it didn't
limit contributions from political
action committees and it didn't
require late pre-election report·
ing of all expenditures.
'Three's Company'
star to lead parade
Jenilee H a r r i so n , w h o
porlrays Cindy on the lelevisloo
s how "Three's Company" will
be grand marshal o f
WestmJnster's a nnual F<>undff'•
Day parade.
The procession wUI begio at 10
a.m . Saturday at WestmiNlff
Hlgh School and move north oo
Golde n Weil Street to
West.m1nater Avenue. eHt on
Westminster Avenue t.o Hoover
Street.
Entrtea will Include bandl.
color aua,rdl, drill tusna, dnun
maJon and downa.
---. -___________________________ ....... ___ ......... -.. --... -............. ,---.,1 , -.
l ..... H J ~ Orange Coat OAJL Y PILOT /Wednesday. October 7, 1981 r--------
NYSE COMPO I TE T R ANSACTI ONS
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NEW YORK (AP> -The president
.and chief executive of E.W. Sc.rip111
Co. ha.a said ''oo deals have been
made" to ae1l Un.ite.d Pr8s Intern•·
tlonaJ lo the 8 r1U.h newa .. ene) Reuters OT to any other or1an.l.&atims.
Howeve.r, Ed ltlUow told editors
attendlna UPI'• thrH~•Y •M Ual
con vent.1an here whltb cond udtd Tuesd91 I.bat ''our e~ an
that a 1at.Wactory owmenblp ~·
chJ.JIQD wUl b@ reached -
~ '1 Why cereal
costs so much
In 1950, there were 26 brand5 o r ready-to-eat
cereal on the murket. By 1973 there were 79 dltre rcnt
brands
In 19$4, the lop eight cereal brands accounted for
57 percent of lhe total market. By 1964 the t.op eight
held only 47 perc"nt of the market Today they have a
little more than ont·th1rd.
Com Oakes once represented more than 30 per·
cent of the dry cereal business. Its s hare today is leas
than 10 percent
Today, there's probably no cereal brand that can
<'lt•im more Lhan 6 percent of the total market.
tooking at that ~ urray or figures, an •
unins tructed o b · I·; cit
ser ver might draw ~ ,
the c.onclus~on that ,,,;..~ ~ lh1s 1s an 1ndu~try •--.. ~~ ....... ~:::;:; ... ____________ _
where competition lllJll llll•IR has flowered. Top
brands have lost
their m arket power Concentration is rar weaker to·
diiy than it was yesterday .
But things are not always what they seem . Those
figures ue deceptive because they do not show that
while brands have indeed proliferated, the number of
producers has not. Six companies make virtually all
the dry cereal we eat. They are: Kellogg, General
Mills (the Big G line), General Foods <Post). Quaker
Oats (Cap'n Crunc h. 100 percent Natural>. Nabisco
!Shredded Wheat) and Ralston Purina <Chex>. And
three Ke llogg. General Mills and General Foods -
do the hon's share or the business. about 80 percent.
Now that high degree of producer concentration
bothered the antitrust lawyers a t the Federal Trade
Commission In 1972, they brought an antitrust action
seeking to break up the big cer~al makers. The FTC
alleged that we were a ll paying too much for our
breakfast cereals because or the monopoly power ex·
erted by these compa nies.
The F'TC. tn its complaint, proposed that Kellogg
be eviscerated by taking away a bunch or its brands
und setting up three new companies. The FTC asked
that General Mills and General Foods also be re·
quired to yield some of their brands to a couple or
newly fo rmed companies . Out of the three companies
would come eight.
FTC's idea was that the more companies there
a re , the more competition there will be, whicb is pre·
sum ably good for the cereal eaters.
But the thing is, you can't just tell companies
they control too much of the m arket and have to slim
down Jt 's usua lly incumbent on a government agen·
Cy to demonstrate that the companies reached this
stage by collusion. conspiracy or some other illegal way .
D!d the complaint charge that the companies
cons pired together to drive competitors out of the in· dust ry., No.
There was no proof of any of this. The FTC's ac·
lion was based on the novel theory that the cereal ~akers. without ever getting together to plot, acted
tn such a manner -for example. by bringing out all t~ose new br ands -that the "effects of <their> prac·
t1ces are actually the same as if they had engaged in
a conspiracy.··
That's certainly a novel theory. It's tantamount
to . saying, .. You may not have engaged in a con-
spiracy but what you have done is the same as what
you would have done if you had indeed conspired.··
Last month Alvin L. Berman, an administrative law ~udge .. ruJ~ that the FTC had no grounds for bring· m~ lhlS action, and he recommended that it be dis·
missed .
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS NEW YO!tK (API T1'11 lolloWlftQ llst ,,_, lllt New v°" Stock Each•ft9e •lo<kl elld wernnts lt..I NV• 90f\4I up
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Diiiy Pilat H / F
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6, 19'1
CLASS I Fl e'h DS
l .
The Oakland A 's
return to first-half
season form. See D2.
A storybook finish
Astros get a head start on Dodgers • HOUSTON CAP) -Alan Ashby·
called it his own Walter Mitty
story.
Here he was -a line-drive hit·
ter with only four home runs all
year -get.tin& the eame-winniJ!i
homer with two out in the ninth
inning against a team he used to
s neak in to see.
Catcher Ashby's story-book
two-run homer Tuesday night
carried the Houston Astros to a3·1
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers in the first game of their
National League West playoff
series.
THE SECOND game in the
best-of-five series began at noon
today with Hou s ton 's
knucklebaJling Joe Niekro <9-9l
facing the Dodgers' Jerry Reuss
(10-4).
"I'm elated beyond words,"
said Ashby after his homer into
the rightfield stands off reliever
Dave Stewart. "I knew it was a
homer when I saw it in the air ..
. and it's not like I'm a home run
hitter, either. It's a Waller Mitty
dream."
Ashby's decisive blow settled a
pitching duel between Nolan
Ryan, who twirled a two-hitter ,
and Fernando Valenzuela, who
battled hard before leaving after
eight innings with the score tied
1-1.
Houston's only run off the 20-
year -old rookie sensation came in
the s ixth on a two-out single by
Terry Puhl, a walk to Phil Garner
and Tony Scott's bloop single to
right just off the glove of second
baseman Davey Lopes.
THE DODGE RS tied it 1-1 in
the seventh on Steve Garvey's
400-foot home r that hit the
yellow home run line in left cen-
te rfield.
A~W.,.......
flouston·s Alan Ashby raises arms m victory while Steve Garvey watches Ash11.1(s dr •. ? clear fence
"I remembered when 1 was a
kid in San Pedro and I used to try
Guilty of a monumental absurdity
Nobody came in on the noon balloon from Saskatoon, but. ..
Nobody came" in on tbe noon balloon
from Saskatoon and asked me. but. ..
Baseball may be years getting over the
harm done by the great walkout of 1981 but
the real tr agedy is that one side continues
lo blame the other and neither faction re-
a lizes both were guilty of monumental
absurdity.
1f you are looking for a sign or the times.
the training camp of the Los Angeles
Lakers opened and the fi rst two ston es
dealt with off-season endorsements or the
players and whether the millionaires were
happy.
If you look closely. you see where the
San Diego Chargers are challenging the
Rams for the title of soap opera team of
the National Football League.
) chaUenge you to look into any walk of
life, sports or entertainment and find a
more pitiful trio. from a talent standpoint,
t hat CBS' Irv Cross. Jimmy the Greek and
Phyllis George.
If there is a better pro football player -
from a standpoint of effort a nd consistency
-than Jack Youngblood of the Rams.
please name him.
It 1s doubtful that even Lt. Columbo
could solve the mystery as to how New
England Patriots coach Ron Erhardt holds
his job ... Almost to a man, NFL ex-
ecutives and coaches will list the Patriots
in the top four teams with regard to
personnel.
Angels general manager Buzzie Bavasi
SPORTS COLUMNIST
BUD
TUCKER
says he is s ick and tired of making
millionaires out of baseball players who do
not produce and it is a mortal cinch the
Angel fans are s ick and tired of tooking at
them.
Steve Garvey is approaching the end of
a contract and the Dodgers may not be
able to afford to sign him to a new one, if
for no othe r reason than huge infant first
baseman Mike Marshall will do as good a
job and work somewhat cheaper.
If you think television does not create in-
stant broadcast talent , consider that Fred
Dryer stepped right out of a contract
hassle into the booth.
Fred Lynn says he did not tell a writer
that he had no responsibility to anyone to
stay in shape during the baseball strike
and the writer says Lynn did m ake the re·
mark . . One of them is telling the truth.
The national award-winning female
sports writers and sportscasters are stag-
ing a convention in a room at the Hilton
Not a banquet room -a room.
As soon as professional sports makes
room in the courthouse, college football is
waiting to get in.
The UCLA football r adio broadcasts
may put the sleeping pill industry out or
business.
Those who explain the collapse of so
many soccer franchises as a case of the
American public not understanding the
game may be guilty of an understatement.
In his recent re marks about an ex·
pansion franchise for the Coliseum, Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley sounded like
a ridiculous politician ... or is that redun-
dant?
We s hould not put the knock on Dor
Me redith's whistling on Monday Night
Football because it may be the most con-
structive thing he does.
As a means to eliminating income taxes,
President Reagan might consider replac-
ing the revenue with a small surcharge on
all football wagers . . . It could be called
federal vigoris h.
If you wrote down all the guys who think
they have a shot at an NFL expansion
franchise for the Los Angeles Coliseum,
you would have a longer list than Madame
Ram's former husbands .
A harness race driver is less important
than a thoroughbred jockey because stan-
dard bred horses are more intelligent.
If you need further proof that Howard
Cosell is egotistical, consider that Fr~d
Dryer said be wanted legal advice on his
contract hassle from Cosell. .. and Cosell
took it seriously.
to sneak into Dodger Stadium and
got caught a lot because I was so
s low," said Ashby. "l used to
idolize (former Dodger greats l
Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale
. . . ll sounds silly. I guess, but
those arespeclal memories
"It was a lucky swing, quite
frankly," Ashby said. "I'm no
home run hitter ."
"It wasn 't a bad pitch." said
Stewart ··1 thought it was a good
fastball shoot. I didn't think
he'd jack the ball out of the park. I
didn't evenknow who he was.
"I can't see us losing a game
like this . they're not a home·
run -hilling t eam ,·· Stewart
added "Every team has some
luck." ·
RYAN, WHO no h it the
Dodgers the last time he pitched
agains t them . retired 16 batters
in a row during one stretch
"l thought Nolan's stuff was
better than when he pitched the
no-hitter ," s aid Astros' Manager
Bill Virdon. ··This was a big win
fo r us . . it's important that we
win at home."
After today's game. the scene
s witches to Los Angeles for the
windup.
·'The pressure is still on them
<the Astros>." said Garvey.
'"because I know the effect we've
had on them in LA .
"Two hits is not going to win a
ball game. Ryan threw hard but
his breaking pitch wasn't as con-
trolled as it was on his no-hitter."
Garveysaid.
·· 1 knew I hit the pitch good
enough to go out of most pesrks.
But hereyoucanneverbesure "
Uut it took Ashby's first career
homer off the Dodgers to settle
the issue.
Dodger Manager Tommy
Lasorda said he went to reliever
Stewart because '"we felt Fernan-
do <who gave s ix hits J had
pitched long enough. We wanted
to tr y to get some runs. I believe
in our bullpen "
·'This was a typical game for
us, .. Ashby explained. ··This is
our style going down to the late in·
nings . We plc.tyed four extra in·
ning games in a row with
Philadelphia last year in the Na-
tional League Championship
Falcons look ripe
for a Ram plucking
Bruised Atlanta is licking its wounds
By JOHN SEVANO
Of tM 0811, ~tltll Sutt
If ever the Rams were going
to catch the Atlanta Falcons at
the right moment for a defeat.
this would seem to be the week.
Consider this :
-the Falcons are on a two·
game losing streak, having lost
to Cleveland and Philadelphia.
the Falcons are coming off a
physical Monday night contest
with the Eagles.
-the Falcons are beat up -
both offe n sivel y and de-
fensively.
-because of the Monday night
affair. the Falcons have one less
day to prepare and or nurse
their wounds
YES, INDEED, if the Falcons
were ever ripe enough to be
plucked, this would seem to be
the time.
··Yeah. they mus t be pretty
b anged up,·· admits Ra ms
Coach Ray Malavas1, ··but then
Cleveland probably thought they
we re catching us at the right
time, too, a fter our Monday
night game with Chicago ··
What the coach fails to point
out. thou~h . is that Chicago isn't
as tough as Philadelphia ...
they're not even close.
Of course, not all is bad wfth
Atlanta.
Despite losing their last two
games. the Falcons are still tied
with the Rams and San Francisco
for the top spot in the NFC West
(allat3·2).
And, being at home is a def-
inite asset. The best remedy
possible for bangs and bruises is
61,000 fans yelling and scream-
ing to get a person's adrenalin
going.
There's no doubt regardless
of the timing -the Rams will
have their hands full.
T he Rams own a comforta·
ble 22·5·2 s eries a dvantage
aginst the Falcons but all five
defeats were in Atlanta. includ·
rng three of the past four meet-
ings
'"The key thing on Atlanta is to
s top their running game." says
Malavasi. "They have two ex·
cellent running backs c Lynn
Cain and William Andrews l and
an excellent offens ive line.
"WE HA VE to stop them from
gettrng fi ve or six yards on first
down."
M alavasi feels confident the
defensive secondary can take
care of the rest if the Rams' first
Objective is achieved.
Offensively. Malavas1 feels
JUSt as good. although Wendell
Tyler Cno t to mention Pat
Thomas) has been listed as
··ques tio nable" for the game
because of a hamstring pull lf
Ty ler can't go. Malavasi indicat-
ed Mike Guman would get the
call
Actually. the Ra ms· success
will, once again. hinge on Pat
Haden. It's apparent that as
Haden improves so do the
Rams.
HADEN WAS 21 of 31 for 205
yard s and on e touchdown
against the Browns. More im-
portantly. he hasn 't thrown an
interception in his last 71 passes.
Haden's efforts have moved
him lo seventh place a mong
NFC passers. Atlanta's Steve
Bartkowski is 12th.
··Our big Job will be to keep
o ur concentr ation," says
Malavasi. "That shouldn't be
hard though because everyone
knows we're up against a good
football team.
"I know if we beat this team
we'll be sitting right on top of
our division.··
Atlanta knows that. too'
Sea View title dreams at stake for Estancia, Corona del Mar
Battle of unbeatens tops Friday's league action; Edison goes for 27th straight and Marina risks its streak
Br ROGER CARLSON
0(-Oelty ...... , ...
A battle of unbeatens figures to give the win-
ner the inside track to the Sea View League foot-
ball championship Friday night. Edison goes for
its 27th straight victory and Marina seeks its fifth
straight non-league triumph as high school action
continues into the fifth week of the campaign.
The Eagles swept past Saddleback in their Sea
View opener, 21-0, without the services of tight end
Jamie Aileen, who is expected to return to the
Lineup after a brief encounter with mononucleosis.
Corona del Mar counters with its split backs
(Bill Bright and Lance Martin) behind Woods
(44-57·3, 469 yards and 5 TDs>.
1981 opponents with the vast majority of damage
accomplished in the second quarter.
Title dreams are at stake Friday nJgbt at
Newport Harbor where Estancia's Eagles (4-0, 1-0
in league) and the Sea Kings of Corona del Mar
(4--0, 1-0 in league) collide.
The coaches -Corona del Mar's Dick Morris
and Estancia's Ed Blanton -echo each other
when discussing the merits of the other and the
task at hand. ..
"A lot of teams can run well, or pass well or
play defense well ," says Morris, "but the thing
about Estan~ia is that they do everything well.
"We have to establish our offense and hold on
to the ball. U we do it could be a matter of who
scores the most. I think we can score, but I don't
think we can completely atop Estancia."
What will it take to beat Estancia? "Three
touchdowns," says Morris.
"Corona del Mar creates a lot more problems
tban Jut year," says Blanton. "(Eric) Woods
<CdM'a quarterback') ls really comlnt into hia own and be ha.a added tM extra touch to tbe offeue.
"Corona del Mar ll known for it.a deleDH aDd
~is year ll no enepUon. lt'I a readlq 50 COkle l-2
;
fense> and there are some kid.a up front that
ayed last yur who are biHer and 1tron1er. I
Ink It'll take three touchdowns to win."
I 1
Estancia, ranked No. 4 in Orange County and
in the CIF Southern Conference, has bombarded
four opponents to the combined tune or 121-26,
while Corona del Mar has an 80-19 edge.
"Our offensive line Is starting to get
together," s ays Blanton. A few weeks down the
road we're going to be all right."
Estancia's offensive wall includes guards
Mike Griffin (6-2, 225) and Mike Brockert (5-10
155), along with tackles Mike Smith (6·6, 245), and
Marcial Gallardo (6-2, 210) and center Steve
Dethlefsen.
Defensively the Eagles get a lot from Chris
Crandall (the fullback> at nose guard, while Alex
Shively and Mark Van Doren have been keeping
the opposition off balance from their Unebacking
positions.
Corona del Mar's bread 'n butter front line in-
cludes• guards Pat Duddy (~11. 200) and Todd
Parker (6-0, 185), tackles Steve Blake (4-2, 175)
and Glenn Ro1era (6-2, 245) and center Dave
Staasel (5-10, 190), whose snaps on puntlnl situ•·
tJons defy improvement.
It's the skilled po1Wou, tio.ever, that are 10-
ina to put the point.I on the boards and lb.ii ta
where Estancia appears to have the eda• wltb All·
CIF quarterback Jim McCahlll (41.e'7·5, for 585
yards and 6 TDt) and tailback Curt Wiulalf <92
carrlet for 5a )'arda and a U 1,tra1e fortTDt).
"Yes," agrees Morris, "this one is extra
special."
Elsewhere this week:
Meter Del va. Edlaon
An early-season look made this game appear
to be one of the more attractive non-league games
of the 1981 season, but two losses for Mater Del has
taken off some of the luster.
Nevertheless, it is a resumption of a rivalry
which has seen Edison win the last four starts ln
the five-year ~eries and the Charters , ranked No. 1
in the CIF Big Five Conference and Orange Coun-
ty, are working on a 26-game winning streak.
The workhorse in Mater Dei's game is
tailback·linebacker Kennedy Pola, who bas car·
ried 7'7 times for 523 yards and 3 TDs, but an ex-
pected strong passing game bas melted con-
. slderably.
Tony Locy ls Mater Del's quarterback af)d bas ·
c,mpleted 26 of 74 for 337 yards ln four start.a C~.1
percent).
Edison countert wllb lta aoUd run, PHI, de·
fense setup, revolvln1 around runners Dave
Geroux and Theo Lan1ford, puMr Ken Major, a
fleet of receivers, includinf the Ould Gre1
Eskridge and ' defense keyed by Unebac.ker Rlc.t
DlBerna.rdo.
Edll<lb hu n-ampled four straJabt DOD·ltal\M
Millikan vs. Marina
Marina High's Vikings return to action after a
week's rest with a 4-0 record, bent on making it
five straight non-league victories against the win·
less Rams.
The latter was down by a 41 -7 count at
halftime last week to Edison and although the
Yikes are not expected to equal that mark,
Millikan isn't expected to be able to handle the
passing of Ken Laszlo, receiving of Jeff Frandsen
and running of Tony Valente, Brian Brown and
Rick Tobin out of the veer.
Frandsen has already caught a school record
seven scoring passes and Laszlo has equaled the
school record for TD passes in one game (3) twice,
a lready. Marina is Orange County's No. 3-ranked
team.
Founteln Vatley va. Lakewood
Aft.er last week's naU-biter over Servile, the
Baroru1 of Fountain Valley have a much eaaler
task (on paper) wlth LakewOOd, which baa lost all
three non-league 1981 start..
The Barona (1-1) 10 with the nm• tldq that keepa them one of tM mort l..ntenlUal tHllil S.
lhe CIF Soutbena s.ttioa, ~ 'dliun = Stevena, e.xcellat ...celven In Jo.a ..., ad
end Gree BoUa and tailback Rod 1mt17.
Lakewood baa nlae retunimf ltaltln. laeWt
ln1 qUU'Mrbeck Mike Teretclndl, wllo ldl •.t per.. \<See SBA VIB1', Pqe DI) _..
f
------~~--............... ..-~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~--...-----_...--................ .._ ................................................................................... ,..,
.. . . . .
H /F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. October 7, 1981
~ . . • •
N l WEST PLAYOFFS
Aatros 3, Dodgers 1
o-o ...
LOS ANGELIS HOUSTON all r~ Ill
l-•.2b • 0 0 0
Lenelro, cl • o t O
8eker,ll 3000
G•r•ey, lb 3 I t I
Monday, rf 2 0 0 0
Guer,...., lb 3 o o O
Scloscle.c t 3 o o o
Russell, ss 3 O O O Vel'nzu•te, p 1 o o o
Jollnstn, llfl 1 o o o
Stewart, p o o o o
•II r 11111 Puhl, rl 4 t l O
G.,ner, 2b 3 0 0 0
Scott. Cl • 0 I I
Crur.tf •OOO
Cedeno, lb 4 0 2 0
Howe, 311 • o t o
Gare I•. u 3 0 O 0
Reynolds, pl> I 1 1 o
A1llby,c 3 I I 1
Ryen,p 3 0 O O
Totals 18 t 1 t Totals l3 3. l
Los Angeles 000 000 100 -t Houston ooo 001 007 -3
Two outs when wlnnino r-un scored.
OP -Los AAQtles 1. LOB Los A19les
1, Houston 6. 2B -Cedeno HR -Garvey
111. se -Cedeno1.
Lea A ....... Ve leniuela
Stewert (L.0.1)
H ........
IP H 11
8 • ' ~ 1 2
Rya n CW. 1-01 9 2 1
T -7:22. A -... 834
Elt 88 SO
I 2 6
2 0 1
Al WEST PLAYOFFS
A's 4, Royals o
GameO...
0.AKUNO KANSAS CITY
•II r ~Ill all r 11111 HnClrsn, 11 Murphy, cl
Drght, dh
Armas, rf
Gross, lb
Spencer, 1b Hutll,c
McKay, 2b
Stanlo.ss
' 0 0 0 Wiison, II • 0 I 0
3 1 1 I White, 7b 3 0 0 0
• 0 I 0 Breit. lb • 0 0 0
• I I 0 AIUn5, lb • 0 I 0 ! ~ ~ ~ Olis. cl 4 o o o • o o o Mc Rae. dh 4 o O O • o 1 o Hurdle.rt 3 0 I 0 • o o o Welllan, c 2 O O O
W•h"oln," 3 o t o
Total• 35 • I • Totals 31 o • O
kw• lly 1 .........
Oakland 000 JOO 010 -•
Kanws City 000 000 000-0
E -Norris, Brett, McKay. OP -Oakland
2, Ken~• City I L08 Oakland S, t<an .. s
City 7, 28 Spencer HR Gross 11), Murphy (1).
O.llland
Norri• CW,1.()1
Ka11u1Clty
IP H II
9 • 0
Ell ae SO
0 3 1
Leonard (L,0.11 1 • 1 1 3
Merlin t t o o o o
T -2.JS A-ao,sn.
Baseball playoffs
NATIONAL LEAGUE WEST
FrlClay -Houston al OodQtrs <Channel 4
anCI 11 al I ·05 p.m l
Saturday -Hou•ton a1 Dodger" S IS p.m., If neceiwrv
Sunday -HQU\lon •I OodQf'tS, I 05 p.m ..
II necessary
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST
Tnur..Say Ph1ladttphla al MonlrHI
IChannelO at S IS p.m l
Friday Montreat at Philadtlphta, t·OS
p.m.
Saturday Montreal al Pnttedtlphl•.
IO:OS a.m • ii necH .. ry
Sunday -Montreal at Philadtlphla, I :05
p.m .. II necessary
AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST
Friday -Kansas City at 001ene1 ICher>-
nel 7 et S;tOp.m .t
Saturday Kansa• City at Oaklano. 1 10
p.m
Sunday Kanws c11y al Oakland, • 10 p.m.
AMEltlCAN LEAGUE £AST Todav New York al Miiwaukee tchen-
nt11 at5: t0 p.m. I
Thur..Sey -New York at Milwaukee
I Channel I at t2 10 p.m .1·
FrlClay -Milwaukee at New York, S tO
p.m.
Sa!urday Milwaukl!t' at New York, I 10
p,m.
Sunelay -Milwaukee at New York, • 10
p.m.
AtltlmHPDT
All seri~' •re t:>rst-of·fivr
Hollywood Park
TUESO.Av'S llESUL TS
(JM~ofSl<fll .... llarMUmeell"11)
FIRST llACE. Orie milt pace
Glamour Levs (Kezmaierl 71.IO 10.ao u .10
Yaklrlke (Todd) 6.00 5.10 Able Wey (Wllllamsl 9.IO
Also raced: Ll•bon Lad, Lirerd Lips, Shy
Bucllshot. Flemlnv A, Mr. Graham Bell.
J ames Rllyll\m, Hanover Ster.
Time: 2:01 l/S.
P EXACT.A ( tMI paid $743.60,
SECOND II.ACE. One mlle pace
Scrembllr>g Rall (Trembley) 6.80 l .IO 7.60
Nanechl (Ritchie) 4 lO 3 . .0
Rhylllm AnCI Blues (C.mpbell) l .eO
Also raced: Hot N 8olhereCI, My
Truelleert, R-t Vfctorv, Slumberln9, An, dy's B•ron, Jerrydot's Hel•n.
Time: 1:05
THtltO RACE. One mil~ trot
Bold Slreal< IWl•hardl S.00 l .60 7.eO
No Bel (Tremblay) 1 . .0 4.00
Wyn Darnley CParkerl 3.10
Al•o raud Gullger. Sara'l Minion,
HellsaPOPPln, Comanche Abbe, Messiah,
Rip Sliver, Snoopy Rodney.
Tim•· 7:03 715
SS E XACTA 19-t) paid '61 . ..SO
,OUltTM II.ACE. One mlle pace.
Summer~ <Tessler) 1.60 •.IO 4.00
El Rey Rlc;o CCranel 6.60 5.00
Desert Cllrls IVellenCllgheml S.IO
Alio receCI: Bou Hlllbllly, Pine Hall St.
llon. Pine Hall Saturn, Gotdtn Caro, Flu
Time, B•bl' J-'s Wo, Granelpa Rockey.
Time· 2·00 215
Fl FTH II.ACE. One mllo pee•.
Stalker (Todd) 13.00 I.~ 3.60
HlghtenCI Byrd lToclCll 10,(JO S.00
Hat Cllerle ( K .. bler) 4.80
Aho receel: Atalklen Wren. Reellcel, ~
Cly's Skipper, Julle Harper.
Time: 7:003/S.
SS W.XACTA ( .. S) pelCI JUI.SO.
SIXTH It.ACE. One mite pace.
Eestw-Prine• (Wlsl\erdl 1.10 S.00 3.IO p-·, Bruiser (Huelonl 6.IO S.40
My Sandy (Rllchlol 3.IO
Also reced: Rec:e Clllef, Thorlow, T,....
Trlcte, Hendower, Winter Prince, C-y
Lobell.
Time: 1: 5'I l/5.
SEVENTH lt.ACI. One mite pace.
Vocal Ker.,.• lsntrrenl 11.00 9.10 4.tO
Teel Httlry (&Merl S.IO 4.AO
Ory Sack IL'9fltllltll 9.40
Alto receCI: HunClred Ootters. Deep
Woods, Gary Golfer, Mr . Wiiiow. Canny
8ret, Pleytlo'f Butler, Jive T elk.
Time: 1:,.2/S.
U E.XACTA (7-41 paid mt.so.
$1 l"ICK SIX ,......_ .. Hl pek! Sl,42.UO
with sewn winning tkkell Ill••...,,_,), U
Pkk SI• COMO!alton paid '311.20 worth 117
w1n11tnv tkkllll llOur l>ors.sl.
W IOMTM ltACW. One mite pace.
Underr.-0 C~-l U.00 UO UO
Petilr Onedln (Hudon I 2.• UO
Marciano CL.Gnool 2.40
Also r.c:eel: Tarpon Bi.ck. Southwen,
Tile Hlcllet Klnv, Nattva Warrior, Time
Square a-, s-y Po111t.
Time : l:JU /S.
$1 •XACTA (14) paid $'2..10.
fllflTM It~•. Ono m llt pace,
Cell11ul (Hulllrtl 2J.JO •·• 4M
Otm111• tw-(l.M1911) 4.40 J.•
l"retty TWiii tM!trnftl UO
Altor8C811:MeittwVatue,P....-.e,F,..
ty S11'"9r, Ttft Pwaftler, '"'-'• Jecik. P'IMl._..., ...... ,Nlllllte.
Time: t :JU/I. .. •J(ACTA CMOI • .__, .. ,.,
TWNTH ltACW. Ofte mlle -· Renoml CLltl'thlll) n oo 1• oo uo
Tllu-"lorm IAublnl t .OO •.40
819 Sprlnv <crQllQll ... l uo
Also reced: Clll•I Nakia, OltMI Envlne,
8y• Awey, Knll)ftl'I Honour, VenOc>r'I Boy,
cou11er'11.....,., Frostv Cllarlt•.
TIMe , 1:01 4/S
U IX.ACTA (1 .i pelCI $HJ.:IO.
AllenClenu 7,0'1
COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOG
Golden West (1·2)
1 BebnllelCI 11
• S.n!Ao Ana 31 31 LA V•lley 1
Oct. 10-S...t• Monte•
Oct 17-Ml Sen Antonio (et OCCl
Oct. 2-Slln Dteeo Mesa
Oct. 31--0roumont l•t OCCI Nov .__, Cerritos
Nov. 1t -Fullerton (at OCCl
NOV 111-0r-Coast
Orange Coast (1 ·2)
PalOmar 3
u SaCICltec.ck 7•
1 P•-na 11 Oct 10-EICamlllO
Oct, 17 •I Cerrito•
Oct. 14-Fulluton
Nov 7-•t Ml. San Antonio
Nov U Sen Olego M•~
Nov. lt -•t Groumonl
Nov 18--0otoen W~st
Saddleback (3-0)
37 Ventur• 1'
14 Ora19 Coast U
21 LA Soutllwt!'SI 3
Ocl. 10-Ant•tope Vall•y
Oct 17-at Palomar
Oct, 14-S.n Diego CC
Oct. 3t-al Soutllwostorn
Nov 1 S.nla Ana
Nov 71 at Citrus
Nov 1&-Riverside
Deep sea fishing
NEWPORT (Art't Lendl"tl -43 angler\:
•JO bonito, •5 bass, t60 mackuel, 4 roe k fl>ll,
t trigger llsr>. lOeuy't Locller) -6t
angteri S70 bOnito, 1 i.dnd ba~s, t c•lico
bass. 1.SO rod< cod, 110 meoorel. 7 cow cod. 0.ANA WHARF ,. •nv•ers: H bass, 611
bOnlto, 121 rock fl~, .45 macker•t, 1 cow cod.
MORRO 8.AY (Vtrv'• La11dt111I -11
anglerS' 3 ling cod, 0 rock cod, U red rock
coCI, llS Dass, 20 rfll \llapper.
SANTA MONICA H anglHL 11
yrltowtall, 20 boruto. 1J"2 mackerel, ~ rock
blJS~
MARINA OEL REY 1S angle ... 2
yetlowtari. 1)4 bonito, 23 baH1 ~ mackerel,
1'S roo llSll. ..,... '7 angl.,>:, IO Dar·
racuda. SO miKk.,rel.
SAN PEOllO 122nd SI. LanCll"111 -IS
anglers 25 yettowtall, ISO callco Dass, tOO
bonito <Perts O' Calli 11 en9ters. llO bOnlto, 36 calico b.U>. t sanCI bass, O rock
ll•h. 10 mad<01tl
LONGI 8EACH C8etmo111 Pieri -11
anglers 160 roO ""'· • cow cod I°"""'' Wllarfl 78 anglor" 13 yollowlalt, 61'
calico bats, 1 sand b.ns.
SEAL 8EACH so anolers 311 rock cod,
1 cow cod, t 11"9 cod, 6 bonito, •calico bass.
1 uno ba.s
OCEANStOE .. anvl~rs 7« bonito. ,.
calico bass, • wnd bass, 1 rock ll•h, 178
mackerel, S1 rock cod.
Cross country
HIGH SCHOOL
F-ift Valley tt, We~l11t1er O
I Erin'°" IFVI, 18 3'1, l . Mosher IFVJ, rs. 3'1. 3 Morton CW), " OS; •. Rey"°"' IFV), 16 11, S 0.Wenter (FV), 16 21, •· Mllchr ll IFVJ. 16 ll 1 IConltU CWI,
16.38. 8 8'11"'" (l'V>. 11 13. 9 M•nn CFVI,
11 ;i.., 10 Ramsey (W), 11 51
WOMEN
HIGH SCHOOL Fou..Ut11 Valley U, Westmlll•l•r lJ
I McCracken IWI, 18·37, l Crabtree
CFV). 19 06; 3 Pnnole IFVI, 19 ·30; •.
Whistler (W). 19. s.o. s Ml• .. lFV), 10.0.
1.pc>rh '~'s \OCC•r
Women's soccer
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Ora-C .. ll 4, Pffadefta 0
Orange Coast scoring: 8t<1uchamp I, Culp
1, Robinson t. Vartanian t.
NHL
CAMP8ELLCONFEllENCE
SmrtMOlvlsloll
W L T OF GA l"tl
V•ncouvff
C•lgary
EClmonton
Kl1111
Colorado
I 0 0 4 2 l
0 0 00 0 0
0 0 00 0 0
0 0 00 0 0
0 1 01 . 0 N ............... loft
Toronto I 0 0 6
SI. Louis I 0 0 •
Detroit I O O S
Chlc-oo 0 O 0 0
Minneiota o o O o
WlnniP119 O I O 1
Quebec
Boston
8uflelo
MontrHI
HertlorCI
WALES COHFERENCE Ada-Divis..., I 0 0 6
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 t 0 s
Petrkll Olvts...,
NY lstanclers o o o O
Phlteclell)l>la 0 0 0 0
Wnlltnvton o o O o
NY Ra~ 0 I 0 2
Pllltburl)ft 0 I 0 2
T-y'IS<-
Quebee 6, Hertford S Detroit S, NY ~a~rs 1
St. Louis 4, Plttsbur9117 Toronto 6, Wlnnlpev 1 v ancou-..r •. Color-2
T.-y'sO-
Hew YOl'k lllal'CMrsat Kl"91
WeslllnvtCH> el Buffalo
Plltsburtlfl et Chtcaoo
ColOredo et Edmonton
Women·• volleyball
COLUOW
I
2
1
0
0
'
5
0
0
0 •
0
0
0 s •
1
1
1
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Pe-dine def. UC trvlM. IS-10, ,., ••
IS.It. COMMUNITY COU.•o• Ooldeft Witt ctef. c.,._.._ 1W, 17-IS. I~.
MIOM ICNOCM.
Merlnedllf. EC11tonl 1S-S, 1H, .. U. tS-11.
Estancia•· Newport H•111W. 1J.t, •u. t•tt, IS-ta, IS-J. ' Miiter Oel dlf. St. J-...., tM. 1.w, 1s.11.
Fwt1t.el!I V .. ley dltf. Hllftt.lf191on lffcll. 1S-H, t•ts, t•U. , .. , •• IW •
Superc:hallenge tournament
(et ........ A....,ellel .. -........ ~ Vltat Ger\1 .. 1111 Clef. l(lfn W-kll, •2,
•1; Petlf' McNam.va Clef. J~ l(rlek, M , .... , ....
Women's tournament ,.,, .......... .) .. ..... , ........ ......
Hane ManClttkova Clefe111tn to Sa110y
Collins Clue to• "-0 Injury; Vlr9tnte Wedi
Clef. SMrry A<k•r. 1->, 1 .. ; 4nne Smltll dltf.
Virginia Ruzkl, •>. 74, Wendy Tu""""'t
Clef. Trey Lawis, ..... 6·1. 6~; Joanne R\ISMll
<let. Jennlltr Mundel, W , '-2. 6-2: Mery Lou
Pl•l•fl Clef Anne Whitt, IM, 74.
Women
HIGH ICMOOL
Mariflall, ... _,
SI,..... . Cleu1 CM) Iott lo Ft•llery, 0·6, Clef.
Kirk, H , def H-11. i-1; Alb9rts IMI lost
0.., 44, won •3; """"4Y (M) toll 0.., 0.., a...
~
Ngnl-Tom (M) Clef. Eltlson·H•lltlUf'n.
6·3, Clef. Lott-Smith, M ; Clef. Mallotto-Shtm,
6·1; SlanflelCI Lotllo (M) lo1t ••. won 7·5,
won i-l; C-y-Herrlt tMI won..._., Ifft ....
won 6-3.
Ulllvenlty 12, ~II 6 , .......
Brlshke IU) lost lo,Strombe<k, H . def. T.
Pham, 1,.3, def M. Pham, •2. S.V-1 CUI loll
11, won f>.t, IOsl 1-4; Corfm.., IUl lo51 U, ,.., 7 ...
~
8raCl>llaw•Wlntersteen CU) def. Nguyen..
W•lker, 6--0, def. Gee-HlllOfOW, •t; def.
Lan.an11-Tr..,, •7. Connell1·MICIClleton CUI
won 6-t, 6--0, i-1; Hotablrd-Lucas (UJ won
6.(), 6.(), 6--0
E11MO<la 11, Newpet1Ha"'9r6
Slqlff
S. O'Mll•ra IEI lost to Steiner,.,,, Clef.
Black, l>-1, Turner, •·2, C. O'Mllare (E) won,
6.(), 6.(), 6·2, Carey IEI tote t-4, won i-2, 7-4.
OouMft
L•n<aster-Cunnlnl)ftem lEI Clef. S.mmls.
Andrews. 6--0, def Smllh·ElllM>n, •7; Clef.
Mackel·Galey, ~. Ellltrs-Ooan lEI won
6·•. lo•l l-4, S-7; Barbarlon-Cleveloence CE!
lost 3_., 2_., won •·3.
El T .... 11. ceeu Mew 1 s .......
Han'°" ICM) lost to Helnt>auQh, o ... lost lo
Donofrio, 1_., IOsl lo CHs. 3_.; 8ermo ...
(CM I lost, 0-4, 0-4, 0-4; Simmons (CM) k>Sl,
14. 0-6, H .
~ ..
Osako-Neale ICM! lost 10 Pope·NollH, 1 ... .
lo•t to 8oylan·HauschltO, l•, lost to T ...... r-
Eerley, U , Clause,..Patrkk CCMI los1, 2 .. ,
won, •·l . lost f>.7; Shre•e·Hughes (CMl IOS1,
t-4,3·4.H .
Water polo
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
~West 16, Alo H-J
Rio HonCIO 2 o o t-J
Golden West 6 • 3 3-1'
Golden West scorlnv Sutton 4, Neely l ,
Hamilton l, Kendall 1, Wright t, Jenkins t,
Elliott, Gilbert t, O.vlch t, Lund t .
~Wnt 17.EIC•mt ... J El Camino o o 1 t-3
Golden West 9 3 7 4-17
Golden Wnt .coring· Salyer •. C~on 4,
OelValle 3, Baker 3, Thom•• t. Nady I, Grell
I
OrMtt Co.UC to, S.flle AM I
Santa Ana 3 3 t t-I
Orange Coast 2. 7 3 3-tO
OrenQf' Coast .coring O'Donnell 3, Soflo
1, Alwes3. McCormick t, Hawkins I.
PGA statletlcs
(~Oct.4J
SCORING LEADlltS
I Tom Kite, 69.IM. 7 Bruce Llettke, 70.06. 3
Ray Floyel, 70.23. • C"11s Slra19, 70.60. 5
Jerry Pate, 10.61.
AYER.AGE DRIVING DISTANCE
1 Dan Poht, 290. t. 7 Frfll Couples, 1n.s. 3
Tom Purtur, 21S.7. • Fuuy Zoeller, 17S,O 5
8111 S•roder. 273 1
OlllVING PERCENTAGE IN FAIRWAY
t Calvin Pffte, .an. 7 Mike AtlCI, .761. 3
8111 R09ers, .7.50. • J a<k Renner. .7'7. s
Larry Helson, 7.0
GREENS IN REGULATION
t Calvin Peete, 771 7 Jack Nlckl•us. .no.
3 Bruce Liet1ke, .110. 4 Tom Kiie, .705. s Biii
Rogers, .698
AVERAGE PUTTS PEii ltOUNO
t Torq Wat..,.,, 18 .... 1 Alan Tapie, 19.70. 3
Morrl• Het..lsky, 11.11 • Fr.tnk Conner,
21.U . S Tommy Aarnn, 11 94.
PERCENTAGE OF SU8-PA1t HOLES
t Bruce Lietzke, .113. 2 Jerry Pett, .216. 3
Tom Watson, .20'7 4 Rey FloyCI, .208. s Tom
Kite, lOS.
EAGLE LE.AOEllS
I Bruce Llezke, 11. 2 (11•1 Leonard
ThomplOI\ encl Lon Hinkle. 10. • Ille) 8obby
Wadkins, 8obby Ctempell, Terry Dlehl -
Bruce Dougleu, 9.
8111DIE LEADERS
1 Tom Kite, 367. l Vance Heefner, 351. 3
Mark Lye, 357. 4 Mark O'MHra, 349. S Dave
Elcllet~roer. 347
~;. -·
NASCAR point leaders
t. D•rrell Well rip •. tl5
2. 800by Alll'°" 4, Ill
l Harry Gent 3,743
4 Ricky Rudd 3,620
5. Dale Earnhardt 3,491
6. Terry Labonte >.•
7. Joely R k!fe.y 3,4'1
I . RlcllarCI Petty 3,«W
9. De.,.. Marcel• 3, 163
10. Bennv Person• 3, 111
NASCAR money leaders
1 Bobby Allison M6t.ns
7 Derntll Wellrlp •Sl,190
3. RlcherCI Petty :MO,JOO
4. Ricky Rudel 311,llS
5. Date Eernhef'dt lOl,.JIO 6. Benny Persons 2•.au
1. Terry.__, 2•.-.S
8. He"y Gent 213,225
9. Jody Rk!ley 1'2,_,
10. M0'9t"Shet>erd. 141,IOS
Tuesday's tr•nHctlons
tAHltALL
A~l.Ntllll BALTIMORE ORIOLES -Signed Dennis
Merttnez, pitcher, 10 • 11,,..,..ar contrect.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS -~trltll1eel
Pllll HllffmM end l<tt1 Scllrom, pltd•ra,
end D•n Whitmer, catcher, IO Syracuse of
Ille tntel"Ntlonel L .... . .. ...... u.e-
CINCINNATI ltEOS -AMOUnCed -
Deve Cont:e9tlon, tllorttlo,i, had aQreed to a
flve-yeer C«1lnict. l'OOTIALL
N..._.lfl_...L ......
CH IC.AGO BEARS -Waived Hena H ltlNfl, kkker. Stoned .iGltft R-10, lllelter.
NEW YORK GIANTS -WalvM lltlty
Taykw, "'""""betll .•
SAN FltANCISCO 4tllts -Tr .... jlMtt
ll911r, 11 ICW, to the Cle,,.._ BNWM fOr M
INlt<lotld Or41ft cltolce. MoeteeY ....... ttecllt'f ""'9
ST. LOUlS llLUO -AHllMtl Alelll L_....,., ~. to Salt Ulle City 9' tfle
Ce111r•I HOCk•y LHtw· lttturrw41 "'"· Wllt011,dlftl_,_, .. 11t1j1111lortNfll.
All this work • •
• • • to have it end • • •
• • • like this!
HEARTBREAK The Dodgers went
through a lot of work at the Astrodome in
Houston Tuesday night . . only to lose.
From the top. Steve Garvey puts the tag on
the sliding Art Howe at first base. Howe
Al"WI...._..
was called out: Ken Landreaux trite·~ to
stop Kiko Garcia from completing a douhll'
play. He failed: and catcher Alan Ashb~·
puts an end to it all as he homers in t tw
ninth inning off relic\'N Dave StewCJrt
Sooners fumbling for answers
NORMAN . Okla. <AP> -Once
Oklahoma fans joked affec-
tionately that the Sooners' of·
fensive tactics couJd be summed
up as: Fumble, fumble, fumble.
touchdown.
This season, it's Cumbie, fum-
ble, fumble. fumble ... and no
one's laughing any more.
The fast and powerful Sooners
have traditionally put enough
points on the scoreboard, to the
joy of their fans and awe of their
opponents, so that the fumbles
didn't matter.
But this year Oklahoma holds
a l · l · l record as it prepares to
meet archrival Texas, which is
ranked third in the nation de-
renslvely. Coach Barry Switzer
says turnovers are the reason ror the poor start.
Oklahoma has the third worst
fumble record among the NCAA
major colleges this year, ac-
cording to NCAA r esearcher
Steve Boda .
The Sooners bobbled the ball
18 times in three games. Only
Holy Cross and Auburn have had
more. Boda said. And if you
count lost fumbles. Ok lahoma
leads the nation.
The Sooners have the worst rec·
ord in the NCAA for turn-overs
-fumbles and interceptions -
with a net loss or four per game,
Boda said.
Assistant Sooner Coach Merv
Johnson says the fumble prob-
1 e m started in 1975 when Oklahoma turned the ball over
to Kansas eight times a nd lost
23-S. The Sooners still won the
naUonaJ championship that year
with an 11·1 record.
Oklahoma got off to a good
start this year when it lost only
one of two fum bles to Wyoming.
T h e Soon ers won 37 ·20 .
But two weeks later, then No.
2 Oklahoma lost five of 10
fumbles agains t t.op-ranked
Southern California, and the
Trojans won 28-24 with a
touchdown pass two seconds
before the end of the game.
Switzer said the Sooners would
have won handily if not for the
rumbles.
A week taier, 20th-r anked
Iowa State picked off two in-
terceptions, stripped fi ve foot-
balls fro m the b ands of
Oklahoma runners and 'almost
won.
Coaches are being aa\ed why
so many turnovera and what
they're 10ing to do about it.
• •
---------------------------- --~~~-~--~--------'-~---~~-~_.... ______ ~----~---------. -
(.;~::..--~-=-------------------------~
llliUll lllCH /SDUTH COAST
DlllJ Piiat
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 1911
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEVISION
02-3
07
89 '
Newport Beach firm's
financip.l, legal problems
snowballing. See Page B4 .
Laguna to shop for new diesel buses
By STEVE MITCHELL
0( , .. CNlfy ..... ,...
A majority of the Laguna
Beach citv council voted Tues-
day to send its city manager
s hopping for three new diesel
buses. despite arguments the ci·
ty should continue to use cleaner
propane vehicles.
City officials contend they can
find no company that can de· liver propane-rueled buses
equipped with air brakes.
Assistant City Manager Terry
Brandt said city maintenance
cr ews currently have to replace
standard brake linings on the
city's six s mall buses every
month or so.
He said that by purchasing
diesel fueled buses equipped
with air brakes, maintenance to
the brake systems would have to
be completed once every nine
months.
But Mayor Sall y Bellerue,
Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick,
and severaJ members of the au-
dience made emotional pleas to
retain propane buses, terming
the blue and white vehicles as
"symbolic'' of Laguna Beach.
They complained of pollution,
the s mell of diesel fuel and the
noise of the conventional buses,
and suggested a more thorouib
search could turn up a company
that can instaJI air brakes on the
sma ller propane buses.
Lagunan Estelle Warner said,
·'One thing that makes Laguna
Beach very special is that the ci-
ty s mells good There's ab·
solutely no reason to throw away
that lovely clean ocean air.''
Councilman Fitipatrick said·
the issue of clean fuel buses is
symbolic in Laguna Beach, and
he was supported by Mayor
Bellerue who said, "I find it
amazing there is no way to put
better brakes on smaller buses."
But Coun cilman Howard
Dawson said the wheelbase of
Laguna's propane buses are too
small lo accommodate the
larger air brakes.
And he said the issue was one
of safety, considering Laguna's
steep hillside roads.
"Everybody who wants a pret·
ty bus that doesn't make noise
or polJuUon can't compare them
with 16-year-old school buses,"
Dawson said.
He said the new diesel buses
that are being manufactured to·
day a re cleaner and quieter.
When it appeared the council
majority wus going to support
purchasing the diesel vehicles,
Fitzpatrick suggested the city
shop for one bus instead of
three.
··Buy one and see how the
company goes for it," he said ,
addjng he doubted there would
be support ror the notion.
But Dawson was joined by
council members Kelly Boyd
and Bill Wilcoxen in endorsing
the purchase of three diesel
vehicles.
Coast pl~n endorsed
P lanning Commission OKs refinements in I rvine program
Refinements that will reduce
the size of a major road and re·
duce the numbe r of non·
residential units in the Irvine
Coast development between
Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar have been endorsed by the
Orange County Planning Com·
mission.
a lawsuit challenging previous
approvals of the plan. No hear-
ing date has been set for a hear·
1ng o n t he Oran ge County
Superior Court action.
In a written statement given
to the planning commission, the
Friends said, "Friends of the
Irvine Coast does not believe
that dedication of open space is
a blanket excuse for ignoring
very real problems that face
Orange County. Ten years of
planning effort is not sufficient
reason to adopt a plan that is out
of touch with the problems and
needs of the Orange County re·
g1on.
DllM' Hee M-.
7·l.OT SL'BDIVISIO.\' OK 'D
.Wyst1 c 1111/s prnJ~C'I
Hilltop
housing
approved
The changes were ordered by
the slate Coastal Commission,
which has ultimate jurisdiction
over the 9.400-acre area located
inland or Pacific Coast Highway
between the two coastal cities.
T he county Planning Com-
mission accepted previously im-
posed state conditions that a
proposed extension of Sand
Canyon Road from its present
terminus to Pacific Coast
Highway be reduced from four
to two lanes.
Miffed HB blasts
slur on its coast
Laguna Beach City Council
members approved a seven·lot
subdivision in the hills above the
high school Tues day, ending
nearly a decade of debate and
lawsuits over the controversial
parcel
Willia m Lyon of Newport Beach will be allowed to create
seven residential lots on the
28·acre parcel at the terminus of
Pacific Avenue in the Mystic
Hills neighborhood following a
split vote Tuesday night. The
property is located above the
"L" on the hillside facing Park
Avenue.
The seven building sites will
be located atop a ride. with the
r emaining 23 acres of open
space made up mostly of steep
r avines and slopes.
The original submittal for de·
velopment of the parcel. pro·
posed in the ~arly 1970s, called
tor 78 building sites on the pro·
perty
But residents in Mystic Hills
objected to the number of homes
proposed, citing geologic factors
as well as traffic congestion, im·
pacts on views and the potentiaJ
impact on a water course adja·
cent to the property.
Lyon filed a suit against the
city last year to force the council
lo reconsider its denial of the
project. ..
It claimed that since the proj·
ect was first introduced in urn .
it had been revised six times
with the number of building sites
reduced from 78 to 11.
The final revision approved
Tuesday shows only seven lots
on the property and had the sup-
port of city officials and the de·
veloper. There are 26 conditions
attached to the approved plan.
Further. the co mmission
halved from 500 to 250. the
number of hotel rooms that will
be permitted in the Pelican Hills
area near where Sand Canyon
will intersect the highway.
T he commission also agreed
to changes designed to speed the
dedication of open space lands to
the county and control grading
in certain sensitive area's.
The modifications will be con·
sidered by the county Board of
Supervisors Oct. 21. Approval is
anticipated.
T hough the actions are con-
s idered "technical" due to the
coastal commission's previous
actions, they have nonetheless
s parked new objections to the
entire coastal plan from a
group, Friends of the Irvine
Coast.
The organization recently riled
Dana Point
man, 81,
kille d by car
An 81 -year·old Dana Point
man was killed ear ly Tuesday
when he was struck by a car
while walking across Pacific
Coast Highway at Amber Lan-
te rn ·Street in Dana Point, a
California Highway Patrol
spokesman said today.
The CHP s pokesman s aid
Rodger Joseph Smith was hit at
about 5:30 a.m. by a southbound
vehicle, knocking him more than
36 feet down the roadway. The
spokesman said the name of the
motorist was not immedfately
available.
Smith was rushed to Mission
Community Hospital in Mission
Viejo. where he died at 6:26
a.m .. according to a hospital
s pokesman.
By PATRICK KENNEDY
OttMD.i1r'1 ... S-
HUnlington Beach officials are
sending a formal letter or pro·
test to rederaJ authorities over a
report that identifies the city's
9·mile-long coastline as odorous
and unattractive.
The report commissioned by
the U.S. Department of the In·
terior and released last May
fo und the city's extensive oil
operations unsightly.
City Council members
criticized the report Monday for
not recognizing a new city or-
dina nce r equiring oil pump
operators to c lean up their
projects by fencing and
landscaping the developments.
City officials also noted that
the bluffs area above Bols a
(,hica State Beach is scheduled
h; become a sea view park next
summer and landscaped with
g rass. s hrubs and trees .
Presently, there's a mix of
pipelines and oil pumps on the
bluffs.
"We're suggesting that they
come back and take another
look , .. said Councilwoman Ruth
Bailey
The report gives the city a low
aesthetic rating because "odors
and noises of oil development
and power plant are the major
liabilities to the area."
Huntington Beach was given a
mark of 48 on a scale of 100.
The report aJso stated that the
c ity 's ocean h o ri zo n is
"dominated" by two existing
offshore platforms within the
J-mile state waters.
·'The modest housing and old
downtown area of Huntington
Beach fronting the ocean is clut·
tered with oil wells scattered
helter-ske lter." the report
states.
Alex C. Watt. a federal geog-
rapher and coordinator of the
report. says the study equally
r ecognizes natural scenic beauty
and what appears to be ap·
propriate and pleasing blends of
architecture.
Wayne statue hassle ended
Actor's likeness expected to be installed at OC airport
After more than two years of wrangling, It ap·
pears a larger-than-life size statue of the late actor
John Wayne will be installed at the airport that
bears his name. The Orange County Board of Supervisors.
without discussion, Tuesday approved an agree-
ment that will permit the statue project to move
forward.
The agreement is being entered into by the
county, proprietor of the airport; Bruce Nott,
founder of John Wayne Memorial Associates. a
group promoting the statue project, and Wayne
Enterprises, headed by Michael Wayne, a son of
the actor.
The revised agreement was drafted after
county officials objected to a prop<»ed contract
submitted in July. They areued the county could
have been held liable for protecting the copyright
of the 9-foot statue.
Under the new agreement, lhe county almply
a1ree1 not to actively merchaodiH the 1tatue.
Notl proposed the.statue project ln 1979 shortly
after the airport was renamed J ohn Wayne Airport
followtna the fa med actor'• death.
Tb• autue will be bued cm a cuUn1 prepared
by Mlcbael Sum mera, a Glen Rose, Teu1,
1cuJpt.or reta.lned by lbe auodatel to develop the
likeness.
Jn other 1ct.loft Tuetday, the supa-vllon look
action an t.beM luuea :
TRANSPORTATION: Requested the foder~l
Highway Administration add the San .Joaqum
Transportation Corridor, a proposed 14-mile route
from MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to
the Santa Ana Freeway north of San Juan
<.;ap1strano. to its list of projects eligible for
federaJ funding.
D ANA POINT: Authorized lnstallallon of
parking meters to charge 25 cents per hour at the
165-space parking lol at Puerto Place and Del
Obispo Street at the Dana Point Harbor.
WATER DISTRICTS: lnltiated action to allow
534 acres of land known aa Sycamore Hills to be
annexed into the Laguna Beach County Water Dis-
trict from the Moult.on·Nlauel Water District.
RALL OF ADKINIST&ATION: Bolatered
security measures for the county 1overnment
ceDter ln San ta Ana by orderlnc a $17,000
automatic roWnc (rill ayatem to replace wooden
parkfnc aate arm.a for tbe basement aarace.
. ri.ooo OONTIOL: Selected th• PRC Toups
enetneerinl firm of Santa Ana to conduct a awdy
on wbeUler to mm lmprov~ to the Grwn·
Ylll•81nnln1 flood coetrol chMMI bltweeo Ed·•
lnser Avenue ln Santa Ana and Gisler A.enue ln
Cost a Meu.
He said the report will be used
by rederal offi cials next June to
help decide which oil tracts in
Southern California s hould be
IPased for private oil explora·
lion.
He said the general purpose of
the report is to determine which
areas would suffer the least
scenic damage by development
o f oil platforms in f ederal
waters three miles offshore. He
said the report indicates that on
the Orange Coast Huntington
Beach would have the least to
lose by development of ocean oil
derricks.
BLUFF GIVING WAY The owner of the Quiet Cannon
restaurant in D1:.1na Point is challenging a c·ount~· directive'
to repair the slope below his blufftop eating plate by 1982 or
Housing
scrapped
fro01 plan
Laguna Beach City Council
members have scr a pped the
housing element in the city's
Local Coastal Plan following
passage of a law rem oving
CoastaJ Commission authority to
require affordable housing.
' else close down. Owner Da\'id Perrin wa~ (j lso told to install
a warning device to al ert c ustomers and t•mplo.' et·~ in ca~t·
of future slides. The bluff overlooking OiJniJ II arbor ~lid clu r
ing rains in 1980 Perrin ·-. ilppt..•<il ''ill tw he;.ircl latL·r thi'
month
However, council members
said Monday that construction of
affordable housing could still be
required in Laguna Beach under
the city's General Plan, which
the council ls scheduled to con·
sider in about two weeks.
The bill removing the Coastal
Com mission from the housing
business was signed into law by
Gov. Jerry Brown last week.
The new law is scheduled to take
effect Jan. l.
T he law provides that city and
county governments will take
over jurisdiction of affordable
housing.
City Planner Kyle Butlerwick
said under the city's proposed
housing element in the GeneraJ
Plan, developers would be re-
quired to provide 25 percent of
new housing units constructed
as affordable in subdivisions
with 10 or more units.
Butterwick said if it were not
feasible to build the affordable
units on the construction site,
developers could be allowed to
build them at another location.
Developers could also be given
affor dable housing credits for all
units constructed beyond the 25
percent required. which could be
used in ruture developments.
The Ci ty Co u n cil ha s
scheduled the next hearing on
the city's Local Coastal Plan for
Nov. 14 at 10 a.m. The hearing
will be held al City Hall, 505
Forest Ave.
Under state law, all cities are
r e quired to adopt a Local
Coastal Plan and have It ap·
prov ed by the state Coastal
Commission.
I Foundation elects ·
board m e mbers .
Three members of the South
Coast Medical Center board
have been elected to tbe center's
Foundation for three-year
terms.
Boud members Owen PoweU,
John Rayme:nt and Lany Hunt
were selected to aerve on the •
board'• nm.member foundation
panel wtdcb ral.tel mone1 fOr
health care needa at th• South'
Lacuna facWt,y.
2 Lagunans drop
condo plan support
Two Laguna Beach men who
said they were working for the
owner of a 25-un it apartment
com pl ex in an effort lo convert
the building lo condominiums
have withdrawn their support
for the project.
Realtor Ron Williams told
council members Tuesday that
he and partner Earl Waterbury
had decided the own-your-own
project at the Royal Tahitian
complex on Cliff Drive was not
acceptable to tenants at the 22·
year -old apartment building.
"We told the owners (be·
forehad > the only way we'd
do it cwork toward converting
the un its to condominiums>
would be if there wasn 't a lot of
Art sc lwol
gets director
Long-time board member and
former school director Ruth
Salyer has been named interim
director of the Laguna Beach
School of Art.
She replaces David Patterson,
who beld the position for the
past year and who will continue
to act as consultant for the art
school.
Gifts sought
for prizes
The Laguna Beach Chamber
of Commerce and the pollre de-
partment arc aeellinC donatioaa
from local merchant.I to be Ulld
11 prbe9 ror wbmen in lbe up.
comh11 $· and 10-k llomet er
r&CH in the Alt ColoDJ,
The rac:M wlU be bekt Dee. 12
ud merchaa&I an aked to am-
lJ'lbute ~~aDdlH. ror q~ or to toalrtblU
pr11H, eall raee .OOrclluw
DavMt Saltlt at• &IM.
opposition to it. .. Williams told
council members .
Williams said he met with the
tenants ... and I think people are
pretty upset "
The conversion would have
seen primarily older tenants
leave the apartment building
where they pay between $600
and $900 a month. Sales prices
for the individual units would
have ranged from $225,000 for a
single bedroom unit to nearly
$400.000 for a three-bedroom
unit.
In addition, the spokesman for
the owners said a city staff re·
port indicated current zoning for
the site would a llow only LJ
units . instead o f the exist-
ing 25.
State b e ach
day-use
talk set
Developing day-use facilities
at a downcoas t portion of
Doheny State Beach Park will
be discussed at a public meeting
Oct. 14 in Dana Point.
State Parks and Recreation
Department officials are con·
sidering changing the General
P lan for a portion of Doheny
State Park to include day use ac·
tivlties at the site instead of
overnight camping.
The area under consideration
Ls Just aoutb of the exlaUnc
camplJ'OUl'dl at the beach part.
But before 1ucb a ab-.e ean
be lDade, it.ate olftdala mmt
bold publi~ heariqa Md •uliadl
revlHd plaa to tie ..... P.nJ
•nd ltwtiaa 0...11111• n e Oct. ic •• rt'N wm be lleld • .,... 11111 ......... ln LU..... .,:. r.:· ....... ta11l':ft Catlariill •(Ill)~ ...
..
L
/
SDG&E earn _____ · gs up 3 c
But $1.65 per share figure is down 7 cents from 1980
BRIEFS
,
I Su Diego Gaa &i Electric an·
nounc"tl curninas of Sl.65 a
shitre for the 12·month ~rtod
ended Aug. 31 The earnings re·
port showed an ti cent aain over
the $1.57 ttarned for the 12·monlh
period cndoo July 31, but a 7
cent d~rease from the Sl. 72 a
share earned in the 12 months
ended Aug. 31. 1980. Earnings
for the last 12·mont h period
we re depressed by an oil ex·
change reserve totaling 57 cents
a shure. SDG&I!: released its
earnings in connection with fil.
ing a registra tion statement
with the Securities & Exchange
Com mission for lhe sale of 1.3
m illion s h a res of prefe rence
stock.
The board or directors of
EECO lnc., Santa Ana, d-.iclared
a quarterly cash dividend or 7
cents a s hare, re presenting a 17
percent increase over the pre.
vious rate of 6 cents a sha re. The
dividend is payable Dec. 1 to
s hareholders or record Nov. 16,
a nd is the 32nd consecutive
quarterly cash dividend paid by
the company.
manuged jointly by Da niel In·
t urnationa l, u subsidiary of
•'luor Corp., and by Ralph M
Pa rson::s. has become opera·.
tlona l. The joint venture of
l>uniel and Parsons was formed
in 1976 to perform construction
m anagement services for the
project, working with Interns·
lional Airport Projects, a n arm
of the Saudi Arabian Ministry of
Defense and Aviation
Ne wport Beach·based Com·
preheoslve Care Corp. 's board
or directors has approved 8
second qua rter dividend of 4
cents a share payable Nov. 19 lo
shareholders or record Oct. 30.
•
Saudi Arabia's new King Ab·
dulaziz Airport , a multibillion·
doMar cons truction effort
The final 30 ocean front homesites,
most with unobstructed whitewater
views. A walled and gated private
r e sidential community in San
Clemente. Private beach and private
Swim and Tennis Club.
Fro m
$250,000
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Accounts lnsurcJ to $100.000
lOllAl HOUSlll
Ll!NDl!R
LEASE FACTOR OH
LUXURY LEAS ES
a sac
1982 MARK VI,
LINCOLN TOWM ~CAR
CONTINENTAL. CALL HOW
OFFER IS LIMITED
b a a a a Q > = a e >be
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOJ
DAMATO OVITT '""""to
Banfield heads Martin
Pe ter E.H. Banfield has been
named president of Martin Avis·
lion Inc .. one of the largest air·
craft charter , sales and service
centers in Southern California
The company ti> located a t John
Wayne/Orange County Airport.
Banfield lives in Irvine. •
Bechtel Vice President John
V. Morowski of Irvine has been
elected a director of Bechtel's
three principal operating com
panies Bechtel Power Corp.,
Bech tel Petrole um Inc . and
Bechtel Civil & Minerals Inc. He
will continue to serve as general
manager or t he Los Angeles
Power Division. •
Richard M. Holder has been
na med comptroller of ITT Can·
mon Electric·North America in
Fo un t a in Va lley. H e wi ll
supervise financial operations
for ITT Cannon units in Foun-
tain Valley. Pomona and Santa
Ana, and Phoenix. Ariz.. and
Whilby. Ontario. Holder lives in
Mission Viejo. ..
ON THE JOB
San Diego fo'reeway and John
Wayne Airport, in Novem ber •
R lchard L. Erb has been
na m ed vice p resid e nt a nd
gene r al m anager of the Dis ·
neyland Hotel In his new posi·
lion, Erb will be responsible for
the 60·acre complex which in-
cludes more than 1,121 guest
rooms and 350,000·square feet of
convention facilities •
Lee S. Ovitt Ill has joined
Heritage Bank in Anaheim as
vice president/controller Ovitt
s pent 12 years at First National
Bank of Orange County, and
most recenU y served as vice
president of financial planning
and analysis for Home Bank •
David L. Sprague, form er
marketing m anager for the
Electronics and Space Division
of Emerson Electric Co . has
Joined lrvine·based Li near
Instruments Cor p. as national
sales manager •
Compton , a manufacturer of
auto sound and auto accessories.
lie li ves in NewpQrt Beach. •
Vincent P. Lomonaco, vice
preside nt of operations of
Anaheim·based Altec Corp .. bas
been elected t-0 the company's
board or direct.ors. He fills a
vacancy created by the resigna·
tion of Willis R. T hrelk eld,
treasurer a nd controlle r , on
Sept. 11
Steven W. Miiier has been ap·
pointed applications engineer
for Costa Mesa -based Staco
Powermetics Inc. In his new
position, Miller will work with
c ustomers in the selection of
Sta co 's Lighting Power Reduc-
tor for the control and reduction
of operational energy costs for
both rluorescent and high in·
tensity discharge (HID> lamps.
Ann Yuhas has been elected
presid en t of th e Technical
Ser vices Division of Irvine·
based Falcon Group Inc. In ad·
d ition s he is executive vice
pr esident a nd tr easurer of
the parent company.
L. Donald Damato has been
a ppointed vice president and
manager of To.ronto Dominion
Ba nk of California 's Orange
County office in Ir vine. That of-
fice will move into permanent
quarters at the corner of Main
and Red Hill streets. near the
John X. Shapiro has been a p·
pointed senior vice president of
Kraco E n ter p rises I nc.
Linda Roberts has been as·
signed to Wells F argo Bank's
Westminster offi ce as assistant
m a nager·operations
OVER THE COUNTER ' NASO LISTINGS
NEW YORK (AP) CIUUlll 31)11; 31 ~,,x~1:~~· 1 .... 20 ofiloCH •. ,.. ,. ~:::~' J2 J2'h UPS ANO DOWNS NASOAO ~I~ (lar•Jl ~;. ..... 11 ... 21 OllFt rro U'h I• lDV> J2 .,._,no lllQNsl bkK Cl-Cp j~ • Intra Ind • ..... OtterTP 174 t7V. Stt<ISI 3'ilt •ncl low.st offe" by ColrTle ~ 10 1ntt l 2Sl4. H PCA tnl µI. • StrtwCt ~27 m•rll•t m.keN as o1 CotoGas ......... lntrcEnr 1'1> 1'11. P•MtB 12~ 13 SuN <U M1M J4V1 Tue.. PrlG .. do nol ComCIH 4Jllt QV, tnlmtGs 10 1014 C"'G•R 191'• I~ Sur.rEI •II\ 71111 lncluderelallmar•uP CmlStlr IJ 14 1n8kWSll l~I~ ' tul~P tsih I\ Sbts ' n v. 2~ marlldo-or comm-CmwTtl IS ,..,, w•SoUI ·~ 20 p .. , I 11 "'"' T IC s J2 ]2-NEW YORK (AP) T,.. tottow lno list lu lon tor T-y CO<IP•P 21v. 11'4 JamJC>y 11v. ""' Pen•Enl 12 ... 13 TIME DC \I) 1 shOws U. O....r -• COunlt< Slo<ll Bid A$1L Cordis I) IS\I> Jerico s 21 ,,.,.. P·entair IM. 11~ Ta=· 1"'\ tt ... St0$:U -••rr_,ts tl\et "41n OON uP AEL 11\d ttv> 12"" Cn>,Tre 21'1> 21 ... 1'.!:l/nd, lot .... PeopEllP ~ IO'i\ Ta ms ze14. a v. llw most - -th9 most NMd "" AFAProt 11,,., UV. CullrFd s l'h 2 27V. 21'h Petri! s 27 27v, Tt<umP S.Y, 5111> f!'cent of chango r-rclless ol votuf'l'W AVM Cp ~ 41111 cr ttron 1v. 1\11 ~•jsS• Ill 20 22 Ptllll>Orl 1''11. IS Totem• " ""' or T-r.· A<eura~ 7lot 7~ D tDH s 1311> 13"9 K• v•r '"" .... Phll•N•I ~ 1''h Ten•nl \ 15'4 ...... No te<urll .. lredl;;f, betow S2 tro Incl· Acldhn tO 1~ OaytMat 21 n Ktm•n s 11•n "· Pierce~~ •"9 10</\ THAB \ ~JO "4ed Nol M>d pe.-cen -Cl\eftolts ere IN AdYRou 2lot , ... DBHr ~ ..... K•ri••m • •"-Plnknn o v. '1 Tlprart 2~ 1t dltttrtl'ICe tie-uw fo"v'°"' clollno All Biii s 1114 1• OOlbA' 12ll.U Kt 'Ttsv '31.'> 41 PlonHl8 Q lt. 43v. TomlO I sv. ~ bid P<lct -TUK.'\ lts1 b price AIUAlu 21 2111. DetC•n 11 11"" K•u l•t _,,... PIU llN s'" s~ i~1~~l~d r ~.,. Allcolnc .i 41\1> DeweyEI l J V. KlmN ll 10 20V. Pouls Allu 4'4 S 0 1.Crys 20 ?1 \11 Klno1n1 ,.,.., l\lo Prn GM ~ ~ ~~~Fa n I~~ ,;: u,., Am•ru 71'11. n DIMnCru 31 35 KlootG 32 ..... 33 PrsSteyn Name Last Chg Pct AFurn 414 •'Mo Docull s ~Uh ~~!fo'sv 14'0 U\4. PN>Q<P '"' .... UnMcGll 19V. 19:\Co I York RU\ )14 • I UP ..... AGrottl ISl.'o 1µo OollrGn 14V. ....... IOV> 11 PbSvl'iC 10•11 10-. US Enr 6 '"" 2 Kt"-1 wt ..... • Ill. Up n.a !~~~o: r.'" ~"'° ~r~~~ ' I~ UV. Kull<h 14 UV. Purte ... )411, 2~ US Sur Jj ll\<o ) Alb.,.,., 2 . "' Up n .1 2n.,. un<t ln ~ll ~~~<!t: 11 111o't US Tro 11...., llh 4 KMS tno , .... + "' Up 217 AHettns 12 Ullo DunkD s IN 13 l •ftdRtt j j\lo lj.\lj 16 .... UV•BSll ~ )I s CoeU< s 13 . 1\1. Up 10.t AO...sr 17V. 17,,., Durlrn s I~ II l.•tltCo ~ ,,..,. Re911nPr s:~"" s;~ ~~P~~~ :r.z :;~ • WlnclM 0 ,.,, • "' Up JO,O !~:~~~ ;~~ W' ~alnVM 11 """ Lllnvs U U\4 Rtycn m 1 Vu~A • ,,,.. • ,.,.. Up IU
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liOrlllh
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D1llyPllat
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7, 1981
.
IRVINI
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEVISION
82-3
87
89
Newport Beach firm 's
financial, legal problems
snowballing. See Page 84.
D
n
Huntington protests slur on its coast
. .
By PATRICK KENNEDY Of-~ ...........
Huntington Beach officials are
sending a formal letter of pro·
test to federal authorities over a
report that identifies the city's
9-mile-long coastline as odorous
and unattractive.
The report commissioned by
the U.S. Department of the In-
terior and released last May
found the city's extensive oil
operations unsightly
City Council members
criticized the report Monday for
not recognizing a new city or-
dinance requiring oil pump
operators to clean up their
projects b y fencing and
landscaping the developments.
City officials also noted that
the bluffs area above Boise
(;hica State Beach is scheduled
tv become a sea view park next
summer and landscaped with
grass. shrubs and trees.
Presently, there's a mix or
pipelines and oil pumps on the
bluffs.
"We 're suggesting that they
come back and take another
look." said Councilwoman Ruth
Bailey.
The report gives the city a low
aesthetic rating because "odors
and noises of oil development
and power plant are the major
It abilities to the area."
Huntington Beach was given a
mark of 48 on a scale of 100.
The report also stated that the
city 's ocean horizon is
"dominated" by two existing
offs hore platforms within the
3-mile state waters.
·'The modest housing and old
downtown area of H4ntington
Beach fronting the ocean is clut·
tered with oil wells scattered
helter-skelter.·· the report
states .
Alex C. Watt, a federal geog-
rapher and coordinator of the
report, says the study equally
recognizes natural scenic beauty
and what appears to be ap-
propriate and pleasing blends of
architecture.
He said the report will be used
by federal officials next June lo
help decide which oil tracts in
Southern California should be
IPased for private oil explora-
tion. He said the general purpose of
the report is to determine which
areas would suffer the least
scenic damage by development
of oil platforms in federal
waters three miles offshore. He
said the report indicates that on
the Orange Coast Huntington
Beach would have the least to
lose by development of ocean oil
derricks.
OC planners
OK reduction
of coast plan
Refinements that will reduce
the size of a major road and re·
duce the number o f non
residential units in the Irvine
Coa s t d evelopment between
Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar have been endorsed by the
Orange County Planning Com
mission.
The changes were ordered by
the state Coastal Commission.
which has ullim.ate jurisdiction
over the 9.400-acre area located
inland of Pacific Coast Highway
between the two coastal cities.
The county Planning Com-
mission accepted previously am
posed state conditions that a
proposed extens ion of Sand
Canyon Road from its present
terminus lo Pac ific Coast
Highway be reduced from four
to two lanes.
Further. the commission
halved from 500 to 250. the
number of hotel rooms that will
be permitted in the Pelican Hills
area near where Sand Canyon
will intersect the highway.
to the planning comm1ss1on . the
Friends said, "Friends of the
Irvine Coast does not believe
that dC<lication ol open space is
a blanket excuse for ignorrng
ver y real probl ems that face
Orange County. Ten years of
planning effort is not sufficient
reason to adopt a plan that is out
of touch with the problems and
need:. of the Orange County re-
gion
Sear ch halte d
fo r s unke n
ca bin cruiser
The search for a 26-foot cabin
cruiser which Orange ~ounty
Harbor Patrol deputies were
told had s unk off Newport Beach
early Saturday has been sus-
pended.
A woman is caught in a contemplative mood on rocks below Heisler Park in Laguna Beach .
The commission also agreed
to changes designed to speed the
dedication of open space lands to
the county and control grading
in certain sensitive areas.
Four persons told officials
they struggled lo shore after a
three-hour ordeal
HB asks state to probe dump for toxics The modifications will be con-
sidered by the county Board of
Supervisors Oct. 21. Approval is
a nticipated.
Tom Owen of Newport Beach.
who said he had borrowed the
boat from a friend. said the par-
t y was headed for Catalina
Island when water was dis-
covered in the boat's engine
compartment. lie said he turned
the boat around and attempted
to come back to Newport Beach
but could not make it before the
boat sank al about I a.m .
Officials fear poison material may be buried in Magnolia Street site Though the actions are con-
s idered .. technical" due to the
coastal commission's previous
actions, they have nonetheless
sparked new obJections to the
entire coastal plan from a
group, Friends of the Irvine
Coast.
By PATRICK KENNEDY Of .... .,...,~5 ....
Huntington Beach officials say
they want state experts to take a
closer look at possible toxic
materials that may be buried in
a 38-acre mud dump across the
street from Edison High School.
Mayor Ruth Finley says she
and other counc il m embers
aren't s.'.ltisfi ed by surface tests
conducted earlier this year by
slate officials al the Steverson
dump on Magnolia Street and
Hamilton Avenue.
Those tests concluded that soiJ
down to 2 feel deep didn't con-
tain dangerous concentrations of
toxic materials. But city of·
ficials note that the dump is
believed to reach depths of 80
feet. Since 1971 only inert
materials such as concrete and
soil have been dumped there.
"We have been given minimal
ass urances that the dump
does n't pose a future health
hazard. but we need more test-
ing," Mayor Finley said.
Mrs. Finley and other city of-
Diesel buses eyed by Laguna
By STEVE MITCHELL
, Of Ille o.lty ...... Su"
A majority of the Laguna
Beach citv council voted Tues-
' day to send its city manager
s hopping for three new diesel
buses. despite arguments the ci-
ty should continue to use cleaner
propane vehicles.
Brandt said city maintenance
crews currently have to replace
standard brake linings on the
city's six small buses every
month or so.
dience made emotional pleas lo
retain propane buses, terming
the blue and white vehicles as
"symboli c" of Laguna Beach.
They complained of pollution.
the smell of diesel fuel and the
noise of the conventional buses.
City officials contend they can
find no company that can de-
1 iv er propane-fu e le d buses
equipped with air brakes.
He said that by purchas ing
diesel fueled buses equipped
with air brakes. maintenance to
the brake systems would have to
be completed once every nine
months.
Lagunan Estelle Warner said .
··one thing that m akes Laguna
Beach very special is that the ci -
ty s mells good. There's ab-
s olutely no reason to throw away
that lovely clean ocean air.'· Assistant City Manager Terry
But Ma yor Sally Bellerue,
Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick.
and several members of the au-
Wayne statue hassle ended
Actor's likeness expected to be installed at OC airport
After more than two years of wrangling, it ap·
pears a larger-than-life size statue or the late actor
John Wayne will be installed at the airport that
bears his name.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors,
without discussion, Tuesday approved an agree-
ment that will permit the statue project to move
forward.
The agreement is being entered into by the
county, proprietor of the airport; Bruce Nott,
founder of J ohn Wayne Memorial Associates, a
group promoting the statue project, and Wayne
Enterprises, headed by Michael Wayne, a son of
the actor. /
The revised agreement was drafted after
county orficials objected to a proposed contract
submitted in July. They argued the county could
have been held liable for protecting the copyright
or the 9-foot statue .
Under the new agreement, the county simply
agrees not to actively merchandise the statue.
Nott proposed the statue project in 1979 shortly
after the airport was renamed John Wayne Airport
following the famed actor's death.
Tbe statue will be based on a culin1 prepared
by Michael Summers, a Glen Rote, Texas,
sculptor relained by the associates to develop the
likeness.
In other action Tuesday, the supervtsora took
act1011 on these issu•:
TRANSPORTATION: Requested the feder~l
Highway Administration add the San Joaqum
Transportation Corridor. a proposed 14-mile route
from MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to
the Santa Ana Freeway north of San Juan
<.;ap1strano. to its list of projects eligible for
federal funding.
DANA Pf)INT: Authorized Installation of
parking meters to charge 2S cents per hour at the
165-space parking lot at Puerto Place and Del
Obispo Street at the Dana Point Harbor.
WATER DISTRICTS: Initialed action to allow
534 acres of land known as Sycamore Hills to be
annexed into the Laguna Beach County Water Dis-
trict from the Moulton-Niguel Water District.
HALL OF ADMINISTRATION : Bolstered
security measures for the county government
center in Santa Ana by orderlng a $17 ,000
automatic rolling grill system to replace wooden
parking gate arms for the ba~ement garage.
• FLOOD CONTROL: Selected the PRC Toups
engineering firm of Santa Ana to conduct a study
on whether to make improvements to the Green-
ville-Banning flood control channel between Ed·'
inger Avenue ln Santa Ana and Olaler Avenue in
Costa Mesa
ficials say concern over the
Steverson dump was heightened
this week after state authorities
ru l ed th at an abandon ed
c hemical dump in Fullerton
could release deadly gases in the
event of an earthquake or ex-
cavation.
The Huntington Beach of·
ficials noted that s tale
authorities initially stated that
t he McColl dump in Fullerton
didn't pose a health hazard, but
then reversed that decision after
further testing.
·'The mud dump is ., festering
sore in the city and we don't
know how serious it is," Mrs.
Finley said. "The state should
look at it right away. especially
in view of the problems dis-
covered at the dump in
Fullerton."
The Huntington Beach dump
was used for oil drilling wastes
and rotary muds from 1950 until
1971.
The organization recently fated
a laws uit challenging previous
approvals of the plan. No hear-
ing date has been set for a hear-
ing on t h e Orange County
Superior Court action.
In a written statement given
OC pair advance
in competition
Two Orange Coast youths are
among 1.500 semifinalists from
across the nation in the National
· Achievement Scholarship Pro·
gram for outstanding students.
The two local semifinalists are
Sergio Molino of Costa Mesa
High School and Edward Ussery
Qf Tr vine High School.
Owen said the four people
struggled to shore an the Cameo
Shores area and received as-
sistance from r esidents who
called paramedics
One of the pa ssengers,
Michelle Trusty. also of Newport
Beach. was treated at Hoag
Hospital and released.
Sheriff's deputies from the
Harbor Patrol searched the area
where Owen said the boat had
gone down and found no debris
or other trace of the sinking.
Coast Guard officials. to whom
the case was referred , said they
do not search ror sunken boats if
no lav es are involved.
The boat was owned by James
Cooper. a Santa Ana attorney.
Owen said.
...., ..........
ON THE WRONG TRACK -Teresa Lynn
Carmona. 18, of Buena Park, was in stable
condition today at Western Medical Center
with injuries she received when her 1982
Mazda collided Tuesday morning with a
northbound train on the 1900 block of f:ast
Oyer Road in Santa Ana, j ust north or Irvine.
i>olice said she was attempting to p&As a
slower vehicle and apparently did not see the
approaching train. which was traveling at 10
mph.
' ..
•,
'
t
t )
l
lllllil COAST
D1Hr PHat
WEDN ESDAY, OCT. 7, 1981
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEVISION
82-3
87
89
Newport Beach firm's
financial, legal problems
snowballing. See Page B4 . D
Planners OK coast scheme
Refinements in Irvine development plan by state agency meet approval
Refinements that will reduce
the s ize of a major road and re·
duce the number of n o n ·
res idential units in the Irvine
Coast development be tween
Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar have been endorsed by the
Or ange County Planning Com·
mission.
The changes were ordered by
the stale Coastal Commission,
which has ultimate jurisdiction
over the 9,400-acre area located
inland of Pacific Coast Highway
between the two coastal cities.
The county Planning Com-
mission accepted previous ly im-
posed state conditions that a
proposed extension of Sand
Canyon Road from its present
terminus to Pacific Coast
Highway be reduced from four
lo two lanes.
Furth er, the commission
halved from 500 to 250, the
number of hotel rooms that will
be permitted in the Pelican ffills
area near where Sand Canyon ,
will intersect the highway.
The commission also. agreed
lo changes des igned to speed the
dedication of open space lands to
the county and control grading
in certain sensitive areas
The modifications will be con·
s ide red by the county Board of
Super visors Oct. 21. Approval is
anticipated
Though the actions are con·
side red "technical" due to the
coastal commission's previous
actions, they have nonetheless
s parked new objections to the
entire coa stal plan from a
group, Friends of the Irvine
Coast.
The organization recently filed
a lawsuit challenging previous
approvals of tbe plan. No hear·
mg date has been set for a hear·
ing on the Orange County
Superior Court action .
ln a written statement li!iven
to the planning comm ission, the
Friends said, "Friends of the
Irvine Coast does not believe
that dedication of open s pace is
a blanket excuse for ignoring
very real problems that face
Orange Countv "
Newport's m ayor
back on the job
Newport Beach Mayor J ackie
Heather, hospitalized five days
for a heartbeat irregularity, was
back at city hall today, running
between meetings and trying to
catch up on work.
"I just got out of one meeting
a nd I've got to get over to
Corona del Mar to give a speech
a nd then l have a huge s tack of
messages l have to go through,"
the recuperating mayor e x·
plained.
Mrs. Heather. admitted to St.
Joseph's Hospital in Orange last
Friday after complaining of
c hest pains. was released Tues·
, day following a battery of tests.
She said she feels fine.
.. It was a warning that I've
got to modify my lifestyle." she
said. "a signal that l have lo
slow down a little. get more ex·
ercise and not s pend so many
slee pless night worrying."
She said prior to being ad-
m itled to the hospital. she had
gone through a "week of pure
hell. ll was rough "
Mrs. Heather previously had
complained of being upset by a
referendum movement that got
under way while she was on
vacation and was at full boil
when she returned earlier this
month.
.,..,, ~ ........ .., a.tn"'"
SOCIAL CLIMBER? Shaun Wallace. 6. discovers you
should always be nice to people on your way up because you
never know whom you might meet on the way down. Dori
Gazso, Anna and Tony Fekete. bottom row, and Shaun
Gates and Ryan Steck got him off to a good start before
giggles collapsed the pyramid on a Costa Mesa lawn.
HB officials protest to U.S. over coast slur
By PATRICK KENNE DY operations unsightly. g rass. s hrubs a nd trees
Presently, the re's a mix of
pipelines and oil pumps on the
bluffs
Of llM Dell' I'll« Staff
Huntington Beach officials are
sending a formal letter of pro·
lest to federal authorities over a
report that identifies the city's
9-mile-long coastline as odorous
and unattractive.
City Coun cil members
criticized the report Monday for
not recognizing a new city or-
dinance requiring oil pump
operators to clean up their
pr oject s by fe n ci n g and
landscaping the developments.
"We're suggesting that they
come back and take another
look," s aid Councilwoman Ruth
Bailey.
The report commissioned by
the U.S. Department of the In·
terior and released las t May
found the city's extens ive oil
City officia ls also noted that
the bluffs area a bove Bol sa
C.hica State Beach 1s scheduled
tu become a sea view park next
s ummer and landscaped with
The report gives the city a low
aesthetic rating because "odors
and noises of oil development
and power plant are the major
Way n e statu e h assle end e d
Actor's likeness expected to be installed at OC airport
After m ore than two years of wrangling, it ap-
pears a larger-than-life size statue of the late actor
John Wayne will be installed at the airport that
bears his name .
The Orange County Board of Supervisors.
without discussion, Tuesday approved an agree·
ment that will permit the statue project to move
forward.
The agreement is being entered into by the
county, proprietor of the airport: Bruce Nott,
founde r of John Wayne Memorial Associates, a
group promoting the statue project, and Wayne
Enterprises, headed by Michael Wayne , a son of
the actor.
The revised agreement was drafted after
county offi cials objected to a proposed contract
submitted in July. They argued the county could
have been held liable for protecting the copyright
of the 9-foot statue.
Under the new agreement, the county simply
agrees not to actively merchandise the statue.
Nott proposed the statue project in 1979 s hortly
after the airport was renamed John Wayne Airport
following the famed actor's death.
The statue will be based on a casting prepared
by Michael Summers, a Glen Rose, Texas.
1culptor retained by the associates to develop the
likeness.
In other action' Tuesday, the supervisors took
action on these i.Ssuea: I
TRANSPORTATION: Requested the federal
Highway Administration add the Sao J oaquin
Transportation Corridor , a proposed 14-mile route
from MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach to
the Santa Ana Freeway north of San Juan
Capistrano, to its lis t of projects eligible for
federal funding.
DANA POINT: Authorized installation of
parking meters to charge 25 cents per hour al the
165-space parking lot at Puerto Place and Del
Obispo Street at the Dana Point Harbor.
WATER DISTRICTS: Initiated action to allow
534 acres of land known as Sycamore Hills to be
annexed into lbe Laguna Beach County Water Dis·
trict from the MouJton·Niguel Water District.
HALL OF ADMINISTRATION: Bolstered
security measures for the county government
center in Santa Ana by ordering a $17 ,000
automatic rolling grill system to replace wooden
parking gate arms for the basement aarage.
FLOOD CONTROL: Selected the iiRc Toups
engineering farm of Santa Ana to conduct a study
on whether to make improvements to the Green-
vllle-Bannlng flood control channel between Ed··
lnger Avenue in Santa Ana and Gi.aler Avenue in
Costa Mesa
la abilities to the area."
Huntington Beach was given a
mark of 48 on a scale of 100.
The report also slated that the
city's ocea n h orizon i s
"dominated" by two existing
offshore platforms within the
3-mile state waters.
·'The modest housing and old
downtown area of Huntington
Beach fronting the ocean is clut·
tered with oil wells scattered
Newport man
a rrested in
hit, run
A 31-year-old Newport Beach
gardener has been ar rested in
connection with a hit, run inci·
dent last month in which a 22·
year-old man was struck by a
pickup truck a nd suffered head
injuries, police report.
Thomas Laurence Blair was
arrested on Seashore Drive in
west Newport Tuesday three
blocks from where the inddent
had occurred three weeks
before.
Police said they were able to
track BJair because a witness to
the accident copied the license
plate number of the pickup.
According to r eports, John
Hildreth of Newport Beach was
crossing Seashore Drive when
the pickup hit him. Police said a
rear-view mirror on the truck
clipped Hildreth in the bead. The
pedestrian received emeraency
treatment al Hoag Memorial
Hospital.
Following the incident,
Hildreth told officen the driver
of the pickup stopped, ran over
lo him, said "you look all ript"
and then fled.
he lt e r -ske lte r ,·· the r eport
states .
Alex C. Watt. a federal geog·
rapher and coordinator of the
report . says the s tudy equally
recognizes natural scenic beauty
and what appears to be ap-
propriate and pleasing blends of
architecture .
He said the report will be' used
by federal officials next June to
help decide which oil tracts in
Southern California s hould be
lf'ased for private oil explora·
tion
He said the general purpose of
the report is to determine which
areas would s uffer the least
scenic damage by development
o f oil platforms in federal
waters three miles offshore. He
said the report indicates that on
the Orange Coast Huntington
Beach would have the least to
lose by development of ocean oil
derricks.
M esa faces bus
cut to Huntington
A segment of a public bus
route that r uns from South Coast
Plaza through Costa Mesa to
Huntington Beach will be delet-
ed during the mid-Qay beginning
in February.
The port.ion of route No. 80
(Victoria Street) will be used
during peak commuting hours
but not from 9 a.111. to 3 p.m .
each day, the Orange County
Transit District Board of Direc·
tors have decided.
The cutback in service on the
route was part of modifications
m ade to Z1 local bus routes by
the directors. Tbe change will go
into effect beginning Feb. 7.
Route No. 80 links the Santa
Ana Civic Center to the Seacllff
Shopping C~nter in HuntinRton
Thieves take 8 200
Two men, one armed with a
knife, entered the Fotomat Corp.
stand at '717 W. 19th St. Tuesday
and forced a clerk to hand over
the S200 in the cuh register,
Costa M8¥ police sald.
Beach. The portion to be deleted'
during non-commuting hours Is
in the southern part, from South
Coast Plaza to H untington
Beach.
The segment runs from Bear
Street to Baker Str eet , down
Fairview R oad to Newport
Boulevard and to Victoria
Street, north of Magnolia Slreet
to Atlanta Avenue, to Orange
Avenue, 17th Street and Main
Street in Huntington Beach.
The Costa Mesa Traffic Com·
mission, a city committee, bad
objected in a letter to the district
about the deletion.
But Ed Buckley, district
service development mana~er,
said Monday the buses on the
route haven't picked up the
minimum 12 passengers per
hour set as a minimum require-
ment.
Seventy percent of the riders
on the route are comautUnc to
work or school, so there la UWe
demand dwinl the middle o1 the
day' he aald. The diatrlct ncww
to save •.ooo per year by cut-
tJn1 back service, he said. \
I
I
•
1111181 ClllT YOUR HIMITDIN DAILY PAPIR
v\/f t>Nf ~,uAv P l l llHl ••' l'Jt~· UH AN GE COUNTV. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Ex-envoy: 'Palestine key to peace'
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Of .... o.My ...........
The solution of the Palestinian
problem is the key to peace ln
the Middle East, a former am·
bassador said Tuesday, and that
solution is part Qf both the
legacy of slain Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat and the issues
behind the sale of AW ACS radar
planes to Saudi Arabia.
Robert G. Neumann, former
U .S. a mbassador to Saudi
Arabia, Afghanistan and Moroc·
co, made the comments in a
speech before the World Affairs
Council of Orange County at the
South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Neumann said Sadat, who was
assassinated in Cairo Tuesday,
risked the alienation of the Arab
world by recognizing Israel, and
m ade peace with t~at country in
the hope that Israel's govern·
m ent would grant t he Pal·
estinians self.rule In return.
He said Sadat reco1nized that
solution of the P alestinian
problem is vital because the is·
sue "forms a platform on which
opposition of var ious types
gathers." He said such opposi·
lion keeps the Middle East un·
stable.
But Isr aeli Prime Minister
Me n ach em Begin did not
respond to Sadat's initiative, as
other Israeli leaders might
have. Neumann said.
Deity ............. Cllliftte~
HI-YO, HARVEST FESTIVAL -The mechanical bull pen at Irvine's Harvest Festival just m ay
have been the ha ppiest spot in Orange County last week as a goodly percentage of the more
than ~.000 who attended the event "got into the saddle" just as this youngster did. The home·
grown fair , held at Heritage Pa rk. closed Sunday a rter setting new attendance records.
County mulls airport order
Supervisors conj er in closed session, delay Wayne decision
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
OftllleDallY~S ....
The Orange County Board of
Super visors me t in closed
session for more than 90 minutes
Tuesday to discuss a judge's or·
der barring implementation of a
county pl an to regulate which
air carriers can use John Wayne
Air port.
Supervisors took no action
* * *
following the closed-door meet·
ing. They did agree to consider
the matter further next Tues·
day.
Officials familiar with the is·
s ues said the county has two op·
lions . It could appeal the Sept. 25
ruling of U.S. District Court
Judge Terry Hatter Jr. or sub-
mit a new airport access plan
that would be acceptable to the
* * * Panel questions
airport site delay
Members or a "blue ribbon"
committee assigned the ta sit of
naming a site for a regional
airport have expressed concern
about a recent Orange County
government report that says no
such facility will be built prior to
2000.
"Staff studies have a way or
becoming self.fulfilling proph·
ecles," said James Cava·
naugh, one or several business
leadersservlngonthepanel.
The commlUee, on a motion
by Cavanaugh Tuesday, asked
the county Board of Supervilon
for "clarification" on assump-
tions contained in a plannlnC re·
port recenUy sent. by the county
lo the Southern CaUtornJa M ·
sociaUon of Governments, a r•
gtonal plannltlt bocly.
One assumption was tbat a re·
1lonal airport wotOdn't be bu.ut •
as a
prior to 2000. Another was that
J ohn W_ayne Airport would re·
main the principal public airport
serving the county through the
end of the century.
Committee members suggest·
ed the assumptions were "con·
tradictory" to their task of
selecting a site for a regional
airport.
Cavanaugh, who with Henry
Segerstrom, is serving on a sub-
comm ltlee of the blue ribbon
panel, said, "We think Oran1e
County needs a new air carrier
facility . . . (il) needs to be
planned and well In operiUon
before the year 2000."
Segentrom, the developer of
South Coast PlaH in Costa
Mesa, 111ld lanruase ln the plan·
nlna report prepa red by the
county Administrative Office'•
Forecast and Analysia Center,
(See PANEL Pase AZ> '
court.
J udge Hatter rejected the pro-
posed access plan after at·
torneys representing the federal
government and P acifi c
Southwest Airlines claimed the
proposal was discriminatory
and anti-competitive.
The county had proposed lo al·
locate 35, or 85 percent. of the 41
jet departures permitted daily
from the airp0rt for a three-year
period to AirCal and Republic
Airlines, the two carriers that
have served Orange County the
longest.
PSA, which would have re·
ceived only two departures dai·
ly, initially brought legal action
against the county. It claimed
that it should be entitled to eight
flights daily.
The fed eral government
became a party to the lawsuit,
siding with PSA. Attorneys
representlog the Federal Avia·
lion Administration, Civil
Aeronautics Board and Depart·
ment of Transportation claimed
both in court papers and oral
arguments tbal the plan violated
tenets of tbe Airline Deregula·
tfon Act of 11>78.
AlrCal, which took lhe side ol
the county lJl the legal dispute. ia
"seriously conaidering" tulng an
appeal to Hatter's ruUn1, said
spokesman Mark Peterson. It
would be free lo do so re1ardlesi
or whether the county decides lo
appeal, offlclab said.
Officials said privately that a
decis ion by the COWlty to punue
•n appeal could place some c:A
the county'• uae .... tr1cuona on
fSee AJaPO,T, Paie Al)
"He <Sadat) met a very dif.
ferent man <Begin > who
nickeled and dimed him to de·
ath," Neumann said.
Neumann said that the failure
of U.S. foreign policy to deal
with the Palestinian issue
"limits the closeness we can de·
velop with any Arab country"
because it creates the percep·
lion that the U.S. will not deal
with Arab countries on an equal
basis with Israel.
* * *
Israel covets its special rela·
tionship with the U S and op·
poses the A WACS sale not for
security reasons, but because
Begin's government fears that
the U.S. will develop a rela
tionship with Saµdi Arabia equal
to its relationship with Israel.
Neumann said.
Neumann said the AWACS
sale is a danger "of very remote
significance" to Is rael and that
Begin's government knows 1t
* * *
He said neii<hboring Arab coun·
tries already blanke t Is rael
with r adar s urveill ance, as
evidenced by their sighting of
Israeli jets on their mission to
bomb Iraq's nuclear reactor.
But Neumann said the A WACS
sale is crucial to the protection
of Saudi oil fields, which 1s im·
portant both to the future of
peace in the Middle East and to
U.S. interests
(See MIDEAST, Page A2)
* * *
Egypt No coup • ID
Officials say gunmen acted independently
CAIRO, Egypt (AP> -Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat's assassins
acted independently of any
political group or country and in·
eluded one Mos lem fanati c.
Defense Minister Abdel Halim
Abu Ghazala said today. ·
·'There is no coup." Abu
Ghazala told reporters. "It is an
individual group and they are
not even related to any group or
country."
Abu Ghazalla said that the as·
sassins numbered four. but did
not specify how many had been
Cops raid
house, CM
01an dies
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .... o.lty " ... , ....
A Costa Mesa man, who police
described as "mentally ill,"
died on an operating table early
this morning after police rushed
into his barricaded home and
fired at least one shot.
Detective Lt. John Calnon said
Arnold Nash Broyles, 37, rushed
at offi cers while wielding a knife
in each band just inside his
home at 867 Presidio Drive at
about 12:50 a .m .
Calnon said Broyles shot in
the chest. dropped to the floor of
his family room and rose again
still clutching one of the knives
Officers wrestled the weapon
from his hand, Calnon said.
without further injury.
Officers said they were sent to
the home at 9:38 p.m . Tuesday
after they said Broyles· father,
Arnold Broyles Sr., drove to the
police station to report his son
had chased him and his wile
from their home with a knife.
Four officers, a ided by the
younger Broyles' psychiatrist,
Dr. Richard Green of Newport
Beach, attempted to talk the
barricaded man from his home,
Calnon said.
After about two hours of un·
s u ccessful pleading, police
called in a 10-man SWAT team
to rush the home.
Broyles was shot as he re·
1<>rtedly rus hed at officers who
.icked in a side door leading to
the family room.
H e was taken to Fountain
Valley Community Hospital
where he died during s urgery,
police said.
Calnon said the Orange Coun-
ty District Attorney's office and
Costa Mesa detectives are in·
vestigaling the incident.
He said it is believed Broyles
died of a single .22 caliber rifle
bullet fired by an officer stand·
<See DEATH, Page A2)
killed and how many arrested.
There have been conflicting
reports on the number of people
who took part in the attack that
RELATED STORIES-A4
EDITORIAL COMMENT-A10
occur red during a m ilitary
parade Tues da y . But one
military source told The As·
sociated Press there we re four
in the group a nd that one had
been killed. Other sources said
* * *
six people y,ere involved
Egypt moved quickly today to
assure political continuity after
Sa dat 's assass ination by
scheduling the referendum on
his s ucces!>Or for next week
Me mbers of Egypt's Parlia·
ment met in emergency session,
eulogizing Sadat and preparing
lo formalize the nomination or
Vice President Hos ni Mubarak
to s ucceed him. The nomination.
a foregone conclusion , meant
Mubarak will be the onl y can·
CSee EGYPT. Page A21
* * *
3 ex-presidents
to attend funeral
WASHINGTON <APl -Presi·
dent Reagan will not attend the
funeral of slain Egyptian leader
Anwar Sadat but asked former
presidents Jimmy Carter.
Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon
to help lead an America! del·
egation to Cairo
In announcing the president's
decis ion to stay home, White
House spokesman David Gergen
said today that U.S. security
agencies were unammous in rec-
ommending that Regan r e·
main home.
Carter and Nixon alr eady
have accepted Reagan's in vita·
lion. and i''ord agreed to attend
tod ay, Gergtm said.
Secretary of State Alexander
M . Haig offl c1ally will head the
delegation.
Also being invited to represent
the United Slates are Senate
Republican Leader Howard
Baker. Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd , Sen
Charles Percy, chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Com·
<See R EAGAN, Page A21
Pacific 01ineral
mining called easy
WASHINGTON I AP I -A
huge Pacific Ocean source or
valuable miner als, including
scarce ones the United States
must import, can be mined easi·
ly, government scientists say.
The immense ore deposit.
loaded with billions of dollars
worth of copper. silver and other
minerals, lies on the surface o(
the ocean floor under interna·
tiona l waters off South America.
the scientists said Tuesday.
Scientists of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad·
ministration said the deposits
they discovered on submarine
dives last month were carried
from deep within the Earth by
pas t volcanic activity
"The ores are incredibly rich
Dodgers lose
BULLETIN
HOUSTON <A P > -The
Hous ton Astros took a com·
mandlnl 2·0 series lead over the
Dodgers this afternoon with a
1·0, ll·lnning victory.
and they a re on the s urface
around old volcanic vents,·· said
Dr. Alexander Malahoff, chief
scl~ntist on the dives. "You
don't have to dig out m illions of
pounds of rock to get to the m."
Even though the minerals are
8,500 feet below the ocean sur-
f ace. Malahoff said, most of the
technology go get lo them
already exists There a re no in·
ternational trea ties restricting
recovery of the minerals. NOAA
officials added
"It's up to industry to start
looking at it as an economic re·
source," Malahoff told a brief·
ing at the U.S . Com merce
De partment. NOAA 's parent
agency.
U.S. off1c1als have expressed
concern about the nation's de·
pendence upon foreign countries
for such strategic minerals as
molybdenum, and the nation's
low stockpiles of some of them.
New sources of these minerals.
such as the recent find, could
lessen this de pende nce, they
s ay.
No cheers, boos? ORANGI COAST WIATHIR
Considerable c louds
toni ght through midday
Thursday. Gradual clear·
ing Thursday afternoon.
Cooler days in the inland
areas T hursday. Lows
tonight 57 to 63. Highs
Thursday In the upper 60s
to.mid 70s.
Tough rally ground rules ignored
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. CAP> -
T he ground rules of an all·
candidates rally sponsored by
the Biscayne Democratic Club
were tough: no booing, no cheer·
ing.
''Anyone who boos a candidate
will be arrested and prosecuted
to the full extent of the law."
program c hairman Allen
Goldberg promised. "It's not
mere words ; it's a promise . You
will t>e arrested Immediately for
disturbing the peace. I can make
these charges sUclt. • '.
On~ lady ln the back of the
room at Wasb.lngton Savin11 and
Loan wu the nnt lo ianore hit
ultimatum. She let out a short Jeer when Clty Comml11loner
Simon Wilker toot tbe podium.
Ooldbeft orde,red a policeman
to make an arrest. T h e
policeman shrugged h is
shoulders and rejected the or·
der .
It was one of several light mo·
ments at tbe political forum.
held to air the issues before the
Nov. 3 election.
"It's an American custom to
ch eer and boo," said com·
m lsslon candidate Stanley
Shapiro. "Look around you," the
political hopeful challenged
Goldberg. "Do you see any
criminals."
"I see a few." retorted one
member of the audience of most·
ly rellrees.
Goldber& later explained tbal
be bad laid down tbe 1Uff a'°'8:Ml
rules because be had been tokl
trouble~akers would try to d.lll·
rupl thefonma.
t
INSIDI TODAY
Hugh Mulligan's TV set
must have something
wrong with it. Find out
what programs are being
viewed on Page 82.
11011
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CMltn w a•::_., .... . ...... ~" ...... .. ..... ' c.u .......... .. .............
I
.. N
..
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Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, October 7, 1981
I ..
• I
I
•
Dow Jones Final
UP 12.46
CLOSING 868. 72
~ '1 Why cereal
costs so much
In 1950 there were 26 brands of ready-to-eat
cereal on the market By 1973 there were 79 different
brands.
In 1954 the top eight cereal brands accounted for
57 percent 'or the total market. By 1964 the top eight
held onl y 47 percent of the market. Today they have a
little more lhan one-third.
Com flakes once represented more than 30 per·
cent of the dry cereal business. Its s hare today is less
than 10 percent.
Today, there's probably no cereal brand that can
daim more than 6 percent of the total market.
Looking at that ~ array of rigures. an \"
unins tructed ob ~; ~
server might draw , -,
th~ ~onclus!on that 4 , !_ this 1s an industry ... __ .. _ _.. .. ________ _
whe re competition lllJOI lllllllJZ has flowered. Top
brand s ha ve los t
their market power . Concentration is far weaker to·
day than it was yesterday.
But things are not always what they seem. Those
figures are deceptive because they do not show that
while brands have indeed proliferated. the number of
1>roducers has not. Six companies make virtually all
th~ dry cereal we eat They are: Kellogg, General
Mills <the Big G line>. General Foods <Post ), Qu~ker
Oats !Cap'n Crunch , 100 percent Natural ), Nabisco
<S hredded Wheat) and Ralston Purina <Chex). And
three Kellogg, General Mills and General Foods -
do tht! lion's share of lhe business, about 80 percent.
No"' lhat high degree of producer concentration
bothered the <J nt1trust lawyers al the Federal Trade
Commission .• ' 1972. they brought an antitrust action
seeking le> brno < up the big cereal makers. The FTC
alleged that w1 were all paying too much for our
breakfast ce1 ea • because of the monopoly power ex·
erted by these companies.
The ·FTC 1n its complaint, proposed that Kellogg
be evisccrat~d by taking away a bunch of its brands
and selling up three new companies The FTC asked
that General Mills and General Foods also be re·
quired to yield some of their brands to a couple. of
newly formed companies. Out of the three companies
would come eight
f'TC's idea was that the more companjes there
are , lhc more competition there will be, which is pre·
s um ably good for the cereal eaters.
But the thing 1s, you can't just tell companies
tht!y control too much or the market and have to slim
down It's usually incumbent on a government agen·
cy to demonstrate that the companies reached this
stage by collusion, conspiracy or some other illegal
way .
Did the complaint charge that the companies
conspired together to drive competitors out of the in·
dustry? No.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
St\IF~lnt ' PAC Telle! :,:,r;;~r:
E .. on • SIOOlllnd StorgeTecl\
~rT&T C..Pacll HullOnEF , Penney JC Grumrnn Co AllRicllfld IBM UnDllCal
• 1~.soo 115,800
~7l.•OO SllO 000 SIS 000 •ll.SOO
•ll.000 .U.,000
431.000 •10,eoo lel,600 178,JOO JOJ,700
77S.'°' ?10,600
UPS AND DOWNS
lol•me 1 Patne W•bl> 2 Finl F-r
l Publlo •no ~ ~JI~'' dt0
• Mor lolor 7 St<19l"llS< WI t Envlrtcll Cp • K atylnd pfB 10 Dr•Y1usCp • ti Gl1>r1tF1n
1J Mattel "'' 13 Donlul Jen 14 HuttonEF I IS HMW 1110
16 ~feoraS<t.n 17 lntllco pll<
lol•m• I PotEI 4.2~ 2 Dtv•u Ind 1 Fllmw•v•
4 Fllmwy '°"' ! i;:.~•,1;''" 7 EIMemM9 I UnEI 2. ljpt t EmpDE 1118 10 O•t•Term 11 .HrCeftP lOI 12 com~
13 Cllrytlef'"" 14 UnP•rk Min IS duPnt 4.IGPf It WltCoNA \ 17 GlddLe• t
GOLD COINS
. ~
Pct Up I~• Uo t•.8
Up "·' Up "·' Up IH Up 11' Up 11 S Up II S Up 10 7
Up 10 S Up 10 l Up 10 l Up IQ.I
Up '' UP '5 Up •.•
UD ''
Pct
011 101 °" 10.0 Oii 'J Oii •• Ott t.S Off t.3 Off t.O 011 7.t
Off 7.1 Off •• s Oii • J
Off '·' Off u Ott s.o Off •.• Off 4.7 Off • s
HEW YO"K IA" Pr\«• 1•19 T ...... y
01 "'4 cotn1, c-rM •ltll MoftdaY'•
llfk•
·~, ,....., Ol .... 7 •• 00 ....• 11 .... MtjlM-, I troyw , "'1' 00, WllO 00
*•k• JO jlHO, I 1 ll'OY o•., ~1$.•, ..
"~:0.e,_ 100 crown. "°2 t?-oy ••~ wo.oo.
""$16.00 •
AMERICAN LEADERS
METALS
C...Wtl~ cent1 t pou;Kl, U.S . .-.11._
llOn• •
..... Ja-42 c-s. pound
lllK •t \lo C-a~. dellv....0.
Tl• $7 .... AMtall W-c.,.,._lle lb ""'"'1-1.-c..,ua~.N 'f Met'< WY '4J2 00 per 11•51<
~i.tl_...,_ OOlroy 01.,"' Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
t.-: mom1nv rt•lne "'45 oo. 1111 u .oo. ~: at•,_ t1a1ne ~.50. 110 U.90 .. ~•rte:~-ll•lfto ..n.o, ""'141
~·-: ~ 'S, off M .. 1er1c11: ,..., ll•lne w s.oo. ue> u oo. '4&00 ... ..,.
M•••Y & M.,...... l""IY ClallY Q"°'9)
t4'HO.uo UJO.
1...-: IOlllY aelly qvotel ~5.50. Ill> •uo.
.......... (only O.lly -te l "6t7.1t, up U.tl.
SYMBOLS