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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-10-12 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ·' Jean Harris Dodgers,. Rams . . . .J. . , ~ . " • batecl victim, make area author claims fans happy <See story below) ----; .. DUNGI COAST County killers still at large Two unidentified gunmen who opened fire early Sunday in a Garden Grove restaurant, killing one cu!\t'omer and injuring five others. remained al large today. Investigators said lhey don't have any definite leads as to the identity of the men in long coals and ski masks who sprayed the Hoang My res taurant on Brookhurst Street with at least five rounds from two shotguns, al 2:30 a.m. Killed in the shooting in the Vietnamese restaurant was Hong Thi Ngo. 20 . She was pronounced dead on arrival al Fountain Val ley Com munity Hospital, said Garden Grove Police Sgt. Bruce Beauchamp. Of the rive people injured, the most seriously hurt, according to Beauchamp. was Brian Scott. a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton, who was listed in a local hospital today in serious condition with back and neck injuries. Scott was the only Caucasian in the' restaurant at the time of the s hooting , Beauchamp said. In vestigators requested that the victims' hospitals not be made public in case the gunmen were seeki ng a particular customer. Another Marine from Camp Pe ndleton, '.'on Van Vu , was li sted today in good condition with leg wounds. Other customers with minor injuries were Minh Hoang Nguyen, 24 , Ha Van Nguyen, 21. and Tuam Van Pham, 24 . Hometowns for the victims were unavailable this morning. <See stories, Page Cl) .. -<~~-··.I{. ____ ...__. -·-----....-.--- • • * • * • YOUR HOMITOWN DAllY PAPIR ORANGE COU N TY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ,.,, ......... Frt>d Gorrell 1 left · and Jnhn Shot>craft talk u.:1tl1 1cf'll 1c1sllns 111 Sa1.:annah Ga . after lar1dmg their bal/r11m m o c"'''·C•1w11 ''' l/1qh1 f ""n Cnsta \Te-:a 2 balloonists bask • in ~ After a restful ni ght at a Savannah, Ga., hotel. Super Chicken III pilots John Shoecraft and Fred Gorrell were preparing today to recover the balloon that carried them rrom the campus or Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa to a remote island off the coast of Georgia. With th e ir landing on Black~ard Island at 11 :07 a.m. EDT Sunday, the pair completed the rirst non-stop balloon flight from one coast of the United States to the other. Super Chicken 111 lifted off in Costa Mesa early Friday. Marilyn McManus , a spokesman for the Super Chicken crew, said the men had a good night ·s s leep at a Savannah hotel and today would attempt to recover their balloon from Blackbeard Island. • • victory.: Flight spokesmen said the 10-story-high craft was in the air 55 hours, 25 minutes and had traveled 2,515 miles. Shortly after the landing, co-pilot Shoecraft said he felt "on top of the world." He said the pilots were concerned about whether they would be able to land close enough to shore. ''or if we landed in the ocean with the fog, if we would have a serious problem getting rescued.'' "We were able to bring the balloon right in on the beach so we were very happy," he added. The pilots had attempted an earlier landing Sunday on a mainland beach about 24 miles south of Savannah but failed when stiff ocean breezes rorced them lo ascend to find a more suitable spot. Big nuclear power cam.paign blitz set I \'SATIABLE TYRA \T Slam Dr Tarnower WA.\'TED TO KILL HI."vf \lurderess Jean Harm; Jean Harris 'hated' Scarsdale diet doc NEW YORK <AP> -Jean Harris deeply hated Herman Tarnower. a sadistic bully to whom she crawled like an addict for sex, love and money. accord· ing to a newly published book by a longtime sociaJ critic. '·Deep ln her mind and heart s h e wanted to kill Or . Ta mower," Dia na Trilling writes of the former Madeira Van driver kidnapped? SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. CAP> Although there were no sigm of forced entry or a struggle, police say they are examining the possibility of kidnapping in the weekend disappearance of an armored van driver with up to Sl.l million in cash. A .38-caliber handgun •. uniform shirt and company identification card belonging to Daro Christopher WeUburg. 29, were recovered from the Purolator Armored Inc. van when it was found behind a Phoenix shoppin1 center several hours after it disappeared during a collection run, police spokesman Dennis Harrison said Sunday. Weilburg, hired less than two weeks ago, and the vehicle vanished Saturday while hit r.artner, Bruce Johnaon, was naide a Scottsdale re1taurant to pick up rec;ptl. police said. School headmistress s he sees as "neither fine nor ladylike.·· As for Tarnower, Mrs. Trilling labels h.im a tyrant with ''an in· satiable appetite" for power and fawning women. "Little wonder he became famous as a diet doctor; he was a glutton for other people's vulnerabilities." the author says in "Mrs. Harris: the Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor." The book may shock Mrs. Harris' defenders, who saw her as a lady ol Victorian principles and impeccable breeding who wanted only to shoot hersell amid the daffodils surrounding the backyard pond of the man she loved. Now 58. Mrs. Harris is serving a 15-year·to-life sentence on her conviction for the March 10, 1980, murder of Tarnower. 69, in a jealous rage over another woman. Mrs. Trilllng's book is being published a year af\er Mra. Harris' triaJ be1an and J11st one month before an appellate court will convene to bear her appeal. Attorney Joel Aumou aald he hadn't read tt\e· book and therefore would not comment on its portrayal of b1s client. pend· ing next month'• court ap• pearance. But contained in the app~al is this statement: "It wUI do no good to search for vWainl or heroes lo lhil case, for there are only vlctlm1 -Dr . Tarnower aad and Jean Karril <See BAa'15, Pa'e A2> Man guilty of slaying wife's mom VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) -A jury has convicted a 33-year·old man of killing h.is mother-in·law with a hatchet despite his defense that he mistook her for a raccoon and his wife's dramatic testimo~y that she was the real killer. "I hit her . . . I don 'l know how many times I hit her," Diane Loyd, 30 , said during her husband's trial in the murder of her mother, Margaret Wise. But after nearly five hours of deliberation, the jury found Orval Wyatt Loyd guilty of second-degree murder. The jury recomme nded a sentence or five years in prison. Commonwealth's Attorney Andre Evans asked the jury to convict Loyd, despite Mrs . Loyd's testimony, saying he feared it was part of an elaborate legal tactic to have them both go free. An obscure Virginia law prohibits witnesses' testimony from being used against them. and Evans said he feared that 1r Loyd got off, the statements made by Mrs. Loyd would not be admissible and she would get off, too. "I envision a scenario where you turn Mr. Loyd loose and they ride off into the sunset," he told the jury. The defense lawyers would not comment after the trial. Mrs. <See HATCHET, Page AZ> ....,,... ..... ,.... THERE GOES THE LIVING ROOM -Although it looks like work crews are sinking an oil well in the living room of this Newport Beach apartment on 43rd Street. they're actually sealing one up. Officials claim the well has been leaking sul· fur fumes since the 1930s and had to be sealed off. Egyptian officers dismissed 'Fanatic religious tendencies' cited in 18 ousters CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -The Egyptian government, in a new move a1ain1t Moslem fundamentalists, dismissed 18 army officers "becaU5e of their fanatic reltgiou1 tendencies" and put them in clvlllan Jobe, official 1ourcea announced today. The E1yptlan defense mtnilter dltclosed, meanwhile, that the army lieutenant accu1ed of mastermindtn1 the a11a11lnatlon of President Anwar Sadat had been checked out by mllltary lntelli1ence becau1e of bll rell1lou1 extremism but wu not found to M any threat. Th• 1uspeet, lit Lt. Kba&ed Ahmed Shawlli ea.tsiambowr. WU woaded durlq Tuttday I • Sadat Hf'HlnaUon., He haa , been in a coma at a Cairo 'military hospital since but ls expected to survive his wounds. "Eighteen army omcers have been posted into cl villan positions because or their f anatlc religious tendencies," today's official statement said. The official sources said the 18 were not under any further iovestlgation, however. They also denied reports that army officera, other than alle1ed assassin el·lllambouJy, had been arrested. The defenae m1ni1ter, Lt. Gen. Abdel Hall~ Abu Ghaaala1 was quoted by the newspaper M110 a1 aaytn' the three other men w.ho alle1edl.v charted Sadat'• revlewlnt stand with el·Islambouly previously had military connections. but were not currently in the military. •'The civillan state security service had sent a report to the Defense Ministry about el·Islambouly's religious inclinations," Ghaula was quoted aa saying. "Military lntelllgence officera watched blm, but found no evidence of disloyalty. He was well·behaved, never absent from duty and known lor his loyalty and discipline." or the three clvlllan t di11u1Md u aoldiera with whom el-lllambouJy aUe1edly char&ed Sadat's revtewin' stand durlnS ·a mllltary parade, one waa killed and two were wounded and arrested. '. Spending • cost1n millions? WASHINGTON <AP> -The Energy Department is plannl.ni a multimillion -dollar public relations blitz to win support for Reagan administration policies favoring nuclear power, a House s ubcommittee chairman charged today. Rep. Richard Ottinger, D-N. Y .. chairman of the House Energy subcommittee with jurisdiction over nuclear energy policy, said the campaign was revealed In an internal department memo to assistant secretary Shelby Brewer. . Ottinger called the plan "a blatant propaganda campaigr1 for the nuclear power induslr)! that will cost the American taxpayers millions of dollars'' and said he will ask department officials to justi f y the expenditure at a hearing before his subcommittee. "If the president is looking for ways to save money, he should abolish his new nucleat propaganda proposal before it gets off the ground," he said. Ottinger said the campaign outlined in the memo included: . -Public appearances bx department ofricials, assisted bY. public relations agents, media training and speech writers. -Interviews for department officials with potentially "receptive" newspaper col· umnists. -Sponsorship of a $200,000 <See NUCLEAR, Pa&e AJ) DRllSI CUil 1111111 Fair and cool through Tuesday. Low tonight at .. beaches 48, inland 54. ·. Tuesday high along coast ·~ 68, inland 72. 118101 TDDIY A/rica: will stri/t·torn nation survive to new c entury or be torn asunder? Story . Pagt C6. 11111 •••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, 40ctober 12. 1981 Poisoned soil probed From Page A1 HARRIS. • • U~derground group.takes claim for England dumping unlawfully coovlctedwel hla murder." LONDON <AP) -A packqe of aoll claimed ~o contain potentlaHy lethal anttlru dlH ... lponl la belftt an"1y&ed by 1cientllta after belnl dumS*I et a Defen.e Mlnla\ry bioloefcaJ research center. authorities said today. · Officials said the pack11e was discovered Saturday at the Chemical Defense Establiahmtnt at Porton Down in Wllt.abire, 85 miles southwest or London, and was beinl -exami~~y-mic~lotlata. A Defense Ministry spokesman said the incident was taken seriously. He said it would be at least two days before lt could be established whether the dumping was a hoax or if the soil really contain.ed anthrax spores. A previously unknown group calling itself the "Dark Harvest Commandos " claimed reapoiulblUty for sendlo1 the packace ln atatem!nte unt Sunday to the London Times and new1paper1 ln Scotland. Tbt 1tatetnent aald the soil bad been due up from Gruln•rd, a tiny uninhabited island off the northwest cout or Scotland that .... was used for germ warfare experiments on sheep during World War II. The public has been banned from the island since 19U and scientists say It wm remain contamtnat~ f()r)"fttn'l)~owre:- "In 19U, the government took our island away. We want it back," the statement said. The 1roup claimed its visit to the island was carried out by a team of microbiologists from two unidentified universities and all precautions were taken to avoid contamination. It said it had removed 300 pounds of soil containing .. _~eeds of death." Defen.se Manaatry sources aald that for aaf6 transport. the soil would need to be pack-.. ln a carefully sealed contalner. Anyone handllns anth· rax-cootaminated sou could become infected. they aaid. Police have been put on alert in Scotland to try and track down the anonymous en vironmentallsta. The book la the work of a respected esaayiat and critk who at 11e 76 h11 edited literary works and published commen· tary on political and aocial evenll but baa no particular trainina ln the law or psychology -dlscuss!ons or which dominate her book . Mrs. Trilling also admits lo never lnterviewln& Mrs. Harris: . Anthrax ia a highly lnfectioua .. If I wa.s golna to t.ake a point of dasease that primarUy affects view whicb wa!J ln any way dis· cattle a.nd -sheep, attboutb 00 intetesi.ed and onl)' oblective l -'itl'O""°~eaaOl\9 ·b~ ... ~ .... ~-1~·a.:-1£'V' -~ -"' ~ .:.=. - d . . CO QU '-0 I • contracte 1t. Althou1h first symptoms are said to be mild, a The author makes no pretense human vtctlm can suffer severe at being a reporter. Her book is boils within five days, followed rife with uncontirmed hearsay: by violent fever and breathing "a story I bad heard" "was sald difficulties. British newspapers to have told the press" ''can it said today. be true?" In an interview in her If infection ls through a Manhattan apartment, she said wound, it can usually be cured, she l~ used to "interpreting" but If the spores are inhaled, the what events mean to society. disease is said to be much more Mrs. Trillint bad never been serious. inside a courtrOQm and never --------------------------written a book when she decided Crash kills 'fasting' • 01otor1st A 26-year-old Huntington Beach woman was killed late Sunday in Newport Beach when her car spun out of control, struck a curb and flipped over, according to police. Police said Gail Renee Miesner. who reportedly bad been on a fasting diet for 63 days, was taken to the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center where she was pronounced dead on arrival Witnesses told Newport ofricers that the woman lost control or her car on Pacific Coast Highway near Balboa Boulevard. They sald the westbound vehicle crossed into the east lanes, struck a curb, jumped onto the sidewalk and flipped over. coming to rest against a street sign. Paramedics said the woman was trapped inside her sedan when they arrived minutes before 10 p.m. .-:- .......... Relatives of the Huntington woman told officers the woman had been on a lengthy fasting diet and had "passed out" during previous periods o( fasting. Police, though, said they are unsure this is what caused the accident. They said a continuing investigation into the traffic mishap and an autopsy of the woman's body should provide further information. GOLD HAUL The Soviet salvage s hip Slephaniturm anchors in the Russian port of ~urmansk afte r dropping gold bars plucked from the c;unken wreck of the British wars hip Edinburgh. The ship \\a!'\ torpedoed h~· 1.erman des troyers in 1942. From Page A1 HATCHET KILLING. • • Huntington slaying suspect held Police have arrested a Garden Grove man and charged him with the Saturday night shooting ~urder of a Huntington Beach man. Westminster police say Daniel Rich ard Lucas, 33, of 9321 Marietta Drive was arrested at his home Sunday morning. He is c harged with killing Charles Eugene Van Heche, 25, of 217 22nd St. Van Heche's body was found Saturday at 11:35 p.m. with a small caliber bullet shell in the chest in an apartment parking lot at 7125 Fenwick Lane, Westminster. Police say the two men were acquaintances but no motive bas been established for the killln1. Lucas was booked into 0r8J18e County Jail, police said. The investigation is continuing. From Page A1 NUCLEAR. • • study by Scientist& and Engineers for Secure Energy, which the memo described u "a pro -nuclear organhation or1anized to offaet tbe anti-nuclear Union of Concerned Scienwts." -Callin1 on the 1ur1eon teneral to "certify the nesligible radiation effect of nuclear power reactors." Loyd had testified that defense lawyer Larry Slipow said her confession could not be used against her , while a court-appointed lawyer advised her not to take the stand because she could be held responsible for her statements. The judge did not say when he would pass sentence, but judges in Virginia usually accept the jury recommendation if the death penalty is not sought. The couple from Dallas were visiting here April 10 when Mrs. Wise was found dead in the garage with at least 18 hatchet wounds in her head, according to police. Loyd confessed several hours after the killing, telling police he thought his 270-pound mother-in-law was a raccoon. "He said he'd take the blame and say that it was an accident and use the raccoon story because we thought it would be believed," Mrs. Loyd told the court. Mrs. Loyd said she awoke early that day. beard a thud that she thought was a raccoon and sent her husband to investigate. Loyd came back and said he bad had a fight with her mother and "hurt her or hit her, I can't remember which," she said. Mrs. Loyd said she went to the garage and found her mother lying on the floor. ''She was angry and said all I was concerned about was myseU and I only wanted to take grandfather away," she said. Mrs. Wise's wealthy rather, Frederick Kull, wu thinking of moving to Texas to Uve with her. "She reached up and came al me and I was scared . . . so I ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CleHlfled ectverttalnt 1141'42·5171 All otMr depertmenn M2~321 MAINOff'ICI Jlt W ... hY k . c-. Meta, CA • ... II...,_: ... IMO, C.UMeM, CA • .._ ~-"" °' ... c...i ""*'"""' ~. Ne_.""ift.ll~rMleM, ... WMl~•-"'11.._,., ...... _,, .......... ........ .-i.1.-. ,,...,.,.c...,......_. went to the workbench a nd grabbed the hatchet." She said she had not come forward earlier because "I was torn. It was either him going to the penitentiary or ~e going to the penitentiary. I didn't have the courage to make that decision.•· In a letter to her husband, copied and read tearfully in court by Loyd 's brother Michael, Mrs. Loyd said she felt ••guilty ... I will take responsibility, I must." Slipow argued Mrs. Loyd's confession provided enough doubt for acquittal. But Evans contended scientific evidence. including blood stains on Loyd's pajamas, was enough to convict. Pair rescued after 2 hours in life raft MALIBU <AP> -Two Seal Beach men were rescued from an inflatable life raft after drifting at sea for two hours following the sinking or their 37-foot cabin cruiser orr Point Dume, authorities said. Mark Page. 26, and Gary Abston, 32, were cruising from Anacapa Island to Long Beach when the S38,000 Sea Ducer bit a submerged rock at about 1 a.m. Sunday. Neither man was injured. About two hours later, a passing plane saw an emergency flare fired by the two men as they drifted in a rubber raft. They were picked up five miles north of the Malibu pier . by the Santa Maria II, a commercial fishing boat out of San Pedro. The men were dropped off at the Malibu pler. Girl lo•e• /oot FRESNO <AP> -The right foot of a Fresno 1lrl wu amputed alter it was crushed ln a ride caUed the Super-Loop·at the Fresno Dlatrlct Fair. Cynthia Ann Keen, 17, apparently poked her foot tbroup a llJ> ln the floor ol the rlde wbel'e 1 metal plat. ahouJd have been. ' to tell Jean Harris' story in a 5,000-word essay embellished with trial higbiights. A daily observer al the trial, she said she first viewed the de- f endant as a symbol of a woman "driven to desperation" by a womanizing, manipulating man: "I could make a remin!st iden- tification with her . . . and I think many women did." But she came to see not the pitiable middle-age woman the defense portrayed, but a '"hard woman" who matter-or-ractly handled Tarnower's bloody sheets and pajamas and showed 'unflagging snootiness.· ·'To be there in the courtroom and lo have seen her total lack of remorse . . . she wept oniy for herself," Mrs. Trilling said. ''ls this the best we can do in the way of female champions? Surely what's wrong here is that we're confusing an irremediable and fatal collision bet ween one man and one woman with a re- mediable attitude toward women in our society.·· Mrs . Trilling noted Tarnower's many affairs, about which Mrs. Harris was "well· acquainted" during their 16-year relationship. "Sexual variety was the pat· tern of Tarnower's life, its boast really, which he protected by bachelorhood," Mrs. Trilling writes. "It was obviously one of Tarnower's pleasures that his women shouJd be aware of each other.'' Denied Tarnower's exclusive love. Mrs. Harris turned to money and status, and in that arena the pair mutually used each other. Mrs. Trilling said. Mrs. Trilling suggested that in the end, Jean Harris was seduced not by Herman Tarnower, but by her desires for money. social class, sex and a love she never found. She rationalized her. lengthy liaison by telling herself Tarnower was worthy of her love, Mrs. Trilling said. When he ended the relationship, the re- atization that she had betrayed her moral values and received nothing in return came crashing down, she continued. ..., ........ ._..0:1 . " TUSTIN MARINES TAKE BIG ONE Chier Warrant or. ,.,:1 fi ccr 4 Tom Troutner di splays his cras h crew's Fire ·=· J Rescue award that came as a n•sult of intense training , ,. progra m at heli ropter station St't' s tor~ and phntn~ on .. ·1 _P_~_g_e_B_l _____________________ --'~ ,, .. 'Turkey bomber~' might get fines I. YELLVILLE, Ark. (AP> - The Federal Aviation Ad· ministration says it will seek fines and flying license s us- pensions against two pilots who dropped five live turkeys from light planes as part of a festival observance here -if the pilots can be found. James Butler, operations in- spector for the Federal Aviation Administration in Little Rock, said he was in the crowd of festival goers and got partial identilicatioo numbers from a Cessna th~t flew at_ about ;lO<> feet when 1t dropped its turkeys. He also was studying.film of the planes taken as they swooped low over the courthouse square. Ttie dropping of live turkeys to the crowd at the Turkey Trot Festival bas been a tradition here 20 years, but for this year's drop, held Saturday. organizers promUied to let the turkeys go from rooftops, said Douglas Lee. vice president of the Arkansas Humane Association. The drop prompted complaints from some animal protection grou'ps. Ten turkeys were dropped from roofs and organizers of the 36th annual event s aid they had nothing to do with the drops ... from the airplanes. ~ 1 Butler said both planes wer~: : flying too low, one so much so .... that it apparently violated ._.:1 federal law prohibiting objects being dropped from the air that could harm people. . After the festival last year, the .' 1 FAA revoked a pilot's license for. · 60 days for flying below LllOO." ·.,~ feet. ": The crowd was cheering dur•." 1 ing the drop. Those who caugbf.i a turkey got to keep it. Most of the animals Calling!':· from planes landed high in 40- foot trees. One gobbler ran head-J on into a utility pole and tumbled to the ground. Its cap- tor, Dale Forbus, 25, of Bulh, Shoals said it was temporarily.., stunned. ' Lee said he was not convinced the plane drop was spontaneous,. but said nevertheless he would~ not follow through with threats • ! to file misdemeanor charges of. ! cruelty to animals against the ! Yellville City Council and the;·r Chamber of Commerce. ·~· He said the turkeys, and the":· people below, would have been:_ better off had all the turkeys. 1 been tossed from rooftops. i :. .. I , ... Skiinq Without Limits ·;·~ I ... .•: ... :~I .. :: i ., I ·" t .-il ! Incredible support, full control of your skis on all snow conditions and terrain. Outstanding comfort with- out compromise. This is the new XL-S, the boot that knows no fear whether it faces fresh powder, ice, steepness or the longest run. 2500 Wat Coaet Highway r-- Kl•eld too, lltdleColllpmv. Newport Beach. CA 92663 (714) 631..3280 ·~ I ... ... ... +r ,( .. ,. ., . ..... ·. •• I I . ' .. c s .. , ~l v ,,.;. ,,.., .. ' , . .. •.. •'I ·"' '"" 1 l •Y. •'<j ,..., .. •ll •I' "' -·~ \ ... -., i I , 'l ,) . i, •• J .. ------~~·-------=- J $Choa~ wasting_ time? s. utty says not enough hours devoted to instruction . ABHINOTON (AP ) - Cb ..... lD AmeriHD 1cbooll 1r1 Wns ibortebaqed ot dally cl 11room 1a1truc:tton by rt· u UtUe u 11~ ~ • weell m Tbe IChooll that clevot. man lJlltructlon wbll• others •l*ld u tlm• to lnltnktlon UH ta. d~ much u 2'7~ boun. more tnlcientl)' and do not have Tb• avera1e for aU ..-ad• lon1er houri, Goodlad aaJd. ... u.at nm too Ion•. lellw. ly lanch period• and c:lu1e1 that wlDd up early, actordlni to a newatudy. achooll wu 22~ bourt, or 4~ "Tbef 1et down to buainlu.'I boura a d•Y· he aaJd. "A 11-mlnute ''"" / Tb1t ta almply not enou1h, laall 15 minut., IM>t ao mlD.-.., Goodl.cl told the National Com· •nd lunch 11 30 mlnutet, taqt an John I, Goodlad, dtan of the UCLA Sc:bool ol EducaUoo and author ot tM atucly, found that aom• el._.ntary eehooJa. 1pead mi11lon on Excellence ln Educ•· bou_r ... Tbey don't •PtJMI the tton 1t lll lnaqural meettna. He last ball-hour of tbe day ~ltaa· recommended that U houn of lnt up, because they've found lnstrudioo be1.be standard. that It can ,be. done hr ftve·0r l1Jt ---------· ·---·""-.Jiii.. -. -=--m1auMe.~ -.• ·= --= --c;::, • Saturn 'hot spot' fusion energy key? I BALTIMORE <AP) - Vo)'a1er: II'• discovery of a dou1hnut-1haped 1one 1round Sa~um cootainina 1aae1 100,000 ti~ea hotter than tile IUJ'face of th sun may one day help 1clen· Us , 1 devel9p a revolutionary new aoun:e of energy on earth, a space aclenttst aaya. SclenUats analyli.n1 d1ta from Voyager, which flew by the · rlnaed planet in August, say 'they are at a lou to explain why the area is ao hot. "We don't even know the mechanism that's causin1 the temperatures," said Stamallos Krimigis, head of the space laboratory at Johns Hopkins Univers ity and a principal member of the team analyzing Voyager data. nuclei are merged into the nucleus of a heavier atom. with a re15ultant release of enero. Scientists are seeklnt a way to build a power plant that would uae fusion. Nuclear power plants now use flulon, a process in which enero la released when heavy atomic nuclei are 1plit. In tryin& to develop fualon tecbnoloty, aclenlllta have been worklnl in the laboratory beat· ing pluma -a aaa conaistlnl of electrically charged particles called ions and electrons. The bot zone around Saturn is com- posed of plasma and scientists hope that finding out how the ~ ~!aled up can help them "It might lead . ultimately to produce elec- tricity.'' • Good.lad and a team of re· aearcbera spent eiaht years 1atherin1 data on 38 1cbool1 selected to represent a crou- 1 ec Uon of public 1cbool1 In America. Tbey clocked cl au room a ell vll ies and chronicled school Ute. Called "A Study of School· Ing," the SC mlllion-plua project was financed by the Ketterlna Foundation, 10 other private fou~dattons and two federal agencies. The final study will not be released until next fall. But In a paper prevlewtna h1I study for the National School Boards Association, Goodlad wrote that children encounter • '1bortcomlng1 and Inequities . . . during their very rtrat days ln klnderaarten or the rtrat 1rade" because of the wide di.a· parities in time spent in the classroom. This "is in itself one of the most significant factors in their academic achievement ... " be said. "We have heard a great deal about equality or education opportunity in this country, but one of the most glaring types or i nequality seems to have escaped our attention. And it has nothing to do with income or race." "If there's one thing we've Krimigis said it was only In the "last 10 days" that he and collaborating scientists "rec- ognized the importance of what we found." "I ha,ven't had a chance to think what it all means," be added. learned in the last decade, it's develop new energy sources on that you don't learn anything ii earth. you don't spend any lime on it." he said. "I'm not asking for a longer school year ... I'm ask· ing that we use the lime we've got." The r egion's tempe ratures range from 600 million degrees Fahrenheit to more than l billion degrees, be said. The sun's surface is 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. • 1 What we have found is a natural environment in which nature can produce gas much hotter than fusion." Krimigis said. "It might lead to heating laboratory plasmas more effec· lively ... ultimately to build a r ea ctDr tD produce electricity." .Fusion, the principle behind the hydrogen bomb, occurs when two lightweight atomic Krimigis said the hot gas forms an enormous dougbnut- shaped region encircling Saturn at an altitude ranging from 170,000 miles above the planet's cloud top to as high as 450,000 miles. The gases are twice as hot as the Jupiter plasma cloud discovered by Voyager in 1979, he said. He said the spac-: craft was not destroyed a.s it flew through the plasma because the density is very low. "It's only about 30 particles per cubic foot, so there were few hot particles bitting the craft's surfaoe," Krlmigis explained. Both the s chool with the 181h-bour week and the one with the 271h ·hour week spent roughly the same atnount of time each day on reading and writing, 90 minutes, and on math, 54 or 55 minutes, GoodJad said. But the school that wasted time had only 23 minutes for social studies and 13 minutes for science, while the time-thrifty school offered a full hour of both social studies and science and had time left over for the arts. Full moon tonight Extended outlook Cotutal SOUTHE"N CALIFO "NI A Fair Ulreulfl T..-ey. COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN A"EAS CoH ... low .. Inland J4. C-1 -Fair •J1C4llll fW -let• nltlflt 11'-11 .. lftMNI n wn. 61 •nd Hrly monti"I <Ml1al <leudl· .... • . , . ..... c-..1 -llltN ..,..... at EIMWflen, small-craft edVIMrY tlle hacllo1 to .,..., lh lnl•lld t• "'9tY -•• uator1' w1Mt 1S to H veu..,, ..i ..., " i. u. -..m.111 knot• wllll ..-to • kMtts. l'ertly ""°" ....,.. MIN,. to"· M. ._.as clowy. lo4J. U.S. aummary Temperaturea sMw .......... --1 .... "' MM-._ .. ....,...,,...ttwm.c...... Ml Le~ minor 1tr .. 1 floodlnt In i-t• ., :::::. ;; : '-;::"' ~--::--_. 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Melltorroy ...... _ .• Soll Jltall, "·"· St. l(ltb Teeu<I ..... .tt Tnllleled .01 Verec:na ,. n • n '2 n " ,. • m n n 1.cz .. 7J Sun, moon, tide1 TOOAY SOCMll tlllfl t :JO p.m. U TUHOAY Flrat low a:ea.m. o.a l"lntllltll t :»•.m. 6.t s.c-1ow a:•p.m. u SocOllCI ....,. 10:• p.m. s.• .02 SVn Nb •:tJ p..m., rl9" TllOMa., •:M•.m . Moon (flllll •:21 p.m., Mt1 T......, •:J7 a.m. 71 ., •• " S3 M. t7 ,. n n .. S2 " . .,. . ., SWMey, • roll! 1111 .., ...,,. .. _. .. St.I' .. er SWttlOt"ll c..tNMU. Nttll~llo : ~ CAllAN .-fl~==.: :.t: ":: :::v:"' " o c.teo" ,. ,. ·• SACRAMENTO (AP) TtllM voooy Tilonnol Tett-. J7 ··~ Fictims aided a11Mt1t1CMt11Mtot1•11tM111tt11e ...,. .. 11 :: : ,:: :.=" : ~ -Vlcttms of serious =:::...,~ ':.::"'-=. ':' ="' " •1 Ott11we w 11 crimes and interested L .. ~111ec.,,.c:-.y. ~.~ "••a 75 ,.._.,.. • " .11 officials such as the "It'• .. flnll -..... llM.. ..... -T.,.. .. .. 1 and trl I Jud .,_, .. NM Lil¥I ......, 0 P,.,.... l'tloofll• .. 11 v--w • awyera a 1e ... ,,. ,.,,..,,c;-. ..,. .-.c ..._,, 1 ""~ '* .. WI,.,...._ .. • wUI be notlfied of parole ~':'·~-=:~~-;.. • ...,.., =:::: : ~ l'A1UMH1CM1 heartnas becauae of two au1 ••.._""............_NM .._ .. a .ts ::C:.: :: ~ b1U1 siped by Gov. Ed· =~.:.-:,.~=-:. =::-: : ·• ..,_.. 11.. mundBrownJr. "°''" ".....,., .......... c1 .. r MLeut• 11 • ...-a " • Brown's office aald ..... ._.... .. tlf'tf ~ • "'° : ::::: : ;: :: .. , -* · : ~ that be alped SB39 by ~-,. -,..,., .. 111 "" ._.._ st ,. ...,o " u Sen. Milton Marks, R- ,_,,.., •• ,.. "'' ,. .. , "'• •••• T111.. !! •., .u :=--~ : San Franclaco, and ..,...,, • ....., • c...-_. w.....,...,. ... A B 1 3 b A ...... Of ... *-111 -.. _. Wl(Mto " " ,tJ IC..... " ,, )' I • c-•• ~ ... _" • _, .... _ ~ CAU....,.,. ::".:C...., : ~ :.em blhywodman J5ean .............. .;;;_-,_, == a : -'* ts JS -oor ea , D -IC· ._ ______________________ ....... ~ ..... °" ........... " .. ~ ... __.ramento. ...., ,.,,. :::r ...... We're Ll•t•ning.... · What do you 11te about the 01Jly PUot? ~hat don't you Uke? Call the number below and your me11111 wUI bt recorded, tranacrtbecl and dellvend to Lbe appropriate tdJtOC'. The same 24·bour anaweriftl Mntc:e m~y bt used to record let· tei'I to the editor on a~)' toplc. lle.llbox coetrtbutora muat Include thetr name and telephone number ror-vertncation. No elrculatJon calls, pleue. · Tell ua ~~at'• on your mind. t\ M2~ Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 12, 1981 s ,4ll t -.t ~-.. r . .h : '>, '·I ill ~~l "· ): ... :~ .. "'.:J :11 l•> . .., JC: al HI ,., J!;, : ...... J ') ACT THREE -Virginia Sullivan did a double take when s he wa lked into Michigan ·s But· terworth Hosp ital to vis it d a ug hter J an as Corner . left. who h ad delivered a b a by girl In the bed next to J a nas was :vt rs. Sullivan's .......... ~. othe r daughter. J ayne Bodbyl. center. who had given birth to a baby . girl two ho~rs ea rl ier . J ayn e 's s is ter-in -law. Gretane ·. Rodbyl. gave b11'lh to a girl t hrel' day' hl'forl' the sisters had t he irs . Poor nursing care told . ·~ ... . ·. State may cut inspection staff to meet budget •I • ,., . ~ .. SACRAMENTO <AP ) -Amid rene wed compla ints or poor care, lax enforcement and over· worked s taff at California's nursing homes, the state is plan· ning to reduce its inspection staff because of federal budget cuts. But Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's Health Se rvices Depar tment hopes to make the cuts far less sev e r e tha n t h e drastic measures predicted by patient ad vocates, ·said the depart· ment's assistant director, Barry Dorfman. Dorfman was interviewed Fri· day after a day of fam iliar but poignant testimony to the As- sem t)ly's Committee on Aging from relatives and friends or pa- tients, patients'-r iehts ad - vocates, nurses' aides and others involved with some of the 105,000 patients in California nursing homes. Prisoners at the Sonoma Coun· ty Jail get better food , quicker medical care, and more humane treatment than nursing home residents, said Dale Pennington, who works as a guard at the jail and also, along with his wife, has "adopted" a tf\Jrsing home patient tovisit. "The nursing home residents l have seen are far too often treat- ed as inconveniences,'' he said. "They're ignored, they're insult· ed , they're dehumanized , and for this they're payJng $1 ,400 a month." His wife, Pat Vance, s aid that before the couple "adopted" the pa tient, who is 87. blind and bard Of bearing, "her life COO· sisted or getting up, sitting in her wheelchair all day. and go- ing back to bed." Hall of all nursing home pa- tients have no visitors, added Ms. Vance . There also were accounts or patients lying in t heir own urine and feces, of retaliation against patients who complain, and of word-of · m o uth "co mmon knowledge" or upcoming state inspections. A patient advocate, Charles Martin or Albany, said H_ealth Se rv ices D e par t m e nt supervision is · already bad, and department cutbacks would lead to "eleve n hundr e d neighborhood con centration camps for old people." Martin claimed the depart- ment plans to drop half its in- vestigators, 80 per cent of its nu rse consultants and all its dietary consultants Dorfma n agreed that such sever e reductions would "gut our capacity to meaningfully respond to complaints." Rut he said the department is hoping for much smaller cuts. He said federal budget cuts have eliminated $2.5 million, or about 15 percent, or the state's money for licensing and inspec· lion. Under state law, the inspec- tion program would lose another $2.5 million in matching state m o ney. But Dorfma n s a id Health Se r vices Dire ctor Beverlee Myers is as king the Finance Department to seek a .· wa iver on that law, which would ... allow retention of most of the nursing home inspectors. Mubarak may act f ir1ner -with Israel UNITED NATIONS (AP> - A forme r U.S. en voy with c l ose contacts t o Hosni Muba r a k says he e xpec ts Egypt ·s president-designate lo seek reconciliation with Saudi Arabia and be firmer in dealing with Israel than his s lain men· tor, Anwar Sadat. Hermann F. Eilts had almost daily contacts with then· Vice President Mubarak while serv- ing as ambassador to Cairo from 1973·1979. Mubarak was nominated by Parliament and is the sole can- didate in Tuesday's election to name a successor to Sadat, who was slain by assassins last Tues· day. Eilts, now a professor of in· ternational relations a l BostDn University, told The Associated Press in a telephone Interview that Mubarak has taken care to place loyalists in key positions a nd seems to have "effective hold on the levers or power in Egypt." He described Mubarak, a 53- year-old former air force chief, as "very much a disciplined, military type." But unlike Sadat, Mubarak ·•knows how to use his staff." said Eilts. recalling that "on a . , number of occasions it was he ., who urged a more pos itive .. policy toward Saudi Arabia. "The fact that he was not able to pull it off was because be had .; a boss who, for all his good ··: qualities, was an authoritarian. ,. He (Mubarak ) has got to be given a chance." ·: Eilts said Mubarak particular- ly deplored the break in Egypt's relations with the Saudis follow-i ing Sadat's historic peace mis-... sion to Jerusalem in 1977. Saudi Ara bia had been Egypt's main ~ economic and political backer in the Arab world. Now that Muba rak is in ;. power, Eilts said, "I think he's willing to try to establish a political climate -without &iv· r: Ing up the treaty with Israel -/1 where there can be exploration r: fo r improvement in relations r· with Saudi Arabia." On lhe Ara b-Israeli issues. ~ Mubarak "is inclined to be a lit· '· tie less accommodating than r Sadat," Eilts said. 3.•.. J Eilts said Mubarak was "very carefully groomed" by Sadat, who initi ally included Mubarak in every meeting with Ara b and other foreign dignitaries. •'· , ·! .. I L I! l aura from ecotland ... ehcz.tland Cnm,T n<lCks l I q " G e. / A4 s Oranoe Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 l~Jffiu~rnm Death sp~ AWACS debftte • WASIUNGTON CAP> -In the Middle Eut uncertainty left by tbe.....uuuinaUon ol ..Anwar Sadat there ms Jq,ceat.iom..la • ari-atftady skeptical Congreu t hat the United States should wait a while before sealing the AW ACS arms deal with Saudi Arabia. Even Senate Republican leader Howard Baker talked about a brief delay in considera- tion of the $8.5 billion arma package. But be quickly made it clear he was talking about no more than a week or so. Presi- dent Reagan wants no delay al all. From the start of the debate, the opposing sides have looked at the same events and forecast far different consequences. That pattern held with the death of Sadat. '•It would su11est to many who will be meaaurina our at- titudes and polici• lo the a,._ Ahnd~tbat e.guivQGatlon~and UQ· certainty have become a charac· terisUc American at,yje in the conduct ol it.s foreign policy. and we are not going to do that. "We believe that continuina with this project is more impor- tant than ever," be said. . The deal goea through unlesa Congress votes tbls month to block lt. The House almost sure- ly will vote no. Its Foreign Al· fairs committee recommended rejection, 28-8. It's in the Republlcan - controlled Senate that the presi- dent is concentrating bis, lobby- ing. Fifty of the 100 senators had signed up on a resolution aaain.at the sale. So far. Reagan bu picked up two Republican con- verts, but an Associated Press s urvey Thursday found 50 senators still against him and seven others leaning that way. . .......... Opponents said it would be foolhardy to rush ahead with the Saudi arms purchase before it b clear whether Sadat's death would be followed by an orderly transition or further turmoil in an already unstable region. The president met with .a of the 53 Republican senators Wed- nesday and toJd them that the sale is essential in the quest for peace and stability in the MiddJe East. The U.S. plans to build one new Trident submarine f shown at right. in water J a year, with production of a sea-launched missile. ' The administration portrayed the arms sale as an essential element in e fforts to help moderate Arab regimes withstand radical pressures. A major administration argu- ment is that the world must see that U.S. foreign policy b un- swerving and will not be altered by such events as the killing of Early in the debate over the arms purchase, the opposition seemed centered on the poten- tial threat to the security of Israel, which is on record aga inst supplying new a rms to the Saudis. Mubarak's wife activist like Sadat's She promotes educ ation, ch arity organiza t ions, wom en 's Fauses SadaL • Secretary of State Alexander Haig pressed that side of the case Wednesday. "Were we to draw back in the wake of yesterday's tragedy Crom proceeding with a program which we have very carefully considered to be in the best in- terests of the United States gov- ernment and fundamental to the successful conduct o! our foreign policy in the region, we would make a mockery of all President Sadat stood for," Haig said. More recenUy. the focus bas shirted to the question of whether it is wise to depend on the Saudis to safeguard the ad- vanced technology of the Airborne Warning and Control System planes. Critics recall that Jimmy Carter wanted to sell AWACS to Iran when the shah was in power. Strong con- gressional opposition forced the Carter administration to withdraw that deal. CAIRO <AP > -Suzan Mubarak, like her predecessor Jiban Sadat, is an activist in- volved in promoting education, charity organizations and women 's causes despite criticism from conservative Moslems. The wife of President- designate Hosoi MubJrak, who is expected to be elected Tues- day to succeed assassinated President Anwar Sadat, she will move into the role of first lady Oct. lS when her husband is to Fund-raisers work Computers Mass-produced messages made to look personal WASIUNGTON <AP)-lt ls a scene that could wring tears from a computer. President Reagan sits alone in the Oval Office, late in a long day. the worries of a nation fur- rowing his brow : deficits, nuclear strategy, inflation, the Middle East, and more. Yet, as if that weren't enough, some deadbeat bas failed to kick in the $13> the Republican Party wants for its 1982 campaign fund . Reagan, portrayed as gravely concerned, wants to know why. A computer bas been cranking out that scene, and signing Sen. Bob Packwood's name. Or was, until White House political aide Lyn Nofziger put a stop to that pa r ticular f u n d -rai sin1 message. Packwood said he didn't write the letter himself -and besides, the gimmick was working. His Republican Senatorial Cam- paign Committee sent out thousands of copies, personally addressed, courtesy of the com· puter. "Forgive me for saying this, but you're causing the president grave concern," t he message began. "Why hasn't President Reagan beard from you'? ... "He's personally asked me to find out why you're holding back.. "Shall I show him your con· NEWS ANALYSIS tri bution of $120 ... or whatever amount that's conve- nient for you'?" the letter asked. "Or shall I tell him you've said be mu.st fight alone'?" That obviously is nonsense. Nobody is going to tell Reagan anything about your $120, or the lack of it. But the mailbox is full of non- sense these days. Ever since the fund-raising wizards put com- puters to work, the dunning cards a nd letters go ou t personally addressed, each with a message just for you. There was one from Reagan himself just the other day. Or. rat her, from a computer im- personating Ronald Reagan. "Having lived in Vi rginia for a short time and visited your state on a number of occasions, I know that Virginians are very independent," it read. "I have great respect for that indepen- dence and would not, for a mo- ment, tell you how to vote." The message goes on to say that it would be a very good thing to vote for Republican Marshall Coleman for governor -and send him some campaign money, too. People write those letters. Human hands do not intervene after that. It's all done by machines. But as the process becomes more impersonal, the mass-mailed messages become more cloyingly personal. They are, of course, anything but personal The signatures are printed, although for smaller mailings, there are machines that will copy them in ink. The messages are mass-produced. And the message doesn 't always Cit the fake signature at the bottom. Packwood, for ex- ample. His letter carries on about those dreadful liberals. ''They know they must stop us in 1982, before Americans fully reap the bountiful harvest of the Reagan-Senate programs," it says. "Because once America sees how good things can be, the liberals won't get in again." Packwood is one of the more liberal Republicans in the Senate, too liberal for New Right tastes. They probably would have him on their list of election targets, but he doesn't have to run again until 1986. And even if a lot of people send in $120, Packwood is not likely to be telling Reagan about it just now. The White House welcome mat is not out for the Oregon senator, since he is lead- ing the Republican opposition to Reagan's planned arms deal with Saudi Arabia. MALL WIDE SALE! The reasons for shopping south Coast Plaza have been considerably reduced. See for yourself! Sale starts Saturday Oct. 17 at 10 am. Register in any store both days for prizes. 14 vacation trips to San Francisco courtesy PSA You will stay at the Sheraton Flsheman's Wharf. t fou r.-lsland cruise via American Hawaii Cruises. Many more prizes.• SOUTH COAST PLAZA • l tCHe ""PfO> ... , ttletr ,........._and .... petlOhMI not el!Qlble. Muat be tt Ot Oft'. be sworn in. Mrs. Mubarak is a "delightful lady," with "a ready smile and a sparkle" in her hazel eyes, said one friend, while another described her as "graceful, in- telligent and witty." seeking the children learn. The hope they may take active part in the development or the coun- try is a great reward in itself." Mrs. Mubarak said. Like Mrs. Sadat, she is active in fund-raising, and is the cur· rent head of the Ame rican University's International Alum- ni Board, which is trying to set up income-generating projects to overcome the school's fman- cial problems. .. A UC is important to Egypt. Its liberal arts education pro- gram is an asset to our develop- ing nation and we should help it expand its services," she told the board in a meeting last month. At 39, Mrs. Mubarak is study- ing for her master's degree in sociology at the American University in Cairo, where she received her bachelor's degree in 1977. Her thesis, due for presentation in a few weeks, is en· tilled' "Deprived Children in Poor Areas." She gathered practical ex- perience for the study while working on a program she began in five schools in Cairo's poor areas. The object was to teach handicapped children to read and write, as well as a few skills to keep them out of the ranks of the city's street beggars. Federal contribution to TMI cleanup seen "My sincere wish is that they grow up to be self-dependent citizens," she told an in- terviewer recenUy. ''I would like to see children in poor areas get a glass of milk and a full meal each day." Like her predecessor, Mrs. Mubarak has been criticized by conservatives who say she should stay at home fulfulling a traditional Islamic woman's role. Mrs. Mubarak and Mrs. Sadat also share a similar family heritage; Mrs. Mubar ak's mother was Welsh and Mrs. Sadat's was English. Both have worked bard to help their favorite charities. One of their common interests is the SOS Children's Village. "I love my work dearly, and draw great satisfaction from HARRISBURG, Pa., <AP > Budget d i r ector David Stockman has said the Reagan administration will seek federal money toward cleaning up the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear plant. He declined to say how much the contribution would be. Stockman said the administra· lion apparently decided within the last several days to s ubsidize a plan by Gov. Dick Thornburgh to get the plant going again. The governor announced Friday that he bad asked Reagan for a con- tribution. Three Mile Island has been idle since March 28, 1979 when the worst U.S. commercial nuclear accident on record OC· curred there. "We are very pleased and en- couraged that the governor has come forward with what we think is a sound framework that will allow the slate and federal government, the industry and the utility to share the burden or cleaning up this very serious _problem," Stockman said. Roblnsms KOU ROS. THE FRAGRANCE OF THE GODS FOR THE MAN OF TODAY. NEW FROM YVES SAINT LAURENT. Hi s comments came during a news conference following a speech to the Lebanon County Republican Committee at Ana- ville. about 15 miles east of here. Thornburgh has been trying to raise $760 million toward the estimated St billion it would take to clean up the plant. Hi s plan would have the federal government and the nuclear and utility industries each kick in $190 million; $245 m i ll ion would come from General Public Utilities, the plant owner; $45 million would come from the states of Penn- sylvania and New Jersey, and the balance would be paid by in- s urance. As ked if the federal govern- ment will pay one-fourth of the cleanup. Stockman said: "I don't want to put any percentage figure on it. That is the basic frame work the governor has proposed and we think that's in the ballpark with respect to shares." Now In this, his first men's fragrance in 7 years, Yves Saint Laurent brings together all the serene beauty of the Golden Age with the vitality and freedom of our own. It Is a fragrance of unparalleled purity: an ethereal combination of rare spices, wild KOU ROS herbs, clove, coriander and wood ~armonles. It Is a design that looks to the past. Yet lives In the future. And, like the famed Greek statue-Its namesake-It is. surely, destined for Immortality, 1.6 oz. Eau De Tollette, 120: 3.3 oz .. '31: 6.6 oz., 150. 3.3 oz. Eau De Tollette Natural Spray, S3&. 3.3 oz. After Shave.126. Robinson's Cosmetics. 180. To order. call toll-free 1-800-423-7800. EAU DE TOILEm . . . . . ' . omputers argets of 'frellks ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Four young people called . .''domputer freaks" by a .district ~torney'a i.ov.ea1iiator aoutd have uaed computer data t.be1 allegedly stoJe to shut down Los Angeles area bone service, the investigator said. The four, who have all been arrested, are ac- cused of stealing technical manuals May 31 from the Paclfic Telephone and Telegl'apb Co. COSMOS computer center downtown. Officials do not know ~f any damage resulting fro~ the burglary. said rnvestigator Ro6ert Ewen, although the manuals contained information on bow to program and gain access to the company's computer that handles telecommunicaUona for the Loe Angeles area. -;"'. "The phone freaks of the past have graduated into a new generation of computer freaks. They ob- tain their thrills from the cbaUenge of penetrating the systems," said Ewen, adding that the motive for the break-in apparently was not economic gain. He said the four could have used the informa- tion in the manuals to close down much of the are~·s phone system, but a Pacific Telephone of- ficial said he would doubt that could have hap- pened, because "there are too many safegu,atds and so .many transactions that would have been re- quired." However, Douglas Cambem, at$istant vice president for external affairs, admitted the : ' r disruptions could have been substantial. ~ 1 Two or the suspects are also accused of in- volvement in a computer fraud in San Francisco in which the computer activities or U.S. Leasing Co. were disrupted, causing an estimated $250,000 damage, Ewen said. One of them, Lewis DePayne, 21, of Burbank was arrested Sept. 16 for investigation or both the COSMOS burglary and the San Francisco case. Mark Ross, 25. of Van Nuys, was arrested last Fri- day for investigation of the COSMOS burglary. Both are out on bail and are scheduled for arraign- ' ! ment Oct. 14 and 13, respectively. 11t· One of the juveniles, arrested June 10, pleaded guilty to burglary and to computer fraud. and is J•: undergoing 90-day diagnostic study prior to sen- v1. tencing Oct. 16, Ewen said. The other juvenile, ar- •1•1 rested July 14, pleaded guilty to burglary and pro- '' . bation violation, and is also undergoing diagnostic 0 !1 study prior to final sentencing, he said. 1,.r He said the two juveniles used computer codes for door locking mechanisms at the PaciHc Telephone facilities in Pasadena and Hollywood to enter those buildings June 2 and 4. Both times, they were met by security people and fled . Navy secretary ~:~tough on drugs ·~ . . . "! SAN DIEGO -Drugs are a more serious problem in the Navy than among civilians, says ... Secretary of the Navy John Lehmao1 vowing .. we :.~ want to get rid of dopers.·· . .,)11 .. We have a concentration of the age group that is most susceptible to it," said Lehman in a recent interview. •1• .. When a carrier comes into port, you have 1 '5,000-plus folk s on that ship, all with an average ;-•,i age under 20 years old. It is a fabulous target for <~'drug pushers." tit• Asserting such a problem is "everywhere •111 'naval forces are concentrated." Lehman said 11it. "dope pushers are like locusts." !•1• A prosecution problem is presented because l•r•. military courts reflect legal standards of society '1' as a whole. the Navy chief said during a two-day ins pection tour of San Diego bases. 1:, "It is almost impossible to get anything ot her '.><1 than an honorable discharge for someone you want 1 • to get out for repeated drug infractions," Lehman "'": said. ,,, Later he was to address the Los Angeles World ;r.: Affairs Council. ~~FDA tests sugar in PCB leak SALINAS <AP) -Federal officials say they have begun testing 750 tons of sugar which might have been contaminated by PCB-laced oil leaking from an electrical transformer at a sugar plant near Salinas. Robert Schmalz, vice president and general attorney for Amstar Corp .. located in Spreckels, about a mile west of Salinas, said in San Francisco that the leak was discovered a week ago. He said about half a pint is believed to have dripped from the third-floor transformer to a second-floor walkway at the plant. Schmalz said be did not know when results would be available from tests begun Friday by the federal Food and Drug Administration. Schmalz said the firm did not believe any con-. lamination had taken place but decided to keep the 750 tons, valued at $345,000, in the Termery until testing was completed. Stephan Meyers, also an Amstar attorney, said the transformer was repaired the day after the leak was discovered. ·'The government allows 200 parts per billion in baby food, and the most we've found is less than 10 percent of that," h.e said. • • Orange Coatt OAtLV PtLOT/Monday, October 12. 1981 s ,. .... ,..,_ .. HIGH FOR SCIENCE A smiling. p<.iid ,·oluntet•r fl ni!->ht>:-nff .,t•,·en ?unces of vodka m ixed wi th or a nge j uice and smokes a Joint of m art Jua na <topl IL w as a ll during a dem ons tra tion test at Cll P academ' near Sac·r a mento to determine effect of alcoho l <t nd pot cin auromob1k d r ivers. Official~ !>aid 106 drivers have undergone te~lin ~ a nd fina l n· s uits will be m ade <1vailable in early 1982 . A Salute to Curb battles p ress Campaign coverage off to rough start SACRAMENTO <AP> -Lt. Gov. Mike Curb has made his battles with the press a major lssue ln the early 1ta1es of his campaign for t he Republican nomlnaUon for governor. 1'he tactics have won Curb en· lhusiastic c heers from his sup- porters, although most news ~m· mentary has been heavily negative. Reporters were booed, heckled and called names by Curb supporters at several stops on Curb's announce- ment tour Wednesday. Asked if he could quiet his angry supporters so reporte rs could complete ttie scheduled news cohfetences, Curb· not only refused, but at one point joined in the criticism. · The fight started last week. when Curb told Los Angeles Herald Ex- 8 !l'l iner reporter ~inda Breakstone "I'm going to get you" for writing critical stories about him. Curb apologized reluctantly to Ms. Breakstone for that remark two days later at a ne ws conference, but within minutes was coJ]demning her again as "reprehensible" and "dis· honest." Curb renewed his battle with Ms. Breakstone on his announcement tour of the state Wednesday, denying her a seat on the campaign plane for hi s fl ying tour of five California cities. Other reporters who called days later than Ms. Breakstone were al- lowed seats on the plane, for which they were billed $218 each. Ms. Breakstone initiaJly had to try to keep up with the Curb party by flying on commercial planes. Curb initially told reporters. "I have no apologies" for banning Ms. Breakstone from the plane, adding "she was chosen Cby his staff) not to come on the plane." Rut Cl8 the questions Crom other re· porterR abo ut Ma. Br•alutone pera111ted, ovwsbadowln1 Curb'• re· marks on other lseues, he relented and let her travel the final two legs of the tour on his pla ne. Several reporters tl)llveJing Qfl the announcement tour tomplalned to Curb and his aides lbat they thought he was deliberately trying tC> ln- tlmidate or harass them by packing his news conferences with partisan supporters who booed press ques- tions an4 cheered Curb's answers. · Ttte naturaJ flow pf moat l)eWJ ~on­ ferences involves rtU>Qr.t.en CflJUtiop· Ing possible incons istencaes and pressing for s pecific details of general statements . Therefore, even the friendliest news conference bas something of an adversary format. Curb aides said it never occWTed to them that the Ci ve combined news conferenceli and rallies -the biggest of which drew nearly 1,000 Curb sup- por ters in Los Ange les -would escalate Curb's battles with the press or portray him before his supporters as a victim of the press. •. Curb also denied any intent to perpetuate his fight with reporters. "I have not had a history of attack ing the press." Curb said, adding that he thought the incident with Ms. Bre akstone "has resulted in a healthier, more positive relationship with the press." Whether that turns out to be true, remains to be seen. So far, Curb's campaign is off lo the roughest start in press cove rage of any major Califomia campaign in many years, but it isn't clear whether that helps or hu rts him in the long run. Curb discovered Wednesday that he wins his loudest, longest, most en- thusiastic cheers by attacking re- porters. Women In Bu1in111 ' --·-·-... ___ _ .,, ___ ...... _____ , ..... -· ~ .. ~ _.:_-=-.-.. 1~-:~ --- Coming Sunday, Octobe·r 18, 1981 in the Daily Pilot A tribute to the Orange Coast's SUCCESSFUL WOMEN in business 111-Pllal '42·5671 . The Orange Coast's Successful Busi ness Professionals of 1981 This is the Actual Size Ad For best reproduction, a clear black and white photo of any size can be used. Your messaQe will accom- pany .the picture in this space. If you choose not to publish a picture, fill the space with your message. National Women in Busi ness is October 18 through 24. To honor area women in business, in- dustry and commerce, the Daily Pilot wi II publish a special tribute 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, achievements or cont ributions. Busi'nesswomen Salute notice s wi ll be two column by two inches each, with a photo you pro· vide. The cost of each notice is only $32. Don't mi~s being part of this special advertis- ing opportunity. Deadline for reserving space is October 14. Call today! . .. , ~· Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 A.ttelidance drops at 6 presidential librari.es IOSTON <AP> -Alter a auamer ol wOl'rled ...... ~-, the l ·Ytar-o&d Jolul ... ltmaedy Library wW welcome vllltor No. l m11Uoe ~ • U.. lurmtUM WI moatb. TM reuoa tor 'cooeera W81 a...., decline la It~. Offtciall at the prestlaioul U'Chlvea claim tbe dee ...... WU lnevtt.ablt after. tbt Hcltemeat of UM Ont 12 montba, •tartlnl Oct. ai, ltTt. But tilt cllp WU sharp -and par{ of a treod at all lb PretidenUal libraries, which boule oftlclal memo. and correspondence serve u muaeuma of political mtmorabllla. Tbe federal 1overnment. which manq11 the fulUU., ii well aware of tl)e attendance prob- lem -even amJd fanlare for t» opeo.laC ol Gerald POrd'• noo..Ubcary mUHwa ... Gruel Rapldl, Mich., lut montb and even u Richard Nixon lobbtet hard to win a home for h1a penODal papers at Duke University. "We're DOt in the buslneu ol promoU.nJr prea· ldential libraries. We just mate them available. But our concern coma from lou ol reven~." says John Fawcett, aupervleory arcblvlat of tbe 1 General Services Admlnlatratlon 'a office of preatdenlial Ubrarlea in Wuhinaton. The presidential libraries have all sprouted lD Juat tbe put 40 years. The archivea are available for research and are not connected wUb aucb popular tourist attractions as the Lincoln Memorial or Washington Monument. But vialton are attracted to the displays of presidential keepsakes. .They pay admission fees of 50 centa to 75 cents. But a substantial decline in attendance COila the federal 1ovemment money and raiaea quea· lions about a general lack of interest in preslden· tlal memorabilia. Attendance hit a peak tor tbe nation's Blcen· tennlal. Since the the Fawcett notes declines have been based on ''changing vacation patterns." A newspaper story last sprln1 about atten· dance slipPing at the JFK Library upaet official.a there. Library director Dan Fenn said a 20 percent decrease from the openin1/ear to tbe second was expectable. "Then," be sal . "you climb back ... The library and museum attracted almost 800,000 visitors in 1979·80. But 1-.Sl attendance may be just 400 ,000 despite a summer ruJh, ac· cording to Frank Rigg, director of vllltor services. Elsewhere, the tree-admission Lyndon Johnson library on state college property in Austin, Texas, had an attendance decline lrom 502,115 to 446,062 from 1978 to 198>, accordin1 to the GSA . In the same two years, attendance at the Herbert Hoover library in West Branch, Iowa, went from 95,418 to 65,606; at &.he Franklin Roosevelt library in Hyde Park, N. Y., from 278,865 to 241,4.59; at the Harry S Truman library in In· dependence, Mo., lrom 264,714 to 201,839; and at Houston new No. 4 city HOUSTON tAP> -The score is Houston 1,648,661, Philadelphia 1,648,582 -but who's count· in1? The City or Brotherly Love unofficially bu surrendered its No. 4 ranking in the national population derby, thanks to some arltbmetk by the Philadelphia Inquirer, which says Houston has moved up a notch. · Houston's planning department threw a party in 1979 to celebrate overtaking Philadelphia based on their statistics, but the official Census Bureau figures the next year put Houston fifth, with 1,594,086 people compared with Philadelphia's 1,688,210. On Monday, however. the Inquirer published an article under the headline "Hello No. 5," aayln1 Philadelphia had dropped to its lowest population since before the founding of the Republic. The 1980 census showed Houston 1ain1n1 an average 98 new residents a day between 1970 and 1980, while Philadelphia lost more than 71 dally. By extrapolating those figures, the Inquirer said, Oct. 5 is the day Houston, which ranked No. 45 in 1920, took over fourth. Houston's growth ha11 been spurred in part by a state law allowing cities to annex surroundine land. But research director Howard Martin of tbe Chamber or Commerce said even without annexa· "There is a great op- portunity here. Definitely, I jum-ped ship." tlons, Houston would have surpassed Philadelphia about February 1983. The Cenaus Bureau, meanwhile, is stickina to lta old count, and the Inquirer agreed Its flndln11 were not official. "That cannot change on the book• until the next cenaus ls t.Uen, April l, 1990. Unlil then the 1880 census figures remain official, if not up to date." . ' Botb Houston and Philadelphia still 11ank far behind the official big three -New York with 7 ,035,348, Chicago with 3,005,072, and Loa Anaelea with 2,966,763. Researcher Larry Long of the Cenaua Bureau in Washinaton said tbe Inquirer's method of pro- jection was about as iood as any, without taklnl 1n actual census. "It's not a standard method used by demo1· rapben, but on the other band, there's not much of an alternative at the present time," be said. Former Houston mayor Louie Welch said if the Inquirer's figures are correct, lt could explain wby "there'• a lot of Pennaylvuia llcenae plates 1bowin1 up on our streeta." One of them could have belonted to Jo. Gallaa:ber, an account.ant who moved to Houston trom l'hlladelphia where be .doubled bl.a income. •'There is areat opportunity here," aald GallaabeJ'. "Definitely, I jumped ship." Gallaaber admitted be aometimea wean a T· 1blrt iDacribed, "I'd rather be in Pbiladtlpbia," but added. "ao far, we really do like it here." But Sam Lancia, who moved here HHD monthl .,o and opened a nst.aurant Ml'YlDI such Philadelphia dellcaclea aa cbee1nteak1 and boa•I•, told the Inquirer that HoUltoG wu bard to t.Ue. • ·u you're a bum lD Pblladelpbla. you're lobal to be an outrilbt vaarant in ffouttoa," be -,tic{, "You'll let eaten &.tP and aplt out. I bate Bouton." Ho\llton." ............. The John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library m Boston. like five·others across the nation. has been strug· gling to prop up attendance. a problem which has federal officials concerned about what may be general lack of public interest in past presidents. The &oHvell Library WU t:ltabUlbed in lat -en ak1nc ll u.e oldnt -but lt wun 't opeo to tbe public, unlil lMS. The Hoover library didn't open untll 1962. Initiated by ram~ly and tritndl ol each prt11· dent, and built with private dooaUona, the llWld· ln11 are turned over to the GSA for mana1emen~ The $12 million for the Kennedy archlvea bulldl.n1 was railed from conlribuUou made mainly in the three yea.rs after his uaualnaUon. Perched on a quiet ledte overlookiol Boston Harbor, the Ubrary·museum la a haven for re· searchers and no.talgja aeeken. • 'Ihe late ~tnl't 1a.Uboat-reata on• bed of ~ape·Cod dune fJl'all oUUidt . '"'lde, Pol1tical memorabilia fill diapJay cues. · To lure visitors off the nearby expreaway and keep turnstiles spinning, the muaeum often a variety of educational and cultural pro1ram1. Fenn 1ay1 th• Ubrary·mUMWD .. :~ liV• peo It a 1eDM ol Kennedy's Umt1.'' U. di a araSuai revival of Ubrary·aluMum " to live people ~rett In ot.ber pre•ldentlal Ubrarltt, eapeclally the papers of Hoover, whose con· aervatlve banner la now carried by Ronald Rea1an. Aa tor Ru1an. a deputy COUDHlor. Robert Garrick, saya Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calli., bu already donated land tor a pretldential illllllllll library site. .. It would be close to the Hoover lnltitutlon for Waf end Peace, also on the camp~•. which alrea4,v boUfl Reacan'l'PAP,erl from DaJ ,..,._., 1overnor; his presidential campallP and the tranaiUon between election and lnausuraUoa. And GSA officials say AUanta may be the alta for Jimmy Carter's archives. Mojave Desert prison has no walls, towers or guards ·· BORON, Calif. CAP) -In-vlcted bank robbers, drug de-Boron Community Museum, I mates at the Federal Prison alers and con "men hold out.side 30 others have re1uJar Jobi~ Camp near this Uttle desert town jobs. Last June, 15 lnmates com-maintenance men at Edwarda are surrounded by coyotes, rat· nleted final exams at Barstow Air Force Bue, landln1 site of tlesnakes and the trackless ex· Community College, 42 miles the space shuttle, five milea to panse of the Mojave--but no away. The prisoners7go to thesouth. walls. classes unaccompanied. in a bus Inmates also earn money re· A minimum·securlty facility, the 12·acre prison not only bas no walls. but its programs en- courage many of its inmates t.o leave the camp every day. Its superinte.ndent, Bill Story, says it has an atmosphere that sets it apart from the turbulence of other prisons. ''Any one of us could walk away. But the responsibility of not doing .:.\~ that is the part I really like about :r this place." ~ ---=-------t..J ''This place is totally different the Dwight Eisenhower library in Abilene, Kan.. from any joint I've ever heard driven by an inmate. pal r 1 n g a 1 tern at ors an d1 trom 170,172 to 143,910. of," said bank robber Donnel "Obviously we screen those generators. mainly for nearby / The 1981 figures -possibly affected by stable Tortora, 52. "It's good therapy. planning to enroll in the college military facilities. 1V.: gasoline prices encouraging vacation travel -are We're out he re miles from courses," ,Story said. "No men not yet available. anything. It gives us a chance with records or escape, sex of-The proximity of Edwards ··~;- Presidential libraries and museums are a 20th lo reflect on what we're going to fenses or assault are permitted brought the entire prison staff Id century development. Until FDR, Fawcett says, do with our lives when we get to participate in the program." and inmate population out to a ·.l presidential papers "went to private sources or out of here." Although the atmosphere is re-desert butte last April to cheer .. it members of the family. . But the fa cility offers more laxed, no one can just lie as the space shuttle Columbia1•1~ "They were sold for autograph purposes, and than just an opportunity to around, be said. Everyone must landed smoothly on the desert' valuable documents were continually destroyed by reflect or get a tan by the swim· work. floor. i<J accident," Fawcett says. "Some papers were kept ming pool. Story, 41, calls the Inmates run the camp's fire ,a ln Washington. but preservation was uneven. camp a "halfway halfway department. Half a dozen "It came almost directly.,:~ '"'a pen weren't generally available lo the public house." prisoners spend Saturdays at a above us as it made its sweep t.o ·n until years after administration left ofnce." Some of the camp's 223 con-volunteer project to reno~le the go to Edwards," Story said. '•f1 ..-----------------------------------~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~·HI SFA 5 Columbus Day Event! The Warm Embrace of Cashmere ... Now A Luxurious Value at soo and sas. • There's something quite special about the soft feel of cashmere ... and now the price is quite special, too. • The cowl, in white, black. periwinkle, butter, burgundy and amethyst, •as. • The crew. in white, apricot., pink, periwinkle and butter, •ao. •Both, by J.Q. for S,M,L. • Find them now!-in Sweater Collections -where we are all the things you are. AP ....... Muscular dystrophy stnkes more than one m 100 Amish -1.000 times the national average. Family takes nde m carriage. as Amish community shuns automobile. Got the w rong numbe r LIBERTYVILLE, Ill. (AP) - A suburban Chicago couple whose home telephone number seems to appear in a bard rock bit song bas filed suit to have the lyrics changed because they have received hundreds of ob- scene calls. Last March the group .. AC· DC" released the album, "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap." The song of the same name quickly rose on the music charts and became a favorite of hard rock fans. . t Norman and Marilyn While, howe ver , filed suit in Circuit Court seeking that a revised re- cording of the song be m ade and asking for damages of al least $25-0,000. "Hundreds of lewd, suggestive and threatening phone calls re· laling to the 'dirty deeds' sug- gested in the song" have con· stituted "an unreasonable and prohibited invasion of privacy and an unwarranted intrusion into our private lives," the Whites charged. --• -• -· ~ -.. ... --- -..,.. v--- Orange Coaat OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Ootober 12, 1981 Ami,sh struck by inncurable :MD More than one of 100 in community fall victim to debilitating disease BERNE, Ind. CAP > -Shiny steel wh eelchairs are as familiar u horse-drawn bu1ctes among the Amish ln northem In· dlana. Tbe 3,000 Amish near Berne have the hlgbeat rate of muscular dystrophy ln the coun· try, one researcher says. The crippling dlaease occurs here at a rate l,000 times the national average, striking more than one in every·lOO Am.iah.... . -Doctor-a say It continues'{() spread. The illness is transmitted only to children whose parents are MD carriers, but almost one adult in five is a carrier here and the Amish Instruct their children to marry within the community. In one family, nine brothers and sisters are victims of the disease. Symptoms, which in· itially occur at about 10 yem of age, include weakness In the muscles of the pelvic region and shoulders. By 20, most victims are confined to a wheelchair. There is no known cure. In the Schwartz home, brother and sister Chris and Elizabeth, both in their 30s, slide their wheelchairs together over a rugless floor to a bare corner to sing for a guest. The ballad they've composed themselves is a slow and plaintive one about MD. Miss Schwartz's hands are claw-like, twisted by the dis· . ease. Her brother harmonizes in a strong, full voice as his head rolls back involuntarily. ·'That ole sly sickness, it did come. Made it hard to climb up the stairs," they sinl!. "Quite often it ·did make us fall and finally put us in our chairs." From their chairs, MD vic· tims are incapable of participat· ing in traditional Amish life -a life filled from sunup to sundown with tending livestock, plantfu.g and harvesting crops and feed· ing and clothing large families. No modem technology is used. The Amish, descendants of a atrlct Swill rell1lou1 eect that split from the Mennonites in UM 17th century, believe ln follow· in1 u clolely u po1eible the waya ot the put. They dreaa as their ancestors did and their homes are simple and bereft of decoration. They eschew modem !lumb· ing, motor vehicles an most products of ioth century technology. Only their strong 'Work etb1c keepi ·the Am1sh competitive ln today's economy. MD victims, J.oo, are expected to contribute to the community income, which ls precariously dependent on input from each mem ber. The Schwarttes make leather wallets and produced a song book for the central social gathering of young Amish -the "sing." The Schwart.zea and other MD victims here )ie.ve a lso over· come a traditional shyness and allowed doctors into their homes to examine them and study their disease. The !ests are conducted through the Caylor-Nickel Clinic In b earby Bluffton and are aimed at developing early delec· lion of MD and of its carriers. "'It won't help us, but it might prevent others from getting the disease," Miss Schwartz says. ''The Amisl In Berne have the highest incidt:nce of MD in the nation," said Dr. Patricia Bader, 35, a Caylor-Nickel re- searcher who has studied the disease in this community for eight years . "But they have a remarkable adjustment to it," she said. ''In many ways, it doesn't seem to be as catastrophic as it might in the larger society. Because so many people in the community have MD, there are plenty of role models." Nevertheless, the constant drain of MD theatens to cripple the close·k:nit Amish community itself, Ms. Bader said. ''H 's an e ve r -increasing burden on the overall communi· ty. It is an economic, emotional and peraonal bard.ship for them all," she said. ·'The rorm of MD found near Berne usually is not la•aJ. One of our older paUent.s ls In h!s late 40s , and 1 know of another who died in hl.s late 60s," the doctor said. "But tn some ways, for the community as a whole, it mf&bt be better ll it were not euch a lingering Illness." . The Amish say they accept MP as God'• wUI. They b~ve been told it la caused by inter· marriage but they don't know how to prevent it. AP "'"-" Crippling disease makes Amish .WD victims incapable of participating in traditional activities: tending farm animals and taking care of crops. Two women and two children carry belong· mgs as they go about day's work Feds ready • • zinc pennies SFA 5 Columbus Day Mens Event! S~les And Special Purchases ... On Clothing And Furnishings. WASHINGTON <AP> -Treasury officials are ignoring cries from the copper Industry and mov· ing ahead with their idea to save the government millions of dollars a year -in pennies. The familiar, mostly copper pennies are to be replaced by lighter coins made mostly of zinc, beginning late this year. "We'll start striking the new pieces before the end of the year," says Alan J . Goldman, deputy director of the U.S. Mint. "We were not slowed down one bit" by the copper industry's attempt to ' win a legal restraining order. A federaJ judge in Washington rejected the re- quest earlier this month, but an appeal is being prepared, says Robert J . Wardell, president of the Copper and Brass Fabricators Council. • Camel hair blazer-regularly '22S, now 1189. For regulars, shorts, longs. • Pure wool flannel dress trousers - originally •as, now 63.90. In light or oxford grey or heather brown, for regulars, shorts, longs. • Traditional three-piece wool suits-specially priced at 1204. Sizes regulars, shorts and longs. •Double-breasted leather trenchcoat- originally '42S, now 1329. • Plaid cotton sportshirts- originally •JS, now 23.90 each. Sizes S,M and L. •Cashmere V-necks-regularly '140; now 109.90. Grey, wine, wheat, navy or black. Sizes S to XL. • Active sportswear: warm-up suits-originally '6S, now49.90. In navy or wine polyester and nylon. Sizes S,M,L and XL. • In Men's Furnishings Collections, and the Men's Store-where we are all the things you are. S.h Fihh Allen~ South Ca.JI Pin• JJJJ Bristol Strftlf, Costa M~. Government officials say the new coins will look and feel just like the current ones but will weigh about 19 percent less and will cost Jess to make. Zinc costs less than copper -about 49 cents a pound compared with about 85 cents in recent trading -and copper's price tends to jump around m·ore, interfering with production schedules, of· ficials say. Savings to the government could be-S2S million a year or more, they say. Critics, including the copper industry, argue that switch-over costs will eat up any savings, that hoarding will make the billions of pennies now In circulation disappear into jars and dealers' vauJts and that the new pennies could be subject to severe corrosion. "Absolute nonsense," replies Goldman, though he concedes hoarding has been and will continue to be a probJem. Government production -more than 12 billion pennies a year -has not kept pace with demand, and the Federal Reserve Board has been limiting allocations of one·cent pieces since last year. "We don't think it is going to be much worse" while the switch is being made, Goldman said. The Treasury Department plans to begin mint· Ing the new coins late this year at San Francisco a nd West Point, N. Y. The D e nve r and Philadelphia mints will continue to make mostly copper pennies until possibly late next summer. Pennies now are m ade of copper alloy -about 95 percent copper and 5 percent zinc. The new coins would be almost entirely zinc, with addl· tional copper eJectroplated onto the outside skin to make the total 97.6 percent zinc and 2.4 i>ercent copper. Wardell's group maintains that such a drastic change is "introducing a new coin," a move that would need congressional approval, rather than just 'changing the composition of the copper alloy coin Congress ordered years ago. The switch could mean as much as tlS million a year in lost business for b.iJ industry, Wardell said. But even ll It didn't, he said, It would sWJ be wrong for the Treasury to make such a big cban1e on Its own. Some critics also complain that the United States already Imports 80·percent or more of lta zinc, while producing most of it.a copper at home. But Goldman said the zinc supply would be ao problem, with stable producers available In neighboring Canada and Mex.lco. Despite the• copper Industry's conUnutn1 le1al efforts to stop the twitch, the mint already II awarding contract.a for auppUen of line and pennf blanks. "We felt the odda of 108llll were ftl')', • ..., slim," Goldman sald. I I ... A8 Orange Cout DAU. Y PILOT/Monday, Oatober 12, 1981 Women educators ask . better role ai U CI A UC Irvine committee has released a re port that claims the UCI administration is n't doing enough to h ire and promote women faculty members . The refOr\ 01 · tbe lCJia n· cetlor'"s ~dv1sory Committee on the Status of Wo men cites s tatistics which indicate UCI faculty women are paid less than men and less than women faculty throughout the nine-campus UC system. The report also indicates that the university lags behind the systemwide average in terms of hiring women to tenured posi· tions. Faculty members who don 't achieve tenure in s ix years are dis missed from the uni- ver s ity . UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. has been given a copy of the report and has agreed to have the Executive Council re· view the document with a view toward possi bly impleme nting so m e of its recommendations. The Executive Council is a s ix-member body composed of top UCI administrators. none of whom are women . One of the chief recommen- da tions of the re port is: "The UC I a dministration mus t in- t e n sify lts leaders h ip in af . firmative action in the areas of hiring, including hiring of women at tenured level and promotion.~· , Altho"eh there .are no women on tlfe Executive Council, we ~ h ope its m e m bers can e m - pathize wit h the women educators a nd that the commit· tee reco mme ndations are seriously considered. The statistics in the report are open to various interpreta- tions. And it s tands to reason that UCI. being a r e latively s mall uni- versity in comparison to other campuses in the UC system. might have less opportunity to hire and promote w o men educators. Also. it is true that qualified women academicians s till are harder to find than their male counterparts. • To give UCJ its due, progress h as been m ad e . While in 1975 there were only 15 tenured women faculty members at the university. today there are 32. However. it would behoove the UCI administrators to engage in a little self -examintiation to see whether there are a reas in which more can be done to hire and promote women. Vif>lence inevitable The tragic murder of Anwar Sadat is n ot the e nd of the bloodshed in Egypt. There a re signs it is only the beginning. Even before he takes offi ce as president. Hosni Mubarak has vowed to rid the countrv of dis· sent a move that can· be done onl v bv force and at the cost of lives. ·A government does have 'the respons ibility of maintaining ord e r . Sadat hims e lf rounded up 1.500 foes last month on suspicion of fom enting Moslem-Christian strife. And the role of the Moslem extre m ist s in Sadat's death he ightens the tens ion. The state of e me rgency alread y has been extended a year. Mubarak·s policy surely will take him on a parallel road to some South American dictators and put new pressures on the re· lalions hip between the United States and Egypt. And ye t i s t h ere a n alte rnative'? Probably not. Amid the affluence of Orange County. we simply cannot com prehend the proverty. the cheap· ness of ... life. the difference of lifestyles and government. Two da ys after Sadat 's murder. clashes already were un· der way in the southern city of Assyut. They s ubsided somewh at over the weekend as the world re-lived the agony of Sadat's de· ath in his moving funeral. an eve nt made to order f or television even at 2 o 'clock Saturday morning. But the extra security measures cannot last forever . l n an inter view with Walter Cronkite. Mubarak said "When there is discipline, everything goes in its proper channels.·· Whe n the expected violence comes. we have these choices: Look the other way. raise our protests or condone it. We s us - pect that under the present world conditions. the U.S. can and will do little but look the other way. Egypt has come a long way. Let's hope that progress can con· tinue ·We 're· a good investment Despite the hand-wringing over the slate of our economy. it doesn't seem to be scaring off foreign investors who continue to find California a safe and profita· blc parking p lace for t heir mo ney. In fact. foreign investments ha ve set a new record in recent months . The money has gone into s uch tangibles as banks. hotels. shopping centers, office buildings a nd residential, commercial and rural real estate from one end of the state to the other. And the investors are not just • Arabs and Japanese with dollars to spend from our oil, auto and electronic imports. They include Canadians. British, Fren ch. Germans, Dutch, South Africans and Latin Americans. I Some apparently want a ref. uge for funds t hat might be- threatened by political instability at home. Others obviously h ave confidence in Cal iforni a 's economic future. Which perhaps should encourage us to take a less jaundiced look at our own backyard. Opinions expressed In t he space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex: pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626--0560. Phone (714) 642-4321 . L.M. Boyd/Dating game Unmarried grownups who want matrimonial mates in the People's Republic of China are pictured on television so similar souls can shop the current crop. There are no loads in Australia. "Flush" is none too ~tic a name for a dog, seems to me. But that re- nowned poetess Elizabeth Barrett Browning thought otherwise. She named he r pup "Flush." Mrs . Browning was somewhat of an inno- cent. It's reported she and her husband Robert Browning never ln their Uves saw each other undressed. Q. Ask your Love and War man how a woman knows when a man is falling in love with her. A. He says the first sign is the fellow starts telling her all about himself. When she catches this ORANGE COAST DailyPilai signal, she's advised not to yawn, that's bad form. Q. How long does the average hom eowner in this country now live in that home before moving on to som eplace else? A. About 10 years. Q. ln which sport are the most peo- ple killed? A. Car racing. o r all track acci· dents. 4.6 are fata l. Q . What do gypsies call them selves? A. Rumanlans, mostly. Am now informed a couple in Fort Smith, Ark. -Mr. and Mn. Salu Newquist -have been married 81 years . Since Jan. 201 1900, to be ex· a ct . If that isn't tne matiimonlal longevity record among the Uvin1, what ls? Thomas P. Haley Publisher Thomas A. MurpftlM • Editor B•rbar• Krtlbiclt Edltorl•I P999 Editor • NCPAC's cynical battle pla WASHINGTON -The National NC PAC 's operatives a golden o p · Conservative Political Action Commit-portunity, Dolan writes. Liberal incum· tee <NCPAC) is widely regarded as an bents "will be picking up perhaps hun· or ganization of hot·eyed ideological dreds of Lhousands or new voters who fanatics deter mined to save the world have no clear image of the incumbent." from liberals. In fact. it is a slick. he explains. adding: "Therefore, we cy ni cal g r o u p of prof essional willnothaveto changeimpressions,we ad\ antagcs of "piggybacking" caro paign commercials that attack incum bents an three congressional districts the same media market. he writes: "We might even consider using term ·Gang of 3' and advertising in all three districts using all three names ... manipulators who believe the voters will be able to create them." can be gulled by expensive negali v~ No specific targeL'> have been picked campaigns. de finitely yet. according to Dolan·s bat· The depth or NCPAC's cynicism is re· G vealed in its battle plan for next year's state and congressional elections in ~ Texas. Polls ba,ve convinced NCPAC's chairmen, Tercy Dolan, that Texas and -~· · Flortda•11re coMervatlsm 's land or op· JACI ANOIRlll1 • 0"! Instead 0f picking an ideologicall)'. "pun_.·· candidate to run in a target.cl: ; district. Dolan would first establiSl'i #'#1; what kmd of constituency was out theii;'/~ lJ.> distract wide polling. "Once we hav~ the correct political profile on a district .~ we can immediately look for the corre~ ·V.• candidate and go ahead with that can· it:~- portunity in 1982. ~~·- My associate Vicki Warren obtained a copy of NCPAC's invasion plan for Tex- as. authored by Dolan himself. The cov· er page is labeled ''PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL ... and on top or that. t he seven inside pages are stamped, "TOP SECRET." did:ite," he explains . ' DOLAN'S BATTLE plan for Texas tie plan. But he writes that "I am cur· has :.i c:.irpetbagger aroma to it. Though rently considering" five Democratic in-NCPAC "1s walling to establish a Texas cum bents as targets worthy or a DepartmC'nl which will serve the needs NC PAC blitz· Majority Leader Jim of all the <'andidates, .. he makes it clear Wright and Reps. Jim Mattox, Martin that has out of-state people will be run· 1 Frost. J .J. Pickle and Henry Gonzalez ning things. He refers, for example.1~., <whose name he misspells l. · 'lhe deti.liled ·inform ation we will nee<J' ' IT IS A revealing document. Dolan It won't be cheapl Dolan warns to identify a Ci.l ndidate to define the_ -~ s uggests at one point that NCPAC's 1980 NC PAC is budgeting $800.000 for its issues and to direct the deb~-· campaigns demonstrated that voters T e xas campaigns. he writes. In addi· which ensues." • are fools who can't or won't look tion, apparently, he envisages an equal :\'CPAC wall a lso provide schooli)Wr · beneath the surface. As he puts it, "the a mount for "m y Independent Expend· for candidates, campaign managttil~·, reality is that people decide on image iture Program to destabilize at least and finance chairmen. All the Texas•. rather than substance." . three of the incumbents cited above" -conser vatives will have to do is s it baC'JC'j Dolan also reveals the basically "an· an unfortunate use of the CIA's old <111d let NCPAC la ke over. , ti" approach that NCPAC uses: "Creal-euphemis m for fomenting revolution Footnote NCPAC refused to talk wil)\ ·• : ing a negative impression is easier than against targeted governments. me or my staff because I previously r~: :- a positive impression." Dolan is not above pirating tech-ferred t o the organization as •·ul-:' The legislative redistricting that has niques from the Chinese Communists. traconscrvative ... Maybe Dolan woald ,• • come out of t he 1980 census gives At one point. discussing the economir prefer "ultracynical. ·· • "' --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.... ~~ ! ,..Lf' • Good memory not always an asset . ~· .. -. t ~· What does A WACS stand for again. do you remember? Advance Warning something. Advance Warning American Command Ship? T hat's not it. I'll have to ask SOrJleone or look it up. And who was Lyndon Johnson's vice pr-esident? You ought to remember a simple thing li~e that, and I ought to myself, but I don't. There are times when I'm over· whelmed by my vast lack or memory. The other day l forgot my home phone number and we've had it for 30 years. I remember reading that we all start losing brain cells that malce up the memory when we reach about age 20, but this debilitating influence the years have doesn't seem to have much to do with my problem. I couldn't remember anything when I was 18, either. BEING TALL and being able to re- m ember things ar e pr9bably the two most desirable human characteristics I don't have. Because I am neither tall nor able to remember things, I look for ways to diminish the importance of height and memory. Just for example. memory of the past is not nearly so much run as anticipa- tion or the future and it's almost always sadder. Sadness is one of the principal ingredients of memory and there's just so much or that anyone wants to bring on hi mself on purpose by sitting around rem embering. Another thing, as much as I'd hke to have a good memory sometim es. it seems to me that people with good memories for names. ex~ct times and . I~"' -AID-Y-R00-11-Y -~. -~ dates are dull. They·re not only dull , they can be a real pain in the neck to be around. THE TROUBLE with people with good memories is that they keep want· ing to s how off to you by remembering things you don't · want to hear about. Everything r eminds them of something they've done before. I have one friend I hate to see because every time we 're together be starts talking about World War 11 . I enjoy reminiscing once in a while, but do-you-remember·the-lime- we s tories don't hold m y attention for long. I'd rather wait until I'm all through living and then review my life and thpes. Right now. I'm busy with to- day. Last ~eek I met a friend I used 't::.: work with when I wrote for Arthur God- frey lie repeated a story I've heard him tell 50 times I've seen him twice a year s ince 1960 and I'd heard the story eight times before that. It looks now as though those of us who can 't reme mber anything may be saved. They're s tarting to sell small computer ized memory ba nks for personal use. That's what I want when they get them pocket-s ize . I want to be able to reach in m y pocket and enter the question. "What do the initials,. AW ACS stand for? .. and get an instant answer. I think I'll give one to my old friend for Christmas. too If he ent¢ the quest1on, "Have I ever told this • story to Andy before?" he'll get b~ the answer, ··Yes. 50 times." · ~~: 1''i YOU OFTEN hear people say, .. , te rrible with names, .. a s if it ! · som ething lo be proud of. I'm terrib • with names l>ut I'm e mbarrassed abo $ it because I know it mea ns I just d care enough to make a point of rem · bering. That isn't nice or anything to be proud of. · I don't feel too bad about my bad memory although I'd be happy tL1.. could remember who Lyndon Johnsoil9= v.p. wru,. .... lf! Remember a fine mind is still just a tool ~. l Ordinary people unde restimate the requisite, it is be no means a IU//ident may be used gloriously or pervert~ importance of the mind; extraordinary one to help unravel the perennial prob· any purpose. The smartest people ~ I people, on the other hand, overestimate lemsthataffiictthehumans~cies. not the best people, by any means • .&.::.• the Importance or the mind. Few are Something more than mmd is needed, even the wisest, in many lmporta~ able to put "intelligence" in its proper and that somethin1 more bas little to do' respects. ~~ perspective. with the intellectual level. It is how the I do not mean to feed the n ames or 1 l I thought of this while browsing mind is used, in coajunction with other anLi·intellectualism, which already le~ through the current issue or lhe Mensa p~rts or the personality, that makes the too high in this. country. But while ... ~ dtfference. intellect ls a thing lo be respected • c ultivated, it ls not a shrine to wors~ '• ·':JI ,r.-MOST PEOPLE use their minds. no at. The "research" we most need i!lt:• • matter how good, to confirm and rein· find out why so m any rich m in :--_:'.t force their emotional defenses and their employ these assets in the service social prl'Judlces. Rather than a probe their emotional defects. ~ 0111101111 to reach out to the unknown, the mtnd la _______________ ...,_...._ used as a pike to repel the s trante or Bulletin, a monthly put out by the the threatening or even the uncomlorta- Mensa Society, composed of high IQ ble. The so-called "best minds" ln any people -one has to pass a rigorous test proreuion have generally rejected and tor admission. The aodety ls devoted to condemned the innovators lf\,theJr own "extolling the human mind and foster-field. lng human inteW1ence" by research Thus, the letters and artlclea and and activity around the world. other contribution.a in the Mensa WHAT IS interesting to me la the or· dinariness of the thinking revealed In the society's magasine. Apart from the obvious fact that.the cont.rlbut.or• score well on IQ tatl, there la Uttlt ln the conteott to tndlcate eicceptlonal powera or mind or thou&bt. t aa.y um not to put down the liens• members, but tlmpl.J to point out that tri"blle tntelll1eoce may be a n«"9Clf'k 8utUtin, while perbapa more literate than moet, betray tbt same emotional biases and c ultural conditJonln1 one might find ln any m11adne of general circulation. and no more ori~aUty of thought or evidence of crea.Uvtty bt C!Clft· ceptJon~ "EX'l'OILING TBB human mind" ll u tutile and u fatuoua u extollln1 tbl human body: both are almply toolt, aad Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 UT P• abo • and Ba rbra Streisand are among 7 in tors who have fil e s uit in Los Ang les claiming they ~ere defrauded or pr its in sale of a S19 illion Marina del property. ~---------------------------------- DEAR READERS: The old myth that people with drinking problems hurt only themselves is.Just that -a myth. They also hurt their families, friends, feUow·workers, employers and others. Fort\anately. as more sw:os>le team that alcoboll.sm•is an illness that can be treated, they become more willing to try to help someone with a drinking problem. To help you know how to go about th.ls, and what re· sources are available to help you, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has a booklet. For your copy of "Someone Close Drinks Too Much," send $1.50 to Consumer Information Center, Dept. 210J. Pueblo, Colo. 81009. First step is lo learn about the illness and sources of treatment. For more information and referral to a local community service, write to Alcoholics Anonymous, P.O. Box 459, Grand Central Station, New York, N. Y. 10017 or Al-Anon Family Groups, 115 E. 23rd St., New York, N.Y. 10010. Start of rodeos DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you teU me bow rodeos got started In this country and when tbe flrst one was held? I asked my dad and be said to ask you. K.W., Newport Beacb Rodeo developed on a different basis than most professional sports. It began on cattle ranches of the 19th century, where rop· ing, riding, bronc busting and bulldogging were aJI part or the workday. Skill was re· quired to do the jobs well and reputations built by those or out.atandln1 ability. It was lnevltable that contelll a.ween those ol ability would sprtn1 up both •• recreation and to determine who waa best. During the roundups, one ranch ouUil would compete against another, and the sport began to attract the townspeople's attention. It is reported that on July 4, 1877, at Prescott, Arb., the community oraanbed the flrst rodeo u a spectator event. Admlasloo was charged and priz.e money offered. From that Ume on, rodeo as an organized sport began to spread and develop. Long back order DEAR PAT DUNN: Laa& November I or· dered some en11De caatlnp from CaldweU lndaatria of Lallag" Texas. I neetff4 a card lnclJca~ Utat t~,e pJrtf were • back /W· .~er, bu& t.bt'• ~ laat I lleard fl'fft W. eem· pany even though I wrote aenral ldten of Inquiry. I concluded they had 1oae Ml of buslaets and I'd lost my '54.S., but about a month ago I rttelved a cataJo1. I wrote again, but haven't bad an answer. R.S., Newport Beach The items are still on back order, accord· ing lo Lela Matlock of Caldwell. You may re- quest a refund if you don't care to wait any longer for your order. No approximate date of delivery could be provided. Your letters weren't answered because the firm is "short of help," but Ms. Matlock promises to com· municate with you if you address a letter to her attention. • ·Got u problem·' Then wnte to Pal \.."'I Vunn Pat will cut red tape . gelling " ..l the an.~wers and actwn you need to • solve inequities m government and r"1 bwmess Marl yOlJr question& to Pat Dunn . At 't'our Sennce. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P <> Box 156Q. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many letters cu possible wtll be answered, but phoned rnquanes or letters not including the reader's full name. address and business hours' phone number cannot be conSldered. This column appears daily ex- cept Sundays .. Now. these beautiful no·wax floors are an even better value because thev re really on sale. FREE! Purcnase 1'> so vos or more of FFC Sotartan ounng tn1s sale, and get tne Armstrong cooa taeas"for Dt>corartng oook free valued at $2'>, this 288·page nardoouno book Is brimming with decorating and remod· ellng Ideas. over 400 cot or photographs ano 14 oo·lt·your;elf projects to netp you make everv space In your home work harder work beilUtlfUltY This sate ano specloat free offer are avallaote only at Floor Fasnton center" stores Hurry In now because this sale ends October 31, 1981. 'M~nuhcturer s suogesuo savinos Arn1-.trong floor lash1onn ··~ -...CD' ... 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October 12. 1981 rl!u~ line paying off tate1s num ber to receive Medi-~al complaints busy SACRAMENTO (AP) -A lions Central ~omplalnt Section, W>ll·tree slate telephope Une to 714 P St., Sacramento 95814. fecelve complaints or Medi.Cal Health Services Di rector ~aud la 1ettln1 1,200 to 1,:IOO Beverlee Myers aald complaint.a alls a month, officials report. formerly came In piecemeal to Chuck Shuttleworth, chter Mtdl·Cal d!Jtrlct ortlca, tyinf •edi-Cal investigator for the up lnvestlgatora wbo would If ea Ith Servlces Department,· otberwile be lD the fteld. i ld the telephone line, installed • Besides lncreasint the is year, baa t?ecome the c~ number of public complaint.a, urce of fraud information. . tbe said, the telepbo ea I t lb ''Probably one-third of tit , department set priorttiea ?or i~ l<)mplaibt.5 .bave.good poteotuil·· · ioveatleations, startln1 with llfe-~r c~iml?;tl cbar~s or clvU ,.. .. tbreatening situations and ~n pensions, Shuttleworth told f.-goloc to crimes by providers porters. and patients. H~ said vlrtuai~y all. the ln· Sbuttlewortb said his omce·a ~estigations by his office, and 25 field investlg"lltora are about 90 percent of those of the handling about 800 fraud cases. ~to~ney general, originate on The depaTtment has few e hne. statistics to measure the ertec· Four telephones are slatted ti veness of the telephone Tt'eekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. system, but Shuttlewort:h said about 130 cases, Shuttleworth said. He said about 70 percent of the cases Involve drugs. An Increas- ingly common practice ls for erlminaJ rings to force or steal •· Medl-Cal ~rcls,Joue prescrip- tions and use them to obtain drugs, which are then sold, he said. Shuttleworth said bis office ls concentratin1 on the forgery and theft, to get the dru1s· off the • · • street, tiut will tum next to Ure possibility or collusion by doc- tors and pharmacies. The department handles civil fraud cases and suspensions from the Medl-CaJ program, but turns criminal cases against providers over to the attorney general's office. Stude nts honored 'Pe t of Year' must repay party costs NEW YORK CAP > -A Judie has ordered Isabel Lanza, wbo renounced her 1980 Penthouu "Pet of the Year" Utle, to repay the maguine $67>767 for the par-_ ty thrown to trumpet her aelec· lion. Miss Lanza, 29, rejected the U· tle and $300,000 In prizes ln Sep- te m be r 1980 at the party a.ttended by l,000 euests. She said she wasn't told abe would have to work for Pent· house for a year and make a 30-city tour. She said Penthouse invaded her privacy with 22 nude photos and a cover shot in its November 1980 issue. •nd a Spani'sh-speaking in-one figure of comparison ls the vestigator is available. The de-number of cases in which Two Huntington Beach stu· dents have been awarded scholarships to attend UC Davis this fall. They are Kimberly Yap, who is majoring in elec- trical engineering, and Karen Breslau, a zoology major. . . .. ~ She later filed a $4 million suit against Penthouse and publisher Bob Guccione, churning she was "the victim of a disgusting fraud." 'artment said they cost $30,000 a criminal fraud warrants have year. been issued against Medi-Cai pa- IN REHEARSAL -Dancers Alexander Godunov a nd Judith Jamison rehearse in a New York City s tudio for a Dec. 3 opening at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. Godunov. formerly of the Bols hoi Ballet. and Jamison, Broadway musical star. a r e making their first guest appearance with the Ai ley troupl'. But State Supreme Court Justice Richard Wallach, who presided at a non-jury trial in August, ruled that "if any party was defrauded" it wai Pent- house. The telephone number is (800) U~nts. 8~2-6222. Written complaints There wer'e about 55 such may be sent to the Department cases last year, but at the cur- of Health Services, lnvestiga: rent rate the 1981 total will be Top b e auty p e lte d b y student MANKATO, Minn . (AP) -The students of East High School bought flowers for the new Miss America and paid to have her clothes cleaned ~fler a student pelted her with part of an apple crisp. The incident happened as Elizabeth Ward, 20, of Russell ville, Ark .. walked through the cafeteria greeting young people. "Of the 1,010 won - derful students that we have here. at least 1,009 reel very bad," said ~rincipal Jack ~)ostrom. School officials were fJPl certain who threw \lie cobbler, although Sjostrom said he had narrowed the search to three male stuents . Ms. Ward was hit in the arm and side . 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' • • ' ' • I • : ~ , ' I Crash crewmen simulate removing iniured man from he/1cnpter during dnll at Manne Air Stat1on hllyPllot · MONDAY, OCT. 12, 1981 . CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION .J 82-3 84 BS ' Marines drill to be perfect at copter base By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. 0-., ...... , .... Practice, practice, practice. Whether ijfs a live fire dri!I on the Marine Corps Air Station <Helicopter) in Tustin or train· ing classes at the Santa Ana Fire Academy, the Tustin-based Crash Crew is constantly learn- ing its craft. And, says Chief Warrant Of· fi cer William T . "Tom " Troutner, officer-in-c harge of the Tustin crew. the effort has paid off. The crash crew al the helicopter station was recently named Outstanding Crash Fire Rescue Department for 1980 in the annual Allen G. Ogden Com· petitive Program. The Tustin crew competed against 26 other entrants In the crash division of the competition which pits Navy and Marine Corps firefighting departments throughout the United Stales. The win was a first for a Marine unit in the overall Crash Crew Division, and the local Marines also won in the "small airfields" category for the second ~onsecutive year. Each crash crew was judged on contents of a competitive en· try book which summarizes the crew's activities through the year. · Among considerations for the winning team were hours of training, education civk ac- tivities, awards and public rela- tions. The cras h crews at the helicopter station, as well as the Santa Ana air station practice a minimum of 400 hours a month. In addition to learning how to douse highly volatile aviation fuel blazes, the silver-suited crews practice extracting pilots from "downed" aircraft. They participate in the Santa Ana Structural Fire School and learn cardiopulmonary re- suscitation and other emergency first aid techniques. In their free time, many of the crew members participate in Saturday tours of the air station, Troutner says. And while civilians enjoy the s pectacular shows, it's just another opportunity to do what Tustin's crash crew does most often -practice. ' OM cn:ula ctttD member mans truck turrtt w~ile arwther do.IMS toward "dm.DMd craft" with reicue tool kit an41fire hose. ( .. Expect more human strengths than special effects in ]inale of "StarWars" trilogy. B6. 0 ~ 0 Marine crash crew at helicopter station in Tustin gets taste of real thing f le/ t J in battling aviation fuel blaze set purposely •· for training exerci~e. .. •. Daily Pilot photos by Richard Koehler Lance Cpl. Joseph Medina checks tanks on trailer designed by Marines to be mrlifted to remote crash sites ,~ .. • .... , .......... ~ ........ o.1 •• " ...... . I ... .1 •... .... __ .... --....-..... .. -· _1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12. 1981 I •ANN LANDERS •HOROSCOPE •DA. STEINCAOHN KEY WOMEN AT LUNCHEON -Prime Minister Indira N. Gandhi of India signs guest book at Philippine International Con· vention Center durin g luncheon hosted by Pilot advertising is good business for American State Bank. "Dally Pilot help wanted ads have consistently brought us the best personnel." Lucille Kuehn Community Relations, American State Bank Newport Beach The Alliance to Save Energy has prepared a brochure that contains 12 Simple. mexpenstVe measures to tal<e which can cut down your tiorne energy use by 25% That m tum can cut down the amount of money you pay tor hOme energy (For example· DKJ you know that electocal outlets "leak" heat? The brochure will tell you how to prevent 1t ~nd save.) The brochure wt/I also tell you about easy things to do to chimneys and flues. to pipes and ducts. to shOwer heads. to electncal out- lets. to washing machines. to doors and wm- dows. to water heaters. Do them all, and cut ............. First Lady of the Philippines, Mrs. Imelda R. Ma rcos. left. Dianne Feinstein, mayor of San Francisco, is at right. The event was held in Ma nila. contains accurate diagrams and easy to fOllow directions • · Take our advice Send for our free brochure. "The 25% Solution "It can save you plenty of money The Alliance lo Se~ EIWt'gy Box 57200, Washington, D.C. 20031 Pleasesendrne)'OUf6flef!7Y·S8WJg money-s.~ngt>fOC/lUre NAVE ADDRCSS your energy use by 25% The brochure CITY STATE ZIP AHE ALLIANCE TO SA VE ENERGY ' • \ Masons nOt at ·fault DEAR ANN LANDERS: My marriage is over, not because or another woman. but because my husband has chosen to join th~ Masonic lodge, knowing that I hate an(l distrust secret societies. He even had Uae gall to sugges t that I become a membe~~' the Eastern 'Star. kh organitation for '"e wives of MAsoas~ • · . . I cannot live with a man who belongs to a group that makes their members take . an oath that they will not reveal to anyon6» · They are also pledged not to reveal what goes on at their meetings. The final insult is that they use religion to gain res~~· · . . . ·1'1>~AR ANN LANDERS: Everyone has ~·· a self ·appointed maven -someone who think6 she knows everything. In our family ta bility. · ~ ~ I hope, Ann Landers. that your edi~s a re not members of a Masonic loC:tge because, if they are, they will not allow this letter to appear in print. I ne~ to know what you think of a man who woald join a secret lodge knowing it would men· the end of his marriage. -THE FINAL STRAW IN TEXAS it ls Edith. m v hus band's sister . "• Edith is· givine a shower for our , daughter who will be married soon. She 'is telllng everyone to buy a certain pattern of English table service and sterling silver · · dinner ware -very expensive stuff. Our (amlly cannot afford such gifts. and the bride daesn·t want it. , , ·~'l)le couple will be living in Anchorage. - Alaska. and they will have about as ·much use for Wedgewood and sterling silver • forks and knives as I would have for a buf- f a1o in the living room . DEAR TEXAS: Your signature re- vealed more than your letter. I strongly suspect that you have been unhappy \fllh your husband for quite sonfe time al!ld hls desire to joln the Masons ls a convenient ·•final straw." Should I say something to the rel- atives. like. "'Ignore Edith she's nuts .. '? My husband says to keep out of it. What do you say. Ann? 0-Y VEY l~ GREAT ~ .'/ NECK r I checked with the grand master of a Chicago lodge and le~med that when a man applies for m embership in the Masonic Order, three members do a thorough lnvestlgatlon. They want to nftd out about his moral character, his repata- tion among his friends and the people ·be works with. They also want to know If 1dl family ls supportive of his memben~ Under the circumstances, your husbald!s application woulcM>e promptly rejected. . Why do you despise this brotherhood?· Freemasonry is the world's oldest alld largest fraternal organization. Masons sap·. port some or the finest hospitals and retire- ment homes ln the country. They also 1up· port some splendid homes for children wbo have no place else to go. -and ~r needn't be the kin or a Mason. They la~e ·any child. The Masons have a sple..., blood donor program · and contribute to many national causes. Most hatred is based on ignorance and fear. Thlnk about this. . · ·DEAR VEY: The bride should tell her Aunt Edith exactly how she feels. She ) should then get on the phone and let the guests know that she would prefer more 1 modest and practical gifts. It ls the sensi- ble thing to do. ".. CONFIDENTIAL to What Sh~ll I Say .., to Help Him Understand?: lntellectuall~· he probably knows it. but it's difficult to 1 a·~~pt the f acl emotionally. Leo Rosten said it best: ··The worst thing that can hap- pen to an ordinary man is to ha ve an ex-1 traordinary father ... What 's prudish? What's OK? If you aren't ) sure, IJ<1U need some help. /rs available in the booktet: ··Necking and Petting -What Are the ~ Limits?" Mail your request to Ann Landers. 1 P.O. Box I 1995. Chicago. Ill 61>611. E:nclosmg 5fJ 1 cents and a long. stamp€d. self-addre.<>sed , enve~pe. Mommie Deftrest II , .. If all or you mothers are too chicten to say it. then I'll say it for you. You live in a bsohHe fear your children have a manuscript hidden under their mattress: .. Mommie Dearest II... . I don·t know about you , but I can't function as a mother with all that intimida- tion. There was a time I could lash out a( my children with no thought or retaliation.- I threatened them with bondage and servitude if lhey didn't get the car back on time. I threatened them with public humilia- tion beyond belief if they ditched s*>I. I once conquer ed defiance when they wist· ed on playing in their school clothes:·~ threatening to take away their puppy. NOW, EVERY TIME I so much as ask one of the kids to turn off a light, I ge~ nervous and add , "No hurry. 'Just whe never you have a little time on your·' hands.·· : One of the things mothers are never told is that built into every child 'is a me mory computer. Everything you ever tell them is fed into this mechanism and can be recalled within seconds. When a child is 35 years old. he can still remember the time you made him slt in wet drawers when you wanted to see th~ ending of a second feature at the Palace Theater and he got _a diaper rash. ~ ~,, . . . . ... .flMA IOMIKI ATWIT'S END ~--------------------- C1 (! ,. He can remember the time his brother got a watch for his 12th birthday and he had to wait until he was 13. He can re-1 member he had to s leep aga ins t the wall ins tead of on the s ide nearest the ~ bathroom. He can remember the lime he , was punished unjustly and the time ,vou or-dertfd him to go into the ocean and get wet and ·a w.ave knocked him down and he I' 'nettrly choked to death. .: .,: • THERE IS NO other profession in the d world where vour mistakes are 'an annual event. to be marched out and c~iebrated i like a pageant. ' · Parents, with all their flaws _and .., , frailties, must stick together. We cannot al-1 low a kiss-Mommie-and-tell trend to get started. While there is one best-selling book and hit movie at the box office. none 0 of us is safe. 1 I am in worse s hape than mos t parents. I've written six books on tt\e foiples of raising my children. . On the other han.S,. Bo Derek would be perfe<.'t to play me. . t• Prez priz~=-. ilfeSpian . ., . '>~ ... .. .., . . The following is how a Variety mug might review Ronald Reagan's ~ppearance before his media critics and a multimil&ort \ audience of TV viewers with a stake' ft!'.- what he had to say about the todays of tbe future. ' · • , l · ··(llSOllAl.ITJ Q.&A. BY MARl°LYN ANO HY GARD0NER The superstar or the drama stopped the . 1 ° • show from the moment he slipped thro\lgh but (lS he would like it to be. Amerie'ans the wings of the standing room only room · lb.tllW. they can apply today the policies of in the White House wearing the weight of 1eltdy Roosevelt's day.·· the world on his head and an ingratlati~ Ftdel, loyal to bis commie· cronies, sees smile that covered his face like a securit~ · ~veltthlng through rose·colored glasses ~ blanket. · • ~ .' ' ~p.f~ase settJe a friendly b~t . M y " The prez turned in an Oscar-E"6JnY· ltiieod Sally says the lovable comedian winning performance and made the mOlt rge Burns is close to 100 yt!ars old. My of a tight script. · grandlJ\Olher insists he's Closer to her age Iil contrast to our chief executive's de--+-which is 86. Who wins? -D.M., Ft. meanor, we picked up Fidel Cutro's u· M~eria. Fla. . • 1,. .,. .. sessment o! his sworn enemy,Jriated. .OC~· George wH bora .Ill a""= earlier this year in "0 Pasquim0 Rlole ...W New York City on JaL le, ,., Janeiro: . -------~ r•••1teat&blly" •PProadlla& l5i · "RONALD REAGAN llA.8 res~ American imperialism," says Cuban . 1 know I should ask this q~stion of Premier Fidel Castro. ''We are back to.the .som·eone like Ann Landers or her' twin 'i•· days when Americana considered 1,jr, ·•near Abby". But I thoughl I'd elk themselves lords and policemen Of tlie aarUyn. Thia 1a it: I broke my • world.•• he· said in a four-hour speech at • meni and my heartbroken flanet. literary event. •'This sbon particularly ln doesn't the diamond riDI the attltUdes ancl atatementl of ae.1• ,.. t~ 1bould J .•! and <Secretary of State> Hall.'• ~ "l · ··J " Pr81ident Rea1an,'' Cutro ..,,;.·rti .; ~ worst kind of ldealiat. At leut NftbD .~ realist. Magan sees the world llOt • ~ , By PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna Beach "'"" llllllGAll r . MULLIGAN STEW ~ -.:. Ah, be wary "Cancel the rest of my appointments for the day. I'm casting ofr bad vibrations." G emini wish comes true Tuesday, Oct. 13 ARIES <March 2l·April 19 1: You over- ~ome odds -those who counted you out are in for surprise. You now are the comeback kid. Emphasis on individuality. I TAURUS <April 20-May 201 : This can be your power-play day. Study Aries message for hint. You 'll be given addi- tional responsibility and you·11 bave ch a nce for added income, promotion. GEMINI CMay 21-June 20 >: Wish comes true-you're rid of burden. you perceive potential and project is suc- cessfully completed. You rediscover loved one. CANCER <June 21-July 22 1: New start in new direction brings constructive re- sults. Focus on independence. initiative. originality. willingness to get to heart of matters. LEO <July 23-Aug. 221 : Location becomes important factor : decisions reached involving special person. VIRGO c Aug. 23-Sept. 22 I : Utilize powers of perception. You 're capable now of analyzing, making correct deductions, sensing subtle clues. LIBRA <Sept. 23 -0ct. 22 >: Be meticulous where legal documents are con- cerned. Check for hidden clauses. fine print and trick phrases. Time is on your side. SCORPIO 10ct. 23-Nov. 211 : Job re- quirements are outlined. You know what s hould be done -key is to do it. Close as- sociate shares your interests. reveals in- formation which had been suppressed. SAGITl'ARIUS cNov. 22-Dec. 211: Ma - jor adjustment occurs within family struc- ture . Someone wants to leave home. Focus on creativity, change, variety and excite- ment .of romance. CAPRICORN <Dec . 22-Jan. 191: Focus on property, territory. conclusion of trans~ction . Know when to g.et. off stage. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Take notes. review policies. clarify messages. communicate with relative. Older in- dividual lends benefit of experience. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20 1: You 'll be rid of losing proposition. Take cold plunge into future. Focus on income. personal possessions and use of items which had been in storage. of Irish name By HUGH A. MVLUGAN NEW YORK CAP > -Bloomingdale's, the East Sic!e department store which last year brought you the richea ol CbAna b'ack ·to the Ming a.tld the T'ang dynasties, now has devoted several floors to the crafts and culture ol Ireland. Laboring away expertly among the pianos. hi-fis, Danish modem and tables and waterbeds are genuine Irish weavers. spinners, glass blowers. thatchers, Aran Islands sweater knitters and, for all I know, distillers of poteen, the illicit whiskey brewed in the bogs that goes down like a lava slide on Mount St. Helens. Among the authentic Irish artisans deployed at Bloomies are a genealogical team who helped Debrett's Peerage trace President Reagan's forebears back to the great King Brian Boru and now promise discretion in assisting shoppers to trace their roots in the Auld Sod. DISCRETION IS NEEDED, pointed out historian Hugh Weir, a member of the Irish Genealogical Res~arch Society. "because many a lad who thinks himself descended from the high kings might upon proper investigation turn out to be the pro- geny of a horse thief or sheep stealer." Or even worse a "souper," a ··spa I· peen" or an "undertaker." "The soupers were Catholics who defected to Protestant soup kitchens during the great potato famine of the late 1840s. Spalpeens were in- digent laborers of the lowest class who , went off to England to work the harvests. Undertakers were Scottish land poachers brought over to Ulster by the Stuart kings after the breaking up of the Irish clans. Now you wouldn't want that sort of thing shouted all over Bloomingdale's. Weir can trace his family name. originally speilled de Vere. back to Baltredus de Vere who left Flanders in Belgium in 1165. The historian is ~arried to Grania O'Brien. daughter of the 16th Lord Inchiquin. who sold Dromoland Cas-tle in Count y Clare to Bernard McDonough. the West Vi rginia shovel manufacturer whose father. an im- proverished laborer. passed the O'Brien manse on ~s way to emigrate to America. The other half of the ,team is Tom Llndert. a genealogist who reversed the migratory pattern by moving from his native Menasha, Wis ., nine years ago to settle permanently in Dublin and immerse himself in the profession of unlocking the mysteries of Irish f amities. · Called in by Debrett 's Ancestry Research of Winchester, England, which had begun the study of Reagan's family tree. Lindert and Weir were able to track the president's most immediate Irish rela- tion to great·grandf a th er Michael Regan who was baptized on Sept. 3, 1829, in the Church of the Assumption in Ballyporeen. County Tipperary. After moving to England during the great potato famine. he spelled his name Reagan on the mar- riage certificate when he wed Catherine Mulcahy in St. George's church in the Lon - don suburb of Southwark on Oct. 31. 1852. Such are the ups and downs of Irish geneology. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT WILL ALL THOSE WHO FEEL POWER.LE'SS TO INFLUENCE EVEN TS -- PLEASE: SIGNIFY BY MAINTAINING -THEIR USUAL SILENCE. ····--........ -°""' CNc-.jt ,........._' .......... i..c- Jury out . on pills DEAR DOCTOR : My 68·year·old mother felt fine before taking antl- bypertenslve drugs. Now, ' wonder If she should have started treatment at all. · She was apparently well when she vl•· lted our family doctor for a sprained ankle. Wblle there be took her blood presrue. Although the diastolic pre8sure was only 18, her systolic was 170. He prescribed dturetlc drugs. Tbey made her feel weak and dluy at times. So he took her off them and pre1Hlbed re.erplne. Thia seemed to work quite well. B9t after a few weeks sbe became depreued. This bas penated. Altboagb her 1yatollc prnsare II .aow about tM, I woeder U abe wouldn't have been better off not. taklq any medJd11e for ber blood pre11ure. Should she keep on with the reserpine' -MRS. V. DEAR MRS. U. : The jury ls stlll out. There ii no accepted verdict by all doctors that a patient over 65 should automatically receive pressure pills because the systolic pressure ll over 180. (F.lpecially If the lower diaatollc pressure is normal, as tn your motber'• cue.~ Somi. doct.orl do not prescribe an~ T JOUI HIAl1H OR. PETER J . STEINCROHN hypertensives for elderly ·patients c with normal diastolic) untU tbe 1y1t0Uc prea· sure reaches 180. Approximately four in 10 patients over age· ·ss have biood pre· ssures equal to or greater than 160 mm mercury systolic and/or 99 mm diastolic. But the majority of these have isolated systolic hypertension Cthe diastolic reading is normal). Many factors come into play, Mrs. U. Therefore we can't specifically prescribe for your mother. With many patients over 65, cuttiq down on salt intake and reduc· lnl welpt are sufficient measures to con· trot the pressure. Mild diuretics later are also effective. Dr. St*rolwt •leo...., ,..,. ':::'· H• . CMMC w caU ........,., W t0l4 U.W ot ,...,. ..,.,.., • ,,. ~ ...... ,..r ...... .,_, to Mtft •CON of ... "-..... # P.O. 8os I•, ColCO Mao, CCIUfoNa-t•. Orange Coast OAJLV PILOT/Mond1y, October 12, 1881 .. OUTLAW CLASSROOM -Faith Christian School students attend class during •·occupa- tion" of Fajth Baptist Church in Louisville, Neb., by members of its congregation. Cass County officials have ruled classes could not ., .... be held· in the building because the school re· fused to obey state teacher-certification rules. Church members are staying in the building around the clock to prevent sheriff's deputies from locking it. ; I Of the various characteristics which give uniqueness to Brooks Brothers, none is more integral than the fa ct that we do much of our own manufacturing. And nothing is 111ore famous at Brooks Brothers than the shirts we make ourselves. The dtsttnctlon of "OWJV MAKE', Only fine quality fabrics will do. A Pima cotton ~ oxford developed for Brooks Brothers, f and available in no other shirts; superb broadcloth of cotton and blends in colorations and patterns exclusively ours. These are sewn by our own expert craftsmen. The control of quality at every step is assured, for these are Brooks Brothers people, proud of the illustrious "Brooks Brothers" shirt. "Own Make" shirts are for men who have an ap- preciation for the generous cut of the shirt, the fine detailing, the perfectionist shaping of collars. Not only are the shirts Brooks Brothers' best; we arc proud of the fairness of the prices, for in "Own Make .. we achieve some of the best values in the shirt industry today. $24 to $42.50 ESTAIUSHID 1111 ~6JIJ~ c~~®D ~ Furntshingg tor H m. Women ~· Bous 530 WEST ITH STREET, LOS ANGELES. CALIF. FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. .....-..... ,~ .. ..-...-.. __ . ~ ,.....,.., ... $\ 1 u ......c..,... • ..., ....... ~ _ .. ______ COUPON __ ... I , 'C°' I ., -. Orangt Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Octobtr 12, 1981 . THE F"MllLl' c1act1 81G fiEOIUIE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ... ' ,,. ~ f (I Q l "What kind of sandwich did Grandma make y04J?" "I don't know. I didn't look inside before I ate itl" "I hatt Mondays." l1 \R~ADlKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENt\CE Hank Ketchum {~~··--; ~ ' tit "With Marmaduke around, landscaplng Is easier WITHOUT a wheelbarrow!" Jl OGE PARKER c.; \R•'IEl.D lt>l2 ~OON Ml'LLINS r-.. •-=::::--;®-;ryou H,AVe Na™ING IN SHE:'S JUST THI: oPPoSITE OF You! ACROSS 1 Orlginal 6 Flltbolt 10 Equine 14 School: Fr. 15Y~ city 111 Romen god 170inut llOme: 2wordl 18 Debtor IOBog 4851* 51 Dr..ing 52 Lit• • sachet 54Wld 58CourM 59Clledup 91 Malla up e2Cygnet 93 Or9lnland town .... ......,, esc..... .. Oblgllllon 11COmered 20 o.twne 22~1t1 DOWN 24Fellowt 1~ 2t leut 2 Ad)ldtwe common Mix 27 PurllC 3 Court 30Eggl .. ~ 31 FrOl1 I Ftll . "Explorer • ,_.... M.un-~ 3,C.. 2 .... *"· 7IMll 31 ladly • °"" .... tnerled • __... 40.... '° ........ ,.,.._ n._,.._ ".... _ .. ..... ~ ll'OClltoCll pNdl ... COMMON.. ,--..ah.<~ No l MA~ERS, J No l coun~... jJ tt ,-._..,......._.,. • ... 410Mwld moMr 47 Cfrde pert 41 "--loll eoCNne" •Mlln'•u IOMldrtd .... D llftll ........,.. .......... ~ ....... ~~~ ITC''' Cai -~ by Jim Davis TO SEV~N SCREAMING KIPS? WMAT KINP OF N\ON5TER ARE VOO? C 1111 ~FeeV• s~.1re by Ferd & Tom Johnson I1LL 5AY ~ GORDO fl:NK l' "INKERBEt\N r n.llNK li'o ·REAU.<.> fl>ME-rnlNG 1MAi A 5a)(JT' FROM OOIO 5lm'E I~ HERE 10 .WlrfU4 &JL..L BU5HKA Pt.A£.> ! I A~EO '40\.l i> ~£i.'f M~ "~£. l~C()(,N11"0, ~681.~. 0Ell~ ll)~'RE. A60l>f fo E'f.~ A VU~ 61{, 'JCMOAI.. ~fi~ Af lOU.u.E. ' IT; 0 fl~~ '-rd 1 DON'r ™INK !'VE EVER. 5€.EN ™E: ~ {('{)f?E EXC.rTED ~ .:.-..---~ . ' by Tom K. Ryan l'Vt: NF.:VeR Sia:N p. IJIRP 1..0se ITS P,fl\JNEft by Ernie Bushrniller , .• 1 ., by Gus Arriola· I,, I • I I I t I \ t I I l t . ·t ' f , I I -1'· by Tom Bat1Uk · · ' l If 400 -rnrNK HE'5 Exum> . r-mJ , CJJA f1 11 U.. l.X:i.J 1ELJ. HIN\ 1HAi &U. AAS BEEN DfilARE.D IN6.JGl8LE ! .. , --.... w••---------............ .., •r:9 ____ _,,, .. _____________ . ______ ,.. _____________ ,....,_..,..--------..-i "'''"') ...... EVINllG_ *-I L:.ANOIL.I 0 N'\. '°°TIAU Mleml Dolpfllna al 8uff9lo ···=MUNT -~UIH WlnC"t tlar ®MOvtl • • • ... "'""-It '*'"'" mlft" l1NO Goldi...._. 0... lniMln A ..... 10- 0o vouno "°""" 1Mtall-err1y lolfte .... Anny fol!Ow- lng the dMltl Clf '* ,... h\ltbtnd on thtlt ~dlrog ~ht.'A' •M(J)"l" ....... ()lo TMIMI ~1u.NIWI • * • "~t Grpen" I 1973) c'*'1on Heaton, -·" 0. ~Ni 0V9'J)Opulat ... , flfl'lf,,.. ~~It IOtOtd ~ to K• moet pr1Mltl¥9 in1t1nc:t1 lr'I ~tf to llUf• vive. 9 THI~ ....... An ex-<lOIWtct trying to g0 llr 1119ht lllr9' Roell lord to oomblt fffi>+1• to ~·11M1" hit leolllnl•.-r•faurllllt b\1 .. -. (O)MOYll rtcotdt • 111141f 'o hi.I .-tny lather begging lliftl to uM hi• lnnuenc. to get ' • hlln out of tM ur11t I MAWMI RY5-0 ILICTNC COMPMn' ; OtCKCAWTT NOBLE MOQA -Anthony Hopkins play the title role in the Sha kespeare tragedy "Othello" tonight at 7:30 on Channel SO and 8 on Channel 28. ** "Dalla FO•" ('1171) Richard Lync:h, Stuart Whitman. A prO-..alonal tmuggler ~• hi• mltch In a ~llful ~ who trtlpS lllm with t million dollarl In hat money. 'R' OMOYll • • "Z41fo To Shcty" Dar- ren MeGavln, SyM• Mlltl. 'PG' ·, IGUM~t.'ZTun. (R) WCNEWa MOW •*YI "Somew"41fa In Time" (19801 Cllrl11oplltt R .. .,.. Jant Seymour. ObMIMd wll" the p<1rtr1tt of t ttth-cenl\.lry actrwuf · .. moelern-d•y N-Yorlt ~I UM$ hypnosis to trivet baell In lllM end mMther.·PG· OMOYIE * • "T"undetblrda To 1"' "-"'-•• (t981) ~ The pilots of iw. lp«:l1llly llqUlo!)9d ,~ ~lpS mutt .. ,,. the H.,.. ol pa.: ffflgers tr19ped on a ~trenlPOfl. ·a· •*YI "The Lwed One" ( 1~5t Ro\i1rt ~orse: -Anj9nt11• Comer. ti. . neoi-ot a deoeuecl Mtl-, lywood star ineura ·.amt dtbll and hHdacllH wllell it COfM9 ,.,.,.. to mallll tM lune<al ~.,.. uo(~ WElCOME IAOK. KOTTIR HottMdt d iSc<IYert that he mey bt tr1nsltrred ~ 'Of 8UClllt\an jull u he etlO Mary dlllCOV9f l"«t Is more btt-n them ltlell i t frlendthlp. (Part IJ KCC'l'~t STUOIO&a "~onor Dane." An Ai• b•"'• debutante, ell Okla- homa Indian and OaH88's Youm On The MOY9 Choir are hig.hllghteO (RI (l)Q!NEWS r8) Gl..EN AHO TANYA nllln Camobell and Tanyi1 .... Tucker perform their bf9· gtst pep and country hits In this mpec:lll tllped .. Marrah'1 In Reno, Nev.a.. 1:001 c:ea NlW8 HeCNEwa ' 8 ~DAYIAOAIC Fon1le C0"1e$ to 1"9 r..- cue wheh l9ln9le motOfey- Cllm come to town to tat· tie 1 llCOf9 with Chachl I YOU A1KEO FOfl If THEMUPPETII Ouut: Bruce 'or~'- 1 JOKM'S W1U> , OYUIEASY . GUM!. Maxine SuHl ... n 0 QI) MACN!Jl / lEMAEA A90AT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH QI TME MUPPITS Guest· Anne Murr•y ~MOVIE • • "Sparkle" ( 1'976) Irene Car•. Lonelle Mcl<ee During the 1951h, three blaclt s11t9ft lrom 'the gMt1o become mU'lical supenters, but -•ually ' .,tier from the prMIU,.. of tt•dom. 'PG' .1 • Cl)) ...aw: , , .,; * * ~ ''The F011'11\ Wish'' ( 19781 Robert BetO•. I Jahn Melllon. The rather of a termln1lly lit boy trlM 10 meke hl9 IOl'I' I 14111 !TIO" lhl u luffilllng as pot.Sible. 'G' t:ac> 8 2 ON THE TOWN Featured: a IOOll at neu· raathenle. more commonly known as tM "hou-ile eyndrome"; the b•nd "N-Tubet"; a woman wno palntl miniature pie· lures on llr'199'n&lls. I Qt l"AMll Y FEUO lAVIAHE & SHIRLEY &COMPANY L..e""'9 disco,,.,. that the fllY she'• dating Is mmng robbery with romance. I MATCHGAME M•A•&•H Delly bombing near the holp/181 by en Inept North Korean pilot becomes the leading apec1a1or sport al the4077th. .. TIC TAC DOUGH • MAC111E.ll / l.EHREA MPOAT '1i) TME 8HAl<ESPEARE PLAYS "Ot.,..10" Anthony HOP· ~Ins, Bob Hoskins and P-lope Wiison are fea· tured In Jonathan Miller's production ol Shaka- aoeare's tragedy Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE A profile or The Oak Ridge Boys; an electronk: device lor relie...ng chronte pain ®MOVll! • • • "Mooambo (195-4) Cl11rlt Gable, Ava Gardn8' When a pl•nlatlon ovot- seer falls In IOY9 wllh lhe wire of 1.n enQlneer con· ftle1SanM 1:00 8 Cl) PfllfVA TE 8EHJAMIN (S.ason Ptemler•I Captain L-ls p1omotea Private Banjamln to aquad leader 0 CB UTT\..E HOUSE OH TlfE PAAIAIE Mrs. Oteeon's newly edopted daugh1er sets ou1 10 become the star ol the echool lesllnl (Pan 210 • MOVIE • • "Stllk The Wild Child.. ( t9761 D1v1d J•nssen, Trish Var\ Devere A boy is tound t111- 1ng w1lh a i>Kk of wild dogs on the wllder..-s Q MOVIE • • • "A New Kind Ot LOY9" ( 19631 Paul New- man, Joanne Woodward A buyet IOt 8 departmenl store and • ~•pa<· man lall in loY9 '"" meet- ing on a pl•ne G) P.lot. MAGAZINE A prollle of The 0811 Ridge Boys; an elec:1tonlc device lor telleving chronic pain. Linda H&1ns v1s•ta • Rus- S111n village In AIHkll, Chel Tell prepares IMt<s Cl) MOVIE ••"Once la Not Enough" (1~51 Klrlt Douglas. Alexl• .. CHANNEL LISTINGS 9 KNXT ICBS) cm On-TV •"NBC <MSC) CZ> Z·TV .. • K TlA (Ind.I (Jj) H80 • l(ABC (ABC) ctJ (Clnema1e l e l(FM8 (CBS) (!) CWOR) N Y., N.Y. CJ KHJ·TV (Ind.) @ (WT8SI e KCST tA8CI (I) CESPN) • K TTV (Ind,) (I) I SMwtlmel e KCOP-TV (Ind.). • Spotlight e KCET (P8SI • IOlble New s Network) D KOCE I P8S> Smltll A lllm producer marrhls ror money to Niie- ~hi• llPQllad daughter .. ID THE SHAKE8P!AM PLAYS "Othello" Anthony Hop· kine. Bob Hoskin• end Penelope Wiiton .,. 1 ... tured In Jonathan Miiier'• production of Sh•k•· !{>41•re·s tragedy (i~PUAUE Melbl Moo111, Robert Gull· laum• ind Sherman H.,,,siey re-cr .. 11 tl\elr orioln•l Bfoedwey tolet In lhls fllmed ltaglng of the Broadway musleal •bout plantelion Ille In Georgia. 0MOVIE • "The Awakening • ( 1980) Charlton Hes1on. Sueannah York An arc:h1eologts1'1 Oeughter b9Corne1 possessed by the malevolent spirit ol •n ancient Egypll•n Queen R' (%)MOVIE • • • • "Resurrection" (19601 Ellen Burstyn, S•m Shepard. Atter a n"r latel •uto acc1oen1. a women 11n01 that lhe h•• the eblh· ty to heal others but la per- sec:uled bec•uM OI her refusal 10 olalm a divine lnlluence 'PG' 8:30 1J (I) THI TWO Of' U8 (Season Prenuerel Nan decides 10 meel the 1uthor or net most nattering l•n rett1tt Q) ALL IN THE FAMILY Edith t1nd1 old 1o11ery t1Cil· e1s She hu 101any lorgot- tan •bou1 8:001)(1) M0 A0 8°H Charles t>tcomes lncreu- lngly reclutlwt and ln1ro1- pect1ve elle< 1 sniper attadl on IM camp (RI O Q!MOVIE "F•m~y Reunion" (Pat1 2) (Pr.,,,ie<•I 8ette Oevts, J, Asllley Hyman. Ell.tebeth Invites her tamlly to IM vil- lage of Wlnfleld and lllM 10 perk.Ilda re1111,... lo reconSlder and pr- the l•m~y land O 0 THATS INCAEDl8LE Featured a SGhOOI bus driver who won two mllllon OOltars. a rocket propelled Llnc:Oln Continen111. e lod· Oler b<Yn wlthout •-at glands Q) MERV QRIF'FIN Guests Robert Blake, Stephanie Winslow. Kelly M ontelln. J1ck Rellly. Rieh8rd Pascale @) OOH CORYELL (C)MOVIE • • '" "Slardusl M.,,,o- nes" ( 19601 w oooy Allon. Charlotte Rempllng A WC· cesstul dlfector feces a pafsonal crisis aa he tries to make some major deci- sions In hl111te. 'PG' ©)HAMMER HOUM Of' ~ "Children 0 1 The Full Moon" Cella Gregory and Christopher Cazenave ll•r u 1 pair of honeymooners who encounter • brood of angellc:-loolti119 children 9:30 fJ (I) COUNTRY MUSIC ASSOCIATION AWAAOS Mac D•via and Barb•t• M1ndrell are IOlned by 11 hast of country musk: 11111 ror the 15th 1nnual prnen- 111.on ol thete 1w1ros. honoring eaceltence in the counlry music field. @) ENTERTAINMENT TOHIOHT (.%)MOVIE • • • ''°' "PrNete Benja- min" ( 1980 ~ Mawtl, Eiieen 9rennatl. /I. well-to- do young W°"*'1 mlstak· enly joins Ille Ar~ follow- ing lhe dellti of M< new huat>and on their ~ding i ht.'R' 10:30 NEWS INOUEHOl)tf NETWOM ir.wt (C)MOV!f * • * • "TM Solrit OI St Louis" (1957) J-S,.._ 1111, Murrey H9rnllton. In 11127. C._,._ A. Lind· t>ergh bec:omet '"" flr1t man to ny oooatop tcrou the Atlanttc Ocean to Par- 11 (S)MCMI • • * 'I\ "L.ldy S'"91 The Blues" ( 1172) Diana Roa, 8111y Dee Wllilalnl. The att9fnately 11..., end trag- ic car-ot ~ etnge< Bill•• HolKd•y, Who .. •ddlctlon to d1ug 1 1ncre1Md 11 !Mlf ~rlty did, It tr-0. 'R' 11:00 I a (I) o a Nl!W8 SAT\MDAT~ 8 NEW\ YWID GAME G» THE JtffiOllOMt cm BENNY I-till Benny plays a COYrt tester ano soon io... hill hHO. '1i> AGAM AM) ... larMlt ar11at 'l'llkbY Agam 11 profiled. 11:30 IJ Cil ~ Quincy traoea'"' old man'• suicide to tilt ton'• phys!· cetebu~. 0 CB TWI IDTOF CAMON Guella: Suranne Pleahelle, 8 uclc Henry, Sarati Pure.II, Joe wn. Nama.(R) ' I =TMEMUSIC ~OQDCOUPU Oscar Is suspKted of loul pl•y when no one _,..,, to be able to lind F'tb . cm ONE STIP 9EYOND "The MWk" A U.S. Air Force lieutln•nt'• plane crasn.s In the Egyptian desert 8:) Dla(CA~ Guest Tornn.y Tune (R) '1i> CAPTIOMiD A8C NEWS @) ABCNEWS NIOKTUNE (HJ MOVIE • • "From Mell' To Vlcto· ry" ( 1979) George M8"1il· ton. George Pltppard. Four lrlends !tom d lll11ren1 countries mull leeve Petit In 1939 to 'llghr lor their 1ndlvidu11 countries In World War II 'PG' .O)MOVIE * * "Crulting" (t080) Al P•clno. Paul Sorvlno. A rOOllle ~ YOfl1 City cop 11 ~• on en undetc:ov.r usJgnmen1 to nr'ld 1t1a pay- e11o11c klller befllncl • 1tr1ng of homo99Xu.i murders. 'R' 11:t0 (Z) THE MaM'STOMY: cueAN RHYTHM ~MDIGKT- 12:00 8 MOVIE • • "\rodefln' KIO From Pine Ridge" I t~7) G- Autty G-,,_ta • sing- ing hillbilly • A8CNEW8 NIGHTUNI e M0\11( • * ''°' "The NIQht They -~niseries losing footage lty F&ED ROTHENBftG , .. , ............. NEW YORK -The miniseries craze -at ·lea~ the wont of it -may be over. {t appears the novelty has worn off the 'miniseries, which bas given television some of its best moments. "Roots" tnd "Holocaust." for ex· aPJple, became 80Clal phenontena. America was setting history leasofls ht the living room that were both interesting and entertalning. But the public sees miniseries in so many Jonna now that lt's ®!Jer special. Some minis woUlcl.,llave done b§t ' on a single night, but b~e somebody1 4 ~'OD tbe miniseries _.for~ they tend to dhf.b~ the Jone bauJ. ' · the prh:MQ' S6ap operas, ''Dallas," "tlamin.go Road" an "J)ynasty" are really mu· laerlM. So ls "Hill ' Blues," a continuing potlJ?e drama that doesn't Ue everything in neat panares each weet. In fact, "Hill Street" will 'conclude one pJot l1ll'e every week this season in deference to the public"& ahort attention 9pan and • lnereuinc competltiOlf a.n>und the diaJ. ~ It's apparent th.at &be networks can't 1et away . .a;· eully wtth bhvO, ptomot.ed, lavllb produc- tlon tbat a reb't teod .. ABC's "lhnlona of •r Atftrtica1" a ~·'-"~time ~p o~ra about ·r'-'t lrtahddftlt), 11~' ..fle. _. ~rad if\te" er tbt9 month, lt '. aid bdf tfan very .•eU·-lbil -...un ... The nnt 1 episode was 15th fo., tht •• endin• Oct. 4 wllb a 1 respectable 18.5 petteot ol aU TV boultbold.s and a 1 St peretel ol all TV bo4lleholcb turned on for the · dine perto4. But. instead ol .,..... auilenc. by word of mclbtll u ••Boots" did, tbe nest two nJpta dld worse.. Pan n ended Up all aOd Part JU WU 40th. , Tbe .ct lbat ·~Mlldou" wt.I not w*th •ate~•• ma1 ~v• eoetrtbuted. "Rooli," ' "Holocaust" and last year's "Shogun"' were ex- cellent television. On the other hand, NBC's "Sophlltlcated Gents," a more compelling miniseries, did even worse. All three parts ended in the bottom 10 shows, though it picked up viewers as the audience for "Manions" fell off. If audiences continue having trouble stayin1 loyal to miniseries , NBC is in serious trouble. The network has scheduled six major prodncti~n• this season, including the extrava1ant "Marco Polo.'' One suspects ·'Marco Polo,'' with its 4f_ple -weep, may do well if done well. But the otherr could prove jib unhappy commitment. · "Manions" was ABC's main effort, altbolJlh the network plana a 16-hour product.ton on Presi- dent Franklin Roosevelt next seaaoo. But A:BC, the miniseries pioneer with "Roots'' and last HUOn'a sweeping "Masada," bas all but abandoned the format. CBS will have next week's "VaJJ•J ./JI the Dolls'' and, later, the el1ht-hour "Blue md the Gray," bued on Bruce Catton'• Civil Wu wrttln1. Call t4l•M7&. PvtaftwwPt'd• town.tar Orange Coast DAILY PtlOT/Mondmy, October 12. 1981 •• TUBE TOPPERS KOCE 9 7:30 1md KCET 9 8:00 "Othello." Anthony Hopkins st ars In the Shakespeare t ragedy. <See photo at left >. CBS 9 8:00 -··Private Benjamin." The sea~on premier es with Private Ben· jamin promoted to squad leader. KHJ I) 8:00 -"A New Kind of Love " Pa ul Newma n and J oanne Woodward star as a reporter and a fashion buyer who fall in love in Paris. ABC fl 10:00 -· ·Soylent Gr een ... Ch a r lton. H es.ton a nd Ed wa r<i 6 .· Robinson star In a sci Ci film abouf Ne w York in the year 2022. Raided M1n111y'a" 11oe91 JH on Roberd a. Britt Elclend A rellgloutly lnlllb- 11.0 yOUl\g girt rebel• ~t h4tr pa1en11 end ln'IMI• tM strip!-. • MIKI OOUOlAI Coholl. Anthony Newlty. Gueet: Lou Raw11. Gl ..oc>KIEI Terry Web1t., h all• In 1 ,_partner, Chrla Owens. -rchlng lor an 1r1onlst SI IHTROOUCTION TO PHlloeoPHY tIDl THE AOCKFOAD l"1l.a Attar being taken by 1 fllher·d•ugl\ter 1wtndl• -teem. Roc:klord pull his own con game Into motion 0MOVIE • • "Shock WlllH" ( 1977) Peter Cu1hlng, Bfoolte Ad•ms A g1oup of tourltll stranded on • 1m111 lll•nd encounter a former SS otttcer and his COltectlon ol 1xperlmen1a1 mutant• Cl)MOVIE Ir •"A "Tiie LOYed One" ( 1985, Rob ert M orse. Anjanette Comer. The ~ ol a d-aaed HOI· lywood ''" Incurs some debt• •nd he1d1ch11 when 11 comes time to ,.,aka the'luner•I a"•no-- ments. 12:30 u a TOMORROW Gueste Al!Qe Cooper, Phil Sl1"8rs. teleVISIOn CtlllC M81Vln Kilman 8 MOVIE • • '"' "Jarrett" ( 1973) Glenn Fora. Anthony ... --°"'"l' .... A,,~-"'-· lig8'or Mii OUI 10 IOCate 8 ..,,_ of 1nc,oent t>obllcel ecrollt • IT'S £'/ElllYBOOY'S 8U81f>IE.98 "CorporlllOnl" 12:40 8 ()) HARRY 0 TM only possible donor In a cnllcal transplant C>PW•· !Ion 11 1 man hiding lrom the underworld. (R) 1:008 MOVIE * * "St.,Oust On ttie' Sage" (19421 Gene Autry, Wlnlam MtNy. Gene .aves • trusting young man from lmpnsonmerrt ·~ lilETWON< NEWS ~= • • • "Cousin Cou9'ne" ( 197S) Merle Chrl8tlne 8er- rault, Vlclor Lal\owl Two Fl'9ndl lemllles with mid- dle c£MS Y8IU1$ tuspeC1 lhtor Childrtn .,. hevlng an attalr. 'R' (S)MOYIE • * 'h "Somewhere In Time" ( 1980) CMst09t* Reeve. J•ne Seymour Obsaaad with the por1t9il of • 191h-ce.nfury 1etreq, 1 modern-day N-Yor1c pla)'Wfighl uses hypnQ.iS to travel baclt in time ano meet her. 'PG' 1:'° CID QLEN AHO TNNA Glen Carnpbetl and T•nya Tucker perform !heir big· QMI pop end country hits In lhll apeclll t8')8d a1 Me.rrall's In IWno, Nevtide 1:*1• MOVIE • •.,.. "Nin• Houri To R ama " ( 1111131 Mo,., BuchhOIZ. JOH F.,,.,, Mehlttma G•ndhl'• la•I brief hou" are •••fl through his a11H sln'• OMOVIE • • "Ranaom" Ollvttt R..o. Stuart Whitman ADV 1:llO I NEWS 2:00 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 2:06~= • * • •,, "Prlv•t• Bani•· min" (1980 Goldie Hawn, EllHn Brennen A well-to• oo young wom•n ml1tlk· enly jOlns Iha Army tOllOW- 1ng the death of her ,_ hu1band on 1halr wedding n19111. 'R' 2:2SB MOVIE • • "Adventure• Of Cap- llin Fabian" ( 195 t) Errol Flynn. Vincent Price. A fu09' and his son t>tcorne 1nvOlved In wtlc"cralt In New Otleana 2:30 fll 0 NEWS 2:46 (e'l MOVIE * * * "TM Presldenl'I M111rau" ( 1978) Beau Bridges. Karen GrU$le When a courier tor en American &ecu<1t)' ageney lnve1119ates a report lh•I h11 11S1er 11 • Soviet spy, he encounter• a t1n1sur.- to1ce oper•t1ng behind 11'141 scenes 3:00 { S) THE WACKY W~LO Of' JONATHAN WINT'EM Guest Burt Reynolds 0 MOVIE • • • 'h ··Pnval• Benja- min" ( 1960 Goldie Hewn, EilHn Brennan A well-to- do young wom•n mlsllk· enly 1olns lhe Army IOllOW- 1ng the death ot t>er ,_ hutba.nd on their wedding n hi 'R' 3:.30 (~ MOVIE • • "Thunderbird• To TM Rescue" (1981) Puppeta. The pilots of live apeclally • equipped rocket ship• must .. ,,. Iha lives ol pa.. .. ngers trapped on 1 supersonlC 11anapor1. 'G' 4:00 (%) MOVIE • • • • ··R .. urrectlon" (19801 Ellen Buratyn. Sam Shepatd Aller a near f8tal 11u10 accloent, • womM'I llndl lhll Ille 11411 IM lblll· ty 10 heal 011\ert but Is per. sec:uted bec:auM of "« refusal lo claim • d1vt,. 1nnuence. 'PG' ·•:46(C)MOVIE • • ,,., "Slerdull Memo- roes" j 1960) WOOdy Allen, Charlotte Rampllng A IUC- ceulut director r-. • personll critla as he tnae to make some major oecl- lions in his Ille 'PG' Tue•day'• Da11•f•~ no.,I~• -MORtM- 5..'(IO CS)•• 'A "The Voya0e Of Tanel' P975) WM A.no, JOHN DARLING 'ONE OF "THE. MO&T E><CrTINa AND ~SH PERSorW..mE& IO HrT !HE IV ME"IUM IN Y EAilS. MUSIC AWMDI -Barbara Mandrell will help host the 15th annual Country Music Assoc1aUon Awards tonight at 9;30 on· ' Channel 2. I< lmrte , A yOWIQ POiy'* e1en ooy a.11 oft "' • canoe attd IC>Cioenlally wlndlt WC> on .,., ed\rentlK...,_.ecl, eooo..m11e IOU'ney to the lattway ~ of Alu«a 'PG' • * "The AW911etllng" 11MO) CMttlon Heelan, 81o1u nna1t 'tori!. A n 1teflHOloOl•t't dBUOhtff bec:omet POMffMd by the tnalavolenl lj)lrlt of In ancient EgypllM C1UMn 'R' 1;41 (l) e • 'A ·n,. Loved One" I IN&) Robtr'I MOfM , Ar1j1nette Comer. Tiit nephew of • deCMMO .. Ol- l'f#OOCI 8181 lllcur• -debll end l'IHdachH wtlen •t Conw8 time IO mah 11\J lune(al •rr~ me1ita. · , 1:30CJ:) Ir* 'Ir '·M•nn~"• ~ • Orph•ne" ( 111801 Jim 8aller, Mellllhy Mceourt The boys at 111 Qt'Pllanage rtttt their chatlty fund In an •ttempt 10 help their aoccer coach pay back • ~.000 O.bt to IM mob 'PG' -AFTERNOON- EICflilta ~ A tr~ of Arnerlcen Yolunt-• -In a lltQllt ~adrOl'I In 'rlll'IG8 dunng Wono War I. • * "lneout1141f With "• Tl\f Unllnown" ( 11711) Doc- 11meruary_ H11tai.d b1 "°" 9er11no. ·Tll,.. dlfltr· ent 1upernetur1I lncil· ~are rt-ct .. t.O (%) • * • • "~rec. lion" ( thO) EMln Bur11yn. Sam "'-*•· Aftet 1 ,_ f•tll euto llOCidtftt. a worn• 111 llr'ldl that 8"-haa the aOlllty to llMI Olherl but I• ~led bec:auM or hat retueel to dalm a dlvlna lntluencle 'PG' 1l:IO. *•"°'"Toby And T. l<G91• Bear" (188 I) Flott Har[IL Uve aGllOn ~an!· mallon comblne to tell IM tale of • young boy eno hi• pet t.oate 1n Aintrllla'1 lron11er d•ya. ·a· 1:00 D • • '"' "freaky Friday" (1977) Jodie Foeter, Bar· ' bare H•rrls The world 11 turned upside-down lor a mother •nO daughter wt'IO magically twitch bodlee one fateful day 'G' UIO CC) • • • • "The Ernl- gran11" I 1972) Ma• von Sydow, Liv Ulll'Tl•nn. A Swedish peaNlll l•mlly endure IM hardlhlpe of ltontler 1111 when they come IO Amerlea In the 19th century 'PG' 1:00 (CJ • • • "Executive Suite" ( 19~) Wllllam Mal· Oen, June Allyson WMn the top executive or • l\.lr- niture company suffers a 1•111 _., attack. • mad ~ pley en-among the Vice pr"'°*'111 to 1111 hi• ch•lr. CS)••* "Aoroet The Wide Ml11ourl" (19611 Clartl G•ble. Ricatdo Mon- talban A band ol ,..., t ra pper• enter• th• uneh•rt.O territory of the Bl1ektoot Indian• where tM)I encounter • holtlle Ctllel end hi• warriors lS) • • • "Acroes The Wide MIHourl" (19511 Clark G8ble, RieardO Mon· lliba.n A bend of lur lr1ppe,. enters th• unchaned territory or the Bl1e1troo1 Indians wllere 'they ancount., • hoellle ctilel a.nd his warr1or1 t:00 U * • t,, "TM Pic:tute ShOw Man" ( 1979) Roa T 8)'lor, Jahn Meilton. 111 the 19201. when trevettl~ tent crews brought magic 111'1· tetn 1howa 10 the arnall t-n• ol • America. an aged showman tornp9\M with • naahy, conniving competitor 'PG' ti.ao. •'I\ "Spook Cnuere" (1957) Leo Gorcey, Munu M1JI The BOW*ly Soya find IMy hl\19 some nol·IO- lriendly "ghosts" for com· pany u tM)I Ml out to repair 1n Old larmhOUM 10:30 cm Ir* "The Man f'rom Utllh" 1193'4) John Wayrwi, Gabby Heyet A tough lawman nabs a gang ot out111Wt wno are ullng • rodeo as their b•ae ol operations ( S) * * 'h "It's My Turn" ( 1980) Jill Cleybutgh, Mic:hael Douglas. A bf~· hant Chteago m1th prolet-'°' reeltzea the 1><oblem1 In her llve-ln relatlonahlp w!Mn the llnd1 a ,_ love wtille In New v or1t tor ,,., lither' s r.,,,8trlage. 'R' (I ***'h"MyBody- guerd" ( t979) Chrla Mak•P••c•. Adam BaJOwin TM new kid 11 • Ch•c•go high school rnalces lrlends with ,,,. achoOI outceat and togeth- er IM)' atend up to tM oru- el gang whiell had per- MCuled 11\em both. 'PG' 11:00 D •• "A ThOuland And One N'l)hll" (1968) Jett Cooper, Raf Vallone A beau11lul genie helps • 1word1man regeln hll position. (CJ •• "The Blllim<l'I Bullet" ( 1980) JamH Coburn. Omar Sh11il A tm•ll-llme pool hu1ner must rllM $20,000 end win • b•g t ournament before he ~n 1141'11 a rematch with an old~ nenl -whO has ,_ io.1 11 811y Q-'PG' ...,..AFTERNOON_ 1fa. * ir 'A "Lal8)191te &ca- drillll" (19S8) Tab H1H1ter. 1166 (%) • • •\II "Prlv•ll Ben· jemln" ( t980 GOidie Hawn. Eiieen B11rinan A well-to- do vcung woman ml•t•k· enly joins the Atmy follow· 1ng the oeath ol her new llulbend on their wadding ~hi 'R' 2:00 D • • "Zero To Sl•ty" Oanan McGavln, Sytvte Miles 'PG" 1:30 D •• ''t "Where It • Al" ( 1989) David JansMn, Rosemary For1yth Al1•r r•M•tlng, 1n tvy Leaguer learn• his lllher's nlghlclub 1>u11neu •nd b8Cornfl a ruth'"' m1111- ger ($) • * '11 "TM Voyage Of Tenal" ( t975) W.M Reno. K. Imrie A young POlyneo- sler> bOy Mis oft l.n 1 canoe and ecddentalty winds up on an adY9ntute;>aclt.O. 8000-m11e ioumev to the r1r1w•y shoru or Alattta 'PG' 3:35 ( Z) • • '"> "The Loved One" ( 1965) Robet1 Moree, Anj1nette Comer The n89hew ol 1 0-aMO HOI· lywood 111r Incur• tome debll and he1dachea wh4tn lt comes lime to mak• llwt lunerll ar1ano-- ments 4:00 (¢, • • • 'Manny's 01ph1ns.. ( 1980) Jim Beker, Malachy Mccourt The bOys 11 an orph•n1g9 11sk their cha111y fund In 1n 1t1empl 10 help 1hel1 aoc:cM coach pay baCI! 1 $40,000 debt to the mob 'PG' 0 "The Electrk: Eslu· mo" A young &klmo boy acadentally becomes a powerful source of etec- troclty ·G· 5:30 (HJ••• "The Whllll L1on1" ( 1981) Mlche•I York. Glynnis O'Connor An •n1m1I beh•vlor ~ clahlt's l1m1ty j<>tnt him 1n lhe runote to help logh1 aga1n11 poachers thrHlen- lng valuable alblno lion cubs 'PG' ($) • • "Thunderbird• To The Re9cue · (19811 Pup. pelt The p;lots ol 11,,. epe. cl•lly eQulpped re<ket Ihle>• must save the llvea of patsengers 111ppe0 on e supersonic: transport 'G' ll:a& (2 • • • ··Love Me Or L .. YI Me" C 1955) Doris 01y, Jam" Cagney A mob11er marries IM •Inge. he m•de l1mou1, bul becomes entagecl whtfl he can't control her by Armstrong & Batluk IT'S A Pl!='ECT GUOTE. FROM -n1E 000K! COMMUNITY MEETING ON HOUSING THE CITIZENS Of COSTA MESA A RE INVITED TO ATTEND A MEETING TO EXPRESS THEIR OPINIONS AS TO WHAT HOUSING ANO COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS SHOULD BE FUNDED DURING FISCAL YEAR 1982-83. COSTA MESA'S HOUSING ANO COMMUNITY OE· VELOPMENTCOMMITTEEWILL HO LOAN OPEN PUBLIC • HEARING TO LISTEN TO SUGGESTIONS ON HOW THE CITY SHOULD AL.lO<:ATE NEARl Y '800,000 IT Will RECEIVE FAOM THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT UNDER T E OUSING ANO COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT. . 7:30p.m. : T.,..._y, October 13, 1911 e: CDuncO Chtmt>en 77 Fetr Orlll't ODltt Me., Clllifomla THE DECISIONS TO IE MADE MAY EFFECT YOU. THIS IS YOUR C~ANCt TO IE HEAADI .. 642·5678 Put a f f'W words to work for .- fn the r ,; ~i ' -Orange Coast O~ILY PILOT/Monday. October 12, 1981 'Eye <if the Nee dle) direc tor tUrns to 'Star Wars' series 87 DAVID EINSTEIN ............. ....., SAN RAFAEL, Calif. -Slttint In lb& cool, unobtrualve offleea of Lucaantm1, Rkhard Muquand tries to put It all in s;.:'J:Uve. Here M la, fffab from dire "Eye of the Needle," a Uthtly told story mhdnJ love and In· triaue, and already he's begun work on the next film In the fabled "Star Wars" series. And the 40-year-old Enclisbman aaya he bopes be will be able to lend hla love for portraying human strengths and weakneues wfth the start!· Ina special effecta that wW abound ln "Reven1e of the Jedi," scheduled for release lD 1983. • In short, Richaid.· Marquand hopes 'to be a director for the '80s. ''It's a fable for a whole generation,'' Marquan<S says of the ieJies created by George Lucas, "and it's the mos( exciting thing I could wish to do.•· Marquanci agrees that Lucas picked him to direct the fmale in the Luke Skywalker-Darth Vader trlJogy because of a 1:0mmon tnterest in pre- venting the film from being overwhelmed by special effects. "I think I've grown to realize there are a cou- ple of areas that I care about and that therefore I'm likely to be good at," says Marquand. "There's a particular thing I like in movies and that's real human beings. I'm fascinated by the re- al way in which people react to each other." Richard Marquand A former actor and Emmy-winning documen- tary director for "The Search for the Nile," Mar- quaod Hfl It wH the human f acton wbicb at- tracted him t.o "Eye of lbe Needle." Rtadlnc the tale of a cold-blood.ct German 1py wa1bed@ on a Brltlah ltland, Marquand aay1 be realised the latrlcacJea of tM relatioalhlp betwHa the spy, code-named "The Needle," and the woman who lives on the l1land wfth ber crippled huJband. .. Aa I WU readtn1. I WU totally booked at the moment when Lucy had found her husband oe· lenslbly drowned and ran back to the house where she screamed tor Faber. But before 1he could tell him what she'd found, he lied to her and tald be left ber husband" at another boute. "I could feel myself tenalol." •IY• Marquand, "and I tboupt, thl1 is fasclnatlq, tb1I ii human." Perhaps the film w~d. bave done bett.t bad it been released at some other time, rather than bead-on with movies like "Superman 11" and "Raiders of the Lost Ark." But Marquand ls happy it's out at all, conalderin1 that while lt waa bein1 made, United Artists was in trouble over the finan- cial disaster of "Heaven's Gate." "We were in a situation of potential jeopardy right through to the point of now," tays Marquand. No such fears attend the malting of ''Revenge of the Jedi," says Marquand, who calls Lucasfllms "a nirvana, an oasis" in a desert of Hollywood studios. "Here you have a man who was a movie maker who hu an incredible MUIUvtty to what tbe a~eoce Uket, wbo I• now a •tudio bead. It'• a 1enaaUonal, lncredlble 1ltuaU.OO to be ID, and lt'• totalJy different.'' "I'm t}ad thl• ha• happened at Ul1I poblt ln my lift," aaya Marquand. "I could never believe when I wu a younser man why I wu not belq an ln1tant aucceu and 1major1tar. Now that I'm'°· I tblnk it'• the beat thlnt that could ever happen." Thoutb "Reven1e of the Jedi" b stlll In the story-board 1tace. Marquand already bu con· tribul«l a ,aJplllcant idea that will eae the movtt -a final, climactic laaer•tWOrd ftpt between Luke and Darth Vader. NASHVILLE, Tenn. <AP> -Country mualc sinaer Jim Ed Brown says be bas cbOHn two female vocalists to replace Helen Cornelius H bb singing partner. "I'm going in a whole new direction with a . whole new show." Browb said. "For the flnt time in a very lona time I'm doin1 thlna• I want to do. It's .very exciting." . Brown· s newest singin1 partnen are Dianne Morgan, 26, of Nashville, and Christy Russell, 25, of Oklahoma City, Okla. Actor goes from play ing blackbird to . Dickens' 'Nickle by' By JAY SHARBUTT Af'A,,..,._ NEW YORK -Roger Rees was only 4 when he first acted. He played a blackbird in "an adaptation of that nursery rhyme, four and 2() blackbirds. I think 1 was number 23." He stiJJ wear black -but on Broadway now. He's ... the star of "Nicbolas Nickby," the Royal Shakespeare' company's aceJaimett U~hatacter adaptation or Charles Dickens' 1839 classic. Costing a record $100 a ticket, here for only 14 weeks, the show's been hailed as Broadway's ma· jor event this season, both for its theatricality and its mind-boggling length -SY.I hours. Rees, who made his New York debut five years ago in a British comedy, but was unknown here prior to the "Nickleby" premiere, is on stage for most of the show. "Oddly enough, I'm not tired at the end," said the actor, a tall, lanky, lean-faced man who s~aks in quick, nervous bursts. "But an hour later I get- zonked." At 37, he's on his fourth RSC tour as young, pure-hearted Nicholas, who, when first sighted, is a lad of 19 about to make his way through the bustling good and evil of Victorian England. He first played the lad in November 1979, he said, when the first RSC edition of "Nickelby" opened in London. It may be the best of times now , he notes, but it was the worst ol times then: "When we Started to do it, we had no money at all. We were in great danger of Colding as a com- pany. We did it on a shoestring and played to almost empty houses before it caught on." Rees is one of those solid English actors wbo rise to stardom only after years of loyal soldiering in small parts in classical and contemporary He's on stage for classic in 42-character production theater. He's been with the RSC for 13 years, off and on. lt~k four audiUons before be got tn. "After which I wound up playing a huntsman in every Shakespeare production possible," be said, smiling. Born in Wales, he doesn't come from an acting tribe. His father was a policeman. The closest thing to a performer in hia family was his grandfather, "a barber in Rarrsgate. He used to do great works for charity, roller-skate up and down the town as a drunk. He waa mad, com- pletely mad." Unlike most British stage act.ors, Kees dldn t start young, his blackbird debut notwitbatandlng. Nor is he formally trained, a graduate of aay, the august Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. He never even intended to be an actor. When he became one, he says, "I just picked up what I could as I went along." Raised in London, he did amateur plays as a boy. But he really wanted to be a painter and studied art. However, when his rather died, be had to earn his keep painting scenery at a South Lon- don theater. But as in "Nickleby," where young Nicholas is taken in by a zany troupe of actors led by rollick- ing Mr. Crummies, young Rees was taken in as an actor by Arthur Lane, the theater's impresario. At 21, he made his professional debut, at seven pounds a week. as the juvenile lead in a comedy. A ------------------------------------~ ! MUSIC IN STEREO WITH YOU IN MIND I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I a I I I BRIGHT ... BEAUTIFUL .. e • CONTEMPORARY LISTEN TO FM 103. 1 AND FOLLOW ALONG AS WE PLAY YOUR FAVORITES. YOU'LL ALWAYS HEAR THE BEST IN STEREO SOUND ON ... KOCM 10-11 AM TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13 Don Tweedy . . . . . • . . . . . . ....... Rich Mon. POOf Mon Harold Winkler. . . . . . . . . ......... Ave Moria No Morro Xovief Cugot . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..............• Misty Roses Olivio Newton· John . . . • . . • . .Oonc~ Round and Round Bob Ct-• Genefotion. . . . . ..... Winc:hater Cothedtdl Roy Conniff Singers ....................... ne. Thefe Storbome Orchesffo. . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . Ahemoon Delight Clff Richofd ................•.•........ A Uttte In Love Bojo ~Bond . . . Sombo de Orpheu Antonio Carlo' Jobirn. . . . . . . ... . . . . Corinhoso Golden Dream Orchestra ......... The Most Beautiful Gif1 Poul Dov~ . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . I Go Cro1y Brion Moy . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. The am.x>rtonce of the ROM Sergio Mendes. . . ... With A Uttte Help From MY. Friends Gory Mcfor'.ond. . ...................... Love ~u Big Momo Cass ....•....... The Good Times Ase ConWI' 11 -HOON TUESDAY, OCTOlllt 13 Fronek Powcel .................. TheN's A Kind of Hush Chet Atkn . . . ...... MMt Milter Cologhon Corov.. . . . . . . . I Love Him So Much I Could CM Lobo . . . . . . ........ There Ain't No Woy David Whitoker . . . . . • • • • . . . . . . ..... A Gift In Love TM LenemMW1. . . . . . • • • • • . . . . . Come Sock, Sily Gif1 Percy Faith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... If Kyu Sokomoto. . . • • .......... , ............ Sukiyaki Les Reed . . . . . • • • . . . . . . . ....•....... AA«• Gil Pig« . , • . . . . . . . . .... T ohoe Oreorm Austrolion Showbond . . . . . . . . . . . • . . Capricorn Dancer Jomes T oytor . . .. .. . . . . .. . . . . . . .. , .... Hondy Mon Geoff Love . . . . ................ Alien Smith and Jonft King.ton Trio . . .......•............• Jone Jone Jone Nonnon Concler .............. Oondng in the Moonlght 1-2PM TUESDAY, OCTOllR 13 Htm R~ ...... lbt>ef's Song from Mon of Lo Mancha Johnny P~......... . ............. , . Two Puppeta Nonie Poromor .............................. Calypso Uvlnglton T oytor ..................... , Oonce With Me Percy Foith . . . . . . . . ........ Them. from Serpico Gunter Kc*nonn C~ ......... Wish Me A Rainbow Frew* Chodufield .................... Scorbotough Fair Atwwt tilv..trroy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . ......•••••.. Things Hefvy MoncJni. . . ...............•... , ... Mister Ludty T °"Y Mottola. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Gift Next Door ~of Our Time ........................... loleno Andy Whnt ...................... Speo6t Softty, Love WddodetotRm.... . ........... Evef)'body's Talon' C<otbyStli Noth & Young ......... T ~Your CNlchn S.Ofbome Orc:hestto. . . • . . . . . . . . . I NMd To Be In Love g ! ~~~~.~~~.~.~~~~~ I Uving Sfrinol ............... Something Son of Gr Dusty Springfield ..................... The Look of Love I Sohoul StrinQa . • • . . • . . . . . • . . . . . . l>Aore Thon o Womon Antonio Carlos Joblm. . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . . . Corcovodo Brion May . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . Solitolt-• =~::::::::·:·:·::·:·~·~~99w:-::om~ J Sergoo MendH .. . . . . . . . .It's So Obvious That I Love You Herwy Mcmcini . . . . . .. .. . .. . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . Viloge Inn Neil Oiomond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Longfelow Serenode 4 -5 PM TUESDAY, OCTOID 13 Steve Graham . . . • . ............ Diano Exotic GuitOB.. .. . . . • . . . . . . .. The Enchanted Seo Holyridge Strings.... .. ............ Warmth of the Sun 6 -7 PM TUESDAY, OCTOID 13 Fronek PO\M'cel ....................... Mas Feidty Grey Monny Kelem Voices ................ I W. Wait for You Royinond Lefevre ......•........ : .....•.•....... ~ Andy Wrllioml ................. Music to Watch Glrta By AultrolonShowboud ....................... Uttte Boot Joe~ ............................ So In love 8lly Vaughn ................................. Lady· 0 Morionne Foltttful ....................... This LJm. Bird Nome PoromoJ .................... Uttte Bird, LJm. Bird Pozo· Seco Slngen ...•.......................... Time Ge«oe Sheortna ................... Echoet In The lllgtlt Rond)'Crowtonf .......................... Peor*t ~ Gcwdon Frar*s ......................... .A; Gol In Calco Bobby Edwordl •................... Chico ond the Mon Stelfbome Orchettro AJ You Get From Love II o Lov..ong 8oft>ro S"9iloncl .•........................... ~ f -10 PM 1UISDA Y, OCTOllll 13 LMna MottrnDo. ..............••.••• I Soy o Uttte Prayer Aoycf Cronw •............ Hove You Never Been~ Alon Tew .......................•• , .••.... Loving You Glen Cornpbel ..................••• Try o Uttte ~ I t..onYoung ..............•.....•.• rmT~ Hennon'• Hwmits ........ Con't You HMr My Oebanoff Stringf ..........•....• Puff the 'NJ9r. Drooon Barbfo StrMond ............................... Niooro Asttlur Greentlode ............ t<no..nno Me Knowtna Vou Lourindo Ameldo . . . ... . . . . .. . . . . • ... The L~ II Low JoMny Glbbt .................... · l.~ Orly l.We Twice Mlc.hoel Joduon ..•......•........ ;:ine'• Out of My Ufe Nome Pofomor . . . . . . ..•.......... Love ond Mamoge HowordRobem 0-U. ............. AuMMof MyUfe GotcMn Or.om Orcheltro. . • • ...•....••. SontS-..a. GotdonU(lhtfoot .... , .•.•.•..•.••.•. IYouNeedMe Let us know yu favorite 8C)fli9 and artiltl. Clll KOCM's Music Phone at local critic, be wryly recalls, "thought I was the bee's knee. "But I can't recall at all what I was like, ex- cept that I don't recall being nervous then. Not so when we opened here.'' -it won't play here until late next year or early 1983 -the day he left for "Nicldeby" rehearsals here. He says his Nicholas Nicldeby days wtU end for good the day the Broadway edit.loo cloles on , Jan. 3. A bachelor whose South London flat currently is occupied only by bis cat, Samuel, the soft- spokeo actor estimates he's played the exhausting Nickleby role for 10 months altogether. The role leaves him little time for whoopee, or course: "The routine is almost celibate, kind or monastic. You go into a drugstore and It's so fascinating to see people as you remember them, sort of. Oh, yes, this goes on, I'd almost forgotten. He was asked to compare the reactions of British and American audiences who see the marathon play. "Well," he said, "people here seem more vociferous, more outspoken, more de· lighted. "What I like about American audiences is, they get much more into the story. The English, they play, well, bard to get." Rees finished taping a TV version or the show "I've no idea what I'll do after that," be said. Understandably. he's pleased by the show's triumphs both in London and bere. He feell it bodes well for live theater, even 81Ai bo'1n worth! "For it to be thought valuable enoufh to be put on the front or Time maguine. l think, says something good about the future of live theater. which I think has been in a perilous •tale." Yes, he's gotten fine reviews. But that the show's succeeded, be says, la due to the fact "it's an extremely good example of a form of communi· ty theater where perhaps there isn't an edlpbuia , on any one performer. . ··1 think that's what appe.ala to audiences. I imagine it's like watching World War II, you see all these people putting all their 1boulders to the wheel and actually coming through. "And that's a glorious thing," Taking a.m. show on the road .NEW YORK <AP> -George Merlis calls it "the show that put 'Good Morning America' on the map." Carter, Vice President-elect Mondale, and the en· tire cabinet. "It was Christmastime 1976," recalls the ex- ecutive producer of ABC's early morning news and information program, which celebrates its sixth birthday in November. "We took the whole show to Sea Island, Ga.. and interviewed President-elect "We took the entire two hours, and dropped the regular features, much to the chagrin of network executives, who thought It wu doom," Merlis says. "What it did was establish the pro- gram as flexible and innovative and capable of answering viewers needs and interests." G NEWPORT BEACH MONDAY Programming That Gets You Right Where You Live! 8:00 PM "Newport Now" (moving to 7:00 PM. October 26th to facUJtate our Uve Ctty Council coverage. On the nights that the Council does not mcet-"Ctttzens Forum" wtll be cablecast at 8:00 PM.) TUESDAY 7:00 PM "Sound Off' WEDNESDAY 7:00 PM "Newport Now" THURSDAY FRIDAY 7:00 PM "Sound Off' 7:00 PM "Newport Now" 1t1NE IN TO CABLE CHANNEL 2 4 or K We are Thleprompter Cable 1V of Newport Beach. and we're begtnntng our new Fall Season of programming. Our llAeup Includes our new d tecuaalon eertea- "Sound Oft" our Interview show hosted by Mayor Heathcr-"Clttzena Forum." and live coverage of Newport Beach Ctty Council meet.toga. Plus. \ft conUnue to cable· cast our popular magaztnc format show "Newport Now." Our focua la on the laeues that arc happening around you. and we ._ture people and plaoee that you know. Your neighborhood and Its reaidcntl are our atara. FOR PROGRAM INFORMATION CALL (714) 842-6717 . . • , I. Rival brothers make • music By JAM~ SIMON ·~...._ ........... BOSTON It'• neve,r easy beina a youn11er brother, tollln& ror much of your llfe in the sh dow o( an older 1lbUn1. Oavt Duvlc or the Klnk1 uy1 it's even \ougher when you're a ,star rock 'n' roll guitarist, and your old er brother Ray bu grabbed most of the spot.Ught In the band's 18-year career. "I still feel I've eot a lot more lo say and do. I feel I have only acratcbed the aurface of my own capabilities~" lhe. younger DavJe.e said in a recent- lntervlew, after shining on guitar dllring two sold out Kinks shows at the Boston Garden. "I respect Ray's wotk, apart Crom lhe fact that he's my brolher. But I hale his guts," joked Dave, who at 34 is 31h years younger than Ray. The ~ftep volatile relationship between the brothers payJes. "i>!Atr Ute combination of ,Ray's songwrl(mg and singing and Dave's buusaw guitar playing, have been at Lhe core of the Kinks ' sound since 1964. It was then lhal the band first stormed American shores as part of the "British Invasion" with hits like "You Really Got Me" and "All Day And All or The Night. .. The Kinks have had their ups and downs since, but scattered AM h its like .. Lola " and "Superman," plus a recent return to a ~ard­ rockin' sound, have made the band a bigger con· cert attraction now than ever before. Dave Davies said the sibling rivalry with Ray goes back to their youth In the Muswell Hill section of London. where Ray received more attention at home "because he shouted the loudest." ·'I thin.k a good lesson for younger brothers is to work hard to become an individual ,'' he said. "I think we've helped each other a lot by being dif· ferent. Ray always felt more intellectual while I was more on an emotional level." · MOVIE Author Thomas Thompson's "Callie and Son" will be st'en Tut'sda~· night on CBS ~ Th o mps on wro te th l' t e lepla y when cha llenged b~• u proclurl'r lo writ<.• something "entertuimng ... . 1he1Tench Jjeulenaru:.'\ --woman .......... < w w ........ •• •• w United ... ·sts "'' .. ..,."''""'°'4""'H) IUU NOW PLAYING MISSIOll WllJO M1SS«>11 YNllO Mall 495 6220 NEWPORT BUCH ORANGl WESTMlllSTER Newpon Crneoome Cinema Wes1 644 0160 634 2553 891 3935 UA MOWlfl Brea 990 4022 EDWAltDI ltEWP'OllT Newpon !leach 644 O 760 EOWA"DI MUltTlllOTON TWIN l1unt1noton Beach 8A8 0388 EDWAltDI VIEJO TWiii M1sst0n V1eto 830 699& EDWAltDS CINEMA WEST wes1m1ns1e1 891 393~ ClltEOOME Orange 634 2553 EOWAROS WOODlllUOG£ lrv•nr ~~I Ob'>~ ·~<• HI-WAY 31 DRIVE·lll Wes1m1n~ter 891 3693 SRO LA MIRADA DRIVE·llf lJ f..1., '"" ')?J 9110 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND • YOUNG PEOPLE M1tlnH1 Sllurd1y • Su11d1y Luis Valdez ZOOTSUfT IRI 6:008:10 10:15 IN 70mm CA NfJ/CJ:: HJ::RCEN RICHMD FAllOUSIR I 6:00 8:20 10:35 I NINCE OFT-..: CITY (R) Shows 11 c:::::i==6::z::00;;;;::;:9;:::::15==::::i f.KNCH ~ WOllAN(R) l :U Only When I Uugll(RI 1 :00 10:30 Faye Dunaway MmmllE DEARESTIPG Shows at 7:00 9:30 RAIDEllS OF THE LOST A ltK (PG) Sllow1 7:00 9 :15 In 70mm ltYAH O 'H IEAL SOl'l .. (R)I. Contlnenl•I DMde(l'Q) OlllLYWHDll LAUGH (lt) a. Seems Like Old Tlmes(l'Q) Bruce Dern In TATTOO /R/ Brubaker R NII AllSRtCAlll Wlllt&WOll IN LAM1DON (It) a. Heavy Metal (It) 9111 Murr~ STWIN:s R) Altllllr C ) Wben Ray lef't home ror art school, 11-year-old Dave received 40 pounds from his parents to buy his {irst electric 1ultar. He started a band called the Ravens that featured his abruive guitar play· ing. The two brothers eventually formed the Kinta and releued "You Really Got Me." Dave was only 16 at the time, but he mana1ed to come U.). witb one of tt\e most imitated iultar rllfa In rock his· tory. But even alter becom1ftt a star, Dave was forced to battle rumors that It was then session guitarist Jimmy Page, later gt Led Zeppelin fame, who supplied the guitar licks on lhose early tunes. The younaer Davies became a solo star in England with release of the single, "Death of a Clown," in '1967. But the music press ·continued to overlook him in favor of flashy auitarists hke Alvin Lee of Teo Years Arter and Robin Trower. Dave Davies finally got his due in the mid·l970s when bands like Van Halen covered "You Really Got Me" and several British punk bands cited Davies as an influence on their raw guitar sound. "That's what we grew out of -the crude Corm," he said. "I'd like to lhJnk my guitar play- ing helped stimulate a lot of good music." And despite the many publicized fights between the Davies brothers in the '70s, the Kinks continue to roll on. "J really don 't know why we have lasted lhJs long," the younger Davies said. "There have been many times we 've thought about packing it in, probably 100 times. The last time was probably during the making of the 'Misfits ' album, when both our bass player and keyboard player left in 1978. But we held logther and started louring again and started building up popularity." AllAHEIM Ana~e•m Ot•vt In 879 98)0 NOW PLAYl:c;G ........... El TORO Sdddie!>it k 581 5880 FOUllTAlll H UEY WlSTMIU TElt foonta•n Valley UA I win c.iremas 839 1 soo 893 1305 BREA UA Movies 990·402? ORANG( Cmeoome 634 i.'553 COSTA MESA Cinema Center 979 4U1 ·~"°"",..~'-•"'} AN AMER I CAN ORIGINAL SUIT A UNMRSAL PICTURE "'"'UH~ CIT\' STUOIOl IHC -··"9 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12 1981 HE WANTS \1@(W TO HAVE HIS BABY IUllT MYNOU>S PAnftNITY '.,.. \~I'<' .... C.,..-C 'C:MUA• ._ .................. c........ ~ ......... .._. ... NOW PLAYING CIWAAOI SIJIOlOACll CDWAROI 1'-C't II , ... ~·· ~sao llllUIOll WllolO MAU 1.mn+1 fi lDWAllOI lllllTDl "'''-"'"'° •9' 6110 'Jl'lho, \li1l1&t(~u llltllA PAllll OlllWl·ll """"" ~.,. 871 •OIO· OllAllCI( OlllY(·lll 0.M'QC ~881077 CIJ<tJ ..... ~•O l<U lOWAROS CIWMA WllT UIWAllOS CllllMI Clllflll W111m""" HI )9J~ Co\t• IN.a 919 '"' 'lln COT CllTlR °'""'""' 0117 *BARGAIN MATINEES * Monday thru Saturday All Pertorm1ncea before 5:00 PM (Except Speclll Eng1gement1 111d Holld1ys) lA Mll!AOA ~1All Muooo 01 l101ecron1 LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99.t·2.t00 ----CMMl'r "ARTHUR" -.... ., ... .,..._._..._ _,._...,.~­ "RICH AND FAMOUS" 1111 .... .,, .. Uf, 7>11. ·- ASfM •• ,A -AfeA~ "MOMMll, OE.A.REST" IN) .................... Al LAKEWOOD CENTER WAUHN A-·-----"PAINCE OF THE CITY" 1111 , .... , •• ,, •• 19':11 __ .. _.,.,.....,..,., ''ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" "'1 .............. ., ... , ... LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WALK IN Focul!y At Del Arno 213/63.4·9211 _A,._ ___ .,. "GALLIPOLI" -·-----·-·- LAGUNA __ ,I.Oft ............ _ "TATTOO" 1111 ,.,.. .,.. .,.., Ii:•. lkll. ·---·-Ai.IAll• "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" - ___ ,,_ 11::11, ~ ec.. Pr•.~ _....._ .. "PATERNITY" -'kl&. t:•. t:-• ...... ~ •. 1~ Jocully o l Conotewood 213/531·9580 ._., W..t I.Oft ......... ,.._ "TATTOO" 1•1 ••.a:•.~······ ... __ ..,. __ "THE FRENCH UEUUNANT'S WOMAN" • ....... Ii: •• .,.. .... "SO FINE" Oii •ue.-.-.;.,1~ i:'l. __ ............... "IWOERS Of! THE LOST ARK" ,.._ ....... '-· ." ..,. - SO. COAST WALl<·IN Soutl'I Coo11 H1woy al l rooowoy 494-1514 A-·---"PfllNCE OI' THI CITY" " -···-..... --.111 .. -"'""OWM.. -·-"ARTHUR" --· ... -"''-............. ·- IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE! Httbtf ............... '~'V" ,, JO • Sii S.• Hall 5·30 ,.. ~ ~ • YQOll AM CAii llAOC> IS YOUll Sl(N(fll If HO AN CAii MOIO WITll ~ ACCUSO!tf POSITION -llWfG All IGllT*l ! •AU ClllWl DIWMfS AO Oii All MDID AN .. t<fl~ ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ,__.," ot ...._ .. ---~­"Rlett ANO FAMOUS" 1111 -"MORI AMIRICAN ORAFF'ITI'' ,,_ 179·fll0 CtllE•fl $OUllO ~~~..;....~~~~~---.~~~ ----··· ------''TI41 l'ROW\.IR" fll "CAR80N COPY" ,,_ --"I DIS••I RG MAMA" 1111. "llHAU FIST FIOHTIR" .-, C1111 fl SOllWQ Clllt·" M>uloO BlllN .. P .. U> BUENA PARK DRIVE IN unc0111 A•• Wet! OI lnoll 121-4070 l<JUNl .. IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE·IN son Ofego Frwy 01 t fOOlll\11111 (lo) --"l'ATIRNITY" 1"I -"CAOOYIHACIC" lfll ~--·--Au. ._,,.UI CONFHllONS" 1111 -"THllF"t'll 962•2411 CIHf Pl SOUllO llMll ..... __ 0or;_;_"t_f_.;_3_0I _' _) ,,.---··· "THI 'fl~IR"" "I Dlt••ERIO MAMA" " Cl ... ,, SOUllO --· IAlft '-U_ "'_ "TATOO" 41111 -"91tJJfAKIR" Ill C1lll fl SOUllO A UAfl;li.-Jo LA HABRA OlllV! IN ---~ .... -· ... --17MN2 .. I • t Ji. ~ A ~ I LINCOLN 0111Vf IN ltne:Oln A .. Weot Ol a- 12M070 -- .. '" ·~ A"M ... A ......... -A-.,. "MOMllll HARIST" ,,_ -"UTTLI DA.ltLINGI" fll Cllll·fl SOUllO-'-----·--"ONL 'I WMIN I LAUGH" " -"IUMI UKI OU> TIMll" -• CIM! ·fl SOUllO -·-·---· '"TRUI ~ ....... ''THllP"'"' ------•• MTHllM .... -nsnu ......... ORANGE DRIVE IN ........... "'ATU.:1!.TY'' Pit ''CADD'llttACK" " r•, ''· '' .,1.,. MISSION !Jl11Vl IN ·. . . WARNER ''"'·' IN __ ..._._....,.IM!f_ ''CAMON CMY" Pit -"IOOY H1A T" fll R NOW PLAYING 8AlA COSU MfSA IOUNIAIN VAlllY I COS TA Ml SA ll I ORO OAANC( lllUCl- "TATTOO" llOll-nt\10, ... •'""' I UA'Tlll'l'llOUll "PATERNITY" B7 United Art11ts OAANGC WISIMINSllR .. .. ~~~~-~~~,~~~----~--------~--~---------------..... -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 Mother Of ill child gets offers of help EUGENE, Qre. (AP) -Numerous Off•r• of help have come to ll youna J:u1ene woman whose car, which she needed to take her son to a hospital for heart treatmenta, was stolen and driven untll it broke down in Northern California. Kathy Henry, 22, is divorced and llves on weUare, food stamps and her son Joey's Social Security payments. She must occasionally drive Joey, who turned 5 Saturday, to a hospital so dQC:tof9"'cao relax his aboor.o>aUy thlcjs 'bearl to keep it circulating blood properly. Joey, who is almost deaf, was born with an enlarged heart that saps his is was Joey who almost deaf , born with an ·enlarged heart that saps his energy and slows bodily growth. energy and has slowed body growth. He is scheduled for surgery this moqth in Portland. "The doctors have explained that two-thirds of what he eats goes to his heart," Ms. Henry says. "HopefulJy, after the operation he'll be able lo grow a little more." Her 12-year-old car was stolen last week, but her luck has changed since her plight was publicized in newspaper stories. A group of used-car dealers offered Ms . Henry a 1963 car worth $400. But Ms . Henry says she'll accept an offer · from a group of Lane County sheriff's deputies of a $750 car. Ms . Henry and her two children, Joey and 2-year-old Jessica, also have been given $310 in cash and a promise or help in getting telephone service to their duplex. "I was really surprised at how many people came over and tried to help," Ms . Henry said. "It was reaJly sweet." The first .offer came from the families of the two 18-year-old men charged with stealing her car. They gave her $160 to pay the towing and storage bills on her car, which was recovered near Williams , Calif. But the car could not be repaired, s hort of replacing the motor. Ms. Henry kept the $160, rlguring that if nothing else, it could be used as a down payment on another car. Other glft,s beaan arrivlns. She found an envelope ln her mailbox containing $S0 in cash and a brief note that read simply, ''I hope thls will help." Later that day, a man Ms. Henry can identify only as a member of the Falth Center Church in Eugene brought $100 in cash to her home. Ms . Henry won't have t-0 put her $310 in cash gifts toward purchase of a car, but says she knows how s he'll s pend it. "With winter •coming, I tblnk I'd better get some warm clothes for them." she says, nodding at her children. "They're both starting to come down with colds already.•• ,, Ms. Henry said she's looking forward to getting things back to normal and perhaps going back lo school. She has completed a year of study in child psychology at Lane Community College. LA firm sues rival over shirt sales LOS ANGE4t;S <AP> -LaCoste, maker of the distinctive sportswear with the alligator trademark, is suing a Los Angeles company for allegedly manufacturing-imitation shirts. The suit filed in U.S. District Court alleges infringement of trademark, false designation of origin, unfair competition and dilution of effective- ness. LaCoste contends that Steve B. Arnold Active Sportswear Inc. and Steve B. Arnold, described as "an of- ficer and agent" of the company, dis- tributed some of the $500 million in "knockoffs" of the firm 's sportswear sold between 1964 and 1980. The suit says the counterfeit shirts are sold at swap meets, comer shops and even big department stores al great reductions in prices. The de- partment stores were not named in the suit. Arnold said that he merely sells clothes other people make to depart- ment stores. He s aid he knew of no product that he handled that could be construed to be LaCoste. [..._ __ L_M_. _so_v_o __ ) INFORMS In lhe DAILY PILOT TftK£ Off FROM ORftN<if COUNTY, lftX, OR ONTARIO ftND SftV£ 40%. > y • t' San Jose For as little as $36, AirCal can jet vow to San Francisco. San Jose. or Oakland Naturallv. there are some restnct1ons on our Low-Cal fares• But even if vou can't pick up a low-Cal fare. vou can take off and save with our everyday low fare of $60 from LAX. Orange County, or Ontario. RENO OR SACRAMENTO, S36. w e also have a Low-Cal fare of Just $36 to Reno and Sacramento' Or. when vou have t o leave in a hurrv. it's an affordable $60 to either destination San .Francisco There are no better deals from Southern California to these five dest1nat1ons Not from any a1roort Not on anv airline But A1 rCal gives vou more than JUSt low fares We give vou service in a verv special way It starts with our people All are trained to make flying a pleasure by doing more for you than the compet1t1on We offer one-stop check 1n and seat selection before you board the plane And we serve only the verv best liquors Ch1vas. Jack Daniels. Beefeater and Smirnoff ·Oakland MORE THAN 350 FLIGHTS PER WEEK AND A CREAT ON·TIME RECORD .. A1rCal has a great flight selection Nearly 260 flights a week from Southern Cal to the Bav Area. 70 to Reno. and 38 to Sacramento That means our schedule should fit yours And we'll keep vou on schedule A1rCal has one of the best on-time performance records in the industry It all adds up to style A1rCal style. And that's the nicest wav to fly ·Sears are 11m1ted Oy time I ROI L and day of departure seven-day advance reservac1ons reauired Fares and schedules sub1ect co change w1chouc notice V-....111 ffL-. ..h.1-Sacramenco service noc avail 1UU 11 l\K OU1 a1 ,_... able from LAX presents TONITE 10:00 ·p~m. ' L/.VE FRO .M THE Cbzi.ld9f ~«Jiu81E Drought Ta Tou ly Santa Ana Feed and laddlery L----,~ r.'~. ~ _, , .. . . ~ lllllJ Pllll MONDAY, OCT. 12, 1 .. 1 STOCKS CS CLASSI Fl ED C7 Delly .............. ,..-, A....,_ Steve Garve11 and .Jerr4 lfru.'ls lwtJlll ce/1•hrr1111111 11111me111~ f1//1•r {),,dqen; had f"l1m111ated /lrm.<itrm The drought continues for Oakland Raiders; Kenney sparks KC. C3 . A 'special' Victory Rams' suicide squads stand out in 37-35 win By JOHN SEVANO Of .. Oefty' ........ ATL.ANTA -It was some kind of special performance the Rams turned in here against the Atlanta Falcons Sunday. Special. in fact, in more ways than one. Not since the George Allen teams of the late l960's have the Rams had pride In what they call their "suicide squads ." Throughout the '70's the Rams' kickoff, punt return and field goal units were nothing more than decoration for the main stars on the Cield -the offense and defense. The special teams theory used to be, ''just get on and off the field without making any big mis- takes." Well, that theory doesn't exist any longer. The Rams' newly-revitalized special units ac- counted for 23 of the team's 37 points Sunday as Coach Ray Malavasi's squad won its most impor- tant game of the year to date in drubbing Atlanta, 37-35. FRANK CORRAL'S 25-yard field goal with 24 seconds remaining provided the final margin or victory but in no way told the whole story . .. All it (special teams l is is running around hitting people and having a good technique," ex· plained special teams coach Jim Vechiarella, in bis first year as an NFL coach out or Tulane University. "These guys all have pride. and we seem to have the right combination now." That "right combination" produced two punt returns by LeRoy Irvin of 75 and 84 yards. and three Corral field goals or 25. 37 and 25 yards . Irvin, in fact, came up one yard shy of tying George Atkinson's NFL record of most punt return yards in a single game. Incredibly, his total of 204 yards was just 48 yards short of what the Rams' offense had produced the entire afternoon "YES, THIS WAS probably my best game," admitted the soft-spoken Irvin after the game. .. But I don't want to be a star, I just want to be a football player." Ironically, Vechiarella had to sell Irvin on the idea of being a punt returner. Originally, rookie Robert Alexander (presently on injured reserve> Sunday's NFL score8 Retms 37 . Atlanta 35 Pitts burgh 13. Cleveland 7 ~y Jets 28. '.\iew England 24 Philadelphia 3). :'>few Or leans 14 Cincinnati 41. Baltimore 19 Kansets Cit v 27. Oakland 0 1 louston 35: Seattle 17 Tampa Bay 21. Green Bay 10 Washington 24 . Chicago 7 San Francisco 45 . Dallas 14 Den\'er 27. Detroit 21 ~1anncsota 33. San Diego 31 :'\Y Giants 34 . St. Louis 14 Tonight's Game :\l1am1 at Buffalo t Channel i at 6 • <~Fl, roundup. page C3l (~f'L summaries. p~ge C41 was goi ng to be the deep man ... but then he got hurt. .. Jim came over to me and said, 'Hey LeRoy, you're my man'," recalled Irvin. "I said to myself, 'Hell , I don't want to do that'." "The guy never had confidence before," added Vechiarella. "All he used to do back there was catch the ball. "What I did was sell him on the idea of getting 10 yards. That's all, just 10 yards, then the rest would come easy. "WHAT'S HAPPBNING now is that everyone is helping and doing a good job. We started out slow but we have momentum now. We're one.'' And, in being "one," everyone contributed - and that one facet pleased Malavasi the most. most. ·'The great thing about a game like this is that everyone played and everyone played a oart in <See RAMS, Page C3) Dodgers pull c hampagne off ice; put Astros on it G e orge s atis fie d for now LA awaits Expos' arrival Tuesday after wi~ning the West over the Ryan Express By EDZINTEL OI -DaltJ Plr.t SU" LOS ANGELES -Derrel Thomas and his band of renown, otherwise known as Dusty Baker, F ernando Valenzuela, Davey Lopes and Reggie Smith. finally had Tommy Lasorda right where they wanted him -on the ground. any thrown by previous world cham· pions in any sport. day. "Right now, you could bring on the '27 Yankees and it wouldn't matter. We're sky high." Terry Forster , who's always good for a laugh or two anyhow, was going after the s portswriters with his filth bottle of uncorked champagne. And it was only two m inutes into the party. That seemed like an understatement. But the point was well received. The Dodgers, down for the count when they came home lo LA following two losses at the Astrodome. pulled the ultimate "d eja vu" on the Astros, as Steve Garvey was saying, winning the final three at home . IL was uncontrolled insanity, at tbe ver y least. "Gel him!" Thomas screamed like a general crossing the enemy line And t get him they did. ,i Lasor da, who ·w.as just passing ' through, was grabbed and wrestled to the ground by the group of wide-eyed. ha lf-dressed players. Unable to receive The Dodgers had just finished off tbe Houston Astros and Nolan Ryan in the fifth game of the National League West Division playoffs with an ins piring if not dr amatic 4·0 win before an overflow crowd or 55,979. And outside, it was almost as delirious as it was inside. "This is euphoria," the Dodgers' first baseman said. "I'm so proud or this team. We were down last year and won three in a row (to tie the Astros for the division title, forcing an extra game which Houston won) and we knew we could do it again." I help from a large gathering Of Spec· tators. Lasorda s urrendered to a generous dousing of beer down the front of his baseball pajama bottoms. It was the price that had to be paid by everyone and anyone who ventured into the Los Angeles Dodgers clubhouse late Sunday a fternoon in a post-game celebration that could have challenged The cause for celebration was a sim- ple , single victor y that gave the Dodgers an opportunity to go for the National League pennant, beginning Tuesday against the Montreal Expos. Bul by watching lbe Dodgers whoop it up, you'd have thought they'd just won the pennant for the universe. Garvey, who helped spearhead a three-run Dodger sixth inning to break the game open, seemed to be in a state of euphoria all day. really, like most of the other Dodgers . His fist-clenched gestures to the crowd after both of his ·· unng 'em on," motioned Rick Mon- ' Expos ' Rogers: Toast of Canada His pitching performance helps end 13-year drought PHILADELPHIA (AP> -Steve Rogers is the toast of Canada after pitching and batting the Montreal Expos to their first post-season cham- pionship in the 18-year-history of the National Leag ue club. Montreal defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 3-0 Sunday to win the best-of-five series for the NL East Division title. The Expos now meet the Dodgers in another best-of-five series for the National League pennant and a spot in the World Series. The first two games of the series are in Los. Angeles starting Tuesday, with as many of the final three as necessary in Montreal Friday. Satur· day and Sunday. "WE'VE BEEN WAITING 13 years for this," said Expos board chairman Charles Bronfman. "Eve ry year you think this is the one . This is real· ly it. .. Bronfman and the Expos experienced bitter disappointment the last two years when Montreal went to the last weekend of the regular season with a chance to win the East and lost, once to Pitts· burgh and last year to the Phillies. To win the tiUe; the Expos and Rogers had to repeat their opening-game feat of beating Steve Carlton. ranJted as one of the game's best pitchers. That's just what they did. Rogers pitched a six-hit shutout, and hit a hanging slider through the middle in the firth in· ning to send Montreal ahead 2-0. THEY WERE ALL the runs he was going to need in recording his second triumph oC the series over Carlton, a three-time Cy Young Award win- ner as his league's lop pitcher. Aft.er the game. Rogers was asked about his "great" hitting. "Well, fint of all I wouJd leave the word ·great' out or the question," Roeers said. "I'm just a bail and wail bitter. He <Carlton) hung a slider to me with the bases loaded and 1 just made the right amount of contact with it." As for his pUchin1, Rogers said the key was a slxth·lnninl pitch to Mike Schmidt, the major league's home run king. . The score waa 3-0 at that point and the Phillies had runners at first and third. ,. tion. I know what I wanted to throw him. I'm sure he was expecting a fastball ... I threw him a sinker low in the middle of the plate and I was fortunate to get a double play." The PhiUies didn't threaten after that. Montreal's third run came in the top of the sixth on a single by Andrew Dawson and a one-out double by Larry Parrish, who was hitting .063 wjth one hit starting the final game of the series. Jim Fanning, wbo took over as Montreal He r Jim Fanning J was like a kid in a candy store. He was so excited to be on the field. -Expot' Gary Certer manager Sept. 8, when Dick Williams was fired, was asked what he fell he brought to the team. "l'M NOT SURE how to answer that," said Fanning. "I think you should ask the players." Catcher Gary Carter spoke for the team on that subject. "He (Fanning) lit a fire under us and got us going. He said we bad the talent to do it and from that point we went on. "He was like a little kid in a candy store. He was so excited to be on tbe field," Carter said. Carter said Rogen had command of all hi! pitches; the fastbaJl;sllder and breakina ball. "He did It with his bat too. What more could you want?" Fanning said be hadn't even thought about bit pitching rotation in Los Aneeles a1ainst the Dodgers. Th,e best guess is that Bill Gullickson will start the firal game. ' Fanning said that 'mm Raines, who led the league in stolen bases with 71, and baa been out since Sept. 13 with a broken band, took batUn1 practice Sunday and . should be ready for the Dodgers. bits, set the tone for the complexion of the game. The Dodgers had done it the t"lard way, beating the Astros' ace, Nolan Ryan , who only three weeks earlier had hurled a no·h~ at this same team and who had won the opening game of the series last Tuesday al the Astrodome. "I d on't feel I threw any bad pitches." an upset, but poised Ryan said afterward. "Garvey hi t a good curve (for a single that set up Monday's game-winning RBI single to right>. You have to give the Dodgers credit for com· ing back.·· You also have lo give credit to Jerry "Rolls" Reuss. The Dodger left y had pitched nine scoreless innings in the Astrodome the previous Wednesday. on- ly to get a no decision in an extra-inning loss. Re uss. with a frenzied crowd behind him all the wav. threw a five-hitter and <See LA, Page C3) "I have faced Mike ... for nine years, ... - . Rosen said. "lt was a very analytical type situ•· The Montreal mana1er said he also hoped that second baseman Rodney Scott would be ready. Scolt ll\iured a shoulder tbe final w"k of the seaaon and mlued the aeries. Tomm11 La.sordo lougha ofter bath from Derrel Thomas. . ' NEW YORK (AP > -New York Yankees owner George SteinbreMer elbowed his way through a crowd of reporters gat h e red aro und Reggie Jackson in the team's locker room. He shook Jackson 's hand and said, "Now we start." Later, as he maneuvered th rough the catacombs of Yankee Stad ium , heeled by some of the same reporters, he looked ahead to a confrontation between the Yankees and Oakland A's, managed b y former Yankee skipper Billy Martin. "It's almost like the World Series." he said, apparently with the frustrations and anger of a day ago behind him. "It might be the World Series." The Yankees earned the right to meet Martin's A's with a 7-3 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers Sunday night in Game Five of their American League East Division championship series. It had been as much a battle of words as it had been of bats. After Saturday's second straight loss to the Brewers, Steinbrenner vented al least part of his frustration in a locker room lecture on the evils of slop- py play. mental mistakes and poor hilling. Two Yankees took the out· bu rs t personally, and each answered in his own way. Reg- gie Jackson, who struck out twice In Saturday's 2·1 loss, slugged a home run into the up- per deck of Yankee StadJum's right field, tying the game Sun· day at 2-2. Rick Cerone, guilty of some poor baserunning and a game-ending strikeout, con- tributed a solo homer and a pair oC runs batted in. "There was a lot of pressure on me, .. Jac kson said. "I thought a bout It last night. George said we would embar· rass the Yankees if .we lost three straight. If I'm not playin1 here next year, I don't want lo leave with that on me." ' Cerone •. who exchanged heat- ed anc;I off-color words with Steinbrenner Saturday. reeeived a note from the Yankee owner when he arrived at the ballpark Sunday. In it, Steinbrenner said it was the mental mistakes, not the strikeouts, that bothered him, "and the rest ot the letter was about the excban1e of vulgarities, explainin1 t.llat it was 'done out of frustralion," Cerone said. 1 Cerone also said that Jack.son , called him Saturday niebt to bolster bis spirits. "It was a nice 1eature." Cerone aald. "I bad calls from eeveral IUY*· I jU1t told ReQie that I'd be here today. Ke 61n't have to worry. I'd •bow up. I milht stink apln, but I'd lbow· up." Orange Coaat DAILY. PILOT/Monday, Octobor 12, 1981 ~------------------... a J.C. Snead ends dry spell Waltrip wins at Charlotte Television. radio Vclernn J .C. oead, who hadn't l!I Darrf'll Waltrip outraced Bobby • Following ere the top sports evenb on TV won in rive yours, knocked in.A tap an Allison to win the National 500 Grand tonight. Rall nos are. " ' ' / excellent; / / ' putt ror a pn on the second hole or Natlonul stock car race aunday at worth watching, / / ra1r; ' forget It. sudden death Sunday to capture the Southern Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carollna. Open Golf Tournament In Columbus, Ga Waltrip, starting from the pole and challen1ln1 9 6 p.m., Channel i .,/ .; Defending champion Mike Sulllvan bogeyed the the entJre distance, look the lead for good 60 hole and had to sellle Cor the runner-up prize laps from lhe end and went on lo win .his third NFL FOOTBALL: Miami at Buffalo. Snead, who wall b~ 40 on Wednesday, knocked in sti-aight race Frank Shorter, the 1972 Olym-An'*"ncers: Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell a 25 to JO-foot putt on the 18th hole in regulation pie marathon champion and the 1976 silver and Don Meredith. to force the playoff . Jlollls Stacy canned a medalist, led all the way in winning the ln· The Dolphins and Jets played the first tie · seven-foot birdie pull on the first extra ho&e or a augural 10-kllometer road race in North Creek, game of the year last weekend (28·281 but remeln A's road to Ser1·es four-way playoff to win the lnamori Classic N. Y. " .. American hurdler Sam Turner stole u3~2d.efeated with a '·0·1. record. The Biiis are over fellow playoff members Donna Caponi, the limelight from such track and field stars as thr h B Amy Alcott and Jan Stephenson. The victor y Henry Rono of Kenya and S&eve Ovett of Britain RADIO g 0e8 OUg rODX was the second of the year for Stacy . . . al a track meet in Sydney, Australia . Turner, Football -Miami at Butralo, 6 p.m .• KNX, Severlano Ballesteros, after trailing all day, from Los Angeles, won the 110-me ter hurdles in < 1070>. From AP dl1patcbes . edged American Ben Crenshaw l·up in a tense 13.4 seconds, shattering the previous Australian KLA~~~.;Jrall -Boston at Lakers, 7:30 p.m., OAKLAND -All weekend, the • 36-hole heud·lO·hcad duel to win the World record by two-tenths of a second ... Guard TUESDAY'S TV,RADIO Oakland A's said they didn't care Match Play Championship in Virginia Water, Kevin Porter or the Washington Bullets suffered Baseball -Montreal ·at Dodgers, 1 p.m .• whether they faced the Ne w York Eneland. 8111 Rogers took third placewith a win a torn Achilles tendon in practice Sunday and Channels ' and 11, KABC radio (790). Oakland at u I .. •I ,, Yankees or the Milwaukee Brewers , pver German Bernhard l.anger. may be lost for the entire season. NY Yankees, 5:20 p.m .. Channel 4 . for the Amel'ican L'eogue ~bampionship .. Bui r.:====::!:===:::::::-:=:===:::=~==::===:::::=::::::::===::=============~========~==~ there was never' the s liihtest doubt wh<J they ' " wanted. "A's-Yankees Is a media maker's dream," A's President Roy Eisenhardt admitted. "You have West Coast against , -East Coast, George and Bil· .......... --t ly , the Oakland no-names against the big Yankee names. It definitely would be exciting." A 's M anager Billy M a rlin, twice fire d by Yankee owner George Stein- brenner, is not the o nly Oaklander eager for a crack Johnson at New York. There also are ex-Yankees Cliff J ohnson, Jim Spencer, Fred Stanley, Mike Heath and Mickey Klutts. "It's Hke when Bum Phillips said the road to the Super Bowl is through Pittsburgh,·· said Johnson. "The way to the World Series is through the Bronx." The A's, who won the Western Division title wilh a three-gam e sweep or the Kansas City Royals, new to New York Sunday night after the Yankees beat Milwaukee 7.3 to take the East title. The league champions hip series begins Tuesday. Even befor e he knew who his team would face, Martin made a prediction. "If we get by the East , the World Series will be a cakewalk ... Quote of the day Washington & Lee football coach Gary "Falcon" Fallon when asked if he does anything to msure good luck for his team prior to a gam e: "I make sure that my sports information director puts the visit· jng team roster on page 13 or the program <where it indeed is)." Leach puts bite on Penguins Reggie Leach scored two goals "1 ' and a ss isted on another as Philadelphia buried Pitts burgh 8·2 Sunday in a National Hockey League game on the Flyers' ice. The Flyers broke open a close contest with five goals in the final period, four of them within a span of l : 22 ... Grant MuJ vey scored a pair of goals 14 seconds apart in the first period a nd goalie Murray Ban- nerman turned in his first career shutout as Chicago posted a 3·0 <Victory over Calgary ... Buffalo's Larry Playfalr scored late in the second period to help the Sabres earn a 2·2 deadlock with Vancouver with all four goals coming in the middle period. Blalr MacDonald and Ivan Boldlrev tallied for the Leach Canucks ... Rick Middleton scored his first two goals of the season and as- s isted on two others sparking Boston to a 6·3 vict ory over Wa s hingto n . LEASE A NEW 1982 EXP! TOMORROW'S CAA IS HERE AND WE HAVE BIG SELECTIONS FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. WE LEASE ALL MAKE CARS AND TRUCKS. "WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU 'RE LOOKING FOR ... THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. 2096 Harbor II. FALS 642-0010 Costa MHa --.,·--· 5_40-121 I Trad~ in y~r old pilot light and thermostat, get s 123 (almost half the cost) and eneigy efficiency! THE SO. CAL. GAS 00. Will. GM YOU 12'3.00 FOR YOUR PRESENT PILOT LIGHT AND lHERMOSTAT ... wta YOU INSTALL A NEW HONEYWELL ElECTIOtlC IGNITION SYSTEM AND AH AUTOMATIC SfT-BACX THERMOSTAT IN YOUR GAS AE> fORCB> AIR HEATING SYmM. B.fCTIOHIC IGNITION AND AUTO SET-IACI THERMOSTATS QUALIFY FOR STATE AND FEDERAL TAX CREDITS. SH YOUR TAX CX>NSUl.TAHT FOR RJmlR DETAU. NOTE:. SYSTEMS MUST BE LESS THAN 10 YEARS OLD • ............ ....,... ..... r .Graham Brothers AIR CONDtTIONINO VENTILATING• HEATING ltll C.....,ft. c:-. ..... C'.al Now (714) ·546-1653 , ' LIGHTS: 8 mg. "tar". 0.8 mg. nicotine. FILTERS: 15 mg "tar", 1.3 mg. nicoune, av.11er c1gare11e by FTC method. 1~ • Where a inan belongs~, I . fl. I ~ A IJ OJ C)j H 111 ·H rri JZ ru A II v ·:j ;f 10 a #I '') • ! 3 ,, II I ,. . ) N .n /J JI a •I , " ~~~~--~ ~---~~~~------1·--·-·--._...._._.. .......... a ........... a.-.. •a .... s•c•s .. •z .. s•s•s•s•s .... 2•2•2•tl&~JIE .. lllllllllllllll .... CHICAGO -UHbaibr Neal Olkewtc1 re· turned an inter~l'i•• pa• 10 yarda for '1l toucbdovm aJMI bate a-. picked off anotbel' ,... to set up dae fln.t,. ol two ~ nm.a bJ Jobn Ri11lnl u Wulliftl&oll •mated Chlcaeo. at-1 for their first ~et.oil)' of tbe aeuon. Snapping • fl1e.1ame loalna streak, tbe Redaldns intercepted fou.r ol Vtn~ Evai' ,..._ in the first bllf whitb led to 11 of~ ... ~ · Steelers 13. Browns 7 PI'M'SBURGR -J .T. 'lbomU maiife an end zone interception of a ...,. by Cleveland backup quarterback Paw McOOuJd with 1:53 to play to secure Pittaburtla'• 13-1 victory over lM .,,._,.., who lost quarterliacll lrtaA St•w' ~-oo a third-quart.el' play. ' . , The Steelen' fourth •ln ill a row and their 12th straiiht over the Bt::' at Three RJverJ ~UID insur«t them of at at w...-..n f)f t&a lellll bt tM Americlln Conference'CeM.hl Dlviak>n with a &-2 record. Vikings 33, Ch8(gers 31 SAN DIEGO -&lck ~er's 38-yard r1ekt coal as Um.e ran out capped· a f\µ1ous T°*1:1~ Kramer-led 11.i.nnesota odlneback H the V nipped San Dieeo, 33-'1. ·. · J9tt 28. Parrtots 24 NEW YORK -Ricbard Todd tire• three toutbdown pa11ea, two to tt1ht •n• Jerome' lartnam, and safety Datrol by retu1'td aft iD· terce,UO. ol a Matt Cavanaucb , ... tt yard.a for J.not.ber NOre u the New Yorit Jet. ~ "•w EGilanidf .. ,.. R"'' toucbdowa run~ with htt MCOGd· IA· , ttre•&*Gll ifl the .~. cave~ Jet.a a .. 1. *-4 s: 20 into the third period ad cbeud ~avaaMtp from the 1ame w~th Steve Groaao ~ b1a pl.ace. . , . Giants 34; Cardinals 1 • EAlfr RUTHERFORD, N.J. -Phil Sbnra• thaw l*O touchdown, ~ta to J.twu-, 1'.,tlm fbd a Wl'd to l!arn"t Gray u tbe Rew Xork Giants thrashed St. Louis, 34-14. · RWU\Uq back Rob CatpeDler, pi1rin11lla first 1ame in a Giants uniform, iced tbe Vitt.pry by charslnt 21 yards for a fourth-quarter UucWOwn. Joe Danelo booted two field eoals. Eagfes 31, Saints 14 NEW ORLEANS -Quuterback Ron Jaworski passed for one touchdown and Ht up two 1-yard acdri., pluqges lily BOoker ~GaatU as Phi>fltlelphia kept their reeord unbtemlahed wttb a 31-tf vidory over New Orleabs. the bgJes' other touchdown came on a 47- yard Mturn of a Saints' fumble. Linebacker Frank LeMaater scooped up the fumble and took it In for tbe' third-quarter touchdown. Oilers~. Seahawks 17 HOUSTON -Houston quarterbeck Ken Stabler, au '-'it abut out p..alrlg a *"k qo, .tarn three touchdown pas.1es incJUding one on fourth down, and Eatl Campbell scored twice and ruabed 186 yards to lead the Oilers to a 35·17 tictory over SealUe. Two of Stabler's touchdown aerialS weat to wide receiver Ken Butrou1b as the OileJ'a ended a string of two straight National Football Lea1ae up- set losses to the Seahawks. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 Cl Kramer, outc1Uflltnt &aft Dle10 quarterbftt Dan Fouts on the ittter'1 home turf, hit wi41e re· ceiver Tetry LeCount C:m a 43-yard scorilla ~lay with 1 : 51 remalainc, theo, after J..eCount re- covered an oulde lti~. mev9d the Viltinc1 tnto range for D•tttneiet'1 wtnftiril fteld fll)al . Atlanta picked on the wrong team to bully Broncos 27~ liOf'S 21 . · DENVER. -Craig Monon paased for three touchdowns, including a 95-yarder to Steve Watson, to lead Denver to a 27-21 victory over Detroit. . . Billy !lms, tbe Uoa' stat ,l'\lmllinl bad, bad~a 115-yard, tw~toucbdctWD Perloruta6~e: llut the ' Broncos, in· raisiec their reCotd to S.l, ltoPped Sims at tbe Denwer LS in tk cloe&nt ._condS to preserve dte vidoty. , 49ers 45, Cowboys 14 SAN FRANCISCO -Joe Montana's puae& to Freddie ~ ~ lf,D f'ranci.leO to e early 24-0 lead over hillb aftd the •ra nntaped to a 45·14 victdr'Y, ~de Cowbo11 tbelr wont defeat since 1970. The 4ters scored 'two taudtdowu within 35 seconds du~q th~ tMl'd perio4 to &eave ~tit ,Cowboys f.,. 4'ad in' tllt up.el. Montana couectft& with Dwiiht CJatt on a 'Jl..ywd .,... play and cer· nerback Rbnnie Lott la~ a ~ ~ Danny White and n.n "1 yatdl for a touchdown wtllcll made the ma.rein 38-7. Bengals o4 f. J;;otts 19 BALTllloa.E -Kea AocRtton totsed tbJw touchdewJ\ pdles aptut BalUmOft's pourous de· ' fense u Olnclnnm 1ttaipped tbe error-pNOe eon.. 41-19. . . Andel'SOft com~Jete4 an. ~ 10 al\e~pta oa two drives lat~ in the sNObd feriod, ad fl.Jllalaed WW. . 21 of rt for 251 Jarda, ., Buca 11, Paohet'S 16 . GREEN IAY, Wta. e'ibaa W~J!am• ~-, tor one toacbdOwn M4 ran · fot l!Mtber, wtwe linebacker ~u Job.alcJn eet up anotber scete'WlU. a 29-yard interception return, leldlaa Tamp.-lay to a 21·10 victory over Green Bay. ~ · WUliams ~ lJ of 23 p..Ses fDr 1• yards. Tipt -end Jimmie Giles cau1bt six paaaes for 8S yards, lncludin1 a 6-yud strike for the Buca' first touchdown Dolphi~• play Buff._!«» ORCHARDniAU. N.Y. <AP> -U IOOd de- fense couata aimuc~ as an eaploelve oft'eue la the National Footkll Le•cu...t.ow do you explaiil ibe Miami Dolphine? ' •· . · Miami llaa flVeQ up ID 'ftl'ale of 351 Ja~ a game but .. Ulldefe~ at 4-0-1 1oifte bdo toft1 t"a nationally televlle4 ••m• a1alnst Ule Bu alo Bilh, S-2. "There's nothini wnq with their cltft!Qle." Buffalo Coatb ·chuck KDGI S•YI· "TbOM JO-e¥ 80-yanlel"I add vp .ad lDereue tbe statilUcs. But the moet imDOIUilt et.t It U. ~ ot golnta on the boant. AMI tbey've put ~on UJI for, 13 a1alnat)." .. Tbe ~ baYe one i.lllpraaive deteuive statistic -ll aac~ ln five 1ames. r Contr.ctore: ., Rams irate with what they call a 'cheap shot' by Faumuina on Pat Haden ·ATLANTA ...... For the put few yem -or since Leeman Bennett took control in 197'7 -the Atlanta Falcons have been a hard-bittin1, pbyalcal team . .. It's almost to a point where the Faleoqa try to lntbriidate their op...,enta. And,.tt'a :.aet ~· mtm, '° insve t.helt re~. for~.P~ to ,et t1t0 Or three peniltlea,... --~mu.ti& Colld~t to MoW tMy mea8 tJwiMPI, U9fortunately, tbe Fl.leoM dft!ked on tbe wrong team to try and bu.lly: 'Aa4, wbett Wilson Faumutna Sidetlned quarterback Pat Haditll With what bUlll)' Ram ,tayen feJt wu a cbeap shot well, that waa Just about tbe last straw. 'At lbM point, the Rama ~ dtey. WND't t°*'1t U> pl8,y 1odd, cletn football ~ ~. If the From PageC1 :llAMS. • • w1nnin1." Malavasl beamed, "We're ·iD the driver's seat now." I.bdeed, the Rams < 4·2) are siUlrll preltf. Not even rOqb tactlcs by the PaJcotts ll-3) or· a DJfll•cinf crowd of 51,841 could ch.ante the ~t· come. Tbe aams appeared as lf they '1Htt going to mate it. a rout when they jumped to aa earl1 lJ-0 lead behind Irvin's first runbac~ of '5 yatds and two CorT&J field 1oaJs. JJut the Falcons -losers of Uiree str~ ,,_ -stormed Mck into coiitention on the .t.tenllb Of two to passes by 5'ev~ Barttw.itti'uct a 25-ya"' run t.y William Andr .. a. ' · . ' AT TllAT POINT, with Ute IC!Ore 21-11, lM Falcons were definitely in control aftd bad the momentum. But their aacreastveada eventually ao1t them, especially wt.en Attaota rifllt ·end WiUOn lt"J\tllluina sent Pat baden to Ute IOc*et· room Jmt prior to the ball with wbat mabr ptaytn c6Dsidered e cheap sb<>t to .Haden'a Jep. It was at that juncture that tile street fight turned into a riot with both sides awtncing at an)'UUni in an opponent's Jeney. "r taought we showed a lot of cb.uatt« to- day," Mid l]>eeial teams captajh Joe ttenM. ~·we sho.,ecf' that JI anybody •anU to ftitat' ut . U..y'• better be prepared to fi1ht dOwn ta the ft.Dal minute because we're not about to give up." "We fipred if that's the way theJ' wa.ntlltd 'to play tbeft •e'd play that way, too," said Kent Hill of A.tlanta''a ~ib atyle. ··1 think w~ all Mt the thot Utey cave to Pat was a bad Ol)e &nd t.bat ••• Mr iJrcenUve tom all.'' IT WAS oalGINALLY teared that U\e blow miSbt have broken Baden's lea. Aner further ex· am.itiation lA the locketNOm, a.owner, Ute htjul"J w•.c:Ue u a severe coo.t~. "I 'Hbiu,any teamJ: iptimtdale \II uy roore," vtsed Jitn YCMl6& . "I don •t think they picked oo tae ~ felm to lJ'y that stuff aealnat.'' added Dous Fruce. "We don't bllck down. It'• not ow: •!JAe." ~ JOHN SEVANO Faleoos were going to play dirty, then the Rams were going to dish it right back at them. "I've never been that mad for that long," said an Irate Oenni8 Harrah after the game. "I hate to make a big issue of the whole thing but it was de- finitely a cheap shot." Harrah wasn't just a bystander when Fau· mulna buried his helmet into Haden's right knee, causine the quarterback's left leg to buckle under him. Harrah was there, on the field, right next to his fallen friend. In fact, It was Harrah's man who flave Haden the shot. "U l was on a jury I would have voted to hang blm," added Harrah. "He definitely tried to hurt Pat in rny mind and I'll never forget that. "It's not like r ran over there and thought the hit was malicious. I was there. l saw it. It was dis· gusting to me. "He <Faumuina) came over to me after the game and said be wasn't trying t? ~urt P~t. He was just playing football. Well. he s JUSt lying as rar as I'm coocemed." "1bere's no place in this game for that sort of thing," Jack Youngblood agreed ... This ga!lle is too tough the way it ls without someone trying to take a cheap shot and end someone's career ... Even Coach Ray Malavasl couldn't contain his feelings. "It ·was a late hit," he said without hesitation. "The wbisUe was late all day. It Is the officials' reaponsiblllty to keep the game under control -and lb~y did a poor job of that." There's no doubt that the players -on both s ides -controlled what was going on on the field -not the ofricials. It seemed like there ·were just as many skirmishes as there were points scored Sunday. ··I actually don't remember anything that hap- pened," said Haden. his forehead black-and-blue and his left foot taped to his calf. "All I can go by is what some of my players told m e. l honestly don't remember ... The Falcons' biggest mistake was not the fact they were over-aggressive, it was just who they they were over -aggressive against. Haden, although often maligned by the press and rans, is a favorite among the players. And, when he went down, it was a classic example of a team rallying around a popular fallen compadre. "I know it pumped me up," said Harrah. "I was really cranking after that. "I know I was ticked off the way they (the Falcons) were doing things, .. said Pat Thomas. "All that late hitting and they weren't getting called fqr it." From an intangible standpoint, the late hit probably did more harm to the Falcons than any of the physical punishment they dished out. * * * HADEN ADMITTED that when he first heard that his leg might be broken, he thought that may have been the final blow to his career. "I would have given it careful consideration." s aid Haden, who has had three major injuries in the last three years. "You can't begin to realize the psychological lift I got when I found out it wasn't broken.·• **'* LEROY IRVIN'S two punt returns tied him for the NFL record of most punt returns in a single game, and left him one shy of tying the mark for most returns in one season (4). College football OUTSTANDING VALUES! Pectfk>10 Confer•nC9 Clllf .. ._ WL WL ... ftA 10 SOllSSI 11 •11'6'1 I· 1 4 1 M5 72 I I J I " • 1 I • 11• 6' 1 1 I I 1D .. 11 14M51D t 1 ' 4 • 1'9 I I 1 4 It 11' I I 1 4 61 a flCAA Confef'9nce U19f1St. SMIJ-k c.t St. ,.utl tl'Mlfk u. ,._ ... LM19'9dlll • c.e. Me-w LWt. ... ftA I I I I ts 111 1 I 4 1161 • 1114,,1'1 • 1 1 •• 11' I • 1 4 1• w I I 1 4 1' ID 8tg EJtM Confef'ence Clllf, .. ._ ........ ._.. OllM.lt. ....... ~~ ..... ........ ...... c:.-... WLTW t.W l ... ft& 111 r11u1s1 1 11110 111~ 1 I •• 1 I 11..n 001111•• 011 1 ..... 011 1 40•wt Ill 4 117'11 I 1 I I 4 I • ... ... T•n Coftterence c.M. All .... " WLWLH'K ...___ 1141 ... .... I I 4 11• .. ~ 11•1••., ....... I I J t • 1• ....... I 1 4 1'41• OMett. 1 I I It•. ...... , t J 11Q .. ...._ 1 tt•n~ *"· ... • • , • '1 "' ............ • •• J ·- W•1t9fn Athletlc Conf•rence c..t. AMO-W L W L .. ,. ft& llrl9Mm Y--O t 0 S 1 US 1a Seft OletflO T. 2 0 4 0 122 16 Vlel\ I 0 4 1 1ol6 U Hew•ll I 0 l 0 1J t7 H .. Mex t 1 J 4 141 1• Wyomlnv 1 1 J J 11t tS Air For<• 1 4 1 4 ll ID Colo. SI. 0 2 0 S • 1• T91l•t·EI PHO 0 I 0 S C) 1ID SOUthW91t Conf•r•nc• c.t. &11-- • L WLTft .. l"A WV J O S 0 0 I" ..a TeaH A&NI t 0 4 1 0 11S 77 TeHI 1 0 4 0 0 Ult M A111MIMS 1 1 4 1 0 lit 1'I !'Ice 1 I J I 0 • H.S Hov~1°"· 1 1 320.SJt TCU 1 I 2 J 0 11' 11S .-.yior 1 J l I o 114 115 Te•H Teel\ 0 J I 4 0 107 1'4 9outh9Ht•rn Confer•nc. • C:....AllO-. ....... 0-1•• Mlu .$t. ,..,la "'*'"' T_._ K9fttlltkr ,_,.,., .... V~H LSV • L WLTH'f'A , 0 4 1 110 .. 1 0 4 1 0 115 Jl 10 4 10117 .0 1 I 4 I 0 t• C 11 2107414 11 110 .. tfl 01 141n tS 01 aaonu• 02 1406.St• O> 2 4t•ta All•mtc Coeat Conf•r•nff c.e. A.119- W L WLT..i"ftA 10 so,..111• 10 111'111 10 ••o•• 1 0 s 0 • ,,. t1 t I 4 I I Its 111 0 1 1 4 I " IM ot t••"* 11 ese .. m IRAMD MEW 1911 vw DIES& IAllrT FACTORY STICKER S7t45 DISCOUNT St SO SALE PRttE $6995 l263-i) (18-i699) IUMDMEW 1911 tSU%U PICKUP FACTORY STICKER '6471 DISCOUNT $613 SALE PRICE 1:2l?i1Je7) IRAMDMIW ltll YW DIES& PICKUP FACTORY STICKER $.1141 OIScOUNr' Sl.110 SALE PAIC~ •7195 (2881) (208040) -----· ----~ -----.... --• t \ .. • s -0 ---!CW SOS-0 w Orange Coatt DAILY PtLOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 ,_ ________________________ .,.. .,,,------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ... ~ . . . ' . .. NL WEST PLAYOFFS Dodf•r• 4\_Aetro• 0 ...... "' .... ltOU....,.. LOI AH•&.U .. r... Mrlllll Pul\l,r1 4 0 0 O LOll",20 S 0 I 0 OerMr,20 4 O O o Lelldr••,CI 4 I I 0 Scoll,cl J o o o leker,11 J I 0 0 A Howe.ill • o 1 o Gervey,111 ; : ~ : Cr111,ll ) 0 1 0 ~=~·~ o t o o We111nv.111 • O I o Gverrerli,Jb , o o o Tllon,u 4 0 0 O Sclo1<le.c 4 o I I AtllOY.< • 0 0 0 Ruuell,u • 0 I 0 R y1111,p I 0 1 o Re11n,p 4 o O O Plltmen,Dti I O O O Smltll,p 0 0 0 0 LeCorte,p o o o o R-rt1,gti 1 0 0 0 Totels 33 O 5 0 Totels 34 4 1 a "-"' ....... Houston 000 000 OCIO-G Los Antel" ooo ooi 10x_. E -Gerner, Welll1>9, Thon, Guerrero, Ru11ell. LOI -Houston t, LM Antelet t. 21 -LelldrffUJI, RlllMll. JI -Gerwy. SI -Pulll, G .. rrfl'O. L_, H_... IP H a l!a II to Ryen (L. 1-1) • , 2 2 1 Srnlth v. I I 0 I LeCorlt t\'> 0 0 1 , LMA"""" Reuu IW, 1-41 t s 0 0 J 4 T -2·U. A -U.t1t. NL EAST PLAYOFFS Exooa 3. Phllllea O G-l'lft MOHTRl!AL ,.HILADl!L"41A ...... .., ... Cromrl, 10 • O O O Smlth,cl • o I O WMte.11 4 0 1 0 ROM,10 J 0 1 0 D••IO<l.CI • 1 I 0 Vuhch,rt • 0 0 0 Certer.c 4 o 1 o Rffd,p 0 0 0 0 PerrlSl\.lO 4 1 2 1 Schmldl,lO • O 1 O Weflech,r1 I O O 0 Mellh~.11 4 0 1 0 Frencone,lf I 0 1 O Trlllo,2b • 0 2 O Speier.SS • I 0 0 ==-~: ~ g g g Menuel,2b l 0 O O ~rllon,p 2 o o o Rooers,p l O 2 2 Grou,rt I o O o Tole ls 32 o • o Totals l2 J e 3 sc ..... ,1 .... 1..., MonlrH I 000 021 ~ Pfllledelptile 000 000 OCIO-G E --··OP -MOfltreel I. LOB - MontrHI S, Pflll-lpl\le •· 2B -Perrltll. M .. trNI IP H a Ea II SO ROQe,. IW. 2-4) 9 6 0 0 I 2 ............. Certton IL, l>-21 RHd I I 1:1S. A -41.JM. T , l 0 0 Al EAST PLAYOFFS Yankees 7, Brewers 3 ~,,.,. , 0 MILWAUKIE HIW YOal( •• ,... ••r1'111 Molltor,cf Yount,u C-r.lb Slmmons,c Tllomes,dll Ooll•le,11 Belldo.lO Moore,rl H-ell,pti Edwenh,r"f Romero.20 Money,20 • 0 0 0 Mupl\ry.cl • O O O 5 I l O MllbOrn,u 4 2 l 0 • 0 I 2 Wlnlleld,tf 4 0 o o • o o o Jecuon,rf • J J 2 • I I I GemOle,dl't l ' I I • o 2 o Plnlelle,dtl I o 1 1 2 0 0 0 Hellles,lb , I ' I l O O O WelM>n,lb 4 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 Cerone.c l I 1 1 0 O O 0 Rndlpll,2b l 0 I 0 2 I I 0 J 0 0 0 Totals 34 l I l Tolels 33 I U 1 k-w• ... ,..., Mllweuk.. 011 000 loo-J Hew York 000 400 12--1 OP -'""'"-" l. LOB -Mllw•-t, Hew Y-l. lB -MllOou,.,.., Plnlelle. JI - Yollfll. HR -Thom .. (II, Jackson (21, GemOle Ul, eer-(I) SF -'-'• H.t· llM. Mllw-.. HH S(L,l>-21 Ce Id well lier,,. rd McClure Sleton Eesterly V11ckovkll NewYn Guidry RIOll•tll IW, 141 Gosseoe IS. l l 1 H 11 11a ee IO j , , 0 0 2 ' 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 1 J 2 2 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 2 ' 0 Celdwell pllclled to two betlers In ,.,. fourtfl. T 2:47, A -41,Jai. Beaeb•ll pteyDffa NATIOHAI. Ll!AGUI WIST Houston 3. Ooc19e<1 I Houslon t, OoclOen O (11 Innings) Ooclgen •. Houston 1 Oocl9<1n 2, Houston 1 Doc1Qer1 •.Houston 0 (0od9er1 win wri.., J.21 NATIOHAL LEAGUE IAST MOf\lrNI l, Pt.11-lphle 1 MontrHl l, Pttll-IP"I• J PhlledetpN• •• MontrHl 2 Phlledetpflle 6, Mont'"I j • MonlrHI l, l'flll-lphle o (MofltrNI wlM Mrlft,).1). Nl.<HAMl'IOHSH" Sl•laS Tueldey -MonlrNl •10od9en,1 :05 p.m. Wed-Y -MonlrHI 11 Oodven, J:QS p.m. F rldey -OoOgen et MonlrNI, J : 20 p.m. Selurcley -OoclOen el MontrHI, 10:05 1.m .. II necessery. Sundey -Oodoers et Montrtel, 1 :05 p.m , II neunerv. All llm.sPOT Serles Is lleSl-of·flw AMllltlCAN LIAOUI WIST Oekllnd 4, KentH City 0 Oeklend 2, K-t City I OeU1nd 4, K-1 City I (()eklend wins series, M l. ...... 'nw ..... y -.._ Y ..... et Otllle"411, S:10 ··"'· ll'r ... y --Vert. I t 0Mlle"411, IJ:llS P.m.,11-ry kl\lrtley -Ntw Vwk 11 Oekl-. S:llO 11.m.,ll~t-t. Alltl,...ll'OT S.rle•" llfft .... 11 .... NFL R•ma 37, F•lcone 35 I k_'Y..,..,.. L" Anoet• U 1 1 10-V Alleftt.I 0 It I 1-lS I.A -lrvln IJ-t retwn ICOrrel llkkl LA -FG Correl JS LA -'G Correl 31 All -""*-"""' (Luckflunt lll<ll All -Miiier 11 llMI lrom a.rtll-1 (Lucklluntkklll All -.-ins 23 peu lrom lertll-1 (Lucllllurstllklll LA -CNl4t I ~s from Rulleooe (COrr.i llkk) All -J«lltOn I 11U1 lroni lertk-1 (Lucklluntllkkl All -Anclre.n 2""" ILuckllunt klcltl LA -lrvln 14 P\Wlt ,.turn <COrrel klOl LA -COrl'etU A -57 ... 1 T-~stks I.A •• ,.,,.., d_, 14 tt 1tuw ... yerds 33-t7 u.u~ Passing yen!$ 1'5 1t7 Return yercls U:2 n ...... s 14-J1·1 "·•2 S.Cks by M7 ).23 Punts 1.u ._.. l'umorn-1 .. 1 4.1 1-1 Peneltln-yeros ,_,. s..is Time of ~Ion 32:U 27:&.I ,,..,,...., Sllllstk1 RUSHING -Los .,.,.,, Tyi.r 1 .... llry1nt IO·ll, Hecltn 2·14, Gumen 1·3. lt11lltC19e 4-1, Oefnerd 2 ... 11.tlenta, AnGntwl 21-11', Caln 12-l:I. PASSING -Lot Anveles, Rulledo- 11·20·1, IJO; H-n J.1M, Y; Conel 0.1-4, 0. Attenll, llerlkowtkl 17·•2, 214. RECEIVING -Los ·-•es. o ...... rc1 4.14, CllllOl 4-2', Bryenl J.JO. Tyler J.12, Hiii 146. Atlante, Jackson 4-41. Andrews 4-lS, Frencls l·5•. Miiier ).)4, MlkHk• 2·16. Jenk,lnt 1·22. Steelers 13, Browne 7 kw9 'Y 0-f'ten Clevel-o 7 o o-7 Plttsl>ur9" 7 J 0 l -U Pit -Stellworth t pen from ••-(Trout kkltl Pit -FG Trout 1t Cit -..__,,. 2' peu from Sipe lllltlr kl<k) Pit -'0 TrOUI ll • -suso ,...,.,....,...,.1ks RUSHING -Cleveland, Wtllte 12-IS, M. Prul11 14·SO, Sipe l ·21, G. P•ulll 2·10, Newsome 1·14. Plttsburoll, Herrls ,,_..,, Polf1rd t-33, Davis 2·11, Br~1w J.20, Thornton l·S PASSING -Cleveland, Sipe 11·1'-1·113, McOoneld .1 .. 1·1~ Plltsblff9h, Br- IJ.1 .. Htt. R ECEIVIHG -Cleveland, Newsome J·l20. M. """4114-41, Rucker J-«I, Whitt S.J7, Hiii 2-17, L09I" 1-20. Fullon 1-11. Plttslluroft. Sweftn '"40, CIMW""'9m ._.,, Harris 4-U, Sllll•orU! ).22, Pollerd 2· ll. Redskins 24, Bears 7 SCW. lly g.e,,.., Weshl"91on Clll~ wesn-FG Moseley• 10 I 0 1-24 0 0 0 7-' Wein -Otkewlu 10 pen Interception (MoMley kk•I WHll -Rl991ns 1 run IMowley kk k) Wesh -Rteglns ll'\#I (MoMley kkkl Oii -~ 43 ~u from ""'-(It~ veto kick) • -57,.., 1,......., sc.tlstks RUSHING -Wesl>lngton, Aloetns J>.1», Weshl"4110ft 2141. WOMley 2·11, Tllel.,.,._ I .z. Clllceoo, Suhey t-U, Peyton s.s, M<l..lr>- don 2·), Wllllems 1-15, E'(MS, l-1, PASSING -Wethington, Thelsmenn 12•2!-1-13. CNcego, EvlM .. :17.+IJI, Plllpps ,...52. RECEIVING -WIS/llnglon, Weshlnvton J-S, Monll 2·JO, Ce,iter 2·>0, Werren 2 ... Welker l ·l . M•lcell 1·7. ChlCIQO, Beschneoel "'72. Meroervm )..SO. E•gl•• 31. S•lnta 14 Sc-. 'Y 0-f'ten Pllll.ctelptile U 10 r ~1 Hew Orf-1 0 0 1-14 HO -R09tn 5 run IRlcerdo kk kl Pllll -K""'I• 11 INH lrom Je-1 (Foe"lllln klekl Pllll -A-111 "'" (Frenklln klCk) Phil -Russell I run (Wiikes from JeworSlll) Pflll -FG Fr-lln 22 Pllll -LeM .. ttr 47 lumllle return ( Frenklln kl<kl HO -A-" Jr11" (Rlurcloklck) A -S2,721 ,...,,....,.....kt RUSHING -Phlleoet!llll•, Mont........, 20-l3, Ollwr 1.J1, Au-II 4-7, Je-llll 2·24, Smllll 1.0, Atkllll HI, Plterclk 1-ml....s .. Hew Ori-, G. R-" 17·134, HOimes ~12, Tyl•r .. D. W. Wiison J.11. PASSING -Plllfedelpl\le, J aworski 1S.Jl.2-207 ...... Orie-. MeMlng .. ,~1-4, 0 . WlllOfl 6-•-6-0. RECEIVING -Phll-lpl\le, Krepfl• J.U, Ce rmlcheef 4·H , Perker 2·30, Montgomery ).20, Smltll 1-24, Oliver 1-4. Cempfleld l•t. New OrlelM, Merllens ).23, HOI,,,..,, 1-16. Tyler 2·17, Manin! M . INVllTORI 8 l'OMM 21.;:: 11 ..__ Oet,..., , , ........ °""*' It l • ,...., Deft _...,. ..... ,,_,...,.... c-... 19" 111(11) Oefl -flO -.w.n M O.•-llfl'll•tllfl (Murreyiltll) 0.1 -..,.,,. I"'" CMwrrey ikkl o. .. -w.._.,...,._..,_<~ ,.,, 111<11) 0.1 -IWll .. JM1tt•1t11 ,.twfl (~ I kkkl o.ti -PO llal....., U 0.11 _,..,....,.,..,,,_~~ '"' klCl) A -14,'11 ....,........._. 11Us.41NO -°"'"'I, 11 .... •t•. ·~ 11 .... , Nl<llel• l·U, Ktmto ).t, a-.._ Kiili 1.s. C>e"....,· ll'Mroe to-n, ""'-'°".,..,,Lytle t1to, M6t10n M , llMd 4-mi"llt 4, PAHINO -o.trelt, l<Mlle ,.,.,,_,,. 0.ftffr,...,., ,,.,.,.au. ltl!Clf\llNG -Oetroll, Hlcllol• I · ... Scott a.22, Kl,. Ml. ..,.._y H , 1(-l..S. Denver, Weta\ $-Illa, Mo-..... ,..,.,... 1-12, ~ 1·11, ·--1-11. 4hre 4$, Cowboy• 14 "-"'~ Delle1 O 7 O r-14 S.n l'r-1~0 21 i 14. 1-46 " -So'91'M11 t "'' '""" ~ .... IW....Chl11tltk ltl '" -Hefw ..... (w.nctli .. ktctll 5" -Devit I rut1 IWertclllllt kl<kl SP -FO W..-ICNllO 11 Del -Hiil 22 NM from "9•r-IS..C ... 111<11) SF -Clerk ,, DIH from Mo11l•N tWer1c:hlno ltk kl S F -Lott 41 Interception rthir11 I Wenching klek) SF -~·I r1111 (Wers<lllnfkkll) Del -....,,.. n lum1>1e retllt'l'I (Setitleft llCkl • -51,51• ......... 1 ....... k• RUSHING -0.llet. J-. .. it, ~ t•21, COlble t·IJ, """'°' S-14. Wlllte 1·7, Cereno HI. Sen Fr•nclsco, Hoter 11-40, Oev11 •n. e.i.y ••. Llwrenc:e .. 21. "9t· IOfl 1·1', ~r ,.., -lenll l-2. PASSING -OllllS, Wlllte 1·16-2·MI, Ce•-).t2~HJ, Pearson 1-1+22. Sell Fr- clsco, ~ ,,._2'421', Soi-M+ts. Ben J em In G-:M>4. ltEC:El\llHO -DellH, Sprl1191 l•t , Donley 2·2', Peerson 2·U , Hiii l•n , Hew,,..,~ 1-21, COlble 1·1', DorWft I 14, DllPr" M. SM Francisco. Sol-J.U, Cle rll 4-1'5, Youno J.3S, Hofer ~22. w l'* 2·22, Cooper2-12, Pftton 1·4. Gl1nt1 34, Cardlnal1 14 k-'Y~ SL LOlllS 0 1 0 7-t4 HY Glents 0 17 10 l-4f St~ -Mersfl ,. PIH from H•fl <O'OonoQllue kkk) HYO -FG O.....lo41 HYG -Perkins s DHI ln1m Slll'lfM ID1ne10 klc:k) H YG -Pert.1"1 7 PIH lro111 Simms IOeMIOkk k) HYO -FG DenetoO kl~~G -Gr•• 22 peu lrom Sl"'mt 10...lv SIL -8-) run IO'Oono9hue kkkl HYG -CM-pen1er 21run10.nelo 1110 > A -'7,121 ,,...,,,....., Stetlstks RUSHING -SI Louis, Anclirson t•l1, T Brown ...... Morris 1.J. Loma• 1 ... - York, Cerpenter 14-10l. L. Jackson lo.ID, Perry s.JO, 8r1Qht s.t, Slmm1 1·24, Br-r l•J. PASSING -SI LOUIS, Hen 11·2'-MtS, Lome• 2·>-0·2' Hew Yori!, Slm11u 1 ... Jl.O.. Rf:C£1VIH¢ -SI. Louis, Andll,_ S-0, MerSll 4-52, T. Brown )-32, Grey ).11, TUiey 2·'1, R. Green t·U, LeFleur Ml ..... v-. Perlllns '°"· Sfllrk J..ll, C.'1191\tor l·U. Frl•de 2·22, Mulled'f 2-14, BrloM 2-10, "9ny 1-24, Grey 1·22, L. Jackson 1-1. Vlklnr.!3, Cherger1 31 ..,Oulten Mlnnesot• o 14 10 9-G Sin DI-r 1 10 7-41 SO M<>ncle 2 run l&e<llrschlle kick) Min -YOW>O U pess lroni Kremer <De~ meler kick) Min 8'..-1 4 INU lrom l(r..,,er 10.,._ meler kkk) SO -Sceles 60 peu from Fouts IBenlrschke llkkl SD -FG Benlnchllt,. Min -LeCount 26 pass lrOll'I K•-IOe-.eler kkkl SO -Joiner JI pus from Po110 IS.nlrsclllll kkkl Min -FG o.nme,.r 21 SO -Muncie 1 run (IMnlrKhlle kkkl Min -LeCount u PHI from Kr- lkk ll lelltd) Min -FG Oer'lrNler • • -50,70I l .......... Mltlstk. RUSHING -Ml-. Br-21 .... ~ Count 1-17, YOU119 S.t, Krem..-).1. Sall ~~~· Muncie 2M02, C.-lietll U , ku6 PASSING -Mlnnuote, Kremer U-0-2-4M. S.. Olevo. Fouts~. RECEIVllfG -Ml~. S.-7.,., LeCO\lnt 6-120, B....., s.10t, s. Whlto I-SI, Resll.O J.l4, Youno ~21. Sen 1>1e9o, Jollltf ' Jet1 21, Petrtot1 24 lc-.'Yo..Nn MewEnewct O 14 1 ~ NY Jell 1 14 1 ...... HY -a-um II pn1 from T ... (Llttf\t •klll NE -Tec...., 2 run ISmltll llkll) ,.Y -llr1lumS119t1fromTOdd (~ ak111 HY -Welker 2' -· from Todd tl.Mllof kl<ll) HE -c.olllnl t rvn (Smltll llk ltl NY -Rey 41 llltercwtlon rtlvnl I~ -~) . ME -Hes•IO.Ck 11 peu from G ..... 15'111111 kkll) HE -PGSmlt112' A.-J.S,11'3 f-....... ~ RUSHING -Hew Entllfld, Collins, ..... , c..,._•1J, Ftrv->11.~ "''· TetoP\I .. 7, Je<kMrl 1-S. H.Y. °*'• H~ • 1·10, •uoustvn•• 10-45, 04-lng 1-1, ...... M , ......, I .. , T-l·S, TeJlor 1·1. PASSING -Hew E,,...,,_, c........-. "20·2·110, Gf'09M 1,._n·2·SIO. H.Y. Hts, Todd 1 .. 2'-1·112. ltECl!IVIHG-Hew lnttlll'ICI, HelMlllldl M,., JeclUOn ~ • .i.Mton 4-52, "'°'9111 M1, Collins J.17, C.1-2·12, T..., 1•D.. TelUClll 1-S. H.Y. Jiii, Welker HI, H.,,., S·40, lerkum •·41. a . Jones 1·11, •uouslynlell 1..s. Chief• 27, Reider• 0 "-..,__.. Ollltfend KensHClty ICC -FGS2U-ry o o o .._o J 7 10 7-'17 ICC -JKIUOn 4 run 1i.-rv kklll KC -FGi._., KC -MerSll•lt • PHI lrom K .... ., IL-erykklll KC -Smlthtpesslrom KenfW)' (~ llkk) •-n."2 I ... .,._ tulhtk• ltUSHIHG -OMlend, Kl,. 11-46, J.....n 7·21. PIUflketl H , Whittington 1..S. K.,_ Clly, Oel-y S.10., Heclnot 14·57, ai.-. 4-1, JeclUOn 1-4, K.,_y,., PASSING -Olklend, PIUftllett 12·2'-1-12', Wiison 2-11·2·22. K1nu1 City, Ke11ney IS.23+217. RECEIVING -Oelllencl, lillll'IWI' J.ZI. Kine I·», lredll\ew ).11, lrencll .._, WllJt. l~on 1·13, Olrl"-1 .. , 8-11 Ml. Kenaes Oty, It-1·12, Mef"lllell 6-110, C>el-y 1-104, 04xon H, Smllll ~ M..._ ,.11. Collage SATVltDAY'S LATI SCO•a Cal Poly·SLO 21. Senti Clere 17 6-91, Cllenclfff H I, Scelff ,..,, Wlnttow ).ii, Oak Tr•• Sle,,ers J.IS, Muncie Ml, ~Hetti 1-11. (et s-a ..... , Be I 41 Colt 19 SUNDAY'S alSULTS nga' • ' 11 ..... a._._, "' ._..., SC-W OIMttws PlltST llAC•. 6 l"''°"VS· Cl"clnnetl l 14 1 11-41 Proue! Ouk• (McCerron) 4.40 ).Oii I.AO 8eltlmort O 5 0 It-It Htoh E9mi118S IH-le"tl •·• 4.JO Cln -FG Brwe<h a Poxy Oulllo (Sltllllel "611 ,.!:' -Seftty, leytor bloclled IMHIC "'9ftd Alto raced; lmm-n1 111ue, ,...... ... Bal -FG -19 Her1em, lfe91e't Reign, 1111 Tell. Cln -Collln-11> 19pesa from.,,.,...,, Tl111e: 1:10J/S. ( B'IKll •lcll) t•COHD •ACI. Owle mite. Cln Verser 20 pen from Andertoft E1lled IPlncey) 1.40 •• tAO -,... . ...... ....... ... ....,.~ ... , 1 Br"'" kk kl ewyent LAM ISlblll•> s.• J.IO c1n -Ross z peas from Andllrtoft (IAeth It's She-·• Tum <McHe,...I I.to EdlftOntOn Chatt.nae kick) Alto raced: Pl .. -lce. Arctk Geel-1 .. .........,........, Bel -Frenlllln I run IWood kick> detl. A....,... ..--... ••• ..__ Cl FG l!nec:1124 Time: 1:.4/S. ---Cl: =~1 rllft(llree<hkkkl UDAl~YDOUll.a IHI ,.io510,-. ...... a.vdef.Woltell F.._.., .. 2,S-J ... t ; fl•I -McCell U pass from J-fWoed nt1ar.11AC•. 6 f\lrtOflgl. J-L"'9~ def. lrlen Goafl'IM, M ,M. llfck> P-or .., ("' ..... e 1 • -•.... ...... ~n's t-•mem•nl . ... ......., ·-----Cln -Hergro119 1run18rwc:ll "ck) Teneo o.nc.r (McH•'-1 •.«t •• I r ••Ill •,A_....) A -».O.O VIM ... IMM'tlnttl 1Jtl> ..... l'i.f ,......,.. ._. .. ,Cl AllO raced: Ster ,,,_..,, ~ ..... Ge"' ....,.., 9f. l!llot ~II~. 1•S, ... ,, RUSHING -Clnc!Men, Johnson •n. ••lllMwSeeller,GIOr'lowGren. N (lN'l'fl" wllll •100,000; Tefbc ... r .... Nlv.1CIH1lc ( .................. , ........... Merk ,..........,. •· °""' '"9Wlt. ,...._ U ,M . ~ ..... ROii Prewley·Lewlt dtf, l.,_._<Mllll ...... 1-S ..... ''° (141 ........ , ---N41 lltM <eMit ..... I Or•nd Pr1• fO'ff'n•m•nt l .. TllAotlwl ...... I , ........ ....... Mel l"lnell .......... l(nM¥fU; ... ,, , ..... t>I; Per H~ll '9f. at'-IWMr1; J.I, .. J ... I NHL CAMPllLLCOll,•81MC• ................ W LTPPPA..._ Vllleovver I 0 2 11 1 f:dmcHlton 2 1 0 1• 14 Cetoery ' I I , • Color Mo 0 J ' • u ..... • J 0 S II .. _DM!Mla Toronto t 0 1 11 12 Mlnnetota ' 0 I 10 I Chic ... I ' I 1• 14 Detroit I I 1 10 10 SI.LCM.Ila I 1 0 10 I WIMlpeo I ' 0 • • WAL&ICOtlPlal•CI ,......,ot ..... Pl\11 edtlptlle ' 0 I 10 4 NYll .. ~ 1 0 I • I PllllllVr'Ofl ' J 1 " '° WHfllntton t 2 0 12 14 HYaenve" O I 0 J 20 AU-DlvlMte Ouetlec , ' 0 14 II Mont reel 1 0 t 14 J ll"ton ' I 1 It II ellftelo I 1 1 1 14 Herttord 0 I 2 11 12 t.My'skww Botton•. Weshl.,.iotl t Vencouwr J, auttelo 2 Plllleclelphle I, PlttsblWp 2 ClllcegoJ, C.191r'f0 T .. .,. • ._ MlnMIOCe el Oue09< -(_ > . NBA 01hlbftlon1 .....,.,Sc_ Leken 12', SNttle 120 IOTJ Portland 10., ~St.Me 11112 Hew J-y 101, Pllfl-lplft n Clllcego 101, lndl-ti T .......... ._ Boston"" lAkt" et Fonim Deep ae• fishing • 4 J ' • s I I J J 2 J I I J 0 • I I J J •llWll'CHl'T (Al't't l.ltldlfl81 -W entlen: •• bonito, 24 1end bell, 41 meckerel. c Diver• L.acMrl -1t.s engters: w oonillO, I Miid bfts. 1 celko tieu, " rotk cod, >IO ltlKlleret. DANA WMAaP -Id -len: U - NH, 7 .. bonito, " rock fl.,., us meckerel, JOO roc:k cod, Mc-cod. s•AL ••AO! -110 -len: ..... cod, ... meckfrel, Ill oonlto, • Mnd -._ 5 cellco bell. I.AH DllOO (H&M L•Mla1, Phll· ent1111'1, ,... .. L-) -)I lflOlers: 1 yellowtell, 151 Oonlto, 9 tend i. ... 22 rack fish. u-....1 -.. engle". 1 Yettowtell, 1as benlto, m mecker'el, J roe II 11111, I cellco NU, 50 roctl cod, 1 ltno Cod. Weekend tr•naactlon1 eAHllALL! ·~~ KAHSAS CITY ROYALS ~ Fired Gor'df Mecl<el\lle, Akk Renia eftd'9111y C.-., coecMs Net,_.. ....... LOS AMCMUS DOOOIH -PfecH llon Cey, tlllrd .,....._,on IN active ros~ tor the Netlonel ~ Oll~p MrlK. Dropped MIU Marshell, Olltflefder, from .,. ect1verot1er. US.•TULL ........................... ATLANTA HAWKS -A-..S u., hen recalveid • sleNcl Offtt tlMet from Mike Glenn, ouerci. MILWAUKEE llUCKS -SIQMd Oulnl'I luckner, 00-0. toe llw·yeer contrect. POOTllALL ............... u..- GRl!EH BAY PACKtA9 -RelH-0.Mn Wflllems, rllnf'lf"9 beck. Al .. endllr 11-33, Andi~ 1·1, H•'9f'O ... ..._ Time: 1:14115. 1'Q,OllO). llefllmore, DI.on •·23, Olekey IJ·lt, _____________________________________________________ _. McMllllfl ).10, ~ 1-l. • PASSING -Clnclnnell, Andersen, 21-21-4-157. K~ 0-1-o-4 ... nlmol'e, ~ 22·)1).NIO, Unclry ~).l>-2'. RECEIVING -Clncln ... 11, Aoss 7·1111, Collinsworth ..._ Kreider Ml, Ale~ ).26, Vet'-2-40, J--.... e.111-. Dickey 1141, 84.lller ~. McCellley "41, Cerr J.lS, McCell 1·65, Frenkfln 1·11, McMlllen1-4. ************* • • • • : JOHNSON & SON : . NFL standings • • Presents . . . : • • • • NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE Western Dlvlalea Wenern Dlvlalon W L T PF PA Pct. W L T PF PA Pct. Rams 4 2 0 160 J.3'f .68'7 Denver 5 1 O 133 75 .833 San Francisco 4 2 O 157 13> .~7 San Diego 4 2 O 193 15.1 .667 Screened Trust DMdl Oft rtlidtntlal Real EstJte Mlnll'AUltl tqUtty, '°'· &di Trust Deed rlCGfOlcl If! YOUf name. $3,000 mlnlnwm lnmtmtnt. Atlanta 3 3 o 157 115 .500 K•nsas City 4 2 o 151 132 .667 New Orleans l 5 O 64 13't .161· Oakland 2 4 o 63 89 .333 Eastern Division Seattle l 5 o 85 136 .167 • • . .. • • • • • -~COMlll ...,._ . .._ .......... ...... .... a.. ..... .._a. .. ..47 ..., ~-JI~~ ..... -................. .......... ...... _. .......... -.... c:..,...-...,rn._ .... ~ONAL SECRETARIAL SERVICES IC.tlwnatete Typing Servtc •Word ProceNlng • Aeaumn • TheMa • Legal Document• • MaNano Service • Anewertno ~ice ... 1711 bt. n.as a=-=--.., L '"" ll. IMtllt Ml W8 AM l'IHHC•ALa. WI MU OUR OWN TRUIT HIDI THE VB COMPANIES CAU fOA INVESTMENT PACKAGE 2111•--714/711-4111 IPECIAL .. US TO 32 '- 1•%. LEASE FACTOR ON LUXURY LEAS ES 1912 MARK VI, UMCOLH TOWM CAI CONl1MIMTAL. CALL MOW orr• SLIM~ Philadelphia 6 0 O 140 67 1.000 Eastern l>lvlsloa Dallas 4 2 0 140 l.2a' .617 M\ami 4 o 1 125 83 NY Giants 3 3 O 105' 97 ..SOO Buffalo 3 2 o 127 67 St. Louis 2 4 o 108 JJ1 .. 333 "NY ;Jets 2 '3 t 129 168 Washington 1 5 O 101 156 .181· New .England 1 5 O 130 149 Central Division . · ' Baltimore l 5 O 106 186 Minnesota 4 2 0 136 14e .. 68'7 Central Division Tampa Bay 4 2 O U't 90 · .68? Cloclnnati 4 2 o 153 131 Detroit 2 4 o 118 126 .333 'Pittsburgh 4 2 o 141 lll Green Bay 2 4 0 106 140 .W Houston 4 2 0 115 99 Chicago 1 5 O 89 133 .187 Cleveland 2 4 o 88 127 • t. , .. . , . . ~ t .900 .600 .417 .167 .167 .661 .667 .661 .333 • •• . .. • • . ~ • • : , ............ er: • • • NFL's • . .. • Picks of • « TIHt Wetll * • • • • « • MONDAY * ,. . ......... . . .. .,. .. . ......... . • Jt • • 'tr It • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • lt'·JlllUN & Sii ; . ~ •••• * * * ...... * * *. * •••••• *..... ....... . I ' I " • r I DUllSI Cll11 11ERE ARE Read all today's news, every day Local, county, state, national an~ international events come to ')!our doorstep in the bright, ~­ light and lively Daily Pi lot. @ 'Keep an eye on ~oeal government No other newspaper brings you more news of your citv counc11 , planni ng commission, school and college districts and county , government. ~ Laugh,_ery or get ())smart Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Monday, October 12. 1981 Ylll llltlM lllll NPll .. ~To keep -•P With!: -· ~·~. ·all that's happening . - · in y.:.ur eomm•nity you .need the Dany.-not ••• every day ' REASOrtS Wl1Y. • • /ifl.f ollow your team "-r/ The sports action at 15 Orange Coast high schools, three community colleges, ·uc Irvine and Cal State campuses is r egularly reported by the Daily Pilot sports staff. Keep up with nation- ally ranked college and pro team s, too! ~~ B Save ~one! and dJ shopping time Real values on items from apple- sauce to zippers are advertised every day in the Daily Pilot. Becaus~ the ads are from firms in this area, . you save time, ef- fort and money. ~Enjoy your Sunday ~·Family Weekly, color comics, f i nance, the latest news and features about your community, your money and you highlight the interesting reading cotP~ 1rt1o packaged in your c,,o,...,c vs··· Sunday Daily Pilot. Enough to read - and enjoy. (ij]rTune in to tll~ {/ latest TV logs, -the I atest, most accurate television guide is published e ach weekday in the Daily Pilot._ On Fridays, Pi lot TV Log charts the' tube in conv~ni~n.t. easy-to-fincf ' J grids. Get into the Daily Pilot for only •4.00 pe~ 1nonth. Daily Pilat We deliver · days a ~eek 642-4321 ____________________________ , --~-----------------------·-·· : I'd like to enjoy the comf9rts of a hom e 1 d eliver ed Daily P ilot every d a y. 11111 I NO ..;-; ACl I I N(ClSSllll'Y , I "MAIH D • I 111 TH( I ~-----... ' Enclosed is $4 .00 for one month. VNIT(0$Ul(S ------~ I I 1 Name ....................................•............. I I A ddress ....................................... , •....... I I City .............................. Phone .............. . I I 1 Signature .....••.•....•...•.•••..........•.•.........•. I I 11to•0t11nuv10 lstrlct ..•.•. :r •.•••....... Rate ...•.• , •.••.•... BUSINESS REPLY LABEL Orange Coast Daily PUot Box 1560 Costa Mesa, CA. 92626 CIRCULATION DEPT. I I I ·---------------------------------------• •• -~--------------~ Complete the.coupon • • • glue or tape the p~ld l•bel on an. envelope for malllng, or cell 6G-41. Ask for Clrculatlon. -- ... .. . I . \ I 11 • c 5 socs a 3 socs a a -· Orange CoMt DAIL v PiLOT/Mohday. October 12. 1881 ·'Btirned' Africans hope to overcome problems I Continent has growing starvation, population due to double in 20 years, chronic political instability NAl&OBI, K~a (AP> -''Slowly. alowly," IC*• an BUlloplan provft'b, "an .,. wt11 walk b1 lta own r.-t." Opt.Lmllta who ... Alrtca u ••YID· boUc ea say It will batch Lato protperity by tbe year _,_ OtlMn upecl lt. lf DOil to crack.to limply rot away. 'SO far, the ~:rd la bleu: SO ec>uPj d'etat, a do1en wan, 5 rnlillon ref\&1 .... *10wlDI ltarvaUon amon1 a popuJatlon expected to double ln ID yun. Each year, African problem• attect tbe world with ~roater Impact. A al1nlficant number of optlmlatl 1cknowled1e tbat emer1ent Africa started ort tr11lcally but say this baa produc-4 a realbtic ap. proacb. "We bad to see for oonelvt1, Ute a kld who was told not to play with matches," HY• Elebe Ma Ekonzo, a Zairian Cabinet mlnilter and wrtter. "We were burned, and now we know." The pessimists say it may be too late. llOll ln· dlcaton, they say. point to mo• and more suffer· ing for individuals and nations, until drastic, Im· mediate changes are made. Vaat mineral deposits, fertile Janela and rtcb bum an resources l~nd weight to optimism. But, at the same time, Africa's immense diversity Africa might become "a perfect model for coun- terdevalopment~ '' stlmufates internal conflict and outside in· terference. From the Strait of Gibraltar to the Cape of Good Hope, 400 million Africans speak 2.~ languages, and 10 percent or them also spea.& English, French, Arable, P~or Spanish. Africans in 1981 eat grube under leaf shelters. and they split atoms. They squat In open-air markets and casbahs, trading old silver coins for 1 battered teapots, and they stroU down block-long supermarket aisles in Pierre Cardin pullovers. Despite the diversity, common threads weave the 52 stales tightly together. Black nations, if not by choice, are linked inextricably. Arab North Africa, increasingly, is part of the whole. Their future depends not only on t'410nomic de· velopment of the richest but also on tbe simple survival of the poorest. Encroaching desert is turning good African land to sand at a rate of five acres a minute, and nearly an acre of forest is lost with every passing second. Since 1960, the number of mouths to feed has doubled, but food production bas hardly grown. Nearly half the people on the continent face possibly crucial food shortages. An African born today, on average, will not live to 45. One in five will die within a year . Total economic aid of $6 billion a year does not e ven cover food Imports. Old ways of life, like the herds of game, are going fast, but the tradition of large families re· mains. Political turmoil, scanty communication with rural areas and religious taboos binder fami· ly planning. In Kenya, the average mother has ei1bt children. and the population crows 4 percent a year, the world's highest rate. Kenya's economy, growing 1.5, percent a year. slips ever further behind. Gulfs are widening between-ricb and poor. In cities, top officials and businessmen can make more in two months than peasants earn in a lifetime. or the world's 31 poorest countries, 21 are In Africa. Their inhabitants earn 75 cents a day on average. But most use no money at all, living on subsistence plots as they did when outsiders first explored African coasts. "Africa is dying," Edem Kodjo, secretary general of the Organization of African Unity, said last year. Without change, be added, Africa might become "a perfect model for counlerdevelop· ment." There are bright spots, but crises threaten to dim them. Tanzania raised its literacy rate from 10 to 75 percent slnce independence 20 years ago. But it cannot pay its teachers. Zambia built botpitals but patients must bring their food and medicine and sometimes sleep three to a bed. African nations started out with the odds against lbem, odds that grew worse over the : years. ~ Most borders were drawn at a conference of !I European powers in Berlin, in 1884, with little re· 3 gard for the tribes that were split, the resources ~ that were separated from badlands, and the an· • cient enemies made compatriots overnight. In the mid-20th century, independence came suddenly. Few countries bad more than a handful of college Kraduates, and overaJJ literacy wu 10 ; ;;:;;;;;:;;::;:;;;;:::==:=:;;:;;;~ perceat. TrMIUonal culturtl, after lon.I contact with~. had loettbelreobuloo. Farelp powers and tiw•ne11• be1an wbat Tauanlari Pne!deot Jul.ha• Nyerere called "lb• second 1cramble for Atrlca." Fonner coloolserl and newcomers e!bowed each ot.b..-ulde for op- portunitla. lnexperlenced natiou loaded up oa overprlc.t techoolocy that created new dependence and dll· appointment. Former aer1eant1, suddenly com· minding armies, played Eut a•atnst Weal to stock arsenals. Slnce then, world crlaea havt hurt. Africans must produce four Umea more than they dJd 30 ytara ato to WY tb•same tbillp. ~be coet or Im· pottln1 oil ia especially rulnoul:"tattn1 ao percent of what Africans earn throuib their own exporu. In 1972, two pounds of copper bou1ht a barrel of oil. Now lt takes 4S pounds. DtoUlbts and fioods crlp1>le rra1Ue economies, and often governments cannot ald victims, much less repair damage. At the same time, mlsmanaaement, corrup· lion and tribalism have taken a calamitous toll. Some Africans grew rich, and a few amaaaed huge fortunes. Millions of youths left their villages bopin1 for office jobs that would propel them into a new mid· dJe class. The more successrul studied 1n Europe, where many stayed. (Jul most did little more than s well the cities, where unemployment rose to more than 50 percent. Few would stay down on the farm after they had seen Ouagadou1ou, let alone Paris. New power elites formed, and leaders In almost every nation dismanUed democratic in· stilutions lo ensure that the opposition could not unseat them. Still, half of the leaden who brought their nations lo independence were deposed later in military coups. Governments, confusing buildings with de· velopment, wasted resources on presti1e projecta. Agriculture was neglected as deineanln1. Today. many states can now barely afford the most basic public services. •'Between 70 and 90 percent of our rural and periurban zones don't yet bave essential health care compatible with human dignity," Dr. Oomlan Quenum, regional director for the World Health Organization, wrote recently. The new realism, cited by the optimists, has begun to make an impact. Nearly half the emerging nations espouse a form of ·Slate socialism, much of it tinged with Marxist-Leninist ideology, but moet now see a role for private enterprise if it aids development. Many who relied on Soviet aid came away dJs. illusioned -in Egypt, In Ghana, In Mali, In Guinea, in Somalia. Moscow grants massive military aid, and its Cuban and East German partners maintain te.ns of thousands of troops in Africa. But the Soviets' African allies tend to keep their options open. Of· fi cials in Soviet-backed Angola, lbe only black African nation with which the United States has no di plomatic lies, say tbey are prepared to normalize relations with Washington. In Madagascar, a MarxiBt nation In lbe Indian Ocean, tbt!' minister for information and ideological animation, Georges Ruphin, told The Associated Press: "We are in the anti-lmpertal.iat camp, but anyone can see our relatiom with tbe West are getting better and better." Each year, OAU leaders meet In a different capital, and host governments have spent up to $300 million for just one of these conferences. The summit extravaganza symbolises future hope and present futility. This June in Nairobi, beads of state assembled in starched tunics, somber business auits and col· orful gowns, with an assortment of canes, fiy whisks, swagger slicks and pebble-grained brief· cases. There was The Guide, The Teacher, The Old Man, The Helmsman, His Majesty, The Boy Hero of the Revolution and Comrade Prime Minister. Some stared with hostility al enemies, often neighbors. Others joked easily. old friends meeting for a palaver. Detractors found il apt when Kodjo said the summit's main achievement was that the grouping did not disintegrate. But in the back rooms, ener1eUc young specialists spoke a common language of tons and meters and yields per acre. They spoke frankly about what was wrong and what must be done to fix it. The winds of change were unleashed when Ghana won independence from Britain ln 1~7. Its brief hi.story shows tragicaUy. if ln the extreme the troubles suffered by many of those that followed. At independence, with $1 billion in exchange reserves, high cocoa prices, good roads and an ef· feclive civil service. Kwame Nkrumah said: "We have a duty to prove to the world that Africans can conduct their own affairs with efli· ciency and tolerance and through the exerciae of democracy." HAllOI LAW~MT. OUYE Mortuary• Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mesa s.40-5554 __J He dropped democracy for a sing.le party. with bis personality as its ldelology. He set up 50 state corporati008 to run every sector of the economy. ;ncrease Millions of dollars went lo confettncet aimed at ., creating a slngle African state. Corruption drained Test-tube births PlllCI llOTHHS l&.L •OADWAY MOITU .. Y 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 IALT'l&lllGHOH SMITH & TUTHtU WISTCL.lff CHAPll •27 E 17th St Coate Mesa 6•6-9371 PtMCI '90,..._S • SMITHI' MOl1\IAIY 627 Main St Hunt~ach PAc.IC YllW .-.OIAAlPMI Cemltef\I Mortuary Chaoel-Ctematory 3500 Peelfie V1" Or1¥e Newport Beach 844·2700 I, CAM 8 R 1 0 GE . away huge amounts. England (AJ?) _ Fiv~ When the military deposed Nkrumah in 1988, more test-tube babies Gbana ~as badly undermlned. The corporaUona, have been born in Bri· collapsing, had run up huge deficit•. ~vtet tain in the past three hardware lay rustlng. Cocoa prices had dropped, months and more than and tbe economy bad little dJvenity. 60 others are on the way, Civilian rule was returned, followed b)' three the clinic established by more coups. Desperate officers tried drastic solu· test-lube baby pioneers lions. Patrick Steptoe and 1 .,,, · Robert Edwards re· n 1979, rlight Lt. Jerry Rawlln11 traced ll· ports leaal trading to tbe market mammlea ln Accra. So Th~ babies brinl the be dynamited the market. Today, a new civilian reported total of test· government ls in power. and the market mammlet tube irtbs in the world to are wheeling and dealing ln the rubble left by the 21 -10 in Britain, 10 in blast. Australia and one in In· The daily minimum wa1e in Ghana buys a loaf d1a. of bread. Cocoa is 1muie1ec1 to the Ivory Coast. Alan Deiter, n.nanclal Corruption la rampant. Good humor and ebullience director of the Bourn have soured to apathy and delpalr. Hall cUnlc near Cam· bridge, uld the rive babies were all normal and "dolna well.'' Tbe Steptoe·Edwarda iprocedur~ ii dnl1ntd for women wtlb blocked f allopta.n tuba or men wUh low sperm count.a. It involves ~ an ••• from tht mother'• body,. f ert1U1ln1 It tn tbe laboratory •1tb tb• f atber•a 1perin, and r~plactn1 It ln the •omb. Thia awnmer, after 1,500 villaien were killed in a tribal club \ri11ered by a barroom brawl, a provincial olfJclal told Wnt Arrtca matadne : "We a.re in a dlfflcult transibal period. The traditional waya are breakiq dQ;wn, and the new onta are not yet etnclent. • • One GbQalan acronomllt put ll 1imp'1: "We II ablohrt.e bell.'' Few expected the early yean or the a.w Africa to be euy. and tHere bu beeD ptOt1"eM, tom• ol >l draa:a~tJc. But U lbe A.trtcan ell bu madt It a,... ••• tJoD wit.bout breaklaf, it •bowl DO lmmedlate al.pl o! laat.cbtna. P , rs a 437 mi111on 11 o '* oan1 °' WOf1d populetlonJ ,.._ 11. 7 miHion lqUara milff (20 I* 09l'll of WOtid l9nO ., .. , Mlillll ...-..i NIQena 183 mllfOf1 popu.allon) C-. ---Palm oll, Pit•· !Ua, c.ceO. benana., COftOn flb9f T • 0 a .. • c..n. two-llfltw of lwld 9'N; IOIWC9, 1"a than on.- fifth; gr....,.., IT!()(• ll'lan two- fiflha --'819ck. 70 '* oanl, EUIOPMfl, e.rt>er, Arab, ltdan. 30 '* 09l'll cw •• ... . Gold. d<emoncla, c.c.eo, c:oball. CICJPP«. ~ • ' . . .. t • I It (• Africa include! 20 percent <lfthe world land area. and 10 percent o/ the world population. But two-fifths of the continent is growing desert that is turning good land to sand . ... ... LSOM. NT'ICI fllCTITIOUI •u••••u NT'ICI Ot' ..lc:TtTIOUI 8UMNIU N.Ck• 11 ,.,_., el"9fl tN1t T"9 hfttl NAMa ITATIMallT T•UITll'S SALi NAMll ITATIMIMT ef ~ ... OOUllCy, 10101 SI .. .,. A-. The fOllowlng ,.,_ It dOlfto butl· &AM-._,,....., Tiie ......... W-It delft9 -1-f'ewllt8111 Vell..,, C81 ......... tU., 1191 MU H : T.t. •..,,., -u : ~ "-ic..IM Wltll .,. ~., SCOAPIO ONE. 25641 Herel11111 TAAN$-OOAST stfltVICIES, INC. ft MUSIC GALAXY, 12'112 ~ 0.11Hl1 f11a11re11ce Cer110rello11, L-. El Toro, CA. n.JO dlll'I' •-'11tM Tr1111 .. -· the A•• .. T..,. ... , CA,._ 1111-"~ O.C. »at, I• ltstnlnell THE SPORTING CANVAS, 2s.41 !Ollowl119dnerltl9lldeedof lrv1t WILL Mk'-! Pl•. #S An"O'fO Ollco, c-..t tD meroit wf1ll 110C -...... Heulnwt i..-, El Toro, CA. '2UI SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Tl41! ~IMdl,CA"'51 c:em,_,,,. SllNIM GclN.eW%, U..I Hentnut HIGHEST llOOl!R FOii CASH Tiiis ....,._. II cOllCIWC-.., .,. ,,,. Tlll1 Nlltlce 11 11111111 .... --t tD L.-, El Toro, CA. m» (peJ•ble et llme of wk 111 l*wf11I ........... Sec1lell ... (Cl .. tM ic.d9t'al 0..-." Tiii• ............ CondlKted by •n Ill--·"' Ille Unli.d ~, ... •lellt. IW"'-1 Pinto 111-enc. Act. Ntf --wt .... te dlvldwel. llllt •nCI lnt.,. .. t convtfed to elld Tllll 1i.ament •• filed with Hie com-., tf111 AllP!lutlM mull Ille 5-le Gonuler nowt.kl 11'1 11 ~ will O..CS of Tr1111 C_.y c;...,. Of Or ... C-ty on Oct. coml!Mllb lfl wrllftl..,,, Ille 11 ...... 1 Tiii• ,..._. wa fl'-1 wltl\ u. In llle property~ cleac:rltlM: 1. 1"1. Dir•<, .. of Ill• Fedar•I O.pe1lt c-1, C•~ of 0.-enge ,_,..,on Seo-T II u s T 0 A . RA y M 0 N 0 .. 1'274.t ·--Qir11era ..... Ille A ...... I temtoer 14, 1"1 MAltSHAU. JAllVIE,.,. unm...rlecl Pvlll ...... Or .. C:.• Delly Piiot, Office, ~ Mll'I!.......-, SI,_, S41ita P'tNMI mM. Oct. 11, ••••• -·I. "'' .... Sell ,,_, __ Cellfonll• "*· PVllllllNd Orenge Coetl O•lly Piiot, 8 ENE FI c I AR y: AL. L $T AT E ._.., .,..,,.,_ .. ,_Of,,..._tlll9tM Ocl.12,1',2'-Nov 2,1'91 SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIA ·-----------tre11ll119 ef tllh ,,._!Utl.,., 11n e _., TION.•C811fomle~lloft. ,..... •ell• IPt lllllt a wr1"'911 Mttce Aecorelllcl .....,_.,. D. tm .. 1111tt. f/f well 1Men1 wf9I .... 11 ...... 1 Dll"K· Ho. ZJSI lfl llooll llDO, ..... UtO flf Of· ----------lw tty ..._,... t, ltl1. Confldellllel .all.IC Mftnf'( flclel ltKOf'41 Ill tM offka of IN "'11eftl Of Ille ~lartlOft era .. Ille ..-0 !WI"' Atcorclef" of Or .. c..w.ty; NICI dtacl ..---TitUSTll .. IALI Ill IM ,...._, Otflel9'1 ~ Of tlw of trust dnerlbes tM tollewlflt Pf• _,,.__.. • "'*klle~...,..,.,.~. Ns-l5074 ~,· T.L-...... ..... Tlwfllal1 ................ k.... NOTICE OF DEATH OF PARCELi: UftltHo.JJllllNCllJ Ml!WPO•T l"AC.,IC FUNOING, .-ctleft ....... tM r ..... .-~ of N--' llaadl, CAlufltY of~ .... INC.,•..,, ............. Trva•..,..... ,_,.._ B I R D I E TH E 0 D 0 RA Sleta ot c:et~ ".,_ Md o. tM ,......,. fllMr'I.., ... ef trwt OATEOs.,t 11 "" J O H N SO N a k a 8 """ • INt ~...._ CMctomllllwn WILL KU AT fl\lauc AUCTION T119~~()r · COul'll THEODORA .JOHNSON. PlallraconllldA"8lllflt,"1tlllbollll TO THI! HIGHEST 81001!11 flOll .. Sia A ... ' 12'10 P99ltS m '° ,,. whnl-. Of CASH <,.,..,..at ume _.Ml•'" ~~ .. ~f!M ANO OF PETITION TO 11c1ei Atcore11, °'or..,.. c0-:11ty: 1..tv1 _,or .. U..IWll Stat•> •II eoc _..... ~ ADM I N IS TE R EST ATE ca111om1e. f1tlM. tl1le _. ,,........ ea11wyed to '°'°1SMll.,.A-NO A·11051S PAllCEL2:Mwndlvldedt/30ttll1>· and -lw4d ~ It Ulldlr .. 1c1 Oeecl of "-"'8111 V811ey CA tr10I • • ,.,,..,es•,......,. Ill~ 111 ttw fw Tr111t Ill tlle 1Weperty ller•llleft•r ........ Y. ltUM8L.ll: •A•••• T 0 a '· I h e I r s • lllltr'Htlllend \OIM c.n .......... of w.c,...: M11•1,ueeoe•H .. &MAML1Y ·beneficiaries, c reditors L.ott1-2a1Trect.,..•-mee> T1tu1To11 : LI NNEA JANE o.~,._ and contingent creditors of filed 111 llOllll •.,....ts to• 1 ... 5MITHUIS,em.-nad-_,~,._..1_. Bl d' T .. ~...,. J h cho1slv•. ~ Mapl, recorctt 81!NefllCIAllY : PAUL A. LA CA_, r 1e '""""ora 0 nson, Of teklGountf,•WCll-lsdilflMd LESSl.ll• Ml!DtCAL CO'RP01tATtOH ~ ~ ... c:.st Delly '"'ltie. aka B. Theodora Johnson 111 t11a Art.klH!ttltfllid "OflflllftlMI" of Olll"IHCl!O 81MEFIT PENSION 199'.21.a.0ct.s._n.1t.l"1 •14iM1 and persons who may be 1"80.Cl•----~.CoNl-TllUST -. ott\erwlse Interested in the tlOlll alld ll.-lct•-rKOrdltd '" •«.,.... .._ 2. •••"""·No. -• IM'llN -. 12Jll5, ,.._,_., -..-econ1ee1 m '"-. 1-.n,,... ,,.,, or Offk1e1 ..-.-,..'""' will and/or estate: 1111too• 1m1,,...az1.11ot11et0fl1c1e1 llecorot 111.,. Clfflce"' IN ltecot"dff °"*" A petition has been filed Recor• . ..o ~ 111 bOOlt nm. :.:,.:~~ .... =~ ll'Wt •OTIUTOCOWT•ACTOU by Farmers & Merchants ,...E~~~~~:~ •II oil, •~•l'll•wtlll-t10L.Dt Pro1ectHo.l1S/A•2 Trust Company of Long 118,m1,,...e1s af'd.--11ye1roca,_._ ,., Trect No • ..,, citr of Newport S.e1H,,.....i1w111betKal....S•t Beach In the Superior 1oe1ciwec1epCttt1t001w1,w111 .... u~ .. ec11, c:-.ty of ~lfl99. stM°• °' uie oH1<eof 111a111 OpetatleNt ...= owet Court of Oranne County ,,.,., of Mlrlea -"'·es ,..rwci '" C.lltw~ a -....i Oii • ~ r• of ~ ()pwlltloM Ill, Fe rv-State " 1,,.tr-t:sf/I record c9NM "' ... m. ~ 1, 2. •· ~ _ ..... , .. ,, ,.. ~ a1W11., eo.1a requesting that Farmers PARCEL a: 1.;.._... " suc11 s"' .,...._......,,._.or MeM. c..Mt.-.. ....,, 1:• P.M..,. & Merchants Trust Com· •-tMfth-.-t1a11ert.,w1ttre1111 0r-..<*Mt'f.c.ilfWllia. 0ct.:i-""·•i:i:=.;-r•111• pany of Long Beach be ap-e11e Ank•• en11t1ec1 "E.-t•" et uot ~ "-· c.r-•1 ~-1~---H"A'~ pointed a s personal 111' O•clerauon ......,, 1119 s.cu.,. MM,c.IMlrflN " .. -... "......-• lltedll'9J 111 lllCll At'llcle ...t"14111 H ... ., • ..,....,_ .. _...,. ,._.. alf i.w, ~...,.. representative to ad-too-•: "RltlMI * Du11t1: u1111ti.. ...,... ... ._....,..,,.__..., _.._,,,.,._., .. ,....r1. minister the estate of _,ca..._T....,...cin","~Set· 1• ••-.. ~ lb ~...,. .. .,. ""u ~:....,.., -~.!,..,..;. ":..'!....." Birdie Theodora Johnson 11em111t end E11croec11me11t ... <corrKtneu). ..._ ' • ....,._ ,.._,., • .. 1110,..11. Eor .. • •lld Aecreet•-• TIW __.lcWy.,,..,., Mid o.c1.,, 1e1t, alld ""'"" or•••' !Wiit "f. aka B. Theodora Johnson, Aleflll .. "Eachalw llKtrkted c;em. Trwt. ~ ,_" • .,,_,..,. _. n•iefll. worll 111011 111cl•d•: . Laguna Hills, ca (under ,,_ ,.,..;. ~ .. -"lo\et.,. ... '" t11e ... ._...,. a«wed ~ It_ ... • ,....ea •111"'119 ,..,.,119 \'he I n dependent Ad re ..... _. . .......... -""" ..... ,...,... '. fll•fll•r---•• l11M1letl0fl. J . • l"AltcEL •. E~• ...... ...... ..,,.. • wr1"911 o.ci.-.. i. 1t•11••ca det•rloreted <•"' 1trt111. ministration of Estates ... .....,.._PettlcUWtv_.,_.111 .. o.t.wt.,.. °""*"'tor s.i.. _, ,.,,.., ............ etc. a. 11.-.... Act). The petition is set for "-...uc1e .,...,.. "€--...-l>t tn1n.11111c: .. r-11M11ofetect wiwaw.,... ,,..., ._ ,... .. , plkll hearing In Dept No 3 a t .,,. o.ci.-1t1a11 • ~ CM111- .. cw ... ..,.,.,..•-'' r.!':·,.,! ~!st:~ 1::" ,!. ':!:.! 700 Civic Center Drive 110'" •lld 11ntrict1•• i«O!Wd 111 ~ .. Mtitty Mid............. · llool! IUll5, 1N9t 1•. and rwec»rded Ml!..,...,... ... ..,,,.,,... .,,.,., 1.• ... "· 1. R•l•o •· West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 111 *" 1m1, peee m . 11o111 of Offlc1e1 .. ldMtkll.r.._._.,._. ... tlell ••••"' ~ lftlulatlon, " on October 28, 1981 at 9 :301 Recor• . .,., recorded 111 -1un, be roe.,... J-tt. ltll, n ltwtr. Na ~ • l'alfvtew s.... Hellllwl, AM .,... l7'0, Oftklel RKWdl. llftcler tlw JJ9f1 111 .._ 1'1tl,,... 271, of 111 ec cer•e11u wltll 11ta111 •11• . Stc1IOf't ........... 111 IUCll At1k le ...,. Offldef ......._ ..-c~----. IF YOU OBJECT to the tl1lad" 1111._.. ""le'lb.,. o..tln· lald .... wttt • ...... ...,.wt .. ~~"::.;":.;.:..-:" .~s:.; granting of the petition, u111111" tnJ c:.t.. T•1aot111G11", .. s..p: ~ • ~ • ...,.. • • ..,.._.. 111 _.._ """ s.ctlM you should either appear llOf'1. s..11811'1W1t _. E11<1MC...,..,. .. , pllad, ......... tltle, ,.._._ fW "COfllfllllllll'll "-Cllltlft £__." M<lllMr-. "' ,., .. ,.,...... ""· et. '-· ,,... 2. c.i...,.,... M-at the hearing and state e11d "Orel,,.. "Owr c..t\MU111ty """''"' -., .. ,..<.,. .. =~:.W ,.::-.-:=--: : your objection or file writ.I Fatll1t1n". • • · · · • ::::=:-~:-";-'.., s-11 ...._, Offka, 1m . '""ten objections with the. c~o eo-trt .• ._ .......,._., ..-r .. ..,_., ....,o.11.h ..,..._ IK••••*·CA""'· Mt ... court before the hearing. "llf•.,..--·~•· •-,,_.... alld .. ,.._. .. t tlal'fM ctic-•rs111 ..,,aM• Your appearance may be lleMllWl1&.,..a1111W •-...Y :.:::.-::',.,!''""""'-:.C':.=.:-~11.::.=.~ In person or by your at· ~~·'°1ta°'*'11i.,...,cw. s.N .... wtn•1ww .. .,. ... 4ii1Ny .,.,,.)oct~--••s.a. torney. T11e llefloflclaty--. w10 o.c1 .. OCtw9ar .. tW1at1:• ,._"'·et 81d,.........-'ll9Mltftlttedtof" I F Y 0 U ARE A Trv11,11y.-tll(abnec:ll•doteu1t ~ •-..v-. • tlle Cl tlle tflll,. wont delcrlllad t!Wr'el11. CR E O I TOR t 111 tlla MtleetlOlla tee•rad ~ ~ ........ • e. ~ o .. latloN '-" ,,_ -.-clftc. or a con · llet'9tolWe _..... _, .... _... Mi 11,,. ..... '" t11a City., 0 , ..... t1a111w1n1111•COl'4ldol .. -•1t1• lngent creditor of the de-.. Wl9W..,...e.-tt11111 ~ Cllf......, '"" ter ratect1-°' '*· TM ceased, you must file your or o.f4lllt • Ollfliltd ,... s.a. ... ., .. .__. ....... ..,,.... 0.-,...,.,_.,_ .. _. .... _, I I Ith th t ~~orllf'MCll•t19loctlal "'..,. .-c. .. ..,,. ..._.,.., ,,....,...,....111 ...... ,.,_,...,or ca m w e cour or to <04lte ... __..,... ... Mild ,.11 ,.1" -••nee •• , ... ·-a11--. present It to the personal INW«tY ..... ..,, _.. .....,....,.._ 11eet1a11 Hc11t•d ,., t11e •• .,, m=.•-:.:.::=",W:'''t representative appointed .. ~ ... ._ ... ,..,....,.. ..,....,. .. .,..,...,. .. o::: *"..,. 11 modi"'~ by the court within four teldMttatfll"-"olld•h•1"1>• ~;1.;~,_.,, •M ..... tte .. 1 ,~..:,. .... ,"*"<1._ ... · months from the date of :;:.~:::."":::·.:: 1 ... "":·.':i To ....,,.... "" ......,. -... wn' • first Issuance of letters as DH1c1e111--. _, cer1 ow> • ...._ '"' 14 :•w ...-.n fMf •-• prov lded in Section 700 of aai. .... '"'' • !Nlfl, -...,_. o.:tr •a.tt11 ~~..:.~-'•..!'==-th e Probate Code of C9ftMftt•_,.•., . ..-wlM-.......,,_lfk _ ............. _ .. • ....... ~tin., ..... ......._ ,11e. .... .... Ofnn., .. °"'°' Callfornfllt. The time for llK'°"*--. .. •Y .. ~ ..... ,.,...... O..r•u-•• tiw ...... _..,.. ... fifing claims will not ex Pf'lttct,.i IMfll" .. ..-cu_..,... ..,T.o.~ca., ~~,~~.au-:_ plre prior to four month~ -. .. ldom•T,,.._.,.,,..... ........ .. .... , .. ..,. __ _..._m lttMMl .............. ~lfUlf, ayi.ewi....,_.. '" .. ..,..or'""~" from the date of the hear· ... , .. ._., .... o.11.,T,,., ..._,.lacreWy ,<_,~,._,...._,..,.., Ing noticed above. '"'· <"-,.....,.. • .....,.. "•• O..CltY.._.,..., COl'ltfect .._........,. .. ,... .. ,_ 1 YOU MAY EXAMINE TNtt".., If.,. tf\19119 cr.nM W Orw..-c.llfllt'llla.... ··-flf Stua ... d 0.. "''frwt. laN ....... , -CNI ...._ TM _..... ~ wtN 11a the flle kept by the court. ,.., .. ~. ,., .. , .. , 1, ""• ........... e>-.. c.M.t o.i1r'"' ••''" • •-"'• • ~r ••r• If you ere Interested In the t:• ... M. •11t6 a..-•-- 0c1. t, n.. "·"" •::-111,:..~ ~ ..... estate, you may file a re .,_ .... a• CllMa' ._.......,. :_1:;.. ........ c.1.._.. quest with tr.. court to re :, .. ~·-· 111 .. Chr ot ,, ... ...-~ .. ....._ celve special notice oft . =:e,.,,..,ift: ... ,.,., ,,., '" -~---,......... Inventory of estate nse .. .,...._,. ..._.., • ~ '""" .. L-.r es.. and of the petitions """" .. .._ ..._ ... ._..._ D•• •••• ,_. ...,... • wwe , ac ~ .. __....,.....,..., ..,., .. .,._....., .... .,....,. counts end report .,...,......_.~ • ......, ·llfk*I 111 • CllllMY "' _... • described In Section 1 _..,.,.. .. ......_ ... :::: .. ~~-..:-•..::-w' t of the Callfornla Probat .,.!; ~·· • • .,.. Olr..c.t9r .. '""'"'•' •••-'lefl Code. o.t•:oc..~ ~ ........ ,..._ .... WUUamG.Haytw ~auv1c11. • Offtc:e., • Ottaf" ,.._ Att-::l at Law •NC. .................... • ... nw.. 9f Ot•ll9'4'11ntal letwlc.a Ml En "°"""'st,..., 9YT.O.MllVICICO~ ......,.--., ~.o . ._ 1• ... . ... ....._..., • ...,. LOftl~CA,_, ._..,,........_. ""·°"::W'::~ Ttl: (J11) ...,_ =-• ':=. • _........ Publllhed Or•~ COH o·i~-.. =~••aaui ~l,'Y Plktt Oct. , 6, 12 ....J:'ow.cweOll"..._ ....... or....Clalf~ ...... It.-OcMawtl,,tt ... "'1 Oct. .. tt.""' _,., -........ • i °'"""' Cout DAIL v PILOT/Mond•i · Octobt;s,.1 Cf 1 ... The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -S678 ,-....... •...................... •........••••........•• .................••.... •••...........••..•.... .................•..... ......••••......•...•.. ················~······ Ga•r• 1002 ltol •••rtl 1002 •••rtl IOOJ ea•rtl· . IHI la•rtl 1002 c..t.W... 1024 ••·•······••··•········ ............................................................................................ ····••••··•·•····•····· ...................... . EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY , ......... tWlw. ..AU real Htate ad· ve r tlud In t h l• newapaper b subject lo the Federal Fair Hou.a· in& Act ol 1988 which makes it illegal to ad· vertise "any preference, llmltallon, or dis· cr iminatlon based on race, color, religion, \\ i : I I '1 \, TAYLOR CO. IU-.1\1.'I ( 11:.... ·.,Ill' l~t Iii SPECT 4CUUR 0 VIRS4ILLIS .. COil Lge cor. ~t~ on Big C.{lyon golJ course. Dramatic foyer . 2·sty Liv. Rm. Formal Din. Rm., 4 Bdrms. 4th Ba. Pool. spa & gazebo. $950,000. WESLEY M. TA noa co .. IEALTOIS 211 1s .. ,,.....-.aoed MEW PORT CEN111, M.I. 644-49 I 0 sex, or national origin, or an l.nttntion lo make --------------any 1ucb preference, limitation, or dis criml.nalion." 'Ibis newspaper will not knowinfly accept any ad vert sine for real estate which is in viola· tioo of the law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 C,t r o/ r!ewparf Ji REALTORS '7S.HI I SUPER "E" PL.AH IN THE ILUFfS: 111111 ,.., dHind MOdal he. lo•tfy CJ"••tt Md__... .. •Jew. 0...-wt• i..tp wftti fl.aRc:illg. ORiy U39,SOO. COLE Of NEWPORT REALTORS 2 515 E. Coast Hwy .. CGrClltG dtt M• 675-551 I ....................... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ EASTSIDE CHARMER • SISICDOWH . I CONDOUVING P~tty as a picture with I DESPBATE! Forget the yard work park like grounds! 3 4 Bdnn 2 ba pool home. with this 2 Bdrm rondo! Bdrm, l~ ba, hardwood Assume hi·balance loan. Large assumable loan floors, dbl gar., on a OWCstraightnote and owner will also as· large R-2 lot! Room to SUCC~ REALTY sist. Whal more do you b u I l d 2nd u n It . 549-7991 want? $75,000 full pric-e. Sl.54,900-refrig. washer Ca~ 979·53'10. lrdryerincluded! CaUto HAUC>alll>GI A. seeJ 846-7ln An exquisite offering: LL STA TE Elegant & spacious 3 .._ ___ _ THE REAL ESTATERS bdrm + family room, l REALTORS lev. home w/panoramic vista or barbo'r, llG CANYON roa.sUine, ocean & night CONDO STEALS! lights. Preshae. com· 2 • 3 Bdrms avail. fort, luxury " security. $18 2 . O 00· S 2 35. O o O Reduced, now S7J9,000. W/tenns! Must liquidate (Owner r1nancing). Agt, now. Patrick Tenore, 1"!!640!!!!·!!!!5560!!!!!!!!· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Agt 759·1221 I"' IJTU WGI LOT This high income legal triplex is a rarity in Old CdM. Each unit has a fireplace and neutral decor. Owner will assist with financing. $337,500. Fee. U~IOOf ti()Mf' REALTORS,675-6000 2443 £,ut Cout Hltflw1y. Corona dcl Mar WE HAVE SO OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN 2.5AC.ESTATE New huge hill149 flit.ale. 360 deg. vu to oc.-ean. Pool. elec. gale, horses • much more! Call Patrick Tenore, Aat 75&-1221 H.tto.-Vil'w .._ I 54Yo Dowa P"'911lt!! Assume 10.9" l at • owe 2nd T.D. CARMEL Model with pool and spa on solar system. $219,900. 759·1501 or 152·7373. UMDA ISLI Exciting opportunity! Wide lagoon view from spectacular architectural designed 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom, dark room & den. Slip for 2 large boats. $1 ,350,000. UDO ISi.i' HOMIS · Featured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath homeknewJr rederorated. Priced to sell quic ly at $4'75,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. ra.INSULA POINT llACHFIONT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room. $1,385,000. WEST OCEAMFIONT Triplex units, xlnt financing $600,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ! l ~ y , I L'' . • • k t"l l') () lt1 1 w...v ...... c. Cbarml.n1 4 Bdrm 2-tty. S Ba, 3 Car 1ara1e. Superbly deciorlted with the 11101t expensive draperies, walkover· ln11 and carpetlnf,. Priced to aeU qukk y and &l hq 2 wwnable louu. Full price •••. '15l"'1tl l BR condo below marlct. $20,000 dwn, U·711% 30 yr loan UIWD. ~1183 FlllOOM HOUSI 3 Br. l Ba. larce yard '85.000 .......... 641·0763 By Owner. Two 2bdrm bol.lla oo l lot. SUD, 000. Auumable l" lat T.D. owe carry 2nd. Db • Pomona. CaU wkdaya only : 640-74'4. Tnba1e, bi·level, fpc. 3 BR. 3 ba priv yd, micro. upgrade owe 1~ do. IU!l,000. 851-119110 Tnbme, bi·level, fpc, 3 BR, 3 ba priv yd, micro, upgrade owe l~ dn. Sl.S9,000. 851-9990 30 YIS FIXED II bard to rlOd. Check OD this 4 BR. 1"4 ba, Seller ii cooperative. CaU now 752-6499 ~ Walker & lee Reel Estate VACAN1' FIXER 2M1~,tr'bdnn~ OCEAN VIEW home. Root petio with I LUFFS 3 Bdrm 2.,., Ba , fireplace. Ital ian Plan IV Rea It y • S9 I SC I Reduced over $40,000! view ! INCLUDES Sellers are very -------------• LAND !~.000! motivated!5Bdnnsplus ONTHESAMD I OMTHIWATB buae family room. As· Cute bachelor condo on 1 4 bdrm. 2~ bath, 2 story sume 9143 1st. 3 private tbe beach ror only home. Master bdrm beaches. Only S318,000! Sl20,000. Per fect ror 1uite with frpk + much Call 673~ vacation home or youn11 mor e ! INCL U O E S THE REAL ESTATERS Httutive. For more in-LAND! $335,000! formation call us DOW. ..... a., rrop. ceramic t~Je in Ii ving a.ooo down, take over ex· rm, dining room , islin g finan cina. kitchen and e.nlry. Sl65,000. 3 BR £/Side, Fabulous mowtlam. and R-2 lot. s.&-ll58 park views. Exceptional ~--=~-==--- financinc!! Reduced to •CiOY1'LOM4S• 1234,500 Pouible 5% down. ----- JACOBS REALTY ~~~~F:~~e, 30 yr 675-6670 Wortd ll 556-7777 ...... *675-7060* Price sa.Mcl llJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I oo this Univ. Park Ter· i-------•I race 3 Br. Desperate 2 HOMES · I LOT 3 Bdrm, 2ba, modem kitchen, dbl 1ar. ALS0'2 BR 1 bath w/frplc, dbl car gar with office. An· nual scheduled croas in· come $14,400 per yr. sw.ooo owe. 751-46811 llGCAMYON E1Cqui1itely UPCraded Monaco oo IJOll course. 3 Bdrm, form&! idlnin&. family room, auumable loana. Submit aU offers. A.eking $575.000. $100,000 se.Uer will carry wi1b low interest. Call for details. No°" only $180,000 RCTaylorCo ' .l1) ',,,, )() 30YrA.•tM dwn. . ~------2 bdrm , 2~ \a . fireplace. community pool & spa. 2car1ara11e. Walled yard. 2 yr old. • SUS.too, S50,000 dn. Bal 30 yr at 13143 . Paul Hickey Agent832-3910 · Mini 11ated estate-Owner! RE~lTOR S Reduced thousands below appraisal! AS· $650,000at 13% SU M E LOW M 0 . for 30 yeU'I to qualified PMTS ~ No qualifying! buyer!! This splendid Newly decorated S or 6 cu.stom Coonlr)' French br. includ. muslve den estate with 4 bedrooms, plus in door jacuzzi! 3~ bat.ha. family room, STEAL S259.SOO! Hurry, library, 4 fireplaces and call now! Ed or Linda. more Is orrered at 957·0744 1145,000. -==~=----- D.M. Mcr11t• Ur TMY•S.Ows VA tenns and a Oexible 76o.ol35 seller make this im· maculate 3 Bdrm, rami· lY rm home In ooe al Costa Mesa's best nelcbborboods. A great buy. Full price S12SK. 751·31lll C:::. '11 I I I I -t"" ~ >q( ,; ,, ,, : ll ., Trade your ~ stuff ror new &oodles with a Claul{ied ad. 142-5678 THE ~EAL ESTATE RS i:~=· S(C~~-a~~s· = WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. lttAl tsT A TE s.. lltftl<lh "°""'¥ ~,, •• ~ 20 W COMI H\111¥ JI~ Ma1w Aw """"°'1 hh a.,. w.id ........ .,,.. .. ----.... ..,OAT L "*Ml .. I T I P£11 I J' t· . I I I' I . .... ( -,.-A -,-"-,--.1 l ._. ,_ 1 IOt ,,,, wit. 11111119 [ I I' I I t Ollt °"' lnOanlO Ill. " ........ - - -I MlaM.ldon'l•lll'/MnM I L A FA 0 L l lllbotflol 111 Vo1n910--. ~ I I' I' I I -·~~-~ o.....,ji..-1-"" ...... _._-' .... --~ -':i?-.... • "1Hl NUMW•O ltfltn IN r r llff 8 19UM!! J rrrr 1 ...... ..... ·-...... .,. ·-. ..... •1111 ...... ·-.. _,,. .... ... .. ... en. :=. •• ::-;:o:J ;::-. :" ·= IL •= · HERITAGE Rl /\LT1 IR'-. ----- I , NEWPORT CREST RIEYEI YU t6rwt4 I IJ# -~ • ,..,.h Oc..Va. ,.,., ... 4;1'194+ .. , 411.r•. OwHr wlll Nip fl111H • UJt,soo. WESTCLIFF mcsATIM ... 9"d to ... -"" -·· ... ,..._ ........ , ............ .......................... ,.... _. "c•-4 ...... ,_. Mit 11 ur•t -• CMf'• ,,,..., kite.... wltll • WI •••• ,.. .............. ~ tJH~tOO , . ~ llCORATOR'S ll1fFS "Ii" Pl.AN L..,.. _. la•lttilg Wery Vt c ... ,.tty, • .......,, 9'lat po4 .... wlttl 4 btcl. + fo,..al dla.ra SJH,000. 673-6900. INVITING APPOL-tllff II. DriYt by IO I Clff DriYe _. ,_'I w.t to CJO .... , Gnat ....,... loc ..... .ct ....... ....... Mnty ~ortllM 2-story 3 a..d. ...,. -.,. .,_ l Vt ..... lad floor. root .... ,.,.,. J ..... ... uso.ooo. UDO ISLE BOCH llJUSE StrMt to 1troda locat6am! I Woda t• ....._ e .. llHM ....._ 2 btd. I M. · ..... wf .. ,.,.. I bed. k .... ........ s. Pric.d ricJlrl at $351,000. BAI.BOA ISlJtl-.IEDll:m! L.owttt pric.d 2 ltd CGttogt. co.• .... to ... .Mt • ..,. to .., .... v .... -.OppiMJ. u 19,000. 673-6900. LUXURY CllllJ'S NEW! U..,. rooftop ••I I lie i Wff wftll l4fY & Oc.• YU'a. Rlllst _...._, & fW.a. ..... $369,000 -$439,000. Ul-1400. LARGE HOME & ltCOME! 0.. Grmd CCIMll waits ~wt °" .... Uttllr Isa.ct. Spoc• J.ttory 4 llt4 ..... wt .. t.aily ,.. & CJOW ... kite .... pclHo. Tie for 2 boah. 1KWtt I llt4 ,.......,. $675,000 cllld OWMf' wfl .. tt..ce. 673-6900. TOP ROOR-VIUA BALBOA Woodlr •Jew frOlft tWs I btd. + .._ °""'wt• htlp fMa. $197,000. BA YFRONT-8ALBOA IS. SUP le..tfMtr •eONW 2-ttory 4 bet&. "°"" wftti 1tollttd ... bdt°"' & •ck. °"""'wt• HC"-Jt for olfMr propartf. SI ,200.000. fH. BA YFRONT-PEJINSULA-VU "-9e & spociotls 5 bed. 6 ba. ...,,.., ... patio .......... $900,000 .... s I ,600,000. wftti boat..,. llAMATIC LDl)A ISLE ..... c..to. 5 bed. .... wfffl 2 •fwy opttl fffiltg .. pi aAlglD• .... Sip for Z boots. OWMr wfll exell .... $2,600,000 ........... UNOBSTRUCTm VU-PRIVACY eo.t,...r •ilfry Oii ail. w wftti 2 bed. & Z bo. IOOlll to ..... Isl • ..... S.,.. Mar Pelle• ... 0...-wll .... ti..c.. S6 I 5,000. 673-6900. OCEANFRONT VIEW-aJM Sllllllkd c'""--.t ba.alM tnet wttti 75 ft. Oii 0c .. 11•4. Weotl ............ ..., ..... "' ... J I.cl.. ......... 2 ........ 0...... wfl ...., tu..c.. s 1.350,000. 0 CE A N'F R 0 NT LI YA BL E TEAROOWN .. lettprice&terw• .. ~2M I blttl '"*•· l r!o fla.tc19tt Helt. $4H,SOO. FORMER MODB.--OCEPTIONM. s •• ., ... 2 ..... c-.. ..... l Ir ... J ............. e ................. . .._$174,tOO. .• ~· "'' OCEANFRONT-ftJINSIU PT. - Trtpln oa ••tnilt let. 6000 14' ft. 0...-•tf•llltd _, ..e1 u11lll11 ., n111n•I• offtt' -er-.. --''" ..,.., 9'c. Pri4M of OiftWS tip ·~ to Sl.tS0,000. NEWPORT YU lllrl! TUMS . P.1 mlc VU ef ..,, 0... & ltlih; ,.,.,.,. ... , .......... ....... ..... $7'1,000. 0--....... .. ...... , WATERFRONT HOMO.INC llfALOJAT[ .. Q Or ng Coa t DAILV PILOT/Monday October 12 198t "-'nllol-Wt ~lt .. t.t.e. u ...... 1 ~ ..._..U.fw_.., MwftUwfwm tr4 jllf 1 _,,,_ h•ttt -:--"':'-------;--;;.;.;;.;,ia.;;..;.:;.;:::.:..:;.;.;;~:..:..:.::;::.:.:.::~~:!.~~~~~·..!!!!. ••••••••••••••••••••••• liliilett . • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ,_.w. Ho.ttf'M'W. "-"'-Wt .._..llof'w. ..,_,......_. '°'' 111cw,....., 20001 •• ni1 u02 ..... ,. ..... n ..... .,.,. .... ~u• tt.w,.t...a J7'9 ······•·····•······ ........................ •··•·•······•·····•···· ................................................................................................................................................................ . ,._ .... .._.. t04 .,..... 1044 Mtw,...tltedl IMtMtw,.t.... 1069 D ..... P • MAii .u•Offllt RENTALS HOMEFORRENT Oceanlr<>nt. Nnt 28R. ••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••r•••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 bd a 1'11~1 ,..... YEARLY-WEEKLY ~ 8d•m ... 00 F'-c:& .. LUXUIYIAYNONT s.sn Mo Wint1r Adult. uC.... DEstn. BLE Dt rm 2 ... 000 w l NT 8 R z 3 4 .. • •• 'OU ... 3 Br 2 Ba with bo1tt.Up Nl IM'fl. ZIJ.'/15-JO ly .. S.. w WUT OCWRONT CANAL PIOMT AJTD SlO,OIX> dn Owntt 3 lncorne l'topertiH 8 0 RM S NEW PO RT yard t 1arap Kida ' Avail Oct lit Many OC!AHFRONT z • 4 Br a If. C... U11bKn In V1UaJt f 3 Trlplta Xlnl term. 6 Me:i:: 5Mftt will urry at 16hr< Eaallldt Costa Mt'u BEACH.: BALBOA ~ wefronv 5'$-2000 1m11utaH '3500 Mo Av all W~r Weekly St •.. bdrm, 1~ ba flM1 unit pri.d'lt locaUon SG00,000 2patloa '1\joylheout &4$-~ • Owner wll l carr)' JR PropeJty Manaaera Y.tn~nofff Brolterr7~12 Month! .m?m ._, to0 Good IOCalaoo nur adult Attnt 6756161. _ doort + move in rond . Dtcoraton & Pnred to .ell' .,.,6 ... 1 .. 3 I ,_& 3•4,. ILU-~ S 675-1771 andtamllt·-....i·.tenni&, lhla 21ty4 8R.2 fplc '1, Ra--• .. 1·-v• v' "'-6 "' rr ... .-.." PACIFIC UNSF.T MACH COTT AGE Approxlmattly I mile to bta<b. Oki flbh1011~d ~ Bdrm coHICge, p1ckel fence or build new with O<'Hn view from ~· up Only $100,000' 1'1kt! uvrr loa111. call64S 0303 COLDWC!U. BANl(eRO -.. ~-lOllS ~ t t l ....,. h l '"'""'~ ""0 j •..a..--1-1.-.J 3•04 •0000•••••••••••••00••• On 811A" n~v 2 Br 2'-VJL..., parks S orl walk to • tpa o poo , udC ATTIMTIONI - -a ..... -1 · ""' "'" •horping and public THllUJFf teMls Owntr wlll takr Do NEim ••••••••••••ot••••••••• llMTALS Ba Dtn. Condo. Z car lS attps to 1and l.g 2 1rinapurt1tllon Owner "LAH ..... lat or tnd TO for equity ~:;r.~:: :~e Mual IHse ~ Br l Ba Sbr, Zba S873 1ara.e. ftl>k IJ.3001Mo bdrm w carrirt. bal. wit I h ~Ip r 1 nan r l' 3 bdrm, din rm , ~v tz45,000 modehnl lovrly Back With front yard. ytarJy 3br, 21<tba St2$ )48 07~ __ ldry lac utl Int' S6S5 ~l.1.1,!>00 rbm . ram nn . PtP, · l't Rat'hardSov.'trs, Rltr Bay Arta hon~ irnd out 1 Cl.JH ~r~~ 00 IM!.~J..--3br, 2ba rT2SLag. Hills UIC HOMI 8.5~7 o. xtra l11r1r pOl'Cflaln Owen Henry f 8 ~Raisor Hit)' 833-8600 H"ll-YIEW l br. lovely rum, pool, tub w1ceram1~·tilt walls 114·5~4~990-2478 o dmf?~!>' ~bdu,y mde out 711 &110763 WIMTallHTA.L The Lakes 2 s t ory n. :' Ba-F ·1 apa, dym, a« au.rd at noor • covrffii patio Tr--an IOU>h.. rm ream 2925 ("olll'21! i\1 ~ 8 L tJ 4 ""'. ~l't , 1m1 y rm, ! llrt'll Pn~ $230 000 5, ade Luxury Newport home $295,000 Owner rc"l.i '1~.a l'A l r it e !sit' $$00 t w n bu. on water, Din rm, 2300 IQ ft Sl500 $750. wn/afl.~I • down assume'4i>ooOt.1; home on h ac~ for In ~~·~or88lS695 2Br1ba S600 tbdrm , ate. fridge Mo. Drive by first 1806 Junior I 8r Vern1He. trust det-d at 7"1~ Xlnt ~~~~;~ts ':cl~~~ rn~~~~ S400~ ~s~~ts ':~. &n:o~~= ~11..Abbe.1_CJAll1_52-&199 Recl(a c. I«' $495/Mo land ltai.e SllM.OO l)t!r 8 1t' • 0 · ' QUI.IL 20 UNl1'S, EtSide CM w_.__.___...u____ 11 1 .. .,, 7.,,.,,ru.· 4br , •ba home in 644 ·5369, so-0425 . yt•11r Can't chunae until 83~~.u~: (.;o· P A1ecn l A Prid~· or ownership ....nttCNW ~ yr easse ~ --· 811yshore• Avail 1st 751'9110·~· Yl'llr 2003 w-: mt only -p• .1.ce Prine Sl.249.000/sub 631-1400 673-HOO D 0 r I s c I a r k • Wttlt In Jan Sl800 mu I Ocean front 3 Br 2 811 2nd tru ~I deed due 50/o DOWM I.A mil ' A•k for Ke vin, -<~l3l373 ll20after6 m yr lease !ton Jackson Very 01re Completely 'fS?3 CAMP\1$l>l·IRVl"E.. l91!6-87 Call owner for S2.000 per mo. lmmed PttOHlTIES • .~·~ 11gt_ _ lc6oa , .... 3207 Rancho SllJI Joaqum con ~.J8JOO fu ~n. Wanter ren1 11I appt, d1t1ly after 11 llm poss~ion. Lovely S BR • F<ir. ule/exchallie 'l u~ •••••••••ot•tt••••••••• Ineg~i~~~rt~f. '!~~i;:~ WESTC"JFF .3 bedroom, Pro P t rt t lf o II s.:,. ' -liUl S4B-!i8IJO 2 sty• lbctc Bay art a. MEWPOIT H6TS i Is on 2 I ot s mid 2 br, utils pd, S6'751mo. 1 Cl den overlooking golf 1 story with pool. family 642-~. ~1010 LacJuna ltach I 041 Owner631·1215_ 2 hOuHs vn a lot Penmsuta 6 1 br, 1 111 2 E Balboa Blvd course No pets Submit roo m. 2 ru·eplJace:i. dm VIEW •••••00•••••••••••••00• SI0,000 REOUCTION' SJ.29.000 SLG,OOOdolWll br, gross $37.000 As -__ 6'13.S3SO on children 192:5imo + mg room. J J)llll~. etc Stunning 2 BR 2 Ba. sun Charn11ng3bdrm,2 halh Harbor V1e'ft home CAJlREI QuailPlacet>roperties sumable rlnanr1ng New,customluxury3br ~ec Eves 8519331. etc.$l500~o646-4477 deck, firepla l'e. 2 car + ~ue~l apl No end M onaco Model LIVluG-.UDO 752°1920 $565,0000wner home. 1 block from duv5_.9S5-000'Z_ garage, security lnclds F.merald Terrace Walk Professionally decorat " "" '2l3' 790-S942 Eves Ferry, 4 f"'•lcs, ,·ac. 2~1 .._ II u k. bed to beach Assume toun ed shows lake model. in lhis 3 bdrm co~y ----· T~d LL --N ·-ba, for M~ to Mo or yr S69S 3 BR Orangetree llG CANYON 5 1 verB .. nen. tinhgb h. Owr1"r ~111 '"-Ip f1nan'"' H h charmer on extra wide liaycrest 3 BR + w I m. w ra e uxury ewport Pallo Hme. F'resh decor Lux u r 1 o us Three e c rang too rus No Qu LIFY NG " ft '"' '"' 1g assumable 30 yr pool&spa $65000u der h 1 r I ly. 12S01mo Can furn Al 64632!'15 A I •""c (""' p .... Allan Rltr lo L2 c •-ft , __ .. bo lot with ln...,e patio F.x • n ome on "acre or n 730 968 """" oar opnr, adlt comm bedrooms Two baths l --·--W f. ,, __ .. rl j fl ;u.;JJ, ,.,.., ''° « ' • ilfl. J oual\ UU\:IL )( ~I> mLt Val ..... ,. 000 fa" u •n 't Ii'~ t ·0682 ~ IO arm .. ...,.,...1e u 4 r 494-75711 1860 Port Wheeler tra park1n1 space or " _..., '' cso2m80e 0 01u or ~w l C-= · -h-all amerut1es. No pets. R1chlyderora~ Muted VlLLA BALBOA 2 bdrm super poo . As king s235000 0 A smallboatstorage 613-776l agt • 00 Ac t now • apfatr.ohoc: 3211 552·4146·8J3.n>7 tones.3000square!eet well furm$hed Condo. 78 900 Bkr848-0709 OCEA N FRONT New • wner Ill S.J•·-Broker Co-Op. Agent oo•oo•••••••••••••••••• Overlooks loth tee of pool. jac, securit . ---Modul11r Tyl"' llomes. 955 2245or7S0.9596 ·-1078 6314516 E Bl ff ti I WOOOBRIDG f'.:-New y I _ .. I ... h Capl1tn..o . . xee. u IOV upex 3B r. 2•,2Ba detached golf couneSJSOOmonth 879·2114 eas.,., a1ru, 3 pvt be :.. • O OO 0"•a 3 B 2• b -24 hr ~ecunty f1Shing • I • 0 ••••••••••oo••••••••oo• f 'j n ,vu. r, Ii ~ a, home. or pool & lagoon Yearly lease •7 Rue OCEANFRONT !Br. SSOO $41.500 MOBILE HOME Lovely 2 Bdrm. 2 bath. 2 m il es rrom OCl!an Owner will help hnanre Agenl ~9161 pier Crom $34,500 10, REDUCTION! Bright. Spacious 2bdrm. • IEST IUY * rp c, am rm. v rm on ~reenbelt $87S mo Grand Valee Open Sun mo winter Jones Real down 499.:1116 llarbor View home 2ba Condorrumum l yr I <>nmat. C 1 Sl200 mo 493 86511. 9988348 day l·S To see call ty67!!:§210 M ou a t.• o ~t o d t• l -~--old. A~sume S70.000 98 U~l1'S. ffn, ed0·r~R 833·0210 . --631-7300. ReaJt.or --WA. TB WATER Profes)1onally det•oral Once In a 12'•"'c only Sll0.000 Day BELOW ~PP~~islll 'ror Cor0tta dtfMcr --3222 LCIC)M'tCI ltoth 3248 _ ~rtmeftts EVERYWH~E ed shows like modt'I Llfetfftw ~·ty time (213) 329 7756 Arter quick sale Completely ..................... ·~· OCE·A~i°FR·o~i'T'~i~t,~j; Sea view 4 Br 3Ba. family u .. fwNthtd Spt•t•l:Hular Views. High assumable 30 yr h 1 6 (714)496-5028 remodeledm 198! HIO'·: 2 Br. frplc, gar. special llomes SIOOO mo Dbl rm. dining rm ocean & ...................... . sprawling 4 bdrm 3 loan 12 Sloan Lock box to pure ase a rme d d d d e c o r night light views Pool & G---• 3102 .. 1860 Port Wheel" r Model in prest1g1uus """-a• ll-..1 ie...L..t... rente an manage $780. call 97~ 05711 or w1~e 49!1 :IH6 S '~"' ....... nm .,ath!t 2 rrplci.. WF.T ~ llarbor Vie"· Homes for """""'' -IOllnnT Ultimate tax wnte-off & tennlS 10.... pr mo un ••••••••• .. ••••••••••• '" '--fl R d $235,000 Owner Aut ft 760 6276 CO.,... r Sl700f -I 0441 A bt'ame ce1h11g . ., only SIS,OOO dn. Seller •••••••••000000•••••••• Investment Less than ..,.,. um, um $21.5! lbr with gleaming .......... ~............ ram rm . lge kitchen. !1_55·~5 or7S0.9596 will carry AlTO or land Mobile Honws 20"? dn. owe all financ 3 bdr, 2 ba, F I'. 2 r ar Spec 1 a cu la r Ocean hardwood floors' 11S402 * LEVERAGE' huge m a~ter i.uite. Ex contr a d a l below Fors• 1100 ing Can close fast gar Walk tu beach View 2 Br 2 ba CO-OP an Waterfronl lease 4 Br~ $280, Sunny studio in * . pan~I\ e patio & pool BAYfRONT market interest rates ••••••••••••••••""''' Bkrs Pnnc welcome SL800 mo Oceana lteal South Laguna f ull> Ba. family rm. Lop con best C.M. area' •639S This beautifully appoint "rPa w rock n mm1•d T o t a 11 y upgraded OC EA N FR 0 NT New Rick Byers. Bkr l.Y (213J_394 376" furnished Avail y rl) d1t1on. d<X'k for 40' boat $330! H B lbr w uuls pd ed 4 Bdrm Nurthwooc1 s P J & wa ter f n 11 OWNER BUILDER landscaping and in Modular Type Homei., 7141760-7292 2 br, l ba. frplc, new crpt win1erorshorttl'rm. SISOO Remax of Npt. Walk djst. to bch 115364 home features its own $35M9.ll~S~ION REAt,·rv terior. Call Agent leased land. _3 pvt bc_hs, No pets . ad u It ~ Waterfront llomes Inc Bob or Dovie Koop, Agt Plus hundreds of others pool, spa, and separate ~ Must sell beautiful 4 759.0704 7so.8237 24 hr secunty, fishuig $6SOlmo me elt'c & 631·1400 759·1221 __ Rentimes631·4SSS Fee playyard Owner sa)'S 494-0?Jl. Bdrm 4 bisth home with --=.:. __ -pier from $34,900. 10'~ Loh for S. 2200 wal~r 673 1180Jft s I ' Br house Balcony BLUF FS. 3bdrm. Jba, ._.__a p.....i..... ... -:_ 380 try small down 1'h1>; ...... ,.... .. u 1c boat dock Asking price NEWPORT'S down 499-31116 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AffordabluOcean\'us ocean view, frplc, cov d fam rm. formal dm rm. --7 seller 1.s genuin ely r"'"""""'"' Sl l35 000 Try S2SO 000 UPPER l"Y ltll>UCID ' SllOO rmo 644-23_00 •••••••••00••••••••••• motivated Taite ad\an OCEAHVlfW down' Submit orr;rs "" 8EACH/Affordoble This 4 Br 2 Ba home IS parking Ulll incl f'llrnor ....... tage' Just reduced tu 12¥40/oAI TD. Dan Babb Just lisltd' Country al S411,SOO w11h low low Coro..o .. McrHomt available 1111 for yearly S7SO mo 5S2·S698. NEWPORT Oceanfront. 2 bdrm S239 000 Or $240 tv•• <>R '"OR L' 675 2311 ,_64().7,,,,. mosphere 8 rm u down. l yr, 2 Br. 2ba, 1 Older dplx 45Xll8' lot on lease at SISOO mo New 5·~m.to9:3Q2m SHORES bac'· uni·l. lg den ... , pk.tng · ... ,., '" r. · • """" ecut1ve home, lots ''' C M 18 I ocn side oC PO I Pos.s1 d d · II Bd h " ~ .. qunhl). wlk 10 bch. g ass. open beam ce1I· sml pets OK Acros~' ble to build 2 Condos Gina. view No End $935 mo S72S yrly Wood & glass de~1gn, 1op ROGERS RULTY I I am rm m age yrs. carpets an rapes ta 2 rm, 2 bal . garage. 4 Br. 2.5 Ba Walk lo for 2 Lse $5951 innter \~ooh ridge angs. formal din rm. from bch Mar.) Jank I 997-1_717 ownr D.M. ManW Rttr T~ner ~ 49Hl77 beach. Will consider 675-7673,640-2092_ ~e c ur1t y sy1.tem 1-s'-0---~0--frplc. lrg fam rm. Rltr 6311,..,_. 3.'i RI I l "'-I r ltase opuon SIOOO mo -Rt!alttj ialuum. mten'Om Ask -, " ,..., ....... master .swte, cul-de-sac --""" -o ru1a map, i 760.0835 Beach Shack I Br $400 7 5 9 I 2 21 Br uce W t tal L 4 BR 2 551_3000 , mg $395,000 3 frpln Lrg ~BR. 4 A home S20S.OOO ~Bay Farm 2bdrm. Iba, bays1de lyofRivel'Sldecall C t M 3224 1035 Catalana Owner Blomgren,Agt. _ b1:.~c~:~v;ewgrurnor ltto B1rranra Pk1<1 , l1i 1111 Open Hse Sat Sun I ~ Steps away from pvt Pl. Westclirr Realtors comm .. Npl Bch. c p, ~1:81]7 Qwner_, /\gt os a "° 6]3· 1464 -NEWPORT HGTS unfur. 5304 Seashore ---Holan Rf'Gll Estatt beaches Owner will as ~5·7~54.S-35!b.._ adults only 2 pools, 2 rel' M09faift, Dnerl, •••00•5;Ac'1oof''••• Winter rental. Oct.-July ~l·BCnO TENN 497 5454 sast in finanring or ~111 rms $32,500 Subm1L all Resort 2400 1 Bdrm ~ondo nr So 1 3 br, 3 ba. Emerald 2 Br. yard. gar SSSO. ~~-----* * ISi • consider trades Shown 9 010 DOUAJ CC S48-4426 ~ 646 1514 ft 5P M New l BR apt Bay View • EMERALD 8 Y b l I P I 11 "" o ers.:. . • ••••••• .. •••••••••• •.. Coast Plaza Woodsy at Bay 2500 sq fl. split ___:.. a ---SSSO includulg ulll NearthefabulousWooo A yapp on > no on> OWC WestcbfC4 Br2•, FA.MILYPARK WEEKEHDCAllN mosphere Security level. No pets S12so _1·626-7190.673-6388 b d · r lJ New elt>gant t'Stm S Br I S.S30.000 Pnnc only Ron Ba, only $279,500. Norm $450 /mo tfurn SLSOOI. 497 4154. Son Clemewte 3276 ~ n ge leMlS 11c1 lies Jackson 556 1800 Lg 3Br beauty, anxious Newly painted Uls1de & oo••••••••••••••••••••• Bay Side 1 Br S4SO This 3 Bdrm. 2 Ila hurne car gar All t>xtras In . & Kasey McKinley, agt owner has priced for fast out on S view anes Waterfront l-lomes. l11t• aft 12, 497 224S~ OCEAN VIEW! Ocean view I Br SSSO has everything you d tie credible white wot er SACRIFICE 63l·l266or~ sale. AfCordable family Partially Cum Localed 6311400 Stunning \'lew of ocean · view t aU7S0.071S f 2 story 3 bdrm. 2"1 ba, Adults, no pets S8\'age sire. 1ncludin1: a largr ---S2011•1t.ft•.,.Tiou housingtnOrangeCouo inAppltValleyHts On •NICE Easts1de (.'M rom this 2bdrm' $425' Walde •-Co.67c"~. bl I · II f "~ " 1 d r b h fireplace. wetbar Bil· "' ,,......... assuma e oan Ca 111 --------•1 ty Call NOW" Wont y S33.000 111•1th goo 2BR. IBA. form din rm, eatures ng l kitchen details COUNTRY ~NCH OMLY $71( lsst. 1J82040-4H. terms. Call to see Gt'o fmt1bk yrd TI shwr old w1large pantry & dming ins S7~839-6SIO --FURH OI UHAlltN $164.500 NORTHUGUMA DOWN CHOOSE YOUR Fr e > R E 111 l' Cash tub f'ridge. Pet area for entertammii ' 2br .. den, fp . walk to Oceanfront, 2 Br, back S2IS.OOO as.~um. loan:. ut Vl'rsa1lles 2Br. 2fla Pl'n· HEW MOllLE HOME 1714J.l242·4677 OK S67S 6 mo lease Sh a g c 3 r p e I 1 n g beach, tennis & golf Nu unit. lg deck, park1.ng Co W\lodhrldge , 12'. f.ovt'I} 2 sty, 3 br l thse. otn 11ew. $135.000 Space avail an Hunt ~ Co.ty 752·2282 days 642 5261 throughout' Must see ' dee. S673 mo 492·79!L 2 Lse $595 wanter ba home w playhou~e.' t\ssume $128,000 of S&L ESTA.TE SAU mgton Harbor area ror p-......... 2500 e~~ ~ wknd's 114993 Spanish-style family f72:S yrly Realltj s I loans JI 17', $1828 mo F .. ,.,. 2 b h r ._ ti 1 • '...,..... '' EASTSIDE CIVPr'AG E Renhmes631-4SS5 Fee home w arches and red 675 7673 640.2092 S5J<IOOO 11i.e~~n~~~:1111~e~~:~~ No qual1fy1ng Ovd E~~~bl~::~· Mus:~ ~:b~le0!:,;'e'.!Ulc~llnfo~ ju's.f'm~··;•B;~·dbj 0 T1ny I Br r~/ qu1:t 3250 hie! Woodbummg frplc Coz; I Br, yearly, bay •m Barranca Pk'" '"",..• 1 l A ~ k 1n g $33S 000 730 2270,H m642·2682 so Id to pay I ax es tnfoon thL5 rareopply frplc. Trv r"""" dn Bkr single. S39S all utils paid. LocJuna Hills & gated, enclosed yard v 1 e w , S S 0 O m o ~ ~ ••• ••••• ••••••••••••••• A t I l SS50' "7880 w terms Will ronblder --------• Beautiful pool Two LEASfORIUY 848...:0709 Stove,Cnge Nodogs HOME FOR RE~ sea a 714 675·1774 __ THNIHG trade BAY BEACH pat111S. large lot. Fan· Lu1Cury mobile home. Owt of Cowity 2335 Elden ~6 9&().3989 3 Bdrm SOSO Fenced Plus 2bdnn bungalow 1 br apt, sto1e. refng. TOW.,..OME? 1t6°o St5ncaComm. • tastic Won't last price truly beaut du I f'roperty 2550 2 bdrm. Iba. sl(le car yard & garage Kids & mquietarea'll4924 prkg S400 mo Call Call lhe spec1ahbh ,11 or $20,00'b Disc. ANO BOATSLIP $209,800 Call Ann Sant as Reasonable Seller very ....... ................ gar New cpt. ule. pamt pets welcome .>45-2000 Ren II mes 631 4555 Fee 675-0612 aft. 6 the condomini um 111 TO PRINCIPALS Vaughn for details motivated See lo ap No pets Avail 1011s Ag_e_[lt, no fee Westminster 3291 formation center Ken, owner1 agt, 494.5057 Investor or mvestor Ile t ' Pre c . Sub m 1 l Your Triplex$ I 30,000 Rent $495 548 Bernard •••••••00••00•••••••••• COf'Ofta def Mar 3822 Touchstone Realt\' nant Whoever thought Cote Reall) terms tSCl459) Th' i; , • Pride of ore unit B~llgL_ Lagma NlcJltl 3252 HOME FOR RENT •••••··~••oooo••••••••• · you could buy Bayfront & Investment Mut.HEAAH o wnership" Apple •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• 3 Bdrm S62S fenced Ocean v1eww/frplc 2 Br ---~ GREAT BUY propen> for less than Rr. .. , OI Valley prop iuves many Brand new 2 Br Condo. 2 Shores 3 Br 2 Ba beach, yard & garage Kids & I Ba S600 per mo 10 OUTSTANDIMG Ex.cl'pl1on,1lhomeunpvt mosl homl"S m Newport 640.5777 ~T S benefits low vacanc)' Ba. 2 car gar wtelec tennis S82S No pets pets welcome 545-2000 quiet nonsmoker Gorgeous 3 Bd 2 Ra m l view 101 3 Bdrm~ 2 ba Beath• WE are sellang 11111!!!!!!!~-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-•I MoblleHCMM DIY. area, low int Ins. Compl door. frplc. dlShwasher, 831·2327 Agent nofee ~~ Irvine's College Pork art1st '5 studio Owner ,, 1n tercs1 in our <t (714) I mgmt, On pymt 1s flex1 mic ro, washer & dryer. HOME FOR RENT Steps lo ocean. Large 3 • bed • HEWPOITCREST 527 5900 , ble s7700 annual pool, jac. bakony No MissionVt.fo 3267 Br 3 Ba ~an Lovely come.r lorut1011 mC1t1va1t'<l and will help room hme with 42 ABSOLUTELY PRIME • ·1 ed S7 4 Bd f> I $750 "' p r o f ess 1 0 n J 11 \ with fmanring $365,000 huat dot'k for S2'7S.UOO • I depreciation avail Call pets. Avai imm · ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm 00 amenities SHOO Mo. An Ind ....A d l V"I RE Whether )OU mo\e m Former model 3br3ba. ----now George fre) RE Mo.S40·2:53 Lake Miss ion V1eJ o f enced yard &garage thony days642 5757.eve a sea~ an p1rtur1 ac;iuna I agt · master s uit e with 1 Waterfront Execut11e l Kids & pets welcome s fverfect inside & out 497-1761 rourself or lease ii out private retreat overlook AcreogeforS. 1200 nc 7_!4 1·242 46'77 • 3 Br. 2 Ba <.:ondo, nr Condo Spectacular S4S·2<1QO"'"AK.ent_.no fee'-~wknds631-6630 -pooai~ o~:rc~~l'.~Jt~~ ILaCJlolna Niguel 1052 }~~1::1~m~~nt~~~:~ ing tennis court. pools. 00••••••••••••••000•••• lteol Estm ~ C · P~aza. ~ ~~01~ view. large 2 Br 2 Ba . 11 3Br 2ba. dbl garage. 2 Br 1 Ba Large exterior Un thl·s one 673 ,666 and spa Good assuma 2'7 Arres SIO. heh-2800 OpKa, auna 1 decorator furnished or , ram rm. lg rn~d yd deck, frplc + separate Call for details. 1 • • •••• •• •••••••••••• .. • " This property located 1n -"T S49·323'l r s ~ S.S7 A 1 · e--RANCH REALTY 551 2000 4 IR2'/J8a 6 yrs old, S31.ooo dn OWC A.l.T.O. al 12·, •I yn. Quail Place Pro1>1.·nie!> 752-1920 2GOOD TO LAST Irvine. Calilomia llume. 4 Bdrm. l sto11 . \ery clean. Al end of trer lined pride or owner~h1p cut de sac. SJ,87S dnwn to VETS or seller will as .sist the financtng Only Sl.25,500 752-1700 THE REAL ESTATERS OWC: Isl of S90K al 13', Owner Broker bleloans ( l fS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·G-un urn 1200 Mo $675 mo+sec 14361 garage. S va1 . am on t is I Hr 2 Ra home !"'Or '"' Bemardtn0 l'o can be "'" Kids OK. 2 BR 1 Ba. -.,..,..,....,. h C/2 1 u-~ C_._ as growml( area o an OCE _...._.VIEW LAR E FE.'ICED YARD 831 7666 Pur_<l St. a.o .,..c.. med 770.0347 _ ~ l n \ J 11 ~ Y v I e w ' 640. 3~ bought on eas) terms So Laguna gated estate, D W, d1sPoSal. ut1I pd.. Newport~ 3269 Coedo...W... 2 Br I Ba New carpet & ll1ghly upgradetl' Jui.I .. PE ......... OUSE Geo. F'rev R ~ Int• 3000 sq Ct. prof decor $600. AvaiL 10 IS Call ••••••••••••••••••••oo• U-L.-!....L.......11 3425 paanl , patio. sundrck $152 500 , T R n It "'" , •c•u 000 ·r d r p I ~ Crpl c, rar port No " t>u " 714 l 242 ""'ITT ..,..~. ra e or 3 m Bob .. 64 .c·9161Lno r~ ••••• • •• •••• 497 3034 , COMOO --· ~ Sprangs. Lake Ar -,, "" WESTCLIFf • •••• • ••••• children or pets I.ease with !>lap fo r 40 fl Co.....wrcial rowhead or mcome real 3 Br. new kitchen , Luxurious four IE ONE OF S620 7S0.17lJ.._833-3307 H~wportlf.odt 1069 sailboat L80deg ocean, f'~rty 1600 estatL 499 347U,551821S beautaful home 1963 bedroom. lhree balh THELUCICYFEW 4091., Acacia. 3 bdrm. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bay and city lights ••••••••••••••••••••••• olE Continental S700 1 home. Beamed ceilings Rent in Costa Mesa's ba.oceanv1ew S87SCall 4 BDRM BEAUTY OH..~ v1 iews. Large assumable SUPER, SUPER Rewa!:.°!r 2900 559-~l. _ in bving room and rami· TN EWhEST gated 20 673-7942 Only S27:J,OOO w terms RE~ l TORS oan. Secunty + pool Lrg l20xl•O lul + sml New Wilson Pk Condo. ly room. Secluded pool own ome VILLA GE 3 hr. } ba front dplx, gar. Great location Patrick O l!L. C/21 Newport Cntr bldg. 919 Sun.'iel, CM. In (;,"''"j0 ••••9jd"''h0 • 38r, 3Ba or den. dlx cpl. size yard. Sl>ace for boat COMM UNITY. 2 & 3 Br. frplc, stove. refrig, n40 Trnore. Al?l 7~1221 wner nncmCllHJ In 640.5357 dus''"al .,.,ned Act now, l w P ans. r as drps. micro. AC. elec 2 or trailer Sl8SO month 2"'1 Ba. 1600 · 1800 .sq ft ~ .. "~~~ I BU< TO THE BEACH S20.000 dwn buys this 3 Rd 2.5 llath home on fre land Nu carpels & paint i\sking $234,SOO OW<: Ownr Agt Bruce Bl omgr en 7S9 1221 He Max .._~ u • .,,, const money Will buy or I *""" of pure Juxurv Garages. ......""""' evs 9NJD won't last Chuck · · car gar, poo ·spa «>£01 yearly basis Agent _, E · 1 · 11 Owner will carry a large 1•--------1 Jomt~enture4~ H eps. J~8S1·9350 631.7300. hydro-tubs an master n)oy summer 1vmg a second on this beautiful N£W Spiller,AgtS3Hai6 s uite, Cormal dining yea r. Walk to COM - -•entol1 2 bdrm. 3 ba, lovely E Bluf condo 4 br 2 ~. ba. B h 1 bd • 3 bed room condo. r h 1 rooms. wood burning eac · rm. pa,10, Private end unit with HARBOR RJOGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• town ouse. poo · gar. 835 Amigos Wy #8. S940. fireplaces. micro wave enclosed garage $500 large patio Priced al HMHI Frtllaht,t ~:~No pets S700 2l3·S4l·4460_24l·48_JJ_ ovens. fenced patios & mo Avail Nov !st $249.500 ~U:~a'i:~r:n:e B:o~~~ ;;:,··;;.:;.··;i·o; M -V-rde--BR B BAYSHORES 4BR.3BA yards Pnvate elegant __ q?S-8589 D.M. Marshall Rltr 0 d . a esa e 4 2 a. Home. Across Cr om Uvmg only 15 mmu tes Lrg & pvt 2bdrm. 2ba 760.0835 utslan Ing view with --------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl ga~. l&e Y~. grdnr Swim Beach. Sl4SO mo from Fasluon Island. 7 beam cei II n g. d 1 s Ocean View Newport Crest Home Presug1ous 4 bedroom. 2' 1 ba th luxllr) condo Formal dmmg room , re· laxlng family room, great financing. Pnred SHOPPING 3 br. 21. ba. winter , &wtrmcl Avail Nov I 213·385·2176,213-441-3252 minutestoS C.Plazaor hwasher. no pets Co r i m med s a I e at CEHTB S69S/mo. 30S Montero. S8SO mo 540-4734 hme o c. Airport Just east of $650/mo. 559_9265 $495.000. Agent. Dan Prime Costa Mesa loca 1·879·599..J,2.f!~4696 _ 758·2434ofc ILUffS Newport Blvd & 50 of --- Bibb. t1on 100". leas ed LocJ-a IHda 3141 Mua Ve-rd e Odrm 3 bdrm. 2Vi ba. (pc. San Diego Frwy Start Costa Mno 3124 !75-2311 ~7665 $477,000 L H Owner will ....................... W/pool. new paint & cedar paneling. patio, 2 mg at SIOOO a month ..... ••••••••••••••••• THE 11.UffS finance. Whitewater vu Emerald crpt. gardening & pool car gar, pool S850 631·5439. 2473 Orange NEWLY DECott. MOVING · Must W Bay 2 Br 2 Ba +Loft· ~_rv. incl~,146-9950. ___ 759-0980 Ave, Costa Mesa. 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar Excel financing 17141673-4400 tennis-pvt beach pools. S395 rents thlS charming Ocean rule Laiiht view 3 WESTCL.IFF NB d/washer. pool. Adults OCEA.MFRONT romantic fireplace Up. BY OWNER g r a d e s g a Io re ' New rust bit 2 st). Beautifully landscaped French Normandy 3 BR grounds With JO'"', down owne r will ca r ry & _den home. Ca,o be balance! Submit all of· spht.Sll9S,OOO,OWC J7ll fers ' $235.000. Cal l lease/opt Carmelita l2 Ill Uf.2121 1350 mo 494-1177 _ 2bd rm w steps aver BR, 2 ba FR, grdnr incl Beaut. 1200 sq rt 2 BR 2 642-5073. -- plan condo 4 Br Jba 1 OCEANFRONT I BR. pvt kitcheo & landscaped yd Xlnt cond No pets $1375 Ba , fplc. dining rm. 2 Ir. I laApt Br/bath downstairs. point Spectacul ar forkids/pets 116454 days9S7·1100ext212.eve refrig. Adlts. no pets Newly dtt0r C:as pd Beaut. greenbelt view. views. I or 2 adlts. S'990 Also: S280 rents this 857-0377 ~5. 640·7814 encl gar .. pool. dshwr Newly redecorated. ~499-XllS lbdrm cottage-style w $1400. HVH. 2 yr lease M ArtllrVlll-Adl!l!!_,_642-507! __ Stnshore 673.~78 979_2390 -·TU·m.e-·a·oc-K-1 LEASE I TarW.R~ om ON ·4M.IM TOWMHOME ssooo dwn and buy in 6 Beautiful Jasmine mos for $129,900 w110·1,. Mndel 2 bdrm + den S239.SOO. Call J L Tyler Newport~ 3 I 6' part u~ilities pd #6418 4BR. 21,BA lrg yrd ac --r-Eve / wknd 759·8989. ....................... Rentimes631-~Fee View . Dnve by 2012 l BR.pool,leMas lc club 31rTo•=-e wltdys752·8011 BA YCR EST s bdrm 28R w/gar Xlnt area Port Card1H Place ~.646-0IO...._S42·2029 -Newly decor gas pd .. home w/pool, large yard $475. Avail Nov I. ~-5966 encl gar .. pool, dswhr f' with delightful ba ck dwn 1 Rr dlx condo w partial vu Take ad yard. G!'tal ftnancang vantagl'' Rae Rodgers, Assume 12~% loan & owner will carry 2nd. Agt 631 1266 T.D, . I\i:t I h 1 I Id-~ Rr alty I ; ~: ; ~: \(1(1 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I~~~ .. • .. • ••• • •• ! !.~~ SU,11 LOC ATION IH WOOD· •Ml Elegant 2 BR townhome. Customized den-21'2 bath. Up· graded carpets, drape s, mi ni blinds & shutters. Gorgeous wall coveril'lgS. Premium lot with lov- ely landscaping and redwood deck. $171.500 Mack Hanson 5.Sl-8700 ( E50) 3 IA YFROHT HOMES. •• Choose your location ... N.B. Living at its besL .. Your boat at your dock .. Seller FW1ancing. . . HIW UHSOLICITED LISTING! 45 feet on peninsula. See the world. 3 stories high, privacy. yard for children. 219 Via Lido Soud, 2 yrs. new. Easy ca re custom design. 1 Yi lots .. Open Sunday 1·5 UHDA ISLE 50 HIT main bay view w /70 foot pierhead line .. Price ceduction $1,850,000 , ..... ( .. DOMA CHICHISTll 64J..llll C-2, Ccner Lot Excellent Costa Mesa location. Zoned for many uses. 3700 sq rt Large lot. Good finan c Ing. Charlie F.lwis. Tarbell Realtors 8J0.60:Kl ' QUAIL PLACE PIOHlTIES .. S 18 oo. LID o Is L E ~7940 CAHAL FRONT HME ~dults. 642·5073_. __ charming 4 bdrm, 2 D.aPoW 3226 LUXURY DUPLEX balb, newly redtt0rated •oo••••••••oo•••••••••• Newport Shores 4 BR 3 lalboa l.a.d 3706 2 Br. 21.; Ba dble gar $1800 mo. Yearly Bill ••BEACH HOUSE Ba. 1 year lease. Sl200 •••0000••00••••••••••00 1650 sq n.. wtth every Grund 67~161. mo .. 1st & last Gwen Cule smaU 2bdnn, Iba, xtra, huge rear yard 2 br, frplc, builtins. Henry winter rental SSSO incl. i'h RV Ad f Fantastic Townhouse, gar11&e $S50. 499·2986 Richa rd Sowers Rltr ~Us. 675·0349. ~-673.J:~~-~~-oce~n view, ,frplc, ever Feo.ttaln v.., 3234 714·598·5674 BAL Bo Is L ND · --- ythaog rurrushed. $895 •••••••••••oooo•••••••• •bdrm extcutive home A A 2 Br Bltns enc:lsd gar Mo.760-9117 HOMEFORRENT loc i·n s""un't" gatad BAYFRON}: Share 3 Uppe~Apt.°S490 Mo.765 W t tiff 3 bdnn d 3 • Bd POOL $950 . ... .. , "' Br.2 Ba.with 2F or1M. Hamilton. 760·0734 . es c . • en, .. rm. · · comm. w/pool, tennis lF. $375 each. Bryan 63J 4402 b a . n r sch Is , p le . Fenced yard & garage. court. $1200/mo, month· 673-1388. -· · --- water/gardner pd. S87S Kids & pets welcome month o nl y Call Lrg clean 2BR. gar. mo avo.11 thru June. 545-2000. Agent,noCee. 675-6646 833·3622 or hlNHI ,.._.. 3707 adults. no pets $435. 2178 84&·863S, 92781 llatt"""* leaclt 3240 644-8018. · ........................ "B" Placentia. 545-7983 Venailles, lovely furn. 2 •••••••••••oo••••••••oo 1 BR, loft. $450. 204. 44lh 2rl~:~r!c~udis~aw~:;:; * 2Bf. 28a. Near So. C. br, 2ba condo, ocean vu, Family welcome. 3 br, 2 St. Upper. Orivebyl.st& Winter ~ental s550 Plaza. S.A. Luxury Con 0. &42·6149 ba twnhse. Close to play· call 752-6499 673.7083, (Zl3l 258-l7s0 do, w /pool, adults only. OlAHGI COUNTY OCEANFRONT Oeluxt round, shops l schools. 4 Br. 2\IJ Ba. Ytarly, all after 5 ~· 833-897•. 2 tenant comm'I bldg.s. 5 Br. 21,4, Ba /mo. 7si.2m amenities Club & pool C h M 7,. Spacious I Br Garden Leased, low main WinterS1100/mo. 2sly,Z br,l\'Jbhoodo,2 rac's Goodarea suoo ot ... l 44 Apt.Pool &retAllutils Yrly SlSO()(mo car 0 ar., children OK, B It. a-. · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• paid Aduh no ....... tenance, passive invest· 21314*84 . Ma-5Cmeva ro ervi5-41112. $375/mo. Deluxe Mobile El Pue.rta M;;a ment. Ellisllng H~% b--AJ•t, _,.__.._ HARBOR VIEW Home. Malurudults, no 1959 M•!'leAvt A"' 5 loan. owe 103 financ· """' -~ • Bdrm, 21,\ ba 2 story peta. Quiet. stture. 1991 ~~ '-~ Inc for lOyn. $3'75,000. BAYVIEW CONDO 4 bdrm, Z be. lg llv rm, with family rm. formal New rt Blvd.646-U73. EASTSIDE .,_arp 1 BR. Quail Place Propertl~ 2 Bdrm 2 ba. Nictly ram rm. formal dlnlng dlntnc rm, •iew. bl& 2 bdrm 1 ba duplex bltns. pvt entranu, 7H·l'20 furnlsbtd. Security Bon\IS rm. 2"11 car gar yard privacy Sld5/mo Qu · ihbornoodS4 1ar .. no J*s, Im mo Rare N.B. ()(tAl'I view C·l bide. SUOO/moyrty 3,000sq ft . $1115 per mo. WaterfronlHomes Inc.· ~~e• ~ Call 540-tUe, aak for gr:crty. 120 front n. WaterfrontHomtt lnc. Jim Owner/Agt. 631-1400 l Llrry Of Pim. aft IPM. C T 0 831-1400 m~. 'l'JO.l@_ a..,...... l741 _r;t *8.Pam l 1 l . . A It. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!l!!I!!!!~ g31.,_ -= 1435 rents Ulil rounlty ........... a .. .u ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••••• L a r c e 1 b d f '" .. ........... ftnt. t t ·-..... /""'~ ..... fn-3 ·~A-•n fum lux tlldo. Ip&, TV, .,,.n_ .. ..-L-·-..... ,,...,., 2000 l sdr~~balh. 1f~ 6'rJct;,"';1ne'"; DfVble car 1arue. maid service. phontt, 1c1;;:.·--.;··· ............ , .......... Profeaalonally deeor-1t· appkl llllatsee! "300 lnlMAW.,DHrJlllhSt. ME ·-= ~ · f Owner fin. 8.t tlmu ed '#ltb ~ vie•• Allo: rem lo own thil 2 Kldt•PttlOK..mGmo. lnO ,_,,...... ..,. ro1:.J -• IJ'OU. OrC.04J»Su. 2BR. $1MO/mo,urly. 1tor1 bome w/enclad a.,~ Dr. beda., lldl. UW pd. l'4o ••kt -, .. '-CJ 152.S SlH ,100 Bllr. W.Wrfrall&._.lnc. ylrd.OelJ_.!... Mlo77Zt ptll, 1 rta,omal~lt .... at Ill pt.mo al·lf9t Rt!timwfll=Ml'M I llM ...... ' ''.:\ Fil SPBll ......... & • 11/ ~c.,.tar ca. ... Slr'fk.. ....... s.rwtc. ........................................................................................... . n••••••••••••••••••••• Compl. lnt/ut. ZS yr&.. Wlndow•/urpeU/floora Haull111, tNe tttmmln1 a Halli. ci......,, ccmcrew Exp . (healthy female CffAR R!NOVATINO Home, condo, ortlce rcmovaJ, ma.Int, dean rtmovat D&mpT:':k. w.11 ...._..._ Srttc:et f'-'-"-P,.,-rty t'• 11 t 'l ,._ ....., -.... . ..••.......••.••...•.. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BRICKWORK Small • RENT.\!.") PAJNTED rtOfl•n Jobi. Newport, Co1la •JacquellM • Nunln1 Perfect. jlt'Ompt, reu MAMAGIMIMT .. 1!~a7~!1y aallor w/rt{J, avail. to MW'7• 1'"7.a et u , kHOllP QWc~terV.fG:~ Meu. Irvine. Refs. Service Qualilled. com· Stuldtf"nt ~ Oranae Co. arta. ll yn ·, .. ' , ' .• fora JO~ad DAILY N.or SllVICI DIUCTOIY DO IT NOW! ........... You.r Daily PUot Service Dirtttory RepreMntalivt -:: 641.1471. tlt JJZ livt1 lovt Is care fot ywr .,.. ~ Drywtl .,.,... s.nte.. DUMP JOBS aa.llooat. N. B. area Call ......... • ........... ••• •••••••••• .... ••••••••• Is Small u-~1 ... J-'-C ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-VT¥'9 uuw We :t~CrplCleantra DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC 4JrC~ Ct11MIJCE84f=l.381 ..... n SUamclean&uphola. 14 yrs e•p. Nly lic'd 6 Rod ~an.I HAULING•DUMP ••••••••••• .... •••••••• Truell mowlt unll 1n1ured. m.SS49 --• a · JOBS Ilk fOI' R&Ddy •llWfCllSOM Workauar. M$:3!lS DRYWALLTAPLNG For Sm~.11 M.~cblnt 'w.au7 ' Bu.lldenSlncelN7 Shampoo & alum clean. All ttxluN & acoosUc Shops-a ~ar lnlP«· TREES SHRUB TRIM Additions rtmodelln1 Color brlibteners whl (rte HL Yin 175-9088 , lion service. 548 7227 0 1, ..., I ' • c ..... 1 10 nln. bl"a h t7-4pmJ 1ra1e Y••v c ean· plana. Freee.t. Reas. • ... · 1 " c : Drywalt/Plaater-We --· -. . ups. Freuit.557-8271 Llc. t310N2 9·2110 Hall, liv /dln. rma Sl.5, patch any bola fut. k O Ho I.lat 1 c Approach •~..a...tC....wtA av, room S7.50; couch min Lie 405544 Ml·2t30 Sp1 r llual Healer & CLUM .. YOUIACT ._..,.__, $10: cbr SS Cuar. elim · · Counselor496-'lo.12 Custom carpentry , petodor Crptrepa1r Btctric.. ..__... JIAULJN~ 1131-1993 decka,patiol.J.S.Const IS yrs exp. Do work •••••••••••••••••••••••._,-...,...._...._._. Co NobodY doet rl bet m~self. Refs. S3l<Olil ELECTRICIAN -Pl1ced •jACXOf!Ai£fil.u)§.• J JIJD.~ tu! tlc'd t bonded. NoSleamhloSbampoo 'right, free ~lmtte on Plumbing, electrical, A·Z HAULING Construe Free eat. Call Joe. StaloSpecialist. Fast largeorsmall)Obs. beating. Odd jobs. Uon & reaidentJaJ clean· •·c1•H Mi·~ll. dry. Freuat. 839·1582 Uc. 1396621 8'13-03S9 638-4068 U"', dumplnlclt. &31-0022 "'., ... P . d ' -Rf.SID /COMM 'L !!.. --. .......... ••••••••••• atJog, edtinp, ext. sid· ROBERT'S CARPET . · . Ca~ntry ·Masonry M...-.... .__.__ Acct Blllloo for small inga, landscape designs REPAIR. Restretc· ... re· H11hly qu.allfied. No Job R f Pl bi ·~ • & I t .•. --t. F " too I I.I mall 631 200t oo ini. um ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• bu.ailleas. Marv Goens. n ......... r~ est. lay,allrepal!'S.673-8'90 r 1 · · Drywall Stucco-Tile WantaREALLY CLEAN 71 4 -U 8-l751 Eves. Llc,bonded.631-0eOl CttMtlt/ec.cnt. Ci ... , Remodel. J.B.&46-9990 HOUSE? Call Glnaham 2U.ISZ-1&16 • ltR.._.,__ • ..--. * ••••••••••••••••••••••• C "'I ri al GI I F t """·5123 "'•.......... IU"lvv-..nw ....................... CLEAN UPS/LAWN arpentry . ""ect c r . reees ,__,. -.......-Rm add & new consl. THOMPSON'S • Plum bin&-Painting ROBfN'SCLEANING ...................... Res/Comm. Quality CONCRETECONSTR. _Ma1nlenance-l.andscp DaveorMike,964-1917 Service-athoroughJy Driveways, parking lol Guaranteed. Leming Lie 11393383 &t2-8482 Freeest. 642-990'1 •HOMEREPAIRS cleanhouse. 540-0857 repairs, sealcoaling Construction (8-270791 ) Pool Decks and Patios, Cleanups-TreeTrim'g & IMPROVEMENTS• Expertise Hou.wW~ing. S•S Asphalt. 631-4199 ~ M Sport&T . Hauling -Maintenance Re•s.Fr-..... .,uru .. o Lie. asonry, ennLS Arnie548-S4l4 • '""""' ...,......., supplies furnis ed. Al.I.STATE PAVING MocHA&.ICOHSTl. Courts. l.lc.374067. Bob. TIH!.H RESID.ICOMM'L trustworthy. 957-8003 S•alcoall Sl · · Custom homes, fram· 851-1966/847·70'78 •~ Complete Maintenance Clean UpYourAcl Co. "' nc. riping, ing, re mod, French NO JOB TOO SMALL Topped/removed, clean 641·8967 Housecleaning, a"'• & Repairs. Comm./Res. d " lin1. . B k & B''-U.Ps. ta~ -nov. 751-3476 .,... Free est. 1397362. oors, s..y .,,ts & pallo r "'·We 351449. -· wu... HOME IM PROVEMENT otricesps. &.11·199~ &4.5-8181 covers. 848-3652 Dale, home96J..8767 Gardening, landacaping. Tile fl oors. fencing, LETTiiE MOUSE CabiMtMaW.J An.$.W ·21B2Beep2313 lree trimming & re plumbing. all small CLEANYOURHOUSE. ~~........... .. ......... ~........... CONCRETE WORK moval, major clean-up. jobs. 28 yrs exp. 979-2265 Call Sue, 851·6878. Babysitting, my home. l All types-kite.hen, bars, Foundations, sidewalks, lns'd. Free est 642·4889 Eleclr1cal-Plumblng GeneralHouwcleaning yr & up, nr Vicloria, garage units Day patio s labs, custom Mowing $15-$20, Haulln& Carpentry, rough/finish Reliable-Referentes C.M. 642·8482/646-5759 645-6521, eve 549-1685 bric It. Lie.~ eves. & Dumping $25. 754.9904 Roofs-Masonry-Stucco Own trans. 962·~10 c t CHGtlNc or 955-0095 Mark Refs. 540-3987 eves Childcare. loving home, °"".. . ...................... G R E ING WANTED MRS CLEAN bot lunch, companions,••••••••••••••••••••••• Hansens Ceramic Tile, A ~ N HordwoodAoors MAKESITGLEAM ' fenced yard. 556-JmiB French drs, bdwd noors, floors. showers, tubs. Mowlllg, edging. rakmg, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~2240 8 b . s weep i n g , r re e HARDWOOD FLOORS a ys1tting, full -time, moulding, shelving callafl4PM,S.SHl280 estimates. 645.4372 or Cluned &Wued HOLIDAYCOMPANY? my home near 0.C.C. R o u g h & f i n is h THE TILE MAH 645.5737 Anytime, 832.4881 S.A. Lel me clean yo1tr home. 54&-86S/J. Complete services. Free . --Reas, reliable641"0140 KUNTINGTONBEACH est. Bonded, h e'd Freeest. &ID-2062 Ralph Caballero&Sons HMIMJ Morrf Serric Mother babysit&, 6 wks &«-4015 Wld Care Gardening service,. 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• age " & up, 6-htdys. 892-6304 ROUGH & FINISH ....................... t~m~~~~:~:t~i:: HAULING Student has M:;;i~~t~:; .. N~"bj;:; Trade your old stuff for Doors, fences. wmdows. DAYCARE ming & removal, clean· lge truck. Lowest rate tests req Lie provided new goodies with a etc. Refs, _free est Special to working ups. Fret! est. 646·4654 Prompt.Call7S9·l976 I 968-3797 aft 5, all day Classified ad. 642-5678 340.4043 (Chris! parents. CM. 646·5423 art. 4:30. Thank you, John. 1 _w~lt~n~d~s _____ _ '7~1175 petent nul'IH aervlna -uper1en~ Call rM (Pro EXPERT BRlCK & 0 ran i e Co are a . P~ lettoM and rates Muon,.., Small JO' ~ & 554·8$71 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t6J.1112 ., 1-'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'IAL10 fineidt>t•ur icomml -repaln. "111c f1cin11 1~ a r t w o r It M 1 11 I lntodtlftCJ/..,.., Reta. ~l 7 7014 ,...._. Morale) Mr A 675·4722, ••••••••••••••••-••• HAITMASOHIY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6t6·2lll . Gl'nrr.il ''ontraclin1. Brickwork, blockwalla, Fil.I Special, ext/&nt ---botnt lmpruvtmtnl.I wood fences. Concrete painting Prof. Rsnbl. P4'ptriltcJ Also damaae rl!p&lfl. 1st l I I rree eat. StA!ve547 ~l ....................... class work. Lie 1194,97911 pa 0 1, comp rte lln b Rl h The Paper Hanger Prof ---landJcapes. Lie. 368294. Fine pafo ' Y c ard install Dt'('()l'aLorqual looflR9 844-15t'7 Slob or. NLlcB, ~ •• ~ yrs of Free tsl Stevl' 547-t2:8l ••• • ••• ••••••••••••••• • B · ~ 91.....i.r.-appy · .c......,mers. -----B LBO ROOFJNGCO nc.-_,.,_,,,crete Thank you. Ul-4410 WALL..~ UY BOBBY A A v93 rus. Lie, bonded. t.AIU:lV'S PAINTING ' Quality faM s.:~~ A'8:~~:-· $48-T~ lnt/ext.Syrsexp lSJrs up · -f'reeesl 67U743 MoYllNJ Reas. free est. 845-9383 Ainy lyp1• \\1.1111 <'td>Verb1ng Orao-ge ''oast R-..,,lno ••••••••••••••••••••••• SI • y .... -.. CUSTOM ltn'/EXT n 11 • ' Reroof111 re lrJ CaJI *A·I MOVING• EXPERTSERVICE J o urn r> man paper 646-2389 k1~ Top Quality. Speci al LOWRATES hanaer l1L• IH'. work -~ --- care 10 handhng 25 yrs NU·BROOK642.1403 grntd HJlph l'.iruso TrHtl Sef"fktt rxp. Competitive rates 991·1936 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N · m ~ RALPH'SPAINTING -SOUTllAMF.RICA oovertime. l Exl/inl·Reas·Prompl. PICMO lttsont TRAV to:LSJl:RVLCES •ABC MOVING· Exp · Lc'd. Free est. 964·5566 ••••••••••••••••••••••• My specially Call Tery prof., low rat.es. Quu:k, All Painting-1.nt $4SO ext Theory f i:inu Sight see Jackson Toon 75!1.~3 carefulservice.S.52·0.lO Ing Culll'gl' Prof ------- SfARVINGCOi.U:GE $650 Neal. complete Tra vth An} age Tl"ff Senict STUDENTSMOVING Freeest,refs85l·7292 _Qrace ~·r.!112 ...................... . CO Uc m.24 43& Ext house paiJlt111g only .. _1a-r/R-.ir TR EE DESIGN'S' l · ... ,:,., Wedothejobrighl' nu '" ~,..-Pruniog.Sculplunng. nsw ...... 641·8427 LEE Painting, 894-3449 ....................... Top. Thin, R.emovals. WATCHUSCROW! COLLEGESTUD ENT Neat potl'h•·i.&textures _Clean:up.G3l·2filL_ •Two Brothers Moving • Exp. lot/exl. job ror me Ht. 893-1439 JAYE TIH CAii prom pt Cou rt e u us less! Alex S.52-0231 lnl1 Ext l'ittch11ork Complete service and Se rvice 957 0500 or ReslUtl'<"" Textures slump .. nnd1.11g 10 yrs 540-8448 Quality ptg Lowest rates _fREE t.:Sl 645 8258 exn L1:' Lns 640 9D_ PADDEDWAGON -tn O.C Neal, prompt ._, serv. ll48·S684, 6J6.7l49 PLASTEH f•ATClllNG Tlltori g Carer~~~cous INT/EXTPAJNTLNG Int ext ;ioyrsrxp ••••••~••••••••••••••u and Cheap. 497 4956 L1c'd Refs. Free Est. Neal ~Ork l'aul 545·2!!77 lnd1v1du:ihzed programs STUDENT MOVERS ~1067 Plunibift9 in shorthand, typing & I t. I p · ••••••••••••••••••• •••• oHice sk11lb &U--0678 Anything, anywhere. nlerna iona amtlng McCOR.\I \L'I\ f'L~tBG I tutor Snamsh aii levels anytime Anl 1Que ~. H1gbQuallty Int Ext REP II I EMODEL ,, short notice. An;una Free Est. 556-1631 A < & 1 • B A Credential Larry Cheap rat.es, lntdllgrnt Saint Laurent & Sons Stoppage., Rl•ois. rates 963·1662 service. 673-5686. Call us Best in Pai.nl& Paper Lie. 11294371! §.7_5·9l94 lft~w CleanMg first ! 548.0850 6Jl-l3.5l Drains lrurn SIO Main ••••••••••••••••••••••• You don't need a .:un tu "draw fast" when you plact an ad in the Daily Piiot Want Ads' Call now -642-5678. CuttoMP.._ 25 yrs exp Lie. 4~1. Bonded Ins R.efs. Color expert. 963-0011 D1clt Classified Ads 642-5678 from $15 Plumbing re Original Window Washer airs. M&\l,642·9033 A\•g3brhumr.m. Selling an~ thmg with a Daily Pll01 l'lussif1ed Ad is a sim11lc matter just call nit2 5ti78. 6317698 -- . Let the Sunshine In" Call Sunshme Window Cleaning. Ltd 548.:8853 ApcwhwmUnfuna. IOCHM 4000 a...tabtoSlicn 4300 Officel..td 4400 ... , .. ._.. 4450 MotMytolom 5025 Lo1t&f~ 5300 H.fpWonted 7100 •••••••............••..•••.•••......•......•.. , ........................•.....•.•.•..••.......••..............•......•..••..•........•........•.•....•.............•..•••..•...............•••.•.••...........••.......•.....•.•.••••... Coste MeM 3124 Coito Mesa 3124 Newport leodl 3169 TUSTIN COHDO NB prof eenUeman wLU HEWPOIT Slort for rent or lease Widow has money to loan Blue eyed k1Uen Uiege ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• needs prof person lo OC· shre beaut home w/m/f PEMNSULA 1200 sq. I\. Newport & for RE. Sl0,000 up No with Bh1ck markings cupy lrg unfum rm . $300 ~r 30 $375. 7~~. Harbor BI v d . l' M credit check, no penally. Found on Hith :.treel NB INSTANT INJ Townhouse type apt 2 Br OH THE HACH U ·1 pd C JI Bobb Spacious executive or-646.774). 631-7420 Call Denison Assoc 548·8653 Ant•• GPM I ~., ba pat ·o e I WIMTERRENTAL mo. ti a Y M/F belw 23-~ shr Jbd rices across from Cily -673 7311 --2 Br. 2~ Ba. 1650 sq.,ft. 'Gd 1 :d "1 c at 730·6478or S.57·9051 2ba hse lblk from bch m Hall. All serv1--availa· CdM Prime Loe. 2500 sq · --,, ... _...,, 5350 Twnhse. w/every xtra, garage eastsi e oc. 3 Br 2 Ba. S800 Mo. -~ G Sho T '._.... • big dbl oar & ard Adults. $4501646-2280 Chns 956.5871 Lido waterfront w/sllp. Npt S2SOmo67S.2486 ble, ·optiooaJ'. From 22S ft real w rm C\ Mo~ rwt ...................... . Adults. P~ OK.~ Mo. Hwtl""9fon leoctl 3140 2-B-r-1 •., Ba Adults.-n-o ~U:~r~ ~·B':11s~~c~, ~fe~: ~~~e ~~~edr' ~~::~1~~ ~~ 'f:=a~;~ ~f:~~e G ~~~~t:d V ~t>o:r •• ~~~ •••••••••• ~?.~~ EXECUTIVE 673-6336 642-9666 ........................ pets.S42S 675-4140or9'J2.4620 a,., blk to beach. N.B. Jl_uired,call673-3002 Parlting.673-020. S~MhJ.Co. * SUITE* QUIET ADULTS over 3.5, THE WHIFR.ETIH 548-26S2. Room w/kitch pm. Love. St.eve. 64S.5a86 days till HEW,OITCIHTB C~ All types of real estate unfum 1 & 2 BR. from Luxury Adult wtlts at af-2 Br 2 Ba Condo with ly security protected ~ p . . full . lttdok 4475 investments since 1949 24 Hour ESCORTS ~-Beaut. landscap· fordable living. 1,2 & 3 frplc . completely re home Nr SC Plaza Professional Mf F ID ErXesEtC1g1oousrr1!ces. slenrcv:dces ••••••••••••••••••••••• s,. ... i....a...i.. 953-1822 f!4~/Vl•o 1ng.Nopets.LEEWARD Br Well decorated. carpeted & painted Over•o M.,_' Answer 2coo Ft d I d -...., APTS """" F 11 .. ..-.. ,, COM $250 per mo. CaU rcpt, sec. xerox, under· ~ un eve ope WTDI · ~-v u erton, Olympic size pool, light· Pool Adults S675 Mo ·1 H' h •e CM 63 -ccm Ad •508. 24 hrs 642-4300 Scotl or Terry ground pk'g, telex & an· space 1v11 1& n., 642·2171 54S.061 l · l ed tennis court, Jacuu.1, 645·1528 673·4239aft6pm '"'ue decor. cont nn. waterfront bldnte 1n Lg 2 BR l ba, St25/mo park like landscapmg Ocean view Condo 2 Br Free Furn rm. In ex· 2 bd b b 1 -Id 644.7189. Newport Beach. SI 00 WEPAYTHEMOST $175 dep, laund facil, Most beautiful bldg m + Den. $750. Adults, no change for custodian · 1 8• a cony, w · per Ft. Good potential For your TD's & notes dul•• tOK 2009 M H B work at Church in CM. Grand Canal, Balboa EXECUTIVE r N AtDennisonAAsoc a .... ca . a· . . pets. Savage Wilde Co. 751_5525 Isle, $3?S/mo. yrly. or many uses. ewport 673-7311. ple St. Mgr #K, 548-5861 846-0619 675·9006. 675. 7588 atl6:~ & WEs. SUITES Arches Bldg. 642·4644 Great Company Escorts 2A Hrs 641-0180 Co"9/Chec:b AM EXP/MC/Visa ACCOUNTS "A Y AIU CLERK R11 pidly growing In· ternat1onal company seeks enth~1ast1c self starling indl\'ldual for pos1l1on tn our Ai P dept. Good typuig & 10 key capabiht1es required. Al P expenence helpful. Xlnt opportunity for ad- vancement Outstanding compensalloo & benefits 111 a pleasant worllng en v1 ron ment. Cont•ct: Pat Mtlh., AMF Scien- llril: Drlllln~ Ill., l8011 Mitchell S , Irvi ne, 557-9051 . aft 2pm M •11..a!E85 W • • 11 Versailles bach. bdrm, MICE• PllV A Tl lN Harbor Shonning Center, IMVESTOIS --t...·--"' ~ ,..... --F Non-smkr shr 3BR CM rr-2 Br. To .. ,........,,.,, adults 2 6 3 Br. Townhouse re(rit· mirrored clsls. US1~vs:C.M. HlllT'"..._11! stores from &M to 2,160 High yield trust Deeds. •••••••• •••••••*•''llllJllll!ll!~-1111111!1111!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ool .._..,.. M ail 0c Apt. $205 mo. Prefer ,...~ r all r 2300 I' 7c.c~ D018th.peUSt. • .,~ l>CN! o Apts Patios, single & $475 and~~ L0ge room, aMv t 15. Vegetanan 5'8-0Sll PLAIA sqH. Rl.BAOvR BoLrVre0nt ''M Sare. well secured. CaU PSY<:HI<.: ESP Ad m 1 n 1 5 tr at iv e EOEM1F .-· ·.,_.<NY,. double car garages. * Ocec11tfro..t * wn entry. ust see to New luxury office space A . -. CIR Fmanc1al 85.s-445.s R ~:AUING~ Secretary Due to ex- Avail. now? l & 2 Br near Hunt. Harbour. LuxuryCondo.2 BR.H; appreciate. $300/mo, ~:s~t~'o6wblks .bch, in Irvine's bus iest To see,refSle.37 Bkr. byA:itANDA pansionanexcellentop- CAadrpoultsrt,nopoopel &tsla~.~ry&. Children OK. 840-6807 BA, Great view. Secun· ~~~~ aTI·P;al pref. $200. 960-52.oo, 900-=ro, cenurA! Easa1J Y F~yCaallc-.... trial lt...tal 4500 Fi Is th sedT. Dr ' S28c a "soob e3 ~~~~·~ItW~~ apocrta~anbitlye sheacsreatnsa·ryen,/1.olhr • · .,..., . HUNTINGTON BAY ty bldng, parking $750. · cess. v . now ....................... pure a or , , ,, $440 Mo. + '265 deposit. CONDO 67s.7264 NB Lrg Pvt Furn Studio. M/F shr 2 bdrm upper, on for details. Rent. 1125 aq.ft. $600 mo. yr. interest only at 20'k CALL !'..,131~~~.'.'.:0W , word 11rot•essmg &k1Us, 931 W. l.9th.Sl.548·0.92 2 Br 1 ~ Ba. Patio. ---Pnv $450. beach in Nwprt, $320 + 551-1231 64M230 1355 Logan, ltl CM with discount. & Int '" """"' ab1ht~ to do reports, TifE SEVIU.E. Adults, carport. washer/dryer 2~~: f:~g~~e~I~ _ 640-62!Kl ShrutilsB. 64R2Condo·5995evCesM $200 $250 Up. Hunt Bch. 675-5116 yield 27.5'k yrly, 57'1 • •• • • * • • • ** • • • • • most of all willing to crpts. drapes. patio. incl.Water&trashpa1d. fnorr,,ann t 2•~uc.7969 ~.Motek 4100 3, . . . Costa Mesaorr Baker & loan to value Call Mr COEDS \\ould love lo ~arr) out assi gned water pd. Call 1-5 Comm. pool. Adults, no~-..,......,. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. •"3 uul. Non-smkr. f7~f;~Jt~~~ir. Fairview. 1380 sq. ft ChrisShaw7»6056 party w11h,11u Call Sue tasks Willreportdirect-636-4120. pelS. SS2S + $SOOdepos1t. EAST BLUFF Spacious 1 1 u 111 OTB. Richard 642-33.52 $395. l770 sq. ft $495 o r Ka 1 h ·' an) 11 me ly lo VH'e president. 2.619 "1"SantaAna $465 Agenl,nofee.545-2000. Br. Pool. patio, view in SEA.--M . M I /F 1 30 t ~STUil J.D Property Mgmt. Juao•cfffMfh/ 953-9363 Send resume. in con- $450/mo. 2 Br l Ba, nu ;-'Ir, 2 ba, crpt, OW, encl pdlea1sant area. Single Ws1W &entals C~ av~~ sha~e 2~rm:b:. Ne~~ TA MESA 751·2787 '•rsotdt/ ERIC WE \H:T YOt: AT fid ence , lo Tom Roll. paint. caf1)et.s & drapes. .1ar. upstairs Nr beach ! .. u;7.67no pets $525 Mo Ph ~p. 0 or 2274 Beach Condo. Patio. 2 or 3 oom olfice suites l200SQ FT Lost & Fomd THE ~ \ R EU OUS E Wright Energy Corp., " ., ,,...,., ones ID room. frplc, phone .....,.. incl C I of rk U ·1 I W E ' c-... D A 200 :-.l ewporl Center garage. 2960A Hier.Ory .842·8>32 ---N t Blvd C M ~ A/ , P enty p g ll COSTAMESA $.175 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,, r r. • ewpor util.646·7332. I ·1 C II ~ 5100 BARTE'l>ff< WITJI ' Drive. 1!308, Newport Pl. Refs req'd. No kids Near new . xtra dl1 S.C.,_.. 3176 646·7445 uic .Ava1.now. a 67J.5340 ~c_... ,, . " Be h C 92600 or-ts A,.. SSl-6221 T h I 3b 2b ,,,__ Realonomics 675-6700 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• B L E ' 0 E: R ~a-__ . __ _ ..... · ~· wn se, g r, a ........................ Live at Newport Beach •orocie• Nwpt Bch. 4001 Birch Large 3 Br 2 Ba . frpl~, bllns, W/D hkup, TOW NHOUSE. 2Blks (P.C.H) SlOO weekly for•etlt 4350 Cosla Mesa, 250 59 .. rt. M1A Zoned,dbtgar.S200 AAA Credil tn 30 days. ~AEL~sJ~'~~ES96620S4 ADVstTISIHCi enclosed garage. Lower. skylights, vaulted ceil-from Bch 3BR, 2BA, Pine Knot Motel ••••••••••••••••••••••• suite. Sl75/mo Ulils In· Mo.A enl54l·S032 _ ~:o~~:r~leC:ll Xii:e~ SALES S49S Mo. Mesa del Mar. 1ngs . dbl altch gar , downstair.1 Lrg liv rm & 645·0440 sto,..,,Garege cld 779 W 19th St. Storage 4SSO 552.700 4 pc h\ rm l'I S300 Make Southern CaMomia in· No pets. 751·9905. many xtras. Adults. no frplc. modem k1tch up· y crticMt...... 4250 00 Ba I boa Peninsula 851-8928. ....................... orrer tenor design publication Upper l Br. S380 utils IS. '575. 545-3604. stairs. S650 + $850 dep oc next to fun 1.one 001.'t ft BAYFROl'-ITOFFICE s T o R A G E Cllril._ ,_... !>lO 1287 needs hard workmg. ag- paid, carport. Qu iet t"IH 3144 (RefuodableJ492·7743 OCEANFRONT•;&;~·s;· "20"2 rt) soo feet. janitorial, park-WAREHOUSE nr N.B * * OfLJ9ih * * PenOftol ~lcfl 5360 grern ve, organiied adlt,nopet.JllJW.Bay ............... ~ .. •0 •0 T11Stln 3190 Avail. Wint.er. Weekly/ 673·~,67J.3930 lng,etc.7~9440. 1 P oat Ofc . 12x35 ' Individual or group ....................... sales reps tohjllondej 548-9516. Beaut. Woodbndge ron· ....................... Monthly. 673-7873. Single garage for rent. in HEWPOIT IEACH $175/mo. 642-2Zl0 charters. Reservations. WOMEN'S CENTER ~i!s7n~s!;.c p~~~!~f:d . .. East.aide. 2BR. Remdld do, 2 Br l Ba, nu plush Large 2 bdrm, l \.; bacon-Lr& Big Bear cabin Pool Laguna nr main heh, $65 Full service exec. or-......... W.ttd 4600 67J.1434 Pregnanr) ttsling. im· terntones tn 0 c. & L.A . In '.81. Kida OK. ~75 ulil carpel, leve!ors, prof. do, Irids & pets welcome. table, color TV. 2 'rplc:.J. mo. 494.3044 fices from $397. "On ••••••••••••••••••••••• D~• LocUr med rt!>ults Low cost Counties Growing com- pa1d.. Ul-4320. Bk.r. decor~ted, pn~ romer N r NP l F ree w a Y • SIH 14. TI4/545-6916 Eastside C-Oll.a Mesa 12 Call" exec. offices from Need 2 br un!um house BalbOa Pavilion abortion All methods or pa ny. excel op pt 'y, New 2bdrm, 2ba condo, location. Avail ll/ l McFadden $525 mo. x.12 x 28 Garage for rent $105. lnclds secretarial, by 10/5 orl0/31. CdM or sc11u 1 ~ birth control avail 24 hr draw + highest com· waler-oriented project. /mo. 752-831B Rene 754-0225. wkda. INhlh to SIMre OOO $9 5 Mo 6 4 6. 116 4 , phone ans. word pro-Lag. Bch pal.lo $1000 NW1.l. I~ hel hne 547-9495 _!!11Ss1o'!:J.213l657·6123. M I c r o , r r p I c • L.,..a leacli 3141 S.56·3050 after 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-9543. cessing, Tel~x. Qwip. max. No 0childre0n1pets ANSWERS washer/dryer hkups, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Office It............ 4400 rnE HEADQUARTERS &M-9971 A Touch Aerobic IMtnlctor car oar w/opener, pool. 1 Bdrm. I batb. lgedeck. "GayRoommate ..,.. COMPANIES Sizzle -Inept Of Class Exper only Newport l·ac. fnstmo. 545-3115. ocean view. $500. Turner ConlactServices". ....................... 714/851·0681 Young Clinstian Couple Mangy -Floral -Beach area 759-1458 --77 L a r g e s l C a y 1617 Weslcliff NB. Want seek living arrange· PRISON 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, gar .. Assoc. 494-ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ma le /Female Room· financial inst 7000s.f. ~CE meot.s in exchange for hcorh/Mod.liltq ASSEMILY completely redecorated CONDO 2 bdrm. 2 bath. S E A WI ~ D mate Service 1n So. lst.floor.Agenl54l·S032. services, companionship Last year 1 IC!t my wife M r &C'ouples work 1n plastics Im· $475. 675-0013. ocean view. No End " Calif. G.R.C for rental 2 paneled olfices +large &c/or rent. 559-~. make out our income w 31.lffi MC V1~ mediate operungs. Need Eastside 2 Br. 2 Ba S87S mo. Turner Assoc. VILLAGE needs. 11-7PM AllPOIT front omce. Carpeted, Old Fishemman needs lax. U there's a mistake, girls for first and second downslal·ra. No /.els. 494-1177 (2l3)6:l>-J040. EXECUTIVE air, parking al front and l don't see any sense in r..loymeont & shifts. Must speak and New 1&2 bdrm luxury rear entrance. Ideal for 2BR. 2BA Waterfront bolh or us going to ,rtpardiOft Near schools. 425. Mewportleadl 3169 adult apls in 14 plans 1 SUfTE 1 or 2 attorneys. institu· home w/sllp for JIFT PRISON. ••••••••••••••••••••••• understand English. Ex· 6.11.01.55. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bdrm from $46.S. 2 bdrm Flo shr 2 brroodo in H.B. Several offices avajl. in llon al, sales, etc. Faces boat. Yr Lease Pay to Set.ooh & per helpful, will tra!u re· SPACIOUS &SUNNY VERSAILLES from SS35. Townhouse w/same. Tennis, pool, full service exec. suite Garfield on SE corner of $1700 Bob,498-2229 Car Pool 5150 I . 7005 _kable person 642·10'l6 R cl Bach. bdrm, refrig. $470 f •~10 ls t W/D ._n •~ u·•· & loc. nr O C. Aipport. Ith · ••••••••••••••••••••••• utrwctioft 2B .en .gar.upper. rom ~ + poo . en- . _, + ~ u .., 7c".''""'9. Broo urst, Hunlington -L..-1~/ Rider wanted, private ••••••••••••••••••••••• AsM~T,.._. D/W, adlts, no pets. Sandy 642-6149 ois, waterfalls. ponds! dep. 673-4743 ox.""" Beach. Very rnsonable ~........ van. Newport lo LA dai-c-No exp nee. l"""ed $425 Oceanfront for Winter Gas for cooking & heal-Lido waterfront w/slip, M 1 -cu rent If you qualify. ,._ 1 3) 85 08 ,.._, opening. NB.548·7 548-9084 · 540-5446 Rentals . Furnished & ing paid. From San • • vrn 962-4458 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y • !21 4 ·57 1714 > Chrfsti1111 Chlrch -- uni Brok 675 '912 D1·ego F"""' drive North luxury condo, util incl, 2 premium otfices avail. morrunp. -L..~. 644-4.209 PRE .. ~1100L & Assem biers Wt Will 2 Br, 2'1AJ Ba town.house, um. er. ., · • ~~ pvt Rm & Ba $650 P · I l ""xecullve su1'tes r II _.. l · A I 7 .. M on Beach lo Mcfadden · nme oc., new carpe · "" • u O•o:luit'f 5005 Lod&Fo.d 5300 DAY CARF.CENTER ratn PP Y ,. · frpk. encl. gar., palio. NO FEE! Apt. & Condo ... W M F dd 67S.4HOor992-4620 wood noors. sky lights, service, very reuona-rr 792 Victona, CM MacGregor Yachl.6, Wl POCl mo. 67~166. rentals. ViUa Rentals u•en est on c a en I open .. -am ceilin' ..... a/". ble AM 1S4--0274 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl u ,,_a M -to Seawlod Village. Wanted : fema e, non· ""' .,... ' · · LOSING LEASE. quit-<corner Victoria & ~s_~ai... ....... esa 1 Ir 2 Br. upeta.irs. slove. 67S-4912Broter 17141-.. 5198. smoker, W /mo. Steps 944 & 8112 sq. ft at $1.25 cu ..a.·-· ••-g bualn-· •-"'-gout Placenlia l d I Ref Co I _,. h per sq. fl. Call Mark JCjk.i """'"9 ~ wi ~. "O<.IW' A u ta. a, up es PAii YrWDART It 4000 to beac . Newport. 2 room office, wet bar, ALL supplies and fix-FOUND Int E:NROU.ING NOW ~ preferred. $.\15 & $35.s. rw:.nru 001M 631·3574. at673-6606. business uae only. $225 turealncluding: AIN lBt lO children enrolled 646-8727. COUNTIY CLUI ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAL Bo A ISL AND SOO sq ft back office · Mo. utlb incld. ,,.., 1684. Display cases, waiting Al£ flEE $10.00 D1~eounl Hrs Laguna Beach Motor Inn, . 1 s I '""" 6 30A M ~ >OP" p 1 Br. garden apt. crpt. UVIHCi 985 No. Pacific Coast BA YFRON:'f. Share 3 mu ti -use. pace n room chairs, Beauty . " ( '" art drapes, patio. $33.S + Bachelors, W bedroom Hwy. Laguna Beach. Br. 2 Ba. wtth 2F or lM, Irvine Industrial nr Mtt me W.. Salon hairdryers and f'.at time students accepted aec\111,y. Adulta. no pets apu &c townhouses. Daily. Weellly, JCjtchen lF. $375 each. Bryan Airport. Perfect for Avaifable for sub-lease hydraulic chairs. m1r-.,_ 543,3468 &46-2723. from$S»$1000644-1900 available. Low winter 673-1388 . art.isl.75'pet!ift. lnoneofNewport's ex-ror1,1belvesandplant.s 642.-5671 JobtWOBted. 7075 Ju.IT I_,, •Tf 1 BR VersaillM. Pen-rales. 494·S294 Room for ~nt, 4 BR hme So«)......, ~uaQlvuel .... otfih·~~mm!~~Xt· Alsod h' m.U.produp, shampoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• r"n"' th s.540 h w/spa. Close lo bch. 3 PrhMHlltlc.hLoc. --.., ... ..__. """" · an air ucts. Lost: Sml S~amese Fem. TYPING lgt hkkpg in e new Bachelor, 1 & 2 ouse, per monl Balboa Inn. $90 & up prof people looking for h1 ting inch.ides rtcepllon/· Calle.11-9754 or Family grieving. Big my home ~'ree pickup & Br. Apts. w/gar or 644 ·S369, 548-0425. weekly. Kllchennette, l $275 Approx. 100 rt suite. ph one coverage • arter8 l!!IM809 C _ """ d 1 5409639 ca rporl. Balconies, 7 S l 9110, 645· 62 4 2 ocean front 675-8740 rm ma e. mo. Prkg., fUll serv., on the uUliUes • janitorial • • anyon............,.., e . · patJoa, pool, spa, bbq. Owner/ A,gent XLNT pvt ba & ent. nr 968.1734 water 100 free photo copies/ S w I m m i n g p o o I Lost: Dog, small cream Het, W a:ftd 7100 ASS&«aS Mechanical assemble.rs for growing laser co. Mtn. l yr exper. In mechantcal assembly Soldering & light shop exper preferred Ex· cell. insurance ~e & CO. paid benef~I • ly al· Laakma . tro-Optics. Inc. . . San Juen C• po 714-493-tQC laundry, Ju.ab shaded l llDIOOMS Hoag, 00 smdt/kitcllen female noo-amoller, ful Come set it now! mo • ample parting • Chemical Service .Bu.51· l.has•-APIO mix. Lake •••••••• ••••••••••••••• laftdacapln1. s.w> & up. ZIATHS 1275 646-l~ l,)'fum.2bdnnrondo.So Mew,...Ndm secry service avail. • neas. Laguna Niguei Park art•. "Snooky". ACCOUKTAMT j'!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Nature adults . NO S•?S.....--.. · Cal Pin.a, m ~ -uUI. Tok.I..... kitchen. Call Qualified area. Noex'°necessary, Reward.s.36-0321. Degreed or nr degreed ASSlSTnfEBUY~R PETS. M•• Pines, 2650 ...._..," . C.Md. In ~vt home,Mltit. .ti Nl·3583ev Call Judy Services at: m-0'740 for :;:,1o~~~in;..,,, '~ii~~: Lotl: tan Genn. Shep. a cc n l fo r l n SIR. AcUve, ra!S Harl a S0 -2447 o r 129 35tb Sl. lower umt, In ry pnv., rap. over M/F rmmte to share 3bd, 642-4644 (Ol'al!l!l-losee vlewln& $40,000 +·~Call Collect. puppf, M, MaanoUa &c vestmentistock broker lnte.resungjob, 'I 5'5-JUS'. xlnt cond. Avail now. 40· $275.842--~ 2ba Condo C.M $225 mo. NEWPORT BEACH Nr Hunlinctoo Beach. 4l9 111 on . Fri. 9.8 p M. Yorktown . H .B. staff. Rt'~ponsible for ~r~~ ~~ ..... ~1.-~ Ltl 1 Br Adult Near <213>966-l7ll. Need r~m to renl lul tl00de.lmmed.NM915 O.C Airport. MO to 1100 Main St. 3llO sq. ft. at -..T.OUl Reward 963 -3108, malntainmgseveralstU •/good men:;,:.;. ._ pool an ut11a pd l bdrm oounltont N50 wknd in Oct. tbtu Jan. F. Straight. ahr 38R apt. agft. 544.7722 • $195. Siem M1mt. Co. FOR SALE: lndustrlal ' 1157.f7&1Jackie. of limit~ partnenhlp amoller Top pay •.1111 1114M~a.541-0a. mo. All WJ ptld. CaU =~~~C'~uuP:='::ti~: CMPMar ea. &46 ·5413 NEWPORT BEACH 504 14HJ24. commercial carpet Loll : cat, ~yish tJser, booh. 11eneral ledger, ln petsononly,no*"1e Roomy 2Br adha pool lMpm,m.l842. lndry, bath" kitcb fac. M · No. NewportBlvd.180sq Beautiful omce In suite, clean In& business . F, L2yn,Sborecllflvic., ~!sphlamoagtmlont&rotrev~a"naonuds calla. BacltSUftt. ll nr stom ii-. ~ pets' 2 Br 1Ba, S* yr1\e Opn \Vould prtler Mlaslon 6*-5'13 ft. at SW. Sierra M1mt nt A.lrpoct. Prk& Incl. + Sl0,000. CdM. 760=QMO '"' St. TuaUn UU mo tf2·1603: beami, atepl to ach. Viejo to San C1emti\te Sbr Ir& luxury home Co.Ml-1334 ~rtlarial. Prefer R.E. fft.01U·831·2m FOUND: Killen wired rrofit and cash proJtc-AUTOMOTfVE ICZ.4W ~~J~:CZ Balb ~a . areas.9'1HZ5fdr!. w/profpen:on.tstlut + or uaoeiat.ed bl.win•. JANITORIALSUPPLY collar • bl11t atooea , '1~-~0 :JEue c all PAITS IASTSM N(ft Hat• 1 Br. $375. Room for rent Christian dep 548-'M3 llDUCID!!! !!!~1 .___._. NetasK,ZKdown.OWC ::.:.1oel Mar area. 28r l~Ba Townhouff p couple looll ln1 for a Have prsd .. Newport _.._ 4460 5».QOO/ITSol7al au bullt·IDI: pello/yard: f7;.;:1:_eiit: ~. e te M/F. non •moker. Many NB. 2BR, 2BA. Pool, ten· Ctoltr Dr. •.ddre.a •t •••••••................ au salllry • atf\ ahop. FOUND : SmaU kitten. gil,., aa Sm ll -t •xtrat. •200/t,t utll. n1a,J1c. Nrbcb. $28.Smo. ·--fie"-·-• 0n1u • Retall Store · e.t beach • -c•"'a. v--·· -t. vie. Ellis. Jacara.oda. -..:.l<A.!'0" a "'" v•ARLV. 3BR. lBA. ~ " r ....... ~ .... ..-"""111 IUW•-v" 1 u 1 ., Ull .... ...,.~ ..... rv -·1••1 --... AvaUNovl.•78S4ev .u._.~,..... left. Reception. phones, OU OD D ,-ltwporl! n•/f! .. %13/SOl-4444 ............... -~~ .. '""'----TSL MGtirr' 842,Ja N.-carpet., paint. 1 bit l 'SCDEC.M. Gunl Houee. F. 11·25. copitr +more. *750 Mo. 114 Drd. St. I would lib to b\ty lnto Lost: Smoll)' Black DMo.28r.J Ba.~ rr~T1~f.ni11~5S3~d. MlCl·PllYAft IZ50 includet ut.11. HB. Hl.u42 fTHllS,171-HOl 1our txlttlat aervlce Altered II Cat. Gan••· .....,/drytr, as:-. LarcuoomavaUOct JJ. Nr8ch.mg llTALSPACI bulH11. Pool main· Declawed Reward. all bullt·lnt. Smalt dllld On tftltJ. lllmt ... to llfFtoabartJ9leoodo. Daq. ft. •mo. Grtat tauetor1.lban a tit·,.• ........... •---..·---- OK. e•t OC. OllJ l yar , .. 1811 P'lllll. apprecl.at.. DO/mo lit pool, •Pa.,.,..,., It SllS apaeare, Hanor-BlYd. ~ ID0811 llld 1 lot at 'l'be faaltll *-In the old.C&Ulr6..,C. Ur. IBLCoauntypool. 6 laat rtq. Gal pref. + \htil. caJI Umt. C1ll: A111wtr Wttt. •. 1 D11tJ Pilot m•OIW IG*I f7S0.17W217. MN17hfthm. --da IMhMmt.a •flHl!I Mflln ..... >Ug , CfwNM.•1111. ~ ~:u nus : z~ ~~~~ _ _ Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 12, 1981 tWp WllW 11M ~ W 4 0 5 6 !25422 0 a a ...... ____ ,__... 2 ~·-.. 1111 .... w... ,... . . w..-.. I 71M ............ -.............. ~ ....... ?~.!! ~!~ ..... ?!.~ !~!~ ..... ?!.~ ~~.!~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!!! .. ···-·····••H•• ....................... ~: .................. '=9:•2 ""'~ ...... .......... hWae drtulUn " + lelt.aval lect1Ury. Plft.UIM J A Ill• lh ti. u te . Cltrit•I , o.tal ---. p, ._. ... ,.. •n br. FIT, PIT. ha It COOK Sat. • dayu ... Pr' bt'-I •· J094 Mature pcraon. Ao· Ortbodonio A11l1taat/ mal•!!1_.!_lper, rt(a. -.v.;..-•-nn w. .MMllt. r~ uua-.... ....... 111 11,tr Mlllt Ille ett\lrlil"""" 1 arh . •t• L .. t t l t 0 d 1 1, Good Hl¥7 • tia.f'll.a. ·--p .. _. ......__ a.-...1..... ...-v'l, *1 ~r. tW; TtO ·UH Atk tor 1m_,,.,:,.: • ... 1uor. c11t1 t Y~ oo trept oe .. t wa.atecl. 11 l ,&&Ln.i. .. 1. UV\01n...-. ---· ta acceptJai appllca· ~ MaruNt •lfi&llf'tl beotft&a. P1eu.c.U: Dr. Jaeot. ff I d uiq . il 200 Pleue Call.. t.loos tor ~ cook 111.n.u., ""· . &o ..U • _....,__........._ ___ _ .. =.:r· 1.·.1:.· ~~w.·.~~:. ..=s -:~ .... alo •• ":'..'='• ......... =.. ... , A1t•1 ... 111 ..... "'"'. · =b~ • ,, ,'.::'~£,,. . for 2~ 1r old lirL My 1;;15Zlii·m•mlOlliiiiEiiiiiiiiiiiiiil CARRY Ttltcommunlcatloiu :,•cb, 1~ '*week. Pll 0. TOITAIT needed for powtai1N 8 8::uraat mat EanWI& al: fut pace -.t· ~~JU la Npt Bd1 1• FOX --1....-•• llnD Meda ·= for 8eGnle Me•-7Jn'•-tt..c. olftct ~ · aaftdwich en• U0ooo.150000 ms wft.b c.., mNtvea ~ r /u .. ......._...,._ CLmltCAL AfiENCY .. .,._,.... WlW11111. r...... . cubltl"I, 18oro¥ff, full • cO ~. at Oru1e Co1111ty ... r·..a....-PAITTM ' f!•ften~in HAUWAllSAUS 111 i.,.1-llJJ NISSONIATOI :il/tlmt,SUO&oai.art, •QuainedLeadl Alrpon.MtttiDA.....- 1c •..,_.._..,. Look.Ins tot lntetetUnr ALL JOBS FIE£ 0 ror Ink 00 ll,.tar. F/tJ -a.a-ln Married, emp&oyed but wanted for i11·ho111t train. nit11nk.ot· • UJploeome may be t.be .... tt for P?ir lafaat, 1111 L...e-• or .. T I ood bud ' hard me_. ~ wa .. t t .. ' pnrint abop In Ne-ten, 17'31 Btoothurat ...... ......, • ...._DI ,,.. l_ourt, M·P, vic~lu 6 wor.. T Y&;n1. no wotten only need 1pp. bardware 1tore. Stt .. o ma..e more. Beacb ~um -ry; St. r.v. ""_.. _. •· (iCMI. A1191icaatmi.mbta ·--FV ~ :~"!i·~ a!J:y~~ ly, KltB En1lneuln1, Sttv1: H W. Writht C.o., ~~ ~=-==1! expr ~n email Off·Ht llSTu•.u.rr U7-71JO ~ :r~= =~v: Balttl"I -wetk,S1t•&m.M6-14i1 <714>54C).ll14· l28Rosbtater,CJI. p/Ume wllb mao•1t· pre11. Good company _,.., A*fw~a• t e lnltlatlve to set E1plnOonutmult\1orl"1===-CUllCA&. M.ICTIOMCSPn HOMEMAKERS meat abWt,y. Call for benefit.. IOllmMS thlnp done wl.t.bout be-will train. Apply 1t I• 111ii1iiiiiiiii forakllledllMl'lll·tkllltd COLLEGE STUDENTS app'l *'5189, ARC AMERICA Corp. 11 now hlrln1 5 day lnl told. Mmlmum ol 3 Wlncbell's. 202 El Ct.mlCAL . or w• train appllcanu ~•amlnMllhrlnbou&CdekMee~'. M_.Lu.-c: 714/tl3-3Jl21Ctny H0•1teu yoslt~n Flrlo· SA~/TIMI yeau tsperltnc• r•· Camino Real San Growln&luerco.1Hb w/1ood math btck· rv e, • 5"'""""' EOt/A!lrm Actlon tervew2~~··00• • TheLotAnaelaTimt1 qulred.Elceties>t aallry ::Cl.,.e::..::m:!.:1~t.!:.!:!11t•~· ----1 ex per. clerical pel"IOO to AcCGUnts around Calif Air Na N w Pt. APP ro x · u Own toola, 31>''1 expor, Empl 37 Fuhloq !!!_and, N.B. Clrculauon Dept cur· and bentftta part1ae to BALLROOIHouch dance handle material control tlon11 · Guard. Prio; bra/wk. Girl Friday In brake Uroot~nd pre. · rently bu po1lt1001 lbe ri&b~ peraoe. C1U lnatn.ictor train~. p IT records. Efficiency ' Recen-1.1e c1...a. military helpful Call Home Services, re r r. d . Gd p. y • Prestige Womens abop In Restaurant available In Hlei u • Pat 1Joc11tna at (714) Will ""' "" C I o d Y Gehr i n I @<S02'l medical beneflta. No Cdm. Must have sincere •I Y 'II 548..UOOi In'-" ev'9, eani N you lea111, neasneaJ l. muat. I You don't 'ne~ a klt '714/ID='7113 HOUSIC'.ll!tBS Swadaya. S/day worll lntemt In Qu.Jity Ap-repreaeota-.ve. ou cw ...... ew .to Sl.000 mo. or more train qu.a.Utled ~rli· ot b ~ od f this 1 ........ _..,_.....,.<=-___ ~f--"• , week. Apply aooo Sut parel.Se:ndl!P!.YC~of CARL'S JR Hm •11 boui'b' wa1e + Setretal)' Pouible, Mr. Elhs. c • n ts Ex c e I . iup:: n~ co!rP•ny to •or. or Janice s Co u t Hwy, Cd M, J Moon 1'77F RivenJde • ~enero1&1 comm1111om. Typiat for Ntrpt Bcb. SU•llM7 btnefitstsalarybuedon locited In Newport (l(l"IWC Ra11edy Anni, 4/d1y1 SM..acm. AveNBQIS.1 HELPS Ulll( all8151-2311,est.1JO(. R.E. lnvat. Co. SUt tfP. Bankln1 ex Per · C 0 n tact ; Beach area, but you do """"" week, 8-4pm,8'75-2!1l4. Medical P/U T ~ 2h d'' lftM Ins• mlllt. llMlrtlland 6 18tUIUCNDa~ Laakmann Electro· netd to know how to l'llftl Houaeb.eper/Nannyllve I SU me, dell~· n . ... ENOS MEET! word proceuor U · S.--.5 Optics lnc. E.O.E. Sao h .WU in love cfl1ldren apeat N IAMCICUllC ly. All de very, L.A S .&I ~s perlencc prtferred. ,,.y..._ Juan Capo. 714..m.c4 operate t e 10 key Man u lac tu r e r 'a E~c .. ulary + own llCnc>MST Timea. SlOO per week. ~ su-zm. bu openln1s for u > adding machine. If you represent.alive wilh ex· room. 6 da.y wit drive Needed for busy N. B. La1una Beach. 49U496. Salesperson for floe -------- =:re; <~c~~~~! Clerical ;~~t;o =~['t. aalo~!~ ~~n!::n~~:~ highly resp., ref~ req'd: L1b.Hlhdl·Cal exper. 'fTIMl~S ~~;fix=~w:~'i ~~:,. Teller. l.af\Ula Niguel STOP expanding company, do aalet engineer trainee. 7~·800t ~lifi:C,ws ~00~~~ Cam 11•g ~afl'a Jr. would like to ferred. t>w will ronalder bu openln• for n · bruch 831 ·1940. call. Company offers AUr1ctlve commission HOUS8CS"•ll Jan6'0-0l40 Y .... c.rien mee~t.yo~em:::ee~!~ tralnio1 ri1ht penon ttutlveaecnt.ary.Mlllt -...0. LC>OICIMG fintclassbenerits and nte and beneflta Surf fl Sand Hotel, Ad11Jt.cwlt.b~din1 mediateFULLorPART lntervlewby1pp'tonly be1el11tartera.odhave M/F/H E.O.E. STAIT start.ssalarytoS730. packaaeolfered. Forap-Hou a eke e pi 111 MllMCAL lltractlvepe.rsonalltles TIME employment op-Call6"·BS. lood oral and writtea Bankiftc E..AIMM(i Rita J-... pointmentcall89"7257. Supervia-Or. night sbi!t, Front office soto NB, who enjoy wortln& with · ail 1 communication akllla. SAVIM&S '7l·HSS part time. $4.25 hr. MD. 40/brs Mon-Fri, 10-lS year old youths. portunities av ab e. Reep/sec Xlnt pild company llPllSINTATIYES Kelty Services can offer English & Spanish Salary open, Please Evenings &-9 p.m. Call ASSISTA~T Full-time. Small firm. benefita. Call; Linda •t F\ill 6 p/tlme Seek in& you immediate. eitclting ILICTIOMC speaking. 497-4477, 3115. send resume to: Ad. No. 6 4 2 · 4 3 21 , ext , 34 3 " Accurate typist. Cood .... 5'9-......... 88CJ8~------- lndi 'd temporary positions PurchaSl·ng c1...a. ASSlteLY La&una Beach EOE 935, Daily Pilot, PO Box between 2 p.m. and s MANAGERS Starting Wife. Medical ..... ~ ... -.. -· YI uals who enjoy h • .._ a1" c II ,_ & 1560 Costa Mesa CA A It I & ..... _ public contact. Must be w en"' Wu.ore you want. M•Jor corporation • •••r ••, Hsekpr. 4hrs/wlt. SS/hr. ' • p.m. 1 ior nuwd coverage. Call after SECIEr AllBI able to wortt Saturdays. near J 0 h n way n e ........ fw •xp •6 I HB. Must read English. 92626 4PM. 546-9250 C II •CLERKS OC c .....,of~ 911u 257 MODa~-,.OITs l'Mi•1'9V We offer excellent a Mr · Le Van : •TYPISTS Airport setks individual • • o. ~•'JI _, ---"-=-='-----T ~ .. """ TV-' ' benefita, super working -!1111111 ..... ----1 Join a proleaPoaal team 642·74ll, Bl E. l7th St, •SECRETARIES with minimum 1 year .... I tr.efoe..,.a. IMSTA&.UTIOM op ..........,,l COMTIOL conditions and good SECRET ARY today, ~ WOik u early C.M. •WORD PROCESWRS e x P e r i e n c e i n bp. or wllll19 to TV D•MTMENY Models needed. AJI types. IMSNCTOI pay I Starting salary ADMIM ASST 11 tomorrow. Call or DOWMEYSAYIMGS purchasi,,..__office ....... C .. 540.9264. Must be able to h1ndle Men, women&children. Immediate openina to $4.SSperbour. • come lo and we will E.0. E. Apply at. C o m P a n 1 h a s y ALOI large Wlita, bouts l2-8 No exp nee:. 548-7762. bindle variety of inspec-TO $ 15,600. answer any questions ...-.. l(lLL y outstanding benefits B.ECROMCS pm Mon-Fri. Apply in MUl5esAIDIS lion incld. lncomin1 All shifts are available Growing automobile you may have about ,.~,,!_,,, SRYICES and vacation package ~rsOll TV dept. Kenn All shifts, Convalescent mechanical 41 electronic IO you ~ be able to coach buiJdin1 Co. needs temporary employment. -.-and offers starling Fashionable Newport H d parts wo .... in P'"""6 "" •-'"b ... _t d forbusyNB,,aJon:Call 2102 Business Center 1ma ar ware 2666 Hospital. Beach area • '" .............. wor,. oun ..... arecon-ynamic self-starter lOIHTITAYLOI Dr., II~ &tH441 (Nr. salari.:.~~ ge.a1c:n· ~8:~~~ ~!~ KarborBl.,CM xpit benefits. Pre·cert ~~1~hl:t ~·,::::n:: :ct!d~ee~t to your w/all around skills to 646-7197 MacArthur Bl. & 405 972_9955 0 w n er s bi P s e e-k 9 Insurance c asses 1tartinc now. Min. 2 yrs. exper. Ex· take charge ol front of· frwy ) Hrs. ~or 27957 Operator with following AccOllltlap Earn while you learn. cell. benefit.I package. F' d f II fi ce. Type 6Swpm, Beauty Ca bot Rd .. Laguna & bas available rental FGF has openings in Call: Mrs Slone. Salary baaed Oil exper. wb~t C~~t·s ~~. 6:Su[!~f. knowledge ol book.keep-:~~~1t~~S~S ER & Niguel. 831~ (Crown Cle.I. room. 64<Mi023. Sandy. customer service dept. 642 • .,.. Cont a ct. Laakmann fer you! Please apply in inc. payJ: ~u:1 com· ror gd Valley Pkwy exit> Hrs Ill Gas Attendant req full & Handle aU ·upects of RN SW'llYISOI Electro·Optics, Inc. person Tuesday . Satur-mumca essen· N.B. salon. Clentele 9-JorHuntingtonBeach 3 years general ~rsooalllnesbusiness EOE.,,_ tial.R.StramenCo.779 pref. The Hair Handlers, Hrs 8-S 847 .,....., ( p1rt time w/ some exp. · 1 7:3B-3:30 PM. Mon·Fri. . .. ->&i• Juan Capo. day 2:00 p.m.. 5·00 p.m. W. l6t.bSt. CM$48-661l 642-·MM. · · ·...-o fice experience immed. opening. CdM arting salary com-Strong leadership ablU· 714-493-6624 arat: mi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ILL(~..h.r. needed to join one ol 6"-5053 mensuratt wit.b Exp & I ty. Cheerful, dedicated l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-= BEYOUROWNBOSS ~ p;;j(,teGlrf'" Jrv i ne s fine s t -'""'~"""------1 Ability. XJnt company to good patient care,--------CARL'SJR SECRETARY Full/part time. Choose se,..v•ces companies. Would like benefits&careeradvan· Beach area . Xlnt LE.I~-• Secretarial position bn.lnfo.Julie67!J..7811 I you to have aales General cement potential. For benefits. Call : Mrs. E 'bij--"')' 4t6019T9CGPkwy. LagunaHillsani Typ- WORD PROCES;ORS RECEPl'IONISTS LEGALS~ETARJES TYPISTS TOP PAY-STEADY WORK iv1c11 HESTOll 'ASSOCIATES 54CM>400 • •BlKESl'ORE• Equal Opportunity d e p a r t m e n t STOP appt call Pauline at Slooe&42-«)64 am w e you earn. nm 1n 1 7 0 w Pm, 11 t e Employer background be good t LOOIJNG 549-8909. H E R I T A G E b Assist. Manager or M/F/H follow·ops a~d be detajl Painting, astom Painter INV ESTM'ENT will s ortband, eood co 180CWSkypa.tt.Blvd. mech. for Schwinn de· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I minded. Excellent STAIT --------1 -custom min. 7 yrs. re-teach you creative Equal Oppty Employer benefits, salary open. Ste2Zlrvine aler. Must have prior benefits and vacation EilNMG JEWBAY fereoces. own truck rinanclng, 1031 Ex· •M!!!!!!!!/F!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Call: SueAnne.betw~n 'lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!! s lo re exp. Sa I a r Y COOi( plam. Salary to $l,2SO. Salesperson for fine pref. call after 6 PM al chanah. Investor de· = 4 · 5 PM Mon · Fr 1 1° flMOO. 5-M-~. Raleigh Hills Hospital in Rft Kelly Services can offer Newport Beach jewelry .... 964~·-4828='------velopment & counseling. ________ 1 586·4400. SEC'Y JllC9'T. BOOKKEEPER Newport Beach las an • JollftlOfl you immediate. exciting store. Eirperience pre· p-1....1--Exper counselors re-Restaurant Ope.Dings SECRETARY (EXEC.) Independent film dis· immediateopeningfora 972,9955 temporary positions ferred, but will consider --. ceive 100%comm.Tbeis Enthuslastlc,efficient& tribution co. locaUd in Tustin, full·time, F/C, cook to work second wben&whereyouwant. training right person. •needed for detail craft an unusual oppty for W•'dm.. or1anized, w/bkkpg 'Nwpt Bch bu opening h IC b I Y organized , shift, lO::KJ AM to 7 PM. Interview by app't only. work. Mt.&St be perfec· nght penon. Confiden· exp. 4 day wk. Pd vac & for Secret1ry I Recep. responsible, exper, non· Experienced in the Trainee •CLERKS Call644-2883. tionists. Piece work at tial interview. Call to~ holidays. Send resume, tioni1t. Salary cotn· smoker. Good salary. hospital setting pre-•TYPISTS home. Vinces.46-SIB>. JOllL will contact. Write Box menaurate with eirper. A/R', A/P, Payroll ferred.Excellentfringe Beaut i ruJ big •SECRETARIF.S L...1..T--LT.....i........ 498·1118.19-SCathy IOl'SmGIOY! U 45, Daily Pilot, PO Don,851-1502. Growing mfgr & 4 benefits. For interview, •WORD PROCESSORS .,PAll'lliillRTffl.--.ME Part-lime Sales help Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ~--4U... .-..... service oriented busi· call: Barbara Duran company in Fashion wanted p t ' IECEPTIOMST """261\/l.'"' _..-..,....,..._ Island seeks bright Responsible for lab · re 5 1 g e .and one of the many '""' '""""• Pumps, minor lube nesses. 832.7300 (714)645·5707 E 0. E. individual to train into a Apply at. gourmet cookware shop needed for insurance restaurant opportunjties SECRETARY CARSON Bookkeep•"" _M_/_F______ 1 . 1 . . the' I( ELL y ma i ntenance i n in CdM . Ml.Gt have sin· brokerage firm In N.B. we have available. No M . : k work , station maiot. ~... ,..__ t I t th c enca position in Ir s raarmaceullcal R & D ftere IA•--m' ~'-m' g. Duties Include telephone ewperien""' reqw'red. We aJOr corp see s exper Full time. Apply Mr. CO. in 1...nfte "-· ·ammed ""'3me o OglS mus .ave own Bonds Department. ir.y1e•r.cr · I · " "'""'''=' .. """ .. ""' secretary for Carson Bot 2•"" F · · ' ... , '""" k I d r al ~ a c 1 it Y · I • 6 Pm · Call Berle at ""'1·3335 or answering & Ute typing. ·u · Pl I ts. ...., all'Vlew CM opening for person ex· no~ e ge 0 styh.ng, Light typing is 0 K 2102 Susioess ~nler •3 75 /hour D' "" WI tram. ease app Y Sales Ore. Must be good . . perlenced in working bl~wmg, cUUJng, lnm· Co mp a n y or re r s Dr 1208 833-1441 <Nr 642 7511 x22 1~n;' -'N_a=n=c>;"'"""at~673-3U4=-="'-'-'---For appl. caJJl)4.4.5,22 in person between 2-4pm typist Front ore ap· Service •tlUOn attendant w/banlt P/R system & mtng & pemung of halr. excellent benefits and M~~Arth0ur Bl. & 40S g.11 ;30am. ' · ' Part time olfice work. RECEPTIONIST daily. pear a nee. Customer 3-lOPM. Apply at ~ell hllldling AIP & related Knowledge of Farsi will startyououtat$650. frwy) Hn S.5 or 27957 --~=-----Perfect foe housewives Partt.tmeforpresUiious contact. busy phones. Station 17th & lrv1.0e functions . Outiesalsom-language IS prefered. with r oom r o r Cabot Rd , Laguna LabT9diT,.... &Colleeestudeots. Easy salon. Someooe who en· WAITERS Xlnt salary & benefits ~B~l .... vd"" ....... N .... B.._. ---- elude; Maintaining cost $1000 per mo. Must b~ve advancement. Niguel, 831-0542 (Crown PARTfflME work must be conscien· joys people,~ can ban· WAITRESSF.S Applicants only, Call: SERVICESl'ATJON sheets & gen typing Ca I 1 r or n 1 a Rita~ Valley Pk:wy exit> Hrs. Reeponsibleforcleanup tious. 10-20 hrs week. dlebusyphone. Ml.lat be COOKTRAJNEES Kerin Holmes (213 ) Mllur e person for Good Co. benefits Cosmetolog15t license. 972•9955 9-3orHunLtngtoo8eacb & animal care in f3.7Sbr.Call646-9741 fashionconscious.Houn CASHIERS 841-032Ext126. E.O.E selfaervice cu It car Salary negot. w/exper Send. resume lo 9944 Hrs. 8-S. 847·3498 pharmaceutical R & D Part-lime Sales. Fashion Wed-Thun·Fn. 4-8. Sat 4.501 Cam~ Drive M /F /H. wash. Apply : 1701 T\&ltin Call 7$4-1931 Hamilton Ave HB Ca IEL[~ Tht facility. 4-S hours per island women's special-8·5. Apply in person nei'{~e::11° _A_v_e_C_M_. ____ _ 92646· Tra1·nee "tSelYGSf" d. y ' AM 0 r p M. ty store, flu. hrs. Some Richard Ouellette Beau· • ..... SECIETAIY SERVICE nx:HNICIAN IOOl.OIPB F/C COSMITICIAN PllqlR S3. 75 I hour· Diane, eves & sats wtends. Call ty Salon, 200 Npt. Center for heati.n& le air coad.I· Independent film dis· Wantedtomanagelarge lf you like to work sePv•ces 642-7$11 X22, Mon.·Frl. Mimi ·7se.~1. Dr. NB. CASHIERS Local Newport Beach tionioa co.mpany. tribulion co. located in Cosmetic Dept in friend· with lot.s of people and Equal Opportunity 9·11:30am. 154 E. 17th Street Savings & Loan IS seek· Permanent poaition for Newport Beach has l y neighborhood wanttobecomepartofa Employer Landsctping. Fu.ll·lime. PAITTIMI RECEPT/SICIET nearFullerton 1ng a self motivated qualifiedpenonw/3 yrs ~pe.ning for fuJlcharge pharmacy. Days, Mon.-big company, this job 15 M/F/H Call Between~7 PM. Crew Supervisors, work Costa Mesa secrPlary with strong or more ex per. Pd ooklteeper. Salary Fn.644.211i, foryou. Youdonot oeed l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 9'19-Sl82 P /time evenings & Real Estate develop· '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! secretarial s kills, Holidaya "!rofit sbar· commensurate with ex ...:....:~::..:..::=----any offi"e backgro··-.. weekends. Supervi'slng men t firm needs a~ .r...1.e... lhorough.DeS$ and con· . Do C~1c~ al " """'· general • •u...-y 11.1tt1 • .,... -. 1n1. & me benefits. per. n,851-1502. _......,. ....... c but you mus t like Dental, front ortice -._ n.....-the door to door sales mature, sharp front of· Kron Cbocolatier in genial manner to work BOOKKEEPER PIT Person for equipment numbers. This company 1 r 0 u P Pr 8 ct1 c e . Mon · Fri. 7 · 3: 3 O. crew of youngsters. Ex· fice P/T person to greet Soulh Coast Plaza bas for the VP of Loans, and ~~~::Oa Niguel. Call Alts or moms. Xlnt pay. rental store, Saturdays has outstanding benefits cha llanging position, Newport Villa. 4000 cellent earnings for public & answer phones. fu.IJ d VP of Administration. -------- Apply in person , no required. Wages open. and will give a salary of room for growth with ex. H 11 aria Way . N. B. person with ability to Must have accurate lyp. lions 3!1v~e~ime posi· Salary $1,200 per mo. SERVICE STATION phonecalls,BackStreet, United Rent-AIL S650. with plenty or cell. benefits Call· 642-5861. motivate. Van or large ing. S-46-KRON w/f ull insurance AiilNDIWT 65SBSt.,Tustin. 645·1n60. opportW1ityforgrowt.h. Diane -Le-g~a~l ..-=.-----I carisneeded.Call Call752-2737 benefits & paid career Full or part-time Even· CUSTOMBl RB' Rita Jolltto9 973-1495 Freelance Legal Sec'y & Media Merchants RETAIL MANAGER apparel. Pleue c~IJ. Inga' week-enda. Mac's ht''"°"' Ab'U d I · h 972-9955 G Legal Word Processors 213-427·2756 EOE RECEPTIONIST Ms. Denny Paruia Texaco~ Full time. Continental i ty to ea Wit peo-eneral needed. Please call P . Anl I H 'I.al 1oo1c· NEWTIMES 71~ Cuisine.Ask:forKen pmlea'}bY1.Pneess. wpphomn'easddinan·dg Executive seeking in· Hild l ..... ..,., •• p . art lime evenings, r ma ospi llDI CL01H-.CO. E.O.E. SBYICISTATI-.. 873-3233 ~ dividuals ror business · a a .,,.,.....,..., nnc. answering service, no or exp., aggress ve -_.. keep billing records. Jun1' r Secretary expansion in Orange Only pleue. exp nee. Call: 636--8000 i person, P/T eves. & SOUTH COAST PLAZA ATTMAM'r CASHIERS T I C E.O.E. weekend.1631-1030 Now hiring a Store Apply Cbevroo. 1251 No. wanUd for auto wash m e eprompte.r able TV. If you have good C.ounty.IMMJ99S Liquor Stott: Stoclting It , REC...,._,,.S / Manager & Assistant --------i Coast Hwy, L.B. Nwpt Bch & Irvine :U~ 16lb St. NB. skills. this company &IMllALOfPICI Cash Register U · AYROU.CUll _. .. ..,..... T Managers. M1.Gtbesales •SICllTAlllS• SH-. ... .- areu.844-4480 """""~--------offers an excellent Heavy figure work. perlence 'neceuary, The Jolly Roger Inc., an HOSTISS producers, fashion· RP.Erea1uShtlct/J..~~.OOO ~-DELJVERY DRIVERS opportunity to grow and u .. _ over 18. ~between 8 established restaunnt Personal assist•nt to oriented & experienced 111 _,,.,.'° llCllYM CASH& A IU"au· be.in I Tb b •Ult ""' proficient in It 3 week 1ys. 1888 h • b · f J · · • S80/Full0i-"'/8122 000 · P1 ... ons now g earn· e Y ave fl:(l.lrH, 10 key by touch, p c 1111, as an operung succeu u , very busy m m11ses .. junior ap-a• • Mail, exper. helpful. HOUSEWAIE SAL.ES taken for furniture de-outstanding benefits, bookkeeping or account· laceoU11 Qista Mesa. for an experienced executive. Mtat be ex· parel. If int.eresled. call ExpCoosuhant Oura Some lifting <~Iba), Full or P/time. Apply· Uverydrivers.XJntdriv-theirownspa.andlhey ina exper. helpful, Ute MANAGIMINT PayrollClerttoworltin tremely attractive. Mr . Ordesky at LizReindersAgy,lnc. XJnt company benefits. Crown Hardware, 1024 ing record req. Call are not a pressure type typini. ()ppt'y for ad· Executive seets $ key a 4 person dept. Ability superbly groomed & (213)703-1716. N4020 B~Est'64EOE Informal office, C.M. lrvine (Westcllff)NB Mon· Fri, 8am-9am. company, so you can vancement. XJnt com-people w/mgml exp. & to handle extensive have a vivacious RO~S ewport m.8190/Free Call Millie after 9am CASH& 646·7579 learn at your own pace. pany benefits. Informal ablllty to YIWk w/otbers. phone communications personality, Duties in· vna 645-SIOO. DEUYllY ~ Salary $900. to start. offi c M 'Ill a must. Salary com· elude light secretanal in All types. 3 yrs exp. Hous-·-s·· 1!$ ice. . . Call Ml e Xlnt income potential __ .. ed G •. I ·1 p·1at ~.,...__, AWi: T b RJtoJolliittolt _,._ 9 ~ac"""' mensurate with ex· extremely quiet, pretty n=u · reatpay .. ex. : II y I ....................... ~. Full or Pftime. Apply : 0 usinesses. ex., 25 971•9955 .,..,r am: ....... .-.... teaching simpl@ busi· perience. Apply in one girl office + con-tra benefits. Contact Crown Hardware, 1024 hrs/mo. No sales. SS/hr. 'ilMB.AL HB1 n e a s s Y s t e m . persoo between Sam & siderable local driving, Mike or 8.J. 642-7222. Irvine (Westcliff) NB + mi. &ro-2440 $1000/M <213>596-2584 Spm at: Benefits Include Iota of -------• CATERING Service Dellvery.menovertBfor We have over 40 0 MANAG&e(T THE JOLLY ROGER variety & freedom, SALES needs food prep . LA. Times to homes positions available • Retailfabric store INC. 1reatstartingpay&un· workers. $4 . hr . C .M 3am ·6~m . immediately in almost •IOOUBPIM& 8 locations Southern 1700Gillet.teAve. limited growth poten· COMMllCIALl.E. Fulltime. 5AM·1::KJPM. Economy car req.wred. ~very job function in the ISECllTAIJAL California. Trainees It Irvine, CA. tl11. Good education, rred of selling houses 7 • Part time SAM·9:30AM N o c o 11 e c l 1 n g · 8 n k an (I S & L •OIDa IHRY usi.st1t1t managers. Ex· (71')54&-0331 s t ab i 11 t y & s e Ir . ays a week? We need • or 1PM·6PM. Lori 's S400-S4SO/mo, +bonus. industry. •wu1.u-..r11 citing, challenging, ex-motlntlon A MUST. 0~~.~censeeto learnlhe Kitchen, 3077 Harbor 646·0637or646-S844. Call: Carry ,,,__...vv-K cellent benefits & start· People who need People Write very detailed let· 9 i "'to manage, broker • Bl., S.A. 97&-0747 for apt. Deliver L.A. Times to 972·9955 •DISTlllUTIOM Ing salary. Must have That's what the ter Including ambitions. commercial real estate. CH~-c•i homes in H.B. & C.M. •llCB'TIOMST ret1il background . DAILYPILOT ~u1liflcationa, personal lnbcilome from mgmt • ~-"' ' lb 1..i-., 1 i Jl. d w e you learn. Super • eed i d d . UAM. $400.$4.SO/mo. + N o erpog uuu:i. Prefer R'IWorrelated. SERVICE DIRECTORY escr pt on .. eaire4 benefits; life insurance: n sa ewg rivers. bonus. Dependable car ew Accounts HOOPII.NEC. (213)627-4471. isallabout! salary. Write Box •9'6. healthinsurance&den- 483·8888 needed. 546 ·4481 or Super benefits. Young Dally Pll~ PO Box 1.560, tal plan. Coot.act Ken , Childcare. 964-4982. Reen people pref. / c 0 s t a M e sa ' c A 675...S700 Cheerful, reliable In· ..=..;:....=D=..W;.._,,_A ___ t__ IR A I i(E OU G H 1714J147·242Z I'!... _9:~21626--=-0560~'-· ----I •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ dlvldual needed to pro-k I d d J b , .. _______ I J ~ RECEPTIONisr = . cuion•I full days. Our Thurs only Top pay. th.is company known for Our rapid.ty expanding busy' friendly real f:::01!!:1~qcu:to e :m~ videurefor3chlldren2 Exp. DAforEndoolfice now e ge an o ,-afN-•• -...I f Recepli-'•t ~_.for SALESPE.RSONfuUtime attemoonaperweek.Oc-wanted PIT. Mon Ir st.ability important for w --""""' ~··.~ "'-·~ f t & h Cdlil home only, car & ~63~1~·3380........______ lt.c l0t11·te.nn employees lntern1tiooaJ comp1ny estate office In Npt Bch r us • ref 1 ml.lit. Salary neg, DIMTAUICH and excellent benefiu. is seellinc an en · C.thy.SM-tll80. . L~~~o~etaenn::n 3~~~ N0-9290 Ex per dent a 1 Beach location. Start.inc U11asla1Uc aell Startin& RF.STAURANTHELP Laiuna Beach. ttthnican. Partial dept. salary to Sl,000. lDdividuaJ for a general _,, ~ ~ -;\ Bartenden. servers, bus SELL idle items with a Process & ftniab , etc. · e.l:Cwry office position In our ~ peraon1, boateuea, SA&.ISPllSOM Daily Pilot Classified Sal•ry open. call M-F. '72·"55 purcba11nJ departuwnt. --coot1. ()pmini Nov. ltt. in men's fashion store, Ad. Sti-2002 Good tJping, phooet • f!urope.11 ca.le. Newport lAguH Beach. P/time ...;..;.=-------1~'-----·-----f llln1 required . Bcb , Call for appt. • f/tlme. Salary t ' 11.11 p·iat ·· Tellers <>uutancHoa compeosa-""""'790......_·ms::;:..__ __ ~com ____ m .............. -==--·. I I .................. "\. Need ae v er a I =.nt.~.:f ., C~111fled Ada, your one-~t~a ~i experienced person•bfe in& eavttOC1ment. eon. l\oe abopplg cegttt. Clauilied Ada SC.5678 Tellers for rapidly tact; Pat llUll. AMF ACCOONTS RECBYABLE CREDIT ASSISTANT · I r o w I n I b a n k . Sdeatlfic DrtWn1 IU., • Comp a n y o ff er a 1.IOll llltcbell s .. lrvi.ne, . • excellent benefits and '57•1C1151. EOE M/F • starlln111lary. I • : e.l:Cwry : Will prepare bank deposits 11.nd resolve • t11·HH • credit and blllln11 problems, 2 years credit • : exptr. Good accounting skllb, Including type , : 40 wpm •nd !Ljey by touch. Most bt • : diplomatic 1nd l'Jllclou.t in dealing v.1lh lhe : • public and sales surr. Compl'titlve salary • ; and cmploytt benef"'au includin& comp1ny : • paid health. life •nd dental lnsurtnl'P C•ll • : M2"'32l. t•l. m ror •ppointmcnt : , . . · OIAMMGl)ASTDM.YMOI' : CARRY FOX ~EN:Y ht'IOMa Ac~,...... Pel"IOD needed fOr OOW· In& reatalftlll Corl> ol· nee. The UM ol LO k•y, Utt typta1, a bkkiD1. Some A/Cr.rlblt uper helpful. ala.ry com· llM9tl rtt.t wtt.b lllUltJ. Call tor ~ (714) MNIZZ. a.., Neu • . ' \.__ ~ "8ilJ ,. •.. : ............... '\ : KIDS -' ; PAIT TIME EYD1tCS ~ ; STUDENTS ~ \ ; Wt art Prtaentty attkln1 adult• with : : NEEDED ,pleaunt peuonal1Ut1 who would be • ' lnC«tlted in wOf'lllDI ln SAM 6: PromoUoo : • : wllb Dtll7 PMot C&rriera 10 to ~ rem o1c1: • • e.n P>-SBO per week. Tripe & Prizes. C.tt· Q-i=e • IJt-NOI. ' i Uilllmit.cl eanalnaa anilable tol1Cllt penoa, : : : Kn: S;IOPll to l :JOPll, Monda1 tllru : : : PtidQ. Some S.tutd11 naUablUty, '°' : : ; =IDellt, call: M241, ult few Ben ; ; . ' . . ' . . . Sales Trainee For District Mananr This highly successCul lotal?IWi.PIJfti h!ls an opening for a trainee Lo tarculation department. Bask 1 Us will entail supervision of 10 to 14 yeu old boy ana 1lrl home delivery carriers. Areas or supervision will bl! delivery, collections and sales. Selected applicant will receive liberal s~rting salary, regularly scheduled rwes, bonus opporlunlUes and many frin&e benefits such u company pa.lit dental and health plan, lfOUP Ille insur1nce, vacation arid sick leave. Com(lany vehicle ia furnished durinc working boura. Applicants muat be over 18, ba~ a good drlv1n1 record and be. neat appearing. Houn are generally 11 AM to 9 PM. Mooday t.hria f"rlday Some ov~me la available. · U you an Qll&Ufied and lnletelted lo lurnln& the circul1tlon buai.11e11 coot.act the Daily Pilot 1t 330 W. Bay, Costa Mesa before 10:30 AM er aft.er J PM d1Ur. AK for Don WUll1ma or K~n Goddard. . fllld 5*s S.,.nil' : • UOranmlted openln11 avail•~· 11 u.. ft CoUt .,.., for Hlf· \'Ir.I career oriented Individual C'U • work with Field Salee Peopte. Train : mollv•te and ftt rtaulta. Statloti : WllOn OI' Ylft ftfftlllry. ~icmal • t1ml~11, Ph•a Job rtlateel ._,Ju : available ror tM rl1bt PtOflt-I ,_ · can Pl'.Oduee ra111ta, not Ju•.£ t.ik .-• ttJ ctll -... for la~ifw. Mk for : ,.r.c:::!hanct. • : JJI W. IAY ST .. COSTA M1SA. : : CA.t»U . .... , ....... .... , .. ~-.• Jr!fg!, . w. CGltl W..tl:ict.. llpt ... ..... . . . 1------· __ 1111111--.11111111~_.. : OIWIGI COAIT DAILY PILOT • ! I ., ~ .~ D W.IA'f lT~Am.IA.CA.lml • l~:.. . . . . \ . COSIO MN. CA ~. . ~ ~&,:L... i ;,; . . . ~ -tOllM. ~ M\.oe : . . ··v···············1···'········· ......... . . I • Mt IOU• "*""" Ufii.Oorli. •• ~-• 1 c.4. ..... , •••••••••• ~···························· .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. . .. . . .......... ') -,-~ -II .. ... . -!-...£ I 'Q 9 a a 9 0 a 2 sTisTF37 i 5 a-•• 2 a a.-. seat a'o•••••••~~~ / ' ('JI Orango Coast DAIL v PILOf/Monday. Oc tober 12 1981 Sell it all and put cash fu your poCke ' DAY WEEK 8Days 3 Lines -, Special flat rate for non -commercial users offering merchan- dise priced in the ad fot $800 or less. Cost is the same for '8 days · "'-or one. Minimum three lines . Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678 8 Dollars Classified PLUS START COLLEGE IN lliREE YF.ARS WTTli MORE niAN $20.CXXJ. Mtrchcmclse .. f0l5 ~ 1050 Mtau•••• IOIO W.ltol ~.rot p to10IMotori1ectllkts tl40 ~C·t "'1/ 9520 ~~~:'!.~ .... !~.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ins~ 8083 •••••••••••••••••••••••1 ····••••••••••••••••••• a1s cs ... .\ ,.. . .. ,. .... ! . •' .•. '· . AAMY BE All YOU CM Bf. Com Mesa S~O 1026 Huntington Bch 962·8821 Dana Point 493 190 I SaAtJ Alla S424763 Stal1on1·n ·tu ' 1 AntlquH SOOS t'Ft\ k1h. lltm.,, l:lurmb. Burca·Lounger rocke r Lovtlaloofts ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand 11.'1•\\ "Ill l>o"n Ydlow BalJ\Uli. lo mi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • •• ••••••••••••••••• S 1 .1 rn, In 11uir1 t' s, recliner. oatmeal, hke Hehum Bouquets de • faM To •I i SI I 1 \Int c·ond tum i.rl(nal!> '65 Sonbeum Tiger new I 111 I • ..,,,, Leblanc clarrnl'I, :>.~nt s'10:..n .f •!Jln1' r'llr u,1r flt'lllll't \'iio 11!117161 2119 l'mblems. (J,I 1 ' ; •' "11 1• It rm, ~ 1 Ott S2SO new~.,."" 5il9 3S98 liver ed Pe rfect for rond, suo Ru.i:ll', S2S .. ,..s ·' o 1' , , cit· an Rl•turnini: to l !111 i qJ ~ f11oll10Jrtl •llS 1l51!7 Art deco 3 pc bdrm furn ..!Y!f}'OCCASIOll.&7_3-4-419 Drum $15 536 715-1 I hing. dl\Ul)( ~v <nm. I 110:\ll\ \10! F.I> . h I ·ts ·II ~'""'I I I • I I It I ---~ J. • (' t I IW•j ,. I' <'> /\I N . SC 00 mw. ' ...... ,.~ ''' ol Ill\\ Ill.I Ill\ 0 8040 matchedsetl.ovelyong•LOSING LEASE QUll· Offi E..-.16.-& 1n.i: JJJOJ ,.,.. . ... 1~1 1110~1.e~ OHO .!17!16600 x1·111 1 'Ii' ~.:.r.1 %7 1111,;, 09s t•ond SllOO 63l-S794 l b Iii'. ct,.............. 557 11!><!7 da)s Ctll t..t:! 141;11; ,,.4 1.,,0 • • ••• • • •• •••••• •••••••••• . mg us mas, se ng out EquiplMl'lt 8085 I --!....-1 .. < 1·c n L·c· \:-.. ~T mo ed .,.. """ 1111111 1\~.ESllONI> Pup!> :\KC Teakwd blk round din rm ALL supplies and ftx· ••••••••••••••••••••••• oah, Munt'l'll' 1 m ' J •· • • : P 4 Wtt.•I Drhtt C'hJmp 1im• M F Pl't & tble. 3 leaves, 3 chrs lures mcluchng Copy mactuncs for Sule Equtpmmt 9030 i,:011\l c1111d S.:150 lwst •• 1111,~~I ' •• 'h11 \\ 11, l pl) Sl9S080752 5620 Dlllplay cases, waiting Xlntcond S6SO, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111 l'•·l'l82l.1fl s • •Iii ~·~,.. lt:l .i7 IJ4Safl6_pm room chairs. Beauty o« ........... 768 1092 Voh o u11tl111.1rd .111 \1111' ~.11 1 ikt• ~e~ ~ r C'hrome & gl~ md tbl s I h d d °"" ~ 7!1 I or1l ~ ·t.o l't 1'11 \ H .1ut11 .111 I J•l1 ,1111 rm C.Jo.•~•l >I'• .!:!;'.i1 Wt'll ltry Or StU Yow Cftan , l111port On \ Conslcptmtnt!!! Coll Our . U1.cl Cir -I Mein~ • ' TODAWl ~~ • • 1111 • • I SlllH l'Zl pup,,, .\Kt' w 6 Breuer Chr.. $300. a on air ryers an m u I u 1 .I !! h I' I 1 • 111 fi.. r• r hnd;, • 0,11 •L•I l<u)!b ~.5 111 S2.S0.111cl111> l'J,honb S48 71196 e\ei,1wknds. hydraulJc chairs, m1r· l'RICESREDUCEO alll·rn.11111. 11~·· ll t'\\ j llu11' hll'oil 111~1 n11 '''· 11 1·1"'" !t•ll1•t• ti3K!l3tll 6427370 rors.shelvesandplanls DRAMATICALLY! $425 ll.'11!nli I l'11,t ~I.IHI m" \11\\ 0111\ Trucks , I 13 f•J040 4f ... 949 ·· Ml&sd~rni~ -~ 1 •1•1 Sl<.1 ~~111 fl(I.-. '>Ill I (;ulcltn Ht'lrn·~er Pup Alsdoh, n:iake·up. shamPoO Nt>w and u~l·d off1te Gt·rnwn 1'1.ith "·~11111 All li:t:!:> oh•· . .-111 11.1; ~lt'' l' ••• ...... •••••••••••• •• h .i 1tt1. ,~1 '1i·\1tau Pit'' \KC' ~;mo $\75 U1111n~ set. Century an a1rprodorts furn Metal and ~ood 8, .. ,, l't·ift•rt '!.Ii, 1!•1'' f11ril 1111111 1 \, ~ I 11111 °'4J ~\ht I l'an ll'a\1· .1 ht ~t'ek or 'CounlryClass1cs''4'x7' Call631·97S4or de:.ks $25 lU $100 i.t/!r.~11 Motorcyct.s/ p.11111 JI"~' ·", ,.,. table, 6 chr.. Like ne~ afler6.._89!68Q9 Lockers $50 tu $150 Scooftti 9150 11111' 1 1111tl '"' :H5 i21>1 $89S 548 4884 f:\lnrurlt 1111' 11 II 11m , •• ••••• •••••• • •••••••• I k I , _· Ceiling Fan Casabella Chair:.. file' ~ork 1 S:ll• lll'O 1411 .,111,1 \loturn It· l!ll\ '1•1 i· \l\l ln'h Sl.'tla Pup~ 2 Loft Bed Comp w mat Victorian. Antique ed1 bt-nches. tabl"'· "lH>tl l(rl'.i ' 1" 111: .... F 10 \\k~ :.,hoh, tres~.ladder.guardra1I. lion. SZ" blades, re ~hel\'rng. bouk1'J'''' i.i .. ~.fh· 1 ~"1 111'\1/'~'.~tll 11'011 t I l'1 d111• 1,1, 1.~11 "11rml'd $7!'> 646 l942 $130 !163-SS.lS verse, 4 tulip lights, wa s c·abmets, (>l'nfll, IO t•a l Boats, PowPr 9040 · ·~-1 " • ·' Hu11., ~cl 'I.it.at IJ,1 1•11 \ l\.t 'C'OLLI ~; 963-~ S299. Take tl.25. 730.0986 SA VE SSS HOW! ••••••••••••••••• •••. •• \Ill\' Jo ~1 tt>I .,.11 ·1 H 11011 x.11. l:'J. ~ "111'"11ld.lnrnlort'd. Mu)t Sacrifice Brand Everes t & Jennings C E Surplu.o,Ofrttt·Foru \l\JUl'ldlll\·1 ,1,, 'fll "111' l.IC)NI 111 IT11 1;.i 1'1e~ IJI 1J1111>1 I I I h I f I '''" Pl :!4 I Ir >(Ill I ' ... uldO'-i:!ll:ti "' 11 \\ 1 1' amt' ne~ tdbles. lamps, Wheel chr Brand new ""'4 atenttJ M l'\1 11 1 ' •11111 ~ht'll , ·'"'·111· :111 .• 10 rat,rol "~hub. leai.h JJJrntrngs. trurrors Uest Askrn.&_S2SQ,540-9275_ ~I 2777 111~•·1 )!llHI °' 1"''1 111 11\J 1111' 11 \ I'\ ~uu ''"r"o \1·\\ r;11lr.d 1·11, 11 ''111'''1 ~'\JJ l'.'>t !!697 Offer f'mm S2S lo S300 Carpet, apt grade. tan. Like new E\l'lUl1111e fir Iii.Ii~ 1 " 1 " llnh i 11111 11•hlt 1·111-t'Jrnl '•h •\l\.t ri·i:•~ll'red lri~h 5531041 wlcushionairpad.tack Kl 500 i•harti·i ~1•1 t:! Jllrrwt1lt.1,1t .tohl' 111tl1 1·\11·111·111 '"111d1 rind 1111,. 111111 ... 1:!1: St·llt1 J.IUJJJ!lt'~· JO ~k' t.rg Maple Table. 4 strip, tnslalled, $6.00 tell:'phone ~ystl'll\, 111111·1 r.vinrutll' i·lo·. '·1•111 111111 [. luJtlr·d "1111 <ti' I ()fl() li7.'i·:l:§let Iii •Ill old ,17;, 1!11! J.122 i·hatrs $t50 GoodCond yard compl. Approx 100 over pagt•. 211 lll'lru trJ1lt·1 11"1rlo 111111111•. 11'''''ru·~ '-2690 l'all 11H1l IOOh \ \ \I li1rn1 l.lo!l TrJ1nrng 963-6316 J..!!s_. 64S·9325 mt•nts. Own 111111 "" 11 ·""' II 11·ri-1·1I •11 '11.>0 ,;,~ !l~'9'1 Jftl'i l;pm '71 Cht•\\ Sut.ur J,,111 1,. h l't uplt frJtr11ng fur s r· . d loH' eat z i.ystem tn )our m·~ nl .,.a11 u1.1u 71 Hi:.;; IHI\\ ~.x11•llt·nl I milt·' .mlu 1 r pt•\\•'' lln.:' h \our !Jog \ •0 a an ~ · Bx 12 woolrug.slateblue flee Must \Jl·C1fn•1 PortnerWm1t~d' r11nd1t 11111 ~t5UU S:!.!<k1 Cilll·t 11131.:i.1. •. llllllll l't"I l Jll l ' \\di do ~r~~llh~ ~~~lbrc;~~~do;~I wl ivory gold design. I l'has Perl) 711 956 l.ll!I 2,, I' ,.1111 \ .ill s 'ii·:! t•IJ5 If.~:! K'll•I 64:! <lti(jl, llwr .. ,t •i.Ai!r4..S I \\,1~S900,sellforSSOO S300 957 0'7~ -IRM Correcting.Srll'l'lrn· U1""'' 1•r;•1 lrnrt1•H '1;11 "•hi "II motor< 1l'le Vans 9570 B1 ;JUl .\KC ~h1h Ttu 851·2300 Se 1 bo d'S SlOO I ll.xlnl C'oml.S.~11rhf•,1 ~hp ~15-1 rno + t•1p11t1 tCJi5 C'll .IOI.fl Sl!OIJ ur ••••••••••••••••••••••• -all e on . ave ff "'8'"'"" I I I 1••101411 I \\ In 111'1 It• JJ u JI P n· s I M u~t sell br set $140 sofa Round trip for 2 Air Cal o er .,.. ~ dep It'' •..i5 ~7110 I.' ,,.,111 r ... '72 Uodi!l' Spbman t.tornl " ~huh 111 ~I.~ olrl Q25 l'hrm tbl S7S uphol "won trip" can't u~e Orrn·e Furn fur ,.ilt· 5.17 !IJ:>-. \I l' '>I !--~ I I. 7 S <'und '1 ';5 \ut11 ~1•1 !"!lh ur S300 l'uCh chr$!10dincabS160lamp Must fly before 11 lS·lll. Bond tOJJll'r lolill\ furn PARTNYWA.HTEO '.1111ah.1 1: .!Jl \3!10 ~ht r1I \lu~t :o.ei- 1i4.'i 11>1.1 15 monk chr S7S dl.'sk days 2138642729 mghls Exec dC'sk~ rhr'? Ne~ II I ;11Wlktru.1l•rn .,1,., 96.11S785 l•.1 h-hum1'11upp1e~ Std lhr$208423196 71 4-673 1187 ask for CredenLa~ Call Tern ..it tru1'rr tra"lt·r Star uf t'Jll1..itf515.'i S7WOR BE.'>TOFFEll \l\t 1 h.imp hl0twllinl' flun k bed. sohd wood. George 752 1194 Mon thru Thur, I :0-11 Boat '>ho\\ ·1~1n , Motor Homrs, So~/ 'fi7 Dodg1· \\'1ndo~ \.'au '1·111 li&t I hJndrrafled oolstand • Scr1ptomallt' addn·'''"R d 1t·,1• I i 5 "-\\ Rent/Storoqt 9160 runsgood !IJIJ2997 •.ii •i:t:l:>l'11'' !l&l 295..)d;i tng qu alrtySt.15 SJG.4926 M•w.J:::l~eew system modi!! 2K. r!'pn 1-!<'nC'ralr" 11.1<1:.ar tulh ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7ti l'hr\ \an .i, lun \'k \"1 ~ 1 01·k1•1 Sµantt'I' Ii !\mg mattress springs acht C Submit bid C;rll ~Jud) j equip iJ \ .il111· $15(1 tl(MI H ~ :-. T 2~ I ux \lotor aot11 I' ph rJdm. iclnl , 1 Jntl•llnt' "201 I 5 · · • .,.,c' full membership avail 6417117 , 11r a' J1l IJ,1 llumt· ,1p, 1, ,t•lf n1nl. •·on1I 2111111 "tJlt . • rJme, mos new~ . S"' ...... lo th , >ll•'Hl-I GdsofaS50 64S9494 al 1 <""' w e reg ,m 8087' ~587!101·1\5i'l:lli \lnt1·11nd l'l't>-ltl~ ll.l3ornu~ktl~'K5 -price or SLSOO. . ' r\nt1qrC'krSJ50 Oakrckr C'onlactS.S1·3733ev ••••••••••••••••••••••• 32 C'hn.,l1.sll 1·~1 'IP' Troil"'s,Tro•ef 9170 AutosW~ 95901 mt to You 8045 w uphol ~eat SI!!> Oak LOVEBIRDS lleuut1ful ti. need-. ~ork mu,1 1 II ••••••••••••••••••••••• rt~ 11 1 1 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• •h -~al p· d s65 Marble top Coffee table. Babies Pea1·h lal·1·d !S28 S3.'>00 11110 1..i:.:i:r.ix H 11 .\111111111 14 ft Best 1·~~;.·,:,~~~;~~1",·1~;>~·1~~·~· l-'11:11•1; lj•:1~,~~~P~~~~~ltm1~'h1\~ ~94r87~7 :; a ~ ~~~~Y ~~ ~i~~i':.te~l:~I P1edS30,1!5l 6!llO 24 Toll\ l'r.1ft t d1111 11111 r ""'r ':!111 UIO £or lop U'etl ;rr, 'Tlll '\;l'Ull'rt'l"I al.I shot\ Big Canyon lrg lJv rm of boo«s $50 646-0697 Blue & Gold '1J(.';i" ·Will Crut>l'r Lo~ hr, I '~" '°''" Jlllrl RI C~I forl'1gn dumt'\tl'' ur TUnLE'S ANTIQUES •r '••r t 1J t 11 ,J I \I • ".Im ~ I .:. ~-~. : .... W E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR USED CARS ALANMAGMOH POHTI 'C S•JB RU S4 • 3 PORSCHE~ 'V\ ~ITTEO ~~f'f ( 1·~·~ .... ,, .. , • 11.2 =J WE BUY CLEA~CARS AHO TRUCl<S Corona dcl ~l.H 1111·11 expl'r'd ~ale,l.1ol\ f 1111 time 5 d.I\,, l\lnt ~·irk 1ng concl; "·'I'' 1·1.ill\ fmt• t lic11t..t1 1.u , 1, n :..\CIHH rnntemp dest~er rum Wh1rlpoo'...L I fng $100 Gold "1 lln('~ lla~dR T(I ~lmtf'<ll ,'amlk n ... " thrrn1i;h111.1 l.11.111• •I 1rl2 1..2>:' I'+.! 'l.Jl'i rla''lf' If ,-.. ur ' lf I' \lmoi.t ne~ Xlnt l'Ond .. ~ ' w l\t1thmL I 11It111 I 1r1•lr't IJ) lh1·~·J i!'.' -1 e\lrJ , 11 .111 "" 1 Auto Ir ;>0'1·d Fvmihlr• 8050 , • " couch & chair $100 W \llamtru.. boo~ f04KI I trlr .11 ••I ni:i tt lr11-.il trJtlt•r In f'lllST •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• •••. ••••••••••••••••••• on.: SSOOO. 00" ~I 40 ' of Panasomc stereo $20 1 628 7203 I BMW 9712 '1 ! '>'12 111\.l ,\pplil'dll" I ht'llo~ taken fur 11;.11 h1•r \1•ph Il a ~ tho111 1·111i'l1,111 Sch o v I U l·o•t ;tmatch5 sofas. 2 963 0789 14 GJJ,p,11, lllllf' ,,,.,, 1,Jrd,n !'wllllllo: Atr11~:.1 B •••••••••••••• •••••••• * * I 8 y * * m.itch5'.7'sofas.i.wrvcl _. -One Patr l'otkalrt·I.. ele1· .. t.trl 'lrh 111 rnu,1 rr .. m S\\1rnrn11111 pool 3 < .... d u~l~I Furmlun· & barrelchr.2matC'hollo Sunlu:am Elec. Lawn normal spht prl•d , mov '>l'll s·i~1111r 1,.11 ,.i,1 1•11\.11< ri,•,1tht•;. For111 ~L~ 198 1 BMW .. 644 4655 PM Mower Topcond. SIOO ino $85 pr 957 Hl70 h ,. d)• t• c .ill I 1m \\•·ll Frr Cl QSEOUT \11pu;in1 l'' OH I ~ 111 " • Brookhur~t 1'011n1a111 Valle~ 91;:! lJI' TU CHER 8010 . ..itorSEl.1.fur You ColorTV S4o.wtutecollon ~95119-mess Dm11h> •tft \l,.1111:1,1111•1\ 111 '11 ~1 "''"'1'" t!JJGij.lb SAVE'' MASTERS .AUCTIOH llOla $100. rusl over PAN ~M 2 for l boardmg M \'NA ti1rd for 'Jle 2 11 p S1J1ul..1 mnt .. r Trailers, Utility 9180 6•6·8686,833-9625 I lltuffed cha1r~.k1l ta passes Value up to :<.eeds good hurnl' n.1111,. \n•h•r to. 11,,1 •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 4l lnOr~C......+y 1 •• ble 4 bamboo chairs $40, j2500. Sell $200. 759.9320 $200080 962 5&17 Ski~' ><ci.'> 1.;.,~1 t 1 ·1 1 "1 , 1 !I\ h !I ~I:!' llart.ir Bh d n t' e d 1• it I , 1 I, childhuod <'I• 111 111.1n crcdenl1JI 1>1 , hild 11" \'elopml·nt w1 nut I r •1 .,,, U.llH "' I I 1H ti ~tJ.tP I BUY FURNITURE I A11t sz refng 540. child's Beautiful new while wed Mosl sell Cockatuo. pd ' Bo S •1 9060 '-t11r.•i.:• .111·a 1111 ~1\ll·.., • 1 9·.1 7>:-9 1_'z's''oSO\ HIJG[ 8.l=<':TION I.•• 95i 11133 wardrobt> SJ.5. Twin bed, ding gown, never bt>en $1800 Sell ror SKIM! , ··•Rt' I ats, al -..1~n h~t 11fi x.10 :1.!.1'i I "-I\\, lto.\EHSPHl-.:G !xix ~prg & matt new. 63wo1r5'!;._,size 910 $100 &all 67S-lf114 1 ;;··;.~·.::~;·~7 ;;"~1~1:1:· AutoS~rvicr,Ports ~ hrs a 11.J\ ~. 111~11 , l'hlldt :lfl -, I lit• I I Oi ~56111 TelephClnt PHONE PERSON r llm1• 111111111· I'''"" needt•rl tu • ,, , ' ,\ JPP ls fur hu ' ~ .. 1..r Ener.e' 1 ·11 ~ ·~· hr bonu:. hi. fur \I 1• 111 I" Aabatk Safar Div 537-7130 Tra\'el '· 11.t ~ \I KA Flint mJttrl'..,.., ~o Gas range ~ Of. •;rot I & .. . 9400 rt·rs a••ca .... ...t 979·2151 --Pianos & n...-5 8090 \ '''"' .i .. 1 " r·hu111 ,,.1 ... cc~ssones I d 111'1·1 u.wd ~urth ' ~!'":" Juke Box "-aburg Stereo _..,'I""' • ""' 1·•••••••••••••••••••••• muur1n~ 'l, "no ••••••••••••·•.••••••••• • ,l'l 'J' r \Z-111 dt·I .\1l'STSELL' xlnl cond S300 080 Piano, \el') nllT \ladi• 661 tJt3 < f:Lll'1\ HIM~ \1•1 t'r uw1l •tU<'l'n " 'e~ RP John dresser P. P 645 3600 evenmgs by E Gabler & tin•~ 1980 \ ak) 111, •:!.t, 1 """' r 11:-11t~rr -.rn.111 Tu) ota I '"llth ~:l!l'f t."h onl) S2Sho' xo rNr .. ~m\l"qSule7~n()mffae·tr~ Pool table for sale , 1~ Sarnfrn• fur quu•k 1·11m)llttt'" lt1t• al~•J11I rars.~l:.!.'> OHO 5-1114!153 '2111 ril'I l\ualf\ hom1.• I "l2 0707° ' " ~ Brunswick "Monterey.. salt• 546·318-1 Sun t•1e I ~1111 ~1:i.su101\11 3 Cood)eJr P11l) Sl!•t•I :.i ;J:;o ~ 0 fulls1ze portable model. thro Fn afll'm1111n •:!1:111.1:1111111 H;ultals l't!f) i5Ht4 S22 LI' tnl( rm ~et Couch. automatic ball·return. Sewinn ModtiM, 8092 •1 '>l'J ~111~1 1•a 11r 1 r .. r -.;,-, lo\e<;eal coffee table. complete with table ••••••"!•••••••••••••••• . 55/i •r,34 IJmp <,\and S40ll lxl ofr scoring, balls. tnangle. 8 ZIG ZAG Smi:t•r "'~ rng 1 Al l TEAK ii t't'IH·a r. 1 ~ hi•i·l'. I GiJ 8849 cues. wall cue· rack and machine \\ t'Jblllt'I & 57 Ft KETCH nn"s. lu•'' Ol'" Sll~J ror KT A IL TAB I. E I srore keepers. chalk bollonholl:'r all th (;d I (.'u~lom butll J9'i0 f'llml ll.1<>4727 ,. I 3'ix:l6. )•" lhtrk glass I and chalk drawer. two cond SlSO &16 I Ii:! I> nf 5 JUM rl'tumc-'11 from top, Elegant c·hrome bridges. Brunswi ck 21 mu' t•rutM' 111 Su SJddle tanh 1·u,tnm bd'l'. $300 best ofler brush Newly recovered Spbrting Goods 809,. P.inr1r Thi<. \Jrht liJ' mJdl' for t•arl> 'horl MUSTSEil HIGH BUYER foµ 1lnll.v' lur '-f"11 t r J"' HUI!' I 'ii mp1·r' !ll~ s \11d1 ~ ,\sk furl' l' ~11 di JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 1117111.k-alh Bh I lll''Hl:\GT0:1; Hr \I II 842·2000 WE MEED YOUR EXOTIC & IRITISH C ARS Comm'IA~ Computer 1r.111H~I 1·nm \l,1h1•1!Jn1 llhl Ut-d ~ 1r •. 111 r1·" \1~ht ,\and ,, dr ""1·r lo match Lrkl' n .. ~ "!U\I Wl' to ap 111 l'•·ralt• Onl) SIOOO or Ii 1 I 11 tr t• r M a rr a 1, .I l ; , 'Ii J (I Ii P \I "t I kila\' JO\ (Im(' ""~i.. ... 1111 .. If no an~~er II J '-1 j, f,, pll'J'I' l..t't'Jl Ir) 111Jl merc1al a.:1·nl "''" ~··"' I 'I.!.. 111 h\\ "111·1 . DOM INTI. knu~ led!!, I'' 11 , 2.'> 1, .'(." 1 \ j Loll lkd Comp ~ 111al MO 8855 by professionals Pnce ••••••••••••••••••• •••• n 1 n t h1ni: \Int , ond ~ hlh<tw Dud)!1• trod .. s $385 See by appotnl RO) di golf clubs tO mm-. Pl' \llll hn..inrl' l"n ~IOOpr 5:., 192ti I ~EWPQRT Hrand ne\l sofa & lov & ood b & menl Phone 6.30 to 8 JO 4 w s. ag t.irt srdl•r rt•;.il t"lJt1· trad1· C:Jmper Shdl f11r To)ota MPQD1TS ~~en;itl ;,~fo~;·h~~krancg evenings Ql4 )~7·16~-xlnl.._$150.673·4225 Tax1e~ b) ,,.,-lh:r Sliu.uoo I ur (.'ourrt•r Joni.: bed ~ needed at 0111 1• 1111 1 1, rt , 1 1 11 trt·s~. ladder. guard rail. ll l I \ ~tt.*~ fl t•J I ti ~130 $7~1080~552_4081 ROCKI NG HORSES. SOLO.A.EX Cal 714 8.115899 '<Int ~12!! 1;73 6336 ,,..c G• r...t.... Hardwood. custom boilt. <Mmi Gym> Advertised 1980 Catalina Jo. lnu<lcd. 114~ !NiAA 3100 W Coast llw' Newport In in1 \J:l'm'\ ~.:, •V ir.•tt1 w 0 r I d \ I(•~ r r •• I I' I ~5·1200 Barb~rr.1 \ t\ 11 003 58'l5 aroge -1055 or d e r now r o r tn Sports Illustrated S3000 & talw mer (l,f\ 1'c~port Beach ••••••••••••••••••••.••• Christmas. pre.cut kits Time. Playboy & ttun· ments JI II'• 771 :12!'2 Autos for Sale &t2:94~ TREE Timmi; I< Exprd tn Jll 11hJ'• • ••I tree ~orl. .m.t 1111Hh 1 t• equ1pmt•nt 'I op p.11 .111d benefit' l'h·.1"' 1 :di 768·4i5t tr11rn •1 .1111 t" ~··" 2 lamps. 2 end tbles. Mov ing Sale. Everything available. ner's World .. nd ,old e\'e!i •••••• ••••••••••••••••• W MTED tvfft't' tble. B 0 Price g""'s' • 839-8776 Ask for 0 A I "" .. 645-7300 new S49S Askrna $385 D f \\' I IM l'ORTANT • t.1"''t1tloo G44:>319 /\llanorTe.rn ---,... u nor ini: ,\ mu'tl ".'l)'fl''L'T<> L od IT " • 111. 1' \\ .1 r ti 1" 00 , .. , -Electroped1 c Adjustable 54S·83S4 Ne~ ~70tt -• '• ate m e oyotas an .. l'IMll 1r .. q lrt•1 ~ u I" x sprrni: o. mat Ho"H 8060 Bed. Brand new Paid B'1X 20" Bk I) ... 6.5 •l-IK:I 1n:,\ DEHS AN() \.' o I v o., ('a II u' I • 11 1·•1 I t11·" ""\\,$150 "· 1 e ramonu \D\'F:RTISEHS TODAY "' • ,,, ··" 1;73 ,1225 1·•••••••••••••••••••••• $742.BestOffer.548·2429 back AllO) bar!>. neck. Dufour \\mg ·\lrrw'll PananiSaddJe. Rare Man's SchWlrln Bik; S75 wheels. poi.I Frt•e ne" FJ~t '57cl!J Jd~~·~u~.~:{rb\11',~~~~! ,1,,111111 1 \nuquP \JOU\.~ mirror hest Offer 3 Roll Away Beds. all wheel ~1X seat $1i.'i 1;;• ""' iv 1 I ~1 Sold ood Call Sally 673 3329 " """" dea lcr~ m lht• Hhrcle t I•, I• 1 "l'f't 1 1 rl ' "0 • 1 w new $50 each l Dark M 1ss1on \'1eJ0 830 472i 2 D r \" J>m Earle Ike TOYOTA.VOL VO TR l'C'I\ Dm' 1 \ prohlu tum train•·• .:'I '1 .11 Gd dr1 "ng rt, .u~ 111.11 rnJ p1·d1."Stal elm tbl 2 5 Year old Pmlo stud Room Srnk, free stand· o nor .,.,n.:~ \lmri't rlao,s1f1ed Jd\.erllsrng , "' ' I•• ' 11~',,11 ,,,1, '~ .. 1 rhatr.. $200 Son) Beautiful horse Needs a ino new SSO. 64S·6066 Used Seuba eq111p nt'~ Fa'I r.r.:1 e;11·h 1 r11lomn' doe~ not rn I h~:.::1:';,~l·tl rt-t'IL11n'\!l tJpPrer.S75 goodtrainer.1S50 S-'!!.DJh 11 Y ~h Cl b 7_~1-8_967 m;i gnum, S~70 l.1kt·11·ludt' Jny .1µplt1•Jble 1"1.H•'10lws•o ,oi TYPIST '>m.tll 1•11.-111 .. i·r 111~ firm"'"'' ~ .. ,,• l)pll>l ))J\ ,JI"• J•·I lt1fl•' Girl frr tlulr<'~ I' r I hr~ per da\ m11m111J.!' \ afternoon' :\.1 l.ir based on 'k 111, l.. ,., I' \\ ,,,1,,..-•ll\t'f l .. 1t1vl jf~l9672 S4l-S4Z7 arp s e ac l ~ ne~ ~real rree 'lvlt'. taxes. ht•ensl!. transrer h t Ill 111 .... I """ l\1·n111•d) tool caddy $95, 50"1 of new membership s•1:-R.stcarant, 8095 S650 675 448.1 .rftt.>rti ft·lc';., ftnant't' rharge~ • I ti l·rtrS12Cl. Elel·dr,\•er HouseholdGoodsl065 Ctt 675-6912 fOrtl' ft\l' H llllnfl re.•,fora1rpollullonron \\ b ~ ronsl T\ S40 ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• M' llantOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ lrarlrr SJ llKI Firm trol de\ tee cen1f1ca1tons I • 1 1 Antique Oak Glass dr ISWC!_,,_... IOI I LOSING LEASE. qu1l q .. 1 ~1.,.,,, or dealer documenlar) ' 1 '' "" n '' '"'. l!.tli 6il:li bookcase. $350 New unTiru tmg busmes.s. ~elhn° out ' "'"' 1 ,. \ J , 11i1<I ~ 1111 . 1 ,. • preparation t harl(es un 1, l'•I' I \p~ ro11 .. 1zt' bed. mat N1sh1ki , mternat1onal ••••••••••••••••••·.~·~~ AL..., supplJes und fix Sacrrfrrr llOBIE 14 llr.l(h 1 less otherwise specified , trr'~ &. hox ~prtngs. S60 bike. $200. Copper Fire Wanted. The ~tler A lures inrludmg perfor(llanrc Mam f,:>.. l)y the ad,ertri-er Bictdts 8020j Call anyllmt•: 7~5832_ Extmgu1sher lamp, $75. For the Pepsi Challenge Display cases. waiting tras 1 • lht• prtet' C:ill I •••••••••••••••• '>oLr bt'cl SllXI Chair & Pair captains chairs. Game. IU~r the Caps room chairs. BenutY 754 41\47 cluys 58fi 8557 Antique~/ ~1111 i:ible St<Xt S50 Full hdbrd. nt stand. Of Soft Drinks> Will pay Salon hairdryer' and e\'e~ & Wn•kemls CJauics 9520 Call KJy 979 3797 T y p Is T f( f I f I' TIONIST PH & hrn•t 1h v e I o p m l' n t 11 1• JI t Persona blr •1rg,1n111•11 s e If st a rt c• r \ .11 11· ti r e s p o n ~ 1 h 1 I 1 t 1 1• • SS 65wpm ~.\1·1·11 benefits & nppty In .111 vance Sant" \n.1 .1rr;1 I 675 3445 S50 Roll·a·way bed. $50 SlOO lO the person who hydrauhc chain. m1r CAL z 24 Nt14-port Shp • ••• • •••••••••••••• •• • • Brass Stand lamp. S2S. fmds one. 497·5372 rors. shel\'es and plants Best offrr on•r ~. Aoo I PRE1T1EST ' 111 "'"' 111111• \\ rflul(ht rmn 18 round 494.4075 Mnicol Also. make·up, shampoo Will ftnan1'1' ~ -1871 I 'S7T·llRD i:bss l«ble. I rharrs. <t -I tn it 8013 and hair produt·ts. " I nd ~:~i b.ir st11ols Xlnl rond J•welry 8070 lll4t!IU•t I ca11631.97~ or Lido 14. flt't'I rh;imµ lust' IN TOWN! ,., 1 '1' F~t ~1 •I.II \ 'lit.Ill 83J3415after 5J?m ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• after6 8986809 yr W tr•11ll:'r Ch1•av BESTOFfY! 1•1•11r~ll1 1t1i;hb , S18.000 Be aut i ful DRUMS ---L 1!:452297 l ~l'KZI \ 111 I t'Tltl<'Y<'l,r 8 ~,'~hr 3 • loh\ esea~ ·rth2 Diamond Ring Set. .93 8 pc Rogers Drums. $750 TY, Rodlo, loat Sli I S46-576{1 r 11t ~ \1511 lllJ t mg r airs, ea Ca 89 C Must see to ap· 080 646-84CYl HIFi Shno 8098 s, P' ~Iii:'~; tone,, "<Int cond S400 rec1ate Call SSl-6708 ••••••;•••••••••••••••• Docks Jll r\fl 5 & \leekends. Pf t .l t B k ACOUSTIC GUITAR Beta v· . II f ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAITIESSES lluildi Mcrtcrial 8025 lall.63117:.l or app osee a an lbanei Blk. ''Butterfly" 151on . rom BOAT SLll'SFOR Rl':NT Exper "vrs min ng s AmencaVault. w/cu.stom pearl 'inlay/ Sears. 9 movies. Must NPT l'"Lt 23'."<° .,.,. ·' · ••• •••••••••••••••••••• Be1gl' while 3pr Sectional II $700 963-2878 ''-' "' "" f1hme avail APl'h 1n' REDWOOO 2x6·s SISO Good condition MINK STOLE shadow lranducer P.U., se · ~ -32'. & 34 per.;on. Jollv Rogc·r. 400 1 111 ,11 l·m1-\Int rl•·• k h42 3512 Beige.sz. S. $27S. matching hand·looled Sears Portable 15 rn Color 642 4644 ,15 PM So. Coast Hv.) . Laguna n,: t rt•,h loacl .trmtnll Bed. Serta Full s ize ~7154 leather strap & hard diagonal w stand $150 BOAT SLIPS r'OR Rt:NT ~ach '4ti kll !'>J\t' Jt 1~ ft \1attress. Box springs, Machhtery 1071 shell case. Mint 0ron~i· -_67S7Sl.3 NPT BUI 23· 25' 2fi. Wanted 2 partllm< Jm111,~.l,!'>t•na frameA lSOOS40 4038 •••••••••••••••••••••••lion . S42S B · Y'llmahaWP1171turnta 32 .• &34, evening phone sollc1((ITT. f 714·75l·lij16. ble, direct drive, quartz 642 4€>14 9 5 ~M settingappomtmenlsfor REDWOOOLATHE Water Bed with Heater. PRESS Alto sax : Bundy S250. lock, value $300, srll s alesmen Sa Inn' + ,,o '· hn.irch hundh'. Oak he 3 db 0 a rd Perfect horn for begin· 11251080. 892·7841 an Comm Call lll.r~t· or ~12 I lndh: 6"6~1J1m bookcase AM/1250 oer. Xlnt lone/cond. 2 Marie m 95i O'iHJ , • l'l.YWt>eH1 sm 673-8231 MULT't-4.ITH 536-4926 <.1~1<11 .. >tk SIO ~h~t:l Gray floor model shoot p A SPIC'&VERS XEROX orERATOR Twin box spnng. mat delivery, rebuilt Good · · ~ Reproduction graph11·, li4~ 9325 -tress & frame. sz; ea pc condllton. Pair of Mitchell BC 84 loat1 & Mara Eqllfp,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• technician to upl'r.ilt· o t~ n111~tll 2xH' 12 ~99 5224,499-5000 642-5457 ·speakeni witb6" stands. copy machme!\, rolatr t.. Jon~ [),ince floor, d1•1•k, WATERBED New condition -low GtMf'Cll 9010 bind repol'ts Nc>alness trutk twtl'673S6116 After6PM mileage. Gr eat for ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEED shp or s1de·lle for beaut 26. Sra Ray, Dana Pt or !'-\ B Call Glyn, 4974342 973 o:m 20' Sail Boat Slip $160 Mo Call Mark. 28th -~eet M annl!_, 673 0000 1940 Ford Sedan Deluxe. l'oncours trophy winner. grClund op restorat1on. $12,SOO 851-6226 197!1 Auburn Roadsler. auto steerlnic. brks & air A ~1 F\I tape. lilt, le.tlher black & Mher '.;ever regtstc>red 25.012 Ml 795 2011 Top Dollar Paid \ For Your Car' JOHNSON & SON Llnco~cury 2626 Harbor Bl\ cf Ccxta Mesa s.111 't631 WeP~ OVER llueB* F11rY11urGoucl \'W l'o~rhl! or Aurl1 £ HICK ~VERSON \'W PORSCHE AL'UI 445 f; Coahl lit" a) at Ba\s1dt' Dnw ~<·~port Ht•arh 673 11JOO f'rl'mtum pra·es paid for any usrd car 1 foreign or dome~trr 1 tn good cond1t1on See U First~ l\mg,me complete with l!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I small.medium siu club Avon Red crest $700, rmisportatiOft :~~e~~atpt·~~~~1011~ \~~ ~~~~ ............. ~?.~~ ~~~k:hcelCeh~~d:!!r! Mlsctl••-IOIO situations ar usuals. Johnson 2 hp $200 Both ....................... ~:S.B~~~:i"r~~: !~~~~: WEIUY Fuentes ut R<ll.lt'r1 !kin Htm.1l.1pn 11.ttten.' Cl' A 'frw condition. $200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~·-0....,B_.0.._. '"'71 ... 4 ..... ·7""S..._.&s:--16._._ , 846-0021 C~r"J, Sde/ 9120 $10,7~645-3'?._81 USED CARS&TRllC'KS 'f>.i \ ette orii: clriven da1 ly onrestored L~l rPsona· ble ~fLer 644 cm t Wilham fto!\t & All S11~ 710 l!ll811. eve<. New baby crib SSO. Full set Hagen Clu bs, Gr~ pianc>t<Awal. blk.1•-------""' COMElNOR somle!I. 1401 Qtr.nl S1 ..:,1 ~J • m 1s1 8516 bag. cart $~. Slnger satin fln . pp xlnt. cond. SUIPWS JlfPS ~0~;"(;~;;;; .. ;;~;·5~;; CALL FOR Ne.,!'port&arh NE v ER USE D . ilgug, m any a c · $3,900. eves/ wknda CAISmdftUCl(S w/refrigerat-Or & stove. ForClass1fied Ad FIH.,,..ISAL X·lA Y T!CH. J,ur~h' .. n"u111~t,><I .. 1"njt1u1 !,onwl~: Sofa' lov~al $300, Qn Scess67or31~1Sl00. After ~XRM.2P" ..c"'"SHlFTER avallabi.. Many sell un· Port a .Pott Y A 11 Ag:i~~ CCoNnH:/a·DeOlLIETllo Pnvat• 1~b. 8 to "pm. " .. .. " •.. bdrm I.WO. bunkl, $200, pm ~' 111 OJWr. der $200! Call (3121 Butane, Quttn s11r ~ ""' '·" . ,, I I• l• • nl •hi' I 11 c, .. ,,,, \ h I j, •lt1• I I I• I "' r1r1 Ii \\ ' t' , . frtr" :.'" •I d1 .•tl•I ••1\.1 ttftt'r ~ ... t I•·' "'tr\ • < t t· CREVIER ' . - SAi. ~-!> VC• ltA<;~G 2 8 IV SI S, '. A ' A 714 83&3171 Cl ( ,f ;'l < II• )A ' •tr , SAOOLEUCX BMW II h I~~\ \t1 ,11111\11·r \\ ~ HYl'l\W\ F'.'.IT:1I'\\\ I 83 I ·2040 495-4949 SAOOLEBACK a~w '1•) ~Ill ' -I I sdn '<i1 • ..,c ,, I :l 1\,1 \ 1r ,t qi f4' I '\ -ll-'11· r, l ,j I J I'll llr 'I 1 ond -;,; ~l1••1 ur 1•r<i1 ra"'' 1S1•r :11•1'.·l~I . 7!1 '.lllll 1:111( \ •llC•\4 136!JXl'\1 1 7'1 3:!111 r.•11 ,11 C ,tt'ff'O I"' '111l 0t-;l I :11) Ql!J I ~1 .'12!11 \ \11t11 1 ru1~r. sunroof. F "'' utt "' 1 :11 4 :7,;3~1 ·Ro liJoCS1 S;i-pph h111r l'rd11111 thl low m 1 I r .1 ~ 1· 1• '1• • r a r I 199-j;!:I:> SADOLEl.ACk aMW U I ·2040 495-4949 Tht Most bcitincJ Por+OfYow- IMW Pwc.~Or Luit CO'Ad I~ Mclartft BMW!! luy Or LtOtt • IJ Ow P'haltt "-f (7141 522-5133 ,. ~ with the l.l&1>S11td Ad" I ... ~ -t>..1 f "tOO" dual controls. 7•• it•• E l Dai\) Piiot lS211 BEACH Bl.VO Mon thru Fn No m pa · g ass top uu..-\le N4l, ~at>.d, misc. um., ap-b 1 S -· w xt. 473S for D· Sleeps 6 In txccllent AD VlSOR HU tJmts Hrad~rayonl} Tht:V'ret.heeas1e5tway Mattruses/boxsprinp pies. c bandeller, Newly re ult. TS formation on bow to condltrnn $900 Call &4256"18 NTINGTON8t-'At'I' 1 Will train l1c'd 1n to(tndJLL~t tbcrtem~and TWln $80, Cull S90 Qn. ~rastan ruaa. etc. 8arroe·8erry Prf.amp. purcb11e. bttv.ern lOa m Spfl\ 147·60 7« , ,. d ~d~iv~i~du~·~,~~~:03)2~~==::.L'~~~rv~1('~f~S:OU~n4'ed~~~!-=-=:..L.:':l30==M~O:R:E:'='n=o.oeo===·=..1i49'7=:·~==··==========~~:W~·'7U:::::•:»:·=====..i:======~==::::::::i:Q~l·~1~~7'...._--=======-~============::1..:::::::''4f-.llll 48207 .. . . f 0 4 -- Cll 1 t Coa .. DAIL Y PILOT/Mond1u October 12 1981 ....._ 11•1?ie4 AaltM. 1_,a.w ... __. ...... U_. ....._ UN4 ..._, UN4 _________ !"-....................... _._;;.;..;.....;....;.;;T:.;t..;;.;.;,;;.;.;,;...;,;,':..:.;;.;..;. ee•tt I •• 1'1eee•e I tee II e. I I •te I I e I I e e Ill 1111111, II I II.~.' II II I I Ill Itel I Ill I It 11111"°1111111111 elll II. It. I I I Ill 1111•11 11111 I I I I I I It •111111 Ill ..._ .... rw ..... ..,11._. ,...,11.., ,..,..,.rtM M•n•••'-'740 ,......,. 97'7 v ... !'.,. tno~~ .. " ...... !!.'.! ~=~ ........ !!!! ~ .......... !!.~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••• ,.Ztpbyrlf7L4draut.o IMW 97 I I ....._ t7H .._. t717 U111Nll t7Jt COevertll* '" 250. Sac 'H TRI Low ml See to ''1 VW ClMaic. Nff •1. I f61 c.ec... SH US .. STl PIS 6 Pll YV\11 top Im' ....................... •••••••••••••••••••• .. • •••••••••••••••o•••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• a.tt off tr over l1$K apPl'ecl1t.e. CllOO. ftlW brt• SIOOO· white, red IGWiot. wl,. We have 1IOIMI Mi.nioe m OIAMMCOUMTY'S 'T1 aeaz. xlnt cood. upd, 00 OIANGI nMOlt or en 01u ti. wbtelt, 1ter.o cUMU., of NE vr • U 11 D -=~ ........... ----- § 1 Ir' Im" m c I... ;;:~1xii~~D COWin'Y'S J!!!!L.-y....... t770 .• Bua, new paint. '"'· Sood top S3CIOO Trade for Cbevrolit&ll 7f Mr,r.': w~ mOOJbH\. '**ext .•• _ _pl:@! IXC=I "75 ~L. Ivory/tan lrlt. •••••••· .. ·~~··• .. 1••b•• rad~, e111 S2:150. =1· boat, carf ~ou 1~!d~•:1~·l ~~!~ 315w • 7 5 H 0 nd 1 C 1v 1 c lmm1cuJ1tt. 'I0-'85 VW -· • r 1nt Ml·-__ iin DtllUD am. Xlnl H1tchbuk. Air cood MAS Tl 131·1Mt/~ I.00 doot. ·n left door ~ Y•• t77Z 'T1 S.vlUe-AJl 111 black COM1'4fl l CHfVA OltT ~ . ' cood 4 tPCI. air ~. Reblt ena new radial Dl.ALBSHIP 'II 300 SD Tl&tbo Diesel ucb w-.m style whl ....................... beauty with rut chrome t•lct 9912 Sa.lei Sttvi~l..eytn1 am/frncaueueu ,ooo Urea. new uneU• We'll dellver 1.1\Ywhere •liver blue, pollahed nm! r::._:rr Beetle #I YOUODIAUI wire whHls, l'fUO. ~;.·;.·:;.~vi·.·.;~:~:;Pis ley CS'fer,llc. ~1 fm/1.m stttto, body, I.A· In lh• world! wheel.a. IUl\l'OCt. IK ml. a. IN ORANOECOUNTY! Jurx l7J..Z49 'M Cllev. Millbu xtnt. xlnt cond tz.~ r \ ,_ I ~41>-I 200 ----- Rolla'l\oyc. BMW '76 Lon1bed w/camper ler1or fine ~d ~ llACH IMPOITS 900.811-~ ·•· 19 8 t •• 1 ec l wood 4 AM FM di 1533 t$40J1tmbom aheU 080 675-3380 or (714) 848DoveStrm ·11 SOOSD Turbo An · '63 bus. movln11. muat SALIS.•Ytcl Broualum 2 ~oor con · ra 0 • -.:...·=-='-Ne~rt ach ~8444 "6000080 -.10l)i6_ 752-0900 tbraclte arey. IUceU~nl aeU QBO. p.e. Wf-672:1 D Ele11nce C1d1llac. llOO. M2.Q4 OW.•1•• 9955 • 'll &Mw m~lnlrond, ~Sl.31 ....... t7l0 lt$9Harbor 8lvd =~'·000 mi $34.000 '72S.,... ov~Jf&Mt\Rv ~~~n'°:=~'~2:i~ _'7_3_W_1_n-.• -m-V~8-.a-u_to_._n_u T~~·:.·;;,~~·,~; .. c-:r .. ;d· auto, AC , AM/FM De&..n9 97%1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 1·1170 _ Xlnt tood. New reblt EXPERTS le1lberlnterior All hut· Ures, ps, pb, 1/c, ru.nt 1uml. RW\SXlnl 1600 c111tlte, new tires ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 JAMAi w.rct4tt ._ 9740 M61 9744 SZ250 P/P ury options. Sunroof, xlnl .$57:W 142 '°84. __ _ MUST SELL.~ II DaOllAH XJ6l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;•,•MG·e~·o;:••••••~ 64.S-8l502 . UILllll etc. 18 S00.1S&-1191. '72 Nova, new coollna '74 Cutl1ss, nms well. nd.s -,..._.;M.S-:;;:: 768'1 h pd1llcka2.900 Polaris u terlor with •Ml prefwo ml. AM /t',; \~'ereo ·~ VW RBua. New r= lM6~~~Blvd. '18 Seville, 35K, 111lmon. syslem, runs, nda eltt. 1ome body work . c.., 9715 131·2'.'M --e b o n Y Int e r Io r ..d·~ tape, 4 apd PERFECT! WB~.548~1reat. COSTA M&CiA perrect cond S9500. _!'Ort NOO/OBOMZ·Ol.W ~/OBO 900-9213 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,_. 9721 (1'74UZK> 195 6423571 --~-824t~ '76Loaded Stereo PWo 9957 1979 C .. _, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mown.... SI0,9t5 too_. · ' '70 VW Bi. Swldlal ron· 64 .. 910 540-9467 '7l CDV ~•-t ftood lmLS -ArtlJ .,.._., ..tiW... -.l...-. , &.-9 750 I:'-"•-c:A AUi " etf,J{ll,l4,/ • e • • e e e • • •• •• ••• eee • e • • Ghia model with an 1979 Ferrari, 308G1'S, SAODUIACI IMW •pu:e;.-r one-,ver1100 .... ce.ucnl S2'J..., '83 PllOO, restored Ill & nna r;ahl dr hAndle> '73 P1NTO auLo111at.k trios., air AW /f M tape:~ spd. AC. IS • 040 4t 49 Cooipare HOuse ol Jm, •-••••••••••••••••••• 8Sl-l521. out, bealtb forett sale. '70Ct. Z20 C1mtlU1, CM. BONSGOOD. $7MI. coed~ •ttteo wltape & 28111 . Sacrifice. Dir. ports Di~bleuel a.nd160 Pond•''5 ~HC vw conv ~12 Claam. mustsacr.S31-1SU • &&2-3167 Con.... 9932 fm.8068 (714)523-7030 lt7'U 1 mos. aensi e pym 5· Good d 0~toffer I/bl'-top Ort · --------loather int e r io r . • D i a I 2 1 3 0 r con ·..... ye • · &.owner. '16 Seville fully equip. 2-....................... 1111.....et. 9960 <OlilZER). 65 Ferrari 330GT, 2+2. Ver Y s harp w l th 714/MERCED&Ci i.s 213 (714) 67S.IM89eves Under lOOK oria m1 . .,...._,Used lone, new radials aee to Sam says "drive a little, :~ .................. .. SADDl.llACllMW immac, 36K mi, dk :u:O:'!Uch l!8!""!isis~~ or714/13'1·2333 '54 Porsche ror sale. ~w to~ 0:.w ena • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..!22!..ec 897-8423 uve • lot," on new 81 73 Fury, 4 dr, PS.PB. 318 ll-~040 49Mt49 brown, Cognac Borranl Please Call~ for ve lr . any xtn. AMC 9905 Corvettes equipped Wllh ena 1046 mi must sell --wires, 11r, AMIFM cass, cood.ition.in&. at.ere<>, and SELLING YOUR MB" 111form1llm $qSG. 61!-81!!5t 7·9PM ....................... '78 Seville 36K miles Xlnt 4 speed or automatic OBO &Li259t W.. 9720 el«wtndows.Faclconv r1cey looking alloy -, .. , '70el1E Goodcond S9500 '75Scarocco,uking$3600 1916 HORNET c.ond . Many xtraa transmission • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo Ford lSlCJ (Pin· wheels. Only 8,%10 Orig T-~~ ... SS OBO. . Am/fol stereo cass. new 50,000miles SlO.~ Days 833-3'1'16 or 43007'7 RED Potlffoc 9965 tara ), VB & 4 spd miles. vr~ &l2·2ll7 Make brka6Ures,4spd,1/c S2500 Evenin 1644-2137 430154 WHJTE ••••••••••••••••••••••• $12,000. PP. 714-496-8325 SADDUIACI IMW Call Jack Bacon Well pampered. Must 5 5 6 . 43 5 3 eves & lOl&7JSILVER '68 CTO, <!herry cond or~9-17_E__ 131·2040 4f5-4H9 JIM SUMOHS '&l Porsche 356C, runs sell.1218>5'7~ • weekends C...-o 9917 l030'Z7 BEIGE CLEAN FAST CAR A4lt t725 "76 XJ12L. "'K mi, xlnt IMPOITS f650g1 & looks aood. 1970 VW Bus' Engine COllloc 9915 ~...................... 103802 BRONZE 11695 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cooditioo. l301 QuaiJSI /best 536-4248 L600cc Slnale Port, all ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 C1maro. auto, PIS. 493-9411 l~""IP.'P.f"IP....,ft!""'ll '18 S uper Br a va , fi.40.2719 NEWPORT BEACH ... Royce 9756 new beannp, hu llaht COMTNL.14.TIMG P/B, air, 75K mi, good 1970 Firebtnl. new pa111t, Silver/blue velour, 2 ~ 9711 llJ3.9300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 011 leak. MUST SELL! CA.DK.LAC? ..£2!!d. · 962·~ sterto. Cood lransporta· door air am If m •l DEALER IN U.S.A. . Lona Block only, ........ or W .• 11_ In 1 "72 Camaro, runs great. lion car. Body 111 xlnt •eon" .,,...,.. • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• NAN e speca411..U.6e eases d '" ft 1-•-•-.. •-cassette, 38K mi . 5 '79 240·0 , sunroor. auto ROY make offer. 961.a8311 or for the business ex $2200/0BO. con .... 100. 750-5142 a speed. P.P. $4500/0BO. fAE z!!1~ trans, air, slert!o. ivory ~CARVER 586·30911fter 5Pm. ecutive"prolessional. 962·37~ 401S.El Camino Real 4PM 549·1751or832-SlM. R-~ • & bamboo, 35,000 ma 1976 scnOCO Larg.S.ll Ho. Clte•rolet tt20 SanClemente '65 Pontiac Grand Pnx lt71 DATSUN FIO Hoedl 9727 WE'VE Imm a c . $1 7. so O ROUS·ROYCC Fist w/many xlrs. 10 Ai.....O: 19c11 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 831·0S80 492-8500 Runs aoodS250 S speed trans & t1us ooe 851·6226 ,,.. ,.,,,._., VJ,_..., 979 754-7lllll • · -·" • 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOYDI· · ...... ,.., ... ,~ mi.S1lver.M200 0BO c---1 • ChH. '11 Corntte I ---""""'-=-'--~.:ze~~t '"'""tion. VISIT YOUR -·" . '19 Ml 2400 ~ 675-4775 How~! Ccnaier White, aar. cnuse, Xlnt '66 CTO. Orig owner SADDL~CllMW ORAHGECOAST ··1;; .... s~~c~~i~ondataon . ClOSIOSUNOAYS '71 vw Super Beetle NABER~ New J .car Wagon. Air, w:!d~~~1;'i S9SOO. ~=~~~~.es~.Hastory lll-2040 495-4949 HONDA 'AGUflJ '70 Mercedes ?IO. 4 d;-~ ........... :.!?~~ Semiau~=OBO :~~n~l~b~a~!:r~~~. (714)994.aiOO 497-4Ul9 '73140% HEADQUAITEIS us Clean S412!5. 74Saab99LE Excellent 65VWSq~back,Euro-CADILL1\., tall wheel , more ' DodcJt 9915 rtMrd tt70 Good cond. New '72 TODA f lll y~: --963-5813 cond Inside and out. LO peen Edition, rblt en&. 11100ti11l•• l:ll-.i• Sweetheart! (4617> ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• carbs, rttenl tuneup. UHIVBSITT MAIDA. 1972220 mi.673-1763 new brakes. new l'"''·''°"'' '>JO 11 , OMLYS7995 '6~~Dart '68T·B1rdSJ.2SO. White/red ant. S37SO •• ··r Clean, new tra111, new T to 97'5 fenerat.or. Needs pa111t, HOWAIDO.•rolet ~~ 63T·Bin1 S2950 840-.3992 SALES&SERVICE ~-•· tares new blaupunkt oyo _UOOOB0.631·1696alt6 Dove/QuallSts 646-0389 OLOSMOllLE --=+ •~, ster~ and sheepskins .... ~ ................... '76 VW convertible Xlnt '76 Seville fully equip 2· NEWPORT BEACH Ford 9940 V-9974 HOMDA im 111111 n. us11111.s.t !AHll4 $6,000or best ocrer. PP 7 6 CoroM Wag d F T •• t.ooe. new radials see to lll-0555 ••••••• •••••••••••••••• •~•••••••••••••••••• '73 240Z Oat.sun. Runs 111d looks great. .Xtras. $2511; 631·1458eves. GMCTIUCICS 842·4118 4spd.White.S2.SOO locon · M/ ape, ..,,SOD a rec.897-8423 FANTASTICDEAL '7 V St W GT f • .,.. ...... I w m1 5S&-6M3 • Ch ..,,,, 69 000 '78Gran· .. -11100 5 eaa a. Ill · 5 -<l\U--'-rBlvd. MBZ """"'0 ._...New 40 a ter .. ....,.,~ . . '79 Cad Couro de Valle. 69 ev JU•. • ma. ...., pd 7• 000 t _...,..., uu 'I I ..,._...._ 07 _,.., ......., I '7 VW Con Xln d p . AA ""' •••" ., • ., -10 s . ... nu, new ares. COSTAM&CiA -galDSLtank.Clean.aU Trimlptt t767 O . vt. lcon · Landau op Wire osa·traclJon rear '"""""" u.vw best offer SS7·1700 or 540-9640 New. only 2K males. extras. Either S3SOO and ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30,000 m1 on rblt eng: Wheels. Leather, cruise track . 842·8058 '72 El Camano Good 644·4Ul1 '80 Datsun 210 Wagon. Sl0,900 or take over take over advantageous 1980 TR 7 Caw. white. lo !.~183rm12· $3950. Nancy· control. Strack & Stereo. SUPER DEPENDABLE Cond Needs Uphol ~--- Air, stereo, S 5~1J: '76 Honda Wa~on. ~ lease. 544-llE! lease or $29,000, 544.9272 ml, always garaged. .,_.. · 3LK ml. Xlnl. $8800 080. '71 Malibu, reblt eng, S2400. Find what you want an · · I :~~~ew pamL Sell idle items 642-5678 aft 2pm. 496-3964 Wanl Ads Call 642·5818 494-4881 trans, S800fmn. 640-2'715 979-5182 Daily Pilot Classifieds ...:..::::....:::=.=...-----1 I 0 ATLAS CHRYSLER.ft. YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 546·1934. 3 blocks! south of San Diego Freeway ott Harbor Blvd. Complete body shop. Sales. Service Parts. Service Dept. open Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M to 5.30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Saturday. • BEACH IMIORTS 848 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 752-0900. Call us. we re the spectahsts for Alla Romeo, Peugeot & Saab. THEODORE ROllMS FORD Modern sales, service, parts. body. paint & tire depts. Competitive rates on lease & dally rentala. 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 642·001 O or 540-8211. G) JOHNSON & SOM UHCOLH MBCUIY 2826 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mela. Tel. ~5630. 57 Years of friendly family service -Orange County'• oldest Lin· coin-Mercury dealership. 0 . SOUTH COAST DODGE 2888 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-0330 RV Mrvice' apeciall1ts, custom van converaions. NEWPORT IMPOl'rS 3100 W. Cont Highway, Newport Beach. Tel. ~40!5/540-1784. The Ferrari Heedq~ra MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN "(Hi BOXES HEW,ORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind V1ct0fia Station Sales. Service, Leasing & Parts. Fleet discounts to the public. • MAIERS CA.DtLUC 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. 'rel. ~9100. Orange County's Largest Cadillac deale" Sales. Service. Leas- ing. • DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUfCl(..flONT'IAC-MilDA Sales • Service • Leasing 24888 Alicia Pnway Laguna Hills 837·2400 llLL MAXEY TOYOTAUSID CAllS 19202 Beach Blvd .. Huntington B .. ch; 982·0829. Outstanding selection of used cars for Immediate delivery. And whlle on Beach Blvd .. stop by our new car f.clllty up the strfft. • ALAM MAGNON POMTIAC.SUIAlU 2480 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Meta. Tel. MM300. Sales,. Service, Le11lng. :'Mr. Goodwrencta." o· HOUSI Of IWOITS MllCMS1941 S .. •S..W• ...... 8182 Mancheater Blvd .. Buena Pn (on Santa Ana Freeway). Tak• Beach Blvd. offramp -ltlll'p right on Menchelter. OtAl.. MER.CEDES (213 or 714) &37·2333 • • I 01 LON~Pll PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminslef. Tel. 892~1 . Orange County's oldest and large,t Pontiac dealership Sales, Service. Parts. UNIVHSITY HONDA 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. ~9640. Mile South 405 Freeway. Sales. service. parts & leasing. • SAMT A AMA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th Street, Sartta Ana. Tel. 558·7811. Your• Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer. • MIUCUMADA We'WI moWdl Our new loc•tlon Is 1•25 S.ker Street. .Coat. Meu. Tel. S.5·3334. Slop by & visit our brand new lhowroom and see why we're the #1 Mazda dealer In Southern Cellfornla. Sales. Service. P.rte and leasing. ALLIN·OLDSMOllL.a.CADILUC SUIAIU·GMC TaUCICS S•n Diego Fwy. at Avery Exit on Camino Ceplttrano In t..guna Nlguel. Tel. 831~. • SAM DI SAMTIS CHIVIOUT 401 S. El CamJno AMI, Sen Clemeni. SelM, S.rvlce, IAallng And Patti Orar199 County'I NEWEST C~ deelet: "Growing Your Wey." Elclt El C.mlno of;f·..,.q>. atl.()51() • 492-8500 COST A MESA DATSUN 2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel 54(}6410 Serving Orange County for t 6 years l Mile So 405 • SUNSET FORD, IMC. (Home of Wallie the Whale). 5440 Gatden Grove Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 636·4010. MANK PROTO LIHC~HCURY Service and Parts Department always opan 7 days a .~k 7:30 A .M. to 8.30 P.M. 848-7739. • CONHIU CHIYIOLIT .2828 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Mela. Oller 20 year1 "rvlng Orange County! Salee, leaalng, aervtce. C.11 546·1200: tpeelal parta llne; ~!MOO; body thop line; 754-0400. • CHICK IVERSON POISC ... AUDl-VW 415 E. Coast Hwy., Newport Be.ch. 873-0900. The only deelerahlp In Orange County with thne three great mMes under one roofl • . aoy CAIVH IOU.S IOYCNMW 1540 Jembor" Rold, Newport BMch. 640-6444. 8all0, Service, Pam And Leulng. ~OR FURTHER INFORMATION, OR TO BE PLACED ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT' R~P . 642-5"678 ... I ; . .. . . .. IUllf Cllll Ylll 11111111 llllY PIPIR M O NDI\) or l(lBEH '.'. 1981 OHANGE COUN TY . CA LIFORN IA 25 CENTS .. Cross-country balloonists resting Arfzonfts attempt to recover craft which carried them to Georgi~ ........... Fred Gorrell 'left • and .!11'111 Shuecraft talk with well wishers 111 Savannah. Ga rift er landmq f/lf!1r ballmm 111 n cmss c111111t rr1 1/141!1 Imm Costa Wesa ~ By PHIL SNEIDE&MAN t ofeMD...., ...... I._., ,/ . ~ . After a restful night at a Savannah, Ga ., hotel, Super Chicken 111 pilots John Sboecraft, 38, and Fred Gorrell. 40, were preparing today to recover the silver balloon that had carried them from the campus of Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa to a remote island off the coast or Georgia. With their landing on Blackbeard Island at 11 :07 a.m. EDT Sunday, the Phoenix, Ariz .• businessmen completed the first non·slop balloon flight from one coast of the United States to the other. Super Chicken Ill lifted off in Costa Mesa early Friday. Flight spokesmen said the 10 -story-high helium-filled balloon with its egg-shaped gondola was aloft 55 hours, 25 minutesandtraveled2,515miles. S p okeswoman Marilyn Mc Manus sai$1 the pilots enjoyed a good night's sleep Sunday an<! today would attempt to recov~ their polyethylene balloon rrom Blackbeard Island. Shortly after Sunday's landing, co-pilot Shoecraft said he felt ' 'on top of the world." The l and in'g climaxeq.. a coast-to·-coast voyage that included a hazardous crossing of the Rocky Mountains (the balloonists reportedly wore parachutes until they had cleared tbe mountain range). Prior to their Black beard Island " ... Or if we landed in the ocean with the fog, we would have a serious problem getttng rescued.'' He said he and Gorrell were concerned about whether they would be able to land close enough to shore, "or if we landed in the ocean with the fog , if we would have a serious problem getting rescued." touchdown, the pair attempted a mainland beach landing about 24 miles south of Savannah. The landing failed, however, when stiff ocean breezes forced the pilots to ascend and find a more suitable site. He added, "We were able to After I anding on the bring the ba1Joon right in on the undeveloped island, the pilots' beach so we were very happy." • tracking boat had difriculty (indang the· balloonists, and two Coast Guard vessels were S\lmmoned to assisL Both pilots were found safe with their balloon undamaged and were transported back to the mainland. A rtightspokesmansaid the pair had fought off oxygen starvation and sub-freezing temperatures, fly ing as high as 28,000 feet at speeds that sometimes exceeded 50mph Cross-country flight attempts by two previous versions of the Super Chicken failed l'in 1980 because of adverse weather conditions. Last year, New Mexico balloonist Maxie Anderson and his son Kris flew from the helium balloon Kitty Hawk from San Francisco to the East C-0ast, but the craft was blown off course and Landed in Canada. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 18 Egyptian officers dismissed Government says move prompted because of 'fanatic religious tendencies' assassination of Pres ident Anwar Sadat had been checked was wounded during Tuesday's Sadat assassination. He has \ CAIRO, Egypt <AP> -The Egyptian government. in a new mov e again s t Moslem fundamentalists, dismissed 18 army officers "because of their fanatic religious tendencies" and put them in civilian jobs, official sources an nounced today. ''Eighteen a r my officers have been posted in civilian jobs.'' conspirators, members of an illegal fundamentalist Islamic sect , "committed the crime or their own free will" and had no helP' from abroad. Ghazala told Mayo the three men who helped el-lslambouly carry out tt}e assault were a former officer discharged from the army for his "extremist tendencies," a reservist officer who had terminated bis military service and a volunteer corporal who had also left the army. The Egyptian defense minister disclosed, meanwhile , that the army lieutenant a cc used or masterminding the o ut by military intelligence t>ecause of his religious extremism but was not found to be any threat. been in a coma at a Cairo military hospital since but is expected to survive his wounds. ··Eighteen army officers have been posted into civilian positions because or their fanatic religious tendencies," today's official statement said. The suspect. 1st Lt. Khaled Ahmed Shawki el·ls lambouly, -.../ 12 OPEC • nations The official sources said the 18 were not under any further investigation, however. El -Islambouly's brother, whose name has not been disclosed, was arrested last month in Sadat's crackdown on extremists. agree on oil price They also denied report.Ii that a rmy officers, other than alleged assassin el-Islambouly, had been arrested. Gbazala gave M9o det.alla, some previously undisclosed, of h o w the conspiracy was aU~gedlY. carried out, loUowing interrogation of the other two accused attackers. NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP> - Twelve of the 13 governments in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting countries now agree on adopting a unified crude oil base price of $34 a barrel. the Middle East Economic Survey reports. Only Venezuela s till has reservations. the weekly oi l journal said Sunda y without et a boration. Saudi Arabia. which pumps 40 per cent of OPEC production, has the cartel's lowest price, at $32 a barrel. Venezuela has one of the highest at $36 a barrel. The other OPEC members are Iraq, Iran. Kuwait, Libya, Algeria. Qatar. United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Nigeria, Ecuador and Gabon. The defense minister, Lt. Gen. Abdel Halim .. Abu Ghazala, was quoted by the newspaper Mayo as saying the three other men who allegedly charged Sadat's reviewing sta nd with el-Islam bouly previously had military connections, but were not currently in the military. Ghazala said t h e four He was quoted as saying the cons pirators had long been looking for an opportunity to 'kilt Sadat. When they learned that el·Islambouly was to lead his 130-millimeler gun crew at the annual parade, they decided their moment had come, he was quoted as saying. If you have to ask price of home ••. Multi-million dollar estate buyers don 't wo r ry a bout interest rat e By STEVE MARBLE Of t"9 D.tff\r ...... S- W hen John Wayne's waterfront home went on the market for $5 million. it set a high.water mark for real estate prices in Newport Beach that many figured would be untouchable .... But less than two years later. the W ayne milestone is not so extraordinary The Newport housing market is crowded with dozens of homes priced well over Sl million and at least four priced higher than the Duke's old digs. There is even a certain amount of professional disagreement on which house oow holds the price record. Realtor Bob Koop says his waterfront listing on Linda Isle, which comes with enough room lo tie up an 85-foot yacht in front and has an indoor-outdoor swimming pool, is tops on the money chart. The 6,500-square-foot home, owned by a 32-year-old business whiz, is priced at $4 million. The catch is it'll cost the buyer another $2 million to buy the land. That adds up to S6 million. Koop says the home even comes with an assumable loan of $1.8 million at a reasonable 12 percent interest rate. Monthly' mortgage payments are $18,000. But Ma rion Buie, president of Macnab-Irvine Realty. says his firm has a listing that can top that. This house also is situated on private. guarded Linda Isle and has 127 feet of bayfront property with enough room for an 80-foot yacht. He says it also has a perfect vtew of Wayne's old mansion. Buie says the house is going for $5 million and the land under it for another $2.3 million. That comes out to S7.3 million. On both of these homes. realtors agree, buyers do not have to purchase the land. They can opt to pay yearly lease fees instead to the lrvine Company, which owns the land. Tbe Irvine Company gives homeowners a choice between purchasing land or paying the land fees. .,,, Buie auggests the highest priced homes couJd be his firm's U1tin1 on the tip of the Balboa Penins ula. Does this S4 millwn estate on Lmda Isle top the Harbor Area Pnce includes slip for 85-foot craft . but not the yacht: This house, which comes with an electrically heated patio, radar security devices, a gymqasium and a view or just about everything, Is going for $5.75 million. This asking price equals the mark set last year w~en the old Myford Irvine home on Avocado Avenue went on the market for $.$.75 mlUlion. T bat hou s e . own·ed by Gene Was hb!!rn, baa seven bedrooms. 10 baths. I' four-car aaraee and an ocean view from every angle on tho one-acre lot. The house was built for Irvine, the late president of the Irvine Company, and lnctudes a pool, courtyard, «iuett wing, servants' suite and chauffeur's quarters. But the house still hasn't sold even though the price has been dropped several times. •'Prices have tr-uly reached stratospheric levels." comments realtor Buie, "but the slumpin1 housln1 market really hasn't slowed down the rates of sales of these kinds of homes." He says most people who would be interested in purchasing a mu1U-m1Jllon dollar home would be able to pay cub for it. tngh interest rates, he explains, would be or Uttle concern to them, Realtor Koop aay1 the same thine. He notes that only a "very, very wealthy man " (or woman ) wlU be able to purchase h1a listing on Linda Isle. ·WA.VTED TO KILL 111.\.1 .Vlurderess Jean H1Jrris I \'SATIABLE 'fYHA \ T Slam Dr Tarrrnu:er Jean Harris 'hated' Scarsdale diet doc NEW YORK <AP> -Jean Harris deeply hated Herman Tarnower, a sadistic bully to whom she crawled like an addict for sex, love and money. accord· ing to a newly published book by a longtime social critic. "Deep in her mind and heart she wanted lo kill Dr. Ta mower.·· Diana Trilling writes of the former Madeira School headmistress she sees as "neither fine nor ladylike." As for Tamower, Mrs . Trilling labels him a tyrant with "an in· satiable appetite .. for power and fawning women. "Lillie wonder he became famous as a diet doctor: he was a glutton for other people's vulnerabilities," the author says in "Mrs. Harris: the Death of the Scarsdale Diet poctor. ·· The book may shock Mrs. Harris' defenders. who saw her as a lady of Victorian principl~s and impeccable breeding who wanted onJ y to shoot herself amid the daffodils surrounding <See HARRIS, Page AZ> Reagan maps blitz on nuclear power WASHI NGTON (AP> The Energy Department is planning a multimillion-dollar publk relations blitz to win support for Reagan administration policies favoring nuclear power, a House subcommittee chairma n charged today. R ep. Rich ard Ottinge r , 0 -N.Y .. chairman of the House Energy s ubcommittee with jurisdiction over nuclear energy policy, said the campaign was rev ea l e d in a n internal department memo to assistant secretary Shelby Brewer. Ottinger called the plan "a blatant propaganda campaign for the nuclear power industry that will cost the American taxpayers millions of dollars" and said he will ask department officials to justify the expenditure at a hearing before his subcommittee. "If the president is looking for ways to save money, he should abolish bis n e w nu c l ear pro'Paganda proposal before it gets off the ground," be said. Ottinger said the campaign outlined in the memo Included: -Public appearances by department officials. assisted by public relations aeents. med1a training and speech writers. -Interviews for department officials with pote ntl•llr. "receptive" newspaper co . umnist.s. -SponaorshJp of a ~.ooo study by Scientists and En1ineera for Secure Enera. which the memo described 11."a p ro-nuclear oreaniiation or1anh.ed to offset the anti-nuclear Union of Concerned Scientists ." -Calling on the surgeon general to "certify the negligible radiation effect of nuclear power reactors." I Ottinger said the memo acknowledges that the industry a l ready has "a n extensive publk information effort,·· but recommends the government effort because "governm ent officials do command media attention." ORAIGI COAST WIATHIR Fair and cool through Tuesday. Low tonight at beaches 48, inland 54. Tuesday high along coast 68, inland 72. llSIDI TODAY Africa. will strife·torn nat ion survive to new c entury or be t o rn asunder'' Story. Page C6. llDll l I I I ) i i J I I t ' SPINNI NG THE SPAN: After more than one year in the making, 20 years of governmental bickering. and daily study of construction progress by untold thousands of commuters. Newport's new bay bridge opened to Pacifi c Coast Highway traHic this morning It was a bust -Alas. this comm~ntary will .fall s bol't of enormous interest for those lOyal' rea"ders wtfo travel 'other . commuter routes or tend to stay -at-home in Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa or Laguna. Unless. that is. you happened to be in one of those places and got trapped in the residuals of Pacific Coast Highway traffic. NOW A.5 TO WHY this morning 's bridge opening was an El Floppo. To understa nd this. _vou need to recall the ~- ,-u.-.-U-RP-HIN-E -~r, public buildup First. there were warnings that the upcoas t traffic would be restricted to onl~ one lane as it approached the bridge. Right there you've given all the upcoast commuters who have used the old bridge during construction foulups a good case of the heeby -jeebies. Top that with cases of dire pessimism by the regular hardened commuters. All this time while the new bridge was being built . they were told how the spanking-new span was going to relieve :'llewport's chronic traffic bottleneck at that location. This a lone would be enough to cause grave doubts that it would ever happen. SO THIS MORSING the Great Day had arrived. All the upcoast traffic was going to get squeezed down into one lane and then routed onto the new bay bridge. Downcoast traffic. headed toward Corona del ~far and "Thi:J 8ure does seem quiet today for a bridge opnii1'g. Laguna Beach, was going to have no problem because it would remain on the two lanes of the old creaky bridge. Thus it was this morning that upcoasl traffic was in its us ual crawl -along through th e jumbled non·synchronization of traffic lights through Corona del ~tar . '.'Jothing unusual here. ~ow ~·ou arc past the business "trip. Ynu clear the light al :VlacArthur Boulevard Traffic is now jammed solid .. This 1s the big bridge .1am ... you mutter . Some of ~·our fellow motorists get desperate and dive their car!'> into alleys and through nearb~· gas stations Those who stuck it out. however. learned to their wonderment that t he traffic signal at Coast Highway and Jamboree Road wasn't working It had been placed on red blinker Thus 1t required all motorists left -turners. Balboa Islanders and upcoasters to make a complete boulevard stop at Jamboree Road TfOS HAD THE SAME overall effect as one of those metered signals on a freeway on-ramp. The commuters in fact should be congratulated because much politeness of ··you go, then I ·11 go" was demonstrated at the .Jamboree·Coast Highway blinke r light. Meanwhile. the poor souls with all their regular lanes - in operation headed downcoast were backed up from Jamboree Road to the Balboa Ba~· Club. ll was a real mess. Reports have it they finally got a traffic cop to the afflicted intersection about 8:30 a m Earlier. however. the traffic 1ust trickled from Jamboree upcoast to the new bridge And thus. the new bridge worked just like a whiz. ~o problem there. . So commuters just breezed across the new bridge in a ~onday morning test that turned out to be no tes t at all. The test. it turned out. was negotiating the Jamboree Road intersection Whal a letdown. Oh well. there's always Tuesday '1-------------------------------------------------... i Gumnan gets $50 ~ A gunman with a handlebar Chicken restaurant in Irvine I mustache made off with SSO in a Sunday, police said today. ' robbery of a Kentucky Fried No one was Injured ln the 8:25 p.m. robbery of the restaurant ~ al 14407 Culver Drive. police t 66 Yiets rescued said. • MANILA, Philippines CAP) -The gunman was described as r The U.S. 7th Fleet picked up 66 5-foot-7, about 32 years old with Vietnamese refugees Sunday. short brown hair. l ORANGE COAST Cle11lflltd ltd'l'er11elnt 714AMt·5111 I :_~,!~~ i+~i:::: _ Coe>yrlOfll ,,.. o....,. Coe• "''*'"",,. ~. Robert N. Wetld No,,.., tlllf'lfl, 111u111r .. IOfli, ~I~,., ... ~ •ertlM--.111 m., a. r~M .,._,. Thomas A. Murph1ne 'PK'•' -'"'UIOflotce.,,,..,.._, (- Michael P Harvey .. ""' ...... ~ L Kay Schultz ~~rd Jr Bernard Schulman c:.-... Chralet H, Loos ............ Cerol A. Moore ~ ...... ~, I -2 county killers still at large Two wlJdent.Lrlcd gunmen who opened flre early Sunday ln a Garden Grove restaurant. klllln1 one customur and injuring five others, remlllned at large today. Investigators said they don't have any definilt! leads UIS to the identity of the men in long coat.a and skJ muks who sprayed the Hounji: My res taurant on Brookhurst Street with at least five rounds from two shotguns, al 2:30 a.m. Killed in the shooting In the V1etnamf'se restourant was Hong Tht N~o. 20. She was pronounc~ dead on arrival al Founteln Valley Community Hospital, said Garden Grove Police Set. Bruce Beauchamp Of the nv~ people injured, the most seriously hurt, accordln& to Beauchamp, was 8rh1n Scott, a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton, who was listed in a local hospital today ln serioua condition with back and neck injuries. Scott was the only Caucasian in the restaurant at the time of the s hooting, Beauchlmp s~id. • .,. 'investigators requested that tbe vl~Uma' hOSl)itals not be made public in cut the 1unmen were settklng a particular customer. Other customers with minor Injuries were Minh, Hoang Nauyen, 24, Ha Van Nguyen, 21, and Tuam Van Pham, 24. Mlnb floan1 N1uyen la the husband of the customer who •waa killed, said Beauchamp, They ltved ln Hawthorne. ¥Beauchamp said the two gunmen a{>parenUy entered t.be restauiaot and walked around a partition to where the vict.im."J were seated around two tables ~ pushed to1ether, then opened flre. Investl1ator1 are examlnlnl the strong appearance that the gunmen were searchin1 for someon e at those tables. 1 • Beauchamp Hid. But be added '" that other motives, lncludln1 the possiblUtles that lhe ahootinl was part of an extortion plot or gan1 dispute, also are beln1 considered. Wltnesaes told police that ba8ed on seneral appearance and &be: the gunmeit probably were Vietnamese, he added. Ali's 'Leanb:ig Tower' straightened out By J E RRY CLAUSEN OltllieD.itr ...... S-.tf The "Leaning Tower of Costa Mesa" no longer leans. Ali R ous h an. Iranian immigrant embroiled in a battle with city orricials over tall metal sculptures he's erected at his Crash kills 'fasting' • lllotor1st A 26·yea r -old Huntington Beach woman was killed late Sunday in Newport Beach when her c~r spun out of control, struck a curb and flipped over, according to police. Police said Gail Renee Miesner. who reportedly had been on a fasting diet for 63 days, was taken lo the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center where she was pronounced dead on arrival. W ilnesses told N ewporl officers that the woman lost control of her car on Pacific Coast Highway near Balboa Boulevard. They said the wes tbound vehicle crossed into the east lanes, struck a curb, jumped ont.o the sidewalk and flipped over. coming to rest against a street sign. Paramedics said the woman was trapped inside her sedan when they arrived minutes before 10 p.m . Relatives of the Huntington woman told officers the woman had been on a lengthy fasting diet and had "passed out'' during previous periods of fasting. Police, though, said they are uns ure this is what caused the accident. They said a continuing investigation into the traffic mishap and an autopsy of the woman's body should provide further information David Trigg • services set for Tuesday Funeral services for David Le roy Trigg, the 17-year-old Santa Ana youth who died Friday following a motorcycle accident in Newport Beach. will be held 2 p.m . Tuesday at Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel in Costa Mesa. Burial services are to follow at Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial Park. Trigg, a 1981 graduate of Saddleback High School in Santa Ana where he was a member of the school's marching band, was critically Injured early Friday along with his 17 -year-old companion, Frank Clarence Olvera of Santa Ana. Olvera remains in fair condition at Fountain Valley Com munily Hospital, officials there said. Police claim the two youths, riding a m otorcycle, were southbound on Superior Avenue near Pacific Coast Highway when they veered in to the northbound lanes and collided with a car driven by John Arthur Reynolds of Newport Beach. Officers said they're unsure which or the 17-year-olds was driving the motorcycle. Neither you th, police added, was wearing a protective helmet. Young Trigg, a member of Spurgeon Memorial United Methodist Church of Costa Mesa and active on the church softball team, is survived by his parents, Richard and Marianna Trigg. He also leavH a sister Coleen and two brothers, Thomas and Tracy. The family bas asked that in lieu of flowers donations be made to the David Trigg Memorial Fund in care or the Saddleback HJjh School band. IJ'ait outer bid PORTLAND, Ore. CAP> More than l mWJon people have 1i1ned.fetlltona aaklna the cllsml.ss of Interior Secretary James Watt because of bl• pro·development vlewa, tbe SJerra Club says. s h op, said today he has s traightened the 65-foot-high pit!ce dubbed •'Tornado." Rou s han ·erected the sculpture, the rourth on his property at 1550 Superior Ave., on Oct. 2 just before he was served a temporary restraining order signed by a Superior Court judge ordering tower work to cease. Then, last Friday, RoushaD announced that "Tornado" wu leaning dangerously. He said be was afraid to adjust the piece because of the restrainin1 order. City officials, he said, told him il wasn't their problem. The city has sued Roushan over erection of the towers without special permits requind for structures in the industrial zone. That case ts to be decided by Police nab suspect in Huntington death Police have arrested a Garden Grove man and charged him with the Saturday night shooting murder of a Huntington Beach man. Westminster police say Daniel Richard Lu cas, 33, of 9321 Marietta Drive was arrested at his home Sunday morning. He is charged with killing Charles Eugene Van Heche. 25, of 217 22nd St. Van Heche's body was found Saturday at 11 :35 p.m. with a small caliber bullet shell in the chest in an apartment parking lot at 7125 Fenwick Lane. Westminster. Police say the two men were acquaintances but no motive has been established for the killing. Lucas was booked into Orallge County Jail, police said. The investigation is continuing HB man badly hurt by hit-run auto Westminster police are seeking information on a hit-and-run motorist whose car struck and seriously injured a Huntington Beach man early Sunday in front of a night club. Police say a Light yellow or golden El Dorado Cadillac convertible with a while top struck Greg G. Larson. 29, of 8395 Leeward Drive, at 1 :25 a.m. in front of Smokey Stover 's on Garden Grove Boulevard near From Page A1 Golden West Street. Larson was listed in serious condition at UC Irvine Medical Center today, according lo police. Larson was getting int.o his parked car on Garden Grove Boulevard when he was struck, police said. Anyone with information on the incident is requested to call 898-3311. police said. HARRIS 'HATED DOCTOR'. the backyard pond of the man she loved. Now 58, Mrs. Harris is serving a 15-year-to-life sentence on her conviction for the March 10, 1980, murder of Tarnower, 69, in a jealous rage over another woman. Mrs. Trilling's book is being published a year after Mrs. Harris' trial began and just one month before an appellate court will convene to bear her appeal. Attorney Joel Aurnou said he Superior Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald who has taken the suit under submission. R oushan was concerned because be couldn't contact t.he judge for permission lo straight en out the lates t sculpture which he feared might topple under a strong east wind. His attorney als'o bec•me cohcerned and told Roushan not to worry about restraining orders, Roushan said today. The attorney , Meir Westrick, advised him to adjust the leveling bolts immediat'ely, Roushan said . "AccordinJ? to all calculations, it 's p l umb now." Rous han advised. J7 alley cops arrest trio after search Police cordoned off a Fountain Valley neighborhood early today and searched house-to-house before arresting three men s uspected of burglarizing a clothing store in Brea and then leading police on a car chase. Fountain Valley and Santa Ana police officers cordoned off the residential area between Euclid and Newhope streets and Edinger and He il avenues at about 7 a .m. today. The identity of the suspects was not immediately released by police. Two suspects were found hiding in a garage and the third was found near a home in the search area, police said. Police said the men had burglarized the clothing store and attempted to escape in a car that had been stolen earlier in Sant a Ana • • hadn 't read the book and therefore would not comment on -· .. .. ... ,• . . . . its portrayal of his client, pend-.. ; ing next month's court ap-' pearance. The author makes no pretense : at being a reporter. Sf : .. : Skiinq Without Limits I •.: . I Incredible support1 full control of your sk is on all snow conditions and terrain. Outstanding comfort with- out compromise. This is the new XL-S, the boot that knows no fear whether it faces fresh powder, ice, steepness or the longest run. 2500 West Coast Highway Newport Beach, CA 92663 (714) 631-3!80 • ·- ~ I ~ J J, , . ' . ; •": , t1 •I ~ . : ' : . . . . .\ Schaol.s wasting time? f Study says not enough hours devoted to instruction WASHlNGTON (AP > - Children In American 1chools arl' being shortcbanced of daily classroom Instruction b)' re· ceases that run too lon1t. leisure· ly lunch periods and classes that wind up early. according to a new study. John r. Goodlad, dean of thl! UCLA School of Education and author 9f the study. found that some elementary'scbools spend • aa UtUe u 18~ houn a week on Instruct.ion while others spend u much as 27~ houn. The averate for all arade schools was 22~ hours, or c~ hours a day. That ls simply not enou1b. Goodlad told the National Com· mission on Excellence ln Educa· tion at its inaugural meetUig. He recommended that ZS hours of instruction be the standard. Saturn · 'hot spoi' fusion energy key? BALTIMORE <AP ) - Voyager 11 's dis~overy of a doughnut-shaped zone around Saturn containing gases 100,000 times hotter than the surface of the sun may one day help scien· tis ts develop a revolutionary new s ource of energy on earth, a s pace scientist says. Scientists analyzing dat~ from Voy ager, which flew by the ringed planet in August, say they are at a loss to explain why the area is so hot. "We don't e ve n know the mechanism that's causing the temperatures," said Stamatios Krimigis. head of the space laboratory at J ohns Hopkins Unive rs ity and a principal member of the team analyzing Voyager data. Krimigis said it was only in the "last 10 days" that he and collaborating s cientis t s "rec· ognized the importance of what we found." "I haven't had a chance to think what it all means,'' he added . The region's temperatures range from 600 million degrees Fahrenheit to more than 1 billion degrees, he said. The sun's surface is 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit. "What we have found is a natural environment in which nature can produce gas 'much hotter than fus ion," Krimigis said. "It might lead to heating laboratory plasmas more effec- tively ... ultimately to build a reactor to produce electricity.'· Fusion, the principle bebinct the hydrogen bomb, occurs when two lig htweight atomic nuclei are merged into the nucleus or a heavier atom. with a resultant release of energy. Scientists are seeking a way to build a power plant that would us e fusion. Nuclear power plants now use fission, a process in which energy is released when heavy atomic nuclei are split. In trying to develop fusion technology, s cientists have been working in the labor atory beat· ing plasma -a gas consisting of electrically charged particles called ions and e lectrons. The hot zone around Saturn is com· posed or plasma and scientists hope that rinding out how the ~ _!l~ated up can help tt_iem "It might lead . ultimately to produce elec- tricity.'' develop new energy sources on earth. Krimigis s aid the hot gas forms an enormous doughnut- s haped region encircling Salum at a n altitude ranging from 170,000 miles above the planet's cloud top to as high as 450,000 miles. The gases are twice as hot as the Jupiter plasma cloud discovered by Voyager in 1979, he said. He said the space craft was not destroyed as it flew through the plas ma because the density is very low. "It's only about 30 particles per cubic foot, so there were few hot particles hitting the craft's surface," Krimigis explained. The schools that devote more time to lnatructlon use the day more efficienUy and do not have longer hours , Goodlad said. "They get down to business,'' he said. "A lS·minule recess lasts 1S minutes, not 30 minutes. and lunch is 30 minutes. not an hour ... They don't speQd the last hall-hour or the. day clean· Ing up, because they've found that it can be done in five or six minut~.!' Goodlad and. a t~am of re·· searchers spent eight years gathering data on 38 schools selected to represent a cross· section or public s chools in America . Th e y clocked classroom activities and chronicled school lire. Called "A Study of School· ing," the $4 million-plus project was financed by the Kettering Foundation, 10 other private foundations and two federal agencies. The final study will not be released until next fall. But in a paper previewing his study for the National School Boards Association, Goodlad wrote that children encounter ·'shortcomings and inequities . . . during their very first days in kindergarten or the firs t grade" because of the wide dis· parities in time s pent in the classroom. This "is in itself one of the most significant factors in their academic achievement ... " he said. "We have heard a great deal about equality or education opportunity In this country, but one of the most glaring types or inequality seems to have escaped our attention. And it has nothing to do with income or race." "If there's one thing we've learned in the last decade, it's that you don't learn anything if you don't spend any time on it," he said. "I'm not asking for a longer school year ... I'm ask- ing that we use the time we've got.'' Both the s chool with the 181h-hou.r week and the one with the 27Y.t-hour week s pent roughly the s ame atnount of time each day on reading and writing, 90 minutes, and on math, ~ or 55 minutes , Goodlad said. But the school that wasted time had only 23 minutes for social studies and 13 minutes for science, while the time-thrifty school offered a full hour of both social studies and science and had time left over for the arts. Full moon tonight Coastal Fair througll T""4ev. Coast•I 1oW 41, Int-S4. Coettal 111011 ... 111.-n. Wat•r '7 EIMwllere, small-cralt advisory few ousty --llHly winds IS 10 1S -noll with QllSll lo lO -nots. P•rtly clOUdy. U.S. summary Extended outlook SOUTHER N CALIFOlll NIA COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Fair ••<IPI fOf' -late 1119111 and u r1., moml119 coestAt cl~I· neu. Coeslal •rw NllhS mlcHO& at the lleachH to 1.1-r eo, lnlalld velle'fS -lows 56 lo 65. Moo#llal11 rHOrt lewl 11'9hs S6 lo 66, 8lld fowl U 1045. TemperQ.tures Snow Ill .... ,.., POrtlollS of Moll-,..,. H ,..,,.,, thunoerstorms c.MIMCI HI LA "<• minor str"I 11-1119 In parU of AAll~llV :; : 1e111thwes1 Tel!M. ,_qw Two llldles of --• ~ Amarlllo M 50 .14 Sllftday In C111 Batik, Mont. Win• A1l1evll.. 4t S2 storm warnl• •lld 1r11..i.r1 ad-AllafttAt 11 SS vlJOrles ...-. potted for'•arU of Atlante CIY :: : Mon tana, W'fOm lno, Nevada, Batllmore calllorllla-Ulah. Blrml.....,., " 61 Slt .. s -. fair from ...., Ef191end Bllt'llarck 66 ., acrou th• Ohio Vallet end the B8o1Mt • 42 •16 IO\lthel'll PlatMU. Mon S2 11 S11ow was UPt<lad today over Br-Mvlle 92 11 lllQher el.,,atloni from -em Mon-Bllffalo St 41 tan• lhr0<19h Call for11fa's Sterr• c.Mrlstn SC •• S1 Nn..S.s Rain wn tor.c:.Alt !of' Ille c.Mrlst11 WV 71 '° •-•r el9"atlons from tlw PletHY Clleyel!M 71 J6 ecrou the Rocllles alld over the Chlcaoo •1 U Plal11s •llCI the Mlu lulopl Valley Into Cincinnati :: !; the wutemOlllo Velley. Clevelelld Temperatures were .... ,., to be ~t~~~ ;: ~ cold o,..r I'--Ml,_I Valley ~ 90 45 •llCI the nortNm Roell .. ,. ... r 50 ... ftflr over New Enoland. near 60 from the Des Mol"" " 42 central Allanllc Coast ecrou Ille g-:·~~I ~ ~ Pie Ins and near to 111 101.1ther11 Ej; 12 60 .J.S Florida and southern Teus. H HO S7 J:J At mld•lternoo11 S1.1"'9a.,, tem· H::o 41 J6 ·" pereturtt r......, from a low of l1 111 H-lllll.I IS ff Gree I Falls Air l"o<c• Base, Mont., to Ho11tton 12 72 ts In McAllen. Tuas. . llldlleplls .. 50 ' Jachnvll• 0 H JO KensCllY " '° Lasv..-12 '1 Llltle lllod< .. .S. LOllltwlUa 7J 5' ,......_.,,s n •t The year's flr"tl snow was ,_,,eel Miami It 1S .JI at Mollnt Pl,_ near Frnler Per11 on Mllwellll• SS Jot California Stlftde'(, u rain hit OClier perts of •ts-St.P 60 '2 SOvthern Cell-• Nall\vlll• 11 U ,,.,,,~ (iillJ ..... ~~~79· S~••o Jot•••".,..' Ouhittl•41 ... umm ---=== Barstow .__ ...... ......... 81.,U. E11ralla Fresno La"Ar.-...S La11ea1tar LMQ8Mch Los Angeles Marysville Monrovia Mo11terey N...:ll•t Ne"'110f1 8Mcll OntMlo Palm Sprl19 PaU411M Paso lllOlll• Riverside Red8klfl 111.-ot-t S.llllH 11 '° 60 SI SS 11 M 41 II M 5' 46 '5 S2 St 17 .. 52 11 .. .. 62 M SI 1' SI •t S3 II 66 71 SI M SI 1t 61 71 S1 .. 51 M S1 .. 47 •S 56 u 50 .. Sf n n lltofilT_.., Mollterrey ,GI NHMll.I .:te San J....,,.,, P.R. '° 73 • n ., n St. Kitts TeQYCl .. lpe .fl Trl11ldad .01 Veracruz " ,. .. m 11 '° 13 1.42 15 Sun, m oon, tides TOOAY Second h1911 t :20p.m. S.• TUISDAY Flrstlow J:40a m o.J First 11191\ t.• a m •. t Sec-tow J:Slp m. 0.2 Second hlofl 10:0I p.m. S.4 .02 S11n H1s •.41 p.m .. rl-T....ciay •:56a.m. Moon (fllll) •.21 p.m .. MO TUHday •:n a.m. Sen 8etfWdlllO S.11 Gallrlel SanDl41911 S... Fr811Cltco S...J-SMtAtAN s.ntae.-a SMtAt Marla Stoc:Uon Talwle Vetley TMrmal '°"aft(:. 11 '5 .02 ., S3 .. 50 •1 ff n n .. S2 10 so 4S D '° ., S1 ·'~ Vretims aided Capt Jflf10rtllofllleFrazlerPer11 NewOn.-1$ n CAltAOA SACRAMENTO (AP fire station Mid lie had r..,.n.a that New Y0111 61 q Cll .. ry 14 14 .M ) aboll12 1Mm lladf•ttenataboll1tlw Nor1o411 !: ~,:: ~ ;: ;: -Victims of serious •.ooo-foot 1ew1 on""°""' Ptnoa. • D4llac1t., u ... ---• •• -crimes and interested proalmetely 90 rnl19' Mf1tlwetl of OmalWI ., .... _... ,.. .. 1.os.,,.....1111C.,.,.c-t-t. 0r1alldo " 1s 111..i-46 ,. .s1 o fficials such a s the "It's the nn1 -_..,.heel thll PNlad!INa :! ~ v'~~ ~ ,.• lawyers and trial J'udge year," Mid UoyO Wiens, a Frezler PllMnlll -~~ ... ,..,.. reara.111:-"w• -.,. a6eU( t P1tt11111ro11 u .. w1""1Pt9 " '° will be notified of parole 111<11et.1tslMWda11a.m." ptia11e1,,.,,,. !! ~1 ,..,. _.1111....... hearin°s because of two The precltlllatlOll ,_ 111 a .Wm Plfalld, On -• _.. e ..,. o4 ,,. 1'9clfk Hot1tlW.t. Mid 111-.. » .IS A<.,i<e .. n bills signed by Gov. Ed· ~i::.~.:_u;::::::= ~~~!i!tt• : : ·40 ::= ~ : mund Brown Jr . pect•d 10 dissipate,, • ..,,,.. clMr StLoutt 10 o helt• u • Brown's office said .-i.s tlll'OllGlll the first pert o4 ,,,. : :i::= : : ~~:~ : : that he signed $839 by ~ef,t rain••• reported 1n s.n SIN*-n ,. ~••I«• " n Sen. Milton Marks, R- hr11erdl110 and,, .. , t11• ••I• '"1.. !'! !! .u ~::::::-~ ~ San Francisco, and llorWr, • ~ -CIOo*.,.. Watlll....,, ... -A 8 1 3 b A a,..H of too *-In -the l9\lth Wklllta •t .. . U Klflte• te ,Pl y S · ~a.v • n b l J coest. CAU110ttti11A Maut1a11 ,,. n sem ywom an ean Wtlllb "' .. to ID ml ... ., ....,.. Milt .. v....., n n MeriN " rs M o or h e ad • D · S a c · L..wt1_'"" __ "'""'-' __ -_-.r1s. _____ ,_.,_ .... _, ..... _____ .. _,, ___ llllft_tc.._0tt _____ "_S7_~ r am en to. 0., .... hhwy ........... We,,e Listening ••• • • What do you like about the Dail)' Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below ... )'OW' mea111e will ~ recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour .nswetinc service may be used to record let ters to the editor on any toptc. Mailbox contributors muat Include their name and telephone number for veriJlcation. No circulatl.on calls, pfea.se Tell us what's on your mind. Orango Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 s ACT THREE -\·1rgrn1a Sulll\ all d id .i doubk tak e wh en sh<' walked 1nl' ~l 1l:h 1gan " .. Dul ter worth ffo:..pital lo '1:..1l d Ju~hler Janas Corne r . left. "ho had tklivt>rcd a ba b~· girl In the bed nC'xt t o J <Jn<t'l was '.\l rs Sul11van·s ... ~ olhL•r d aughte r . J ayne Bodbyl. center. who had given birth lo a baby girl two ho urs earlie r J avn c's sist e r -in -law. Gre tine Rodbyl. ga\'f,; birth to a girl thl'l'(' da.' .... hl'l'on· l he sisters had theirs -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Poor nursing care told State may cut inspection staff to meet budget SACRAMENTO <AP l Amid r e n e wed complai nts o f poor care, lax e nforcem ent and over · w orked staff a t California 's nursing homes, the stale 1s plan· ning lo reduce 1ls ins pection s ta ff because of federal budget r uts. But Gov Edmund Brown J r 's He alth Ser vices De pa rtment hopes lo m ake the cuts fa r less s evere th a n t h e d r a s tic m easures predicted by pa tient ad vocates, said t he depart m ent's assista nt director. Barry Dorfman. Dorfman wa:-interviewed Fri· day after a d ay of familiar but poignant testimony to the As· sembly's Committee on Aging from relatives and friends or pa- tients. p a tien t s'-r igh ts a d vocales, nurs es ' a id es a nd others involved with some of the 105 ,000 patie nts in California nursing homes Prisoners at the Sonoma Coun· ty Jail get be tter food, quicker medical care, and more humane tre atment tha n nursing home residents, said Dale Pennmgton, who works as a ~uard at the jail and also. along with his wife. has "adopted " a nursing home patient tovisit ·'The nursing home residents I have seen a re far too ofte n treat- ed as inconveniences, .. he said. "They're igno red . they're insult- ed , they're d ehumam zed, and for this they· re paying S 1,400 a month." His wi fe, Pa t Vance, SCJid that before the couple "adopted " the patient, who is 87. blind a nd hard of hearing, "her life con- sisted of getting up, s itting in her wheelchair a ll day . and go- ing back to bed · · Half of all nursing home pa· tients have no vis itors. a dded Ms . Vance. There also were accounts of patients lying in their own urine and feces, of retali ation against patients who complain, and or wo rd·o f -m outh "co mmo n knowledge" or upcom ing state inspections. A patient advocate, Chari~ Mar tin of Albany. said llealth I Se r v i ces D e partm e nt supervision is already bad, and department cutbacks wo uld lead t o ··e l eve n hundred ne ighborhood conce ntra tion cam ps for old people." Ma rtin cla imed the depart· ment plans to drop half its in· vestigator s. 80 percent of its nurse consulta nts and all Its d ie tary consuJta nr,; Dorfman agr eed that such :-even• reductions would "gut ou r capacity to meaningfully res pond lo complaints." But he stud the department is hoping for much smaller cuts. He said federal budget cuts have eliminated $2.5 million, or a bout 15 percent, or the state's money for licens ing and ins pec- tion. Under s tate la w, the inspec· lion program would lose another $2.5 milhon in matching state money. But Dorfman said H e alth S ervices Director Beverlee Myers is asking the Finance Department to seek a waiver on that law, which would allow retention of most of the nursing home inspectors. Mubara_k may act f iriner with Israel t.:NITED NATIONS I AP> - A for m e r U .S . envoy with close co nta c t s to Hosoi M uba ra k says h e e xpects Egypt's president-designate to ~eek reconciliation with Saudi Arabia and be firme r in dealing with Is rael tha n his s lain men· tor. Anwar Sadat. He rmann F. Eilts had almost dailv contacts with then-Vice President Mubara k while se rv- ing as a mbassador to Cairo from 1973-1979. Muba rak was nominated by Parliament and is the sole can- didate in Tuesday's election to name a successor to Sadat. who was ~lam by assassins last Tues- day . Eilts. now a professor of in· ternational r elations at Boston University, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that Mubarak has taken care to place loyalists in key positions and seems to have "effective hold on the levers of power in Egypt." He described Mubarak, a 53· vear-old former a ir force chief, as "very much a dis ciplined, military type." But unlike Sadat , Mubarak "knows how to use his stare." said Eilts. recalling that "on a number of occasions it was he who urged a more positive policy toward Saudi Arabia. "The fact that he was not able to pull it off was because he had a boss who, for all his good qualities, was an authoritarian. Ile (Mubarak) has · got to be given a chance." Eilts said Mubarak particular· ly deplored the break in Egypt's re lations with the Saudis follow- mg Sadat's historic peace mis· sion to Jerusalem in 1977. Saudi Arabia had been Egypt's main economic and political backer in the Arab world. Now that Mubarak is in power, Eilts said, "I think he's willing to try lo establis h a political climate -without giv· ing up the treaty with Is rael - where there can be exploration for improvement in relations with Saudi Arabia." On the Arab-Israeli issues, Mubarak "is inclined to be a lit- tle less accommodating than Sadat," Eilts said. Eilts said Mubarak was "very care(uJly groomed" by Sadat, who initially included Mubarak in every meeting with Arab and other foreign dignitaries. ours from ocotland ... shcz.t1and CTIZ\}l necks 1 ., I I . i 1 • 'I I: I : I' I • I • I ' • J I • • f ~ -.----~~-.......--~~~.....-. ...... ...--------------------· .... t'/F Orange Coa1t DAIL V PILOT/Monday, October 12. 1981 ~ffiU~OO~. Ex-presidents tirge PLO notice Libyan planes bomb .. Sudanese ·villag~s · KHARTOUM. Sudan (AP> - Llb_yan W1trplanes bombed two Sudanese vlllages near Sudan's western border with .Chad, kUl· ing two women and wounding several other people, the Sudan National News A'ency-reported today. Quoting a Foreign Ministry statement, the agency said the border villages or Tendelti and El·Tlna, about 660 miles west of the capital, were "brutally bom· barded" on Thursday, leaving two dead and many more in· jured, including women and children. "Sudan wil l not s t and handcuffed against the con- tinued Libyan aggressions,•· the news agency said. Sudan report- ed several similar Libyan air at- tacks last month · Nixon meets heads of Saudi Arabia BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP > Former President Richard Nixon is in Saudi Arabia for a s urprise meeting with King Khaled and Crown Prince Fahd. Nixon "is not here in any official U.S . govern m ent capacity," a U.S. Embassy offi cial said Sunday in the Red 'l'Sea port of Jidda. American .... ~diplomats in Jidda and Cairo :.._._.were unable to say what the ~~purpose of Nixon·s visit might :S:: be. ~J ~Dominican rioters :~protest Bush visit r..: ~;, SANTO D O MINGO , ~i. Dominican Republic <AP> - ·:.:·Rock-hurling demonstrators ,0 protested the vis it o r Vice ··:President George Bush, who ~ "'.;. later praised "the example the ·~Dominican Republic offers in •--::strengthening democracy in the ·~world ." t~3 R i o t po Ii c e a r rest ed 4 3 c~: a nti·American protesters in ;·. downtown Santo Domingo on :"..··Sunday after they began burning • .. •• tires and attacking police. ,., ... ~ ~House panel hits ·~~ Reagan stand \;~ !$ WASHINGTON <AP> In ·::;s harp contrast to President ?~ Reagan's complaint last week ,~ ~ .,;:.: '~--: ':; (:-· ,!. .. TARGET? \'e s tigating a report that New York mobs ters h ave or- dered a death contrac t on ente rta iner Wavne Newton. a ke y witness in· an exto rtion Ct.I Sl'. that the nuclear industry Is suffering from over·regulation, a House committee Is saylng s uch c l ai m s a r e "grossly exa1gerated ... In a report scheduled for ·pubU~ re)e.ase later tbls week, the Ho u se Goverhment Operations Com mitt ee contradicts Reagan 's newly announced nuclear policy. and also says the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's new emphasis on speedy handling of license applications could be dangerous. 82 more executed by !ran regime BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's Moslem fundamentalist regime sent 82 more leftist opponents to their deaths before firing squads over the wee kend, Iran's state-run radio reported today. Parliament speaker Ali-Akbar Rafsanjani. meanwhile. rejected an offer by the 42-nation Islamic Conference Organization to sta tio n a multi n ational peacekeeping force a long the Persian nation's warfront with Iraq, Tehran Radio said. Wreckage of 1953 air crash found REYKJAVIK, Iceland !AP) - Sear che rs alerted by s heep herders found the wreckage of a U.S. Navy plane that crashed on t he Myrdalsjokull glacier on Iceland's south coast on Dec. 17, 1953, I celandic r escue authorities reported today. A s po kes man said the authorities were alerted by the · far m ers who s po tt ed the wreckage Satu r day while rounding up stray sheep. He said they found the bod ies Sunday of seven of the nine crewmen who were aboard the twin-engine Loc kheed Neptune wh en it crashed. One body had been found soon after the cr ash; one is still unaccounted for. Thatcher assailta V.S. IRA backers LONDON (AP> -Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher attacked American supporters of the Irish Republican Army as police braced for more Irish terrorism in England . Mrs. Thatcher visited victims of an IRA nail bomb in London and said she told two Americans she encountered at the hospital : ·'Go back to the United States and telJ people there never to send any money to Noraid. Now you know what it is used for." Poland invites . union aupport WARSAW, Poland <AP) Poland's Communist Party says it is going ahead with price increases despite the opposition of the ind ependent labor movement. But it has invited Solidarity to join a commission to plan food supplies, prices and rationing. The offer to the independent labor fed eration was in response to a threat b y the union's national congress last week to call a national strike if it was n ot consulted about price increases. WA SHINGTON (AP ) - Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. wbo were Ins trumental i n brlngln1 Israel and E1ypt to1etber, say the United states eventually must deal directly with the Palestine Ll~ration Orga n lztatlon to gain a comprehensive Middle East peace. In an unprecedented joint Interview. the 38tb and 39th pr esidents also agreed that many m,o•d e Tate Ara b leac!ers support the Camp David peace but are a fra id to speak up. Ford a n d ~on Ca rt er , freouentlv callinll each other "Jerry" and "Jimmy," spoke o n the fli ght back from Saturday's fune ral of slain Tee~age drivers rapped CHICAGO <AP) -A report by an insurance r esearch group s uggests high school driver e du cat ion program s be a bolis hed and teen ·ager s a llowed to drive only in the daytime as a means of saving lives . ·The report, compiled by the I n s urance In sti tute for Highway Safety, says nearly 50 p e r cent of a ll deaths of Americans aged 16 to 19 are caused by m oto r ve hic le accidents. In addition, the group says more than half of the accidents occur at night and drinking is a major cause, particularly a mong males. The institute , a non-profit resear ch group fund e d by s everal insurance companies, issued its 11 -page report "'Teens a nd A ut os : A D e adl y Combination" late last month. The institute also proposed raising the legal drinking age to 21 and le1tal driving age to 18. T h e group 's most c on· t roversial proposal , how- ever , may be its recom· mendation to abolish driver education programs in high schools. Th e institute said the programs promote the licensing of more 16-and 17-year-olds and as a result increase the chances of a teen becoming involved in a traffic accident. The report referred to a 1980 Ya le study which found that accident rates among some teen groups dropped in communities where driver e ducation programs were eliminated. The proposal was met with an a ngry r espon se fr om Carl Mags a men, pres ident of t he Illinois High School and College Driver Education Association. "If we a bolis h d r i ver education to reduce the number o f teen -agers exposed to automobile accidents, then we m ight as well a lso abolish s wimming l esso n s for youngsters so that we can cut do wn on the number of drownings," he said. The report also recommends changing state li censing laws to prohibit teen driving during late night hours. Reds vuit Vietnam BANGKOK , Thailand (AP> - A group of Soviet wa rships. ·commanded by Vi ce Adm. Nikolai Yassakov, is on an official visit to Vietnam. the Vietnam news agency said today. MALL WIDE SALE! The reasons for shopping South Coast Plaza have been considerably reduced. See for yourself! Sale starts Saturday Oct. 17'at 10 a.m. Register In any store both days for prizes. 14 vacation trips to San Francisco courtesy PSA You will stay at the Sheraton Fisheman's Wharf. A four. .. lsland cruise via American Hawaii Cruises. Many more prizes.• SOUTH COAST PLAZA • Store •mploy .... tfttlr famlll•t, and P1aza pef80nMI not ettglble. Mu1t be 18 or otcter. Egyptl11n Presiden t Anwar Sadat . The Whlt e Ho use released the text Sunday. Sadat had urged that the United States talk with the PLO. "At some point that has to happen," s11ld Ford, who was preside nt when Secretary of State Henry Kissinger employed shuttle diplomacy leading to the separation of Israel i and Eevotlan forces in the Sinai. •'That Is the kind of de· velopment that I thlnk has to take place if you· re goinc t o get the negotiatio ns Cor the future o ff dead center," Ford added. "I wou ld not want to pick the date today ... but CAUH as you go down the road at some point. that dialogue has to Lake pla('e, and J think that will happen." It was Ford who promised Israel that the United States would not deal with the PLO until it recognized Israel's right to exist. Carter. who persona ll y supervised the 1978 summit at his Camp David, Md ., retreat t h ttl led to a peace t reaty between Egypt and Israel, said: '"T here ls no way for Israel ever to have an ~sured permanent peace withoftt resolving the Palestinian issue.· ... So I think Jerr y is certalnJ y right in saying these discussions have to be done." The problem, Carter said. is U.S. recognition of the PLO before PLO r ecognition or Israel. "We can't speak for Israel. but I think a simultaneous acknowledgment of the PLO that Israel has a right to exist, and our dealing with the PLO. ""~ Palestine Llberat1011 Orgamwt1011 leader Vasser Ara/al waees us he arrives m Tokyo for three-day u1s1t Secunty 1s heavy with the .Japanese government mnhilizmg l i .f'Hl<J po/tee tn qun rd Arafat would c~rtainly be something thut I would favor, .. Cart.er HJd. But both former presidents ~aid dtialings with the PLO would not necessarily have to be with the present le adershlp under Vasser Arafat "IL can be r e s pons lblt bus iness and other leaders ... Carter said ··There may well be other leaders that in time will either in conjunction with Arafat or independ e ntl y hav e an opportunity t() represent them•fo these eventua r negotiiitlons. ·· Ford added In Israel , government of ficials who refused to identify themselves crili<'ized the timing or F o rd 's a nd Carte r 's statements about the PLO. "'T h e timing o f thes e s tatements i s es pe cial!\ inappr'bpraate coming so soon after the PLO expressed JOY ov e r the assass in ation of President Anwar Sadat:· the officials said. The government of Prime Minister Menachem Begin had no official reaction * * * Egypt, U.S. plan told NEW YORK <AP > The Un ited States and Egypt will soo n form a joint military c ommiss ion to dev e lop a resoonse to anv Libyan attack o n t he Sudan and thwa r t Soviet-backed aggression rn North Africa. News week has said in its latest editions. The project , one of Anwar Sadat's last joint ventures with the United States, has gaineJ m omen tum wit h Sadat"o.; assassination last week. Talks between Egyptian and American off1c1als began earlier this year after Sadat suggested a possible Egyptian invasion of Libya to counter Libyan strongman Moammar Khadary·s expansion in the region. the magazine said German protest FRANKFURT. West Germanv (AP > -Police us ed wate.r cannons Sunday to drive awa) demonstrators who atte mpted to rip down barbed wire around tht' construction s ite ror a thirct runway at Rhein· Mam Airport ~ Mandrell seeks award repeat Petite singer finalist at country music event NASHVILLE (AP) -Barbara Mandrell makes a bid tonight to become the first artist to win the Country Music Associat ion's entertainer ·Of·the-year award two years in a row. <Channel 2, 9:30 p.m.) The petite singer iF one of five fin alists for the award, fa cing competition from Kenny Rogers , Geor ge Jones and the groups Alabama and the Oak Ridge Boys. The show, which traditionally co m mands top t elevis ion ratings, will be broadcast live by CBS from the Grand Ole Opry. Miss Mandrell, star of her own weekly network variety show on NBC, was named entertainer of the vear in 1980, and is a co-host for tonight's program. She a lso is a finalist for female vocalist or the year with newcomer Te rri Gibbs. 198(} .. winner Emmy lou Ha rris, veteran Loretta Lynn and Anne Murray, whose style appeals to pop audiences. Finalists for top male vocalist include four former winners J ones. Ronnie Milsap. Rogers a nd Don Willia ms -plus veteran Willie Nelson. Up for single of the year are "Elvira" by the Oak Ridge Boys, "I Believe in You" by Williams , "Old Flame·· by Alaba ma . "So m ebody 's Knockin" "by Mi ss Gibbs and "I Was Country When Country Wasn't Cool" by Miss Mandrell. Robnscns KOU ROS. THE FRAGRANCE OF THE GODS FOR THE MAN.OF JODAY. NEW FROM YVES SAINT LAURENT. Contenders for top album arc.• "Feels So Right" by Alabama "I Am What J Am " b.\ Jones. ""I Believe in You" by Williams. ""Out Where the Bright Lights Are Glowing'' by Milsap and '"!! to 5 and Odd Jobs"" by Doll~ Parton. One or fi ve nominees Will be chosen for the Countrv Music Hall of Fame. They are p1onee1 singer Vernon Dalhart, the late singer Lefty Frizzell, colorful singer Little J immy Dickens . singer-composer Floyd Tillman a nd Grand Ole Opry announcer Grant Turner. About 5 ,200 s ing e r s . musicians, songwriters a nd other professionals in counlr) music are eligible to vote Now In this, his first men's fragrance in 7 years. Yves Saint Laurent brings together all the serene beauty of the Golden Age with the vitality and freedom of our own. It Is a fragrance of unparalleled purity: an ethereal combination of rare spices, wild KOU ROS herbs. clove.'corlander and wood harmonies. It is a design that looks to the past. Yet lives in the future. And. like the famed Greek statue-Its namesake-It is, surely, destined for immortality. 1.6 oz. Eau De Toilette. $20; 3.3 oz., $35; 6.6 oz., $50. 3.3 oz. Eau De Tollette Natural Spray, $38. 3.3 oz. After Shave.S25. Robinson's Cosmetics. 180 To order. call toll-free 1·800-521-7800 . . EAU OF. TtlllETil: • • ... -- J Ore~go Cbast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 H /F .\I ~UillU~ ·Carpenter's in running Orange County solon assails governor in jetliner tour SACRAMENTO CAP > -CriUcizlnj Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. as an ineffective "elitist," state Sen. Paul Carpenter has become the second Democrat to challenee Brown for U.S. Senate next year. Carpenter, who has represented Orange Coµnty in the state Senate since lfn4, announced Ms cancUdacy during· a• (lying tour of. t]le st•te Sunday with 175 supporters who pai<l S500 each for trip with him on a chartered OC-10 jet. Like Fresno Mayor Daruel Whitehurst, the only ottler candidate against Brown in the Democratic primary next June, Carpenter comes from the moderate ·tO·COnservative wing of the Democratic Party, and he attacked Brown for being tied loo closely to a "vocal minority" of liberals during his seven years as governor. Carpenter said Brown "bas failed to take a leadership role on many of the vital issues affecUng our stat~. anc,t his administration has mismanaged and bungled its way, creating havoc in almost every area of the state," he said, citing Brown's handling of the MedUerraneart fruit fl y as one example. Carpenter also attacked Brown's opposition to nuclear power. which Carpenter supports, for Fans rnSh gate at Stones f ete LOS ANGELES CAP> -The biggest problem at the Rolling Stones closing concert was not the 98,000 people inside the Coliseum but the people who couJd not get in, police said. Some 300 fans tried to crash the gate •fler the concert began Sunday, said Lt. Paul Jefferson. They were quickly dispersed by 15 horse·mounted policemen. The would·be gate cras hers apparently had hoped to buy some or the 5,000 extra tickets which went on sale but were quickly sold out overnight. The addHional tickets became available after pro· moters noticed empty seats during Friday's con· cert as more of the 93,000 people in attendance crowded down onto the field than expected. A nother m e dfly d iscovere d EL MONTE (AP l -County agriculture of· ficials say another Mediterranean fruit fly has been found , this time in West Covina, one.eighth of a mile from the original Southern California finds in Baldwin Park. The medfly, found late Sunday afternoon, was sent to Sacramento for tests of its fertHity. In a~dition, aerial pesticide spraying has been ordered m the La Puente area where four MedUer· ranean fruit flies were discovered last week. Man floats 6 hours in sea EL S EGUN DO (AP l -A 36·year·old Woodland Hills man was found floating in the ocean near Palos Verdes Point Sunday, about six hours after he was s wept from a boat he and a woman companion were sailing to Marina del Rey from Catalina Island. The sailboat Rodeo Drive was out on a pleasure cruise about 9: 30 p. m. when those on board spotted Steve Hudson, who had been floating since he was swept from his sailboat about 3:30 p.m ., said Coast Guard Lt. Mark Jones. Hudson was reported in good condition despite the ordeal. LA street f estival e nds LOS ANGELES <AP> -Cheerful, friendly crowds gathered in central Los Angeles Sunday for the final day of the Street Scene Festival. "They have some delicious food, and there's a real nice crowd out here today," Lt. 'Gary Bebee said. Police r~ported only two arrests for public drunkenness m the fourth annual two-day festival. Ga s supplies on wa y down.? LOS ANGELES <AP> -Oil industry analyst Dan Lundberg says the price of gasoline is drop· ping at the pump, but be says the drop will be short·lived and troubled times are ahead for the motorist this fall. Lundberg said in his weekly newsletter that he is not backing away from predictions of higher prices even though the current price drop dis· proves an earlier prediction of a price rise at this lime. He says it is just a matter of lime before the costs go up and the supplies go down. Late-pay bill vet oed SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has vetoed a proposal to make state agencies pay late penalties of up to 180 percent in annual in· terest on overdue bills to small businesses. The bill, SB686 by Sen. Barry Keene, D· Mendocino, would have imposed the penalty on state agencies that were more than 30 days over- due. without good reason, on contract payments. thwarting the attempts to develop more electrical power nei!ded for economic growth. "He has probably set a record as the worst governor this state has eYer had," Carpenter said of Brown in a news conference on the state Capitol steps attended by fewer than a dozen reporters and photosrapf}efs, . . Carpenter said lh•t 'Unlike· Brown. he would restore "balance" in representing California's interest in the Senate. Eleeting Brown "would only be a continuation of Sen. ($.1.) Hayakawa's fruitless tenure," Carpenter said in one of his few referenel!s to the Republican incumbent, who is seeking a second six-year term. Voicing the same criticism against Brown as most of the Republican contenders for the Senate, Carpenter charged that Brown is seeking election to the Senate only as .. a stepping stone to higher office," a reference to Brown's two campaigns for president. "'It's time we pull the plug on Jerry's political game quickly,·· Carpenter said. Pollsters and political observers give Carpenter little, if any, c hance of blocking Brown's bid for the Senate nomjnation. Thars because mos t of the dissatisfa ction with Brown among Democrats comes from the liberal wing of the party, rather than from the smaller conservative wing, where both Carpenter and Whitehurst draw their support. In an August poll , Mervin Field reported Brown was supported for the Senate nomination by 48 percent of the Uemocrats polled compared to 23 percent for Assemblyman Leo Mc Carthy. who has withdrawn from that race, and just 8 percent for Whitehurst. Carpe nter was not listed as a potential candidate in that poll. A Salute, to ............. HUP TWO THREE FOUR Fort Ord Drill Instructor S P4 Angela Adams s houts cadence as 54 women m a r ch off to barra('ks during probably the wackiest pajama party e ver. The women stayed overnight in the barracks and participated in close-order drill and other basic training exercises. The women, mostly housewives and professional women. m eet onc·t-a year for unusual pajama parties . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~ Parachute accidents kill pair LAKE ELSINOR E IAP l A 20 -year-old French woman whose parachute failed to open and a 27 year old San 01ego man whose chute entangled with that of another skydiver were killed in s1.•pa rate H 1 \•er::.1dc Count.> skydiving accidents l nve ::.tq.~utors Sund<i.> s aid Ghislaine Mi g li arini 's µaraehutc would not open, and she fa iled to jettison the malfunctioning parachute before opening her auxiliary. She died as she hit the ground in the 1 p.m accident at Skylark Airport near Lake Elsinore. Officials said she had made about 60 successful Jumps. In vestigators at Perris Valley Paracenter said David Redick died of a broken neck when his par achute entangled with that of another skydiver, Ginnv Wilson Women In Bu1in111 t I-~,-·..._. .,. __ _...._ 1 .. ---·------· ...... -~ .... IC-:.=:=..- 1......_C.~'::, ..... ._ ,,...._ "'· l~ .'\,::-::.--::;. -- S :..:.:..~_:::_-::= ·-----------~ .. __ .,_ ~ • .=-:..:..-:.: = t::;:. ~ ..,:-, ·--· -..... ----i.-. ~ -:r Coming Sunday, Octobe·r · 18, 1981 in the Daily Pilot A tribute to the Orange Coast's SUCCESSFUL WOMEN ·in business llHyPllat .A2·5671 The Orange Coast's Successful Business Professionals of 1981 This is the Actual Size Ad For best reproduction, a clear black and white photo of any size can be used. Your messaQe will accom- pany .the picture in this space. If you choose not to publish a picture, fill the space with your message. National Women in Business is October 18 through 24. To honor area women in business, in- dustry and commerce, the Daily Pilot will pub lish a special tribute 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, achievements or contributions. Businesswomen Sal ute notices wi II be two column by two inches each, with a photo you pro- vide. The cost of each notice is only $32. Don't miss being part of this special advert is- ing opportunity. Dead line for reserving space is October 14. Call today! \ " ' A,. ........ M uscular dystrophy stnkes more than one in JOO Amish -1.00() times the national average. Family takes nde m carriage. as Amish community shuns automobile Got the w rong n umbe r LJBERTYVILLE, Ill. (API - A suburban Chicago couple wbose home telephone number seems to appear in a hard rock'. 1 hit song have filed suit to have Ute tries changed becanse they have recei ved hundreds of obscene calls. Last March the group "AC- DC" released the album, "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap." The song of the same name quickly rose on the music charts and became a favorite of bard rock tans. Norman and Marilyn White, however, filed suit in Circuit Court seeking that a revised re- cording of the song be made and asking for damages of at least SlS0,000. "Hundreds of lewd, suggestive and threatening phone calls re- lating to the 'dirty deeds' sug- gested in the song" have con- s tituted "an unreasonable and prohibited invasion of privacy and an unwarranted intrusion into our private lives." the Whites charged I Orange Co11t OAJLY PILOT/Monday, October 12, 1981 H/F A7 Ami-sh struck by incurable 'MD More than one of 100 in community fall victim to debilitating disease BERNE, Ind. (AP> -Shiny steel wheelcbalTs are as famlllar as horse-drawn bu11tea amon1 the Amish ln northern In· dlana. The 3,000 Amish near Berne h ave the h igh est rate of muscular dystrophy in the coun- try, one researcher aays. The crippling disease occurs here at a rate 1,000 times the national average, striking more than one In every 100 Amish. Doctors say it continues to ·spread.~ The illness is transmitted only to children whose parents are MD carriers, but almost one adult in five is a carrier here and the Amish instruct their children to marry within the community. In one family, nine brothers and sisters are victims of lbe disease. Symptoms, which in- itially occur at about 10 years of age, include weakness in the muscles of the pelvic region and shoulders. By 20, most victims are confined to a wheelchair. There is no known cure. In the Schwartz home, brother and sister Chris and Elizabeth, both in their 30s, slide their wheelchairs together over a rugless floor to a bare com er to sing for a guest. The ballad they've composed themselves is a slow and plaintive one about MD. Mi ss Schwartz's hands are claw-like, twisted by the dis- ease. Her brother harmonizes in a strong, full voice as hls bead rolls back involuntarily. ·'That ole sly sickness, it did come. Made it hard to climb up the stairs,·· they sing. "Quite often it did make us fall and fina lly put us in our chairs ... From their chairs, MD vic- tims are incapable of participat- ing in traditional Amish life -a life filled from sunup to sundown with tending livestock. planting and harvesting crops and feed- ing and clothing large families. No modern technology is used. The Amish, descendants of a strict Swiss reltitous aect that spilt from the Mennonltea in the 17th century, ~Ueve ln toUow· lna u cloeely u poaatble the ways of the put They dresa u their anceators did and their homes are almple and bereft of decoration. They eschew modem !lumb- ine, motor vehicles an moat products of 20th century technoloJY. Only their stron1 work ethlc keeps the Amish competitive in today'• economy. MD vtcttma, too, are expected to contribute to the community income, which ts precariously dependent on input from each m ember. The Schwartzes make leather wallets and produced a song book for the central social gathering of young Amish -the "sing." The Scbwartzes and other MD victims here .have also over- come a traditional shyness and allowed doctors into their homes to examine them and study their disease. The tests are conducted through the Caylor-Nickel Clinic in hearby Bluffton and are aimed at developing early detec- tion of MD and of its carriers. .... It won't help us, but it might prevent others from getting the disease." Miss Schwartz says. "The Amisl in Berne have the highest incidt:nce of MD in the nation," said Dr. Patricia Bader, 35, a Caylor-Nickel re- searcher who has studied the disease in this community for eight years. "But they have a remarkable adjustment to it," she said. "In many ways, it doesn't seem to be as catastrophic as it might in the larger society. Because so many people iii the community have MD, there are plenty of role models." Nevertheless, the constant drain of MD theatens to cripple the close-knit Amish community itself, Ms. Bader said. ·'It's an ever -increasing burden on Uae overall communi- ty. It is an economic, emotional and s)enonal hardship for them all," she said. ·'The form of MD found near Berne usually ls not fatal. One of our older pat.tents is in bis late 40s, and I know of another who died in his late 608,'' the doctor said. "But ln some ways, for the community as a whole, it mlaht be better ll it were not such a lingering lllneas." The Amish say they accept MD as God's will. They have been told it is caused by lnter- m arriage but they don't know how to prevent it. A,. ........ Crzpphng disease makes Amish .\10 v1c t1ms incapable of participating in traditional activities tending farm amm.als and taking care of crops Two women and two children carry belong mgs as they go about day·s work Feds ready • • zinc pennies SFA 5 Columbus Day Mens Event! Sales And Special Purchases ... On Clothing And Furnishings. WASHINGTON (AP) -Treasury officials are ignoring cries from the copper industry and mov- ing ahead with their idea to save the government millions of dolJars a year -in pennies. The familiar, mostly copper pennies are to be replaced by lighter coins made mostly of zinc, beginning late thls year. "We'll start striking the new pieces before the end of the year," says Alan J. Goldman, deputy director of the U.S. Mint. "We were not slowed down one bit" by the copper industry's attempt to win a legal restraining order. A federal judge in Washington rejected the re· quest earlier this month, but an appeal is being prepared, says Robert J . Wardell, president of the Copper and Brass Fabricators Council. ' •Camel hair blazer-regularly '225, now '189. For regulars, shorts, longs. • Pure wool flannel dress trousers - originally '85, now 63.90. In light or oxford grey or heather brown, for regulars, shorts, longs. • Traditional three-piece wool suits-specially priced at '204. Sizes regulars, shorts and longs. • Double-breasted leather trenchcoat- originally '425, now '329. •Plaid cotton sportshirts-original/y 135, now 23.90each. Sizes S,M and L. •Cashmere V-necks-regular/y '140; now 109.90. Grey, wine, wheat, navy or black. Siz~s S to XL. • Active sportswear: warm-up suits-originally 165, now49.90. In navy or wine polyester and nylon. Sizes S,M,L and XL. • In Men's Furnishings Collections, and the Men's Store-where we are all the things you are. • s..lcs Flhh A~ South Coast P~u JJJJ Bristol St~. Cost• M~ Government officials say the new coins will look and feel just like the current ones but will weigh about 19 percent less and will cost less to make. Zinc costs less than copper -about 49 cents a pound compared with about 85 cents in recent trading -and copper's price tends to jump around more, interfering with production schedules, of-ficials say. Savings to the government could be $25 million a year or more, they say. Critics, including the copper Industry, argue that switch-over costs will eat up any savings, that boarding will make the billions of pennies now in circulation disappear into jars and dealers' vaults and that the new pennies could be subject to severe corrosion. "Absolute nonsense." replies Goldman. thoµgh he concedes hoarding has been and will continue to be a problem. Government production -more than 12 billion pennies a year -has not kept pace with demand, and the Federal Reserve Board has been limiting allocations of one-cent pieces since last year. "We don't think it ls going to be much worse" while the switch is being made, Goldman said. The Treasury Department plans to begin mint- ing the new coins late this year at San Francisco and West Point, N. Y. The Denver and Philadelphia mints will continue to make mostly copper pennies until possibly late ne:ict summer. Pennies now are made of copper alloy -about 95 percent copper and S percent zinc. The new coins would be almost entirely zinc, with addl· tional copper electroplated onto the outside skin to make the total 97.6 percent zinc and 2.4 percent copper. Wardell's group maintains that such a drastic change is "introducing a new coin," a move that would need congressional approval, rather than just changing the composition of the copper alloy coin Congress ordered years ago. The switch could mean as much as $15 million a year in lost business for hls industry, Wardell said . But even if it didn't, be said, it would still be wrong for the Treasury to make such a bi& c:han1e on its own. Some critics also complain that the United States already import.a 80 percent or more of lta zinc, while productne moat of its copper at home. But Goldman said the sine supply would be no problem, with stable producers available in neighboring Canada and Mexico. Deipite the copper industry's continuin& leaal effort.a to stop the switch, the mint already ta awarding contracts for suppliers of sine and penny blanks. "We felt the odds ot Jollng were very, very slim," Goldman said . l, .. . •, ·. ·. .. . . .} . .. I I ~ r '.) :l I' J q " .. :· .. ~,~-------~-..-.. ...... ~~~------•r~~, ............... s ... •s ........... a .. •s .... .............-. -, .... ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 12, 1981 M/F Cl O~ght .continues ll ':hdown c~.~i·I ~;t~~~;~~::~~ aiders blanked again as Kenney shines ,, .. 8ttown,f0tm.1 31 Our cO'ltl09nt (•b.) pearedtobe lntrouble. om AP dbpat.cllft KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Former San Clemente I lgh product BUI Kenney tossed two touchdown 1 sses and Kansas City's lnjury·weuened cterense nned " lhlrd consecutive shutout on the OakJand aiders as the Chiefs dumped the defendtnc S~ owl champions 27·0 Sunday in National Foot~aJI eague action. The Raiden, 2·4, have not scored sineot Def. ck J ensen tallied on a short run in the fourth a rter against SH\Ue on Sept. 20. The three s\raigh~ shutouta ar4f 1lbe toniest scorinc drou1ht In Oakland history. Rookie Joe Delaney, rolling up more than 200 y ards rushing a"d receivine. set up three of Kansas City's scores. ln other action Sunday: Redskins 24, Bears 7 CHICAGO -Linebacker Neal Olkewic1 re· turned an intercepted pass 10 yards for a touchdown and Dave Butz picked off another pan to set up the first of two touchdown runs by John Riggins as Washington defeated Chicago. 24·7 for their first victory or the season. Snapping a five-game losing streak, the Redskins intercepted four of Vince Evana' passes in the first half which led lo 17 of their points. Steelers 13, Browns 7 PITTSBURGH -J .T. Thomas made an ud zone interception of a pass by Cleveland backup quarterback Paul McDonald with 1:53 to play to secure Pittsburgh's 13-7 victory over tbe Browns, who lost quarterback Brian Sipe to a concuasiOD on a third-quarter play. a The Steelers' fourth win In a row encl their Utb straight over the Browns at Thrff Ri~n St.adh.tm insured them of a t least a share of the lead in the American Conference Central Division with a 4·2 record. Vikings 33, Chargers 31 SAN DIEGO -Rick Danmeier's 38-yard field goal as time ran out capped a furious Tommy Kramer-led Minnesota comeback as the Vikings nipped San Diego, 33·31. Kramer, outduelling San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts on the latter's home turf. hit wide re· ceiver Terry ~ount on a 43-yard scorine play with 1 :51 remaining, then, after Lecount re· covered an onside kick, moved the Vikings into range for Danmeier's winning field goal. Broncos 27, Lions 21 DENVER -Craig Morton passed for three touchdowns , including a 95-yarder to Steve Watson. to lead Denver to a 27·21 victory over Detroit. Billy Sims, the Lions' star .running back. bad a 185-yard. two-touchdown performance. But the Broncos. in raising their record to 5-1. stopped Sims at the Denver 15 in the closing seconds to preserve the victory. 49ers 45, Cowboys 14 SAN FRANCISCO -Joe Montana's passes to Freddie Solomon propelled San Francisco to an early 24·0 l~d over Dallas and the 49ers romped to a 45-14 victory, handing the Cowboys their worst defeat since 1970. The 49ers scored two touchdowns within 35 seconds during the third period to leave the Cowboys for dead in the upset. Montana connected with Dwight Clark on a 78-yard pass play and cor· nerback Ronnie Lott intercepted a pass by Danny White and ran 4'1 yards for a touchdown which made the margin 38·7. Bengals 41 , Colts 19 BALTIMORE -Ken Anderson tossed tbtee touchdown passes1against Baltimore's pourous de- fense as Cincinnati whipped the error-prone Colts, 41·19. Anderson completed nine of 10 attempts on two drives late in the second period, and finished witb 21 of 27 for 257 yards. Bu cs 21 . Packers 10 GREEN BAY, Wis . -Doug Williams passed for one touchdown and ran for another, while linebacker Cecil Johnson set up another score'with a 29-yard interception return, leading Tampa Bay to a 21·10 victory over Green Bay. WiUiams completed LS of 23 passes for 198 yards. Tight end Jimmie Giles caught six passes for 85 yards. including a 5·yard strike for the Bucs' first touchdown. Miami plays Buffalo I ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. <AP) -lf &ood de· fense counts as much as an explosive offense in the National Football League, how do you explain the Miami Dolphins? Miami bas given up an average or 353 yards a game but is undefel\led at 4-0-1 going into tonlp\'s nationally televised game against the BuffaJo Bills, 3-2. "There's nothing wrong with their defense," Buffalo Coach <?hbck Knox says. "Those 50· ud 60-yarders add u~and increase the statialic1. But the most important stat is the number of polnta on the board. And t.hey've put them on <US tot. 13 against)." The Dolphins have one impresaive defeuive statistic -19 sacks U\ five games. Zillgitt and Wright insur.mcc :lg("fs and brollm Contractors: Insurance ~rislq? Contact ua for com•elltJvt quot• (• Liability, EAuipment, Properl J atd Worker's Corftpenaatlon Insurance. We ~­ alao handle yqiJr bondln1 nffdt. .. Jets 28, Patriots 24' NEW YORK -Richard Todd threw three tou chdown pasaea, two to tlaht end Jerome Barkum, and safety Darrol Ray returned an in· ter~pUon of a Matt Cavanaugh pass 43 yards for another score aa the New York Jeta edaed New England, 28-34. Ray'• t~uchdown run, with his second In· tercepUon of the eame. gave the Jets a 28-14 lead 3:20 into the third period and chased C~vanau1h from the eame with Steve-Grotan takln1 bls place. Giants 34, Cardinals 14 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . -Phil Simms threw two touchdown passes to Johnny Perkins and a third to Earnest Gray as the New York Giants thrashed St. Louis, 34·1'. Runnlng back Rob Carpenter, playing bis first game in a Giants uniform. iced the victory by cbarging 21 yards for a fourth-quarter touchdown. Joe Oanelo booted two field goals. Eagles 31, Saints 14 NEW ORLEANS -Quarterback Ron Jaworski passed for one touchdown and set up two l ·yard scortn1 plunges by Booker Russell as PhiladeJphia kept their record unblemished with a 31·14 victory over New Orleans. The Eagles' other touchdown came on a 47· yard return of a Saints' fumble. Lineback-er Frank Le Muter scooped up the fumble and took it in for the third-quarter touchdown. Oiler• 35, Seahawks 17 HOUsTON -Houston quarterback Ken Stabler, all but shut out passing a week ago. threw three touchdown passes including one on fourth down, and Earl Campbell scored twice and rushed 186 yards to lead the Oilers to a 35-17 victory over Seattle. Two or Stabler's touchdown aerials went to wide receiver Ken Burrough as the Oilers ended a s tring of two straight National Football League up· set losses to the Seahawks. Oolphlne• 08 32 NII• Klnnlck'a "How many auya can 10 Falcon•' oe Jell -Univ. (ab.) get standing ovations ror 13 Viking•• C Jim -33 Che~' WR striking out eight Ume. 14 In attendanoe Jotln -l '>" R j k d 15 COICh P81Hghlan 3e Brito or Upahaw n u row . euss o e 19 r1.,,.. of dtly . 39 vary or Aydal<:h afterward. in reference 11 AMlcle 40 01mlnu1tve to hta own batting rec· 18 Lou "-Toe .. Grou ending ord of late. 20 -College, 43 --Amerlc•n Reuss s aid he wus eo•umoua, o. 45 R .. rwatd, .... t d l r th 22 Iii.gal _ of hand• .e &."ON' c -rem en a.us y up or e 23 Yard• for a llrtt M~ game, so much so 1n down 48 ProP for MOMley fact. that ht was throw. 24 ~fi:~~:!~ 49 ~ ~1 the e1~1e ~ ic:.~a':>tc'• : ~:!~:9 }?r~t.a bit too tiard at 25 Fl "" •tt-pt 54 Biiia' atar Gu•rd, kick 2e rat men """ " ..... with 5e Acroea 59 Poetic tlm. "He was trying to put 29 Viking•· a -Boyd 51 Skeet at>Or. his heart and soul into DOWN 1 Oiiers' OE Elvin - 2 Do -di• 3 Bikini lop 4 Bengals' G Biii - 5 NFC team II Elec:tM• 7 For example (ab.) 8 Sixteen games make one 9 Syr8ouae•a Hels1T18n b8ck -Davis 10 BMra' RB - Su hey 11 Sphere 12 H•ll of F•mer Klesllng 19 Biiis' Ben Wllllams, e.g. 21 Driver's license, e.g. 22 Oolphlne• K - Von Schamann 27 Unspecified •moont 28 Ted "-Stone· Hendricks 29 O•ry "-Hands" Johnaon 30 Bucc.neera• b8ckup OB Mike- 33 Steelera' RB Herrls 34 P•ckere' WR Jam.a - 35 Neighbor of Que. (ab.I 37 Oolphln1' WR Moore •2 38 Any loo1b8ll 1 .. m " 40 -"Bulldog" Turner 46 ,, The -R•ms (ab.) 47 every pitch," comment· ed Lasorda . .,..-<1--+--t--+-+---t "At times J was prob- -out (made do) King, Norman or Les lie Dulek or Budde Ike's WW II arena • 50 52 ....... -+---t ably trying t.o do things 1 couldn't do, .. s a1<1 _....____..Reuss . But afte r chatting with catc h e r Mike i---+--+--1 Scloscia and pitching ~-+--+--1 coach Ron Perranoski. Reuss settled down. And the Astros. minus their mos t consistent hitter, Cesar Cedeno, who went out with a pull e d hamstring in Saturday's gam e, w e re goin g ~-+--t--11 nowhere but back to Houston. "J never had one bat or doubt that we were not --+---t going to win,·· said a -·borough Bridge WOOdeon or Olbron ch a mpagne -d renched Lasorda. 55 H•llfax'1 prov. (•b.) 57 QB Eddie -B•ron See next week's Issue for solutlon On the other side of the s tadium. Astros manager Bill Virdon tried to put things into pers pective. "It's tough lo win without scoring any runs . But if the Dodge r s continue to pitch that way, nobody·s going to beat them." Atlanta picked on the wrong team to bully Rams irate with what they call a 'cheap shot' by Faumuina on Pat Haden ATLANTA -For the past few years -or since Leeman Bennett took control in 1977 -the Atlanta Falcons have been a hard-hitting, physical team. It's almost to a point where the Falcons try to intimidate their opponents. And, it's not uncom· mon, to insure their reputation, for the Falcons to get two or three penalties for unsportsman-Wte conduct to show they mean business. Unfortunately. the Falcons picked on the wrone team to try and bully. And, wben Wilson Faumulna sidelined quarterback Pat Haden with what many Ram players felt was a cheap shot well, that was Just about the last straw. At that point, the Rams decided they weren't going to play good, clean football any loager. lf the From Page C1 RAMS. e e winning," Malavasi beamed, "We're ·in the driver's seat now." Indeed, the Rams <4·2> are sitting pretty. Not even rough tactics by the Falcons (1·3 ) or a menacing crowd of 57 ,841 couJd chan~ the out- come. The Rams appeared as if they were going to make it a rout when they jumped to an early 13-0 lead behind Irvin's first runback of 75 yards and two Corral field goals. But the Falcons -losers of three straight now -stormed back into contention on the strenith of two TD passes by Steve Bartkowski and a 25-yard run by William Andrews. AT THAT POINT, with the score 21-13. the Falcons were definitely in control and had the momentum. But their aggressiveness eventually cost them, especially when Atlanta right end Wilson Faumuina sent Pat Haden to the locker· room just prior to the half with what many players considered a cheap shot to Haden's legs. 1l was al that juncture that the street fight turned into a riot with both sides swinging at anything in an opponent'$ jersey. "J thought we showed a lot of character to· day," said special teams captain J oe Harris. "We showed that it anybody wants to fight us they'd better be prepared to fight down to the final minute because we're not about to give up." "We figured if that's the way they wanted to play then we'd play that way, too," said Kent Hill of Atlanta's rough style. "I think we all felt the shot they gave to Pat was a bad one and that was an incentive to us all." IT WAS ORIGINALLY feared that the blow migbt have broken Hadeo's leg. Alter further e1C · aminaUoo in the lockerroom, however, the injury wft diagnosed as a severe contusion. "I don't think any team can intimidate us any more, .. advised Jim Youngblood. "I don't think they picked on the right team to try that stuff a1alnst," added Oou1 France. "We ck>n 't bllck down. It's not our: s~le." t• CADILLAC SEVILLE . Factol")' t,ro tone paint, leatber covered aeat· inf area • features all CadJllac pcwer as•l•t .opUGM. <888ZAH) •14 995 ~ . . ' C4dUklc var. Proecdioft ~A,,.,_,,., A~' JOHN SEYANO Falcons were going to play dirty, then the Rams were going to dish it right back at them. "I've never been that mad for that long." said an ir ate Dennis Harrah after the game. "I hate to make a big issue or the whole thing but it was de· finitely a cheap shot." Harrah wasn't just a bystander when Fau- muina buried his helmet into Haden's right knee. ca using the quarterback's left leg to buckJe under him. Harrah was there, on the field, right next to his fallen friend. In fact, it was Harrah's man who $?ave Haden the s hot. "If l was on a jury I would have voted to hang him," added Harrah. "He definitely tried to hurt Pal in my mind and I'll never forget that. "It's not like I ran over there and thought the hit was malicious. I was there. I saw it. fl was dis · gus ting to me. "He (Faumuina) came over to me after the game and said he wasn't trying to hurt Pat. He was just playing football. WelJ . he's just lying as far as I'm concerned." "There's no place in this game for that sort of thing," Jack Youngblood agreed. "This game is too tough the way it is without someone trying to take a cheap shot and end someone's career." Even Coach Ray Malavasi couldn't contain his feelings. "ft was a late hit," he said without hesitation. "The whistle was late all day. It is the officials' responsibility to keep the game under control -and th~y did a poor job of that.·· There's no <loubt that the players -on both sides -controlled what was going on on the field not the officials. It seemed like there were just as many skirmishes a s there were points scored Sunday. "l actually don 't remember anything that hap· pened." said Haden, his forehead black-and-blue and his left foot taped to his calf. "All l can go by is what some of my players told me. I honestly don't remember." The Falcons' biggest mistake was not lhe ract they were over-aggressive, it was just who they they were over-aggressive against. Haden, although often maligned by the press and fans, is a favorite among the players. And, when he went down, it was a classic example of a team rallying around a popular fallen compadre. "I know it pumped me up." said Harrah. "l was really cranking after that. "J know I was ticked off the way they (the Falcons ) were doing things," said Pat Thomas. "All that late hitting and they weren't getting called for it." From an intangible standpoint. the late hit probably did more harm to the Falcons than any of the physical punishment they dished out. • *. HADEN ADMITTED that when he first heard that his leg might be broken. he thought that may have been the final blow to his career "J would have given it careful consideration," said Haden, who has had three major injuries in the last three years. "You can't begin to realize the psychological IHt I got when I found out it wasn't broken." .... LEROY IRVIN'S two punt returns tied him for the NFL record of most punt returns in a single game. and left him one shy of tying the mark for most returns in one season <4>. College football OUTSTANDING VALUES! PacHle-10 Conference Wtlfl. St. Ariz. St. Wtllll~ ,.,,,_ use UCLA r tllloml• St.tnrort1 0"990'I SI. Onoen CeM .. ._ W L. W L f'P "A 20 SOl2SS2 J I 4 I 19' '1 21 •11osn J t , 2 •• I I 4 1 1• 6' I I > 2123 M It I 410SID I I t 4 D 11' 02 , ... 11. OJ 1 4~D PCAA Conference Utell St. SMJ-SI. Ctl St. l'ull PttlllCU. FrHllOSt. LGlftt 8M(tl St, Q.t. ,...._ W L IW '-l'P "A ' 0 , , " '" I 0 4 1167 .. '' 2 •'710 0 1 ' •• '" 0 t t 4 IJO Ill 0 0 t 4 16 ID IJt9 E'9ht Conference CM. Alle- NttlttMa Miu-I Olllt.St. .... st. Olli.llofN KellMlSI. IC-• C••- w L T W L W I"" "" I 0 O J 2 0 141 H 1oosoo1n ·at 100 J tO .. Sl 0 0 I JI 110.tela 001121•11 0 1 01 4 0•'41 010 4 101'7' 0101 4 0Dttl Weetern Athletic Conference c.t. ,. .. ._ WL W Ll"P "A BrlOllamYOl#IQ 2 0 S I US U• ~110la00St. J 0 4 0 ID 1t Utall I 0 4 I 14' '2 Hawaii I 0 l 0 n 11 Ntw Melt. > I J 4 141 la Wyoml119 I I l 2 12' ti Air Foret I • I • a ID Colo. St. 0 J O S • 1• r ....... £1 P-o l o s cs 111> South .. at Conference ' c-t .... ._ WL WLT"""" SMU I 0 S 0 t tt• ~ TtHSA~M J 0 4 1 0 llS n Tuu t o • O o !Oii ,. Arlltllln I I 4 I 0 12' '2 lllca I I J J 0 a HS Hovtton I I I 2 0 ft 1t TCU t 2 t I 0 11' 115 eeylor I t > l o IM 115 r .. u rec11 o > 1 • o 101 1.w SoutheHtem Conference Al•llMll• o.wv•• MIN. St. ,, .... ,_ ""°"'" Tt11M-l(t11tuckr MlaJIM'"' Vtno.'11111 LSU c.t. ""._ WL Wl.T .... N ao •1110• JO 4 10t•• JO f l0111 t0 It •>tta• tt J J IMU ,, a1e .. .., 01 t40Pttf o ' a a o '* t• 0 t I f 0 t.S t• oa >•••ta Atlanttc Coaat Conte,.nce H.CtrollM Meryl...O Dull• ci.m-N.c.ra.5t. G•.TKlt Wll."°'"' YWWt"'- c.f• NA9- W L. 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'1 U11t .... 7 7 7 a 7 7 7 7 ~aiser earnings drop OAKLAND CA P > Ka is er Aluminum & Chemical Corp. reported a drop in third-quarter earnings. wilh declining returns in the company'!! aluminum business coupled with a strong showing by Ill Industrial chemicals division. Third quarter eamln1s were S12.3 mllllon In 1981, or 28 ce.nu a common share, compared with $48..9 mllUon and $1.16 a common share In the third quarter of 1.980. Earnh)gs for lhe nr1t nlne' mont.t)J or 1981 ~-ere $148.9 mJtuon, or $.'Uf a common share. on sales or $2.$ billion. l.n the nrst nloc moatht or 1980, Kaiser earned S204.6 mlllloo, OT ".91 a common share on tales ~. $2.SS billion. . - ~~" -s.~~ ... ,~ All Savers only for some What's wrong with the All Savers certificates, outside or Its name, which should be "Some Savers certificates' .. , Are they right for you , as a taxpayer with some money in m oney market funds or s mall ..Silver certificates o.r. ~ix"'fllOr\tb ccJljflcateos or whatever? Or are theyyvronat for yoll? Ar~ you so be(uddled by all the publicity about them that what you're really praying for are some simple, un· decorated facts? One thing is for s ure . The se certific ates have been an absolute bonania ro r th e news papers I have never seen a finan cial piece of pa1>er so widely promoted, so SYlVll PDRTIR widely advertis ed in full-page ads day after day Were r not working for newspapers. l'd be a bit sus· picious or so much publicity. And judging by my own reactions. the very pro motion has been. in a sense, self·defeating. Under the headline. "How Do J Know the All Savers Tax Shelter Certificate Is the Best Investment for Me?" a leading New York savings bank comes forth with some beautiful bafflegab. "The All Savers Tax Shelter certificate may not be the best investment for everyone The table below shows taxable equivalent yields of the All Savers certificate al various income levels." So here goes. Q: At what tax level do the certificates make sense for me? A· Only if you're in the taxpaying bracket at 30 perc~nl and above. If you're in a taxpaying bracket below 30 percent. you can find many other more at tractive investments (i( you have extra cash>. Q: What will happen if I have to redeem my certificate prior to maturity <one year)? A: Aha. Redemption prior lo maturity will eliminate any tax exemption on the certificate. Plus a penally for premature redemption prior to three months" interes t is expected to be imposed under federal banking regulations. says Bache Halsey Stuart Shields Inc .. a brokerage and investment banking firm headquartered in New York City. H you feel that for aoy reason you may need ac cess to these funds within one year <and you very well may), you'd be much better off in a more liquid vehicle (money market funds come to mind l. If you're in a 40 percent lax bracket, premature redemption would mean sacrificing 40 percent or the interest to laxes. plus the forfeiture of three months" interest. Q: What Ir I put up the certificate as colla~ral ror a loan? A. The Internal Revenue Service will treat the use or the certificate that you put up as collateral for a Joan the same way as though you had redeemed the certificate. In short. you'd get no tax exemption at all on that certificate. Q. What II I purchase a new certificate? A : Sure. You've lost the exclusion due to redemp· ti on of the old, but the interest on lhe new. not the old. certificate would be excludable. Q: Can I borrow to buy the certificates? A: Sure, but what's the point? The interest de ductlons on the funds borrowed to purchase or carry the certificates would have been exempt from tax, so you 're right where you started. Q: Wh at about &be interesl·ra~ level when the certificate matures? A: Now you've hit a key point· If you expect a decrease in interest rates a year from now lqu1te logical on several premises>. you s hould consider locking up today·s high interest rates for a lonJ{er period than the one-year maturity on the certificate Q: What about state and local tax exemption! A. ALI Savers certificates will qualify in most states for an exclusion under federal tax law But some state and local governments may levy taxes against this interest. Check locally to see if state and /or local laxes will apply. Q: How much must I Invest to get the full tax ex- clusion? A: As or Oct I. if you file jointly. you would need to invest $16,474.46 at 12.14 percent to get a full $2,000 tax exclusion. rr you file as an indjvidual. you would need $8,237.23 to get the full $1,000 tax exclusion That's lhe maximum exemption, no matter how many accounts you might open. The minimum as of today is $500. Gold metals quotations Gold By The Associated Press Selected world gold prices today: London: morning fixing $451.60. off $1 .90. London: arternooo fixing $449.50. off S4.00. P arts: afternoon fixing $487.93, off S0.23. Frankfurt: $452.00, off $2.00. Zorich: late afternoon fixing $448.00, off S4.00, $451.00 asked. Handy & Harman: (only daily quote) $449.50. off $4.00 Engelhard: <only daily quote I $449.50, orr $4 00 Engelhard: <only daily quote> fabricated $471.98, off $4.20. Gold coins NEW YORK <A P > -Prices late Friday or gold coins, compared with Thursday's price. Krugerrand. 1 troy oz., $472.00. off $2.00 Maple leaf, 1 troy oz .• $472.00. off $20 .. Maple lear, 1 troy oz., $472.00, orr S2.00. Mex.lean 50 peso, 1.2 troy oz .• $S71.00, off $2.00. I Source. Deak-Perera N EWYO RK <AP l -Spotnonterrous metal prices today. Copper81 ~·86centsa pound, U. S.de.stinatlons. tead38-<Mceota a pound . Zleeu-49\4centaapound,delivettd. AJamJnm76-80centsapound.N.Y. Moeuy"25.00pernask. Platlnam 14.25.00troyoz .• N. Y. Handy& Harman,$9.SSOpertroyounce. ·J tICk Anderson llm ·1 ,.,_, reveals in the IMI J I UI --~~..._.~.~~.,.-.... ~·~= ..... 4--.•--._....._ •• "~· ..... ~·---.·~·--.._ ............................. " ... ~, ..... a_a .. •s .... a ... a•z•a .. •c•s .. c~s•a"4& .. a .. a'&•&llJll9il"S•& .... £ .. J•&•Z .. lllll!i ~--"-- ----·-- \ OI Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 12, 1981 'B1i1-ned' Africans hope to overcome problelns Continent has growing starvation, population due to double in 20 years, chronic political instability NAIROBI, Kenye (AP> -"Slowly, 1lowly," iota an Ethiopian proverb, ''an •II wlU wait by It.a own feet." OpUmt.t.a who see Alrtca H a 1ym- bollc •U say It wJU batch Into pt"Olperity by \be year JOOO. Othen expect lt. ll not to crack,to almply rol away. So far, the record ls bleak: ~coups d'etat. 1 doaen wan, 5 million refu1ee1, srowloi 1tarv1t.loo amona a population expected to double In 20 yean. Each yee,r, African problems affect tbe world with greater lmpact. "'" aJ1nHlc4n t n umb~r of opU afilU acknowledge that emereent Africa started ort tragically but say this has produced a reaUsUc ap· proacb. "We had to see for ourselves, like a kid who was told not to play with matches," says Elebe Ma Ekonzo, a Zairian Cabinet minister and writer. ··we were burned, and now we know." The pessimists say It may be too late. Most lo· dicators, they say, point to more and mo~ suffer- ing lor individuals and nations, until drastic, im· mediate changes are made. Vast mineral deposits, fertile lands and rich human resources lend weight to optimism. But, at the same time, Africa's immense diversity Africa might become "a perfect model for coun- 1 terdevelopment .. " stimulates internal conflict and outside in- terference. From the Strait of Gibraltar to the Cape of Good Hope, 400 million Africans speak 2,500 languages, and 10 percent or them also speak English, French, Arabic, Portuguese or Spanish. hoapllata but pat1eou must brine their food and meclJclnc and sometime• fl~p three to a bed. Afrtcan nations •tarted out with the odda againat them, odds that grew worst ovtr lhe years. M08t borders were drawn at a conlerence ol European powers ln Berlin, 1n 188'. with little re- gard tor the tribes that were epllt, the resources tbat were separated lrom badlanda, and the an- cient enemies made compatrtou ovemi1ht. In the mJd·20th century, lodepeodence came suddenly. v,w count~• htd more than a handful of cOllj?ge f[raduates, and overall literacy was to percent. Traditional cultures, after long contact with Europeans, bad lost their cohesion. Foreign powers and bwsineaaes began what Tanaanian President Julius Nyerere called "the second scramble for Africa." Former colonizers and newcomers elbowed eacb other aside for op- portunities. Inexperienced nations londed up on overpriced technology that created new dependence and dis- appointment. Former sergeants, suddenly com- manding armies, played Eut against West to stock arsenals. Since then, world crises have hurt. Africans must produ~e four times more than they did 30 years ago to buy the same things. The cost of im- porting oil is especially ruinous, taking 30 percent of what Africans earn through their own exports. ln 1972, two pounds of copper bought a barrel of oil. Now it takes 4S pounds. Droughts and floods cripple fragile economies, and oft.e.n governments cannot aid victims, much less repair damage. At the same time, mismanagement, corrup· tion and tribalism have taken a calamitous loll. Some Africans grew rich, and a few amassed huge fortunes. Millions of youths left their villages hoplng for office jobs that would propel them into a new mid· die class. The more successful studied in Europe, where many stayed. Vut most did little more than swell the cities, where unemployment rose to more than SO percent. Few would stay down on the farm after they had seen Ouagadougou, let alone Paris. Africa ..., ' u 437 ""'llOn flO I* c.nt OI world PoPutatJonl #Mi 11 7 mlll<>n equare lntles 120 per c:en1 of WO<ld land aiea) ~~Nigeria (83 million l>OC)ll atlonJ C-.. """ -'91 Palm oil. pea- nuu. '**'· baNl\U, canon ''* Titp 1 •••· tiesen, iwo-t.nn• o1 land .,.., f0<Hts, test trian Of'e· flfln, gruslanda. mote rhan cwo- fiMI ...... ~'Black 70 per ceot. EUfOPNn. Belt>et. Aleo Indian. 30 I* cenl Africans in 1981 eat grubs under lea! shelters. and they split atom's. They squat in open-air markets and casbfhS, trading old silver coins for battered teapots, and they stroll down block-long supermarket aisles in Pierre Cardin pullovers. Despite the diversity, common threads weav.e the S2 states tightly together. Black nations, if not by choice, are linked• inextricably. Arab North Africa, increasingly, is part or the whole. Their future depends not onJy on e•onomic de- velopment of the richest but also on the simple survival of the poorest. New power elites formed, and leaders in almost every nation dismantled democratic in· • stitutions to ensure that the opposltion could not unseat them. Still, hair of the leaders who brought their nations to independence were deposed later in military coups. 500 MtlftS Africa inclvdes 20 perce nt of the world Land area, and JO percent of the world populah.on. But two-fift.hs of the continent is growing desert that l3 turning good land to sand Encroaching desert is turning good African land to sand at a rate of five acres a minute. and nearly an acre of forest is lost with every passing second. Since 1960, the number of mouths to feed has doubled, but food production has hardly grown. Nearly half the people on the continent face possibly crucial food shortages. An African born today, on average, will not live to 4S. One in five will die Within a year. Total economic aid of $6 billion a year does not even cover food imports. Old ways of life, like the herds of game, are going fast, but the tradition of large families re- mains. Political turmoil, scanty communication with r\.lral areas and religious taboos hinder fami- ly planning. In Kenya, the average mother bas eight cb1ldren, and the populatiori grows • percent a year. the world's highest rate. ~enya's economy, growing 1.5 percent a year, slips ever further behind. Gulfs are widening between rich and poor. In cities, top officials and businessmen can malce more in two months' than peasants earn in a lifetime. or the world's 31 poorest countries, 21 are in Africa. Their inhabitants earn 7S cents a day on average. But most use no money at all, living on subsistence plots as they did when outsiders first explored African coasts. "Africa is dying," Edem Kodjo, secretary general of the Organization of African Unity. said last year. Without change, be added, Africa might become •'a perfect model for counterdevelop- ment." There are bright spots, but crises threaten to dim them. Tanzania raised its literacy rate from 10 to 75 percent since independence 20 years ago. But it cannot pay its teachers. Zambia built DEATH NOTICES PETERS Ha ide J. Straight, father PHILLIP J . PETERS. 11. Phill ip J . P e ter s of resident of Anaheim. Hiiis. Wisconsin and sister Tina E Ca. Passed away on October Peters or Anaheim. Ca 10, 1981. He was a student at Funeral services will be held the Modern Trade Institute. on Tuesday, October 13, 1981 He is survived by ha s mother al 3· 30PM with Rev Bruce :;:;:========;;::-,Kurrie. past or of the Presbyterian Church or the Covena nt, officiating . Services under the direction or Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary or Costa Mesa. 540·5554. HAa101 LA WK-MT. OUYE Mor\uarv • Cemeterv Crematorv 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 54()-5554 Governments, confusing buildings with de- velopment, wasted resources on prestige projects. Agriculture was neglected as demeaning. Today, many states can now barely afford the most bas ic public services. "Between 70 and 90 percent or our rural and periurban zones don't yet have essel\tial health care compatible with human dignity," Dr. Oomlan Quenum, regional dfrector for the World Health Organization, wrote recently. The new realism, cited by the optimists, has begun to make an impacl. Nearly half the emerging nations espouse a form of state socialism, much of it tinged with Marxist-Leninist ideology, but most now see a role for private enterprise if it aids development. Many who relied on Soviet aid came away dis· illusioned -In Egypt, in Ghana, in Mali, in Guinea, in Somalia. Moscow grants massive military aid, and its Cuban and East German partners maintain tens of thousands of troops in Africa. But the Soviets' African allies tend to keep their options open. Of- ficials in Soviet-backed Angola, the only black African nation with which the United States has no diplomatic ties, s ay they are prepared to normalize relations with Washington. In Madagascar, a Marxist nation in the Indian Ocean, the minis ter for information and ideological animation, Georges Ruphin, told The Associated Press : "We are in the anti-imperialist camp, but anyone can see our relations with the West are getting better and better." Each year, OAU leaders meet in a different capital. and host governments have spent up to S300 million for just one of these conferences. The summit extravaganza symbolizes future hope and present futility. Four-alarm fire g uts SF church Investigators say faulty electrical wiring sparked a four-alarm (ire that destroyed a church rebuilt after the 1906 San Fraac:lseo earthquake. Two firefighters suffered first -and second-degree burns battling Sunday's blaze al Trinity Methodist Church. The church, founded in 1886, contained elaborate stained glass windows and an organ considered one of the best in San Francisco. * A Ku Klux Klan leader expressed disappointment tbat a two-day rally in the eastern Connectlcat town or Wladbam drew an estimated 200 participants and spectators. State police searched TRIGG a 1 1 v e h i c l e s a n d rtUCI laOTHHS llil laOADWA Y MOITUilY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 IALTl & I HGHOH SMCTI4 & TVTHIU WISTCLtff CHAl"I&. 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 f'tlACllM>TMaS SMITHS' MOITUilY 627 Main St ~nllnQton Beach 536-6539 DAVID LEROY TRIGG. participants r or PLACES resident or Santa Ana, Ca. w e a po n s . T h e i r Passed away on October 9. s p o k e s m a n , J o h n 1981. He was a cook for the McLeod, s aid Sunday's Giovanni Pizza Company, rally and cross-burning were peaceful with only having graduated from Saddleback High School in about SO participants and spectators. One person 1981. He was active in the was arrested on a drug charge. Troopers Spurgeon Church Softball outnumbered the crowd Saturday, with about 1'4> Team. the Southwest Little people, including 22 robed Klansmen and about 30 League Team, a member or reporters and cameramen, to 200 troopers. the Spurgeon Memorial * United Methodist Chu.rch of A plan to build a second deck on San Costa Mesa. Ca. He was also Francllco's famed GoJdea Ga&e Brtdse and move active in the band at Saddleback High School. He the toll plaza to the other end of the span has la survived by his parents stalled. Rlch&rd and Marianna Bridge dlrecton v~ed 7 to 8 a1ainst a $110,000 Trigg , .!'lat.er Col een. 'study of a Golden Gate Bridge master plan that brothers Thomas W. Tt"lll( would have included moving U\e toll plaza to the or Tustin and Tracy R. of Marla Coanty side of lhe bridge. Santa Ana. Ca., maternal • (randpareot.1 Wllllam and Cartier's jewelen will use an eight-ton roller Edith Jones of Hemet, Ca. and paternal grandmother Tuesday ln Beverly Hiii• to cruab 4.000 counterfeit H 11 d a Tr l 1 a 0 r oh 10 . gold-plated Cartier watches aelMJd in one shipment Services wlJI be held on by the U.S. Custom• Service, tbe company uald. Tuesday, October 13, 11181 al "They wel'e conll1cated ln 8u Dteco,'• said 2:00PM at the Harl)or Lawn Chris Glnord a CartJer 1pokeswoman. "They Memorial Chapel wtlb Rev. were made ol base metal, 1old·plaled, and t.be L1a1w1 r1ence P. Bjorklund movements were or very lnfmor quality." o c at1n1. Interment * ae rvlcea I mmedl ately A .. ~ .. mean, wild hoe" that had 1of.td nearly followlq. ln Ueu of Flower• ..._, --.a _ _... •-f donations may bt made lo a dou:n Cann anlmall auu IC!-.ca. parenWI n l~ the OaVid Tl"IU Memorial • counties wu lracked ~own and 1hot to dtatb by 1 Fund c>o Saddlet>tck Hl1h hos buo&.er ud GeoraJa came warden.• near School Band, Santa Ana. Ca. A•1u&a. S."lc• under LDe dlrertlon Rw Davll of OMllU. wboN pack of 10 bol of Harbor Lawn·llount Olive doll comered tb• rudrback, 11JcUM thoa.1bt t.be Mortotl')' of Coau Jhaa.< •nlmal probably welshed 175 &o 300Poundl. 540·5554. I . - PllUC •Ta Mt 1U11 LAML MO'r1Ca "CTIT10US aulfNaU A NDTICI! Of' f'lc;TIT10UI .UllNHS Notke It~ 9'Wfl llwt n. a81111 NAMIE STATaMaNT T .. ft••"S SALi! NAMll ITAT•MaNT of 0r.,.. c..tMv. 10101 Sl•or A-ue. The lollow!nt pe..-11 dolf\9 Dual· ......... J111U9N The fol!owlno --II dolne bull· l'OUllleln V•Hey, Celltomla ·~. Ml ne-.. •t: 1-L .... 61111·1 neu es: m8* AllP!k:41tlon wltll 1M ...... al SCOltf'IO ONE, "641 Herelnul TltANS.C91'1f SEltVICES. INC. M MUSIC GAl.AltY, 11932 Newport Dep .. l I lnturence CerPOrellen, Lelle, El Toro, CA. '26JD duly •-' ... Tru1IM Uflder the " Tustin CA""° w .... ,,..9'1. o.c. JDcZt. for Its··--THE SPOttTING CANVAS, J5'oll ro11ow1119...,... ... A. ,,....,WILL veMk:lleel• PlnlD, ftS ArroY9 a.1c4• ,_ ID ....... wl .. 110C __,,., Hutlnut i.-, El Toro. CA. '2'3111 SELL AT """'C AUctl~ TO THE L-o-ellMCll.CAm51 c_..,,_ s.. ...... Gonuler, 15641 Heret11111 HIGHEST jUl>OEA FOii CASH Tiiis --... 11 conduel .. .,, °" In· Tiiis N«a 11 Plillllllled --· ID L-. El Toro, CA.~ (peyella. •I ;ti .... of ..... In l•wful dMduel. Sedlof'I 11 Cc> ol .... r:.etrel 0..-11 Tllll llullnffl It cOftdu<*I lly en In· money ol the j.lllllM Sletffl ell r'911t, Mlc:tl9tl Pinto lnlllt'911C. AC1. Alty --wllfllne lo dlvlduel. tltl• end 1111.,..+ co11voed to end Tiiis _, WM llltd wlll'I Ille com...-on 11111 """'4k41tkln llWlt flle S-Gonuler llOWMkt b¥ II ...-r uld Deed of Trust COllflty C*1lolO.-.Coutt1Yot1 D<L com,,,..,.,111.,,ltlnewltfl_lt._....I Tiiis ..--1 wH 111 .. wtlh the lntheprooerty~roescrl-: 7 1"1 Director ol Ille l'ederol Depesll Ceunty Clet1l of Or-c....ncy CHI Set>-T II U ST 0 It ; R A Y M 0 N D ' '171761 ·-·-CM1oor•lon .. -11..-..1 lomllOr U, 1"1. MARSHALL JARVIE, Oii -enled 1'114111-Or-Coesl 0.lly Piiot, Office, ., Mlrlt..-., S. ..... Suite fl11'WI rnon. Del II 19 ».Nov 2. 1'11 ... SM l'"rtMllC.O c:.tlforftle t410ot Put>lllNd Or-Coesl O.lly Piiot, It ENE "IC IAlt Y: AL LS TATE . . . . '*"81 .,,,.,.,_ ..... ,..,,......tine~ Ckl.IJ,lt.2'-Hov.2,1#1 SAVINGS AHO LOAN AUOCIA Qrtllllft9 of 11111 "-ktltlM, ,,.. • ·---· TIOH. e c.lllomle (orpe>rellOn r1eM ••so by •••no a""""" nuc1ce RecCltOed F~ 23, 1'1'" 111str. of_,,'"""' wltll ._~I Dltwc· No. 15111 Inbaoll1*3, -me of Of. tor llY "-Nier t , 1111. c.MMMtlel -.,. lllrl'll'( lie lei ltecCM"lb In IN off kt of Ille .-rtlllft• Of._ ._..lutlon era., file ~ ... ,"' RecwderofOr.,..County; uktdHCI lft tlle lt..._1 Ofllce't -1 of t• of lrusl CMtcrlbff Ille !041-1119 Pf<> NOTICll Of' TltUIH•'S IAL• ...... k , .. !NI...,_, by , .. C«por• NS-85074 l)«ty: T.S.-.MDM !left. T•fllelle....i1t111etwpullOc ,,,. NOTICE OF DEATH OF PARC£L I: U11ll No. J21nllleClty NEWP'OllT PACl,.IC FUNOINO. 141'1Ctlllft dWlfog '"' ...... lanl-B RD I E THE 0 D 0 RA of N-Po<i &eoKfl, County of o. ..... INC., • dllly ........... Tr111• -fleurl. I Stele of C:&Ofomla, .. 1-011C1 ,,._ Ille lollowffte dno'llled dMd of trwl OATl!.OSolpt. 21, 1"1. J 0 H N s 0 N I a k a B . fined ... ""' Cor1al" Condemlnl ..... WILL SEU. AT PUBLIC AUCTIOH n...,.ofOr-c-y THEODORA JOHNSON Plt11rt<ordMAuvul12'. 1'7t In-TO THE HIGHEST BIODElt l'Olt 10l91si.erA-12t20. ~ m to J11 lrch~w. Of. CASH (peyMI• et ti me of 1ele In .._.,.Veil.., CA'2?m ANO OF PETITION TO llclel 1tecotd1, of or.,.119 County, 1ewtvt-yof .. u1111MSte4Hle11 IOCIM<oer~ ADMINISTER ESTATE eo111om1e. r'911t, 1111• -lftMr•t conw.,.O to IOIOISl«erA-NO A-110515 PAllCELl:AnundMdecll/JOlflln· Md ,_ lwlcl by It -uld DMd of ,,_ .. ,. va1r.., CA 921111 T. 1 1 h . 1eru1u•1 .. ent 111 com,,_ In the I• Trwll In Ille properly Mrel11ellet .. UILl'I', ltUMBLi, WAONalt, 0 .a e I r S , lnttrvstl11-tottwCof'n,,_A,...ol wscrllled: Man•• u..otHB••••MMILav beneficiaries, creditors L.otst-JttTrad.,..M-maco TRuno1t. LINNEA JANE o.~,.._ and contingent creditors of 111te1 In -a ,-· u 10 ,. ,,,.. SMITHEltS,amerrtod-lllt~fl8111._ Bl d ' T._~,.,. J h cluslve. Ml-ii..ou. Maps, rvcorth BENEF ICIAltY: PAUL A. ......_CA..., r 1e ·~ora 0 nson, ofuldC-.W.ffwtlllermhdellMcl LESSLER MEOICAl OORl'OltATION LMPWllllWCI 0r8"QI C'Nll o.lly flllol aka B. Theodora Johnson In Ille Artl<le'91111tled "Defll>lllOM" or DE "INCED BENEFIT PENSION 5"111. 21 • Oct. s 12, "· 1•1 ...... and persons who may be lht o.c1 ....... of Covvnonts, Cencll· TltUST ' • < • • th · · t ed I th t1on1 and R.-rict1on1 reco'*d 111 ltec«dlld JllM 2, i• .. 1,.., .. Ho. ,. .. ,,,. o . erw1se m erest n e llook lll05. ~ , ... -,..,ec0 ,_ 1» 1n ..... 1an . .,...1m of Oflk:1er -•TIC£ will and/or estate: 111-• 1m1,,...m,11ott1o10tt1c1e1 ltecordl In.,. aHlc• of.,,. Recorder •--A petition has been filed AKMm, -~ '" -nm. of ~.,.. c..tMv; ukt -of 1'wt --by Far & M r h ts ,._.. 179. Ofllc'9f~ecordl. CM«rltles .. hlll0Wlnopr-1y: NOTIC•TOCDNTllACTCMll mers e c an EXCEl"T TJIEREFllOM •II oil, ALMllfllltdll'll•tltlntftdtoLot Pro~Ho.1tS11tu Trust C~mpany of Long ees.mlrMetuwt111er11yc1roc:ert1on1, "·Tract No • .as. citv of Newport s.a1oc1...._...swt11111e...ce1wci e1 Beach 1n the Superior .. 1_ • .._ • ._,.1,w11t1outt,. hac11. c-ity of or ..... St41t• of Ille off tee°' ,...,.. CJpwetleN -°""' Court of Orange County r1g11t of -'«• ...t,..,, ., ,_,_ In C.lllof'llle. • .._, °" • mott r• llf flla11t~llf,f'.i,,,.._st.N lnstr_of...._ <eniMlft.._DS ,.....1 2 , • ..., "°"'"•'· HOI .._,_, a1..-.. C•t• requesting that Farmers PA1tCEL. ,. ~· •• _,. , .,. Mltm.._. ----· ·,~ .,. MeM, Collf. -. ""'" t:• P.M. °" & Merchants Trust Com-•-IMlll•-P.nku1er1y .. 11ort11'" 0r.,...CWMy,c.ltfw!ll.l. 0<t.tt,l"1,etw111<:11ti... .. ywan11e pany of Long Beach be ap-111e Ar1kl• en111!9d "£-u" 01 2JOI L.....,_. u... c--0.1 Plllllkly -'"Md !'Md fW por1om1. I t d I Ill• Declarellon ..... , Ille Section MM ca1Hon11e ' 1119 -" .. "ROOf' llEPAllt5''. P 0 n e as Pers 0 n a 11eec11"9' an IUCll Art1c1e en1111 .. es .. ,·11ascrw1eddr-orcornmonoe-irurnltfl all..._, 1Nterle1., too11 representat ive to ad-1011-1: "lllQflllM110ut1ts: u1111u" 1'9Mtlofll1'""'"etiow,newerr_., 011C1eqtolpftwlt11K_.,to1t....ir/· minister the estate of endC-.Te1.,,1sion"."~S.t· 11 ''"°"es to Its ~.i-1 or ,....e<••alstlfttr'Ollhof ,...._ K. !,.!' Birdie Theodora Johnson 11 eme111 end E11cruchment'". 1<0<..ctnesl)."' U wt1kfl I• • CClfTlllllW!lon tM "-"• ' "l111reu, Eoret1 elld 1tocreet1-1 TM Wftlfklert ~Mid °"" o1 10111 end '""'"" orner 11u111 "'f. aka B. Theodora Johnson, Rl9llU" "E•clww ""'r1c1te1 Cof'n· Trvst by,_of•lwoedlorCMf.ull •Yn•m work 111811 Include: ·Laguna Hiiis Ca (under monArNE......-"-"M.ierlox 1 .. 1119 Dlll'9etlont tec:uroct ''*""· ltemn• • NPlec.• .. i,unv rootl!IO (he lndepe1ndent Ad-EeMmellt". 'llemefor• eMQMd end dellwrod t memllrene down to ln1ulallot1. J. . PARCEL 4: Eewments 91 '""' "" .,... ..... •written 0ecrer•1en ••Piece .. ,•rlorated unt strip•, m In 1 stratlon of Estates --·.,.. Nrtkuterly M1 I-'" of Def~I .... 09fTMnd for Sale. -, ..... woodNllen,ett. I. ........... Act). The petition is set for Ille Ar11<1e entllled "E-1.1•• of ... 11te11111ticetfllra«Jlandol•loc1 ..,...,etoct .,_. ....... •. "°'111 lll1C" hearing in Dept. No. 3 at 111e Dec:1«4llan of Oown•t1, c-~ to ~ ._ ~ ID I041 'ella. S. '*''" ell i.intt of motel 00 C • · lions alld l!eltrlC11ona recorded 111 IH'OPfftY to NCltfl' Mid elll'941tleM flallllft9. '· IMtell ... root vOlltt 7 Ivie Center Drive ...... 12JQS ~ , ... -,...,ec:Of'Wd .,..__,_ttw~ • ..,.,,. 1,• "· n. 1. 1top•ec• •·West, Santa Ana, CA 927011 1nboo111m1,,....m.~of0ff1<1e1 1&ld110tl0tofWM<11-o1e1ec11on1 •or•et• er...,,..... lntuletton. es on October 28, 1981 at 9:301 Record\. Olld racorCMCI 1n ....... nm. lie ...cordldJ-22, 1•1,es a..tr. No. llt<ltue/Y M Falrwt.. Stet• H91p!t.I. 11eoe 170. Olllclel Records, under It. ,,.., In,... 14111 ,.... 271 of 111 eccordanc• wllll pl en1 •11• AM . Se<tlOft ,,....,. "' well Artl<lt .,.. Oflklal .--. . ' ICl'Klll<ettana ..... .-. IF YOU OBJECT to the t1t1te1 " 1o1i.s: "llllQM.1 _, 0ut1et: Saki.-. win 11e ,,...., -w1 ,.,....,_ wlH • .,......,, .':' lllO-granting of the petition, uu11tlfl ..o.CMM T.,.,,,..., .. , ··s. -111 • ~Y ....,_ • Mn pr...,-ly ....,....cs • Snwll hould lthe -1.. s.tu-4 elld Encro«_ .. lilied ~ u11e' _....... • B•-" "' eccorcllilMe w1VI Section you s e r appear "Cotnm ... 1-. "•<"'"" ••""'°"'': MC..;,.._,, to pe~ lfle r.melnl 1 ... , 41t. 91111., T1tlt a. Collfomlo ,,.. at the hearing and State e11d "DrtllllQe Over Comm11111ty prlfKlpel ..., ., t11e nott<•> MC =':::!"":.-:'1:!:.°".!:: your objection or file writ· Fec11111es". -by .... o.ufof Tnat. wttll llll..-..t small ,.,..,,.., OHke 1m . 1~11 ten Objections with the 10 C.Wfltl'Y, ni. N""*1 11eoc11, 111 NH .... ,,........, ... _. 'II 8llY • f I CA ..,.., ..,. ..._., .. 1e1 Oe9d.,. T"" stn.t. Sec,......., CA..,., not'-court be ore the hear ng. ""' e .. ,........,_or c-• '"'· c11e,..1 onc1 • .,.._.oft t1•1'"mce1M111rwys1nedlle11ce Your appearance may be 1aen.i1on 11....--... ••rMty Trv11•.,.., .. 1tv111 ,,....-llf llMll.....,.. -... ™• _,..._, In person or by your at-1101 ..... HloltHOf'l\9ttlMWt.I• cor· Uld Deedtl Tl'Vlt. ...ii.. le ,,..je(tl-. -ettlfMI· ractMH.l"' S.ICl .... Wlllllelleldon~ •-~c•oc•MIHU,ODO. torney. • TM ...,..klarY llNll• .. 10 °'"., D<tlMI' • 1111 4lt 2:00 p,m, at 1 llCI ,...,....., mwt be ~llWd tor I F Y 0 U A R E A Tn.11, llY ,_ llf • lwee<ll er dltfwll ~~e111renceto1MCI 1119 91111,..-" -.Crllleel 1Nntt1. CR E OITOR or a cont-In Ille DlllleetleM tec:wred ,,.,....,, C.....,. ..,....., • 1!.att ~ Oevl.t .... ,,..,. ,._end ..-<lfJce. ,.,..,...,.. .__.. -41941...,... te Aouo 1,. '"•City et ore"to tleMwtH..,•c......,..,..,wlu• lngent creditor of the de· tN-.... •Wf1"9f!Dec1ere1.., c:.i11w!llA. c•wM .., ••lec11.,• °' ttt••· Tiie ceased, you must file your llf OoflKllt -o...IMd,... S&M, - "' llletl!N" .. 1n111e1 ,....~ Oe!Nl111'1*11 '-tfltrltM ............. ,. c;lal m with the court or ..... 1en,...1coof 11rM<"-ofe1ect1e11 Of Olla Mttc. -t•el .,.,.,,,. ., 1 ,,.,....._ltY In• llW « te rej«t MY or . 10 ceu• "" .........,... 1e wtl ._.. 1111 pald 11 ,i.19110 of 1110 ell a11111n. . present 1t to the personal pr0porty •• ... ,..,, u1c1 t111'9etloM, 111a11on .. c11red 11y tll• ._ • .., H•blelwllllle<.,........wmn•1111, representative appointed -.......nwiN.........,....c..,... *terllled ... " Wit -eett nMl4llt 011 •....,..fem\ fllrnlt!WCI"' by the court within four Mid Mtlet., 11raee11 -°' •lodMll • < •• I. ew--..1 e...., ....,wat1cet I -O•J&tllMll Md 1-"'* Ill k · th f the d t of lie Recordlld ~JO, 1"1 .. IMlr. Mo. • -·-• ... -· c~wttfl .. "1..-wt..,.•11 mon s rom a e .,_ 111.._ i.121 • ...., 14.,. NICI ... /.1~ .. .......,,. 111e1 ..,..... first Issuance of letters as OHk••• ..--. mayc•• fN)t114'M. • """"'11W......,.. _., ,..,,.. provided In Section 700 of ""Nie w11i 11e "'*· 1111t wtttleUt Dato•.....,...._,, "'1 eftd .............. tpe<lfkM'-th p b t C d f ~-Ill flf -..Mty, ~ W Im-. ~ '9ctfk * ,.,._.., ea111n1 et er,,..., .... • t r o a e o e o lllled, ......,.."' title, ,...... ..... ., ,........, 1"' -" ,. .. Of'fleellf.,,.Olletet California. The time for tnellllllltMCte. ..... ,. .. ,_..,..,.. • ...,T,....._, O..•ati-at tlle • ...,. ... ,. .. , filing claims will not ex-"'111<1•...,.".,. .... ,,, -- "T.o. ~ee.. 11~•:.;::1::i~..;,,, plre prior to four months :'.='.!:'.:.:;:"=~..: ~-~ 111 .. _..., fWt'f l*'CMt o11 from the date of the hear-ltNff .. .._., .... o...n,. ~ llct9'art ~en ,,_ lllllll ~ Ing noticed above. '"'· c'*"• _, .. ,...... .. 111e OU.otyll'M.w.tt eentren ~ • e.........,.. 1 YOU MAY EXAMI NE Tl'\dt• -• ttie tNMI cr..eM"' or.. Ca1"'""8..... •*"'_,fl,_, t Mid ~ ti TN1t. s-141 .... wlll lie crwi--. ""' ~ w .. r w1" ... the flle kep by the court ..... "' -r~ • ...._,..., *· "" .. ~ ..... ~ .... c-.. C>e11y"' •••r•• •• .. «ut• • catttNCt•r• If you are Interested In the t :• it.M.~ .. a.-.--- 0c1.s tt.""" ..,..,,.,.111 .. *"'••'"I estate (:'may flle a r "-"'*0*~•---• • • "91' ........ fllerwl r • ""'6c:fl ..... I hit ~ A-, lfl -Qty of _.....,. .. .._.,cat.._. Quest w th the court to re cw.,....w 1u11_..,......,....... celve special notice oft Att11e••-111111a1_..1<M..,. '" ac:caa:a.,. .. ,..,,....... lnventf1 of esta.._ asset °' '111' ,..., ti. ..... ~., .. lectleA "" ef ........ 0.... •v . ""'&Ill ~ of Ille Mlll&I~ _.,.,..... ._ _. ••... and of he petitions, •c _.,,.._,.-.,..,.,....,. .,... .......... ,....,....,. counts and report ..,,.. _......,-..,....... =.-: ~ = :..· =· deof "t!!~,,'tom" Seel tlonp_.!_ ~e-..:w:" .... -Hl&MIWll 111i1 ,_ .. .._. •'I' I '"°' -I •-~<atl (1M Olrtcw llf t-.otrlaf R•l•tlet11 Code. DMM1 ~L"" ~.,...... -"'""' w1111am o. Hayter T~'l!IAIT iuv1c ... ~..,.:: ........ Attorneyat&..-w ~1 ........ .. De .... ,.,,_ -.... ,...... Stnet4 .., T.O, AllV1C11 co.. P.0 ... 1. ..-LMI INcll CA ._, .,._.,..,.....,... Ttt: (J1J) 4&ma =====--PubflsMd Orange Coett Orllllt.CA!Pfll ~,:•,•v Plrot. Oc:t. s. •, 12 .......::•.::-°"' °""'......, 4345-t1 ~a.,., .. "" ..... assess· 0 999 2 92 990 9·5 0 0 SS 2 CS .••• t , •••. +• ., . ..,,< e • ....._... ~ .......... ---. -----~---- ------..-- • • • • Ylll llllTlll llllY PIPER CH~A N<.~ < (1ltr"' 'f • l'I II I •H Nll\ ]~ Cf_NTS Cross-country balloonists resting Arizonans attempt to recover craft which c!arried them to Georgia • McManussaldthepllotsenjoyeda ~ PIUL SNEIDERMAN -• (OOQ nigt)t's sleep ·s unciay' and i-..,.... ~·.... ' • \ • today would atteJDpt. t~ recover• After a restful night at a their polyethylene balloon from Savannah, Ga., hotel, Super Blackbeard Is land. Chicken III pilots John Shoecratt, Shortly after Sunday's landing, 38, and Fred Gorrell. 40, were .1 t Sh ft · d h f 1t .. preparing today lo recover the co-p1 o oecra .. sa1 e e on silver balloon that tlad carried top of the world. The landing climaxed a coast-to-coast v,oyllge that included a hazardous crossing of the Rocky Mo unta ins <t he balloonist s re portedly wore parachutes until they had cleared the mountain range>. Prior totheir Black beard Island finding the ·baffoorusts, and two Coast Guard vessels were summoned to assist. Both pilots were found safe with their balloon undamaged and were tra nsported back to the mainland. them from the campus of Orange --------------------------- Coast College in Costa Mesa to a remote island oH the coast of A flight spokes man said the pair had fought off oxygen starvation and sub-freezing temperatures, flying as high as 28,000 feet at s peed s that sometimes exceeded 50mph. Georgia. With thei r landing on Blackbeard Island at 11 :07 a .m. EDT Sunday, the Phoenix. Ariz., businessmen completed the first non-stop baJlooo night from one coast of the United Slates to the '' .Or if we landed in the ocean with the fog , we would have a serious problem getting rescued.'' Cross-country flight attempts by two previous versions of the Super Chicken failed in 19lf0 because of adve rse weathl!i' ... _,..... Fred Correll 1 le/t 1 and John Shoecra/t talk wi th well wishers in Savannah. Ga alter landing their balloon ma cmss-cn1111tn1 f/1qht from Costa .\ilesa other. Super Chicken Ill lifted off in Costa Mesa early Friday. Flight spokesmen said the 10-story-high helium-filled balloon with its egg-shaped gondola was aloft 55 hours, 25 minutesandtraveled2,S1Smiles. Spokeswoman Marilyn He srud he and Gorrell were concerned about whether they would be able lo land close enough to shore, "or if we landed in the ocean with the fog, if we would have a serious problem getting rescued." He added. "We were able to bring the balloon right in on the beach so we were very happy." 18 Egyptian officers dismissed I Government says move prompted because of 'fanatic religious tendencies' assassinatio n of Presid e nt Anwar Sadat had been checked was wounded during Tuesday's Sadat assassination. He has CAIRO, Egypt <AP> -The Egyptian government. in a new move agai n s t M os l e m fund amentaEsts, dismissed 18 a rmy officers "because of their fanatic religious tendencies" a nd put them in civilian jobs, official sources announced today. ''Eighteen army officers have been posted in civilian jobs ." con spirator s, m embers of an illegal fundamentalist Islamic sect. "committed the crime of their own free will" and had no help1from abroad. Ghazala told Mayo the three men who helped el-lslambouly carry out tt)e assault were a former officer discharged from the army for his "extremist tendencies," a reservist omcer who had terminated his military service and a volunteer corporal who had also left the army. The Eg y ptian d e fense minister disclosed, meanwhile, that t he a rmy lie uten ant a cc used or masterminding the out by military intelligence t>ecause of his r e ligious extremism but was not found to be any threat , The suspect, lst Lt. Khaled Ahmed Shawki el-lslambouly, Seaso~'s 1st snow falls ·on Rockies By The Associated Press The season's first major snowstorm blocked Columbus J)ay travelers in the northern -Rockies and contributed to at l east o n e dealb , whil e waist-deep floodwaters surged through the streets or some towns in soggy Texas. No injuries were reported in North Texas, where 8-inch rains forced scores or residents lo evacuate their homes a nd floa led a school bus oft the road. A man was killed when his car skidded out of control on an icy mountain pass west of Great Falls, Mont. The Going-lo-the-Sun Highway over the Continental Divide in Glacier National Park was closed by 4-foot drifts as heavy snow feU over much of western Mo ntana , northwes tern Wyoming and the mountains of Utah. been in a coma at a Cairo military hospital since but is expected to survive his wounds. ··Eighteen army officers have been posted into civilian positions because of their fanatic religious tendencies." today's official statement said. The official sources said the 18 were not under any further investigation, however. They aJao denJed report! tbat army officers . other than alleged assassin el-Jslambouly, had been arrested. • The defense mjnisler, Lt. Gen. Abdel Halim• Abu Ghazala, was quoted by the newspaper Mayo as saying the three othet' men who allegedly charged Sadat's revi·ewing s tand with el-Islambouly previously had military connections, but were not currently In the milltary. Gbaza l a s aid th e four El -lslambouly 's bro ther, whose name has not been d isc losed, was arrested last month in Sadat's crackdown on extremists. Ghuala gave Mayo details, some previously undisclosed, of h ow t he con s piracy was allegedly carried out, toUowing interrogation of the other two accused attackers. He was quoted as saying the cons pirators had long been looking for an opportunity to kiJJ Sadat. When they teamed that e l-ls lambouly was to lead his 130-millimeter gun crew at the a nnual parade, they decided their moment had come, he was quoted as saying. If you have to ask price of home .... Multi-million dollar estate buyers don't worry about interest rate By STEVE MARBLE Of tN Delly ...... Se.ff When John Wayne's waterfront home went on the market for $S million. it set a high-water mark for real est~te prices in Newport Beach that many fi gured would be untouchable .... But less than two years later, the W ayne milestone i s not so extraordinary. The Newport housing market is c rowded with dozens of hom es priced well over Sl million and at least four priced higher than the Duke's old digs. There is even a certain amount of professional disagreement on which house now holds the price record. Realtor Bob Koop says his waterfront listing on Linda Isle, which comes with enough room to tie up an 8.5-foot yacht in front and has an indoor-outdoor swimming pool, is tops on the money chart. The 6,500-square-fool home. owned by a 32-year-old business whiz, is priced at $4 million. The catch is it'll cost the buyer another $2 million to buy the land. That adds up lo $6 million. Koop says the home even comes with an assumable Joan of Sl.8 million at a reasonable 12 percent Interest rate. Monthly· mortgage pay ments are $18,000. But Marion Buie, president of Macnab-Irvine Really. says his fll'm has a listing that can top that. This house also is situated on private, -guarded Unda Isle and has 127 feet of bayfront property with enough room for an 80-foot yacht. He says it also has a. perfect view or Wayne's old mansion. Buie says the house Is going for $5 million and the land under it for another $2.3 million. That comes out to $7.3 million. On both of these homes, realtors agree, buyers do not have to purchase the land. They can opt to pay yearly lease fees instead to the lrvlne Company, which owns the land. The Irvint Company gives homeowner• a choice between purchaaln1 land or paying the land feet. Buie suuests th~ blgheat priced homes could be his fli'm 's lilting on Lbe tip of the Balboa Peninsula. Does this S4 million estate on Linda Isle top {he Harbor Area Price includes llip for 85-/oot craft. but not the yacht. This house, which comes with an electrically heated patio, radar security devices, a gymnasium and a view of just about everything, Is going for $5.75 milJion. This asking prtce ~uals the mark set last year when the old Myford Irvine home on Avocado Avenue went on the market for ~.15 milillon. Thal house, o•ned by Gene Washburn.1 bas seven bedrooms, 10 baths, • IOur-car gar.,e and an ocean vlew fl'Qm every an1le on tbe one-acre lot. I The bouae was built for lrvlne, the late r.res1dent ol the Irvine Company, and ncludes a pool, courtyard, 1ue1t wing, servants' suite and chauffeur's quarters. But the bouse still hasn't sold even though the price has been dropped several times. • ' P r i c es h a v e t r-u I y reached stratospheric levels," commepts realtor Buie, "but the slumping housing market really hasn't slowed down the rates of sales of these kinds of homes." He says most people who would be interested In purchasina a multi-million dollar home would be able to J*Y cub tor it. f'lllh interest rates, he explai.M, would be of little concern to them. Realtor Koop says the ume lhtnt. He notes that only a "very, very wealthy man" (or woman) will be able to purchase his llsUng on Linda Ille. touchdown. the pair attempted a mainland beach landing about 24 miles south of Savannah. The landing failed, however. when stiff ocean breezes forced the pilots to ascend and find a more suitable site. After landing on the undeveloped island, the pilots' tracking boat had difficulty ·WA .VTED TO KILL Hl.\11' .'\lur<Jvess Jean Horn• conditions . · La s t yea r . New Me xico balloonist Maxie Anderson and his son Kris flew from tt1e helium baJloon Kitty Hawk from San Francisco to the East Coast, but the craft was blown off course and landed in Canada. "/.'t/SATIABLE TYRA.VT" Slain Dr Tamowt>r J~an Harris 'hated' Scarsdale diet doc NEW YORK CAP ) -Jean Harris deeply hated Herman Tarnower, a sadistic bully to whom she crawled like an addict for sex, love and money, accord- ing to a newly published book by a longtime social critic. "Deep in her mind and heart s h e wanted to k il l D r . Tarnower ," Diana Trilling writes of the former Madeira School headmistress she sees as "neither fine nor ladylike." As for Tarnower, Mrs. Trilling labels him a tyrant with "an in- satia ble appetite" for power and fawning women. '·Little wonder he became famous as a diet doctor ; he wa.-; a glutton for other people's vulnerabilities," the author says in "Mrs. Harris : the Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor." · The book may shock Mrs. Harris' defenders, who saw her as a lady of Victorian principles ·and impeccable breeding wtu? wanted only to shoot herself amid the daffodils surrounding <See HARRIS. Page AZ> Reagan maps blitz on nuclear power WASHINGTON <API -The Energy Department is planning a multimillion-dollar public relations blitz to win support for Reagan administration policies favoring nuclear power, a House subcom mitt ee c hairman charged today. Rep. Richa rd Ottinger, 0 -N. Y., chairman of the House Energy subcommittee with jurisdictioo over nuclear energy policy, said the campaign was revealed i n an internal department memo to assistant secretary Shelby Brewer. Ottinger called the plan "a blatant propaganda campaign for the nuclear powet· industry that will cost the American taxpayers mJllioos of dollars" and said he will ask department officials to jus tify the expenditure at a hearing before his subcommittee. '' lf the president is looking for ways to save money, he should abolish bis new nuclear propaganda proposal before It gets o(f the ground," he said. Ottinger said the campaign outlined In the memo included: -Public appearances by department officials, assisted by public relatiorui agent.I. media traintna and speech writers. -lntet"Vtews for department officials wllh potentially "receptive·• newspaper col- umnlsta. -Sponsorahlp ot a '200,000 study by Sclentllta and Enclneen for Secure Enercr, which the memo described as "• ·pro-nuclear or1anhatlon organized to o(fiel lbe ' • anti-nuclear Union of Concerned Scientists." -Calling on the surgeon general to "certify the negligible radiation effect of nuclear power reactors." Ottinger said the memo acknowledges that the industry already has "an extensive public information effort," but re<:ommends the government effort because "government officials do command media attention." ORAllif GUST lfATHfR Fair and cool through Tuesday. Low tonight at beaches 48, Inland S4. Tuesday high along coast 68, inland 72. llSIDf TODAY Africa: will strife-tom nation survive to new ce ntury or be t orn asunder? Story. Page C6. 11111 ic*'&j I i .11=1 .. • ' Orange Coast DAILY Pt LOT/Monday, Oatober 12. 1981 N Cl ~ Ifft W•n N•I Win ,,.,, ~'" No• u1~ ... , .. l"" c:: t "I P C "°' Clow C"4 It C' '"" , .... t"4 P f Nb '-'"" ("9 P ( "4• c10.. '"' llAll' f 1.tt II + Vt =1111 ,.o 1 12 llVt • 111 MellOn llZ.04 t u -I !'•UICI\ l"'° 11 C IJ 'I< ~t<P 11 J"' DIAi• '·! .. * "'• " M 1 '° t 11 2'11.'t -. Me ... 111e uo • m ••'---"'e' '° • n' Ul-t • "" w•llli , 1 1 111 .. ... 8 I '! 181 tolll..... llO 10 e 7t 1'-Mtm~ •. JO 11'-• ~11,i .'4 . I n' I • yttroft t • ~ ~ ISflt It 1. j Ill\+ \\ "9Wllll I tJ I I~ ,,._ fNfCll t.50 t -~ • t ~llgf 4.JO IJOD '>•I 11 pf1.... II ~ • £' H .. I "°1111 .. t .ll • . I r.~· II. ~II t I t II "l\ ~remr t » U 4 y11•0 I to IO ,.. Mlft ~'"'ti CH:_! 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Are you so befuddled by a ll the publkity about them that what you're really pruying tor are some simple. lln· decorated facts'! One thing is for sure . These Ct'rt1ficates have bee n an a bsolut e bonanza for th e newspapers I h ave never seen a finan· cial piece or paper so widely promoted, so SYlVIA PORTIR widely advertised in fulJ .page ads day after day Were I not working for newspapers, rd be a bit s us· picious of so much publicity And j udging by m y own reactions, the very pro· motion has been. in a sense, self.defeating. Under the headline. '"How Do I Know the All Savers Tax Sheller Certificate Is the Best Investment for Me'' .. a leading New York savings bank comes forth with some beautiful bafflegab: "'The All Savefl6 Tax Shelle r certificate may not be the best investment for ever yone. The table below shows taxable equivalent } ields of the All Savers certificate at various income levels." So here goes. Q: At what tax level do the certificates make s ense for me? A Only tf you're in the taxpaying bracket at 30 percent and above. If you·re in a taxpaying bracke t below 30 pe rcent. you can find many other more at tractive investments <i f you have extra cash I Q: What will happen II I have to redeem my cntlflcate prior to maturity <one year>? A: Aha . Red emption prior to maturity will eliminate any tax exemption oo the certificate Plus a penalty for premature redemption prior to three months' interest is expected to be imposed under federal banking regula tions. says Bache Halsey Stua rt Shields Inc., a brokerage and investment banking firm headquartered in New York City. tr you feel that for any reason you may need ac cess to these funds within one year (and you ver) well may >. you'd be muc h better off in a more liquid vehicle <money market funds come lo mind I. If you're in a 40 percent tax bracket. premature redemption would mean sacrificing 40 percent or the interest to taxes. plus the fo rfeiture of three months' inte rest. Q: What if I put up the certificate as collateral for a loan? A. The Internal Revenue Service will treat the use of the certificate that you put up as collateral for a loan the same way as though you had redeemed the certificate. In s hort, you'd get no tax exemption al all on that certificate. Q. What If I purchase a new cenlfkate? A: Sure. You've lost the exclusion due to redemp tion of the old, but the interest on the new, not the old. certificate would be excludable. Q: Cao I borrow to buy the certificates'.' A. Sure. but what"s the point? The interest de· ductions on the funds borrowed to purchase or o.arry the certificates would have been exempt from tax. so you ' re right where you started Q : What aboul the interest-rate level when the certUlcate matures? A : Now you've hit a key point · If you expect a decrease in interest rates a year from now tquite logical on several premises>. you should consider locking up today's high interest rates for a longer period than the one-year m aturity on the certificate STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS Grummn Cp Sl"ttHlnl s llM Coe~lelQI SICIOllllld Ge11 Molon Amer T~T SeersRwb EU Of\ I AtlNILi. HUllollEF 1 Gulf_.011 Gt111el~EI Btlll Steel Mlrrlll Lyn 1.1 ... soo jM,700 •15,600 '32, 100 J20.• 311,iOO 197,200 19S,JOO ~:= 1',too ltS.000 194,400 ,..,_ 11$,100 UPS AND DOWNS N-I IUl11t l.>6of 2 Pltvt!OY En J OllteTenn 4 CMSllCp pt8 S U11E I 2.1Jpl t ~::=­=~.r 10 fE"ICI> ofA 11 llply )nt 12 WOfl llld U Scot LFCI •• Tre11101 Inc U,IO~ 16 EmpOIE pfB 11 GIMI 111e N-1 ._,. Jlf ! Amiee Inc l omi,1=' I Vetlde C• • """Ct 1 Alrlln f'1'1 e ""llllta Ind t (Ole(.o IM lo"'"~~ :~=:·~ ll • .._ 14 ... H1c 't.. • I f'.,llrOflt I u" Lall Chu P(t. 10 • 3 Up 17.6 6.\4 • 1 Up 17.A 1\11 + ._ UP tU oil • SV. 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