HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-10-26 - Orange Coast PilotDRlfHil GUST YOUR HDMITDWN DAllY PAPIR
MO NOAl' JClOBER 26 i ·H~' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS .
Boy contends devil Inade , hlln do it
I'
DANBURY, Conn. (AP> -
The ctevU gets bis day in court
this week in a case authorities
call "a routine murder" and the
d e fense attorney calls a
clear-cut case of d e monic
poaseuion.
Tile case i n vo lv es a
husband-wife team of nationally
kaown "de monologists," a
13-year-old boy som e say is
possessed by the devil, the
e fforts o f Ro man Catholic
priests to rid the boy of the
s p i rits and a c urly haired
teen-ager who challenged the
demons to take him on.·
That t een -ager , Anre
Cheyenne J o hnson , stands
accused of murder and Martin
Minnella, the defense attorney,
plans to argue that the devil
made him do it, literally.
The trial begins Wednesday in
a tiny, aecond-floor courtroom,
and attorneys predict it could
take up to two months to seat a
jury because of detailed
questions about spiritual beliefs
~.Burglary
f . suspect
killed
One suspect was killed early
today when he and a partner
apparently tried to burglarize a
· gun shop in Stanton only to find
a shottun ln the hands of the
awakened owner.
According to a Stanton Police
Department spokes man ,
C harles Hol co mb , th e
73-year-okl owner , was sleeping
in a back room of Cal Sports on
1• Cerrito. Avenue when the two
i nnidentified men backe d a
~fi stolen pickup truck through the
froat ol the store.
While the two m e n used r laammera to break display cases
'
and loa4 handguns into a large
trash can, Holcomb came out
from the back room and flred
one round from a shotgun, the
spokesman aaid. 1 The one syapect was dead at '! the scene when police officers
arrived, the spokesman said.
The other man fled, possibly
• 1etting a ride from a companion
waitint in a vehicle outside the
store, he said.
ln•estigators were working
today to identify the dead man,
I the spokesman said, and to find
. • the other suapect. Ii-Holcomb was reported to be
I
i' doing fine .
t~ 1 ~ Police nab 4
Ir teen• in LB 1~.
auto brea~ins
La1una Beach police have
arrested four teen-agers in
connection with a rash of auto
break-i.nl t.llat have plaaued the
Art Colony and other ·south
county cities the put moath.
Two Laguna Beach
andercover officers spotted a
tntck ln the 400 block of North
Coast Hlahway early Sunday
mornln1 contalnlnt the four
teen·&_..
Upon coalront.lnl the q uartet.,
Officer• Danelle Adams and
Ray Lardie founcl the batk " the
El Callliao Ytb.lcle to contain a
number of expeulve radloe and
ltereoHta. Arrtlted were Michael Reicl
Graham, 11. of Loi Ancelet, and
three 17-year-old JuvenUea
wbo m police en. not name.
Tile f ou r are believed
, .. .,... ... for at leut 40 auto
bur1l ari• ln La1una Beaeb
alone, where expen1lve car•
... ,... fw ltereo 9quipmt9t.,;
pollceaald.
Police uid tlMJ believe tbe
bvsJary i.111 alto b.-e mto
c ... ltt•fGi't Beach -In uatncerporat.d 10..tlt covaty
U'MI .. pell lllOilda. I
Minnella is expected to . ask
prospective jurors.
J ohnson, 19, has been in a
Bridgeport jail in lieu of $125,000
bond since his arrest on charges
in the Feb. 16 stabbing death of
Alan Bono, 40-year-old manager
of the Brookfield Kennel.
body and caused the 111 ltimate
demise" of Bono.
If allowed into court and if
successful , the defense would be
a landmark in U.S. law, legal
experts say. But the deC"ision to
admit Minnella's evidence rests
with Su perior Cour t Judge
"Take me on. Control me. Leave
this boy. alone.''
Minnella 's <lefense is
straightforward : the devil
possessed Johnson 's body
several times in the months
before Bono's death and then
again al the moment of the
attack.
Minnella will first have to
convince the jury there is such a
thing as the devil and demonic
possession. Secondly, be will
have to convince jurors that, in
his words. "this vile force or
spirit manipulated 'fDY client's
Robert Callahan.
Mlnnella says he's C• mfident
Call ahan will see things his way.
·'The. state must prove he had
specific intent to murdt•r Bono.
and the defense is alk>wed to
show any evide n ce t h at
indicates he didn't have intent,"
Minnella said in an interview.
To Walter F la n agan , the
state 's attorney who will be
p r osecuting, the case~ is "a
routine murde r , insofar as
homicide can be classified
routine."
John Anderson. chief of police
in Brookfield, a quiet town of
12,000 north of Danbury. said:
"There's nothing an the crime
itself lo indicate it had a nything
to do with demons."
The stabbing occurred while
Johnson and Bono were arguing
over Johnson's girlfriend.
Deborah Glatzel. 26, police said
Johnson and Miss Gl atzel were
Ii vmg in an apartment next door
to the kennel. and Miss Glatzel
groomed dogs for Bono
Acquaintances have described
Johnson and Bono as "the best
or friends.''
Five months before th e
stabbing, Johnson was in vol ved
in efforts to rid Mi ss Glatzers
brother. David, then 11 . of 42
demons . according to Ed and
Lorraine Warren, s elf-styled
experts on de mons, who are
expected to testify for the
defense.
In tape r ecordin g s the
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
MASTERPIECE DISPL.AYED Some of the
t housands who lin ed up to see Pablo
Picasso's famous painting "Guernica" from
the Spanish Civil War wait outside a Madrid
,.,...,,,.,.._
must·um <top) while inside a ~oung Spanish
girl s inks to her knees in homage It \\as the
first exhibition of the painting 111 the art 1st 's
hom ... land.
Warrens say were made in the
home, a voice iden t ified as
J oh nso n 's can be heard
challenging David 's demons to
"lake me on. Control me. Leave
thi s boy alone."
The Warrens c la i m the
demons did just that.
Efforts to rid the boy of
demons last fall included three
minor exorcism rites performed
by fiv e Connecticut priests. The
Pi oces e of Bridgeport
acknowledges some involvement
with David's problem but knows
nothing or J ohnson . said the
Rev Nicholas Grieco, a diocese
s pok esman. Bishop Walter
Curtis has ordered the priests
not to talk to reporte rs or
attorneys about the case, Grieco
said.
David attends a special school
for e motionally distur bed
children. The Warrens say he is
sti l l possessed by demons.
Minnella says Johnson has been
.. under attack" by demons
<See DEMON, Page A2)
Tf/E DEVIL'S DEFENSE
Attorney .\11artm ."vfmnella
'Patient aid'
Presley drug
• trial issue
MEMPHIS. Tenn. <AP> -
Defense attorneys say the issue
in the trial of Dr. George
Nichopoulos, acc u sed or
prescribing too many drugs for
rock 'n ' roll s inger Elvis
Presley and others, is whether
the physician was trying to help
his patients.
Nichopoulos, 53, is charged in
a 14 -count indictment with
prescribing drugs in quantities
that exceeded accepted medical
practice for himself, Presley,
entertainer Jerry Lee Lewis and
eight other patients.
Prosecutors say they may call
up to four more medical experts
before winding up its case this
week. Testimony in the Criminal
Court trial for the 53-year-old
interest began Oct. o: James F . Neal, tbe
physician's chief lawyer, has
said Nichopoulos will not
attempt to deny that he wrote
the prescriptions.
Neal a lread y has served
notice. through his questioning
of ,prosecution witnesses, that
the defense will lean heavily oo
the argument that Nichopoulos
was treating patients who h84
bttn rejected by other. docto4
because of their drug habits. :.
Neal said he wiU challenge Utt
s tate 's cont ention tb-1
Nichopoulos' use of certalj
drugs in treating those patien\t
was not in line with "accept.e4
medical practice." •
Gene(ic r esearch
unv e i led at UCI
Nichopoulos canndt be guilt)
or violating an unwritten ~
Neal said claiming medic~
practice is an ever-chang"'f
thing. .•
"If somebody at some tilQJ
didn't say 'Enough of this,' we'O
still be placing leeches oj
people, wouldn't we?" be said. j
Dr. Alvin J . Cummins,J
internist . spent two days on
stand at the end of the w
s aying the defendant's use 61
drugs lo treat the late Prest4
a nd ot h e r patients wap
"outrageous." 'j'
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Of .. Delly,.. ........
Genetic engineering research
that couJd have an impact on
everything from m edicine to
agriculture and the world's
d e p e nde n ce on oil was on
display Sunday for supporters of
the UC Irvine Coll ege of
Medicine.
The display, presented to a
community support group cd.lled
the Medical R esearch and
Education Society, included a
talk by Dr. Paul S. Sypherd and
a tour ol the laboratories or four
professors involved in genetic
··Policewome n
to cut hai r?
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Knoxville's police chief, shaping
UJ> his department for the 1982
World's Fair, has ordered
female officers to cut their hair
because a police beat la "no
place to look pretty.''
Debbie Frank, a NawbvUle
police officer and chairwoman
of the Tennessee Associatioa of
Women Police, said her
Oraanlzation would flCht the
order bl Police Chief Robert
Marshal .
''That's what they did to
wom• la priloner of war campe
to debumanlae them . . . made
them cut tbelr batr Uke men,"
lhe Hld.
research.
In an interview after his talk,
Dr. Sypherd said a dozen UCI
professors are involved in the
so-called "gene manipulation"
researt'h at UCI.
Sypherd, ch airman of the
university's departme nt or
Microbiology, said the ability to
manipulate genes "m eans we
can take desirable traits from
one organism and transfer them
to a nother." Specific genetic
projects currently under way at
UC I , according to Sypbe rd,
include:
-A study that may result in
the implantation of a gene into
some food crops that will allow
the crops to use nitrogen
directl y from the a i r ,
elimi ating the n eed for
nitrogen fertilizers which are
both co s tly and
petroleum-based.
-Research into the insertion
of drought-resistant genes into
crops that will allow them to
grow wltt{ less water,
sallne-resista,.t 1enes that will
allow plants to utilize the
increasingly salty water ln
many parts of the world, and
alltaJlne-reslstant genes that will
allow more a,riculture ln deaert
areas.
. -Insertion of 1enea into
• ordJnary mlcnM>r1anbm1 Lbet
will allow them to produce
compounds formerly prodtlced
only ln the b1lman body. n...
Include iuulln, tbt anU·Ylral
(SM GBN~, .... Al)
"Dangerous use of drugs," hit
said in response to questioqs
abo ut the number o f
barbiturat es Nic hopoulos
prescribed for Presley.
DRAICI CIAIT IUOll
Night and morning low
clouds, but partly sunny
Tuesday afternoon. Highs
67 to 72. Lows tonight 55 to
62.
llSIDI TDIAY •
H'• not ti•• Too11ervillc •
Trolley, rather the Tl"'°90
Trolle11. See 1lof11, photo, • Rao• C6. ...-.
I.
11111 ,,..,_ ....... ,,,
.(~ ..,
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 26,'1981
..........
WINNING LEGS? A voter casts a monetan ballot for
Denali. the only four-legged candid ate in the ··8est Legs on ~ampus" contest at the University of \.\'e1shmgton The.• dog
1s mascot for the UW lluskies. '.\tont•\ raised in ttw tonl<.'st
is to benefit United Wa~·. ·
,
Car bomb kills one,
20 hurt in Beirut
"BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP> -A
dar rigged with nearly 90 pounds
Ol explosives blew up today in
Christian East Beirut. killing al
least one person, injuring 20
mhers and starting a huge (ipe in
'an exclusive residential
neighborhood, police and
Christian radio reports said.
There were no immediate
daims of responsibility for the
bombing . However, a caller
claiming to represent the Front
for the Liberation of Lebanon
'Jl'rom Foreigners told Reuters,
the British news agency, that his
right-wing organization would
retaliate for today's bombing
"as soon as possible with a more
violent explosion in the occupied
Lebanese territories "
That was an apparent
reference to West Beirut and
other areas of L e banon
controlled by mostly Moslem
Jeft-wing militias. the PLO and
From Page A1
GENETIC • • •
drug interferon and a number of
hormones.
·. Sypherd said a key to the
cµrrent genetic research at Ut:l
is uncovering what he called
"the switch" -the method that
will "trick" a bacterial cell into
producing the desired substance
with a gene from another cell.
Finding the switch is the key
to mass-production of needed
substances in bacterial cells, he
said.
"Right now it's a very big
-problem ," Sypherd said.
'!Without the right switch (the
~cteria produces) nothing at all
or what we call ·nonsense'," -a
.,i,seless substance.
. Two UCI doctors , Kevin
'Bertrand and Wesley Hatfield,
c'brrently are working to de-
jel op what Sypherd called
'universal switches" that can
~ used to trigger the desired
lunctions with a number of
lenes and bacterial cells.
Sypherd said one UCI doctor, '~ric Stanbridge, is working on
·~ ort-circuiting the switch that
\ rns a normal human cell
ca n cerous. The research
rnvolves moving genes that
appear to be associated with
cancer from malignant to
normal cells. he said.
Other UCI researchers are
woTking to find genes that
control human production of
antibodies and would allow
organisms to feed on now
inedible substan ces such as
celluJoH, Sypherd said.
Such research could lead to
new breakthroughs in disease
i mmunity, the control of
allertlH and control of the
rejection of transplanted organs
and akin ararts, he said.
Sypbtrd ls currently
reH&rcbln1 serveral fungi used
jn the production of commercial
vita mins, in the hope of ma tchln1 a fast -growi.,ng
or1ant1m with genes thaf could
re1ult ln increased production of
widely used substances.
Syrian troops· o f the Arab
League's peacekeeping force in
Lebanon
The Phalange Party's Voice of
Lebanon radio said the casuaJt)
toll was expected Lo rise because
ambulances were still rushing
victims to hospitals .
A police spokes man, who
declined to be named in
compliance with go\'ernment
regulations. said several
aparlment buildings sustained
considerable damage 1n the
blast. The radio said 10 parked
cars also were wrecked.
"Thick. black smoke shrouded
the Borsh Thabet neighborhood
where the explosion occurred at
10· 15 am (12 : 15 a m PST),"
the broadcast said
A West German-made BMW
car rigged with powerful
explosives blew up near. a TV
filming studio across the street
from the home of form er
President Charles Helou, the
radio s aid
It was not known 1f Helou was
in the vicinity.
Earlier reports said the bomb
was placed in a Mer cedes, also
wrec ked in the massive blast.
It was the first car-bomb
explosion in the Christian side of'
Beirut since a two-week wave of
s1m ilar blasts devastated
several Moslem neighborhoods
in West Beirut and m southern
and northern Lebanon and killed
146 people between Sept 17 and
Oct. 1 •
The explosion Oct 1 also
occ urred in a bomb -laden
Merced es. rt pulverized a
half-block stretch of a street
crowded with offices of the
Palestine Liberation
Organization. Reports from the
Lebanese government and the
PLO said 92 Palestinians and
Lebanese were killed and 3QO
injured
Phony rock·
tickets told
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Caty
o ff icia l s ha ve revealed
themselves and say between
1.500 and 1,600 bogus tickets
were used to gain admission to a
Rolling Stones concert at San
Diego Jack Murphy Stadium
Oct. 7.
But a San Diego police
detective says he doesn't
anticipate any arrests soon
because the investigation is
complicated.
"Every time I think I'm just
about at the end, I find out I'm
only one-fourth or the way to
d iscovering somethi ng
important," said detective Ed
Boyce.
2 nap n ear'bo'mb
CLOUGH, Ireland CAP) -
Police arrested two suspected
IRA guerrillas today as the pair
.slept on a hilltop beside the
detonator for a 500-pound bomb
apparently targeted for British
security forces, authorities said.
tiilf f Pi1at Cla111fled advertlalng 7141942-5678
All olher ckpartmen11 642-4321
MAIN OFFICE
)JO WHt l ay St., Cotta MeWI, CA.
INll •ddrtu: •• 15.0, Costa MeWI, CA . .,.,.
COllY•lgflt ,., 0r""91 Coul PUllllSl\lfll c;...._,y
No_, 1tori.1, lllvitrailoll~. Nltorlol m«ter w ff. venlsomt!ltl .....i11 rMy lie r~td wltN\11 ~lat llllf1\'llHlonef c..,rlthl-nor
Hinckley
'offered'
statement
WASHINGTON <A P > -An ref
agent testified today that
accused presidential assailam
John W llinckley Jr. understood
his rights to an attorney, but
voluntarily gave agents a
statement without a lawyer
present more than four hours
after President ~eagan was shot
March JO
The agent, Henry E . Ragle,
said the state ment began at 7
p.m. at the FBI field office in
Washington, and lasted about 25
minutes. with Hinckley talking
about l1is Life in the year before
the shooting . But 1-tinckley did
n ot di s cuss the 2 25 p . m
shooting and said he would not
do s o without an attorney
prei.ent
Ragle testified at a pretrial
hearing in U S. Distric t Court on
a notion b) Hinckley's lawyers
to suppress his statem ents made
to law enforcement officers
without an attorney present. A
ruling in favor of the defense
would mean the state ments
cou Id nut be used at llinckley's
trial, Sl'l for Nov. 30.
llincklt.>y listened intently,
unlike his last appearance in
court Tuesda\'. when he often
looked around the courtroom
and appeared to pay little
attention to the proceedings.
Today, he wrote notes to and
conferred with his Lwo lawyers
und looked at several mug shots
of himself
Raglt• said Hinckley signed an
F'Bl form telling him of his right
to n•main silent and to have an
attornc) present. Ragle said
ll1nckle) 's signing of the form
mt.'ant he "understood his rights
and did not have to talk to us."
;'II evl•rtheless. Ragle said .
Jl inC"klC'y began "a running
narrali\'e" which included
background information on his
fam 11~ and his whereabouts until
he arrived in Washington on
M<tr<·h 29 At that time, RagJe
s aid, llrnckley said he was
ending the statement until he
spoke to an attornev.
Sub s equent l y, two
court-appointed lawyers arrived
to consult with Hmckley Ragle's
tesllmon~ did not go beyond the
endoflhemter viewat 7 : 25p m .
According to legal papers filed
by Hinckley's lawyers, court
decisions have said questioning
b) law enforcement officers
should cease once a defendant
asks for an attorney. The
defense lawyers said Hinckley
originally asked for a lawyer
while at Washington police
headquarters at 3: 10 p .m ., and
conte nded that there should
have been no further questioning
after that time without an
attorne~ present.
Gold price drops
as dollar gains
LONDON !APJ -The dollar
posted sharp gains against key
world currencies in lively early
trading today. Gold prices
declined.
Dealers said a higher than
expected 1.2 percent increase in
the U .S. inflation rate for
Seplt'm ber prompted
spt:culat1on that U.S. interest
rates would remain high. Such
high rat<'s make the dollar more
attracllve to foreign investors.
• CONDOLENCES '.\1 r and '.\1rs Wesley
Me lvin rece1\'ed bouqul'l from Rolling Ston<.'s
r o c k 1-! ro u p . a t \\ h o :-. l' 0 c t l 5 Se a t ti e
Krngdo.me concert t lw1 r daughtt•r Pu m dt<'d
A" iiiiliiiiiiiiii
in an accidental fall A ccompanyin~ the
( I o \\ e r s w a s a c a rd s t a t i n g · ' 0 u r
s~·mpathil's . the l{ollin)..( ~tones.
"""' ....... COMMJSSIONED The CSS La Jolla. a nuClear-power~d
attack submarine. is offtc1alh· m ade a member of the '.'/a\\
s ub fl<•et in com missioning ceremonies at the ~a\~:!)
s ubmanne ba:-.e 1n Groton. Conn.
Mc•slem fanatics
beJhind Sadat plot?
CA IRO , Egypt IAP J -
Moslem fanatics assassinated
Preside111 t Anwar Sadat and
launched other terrorist attllcks
a ft e r 1· e c e i v i n g s p e c i a I
dispensation from a blind
r eligious leader. a semi-official
Cairo wet•kJy reported today.
Mayo. the organ of the ruling
National Democratic Party.
identified the leader as Omar
Mohammed Abdet Rahman. It
said he was among nearly 400
Moslem fanatics arrested after
th e Oct 6 assass1nat1on
Diploma tic sources have said
that more than 1.500 people have
been detained by police
The news paper said Rahman
was the mufti. o r official
interpreter of Islamic law, for
the underground Takfir Wal
Hegira (Atonement and Flight
From Sin) Moslem sect.
Sadat was s hot to death by an
army lieutenant and three
civ ilian s wearing army
un iforms while walching a
military parade in a Cairo
s ub urb. according to the
~overnmenl Police said the
assassins were all members of
the Takfir Wal Hegira sect
The group also was blamed for
violence in th e northern
Egyptian city of Asyut. where at
least 118 people we r e killed
following the assassination.
police sources said.
"He (Rahman> is the one who
gave the dis pensation for
exploding a revolution like that
of Iranian revolutionary leader
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
he is the one who gave the
di s pensation for the
assassination of all of Egypt
p o litical ano executive
I e ad er s bi p . " w·ft o were
considered atheists. Mayo
reported without citing its
source of information.
From Page A1
DEMON • • •
whill' 1n Jail but doesn't
remember the attack on Bono.
Minnella said he plans to
s ubpoen a all five priests.
i n cluding the Rev Francis
Virgulak, whom the bishop sent
to investigage the Glatzel case
last fall
"They'll have to talk to us m
court," Mmne lla said •
Other Catholic priests also are
on Minnella's witness list. He
said he may· even subpoena an
exorcism exp e rt. whom he
declines to identify. from the
Vatican
M innella said one "b~nefit" of
the triaJ could be that "people
will realize there is a demonic
spirit and will gravitate closer to
the church and closer to God.
"fl certaml) has brought me
closer to God ..
With testimony still weeks
away . Minnella has
concentrated on developing a
profill• of the ideal juror -
Catholic-. female. between 40 and
65 years old. a mother who has a
child Johnson's age. a believer
in both the existence of God a11d
the de\'il
"Our research has shown that
a "om an 1s more likely than a
man to believe in d~monic
possession and lo express those .
views." Minnella said.
Since lhP case and the unusual
planned defense were first
reported b:-The Associated
Press, hundreds of newspapers
and radio and television stations
arounc;I the world h ave sent
reporters to Connecticut About
50 spect ators can fit on the four
oak benches in the 82-year·old
courtroom. and Callahan has
said seats will be first-come.
first-serv('(!
Police Chief Anderson. like
others involved in the case, has
received hundreds of letters and
phone calls. A crucifix which
arrived in the mail now hangs
on the wall of the office
"The day I levitate 5 feel oH
the floor is the day I'll believe."
Anderson told a reporter "But I
fi gure, why push your luck?"
Teen sprea~
1.vord on pot
TITUSVILLE. Fla. CAP) -A
judge has sent Timothy Barrett
out on the streets to tell people
that marijuana is illegal, if they
didn't already know.
For the 19-year-old youth It
was either that or go to j~.
Barrell pleaded guilty to
possession of a small amount of
marijuana Brevard County
Judge Larry Johnston sentenced
him to the maximum penalty, a
year in jail and a fine of $1,000.
Huntington man
dies in cliff fall
A Jtuntinston B'each man died
early Saturday w h e n h e
apparenUy slipped and fell from a sleep cliff. at Crescent Bay
Beach Park ln Laguna Beach.
Gerard F. Verhaar, 23, of 8562
Donald Circl~, was found at the
bottom or a rocky precipice
overlooking the ocean at about
1:30 a.m. Saturday.
A companion. William S .
Bray, also of Huntington Beach,
told police he and Verhaar were
walking along the clifftop park
when Verbaar '1isappeared.
Bray reported his friend
missing, and the body •as tOW\4
a s hort while later at the base of
the cliff.
---TO UA RESUMED -Pope John Paul II hOkh two dolts at lie
listens to a young girl during his visit Mt the Church of Jesus
the Divine Worker in Rome. The pontiff resumed hia weekl)'
tour of Rome dioceses Sunday for the (irsl lime . an~ Ute
attempt on his(tfe in May.
'
I
I·
! I I •
l
I
~ I
,
I
Chaplains under·jire
Congress clergymen still target of complaints
WASHINGTON (AP) -
James Madison called them "a
tiresome formality." A 19th
century newspaper edltor said
they were a bore. And since
lW, citizens have ~riodically
complained about spending
taxpayers' money on them.
But the prayers that 'open the
House and Senate each day -
and the chaplains who lead them
h ave been on the
congressional scene since 1774.
The latest legal challenge will
be heard today in the U.S. Court
of Appeals.
Meanwhile, Uie Rev. James
David Ford, 50th chaplain or the
House, and the Rev. Richard C.
Halvorson, 50th chaplain of the
Senate, will be on hand to
pray for, counsel and befriend
the 535 members of Congress.
'·I stay here as long as any
members are here," said Ford.
"A week ago I was here until 1
o'clock in the morning. People
have concerns that they will
bring up to you casually, who
know11 when?"
He· added, "I don't pretend I am pastor, priest and rabbi
wrapped up in one."
Halvorson declines to give
interviews these days, saying he
does not want to seek publicity.
After his election in January, he
told a reporter be hoped to help
provide a "religiously based
frame of reference" for senators
often adrift in •·a moral
vacuum."
When the first Continental
Congress met in 1774, on~ of its
first acts was to ask the Rev.
Jacob Dushe of Philadelphia's
Christ Episcopal Church to lead
prayers. He was paid $150. The
first Congress to meet under the
Constitution in 1789 paid
chaplains $500 a year. Ford and
Halverson have annual salaries
of $52,750.
In the 1850s, after the House
received challenges to the
chaplaincies on constitutional
grounds. both hou s e s
experimented with inviting local
clergymen to lead prayers. Both
resumed electing ch a plains
after the House Judiciary
Committee concluded it was
constitutional. Guest chaplains
still appear.
Atheist Madalyn Murray
O'Hair and the Society of
Separationtsts argue spending
tax money on chaplains violates
the constitutional separation of
church and state by "placing the
power. prestige and financial
support of the government
behind particular religious
beliefs.". ·
They have appealed U.S.
Di s tric t Judge Louis F .
Oberdorfer'$ ruling that they do
not have legal standing to
challenge the internal practices
of the Senate.
Fusion energy
machine dedicated
The chaplains wer e
challenged in court in 1928 and
1973. Federal judges dismissed
the suits. U.S. District Judge
Warren .K. Urbom held in 1980,
however, that the Nebraska
Legislature's chaplains have
•'an imme diate and direct
effect, substantial in scope, in
advancing religion." The ruling
was appealed. LIVERMORE, Calif. <AP) -
A giant, experimental machine
that someday could harness
nuclear fusion energy for
commercial electric power has
been dedicated at Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory
amid uncertainty over federal
support.
The director of the fusion
energy program worried that
curtailed federal aid would
jeopardize the goal of using a
fusion reactor to produce
electricity before the turn of the
century.
"It looks like we're on hold,
when a little while ago we
thought we were ready to go,"
said T. Kenneth Fowler.
W. Kenneth Davis, deputy
secretary of the Department of
Energy, said' at the ceremony
that the Reagan administration
was committed to supporting
fu sion "to achieve a secure
ener gy future in the next
century."
But citing "extreme pressure
on budgets,·· he said ·'we may
not be able to proceed as rapidly
as we would like or on as many
parallel paths as mi ght
otherwise seem desirable."
As a potential source of
energy, fusion -the joining of
atomic nuclei -is attractive
because it produces few wastes
and the fuel supply is virtually
limitless.
The mirror fusion test facility ,
one-third complete, will contain
powerful magnetic fields to trap
an electrically charged gas-like
plasma of hydrogen ions heated
to 500 million degrees . The
energy produced by fu sion will
be captured as heat, whicb will
boil water to run a conventional
steam-electric generator.
At the dedication ceremony,
one of two magnet pairs was
unveiled. The magnetic fusion
program has a budget of $400
million a year, with $460 million
requested for next year, Fowler
said. But at least $100 million
more is needed lo begin work on
prototype reactors, he added.
Scaled-back aid by the Reagan
administration may force the
program to turn to private
industry for fund(, he said.
Wh ile lawyer s argue ,
chaplains pray -and, they say,
much more.
''The most interesting things I
do a r e t he things that are
private," Ford said.
Halverson says, "I spend a
good deal of time with
individuals. I feel my role is
that of a pastor to the senators
and the Senate staff and their
families ...
The c haplains conduct
weddings and funerals, attend
prayer breakfasts, look up
biblical passages for · members,
speak to organizations, and visit
hos pitalized member s and
staCCers.
But their most visible task is
the prayer.
On a recent morning, there
were 12 House members in their
seats and about 15 standing in
the back of the chamber as
Ford, a man of medium height
with graying curly hair, prayed
for divine encouragement to
"reach out to the needy among
us who are hungry, or thirsty, or
naked, or in prison."
It 'II be fair again
Smog report 1 •• ,_., 11·1 :I Jt\ii
Coastal
POINT CONCEPTION TO THE
MEXICAN 80flDEA OUT 60 MILES
-Uaht end v•rlM>le winds throulJI!
tonlollt .. c_.,. sou01w•1t to west
wlnelt • lo IS knots with 2 loot wind
wews durlno the ~. One to 2
foot southwest sw•ll. Low clouds
nlQhl •nd momlnQ "°""with P¥1i•t clHrlno durlno lht .nernoon.
Unllealtllfut elr qu•l lly for
sansltlw ~le wH fwK•st tor
todey In IN Sen GMlrlel -PornoN
v•ll•ys end the R l versld•·S•n
Bunerdtno ...... the Air Ouelltv
~ Dlstrkt Nici.
Tiie Sen G•bf"ltl·f'omone erees
were e•PKled to ,, • ..,. Pollulent
Stenderd ,,,._, of 11J, Wfllle • 1U
PSI wH predlct9d for Rlw ..... de-S..
8.rnerdlno.
GOOCI air quality IMS for'K.~ fof' "•'"'' ell OI,,.,. reQIOM, With e PSI of 42 l!!X!)
----------pr•dlctecl for th• coest, Intend • ••·•
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.. rm front •'°"9 the llClf'!Mrn Gull B•nntno •rw. Coe~t, olvlno much of the Soulllffst __________ _
rein sllow•rs, with some llHvy r ein
In North C.rollne.
A frasll ~ of ,,_ uP lo 6
lnche• dHP blenlteted ColOr•Clo on
Suncley, but matt of the s.-rMlled
H le.,,.,.retul'9S -rmed.
Cold •Ir mOWd Into Ollletlom• end Kenses end the mld·Misslulppl
V•ll•Y. urry1n9 _,. s11o-n. Sltifl wtr• sunny In Arlron• and
New Mulco, the centr•I Rockies •nd
ltle centre I p1etHu.
Temperetures wound the n•llon •1
mlcl-d•., Sundey r8"91d from • •-of
24 In lnternetlonel Falls, Minn. lo •
hloh of 19 In Pelm Sptlnos.
A tornedo touched dOwn In tht Flori da P•nhenc:tle town of
Bl~mttown, -klno some 11omes. knoeklno out comrnunlcetlons and
1eevlno e n unknown number of
~Injured. A guard et the 1•11 In r11lgt1borlno
Liberty County seld pOllc• from oOwr
communlllH heel -Cltlled lo IMIP
hancll• th• emerQtncy.
"It's torn uP • lot of llouws •nd
trellers •nd It's moWd • IOI of cars
from ...... !fwy -• llHlnQ," Seki
Liberty County Corractl-Offk•r Wendell Ellis.
California
Hloht end mornlno cloudsv.
OINtWIM few llWOUQfl T .. tcley, but
wttll lllQtl cloudl Tuateley. ContlnllN
mllcl. Ove"1'9M '°"' S2 to 61. HIQll• tocley end T1191dey In low 60s •t
bNClles to l-10s Inland.
Extended
outlook
Mleml 81 79 Los Anoelfl 1S .,
Mllweukff 0 )4 A.Vrysvllte ,, (7
Mpl1-St.P 41 31 Monr011I• 1• S9
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NewOrl••ns 7j s• .SJ Monl•r•v ., .S4
New York S4 4S H_ .. , " $1
Norfolk 63 S4 1.11 Newpon IHCll .. '° Oki• City 49 J9 ,19 Oektend $1
Omeh• 50 ll Ontario 76 .S4
Orl•ndo .. 70 • .Sol P.tm5e>rl"9l ·~ SI
Pllll.clplll• S3 J7 .21 P..-.ne ,. 50
"'-iii• u S6 P-Robl• 74 41
PlttlllurQh SI J2 lted Bluff 74 45 Ptl•nd, ~ '° 11 AedWood City .. ,.
f>tl•nd. Ore SI 0 Seer•~-76 S2 Reno 14 27 S.llne . " s.nu11e '° 3S San B.,nerdlno 11 SJ 5Httle M 46 Sen Getw .. I 71 SCI St Louis S3 J3 San Diego 70 62 St P·Tempa 13 71 San l"rancllco 61 .S4 St Ste M•rle JI 21 Sant• AM 74 5' 5'1oUn• n ., Sante Bartiere .. SJ Tulsa so 44 .J7 Sant• Merl• .. • WHlll11Qtn $1 42 Sant• Monie• .. S6 Wkllll• oil 41 1.12 Stockton ,. 42
T•'-Velley 71 2' Therm•• '3 S6 Torrence n SI
Te mperatures
HI 'Le ~ AIO.ny S2 ,.
Allluque 61 41
Amerlllo SS 39 .09
"'911•vlll• 49 40 .13
Atlent. 47 42 .4.
Attentc Cly S6 51 .43
8eltlmore S3 J3 17
8 1rml11Qllm S3 .. , .10
l lsmerck 40 16
Bois. " 37
Boston S3 JI
8rownsvllt .. 57
luff•lo S6 31
CherlStn SC 5t S1
CherlstnWV 61 J3 .01
CJMvenrwr 46 14 .01
Chlcao<> 45 " Clnclnnetl 59 2t
Cleveland SCI 2t
Colum,bus ,. 11
Oet-FtWlh 61 so .03
Denver S3 lO .2.S
DHmolnH ... 33
Detroit S3 14
Oulutll 21 23 .07
El Peto 1S 61
CALI l"CMIMIA Awl• Velley IO 40
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Houston • 54 .01
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• 12 1 ' -v--S2 • Wlftft1991 SS '1 OUt•UwTUMllily: Litt .. ~.
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 26, 1981 s
,.,, ............
Leaders. at Cancun. Mexico. l>'umm1t on economic development pose on tropical beach. President Reag
is seated at far left. Other leaders in attendance were Pi.erre Eliot Trudeau of Canada. Jose L.opdl;
Portillo of Me:nco. Margaret Thatcher of Britajn. Francois .Witterand of France and Zhao Ziyang <fl.•
ChiTla.
Long-run benefits seen·
Summit built some understanding between North, South
CANCUN. Mexico (AP l -The
advanced billing put the global
economic conference here in the
ranks of historic summits. But
rathr than a giant step for
mankind. it produced a small
s tep t owa r d better
understanding.
For 2 112 d ays, among the
beachfront palms and around a
g i a nt conferen ce tabl e ,
President Reagan and leaders of
21 other nations talked of tariffs.
credits and currency. as well as
the heeds of fi shermen, tea
prices and cotton supplies, and
the virtues and shortcomings of
p rivate en t e rprise a n d
socialism.
What grew from the unusual
and relative informal dialogue
was a "Spirit of Cancun,"
concluded Mexican President
J ose Lopez P ortillo, a
co.chairman of the summit.
-"It is a spir it of solidarity, of
conciliation, and of harmony,"
he said.
The spirit may prove fruitful
over the long run . But the
Cancun summit, which produced
no major specific agreements.
f alls short of its origin al
mandate.
Early last year. a special
stud y comm ission o n the
economic issues that divide the
developed and developing
worlds called for the convening
of a small meeting of presidents
and premiers to "thrash out"
the problems with "candor and
boldness."
It called for particularly quick
ac tion on an ··emergency
NEWS ANALYSIS
program'' to relieve world
hunger, conserve and find more
energy supplies in the Third
World, and reform international
financial inst itutions t o give
poorer countries greater say in
their oper ations. Action must be
taken by 1985. the Brandt
Co m mission said almost two
years ago.
But the Cancun summit's final
statement either skirts around
subjects in which disagreements
run deep -as in energy and
international financial reform -
or offers such generalizations as
"hunger must be eradicated."
A central task of the summit
was to better define procedures
for conducting negotiations
among all nations on the full
range of problems. But the fin al
statement shrouded this subject
in the obscurity of diplomatic
language.
l t said global negotiations
were desirable but, Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau, the other co-chairman,
later said, "We fa iled to get
agreement on exactly what the
next step will be."
The focus now shifts back to
the United Nations, where years
of backroom bargaining have
produced no ground rules for
such global economic talks.
There is little prospect for a
swift agreement this time in the
United Nations At Cancun.
Reagan set some pre-conditins
for global negotiations that
promise later confrontatio
with the Third World, includin
a r ejec ti o n o f majoP
international financial changes.
With no hard <lecisions taken
h ere, many leader s of the
d e v e 1 o p i n g c o u n l r i e S".,,.
represented at Cancun followed
Lopez Portillo 's lead and
em braced the "spirn" as the
important thing.
Cancun "has succeeded irl
bringing develope d and
developing countries closer
together," Indi a n Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi said
Saturday.
" I think the fact that people
have att e nded the s umm it
means they mean business, ..
Nigerian Foreign Minister
lshiya Audu told reporters. "l
think a good first step has been
taken."
For 22 men and women who
s pend m ost of t h e ir days
worrying about their particular
problems bac k home, the
Cancun "semina r '' was an
educational experience.
"There has been a mellowing
of President Reagan's attitude
here. r believe he has learned
things, and is ready to keep
listenin g," said Philippine
President Ferdinand Marcos.
Trudeau. at a separate news
conference, noted it was a
two-way street. "I would bet my
bottom dollar that leaders like
Lopez Portillo and Marcos have
never been contradicted with so
many arguments before in their
political lives:·
PUC rate approval policy
brings consumer broadside
SACRAMENTO IA PI -The
s t ate Publi c Uti l ities
Com mission demonstrates an
"arrogant , doctrinaire.
public-be-damned attitude" by
using higher utility rates to push
e n ergy co nse rvat ion. a
consumer advocate says.
"As consumer advocates, we
are a pp al l ed at the
commission's indifference to the
t • actual bills of the ratepayers of
this st.ate,·' Sylvia Siegel,
director of Toward Utility Rate
Normalization of San Francisco,
told an Assembly hearing.
She said the P UC has
fragmented utilities' requests
for higher rates from one per
year to as many as 11, so groups
like hers have trouble following
what utilities are doing.
The Assembl y Utilities and
En ergy Co mm ittee h eld a
hearing on how the PUC decides
what rate increases should be
granted lo utilities such as
natural gas, electri city and
telephone companies.
The committee chairman,
Assemblyman Gordon Duffy,
R-Hanford, s aid he or other
committee m embers m ight
introduce some bills next year to
change the PUC procedures.
Duffy said he was concerned
about the PUC approval last
summer of a $610 million rate
increase for Pacific Telephone-
TURN had learned that the PUC
staff had recommended only ;i
$200 million increase, and the
P UC adminjstrative law judge
who heard the case suggested
$400 million.
Duffy also noted that the PUC
this week gave Pacific Gas ano
Electric a $325 m illion rate
increase to pay for higher fuel
costs. which will add about S8 a
month to an average bill. Also
pending before the commission
is PG&E's general rate increase
proposal of $1 .2 billion.
just right for thi5
timz.of~r: ..
a mixt.utTz. of tbz.
eoftast hm:i lcomczd
sbz.tlond yorns and
th<i truz. ~of
autumn. toilonzd
~et fbr ue, With
ck~ pxl<Q.ts and e · \Atnte .
f {
4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 26, 1981
rnillu~ rn rn \
U.S. foreign a~d shifts
Program being turned towards political, security ends
W ASIDNGTON (AP> -The
U.S . foreign aid program, the
largest in the world , is
increasingly being turned
toward political and security
ends. government figures show.
The shift started during the
Vietnam War and has continued
unabated ever y since. The
Reaga n adm inistr at io n ,.
s tressing free enterprise and
self·help for poor n ation s,
appears eager to accelerate the
trend .
"Ttie trend h as not diminished
a t a ll,'' s aid Emery Simon,
co-author of a Congressional
Budget Office stud y on foreign
aid. "There has been a policy
decision in favor of bilateral
instead of multilateral aid ...
equal to that of the United
States . Norway and Sweden
were at the top with a 0.90
percent share.
While P r esident Reagan
praises the U.S. record, Robert
S. Mc Namara, until recently the
president of the World Bank,.
calls it "disgraceful."
The 1980 Republican Party
platform. endorsed by Reagan,
says "th e prin c ip al
consideration (for aid l should be
whether or not extendin g
assistance to a nation or group
of n atio n s will advance
America 's interests a nd
objectives."
about $2. 5 bill ion for t h e
Economic Support Fund in fiscal
1982, of which $785 million is for
l srael and $750 million for Egypt
-or two-thirds of the total. Next
in line are Turkey, $300 million,
a nd .Pakistan, $100 million.
Oiitier 1979 foreign aid outlays
includ ed : dev e lopm e nt
assistance for poor nation s,
a dministered by the Agency for
Int ernational Deve lopment,
$1.14 billion; food aid, including
the Food for Peace program,
$316 million : multilate ral
d everopment banks, especially
the World Bank, $683 miJlion ;
a nd international organizations,
such as the United Nations. $883
million.
As a result. U .S . aid is
diminishing for som e of the
world's poorest nations. whose
econ omies a re t oo weak to
a ttract private investmen t and
w hi c h aren 't part of U.S .
military strategy
A Congressional Budget Office
study. completed las t year while
Jimmy Carter was president,
fou n d t h a t "U .S . foreign
assistance h as long been
concentrated on a relatively
s mall number of countries,
us ua lly of great politica l interest
to the United States."
While the figures are several
yea r s old, ove rall outlays
haven't changed .s ignificantly,
except for a few key countries,
because no new forei g n aid
appropriation bill h as bee n
e nac ted. Ins t ead , the aid
programs have been funded at
old levels through a continuing
r esolution.
BATTLE BREAK Airman F1r~t l"l <t-. .. ·~··---\\ ••1111dt·d -.1ild11·1 111 1 lw \11 F o1 n· ~ \ledinll
These nations have received
most o r their aid from
multilateraJ lending institutions,
s uch as the World Bank. But
U.S . support for these banks has
been diminishing, a trend the
Reagan administration is likely
to continue .
The s tudy put actual outlays
for fi scal year 1979 at $4.4
billion. The largest chunk, $1.8
billion. went to the Economic
S upport Fund. which helps
nations with which the United
Stat es has , or wants to have, a
security relationship.
Maureen Guard of lla\'crh1ll. ~ta~s . l'ah C
rations during lunch bre<tk from hN rnk a-. .i
l~1'll l'l.11! ,., .. , 1 1· II \111lr1•\\.., \1r Forl't'
l:,1 I' Ill \J.11 \ (.111d
Foreign aid authorization
fi gures. such as the $7 .1 billion
figure used by the Reagan
a dministration for las t year .
inc l ude commitments for
spending in future years.
Much rema ins sa nie i11 Ko rea
Foreign aid last year totaled
S7. 1 billion.
But during the past 15 years.
aid as a s hare of the nation's
wealth has declined sharply -
from 0.41 percent of the gross
national product to 0.23 percent.
Only F inland , ltaly and
S w i l'z e r 1 a n d a m o n g t he l 7
indus trial democracies g ave
les s. and Japan's s hare was
Most money from the fund
now goes to the Middle East,
especially Israel and Egypt.
E SF money tripled in the
1970s. even after allowing for
inflation, and by 1979 accounted
for half of all U.S. bilater aJ aid.
Amounts for oth er programs
ei th e r d eclined or we r e
unchanged.
The Reagan administration is
asking Congress to a pprove
Traditionally, the United
States h as provided a large
share of its foreign aid through
the so-called multilateral
institutions. s uch as the World
Bank.
U.S. aid to such institutions
has declined as a proportion of
the totaJ from about 35 percent
or more a decade ago to as little
as 20 per cent.
SEOUL <AP> ··Some thing~
have changed, a t least in style.
but many thin gs r em::iin the
same:· said one knowledgeabl(·
observer, looking back over the
two years since Presid ent Park
Ch ung-hee was assas s inated.
.the controls rem ain
Ther e is no forum or outlet for
an exchange of opposing views.
As before, the government can·t
seem to und e r s t a nd th e
diff e r e nc e be tw een
da sagrl'l'ml'nt ;111d tit 1111 .tit'
Park'!> dl·:1lh Ii\ lht h ;rnd ·d
has intell1gt•J11 I I h .. 1 <HI 01 I '."
1979, br<1ui.:ht 111 •"111 I•• IR '11;11
of authoritat1\1· 1 ul1 .111d 'ti 111
m ot 10n ttw f"\ <'nh 1 h .ii t11·11ud1r
po v. l'r to ;11u.11t1·1 .11111\ 01!111·1
Chun l>oo h\\ .lll
\\'Ith llll' I 11 ll I li.1d.r llJ.: 11! lllt'
mil1ta rv . an 1· .. svnt1.11 f,,.-11.a
he re. Chun has prol'la1m1·d whJI
l!<t dl'Sl'rlUL•d .i' 11 111°\\ t•r;1 ·-
Em pha:-1s 1-. 1111 ,1 t·•·nl111111r1~
lr1111c'. p11~111 rl' agai n st
1 11111rnu111'1 "\11r th K orea.
1111··111:11 '' 1111111\ .ind e conomic
d1•\ 1·lt1Jtlll• 111
On·· 11·1\1·111 young Korean
'"'''1111111111 11 lf 1c ral . who
d• 1 l1r11·d 111 lie identi fied,
d1·1 l.111·d th•·rt-a r e marked
d1llt·1 t·tll't·.., ht'l>A e en Chun and
l'.1rk dt·:-p1t e their military
li.11·k~·r 011n<h and the ir stern
1 ...... 111111 111 •1ppos1t w n
Recessio.n: Different things to different folks
W ASH l NGTON <A P l -when such activity has been National Bureau of Econom1C· quarll'r . but 1111 dl'l·la 11 .. ":1., "''
"n ecc•ssion" is a word game for generaJly inc reas ing. NEWS ANALYSIS Research says so. s tee p ;111 :1n r111.1 I r al,. "'
pol iticians , economi s ts and As migh t be expected, whe n Th e bureau . a private. nearly JO p1·n•nt .i11d 11t1
JOu rnalists. For m ost working bus iness activity falls off, non-profit resear ch group in ('(feet -; h11 1h1• '' on11m1 11
people, there·s a feeling when companies· unsold inventories s preading to other areas. Cambridge. Mass .. has been broadh thal h;11d1' .111111111
economic times are good and pile up and they stop ordering The decline hasn 't been very measuring a nd calling turning qu a rreit·d "r1 h 1 h1• r 1·1·1 .-1111,
~h en they're not. new products. Because their s harp. dropping at an annual points in busines s activity for la bel
In fact. there·s an old saying: factories are idle, they also lay rate of only about 1 percent for half a century. and virtuall) In gent'r.d. •·11111,,1111'"' •.,1\
When your neighbor loses his job off employees. the six months ended Sept. 30. ever y body accepts its verdict. you nc1·rl 111 i-!" .1 i1ttl1· l1111h• r
rt's a recession; when you lose That"s what's been happening Is that a real recession or just But those verdicts usuall v than tht· h\o q11.11 ,,., ~·111d" \
yours it'sa depression. this year, leading many a fluke thatcanbeexplainedby don·t come until months after rece::-.~1011 r1·q1111t'" 1111 tl111·1
That a bout s um s up the econ o mi s t s a nd President highinterestratespricingyoung th e turning point a 0 s ·· of df·plh f.11rh l1111i.•
definition for people who have Reagan himself to declare a buyers out of t h e hous ing ··recession" s eemed to be dt1ratwn and \\ 1<11· d1 -;p .. r .d
mo r e th a n a political or mildrecessionisuponus. market? marked every time by at least the\ ~a\·
academic interest . The inflation-adjusted gross Some s mall and med ium-sized two s tr aight quart ers o f The 'currl·nt d1hu1t11111 1 11
It can get confusing, though, nationaJ product -the totaJ of companies have gone out of declining GNP. \Pr~ dt•t•p littl • •·111 111 1,.
with declarations and denials of all goods and services produced bus iness. And some people have That ··Jaw" stuc k, and you g('lling d l·,·1H·1 11 ti 1,.11 1 l.1 tt-d
r e cess io n f l owing fro m by ever ybod y in t he United lost their jo b s, with still hear politi cians and ne\\S \('r .\' long 11111 .u1.il1't' 111•ul•
officeholders and o thers who States -fell in the second and unemploym e nt rising t o 7.5 commentators referring to the and nulsr<lt-Lm1•r11rr11•111 >..11 11 ...
have an interest in convincing third quarters of the year . Two percent in Sept ember and two .quarte r g u ide a s the going to l a~I a \\hil,. looc• r II
people that they a re better or straight declines are widely forecast to go as high as 8.5 ··technic al " definiti on of a was n 't w1dd~ tl1•.p1•1.,1•d ul 111-;1
wors e off than they think. vie wed as the m ost obvious percent of those actively seeking recession. hut is turnm~ 1111t th.it , .. 1
The word "recession" is a signal of recession. jobs. But it doesn't always work. By Most <:ton11t111.,h .,,1\ 1 .. .., rt
form of "r ecede," meaning "to A l firs t , the produc tion For the record. there are two all accounts. including that of probably i!'-.. r1l1· •Ion thouj.!lt .1
move b ac k ." The broad c utbacks and layoffs were general guid es to a recess ion the re~earc h bureau . the pretty s p «'1'1.tl111•d 1111 1· lt-.
definition of econom ic recession concentrated in housing and that are widely used . economy suffered a re<'Pssilln damage 1::. f<ituwd 1111 hurldt•r,
1s the temporary £ailing off of auto production, but in the past Th_.e ··official" rule is simple: m the s pring of last year. and s ellerc:; of hn1i...•·-. .tnd 1·;11
.. 1u I .11111 tur 111tu rl• m:.sking that
d1·pl·nd t1r1 tlto"l' two areas.
f' 1 1 • 1rl .. 11 I .., u ~ u a 11 y a re
11·l1H t .1111 to 1·11ne t•<k a recession
11,1 . "11111 n·cl "ht le tht:y are in
• :1111· hut lh•:Jgan Jumped the
t111 "" 1111 •nw lit· declared las t
.,, • .. t.;1•11tl that tlw nation was in
11~·111 .11111. I hope. a
.,.j\111"! 11·1 ,.,,,,Ill
-..1111 lw .11111 tu-. top t.>.conomic
.1rl\ 1" 1 \\1•r1· quick to blame
11,, 1 v1, 11m on the policies of
I 11 ri • 1 1'11 10(·111 C arter
fl • " 1 11 ' p 1· o p I e s a y
'"1 •1111 .. 111li11g h i~h interest
,111 li.1, • l1ngt·red because
111\' .. 1111.., .111d 11tlwr-. ha\'C' been
111 \1 111 l>1·l1 1•\'l' the new
,1d1111111 1r.1l111n \\tll stic k to its
l111dc1·1 11itt111u l i g ht ·credit
p •' I 1 t 1 t' ' i.l ' p r e ,. 1 o u s
11trn1111,trat1n11-. han.• not. r 1!1 p1 c·:-1c11·nl ·, err tics are
.t11.wl-.11ii.; l11m in a n effort to
111 ;11-. •· 111·.-t hrs reeession if it
" 0111 l>t'l'Ur1W!> known as a
lh·~·";in rr-1·p1;s1on." business activity during a period few months they seem to be It's a recession when the R eal GNP fell in only one as well as th(· inclustrtr·-. ::-.uc.'h a~ r.:==========~========================::;:;,~-------;.----------~--------------,;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;::;;;;;::;;~.~;::~ .. ~~~~ -' ------
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Students told test changes won't hurt licensing ability
SACRAMENTO <AP> The
s tate is assuring student nurses
lhal Californi'a's c hanges in
national standard licensing tests
will not hurt their ability to be
licens ed quickly in other states.
The Board o f Reg istered
Nursing said that students who
take the lest next February in
California will be given two
scores one on the whole test
pre pared b y th e National
League for Nurses and one on
t h e portion of the test that
C alifornia d eclares t o b e
job-related.
lf appLicants pass the whole
tes t, their license will be the
same as that given in any other
s tate. s aid board membe r
Patricia Norris.
Shelora Mangan, a nursing
s t ud e nt at Americ a n River
College, told the board she was
worried that her license might
be good only in Cali fornia.
Afte r tests wer e given in
February and July this year, the
hoard appointed panels to
review the tests lo make sure
that question s actually
measur the ability to do the
job.
As a r ult, the board threw
out all the questions in a
section d aling with psychiatric
nur s ing and s ome o f the
questiom in each of the other
four sections, which deal with
m edicint, pediatrics. surgery
and nur&;lg of children
When hie February test was
r es cored without thos e
ques lio(S. 473 mor e pers ons
passed.fut of 5,500 persons who
look th test, 2,321 passed the
whole 'ng. and 2,794 passed
after th questions were thrown
out.
Chairtoman Patricia Majcher
of Sant~ Monica s aid the board
will soo' release an explanation
of how it selected the panels
which reviewed the &ueslions.
But sht said the elltninated
queslioli> will not be r evealed
because that would breach the
.ecr ecyof the test.
The tontroversy de veloped
after tbe State Department of
Cons urrer Affairs analyzed the
r esultt of a test given in
Anaheim in July 1980 and found
that 85 percent or the while
applicants passed. while only 26
percent o f the m inorit y
applicants passed.
The board hired Reginald
Goodfellow of Applied Research
Consultants, who determined
that part of the test was not
job-related
In June. the National Council
of State Bo ards of Nursing
awarde d a c ontract for
development of a new test to
CTB -McGr aw Hill , but it
probably will not be ready until
February 1983.
Meanwhile. t h e California
board's decision to modify the
test has been cr iticized by the
California Nurses Association
for pote ntially lowering
s tandards. but applauded by
I a bor un ion s and minority
groups. who s ay the national test
is biased agetinst minorities and
foreigners.
The state Department of Fair
Employment and Housing also
('Omplained that the test may be
biased against minorities and
persons over 40
Interferon appears safe
Encouraging results in can~er patients noted
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Des pite side effects r a nging
from fever lo weeks or fatigue,
synthetic interferon appears
were reported by Dr. Jorda U.
cancers in seven of 16 patients !n
its fi ts t clinical lr1a1 ,
researcters report. .
The i1udy of the artificially
c r e ated s ubs t ance. r eported
Fr1dar . answered many
queslioas about how patients
State workers' group
beaten in elections?
SACRAMENTO CAP> Two
AFL-CIO locals say they have
ddealed the California State
Em p loyecs Association in
repr esentati o n a l runoff
elections.
In one contest lo represe11t ·
about 8 .000 p syc hiatri c
technicians in California's 11
state hospitals. the CWA Psych
Tec h Union s aid 1t won 2.575
votes compared to 1.931 for the
CSEA
In another to represent 3,000
stale health and social services
professionals. Local 2620 of the
American Federation of Stale.
C ount y. and Mun1 c 1pal
Employees s aid it won 1,081
votes compared to l.038 for the
CSEA.
The CWA Psych Tech Union is
an independent local of the
Communications Workers of
America, AFL-CIO.
The local's pres ident, Jim
Smith. ;aid the result "marks
the betinning of the end of
CSEA's domination over state
em ploytes . We expect more and
mor e s:ate employees will be reJecti~ CSEA and be turning
to real 1.nions like CW A "
The i:resident of the A FSCME
L oe al 2620, Lenny Potas h.
c r~dited the victory to, "the
ability of both our local and
international union to combat
bud ge t c ut s. a nd th e
commitment on all levels of
A FSC ME to protect the services
that health and social services
professionals provide."
T h e CSEA c ou l d not
immediately be reached for
comment.
react to 1t a nd raised new ones
a bout the best dos age and
schedule of treatment.
One surpris ing discover y
during the tes ts was the
development of an antibody to
synthetic interferon in three of
the patients.
Detail s of the effects of
synthetic interferon injections
were reported by Dr. Jordah H.
Gutterman of M.0 . Anderson
Hospital and Tumor Institute in
Houston and Dr. Sandra Horning
of Stanford University. Their
reports came in the final day of
the Second Annual International
Congress for Interferon
research. •
I nte rferon is p r oduced
naturally by the body lo fight
infection and has shown promise
as a cancer-fighting agent. But
since it 1s expensive to extract,
studies have been limited.
Synthetic mterferon, produced
by bacteria whose genes have
been altered. is cheaper and
more r eadily available. The
recombinant interferon for the
Stanfo rd-Hous ton trial was
produced by the Nutley, N.J .
d r u g c o m· p a n y
Ho ffmann -La Roche Inc . and
Ge nc t ech Inc. of South San
Francisco.
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 26. 1981 s
Data kit
on Klan
criticized
SAN FRANCISCO IAP> The
Natio nal Educ1tlion
Association's information kit on
the Ku Klux Klan is "disturbing
and troublesome" because it
indicts American societ y as
innately racist , th e
Anti -Defamation League or
B'nal B'rith charged.
Underlying the classroom kit
is the "untenable premise" that
the KKK is ·'the tip of t he
iceberg .. of entre nched
racism" in America, not an
aberration, s aid the AOL's
Kenneth J . B1alkin
T he league has monitored the
Klan and other extremist groups
ror decades.
Bialkin, c h airman of the
league's National Executive
Com millee, presented a report
on the NEA kit "Violence. the
Ku KJux Klan and the Struggle
for Equality. An Informational
and Instruction Kit" during
the committe e 's fo ur -da y
meeting in San Francisco.
The leagut? agr eed t here
should be classroom material on
the Klan but found the NEA kit
"gave ~ incorrect portrayal of
American society," Bialkin said
He singled out two statements
that he felt presented a "false
view" to students "The violent
nature or the Klan feeds on a
c l imate of gene ral socia l
acceptance of racism "
The other sentence read "It
is important lo remember that
the Klan 1s only the tip of the
iceberg. the most vis ible and
obvious manifestation of t ht:'
entrench e d rac is m 1n our
society."
Bialkin contends that racist
ideas are antithetical to mo:.t
Americans, who regard the Klan
with "scorn and distrost. ..
Th e NEA kit le av es o ut
information about "the nation's
ad vances in over coming past
racism" and "important black
gains over the past 20 years ... he
said .
The Anti-Defamation League.
in reaction to the N EA kit. is
preparing an alt e rn a te
curriculum on the KKK. Bialkm
said. •
T he league was cons ulted by
the NEA before the k1l waf.
published. but Bialkm said the
association did not comply with
all its suggestions
A~WI ........
CROSS-EYED TIGER H1111\ llll' ...;111l·t 1.i11 t t~t·t .11 tlw
F o lsom zoo has a righ t 111 bl· irri tated while be ing
photographed . Thl• 12 ~ l'a r old . soo µound tiger was born
with crossed e yes VNc nn:i rians s :.i.'· nothing l'Lln bl' done to
corrt>el the proble m
SF parking fees
may he increased
SA!'< FRANCISCO 1 A P i
Dall) parking fees Ci t four
ci t y ow n e d lo t s "'1 11 b e
substanti ally increased in unc
('ase to SlO a da' 1f raH·
111cn•a!>es approved b) t he San
Fram·1sco Parking Authont)
are tonftrmed b\' tht:' Board of
Supervisors and · Mayor Oranne
Feinstein
The 10<.·rcase!>. a pprO\'t.:d b)
the Parking Authority, CO\e r
pa rking al the Fifth and
M1ss1o n. Port smouth Squar e.
Sutt1.•r-Stockton and Golden
Ga teway garages
The ne w rates, designed lo
ret tSe additio n al montc'\' and
d iseourage all da) parking.
!>hould take effect b) OeC' 1,
according lo M argart'l Hrndy.
direc t or o f t h e P ar k ing
Authority
Rates la-.t were increased la~t
Octob1.•r
· There has been a wider dnd
"'1dt·r 1-!·•P l.ll'l\\ el'n r 1ty rates
ancl lhl' pnvit l<• '>ector... said
\u t h11ri t \ P resident Don ald \1 <1~n111 ··Those ~ar<1ges were
1ntt•nch•d for the person who goes
-.hoppin~ gcw<; to the dentist.
gm•-. to wt· h1:. broker That's
'' h) lht•> "'('rt: built "'here Lhey
"en· built ·
\dd1twnal re\.t:nue 1:. needed
to tO\'t•r 1nc·n·ascd costs at three
of till' four i.:araJ.!"eS Only Lhe
Suttl'I Stol'kton garage 1s in
good shapt· f10anc1all y. Current
ft·l·s "'di rc•ma1n in eff ect at
otht.•r l'tty garages
T ht· <.111 day parker will bear
t ht· brunt or the h ikes. For
t'xamplt.'. th<' m aximum all·day
rat l' "'111 Jump from SS to S7 at
Fifth and ~1 iss10n. from S7 to
SS 50 ;it Por tsmou th Squa re.
from S7 50 to S9 a t
Suttt.•1 Sll><:kton <.1nd from S7 to
Sill .it (;oldt.·n Galt:\.\ a\
~ 'JY§~
RO,~§U.~
98.lw•fft ~~ ~ MM/ ~.,."4, '•
.A'~ /&oclt, (T-1#} (;.f.f·G990
~---~-------------,,......,.-.....----·---------------------------,-11
---~~-~----~--~~-~--
~· Orange CO Ht OAJL V PILOT /Monday, October 29, 1981
Government spending
that makes no sense
Many actions of the federal
government are bewildering. but
one that is incomprehens ible is
its simultaneous support of
tobacco farmers and i ts
campaign to discourage smoking.
Last week, the 48-year-old
. program of price s upports and
acreage restrictions survived a
mov e in the Hou s e of
Representatives to kill it bv a
vote of 231 -184. Close but· no
• eigar.
Last month. an assault on t he
price support program in the
: Sen ate was turned b ack .
The House did approve one
concession to subsidy opponents.
Language was approved that
would require Agric ultur e
Secretary J ohn Block to provide
for an unna m ed entity to relieve
taxpayers of the direct cost of the
subsidie s. $100,000 annuaJly. T he
public would still get burned.
however. for the SIS million
adminis trative c os t s of th e
program .
The r egulations are a step in
the right djrection. but Congress
s h ould h ave abolis'b ed th e
tobacco program forthwith.
I t makes no s ens e fo r
Was hington lo s pend S28 million.
a s it did la s t ye a r . o n
anti-s moking campaigns and
medical research into
smoking.related diseases. ~nd
then dish out other millions to
prop up tobacco (armers.
Subsidy proponents say the
price supports are needed so that
tobacco growers can get a "fair"
price for their product. If public
funds are needed to ensure a
"fair .. price. then growers should
try other crops with m ore market
appeaJ.
Another argum ent put
forward in favor of the program
is that without it. tobacco would
bec ome cheaper and its use
encouraged . If that's the case.
wh y do t o bacco s tat es ·
congressmen want to retain a
program that see mingly stines
the market for the crop?
There is a larger issue
involved. though. Las t year's
e l e c tion res ults have been
interpreted as a mandate to
reduce government intervention
in the marketplace . Subsidies for
tobacco a nd other crops are
glaring exampl es of s uch
f!overnrnent involvemeht.
The time has com e to rethink
this S3.9 billion quagmire of farm
quotas. acreage allotments and
pri c e s uppo rt s with a view
toward eliminating them
UCI reverses trend
Declining e nro llme nt as
family s izes s hrink has bee n
cited as one of the major school
problems at the grade school and
high school level in recent times.
The shortage of s tudents has
res ulted in clos ure of some
schools and wides pre ad teacher
lay·offs.
A projected drop in the
population of college stude nts
was the reason plans for future
e nrollment at UC Irvine were
scaled back a few years ago from
a potential of 27.000 s tudents b~·
1990 to somewhere in the 10.000
range.
Ifs somewhat s urpris ing
especiaJly for university officials
to find that enrollment this
year has jumpe d 8 percent
ins tead of the anticipa t e d 2
percent.
The pe r centag e incre ase.
largest in the nine-campus UC
system. brings UCI 's s tudent
population up from last year's
10.222 to a current 11.057 the
mos t since the campus opened in
1965.
Beyond the fact tha t the
university h as had to lurn away
s ome s tudents appl y ing for
ov ercrowded programs such as
comput e r sc ience a nd
en gineering. it seems to be able
to handle the unexpected influx.
There's been some shortage
of textbooks. a certain amount of
rescheduling of classes and labs
and a hunt for money to pay
additional faculty not eas y.
given gove rnment cutbacks in
aid to education. But apparently
the worst problem right f10W is a
shortage of space in the student
parking l o t s. w h ich they
doubtless can live with.
So far. no one seems to have
any s pecific explanation for the
sudden incre ase in enrollment.
But it may be logical to assume
that UCI's reputation for quality
education is s preading. as is the
awareness among young people
that solid education can pay big
dividends in future life.
All of .this indicates that high
sc hool students with their eyes on
UCI would do well to keep a close
watch on their grades and get
their applications in early
Reagan tightens reins
There has to be more to the
7: 15 a.m . r e assig nme nt of Army
Major Gen. Robe rt L . Schweitzer
than meets the eve.
S c hweitze r .'of course. was
hurriedly movf>d from being the
top military o fficer on the
~ational Security Council staff to
a very v a g u e pos t in th e
Pentagon after saying the Soviets
··are on the move· they are going
to strike.··
The Whil e H o u se s aid
Schweitze r had not publicly
c l eared his s tatem e nts in
advance with superiors.
Yet here is an officer who
has served on this staff s ince
January.
Even aft e r his trans fer .
Sch weitzer was described bv
President Re a g an as .. a fine
s o ldier" whos e s ervices in
a nother pos t will continue to "be
of great benefit to the country ...
He was not dis m issed from
service.
The gen e ral m ade his
remarks at a meeting in
Washington of the Association of
the United States Army. Anyone
•
who knows anything about the
Army knows that this is not a
li ghtweight outfit.
And . finally. the general
d e liv e red the s p e ech in
Was h ington. under th e ver y
noses of the president and his
a ides.
Spokes men quickly said the
views were not thos e of th e
pre s ident. However . t'he
suspi c ion remains that
Schwe itz e r might be the
pres ident's Paul Revere.
While what h e s aid was
controversial. vario us remarks
had a ring of truth.
The president had little other
choice. The general had not
cleared his speech.
The preside nt has been able
to keep a tight rein so far on his
Cabinet and subordinates. quite a,
contrast to the contradictory and
conflicting statements from the
member s o f the Car t er
adm inistr ation. His quick actions
to silence the general should
enable him to maintain that
control for now.
Opinions eitpressed In the space abo11e are those of the Dally Pilot. Other 11lews u·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O .. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714)
642·4321.
L.M. Boyd/Ideal face shapes •
The human face shows up in seven
shapes: oval, round, square, oblon.1.
diamond. pear or heart. How would
you categorize your own face on this
ll1t1 ln drawtn11 of women, artilll
O RA NGE COA ST
Daily Pilat .. ........... .,..,., =-YW' ... ,.. .., "~ c..-.-_,._ .. u ....
1-.C..-~.C.A '
tend to tdeaJlze the oval face. Of
men, the square.
There are thole aatu.rallata too
who use paraley u an ~arm deodorant. ·
..
Judicial screening ·needed
Starting with the gubernatorial
campaign of Ronald Reagan in 1966,
there has been increasing criticism of
·the j\14idat system . And with the 1r~ te!ldendes of the supreme and ap~hat.e courts to make new laws and
change existing ones by their decisions,
much of the dissatisfaction has been
aimed at those courts and the process
whereby judicial candidates are
selected and approved.
During this period a number of
proposals have surfaced to change the
current system whereby the governor's
no minees to the higher courts are
confirmed by a three-member panel
com~ of the chief justice, senior
presiding appellate justice and the
attorney general.
THE P ROPOSAL most frequently
advanced is one patterned after the
f e deral system requiring Senate
confirmation. However , in the past
session Speaker Willie Brown, applying
the pressure of his office, succeeded in
getting Assembly approval of a bill
which would replace the three-member
panel with one somewhat larger. He
would eliminate the only elective officer
on the panel, the attorney general, but
retain the chief justice and presiding
appellate justice and add two
r e preuntatives of the State Bar
Association and two additional citizens,
one each to be named by the Speaker
and the Senate President Pro Tem.
Since any change in the judicial
confirmation process requires a
constitutional amendment approved by
the voters, Phil Wyman, chairman d
the Assembly C onstit uti on~
Amendments Committee. has schedul~
an interim hearing in Sacramento fer
"an in-depth investigation of alternati~
methods or confirmation."
WYMAN IS A bright young attom~
out or Lancaster whose district include;
part of Kern County. He also is the
author of one of the constitutional ... ,
' I (; ~i;
~ IARL WATIRS
a m end men ts to r equire S e n a te
confirmation. His contention is that Ule
power lo screen the governor's judicial
nominations should be with elected
representatives of the people who cat
be expected to be sensitive and
responsive to the public. It wouki
provide a proper forum to air the
public's views and the decisions wouki
be reached by a bipartisan bod!.
something which is not assured under
the current system or that proposed by
Speaker Brown.
A compelling ariument in favor of
Senate coo!irmation is that it is a plan
which has proved s atisfactory over
many years at the feder al level wherea5
other proposals s uch as Speaker
Brown's would merely be experimental,
substituting an untried system for one
which bas evoked dissatisfaction.
But Wyman's plan provides only for
the screening of appellate and supreme
court nominees. Since these are the
courts which have been most active in
overruling the Legislature, changing
the laws and making new ones, a better
system of confirmation for nominees to
those courts is paramount. Still, with
the huge numbers of judges being
appointed to the superior and municipal
courts, the time seems ripe to include
the appointees to those courts in a new
confirmation process. This is especially
true in the light of the arrogance of
Gov. Jerry Brown in overturning the
voter rejections of at least six of his
appointees to the trial courts by
reappointing them after their defeat at
the polls.
THE URGENT NEED for a better
syst em, one which gives the public
some voice in judicial selections, can be
seen by the fact that, since taking office
in 1975, Jerry Brown has appointed Sil>
or 54.5 percent of the state's 1,182
judges. In the 14 months left to his term
in office he will add to this. At least 2.S
new judgeships were created in the past
session and there will be the usual
vacancies by reason of retirements,
resignations and deaths.
Neve~ before in the history of the
state has one person made so many
judicial appointments. And no one
person should have the power to
single-handedly bring to bear so much
influence on the judicial branch of
government. A provision for · Senate
confirmation would prevent it ever
happening again.
First ladies have an impossible job
There are two things I wouldn't want
to be in this life. I wouldn't want to be
the queen of England's husband and I
wouldn't want to be the president of the
United States' wile. Other than that, I'd
be willing to try anything.
Both o( them are reaJJy terrible jobs,
even though I imagine you get all you
want to eat Prince Philip seems to
handle bis position with a casual charm
that keeps the press orr his back. but
our first lady, no matter who she is,
always gets it from reporters. Mamie
Eisenhower , for ex ample, was
considered to be nice but a dud as a
first lady because she never had any
strong opinions or did anything that
stirred up controversy. Rosalynn
Carter , on the other hand. was accused
or having too many opinions because
s he sat in on Cabinet meetings
sometimes.
OUR flRST LADIES are asked to be
the impossible. Broadcast reporters and
newspaper people expect them to be
busy saints. They're expected to have
strong opinions but not express them.
They're expected to be good hostesses
in the White House without spending
any money. They're expected to be
beautifully dressed without buying any
new clothes.
Nancy Reagan is currenUy getting
the same kind of criticism that
Jacqueline Kennedy got when she was
in the White House. You can tell from
the way Mrs. Reagan keeps herself that
she's used to having things right. She.
has good and expensive taste in clothes.
furnishings, food and decorations. It's
not a serious defect in her character.
It is my opinion that reporters write
stories picking on first ladies because
they think people like bating our first
ANDY RDONIY
lady. They think the public will object
to the president's wife buying the best
dinner settings avallable for the White
House if they cost $600 each. The
reporters are probably wrong. It's a
strange thing about Americans but even
the ones living on food stamps don't
resent rich people and they especially
don't resent the president and his wife
living well.
l'M SOFT ON first ladies. l don 't
know what's wrong with me but I've
liked just about all of them that I can
remember. I even like Ronald Reagan
better now than I did before 1 knew he
and Nancy like each other as much as
they seem to. It's nice.
If I'm ever elected president. the
nation is ~oing to be in for a shock with
its new first lady. If rePorters think
they have something to write about with
Nancy Reagan. wail until my Marge
moves in. She just isn't lhe type who'd
m ake a lot of adjustments in her
Lifestyle and the press is going to love it.
If I ever made a speech in front of the
fireplace the way Franklin Roosevelt
and Jimmy Carter did, my wife is apt to
walk in right in the middle of it and tell
me to go out and get more wood. If I
made some important policy statement
s he disagreed with, she certainly
wouldn't hesitate to tell anyone who
asked that I was out of my mind.
I KNOW darn well she wouldn't spend
half her day in the White House Rose
Garden greeting Girl Scout troops
because she plays tennis three days a
week, has French Club on Tuesdays,
bridge on Wednesdays and she comes to
New York to go to the Philharmonic
every Friday. She does our bookkeeping
nights. There's just no way she's going
to hang around the White House to
shake hands to get me in good with
foreign dignitaries if she 's got
something she wants to do. And if she's
ever first lady and does what she did
last week, the press will have a field
day. She pald $350 for four tiger maple
chairs that aren't even new.
As I anticipate the kind of first lady
my wife would make. I know how
President Reagan must feel when they
get after Nancy.
Jinuny Carter re:minds Us why he failed
Jimmy Carter reminds you or
someone you used to date, but can't
rem ember why you stopped seeing her.
Then, time goes by and you uk ber out
again. N. soon u the door opens, you
remember why.
Jimmy slipped away lo Plains,
Georgia, some months 110 and quickly
laded from mOlt people'• comdOUID..,.
However, a few days a10, be retw'1'UMI
to Wublnaton for a urlet of
appelJ'DCtle and aomt 1tattmtnt1 that mach Uberall and Oemoerau pit tbelr
tftth. He IUCCeeded lJl temlacffq ua
Wb)' we were IO llad to lte Mm ID l .. t
J•uary. There wu, or couue, bl• Jolnl 1t~tement with Gerald Ford oa t.be
return trip from Sadat's funeral about
getting cozy with the Pales tine
Liberation Organization (PLO>. We can
chalk Ford's views lo stupidity. Any
man who thinks Poland Is a free
country probably thinks the PLO {a a
pottery worker's union.
But, wtth Carter, we can't enter the
1lupldlty plea. '
T'HEN, THERE was the lecture be
•ave the eon,reaa about how it muat do
whatever the president want.a lt to do.
Tbit either betray• an enormous tact OI
understandlna about bow our
democratic republic or the Coacret1
works -probably both. U WI II what
the Found.ins Fathers had Intended, we
wouldn't nffd a lefialallve braDC!b.
Mr. Carter'• me•lln1• with Democratic bran were cbllly a.ad
awkward to l't.attat that tbe Speaker
ot Lbe HouM,/np O'N.W. D-lhll .. a.-made tlle ...,.,,..... iDd ... 11
mo•• of •••"8dt•1 lie ,.._ Uae DemocT1itlc spciblman IMn ... bJ
Implication. aat Lb• former PNll~
J immy Carter is a strange man. His
perception of the world and of his
country is warped in a way that few of
us erasp. The man is entitled, as we all
are, to march lo a different drummer.
but he cannot expect us to follow any
more . He and bis drumlJler are
marching to a pl,ce we don't want to
go .
I
Wm we live to He lite d•v•lta
Califor'llla'1 ...., "m1M1111" Wiii have
to demaad ballot ia1tnacUoa1 ta
Bn1Ullt?
F ---.:.;,_ __ _
Orange Coast DAILY PtlqT/Monday, October 26, 1981 .47
~~~\ ,,,,
~ H a ir s p r a y those stains
Growing O ceanside
cracks co de for future
OCEANSIDE (AP> -Someday,
maybe soon. the people or Oceanside
m11y telephone their fellow citizens in
a different area code.
Commission to ann ex Ca mp
Pendleton, u move he says would add
million..., an tax benefits to the city.
DEAR PAT DUNN: I waated to leU tile
reader who 11ked bow to remove ballpellll
Ink 1talna that all 1be bat &o do 11 1pny tM
stain with hair a(>ray and nab tile area -.ltla a
clean cloth. Several appllcatloas may be
necessary.
B. "Helolae" A., NftPOl't Beach
• Thankl for writing, "Helola.e." Several
other readers asree with your solution.
Another reader advises keeplnc blotting
material or some kind under the stain u it is
sprayed with aerosol hair spray and movinc
the blotting material if more than one
application is needed. Another reader swears
by "Spray and Wash " pre-laundry spray io
remove ballpoint Ink st.ains from her
husband's shirt poc:kets.
Don't eat moMy nuts
DEAR PAT DUNN: I stored ao"e
walnuts ln my cupboard over the aummer ta
a plastic bag. Now I've found Uaey're m~y.
Are they slllf safe to eat?
R.C., Huntington Beach
No. Never eat moldy walnuts. Some
kinds of mold that grow on nuts produce
toxins (mycotoxins) which have been found
to be potent cancer c ausing agents in
laboratory tests . It's best to discard~ any
nutmeats that show signs of mold.
Retireme11l saving
DEAR PAT DUNN: I would appreciate a
rundown or the m ajor changes in Individual
Retirement Account regulations as a result of
the new tax laws. I've been thinking alM>ut
investing In a n IRA because I am not covered
by an or1tanized retire ment or pront-sbarlng
plan at work, and I'd like to get In on this
Sp ecialist voices
advice on talk r
C.H I CA GO I AP l Rosalie Loed ing, an
associate professor or speech and a specialist in
conserving voices, has got some down-to-earth
advice for people who talk too much: Shut up.
She also h as advice for people with dry
throats : Bite your tongue.
"ll activates til e li ttle salivary glands
underneath." she said. which helps lubricate the
mucous membranes in the throat.
Ms . Loeding, 53, a teacher at Illinois
Benedictine College. has solved the voice problems
for more than 100 people referred to her in 10
years.
One of her most interesting cases. she said
was ~at of a construction executi ve who ' had
chrome hoarseness.
"He told me he was on the phone most d the
lime. cradling it on his shoulder ... tipping bis
head to one side so much put a great strain on his
larynx. He lost the gravel in his voice by installing
a speaker phone on his desk."
DR . GEORGE l. HAINES. leading authority in
real estate. taxation & investments dj'scusses: • Four basic rules to greater wealth.
• Pres1den1 Reagan's recent tax reforms & high
return investment opportunities.
DOH'T D84Y YOUlSILf T .. S O..-OITUMtTT
T•. Oct. 27, 7:30 ,.-. 11Mw. Oct. zt, 7-.JO ,..-. .....,... ..,...~
JIJllriwWSt. 1700S.........,_
C..Mele .......
Sf'OHSOAtO l'I' lllTCOUIT FIHAMaAl., IHC.17141 946-7602 •
Transcendental Meditation®
Program
Ushering In The
Age Of Enlightenment
In This Generation
(7 14) 6.H-2311
THE WORLD'S MOST COMPACT.
BICiCOPIER
type of tu-deferred savings plan.
P.E., Costa Mesa
As of Jan. 1, 1982, almost everyone wlll
be allowed lo Invest In an IRA <roughly
doubling the number of eligible people). IRA
Investments will J\.lmp to S2.000 or 100 percent
of salary. wtµ'chever ls le.ss ($2,250 Jointly
with non-working spouse>. A d ivor ced
oon•WOrking spouse may count alimony as
earned income for investing In an IRA.
Active partic ip a nt s in em.
ployer·sponsored plans may deduct con·
tribuUons up to the same limits that apply
~o non-participants. Voluntary contribut·
ions are subject to IRA limits and to IRA-type
rules. except distribution& starting at age
70"'2 are not mandated. All or any portion of
any distribution or accumulated deductible
employee contributions may be rolled ovQr to
an IRA.
Amounts invested in collectibles
.(antiques, art. etc. l under IRAs or
self-directed accounts in qualified plans are
• treated as distributions for income tax
'Purposes. Redemption proceeds of U.S.
retirement · bonds distributed under a
qualified. bond purchase plan may be
redeemed after age 591 2, death or disability.
and be rolled over. tax-free to an IRA.
• "Got a problem" Then wnte 10 Pat .._ 1 Dunn l'at wall cul red tape. getting
• the aruwers and actam1 you need tu
solt>P cnequ1t1e.~ m gouernmenl and 'I • busmess Mail 11our 'questwns to Pat
Dmm At Your Seruree. Orange Coasl
Daily Pilot P 0 lfo.r /561J. Cosla Mt' SO CA 92626 As
many letters as possrhle u•rll he ari.~u>t'red . but phoned
mqu1nes or letters not mcl1u1mq the reader's Juli
name. addres.~ and hus111e1>!> houn phone number
'cannot be ccmsadered This column appears Monday,
~ ednesday and f'nday
UL{RA, ULTRA lOO's 5 mQ 1a1 • C.5 mg n1co1111e. LIGHIS 11 mq '1ar"
TRIAL SET A
De n \'t!r .i udge ha ~
ordered trittl for
<H:lor Peter Fonda.
above. for d1sturbin~
the peace.' and
destruction o f
proper!~ lor
alleged!~ tr~ 111g to
rf l' !) l I' CJ ~· .I "> I g n
:-.uggl'-.lln~ h1..., ..,,st<.·r
at·tres s .Jane
Fonda. below. be fed
to lht> \\hall'..,
Pro.nuC'lear p1<.·kl·h
tarried tht• s ign
0 9 mg mto1111e av per c11are11e 0\ FTC method. LIGHTS 100 s 13 my tar
10 mg nrco11r.e a1 pe1 c1,are11e. rtC Repo11 MM 81.
lt's possible even before tts lOOlh
birthday as a municipality in 1988.
The population o( the sleepy
seaside town by 1940 stood at 4.600
with wide. sundy beaches a nd
bungalows that gave tourists an
undisturbed view of the Pacific
Ocean. Then, two years later ,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt
gave some neighboring land to the
Marine Corps.
The deed to 125,000-acre Rancho
Santa Margarita complete with three
mountain ranges and 17 miles of
coastland was signed over to the
Marine Corps with World War II
approaching. and the building of
Camp Pendleton the world's
biggest amphibious military base
began .
Oceanside became the weekend
horn e of tens o f t housands o f
Marines /\s many of their families
stayed, by 1950 there were 13,000
perm anent res idents in town.
By 1960. there were 25.000. By 1978,
37 percent of the heads of household
in Oceanside were commuting to
work at Camp PendJ eto n.
The last federal census put the
permanent population of Oceanside
at 76.698, making it the third biggest
l'tty in San Diego County. which is
on<.· of th<.· nation's fastest growing
counli<.>s
Th<.• l ' S Post al Service has
as signed Oceanside a second zip
<.·ode'. 9'~5fi for the eastern parts of
to\\ n. to go with 92054 City Manager
Robt.'rl Bourc01<'r said that the city is
r<.'ad~ lo :.ubm11 an application to the
Lo<.·al /\g cnc:y Formation
Also u second area telephone code
was assigned by Pacific Telephone
Co.
The prestmt code Is 714. To reach
the part of Oceanside which Gaspar
de Portola and fellow Spaniards
discovered In 1769, it'll be necessary
to call long distance to area code 619.
·'The whole thing would be settled
by the commission , hopefully in
December, .. Bourcler said in an
interview "Then we'll negotiate with
the county over our share or the
property tax "
No actual control over Camp
Pendleton would revert to the city. It
would remain federal land but within
the city limits. '
Attorney Jim Betz. president of the
Chamber of Com mer ce, said "We
certainly hope 1t goes through and
believe it will ..
The Marine Corp!>. in effect the
federal government. recently took a
neutral stand under Maj . Gen.
Kenneth flobinson. the commanding
general. In the past. the Marines
opposed annexation
"Wc 'vt• overcome the biggest
hurdle, .. Retz said. What would be
the Marine Corps' gain·? "Frankly. 1
don't know. Maybe they recognize
the benefits lo Oceanside."
I
Jail help de nied
SAN JOSE (API The Board of
Supervisors has rejected a plea by
Undersheriff Larry Kelly for money
lo hire temporary starr to work at the
"critically" crowded Santa Clara
Jail
ave
ona carton
of Winston
Lights
or Winston
mtra
-------------., STORE 75 I ~ COUPON ~ I
~ I --SAVE75~1
ON A CARTON OF
WINSTON LIGHTS OR WINSTON ULTRA
OONG OR 1 OO'S) ----
I
I
I
I I I I I
~·
.. . .
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Octobef 26.1981
Ford and Lincoln-Announce
·A better way to beat the high cost of financing.
Ford and your participating Ford and
Lincoln-Mercury dealers are making you a
special otter. It's "Up-Front Money" on
some of their best-selling, highest mileage
new 1981 and 1982 cars. Money to help
finance the new car you need. You can
lower your monthly payments by applying
the savings to your down payment and
borrowing less to begin with. Or get a check
directly from Ford or Lincoln-Mercury.
It's your choice.
Ford puts cash in your pocket. Not a
reduced annual percentage rate , but cash
up-front.
Make your best deal.
Then top it off with hundreds of dollars in
savings. Save $700 on America's newest
LYN~, ESCORT
UP FRONT
$
ON LUXURY SERIES
SEDANS AND WAGONS.
two-seaters: front-wheel drive Ford EXP .
and Mercury LN7. Save up to $500 on front-
wheel drive Mercury Lynx and Ford Escort.
And save $600 on America's most popular
sports car: Ford Mustang. Or $600 on a
new Mercury Capri. Dealer contribution
may affect customer price. Limit five per
customer. You can also get $500 back
from Ford on tough Courier Pickups.
Buy or order now.
To get your share of Ford's Up-Front
Money, see your Ford or Lincoln-Mercury
dealer and buy any of these cars from
stock or order between now and
November 22, 1981. Take delivery on
Courier Pickups by December 2, 1981.
($40Q BACK Ori ALL BASE, L, GL MODELS)
CAPRfJ. .
MUSTANG
UP FRONT
$.
.
ON .A'-L ~ODE LS
.EX.P . ·
·,LN7 . ·
UP FRONT ·.$ .
'·' ...
..
ON ALL MODELS · · . '
' -·FORD .
COURIER·
UP FRONT ••
. ·.•. ... . . "'
. ·' -·.:
'
I •
More value news.
Remember, if you're looking for a mid-size
family car, both Ford Fairmont Futura
4-door and Mercury Zephyr Z-7 2-door are
actually sticker priced lower than last
year."' On top of that, Ford and
Lincoln-Mercury are offering special value
packages on many other popular models.
So be sure to check out all the value news
from Ford for 1982.
*Comparison of August 1. 1981, sticker prices of a 1981 to 1982
base model Fairmont Futura 4·door and Mercury Zephyr Z-7
2·door
FORD AND LINCOLN-MERCURY
EPA EST MPG
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EST HWY EPA EST MPG
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EST HWY EPA EST MPG
You get front-wheel drive
in America's newest
two-seaters.
EST HWY
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I I •
'·
~
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i
Daily Pilat
MO NDAY, OCT . 26, 1981
CAVALCADE
COMICS
TELEVISION
82-3
84
86
Man benefits from
overpowering wife . See
Ann Landers, Page B2 .
Youngsters ich1z across the floor in red light-green light game. Below. Sunde White . 6. tries on skates
Irvine recreation rolls along
Irvine s first roller skating rink has
01H·1H•d and. soon. the city that's been
infamoul. for its lack of recreational
facl11tl(.'!'> "111 have its first bowling
alley
The rink. called Skating Plus. 3415
Michelson Urn. e. opened this month and
has already done its bit to help with a
community problem On Oct 19. a
.. Roll·Out"' was held there The roller
skating fund·raiser benef1ttcd the Irvine
Education Foundation. a non-profit
organization which raises money for the
fina nciall y strapped Irvine Unified
School District
The event raised about $1.100 for the
foundation. said foundation president
Stanley Newhoff.
Next to the skating rink is a 40-lane
bowling alley that is to open before the
Dally PUot Photos
by Charles Starr
month is out. said a spokcl>woman for
the In ine Recreation Park
\\'hen completed. the park Just east of
the Fluor Corp 1s to also include a
racquetball health club building. a
restaurant. batting cages. a miniature
golf course and possibly other
attractions. s aid Ken Wines. spokesm an
for the park.
lie said the entire project should be
finished by next spring.
The project is being developed by
Architecturnl Design Management. 2710
E. Regal Pa rk Drive. Anaheim. The
company. headed by Dr Barton Heuler
of Anaheim. bought the 16 acres of land
for the park from the Irvine Company
in mid·l978 for S2 million.
The architect for the project is J ess
Perez. o f the P e r ez & Hurtado
architecture firm.
D
D
.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. October 26, 1981
•ANN LANDERS
•ERMA BOMBECK
•HOROSCOPE
DON'T M-A*S*H THE CAKE .Jamie Farr
plugs ears as Harry Morgan uncorks bottle of
c hampagne during party on the set of the
:\I A ·s H television series Other cast
members at the party. which marked the
..........
beginning of the popular show's 10th year on
the air. are <from left 1 Mike Farrell . Alan
.\Ida. Loretta Swit. David Ogden Stiers and
William Christopher.
COULClO!m CC»Mlll -C:..&..._ -&-
i.ZM1 O.M C ... Ma.a .. , • .,Cl. ft.IS
Krv .. rr-Of.a .... . Mt111 .. LMls tet.• ..... .
O RANGE COUNTY FI NANCIAL OJGE$T
and
50 "-ua.11 U41.1t ~Sliver a.,. tttn.• tNH.• RAYMOND A. LA VINE
-~-,,....,m•1 ....... m' Hl' \1 •u 111 t·\rt·rit·nl t'
''DIALOGUE T HREE"
PROFESSIONAL Wednesday, O c tober 28, at 11: 3{'.1 a.r11.
SECRETARIAL
SERVICES
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'lll'1.1..'" .ind pr11ti1.1hdt1\.
ll1-1.11"1•111 L1.-.1'il'r·\11111rt.1 (. 1\\v\. E-qu1r1.·
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"-11h1, 1 111 !)1.il••!.!111-. .. J .1k111!.! ,\,h.1111.1!.!1· 111 rl w ~1·''
T.1\ L •\\~ 111 \1111r 1'11 ... 1111.· ........
835· 7m Ext. 7225 I 111i. lwo111 "21' H,, .... ,." ·'"' 111-rn1uu1,I.
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<.di 1;1-H ;;7.11;l'.
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~ Of the various charact~::tics which give I ~
~ uniqueness to Brooks Brothers, none is more ~
~ integral than the fact that we dp much ~
~ of our own manufacturing. ~
~ The distinction of ~
~ "OWN MAKEn ~
' For our "Own Make" . ~
; neckwear, we finish every ~
~ ~~:~:~:1;.:i:::;:~:~is ~
'. uct a resilience that ~ ~ -~ is not possible in ~
1 a machine-made ~ ~ necktie. We ~ ~ select only fine quality ~ ~ silks, largely from E ngland, ~
~ in colorations and patterns ~
'-that are exclusively for ~
~ Brooks Brothers. ~
~ T he fabrics are then worked with skill and ~
' dedication by our own fine craftsmen; the ~
~ control of quality, all along the way, is never ~
i in doubt, for these are Brooks Brothers .. ~ ~ ~ =~~:· ;~~t~e~~:~~:~:~h:;:~:~~::;w:l 7 ~ i qua 11y. 1 repps, . . ou ar s, . ~
ISTAIUSHID 1111 !
~cfFJ~ ~ ~19i)Jj_@D t Jun\ts~htg9 for aitn . Womtn ~~B oys ~
530 WEST 7TH STREET, LOS ANGBLES. CALIP. 9001.. ~
FASH ION ISLANl>, NEWPORf BEAOi 92660 .I~
-Ar~,.~~~~~~~~~
'
'Blessing' powerful
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I would like to
say something to the man who wrote to
complain about his wife. He said she was
.. overpowering ... That fellow said he was
25 . I am 72.
I'm sure he would describe the woman
I married as .. overp6wering ... too. '.\!~·
s is ter called her .. bossy ... As far as I'm
concerned. the da\' I met her was m,·
luck ies t. · ·
If it weren't for my .. overpowering"
wife we wouldn't have a dime todav I was
a big earner and a bigger spender. My
.. overpowering.. wife s aw to it that 20
percent. of e\'ery paycheck went into the
bank no matter what.
Today. we have a lovely paid·for home.
some high.yield bonds. a nice stock
portfolio and no unpaid bills.
!'vty ··overpowering ·· wife
"overpowered I· our three kids through
college. The~· are a ll doing well because or
her common sense and firm hand I was
more or less a bystander.
So. please let t he world know that an
"overpowering" woman can be a big help.
Mine was. LUCKY I~ LOUISVILLE
D EAR LUCKY: Some m en need a
s trong woman . Othe rs have to be boss. Tiie
best arrangem ent is a joint partner8"tp
with both doing some compromising. For
you -your wom an was a blessing. I a"'
happy you found each other.
DEAR A'.\:'.\: LA~DER.5 In a recent
column a reader complained about reruns
accused you of being too lazy to write a
new column l'\'ery day. Another person
wrote to say the reruns were g reatity
appreciated becau~e they were the best
columns of all I agree with the latter
I am enclosing one of my fanlrites
with a request that ~·ou run 1t again It
made me a better person. YOL' R
FRI E'.'lD l:"-1 DETROIT
DE AR FRJ E~D: Thanks for asking.
lt'!i one of my favorites, too:
Your lire will be richer -Ir
On this day : You will make an effort to
'.\tend a quarrel.
Searc h for a for gotten friend.
Dismiss a suspicion and replace It with
trust.
Write a lette r to someone who misses
you.
Encour age someont' who has lost faith.
Keep a pro m ise.
Forget an old grudge.
Examine your dem and~ on others and
vow to reduce them.
Fight for a principle.
Express your gratitude.
Overcome an old fear .
Take two minutes to appreciatt> the
beauty of nature.
Tell someone you lovt> him .
Tell him a gain.
And a gain.
And again.
Don't flunk your chem1stn1 test LtJ1:e 1-;
more than one set of glands callmq to another
If you have trouble makmq a d1.<>tmct1on 11011
need Ann·s booklet. l.ove or Su and llou: '''
Tell the Differen ce Send a lrrnq .
st:'lf-addressed .... tamped envelope with qnur
request and 511 cent.~ to Ann Landers P n Hnr
1199.5. Chicago. Ill M61 I
Who ~eeds progress?
E,·erv tim e a manufacturer' of
appliances' come!'! out with a new feature
on their product. the~· call it a .. scientific
breakthrough · ·
We ha\'e seen the coming of the
see·through O\'en. the talking refrigerator.
the thinking-woman ·~ computerized s to,·e
top and the sweeper that does e\'erythlng
but dance backwards.
pne more sc1entif 1c breakthrough and
I'm going to ha\'e a scient1f1C' breakdown
WHO WA~T T O SEE their m ·e n
under glass" Wh~· would a manufacturer
consider rorrosion a turn -on ? It was
always enough for me to open the door.
g rope through the darkness a nd be cheered
when I s till had room for a s mall casserole .
The ··breakthroughs" wi ll never gi\'e
you a break. The newest accessory for
refrigerators is a s ign al light that lets you
k n o w w h e n i t n e e d s ,. a c u u m i n g
underneath.
I don't know how it works but I can
only suspect ins tead of the dust growing up
through the refrigerator until it r eaches
the top under the phone book. it reaches a
level and shorts a light which goes on.
signaling it is read~· to be hauled away.
LET US BE PRACTICAL. If God had
meant for us to clean under refrigerators.
He would ha\'e gi\·en us yardstick hands.
I do not know an~·one personally who
flMA 80M8fCI
ATWIT'S END
does it. nor d o I want to es tablish a
relationship. They're probabl~· people who
wash their hands after the~ play with the
dog and c-hange the baking ..,oda t•,·er~· ~·ear
or so.
Frankly. I clean under my refrigerator
every time we move and l'\·e ne,·er found
anything under there \\Orth getting ..i
hernia O\'er.
THE LAST Tl:ttE we mon•d from the
farm to the West. I uncove red a pencil
stub. an iced teas poon. lwo mCJrbl es. a cold
tablet. a cluster of black g lobs thCJt had
been grapes in a nother life. two nails. a
coat h a n ger. a s kele ton •possibly
mammal 1 a nd a note reminding me of an
appoint ment with m~· obstretician. The kid
was 14 years old .
I suspec t there are talking ston~s in
our future. mixers that whimper. "Clean
me ... and wa s hers that will rlCJ!'th
OVERLOAD and give U!, a lecture
I don't know about mu. but if I "anted
guilt. I'd call m~· mother
Virgo: Focus on trip
T uesday, October 27
ARIES <Ma r . 21 -April 19): Subj ect of
money dom inates discussion involves
partner. m ate. professional associate and a
special member of opposite sex. Focus on
additional working room and travel pla ns .
TAt.:Rt.:S •April 20-~ta~· 2().: Defer to
judgment of others: your most producti\'e
role now is that of keen. car eful obser\'er .
By waiting. you'll be in position to listen.
absorb. learn and eventually profit.
G E :WINI 1 !'day 21 ·.June 20 1: P lans
s ubject to revis ion know it. h ave
alternatives available . E m phasis on
structure. security. e mployment. basic
issues. resolutions concerning diet.
nutr ition and health.
C ANCER I J une 2l·J UI\' 22 1: Good
moon aspect coin cides with release of
tensions, r estoration of family harmony .
i mp r o ved f i n a n cial outl ook a n d
relatfonship which is serious. •
LEO I July 23·Aug. 221 : What appeared
to be a lost cause is due to re bound in your
favor. Accent on land. territor y. security
and possible renegotiation of contract.
1'erms will be clar ified see plates.
people ln realistic li ght. ·
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 221 : Olde r
relative conrides longst a nding plan or
a mbition. Focus on visits. trips. iRH
which c an be t ran sformed into \'fat.le
concepts. Pleasant &urprise comes from
unorthodox source . •
UBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 •: ,,n..,...
burden Is re moved. Views are t indlCiM:
you receive oredlt Iona overdue. v .. 'ft
llOIOSCGn
BY SIDNEY OMARA
able to locate need ed material and to
return favor granted by Aries indi,·iduul
SCORPIO cOc t . 23 -~o\'. 211 :
Circum s tan ces fa\'Or \'Our efforts .
Sign ificant gains indicated through
personal appearance. indi\'idual appeal.
J udg ment. timing are on target
SAGJnARIUS '~o'" 22-Dec. 21 1:
Delaying tactics will ultimately favor ~·ou .
Know it . gather information gain
con fide nce of one who controls fu nds. You
p a rticipate in private conference.
CAPRICO R N 1Dec . 22-Jan . 19•:
Powers of persuasio n are he ightened
n e eds are s uccessfully communi<."ated.
Gemini. Sagittari us per son s pJ a~·
important roles. Popularity increases allies come from s urprise sources.
AQtJAllHJ I Jan. 20-Feb. 181 :·You get
career-bo08t as poll. r eview. (act11 and ·
flaum retnrorce poaltlon. You'll be Mked
to dismantle project ror purpose or.
rebulldlnc on a more suit.able structure.
PllCD , Feb. 19-llar. *,.= SpcltljS on c.U.. ......... wa,ya ~ OV9l'C.'OID
4llt1t.... fan1•q• barnen. Allltrae ~ ................. ..
ptillGll'*' ................ of ....... .na wwth -W\D be n.tared.
'
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I I
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•
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.. BY f.till INTERLANOI of Laguna Beach
"Mr. Grimshaw says we no longer need a frumpy
father ri gure. We've been swallowed b.> a
conglomerate."
Pf ISONAllTY Q.&A.
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARONER
Who'll play
Anw-ar Sadat?
Q: Who will pla~ the part or the late
m artyred :Wan or P eace. Anwa r Sadat. in a
biographical movie of his colorful life? Ha!.
such a choice been made ,·et?
-~ike W .. Queens. '.'i. \'.
A : Not d efinitely. as this is being
written. But it could be ror should be 1 one
of the greatest and most ,·ersatile actors of
our t ime Oscar·wmner .Jose Ferrer
F errer ii. in Tel -.\\'I\' at this mom ent
completing his port ra~·al of Sadat in a
m a d e·for ·T V m ov ie titled "A Wom an
Called Golda ... l'O·starring him self and
Ingrid Bergman pla~·ing the courageous
Is raeli prime minister. Golda :.'vte1 r .
Thanks to the ingenious m akeup m e n
a nd wom e n .. Jose <'Orne~ off as quite a
look·alike fo r Sad <tl and dc<.'pl ~· ,·ersed in
the latter's char a('ter :\Ji ss Bergman b
bus~· acquiring a slight Yiddish ac('ent
rem iniscent of Golda in her later years.
A FTE RTHOl'GHT : We rec<t ll sitting
in a s m a ll offBro<1d" a~· pub sipping
cocktails w_i th .Joe. waiting to hear the
radio announcem ent of his being ,·oted thE.'
Best Actor of 1950 for Cyrano de Bergerac.
He couldn't h ave been prouder. a n
e m ot ion he reflected several m onths later
w h e n we ask ed w h ere he k e pt the
statuette. "I gave it to the University of
Puerto Rico ... he answered. "as a svmhol
of w ha t on e Puerto Ri can boy ·could
a ccomplish . othe rs could. To demonstrate
th a t the U.S. was the land of opportunity."
NOTE : .Jose Ferrer "as born ot
Spanish parents in Santurrc. Puerto Ri co.
on .Jan . 8. 1912. llis father \\i:IS a law,·er
na m ed .Jose Vi('ent o Fcrrt.>r Otero · d e
Clintron .. Jose's parents m<)\·ed to the L'.S.
mainland whe n thE.'~ sensed their young
son was a budding prodig~'. which he
proved when he entered Princeton at the
age of 15.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
MACHINES
CAN SOLVE t10S T
OF' OU" "'oaLEMS,
E'')(CEPT
THE PROBLEM
OF
BECOMING
TOO
DEPENDEN T
ON OUR.
MAC.HIN ES.
~J,ty ..
«>••• ·-···-All """'•-Ott• a..._ Tt-N Y .._.I~ '"°
CHAil iS
McCAii
Vie w drops
on high-ris e
Unaccustomed as I a m to seeing the
bright side of things. I view what is called
"progress" with a decidedly sour eye. l do
not. as an instance. view City Hall .. s r ecent
decision to compel high.rise developers to
build ne w houses and apartments as a
condition to build mor e high·rise office
buildings as an~· great thing.
The city brought the hig h-rise e urse on
itself Since the time of George Chr istopher
and the so.called .. Pacific Rim Strateg"··
t he whole aim and effort of the ma\'ors and
s upen·isors of this town has ·been to
im pleme nt its lo\'e affair with tourism. The
~educ'tion of rich m e n who like opulent
buildings 1 a nd are oft en from '.'lew York
a nd named David Rockefeller 1 ha:-. been a
conscious thine. It has just a bout r uined the look of the
city a nd the lives of 1ls inhabitants. a nd the
m <?''e to compel these ad,·ocat es o f
·progr ess·· l o b u i ld h o u s in g to
aeeommodatc their bu~iness headquarters
i!-> m erely a sud admission o f th e
ina dequacy of the high -rise strateg~·
C'O ~~E ~Tl~G O~ THI S
phe nomenon. the British publ icMion The
Econ om ist said r ecent J\·: ··The c 1t ,.
s t r u g g I e s w i th a n u n .com for t a b I e
c o n s c i e n c e It r e I i s h es i t s p h ,. s i c a I
em be ll ishment as a ('orporation pai·adise.
but it is near lo losing th<.• color of 1t~ eth nic
n e 1 g h b o r hood~ . t h e ' 1 t u l 1 t ,. of i t ..,
blUl'·('Ollar middle class and the sens1tin\\
required by a population that includes the
poor ...
Rent:-. and the pncl·~ for food . in light
of the hous ing shortage here. are just
about the highest in the c:ountry Offi ce
:-.pace has doubled in the pa~t IO years. and
the people who inhabit thesl:' offices and
are o,·erwh e lmingly r<.'cruited fro m
outside. are asked. not to sc.1~· urged. to liH·
in the suburbs of the Ba~· Area The cit,. is
being given away to tourists. to stranger :-.
who live her E.'. a11d. to no small degree. to a
la r ge popul a tion of ou t of the ·eloset
hom osexuals
E IGHT TllOl SA ~U :\t.:W Jobs art•
being added each ~ear to the :.m.ooo ne\\
jobs already cn•ated by the hig h-r ise
s war m . <1nd the cit" itself declines in qua l it~· and populatio'n Something ha:-. to
be wrong It is the blind and systematit
ruination of what this cit ,· once had
:\ bank or an ins urance conglomE.'rate
could just as well ha\'e its headquarters in
Da llas or Los Angeles The~ come here not
bee ause the' love tht.• cit,. hut because t he\'
lo\·e the image of the cit~ the c ity Ton;·
Bennett celebrates with suc h \'er\'e and
such mendacit \' :\1 r Rocker ell er a nd hi~
cohor ts think the~ and their acti,·itie~ get
to be more honest. .;omehow. b~ being
-;1tuated in tht.• e ll,. b' the Golden Gate
They are using the amenities of the city.
and a\'01ding an~· responsibilit~· wh atever
for it.
The propos a l to provide about 2.300
new hous ing units for t he cit~· ma~· work .
but it will he Band Aid therap~·. The ci t~"s
Chamber of Com m erce has a lread \'
estim ated that about 10.000 iobs ha,·e been
lost to the city in the' past three ~·ears alone
BUT THE WHOLE premise on which
the c ity has oper ated O\'er the past 30 years
is plain wrong . You don't just mo,·e people
into a city because of "image." You don't
move people into a city a nd force out the
people who li,·ed here before and ga\'e the
cit\' its charact er You don·t turn a cit"
O\'er to strangers who li \'e in Hillsboroug h
and Concord and Lafa\'ette and Beh·edere
This 1s the tragic fallacy of ·progress ..
And the fallac~· cont inues. Large a reas
of the light·industrial and warehouse a reas
abutti n g t h e hig h -r is e s h ave b een
designated as "under-utilized" b~· the city.
and a\'ail able for the further use of people
who live in Hills borough. etc .. etc. When I
ca m e h ere in 1955 the m ost evident
structure in the city was the Russ building
'.'low ~·ou can h ard l~· see it. This isn't
pr ogress.
No Rx good m~dicine
D E AR DOCTOR: )ty doctor is a
sweetheart except that a t times he gets
quite s trict a b o ut n ot prescribing
medicines. I suppose I should be thankful he got
me out of the habit of chewing so many
antacid tablets, and I've c ut down on m,·
cons umption of as pirin tablets for tension
headaches.
But wh at re ally upset me last week
was his r efusal to prescribe penicillin for
m y sore throat. He said It was an ordlnan
lnlectton that did not require antibiotics.
He allowed four aspirins for two days. The
sor e throat went away.
My question : What would have been
wrong In prescribing the pe nlcillln? -
MRS.D.
DEAR MRS . D.: When a ntibiotics
ca m e into use the y were soon be ing
prescribed for everything. Doctors had a
difficult time persuad ing their patients not
to demand a ntibiotics for s uch s imple
infections as the common cold.
At last. m ost patients are aware that
penicillln by mout h or injection will not
he lp a cold. Nor does every sore t hroat
req u ire antibiotics which are so he lpful
• ...
T JOUI HEALTH
OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN
against strep throats.
Be thankful Mrs. D .. that vour doctor
is aware that the use of antibiot ics is often
a bused.
In a recent inte rnational meeting of
scie ntists in Boston. they stre ss ed the
dangerous incr ease in the number of
a ntibiotic resistant bacteria. One of the
r e a s ons is prescribing ant ibiotics for
a ilments for which they are ineffective.
What docto r s want to do is not
o\·e rprescribe antibiotics. Otherwise. some
day bacteria will thumb their respective
noses at us whe n we are severely ill and
r equire help to overco me infection:
01. Stefncrohn welcomH qHatfona /rom
rl'Jdn•. He CGlftOl.CD1110CT .all id....Ur but .nu
'8cludc UtON of ~al fftttrai bl thU cotamn. Snd
~r qwationa to Mm m care ot U. IJfJUw.Ptlot .. P.O.
Bu LM), Cotta ltl•«i, Call/. Dl:lfOND .
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 26, 1981
CENTENNIAL CONCE RT no~ton Symµhon~·
Orchestra musical d1r<.'etor SeiJi Oza\\ a
1 center 1 1.•x t end.., hi.., arm~ 111
ac knowlt•d g m1.•nl of <1ppl<w :-.<.· foll1"' 1n ~
"A Beautiful Smile Could Change
Your Life!"
17 years of Quality Care at very reeaonable fees.
David A. Sullivan DMD
17132 a.ch 81v(t
Huntington Beach ca11 842-2552
14,..,. ........ 1oc111Ma.
~j
Daily Pilat
Cl assifieds
Step~ to Ba\ I iiJ J.:r<'~tl
Patio. frµk. ~J1 s.ias
"1ntt•r. flJ'E:"' :12H',
Sapph11 l• 1'41 IHM_ll_I --
'' Fantastic results! We
had over 100 calls. ''
~~~1 @ 642-567 8
charge it ~!;I by phone
From South Laguna & No rth County
call 540-1220 toll-free.
The Alliance to Save Energy has prepared a
brochure mar contains 1 2 simple mexpenS1ve
roeasures to take which can cur down your
home energy use by 25~ That in turn
can cur do~ri the amount of money you pay tor home energy (For example Did you know
that elecrncal outlets 'leak heat'> The brochure
will tell you how to prevent 1t and save )
The brochure will also tell you about easy
1hmgs to do to chimneys and flues. to f)lpes
and ducts. to shower t>eads to electrical out~
lets. to washing machines. to dOot$ and win-
dows to water hea/ers Do mem all and cut
your Pnergv use by 25°'n The brochur&
.,..,,...,...
tonclusion M on·hl'"t ra .., performan('e
Open-air concert on lhE.' Boston Common was
part of celebration last \\eek marking the
orchestra's centennial
CONSTRUCTION
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK
•Residential
• Commercial Buildings: Takeout
C.omrnitroent required along with leases.
•Land Loans u p to one year 50% appraisal
•Jeff Juh nM.m
South Oran~ County lrvint.>
7141851-4050
• Tom Wik ht•r
North Orang~ Counry ruverside Cc.-,unry
7 14 851-4126
• John Hcrshfeld
San Dit.."g(l Coun ty
714 299-93 lO
Herit~e ~1~,~~@
An,1un~ lll!>un.J h• Sll\..1.1.\..\.1
contains accurate diagrams and easy to
follow dlf8CtlOOS
(QUAl ~ L E N OeR
Take· our ac:Jvice Send tor our free brochure
The 25% Solu/lon It can save you plenty
or money
The Alllance fO Saww En«VY
Box 51200, Wahington. D. C. 20017
~sesefldme;'[Vf'f'lt'f~y sswig 1t1rlr1'1i w .... ngorcipi.xt
ll,Al,4f
O,_ngeOoast DAIL V PILOT/Monday, October 26, 1981
THE
f J\MILt'
CIRCl'8
by Bil Keane
111 think it's raining 'cause I see dimples in the
birdbath."
~.\R~.\Dl'K t: by Brad Anderson
"That's the tenth salesman you've let by
today ... just WHAT are you mad about?"
Jl OGE P .\RKER
BIGGEOllGE by Virgil Partch (VI P)
"Oops, It's going to be oqe of those d1ys."
DE~~IS THE Mt~~ACE Hank Ketchum
~ 'o 1'i
~
~ l 01~'r KWJN HE WAS A ST!N6/N' &JG 1TIL
HE WANTEU LOOSE ! II
J••~~[Hi~ru:Yf;~;)OiJTi~;-(itfilj AFTER WHAT LINDA THAT'S WHAT
by Harold Le Ooux
WT IT'6 OUITf F'05616LE
THAT LINDA Mf\Y UftEER W HEN RANDALL
FORt;ES RE1URN5
TO THE COTTA6E
AFTER DINNER.
AOe>EY AND SAM
015Cll5S THEIR
EVENIN6 Wl'TH
fHE MOVIE STAR.'
. ~00~ ~l'LLI NS
ACROSS 47 Gr• letters
411Andnot
I Fabled bird 50 High priett
4 ToWllt 51 Aigtit; Pr9'.
t Tu~tfvl 52 Gluttony
14 Ostflttl's 5" Cell room
llln 58 Mr. Fleming
15 81u9"1 eo SIWbucll
16 Authored 61 Wiid
17 Aerollta 62 Qay
1t Fl8voring 64 Cut .:XOll
20 BtOller 86 Humlnt
21 Mom'• git! 117 Bold,,...
22 " -ot Thtt" 118 Once nemed
23 Segmtnl 611 Panel
• 24Facing1 70 Salu1t
glecier 71 Tlmttlblt
21 -cit grace lbbr.
29 Rodent
31 8llO'lt
32 "-
Qwlltle''
33 ArtzoN
lndien
$9 E8fll
31Cetd~
31Sfyweddlft
41 De*oy. °"'· 43 ..... .. a.-
~ ...
tetwi..,..
2 Thetnd s Pr9C1llt
'Lowllnder 5 "Higll -"
'""**' 7lcle9 .......
• Hit
10~
t1 W• tlllOo:
2 ...
UNITED F81turt Syndlcttt
S11Uf'd9(1 Puzzle SolWd
MA'! 6REER MID LA6EL~ HIM
AOOUT HIM, HOW A5 A PRO!
COULD HE DE 50 HE NEVER
<?ENEROV5 IN VNOERE5TI·
Ht& REMAf{K!> MATES THE
AOOUT HER? Hf COMPETI· •
EVEN 6AID &HE TtON!
WA5 TALENTED' • ,.
HAO!
by Jim Davis
--· ----... ---· ...... ..,_. or>-.--...
PEAN l 'T8 by Charles M. Schulz
....... .-----or--"""'TI
Tl'MBLE" EEDS
-me ANSWER IS,
"'Jl.lE WHOLE WORLD"
...._--~--------..., fOF{~ 11VE: l'ft:tJ L.OSf!
FIG-H111\JG"1'0 S1AY Al-IVE:~
IN ~ 17Al\16afl SlJFA:RI~ LJN~L..l~VAE't.e HAFWSHIP!
!
r'1::i'-::::::'.lf
I TU006HT FOR SURE -me AHSWER WOULD 8E
I~ THERE SOME PLACE
by Tom K. Ryan
... I
'----~ .. *~·lli !_11.· .... • j __ :.."""": ~~~~~ r:.::::::_::.-=::32*1
SHOE
YES, SHE'S 6ETTING
OUT OF HANO---
SHE'S V ERY NOISY
AND NEVER OBEYS
ME ---
GOROO
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UM:.U ruOE 6E'i.5
F.IVJC IER
S'Y THE
DAY/
t'l'~Kl' "INKERBEAN
CJXXJLO (,Ot) LIKE TO iAKE
AOVANIAGE OF OOR SPEUAl
BAND CAND4 Of FE.R. , mA .,.,, ?
DRABBLE
---AND
SHE'S
ALWAYS
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ON HER
FEET
I 1,l 1~
jl I
I
-·-YES--· SHE'S
QUITE A
PROBLEM
!F ~l.) M-) A BOX OF
BA~D CA~OO ...
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
I W15H 1 KNEW
WHICH ON E OF US
SHE'S TALKlt-JG
ABOUT
by Gus Arriola
>'4~ >IE N:EN
SHOPP/NS
IA) ml!:
Re-::.A.J...E
5'0RE.:r
by Tom Batiuk
WE'LL 5E£ m rr 1HAf1UE
H0005 Al ruR 5000L I.EAVE
lX)(JR HOUOE Al.OOE ON
HAU.OWEEN ! ------"'Tiii
f\1'«.1c.K, l ~~ Jl)~1'
1N~11tO {O A AA\.\..OWE.E.~ ~ltf'i ~
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b~0£1'~ Pft£1"1"i ~A'f,
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DR.SMOCK
PSAR,
WOU&.,P
YOU "f"AKe ou-r THe GAReAcse, Pi..eAse ~
1.'M A "o c roR! t CAN'"f' ees seeN 1'AKING ou-r -rHe SAR e>AGe!
FOR •ETTIEll •• fea •• •HE
l FQf'.GOi M'{ BANK
~ANO-COOPS)
-OEPOS\T ~~\
by Lynn Johnston
~'/ 10 tw1A\'<.E :THElf\ ooes ~ IH!~lt(;
ANO TuE'J' ~EER.
RU.O'JER VOO.
I I
I I
I I
T
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 28, 1981
•
Thousands of people are
catching the spirit of helplng as
~-i-" United Way of Orange County
01 Omo• Co~ntv '°"'" N 0 rt h Is 0 u th r a I s e s f u n d s f 0 r Thanks to you, tt work1.
for all ur ui . 1981-82 needs.
But that spirit means more than just an
annual fund drive. United Way and the
people-helping-people spirit is working
thro~ghout Orange County every day of the year.
Thanks to you, more than 85 United Way
agencies are there to help people feel better
about life and about each other. And that makes
our community a better place for everyone.
Thanks to you, it works for all of us -the
United Way.
3903 Metropolitan Drive, Suite 500 * Orange, CA 92668 (714) 634-2252
A Pubttc Servi<• 5-nl\IP of tN Or-Coett O .. ty Piiot
8 ••
•
------~------...... ··~_,......,...., ................. , .. , .......... -....... __... . .. Orange COa11 DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 26, 1981
\U t'\IH Y
-EVa..o---,·
. t:OO UD NEWS 0 04AAllE'8 AN0l!l8 fJ (1]) NFl FOOTBALL
Houllon Otle<t at Pitt•·
t>urgh StMlefs t") U TAEASUM HUHT CD M·A·s·H
COi Pollet 1ea1n1 lhlt neg.
ahve reports regarding him
•nd the ~077tn have
reached Seoul
II) HAWAII Fl\/E..0 tlil 'BUSINESS REPORT ml DICK CAVETT
Ubet&h$m Guests Fr
Robe<t Drinen Sen P•ul
Tsongas. Tom WICktl IF
Stone 1Part 11
(I.) CBS NEWS
l)tNBCNEWS
C)MOVIE
• • 'Home To Stay
( 1978) Henry Fonda
Michael McGu1re 6 teen-
ager takes her SJ>l'1te<I
grandfather on a t"P 50 he
won t be sem •w•Y. 10 a
hOme 10< the aged
H , ~NOTORIOUS
JUMPING FROG OF
CAlAVEAAS COUNTRY
This animated spe<;ial
based on humo1111 Mari..
Twain s classic short story
takes a broad ond cynical
IOOk at human nature
S MOVIE * * '> 'The Ftlln<lt5h Plot
01 Or Fu M•nchu ( t980)
Peter Sellers Std Caesar
The FBI Md Scotland
Yard's Oet Nayland Sm1tn
pursue the t68·year·Old
arch villain as he searches
Im the 1ngre<11ents 1nclud·
1ng the Crown J•wels
used to ma~e his 11r, pro
longing elmr PG'
9:30 U BUL.LSEYE m WELCOME BACK.
KOTTEl'I
fZ3 KCET NEWSBEAT ml BUSINESS REPORT
(J)°'NEWS
H MOVIE
• • ', Somewllere In
rime t 1980) Ch11S1opner
Reeve. Jane Sf'ymour
ObHSsed with the pgr1ra11
of a 19th-century actre<>s
a mO<lern-day New Yo•k
ptayw,.ght uses hypnosis
10 travel back in 1omo and
meel her 'PG
f:'tMOVIE
• • Ttie Amazing Adven
IU•M 01 J.>e 90 Puppets
A magical 1nven11on
enables a 9-year old boy
to t>ecome a sl>f'C•al agent
lor lhe World lntelhgoncf'
Ne1w0<k G
9:60 Z BALANCES
7:00 8 CBS NEWS
D N8CNEWS D HAPPYOAYS AGAtH U YOU ASKED FOR IT m THE MUPPETS
Guest He~ Reddy
II) JOKER'S WllO
Eii) OVEREASY
"Arthrtt•s" Guests H&r04d
and Fayard N1c!I04as ~
fii) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
~THE M UPPETS
Guest Doug Henning •
0 MOVIE * • * 'The Je<k f 19791
Steve Mamn. BNnadotte
Peters A cllron1c screw up
makes m•lhons on a we1rd
1nven11on only to lose 11 all
in consumer damage SiJtl5
R
Z'MOVIE
• • Stone Cold Dead
(1979) Paul w 1111ams R>eh·
ard C.enna A coP a.~ a
ROMANCE ~Jd is~a (;1lt){1rt and C:~Ti l
()' Rt•ill\ 'la1· 1n · Spkndor 111 lht• C r a,.., ·
111111ght :it !) on C'ha n nt·I I
small·hme cr1me boss fOt"
lorees 10 t1nd the man
responsible lor a sene5 of
p1os111u1e killings A
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Feelured a loOk at the
compe1111ve world ol
weather reportera, an
1nlerv-""'lh Jarry G11f1es
a man who P<Olesses 10
know a seer el ol hv1ng lor.
ev111 a view 01 a lew ansto·
crats and lhe<r olltGes
CJ ~ FA Mil Y FEUD
0 LAI/ERNE & SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
l he girls dec•de 10 11e1p
Carmine r1J1se the money
to s1a11 his own dance stu·
d10 U MATCH OAME m M·A·s·H
A general rewards the
407 7th with an Oll1cers'
Club aller Hawkeye and
Trapper sove t11s son's hie
II) TIC TAC DOUGH ED MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
fii) GREAT
PERFORMAHCES
A Monlh tn The Counlry
Lynne Svymour and
Anthony Dowell are lea·
lured 1n Str Frederick Ash·
ton's ballet based on Ivon
Turgenev's 19t1J-centu1y
drama (RI
If P.M MAGAZINE
An 1n1erv19w w1lh Oan1elle
B'1Sebo1se ol Archie
Bunker s Place a hus
band-and-wile truck drtv
1ng leam
C MOVIE
• • • I Cover The Water
lronl · (19331 Claudelle
Colberl 811n Lvon A
walerlront reporter falls in
love w11n • smuggler's
daughter
8:00 8 ({., PRIVATE
BEHJAMIN
D 91 LITTLE HOUSE OH
THE PRAIRIE
A lllBck phys1c1an s arnval
upse1s ltie e1111ens 01 Wal-
nut G•ove :) D MO\/IE ... ,
Horses
( 19691
Michael
They S11001
Don t They?·
J•ne Fond•
Sarra11n A
Oepress1on-ef8 dance
maratllon 1s enlered by a
young coupl4i in need ot
the pnze monl"y
f) INSIDE CHINA
This rehg1ous program
relahng 10 lhe desire ot
m1ll1ons 1n China 10< rehg·
1ous lreedom describes 8
crusade lo garner funds to
purchase bibles for d1str1-
buhon to Chtts1111ns 1n Ch•·
na m P.M. MAGAZINE
An 1111cr1o1ew with Danielle
8r1sebo1se ol Archie
Bunker s Place a hus-
band·a~-w1te truck d .. v.
ing 1eam. Linda Haws vis-
its Durango. Color•do.
Chet Tell t1usses • chick
en
II) MOVIE
• • • "Foreign Corr•·
spondent · ( 19~0) Joel
McCrea. Laraine Day
Directed by Allred HllCh·
cock An Amer.eon rel)Oft
e1 breaks up a spy nng 1n
England
El:) A STEP IN TIME
A KCET-produced d1amat
11e11on that acts a~ a vent
Cle to address the orowmg
problem 01 aicohollsm
among teenagers
S MARVIN HAMLISCH
THEY'RE PLAYING MY
SONG
L•U M1nnelll Johnny
M81h•s Gladys Knight and
Carly Simon sin9 some or
today s greatest hots
1nclud1ng, The Way We
Were. · Wllat 1 Did For
Love" and ' Nobody Ooes
It Setter ..
0MOVIE
• • • • The Slunt Man
t •9801 Peter O Toole
Steve Reltsbac.k Wanted
oy the pOllC4t. a d1slurbed
llte1nam v111e<an 1on0s an
unsure haven on a movte
set whe<e a World War I
epic 1$ belng filmed 'A'
8:30 8 (}) THE TWO OF US
Cubby and Reggie come to
Brentwood lor advice
aDout lheir love hves
Q) All IN THE FAMll Y
Archie Ed•lh ano Mike
l'!ICh 1etate a 01tferen1 sto
ry to Glotta concerning a
v1s1t by a relngeretor
repairman
ED TEENAGE ALCOtlOL
USE
A follow-up to A Slep In
rime" designed to otle<
help to parents and others
concerned •boul teen
alCohol abuse addressing
such problems as re<;•e·
ahonal or1nk1ng peer pt8S·
sure and how par en ts c11,,
eflect1ve1y tntervene
fii) MORETHANA
CONCERT
David Frost n8fr81H a
documentary profile of 1114!
Nelhe<lan<ls Wino Enaem-
Ole
fi HBOSNEAK
PREVIEW: NOVEMBER
Husband-and-wile comics
Jerry Siiiier and Anne
Meara inlroduce lhe mov
li!S specials and spgr15
events coming to Home
Bo• Olhce on November
1:35 0, OOOHESBURV
SPECIAL (TIME
APPROXIMATE)
8:40 Z THE IMMIGRANT
IHlO 8 Tl M•A•S•H
(Season Premiere) A USO
troupe makes a,, unu-
pected detour to rne
4077th when one ol its
members falls 111
D ~MOVIE
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Sp1end0t In Tne Grau
(Prvmoere) Melissa G1lbef1
CyYll 0 Re<lty Two IMlnS1
tove teen-•gers wreatle
w11h strict se•ual m0<es
and parental pressure 1n
1><e-Oel)ress1on Kensea
0 THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Featured the lirsl tncredl·
ble Hero award. 1n air
5afety bleat.through 48
SkHt<S behrnd one bo81 a
loam home
8 KN XT <CBS) ,o•
C!) KNBC INBCI z
0 KTLA tl~ I ..
e KASC (ABCI c
O KFM B ICBSI !)
0 KHJ·TV (Incl.) m
G:.l KCST IABC) E
Gl Knv llnd.) $
CD KCOP-T\I (Ind.) " fD KCET IPBSI •
G KOCE IPBSI
On TV
Z-TV
HBO
(Cinema id
IWORI N Y , N Y.
IWTBSI
IESPNI
IShow1imeJ
Spotlight
(Cable News Networil)
f) CHILDREN ON THE
RUN m MERV GRIFFIN
Guests. Chit Richard, Dick
Clark. Nancy Ounaull. Sal
Cesarlni. Robert Wuhl
filD THI 00\.0l_H AQI ()ti
TILIVlllON
'The O•y1 0 1 Wine And
AOMA" Pl~ L8'1rle I nd
Clltt Ro~tlOf\ 1tar n •
hutbtlnd tnO Wiie Wl\O 1<111
tnto lhe pot or atc:OhOll""
lt!) THE AOAO llACK:
THI STORY Of JAMd J.
leATI'll
Bo•., Jim e .. 111e'1 early
ye1t1. hit atruggle wllll
drU{I• and alcohol •nd hit
conneclloo with 0<g•nlzed
c11me 11• lnt.,c:ut w1tn
bOalng footage and K -
Oi BNtlle woiktnQ with
young lelool (Al
(ft OOH eotn'Ell
'C'MOVll
• • • "S1ranotr In TIW
HouM " ( t975J Keir Dullea,
Ollvla Hu"9)' A p1ychOtlO
murdllfe< hid .. In the l lllC
or • col\eo8 ao<orlty housa
on Clm1tmu Eve 'R'
H)MOVIE
• • '> "Rough Cut 119801
Burt Reyf\olda LH ley·
Ann11 Down A 8'111Sh
~altte lures •n intern•·
tlonal 1ewet Ihle! out of
retirement to help her sleal
$30,000,000 In diamonds
'PG
0 HAMMER HOOSE OF
HORROR
·The Mark 01 Sal8n" A
young mor1u1ry lechrnc•an
imagine• lhat he has been
chOsen lhe devil s disciple s, WHA r s UP AMERICA
Take ii shotl look at adults
who believe swingt,,g 15 the
only way to live, an Amerl·
can bulll1ghter gorllla
grams strtp·grams and
lots more
Z MO\/IE
• '1 Running f 1979)
Micllael OouglH Susan
Anspach Having 1a1led al
nearly eve1yth1ng tn h15 11111.
a 34-year-Old divorced
man decides to lry out 11!1 a
marathoner for lhe u S
OtymplC T .. m PG
9:30 @) ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
10:00 8 . THE MAGIC Of
OA\110 COPPERFIELD
lllus1on1s1 David Copper-
field perlorm1 a vartely ol
magic lflCkS Jason
Robards hosts and Susan
Anton. Audrey Landers
and Cathe11ne Bach guest
DUii> NEWS
0 MOVIE
• •" Kansas C11y Bomb·
er (19721 Raquel Welch
Kevon McC•rthy
ml THINGS FAll APART
Ellrabolh of Toro and
JOhnny Sekka ttar 1n the
story ol an 1deahs11c young
man c;aughl belween the
tribal lf8d•t•ons of his peo-
ple and the odes 01 Cll&n<J8
which are sweeping his
counlry into c1v11 w111
(j]) THE ROCKFORD
FILES
tOi MOVIE
• "The Boooey Man"
( 19801 Suunn• Love.
Nicholas Love Years aher
lhey murder their mother s
t>Oyltlend 8 b!Olhe< llnd
s•sler are haunted by the
v>et1ms murderous ghost
R
S MOVIE * * 1, "Little Darlings
( t980) h lum 0 Neal. K'1S•
• ly McN•ChOI At summer
~p. two tMn-8Qe 01rt•
compete to -"""'°will t>e
Ille Ural to loM tie< virgini-
ty R
10-.30 m NEWS
II) INOEPENOENT
NETWORK NEWS tlil MORETHANA
CONC£RT
David Frost narrates a
documentary profllt of the
Nethe<l9ndS Wind Ensem-
ble
0MOVIE
• • • Chaptvr Two
( 19791 James Caan Mar-
sha Mason Soon ar1er his
wiles death a write< finds
h1m!Mlll reluctanlly falling
in love again PG
10:45 Z CINEMASCORE
, 1:00 e a C1J Q1' ~News
0 SA TUAOAY NIOHT
HOii Ray Chafin
0 PAULHOOAH m THE J£.FFERSON8
II) BENNYHlll ED 04CK CAI/En
"l 1bet11l11m' Guests. Fr
Robert O<ln•n. Sen Paul
T songH . Tom Wicker. I F
Stone (P•rt 11
C MOVIE
• 'The Happy Hooker
Goes To Washington
( 19771 Joey Healheflcin
George Hamilton The
irreprtt1s1ble Xaviera Hol·
lander 1ourneya to the U S
cap11al and uncovers sonie
very sen1111ve secret docu-
ments 'R
TUBE TOPPERS
KOC E $0 7 ·30 Gn•iJ l Pl•rlorm:rnc·t·'
:\ :\lonth m the• ('ountr~ I.\ 1111 Sl'' muur
i.lnd Anthon' Del\\ l'll ci ann· thl' h<il k•
l}i.l'rt!d on a 19th c·c•ntur.' dn •m<•
KT L/\ 0 8.00 "Tht·~ Shoot llorsl·~
Don 't Tht•\''' · J ant• Fondi.l and '1tth:wl
Sarrai.111 stur m 11 mo\'il• about da n<·t·
murulhon~ ol th<.• 19:Jth.
K C 0 P Qi 8 o o I-' o r l' 1 J! n
('or re:,p ondt•11 1 .Jot•I '.\kl'n"' .incl
Lar u rn c' Da.' ~t ar 111 an \lft'l•d I lnd1t·1H·I..
n)()\'l l'.
KCET 9 8:0o
dr:1ma l1 1.a t1on
p rob l cm ol
tN•n ager"
· .\ Stl'J> tn f lllll' \
look..., •<l I ht• ~ 1 O\\ 111.i.:
J I c· 11 h o I 1 " m .i m '' n :.:
HJ MOVIE * * ''> "Divine Madnesa"
( 1960) Batie Mldler. Tht
H•rl111te1 ThlS ltlm racO<d
ol Mldler s conceft perlor·
mances at the Pasadena
Civic Al>d1tor11Jm 1n Febru·
ary 1980 te,.urn a varie-
ty ol song5. from camp
standards to rock ballads.
punctuated by a wries of
raunchy monologues 'R'
Z,MOVIE
• • • ··~ "My Bodyguard
( 1979) Ch111 Makepeaca.
Aoam Baldwin The n-
k1d al a Chicago hlQh
schoot m&lles t•iends W11h
the schoot outcast and
1oge111er they !>land up to
Ille cruel gang which nad
peraeculed them both
11:30 8 (J) QUINCY
CJ 0, THE BEST OF
CARSON
Guests Dick van Pallen
Oav1d S1einbefg Me11•sa
Mancheste< tRI
0 NEWS U BEST OF GR~O m THE 000 COUPLE
Felix tries 10 reform alter
his 11n1ci..y at11tude toward
100<! ruins an 0111erw1se
pleaaanl dinner with his
ex-wile
II) ONE STEP BEYONO
Delia" An American vaca
honing 1n Central Ametica
..-11 •~fells 1n love w1lh
•strange woman
&;) KCET NEWSBEAT ml CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
®) A8CNEWS
NIGHTUNE
0 MOVIE
• • 'r Seems Like Old
Times t 19801 Gold•e
Hawn Chevy Chase A
solt-nearted lawyer is tom
between h6f hopeless e•·
husband-turned-bank
'obber and he1 11Qlto)'t
present husband who IS
runn1no. 101 Ca1110 1n10
atlorney general 'PG
-Ml>NIGHT-
12:00 D MOVIE
Sunset In Wyoming'
119411 Gene Autry
• A8CHEW8
NIOH'TUNE
U MOVIE
• • SUl)ef Seal I t97SI
Foste< Brooks SlerhnQ
H041oway
m MIKE OOOGL.AS
Cohost Norm Crosby
Guests Roger Whit laker.
lou Jacobi, Reba Mein·
lyre. Michael Marhn
II) ROOKIES
fL) INTROOUCTION TO
PHILOSOPHY l~ THE ROCKFORD
ALES
When Rockford does a
favor tor a h1pp1e-1ype girl
camped al the beach, the
gOO<I deed turns into a
nightmare placing h•s 11111
on 1909Brdy
I
tS :MOVIE
• • ·~ "The F19nd1&h Plot
0 1 Or l'u Manchu t 1980)
Pet8f Sellet1. Sid Caesar
The FBI and Scolland
Yard s Oet Naytand Smith
pur-the t68-year-old
arch villain u he sea1cnes
lor the 1"ilred1en11 1nc1ud·
ing the Crown Jewels.
used to m•k• his Ille.pro·
longing elixir 'PG'
12:30 0 ~TOMORROW
Guests Congressman
John Lllboutllller (R·N Y I
auttior Alexander Sol1hen-
1lsyn. Charlie Pnde
fJ MOlllE
• • •, Gooon1gnr My
love ( t972) R1c;hard
Boone. Michael Dunn
tlil IT'S EVERYBODY'S
BUSINESS
'Bank1no
C MOvlE
• • Cry For Me 81tly
t t9771 Cllll Potts Harry
Dean Slanton A lree-
wheehng part ume gun·
ltghler and driller falls •n
love with a runaway Indian
girt 'R
12:35 H MO\/IE
• ' , The Gong Show
Movie I t980) Chuc~
Barros Robin Altman A Tll
hOSI must contend with a
vaflely 01 o ostacles
1n<:lud1ng network cenao<s
10 put 1oge1ner •collection
01 bizarre acts for Illa
~ow 'R'
'Z MOVIE
• 1t • "The Jerk .. (19791
Steve Marlon Bernadette
Peters A chronic sc1ew-up
makes m1lhons on a wetrd
'""enhon only to lose 11 all
in consumer dam•ge su11s
R
12:40 8 <J, HARRY 0
Harry commits h1msell 10
an lnltlluhon 10 llelp a
young woman (RI
1:000 MOVIE * * "Melody Trail t 19351
Gene Aulry Al Bridges A
gang or men stea1s rodeo
pt1ze money won by a cow-
bov
m SPEAK OUT
II) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
@'NEWS
(ii AM EV£NtNO Of'
MAGIC AHO COMEDY
Orson Bean hOSIS lh•S
hll8rlOUS hour ot zest. real
and laugtiter 111pe<1 at The
Great Ame11can Music Hall
1n San Frnnclsco
1!30 11) MOVIE
• • ·s1an1ey ( 19721 Ale•
Rocco. Chris Robinson
1:45 S MOVIE
• • Stone COid Dead
t 1979) Paut W1"'""'· Rich·
ard C.enn• A cop 800 B
small-ttme cru•wJ boss 101n
forces to find the man
responsible lor 11 series ol
pro1111u1e kllllnga 'R'
1:508 NEWS
2:00 0 ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
0~NEW8
JOHN DARLING
MY GUESI 'TODA'( ON PA~~ 15 CRA7.Y HARRY, UNG MAN WHO ~ECENT\..Y SET ~ R~ FOR THE ~!Gt-4es T NUMBER OF R)tN"l!S EVER SCORED
CN A 6PACE IN'-'..ADE~S MACHINE/
Retelling of 'Splendor' still poignant
By FRED ROTHENBERG
A,Tetewl<llW"'-
NEW YORK A whole generation has come
and gone since Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood
sta rred in "Splendor in t he Grass ... Willillm Inge's
poignant story aboul the struggle or two teen-agers
in pre·Depression Kansas to stifl e their sexual
feelings in the face of par ental manipulation and
period morals .
Inge's compelling drama raises conflicts that
are everlasting, and the remake is a valuable
vehicle with Melissa Gilbert, a full-blown TV
persona, cast in the st arring role on Channel 4
tonight at 9.
For the last eight years, Miss Gilbert has grown
up in our Mmes, only her notches In the door have
been the new season's ''Little House on the
Pra irie." Although little Laura Ingalls got
married on the Prairie, "Splendor in the Grass"
marks Miss Gilbert's real emergence as a woman.
It also confirms the 17 -year-old actress· keen eye
for quali(y. Miss Gilbert's Half Pint Productions -
her nickname around the "Little House'' set -is
responsible for tonight's TV movie. Half Pint ~lsei.
successfully remodeled "The Diary of Anne Frank"
and "The Miracle Worker," with Miss Gilbert
portraying Anne Frank and Helen Keller.
Tonight's three opening scenes, all evoking a
tone and spirit of 1920s mid-Americana. quickly
lay down the story line and establish the emotional
b attle lines.
With a cascading wat~rfall as backdrop,
D eaoie Loomis (Miss Gilbert> and Bud Stamper
(Cyr il O'R eilly l are engaging In upright,
front-seat kissing. Their simmering sexuality
comes to the (ore. and Deanie parries Bud's
advances. "Maybe we've had enough kissing for
tonignt." Bud says out of frustration and anger .
1911 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER IUT,OHIGN~ mM
with a large measure I of understanding coming
across .
Their relationship seems a lot more than just
passionate first love. Bud kisses her good night
anyway. and their ob vious friends hip -for now,
at least washes away the tension.
We're then taken into Deanie's unpretentious
·home. Deanie's mother, Eva Marie Saint, wants
the better life for her daughter that marriage to
the wealthy Stamper family would bring. But she's
also concerned about Deanie's sexual purity.
T he title "Splendor in the Grass" comes from
William, Wordsworth's poem about the idealism of
youth: "Splendor in the grass, glory in the
fl ower," and dealing with its inevitable end: "We
shall grieve not, rather find strength in what
rem ains behind."
This lesson is worth relearning: the story is
worth retelling.
A N
AM ERIC AN
0 It I G.I N A L
A UNMRSAL PICTUU '''"--''"----·--····-"9 ... ".'-
~
C MOVll
• • II "!ltrtlllget In Tt141
MOllH ( 191&) K!Mr OUllH .
OllVIO Hu•.-Y A paychOllC
murdeter hld.e In the attK.
or • c~ t0tor1ty hOuM
on Cht1a1m .. fve R
2: 10 J THE IMMI0"'4NT
2:25 tJ MOVIE
• • Rad l om1h•wk
I t9671 Howerd Keet Jo•n
C•ullleld
2:10IJ NIW8
0MOVIE • * • •,., My Bodygu•rd
I t9791 Chris Makeoe-
Ad8m Baldwin Tne new
lo.Id •• a Ct>tc8QO high
tchoot makM trleftda with
the school outcall end
together lhey sl8nd up to
lhe cruet gang whleh hid
par secutecl lll41m bOln
PG
Z MOVlE
• • Stone Cold Oe•d
119791 P•ul W1thems Rtell·
•rd Crenn• A coc> and a
sm.tll·hmt c"me boas 10.n
torcel 10 ltnd the men
respgn1tOle !or a Mmes ol
pro111tute k1lllng' R'
3:30 S ANIMAL YMPICS
fh11 animated comedy
1e.i1ur1ng 1ne v<>«:es ol Gii·
da Radne< and Billy Crys
tal look• at how the vari
ou• an1mats ptepa•e for
lhe" own Olymp.c games
3:45 C MOlllE • * • lhe New Leno
( 19721 Liv Ullmann. Ma•
von Sydow A Scandlnov1·
an lomlly seeks lroedom
and a new hie 1n lhe Min·
11asota lemtory of the
1850s PG
4.10 Z MOVIE
• • •, A Small Circle 01
Friends' 119801 Brad D•v·
11. Karen Allen ln the
t960s. lhe 1riendsh1p and
idealism ol three Harvard
'tudent~ 1s threatened
when one of them 1s dtalt
ed 10 serve 1n \/ietnam R
4·300MOVIE • * ' II s My Turn
( 19801 Jill Cliiyburgti
M1,hae1 Douglas A bril
1tan1 Chicago math protas
~or rflnl11es the problems
1n her ll\le-in 1etahonsh1p
when she lind& a new love
wMe 1n New Yo1k lor her
1a111er s remarnage R
Tue11day'•
Dayf l111r 1ffovlr11
-MORtM-
tO:OO C • • Roadie I t9801
Meat Loat Kak1 Hunter A
rock music roadie lels
nothing get tn n1s way in
h11 pursuit or the 91rl of "'~
dream• 'PG
S • * Chandler I t97 t I
Warren Oates Leslie
C•ron An ex-secunty
QUatd now achng as pu
valt eye. •s set up for a
murder lrame When he
accep1s Jn ass•onment 10
guord a state s w11ness
0 • • • , ·I Love You.
Ahc• B Toi.las ( t9661
Peter SellefS Leigh Tey-
ler Yoong A m•ddle-aged
lo' Ang;ttes lawyer leaves
n15 bnoe-10-oe sttandeo ••
Ille 1111ar and t>ecomes .t
treewheeting h1pp1e
10:30 Cl) * '> The Trail
Beyond (1934) Jolln
Wayne lle•na Hillie
11.00 U * • , Moonlleel
( t9SS) Stewart Granger
loan GreenwOO<I
-AFTERHOON-
12:00 m • • Deadly Game
I t9761 David Birney Allen
Garfield
Cit * e 11\ .. Ar'l)fl Ar)d The
fl•dmen· (1841) Jonn
W•vn•. G•ll M111Mll
C • * K1ng$olomon'1
Mines ( 1960) 0.borllh
Ketr S1ewart Grat\Olf A
.. .,,h 10t Kine SOIOmOt\ •
d1tin000 rn"'" tak" 1.11
deep 1n10 the ac;enoc; and
colorr...i Aftie•fl 1ur191e 0 * • * Cll1p1er Two"
j tfl791 Jame. C••n. Mlt·
th• Mason Soon ••te< hi•
wrle a death e wr1tet flndl
h1mMll reluct81ltty felling
mlove~ PO
l *I*'• Taking 011
( 1~711 Buck Henry l ynn
Carlon °When • tMO•llQ9
girl run5 •w•y from nome.
lier acuoo cau*81 hat per·
anta to re-evalulhl the Ille·
style tney'v• sell~ tnto
'R'
1:00 S • • •'• On The
Town ( t950) Gene Kelty
Fr 1111k Sona tr• A trlO of
sailors 1eam up with 11 1u1
dirvtlf and •n anth1opol0
g1S1 to find a beautiful girl
whose picture i. diaplay.O
1n lhe subway
1:36 z • •, "Running ( 1979)
Mtchael OouglH Su .. n
Anspach Having l8lled 91
nearly everything 1n his Ille
a 34-yeai-old divorced
man dec<dl!I. to lty out es a
marathoner 101 the U S
Olympic Team PG
2:00 C • • Young And Free'
Whan tragedy torces a
young boy to 10<n ll wagon
1ra1n on the ruggeo west. he
mHts a young Indian girt
and begins a new hie PG'
2:30 0 * • • ' My BO<ly·
guard ( t 9 791 Cnr1s
Mal<epeace Adam
Baldwin The new kid al a
Chicago high •CllOOI
makes lnends w11h tne
school oulC•sl ano togeth·
er lhey stano up to the cru·
et gang which ha<I pet·
HCut'!'.I them b011! PG
3:30 f) * • Night 0 1 Dark
Shadows t t971 l David
Selby Lara Pml>.e•
C • • Sir Gt1w.i1n And
1 he Green Kn•oht Murray
Head. N1gc1 Green A
handsome sou.re •5 aided
by a oeauhlul maiden dur·
mg hlS billies w1lh lhe
1reache<ous Graen t<nogtit
PO
Z • • Stone Colo
Dead" ( 1979) Paul W•I·
hams. Richard Crenna A
CoP and a amoll·llml' crtme
boss 1om 1orce1 to h~ the
man responsible tor a
se<iM ot proshlute k1lhngs
R
4:30 0 • • Tile P1c1ure
Show Man t t9791 Rod
1 ay1or John Me1llon In me
t920s when lravoll1ng tenl
crews brougrit magic Ian·
te<n snows 10 tnP small
towns ot a Ame"ca an
aged shOwman competes
with a llashy conniving
~omPl!l•lor PG
5:00 C • • • , On The
Town 119SOI Gene Kelly
rrank Sinalra A tflO ol
sailors team up w1lh a la••
dt1ve• ano an anlhropoto-
O•St to tind a beauulul g"I
whose p.c:ture 1$ displayed
1n the subway
S • • • Across T11e
Wide M1ssou" ( lllS II
Clark Gable Ricardo Mon·
talban A .>and of tur
lrapper~ ent or• the
uncharted 1ern101y of the
Blackfoot Indians whefe
they enc<)Unler a h0$t1ll'
Chli!t and 111s wa,,.ors
5·16 Z * 'r Running ( 19791
Mochaet Douglas Susan
Anspach Hnv1ng tailed al
nearly everylhing In h•S Ille.
a 34-yeai ·o•d divorced
man decides to lry OUI as a
marathoner lor tile U S
Olyml)IC Team PG
by Armstrong & Batiuk
SOMEONE ~ "10 PROTECT
OUR PLAJ'-ET, .JOHN.'
MGM ......... NOW PLAYING ~
ll TMO '"''M GUiil Saddlebaek WoodllrlOOe ClneOome
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monda'y, October 28, 1981
International directors gather to praise Orson Welles
!LJSOB THOMAS ..............
HOLLYWOOD They gave Orson Welles a
tribute the other night and it was the real thing. No
fat jokes. No wine·betore-lts-llme jokes. Just a
warm tribute to one of the great achievers or the
American film
"There has never been such a night as this for
me," said Welles, the fumed bass voice rumbling
with emotion. "l will cherish it to tho last breath of
my life."
Ever since "Citizen K~e ,'' Welles has
operated outside and often in deriance of -the
Hollywood Establishment. The t ribute was
tendered not by officialdom, but by his fellow
artists of the film world. The evening was
organized by the Hollywood Foreign Press
Association. and was appropriately multi-national.
France s Roger Vadim !"And God Created
Women"> said he wanted to kill the legend that the
French love only Jerry Lewis -"We also love
Orson ·wellea." H1ly '1 Bernardo Bertoluccl.
C "Last Tan.co in Parl1>" l added his pralse and
remarked, "l hove JUSt heard that Orson Is
prep aring a new movie: that 1s good news for
everyone."
Peter O'Toole recalled Welles' advice on
acting as "one of the most liberating experiences
of my Ute." Welles simply referred the Irish actor
to Hamlet's instructions to the players. Discarding
if. •-fRI
EAIU.'S
"'--· .. •~IMO ---'" ...... ~· 1 ... '"·~· ~•'••U T"'-s,,.,,, •I 'fOu• OOOt
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Shows It :15 9:
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It ., tilt' qut">t1011 11111n-.111d rnuw l..11 t-. ,1rl' 11<1\ 1111.t trouble "1th-..ilu1hnl
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WEllDIOLFtN LONDON IRI
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Then, a t 8:30, .i KCET Im.ti hillow 11p ulll·r ... ltl'lp Im P•Hf'llL'> wllo-.<• d11ldn.'11
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8PM
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BILL MURRAY
STRW'ES IRI Arthur IPGI
NICE DREAlll CR) Up In Smoke (RI ~ &°'°'11(• ....... MIMllRI
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the microphone, O'Toole delivered the soliloquy
with an eloquence that mesmerized the Beverly
Hillon Grand Ballroom audience.
Welles' fellow Amcricwu also patd hom11e.
Olrt!clor-wr1 ter R1('hurd Brooks; "There's no one
here .. who doesn't owe somethlna to Orson
Welles. and I'm one of them."
The 66-year·Old Welles seemed genuinely
MOVIE RATINGS
I FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
All. G ~ ANO C!!J FILMS A(C[IVE
fHE SEAL Of THE MOTl()fj PIC IURf
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Nowadays directors are called 'filmmakers,·
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...
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--. -------~----
-. ·--. --·· -· ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 26, 1981
•
. .. .. .
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
•'
--Ultra UghtS
5 mg "tar:' 0.5 mg nicotine
w. per c191r1ne by FTC method
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ultra light 100's
gives you the ·Merit
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..
'
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, OCT. 26, 1981
CLASSt Ft ED C7
18-year-old rookie
leads Winnipeg
past. Kings. See C3.
Cey doing fine, Dodgers doing better
Guerrero, Yeager supply one-two punch, a$ LA takes 3-2, advantage to New York.
ly CUllT SEEDEN .... IN!tr,....S-
LOS ANGELES -A crumpled Ron Cey lay in
the batter's box, much to the horror of 56,115
.,alrons at Dodger Stadium Sunday afternoon, the
~ictim of a 94 mph fastball h'om New York
Yankees reliever Goose Gossage.
Gossage, one of the hardest throwers in the
major leagues, delivered a hi&h , rising fastball in
the eighth inning of Game Five of the World
Series, and Cey took the pitch on the lower left side
ol bis batting helmet.
It took several minutes, but Cey finally came
to bis feet, and with the help of his teammates,
staggered back into the dugout and eventually
wound up In an observation room in Centinela
Hospital.
Well, like Cey, the Dodiers also got up out of
the dirt Sunday, doing the near·impossible. They
beat the Yankees. 2·1. took a 3·2 ed!le in the World
Yankees'
owner
in brawl
LOS ANGELES (AP >
Owner George Steinbrenner of
the New York Yankees suffered
a possible broken left hand and
other injuries in what he said
was an altercation with two
young men whom he said cursed
him and attacked him witfi""a
beer bottle.
Steinbrenn er. wearing a
plaster cast on his left ha nd, also
bad cuts on his right hand, a
swollen upper lip, and a severe
lump on his head. He said he
received the iniuries in a fight in an elevator Sunday night.
Steinbrenner, who called a
press conference at 11:30 p.m.
PST, said he e ntered the
elevator on the 11th noor of the
Hyatt Wilshire at about 8 : 10
p.m . on his way to meet his wife
and others for dinner.
"I don't know exactly what
floor it was," he said, "but one
guy got on the elevator and the
other guy stood in the door
holding it open as if he wa.
waiting for someone. The first
guy, who had a beer bottle in his
band, said 'Steinbrenner, right?'
I said, 'Yes'."
Steinbrenner said the men,
who were not a pprehended,
made derogatory remarks about
New York fans and insinuated
that the Yankees, who dropped
three s traight games after
beating the Dodgers in the first
two games of the best-of-seven
series, were chokin g unde r
pressure.
"I guess that did it. I hit him
and he hit me on the side of my
bead with the bottle," said
Steinbrenner . "I know he's
missing three teeth and he's
probably still lookine for thP.m T
hit him with the right hand and
he went down.
Series and changed the complexion of the Fall
Cl assic which ha d another Yankee World
Ch ampionship written all over it after New York
had taken a 2·0 lead in the Bron.x earlier in the
week.
While Cey never lost consciousness, the
Dodger crowd nearly passed out in ecstasy as
Pedro Guerrero and Steve Yeaeer delivered
back·to-back home runs off Yankee starter Ron
Guidry, who up until the fateful seventh inning,
had pitched a marvelous game.
Prior to the seventh, Dodger Manager Tommy
Lasorda told his players to quit swinging from the
heels against Guidry. who had retired 13 of the last
14 batters he had faced , seven by strikeout.
"I told them to swing easy," Lasorda said.
·'They had been trying to knock everythlng out of
the park. Whe n you .hit a home run in a game like
this, you've got to .b_e the most surprised guy in the
park . You can't be swinging for homers."
Apparently Guerrero and Yeager didn't hear
their manager.
"I told Pete I Guerrero) to swing easy,"
Lasorda reeounted moments before he connected
with a pitch Guerrero said "was right there•· to
get the Dodgers even at l ·l with one out in lhe
seventh.
mini·seriea the Dodgers bounced back. Down 2·1 in
Montreal the Dodgers clawed their way back. And
slapped around by the Yankees in New York for an
0·2 dlsadvantaee, the Dodgers, for once, do not
need to sweep anything.
"And then Yeager comes up and swings like
he wants lo hit the ball to Glendale," Lasorda
added.
They just need a victory from Burt Hooton
who'll oppose the Yankees' Tommy John in Game
Six Tuesday night in New York.
Yeager, in fact, was fooled badly by Guidry's
first two pitches. But the Dodgers' No. 7 hitter,
who had appeared in but 42 games all season,
guessed right and belted a Guidry fast ball into lhe
lefl·rield bleachers to give the Dodgers a sweep of
the three games in Los Angeles.
"We had our backs against the wall,"
admitted pitcher J erry Reuss who scattered rive
Yankee bits <that's one more than the Dodgers
got) aftd pitched out or several tough jams,
including a one-out, bases.loaded mess caused by
a couple of errors by second baseman Davey
Lopes in the fourth inning.
And, for the first time in what seems like
months, the Dodgers have what is known as the
advantage. T hat's A·D·V·A·N·T·A·G·E, guys.
Down 0·2 to Houston in the Western Division
"Whenever I had to pitch out of a jam, I did,"
added Reuss who was trying to explain the magic
that seems to follow the Dodgers al home. "Why
we do so well here, I don't know. I guess we just
<See OODGEas, ••1e CZ>
Boss George
has his word ( s)
By EDZINTEL
Of .. ~,... ....
LOS ANGELES -By George,
he was beside himself. If there
was such an award, New York
Yankees owner George
Steinbrenner would have voted
himself Mellow Fellow of the
Year.
His hand-picked assemblage
of millionaires in pinstripes bad
presented him with another
one-run loss in the 78th World
Series and they couldn't have
hurt the owner's feelines more if
they had put up a picture of
Babe Ruth to throw darts at.
There was no hiding the fact
that Steinbrenner was hurt. His
suit looked like it was ready to
cry Yankee blue tears at ally
moment.
In fact those were two of the
first words to leave his world
famous mouth: ''I'm hurt."
Steinbrenner was a
disapp0intment. He wasn't evett
trying to get mad. It just wasn't
vintage, though it was better
than listening to most any other
stiff-lipped owner.
As is his wont, Steinbrenner
had given the Yankees a
pregame pep talk before
Sunday's 2·1 loss to the Dodgers.
On the day after the second
straight Yankee loss in which
Steinbrenner blasted the
performance of players Dave
Winfield, Rick Reuschel and
Ron Davis and even tbe
decision·making of Manager
Bob Lemon, Boss George had
given bi s clu b a terse
thr ee·minute address that
reportedly was tainted with
positiveness. Steinbrenner was
said to be uncharacteristically
calm.
were still even <at two games
apiece). One player s aid that
Steinbrenner also told the team
what it had to do to win . which.
as the bearer of the highest
bankroll in the game, one has to
figure he has the liberty to do.
Exiting from the New York
dr essing roo m f ollow ing
Sunday's game, Steinbrenner
led a small arm y of reporters
into the dark catacombs of the
stadium to give his unbridled
analysis of the game and series .
Steinbrenner talked of several
angles, from frustration to hope.
He singled out Winfield again
for his lack of offense and added
Rick Cerone to his personal
blacklist for blowing two
opportunities to advance
runners on base and thus killing
rallies.
Within the same sentence,
Steinbrenner said the Yankees
lacked a "killer instinct." but
predicted that his club would
rebound and win the World
Series when it returns to New
York Tuesday.
Through it, Steinbre nner was
well under control. his voice at a
normal deci b el l evel for
conversation. Hi s hair was not
s tanding on end nor was he
foaming at the mouth. He was.
nonetheless, s traightforward
a nd adamant.
·'To m e . it would be an
embar assment to go two.up and
l ose ," he s aid, holding a
drumstick ice cream cone that
he would never sample when it
fell to the ground moments
later.
That's the Steinb renner
approach. Hit 'em where il
hurts.
"I guess the other guy then hit
<See BRAWL, Page Cl)
~ ........... ...,a.tH~
Ron Ce11 hits the dirt after bemq struck m tire helmet by Rich C ;ossage ptlch m the e1ghtlr mnmg
Steinbrenner's main point lo
make was that the team had
given two games away, in his
opinion. but that tbe Yankees
''These are pros and they
don't want to be embarrassed,"
he added. "I think it was an
<See STEINBRENNER, P•1e
Rams fall two games hack at halfway point Sunday's NFL scores
San Francisco 20. Rams 17 LA blows its chances, as San Francisco pads its, advantage in the NFC West
8)' JOHN SEVANO
Of .. IN!tr .........
SAN FRANCISCO -There's no reason to push
the panic button yet. As the Rams are quick to
point out, the season is only half over.
But after Sunday's travesty here, in which the
Rams lost another game they should have won.
20-17, there are some reasons for concern.
Legitimate reasons.
And, most or them concern the Rams' offense.
Let's face lt, when you're in your opponent's
territory on 14 of 15 possessions -like the Rams
wer e against the 49ers Sunday -a good team
should be able to walk away with more than two
touchdowns and a field goal.
Not that the Rama didn't try. Oh, how they
tried.
caromed to the left of the goal post, nicked the
lower crossbar and fell harmlessly to the ground.
The second -a 45-yarder with 17 seconds to
play -new wide left. It never had a chance as it
missed by more than two feet.
.. I over-compensated," admitted Corral of bis
final attempt which would have tied the score. "I
wanted to go a Little to the left and I went too far to
the left.
"l probably had the worst day of my football
career here."
Many of the Ram players could boast that
same claim.
Pat Haden, who engineered the sputtering
offe nsive machine, took the loss hard. His
numbers certainly looked good: 20-of·39 p.ases
com pleted for 310 yards and one touchdown.
But the number that counted the most -the
m eager 17 points the Rams put on the scoreboard
-was unfortunately, the number that Haden
wanted, but couldn't improve on.
Haden w as reluctant to talk about his
performance. He brushed off the first wave of
reporters who approached him, saying he wanted
to shower first.
Haden then slammed his fist against bls
locker , shouted a swear word and stared
disconsolately toward the floor. He wasn't much
better after trying to drown himself ln the sbower,
either .
"We bad many chances, we just didn't do It,"
he said glumly. "I missed my receivers by that
much (holding his hands six inches apart) four
times. I can't believe it. You don't dominate like
<See RAMS, Page C3)
6 )
NY Giants 27, Atla nta 24 10T1
Buffalo 9, Denver 7
Cleveland 42. Baltimore 28
Detroit 31, Green Bay 27
Philadelphia 20, Tampa Bay 10
St. Louis 30, Minnesot a 17 -
Washington 24, New England 22
New Orleans 17, Cincinnati 7
Chicago 20, San Diego 17 <OT>
Dallas 28, Miami 27
Seattle 19, NY Jets 3
Kansas City 28, Oakland 17 Toa.lfbt~s Game
Houston at Pittsburgh C Channel 7 at
<NFL roundup, page C4>
<NPL 1ummarles, page CS>
But there were three missed field goals, one
blocked field 1oal, one intercepUon and one
aborted attempt late in the tint quart.er on a
fourth·and-ooe at the San Francisco 49-yard line.
"We beat 'em in every way but lhe score,"
said Coach Ray Malavasi. "Sometimes that's
going to happen to you in this league."
Now IS the time for Rams to make QB move •
Sure 1t la, but not a1ainst the Rams.
Remember, this ls baalcally the same offensive
,unit that led the NFC In offense last year.
"We aure weren't very eood," moaned
·offenalve guard Doug Smith. "Why? I really don't
have much of an answer tor you."
"We juat couldn't put It in the end zone,"
added a fruatr•ted Dennis Harrah, who stalked the
lockerroom alter the 1ame muttering to himself.
"We worked our butta on a1ain and didn't win.
Just Uke lut week we were cloee, but we didn't get
lt in there.
"I reall&e we should bave put more points on
the board. It'• 10 fruatrattn1."
1The lf'Oll1. ot It all ls tbllt u sporadic as the
offente wu taey still could bave won the game -
that 11, u rrut Corn.I bedn't mJIMd three field
1oalJ and luMI anotMr bloclled.
All four m ..... were crttieal, but the two that
1tand out wen Uw on• milled dUrin1 the rlnal 8~
mlnui. ~the ••me.
1111 ftnt -ol ll Jardl -bit the ri1bt uprt.1ht, i l
SAN FRANCISCO -I have notbint aealnat
Pat Haden. I really don't. He's a 1ood person, be
r eally is. but he's also not the quarterback the
Rams are looking for to run tbelr offense.
Sorry, Pat. But eltbt 1ames is plen~ of time
to show your stuff, and the only thine the Rama -
and their fans -have gotten to far ii four wins ln
eight outings and two games behln4 the 1w-pri.1in1
San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Weet standin ...
It's not that Pat's done a bad Job. His
performances have been adequate, but the Aama
deserve better than •dequate.
Let's face lt, a year and a halt on the aktelloes
can do a lot. toward a pencn'a l.Defteetl•eae11
especlallY a quarterback. Al one Ram oftlclal said
after Sunday'a loss to tbe 4'lrl, ••Pat'• a 1reat
person, but he can't quarterback tbe type of
offense this team ruu. 'nlll la a bualwa not
something they do for ple..are."
Haden ii best at the in~te pua. In fad,
if be was on the •ten, or MlimMiKa. w 0-Yft' -
in other worda a lusn wttb t.bat ltYle al olfeue -t.
~
JOHN
SEVANO
he'd probably be among the top quarterbackl ID
thele.pe.
But the fact remains tbat the a.•• like to
play lonf ball. Vince Ferr.,.mo•a RffeN lat
season playtna that type of 11me dW a lot to alW
the coach's thinldna alon1 thole llDel.
Thla la not a 10-to-lS-yard l•m. TM NHlftl'I
Haden ~ to -. med to ftlllBbll •to .. ,.. patt.eru. Unfortuoa~. mOll ~ ....... , ....
either a) dan'l make It tbat fw i b> _. eN•• •
early IO tbey'r. •l'Olal1 o..-their'•• W ...,._;
or C} .... 10 •rtt litlie to W .... 1•16Mft
unintentloaaJty slpal for a f alr cat.th u tf it waa a
punt.
Actu~ Haden abouldn't take tbe entire
blame lit . The bead coach'• stubbonmna in
contlmdftl With an otteme that iSn't 1ulted to
Haden 11 tbe prlnctpaJ f aeUit beblnd bll lack ol aucceu.
Orange Coaat DAIL y PILOT /Monday. October 26. 1981
.,.. ____________________ __
Pirate GM promis e s
some house-cle aning
From AP dispatches
LOS ANGELES -General •
Manager Harding Peterson of the
Pittsburgh Pirates s aid Sunday he
will unload from eight to 12 players
durini the off-season.
•'I'm working on three trades," Peterson
told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "If we make
all of them, as many as a dozen players who
were with us this season will be gone."
The Pirates finished in
fourth place in the overall
season in the National ·
League's East Division and
in last place in the second
season.
Peterson said he may not
be able lo complete any of
the deals until the winter
baseball meeting s in
Hollywood , Fla .. in
Peters<m December.
"l'm confident that we're going to make all
three trades," he told Charlie Feeney of the
Pos t-Gazette, "but the number of players we ..
may deal may only be eight. It wlll depend on
just how far we go in our trade talks."
Quote of the day
Larry LacewelJ, Arkansas Slate football
coach who calls signals from the press
box. asked if his absence from the sideline
r educed his team's enthusiasm: "I never
thoug ht a lot of enthus iasm on the
s idelines would win for you. If it did, Tom
Landry would be 0·16 every season ."
Heafner, Holland hold on to win
GoUing unknowns Vance Heafner !I
a nd Mike Holland completed a
record · breaking 42-under -par
performance Sunday with a closing 63 to win tbe
Disney National Team Championship by five
strokes over Chip Beck and Bu Caldwell.
Leading the Florida tournament from start to
finish, Heafner. 27. and Holland, 25, posted
scores of 60-62-61·63 for a four-round total or 246.
The winning pair divided $36,000 and Holland
re~eived a qualifying exemption from all 1982
lour events of the Tournament Players
Association ... Hale lrwln, the two-time U.S .
Open champion. shot a 4·under-par 68 and won
the Bridgestone Open in Chiba, Japan. Irwin
finished eight strokes ahead of Bill llo1ers, the
1981 British Open champion ... Peter Jacobson
fired a 6-under-par 66 for a 268 total to win an
internationai golf tournament at Madrid over
Spaniard Manuel Pinero.
From Page C1
St. Louis salvages deadlock
St. Louts defen Jeman l oe Iii
MlclaeNtU scoted wlth lua than thne
mlnutel rematntn1 Sunday nlcht to
cap • comeback from a •.o deficit and lift Ute
Bluel to a 4--4 National Hockey Lea1ue tit wltb
Chica10. lo a 35·1tCOnd IPlb ln t.be MCOM
perJod, Tooy C.ny scored hi• third and fourth
1oal1 of the season for St. Loula ...
Minnesota'• Brad MuweU scored twice in lbe
second period as the Narth Stara came from
behind to win at Buffalo, 6·3 . . . !Mewe A'Mt'a
two 1oals led Montreal to a •·2 triumph over "1e
New York Ranaers, keeplna tbe Canadlena
unbeaten (5-0·3) this seaaon ... Brtaa P...,,
tallied twtc~ and assisted Keuy U.eeaaa u
Philadelphia posted a 4· 1 victory at Detroit . . .
Captain R and y Carlyle connected on a
power-play goal late in the second period. to
snap a 3-3 tie and pace Pittsburgh to a M win
at Vancouver ... Rangers' left winaer Doa
M aloaey. will be out a minimum of ab: weeks
after tearing ligaments in hia right knee
Saturday night.
Pete Reiser succumbs at age 62
Harold Patrick <Platol Pete> •
Reiser, a former star with the
Brooklyn Dodgers in the '40s, died
Sunday in Palm Springs from complications of
a respiratory illness. The St. Louis native was
62 and a former Angels and Dodgers coach ...
Memorial services were planned on the shores
of Mission Bay in San Diego for Bill Mucey,
described by some as the "Babe Ruth of Boat
Racing." Muncey, 52, was killed Oct. 18 in
Acapulco, Mexico when his boat crashed in the
final unlimited hydroplane race or the season ...
Spence Bay, back in the pack on the final turn,
swung lo the outside then spnntea anea<l down
the homestretch to take a 3'h·length victA>ry ,in
Sunday's Burke Handicap, a 111,..mite turf
feature of the Oak Tree meeting at Santa Anita
. . . Maurice Lucas, once considered •he belt
power forward in the National Basketball
Association, was traded Sunday from the New
Jersey Nets to the New York Knicks for free
agent guard Ray Wllliam s ... Former DaJJas
Cowboy cornerback Mel Renfro was \nducted
into the Cowboy Ring of Honor. the fifth player
so honored by the NFL team. The others are
Don Perkins, Bob LUly, Don Meredltb and
Chuck Howley.
Television. radio
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ ./ ./ ./ excellent; ./ ./ ./
worth watching; ./ 1 fair; ./forget It.
9 6 p.m., Ch•nnet 7 ./ ./ ./ ./
NFL FOOTBALL: Houston at Pittsburgh. ' Announcers: Frank Gifford, Don Meredith
and Fran Tarkenton.
Both teams are coming off tosses and the t~
are tied for second In the American Conference
Central Division. The Steeler offense behind Terry Bradshaw was limited to one touchdown by
Cincinnati while the Oiler\ fa~ little better. Ken
Stabler had four passes Intercepted as Houston
lost, 38-10 to New England. Pittsburgh Is favored
by five points.
Football KNX (1070).
RADIO Houston at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m.,
STEINBRENNER SPEAKS OUT • • •
embarrassment to Los Angeles -
not to the city but to the team
when we did it to them in
1978.
··After you go two-up and lose
two games like we lost Friday
and Saturday. yeah, it would be
an embarrassment."
Steinbrenner conceded that
the Dodgers beat his club fair
and square this time. but that
was not a good enough alibi for
the Yankees to be trailing three
games to two.
"Just look at the stat sheets,"
he said. "I can't change the
facts -75 million people saw it.
"When we had their pitchers
on the ropes, we lacked the
killer instinct," be said. "We
had chances to put their pitchers
away and put them away good.
The same thing happened today
in the second and fourth innings.
We should have had four or five
runs but certain guys didn't
com e through."
All it would have required to
l earn the s ubject of
Steinbrenner's attack was a
quick look back at the
scorecard . But Boss George
saved the reporters' time.
"Rick Cerone took us out of
both those innings," he said.
"He hil groun d balls with
runners on base and nobody out.
Their catcher comes up and hits
NOW!!
thru Nov. 11th
12.9°/o
op r t1nonc1ng
on Y04Jf new
CIMARRON
at
~
COSTA MESA
m 4) 540-9100
o n e out (Steve Yeager's
game-winning home run in the
seventh inning).
"Their pitcher (Jerry Reuss>
beat our pitcher <Ron Guidry)
and their catcher beat our
catcher . It was a great game
today and the best team won -
the best pitcher and best
catcher."
In further advancing his
thoughts on Cerone .
Steinbrenner made reference to
the fact that on both ground
'balls, Cerone hit the first pitch
thrown to him. "I'm not the
batter, but we've discussed
being patient up there -seeing
more than one pit-th."
Then, Steinbrenner changed
the topic to Winfield . the
marvelously gifted left rielder,
who was signed to a $23 million
10-year contract last winter
after much haggling in round
table talks between Winfield, his
a~ent(s) and Boss George.
Winfield, a .286 hitter during
the season. was hitless in 14 at·
bats during the first four World
Series games, but collected his
first in the fifth inning Sunday. a
single. In three other at-bats,
however, Winfield struck out
twice and grounded into a force
out with runners al first and
second and one out in the third.
.. We've got to get some
production out of him,"
Steinbrenner said. "I only wilh
his bit would have been a
game-winning home run. I
would have gone out and gottee
it (the ball) myself."
Winfield, seated by his locker,
was unemotional when told of
Steinbrenner's remarks. "The
story is in that room,•· he ~aid,
pointing in the general dlretlion
of the Dodgers' clubhouse. ''The
story is down there. I'm not
talking; there's nothing I want
to talk about."
Steinbrenner, commentinf on
the lack or killer instinct. said
that it seemed to him that it was
the same people who were not
delivering in key situations.
''Some guys are going to have to·
stop talking and s tart doin& it,"
he said , and furthermore, "lf
these guys play in New York
like they did he r e over the
weekend, they'll be gone next
year." something Steinbrenner
had warned of earlier this
month.
Still. Boss George changed
mood direction toward the end
of his interview, saying, "We1re
going to win it and you can quote
me on that. I'm confident."
T rode in your old pilot light
and thermostat, get s 123·
(almost half the cost) and
energy effidencyl .
THE SO. CAL. GAS CD. WILL GM YOU 123.bO
FOR YOUR PRESENT PILOT LIGHT AND
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---~ ....
....................... "'.'"
Graham
BtOthers
------.--·-..... ---....--. --...-...--
Steue Yeager is congratulated by Tommy Lasorda alter l1111u111 l11s CJ<llllt' '' m11111q
From Page C1
DODGERS HAVE ADVANTAGE • • •
come home and get comfortable and try to
regroup.··
The Dodgers must now regroup in New York.
however, where they have dropped six straight to
the Yankees . The last Dodger victory in Yankee
Stadium was in Game Two of the 1977 World Series
when Hooton beat Catfish Hunter , 2·1
Asked if the Dodgers can win one or the two
remaining g'ames scheduled in New York, Yeager
replied: "I think this team can win ~game in \he
G;;.and Canyon if it has to."
"Just another day at the office," added Steve
Garvey following the pulsating victory. "This
team is just. playing in the spirit of the De>dger
organization. For once. after coming back and
coming back. we now have a lead.
''Why not take advantage of it. cross the finish
line and ~ive vou ~uys (the media) a happy
ending? I want to win it Tuesday, .. Garvey added.
Asked if the pressure of being behind only to
somehow pull out victories -either in a game or a
series was starting to get to the club. Garvey
noted: "It has been a constant source of pressuf.e
We're creatures of llabil and as we battle back like
we did today, you just become more conditioned to
It all."
The Dodgers got conditioned in the second
inning when Reggie Jackson ripped a double down
the left-field line a,nd moved to third when Lopes
dropped a slow grounder off the bat of Bob
Watson. Lou Piniella then singled to left to score
J ackson.
Rick Cerone followed by billing into a double
play, and Reuss got Aurelio Rodriguez to ground
out to 8111 Russell at short.
Yeager doubled off the left-field fence in the
second inning, but that was to be the only hit the
Dodgers would get until Guerrero and Yeager
provided their seventh-inning heroics.
With Cey's status questionable Chis injury has
been diagnosed as a mild concussion>. Guerrero
may be moved back to third base where he
substituted nicely when the Penguin was
recuperating from a broken wrist late in the
regular season.
B,Ut ir Cey was well enough, he was to join the
Dodgers in New York today -a remarkable
recovery, considering the velocity of Gossage's
pitch.
"If he didn't have a helmet on he m ight be
dead." admitted Gossage. "There was no way I
was trying to throv. <ll him My l'ontrol is pretty
good . l.lut loda) m) <"oordmation was off and I
rl·ally chdn't kncm l':<actl) where the ball was
gorng to go
Whl'n I ~av. him hit, I thought 'Oh God.' I ,
kn o v. that wht·n Go-.sage throws hard. he
som ct1m<.>s lose1' nmtrol but there was no way he
v. ould Lr~ to hit him 1 ('{·\ 1 added Lasorda.
·1t s hke a ran· c<1r driver m auto racing,"
Go-.sage noted "His famtl) has to understand that
ever) l1mt-hl' goes out there, there's a chance
he might not come IJack It 's not that severe in
baseball, but you cant v.orry about it. Otherwise.
ynu·n· not going to be effective ...
A Ron Cey comeback . in fact, would be
indicative of thc lJuclgcr::i th1-. )l•ar
Vik es, FV swi tc h
Then.> was httlt• shurflmg 10 the Daily
Pilot's Orange County Top 10 high school
football rankin~s.
Fountain V:illev <No 2> last week> and
Manna <No :1 las·t week > switched places
aft er Marina defratC'd the Harons, while
Mater Dei, a 31 -2-1 loser to powerful St Paul.
foll from seventh to ninth place
Orange Count) Top 10
Dail} Pilot football rankings
Pos. Team. record Nut game
J Edison <7 01 Westmmster 15·2>
~ ,\tunna lti 11 lluntmgton Beach <3·41
3. Fountain \'all{•y 15 <!1 Ocean View (3·4
.t. El Mo<lcrn:1 1 ~ 31• SA Valley 13·4>
5 Footh11l 16 11 Santa Ana 13-4 1
6. Espcrnnza 111 I • Los Alitmilos (3-3·1)
7 Estam·1a <6 11t 1 Newport Harbor 0 -6)
8 \'ilia Park <6 11 Tustin (3·4)
9 Mater De1 134 > Bis hop Amat <6·11 (3·4>
10 <tie> Pacifica <6·11 Loara (3-4)
El Dorado <5·2> Katella (0·6·11
M1ss1on VieJo <6 O 11 San Clf'lte C0-71
•one forfeit I~:-:
I
)
'
I p
NFL standings
I
* * * * * • ' * * * * • •r : JOHNSON & SON !1
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN ('ONFEREN('E
Western Division Wes tern Division
w L T PF PA Pct w L ·1 t'F PA
San Fran. 6 2 0 191 140 .650 Kansas City 6 2 () 207 163
Atlanta 4 4 0 222 162 .. 500 San Diego 5 3 0 253 187
Rams 4 4 0 194 180 .500 Denver 5 3 0 154 112
New Orlns 2 6 0 98 163 250 Oakland 3 5 0 98 133
Eastern Division Seattle 2 6 0 104 171
Philadelphia7 1 0 183 112 .875 Eastern Division
Dallas 6 2 0 197 167 .750 Miami 5 2 1 186 152
NY Giants 5 3 0 164 121 .625 Buffalo 5 .I 3 0 181 128
St. Louis 3 5 0 158 209 .375 NY Jets 3 4 I 165 202
Washington 2 6 0 135 191 .250 Eng Id 2 6 0 190 183
Central Division Bltmre 1 7 0 148 271
Minnesota s 3 0 188 199 .625 Central Division
Tampa Bay 4 4 0 143 128 .500 Cincinnati 5 3 0 194 155
Detroit 4 4 0 197 170 .500 Pittsburgh 4 3 0 148 145
Green Bay 2 6 0 136 184 .250 Houston 4 3 0 125 137
Chicago 2 6 0 126 198 .250 Cleveland 4 4 0 150 1 :2
._.., .. _ S411MNy'a Gem ..
kn Fr-ltco 20 •-• 1' Detroit et•-
NY Oi.nts 21. Atlante 24, OT All•nl• ., New Orle•M
Buffalo t, °"""., 1 llelllmore et Mleml
Clowi.nd 42, llenimore 21 Chle1190 Ill T-Bey
o.trotU1, Orwn Bev 17 Cle¥ei.nd et Buff•lo
""41....,....10, T..,,.,. a.v 10 HO•"'°" M Clndnnell St. Lwlt •, MlnNtOto 17 NV Jetl•I NY Glenb
Wolft=. tA. New El>OIMd tt Sen Fr..clsco et Plt1111U'Oh
H.. 11, Clncl""•ll 1 Seattle et~ Bey
Cll'"-». S.. a... 17 OT OellH et Ptllledelpllla
CJ11no1 • Mloml 11 IC an SM Cl'Y ot s.. 01999
Seetlle ~ NY Jets J New Enoi-etOelllend
"-· " .. Ollll.wl 17
SI. LOUIS ot WHlllllV'On T.....,t_ MMNf,Nev t
Hwti.o .. PllltillUf'tlh (~ 1 et•> ,..,,,,..,.. et o.-r
on 12's & ll's
c.rs • L YNX's • LN-7's
. ~
: Presents . !' • Pct •
750 •
625 •
625 •
.375 •
.250 • • 688 •
625 •
438 .
250 • • .125 •
• .625.
.571 •
.571 •
500 . • • • • • • • .. • .. • • • ..
NR.'s
Picks of
The WHt&
MONDAY
Houatoft
over
"ittsbwcJh
t
From PageC1
(JOHN SEVANO'S COLUMN • • •
•PPHJ"I to be ln order ... It'• been a lon1 tJme lo ~mll\I.
The Rama not only need lo make a
1uarterback chan1e -they HAVE to make a QB
tban1e. MalavuJ bae to admit be made a mistake
with Haden and 1lve the ball to Jeff Rulled1e.
, ll'I not a matter of stubbornness now, it's a
From Page C1
RAMS LOSE • • •
we did and score 17 points. That'!! what makes it so
bard.
"We dJd have a lot of third·and·lOs and
thlrd·and·l2s, though. We dJd the same thins
ualnst Dallas and we did it a1aln here. You can't
constanUy do that and win.''
The final statistics bear out the Rams' horror
story: fnt downs -25-14 ; total yards -401·325:
rushing yards -145·60; return yardage -26<1-llO ;
, time of poesession -33: 18-26:42. Tbe only stat the
Rams didn't lead in was passing yards -256·265
-but even that was close.
"It's not only dJsappolntlng that we lost, but 5
and 3 sounds so much better than 4 and 4. It's the
whole tb.i.nl. the division, and 4-4 doesn't have' a
good ring toll," said Haden.
Nor d~ the 6-2 first-place record the 49ers
currenUy hold in the NFC West. The Rams and the
Atlanta Falcons, two teams who figured to be
battling for the top spot at this time of the season,
are trailing by two games. And, although that
doesn't sound like a lot, one has to remember
there are only eight games left in the season.
For now at least. the 49ers are in the driver's
seat.
"I'll admit we were lucky, but I'd rather be
lucky than good," is how Jack Reynolds summed
up the 49ers' victory against hls former
teammates . "The Rams will win their share. They
always do."
Ironically, it was Reynolds -the 11-year
veteran linebacker the Rams released during the
off.season -and defensive end Fred Dean, exiled
from the San Diego Chargers, who were two of the
principal contributors toward keeping the Rams
out of the end zone.
Reynolds bad three tackles and three assists
against his former teammates, while Dean
appeared to be part of Haden's jersey in recording
4 ~ s acks.
"Jack Reynolds and Fred Dean have both
helped this team a lot," said J ack Youngblood.
"They're professional. talented and an asset to
any young team. The 49ers have come a long way
over the past three years."
A9d it appears as il the Rams have regressed
"I hurt because I take pride in what I do," said
Haden, "~d I'm disappointed I didn't do a better
job."
"We're at a turning point," added Rich Saul.
"We're going to have to start winning some games
... or it's going to be a long season.·•
For some of the Ram players, it's been a long
season already.
matter Of civin1 tbt Ram. a et.anee ftrtAI tllle
rest of the aeason.
If Ray doesn't make the move. be •• only himself tD blame. • • • fl'or those need1nt mOH proof .._. HM.ea.
let's examine the Rama' tour wtna:
Against Green Bay (3$-23), Haden left tbe
game with an ln.Jury early ln the 1econd quart.er
with hls team behind, 7·0. He •1411n't retura as
Rutledge flnlshed the same.
Again.st Chlca10 (24·7>, Jhden pla,_. welJ , but
ANYBODY could have played well q.tul t.be
Bears that night.
Against Atlanta (37·35), Haden left witb an
injury and the Rams behind, 21·11. It wu tbe
special teams and Rutledte's two toydadown
passes that were the dUferetace. ·
Finally, there's ClevelUct ~2'M8), Hecln was
exceptional (you ba\le to give eredtt .We crtdtt
is due).
Unfortunately, one 1am• doesn't cut tt -
that's why a change is needed.
. • * *
Add wide receiver Presterl DelUS8t• Oii the
Rams' situation:
"I know some tbinga, but I don't wQt to atart
a whole lot or b.s. around here. Let'1 J.i aay a lot
of it is on the field."
Add Jack Reynolds: "I feel sorry for Pat
Haden because he's under so much pressure
because of the situation in LA. 1 thiak he'• hHdleCS
it as best as he possibly could with all the •ressure
that's been put on him.
"I know I wouldn't have been able to hudle it
like be has."
* * * Reynolds on the importance of the 1ame:
"All it is ls another W."
Reynolds on the Rams:
"I have nothing against the Ram players."
Reynolds on the 49ers ' first.place position:
"It doesn't mean anythln1. You're only as
good as your last play ~aae .i.. )ICM! 8'lr't
patting yourself on the baelr t. wben YOll fat
yourself at the bottom." • Bob Lee update: • •
The ex.iled quarterback underwent minor
surgery 10 days ago to have dead tissue and part of
his tendon removed in his right elbow.
Doctors say the surgery was a succe11 and
now Lee will see if the arm is a sucttaa this week.
Lee, who lives in the Bay Area, says be already
feels stronger and is hopeful of booting oa with
another team before the end of the moath. • • *
One LA reporter asked no one In particular,
"Which middle lin e bac ker would you rather
have?"
The unanimous opinion -amon1 LA writers
-was Reynolds.
* * * The Rams, at one time, had a shot at Fred
Dean but declined to pursue the matter when they
felt his salary demands were not within their
financial structure.
UC Irvine
captures
Swee t Trophy
Raider in rally
Race encounter s little diff iculty
For the third year in a row
New p o rt Ocean Sailing
Association's 14-Mile Bank race
wound up without incident.
R o bins on whl8
Newport regatta
--....-::·~·-··'~
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Monday. October 28, 1911 • ca ..
Flamboyant
takes race
LOS ANGELES
Flamboyant, co·•klppered by
Barney and Steve Flam, Loq
,Beach Yacht Club was Lbe Class
A winner In the loternatlonal
Offshore Rule dJvlslon In Lbe
second race of Loi An1eles
Yacht Club's Harbor ~rfea .
Trophy winner ln all cluaes:
IOlt,,\ -I. 1'1...-V-. .. mey 11M 5Mw
1'1•111 , LeYC\ 2.1.. l.tvt M1chl11t , llon ~rty·O..W.,. 1111r .. n, NHYC, I. ROii., fOl'.j Goll_.. $¥Nllcn . IAYC.
,...... il0;t 1. '=""t'Ni• 1.or-.nc~ Aevc'-2.
Wft, ~~--. 1.AYC:-"""'· PM C; a. .o
1olt-c -'· I( ..... 191rlt. MUI ...__ MMt• Voe•.!, 1.evc; t. ett Apple. or1n1-~ .. 11.
NHYq a. C.W• UM, SCI Hert, ICHYC,
PH1tl'-A-1 • ...,..._,, J t"' N-w.1.evc 1. TyPMo11, J -01...,, La YC; I. Cwt . 6111 ~.si eve.
""""_. -1. ~ AJe ,.,,,.., A, ... •eve; L .. , ..... "9111 lllfel'9e, LA\'C; .. Srtt-1(41n DltWOlt., llCYC.
PHltl'-C -I. I'« llottMI Girt, 0..-_. 1C...t11 erown, CIYC; I. TO<Mrt, Oout 1114 tom
Jtrt f llMfl, 1.AYC; a. ••KtrMtl-..... " ktltey, CIYC.
From Page C1
BRAWL .•.
m e, which probably accounts
me for my lip," Stelnb~nner
said. "But I hit him with a riihl
and a left and pushed them both
out the door .
''When I left them one was
laying down and one was sitting
ttown. I then went to t he
bathroom to wash the blood off
me and told security officials,
but I guess they can't find the
guys."
According to Steinbrenner.
both men, in their earlr 20s,
seemed to have been dnnking
quite a bit.
The Yankees owner went to
ditlhef', bell started fffliftl pain
in bi's left band. He s aid be
called Yankee teitm physician
Dr. John Bonamo. The dOctor
taped bis right hand, placed the
cast on his le ft h and and
indicated it was possibly brokt:n,
said Steinbrenner .
ACROSS
Rookie, 18, leads .
Winnipeg victory ._
WINNIPEG. Manitoba (AP / -
Anyone still wondering bow top drat\
pick Dale Hawerchuk would fare in the
National Hockey IAaaue should have
few cloubt.s after wat.cblnl t.be rookie
cent~r play against Los An1eles.
Hawerchuk, Canada's top junior
player in 1980·81, scored three aoala -
an NHL first for the 18-year-old Toronto
native -to spark the Winnipeg Jets to
a 9·4 win over the Kings before 10,M4
fans Sunday night.
"It was great," said Hawerchuk, who
scored 81 goals in 72 1amea last seuon
for Cornwall Royals of the Qu.-,.c
Major Junior Hockey Leaiue.
"Any time you aet a -hat trick it's
great," he said. "It's just a niatter of
being in the right place at ~e rilht
time, that's all. It's been a team effort
all the way. We wouldn't be near the top
lf it wasn't."
Hawercbuk's back·lo·back 1oals at
4:09.and 14:04 of the second period aave
the J et.a a 3·2 edge and they never
looked back.
Hawerchuk rapped in Norniand
Dupont's rebound for his first goal. He
was lying on the ice for his next score,
sweeping the puck into the r...o. Anaeles
net with his stick. His last goal -bis
seventh in eight NHL games -came at
15:48 of the third period when bis skate
deflected a Morris Lukowich drive.
Doug Smail of the Jets scored at 19: 51
of the second period and again in the
third period when Winnipeg erupted for
five goals.
Paul Macl..ean, Dave Christian, Willy
LiBditrom and Barry Legge also acored
fer the Jet.s, who have a 4·2-> Neord
and sole possession of second place in
the Norris division .
"It was the Dale Hawerchuk show
tonight," said Winnipe1t head coach
Tom Watt. But he also gave credit to
goalie Ed Staniowski.
* NHL
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1,4 Shown, Steelef'a' 27 St .. ters' G Sem -Slloh Of'I .... -LH A1199ltt
1 .. 1,_.IS. WINI ... 7·--11-4, star CB 31 Got off
10 Ollera' S Jeck -32 Balllmore ethlete
12 AB Coleman and 33 S.F. FOftY·-
TE Lee 3!!> WR Theo end RB
14 Packers' LB Rich -Ricky
16 llteoaJ -of hands 31 Clock symbol
le DE -Aor Setmofl 37 Mrs. In France
17 -c ... r Day 38 Sen -State
11 ...,.. LB Wlleon 42 eroncoe' LB Jim -
20 -Smw 43 Airport eked abbr.
21 8 ronc09' TE Egloff 48 RCMJtlnlz.ad llfe
22 FatcoM' WR •7 Pro'• charge
Jentilns 48 Famous
23 Oiiers' OE 8ak.ef 50 See 54 AcroN
1 Pr1nclpel
2 SlclW.n votcano
3 Haul
4 UCLA pleyer
5 Dlaape>olntl"(I
game'°' tM
home fans
8 PAT ICOf9
52 s..ti.wtta' c John -S4 Oiiers' aw 08,
53 lnleroeptl with 50 Acro.a
Go•ll•• -Lo• A11t ••••· ltulllerford. Winni-. ,.., ... tlll. A
-10 ......
Volleyball
showdown
It's showdown time in
the Sea View League
women's volleyball flag
chase with Corona del
Mar faci n g three
top-rated teama in a
three-day span starting
. Tuesday nigh& a1ainst
El Toro at CdM.
The Sea JC.inga are
rated No. 4 in the CIF _ ...... ..,._,.._. with El Toro No. 3.
UC Irvine with Ken Walts at
the helm was the winner of the
Dick Sweet Trophy, symbolic of
the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate
Yacht Racing Asso ciation
championship in a five·race
series in the ocean off Newport
Beach Saturday and Sunday.
Runner ·up was Stanford with
Paul Yost at the he lm . The
regatta was sailed in 30-foot
Shields Class sloops. The sailors
dedicated the event lo Cornelius
Sh ields of New York who
donated all of the sloops lo the
PCYRA. Shields. head of a New
York stock brokerage firm, died
Oct. 15.
In some r aces during the last
three decades Ute r ace has been
hampered by too much wind, too
little wind and dense fog causing
it to be abandoned entirely or to
be finished at the stake boat
anchored on the Lasuen Sea
Mount (known as the 14·Mile
Bank> which r ises to with.in 50
fathoms of the surface off the
east end of Catalina Island.
7 Nega11ve prefix Twenty-three bom tWfted out a HMaman OB
Sunday for Newp~t• Harbor Kinnick
Y a c ht C 1 u b · s O.ic t b b e r t -·eoer
One·desi1n Re1at\a sailed on 10 S.fety SCOl'e
Wednesday nltht (7 :r-+-~llP._ ........ o'clock), the Sea Kings
host No. S-rated Laguna
t:z'"-+--t--t--t Beach in a llori-league
The winner of the Pacific
Coast championship will travel
east later this fall for the
national championship at the
Coast Guard Acade my. New
London, Conn.
This is the fourth straight year
that UCI has won the Sweet
Trophy.
Saturday's race started off the
Balboa Pier in light air with
heavy overcast, but the wind
~icked up offshore and the first
boat around the stake boat was
Mike Braun's Santa Cruz-50
Shandu, Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club at 3 :25 p.m . The race'
started at 11 a .m.
ocean courses. 11 l'talt ol Farner
Winner over six ri•-1• in the 13 i:.-;., °'
Etch ells-22 Clas1 t; as Art Moynihan (ab 1 Robinson , NHYC , and the 19 Aun_ o.yUght
winner ln the sb-boat Solina 20 _ kick
Class was Gaston Ortis, Balboa 22 Com"'9f'Ci.I
Yacht Club. 23 Ex Chief• and
ppera' K
Stenarud
Alamitos Bay wins ~ i~
29 08 Bat1kowaJll Ala mitos Bay Yacht Club,
Long Beach, was the winner ol
the William Morris Trophy in
Lido Yacttt Club's annul team
race for Ildo-14s.
28 TenneaMe player,
f0t anon
29 Red Gnmge'e Univ.
(M>.)
30 New Ofleena -
(M>.)
38 PTA type
39 w CMJ Id-be era.
40 Six per Inning
41 Yard•, gained, e.g.
affair, then pla.y No. 1
rated Irvine 1'b~rsday
at 3: 15 at Irvine. CdM ~.___.,_.__.,_..__. handed Irvine its only
42 Rod and -
43 Raison d' -
44 Johnny Majors'
Univ. (ab.)
league loss in first.round
play.
CdM ts led by seniors
Katrina Moi9o, Kristen
Brown and Ci n dy
Kendall. Other starters
are juniors Mary Ann
Muller and Lisa
Niedringhaus and
freshman Booke
45 Bother Herrington.
47 Dolphln•' state (ab.) Other members of the
49 Acom produOer Cd M t eam are Pam
51 Exl•t L a w r e n c e , L i s a
Greenberg, Ilene Hess.
Other schools participating
were Orange Coast College, UC
Berkeley, UC Santa Barbara,
California Maritime Academy,
Har vey Mudd College, UC Santa
Cr uz, and the University of
Hawaii.
But on the return to the
mainland Shandu was
overhauled by Jim Linderman's
Ericson·46, Raider . Balboa
Yacht Club. Raider was the first
monohull to finish the 28·mile
course in an elapsed time of
slightly more than six hours.
Handicap results:
The ABYC team wa s
composed of skippers Charlie
Cummings, Mark Rastello, Ron
Rosenberg and Gib Marshell.
34 He'9hbof ol MA
35 Cowboys' CB
Barnes See nexl weett'a :aaue fOf solution
Cheryl Rados , Tracy
Ths trup and Andrea
Reddick. IOlt -I . ~lt. Alltn llr_,, VYC. Other clubs involved in the
event in order of finish were
Balboa Yacht C!ub, Mfnk* Bay
Yacht Club and the boet UYC.
PHltF·A -I. Jiffy too, ltori Woods, VYC; J, c.t1 Pei--, Cerl Lt1t. VYC; I. H.,._11. Jllft Heery, l8YC; 4. 5'ress llrMker, Jeck 8M 9nlt4 lAr-, llCYC:; S. TOf'Y, a. Oelldl, NHY(.
PHltl<·l -1. lt-•Y ll,J4iMWIWel, VYC:.
PHlt,.-C -I. K-"9, Ar1 Clltcl"', 9CYC; t. ~v.Or_G ....... IYC.
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c Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 28. 1981
Brian's just Sipe(r)
New Orleans star tles Cincinnati, 17-7
From AP D11p1tcht1
CLEVELAND Quarterback Brian Sipe
riddled the Baltimore defense tor a team-record
444 yardR passing and tour touchdowns as the
Cleveland Browns handed lhe Coils their seventh
stralghl defeat 42·28 in a National Football League
game Sunday
Sipe completed 30 of 41 passes in breaking the
Browns' passing yardage mark or 401 set by Otto
Graham in 1952.
The Browns compiled 562 yards tot:ll offense to
shatter lhe team mark of 550 yards set against the
Chicago Bears in 1951.
Sipe was near perfect in the first half,
completing 17 of his first 22 passes -including ~l
in a row. He threw touchdown passes lo Onie
Newsome t1 yard>. Gregg Pruitt (22 yards) and
Dave Logan <40 yards).
Charles While added a 2-yard run to-give lhe
Browns a 28-7 halftime lead.
Saints 17. Bengals 7
NEW ORLEANS Rookie running back
George Rogers broke open a scoreless tie with a
19-yard, third-quarte r touchdown burst to ignite
New Orleans to a 17 -7 upset victory over
Cincinnati.
The Saints now are 2-5, doubling their number
of total victories last season. Cincinnati, leading
the American Football Conference Central
Division coming into the game, dropped to 5-3.
Rogers, the Heisman Trophy winner who was
the No. 1 choice in the 1981 NFL draft, carried 31
limes for 113 yards. It was his third straight
100-yard rushing game and fifth of the season .
Costa Mesa High product Benny Ricardo
added a 38-yard field goal in the fourth quarter.
Bears 20. Chargers 17
CHICAGO John Rovelo's 26-yard field goal
with 5:20 left in overtime lifted Chicago to a 20·17
victory over San Diego, snapping a four-game
losing streak
Gary F<'nc1k 's interception of a Dan Fouls
pass set up the winning score. Fencik intercepted
at the Chicago 41-yard line and returned it 32
vards to the San Diego l7. The Bears managed to
m ove the ball down to the San Die~o 9-yard line
before Roveto's winning kick.
The Chargers had tied the game on a 39-yard
touchdown pass from Fouls to Wes Cha11dler with
1 :40 left in regulation lime after the Bears had
marched 76 yards for a go-ahf>ad touchdown on
Walter Payton's lwo-yard run
Ltons 31 . Packers 27
PONTIAC. Mi ch. Detroit quarterback Eric
Hipple ran for two touchdowns, including the
clincher with 1:54 remaining in the game and
passed for another as the Lions defeated Green
Bay. 31-27.
The Packers had fought back to take a 27-24
lead on a 1-yard touchdown run by Gerry Ellis
with 5:52 left in the fourth quarter.
However. Hipple drove the Lions right back 76
yards in 12 plays including a clutch 38-yard
completion to Leonard Thompson at lhe 9 -to
regain the lead with a 5-yard quarterback draw
play on third-and-goal.
Giants 27. Falcons 24
ATLANTA Joe Danelo drilled a 40-yard
field goal with 5.40 remaining in overtime as the
New York Giants downed Atlanta. 27-24.
Danelo's £ie ld goal came after Brad Van Pelt
fell on a William Andrews fumble at the Atlanta
31 . The victory in the rainy, 4.5-degree weather,
was the third in a row for the Giants.
The Falcons fo rced the overtime with a
66-yard drive in the final two minutes that ended
on Lynn Cain's 3-yard sweep off left end with 1:09
left in regulation, tying the game al 24·24 .
Seahawks 19, Jets 3
NEW YORK Steve Largent ran 10 yards for
one touchdown a nd caught Jim ZOrn's 27-yard pass
for anothe r as Sealtle survived their own
ineptitude and defeated lhe New York Jets, 19·3.
With Theotis Brown rushing for 104 yards on 14
carries to set up the first two Seattle touchdowns,
and Sherman Smith's 4·yard scoring run, the
Seahawks. 2-6, beat the Jets for the fifth time in
five games s ince Seattle entered the NFL in 1976.
The Jets. their four-game unbeaten streak ended,
are 3-4-1 this year.
Seattle. which threw away several scoring
chances in the second quarter and held only a 7·0
J C ~-PhllhW:
4 Great DATSUN Nights
GARY HTTENHAUSEN
llCI flRKEl
STEVE llNSll
ION SHUMAN
SAMMY SWINDEU
DEAN THOMPSON
l..._.McS,...._
J•.-y O.kle
fMe lenltt Jeff SwWelt
WED-THU·FRl-SA T
OCT. 21·2'·30-31 I P .M.
O.eftfyiftf, , .. l1ee1-Wt4.-l1Mtr.
l••t O..Ce, Mystery I.en-Fri.
C Mehl, I ... , JI.lip FIMle-s.t.
IUOO Vennont
Gardena
11 u 1 121 1100 ·
!7 1]) ]7J. J1 47
reveals in th~ [Jack Anderson 111111 Pllil l
'
• halftime lead, gave up only a 34-yard field goal to
New York's Pat Leahy midway In the third
quar~er ...
' Redskins 24, Patriots 22
WASHINGTON -Quarterback Joe
Theismann's 1-yard touchdown run in the third
period was the difference as Washington edged
New England, 24-22 In an inter-conference club.
The Redskins' victory, their first at home in
four outings, raised their season record to 2·6. The
Patriots, 15till looking for their first win away from
home. are also 2·6.
Tbelsmann's winning scamper came with 3~
minutes remaining in the third period and the
Redskins nursing a 17 15 lead.
The Patriots' final chance for a victory ended
when John Smith was short on a 53-yard field goal
attempt with 57 seconds remainin1t.
Eaqles 20, Bucs 10
PHILAD-ELPHIA -Tony Franklin's 32·yard
field goal with 4 . 18 l eft lo play enabled
Philadelphia to beat Tampa Bay 20-10 Sunday in a
National Football League game.
Franklin's game-winning kick cam e just 2 :50
after the Buccaneers' Bill Capece had tied the
game 10·10 with a 29-yard field goal.
The Eagles returned the kickoff after
Capece's field goal to their 32. After Wilbert
Montgomery gained 9 yards, quarterback Ron
Jaworski connected with wide receiver Charlie
Smith for a 45-yard gain to lhe Tampa Bay 14.
Montgomery lost 5, gained 5 and then was
stopped for no gain before Franklin came on to
split the uprights with the winning points.
Cowboys 28, Dolphins 27
IRVING, Texas Dallas quarterback Danny
White completed two touchdown passes in a
31-second span late in the fourth quarter to rally
the Cowboys to a 28·27 victory over Miami.
The victory was secured in the final eight
seconds when rookie defensive back Mike Downs
intercepted Miami quarterback David Woodley at
the Dallas 42.
The Cowbovs overcame a 27·14 Miami lead
and seemed all but dead before White ignited his
sluggish offense with a rive-yard touchdown pass
to tight end Doug Cosbie with 3:48 to go.
Bills 9. Broncos 7
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -Nick Mike-Mayer
drilled his third field goal with one second
remaining as Buffalo defeated Denver 9-7.
Second-year back Joe Cribbs rushed for 123
yards in 24 carries, including 21 on four tries in a
last-gasp drive that set up Mike-Mayer's 36-yard
effort.
Denver was stymied by a withering Buffalo
defense but led all the way until Mike-Mayer's
final boot. Bronco quarterback Craig Morton had
lofted a 36-yard touchdown pass to Steve Watson in
the second quarter.
Just before the half, Mike-Mayer kicked a
41-yard field goal, and he added a 46-yarder in the
third quarter
Ch ief s 28, Raiders 17
OAKLAND Kansas City rookie Billy
Jackson rushed for three late touchdowns and
linebacker Gary S p a ni turned back a (inal
Oakland rally by streaking 91 yards to score with a
recovered fumble as the Chiefs s urged to a 28-17
victory over lhe Raiders.
The come-from-behind victory was keyed by
quarterback Steve ~uller. who too.k over for :8ill
Kenney in the third quarter with the Chiefs
trailing 17·0.
Oakland drove to the Kansas City one-yard
line with less than a minute to go in lhe game. But
two plays later, Charles Jackson forced Raider
quarterback Marc Wilson to fumble and Spani
scooped up the loose ball and romped down the
sideline untoµched. ._
Card in a ls 30, Vikings 17
ST. LOUIS -Jim Hart tossed his 199th and
200th career touchdown passes. Neil O'Donoghue
booted three field goals and Wayne Morris raced
13 yards for a key score in the second half. lifting
St. Louis to a 30·17 upset over Minnesota.
Minnesota misllfkes helped St. Louis end a
two-game losing streak and halt a string of five
consecutive Viking victories.
MOftday Hlcjllt Football
3 GIANT SCRIEINS 75c BEER & HOT DOGS
GUEST CllEBllTIES/UFFU AT HALfTIME
Oyer Rd. Exit/Newport Fwy. Sent• Ana
549-1512
T his w eek s Special
RADO COUPE
Leat her seating tree, Cabriolet lop &'
Cadlllac wire wheel covers . (1BGA165).
$16,995
CodWac Vo.LUjl Prottttlon Sfflllcf AgrHnM'ltl A~\ I .
Ml c.w ~ T'• ..._ _ "'"""" '!lllif ,...6 u.i..
~~lJlf r'
~1. ' "l: , " . I •""... ' ' ... .
! f ._, • •" • I ••. A.---~-_ii -•. <~......... . . .
. ·. . . .
Brwn Sitw
Sala za1~
le a ves
no d o ubt
NEW YORK (APl Alberto
Salazar has e nde d a ll the'
controversy about the world
mara thon record.
The quietly confident Salazar·
had said prior to Sunday's New
York City Marathon that "my
goa I is to break 2 · 08 · 33, so
there's no doubt in my mind or
anybody else's mind that I've
got the record ·
Running s moothl y and
strong ly through New York
City 's fi ve borouqhs, Salazar
covered the ~ruelling 26 miles .
385 yards in 2 hour5, 8 minutes,
13 seconds
... . . . ,, ----~--. "'. -
NFL log
11 Newon.-
Jt G'"'18eY :M S.11 lfr-IKO 17 Cit~ t> P11ll ... 1pNe u. i,...,.A ........ 41 st. Lours
2.4 NV GI.,.. IOT)
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Nov. I-Ats. f'rerKIKO
Nov IS-Pltttbutofl
Nov t>-XM!Mttott
NOV :rt-Al H-tofl
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BaltllnOf'e (1·7)
2' New Eflllland , lutf•lo
10 °*""• !I Ml•MI
17 9utl•IO 1t Clncl-11 1• S.11 Oleoo
21 Cleve~
NOY. 1-AtMl-I Nov ~NV ntl Nov lj-At PNl-iplll•
Nov n -SL Louil
NOV 19-At NY Jet$
O.C -Delles Dec I >-Al WMlll"910ft
O.C JO-Hew 1:1191-
Buff alo (S-3)
Jl NewY_J ...
U BelUmore
14 Pllllede!Pflle ?4 Clr><lflMt.1 (OT)
13 BelUmore
ll Ml•ml
•• N•• Yorti.Jets 'o. ...... Ho• 1-<:11w1-
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Nov. 17-N-E1>9l-Nov. l9-Wallll"91on
O.c. ._Al Sen Ole90 ~ :::::: ~1!ni1•nd
Chlc:aigo (2-6)
• Greet> Bey 17 S•n FrerKIKO 29 Tampe Bay
1 LCKA-ln 21 Mlnne!IOta 1 WHhlnglon
11 OetrOll
JO Se" o._ (Oh
Nov. l~AI T•mpe 8•~ Nov t-AI KMIW$ City
Nov l~AtGrM<I Bay NOY 22-0etroll
Noy 2-AI 0.lla\ Dec .,_..,_,"'""""' Dec 1)-Aloakl-
Oec 20-o.n ....
Cincinnati (S..3)
21 SHll ..
ll NewY-Jets
17 ClevelAftd ?7 Buffelo (OT)
10 HOUstOfl
" Ben1,,_.. M Pllltb<WOll
17 NewOrlt-
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>1 Houston (4--3) n 11 1. ... A,..._ 10
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11 Clnc'-1 10 is S..ttlt 17
10 N-Engl-•
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Nov. IS-Al IC._ City
Nov JJ-OrlNr\1
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3 Dec. l>-AIS... FrM<IKe JO Dec. 70-Plt~
~~ Kan .. • City (8-2)
21 'SI PllllburQll
33 It Temoe e.w
1 JI ~Oleoo
JO S..•111• 11 New E "Ii end
27 Oeklancl 21 Oenwer
11 O•kl-
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Nov. t-<Jrk llQIO
Nov IS-Houston
HOY 22 5Ntll•
Now. 2.._,.t Ottrolt
1' De< .,_At De""'' • Dec 1>-MI-• 17 Dec 20-A I Mlrwwtcll<I ~: LOI AngelH (4-•l
24 10 HO\lston 41 11 HewOrlHM
17 ~ g~~ll908ey l1 ,, ..... _
11 Allenta
11 0•11• 17 S." FrMCISCO
Nov I Oetroll Nov ..__Orte.,,I
Nov IS-AtCH><lnNll Ito• 11 Sen F•ArKllco
No•. 7'-AI Pltbouro11
?I Dec -Al NV Gl.,,h
30 ~. ;:::::.i:.=.,,, ~ Maml (5-1 ·1)
17
" 7
1
SJ 10
42
14
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14
17
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7 ,.
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JI
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21
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0 luffMo JI
30 ClndlWlll al
10 Pill~ a
D H0\111... 11 a Ml•ml (0'f) 21
• """ 11191"'4 74 U lllflelO 14 " s .. 1u• " Nov. I Al NV OIMl.l Nov. -I 1.111,_.
Nov lj-AI H ~Nov tt Ml-I
Nov. 2t--8elllfnw• o.c ..... Al s. ..... oec. 1i-A1 c -1-oec ~ ...... Y
Oak1end (3-5)
1 OelWer ' » MllWM!Mtl 10
JO s .. u.. 10 o O.troll i.
0 o....... 17
0 IC•M&Clty 27
II Tempeley 1'
17 IC•,,-Clty • Nov I -H-Enal-Nov t-Al-laft Nov U,-At Mieml
Nov 22 Sen DI• Nov. 2t--AI S. .. lle OK 1-•PlttKMKofl OKI~ Dec 21-l<AI San DletD
Phlladelphla (7-1)
J4 New YOl'll GI.nu 10
ll NewEllgl-)
JO 8ufl•lo 14 » WeSlllngton U
1' All.nte U JI New OrlHft,i 14
\lo Ml~~~• 8 • v 1~
Nov I 0.llft
Nov I-Al St. Loul•
Nov. l~Beltlmore
Nov. 22-NY Gi.,,I•
Nov JO-aAI Mleml OK •-Al WMIMnglon Ott< 1)--At Oellft
Ott< 20--SI l.oul•
Pittsburgh (4-3)
D IC•-Clty l7 10 Mleml JO
• New York Jets IO 27 New Engl-COT! 21
20 New Or1-'S • IJ Cleve!-7 I Cln<lllNll J.<
Oct ?• aHou>10"
Nov I Sen Fren<IKO
Nov I-Al Se•UI•
Nov IS-AIAtt-.i
Nov n -AI Clewl-
Nov ~ U..""90'!H
OK 7-J!At ()SI-
OK 1~11>Clt>n•ll oec 20-At Hoodton
St. Louis (3-5)
I Ml•ml JO
17 0.11.. 30
«) W•Slllnglllft 30
10 T .,,,pea... 20
20 0.11.. 17
14 N .. York Glen!• ,. 20 All-41 :JO Mlnnno!A 17
Nov I Al W•tfllnQton
Nov. t-Plllledelphla
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Nov. 22-At llelllmore
Nov. 2t--At N. Enot-0.C ._ H-°"1e*'S 0.C. I )--NV Gl.,,U
OK. JO-Al Phltedelphia
San Diego (S-3)
4-4 Cleveland 14 21 Detroit 23
41 Item• City 31
24 Denver '2
24 SHllle 10
JI Mll'lnHOle SJ ~ Baltimore u
11 Clllugo COT) 20 Nov I IC_ .. City
Nov ~lftclnnell
No• 1.,_J<A1 s..tae
No• n AtOelll-No• ,._De_
OK -8uffel0
OK. 1)-AI T-8ay
Dec 21-•0.•l-Sen Francisco (6-2)
17 O.troH 24
21 Cllk-17 11 Allllnte )0 21 New Ori.-U
JO WeM>tnglon 17 •1 Delles 14 ll Gr..,a.v l
20 LO$ A"9fltt I 1
Nov. 1-At Pftuo..tro11
Sellttte (2-e) ,, c lt><lnftlltl u Oenvf!f' 10 Oelll-
14 1Cem•Cl1Y 10 Sen Diego 17 HOUl'°" 0 NV Glents ,, NV J.U
Nov I AIGrN118ey
· Tempe Bay (4-4)
27 10
20
JO 74
lS ~
?I Ml-ta 1J 10 Ke"'a City " 17 Clll<eOO ,.
20 St. LOUii 10 • 0.1..alt 10 21 G•_,lley 10
" Oe•tar>d II 10 PlllledltlpNe JO
Nov 1-<h"-
Waahln91on (2-6)
10 0•11• M 1 N•7.J:'-Gl.,,t~ 17 JO SI t «> 13 P1111ed9iphle ,.
17 Sen Fren<llCO JO 2• ~~~,.. 7 10 13 ?4 New£f191-22
Nov I-St. Lowl1
College football OUTSTANDING
Paclflc-10 Conference Big Ten Conference VALUES! c-t. s.... Clllf. .._,
W LT W LT PP PA W LT W LT Pf' PA
WHlllllQ1Dn 3 0 I • 0 1 17• • low• 3 1 0 S201'1_.
Arlron•St. ' 1 0 • I 0 263 115 Olllo '>I J I 0 S 2 0 It• IG IRAHD HEW WHlll"91cn J 1 0 t I 0 IU ,. llllll041 J 2 0 ' 0 ,. ,.,
'"' vw UCLA , I I 2 I 174 107 Mlclll9•n l , 0 2 0 ,., '° use , I 0 101t7'° Purdue ' 2 0 ? 0 IH 1\S DIESEL RAlllT Arlron• J 3 0 l 0 115 lll Minne sot• l 2 0 , 0 , .. 1. FACTORY STICKER Stenford I 3 0 • 0 l:lt -Wltconstn J 2 0 4 J 0 IM 14'
CAlllorni.t I 3 0 • 0 1• 1112 lftdl-, > 0 7 s 0 100 111 $7945 Oreoor1 st 0 J 0 • 0 IOt 274 Mlclll11An I 4 0 2 s 0 12' *' DISCOUNT o,..oon 0 3 0 • 0 11 121 Nortllwttl~ 0 s 0 0 1 o tom
$950 PCAA Southwest Conference SALE PRlbE c; .... ,._, c.t. le-. S6995 W LT W LT "" .... W LT W L T ,.,. ,.A
S." Jo .. SI l 0 0 6 I 0 1,. ISJ WU J I 0 • I 014 ..
Ul•llSt. ? I 0 ' 4 I ISJ 1• ha•tA&M ) 0 s 2 o 1a 112 l26~) (184899) LOllO h«llSI 0 ' s 0 ,. , .. Tues 2 0 s 1 O 122 D
Frnt>O St. 0 ?SO"I• 9eylor ) 0 s ' 0 ,., 1g lltAMD MIW Pee Ilk 0 , s 0 12 lff Ar1tenses , 0 s , 0 Ill IGO 1911 tSU%U CS Fvll.,,tft 0 l • 0 t2'., IUce , 0 J 4 0 1~ '" Hov.$l0fl 2 0 l 01• .. PICICUP We1tern Athletic Conference TCU I 0 4 1 1$1 '" FACTORY STICKER c ..... .._ TH•thdl 0 0 ' tlP• rc•1• W LT W L T ,.,. ,.A
Ute II , 0 0 610nt!OI Big Eloht Conference DI COUNT H•••ll ) 0 0 s 0 0 ,,. 50 c:.f. .._ S611 IYU I 1 0 1 2 om1t1 Nebr• .... , 0 0 s 2 0 1,. .. SALE PRICE w.,om1no , I • stonsm 1-•SI. , 0 I s I I IS7 1• HewMellko , , 0 JS01111 .. Olllellon\e I 0 I I J 2 11 ....
C1
12l?cll1i s... 01.., , ) 0 4 , 0 ,,. !JI Oklello,,,. SC. I I 0 4 2 0 " ,, Air r::.,.ct I ' 0 2 s 0 11$ 174 Ml-I I 2 0 , t OllS" TtH .. f.IP-I • 0 ito torn ICtllllH I t 0 s J 0 1111• ~edoSt 0 ' 0 0 1 0 100 24.t c.ior..,.. I , 0 , s 0 llS 1tS .. .. , 0 0 •I Ot1'1°' IC•nM&Sl. 0 , 0 I ' .. ., IHOYW Southeaetern Confe,.l'c• Atlenttc Coast Cont.,._. YAMA•OM c.f . ...... c.t. W LT '""
1 pa.tsel'ger moCMI. WLT W LT """A
Georol• 4 0 0 6 I 02!19 5' W L T 4 speed transmission M•ryl-J 0 0 • 1 I*"' Alt lNl!lt ' 0 0 • I '1212 .. CIMlllGfl J 0 0 1 0 • ,,. • Stiarp & very Cle.In! MIUIHIPlll J 0 0 • 1 IS't 11 '"'1" cero11... t o o •ltV11't (096570). Flor Id• , 1 0 s t om • NonllCM.$1. 2 ' 0 A a 0 tG 1• A\lll<iffl 1 , 0 J 4 0 122 * Dull• I 2 0 • 4 0 1H 1• T•llM-• 1 0 4 J 0 116 ,. w ... ,. ...... ' • 0 I S 014' m Vt-l'llln , 0 2 ' 0 llJ tit °'°'''' ftcfl
0 1 0 16011111 LIU • 0 I S 0 1» ltl '"'el"'• 0 4 0 • , •• * MINIMINI J 0 , s 0 .. tll
l(tfltVCky , 0 , .......
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' .. --·----------....---·--------
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 26. 1981 cs
~ t I ., .
WORLD SERIES
Dodgers 2, Yenkee• 1
GAME l'IVe
NF\.
4hn 20, Ram• 17 s.c-ltY OIWll'Wrt
NllW Y081l LOI ANGeLeS
Los AnQe 111 0 10 I ~ 17
S.n Frenclsco u J 3 0 70 .. ,.... .. .....
R•ndolllfl.211 l 0 0 0 L-t.2b l 0 0 0 Mllboln.H • 0 I O Ruu•ll.u • O 0 0
Wlnll.id,d 4 0 I 0 0 Ar.-.y, lb 4 0 I 0
JA<k..,,.,rl 4 I I 0 C.y,Jb 2 0 0 0 ~~:1: ~ g g g ~=~~.7.ct ~ g g g
Plnl1lla,11 • 0 2 I Ou•rroro,rl l 1 I 1
Brown.pr 0 0 0 0 Y••o-r.c l 1 2 I C.•rone.c • O O 0 Tllornu .ct l O 0 0
Rodrlfue1,Jbl 0 0 0 RtvU.P 2 0 0 0 Gulory,p l O o o
Mupllry,ct 0 0 0 0
Tol•I• :n ' s ' Tot•I• 21 J • J
s.c .... by ·-·---Ntw York 010 000 ~' Lea A no-IM 000 000 20Jl-2
E -LGPK l OP -Lot A"91l1t 2 LOB -NIW York'· I.OS Angelft. 2B -J.cklm ..
Yuger. HR o .. rT1ro 111, Y-r 111 SB
-L_._ LAndrt•u• N•• y-'" M a t:e 88 IO
Guidry IL, I 11 1 4 2 2 2 '
Gotwe>e 1 0 0 0 1 0
LMA .......
R1uu IW, 1 I) ' S • H BP by GosW91 IC.ey l
T J 1'A-S..11S.
COMPOSITE BOX
Betting
LOSANGt:LUt
Lopfl
Rustell
Johnst-
StewArt
B•ker
G•rvty
Cey
Gt.Htf'rero
Mond•Y veaov LAndre.,..• Reuu
C..sllllO
Golh
S.• Nledlnl..,
TllomAI
Howl
Sc lose I•
Hooton
Fortier
Smith
v.11111 .. ••
Wtl<ll
TotAIS
M r11taa11r .._._
11 • • ' o o J zn
11 • 4 0 0 0 t "° l1J001l .. ,
0000000 000
1' I J 0 0 0 I ,105
10 J ' I 0 0 0 .450
17 J S 0 0 I 5 .2'4
161 4 1012250
10 I 1 I 0 0 0 100
•J 110 21m
S I 1 1 0 0 0 .200
) 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
0000000 000
1000000 .000
0000000 000
4 10000 0 000
000000 0 000
•1100 00150
2000000 000
0000000 000
2010000 li00
1000000 000
0000000 .000
1S7 11». 0517 20
NEW Y081C
•• , " a • "' ,.. • .,. A1ndolpll IS • 7 0 1 1 J 1J3
Mumpllrey 10 2 J 0 0 0 0 200
Wlnlltld II 0 1 0 0 0 1 05'
Plnlella IS 2 o I 0 0 J 400
Wettor> 11 1 I I 0 1 I ...
N1ttles 1 1 7 0 0 0 0 •• C•rone II J 4 I 0 ' l .m
1M @lb()yr-n1 11 J 5 J 0 0 l .111
Uut0r'f s 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
O•vl• 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 o-.. ~ I 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
U.mblt • I J 0 0 0 ' m
JOhn ' 0 0 0 0 0 0 000
Mur<•r 7 0 0 0 0 01 0 000
Brown 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
RIOlltttl I 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 000
Frailer 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
l'My I 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
llodrlo .. , " 0 • 0 0 0 0 ...
J.ckson 1 3 • I 0 I 1 S1I
II-rt-. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000
Foott 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 000
Atus< "91 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 000
Tol1h UI 10 J9 • I s 10 w
Pitching
LOI ANGELES
9 ip II " ...... _
lltuu II 11 1 7Jl'J 10 s l I -C•~tlllo I t 0 I 5 0 «IO
Golll 1 J'J • 1 1 J 4'0
Nl..O.nfuer 1 s l J ' 0 0 00
Stewert 1 ... 1 0 2 ' .000 Hooton C~I • l 1 I • I 000
Forster J I 0 0 J 0 o.oo
Howe It.QI l'> n l J 0 ' I 11
Vln1IA (1.011 ' • •.00
Wei ell I I 3 0 lnl.
TotAlt s '3 l'I 10 17 11 .. HI> Savo NOtW
Guidry 11 II J
D•vls 3
GoSH91 3
Jolln 11.0l 2
Al911tttl 1
FrHltr ICHl2
MIV 7
NEW Y081C
I Ip lit r er ... •.,..
14 I l J 4 U 1n
, 3 5 • 3 J 11.00
S J 0 0 I 5 000
'sooo•o.oo 2 S J J 2 1 IUO
I\') s 3 1 11.'°
•', 4 0 J 2.01
lltu~cMI 1 J212,.00
011 " u » l.'4 Totals
S.vu
Toi.ls
3 •
I 5
Goswge 2 5 Al 3' 11 11 14 36 3 ...
s.c-1rr·~
Los Anoel.s (N) 302 °'3 •»-II
Ntw Yotll (Al S4A 11J 0»-10
E MllbOun>e. i.-s s. Sttw¥t, Rusu•.
Je<kton, Ho-OP los An9e1os 7, N1w
York 2. LOB I.OS MQelH JI>, Ntw York 0
SB Mumpllrty, Plnltlll, LoPH 3, Wl,,fltld.
L•ndrt•u• S -Guidry, Jolln, Murctr.
Aionem, Looes. MilbOrunt, S<tOScia, Howe
SF -811<er. A..-illfl, Welson, YM9tr HBP by lllQl\eltl IG..,rero1. by (.on•oe
CCtyl PB Cerone A 2111,S/Jt
World Serles score• Ntw York 5, Oodoen l
New York l , Oodoen 0
0°"91rt S, N-Yorll 4
00099rsl. -Yor11 I
SF -Solomon 14 PISS lrom Monl1na
(WerS<lllno alckl
SF -C.l•rk 41 pass from Mont•n•
IWtrKllinQ klOI LA -FG Correl U
LA -Gum.n 2 run !Corral kiU I
SF -F G WertclllnQ 47
SF -FG Werscllll"IQ 11
LA -Tyler 16 PASS from HAdtn !GorrAI
kl< kl
A -S•,IW
Te"'" SUtlttln LA
First downs 1S
Auslles·y•rds J l·JO
Passino y.,ds JS.
Return urd~ 166
PAStH 2~~1
Sacks by l-21
Punts S-43
Fumblt\.IOSI 0-0
Pan•lllH ·y•rds 1 :I'
Time ol l>O'MHIOfl 33 18
IMlvldlM I Statlttln
SF
I• , .. 60
7'S
9
lf.l7.0
• S4 11~43
O.Q s .. s
2• •2
RUSH ING -Los Angeles. Tyler 22·'!0,
Gum1n I l' Bryant 113 Hedin 1-8. S•n
FrenclKo, Hofer f.U, Devis • u , Pellon
.. ,3, Coooer s 1. Montana J·3. Easley H>
PAS SING LOS Ano•le\, Hedtn
20·39·1 310. Sa n FrantlHO, Mont•n•
lf.31.0.217
RECEIVING Lo• A119eltS, O.nn•rd
._119, Tyler •SS. W-y 4 Sl, Arrtokl l-19
Bry•nt 1·1', Hill, H3. Gum•n 1·13 S•"
Fr•nclsco. Cl••k f.109, Solomon S-19. CooPI•
J·S1, Youno 1·7', Piltton 1-1, WO.on l·S
Cowboy• 21, Ootphlns 27 s.c-ltY o...,.,. ..
M11m1
0111u
0•1 MIA
l•iledl
0 • I 1• 11 I 1 0 U 18
SprlnQS Srun l~llen 1<101
NAllWHI s D.US lrom Woodlfy (kltk
D•o Johnson JI pus trom Wllllt
IStDtl1n kltk I
M11 CtfAIO 69 ~· lrom WOOdlty (•on
5c,.,.m1nn kick I
Mii NAll\An 10 run Ivon 5cnam1nn
ltkltl
Ml• Rose • PISS lrom Woodle y (VOfl
5ch•mann 1t1Ckl O•I CO\bl• s pau lrom Wll110 !Sept1111
kick I Da l Spr1119s n D .. s trom wnne l~Plltn
ktekl
A -M.711 IMl_L.t_s
RUSHING MtAml, Netll•n 1' 7•
Fr•nklln 11 J'I. WOOdlty S-11. Howell 1·6,
v111e1r110 2·• 0111.s. Oortelt 24 117. SDrln9s
7-9, Wlllle s.a
PASSING Ml•ml. Woodlly Jl·37·S..408
0.llH, Wllllt 12·l7·1·lS"
RECEIVING -M•Aml, H4rro• 6·16S,
C."110 s. 1'4, Rose 4-43. N•tll•n •·22, Vigorito
1·11, Frenklln l.J O.llA\. 5'>rl09• ~93. Hiii
S-106, JOflnson 311, Dorsett J.31, PHrton
2·31, SAldl •·13, °"Orff H, Cooble l·S.
Chlefe 21, Reider• 17
"-""°'*11" Kenws C•tv o o I 21 11
OlklAnd I 10 0 0 I/
O•k Braostl•• • P•U lrom Wllwn
IB•llr kick) O•k Wll.on 3 run IBellr kick)
OU FG BAllr 51
KC B J.ck.on1trun IL-tryklckl
KC B J.ckt0n3 run (Lowery ltlO l
l(C B JA<kton 3 run ILow1rv kttkl
KC Sp1ni '1 fumble relur" ILOwtrv
kitkl
A -•2.'14 INllvlOIMI St•ll1tk1
RUSHING KAllWS Clly, Fulltr 3·0 . B
J.ckson '""°· H-1~11. 0.l•nev II S. Ktnnoy t o O...l•nd, KtnQ 11·49, Jtnsen
IS.41. Wilson l-2•. wn11t1n9ton S-•. w 111i.
).minus 1
PASSING Kanus Coty, Kennty
.. H·3· •ll. F uii.r '"70.Q.103 O•klend. Wiison
, .. 4"4·UI
RECEIVING K•ns•• C1ly, Mer!ol\All
S-U, Ol•on HI. Sm•tll l-41 Romt 2·34,
HAdnc>t I 6 J41ctuon 1 J 0Aklancl, Brantll
..-.. Jenten 4-(2, A•msey ).31. Brad•""" 1·11, WlllttlnQton J·Jl, Clllllldltr J.11, KlnQ
HO.
Redeldn• 24. Patriot. 22
Sc-.., Olt•11An
New EllQIAnd 6 ' 0 1 12
W•Slllngtot'I 1 1 10 0 2•
NE FG Smllll U
NE -FGSmlllln
w ull wulllnoton 13 pass trom
Tllelsm1nn !Moseley kick I
NE ColllnHrun lkltkfalltd)
NE FG Smlth41t
WaSll Net-IS pUnt return (Mo .. lev
k>ekl
Wull FG Motetey34
WHll Tllelsmann 1 run (MoMltY ltltkl
NE -C.unnlnt;ll\lm •run ISmllll kick I
A -S0,)94
1nc11v1-1 St.ellatlu
RUSHING -N"' EnQIAnd, Collins 22·101,
Gro9•n s '· r.tuciu J.a. Cunnl09,.,.m 1 • Fer9uson •·l, C..llloun •·1 Wnllington.
RIQ9lns 1~. WMl'linoton 14 •1, Thelsmenn
J.mlnus 2
PASSI NG -New Enol•nd. Grogan,
17·30·2·l06. Wu111n9ton, Tllelsmenn
14·13-~16J
llE CEIVI NG New Eng l e nd,
Huselblck, s-112. Mo<o•n s-... J•<kson
4-13, Johnson :HS. WHlllr>Qton, w .. 1111191on
,.97, Monk 2·». WArren 7·16, Metc•il I 11 a ... t, Bronco• 7
Denver
ButtAIO
Score ..., OIWl,,_'i' 0 I
01n WAison 36 PIU
!Stalnlor1 kit.kl
0 l lrom
0 0 7 3 3 ...,
Morton
OOCIQl rt 1, N-York t 10odtler1 l9M .. rlts, ).2)
Bui -FO Mlk•MA,..r 41
Buf -FG MlllA-MllY1r o
TUA~Y -Ooctoen (Hooton, 11-61 91 N-York CJoM, ._.,, s·JOp.m
WldMfdly -Qodoen •• New York, S:10
11.m , If ne<HSM'y
AlltlmMPST
All 91tnHonOll,,,..lt 7, II.
Buf -FO MIU·Meytr 36
A -11,151
IMlvtdwl Matlstlet
RUSHING -0.l'IYlr, Pruton II 26,
Parros 10·21, RNd 1 11, Us><llurcll 1.J.
Buff•I•, Crt~ 14-113, Brown M , Butler I 1,
l(U1Jl l·mlnu1"
SCOREBOARD
PASSING Oen,..r, Morton 1~2S4U1
Buff•lo, Ferovt011 21~-l·27l
RECEIVING -Denver. wetson .....
Odoms 2·21, PrM-J·J, Eolotf Ml. P1'1"119 •·• Buff•lo, Llwli 6-to, Br•mmer • 21.
Brown •·24, Piccone J·U , Crlbl>l 1· IS, Jtol•
•·J4. Frenkiln I·"· Buti.r l.C
Glante %7, Felcone 24
kw. .., QM,,.,,,
New York GIM1lt 0 I 10 1 3 27
Allen!• I 1 3 1 0-24
All -Miller 1'J PH• lrom BertkOWlkl
ILuOllurst kick>
NYG -Dennis re<ovtred block pUnl In
end tone IO•nelo kleltl
All -Fr•ncls S pas from Bartkowski
IL..c:1'11urst kleltl
All -FG Lutkllurst 7' NYG YoUllQ J PISS trom Simms 10 .. wlo
kk kl
NYG -FG O.rw10 21
NYG Ptrklns 12 p1u lrom Simms
<D•nelo kltkl
All -C•ln l run ILutllllur\I kit k l
NYG -FG 0...10 40
A -41.410
lndtwi...1 St.etlstlu
RUSHING -York, C•rpenter 17.~.
Simms •·I, KotAr 4-6, 8rl9llt 3 • All•nll,
Andrews 21·91, C..ln 13-•9, B•rtkowskl HI
PASSING New York Simm• l ... 3J.0.7S.
All1nta, B•r1ltowtl<l 2.._.1.Jl1
RECE IVING -York. ~rklns S-12 ..
Brl911t 5·51, C•roenter 3 13. Snlrk 2·11, Mlsller 1·31, Grey H1, Kolu t J, Youn9 1 1
All•nta. Ct ln »6S. Andrtws •·40, J•OMln
3_.2, Miiier 3·Sl, Fr•ncls 2·33. Jenkins J·28
• Cardlnet. 30, Viking• 17
MlnMsolA
St Louis
Sc-lly~n
031111 n o 1 10 JO
SIL -FG O'DonoQllut '' SIL -Tilley JI PU• from H .. t IO'OonOQllUI kick)
StL -FG O'OonOQllue 23
Min -FG Oanme,.r 36
Min -Wlllle 15 PU• lrom Kram•r
10.,.mt ier kl<lll
SIL -Morris ll <111 IO'DonOQll .. kick)
StL -Grey I PASS from H1'1 (0 'Dono9'1.-
klckl
Min Wnltt 22 peu from Kramer
ID•nmeler kltkl
SIL -FG O'OonOQl\1# ••
A -•l.03'
IM1vtci..1 Sutntlcs
RUSHING M1nnesot•. Brown 13·5S,
Youn9 2-7, Kramer 1-1, Sltmclft 1.0 SI Loui•, Anderton 3·71, Mo<rls I~. H•rt l·minus 1
PASSING Mlnnuote , Kr•mtr
H·H·2·l0 St Lovls, Hart 13·2 .. J·ltl
llECEIVING IWnnttolA, Wllllf 1·110,
Aun•d • 11 s.nw r 5 100 Brown 5-•1
VOUf19 2· I I St Lovlt. Tilley s "· Green ).49
Guy J·16, Andlnon J·IO, Harrtll I minus 1
Eaglff 20, Buce 10
Sc.,.. by Oll...Wn
T •mp1 Bay 1 0 0 3 10
Pflll-lplll• 0 7 0 13 10
TB -Wllll•ms 1 run IC.Pitt kltk)
Pl\1 -Krtpllf • PISS lrom Jawor\kl
IFr•nklln kick)
Piii -FG FrAnl\lln '4
TB -FGC.~e1t
Piii -FG Fr.,...lln 32
Piii -MontQOMtry 2 run I Fr•nlllln kick I
A -70,114 , ........ 1, .. tl•tk t
RUSHING TA'""" Bay, Eek-ll-65,
Wllllems •·16, Wiider -.u. O.....s •·1, House
1.a. Pftll.0.lpl\I•. Monloomory 27·1 It, Ollv•r
•·36, C•mplleld •·12, Ru•ull 3·12.
Gtemmon.1-t.
PASSI NG T.,np• B•Y. Wllll•m•
1•-H ·l -20 Pllll•dtlplll•. J•wor•kl .. ,S-1·121
RECEIVING Ta.._ B•Y. Gilts ..eo.
Howe .. 19. Wiider •21. Eek-J.:IO, T
Btll J·1', G Jonll 1·11. Pftllldelphle. Smltll
3·0 . Mont9ornery 2·l, C•rmlcllael 1·20.
KrtPll• , .. 011-1-15. C..molllld 1·•
Browns 42, Cott• 21
Sc-.., °"',,.... B•ltlmore O 1 u
Ctevtl•nd 1 21 1
Cl• -New"'"1• I pen from Sloe
kltkl
1 71
I ~1
(Bahr
Cle -G Prvln n !)tis 1rom SIPI IB•llr
Ille Ill
Cit
kick)
BAI
kltk) OltMY 3 ""'' from Jone• (Wood
Cle -Wllllt 7 run (BAii• lll<k I
B•I Buller 31. pus trom Jones (WOO<l
kl<kl
Cit -FH clle< 211 pess lrom Sloe IBa l\r
k•Ckl
Bal -Butler s pas from Jon.s (Wood
kiCkl
Cle -M. Pruitt 16 run ca.nr ~lck I
A -11,916
1 ... 111141191 SUStlct RUSHING BAIUmor., McMllll ll, u .n .
OlcUy 14·3'. J-1·7. M<C..utey, 1-6, Z.
Olaon 2·2 Clertt-. M Pruitt IHI. Wllitt
._11, C. Miiier S-:IO, G Prullt 3·11. Sipe
J-mlnus 1, F•.clle< 1·mlnus 1
PASSING BAitimore Jones 11·37-2·2••
Clevtl•nd, SIPll »41·2·4'4
RECEIVING -BAltlmore, McCauley
4-13, C..rr ).51, Butler J.S.. 01cu v 3·24, Z
Olaon 2·16, McMtllAn 1 11, McC•ll 1.s
Cl1v•l•nd, G Pruitt .. 104, Newsome s.as.
FH Clltr s-ss. Auclltr •·72, L~n 3-69, M
Pruitt 3·11. White "71
Selnn 17, Bengel• 7
Sc-ttov°'*11n Clnclnn•tl O o O 1 1
H-OriHn• 0 0 1 10 11
NO -A09ers It run CRl<Ardo •ltkl
NO -FG RltArdO 38
NO -w . Wilson 1t pen lrom Mannl09
IRlcardo kick I
Cln -Aon • DUS lrom Tllompson
(Breech kltkl
A -46,316
llldl,,,_t S\allltlu
RUSHING Clnclnn•tl, Johnson 11·S1,
Aleunder S·I, Anderson 1·0, Ver•r 1·2,
Mc ln•lly l·mlnus 21. Now ori .. ns, G
Rogors 11·113, Holmes J l, Tylor 1·1,
Mlnnl119 t.15, w . WlllOfl l·J. En-1·2'-PA SS I NG Clnclnn•ll. Anderson
11·21·0;111, Tllompson • 10·1-11 New
Orlons, M•nnln9 IS·J•·• 110, Merklns
H.0.20.
RECEIVING -Cincinnati, C.Olllnswortll
4-.0 , Alu•nder ).IS, Krtldlr 3,3', Curtis
4-SO, Ross •·:It. M. Harri• 1·10 Ntw Orl••ns.
Holmes 1·1, Grotll 2·l6, Mlrkln• ... 1. w .
Wiison 2·21. T"°"""'°" 1-6. G R-rs J.11,
Hudy J·1•. T\'Wr 1·1.
LloM 31, PecUn 27
~llyO....n
Gr"" lay 1 ) 10 1-27
Detroit 7 10 1 7-3t
Ott -Hipple 6 run IM.,rrly kick I
GB -Lorton 1S PH• from Dicke y
IStenerlld klckl
GB -FG Slef'9rud t7
0.1 -FO AkJrr•y l7
0.. -Hill I jl9H lrom Hlppfl tMur•••
klckl
G B -FO Si.fWrud 3'
0•1 -K•M 2 run (Murr•Y kick)
G8 -Ellis 4' pHS from Wllllellurst
(Stenerud kick)
GB -Ellis '""' 151enerud kltkl
0.1 -HIP91e s run tMurr•y kick I
A -7•,°'3 ,.,.,..Wit S .. thtln
RUSH I NG -GrM n Bo. Ellls 11-12,
WllltAllurst 2·11, Mlddt.1on 4-U, Hutkllby
4-1. Detroit, ~ 21-IO, v TllompSon 6-«,
HI~ S-20, B-y S-10, Nk llOIS H
PASSING 0...... B•Y. OkliAY 4·1.0.'1,
Wllltellurst 20-l• 1·143. Detroit, Hipple
»»-1-211
RECEIVING G•Hn B•Y. Ellis , ....
HuOllbY •·41. C.offmen S-73, Lotton 2·'11,
Jetterson 2·2', Mldcjjelon 1·7, Cassidy 1·6.
0.trolt, Hiii ..... L-Tllompson 2-6S, 5colt
NS, Bussey 2·11, K•ne J·1', KlnQ J-12, V
TllomPtOn t·ll
S.ahewb 11, Jen 3 tc.weWOM,_.
SHttll 0 1 6 6-19
NY Jell 0 0 3 0 3
Se• -L•roent 10 run (Herr er• klckl
Se• -LuOlfll 27 pen from Zorn (kick
fAllld)
NY J -FG \..Nfly )4
S.1 -Smith Hun !kick l•llldl
A -n .•71
llMhlclw.l K•thtkt
RUSHING Suttle, Brown 14·104,
Doorn Ink 11~•. Smit/I 16-U , Zorn •-2',
L•r9enl 3· ll New York, H•rptr 1·60,
Ot.rklnQ s-1•. AUQUSIYl\l ... ._.,, Todd J.n.
l.Ofl9 2-6, J . J_.. l·S. TaylOr l·mln1n I
PASSING -S..ttle, Zom 13-21.0.ln. Ntw
York, Todd 1•2'-J·111.
RECEIVING -SHttle, Lar9enl 6·90.
McCullum ).1', Brown J· 16, S•wY1r 1·30,
Stnltll 1-10. New York, Harper 3·13. OltrklnQ
J·21. G•tfney J·10, WAtur MS, AUQ\lslynlH
2_., BArkum 1·14, J JonH HO, Newlon 1-1 a. .... 20, ~,.,. 17
le-. "' l'9nMll S.1101100 0 3 0 .. 0-17
ClllCAQO 1 3 0 I 3-10
Clll -Slll>ly 1 run IRowto klc~l
SO -lleftfrKl*I FG 11
Clll -Aov.-i FG 13
SO -Joiner 27 P•U lrom Fouts
IS.nlrstllke kkkl
Clll -P•vton2 run IROYltO kltkl
SO -Cll1ndler Jt DUS from Fouts
IBenlrS<llke kk k)
Clll -RoYeto FG 1'
A -S2,to6
l ... ~ISU119lkt
RUSHING -Sen oi.oo. Muncie 11-21, J.
Brool<s 7.)t, ~11"'11 1·1. Chic-. Payton
,..101. S..1>1y n~. btni l-lA.
PASSING -SM oi.oo. Fouts 13-~·M9S.
Clllc-oo. Evans ll·Jt..o.21'. RECEIVING -SM Olego, Joiner S-124,
WlnD)w •·71. O..ndler 21'. 5c•ltt 1·10. J.
Brooks 1·• Clllc•oo. B•sc11n1011 S-IO,
MAroerum 4-CJ, P•y\On ).22, S..hey l-17,
C:-1_., E•r11-I.
COLLEGE How Top Twenty Fered
1 :.1 -StMI l..+41 _, ... Ill .....
1 Pl~ 1~)-t S.,..AC.,. U.tcl.
l. Hor1h CMOllM ( .. 1.0) !Ml '8 Soutfl
C•rollM J1·1J
•. Cl-17-0.01 bHt North CMOIN
State 11·1 •
5. Sout,..,.,, Col , .. t.Ol -· Hot,. °"-... ,.
•· l-1 IS-2.0l lost to Ml-.U tMt •
1. Geclrol• 1._t .. I -t K..,!Ueky lt-0.
I . Southern Metflodlst l._1..0l lost to
THH•7. t. Mlul~ppl State 1•1-<tl -t Autiwft
11·1. 10 Teus IS-1.0) _, Sout-1'1 -ltt .. ,
11 Al-(._ HI bHl R"'P" Jl-1.
12. A,..._. IS.Ml 1<"1 lo Houst., •t7.
11. Brloll•m Youno U ·2·0l 1011 to
Wyomlno J:>.10.
U. low•Stt• IS.Hl -tColor-11-10. 1S Nebr.U (S.2.ol bHI Ml-IM.
••· WHlllnoton State 1-1) bHI Att.N
)4-9' •
" Ari,_ SIA!• 1 .. 1.0) bHt Stanlor'CI ., ...
11. Ml<lllll9" (S.2.Cl bHt NM!--..,, ..a.
1t. Mluourl IS.2.0) lost to Nebr..U H .
20. Florld9 St.wte IS.2.0) -t UIUIU-
StAte .. U.
Cenadlen Football Leegue
Hamilton
Ottew• Toronto
-trt•I
Edmonton
w1""1-
...... DI,,.._
W L T P'CT. "" l'A• 10 4 1 .70I m SIA
! 10 o .m 1t1 1111
2 13 0 Ila dO el
2 u o .t» m ,.,
-~ II I 1 .... J6t U1
10 s o ... , ai m
9 • O .tCIOC25112
•60 .tooalM
Br. C.olumllla
$Hk11C--.
C.•l9ery • ' o . .oo • m ...... .,,.Sew.a
Wlnnl1>99 n. Mcw'ltrHI IJ
E-•1,T-7 .....,,.Sew.a
Brill"' Columbl• M, Hlf'lllltlln 1
Stskat~ 2•. Cel9wY 11
-(_ > .
NBA exhibitions ....,..Sew.a
ln41 ... '°· Ollc.eo• S.n A-..O IGll, Mllw., .... 110
POf"ttand tat, IC-City ICM T ...... ,._
Oanver,,., .....,. at Sprifttif .. ld, Ma&
Att1nlavs. WeMI ........ New Vert!
Clll<-.O .wt -Yertl llElld •ldllMtlon _,
Camel. Where a man belongs.
•
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 8 mg. "ta(', 0.8 mg. nicotine av.
per cigarette by FTC method .
OakTfff "" .......... , IUMOAY'I •aWLn
C111UUM11'f -J ' M _.., ,,, .. , llACa. '"' f\lrtMes.
•HI s-11 CMCC.r .. ) UO 1... UO
1!1 TIN'wl (MCH.,.....) S.• lAO
SU~eP.wt (.....,I 1M
AltO rec.cl: ~It• -Frlta, llllKa,..,.
PrlMe, o.rll ... , MM11et OIA,,,,., ......
Gunflint, Gt..mlc, He'• o.w .....
Tlrne: 1:171/S.
HCOtlD llAC•. 1 lur'°"9S
RHllY Sot--.. 1011¥Af'ffl :n.• .... U
c1-1w111111 IMCCarrt11l s.• 1•
8rlOfllMI R-(McH ....... 1 UD
Aho r.cect: S.-U Sll«t«ul.,. "''" ... Room, Aun«._., La-r. 811 Sc.-,
v1111111ne Law, C:O..vlncl"91y.
Timi : 1 :221/S.
U DAILY DOU8La Cs.fl PAl<I '50.JO.
TMl•D aacm. OM rnlll.
8llOll llY IV91eniwla) IUD 4.a 2AO
•• ,.,., • .,.. (Oltl ......... Yll J.IO 1.a
CrY1l•I Star (Pln<•Yl 2.•
AlllO r.ced: Verrnouttl. R.....m ... , JACk
L., Gummo-.. Caeil'I Prince, ln .. •r<'*· Time. t:a.
l'OU ant eace. 1 111• m llK.
P.,...rll\Mor IMcCMron) 4.• J.10 2.a
LOYI ,, Bl .. (ll•lenruel•I •.• 100
Fort C•IGAfY !Hawley) J.10
Alto racect: Jlmsel, Alw•yt ..... T•UI o.m.
Time· 1:0
"'"" ltACE ...... fWlonOSOfl tvrf h lluound IHArrlt l 10.00 4 ...
DAndY Wit (0.1-.,.I 7.10
Gr•y Dandy 1-leyl
l.•
S.00
•.JD
Alto racld: Fr.-1y Unu Al.,,
S.r•ne. P-. P Vlk.
Fl1109I,
Time t:t4.
U EXACTA IMl Pll0$11' '°
SIXTM llACl.OM mlla
Jennlf., B. CPtncAy)
Pey or Play IHawlayl
Guel• IMcCarfOfl)
Alto racad: \IHAI F«ce.
Aatl\Andle,Hal-
Tlme 1:J7 4/S
•.• J.10 uo
l.00 t.• ,,.
sevt:MJ'M eaca.1111'mllfl.
POiler Polrtl IGollltMol U.tO 14.20 •.t0
Monarcll IG111..,.l 7 ,60 ._..,
A Moment In Tl-(Oel-11'91 J.111
Alto r-: Hemtll\lll ~Y. I'«<• FIMI.
Sunshine S•A9. C11Arml"9 Turn, Or-
G•ll•nl.
Tim•: 1:42 4/S. U IXACTA IHI paid .-.oo.
u PICK SIX (f+).7-).1) !Ml(d .. z.nuo
wllll tll,.. wlfW>lno tkllts Isl• lwrtH). S2
Pk k Sia COMGIMlon Pllld 16Sl a wltll " w1 .... 1,.. ~(five ___ ,
e10MTM llACI. 1\lo mllfl on turf.
5P9fl<• Bay (Toro) •·• J.60 lAO •Provl-1.al Plnuyl >.60 1AO
5-f' Mornof'IC 1ttaw1ey1 •.oo
Al .. r-: Wick.,.,, Klno Go Go, •Dom
O'AI~, Rvaty C...yon. •E"-~• II
Tlllt .. So, Amllstk• 0.y.
A -COUPied -ry
Tim•: J:OOJ/S.
NINTH aACl.O... mile
Pier,. LA Mont
((Ast-) 10.10 ••• uo
Rwle lhe liWUt Pln<AVI 1.111 UO
S.y Y •rdw IV•llllNel•l 4.IO
Aho rKed: Tr•blt•n, Four W .... ler,
Prince Wo<1fly, Ooml,,..u, Bl.ck -. Ori
Yovr Way.
Time: 1:• 1/S.
t.1 I XACTA (s..11 Pllld '1•.oo
Attend.wnce: • .-.
Japen·Aela Open CetT.-Y.> ..................
8•1.U Teracry ... Ellot T1lt1ei.r ... a,
'"'· '"' CT~ wins $20,-; Teltact.r wlnt $10,000). ..._. ..............
P•lr'ICll Pl--def. Pem C-.le, u .
~ • ._, (Pint-YI WIM $1,000; C-t!A wt ..
$4,2001. ...... .,....."' ...
T ArOC1Y·H•ln1 Guntll•rdt def. L.,,.,
Stel•nkl-R-.t y_,•t Helf, M , .. 1. ••·
.._,lo.MetPIMI
Pttrld1 "'9dr.-.Cl....SIA Monllet'o -· B•rblr• JorO...R-.t• M<C..llum, ._,, u ,
.. 2.
Frankston lndoOf tourney IM ................. I .......,. ..
Peter Mc"-• dlf. \lltn Gefvl•ltts,
~. 1 .. , M (Glfvl•ltl1 -9Ulted fin.al Ml wltll tcon llect, S.Sl.
•
•
~PIMI
Mc N•mar•Pet•r Fronk def Sllerwood
Stewut.,,..,,. Tey9111, M , .. l, ~
Gl'end PrlJ tournement
IMV~ ......... I ....... ,, ....
l"'•n LMd def. Brian Gottfrlff, t-6, H , ....... ,
o.eiMIPIMI
Ste ve Deni-Tim Wllklson O.f. S.mrny
Gl•mmllv•Frecr M<N1lr, ._., •..i. , ..
Delh•t•u Ch~-:Je lat.,.._,. )
....... pt ...
Sii• B•rker dltf. Mirna J .,..sovec. •-6. ~•.
.. 1 IB•rkerwlnsW.0001
World Couple• tournement
lat M.._ Heed I•-· ,.c .1 ~--PIM!
Andre• J H9er·Frlt1 Bu111n1no def
BettlflA ....... Okk Stockton, l·S, ........ IJHoer and B-1"911>1lt 52•.0001 ~ .... PIMI
Leslie Allen-Fr eel Stoll• def Evonne
GoolAOOflO-RCld l.A,..r. ~ (protest!
Dlaney Goff
l•t LAU•-Vh t.e, l'IA.)
HA•fner·Ho11-.sn ,ooo
B«k·C..ldwell,....,<IOO
Edw•rd .. Edwr<ts,"2.000 Hocll-P .. te,"2,400
Oenl·Rose.S11,l«>
Booros·Nor rls,S 1',000
Bryent·H•Qer .s U,.WO
8.0ouQls·McCllQll,Sl3,.WO
PvrtUr· Twltty,J13,.UO
Artllur·Bl•Ck.$9, IS-
c.n1..-.McGIMh,M IS"
"erous-H•ncock.S•, tS. Fe11er·Powers,n , 154
Fl•lsner J1"klns,S9, 1S-
Ly•·POfll,S9, 1S4
McGowAn·Ntllord,S9, IS-
GrHn-Zotlltr,V ,040
J MCkll·MCGmd,$7,040
J Mlttllell·Rf9.ald0,V .040
Bertonclno-N uck llS. 14.0IO
C..lvlt'l·Cll1ffee,l4,0IO
C.0011,HAliberg,$6,0IO
Brewer·Nlcl\Ols.M.MO
M.B•rDer·Sneed,'4,...0
Slre1199·Str•"Ol.M,MO Albu5-Br1tton.So1,MO
HArwtll·Lolt,5'"40
M.arkllAm· Trl~l.M,MO
P«k. TenBroeck,S3,3'°
Donald· Tllore.13.360
BIAkt ·Upper ,$3,160
~7·••·•l JO 66-61 SI-.. HI
62 ........ J J52
64-'J-U.1>3 1Sl
6S-61 -63•S 2S4
63-62-6S 6S JSS
6HJ .... 61 lS.
63-63 .... 66 lSO u... .... 6S JS.
67-M '9 6S 2SI 64-61·0 6S 2u u ...... 363 151
62-6S-67 63 7S1
..... s-.1 ... 1S1
63 ..... ,.., 257
66-61 •S-•S 151 M-6S M 6S 7SI "'-it-•• 6S HI 63-43 ....... HI .......-s-"" 6S.'4-65 6S JS~
63 .......... 1S~
U-43_..l>ll 2!>0
•S-61·'4-41 160 u..s... ... Jf>O
....... 63-4• 260
I>(>. ........ 160
...... .,"" J60
•s-43-6 s-68 l'1 ~IJ61
61·.S·•2·•1 ,.,
Deep see fishing
SeAL 81.ACH 114 AnQler" 600 r~O
Cod, 1 c.-cod, 2SO ml<ktrll, » bonllo
NeWl'OltT (.,,., ~) -ff Angi.n
27 .-tieu. l74 bonito, • m41Ckerel, 1
l\Allbllt, , .. rock coo. 2 c-cod 10. ... r a
LMllerl -llS A1>91trs W bonito, S ..,..,
bHS, 1 CAiieo blU, 1J5 rlXk cod, .. ,
macaerll, 1 c-cod
DANA WMA8P 2lS Aft1Jlers I I s-
IMH, 1."1 bonito. 3 ,..1-..11, 1l roo flSll,
1,041 macurll.
SAN Dlt:OO 1111 ... 11 -113 bonito. S»
mackerel, 43 rock tlsll, I CAiieo bin, 3 ..,..,
IMH , 1IO rock t.od.
MO••o 8AV 1111,.·1 u11dl1t1l ..
•ne•ers: 11 ling cod, 100 rock cod, 1'7 red
roO cod, ... MIMI Den, .. rwd --AVl LA MY I,,_, Sell Laltl -S5AnQlers·
U 11"9 cod. 1111 rock cod, JU Ylll-bin, 140
rock llSll.
Weekend trenHctlon•
POOTMLL ......_,, ... "'"-
"''"'""' 00l.Pt41NS -W91-Mike FUitz, llMm•n. A<tlvllld Eddie Hiii, runnlne
bA<k.
IAl•eTMLL .................. ._ .. u.
NEW YORIC IC NICICS -Acquired
Meurlu LOK ... f-Ard, from ti. .... Jenay Nets In , .. ,....,.. tor Ray Wllllttns,
9U1rd
I
....... , ... . ... ;
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 28, 1981
-----------~--,-...... ·--·--· -~--
. -
NOTIC9 TO uaotTOllll OP euuc TRANIPlll 1-.ca. .,., .. ,., u.c.c.1
Nolin h h•••bY 1ln 11 10 Ill• Cr•dllOrt ol MAltUIE COLLISON, SHIOllCO SAJllll Oftd YUKIKO ICMll(AWA, Tr•n•l•rOft, WllUe
""''.,.• ..._, I• It can .. 1 City flf lrvl,.., C-IY flf Oral\ft, ol.W Of C•hlorni., lh•I • bYI~ tref\5for I•
about t• •• "'··· •• CHIAICI MAT IUOKA Oft d ICYOICO MA TSUOICA, TrOfttlere .. , ...... twll11 .. 1 _,.... •• , .. w .. 1 , .. .,
..,. .... Qty"' 0.,...., C-y °' U6 A•ln , II*-' C.Hfeflllt TM P,._.t1Y to bt 1,.,.,,.,,.., It
clot<tlbeil In ""''" ••· All \l.OCll In ,, .. , 1111t-. equfPf\'.Mftl -fOOO will OI INI ~wl<h SfleO 1Mill1191t •"°""" H "PICNIC eASICl!T" enO lot.led •I USS N. Ti.Un Avo., CHY of S...ta AM, c.unty of OrallQf, Stat• ol Calllornle Tll• bYlk treftll•r wlll DI
(Ofllllm~\ed Oii Of alter lhe 11th <Mt' ot Ho¥emOltr, '"I· •• 10.00 A.M. at WE SfERN MUTUAi.. ESCROW CO RP ATTN MAA lt..Y N WESTMOIULANO. whOte aodrtu Is ta t So V-St s..lt• 101, Tystln, Calllornla t2IMO TNt 1111 IHI d•I• tor llllne claims Int.__,_ rolorrld to
"41-.ln It N-r 10, "" So lar as Is •no,.,n to Iba
Trensfe......, ell bonl""s NmH -eddrot-Ytold by 1119 Tranlfaron f04' Illa e»est lllr• y .. rs er•. SAME
Oeted; 5-p4...,._, •. '"' Chlalll Melt4iOllt l(yat.o AMI"'*• Transferwot PuDll•hecl OrenQOt Coest Delly Piiot,
0<1 2', 1 .. 1 463HI
---·-·--.... ·· -~·
I
__..._, .......... .._..., .......................... .-.--. ....
IU ... RIC*COUH I• TM• NOTtC• TOCOMTaM:TOttl CAUi ... "Olt etM ITAT• ~ CAL1'GaNIA kllMI DIUflft: H•WlllOltT•MIHA COUNTYO,oaAMOI UN1'110SCHOOL DllTflleT,
CAie NO. AtttMI e1c1 oa•niw1 t •'<*" , "'· of ,,. NTtnCNflCHt A'll'OINTNNT OP TltUITll IDlll NY-' N_..,.r, ltll,
,,. the M•ll•• ol th• l•l•I• 01 •11ce Of e1c1 "•""' 1tf1 fll.-11111 l'Hlt..1~ MAt..OHl!Y, a t11he1"9 portorl Sl,..t, C.... MMe. CA tili21.
I . •tt1ti-ANITAMALOHl!Y,t,_ Profoct ldo11tlllcell•n Heme ; I Nl ll OY CONS .ll VA TION NHlllM of PHii.i,. MALOHIY, Illa MIASUlllS AT COleOHA DEi. MAit
min i,,._ HIGH SCHOOL MICMAN1CAL t. Oft ~ -DKM!Mr n ...... POftTIOH ,.H ILIP MAl.ONl!Y, Ille mtu ln9 Pleu Plent art 011 l'tte· IU7 ......... ... ... ••tld9nt .. 0••1199 Ca1111ty, Calllor11la rHldlftt wltll •iounll• 11-1. Cetta Mna, CA m27 potlll-at lelSA I! t..Md Canyon •NI ,.., ... 11 .... 1. C:O.ta MIN, CA ltd., su .... -. c;. nn•.
J. PHii.iP MAt..OHIY, ... mlul11t NOTICE IS Ml!lll•Y GIVEN INI ,., .. fl,_, .. ,•-Oft De<omber 22. 1111 •Do,,._'""' School Olllrkt ti '"° •nCI _,••net,,... ue ,.., .,..,., Ot•noe ~.,. Cellfot11I•, ect1111 by and now '" mtutno at1 o hit ond tllrol/lll llt Go•ernlflt eoercl, wtwre•llOub•rt Ullllnow11. h• r •I nallt' r eh r, •cl to •• 4, On or etiout Oecomotr n, 1'90 "OISTlttCT," wUI r..:11 ... up to, but PMlt..I P MALONEY, .... "'1 .. 11111 llOt .... , t ......... tDoVO<tl.tted time, Pll'10n, -*' 1111 lteerott 111, encl wet .. •led bldt fO<' tlt9 -•rel -' • wntrett
.. m1ae1 to ,. ..... on ., . .,,,, ,.w own• tor Ille -.. pro~t
an In•••• In and It enllned to tlle A Pre..tcl Conflt'-.0 I• >elllehlMCI PftMIJlon °' ~" , ... pr-rtlot fQ( NOVO,,.., J. Itel, • JO e.m ...... tllu•t•d 111 Cetttornla encl '"~Iller Mr. Jim Hebtand, Otrecw ol MM>,
cine rllled • loOowa. 171 H'6.mll el 1"'S .. ., St., Costa s TIW OSWl•Of .... rnlollle pot tori ls ~ ... CA. Ho Did wlll llO KCtp(ed 1" n-llf _._,.., -rvltl.,, end u11t1u I,,. CAN\lractor ettendt thll
cere ol --Ill lllat potltloMr P-.~ CoftftreftCI -11• •""'-'Joint -..Cy 1111-1 lft ltd Doc-•.,. to tie picked up the -w•ttrlbeil pr-r1'f wltll the •I Ill• P11rc t11tln1 Olllce, 1'57 mlu lnope..-.-deSlnste ~ ... Pl•u nll• Slrtet, Cott• M• ... CA end renoot• 1111 temlly dwelllftl t71•761>-Ji171 tooted._. Mid pr-rty, llm -II Ill r•ulved In IM 111eco •· Pollt'-<' I• a rnldeftt of tlW st.a .. ldontHI ...... and shell llO ~
of CallfOf'nle, 16 OY9r •loh"9n yMrs ol end publlcl v •••d etoyd et tho eve . .,d e. the •-o1 h missing •tiov• .. 1a1ec1 tkM enct piece. perlOfl, I• MUiied to prefor911Ce tor TMr• wUI Ill • l'ltty OOltar ($50.001 eppolnl"*'1 H truoleo. cNPOSll required lot .. ch Mt of Did WH Ele EFORE, pellllon•r preys doCum•nO to ouar1111tao tfll rolurn In
llOftC•OP HWT•l'tlAt.I "--11~ T.&. ...... t1;1 TllANl-C04IT HftVICI .. IHC. •
dvly e,..i111H Trutl" """' tllt •towlnt.._, ... ..-flf trutl WILL SILL AT PUet.IC AUC'TION TO THI MIOMllT l lODlft P'Olt CAI M
, ... ., .... et tltM • .... 111 lawful
IMftfY " IN UllltM IUtetl ell tltM,
tltlo •114 '"'-'' ,.,.veyed te alld ,_...._ 11't "..,._, .... Deed of TNSI
... IM~~*"'"'"' TllUSTOll . RA'l"MONO MAllSH4LI. JAllVI•, 111 _..,.,._ ,,....
IENU'l(IA.,Y. ALLSTATE SAVINGS ANO 1.0AN ASSOCIA TION, • c.llfemle c.,,.,otlon.
llecot-~., n , 1tn •• '"'"· No. t•t lft lloOk 1..i.,... mo°' Of· flclat llKOrdt In tho offlc• ol ,,. lltKOf'dtr of Or ..... Co..nty; ..... OoM
Of trutt dHcrlllOt the f9110wl"I P••
potty: PARC8t.. I: Unit Ht. S2 Ill UM Clt'f
of Now_. llMcll, C.DUMy ol Ot ......
SCete of Calltomla, •• .---II,_ Oii -• certeln ~1111-'IM rac..-tllld A.,.... 2', 1m '"Doell 1• ..... m lo >11 tncluolw, Of. flclel ftKords. ol Ore1111 c111111y. C.llfomle. PAltCEL J An Yndlvlded lfMh I,._
•ro.i •• • •-'" com,,,_ 111 Ille f• tnteroA In -to Illa Common Aroo of LOU 1 -2 ol Tract t•, M PO• mect flied 111 11oOk «IO, ""9H 25 to ti 1,.. c1.,.1 .... Mltt•ll-Olls ~. records •
Of said County,••""" term It defined
11\el: l .-<onclltlon within u deY• efler tN
.-------------1 1. Tllo c rt -rtnlt petition tiled, Did-nine <Mt•
J. Tlllt petition ... 111 be HI tor Eecll bid mull conform end bo llaertne not loN -t.,. CS.ys trom the ••l90fltl,. to "'9 uwur.c I documents.
111 Ille Artlct• Mllttao "Oollftltlons" of 111e 0oc1.,a1c1111 of e.o ... ,..,.o, C.of>dt-Uo•u •nd Reatrlctlon• re<orclod In
-12JD5, Peo-, .. , -,..,ecordlcl
'" -1m1. Peo-n1, Dotti of otflclal RKOrds, -l"KOt'-In -12:m.
11911110, Offki.1 Records
Passengers board the
San Dwyo headP<l for
·T11uana Trolley" al
Wn1c<J po1111.~ The
A~ .........
~ystem UXlS built, entir{J/11 from .'itate :.ale,\ arid
gaso/11w ta.r /unds
San Diego trolley jolly
Swift little red cars whisk riders to Mexican border
SA~ YSIDRO IAP> This
1s t h e last stop for the s wift
l1lll<.' red c ars that whisper
th<.'ir way down from San
L>l ego on se<.1mless rails to
the Mt.•x 1c an border.
Pa-;sengcrs get out here
and walk across th e
pedestrian ramps to Tij uana
taxis that ta ke them into
t o wn lo s h op. o r bet the
ponies. or d nnk and lis ten to
Tijuan<.1 brass. or have the
Caesar -;alad a t the Caesar
Ho te l
The little red cars are here
wa1t1ng when they return, to
whisk them northward again.
their ccstas filled with booty,
their insides w ith he artburn.
San Diegans are proud of
th1., 16 m ile stretch and the
German built c ars tha t carry
18,000 people a day on
\\eek end~ and 13 .000 a day on
"'eekdays
One thmg that makes them
proud 1s they did it all
Lhemselve~ Unlike almost
e ver) other mass trans it
progr<1m 1n the United
S tat es. th1::. on e used no
fed eral funds. except for
grade·crossin g sign a ls. a
half m11lion·dollar drop m
the S86-million bucket.
The project was patd for
w ith s t a t<' sales tax and
g a soline tax funds set aside
for mass transit ll was
l oca ll v conceived <tnd
planned'. a nd is the c heapest
system per m ile 1n the
nation.
For instance. Was htngton.
O C . s pent $43 million per
mile for its new subway. The
San Diego Trolley came in at
S4 7 millio n per mile.
The only s ad note in this
happ) operation is the name
The San Diego Trolley will
probably not stick. People
are already calling it the
T ijuana Trolley. although the
UL Tl IERGEROH
SMITH & TUTHILL
wtSTC LIFf CHA,EL
rickety cit y s outh of the
border had n othing to do with
1t. T he Mexicans are talking
now about building the ir own
trolley to link up with San
Diego's red cars.
The trolley s t arts just
outs ide the old. picturesque
Santa Fe s tation in downtown
San Diego. It makes six s tops
m San Diego be fore it hits the
right-o f·way . To avoid
making too many stops for
red lights rn town, there is a
light actu ation switch to turn
the traffic lights to green
Once outs ide of town, the
average s peed of 9 miles a n
hour picks up to 35 to 40. and
th e trolley makes 11 s tops of
20 second s each a t pretty
littl e s tations built to
accomm odate the German
cars The average run takes
about 33 minutes. which is
fine because most of the
countryside outside the wide
windows is dull.
The high spot for v isitors
comes al the Harborside and
Pacific Fleet stops. where
they get a s pectacular view
of the s outh harbor. the
bridge to Coronado Island
and the Navy yards with the
proud ships in m othballs
The trol le y wa s the
bra instorm of two San Diego
w o m e n who organized
s upport for the project and
pus hed it along.
Judith Bauer and Maureen
o ·connor. chairwomen of the
M etropolitan Tran s it
D eve lopment B oa rd ,
overcame partis an politics,
p e r sonal feuds a nd public
dis t a ste for big s pending to
get the cars rolling. The line
s aved money by buy rng
existing right-of.way from
Southern Pacific R a ilroad
for about $18 million.
The trolley s tarted July 26
and was an ins tant success.
It 1s so p opul a r as a n
al t ernat i ve mean s o f
transportatio n 1n car·c r azy
California that cons truction
of doubl e track is being
pressed and 10 mor(' c ars are
on order from Siemens· Du
Wag of Ducsseldorf. There
arc plans also to extend the
trolley to the cast or the city.
Tom I.Jr\\ in . gen e ral
manager of the Metropolitan
Transit Development Board.
s ays su ccess has created
problem~. They had planned
to add to th e se r vice
gradually, but now they have
to jump nght 1n with both
feet
There are no conductors.
The re are no ticket sellers or
takers. The traVl 1s run on
the honor -;yste m in a way
The only employee aboard
m ost trams 1s the dn\'er. You
drop a dollar m s1h er mto a
ma c hine al the station. It
d e I i ,. e r s y o u a s m a 1 1
pas tecard tick et good for two
hours. You mig ht be ask ed to
s h o w the t i cket b v
plainclothes security people
ridtng trains at random But
more hkt•ly not
The firs t lime vou are
caught getting a free ride
you pay an autom at1c S20
fine The second o ffe ns e
costs S50 The third o ffe nse
means a S50 fine a nd a n
appearanc(' 1n cou rt to
ex plai n wh y vou are so
dumb.
In the ff'W months the
trolleys havt' been rolling.
less than 1 pe r cent of the
riders have evaded paying
the fare. officials s ay In
New York City. by contrast.
transit police caug ht 60.000
turnstile j umpers m the first
s ix months of 1981 and
they do n·t know how many
got away
Dance sweetem fund
427 E 17th St
Coo;la Me~a
f;df;.Q37 1
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
r-: I. ('A J 0 ;-.; .\ p I
F.d" ard II. La". Si a
forml·r 'lat<' o;rnator from
I llll'l'll.tl Coun t;-dil'd
TUl''<l;I\
GENOA, Nev. IAPI -The Northwest Nevada
town that throws a dance ins tead of payin g higher
taxes co llected about $12.000 at its annual .. Candy
Dance" fund-raiser .
"HCI IROTHHS
SMITHS' MOUUARY
627 Main St
Hunt1na1on Bt-ach
536·6539
,ACIFtC YllW
MEMORIAL ,AJllC
Cerre1erv Moriuarv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1l1c V1P.W Orovf•
Newporl Beach
644·2700
McCOIMlal MORTUARIES
LaQuna Beach
494 ·941 5
LaQuna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Cao•slrano
495·1776
HAalOlt U W~MT. OLIVE
Mortuary • Cerre1erv
C1ematorv
1825 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
ptBCI lllOTHfRS
llLLllO.t.DWAY
MOtlTUAIY
110 Broadway
cos1aMeu e.2·91~ E
~EW YOHK <API
l.oul~ W. •·alrchlld, 80. "ho
ran Fairchild Publications
Town Board Chairwo man Ruby Barker said
the gross receipts from the event marked a record.
The money will be used for various civic proj·
eels in this tiny hamlet.
du r 1 n g l h (' company· s .--------------------------p os t Wor ld W ar II
r' ans1on. died Friday
F~11rrhlld "as president
and c h airman or the
trade-publishing giant from
1948 until 1966
A RV I N 1 A P 1 A
businessm an died in the
wreck a~e or a private plane
h<' rented to check his rarm
arreage In southeast Kern
County. Stanley E. WUlls,
60, was president of the
Kern Delta Water District
board ol dirC<'lors
PICT1T10UI eUifMUI ..,.,. ITA'n .. MT
TM,.........,..._IS...,,.~·
MM el! SC~PIO OHE, UMI H•i.i,.vt
UM, 81 T-, (A. ... TM8 l~TING CANVAS. "'41 Mewlflvl ~. El Toro. CA.._. ~ ~Ma. 2'641 Hanlll<ll L-, 81 T-, CA ft6» Tlllt ..._ It CGflell>CWcl l>y M In· dM .......
--~· Tiiis .....,_. -fllM wit.ti \tit C.Unty °""' .. 0r.,. C-y °" ...
tafl\Mf' '" '"'· ,.,.., ""*' .... Or .... c...-0.ly ~ .... O<t. U, 1t,i.•-.t. 1'11
dtl• of IN order as provl-Dyt-. Each bid thell be eccompentod Dy
J For e11 oro•r dlrecllno end lhe M<urlty ,_..,,.,to In tfle contract a11thorl1lne s-imoner, •• tnn ... ol t11e dO<u"'...u and bf the llR "' e>rGPOMd H la t• OI PHILIP MALONEY, • Wbc0ftlrac1ors mlul"O perton, 10 encymt>er lhe Tfle DISTRICT ,_,."the''""" to -ve-.Crl1*1 roet .,.._,., °' ttw reject .,.., ot ell blch or to wel .. .,..., •Sl•I• 104' lhe purpow o1 completing lrragul•ntlol or lllfor,,...11119'1 In any lmprovo,.,..,,11._n wkl pr-ty; Did• or In .,.. Dlddlno '· Petlllontr to bl •Ppolntld .. The DISTRICT het 001a1 .. c1 from ,,.,,, •• ol Ill• ut•t• ol PH ILI P Ill• OlrKt04' ol the O.perlmont ol MALONEY,• mlNl"I POnon; tndustrl•I R•l•llons th• 11•neret
'· ~h ot"9r end turt"9r relief llO Pf•velllno '"'• ol PO• di..., ••gn In el••n •s thltcourt may d"m ,,.._,. tfle locelltv lr1 wlllch tllls _,k 11 to De DATEOSopl, i•. ,,.1. pertormld tor •och er.it or type of OAVIO s. GETTY, workman n•ocl•d 10 ••ICYI• Ille Attonwy for Petitt......,. COftlract. fNM r.Cft art on Ille et l"9 ANITA MALONEY DISTRICT offlu loceled al· P•llll-. ,.11rclletl .. O•pert"'111t, 1157 DAVID s. OIETTY PletHlla Slreot, CHI.a MHe, CA
ttSS Clvk OMW ~tw We• ttU1. Cotti•• may De obtained on Sa111a AM CA mn requosl. A CGPY Of theM rain sl\all 111
1714) .,.,.-post Id "' .,.. joO II 1 e Publl....., Or-Co<lil Oetly PllOI. Tiie foreooi"I KheclUI• of per di.,,, w-s ,, be.cl -• --.1ng day .. 0<1 15, 2', NO\' 1• 1"1 .. ~I o191\I Ill llOurt n. ral• for llolldey
end ewrtlme '"°"' w it be al least tlme•nd-1\ell
It •~•II llO menOelory upon Ille NllUn CONTRACTOR to wNlf'n IN COfttrKI
l'ICTITIOUS eUSIN•U I l a w tr d I cl , e nd II Pon t n y NAME ITAT•MIENT wb<ontr«tot under lllm. to P•V not Tll• loltowing person I• dolr'll ~I· lest t,..n ,,.. Mid lllO<llied rates to •II neu as. -r•mon emplOya<I Dy them In ,,.. MUSIC GALAXY, t29J2 Newport .. Kuti on of IM contract. A¥• .. TYlUn, CA n.eo Ho bidder ,,...., wlllldr-his bid IOf' Mlc,_t Pinto. ~ Arrovo Chico, • period ot forty.fl.,. CUI day• etter Laguna llNch, CA ms1 IN dal• ... fot IN _,Ing of Dien. Thi• _,_, 11 conduelld by an fn. A peymW1t bond end •performance dlvlduel Dond wlll D• t•Qulr•d prior 10 Mia-I Pinto •••< ytlon ol Ille contr •c I Tfl• Thi• Ual-was filed with the peym.,.t llOnd -II bl In -lotm Ml County Ctorti Of 0r.,... County .,, O<I tortn In u. conlract docl#Ml'lb
'· 1 .. 1 GowtTllng Board '17Z7U By Dorot"" H¥ .. y Fl-r, Publl"*I Or-(:OHi Delly PllOI, Purcto.lng Olreclllr 0<1 1?, "· 2', No¥ 1, .... PYDll-Or-Coall Delly Pilot, ----------~--'i Ocl. 2', Nov 2. 1"1 .. SJ.ti
rtlUC llltE rtlUC •TICE
EXCEPT THEltEFltOM ell oll, 11s. ml,,...•1• -_, 11-,droc•"'°"'· llel-e d90lll of MIO l•t. wit'-' lfle rllf11 OI -1"'• .,.,,.,., et , ... ,._ lft 1,,.1,.,..-u ol r.conl
PARCEL l EOllfl'ltnh at W<n •-m•nCs art partl(yterly Mt lor111 In IN Arlld• ...Citied "Ee .. m.,.b" of
the O•ctar111on ""do' the S.Ctton "9adl~ In tu<h Artkte lfllltlad et 1o11-1· "RteMs end Ovtles u111111 .. end CeDt• T•ltvl•lon", "5-tl, S.I· llement end Encroac11m1nt", "tn9reu, Eorus end Re<rHllonal Rltflls", "E•ctutlw R•ttrktld COm·
mon Area E._,, .. -"Moler Boa EaMm-" PARCEL • Ee....,...tt as well HMmonls art partkuterlv Ml lor111 In
the Artkle •ntlllld "E•..,,,.,,ts" ol
tlll Oa<ter•I°" of e.o .... -•• c-1-tlons •NI Rntrlctlon1 rKorded In
-1JJD5, ..... 1 ... encl ,._,ec..-ln -12'11, PeQ9 J27, Doti\ of Offlcla l Recordl, and recotlltd In -um.
-110. Offki.t Record•. ,,_, lfle Sec11on llMCll"lf In well Artie .. .,..
1111 ad es foOOW\. "A 19"11 eno Dvl .. •: Ullllllff -CMMe Tel.,,ltlon", "Sup-port. s.tn-t •nd Enc-hment", "CommlHllty l'eclllllet EeMmont" and "Dreln•o• Ov., Commu1111y Faclllllff"
10 co.,.,.trv, •32. N-por l Bffcll. CA
"(ti• '1••1--or '°"'mon de· tleNllon Is .,,._ -..e, ,. w.,r.,.ty Is 9lv•n .. to Its Gomplet-u or tor· -.c1neu I"
TM .,.,,..,klery -· selcl Oeocl ol Trv11, Dy.....,. o1 I DrMCll Of d9f ... lt In Iha otlllgatlon1 uc11rld 11\areDv, ...,•totore •-lllld and dell...,.ld to
the unO.rflonld • wri""' OeclerallClft
ol OeiaUll -Demand for s.i., -wrltt9fl notice Of breeell end of etectlon to ceu .. the """9r"-d to toll •eld
Pl'GPer1Y to Mtlsty ..io Ollllgal lons, -.... ,...,., t"9 undanlvned ceu..a said ,.tlct Of -.Cfl and of et.ctlon to
NOTICE 0' TllUSTRIE'S SALE tie RKOf'-J..,. JO. 1•1 .. Instr. No. UNOIEttOllDOPTllUST NOTICE OF DEATH OF UOll 111 bOOll U IZJ, 1>999 142, of said
...._Ne. t1-1t1tc11 E RM A V. KEITH AND °'~:.:1.:.~:~·be m.-""' wllllollt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: 0 F p ET IT I 0 N TO cov•nent 04' werrantt', .~-H Of Im· Tnat under •ftd by ¥1rt ... of 1119 ~-provltlont of tllel corteln DHCI ot ADM I NISTER ESTATE Plied, r ... """' 1111•, PO-U,lofl, or Tryst c1411ad ..-. )I, 1m , and rec~ NO A110CYJ9 ancumDretlCH, to PIY IN ,...,olnl"I -• • ,, • . prlnclpel tum ol .,,. "°"'''' tecureo In , ... offlco of llle RllCOrClow of ... T 0 a I I h e I r s • ..., said DMd of Trwst, wltll Interest .. Covnty ol Or ..... Stal• 01 C.lllOf'nle, on Jyne 12, t'1t, 1nvo1-u1a. -benef ic i arle s, cr editors In Mid not•-'Old. ee1Ver1<&.11 en.,,
"'· of Offklel Recore1s. .,_.,..., by and contingent e r.editors of ':":::.' :::S.°.:o .. :!.=' .. of .. ~·i:s,:,; Ruuel c B 1Cer1 ... and Janis I( E rm a v . Ke I t h a n d Tt\ISI• and ol the tnnts <•Miid by Karlen, Hutl»nd -Wife es T-tDr, h b to Norco S.rvlc• Comp•ny, a per SOn S W 0 m ay e Mid OeOCI OI TrYSI Seid s.I• wlll be c00>cw111on, H TrllSleo, anc1 STATE othe rwise interested in the llald on TYftelay, N-m111r J, '"' •I ••v s 0 ft• ..,.,. 1 t:oo P.M. • .,. c....,....,. A ... nuo .,._ -ING AN L. .... N AS ....... IATION, w 11 and/or estate: trence to.,.. CMc Cent•• Bullcllng JOO • Ca tllornl• corporetlol\, •• A petition has been filed EHt C"'--A-. in 1111 '1.:..of B-tktllr'y, ·-·-· ..... _ And """'*'' '° 1119 rwq ... st of ,... by EI s i e H 11 1 i n the Oreno-, CA. owNr -lloldltf ol tfle promluory Superior Court of Orange At ,,.. time°' t11a tntttat PYDlluoll"" · 1 b .... ~ of this notice, 1119 101e1 1mount of tho no • IKured Y ,,.. ..,_.. 01 Trusl County requesting that unpaid betence ot tlle obtlftellon aDove roten .. to, • And DY ,_ 01111e dlff•utt 1,..,. Elsie Hill be appointed as >e<11reoo.,t11ea11o ... d ... cri--ot
e»eYm•n• ot wld "'°"'''_., note -personal representative to 1'"'1 •nd nttm.tec1 '°'1'· npe>tH, the Dr•ocll ol the C.-ltlo of tld · · f end adY•"'ft It $l .. ,S'6."4. °"" of Trvst _ .. ._. • ":.ot1c!,,. adm1n1ster the estate o To c1ot..-m1,. ,,.. -"'"II bid, to11
oe1eu11 -e1ac11.., 10 s.11 Und9r Erma V. Keith (under the may <•tt t11•1 tJ7'°"6
Duo ot T '"'' ..... 1n9 ken duly I n d e p e n d e n t Dated Oct-2, 1 .. 1 recorded .. provlad Dy ,_ ... MIO Administra tion of E s tates ~:t_HS<OAST SERVICE!>,
RKordof"s Ollk• on J-'· ""· In Act)' The petition is set fOf' .. Mid Tnnlft Book 1«)t1, -1S7'; SU NICIST SEleVICE COMPANY .• hearing in Dept. No. 3 at 8y T.O SERVICE co .
corporation,•.,,.,,..._,, -11or11ec1 700 Civic Center Drive, ~51>9'n O.Pletro end Kll"I Tr..st" ,,_,Mid 0..0 al W t · th C't Of S t ' Trutt, eforuetd, on Tllurtday, es • IO e I y an a AulstentSe<retery Nov•mber s. 1"'· e1 ,.,. "°"'of t ,,00 A n a , C a I I f o r n i a o n One City aou .. verd wnt,
o'ctoo e.m. •Mid day a1 ,,,. main November 18, 1981 at 9:30 ?,'1~~ ...
•ntra"'e to llw Orenoit C-ty Hertior a . m . Publl~ Oranee Co<l1I Delly Piiot. Juc11c111 Olstrtct Muntctpe1 Court."°' I F YOU OBJECT to the 0cto00r 12. tt. u , 1•1 Jemborn lllvd , In 1111 Clly ol
Newport Beech, C.ounly of Ore1111, gr anting Of the petition, -----------~--' St••• 01 catlfor,.te, WILL seu. you should either appear 1 pyrsyer11 lo Ill• power of UI• Piil.JC •ft( c.ont.,,..., 1n Ml4 o..o of Trust -· at the hearing and slate ------------without covenant or werra111y your Objections Or f ile NOTICITO
r•o•rcllno 11110, posusslon or written objections with the cONn·---0ttSCALt..tNG encYmbren<ft, et llUblk .ucllon, to 1 bef th h • -· ,,.. ntollftt cash blOOer. in 1..n.,1 cour ore e earing. l'CHt ••os "'onoy ol Ill• United Stein of Your appearance may be S<.hOOI Olstrkl CO.ti Community
Arner•<•.•ll tM1corta1nrHltw-1'1Y in p erson or by your co~',T~~~= 2 00 o'c10<1t Pm of 111 ... te In ... C-ty of Or.,., SI-'• tt -ol C•IHornle, CIHCrt-es follows: a Orney • llM IJlll <My of NowmDer. '"' Lot .. of Tract nw. ltr'lho City OI I F y 0 u A R E A Piece ol 114 Rec91pl• Offlc• OI .... N•WPOrt 8Hc:h, as ..... ,,,., r-old c R E D I T 0 R 0 r a Pur<llHlng Aoent. M• Marlen Pef'l'ln, I B k JIA p 27 t 311 tusl of • Coast Communlly Coll ... Olttrlct, ~ •• ~.~ ~.::, lhlncoffl: of contingent creditor of the u10 Ad•m• A ..... co11• Mu •.
111ocountv Recorder olleld C-ty. deceased, you must file C•llforntat>t» EKUpt 1'-rtfrom ell oll, oll rl9fllt, your Claim With the COUrt Prof.cl ldenllfl cat lon Name; mtneralt. m1,..re1 rllf1tt. MtYret 119, 0 r pre Sent It t 0 the OB~Oan~0•-Co41ega Recyclll\O Cent¥ Stab rlollu and otr.r hydroc••-• by ~ .. 11e1so ..... r neme .,_,,that mey Ill personal representative Place Plans are Oft Ille; Office ol
•1111111 Of .-. 111o parcot o1 t•nd appointed by the court Pfly•lcet Fecllltlfl Pl....,, ... Tre11 .. ~ I ~ ~ ~ ._..._ 1•• i hi f h f Complex, Coast Comm, Co1te9• _,. ,,._...... __ ,.....,, • .,,....~-w ~ W t n OUr mont S rom Ohtrlct, 1J70 Ademt Ave. Cosll ~':.,::~:,·:::,:1:''~"'.::; the d ate of first issu ance ~wo. c.111orn11 "'" 11w ss..m1
Jt0ff"l lnand•-•"lt11e-trom of l~tters as provided in J-::"0~~'15 HEREBY GtVEH .,..1 Mid ·-°'any ..... ·-· '"''"'""' Section 700 of the Probate lht •Do ....... IN(I S<llool Olstrkt of ~,{':::, :,.:=~::=~ Code of California. The Ot•noo c-tv. C•llf04'nl•, ectlno Dy
t11osa "9relnabow clnc:ribecl, o1104' on time for filing claims will •nd thrO<J911 '" Go ... rnl"9 eoerd,
I . fl•r• lnelhr rehrrtd to ., -us, 1"""91•-tllafts Into, thf'OUOll not exp re prior to four "OtSTRtCT .. , w111 n!Qtve "° 10, bUI ~or!~=... "-..c~ec;.:,:~!: months from the date of not 111 .. tNn ,,,. ab0 .... 1.ttec1 ume, tucll whlPllOCllH or dlrectlonatly the hearing noticed above. Meled bids for IN tward of e contract
drH1ec1...i1t,tUMOt .. l'ldl!Mfttundor YOU MAY EXAMINE '~::::-;;-.:v~:'.i .. ec1 in t"9 piece
and benNtll Of beyond Ille ellttflor th fll " t b th rt lfmlts thereof -to 1'9drlll, retunnet, e e "ep Y e COU . lllenUfltd •bO .. , -illall 110 -noel
"llllP, -lnteln, ropelr, --•NI If you are Interested in the .,,,, Pl.lblkly read •loud "' the -...
opor•I• any such w•lls or,...,.,.,, e.s tate , Y?U may file a staTt~::":.~:.oc:. •io.oo deposit wn"°"t· _.,.,, .,,. ''"" to c1r111• request th the cou t t • mine, ,,0, •• ••Pl••• enO operet• WI r 0 requlrld for each Mt ol bid dOcu,.,,.,,ts
"'"'"'" 111e aurtec• or the ""'91' * receive speclal notice of 10 11u.,en1 .. lh• ,.,.,,n tn oood , .. , 01 ,,.. •ut.wrtec• ot 1111 1anc1 t he Inventory of estate ,_111on within 10 <Mys 111 .. 111e bid hof'Olftabow clnc:rl-, es r-..ld Dy t nd of th ti ti OPOftlfto Clillw. OoH ·-1n ....,. 12220, p... a sse s a e pe ons, Eec11 bid must co,.1or"' and ...
t ue, 0111<1a1 R•corcla and mon a cc OU nt s and reports f'ttllOll•lwto.,. c-••t doc11rnenb. commonly •now" ., u Cambria described in Section 1200.S Each bid lholl bl K'*"Plftlocl...,
Ort .... C-del -· c.111orn1a. II of the California Probate lhesecur1tyf"9fff,....tolntt1e contrecf tfler• ts "° strwt .odreu, •r«t'-Code, =~:'~ Dy IN fist ol "'--' may be abtal"9d by w.ltt.en ,_.to -· ... _ ..
s1a1. s......, .,,.. L-An«••tt..,, David S. Getty, Attorney The 01sTRtCT --"'° ''""" 111 m North El oar-S4rMt, StoclltOft, at Law 1155 Civic Center ••lee• any cw e11 bids°' to wat ... any CA tSJ01 Attention Loaft S.Nlc• • lrreouterlOas cw W-lltles In any Oetlert_;,,., "°' ••t•; 11\aft H_...be, Drive West. Santa Ana, bids or tn hblddl,.,
I, "" '°' Ille pyrpow of peylng c A 9 2 7 0 3; t e I . ( 7 1 .. ) The OISTlllCT .... Gbtalnocl from OOl ... 11_ MCur.cl by Mid Oeld of 836-6607 the Director of tlle Oepertment of Tryst, ll"vt>ll-.d Or11119t C..st Oelly Piiot. tncl111trtel lltletlons tlle to11erel Th• lot•I ernounl ol tM 1111,.ld oet. u 2t, HoY. 1 1•1 4UM1 pre'WllllllO Nie fll per dlOfft w-t In l>elM<I Of lllls obl ... tlon Is UIUIUt ' ' the locatlty In ""'<II 11\ls _. Is to M
ptw s l11ter11t ~.US.ti encl ,.,. 1-------------:-:~= :O::C: tC:-:.:11~":',:: ::!:":..-:--::'ic: :.r.-:. ~= JllalC ll'lll <Oftlract. TNto r.._ ero Oii 1111 et the
byfMdilllellf .. llltS.S.-.OO; 1-------------OISTllllCT effko lee•• It Offke If
OATl!O ~· "'' Lll~NOTIC• Physic•• ,..lllllo• Pl-"'e. CaHt sJNKIST H llVICE "OTICE IS HIEltl!eY GIVEN _, com"'. Oii .... Oltlttct, llPO .......
COMPANY, lllO IOli.wllll lttfM of fOUllcl ot •-An ., CMle ,_.... Gall"'""4l tMa. e c°'"'atlell ~ lleve llOtfl 111111 by ,,. Polk• COPlot m9Y Ille .. ...._. .. """9tf, -' I TI C PNCINI Oftroart,,,.,,. fll IN City ol Cot .. MeM COC1Y ol I-, ... , tMll 119 pet1o9e1 at ~.;:,tie<.....,.~ tor • w1oo1 '" ••ens f1f ,.,....., ltOl Ille Joe •I•. m Nor111 l!I Ow ... St-t :Myt: TM , .......... tcJIMlll4o M per diem
s.tMll, C.tltomi. •noz lloY'• Wlllto lkyclo, ...,., G,_ .. .,., Is -..........,•-"'"' dllY of
CIO.I ... ltt, kllwlM Varsity IO $Cid. l kycll, .. ,., •19111 Ill 11111n. 11111 rMt fet llOlltMy
Tna• '"'' .. ..._.., etecl</Gold ID 5-d.. elld '"'°"""' -" !NII M et '"-t l kYd•, ao.,•1 llecll/Yetio. Mwrty .,,.,. .... -...... Pwt>lllMd Htw"9f't H~llOt N-• IO" ••eve•• ... .,., Ill.ell SC.llWIN! ll. tllall .. ffttlfMlel9r't ~ .lM ..,.. .. < ........ wtlll , .. 0-...... Coatt IHCll Cni•-l lcycle, .. Y'• "" CONT"ACTO!t .. ..._ .. <Mrect OallyPl111t.0tt.1t,-.-.1.1t11 •'"*'>..,..ltcyclo,lt .. ~ll It ewe rdef, e!ld w•o" 011 , 1------------.....i ___ ,....,,., Y-.M o-ta• ,...,.., ....._ • ._., --.r-. • •Y.,.. ·A '1cllilM.e l111i111 .. , retM • •..., .._ ctttUl!lllle IOM tMll •MN__.........,.• .. ,
.. ""'.,._...... ---............. Ill .. •Ille ..... Meftt ftled NOTIC:.11 ~ltTMlft OIVIN-t .............. __..
wttft tfle CiMIMy Cletlr le t M -.._..,. -,,_ 1111 ... ~ .......... 1111 ... .. MIN,_ ... ,._. aftet Mrllll• of tM •• ... rty WllMll e ..... f/I ............. ..._
n1c11 ...... Cleft~ •••11 CH o ,, '•"••••• '"• ...... ..,._...,...., ........... """"...... kelllA............ .. ... • ...... -........ . ,.w ....... I ......... ,, ...... ........... .... .. .... ,.....,.. "* .. e111r If tllere en -·•••otrlfC:.....,111 .. ntl• .... c.IMCt. ftle ~Cml-L....i llc.t .. ......,,......... ... .......... __ o.,., ••••••. th ......................... .. .. __ a::
OAILY "LOT ,., ........ ... l1tfett11etle1t ett4I OATIO·_,..,.. ., __ ,, ~,.,.__ R .•. MllTM ...,_.,, .. _,.. -• ._.._ CHt•P'Of'..oLtca .._..,._..
-~ ~";:Or9111tc.11Dellf.= oa.~t";fCll-.Dllr.= .... '
•
•
------~~---.~._...-----------=--.....
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 26, f981 ... C1
The marketplace on th e Orange Coas t .. 642-5678
74<'t· of people buying real estate have
read classified ads in the past week. a
national study indicates.
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
~-~~ ............ ~!!!.~~.~ ........ ~!.~~.~ ....... ~!!.~.~ ....... ~.~.~= ... I ~.~.~ ....... ~!.~~ ....•... ~!.~~ ........ ~~=-.~········
. Gi•rtl 1002 G1111rtl 1002 GHertl 1002 G1•ral 1002 1G1111rtt 1002 G1•rtl 1002 c; ... ,.. 1002 G1•r• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Te Pbct Y11t Ad, CaP
642-5678
MOUSES FOi SALE
1 ...... 1 1114
8'100. hl•lld ICU
ll.llboot Pt•lll•~lo 11111'1 l 1piotr1ft0 11.,rh 10" l<•Oft• llcl .... 14m ('~1 11... llR4
u....1~.. llMO
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
l'J Toro lil:sl r-•·• v.1 .. , 1o:M , ... ...,.., MoHc.: :~~:,•111.111 lltO(h :: Al I rea t estate ad
~ltii:h JI* ve r tised In 1b1 s
HSTIUY
Buuurut, Immaculate,
nicety landscaped 4
bdrm home on cul·de
sac Spacious rooms.
View of golf course from
property. Owner will
help on nnancina Only
$1 39.500 Catt now
979.$310
ALLSTATE
REALTORS ~= ~~;':' :; nthe;~:J:.e:at18 F~~~j~o1uts~ ' '°" 11t • 11M1 MINI ESTATE/OWNER .,:: a..,....:.• ,.,. Ing Acl of 1968 which ... • Super nnandng incl. 7'1 ::.!".::.l•PI•"•"" :: makes it illegal to .. d-lst! ASSUME LOW MO
11<.1 a...... 111M verttse "any preference. PMTS ! No quahfying' ~:'';";:,...,,. :? ~~~11n'a\11~~ · b~~et!~ Gorgeous 6 bed. plus
IEALESTll£ nee. color, religion. sP:Y ~~dt~ ~~I
A<ruu '°' s.1. '""" sex. or national origin. Hur_!}'_' Call 957_-07~
LIMDA ISLE
E.xc1ling opportw1ity! Wide lagoon
view from spectacular architectural
designed 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom.
dark room & den. Slip Col' 2 large
boats. St.350.000.
LIDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tour~ this lovely
traditional spat'ious. custom 3 bdrm , 3
bath homcknewly redt.>corated. Priced
to sell qu1c ly at S47S.OOO. Must see .
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings (;re al for entertaining.
S4::!0.000. Ht•st price for the money
£='~~~:·· !E ~~;n s~:~~°:!r~r~~e~ ~ ~=~l:~·S!,' 1: ~~~1~!~~n.: or dis pp~I~!~~~ :a~~ !~~~.~~2~~
:=~~~~~=~ :: ~~~~~~~~ 1 wedge. from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. ,,,,_ Pr-n1 JQOO This newspaper will not 1' 3 b th t h f llld!dlnotPr°"'''' 211N knowlnflY accepl any a <'US om orne. 3700 sq . t. ~:!'1~Trl•I'•" ~: advertising ror real FOR MER BAYCREST featuring marine room. $1,385.000. i1.~:~i~U: .. "'' ~:: eslate which ism viola· MODEL ~~~':;~~:.:Pill> = lion Of the law. Beautifully decorated,
""''""' ••• ,,,,, i. •••• , nou 1________ l h 1 s c.-harm Ing ~ =::: :;:~:: ~~~~;:•• : bedroom , 2\.\ bath ho,mf RENTALS HRORS: AdYttilMn features a fireplace in
-L-...1...a L....J. ............. _....... the family room. a con· 1....,.... f•rru•hrd >1a1 -c_.... ,_.... -venient location and as· H ... ,. lnf•rll1>ht<I ?~ ...a...11y -...& = -. How>h .,.,.or tnr ~ ,._ -... -sumabte rmancing at n f.::::~:~:r~;· :: rors 1 ... ~. The low interesl rate
t .... 1 .... '" •••• l.llAl DAILY PILOT m.-s ...,.... 500 .,,. 1020 r ... -... L "' J$1) --"• • .,.....
!lupin" rurn Ulfl labilty for the finf •
~~~~=~:,l"I = Oftly. ~:,-.;.-;..t•r :: l11eorrect i.sertio. ~ ~l·t-~ .. gO
l\'*7h IOC'l =.· ... ~~d ~1--------·1 e:.',!,.'t;'::':!t.i. :: ..... for We
\MMtOlftflllt•I• &,no ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~t~~!~· ~ Gftlffal I 002
Ofhrt ktM•I tm • • • • • • • • • ••• •• • • •••••••I
......... R ..... , ·.~ c.....,.., I l~n11 M.~fW•I "'"' ~ MG ;::,"t,~11 ... ..i :: THEMARKET j 1
,., ... 11 .. 111. "-"• Besl buy 1r1 area 3 Bdrm
BUSINESS, INVCST· and add on ram1ty OH-.~ I MENT,FINANCE : room loo ' Refng & IHHTORS a... ... C!P ,. !LOI home warranty If lhal's S...: .... :ll:~ ~:t not enough, try 8L'.r'h as-L9 F..i1J HcMM I ::::~:.."'.!i' ~ sumable loan St~.700 OnThelay ~=~ ~.':.:. : Call now m.5370 EnJOY waterfron{ livin@
Mort111 .. ro • lOl) A on Lido Isle m this fan
ANNOUNCEMENTS, 11' £ LS TA TE t a s t i r 7 bed room rEISONALS & _ Colonial style home w1tt
LOST ' FOUND j REAL TORS trench doors, shuuers I __ and used bnck patio
t~.::I"',."" ?l; CHOICEBUY! Large balcony ofl
1..ti11 :....... _ master bedroom over l>':'.!.~~nd ~ $I 04, 900 looks the waler and th( Sor111c1.1a• i.400 Highl y upgraded 2 pril•ale sandy beach
Tr ... i· M.,,, Bdrm, lrvme Condo. This unique home on ar SERVICES Beautiful wall cover-oversized IOl is ideal for
*'te't Dtrtttot')
CM'lOYMENT &
Nf,AHTION
Mhoots tna.trw«"l~ JubW4nt~d· H<1p11an1 ... 11•r
MEICHANOISC
""" mgs , levelors. drapes family Jivrng and enter pluspool,spa.recroom laining on the bay
Take over existing Sl.750.000
-financtng Call ror de· D.M. Manllal lttr ;~ lails! 646·7171 7+_~835
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 llC1y\ld1· 011y1· N 8 675 · 61 61
UNIQUE IN HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Privacy. \.ery largl' lot. master i;u1te
with fire place. J bedroom. 212 bath +
studio. Assumable financing. $450.000
U~l()Uf ti()MfS
REALTORS. 675·6000
2443 f..SI Cout Hlgh1.,.y. Coron• dt>l Mu
WE HAYE 61 Of THE IEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
TEMMIS + POOL I FIXER
.5 acre e~late, 4 Br 41, M E W P 0 R T
Ba. has 1t all Lo dn I HGTS! owner will hnanC'e ' Excellent opportunity!
Palnck Tenore. rltr Beamed cetlinged living
7~·1221 room. bnrk fireplace.
French doors. 2 oew
balhrooms. 3 Bdrms
Owner ~topped remodel· 1ng Needs help
""'-' ~ ...... _..
"°"'""
IJ)6
11111 IOI>
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS Little is 1icJ! ! I -Classified Ads are reall) small "people lo people ..
sales calls with big re adersh1p aod big re
suits! To place )'OU r
classified ad. call toda~
642-5618_
1 $175,000 Call on 1his I one! $46-2313
2 ADULT ~tin
Bwkkrtt Jihlf1'1tih
C'.intr-t\. l.Q\Npfl'I«"'
C.il.l
Dup n ... 10 ,..,
fU.rMw«
Ga.t•tt Sal" Honn .....-r;or.,i, Jnit4n l.J,nt«,
lh<l•IWf) ~lM"tll•MOu\ Mlk'tU•~ "•"tf'd M~ul lnstruJM"h
()If ... f•r• 6 ~Q•IP PtU
C.U: ~~:~~n~ Sc>ot1 1111 c ood\ Sort Rma""'" 8., ~~~.o.H1t•1 Meno
BOATS & MARINE
,...,,
..m llQJO Mm
** 00<$
lllOIJ ~ !(Ml
1(1') .-.ri.
11C1a
~ ~ ...,,
lOllllJ UD Dr.
llOIO ill"3 lltl!M
"~ llO'lll
"°""
OPPORTUHITT knocks often when you
use resull·getllng Dail)
Pilot Classified Ads to reach the Orange Coast
market
Phone 642 S6'78 DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642·5678
HOME $88, 900 THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS Singles find d partner
T~o big pr1\ate
separale bdrms. each 1 Ocean & Lts Vu
with full baths Quiet. Pool. spa & lenms Lrg
pnde or ownership. hid . hke new 3 Bdr + den
den awa) I le\el condo I A:.sume 9\,'1 rnterest. with pool and c.-ommuni $475.000 Terms' Palrick ty rec room Near S Tenore, agt. 75EH221
Coast Plaza Call about I
terms. 752·1700 I
THE REAL
ESTATERS
120/o
AITO
W LSI. I< Y '\
TAYLOR CO
HEALTOHS -.11111· l!J.11
llG CAMYOM CUSTOM
A REAL ARCNTfCTUUL IEAUTY
Luxurious Georgian Colonial on best
golf course View Site! Beaut design,
abundant marble & crystal & finest
materials thruout 5 Bdrms. lge DR.
fam rm. billiard rm. 61,; baths.
$2, 150.000. Call for color brochure &
financing.
WESLEY H. TAYLOI CO., REALTORS
21 I I S•~HfltRood
NEWPORT CEHTER. M.I. 644·49 I 0
REALTORS
675-5511
SUPER "E" PLAN IH THE ILUFfS: 11111 nt01t
dtsl~d model hos a lonfy C)l"tHbe" Oftd
mou11ta in •iew. Owftfr will h1lp with
finC11tClftCJ. Only $239,500.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 E. Coad Hwy., COl"Ofto dtl Mar
675-5511
CLIFF DI. VIEW
This splendid home offers punoramit'
views of the 0 €EAN. BAY and s oft
green hills from ulmost every room.
Expansive 4 Bdrm 3 Ba home
w1fomily home leading to pool and
spa area. 1-'inesl appointmentii thruout + excellent ftnanl'tn~ m;1kes this a
flawless choicC' for you Call fol'
1<;xcLUSIV1'; s howing.
BRIMG YOUR ANTIQUES
They wi II fit beautifully in thl' gor
geous Newport Hgts home Unique
charm and OWNER FINANCING
makes this a wonderful opportunity to
Bl"Y. Asking Sl70.000. Drive by 520
REDLA:\OS A\'1':. then l'all for
appointmen"
THE VERY BEST
LOCATION t\ND PHJCI::' You will
agree when you \'le\\ lh1s t;ORG EUl.iS
tQuntry cottage in Newport llgtii. It
has 3 Br. & LOW 1:--JTI::HEST
FINANCING Ori\'e by 2809 Brciad St.
then call us.
RAE RODGERS 631·1266
R&" M ~ of Costa Mesa
OCEMFIOHT
1
3 Bdrm. 2 bath. 2 car
garage, multiple zoning
Cati S.5·9161 I
, OPEN HOUSE
REALTY ~
*SI SIC DOWN*
DESPER.A TE!
4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home
Assume h1 balance loan owe straight note SUCCESS REAL TY
~7991
SI 0,000 DOWN!
REOUCB>! I
Owner has moved and I reduced the pnce for
qu1C'k sale with atlrac
t1ve terms. This 3800 sq
fl home 1s now only
$389.500 4 bdrms ,
formal dining rm . huge
family rm and pool Im·
mediale occupancy.
Low interest lst T D
HORSEPROPBTI Two houses situated on l-11!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!111111
Unbeatable terms by
molivaled owner '
Dese rled 3 Bdrm
charmer 1n good
neighborhood Sunny
kitchen Hardwood
floors Ont) $109.900
Call673-IWO
almost 12 nc 1n lhe
backbay Newport area MESA VERDE
Front house 1s a modern PACESITTER 1800 sq fl home with I frplc. family rm. CO\' You must see this
cred 1'al10 and 2 car elegant 3 Bdrm 2 ~ath
garage Back house is home with .a . beautiful,
older 3 Bdrm I Ba wilh 2 sp a~ious living room
car ga rage Owner will w h 1 c h over Io o k s
finance with $75.000 seclude~ b~ck ya~d. dwn. Full price S275.000. ~arden hke kitchen, d.m·
THE REAL
ESTATERS
FIXER
SIOl,000
3 Bdrm huge bat•k
yard great ror r1rst
lime buyer don't miss
thisone Callnow'
1ng area and family
room overlooks another
secluded patio. Many .
many other eleganl
features. Owner will
help with financing @ SEA COVE Pnce ooty Sl65.500 Call PROPERTIES
546·2313 714·631 -6990 l!i!Wift1 I ~I~:~ HA.DOI ~ Only St0.000 down gets
OCEAMFIOMT HIGHLANDS you mlo thlS lOCally re
$195 000 cadt doWll Spar1ous immaculate LEASE OPTION modeled 4 Bdrm home
7ff.1111
ASSUM.Ull
I 4.50/o LOAH
Near new Woodbridge
<'Ondo. Much desired
i.mgte story. has 2 Bdrm.
2 bath. French doors.
lovely neutral wall lo
wall carpet and
beautJful brick patio
75'-1616
HAllOl IJDGI An exquisite offering
Elegant & spacious 3
bdrm + family room. 1
tev home w panoramic
vis ta of harbor .
roasthne. ocean & ni&ht hghu Prestige. ('Om ·
fort. luxury & security.
Redu('ed. now S739.000. (Owner financing> Agt.
640·5560
NEWPOIT DUPUX
Steps to beach. 4 up & 3
down . 2 baths each.
Furnish for wmler 'sum·
mer rentals Good his· tory f'ee Priced at
S335.000
associated
9~01( ERS-Rf AL TOllS
lOl' ._, lo~b?o t T • ii
UkeYtSt1tr ...
Spac1ou.s cust.om 3 Br 2 Ba m presuge Santa Ana
area Also mctudes 1 Br
guest quarters and
~eller hnanc.-ing w great
terms Unbelievable al
JUSl $200,000
RCTaylorCo
64 0 9C)()() .
GET A START
Only SIO,OO>dwn and low
monthly payments for this 1560 sq ft condo in
Costa ~esa 3 Bdrm 211
Ea. wet bar. 2 car gar. BBQ & microwave oven
and much more full
pm·e $128.500
TJUDIT 10\,\1
REALTY
631-7370
Seller ;_.111 carry balance Two story. four bedroom i with just 55000 OWN o: Large comer lot. Ko1 at 12~ rnterest Choice famil y home w11h buy oow with SI0.000 pondtoo'Won'tlast.rall l•-------•
comer duplex 3bdrm,31 ~oaurnvlerl~u~e~oar-:ie~ dwn Dix Npt condo. 00~· 3 B~r~~~·~m
bath up. 2 bdrm. 2 balh i bedroom retreat lt;s all partial vu, St.29.900. Call I @ SEA COVE renlals Excellent condi·
down Can convert lo here for lhe young at Rae, agt 63J.J.21i6 ~ PROPERTIES t1on Onl} lOr; down
large home Submit all heart $270.000 ] 1'·631 ·6990 OWC Asking 5260.000 orr~~layProp. 631-7300 H.1.1 --
Realtors
•675-7060• Plan• ELEGAMT EXECUTIVE
oNt of IMne 1 RESIDENCE ~~.r.s. High on a North Tustin
Dalebout EQU"MCNT
<ie-nff•I 8oau )hJM !lit'HICf >Olu ,.,,,.,
CE
BEDllE ELllKS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
BIG CAMYOM
COHDO
STEALS!
Elegance within reach• Bay & Beach 1 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. large liv-Real Estate I
• o·a Hill with spectacula1 "t~!ZiJ:fM!!!ll!!:~
!lJ • STEPS TO BUCH! views . 6500 sq ft 4 ..: 714
S I l ,1,1 Bdrms. 6 baths. 4 ___ _ • uper oca ion. • " rm fireplaces. real wine Ila-. »anot F.qvop Boat>, ... .,
bu Rtnl C'h1n4'r 8oaU Sell -.s1111 Doth 8oaU Sootd • 5'1 ea..~,.
TIANSPO•TATION
Alttraft t•amprn.!>ilr RrM
DH1ntC.1n
....., Cycles. Scoatn>'
llotot fiOI• J.ol# R .. I Traden Tuul Trail<n l'llbh
A"'o Stmtt Pin•
AUTOMOBILE
(fflltr~.J
..\Jloqw.h (IUtH't ltttrnt.oo \t>ll1cln ~ lil•tf' Rod'
•WMrll>rt,f'I lrvru
\'ilh
AYWlAMIAC ,.\Uilo.W&nlt'd
AUTOS, IMPOITED
ti""'°n l
AU• RufPW•• 1"'1• A.nun ltolf) Hllll
1:•"'1 a.,_ IA>ll lJ,.&.aun ..... ,,.,, ,.,,,.,
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141.
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AITDS, NEW
i-.i
QTIS,USED
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11111 viU tm 11711
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Ml
FIXER UPPER
USTILUFf
Individual Home -Large Five
Bedrooms Separate Master Suite
Good Floor Plan -View Of City
Lights Great Neighborhood
School & Park Close By. Listed Al
$255.000.
WATERfROHT DUPLEX
Balboa .. Little Island ... Full Bay
View From Both Units Upper Unit
<Which Would Make A Wonderful
Owner·s Unitl Has Four Bedrooms.
Lower Is Three Bedroom Unit.
Large Front Patio. Sandy Beach.
......... ~ ,..<'••·····
759-9100
#2 Ccwpcutt Ptno
NtwporlCNhr
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
AQCOfchg to CalNoml• BualneH
•nd Profe"6ont Code (Ste. 11900 to
17930) all persona doing butlnttt
under • ffctttlo"8 name mutt file •
statement With the County CStfk and
hnt It publl1htd four times In •.
new..,., HMng the ••• !fl ""*"
tht bullM• It locattcl.
Tht ..... tMnt It t..,nd bJ law
and It ,......,, lft ~· your ..... MN. Mott llilftlll ,....
pteof of tlll"t to optft COMIMfdal
ICCCHIMI. TIM DAILY "LOf prowtdH both
ftllftt lftd "'*6C•Uon ..mc.t. Wt
hi ...... MCHUfJ ftwMt aftd
llJlil 1• I -_..to .. Or8ftll ~~ ......... ., .... .... _ .................... ...
LIU&.~__, .....
mw.,.tlaaiillllNIM ....... .
mg room, huge bonus
room . fireplace . 2 & 3 Bdrms avail. $184 .000 ·$235 ,000
w1terms' Must l1qu1date now Patrick Tenore.
agt 7~·1221
Remodeled country MESA VERDE
kitchen. much more for Four bedrooms Step.
only $124,900. Call us down ramily room. Tem·
now. 546-2313 I perature rontrolled wine
THE REAL
ESTATERS
WATERFRONT FOR EXCHANGE
Linda lilt homt with elec)cMce, Optft
fttllftCJ & 5 bed. loat slip for 2 boats.
Owner wlll uchanc)t for cotNMrciat
property. rOftch or Mbmit. $2,600,000
lncoludes land.
AFFORDABLE NEWPORT
Otte story 3 bed, 2 ba. w• to beach,
pool & teMll. R.cluced to SI 39,500.
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC
REAL [.STATF
'-1.'\o •fr,1to'I\ ,.til(Jitlll\ M.tnN ... ~'''
lt lh W < ,.,.1 H....,
N....,1,,,,1 IW"'''
Ut·l400
t1\M,1m'4'Aw
<>o.! lsl,,ntl
'7Ut00
R£..WDT
CS A E~EAOPT
H P A L I A T 8 J £ A D P 0 W 0 I A
N S 0 E C E T K D Q t t A U S R U P S
N A A A I U C E V S U C J U T R N E P
E R M P D I E A A H S R T R E C E N I
A S A T R L N S M 0 C I A E T R H D R
N R T D $ R T I N S T I E I T A N R L
L T N N l A L A & G T R A £ H 8 G A E
D E S J D L L H S P I E E I T N U W A
H R N Q E H l R A L A R R S K G C I N
E t C R I H V 1 E N H I E D L S H N T
R 0 T P C A N'l H T J MN 8 AR AG S
J N A T H T D J E D E W T T K M E S A
t P E R E E 0 H 8 CJllC I A M £ T T 0 P
K C A R N P T M E G S H P T A R E W M
,,.... ... , HMNlll ....................... . _.., •·'°"" • .._...,. ,Mlldl lllllll e.ltlft..p
..... ...~ .... '-.J ..... V... 1llel'llnlT•"' E ... i'I .. ,..._i
~ ... ~ n. .. ,......_..., ....
room. Wet bar Artistic
'11se of rtat1an tile $250,000.
631-7300 .....
For C'lassiflfd Ad
AC110!'i
C.11
A DAil Y '1lOT
AO.YISOl
MJ.S61'
RESIDENTIAL RE Al ES TATE SERVICES
A TIEHTIOH IUSY EXECUTIVES!
Enjoy the tranquil setting of this 2
BR. + den Condo overlooking the
golf course and wide greenbelt in
two directions. Ideal retreat after a
hard day. Two good assumable
loans make it pe>ssible . Priced at
$199.000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
t·us tom homt• \\tlh cellar. Pool. spa F.x lalboalsa.d 1006
1· o a s I I 1 n l' a n d quisitely df'COraled and •••••••••••••••••••••••
""h 1 t e w a I l'r ' 1 r" beaul&fully landscaped Stlbftlit yow owa ..,_, ~lagnafil'ent largl' dr,·k I Askmg SI 25 million Defer down payment or
fo r 1001 dour I II 1 n11 Greal terms. trades con mteresl on lh1s new
5685. 01 sidered Balboa Island home.
j 'I Rick~ I Ill H..-dnty, Rltr Owntr Ill* ,IRltr 6 75-2"6
I 731-4444 132-0440 EHCHISH COn-i'GE
II I owe AITO al 12r; mt ..
pymts Sl395 mo. Steps
--~~!!~~--I ll s .i BREEZE from the bayfront 31;
I Class1f~ed Ads 642 56711 br. 2 ba . open beams .
............. hdwd firs. hand·hewn • limbers. full lot.
SU VIEW CUSTOM Newly listed
four BR home \\>ilh city & night
light view. split level designed &
built by Valentine featuring
custom amenities throughout
Birc h panelin g & cabinl'ts
va u I led ceiling· French doors
Four patios -):!ate Buarded
comm pool & tennis $525,00Q
Lynne Valentine 644·6200
I G G A I Z
I I' I I I
U NH AH
....
IHI
1 S42S.OOO 20'· down
Own ag_l 4~-o:!15 __
Corot10 del Mer I 022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
4341EGCHA
New elegant 4 Br Vic·
lor1an partial vu .
ownr contractor finan.
avail. $.575,000.
Lq.CetHOME
4 bearooms. 312 baths. 2
story l block from
Beach Low down
paym·t. owner will
carry Open Sat & Sun
223 Narc1ssu.~ CdM C2131
402 3434
BY OWNER
IRVIME THRACE
10%DOWH Expandable. 2br +
conv den. l'd>a, Cutt dr.
Rcluded pool + !ipa, '•
lot, lust land lmmtd
occup. Assume exb:tinJ
f1nanc1nit owe SZ!l5.000.
t!M-0073.
CDMDWl.U
IYO\'AB
M usl sell! ~rldt of
ownrrahip. ~:xcelltnt
ltrm11. ~-tow marlltt
I 114) ~8581)
,...---...... -:--. --. --r -------·-..,..---,--..,,..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday October 26, 1981
He.Ms For s• Ho.ilts For ~ Ho.ilff For s• Houstt For Sak HCMIMS for s• Ottt.r .... &left HCMl!lft u ..... d Hot1Ms u~ He.wt u.twWtlwd .•.•.•..•........................•...........•........•..•..•..•••..••....•..............................•......... ••••···•······•······•• ....................................•.......•....•................•.• e.,_. .. Mer I 02J Coste Mtto I 024 L04J9U hodl I 041 Htwport ltOCJI I 06' Newport ltoc.h I 069 Lott for W. 2200 CMOM .. M.-3222 lni..t 3244 Mtwport IMc.h 3269 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ... ral JIOZ
l.....,_,,...,.rr: n <> l l' I Th I I I bd 2 b L" f' 2 1 3 bd 21 b rondo ••••••••••••••••••••••• """""'""" ~ wner .r11 urnt'r EMERALD IAY OCEAHFtlOHT DOYEi SHOIH rt't sin11t amtl} ut.s 3 r. a, r • or 'he Lakes 2 ~t ury rrn ' ii S200 lbrrttrl'lll 15479 M)fatbtr~1ll1nu,twll Ider Hou.u-t:llSUldf' Neweleirant~tmSBr4 I YOWMER rool,JIH'UUI Ovt'rlook~ 1n llunl1n11ton Bi.-u·h gi.r W11lk tu bt'nh 1wnh11t. C)n Wlllt'r float illp. (pr )((Ir 124$118 tudm •9633
,I d11plean l'L>M l'ull 3BR. !HA. lrll klkh car iiar All l•Jttru~ In buy Gulaxy Dr f"ormul with pl11n.~ •.UOO per 11 700 n1u A&k rur I bdrm. ;i r, rndae. Sl,000 67597~ S37HbrSlln('lt•rn ,4924 8randonAgt644 711211 t't'llar. front & bdck rrediblr wh itr w.iter Nt'"" ru'I lilt 2 ~iv clin rrn.2rrptcs lol c.·uup1·r.il1un to H1&rbara,675 D'7 lrplr. pool~ & l'uurtb lllurrTowntiou....-.itictrm $400CM 2brplt'x ,5400
JASMIN! CRHIC
• 107/1%-10%
F4MAHCIMG
F u rm,r rnotlt•I'
Sp11r 111ug l'IJn 5 w 1th
r usturn lSP" ,1n1I ,tll
•menttlt~ Onlv ~t!l,UOU
Cull 1511 ISOI or 7S2 7:17:1
Walkiir B leo
AHi f11tat1
7Sf.t~OI .
porrh \lew t'all 7fi<Hl71$ ~·rrnrh Nurm.11111) 3 llR 642 2$lO 646 48411 broke 1 s t'a 11 Ruh. Ext'r ot•n \lew home. ZlOO Adulh only, no pelb 1 bll Virw 2 ,.11, l(ur 5400 Do nu Pt lbr 14924 AftrrS ))PM,~ ll79 & dt'o humtt t'Jll br 714 8•8 313l or l111rr1c, sq ft 3 Rr, 21 ,fJ:a, I yrleue ~ 730 6046. $800 67S!M S42S 2brw deek •963ll
s f I OceClll ~-Fb~ spill 589~.~Xl. owe 3711 Seto AftO I 010 675·4746 JIUllrded l·u1Mn. tenmN. 0 0 r I ~ c I II t k . I 2 S47H' lkh 2b •!lfilW
• :~~·1.1r~ •• ~~.owd~~r ~~~· ~i~: 1~1~!:~m ~J~.9r.,~1 Sus1hl1r1e~~71ot8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.ak,c· Arrodwhud 1015 Fu111 pool, $11100mo G40 6'MIO Nt2t32>Jb73·2~batter 6c.J~m N3:~~ S::-o~(!~t·.i~; Rent~~e.6.'ll ~ ~·"' .
$135,000 SIO,IXAJJn "~ H --.1111 HuylhlH'l1•11n4 8 rhouse in 0 an mil1>1> l'll 3 llH, OH'l'Yllrd, Cltn)'Un l'W t , I IH'tlll o,on Ojlll0n.Agent 7f.0.0297
'omr $98.500 lu1111 3o i·o OW(' Oon 1131 48811 l,rvrl ltdy to build w t•x1~t1111: I yr ll•;ti.ed u w n t' 1 h 1 11 k 1· r Vll'w , rpl!I, drp:i, $750 lhc park, w view tu lalboa l"'-d 3106
)'•'ar ft~rd SIJ•ll! l)l'r Agl $130,000115.000 dn OW(' Cur :t low 14'< dwn I 7 I 4 I 9 6 3 2 4 811 616f'OjlpyAve.G731464 NtwportCt'nk'r.11mllo W•shlllatter 3291 •••••••••••••••••••••••
011>11th Wiii c.irr} II', t:le&ant 3460 S ~' b11112'~ W1R«111w1l>kr Ownt'r will hnancr ~1313464424 UC1,$800 t RMXI I $400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Zbr <'UPorl p·1t10111·1111 ~l't'o111I or ll'llM' option :1howphm'. So L.aguna. 851 1538 c.Jay, 640 0352 balance at !5': lnh.'rest MEW PORT lfACH Luxury Co.dos Lease No (X'ls, 2 krdi. llOM E f'OK It ENT 1 11; rn t• cl • • s 4 5 o' mo
5'1ll 7100 180· dr1:rt'(' lWea.n view l'Mfwkndil Low ncKaUve cash now Residcollal lot Level W11lk to CU M lkal·h. ~~.;...~ n~ Od 28 . 4 Sci rm Pool $700 I 75~ t886 ~I Zllrl
D p hit 10 26 Security, private drive· w/MW 15 yr cxcellerat· rdy to build $l30.000 Brand new. $l.IOO to SIS()() '"""°"" Fenct!d yartl & 61Br1111e '
ano o Heluw mkt at 56:>9.~M) ed drprermtion tux. luw I> u r m o Brund on Kids & Jl('ts Wl'l<•onw lalboa ,~ 31 07 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AS~Ulll able fln:1nc·1n".. HARIOR RIDGE u p 775 """". SGS.000 dun owe bol 12··: 644-7020 I -a ·--1.. 32... &il5·2000 AieOt, 0(1 Cn· 1.ra:u• option or ~lll l'. ' LEASE OPTION r """" W Rt•c1p w,bkr 851 ISJfJ • . . _,,.., .,._., " ••••••••••••••••••••••• $8.000 down, no ciuuhfY. lmrned oeru11u11c·y ~·anul)' Affair du . 640 0352 PM,wkends 2BR C~armer G1g11nt1t• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail now 2 nr I Du lka<'h yrly Lr.: deluxe. 3 Owner 8SS·2013 Zbdrm, 21.>11 l'Ondu, $ 32 OO • Di!n l'rpll' gar $725 Oceanrront, No Llll(unu Walt•r & trash IJllld IJll . 2UA w oar $800 lnl(. Vll'W bortw, 2 Rr . • h hi a·•ed ~11 I ,5 IMo•-ta1-, D----", .. ~..,,.,.., 'h h .. I • r D ... I 30 IMT ig } up.ir u • " -· .. WMT"f ....., .,.,,,, c arming 2 Br Wit tlllf. 11arage Allult~. no PC'l6 67~ 9797 213 5& 2111 c~;;;m1lyroorn Tum 20%"' Yo · view,$450,00064().~ l,lundsomt' 3 bedroom Retori 2400 M 3224 laundry rm In pre S4SO + $400 dtpos1l . ' .
Costo Mna 1024 4 • 5 3 br. 2' 2 bu, lam. rm. Sao d I> 01 n t c h o m 1• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coato no :<tigious 4 plex w derk Ag,ent, no fot• ~ 20(., Bayview. adorablt I Rr.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Fo1111tolft V.., I 0 34 din rm. frpk. 2 rar gar I l'opul111 plun I modl'I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• $7S0 /mo 752·5040 or HOM I:: fOR RENT avail yrly ~ mo
Tnhme, bi leil'I, f!Jt' 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dw upem•r. f1•nrrd ~cl. 3 IEA.UTIFUU.Y l>ellghtfulfidi11111g room. I • 3 Br 2 Bu Condo, nr 497 _1852 3 Bdrm $650 1''t•m·cd 675-1774 BR, 3 ba pm yd, nuao. HO QUALIFYING eeks w tx·ew1 \'U 4 > r romant1r 1rt'plure ll1g SC Plaza. SA Pool , Ba> Side Bach S36S
upgrade OWC 10., dn 4 Hit Jba. rrml DH. wi•l old $245.IXX> 4~ 11151 MA.IMTAIMED h1ndi.caped lot located Spa. Sauna S65C.1 Child I br. frpk . balcony ocean yard & gara~t' Kldb & Ocean view 1 Br S5SQ
t 1590008519990 b h 180 D VI 3bdrin.2balh We!>tchH ullqu1rtt reelined j • OK 5493232 view.ulllsincl.$700mo pelSWt!kOmt'545llXIO AdulL~.nopetsSa\'aite ~,,. -·-. a r. r a~ . l'a r. ur' ~ ew I Home Close to i.rhools, street <:lost-to Grant 4bdrm, Newport R1v1t!ra 552 5698 eves. 540 7377 A.&ent, nortt Wiide & Co 675 6606
30 YIS AXED ~5 281i 5000 sq ft house. 4 Br JJArk & terull!> Room for Park an<i South t'o11st rondo. Jar. pool, tenms wkdJ! IDonJ Condo......_
u._. . ..._ •---h I 040 ~,, Ba S825.000. ~ood eitpans1on Good hnant· Pla1a Owner may help ~ N <I>_ 497 4116 Emerald Bay. oceanfront L .-·,.1..-..1 3400 c---o ..t.J Mer 3122 ls h d t r d Ch k """'"'"'""' __. terms Pnncipu Is onh " E "' l T 0 " S """" ~ """' "'...... Ullr'I ar o lll ec on ••••• ••••••••••••• ••••. mg $185,500 with financ·in~ Call ror I\ " I\ 3 0 r 2 Ba n e a r overlooks lrt'me Cove, ••• ••• • ••••••••••••. ••• •••• •••• ••••••••••••••• tbiJ 4 BR 1a, ba. Seller IE.A.CH COTIA.GE 641-<Yl6J appomtment !779 2300 TIMESHARE PaulJrtno School L:uge deck. pallo. 2 BR 2 Ba FOH EXECL'TIV~:s Large 3 Br 2 Ba lower 3
is cooperat11·e Call now Appr9~1malely 2 miles Laguna Hlls I 050 TarW, Redtors 2 weeks a year in llawa11 rear yarrl, 2 car garage 2art fl!rlh.$1200 n9 6926 2 BR 2 Ba. t'<.11nph•trly blol'k~ to beach. d1!> 752'6499 tobcarh Oldfash1<>ned 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or exrhangt'tuoverSOO $700 Mu Sierra Mgmt LOCJ!MoMic)tlet 3252 furn . "'Ith 11t·w hwasher, frplr -;oft
Bdrm cottage picket I HelleGailRClftCh Other Real Estate d1rfcren1 location:. Co 6411324 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport !leach St~ water. pal.lo S8SO Mo
fent·e or bwld new with
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$900,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• worldwide Owtwr an' Mesa Verde 4 Br 2 Ba Shores 3 Br 2 Ba beach, mo CHAR~11:-.ic 3 Bit 2 ~abe 673 8157
ocean \'leW from JO' up 643-2:)41, 1·986·2045 Mobile HomH 1ous Randi llamhn l'ool home. new l'Jrpet & tennis S825 No pets H a l om PI c It' I~ 2 Br. 2 ba. bt!aut view of
•GOV"T LOAMS• Only $100 000 ' Take O\er 1 --· ... ;,._. I 052 BEST BUY IM For Sole 1100 D M d -a....1111 Rlt t Ids d • 831 ·2327 furnished. t'o~t:1 ~1l·)a ba}. pm ate Gar:ige
Possible 5'. down loans.call6450303 1....,-••••••""•::r........... ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ·""~ r pain .inc gar ener ... A\·ail Nov lst New ex $1.000mo Agt 6463255 . Rdrig $900 mo
l2·14''1. Int r..alt• 3o yr owe Isl of $90K at 13'' VERSAILLES () (' ~: A N r n 0 N T 64 .. 9990 ~~~~~erv1<·e ss so cc home. 3 Bdrm 3 Ba eves642 222.S 846 0096
loans. Free info Ult lhts 4 Br. 2 Ba homl' $500,000 DWM LAG u NA BCll. llCW Out of State Catalina, mountain view 1"am1ly Rm. Pool Spa 28 R v •H'al1on rondo 4~', Al'ar1a. 3 Br 2 l:IJ
WortdR.E. Mtn Valley \tew' 2Br, 2Ba i>enthse. ocn from $29,900, rent $400 Property 2600 from thelJV1ngroom& $1300 Mu llll·ld~ Pool. Jal'. l~nn1~. IJl'l O(•ean view $875 Mu
556-7777 H1ghl) upgraded• Ju~t view· $133.000 Assume mo. 499·3816 ••••••••••••••••••••••• )'a rd, Costa Mesa Blufrs, gardener & pool service securtl) Nr ha rbor '°'<> Call 673 7942.
Mini estate own Un $152 500' TB Realtv Sl28,o00 uf S&L loans at Sl'ollsclale, Amona. lux hrand new 2 Br 2 Ba No pets please For pets S700 wk San .Juan 28R. tBA rear unit ssso
beUevablc fin incl 7'' '°"ts'l~.M.-uORS '!97-3034. · 1 ~.:1•1:1 mSlo.v~orms~tayOw&·n~:. IAMk REPO urioub rn11domin1uni. 3 Uhed brick frpll" serur1 a ppt ~al I 545 2000 Capo 979.03..13 Mo lnl'I fndge Jim
" < ,... Br 3 Ba. xlnt lotat1on M APeOt no rec c do l-l 1st! OPEN Sun I 5 1661 Mewpori leodi I 069 y 0 u r 1e 11 ant or t· FIXER MAKE OFFER ty entry, adults $950 o a. ' on m .. wns 631 7X() 644·7441
lndusSt.Seeclass1002 t11tdtr S25,000dft ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7J0:!2'7U,Hm642 26112 j 5 Star pet park. 2Br. lg ~~~79i~000 ~w~~"~~lty <.:all 644·9'l5Y. 642IJ801. MisslonVieio 3267 Unf1arnlslted 3425 3 Br 2 Ba "1-year new
NEA R BEACll Payments under St,000 0 W M E RI , lo!, asking $22.000 but O'Connor or wnll• 4256 644 ll722 ••••••••••••••··~··~··• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Close to beach. laundry
3BR.211BA SIU.000 mo. 3 and 4 bedrooms ANXIOUS SI0.000 . lender s:iys bring uf· N Brown Ste 11 Sharp 2 master (Jdrmb, HOMEFORREN1 IEOHEOF room . garage $700 Mu
-ON 6.1_15737 homes. New tpts. drps & MOTIVATED I PrictRtdYctioft I rers"' tSIOUl) S P~o.pert1t'~1 encl gar, pool. spa. ten-3 Bdrm $650_ Fence<l THE LUCKY FEW I Rt-quirt' lca~e. $700
ClTY LlGffl'S VIEW and paint. Submit your . in h I gh ly upiirnd ed MULHEARN Sl~Jtt~~~~. Am ~I . nis. ad Its. no pe~ $795 yard & garage. Kids & Rent in Co!>ta Ml'sa \ I serunty dep tns 0124
NrBearh.$20.000dn offer Call Leslie or LovelyD01erShore3Bd ~~ASTBLU n' home REALTORS I mo S48 0111,6.111266 pets welcome ~52000 NEWf:ST l:ittt>d 20 C t M 3824 Rosie Agts 84822112 or 212 Ba. upgraded pool No w Sl69 sou with , • RClftChes,Fcrn, E' d D 1 , 8 b Agent,noftt 'r h \'ILi •G '-" osa Ha 6.11·573'1 968 7194 home. sparkhng new $130,000 in tong ti•rm ••~ Mobile Home Dt•. Gro'l'•S 2700 s1 e P x 2 r I a, own ome '" r, •••••••••••••••••••••••
... 0 ~U"'' 'FYl ... G 4 ur 2 st}. 3 BM. patru patnt & carpel R. t!ad) sumablo finan1·1n" l'all (714) 527-5900 rrplr. I car gar. lg yard Newport leach 3269 COMM UNITY 2 & 3 Br 2 I r I la ~ " ALI " D .. r eel l ~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• S!»75 mo 67l 2t117 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2• 2 Ba ISCX> 1800 sq ft ~ N I d. d
MESA ERDEEAST,4 202S2Newb}l..n9631420 or1mm iaeocrnpan WayneSte"'Jn Broker Lakt'llt'W Orrgon ba EXECHOME ofpurcluxuryGJra1te~ .e'<I> ecor as P br, 3 ba. den. wetbar + Sl59 500 r) Submit on rmancrng 646 8816 Ranch for rt>nt. S300 mo Eao,t )1de 3 Br 2' • I I h> dro tubs in master enrl gar . pool. dshw r
\'iew Next to ROif ' term~ (hrner will a!> 200 Jrrc!> 2 hr house Family home Grdnr HARIOR VIEW \Ull<' formal dm1nii Adults 542.5073 54S-2817 rR t::STIGIOIJS VILLA I SISI Asking '278.500 NEWPORT SHO RES IELMOtff SHORES slrl'a m Or "'Ill ~ell Agt 61~ ~Br 2•1 Ba. Famtl) rm . room·. uood burn1nd ~ourse,_ PACIFIC 2br. ll•ba. Ca11Trmh,agt~9400 Grei.tl r .. m1l} h11mt on Clo~etobc:h Th1slgdbl u z:n> f SSOO ~ " " 3 1rToWl'lhotne IEST BUYS w e l b a r . P o o I s can J I t BR 3 Ba dosr tu "1de on an •llers1zed lot $225 000 c500>947 3143 or 3 bdrm. 2 ba. behind So 1" rm. sq 1 1 fireplaces micro w a\e Nelo\ll} decor gas IJ(l .
dubhouse. h1ghl} up swim & tenrusrlub wa lk at must to see 1045671 t>ves 714 661 7622 l..'st Plaza Kids 0 k $850 ~to Dnve ~Y first 1806 U\ en~ fenced patios & encl gar . pool. dswhr
2 br 2 ba. 5 yrs new oradl'tl Ha:. e"1s11no to bn.ic·h tlwm•r "'111 MU'......, ... a... falllJrOOk S.07387,~4731 PortAbbeycall752-&i!/9 }ards Pm·ate elegant Adults 6425073 Sl29.900. All offers cons " " ' ~ \B d 3b d 4 b 4 b a h m n 7 9'' Isl Ow11er will con consider leai.l' or leJse REAi.TORS r or en, a ron o r. . o e i lw1ng only l5 minutes Spacious 2 Br. t Ba. $395 bider C'arrylllg b<ick 2nd I optwn or trJde for tru~t :1 15 al'rl's Avol·adu~. l1cro dshwshr. com Ba) shores A\a1l 1st from fasluon Island. 7 3 Br. I', Ba S425 Laun ~I~:.~ dO"wt~pgraeded or help ref inaner new WEST OCEAHF«OMT 1 dl'l'ds Submit all offt•r; Mobile Home Di•. I '1ew $115.tnl A!i!iUma pactor i\11 up1?rades 2 week m Jan Sl800 mo I minutes to SC Plaza or
loan Open Sat Sun. 1 5 Triplex Xlnl term!> &
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$245.000 Gwen llenr) l714) 527-5900 bh.' Joan Trade Ca~h car ~a r Pool. spa I yr lease Ron J al·kson O C Airport Just east of dr} fat· •pool 548·9556
JBd rm pool fabt 9766 Verde Mar 5361600 prrme location S600,000 Rit'hardSower. IUtr dtSl' 642 5000 Isl last +sec Sll15 mo 556-1800 Newport Blvd & so of 1. 3 r I? e 1 h d rm
escrow owe so,,.;c bkr,968834low11er Agenl,675-6161 7145985671,!l!Kl247K Roadrra~ft 1961 IOX55 Reaf Edate 11519350 IWESTCLl.FF3bedroom. San Diego Frwy Start ~r~l~~"':.S~~;d;a;roort
paper & assume $80,000
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1 J UST R EDUC E u layshores by Owner 1 Ri~ Canyon Tow nhcime H1 ver 'Pl'l'lal. c·abineb
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ExchClftC)t 2100 i Jbr 2ba f p built ins. I story with pool. ~amity rn~ al SIOOO a month . &4S-662S
FRMC $147,000 S ac r1fire price a t Lrg 4BR. 4FlA home panorami<: golf rnurse I galore' 7~0097 •••••••••••••••••••••••! carpel>. drapes. dbl room. 2 fireplaces. din· 631 5439, 2473 Orange I Sl2S.9004Br.p\lculde Steps away from P't l 11 ew , s \t•ars new . C t Lots/ I EXCHANGE gara1?e. covd patro. mgroom.3patios.etc. A\•e ,C~ta Mesa 2 Br w l(arage A<iults II. RED CARP I sar. nr llarbour 6kr beac_hes Ow11er will as ·, 3bdrm. fom rm. 2' iba.
1
Cry• p•trys 1500 R E , fenc·ed ya~. gh•ur1dden
0
eKr. etc Jl500 l'o!o 646 4477 \\ ESTCLifF NB apt~. drapes. IJallO . ET 848 0709 SIS! In financing or will 2000 sq rt rxisllnu fin I OMllOO()equSlll25} ,~:,0Ti:tnt gl wuter me. 2 c I . Heau t 1200 sq fl 2 BR 2 water pd Call I s 0 2 d d Sh " " • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '°"v,, to ll'\J't o 3 $825 644 2778 8 ( I d 636 4 J 20 -754· 12 lnine I 044 cons1 er tra es • owl 11 I S24S.OOO Submit offers 2 Cemetery lots in llarhor '1 equit\ $41KllMMi 4 T I) \ I no pets . llG CAMYOH IJ. P r . ming rm, 2619 ... , .. S"a111a Ana ~·6s by appt onlv Prut ''" Y T d k 7•<> 8005 · I , • ' ' •1 .. sa Va rd" Area 4br L · Th rl'f.r1g Adlts. no pets. ,... •••• •••• •••••••• ••••••• · ra es o "" . Rest SSOO t'll (all rul N t I or 1 75!11!1)(6 •• ' , ' · · u x u r 1 o us r l' e
1 667
\'it'tuna 5470 W.side Chcrmer ~0.000 Prine onl) Ron ' 714 658 41118 l 2 ha . Po o I . den bedroom:. Two balhs !07ft 640 7814
Great rinant'llll!. 'lll>t'r . * *QUALIFY? J3ck:.on 556-1~ . : NEWPORT SHORES I ComtMrciol Rflttols $!100 mo 774 5023 or R1l'hly det'Orated Muled MocA.rthw v11i. • 2 Br Condo. nr s l'
neighborhood Ow nl'r Norw required on this I S 10,000 DOWN )IR 21 A~ I p rty l600 !••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 ~5 ~~!~I= ~~~r~e~ee~! t BR. pool. leMIS & l'lub ~~zaCh~to/~~'.3~a
motivated 54~3666 1mmJculate 2 Bdrm. 2
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$2,000 pt'r mo Im med S 199 OOO •••• ~'!!••••••••••••••• Houses FWftislwd Pn\'ate 3 BR 2 Ba hme If h S450 646 ~, 642 20~1 SF'ACIO' 'S & SL'".· ....... ,. Bath Northwood home possession Lo\'el} 5 BK • ••••••••••••••••••••••• with all amenities S77S go rourse S2790mont ~I . Blufr v ·'·', Whelan 1500 ~'I ft and su~er 2 st~. Back Bay area
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675-1771 I SUPER. SUPER [lalboa lslGRd 3106 mo Ann. 645 9161 or Yearl> lease e7 ~ue l n~b~~~rted tirw 2 BR l'ncl gar upper
terms Pnred to 1111 fa~t S265,000 Owner&.11 7215 Lrg t20xl40 lot ~ sml !••••••••••••••••••••••• 979 1~2 Grand Valee Open s.•.m I 2 ,tor}. 2BR 2,,H \ D W adlts no pet~
Re,'!91 Estate at -bldg 919 Sunset. (M In Charm mg Stngle fam1l~ A\•all Nov Isl 3bdrm. da) 1·5. To see l all Frplr. 1093 \ll':IJ Rlurr\ M2S a $151.500 r.•sT·BLUFF dustr~alzooed A~tnow . home A\i.111 mid 2ba in College Park 6.117300.Realtor Dr C ~I Si25 mo 5489<Xl4 541>-54-l6 ~ wun l last Chuck I No\'ember for t mo 3 Nt>w paint, frpk , tret' I f>42 7429 l'\l!!I 558 019-; I & 2 Br upstairs. slo\e FAMILYl'EARCT [~i)"\">dhrldgc 3 B< Hom. 2 8• N.-, -1ller.a .6.1J.L266 Br +loft S1:.JO mo Call shaded yrd $750 mo 4 Br 211 Ba Yearl), all Message Adults Refs Couples Excel 3BR 2ba home r .i r p et 1 n g & et r Ka\ 644 gc:r,o or 673 llS85 752 2318 dyi. ~O 7576 11m~n1t1es Club & pool ,. . ·•uH 28 \ U P preferred ms & S355 w huge bonus rm. ~pa lkally $205.000 • . pm-l'le:o fac s Good area $1100 a ranl ' · 1 6468i2'7
mrely deeorated Shar11 • -1 IO<HI Roy McCcrcle Rttr r Broker 675-4912 "o pC'ls ~> mo oso home Sharpbu)'Onl) l> ' • 1S700M0 W111ter.l Br I \te~a WOO<b4Bdrm 3ba. \1rJ11 Prop1•rt1t•' ~UIET&PRIVJ..TE
Sl«.ooo I~.~·"'' r.tll J ..... ' lr\IRI 548-7729 HARIOR VIEW Ba lrplC' pal1os Be'I ram rm Pool SllOOmo Beacon Bay, 3bdrm 3ba 951 uu5 L u h '·· l •. 2
"" HOME COM• .. n1c1•L Joe 675·41115,6731401 Gardener pool sen I 1s dock.tennis.2~rlsc 1,-.,. """So thl' 11•1 ?
1 ene~nat t.'lvr."' LagunoHills R.E ,,_"" 1 KJV\ J Sl700 67S.ll6I-"ar. u 11.1s '.ttJ~ Br Apl.s w gar or 497-176 1 --------· :\l tni !.'state own Ln 15°o DHPAYMEMT I UILDIMGSITE Loqunaleoch 3148 IM ast.,.,., se<· Ud)., mo · ' I hr 1 ba Tront~ Pc.c1I t"arport Balcun1e' UNO 9UAUFYIMG bt'hevable fin inrt i '"Ofllt• Ill 'I . hi & 11 i' t 0 I I(.' JI d Is •••••••••••••••••••••••• ' Agt 979 moor 540761R Seav1ew4 Br3 Ba famil~ I Jar Pr11 'l'l Ufll\ patios. pool. spa hbq
DRIVE BY I • • 20°0 DOWN * •
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lst OPE;>. Swi 1 5 tli6I uWt :?n<i r I> 1 ,\lt\ffl tml.TPmr,·111.i. $100.1100 1\'1l'lona Heal'h 2bdrm. I• Clean Bachelor L'nit rm, dining rm. ocean & 1 l·arport. R1t l'hild Pl'h laundn lush ~haded lndu~ St See dass 1002 h I h p J & d · 26S E Ba\ 1 F.a.~tuf ~Jtll \\ ,, u 11 b r 1 cJ ii e \1udl'l ><1lh '""I. JnO 'I'•• I f••rm~ J\ail.1bh• l'all 1 n1mpl refurb1,hrd. Qull't orrstreetparkmi.: I nig l 1g t \1ews oo Mustscel•iappre<'rah• I Ian sc:ipmg SB> & up
orr Sania AnJ \11 \1 e11d11wl3rk 3 Br 2 ba --------· un 'ol.1r ''tl m t-.r11 '1 ark.~Jt "'inter or } t>arly No pets Uhl rnl'I S275. tennis Sl600 pr mo Roh Call 540KmJ ~l ature adultc, ~O
Then ('all Ruth r11r 1 1'111 'd pattn 1\lmu~t n<IO HARBOR RIDGE -S2fi'l.'HHI 7:;•1 l ~llt ur I SWAM st 5 0 0 m 0 p r 848 2474 I or Do\'le Koop Agt IT . I Pt:TS Me.a Pine<.. 2650
lerms,at640-4ll0 rltr Cirealfrnancm1t UMDERMARKET 7~273i:l REAL ESTA.TE t213J7952937 1 Br 2 na Yellowstone . 7S9·L221 I ownho~ JI aria 549 244 i or
3 hr .. 2 ba .. fim. w Ji.: Sl'Cl"ESS R E 549 7!191 3 Bdrm. J ba . VI F.W 18051238-7780 Newport leoch 3169 Dr Redwood spa. 2 car! NEWPORT SHORES •• ~~~':'!'~ .... ~~.2.~ I 545 3115
ram. rm & lpt ownt•rl•--------townhomc in th1:, pn· 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••'garage Avail Nov 15th J bdrm . 2 b a 28 R l'>BA llecr{'alwn s.520 Mo 2 Br t lfa •\µt
fin at 12, 1\i,:,•111 l'Nl\'ERSIT\' PARK . sllg1ous µrnate l'om 25 ~ol.T.C. :Jbr 21, ba Bluff:. area $750 Mo Sierra Mgmt 1 Watrrfront. rireplal'e. fa ~ilities l'rll ate I Garage. washer dr~l'r 642:!.~23 dram;itirl.Jcanehomc• 4 muntl\ with l1·nn1, 111 '' uld 1·un11n1·nt<1l 1 SllOOmo 759 0071! or Co 641132.t gar. dishwasher new Bl'Jch. ll~ll.' JlU.itrktl all.bulll1ns Small child
llR 3 Ba ram rm. J' 1·nurl. rHJOI'-& '"·'' Xlnt ' 1il•ll!~ 1•l,t"1r11•rl llllo 752 5282 $5!\(l rent5 this 3bdnn in cpts & drps. Pool tennis 1 rnmmunity 01\. ~o (X'ts Onl) I ~ear 100/o D~IOO/o lnt. '"m.ihlr luan~ l'rn·1• finanr111g w11h l.1rl(1• .i' : loricJI 11uohf11•' for in \'ERSAILt.t,;s bl.·st Jrt•a' SIJdinl( Illas~ $875 mo yrly 4939501 , 495 lti:il ol~ Callforappt
Anxious owner \\tll help• tlrasl1t:all~ llroµ11cd sumable Juan l'nn•tl fut h''tn11•111 la' c·it-<ht' of Loveh· 2br 2ba din rm . leali\ to roekta1l style 496 9767 I TSL MG ~IT &-12 1603
(lnance lhJS nc1~I) fl' t7532Cotton~oocl 1mmed.saleat $195,""' PRICE!TERMS! ~5' Wrha1!',('\l'ralrn 1 rrule."tiick1t . mirrored pa110'=7687 WesperrahzernNewport A.partmetttsfwnislttd l r1replarc. pool. p\l decorated 3 Bdrm ~o OP ".NSAT SUN 1 5 ROGrr:as nr••TY S·rnta \n·1 for ,Jlc I " Pl s h I 2b Costa Mesa home Lme '" g\ ~ L O C AT I OH I • • ' ' ' -· fist!> Ol'('an 1·1ew pen us pants ~lye r & Corona del Mar ren ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio. dishwasher. on
lyyard.apatio&bmk 714·552·1311 675-2311 ROSES ·1 ~:rl~~~:~~bOO sq fl lhousr $1150 Sand} wearthtonedecor and tals 1.etusdoyourleg lolboolstond 3706 1 Es1de.alltnxl1!1&2
BBQ. Full pnre s120.00(1 $5000 . r 642 6149 tile bath,, $400' •S400 w o r k No F ft.t> 1 ··••••••••••••••••••••• i Br garden apt.!. From
751-3191 REDUCTIO.._. l"'CKIAY 111h1~1 hum,~· ~as1111t1m'~1 ' ,Condominiums/Town· LIOU ISLE charminl! ~ Rcntlmes631 4~fee Homes Condos from Cute small 2bdrm. Ilia. $445 ~72841
....,. "" ar >or '" ~:..I hous.sfor sd• 1700 bdrm. 2 bath. newl> re D p iftt 3226' $700 10 S2000 Mn wint er rental ~I 10l'I 2 B l B ~Hll Make~ this uni> of 1he si 9 3.ooo wllt•r. ~111 ht•lp rinJm'i'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• decorated $1800 mo •• ~~ •• ~•••••••••••••••i Pangburn rropertl('~, Ullls 675 !04!1 Ma1~amoruu:on2 nmo~ C:::. SELECT ~PROPERTIES b"'.l 1111.·• 1n lr1 in1• Spacwu~ h\lnl( room, onl\ ~.\.~IOlnnft•rl.iml Boat "'cpsA•oil. Vearl) Bill c:run1h ••llEACHHOlJSE 646 0295 11 Ibo p · •. ..1 3707 2043 W 11 r t' ~I '·' • ' w 1th stone r1replare I \I Jilli url.'d lan•lsc .1p1nl( "' a a e.t-a a a e o a All~Jt \fo1Jtol in HJn1-l111 ~enl'ruus bdrms. hull•' ,11rroundmiiprii.ll•·'I'" \\aterfronl l'Ommuml~ 6756t6l 2.BR. 2Ri\, built ms & Ocean 11ew 5 drs from ........ ~··•••••••••••••1 ~1 esa 54K 1;,11; &
--------•) ~an Joaqucn \'11la~ 21 prll ate master suilt' off 111,1,ll'r l>dr 111 < ''"'' 1.2 &JRR Cond<>!' from Want something ,1ra Gu rage S550 499 2986 beach 2 Br 113 29th St 1 I bdrm. , b~k Bcarh ~k 6.11 2150
OWHERRMA.HCIHG bedrt•u m . 111 bJ paneled den realurl'' In l.itj!C' .:r1·1·11hrlt\ St50.000 lo S38.'i.OOJ \s spenal 1n .. 2 Br Efloro l232 $750 !'10 Yrl} Mldl'p IOl(.~~tlpd hlJunrS3i!\ STl'":\INltlitrge 2Br 2
4 Bdrm charmer with Stained glass cnlr~ ~:, I bnrk fireplare Sparkl st1•pi. to c11rn rnun11~ sumt• luJn & ""''Tier .i~ Townhouse romplt'lel} I •••••••••••••••••••••••i 213 3i2 9lll 534 3 0 Ba Garden \pt Pool
interior t'OITIJJletel) rr rellent lorahon nedr mg poc,il and spa Lex: al puul f 1 r'I 111111 J1I m t fmanl'ml( Res aiet furn ' $895 Mo 700 9117 llOM F. FOR RENT WA n:HfRONT I Hdrm .\111 ilO W 18th St
modeled Surrounded h) Pool. wa. ~hoppml(. ten ed on a quiet ml de -.ac I l'ert1l>ed 752171•1 Sheila 2135985272 Bl'autrfully upj!raded z 4 Bdrm SG75 Fenl'ed !bdrm. with iiar & 30 $375 mo "1-:W BREF.UAPTS
matur e l r ers and 01" anti golf \<lull onl) Assumable loan.'I' Takt' -Dlll>lex.s/ br home. full} furn . w ) arri & garagt' Kid~ & duck l,,111 ind $695 1 675 8996 t BR w 1th LOl'I. S'IRO
s c e c I u.d e d pal 111 nimmunil\' I ad1 antage now' 645-0303 llll.i1~~ I Onih S'ale 1800 pvt yarti. ~pa & brick pets welcome ~5 2000 773 40411 H...tington l.ach 3740 Frplr. m room. pool.
S149.500 (#§jfijiJlf41 ....................... patio plu:. gardener m <\gcnt,nof~ On thelcryCondo i••••••••••••••••••••••• 1aruzzr. gas & water 642-5200 I IM~ATION RGHTH! neighborhood oC Harbor Rent to own th1.~ large Completely remod 2 Hr I bdrm pruf derorat<'<I •
1
pard AdulL'I, no pell, 393
..
I 12 Units. Costa Me:;a View Homes $1400 mo I r J m I I y h 0 m e 2 ba \'1e\I. of bay & I 0('ean View Pon' J•H' llam1lton, CM 64~ 4-111 rJll : Assume contrart SJiOM Call 8 111 Wrrimore w remodeled kitchen; ore an Sec bid.I! & fGSO 1213>592 lll7G 1 . I I 11 )rs 10' Sl25!\1 dn 644·7020 new buillins & more park'g $1200 mu Call,LOC)Wla l todt 3748 mleStiB.AU
' --------Ho11sts Unfumilhed Also 3br on treesy lot 7J4.95S-1961 Furn lux studio. spa. TV. APARTMENTS rOM:S1t~MN.ro..s --J Owner 631·2150 I $6()()• •8302 1 Nancy Mon thru Fri. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1
BEACH HOUSE lncom• Property 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w woodburning frplr , -d . maid service, phone~. Ueaut1rlul landscaped
______ , ~513 C~MPtlS Dt·IRVINE
ASSUMAILE
14-3/5%
FIHAHclMG
MESA. VERDE
Finl TD approximately
S00.000. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath.
new roor. large yJrd
Ownu will consider
helping with the rmanr
ing. Askina Sl29.900 for
more Information. l'all
S.0-1151
'!.' » HERITAGE
. REALTORS
l aC)'l"a ltoeh I 048 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WATER WATER
EVERYWHERE
Spertar ula r l'iews.
sprawling 4 bdrm. 3
baths. 2 frplcs. WET
BAR. beamed ceiling.
ram rm . lge kitchen.
huge master suite Ex·
pans1ve patio & pool
area w rork rimmed
s pa & wate rfall
1159.000
MISSION REALTY
494-0731
1044 I" ... 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GREAT LOCATION ACROSS NOM
PARK R i ~hl in the hcarl of
Woodbridl?<' is this lo\'ely 4 BR
~m~lt' ra m d~· hom(' n.•ady lo
mO\'(' in M inl ('ond1l1on plus 2
assumab l e l oans Se ller s
mol1 ntled . $189,500 Darlene
Peinti oger 551-8700 IG52)
Real Culft Balbo~ lslan" o·· •H""'-11.ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• G I 3202 +db le iiarage. $595 VIE\\ Con ° 2 masters I $125 wk 499 2227 1111rc1en apL~ Patios ()r ~ p .. m ,tn'f\.Jnr'U. M ·KE A ... or.r.r.Rt enera ~ + den. AC upgradl' 2' • .. hom e 2 Bdrm + RE ._ LT 0 RS "" " rri; • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •R . ba u r.n mo 559 4718 furn studio, Laguna decks Rool & Spl!, l'O\ bachelor S32S.IXKJ owe RENTALS enlimes&.11 ·~fee ....,,. . . $350 Mo ered park1n~ Heal paid
760.8099 Accfltt On Details J J lll'IJme l'ropertrcs Huntln'"'-lhoch 3240 Newport Heights Cozv 499_2227 Adults no peL~
LARGE ti 2 ',
ASSUM LOAN owe on !his lovel}
spacious custom pool
home in Baycrest 3br .
3ba • plus large bonus
room 1399.500
Open Sat/ Sun l 5
2048_C-Ommodore Rd
LOW,DOWH
SelH °""'aft!
Ve rsailles. 1 bdr m
stutio penthouse condo
w ilar ge assumablt•
loan. No qualifying. On
ly $'99,SOO. Ask for J im
Owner I Agt 979-5370 or no-19211
R.DJIU
FtMAHCIMG
OM UDO
on this 3 bdrm countr~
French home on an ell
tra wide lot. Recently re·
modeled. Try m down.
Aaaumable loan. Owner
wiJJ carry. A rtal must to see.C•llnow!
Red h ii Id-~ RL'.llt\
I ~.: ~. :1111
SwN•p1nii panoram1r F:a~tf.1de Custa Mesa Y l' a r 1 Y Week 1 Y .,..... Collage Bnck frplc 1 BR S420 S430
\'lcws and pr1\'aq· Ownrr will l'ttrry Winler.2.3.4, Bdrms. ··~j(JM E.SFOR.REITT••• 2BR. IBA $500motnmo H.wporileodi 376' 2250VanR11ard. 5409626
a hound in lhL\ ht.'au11ru1 Prired lo ~ell' New Po r l Be a ch & 3 & 4 Bdnns S625·S72S 675-4333 ••••••• ••••••••••••••••
4 Bdrm home on fee Balboa r OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Or 2 BR 2 BA. land Dramatu· use nf JACOBS RE "'LTY f en c e d yards & :kJO() sq (I Nr Westcl 4 ;\va1I Wmter Weeki" 398 w u•11son sm
'
s;A aara"es K1'ds & pets Br. 4 Ba. den. pool spa ' " 6.11 uo~
noor rovennos "lie lhl~ /\. welcome 545 2000 wood. tile :ind custom 1 10 PROPEID MGRS " " Fam rm Dine rm Tri Month I) 673-7873 I · """"
home war"'m th anci NEISSER 675-6173 ~eot,no fee pie gar $1500 mo Furn 2bdrm. 2ba. lrii
c harm Excellent r rn lJJ"ll t\J 1•-11· r.nn sAbu:ngolow 11~19 Sharp Exeeut1ve 5 Br 3 ~~·0873 patio. overlooking \NcstFteld 1...tn ~ '"--..,vv '" B F 2 r • Nt!wport Ba y Pnol., financing makes this -S245 HBstucho •9633 a. am rm. P s. LUXURYIAYflOHT Sh 1 oneorthe~tbuyson 7111..1111;1;.1 S330 HB1br home 115364 gardener $1095 mo 3Br2Ba.withboats1Jp sauna ort or onii FAMILYAPTS.
the market today 2!12H'olltl:l' .\'l' S375San Clem2br 114924 A1ent Cre.ij846-4143 _ Avail now. Man y term rental Sl200 mo Sparkhngcleanlri:apl!> ~ 000 l'o,t.1 \lt''J t' \ $400CM 2br homtt 115403 ...... gt. amenities $3500 Mo 64§ 6350 for families v.1th I or 2
D.M ..... _.._.R.._ $475Cap BchZbr 119684 H......a..:::_ 3242 Bro_ke_r675-4912_. SHORTTERMS children Near p;irk
• • -~ ffT S650 1rv wipool •017 _._. Beach rentals. Z&J Heat paid Nopel<. 16~0135 ••••• •••••••••••••••••• bdrms, SS50 mo up i\Pt z BR I'• BA Rentimes~)·~ Ftt 3bdrm. Zba. fam rm. UtROMT " IEDUCED41K 1!1_7~!!~5 lal»oaP.._. 3207 Crplc. brick atrium, OC Uftl...a !75·3170 t,'!~2WBiAlson,
Ow
-
000 " ,....._~ O""n-airy, ste""' to bay. n-.-.. IBr Yrly, CX'fl view. ut1I .-. N •••• • ••• ••••••••••••••• """ ,........ .11 bd 2 b th pd F "-' '"' 1•--------Pri red $400,000 below 1100. 494·2136. .. rm. a . rom um1~ .......... ~ mo i·
Up ,0 4 •. boat sl'p avei'I appraisal for qwck sale. Pblllen~e. 11!_,!,es~dmeoled · 646-4419 EASTSlOE I lir Newl~
· ' h., ·1
2 d Won't last. Fantastictax lalboaP.-...a w,at'.r<0r0~-tholmBe. 2rooBm 0 • "'"' ......, lbr Versailles. vu orroun decorat'd Adulb. no with t is huge an o write·orr and invest· Bayfront&Mlac Rentals or.. ...... . r a, LIDOIS&.I taint1arden. Sl,000,000 pets. Rl'fr•ll<' s:l8S mo dtn or 3 Br rondo C 11 R ' k 1·2·3Brs-Yearl)' 1200/mo~*'TI~.:.f.P. 1 ... ,,.._,.. 6450108 w/w9ter views from m e nl a I C Fum.orUnfumlJlhed '"''"'_..' clubhse. sauna. pool.
both living rm and mstr 7141760·7292 Call rorlnlormallon '""" 3244 3 bdrm, I bath, r111k . s p a. gy m . sec ••••••••••••••••••••••• bllnJ ... .,.mo gar /guard -<I\ Dy• suite. Gor(le<>Us neutrel j MEL F'1CHS '_,., · . • ..,.... " decor end the llesl PAVILIONREALTOR Woodbridtte 3 Br 2ba, 91S·0801 Tom ; evs
i
ram rm. dining rm. 6lt_M6 Ron financin)l et the beach 61~1M rrpk. Inside & outside Call for your personal In 4 UMR'S~ ti M lib II h
spedion. , l6000 positive cash now. pa 01· 1 u 11 ts. I WIMTlllBff AU
I Own•r will lr•de or .,_ IMdt JJ II auto sprinklers Lake. 2 ........ I "-· h r I " d ••••••••• ............. pool ' tennis priv. vurm. -t , rp r, ~l\ldbrld9c : c 1 r r >' w 120 'l n Endurln1 tlqance! 2br 2 '800/mo PH; &40-1327. I 39R Close to Beach dthwhr. SSIOmo. o .. illtu ; 1229.000 story home futures ~·eta Ofc 1'!~ Nict ~ l'3$. 53&--670t 3 bdrm. 2 bath. bllll~.
M • I •-1 l palio, -.SO mo $SI 300ll 1 S7'.tSODUPLD awttpnr a .. rcut, &t Twnhome,n~3 br,Jba, art.-r5PM 3 bd 2 beth r 1 emtturenn l'llu.lr~IM i OWC at 12"'-with $1BK mHttr Suite & kitchen patio. Or Park, pool. HerfMrYlttw"-9 S1SO!:.' . rp c.
associated
8 0 '• i 11 , I.I~ .\ .. ._• •,
.. "' "'. . '
2 bdrm. 2 ba townhl•u~l'
t:astalde. 3 yeu rN old.
yard. ~. r;ill Dick at
l·M 7300, duy11, f!40..242ii
evs & wkf'l(ts
PALM Mf~ i\l'l'S
l561 Mes11 0r
l lit rurn MOO. 2 fir \ln
rurn S4~. Ad\llb onh c.11, .• *-lml ·
--' down. nice area In S.A. :~:l'f:::'es~~~·S:~ Ja~ tr1J/1'!? 133~~7 'BR. rem rm. din nn.
-------Calllina Pier-Vu Xlr II 2 Good cash now. OK ' Olll,y M'IS' 19814 19« AU "Monte10" St ZOO mo 2 duplexes • • ltlplesa. br Ne• ~ UINOUt R fr H lnwstments Rnllm• D1~ Fte 3Br, I Ba 9'7~ I mmtd Mr•p. S1tper associated
81 Owntt, CdM •NB. •YrlJ.Prd mdltJ• 71J..21t7 ---3Br,2"'Ba • ramll1 ho1n.1 RuJ
Good lftW '"'· onl1. coup~. 8tlllhlnpr.twlthDaUy l 8tth tnsa...,HW. !stat• b) 5alarkHJ au 1 ••12 Pllol!WMI la ~---.. -
.. .
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: I
C..,.tSenlct DOCJC.,. Gorde11i.1 HHllHJ Ht111t........ .. .... Fill •··•••••··············· ·•·················•··· ·•••••••··••··••·••··•• ··•···•···•••••·•······ ··············•··•····· ·····•••••••••·••·····• ...•••................. '•MnCJ Tl!. ....................... ·················~····· Till INST1\J I,! 0
11 k1111h 1;u.11.111t1·1·1I
ftef• John lt!r.I tt;111
GHWIC9C&SOH Shampoo&altamclcan PETS "R"PEOPLE THITRHPIOPLI All-Ar'O..t~ Retirfdcouple1Vall wf:all Sprc1ul , 1·x11nt llANt;1N<: s111 o1 roll. SPECIAL Rulldtl'l1Slnce 1947 Color bn&httntra. whl Boardtnf&Croomlna lA)wt>Klj)M('t' 8$-~ Jlm,M&-~ housesu. mm 2 wlu. painltnll PrCJf lbnbl quullty. fri•I! "'t & ~167 L.. O Additions, remodtlinR. crpl:i 10 min. bleach. "We Cart' M6·2848 H...._. AZ HAULING Con&\ru<' Dec.l·Jan 30. 700.1689 Freeest ~eve~7 42111 striµp1111: l"1ll S1·011 nA ai plans Frttrsl Reas Hall. hvldln rma $15; n...Ml.u. •~t---rm• L-..a. ~ 1'~ne paintmr, by Hlchurd 64511325 Custom ('c1 amt~T1lt· • I 3 ""'"'" 9 70 ava room S7 $0 rouch ...... _,, ..........,ll'li" ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion a. rtM1dfonUal el!!an -.c..,....., S f N(•\4 1lt•11l1MJ1•l lk11.11r • hat's All you P Y ,u• • I"'"' ~ 21 s10, chr ~ Gua'r eUin. •••E••M•••o••so••Nu:•c•HX•••••• JACK Of AU. TKAUl!:S ltll. dumptruc~ 631 0322 ....................... inor Lit'. l1li 13 yrs o ,laster /Repolr 1-'ri•t• t-st ( 'h11l'h "' IK:ll
for u Pollos. deckml!i. ext s1d pet odor l'rpt repair • Plumbtnl(. t>ltclrtl·al. Ho.K Bryunl'1 Landsc11pln1J happy N B <'lbtomcr~ •••••••••• ............ .
:Kida) ad ina~. landscape design~ 15 yrs exp Do work pack•c•l1l1111h mU pcb hu 11 n1 Odd Jobs ~ Brick. stone. block. c'On Thank )'OU Mt 4410 Neat Pillrhf" & 11•"1ur1.>~ Tra •tl S9"icn
In the & ml work Free est ml'selr Refi..S3l 0101 all~3701 ~400ll ••• .. :•··~··· .. ·~· ... ••• creto Frplc~. RBQ11. 1.ARRY'S PAIN'TIN(i meed. 193-1439 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAILY Lie, bonded 6310401 n-ol O PR Wa nt 11 R,t:ALL, • YCLEAN p.tt1os . dtl\ e" t1} Full Special' Int t'Xt, Sol I'll \\lfltll'\
1111LOT ROBERT'SCARPET ... ,w H ME IM OVEMENT !IOUSE CallGmgham GuarLu:&lllS53S-09l4' II l'IJ:.ter l'oit1l1111i: & TRA\Fl'>}ll\ln s
..-. •REMOOEUHG • REPAIR Restretch re· 'oRVWALj"'cousrif' REPAIR. PLUMBING, Girl Frl'Cl'l._t.6455123 l' U • T 0 M p1prr1t. dqw.1 rc~tu1·ro~ Int i•\I Jo :'th ,,,..1·1,111' l'.111 f111
SElVICE Rm add & new cun~t. h1v all ren111rs 673 8490 ,/A . heating, carpentry, l!lec, R<>ulN'SCLF.ANIN(' S 645'9383 yr~ Neat l'uul 54~ :!917 Jurk·i111 I 11111' 7,'l'f 1111,:1 DIRECTORY cu r 14 yrs exµ. l''Ully Uc d & tile. •·ree est. No Job too . 0 • ' ' LANDSCAPING Create All Pamt11111 ult $450 txt '
DOITNOW' ~~!~;~~~ ~~~11~~ CttMtlt/C.Cm. insured 532~9 small 64S.2811 t'i::hC:US:lho~!~7 a unique t'nv1ronm1.:nt $6$0 N!!al, complt'lt• Plumbin9 Trt'f Ser•lce
AsliF6rs..dra ConslructJonl82707911 ....................... DRYWALLTAPING -Car""nl'"" Masonry 4948472 ~·ret'eSt,re!sllSJ7294! "··~·······:~·~·····:• ••••••••• .. •••··•••••••
Your Dally 1'1lot 96().:.8) ''ONTCHROE'TMPSOE''ONN'SS""R All lelllures & acoustic. R~ln;' PlumbUlg 1-:xpcrt1se Housekeeplllg. Mtl Oll~A<,~ I ~~(~.U.l1 TH H : !>~~SH' S \. \. " r K " suppl1e furn1Sh('d , Marrlogt S.-.kts CuatomPoMffna I 24 llOl nst.11\ I "· Prunm~ "'·ulpt II~ Sen•1ce D1rertor~ MocHALf CotfSTR. Lie 13933!13 642·8482 I..tt est evlll67S ~ Drywull Stucro· Tile ltu~tworth) -957 8003 ........... ~......... 25 yrs exp Lie 4~1 w e •2lHJ711 ti7S !!1!11 !'op n,in lfrm ih
Representative f -. --Drvwoll Plosler We R_e_model J B 646-_9990 1 M •RRYTODAY Boded Ins Refs l'11l11r 642·5671, ext 322 Cu)tom homei.. ra rn NO JOB TIX> SMALL patch any holt.'!t rast $40 R a.;s1 U COMM 'L Generul I louseeleaninic No. bl~ tests req Lie ex!.rt 963-0011 Dick .Tor HAT 'lulftbMcJ & \ I• 111 uv i.11 ~1:1 -1111111!!!!!!!!~11!!!1---•I in g. re mod. Frenc·h B0rk &1 B~ L1963c. :is.87146749 !Pl!I Lie ~ 631 2430 Complete Mamtenance
1
Jlellable twferences providl.'d OOS.3'197 wkdvs .r Spt'l' 1n lthotJur.rnb Wotch R~r doors, skylighlll & p11110 a e. nume b --L.! I 6418967 Own trans 962·~10 1 , RENTALS PAINTf:U commertiJI ~ork Lil •••••• ••••••••••••t"" ACCOllllHRcj l'UVl'r.. 848 3M2 Ans ~·2182 lleel,>2313_ ~mcol , . MRS CLEAN MLJ,_a I~ SatfSun~ Perfect, prompt, re11a 11404321 tiJti 2000 Snit & lkp.111 ur .1niw1111•
....................... llOOM AUDITION CONCRETE WORK •••••• .. ••:••"''"'~" llOM E 1 M PROV~,MENT I MAK !';S IT GLEAM' Ma10ttry Seasi!,le Pntjl 536 4806 Dnuns cleared from Siii anti 11)111krn rtm:l.~ &
Acct Bkknl( for ~m all SPECIALIST Foundations bldewalks E~ECTRICIAN pri~ed Tile floor~. fenc lllg. 646-2240 ....................... All PainlUlg. 1111 $4SO t'lCI Plumbing re11J1r3 fr~·1· IA .11 dll"· (i u~ · li'~<1t 1 h
business Marv Goen~ RemodelUlg,derk~. patio sl bs I . nghl. free ei.timute on I plumbing. all small -BHICKWORK Small $650 Neat. complete e&I \f&M &129033 Sho11'1 l,1 11"' al rloJI 7 14 6 4 6 17 5 1 ~: ,. e ~ homes. free t'1>t John brick L1/ 960·~!v~!11 ~rge or small JO~ iob!t 28 yn. ex.e_..979 2265 ~~Pr l~iusel·~~ane~ R~l Jobs. Newport. Cost a F'ree est, rer~ 851 7292 (':111~1111 I ,,1111n.i "'t 11 "4;'
Zl3862-l636 Lie 11~1093Q. 661_1301 R d _ic •396621 6730359 Electrical Plumbing e ree ~ ·'"' ~4 'i1esa, Irvine Rt>fi. l"'"'I G I Pro~rty~metd Tr;uii·m .,.t•lrnml' l\cctg, bkkpg. hn ~late esi concrete · also RESID COM M'L Carpentr). rough finis h hr~ 955 2418 675 3175 OLYMPIC PA "' H •••••••••••••••••••••••
ments, auditing for ROOM ADDITlOHS 5'8o'\"~~L1~,f;~ Highly qualified No job R'oofs Masonry Stucco llou3ecll!.1~111g 1~ our Brick Bl~k-Concrete INT EXT !-'REE EST PROPERTY Window C~1'19.
small bus1nesse:. Boyd Conc0rete& ~.L,oc04·k .~alls too lrg_1small 631·2004 _ Refs B111960 1401 c\t'S bu~ine:.~ Call Janare s I Vt'ry reas Lie. bonded Lo'~!?RHAQTUE'~ ~?.fl11\903 MAN.AGEMEMT 1 ~·,,·17•11•1 .•1•1 ~\~i·n·11•11·.~·",:l. ;1•1.~·
Wheeler. CPA. ~ 43.'i5 l!nms...,.,. "" C•rom1· .. "ftt-Go-...t-• European l'raftsman All I Rairned) Ann~ 9 > r~ Bob .. 8·7650.~·9906 " ,,., ....., ,. ~ .. " ,.,. eves Cob' t ~;..... ... ~ "~ ~"""l · · l'XP 675 2514 '" . ----llOUSE PAJNTll\!j Orange '"0 ~rea 1• ) 1' \ 11• :1 hr humt• ,,., 1ne ...._.., ....................... ....................... Jobs. Big or Small Call Custom Brick Storll' W k F , , t 1•i.p1·rrcnn· < .111 fur info I \l;ll 71~1H
Asptlott ....................... THETlLEMAM CLEAN·UPSILAWN ufler6PM.9645231 llollda) part) lllJ\I.' 1s Block Concrel~ Stu<'l'O. or guar rf'fi ~ :indrall'~ I . ' .
.... • ••••••••••••••••. All types kitchen, ha rs, F . c•o 2062 1 Maintenance·Landscp H d ood .,,_,__
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h1•rl' • Let u.~ de3n' Ref~ I Refs Free est. 549.9492 I.al' 1138379'1 97R 'l31n 963-8 I 82 · l.1•1 th1 ~1111~h111 Drlv W " k tit uaragfi unit• Oa\ reeest "" F 642""'"' or w ~ l')nd1 & ......... •""7"""'1 I ---INT "'XTPAl'""'l'( ! 11~1111 huw\\'111111114 e a,~. par 1ng ( .. < • ~. • c . . reeest ;J;nll ....................... ,., ....... ,,,,,., ""' Mi\RIJLE·TILE-STO!'fF: r, n1 '' • . I " . . repairs. sealc·odtin~ 645 6521,e\e~ 1685 Mc r)stalCeram1cTile TREES HAHDWOOU "1 OORS lndl'pendtnl llou~t' t.ir'd Refs rn·H~l Remodel1n9/Repo1r u .. 11111w IAcl · :.~ ~:d
S&S Asphalt 631 1199 Carpenter DIStml'lt~e ln.~tallat1on Cl ed & w' d • cleaner referenl·es re 111 <'I '"st all pre fa b • • 64& 1007 • • ••••• •• • •••• .. ••••••••• l I ~ \II\ I H\' L Lie •408746 846 8612 Topped removed clean ean H'<e 1 bl J . fr p In 6 4 S S 6 0 2 General CootrJ111111? \\l'IH i\\ < 1 1 \ \l\i;
IC •••••••• ............... • l!p!> lawn reno\ 7Sl 34~6 , An,'llffil', 832 11!81 s ,\ 13 (' l'M) 548 8736 213 634 Ot40 rointin9 Lessons llome I mpru\l·m ... nt' ( 1111 ""' 1111 '•I · r 1~1 ALLSTATE PA \'I 'llC ROIJGll & FINlSll Child Co~ • · 1 H 1j j l'rof wkl~· b1 "kly sen . •••••••••••••••••••••.. damage rt•pair. ~u.ilft,
Seal coating. StriprnJ: Doors. fenl.'es. wmdo\\~ ........................ Gardenuig. landscup111g., CKI nCJ clllply h~. 1 Jl' Wndwl>. IMo•inCJ Abo fine dl•<'or t11mml wurk LI• 1 ll~ '17!1~ Window nnti....
R C R ell' Rt'fs, frt•e l'~l Ch'ldcare Mon F d tree lrimm1n~ & re· •••••••••••••••••• .. •••I l . , R"1 epa1rs omm cs 8404"'3 ''h I • n ays I I Haul rleanll" i·onl'rell• "'' ''· cflb 20 )r~ ••••••••• .. ••••••• .... • Jrl work Mai:1:1 Carpi>nlr.' d1k1r~. df\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fre" est =3'.17362 ""''" nsl Infants lhrou"h 6 yrs mova · ma1or c:ean·up ' ' "' "27""' I Moral"s UL'\ 111• t7''2 "' •/1.1l1t, •. 1111 .. 1•1r•
645 8' " lns'd Free est 642 48119 rl'moval l>ump Trurk I "'' "'"' . *A· I MOVIMG * . 1· · "'' 1 "" " wall, ele1 K1tdH 11 &. ' • '181 Custom wood palws. ~7~ome N ('M -Qutl•ki.erv64276311 lli l'l'd a m1.11d or Top Quality Spl'l·tal 646 21 1 llalh n•m11d1•I' I r1111t 1""1'111111""1"•1
lobysitting dec~s. wood 14 mdow:. . ,~o~~~p~~~ ~ ~~~~' OL'MP JOBS hou~ek.ec11rr' llrly or I t·oire in h.indllng 25yr~1 Pa~rin9 ,111 Fr ... 1• I''' 1;;11 111 • "11 !tl'fl
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie: d Reas John 11r CleC111111g Services or95S·OOllS Mark .,,,, & Small \1mml(Jobs "kl) l,all Madrid i\l(en l!~P C:omPt-lllive rah~i. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 l'H'!'I
Babysit ling. m) huml.' I Rick 979·l2l8 •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• GARDENING W NT l'Jll M IKE&l6 1391 t} :it \' , ~ 0576 'lluCJ\ t'rt1me.J:l0 1353 Thl• Paper Hangt>r l'ruf Roofln Tlit> Bl&&HI MMkttplact
tr :\1 & 64~p~r ~1~~~13 ~~~~/'"~~~k~~r~em~:i!. "~~~:.s ::~ro~:. ~~~t~!' :itowing, l'd~ing";aki~~. II \l'!.ING & ()L')f p Ht•hJble Homemaker~ •'\BC M OVl:-.:G Exp 1~stall Dt'l'~.m1tor1tu.'.' I•••• .. •~••• .. •••••••••• on tlte OrqeCout
Chld I . h ' lland},6735716 Hl9781396J3.9l68 s w eeping . fre t• JORS.~kfurlland). ~tlil'!t•Jn)ourhome or prnf. lo" rates QU1rk Fn·eest Sle1p:-,.i, llt!I OrJni:t· l'o,1<.l H1H1f1ni: 0·•1•v Pl•OT 1 care. O\mg omc. , estimate~ 645_4372 or l &II K427 "l'l 760 t7113,83.)fi0.l9 1'arefulserv1ce S52·U.1111 \\Al.LS HY llOHln rteroofing 11•p.ur. <'.ill M i.I ~
hot lunch. companion!'!. Carpet Sen1ce Controcton, Gefterol J 645 5737 llAUI 1 ~1 . St d 1 h· . Howsn ittincJ ST1\RVING <.:OLu:et; \,Juoltl)'. fastserv111• b46 238~1. ~ li:J:I CLASSIFIED
fenred yard 556·30911 1·••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••"•"•••••• I .. k u en as ••••••••••••••••••••••• STUOl':NTS :iiOVINC IK ~ r~ !!Xp. 001 l~li!~ BALBOA HllOFt 'C: \'II
II R Dependable mot.ht•r We Care Crpl Cleaner~ 22 Years Exp Custom ~alph Caballen>& Sons I .~I.' lrui: • ri~~:~~~alt• ro Lil' llTl2~ 436 ·'"~ l) pe wall 1•111'1•n11g Sk ~ hl(ht!'I & Pla,lt•ru11: ADS baby sits ages 6 "k' & Stt'arn dean & uphol s llomes Condos Apls & Gardening si>rvil'l', 10 '°.f1'11 la 1 Ho~ SittirtCJ ln~ured 64111427 1 n , t a I I e d h ) Free es l tii:l li713
up $45 wk 892.GJ(~t . Truck mount umt • Hemodis Bob 492 ~ Y,rs exp Compl ma mt rnnk )OU, John Rl'l(ll>tered Nurst' E\ \\ ATCH L'S G llO\\ • J., 0 r n c, man p .qi n . . Yov t<•li ~11 11 J1rnf II
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. · Work:_uar 645 3716 . Comm rto:.td Trt'e trim· CLEAN UP YOUR ACT u•lll'nt rcfrrfnre' ~un h.in1:t·r ·1~. IH-. ""rk ISecretonal S«YtcH loats, MClll'lfet1C111Ce/ I . . DeeoratinCJ ming & remmal. rlean· llAl'l.I 'G..,., 6Jt l99.1 Mvsic lessons , td R3l h C r ••-••••••••••••••••••• Ser•lce '-;oStea.!fl ;:>;oSha~poo 1·••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ups frt't' 1~t 646 46!>4 ....., ~mnkl'r A\Jrlablt' thru ••••••••••••••••••••••• i:rnt936 p J u~u "!':ED \ !:.F('flf'wr \R\
••••••••••••••••••••••• Stam Spe<'1ahst ~ asl Molding. plastering or art .i 30 TIU. ES Stll!eR fRI M 1'1•b ( .rll at After 5 oo Theor) Piano Sight WI BkkpJ? ~om,.. skill,
B9atsCleanl'd Wa\t'd I drLF_reee.st 8391582 namental Sell & 1n Exp gardent•r. clean Gar 3 g l' & } a r it SJ2 IH8 ''"1!1ng Colle111: 11rnf ." •\\ALLPAPEH'' Hcas 1 alt" l!I'.. S:!,,I
Experient•ecl Insured WANT ACTI ON~ s!allat1?.n Guarantee J ups, lree trim. mant de.inuµs Frt•t• l'St I yuur homt'. an) aj!l' I I u~tumpaperh:inj!U11!
Jim 759198.'il'\'l'S ClassifedAds&l2 5(,'78 l'nal 'G !r/9 4348 Free est retr641 1096 557112'71 St.'11 ulle Items 642 5678 (iract.'558-9282 Rt·s1d comm 5411 tit,{; I \\ant .\d lktv·· 1.12 51iil!
642-5678
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Costo Mesa 3824 Hllftt111gton lecKh 3840,Newporl leoc:h 3869 Santo Ana 3880 Shr 3HH HJlbooi Penn ~ lo 'hr l hr :! hJ Jpt ~lr 1•mpl F Shr Ir.: 2R \ :'llilturl' prof mak 10 :i1 F >h.m· l'.1r~ \1•\\JM111 NEWPORT
••••• ••••••••••••••• ••, ••••• •• ••• .. ••••••••••• •• ••• ••••••••••••••••••I•••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ltt~p $!25 t 1 • uul ~ 1 II'\\ l'r?1nonlor~ l'I apt (' :\1 S25(1 mt'! ulll ~harl' beautiful :-.1•1A 11on Tnh'e 'f ,.nm· 1• .1 1 1 PENINSULA
28drm1Ba.grt'at t:,1de l THEWHIFR.ETREE I JIEDROOMS 2bdrm. lb11.cl~etuSC Pambi3~SJ ~ B $.lttlt • 1li·p Uor~th~. 979 511'17 hume IA ~Jn11· Jdni5'H~IUC -.1 .. ,11 .. 1, ,,,.1111 1 . .r
local1on No children 1 Luxury Adult unit~ al af 1 2 IATHS I Plala. newly m.lr. c Sl2.5 M ~ tu 'h1 l~e 4 !Jr h11mt' 5 ™9 ~o 3233 Ext2811 I (hl'rlook1ug ba~ &-11111·11 Garaqes 11 • , '' ij. 1 1, ~ls. $475 mo HI) C:lll l fordab!e l1V1ng 1.z & 3 S675MOHTH + $350dep :>4601.16 ~· \' nu~srn~l·r.Sl!ill ~ MJlc• 35 45 'hr 5hr 2hit s.h .. r NH _Apt 3RI~. 211/\ ueean Own .b:' ~ 111 I for"Rent 4350 11111 \lt...r111·1·~t.. .. "·'
Llo,td 675·6670 I Ur \\ell decorated l2!1 35th St. lowvr unit. Aporimenh fwTli~d I !!I ullb 9tl2 ti846 h'" nr S l'u l'll11<1 Fe"~ 25·34 S232 mo • ulil Non ~muke 1).16110,);) ....................... 111, 111111111.11 Fr~:•.::;
2 Br 1•2 Ba T"nh~e Olympic size pool hJ?ht '<Int cond Avail no" I or UnfwW*d 3900 :i.1 F ~ t1r 1 h!J pool l!•n Spa S:!25 l ,h,irl' util' Dep 7601624 aft 51,m 1 F M lloommut<' t11 'hare \llt'\ :ii'! I''' '°~' ni•o lhM •1 rt "I' ,11 11 '"Tl\r~t.11
gar. patio quid rdtenmsrourt Jal'UPll 12131966-1711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n1~ 11\t'r ~.prof SC' r..it rn1:1 . 2 hdrm aplmllB ~(I F 19th '>t ('11·t.1 \11·'·' lt•11t.ol '" 11,1" II'
IJfeSl)lt' maturt' ddull~ park ltke land.~t·apm!! w-tc:iff s E A w I N D Pla?:l $200 646-Z7i6 ... hr lri: IU'(Uf\ homl' LdM . rt'SP fem, 25 lo 35.1ur negol1able9b\).O!r.:! ~!1701!16 •l'l'rt·•1 .• h µ-t•
no children. pet!. $5001 )lost beautiful bldg in .... ;\I ~ to ,hr 2hr .1µ1 " " µrof pvr<.on Isl IJ~t t non smoker lO ~hr JBr Female sle\\arrl~~ pn· 2 11,ir dl<!l'' in t 11\t ~tui 8 AY fRQ.,,IT
Mo ~8 5-179 II B Large 2 Br Paho Pool VILLAGE pool S190 mrl ut1ls. ur dt>p 2ba " sale $260 ~ JI fers samr lo 'hdr" 5 <'JI! i6o ·1~1. 1111-!hh ~
2 8 I B -I N u, 846-0619 Ad_ullS 645 8152 New 1&2 bdnn luxur) <XT MS 14!114 ~ 3428 utll 675 3529 bdrm home Friol1 640 8950 ~ '" ll:l 11.i\' Office' l11r r1•nt 110111
sa\a e8 ~e' 2'7:0 MARINERS WALK 1 ~ Br 2 Ba 2Slory Year I adult apts in t4 plans 1 .• . 1 hdrm unfum l:.l I.isl SPYGl.AS.Sllll.L \ard , rec '31·11 'o . ' · ~I 5""'lft f,\,, ~11·1
642 44fo 675-"""" 2 & 3 s T h h Good location S9tl0 Bdrm from $4911. 2 bdrm Chnslian ~ tu 'hr tug 0111, + ut ti. mall' F ~hr l br hst'. pool. 1•11 ~mokers. k1cb. Pt'l~ 111 JOffice Retttol 4400 "t.Wl'l>H'I m \C:N .~•I • """" r own ou~e · I 1 ho u ' t• 1 n 11 11 No B $275 mo Cathy I 1 $3 I 1 ••••••• • •••• •••• • • ••• • • ' ' Ill .( 2 B 1 8 2248 C· Apts Palaos. Stnl!ll• & Mo Broker67~4912 from $5711, Townhouse I h Id '16K 'lll!IO f1•male Sl6Smo ll , . · ma t'S 00 r\lnt· IJl'l7 \\'estdill "11 \\ant ·'" • "1-111 11 01,. Dr. a. ;n~~n double car garat!l''· a·y-~ f~om $640 + pools. ten· c I 11.'n . • I Ju 1151523.'i,t'Vl!4231~ 644-0106 760·12.12 857 931711 me.suge ; ' l "I ~ I 151"1 ''I Ii .II Ill lt~l~ ·'
r New carpel I ~ ne.ir Hunt. llurb11ur ~ "'"'"' nis. ~:11erfall~. pond~' inanr1a 111'1 ',.. . '4 It S11·11 i \h•111f \ i• ~~er~~ ~tsg;f'1s <\_1~ Ch11drenOK_8406807 l.ux 2BR.2BA. Xlra Lrg1 Gas for rookrng & heal I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ht fEliXmErC.\i;UT•1•ntt.>1VE1 ~132 ~1 n.:1 • II\ rm Q,·erlook1ng l rng paid From San I • •
641 1324 Reodv. Mo•e In! Ba~ Ser bldng l'nder DieRO Frwv dnve North SUITES
323 E 18th 2 Br t car lmmaculate2bdrm. l'• ground parking Adult~ on Beal·h to \kfadden • B•DAY WEEK SPECIAL • I~ garage, 2 kJd.-. 01\. no b a II u n t 1 n gt o n SIOOU mo 67H77S then West on l't1C'Fadden
pets $445 Sierra \li.:mt Ldndmark Condo Adults. spacious dpt No to Sea\\md \'11laj!e • • HERITAGE
Co.64l 13'bl Washer & Dryer. 2 pets 1 m10cran m4>S9351911 • 8 Days • 3 Lines 8 Dollars • PLAZA
Small 1 br. srnglr ;adult patios. wetbar. bit in H & 642·2357 :\l'\\ luxurr orfi1l' ~Jl~c·1·
only. no pets. t!ltfi(' 0. 2 car gar s.m per Step$tOlheht'a('h 3Br 2 Rooms 4000 1 • Its easy to place your8-0ay W eek Classified by mail and 11 • in l rnn(•' hui.it·-1
Wallace. Fi tl.75 8074 mo Isl & lru.t + S300 set· · ••••••• •••••• .. •••••••• B I d 1 T I f I 1'1'nter • E."' l"rv.' .11· de Po s i l C .i I l ~a frplc enC'lsd pa.Ito Laguna Beal·h Moturlnn. I • costs JUSt $ -t hat Sonly a dOI ar a ay 0 QUa I y or lh1s • <t·~~ \\all nu"' t'all
lbr E side. small but li14 1759·4381 A~k for \early S735 \1o Call 985 No. Par1ft(' Coast I • special o ffer you must be a non-commercial user offering • lordetJll~ cozy w lot5 of neat 673 2507 H I R h )1r Binoham Call8S -wy. ,aj!una eac h d f I t S800 d d th t 551-1 23 1 640-4230 ,.ood_S3SO ~1·1660 -c= Duplex . upslair<i 2 Br 1 Daily. Wt't'kly. Kitrhen • mere a n tse o r sa e up o per a an e pnce mus •
Ei\STSIDE l.nfum1shedl.2.&3br Ba. frplc. Rara1?e Near available Low winter be in your ad The cost s tays the same whether your ad •DELUXEOFACES•
Spacious 2 br. n.itural ASPEHP'ACIFtC L1do shopprngarea $600 rates 4945294 • needs eight days selling time or IUSl one • 1.2 &:1roum '.'\ulc·oi~lll'
wood <' e 1I1 n gs & 12131596--7202 year lease Adult~. ~o Balboa Inn S90 & up • • qu1rt!ll \dJ A1q111rt1·r
cabinets. pr\' balconae~. Deluxe poolside xlra pets Mu.st ha\~ ref~ weekly Kitrhennelte. Hntl'I 1<:1:13223 '11:?
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tnl( ~·'"' llll\1' "'llll' ha• .ut1hl1es pd 1\dull!-only large 2br 2 ba. bllns. A\ ail 11 15 l)me by ocean front 675 8740 • Use one word 1n each box About 4 w ords make one • S2511 l p llunt llrli ~:~~o Plea~(' l':ill dswhr 111 miles bt'arh :~.~'lubhoust' Ave INewl) dec'Orated pnvall.' • classrfted line of type Minimum ad IS 3 lines Please print • Cnrpl'I tlrap1• .... llll
Adlts. no peLS $450 mo room & bath. frpk $28.5. I I 17301 ll1'.1rh 1142 X\.I
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1111•\l\li• I \C"lllllll ~-8362 --I .Br Condo. ~so. Mo melds ullls ~:aM~1de • pain y • 17TH STREET
Easts1de 2 BR t14Tihse. 2 BR TOWNJ·'O"'"' \er s a i 11 es Ca 11 C.M 645 Oltll COST"' MES"'
I ... r. 213 830·2323 R1chard -• r------------------------------, • " " no pets. S42S mo Pool. park, near beach -Room with kitchen pm• l. nr 3 room offrll· w1te~
543-49'7I _96:t.S191 MUR OCUM! Nr bu!>. 3hoppmg cenlt'r • I • .\ r pll'lll\ or prkt! I t1l I
& 2 BR 2 Ba, upper. t'ncl 2 bdrm. I ba. fireplace & OCC. Adults 962 7521l • I • incl ,\\ail no\\ 1 .111
LGTwoledroom gar, 16702 Algonqurn. gar. ~9Smoyearly. Female 21 or O\'t'r 111 • I • I Realonom1~ 675 tlicH1
l12l!a . 2 sly lwnh~e. $485 mo $485 dep . 673·2.lmDfl6PM s har e a house 111 l'osta Mesa ~I "><l r1 I
North C M ~25 mo 846 ~; 848·4115 2 Bdrm apt $600 yrly Newport w snme S2.SO • I • : Mt1te ~li5 ,1, .. 1 111, 10 1 S46·Jlli_ _ $600 Gorgeous2 Br 2 Ba Spar1ous. newl) de I da6404100,ev67S.~ • II • I drl ii'' \\ 14th "it
2 Bdr I Ba. upstairs. encl ~eperale unit . best corated Malurt' cpl on Lg rm 1n beaut NR hm . 1151 11!1211
garage. a\'a1I. II I $38(1 area walk 10 beach .!!.. Pl~a Realty673·1~ kit pm pl prof F • I • NEWPORT BUCH
6407804 child OK . no pets Penmsula t bdrm. sleps o 30 S22S inc utl I Full 'u"'' 1.,11 of
TllPLEX 833 3307 to ocean. $400, mo Da) 7_60·8242 • I • f11 ,., frnrn s:1•17 on
2bdrm .lba.bu1lt m~ 3 WALK TO BEACll 67~·2fil7~e,·eS484122 . • • (,all' l'~t'1 olf11•·,frnn1
years new Garal!t' s.175 Bach. stove & rcfr11(e Versailles Bach bdrm Furn room wanted for Stu~. lncJd~ M'i'rr1.111.11
955.2345 All utils paid. S:l2.5 Mo refrig Mirrored closet Nov. & Der Costa Mesa • • phonl' ans 1Aorrl 11111
MESA VERDE home at 536 2456, 536·7!179 ~70~'!.n<!.\'642 6149 area Reasonablt' E\eS • • 1·es~ml( Tl'l1·~ l/w111
mospbere2 &JdU:apti. l"ine 3844 \'E R SA IL LE S 213 425·852!'> • • TllEllE\l}(Jl'\HTI HS No~ls S<W>:1034 ....................... 2 B P2E8aNTIWUSE l ('0~1 1' \~Ir;.-.
2 BR. l BA. nr S C:st WOODBRIDG E r . comer uni · E'Sid•l...tiM • • 711 ll'il llAAI
't'' 111" 11wlu1l1 ;i ,,., •·1•
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fes,1on.d 'l'•H 1· 1~ "'"'l'.1
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'>th !:12:!. ;or; ~.1 Pina & Sant3 Ana ~per mo 2 bdrm t ocean ''1e14 s7so Mo Lg rm" frpk bar pvt \r:\\ PO!ll llr \{'II \1
Adlls onl) ~ 545 1241 ba, 95l·i.S43_Bird1e ~-04~ entran1·e Res p rem • Publi sh my ad for 8 days starting • 0 r ,\1rvun l lll t11 11110 CM-HI ARE ..
975 1107 e~!._8 Woodbridge 3 Br I' 2 ba 2 br apt. close to beach wan led $300 mo. • • sq fl 1'~4 ii22 :! 11k11n 11ff111· \la h.11
""'EW DLX 280R..., home s1so,mo Avail quiet neighborhood c1sutp1alansct>'r,eqcal'lmemv edwk.nocds. .• Classification • I h11s1nc'' 1lw on~:-1'1.•.; " '"' 11 6, Call i'J9.S98l. Ed Gar. wash1dryr, adults. "Full Ser\ ii•('" r~x '.\lo ut1b inl'ld 1,w..-11~1
2 sly. 212ba. encl yrd. Agt no pets.~ tst &last ~-3375 • Name • ecutive suili• 10 1·-----.. --g'I!, patios. decks. bit 992-0823 days. or call Ho Matef 4IOO t :-JEWPOHT CENTER
ms. 'rdnr. kid.~ JX'L~ ok LCICJlll'a leodt 3141' 1'45·2303~~&wken_ds ••• ~'!; ...... !......... • Address • no" inl'ludmg ~•m mn 1 ::~1.~~·1~~:.1~~1~~ ~11 S635 Lorn wkd rs ....................... 1 blk to beach Bachelor ,N·retarial 'rn11·1•' "
S47·9571. eves >Aknd~ OceanV1ew.Deluxe1&2 ~pl rdng. no kitchen. SEALAHMOTR .. City Zip Phone • om cespare \1u.o;t<;('('tn ni:':·~~~·:,1~~1~::1-~~~.~n1~11 ~ S434 _ Br Apts Newly decoral )'~S'mo 968-826J I Wkly rentals now avaT1!, • • i•ompare' M'\ n•t0tnill "'" 11 , "
Condo 2br .. 1,, ba . ed . refn ge. dishwasher. "--Sll2 & up Color • Ch k M O d O EXECUTJ\'t-:OFFI•'~. pal 10 . 2 ('a r gar ' disposal, h('ated pool. Versailles 2BR. 28A Phones tn room 2274 • ec or . . enclose • 110 Nl'wport CPnter Or ofru·t> ~p:cr1• \111~1 .. ,~.111 ~25 mo ca11642.i.174 elevator. sublcr prkng Security Galt No pets Newport Blvd CM SutteZUO ~~~~~('.'~: f'H:t'\'TI\ l
Un furn 2 bdrm No BS<!.!..~· Call494·8983. Adults. $750 ~7-1997 -1 ~·J.445 • Charge my ad to: I. ~l'WpQrt Ht'lll h I 110 'll'\\Jllln t ···ntM' I •1
children or JX'lS l ~I. Lower !BR. IBA. Yrd. IBR. $450. 2B . S500. Ull Live on Newport Beach • • &u 449'.! I Suitt• 21,,,:, .• lasl,$400 ~00-00q ~~~h~:~yNoB:;~d~ ~~~~6~b~a~~m648:;~~3 ~o~~,'.~~nPCH~~o~ •'i 0 .. # Exp. ' le ~~-----• '.'11'"flC1rtll«.1t1r
DCMO floillt 3126 Realtor. $·2A14 ~ __ 645-0440 _ 1144 ~11(1 1
....................... ---.___._ ~1-69 I au. Vlt I Yearly on tM beach rum •• '1 0 # Exp . '1 •• I Br ucell cond1hqn. Htwport -• "Y• w Kil h & B S230. Avail Nov 1st ....................... E~clusive Cll rrhaven rooms c · ..,! ...,., ,,.,.,. P'I" NEWPORT private apt. I bdrm. Iba S280. per mo + _,., • L '• ~~ " R S500 per mo. Days sec. dep. 2306 W. Ocean· ------------------------------.._..CJfollhodl 3140 cou~YCLUI 556·1774. Eve & wknds erontNB • 1r·····-··· WE'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ········--·--1 .•
....................... LIVING 00·7264 67J·
4
IS4 ~· : 1111 . l;Q POSTAGE 11
1
• 2 Br 2 Ba CJJ>t d/w encl Bachel.ors. 1&2 bedroom 2 bdrm, I ba ~5 yearly Vocatto. ._.... 4250 1 I NU . pgt' · 'N i>e h aptslctownhou.ws lease. Open beams ....................... , • 1 NECESSARY I •
1ar. ~2 =· r ac From ltXX> 6«· 1900 carport 1118 W. Balboa OCEAN FRONT 2 & 4 Br • 11 If MAIL E0 : • · ' ---(213~-2542 Avail Winter Weekly IN THE 3 Br. 2 Ba. 3 bib rrom l BR Versailles. Pen· : --Monthly 673-7873 • .-fJ • ocean wpstain 2 car lbouse SMOpermonth Westcliff large lower 2 ------, o. UNITED STATES 't>
•ara1e. _,., Mo S6SO G44 ·5l69, 548-0425. Br. 2 Ba. Pool. ~•litre ltwtak tosa.. 000 • ~ • ~.de ~7-7826. 751 .9110. 845 -6242 couple.SOOO.NochtJdFen········ .................. ~ BUSINESS REPLY LABEL pt.
--lll O ner ent or eets. 645:«192. I _ > 2 Br, $400 mo. u area, ---1 BR-~ bllt: ocean ''Gay Roommate ~1Rsr cL•ss PUM11 HO u cosu MESA. CAL1~0ANIA ~
pal'llf'I tacll. doWfttC>Wll Y ....... Mtt. 1 It Contact Services'' I • 9 M • H .... .,.a ...,.._,.. 28 •a.,.~ l: ~1 sng a . . ~ "-,.~ ~·" -r "IHI· ""'"m Y .,.,.,.. 642-5002 L a r g e s t G a y • ts POST AGE Will BE P•IO BY A~E:SSEE o •
2 Br l Ba Stovt. d/w, f1SO.S7S.3'197. -1 Male/Female Room· i: O t Coas• Delly Piiot m
rrpts, drapes. g1r1ae EASTBLUFF Sc>•ctcM J NO FEE. Apt Ir Coodo mate Service in So. I ~ ~ rang ' i •
with washer dryer bk I r. Pool, petJO, view tn rt,ptala VUJa Rentals. Caur. C.R C. for rtotal 1 "° I ' ,.,, ,,., I 1"'
up Adulu. no PflS S460 pleasao.t area Sin« I• 6'7M91.2 Broker. needs. 11-7PM • o. ,, • l80.2582 adult, no iJ'U. ~ Mo. Ocunrront foT Winter <213)631).3()4(). • • 0 • • •••c _.__,.. 644 4]87. Rentals. f llrn!shed &i 1 1 1 _.,,. ...... ,nvv.-----unlum. Bnlftr.675,.912 w d "' •-I • t B 1.r.aJ\ I • a br. 2 ba, skyU,tlt•. 2 BR.ISOO1)1111 ulll. tst. -ante : r emaJCtos.bar~, OX JfN
u Uttdrel ctllil\p, dbl fall ' a«. llOO lltf, a, -~ private home in C.M. . • : 330 W. 81y St. • bt~y. siqJes dtll1ht S?J.UM AllC,$58.83 c 1171 W/Ume m Mt-9847, •• I I
er tamlly l'fVUt. ll50 1200 ~. ft. a Br. z ea. ..... •"•.... 6'2 U4t _ --• Cotti M111, CA 92828
.-1 Df1cowal tor ll ''*~ dilllll rm, pool. Have aometbln1 1011 • 1 1
'*91ap Act. Grw1. ::~~cu•r . Mn . :'~~~! ctasair~fd eeeeeeellll
Do \ ou fll'l'(I ,. 111:1< 1• to
~ork ~ U '10, hM' what
v.e otrtr
Secrel1tr1.1I seh u
Pnvnte-1>hl11w hn
New orhtl· t1ulli11
\ blO<'k <>ff ~~· ) In
Pount11tn V1ll1·\
BluepnQl ~n 11 <· By month.,, lt11N
'6J.ltl2,
•
l
CIO Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday. October 26, 1981
~.~ .... !~.~! ~.~.~ ..... ~~~ ~.~~ ..... !!~ ~!~ .... !!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~.!~ ..... ?!~ ~!~ ..... !!.~ ~~.!~ ..... ?!~ ~~.~!.~ ..... ?!~
HT.Al. VACI Lott Bit Onilp Lon1 Aut.omotivt t:itla Clerical
WU Cl ll Dmo Grtt1t Haired M C1' Vic. T......aNI THI• "41..._..... IMIUl..+..MCI
C'-.posurl!, lh1rbor Blvd 8rookhurat ft Adema -•T-• ..,..wvnA Claims ollloe &ooiiln& for
Call 1114-6510 REWARD! 1 ---·-I•.....,._." 1 rl I J ood ttc11lon11mics 6'15 6700 -f!aptrltnced, able to "'""""' c e ca peraon w1soo . . , . coct. s..Aet type acc~ • •ct 11 1111 or11nlll00o> will ac typinc • ~uant pbOfte "~TCl.11' F ARt.A 700 female. lat 'O/Z:S. Bull rtteptloalat. Usbt book· fceptl appllUUOnalfor the CARRY hmeal~ofunle.rCa. Sllom~rexopr· ~Q rt MMll •ho9 now rolor, tyrold. keeplns up. not followlns pot t1001 FOX • 1vatlablr llHth tram<' 982,3119 neceuary RMll ftlt<>me. Banking experience Q · roe . IM·IUl. 21~~uoh~~ l\1ent~18300, ,.,...... 5J50 lOYCAIVll aenUal.T&L.a.S • ACEM:Y COM PANION/,\10£,
Gtnual Nursln& EucuUvt uelllol lM SW'9IYtSOI
mature lndlVliduals tor ... pu M F bualoe11 expanalon in 7:»3:..., •· oa· n.
/\o.an•er.-..tv. MM9IS Strool leadtnhlp ablU· .Y!. ty Cheerful. dedicated 6IMllAL Offtel to good p1Utnt care,
Huvy ri1ure worll. Beach aru Xlnt
Muat bt proficient In benellu. Call Mrs
r11uru, 10 key by touch. Slooe1 6'2~ _
lec ....... nw.t
Nndta for multJ.b;ancb
Travel AltnCY ln Irvine
Good phone voice '
front office appt'aranct
a must Typina S.S wpm
Xlnt Hlary & company
benefit• Call Tommie w .m1 _
llttlU
tllt'ht<i • ~~ lir:::m~I ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• lOU.S lOYCl/IMW ALL JOBS FIE£ llve•in , TLC for semi·
b · R d A 1x-·-1 640-4444 1orwmwa Invalid, elderly lady. u•1ness emo eleu. ~"'''~"" __. w k d
bookkeeplni or account· Nursmi
lns ex per. belp(uJ, lite MUISIS AIOI IECEPTIOMIST
typlna. Oppt'y for ad· Exper'd., 111 •hifU. Receptionist needed for
vancement. Xlnt com· Conv. Hoep Nwpt. Bch. prlntlna franchise/or
pany benefiU. lnformaJ Brina your tmile & join Ability to handle busy
office. C.M. CalJ MllUe us! free mJr med .. den phones & work lndepen·
So uthern Calltoroia '•
excltJog ''*"'°" retailer hat 1 world ol opportunl
ty to offer you! Ptrma
nent • tempora.!'y f /Ume
poclllont In the follO\\ tna
depts. $1}0 rrto ~l ~ * S&ITI • Babyaltler for 3 dlUdren, 63:.~n *· Ref~ req.
COINM lal 24 hour ~ORTS my N. CostJI Mesa home. TILB'HOMl/HCB'T R-_.~ 4 .. 75 953.1122 MC/VISA Mon-Fri, after Spm: CLHICAL Companjoo '""..... ,. 9!16·2319. MU~-. Mature Uve-ln Comp•· •••••••••••••••••••••••COEDS.Would Love to ~ ...... .....______ --• CLERK nion. Housekeeper. Party with you. Call Sue Babysitter needed· Mon 493.7393
after9am: 645-Slm. taJ 6 Ute Ins. Top salary. denlly a mutt. Typln(I
Halrdreaaer Call . Mrs. Sione .Swpm. &•rtlng salary
r11MA1•n'f/T
• House&eeperln&
• Dlshwashtr
TIMPOIAIY P/T
• Stock
•Credit
•Gil\ WrappiJJI
Commercial lot, 63Xl25. or Debbie anytime Uiru Fri, M for 3 mo. Call: PenoMel Otflcer Fine lrvlne comp~ny Cowuelors nNded at OC
for rent or lease 1912 ~9363 old. Call Natalle&40-Sl39 for Upt., T1.1e1-Thurs. ateks brlaht ou~aoina WMCA Mon thru Fri.
Full service Salon is 642-*>t4 SllOO Cont.ct Personnel
lookina f~r the right Nurslllg Dept.. Sir Speedy Inc Pomona, C M 1916 1
1
________
1
________ 3-SP onlY.'90471. indlvldual w1lh 81 CalJAmy6GMO
62J.6019 A IAIYsrnB , months experlenre In an
operator. Eaaenll11$ For LYM l714)842·1M!O_
Hair. 7»&1> 3-ll 30. Conv. Holp NB HC./SIC'Y
lndudriol ....... 4500
•'"'CD .. -V Person needed to meet ~I Fortst Ave. Suite Al Ac<' 0 u n ll p s >'ab 1 e Counter help 6 back room
Escorts 8/yr. old girl after LaauoaBtach,93151 department. Lots of · ep~fiocer~'°n:!:~!t.edca'r~ Hairdresser wanted with area. Pos. •lUtude, xlnt Real estate offtc~ in
followln1 only. Vlllaae benefits. Call· Mrs Irvine, some typing,
IXTUOMCALL
• AuortedSM\.a ....•••.•..............
60() IQ rt industrial
.stota&e v.<1rk fur rent
24Hrs 6't 0180 school, l :SSpm to I P· EO.E M/F · pbooe .co ntacts end ---1 • c•/a..d&a prox. 2:45pm everyday. interfacing with other tu lime bn for holiday Falr Mall. 4lM-lSOO Slone, 642.-M4. ceneral office dutlu
Hair atyllst, aubleue ' Office Mgr's Assistant Call 73M8118. -THI llo.\DWA Y
Apply In pet'IOft, Mon·
Fri, IOam Upm or by
1ppo111tmtnl. 58&-l901
646-GiS
A•hp/MC,IYIM Mon-Fri. MUST BE .Buuty depa~ments. Excellent period. Apply Honey o E p END ABLE ar.,teo.ty'a benef1).! plus If! extra Baked Haros, 19069
Stonecreek EJement•ry. ,.....Stla9 week s vacation at BeachBl,HB.
be your ow n boss Gal-Fri. type JOb. Restaurants
Newport Beach. Two Payroll exp helpful. Food Prep &c Server
stations now open. Call ~ oo hr to start, raise In Now Hlrmg If you are
Chuck 875·2046 or 90 days. F/f. Must be fnendly,consC1enuous&c AT• Woodbridge, 1 rv1ne. Need a hair stylists, Christmas Salary lo Day holtffa, 3hrs pr day. f or reol or least 10.SOO
~f ~torage yard f enced.
lri<·kt'd, pa~ed. near ror
OH of Red Hill &
T' .1ularmo. Car;ta Mesa
ofdel1
Escorts/Modeling
MI F &c Couples
'~·~MC/Visa
R eC • s . Please ca II shampoo PtJ'IOfl & lgjis· $1,000. 5 dys pr wk Apply In
552-0461 aft.erS:30pm. tants. TopSalary Itta J•.-person, Stemwheeler 552·024Horal)llt. avail. most Sat. from Dependablewewantyou THlllOADWAY
Health Club Attendant. 9-12. Call: Mary Anne, from 8AM lo 4PM EIToroRd&S.D.Frwy.
549;.!1761
semi-retired perlOD on· San Clemente~. wkdys. No exp needed Equal 0ppty Empioyer
I ff l" • Tue Apr.ly m Person Slone 1 .. •••••••
Rive Gauche, NB t72·'955 Restaurant. Reuben E
Ba llroom Touch Dance 540-8177 Lee. 151 E Coast Hwy,
Tchr Trainees. PT Eves. IOOIUB'EI .:;N..:..:B::..:·'--------y. rs: ..... pm, s Pa*Jime Counter Girls o-11 lbru Fn . 6'4-84. ApJftf in person at the M1 I Terrace nc;>laurant Satlboat rrwnt.enanff • AUTO OR LIKE
11:, frontag~. Harbor &.low~&
lllvtl, t M, uvail for , .....
Home Health Aids & Tummy Stuffer 2915 RedtullCM. deaning, Newport
Homemakers to assist Restaura nt. 270 S 1111 .... -•----Beach. F/llme, Mon-
Earn as you leam. $.1000 P/time. 3.4 hrs AM DELI COUMTll
moormorepoaible Mr Thurs thru Sat See F /t i me includes
I• se ~k ""a 9688 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 '1 · 0 r.,,.,. Jobs W..t.4. 7075
Ellis. 542·9047 Harold: 548-l687 495 E MAIL CLERK weekend abilu Harolo
Banking 17th St. C.M 495 E. 17th St. C.M. w /the elderly &c Dis· Bristol. CM. 751·3567 Restaurant f' r 1 . 7 · 3 · 3 O. C d
abled 1n their homes. , ... RT ... ._.., mechanical apptitude
Rentals WCll'lhd 4600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• • ·•• • • ••••••••••••••• Dependable woman com-
E~cellent opPort~nity Bookkeeper, FIT. p /T, ~~g~~,:~dofc~::r~~~ De I 1 ve ry person , ~1th newly established some exp. prefered but for this "s tarter" Freeway Auto Supplies, 1ndepende~l bank, we will train Rusty 1 . 26242 Avery Pkw .. Mis·
,. •-THE llOADWA Y 2727 w Coast H Part &c Full lime. Crew Supervisors, work LAGUNA HILLS req. . wy'
LEASE panion to older person to
Newport/Irvine area. Pelican Restaurant call ~:~~~noyn n~~r IS~~~ -"s""io:..:;n:...V:...::l.::.eJ""o'"'. ----
w.,e&Mileage P /time evenings &c N.B.645·7100. 636-l~ weekends. Supervising Is interviewing for ~~Sales P"""'le. Part UNFURNISHED take to and rrom Doctor.
l..o('al business man and errands, etc 4"5 hrs per
v.afc. 110 ch1ldrt'n. no daY.675·~ ~~dr~~ncdeen~r~~:~r:~: foraont.549-9322 . Coast Plaza. Tht!Y offer DEHTALASSIST. HOMEMAKERS the door to door sales -.-COLLEGESTUDENTS crew of youngsters. Ex· or Full-Time. New
Pl'tS Newport areu 3 PRACTICALNURSE Emp)oymenl package IUTCta excellent benefits. lots Exper. Easy paced of·
includes. Medical /Oen· Full or p/time, exper'd. 0 df r 0 0 m f 0 r fice in Newport. Good tal ins urance, profit Non-union . Gene's a vancement and even hour5 & salary. 646-~11
Earn $6/hr houukeep-cellent earnings for DISHWASHH Mulll-Level Marketing
mg in Irvine, CdM & person with ability to Program. Earn 125.000 Bdrm. prercrrcd Call Companion, loving care,
552-1159or rers.S48-54.56.556-BS78 N A 5 h oll. t Van or large This 1s a permanent to SS0.000 & up per year. ewport. pprox.. l I rs m va e. Call for Personal In· week. Girl Friday Home car Is needed. Call (/ti me posiuon begin· sharing plan & good Market, 1080 S. Cs t have their own spa wkdys ; 646·5594 after
546' 120Q days Help W..t.d 7100 growth potential. H L e 494 3794 Rita JohaSOfl hrs. wy , · · . · 972·9'55 ..:::::..::..:..-----------Services, 558-5022. Media Merchants ning immed We otrer terview No pbooe Ex-
213-0'7·2756 EOE xlnt beneril$ & working planation. 714"32-9073
Busineu /ln•est /
Fi11ance
••••••••••••••••••••••• Accounlin& Clerk
Accu racy a must 1 Work
w I government com·
modity inventories.
General oUice knowledge helpful. Call
for appt S4G-8871 ask for
Ginni
Positions available: Housecleaners, $5.00 pr
hr to start, must have --------•I CAMW rasOH D ..... Ft Offk•
Exper'd on process Non smoker. Part. but
•.......•....•.••.••••• M•wAcc:omh
MolilT ....
car11t>ra. Fut ~rowing could be full time Exper
company in Irvine. Gd. ,p""'re .. f.-64.:..;4:...;·06=11=-----
car. Marla!KS-5355 PAIT TIM£
Housekeeper/Cook M/F Business
Opporiunity 5005 .......................
l.OSINC. LEAS!-: quit
tlltl! business. selhnR out
\l.L 5Upphes and rax ACCOUMTIHG
T.e.rt
S.Oll'fwlti
co. benefits 549-9498
Canvlsers CLERK DENT AL ASSIST.
Exp DA preferred Wanted p/time Mon &
Thurs only Top pay
~63~1~·3380~~~~~~-
1·5, non·smkr, $80. per £YEJlllS
week s:i6-1737. We are presently seek·
HOUS&l&PB ing adults with pleasant I
Sun-Thurs, some exper personalities who would I
tures tndudinR Fast growing insurance I DI.splay cases. waiting agency bas open10g tn
room 1·ha1rs. Beauty accounts receivable
Salon h.mdryers and dept Rapid advance·
b)dr<1uhl' <'hairs. mar • ment for nghl person,
Mrs. shelves and plants
1
1 salary commensurate
Also. make up, shampoo with ex perience. paid
'ACIRC
HATIOMAL IAHIC Un Organlzatt0n I
p r e r e r r e d C a I I be interested 111 working
C1p1str1no by the Sea 1n Sales & Promotion
DIET1CIAK&K. Ho1pl. 4~5702. with Daily Pilot Carriers
Part or Full Lime New Some high school
Multi Level Marketing accounllng. classes or
program Earn up lo I 1 t e a r c o u n l 1 n g SlS 000 per year CaJI for I experience fine for llus
Pe,'.sonal 111terview No beautiful company in its !••••••••••••••••
Phone Explanat1ons 1 lall glass building.
11n<l hair products company benefits. Call :
<' d 11631 9754 or Pauline 549-8900.
arter 6, 898-6809 I AJD~
PRESCHOOL i W~e kend gr.avey~rd
In Costa ~esa Land & I shift only. Act.Iv~ rel1re-
Bullding ml'luded Aiit I menl. community. Gd
il4·640·4287 I benefits. N.B. 6.11·35SS.
I l' E c R EA M Apartment Complex ~ t;W PORT Xlnl beach needs Helper to fulfill
101• uni\• SI S 000 part lime clean up & l 533·4242 · ' lock up di.ties. Must live
on site. Apartment value
--------•I 111 exchange for duties. Cookie CONiectioft Sue 846-0619
Bolcery, IGl Ptftin. Ar c h 1 t e ct u r a I 11.
Completely outfitted . lustrators. High caliber
l!•p l(){'a tlOfl Good busa professional quality
n~si. Jnd pnred to sell architectural renderiJt
;ot $30,000 & pel'$pect.ive & layout
MEL F"lJCHS man. Salary neg Call
PAVILION REALTOR George: 964.kl&.
675-8131
ln•estmtftt
Opporiunity 5015 .....•...•...........••
INVESTORS.~
Pr1vale part) wants
$700.000 ror lst TD on prime N B properly
(.all illO 8009
Money to Loan 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wutow ha~ mollt'y to loan
for R ~: Sl0.000 up, No
1·ro·d11 <'hE'<:k. no penalty
l' J II IJeni~on Assoc
G73·i31 I
\'ENTURE CAPITOL
On equity ba~is New
business Ideas Pre(er
~o ftwarl' & high
technology 855-91163 _
H )'OU want a Real Estate
Loan al BELO W
~IARK F.'f RATES call
r r 1me f 1nanr1al
Sen ICCS
52]·3477
A.ssembty Assa· as ,.aas
WAltlHOUSI
Long &c short term. as·
s1gnments available.
Come in today!
$25.00 referral bonus '
Apply at:
IC ELL T
SllYICES
2102 Business Center
Dr., 11208 833-1441 (Nr.
MacArthur Bl. & 405
Frwyl Hrs. s..s or 27957
Cabot Rd .. Laguna
Niguel. 831-0542 <Crown
Valley Pkwy. ex.it) 9-3or
Huntington Buch. Hn.
8-5. 847·38.
IELL~W S ERVIC~S
Equal()pportWlity
Employer
M/F/H
\cnture Capital, prer l1!!!!!!!!!11•••1!!!!!!1••11
high ll'<'h & software.
.ilso do equip loans
~9863
Mort90CJH, Trust
Deeds 5035 •..•...........••••••••
Sottt.r Mh). Co.
.\II types of rl'al estate
'"' estmcnts since 1949
Speci~in
2ndTDs
64]-~J 71__545-0611
S24K ml Nate
AuUJmotlve
MAIHTINAMCE
MICtwee
Need very reliable
person for maintenance
of autos &c all equlp. on
premises. Must assume
full rt:spoo. &c be willing
to work nights fo r
performance of duties.
Apply in pmoo & aak
for Stan Mashlta.
NABERS CADILLAl:
(714)8Sl·l033
E.O.E.
714-832-9073 Friendly people lo work
-with and plenty of room
Banking
CASMBS I lo grow
F u II &c pa rt t 1 m e llta Je>M1CN1 cashiers needed 10 972 9955 SAYIMC'ioS
COUHSll.OI
Fashion Island store •
Exp. preferTed. 18 yrs or
older. 64•·5070
CASHIEI CUSTOMll
SHVICE RIP. HOUSEWAll SALIS
Full or P /time. Apply ·
Pacific Federal has re· Crown Hardware. 1024
cenlly merged wi lh Irvine <Westcliff)J!B
Oceanside Federal mak-CASNEI
tng it one of Ute largest HOUSEW .... ·~ SALIS savings &c loans in the ,._ state. This expansion Full or P/time. Apply :
ha.s created 2 xlnt career Crown Hardware. 1024
opportunities in our San Irvine \Westdiff) NB
Juan Capistrano office. CHILDCAU
We are cWTenUy seek· p I t 1 me chi Id care
ing a Savings Counselor worker for Christian
with experience &c a school 16113S Brookhurst
p /l ! me C us to~ er Sl., F.V. 962-3312. Service ftepresentaUve. --. -------These are career poei· Chi ldcare, part·llme.
tions wilh upw1rd Wed, Thurs It Fn Call
CLERK
If you have a year's
experienrt> 10 a
purchasing dept. please
call. This maior Irvine company _Pa.ys to Sl ,000
a month. has excellent
benefits and offers an
extra week 's paid
vacation at Chrislmas.
lita Jot.'°"
972-9955
TELLERS
mobility avail. Salary Mon between 9.5 I
commensurate with ex· &11-6977 __ ---
perience. Xlnt frmge Clencal
b f .l k LO• ... ~YICE 'Beautiful Savings & ene 1 s pac age. CL=~...... I Loin seeks individuals Please apply in person ~ ,_....,._ i with S &c L or bank
to· Immediate opening for ; experience to join their PACIFIC FtDaAL loan service clerk Ac· 1 crowing staff. These
SA YIMfiS & LOAM curate lYPlllg computa c o m p a n i e s o r fer
32039 lion skills & variety excellent benefits
CaminoCapistrano Salary -$900+ Call , . ··-Cal: Carry
San Juan Cap ,CA 640·9350 __ ___ 972-9955
(i14 MilSl-7200
Equal Opply Employer CUllCAL
Banking PART TIME
SAV1..._S Looking for interest.Ing
IEPllSB(TATIVES work ' Typ i ng, no NOTE CLERK
TRAINEE Experience preferred. shorthand. Offitt loca·
Must be able to work lion on PCH. 3-days per
Sala. We offer pleasant week, Sat&Sw\. 646-7431
.... ,_ · & ""!!!!!!!!!l•••••!!!!!!!!!I Beautiful beach l(){'ated wora.wg enV1ronment "' bank seeks individual com~titivesalary. c•-.a.•
COSTA MESA
Full & p/time. Ca-11 Earl
LeVan: 642-7422. 360 E.
17lbSl.
SOU'IH COAST
f /time. Call Jim
Nevison. SGallll. exl
625. 3200 Bristol, C.M.
DOWNEY SAYIM&S
Equal Oppty Employer
Banking
TB.LER
Part-Time
Newport Center · 25·20
hours per week. Light
typing, experience pre-
ferred. Call Rick Mein·
tire for appointment at
(174)644-1'61.
..---W1th teller ex pe-rlence Work Temporary jobs t o t r a 1 n 1 n n o t e
close lo home. department Company
VlCKJ HESTON offers all the extras and
&c ASSOC good starting salarv
~7 30-S·~/S46-0400 Coll: Carry
Clerk Typist 972.9955
Newport omce needs
mature dependable de· I
tail oriented person
HEAVY typing (6Swpm
IBM) Hn. flex . ~/hr
Call (714)8Sl-0444 Julie
Cltftt.T~t Filing &c other Gen. of·
flee work. S750 to S8SO;
lite typing at 40 to 45
WPM ; 1 yr exper pre·
ferred. APoPlicat1ons now
being taken between 8-5
PM at U. S. Rentals
Corp HQ, 17871 Mitchell.
Irvine. (714) S56-4800
We have over 40 post
lions available 1m-
med1ately in almost
every Job function in the
bank and S & L in
dustry
Cal:Cany
972.-9'55
NEW ACCOUNTS Secured by OC 4·plex
Retvm of 11i/t'/o
hH. 552-7655
Jt® H.ulk~ l\lv11
( '""' "v\ ..... 1 '>40 •1100 I IMPERIAL s & L E.O.E. m/f /h
CLlll/TfW.
Opport unity to learn
about computer data en-
try & retrieval. Some fil.
Ing &c typing. Could
become permanent
Call· Tom Mitchell at
AMF Scientific Drilling
SS7·90Sl. F.oE M/11'
REP
IRA /K EO UG H
knowledge ind job
stability import.ant for
this company known for
its long-term employees
and excellent benefits
Beach location. Starting
salary to Sl,000.
Areo•clfM'fll/
'•nOftf/11/ Lost Ir F'OliM •••••••••••••••••••••••
~lily Pilat .................. "·:
............ 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •
SCUMUTS
ANSWEIS
Z1gug Human
Derry Forage
MUGGED
D;syllght s~mng.s lime Is rmrm better ll gives
you all that extra light so
yOU can 5" who Is get
hn,B~GGED _
Lolt&fo.d 5300 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FDutl ADS
ARE FIEE
cal
641..5611
Clerical
ADYERTISltli Clill
Tbe Daily Piiot has an opening for 10
advertlslng clerk on 1 part time basis
Will verify publication OI advertialna In tht Daily Pilot and luue related
m1n1gement report 4 or S hours daily,
houra flexible Ideal for housewife or
'ludenl full Pl•r"innd Ol'IH1rtmen1
6'2-4321
COLDWeLI.
BANl(eRO
(~"( .. , lll'4. t\Wf UllMCtt
NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING WOID PIOCISSOI
GRAPHIC llSl"tlR POiit.ion open for strong a typist with ucellent
lmmedlatt' opening in lhe creative 1pellln1/ar1mmar
serv lcu department now exists for 1kllla. Should have at
full·llme artist Requires good graphic lea1t l yw expe.tienC'9
de11lgn and spatial sensitivity. ability lo on word proceolng s~r type. some illustration or tech.nl~al equipment.. ml eatate
dr1wln11 ability. knowlcdguble tn backsround ~lrable.
production. an un~rstandlng ol retail Oynamle worklng en·
advert!llng des111n. and ability to IMt'l Ylronmtat.
dudllnea. SWrrcHIOAlD
We're fast0p1ced but fun to work for, wiUI OfWtATOI I
Call: Corry
t72-9tS5
TELL EIS Need several ex·
perienced Tellers fo r
rapidly growing baM ·
Co mpan y offers
excellent benefits and
Startin& salary.
Cll:Cany
972-ttSS
H k d I 10 to 15 years old. For 82 bed psyc h ouse eeper. 2 a u ts. I h k I d Unlimited earnings hospital in Dana Pt ale s e pg, n ry Take (ull charge of busy Prepare I meal per day av a i I ab I e to r1 g ht
Dietary n...... incl plan· I Own car. Call Mon· person Hr 5:~PM to U<'I" Th (). 559-4006 8 30PM , Monday thru n i ng , purchasing. urs,1 4 Friday. Some Saturday
budgeting & penonnel I HOUSEKEEPER needed ava!labilily For ap-
W e need a st rong f/Umeforconval.hospl. p o intment . call ,
s uper visor with a Xlnt benerils mcl in· 642-4321, ask for Ben creative & caring at surance &sickpay. App. Williams.
titude. Thi.s challenging ly Beverly Manor. 340 !!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!1•••~ position offers outslJJnd· Victoria, C.M.
ing work environment. HOUSEKEEPER
oppt'y for growth & xlnt 11 Live-In. Top wages.
benefits. Capistrano by English speaking. Must
the Sea Hospt. 496-5702. be rlean. neat. very ac·
DRIVERS WANTED
Early morning home de·
livery L.A. TIMES
Irvine &c Newport areas.
U SO + mo Jess ·
~546:=,;·0235:.=,.__~~~~-
Driver needed 1mmechat
tive le enjoy canng for 2
children Pref. non-
smoker Mu.st be able lo
run a house. cook &
drive Own room, co.
benerits. Refs req CdM.
Call AnswerAd a496.
642-000, 24 hn.
ly. Must have Valid Ca I Janitor. Part-lime " Driven Ucenae" Clean 1 driving recont Appty in Pu I-Time Eveninga.
person. 2431 W Coast Clean Office Bldngs
Highway. NB Must have own equip---ment & reliable
DIY WAUll tr•nsportabon Call for
Must be expr'd aping 1 1ntervlew.11S1..0121
20
PEOPU ti&DED
TO START
IMMBMATaT!
Fast growing Orange
Co. marketing firm needs represenlJlllves &
manager trainees SliJ!O
TO START
Hoe..,-.M<. w .......
17 I 4tt47-l I ~
& texture. 6.11·2004. I LEGAL SIC'Y POUIOID I
EllCTIOMCSPfr 1 T US T IN. Mature. Special Events Co
forskilled &c sem1·skilled I Shorthand preferred. needs S_antas. H~me vis·
or we train applicants but not required. its, oHtce parties. etc
w /good math back Califomiaexper not re-, SlO/hr. Plus. Call today
ground. Cali/ Air Na--quired. No pressure or collect: 1213)587 l.M!Q.__
t ional Guard Prior deadlines. No litigation. Printing
military helpful. Call Sa lary & benefits open. F tr pressroom h.elper,
Ci nd y Ge hring 35 hour week. l girl of-II Mon 3·30 pm·F1n1sh
714/979·7363 fice. Phone: 731-11554. Tues 2:~ pm-Finish
Experienced sheet metal Liquor Store: Stocking & · Thurs-Fri .. 9·5 Apply
man for fine shop. Weld· Cas h Regis ter ex. 1660 Placentia CM
ing a must! Wood Art perience necessary, Professional Models with
2305 W. Second St. Santa over 18. Apply between 8 portfolios needed for
Ana,542·23'3 & 3 weekdays. 1888 public relations & prinl
Gate Guard, 12:30-8.30 Placentia, Costa Mesa. work. 851·313P.
AM shift. 1131 Back Bay PfTIMl EVMMGS
D NB 644-0510 Mechanic r. · · Woods Marine NB . C muillllJ
General Mechanic Wanted. No T..tei Crrien
If yOlll'N GOOO
Ya..,..IB.lT
Butchers need inquirt. . Adults with outstanding
Salary neg. • Parls
1
, attractive personalities 1 Man ager wan led who enjoy working with I
760-8697 Ask for Rick 10· 15 year old youths
Medical I Evenings S.9 p.m. Call I
•CLlll(S
•TYPISTS
TlAMSCRJIB 642·432 l , ext . 343 between 2 p.m and 5
• SlCllT AltlS
Radiology ofrice 1n p.m.AskforAndrea , Newport Beach Medkal
• llC9'T'IOHIST~
•WOID
PROClSSOIS
uperience required I
631-4422 1.l. IMYES1'MEMT
Earn while you learn MEDICAL F. Isl. MD ff E R I T A G E i
sttks pt lime fr. olfice INVESTMENT w i 11 '
help, exp bkpg . ins.. teach you creative I
recptn., &c collect1on financing, 1031 Ex ·
644·0381 changes, investor de
Models needed All types. velopment & counseling
Kelly Services can offer
you immed., exciting
temporary posit ions
when & where YOU
want. Men, women &c children. Ex per counselor!! re-
IELL~W
No exp nee. 548-7762. ceive IOO'k comm. The 1s
MOD~·s~-an unusual oppty for
Ao ""' ~ right person Confiden· Attn Femaesonly tial interview, Call
s E "v • c E s 953--0971 Vince 546-SIB>.
2102 Business Center NEWS DELIVERY
Dr .. 1208• Irvine, 2am-sam. Sun thru 833-1'41 <Nr MacArthur 81. ft 4os frwy) Hn. 8-S Thurs. SlOO + week
or 2'19S7 Cabot Rd.. C.M .• N.B., Irv. 953-8110.
Laguna Niguel , 831·0542 Newspaper Delivery l..A
(Crown Valley Pkwy. Times to homes on
exit) Hra. 9-.3 or 18152 Balboa Penin. l&OO/mo .
Beach Bl .. 12l> E. Runt-3:~am-6am 548-&441 or
lngtoo Beach. Hn. 8-5. -'646-~•-•""13_. -----
NURSES AJ DE needed Equal Opportunity for feeding p/time in
Employer eves for C'Ollval hoept
"'!!ll!!!m•M•/F•/H•••I Applf Beverly Manor.
"!! 340 Victoria, C.M.
f181d Sales Supervim
Limited openings available in the
Oranie Coast area, for self·motivat.ed. career oriented lndlvldu1I who can
work with Field Sales People. Train,
motivate and 1et ruultt. Statlon wtgon or van necessary, Exctplional
earnln&s, plu$ Job related bt>nefita
available for lht rllhl PfOl>le. U you
can pN>duc. raulta. not ju~C talk about ~lJ call · ... for ln~rvlew. Allt ror
111r. Chane.. ~ I
I
Receptionist Part-time.
Radiologist Ofrice,
Westcliff 9-12A M
Pleasant, neat. good
1
wilb paUents, doctors &
insurance. No dktation.
646-8964
Receptionist
Beauty Salon needs so-
meone 3 days a week.
Thur, Fri & Sat. 730-i630
1n u cellent benefit PKkaae includlna 0pn1n1 on 'Ytf1 acdve :
dtotal 2.poalUon board Mutt I ~C.... If you havt at lust one yur'• exPtritnct hau l year current 1 ,.. '
ln print orltrt~ VtOl1I and • cvrttnt w ikhboard experien<ot. S
portfolJo. ull C.rl TalPma al ICZ-dll. Dyaamlc wonlnJ t D• 330 y treef
01. m to acMdul• u appoiattnc.nl. m....t, Costa Mt$0.. CA
. OMNGECOAITMLYPILDT : -•KAl\WIM, ~...1~ • ~
:.. mw.,_':!.f~~ / ~~-~':::.•.-.u. .:· ....... :~:.::.:::~.~~::: ..... / .
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • ... t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' I illil••••••lf .............. .
conds. Sales
THEllOADWAT LIQUID WALLPAPER
Sales and application
will tr 1 In. 9IJ8.a22
Apply in person, Mon· Sales
Fri, 10am·l2pm or by Hickory,.._
appomtment 586-t90I. Person for ChnJtmas
THE llOADW A Y EIToroRd&S.D. Frwy.
Equal Oppty Employer
Restaurant
PAIAllSE CAFE
New lunch & dinner
Gitt Sales. Work in NB
uea Calling on presi
dents of Cori> & purchas-
1ne agenls. Resp incl
handling esubtistled ac·
count.a & creatul& new
ones Apply at Hickory
Farms. 17th & Irvine.
WestcUff Pta.za, NB.
houae will be accepUn11 1--------
applications for all poei· SALIS
tions. Oct. 27-28·29, COMMBCIAlLE.
10am·3pm. Apply at El\,.tensive on lhe job
600·0 NewPort Center tralhing. Must be highly
Drive. Fashion Island, motivated self starter
N B. Income from property
management plus a
--------•1 draw while you learn. l\ttractive com mission
schedule &c benefits
pacakge offered. Call
Ken.67H700
restaurant positions
THE GOOD
EARTH
AND YOU ... Sales ........
cmtlil DflcM! HICIOIY FilMS
Oppty sell 1ourme1
Welcome The Good food a 6 gifts for Earth Restaurants and holidays. Flex. hrs. Fashion island ~ Bakery to Santa Ana Westcllff Plua642-0972 and Newport Beach by 1"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1111!!!!!!!!!•!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!~ Joining our team. and I'
help us bnng good food SALIS
to good people. We are Ol~AHIZllS
giving the public a new SSOO-SI SOO/• choice in famtly dining . fres h. who I eso me, F f'1: or PIT sales oppt'.y
nutritious rood , pre-se~ling Kodak. mm d1S·
pared with little or no tnb. nationwide from
preser vatives If you I yourhome ..
share our commitment EASY EASY EASY to whole!IOIT\e food and They call you. Call Mr.
good health. and have C lose arter 3pm
the ability to com . ..::6..:.;75:...;·JO«~""'·----
mun1cale effectively
with others. please come
and talk with 115.
We are luring for the following positions.
•Ltne Cooks
•Food Preparation
•Utility
·Juice&SaJad •Kitchen Help
In addition Lo an ex
cellent salary and com
plete benefits package,
s ........
Children's St.ore. retai1
exper1enre pref. Full
time. Pettie Marche
642-4714
SALIS
Per&0n needed for retail
Brus Bed St.ore 3 days
per week. Ca.U: 64.2-2712
SALES
TOO Ytlll
FOi AllJllS?
we ofrer full tra1n1ng I Immediate aperungs for
with pay. paid vaca· 15 sharp guys & gals to
lions. and rapid advan· travel U.S major cities
cement opportun1t1es I with unique business Apply between 2 and S group Transportation
pm at either locallon rurn1shed. 2 wk paid
training. Must be 18 or
3810S PlazaDnve over . single. well
Santa Ana groomed & free lo start
210 Newport C•1 nter
Drive
Newport Bearh
TheGmu~
An Equal Opportunity
Affirmative Action
Employer M /F /H JV
1 m mediately F o r
personal interview call
Neil Grogan 645-4840 or
apply in person to The
Ambassador Inn ,
Harbor Blvd , CM
between lOAM & 5PM
Mon· Wed. only. Parents
welcome at interviews.
Trade your old stuff for
new goodies with a
Claslli!_~ ad, ~2~.8 _ .
sr6Wltirs
NEEDED
Eam $30-l&O per Wilk;
Trips & Prizes. W •· · a., ... 1n.wt.
I I •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 26. 1981 <: 11
HttpW...a JIM........ JIM~ ,_tlllwt tOIO Mkcel••• IOIO Pih IOl7 ...... lwl/ Mototcrdtt/ ~/ AMtotW--4 tltO ••• • ••• ••••••••••••••• ~~ .... --..-......... IOJO ••••• .. ••00••00• .. ••n• ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ....................... C..._. tOSO Sc.ohf's 9150 Ctisalc:a 9520 •00••••••••••0"'"'1••-
S.ltspe,.., lld1t1' hip YOllllt Ma • ~ ...................... Pr armltn love1e•l1, lapidary 1aw, pindtr, WHrtECOCKATIEL ....................... •••11••••••••••••""'' ....................... MICiHIUYB o1t
ra hloo ''°"· Npt. kh tkMa.t ·towllarlw\tewlt C3A~t~PemilKIOOO, aood eonllr , oeed rov under, poll1ber, l Male,w/cqe.llO. Cllrt .... IMtP ... 'U Yamaha Dirt !Jake 19711 Auburn Roadater, Top dollars for Sport.a,.
aree Salary+ aoed lJ l'fl. S4 llt. Call p ~DJcoodaccu1orlea. triD 100.W-0311 ~P:..P-5*~-~ _ Boel1Au1Jable All arc Runs1reat.nf!fd!.m11Wr 1utu stecrinii. brks' Cara. Sup. Carxu>cn.
benefit.. NI' pltimt 211 cm .!.nil$ · D /080. Jld. llble w/4 chain sz l.tbl1oc clvind 115, ao· Rabbits. A11TyJle9 Coett GUiid uorvved work. S200 or best orrer 11r AM1t'M la~ tilt. 91~. AudJ's
Ca11M4-'7\00 ..=.:::-recliner $40, 3 swai Uuucmualcbo1'45.an· ». Rei.• lnro.<r(nto-' MIJ5212. luther, blark and AskfotV1CMGR
SalH IOU l•mP• S'7 ea '4S-9S2l Uqiw min. ~r aew. o oavey'a Lotbr Balboa '73 K.awuui ZS-0 F.nduro salvtr Nt\ltr ~•• t~rf'd JIM MAlJMO llCIUITlll .................. _•ff•••••••••••••••••••• ft.J ___ marh. 135. M' brome Recl•tered f wire P vlllo • complete Buket r11:H~. 2S,Ol2mil~ m 1roo VOLJ(SWAfHH
Eim11Uve torrll nm ' V; Ii ... HINALAYANKl'ITEN Sectlooahofll H rrulon candle boldPr Ill Ital. Haired Temu SNde GBO w/akl per onl takeull.6.11-M'Tt ·7~ linrkl.tn Xlnt l'ond 18711 Bearh81vd "
utklnl brl1bt. 11 ............. _ ....... Cr tam pt /wht M. areen. &old, white. marble ovmbed t-Ol· S h ots LI sc W 1 ti bell rates ~or ovfr· '78 YAMAHA ~X xlnt Ntw Punt, New lnl HUNTINGTON BEACU
iresslvt Re(Nltcn who MUST SILL aptn, 10 wb, 1150. plllow backs, alnt tm fee/cor rnd table•· Set Trained. SlUl to t1111t nl&h\ HMoos rood. to nu t800 080 18.000 On& nu 14%·2000
can l.1'1nlt &: arow rtch! Ant. lqu etc1lln1 by c11h.M2·31&3 of 5 llaUan art books p_~r_!1_. Muat Part •-..£.· ti 7609363MarkllJS2929 98181<18,11111 88'13 WI....._
673-2902 • 1 c~ ii Job .,... 1040 ..,..een ..:!..... •• ~ er . Jolln Wayne Tennia Club .. __ ~-....................... uiu I • 67 c .... s C•• YOUIUXOTIC For latervlew call IHI Hofarth dated "'"· SI Wt bed 6 7$.W-71.54 ~ -·· S 9060 '80 S k' GN400X 70 • l"llall
lk . tallllMI pl n ....................... Drwr .,_......., 3 ahell Me bersbl ..--. I 0....., 1090 AU. TIM mpg, 1400 rr. ireat t:lltru rl~un Ulue with & llmSH CAlS Sec ..... , .... ~ea. ~e KEESHOND Pups. AKC. hdboard. padded r11la, m •• ,,Pl433 ••••••••• .... •••••••••• 57 a mCH handllng. Some dcnlli. bl11ek top Htark int Df I '-eo 1oo1cln !fNIYWl'.l In "'"'7"~Ja Ch 1 M F p •. heater, xlnl ~'Ol\d. S200 - _ _. WeberSpinetPlano " sllllnice 5000milcsnew $llJ00000:,48•1J17 ve opment ~ Brlttulca. Have 185-0 amps re. I · et"' beat off r. 7 28S' used 4' Chain Unk A·l condition, '875. Custom built 1'10. Faml· $85() • ~o:of~~:f:n!T~it=~~. appr1laal. Will aell for ~~1~.iS:aft~p::i t >' • Dbidreaaer &. mirror+ 2 Fence w/PoSta & Flt· 1 ty or Sjust ret~ trom i.97-8236 494 2407 4 Whtel Drhn 9550
Call Carol At'152>8l41 -Cllb lrmnecllat~ly. ' ni&ht stands. top quall· tings. SlOO.OO. 54a..2597 Yamaha Organ, 10 OC· 21 m.os. C~UIJe in So. Motobecanc under 700 lnl ~ ... : ................. . ~ ~ --P SHIH TZU p\lps, AKC. JI,.11751080 642.5872 r r4PM. ta v e 1 p e d a 1 5 Pacific. This yacht has run!$ xlnt. Mu.~t sell Im 72 ford Bronco, rebuilt. SICllTAIY Player Plani>. Cher-S250aodup.Caahonly. --·---White-top bar. black , P recuss.lon. Bench'. e\leryt~lng. Xlnl cond. med.$350.S.S7~Ul6 hard tu~. MJ(t top. Xlnt
or secretary trainee. ''*OOd. •ecula r • 638-.U. O~w~t~ ~b~(lZ)so~j.· padded frool. s~lves, 31 $2500 or beat offer PP wall finance ron· Motor Homs, S../ ~~:245c.11!~ d~~~' ~\~~
Nwpt Center Law oCfke. lfllllll·Tlnk. to rolls. X1nt POODLES 'R ·PEOPLE fee tabfe Sl.50 all ·Gold stools. &U-2902 960-0l'12. ~dtr real ~-tale lrade. R ... /S'--f 160 ..,,IOO
Ask for A 644-6516_ Con&Uoa. $DIG. l:vea. Home-raised Tcup/Mln. 1 ,.,. e 0 l ·,. h 1 · s2• Remo d e 11 n g s a I e ! u.ii.... 1_3 Cax11es by seucr. St7o.ooo ·-..,. ..,. 116 ·1$47. fls-w? Groom &board 5"-2848 H ' a r . "· Ev lhln • b I _...., v.,. a 714/83S·5899 ....................... T ... 9560 --------1 -====-=='-'· =="-I 493-3905 ery g goes, s e v ....................... Lid --Beautiful '80 f;l Dor<idu rvc11• •SICnTAlllS• SP£CnlUM AKC Doby Puppies. Xlnt -, mg mat ror gar. $50, 25 K2 710 SKIS 190cm o 14, new, never used. MO(or Home. Lo Mi 81g ...................... .
Sht. 80 Dk. Finance or JAPANESE~QUF.S !:!!,es & Temperrnent. N~~ f~~:: ~.m!l!l~ 4X8 oak panel•_,~o. Salomon boots·. Equ1u~ ~~l7r~~~er, extra& $2950 eng, air. compl sell cont '71 cl·hevy Suburb<1n. r.7K
Mort11gebackfrnd 1 Lo••l prices. 50t N . ...,.,.536-91562 f 151so.s&.12 stereo cab. S3Cl. 3 ~fl. 9""·10°"' boots S400 ,,_ 2Srt. on Ford Chassis ml es iiuto. ,ur, pt>iH•r
must/Fashlslll8,000 Newpott Bhtd.Suiu 203 Loving 2 yr old F rame ·--book ~helves '60. large "8·0M5 . HEPl"UHE 16 w/b1g eng. Abo a car $19~ Offer 6736336 ~
l~W4 '
31oo·w Coast Hwy
Newport Beach
642.~
WANTED!
I.ate model Toyl>Ub and
Votvos Cull us
Exp Conaultant Owl N.B Sat &M I Sun 12-2 Shepherd Hl.L'Slcy. $10. Sola.$300. Loveseal. $200. desk ~· blue ~veseat trader motor custom lrlr com pl wared Nace 642 9666
LnReindenAl)',lnc S48-76CB ~~~~~dintble. ~c:>~~~wta~~· ~.~ ... !~! sails Sleeps2 Sl,950 da condilloo.6.11·00 7sc~~1'f! 1~ TOTOTA·YOUO N=~=;:~~! ~~ ri:'v!1r'v~!! Doberman puppies. bred AnhqueOak ~1.2182 . SUlflOAIO ~~0280) 851 0040, ev (7141 TroUtn, Tnl'f.. "70 537 633.'.lor~ 8829 " .. H~ "'' -.... ~u ror cood nature. Descen· w h land $200 v· 10 ft ch k d t ....................... c ......... . l!!!!!!!!!!!!!••••••I PSO. 1@':1004 danls or Storm. Reds M!~k:desk'.SISO StoWesaShtf w~~eHunttn;:,, p~~r Fo r Sale 47' Ketch Dor Sael· Paradise by You 9570 ,...o.t lOlerHO.t•H SICllT~ AaUque tlpr chain, and blacks. Dam has 119 Wrought Iron Pauo tble cookware. 20 pc set The surf lie ille new. $145 Sailboat. hve a board. the Sea. 221., rt Ideal ..................... .. OFACI beaut. set oC 6, Value CbamptonS in blood line. & Chairs. S2SO Sft mir \I er y be s.l Ide a I U'l·lll4 ms tr & euesl bdrm, trailer In Garden Set 1980 nn:v1 t: \Jll ·~ton.
••IC moti'va•....t ••ctra'"" Jl250,1tU M494-!00t 848-9979, 7!D-.100 S M bl bl Chrtslma.sGift S375 . shower. Cull galley, boat LU\g. Across Crom S-.1m Goud r11od S4 mo Top Dobr
Pid ...,. <eu.... ·1 B N I ror, 75. ar e t e 957-&'IC» D1v1ng Compressor rutty ""'WP Nwnt Slip· I 3 ~9 7!166 with front oUsce ap· rau at on al Cuh Gorgeous pair male Shih· tops, 150 ea. Set or 2CFM 110 v. 3000 PSI n1nme~1",.,. (2' 13•-1"83 ... u ming poo private pearance and outgoUii Resister. Obie Drawer. Tiu puppies. AKC ~hls f/S 64,2,5170 c.-F. ..,., "" , ......., beaches Call Grare Autos W...ted 9590
personality Must be de Late 1800 era. $800 Shots. Unusual Cbam· ei -" '-Casabella (~ew). Great + 72 30 man $ l400 We s l w I gh l p otte-;:-(2131 620-4402, eves (213> ..................... ..
pendablew/goodbu.si 95'1·8170 pagnecolor.MS-16'5 SeabergJukeBox. Xmas gilt. Reversible. 575.3504 sailboat. 14'. 2-6'6" 256·1947494-9154oreves WENES>YOUR
F'orYourCar!
JOHNSOH & SOH
Llilcollt Mtrcwy
2626 Harbor Bh·cf. ness ~n.d orga.ninlJona! Antique Slot Machines. Codtr Spaniel Puppy, :i10 with 4 tulip lights. $125. Store, le .... ..t, berths. main & Jib. lolS 49.Hl!'.46 GOOD USED CAR!
qualities. Call Jdt Jule Box~. Solid .Brass champ. lines, AKC. Mirrored 3 pc custom 73().0986 I• 1095 orequip.11996 494·6633 Auto5t"Ke,rorts Anythmgcon.\ldert'd .
Berkleyat966·2667 Ca1hlleg.1&t.ers Maacao· black remale. s2so. book shells wtlighting. F~r sa~LUMBER. 65 i.osiNo'L'[;..s["~~i;~ Celest l11t Na\11gat~n &Accessoms 9400 19771.hru lUAO
Service station altendan1 tlqu:i !111-11173 731-6995 ~642·5170 pcs 2x4x6~ Ing, new. gd ting business, selllng out cl us. taug~t at sea ..................... ..
l'o~la Mesa 540-S63<1
WeP!t,. OVEK 3·lOPM Apply al She FrH toy 1045 Boys Bdrm Set, Brund cond. S12;S. 675-1575 aft ALL suppUes and fix · ~board the~. schooner Saddle tanks: custom
Stal ion 17th & lrvlo1 ......... '!'!............ New . 2 rhests. book ~ lures including: Shearw.aler. by Ca{>: made for early shorl
Bl\ld.NB. ~ .. ,.... shelf, .. .,<l, Chrome & New Spanish GalJeon s· Display cases waitin• tam Ernie Minney. This whlbase Dodge tru(•ks ";.':.:".::!a--.......& 5 yr old Weimaraner & 4 ....,., Shi· od 1 Onl S700 h . • B " 2 day course 15 a no· $100.pr 536-~ .... loolr
f'or Your Good
VW. PurscheorAud1 -ro:-..-,,,_ mo. kitten . Shots . glass dinette, $350 Pm e . Y · room c ~urs, eauty nonsense approach to
213/S97-6942, 531j.2338 Schwinn 10 spd , Sl25. 640-86118 Salon ~a1rdr~ers and use of the sextant & pos1· Autos for 5* tt I IR Or~ C-.ty
2925 llartx>r Blvt1
COSTA Ml-:Si\
STAR'f OOU£G£
INlliREE~
wmt MORE
1liAN $20,00).
Fwaitwe 1050
642·5170 PERSIAN RUG· 2 hand hydraulic chairs. m1r· lion finding al sea by use ...................... .
2 pc Custocn Suede Sora. made all wool. immac. rors. shelves and plants or the sun & the 110249 IM PORT ANT ••00•00•00•••••••••11•• S600 Rattan Papa san cond pvt. party, art. 6 Also. ll_lalce-up, shampoo tables At the end or the NOTICE TO * * I BUY * * chm, $100. Antique mir 731-11630 and hair products. 2nd day the student will READERSA.'lllJ 979-2500 \'W PORSCHE-AUOI
145 E Coast Hiway
Good use.d Furniture & r.:QLJ75.642·5170 WHIT(D Call6.11-975.tor have the ability to ADVERTISERS
Appliances-OR I wilt Queen Ann Antique din Ml __ arters.898-6809 __ navigate his own boat The price of 1lelTJ:1 We'll luy
Or Sell
Your Cleon
lmpori On
at Bayside Drive
Newi><?n Beach 67} 0900
Mn.,_ t""d'" tfl t ,
ld, a· ~rt11Ht'\
sell or SEU.for You rm set. 4 tu back chairs. Leather tools & leather TY, Radio. anywhere in the world advertised by veh1de
MASTEISAUCTlOH S800 Reasonable 840·8709 Hlff, Steno 1091 Isl class Nov 7th & 8th. dealers m the \'eh1rle Premium pnreio
paid ror illlY used car
1foreign or domestic I
in good conait1on. '°" AO.'ll •or tr·~ ~t~· e· ~ ~·~ "e' ) , .i :>)I
';;r o t?'., r JC.it ~ A·n I
64M•l6. ll).9625 642·5170 eves[wknds. ....................... Cost or course $295. classifie d dd\ erl1s1ng
-SALESALESALE Wurllltereleep1anoS500. Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr materials included columns doe~ not an
' •31: I "°" "'
.. ~ ArT'11 \,• t~r...-)~a"
yoi.; C~JkJ accumul.rtt m "
than 520 000 l'l' sc'lo-.
Hprf s no" ,t yo..
~te on tt.I' V• "3M
Eoucamn Ass·st.\ri..P
Pr09ram t \. :AP the
qovfmmt'1t ... 11 mam• rr.
t'atn1~ yo.. S.Jllt' ~trr
Ol1f for a m4.i•!T1Jm ot
58.100 Trien. tf ~
.iualify. tile Army Wiit iOO
•on d St 2.000 eaucat1011al
~on.is T'lat s S20 100 ,~
;1.st wee yt-a~
co• more alleut
St"OO • 5.' ,1.."'' IOC~
.lrm; Pee~. •e· n. ""
..:.-y o=c ~ • ... ;, •
282 C:Bf>:
AP.MY.
BE AU. YOU CAN BE.
cem11m~1m
llltilftll lttl 9&2.U21 -'* 493-1911
SR Aa 542~'3
I IUY FUIHtTUIE
Les 957·8133
KING INNERSPRING
EXTRA FIRM mattress SAYITJIS AD set. never used. worth AJnalldtrP'onter $530, sacr. S248 del.
P_.__ Never used queen sz, ...,..,..ta.·· worth $399, cash only HIWPOIT llACH ua11y ho fALLAm'JQUE S218 del. Us me.
& OOU..ECTORS 7~-7350
SHOW&SALE MUST SIU
Cobeheld Mahogany Obi. B~d
OCT. 2'. lO. ll w/matlress. Night st.and & MOV. I & dresser to match. Like
1 10p Sun 1 • 30 new. Must see to ap-. m: · ...,; precjate. Only $1000 or
MfWrORTBIHN be5' oUer . Maria South off Fwy~ toll«rf~lload 631 -7797 a ft 6P M
1'ltlSADADMITSl weekdays, anytime
OR MOIE. $2.25 weekends. U no answer ror du.ration ol sale please keep trying. •••••!1191••1 Bunk bed : solid wood, DEALERS. Wbofeule handcrafted. out.stand· Halloween Sl'tdal. 40• ing quality $115. S3M926
EnJllsh loadonsale6pm Ul couch, 0 1 bide-a-bed,
Thuni Oct 29 Jonathan blue. &reen lt. yellow
Blxby's 2911 Croddy floral, eod tbls & coffee
Way..SA,.2911 tbl. while w/glass.
2 anlq abort poster bed lamps, painting, all
rrames, sgl. 1'00d. $12:5 coordinated. Sold as
ea. 644-1411 group only. <&97-4116.
Exec Walndt/Clitomt Klngsize bed and head· deak • 1plast1c fl oor board. S.l50. Call after 5
saver. S75 Firm T I\ _,645-:.=..997~7,__ ____ _
w a In u l b ook c as e 7·pc youth bdrm set incl
w I aloveablt 1helves. corner group, walnut
$360. ~toldgame finish . S400/0 BO.
ST ART NOW tble w /2 cbahs. S200. As--'-1s=1..-:;..2496=·----
L o ca 1 Amwa y dlS sorted l«JP',.!J.ality anti· Girls' bdrm set. S300
t que tbls. num $100 to Sofabed, converts lo tr rti bu . orr orgoodfers op $200. 498-47<11 eves after queen sz bed S200
po unity or earn 6PM "" .... · ings You pick the houni · 40"0·'-'22 . .
We train. For interview ~pl•sa· IOIO 8' Sofa with matching ~7·5675 ....................... love seat, good cond.
. HARBORAREA $150 make offer.
TUCHBt..OAYCAIE APf>tl.ANCE SERVICE 342.lJSo.
4 :30-6 :30 PM. Mon Fri. We boy used appliances ...:K:.:::it"'"ch;::,,;e::=.n=-c-ab-in-e-ts-.-sin-k-.
642-0411 -WueUfeC()tld .• guar. $150 . Gas o\len S25
Ttoc..,..sAkM i.aoces. 549-30'77 Porl/dishwsher S25.
Preechool. exper'd. Fu I IUT APft.IAMCIS 846·5482
Ume. 10:00<6:30. 642-0m Les 1157-8133 STUNNING KING sz.
TEL&'HONE WATERBED. 8 dwr ped.
base, dk wood. 4 cab. w.
cane accent. padded
sides tuck liner. hlr. 3
s helf hdbrd. $300.
631·3SS3
Maple bureau & bed $200.
sofa Sl.50, rel r SBS, slv
SlSO. Perfect $150
548-2060
3 cstm bar stools, solid
oak, vinyl uphol. gd
cond, U-0 ea, 675-1575 an
6.
Bedroom set, queen
matt. S165. lamp $25. cor.
·:1..;ma.::i~='-""'i..=::.z..--1 ree. end tables $50,
camper shell SlOO.
675·'135
Kil table 5 rhams $25 1 Men 's & women's 3 s~ wrnly. Free dehvery ~ 4192 d ude an) appllrable
b w T v S 2 5 . bicycles SSO ea. Gail 1'8. 646-1786 Must sell 14' Force 5. taxes. license. transrer
Dresser SIO . wrought 673-628S ev. days 645-4991 SONY tape rec . mod xlnl cond . S625 best or fees. rrnance rharl\ei..
I 350 od I TA fer 631 2198. 645 J6S2 rees for air polluuon con· iron. g ass lop table 4 Pool Table Slate $300 r r. amp .m e • lrol de nee cert1(1cal1ons chairs·SlOO . sect I ~1728 lllS5, luner mod. ST~ 5o.5 w1trlr. 2 swts sails, or dealer documentary
sora-$15 . dbl bed·S75 . DUAL mod 1229 l it fast & unsinkable. S79S
mens leather coall> sz r A Y TY .14.QQtoHer_s:!~~ ror q1.11ck sale ~ r:se:~~~~~:~~~r~
~~ ea i 6'5-Jl529 M 1crowa.ve receiver. Stereo Concept 11.0 IOOw loats SI / b\ the advertiser
Wicker table glass top Free movies. Sl7S romp 1 pr channel. xlnl sound D • L. Pl 9070 • 9510
ConsiCJllment! 11
Call Our
Used Car
Mon09er
TODAY1!'
831 ·2040 495.4949
Soddltbac~ IMW
Minion Vitjo
Sf>p ] I
SOUTH COAST
Dodge
4 h ' r ct' 750-5832 system Also T ac AIOO ocou GNeral w1 r airs. per con . ---. e ...................... .
nat color. 34"x34'". $400 Microscope cass. deck. S750 takes Quiel amenable retired ~i5'j;;;~x~;;~;,00••••• WE IUY 642·9~ Millipore. Prof lab aU.494·84'12 couple need Uve aboard $9f>() WE PAY USEDCARS&TRUCKS
9pc Pecan din sel·cane model. Mint cond. Allee speakers. new cost slip, 42'. Newport to 673-6883 COME IN OR .
back/crewel uphotlbur. 645-6600 $400/ea; sell pair for Long Beach. Call collect • TOP DOLLAR CAU.. FOR
fel/rbina closet1 $975 Assld books. Nal'l Ge<>-$500. 846·~ (213) 432-0507 Anti~ws/ FREE AmAISAL ~ graphics. TV Guides. 10 loats Ii M..-G 0 ING CRU IS ING-> Cla,slcs 952o FOR USED CARS C'ormier·DeLillo
WATERBED yr collection $95 s...i • Mature exp adult wants ....................... ALAM MAGHOH CHEVROLET
u. • • . UfWP'*' PREnlEST PO rung s11e, complete with 536-1154 ....................... w o r k I n g b e r l h . NTIAC/SUIARU 18211 BEACH BLVD
a II accessories and 4 gal Sila.stir RTV mold· Get.trol 901 Oj anywhere PO Box 2452 '57 T·llRD 24110 llarbor Blvd Jlt:NTINCTON BEACH
bookshelf headboard making rubber kil, ....................... NB INTOWM! COSTAMt:SA 847 L087 Ne·~ ~ond1t·o S200 T 549-4300 549-1457 .., OI' w ~ 1 n $3l 22 /gal., retail WANTED Pontoon1 to loats,Stor.Jt 9090 IES Offet! 549-llll
714/751·8516 .66 al.536-7154 build houseboat tor ....................... <O<r>UKZI PORSCHE G_..,. S. 8055 •.. n .. cel=•---school pro1ect. 548 '!163 S Aaltos, lmporW _. - -DRY STIIAGE wt ..... ED ••••••••••••••••••••••• ................. :..... W.t.d 8011 Avon Redcresl w1oars. "'"' MOVING SALE! I .. ,,,,................. motor mOWll, & or 2 hp Alluv. usd thehoppon unil \ IMW 9712 Din rm set, pool table. Wanted. The Liller ··A"' Johnson,@JO 84&-0021 Monthly boat & RV I tncon~• ert epurrhJ\I' ...................... .
Victorian Sora. chair .1 For lhe Pepsi Cba.llenge lloclh. M.-storage ror any m.e. 24 or lradt• in or ~our l'lran ORAHGE COUMTT'S
Allquah.tyllems Murh Game (Under theCaps s...i.-tOlO hr secur1l). free Por~che ("ht'<·kv.11hl~ OU>EST
MIS" c 7""' -rv sort "--"·) w·.u pay -:-.....--launching & washing Toda\ I I . --_._ Si'oo lo tlte~ ho ....................... privileges Newport l!M-0 Ford Sedan Deluxe., :u~ & Lg dresser 3 tier n1te 1 r d 67~ 111 jMarine refrigerator Dunes 1131 Bark Bay roncourse trophy v.in '.IJIJ
table swivel chair Anlq tn sone · AC DC NORCO brand or Newport Beach I ner. ground up restora j ..U. ~!!.!tej60cl!_Sh760-1236 WANTED Blark leather 'lew j300 SS7·2:>87 6440510 ·~~-·-"o u" 1
4 car Gar sale Daily ! motorcycle jacket s~ze 71., Hp. Ev1nrude OB. lion, Sl2,SOO. 851·6226 I w ••••1>u> U•••l S1i1les ·Scrv1ce-Leasmg
Clothes Lumber. pipe. I 40-42 & bla~k leather n~· Com pl rblt S3000BO. I '5 7 T-llRD ·• M t. '" •·• ... un ' Roy CcrY~r.lnc.
rurn. evervthing 1741 mg chaps in good cond1· 642-4764 T ,e..&1 All orig. xlnl cond WE BUY I Rolls Ro~re BMW s l A ;.,. CM hon.Call646-4629 rmtspornMOfl 1 540·7111da644i777e\ t540Jamboree _ao a na '' C-ASH p ID FOR USE 12' G,laspar, trans doll} ....... ~ ................. ,,. ~·""'c. red e-:-l .. black CLEAN C "RS "1Jewrv.r1 Beach 64()._~ u---1 1060[ ORUM SAETS' D not. at1on ta.nits. compl Moto --"' •ra... 9 I 40 '" ...,.,., ~ "' I -"" --~ rta;cv-s 1nl .. 1mmac cond AHO TRUCKS Brand nev. assume
••••••••111111••1111'"1 i10.i100 asnted~.836-~ ....................... $!4,000 8928900 962003.5 I Bl k .,.,,,. "-Arab Gelding 8 yrs loots p 9040 Puch Moped. only 280 mi • · :.. _::J.. ease ac """'· sun·
old gd dtspos1l1on. gd Desperate young mother • OW« Arter 6pm call Sue: 11928 "A .. ROADSTER roor. a c Jordan. ' d II ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• R I bl 752 1750 show prospect, SIOOO or an sma so.n. oe s 24 . Tolly C rt C· b SS9·93S6 . ep 1ca, rum e seal. _ ~t.jana._760-2637 refngera!f>r. kitchen ta· Cruiser Lo~a hrs tu~~ -soft lop, 5000 nules. Pin '69 BM~ 2002. wht. snrf. 4 u---L....&..t"-~~ 8065 ble & chairs. Please call lh · .. _ ... Lo. ded SELL idle items with a lo components in war spd . xlnt rond $3150 ..,,_..___ Answer Ad #388.642-4300 new rou~"""' a Dally Pilot Class1r1ed ranly · rost $12 ,000 Call Lyle 898-2521 ext
....................... 24 hrs w/everthmg Tandem Ad 642 567~ _ Make orrers~ 9S3-l.220 2116 20 piece Stainless Steel -· lrlr. 714.5544343 cookware set. S22S M.sicol ------
494:.2522 hi I 1 IOll ~artner wanted 25" Skip ___ s rm:aa I Jack, C.C lmmac.
TAN CARPETING ••••••••00•••00 .. ••••11 loaded Incl H.H slip, grade, l20yds, Alto sax, Bundy $250. Sill mo .. + equity dep ~1uud ,,.. .. 9325 Perfect born for begin. ~ ~ ner. Xlnl tone/cond. 557·9327=-:... ____ _
Jewelry 8070 536-4926 PARTHBt WANTED
....................... Al S Y mah ....,,. 34 Cl CHB art cabin CASH IN ON YO UR lo ax a .. a._,.,. N E G L E C T E 0 Collectors LudWlg Drum trawler Smgle diesel
VALUABLES', Get Set .642·4764 lmmac Loaded Shp
Paid Handsomely for P.A. SPEAKERS NB $439 rno +equit y de·
select pieces Gems. Pair or M1.lche,l,l BC 84 pos~7·932'7or494·109S
Pred-0us stones. Gold. speakers Vil~ 6 stands
Estate Jewelry, Crystal. N~w cond1t1on -low Mfiftd
Bronze AnllQues & Ob-mileage . Gre.at for Eledric 11 jetsd'art646-7741 Ask for small-medium size club S9500· Make Offer! Mike. "tualions and casuals. 1 yr Car guar
Gentleman's Gold Nug. l60Qobo. 7l405l·8Sl6 MS-0715
W h OWT MXR PHASESHJM'ER gel ate 60 .. 100 .. dual controls. 1977 23 fl Mako. 1978 235
Quartz Movement. 24 Newly rebuilt $'75. HPJohnsonO/B.Lohrs.
diamonds. Appraised al Barcus-Berry PT.e-amp. loaded wt ~em trlr $1000. Sell S3SOO OBO. $45. 714nst.SSl6 Great terms. Make orrcr
768·5SSS --54-0-0312orll73-8310
Antique French Gold & Office Fw aitve l 6 HP JOHNSON WITH
Diamond Ladi.es La pel E .. p•llf 8085 8' BOAT. PrisUne. Cov· Watch. Value S6SO sell ....................... ers & tanks tst SSOO
$350. Beautiful piece Walnut Exec Desk & takes. 673-'7220.851·8959 494-7004. C r edenza . Exec 3 • U ·ru .
2 SALVADORE DALI High back Chair, $700. 1 n1 le SportfLSher, 494.2522 F /B, fresh 320 lwn eng.,
Uthos; 8 Montz lithos. Lro 3 palntin" g Mural, 10 fast. xlnt cond., loaded. sell or trade. 675..§856 " 644·5983 all 6PM.
V, rt. endangered Hawks in 3 meter 1cw111 wool + 1 Oils. Called "Last Su"-13' lost.~ beige mink for Vicuna .. ,. coal . 536-7154___ per $400. Lrg oil. 5X4, w /l yr old Mere 40. bow
. 494·2522 rail side rails, 4 cushion
91 ·1 ENG•E SPECIAL
INCLUDES THE FOLLOWING:
-MAIM IEARIMGS
-ROD IEARIMGS
-C OU HTER SHA.FT
IEARIMGS
-CHAINS
-RAILS
-TEMSIOMER KITS
-RINGS
-VALVE GUIDES
-ALL MEC. GASKETS
& SEALS FOR EHGIHE
-POINTS
-AIR,,flLTER
-OIL FILTER
-G~S FILTER
-OIL
-HUTS & WASHERS-
AS HEC.
-REBUILT RODS
-LINE BORE
-CASE SAVERS IF MEC.
"WITH ENGINE SPF.C f AL ONLY
PRESENT THIS AD FOR A
FREE PORSCHE BAG ~, •.
MocWlltry 8071 IBM typewriter. ~Not s w i v e I s e a l 5 ~==-----Kini 1iu nter bed Mir· ....................... Selectric Portable szs w/backrftts, bow and roted canopy hd.brd $425 Sm a II RN D M a chine 675.3123 · · stern Ii ghls, near nu bat· 91 I TUME·UP SPECIAL
Shop. Going out of Busi· tery + rover. $3695 o e 1 1 • L I k e N e w OfflCE WTUll 67~0 dn, 673-4585.
Machinery. Lal.he Mill, Bond copier. lobby etc. omce rumllure. furniture. e.xer desks. tr 8Sbp Chrysler ene.
Etc. Worth SU.000. Sell cbalrs, credenus, w/trlr.S600
000 0B0 768-~ ~111.U. Terri, 7SZ..l.194. 644-01915 ~d••• IOIO oe.·Tbun. U 'UMIUTI -=~;:;.;;...;='-----••••••••••••••tt••••••• SAVIN 220 Cop y Financlna•aUpavall. MacbJne. Good Conch· , ___ .... M6-00ZI..._.=---
tion. 16 roUa copy paper
• ne• etectrollalic mix. $.125 for Ule lot. Call
87}7llO. Mon·lhur.
21~tlp aleepe 4, like new can-vu. Prime Newpc>rt
slip. Only •·•· Call Oftlct Fw 111111 t Mick 912-7711
Bond Copier, lobby a· Cbtia Craft Cruiler,
furnltur•, executive 2.83 cu.l.n. Chevy en1 ..
de• t • . c b a i r •·. completely equipped ,,.., ... caJt Terri, at w/UHP rldio, Uve bait
5190!'T4X
r
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Oolob9r 26. 1981 '
I ........ ...._ •-irt.d ......_ ._,rW ..._ .__,,w WM, ... ..W Wet • ..,,..w ....... Uttd AlllM. Uted ...... U .... . -, • ..w .......... ,.. . ..... ....,. ....... ••••• • ................................................................................................................. . _..•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• • • ...... ---------IO -"41
.... , t71l 0..,. t7JG ,,._ t7JJ Meta•1._ '740 ~~~ t7~ ,,._.. 9767 !~!:~ ....... !?!.~~~ .......... !!.'.~ ~'!!:~ ........ !! ........................ .. • •• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• • ••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• "'-~ .......... lllO IOO SD. Ukt MW, ma Tftt. New tnjlne ••• Baja Bu.a Convert. 7 9 ..... •Md FULLYLOAOm> ltll IMW s::~P.3 conv hardtop. ...,Mir .. dart brown.~ aal main clutch, hard .nd •oft New ena . Llkt new Brou1h1m. 2&,000 ml. '71 Monte Carlo, T Lop, C!OSIOUT Rebwll fromUie&rowwl .. • 1 tank. sao1soe> ftnn. Call topt.Musttell,otter Cond.!l!l-4!4UIHEI Su.oroof.Sh.arp ,xceUent H500 . 914 .7135 or
IYE.,, ~· M1&1t sac at t&eoo. • ..., Ray 8alJ t'Jt.7030 d1. Nl-Maft«tPM_ cood. Must Sar . No 198. ••••••••
P ·-....... 7 M4•&ew 'SITJU, ..-.tcorwt t\11\1'72VW81.lJ,Nupalnt,nu. ,.,.~m't'tll 'llZ ,,...._ • .__ 99•1 ,. at emtu/l!!f=....,\ COm .... °' 1 ---""' ....... \ u UNI: at' Blau ... -,~ ..... -.. HIJ •• , ..... J•"--u •• 10 ~-. pan m 1tron1 ; new tire1, rct, r re00· OBO. alltover~ue.Chu •••••••••••••••••••••••..-
,..,. .,,_ ,_IT """' poN Direct leue and 80 ~· '744 starter t ball. 11100. • l •re 0 . 25 ' Pe 71 1281 '77 Cbryaler c:on:loba. ) ' ..................... . .... aed Leulna at vertlble. 2K on compl moa. l'to•lblt pymla. ••••••••••• .. • .. ••••••• •iMS a , C ,.17 ownr fullpowr lltru • llu1tana, fut back, -.eu:;:.:.:P~ rbl!si:mac. S'IOOO firm. ~.~11~icJobS II o21~ is MG~ial Edit.Ion, , ... .,... 9770 VolYo 9772 •• ~~............... .' "so . !!l~ ~~!°ei al~atf:r/~; IL:.;;~~oiiiiiii;;:;iiiiiii:iiiiiiiii:ll ,,, J/H. 1 Owner. Xlnl or11'/U?•2m :!;~,~ -5o.':..'~t111• : ........ d ....................... ;;;::::-.:;•• '1t Z28, xlnt CC>ftd, lff to C11HM.... ttJO mutrler tfr5. 161·0078 '72 240Z Good Cood. S3700 cond. Must See! ..,,.5. 8'1 8 g, mint •t~k #I VOL .,__ 1pprecl1te, ts700 or best ....................... evn t wtdt. too' ttl.ecUco of ptt· 080. 85H632. 7eo.8727, Chria. S.ELLINO YOOR 118? i1 MOB, am/fm 8 trk, cond .. •tereo. nu mtr.. lN ORANGE COUNTY' olfer. M04183. lt71 y.,... C8" llu1tan1 '115 co.nv 2191
oned BMW l 844=!211 ~ 97JI WIPAT . xlnt cond. lo ml, best of. mu.ataee! m .isn '75CamaroLT xlnt cond. 18.900. Black/black automatic PS PB. PT
I•--"an •-ex TOP M!l~•1 SS fer. U0.91'1 • '73 bfflle. cherry red, SALIS, 5aYICI Air. auto, AM/FM c111, ve'ou.r. Split t-t ... a•·. ~.1.....,;.,,..' ' . -... w · '80 Dallun 210 Wagon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --I t u.nd 12725 Ari.~ LIASlie& • '"'-' '"' ... ~ ~ coadl&n. Air, stereo, 5 spd 11,000 Call Jack BaCOl\ Pt••• '741 c eanea aro . n ASDELlVE S3000/mabo(r. 673-3612. AM IF M Quadrafonlc HIS --fl ••••••••••••••••••••••• d7·lW7 OV . RY '78 Camaro Rall.ye Sprt, t.ad. track. 37,000 mi. ,. ~ have a lease ml. 1.5400/ofr 642-ZOIH, JIM Sl8'0MS 1'16 Peu1eot 5CM&. 4 epd. 'to-'115 VW left &t right EXPERTS 32K ml, fully loaded ~ 541)-7000 •79 Cutlau DieMI, air,
-· ny that leases S48-l5S8 WE'VE • • IMPOITS Need.I ena wk. '800 080 I door, '73 left door. SSO ....... ..,1 pzoo/OBO. M&-0667 c--......_ tt~z am /fm. cua, lo mi, mUll ..-. makes of au.tos, '67 411. 4 dr, 1600 eng. 1301Qwli1St. ~·7503After6'9'~ each. Westa'n style whl ~'" .,. .. _ -L-& -,......,. ., 11 1080 2'1U
Eu and vam. For ad· Du.al carb. 4 spd. $795. MOU.. NEWPORT BEACH Pondat 9750 rims for Super Beetle VOL YO _ • .._.. 99ZO ....................... se I f;IOOO . l73'
l lnlormaUon on ~ 7578 Y lill' _... m.aoo •••••••••••••••••••• .. • ea. 548-97'4 1966 Harbor Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sam uys "drive a little, ffl7
. pleaecaU... "-"-I 9723 ... ,".,... '10 914 Red-Blk int. '76 Scirocco. Fast COSfA MESA * CINrn .. '10 save a lot," on new 81 ...................... .
'41f'l2-1Z70 7141•1·9611 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S1tP" 'vmr -.. '81 lhrcedes SOC> SL. Im· AM I FM cau. 13000 w/many extras. Low ' 6M9 03 540-9467 Moel• ~eo.,. Corvettes equipped with ~ SALi
...._ --and ood 1919 Ferrari. 308GTS, ~"aur:J mediately available. Firm. miles. '4200 bst ofr. '78 Volvo 242. Im· Economicll 4 cyl .. auto 4 spee~ ~r automatic 71 • Pinto, clean w/air !:'a!Cood~.. II AM/FM tape,4 spd. AC. . us Great Western Im · 646-1933 675·4775 maculate cmditin. only lrana., air cood .. etc. lrans~~LVER conditioning, good
,. ... aaJes_,ncelff: Sacrifice v~i~ port.era. ln4)855-0681 '77\.'J Silver 924 . AC, lt'6YW.., 17 ,000 miles, AC . (lAB~=~S5ltS 1oi.9'7DARKBLUE g~is~~~~1~77~ I Dir. (714)523-7030 XTMAlDA. '77 450SLC, brown /tan, AM /FM St Cass. Deluxe Good condition. 11200 AM /FM cas~u. elec· HOW•ID--•roltt 10t964BRONZE u kforMaria
flat 9725 •• ··~ like new, loaded. int&rwhls.Snrf. fi tnc seats, radials, etc. "' -......................., • • chrome ~· new tires. Call M9-9lll, Ml·2.MS arm. . M usl see to fully ap· Dove/Quall SU. ....._ 9965
., ... ,.,.,_.,,.....,.,.,,,, '"•"ING '78l2.4Spyder5-apd, i '== •llflJ 53,00.0 m 1. $25,300. '66 912. Mint condition. lt73 YW8-Q predate! Garaged, cov· NEWPORTBEACH ••••••••••••••••A•••h ...,..,~m~_,...., M FM trk AC !'_ 673 7339 Excellent cond. )2800 ered and pampered like 13).0555 208 w. hi. SANTA ANA ' A I 8-• I . ICJHUll SI, tlSTA lffSUl~W4 . • . . All original. Red. Alloys. 080. Da 494.7527, eves. a baby... '6 7 c .............
714/836-3171 $§600. 972.0499 · '7' 280, 6 cyl. Regu.lar Sspd, 1'7500. .,. '877 SEE US a•st• $3000orbestolfer CLOS~SUNOAY ......_..._ 9727 Mcneraff 9739 gas! Sliding sunroor. 544·~.~7912 . Ph.54&-5659 "" • 960«l7•
For I.he best deals in ,,_ IT PIS P/B I '71 Super Beetle, new We have agoodselection 401S.EICaminoReal ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••0··~·:-:;;;_~··•••• A. d A/C AM~~· ·57 Speedster. Sliver tires, new gaint, eng Alltoe, Used of NEW & USED San Clemente '80 Pontiac Lamens
• Southern California
• Come See Ua Today!! VISIT YOUR ~ wm ows, · · w/Red Leather int. Xlnt XI t .-....v>O o C'"-vro'-ta '. 831·"""" ........ ,.,.... Safari. 22 ,000 mi, Value _,,,,. seU ~s · n · -••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., "" .....,., ...... °""" OR ....... ,.-co•st COUMTY"S -· . ongcar. 891·7490PM H . .fc ttOS '76 Vet. Yellow. T·Top. PS /PB. A/C, tilt, roof
& "'"~ "' EXCWSIVE 833-8162 981~l'8,ll8l·S813 '79 Westfalia pop·top :':'.................... New Int. AM/FM Cass. rk, AM /FM tape, 96500. HONDA MASERATI '77 2AOD. Priced Sll.750· '77 Ponc:lletl IS camper, am/fm tape. '72 GREMLIN X, rebuilt New Auto Transmission. ,_549~-28~13 ____ _ HEAD~ARTIRS Dir.•• £BSHIP ~r:.!79::J;f~wen or Su.nroof, immac, 46,000 refr, stv, new Micbelins, engine &i trans. Souped BM Shift Klt. L-48 Eng. '67 Firebini Classic, xlnt
To Aylll ~1.8' . mi.AC,stetto.$18,500or x.lntcond,18259.760-:1175 up VB full. Mlnor front $9000 080. SSI 0278 cond. runs great , .. • We'll deliver anywhere '81 300.5D Turbo, ivory TOL 497.3374 da nile ,72 vw Bug, xlnt cond. end damage, must see to After 6. 11800/080. 846-5458
..
SADDIR•CK
IMW ._,ll~tePkwy UHIVEISITY inlheworld! w/tan int, loaded, only 497-41'5 $2300 ash onl p apprec.Jl~S46-5659 '77 Malibu Classic. Low Exec. car. ·59 compl. '61finWrdC..,
SALES&rSERVICE IEACH IMPORTS 80mi, P4.SOO. 6'4·82.53 '61 C*lolet Nov. i4Ui .• zJi oss. Codllloc tf 15 Mi., good cond .. AM/FM restored Corvette. like VB, auto, must see to ap. , 11 issaon Viejo
• AVERYPKWY. (Exn'SFWY.}
OLDSMOllLE 848 Dove Street '73 450 SL ssoo 542.2455 '78 Dsl Rabbit. Deluxe ....................... stereo, 8-track. loaded. new , custom paint, new preciate. SD>OOBO #!..MHC~UCA t1S 752-0tOO New paint, excellent •-• . .'1oy 9756 mdl. Xlnt oond. $4500. COMT~TIMG 645-2902. whls & tires, motor com· 751.:e:n
ll 1·2040 4tM949
Cloled Sundays
... '" " 1969HarborBlvd. cond. 113,000. MUST -ce Call 494·0009 CADIUAC? '72 El Camino w/shell. 4 pl. ~ebll. CaU Mr. Cops, .65 Pontiac Grand Prix..
2850 Harbor Blvd 631-7170 SELL! 496-7360 ''11ib'[UliiP4°U~ff ~ '76 Rabbit, :.> mpg, new We s~ciallie in leases spd. mags, 350 modified. Hentage Bank, 833-1191. Runs good, needs work.
• M..t lldtillg , .. on_.
COSfA M~A MHc ... 8-9740 ltH 2105, "· ROY paint, runs good. $2500 ror th~e business ex· ~. :~~~Jertificate. DodcJe ttlS $250. 539-6722
'80 Accord. 5 spd Hatch '77 28>E Colorado beige "70~LMBZ.Ne~tires, CARVER '80 Rabbit Dsl.. A/C, LarpS. .. ctioll ~~!!'n~~!u~~::,~d. ·7~o~:e.J°c~Se~t ....... ~ ........... ~ .. .
540.964 ....................... 546--0606; evs 833-3'87 ~ ftrm . 675-TI83, 673-5372 ecutive & professional. -· ....................... 9970
INWr. 'r tOr
LHMColldle
McLmwlMW!!
1-r~L.eeN rJOW"-"-! L141521·5313
Back. Exeptional cond. Xlnl. condition days, paint, bani top convert ROLLS·ROYC[ snrf., sterio. take over OfMtw ltll (114}&42-6676 Offer 497-089 '79 He~atage. Be~u.llful
Lo Mi. Many Xtras. 979.9930 ask for Elaine, roadster. Ru.ns excel. U40J•m11ot" lease. 495.Ql88 CDlllKJ · -. Condition. 39K ma. $5500 S§llS083S·~ Evenings, 759·9065. PP . See at 17 611 :.:1 amh '73 vw Van. 7 passenger, How .. Stodt! '70 ...., ton PU. Auto, PS. !Ford 9940 080. Call Nancy A~r
'81 Honda Civic. Auto, UO· 2lio SL. Gold w /blk in· Arm1toroog Ave. Irvine. excellent. $3200/offer. PB. $800. 6'15-3504 Leave ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6PM . 548-99118
der warranty. 15700. lerior, all rbt. $18,500. McKinley Equlpment 1• CLO$EDSUNDAYS partial trad e for NA~R~ message '67Ranchero.Good8ody. ,66T.-O
MH277 760·8099 Corp.979-87 Toyota ~765 wre.cked bug with no ("A DIL( A lf you're in the market Needs Engine work. S600 H d drseda
'79Accordl..X.Llkenew. . 191zw..u•• .................. , .... engme. , j ., rorabetlercar,besure OB0642·5939 ar ~:Wl n,
Hondamatic. air. Lo mi Have .Y,0U read, today 5 72 T ~ Corolcl 497 6236 494·2.407 1i.<-'Q 11 ... 1 •• tti,,. to check the many autos '80 Fiesta. AM /FM . air.
••lit your shopping 640-6791 Cla~sifted ~ds . If not. Order now. Fleet 0 Hav.e something to sell? l ....... \\ .. ,, 'l·IO ·11U1 advertised for sale in LOW MILES. Like nu. Find what you want in · b min the Daily you re m1SSmg tbe best prices on all model! 1600· Au. 0• needs engine di Classified. PP 968·7141 Daily Pilot Clusifieds . .. p;ifsaif.J Ads. : Classified A& 642·5678 . bargains in town! CaU 675-9LS3, 835-6636 $250. 951·&'D Classified ads o It well.
• ATLAS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 546·1934. 3 blocksl
~uth of San Diego Freeway ofl Harbor Blvd. Complete
~y 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 • BEAC.., IMPORTS
848 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel. 752·0900. Call us.
we're the specialists for Alla Romeo, Peugeot & Saab.
•• THEODORE ROllMS FORD
Modern sales. service, parts. body, paint & tire depts.
C.Ompetltlve rates on lease & daily rentals. 2060 Harbor
Blvd .• Costa Mesa. 642·001 O or 540-8211.
JOHNSON & SO N UMCOLH MEACUIX
2628 <Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. ~5630. 57 Years ~friendly farolly service -Orange County's oldest Lin·
coin-Mercury dealership.
SOUTH COAST DODGE Me Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-0330. RV service
l1lista, custom van conversions. ·
NIWPORT IMPOITS
0 W Coast Highway, Newport Beech. Tel.
~40-1764. The Ferriltl Heedguartert.
D•M LIASIHG, IMC.
73> W. 19th St .. Coit. t-4 ... ~·1t44
ting ~llfl1t I• our Job. to Uiilor ,your lea.In~ fOf
' ~.we , .... all mtkll and models of care, truck• end
MATCH 'rHE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
M.EWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Bristo.I behind
Victoria Station. Sales, Service. Leasing & Parts. Fleet
discounts to the public.
0 MAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd ... Costa Mesa. Tel. ~9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dealer. Sales. Service. Leas-
ing .
• DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICX.flOHTIAC-MAZDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hills 837-2400
I> TAIMT DATS&llt ~c...ty' .............. ~
13731 Harbor Ellvd. Garden Grove. Two blocks aooth of
Garden Grove Freeway. Sales. Senlioe. Parts. Our aim
is complete customer satisfaction. Shof> us and avoid
paying too much! Tel. 554-9000
• A.LAH MAGMOH POMTIAC-SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 5'9-4300. Sales,.
Service, Leasing. _"Mr. Goodwrench,"
0 HOUSIOlll~S MllC••-s.-G-m ...
S..•s..tc.• ...... 8882 Manchetter •Blvd .. Buena Park (on Senta Ant
Freeway). Take BHch BIVd. oNramp -therp right on
Menchet .. r.
OW. MER.CEDES • AMAH9M MAZDA -.o.,o.c. ......... •• ................ c..·
I01 8. M9Mim BIVd., ANhelm 1116-1820. Jult north of s.nta Ana Frwr. on Anlhelm 81Yd. Call u. fl,.u ''WI M l tiAN> TO ~'T WORTH ITI"
,
)08 LONGPRE POHTIAC
13600 Beach B lvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange
County's oldest and larges! Pontfac dealership. Sar~.
Service. Parts.
• UNIVERSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9640. 1 Mile
South 405 Freeway. Sales. service. parts & leasing.
• SANT A AMA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th Street, Sal'lta Ana. Tel. 558·7811. Your•
Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer.
0 MIRACLE MAZDA
We've mo~dl Our new localton is 1425 Baker Slreet.
Cotta Mesa. Tel. 545·3334. Stop by & visit our brand new
showroom and see why we're the #1 Mazda dealer in
Southern California. Sales. Service, Parts and Leasing.
ALUN·OLDSMOllLl-CADIUAC
SUIARU·GMC TIUCKS
Sin Diego Fwy. at Avery Exit on C.mlno Capistrano In
~uni Niguel. Tel. 83Ml800J495-0800.
• SAM DI SAMT1S CHmtOLIT
491 S. El Camino RMI. a.rt Clemen ..
.• Selet, Service, Leeelng And Plttt
Orange County·.-NEWEST Chtvrolet dealer; "Growing
Your Way." Eidt El Camino on.,.,,,.,.
831-0ISeO 492-e&OO
COST A MESA DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-6410. Servtng
Orange County for 16 years 1 Mrle So 405.
SUNSET FORD, INC.
(Home of Willte the Whale). 54.40 Garden Grove Blvd ..
Westminster. Tel 636·4010.
FRANK· PROTO LIMCOl.M-MHCUIY
Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a
,~k. 7:30 A.M. to 6'30 P.M. 848-n39.
0 C OMMELL CHEVIOLIT
.2828 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Over 20 ye1r1 aervlng
Orange C<Nnty! Sales. leuing, service. Cell 5..e-1200;
special parts llne: 546·9400; body shop line; 754--0400.
• CHICK IVERSOM ftORSC ... AUD .. YW
415 E. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach. 873-0900. The only
dealer&hlp In Orange County with thfte thrff great
makes under one roof! •
• lOY CAlVll IOUS IOYCMMW
1540 J1mborff Road, Newport a.ch. M04444, a.i....
Strvloe, Perte And Leulng.
..
• • * * •
DRlllil CUil Ylll llllTlll llllY Ml
\-\ • • ~I I I l •
I
I. UCI provides a look at the fut11re ol genetics
I ' I
By STEVE TRIPOLI. °' ... Delly ..........
Genetic engineering research
that could have an impact on
everything from medicine to
agriculture and the world's
d e pendence on oil was on
display Sunday for supporters of
the UC I rvin e College of
Medicine.
The display, presented to a
community support group called
the Medical Research and
Cleanup
of bay
on hold
By STEVE MARBLE
OftMDelty,. ........
Time has run out on any hope
of beginning a cleanup project
on the swa mp-like Upper
Newport Bay this year.
Engineers who had prepared
plans for the $4 million cleanup
job said because or hitches in
getting state funds. at is now too
late in the year to start any or
the work.
Don Simps on, a Ne wport
Beach consultant in charge of
the project, said contracts had
been awarded for the work when
state financial officials signalled
that $1 .3 million in state mone)
for the project might be cut.
"Time dragged on and we just
got stuck," said Simpson.
He said some work on the San
Diego Creek . t h e main
waterway to the bay. should be
able to start in April at the end
of the rainy season. But a
dredging project on the bay
itself likely cannot get goiflg
until August.
The le n gthy dela y for
dredging silt from the top
reaches of the bay. Simpson
said , is due to the spring bird
mi~ration season.
The S4 million cleanup project
all but collapsed when the state
reported it was unable to sell $2
million worth of Clean Water
bonds because or high interest
rates and then threatened to cut
$1 .3 million in state Energy
Resource funds.
Prospects for t he project
brightened last week when it
was learned the state will again
try to sell the bonds and that the
$1.3 million likely would be
coming Newport's way after all.
The bonds, state officials
confirmed, will go on the market
Nov . 4 . The $1.3 million
earmarked for the cleanup
project, meanwhile, would be
available to Newport late this
week providing it clears a rinaJ
s tate agency , the Water
Resources Control Board
Gun t hreat
reel thing
The caller reported a man
with a gun in the Glenneyre
Street parking lot and it didn't
take long for Laguna Beach
police officers to arrive at the
scene.
And, when officers contacted
four people in a vehicle at the
lot, they indeed found a small
arsenal of plastic weapons -toy
guns.
It seems the four were
students at the high school
preparing to make a film for a
school project.
111151 CIAIT llATlll
Night and morning low
clouds, but partly sunny
Tuesday afternoon. Highs
67 to 72. Lows tonight 55 lo
62.
111181 TlllY
1"1 not Oat ToontruUl•
Trol~, tallutr tM Ti;i,ono
Trollty. s .. 1tor71, photo,
P.agc Cl.
·11111
..
..,......., .
.... 1 llJI 91 =::--.:: ===-:-= r::.~t -~ = ....... -.n ~ u ..........
Education Society, Included a
talk by Dr. Paul S. Sypherd and
a tour of the laboratories of four
professors involved in genetic
research.
In an interview after his talk,
Dr. Sypherd said a dozen UCI
professors are involved in the
so-called "gene manipulation"
research at UCL
Sypherd, chairman of the
uni versity's department of
Microbiology, said the ability to
manipulate aenes "meanJ we
can lake desirable traits from
one oreanism and transfer them
to another.'' Specific · genetic
projects currently under way at
UCI, according lo Sypherd,
include:
-A study that may result in
the implantation of a gene into
som e food crops that will allow
the crops to use nitrogen
directly from the air ,
e liminating the need for
nitrogeo fertilizers which are
both costly and
petroleum-based.
-Research into the insertion
or drought·resistant genes into
crops that will allow them to
grow with less water ,
saline·resistant genes that will
allow plants lo utilize the
Increasingly salty water in
many parts of the world, and
alkaline-resistant genes that will
allow more agriculture in desert
areas.
-Insertion of ~enes into
ordinary micro.organisms that
will allow them to produce
compounds formerly produced
only in the human body. These
include insul.in, the anti·viral
drur. interferon and a number of
hormones.
Sypherd said a key to the
current genetic research al UCI
is uncovering what he called
"the switch" -the method
will "trick" a bacterial cell ·
producing the desired substan
with a gene from another cell.
Finding the switch is the k
to mass -production of need
s ubstances in bacterial cells,l
s aid.
"Right now it's a very
pro bl e m ." Sypherd sai~
"Without the right switch (
bacteria produces> nothing at
<See GENETIC, Page A.%) ·~
•:11
Devil to get
day in COUl1
~
· . . .
in murder trial
MASTERPIECE DISF1LAYED Some of the
thous and s who lined up to s ee Pablo
J>1casso·s famous painting ··Guernica"' from
the Spanis h Civil W.ar wait outs ide a ~adrid
,,,~ ............
museum ctop) while inside a young Spanish
girl sinks to her knees in homage. It was the
first exhibition of the painting in lhf' artist ·s
homeland.
DANBURY , Conn. <AP) -
The devil gets his day in court
this week in a case authorities
call "a routine murder" and the
defense attorney calls a
clear·cut case of demonic
possession.
The case involves a
husband·wife team of nationally
known ''demonologists , ·· a
13·year-old boy some say is
possessed by the devil , the
efforts of Roman Catholic
priests to rid the boy of the
spirits and a curly haired
teen-ager who ch allenged the
demons to take him on.
That teen .ager , Anre
Cheyenne Johnson , stands
Police 01ake arrests
in nightclub area
Police sweeps in a four·block
Costa Mesa area centering on
the Cuckoo's Nest nightclub
resulted in more than 90 arrests,
citations or juvenile contact
reports over the weekend.
officials said today.
Ten·man task forces hit the
area surrounding the club at
17th Street and Placentia
Avenue Friday and Saturday
ni1h.ls after ow ners of
businesses and residents in the
area pleaded for help in cleaning
up the neighborhood, said police
Capt.. Robert Moody.
The sweeps resutte'd in
Phony rock
tickets told
SAN DIEGO <AP > -<;1ty
officials hav e reversed
themselves and say between
1,500 and 1,600 bogus tickets
were used to gain admission to a
RoUing Stones concert at San
Diego Jack Murphy Stadium
Oct. 7.
But a San Diego police
detective says he d oesn't
anticipate any arrests soon
because the investigation is
complicated.
"Every time I think I'm just
about at the end, I find out I'm
only one·fourth of the way to
di scovering so mething
important.'' said detective Ed
Boyce.
citations and arrests ranging
from suspicion of loitering and
curfew violation to alleged
possession and sale of alcohol
and drugs, he said.
The crackdown was the first in
the area since the City Council
revoked the Cuckoo's Nest's
live·entertainment permit late
last February.
The permit, which allows punk
and other rock music groups to
perform. was pulled after
residents• a nd businessmen
complain ed of vandalism ,
drinking problems and
confrontations with crowds
gathering on weeltends at the
popular club.
After a series of legal moves,
the state Supreme Court ordered
the appeal heard in San
Bernardino and ruled that the
Cuckoo's Nest entertainment
permit should remain active
until the appellate court rules in
the case.
Arguments will be heard Nov.
3 in San Bernardino, said City
Attorney Tom Wood.
Captain Moody said today that
none of the weekend arrests and
citations was made at the
controversial club or in its
parking lot.
Contacts were made in the
residential, commercial and
industrial areas surrounding the
club. he said.
<See ARRESTS, Page AZ>
Coast students high in college exams
Figures r eflect national hope that downward curve may have hit bottom
By JERtlY CLAUSEN
..... Delly ........
College entrance exam scores
earned last year by &>ublic ru1b
school seniors along the Oranee
Coast indicate k>cal students
remain well ahead of the state
and nation in both verbal and
mathematics skills.
And they reflect a national
hope that 18 years or continued
drops in verba l a n d
mathematics test scores may al
last be reaching the bottom of a
downward curve.
Figures. averaged from a1Jl9Da
the four coastal school diatricta
surveyed indicate seniors moved
up a couple of notches hiper
than ~ in the same diltrtcta
who took the tests durtn1 their
high s~hool senior year ha
1979•80.
The ftgures were talrea•from
report.a by the Coller ....... Examin•tion Boar ntardlnc
Scholastic Aptitude Test HOl"t9
durln1 the lJI0.81 scbool year.
Studeatl plannlDI to att4qd
moat '°'f ·1ear eoUqee 1n tbe
School Olatrict
Comparleon
Huntington Union
Irvine Unified
LagunaU~
Newport·Mesa Unified
National
State
t
United States are required to
take the te1t priot to admillion.
N atioaally. the nearlJ OM
mllltoa 1tudent1 tn tbe bllb
1chool due ol 1181 averapd 4M
on tbe verbal SAT teat and •
OD •atb..L.. ~ 1ame at tbe c8'11
el i.. -me ltatewtde mua wu
GI on v•bal t8ltl MCI 411 •
matb.
Locally, the elHI or 1111
scored aft averqe 441 OD ffrb9l teal• and 501 on m atli, .,_.. HOI'• two pamu ~ llllll Mn.d-llalor'l la *"ilw GI t•. ,
Verbal
Averaie a ... .,
i981 1980
441 436
'35 443
'51 Uf 454 4.56
DI 434
42t
Ma&b
Averaie
aauol
1981 1980
503 •97
•99 .a
•IM 508
SU 506
... 486 •7S
Surveyed l ocally were
HuatlnltOn Beach Hilh School
Dlttrtet, lrvine Unified School
Dl1triet. Lquna Beach Unified
u d Newport.Mesa Unified.
The hl1heat verbal avera,1 ... seared in 1111 by w.-a B e a e b 1enior1. ti t .
••t-o rt·Harbor dl1trlet
.. icored "11he9t ~ ....
math~IU. .. O.....ally 1peald.,, ·• Uld
No r ••• Loatt, tile Newpert-11 ••• •t•trlet•• ........ 11=r::·.~, ... .... ,..... fl
accused of murder and Mart.in
M innella, the defense attorney,
pl ans to ,argue that the devil
made him do at. laterally.
The tr1aJ begins Wednesday ip
a tiny, second·floor courtroom,
and attorneys predict it could
take up to two months to seat 1
ju r y becaus e or de ta ii ea:
questions about spiritual belief•
Mannella is expected to as~
prosped1ve jurors.
Johns on, 19. has been in a
Bridgeport jail in lieu of $125.~
bond since his arrest on charg•
in the Feb. 16 stabbing death cit
Alan Bono. 40·year·old manage$ ·
of the Brookfield Kennel. ;
Minnella 's defense i(
s traightforwa rd : the devil
poss e s sed J o hnson's body
several times in the month•
before Bono's death and then
again al the moment of the
attack.
M innella will first have to
convince the jury there is such a
thing as the devil and demonkt
possession Secondly. he w.ill;
have lo convince jurors that, 9'
his words, •'this vile force or
sp1ril manipulated my client'.I\
body and caused the ultima~
demise" of Bono. ,J..
If allowed into cour:t and if
successful, the defense would ~
a landmark in U.S. law, legal
experts say. But the decision te;
admit Minnella's evidence resf.4•
wfth Superior Court Judge
Robert Callahan.
M innella says he's confident
Callahan will see things his way--:"
· "The state must prove be had
specific intent to murder Bono,
and the defense is allowed to
s h ow any evide nce that
indicates he didn't have intent.''
Minnella sajd in an interview.
To Walter Flanagan,. the
state's attorney who will be
prosecuting, the case is .. ._
routine murder , insofar al!
homicide can be classifiel
routine." -~
John Anderson, chief of poli~
in Brookfield, a quiet town of
12,000 north of Danbury, said:
"There's nothing in the crime
(See DEMON, Page A.%)
AJ ••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 26, 1981
ewport plan opposed
nning Ranch develop1r_1ent hearing slated tonight
A controvorslal plan to
velop a portion ot the 600-acre
ewport Bannin1 Ranch ha1 ~olted slow.growth forces ln
tJewport BHch.
I embers of the var•oua
ups promised to be on band
ght when the Newport ctty
tobncll opens ita third pubUc
"•ring on the proposed ranch
velopment.
or the first time in Newport
ch, the 7:30 p.m . council
)ttsion will be broadcast Jive by
~eprompter Cable TV.
: The ranch plan, submitted by
tt.~eco Ltd ., ca ll s for
cf!'velopment or 75 acres o( the l~d in West Newport that now
From PageA1
GENETIC • • •
or ¥'hat we call ·nonsense'," -a
useless substance.
Two UCI doctors, Kevin
Bertrand and Wesley Hatfield,
currently are working to de·
velop what Sypherd called
:;'4.niversal switches" tbat can tie used to trigger the desired r~11 ctions with a number of
g~es and bacterial cells.
· ~ypherd said one UCI doctor,
Efjc Stanbridge, is working on
flb.<>rt·circuiling the switch that
l\itns a normal human cell
t~ncerous . The r esearch
i.Avolves moving genes that
appear to be associated with
~•n cer rrom maligpant to
normal cells, he said. •
1 -Other UC l researchers are
~rkin g to find genes that
q,ntrol human production of
aptibodies and would allow
0.rganisms to feed on now
inedible s ubstances such as
~ellulose, Sypherd said.
. ·Such research could lead to
new breakthroughs in disease
~qimunity , the control of
allergies and control or the
i:~jection of transplanted organs
and skin grafts, he said.
· Sypherd i s cu rr en tl y
rqsearctling serveral fungi used µ. the production of commercial
v~·tamin s. in the hop e or
fl?. at chin g a f as t · growing
orga11ism with genes that could
{flSUll in increased production of
w~dely used substances.
HB man dies
in fall off
~aguna cliff
A Huntington Beach man died
etarly Saturday when h e
apparently slipped and fell from
a steep cliff at Crescent Bay
Beach Park in Laguna Beach.
Gerard F . Verhaar, 23, of 8562
Donald Circle, was round at the
bottom of a rocky precipice
overlooking the ocean at about
1 :30 a.m. Saturday.
A companion , Willi am S.
Bray. also or Huntington Beach.
!,old police he and Verhaar were
~.liking along the clifftop park
~lrfen Verhaar disappeared.
/1Jfray reported his friend
mining, and the body was round
I! &hort while later at the baae or
~cliff.
I •
Police probe
~Brink 's caper
" NEW YORK (AP) -Police
tklieve they have identified at f ~st one, and perhaps as many ~ five, or the bandits who fled
Crom the scene of a bloody
Brink's truck holdup that has
been tied to the radical Weather
Underground.
Inves tigators spent the
weekend trying to follow the
many trails the bandits left after
last week's a mbush in suburban
Nanuet ; i n Washington ,
fingerprint e xperts tried to
identify hundred s of samples
from cars used durin1 the
holdup and from apartments
tbat apparently were hideouts
/or tbe I Uli· Clarkatown Police Chief
,Robert S chnakenberg said
autbortt1• believed they bad
identified at least one or up to
eitbl DIODI• thought to bav-e fled .Cter -. lrink's 1uard apd two poUeemtn were killed ln the
mew.at. foW' people, including
tiree memben of tt_le Weather
UDd~. were mnled at
tMHd·
Is dotUd with oU wells and lank
Carma.
Beeco. accordlna to lts
president 'Hancock Banntn1 Ill.
wants permission to bulld more
than 200 rt!Sidential unit.a and
730,000 square reet of industrial
and omce space.
The primary objection to tbe
development scheme has come
Crom a group calling Itself the
West Newport Legislative
Alliance. comprised or 13
homeowner groups from the
west side of Newport Beach.
The alliance is asking that
Beeco be prohibited from
building any office buildings and
restricted to constructing only
100,000 squar e feet or light
industrial uses.
o.llyfJllllCS-.....
110.VORED BY COLLE<;f:
Supervisor Stanton
Long B e a c h
c olle g e cites
Roger Stanton
Orange County S upervisor
Roger Stant.on will be inducted
into Long Beach City College's
Hall of Fame Wednesday.
Stanton, who gr aduated from
the college in 1958, will be one of
four people to be named to the
group, wtlich numbers 28.
Stanton, whose supervisoriaJ
district includes his hometown
or Fountain Valley. part of
Garden Grove and Tustin and
Santa Ana, was student tq1y
president and a track and field
letterman at the college.
He later taught at California
State University, Long Beach
and then was elected to the lst
District supervisorial post in
November 1980.
Officials said Stanton will be
honored for his achievements.
Forum slate d
for Irv ine
school race
Candidates seeking election to
the Irvine Unified School
District Board of Trustees will
participate in a public forum at
7 o 'clock tonight in the
auditorium of Lakeside Middle
School. #3 Lemongrass, Irvine.
Up for eledion on Nov. 3 are
the trustee seats held by Frank
Hurd and Fred Gahm, neither of
whom is seeking re-election.
Andrew Barna. John Mundy,
John Jaeger , John Flynn, Irving
Marks. Gene Conley and Buff
White are seeking election to the
board of trustees.
Roger Denney and J eff
Winneke filed candidate papers
with the Orange County
Registrar of Voters and their
aa·mes will appear on the ballot.
However, both have dropped out
of the r ace.
T ourist stabbed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
German tourist was reported in
stable condition alter he was
stabbed in the leg during a
mugging. Ludwig Probst, 63,
recovered at General Hospital
on Sunday from an attack on
Friday near a recreational
vehicle park south of Market
Street.
C:IH•lfled advertlalng 7141642·5878
All other d .. rtmenta 642-4321
MAIN C>mCE
iJO WHI lary $1., Cata M<JM, CA. Mell ~1 IOll IMiO, Cocte Mew, CA,~
C.oyrlolii 11111 CW8'\tlt CoHt ftuelltlllrla 0-y. Ne MWI ttwift, llkltlrMlollt, edi..,... m..,... w ...
•ttrtlw-.... _., • ,_.,... .. ~
.-Clel """'"""flf(~---··
Two other ciUztn arouPf -the Corona deJ Mar Community
AuociaUon and Residents'
Action Plan -have announced
they'll also oppose the Banning
project.
The Residents' Action Plan,
known as RAP, is the group that
Is attempting to force a
referendum on the Newport
Center Expansion project. The
Corona del Mar group also is
active in the referendum.
"We see a lot of similarities
between the Newport Center
development and the Banning
project.'' said referendum
leader Ron Covington. "There's
a growing concern throughout
Newport Beach on the issue of
development.''
From Page A1
DEMON • • •
itself to indicate it had anything
lo do with demons."
The stabbing occurred while
J ohnson and Bono were arguing
ove r J ohnson 's girlfriend,
Deborah Glatzel, 26, police said.
Johnson and Miss Glatzel were
li ving in an apartment next door
to the kennel, and Miss Glatzel
gr09med dogs for Bono. ,
Acquaintances have descnbed
Johnson and Bono as "the best
or friends."
Five months before the
stabbing, Johnson was involved
in efforts lo rid Miss Glatzel's
brother, David, then 11, of 42
demons, according lo Ed and
Lorraine Warren, self·styled
experts on demons, who are
ex peeled to testify for the
defense
In tape recordings the
Warrens say were made in the
home. a voice identified as
Johnson's can be heard
challenging David's demons to
··take me on. Control me Leave
this boy alone."
The Warren s c l aim the
demons did just that.
Efforts to rid the boy of
demons last fall included three
minor exorcism r ites performed
by five Connecticut priests. The
njoce se o f Bridgeport
acknowledges some involvement
with David's problem but knows
nothing ot Johnson, said the
Rev Nicholas Grieco, a diocese
s pokesman. Bishop Walter
Curtis has ordered the priests
not to talk to reporters or
attorneys about the case, Grieco
said.
Da vtd attends a special school
ror emotionally disturbed
children. The Warrens say he is
sti II possessed by demons.
M innella says Johnson has been
"under attack " by demons
while in jail but doesn 't
remember the attack on Bono.
From Page A1
. ' ARRESTS ...
Two -thirds or those
tran s ported to police
h eadquarters following t he
sweeps were juveniles -later
released to parents -many of
them residents of Los Angeles
and Riverside counties.
Only two or three of those
picked up were Costa Mesans,
Moody said .
Area business owners and
employees have complained in
recent months about vandalism,
drinking teen·agers. fights and
drug use in the area as punk
rockers converge on the area to
attend the club, Moody said.
City officials contend that
weekend patrols or the active
17th Street a nd Placentia
Avenue area weakens police
protection in the rest or the city.
Candidates'
for um slate d
A candidates night for those
runnin g for seat s on the
'Fountain Valley School District
Board of Trustees will be held
tonight at 7:30 at Talbert School,
9101 Brabham Drive, Huntington
Beach. •
Candidates will make brief
statements. then answer
questions from the audience.
Another candidates night will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
al Fulton School. 8778 El Lago
St .. Fountain Valley. Three
seats on the school board are lo
be filled ln the Nov. 3 election.
Two school
forums set
Voters in next week's Laguna
Beach school board election will
have two opponunitiea to meet
the candidates thia week.
The Laguna Beach PTA .
Council and the Lea1ue or
Women Votera are sponaorin& a
candldates' n1aht Tuesd ay at
7: 30 p. m . ln the hilh school
auditorium, 62:5 Park Ave.
All \4 school board candidates
have also been Invited to a
meetln1 or the North Laruna
Civic Aasoclallon Frid•)' at 7:30
p.m . in the Unitarian Han, G9
CyprnaSt.
~
' ---------~~~ ·--·-------
............
WINNING LEGS? A \ otcr casts a monetan· ballot for
o:nali. ~~eon)) four legged. candidate in the .. Best Legs on
Campus contest at the University of Wushington. The dog
1s mascot for th~ L!W Huskies '.\tone~· raised in the contest
1s to benefit L'nitcd Wa v
Car bomb kills one,
20 hurt in Bei rut
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP > A
car rigged with nearly 90 pounds
of explosives blew ,up today in
Christian Eas t Beirut, killing at
least one person, injuring 20
others and startmg a huge fire in
an exclusive residential
neighborhood . police ond
Christian radio reports said.
There were no immediate
claims of responsibility for the
bombing. However, a caller
claiming lo represent the Front
for the Liberation of Lebanon
From Foreigners told Reuters,
t he British news agency, that his
right-wing organization would
retaliate for today's bombing
.. as soon as possible with a more
violent explosion in the occupied
Lebanese territories."
That was an appare n t
reference to West Beirut and
o th er areas of Lebanon
Police nab 4
tee n s i n LB
auto break-ins
Laguna Beach police have
arrest~d four teen.agers in
connection with a rash of auto
break·ins that have plagued the
Art Colony and other south
county cities the past month.
Two L agu n a Beach
undercover otficers spotted a
truck in the 400 block of North
Coast Highway early Sunday
morning containing the four
leen·agers.
Up0n confronting the quartet,
Officers Danelle Adams and
Ray Lardie found the back of the
El Camino vehicle to contain a
number of expensive radios and
stereo sets.
Arrested were Michael Reid
Graham, 18. of Los Angeles. and
three 17-year-old Ju veniles
whom police did not name.
The four are believed
responsible for at least 40 auto
burglaries in Laguna Beach
alone, wbeTe expensive cars
were rifled for stereo equipment,
police said.
Police sajd they belleve the
burglary team also broke into
cars· in Newport Beach and in
unincorporated south county
areas over the past month.
controlled by mostly Moslem
left-wing militias. the PLO and
Syrian troops of the Arab
League's peacekeeping force in
Lebanon.
The Front fQT the Liberation of
Lebanon from Foreigners
claimed responsibility for the
explosions in the Moslem areas.
The PLO said the group was
"fictitious " and the bombs were
planted b) Israeli agents.
2 m«~n h e ld
in M esa
· rohlle ries
Two m(:n are being held in
Costa Mesa Jail today for
s us picion of armed robbery
after they allegedly held up a
gas s t ation and a pair ol
pedestrians early S unday
morning.
Held in lieu of $25,000 bail
each are Arthur Hernandez, 26,
of Lynwood and J erry Cuevas
Jr . 21, of Carson.
After filHng their car's tank
with gas. one of the robbers
brandished a .32 caliber
revolver and relieved the station
att~ndant of nearly $100 in cash,
police s aid .
A few minutes lati!r, Steve
Luce, 25, of Newport Beach and
Michell Middlekauff. 21, or Costa
Mesa were robbed at gunpoint
by two me n as the couple walked
along Cabrillo A venue. officers
said.
Police said Hernandez and
Cuevas were arrested later in
the morning when their car
described by the victims, wa~
spotted cruising east Costa Mesa
streets.
Toddler missing
INDIANAPOLIS l AP )
Police and city workers opened
manholes and checked sewers
Sunday in a search for a
16·month·old toddler who
vanis hed from he r parents'
Jparlment clad only in a diaper.
Police said Tiawana Dockery
was asleep beside her father.
Dewayne Carpenter. 25, when
last seen about 2 a.m. Saturday.
CONOOL£NCES Mr. and Mrs. WHle)'
Melvin received bouquet from Rolllng Stdies
rock group, at whose Oct. 15 Seattle
Klngdome conte~t(thelr daughter Pam died
Burglary
suspect
killed
One suspect waa ki11ed early
today when he and a partner
apparently tried to burglarize a
gun shop In Stanton only to find
a shotgun in the hands of the
awakened owner.
According to a Stanton Police
Department spokesma n .
Charles Holcomb, the
73·year·o1d owner. was sleeping
In a back room of Cal Sports on
Cerritos Avenue when the two
unidentified me n backed a
stolen pickup truck through the
front or the store.
While the two men used
hammers to break display cases
and load handguns into a large
trash can, Holcomb came out
from the back room and fired
one round from a shotgun, the
spakesman said.
The one suspect was dead at
the scene when Police officers
arrived, the spokesman said.
The other man fled, possibly
getting a ride from a companion
wa1t1ng 1n a vehicle outside the
store, he said.
In vesligalors were working
today to identify the dead man,
the spokesman sajd. and lo find
the other suspect.
Holcomb was reoorted to be
doing fine , alth oug h the
spokesman said the store owner
was "a little shook up."
From Page A1
SCORES. • •
baby-boom generation all may
be working together to spark a
turnaround in test scores.
·'There 1s a tre nd among
students to be more serious
about lea rning" and more
willing to submit themselves lo
adults' Judgment about what
they should stady, said Robert
G. Cameron, executive director
of research and development for
the College Board in New York.
A voluntary questionnaire
given to the nearly 1 million
seniors who take the SAT each
year found that in the past four
years. students have been taking
slightly more academic courses.
They now average more than
four academic courses per year,
compared to rewer than four in
1977. and the extra course more
often was 1n math or physical
sciences.
Tox i c wast e
r e por t due
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
report chargin g massive
defic iencies in California's
regulation of toxic waste
regulation was scheduled to be
relea sed at a l eg i slati ve
committee hearing today in
Riverside.
The report by the auditor
gen eral's office charges that
state regulators have inspected
fewer than 15 percent of the
state's toxic waste djsposal sites
a nd that its s luggis hness in
producing regulations has
delayed control of poisonous
substances around the state.
The report. described in
S und ay's Sa n Francisco
Examiner, is to be released al a
meeting or the Joint Legislative
Audit Committee, chaired by
stat e Sen. Walter Ingalls.
D· Riverside.
2 n ap near bomh
CLOUGH. Ireland <AP> -
Police arrested two suspected
IRA guer rillas today as the pair
slept on a hilltop beside the
detonator for a SOO·pound bomb
apparently targeted for British
security forces, authorities said.
. ~
1
~ I
J
..... ,,......
aPokesman ror the televialon
series said.
Tbe idea was lar1ply a
result of the Oct. 1 attack on
two CHP officers on the San
Bernardino Freeway ln
Alhambra in which one was
killed and another wounded,
spokesman Sean Mahoney
said.
Caesar's Palace in
Stateline, Nev. normally
includes flying lessons when
it awards airplanes as
jackpot prizes. but the
winner of the casino's eighth
giveaway won't need them.
J erry ObJson, a new owner
of a $32,000 single-engine
Beechcraft Skipper, is a
United .Airlines pilot with 15
years' experience behind the
controls.
The 50-year-old Scottsdale,
Ariz. man -who said he's
not a gambler -fed a
75-cent slot machine at the
Lake Tahoe casino between
$40 and $50 before coming up
with three bars that won the
plane suspended above the
machine.
King Kbaled of Saudi
Arabia wa s found in
"excellent health" during 12
days of tests al a Riyadh
hospital, a palace statement
said.
There was no official word
on why the king, who is 68
and has a history of heart
trouble, entered the hospital.
He said he wanted to nee
the smog and stress of San
Francisco. Instead, Mark
Kevin Thomas has been
sentenced to a federal prison
for two robbe ries and
stealing a car .
Robert Kennedy Jr 27. son of the late Robert F Kennedy. unll
marry 24-year-old Emily Ruth Black of Bloomington Ind . on
.\1arch 6.
The former University of
Colo rado s tude nt was
s entenced to a n
indeterminate term by U.S.
District Judge Ewing T. Kerr
in Cheyenne, Wyo. Cele brities gathe r for Denver bash
Dozens of business and
entertainment stars were on
hand as the fourth annual
Carousel Ball transformed
Denver's boxy Currigan Hall
into a pastel rainbow big-top.
Former President and
Mrs. GeraJd Ford vied with
Frank Sinatra and Cary
Grant, among others, as the
big names of the evening.
though a steady, wet s now -
the season's first -held
down th e num be r of
autograph-seeke r s outside
the hall.
Also on hand were Sammy
Davis J r. and has wife -a
photographers' favorite in a
midnight blue velvet gown
open to the waist: Ed Asner,
Jamie Farr, Dina Merrill,
Ed McMahon, Gary
Coleman, Rich Little and
Gregory Peck.
Stopping the California
Highway P atrol usually isn't
as easy, but the cast of the
TV serjes "CHiPs" had no
trouble over coming their
real-life counte r parts in
softball.
The actors and crew
defeated a CHP team 10·2 in
a benefit game in Encino to
aid CHP families . a
Queen Elizabeth II rode by
train. car and bus through
200 m iles of ra1ns wt:pt
jungles and uplands to the
a ncient city of Kandy her
visit to Sri Lanka.
Thousands of flag-waving
children, and elephants with
th e ir trunks h e ld h ig h
greeted the 55-year -old
British monarch along the
way to K a ndy , on e time
ca pital of the Sinhales;
kingdom . S h e wa s
accompanied by h e r
husband. Prince Philip, and •
Sri Lank.an President Junuis
R. Jayewardene.
Cool. weather prevails
Temperatures ... ,.......,
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SURF RIPORT
We're Listening •••
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 26, 1981 H/F
AP~
Leaders at Cancun. Me.nco. summit on economic development pose on trop?cal'beach President Reag(Jn
1s seated at far left Other leaders 111 altendance were Pierre Eliot Trudeau of Canada. Jose Loptz
Portillo of Menco. M argaret Thatcher of Bntam Francois .\llllterand of France and Zhao Z1yang of Chi~ 1
}
seen··· Long-run benefits
Summit built some understanding between North, South
CANCUN. Mexico t A P l -The
advanced billing put the global
economic conference here in the
ranks of historic summits . But
ralhr thari a giant step for
mankind, it produced a small
step t oward better
understanding.
For 21:1 days, a m ong t he
beachfront palms and around a
giant con f erence table .
President Reagan and leaders of
21 other nations talked or tariffs.
cred its and currency, as well as
the needs of fi shermen. tea
prices and cotton supplies. and
the virtues and shortcomings of
private en t erp ri s e and
socialis m.
Whal grew from the unusual
and relative informal dialogue
was a "Spirit or C ancun,"
concluded Mexican President
Jo s e Lop e z Portillo . a
co-chairman of the s ummit.
··1t is a spirit of solidarity, of
conciliation, and or harmony,"
he said .
The spirit may prove fruitful
over the long run But the
Cancun summit, which produced
no major specific agreements.
falls s hort o f its origina l
mandate.
Early last year, a special
s tud y co mmis s io n on the
economic issues that divide the
de.eloped and developing
worlds called for the convening
of a s mall m~ting or presidents
and premiers to "thrash out"
the problems with .. candor and
bo ldness."
It called for particularly quick
action o n a n ··emergency
NEWS ANALYSIS
program " to relieve world
hunger. conserve and find more
energy supplies in the Third
World, and reform international
financial institutions to give
poorer countries gr eater say in
their operations Action must be
taken by 1985. the Brandt
Com m1ss1on said almost two
years ago.
But the Cancun summars final
statement either skirts around
subjects in which disagreements
run deep -as in energy and
international financial reform -
or offers such generalizations as
.. hunger must be eradicated ...
A central tas k of the summit
was to better define procedures
fo r conducting negotiations
among all nations on the full
range of problems. But the final
statement shrouded this s ubject
in the obscurity or diplomatic
language.
It s aid global negotiations
were desir able but, Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau, the other co-chairman,
later said. ··we failed to get
agreement on exactly what the
next step will be."
The focus now shifts back to
the United Nations. where years
or backroom bargaining have
produced no ground rules for
such global economic talks.
T here is little prospect for a
swift agreement this time in the
United "Nations At Cancun,
Reagan set some pre-conditlns
for g lobal negotiations ttra'l
promise later confrontatioM
with the Third World. includin1
a re J ectio n o r major
international financial changes.
With no hard decisions taken
here. many leaders of the
developing cou ntries
represented at Cancun followed
Lopez Portillo ·s lead and
embraced the "spirrt" as ttie
important thing
Cancun .. has succeeded in
b r 1 n g 1 n g d e \ e I o p e d a n·d
developing countries closer
t ogeth er." Ind ian Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi said
Saturday.
· · I think the fact that people
have attended the summit
means they mean bu sines&,"
Nigerian Foreign Ministoer
lshiya Audu told reporters. "-J
thank a good first step has been
taken."
For 22 men and women who
s pend m ost or their day!
worrying about their particular
problems back home. tht>
Cancun "semi n ar" was an
educational exper ience
··There has been a mellowing
of President Reagan's attitude
here. I believe he has learned
things, and is ready to k ..
listenin g," said Philippi\lt
President Ferdinand Marcos.
Trudeau, at a separate neli
conference. no t ed it wait i
two· way street. "I would bet .~I
bottom dollar that leaders LUt.f
Lopez Portillo and Marcos have
never been contradicted with so
many arguments before in their.
political Ii ves."
PUC rate approval policy
brings consumer broadside
SACRAMENTO <APl -The
state Publi c Utilities
Com mission demonstrates an
"a rrogant, doctrinaire,
public-be-damned attitude" by
using higher utility rates to push
e n ergy conservation. a
consumer advocate says.
··As consumer advocates, we
are appa ll ed at the
commission's indifference to the
actual bills of the ratepayers of
this s l ate,'· Sylvia Siegel ,
director of Toward Utility Rate
Normalization of San Francisco,
told an Assembly hear ing.
She said t h e PUC ha s
fragmented utilities' requests
for higher rates from one per
year to as many as 11, so groups
like hers have trouble following
what utilities are doing.
The Assembly Utilities and
Energy Committee held a
hearing on how the PUC decides
what rate increases should be
granted to utilities such as
natural gas, e lectricity and
telephone companies. ·
T he committee c hairman,
Assemblyman Gordon Duffy,
R H an ford, said he or other
committee m e mbers might
introduce some bills next year to
change the P UC procedures.
Duffy said he was concerned
about the PUC approval I.st
summer of a $610 million rate
increase for Pacific Telephot\e
TURN had learned that the PU-C
staff had recommended only a
$200 million increase, and ~
PUC administrativ~ law judge
who heard the case suggested
$400 million. -~
Duffy also noted that the P\t:
this week gave Pacific Gas !d
Electric a $325 million r e
increase to pay for higher I
costs, which will add about $8 a
month to an average bill. ~o
pending before the commissi"Qn
is PG&E's general rate incre~e
proposal of $1 .2 billion .
..
JUSt nght for tins
t1mz ofyz.ar ...
..
ti
i
f ' l
NPU 644 AO QU&J!U 0 ••• --
·• H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 26, 1981
mruu~rnrn
.Reagan twists arms
on A JJ:4CS progrdm
Polish troops
sent to towns
WASH I NGTON (AP) -
President Reagan began
meeting today with senator s
opposed or uncommitted to his
sale of AWACS radar planes to
Saudi Arabia in a last.ditch
effort to save the $8.5 billion
arms deal from a congressional
veto Wednesday.
"We've still got a way to go,"
said deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speaks "We're
concentrating on a group of
senators who are undecided" or
who have expressed an interest
in talking to the president. he
s aid
Senate Republican leader
Howard H. Baker Jr .. who is
leading the battle for Reagan on
Capitol Hill, said Sunday that
some Senate opponents of the
sale are reconsidering and could
be converted with a final push of
pres idential persuasion. "We
will win," Raker insisted.
Exxon t e lls dip
in quarte r profits
NEW YORK (AP) Exxon
Corp., the nation's largest oil
compan y, said today its
third-quarter earnings fell 0.2
percent from a year earlier. The
co mpany cited higher oi l
exploration costs and sharply
lower profits from refining and
marketing.
Earnings for the three months
ended Sept. 30 dropped to Sl.08
billion. or $1 25 a share. from
SI .36 billion. or Sl 56 a share. in
last year 's third quarter.
Revenue rose 3 percent to $27.61
billion from $26 75 b11J1on
STAYING ON The Rl'\'
Th l' <HI ci'r l' 11 l's bu r g h :-. <J ~ s
h<' · s not O\ c•rjo~ C'd at st<J~ mg
on as prt•s1clent of '.':otre
Daml' l 'n1\·t•r s 1t\ for
;.in other fin· 'l'ars. b·ut has
a g n· l' d t 11 i h l' t r u :-. t c· l's ·
l'PCjUl'!-.l
Pale stinian issue
talks to resume
iERUSALEM (AP> -Israel
and Egypt decided today to
renew ministerial-level talks on
Palestiniah autonomy and
concentrate on mapping out
elections for a self.governing
council, Prime Minister
Menachem Begin announced.
Negotiators would meet in
Cairo Nov . 4, five days earlier
than originally scheduled, Begin
told reporters after a 00-minute
meeting with Egyptian Foreign
Minister Kemal Hl\ssan Aly and
Israeli Defense Minister Ariel
Sharon.
Mt. S t. H e lens
e ruption.seen
VANCOUVER. Wash. lAPJ -
Increased ground movement
near the lava dome in Mount St.
Helens' crater indicates that a
non.explosive eruption is likely
within the next two weeks.
scientists report.
But seis mic activity around
the mountain remained low
Sunday. according to the
University of Washington
Geophysics Center
Tornado l evels
home s in Florida
BLOUNTSTOWN. Fla. <AP)
A tornado that roared through
this tiny panhandle town leveled
about a dozen homes, injured at
least 12 people and left t he main
hospital operating on emergency
power after power lines were
sheared by flying roofs, officials
said. None of the injuries was
serious.
"It's just taken things and
leveled them like a bulldozer."
said Merrill Traylor. 33, son of
the Calhoun County civil defense
director.
Siamese twins
succumb in Te xas
EL PASO CAP> -Siamese
twin girls joined at the chest and
upper abdomen died exactly a
month after they were born to
an El Paso couple, medical
officials say.
Jeanette and Jillian Barcena
died in the intensive care
nursery of Sierra Medial Center,
about 45 minutes after one of the
twins' intestines ruptured and
the other's condition began
worsening. said Dr. Carlos
Gutierrez, their pediatrician.
·-
If ,·ott don't \Vant •
to drink -
• •
a .... ,,..._
UP AND AWAY Balloonists from Pennsylvania and
s urrounding slates came lo Strasburg to part1ctpate m the
fourth annual Pennsyh·ania hot air balloon champ1onsh1p:,
over the weekend. Twenty·ri\'e balloons were registered for
lhe two schedul ed hound and hare races held to benefit the
Cystic Ftbros is Foundation.
WARSAW. Poland (AP) -
Veter an Polish troops, ordered
by the government to "help
solve local conf licts," were
moving into 2,000 villages today
to try to ease food shortages
spurring wildcat strikes by more
than 250,000 wol'kers .
Demanding an end to strikes,
the minister of union affairs,
Stanislaw Ciosek, accused
Solidarity of "blackmail." He
said the independent labor
federation is putting the "pistol
of strikes not only to the
government's temple. but to the
temple of the entire society."
"The Council of Ministers
demands an end to strikes in
order to save society from their
disastrous effects," Ciosek said
Sunday in a televised statement.
In addition lo the spreading
wi1dcat walkouts, he apparently
was referring to a one-hour
warning str ike called for
Wednesday by Solidarity to
o r otest food shor tages and
alleged police harassment.
Announcing implementation of
the troop deployment ordered by
t h e government last week,
Administration Minister Gen.
Tadeusz Hupalowski said,
··Extraordinary situations
require extraordinary
measures.
"The situation is getting worse
and the government is doing
everything it can to make
survival possible." Hupalowski
said. ·we are facing winter and
people are anxious."
Gen. Wojdech Jaruzelski. the
Communist Party chief. premier
Romanian asks SS-20 re1noval
Ceausescu. also seeks halt in U.S. missile plan
By The Associated Press
Romanian President Nicolae
Ceausescu was quoted today as
calling for withdrawal of Soviet
nuclear missiles from Eastern
Europe in return for a halt in the
plann ed deployment of U.S.
medium range rockets in
Western Europe.
The maverick Eas t bloc
leader's appeal came after
weekend anti·nuclear rallies
that brought out more than
650.000 people in six West
European cities in a show of
growing opposition to
deploymen t of U.S . nuclear
missiles to match a Soviet
m1ss1le buildup.
Ceausescu's statement, made
in an interview with the West
German newspaper Frankfurter
Rundschau , marked the first
time a Soviet Bloc leader has
spoke n out publ icly for a
withdrawal of Moscow's SS-20
miss iles as part of an arms
reduction plan
The paper quoted Ceausescu
as saying he favored a halt in
development of new nuclear
missiles as well as the s tationing
of nuclear weapons on European
soil.
Ceausescu said this would
apply not only to Western plan s
for stat ion i n g cru ise and
Pershing 11 missiles in Europe
but also to "the withdrawal of
Soviet rockets," the newspaper
reported.
The Romanian leader called
f<Jr "decisive measures from the
side of governments as well as
the public" to end the arms
race.
Ceausescu's proposal
paralleled calls by West German
and other Western European
governments for scrapping the
Western missile deployment
plan in return for Soviet
promises to dismantle SS-20
missiles already deployed.
More than 200,000 marched
Sunday in Brussels, led by
government ministers and
political leaders. Police said it
was the biggest protest in
Belgium since World War II.
Fifty thou sand Par isians.
some wearing gas masks and
skeleton costumes, par;ided
throu~h their city and 50.000
rallied in Communist-ruled East
Berlin . In Oslo . 7,000
Norwegians walked in a
torchlight parade sponsored by
a group called "No to Nuclear
Weapons."
More than 200,000
demonstrated on Saturday in
Rome. and 150.000 rallied in
London . where Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger
was concluding a tour and talks
with North Atlantic Treatv
Organization defense ministers
on the deployment of U .S
Pers hing 2 missiles an Europe.
"I Uunk they should be taken
seriously," Weinberger said of
the marchers. "It 1s completely
understandable, but it's the
wrong way to get the resuJt we
all want -no war."
In 1979, NA 1'0 asked the
U n ited States lo in s tall
medium ·range missiles 1n
B r itain, West Germany ,
Belgium and the Netherlands to
counter the threat of hundreds of
Soviet SS-20 multiple warhead
missiles aimed at European
targets.
Remodel Special
and defense minister. on Friday
ordered the t roops to help move
rood to market. ease problems of
fuel distribution and "solve local
connicts."
Sources closer to t h e
government said teams of three
or four enlisted men and officers
were being sent to vlll ages, but
not to the larger towns and
cities. This indicated their
mission was economic and not a
portent of martial law.
Local Solidarity chapters met
during the weekend to assess the
government's move and plan for
the warning s trike Wednesday
by the union's 9.5 million
members.
Many union officials said they
would welcome the presence or
the military if the troops help
improve the food situation and
provide more fuel
Food and fuel shortages have
triggered a spreading wave ot
strikes by an estimated 250,000
to 300,000 workers.
33 drown
as Haitian
boat sinks
ll lLLSBO RO INLET, Fla .
<AP I A wooden sailboat
carrying 67 Haitian refugees
"broke up" less than a half.mile
from shore early today. and al
least 33 people drowned, the U.S.
Coast Guard said
Petty Officer Daryl Gale said
22 bodies had been recovered
and that three patrol boats and
three helicopters were searching
for the "five unaccounted for" in
waters off this northeastern
Broward County inlet, officials
!'>aid.
Thirty of the refugees swam
safely to shore, he said.
A command post was set up at
P om pano Beach , the city
n e i g hboring the mos tl y
upper class town of Hillsboro
Beach, to treat survivors for
exposure. authorities said.
Gale said the Coast Guard was
not sure exactly when and where
the vessel broke up
"It was probabl) overcrowded
and un~eaworthy . as most of the
lla1t1an refugee vessels usually
are." Gale s aid
Coast Guard Petty Officer Dan
Waldschmidt said bodies began
washing up on a beach near a
res1dent1al area about a mile
north of the inlet al 5 30 a.m.
Debris lrom the \.essel also
was ht'd up on s hore
"The boat 1s swa mped
offshore We can see 1t," said Ll.
Robert Jones of the Hillsboro
Beach Police department.
Jones said the morning waters
"aren't terrible. but they 're
rough enough ..
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EncloH $1 for po1tage and han:illng.
011-Lea!le wlll rush official entry cards ard full instructions to
meet earilest available !tling period.
ThH• drewlngs rere1ve no governmental publ1c1ty consequently.
number ot pert1c1pants is extremely tow
·L.B .• HazelwOOd. Mo . Aug '80
Lois for hair
1113 So. Coast Hwy •• LCKJUftG Beach 497-4410
Expires Dec 1
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VVith the United way.
3903 Metropollten Drive, Suite 500
O,.nge,Callfoml• 92668
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IWI A Public Service of The Daily Piiot ~ & The Advertising Council
.I
Unlt.tw.y I nonh
or 0.ange Counrv ~
T hanka to you, it works.
For all of us.
STEREO SQUNDS OF THE HARBOR . .:
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. October 26, 1981 H/F
•
Marine DI guilty
in recruit attack
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A
Marine Corps drill instructor
who ordered a Marine recruit
beaten has been convicted of
assault and maltreatment.
The court martial conviction
stemmed from a July 26th
beating of Pvt. Paul Johnson at
the Marine Corps Recruit Depot
that forced removal or Johnson's
spleen.
Sgt. Timmie Piatt, 29, of
Geneva, Pa ., received a
bad-conduct discharge plus one
year's confinement with hard
labor. He also was reduced in
rank lo the entry level of E·l
grade and ordered to forfeit $300
a month from his salary for a
year.
A mtra k b egins
new LA. seroice
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
first train since 1968 from Los
Angeles to Sacramento was
more than ha lf full , Amtrak
employees said.
Station service employee
Darryl Triche said 150
passengers Sunday were aboard
the new train that carries up to
275 people.
The train travels up the coast
to Oakland, continuing t o
Sacramento, said Mrs . Lynn
Berberian, Amtrak regional
director or passenger services
The 13-hour trip includes stops
at Glendale, Santa Barbara, San
Lui s Obispo. San Jose.
Richmond. Oakland and Davis.
Full round-trip fare is $69.
Copte r landing
sha k es up p air
LONG BEACH (AP> -One
police officer was hospitalized
a nd another was shaken up alter
their police department
helicopter lost power in an
industrial section here and made
what a spokesman called a
"hard landing ...
The crash occurred at 4: 45
p. m. Saturday as pilot Officer
Ben Pos t maneuvered the
aircraft a nd Officer Gary
Denham gave directions to
ground units that were
investigating a silent burglar
alarm at an industrial building,
police department s pokesman
Sgt. William Sprague said.
Ttvo f ish ermen
drotvn in b ay
BENICIA <AP> -Two sport
fishermen drowned at about the
same time in separate weekend
Incidents In Suisun Bay 1 the
Solano Co unty s heriff 's
department reported.
The victims were identified as
Nathan B. Glidewell, 59, of
Martinez. and Eddie Lee Jr., 48,
of Fairfield. Bolh men drowned
. about 12: 30 p.m. Saturday.
Authorities said Gt1dJ.ve11
perished alter diving Into the
waler to retrieve his wallet with
$500, and bis wife in their boat
could not come after him in time
because an anchor line fouled in
the propeller. Lee fell Into the.
bay while trying to untangle his
fishing lines from his propeller,
his wife told officials
Brown.'s office
scrap s gay ads
SACRAMENTO (APl Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. 's office has
s c r a pp e d' a t e 1 e v i s i o n
advertising campaign aimed at
promoting mental health among
homosexuals. racial minorities
and the elderly.
The ads on homosexuals. the
only ones that h ave been
produced so far, "smacked of
advocacy," said Brown's chief
of staff, B.T . Collins .
The decision was criticized by
the producer of the ads, J erry
Wheeler, who said, "Our
messages promote mental well
being among gay people, among
parents, friends and coworkers
of gay people."
AFL-CIO units
c laim wins
in 2 e lections
SACRAMENTO <AP> Two
A FL·CIO locals say they have
defeated the California State
Employees Assoc iation in
represe ntational runoff
elections
In one contest to r epresent
about 8 ,000 psychiatric
tec hnicians in California's 11
state hospitals. the CW A Psych
Tech Union said it won 2,575
votes compared to 1,931 for the
CSEA.
1 n another to represent 3,000
state health and social services
professionals. Local 2620 of the
American Federation of State.
Cou n ty, and Municipal ·
Employees said it won 1,081
votes compared to 1.038 for the
CSEA
·~-· ........ SUNSET STUNT Pat Wagner waves from wing of privah•
plane piloted b) her husband. Bob. on an evening ride out of
the sunset in Salinas. Pat. who has been wing-walking 10
years. appeared in the first California lnternationi.Jl
Airsho\\ Sunda~ ""1th flyers from throughout the world.
Gull population
beginning to rise
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A
two-year study shows that DDT
acted upon seagull embryos
among the Santa Barbara Island
gull populatton like the female
se.x hormone estrogen. resulting
in an ovary -like organ
developing in the left testis of
male gulls and interrupting the
breeding process .
But now, says t he recently
concluded study by D. Michael
Fry of the Department of Avian
Science at the University of
California-Davis. the seagull
population is again growing on
the island 60 miles southwest of
the Los Angeles County coast.
and the effects of 20 years'
exposure to DDT are gradually
being bred out.
In the mid-l970s. scientific
observers noted a highly s kewed
sex ratio among the Santa
Barbara Island gulls. with the
f emales outnumbering the
males 4·1. but Fry s aid he did
not believe the lopsided ratio
was because the gulls had
become completely feminized.
"It was probably because the
partially feminized male gulls
did not come to the breedrng
places," he said. The gulls breed
at the age of 4 or 5.
Scientists estimate that the
offshore area was contaminated
by as much as 1.9 million
kilograms of commercial DDT
between 1950 and 1970 from
spraying and m anufacturing
plants. The chemical wa s
banned in 1972.
It was known that DDT caused
thinning of the eggshells of
pelicans and cormdPants on the
oflsnor e 1s tands. causing a
breeding failure in those birds in
1969. 1970 and 1971.
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Placing a Classified
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Book attacks
chief justice
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The
first book abo ut the
unprecedented public
invesligation o r the state
Supreme Court in 1979 is out ,
and its author, law professor
Preble Stolz., blames much of
the court's turmoil on Chief
Justice Rose Bird.
The book by the longtime
ro11rt r ritic is called "JudllUlJl
Judges· The Investigation of
Rose Bird and the Cahforma
Supreme Court."
Stolz, who was a policy
adviser to Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. during part or the lime that
W11liam Clark.
Stolz says Ms . Bird's excess of
suspicion and tendency to isolate
herselr from all but a few close
associates "concealed her
greatest virtue: exceptional
conscientiousness and hard
work," and contributed to the
breakdown in communicaion
that was painfully exposed in the
1979 hearings.
He also says Ms. Bird, alter
her appointment by Brown in
1977 as the first woman on the
court, demoralized the court
staff and alienated trial judges.
He rejects the defense that the
''No one wants to be .a martyr
without. a cause''
Ms Bird served in Brown's
cabinet. has generous helpings
of blame for pra c tically
everyone involved with the
court
Thal becomes clear in the first
page of his book, in which he
says the leading roles in the 1979
hearings "were filled by public
officials of m ediocre talent
whose evidence disclosed not
venality but ineptitude and
pettiness.··
But that's tame compared to
hi s treatment or the chief
justice, who was the central
target of the investigation into
whether the court's rulings on
the "use a gun, go to prison"
law and oth er cases were
improperly delayed for political
reasons.
Stolz agrees with the findings
of the Commission on Judicial
Performance that there was no
evidence to charge Ms . Bird or
a n yone else with deliberate
delays to protect the chief
justice in the 1978 election, m
which she barely s urvived a
conservative campaign to
unseal her.
But in the course of 427 pages.
the author questions Ms . Bird's
competence, motives. j udgment.
c hara c t e r , maturity and
emotional stability ; concludes
she was unfit to be chief justice,
and largely exonerates her chief
antagonist. former Justice
reaction wa s that o f a
loo-comfortable establishment,
s aying the judicia l
establishment is a myth~
Stolz is almost as harsh lo Ms.
Bird's chief ally on the court,
Mathew Tobriner, saying he
mishandled the "use a gun"
case. gave Ms. Bird poor advice,
and was "pathetically
undressing himself in public"
during his testimony in the court
investigation.
Stolz largely faults Ms. Bird in
her feud with Clark over events
leading up to the 1979
investigation.
Clark, n ow deputy U.S .
sec retary of sta te ,
acknowledged talking to a Los
Angeles Times reporter before
the Election Day· 1978 story that
alleged the delay of key cases
and led to the investigation.
He later told another reporter
that he had undisclosed
"decisive reasons" for not
signing a statement circulated
by Tobriner denying any
improper dela~ of cases.
Stolz calls the coyness of the
"decisive r easons" statement
"indefensible," but says Clark
had reason to shun a possible
coverup of wrongdoing. He
concludes that Clark was not out
lo embarrass M s . Bird
politically and that s he was
paranoid for suspecting him.
~'JV§~
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you can use your VISA or MASTER CARD to place a DAILY PILOT
Classified over the telephone, including 8-0ay weeg ads.
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Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Monday. Ootober 26, 1981 HI F
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Merger talks
OAKLAND <APJ -Golden West
Financial Corp anno unced It ia
enaaged in talks •'med at acquirtnc
F i deli t y S avin gs and Lo an
A&soc:laUon.
Herbert Sandler. chairman of
Golden Wal, said the de al would be
ciontln,ent upon aaslstance from the
Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
CorponUon and other government
11nc'-.
Tbe K"Quisillon would bl made by
Golden West or ltt subaldilll'J World
Sawina• and Loin Au oclation,
Sandler aaJd
. ,,... ............ _. ................ ~ ..
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.
Housing woes
'Dot that simple
Mortgages a t today'• lnterest r ates are, q uite
·Jlt erall y, k al jln g man y s ma ll in s t1tu t1ont1
<"Mortgage" me ans "death pledge." I They are
severely wounding hundreds of building contr actors
and thousands or real estate brokers
Don't let one or these home loans wreck your
finances 0on·1 sign one until both interest rates and
home purchase prices drop dr11st1cally. no matter
how creative or attra ctive the agreement may sound
ery new home loan In virtually ev-~
('ont,.act. the banks.
bu i I de rs a nd r eal ~,...
est ate indust ry ure ·
trying lo s hift their A ..,. a
ri s k ~. o r t h e i r -1,-(J-IA.__P_OR-Jf_R_ ina b i li t y lo se l l
ho us('s tod ay , o fr
their own backs and onto youri.
Furthermore, us a prospective private lender. as
opposed to borrowe r, you must be wa ry of the new
home sales agreem ents. Stonewalled by both buyers
and lending institutions who refuse to lend or pay at
rurrent rates. real estate agenls a re. increasingly.
"selling" the homeowner or becoming 1n effect a
"ba nk" talking you into "laking back" a mortgage
ut a lower inter~st rate to enable you to sell your
house to a reluctant buyer
"The situation is desperate ... said He rman J
Smith. president of the National Assoc1at1on of Home
Builders ··Under tod a\•'s maser abl e econo ma r
cond1t1ons. builders ran't sell the houses they·ve
already built, they can't sta rt new homes. they can't
meet their payrolls and they can't meet their <own l
obl igations . From Maine to California. the home
building industry has been shut down."
The home builders blame mterest rates, home
hu ilder Smith fl ails Congress. the admin1strat1on. the
Fc>deraJ Reserve for outlandish loan costs
Certainly. Congress a nd the Wh ite House m ust do
much more to cut the federal bureaucracy and the
budget
But the problems in housing are not as s imple. In
the words of Dr. J ack Carlson. chief economist of the
;'II at1onal Association of Realtors
The increase in the overaJI cost of housing
nation a lly an the last t hree year s has been
devas tating Since 1978. total housing costs have
surged 60 percent, and in some cases. the costs have
doubled ··
The NA R economist blames interest rates as one
factor But he correctly points also to the soaring
prices of homes themselves. plus the staggering
increases in related home upkeep expenses -such as
utility bills theat and lighll and property taxes.
Ty pi ca l mo rt gage pa y m e nts o n a n
average-priced, sangle·fam1ly home. fi nanced with a
30-year mortgage for 80 percent of the total home
price, amount now to S8 10 a month, 112 percent abov f'
the 1978 average of just $382 And Carlson adds
··Mortgage payments r eflect o nly about
two.thirds of the cost of owning and maintaining a
hom e" Taxes. insurance and utilities account for
a nother one·lturd. putting total average monthly
r ha rges for a t ypical one-family house al nearly
Sl.215
T hal figure comes to $14,573 a year '
Under the traditional fin ancial rules of the game
al the most, 25 per cent of your income for housing
a typical family buying a typical house would have
to gross more tha n $58,999 annually to be able to
afford to purchase and keep 1t
And the traditional rules applied as recently as
three years ago, the realtors' assoc1at1on·s figures
s how In 1978. the average mortgage payment alone
was JUSl 22 per cent Of gross family income.
In short, three years ago. you needed to gross
on l~ about S2J,000 to buy a typical home But the 1981
monthly averaJ:C of S810 S9.270 a year c urrently
amounts to 37 per cent of annual gross family income.
Add to that the ext ra S400·plus per month in
additaonaJ home costs fo r taxes. insurance. utilities
and ,the c urrent figu res come to 55 percent more
than half of typical family income. That percentage
no one can afford 1
At these prices. experts conclude. only ab<>ut 5
percent of the nat1on·s families c an afford to buy a
new home
Gold metals quotations
Cold
London: morning fixing $428.00. off $4 SO.
London: afternoon fixing $426.00, of( $6.50.
Paris : afternoon fixing $430.92, off $6. 73.
Frankfurt: $431.01. off $4.97 .
Zorich: Late fixing $425.00. bid off $6.00, $428.00 asked.
Handy & Harman: (only daily quote> $426.00, off $6.SO.
Engelhard: (only daily quote) $426.00, off $6.SO.
Engelhard: (only daily quote) fabricated $447.30, off
$6.83.
Cold coi11s
NEW YORK <AP> -Prices late Frid ay or gold coins ,
compared with Thursday's price
Krugerrand, 1 troy oz .. $454.00. o{( S3.00.
Maple leaf, l troy oz .. $454.00, off $3.00.
Mexican SO peso. 1.2 troy oz .• SS48.00. off $3.00.
Aus&rlan JOO crown, .9802 troy oz .. $430.00, off $2.00.
Source: Deak Perera
Metals
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrous metals prices
today.
Copper 81%-84 cents a pound, U.S. destination&.
Lead 36·40 ceots a pound.
ZlDC 46V•·49 V• cents a pound, delivered.
Tin $7.8604 MetaJs Week composite tt>.
Ahamlaum 76-80 cent.a a pound. N.Y.
Mercary $4.22.00 per nu k.
Pladaum $41.3.00 troy oz., N.Y.
SiWer
Handy & Harman, $8.9S> per troy ounce.
642-4321
· Dirm "' coa.ct, totu~fo...,..
lwmftOIOll paprr, ""
H /F Orange Co11t DAILY PILOTfMonday, Ootober2e, 1981
Man jailed
on check rap
A man calllne himself Dale H&JJ came to Troy m., ln January. claiming to be a former retidenl
dyitlg of cancer, and bestowed $10,000 lu 11Ju on the 1oulbern mtnot1 city.
Now, the man police·~ 1s really Harold Hall
was in jail charged with grand theft for alleaedty
writing bad checks in Florida.
Hall was arrested at a hoapltal in fllfblHd,
Ill., where he had gone for test.a. He to14 city
residents, who were used to seeing him flaah a
large bankroll and pick up restaurant tabs. that he
had a stroke •
A balky fuel pump again has spoiled a
Colorado couple 's attempt to set a record for flying
around the world in a sing le-engine, piston -drive n
airplane.
Paul Whistle, 56,
flew t6 Singapore from a
remote Indonesia n
airfield in a hired
airplane, hoping to have
the fuel pump fixed or
PLACES
replaced, said Howard Ryan, a spokesman for the
Whis tles.
His 53-year-old wife. Eddie. remained in
Me da n, Sumatn, with the couple's cripple d
14·year-old Beechcraft Bonanza V-35TC, dubbed
"The Flying F ez." •
HnCa TOCl*THCTIMI& IJIOftW Of'
CAU.I .. "" ..... kll .. I Olttrkll N•*f'Oln·MltA "'""""' .. &AA.JI UN"ll Otc.HOCM.OllTIUCT, ----~1
lld O.•tlMI I .. C'IOCll ._,... el tM TlllANS.~:tlltV~i ... INC: ... ·····~·'""· P""•e ....... .._...._. llP l't«tftCM dU~y Tt119' .. ~ lllt ._ -....., ... .._,._. .._., irvlt WILL Stnet,C:-4Uilie..,,CAfM27 Hl.L A lil'UIUCAUC'TtOH TOTHI Prtlecl ldt11tlllut1en Heme: lflONllT 1100111 ,011 CASH IHlltOV CO HllllVAT IO N I tf .... I twf MIASUlllH AT COltOHA OIL MAii IN YMM -' t -11 1 U4 _, .. -U""-1 14*tl ell •lt!M, HIGH $C:HOOL -MICHi\NIC:AL llllt .,141 lllltf'fft C-YH to ..wt ';?.".':~lent tr• on l'lle: 110 MWtltld"'lt"'*'Mldo.MOfTn.sl ~ 111 Ult ~_........,••crlOM· p~ ... ll• 14-t C.IAI MeM, CA mv T • u s T 0 II : II A v M 0 N 0 tl'ld ~ INr SC,._., Cttlt Mew, CA -lllSHAU. JAlllVll, ,_, .,,.,...,,led .... -HOTICI! 1$ HlltllV OIVl!H IMI llHll'IC:I AllV ALLI TATI '"• •--Mtd ScllOtl 01Mrlc1 ti SAVINGS ANO 1.0AH ASSOCIA Ort .... ODuf!ty, c.111.,.nle, Kllfll ty TtON, e c;.l~(.tfje(tlllft. end lllro\19'1 llt GeYer11f111 ... ,o. llK.,...., , ___ Yu, tm •• lftttr "•re I n•fl • r r er er red I• • • .... Ult! 111 llMtt l»Q, ,_ ISI09f Of· "DISTIUCT;' .... ret.iw \IP to, '"" llcltl 11Ktf4" In .... offk • of .... NM ltler tlWI h .,_.1\lted time, !tee.order of OrMOf eounty; wi. OMo tHIM ~tor Uw -rd .. t Ceftlftcl ot lrliM dlHUlllH lflt t.tio.1111 IH• ,., ,,.. ...... "ole<t ,......., . A p,...._ Qlflfertflff h tc-leO PAltCh I. Uflil HO. J2Ill1'11 Gltv
hW .__,,..., l 1911, •:• e.m., wltll tf H-1*1 9M<ll. (N1ty .. 0r ..... Mr. Jim Meis.-. OlreclOt of MM>. Mele .. c.lllornlt, 0, .--o. 111•SJ64*1 ti 2"5 .. ., St • C..lt lll)td .,. lfwl1 terulll Gtft4ltmlllh1m Mo••, CA. Ho bid •lll be ec:up«ed 'l•n ,_ .. A.,.,.i "· 1'1t If! ll004l .... , ... , ... COftlttclor •ll•nd• ..... nno. INQtt 27t to ,,, lflClllMve, Of P,.-t>ld c,.,.twence. llcl•I llle'41rda, of Ort110t Ct11nly, l ld ~nts .,.. to be ptc•t41 111> c:.tlfomlo. ti 11\• P11rc" as l119 Otllce, llU PAlllCEL J· An Ulldlvldl9cl 1/»0ll\ I,.. Pt•centlo Street, Coal• Melt, CA leNll n • 1...-111 c.nl"-In IN'" (71•7'4UJ11J lnlOrHI '" -lo,,,. c.m .... Are• of l ldls INll lie recel•tcl Ill tN piece Leh t -t ol Trtc1 t91, .. P9f' m# 1c1tn1Hlet1 -... and lhtll be ~ flltll In -a , INIOt' ts 10 2' 1,,. enO publicly r•tO •loud et th• clutlve, Mlaull--~. retordl •llo"9•si..tecl II""' -piece. of .. 1d c:o.intv. •• wcll t•m la .. 11"'"' TM•• wtll .... Fifty Oollw ('50 •. Cllll In .... Ar11cl• enllllecl "Definitions" Of
dtpetll ,.quired f0< "'" ... of blll llW Dt<l•r•llons of Covtftt11la, Condi· doc:um...U lo ...,.., ... t11e r•hwn In tlona end Realrlctl°"a rKOrded 111
.-<-Ilion ""'"'n u NY' •"• --17JQS, POl1t 1 ... -rt-reconlM bid-nine cMite. In -• 1m1,,.... 2111, 11o1" e1001<1e1 IEec" bid ""''' conform •nd be R«Mcb, -recora.d 111 .,_ t2S7J, r•-•lw 10 N c°"lrectdewmentl. ,.... f70. Offtclel Recoros IEtell IHd tlltll bt .CCOl'llf*'led by IEXC:IEll"T THIERIEFROM oll ell, ,,,. -lltllY ,..._,""2 to In,,,. <°"tree.I .... mlM<•lt -GUier ll~f'OCertlom,
doc:umtnla Mid ll't t._ llst of II'--below • dllotll of 500 l•I. •""""' 1"9 subcontrectors. rl8"1 of -1..:• entry,•• l"fftrw<I In TN OISTIUCT r-vn lhe rlgll( to 1,..tru,,,...bof rec.onl.
Passengers board the ·T11uana Trolley'· at
San D1eqt1 headed for .Wer1co pm11ts Tiie
APWI..,.. ..
system wa~ built entire/11 fm111 state sales and
yosolme ta.r I und~
A sear ch resumed today for a Visalia youth
missing since Saturday on a deer hunting trip near
Badger in the Sterr• Nevada.
Bry an Riley, 19, left Cherry Flat Camp1round
Saturday and was supposed to return a couple of
hours later , Tulare County sheriff's officers
reported.
••lee• .. y O< .. , bldl Of' lo wotw ... y PAlllCEL >: E-ents H _ .. lrre9ul•r1lln or lnlorrntlllles In ..,Y •-m..U.,.. per1lculerly Ml forth 1n
bids Of' In ltw blddl1>9. .,. Artkl• -•tt..i "Ee-a·· of TN OISTRICT ,_., 00\llfltd from '"• Oecl ... ellon _, 1"9 S.Cllon llM Director of IN Deper1menl of hetcllnot In tue:" Ankle ..,tltled os lndustrlt l ltelollona Ille 99nerel fOll-i: "Rltflls •NI Duties. Ulllltles iwevelllng •81• of P9f' OI-.,, ... , In tnd Ctllle Tetevlslon'", "~r1. Set· tlleloc.tltyln-"'chlflla-•lslobe tlemtnt ••• IEncro•cllm tnl". performed for •..:" craft o• type of ·•1ngrHs, Ellf'HS end Rec,.•llontl workmen needed to •••<ult Ille llllQhll", "E11.cklslw Rutrkllld Com-contrltCI n... rtt• •rt on Ille •• '"" ,,_ ArN IE.....,..., .. -··-., Bo• Dl$TRICT otrlet loc .. tll•t E•Mm-· P•rcl1t1I .. O•••rlM•"'· IUJ PARCEL 4 E~s •• well Sa~ Diego trolley jolly •
· Swift little r ed cars w hisk riders to Mexic'an border
About 1,000 fu ndamentalist Christians
c horu sed .. amen" as the Rev. Jerry Falwell
preached freedom of religion in support of a
church whose Christian school has been closed by
the courts.
Pt•ce•ll• ,., .... Coate ....... CA e--~ -Nrttwltrly Ml lortll "' t JU1. Ceples mey l>e OOl•IMd on .,,. Article enllllect "'E•tomlftlS" OI
'"""'·A copy o1 .,,.. ratn s11t11.,. 111e 0ec1 .... 1 ... of eo ......... u. Coftdl· post..S at llw IOI> •lie. lions •nd Restrlcll°"I recorckd In
TIM loreQIDl119 sclwdul• of per di-booll 12305, -746, -r•recorooo WOf>el It lltMd uPOll • -rtll119 city of In -k 12:171, -327, bol" of Ofrlclel •IQlll 111 "ouf'\. The ret• for holldty Reco•4" . .,..,, recorded In .,_ IU7l, anCI ovtr11me -on !NII be •I leest .,.._ 110. Otfkitl Reconli, ,_, tlw
tlrnt •nd-·l\all s.ctl°" llMdlnvt In IUCll Anlclt ..,.
SAN YSIDRO (APl This
1s the la:-.1 stop for the swift
ltttle red cars that whisper
their way down from San
Diego on seam less rails to
the Mexie<1n border
Passengers get out here
and walk across the
pedestrian ramps to Tijuana
taxis that lake them into
town lo :-.hc1p. or bN the
µon1es. <1r <lnnk <And listen to
Tijuana brass, or have the
Caesar salad at the Caesar
llotel.
The little red cars arc here
"aitini:: when they return, to
whisk them northward again.·
their cestos filled with booty.
their ins1de9'with heartburn
San D1c.•gans are proud or
this 16 mile stretch and the
German built cars that carry
18.000 people a day o n
weekends and 13.000 a day on
"'eek days
One thing that m akes them
proud i:-. they did at all
themsch es U nlike a lmost
every other mass transit
program 111 the United
Stales. th1:-. one used no
federal funds. except for
grade-crossing signals. a
half-m1llton-dollar drop in
the S86·m1lhon bucket.
The proJet'l was paid for
with stat<' sales tax 3nd
gasoline tax funds set aside
for mass trans it It was
localh l'oncei\•c.•d and
planned. and as the cheapest
s y s t e m p <' r m ii e 1 n t he
nation
Jo~or in~lancc. Washin~ton.
D C . spent S43 million per
mile for 1ls ne\\ subway The
San Diego Trolley came 1n al
S4. 7 millton per mile.
The onlv sad note in this
happy op.;ration is the name.
The San Diego Trolley will
probabl~ not stick . People
DEATH NOTICES
are already calling it the
Tijuana Trolley, although the
racket) c ity south of the
border had nothin)( lo do with
it. The Mexicans are talkmg
now about building their own
l rollcy to link up with San
Diego's red cars.
The trolley s tarts just
outs ide the old. picturesque
Santa fe station in downtown
San Diego. It makes six stops
in San Diego before it hits the
right-o f-way To avoid
making too many stops for
r ed lights in town. there 1s a
light actuation switch to turn
the traffic lights to g reen .
Once outsid e of town, the
average speed of 9 miles an
hour picks up to 35 lo 40, and
the trolley m akes 11 stops of
20 seconds each at pretty
little s tations built to
accommodate the G erman
cars The average run takes
about 33 minute!., which is
fine because m ost of the
countryside outside the wide
windows is dull
The high spot for visitors
comes at the Harborside and
Pacific Fleet stops. where
they get a specta,•ular view
of the south harbor. the
bridge to Coronado Island
and the Na\'Y yards with the
proud ships in mothballs.
The trolley was the
brainstorm of two San Diego
w'o m en who organized
support for the project and
pushed 1t along.
Judith Bauer and Maureen
O'Connor. chairwomen of the
Metropolitan Transit
Development Board ,
overcame partisan politics.
personal feuds and public
distaste for big s pending to
get the cars rolling. The line
saved m oney by buying
existing right·uf way from
Southern Pacific Railroad
for about Sl8 million
The trolley started July 26
and was an instant s uccess
It 1s so popular a s an
alternative means o f
transportation in car crazy
California that construction
of double track 1s being
pressed and 10 more cars are
on order from Siemens-Ou
Wag of nuesseldorf. There
are plans also to t•xt end the
trolley lo the east of the city
Tom Larwin. general
manager of the Metropolitan
Transit Development Board.
says s uccess has created
problems They had planned
l o a d d t o t h e s e r \' i c e
graduall~. but now they have
to JUmp right in with both
feet.
There ar<.' no conductors .
Ther e arc> no ticket sellers or
takers. The train is run on
the .bonor system in a way
Th<' onl) employee aboard
most train:-. as the driver You
drop a dollar in silver into a
machine at the station. It
del i vers you a s mal l
pastec<Ard ticket good for two
hours You might be asked to
s ho~ the ticket by
pl ainclothcs security people
riding trains at random But
more likely not.
The first time you are
caught ~ettmg a free ride
~ ou pa~ an au tom at1c $20
fine. The second off e nse
costs $.51) The third offense
means a S50 fine and an
appearance 1n court to
ex plain \\h) you are so
dumb
In the few months the
trolleys have been rolling,
less thun t percent of the
riders have evaded paying
the fare. o fficials say
Falwell, leader of the conservative Moral
M aJority, led the rally des pite a cold morning with
snow flurries. sleet and rain, in support of the
Faith Baptist Church and its pastor, lhe Rev.
Everett Sileven. of Louinllle, Nebr.
* Showers could reach the north end of the San
II Sholl lie man<t•lory uPon IM llllecl u lollOws ""R~t.a •NI OutlH CONTRACTOR lo -... conlrtct Ulllllltl -c. .... Telnl11 ... ··. ··s~ Is •••rdeO , •nd upo11 eny port,S41t1-•N1Encroec....,,.nt··. IUCl<onlrtdor -nlm, lo P•Y "°' "Community Feclllllu Easement" leU 11\an Iha wkl speclll•O , ... ,to •11 ano ·· Dreln•o• O••• Community -rkm.n tmc>foyed by them In tlw F.c:llllles".
uecullon of Ille contrect. 10 co ..... trv. • 32. N._1 lloe<ll. No t>I-mey wlthdr-his bkl tor CA • period of torty.flV't (<lS) O.ya •Iler ·· 111 • strW1 .oor-or common dlt·
IN d•I• '9t lor IM-1"9of l>ldl.. sl1jnotlon Is sllOWn -.... no werrenly A peymenl bond -• perfMmonce Is given u lo Its compltl-U or cor· ___________ _,bond •Ill be required prior lo rectMU.l"
execution of Ill• con1 r1et T"• TN btnafkl•Y .... , seld Dee<! ol p•ymenl bond shell lie In llW form wt Trust, by,_ of• btM<ll or dltf..,11
J oaquin Valley tonight spreading south to about
Merced Tuesday, the National Weather Service
predicts.
NU llllCE -------------tfOf'I" In llw contrettdo<umentt In the obll911llons securlld lllerebv. SUPEltlCl't COUlllT IN THE NS IU'2 Gowml"9 &oerd heretofore e1111<uttcl -dltll.,.r*<I to STATE Ofl CALll'OltNIA l'ICTITIOUS llUSIMllS By Qorotloy Hotr"9y Fl ... r, Ille undersigned t -1n.n Docl•ratlon
COUNTY Ol'OlllANOE N-l!STAT•MaNT Pur<haif19Dlf9CIOt ~IDt1•..,I•~.~~~ .. _!_O!~el,:_ M1cl11_ ~.~oo:~=I ... :::s1011-i1>9 ---Is dol"9 Dusi· o:;u:~= ~ CoHI D•llY!~'; l'o' ceu.:.tt: ~ ........... 1 ..Tei
APPOINTMENTOI' TltUSTEE MUSIC GAl,AXV', 11'!» .... _ P•---1Y 10 utlsly stld Olllloetlons. In lhe M•ller of llM Estale ol Ave.,Tuslln,CA '261D NII.JC MOTIC( end1Nreott...t,.._.sl9"0dc..,MCI PHILIP MALOHIEY,. mlul1>9 ptr>OI\ Mic,_, Pinto. "i Arroyo C"lco, .. 1. notice ol _,. -of e1ec11 .... to
l Pet Ill~ ANITA MALONEY. It. l•gu,.. llffc", CA 92'51 b9 Recordod June >O, 1911 ts lnslr. No, spour.e of PHILIP MALONEY. Ille T"I' butlneu lscanduet..:t by en In· NOTICE OF DEATH OF =l~~R:.C::.m. PtOt 70, of Hid mr~':'~ O.oomcier 11. 1'80. dlvldu•IMlc:r-IPinto ERMA v. KEITH AND Seid .... wm i. m-. DUI •lll'IOUI
PH 1L1 p MALO NE y , the min ing Tnls .... ....,, • ., lllecl wllll Ille 0 F P E T I T I 0 N T 0 coven•"' or ..,.,.,.,,,,, eitll"HS or Im·
person,••• a rulci.nt of oren90t c-1yClffll'.of0t-c:-1.,on0c1. ADMINISTER ESTATE p11ec1. r9911nllnt1 Utte. -"le"" or County , Ce•llornl• residing with 1, tttl NO All0739 eftCumbuncH, to pey tlle rcwn.inl"9 1111 I I 1'17174.S . . ll'lnclpel ...,.,, of .... nole(S) -u•ed ':o . s":::;r.:o.,, ~· E Ladd Cenyon PuOllShed 0r.,,.. COHI O•lly Pllol, T 0 a I I h e I r s , by .. 10 Otlld of TrUll. Willi lnl•rtsl ..
J. PHILIP MALONEY. ,,. mlul"ll 0<1 n. "· i.. Nov J, 1"1 beneficiaries, cr editors in .. id not• provided, eovonc:es, 11 .,,.,,
person, wes 1es1 s-. on December 11. • ._.., and contingent creditors of ':':::.' ~';!~:,';''.~o'°:!!:'.:' 0~'':!!;
1'IO •nd ever since'"-' •••• l\aa men, E r m a v . K e I t h a n d TruslM -ol ..... trusts cr•leO by ~,.:::..i::.=~g end !\It persons WhO may be .. Id OMd al Tt141. Seid .. le wlll lie
• On or ....... O.C-r 11, '"° otherwise interested In the lltld on Tundoy, N-mbtr >. '"1 •• PH P 0 • 2•00 P.M. • 1tw C,_,.,..,, Aw,,.....,_ ILi MAL NEV' Ille mhsln9 Wiii and/or estate: lrtnceto91e Clvl<CmterBulldlfll.>OO =~~.:'.i ::;,::~-;~~,!;'·,;:'0:~ Ml •Ta A petition has been filed EHt c~ A-. 1n .,,. c11., of
•n ln .. resl In -1' en II tied to ,... NOTIC:• oir TltUST•l'S IAL• by E.1 s i e H 111 i n the Or:.i:; ~-of tr• lnlllel publlctllcr pounslon o1 <•<1•ln , ... P,_rtlta UH0•1t o•eooir TllUST Superior Court of Orange of '"'' nottc. 11w t<QI •mount of 111e :~~~:::,:;~·~~rnl• •nCI further ~ .... tMtt... County requesting that unp•ld b•linc• of th• obll9et1on
j TNHttl•Of91emlul"9P9rtonls NQTICEISHEREIVGIVEN Elsie Hill be appointed as .. cu•..:tbvlN•lloWdH(rlbedOtoOof In nMd of •t .... lon WC>e,..lllon eno Tll•I undtr -by vlrtw of llw personal representative tO tr.nl eno ntlmtleO costs, • .,_..SM, cere of -11\ip 'in ll\at pettt'to,,... Pf"Ovhl°"s of ,,.., cer1eln OMd of encl 4ldv•11<n ls ""·"' .. owns e VHlecl jolnl 1.,,.,cy lnle""1 In Trusld .. ecl IN)' 11, 1m, -..co...-administer the estate Of To dltterml,. Uw -nlng bid . ....., lhe -V't-dtscrllled .,,_,.., wltll .... '" .... oHIQ of Ille Rte ... ~ of ,... Erma v. Keith (under the rntY cell (714) '31'°"6 mlnln9 penon -desires lo ._..,0,,. County of 0r-.. stet• o1 C.lllontlo, I d d t D•lecl Ocle>Cler J, 1"1 ...... on JyM 1t 1tn tn Volume 13113 .,... n e p e n e n TRANS.COAST SERVICES •nd reno•••• lhe ••mlly dwellln9 • . • Adminlstrat1'on of Estates INC. . l<Ktlecl uPOll .. kl property ,. •• of Ofllcltl RtcOf"Cts, .. ec.uWd by
• Pellll.....,lsorfflCMntollhlSl•te Ruu11 C.B. K•rl.n and Jenh K. Act), Thepetitionissetfor .. s.tdTruttee of C•tllMnlt, Is.,.,,., •'9"1een yMrs of Orlen. Husb9nd -Wife•• Trot•r. hearing in Dept. No. 3 at By T.o. SIERVICE co., •9'!. -,°'.,,. -of uw mlul"O ~:,..'!,,°;,~. s.~,~~o:;•s;~T; 700 Civic Ce~ter Drive, ~si.r1 DtPletro, :-..=im!...-:'~~~.: ........ nnce ..... SAVINGS AHO LOAH ASSOCIATION, West, in the City of Santa Assis ... , Seer ... ,..,
,,::HIEREFORE. petitioner p,.,, :.;.~~:!~;.n i t corpore llon, es Ana Califor n ia on 0nec11yaou1e .. ....,w111,
1 Thecounonttrt,.11119111,onllt..:t And""""*"•,.,. reciwtt of..,.. November 18, 1981 at 9 :30 ~1=~"'
1 This petition wlll bout ,.;, _,,., ..0 ,,,.. .. , ol Ille promlaSMY a ,m , PuOllShecl~-COtsl Delly PllOI. 11ear1~ ""''"'than ten de '' the note secured by ,,. 0-of Trutl IF YOU OBJECT to the Octobe< 11. 1•. u. 1"1 ··• ys om above ,.,......,to· d•leofllwordor•sprovl-bylaw; Anclbyr-'olt ... dltfoull lnlllt granting Of the petition,----------'"'_ .. _, > For •n ~rd•r Olrecllng •nd peyment al .. Id promts_.,,,... -you Should either appear I eutl\orltln1j pet1ttontr. H INSIM"'.,. _.,. ~( Ul•t• Of PHILIP MA LONEY ... bN.Cll of the ~llloM of s•• at the hearing and state rwa.ftt '"'""' ' • Deed of Trust provldtll, t Holke ol ------------m lstfn9 per$0n, to encumber llM Deft 11 -IElectl°" I• $ell Under your Objections Or file ..-IC"'TO -·•-r1becl ,.., "'-'" of ,.. u i . . ...... .. e1to1t for the Pll<'POM "' completlll9 OHd of Trust ll•vl119 l>ffn duly wr tten obJect1ons w ith the COMTllACTOllS CALLING 1mpro.,emtntsUJ10r1wldP<-1y· rtcordtcl • Pf'OVldod by 1-In .. ,d court before the hearing. ito1111os
4 Pelllloner t bt I lod R.cordff'a Office °" J..,. •, ltll, In Your appearance may be Sc"OOI Olstrlcl. Cooal Community 0 •PPD n u looll 1""1 P9ve 1m· . COll09• District lruslu of'"' •11•1• of PHILIP SUHKIST SERVIC0E COMPANY • 1n person or by you r Bid DNclllne: i·oo o·c100 pm ol M:L~~~~'!:,"".=~.tt.i lie corpor•tloll, • ttw _..... _,.rf;ect attorney. the t2th dt¥"' November, ,,.,
ql•tn es tlllscourt rnty IHem "'-' •ncl ectlnv Trvstft u,,.,.r .. Id o..cl of I F y O U A R E A Piece ol Bid RKtlpt: Offlco of "" DATEDSeot 16 ltll • Tr1ht, •foreuld, on T"uraoey, C R E D I T 0 R Purclleslng /40fnl, M$. Mtrian """''"· OAVIOS GETTY No"9mbe< s. ltll, •t tlw llour of ll:OO . 0 r a Coosl Community ColleOt DISlrkl, AltorNY ior ""1111~ o'clOO • m. ol wld dty at tlot rntln Contingent Creditor Of the U70 A Gems Ave ., Coste MU •. ANITA MALONIEY •n•r•ncetoll'eOrenoeCountyH•rllOf' deceased, you must fi le C•lllorni.m• P.iltlone• • ' Jucllcl•I Oldrlct Munlclpel C-1. 4'01 I . . t t Project ldentlflc•tlon He mo OAVtOS.oETTV JemDorH e1vo., In '"• City 01 your c a im with he cour 11H CMc ~Ori,.. Wetl Newport le..: ... County of Or...... 0 r pre Sent it t 0 the ~~~Oe:ltColl ... Recycll"9 Center Sleb
Tlll-:11. c; ra' ei.1de sen ices on Eptleps' Foundation She \\Ith he1 sister '.\iinam on Stllt•A• CA'211J S1•1• 01 Celllornl•. WILL SELL, p ersonal representative Pl•<• PlonJ .,.. on tti.: Offke 01
BETTY S T II EI I. :\1onda.'. October 26. 1981 at ".is an Episcopal tan and I h l' Ke it h 0 r p he u m 17141 ..-Pllrauoni 10 •"• po•er 01 n•• appointed by the court P""'< .. l'eclmk-t PIOMl"9 Treller
C P bll Or C04I conlerrect In wkl o.e.:t of Trusl -· Complea, Coest Comm Colle9• rl'~1dent nf Ant1he1m . Ca 2 oorM a\ Harbor Lawn member of St J a me_s \ aude\llle 1rru1l In lieu of Oc u -9"91 SI 0 •11Y Piiot, wlllloul coven•11t er Wtrr anty within four months from DhtrlCI. 1370 Adams A•• Cos•• Passed awa) on 01'tober 24 .Muunl Ohve Park Sernces Episcopal and St l'aul"s m fin" ers the family requests 1 u. i., NO¥.'· '"1 4'SUI r•11•rdlng 1111 •. poauuton or the date of first Issuance Mo ... ee111orn1a m~ t7UI ss..s101
19u1 S"hc "u" ... member of under the d1rect1on of tlln dn•ert She was ac\l\'e 1n memorial contnb11t1ons be 1 1111 encumtlf..cft, et ll'*lk •uctlon •. '° of lett s s p ovld..,. ·n JoMPon ... 0 .. " .. ,, • . ..-.It.JC Illa lh• lll9!1ftl CHI\ Dlddtr, In l••ful er a r """ I NOTICE ·,s HEAIE8V' GIVEN 11\tl lladassah. Ma:-.ada Chap\t'r llurhor Lawn·Mount Olive Camps Farthest Out. and St'nl to the Cal1forn1a mono 01 111e unit•• St•tu 01 Section 700 of the Probate th• •l>o,,.·nemecs Sc,.001 oistrlcl of
(or approx1mall'h 25 )'ear!'. :'.lortuar) or Costa :\1.esa. member or the Order of St. E p 1 I e ps y So(' I et~ . Ii I 1 7 NOTICI TOCllEOITOltS Am•rlct, •II·-tw1Mn rtol Pf'operty Code of California. The Ort~ COunty, C•llfwnl•. KllnQ by
.She 1s sun I\ cd h) her son 540 5554 James She was acll\'e in the R eseda Blvd . Space \. OI' auuc TlllANSl'Elt sltuett In .,,. County"' 0r.,,... st .. • time for filing claims will on<I 111ro\19" Its ~vern1119 Boerd, '.laltri~a and "r··ndchildren LANG 11e~ting •.tinistr.' and other Reseda. California 91335 <Sec:t.'1tH1wu.c.c.1 ofColll....,.•.-rlbtOHfOtio-: t · · t f "•r•lnefter referred lo •s
·' H " u " -' Notlu h l\ereby given to Ille LOI ti of Trtct 7Mol, Ill IN City 9f no expire prtor 0 OUr "DISTRICT". will ...cel\19 up lo, llul l'a el' and Severi\ I EARLE LANG. resident ecumenical mO\·ements She Serncesunderthedirectlon creditors of HARUE COLLISOH Hewpert 9Nd'l.MP9f'....,...c.,,_ months from the date of ""1101 ... -1,._...-su1ec111me, of Montclair. Ca Passed .. a!;. born 1 n l R 9 7 1 n . I SHIGEICO SASSIER •n• vu1C11Co In B-Ju, P09" 21 .. • lfKhmve"' the .... I otlced abo e ... ,.., l>kll.,,.. 11w •-•Of• contrect " of Balu Ber~eron-Sm1th & 1cu I" ·w·. Tr•nsl•rors, -~ost Mlacell-~. In Ille office of .. e ... r ng n v e' for ..... 11o ... ~1ec1 ••LTIIE"GERO"" a"ay on October 22, 1981 \'alcntine. Nt:'braska und """ " -" YOU MAY EXAMIN ~-~ " "' h Id Tuthll wt l"ff M l DU11nesa-11sla"Ct"°" c1tyo1lfWCountv R«orderof1tldCountv. Blcls sl\allllertalv«1 ln 1.,.p1ece SMITH & TUTHILL Funeral services will be e II\ eel 1n Cal1forn1a s inn· . 1 es c 1 or uar} 1rv1ne, county o1 orenge, St••• of 1Eacop1 tlwrtfrom 011 o11, 011 rights, the file kept by the court. 10.n1111..s tbow, -"'911 bt -Md
W'fSTCLIFF CHJ.l'U I on Wednesday. October 28, 1922 In her youth !-ht' loUl'('rl b46·9371. C•llfornl•, th•I • llUlll trensltr Is mlnerela. ml,.,., rigM•, Nturtl 991 If rou are Interested In the •fld pullllcly rMd •loud at, ... lbove 1981 al ll:OOAM at Pierce •bout to b• med• to CHIAKI rl9"1t •nd ot,,., "ydroc•r-a bv t fll stotedtlmeenctolec.e. 427 E I 71h St I Brothers Bell BroadWO\. ..-------------------------1 MA Tsu0 IC A • n d IC V' 0 IC D •llet-r -"-thtl .... ., be es a e, you mav e a T ... ,. wlll .... SI0.00 deposit
C M MA TSU OKA, Tr•naferHI, WllOH •ll"ln .,. ..,_ I ... perctl of I-request With the COUrt tO r-lred lor Mell sot of 1110 CIO<ume<>ls D'ola esa Ch a pel "1th Sea far' n g 11u11n11s tddrwss is ,.._ wnt """ herein....,.,. dltlerllled, toootMr wttti receive special notice of 10 9ueran1 .. th• return In 9000
fi4n Q1 7 1 M a son i c Lo d g e # 7 0 8 s""'· Ctty o1 G•r<toN. coun1., o1 Lot lhe .,.,,... ... , noM"' arllMno. m1111no. the Inventory of estate conc1111on •ltflln 10 oavs •tt .. ,.,. bkf officiating. In heu of nowers Anoe1 ... Stet• of Ctlllornl• nplMlno --tt•r111 therefor 9'ld , 011e11'"9 dtl•
rlEICf HOTHEIS
SMITHS' MOITU4U
627 Main S1
Hun11nQ1on ~ach
S36 6539
l'AClflC YlfW
MIMOllAL l'Alk Cemetel\I Mortuary Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pec1hc View Drive
Newoort Beach
644·2700
._COIMfCa MOlTUAlllS
LaQuna Beach
494·941 5
Leouna Hills
-768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HA8IOI U WK-.,.,-. OLIYt
Monuarv • Cemeterv
CretTWtory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa~a
5-40-56$4
NICIMOTHIU
-.L•OMWAY
MOITVAU
110 Broadway
Co$t1MHa
6'2·91SO '
TM P._rtv to m tr•nlf•""' is 11orlr19 tn ..o ·-•no.,. -fr-assets and of the petitions, E•<" blo must conrorm eno .,. donations may be made lO 0.Krlbtd In ge .. , .. es· All stock In Mid IMld Of' WIY Ollwr lend, lt>clUldlfll a CC OU nt S 8 n d r ep 0 rt S rtspontlW IO Ille cOMrtc1 CI0<11mtnts the Masonic Homes Pierce lt•dlt, rtlrtu.-S, llClulpment -.-I ... rltM lo ""'lpstock or dlrtellolltlly described in Section 1200.S Eecl! Ille! "'911 lie KGompenled by
Brothers Bell Broadway w111 of 1i..1 s..no-..1c11 S1t09 IMlllnou or111 •"" mtne 1""" ttflds otr.r t111n f t11esecur1t.,,...r...,1o1nt,,.con1recf •nown es "PICNIC IASKIET" ano thoM .,.,.........,.dlHC,illed, o11or9M O the Californla Probate doc:uments ...ci by the lld"' propotecl Mortuary dfre<:tors. toe•••• •I zm H. Tll'Jtln A ..... City et .. us, ,,,,_1, enc1~1n1o, "'"*"" Code. su11con1rtc1on. MARKHAM Sent• ....... Cowtty ol 0r..,.., St.Ce ol or •Cr-.. -1eu Of , ... ,.,.. Davids. Gettv, Attorney T ... DISTRICT -llW rl9'11 .. MAZIEBELLE GLOVER c,11f..,n10 ...,,,......,... *Krltlecl -to"""-" reJect .,Y or ttt lllCIS or to ••Ive.,,., •"t"• but• tr•nsr., will b• SU(" ... , .. ,,ocll..:I or dlr.clleftelly at Law, 11SS Civic Center 1,,...u1 ... 111es or IM-ltlot 111 any MARKHAM Mem orial <Oftaummeleclon or ••ur ,,,. 11tP1 c1ey or1tled-4t1, tvnNt•-lflOfti Uftdtr Drive West, Santa Ana, lllcnorln.,.lllddl,... services for M11 ziebelle of No,,.mcitr, 1t11, 01 10:00 A.M. et_,...,..,.,.,. •Yond .. •xwrltr c A 92703 ; tel . ( 714) The 01ST111CT ,_ _.,., 1rom Glover Markham. age 84 WESTERN MUTUAL IESClllOW llmlb....,.... _to reclrNI. , • ...._,, 836-6607 , ... Director of ... 0..-rlme.>t ol
will be held at 2:00PM Orl c 0 R p . ATTN , MAR I l. v N equip, mt'"4tln, NPtlr, -.... -P\lbll-Or .... GNsl Delly Piiot tndult•l•I lll•l•tlens .... 9'n•r•I •tonday. 0,.to ... ~r Z6th at St WIESTMOllllEl.AND, wllOte ~ ... 11 OP'r•t• any •uc" ••II• or mines, Ott u ._HO¥ 1 1911 4'!Mt preve111,.. rtte"' ,., oi-...,..., In 1' '" """ 1a 1 So. V'O<lle St. Suite IOI, Tu.tin, •ltllout, -'· tM rltM W df'lll, · • · • t"' lt(elltr '" wtlld\ title_. IJ to .,. James Episcopal Church, Video~ for Sale C•tllornl• n.t. Thltl tM lttt det• tor mlrw, store, uplor• •"" •'9ratt PtrformM"" etch Cf'fift.., type .,
3209 Via Lido. Newtort 1111,,. c1ttms111111e "',...,, reftrnd 10 ttl,.....h .. .-teco.,. ""...., • _.,. -•orll:men ""O•d to •Hcut• '"' Bea~h. Ca. k~rs Mrk am or R...t 11ere1n ,,.._..., 10. '"' f"t •f tllt -tftt• •' ttte ,_. ..._ ,.,~ c..,trtct. n.. ,_ .,.. ... fl1e •• tM .. " So fo r ., h 1tn•"" 10 '"• hereln ..... etc'rlllM,ft,_,,.lly OISTIUCT llflla lkotM M Offlet f/f
died Friday, October 23. SPECIAL THIS WEEKI Tren_,.rees. ell N1nea111emos -CN.cl _..... 111 9tdt trno, ~... 1.a~ftOTtca Pll'(slc•I flecllltJn P•-1no. Coo•t 1981 at her home OD Balboa • ·····-uted llY ,,.. n-..... .,., for l t21. 001(1•1 llltcor•• .... "'"'' NOTICf IS HEflEIY GIVEN !Mt Comm. ColltOt Olttrlet, tDO A .. IM I s land, Cn . Survivors lhe,..llthr•yNrsere:SAME. cemmonly kllOWn tt u Cembrt• lhelollMl11tlMfl'lsofl~ ... ,wed Avt., Coste Mlle, c:.lllfwnl• .,.._
R "3" • f • Oelod: $9pt9mbtr •. 1•1. Ori,.., C-dtl MM, Cellhlnlle. If Pf'Ol>9rtv.....,....., ._Id w ,,. l'ollc• c._a.1 """ be olltelnff"' '""'"'·A Include 2 sons Or Charles * ent movies or price * CNolll INUuoll• .,_,. It ,,...,_ tM'•t. tlACtltftl DeHrt.....,.., -Cltv tt C•to Molt c~of tfltte rttH ll\e1111t ,..._.,et Henry Markham or Los ICydeoMtt1101lt rney ............ 11Ywrl9tflf'911-'tt tor. !*'led lft tll~U of ninety (tol .... "'*· I d R • h d G TrlMftrttl ' Stttt S..11111 _, L-"*-'•'*'· .. .,.. T ,......,.. .,,...... " "'' Oleftl ~nicekehs an r PIC ar tt Of ''2" ··th th1·s ad* Pulllllhed OrMOtCooslO•llyPltot mNtrtflEI Oet_S4 ...... MKll:twl. • .., •• wtllte.kycle, llty'•G-•-.etlt-....-• ..... , ..... ytf "' II r am 0 res c 0 • Oct •. ,,., ..,., CA U>O!; AttCIMIMll ~ leNIW k llw""' Vtrtfty 10 5'111. lkycle, llo'f's ..... (I) --. n. ,. ...... NllMY
Arliona and a daughter OtjltrtMMt. Nt l«et" '*' ~ ~Mir 111-r e1ec111Gc*! 10 $tMI. tfW o;.entmt --w• be•• IHlt
M I WI I Sh l _,.. ..._ I, tttt lor 1"-,...,_._. ot ,.,i,.. tcycte ...,_s lleCll/V141tiw Mwr•y tlmt•M--.it· nrl ana gg ns. e a so •Mo c._.1 to folnl . ,...-..., ,.,~ ., ... , .. _..,..."' ..,,. OeM" w· llcvc11, lor'> """ Sc"w11111 "'"•"be"'~_...,,,. leaves 2 daughlers·ln-law, 14 Trvst. 1ec11 °"'* llc-;ct•, hY'• llt41 CONTllACTC>lt •""""' .. "'°'rkt
'
randchlldren and many •Mo ....-.nhlp t.ell 'ICTinou:aauauiiu Tiit •ot•• -"t ot '"° 11111,.1• Stora~,._.,, 11~1t. lllt11 l"llC1t 11 ••n• ... •"• "'u 1ny 00~ of •--"Ml ITATe•trt _. .. ._,, .......... 11 -..et&.lt ..... 'l'MION °""1fllllt M9tor -.C.-.CW .__, Mii\, M HY ._ nieces and nephews. Her • 1,0 • MOY.... Tl••,.....,.,,....-•• "91111 "'"' 1111•rnt ua,00.11 .,.. 111e· ••me•..., ......... wnl......_ _ 111911 .. .-~, ...... .,..
h u s band Fr c d Sm l l h • 1toc.11 ..... ••: •«'-IN .,,_... "' ~ ,,.._ "'"'•"---... ---~ ., """"' 111 .. Markham died in 11162. Mrs. SC:Olll1'10 °"'· .,.., ... ,.." tM ..,_ wMcll w111 • • .,,,... NOTtCI rtf!UllTHlll 01v•N t11et _....,. ... ...._
M kh d h h b d l-,ltT°"CA.""° Wtllt .... ,,, ...... ta.••: M -9M --"41 Ne.i.w_,._.. ....... ._ er am an er us an Ho THI ll'OttTINO CANVAS, UNI OATIO! ..... , ... t, Hit ..... 11 .. .:T._:~,_.,,.,·-.;r ....• ,.,.. " ......... : ....... ....
owned and operated Smoke ~'::.-."-~~.':!:..-. 1UNc1nac11v1c• .. .,.11 en •• ., .. ,.11 •• 1., '"' ... _ .. ..,._...,.._, Tree Ranch reaort in Palm .._ ••r-.CA.u COM~•Nv, IWl!e•t•.,, ........ ., ....... ...,......, ... ~111n•1t Sprlnp from tt3e unt.ll 1N8 TM.....,_ •o;:t:-.. ,... .... ._ ... ..., .... ..-•ttt .. ,....,......., "
where she had maintained a .. ..._. "..._.." • • By c. ..,......, -· • • • ci.y.,, Qllll-.. • ..... , ...... •• .... MC1.;n.e ._....... ...............,., "<_ .. ......., ..... _ ... _ ........ .
winter home. She waa a Tiiie ...._ ,... ... .. 111...,..110.•~ ..-c. ........ .__..... ••-a=
roundln ~mbtr e~ ltl c-lya.1t,,,er::c.My ........ ~-·~ ... • ..... President of lh CaUfomla MMw1<4.tttt ... <..,••Ot OATID:tll\MI 9'.._I, ' ..,,_., T,_.. . 11 ••. MaTH L _ _ _ ..._.,, tplltPIY Soclct,v end one of ........._.°" c..tOlllty..._ ~"'"'" ..._t "..-...... CHllPOP~ ~.,,,..._. lh .. O"l'"n'l&-end ("'•m•r ..... u ,,_ .... 11: l'nlu(....,..wlttltMOINfl9tC:..S. M1 ..... -bett0t1ty""-,_.....,_.Cllll...,...., " .-"" ..... "' ~ ~·· .......... ) .. "" ......... _.o.1,.~0d.", ........... ,~ ... ,,..--...... Oct. ....... ,. .... pre1ldenl.A of lhe Amtrican, _... --·
~ . -
Orange Co.at DAILY PILOT/Monday, October26. 1981 N
NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTION
ouo••T•Otcl INCl.UDI T•&Dt 'ON, ...... 'tOlt•. MIOWIU PAC"•C P•• IOUON OIT•Olf ••O (lN(lllll.Alfl UOC• l•CMAllit•U ANO •IPO•flO a¥ Tllll NA\0 ANO flOTllllT
.
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 7.03
CLOSING 830.M
1-----------------~~ ~·" ~'" ... ,~
Housing woes
not that simple
Mortgages at today's interest rates are. quite
llterally , k1ll1ng many small 1nslttut1ons .
C" Morlgage .. means "death pledge "I They are
severely wounding hundreds or building contractors
and thousands of real estate brokers .
Don't let one of these home loans wreck your
finances Don't sign one until both interest rates and
home purchase prices drop drastically. no matter
how creative or attnct1ve lhe agreement mety sound.
In virtually ev 0 ery new home loan
contract. the banks,
builders ::ind real :;,, ...-.
estate industry are ...;.
trying lo shirt their "'f'I:> •
r i s k s . (Jr th e i r ..-., ... 1,--IA;..._P_OIT_l_R _ inabalat y to sell
house:; today , off
their own backs and onto yours
Furthermore. as a prospective private lender. as
opposed to borrower. you must be wary or the new
home sales agreements Stonewalled by both buyers
and lending institutions who refuse to lend or pay at
current rates, real estate agents are, Increasingly .
.. selling .. the homeowner or becoming in effect a
··bank" talking you into '"taking back .. a mortgage
at a lower interest rate to enable you lo sell your
house to a reluctant buyer.
··The situation 1s desperate," said Herman J .
Smith, preside nt of the National Assoc1al1on of Home
Builders "Under today's miserable economir
conditions. builders can't sell the houses they've
already built. they can't start new homes, they can't
meet their payrolls and they can't meet their cown>
obligations. From Maine to Cahforn1a. the home
building industry has been shut down."
The home builders blame interest rates; home
builder Smith nails Congress. the administration, the
Peder al Reserve for outlandish loan costs
Certainly. Congress and the White llouse must do
much more to cut the federal bureaucracy and the
budget
But the problems in housing are not as simple In
the words of Dr Jack Carlson. chief economist or the
National Association or Realtors
"The increase in the overall cost or housing
nat1onally in the last three years has been
devastating. Since 1978, total housing costs have
surged 00 percent. and in some cases. the costs have
doubled ..
The NAR ~onom1st blames interest rates as one
factor But he correctly points also lo the soaring
prices of homes themselves, plus the staggering
increases in related home upkeep expenses -such as
utility bills 1 heat and light> and property taxes
Typical mortgage pa yme nts on an
average-priced. single-family home, financed with a
JO.year mortgage for 80 percent of the total home
price. amount now to $810 a month. 112 percent above
the 1978 average or Just S382. And Carlson adds
"Mortgage payments reflect o nly about
two thirds of the cost of owning and maintaining a
home · Taxes. insurance and utilities account for
another one-third. putting total average monthly
charges for a typical one-family house at nearly
$1 ,215.
That figure comes to Sl4.573 a year '
Under the traditional financial rules of the game
at the most, 25 percent of your income for housing
a typical family buying a typical house would have
to gross more than $58,999 annually to be able to
afford to purc hase and keep it.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
METALS c.,,., 11-··4 Oflh e POUfld, U.S
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