HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-10-27 - Orange Coast Pilot•• * • * •
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Does 'killer satellitte' threaten U·S·?
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Soviet Union has a kill e r
s atellite in orbit capable of
destroying several orbiting U.S.
satellites, the magazine Aviation
Week & Space Technology is
reporting.
The report. in the magazine's
Oct. 26 edition, called the
satellite .. an anti-satellite battle
station equipped with clusters of
infrared-h o ming g u i d ed
interceptors that could destroy
multiple U.S. s pacecraft.
·'The podded miniature attack
vehicles provide a new U .S.S. R.
capability for sneak attack on
U.S. satellites." it added.
Av ia tion Week c ite d no
so u rces a nd the D e fe n se
Department said it would not
comment on the report.
For several years, the Soviets
have had the only oper ational
killer satellite system. It is a
payload that tracks a target
within one or two revolutions
a fte r it )s launched and then
detonates, destroying both.
U.S. observers say that the
new killer satellite is capable or
striking targets out to 600 miles,
whi c h makes America's
n avigation and reconnaissance
sa t e llite s vulnerable.
Com mun icat ion s and
missile-warning payloads are
stationed 22,300 miles up, but
ffiA, Welsh ho
Two join
AWACS
sale plall
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two
prev iously uncommitted
senators came out today for
President Reagan's proposed
AW ACS sale to Saudi Arabia.
and another said he likely will
support the deal, but the odds
remained heavily against an
administration victor y in
Wednesday's vote.
The president, zeroing in on a
handful of opponents. planned to
. see up to a dozen senators in a
fin al lobbying blitz.
Even before the White House
meetings, however , Sens. David
L. Boren, 0 -0kla.. and Waller
D . Huddl es t o n , D ·K y .,
cnnounced they will vote for the
sale and Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
said he intended to do the same.
All three had been uncommitted.
within a few years they too may
come within range of advanced
killers or laser beams. both of
wh ic h the Soviets are
researching.
The Defense Department is
developing its sa tellite
destroyer , but it won't be
operational for about two years.
A spinning cylinder 30 inches
long, it would be launched from
beneath the wing of an F-15
fi ghter plane and its Infrared
sensors would guide it to a
collision with its orbitin~ tar~et.
The Soviets last week cited
this U.S . weapon when it
petitioned the United Nations for
a treaty banning all weapons in
space.
The Pentagon also plans to
test laser beam anti -satellite
and anti-missile weapons within
a few years on the manned
s pace shuttle.
Aviation Week reported that
presidential science adviser Jay
Keyworth opposes spending
billions of dollars on high.energy
laser battle stations for ballistic
missile defense in space. Th~
magazine said this appears to
<•onrticl with a decision by
President Reagan to "develop
t echnologies for s pace-based
missile defense."
s peril London
Ar ........
Royal
tour
Dlenaced
LONDON (AP l -Britain was
plagued today by a double bomb
m enace. from the Irish
Republican Army in London and
from Welsh nationalists police
feared might try to disrupt the
first official tour by Prince
Ch arles and Princess Diana
sin ce t heir wedding three
months ago.
An IRA bomb Monday killed a
p olice explosives expert in
London. the third bombing
victim in the city in 17 days. In
Pontypr1dd. Wa les. experts
defused a firebomb in an army
recruiting office near l he route
the royal newlyweds will take
Thursday
But Senate Democratic whip
Alan Cranston, who is leading
opponents of the sale , said the
announce ments were no
surprise.
Sculptor Jim Sardonis washes off his statue of two hippos carved in white granite at a park in Brookfield . Vt.
The bomb disposal man was
Kenneth Howorth, 49, who died
as h e tried to defuse a
fi ve-pound bomb found in the
ladies' room o r a Wimp§t
ham buraer stand on Oxford
Street, one of London's busiest
shopping thoroughfares.
Shoppers held back by police
barriers screamed and ran as
the bomb shattered the glass
fr ont of t he ev a c uated
restaurant and blew a 12-foot
hole in the sidewalk .
And one of the first senators to
meet with Reagan today. Sen.
David F. Durenberger, R-Minn.,
s aid afterward that he still
intended to vote against the sale.
The latest Associated Press
tally show 53 senators against
the sale, plus two others leaning
against, 41 favoring the deal or
leaning that way. and four
uncommitted. A majority of
those voting is needed to block
the deal.
Huddleston told the Senate
"the prospect;; for peace and
stability in the Mideast will be
enhanced by the sale. With the
difficulty ln Iran and the
uncertain coqditions In Egypt,
Saudi Arabia ls the key lo
stability and peace in the region.
as fragile as it may be.··
Boren said, "I cannot accept
<See AWACS, Pa•e AZ>
Rain may
cancel
Series game
Aoki, Abruzzo
. postpone
balloon .bid
R es t au r ateu r -ad ven lurer
Roc ky A'oki a nd pilot Ben
Abruzzo, who comple ted a
record -setting balloon flight
from Fountain Valley to
Millarton. N.D .. last April, have
postponed until December their
latest attempt to float across the
Pacific Ocean. ·
"We've had anchor problems.
Our oxygen bottles somehow got
contaminated, and we need
helium trailer modifications to
satisfy Japanese regulations,"
Abruzzo said Sunday.
Abruzzo and Aoki set a new
distance r ecord this year in
winning the annual Gordon
Bennett Balloon Race, which
lifted off in Fountain Valley.
Now the pair, with two other
crew members. hope to cross
the Pac ifi c in a manned
400,000-cubic-foot helium-filled
balloon. NEW YORK (AP) -The The Double Eagle V balloon
National Weather Bureau's was to launch rrom Nagasbima,
forecast for New· York today Japan, in early November in an
was not encouraglna for the attempt to cross 6,000 miles ot
sixth game ol the World Series Pacific Ocean to the West Coast between the New York Yankees and Los AnaelH Dodgers at or the United States, said
Yankee Stadium.· Abruzto, 51 .
The forecut called for r'1n on "Our primary goal Is the West
and olf, tu.mini heavy at times, Coast, our secondary eoal ia the
I and East Coast and our final &oal lbtougbout the • ternoon would be Europe," be aaid. ni1ht. The aame was scheduled for Abruzr.o and a second member
5.20 pm PST or the team, Larry Newman,.
·The. rOr-ecaif alAo called for m~de history ln 1978 when they
temperatures tn the 50s to eo. _ Jomed Maxie Anderson, all from
ith Id expected to clear by Albuquerque, ln the Double Wed ~-= Eagle U lo become the fintt to
Tbn Dody. ho lead the cross the AUanUc Ocean vla e sen, w heltum·filled balloon.
Serles 3 camea to 2, were Abruuo and Newman have
auppoeed to. wort out at Yankee been Joined in thelr attempt t.b Stadium on Monday, but rain · cance~ practl,... • (See ~N, Pap Al)
Adult entertainment targeted
Huntington, approves restrictions on sex-oriented stores
The Huntington Beach City
Council took the first step
Monday toward curbing adwt
entertainment in the city by
unanimously approving an am-
endment to city codes.
The amendment lo codes that
govern establishment and
operation of such businesses will
go before the council for final
approval next week.
The council also extended its
moratorium on the issuance or
licenses and permits for adult
entertainment establishments
for up to one year. The move
was designed to give the code
amendment time to take effect
after its expected passage next
week.
The amendment specifically
defines numerous forms of aduit
entertainment, i ncluding a
lengthy list or "specified sextJal
Colossus planned
Ch~cago due 169-story skyscraper?
ClilCAGO <AP l -A Sl.25 billion skyscraper almost 900
feet higher than the world's tallest building is not a
pie -in-the-sky idea -an architectural firm is planning
construction of a 169·story colossus, according to published
reports.
The Chicago Tribune attributed to sources its story that
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill is designing a 2,300-foot
skyscraper, standing almost 900 feet above the Sears
Tower, the world's tallest building.
The Tribune said Monday that Skidmore designer of
the Sears Tower and the John Hancock Center. at 1, 107 reel
the world's fifth-highest building -is using construction ,
techniques perfected for the Hancock and Sears projects.
Both buildings are in Chicago.
The newspaper reported that money to acquire the land
and finance the enormous structure may be the biggest
obstacle in construction, saying overseas and U.S. banks
would be involved in the project.
But a Skidmore spokeswoman who asked not to be
named denied any knowledge of the mammoth project when
questioned by The Associated Press.
The giant skyscraper would accommodate as many as
45,000 peopfe at work, play and in apartments, the
unidentified sources told the Tribune.
j ~·
activities" governed under the
proposed new code.
It a ls o mandates that
' conditional use permits must be
obtained by any person seeking
t o es tabli s h a n adu lt
tertainment busin ess and
limits the places where such
businesses can be opened
Existing adult entertainment
businesses must comply with the
new code, if it is passed, within
three years of its effective date
or discontinue operation.
The a mendment states that
the council is seeking to pass the
c ode becau se "ad ult
e ntertainment bus.inesses.
because of their very nature,
have objectionable operational
characteristics, particularly
when several of them are
concentrated, which may have a deleterious (harmful) effecton
adjacent areas.
"Special regulation of these
businesses is necessary to insure
that such adverse e((ects do not
blight or downgrad e
surroundJng neighborhoods. and
the primary purpose of
regulation ls to prevent
concentration or clustering of
these businesses in any one
area." the code stales.
Bus inesses specifically
mentioned in the proposed new
code include baths, sauna baths,
massage parlors , escort
bureaus, .lntroductlon services
and ''figure nl>del studios."
Many or the "specified sexual
activities" outlined in lite code
were words which could not be
found ln a Webster's Dictionary.
They Include bu11ery ,
copropha&Y, coprophUla .
plquerlsm a~ iooerasty.
The l RA in a telephone call
took responsibility and claimed
two other bombs were in stores
nearby Sniffer dogs found one,
and police defused it safely, but
a third bomb was not found.
The IRA bombing in London
began Oct. 10, a week after the •
collapse of the seven-month
hunger s trike by Irish
nationalists in the Maze Prtsoo
outside Belfast. Police say the
bombings are to avenge the 10
gue rri llas who s tarved
themselves to death in the futile
attempt to win polltical-orisoner
<See BOMB, Page AZ>
ORANGE COAST WEATHER
Mostly cloudy night and
morning hours with partly
sunny afternoons through
Wednesday. Highs 65 to 72.
Lows tonight 58 to 63.
INSIDE TODAY ..
A teachers' walkout mu
angtrtd the re$id.enb of o
Minntsota town fmmortollud
by author Louro lngolb
Wildtr in her "Littlt Houu"
booka. Set Page Cf ,•
·' INDEX
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I •
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT I Tu11day, October 27, 1981
o.llY ..... SUfl .....
One of the pictures Russian families will receive 1s this one of
Huntington Beach's Betty Edwards. daughter Lisa Tyler and
granddaughter Janine Tµler
Can photos hcilt war?
Huntington woman exto l s humanistic· program
• time I'm thinkina. I wonder lr advertlsing the photo excbanlfe, . 8y JODI CADENHEAD she 'll grow up " occordSna to past president or °'*Dmfr""..... She and other Humanistic the Orange County. chapter of fl may not rank wltb the PsychoJogy members admit \bat the AssociaUon tor HumanlltJc
de tent e neg o t J at lo n s photoJraphs passed throuch the Psychology, Herb Newman.
m a~ le r m l n e d by 11 en r y mall may not mean a lot In the "It's a way of personaU.tng,"
Kissinger, but to Betty Edwards face or world relations . explained Newman. "It makes It
of Huntington Beach lt's a "If sending a picture la aoina dlfrlcult to kill someone you can
hopeful istep. to help, I'm going to try," said conceptuaJize as a human being
Ms. Edwards, a high school M.ll. Edwards. "It certainly can't wlth a face."
teacher in Norwalk, is one of a hurt." . All photos are being \abeled
hundfuJ or people participating The photographs are all .be~g with family members' names.
in an exchange of photographs sent to th~ Psychology office in And those participating tn the
with Russ ian families. ~an ~rancisco. whe~e 8 member exchange are urged to display
Since the program was first is going to .hand dehver them to the Russ ian photo in their home. announced at an Association for a person m Moscow who has
Humani s tic Psychology agreedtotheexchange. Those see king more
convention last month, about 40 ln Orange County about 300 information can call (415)
(am ilies have sent pictures. ...:.f .:..:I i:.,:e:.:r..::,S_..:..:h_:a_:v_:e_:b:.::e:.::e..:..:n__:d:.:i.:.s.:..:t r_:l_:b..:u..:..te.:_d::___:5.=28:..·..:630.::.:..:l:.:.. ---------t°:xplaioed Jack Drach, acting
executive director of the 6,000
member organization based in
San Francisco., "Maybe the
Un ited States and Russia
wouldn't be al e ach other's
throats if people knew each
other. This isn 't all that earth
shaking. It's just a first step."
For Ms . Edwards it's a step
toward awareness of social
issues that once dominated her
life. "It's like we've all gathered
into our own personal lives,"
sa id the 53-year·old woman,
recalling her past involvement
in anti-war, civil rights and
ecological issues.
"It's especially needed now.
We have all accepted the
inevitabilit y o f war ," she
mused. "I look at my adorable
new grandchild and for the first
Toxic waste claim filed •
Huntington developer's action against OC , Armu $14 million
PATRICK KENNEDY
tM D.ity l"llet St-.
· •A Huntington Beach developer
g_ils fil ed claims of more than $14
•illion against Orange County
@d the rederal government
itJeging they are responsible for
fQ,xi c wastes buried in the city
l11ring the 1940s.
Mola Deve lo pm e nt Co .
excavated the toxic and odorous
chemicals last summer from an
abandoned 3.5-acre dump on
Bolsa Chica Street near Warner
Avenue to make way for a
288-home condom m1um project.
Hairy issue
now resolved?
KNOXVILLE, Tenn CAP>
Saying there are other ways of
dealing with long hair than
lopping it off . the mayor
reversed a proposed rule that
male and female police officers
adhere to the same hair·length
s~ndard. .&!vf ayor Randy Tyree said that
!'!Jng hair in a bun or other l eans o f keeping it from
coming "a safety problem"
uld be OK.
3'he earlier proposal said the
uniformed policewomen had
keep their hair cut above their
irt coll ars and the tops of their
rs. The Tennessee Association
Women Police charged the
Hey was intended to humiliate
men who wanted lo become
lice officers.
The excavation took three
months and cost $4 million as
more than lOO tons of earth
conta minated by tox ic o il
refinery wastes was removed to
a hazardous material landfill in
West Covina. according to a
Mola spokesman.
The separa te claims seek
reimbursement for the cost of
excavation and the cost of the
I 12·year delay in beginning the
condominium project while the
excavation plans were being
considered by city and state
health officials, accordinl? lo
.M ola Vice President Peter Von
Ellen.
Von Ellen says the U.S. Army
owned the land in the 1940s when
the toxic chemicals were buried.
Big guns were placed on the
land during World War n as
part or the nation's Pacific
~~rense. according to Von Ellen.
He says county officials in the
1950s allowed the hazardous
materials lo be covered over by
a landfill oper a tion. d espite
warning s from a cou nt y
consultant that such action could
create future environmental and
health hazards.
Mola's claim is against the
U.S. Department of Defense.
U.S. Army and U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers.
The city annexed the land in
the mid-1960s and no claims
have been filed against the
m unicipal governme nt. Von
Elten said.
Rod Umscheid. the county's
risk manager. said today that
his department is investigatinl(
Gunman with mask
Tobs Irvine shop
A masked man armed with a
sawed-off shotgun made off with
$400 in a Monday evening holdup
at an Irvine tire shop, police
said today.
(rom Page A1
JIALLOON. • •
tross the Pacific by Ronald B.
park, an Albuque rque real
es tate investor, and Aoki of
Miami , Fla ., a Japanese
restaurateur and entrepreneur.
• The massive Double Eagle V
toncrete anchor, which weighs
about six tons, must be allowed
to set properly, Abruzzo said.
The anchor is to be buried ~nderground at an asphalt
f arking lot from which the
alloon is to be launched. The
nchor is to hold the
6olyethJylene balloon in place
lor the launch. s
Described as 20 years old.
5·feel-ll with shoulder-length
curly blond hair, the gunman
ente red Group Tire Service,
17281 Eastman St .. Irvi ne, al 6
p. m., police said.
He lied up the tire shop
employees and then emptied the
cash drawer. police said.
The man, who was wearing
blue jeans, a green nylon down
jacket and a yellow ski mask.
Cled on foot and is still al large.
police said.
Burns kill woman
FRES NO CAP ) -A
Porterville woman has died at a
Fresno hos pital from burns
suffered when lacquer thinner
ignited. Jamael Bouuker, 22 •.
died at Valley Medical Center
Sunday from third· and
fourth-degree burns over 90
pe r cent of h~r body, the
coroner's office reported.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat Claaalfled edvertlalng 7141642-5678
All other dep1rtment1 642-4321
Thomas P. Haley l'llbli-#Id 0.1EJreQl~Ve0~
Robert N. Weed ,,__
Thomas A. Murph1ne
f-
Michael P Harvey ......... ~
L. Kay~ulti DndoiolO.-
Kennetti N. God<'lf<' Jr ~OW9clol
Bern.,'d Schulman c......, Ooies H. Loos
~hlol
~t-,M<#•
MAIN OFFICE
D> Wttl a.., St .. Coti. IMs., CA.
Mell edOreu: ka 15'0, Cott• Mes.., CA. 9261'
COCIYtltfll 1•1 0r*'99 C11111t Pulllll"lnt (Of119eny, Ho new• •10ti.1. lllultr•llon•, Mltorl•I m.n~ « eci-
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SKof!d <IMS llOSletit peld •t c .. 1. AMS., U lflonlla
IVPS'l....01 ~ri.tlon lly carrlff '4.00 _,,ly
.,,. m•ll U IO "*llMy, mllli.ry 01111,..._. to' 00 mOfltllly
the claims. but h e declined
further comment
Von Ellen says that the clairr.
against the county is largely
based on an early 1950s letter
from a county cons ultant
identified as Loren Blakely
warning authorities not to cover
over the tox ic oil r e finery
wastes.
Stale health offi cials last year
id e ntifi ed sev e ral toxic
s ubs tances buried a t the
abando n ed s ite . including
suspected carcinogens. 'l'he
health experts recommended
exc avation to pr eve nt
conta mination or underground
water.
Lawmen grab
one escapee,
lose another
Orange County Sheriff's
deputies found one jail escapee
Mon day but lost another.
Jimmy Leyva, 28, who was
reported missing from the Theo
Lacy minimum security jail in
Orange on Friday night. was
captured Monday evening in
Garden Grove, said Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart.
Meanwhile, a 9 p.m . bed check
Monday at the county's honor
farm near the El Toro Marine
Air Base revealed that Paul
Frederick Smith, 26, was
missing, said Hart.
Leyva is serving time for a
drunken driving con viction.
Smith was sent to the honor
farm on Sept. 21 for a six-month
sentence for receiving stolen
property, said Hart. who added
that both men are from Los
Angeles County
He recalls
holocaust
WASH1NGTON (AP> -Ralph
Rundquist cannot forget.
It was April 29, 1945 that
Rundquist . a radioman with
Co mpa n y II of the 222nd
Infantry, helped liberate the
German death camp at Dachau.
"We were taken aback," he
says. "The people who came in
a fter us didn't have as much
ex pe rie nce and they were
bawling and crying. Suddenly
we all understood what we had
been righting for."
Rundquis t, who has twice
taken his fa miJy to Dachau, was
standing in a State Department
lobby Monday in the midst of a
throng or people, all with
memories of the death camps,
all with a mes s age : The
Holocaust was real. It shouldn't
be forgotten.
Board d e adlocked .
on oil tax· appeal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state Board of Equalization is
1 reru1ln/ to overturp a
14-year-ol decision that could
cost Standard Oil of California
millions of dollars.
The state boar~ voted 2-2
Monday with one abtteotlon on a
motion by Controlln Ken Cory
to reject Standard OU 's appeal
and sustain the decl1lon by the
Franchlao Tax Boatd.
.~ .........
COURAGEOUS M C:Jrk Scott , 16. r ests in a Greenville. Ala.,
hospi tal bed after virtually saving his own life by drivinf
himself nearly nine miles to a hospital after severing a hand
and a foot in a farm accident.
N-M 1wn-teachers
reach tentaiive pact
Newport-Mesa School District
and union n egotiators have
r~acbed tentative agreement on
a new one-year contract for the
d istr ict's 800 non·teaching
e mp loyees. a district
spo kes woman a nnoun ced
Monday.
Accord was reached late last
week. s he said. but a slate
m ediator has ordered that no
detail s o f the proposed
settlement be released until
California School Employees
Association me mbers vote on
t he package, probably next
week.
Union officials sought pay
raises between 7.5 and 12.5
percent , d e p e nding on
classificatio n of various
employees involve~.
The district board of trustees
had offered an across·the-board
hike of 3 percent.
The union has been working
without a contract since June
when a three-year document
expired.
The distncl and its teachers'
union still have not reached
agreement on pay raises this
school year.
The teachers· contract does
not expire until next summer,
but salary and fringe-benefit
issu es were scheduled for
re·negotiation this year under an
existing three-year contract.
Autumn air
quality hailed
EL MONTE <AP> -The best
September·October air quality
in seven year s has been
recorded by the Air Quality
Management District, oCficials
say.
"September and October are
traditionally the peak months in
the s mog season, which begins
in April," APMD spokesman
Jim Birakos said, attributing the
improvement to a reduction of
pollutants in the air, plus better
weather conditions.
Since 1977 there also has been
a reduction of 800,000 pounds per
day In p ol lutants fr o m
stationary sources s uch as
refineries, Birakos said.
From Page A1
BOMB. • •
1tatu1 for Imprisoned lrlah
natlonaJJJta.
"We under1tand they have
decided to cause u much
devHtatJon aas possible," aaJd a
British security source In
Northern Ireland, where the
J RA hu been flgbtln1 a
guerrllla war against Brltiah
rule for 12 years.
Detectlvea of Scotland Yard'•
antl-terrorlat branch said the
IRA bomb squad in London "ls
considered to be one of the best
ever to operate on mainland
Britain," the Daily Telegraph
reported.
The paper said detectives
believe the squad has at least
five m embers, including an
experienced bomber and a
woman, because the wimpy
b ofn b wa s pl anted in the
women's lavatory.
Prince Charles and his bride
left London on Monday night on
the royal train for a three-day
tour or the principality on the
west coast from which they get
thei r titles of prince and
princess of Wales. ·
The royal couple were to
spend their nJghts on the train
instead of at the homes of local
dignitaries. the usual custom.
Press reports said it was a
sec urity precaution , but
Buckingham Palace refused to
confirm that.
The Daily Express said
counterterrorists or the army's
Special Air Service Regiment
would form an armed guard for
the coupl e. The Daily Mirror
said the security operation
would be the largest in Wales
since the investiture of Charles
as prince 12 years ago
From Page A1
AWACS . • •
even partial responsibility for
the consequences of rejecting
this sale. The potential danger to
our country is too grave ... the
risks are loo great.··
Dole noted that the planes
would not be delivered for four
yea r~. giving the pres ident
"plenty of time lo pull the plug ii
som ething goes awry in the
Mideast."
The $8.5 billion arms package.
the biggest in U.S. history,
includes five Airborne Warning
a nd Control System radar
pla n es plus 1,177 Sidewinder
missiles and fueling to extend
the range a nd firepower or 62
Saudi F·l5 jets.
The sale has been rejected by
the House and will be vetoed if a
majority of the Senate votes it
down Wednesday.
White House aides and Senate
Republican leader Howard
Ba k e r and his staH exuded
confidence Monday that enough
Senate opponents are willing to
switch lo give Reagan victory in
this, his first major foreign
policy battle on Capitol Hill.
Cory seek s hike
in interest rate
SACRAMENTO CAP) -State
Controller Ken Cory wants a
s p ec ial sess ion o f the
Legislature to raise the interest
rates on late payments of taxes.
Co r y issued a s tatement
Monday saying it could yield the
s tate $125 million a year. He
said the federal government is
a lreedy preparing to assess
interest al the prime rate, which
i s highe r tha n rates now
charged.
A~-......
House Speaker Thomas P "Tip" O'Neill. D-Mass., speak$ to
photographers in his Washington office. "No more pictures with
a cigar in my mouth." urges the vetaran politician. 68 . who's
trying to change his image.
Lllte other American city
man.,-., Du McCermlet
of Calumet, Mich., hu been
rt1htln1 tbe battle of the
bud1et. Hla 1trate1y,
however, la different.
McCormick has called for
bis own layoff, to take effect
Dec.1.
"With cutbacks ln state aid
and rillng co.ta, I Just looked
over tb9 bud1et and knew
cut.II were 1oln1 to be made
or we'd have a deflclt,"
McConn.tck aaid.
He alao recommende~cuts
lo office staffs and red~Uon
of overtime for village
employees.
The hotel rooms at Cancun
were crowded for the summit
conference. A shortage of
rooms forced all but the most
senior membe r s of the
administration to double up.
And so it was that David R.
Gergen, the tallest member
of the offlcial U .S .
delegation, and Joaepb
Ca111erl, the shortest. ended
up sharing room 620.
Gergen is the chief White
House spokes man, and by
one apocryphal account, be
was kidnapped as a child and
rai sed by a f amily of
g ira ffes. C anzeri is a
presidential assistant known
for his wizardry at logistics.
He has been dubbed the
Italian leprechaun.
World War 11 dead honored in Egypt
"The tall man and the
small man," said Canzeri,
describing the pair. "The
man who snores and the m~
who doesn 't sleep," said
Gergen , grumbling
good-naturedly about bis
roommate's nocturnal noise.
With flags at half-staif in
mourning for slaln President
Anwar Sadat, the thousands
of soldiers k illed in the
crucial 1942 battle of El
Alamein were honored with
three memorial services.
Diplomats an~ r elatives
gathered at the Allied ,
Ge rm an a nd Ital ia n
cemeteries in Egypt to place
wreaths for the men who fell
in the clash between forces
Conductor Zubln Mebta's
controversial decision to play
th e works of German
composer Richard Wagner in
Israel has brought a charge
by a government official that
M e h ta fo r ced orches tra
members to play the music.
Wagn e r 's mus ic was
embraced by Nazi Germany
a s the ideal of Teutonic
culture and is seen by some
led by t.wo legendary
commanders -British Gen.
Bernard Montgomery and
German Gen . Erwin
Rommel, the "desert fox."
British Ambassador
Mi chae l Weir and
r e pr esentativ es from
Commonwealth and Allied
nations placed red-poppy
wreaths at an altar in the
midst of 7 ,354 graves in the
Allied cemetery.
s urv i vor s o f the Nazi
Holocaust as a symbol of
anti-Semitism.
Dov Sbilansky, de puty
minis ter without portfolio,
was quoted by Is rael Radio
as saying he polled the Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra's
musicians and found all but
two were opposed to playing
Wagner's music but were
afraid of Mehta .
"We thought," Gergen told
a group of reporters in tbeir
room, "that we'd give you
the long and the short of it.·•
Delivery room workers
were in for a surprise when
two sisters from Coalinga
gave birth to a healthy baby
girls at the same moment.
"It wasn't like we planned
it, that's for certain." said
Suzanne Amlnzadeb, a nur.se
at Valley Medical Center in
Fres no. "It just happened
that way.''
M artba Nolasco, 28, and'
Alicia Alvarez, 25, were
placed in different rooms
after traveling 50 miles from
hom e together in labor.
Precisely al 9 :27 a .m., tbey
became new mothers and
aunts.
Sun hiding
Coastal
H ig h tloudlneu lod•Y and
WednolClay.
Coastal low U, Inland U Coa•l•I
lllgll H . 1111-., Waler M
EIMwhH•, llglll ve ri•llle winds
nlgllt and mor11lng tw>un, be<omlno
oouthw"t 10 lo 11 _,,..ts atter-"•·
Two to J.foot •lno wev.s. One to
l ·IOOI IOUll\WUI •••II Mostly
c-v.
V.S. sunu11ary
Cool temp•r•t11res ll•v •
accom~ rain C"ler muc:ll of ~
EHi, wltll ~ r-1od from the
Ofllo Valley -Ole Nort-11 to IN
central Gulf coest and Ille c ... ollnas.
A llHll f-wetcll was In eff.cl
Molld•y for ,...u of South Corollna.
S• les wore o•ercasl from
loulltana to Ml,$0<WI e nd 1>41rtly
low detef'I hlQM ..-uy In th4 IOI
•nd lows In SO..
Co•ll•I •no mountel11 ., .. , -
Mollly c_., -<OOI -y.
Cleerlno Thundmy F•I• •NI w-··
F rldey exaipC cOOI -windy In the mountelM. M>d locelly windy belOw
PHHI Highs "'°'"" u to 7• Ill cN s1411 -vellev .,_ w•rmlno to
the 10s to -D FrlcMy 0Wr11lpl lows ~lly In 50s. Hl91\1 In the
mounl•ln$ SS to •S coollf>g to 50\ llY
Frkley •nd loWs In 30l loo.
Nortllem C.llfOf'nl• -Unwltled
-•ry -llkely wltll .,_ lft
1"9 ,,,_..,. -lo about •.GllO to
S,000 IWI. T-returM aftratlno
•bOul I~ be-,_,.,.,, HIQM
'" t"9 SOI toeslsldt to ow 60s Inland.
LOWI In lht 40s to -jOs at -r elevatlons. C .... rel C.ltf.,.. -Aal11 In the
••lt.yl --... .,,. MOUfltalftl taperlnt oft Frldey alld S.turday.
S-w level .-ut S,.llOO to 1 /lllO feet.
T1mporol11,.s averaolf\9 ollOut s
d09rMs betoW normol. M'11ftt In the
SOI CNSUIOe to "" '°' to low 70s
Inland '--In lflO «Is alld '°' at
lower elovallcns.
.........
C!lllJ ·-· Cel4 .... ~ --=-== ~ Steti•• .. r Out.~ ---==·
MllweUll• .,
NeSllvlll• tS .... o,.._ 1'2
<>tii. Clly 60
"
FORECAST
NOAA. U.I . Oe•·t •' <••••rt•
J3 A-74 • ,. .a S.CrorneMo 11 SJ
ll ·" S.llnos .. u
" sen ••,_.no 73 j6 n Jt Qrl•lldo .. Son Galwlel
Pllt.sl>u'llll ,. JO .17 S.nJ-'3 SS ctoudy over IN -r Greel Lakes -----------ro9lon. Skies w•• ,,,.,..,., ,_., In
lite u-Mlululppl Valley, where
lemperatures row Into the 40I and '°'· Sties--. •ISO......,., 111 -Grea1
Pi.ln5. with 11,_ -lwrly wlllds
p;isllln9 umperetures In'° 1"9 tOt
alld 70t. Skies -· mostly suMy In
tho Soul_,. end oeneralty overcHI
Smog report
El MONTE IA P l -Tiie Air
Ouallly Ma11a9emen1 Olstrlct
predk ll good air -llty ~
the -.itll cont air belln toelay wltll
POllUllOft S._rd lndn r .. lngs of 42 , ...........
P\l•lld. Me
Reno
S.11 Lau
Son Fran
SI Louis
St Me-le T\llH
Waslllngln
so 4
14 • .. 4 .., S1 .. 0 .. 71 .., ,.
'2 •
.•1 S.nt41Ano 72 St
Sonto ·--•:1 S1
Softta CNI ., S7
SoftU Morla .. • ... Soft\e_.. ... SI
Stocllton 71 0
ToMeVolloy " 42 .. TM""•' IS SI
T«ranco .. Jt CAU llOlllllA Yllf'l\a " • In the Wn1. w1tt1 sutWred .,_,_" -----------In IN -1Mrll ltoelllet encl P.cllk
Nortll-. Tempe<-.. ...-IN notion •I
11 a.m. PST MDndoy awr..-ci from
• 1-of 35 In HouQMon, Ml<ll • to •
lllOll of tt 111 F_, Mye"· Fi..
For today, rain wa for9<Ht In the
AUentk Coos1 ltotes and e1tem llatf
ot tll• Olllo Volley, •lld from Ille
nortllor11 -c.nlr•I Poctflc coesl to
1 UM 11or1Mrn Aoclllff. s..ntty 'kles
were f-l acn>u u.e soulh•m half Of u. .Mlulalppl Veltoy alld
OrHt PIOl111 roel4"1, end In N-Moako.-.:t Art_...
H .... s In tlw * ..... pr..cl~ In
ti. Pac:lfk ......_., -northern Aoclll•• end from Ill• upper
Mluls..,,.,. VOiiey ""'°""' "'° GrNt Lelle• r9111.., to norlllern New
IE119Mlld.
H .... s 1t1 IN 101 _... pndkled for
Ill• eouttiem Atlontlc -ce111ral
Gulf coasts, wllh IOI In Florida.
H .... t In IN l'Ot elso -r• prodlclod
'" ,,,. ~ -c.,lrot plalft'; In
Temperatures
Albafly
Anchor-
Alllevlll•
lalllmon
loslofl
CharlstnWV
c111uoo
Cleveland
Oal FlWtrl
Denver
Detroit
Fairbanks
-tutu
HoustOfl
11\Cffteptb
JunHu
1Ce11s Clly
LAISV99A
Lo. Angelft
Miami
Ml Le f'rc. so u .7S
ll 21
j6 • 1.•
" SJ .n S2 ... 4J
•l S3 .'7 n » ,. .. ..
'3 4J
TO 11
SS U ."7
JI JO .02 ., .. ·" ...... u .... u 41 .17
j6 •
IO ..
70 Q n IO
AJlllle Vell9y
Bollenflotd .........
8NU~
819 •••r ""-l lytM
Catalino
Eurell•
Fre...o
Lance rt.,.
LontlMcll
Mor''"'ll• _.. ...... ,
Mt.Wit_,
MHclles
M-pOrt IMcl\
Oallloncl
<>MerlO
Pelmstw1• Pa..-...
Peto •ollln
"" '""' A~Clty
. ..,
" Q • S1
n •
" JO 1l M
'° " .. u
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.. SI
62 Jt .., JO
.. SJ ., ..,
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11 "
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CMAOIA• Col..-, 43 M t.16
Edmolltoft 4S tS .t• ,Montreal SO 41 M Ott-• 46 '1 I.JI .... no 0 •
T orOflto 50 It AO
Vfjft<OU-SS • .II
Winni.,.. • SO U .04
PANAMaalCAN
ACOllUkO ' 1-J 75
a.r~ "n
hnft-" n ...... '4 ..
Curacoo • 11
Ft-' • 71 .04 Guodo!al.,.• 11 JO O~'-ft .1'
Hov-'° n
Klnettofl '° n Men'°9Dlrt • n Mout&an • 7t
Merida t5 1l
MHkO City 7t S5
Mon ... ,.., '° " Nouou • n ·" Soft J...,., P.•. " 74 1.4' uw IOs ac:.--SOUINr'n Tu•'· In IN Ir"~-------------------"' .,.., '°' '" soutflem Ari-..... mucll IJf -Meako, Oftd In the 60s .... w .......
Extended
outlook
Hero -u. UWftdld c:.llf«N•
fffeCHls I« w.dneldeY 111,..,... ,rltloy:
0.Mrt --Guity -rly ...... ,,,.., dKl'Nllnt .... 'rlMy.
HI ... ..,,_.._. lft 0-Voll.,,
.. te 1' Ollll .... » .. 4. Hltflt lft IM Mell *-' '5 to 7S ...,, ..... 4S to U.
Mondll)l·FrtOay If -,.o.i 00 nol ,,_
-~ Doy a 30 P'" 011 tiOlor• 1 pm -'IOU'COOVMllbe-
Seflll'CleV eno &vno~llr;'. dO na1
=:1.r:"m c:,: _ ~ ~c: _.,_..,
St. IC lttl " 74 1,45
SURf RIPIRT ,.,,,...., '° n
Vol'OCNI .. n
'.Sun, moon, tidea
lia:iiilii5i ........ ._._._._._.__.,..,.. TODAY
Vo11dtD6p,m.-..,. = ... -I
... "" ...........
A .. -Mr
ltcOfld 111111 t:'7 p,m. U .. ....... ., ._..
1-
P:-lrtt... lllfa .. m. IA
"""Mall •1 • ··"'· S.1
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' ' 2
2
t
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I = IK.-• J1a p.m. .,JI, ~-t :Op.m. .f. a•11 nit t :et p.m .• rise•
....... !.o.1'11 •
We1Te Listening •••
.._ (-) ... S:J7 p.m., r1-
We•w•1 •:•o.m.
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number below and your meua1e wtll be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to \he appropriate eclltor.
The same 24·hour an1werina aervte. tnay be ueed to record let-
ters to the editor on 1ny ~-Ma.Ubox COfttrtbutors must include
lbeir name and telephone number t« verlllcaUon. No circulation caU1. pluse.
Tell YI what's-on your mind.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday, October 27, 1981
Hospital assailed
South Laguna facility hit on maternity care standards
lb GLENN SCOTr o1 .. ...., .........
• The South Coast Medical
Center ln South Laauna didn't
meet several of the atandarda
for maternity ca.re set last year
by the Oran1e County Health
Planning Council.
In a recently published fl!port on mate rnity, or peri atal,
servtces offered in the c ty.
the council s aid South Coast
failed to meet more of the
standards than any other
hospital.
The report, with conclusion s
based on 1979 statistics, noted
that the medical center had the
highest delivery costs or 19
sur veyed hospitals. South
Coast 's average cost per
delivery was $1,167.
The average cost per delivery
for all hospitals was $596. South
Coast and Palm Harbor General
Hospital in Garden Grove, with
an average $1 ,085 per deliver;'.
were the only two hospitals at
which costs surpassed standards
set by the health council.
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach bad the third
highest aver age deli very cost, at
$790, but that figure fell within
the cost standards calculated by
the council.
Huntington lntercommunity
Hospital was fifth wi th an
ave r age $609 delivery cost ;
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital was 13th with a $454
cost.
South Coast also h ad the
fewest deliveries of the hospitals
in 1979 with 260, which failed to
meet the standard of 500 set by
the council. Officials said
hospitals with less than 500
deliveries weren't orrering
medical starr members enough
experience to be prepared for
perinatal complications.
In contrast. Hoag performed
2,068 deliveries in 1979, fourth
most in the county. Fountain
Valley handled 1,323, according
to the council.
The council also cited South
Coast for failing to implement
an active perinatal education
plan for its medical s taff and for
not having c apability of
performin~ a cesarean section
Service held
for Newport's
Mrs. Markham
Memorial services were con-
ducted Monday for Newport
Beach r esident M aziebelle
Glover Markham, a founding
m e mbe r of th e California
Epilepsy Society, who died Fri·
d ay at age 84.
A Balboa Island resident, Mrs.
Markham and her late husband
fo rmerly owned and operated
the Smoke Tree Ranch resort in
Palm Springs where she main·
tained a winter home.
She was a native of Nebraska
and came oo California in 1922
after a t our on the Keith
Orpheum Vaudeville circuit. She
was an active member of St.
J a mes Episcopal Church in
Newport Beach where memorial
ser vices were held.
Mrs. Markham is survived by
two sons, Dr. Charles Henry
Mark ham of Los Angeles and
Ri c h ard G . Markham of
Prescott, Ariz .. and a daughter,
Martiana Wiggins.
She also leaves two daughters·
in-law and 14 grandchildren. The
family bas suggested memorial
contributions to the California
Epilepsy Society, 6117 Reseda
Blvd., Reseda .
within 30 minutes at all Umea.
The health planning cou.ncU la
a non·profit aaency given m<*tly
federal funds to encourage
coordination of medical aervlces
wHbln areas, thus assurin&
quality care al reasonable costs.
The council bas no direct
authority over hospitals, but
does make recommendations oo
state llcensin1 agencies. Its
review of maternity services is
one of several studies slated this
year lo exam ine aspects of
medical treatment in' Orange
County.
In a summary or South Coast's
ser vices, the council's 'report
says: "This facility s hould
$eriously eva lu a t e its
co mmitment to offering
perinatal ser vices and consi~er
joint planning with oth er
facilities to improve the level of
service in its area."
P aul McQuade, administrator
for the South Laguna hospitaJ,
~aid in a response to the report
that thfl' medical center hu h
hiCh costs because of a lar
obstetrical unit but few births.
"We have continued to provt
excellent peraonallzed care
the community, while stud
possible means ot reducing
size ot the obstetrical unit
comin& under corppUance wl
the new standards or closing
unit altogether," he said.
Meanwhile, officials for the
health planning council say the
examination of maternity carf
already has increased th
quality of treatment.
Said Lois Benes of Irvine,
chairman of the council's revie•
co mmittee: "It's been a
absolute pleasure and Joy
working with all these hospit
which showed without a shad
of a doubt that they really c
about quality and distribution
perinatal services in Oran
County . Some already ha
co mpl eted thei
improvements." ·
Doll, .......... ~
SECONDARY RECOVERY Rig in Huntington Beach pumps
water into the ground to recover deep crude oil left behind b~
past operat10ns whe n oil was less profitable. In excess of 100
tons. the 120-f oot-tall Am inoil rig on Paci-fie Coast Highway·
near GQlden West Street recovers l~ barrels of crude oil
daily It's one of sax Aminoil rigs that use water flushing .
@
Can you believe it's almost
November? If you have a
birthday gift to give next
month, you might give some
thought to a piece of jewelry
set with one of the November
birthstones. Topaz or Cltrine .
CiEM WISE diamond ring made by Kurt
Gaum. a very talented New
York designer
In addition t o s haring
November. these two gems
have many similarities and are
often confused . They both
occur In a wide range of yellow
tones, from tawny yellow
through orang11h·yellow to the
smoky browns. Both are very
attractive gems and both are
very durable end satlsfectory
for setting In all type&-of ·
Jewelry for man and women
The moat popular style of
cutting for both gems 11 the
1tep cut. That 11 when all facets
are four-aided and In 9Mpe and
rowe above. below. and on the
glrt11e.
White Topaz and Citrlne have
many almllarltlH they also have
eome dlfferencee. Topaz le the
more valuable gem and la often
called "precious Topaz" to
dlatlngulah It from Citrlna.
Topaz Is 8 on \he hardnese
scale while Cltrlna 11 7. Tcp.z
has a higher refr..-. 1ndb
and a heavier apettJ6c gnivlty.
Topaz aleo comae In -'dltlonal
colore, the moat bMUtlful of
wtllch are tha bluae end plnt<a.
Mary Ba!f. c.rt1f1ed GetnOIOg•St
CHARLES ff. BARR
C1tr1ne 1s a member of the
quartz family and 1s limited to
the yellows. oranges and
browns. Other varieties of
quartz have their own names.
such as: rose quartz (pink),
amethyst (purple), eventurlne
(green) and crystal (colorless).
Topaz Is found pmnarlty in
Brazil while Cetrine is hkely to
be found more widely
distributed en our earth's crust.
Topaz and Cltrine eaoh has
1ts place in our gem world,
however. I think it is important
not to confute them. New York
State recently fined a jeweler
for writing Topaz on his 18181 •
slip Instead of Cltrlne -wnen •
• Cltrlna was wtlat he actually
had aold. Unlortunat9fy not all
Jewelere avan. know t he
difference. That le one of the
many raaeon• It pave th•
coneumar to ..etc out a fl""
holdlnp memberahlp In the
American Oam Soolet,.
Aaqulramant1 of ~
tnoluda tralntna In gemotoar
and adheranc. to high ect*il , ... ....... We.,. proud of C11r "*"= "' ----o.n and..._..
Wa l\ava a baautlful blue topaz ,.._,.1191 wtilch I bought In Garmeny on
my latt trip and wtllch we have
recently mounted In a l.tlee
qUHUOnl on .... .................. .... MOMlt.
ftne aa1111~ ettttne~.
..
\I s OrangeCoatt DAILY PILOT/TuHday, October27, 1981
DEATH BOAT INSPECTED -A Hillsboro,
Fla .. police officer checks the swamped boat
that brought 67 Haitians to Florida. About half
~urvived as the leaky, 25-foot wooden sailboat
broke up in rough surf less than a half-mile
-~ ..........
from shore and 33 refugees drowned Monday.
It was the worst such accident since heavy
influxes of Caribbean refugees began
arriving by boat more than three years ago.
Oil price cut resisted
Venezuela opposes OPEC proposal of $34 a barrel
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A r eport by a Kuwaiti
newspaper that Venezuela is
resisting a proposed cut to S34 a
barrel in OPEC's base price for
oil raised new doubts about the
outcome of a speciaJ meeting of
the cartel this week in Geneva,
Switzerland.
The session was called on
expectatio n s that the
Organi zation of Petroleum
Exporting Countries was ready
to end its divisiveness and
t•stablish a benchmark price of
S34 a barrel.
But Venezuela is seen by
industry analysts as a key to
OPEC's long struggle lo unify
prices. and the Kuwaiti report,
riu oting a top OPEC officiaJ, has
r a ised new d o\lbt s about
whether the cartel will reach
a g reement at Thursday's
meeting, analysts said Monday.
Venezuela opeosed a base
price of S.14 a barrel at OPEC's
last meeting in August. But
Calderon Berti, Venezuela's
energy minister, had indicated
recently be would compromise
on Venezuela's $36-a ·barrel
price if an agreement was near.
''It would be extremely
complicated for Venezuela to
remain isolated from the other
countries," Berti had said two
week s ago . "We want to
contribute to OPEC's unity."
But Marc Nan Nguema. the
cartel's secretary general, held
lengthy discussions with Kuwaiti
Oil Minister Sheik Ali Kbalifa
Al-Sabah in a one-day visit this
past weekend.
"Saudi Arabia still insists on
unifying oil prices at $34 a
barrel, while Venezuela's latest
proposal s uggested $36," Nan
Nguema said. "Each side has its
own justifications."
OPEC prices now range from
$32 a barrel for the Saudis to
Algeria's $40 a barrel. lndustry
observers believe Iran is the
only cartel member besides
Venezuela resisting a base price
of $34 a barrel.
Sanford Margoshes. a New
York-based oil analyst. called
the Kuwaiti report ·'part of the
posturing that goes on" among
OPEC nations before a
price-fixing meeting. M argoshes
said he sees a ·'slightly better
than 50-50 chance" the cartel
will strike a deal on unified
prices in Geneva.
Many analysts believe an
OPEC base price of $34 a barrel
would result in sUghtly higher
prices for U S. gasoline and
heating oil because the prices of
North Sea and U.S. crude oil
would be expected to match any
increase in Saudi Arabia's price.
The Saudis, whose price is the
lo west in OPEC, have not
indicated whether they will
attend tbe Geneva price-fixing
session. Analysts say Saudi
participation is crucial to the
cartel's success in forging an
agreement.
SPINAL SCREENING EXAMINATION
GOOD THRU OCT . 30th.
The Yarwood Chiropractic Office of Costa Mesa is sponsoring A
Spinal Check-up and Scoliosis Screening program as a public service.
This service will include consultation. examination. spinal photograph
and explanation of findings. By aJ)pointment only. Call 646-0516
Monday through Friday.
CONSULTATION
.n. c..,..,._ ,, ~
to .. ~ row pest Wttory
•d/or prtHWt ,,.. • .,.. n
titer •ar relate to .,1 .. 1
l1tj11rlu or other ,,1aal
COltdltiCMt._ lated lipOll ....
,._Hitt of tt.e C ... aticNI ....
doctor will ••II•
reco•...ctatlo1tt r-.ardhtCJ
••••IHtfCMt or nferTol to
•otlter doctor.
·X-RAYS
x ••• , .... "°' ,...Nd
for t•I• tcr•••l•t
••••l• .. I••· How•••r, ... ,...... ........
REPORT OF
FINDINGS
After th doctor ltot
CorTIWild ,_. fle•a11
boted ... Hte •tstwy,
........... •d ., ••••
, •• ,.,,..,, yo• wlll
r •c•I•• • report of
fl•d l •t• ••d
NCO I flw lllclcllfe4
by,....,._.crn..-.
EXAMINATION *
0-offlc• ..... ........
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OF SPINE RELATED CONDITIONS
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YARWOOD CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE.-.....
I 36 lroadw_,, c .... Meto, CA. •
646-0516
-.. . . ~ -. ,
Victim linked to heist
Former Black. Panther involved in Brink's robbery
NEW YORK (AP ) -A
convict slain In a sunbatUe with
PQllce bu been linked to the
earller $1.8 mlUlon Brink's beilt
In which member• of the
Weather Underground alleaedly
killed two policemen and a
1uard.
Police 1ources said Mondl)' a
.38-caliber slut found In the
pocket of the convict , Sam
Smith, came from the iun of
Nyack Police Sat. Edward
O'Grady Jr., one of those killed.
Smith was killed and
Nathaniel Burns, a former
Black Panther, was arrested
after Friday's shootout. Both
men were wearing bulletproof
vests and Smith had a bandaged
c hest wound consistent with
having a slug stopped by his
vest.
O 'Grady, another police
officer and a Brink's guard were
killed a week ago today during
the ambush of a Brink's
armored car and subsequent
shootout ln suburban Nyack that
led to the arrest of the Weather
U nderground's Katherine
Boudin.
The baJlistics lest provided the
first definite link between the
two incidents, the police source
said.
Smith and Burns were spotted
in the New York City borough of
Queens last Friday in a car with
a license plate matching one
seen on a car connected by
police to the Brink's case.
The ballistics results came as
a grand jury sitting in a Queens
courthouse began h earing
evidence stemming from the
Queens shootout.
Smith's police record,
extending back to 1963, included
charges of attempted murder
and robbery. He was imprisoned
in 1971 for an armed robbery in
which be shot and wounded two
officers but jumped parole two
years later.
But police said Smith had no
known connections with any
radical or terrorist group.
In other developments:
-The arraignment of Bums
was postponed until today, at
which time court will convene in
Kings County Hospital, officials
sai d . Prison officials
acknowledged that Burns was
hospitalized after sustaining
"blunt abdominal trauma" of
undisclosed origin.
-Doc uments found in a
raided East Orange, N.J .,
te rrorist sale house showed that
the merged Black Liberation
Army and Weather
Underground bad planned to
kidnap e xecutives of major
corporations for ransom ,
according to a published report.
-A heartnc WIS poatponed
for rtve people charsed In
connection with a violent
demon.et.aUon lut month a1a1nsl
a South African rucby team ln
which acid waa thrown at a
police officer. A car registered
to one or the def end ants wu
used In the Brink's shootout.
-Two Weather Underground
fugitives arrested Friday night
in the Bronx waived extradition
to New Jersey before a U.S.
magistrate ln Manhattan.
Magistrate Kent Sinclair
turned Jetfrey Carl Jones and
Eleanor Stein Raskin over lo the
New York City police warrants
squad to determine if there are
any outstanding charges here .
If they clear that test, Sinclair
ruled, the two will be sent to
New Jersey, where they were
charged in a 1979 fe deral
warrant with unlawful flight to
avoid prosecution after a raid at
their Hoboken, N.J ., apartment
uncovered a bomb factory.
Extra heavy security was in
place at the Queens courthouse
u a grand Jury besan bearlna
ev ldence about the shootout
involving Burns and Smith.
A uthoritiea were especially
co ncerned about security
because schematic dla1rams of
the Queens court buildings were
among the maleriahl conliacat~
in 10 raids in the metropolitan
area since the Brink's job and
the arrest of four. includlnt Miss
Boudin.
The h ea ring ror the
self-named "Anti-Sprlnsboks
Five" was postponed until Nov.
23 at the r e quest of the
d e fendants . The five were
arrested at Kennedy
International Airport last month
during a violent demontration
against the South African rugby
team.
A car belonging to one of the
five, Eve Rosahn, was allegedly
used as a getaway vehicle in the
Brink's heist.
Somalia says U.S.
dragging its feel
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
-The No. 2 man in Somalia's
Fore ign Minis try s a ys the
United States has deUvered none
or the military equipment
promised to his government
while Soviet arms are pouring
into neil(hboring Ethiopia.
Hashi Aba'Clallah Farah. the
director-general of the ministry,
said in an interview with The
Associated Press that Somalia
needs arms more desperately
than Sudan, which has been
promised an emergency
shipment of $100 million worth of
American arms to counter a
Libyan buildup on the
Sudanese-Libyan border.
Farah said Col. Moammar
Khadaly, the Libyan leader, has
only 40 ,000 troops while
Somalia's 60,000-man army
faces a "much stronger" threat
from Ethiopia 's 250,000·man
army s upported by 15,000
Cubans and 3,000 East German
advisers.
He s aid Ethiopian leade r
Mengistu Haile Mariam 's air
f orce h as ca rried o ut a
"staggering number of attacks"
this year on towns and villages
throughout Somalia.
"We have Mengistu knocking
at our door and Mengistu is
doing more bombing'' than
Kbadaly is doing in the Sudan,
said Farah.
Somalia broke with the Soviet
Union in 1977 a fter Moscow
backed Ethiopia in its war
agamst Somali re bels in the
Ogaden region of southwest
Ethiopia.
Under an agreement signed in
August 1980, the Amer ican
Rapid Deployment Force will be
able to use the former Soviet
naval base and air s trip at
Berbera, and Somalia is to gel
S45 million worth of American
air defense radar equipment.
But none of the equipment has
arrived.
··1 think it is quite
understandable that the Somali
government is questioning why
the United States government is
dragging its feet," said Farah.
"At first, we thought the
m achinery in the Unjted States
was slow. but then we began to
think perhaps the government
has different priorities. Still, we
are hopeful."
He said the Americans know
the S oviets "are po uring
millions of dollars of arms" into
Ethiopia.
··1 think Somalia and the
United States share the same
interes t in t he area," be
continued , "a nd we think
som ething is coming, but we
need help sooner."
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PH. 751·23.24
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Oc tober 27, 1981 s
~UffiU~
Nude sunbathing
hacke r s lose roun d
LOS ANGELES (P ) -A pre-
llminary lnjuncUon to bar Los
Angeles County from enforclna an ordinance against nude sun-
bathtnc has been denied in U.S.
District Court.
Judge David V. Kenyon Mon·
day rejected the motion for a
preliminary injunction filed by
two people who were arrested
for bathing nude on beaches in
Malibu this summer.
"Plaintiffs have failed to
es tablish that they're likely to
win this case on its merits,"
Kenyon said. "They may win on
the merits, but they have failed
to show they are likely to."
The SJ-million damage suit
against the county was ordered
to proceed.
Kenyon questioned the plain·
tiff's attorney, David S. Kesten-
baum, who was brought into the
case by the American Civil
Liberties Union, as to whether
proponents of nude sunbathing
h ad committed "a gross viola·
tion of local rules" when five
parallel s uits on this Issue were
filed. Four of th<>!e cases were
swiftly dismissed, in what Ken·
yon said he suspected may
have been a "judge-shopping ex·
pedition."
Kestenbaum replied that the
local rules that the judge cited
referred to suits filed by the
same party and that the four dis·
missed suits had been filed by
dlfferent individuals.
Deputy County Counsel An·
thony SerriteUa emphasized that
all the suits were similar.
"The complaints were iden·
tical in everything except the
captions," s aid SerriteUa.
Kenyon took no further action
on the matter after raising it.
. .........
ENOS FAST -Marc Busch, 26, an Australian crewman on
t he Sea Shepherd 11, l!as ended a 20-day fast to raise money
for a s ave -the-dolphins campaign against Japanese
fiserhmen.
Ban on lawsuits against Iran upheld
J udge rules Carter acted within his a uthority in blocking hostage action
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Jim·
my Carter act ed within his
authority as president in ban-
ning lawsuits against Iran by
former hostages. a federal judge
ruled in dismissing a suit filed
against the U.S. government by
13 people ta ken c aptive in
Tehran.
• be half of J ohn D. McKee!,
Charles Wesley Scott. William
B. Royer Jr., Donald A. Sharer,
Le land Holland, David Roeder,
Regis Ragan, Paul Needham,
Duane Gi llette, William
Gallegos, Alan B. Golacinski,
Ma lcolm Kalp a nd Cha rles
Jones Jr.
ruling was issued. "The com·
mercial claims were allowed to
go forward, however. There is a
billion-dollar fund available al
the Hague to s ettle t ho se
claims."
He said the appeals process
may take a year, but expressed
optimis m that his case would be
suc cessful.
Davis also contends the agree·
ment between the U.S. and Iran
should be voided because Carter
was acting under duress at the
lime.
However, he s aid, the Reagan
administration has said it will
uphold the agreement, so Davis
said that leaves only the courts
lo resolve the question.
Suits oppose
remap vote
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Al·
sembly Democrats have u.ked
the st.ate Supreme Court to halt
the Republican reapportionment
referendum and req u ire
Democratic-drawn districts to
be used 1n next year's elections.
The two suits flied Monday
s aid the Republicans are
circulating referendum peUUons
that ask voters to lie about their
res idences and that are "inac-
curate and unreadable."
They also said the referendum
text is wrong in staling that
qualification of the referendum
for the June 1982 ballot
automatically means the new
le gislative and congressional
dis tricts cannot be used next
year.
The redrawing of district lines
to reflect population changes is
required by ~ne constitution and
"invocation of the referendum
process by a s mall minority
cannot force Californi a to use
unconstitutional districts any
more than in action by the
Legislature could have," one or
the suits said
The high court must decide if
it will hear the two s uits and
normally gives no indication
when s uch a decision will be
made.
Republicans, unhappy that the
new district:-favor Democr ats,
are circulating petitions to put
the three reapportionment bills
before voters in June.
They must gathe r 380,000
signatures of registered voters
by Nov. 15 to pla ce the matter
before voter!. They have mailed
petitions to Republican voters
and are solicilin~ signatures in
publl<' vlaces
Since referendum petitions
must contain the entire bill be·
ing considered, the petitions ln·
elude the complex census tracts
that comprise the reapportion·
ment blllB. For example, the M ·
sem bly bill llsts all 80 districts
and all the census tracts within
each district.
To save money and apace, the
Republicans used tiny type and
printed the complicated billB on
pages intermingled with the
petitions that mus t be s igned.
But the Democ rats' s uits
claim, "The very form of the
petition and the size or type in
wh ich the r e apportionment
statutes are printed eff~tively
prevent voters from reviewing
that which they a re being asked
to repeal."
In addition. the s uits say the
Re publican pe titions instruct
signers to Lis t the address at
which they are registe red to
vote "even if incorrect."
But the suits s ay state law re·
quir es that signers use the ad ·
dress where they live
"The Republicans ' direction to
signers to list their address ex·
actly as listed on the mailer
·even if incorrect' is blatantly ii·
legal," one or the suits s aid.
The suits were filed by AS·
sem bly Spea ker Willie Brown of
San Fra ncis co, Assemblymen
Art Agnos of San Francisco and
Richard Alatorre of Los Angeles
a nd five people identified as
registered voters: Vi ctor Garza ,
S t eve G u e rre r o and Ge ne
Flemate of Santa Clara County
a nd Ricardo Dura n a nd J ess
Marquez of Fresno County. The ban was included in an ex-
ecutive agreement worked out to
secure the hostages' release.
"The executive agreement
was a major part or the effort to
get the hos tages home," U.S.
District Judge William Gray
ruled Monday. "The agree-
ment was within the executive
a uthority of his (Carter's) of-
fice. It may not have been wise,
but we wante d lo get them
home."
The U.S. Embassy in Tehran
was seized Nov. 4, 1979, by Ira·
nian militants protesting a U.S.
decision to admit the ousted
shah for cancer treatment in
New York City.
Thirteen hostages, women and
blacks, were quickly released by
the milit an t s, and another
hos tage was sent home when he
became ill, but 52 hostages were
held for 444 days. They were re-
1 eased in Januar y, the day
Ronald Reagan succeeded to the
"Note the basis of the court's
dec1s1on." he said. "The court
said the re was a m biguity in the
defi nition or jurisdiction over an
embassy, and there have been
three cases in the East in which
t h ey we r e adve rs e to the
hostages rulin"s on that Ques-
lion ."
Controller, cash missing?
The suit seeking to overturn
the executi ve agreement was
filed by la wyer James Davis on
Presidency.
Davis, who said he would ap·
pe a I , contended the hostages S tudent nanied were denied due process when the government a greed they
BERKELEY CAP > -A could not sue Iran for damages.
Uni versity of California student He said the United Nations
has been appointed to the rent world court at th e Hague,
control board h e r e . Coun· Nether lands. bad set aside a
cilwoman Veronika Fukson ap-fund to hand le commer cial
pointed John Braue r , 21, a claims against Iran.
political science major. who "There was an unconstitu·
became the only under-graduate tional taking of their property
He s aid a bill offered by Sen.
Robert Dole, R-Kan., would cor·
rect that jurisdictional definition
by the time the appeals are con·
eluded. Under that bill. if any
similar terrorist act against an
embassy occurs in whole or in
part within the premises of a
diplom atic or consular mission,
if in violation or international
law and if the aggrieved party is
a U.S. citizen, "then our courts
can t ake jurisdiction."
"B y the time we have our
hearing on the substance of the
case, I believe Congress will
have approved the bill," Davis
said . student on a major city board. rights," Davis said after Gray's . ~~~~~'--_;._~~~~~~~~--=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Me di-Cal
doc tor
subsidy ?
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-A new study s ays
Califomja's $5 billion·a·
year Medi-Cal program
is hea vily subsidizing
the training or doctors,
boos ting inpatient costs
by 5 percent to 7 per·
c e nt, t he Sacramento
Union reported.
The news paper said
t he 158-page r eport,
com missioned by the
s tate Department or
He alth Services. focused
on the Medi·Cal costs at
leaching hospitals in the
state where doctors re·
ceive training.
"Medi-Cal appears to
be s pending 5 to 7 per·
cent of its inpatient re ·
imbursement for higher
patient service costs in
teaching settings," the
report said.
State officials are cur·
rently evaluating the
s tud y, compiled b y
He a lth Sy s t e ms
Research of Marina del
Rey.
If the study is correct,
officials said, graduate
medical education pro·
babl y will a dd S74
million to $104 million to
Medi-Cal inpatient costs
d uring t h e current
1981 ·82 fiscal year.
According to Health
Services Director
Beverlee Myers, Medi·
Cal faces a $195 million
deficit during the cur·
rent fiscal year.
The study found that
the cost of physician
services in teaching and
non-teaching hospitals
to be about the same,
but said higher costs at
teaching hospitals was
due t-0:
-Higher routine
nursing costs per pa·
tient;
-Greater use of
druas and medkal •UP·
pUes ;
-Hieber cost per IUT·
1ic1I procedure wben
resident doctors are
pr&Hnt;
-Mort dla1no1Uc
~ labor&tA11"7 ~.
By Popular Demand!
Nowthru
Nov8.
Say Shrimp Louie,
Garden Shrimp Salad,
Shrimp Creole, Shrimp Cocktail,
Shrimp Omelette, Steak & Prawns,
Prilne Rib & Prawns, Pile o' Prawns.
LUNCH SERVED l 1AM-4PM
~~GU~la.iaootW
BLACK ANGUS
RES 11\I •RANTSTM
\ ~
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, SANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE,
TORRANCE, CERRITOS, LAKEWOOD, ANAHEIM
..
ES CONDI DO <AP ) -A
fugitive warrant has been issued
for a convicted forger who got a
second chance as controller of
a company which now claims
$1.5 million may be missing.
When Diane Hilts was hired at
Frazier Farms Inc. in April
1979, she was forbidden by her
probation from carrying even a
credit card.
T he 33-year-old mother of four
was fired last May. William
Frazier, company president,
says auditors have discovered
bookkeeping discrepanceies of
$1.5 million in the privately held
retail chain of six health food
stores based in Escondido.
The company's retail s ales in
recent years have been about
$27 ,000 annually. Mrs . Hilts was
fired after $28,363 disappeared
Crom the company's petty cash
account. Frazier said in an in·
terview.
A former police detective, Bob
Va les. now a police lieutenant in
Carlsbad, said Mrs. Hilts was
arrested in J une for investiga-
tion of 10 counts of embezzle·
m e nt and grand th eft. She
pleaded innocent and was re·
leased on her own recognizance
but now has been missing since
August, police said.
The fugitive warrant was IS·
sued when s he failed to attend a
hearing on revocation of her pro-
bation in a 1977 forgery conv1c ·
lion ste mming Crom her job in a
San Diego dentist's office when
$38,000 disappeared. Te rms of
her probation barred her from
jobs involving bookkeeping,
handling money or keeping lax
records.
Frazier said it was several
weeks after he hired Mrs. Hilts
that she told him of her back·
ground.
Now save 400i> with ftirCals low-Cal faNs.
AirCal 1s growing
again Now the a1r1ine
that's winning the West
with style is heading
to Phoenix·
Going with us are
lower fares 40% lower
than what vouve been
paying on other a1r1ines
Pick up an AlrCal
Low<al fare.
From Orange County
or Ontario. we'll Jet you
to Phoenix fo r as low as
$36 Naturallv. there are
some restrictions~· But
even o ur unrestricted fare
offers a 40% savings.
AlrCal's everyday, fly-right·
away fare 1s just $60
AJrtal stvte Is service.
Your flight starts with
one-stop check in and
seat selection before you
board. After arrival. it's
swift baggage dehverv
And A1rCal style is one of
the best on-t ime perfor
mance records in the
industry
A toast to sty1e.
Dunng November.
we·re serving comphmen·
tarv coc1<ta1ls to all adult
passengers on every
non-stop flight to or from
Phoenix
Next time vou re
flying to the Grand Canyon
state. fly A1rCal You·11
like our stvle
For reservations call
vourTravel Agent or A1rCal
SCHEDULE TO PHOENIX
FROM ORANGE COUNTY
Departs FreQuencv
7 ooa Sat
8 30a Mon ·Fn
10 OOa Sun
3 30p Daily
4 25p Ex Sat
6 45p Mon ·Fri
6 SSp Sun
~OM ONTARIO
Departs FreQuencv
8.20a Sun
10 OSa Ex Sun
1 3Sp Daily
• Servtce starts November 1 • ·Seats are /1mtted. seven-dav
advance reservat10ns reautred
Fare and schedule sub;ect to ~ change ..,tllout not<ee
f •
-------..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday, October 27, 1981
THE
F MILl'
CIRCl:8
by Bil Keane
BIG GEORGE by V1rg1I Partch (VIP)
,. ·~'
"I was getting ready to make dumplings."
by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE ME,t\CE Hank Ketchum
~
.j 1-7
-
PUNl'TS
TIJMBLE" EEDS
A WORl71011-ie wise:
V'O Nerf HUN"T' 17eeR
WHlt..SH~IN
FOOKAWK COLJl\11lrf.
~ 0
COME OVER,
SLUGGO--I'M
GOING TO KNIT
YOU A
SWEATER
''Do you think they expect refreshments
after their meeting?"
110H H1 ,MR. vJ1LSON' Coum YA tQA.N ME: A A:)T 60890
Jl.DGE P \RKt:R
llil--m:llliiiilliii!!!~'Zrcl\ANC'Al l FORMS
WHEN YOU MIO we ~AD TO ARRIVEP HERE
LEAVE L.A. EARLY. I DIDN·r 1 'IESTERDAY'
..........,_ KNOW 'rOU WfRf. lALKIN(.1
( A&OVT FOUR IN lHf
.,
I•
,~
t
MORNING, &10' -·-,.,_ __
t;:\Rt'IEl.D
ACROSS 47 Breeziest
51 Raced
1 Grinder 52 Cfaed
8 ShOw ewti 54 Tinker
10 Malet I -58 let UM
Try 59 Mend
14 Exlaliog 61 AttKk
15 Pfedo paint-62 Pok• pool
Ing 63 llUC's son
16 Hid on 64 Inner
17 Oft digger 65 -otl
18 Plalntlff Vtxtd
111 Conllntnl 66 ArrMtege
20 Dot• on 67 Run-down
22 AbuM
24 lngf'tlt DOWN
10·21
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Monday's Puzzle Solved
28 f.Uroe>Mfl•
27 Ccwtrtd
I "I ~~enlber ~~~~~~~ ...
31 Serbian
city
32 *""" Alnetlcant
33 liAAO
S5Tttoom ............ ...... .......
,, ........ ldn 42---.......
llCI I ......
2 Smtlty
3 Prtfl• for
type
4 Flguttd.
IMlf\
5Ntlleer.l •Full 7~
ITOllf .,,...
10 .......
UGo--: ... u ...... •• ••
40 EldOf'aclO!
2wordt
42 -Canal
43 Satlsftll
25 Ouetallon " COiored
'7 $ocCtr gteat 46 Flat: Abbf.
21 Epocf\tl 47 Key
2t ~ 48 A Cel1te Plll9t 49 lncom« Ff.
80 PYGglnY 50.T orment ,..__ 53~
"~ 55 $1ie1igbox ........ It .. _.
J10.... 57---.. ............
FOR THIS PLANT I'M ~IN'?'
by Harold le Doux
YOU KNOW IT'5 MONOAY
WHEN VOO WAKE. UP
ANt' IT'5 TUE.5'7AY
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
WHAT'D
H~T~LL
you?
/
r(J ·
--------RcALL'<? wow~ DOES
ME KNOW IT'S WORTH
TWSIT'r'-RVE THOOSAMD
DOLLAAS?!
by Charles M Schu lz
MONEY' 00€SN1T MEAA
IHAT MUCM TO ME ...
by Tom K Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
HO. iilAT ~~ ! C»J
HAVE A NEW OOX.
by Ernie Bushmtller
ARE YOU SURE THIS 15 THE
WAY TO
MAKE A
SWEATER~
(VY.) I ('(y..J ! LOOK /ti ALL OF
'THE. ~~ LITIL.£ WrTOIE5
AND GOBLINS!
I ~f 'IOU A ~f '<00 MENf\ONEV 'f14~f ~OI)
{~\JME. ~ AA1.U>lii£E~ ~ \i)N~f.0 A Q.U.I.. ll.E.~E.fl
Vl!.60~~. ~0 I Jl.l5f
"1m.MEO 'fo 14~-JE. ONE~
1R~ 11" ON\ r---...,
:t ,-HINK WIS CAN DO IT IN
Aeou-r FOUR "fRI PS.'
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
by George Lemont
by Lynn Johnston
PICK A PUMPKIN -Sarah Auth of Herndon.
Va., looks through a pile of pumpkins in an
Co~puter threat
to Constitution?
WASHINGTON tAP) -A study prepared for
Congress on the impact of forthcoming technology
asks : When computers can accurately predict who
is most likely to commit crimes, should society
closely watch those people? Deny them jobs? Jail
them?
The stncly . published Monday by the Office of
Technology Assessment, said computer technology
already in use and advances on the horizon raise a
host of similar questions that must be answered
soon.
"These technical advances are generating
public policy issues at a rate that may be
outstripping the federal government's ability to
respond," the OTA s aid.
The office is an analytical agency of Congress
and made no recommendations for answers to
most of the questions it raised.
Constitutional rights are being jeopardized by
new technology. the report said, especially by the
enhanced ability of computers to record people's
activities and interests and to predict their future
behavior.
For example , with a device that records what
books someone checks out from a library ··an
accurate profile of an individual's interests and
attitudes could be provided by a complete dossier
on that person's reading habits," the report said.
Information that is now unrecorded will
become collectable in computer data banks, the
report said.
"Electronic mail and electronic point of sale
systems (which record a customer 's purchases>,
for example, coll ect and store more data than the
systems they replaced.''
Under existing law, police are permitted to
watch daily public activity without a warrant.
Even the envelopes of the mail someone gets can
be studied.
If the observation is extended to s urveillance
of electronically delivered mall -where there is
no distinction between the outside envelope and
'Society c.annot
imprison ,a person who
might someday rob. a bank.'
the inside message -and to the person's financial
transactions, recorded through electronic funds
transfer systems, "much more data, some of it of
a highly personal nature, couJd be collected in
secret." the report said.
Congress must someday decide, it said,
"whether such transactions are to be considered
public or private behavior.
''Psychology-based" uses of computers -
including their use to predict behavior -raise
other questions . The report said:
·•Much research has been done on the
application of computer·based social science and
statistical models to files of personal data and the
result of psychological tests in order to predict
behavior. Techniques are being studied for
detecting tendencies toward juvenile delinquency,
drunken driving or violent anti-social behavior and
for security checks by the government."
Businesses may some day use s uch
computer-based predictions to decide whether to
extend credit or insurance to people or give them
jobs.
"On the other hand, society cannot imprison a
person who a computer model predicts may
someday rob a bank," the report said. "But should
that knowledge be 'reasonable cause' to monitor
such a person closely or deny employment?"
Computers are already used by lawyers and
prosecutors in compiling dossiers on potential
' jurors and seeking to predict how they will react in
the jury room.
As more personal data about potential jurors
becomes available, computer-based predicting
will become more exact, the report said.
As a result "the entire concept of an
'Impartial' jury as required by the Sixth
Amendment may be challenged,'' the study said.
Another right -the Fifth Amendment right
against self-discrimination ' -ls challenged by
voice stress devices that seek to determine
whether someone is lyin1 by measurlng the stress
in his voice.
Unlike someone who kDOWI he Is under1oin1 a
, lie detector test and can refUle to submit, the
people test by these new devices may be 1ivin1
testimony a1aln1t himself -an uowltt1n1
vtolaUon of hil Fifth Amendment right a1at11t sell-dJscri~natlon.
,. ............
attempt to find the right one to take home for
Ha lloween.
.. ..
,.
• n}O
,
" ~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, October 27, 1981
Bingo
• prize:
house
FREE INVESTMENT SEMINAR
OR. GEORGE L. HAINES. leadlno authority In
real estate. taxation & Investment• d/ecu11e1:
....... ,_ &'-1t., ,..,. o..... • Four basic rules to greater wean fl
tC•Jt '""'* .....,._. •fhll •'••• cona-..141·1219 • President Reagan's recent tax reforms & high
, .. ..._._ return investment opportunities.
•tt9-v~l5-CM01 -~~-DOM"T D .. Y YOUlllLITMS ()flPOITUMtTY
P 0 RTL AND, 0 re. ~='='·=~=--~.....,=="'=""":::::~='.,:::::' ~~ T•~ Oct. 21, 7:JO ,.-. n-.. Od. 2f, 71JO ,_ (,b.P > -What's being ......,._ ..._........-
billed as tbe "richest DAILY PIL.b'r J I~=:· t700~
bingo game in Oreeon" CLASSIFIED ADS SPONIOflEon is much more than that 84~.-5878_ 11ncou1T FtMAJCtM.. tMC .. 17141 t4'·760Z
for Zidon and Sharon l ljiiiiiiiiii~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~~::::::::::::::::::::~~~::::::::::::~ Wh i tt e m o r e o f r
Estacada.
The couple are
ottering their '$125,000,
three-bedroom house as
top prize in a bingo
game Nov. 7.
The Whittemores say
they mus t sell 1,300
tickets at $100 each,
before the game goes
on. If fewer tickets than
that are sold, the house
and the 43 acres it sits
on will be sold al auction
Dec. l.
They took a second
mortgage on their farm
to meet the cost of the
custom-made home .
Mortgage payments are
$1,500 a month.
It 's the second time
the Whittemores have
tried a game of chance
to get rid of their house.
Proceeds from the
gam e, at least $10,000
after the mortgage is
paid if everything goes
well, will go to Watch
Our Waves, a group
trying to build a covered
public swimming pool in
Estacada.
• f •
T'9li43
BALLIDAY'S IUINVAL SALE ON
SPORT COATS
ONE WEEK ONLY OCTOBER 26-31
403 0FF . . .
TO REDUCE OUR STOCK
NowS99 NowSl35 NowSll7
<Ceg. $165 reg. $225 reg. $195
So,-ry. olterotlon$ 1101 Included.
17th & Westcliff Ave. • Westcliff Plaza • Newport Beach • 645-0792
I
---------------~---~-~~--~~~----,,__ __________ .,._ ____________ _.. ............................... llm!I ......... ~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tu11day, October 27. 1981
~Recial school may
aid problem youths
Expectations are high ror a
new school scheduled to open
aext Mono~ exclusively for boys
alrtady involved in the crimina l
.}ustice system.
bThe. J .P. Greeley Community
ay: School in Orange will hold ~~r45 mostly high school·aged atuetehts from all over the county
who 'uhtll n ow h a ve not
suc~ed in school or in socie ty. ~ll the students will be wa rds of
Orange County Juvenile Court.
The school in some respects wm be s imilar to continuation
schools oCCered by m a n y school
districts. except that the students
at Greeley will be the m ost
severe proble m cases. They are
the ones already in other
tnstitutiona l settin gs. the on es
who disrupt regular classes or
who just don't bother to show up.
The n ew sc h ool will b e
~dministered by the county
Probation Department . f robation officers will be on
hand to help remind student.a to
take the class work seriously,
and Cor mor e personal
instruction, there will be one
teacher for each 15 boys .
Official& in the probation
department are optimistic about
the potential results. "School
problems are so often mixed with
delinquency," said one official,
who explain e d that problem
youths ofte n improve drastically
when r e m oved from the
embarrassin g a nd stressful
situation of being behind most
oth e r s in achievement.
The school is not expected to
cost taxpayers a cent during its
first year, at least. Funds will
com e from other parts of the
probation department's budget.
U nde r s uch advantageous
circums tances. it would be hard
not to wish the school good luck.
School a dministrator s thro ug hout
the county must be doing the
same thing
[,C"J{.violence links
There was as mu ch talk
about violence on te levision las t
week as the re was violence on
television .
First. cable m agnate Ted
Turner of Atlanta figured in the
h eadlines with his commc•nl to a
House s ub comm ittee that
e ntertainm ent on the three rnc.1Jor
networks was ··so percent tr ash ."'
There are thos e who sa'
Turner understated the case• •
. But. of cours e . Turner
welJ·known 1n boating and
baseball circles isn·t totalh
o bjective . He heads a rival
network and there are probabl~
those that say 80 percent of what
he carries is tras h
But the controversial T urner
did s ugges t that Congn·s:-; st•t
st a ndards to limit violenc(' on
TV. He conte nded that T\" 1s a
greater danger than c igarettes
a nd that programs should carr~
warning s ig ns .
While we don't want Jern
Falwe ll to set s ta ndards for the
tube . we don't think Congr<'SS is
much bl'tler. Nor is Norman
Lear. It's the old s tory of who
g uards the gu ards.
Following Turner at the hear-
ing in the nation's capital that
day was a nothe r s peaker criti·
cizing violence on TV.
Dr David Pe arl. c hief of the
N a tional Ihs titute of :\1e ntal
H ealth ·~ behanoral sciences
resear.ch branc h . s aid s tudies
indicate that TV violen ce is
di r ect!~ linkt-d to aggressi \'e
beha\'lor by som e frequent
ne\\ er~
His credentials are muc h
be tter than Turner's.
Various studies .. on balance
s upport the inference of a causal
relationship, .. rear I s aid .
This s t ill is a gray area.
how e ,·e r Some s tudies ha ,.e
s uggested the hnk between TV
a n d viole nce. Pearl's resear ch
bega n as recen tly as 1979. We
belie\'e more is neede d .
Common sense would d ictate
tha t killing. rape and robber~ on
T\' da\ after da\ must h<I\ L'
... o me drect on u~ ·
Dr. Schlesinger forgets
Hi s torian Arthur M .
Schlesinger Jr. last week treated
a l "l' l r\.llll' .1ud1t•nc1• to .1
negat I\ t' \It'\\ of 1 lw Hl'<ll.:.11)
a d m 1111 ... 1rat1011 . IJl'1•d w1111:.: I I.it h
that 11 ... ..,upph -.1 tl1· 1·t·111111m11·-.
" ii I t.11 I
li t· did 11111 -.1·1·111 111
..ic·knm\lt'clge tlw t.wl th.it ,,ll,tt
ha.., h t'l'll hap1H0 11111 g 111 1h1 ...
tountn for tht• pa-.t dt•t.,1cl.-•JI" ... .,
ha~ not bt•t•n '' ork 1ng .. .., l'\t'll
s 0 m (.' I I b t' r .I I n l' m 0 c· .. a I ...
r e lucta nt I~· ad n111 and 1 h:11 thl·
peoplc ·s rles1n· lor c·ha11g1· ",.,
J:>ased 011 reallt ' llt)t "h11n
In Sc:hle.::.u1i.:cr" \JC.\\. th.t.:
liberal admin1 ... 1r;1t1orh h.1q·
u I \\" a·' :-, I>(.' l' ll t h (' ill' I I\ I.., t ...
g e n c• r a t i n I.! n l' " 1 , I l· .i ... a 11 , I
a p p r o .1 c: h t' ' " h r I 1 • 1 h 1
conscn·at1n.•.., tt•nd to n ·..,t and
le t th inf!:-. ... l!d e during t hc·11 tt•rrn ...
of offit-e.
F'o r ex<1mpl1·
Roose' l'll lollrl\\ ing
U oo,<•r . or CJ
.tll .t<.'l I\ 1:-.I
,1 do nothlnl-!
r I' .., I f LI I
•
E 1 .., l' n h 11 " <.· r I o I I o " 1 n g
HO<hl'\ dt Trum.111
Thi-. ... omehm\ d 1w-. not 11 hl'
''1th lhe Hc•,1g;111 adnl'lni...tr.111011 ...
d1·am;1t 1c plt1nJ.!t' into an·a ... that
l11r lll'll\"r or "nr .... v .11·1· l'lt·.1rh
dtl lt-n•nt
'-;thlt·..,111~1·r lln1·1• .1 ..,111·<·1~11
,1 .., '> I .., I .I ll I t 0 J> I" I'.., I d l' 111 .J 11 h ll
Kt•n1H'<h . e h1111-.1·!'o lo ch\l'll 1111 thl'
K l' n n t' (I ' l' 1 a \\ h 1 c h . 1 n h 1 ..,
h 11Hb1).!hl. ";1.., -.11m t· -.ort 11f an
1clt•a I lie.• a l mn-.t g 1 n•.., ('rt'<l cntl'
111 cnt 1 c~ \\ho contl'ncl hi s
111lc•lledual dt>\'l'l•>pment ..,t,>p(H'd
" i t h I h l' t r OJ 11 m a o f t h t' .1-..., a:-..., mat 1011
Sd1lt'-.tn).!er ... predic tion ut •
lailLtrt• for lh•;1 ).!;111·.., t•c<11111m1 e
p ro~rum nw~ c·ome to pa!-...,
l"nfnrtu11a1el~ lw ..,till he1rp~ on
.... o I u t 1 on .., o I I h c.• p a .., t " h 1 c h .
n•alisi... rnu!'>t admit . were not a..,
l' I' I e (' t I \ l' a .., h t· C" h o o s l's t o
l'l'memhc1r .\nd ht• offt·r.., no
c11 ... pa..,..,10natl' .inah :-.1s of th e•
" o r I d t o d a ' n o ,: a n ~ n C' w ·
... olut1on:-. ·
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on tnis page are those ot their autnors and artists. Reader comm ent Is inv1t·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92b2b. Phone (714 )
642·4321 .
L.M. Boyd/Soup helps dieters
The soup before the m eal gives
your brain time to turn off the hunger
signals. So if you eat soup, you eat
less when you get Lhe main course.
Many generations of grandmothers
have known that. Researchers at the
University or Pennsy lvania
monitored 1,056 dieters. They learned
in this particular study that those
who started their main meals with
soup lost just as much weight as the
yogurt and salad dieters.
Skin ol Lhe coelacanth fish in the
watera of Madagascar is so tough lhe
island natives thereabouts patch
bicycle tires with it.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Th irty·e ig bt p e rce nt of firs t
m arriages end in divorce now. 43
percent or the second marriages.
Q. Didn't you quote the experts as
saying no twin ever became famous?
How about Elvis Presley? He was a
twin. And Ann Landers and Abigail
Van Buren, they're twlna.
A. No, air, the contention of the
scholars was no twin has ever been
ranked as a genius.
Q . How much are the car burrs
getting now for a 1955 Ford
Thunderbird in tiptop condition?
A. About $30,000.
Thoma P. Haley
Publisher ' '
"'Thomas A. MUrphlne -
Editor
B•rbera Kreiblclt
Edlb>f'lel P-oe EcUtor
I
Business stumps for A WACS
WASHINGTON Wh1d1t•\ • 1 w;..,
the Senate votes on thC' AW t\C'"> .ill'
and barring any startling lal>l rnrnutl·
development it should be a i.quf•.ikC'r
the Republic will survivl' B11t vou
w 0 u Id n . t kn 0 w I 1 r r I),., t h t'
near-hysterical tone adoptl•d '" sn1111· •Jf
the people who arl' lobb~ in,.: 1111 11111 h
sides of the issue
Everything from pon11l'rot1s 1111l111n,1I
security argument ~ to t•m11t 111n.d
"win-one.for-the·G1ppcr" ap1w.ib h,1, i:
hee n used t o bring p r c-,sun· on
wavering senators But the mrn .. 1:-.ing
shrillness only accentuates thl' pla111
fact tha t neither s uppo1 t "r" nor
opponents of the contro\ 1·r..,1<il d1 ii
have cornered the markl•t rm truth anti
logic.
IN TIDS ATMOSPH ERE, it ' .limo 1
refreshing to observt-lht· untJ1si.;1u-;1•1l
self·interest reflected in ttw ltolih' mi.;
activities of the bus1n1·..,-. 1 i.n n1111 11' 1
favor of selling thl' rt1d.11 1•1 in•.. 111
Saudi Arabia. For Rt~ Hus1n1· "· m .. 1 •'
makes the world go 'rouncl Jt1d 11 ... 1111
Saudis who have the m oot>\
Maybe it's b ecause thl r1 •'-. ;I'•
unabashed friend of bus1nl'!.:O. 111 th•·
WhHe House; m aybe it"s hec aus<' tht•
other arguments in favor of thl' 5ali> art
less persuasive. Whatever the reason
the corporate flacks nre not -.h, ho111
s t ressing the profit mnlt\f· 11 ti• 1
approach to a poltt1 ral IS"'lH.'
With all the subtle!\ of a tank Ir 111 I.
barreling along th(' Jt•r ..... , I 111 11 :~
one la rge Mobil t>il 11h • t • 11 111
1111 11111< ti 1 11 t 111 A1111•11l·an companies
1•11111!' t 11 •h 111 ... ,. 1 'i u·s to the Saudis
u11 l 1 111•· lw,111111 1... $35 Billion 1n
1\1, Ill• .. Intl' S }•11 m., ••
\111!111 s p r nw11 d1dn"t even feel it
111 • ... ' 1 .. 1111·11t11>11 the AWAC:S deal
,11 I lo• ,,cl 1 -.pl.111wd that tht• lti.t of
\n r 111 1111p .. 1:1t11111• ''° tlu• 'iaud1
(.)
-JA-CK-AN_D_ER-SO-N -~
11 .11 '' 1 pr1•0.,1•11t1·d 111 the 1nh.'rf'st of
, on 11111t1, 1 1h-h.1t1• o n a c·rit1cal
11~111111 I I 'Ill'
·1 \\O 1'-1 •l s·1 tU \I. gianli. that have
I 111! 1 1•1 111 tht> pro l\WACS
, • 11 i .11 11 .111 I 11111•11 1 l'<'hnol11g1l'.., and
tt.. I • , l1lo I 1 111 p lnll·rt.'l'.it1 n~I~. the
.11l 1 111 11.11 111-. tno'>l ouls po ken
I 11 I 11 llit \\\\CS -.a lt• "'ere
I 1\f" If l ht 'Jllll ftrm~ i!l'forC'
Joll1 11,1 tl11• 1!1 ::ii::.111 (\d11nl'l ...,t•<.·rl'lar)
.,j SI .111 \l .. ,andt•r H ai~ "'3'> L'T
pre ,14Jt>r1I I >l'fl'nsl' ~ccretar) Caspar
\\ 1•111lll'n.:1 1 "'as '11·e pre1>1dent and
1 htl'f t·ouns,.I •1f Bechtel
H •· 1 h 1 • 1 ,, , on.., tr u <' t 1 on and
11 • 1 • n " I 11 m t.> r al I.', h ·a<;
1111<, , .. '' 111 t..,.111Ch Ar~1b1a . and
• 11ld lw .11 Hllll' l h<' perc1•ivPd
.., 0 ud1 .u .11h 1f the• \WACS
h I "II ): h fi U I l Ill t t• d
Technologwl>· stake in the sale is more
direct It makes the engines for AWACS
plllnc:.
Bechtel, 1n a lette r to members of
Congrel>s, pointedly warned lhat the
AW ACS cleal ··directly affects not only
l S ct•tmom1c concerns, but those of
our NATO and Fa r Eastern allies" -
which also happen to be custome rs of
Bechtel
M y associate Lucelle Lagnado has
seen a Ion~ telegram sent by UT's
chairman. Harry Gray, to the firm's
s upplier~. uq~ing them to lobby on
be half of the sale He a sked the
.,uppliers to wire their senators and'
added. · Would you also send me a copy
o f your co mmunica tion to the
senators·• ..
WHAT NEXT?: Al this writing, the
Senate vote ts loo close lo call with
confidence But I predict that the direst
"''JrnJngi. o r both sides won·t
materialtic If the Senate kills the sale,
President Reagan will not be stripped of
h1-; control over foreign policy, and Lhe
S.1ud1l> "'nn t cut off trade with the
l n1ted States If the sale goes thr ough,
l:-,racl "''II not be dei:.troyed, nor will
\ital US. technology fall into the
Kre mlin ':, c lutches . Everything
inclu1ed in the sale can already be
purchal'.il'<i on t he open market, and by
the Ltmt• the first AWACS plane is
delivered in 1985, the Soviets will
probahly have r adar planes of their
ll\\n -.uperior t o t h e AWACS "
:?o \ear old t<.•<·hnolosD
School fin a11c 1 by state has flaws
Total state financing of th1· p11hlit
schools is the aim of an in1t1.ttl\'" p..t1
lion cleared for c1rcul.it1nn II\ tho• .11
torney gener al It ...., ould oirn1•111I th··
state constitution to rt'quire th• .1.1!t' to
set aside off the top or all reH·mw~ :111
amount equal to the money a\a1l.1hl 0• to
the schools from both stale .inti 1111 .11
sources this year.
Budget figures shu"" the.· schools \\ 111
receive some $12.3 billion for ~rades K
through 12 in the c11rrent y1•ar. S2 !.I
billion of that from Inc al rt·\ Pnm•o;; tr
the measure qualifie" for thl• ll.1ll11t .rncl
is approved by the \.Olen. J1 \\;1u!J Jt
quire the state to increase 1h d1re1 t
funding to the schools by the amount of
$2.9 billion. Also, s ince the m t-al>Ul't> prn
vides the allocations be adJu<.ted an
nually to enrollment and the C11n ... 11mer
Price Index. there wo uld b<: a furtlw1
increase in cost to the state.
T H E LEGISLATIV E Analyst
estimates lhe increai.es by reason of lht'
enrollment and CPI a djustments alone
would cost the state $400 million the
first year and $850 million lh<' following
year. Asked why his estimate or cost
didn't include the $2.9 billion reprPscnt
ed by Lhe local revenues, his office con
tended that the slate would recover that
amount by deducting it from the money
now being allocated to local govern
ments in the form of property m lieu
of taxes and Proposition 13 "bailouts ·
1• .111.d\ • n>n11•d1·d that it "'ould'rc
q 11r o' It · 1 l.1t 11>11 111 ,1il111st thl current
.di 1 111 .. 1. '" 1, ... d L:41\'! rnment lo off~t.>l
r h 1• 111 • r' ,.; I'd ch o 11 I a 1 cl I f t h P
I • i: L I 11 1 1 I.oil• ii t 11 1 ••1 ovt•r the ne"'
,., po r .. 111 r • 1111 ..,, li1111h m tl1at manner
IARL WATERS
lh·· 111 I 111\ 1· c•111ld cost the statt• in ex
1·1·'1· 111 ~I :1 lull11111 thl' first y£1ar He
.• :11d 11i,,1 \111ul tl11"l happen b~cause the
111111.111\1· 11•1'.1..,ur1• .,..,..,,,Ply st:.tes in
lt-111 h111.d111· ... n t hjVt' an) teeth ··
HE T ll,\ I' .1-. 1l may. th<' idea of writ
111i.: int 1 I ht• con st 1t 111 ion a specifi c
.1 n111u 11 1111 lhC' ~chools is ba,1cally un·
:1011n<.I \nd to pro\'rde that such amount
shall h.1n llrst call upon all money in
lhl' -.1.111 tn .i:;urv b even "'orse
For rk.,ptti-th~ nnt ion entertained by
rnam 111 the puhht' schools program.
1'cluca11on 1.., not th<' prime purpose of
AO\ t'mni<•nl T he ht•alth and safety of
th1• pt·oplt• mu5l come fi rst Were it
11thcrw1st• ther<' might not bt' a nybody
<11iv(• to b<•nt1fit by an educational pro·
~ram
R:. l>''J?gtnl? the amounts to be allocat
NI to thr 1981 ·82 costs the initiative
gives blanket approval to aJI of the pro·
grams n<m supported by those funds
Tht· fart 1'.'> there 1~ much disagreement
a:-, to th£• n('('d and propriety of m any of
those programs.
Furthermore, the Legislature has re·
JCcted tht• C PI as a basis for increasing
school funds for the valid reason that
factors used to a rrive at CPI such as
hom es. interest, food and automobiles,
do not apply to school costs.
WJULE fT MIGHT be s uspected that
the initiative is being sponsored by
public school organizations the stmplici·
ty of th<' language or the measure s ug.
gests otherwise.
Besides mos t school officials and
many teachers oppose 100 percent state
financing of schools for the reason it
would surely remove all pretenses of
local control. Further, it would in·
evitably lead to the imposition of
statewide standards for both staffing
and salaries. something the educators
bitterly oppose.
Given tht'se points it is not likely Lhe
sponsor. listed as a Michael Davis of El
Toro. will meet with much success in'
gathering the 553,790 s ign atures
necessary to wi n a place on lhe ballot
for the meas ure. A similar proposal a
couple of years back failed to qualify
for the ballot for lack of sufficient
s1gnaturt-s
The only way to-learn the facts of life
There ought lo be some way to r e:lr
young people so that by the time they
are ready to take their place m the
world, they will know what it"s like to
be somebody else, and will not forgt'I 11
for a long time.
Whe n e ver l h ear a ffluent sub
urbanites talking about those "shift
less'' people in the slums, I see a recur·
rent photo in the newspapers a plant
has advertised 30 job vacancie!\, and 600
people begin lining up before dawn to
apply.
Or whenever 1 hear dropout mnlcon·
tents attacking the "system." I Uunk or
my own son, who started D little busl
neas not Iona ago, and has learned more
•bo•t the faei. of me than bt tver im
QiAQedbefore.
.
Tht• other night. al dinner, he ex·
rluimecl, "You know, I've got more or·
dl'rs than I c.m handle , lots or money is
rominJ? 1n and I can't pay m y bills!"'
SU DOJo.N l.V llF. w as an en ·
trc•p r.<>nl'ur. and finding it no easier than
10 be ~orking for someone else, and
m.1~ be ha1 der He took a big loss on one
Joh mack a mistake on another, had a
!;11urce dr~ up on him , two checks
bounced, a couple of helpers couldn't
xhow up for work, and the cost or his
tn aterials h>Ok a sharp rise.
lie nev1·r knew that ''business" was
llkt• thb , how could he? He thoucbt a
ho:;~ lounged in a paneled ,office.
~mokf'd Havanu cigars, pushed a few
telcphorw buttons, and apenl two boun
lunching at th club. Maybe 20 yurt
from now, 1f he works 11.ke a doa. and lS
lucky.
Alan Grt'gg of the ftO(kcfcllt-f Fund.
v. hen he wu sUll teachinc medlctiw,
oncf' saJd h • hilted &.o lff a mtdk1l ltU·
dcnl l his M.D. dtlrff before M Ud
bu n •,Patient ln a bolpltal, .. I'd to
put every intern through an appendec·
tomy at least," he said. "Not for the
surgical experience. but to team how
the a verage patient Is treated."
And 1t·s really not enough lO walk a
mile in someone else's moccasins. They
ha ve to pinch enough, long enough, fot
the bl11$ler to be remembered when lhe
shoe is on the other foot.
BREAK TIME -Miss World contestant
Marisa Tutone, Mis& Italy, listens to music in
the headphones of her mini-cassette player
Mideast war
facts sought
TEL A VIV. Israel <AP) -The death of Moshe
Dayan has brought back the gho,,t of \he 1973 Yom
Kippur War to haunt the Jewish stale.
The eighth anniversary of the end of that war
is today, and many Israelis feel they still do not
know the whole truth about those disastrous days
when Dayan was their defense m.inister.
They are calling for the publication of the
Agranat Report, the secret findings of a high-level
com mission that investigated the conflict.
With eight years passed and many of the
protagonists -Dayan, Israeli Prime Minister
Golda Meir and Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat -dead,
they see no reason to keep the
r eport secret. But some oppose
publication, fe aring it will
divulge valuable military
secrets to the Arabs, leave key
ques tioas unans wered and
resurrect old grudges for no
good purpose.
The three -week war
launched on the Jewish holy
day of Yom Kippur was a trauma from whi°cb
Israel has never quite recovered.
The army, surprised by Egyptian forces
driving across the Suez Canal into the Sinai
Peninsula while Syria's army advanced through
the Golan Heights, has never regained its pre-1973
aura of invincibility won in three previous
Arab-lsareli wars.
The 3,000 lives it cost have left a permanent
scar on the population. The feuding it provoked in
the army still reverberates. And it followed Dayan
to his grave as the major flaw in bis record as a
war hero.
The commission cleared Dayan and Mrs.
Meir of direc t responsibility for Israel's
MIU a
unreadiness for the onslaught,
and placed the blafDe on the
military chief of staff, two
generals and three intelligence
officers. Dayan and Mrs. Meir
were forced to resign later in
1973 after their Labor Party lost
five seats in parliamentary
election s . But the fee ling
lingers among many Israelis
that the commission blamed the
soldiers for the errors of the
politicians.
Military historian Meir Pa'il caJls it "the final
shortcoming of the war" because it restricted
itself to finding culprits in the army instead of
investigating the politicians. He also said it was
insufficient because it did not study the war
beyond its third day, when Israel came off the
defensive and swung onto the offensi ve.
"The report is valueless," he said. •'It is
superficial and arbitrary."
The commission consisted of five revered
public figures beaded by Shimshon Agranat, then
president of the Supreme Court. It spent four
months listening tQ 58 witnesses, including Dayan,
and produced a 1,500-page report.
Only a tiny portion was made public, although
political leaders and senior officers were ordered
to read the full report.
In his last months Dayan said he wanted it
published to clear allegations that he ignored clear
omens of war, and that when war broke out be
panicked.
3,000 to watch
shuttle blastoff?
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP ) -When the
space shuttle Columbia blasts off on its second
mission into space next month, NASA officials are
hoping at least 3,000 V1 Ps will be watching the
spectacle from an exclusive space agency
grandstand.
In September, about 4,200 invitations were
mailed from Washington to the private homes and
businesses of the VIPs -including science fiction
writer Ray Bradbury. singer Jimmy Buffett and
actor Christopher Reeve. _..,,,_
Singer John Denver, who viewed the debut
launch and has been invited to the second, "is a
space nut. He's shown an expressed desire to see
the space launches," said Arnold Richmond, chief
of NASA's visitors service at the Kennedy Space
Center.
Invitee Johnny Carson is also a space buff,
having interviewed noted astronomer CarJ Sagan
several times on his late-night show, Rfchmond
added.
National Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration officials say the leaders have been in·
vited to the a~beduled Nov. 4 launch not so much
as a financial pitch for the proaram, but for
educational purposes.
"There's no denytng when you put people close
to this program and let them be there when
something happens, they get intenaely interested
and even supportive." said James McCulla, chief
of NASA public services ln Washington, D.C.
"Because these people are opinion leaden ln the
community and we are 1lven a leglalatlve
mandate to inform and educate, we want to alve
them as clo1e a view of the apace proeram aa we
can.''
The guests will be brouabt to a vlewtn1 at.and
four miles from the launch pad -the cloaest
non-w6rkin1 official• are permitted.
• So far, RSVPa have been alow with 1ll1btly
•more than 1,.000 lnvitaUona accept~ and about 500
declined aa ~ Frtday, Richmoacf aa1d. 1
-----------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday, October 27, 1981
Trick or. Treat
On the Mall
A .. ie& sane
HallowHn preview
6-9 p.m Fri. nite
at Huntington Center. Free candy, frM
balloons. Plus 25'
tickets for garnet
& prizea.
RESTAURANT
DIRECTORY .
For The Orange Coas!
." ....... during a lull in the taping for the swimsuit ITALIAN
competition ln Miaml Heach. VILLA NOVA ALISIO'S
3131 W. Coast Hwy. 642-7880 1670 Newport 642·8293
Save money and shopping time . For °'1uifled Ad
ACTION c.u
All major credit cards. •
llalian c ui s ine. Overlooking
Newport Bay. Dinner served night
ly until I a m Piano Bar Banquet
Fac1ht.te:.
Mas~r Charge, Bank of America
The best in Hallan cuisine. Live en·
terta1nment nightly Banquet
fac1lllies.
Read the Daily Pilai A DAIL "f rt&.OT
AD-WSOI "42-5671 STUFT NOODLE
Designed,
Finished -----
Installed -
215 Riv erside,
Newport Beach 548· 7418
Restaurant Writers' Award winning
Restaurant for the past 4 years
MEXICAN
TNT TACOS
N' TEQUILA
3300 W. Coast Hwy. 548-2224 AJI major crt>dlt cards
Happy hour 7 day!> 4 7 pm Sunda'
Brunch 10 3 "tth cornphmc>ntary
champagne
CAMINO
MEXICAN
RESTAURANTS
Irvine Ave./Mesa Dr. 646-3%28
Brookhurst at Adams
Huntington Beach 963-9748
Margaritas and GREAT Mexican food. 14
µage menu Weekend hrunch To go
packai;1nJ!. Lunch & dinner everyday.
Most c:recltt cards
28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY.
DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717
AMERICAN
AIRPORTER INN HOTEL
~editcrranean Room
18700 ~acArthur Blvd., Irvine
Spl0C'1ali11ng in Continental Cu1~1ne 7 days a week
Fl•aturing Sunday Brunr h 11 J
HElllWOOD MANUFACTOllY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 926V All ma1or credit cards <1ccepted Reservations 833·2770
Compare 011r rate:
• Annual rate of interest on Te •. n Investment Certificates•
Comp~re our term:
Compare our minimum:
All things considered. Avco Thrift's Term Investment Certificates offer you considerably more.
You can"t get a better combination of high rate. short term, and low minimum. Just
compare our Term Investment Certificate with comparable certificates at any other financial
institution and you'll see what we mean.
So come on in. You'll meet people who really enjoy giving everyone the chance to earn
high interest.
We also offer 8Y2% Passbook Investment Accounts with a minimum investment of $25.
Earns from date of deposit. Interest compounded daily. paid quarterly.
•Rates subject to change on a weekly bas11 In the went of early wlthdr<tWal. maJCtmum lntere~t paid Is 6 O''h Thi~ Is 11 llmtted offer.
c)va1lable to Callfornl<1 res1dt>nt' onlv
L:JOAVCO THRIFT
25252 Cabot Road
Laguna Hills, California 92653
(714) 581-1700
l
620 NeWQOrt Center Drive, Suite 101
N~rt Beach, California 92660
(71~) 644-9490 .
Ale Or•ng• Coast DAIL V PILOT IT uHday, October 27. 1981
ADVl:.RTlSEMl!NT
A timely report on developments at San Diego Federal Savings and Loan Association • October IN ovember, 1981
Tax-Free Yield Beats Money-Market Rates
Ready Access
Eliminates
T-PLUS Penalty
A new dimension of liquidity is
being added io San Diego
Federal's six-month T-PLUS ac·
count with the early-November
introduction of a new ~ervice:
Ready A rcess.
Up to n ow. withdrawals of
T-PLUS funds prior to 1he maru-
rity date required a severe penal!}
of reduced interest. Now, Read•
A rcess allows customers to use
any portio n of their depo:.i ted
funds at any time for any purpose
... without any penalty fo r early
withdrawal!
SAME T.PLUS RATE
T-PLUS customers choosing I
the Ready A ccesl o ption when ,
they open their account!> will earn I
the same hi gh "money-market" I
rate as o ther T-PL US account
holders. They abo will receive a ,.
line of credit equal 10 the amount
deposited. plu~ 20 check~ that can
. be used JUSI like the checks
supplied with a regular checking
account. Checks should not be
written fo r less than S500.
There 1s a one-time fee ofS5.00,
which is not due until the ac-
count's ma1urity date. when it can
be deducted from m1ere\t earned
This entitle~ the customer to live I
advances (check!>) without aJdi·
tional charge.
There 1s no limit to the numher
of advance~ that can be taken dur-I
ing the six-month term, hut each
advance beyond the Ii r'>l fj\ e I'>
subject to a S2.00 service charge.
due at maturity of the T-PLUS
account.
S5.000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
. Comparison of Income from Tax-Free Savings
with After· Tax Income from Other Investments
Tiit Amount lnwesttd In Savings insured to $100,000 by the FSLIC Unlnsured -MONEY All Eumplts Is $10,000 6-Months 30-Months One.Year FUND T-PLUS ACCOUNT T·PLUS/30 TAX-FREE ACCOUNT
MT£ 1011·10/5 1016-10/! 10/10.10/H 10/1-10/! 10110.10126 1011-10/3 10/4-10/31 10/1·10/14 EffECTtvt: MARGINAL --
TAX RATE Of 15.989%' 15.21%' 14.43%1 17.85iz 17.19%2 12.61%1 12.14%' 15.50%'
RATE EARNINGS: ---PRE·TAX $1,599 $1,521 $1,443 $1,785 $1,719 $1,261 $1,214 $1,550 INCOME:
30% AFTER-TAX $1,119 $1,065 $1,010 $1,250 $1,203 $1,261 $1,214 $1,085 INCOME: --·---
37% AFTER-TAX $1,007 $958 $909 $1,125 $1,083 $1,261 $1,214 $977 INCOME: --
43% AFTER-TAX $911 $867 $823 $1,017 $980 $1,261 $1,214 $894 INCOME:
49% AFTER-TAX $815 $776 $736 $910 $877 $1,261 $1,214 $791 INCOME: - ---54% AFTER-TAX $736 $700 $664 $821 $791 $1,261 $1,214 $719 INCOME: ...
59% AFTER-TAX $656 $624 $592 $732 $705 $1,261 $1,214 $636 INCOME:
Annu.llm:J ~u:lc.J. J)'ummi full remve)tmcnt of all m1erc'1 income al the ~amc rJle after i.1>. month,,
Annudl ~u:lc.J .• 1"un11ng principal JnJ mtere.~1 remain in ilCCOunt for une year .
Annual }tCIJ ~Ith all 1n1t:rc't pa1c.J JI ma1ur11y
• Avcrdge ..annuJhlcJ ) 1dc.J llf mune) funJ~ w11h a~eb of S 100 nu Ilion or more that an: a\ a1lable h.> mdt\ 1Jual tn\ c~111r•
tm 1hc '<~t:n-J.i~ po:rmc.J enc.Jing Oll\•ber 14. a• comp1lec.J b) Dunoghuc\ Money Fund Report of Holl"ton.
"'"".JlhU,t:lh UI 746
By c utting the required '
T-PL S balance m half. San D1·
ego Federal open!> the door to
many ~avers who thu~ far have not
been able to benefit from the T·
PL S accoun1·~ comb1nat1on of
high mone) -market interest plu~
insured safet ).
The T-PL S rate is based
on current mo ney-market rates.
changing weekly. usually on Tues-
day. T-PL US savings are insured
to SI00.000 by the Federal Savings
and Loan Jmurance Corporation.
Open Tax-Free Account Now
To Maximize '81 Exemption
Although the Tax-Free Ac·
count may be opened any time
through December 31. 1982. the
sooner the account is opened in
1981. the greater the tax savings
that can be realized.
Here's why:
total S303.50 ... and nt)ne of that
is taxable!
In just the lallt two month~ of
the year. the above taxpayer haf.
increased aflcr-tax income by Sl3 I
... aod that amount can buy
someone a pretty nice Christma'i
present!
For taxpayers in lower lax
brackets. the tax ~aving!> may he
less dramatic; but they're \till ,ub-
stantial, as indicated in 1hc table
below.
Average After-Tax Yield Of
Funds Is Less Than 12.14% •
The 12.14% yi eld of the new Tax-f-ree Saving!> Account compares
very favorably with that of other investment~. including the average
yield of money-market fund~ after federal income taxe' have been de·
ducted. a:. 11lu~tra1ed in the chart at the left.
:faxpayer~ paying a margi nal I -8-!ll-~..---f-ac--ls-A_b_O_ul __
tax ra te o f 30~ or more ap· ........,
parently will r1ot e:NI) find a bet·
ter inve!>tmcnt th an San Diego
Federal\ Tax-Free Account. par·
ticularly when the ,afcty llf 1n-
ve,1ed fund' 1~ con,adcred along
with the alh:r-tax mwmc.
INSURED TO S100,000
Tax-t-ree Account.... J ' ~ell a'
other San Daegu I edcral .,Jvmg'
accounts. arc in~urcd to $100.000
by the Federal Saving~ anJ Loan
ln!>urance (\1rporatiun. wherea'
money-mar~et fund' are nnt nor-
mally protecteJ by any in~urancc
at all. Al\O, ~hare' m mo ... 1 money-
m ar~et fund' ma\ llul:tua1c ;n
value. \O lhat thcr~ " no guaran-
tee that the inve,h1r\ cap1 1al wi ll
not ~hnnt.. hclow th e amounr of
the on!final in\e,tment. Th" can-
not happen with an an~u red 'av-
1 ings account ... uch J'> San D1 eg11
hderar, Tax-rree An:ount
CHART EXPLAINED
In the chart. the amount llf 111 ·
,e,tment upon '>'h1l·h all Jller·IJ\
\ 1elJ, Jrc ha,cd 1, S l 0.(1110 I the
inin1mum all11\\,1hlc hal,111cc u f
the 1-PI l S acniunt)
Bcl·Ju'c ra1e' on 'l\·m11nth
1-Pll'S Jcwunl\ and )O-m11n1h
I -P l l 'S/30 :tl'l"\1un l' l:hangc
lrcljucntl~. J' Jcterm1neJ b~ g11\-
crnmcn1 T-8111 .w1.11nn' . ..ill ra1e'
1n effect Mn1.:c 1he October bt he·
ginning of Tax-I-rec Saving' up to
the time thi' article wa' wriuen.
Jn: 'hn'>'n for oimpari.,on L'en
"'hen th~'c ra1c' ""ere ,11 1hc1r
p e a ~ ' ( I 5 . 9 X 91 , .1 n J I 7 . X 5 ''( •
rc,pcl:ll\cl)). the fJ\·I rec \1clJ
wa' better than the aflcr·t.1 '< \leltl
1ll the 1-PLL S .inJ T-PI L St:lO
Tax-Free Savinp
I Sometimes referred to in 1hc
pre's a)) the "a ll-';aver~ certifkate,"
San Diego Federal', Tax -Free
Saving'> Account wa., authoriLed
1 by the Ewnom1\: Kecovery Tax
Ac t of 1981. a<. pao,,cJ by Congre~
and '>lgncd h~ the Pre'>idenl this
pa't 'ummcr
l he aC\:11Unt allows a one-time
federal lnl'ome ta.>. exemption of
S2.000 lvr l:ou ple' filing JOtn tly
and $1.000 for thmc li lang mdiv1·
dual tax returns. Account<; can be
opened at an) timl' between Octo·
her I. 1981. anJ Decemher 31.
19~2. •
Ta x-l·rce Al'\:o unh may be
11peneJ \.\ llh $500 1lr mon: ior a
term nf 11ne ~cJf J\c1 ther JJJ1-
11on' n11r wnhJrJwal ... can be
maJc: lo Jn ac~ount. ho'>'c,cr. J
pcr,\1n or louplc lJn open J'
man\ anounh .i' rhe" "'"h
'h11ulJ fund., bt:cunac a";11hhlc al
J 1tl'c:rent llnll'' 1hrough Delcmher
JI. 19!Q
ShoulJ w11hdra'>' ah he re-
ljUtred fur any rea~un. the tax ex-
em p1wn 11n tht' ac~oun(, entire
cJrning' '>'oulJ he forfeited and
there '>'ould he a penalty of three
month~' 111'' o f intcre...i ,,n the
amount withdrawn
FREE INTEREST CHECKING
A minimum halance of $2.500
an one Tax -Free accou nt entitles
the cu<,tomer to an lnterevt Check·
1n,:: Pl l S al·count fret> of
month I) 'en ice charge.;.
S,W1ng' are IO\UfcU 10 $100.()()()
h) lhe FeJeral Sa\ mg' anJ l.1Mn
l n~uramc Corporation
Read) Acces1 all ow'> a ~u~tomer
to open a T-PLUS accou nt with
ju t $5.000 . . rath er than the
SI0.000 manamum balance nor·
mall y required.
To the T-PLUS benefits of high
earn mg~ and insured safety is now
added a new dimension of liqutd·
11.1 • San Diego Federal'-; Read)
A c·ce.u service!
Tax rates for 1981 generally are
somewhat higher than they will be
in 1982, suggesting that the tax-
payer will benefit by taking just as
many deducttons/exemptions in
'81 as is possible. Tax-Free Savings
provides such an opportunity.
For example. let's say that a
taxpayer is earning 15% per
annum on $15,000 in a 6-month
T-PLUS certificate. This amounts
to S2.250 a year. or Sl87 .50 a
month. That's $375 in earnings for
just the last two months o f the
year. November and December.
al:counl'> m even ta'\ br-.H:~cl 11\cr
Obv1ou!>ly. :.hould !>avmg' cur-; 30'~. Since 1h~n. the gap h,1,
rently be earning le'>s than the 15~ wiJcneJ n 1n,1dcrahh.
1 he maximum \'tcld of the 1 a.>.·
I ree Al·n1 un1 ;, eqabJ1,hcd'
.1pprox1ma1el~ e"cr~ fo ur '>'Cek'
following the go-.ernment T-Bill
aul:tion. 1 he vield can be no more
than 701 .of the average
1mes1men1 \leld of the onc·\ear
A Four-letter Word You
Can Teach Your Children
S-A-V-E.
While certain four-le11er word~
you'd prefer your children didn't
use were gaining in "cceptance
over the past few decades. the
word "save·· was losing some of
the luster 11 had gained during the
'30s and the pos t -depre !>~i on
period.
Not that thrift had lu'it all ,1f 11'
supporters: The growth of SJn
Diego Federal Savings is te,ti-
mony to the continual popularity
of saving among a large segment
of the population.
But the detractors became
much louder in voice. 1f not much
greater in numbers. On the prem·
ise thal "interest rate~ weren't
keeping up with in nation," th ey
urged saver'i to see k greater re·
wards. Th ear claim : The po'>·
sibility of hi g her ea rnin gs
elsewhere outweighed the prom·
ise o f safety and consis1en1
earnings that they enjoyed with
insured savings accounts.
THt PENDULUM SWINGS
Times have changed ... again.
Just witness these recent head-
lines from the pages o f major
n ew spapers and f inan c ial
journals:
"Now It's The Decade For
Savers" (Sacramento Bee).
"Expansion o f IRA privileges
may be tax law's bes t ne w ··
(Sacramento Union).
"Disinftation: II Could Lei the
Air Out of Some In vestment
Standbys'' (Los Angeles Timl's).
"T he Tax Cut W ill He lp
Savings" (Fortune).
"Collectibles: Nice if you sold
a lready'' (San Francisco
Examiner).
"A New Tu Shelter For The
Average Saver" (U.S. Ntws &
World Report).
"Accountants Expect Tax Bill
to Cause Big Changes in Invest·
mcnt Strategies" ( Wall Strut
f 01m1al).
"'82 tu laws beneficial for
IRA. K eo~h plans" (Yo u r
M oney's Worth by Sylvia Porter.
S11cramento Union ).
"Tax Bill Narrows Demand for
Shelters and Puts Focus on Merits
of Investments" (Wall S treet Jour-
nal).
Ye!>, the focus once more is on
the "ments of inve!ttments'"-the
con<;a tency as well a!t the amount
of earnings. the degree of safety,
the preservatio n of principa l.
The e are the cntena that have al-
ways guided savers; chances are
that a good many investors wish
they had stayed with them these
past few years. too. rather than ex-
periment mg wi th tax i.helters that
didn't quite pan out.
SOME WON. SOME LOST
It's true that some people have
made money by leasing box cars
... by feeding ca ttle ... by drilling
for oil and ga ... by financing
films. lithographs and books ...
by the timely sale of coins, stamps.
gold and diamonds. But many did
not
They got into box cars just
abo ut th e time the glut hi\ the
tra<ks and their own investments
got sidetracked. They ended up
payin$ more fo r feed than they
could get for their fattened cattle.
Their drills hit dry holes. Their
films napped at the box office,
their lithographs and books
stayed on the shelves. They
watched a s the boom in coins.
stamps, gold. and diamonds
bombed out, leaving va lues about
where they bought in. sometimes
dropping dramatically ... and
now "collectibles" no longer even
qu1tlify for IRA and Keogh in·
vc tmenlS, putting more pressure
on the market.
Of course, even though their
capital investments may have de·
preciated, o mc iovestors-
particularly in the very high tax
brackeu-rcalir.cd some return by
sheltering other lncosne from
'
If the taxpayer. who we'll as·
sume is married and filing a joint
return, is in a marginal tax. bracket
of 54%. the after-tax earnings fo r
those two months will be reduced
10 Sl72.50. the other S202.SO going
to the IRS.
NO PENALTY FOR TRANSFER
Should the taxpayer transfer
the $15,000 from the T-PLUS ac·
count into a Tax-Free account on
or before October 31, which the
new regulations allow without
penalty, the earnings at 12.14% for
November and December would
used in the illu!>trat1on. the addi·
rional a fter-tax income generated
b} Tax -Free Saving" w,,ulJ he
proportaonally greater.
OYER S15,000 OKAY
Incidentally. the Sl5.000 in veM·
ment in Tax-Free Savings return'
Sl,821 in interest over the 12·
mo nth term . well below the
S2.000 maximum exemption for a
couple tiling a joint return. Actu·
ally. Sl6.474.46 ca n be deposited
at the 12.14% rate to result in just
S2.000 of Tax-Free income
Anyone who want!> to compare
Tax-Free Saving' with a T-PL US
account or some other current in·
vestment will find penonnel at
any San Diego Fed eral office
pleased and prepared 10 a ~~1\I
with the computations.
115,000 SAVINGS-2-MONTH URNUIGS COMPARISON (NOY. & DEC.)
--
TUf'AYEIS 15\ FtDOAL Af'TH· ll.14\• AD0£0
MMGIMAL T·l'lUS INCOME TAX TAI.Flt[[ INCOME
TAX llAU EMWIMCOS TAXES WIUMGS EM1'1M'5 --
54\ J375 SZOZ.50 $172.50 S30l.50 $131.00 -
4K J375 Slll.75 $191.25 SlOl.50 $112.25 ·---
43\ J375 sm.zs $213.75 S303.50 m.1s -37\ sm SIJl.75 U3US $303.50 $67.lS ----•11te4 °" Odtber yltl4; saibjed te cl1111p tlowemlMr L
--------------------------taxes. But beginning in 1982, Federal Savings and Loan Insur-
when the maximum tax bracket ance Corporation.
dro ps from 70% to 50%. the 3. 1981 tax legislation with its
shelters won't provide anywhere Tax-Free Savings Accounts, liber-
near the same benefit. alized IRA/Keogh regulations.
DECADE FOR IAYllS? and other benefits for savers.
I the Sacramento Bee headline 4. Negative circumstances
correct? Are the '80s the decade affecting a long list of ta1t shelters
for savers? Many recent events and other investments, increasing
point in that dircctjon: the relative advantages of invest-
1. The deregulation of the sav-ing in insured savings accounts.
ings and loan business, allowing TILL THE lllDll
San Diego Federal to pay the Sovt. A noble word tha1 is well
highest interest rates in its 97-year on its way to rtgaining the stature
history and to offer an ever-it once enjoyed as the basic form
upanding variety of savings ac-of investment for the American
·counts, financial services, and family ... perhaps the inve 1ment
banking conveniences. of the decade ... and, yes, a four·
2. The recent increase in sav· letter word you can {sho uld?)
ings insur.nce t0 $100,000 by the teach you.r children in Che '80s.
•
monC\·mad,el funJ, nultUalC,·
da1h ~nd ma\ J11ler 'uh,1an11alh
fr1Hn nnc fund to Jno1hcr. an m·t•;.
llf!.'' neld 1' u,eJ in the la't col-
umn. A' n,11eJ. 11 "'a' compileJ
fl1r the 'even-OJ\ period ending
Oct1lhcr 14 . h) the William E.
Donoghuc Money ~und Report.
As anteres1 rate' have gcnerall)
been fa lling 1n recent week,, th e
money-fund average 'lmwn ma)
he on the high ,iJc h) the time
th1' puhl1ca11on 1' printed .ind di,.
tnhutcd '1e\crthele". 1he Tax-
i-rec Y1clJ "'L:h,1an11ally higher
than 1hc after-lax funJ \ ield.
rangi ng from Jbou1 12', higher
lor tho'c an the 31Y; tax hrad .. et up
Ill W'fh h1f!.her ro1 tho'>e paying a
marginal ta'\ rate llf 59'k-1
TRANSFERS WITHOUT PENA~TY
U nlc~:-a T-PLUS cuq11mer
\lpcncd rfle account wh en rate'
were 'Uh'>tantaall) higher than
they arc now. cnn,aderation might
he givcn to tran,fcrring fund!>
from r-PLUS into a Tax-Free
S:n 1ng' Accnunt Thi' cJn be
do ne w11h m11 any penally what-
'oever.
Government regulation-. waive
the '>'1lhdrawal penal1y on
T-PLUS account\ (a) if the ent ire
T-PL US balance i~ tra nsferreJ
into a Tax-Free Account. or (b) 1f
S 10,000 remain' 1n the T-PL US
account after transferring a por·
T rea~ur) B1il. '
On Oc1o ber I. thc initial yie ld
wa~ ~el at 12.61 1~. Sub;,equently.
following the auction that took
place October I, the yie ld of
12.14% wac; estahli~hed for the
period of Oc1ober 4-3 1.
1ion of the fund~ anto a Tax-Free
Acrnunt
In other word~. 1f the cu,tomer
I
dec;1re~ to tram.fer ju\t a portion of
1he current T-JlLUS balance into
Ta'l·Frcc Saving:.. $10.000 must
remain an 1he T-PLLS account or
1he regular pen.tit)' regulations
would apply. If. however. $10.000
remain., in T-PLUS. that balance
would et'nt1nue to earn at the
wmt' T· PL S rate now received
... anJ there wo uld be no change
in the T-PLUS maturity date.
DECLINING INTEREST RATES
Ai. 1he chart indicates. interest
rate~ hu ve been declining in re-
cent week<.. The Tax-Free rate it·
\elf declined the one time it's
changed si nce October I st.
Anyone who has n o t yet
opened a Tax-Free Account.
might consider domg so before
the rate changes again on Novem-
her lst. There is no way to assure
the direction the rate will change,
hut indications are 1ha1 the trend
wi ll continue lower. .
12.14o/o YIELD ASSURED ONLY TO OCT. 31
Savers desiring to lock-in a yield of 12.14% must open a Tax-Free
account by the close of business on Saturday, ~tobcr 31. AJthough
there is no way to know exactly what the ocw rate will be, the JCDeral
trend of interest rates has been lower in recent weeks, suggest.mg lhal
the current rate is the more desirable.
Savers who choose to wait until the October 29 auction before
opening a Tax-Free account might be prepared to move quickly on
the 30th or 31st should the rate decline funhel' from lbc turmu lnet
• ' l
Northrop ,aims
Dilly Plllt
TUESDAY, OCt. 27, 1tll
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
82-3
87
88
,,
•
Now that there is, a woman on the "
Supreme Court, Erma Bambeck is pushing
her Bedroom Rights Amendment ... 83 .
. li . .
at export sales of F -5 fighters
' ' 11
' I
0 :
' ,!
0 ~
"
_.. .
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Firm targets foreign market f or i ts Tiger shark
HAWTHORNE (AP > -
Jubilation among West Coast
military con tractors over
President Reagan's recent nod
ror the B-1 bomber and MX
missile systems had its echo at
Northrop Corp.'s headquarters.
too.
But although the company
could receive as much as Sl.3
billion worth of s ubcontract
business from the two projects,
Northrop executives have their
sights trained on a different
target : the foreign market and
sale of their F·5G "Tigershark."
Export fighters have been the
backbon e of Northrop's
diversified operations since Tom
Jon es stepped into the
president's post in 1959.
At that time, "We had all the
creative technology wrapped up,
but we weren 't solvent .
Research wasn't translating into
products." recalls Lee Begin,
one of the original designers of
Northrop's successful F·5 series.
·'Tom came in and told us to
concentrate on low-cost weapon
systems, t o use advanced
technology to s implify rather
than build more comple x
aircraft." Jones is stressing the
Tigershark's relative simplicity
of design and reliability in his
Northrop sees. a
3 , 0 0 0 -p l, a n e
market .among
cou ntries ready
to r epl ace . aging
short -m e d i um
range fighters ...
globe-trotting sales campaign
for the $7 million aircraft, which
the U.S . government has
authorized for sale to 49 nations
but has not purchased itself.
Tw e nty -e ight of those
countries bought earl ier
versions of the F-5. Thailand
took the 3,500th F-5 in July -
and Northrop i s counting
primarily on the return of those
customers to carry Tigershark
production at a rate of 10 a
month through the l~s.
At project headquarters in the
Lo s Angeles s uburb of
Hawthorne. international vice
president and F-5G program
manager C Robert Gates sums
up Jones· pitch: .. In anybody's
air for ce. total f o r ce
effectiveness is the bottom line.
How many planes can you get in
the air at one time ? You have the
most sophisticated equipment in
the world but you can only buy
one .. :·
Northrop sees a 3,000-plane
market among countries ready
to replace aging s hor t · to
medium-range fighters such as
the F-4. the French Mirage and
the F-5G 's predecessors : the
t win-engine F-5E and F5F.
Gates predicts the Tigershark
will capture more t han half that
market at l.~ planes.
With a top speed of Mach 2
(twice the speed ot sound)
compared with the F-SE's Mach
1.6, the Tigershark climbs 38
percent faster and accelerates
48 percent quicker. The General
Electric F404 engine that
replaces the F·SE's J85 model
has 7,000 fewer parts while
providing 60 percent mor e
thrust, and Gates notes that its
erfectiveness has already been
tested through use in the U.S.
Navy's F-18 aircraft.
Fewer parts allow more mean
flight hours between engine
failure -~.7 hours flying time
for the G compared with 3.3 for
the E -and a corresponding
decrease in maintenance hours
per flight hour -13.9 for the
Tigershark against 16 for its
predecessor
Northrop began developing
the G in 1975, "when we s tarted
looking at the Soviets' advanced MIG·2ls and MIG-23s. We try
to look through the eyes of the
user country. what threats they
would have to counter in the late
·sos and ·oos. · · Gates said.
T he company bypassed the
us ual prototype stage, instead
moving into production of six
planes slated for flight tests a
year from now.
"We knew the airframe, we
knew the engine, and as far as
avionics we didn 't i nvent
anything new:· Gates explained.
Deliveries could begin by July
l.98 3 a n d Gates includes
Thailand, the Republic or China.
So uth Korea, I n dones ia ,
Malaysia and Nigeria among the
most likely first customers.
The project got full go-abead
with the Carter administration's
January 1980 approval of the
F·X export fighter competition,
which Gates wryly called "a
welcome exception" to Carter's
r estrictive arms sales policy.
Although Northrop shared the
defense industry's relief at the
Reagan Admi n istration 's
turnabout. som e analyst s
s uggest the compan y faces
increasing competition because
or 1t
"The G is probably going to be
a good seller, but Reagan's
policy might have slowed down
their sales effort, .. s aid Michael
Oerchin. New York-based
defense re searcher for
Oppenheimer and Co.
··The administration is
p ermitting s ales of more
sophisticated fighters to Third
World countries, for example
the F-16A offer to Pakistan and
Venezuela,'' he said . "Countries
tha t normally wouldn't have any
other options now think they
might have some with General
Dynamics' F-16·79 or a front line
fighter like the F-16 ...
But pricetags tend to work in
Northrop 's favor, s aid John
Simon of Los Angeles' AMOEC
Securities. The basic F-16 is $4
million more expensive than the
Tigershark, "so you're not going
to be able to fill up an air force
with them."
Gates also underscored
Northrop's oth er marketing
advantages: a reputation for
delivering on time. a willingness
to o ffe r co-production o r
·reciprocal trade agreements1 known as "offset" proarams1 and a policy of fixed -price
con tracts paral leli ng the
commercial airline industry.
Wher e as most de f ense
contractors renegotiate prices
yearly to cover actual costs,
Northrop pref ers to risk
absor bing them over a fixed
n um b er of pla n es w i t h
guaranteed pricetags, figuring
the certainty offered buyers will
generate enough sales to cover
r esearch, development and
i n itial produ ction . In the
Tigershark's case, that's a $300
million investment risk. Gates
said.
"'This is the first time we've
moved into production this far
on our own. We had government
money during development of
the E this tim e it's Northrop's
money," he said. "But we Northrop executives. are pinning hopes on over1ecu 1ales of its Ti9er1h4rk fighters shown in photo.
Another mew of the .'Jorthrup F 5G T1ger.~lwrk which lht>
compmiy 1s pushing as a lower-cnst relwhle f1qhter p/a11e
couldn't sit here waiting for
customers before we moved on
it. ..
Gates said o ff set
ar rangements are ··a fringe
benefit of dea l ing w ith
Northrop.'' When Switzerland
was considering a $400 million
F-5E order in 1976, the company
developed a marketing
agreement that h ad Northrop
representatives in 70 countries
finding buyers for $143 million
worth of Swiss products, from
hospital beds to wine presses.
T he eight-year sales effor t
culminated in ha lf that time and
prompted another $335 million
Swiss order for Northrop last
June . The latest deal's $140
million offset program is "more
than well ahead of schedule ...
according to spokes man Tony
Cantafio.
"We'd be prepared to do that
again," Gates said. "although
we can't go out soliciting for
everybody we try to sell planes
to."
The compa n y 's massive
Tigershark invest ment will
depress ear nin gs al least
through next year. with 1981 net
earnings about the same as last
year's $86.1 million.
"Eve r ybody's sort o f
discounted 1981 and is looking at
'82," said Oppenheimer's
Derchin.
Third quarter net
drops 90 per cent
H AWT H ORNE (AP >
'Northrop Corp. has reported a
d r op of approximatel y 90
percent in both net income and
earnings per share for the third
quar ter of 1981. compared with
the same period a year ago.
The slump was "primarily
attributable to expenditures for
the buildup of its new F-5G
Tigers hark tactical fighter
program," a statement released
by the firm said.
Higher sales for the third
quarter of 1981. compared with
the same period a year ago, also
were reported.
T h ird quarter s ales were
S524.2 million, compared with
$403 million reported for the
third quarter of 19M, but the
firm 's net inco m e f o r t he
quarter ended Sept. 30, 1981,
totalled $2.5 million. compared
with the $24.8 million recorded a
year earlier. Earnings per share
were 17 cents versus $1.74
reported for the sam e period
last year, the statement said.
O n Sept. 30, Nor throp's
business backlog totalled $2.11
billion, compared with $2.15
billion a year ago.
Northrop said expenditures in
the third quarter for the buildup
or the development and initial
production of the F·SG totaled
$42 million. compared with $10.2
million expended during the
third quarter a year ago in early
p h ases o f t h e p r ogra m .
Expenditures in 1981 on the
expandi n g progr am are
expected to total between $140
million and $150 million.
T he company has established
a program schedule designed to
perm lt ini tial produ c tion
d el i ve r ies of t h e F -SG
Tigershark in July 1983, the
statement said.
Northrop has been authorized
by the U.S. government to hold
discussions on the F-5G with 41
count ries. T he F -5G is the
newest version of the company's
F -5 series, whi ch is being
produced a t a rate of five
aircraft per month.
Northrop said third quarter
earnings also were adversely
affected by an increase in the
provision made for costs ot
com pleting the pilot and limited
production phase of the F-A·l8A
Hornet fighter for the United
States Navy and Marine Corps.
Thirty-four Hornets are being
built under this phase of the
program. ·
The company said a reduction
in its estimate of 1981 income
taxes had a favorable $1:4
million effect on third-quarter
earnings.
Northrop's sales for the first
nine months of 1981 were $1.427
billion vs. $1.184 billion in the
first nine months of 1980. Net
income during this period was
$30.8 million as compared with
$70.4 million recorded a year
ago. The com pany's earnings
per sh are for the first nine
months of 1981 declined to $2.H
from the $4.94 during the same
period last year.
In the first nine months of
1981 , Northrop had an avera~e
or 14,378,250 shares outs tanruns
compared with 14,248,323 during
the first nine months of 1!8l, the
company said.
The U.S. Air Force announce(t
this month that Northrop hab
been se l ected a s p r im~
contractor to proceed with
initial research an~
development o n advanced
bomber concepts -specificall1.
the "Stealth" bomber designed
to avoid radar detection. Tha1
award is worth about $7 billion,
accordi n g to th e tra d e
publication Aviation Week &
Space Technology, but Pentagon
officials have not confirmed that
figure.
Northrop said the contract
would have a "material effect"
on the company, but that detai.ts
were classified.
Group hopes to raise funds for 1986 Halley's Comet probe
COCOA. Fla. (AP> Two
aerospace industry workers are
determined to take on what may
be a losing battle: the launch of
a probe to examine Halley's
Comet the next time around.
ReaJ?an administration bud~et
cuts have cooled the National
Aeronautics and Space
Administration's plans to take a
close look and photograph the
brilliant comet. expected to pass
near Earth again in 1986.
"At the moment it doesn't look
good at all. And it's a shame,"
says J ames Harris, director of
the Cocoa, Fla.-based Florida
Spaceweek Committee, one of
the organizers of the Halley
Fund . "We (the United Stales)
were the only ones with the
off-the-shelf technology to really
pull off the Halley's mission."
The last time the comet was
photographed was in J uly 1911.
The 50,000·mlle-an-hour ball of
ice and rock can be seen only as
it nears the sun and it reappears
every 76 to 79 years.
So far, the European Space
Agency, Russia and Japan plan
to send probes to Cly by the
comet on Its next pass.
Although the United States bu
not officially announced plans to
s it back and watch Crom afar,
the prospects that NASA will
undertake such a project are
slim, according to a spokesman
tor NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena.
• 'Tha project office lt closed,"
spokesman Don Bane told "The
T oday newspaper in Cocoa.
"We're not working any longer
on it.1'
Bane said the mission would
have been controlled from the
Jet Propulsion Lab. home of the
Voyager mi ssion to outer
planets and the Viking probes of
Mars .
Mark He ss, a NASA
spokesman at Kennedy Space
Center in Florida, noted that a
com et probe would take years to
get ready.
"We h aven't offic ially
scrapped it, but It takes a long
time to build a probe," he said.
"You have to get funding today
for something five or six years
away."
C h ar l es R e dm ond , a
spokesman for NASA's Olllce of
Space Science in Washington,
said that the space agency does
plan to examine the com et from
the ground and "fly as many
sensors as might be useful" near
the comet.
•·w e have reasonably aolld
plans to maintain a sclentiflc
communications network'' with
other nations plannin1 Halley
mlaaions, Redmond said.
Redmond also said the U.S.
wlll be privy to data collected
about the comet because several u .s. scientista wm be part ol tb~
European Space Agency Halley
mission.
The Halley ~nd. based In San
Jose, plans to uae a Madlaon
Avenue-like advertising blitz to
solicit private donat ions. Its
organizers held a similar drive
last year to help r aise money to
continue gathering information
from one of the still-working
Mars probes.
Stan Kent. an engineer with
Lockheed Missiles and Space
Co. in Sunnyvale, and one of the
organizers, said the Halley Fund
has raised $40,000 in private,
tax-deductible donations.
A mi ssion wou ld cost
anywhere from $150 m illion to
$300 million, and Halley ~nd
organizers say It 's unlikely
they'll meet the probe price tag.
The fund-raisers m ust obtain
some commitment from the
government or private donors to
prepare a probe in time for the
comet's passing over Earth.
Kent trunks the fund-raisers
can solicit money by capitalizing
on the popular wave of science
fiction movies.
·'People who crowded theaters
to see 'Star Wars ' would
certainly want to see t he
spectacular shots we could get
out of Halley's Comet, especially
if we make it entertaining -
maybe into a movie," Kent said.
"It would be the entertainment
event of the century.··
The Halley Fund also h as used
the more sed ate forum of
''Natural History" and other
magazines to sell the idea of
studying the comet.
"Last year, 10,000 people used
the Viking ~nd to show their
support for space exploration,"
one solicitation reads. "They
contr ibuted an average of $10
apiece to one starving project :
The Viking lander on Mars.
'',Now the Viki n g F und
or ganizers announce the Halley
Fund. By donating to this new
fund, you'll l~t Washington k! you want a U.S. probe of
com et. Your money will he
pay for the mission, for Hallet;
studies from the shuttle, and f~
U .S . par tic ipation in t tf:!
International Halley Watch." ·•
The ad noted that the ne~
chance will be in the year 2062 ..•
Harris said the United statei
would be the loser if a Halley's
probe is not launched.
"We'll be the ones left out," he
said. "We have a lot to learn
Crom the comet. It could answer
some of the mysteries."
Honor for human rights advocate l>laste<l
NEW YORK (AP) -Jacobo
Timerman, a former ArgenUne
Journalist and human r igbll
advocate. is amonc three
reclpienta of thia year's Marta
Moon Cabot Prises at Columbia
U niversity , the sc hool
announced.
Kare n DeYounc. forei1n
editor at the Wublnstoo Poet;
M arlla e Si mons, a Lalin
Amertnn correapondent for the
Poat and Newsweek Macaztne;
and T lmerman will receive
Cabot awards for "dlatinf\lllhed
contribution• t o t he
advancem.it ot lnter·American
undentanclin.a. •'
Several prevlou1 Ar1enUnt
winners ol Cabot prizes have
protested the s election of
Timerman, Wbo was publlaber
of the Buenos Aires dally La
Opinion until bis arrest ln 1WT7
by Argentine aecurity forces.
Timerman wu stripped ot bl•
Argentine cltiaenablp by lbe
miUt.ary government and be b
now an Israeli citiaen.
In a book publlabod lhJs year,
"P risoner Without Name, Cell
Wit.bout Number.'' be described
belns impriaooed for 2~ years
and tortured dwi.DJ that period
becau.se bla paper bad delmded
human rt1bta. Hla book alao
examined antl-Se mlUam in
Ar1entina.
Di ana Ju-l,io de Masaot,
conservative publisher of La
Nueva Provincl a of Bahia
Blanca, Arteotina, and a former
recipient of the prize, sald in a
teleeram to Dean Oabom Elliott
of the Columbia School of
Journallam t hat ah• was
"11ton11bed" by Tl merman'a
seleedon.
She calle d Tlme rman a
polltlcal opportunlat and
''1p okeaman for Marxist
t e rro~lam ' • and added ,
''Evide n tl y , there are
lde olo1leal motlvH for hi•
selection."
Mrs. Masaot uked that ber
-;
name be removed from the llit
of previous winners. ·.
J u an Carlos Colombres, ~
cartoonlat known by lbe name
Landru and aJao a form~
winner, expreaaed bl.a "p~
dl11uat" over TJmerman:a
select.ion In a ..a11nm to Ellke
and said be woWd rem°" ~
medal from dllplay ln bla ~
Special cltattona wlll •
preaented to ~ ... s~
vice ~-diredG!.fl world ••r vieta fo r Tl
Aood...S Prw, wt SUati
Cabot, wlclow of AmbaNMll!
John Moon Cabot, wbo •• *9 aoa ol lluia lloon Cabot.
-------. -------...------.. Orange Coa1t OAt~Y.,lLC~T/Tue1day, October 27. 1981
•ANN LANDERS
•ERMA BOMBECK
-HOROSCOPE
\
.. .........
CAMERA SHY -Actress Katharine Hepburn.
71. arrives at Philadelphia's Forrest Theater
for rehearsal of new play, "The West Side
Waltz," which opened last week . Miss
Hepburn carries an umbrella on a clear day
in an effort to prevent being photographed.
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Child,
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mom need help
DEAR ANN LANDERS: As I write thls
my little boy is lying on the couch under an
icebag. His face is as red as a beet and the
skin is broken in a few places where I
slapped him. When he gets stubborn or has
a tantrum. I become so angry I can't
control myself. I have hit him like this
several times before, even though I know it
is wrong.
I read your column every day and
have read your advice to look in the phone
book under child abuse. I looked and there
is nothing in this town. (Population 3,0001.
When this boy was born four years
ago, I really didn't want him but my
husband was crazy about children and
insisted that I have a family. I have always
hated this kid, which is a terrible thing for
a mother to admit, but it is true. His daddy
died two years ago. and thank God, I don't
have any others. I am a rotten mother.
Many times I have thought of giving up
the boy for adoption. 1 know there are
many couples who would love to have him.
He is very s mart for his age and
darling-looking. But just when I get ready
to put my hand on the phone. I tell myself.
"Don't do it. Keep him and learn to be a
good mother."
I live 1.500 miles away from m y own!
family. I have a good job and work 50
hour s a week. Please tell me what to do
TELLING IT LIKE IT IS IN KANSAS
DEAR TELLING IT: My heart aches
I or that little boy on the couch. And for
you, too. I know the guilt must be kllling
you. You MUST get help at once. Call
Parents Anonymous immediately. They
may be able lo give you a local number to
contact in your area. The toll-free number,
in every stale except California, is
800·421 ·0353. Another alternative: Write tO'
the National Center on Cbild Abuse and
Neglect, P.O. Box 1182, Washington, D.C.
20013, for information and help. I see by
your envelope that you are not too far from
Topeka, Kan. If there is no Parents
Anonymous group in Manhattan, Kans.,
try Topeka and Kansas City. Good luck.
DEAR ANN LANDERS· My beautiful.
brilliant son, Jerome, waited until he was
37 to get married. He took out so many
beauties, and for a wife he picked a very
plain girl who has a Ph.D. in economics
but doesn't know enough to hang up a
dis hrag. It's always in the corner of the
sink.
She has such a high opinion or herself
she thinks she can hold down a big job and
keep house and cook, too. On Sundays she
likes to make supper. Her steaks are either
bleeding or burned black. The vegetables
are mushy Her homemade bread is so bad
I wouldn't touch it again. Once it pulled out
my lower dentures.
This Ph.D. does n 't have a needle in the h~u se. Yesterday at my nephew's bar
m1tzvah J erome came with a cuff pinned
together. No button. When I saw it I almost
had a heart a~tack . He is such a good
person. he said . "It's not important.
!'1ama, she_'s a wonderful girl.·· CI ask you.
1s that a saint?)
Should I have a talk with m y
daughter-in·law and offer to teach her a
few things? -ONLY HIS MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: Obviously Jerome is
happy with his life, so I suggest that you
keep quiet. Your offer to help may be
interpreted as criticism or maybe even
butting in. Some husbands don't care
where the washrag is, and missing buttons
don't bother me either. Be happy that
Jerome is happy. And, as my wonderful
Jewish grandmother used lo say, "Don't
mix in."
Planning a wedding' Whal'1 right? What'•
wrong' Ann Landen' completely MiD "The Brlde'1
Guide" will relieve your anxiety. To receive a copy,
send . a doUar, plu.s .a Long, 1elf.-Oddreued, 1tamped
enveloper 18 centa postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Bor
11995, Chicago, lll 60611
Namath tackles acting
Q. Is Joe ~amath really taking his new
acting career seriously? Or is he doing it
because it just gives him something else to
do to kill lime? -Leon K., Shreveport, La.
A : The former football great is
tackling hb new assignment with great
interest and dedication. Broadwav Joe
likes to be good at whatever he does. 0About
his pe1forming. he confes!-,es. ··::--Jot ha\'ing
the total confidence that I had m football. it
forces me to work harder now.··
Q: Oid handsome actor Tom Selleck's
marriage break up as a result or his
sudden leap to stardom as TV's private
eye, "Magnum"? -Josie R., Indianapolis.
A He says no. and he resents the
rumor s that he dumped his wife when hi s
career took off. "The breakup came before
I was e\'en offered the T\' series ... he told
writer Jud\' :vtcGuire.
''I've never blamed it on work or my
PllSONAllTY Q.&A.
BY MARILYN AND HY GARDNER
career .. It had to do with the image we
had of each other. but that's a problem for
e\'eryone. not just actors. It 'v\as n't just a
case of another show business marriage ...
in s i s ts the 6-foot -4 mu s tac hi oed
.. :vt agnum ... ··we had problems. and work
was certainly a part of it. .. Smee the s plit.
the star says he's been afraid to form
another permanent relationship
Send your questions to Jly Gardner. Glad
You Asked That. .. care of the Daily Ptlot. P 0
Box 19620. Irvine. Cctlt/ 92714 Manlyn and Hy
Gardr1er Will answer as many questions as they
car1 in thetr column. but the volume of mail
makes personal replies impossible
Libra: Windfall due
Wednesday, Oct. 28
ARIES (March 21 -April 191 : Spotlight
on money as it affects others. including
close associate. legal partners and mate.
You'll be dealing with Aquarius. Taurus
and Leo individuals. Emphasis on m ystery
and matter!. that have been hidden from
view.
TAURUS !April 20-Ma y 20 1:
Attempting to hold fast would be an error.
Key now is flexibility, knowledge of legal
situation and willingness to make change.
Protect public image.
GEMINI I May 21-June 20 1: Emphasis
on security, basic chores. employment and
diplomacy in connection with family
affairs. You'll be reminded of resolutions
concerning diet. nutrition and health.
CANCER <June 21-July 22>: What had
been hidden from view comes out into open
illusion and romantic notions dominate
scenario . Strive to steer clear of
self-deception. A void confusing investment
with speculation. Know that a gamble is a
gamble is a gamble.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 : Emphasis on
important rela t ionships, added
responsibiJity. property rights and chance
for fina,ncial coup. You'll have interesting
encounters with Taurus, Cancer. Capricorn
natives. Assignment is actua lly completed.
whether or not you know it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: Light touch
i s essential ; allies are gain ed via
persuasion, not throu gh forceful
procedures. Focus on trips, special
communications, public relations and a
favor that is returned.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Money
windfall could contribute to 1reater
..
• HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
independence. more self-expression and
originality. Light is shed on areas which
had only received benefit of heat. Means
wisdom could replace conflict. controversy
and constant bickering.
SCORPIO !Oct. 23·Nov. 21 l: Intuition
is highly activated. Cycle is such that you
rise above petty obstacles Teaching and
learning processes are stimulated. You
locate items that had been lost. missing or
stolen.
SAGITTARI US <Nov. 22-Dec. 211 :
Someone appears to be deliberately hiding
facts. Look behind scenes for answers.
Clandestine arrangements have direct
effect upon you. Protect self in clinc hes by
having alternatives at hand·.
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan. 19 >: Wish
comes true, but only after review. revision
and rebuilding process. Vision recently
dimmed by stubborn associate who saw
only half ·truths. Shake loose from negative
influences.
AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Feb. 18 >:
Message received which clarifies goals.
Business opportunity exlsts if only you
read b~tween lines. Gemin i, Virgo,
Sagittanus persons are involved. Member ot opposite sex could have ulterior motive .
PISCES <Feb. l~Mattb 20>: You could
be diacuaaina travel plina WWa a family
m e m be r . F o cu 1 o a e due a tl oa , communlcaUoD and aplritUJ Nlftllmeat.
Gilt comes from afar.
r
of Lagunaaeach
~'The raspberry 1s not a reply to an editorial "
flMA BOMBECK
ATWIT'S END
House rights
her campaign
I don't know about you. but I find a
great deal of comfort in knowing there is a
wife and mother on the Supre me Court of
this land.
It gives us that edge and we need it the
way things ar e progressing. I suspect it
will be only a matte r or years before this
judicial body is faced with a monumenta l
decis ion regarding the American family :
Does a bedroom occupied by a child give
the child ownership and jurisdiction for the
rest of his life? Or does it legally belong to
the par ents to m a ke available at their
terms''
Ifs a question that has been argued
bet ween mother and c hild for a s long as I
can rem e mber. .us ually with a door
locked between them.
WITH THE COMING and going these
days of grown c hildren. parents are
confused. When do you take a bedroom off
the market and convert it to someth ing
else ? Are t h ere house rules on who
occupies the bedroom and how many and
wh at the ir m a rriage status is? Who
e nforces health st a ndards'? Is a locked
door a right or a c hallenge?
Knowing how slowly the wheels of
justice move. I would like to introduce the
28th amendment to the Constitution: the
Bedroom Rights Amendment <BRAl.
1 only hope this is written obscurely
e nough to be take n seriously : "THE LAW
SHALL DECLARE THAT AS LONG AS
PARENTS OCCUPY A DOMICILE. THE
BEDRO OM IS A PART O F THAT
DOMI C IL E AN D TH)i: RULES
ACCORDED THE ROOM ARE WITHIN
THE J U RI SD I CT I ON OF THE
PARENTS."
If a parent gr ants rights to live in said
bedroom then t he bedroomee mus t sign the
following dl>c ument of consent :
ANYl'mNG THAT DI ES in the room
must be buried before the sun sets on it.
In the event of missing towels.
glassware, food and silverware. a parent
h as the right to search and seizure.
Parents have t he right to break down
t he door when it is too quiet.
Boxes and luggage upon returning
from an apartment/trip/marriage will be
left in the garage for 30 days of de-bugging
before being allowed in the house.
No stereo syst e m will be permitted on
the premises without h.eadphones.
PARENTS ARE NOT only allowed to
accept payment for room ... but will insist
upon it.
Persons left in the room longer than 60
days should be forwa rded .
After age 18. a child 's b edroom
becomes a part of the house again with
be ds made daily, linen changed weekly
and an air of wholesomeness. At least once
a week , a returning child s hould say.
"Thank you for lettin,:?Jne stay here ...
The BRA would take 35 states to ratify
or 15 mothers. . whichever com es first.
HER9MEN
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
New painting
given brush
. Before the Reaganomy ax fell . Artist Jo~1e Grant got a $2,000 CETA grant to
paint a 10 ft. by 22 ft. mural in the Dist
Atty. 's ~~fice a nd produced a vaguely
a?stra~t Jigsaw puzzle called "The Missing
Piece. It has now been painted over
Arlo Sm ith 's staff couldn't staaaand it
;ind has itself become the missing piece.
Who says there are no secrets m tn1s
town? Ex-Mayor J oe Alioto recently was
in St. Mary's Hosp. for three weeks without
a leak to the media (he was in for
··observation and evaluation" of a very
personal problem 1 . .
THE SCENE IN GOLDEN Gate Park a
few crisp afternoons ago : two young
women were nding slowly along on t heir
horses when a man began abusing them
verbally. At that moment. along came
Officer Jim Bloesch astride the famous
SFP D horse. General. Whe n Jim
inter vened. the man spat at General The
horse responded by kicking the spitter in
the groin. Jim figured that was enougti
punishment. but the incident wasn't over.
The man has filed a complaint with Police
lnternaJ Affairs. protesting what he terms
an "unwarrantged action by a police
horse ... Gener<Jl is s peechless.
OUR SPIES ARE omnipresent · At
the White House the other night. King Juan
Carlos of Spain washed down his cold
salmon and dill sauce with glasses of
Grgich Hills· ·79 Chardonnay: the White
House ordered four cases of this superb
wine. difficult to find around here
Purely coincidental postcard from S. F. ·s
Marie Rogers in Granada: ··Ronnie and his
lady would love Spain. The horses and
palaces are beautiful and the truly need)
look after themselves. The blind tap along
the street selling lottery tickets. and the
lame. the elderly. the unem ployed a nd
mothers with children s it on the streets all
day and plead for money. but they got the
government off their backs.··
NEVER SAY DIE : Joel Hildebrand.
Cal's celebrated Prof of Chem 1str v.
observes his lOOth bir thday at a fe te -in
Paulev Ballroom ~ov. 16 Joel has slowed
down ·some. Works o nly two days a week
now ..
Meanwhil e. h as buddy . Don
:\1 cLaughlin. ex-dean of Cars School of
Engineering. is in UC Med Center for his
third open heart s urger)". "but I'll be out in
time for Joel's birthda~ By the way. don "t
have open heart surgery when you're in
vour 80s ... Don will be 90 m December. and
rem inded J oel recently: ··Don·t forget. you
promised me a party ... ··Thal.·· replied
Htlde brand. ··depends E:--!TI RELY on
you·'.·-
further plugg1s m : Fred Kuh·s Old
Spaghetti Factory.· a lovable landmark.
celebrates its 25th anniversary plus the
happy news that it has been saved from the
edifice wreckers. By selling has T"graphill
house and wangling a loan from Crocker.
Fred managed to buy the almost·doomed
building . Today. there ·s a S6 door charge
for charity. but bar prices will be rolled
back to 1956. which means a quarter for
steam beer and wine . Those wer e the
good old days.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
IF YOU
SUSPECT
EVERVTMINGj
YOIJ A~E
WASTING
MANY
SUSPICIONS ON INNOCENT"
THINGS.
She wants sleep too
DEAR DOCTOR : I was well until 55.
At about that time I began to complain of
dlzzlness and faintness. I couldn't Imagine
wbat was causing it as my blood pressure
was normal
But things cam e to a bead when I
f alnted a few times. A few days later I bad
convulsions. While in the hospital ECGs
and other tests showed that I have heart
blocks.
Doctors said t h a t I 'd n eed a
pace make r . They Installed one a few
months ago and I've never felt better.
What I 'm concerned about Is whether
having a pace maker will lessen m y
chances for getting Into my 70s. A fe w klnd
words, plea se.
-MR.O.
DEAR MR. 0 .: Time slips by so fast
it's difficult to realize that pacemaker
therapy was first successfully applied
a bout a qua rter c e ntury ago. Many
T rou1 HfAlTH
DA. PETER J. STEINCROHN
patients , like yourself are apprehe ns ive
how well pacemake rs will work.
The type of pacemaker chosen will
de pend upon what's consider'ed the best
po w er for the patient's underly ing
condition. In reply to your concern about,
your pacemaker, you'll be interested in the
con clusions of Joseph Carver. M .D. and
assoetates of Hahne mann Medical College
in Geriatrics magazine :
"The literature s upports the conclusion
t h at d eath secondary to primary
pacemaker failure is rare a nd that most
deaths in this population are due to the
underlying disease,
Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT I Tueaday, October 27. 1981
WEAVING DESIGN Minnie YerH'C'V, a
Ke ntucky weaver. demons trates c raft u·nder
the watchful eye of Muhammad Alt and Go\.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work tor ou.
.~ .........
and Mrs. John Y. Brown of Kentucky. Crafts
dis play "'ill end Wednesday at t he Beverly
Hills Neiman-Marcus department store.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
So•• fro-•. lllH 09oltl
1922 HAAIOA ILVD.
COSTA MESA -Ul·l 156
HOUSE OF
TAILORING
ALTERATIONS f O R
MEN & WOMEN
SO COAST PLAZA 540 8491
lo••• L•••I by C aro.,HI
Placing a Classified
is twice as easy!
Just say'bharge it"
you can use your \'18/\ or ~1ASTI-.R CA RD to place a Di\lLY PILOT
Classified over the tPl0phonc, inc luding 8-Day week ads.
ca11 < 114 > 642-5678 Daily Pilat
The Orange Coast's lar gest marketplace
ASAP.
THE LOWEST
UNRESTRICTED
ROUND TRIP
FARES TO
ALL THESE CITIES.
$1 . 5 Each"~~> \.\llh
round trip
purcha-.c
Chtl'.ago. Milwaul..ee
Penna
faKh \.\a> \\tlh
round trip
purcha!lc
Our new ASAP fares from Los
Angeles International, Burbank or
Onta rio to the Eas t aren't just lower.
They're a lo t lower. Downright un-
beatable.
Best of all, there are no re-
strictions. No advance purc hase. No
length of stay requirements. But seats
are limited. and fare · are effective
through November 14, 1981.
Each way with
round trip
purcha-.c.
Hoston. New York/NC\\ar~. Philadelphia.
Wa-,hington. D.C .. Mwmi . Ft. Lauderdale
AN IXTllA CITY AT NO
•XYRA CllAROI. When you fl y
co any of these cities in the East, .
you can return from o ne of lhe other
cities at no extra charge. For example
fly to New York and return from
Wa hington, D.C.
So for the lowest fares to all
these citic • call your travel agent or
Continental. ASAP.
,
...
~ ... Orange Coast DAILY PI LOT /Tuesday, October 27, 1981
PVIUC llTICE
.. :=.-.. ~.:.T· ... u~._!':~~i:.:·:.. .. "==~-:ru ::~~~-'°':'~== .. ~~cl o: O~ATH ~F -=~:="::' ..::aw~ ~:!::11:.,="C:.::1t:':~=:: ._,~~,,..,.._•rt _.111 TN• U~Ntl:::,_c...uciAA. HOl'l'MAN AKA l!LMllR .... ~~.='*:r'!i"t.~~ ..
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111 •"'*'<1
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., -. ._ ,.. ... • """• •1111 % '"1 n uo1NY c;a TAl.OO/CLAH •l•""L........., •1111111 lllr•...-1ttt .. "' .. ,., •• b eneficiaries cred~tors 1 .. 111!eMllld t•IMttfWh>-: C:lePli ef t'-'• C:.Wrt ltt _,. er•t I C H I D U l. I, C 0 A$ T L I N I Vkle ~ 1!~11 le TrlNMNe, -: (-), !It d I ' dlt f DOltOTI4V M. HtOUl•A. 44JI ,, .. , 0•111•-. """*'-f'• MMt '''"' COMMUNIYVCOl.L•OI ""'• .......... -fllell •1111 ... O •O N AUT OMOTI VI, INC:. a n cont n~nt c:re rso °''"' •ICll.C.1t~C.A'1••1M DO .. '-0 .. ILU AM KOUllAS It All Mttteretew lll e<<Mllallet wllll C-ty °"'"Or.,..C:-rt110<I. Tr_ .. ,_,...._ ..._.ell*•• It Elmer H. V. Hoff m e n , aka ••Vlltl.V A JOHii, tis Hiii l"le<t,
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IT 11 M011t•D \11111 .. , ..,_ C9Mt1'--"'9clfk.-i...t wllk fl •tnm lttMllt O.•ll11111t. C.-ty. tf Let k El H H ff ' Tiit tou11., 1r1 Celllor11tt of tlle ......_. ... ._ .. ,u .. ,..,.._ •rt -lift II .. .,...""" .. -"'"'" P'\11111.._. 0r.,... CMs1 O.lly "''"' A••-. ,._ .,. C:.llMMI•, of ti. a a mer • 0 man , c111e1 t M<vtlw •"'" or prl11«tpe1 ....., ~""'°"'" .. tts•A.M., '"' 9ffk• t11 "' """'1;f\Mfnt Ate"'., ~. u, IQ. n, ..... a."'' .._., 1o1.._1:::.,-:;cr*'N,........ ,......11, a k a E lmer Hoffman , a n d t11••11•u etllo 01 '"' 1111e11u 11 •11 oue111'8r '· ,,.,, 111 tu .. 141 c•ltt9tflttrkt. .,,,.., .•wt11 pe r sons w ho may b e "'"'•twor .. :SAMI .
D••rtt••• a..,, .. 0r.,... Ct11My llcfl .._,"""' •IAllN~..!''" ""• Piil.iC 1111( ~::...::,.ec!.1~~~·.,"•!:;.:~ ot herw ise Interested In the All 01"" h atntu "''"'' •"•
...._,_ Clwt. ....., • ,. CIYk "" • , • ..,.. ~. <•11•-tfltcll. ~·•• "•rh 1>11at11 ... kn.own 11 wlll and/or estate: ~.·.~·f~~-· 11'11'".,!! ~"'.,,111,.',',"!:!1 C.llltr Ori,,.. W••t. te11te ""'· Ir ~• llOllll -"°YIMllt •.. • , ... __ ·-•• ~ c.tt~ .,. ...,. c.-" 111, .,tit,.,.,_ eo. c-U1111., c.i1tttt ~1CT1nouaeu11•1u ov••tlfAS MOTO• •a•u .... A petition has been f lled .. fer u k110•11 10 111. 1 .. 1 • ..ou _,.,.......,_..,o..ie.·.,.......; 01"rkt 11Mr•e1 Tr.,.t•1 •11 e11 en1 •AMeCTAnMINT tecalt4141ttMs.-..-.vw.,.,d,I" by M arlon Hof f ma n ., .... ,.,..._·NONE. ............ .,.,..._, """' "°' .... tllell llw ~..., cnu .. T ... ltll1Wl"9 pet'Mlll .,. dolne !..~~". ~ c::~~~ •. ~~..:: in t he Superior cour t of , ... T ... lnl~t ... ,-~.!.."",.~ --.. IT II "UltTHI• 0 ._D•••D t"91 • IN ti.Im bid .. t ,_,., .. ._ .... t ... b.iil11t .... : -~....... --..._ ~~·-~· .. 11111 °""" • .,_, C:..• ._ "''"' w111 Hiter Into ,.,. ,,,..,."'"' J AN •a•soN ~HOTOORAPHY, ,.,. •w •roo butk ,,.,.,., •Ill "' Orange Coonty requesting MAltOOT M. o •uu1ER, •10 Trait
'"'"•••• In ,,.. oeur ,.110, • Ctttlreo« 11 "" -•• -•rdM • , ... oia _..,... ••ott., C..to ._ .. , -""""'""' M., -T°IMM\o, uw that Marlon H offman be s1r .. 1, "°'''· CA. t11.o, 111e1 ""
11•••••"' .......... cltC11letie11 Mm. 111 ... ....,., "' .......... et\tw CA ,,.11 '"" N y "" .._...,, "'1• ~ ...... a p I t ed s s I ~•rty _, • ...,.. --1• °'"<'1'" .n-.111 °".,.°""" eeo ... ,"' .. lnle•1Kll~••t.•.,.--o1t,. J•nP.,'°"''"~'·'•'*"""°· It<,.• Ne. %Jto.111'. et,,. .. ,,_ P on a per ona •n •N1t1 •:A1t fllh t11t<1t.-l,..tr ... -• -.., t.w t•i ,11""'"" c11eo w111 11e 1.nt11 .. , or 1tt ttw u .. CA.,..2 ,.._,_ fll "" ..,._., & •••• r ep re Sent at Ive to 1u,,.1111, •• 11•111,.,, .,,111,.,..111, ...._..,.,.•"',...Mt ..,...., ..... ., • bond,'"' 11111..,,,, .,.,.., w111 w Daryl o..itv. '°' o.i.1. ee111oe '"'""· Offl<• o1 Stcwlly ••111< Ne11eo1e1 adm lnl st er the est ate of ...,_, .. ...., ,,_ -of • ctrttln ,... lwttlltcl•uld ~tll ... flllrltt CA '266J. •e1111 •I TTn £Ol"tlllf' A-. 111 "" E I H V H ff ·--•· ....._~-• -• ..._ , .... ...... ,...._ . ' (llY .,. u,_,,__ a...--11, "-~y ol mer , • 0 m an --w ... 11 o.__,,,..., t -.a.,. D T•D·~· No 11>1_, mtr wltllclr..., fllt 11141 lor Jen P""°" '" "-• ....,_, -,._,. et· ,.,, Irvine A-U11ll G C.le A • t.O. ttll. •11trltclolfcrly..flwC4Sl d•Yt1f1 ... t... TNt .... ,.,...,,,Wt\ lllecl wllll o, ...... St41tttlfCtllfofnlt. (Un der t he Independent ~ ... <Al ..... N• • • ~H. "'-' tltleMlllOtti._...,..tlwreof. IN Co.it.ir Clwk 01 Ot-en OU 16, C11l1111 ol c..-lien t4 ,,.,.,,_,., Administ rat ion Of Estates Tlw _,,.. __ -by tt. Ml• =:,~ Tr.. loor'G "' Tr.,.._,.._,. .. uw "" ,..... " meo •II" 5ecurtty "•Ilk Act) The petition is set for trt11tltr••I•> •t u 111 tecett .. h "-" 0........ , ... t .... ., •t!4<tlllt eny -•II l>kt• ""Sia "·"-· llenll ll ........ _ ... IWlll . De •u•v ·s SAHOWICH SALOON, •--.•u. or 10 w•lwe •"Y 1rreo11l•rt11n ., Publt_0t.,...coe1t0.1tr Piiot. tt•••· Tiie 1e11 ••••for 1111111 h ear ing In p t.No.3at 700 Thtt .. '411Mk lfM-•••nttMM••
••· ,,..,.... 1ntormem1t1 In any 111d or 111 11w 0c1. 20, 11, Nov. I. 10.1•1 ttu .. , crt4111tn' del"" 11 Mo!INY. ttw "" Civic Center D r ive, W est, .,. ctnaummet., et lllt oHl<t of
w.o l>hlGlrtg. -------------:::.:"=';,::1~~'::'!:!1':: In the C ity o f Sant a Ana, I UUOW esc•ow COMPANY,,.,. ......... cm..,....,.. ~-N •WATSON _.,. _""c rt<tlw~ .... 1.,. -c-~~ .. --Callforn laon N ovember 18, E. L1..co1 .. A ..... 0r.,,.., CA ~s .. ( 1M4'1t.... $«~,.,, ,..._ IWI~ ·-,.. ~ •v-__ , .. _, 9 JO or eltW _......, ... 1•1
........... Or .... c..stDelly Pllet loerdf/ITrvtltts llefort <IGM fll -llwM ... tflte-1 81at9: a.m. Tlllt ...... treniter h tulllKI to
O<t. n, ....,, a.10, 11, 1t11 ~i ~~~ty NOTIU TOCONTltACTOltS ~::!:°~ z'i.''::~ttlmL IF '!'OU OBJECT to the ee111om1e UnllorM c:ommercl•• c-
PVIUC NOTICE Publlllltlt Ot .... c.o.11 Delly PllOI, CAUJNO ,,o. ••OS GEON AUTOMOTIVE, INC gr anti rig of the peti t Ion, St<tloft "°"
Sc11oc>• 011111c1 Coes1 eomm .... 11y Tr-.lwtt you should either appear Tiit "-end eddr•• llf """''°"' Oct. 20, 27, '"' ,,., .. , c 11 oi~rkt •1111 •lloM <l•lms mer be lllllcl 11 Piil.iC .ftllr
0
et:''l>Mdllnt 2 00 o'clo<~ p,rn. ot ~:~;~·-"1• at the bhe,arit~g a n d Stf~t1e BURROW ESCROW COMPANY, 1U't .. onc• 11tvtTUfO ••DI tiM; 111a '" oer o1 O.Cembtr. ''" Putin""° Otenoe CM•t o.uv Pliot, YO!J r o ec 1~ns or t e E. Lincoln Aw .. 0r.,,.., C.A .,..,, -..,,._..,Al Piece a1 Bid Rece11>1. Otllc• ot .,,. Oct 21, ,.. written object ions \\11th. the u. 1t11 a.., tor t111,.. c1t1m1 ..., •"r
NOTIC,. IS HE1t••v OIVEN -"'CT1TIOUS IUSJNIHS Purc11 .. 1no ""'"'· """ MMI•" P.rrln ~· court before the hearing. <f'4o!llW -11 .. Ho-• "· ""· ...... -Wiii M ·~-by MAMIE n ATeMIENT Cot•I Comrnunlly Collf9'1 Ol1trlct 1--------------wllkll It IN lluolntu ... y before llw '"' City °' ""'-MtM. 1e wtt: Tiit T11e to11ow1ne ~f....,, .,. 001,,0 1310 Acum, •v• .. c °''' MH•. c" .. IUC MftTJC[ Your appearanc e may be '°"'"'"'!Niloncio1t ..-cHltd •bow.
City c-11. P.O. lkl• 1200, ee.te bu11,,.1u • •uu nr ..., In person or by you r ,,.. 1e11 dtv for llltno cltlm• w .. Y Mt .. , Gellfllrnle n.• . .,., llofote IAI FOR YOU, 181 4U. uoo ProJ•<I ld•ntlllcellon l'hme a ttorney. crtdllor llWlll lie -mlltr ''· ttll
111e fle11r Clf 11:00 e .111. en 'rltlty, 11erll0r •l1, CO&la ~w. Ce. n•i. Ortnge Coell Coll•O• 8ook11ore NOTICl'TOCONT•ACTOltS I F y O U A R E A wfll<h 11 lllt llutlllOtt O.r W Of't lllt
Ntftf'lllltr •. , .... " ...... .. .... Atltl SeMI Mevl, 1-1622 Del Amo, Projtcl 810 11031 CAI.UNO "0. ••os c .......... ._ ......... _"..., _"'
""""""''"""' .... ......, t• dell-T11111 ... Ce. t2MO p I• (. p I• n. ., e 0 n 111 e . Scllool Dlltrkl NEWPORT MESA c R E D I T 0 R 0 r a Oel9d on... JD,, ••
llblllf lltlM Oty Clffk'10ttk1...... J e nice Anll Voalllcle , ltSI Hlll·Oettloho" A11ocle1u, UC UNIFIEOSCHOOl. OISTRICT Contingent Creditor Of the Mergl>tM G, .... , ~· -1in.. 1kb •IH • lrttlllfltrw,T111tln,C•."2tl0 N po 1 c .. ,,., or1 • s1111e 12 a1a DNilllnt. 200 o'c1o<• p.m. of deceased you must file Put1i.-0tenoe co .. io.nyPllot.
., .Wlt<ly ---,_ •lwtt tt Tiii• bu~1""' 11 conc1 .. ct•4 111 • N::po:1 a .. c11. CA• ;,.,o 171 4; 111t fth ctero1 N4"'ttl'\11tr, "" your c laim w ith the coo rt ._0c1_._,_7·_'_"' ... , .. , tt:OO t .1'11., or .. -....,.._ ti tfM'9I ~p. 440-62.. Piece of 8141 Rt<•lpl: ENERGY ,. pr~ll<MI•.., Frldty, Hoftmller •· Adtl Melt'I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllal CONSERY.\TION P ROGRAM AT Or present i t 10 t h e ruauc •TJCf
1•1, '"IN c-.e11 OW.mMt's, City Tlllt ~·'-:,..w•~ 1~ wltll g: ,,,_ ebovt~-S<llool 01$1rkl ol ~ORONA OELMARHIGHSCHOOL personal represenl a tive 1--------------Htll, 77 "•''Ori.,., Cal• ,_.,., county 1eno1 etlOt 1¥0fl · ore~ CountV. Cellro..nt•, act ..... b• Prottct ldentlll<•tlo" N•m• appointed by the court ,._,, .. ~. --~ ·~ "-~ loller 1 1•1 ·~ • .,. "ICTITIOUS 1u•1wess .__ '"' -· ,_ ._ ._,..,..,.et ' . "lnttl tftd tllrouvll Ill Gowtr,,lllQ Board, ELECTRICAL PORTIOH f • ~ OME lfACHeltUSH041Pl'Elt. lltrt l ntller relerrtO 10 •• Protect ldo,,llllctllon Name Within our months from NAMESTATH.tl NT AMlllMel -Of IN llfO(lftuU... Pvlltlllltcl 0r-. Coell Otlly Piiot OISTR CT" I 0111 E the date of first Issuance H • IOllOwlng _ ......... Ooln11 ~~-·~ ...... Oc1•1JJOV1•1 OJWI .. I ,w llrtcelvtllPIO, EH RGY CONSERVATION of le tters as p ro"'tded ··nbu~l"A·~·~··.PROPEftTIES ANO mey -_,,...el IN ..,.,.,f(Te of IN ' ' ' ' ' no1 Jeter 11\tn llW •bO.,.stalod llm•, PROGRAM AT CORONA DEL MA R • • "
Pl#rcllul119 A9tftt •• n ... ,, Ortwt, _.,. Mftftl'C ... lt dblcblorlht t WtrOot.contrecl HIGH SCHOOL ELECTRIC.Al Section 700 of the Probate INVESTMENTS. 1-1 ••y Pt rlt Cir 'C•t.e M9M. Ctlllornte. 11111 lllould lie I"~ '''""'c; tor t"9 tOO.,. proj<K;I PORTION -• -
,., ........... ""' tlMfltloll of .... City Blcb INll lie rtctlwllcl In .... Pit<• Plt(t Plans.,. 011 Ill• IUI Code of California The c1t.Sul1ec,1rv1ne.c•.,1u
Clerk, •1111111...., """ "'""· In • "'CT1T1ous•us1Ness 1oen1111ec1 .-. -u..11111 --Plec•""' Sire••. c oue Mu•, time for filing claims w ill usyd R ...,.,v, iecni s.v Pa.k cir ... ,., "'"''-· ,,..,. .. ,...., °" ,,.. NAMe STATIMIENT •nd p1o1t11c •• r••G •loud " •11• c e111ornl• n671 -:rtlS a.., Strtt1, not ex pi re prior to four cit, ult• c, •rv, ""·CA .,714 -$1dt wltll Ille 8141 llem Numlltr -IN lot!owlftg ,,.._. ••• dOl'IO llual •llO••·•lellCI tlrne &nd Pl•• Art J9'tm Ito f're11co, 18011 S• y ""~ Diil•. Mu ••· Tiier• wllt ow , uo oo <l•Po•ll Co~• Mne. C.lllor,,ie m.116 months from the date of Per1t Clrclt, s..110 c. 1rv1nw, CA n114
Etcfl bid shtll ..-Clly .. cfl tnd I( & S FASMIOH, 7241 G¥•n Grow re<1ulrtc1 "°'each wt Of bid clocu.....,11 1.,Z~T.:;,,:..:!..::~~IG~~!~k:i-:: the hearinQ noticed above. John E RIOQln,, ll071 S-y P•rk Cir· •••ry ll•m .... , I or Ill In , ... ••vii., S11llt L, Gerdt .. Grov•, CA' to ou•rant" '"" retvr" In ft00d YOU M AY EXAMIN E <••.Sult• C, lrvtno, CA '1714 ..-cllketlonl. Alty .,.., Ill tac.,i11.,s ~t. conolllon w11111 .. •O cteys alter ,..; llld Ort no• Coo.my, Gellfornl•. e<llf>e Dy Tllll ""'''""' " to,,d11cled or • to -..-CNIUtlant mutt W cltOf'iy 1(11n Ho $o110. 1S11 Ltlllgll Pl , -nl ... O.tt. and tllr0U9ll 111 Gov•rnltlQ BotrG, the file kept by the COUrt. -rel-'"""'"'
ei.ttd "'"" 111111....., ltftwe to •t w .. 1 ... tr!Aff,C.Ani.a. E t dl 1110 m111t co,,form •nct 11e 11 •••1"'11" relcrrt d 10 •• If you are Interested In the LloydR.Herdy I
"
I I I,~. "DISTRICT'", wlll receive UC> to. Dul Tlll1 d•~• 111-ttll ~ otl '"" tem fl l ... ...-< ....,11-Hyo SUft 8-, 7Stt LelllQll Pl . •ttponsl"ltolN~r•tcloc11mtftb. Ml ltt ... ll\en lht -... ·Stal.cl time, estate YOU may file a ·--·~ .,.. -w "~
lofltll lie.,...,... hlr rtjtet'°" ef .... WttlmlMter,CA'HIJ Etcll llld llWll 111 eccompe,,lecl lly 1Mlecltlldllo<t"9ewerdof t COfllrt<I Q est w 't h the COUrt t o CountyCltrllof0.tr>Qt C0U"IYon0cl
1110. T1111 buSlM•s 11 c0flc1uc1ec1 "' • ,,. M<urtty ,....,,... to 1n ,.,. ,..,,,_.1 •or tN•bo••Pf'Olt<t ~:c~ive sp' eclal notice of ~=~.1<.....,1 a H•"......, Eecll llld 11\ell wt for111 ,.,. 11111 oener•I ~p. docum•nls -11y tlle llJI of PtllPOW<I Bid' tMll 111 rtctlvt(I In 1,.. piece ,. ..
nem .. -'"~of t it ,.,_ ICl#\HoSoftg SUO<Ofllrtclcn to. .. ttllllcl etio ... , -ahtll bt -Mcl t h e inventory Of ~S tate :n:M:c":'::...C.:::eUtfl ollO pef1 ... lnl-tecl Ill IN-·· Tlllt a~t was llllCI wllll t... Tiit DISTRICT,_,.,.. l,,_ rlVfrt lo ,,,4 p11bllcly rttO aloud t i tbe assets and of the petttiOnS, hlle tM 11 -blO It...,• c..._el..,.., tlele"" Cou,,ty Cltrtt t4 ~-. Count\'°" Oct ••tee I My or ell llkb or to .... 1,,. ""f allOv ... stMICI llrne end Pit<•. d
"""'""' ... ofl1c:wt -,.., .,... M J, 1tt1. lrr•ou1.,11i.. °' 1,,,.,..,,. .. 111 ... in lWlr Tiit•• wiw 111 , NIA dePMll •e<1ulr9d accounts an reports ,.....,. ...,.., c.1._. ~17 .....
... -.. -·IN~..... ,,,,... blG•orlflthtblddino '°' H Cll ... ot t>lG doc11rne .. u 10 described _In S~tion 1200 P111111·~0r-c~110tllyPttot, -......,., .._ ....... -offker Pullllllltcl 0r.,,.. Coell Otlly PllOI, T~ DISTRICT ••• ~ ••• ~ ··-')f th Cal torn a Probate ··--m u11 1ton. If Ill• t la 11 l>Y • Oct.•. ll, lO. v. 1•1 Olt .. 1 Ille 'oirocto.. of .;:;~ D;p,,'i';;_j-~; oue""'" "" ••""" l11 9DOc1 t-ltlon e I I Oct.•· ll, JO, 21. 1tt1 07~1
pen 11trtNp or • jol"I "9f\llW•, •lat• lndu1trltl Rtl•llons tllt ll;~~rtl lwltllln H/A. csen •ll•r the t>ld openlllQ Code. ,.,. ,..,,_.., ~ o1 ... OtN••• •uauc MftTJCE o ....
pef1"'" -jolm .,.111.w<lfL 11 IM l"V "" prevtlllno rett OI per diem •800• In Etc" bid mus I conform •ncl tit
bidder 11 • tole P<oe>rltlO'llllp Of 1,,. locelltr In wlllcll '"'' work I• lo lie ••SPO"lllll lo the <Ofll•tcl Ooc11mem~
e11otller '"'"" lflel dOft l>uslntts NOT'ICa •-ITINO e101 llerlor....., tor et<" er.it or ,.,.,. of Eecll llld Inell 111 ecc-lecl by _,•fictitious-· ew llld 11\ell .., ,_...,.,. wor-mt" "•tded to Otc11t• ll1e ,.,. wcurHy ,..~....,to I",,,. c..,trecl
.. In .... reel ....... or ,,.. ........ NOTICE IS HIE•E•Y GIVEN , ... , (Ofllract Tlw•• ,._ ••• 0" Ill• •• '"" dO<lolrneftb ..... lly ,,,. llS1 of pr~
"""""' -• llctlllow -·.,. -•eel_.., wlll .,. nul-"'~DISTRICT office toc.•lf!d •I Olllo ot iull<011l•t<10t\. 11141 lllell be In tftt reel ,...,.. of IN tflt City Of C..te MeM, lo wit: Tiit Pl\y•lctl l't<llllle1 Pltnnlno, CCCO, Tnt DISTRICT r.-vn Ille rlOlll lo
11'-r wltfl a O.lllgnellcn I04lowl119 City C-11. P.O. 8oJ1 1200, Co.le Tra ller Ftcllllf "A Or • 8, IJJO r•tecl any or all Ill"' or to walvt env
"-lllO "De.A (h flctlt'-,,.,,..)"; Mew, c.llforllle ,,,.., Clfl or 11ofote A.S.m1 ...... C:on• Mew Coe>lo may lrregultnti.. or lntormalllles 1" tllY
Pt'OVI,..., .,._.,.,, no flelllloll• ,,.me Illa .,.ur ol 11 '00 e.m °" ,,,._.,, bl oblelned on reci .. 11 A COC>ll Ol 1-blG1 or In o. blddl"ll
INll lie-uni-~t I• t cur,....1 Now•mbtr 6, ltll 11 •11•11 bt Ille rein ""II bt llOllecl ti lllt laC> slle Tiit DISTRICT Ila• -.i.-''°"'
rwol1treUo" wit.II tflt OrellQIO County ,........1111111y • -llldder to *""" TIW 1°"-'no K'*"ilt of .,., diem Ill• 0 1rec10.. of Ille O.pa.1m.-.1 of
Recorcltr. In cew ot corpor.,i-1, 1111 llld to the OIY Cltrlt'1 Otfke by h ••ve• 1• btWcl -• -•-lllO o.v ot 1 .. d11•lrlal RelUlons the o•,,•rel
I lutlt Ille of the Prtslden P,_r ~ time. 8141 wlll be eight Ill "°"" Tiw '"" '°' llollday P••••ltlng •et• of 1111• diem ••110 In "' ,,.,,_ !., pullllcly OC1tt1tCI end ,_ ••-•I end overtime wor• ~hall bt •I lee~1 Ille IOCtllty I" wlll<l1 llllt work I• 10 bt s.;=·c~!.~~·~c':'~..:.1 11:00 a.m., or " -u.,....... •• llme•na-11a11 perlorrnwo for eecll cre11 o• l\'llt ot '' .,._,., u-"ol..,... • IN'O<tk-• .., ,,.,..Y .._._, • II tllell lie maf>Clttor~ uPO" Ille
::-::: ::;:--... ,,GM lo ,.IK I My t•t, 111 ... C-ll 0...,,..,... CltY COHU ACTOA lo whom 111t conlrtct :::.~~=l•;.::;~::.::r:::~1':.:~1::
OAT!O:Octrle.r•,1t11. Htll, 11 "•Ir OtlVI, c:.. .. Mei .. 11 t ••rtltd, '"d voon a ny OIST•1CT olll<o IO<t ltd a t •e'7
PUltlllfled ~ --I~~. Pl~ c.i .......... ,., .... fwflllN"I -' "*-•recw -lllm, to ~y not Pl•c• .. 11• St reel, Cottt M••·· ......... -.-I ...., y -., OHIE EACH AERIAl. Lin T•UCIC. lftt '""" lttt uid -lllecl rttos lo •II Ctlllornle t2U7 Coplu may b•
Oct.
21
• ltlt .. ,._., AOtlltlontl Nb d .,,. -lfketl.,t wor-me" employed t>r 11\tm In Ille Olltel"ecl on rtQue>I A copy of '""'
mer lie oei&elntcl It II• OPfko o1 .,_ Otcutl.., of Ille contrec1 r,tto s!Wll 111 POJltcl ti lllt Job sJI•
f'lirclleslfto .... el n F•lr Ortw No OlclOer "'41'1' wllll«ew Mt 1110 for TM t0t900fno KlltOule of 1111r 411-
Colta MH4 Cailfwllla. lllcllt ~ ~ • perlOCI of \11ty I.ell days '''"' Ille weoet 1, --• -r1t1no day of
NOTl(I[ INVITING ••ot """'-'° "" et_ .... of ... City dtl• ....... 1"°' GpenlftO Ol lllclS t ight ltl "°"r' ,.... .... tor llOll<My
llN 1-Na.. m Clt rll, wltN" Mid ti-llmll, 1,, t A P•f"*" -.0 -• P9rt0tmtne• end overtlmo WOf1I lllell 111 ti let>I .. ,,.,. HIWI-ltlentllltd lflt bona wlll be requl••G P•lor 10 tlmetna-.helt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllet ovl1lclt Wiii\.,. Bid llem Num=-exec ullon ol Ille contract Tllo It '"•II lie mandatory YP<>n ,,,. Mtltd Pt'OjlOUl1 wlll lie rtcel-by tfle O lnoDM • Ptymenl bond tllall lw In l"9 lorm Ml CONTRACTOR to WflOm ,,,_ COfllr•I
ruauc NOTICE
John A . Dun c an .
Attorney a t L aw , 61 0
Newport C enter Drive,
S u i te 1 5 3 0 , N e wpor t
Beach, California 92660.
(714) 640-2320.
Published Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, October 20, 21,
27, 1981 4583-81
ruauc NOTICE
P'lllUC NOTICE
NOTICE O" INTIENDIEO
TltANS"IE" UNOIE• SECTIONS 24•1> AND 1•74 CALl,,ORNIA 8USINIESS
ANO P•O,,IESSIONS CODE I Ntmt 01 llcenwt. 1111 Soclel
S•c udtr "Vmber, end t ddre u of llCt MOG Pff"\I~. tnclUOlno Zip C-
F RE 0 J SMITH, llOO Airway A,_..,
• 10 , Coste Meta. Cellfornlt
PRISCILLA K SMITH, 3100 Alrwty
Ave • 111u. Coste Mt .... Ctlltornle
1. Name. 5'><1•1 Sa<11<1tr number.
encl eddr.u Of lnttllded lrtntftrtt, SUP9•1CMt COUllT O" lnchldl"9 l ip C-
ULll'09!NIA, DORIS I SM!™, 176 N S1-.1
COUNTY 0 1' 04tANOe Awe., F11ll'10f\ Cellf0t,,le
In,,,__, ol O.. A$1P11Cellor\ Of KENNETH E SMITH, 11• N
R08EllT ALUIN SEBASTIAN, For StepMn•. Fullert .... Cell10t,,le.
C"41"i1• of Nome Petrick M11rray, 71• N Slepn.,,, .Al~ 1-4.,., F\llltr1on, Celllo..nlt
OltDIE•TOSMOWCAUH ROBERT.\ E MURRAY, 776 N
"Olt CHANGE 01' ll•MIE Slet>""'t Awe , F11lle'10fl. Calllornle
ROllEllT ALUIN SEBASTIAN ... ~ J Klno Gii llGenMCll 1 .. t_ to ...
llllCI . pefllloll In"''' court lor en Of• trensl•rrtd RETAIL PACKAGE
Ger allowlftO pelltlOfltf'lo CMnotllls OF F ·SALE BEER ANO WINE n•mt from ROBERT ALLAN LICENSE •~111_,
SEBASTIAN to ROBERT ALLAN 4 Tottl COflsldertllon 10 111 peld for
PHUC NOl1Cl PUIUC NOfll
CONSOLI OATliO
REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolld a tt d R eport of C ondition of "AME!RIC AN
STA TE BANK" of N ewport Beech, Or•noe County,
a nd Domestic SYbsld lul95 a t the close of bu lness on
September 30, t98t.
State Bank No. 1on
DoUar Amounts
111 Thousand&
ASSETS
Cash and d ue f rom banks . • . • . • . • • . 5,AS5
U .S . Treasury s.ecu rltles • . • • . •••• , • • • • . • 2.A67
Obligations of ot~ U .S . Govemrt"letll
agencle!> and corporations • • • . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • 2,800
O b llgatlons o f S ta t es a n d
polltlcat subdivisions. .. • • • .. ............. .
A ll other securities ........................... .
Federa l funds sold a n d securlt'-5
purch ased und e r agreem ents
to resell In domest ic off ices a. Loans, total <exctudlnQ
unearned Income) •••...•.•••••... 41,788
b . Less: R eser ve for
possible loan losses • . • • • • • • 474
171>
'
S,200
c . Loan s. n et... .. .. • •• .. .. .... 41,314
Direct lease f in a ncing •• • . • .. .. .. .. 4, 161
Bank p remises, F .F . & E., e tt . • .. • • • . • • • • • • • 3S6
Rea l estate o wned other than
ba nk premises. . . . . . . . . • • • • • . • . . . . 3, 119
O ther assets ......... . . . . . • • .. • .. 1,S36
TOT AL ASSETS . . . . • . . . .. • .. ................ 66,SSS
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits o f Individuals,
oart nerships, and corporations . . . . . . • • • • ••• 12,062
Time and savin gs deposits of Ind ividuals,
p artnership s, a nd corporations •.•...•...... 33,S18
Deposits of United States Government • • . • • • . . 4S
Deposits of St a tes and
polit ical subdivisions... . . • • . • . . ...•.•••... 7 ,200
Cer tified a nd officers' checks • . . . . . • . . S09
a . TOT AL DEPOSITS IN DOM ESTIC
OFFICES ................... . . 58,33.4
Total deman d deposits . . . . . 12,616
Total time & savin gs deposits .... 45,718
c . TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOM ESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFFICES . •.
Other llablllt ies . . . . • . . . . . • . • ••••..
TOTA L LIA BILITIES
(excluding subordinate d notes
58,33.4
2,247
a nd debentures) . .. . . • . . . . . . . .. . . • . .. • 60,581
Sub o rdinated notes a n d deben tures . • •..• 1,000
SHAREHOLDERS EQUIT Y
Preferred stock
a . No . snares outstanding N one
Common stock
a . No . s h ares autho r ized 1,200,000
b . N o . shares outstanding 1,004,423 1,256
Surplus ........................... 1,4S4
TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL ..... .
Retained earnings and other
2,710
capital reserves • . . . . . • . . . • . . • • • . • • • • . . 2,294
TOTAL SHAREH OLDERS EQU ITY ......... S,004
TOTAL LIABILITI ES AND
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY ..... ..
MEMORANDA
(Amounts outstanding as of
report dt11te)
• ... 66,585
Standby letters o f cred it o uts tanding . • . • • • • . t ,507
T ime Deposits of $100,000 or mor e
in domestic offices (I PC only):
a . Time certificat es of deposit in
denominat ions of $100,000 or more ...••.... 27,m
b . Other time deposits In amounts o f
$100,000 or more . , • . . . . . . . . . . • • . . • . 7,200
Market value o f
investment secur ities . . . . . • . . • . . . 5, HM
The undersig ned, John Engberg, President, and
S . R . W hitfield, Senior Vice P resident/Control ler , o f
the above-named bank, each decla res, for h im self
alone and n ot tor t he o ther: I h a ve p e r son a l
know ledge of t h e matters contained In this r e por t
and I believe t hat each statement in said report is
true. Each of the undersigned, for himself alone a nd
not for the other , cert I f ies u nder penalty of per jury
that t he foregoing is true and coHect.
Executed on October 20, 1981 , a t N ew port Beach
California.
/s /Joh n Engber g
/s /S.R. Whitfie ld
Published O ra n ge Coas1 Dally Pilot October 27,
1981 464-81
ruauc NOTICE
,.CTIT10US eUSINIU
MAMIE JTATEMIENT
Tiit !Ollowl"O P•tlO" It dOlng
bu1lntu ..
ruauc NOTICE
NOTICE TO ClteOITOU
o,. euuc: T"""'"'• ,._., 61t1-4ttr U.C.C.)
tilt City o1 C:O.ta Mooe, lo wit: T.,. E_::nl>ld .,.;ii 11 11 nd torthln~contrac10otumon1> I t •••rded . •"d 11 p 0 ,, e ny Clh C-11. P.O. h • 1200, Cotle -,. tee • Govttftl"' Board IUbcOfllrKtor ..,,.., him. to pey not
-:; Mffe, c.lllornl• ,,,.., .., w llefon tvtry Item •• ••t lortfl '" lllt •Y 1/Normen E Weuon leu t!Wn the w kl -Iii.ct retff to a ll
: ,,,. 4'011r of 11·00 e.m. °" F•lclty, -llket-. Alf'f -•11 ••,tClllClfls Sec~r •ork....,. 0,.,.,.0,.., O'r tr.m 1 .. ""
HUGH ES Ille butlntts And llct"M II ~.500 00
It IJ lloreoy or-llWit •II """°'" C••" to bt cMpo1lltc1 '" EK•-lnllrt1ted 11' IN matt~ ••or-Id •P. U.000 00
STONEW.\RE DESIGNS 8Y GREGORY, 11511 YoO•y SI,. G., .....
Grow•, C. 'l'76M
0-11 c. G._-v. IWl Yockey
St . Gerclt,,Grove, GI .,_
Nollet 11 ller~bf gln n lo Ill •
creclllor• Of FRED J SM• TH ANO
PRISCILLA IC SMITH Trat1 ... •on.
""ou bu1l,.tu •GGreu h 11012 Amt1orw1<1t L.Mw, City 04 HUftlin91..,
8eec11, County of Or.,,ge, St.U Of
Celltornle, thtl • 1111111 l•-•ter 11
•-I to be -1iO KENNETH E SMITH ANO PATRICK MURRAY
DORRIS I SMITH ANO R09ERTA E
MURRAY, Tre .. •f••••• w llou
buillltU ~~ Is 776 N St~
Ave , City ot Fullet1on, CoUfth Of
Nowtmller 4, 1ttl 11 tf\elt lie Ille 10 tftt s.podflcet..,, """' lie <le«I• Board ol f ruslftl t •t<ullcnoftr.contrecr ~ fff~lll111Y ol .,. ~ le .. llwr NIOll 1" !tit llkl. -1"1"" ta Ml Pullll""-0 Or-Coetl Delly Piiot No 111...._ mav wlllldr-Ns 1110 for
j; ::::.-:=z..c~~~~~·.t;r, ': ':;1~ :;Y..,::..l~~.i':S!k:': Oct lO, 11.1"1 4,A1 .. 1· • perlOCI ot forty five 101 days ef1er
I'-IMcl ,. Ille d•I• Mt for tfle °""''no of 111c11. i: l>Ubllclr otltf1td and'"'°•-et · -------------.,! A pay.....,t --• perlorm111te ;; 11:00 e.m., or • -,.,......,., H Eecll bl• ~II H I lonll ,.,. 11111 _.,. .~ llond wlll II• ••quired prior to
• precllcel>lt ., Frldty, ~r 4, ...,... .. -""~ of •II ,...__ ... ._ 1~ ••t<Yllon of Ille co,.trect fllt .~ •••. 111 IN C-11 a..-.. City -"11'" lftl-tecl"' ltw -•· P•rmtm "°""Inell be In -l0<m wt Hell, 77 f'e lr Ort VI, C:otte Mtu, II Ille bid Is Dy• ,.,..._elloft, llM• "'9 "ICTITIOUS eUSINIEll lot1~ tn t1Wcontret1c1o<-n11 Cellfoml• -·· for ltw """'"""' of ,..,,, .. Of lllt fllncer9 -CM .... ... MAMIE ITAT'eMINT ~mlno BoMo ~ OHE T•UCK W1Tl4 CHIPPEll 800Y. 4'0'"""4fltMIMIMlll • ... c..._etl., The lollowl"O persons Ut dol"O 8f Oorotlly Htrvo Fl-f,
AlldlllClflll _., ol .,. .-CHlcaU.U .,... • .,..,... more tr..n -°"~ buslneu .. , ""''IW•lno Dir
mey lie Wlelntd et ,,_ Oftkt of Ille m111I l lfn. ti 14't bid h by • Rt LEV'S FRAMERY, -f.. 17tll P1o1bllShecl Or-C..sl Dally P'llot
f'lir<11tt1no Aoent ti n '•I• D•h•, ~n11ent11p or • lolnt _,..,., ,.,. st.. C0t1o Nine, C•. m11 Oct JO. 11. "" 4J11 .. t Cwi. MtoM,Cel""""-. l klll-• ..,..,. __ ...,..._of•llOtNrel J t net Lynn Alkl,,ton, 1121
rtlw-to "'9 M-larl t4 t ... City Ptrtlltrt -jollll _..,,_I. If U. WHl<lllt •11, N-P0<1 Bttcll. Ce Cltrl, wltltln Mid tlf'lle llmlt. 111 e .. ..,., h • Mlt pr-I-Ip ff ~
... , .. MIW loPt, tt1t11tllltd on ,,. 111•111tr •"Illy llWll don IHl•l-1 Lenee Clllford ou,,mlrt, 1121
ovt•lllt ..... "" •kl Item Nlllllttr .... ~· • 11<11._ -· IN ... ""'' w .. tcllll • ,,, N ... l)Or'I Bttcf\, C•. ttot 011t11lfle O.W. lit Ill , ....... -of ti. MCldtr wltll '2..0
Eecll Illa llWlll -lfY .... •ntl • tltttoNttltn ,.._,,. .......... "OBA Tlllt ""~'""' 11 COfldUCltG by • t¥tr y ll•m es s et fortll In tllt llllt ll<llllous nemtl"; prevl-. ~,,.,.,~Ip.
-lflc.el ..... ..,.., -ell ••<tClllClflt flOwtw•, no lloc1Hlout Nlllt aflell lie J.,. .\t11"1ton 10 ,.,. ..-<Hlcelloru """' lie <-ly 111td 11nleu tllere la • c11rrent Tiiis ltt.,.,.,,...t ., .. 11190 .,1111 the
stetOll In tllt-elCl. -fall..,. lo •I ,...llltret'°" ...,, tflt 0r.,.. CIDwiey Coun1y C•rtt of O.~ c-r °" Oc-
NOTICI O~ SAl.e O"
P'ltOPe•TY AT P'•IVATIE SALi
lle.SIEP U21S
~Cewi ef U..
S-9' Cellttntle ler
'"' C-., of LM A-"9
,..., 119fore 11111 court '" Oellen,,....t Otmtno Note tort,,. lltl•n<• of <t14' No. l et Jal> Civic Cef'lltr Drlw WHl, to tit GePOlllttl SU,000 00
S."I• A,,., C•tltomlt, Oft Nov. 1', tttl. Otm•ncl "fbte lo 111 •1o1mtll11tod bf en
ti 10:>0 o'ctocll •.m., eno lflen encl utumptlon ot the tal1tln11 loen ,,.,. -< ... M. II '"Y 11\ty ... v.. UJ,000 00
wlly wld Ptlllloft for <lle"90 ot name D•meno Nol• for '"• emo""' of
II-Id not lie Qrtfl-Inventory not to .. cftd tht wm 04 It Is lurtllef ordtf"tcl 11\tl • copy of lJOO.oo
11111 ortltr lo ~ c-Ill py1111-.i Nolt • ..., S.Cu•llr Agrffm•"' 1,. In Oreno• Co11nty Delly Piiot, • l•vor of tllt Seller ss,ooo oo "'"''"'iM' ol Qtflt••I clrcule llo,., Tote : .,..,500.00.
pllllll111tO In tlll• '°"""' et ltH1 once• s T,.. Pleet-· .,.. c ... •l•ratlon Wttk tor !our c-uu .. -It• prior tor tlle tr~ of 11\t ll<ninotl -lllt lot,..tltyofwld,,..rlno. 11ce11 .. or llG-s 11 to lie pelcl 11
OATEOOc-1, ,., Woltm Mvtuel Ea<row Corporation, ,._Id H. Pr-r 140lt S. Yorbt Slr"1. Slolllt • 101.
J ..... oftllt T11111n, Ce llltrnl• o" or titer ~rlor Court Novtmber 12, 1•1 .
•tclleNIH.llnrdl,11411. 6 Tiit pertlu •or .. 111•1 lht '"'<II, A....,_• 1Crett1 C011Slcltrt4kln lor ll1t '""'"' of lllt
1'1a MKArellw ••""'· Sollffe 1• bl.ltlnau -1t1t tlcHiM or 11<.-.1tt 11 ,,.., ... , C.A ft71S to be °'91cl after Ille Oet>ertmtftl 04
PubJI-Or-CoeU,J:>t lly Piiot. A1co11011c B•nreo• Control "°' Oct. 6, IJ, 10, J7, ltll 4l7M 1 eppro_ I,_~ lr.,,lft<.
for1ll ..,, 1WIW' In tfle ._Hlc41t'-lttcor,.r. In <•• of c.orpor•tl..,,, 1-1• , .. 1 lflell llt .-for rejecllM of tflt lnclllfe lflt Nmet fll ttot ,.,...,_,
bid. SO<rttery, T,_.,, -~ "11Ur Publlt"9d OrtftOt Ce>ell Otlly Piiot
In Ille m•tter ot Ille ute te of PUil.iC M8TJC[ ~~~O EUGENE GUIOOTTll-------------
1 Heme --r'ftt of tllt ncr°'" holder
WESTERN MUTUAL ESCROW Eech blG lofltll wt forlll t.,. full Tiit City C-11 flf l"9 City of COllta
......,.. -r .. ldeo\ct9 o1 t it II"'-MeM ,__ h ritM It re)ecl My Oct .•. u. JO, 21. '"' 4'1'-4 1 Nollce It lltrelly given tllel Ille "ICTIT10US eUSINIU
-pel11et 1111-tecl In "" -•· or •11 bldl-11INbidIs 1r1ec.,._.U..,1\ele Ille DATED:~ 21, "11. PVIUC llOTICl
uridtrtlgned wlll Mii al prlvtte stl•, NAMe STATeMINT
Oft or eittr tlle Utll def o1 No.,.rnllt•. Tiie follow!"' "rton1 ere Gol"O 1•1, ti Ille oltke of WARD. 0000 £ butlMUtl ..._ of Ille offkert w11o CM llOl'I M l'ulllltlwG at"-CMlt Delly P'llOI, ..,._,en« Clfl IMIMIH of !flt c""°'etlcn, Oct. 21, ltl1 •n .. 1 GAUNT, 11'1' Hlwlllor"• 81¥41 , THE COPPER PLAY, 711 W 11111,
TOf'ttnce, CelllOf"'' '°'°3· County of G4, Co~•· MMe, C.A n•v. fl lCTITIOUS IUSINH S NAMe STATIEMIENT end .,,..,... mor• then -officer
"'"" s ig n. II 111• ll ld ts Dy • """''lhlP or • Joint -111re, ,..,. -------------.,. ,..,,,.. .., --... ....... ,.. .. 1
ruauc NOTICE Tiit lollowlno ~"on1 .,, Going .,.,,,,, ..... :
Los Angtltj, Stele of Celllornle to Ill• Tiie Common StnM Prna, IM • lllgll111 •no Dest tll-•. eno sut>JKI to Celllornle urporetlClfl, 711 w 17111, 04,
conllrmetkln ~ wfd S-rl0t eouri, Cott• Mew, CA m21
"°11"''' end joint -S. 11 1'1t llldeter 11 • Ml• proe>rltlortlllp er
•Miiier entity lllel dot• b11el11tu
llftder • flc11"--• .,. lllld 111111 .. 1 .. t ... ,..., -of "" ..,_ ..... e tltlll.,..,loll fol10wl111t "-lflt "OllA tlh• llclllloua ,,.,,,.!": provlcltd,
llOw•wtr. llO flc11t'-,,.,,,. ........
111td u11teu lll•r• ta • c11rre111
,...lltrtlloll wllfl Ille Or..,. C-C.,
••<trftr. In cese o1 cor-etlOfls,
IN:lutlt tflt ,,.,,_ ol t ... ""'"'-·
S.Crlltry, T-. --......
TN City Councll al h City Of C..lt
Mtu ,,_, tfle ... r141M to ,.Itel
... ., ... 11111a.
DATED: Ot~ JO, 1911.
fl'WlltNcl 0-.,,.. C..tt Ot lly Plltt, Od. 27. ,.., .. ,,..,
PVIUC MOTICE
"ICTtnOUS •UllN•M SWALLOWS NEST. JtltS Ctrnlno
NAM1 ITATSMeteT Cepltlr-, Seti J"'n C:.hlreno, CA
T4't lol-1"9 M ttofls •rt dol119 '267S
butllltt6 •:. Rllt y JOMI""' Camp, J31., EllM.
J ANES POINTE ASSOCIATES, Ot "t Point, CA mlt.
2'50 Alrwey A-, Svlle ot, Colle Oorotlly Mey Cemp, JOOV, Stpjihl•t
MtN, CA.... Ave., 8t lboe 111-. CA '216J
M,O. JANES COMP'ANY, INC., Tlllt butlfltSl h co"Oli<ltd lly o Gt11ere I P.,111e r, I• Ce l llernle ..,,.,.I -1ntrW\lp.
<.,,.,.,IOftl. 2'50 Alrwey AWf'I .. , RI .. ., J te.np
Slllle Ot. cato !MM, c. .. .-.. This n......,_. w" llllCI with tfle
St111rn Hertdll.,.,..Hlta, LlmlltG County Cltl'k of 0r4ll'IQll COUflfV Oft Oct. P..t11tr, TM c:oi-edet, 12 11.i..p. 2, lttt. , .,,..,. .....,, .. .,_tor. ~. wt ""** IOI , EnoYnd P11bll1fled Or""09 Coed Diiiy Piiot,
P'IUUI f't l'lllly COtH ••tlOll, ~I •• U, 70, 27, ltll 412'-ll
Llm lt•d Pe rt11tr. CA Ce llfornle
<--•tltnl, .. _,.,. .... -·· CA."* ruauc •m
ell right, 1111• •ncl '"''"" ot w ld Tllh IMillnes• •• coft011<1 ... lly • oec•HICI, et time Of dMtll, eno ell corpor9tkln.
right, lllle _ l,,ternt the ••1•1• lie• n..c-nn-s...w
eddlttonelly tcqulrod , 1,. end 1o ell Illa """'· Inc
ortel" rHI pr-t1y situate In 11\t P-R-
Clly or O••"ll• Counly, St•tt of Vice Presldtrit
C•lllor,,lt, penl(ulerl~ cleKrllltd •• Tlll1 •let-w115 llltcl wllll '"'
lollowt, -II County Cltt1t Of 0r..,.. '°"""' o" Oct
l.IEOAL o•sc•t,,TIC* 1•. 1tlt.
Sllwtredo Cenyo" Roed, On"••· Ct lllor"'•
Tflet portlcn of IN Sou111tan Quarter
of'"' Sout11Ntt q..,.,,., of StcllOfl '· 1 .. Town1fllp S Soulll, ._. 7 West, S...
8tr,,trdl"o 8ue end Meridia n, dtKrlbtcl M fol~
,,., ...
Put>ll-Or-CoH t Otlly PllOI
Oct. 10. "· ....... ~ 10, ,., 4$1!M1
"ICTITIOUS eUSINH.S NAMa ST•TeMeNT
T4'• followlno ~rton1 .,. dol"O bu1l,.eu e1: TM1 lllllinett It t'CltlCluettcl by • llmlltcl ,.,_,...p,
ly: M.D. J-1 ~Y. lftC.,lflelllM...-el ~
Commattln9 9t IN ,,,..,. Westerly
~°'"'' ol Lot s of Traci No . .,., u per map IMrllOI r«orcled 1,, 8ool< 33; et
pa091 l lo• lnchnlvt d Ml Kt II-out
Mtpl, •econls of w ld Ortnot County; "~c:!~~!:::.•:::s tll•nce North to • pol"I ltt lllt
Tiie lolltwltlQ Ptt'IOf'IS ... dOl119 N0'1Mrly ""' of st1 ... ec1o Ct11yOft
TRAVEL HORIZONS, 1001 Dow
SIT•t, SUl1t 160, N--1 8tt<ll, Ce. ,,...,
PN:Tlnout MMM•U '::::=-IE. Hen.
llAMS ITATSMeMT Tlllt _....,. -fllttt wllfl ...
.,.,.1,..11.. ltoed " .,_,. Ol'I .,.,.. rNIP; thence
MESA VE•OE LIQUOR. 1570 NOrlMt tltrlf •lono Mid NOF'lfltrly
l ok., SI., eo. .. MtM, Ce mi. llllO tf Sllwrtclo CMlyOll RO*! tO lttl
Rklltrd 0 9Kl'lltf, l ICtMlnolOfl,
Ntwpott IMcll, C.. '2*
Tiit f•ll••I,.. Pt•Mf' II ••lllf C:-ty Otrt1 el Or-c:-ity Ml Ott. ~=.-~.RVICI, >1• If. CNll D , ltll, ,.,,_,
Pl•v~ Lk1110t, Inc. (e Galltor-nl• lo IM trw polm OI btQlnnl,..; 111tM•
I I -North SU Mt, mort or lff .. to lflt corporel.., • ,,,,, Balter St., Cotta Nortll llnw or Illa u la Soutll•••I MeM, Ct . '2t.1l6 e. .. Tlllt Ml,... It <OftClllc'ttd lly • <t,. qu1rter of IM ...,..111te11 quarter;
potelloll ,.,."Ce Wtlt •loflo .. td Nortll nne of
HwY .. C--•t...,,c:Aft6B. P'11blttNc1 Ort11 .. CMtl OeOy KtllMlfl ~ ....,..._,., -'' ,,,_ .... , Wey 0.. ........ CA..... l"lltt, ._.. 27, Ntw. &. It, 17, "'14'is..1 c.;;;;,;11 ... ....... P'\AVAN ltOU0•, 1NC. ill fffl, -· Soutll •'"1. lllON.,.
Tiii• .......... -..... wttll .... l(tltft E • .,, ""· to tflt nof1florly ""' of u ltt
C*MtY °'" 911 ~--C°Mlfll't Ml Oct. ------------
.......-1• Slivered• C•nyon R .. d ; lllt110
Tiiis •le'"'-1 ... 111..i with ,.,. (Hltrty •lonO .. 111 Nortl'ltrly llM ID la,, .. ,. .. ,, ..
""91t .... 0--.... C...I Dell• """"' Oct."· ...... a."· 17, 1111 .....,
l'ICTlnout IMl&llllA
11M1S ITATllMSM'T
T ... ,....., ... --.,.. ftl119 .,,...._
CUlllMl.l'CUtSINE m .. ~.O • ._ 1-.~ ...... CA'*l;J .. W. ,_.,-. •J.C:-. .... ,CANn.
Mii..,., A. "-'rla, 764 '#. IMI SC. AP. ••• ~ ...... CAftW,
.... t ........ t1•1 .... ~-
........... Alie, CA"*-
Tttlt ..,_.. It uMllcl .. .-, • ,_..=~
n.i. .......... -........
C-'Y °"". °' ... c...,. •Od. ......
"ICT1TIOUI •ust••• c ounty C:ltl'k o1 0renoe county on s.p. '"' tnie Ptlnl of beginning, MAM91TATa .. .., ttmbtr1t.1•1. Mor• com me111y k"'"'" ••
T,_ .......... ,.,_ en ....... """• Ullllllllf-lot. Sii.,.,_ !Mnl-•: ...,..,..._, Ol'lfl9I Coed Deity Pt~ C.nyon R-.
l"OINTE "'*NI I, 2'ta Al,,..., 0<1 •. ti. J0, 11, tt•t •11141 Term1 fA .... (etll 111 lewt111 m611t'1'
A-. 1111te Dt, <MU ...... CA. --------------Of tllo Unllecl SIMn °" conflmWllkHI of ""' u lt , or P••I <••II •nG t1e1111ce M.D. J-Ce., lllC., Otftffet f'UIUC tlTICE .. 14•ncd lly n1te U (urod t>r ... r1,.., (t Cllllf9rflle C~ellefl), 1Mf1 .... 0flrlltt ...... OfltllePt'-.rtY
tttD Al,_., A-. $l/IW Dt, Ctele PICTlnOU• eu•IMlll :!.-:.:!~.!..,J::: tf -t t i. ... ~~~ ..... y If......,_,....," ~ITAftMSltT .... "'..,.,..It 119 111 -it1119 -
,,._1119 T,_, • IJMniN ,,_,.., t•t Tiit fe llo•lnt "'"" te •01110 wlll lit~,.... et""'...,..... offtc.
14.,_,...., T-CA. ..,.j '""1M H •: el tll• time ~ l,_ llr1t !"*le.el .... Wuta11 'H. , ....... l.ll\llUH SOllTWA•f •v SAHO, t tt• lleteOftfld....,.dtrt.tOI .....
,..,,_, ttlt ... ,.,,.,.. Wey, T--· ~}'18Mtt lttlo. yt.-.. ""· Ct . Otl"l Oc-.r 14, t"1
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c1 ... 1~aic11 cJo It well:..
J Hn A. lle<Mtl, J IC•,,slnqtOfl,
Newport llMCh, Cl . '2660
Tllll -lllOtt la c~ llf '"In·
dlwldual.
llkfltH 0 lecMel
Tlllt -~ Wll flltcl wltll the COUfllY Oer1I tlf Or-.. c;_., °" Oc·
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l'\ltlll ...... Or .. CO.II Delly ,,1104
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ATTY: MARILYN
WESTMORELANO
FREOJ. SMITH
PRISCILLA IC SMITH
"'."'"'°" KENNETH E SMITH
PATRICK MURRAY
ROBERTA E MUR•AY
Tr-~
Pullllelled Ortnot C:oesl Otllv Pllo1.
Oct 11, 1t11. 461 ... t
PllUC IJTICE
"ICT1l10US eUSINHS
NAMe STATeMlllT
Tiie 1011ow1no ~"°"' .,, doing bUtl11tnt1·
FOUR SEASONS LANDSCAPE
MAINTENANCE, 1500 Aclem1 A"9flllt,
S..llt JOI, Coste Mttll, C.lllor"le ma
R M E"91-lng. IM.,• Celltornle
COtPGflllof\ UOO Acltmt A-. Svlt.
JOI, Co'1• Mete, Cellfoml• •••· Tllh b111l11tu 11 concluclod l>r • corporelton
R. M. Enol"'9•1"9, IN:.
ROllert R. McCoy
P>'•'-t
Tfll• ..... _, w•• ftlllcl ..... ""
County C:ltf'lt flf Ortntt C-ty °"Oct. .•. ,.... .
"· J.cllt Mell a..,.., .. u.
.. °*"'DoM,W•D ............... ~ . ...., ,.,,.,
Pvt>ll ...... Or ..... C..11 0.lly Plltl,
0c1. JO, n . Nov. i, 10, 1•1 ~·
PUIUC teTICE
Tlll1 M ...... Is Conducted llr lWI
lncllvkh•I
O.nh C Grevory Thll , ... ,.._,, wa1 lllttl wlUI 11\t
Cou,,ty Cl.,,. ol 0.•1'19" County on
Ocl-r t. "'' ,,,,,,,.
P\1111111..a Orano-C-1 Delly PllOI
Oct. u, JO, n. "°" l. '"' ....., "
NIUC NOTXE
STATIEMaNTO~ AMNDONMllllT
0"UHO"
"ICTITIOUI eUllNHS NAMI
Tiit lollowlfto 11trton1 iw .. eberl-
-.. IN UM of tflt Fictitious lutl· MH Ntme·
PART'S LI NE, 610 E 11111 SI., S..... ttAne,C.. ~1'1
T ... Fk111lolll 8111lnns Ntme ,..
ltrrllcl to tbow wt1 fllecl In Oranoe County on Auguit 12, 1 .. 1. Fiie No. , ......
Oe1111y L. WlllOft, JOI Oowrfltkl
Or , Plectlllle, Ce m10
llobert M Cllertl•r. llsel Eatt
NIM 011"9, L,_.,,. NI-I, C:. ~·n Tl!lt MHleu ... COf\ducltcl lly e
ll"'lttd pertneolllp
ROC.rt M, C ... rlltr
Tiii• ~ .. _, Wtl llllCI "'"" '"' COUflly CltA. of 0r*'90 County o" S....
""'Ill' lO .....
Pulllllllttl 0.tr>Qt C..sl Delly Piiot
Oc1. '· u. JO. 21 '"' .,, ....
P'UIUC NOntE
NOTICE
•111ty W. Lledlw Glad -•It 11'1 , ... Slei.tAw..,,.nvt.,..,J....,.ry I,,..,
end tell es o"• of lier ll•lr1, •
grllndcleughler, Jtnk t Koefllt r, •llott
IH I •n-~was 2SJ7 ,,,.,.,...,
L•M. Coste Mou, Ctllfornla ttta .
Any lttformttldn ntoenllno Hie pr-1
eddrtU ol Jallkt ICOtf\• 11\ould lit
.... t 10 -""°'" ...... HEllllERT H DAVIS
At1W,_J for Ettelt 1111 M9.o.A-
"'-" WMNllOI-"'SO P..c>NE: C'°'I *'1117 dNlttlY, OAVll.
McCO•MICX & ICMNe tDI • .. ......,. .. u.
1111-....A-~ ... -................ Pul>llllltel Or.,.. C:-1 Dally Pl19',
Oct. U , 20, 17, Now, J, Io, 11, .... ,...,
o. • nge. S..• tA C:.llforl'IJ•
Tiit ~y 10 lie traMfer,..., It
dtK•I-In -··· ••. All •tock In
....... ""'"'"· 9qul_, -d -Wiii of lhel SenOwldl .,_ wlt4' btt•
encl •Int lie-Ho. ~111..e l>vllN$t 1t.11own .. "AlltWAY SAN DWICH
SHOP" -toceltcl •• )100 Airway A"•· No. 141, City ol Cotlt Matt, Cou111y d 0r.,.., S .. lt d Celltornle
T iie l>U IR trentlt r will be
cons.,,.,.,........., or •ntr "" tltfl ,.r
ol No¥-, 1•1 et IO·OO AM t i
WESTERN MUTUAL Esc •o w
COltP ATTN MA lllLY N
WESTMORELAND, •NIM --~ 11 14Cltl So. Yorbt St. S..lw 101. Ty.Jtl,,,
Calltomlt.
Tht t tllt IH I CWlle ,.,, llllflt <IOlmt 1"
Ill• u c row rett rrea lo lier el" It Novtmlltr II, 1•1.
So fe r tt Ct k now" lo I~•
Tre,,tle.-, •11 lluslnot1 ~ -
-'"'" -~ lllt Tr9ltlftron lo< tM Pett lt1rw ., .. ,.. .,,, SAME
Delta Oct-12, 1 .. t
OORIS I. $MITH KENNETH E SMITH
ROBERTA E. MU•llAY PATRICK MUR•.\Y
Tr..-.....
Pvblltlltd Orenoe Coetl Delly PllOt,
Oct. 11, t•• .. lM I
'VIUC NOTICE
~_,_,_ __ __. ....... ~------------------... -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, October 27, 1981 ..
Ebsen 's historic drama loving and long • is
By TOM TIT\JS .................
. It may (()me u a bit of a 1urprl1t to moat of
tbt clvlll&ed world, which know• blm 11 Jed
Clampett or Barnaby 4'one1, but Buddy Eblen 11
quilt a student of En1U1b bhtory.
He even baa cone 10 far u to write an oriatnal
play about one of bla favorite blatorlcal naurea,
Mary Stuart, abo known as Mary Queen of Scots
( 1542 1$87 ). ll arrived in it.a world premiere over
the weekend as "Mary, Queen of Heart.a" at the
Newport llW'bor Actors Theater.
Sta1ed by Ebsen's wife, Nancy, mana1in1
direct.or of NHAT. and starring lhelr dau1hter,
Bonnie, a skilled professional actress. the show is
indeed a family affair. It Is lovin1ty and
meticulously mounted -
perhaps a bit too much
so, as it encompasses INTERMISSION two hours and 4S minutes
including two
intermissions.
Despite its excessive length and leisurely
pacing, not unusual for an original work, Ebsen's
"Mary" contains some compelling moments,
created primarily by Its three leading players. The
play is based on documented fact, and sometimes
it appears more intent on preserving historical
accuracy than fleshing out the motivations of its
many characters.
This is a minor irritation in Act One, when
characte rs arrive full blown with little notice as to
who they are or their relationship to one another.
However, such necessary exposition would only
serve to lengthen an already overextended
production. Various Scottish, French and English
dialects, undoubtedly accurate, also require a bit
or acclimatization.
Ebsen's dramatic account focuses on the six
years of Mary's life from 1561 to 1567, beginning
with her return to Scotland a young widow after
her brief marriage to the King of France and
termlnatins with her capllulaUon to her arouaed
countrymen after )VeddJ01 her .econd bu.band'•
murderer. The period of confrontaUoo with her
cousin, Queen Elisabeth I, which ended ln Mary's
behead1n1. Is not covered ln "Mary, Queen of
Hearts."
The crucial element.a of an often ponderous
production are the splen~id performance• of Miii
Ebsen u the proud, determined Mary; Robert
Knapp as her posturing. ineffectual h'11band Lord
Darnley, and John Szura as ber mad, murderous
lover, the earl of Bothwell. They inject a fervor
and 'Immediacy Into the proceedings that the
balance of the show is hard pressed lo equal.
Szura, whose Intensity is barely restrained by
his subservient role, presents a particularly strong
character. Miss Ebsen is every inch the reaal
beauty, plotting and scheming for her survival.
and her scenes with Knapp are excellent as they
virtually play chess with each other's emotions.
There is, however. much slack in the
production which requires concentrated
lightening, if for no other reason than to maintain
audience interest. In this respect, the play is
similar to Shaw's "Saint Joan" or Robert Bolt's
''A Man for All Seasons," classics which, if played
al less than peak intensity, can become quite
tedious.
Victoria Bryan's stone castle setting is an
imposing backdrop and the background music,
leaning heavily on trumpets and drum rolls, lends
an air of majesty. Be rrepared, however, for an
explosion late in the play which may jar you out of
your seat.
··Mary. Queen of Hearts" continues the
weekends or Nov. 5, 19 and Dec. 3, playing
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m . and
Sundays al 2: 30 at the Actors Theater. 390 Monte
Vista St., Costa Mesa. Beginning Nov. 13,
Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" joins the Ebsen
original in repertory.
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
• • • • • • • •
All Performances before 5:00 PM
(Except Special Engagements and Holidays)
SO. COAST
ACTORS STUDIO
f'"f'Pf1', r'PW f,\, t-". f. 1f
I I I,'. I':> p ! ' ',~ t}'' '. l ,I\ '.~I •' t'.
17141 957-0282
IMllT lllYllO&DS • PATERNITY
(PG' ,,..,~':.:,~,' .. ":, ~
...::::, ...... I •l~f'· • • • .•.• ..., ·-:..i
...
NOW PLAYING
EOWAROI SADOlEBACK
El I OIO 581 5880
EO*AROS BRISTOL Costa Mesa 540 7 444
EOWAllOI ClltEMA CENTER
Costa Mesa 979 4141
l OWAllOS
MISSION VIEJO MALL
MISSIOO Vteio 495 6220
EDWAllDI CllfMA WEST
Westminster 891 3935
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Ota~ 634 9282
•..:wM $MOWS SIU I f£jil41 AT DUSI
MIHIOM DRIH·ll
San Juan Cap1s1tano 493·4545
OfllANGE ORIVE·IN
Or Jnge )88 ·on
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PAREN'IS AND
YOUNG PE<JltLE
rrw oc:wc-•~ (II,,. 1•fWt9J d ro nlorrn ,,..,..,,. ·~""' • ..,f.~ ol
,,.., ... Q)nltetW '°' .. ..,"9 ttr .,_.,,,. c"-'d,.,,
fP] AU 4(){S .. OM1neo
~ 0.netll AUO~\
~lfltUUlllt (:]
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Coll 6l4 25Sl
Ch an A Santa Ana fwy
MATINEES SAT. 8r SUN.
Can dice B~r n AICHA F (R) Shows at : 1 9:
no YhOnet'V ..... ' Sovnd et Oti•~n Beklw Vow AM «* radto tt "°"'-~°' lfnoAM ., r-.cho w1•h ~1•t0n
Cc:9WC>t V OOtlt t0n, bf t "°"'own AM Port-'>le.
SOF1NE IRI
Continental Divide (PGI
ANMIERM:M WEREWOLF IN l'*DON (R)
H.avy Metal IRI
LOl'T ARK (PG) I RAIDERS OF THE
ALL AGES .. OMlfTEO Alcatraz (PG) I
Escape From
p.,.,_..,, a...,..,,co Suwe.,.., c::::::::z:c:::====:a
I ONLYMtENI UWGH IRI SMms L ike Old T1m~(PGI
c::::::c==~
811..1.. MURRAY
STRlf'ES (RI
Arthur (PG)
M.L G ~ .... o !Iii F .. MS RECEIVE
TliE SEAi. OF fHE MOTION PtC TUllE
COO£ OF SELF REGULATION
NICE DRE.MS (RI Up In Smoke (RI
Ct-11& Ooifs Nect MooM(Rl
Ttwf,
NOW PLAYING
Untted
Artists
BREA COSTA MESA MISSION VIEJO ORANGE
Brea Plau Harbol 1 won Vaeio Twm Plot C11y 63• 9282
529 5339 631 3501 830 6990 WESTMINSTER
UA Twin C111emas COSTA MESA I• l'l.RD ltCW'TlHOI '""•-Ill"' I Brts 8 5 0 893 124
II
MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT
11774 ,, ........ , , .......... ,
lllT 1"'11 .. TM tlS HWY • 11 ... ...SY
"IN CONCERT"
OCT . 28, 29
NOV. 4r 5
BOBBY HATFIELD
''IN CONCHT"
NOV . 13, 14
2 Showa nl9htly 9:00 & 12:00
lack ly Popular Demandl
DARLENE LOVE
NOV . 3, 17, 24
Marti Davl4ten • i.n .. menil • M9rthtlll Otw911
ISRIAL BAKIR STRING QUARTIT
C:OHClltT
IUNOA'f' NOY. ht-21"9-1 f'M a 71H lllM
• • • RICH a1uJ FAMOUS:
uu UA Movies
990·4022
COSTA MESA UA Ctnemas
540 0594
NOW PLAYINGMGM O~ ~Altasta
fl TOflO Saddle~k
581 5880
FOU•Tat• Ullfl Foon1aon Valley
839 1500
um•£ ORANG£
WoodbrMIOe C1nedome
551 0655 634 2553
LACWU IUCH WHTMlltSTlll
Sou1h Coasl UA Twin Cinemas
494 1514 893 1305
NOW PLAYING -. ....,.,....
FOUNTAIN U llU OflHGE WEITMIHTER
Foun1aon VaJlev Cllledome UA Mall
839 1500 634 l553 893 05•6
IEW,ORT BEACH WESTMIHTER
Newpo1t H1 Way 39 011ve In
644 0760 (7 14) 891 3693 1---.. ---1
AN
AMERI C AN
ORIGINA L
A UNMRSAL PICTURE
,. '"' u~ <II"" llUOIOf IHC
--im ... ----· I <c,...,,,.)1 IJrrt11•11M1
• • •
LA MIRADA MAll o Muodo ot llo1•c•o,,1
LA MIRADA WALIC·IN 994'·2.tOO
f'MI MOl1 '"* ..,.. .. Co\119'11'
"'ARTHUR'" CH I U U.JAt 44t ... 16' te-..
~ ••Y"°'"'9 I ..
'"PATERNITY" • ..,.. ,,. , ....... ._. 1e:•
A 111'All A Ll.QUtO AMO A_,~
··MOMMIE, DEAREST 1001
t:J-.. , , •• u . a.''· •••
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
A c:Gf' ti 'f\,laNIMO ..,,._,,., UA
PRINCE OF THE CITY (Ill
, • 41 "· , JO, ....
...._-.. llA.ltOM. c"''" ~ .. ONLY WHEN I LAUGH' 1•1 '•.1-n ...... u 1111
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlll·IN
foc""IV Al Del Amo
·~-·~-"'RICH AND FAMOUS'" .. , . ........... ... . - ----------....... fll(Mlt ,.0 . ....._._ .. 4UDt.
"'RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" !POI ,.._ 00\.9 f STl_lltCO
tt-... , ...... , ..... ..,,
'"ALL THE MARBLES 1111
,-,. &At t ·····"··.,.. '"" J,,, .. · EYE OF THE NEEDLE 1111 ,. • I.Al >ia. ,, ••
..,.. ,..,. t ...... 11 •
Faculty ot Condl•wooo
213/531·9580
TATOO'"ll't aA1M
BLOW OUT'" 1•1 , 11,IW 1MI ..... .-...... ---'"THE FRENCH
LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN"'
u--... •• t M en tt •
BODY HEAT"' t•t ,, .......
BLUE LAGOON 1•1 ... , .. ., ..
213/63_4 _·9_2_1_1 --..----
.U......otf I04llD ....... ~ ...
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK cNI It;-, .. ldl. ?;ti. t• M
LAGUNA
, .... A .....ca f'OU ...._. .... Of
"GALLIPOLI"' INt &af OM."I t'1,ltJ!l,t~• ...,. ........ .. u. J!, ........... .._ ... ,. ••
so. COAST WALK ·IN
Soutn Cooat H1woy
ol l roodwoy
494-1514
-~·~-I ••fOURSf!ASONS""c..,.. "RICH AND FAMOUS"' 1111 I _ ..... -.••. --. ..-. ... --,,..,.. RRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER ll'I .. ,....,. ........ '*· •• .,.. ..... , •. , ••. "'' .,.. ........ " 1
IMPORTANT NOTICE• CHILDREN UNOUI 12 FREE!
HJtbtt tftd Wl,,\tf Mtn Hov ~11 •.30 • Sii S111n " .. ' 5 30 ,,.. tN-k $OUICl • fOUl1 a~ CAii llAOIO IS tOOR SIUIC!~
, ' II() "' W 1W110 WITM lfiHITO< attlSSOll• l'OSITOI
-M.llC AM IOllTAllU t•AU. ~ ~ 8311 00t AM llAOIO
ANAH(IM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
•t•••O'f " Of l•~ St
179·9150
SLAUGHTER IN SAN FRANCISC ......
'THE UNSEEN" 1•1 ......
GALAXY OF TERROR 1111
----.,..---
-oot-A IM)C)M Al.,.._. IOfllmtl7 IM
FOR YOUR EYES ONLY cMt ......
OEADL Y BLESSING 1•1
C•HI JI SOUNO
8UlNA PARM
BUENA PARK DRIVE -IN
ltrKoH\ Ave W••' ot cnott
821·4070
FOUNTAIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE·IN
So~ O••oo ffW"f at lrooU•unl (So)
962·2411
WfSIMINS1!~
HI-WAY 39 DRIVE -IN
e M>Otll. ... LOIMit
ENDLESS LOVE 1"1 ......
TARZAN THE APE MAN .. u•t
CtHt It !>OUHLI
.. NINE LIVES OF FRITZ
THE CAT""1111
l'lUI
HEAVY TRAFFIC 1111
, .. .,.,. "* .,_... CMt w•
'"ARTHUR .. I""
"-119 ··STRIPES .. 1'111
Cfll{ fl SOUHO •
llOOt:• tiOOM ....... llO ... , ... ,..,..~:.. ':u...
"FOR YOUR EVES ONLY",_ ALL THE MARBLES t•t ...... ......
··0£ADLY 8LESSING"" llU TARZAN. THE AfltliMAN 1111
CIH! " SOUNO ;;1~1 fl SOUHO ----.::..-~-,:..:._..:.....;;.-__.---11U-,.L:::,s"'LA7:-:"ua=HT=E"-R=1 s'AN7RiN<:iSO
'"04000 a_,.:;""' --I'll ,,J' l HE UNSEEN 1111 -...... -01D01•-•w"'._..1111 .. GALAXY OF TERROR 1•1 CIHl fl SOUHO CIHl #1 $0\lllU
LA MA811A
LA HABRA DRIVE·IN
'"'IM' ....... -· -..... ...,. .... 17Hl62
8U!lllA Plllll
LINCOLN DRIVE·IN
ltftCOtft A•• WeW Of I M>lt
121·•070
o eANGI
Tl<I llOST NII_., CAii ll<IV
0AATHUR"tN1 -'"STRIPES ... 1111
··A.-:RICAN W£AEWOLF
IN LONDON 1111 •
l\.lil
0'WOLF'EN°0 -"THE HOWLING [!I)
\onto "'"o ,,,...,
ORANGE DRIVE·IN
---· J .. PATUIHtTY IN! 1\.119
'SMOKEY A.NO THE BANDIT 11 c
'-tA~ J.JAa. , AV1',lloA"-f•
MISSION ORIVE ·IN
II .. ' N• •''I~ ~I.. --~
WARNER DRIVl·IN
wo•••• A.,. Weit ot ••o<~ tt•d
147·Ht1
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'"PATEllNITV" 1"'1 -"'CAOOYtMACK 1111 ___ _,,,
"'LA NINAD!LA MOCHILA AZUI." CON ··WMAONUM" ----. •OJO '°" ().IC)'" CON "NLIA DC ,_"MOt··
I '4-00 '" CAlr\OAO
For complete ad copy and art services
advertisers all along the Orange COO:!iy on Daily Pilat
Hollywood's receipts
cool with October
8y .IAV ARNOLD A_ .... ,._......,
HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Althou1h 1981 still
looks to be llollywood't blgge1t box office year
•vcr, a dlrth of posl·lummer blockbuster movies
could mean that a bumper crop of box offict
turkeys will be killed off around Thanka1lvine to
make way for holiday mm offerings, Industry
offi cials say.
September established a new bolt offlce peak
near $195 million in the United Stotea and Canada,
with another record 66 million to 67 million ticket.a
sold. accord.mg to the newspaper, Daily Variety.
That makes a 39-week total of nearly $2.15
billion "r or 7 percent ahead of the same
period m •-· J -when September is added to thC'
Motion Picture Association of America's official
elght·month box office tally of $1.956 billion. The
M PAA has not released September figures yet.
When ticket price inflation is considered, total
domestic box office is down about one percent
from lasl year, Daily Variety said. but a strong
lineup of Thanksgiving·Christmas releases has
industry observers predicting 1981 will approach
or s urpass 1979's record $2.82 billion.
......
OrangeCout OAll Y PILOT/Tueaday, Ootober27. 1981
• AUTOMOTILE ACCIDENTS
• CONSTRUCTION ACCIDENTS
• PERSONAL ACCIDENTS
The Law Offices of R. Steven Peters
emphasizes in the handling of Personal
Injury C1aims. R. Steven Peters will make
sure that you obtain all that you are legally
entitled. Cell for a Free consultation and
( 1determine your rights against all parties.
Housecalls or hospital visits can be
arranged.
134-0133 LAW OFFtCE
24Hn. of
R. STEVEN PETERS, INC.
60 I H. Partcc...ter Dr •• SCllltci A11a
Hitachi eyes
Anaheim site
TOKYO (AP> -Hltacbl Ltd •• a major
Japanes elect.roo.lca m aker. will open a color
televlaloo factory 1n Anahelm, Calli., next •prtna.
a leadln& ffOnomlc dally HYI.
The Nlbonb.Kehai Shimbun 11ld the Anaheim
plant wtU bave an lnJtlal producUon taraet or
50,000 unit.a a year.
Hitachi alr~ady has a color televlaion plant ln
Compton, Calif., produclna ~.ooo units a year
under the manaaement of tbe wholly·owned
s uba ldlary Hitachi Coneumer Products of
America. The new plant will help the Japanese
maker meet rising demand in the U.S. market, the
daily said.
642-5678
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NOTic• DI" NC1Ttc• TO ca1DtTOa1
eULI( TAANSl"I a 01" eULI( TllNtll"I a
Cl9c:a. 6'91 ·ti• U.C.C.I 1tea. t.WW U.C.C.I
TO WHOM IT MAY COHCEAN: NOT ICE IS HERE8Y GIVEH to
NOTICE IS HEMeY GIVEN llO -redltors ol the within nemed
C reditors of PATRICI A A .1ren1feron !Mt • llUlll tr.,.lfer 11
CHAPl"Ell. Tr•naferor, wllose e-.i • .. ,.,..an _._I ...-"Y
llullnHS --· It 2-Sen Ml9U91, llerelnetter Clner1-. Httwport a .. cll, COIHlty of OrW)... The ....... -IMllNll e4dr-..
State af Cellfomle. u..t e 11u111 tr.,lf9r ,,,. tnt...-.t tt--ere:
PUil.iC MOTlCE
l"ICTtTIOUI 8UllNU.S
HAMii ITATllMINT
Tiie lollowl119 per•-I• ••Int ............. : ID'S OISOOUHT Jl!W£LIEll$ ANO
ACCESSO•tES. 1",. Brookl\utfl,
Foullleln Vetley, CA '21GI.
A,,.,, M.. E'-1. flll 1.eil-0..,
HIHlll"9lan BM<h, CA.,..._
Tflh -NS• Is <.Oft4\1Cteel Oy en
l""M -1.
MAIL BOXES!
e t4 HOUR l"ICK -UI"
e AVAIL ABLE
'IMMEDIATELY
e LOW AATE8
COtTA MESA AReA
760-7000
Goblin
Festival
Safe & sane Halloween for
the kids at
Huntington Center on Fri. nite &-9
and Sat 11-5
Games. fun & prizes ooly 25•
PUBLIC MOTlCE
None• TO caaDnoas
MIKILl(TU..S.•a cleft.•-• u.c.c.1 NOTICE IS HEREeY GIVEN 10
creditor& of the wltllt n n •"'•CI ,,.,,.,_ .,._. • bulll lr.,.,.r Is ~
to be mede on persOfte l prope'1y
herelnefttf' dncl1119d.
TN ,,_ -llluslneu --of t,. lnt.ndlld 11.,ll•ror I&:
JOHN At<El, t111 lll•bY, Ulllt
"O", G9-Cltft Gnl..e. c.llfo<nl• 91641
It •bOut to be -to SUSAN RUTH " A E A E J A c 0 u E s
MORAIS end WILLIAM HENRY AESTAUAANTCOMPAHY. INC. ...
MORRIS, Tr .. 11-.. -buslllfts C•"'PWS 0.1..e, Swlt• 220, New-1
-'"s Is 1.ot Port sc1r11ne Piece, 11eec11. Cellfornl• f2MO
Newport 8HCll, C:O..nty ol o ..... , The n-end blftlN11 ....,_ of
SteM of c.tlfotfll• "*· u. Int-tr .. ~.,..
The Pf-rty to .. tr-19"Wd Is $ANT A FE INVESTMENTS
-Ei-t
This ..........,,. -flied wlttt IN
Coufoty Cle<t< "'Or .... C:O..nty °"Oct. u. 1•1.
T,.. locetlon In c.111or11I• of tM
clll•I e-.cllllw office « ptlnc1,..1
buslneu office ot tlle ln tendeo
,..,_. treMI-b : Seine
Pwllllahed Or.,.. C:0.11 Delly Piiot. All otll•r bwalneu ne m e & •nd
loc•IM .. ~Sen Mlv .. 1. Newpert GROUP, 1322A Helcourt A..e ... _.,,.
BHtll, Coufoty of Or.,oe, Stele af C.lltonlle""90
CAlltornl•ftMO Tllet tM pr_-ty per11nent ,,.,.llO l.1
$eld pr-rty Is dHcrl-In -rel described In oenerel n · All • u : All stock In trede, llatur•'· lnclud l119; Furnllwre , flat11re1,
.,.ulpmftlt -9110d w411 of IMtletlrlc tee sellold lmprovemenll • nd
-9lft llullnta known es FRINGE eQwlp,.,ent, -11 IOUll9d et: 11111 BENEFIT end louted el 2'4t Sen tl)td Street,<Mrltol,C.lltornlet0101.
Ml9uel, New-1 .. ech. County of Tiie bullnns .....,. llMd ., -°'-· S.M• of C.llfornl• ,..., trenslef'OU .. Mid l«41110fl I&. CASA Tiie 0 11111 trenshr wlll lie 01 POMPEI.
,.,....,,,,,,,.... ort er ettef' tN "" .. ., Tl\et wld-ir .. ~ la In~ t
of H~. 1•1. -delma mey be .,. con....,.rnetH et tlle office of:
flled et WELLS l"AAGO 8ANIC., N.A., twrr-bcrvw Co., 2010 N. Twt111
EKrow ~mo.Ill. Re. IEscrvw No. Aw ...... s.nt41,,.,.,.. Celttomle '2711 -~1. wo ....._,center o. .. SUit• M elter.......,.... 11. 1.,.
IJIO. Newport 8eec11, Cownty ol TIM n---•soft,...,_ Of-. st-. fll C.llh>ml• tM60. wltl\ wlwn cletms mey lie fl ... It
All clelms-i. reol-et INS FRANCIES, l"RIEO, BU RROW
_,.H bl' ... Ullo dev of Nowmller, ESCROW GO., l01'0 N. TYlllll A-.
19tt, wni.ts U. !Miik trW11fer elto P.O .... 117 .. s.M41 ,.,.., c.llfwMe
lftch!Ma .. tr-of ll4Wf ll~e. '111 t, _.,, .. lelt d9y fer fltlftt clellftS
Ill wtll<ll c.M, ell clel"'• mwtl lie 0y eny creclltor .,.II i. "-Miier 10,
re<el,,., prior'° h-. Oft wtll<ll IN ''"· wftldl Is tN ...,""• •Y.....,.. I..._ ltc-I' tr-fef'red 0y IN tll• c•ns11mmellon -.te specified
0.pert,.....I ol Ale-lie Bevereee •llove.
Control. So fer • 11 llNWn to u ld I..._..,
So let • "-to tM tr-fweff, TrenafffeK uld lnt..-ct Tr.,sfw•"
ell llUll-,..,,_ -eddreHM -wMCI Ille fOltowl"' eddltloMI IMnl-a
ltY TrWltfwor lor .,. h .. .,.." IHI IMlmH -........._ ""'""' -""'" "94. --HOf4£KNOWN .,.en leltpolllt: -· O~: Oct...., 10. 1.... Oeted ~ %2, ltll.
SU$AH RUTH MORAIS SANTA l"E
WIU..IAM HEN RV MORAIS INVESTMENTS G.OUP
Tf--I"""""' Tr-ler-WaLLI ttA•oo UJfl(, N.A. 11y: O.vld Schllllter aec.,... o , .. ._..... o..a1 p.,,,.,
............ 0-W Or •• • IQI LAW Otll"teal Oft ....__, 8Mc1'. Ce. ftlMt LAWL••. ,.Ult & MALL
"'Oll&Ncl ~ ..... Coest O•lly Piiot 1'I se.tll ,.._ ._.
Oct. n, 1•t 4'1M1 ~A....., ce .... ,
rllllC MOTlCE
l"ICTITIOUI eUSINISS
NAMI STATIMUIT
T II• lollo•l"ll person Is dol119
t1111ll!ff1et: CALIFORN IA GOLD
INVESTMENTS. 4000 M•<Artllur llvd., Wte JOOO, Newport a.eel\. Ce .
'1'60 Pem•I• Merle T eloll•, JOOS
Cetv.n 51., Cost•-.. C•, •ui. Tllls bllSllltM Is condu<ted llV en
lndlv141WI. l"..,.leM. Telolle
Ttllt NtMMflt wes lllect wltll the
C-t't C19" of 0r•n9' C-ty on
0C19Mrt, 1111 tll7"U
l"Vllllll!M Or .... C:O.st O•lly Piiot
Oc1. ta. 10, t1. -i. 1•1 .....,
l"ICT1TIOUI eUllNISI
N~ STATUll•NT
TN "°"""""" ""'°" b delllt busl· -··· C A I AOYAN C E I.AN O
OfVaLOl"MENT; Ill VINCO
alEALTY, 11• Yle U-Soud, N_,..,,
'"'"· c.iw. ~ .,.,,,.., o. \1111<9"11. "' Ill• lido .,.... .....,... 9Ndl. Cetlf. '*" Tlli. .....,_It~., efl ....
....... l~OV~I
Tiiis ............ wit4 fl ... wltl\ Ille
Count• CIMtl of Oronee CAMIM• Oii Oct.
Pwbll"'9cl ~ .... Cont O.Cly Piiot
0<1. 27, 1tl1 4'1M1
Piil.iC •ta
ttlCTITIOUS IUSINISS
NAMa ITATIMUIT
Tiie lollowlnv person It doln9
buslneu•s:
AMER IC AN MEA ITI MIE
C0MPA"-Y. ~ Vie ()pot1o. •204,
N•wpot1 lleecll, CA 9*1
MICllMI 1.., 1lr11te, 1?21 W. Cent
Hwy • tlO, N-1 .. ech, CA t2MJ. Tiiis bullnet• la conducted b'f •n
lndtv1w.1. Mlctoee4 I lfl !truce
Tiiis st•-· ..., II ... wt111 tlle
C-ounly Cter1t ol Or-c-tv Oii Oct. "· '"' tlt1-
PllOllSl9d Ot-Coel1 O.fly Pl'9t
Oct. 20, 27, ...... l, 10, "" .., .. ,
.. ICTIT'IOUI eUSINHS
NAMll STATaMaMT
TM NllOW!flt ,..._ -eolrle butlllHJos:
BACK IAY CllEANEltS, 2'1S 1,.,,,. a1vd., c.o ......... ce. t2t17
B•y a.., CO., ,.1S ll'\llM 8t.ci.,
C•to Mo.-. co. '2621
Tiiis Ml-• It <_.._ W o
llm11" ...m .......
UCtC8AVCO.
lJNllty ....,.
Tiiis ........... WM fifed wfffl .._
County Clef'llof Or_,.. C-YOfl ~
'· "'1 temller t, "''. "'"* .. 1,.., ~ltNll Oflflft ~ ... ,, O.lly Piiot, Pullll""9d ~ ..... C..Jt Olillr l"lltlt
Oct. .. ta.10.ff. t•1 4J7M1 Oct.•. tt,10,'7, 1'91 ~I
722 7 572 377 SS 7
Oct J1 Ho¥.>. IO. 11, 1"'1 -..i eddr•n•• used toy tll• ll\teftded
• trenlf..-... wltHn !NM .,.." IHI ... SI
STATIMl!NTOl"A8ANDONMINT l"ICTITIOUS8USINISSNAMI The follow!"' _ _, llff •'*"'-d
.... UM of .... lletlllOIA buslneu ... ,,, •.
PAO AIR, 2822 W•lnut A...,ue.
Suite O, Tuo11n, C.ll!ot'nl• n.eo
Tiie Flctltlou' Bwslneu N•"'•
referred to •tlov• was flied In Or•-
County on ~ember IS. 1•1.
M ICHAEL J . LANGTON, H
Fellb..-, Irvine, C.lllO<"'"• '1714
This buollne11 .. es c:Oftdwcted by en
l ... IYI~.
MIChMI J . lenqto11
Tiits 119'ement ••I llled wltll tlle
Countv Ct-ot Or•nte CO\lftly on October 1', 1•t
tt17t1M PubllsNd 0r..,.. Goest Delly Piiot.
0<1. 20. %7. Nov. l. 10, t•t 4521-.tl
PtllUC MOTlCE
l"ICTTTICIUS .VSINHS
HAMii ITAT•M••T
Tll• IOllOWll\t per&on IS dotn9
buJ!nesaes:
8ALllOA EDITIONS, UOO EHt
Oc .. n 11..i., P.O. Bo• 111 •.. lboe, CA
'1661.
J . ROVC• Rld\er'd, UGO IE Oc-
81Yd., 1141-. CA"'" TlllS OuslMU II conclud.O Oy en
lndlvl-1.
J. Royce Aldlerd
Tiii& s1111...-•• filed wltll Ille
c-ty Oer1I ell Or .... c-, °"()cl
:n.1•1. ,,, ...
10 ler u known to Ill• Intended
tr .. •--:-. T Ile ,,,_ ellCI o...I,_' edld<ess of
, .. Int_ tr ......... r•:
GEOlllGE W. GUlllOltY, JR. -8AIENOA J . GUILLORY, H JI
C.,.pm.,. A-. Ger-. Gro ... c.. .,...,
Tllet .. pr-rty P9'11nelll llenllo 11
dff<rlll9d In ......... H : lalndry -dry c1-i,,. end 1, IOUlted el: H U
Newport ~•d, N-' llM<I\.
Cetlfornl•.
TM IMMIMH ....... UMd toy tlle Ukl
trMlmot -&eld locellon Is: SPIC
AHO Sl"AN LAUNDRY AHO DAY
CllAHIHG SERVICE.
T-ulclWll tr .. ~ ta~ to Ille co11111m,,..ted et tlle office of:
PR O FESSIO NA L ESCROW
SERVICES, 1'21 N. Twstln A-.
s.111.e AM, CMH«11141 '7701 on or ..,.,
Novem0...11,1.,. Tl\11 bulk 1r .. 1fer Is SVOje<t to
C.llfoml• Uniform Commerclel Code
S.CUon•I06.
The,..... --· f1f .. 119tt"" wit!\ WftOf'l'I ctelms mey tie filed la
PR OFESSIONAL ESCROW
SEAlllCl!S. Poll Office h 11 11517.
Sente AN, c.llfonlle m 11· 1 "7. A ttll:
l!acnw No.. llOPMF, -• 14111 dey lot 1111119 <lelnH ., 91\V CnMlller "'4111 be H onmo.r. 1ff1, wlllcll II ,,,.
bu&lrons d9y ..._. , .. conaummetlon
«tete s11«Hled -· Oeted Oc11o11er 21, t•1
~ W. Gvlllory, Jr llAftde J. Gvll lory
l~Tr.,..ter-
PvOll&Nct Or-GNS1'p.!ly PllOI
OCt. 11, "" 461'-at
PWlllNd ar..-CMst Delly Piiot, 1-------------
0d 21, ....... J. l0, 11.1... ~I
l"ICTITIOUS IUSINISS
NAMa STATUHNT
Tiie toll-Inv perlOfll ere doln9
OlltiMU et:
COAST MAil CALL, •n Atlente,
Huntl"9lon a..c11, CA t2M.
J•Mt Slettery, 1*2 S,,.r Clrc ... Hwntlnqtoft llM<ll, CA '2646.
Merlfll McGiii, lSSS MeM Verde Or. l!Ht Apt. ue. Col141 Meso, CA~.
Tiiis OVslnHI Is <Ondu<IH •Y e 9911erel~.
J..tSletter,
Tl\ls ~ •• flied "'"" 1'W C-ty Cie<tt of Or-County on Oct.
t ......
tl17Ul1
PwOllslwcl Or ... Coel1 Delly Piiot,
Oct. 6, U, 10, 11, t•t 4~1
lllCTITICIUS 8USINH1
NAM• ITATINNT
PVIUC' MOTlCE ........
ttlCTITIOUS 8USINHI NAMa ITAT•MaNT Tiie tol-11>11 ,.....,.., er·• doln9
O<nllnH••:
JACKtofl/ClAY Oil ORll.l.IHG
PaOGa""'-.a5 J.,,.._, 541"9 1.0,
Newport llMdt, CA. nMO
Je..-,...rc:o, <MU J•lft-oo,
s..tte , .. , """8rt 9oec:ll, CA. ttMO
""-" ...... •.6GJJlll'l'ltlor ... Suite 1.0, ~ lloocfl, CA. n.tO
l".i ~ c.w,or.u... 4CtS
., ........... Wiie 1.0. Newport llffcll.
CA,.,_
Tiiis llJWIMU II c--.<lff 0y • ""'" .............. . •.-.1 ... .-..-0
Tl\la ~ -flied whll tM ~y °"11 f/I Or.,,.. c:-.1'( ""()(\.
tt, ••1. ",,.. l"\ltlll .... Or-CMlt Oelt• "'-' OCt. 27, ,,...,. >. 10, 11, "'1 4 11·11
PllUC NOTICE
Tiie 1011-1119 persons ere dotn9 -------------«Mlal-sot:
l!NOLANOER Al"AltTMINT5, UtJ
l!llt1411d St., Hllfttl"t"'" 8oach, CA ....
Oovld 0 . M•<Lec tllen. 10111
lreecl•lew l"t., SeMo AM, CA nm.
Donald• H M0<locll1en, 101'1
8roedvi.wl't.,S-•Allo,CAttm.
Tl\lt •vslMU I• c•11d11<I•• O)'
llVIMndofld .....
~H.Mo<UClll.n
Tlllt ,.....,._, -filed wl" 1'W
c:-iY C*tl fll OP-. C--.. • °"-12, 1•11. ,.,,,.
"'*..._..or-. CM1t o.tty ..-.
Oc1 ••• "· ,,...,, ~ ... ''" ..,..,
The faa'-dnw In UM' ••t. ..• DUlJ PUot ClaN:ined Ac1. IOlf7l.
937 732 0
Forecaster joins board
Dr. Raymond Jallow, a lead-
ing authority oo monetuy and
economic forecasting, has joined
Santa Ana·based Marine Na·
tional Bank ·s advisory board.
Until recently, Jallow wus the
senior vice president and chief
economist or United California
Bank lnow Firs t Interstate
Bank> as we ll as the chief
economist of its holding com·
pany, Western BanCorporation
<now First Interstate BanCorp>. • Paul G. Schloemer was elevat·
ed to executive vice president,
Park e r H ann ifin Co rp
Schloemer. who lives in NewPort
Beach, was elected a corporate
vice president in 1978. He is also
president of the Parker Bertea
Aeros pa c e Gr oup , head ·
quartered in Irvine, and presi·
dent of the Aerospace Sector. • Anthony Rapoza has been ap·
pointed vice president and coun·
ty manager of the Orange
County office of Fidelity Na·
tional Insurance Co.'s Western
Title Insurance Co. operations.
Fidelity National purchased
Wes tern Title earlier this month.
• Lonnie R. Hoyle has been
elected president and general
manager of J .L. Wood Optical
Systems, Santa Ana. He will be
res ponsible for the operation
ON THE JOB
and growth of the company in
e lec tro·optical and related
fields.
* Ragan T. PhJlUps has been
promoted lo general manager or
the Western Division of Fluor
Power Services Inc.. a sub·
sidiary of Fluor Corp. • Douglas E. Patty, chairman of
the board of Heritage Bank, has
been elected to the board of
directors of B.E.S.T. Life As·
surance Co. in Newport Beach. • John Baird has been appointed
group leader ·new products in
the marketing department or
Irvine·based DYNA·DRILL, a
division of Smith International
Inc . • Thomas O. Morgan has been
named general manager, com·
mer cial/industrial products for
ITT Cannon Electric. Fountain
Valley. Morgan lives in Irvine. • Richard D. Eck has been
named vice president and con·
troller, and Joseph J. Manteneri
w as appointed director of
en gi neering for Costa Mesa·
based Stacoswitch Inc., a
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
manufacturer or lighted display
pushbutton 11witchea for military
and lndustriul applications. • Rohen M. Pat~rtoa has been
promoted to director or sales for
subdivision and commercial in·
dustrial accounts of the Orange
County Title Division of First
American Title Insurance Co.
Patterson, who lives in Newport
Beach, joined the company in
1977 as a district sales manager,
serving Newport Beach . • Wayne Artola has been ap·
pointed pres ident of the
Sunweavers Division of E .T.C.
Carpet Mills, Ltd, Santa Ana. • Victoria "Tori" Knight has
been na med corporate sales
manager at the Inn at the Park
in Anaheim. A member of the
Orange County Hotel Sales
Manage ment Association, the
Newport Chamber of Com ·
merce and Meeting Planners ln·
ternational, Ms. Knight resides
in Irvine.
* Karen MUls has been appoint·
ed product specialist, broadcast
and video products marketing
for Santa Ana·based EECO lnc.
Her primary responsibilities in·
volve market research and
analysis, new product planning
and sales and technical support.
N-C1'141rlot 9 Stdl.OOI< wt Sldl.og wn GdTecown StdlOVi< M41994l'1 F-enl 811.NY S
OatAnfl Mic,.. TelJltfl i IC.MS Ind "IOtrw pl Ll lnvs
FeO'NN ASlr -~=~lt~ N•-3:i':.... Postel ' arao. p1 loneP, Drew pl
DVW'W•
.a:\ + y, + 2 + tl4
+ -+ IY, • \lo
+ 214 + lllt + llt
+ 1
+ -+ .... + Jllo
+ -+ \lo + Ill.
• I • y,
IY, ,..,.
+ I
• 14 + ....
+ "
Lest Ole
J 1·" -1• JY, -.._ , .... -"" l" -y, 6 -I , .... -y, u _,_
1 -1 u .... -J 11 -Jiit
iy, -Siio '41
Siio -'41 .... -y, 1\11 -16 ~ -"' lN -114 JM. Ill •YI YI 214 Ill
1\lo "' JV. 14 4'41 y,
1 -NII 14
"' 14
P<l Up U.t Up 2'..1 u, n.• Up 10.0 Up 11.t
Up 17.l Up 11.l u. tt.J Up 11.t Up 1U Up 11..6
Up II.I Up II.I ~ 11.0 Up lCU ~ 10J) u. ... Up t.l
Up '·' Up 9.0
UP I.' Up Lt Up 1.1
Up 1.1 Up 1.•
PU.
Oft 21.4 Oft IO.O Off 11.2 Oft 11.0 Oft 14.l
Off IJ.l Oft 12.1 Ofl 11.$ °" 11.4 °" te.1 °" i..1 °" 10..6 °" ,... °" lt.S Ofl 19.S
fJ :l °" ..... Ofl ..... °" , ... °" .... Ofl ... °" •. 7 Off t.J °" u
• • '
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT I Tunday. October 27. 1981 s
NYE <~OMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS
OllOt A ll~t l"'(\.l#Oa T •AOI i ON TICI "I W 'tOlttt, MIOWI U 1 ,_.("IC ••c ....... .-o ••PO•UO av, ... llUOAllO IN"llllT •
.... aouo .. OIT•OIT A•D Cllll(IOlllATI UOC•
~,.. 101 ... 1.. Ntl ~1.. "'" 'Wte• N•I Mil.. H•I Pl"°' tlow ("' .-r l>eh CIO" C"t ,_ l "f• Clo~ (II@ I' I! llCli (to~ C!IO ,. l 114• Clow <.he 1., 1 ~ u ~ "!v.11 .n 1 ~ , ... "' Mc~'' it...,. ~ ~ i ~ . , , ! ~-
1r • 1 ... "-H ...... 1.. f. "' fi/lc. ti U • J; tli. .., !I ~ IM;~,·~ I ' ··1 J7 • _• ~ . "-11 .. I, ,J:_" ~=.1 'f : p; --~ = ... ,' I' 17 fl\ .... ~ EI" 1 .. !wi1<r> N•I llAlf. *f .t: ., dtl U V. "61111 \! I nt lo't 14 llNM I 5 tt 14 • 14 5 .· I ~ 1 ! ~ ff '.· ., 11,t ~I~
p ( llCI\ Cto .. C"9 :::o: \·I • !r. l~~ ~ tl:..':tf'AI d 111 "'· it..:::::: · :l 1t¥d11~-1~ t : It 1 IH • .,.
"' ' " J •:::= "' K• ,. • ms m;;:: .,. ai .., ' :5 §• " Melltll "'· • l! ~ " ~1 d:1 -..., ~· I ~ • "' ~o ' i.,~, ! ,;; A -; ~ c " '·,, ll~ ~~-!."' " t~ t ra I ... 1:. =~·~' .1 ra, m: .... ~ ~1·P.. • ii l'"· .... ~... .\• ;1! I ' ~1 • ~
' •• 2M J j "'"~ ~ ~r.1.· 1'~ 1J H,... ~ HOf'l' " -~ 1 .t :.-..:.: ~ Me ~1• ulo ' .1 t. ~ ... " t.!L Ji'" ~ "' .. o 'ti j ;;
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~ McDonald's
fires ad firm
McDooald 'a, which operates the bl1111t
restaurant bultneaa in the WOl'ld la bavlnf uother
tood year (I can't remember a ~d ooe> -ud IO
what did they do? They flred lbeir advertilinl
aaency.
Needham, Harper &r Stee1'1, the McDonald'•
aaency for the past 11 years, wa1 banded iu
terminatloo notice two weeks 110. Effective next
Jan. 12, the account. which la valued at f7$ mlllioo a
year, moves to the big Chicaao aaency, Leo Burnett.
McDonald'• 1ave Uttle reason for d!smiaalng the
agency that came up with some of the clualc
literature of our time : "You deserve a break today"
and "Nobody can do It like McOooald'a can." The
implication was, however, that McDonald's had
outgrown Needham and now wanted to be serviced
by one of adland's super agencies.
Not that the Needham aaency ia amall. It rants
20th in the business, handling such major client.a as
Xerox. Parkay margarine, Y·8 juice, Honda,
Wr igley 's ~ Spearmint ,.
gum, Dial soap \; e»
and Busch 11 ~'
beer. It's ~lso .... ~
the c t ea ti v e •--·~----------r oh c ! b:b~n~ lllTll 1a1•1n
''Eaties for
Wheaties" advertising. But McDonald's was its
biggest account -and so it hurts.
Burnett. the nation's fifth largest agency, is twice
as big as Needham -and while you may DOl know ~ts
name, you are surely familiar with its handiwork for
the likes of Allstate Insurance ("You're in good
bands"), Kellogg cereals, Green Giant <Burnett
virtually invented this character),.Kleenex, Nestle's
Taster's Choice, Marlboro cigarettes, United Airlines
Cthe "friendly skies"), Cheer detergent, RCA,
Revlon's Moon Drops and Dewar's White Label
Scotch.
So next year, when you see McDonald's break out
in a new song·and·dance routine on your tube, you'll
know it's coming from the Burnett shop. Agencies
pull out all the stops in their first campaign for a new
client.
This is not unfamiliar territory for Burnett. It
used to do the advertising for Kentucky Fried
Chicken. And even now it's doing the advertising for
Pillsbury's Steak & Ale restaurants, an account it
will surely have to drop because of the confiict with
McDonald's.
Indeed, Burnett's entire Pillsbury business may
be up for grabs. Burnett handles the advertising for
Pillsbury frostings and refrigerated dough products.
Green Giant is also part of Pillsbury. Those accounts
don't conflict with McDonald's but Pillsbury alao
,happens to operate the No. 2 fast·food chain, Burger
King.
Burnett has nothing to do with Burger King
advertising but many clients do not like their
agencies handling any part of the enemy. That's the
way the ad business works.
McDonald's is clearly the client you want to have
in the restaurant business. There are now 6,SOO
McDonald's restaurants in the world, and they ring
up a total of $6.S billlon a year or an average of $1
million per unit. Burger King bas 3,000 units which do
close to $2 billion a year. Kentucky Fried Chicken bas
more than 4,000 outlets in t.b~ United States but total
sales are less than Burier Kings'•·
McDonald's ta a phenomenon. In lbe put decllde
its sales have increased seven times. It's now doing
more than $1 billion of sales outside the United
States. It's going great guns this year with additions
to its hamburger-dominated menu : Chopped
Beefsteak sandwich, McChickea sandwich, Chicken
McNuggets. U those items are not in your area yet.
they will be soon.
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2
. . . .
-Orange~ .. , DAILY PILOT I Tuesday, October 2 • 1981
.,.._.,. .... v~-•• .... -v .... t:OOl8 NIWI OHAM.11'8~
TAIMUM HUNT
M•A•t•H
Alt9f a delay of live weeU,
llve MCI!• « mall llnally
1rr1ve ., the 40nth
I HAWAn AVE.a
llUllHUI AEPOltT G DQ(CAYETT
"Uberllllm" CW.It Fr
Rot>en Drinen, s..i Paut
T110nga1, Tom Wicker, l.F
Stone 1Plr1 2)
(I) caaNEWS
Q9N8CNEW8 CID n4E SECN:T OF
IOYNE CASTLE
Glenn Corbell •nd Kurl
Ruuelt 11ar in this tamUy
adventure, Ml In Ireland,
ot • youno American boy
and his tr1th friend w110
becO<M lnvOlvecl In an
"9k>l\1Q41 plot turrOUnd·
~ • defecting lcientts1
UMOVIE • * 1h "Seem• Llka Old
Times" 11980) Goldia
Hawn. Chevy Chua A
sott-helrted lawyer Is t0<n
t>e'-l her hopeless••·
husband-t urned· bank
robber 1nd her up1lgflt
P<_,t husband wno Is
running for Cahlorttla
attorney g-81. 'PG'
t:30 8 BULLSEYE
GJ WELCOME BACK,
KOTTEJI
Gabe It reminded ot n1s
all-loo-humble pc>111ion as
• teacher when his old
friend comae 10< 1 \lfSlt
8) KCET NEWSBEAT
~ 8U8INE8S REPORT
(!]) BANIEY MILL.El'
Barney otters companion
to a suicidal man and Wofo
meets e gay cop $' OAU.AGHEJt MAO AS
HEll
The un1><edlcllbte Gal·
l11gher returns with new
and ingenious devices.
outrageous soght gags and
speaks out against • hoal
or traditions, trends Ind
current avenlS.
7:00 tJ CBS NEWS D Nl!ICNEWS IJ HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fon-zle recalls his axperl·
ence as a geng leader to
convince Chach1 1hal It's
not so cool to be • rnem·
be< of a alrMI 11anq
0 YOO ASKED FOR rT
8) TH'E MUPPETS
Guest Roy Clerk 18 JOKEl"S WILD
fl) OVEA EASY
Guest. lyrtefa1 Sammy
Catm.o
Cl) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH tmJ ENTERTA.lNMENT
TONIGHT !B THE MUPPETS
Gues1. CarOI Channing
C°,MOVIE * * "Roadie (19801 MHI
Loaf. Kakl Hunter A. rock
music roedle lets nothlno
get In hos way In h•S pursuit
or the gort ot hil dreems
'PG'
THE SECRET OF
BOYN£ CASTLE
Glenn Corbell and Kurl
Ruaselt Sllr In this l1mlly
adventure. Mt in Ireland,
of a young American bOy
and hla trlth friend who
become lnvOlved In an
espionage plot surround-
ing • defactlng 1<:*11111
(Plf1 3)
@ MOVIE
WHICH WJTCH -Bugs Bunny pulls a
trick on Witch Hazel in the s pecial
"Bugs Bunny Howl-oween Special"
tonight at 8 on Channel 2.
1t * * "The E.lec:trlc Hor ...
man" 11g111 Robert Red·
lord. Jane Fonda. A Lu
vagat cowboy atMts as 12
mUtlon thoroughbted hor•
10 nve h.lm from hll
Hploillllv• owner•. 'PG'
ltlMOVIE
• * * 'h "Taking 011"
(1971) Buelc Hanry, Lynn
Cerlin When • teen-age
girl Nnl aw1y from homa,
her acuon cauNS her par·
ents to ,....,lluat• lhe llfa-
•lyle they've Miiied into
'R'
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
F .. tured a prolite of [)lcj(
Clark: • look at What hai>-
pens lo unclaimed l>Odiel.
an tnl-with Al GOid·
atein, loundar and publl•h·
., of "Screw," the contro-
versial slcln lrllde maga-
z.one
D (B FAMll Y FEUD IJ LAVl!ANE & SHIRLEY
& COMPAlolV
0 MATa.GAME
m M·A·s·H
Wnlle on IHve on TOkyo,
Hanry beCOmilS Infatuated
with • -• young th•no
fresh from lhe S1a1 ..
Cl) TIC TAC OOUGH
&j) MACHEIL I LEHRER
RE.PORT
Cl),NEW8
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
Grunion expert Nancy
Motten
ctll YOO ASKED~ rT
(SJ THE WACKY WORLD
OF JONATHAN WINTEA8
Guest; Debbie Reynold•
8:00 I) Cl) BUGS SUNNY'S
HOWl-OWEEN SPECIAL
Animated Bugs Bunny
ond Witch Hazel get Into
1n art-out competition 10
see who can be scarier on
Halloween (R)
O (BMO\llE * 1') "The 'Bredy Goris Get
Merrled" pg80) lwlaureen
McCormlCk. Eve Plumb
Marcia and Jan Brady
Claclde to gel married. IRI
9 MOVIE * * 'h "Cac>one" (1975)
Ban Gau1ra. Susan
Blakely Tha lnlamoua
mobster Al Capone r1sea
IO ~ II I gangland
czar
0 MOVIE * • * "A Lovely Way To
Ole" (1968) t<lrlc Oougl8$,
Sylva t<oselna A r1cn
yaung W1dOW hires a l>Ody·
guard to P<Olect her from
unknow'1 ass.allant1.
GJ P .M. MAOAZIHE
A man·a MWCh for the
draam girt he gllmc>Md
While in Phlladelph4a three
years ago: the maklno of
lhe WO<ld'S longest hOI
dog. Mlfll ShfiYer -
how the Krolt1 Pul>t>8ts
WO<'k; Ptula NellOl'I telll
how 10 teach kid• the value
Of I dolllt ., MOVIE
a * 'h "Blood Alley" ( 1g551
John Wayne. Leuran
Bacall. An Arnetlcan Met·
c;hant Marltte helps an
anllre village ot ChlneM
peaaanta ascape from pur·
aulng communists &:I C08M08
"Bl\MI For A Red Planel"
Or Carl Sag1n IOOks at the
\llkong Li nder In Death
\/alley and demonstrlles
lhe machln«y that haa
llfT1 piclUtM and mel•
aurementa lrom Mars back
10 Ell'th starting In 1g14
(RIO
Cl) NOVA
"Loeull War Without
End" Fiimed In Europe and
Africa. soma of man's ••t·
est attempts 10 rid hlmffll
01 the locull are ... mined
Q CH:MOVIE
* * * "Biii The Buller''
( 1975) Gene Hackman.
CandlGe Bergen A frontier
n-spaper sponsors 1
race aoa1n11 tome acrON
the Western badlands
'PG'
($)BIZARRE XI
Jann Byner shows you
thongs &lr&ngef tnan truth,
larger than Iii•. and zanier
than an)'lhlno you've ever
soon In ,,,_ encore Pf"·
en11llons from the Show·
time Btzarre Nt>rary 0 JVOY OAAlAND IN
COHCElrr
Judy sings aome or her
most popular songs
accompanoe<I by a lull
0<cllestra on this MnllllOn·
at one-woman lhow
8:30 tJ Cl) THE FAT ALBERT
HAUOWEEN SP£CIAL
Anlmlled The Coat>y l(lds
set out to scare the
weird" people m 111e
neighborhood (R) G Q]J LAVERNE ANO
SHIRLEY
Laverne and Shlftey look
back on 11Mhr high sct>ool
days o
GJ AU IN THE FAMILY
Archie sneaks oft to ntghl
schOOI on hopes ol com-
pleUng h11 high SClhool
educatlOn tSJ AT\.ANTA BIO LAFf'
Off
Biii Tush hosll lh•S hUmot•
ous ntglll or en1e11a1nmen1
H unknown comedians
era fudged tor their comic
tal911ts
1:36 (t) MOVIE * * * 'h "The E•mnQS 01
Mad ame 0•" Char1e1
Boye<. Daniella Darrleux A
flci(te woman has deep
regard for a tignlltcant pelt
olearnngs
t:oO 8 (I) MOVIE * • ·~ "Sunburn" ( 197g)
Farrah Fawceu. Charles
Grodin A Merel agen1
1nvolvee • beeu11ful '*Ornln
In • danoe<oua und«cover
ope<etoon In aunny Acaput.
co 0 9 THA&'8
COMPANY
Tarry rnbtlkenly usurnea
th•• J9" la romanclno the
wire of Janel'• t>oaa. O
CHANNEL LISTINGS ·=~ "Bath Wllllf'I" Areh9eolo-
gle11. ~·and geolo-
gla1a ncavate the ~I
springs spa In Bath, Eng·
land to learn •bout the
Romans who bullt the
bath• 2.000 yeers ago 0 Cl> 008M08
fJ KNXT ICBS)
8 KNBC (NBCI
0 KTLA ltnd I
G) KABC IABCI
Q l(FMB IC8Sl
0 KHJ-T\I (ind I
G!> KCST IABCI
G) I( TTV \Ind )
Cl) t<COP·TV (Ind.I
fJll KCET t PBSJ
Gil l(QCE IPBSJ
0 On T\I
l Z T\I
H HBO
C IC1nemax>
j (WORI NY , N.Y
1l lWTBSt
f tESPN)
s !Showt•me>
• 5'>otlighl
G !Cable News Network)
"B~ For A Red Planet"
Or Carl Sagan looks at the
\liking Lander In Death
\/alley and demonatrat ..
lh• mtchlnery lhat hel
sent plc1urea and ,,_.
suramenrs from Man back
to E&flh •tarting In 1978
(CJ ~
• • "king lolo1t1on'1
Mlnee" ( 1tto) o.ootltl
K.,t, 81-1 Ot~ A _,en for Kl"Q tolomon'1
dll mond ml,,_ tlllc.. I.II
dMC> 11'110 ,,... ~ end
llOk>rll;I A"~~ (Q)MCMI * * * "The f1>109Mtl1"
11070) L.. AMllCll. Liu
CkMor11. A ...,thy lo6-
IOl'I flMlty ptepet91 to .,._
OOIM lwO 11Wtln{I OOUllnl
~ ... KIUllfty ..... 11'\Q I
•IY to CIU/'I 11'1 on the
elan'1 tonune .MCMI * * * 11' "I L°" You, AllOt 8. TottlM" ltN8) ,_..,
St!lttl . Leigh TeylOr·
'f oung. A l'ft!Od~tcl*d Le»
Angelel ·~ ..._ hll bflcM..IO-bl 1trllflded al
IN lllw end ~ I
freewhMll"Q hlppi..
MO. aJ TOO Cl.OM"°"
~
HentY• ..... IPlflted ,.,,_
AprW mov.. In With N Md
Muriel.
ll)MOVll * * •.,.. "Supermatt"
I 1g11) Clwlltopher Reeve,
Margot Kidder Miid·
mannered repon9f Clerk
Kent don• hie rid cape
and -hit aupemyman
powett 10 ll'l•art "' well
Cflmlnll'I plol 10 deetroy
the W•t Cout ...nh a
~nl 11rtllqu1k1. 'PG'
10:00U 8 MAMIAGE18
AUVE AHO W£LL
A free-la,_ p11<>1ogr1·
ptlet'. llNligl\IMnll pro-
vide him with 1 c!OM-up
view of Ille lnatllullon of
merrlage (R) GDe'9 NEWS G IIDl HART TO HART
Jonathan Her1·1 IO<>tl .. llka
and his magician btothef
plot 10 murder Jonathan
• PAEWm
10:16 (ffi STANDINO AOOM
ONLY
"The Lall Great Vaudeville
Show" FNIUred are Don·
aid O'Connor. O.bole Rey·
n01d1. Charlie Clllu and
Marilyn M ichaels u
George M COilen. Sophie
Tuci<er, George Jessel 1nO
Fanny 6t1C4I In this •l•·
atudded r...crHllon of one
ol America's lavorlle
entert8lnmen1 lorms -the
vaudeville revue
10-.20 Ct) C1NEMA8COAE
1cuom NEWS
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
&i) 'ABT FOAWAAO
"tmpflcatlons" The
ldvenoas In computer•
and communiCallona tech·
nology In today'• society
1r1ei..emtned
Cl) OOYSIEY
"Balh W1ler1" Arcnaec>10-
g1s11. engln-• and geolo-
gl1t1 excavlte lhe hol
1prlngs IP• In B•lh, Eno·
land to leatn about lhe
Romans whO 1>\.1111 the
baths 2.000 years ago O
10:3& (Q) TAUCKING (TIME
APPAOXIMA TE)
(Z)MOVlE • * 'Stone Cold o..d"
(1979) Paul wm1am1, Rich·
ard Crllfln• A cop and 1
wm•fl·tlme crime boss join
l0<ces to I ind I he men
responslole IO< a -IM Of
• prost11u1a kitting• 'R'
11:0011 D • CIJ9 at
NEWS 9 8ATUN)AV NIGHT
Hoat Honnen LMt. ~t
Boz&:agg1 8 PAULHOOAN GI THE JUF£R80H8
Cl) 9ENNY HIU
Benny'• ve<alon or "The
Dark Number Flalhe<"
gives him the biggest Ilg
tealof atl. f.D DC< CAVETT
"Uberallsm" Gue111: Fr
Rot>en Orlnan. Sen PllUI
Ttongu. Tom Wicker. IF
Srone. (Plf1 2)
(C)MOVIE * * * "Siapshol" 11gn)
Paul Newman. Michael
Ontkelft. Afl9f 1 minor
league nockey team
d«ldM to 1Pruce up lta
Image by playtng dirty, It
end• up making hockey
htatory. 'R'
(O)MOVIE * "Hot Lege" ( 1980) Bar·
bar• Biiia. Jeni• St
J am••· An ambltloua
advertising axecutlve
lloC>I at nothing to land a
lucrative ladies' hoalery
ac<:oUnt.
OMOVIE * *'A "A Sm .. I Clrda Of
Frlend1" 1 l g80) Bred Dav·
11. Karllfl Allen. In the
1 llflOI, the frlendlhip and
~ of thfea Harvard
t1udenl1 11 threatened
When one ol them la dr•fl·
eel to -•n Vietnam. 'R'
11:30 8 (I) ALICE
Flo hU hopn for • recon-
Clllatlon with '* ••-hus-
---··· --
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS e 8:00 -"Bugs Bunny's
How·oween Special." Th~ anlmated
rabbit vies with Witch Hazel In a scary
competition.
KHJ G 8:00 -"A Lovely Way to
Die." Klrk Douglas and Sylvia Koscina
star in a detective suspense movie.
KCOP at 8:00 -"Blood Alley ...
J ohn Wayne and Lau.rep Bucall escape
Communists by fleeing down river to
Hong Kong.
KCET D 8:00 and KOCE ft 9:00
··cos mos; Blues for a Red Planet." Or.
Sagan demonstrates the machinery
sending information back from Mars.
band.(A)
G 8 TOHIGHT
Hoit: Johnny Caraon
Gueata Tony RandaU, Jim
Stattord
8 Q') A8C NEWS
NIGKTUHE G IDT°' OAOUCHO m THE 000 COUPLE
Otcar 1eetn1 lhet Fella'•
ttew glntrlend ta not juat
the llbtarl&n hi thinks the
Is.
., OH! STEP MYONO
"Annlvet911y Of A Mur·
de<" A man and woman
are plagued by lhelr con-
aclenoe over 1 fa111 auto-
mobile acclcMnt.
• KCET NEWMfAT 69 CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS
CH)MOVIE
• • *°"' "The Paralln
..,_ .. ( 197•) Wwtan e.a1-
1y P1ula Prentiss. An
1nve1tiga11ve raporter
attempts to uncover a
nallonwtda networle ol
polllleat .-e1n1
-~MDIGHT-
12:00 8 MOVIE
*a ''Seven Tl..-Seven'
(1973) Terry-ThomH.
Lionel Stander Seven con-
vtell eacape from prison 10
pull oft a apectacular helll
11 the Royal Mini G ({I FANTASY 18lANO
A woman doctor who dia-
tru111 men II tranaformecl
1n10 In exotic beauty, ind
• proleuor finds Iha
Greek goodels ot tove. tRI 8 MOVIE * * "Nlghl 01 Derk Shed·
owa" ( 197 f) David Selby.
Lat• Parker Alter • young
painter and h<a wife move
Into a family ffllta. he
begin• havino nightmares
and behaving llrtngely m Ml<E DOUGLAS
Coholt Gabe Kaplan
Guesll Woody Harman.
Nell Carter. Jim and JO<lle
King
Cl) AOOKIES
&> EXPl.OfUNO
LANGUAGE: THINKIHO,
WAITINO,
OOMMUHICATING
(J )MOVIE * *''\ "Fade To Btlclt"
11080) Oennta Chrlslop'-.
Linda Kerrl<IOI. A dll-
tufbed young mo\118 tan
reac1• to rom1r11ic retec-
Uon by c:ommil11ng mu<.
der-a in the gulM Ind style
of Ills tavorttt tctwn vii·
laln1. 'R'
t2:06 f) (I) MCCl.OUO
A nightclub singer tries to
frame Chief CHlt0<d 10<
murder IRI
t2: 16 (%) MOVIE. * ·~ "Running" (197g)
Michael Oouglu. Susan
Anapad\. Having failed al
nearty everything In his tile.
• 3•·ya&r-Old divorced
men cMc:ldft to try out as •
mer1thon« '°' the US qtyntp1c T _.,, 'PG'
,2:30 D at TOMOMOW
Guella: Congreaaman
JOhn Lebout~ller (R·N Y.);
author Alexander Solzhen.
lt'Yfl, R41• Reed; lAn•
Home.
• OOHTEMPOAARY
HEAL TH l88UE8
"Alcoholism"
1:00• MOVIE * *"" "Law And Order' ( 1g76) Darren McGav1n,
Suz111ne Pleahelle BUl<I
on the novel by Dorothy
Uhnek ThrM o-atlons
Of att lrlaf\ famlly In N-
YOrlt City pur-• la•
enr0<cemen1 u a car-
., INDEPENDENT
NETWOAK NEWS
(C)MOWE * * "Roadie" ( 1g80) Meal
Loaf, Kalcl Hunt9f A roek
musk: roadie lell nothing
git In hit way In hla puraull
Of the girt of Illa dreams
'PO'
OMOVIE
• •·~ "It's My Turn"
11geo) Jiii Ctayburgh,
Mlci\HI Oouglea A btll-
llanl Chleago math P<of-
IO< rNllzes lhe p.oblerns
In hef lr11e-1n ralellonshop
when Ille finds a new tova
whlla in New Y0<k tor ,,.,
lathef'I remwroage 'R'
1:100 MOVIE * • "The Fam1n111 And
The Fuzz" (1g101 David
Hartman. S.rbara Ed911 A
woman's llbt>er and 1
polleem1n are forced to
sl'lara an apartment
@)NEWS
1: 16 CID MOVIE * * • "T1ma1 Square"
11980) Robin JOhnaon, Tri·
nt Alv1rado. Two unatabte
taen-age glrla become
rock 'n' rOll bag ladles In
the heart 01 New V0<k Coty
R'
1:30 Cl) MOVIE * • • "Wlr And Peace"
( 1956) Audrey Hepburn,
Henry Fonda Bueo on
the novel by Leo Tolstoy
The IJVft Of lhrM ,.,,,,,_
are greatly 1ftectld by the
N1poleonlc wars
2.-00 D EHTEAT AINtffNT
TC>NtOHT D MOVIE
a a "Red Llghr'' ( 19•9)
George Rall, Vlrgtnta
Meyo An ea-con lmprtS·
oned wilho<Jt gut11 hnos
love while seeking
revenge
QI NEW8
($)MOVIE
• • "Snake Fill \la The
Oregon" A deadly battle 11
fought by two lerocoous
martlll art• warri0<a 'R'
(l)MOVIE • * *..., "Tlklng Off"
p971) &ICtc Han<y, Lynn
Carlin When a 1-.-aoe
gir1 rune awey lrom home.
her acllon cauMtl her par·
enta to r......,aluate the t1le-
1tyle they've settled Into
'R'
2:168 NEWS
2:30·=
* * a 'h "Prtvata Ben11-
mon" ( 1980) Goldie Hewn.
Eiieen Brennert. A weH-to-
do young woman mlstak·
enly join• lhe Army 1o11ow.
Ing the dNth of !\« MW
husband on tl'Jlir wedding
~hi 'R'
2:.08 NEWS 2-M ~MOVIE * * "The Rip-Off" ( 197g)
Edward Albert. Karen
Blacll A gang of jewel
thlevee doul>le.cron one
JOHN DARLING
lnOI,,., over M 000.000 111
dlatnoMa 'R a:t0 e MOY11 • *°" "One Touch 01
Venue' t 1960) Ave
GerdMt. Robet'I Wdlw A
"'lndOw ltlmmer ••
IUfprtled wnen lhe 11atue
01 \lanu1 beglna talking to
l'ltm.
WO (l)~ntON
A Comedian l'IOlt and IOUt
comte c:ont .. tanl1 who
compata agalnat one
lnOther .,. IHturld In lhll
uncl4Hl10<ed corneoy glll'M
allow
i:S&(ZlMOVIE • • * ''t "The Elrr1ng1 01
Madame De" Chari••
Boye<, Oattlelle O.rrHluic A
llc:llle woman h•• <IMP
regerd 10< a algnlllUtlt pair
Oltarr1nga
S:48 C8 MOVIE * • "The LH \legu Sto-
ry" ( tll52) \ltctor Marure.
J-Ru .... I A wom1r1·1
Old llarne a1temp1110 c:INt
hef f\uaband of murd.,
charges
1:60 • M0\11£ * * F B I Glrl' 11952)
Audrey Touar, Georg•
Brent When the ayndocate
trlet to ••l>Off the g°"9f·
not'• crlmlnal put. a pret·
ly girl II set up as a decoy
to gat~ ev>dence on thelr
plot
4:00 (J) BEST HOASE
A young girt 11 wllbng 10
defy her molhel to p.ove
thal her hOtM •• lhe belt on
11\e w ...
4:30 (CJ MOVIE
* • * ·~ "On The Town'
( 1g501 G-Kelly, Frank
S1natr1 A lrio of sait0<s
lum up with a 1ax1 driver
and an antf\ropologoll to
llnd • beaullrul girt whose
plctura 11 displayed In the
SUbwly
r SJ REACHIHO OUT
A f\andlc.apped youngste<
reluaes to 1e1 hlS physical
dlublllloes srand In lhe
way of h11 dreams
0MOVIE
* •,. ''Cheaper To Keep
Her'' ( 1980) MIC Davrs.
Tovah Feldshuh tn O<der
to meet hlS alimony P•Y·
menll. a recentty d1v0<cec1
pnvate oe1ec1111e tracks
down dellnquen1 huaband.s
tor a divorce lawy., 'R
Wednesday••
Oayf inee Mot,ie•
~MORNWG-
~30 Cl) * * "Bowery Boys
Meel Monstars" (195•1
Bowery Boys. Ellen Corby
C * * "Big Wednesday
I 1978) Jan-Mochaet \11n-
cen1. William Katt ThrM
Calotornla boys enjoy the
surf 1nd sand unlll 11\ey
bagon to realize lhal
lhere·s mo<e 10 ltle lhar>
wexong down !heir b0ard1
PG'
0 • * ,.., "Toby And The
Koala Bear" (1981) Roll
Hams Love acuon and an1-
mat1<>n combine to tell 1"41
tale ol a young boy and nos
pe1 koala 1n Austraha's
lronller days G'
10:00 S * • • "Coat Miner's
Daughter' (1910) Sissy
Spacek, Tommy lee
Jones. BBN<I on L0<a11a
Lynn't llUIOblOQraphy. A
youno girt rrom a poor
temlly on Nr at Kentucky
marr1e1 a much Older local
boy who englnears her rise
to stardom In the music
lndullry 'PG
10-.30 Cl) *ft "WHI 01 The
Divide • ( 1933) John
Wayne. Gabby Hayes. A
cowboy sets out lo avet19e
hit lather's murder and
find n1s brother wno has
~ mlsstng 10< many
yura
t 1:00 0 * • .,., "Watu1r· ( 1959)
Geor-ge Montgomer)', Tao.
na Elg An expedition IS
I~ through rhe )On-
gle1 of Africa 10 locate a
legendary mine repyled 10
be wor1h a king's rattaom 0 **'""The Picture
Show Man" ( 1g7g) Rod
Tay!Of. Jdln Mail1on tn the
1g20a. when travemng tent
a-llt~t meg'O i.,..
ltttl tllOwt 10 lhe Im
townl of a Am«IG9, In eoeo .,._.,, GOmPll*
wto\ • lllllt\Y, c:onl!Mng
comoettlor 'PO'
11:10(CJ ··~· .. ~·~ 0tiM" I tteOI WOOtl'y ~
Cf\ellolll ~no A~·
Clltfvl dlrtefOr llOM a
per.onll erllla • he tflM
to ~· -rnaior deet-llOna in hll ~le 'PG'
12:00 G) * * ~ ' The KM!« Wl\O
WC>Yldtt'I 0141" ( 101f) Mike
Conttora, Sam61'1tha !oger
Tne ...,en tor ,,,. •111« o1
.,. under-agent luda
Ohanian Into a n.twork of
1n1ngue whkm alrnoat cotl1
him hi• Ula. • * * ''°' "Tl'll Heppy
Tf\leVet" 11Ha1 Rex Herrl·
.on. Rita Haywo<th A wily
art thlel cona • couple Into
aiaallng a preclou1 Goya
pa1n11ng trom a Spanltlh
mu_,m
'2J * * * ' Tile Jerk
I 1g79) St-Maron. e.t-
nad•tta Patera A c:hronlo
tertw-up makff mllllOna
on 1 weird invention only
to ION II all '" con ........
damage aun1 R'
1:00 IC)*•* "The Big Rid
One" ( 1080) Lea Marvin,
Mark Hamill. A tough Army
se<gunl leads lour young.
1ntl)(perienced r8Cl\i11S Into
the vlolenc.lilled fray of
World War II combat 'PG'
• S • * * "The Tender
Trap·· (1955) Oebble Rey·
notds Frank Sinatra A
soph1at1ca1ed blcf\ator
down on marroage mee11 a
girt wl'IO lreps him
1:35 Z * a *'•"Taking 0 11"
(1971) Buck Hanry, Lynn
Carton When • laen-age
girt runs away from home
her ac tion c:auMS her par.
enls 10 r-valulll lhe tore-
styla they've Miiied onto
'R ' 2:30 0 a• "Zero To SUiiy"
• Darren McGavln Denise
Ntekersoo A mlddta-aged
divorced man needing
money IOI' alimony pay.
ments is laced with repos-
ses~ng a Mafia car con·
1a1n1ng a da.d l>Ody as
par1 01 hos ,_ partne<sl\1p
wolh a 16-year-OIO gort
'PG
3:00 'Cl •* The Man Wl'lo
Loved Bears" Narraled by
Htltlry Fonda A 1rue lo kle
story o f a na1urllls.1's
adoption and training of a
griuty bear cub tor survlv·
al 1n the woldernesa ·o·
3:30 0 * * * "Scared Stoll"
( 1953) Dean Marton Jeuy
Lew•• A bus boy and • 1 singar lleeong lrom 11 mur· j
der rap lake sheller on a '
gh<>Slly island wl'l8re 11\ey
encountet a wealthy young
"'°"'an wrlh prot>lems
1Z * * * 1Y "My Body·
guard ( 1979) Cnrts
Mal<.epeac:e AO am
Baldwin The new kid at a
C hicago high school
makes troends with rhe '
school outcast and l<>gel h· '
er 1ney sland up 10 11\e cru-1
el gang wh.c:h nao l>ef· •
secuted them both
4:001C * * * 'Ohver rwrSI"
t 1975) Animated Based on
the story by Charles O.Ck·
ens Oliver and hJS crlCkel
tnend Squeaker outrun J
Mr Bumble. Fagin, Tha
Atllul Oooge< and IYll Bill
Sykes G
4:30 0 • * * The Hound 01
The Baskervllles" 11978)
Pal er Cook Dudley
Moore Master sleuth
Slw!rtocr.. HOimes onvesll·
gatea m)"terlous g0tOQS--
on et Basllervolle Hall and
begins 10 suspect every-
one. onc:ludong himself
PG
6:15 (Z * • * • .. 'Taking Orr
(1971) Buck Henry. Lynn
Carlon When a teen-age II"' runs ••ay rrorn hOme.
he< action cau-her par-
ents to re-evaluare lhe hfe-
styte rhey've Miiied onto
'R'
5:20 II WORLD SERIES L
Dodgen VA. VallkH • In
H-Vot'll In MWM11 -declalve oef'Wlf-.,.
by Armstrong & Batluk
,----:--~------""" Wa..L, "I'VE: &UT· 'I.''\JE DECIDED '10 'WAIT UNl tL 1 C::,RA.DUA"'TE F~
MIGH SCHOOL!
CONSIDERED !URNING PRO ...
Krofft puppeteers modernize ancient craft
By STEPHEN FOX A~ ...........
HOLLYWOOD -"I'm proud of the puppet.a.
People ask me what I do for a Uving and I say, 'I
play with dolls,'" saya Marty Krofft, president or
Sid le Marty Krofft Productiona, Inc.
Krofft and bis brother are flfth-geneJ"atlon
puppeteers whose ·great-great grandfather flnt
began staging abows in Atheu ln the late 1700a.
And although theirs is an ancient art, Krofft says
it's ideal for the '80s.
"Now is a perfect time for puppe~L-~ the
43-year-old Krofft said in an interview. "wnat I
see happening is that people are into examinin1
themselves more, and you can be totally honest
with puppets because they're not a threat. A
puppet can say anything."
Krofft, whose company originated
country-and-western puppets Truck Sbacldey and
the Texas Critters for the weekly "Barbara
Mandrell and the Mand.rell Sisters" television
show, (Saturdays al 8 p.m. on Channel 2), la
expanding his horizons with a TV special featurin1
evangelist Oral Roberts and a froup of puppeta
called The Fudge FamUy. ALso upcomln• ts a
'9 to 5' seeks office help for script
llJ ALAN L. ADU:&
•11 1._. ......
CLEVELAND -A Hollywood production crew
preparing a television series based on the htt
movie 09-~5" bu been lootina for ideas from
aome ol the aame people who helped in1plre the
film -office worken ln Cleveland.
Actress Jaae Fonda and producer Bruce
Gilbert came to Cleveland lo talk to aome ol the
clty'• downlon 1ecret.ar1es before proceed.lnc .n~ die eomed:J ftlm, which •tarred Mlae Fcmda,
lin1er Dolly Parton and comedian Lily Tomlin u
aeentmiel wbo turned th• tabl11 oe a lfJCbe1"0U11 t1RD*Albcm. A local ~ wt.leb helped lD tbe ,...arch for
U.. ftlm -~ WOllMll Worklu -b.al beea ..... u.. u.. ........ oa Pl'OdHtfoo Cl'9W ••
observing office situations and find.inc wort.rs
wttb stories to tell.
"They set up a tremendous number of
situations and lnterviewa for ua," -.ya co-producer
Michael Buer.
Baser, an experienced TV writer wbo'I
worked on such hit 1bow1 u '"l'bNe'• Compaay,''
"One D-.y at• Time" and ''Tbe JlfttrlCIDI," ...
the new venture u aomethllat atilt to .. ll·A.S.B."
one of televllioa'1 ma.tau~ Hrl•.
He 1111 that wbll• lbe MW.Del ol th• two
sbbw1 .. dlfferent. th• m--ce Ult fonnat an
qult.e alike.
'''l'be oftlce wortler ill America la up .. almt I
lot of oddl, much like lbe ...... J.D Kar.a WU, H
UylhMr.
Broadway· puppet show appropriately titled
"Broadway Babies."
Although the brothers (Sid is 54) have renewed
their puppeteering efforts in recent years, they
moved away from the family tradition about a
dozen years ago -with less than satisfying
results.
"It bad gotten too euy. We were the best. It
became mechanical. We \hOueht. 'We're 1otng lo
die with these damn puppet.I.' We wanted to do
wUd and exotic thinga -movies and theme parks
and so on," said Krofft.
"I iueas it WU the Muppet.I' I UCCetll that
made me mad we bad 1otten out of it. When the
Muppet.I got bi1, we sot back in," be aatd. "The
puppet.a never totally went away, but I always felt
I was quallfled to do othe.r tblnc•· We perceived
ourselves u being able to do any kind ol abow that
we could understand." The Krolfta did do other thinp-tbe Mandrell
show "l>omly and Marie'' and tbe feature tum
''Middle Ai• ~ra~y,•• amoo.i otben. But tbe
b:rotben, wllo ttanea in lhow buliMM • ,ears qo u an openlq act for performers 1ucb .. Jud.J
Garland and Prank Sinatra, ~ 8'.palled a ""1\d.led commlt.tnnt to UMAr rooU ~ dcmatlq
ta00,000 to Mt up a pupp« ldlool la Saa Valley •
Tbe Kroftb wanc..d to prolDCM lbelr art, but tM
move wan't mttnly altrubtle.
"'lben'I ....... IDI ID \be Q1 of tnialllC far
profellklnal ~ ID &Jala eomtrJ." ·1811
Krofft. "Tbe _ . wW pirO'ftde lllM. ud Gl
eoune, n -die bMt. •r ltrunt; miiTW te ,_. ~ ,..,._
Dally Pilat
TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1981
CLASSI Fl ED C4
Rain didn't hamper
the Steelers
in. Pittsburgh. C3 .
Uni's Mr. Jnspiration
V. agenas gives Trojans' defense, an, added insight
By EDZINTEL
6' .. o.Ny ...... ''""" There's no special place on the sidelines
for Stacy Vagenas. That's because Stacy
Vagenas is not special -in his own view,
anyway.
Vagenas goes where he pleases, that is,
where his wheelchair takes him. He has a
unique vantage point. especially for a coach,
the guy we normally see at a football game,
pacing back and forth, to and fro, screaming
and yelling in every direction.
BUT IT'S FROM this position, the sitting
position. where Vagenas "leaches." as he
calls it for University High's varsity football
team.
His official title is defensive line coach,
but Vagenas would easily qualify as head
coach of inspiration as well.
But don't applaud Vagenas. Not to his
face. He does not seek sympathy or the credit
he so richly deserves. In fact, the 32-year-old
Vagenas attempts to downplay his brave
achievements.
"There are times I feel like I'm not
giving the kids as much as I could , whether
it's because I'm in a wheelchair or not," he
says. "I guess I don 't feel that I'm special
and certainly the kids do nothing to prove
otherwise.''
And certainly Vagenas does nothing to
show he's worthy of special treatment.
before the accident, when he was a
three-sport. letterman and had a dream of
being lhe "greatest football player who ever
lived."
"DEPRESSION COMES into everyday
life, no matter who you are," Vagenas says.
·'Sometimes I go from one extreme to the
other. I think about my situation a lot. What
if the accident hadn't happened? Maybe I
could have been the greatest who ever lived.
Or maybe I'd be stuck in an office. working
8-5, with the same visions of grandeur I have
now.''
It comes down to this : Vagenas has
remained himself, even with death sharing
the same room with him during that tragic
time in his life, 14 years ago.
It was in March of his senior year when
Vagenas, his girlfriend and another young
couple decided to go out for a weekend drive
and picnic.
H was a beautiful spring day in Bayonne,
New Jersey, the kind that makes you reel
glad you're alive, young and healthy.
The four were in a small car. the type
you got handed down from dear old dad as
your very first and the one that would get you
around during all your college days.
BUT THE CAR never made it past high
school and for a long while, it appeared that
Vagenas wouldn't either.
_.., ~,..... ~ aiu.,,. ....._
Stacy Vagenas sees and gives viewpoints from another angle to UnaverS1ty High players
Vagenas h as been confined to a
wheelchair for nearly half his life now. Yet
he still talks about his high school days
A large family car was the force that
pushed the car Vagenas was in across a
<See VAGENAS, Page CZ)
t's the bloodied patriot vs. baseball's buggers
f tay tuned tonight for the next exciting chapter in this year's Fall Classic soap opera between NY. and LA
I NEW YORK (AP) -Looking like a bloodied the Yankees had dropped three straight games in Cey in their starting lineup. Cey suffered a slight mo ve within on e v i c t or y of the w or 1 <I
1but unbowed patriot right out of a Revolutionary California to slip perilously near the brink of concussion when he was hit in the helmet by one of championship.
1War portrait, owner George Steinbrenner leads the elimination. Goose Gossage's 94-mile per hour fastballs in the To nail it down. the Dodgers must break a
'
New York Yankees into tonight's sixth gatne of the When two men got into a heated debate with eighth inning Sunday. He was X-rayed and stayed six-game losing streak in Yankee Stadium. Los
1981 World Series against the Los Angeles Steinbrehner following Sunday's 2-1 loss. one thing in Los Angeles overnight before nying to New Angeles has not won a game in New York since the
Dodgers. led to another and the Yankee owner emerged with York Monday to join his teammates. second game of the 1977 World Series. Hooton was
Will Team Turmoil rally around its bat~ered Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda said he the winning pitcher in that one and the D~gers
and b~dag~ boss,. who says be .,was ln1ured On TV tonight would use Cey as long as the third baseman had 00 hope he can repeat that tonight. If be can, it will
defending. the1r honor in a hotel braw!. . channels 7, 11 af5:20 dizziness or aftereffects oft.he beaning. complete a perfect turnaround ~rom the 1978 series Or will the Dodge rs , baseball s huggingest when Los Angeles won the first two games at
earn, nail down their first world championship in a cast on his hand. It's a good thing be wasn't Hooton and John were the starters in Game home only to lose the next three in New York and
16 years? scheduled to be an the Lineup tonight. He'd have Two of the Series won by the Yankees 3--0. Hooton Game Six and the Series in Los Angeles.
Stay tuned for the next exciting chapter in this trouble holding a bat. bas not worked since and will have five days of "I tell everybody I don't think back to the last
hrilling soap opera. It arrives tonight with But outfielder J erry Mumphrey, benched for rest for tonight's assignment. John volunteered to Series we played in," be said. "But the same lhinl
ommy John trying to keep the Yankees alive the fourth and fifth games after getting just two go to the Yankee bullpen Saturday and pitched two happened in '78. We won the first two and the
gainst the Dodgers' Burt Hooton. hits in 10 at-bats earlier, will get that chance. innings in an 8·7 Dodger victory that deadlocked Yankees won the next four. We'll have our work
Steinbrenner promises that his team will Yankee Manager Bob Lemon was expected to the Series at 2-2. cut out Tuesday."
ebound in a topsy turvy World Series that has had restore Mumphrey to the lineup and return him to Los Angeles t h en used cons ecutive While the Dodgers battled their Yankee
little bit of everything so far center field seventh·inning home runs by Pedro Guerrero and St ad ium hex. the Yankees had World Series
"We'll win it in New York," he stormed after The Dodgers hoped to have third baseman Ron Steve Yeager to beat Ron Guidry Sunday a~~ history working against them.
Marathon
• winner
• 1n protest
NEW YORK (AP) -Alberto
Salazar, world record holder in
the marathon , in an
uncharacter istic display, has
vented his anger on The Athletic
Congress. the governing body
for track and field in the United
States.
"I would rathe r get prize
money directly under·the-table
than accepting it over-the-table
and having to put it in a trust
fund with TAC." Salazar said
Monday, one day after setting
the world mark with a time of 2
l~ours, 8 minutes, 13 seconds in
t he New York City Marathon.
B y taking it under -
t h e-tab l e -a long -
standing practice that has been
publicly ignored by TAC and the
IntPrnational Amateur Athletic
Federation, the world governing
body for the sport -athletes do
ol have to put the money in
scrow or a trust fund, as some
f those openly accepting prize
oney have done.
A prime example was New
ealander Allison Roe. women's
inner of Sunday's New York
lty Marathon in 2:25 :29, a
orld mark for women. She had
eceived $4,000 for finishing
econd in the Cascade Run·Off
t Portland, Ore. June 28. The
5-kilometer road race was
oder the auspices of the
ssociatlon for Road Racing
thletes, a rebel professional
roup.
Roe was suspended, meaning
1he was ineligible to participate
in international competition or
the Olympic Games. But sbe
then agreed to put the $4,000 into
trust fund supervised by the
New Zealand Federation, and
her amateur eligibility was
restored.
e Meanwhile . two .other
'ong-distance runners, Herb
~ndsay ol the United States and
od Dixon, a naUve New
&lander now Uvtn1 lD the U.S.,
ve agreed to put lheir prize
<8ee MARATHON; Pa1e CZ>
'-I
..........
Russell knows how
Lopes must feel
NEW YORK (AP ) -H
anybody could sympathize with
what Davey Lopes went through
the other day, it would be Bill
Russell, who knows what it's
1 like to have fielding problems in
a World Series.
Lopes tied a Series record in
Game 5 on S unday by
committing three errors. But the
Los Angeles Dodgers overcame
his miscues to nip the New York
Yankees 2-1 in the best-of-seven
Series.
Back in 1978, Russell wasn't so
fortunate.
The usually mild-mannered
Dodge r shortstop committed
three errors in the '78 Series, but
that wasn't the extent of his
difficulties as the Dodgers, after
winning the first two games,
dropped four in a row to New
York, the first three at Yankee
Stadium.
Russell's play prompted
wides pread criticism by New
York reporters, and by the end
or the third game at Yankee
Stadium, he refu~ed to talk to
them .
"He was abusive to New York
writers, who were writing that
be was playing lousy, which he
was doing."
The outbursts were way out of
character for the 33-year·old
midwesterner, who is almost
always cooper a tive and
soft-spoken.
··1 know what h e goes
through, believe me," said
Russell, speaking of Lopes'
difficulties in Game 5. "I've
done that lots of times. You try
so hard, sometimes you fight
yourself and it doesn't work out
the way you want it to. You just
feel for him. He's been under a
lot or pressure ...
Russell should know. The '78
Series wasn't the only time that
he's been bad-mouthed. A
converted outfielder, Russell
took ove r as the Dod1ers'
starting shortstop in 1972, and
he's been the regular at that
position ever since.
To be a regular at such an
important position as short.atop
for so long on a team that has
·won four National Lea1ue
pennants, obviously Russell bu
been doing at least a few thinp
pretty well.
END OF THE LINE -Pittsburgh's Frank
Pollard is stopped after a short gain by J .C.
Wilson, a Houston comerback. The Steelers
won the game, 26·13. See story, Pa2e C3.
"He cussed out New York
writers and the city in 1eneral,"
recalled a New York reporter.
"He did not play aggressively,
and he was letting balla play
him. Every ball in his direction
was an adventure."
· There have been those four
pennants , but no world
championships.
Yankee boss now knows hoU? B'lly Martin must have felt
By WILL GRIMSLEY
aJs-i.1ca11• ''"' Leave it to George -he bad no
intention of allowing bis New York
Yankees to leave Los Angeles with their
tails between their le11. He took
matters into his own hands.
By bis own account, be punched out
an unotficiaJ decision over two hecklers
when they began saying bad thin11
about the Yankees In an elevator ln tile
Los Aneeles headquarters-hotel Sunday
night.
It was the only victory Jn the
Yankees' ''lost weekend" ~the City of
the Angels.
Call him George M. Steinbrenner Ill,
"M " for "Manassa Mauler,"
'
undisputed light-heavyweilbt champion
of frustrated club owners.
Hold the line, George, promoter Don
Kini calling.
Som'ewhere today, roaming the
streets of L.A., ls a guy with a few front
teeth missing and a friend wbo might be
suffering bru.i5CS.
That ls, if Georae l• livilll it to ua
straight. And we have to talle hll word
for it . TheTe were DO other
eyewitnesses. The culprits, aeeordlq to
Geor1e, took off like fri1btened rodents.
Tbe botel mana1er coald add ao
detaila. Tbe L.A. police laid naUa•1
was reported to them. An an•rr
Steinbrenner, It Hema. takH no
prlaonen.
The controversial Yankee boss, a
stickler for rilid ethics codes, showed
more relish than embarruament when
he called a late·evenina preu
conference in i.o. An1ele1 to abow a left
band in a cut, po1albly fractured, a
bruised right hand, a cut lip and a bump
on the bead from a wback with a beer
botUe.
lleanwblle, the bueball world buJled
wSth mild amusement over the llUl1 of
th• lnddeDt.
It wu two yean .,o almost to the
day that \be then Vall• ........ 8WJ
Mart.la, lbnUarl)' taawd be>'oed btl
endura.nc•L-belte• a marabmallow
aalHmaa aa a Bloomlaftoa, lllaa.,
;.~lobbJ.
Althoup Billy inalated tbaf be WU
provoked into the act, Geor1•
proceeded to fire him1 aaJinc, "l can't
put up with tb1a kind°' atutr aay mon."
The Yank .. boa "'RNd tMl im
pla yera mu at •••id ''• ••rr appearance of evil. He nrtu1b ID"*8il
the Biblical "turn the cbeelr" palle,.
Billy tbe Kid, '1Jberever be ti ~
m ut aarely have aa la\erHtla1·
react.ian.
Beale Jaekloa, bMitlii '1-e ~
aaJd, "Now Geol'p ~.-I W." ................ -........
Grala NtMa. __,_'.~!·~ tM'il.,""" Iii~·--· ~Y ........ G)
..
,..---• I ... ---·--------~ ............... ~..--~---..... -......... -919111~
OrangeCO•tOAlL! f'tLqt'/tuMda~. Octo~r27, 1811 ....,. ____ ~ ............ __________ .,....
Henderson must
pay hairstyler
' From AP dlapatd1ea
DALLAS -A Judie ordered m
former Dallas Cowboy linebacker 4 •
Thomas ''HoUywood" Hendenon &o
pay $1,226 in damages to a balntyler wtto
accused Henderson of assauJUnt blm bl 197'1.
Slate District Judge Charles Ben Howell
ordered Henderson to pay the damagu 1fttr
hearing him and halrstyUst Geor1e Anderton
testify about a fight that occurred at a North
Dallas hairstyling salon.
Asidersoo said be told .Hendenoo to ltO{>
telling obscene jokes in front of a troup of
female customers and Henderson struck bhn la
the head.
Anderson said the Dec. 6, 1978, incident
gave him headaches for several days.
Henderson did not deny tellln1 the j~
but said he only s hoved Anderson att.r the
hairstylis t confronted him with a pair ot
scissors.
Quote of the day
Dodger Manager Tommy Luorda on the
changing race of ·baseball: "Today, tbe
trainer's room looks like the Mayo Clinic. We
had a trainer one time ... the only thing he
had in his equipment bag was a bottle of
rubbing alcohol and he'd drink half of that by
by the fifth inning."
Kings call up defenseman Gibson
INGLEWOOD -The Los (ii
Angeles Kings called up defense.man '
John Gibson from the New Haven
Nighthawks to take the place of Utjured playet
Rob P almer, the team announced Monday.
Palmer suffered a hyper·exleMlon of bis
elbow in Sunday's loss to Winnipeg.
In seven games so far for New Haven,
Gibson, 6-3, 215 pounds, has scored one goal and
totaled 24 penalty minutes. In bis four ~ames
with the Kings last year, Gibson totaled 2'l
penalty minutes.
Stanford'a.Elway •..,.cted to play
Staafor• qwarterbacll I••• Ill I••>' aholdd "M ready to play ~ •
a1aln1t WHbln1ton, dHpll• a
C'OftCUlllOO and Jammed ftn1er that kaoeked
blm OUt ol lut wffk'a 1ame A1atnal Arbona
St.&te, Coach PHI Wll ... aay1 ..• USC'1
~I• Adka, wbo had 11tackJella~1'·7 victor)' O\'e' NotN Dame, wu named Paelftt·lO
def enalve Player of tM week IDd Mae Pa1e1 of
Arllo.-a State plcll:ed up ofJeoalve booor1
. , . 1'rtt·~ar GeorcetoWlt Collete football
coach .,.r'U•• waa nred after bl• team loat
all Hven of ita 1amff undel' bJa tu1dance
•• · . Feww than 7 ,000 public pre-tale tick eta
remain for the llt.h annual Fletta Bowl, Jan. l
ticket maMger Mia Greea aaya .
Charges fifed against Kinsella
Swtmmlns champion Jolla • Kla1eua, a medalitt In the 1988 an4 •
1912 Olympics, was cbareed ln a
criminal in.formation Monday with fallln1 to file
fedtraJ income tax returns for three years
.... Thirty.three prospective jurors were
chosen for the. trial of five men cbarsed in a
point·shavtng conspiracy involving Boston
College buketball 1amea durin1 the 1978-79
season . . . The Philadelphia Phillies are
leaiil.ne "Very, Very stron1ty," toward Pat Corrales aa their next manacer, accordi.na to an
lnter\liew with Executive Vice Pr~sldent Bill GUta . .
~etevision, radio
Pollowlno are the top spcrts events on TV
tonight. Ratlng.s are: ' / I 1 excenent; / .t / worth watching; ././fair; ./forget It.
9 5 p.m., Channel 7, 11 I./././
WORLD SERIES: Dodgen at New York.
AnMUfteft'I: Keith Jackson, H.werd Cosell
~and Jim Palmef'.
A wen-rested edrt Hooton takes u,. mound for
the Dodgers as they try to C11nch the 1911 World Serles championship tonight against former Oodeef' southpaw Tommy John. John and the Yan~ees defeated Hooton and the Dodgers In the
second game last week and Hooton hasn't pitched
since that time. John hurled two tnnlngs In relief
In Los Angeles Saturday but figures to be ready
tonight. Ron Cey, who was hit by a Goow Gossage fastball Sunday, was relNsed frotn the hospital
and ts in New York ready to play third for the
Dodgers tonight.
RADIO easebell -World Serles, OodQers at New
York, s p.m., KNX (1070) and KAik: (790) with
Vin Scully and Sparky Anderson, bOth stations. Hoekey -Quebec at Kln{P. 7:20 p.m., KPRZ
(1150).
Pistol Pete is dead From Page C1
YANKEE
Respiratory ailment claims Dodger
PALM 'SPRINGS (AP) -
Former Brooklyn Dodgers
outfielder Pistol Pete Reiser,
who won the Nationa l League
batting title in 1941 , has died at
age 62 after a long respiratory
illness, a family spokes man said
Monday.
Reiser died Sunday night in
his home near Palm Springs
several hours after the Los
Angeles Dodgers beat the New
York Yankees in the fifth game
of the 1981 World Series, said
family spokesman Keith Tuber.
Reiser's wife, Pat, said Reiser
was aware or the Dodgers'
victory but had not been well
e nough to follow the Series
games closely.
''He was labo ring so for
breath that he missed an awful
lot of it (the series>." she said.
"It was probably the best thing
because to have Pete walking
around with ox.ygen all the time
would have been devastating.
All things happen for the best."
Tuber s aid Reiser "bad
wanted most of all to see his
grandson baptized." Peter Brian
Tuber. 3 months, was baptized
Sunday.
Born March 17, 1919, in St.
Louis, Reiser led the National
League in battin• and slu11tn1
in 1941, his first full season with
the Dodgen, batting .343 with 39
doubles, 17 triples and lA bome
runs and scorine 117 tuna. He
also led tile leafue in stolen
bases in 1942 and 1946 and atole
home sev~ thnei In 1941, a
major leaaue record.
He played in two World Serles,
1941 and 1947, lbsioa both times
to the Yankees. Reiser retired in
1952 and was st coach with the
Dod1ers from 1960·64 and lat.er
witb the Chicago Cubs. His
llfetime batting avera1e was
.29S in 861 games with Jrooklyn,
Pittsburgh and Cleveland.
Reiser was considered a
poten\ial sapentar when he
came to the majors but ruined
bis career when he ran-into
outfield walls sever al times,
suffering serious head injw1es.
Survivors include his wife:
Pat, daughters Sally ReiHr ana
Shirley Tuber and 1randson
Peter Tuber.
The funeral will be beld
Wednesday ·at St. Teresa's
Catholic Church, Palm Springs.
College football
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• •
Yankees had clinched the Am-
erican League pennant.
Skirmishes betwe en
ballplayers and between players
and antagonJzing rans are fairly
common, although it's rare for
an owner to get thus involved,
particularly a stickler like
Steinbrenner who always bas
been so prote etive of "the
Yankee image."
Steinbrenner, describing
Sunday's incident, said he was
coming down an elevator of the
Hyatt Wilshire hotel around
dinnertime when the lift stopped
at another floor. A mui entered
while a companion held the door
open. Reeopiiiftg lteinbreoner,
the r~t man, accordtng to the
Yankee boss, beJan makhag
rem arks abo ut New York
"animals" and Yankee
''chokers."
Steinbrenner sale) that's when
he reacted.
He later explained: "lt't olua.y
for me to cri\lche my
ballplayers, because I pay the
checks, and we're in this
together. But when other people
call them chokers, l've bad
enough."
The first man. George aaid,
struck him with a beer bottle .
OUTST ANDIM&
VALUES!
llAMOMIW
I tel V'W
DllSB. UlllT
FACTORY STICKER
$1010 DtSCOUNT $tSI
SALE P~
''095 {27,3) (~08881)
llAMO.-W
ltll ISUZU 414 PICIW
FACTWY gyiCi<ER IJH
01 NT . ,,,,
SALE PAICE
$7395
( 1273) [700!MMI)
1910 YW
VAMAeOM
7 puseng9f model.
4 tPffCI trM1mleelon. 8hatp & v•r'f clelnl
(011181)
SAL! PRICE
OMLY
18995 .
-----------------
From PageC1
VA GENAS COACHES IN WHEELCHAIR. ~
four·lane hl1bw1y and into a
park.t4,car .•
Upon Impact, the back door on
the pauenaer ai de of the
Vaaenu car whlpped open and
Vagenu was nuns out. The car
then dtd a tumble and when it
landed. Vageoas was crushed.
Damace done: el1ht broken ribs
and a brbll:en tplnal cord to
Vacenu, no lQJurie1 to any Qf
the others lnvolved In the
accident, save a sore back to
Va1enas' 1irl lrtend. .
For two months. Vagenas
remained under hospital care.
No one knew for sure. not his par~nlS or even himself ,
whether he would ever return to
a normal life.
Finally, Vagenas wat1 released
from the hospital and sent to a
rehabllltaUon center where he
would spend seve n months,
learning how to make the best
of what was left.
' "THE DOCTOR told me that
because I was in such good
shape -I was about 6·2 apd 2n5
-it saved my li/e," Vagenas
s aid. "Anyone else, be said, less
healthy may have had trouble
survivina."
Vagenas says that upon his
recovery, be went to various
junior colleges. working towards
a degree in el ec tr i cal
engineering. But he wasn't
really sure where he was at all
or where his future was.
Where it was was in California
and with the unselfish help and
patience of his parents, Vagenas
began the road back. Ln 1970, he
and his famil y c am e to
California where he cont"1ued
bis education at UC Irvine,
eventually earning a bachelor or
arts d egree and a teaching
credential.
Upon gruduation , Vagenas
opened a family billiards shop.
Thal was fine, but it didn't
provide the kind of stimulation
and excitement Vagenas was
once a part or as a year·round
athlete.
VAGENAS MET up with an
old friend who once played for
the semi-professional Orange
County Rhinos. Hi s son was
play ing on a Pop Wa rner team
and he suggested to Vagenas
that he consider coac hing a
similar team. Vagenas loved the
idea.
"At firs t , I was shy and I
From Page C1
MARATHON
money from ARRA races into
escrow accounts .
A TAC spokes man said the
accounts were "between the
athletes and us . If the IAAF
decides at its meeting in Rome
Dec. 12·13 t.bal the money can be
used for training purposes, then
the money will be put into a
trust f\md."
SALAZAR, LABELING TAC
"hypocrites and thieves," said
be want& no part of trust funds.
"Wby sho uld TAC have
control of my money?" said the
usually sofl·spoken Salazar.
"They want to be like our
agenls. Why does TAC insist on
this?
"I think TAC ls scared to lose
Its power. Tbey want to have
control over the athletes. They
have no right to. They're just a
bunch or h ypocrites and
thieves."
w11n't sure bow the klds would
a c c ept me ," Va1enas
rem embered "But, U T WU to
tlnd out, It was the adulll who
react<..-d to my disability much
more than the children . KJds
don 't know what adversity ts yet
so they don 'l pay attention to
It."
Vagenas discovered that alnce
he was on eye level with moet of
the Pop Warner players, he bad
no trouble communicaune with
them. "l 've ne ver found any
hesitation between myself and
other people who know me. It's
those who don't know me and
don't take the lime to who don't
understand my situation." ·
A few years later , J im Boyett,
the head coach at Sunny fills
H igh, offered Vagenas the
opportunity to do some scouting
for him. That worked out well
too and Boyett followed by
r e co mme nding Va ge nas to
Servile High where coach Ken
Vi sser was i n s e a rch of a
linebacker coach. Vagenas got
the job and for six years he was
an Integral part of Servite's
proud and successfuJ program.
HE STILL IS. He's currently
the c hairman of the math
department and an associate
athletic director at Servile. He's
a lso the freshman basketball
coach and has been for four
years, lhding the Friars to
three league championships.
When Rick Curtis was named
head coach at University last
year to replace Ted Mullen, he
calle d on his o ld S e r vile
colleague, Vagenas, to help him
r e build the school's defensive
program. It was no small favor
tha t Curlis was asking . The
T rojans had not won more than
three games in any one season
in five previous years and the
defense was always weak.
But Vagenas a ccepted the
c ha llenge. "Fr ankly. I was
honored," he said. "l knew Rick
had confidence in me and he
needed a few special people to
turn the program around."
' AND THAT'S exactly what
RICK PONDER
Edison High
I
they've done. Uolver1lty la •·
and 2·2 ln league pl•Y· ftat'a
more, after th baJ!wa)' ldnt Ln
the season, they sUU ha•• a
ch a n ce ut a playoff• berth,
unheard of up untll now.
"No doubt about It, we're cstablls~· a tradition here,"
Vaaena id. "Tbe way we
approach the whole tbin1 was
that we didn't expect to cet any
support, the way lt alway1 had
been. We told the kid.a that w~
~ouldn't change poople ud the>:
believed that. But tome ol the
people here are now believe~
a nd ther e's good s upport.
T h ey 're not all totally
convinced, but we're on our
way."
B ut w 1n n1 ng_ is n 't why
Vagenas Is there. Nor is he there
to set an example of wbal can be
accomp lished, a ltboqgh by
nature, he does just that.
"The main objective for me i2'
to show the kids how to deal witll
all the good and bad situations in
life. I don't want to be in a
situation where the sport comes
first and the lftds are a vehicle
for me to get to where I want lo
go, even if I really do want to be
a head coa~h somewhere."
AS FOR IDS pl ace on the field,
Vagenas is as secure as any
able ·bodied person, even it his
feet are not. He remembers
once, a few years ago, when an
official tripped over his feet
while jogging backwa~ aJon•
the sidelines, eyeing a punt.
"The guy lost his cool and
everyone got a little upeet at
him for doing that. but he later
ca m e over a nd apologized,''
Vagenas said. But the lime
spent on the sidelines have been
run and certainly rewardln& for
Vagenas.
"After the accident, I had a
tough lime the fi rst year but the
mental adjustments havt come
in time ... Vagcnas said . And in
time, he's come up with the
following philosophy on life:
"The main thing is that life is
great. H you're out in il. then
You should get the most out of it
by pulling all you've got into it."
Edison High's rampaging Chargers. winners of 2t
straight games over a three.year period, recorded their
second shutout of the 1981 campaign Friday night and one
of the ~rime reasons was the superior play of defensive tackle Rick Ponder.
Ponde r , a 5, 11, 205·pounde r , was c redited
with nine tackles and three quarterback sacks as
the Chargers raced to a 43-0 victory over Ocean View and
for it, he is the Daily Pilot's Player of the We'ek for Orange
Coast area prep stars.
Ponder is but one of tbr~ returning
starters on Edison's defense (along with
linebacker Rick DiBernardo and end
Bryce Malavasi) and in seven games
has now recorded 40 tackles. five
quarterback sacks, a fumble recovery
and four caused incomplete passes.
"'He's very quick," says Coach Bill
Workman. "He started.out as a wide
receiver and a sometimes fullback , but
he was switched to defensive tackle in
his sophomore year." Pondn .
Those nine tackles and three sacks. incidentally. were
accomplished in three quarters of action, an Edison
trademark for its stars because or the runaway scores 1n
most instances.
Stationed on t.be right side, Ponder's play all year ba
been symbolic of Edison's very successful defense aa&Jnst
the run.
************* NFL standings ! JOHNSON & SON :
« • Presents ... • • • .. NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Western DlvlsloD Western Dlvllllon
W L T PF PA Pct. W LT PF PA
San Francisco& 2 0 191 140 .150 Kansas City 6 2 0 207 163
Atlanta 4 4 0 222 162 .500 San Diego 5 3 0 253 18'7
Rama 4 4 0 194 lfl> .500 Denver 5 3 0 154 112
New Orleans 2 6 0 98 163 .250 Oakland 3 5 0 98 133
Eastern Division Seattle 2 6 0 104 in
Philadelphia 7 1 0 183 112 . 8'75 Eastern Division
Dallas 6 2 0 197 161 . 750 Miami 5 2 1 186 152
NY Giants 5 3 0 164 121 .625 Buffalo 5 3 0 181 128
St. Louis 3 5 0 158 209 .375 NY Jets 3 4 1 165 202
Washington 2 e 0 135 191 .250 New England 2 6 0 190 183
Central Dl\'lllOD Baltimore 1 1 0 148 271
Minnesota 5 3 0 188 199 . 625 Central DMstOD
Tampa Bay 4 4 0 143 128 .500 Cincinnati 5 3 0 194 155
Detroit 4 4 0 197 110 .500 Pittsburgh 5 3 0 174 158
Green Bay 2 6 0 136 184 . 250 Cleveland 4 ' 0 150 172
Chicaeo 2 6 0 126 198 .250 Houston 4 4 0 138 163 ......,..tcw-e "'"""""' .. ~ ,, .....,.,._..
« • Pct. «
.750 •
.625 +.
.625 •
.375 •
.250 • • .688 •
.625 «
. 438 «
.250 «
. 125 • • • .625 •
.625 •
.500 •
.500 ..
• • « • • 1C • « .. • • • ti
~···~··························· ...... .,... ..
•1 Walch for : P•'• 'Pick at . • : Johnson & Son
• Lin coin-Mercury on 82's & ll's cn·s ·LYNX'S· LM·l's : 26J6HAl80l&YD. « COSTA~ Offer 111plrH 48 l'lra. aft•r pubOcatlon. All ¥91'11clae ~-5~0.56JO . toprlor ..... all plutto.1~
It • •. •• ... •• • • • ..
Peteft.e ''Gr•~ •, • HR.•, .
Picks of
Thew ..
SUNDAY
ua-
• .... ......... .
OTW D._,
OTW
,~
* MOMDAY
M .... , •
• .. •
•• * * * * ••• * •• * * .... *' •• * * ... *"*·* •• *.** •• ff*** * ........
NFL
Steele11 26, Ollert 13
ic-.., Owlrtwt
Ho1nton
P1tt11>ur911
Piii FB Tl'QUI It
0 l 0
10 3 0
Piil Sml111 .. pen lrom 8r•d"'••
IT rout kid.)
How F-G l'rlbcil l4
Piii FG Trowt It
Hou Cuper S7 P<OU lrom !>teblff
CFrlb<ll kl<k)
HOV FG Frlbell 44
Piii Stell-111 • NU tram Br-flew
(kick f•ll""I
Piii H""rl' I ""1 CTr.,..t klO) ,,. s1.m
l .......... l IUthtlCI
RUSHING H°"•1on, Cempbell U-56;
Stebltr 1~. Col1m•n 3 10 Plll•l>urQll.
Merril, 11·~. Pollerd 1S ~. Smith MS,
llreclt!Wlw ._.
PASSING -HOuflon St•blff H-IS-l·ZJO;
P•r>lty 1 1·0.31, Pllllburoh. 8r•d•ll•w , .. , •. ,.JOI
RECEIVING Houlton Renfro '-1';
C•mlltlell ).min'" I C.$91< ).tl, Col-
1-S, Burrou(lfl\ 23S WlllOf't I 11, ArmJI.._
1·19 Plll\OurVll Harr1t , ... Smllll S-1CIO;
Poll••d l-19. St•llworlh •·74
COLLEGE
Top 20
Tho loP T ... nlY IHMl In Th4l Auoc:lelecl
PrH• coll~ lootti.11 ootl, wt01 flrtH>fkl
v0(1• In otrenllwM• Meson'1 rec--
IOC•I POlnb.
I, P.M SI (0 1
2. PlllU>ur9'1 1101 l Cl1m1G11 •use s CO-ol•
t lH.S
7. M1u11alppl SI a. Al•IMIMe
t North CMollrv
10 Artr-51
II tow• 51 12 ..... .,, ....
13 So Metl'IOdl\I
U W•$111"9{on '>I
IS Ml<N-
16 ·-· 11. FlorldA 51
It WHMnolon
1' Okl0-
10.Arhnv.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOG
Golden West (2-4) ) B1hnfl<!ld
• S.nfa Ana
31 LA V1lley
IS Sani• Motll(a
17 Ml S... Antonio
11 S•n 0 -Mtt• 0<1 )I Gn»1mon1111 OCC)
Nov 14c •I Cerritos
Nov 21 Futltrlon 111 OCCI
Nov n Or-Co.st
Oranoe Coast (2-41
1 P110""'6r
I• S-i.llMk
7 Pu~
10 El C...,,1no
10 C1rr1IM
7 Fullerton
Nov 7 •I Ml ~ AnlonlO Nov •~ 5-\ Olt9o _..,
Nov 11 --.1 Groumon1
Nov I~ Golcltn w .. 1
Saddleback (6-0)
]7 v ... ,..,.
1' Or•19 C-t
11 LA SouU.-il
41 Ant-Valltv
0 Pal°"""'
'' S•n DIP90 CC. I 0<1. )I .t Sou1nwe•tetn
Nov I 5.>nl• AM
NO'W n _.... C1tru\
l<ov it. Rlven-
Commvnlly college schedule
1Allp,,_al7·JOp.m • 111111u-•I
SATVllDAY
JI JI
1
11
u n
3 ,.
11
lS
" 3'
" H
l
0
'3
1
""'1tl Cant C..'-'-•
Groumont •t Gold•n We11 •1 Or•"9f Cout
5.>n 01"90,,...UolC.rrl '" M l San Mlon•O ., Fullel'lOO
Mls.i..tC•l.,_e
Saddl-k 11 Souln-•tern
Colru• •IS... 0-CC (I 301
Rlver\ldo' CC •I P•lomer 11 30)
SeutN<•~1c ............
Wot I.°' Angtll\al LA Sou111w .. 1 (II
Compton •I IJ. Harbor
E .,, L.,, A .. IH al I.°' A19tes cc
__.lt.a11~-•
B••tr•fleid •I Lono BH<ll CC
S. M• Monlo .t Pierce Pu•~ at El Camino .
wn-.. State c--· H•ncoo at s.>t.a BMl>ara
C.lendale•t T•ll
Moor~rtl ~t \lffUur•
o...tC ..... trtMt
San Btrnercllno V•ll•Y •I ,,.,,.el-Valley
ll:JO)
lm~rl•IVall8'1•1MlraColla (1 :30) Mt San Jacinto al Dewr'I
This week's sch edule
(aNe-at7:•1
TMVllSdAY
-~ Wutmlnsttt vs Edison •I OCC
S.av1tw1....-trvlrw vs Corona .WI Mer •I N_.,.,,,
Harbor
...... ., ..... "--1'0111111111 Volley n . 0c .... View at
W.ttlfllMMt
Marl,.. 81 ltHWIMf•*tllftj....,..,., 8Mcll ... v ..........
II TOf'O.,._ C:.l.eMtuet Hew~ H..,
N•w-' HMtl9r .,._ llUMle .. 0. .... c ... 1c;o1i..,.
~·-,,.. Ulll-.lty et lnrlne
SI. Paul Vt.:::::-.: !:1m ..,.......,
9-C.... .......
l .. -e..ctl et c:.lslr-V•ll9Y MIUIOft Viejo et S.. Cltlfl9fttt
Dan• Hlllt .. utuM Hiii•
Or ..........
V•-le .,._ AlwNlm •t La fret-fr-.................. Senllaoo w. La Qulni. 81 aotu Gr--
R•ncl'lo Al•mllOI YI. lot Amt ... •t G•r<MnGrow c-.. ....... ~ ..... .,._ C9ft\IOft8' II~
El Mod9N va. Santa AM Valley et SMCa
ANI 8-1
S.nta ANI va. l"OOINll at Tw.tln ...............
Cypreu n. II'._., et w"'"" K•l•ll• va. El Dot• at V•l-la ..........
W-IOgl at On!MloCIVlttlM
81•"°1' MDloteome<v •I St ,,.n<lt
SATUllOAY o......o ... wue.-
Geriten c;,_ at 8olM Gr-
Or-.. U..-II re•-011,.,. al Wfflffft
NHL c:AMPSlll.~aalllCa
........ OM.-
WlT•PN.,._
Edmonton 1 , 0 S2 " .... • s 0 ..
V•M.ouwer l s , • C.lo-ry J s J st Colortdo t • 2 n
MenllDtwt ....
Ml,.,..aot.a s , J 11 Wlnnlpeo • J , S1
Chlc1190 2 , .,
Detroit l 4 2t
Toronto 2 • J2
SI, L°"h , ' J • WM.«$ C:O..'l.lllMCI.
Phll•deltlMll
NV Ill-•
PlttslMH'gl'I
NY ll ....... s
W•$1tlnQton
Mot'llntal
lloston
Ouol>ec
lluff•IO Hanford
freertcll Dht.._
1 0 1 • ' I
4 s 2
3 • 0
I I 0 AM_DI,,..... s 0 s , • • • ,
I •
Weter po&o
NION~
, ,
0
l
J
• IS • u 2t
• 71 • 2t •
C-. MIU t, ---Vi.te S
,. 14 .. I ,, 1 • • .. •
2S 12 • to • I
71 • as • .. •
II " 2'4 u 41 IO .. • .. ' It ,,
ll t2 • 12
JI 11
M s
Mission Vleto 2 I 1 1-5
COiia Mete I 4 2 ,_..
COit• Mew Korlfto: _., t, C-tNle 4,
Muelln I, Ure I, Plitt 1.
CroH eountry
MIO-. K"°°'-
1.1 T-•, l."-le 41
1. M<CM111Y lht.1, 16:1•; J, Farl4tfl (IE'T),
ti 11: J. L.oo-n IET>. 16:20; •· wwn 1rn . 1':lS; S. C..W ........ IETl. 1•:•; 6. _.,..
<ETI, 16·•S; J_ Wft'°" (ET), 16:52; I . alaM
(Esu. 17:2'; t e.rv 1111.1, 11:u ; 10.
Fedlcl'I CETI. 17:S1.
Women
•• ,_,., ·-.. 41 1. Bucks <ETI, 20:"; 2. 11190t" IETI,
20: It; 3. S...aoe (Ell.I, 10:57; •· ~
CETI, 21:12; S. AOol..,_. IETI. 21:.U; 6-
11-ro llETl, 11·41; 7. ~ U!f), D :W;
I. R.,.11«11 (Efl, D:14; 9. Galindo (Ell.
n :JO; 10. H•trOW (&t.), U :IO.
Grend Ptl• tournement
t.ot~ ..... ~I ,.,,. .... ........
Andrew P•ttl•on def. Han1.Joere
Scllwalef, M , ~I; Jlrl HNtle< def. Hartmllt
IClrcllllwtll, 7 ... ~2; Potter lltott def. Ull
Pinner. ~1. ,.._
Mt .... s.• .... UI ,.,..
SIVlwnt llACI. 0... mile-··
erii11ant J«lde CCl'olNnl UO J.JI MO
• -Mlllloo'I (Herclltl Ut lM llNCll ...... Sll,(1181~) U0
AIM rtcecl: Metlw W.rtltt, T~
Slack, HaMe OWl<e, 8 C 1.cMM\, Y-,
S-U.wtrti, 0..-S...
Time: 2:05.G.
.. lllACTA (+11 ptld StS.JO, ..... ,.,. $0... !Nie NC-. Tell~ 11"'0''"1> t ~ ... Mt. ...... . .... ...,..
Jalftff Midi (KMYS> UI AllO raciMt: _,. LA>tlell, Vlll<efl ...,,
Kines Doubt•, 01 ....... 11 H-wr, Vl<ter Oltrlft, An ....,.le, Sprya eest.
Time: I:" l/S. ts IXACTA 11·31 pelcl M0.50.
" frlCll ... (H++-1 ... 1 ,.... •*• ..... 141 w1...,.,. tkklts 11111 ,,__). ti ~II Sia
c-latlon Pflld 11.00 wltl'I I, lt7 •klnllllt
tkllm 111w horMs>. a Pkll Sill 1cr_,.
CMIOll!Cloft Pflid tl'AO 111191 -.r WlfllMI
ll<llltl (fow ..,._, -KrMtll).
MIMTN aACI. 0... mllep•u .
Hardy Mee Feller IS_,.,,en)
I(___,"--ITOdlll n.• 6~ ::
Angea. K.., (Gnftl'I') ...
AIM r-: .,,.,_. Ctwll. 1"°'9Mk
Kid, GIOI Frost. llrllllant O'SMe, II llt'f
Rico, o..<t OW"l1, Scotti .. $WWI.
Time: 2:01 J/S. sa allACTA <~21 ...-suuD.
Tl .. TN llACI. 0... lflli. "9n.
frte<ervtlle (Pwlltrl J.• UO UO
Quick Larry (GnlNt\tl 4.00 4,00
Mr. Joe 8 (IC.Nmalwl UO
AIM rllUCI: RWUll 1110, Tiie "°'*· TlfN
for 11¥11, Hale.,.. Han, DaMt O.W,.
Time· 2:01 2/l.
N lllACTA IWI Pflidat.e . Mt...-.c.-6.-.
NBA extllbttioft9
.......,..~
....... t .. ~111
All-....... .,...,. ..
N-Y-1•. Clliupltt IOTI
MondeCJen~• IM.L. ................
'
CINCINNATI ltRD& -1eW Mt41 ""-" lnfleldtr, to .,.., ~I• , ..... ., ..
Am«IC9ft "'-clMIOn • .\ddM Miiie'~ .,,. .,... LMWy, l'I~. to.,....._ maier....,.,...,.
Ul&ITMU. ............... ~ ATl.ANTA HAWKS -eC Miiie
GleM, ....... frolft h IWw Yn liCnlcbfer ... ~,....·-~' DAI.LAS MAVl!lllCK$ -Wahed
C6antflce KN Md ~ Ont•, ......... .,,.,, ., .. .,_, ......
HOUSTOft ltOCllt!TS -Wei"" JefWI StnMMl,--.S.
HAnLa SUfrlllSONICI -•e•"" J~ll• Doney, IOrwanl. CIDU.aM
OEOltOITOWN, KY . -N~M Jffltl a.1..._,,...._..n~...,,_..,.
Hew111ftl h•t•lm .... C1MICll .,, Jeck «l<lltf..,..... coecll.
KANSAS STATE -Hemed Olctl T-.
etMttk ......
Area high school football l~g
SUNSET LEAGUE Westmln1ter (5-2)
17 La o..tnt• t Pacifica Edison (7-0)
U EIOor-0 Sanl•AN
o u Newport Harbo<
IJ 10 ComP'WI
1
" 10
0 1 lS El-1 3S l one; 8Hdl wn-.
Q Miiiikan 1 " oc .... v-" 6 .. Mat., Oti ,, u Hunllnvton BellC.h
111 Marina 1• Oct 29-E~ C•tOCCI q OC1M>Vl-OCI ,.__lm•Mlor (alOCCI Nov. 6-at Huntonqton 8ta<h
Nov. l~lro V•llrr (at Blc;AI
o Nov ._F_...n V•llrr
NOY 13-Marlne
Fountain Valley (5-2)
It Senta AN va11..,, 7 11 El Toro l1 J St. Paul '1
• 10 S.rvllt u 3" l alllWOCIO 10 3' Hu,,.tnvton &N<h o
J M•rine 10 D<I. »-()cMn View (11 Wmstrl
Nov ... •I WHlmlMter Nov. ,, Edi_.,., Bio A)
HUNTINGTON BEACH (2·5)
i Conina cltl Mer " 0 El Dor-t7
I' lOIA...._ U 21 llOIMGt.. t
I I San a-.ite 0
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
Corona del Mer (4-2·1)
u Huntlngt,on llffcll 6 42 San Clemenl• O
U C8Pl~r-V•ll8'1 6 10 Vnlwnlf'f 1,
10 Etlancl• 10
10 S.ddl-k " 14 El Toro 11 OCt. Jt.-lrvlnt l•t "-'1> NOY.~.IMW!etOCCI
NOY ,, Nt•PCNt (•IOCCI
Coat.a MeH (2·5) O Santa,,.,,. 21
ti s.nuaoe o
'' lo1Alamlto. 7 N......,Harbor 7 Unlwnlf'f 7 lnrlN
,.
J ..
1' El Toro 27 LMIMM\a .. ectl ()-2.1) o SaddHllKll J 13 lnrlN 11
14 Cot1a/NM 1 14 1!1•1_.. ft 1 N._, HartlDr 11 12 ......... II
Oct. 2t-CdM l•t Newperl t 1..0I..,...._ 7
HarOOrJ 21 DIM Hin. i
Nov. ~IUllCla 1• Sall CJeftWlle I
Nov.11-Uft!-.ity Oct. ---~-Valley
N..-Harbor (1 •) ....... • MhllMYlllte ·--· -v N .... ~Nlllt l .. MVI ,J c~y » L-"'• Hlll1 (1~) 10 w:i;i;..-~ ts 1,..,1;;.-··
J C"'4Mes6 7 6 lltaftcle ,. 11 T-24 1 u,,1_..,
10 Ul'I~ u IS o--. 21 lnrlN 1 I l • Ollll'illt ( ..... It)
Oct. »-«llWl(le l•I OCCI 210 ~t-~Vlt'-How. 6S1 ... .._k ..,_, ,.
Nov. 1i-c.-dltl M# (at OC:CI Oct. -..0.. HlllS CM MVI
• 11 • • • u ..
.,_..._ Nov. ~.,.....,(at MV) .._._.oactc (S-2) I Now 1~ llMell (at MV) 7 ._,,_ 6 •
0 MINiOllVleJo 1 MIMlon Vleto (6-C).1)
21 La Hallra tJ 17 Tvttlll o latwla 21 1 hM•o
J lrvlN 0 7 II T-14 c ...... ,,,.,, ,, ' .. _,,.,........
2t C•taMIM t 41 ,,.,..
Oc:t. »-Unlwrll1y (M l"'kte) 1 c...--V ..... Nov • ._... .......... Hattiw •I l.AelfM HHll ........ l~I Tere CM SA 9twl) Oct ........ ~ OllNMt
Unt~ty (44) 1 ............ U.-IMOI 10 N...-a I .. ..,, 1....0.. ......
7 • • 1 • , •
Orange Coaet OAJL Y PILOT I Tuesday, October 27, 1981
Fiscu~' 98-yarder tops
Woodbridge's Figueroa had a pair of sparkling plays , •
Unlvenlty H!1h'1 Mike l"llcWI lW'tled ln tbe
Oruie Cout area'• bl11•t play of the year ln
term• ol yard11e, runnlq 18 yard.I wltb • klck:oft
return for a toucbdowe 111ln1t E1tancla last
week, but lt wasn't enoup to upend the Eail".
Woodbrld1e Hi1h aopbomore Rudy Fitueroa
clicked twice with big play1, runnln& • yards for
one touchdown and catcblnJ a Kevin Burke pa11
for a 51-yard touchdown pua play to lead the
Wa rriol'I to their firat-evor victory ln varalty
competition.
<Lu& week'• bit pJaya of M yarda or moN)
98 -MJke Fiscus <Un.lvenlty), kickoff return
for TD
76 -Mark Bondi <Irvine), TD paaa from Mike
Zorn
72 -J e.lf Frandsen (Mari.oa), TD paas from
Ken Ludo
89-Herbie Campbell <Westmilllter~._TD run
69 -Rudy Figueroa <Woodbridge), Tu run
51 -Rudy Figueroa <Woodbrtdae>. TD pass
from Kevin Burke
SO -Joel Seay <Fountain Valley), pass from
Matt Stevena
50 -Todd Cage
(Saddleback), TD pass
from Danny Armstrong
Seuoa
96 -Mike Fiscus
(University ); 90 -
Onassis Nixon (Costa
Mesa); 82 -Todd
WUliams (El Toro); 79
-Ktivin Beres l Mlaalon Viejo), &Me NU.. 1
<Weatminst.er>, BUJ Brtaht (Corona del ll•r~
Reinholtz (Ocean View>, Joel Seay CF
Valley ), 2, J ohn O'Callaaban (ECllaot11 , leff
Holmes (Mission Viejo), Todd Cage <Saddlebac.k).
(Laat week'• 1tau.tlcal leaden> auMm• ~
l. Herbie Campbell (Weatmln.atA!r), 2S-Z15; 2.
Damon Sweuy (El Toro), 32·129; I . auily
Figueroa <Woodbridge), 13·12'7; 4. Curt WeU&afl
<Estancia), 21-122; 5. Mike Fiscus (Uoh'enlly>.
23·120; 6. Theo Langford (Edison) ,_W; 7. 1'evJ.n
Bradley <Saddleback), 17-ll&; 7. 8. Dave,Gtnlwt
(EdJson), 2'l-1<)4; 9. Kennedy Pola <Water p.t), 25-104. • . J
Pa11lq "'
1. Matt Stevens (Fountain Valley), 14*a.>t:56,
0 TD; 2. Ken Major <Edlson), 12·18-2, 195, l Tl>; S.
Danny Armstrong (Saddleback), 10.U.O, l.D, 0
TD; 4. Mike Zorn (Irvine), 7-20-1, 159, 1 TD; 5. JCen
Laszlo (Marina), 5-12·2, 149, 1 TD; 6. Tony Locy
<Mater Dei), 11·21·0, 144 , 1 TD.
Receiving
1. Greg Locy (Mater Del), IJ.101; 2. Joel Seay
<Fo untain Valley), 6-136; 3. Todd Caae
(Saddleback), f).124; 4. Greg Eskridee <Ediaon>,
5·84: 5. Mike Bondi (Irvine), 4·144: 6. Fred TutUe
(Ocean View>. 4-87; 7. Bretl Blanchard (Edison),
4·80.
Scoring
1. Greg Selby (Newport Harbor), Gary
Figueroa (Woodbridge), 18; 3. Theo Langford
<Edison), Herbie Campbell (Westminster), Tony
Locy <Mater Dei), J amie Aiken (Estancia), Bill
Bright (Corona del Mar), Damon Sweazy (El
Toro), Ken Laszlo <Marina), 12 each.
Field Goals
47 -Mike Doan <Mater Dei).
Kenn e d y Pola
(Mater Dei); 77 -Todd
Williams <E l Toro>,
Kennedy Pola (Mater
Dei) 2; 76 -Mark
Bondi <Irvine); 75 -
Charlie Brown (Mission
Viejo); 73 -Seott Stier a;;;;=;;;;:-:================;;;;;;
(Huntington Beach) 72
. Rudy Figueroa' -J e ft F r a n d s e n
(Ma rina); 71 -Greg Locy (Mater Dei); 69 -
Herbie Campbell (Westminster), Rudy Figueroa
(Woodbridge); 68 -Ron MaJerstein (Marina>; 67
-Jeff Frandsen (Marina); 64 -Bob Critchfield
<Marina); 63 -Greg Neff (Marina ); 60 -
Kennedy Pola (Mater Dei). Herbie Campbell
<Westminster ); 59 -Mark Bondi (Irvine); S8 -
C urt Wen zlaff <E stancia ), J eff Frandsen
(Marina); 56----Dan Blanck (Laguna Hills), Rod
Emery <Fountain Valley), 2; 55 -Damon Sweazy
(El Toro), Steve Patterson (Corona del Mar), Dan
Thompson (Huntington Beach); 52 -Craig
Ra khshani (Edison), Todd Williams <El Toro); 51
-Eddie Nunes (Westminster), Bedd.ie Arabe
<Laguna Beach), Rudy Figueroa (Woodbridle): SO
Fan won't be punished
NEW YORK <AP) -Legal action cannot be
taken against the Can who is believed to have
thrown a bottle from the Yankee Stadium
bleachers at Los Angeles outfielder Dusty Baker
during the first game of the World Series, a
Yankees spokesman said Friday. ·
A number or spectators in the left.field section
had identified the fan as the offender, but others in
the section disagreed~.'--~~~~~~~~~-~========================================~
Will real
·Steelers
stand up
PITTSBURGH CAP>
-Nobody seem s to
know who t he r eal
Pittsburgh Steelers are
-least of all the
Steelers themselves.
"'I hope these are the
real Steelel"S 'cause we
sure didn't play like
ourselves last week."
linebacker Jack Ham
said after Pittsburg h
rebounded from a 34.7
pounding in Cincinnati
ei~ht days earlier to
beat the Houston Oilers
26·13 Monday night.
The victory put the
Steelers, 5-3, back into a
first-place tie with the
Bengals in the American
Conference Ce ntral
Division . The loss
d ropped the Oilers a
game back into a tie
with Cleveland .
"I don't know who the
real Steelers are, but I'd
like t o think we· r e
getting back to where
we used to be," said
quarterback Terry
Bradshaw.
He threw two
t ouchdown passes, a
46·yard bomb to J im
Sm ilh i n the first
quarter and a
game·winning 6·yarder
to J ohn Stallworth to
break a 13·13 tie with
3:41 to play.
·'A game like this does
a world of good fqr your
con fidence," added
Bradsft.aw. "The thing I
waa most pleased with
waa the fact that we
The
Premiere Of
NIGHT
THOROUGHBRED
RACING
Post Time
7 P.M.
Monday-
Saturday
Ex a etas
Pick Six
Orange
County
Fall
Fair
October 27·
November 9
0 F-taln valley JS
• WHtml,.•r I• O<t.JO-MMlna
N•v ..... E:cll-NOY. IJ.-OCHn VI-
' Sacldl-11 11
O<t. ~I TOf'O l•t --11 Nov.~ mt..-., Mt OC:CI
Nov. ,,_..MC.la (•I N_,.nl
El Toro (M)
U ~-Yell., 11 JI I'-.... Vallt'f •
o 111•111 r lena.m.•( .. 7)
• L....-Hltlt 1 ' , .....
I! C-etl~ ,. • c...ttt•
• c.ta-.e 7 I 6 = u....._.....,_ 1e, 16 l~ta U 0 H_..._...__ Oct.• l1 a .. 1c11 ( .. I,....) ft ~..-
Nft ....... l T-la1Mt--J I ' ~ ........... 1"""9 Oct. ~ .,
,. really went after 'em, = We haven't played all
14 ·that physically
" o'ftenaively in a while. ~ We went after 'em and I
Early Bird
Betting
11 a.m.·
4:45 p.m.
$35,000-
added
Orange
Coast
Handicap
Opening
Tonight
Mertn• (f.1)
• H CH11e (HawOll) aJ Ne.._t H1lf'llelr ., 80lseGf'll'dt
14 Fooo•1< a Mlllltten 24 Edbon 20 l"ountaln Valll"I' Oct. JO-« HU1111"91an 1 .. c:l'I
• Nov. 7 -OcMn vi.w l•tWM1lr) Nov 1J-at w..1!fllntlltr
0
' 0 ..
0
11 ]
Ocean View (3-4) 1 Pecllke U
• I..• OulnC• 1• • c;.,.,..... 1•
1' $-y Hill\ to ,. w .. ,.n 0
• Wt\lmlfltltf 14 • ECll-•• Oct. IO Fo11ntal11 V1iley lat
WMtrl
H .... 1-Mlt!M (et WM1')
Nov. ll-~M 9u<ll
0 MIUlon VleJo t 11 .,,,,,. 2'I
24 NewS*1 Harbor 14
1 1 11-le 14
t7 c-., Mer 14 Oct. -....ca.u ... (et ...... t) Nov . ..-u111-.11y .......... , Nov. t2~Mlkll (et SA llOWll
ESC•nd• (l-0-1) • c....-..
11 ~""" • » left atlNnle 6
ti laOll••e• o 10 c ...... .., ,.
14 llT-1 U Unlwnlty , • Oc\ • lteajl041 Hal'tlOt COCCI N .... -IMN Htv. t>-<MU ,_.. 1•1 .......,.,
.. I II ,.
80UTH COAST Ll!AGU! I :t:~l
CeDl.-..0 v .... y (4-t•1) 1 OTHDI
17 .i T-t4 ...., Def~)
• ........ 4t It CMtlll •
• c;_._dlt.,., " •• ~~ t4 :=.:-'S~ • } :::-...:--~ ·" 1.: ! Oct, Jt-U191m 9le(tl M It. -... 11
"""· ~ HMll (el MVI ... ~ct. tt-11.,_, Allllet lat SA Hft. 1,_..tell°"""* -1)
•• •
I ............. O...(•M .... I ..... 1 .................... 1, • , w (14) ,, • Or
think they sensed it. We
tried to pve them a lot
of dllferent looks, tried
to attack them from all
anet ea and not just
stereotype our offeo.ae. I
·think that'• the way the 1 Steelers operate be1t."
I "We're back In the
race," eald Ham .
"Fourtunately, we 1ot
Isome help ye.terday
~ 4:~_:.;:;:11
~~rii~::{ e~i " ~ ..
<N•w Orleane' 17.7
victory o••r tba ...... ) .•. , .. , ..
I 11 •I= ~~-';::.!'
Watch With Us!
Ir Ille W•rl4 ~u 11
1llU .~. roet fw ,_ , ... .n .. ,_ ._.,. •l ....
trlldl. We'll tti.,1 .. ll ror ,..,, .. , ......
"'I
..
• llt ••
' . . .... . -... ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tu11day, October 27, 1981
Strike angers town
Teachers' walkout. numbs 'Little House' residents
WAL.N\JT GROVE, MiM. CAP> -They never
lhou1ht ll could happen on the banks ot Plum
Cree It
There ls ancer. sadness, uncertainty a nd
truatraUon In Walnut Orove, the Uny pra1rle town
Immortalized by Laura In1alls Wilder ln her
"LHlle House" books. The cause or t he
unhappiness is that teachers have walked off the
Job, an aJmost unthinkable act in a bard workln•
cl<lse·ltnit community that has never before faced
any kind or strike.
Walnut Grove's 19 teachers went on strike Oct.
9. Last ~eek, t~e district began rescheduling
c lasses m its single school usine aubatllute
teachers . Of 300 students, only seniors a nd
klndergarteners are not back in class full-time.
"When they first went on strike we thought it
couldn't happen here. A lot of people are sWl
~um~." said Edna Lessman, who holds part-Ume
Jobs an the school cafeteria, the newspaper office
and the Laura Ingalls Wilder Museum.
Others among the town's 746 residents aren't
numb. They're just plain angry.
··Teachers wouldn't be satisfied if they got a
100 percent raise. The more they get, the more
they want," said a man having coffee at the
Wal nut Gove Bakery. He asked that his name not
be printed.
. "You can't. put in prmt what the people are
saymg here, said another man. who also asked not
to be identified. "They are mad."
Both men said they themselves were out of
work.
. "Striking is not fun. I never thought I would
strike but there comes a time when you have to." s aid Margaret Wiecks, a kindergarten teacher
who has taught in Walnut Grove 15 years. "Most
people think it's money. but it's not. The school
board is trying lo put things in the contract that
are in no other contract we've ever heard of."
T~e proposals opposed by teachers include a
no-strike clause. despite teacher strikes being
legal in Minnesota; a clause Lhat pay would not b~
retroaclive to the beginning of a contract year
when. a late settlement is reached, and u claust'
allowmg the board to pay above scale for jobs that
are difficult to fill.
Relations are cordial between the ptcketlna
teachers and those crossing the picket line.
''People who come into town from the-outside
can't beLieve that we are still lalkantt. but we
have to II ve together," said Ed 1-'ornberg, a
second.year art and elementarY, mus1r tearher.
"It hasn't been a rugged strike." said William
Kuehl, vice president and chief executive officer of
Ci tizens State Bank of WaJnut Grove. "A strike is
altogether different in a community like this.
'"When you don't know the people you can get
mad. Out here you know all your neighbors .
You're going to have to keep living here."
But Mrs. Wiecks said some people think the
strike is hurting the image of Walnut Grove as
portrayed in the book "On the Banks of Plum
Creek" and the NBC television show , "Little
House on the Prairie ...
That image "is a real big thing here," she
DEA TH NOTICES
TllEIL James Episcopal Church.
BETTY S THEIL . 3209 Via Lido. Newport
resident of Anaheim. Ca. Beach. Ca. Mrs. Mrkham
Passed awa) on October 24, died Friday. October 23.
1981. She wa:. a member of 1981 al her home on Balboa
lladassah, Masada Chapter Island . Ca Sur vivors
ror approximately 25 )ear~ include 2 sons Dr Charles
She 1s sun·1ved b' her ~on llenn '.\larkham of Los
Maurice and grandchildren Angeic:. and Richard G.
Pamela and Bl•\·erl\ Markham o f Prescott.
G ravestde sen i ce:. on Arizon..i and a daughter
'.\1onday. October 26. 1981 at '.\1urt1ana Wiggins. She also
2 OOP'.\'1 at II arbor Lawn leu,·es 2 daughterS·IO·law. 14
'.\1ounl Olin• Park Sen 1c·es gr a ndchaldren and man)
under the d1rcrt 1on of nieces a nd n<>phews Her
llarbor La"'n '.\lount Oh,·e hu~band Fred S m 1lh
:\1ortuar) of CoslJ '.\k!>a '.\1arkham died m 1952. Mrs
540-5554 Murkham and her husband
L \NG n .... ncd and operated Smoke
-~ ......... Leo Theisen, football coach.at Walnut. Grove High
School m Minnesota, pl.ay! catch while picketing
outside the school.
said. "People from every state in the union and 30
foreign countries have stopped at the museum."
When the strike appeared imminent pastors
or the town's five churches all gave' ser'mons on
forgiveness on one Sunday.
That may have helped. ·1p a town where
Wednesday night ls "church nigln" and no other
rvt•nts are scheduled, the religious community has
an Infl uence.
"We have prayed for a just settlement and
eom municatlon between the teachers and the
board-'.' said Sister Eunice Drazba or St. PauJ 's
Cuthohc Church.
"In a small commmuruty, people 's feellngs
nre hurt. The teachers say, 'I've lived here aJI my
life and this is what the community ls doiag to
me · The community feels, 'We should be able to
run our schools.· That sets up blocks for people t.o hear ," she said.
Walnut Grove residents worry she added that
the school will have to close If teachers are given
large pay increases.
. ·'The thing that comes out most is the money
lhmg. Xou close the school and you close the town.
There 1s that fear," Sister Eunice said.
The current average wage is $14,298. The
~chool board's last wage offe r was a 27 percent
increase over a two-year contract. The teachers
have asked for a 35 percent increase but
emphasize they will accept less if other demands
are met.
Stephen Bohling, pastor or the English
Lutheran Church and a member of the Walnut
Grove School Board, finds himself in an especially
difricuJt position. "I'm torn between my position on the board
and the need to minister to all of the people,"
Bohling said. • The bell that Pa Ingalls helped buy for tbe
first church ln Walnut Grove bangs in the belfry of
Bohling's church, and the feelings Ingalls
expressed about the importance of church seem t.o
hang over the community. "It's nice to be with a crowd of people all
trying to do the right thing, same as we are,"
Laura Ingalls quoted her father as telling his
family alter the first service was held in the new
church.
These days in Walnut Grove, the right thing
isn't 'the same for everyone. But the lines of
communication remain open
"I have not talked to anybody who hasn't been
very open." Mrs . Wiecks said. "They may not
agree, but they listen."
EARi. E 1.A:\G, r<·sident Trt-e Ranch resort an . Palm
of 1\lonlrlii1r. Cu l'as.,rd Spnngs from 1936 unt~I 1946 _________ _
...... a) on Ot•tolx·r 22. \!JM\ \\ hl•re .,he had maintained a MJC MO~E
Funeral sen 1ees..., 111 be ht'ld .... inter home She was a----------
on Wednesday. October 28. found in~ member and lsl "CTITIOUS a usu11us PtCTITIOUI aus1111us
1981 at 11 OOA!\I at Pierce President of the California 111AMa STAT aMENT MAM• STATUAalllT
Brothers Hell Rroadw·iv Epilepsy Society and one of Tri• 1011-1,.. per-.s .,. dol119 Th• 1o11owl"9 peno11s ••• dotfl9
• · h \ s ' · the oqianizers and former bui111e1s H ' b'41nets •: " ape \\ilh eafar1ng . . aACKSAYC0.,2t7S trvl111Bt~.. CUSTOM WAVE WATE.-el!OS, M ason 1 c Lodge 1' 7 O 8 presidents of the American Cool• Mete,c.. 92621 uos H1111t111ot011 •C, Hu111t1191011
off1c1a11ng. In heu of flowers Epilepsy Foundation. She Llndlt'f P. Hoytt, voo ,.. ... '°" •••<II, CA,,._
donations mu> be made to wa; an Episcopalian and Pl.,~,!~·~~~s!:.!'ooor .... ::,~..!'::d:.~=..~ •C,
lhe '.\1 asome I lomes. Ptt•rce m c m be r or S t . James N••llOf1 BMdl. ca.""° ,..,_. Rrothers Bell Broadwa\' Ep1sropal and St Paul's m 1...1rtdleyP.Hoorle H.?.,~~,::~'=-~~~=~stl· "· Mortuar~ dircrlor~ . clhl' de~cr:.. Shhe wasoactive ind c ... !.~1~~~·=.;·.::.."~';! Thi• buslneu •• conChKleCI by •
'IARKHA:U amps art est ut, an 1...,.,.,1,1 .. , o-nen•~
· · , member of the Order of St Ptrea• 1
MAZIEBELLE (,LOVER Jame'> She was active in the Put>llslltd ore11oe coe•t oe11y c~1:,~'-":'cir::.~=~
i\I AR Kll A!\1 ~1emor1al llealtng ~Iimstr~ and other P11010<1•.1J,20,21,1t11 •2'W• ,,,...,.
s.ernces for ~1a11cbclle {'('umemcal mov'ements. She "111: <.lover Markham. ai.tc· R.t "as bor n in 1897 in ___________ 1 P111»11"'8d 0r.,,..c.oestoet1yll'lte ~111 ~l' held al 2 •;IOP'.\I on \'alenune. Nebraska a nd ~ MITU 0ct. is.20.t7.N<W.i. "'' ..,
.• Jonda), October 26th at St. h\'t>d in California since----------
1922 In her youth s~e. toured "~~=:':' PllUC MIJI(
ULTZURGH OH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WIS TC Liff CHAl'El
427 E 17th SI
Costa Mes.a
646-9371
l'IHCE H OTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUUY
627 Main St
Huntinaton &act!
536 6539
1'.AClftC VIEW
MfMOltl.AL l'iltl
Cemetery Mortuarv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1hc View Drive
NewPOrt Beach
644·2700
McCO.MK:I MORTUARIES
Laouna Beach
494-9415
Laauna Hills 1 768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1716
, HdtOl UW"-MT. OU YE
Monuarv • C.metef"f
Crema,orv
1625 Giiier A-Je
Coste Meu
540-SS54
"1th her sister. M1nam on Tll• 1.1 .. wl11t '"r•fl 11 11o1119 PKTtT'lous euau ..... I h e Keith 0 r p he u m eust11ess ts: lllAMa STAT9Mln
Vaudeville Circuit. In lieu of UNrr10 MACtiOIE SHOP. "" Tile 1011owt110 ,,.,..°" w .. 1110
fl lh f iJ "---"-• C.... llllHa, CA. nuP IMISIMSS H : O\\er:-e am.> reques ts .__.,H.~~.un s-te PACIFIC COAST LEAS!,..,°'"
memorial contnbutions beA111 Aw.,c:o.te-.a,e11.m 21 BN<" BfVd., Hl.lftU,,...ei.kll ~
se nt lo the California T1111 IMlnelS I• <OlldlKtecl b'f.,. ""°· · E p 1 I e psy Societ y 6 11 7 llldMdu•t Wtlllem Frtll<H S.ll11or•. >ISJ1
Reseda Blvd . Space G, Tiiis si::='-,/;ri= w1t11 .,,. ==~"~~~·· U> """
1!11•1
•
11
Reseda. California 91335. c-1yOM11e10r....,c.u., ... 0ct. Tiiis ~ts c~ ~ 911
Ser\'lces under the direction 12• 1111• • 1~· f B· It B S 'th & fJtJ-WIH'-FrencosSollfl«d o a z er1oteron· mt P11bt1ilwf or.,.. c.1t o.11 .. Pl.., T1111 t1Mome111 ... Ill• • ..,.. IN Tuthill Westcliff Mortuary.0c1.21,..0...l'°-17,ttrt ..,..., :ou11tyO...afer.,..~ae0ct.
646-9371 ·• , .... f"7Nt
P'olllllsllft Or .... C-t 0...., Pl ... ----.. ----------...o.l >d. U, IQ. ti,,.._ J, ltl1 ._.,
8UCCUMBI
Oacar·wlnninl dress
deslper Editll Head,
believed to be in ber
PllUC Rl
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
.. ...
....... CLASSIFIED
INDEX
....•.................. ··•···•····•··········· ···~··················· 1002 ... ,.. 1002
T1"8ctY•M.td
642·5678
E AL HOUS&NO • ., 1• = :: ·OPPORTUNITY -----·-_ ..
~~m w•
tw. •• w..w. Miike: ti~~~ L,'~ All rtal t1tah ad· IWlt ':: vertlud I n tbll
1e newspaper II 1ubjtct to i.~1 :: the Peden.I Fair Hol.ll· ~":' t: lnl Act ol ta which
-c.p111noo 1m mak• 1t Wepl to ad· luu.\M I. _.la • .,-I 1oo1 •tcti 1.. ve, ... e 'any .,. ... erence, ~ :: limitation, or di•·
atoei1t Homeas.1. 1100 crlmloaUon based on IW ESTATE race, color, rellalon, ~-s.i. IJllD 1e1, or oaUooal oriam,
A,.n111oeu !• s.10 1JOO or an ln&ention to make =~r :: any 1ucb preference,
C...'"'7 t.eu crno 1• llm It a tion, or du· ='.' ... ~..' .. ';:r.'1 1: crimlnaUoo." ~-UoiU S.lt 111111 -........... llllO '-rr....v IOllll =~•01••rlJ ::
II.WO H,,,. 'l'rlr rru mo
...... 0ow1. •• ..,, -
Thia newspaper will not
ltnowlncly accept any
ad ver tl1lna for real
estate which ii in viola·
tion of the law. t:=~~:,.. = ==~.!:':.~:;:-= 1--------·1 llcal r.i.1t Wultd aQQ IEMTALS BIOIS: A.dwtftlMrl
Ha.Mo"""'-, JIOO ...... ct.cl....., ..
-~ .. r ...... -SM ~ _....= "-"'"'"'u"' u.i -r -~ =:::::: i~;· = ren I •-· 1'w f=: ~r· -DAIL T Pl..OT •• • 11
°"Ph• .. "''" = hMlty for .. flnt
..............................................
CUFP DI. YllW
This splendld home offers pano. ramlc
views of the OCEAN, BAY and soft
green hills from almost every room .
Expansive 4 Bdr m 3 Ba home
w/family home leading to pool and spa area. Finest appointments thruout + excellent financing makes this a
flawless choice for you . Call for
EXCLUSIVE showing.
lllNG YOUI ANT19"'S They will fit beautifully in the gor·
geous Newport Hgts home. Unique
charm and OWNER FINANCING
makes this a wonderf uJ opportunity to
BUY. Asking $270.000. Drive by 520
REDLANDS AVE, then call for
appointment.
THE V&Y IEST
LOCATION AND PRJCE! You will
aj?ree when you view this GORGEOUS country cottage in Newport Hgts. It
has 3 Br , & LOW INTEREST
FINANCING . Drive by 2809 Broad St,
then call us.
RAE RODGERS 631·1266
R&" M ~ of Costa Mesa
llllpit•nlJal -~ P\f,. :nao lacorrtct IHtrtlo• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ l,pU(.'alwn 1!JiO ~ -
1<p11 "''""' Lnl *'° -r· R-.. «JW = ... ~d :: --------1 C-Homu 41lll Swnnwr 11. ... 1ab uw v, .. ,_ ll...u.b .m
ltiul> IO SM rt• u:iO
Cw oe•• lor II.HI <r.o Ofll<'t lltntal ooo ~ ltemal "50 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
G1•NI 1002
~~;·i ~ TH~=n
TENNIS + POOL
.5 acre estate, 4 Br 4"'1
Ba. bas It all. Lo dn ·
owner will finance'
Patrick Tenore, rltr
758·1Z21
YllWLon
COIOMA DB. MAI
Spectacular location
with bay and ocun
views. Extra deep loU
startin1 at a .ooo with
753 financinc.
IUSIMESS. INVEST· Bat buy in area. 3 Bdrm 1 MEMT. ANANCE and add on family ---------. ,_ ~ room too! Ref rl1 & ZADULT
17141 673-4400
IJ ll l Ua.2121
HARBOR .......:w-.-.;; lll10 home warn.nty. lfthat's
::.::~, : not enough, try 8...,% as-
:::;~~. ~ sumable loan. 1105.700. •""l•rt• Tn, :; Call now 9'19-$370
~:~~:"is. ALLSTATE
LOST l FOUND AMcluto«monu llUU REAL TORS c;.,....., mo ~.i,,~: ~ CHOICEIUY! ~~:;,.. = $I 04,900
Tm.t• l-4'" Hlahly upcraded 2 SEIYICES Bdrm, Irvine Condo.
Stoa l>\rf'C'I or)
OlrtOYMENT &
rm ttATION
Cirhooh hu~tnl<'•t(lf'I J06W•ot"'1• Hdp, .... .., .....
MERCHANDISE
~ ...,.,.._ ..
"""""" ::I:.'::1111tt11i. ~,. •• fA .. p ..... \
Doc> ....... ,.,.
f°ijf'!'Jlyr.,
G11 .. ~ '-IJt> ..._
'® Beautiful wall cover·
lngs, levelors, drapes
plus pool, spa, ~ room.
7ooi. Take over existing
M~ financing. Call for de·
n..i tails! 646-7171
IDl6 •1• •u --t!Wil-!
: llGCANYOH
HOME $18,900
Singles f111d a partner.
Two big private ,
separate bdnns, each
with full baths. Quiet,
A Olv1s1on ol
Ii arbor Investment Co
pride of ownership, hid· 1"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! den away 1 level coodo I"'
with pool and communi· ~------ty rec room Near S.
Coast Plau. Call about
terms. 752-1700
ttWM-1
3 IDRM.rOOL ,
OCEAHIT
3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car
carace. multiple z.onin1
Call MS-9111
. OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY
/ 12.t,.oAl•cllMJ
Lovely 3 Bdrm, heated
pool home. Take over l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!I!! e:a:iltinc loam u 1293 ,_ ______ _
Total momhly payment.a
approx. $1411. Call Dick
Dreltler, lit 7'5·1Z21
.--...G...-.i• J.-l'J u ..... o
: CONDO STEALS!
:: 2 &i 3 Bdrms avail.
:,: Sl84 ,000·S235 ,000 = w/terms! Must liquidate $10,000 DOWN! oow. Patrick Tenore, :': agt 75'·1221 Unbeatable terms by
HAUOlllDM
An exqul1lle offerln1
Ele1ant ' apacio\11 3
bdrm + famlly room, I
lev. home w/panoramic
vlata of harbor ,
couUine, ocean & nicbt
llcbu . Preati1e. com·
fort. luury &i aecwity
Reduced, now f739,000
<Owner flnanctnc l. Act
M0-55'0
~,._, .11....u-
Nuc-tflMtOUt Vi. •ntf'd lllWtal lnllrun>tnll ~ Deae rted 3 Bdrm ~"''"'('"'' "'-~°'JIM S..VIC lll•dU.nH !iporunc Cooci.
-==I motivated owner !
charmer In 1ood
.., ne i l h borbood. Sunny I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 5 1--"'======;;._i It 1 tc be n. Hard wood 1--ii:===~-Slart' Rf'KUtalM Bu ~"l!.,.._Hift Sterto aom ' MARINE
EQUlrMEJH
-. $17,d~DWM! ~o:;~;;i; uouoo. ":=:1
-S::~~ =1i i!~iittf ~'5.: i:=!!:Lr:J~' :: f I re p I ace, 1 u n n y mer rentall. Good bla·
-kitchen, 3 buie bd.rm1, AXIi tory. Fee. Priced at = 2"' bat.bl. Great flnanc-$I OJ,OOO 1315,000.
: Ina. 117•000 down. 1.3% 3 Bdrm-buae back -~!firer~; :: ':~: yard-areal for tint associated
tuo 544-ZllJ Ume buyer-doa'l ml11
:: th.ii one. Call now!
H W ~ I U ~I :, ' 1 i..' •
• >A ~ • • tt.•@. SEA COVf . ::: "'"""fS :l: 714:0J;6ft0 OCWROMI'
LIASIOPT10H IASTSIDI Sltl,000 ... ••
e11 with Jutt IDOOO DWN or Seller wW CUT)' balance
:: buy now with 110.000 S 151,000 at lK lnterelt. Cbolce
:;: dwn. Dix Npt condo, Only 110,000 down cet.a com er dup&u. a bdrm. 3 '* partial vu, Sl.29,900. Call you lntA> this t.ot.ally re-bath up, 2 bdrm. 2 beth
-Ra a Al 1J111 modeled 4 Bdrm home. down. Can convert to : · Larae comer lot, Kol larae home. Submit all
~too!~=·~::;~. I olfi•i:=~·
Stl.tlO
COSTAMISA Owner will CarTY (mane·
ma with small down ! 3
84rm. Well maintained.
Greal baraain, act now! ;a
DICU11VI
MISAYllDI
Covered mtl)' overloob
beauUfuJ 1pu'klin1 pool,
s pa and fi re rlnc.
Fonnal livtna room and
formal dinfna. Huae
coun try k itch e n ,
• •eparate famlly room with fireplace. 4 Bdnn,
laqe muter bdrm, 3
batb. A Baraa ln at sno,ooo. See it DO'#' call
5el-ZIU
PiOPHTtES *675-7060. 714-63 J-6990, , _____ _
REDUCED
5 Bdrm, Solar heated
pool, s pa. Water sof·
tener, lntettom. GDO,
atone frplc, excell area.
Low down. OWC, IS·
1ume•.soo.
MUST SELL !!! All Offen Considered!
•
RED CARPET
754-1202
llSTIUT
Beautiful, immaculate,
nicely landscaped 4 Wrm home on cu1-de-
11c. Spacio\11 rooms.
View of aoll COWM from
property. Owner will
help Oii (lftlllCinl. Only
UH,500. Cati n ow
'1NSTO
ALLSTATE
10%14tmsr
On thb adorable a Br
Huntlnaton Beach
starter complete with
pool and priced to Mll at Jlllt SU.S,000. Hurry!
RCTaylorCo
l •, 1 I \ l ~ '(, I
• ASSUM+al
,....._ ____ ....... ~·,~-·-R_EA~L_TORl~~-
THE 'R E A L
ESTATF.RS -.
12%LOAM Duianer beauty, ~
lou. Larie I Bdrm, 3
batb, pl• family room
c oado. U:iraded tlanaout ... l JUl"I
old. Take au Jeet to tw ....... m..
'•"" w •. fW 11,
T• II WI • """ M
~&LhY• Pool,.,. ....... Lra 11f.1616
Dt MW I ldr + ............. iiiiillllliillllllll• ~~...._ .. .....,,._INnet
..... L, -RfY'.;~.1~
•
·--~------........ ------------.-........... . Orange Co est DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday. October 27, 1981 Cl
He.Mt,.., Wt Ho.tHt For S• Ho.tea for Wt Ho.Me F« Wt t.._.• llor Wt •••••••••••••••••• ••
•--OllltrRftll .... ........ ,., s. ........ ,., s. Hovtt•""' s. """' '°' 5* ... , ...... , ........... . •·•• iooi G;.;;;; .......... ioo'i ~=~ .......... iO'oi ,;;;;··· ...... ·;;i 9;;.; .......... ;00j
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....a.lie ...... c ........... 101J c.......... 102• &.e,.M8"dl 1041Ntwportleoc:ta IOH .... we ,, ..
,
LINDA ISU HOMES
Prdll(le pool family home Mam
chann e l vie w from bttitutiful
traditional, 4 bdrm. 5 bath home Slip
for 2 large boats. $1,495.(XX)
La rge lu~oon \'It'\\ frvm S(X.'l'lurular
arch1le<.'lural dt!s1~n 6 bdrm. 5 bath.
playroom . dark room & den Slip for 2
large boa ls SI .a.w.ooo
LIDO ISU HOMES
~'eatured on Home~ Tours this lt1H•ly
traditional ~pac1uus. <'U'\tum :I hdrm. 3
bath home, ne\\ I) rl'tll·1·01·.1tt•d . Pnn•d
to srll quickly at $17!'",,tlOO Must s1•e
Ne\\ ly n·modelt•d 3 bdrn1, 2 hath plus
lge rcl'reation room & 2 patios. B1.••rn1
ceilings Great for f,11n1h In 1ng
Excellent val ue at $420.IHKJ
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT
Panoram ic b:iy & Ol't•<.111 \ 1e\1.: at
wedge. from prim~ l.irJ.!t> lot .t hclrm
3 bath rustom honli.' 3700 sq It
featuring marint• room Sl.3H5,UOO
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bay~1de011ve N.8 67S-6161
" I
REALTORS
675-5511
CUSTOM CONDOS: l'rt.·sentl\ u111lt•r
c·onstruction. 2 pros1><.•t'llh' <'Ondo~ 111
So. of Hwv loealton. Poss1hl1• dwu·1•s
of amenil.ic~ and C'olor ii JHtr<'h.1't'<I
earl~ e nough Call fc>r clN<.1!1 ...
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona del Mar
675-5511
~ ............................... ...
I
SELL idle tll'lll' .... 1th .1 Uail) Pilot l'b,~1flt'•l 1
' Ad I
~ .... 11 .... 11hf.\--~
II '·' 111n1:zr
l'l:J',1111'\l \(b 1~1~ :11ii><
,. OPEN WEOMESDA Y
l·S
141SE.8AY
A VERY SPECIAL 8'4YfROHT
On th~ pl'ntn'.tlla·..., EJsl HJ~
Beaut1fu l1' th-1·11rall'll 5 H H
home. Spt•ct:.tl P1t'r ,\: sltp \\Ith
wid<' S\:'\D\ BE\<'11 !-ip1•11.tl
~eparall' lot '.! 1110.101
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
·-------~ I • • •
..
'
'·
., ,.
•'
,.
I l
t rr
LI
C'•
I) .. ..
CE
llDBIE ELllM CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
CHARMING DUPLEX + BACHB.OR UHIT
Situated Best Central .\n a 1·0 ... tu
Mesa. Jdt.>al For <h1\\l'I 111 Ont• l 1111
Ot her T\\O l 'nlls ll l'lp \lttkt·
Payme n ts . lJH \STIC !'Hit'~~
REDL'CTlO\ 0\\'\1-:.H \~~1~1
FI NA!\Cl:--:C ~1:>0.000 <all \1m lo
See.
HEW OM THE MARKET
F o u r B e d 1 o o rn Th rt• l' Bal h Sparkhn~ -Clt.'<lll Ht>modell·d Ho11ll'
In WestC'liff . (';ill [·'or TIH fksl
Terms In To\\ n l.t•a...,<• Opt ion
Possible $28.t.ooo
759-9100
.... ·-..... tt 2 C~t'1a10
HewpotiC~r
SUK & FINlf STUDENT
C E M D S E 0 S C l A A T R E N E C l
S R L E A R T R E l E G A E P A l U Y
A E N 0 l I 8 A W A S N D N M M E E P
E l E S C U R E U E I U R E P S R C A
C O H H A H P D V D C N H T A S 0 l L
S O A A E H I P 0 A A S N R A P T R
K H M R I T S l T M E R P A T l A N I
H C V J 0 G S E H R A U G 6 U C B E G
O S 0 R R S E S F l P P N R D R l R L
T H E A R H E l 0 I W 0 E E E E K P 0
L G C R J R l H L R L V 0 0 H 0 C P 0
R I A A F C C H C 0 E L £ H N H A H
L H R R M S & 0 E T C E L I T U Q U C
TT E£NAM $SALCAKY El~
£ S Y T A A t l L S £ R L £ H U I R &
VI :~1.1-: 1 \
ll 1\YLOR CO.
HEALTOHS ~11H·1· IH·H;
l ·STOU DU,LD H.I. • S27t,IOO
200· To ht-a r h 1 Most uttractive bld g.
hcaut maint by on~ ownt>r. 4 BR , 2 ba
& l~l' sundt><'k up . 2 BH. 1 bu, patio in
lowt•r 2 r J> OWC $2:10,000 W/$49.500
dn
WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
21 11 Son~ Hiiis Rood
MEWPORT CEMTU. M.I. 644-491 O
UNIQUE IM BEACOM U. Y
Ht-.l on lltl' bcal'h living 1n ~l'\\porl
Heal'h . 'l'\\o slon hume now used as
1h1plt•x L.irgt·· R-2 bayfront lot.
Sensl1twn.il hH .it1on Sl,150.000
I J~l()Uf ti M~§
HLALTORS, 675-6000
l 14'1 I ol l uo l Hlqh .... \ ( nron• dl'I Mar
WE HA YE 61 Of THE IEST LISTINGS IM TOWN
LINDA ISLE llAMATIC!
Versatile floor plan with security &
privacy of courtyard entry. LOl"C)t main
rooms for tntertaining in & out. Lonly 5
bed. step-down fam.rm. wittl bar, pier &
slip. Fluiblt fi"a"cin9 or submit
tllchan9e. S 1,595,000.
\\ .\ 11 RI RO~T liOML · ''l Hf \I I-. J .\II " .
\~ e ·\ I
fi.,, ,,.,, I ''"
6734900
SUPER SYRACUSE-SPA. \ lovel)
'.inl \'\ !\p,1 1•nhJ11ee this ~auliful
l'tillt•J.!l' l'tll'k hom1" ~HR · den Jg
FIL k 1 I l ht• 11 ror lll<t I Ii \'Ill~ rm
"'"'' h111·k £pl<· 2 haths
::,JKo.111111 t.1kl· O\l'I' g1t·at loa ns.
\Lin H1•1 I i'.il Xillil <i5:P
CYPRUS SHORE LEASE
OCEAM FROl'IT. S1nglP ~tor) I BR.
:1 B \. 11 \mi.: rm & cl111 rm home an
" \ 1 I 11 .., 1 ' l' I • ' p r 11 ~ S h o r e s
I 11111111un1I\ t1•nn1s 1·nu 1ts &
1·l11hhou~1· '' ;tlk lo he:.ich below .
\\ .11lahl1• 11nmNltatl•ly. S2700 mo
nun,r Cod~hall Gt•org<' Grupe
f1.l I fi20() I (;511
r; STAR GA'ZEK"~• ._,1_~:J--.---~• t L.H It Pllll \N---r---_,
f. "~·.'~,
_,; ... '
1416 ·•'lf •}4*
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t1. Yot1r Ontly Att1nf1 Gv.dt ~ Y Acto1J•"O lo,._. Stor1
T dro"""' ,.....""'l' '°' "'""""'*"' rf"IOldWUtdt f'"'""Pln::l•f'9 ,,,fVTbrn
1f y~t' l1J1tli t.,..rfh ~9" ....
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~,,, .. ,.clh .....
-~ ..... !IOSorl
•C>lt
{)NC'\ttUI
'::~:~:~' $~ \\&t\ lv\-~ £~~8 .... ....
-----" ... 4 ., CLO l POU.ON
0 le1t'°'0"'9• .. Ht •• of "'' IQ<ir Krombltd -di ti.
low Iii> •o·"" '°"' .. "'o'• NOtd1
........•.............. .....•....•.•.......... .•••....•••.....••..•.. ....................... ·····•·················
TwoJ.._ Ow.rWll,..._. EMERALDIAY PRICE!TERMSI o ct AN f Ro NT Red~ct:d to 134D,ln> f1u U a abarp low main Newelepnt cstmS8r 4 LO CAT IO M ! LACUNA BCH. new
quick 11Je. Some Oct•n tenance 4 Bdrm bomt car 1u All utru In ROSES from $29,900. rent $400
View. Spa, 4 car aar with custom apa' BBQ credible whllr w11tM Th h h l 11 , mo 499-_ _ ~t buy Ul all C l> M U1ttreat1 you 1et lhll view CaU 7SO.a71.$ tJ o~ 11.~ 1 a
Try '50.000dn flft1nc brand no.; Select Ele1 ant 3460 S t' Ha rbor Vttw llumts, ----... 1111111~~ PRIDI OP Ulll at 13% Call Jim Property F1ntutlc ihowzlace !i<I Laauna seller wlll twlp r1mincc. 18.MOMI' SHOllS
OWNERSHIP! I fl · . "' 11 I ' ' · ' only 1235 OX>on fri' l1nd Cl ...... •o bri1 Th.is ta dbl Dav 11. 169·1221 , tva nancrna' ru pr ce 180 earee ucean \ltw •t Ill f.ct 1 ndilcapinit .,.., • ~ :~~m ~ 0b:~~ c0Md:b1~ 642-0'750. Agt ms.ooo. 7$1-3191 Security, pth'lllt dnvr .u~ro~~•dml! "pnvuk SJ)~ :1•~i:~ ~'!:~'~nlfl.
Location LIH¥t' Plan c --------1 Btluw mkt Ill $629,SOO orr muster bdrm Close MUUtlAIH model, trl le\fl Owntr ""COIOMADll.Mil Assumable financlni;, tu l11r.:r 11rrenbrlts. 1 ..... TOIS
will cury 2nd Sl34.m R·JLOT lmmf'd. O«UJMDt'Y st e p~ to cummun1ty ._
Charmin& beach cot Ow.!1£r_.8M20LS pool t'ltil tune 11tl MobHt.._IM•.
Ddebout ..
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
U.1e. rutunng 2 Bdrm 204¥oDM-llO/o lHT. wtu.ed m1700 17141527·5900 :£~::1:::::.:::~ :~~;~~~.! Y.:£~~:~':,,~~; f E!!d!• •:,~::',-.~-rt j~-~a-b~l~xe~
For an appomtment to 3 bdrm home U1 Pfilne decks w1ocean vu. 4 yr -----~ galore'. 75~ see,call~USl Costa Mers area. !tld.'245.._000,497-1051 REDUC£0411f 350
--, a HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
7S9·150l or752·7373 ft ltoclt P,..,..,ty I
110 D.cJr" View •• •••. • ••••••••• •••••••
-
Walker & lee
Real Estate
759.1 so r -------
5000 sq. fl ~e. 4 H1 NOW $i9,000 MISTB IOSEH
4''2 Ba $825,000. 11ood up to 4S' boat slip 1mul ll11ve info on duplex.
terms Pnnc1pals only l4 tlh lht!> hugl' 2 and a car Is ba d n eed ~1·0763, den or 3 Br condo telephone number Paul
IFYOUHAYL 14 water 'iew' from Wopsc ha ll Rltr ,
Sl0,000 to $20,lm for Jll both II\ 111J! rm and mslr 714-434 !_735
1nit1al investment. we w1h• Gor11eou.~ neutral CttM'teryL.oh/
HARIOR ll}I'. SIOOODOWM!! ran put you '" a well de,·or ""d the bt·~t Crypts 1500
HIGHLANDS Bring paint brush & located propert) 1n finanemg al the IJearh •••••••••••••••••••••••
Spacious 1mmarulatt broom to save SSS on this Laguna, So Laguna or <.:all foqour IJl'lllt>nal 111 2 Cemetery lots"' Harbor
Two story, four bedroom RE ~ l T 0 Rs J br rixer in qulet Costa Laguna Niguel. Call tu !>pert ion Rest S.SOO ea Call collect
family home with Mesa area Creative day for appl to dti.t•uss ~ 1 714 MS .illlll _
country de t' o r A Spy9lou fto'Oftt Row seller says sell' 759-lSOI your needs 494 2894 t:d ~i \\\\\ldhrldgc COtNMrdal
marvelous masttr Th1s formermodelhome or 752·7373 n
5
:,_LundbergRltr &As R•·alllj p--.... 1600 bt>droom retreat It's all 1s very highly upgraded "' " '"'Y'' •1
here for the young 111 4 bedrooms. family OSO ~'l l ltl<lit 1 · .. ••••••••••••••••••••
heart. $270,IXXI room and spa with spec· LOCJtMO Hilts I 1»~u llrn•r11 • ·,;k,;" tnlno• SUPER, SUPER
631-7300 H.I. tacular ocean view air "••••••••••••••••••••• Lrg 120xl40 lot + sml -lmll!~llllll!!!!!!!!!!lll!!l!!l!!llll rond1t1oning. pool. Melli•GailRonc:h l'atahna P1er\11Xtrh:2 bldg 919Sunset,CM In·
I FIXER ·-ER-security system Pnced $900,000 hr ~t'W dt>t•or thruout I du:.tnal z.oned Act now.
--.-below market al 643·2341,1·91l620-IS SliO<>Yrh Pref mttlal(t' ~on l las t Chuck A htlle redecorating lo S629 ooo u I Sp111~r a"' 631· '""" Mesa Verde L-o ... .__. I 052 t·u ll ,. " • I!>' .....,., make th~ targf' rambl o.·M . ...,._ ... _., Rttr -,-· "~· oo :t112 mg rant'h homt' a real I --$229,500 ••••••• ••••••••• ••••• ••
I dandy Big lot and lots or 7J_Q.08}} Great assumable loan on owe 1st or SOOK al 13'. .......... --.. •! I A k $1°" 000 th IS b4-aullful 3 bedroom on this 4 Br 2 Ba home Under ConstnlctiOft trees s ing ""'· Costo Meso I 024
I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 212 bath showpla ce. Sun M t n Va 11 e > \ 1 e w ' OM LIDO
Co .. ST ... ··~e.s ny dining room. Coty Highly upgraded Just 'fhis 3 un dream home 25% l.T.C.
HALBOA PENINS ULA
HEAUTY'
U>cated Just steps from
the beaC'h, lh1s l'Ult' 2 I
bedroom. I bath home 1s
situated on an R 2 zoned
1 I lot. offering a number or
poss1b1htlt's tu the new
ow ner The seller may
txchange for a house or I lot on the Peninsula
$225,()()() 644 7020 I
aungo ~ 111.lhu"
"' --.;~ family room. TW O $152.SOO' TR Re,111) .,..111 be .i trill' dt'hght Rehabof40yroldrom·
Cool. charming. 4 BR fireplaces o~ner will 497 3034. With s20.00J dcpo:.it. thl' I mental bldg~ clas~1ried
home approx 212 m1 to help finance. Call today He rl leoc.h 1069 0.,.. ner dl•rorator .,..111 H1stor1ral quahf1e!> for
beach Bmk fplr Coun-and enJOY the cool ()('ea n wpo i•rt•I id" an_• uallpa""r In\ e~lmenl tax credits k h r l ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ~ ~ ~ y~ try 1tc en, ea ures I breezes 979,2390 1 l ~JA"'' at or 2sr, We have several
Oak noo~ plus colorful TorlMI Reotton OCEAMFROMT ~~co~~:a'l~~~~·r . -.s I in Santa Ana for sale.
decorative celling. BY OWNER 1 sldr111\g at SLS 00 sq rt
Large t'O\'ered pauo for DCIM Polat I 026 1 New cost bll 2-J l>IY., I Bkr 953 1220
outd.oor ente~ta1ninii.1 •••••••••••••••••••••1••1 French Normandy 3 BR d • I rrtS /T Flexible fmancrng. Only Lease option or sa l'. & den home Can be Con omlft ":de ow•
$119,SOO! CaU645--0303 I $8.000 down, no quallf) spht S895 !XX) OWl' 3711 houws for 1700
COLDWC!LL
BANl(C!RC
mg. vie" home, 2 Br . Se· h .673.6571! 1 .... --.... -... 1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• den & ranuly room Tom as ore I ICMlf Sips A•oil
493 tl52 BayshorH by OWMr REPO SALE v. aterfront community
lr.o.taiR V*Y 1034 1 Lrg 4BR . 4'1A home I NEWPORT SHORES 1.2 &3BR Condos from
....................... Steps 3Wa) rrom II' I 223 CAHAL I SIS<l IMJO lo $385.000 As·
G beaches. Owner will as "' Rr 3 na on ranal sumt loan & owner as-•OllO'-~~---~'°"' _ MO OUAUFYIM '"l tn r1nancma "r ~111 l r " R "'
1
4 BR 3 b r I OR t ..... ,, v tx•ean \II'\\ v.11h nnnml \ I SI~ tnanrm,. es a.,. FIXER · a. rm · "l'. I <·on~1cler tradt-:. Shown pool !.. lcnnt~ 4 ourt~ ~he1la 213 598-5272 bur. cash. C'<H . or ' byapptonl) Prinonly SUBMIT\IJ,tltl"f'.R~ AdultcondohxerS72.SOO
Needs somtTLCbut has ~5-2817 $530 000 Pnn<·onl) Hon t.!60.0l"I t.0 .,.. rn1.,..11 Alluv. S2K rent lrke
loads of potential 3 IH ... gt• Beadl I 040 Jackson 556-llm pymt Barb Shoreline
Bdrm 2 Ba located in ••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••• · 'l6J.O<J02 Mtsa del Mar. close to _ .... _ $25 OOO dll SI 0,000 DOWN .~'-r. -:,;· •
parks. schools & shop· -r • $2.000 per mo lmmed I ··r.111' (fl I Duplexes/ p 1 n g Sub m 1 t your I Payments under Sl.OOO possession Lol'el) 5 ll It 01tih S• 1100
terms Ask mg Sl29.SOO mo 3 and 4 l>E-droom:. 2 st) Ba<·k Ba) area •••• .................. .
homes Ney,• rpts drpi. $265,000 OwnerG31 ~215 I M~ .,,. t .... Fl .. TIAU11t.1Gu...ea! and pamt Submit your " ,.. VI"' n n • m:;,. urrer Call Leslie or ,.. .. _ .. _....... 12 Units. Costa Mtsa.
ijosie Agts 848 2262 or EASTBLUFF \s:.urne contract $370~1
PRESTIGIOUS VILLA car pet1n 1? & l'll o .... ner631-21SO
968-7194 3 Br llome 2 Ba !\cv.
1
I~ yr' 10'' '1.25M dn.
PACIFIC 2br. t:l•ba. $205,000 Pro~rty HouM Rltn Income Property 2000
DUDlex IRYnhMftt w e t b a r . p o o Is Roy Mc:ear.. Rttr. ·---·'•42•·.3•85•0 ..... 1 ·M·•:•K••E··:·.:;~R··,· (Land Included I clubhouse. hH\hly up 548-7729 "" """vrrs;
2 up & 2 down on a Tnbme. bi level. fpc. 3 graded Has existing lill!lllJl!!lll .. 11!!!1 .. ~-mmll!!!'I OCEAN VIEW
llUGElot.prov1dmgad BR .3 ba pnvyd.m1rro. 7 9'< Isl Ownerwillcoo MIDI estate 0\\'n rn CONDO
d111on.il off.st parking upgrade owe lll"c dn. sider carrying back 2nd believable rm met F, Beautiful \'pr.,:.11lll'~
lo the existing 4 cur $159,000.851~ or help refinance new Lst! OPEN Swt 1·5 1661 Penthoust' 2 bdrm 2 g 3 rag e Fant as l t c loan. Open Sat/Sun, 1 5 !!!~~ S.!.:....See clas__! 1002 bath. Owner .,..,11 carr)' rmancmg. low down and owe I ST 9766 Verde Mar 536-1600 Isl T.D $256,500
low interest payments I 5 Bdrm 3 Ba home local-I bkr~·&'Mlowner. BEACH HOUSE A~king only $279.SOO m ed in Mesa del Mar with J ti s T RE o Lf c E lJ Real cute Balboa bl.ind I
be:.l rentalarea.stel)!>lu pool & spa Needs some sacrifice price al home 2 Ad rm +
beach TLC but polenua I IS $125.!IOO 4 Br. pvt cul dl' bachelor $32S,(nJ owe JACOBS RflLTY great AskmgS175.000 sac, nr Harbour Bk r 760 809'J
348 0709 -I LARGE I , •• I 675-6670 '"int 1044 ASSL'M LOAN
I lolboo Isle.id I 006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• owe on this lo\ el~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUAUfY? spacious ru,tom pool
Submit YOIW OW'll terms. * * W • I home 1n Bay crest 3hr . , Defer down payment or None required on this 3ba plus larjle bonus
tntere!>t on this ne" 1mmarulale 2 Bdrm. 2 room $J9!l.500
liU Hardtsty, Rltr -1500 sq rt and super 2048 Commodore Rd
Redhill~Realty
(-j/;3. 1:300 ..
Iii! D~~
REUTOR'S
BJlboa Island home Bath Northwood homl' Open Sat Sun 1 5 I
67>28,6 •GOV"TLOAHS• terms' Pnced to go ra~t LOW DOWM Possible 5'1 down I at 1 C0ttcemedA.bcMlt
ENGLISH con AGE 12· 14"°< inl. rate. 30 yr , SlSl.500 I Seli..r Dnperat•. . LtOM t..d7
OW<.: AITU at 12•; 11\l. loans Freell\fo \ ersailles 1 htlrm I and high interest
3 I nrome Properties
Eas1~1de Cos1a Mesa u .. ner will carry
Pnred lo sell'
''•'..!"' 1 ·olle'a.!• \\t•
I t 1 \11·,,1 I \
98 UNITS
14-7PWES
Pmetl $.$00.000 belo"
i1ppra1sal for quick ~ale
Won't last l"anlasllc tax
wr11e orr llnd 1nH~l
menl Call R Hk
714 760 7292 P>m" 11 .. mo s,.., W..WR.E. (~i]llOOdbrldlJ< """0
,.,.,,..., """'" "'"' s.. '~' ""' , from lhe bavfronl 31 2 556-7777 I w large a;,sum<ible I llonal rec land 1•ondo 111 br. 2 ba. oi>Cn beams. - --- - -Rcahlj loan No qualifymg On-or1i.:1nal Bluffs y,1\h lll!!!!!![llllllllli!!!~~!!!f!!!!!!!!!~
hdwd firs. hand-hewn M1n1 estate own Un· 551 3000 I ly S99 500 Ask for Jim i large a~sumable 12'' 1---------belle\ able rm incl 7'7r •• Owner Agt 979~5370 or timbers. ful l lot l.st!OPENSunl-SIS6l 1t2ftRarranr-a Pk .. 1.lrvlnr 1]_07928_ _ j loan.3 Br.2 6a Shown ---------•
$425.000. 2or, down 1 d S See 1 002 --by f.PP01ntment to 4 UNITS~ Ow!!__l!&t494~0395 __ -1!.. I!§ t. c ass 1 -------12 duplexes & 4 tnplexes ' quahfied buyer $344,500 , S6000 pos1llve cash now
NEAR BEACH By Owner. CdM & NB. I D M Marshal Rttr owner will trade or lolboo Petlinwlo I 007 3BR. 2'hBA. ft0.000 UMO QUAUFYIMG Good terms Prin onl>· j · • 5 I ca r r y w 2 0 ~ d n
••••••••••••••••••••••• DN.631-5737 ** 200/oDOWH ** Call 760-6Cll6,64~1 ----760.08!. S229,000
CITY LIGHTS VIEW W o o d b r i d ii r DOVER SHORES .,..STSIDE Nr Beach. $20,000dn Meadowlark 3 Br 2 ba. . I !!;A 631·5737 cov'd patio. Almost new Pool. JaCUZZI O\erlooks FIXER UPPB
-----Great financing ba} Galax~ Dr Formal Look f r By Owner Lrg Comer SUCCESS RE 54~7991 dm rm. 2 frplcs mg or a ixer uµ I Older House. Eastside. . 642·2510 646--4848 per• Thts 4 bedroom 2 i
3BR !BA t k 1 h bath home must he sold . . rg t c . Re•;...t...-t.:....1•-a
$79,950 DUPW
OWC at 12~ with Sl6K
down , nire area l1l S.A.
Good rash now.
R & H lnvestmenls
752-2197
OMTHEPOIMT
Solid comfort and easy
maintenance in super
location En.JOY the tn
come with this non
comform1ng duple~
Ea ch unit has bdrm.
bath . kitchen plus
garage Close to bay and
beach Owner will help
with financing. $339,000
cellar. front & back UNIV ERSITY PARK. .._.1111111n lo pa) estate tax
1
porch. dramatic Deane home. 4 Lei' el Rdy to build Beautiful pool. 2 patios --------· Arter 5:30 p~~ !2'7.1.. BR 3 Ba. ram rm. as SIJ0.000 56.5.000 dn OWC and complelel) fenrl'll mi!-~1!!!!!!!11~1!!!!!!!11[111111111111!!!!!!1
sumable loans Pru~e bat 1211 W Recap ..,, bkr lot Crab t hts one' ~ f -S. --O
HOOUAUFYIMG drasticallydropped. 851 ms day. 6400352 $2091100 l'all Ann h or 220
642-5200 MESA VERDE EAST, 4 17532Cottoowood PM •wknds Vaughn Sanlas for ap ••••••••••••••••••••••• br, 3 ba. den, wetbar + OPEN SAT'SUN 1·5 l t Three i.ingJe family lots
j PETE BEST .Uy I.... pom men in Huntington Beach view Next l o golf __ 714-5.52-13_11_ " t ·,,, with plam. $80,000 per
J BARRETT
'·· REALTY
~urse.~2:8~7 OFFICE AT VERSAILLES Cote Reallv lo t Cooperation to w .... ~ $500,000 DWH &. ln\l'\lmenl broker s Call Bob .
Great financing, super HOME 2Br, 2Ba penthse. ocn 640·5777 , 714-848·3133 or home.
neighborhood. Own er and 3 bdrms, a de· view. Sl33.000 Assume -1111!1--ll!ll!!!-111!!!!--l 675 4746 ____ _
motivated. ~3666 hghlful omre l1l quiet $128,000 of S&L loans al Lake Arrowhead lots For
cul-de·sar area of Univ 17'1 $1.828 mo. Owner ASSUMAILE in fo and maps c all ~~~~.~~ ... !~.~~ Whelan Park. Extensively UP· will move or stay & be 29 yrs ot I 0.3%. o w n e r b r o k e r
graded throughout your tenant Of c HarborR1'ige.3Bdrms <7 14 1 9 63 2 481 434 IEGOMIA Real Estate
New elegant 4 Br Vic· ------
Superb view and pre 7~ 2270, Hm642·2682 __ 3 b a w 1th VIEW l213134_6-_4424 ___ _
mium location. Within S 00 lownhome in this pre
tor i an partial vu . DRJVEIY
ownr contractor rinan
walking distance lo 10,0 sttgious private com MlWPOITllACH
everythtng. Call today Prl~• ledrlcffoft mumty w tenms courts. Res1dent1al lot. Levt:I 26S E. Bay <East of 20th, avail. P75.ooo. off Santa Ana Ave.) ror anappotntment. in highly upgrad ed pools and spas Excel rd y to build_ $130,000.
EA STBLUFF home. finaneingw lJgeassuma· $65,000danOWCbal in
Now $169 .~00 with ble loan of 5216.000 WtReclp wtbkr. 851-WB
$130,000 in long term as· Priced for immed sale da, 640.<m2 PM/wkeods.
sum able financing. Call at S49S,000. Try SI00.000 w..t• 0......
LCJ. C.tHOME Then call Ruth for
4 be<frooms. 31,ta baths. 2 terms, al~. rllr.
story . 1 block from 3 br .. 2 ba., fixer. w/ lg.
Beac h . Low dow n ram. rm. & rpt. Owner
paym't, owner will rin. a t 12 ~ Age nt
carry. Open Sat & Sun. 642·1523
Wayne Stewart, Broker. down. Rttott ' 1400
646-8816 lOGllSUALTY
MlWPOITSHOIES 6'l._S..2l l I __
Great ramlly home on 0.. lttl ht.tt SHAIP USTSIDI canal. 4 BR 3 Ba, close to r IY OWNER 6 • PUX SZ C swim & teMis club, walk ••11
•••••••••
11
•••••
11
• IRVIHETBIACE OM&.Y tStt.DO~ If 3 AMPVSDl:IRvlMI to beach. Owner will Mow.He.I
I OGJ0 DOMA.J Owner will finance to consider lease or lease For S. 74 "" la.-. • ....___.. .A... t' ,_,._ f •-·.ri 1e1tet•ttl•••eeeeeeeeee Expandable, 2br + qualified buyer. Well _,,.... --op JOO or u...., or ul.Q•
d located, .......1 loot.in& 6 11•••••••••1111•••••••• deeds. Submit all olfers. --------•1 conv. den. l .. ba. ru11 r, ..,.... _'61 ... -.... 000 c H IAt«•O secluded pool + spa, "'• unitl + t car garaae + WA, -"~u -.... s. , wen. enry
lot. lease Wld. tmmed. ample partmc. ~low 11 tvaYWI •I RlchanlSowers Rltr FIXB MAii Ollfll
occup. Assume uislinl UmtslJ"Oll. Spectacular vlcwa. 11f..•!8'74j990-2''11 5 Star pet par\, 28r, 11
financln1. OWC $295,000. Call now"4-72ll aprawllna 4 bdrm, 3 Bia Canyon Townbomt. lot, aakiJ\a 122,000 but
9M-0073. baths, 2 frl)lc1. WET panoramk solf course ltnder ••YI brin1 or
CDMDW\O BAR. bea!Md etlUn1, view. S yurs new , ftrs!!! (8lOl8>
fam. rm.. lie kltthea. Jbdrm, fam rm, 2"'b•. MULHIAIM IY OWIB bu&• mlMr auile. Ex· 2000 sq. f\. ExiltinJ fin UM.TOIS
Must sell! Prlde or paaalve 1atio l pool SUS.000. Submit o«e.rs_ ...............
223 Narcissus CdM (213) ~:o..::.;;;;=------
402·3434
1100
.......................
TIMISMAM
2 wttks a Yttr ill Hawaii
or excha111t \o OYer 500
dlffeunt loc atlo.1 wortdwtdt Oner IU•
loft. Raid KMlba
o..M.Mu'IR•
ownership. t:xcellcnt ••Ill ..... ** area w/f'O(k rimmed Tradenll.s.800&, C7141U7-ltll
terms,btlowmartet. Uf.FiDuclal.l\tmlto 1pa • "alerhll. When you Deed tspeftl'-'1!!!!!1••••••1
{114) tc.M Jda. i Jn...._ l Phil ~ 939,000. aervlcc ~ ,....U. lln
SELL Idle itema ~. Nl&mir.Plfll! IUSl(CJlllEALTY totheSeme.DiNc..., s.u•WE!
DallJ Pllot Clauified Ct..at'lld A*, ,._..., tlH1ll. tn Claat1fltd to Ml•• It'• a llllUU
A4L Wan1 Ad ... , Mlif1f JO!l ll'!blnn. CJ111U'tlU•IRR
..
-·-. ,
Or1ngeCoa1tOAILY PILOT/Tutaday, Oclobtr27, 1981 ·~ •
---·F·11··--· .. ......... c.,tt s.w.t Dec.... .. • 'FI ....... HMNc..... Mo•llt ~~ .............. ~~ ............. .. •••••••••u•••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••u•••••u•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• •••••••••u•••••••••••• ··~•••••• .. •••••••••••• W LLS BY 8088Y Oran1t Coaat Rootto1
SftCIAL Neech Bookkeeper Shampoo & 1~am r111n. Mold1n1. plulerln&. or RalpbCat.U.OlSom HAULING Student h11 HOLIOAYSPEC1ALS SlA~~rJti~Ji~~ QA Ut fast rvlee Reroo Ciu
CallJ\.llly814-CW Color brilhtenert1 wht namental. Sell 41 In· Oar.dtoin~rvlce, 10 tae truck. Lowftt rate. ByTheHOUSEMOUSI'! ·Teo LI _..... .... l8 ua '/. toe 1--09?') •• J.._~ AC'countln f'.!IC~ crptt 10 mln bieacb. aullaUon. Guarantee. tra exp I malnt Prompt Ca.ll 7S6 l976 Call Sul-8SI 8178 c • 11---.Jruii ~ ::::::::::~~~'."':'."':::-=--~ &1 ... ~ Hall, Uv /dltl. nna SU : Cocnm/rtllld trim Thank 00 J~n _:---loaured. &41 IM.2'7 Ally typt will coverina BALBOA ROOnNG CO. • WWtn 1v1 room fl.50· couch """'-C mln1 & removal clun -~ · -Hon........ ~H USMO ! 1 n a t a I I e d b y SkyUpt.a • P\utertnl ars W.you y ....................... s10·. chr ta oua'r. elim. _,, ... u~. F're" -t. ~ •• ••u CLUM UP YOUlt ACT ....... ................ u.-•c L---J 0 urn t' y m In p I per Ftee_ett. rIHI+I fora 6HWICllSOM ............ ••••••••••• " .... ~ -..,_ 30,~.yad Bulldfl1Stneele4? petod'>t.Crptrepalr PETS"R"P.EOPLE a\ 4:30. !!AULING-8.1119&3 Ho-.~ ....................... han1er Ins, Uc. work StutferWSentc.I
.,.lhf 1$ yrs exp. Do work Boardltlf&Groomlns f:ap. sardene.r, clun .... ,........._.__ ,..... • ..., Theory/P11s.no1Si&ht arntd R1lph Caru10 ••••••••••••••••• ......
DAILY ~~~~·~~=,m~:!"'•· m aelt ftga.M 01~ "W are · 541-21141 ~· lrH trim, mant Jim~ ~:if~!!e:1e~n"r': N~~. singln~ C-Ollegt prur. 99l 19341 _ NEEOASECR!TARr -or y_~. Ql08G 9-ZW NoSteam/NoShampoo "--.. reua 1-1 A z HAUUN. 0 C""'•t Smoker Available lhru yout omt. any a11e uWALLPAPER! Bllltpg&OfnceSldlla '""' Staln Specialist Fait •• r" .,....1 TIM--• · ...... ruc· GraC'e Ma 92Jl2 Custom pape!rhanglnl Re11 rates. '95-3 S•YICI Patlot,decllinp,ut aid d F 1.838. •H•••••••••••n••••••• '" ,.-_,,,...,. Uon & ml~nUaJ cltan· l''eb.CalJatAfttrS.00 Rt'ald/rolJID:! ~2'1&6 nit DlllCTOIY 111gs, l1ndsupe dttiana --9..!l'..:..I reeea DRVWAWACOUSTIC Lowes CU7 up; dump truck 1·0022 532-Wll , .... 9 --
OOITNOW • & int work fl'ff est ROBERT'SCARPET 14 yra txp. F\llly he'd & H•ltru • fRF.ES/SHRUB TRIM __ __ ••••••:•••••••••••••••• HAN GING $10 a roll. ••"fjl_£j~AUEO••• AtkforS... Lie bond . .0.01 REPAIR. ~tmch. ~ !l!•urod. pi.~ .. :.: .. : ............. 0; r ag' 4c Yu d lmlchccipllg Fall Spi:c~l.f c~t1 1~lt qu ~lttr. Cr~e l~s~' ~ All kinds. Guaranteed
y Dall II OOBJMG lax.all repai!"l.67~ ONftMts.rnc.. JACKOFAUTRAD~ dt,1nups Frti: i:5t , ...................... ~~~~~~f &e~541~1 :U.'/Jt' a r ot Refs __ Johnl93-166'7
s.:our DIY Plloc * M • c....t/c..cr.te •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Plum bloc. electrle11., 551 Rryant's La.1wc11puig ----TU · ,{ev~~~~~~ ~~¥111~:m"m QuC:t~ty. ••••••••••••o•••••••u £JI. DSGN&CH.K beatlna Odd Joba ...__ .... ~ --Bnck, stont. block, eon Fine pa111llng by R1C'hard Motter/I... ~~:.'ae~ef~epa~r THOMPSON'S picka.gln&/ah mtl/pcb •--.-., r rete frph'll. BlSQs. S111or L1r. 11\S 13 yns ur ••••••••••••••••••••••• uL.A.11, '42·5671, HtlJ2 Guaranteed Leming CONCRETECONSfR. CaUSf.S.3701 HOME IMPROVEMENT w:~;:·aE..\.i.Lv•CLEAN• Pa tlos, cl ri vew a y s happy N 8 customers. Ne11t patches &ti:xtures Free ~st. Chu<'!l =l
lcc..tillg ••••••••••••••••••••••• Al;'C'l Bkkrig for small
bwnness. Marv G~ns
714 646·17S l Eves .
213 862-~1636=----
Acctg, bkkpg. fin state
ments , aud1t1ng for
small b~messes. Boyd
Wheeler, CPA, S36·4:W ms __
lspllolt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parking lot
repairs. sealC'oating
S&S Asphalt 631-4199
Lie
ALLSTATE PAVING
Sea lcoatmg, Striping,
Repairs. Comm ./Res
Free est ~397362
~·8181
Constructioo~27079l) Llc.#393383 ffZ.8'82 "--el REPAIR PWMBlNG HOUSE'Cal1Gm"h1m Guar.Llc.&w.~0014 Tl!_qfilou -6314410 htt.fst. 19l-lj _39 rro•-4~
96(). NOJOBTOOSMALL ... ,.. .._ Un ' try I ' . • LARHY'SPAJNTING p h •· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• u't'a 1&,<'lll>ftl ,eec, Girl Freeest 64.5-5l23 C U S T 0 M • Plaslu ate 1ng "' OU H MERICA MocHAU COMSTI. Brk & Blk. Uc. 351449. ORYW ALL TAPING tile. Free at. No job too ROB IN'SCLEANING LANDSCAPIN~ Create Fall SpeC'1a l' Int ext, restuccos Int •ext 30 ;RA JELASERVICF.S
Custom homes, rram· Dale. bomt963-8161 All textures & aeow1tic, smalJ. 64S-28Jl ServlC'e-11 thoroughly u unique env1runmcnt Pa Pt' r g • d r Y w n 11 .1.!:!Yeat Paul So&s.2977 My S""'Ctalty Call Tery
Ing. r e mod. French _Ans. 83S·2182 Beep 2313 Cree est. Kevin §'7$-NIS Carpentry . Maaonry clean hollM!. 5'«1-i.157 494 8472 645·9383 ~ Jack;on Toun. 7~!H.i13
doors, skylights & patio FCO~Cf:lETEWORK Orywall/Plaster ~We Roofin&·Plumbln~ Expertise Housekeep111g i.tarriocieSerlkn All Pa1nt111guit S450 ext •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ftffs.niu
c_overs. ~ oun auons,s1dew1lk.s, patcbany bolesfaat S40 Drywall·Stucco.Tile supplies rurnuhed' "••••••••••••••••••••• S650 Neat. compl ete McCORMACKPLMBG ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROOM ADDITION p~t10 ~labs , custom min. Lie. . 631-2430 Remodel J.B.6"-9990 trustworth 957.*>03 MARRY TODAY FrtttstJ ~fs&Sl-7292 24 HOUR SERVICE TREE DESIGNS
SPEClAUST bnck.L1c.~tves. EIKtric• RESIO./COMM'L GeneralH~cleamng-N(l blood let\ts rl.'Q. L1r CuatomPmntlna LJ.~. #294~ 6159194 Pruning,Sculpturing.
Remodeling. decks. Res Id. concr~te ; also •••••••••••on•••••••• Complete Maintenance Reliable. Referencei. provided 968 ~ wkdys 25 yrs txp Lir 41&>4! TOP H "T-•b Top. Thin. Removals. homes. free est. John sport courts. Lie 374-067 641-8961 Art 5.._all da.J Sat1S~ Bonded ln.~ Refs Color A ,..,, •IJ Clran-u 631·2513 l,_.ic. 1410900 661·1301 Bob 8SH966/M7·70?8 E~EbCTRICIAN priced "'I •-' al Pl ... _ Own tra~ 962-~!!> e_X'""'·"rt ~""II Q1s_k Spec m restaurants & ----ng t, free estimate on "'ecu1c · umuw' MRSCLEAN "4a50MY .::...:= .....,...., ro mmercial work LIC' W.tci. I__.
ROOMADDmONS C.,_.lc• hlr&eorsmalljobs. CRarpefntry,rough/finish MAKES ITGLEA M! ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENTAU>PAJNTED #404321.636-m> u••••••:r.:;•••••••••• Concrete&BlockWalls ••••••••••••••••••••••• Llc.11396621 613·0359 oos·Masonry-Stucco 64&-2240 BRI CKWORK Small Perfect,prompt.rea~ Sale&Repairofantique
Dennls63G-04S8 THETILEMAH RESID./COMM 'L Reis. BUl~140l eves Exp Housecleaner Rel Jobs, Newport. Costa Seas1de Pn~4806 Drams cleared from SJO. and modem clocks " CabiMt~ Freeest 64().2062 Hl&hlyquahfied Nojob EuropeanCraftsman.All Ref. Frtt Est Svc 24 Mes a. lrvint Rers All Painting 111tS450txt Plumbmgrepa1rs Free watches Gus ' WatC'h
••••••••••••••••••••••• Mccrystal c.eram1cT1le loo Ir /smaU 631·200C Jobs. Big or S!Jlall. Call hrs. 955·24~ 675 317S_ S6SO Neat . complett est. M&M 642-9003 Shop No Cst Hwy at Boat ~II types kitchen. bars, 01Stinct1ve lnstallation w•••• after 6PM. 964-5231 Housecleaning is our Brick·Block·Concrelti Free est, refs. ~!..7292 ,.roperty M•ag••.. Ca nyon Laguna. 494-8282
gar;ige units . Day Llc.114-08746. ~86l2 ••••••~•••••••••••••••• General Ma.lntainance business. Call Janice's Veryreas Lie, bonded OLYMPICf'AIMTIMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tradeinswelro.ffi!L_ &IS·~!,~veS49-l~ ChfldCan CLEAN·UPSILAWN Repa~rs&Decorating Raggedy Anns 9 yrs BohSi_S-7~'~9900 INT EXT FREE EST f'Rorarf WiildowO. .. g
Corpett.,,. ....................... M aintenan~Land.scp •Quality• Ra...l'..§.40-5144 l £!1>.:..675 2514 Custom Brick Stunt, lllGll QUAL. WORK MAMAGEMEHT ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• Childcare Mon·Fn days Free est. 642·9907 Hardwood Roon H I'd --t -Blod, Concrt'te, Stucco LOW llATES -554·1903 0 C 1~ Origmal Wmdow Washer ROUGH & FINISH . . ---••••••••••tt••••••n••• o i ay pany ime is Rtfs Free est. 54!! 94!12 -r:inge o. area. ,, yrs A 3 b .. ~ $35 labysittiilg . Infants through 6 yrs. TREES HARDWOOD FLOORS here! Let usclean' Refs. llOUSEPAINTING experitnce.Caltrorinro. vg rnvme. · ....................... Doors. fences. w111dows, My home N C M. Topped1removed,clean Cleaned &Waxed Cyndi&Ai~ ... s.16-7~ MAIH:ILE·TILE·STONE Workguar Freeest and rates 631·7698
Babysitting, my home. I elc Re rs. free ~st S46-7S64___ I 751 3476 All . ....., ·-S P f kl bi kl Ind install pre rab !.1c --~ --978-9397 963-1112 yr & up, nr Victona. 84(!.-409 lChns> • u awnrenov. · tim~~--1_.A ro w Y ·W Y serv. rrplc s 645 ~60 2. ----"Let theSunshmeln"
C M.6t2·84821646-S759 Custom wood pal1os, Cte.9H)Senkn GardenUlg, landscaping, CLEANUP empty hse,vac Wndws. 2136340140 INT1EXTPAJNTING llemodetMg/Repalr CallSunsh111eWindow
------deC'ks, wood windows. ••.•••••••••••••••••••0 tree tri.mmmg & re· YOUR ACT walls. cpts 20 yrs I --Lic'd Refs. Free est ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Cleanm U.d. ~ Childcare. loving home. L1 c'd. Reas John or Windowstcarpetslfl<>?rs moval. ma)Or C'lean·up. Housecleanln 972·4639 552·7045 Mo•lftCJ * * 646·1067 • • GeneralContract111g CLEARVIEW hot lunch, compamons. Home , condo, orr.ce ln.s'd.FreeesL"•"•oon Need a maid or ••••••••••••••••••••••• H t Rick979321.8 ,,_....,.... HM Paifttill9l.euom ome 1mprovemen.s, WINDOWCLEANING fenced~ M&-3098 Fine rini~h work. Doors 1·997-8139/633-9168 Mowing SIS-S20, Haubng •••••~•• .. •••••••••••• houstketper" Hrly or •A· I MOVIH~*. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• damage repairs Quahty Chris or1'1m966-6484 loah, MuiRlc:u:ce/ hung, decks. remodel COlltrodon, GNer'Clll & Dumping S25. 7S4·9904 Haul cleanup concrete wkly Call Madnd Agen-1 Top .Quality Special l\lso Cine decor iC'omml WQ.rk. L1c. l·ll94·1t798 __ Pror Window Cleaning.
S..-.ice Randy,613-~ ....... , ............... or9M·0095Mar1t rem~val Du.i-ipTruck .n:....M_V,859-~76 -care mhandltng 2Syrs arl work Ma gg i Carpentry, doors. dry-Free est .. qual serv ,
,...................... ~Years Exp. Custom GARDENING WANTED • QuiC'k~rv.642-76:11 ~ ~eliableHomemakers ~:ov~~~,:u:c1~tes I Morale~. Ml-'A.675·4722, wall. tlec. Kitchen & gtd
Boats Cleaned Waxed C~ Seniu Homes. Condos, Apt.s & Mowing, edging, raking, I DUMP JOBS will clean your home or -, . 646·2111 _ Bath remodels I do st I.Y Rae 67>094l
Expenenced Insured •••••••••••••••••••••••1 Remodls Bob492·2208 5 wee P 1 n g free &SmaU Mo 111. gJobs a.2.t_7601793.~6049 -I •ABC MOV IN(, EAp . p-...t..CJ all Free est 631-1137. J1m 7$.198Seves We CareCrptCleaners -t t ,,_.c' 372
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v R 1 bl H k pror low rah'!> Quirk -r-nn ves Wllldown...s.... ---Steam C'lean & up .. -ls Get GREEN cash es 1ma es . ...., 4 or Call MD<f.64&-1391 e 1a e omema er r' 1 .. 2 , .. 10· ••••••••••••••••••••••• L .... ...., H h nu ·11 I h care u servu·e .,.., V"t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ave somet ing yo Truckmowitumt forW HITEelephants 64S·5ll1___ HAULING&DUMP wt C'eanyour omeor -· . -fhePaperHanger.Pror SELL 1dle1tems with a Qualitysincel9'72
want 1~ sell? Classified Work guar 645-3716 with a Classified Ad It ·s a BREEZE JOBS. ask for Randy. apt. WANT ACTION ' install Deroralor qua I Dally Pilot Class1f1ed F'reerowtt'ous est. ad~.Q.!t_ well 642·~ ' ---Call 1i4.2,S(i78 Classified Ads 642·5678 641·842'7 7ro.1793 Class•!~ Ads 642 5618 Free est Ste,·e s.47-4281 Ad 642·567.L_ 644--8494
Ottler Real Estott HousH Fftlhed Ro.sn U ..... tlttd H u_.__._ ... _.... H U....&..-.t-1.......... U-··-· u L-! c--.... --.!-1 I -!...L-c c d Li ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• omn WfWMWWWU ot11•1 ........ ....u ~ .... shed vnuu....... COftdo........a Oftdo~ ORVO l&-M ..taift o...rt ......... ....................... ....................... ......... .............. f1N'lti1hed 3400 U•f• llli*d 3425 U• ..... llled 3425 U•f• •ht.cf 3425 ~esort. , 2400'Hewport leodl 3169 COf'OllG .. Mar 3122 Coste Met0 3214 ~ leoda 3241 ~port m.oc:lt 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••• ••••••••••••••••••f •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••4'• ••••••••••••••••• Vacant 2BR. 281\ D P WES TC LI F'f N R Mesa Bluffs Near South Coast Plaza. 2
lOYLLWlLO Charm 2'2 LIDO ISLE charming 4 CDM Me.tw Hew Emerald Bay, oceanfront VIEW Condo. 2 masters No pets. USO mo 0!:.>0 Ueaut 1200 sq rt 2 Bit 2 Unobstructed View br, I ba, Tennis. Pool,
acre Lease opllon (2l3) I bdrm. 2'7 bath. lrg sun 2 bdrm . 2 ba, ~car gar Wf.!8tiB"U overlooks lrviM Cove. + den AC upgrade 21, V 1 e Jo Prop er t 1 e s Ba. rplt', !lining rm. 2 story. 2BR. 2•<zBA Jar • Priv security,
277.2884 · I ny patio. newly re fpc, balcony. lse S700 TOWMHoMES deck. patio. 2 BR 2 Ba, ba. $8.50 mo. S59-4718 951 &ss~ ref rig Adlts, no pets Frplc. 1093 Mesa BluHs Carport, no ctlLld pets. ---derorattd $1 700 mo mo 551·4693alt6 partrum .. Sl200. 11~ -----• $675 640i814 Dr C M S7:lS mo. Must seetoappreciate
OutofCo.ty Yearly 8111 Grundy, --~-MEW CONDO FOi L Mlcpef 3152 3BR. Clost to Beach., 542 7429 eves . SS80797 ~8100_. _
f'roperty 2550 67S-6!§1. :C::!~~~ • 3224 l I ~JI la. .~................ Nice. 536-1435 536 6701 k ~,,~ITY T k I ST~!! I d Messa_ge __ .,....._.... Fwwl•d
2••0•••A••••p•••••c•e••1•s••n .. ; Want somethrng xtra ; 3 Br 2 s:··c;;··;; r. + --. /J Avail. Nov. lSt. New ex· ~_rter 5PM _ noc s o1 ten when you ha e 1°!.~ o re1t~x an ••••••••••••••••••••••• , c ar . , s pecial 1n a 2 Br · · $695/.o. Dbl gar, ec home.38drm.3Ba . USP resu t-getllog Daily s op at 11ume . s s1m 'rosemile. xlnt camping Townhouse rompletely S.C Plaia. SA. Pool, .._... ~/ F il R Pool/S Horbor ViewHOtMS I P1lol Cla.sstf1ed Ads to pie with Dally Pilot MHO HBJI? lc6oa lslmd 3706
& rec . gold claims, rum~S89S Mo 1ro.9111 Spa. Sauna. S6SO Child .. ,....6, 6 W~ s:~ob Mm · cl~a~ ~.BR, ram .!111· dm rm. reach the Oran~e Coai.t Class1fled Ads. And 1r lielp yourselfto a ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2.000 to S6.000 ea (2001 ----OK. S49·3232. • llh.. 0 1 n . 1 Montego Sl200 mo I market you ha\e somethmg to Hu pingselectionof Cute smaU 2bdrm, lba.
377-8295 Beautifully upgraded 2 4bdrm, Newport Riv1er-; 645-2739 gNardtne1r & pool 1 servFice. I mmtd occup Super Phone 642 S61R sell. ra 11 a friendly Quahfied Hopefuls winter rental SS50 mcl
br home.rully rum .w d · 1 · 0 Pt' 5 p ease. or ramily home ' Real · Classiflt>d Ad·V1sor at inthe DAILYPILOT ulils.67S.03f9 Out of State p\l yard, spa & brick ron o. JaC'. poo . ttnms. a ppt call 545 ·2000 Estatt by Shark any "42 56711 f'roperty 2600 patio plus gardener m S850 497~ -3 Br 2 .... Ba C'O ndo A tnt noree 752 0166 I ZEE I HELPWANTEDA~ Want Ads Call642·5678
•••••••• ••••••••••••••• neighborhood or Harbor 3 B r 2 Ba n 'a r pool /tennis S75o mo Monarch Summit 3 Br 2 --•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Scottsdale. Anzona. tux View Homes. s14oo mo Paularino School Large A l. 7Sl·3191 Ba Condo Adult Com Brand new luxury condo, I
unous condominium. 3 Call Biii Wedmore rear yard.2cargarage.o-roW 3226 munity 1125 ,m o 3Br3Ba.S8SO,NptHicts. • •
Br 3 Ba. xlnt location 644-7020 S700 Mo. Sierra M&ml. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-23S7or831·7990. ~75""333 -8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL S137,000. Ownr Agt w Npt Wkly/mo, -;;-;;-Co.64l·ll24.. •• BEACHHOUSE I llTHEARST • •
602 990-00JI Beverly d I t Catalina, mount.am view 2BR, 2BA, built ins & Mksle. VJefo U•7 to occupy this BRAND • •
O'Connor or write 4256 ~~~m·<2~;{~~n from the liVUl.I room & Garage.p .499-2986. 1•0
;.0;.•E•roilitoo"0 NEW 2 bdrm adult coo 8 Daya • 3 Lines • 8 Dollars ~ag~:r~w ~~o~~~ti~s yard, Cost.a Mesa Blurrs. BTcwo 3232 , 3 Bdrm $650. Ft-need do Adults only. no pets I • •
Scottsdale, Arn~~ Hoae1U.m...illwd brand new 2 Br 2 Ba ....................... , yard & garage Kids & ~ mo.64>~ e 11 s ea sy to p lace y o ur 8-0ay Week Cla ssified by mail. and 11 e
••••••••••••••••••••••• used bnck frpk . secun-HOME FOR RENT 11 pets welrome ·S45-2000 HarborV•hols e c o sts 1us t $8 -that s only a dollar a dayt To qualify for this Ranc~s.Fama, G etteral 3202 tyentry.adults.S950Mo. 4 Bdrm. $615. FenC'ed A enl noree.. 3 bdrms. Cape Cod •
Gro•H 2700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~7~4•9259·_642-8801· ~~d !,i'!~!e :;~ Newport.._.. 3269 Townhomt ror 6 or 9 mo e s pec ial o ffer you must be a non-commercial user offering • t,•;k·e·:;;·;:00;~·;~~.. REMT ~S Sharp 2 master Bdrms. A ent, no fee ....................... least s1100 mo Poot. • merc handise fo r s ale up to $800 per ad. and the pnce must e
Ranch for rent, SJ()() mo ye a r I y \\ e e le I y encl gar. pool, spa, ten· Rent to own this large UlC HOME ,f!'ri'5 ~rivg by 17~ • be in yo ur ad The cost stays the same whether your ad
200 acres. 2 br house. Winter .2.3.4, Bdrms. nis. adlt.s. no pets S79S r a m 1 1 y h 0 m e HAllOIVI~ 1.;.6.~ e1.~934f a needs eight days selling time or 1ust one e
stream Or will sell Newport Bea ch & mo.S48·0111,63H266 wlremodeled kitchen, 4Br.2t,.tBa.Familyrm, --= -• •
S225.000 15001947·3143or Balboa E's1dt Dplx. 2 Br l ba, new built-ins & more ' Din rm, mlsq. rt SLSOO Wes.,.shf-3298
eves 7141661-7622 JACOBS llliLTY frplc. I car gar. lg yard S600! 1183aZ Mo. DrlVt' by first 1806 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Use one word tn each box About 4 w ords make one •
Fallrook PROPERTYMGRS sm mo.m.2UT7 I Also. 3br on treesy lot PortAbbeycall752-6499. HOME FOR RENT e class1f1ed line of lype Minimum ad 1s 3 lines Pleas e pnnt e 4 Bdrm Pool $700. 675-6173 East side 3 Br 2..., ba w/woodburning frplc 4br, 4ba hQm e 1n Fenced yard & garage • plainly 3.lS acres Avocados, $200-SA bun -ga~S479 Family home.Grdnr
1
+dble garage. S59S. Baysbores Avail !st Kills a, pets welcome •
view $85,000 Assuma· • 61"' "-""'-< 5566 week in Jan Sl800 mo 1 • • S24S HB studlo •9633 n · ,,.._,,, ~-2.!!20 ~J..,nofe_e. _ r;------------------------------, ble loan Trade Cash $.l30 HB lbrhome •5364 3 bdrm. 2 ba. behuid So Renl1mes631-4555 Fee_ ~-~~'· Ron Jack.son Avail. now 2 Br I Ba ' • I •
d1Sc 642-~ S375San Clem2br •4924 Cst Plau. Kids o.k. S850. Hwlllrgtoll t.odt 3240 Water & trash paid. I •
Rral Estafe S400 CM 2br home !IS403 540-7387, 545-4731 ....................... WESTCLIFF 3 bedroom, garage Adults. no pets • I • b c"-9t 2800 S47SCap Bch2br 119684 3 Br or den, 3ba condo. HOMES FOR RENT 1 story with pool. ram1 ly 1450 + S400 dt>posit. • I
....................... S650 Irv wlpool •8387 Miao, d.sbwshr. com· 3 & 4 Bdnns. $625.-$725. room. 2 fireplacts, din· Agent, no fee.~~-•
EXCHANGE Renl1mes631-'555 Fee pactor All upgrades. 2 Ft' n (' e d r a rd s & 111g room, 3 patios. etc HOME FOR RENT • I • R. E equity ranging car gar Pool, spa. garages. Kids & pets etc. $1.SOOMo.646-4477. I
S20,000 to S125,000. Total lSt/last +sec. S81S/mo. wtlcome. 545·2000. 4 Br. 2112 Ba. Yearly, all 3 Bdrm. StiSO. Fenced • I • WIMTB RIMT A.LS 8Sl·9'KI\ A ent no fee ameni~· . Club & pool yard & garage Kids & • equity $400,000 4 T.D.'s IL.-&•......_ _, ...... ~el--c..czooo 10 IO I • ~ ._._.. rac's. Ood area. suoo. ....~ w --~ .,..,. •
t-~' 159-~ Cal ow,......... Jbr .. 2ba .. r.p .. built ins. Hwl~• Broker67H9l2. A ent noree. • I •
675-1771 carpets, drapes, dbl. Hart.Ow 3242 Se . B 3Ba r ii tto.MsF•~or 13..20 1etttats garage. covd. pat10. ........................ av1e~ ~ r , am Y u.tr--.d 3300 e I e
••••••••••••••••••••••• renced yard, gardener. 3bdrm, 2b.a, Cam. rm. rm, dm111g rm. Ot'ean & • 15 IO I Hottsft ~ water inc., 2 child OK. frplc, brick alnum, ni ght light views. Pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • •
....................... no pets $1!2:5. 644·2718 open·airy. steps to bay tennis Sl600 pr mo Bob • I
lotboa Island 3106 M v rde Are 4b moo 494·2l36. or Dovie Koop Agt ... di Spedalsh Add $2.60 for each addltlonal llne for 8 times I • esa e a. r .. w rf. .._ 759 1221 · SUMMB • Wl~ER e I e ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 b a ., p oo I , den . ate ront uvme, room ..=:...;·==------"'
Charming Single family S900. /mo. 774·S023 or for 40' boat, 3 Br 2 Ba, Ocun v1ew·5 drs from YUILY • COMM'l • I •
ho me Avail m id· 61S·3655 S1200/mo.~T7118.P.P. beacb.2Br.11329thSt
November ror l mo 3 lolbdo lslmd 3206 Private 3 BR 2 Ba hme '"'" 3244 S750/mo. Vrly $400 dep. • Publish my ad for 8 days starting I •
Br+ loft. SJJOO mo Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• with all amenities. n7s ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213/372·9391 • I •
Kay 644·9000 or 673-858S a.GLISH COTTAGE mo. Ann. 645·9161 or The Lakes ·2 s tory WATERFRONT Classification __________________ _
pm. S800 wm~r. $1000 yrly 979·1942 twnhse, on water. Reduced S50for immed • I.
S700 Mo Winter. 3 Br I Steps rromthebayfront Avail Nov 1st 3bdrm. lbdrm, al e, fndge, rental. !bdrm. with gar • Name •
Ba, rrplc. pallos Best 31.., br. 2 ba. open beams. 2ba, in College Park. "Sic. pools & courts. & 30' dock. Util incl. Ccittdo..._.
loc.67.5-4185,673·1401 hdwd rtrs. band·htwn New paint, frplc, tree A ults only, no pets. 5.113"°'8. Fwwfat..d 3400 9 Address •
CALL US FOR Yearly & timbers. washer/dryer shaded yrd S7SO/mo. l/yr le~se. $550. 730-6046. 3 bdrm, 2\.1 ba rondo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'A
Winter Rentals Aegir Ow n /a-tt 494 -0395 . 752·2318 dys ; S40-7576 Dor 1 s CI ark · Boat s lip, fpC', gar. FOREXECtITIVES • City Zip Phone • Pro rties. 61S.40QQ__ 951-8973 eves. (213)373-l.3:Mlafter6pm. $l,OOO. 675-~ ~ BR 2 Ba: ~mpletely • •
LOCJl9MI leodl )141 ~, ..... 3207 Mesa Woods4 Bdrm 3ba. NtW 2 br.2i,,bacondo,on BluffTownhouse,2bdrm. urn . Wit v e w . • Check or M.O. enclosed 0
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••~•••••••••••••••• ram rm Pool. SllOOmo. the parkCen, w fv!~w . tto 1 ba. View. 2 car gar. Newport Beach. SlSOO •
Victoria Beach. 2bdrm, Gardener/pool serv Newport ter.,. m1 0 S800. 61S-9496 mo. CHARMlNG 3 BR 2 • Charge my ad to: •
com pl refurbished. lst/lut $500 sec Judy. UCL S800 + SllOO + ~· Ba c om PI et e I Y ~;~~e;,~/e~~I/ ,..sa:r===tals A .919·S310orS4&7618 ~;~e·o~~.~~t~ k~~ Co~p~~~Br ~~h~:~~~=: •• 0 # Exp. •• {2131795.2937 2·3·4 Brs . Yearly * Clean Bachelor Unit. B46·28SO 2 ba. View of bay & eves 642·2225
Cozy Laguna BeaC'h 2 ~ua~ r~n1J{;~:;:!t~~ ~uitt,~ru~ pTr~~· Woodbridge ~ Br 2ba. ocean. Sec. bldg & 2BR Va C'ation Condo e O • * E •
bdrm. 2 ba house availa· MELf1JCHS ~~14 inc . . faro rm •. dining r.m. park'g S1200/mo. Call Pool, Jae, tennis. pvt • Tr xp. •
ble for rent. rum. clost PAVILION REALTOR frplc. instde & oo,ts1de Nancy Mon tbru Fri, security. Nr harbor. No L
lo downtown & ntar 67.'""" 4 Br. 2 Ba. Yellowstone patios. Malibu lights, 714/955·1981 pets. S700wt. San Juan • ------------------------------• .roUN Dr. Redwood spa, 2 car rink! La.. Capo 979-0333 Sleepy Hollow Beach. garage Avail Nov. I.5th. auto sp ers. !'e. 3000 sq. rt. Nr. Wt1tclf 4 · la r-----··--WE'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ··------··--·-• $950. !213> S40-3953 S7SO M s· M poo I & tennis p rt v Br. 4 Ba, den. pool/spa ColMIHI I u W I
""'-wport•-............ 311.9 Coplstn.o1Ndt3211 o. ierra gmt. '900559-61188mo
1
.0fPcH7SM597: ~1327. Fam. rm. Dine. rm.Tri· Uafwlhll1d 3425 • 11 1111 1 • ,_ _.. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co. 641·1324. I S .500 I NO POST AGE I p e gar. l mo. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ' t 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Enduring elegance! 2br 2 SSSO rents this 3bdrm in Tw h 3 b 3 b • NECESSARY • 3br, 2~ ba. Bluffs area story home reatures best area! Sliding glass n ome. new r. a. 5S2-0813 II C>MI OF : tr MAILED :
S 1 lOOmo. 759·0078 or sweeping stain:ase. lgt leads to cocllta.il style jpati'!M g5ar/ · p~~7 I. LUXUaY IA YflOMT THI LUCIY FEW • l IN THE I •
1S2·5282 mas~r suh.t & kitchen patio! nan _ac.!!..'. mo ........ ...., 3 Br.2Ba . .;tbboatalip Rent In Colla Mesa's ! o·
VERSAl.U..ES wlcustom cabinets.new Plus: Spa.nishstyle2br HMJALS Avail. now. Ma ny NEWEST gated 20 • ~ UNITED STATES '~.
Lovtly 2br, 2ba, din. rm. appliances! Kidstpets w/earthtone decor and 3 Br, 2 Ba S87S amenities. $3.500 Mo. Townhome VILLAGE • l' BUSINESS REPLY LABEL • •
frplc, tae llil .. mirrored OK ! Only S41S! "684 tile baths, $400! 1540.1 3Br. 2~ Ba lrl5 Brobr 8'7S-4812. COMMUNITY 2 & 3 Br. • E
C'lst.s. C>ttan view pen· RenUmes63l-4555Fee RenUme&631-456$Fee 3Br 2Ba f72Sl.a&Hills I 2~ 8a. l800 · l800sq. n. w FIRSTClASSPERMITNO U.COSTAMUA,CAUFOhlA ~.
thouu. $8$0. Sandy CoroH .. W. 3222 AVAIL Nov 1. Very l&e Le RailorRltym.8800 ocu~-... olpureluxury.Oarages. • g j(. 642 8149 br FR B _ _.., hydro-tuba In maaler . ••••••••••••••••••••n• attrac 3--4 , . . est HOrntWOOD Mo.a suite, formal dining • ~ POSTAGE wu SE PAID BY A~E • IS •
3 bdr, 2 ~. F/P, 2 car north aru. No peta 1895. 4BR. 2Y.BA ntt home. 4 bdrm, 2 batb com· rooma, wood burning < Or1ng1 Co11t Dilly Pilot I
F. M h6i..a far. Walk to beach 641·3937 3 ur car. Muter Suite pletely remod eled. nreplacea, micro-wave • .o I •1 p•1at •
,. ,.... 1700/mo Ask for 2 Br Iba, nr new cpt. no wlrrplc &wet .bar. Prplc I bllnl,frp_k~~.mo. ovens, fenced patlol & • ·°'-.1 ' I • f'.I 81rbar1,81~D7 wu flra. am fend yrd.. ln Uv rm alto. Secluded 1 UDO,_ yards. Prtvate .. elegant .,_I Exec: oco view borne, 2300 Jardener. $47.5 +MOO C11l-de-Sac ln best arta. I IA YNOMT Uvln1 on.tr LS minutes • G • •• l 1q ~Ur, 2~8 ~. ep, amt 5ch2tld .. ot. no suoo mo. Act Kyle.: 1 bdrm, 1 .u.. r~c. from Fuhion 1.aland. 1 • I lox 1 ~ '• • sua·-CO(llm, \erul.11, pell. 19 ... eyer, SSt-1800 I bttas mlnlltatoS.C. Plauor • ~ •
ZIP90l.R !..~-..... G, .... I 549-Wc CE ... B Let-.... 1141 ' ON.C.Al~Jua!eut~ • I l30 w. ••v 8', I •
'-fMlrmet, ..-•t c Eatt M NI . ..,. 2 r.1 ....................... f'Wpon "· • '°· • l Cotti u....... .. 1 Ca .,.."I I • On. "1*~ ms. ba, iar. 1dt-Ptt ok Xln 1 br, rrpi. c, ~ocean Su Dleao Ptwy, Start· ..,... "' ••V& ~ ... 1u.m,eosa1 view, lltilllnd, '100/mo. ID& at 11000 • IDOftt.b. \a I ' •
Q8111ifW A*, WAin ACnON T m -~m? lll·Hat, 2471 Oranae .•
....,,_' ~-.. Cla•H!!lAdllO:lm !_'dn to:i: -A•t.,O<Mlta M••· •••••111111111••••••• ••
f
11
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, Oct6ber 27, 1981
I llli1 Varietr of fine Scltool1 Could Introduce You ro A New Tomorrow.
<>Mc....., 44ol 1111 .,._,._... •111 , • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • n>r rent or _,. 10•
•I atot11e yarcl. r~ I lotlled. ,.ved ,.., oor-UICUTIVI
SllTIS
(]II
for furffttr infonrtafion
r111nlin1 Hrtrfising
placernent in tltt Scltools
& lnstrudions Di11ct0ry
call louiat Griffitft,
'42·5671 tit 3 I I
JOLEE MILLER
Vt)( l\L 1 IV\l'\l~I. I lll I 11 l"I
as openings for students of all
ages and levels . Graduate
Westminster Choi r College,
Princeton, N.J.
546-6985
.,......... ........ ApartiM .. ts Ulrfur1t. •··•···•·•·····•······• .•••..................• 1cAoor..-. no1 lc6oalm.d 3106 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 bdrm. "'J blk Beach. Pk 2 br, carport, patio. avail
111g,ulllpd1i1JuneS375 1mmed . $45 0 mo
534-3740 __ ---1·755·1~~1-~92-
1 Bdrm. Apt. 2 Br I Ba. 1 garage space
S375 mo I S600 pr mo + util. Agt
67>8996 673-4062__ ---
H..tiRgto. leacll 3740 lc6oo P-.. 3107 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I bdrm, prof decorated Beach yrly. Lrg deluxe. 3
Ocean View. Pool. jac BR, 2BA w/gar. $800
213 592·167_6 __ i 675-9'797,_2J.3..~1Jl_l _
lnlM J744 IBayview, adorable 1 Br, •••••••• ••••••• •••••••• j avail yrly SS001mo 2BR, 28A. SSOO dep. $500 675-1774 __ _
Sec. Bay Side Bach S365
673-0895After6PM Ocean view I Br '550 LCICJl9IG ltodi 3748 Adults, no pets. Savage
•••••• ••••• .. •••••••• •• Wilde_! Co. 675-6606_. _
Furn lux studio. spa. TV. Bachelor Yrly S32S mo
maid service, phones •1 blk off Sand
l2S wk. 499-2227 675·9562, 752-6925
Furn. studio, Laguna
S3SOMo
201 E Balboa Blvd
Mana. eoll.
----"'499-~2227=---CorGIWI def Mer 3122
• NOW in
HUNTINGTON BfACH w ...........
Montessori School
AGES 21h thru 6 ................. c..._$, .... ..,..,.
MD., •••11 .. h ......
O.y c ... 711' -' ,.
5172 Mc,.._ An.,
H•fflM)tathocll
lktwffWWlliQlca_.~I
C••tU.C1 ltr c.-.,.c.,. .... _.a.-.. c......
(714) 898-3883
SCHOOl FOR
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Offlct Sldllt clcn1tt bc9n Mo•. 2
Choose from :
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Review of · Typing , filing ,
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transcription skills.
For further information
Col 17141641·0678
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•CHILDREN• TEENS• ADULTS
Ho ............ ...
ClasHt
[ Top yow~ GWf11f I
tHIY.,..._An. l•~lffdi ~ W ol ....,.._,..._.I IO &unny-
-962•5440-
·~1 PAGE SCHOOL
~OF COSTA MESA
llOI. TMIU
IAT. l :IOUI. TO
flit VOllQllOll fOl'ntl I; 10 , .II
ur lftCtOlllA oc ••••• 11111 Ml&llO
co11uca. , .. Oft=... I ... ~....:O.llA3~.!. ••
"l.'!f.::-",, .• ··-~-·-.. ._ f1t.H1 t fl'"" I
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TUTORING
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INDIVIDUAUZEO PROGRAMS
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Grommor
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$1Udy 5"111•
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WORD PROCESSING ANO INFORMATION
SYSTEMS 2232 S E Bnstol-Su11e 108 Santa Ana. Ca 92707
* corona del mar * costa mesa * irvine
J AZZERCISE 1s a dance·!nness
program utilizing Joyful Jatz dance
movements , s tret<'hes. st~ps, and
transitions choreographed to all kind of
terrific music from ro('k to ragtime
IlfVIN~.'Jii<>ltNIN6 ft~(N/NO CWJts
cm 6~·ao6'f
cos TA Ml SA .. MO/tNIN6 CLASStS
CO/tONA /JlL MAit .'f Vf.NI""" CuJ.SlJ
CALt 498 ·111l"" '~S-offl/
HarTACH
Pl.AU
New lulW")' offlct 1p1ce
In Irvine'• b11alu1
centtr' Euy Frwy ac· cesa. Avail. oow' Call
11 er or fled Hiii 6
PauJarino. • Mal I
AUTOOILlll
115 • front•&•. Harbor
Blvd, CM. avail for
le tt Bkr.
rordeta11-...... ~/
5 l·tlll CMJJO....:, * DRUXI °"'CIS * • • •• • • • • ••••••••••• • • • •
l,2&3room Noleuere .......
qwrtd Adj Alrporter 0,,1 twJty 5otl
Hotel. 833 3223. 9· 2. ••••••••••••u••••••• ..
12io-Up Huot Bch. L~SING L!ASE, quh·
Ca rpet, drapes. air 11111 buslneu.aelUoeout
l73Cll Bu h. M2 lf34 ALL 111ppUa and tu· --t11rea includlna:
I 7TH STIHT DIAplay cue.. wait.Ina
COSTAMISA room chain, Beauty
2 or J room office 1u1tes. Salon haurdryert and
AIC. plenty of prkg Util hydraulic clWra, mlr ,
111c:l Av11J now Call rora. shelveund pl111&1.
Realonorrucs 6'7H700 Also. make-up, abampoo
Costa Mesa, -250 ~ft and hatr product.a.
suite. $175/mo UlJls in-CallS3J·9'154 or
cld 778 W 191h St __!!!_erg,_..
851·89?.8 I C E C R E A M · 1
NEWPORT BEACllNr NEWPORT Xlnt. beach
o c Airport. 340 w 1100 IOC' only $15,000
!!!rt &44-7722 1·~""""'-4242=-------------.... " .....
"Full Service" E1· Oppooluity 5015 ecut1ve s uite in •••••••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT CENTER INVESTORS ...
now including SlOO/mo. Private party wants
secretarial services w 1700,000 ror lit TD oo
offire space Must~ lo prime N.B. property 1 compare! CaJ!.l.60-8009. EXECUTIVE OFFICE u-to=• _~-5-0-2-5 llONewportCenterDr ........... , ._
Swtenl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach If you want a Real Estate Loan at BELOW 644-4492 MARKET RATES caU
-~ --Prime financial Share 2 ore suite In pre-SerY1ces sl1g1ous au·port area 375 527•1477 sq. ft For de1a1ls rail --.=-=c.=.~--851-0226 Venture Capital, pref
---high tech. & software, H B Prufess1onal Ofr also do equip loans
I
A.poi t1MWtt u.fw-.. Rtfltals to Share 4300 =~ll:~~~e a~v~:lan?an M5_·_9863_ .
;;;~·;;;;.:; ... 3i6; ;;;e .. ~~;·;~;·:~;:·2~·: ~ rr P5:1o{!;s~~nn~I~ ~ Trwt 5015
••••• •••••••••••• •••••• hse nr s Co Plaza I rrwy 963.8377 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Steps lo Bearh !BR yrly Spa $22.S+sh.are ut1ls NEW PT EXEC SUITES Sattler Mtg. Co. ~mo. &41 4913. Avail. for sutJ.lease 111 All types ot real estate
_ ~l·SB!!L Shr lrg luxury home N B exclusive office investments since llM9.
Spar1ous bachelor, I full w1prof persoo lsl last + complexes Easy frwy . Spedalmg lit
Ba. frig/hot plate. 1•., dep access. qwet handsome 2.d'R>I
bl.k rrom beach $300 mo 546-~ s e 1 t 1 n gs 1 n ~· I 6,.2z171 1:J11: A.£11 _trly 673·2D>aft!_ Shr JBR Balboa Penn • Recepl Phone cov ~"'~·,,,;..:..;:...:...-=.-~-"-"-;:;..:..:...
s.ta AIMI 3110 Resp s:>Z + 111 uttl e r a g e • U t 1 I 1 I 1 e s Pam67J.59S3 •Janilor •100 Photo ;bc;;;;:~b;:·ci;;·t~·s•t want;!.Femaletoshm copies mo •Ample
~ ....... ,
,~,
Lost&Fo.d Plaza. newly redec $425 private home 111 c M prllng •Kitchen •Sec'y + ~dep 546-0116 w/same DX) 5499847, s~r v avail Call •••••••••••••••••••••••
it-al hoch 3884 642·4546. 97Qu5a_071~4fi0ed Services al Happy A.• 5110 ~ . -......••.•..•.•.•.••..•
••••••••••••••••••••••• CdM. resp fem, 25 to 35. Cute 2 B~ across from non smoker to shr 3Br M.I . OFACf
sand S5251mo. + 1st. & 2ba w same. S260 + ~) Premium oHire avail
last No kids. 1148-4~7 util~671·3529 Pnme loc . new rarpet,
AporllMRh FW'lliWod SPYGLAS5 HILL. wood floors, sky bghts.
or U•faWWod J900 F shr 4 br Ilse. pool. Jae, open beam cellmgs, ale
•• ••. ••• •••••••••• ••. •• $2'75/ mo. Cathy, 944 sq rt at Sl.25 per sq
S E A W I M D 644·0100 76'}_1232 rt Call Mark K1k1 al
Ap.t.,.h u.fww. A.poi tmuh u.t..n. Ape tMC•b u.fww. IAf* tlMtlfs u.fww. Mature, prof . male lo 613"6606· c;;~·.:.::_•••••••3;24 •C••o·.· .. ·•M••:.:•••••••3•8•:• ~=~·ia4~M;:;port····~···3·a·~; NewVl!_~~GIEuxury share beauuful Newport BA YFROMT
• wwv ' ...... ...,,_, "" """"' home w 1 5 am e I Offices for rent from ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ... •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• adult apts an 14 plans I Overloolun& bay & open I $l.U\11snr1 .,.., ••19 Newport leoclt 376t ••••••••••••••••••••••• STUNNING large 2 Br 2 MEW DlX 2IOIM 2 Br 2 Ba. cfl)l. d1w, enrl 4 Br 2 Ba 2 Story Year Bdrm from $4.90. 2 bdrm ocean Own ba & br --~ '"°".!:!
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 2 ba, beaut view ol Ba Garden Apt. Pool. 2 sty, 2\.\ba, ·n~I yrd, gar, upstairs Nr beach ly Good location S900 rrom $570. Townhouse Non · moke. 646-~ NEWPORT BEACH S04
THE
"GOOD
LIFE"
YEAA·ROOND FUN:
Social Aclm l•es Ot· re<:toi •free Sunoay
Brunch • BBO s •
Par11es • Plus more
GMAT RECREATION:
Tennos•Freelessons
(pro & pro shopl • 2
He•llh Clubli •Sauna
• Hyd•omasnge • Sw1mmrng • Goll
Ortvtng Range
BEAUTIFUL APTS· StnglH I & 1 Bed
rooms • Furnished
& Unlumcslle<J • ~I Ltvtng • No Pe1s •
MoOels OPM Oa11v
910 6
bay, private Garage 710W 18th St ~ ' N N Bl d 80 Ref rig S9 00 m o ----'--..:....._:__ gar. patios, decks, bit-$4S0.842·~ Mo Brgkerll7S-.912 Crom S640 +pools, len· f /M Roomma~toshare o ewport v I to
846-0096__ --NEW BREED APTS ins. grdnr. k1ds1pets ok IA YRlONT nis , waterfalls. ponds~ 2 bdrm apt Ill H B S250 1500 sq ft 3\'311 at 9C>' a lBRwithLOFT.~ $635 Lorri wlldys IUnfumtshedl,2,&Jbr I Gasforcoolc:ing&heat-orne1,ot1abJe.960-0972 sq ft.S1ernMgmt Co. a ,,., Acacia. 3 Br 2 Ba Frplc, rec room. pool, ~7·9571. evestwkods ASP&t PA.CIRC Lux ZBR. Z8A .. Xtra Lrg Ing paid. From San ~ -i --641-1324. Ocean view $875 Mo · · •-l"lllSt~JZOZ liv rm. Overlooking female stewardess pre· ---=:::.::.:..-----1
Jacun1, gas .. water 546-5434. 1 , .. Bay Stt bldng. Under· Diego frwy drive North f h Huntington Bea. 419 Main
Call6737942 -paid Adults.nopet.s.393 Condo 2br ~a ~luxe poolside xtra ground parlung Adults on Beach to McFadden bed~msa:!':mt: sf~~~c~ Sl 380 sf $195 Sierra
2BR.lBArearumt '550 Ham1lton,CM64S~I patio, 2 car gar . large 2br. 2 ba, bllns. SIOOOmo 675-lITJL thenWestonMrFadden yard. rec. Cacti. No M.&_mt Co 64J:H?4. _
Mo lnclrridge Jim $525 mo.CaJl64.2·i.1'74 dswhr J ~ miles beach h B ' to Seawind Village smokers. kids. ""ts or New garden ofc, ground --_M4·7441 __ ---Adlts. nope•~ ••""mo Sleps IO lhe bear . 3 r 2 • (7 14)893-5198 ,... fl I k
MAICE SOMEONE KU'l'Y
!llAIU IOMIEONI llltllLE
PlaceaHAPPY AD ·
lll Uus column
for only S3.2.S.
Ca II fi42.S678 "'9tFll!ld l Br Lite & bnle & airy, "" ....,., Ba frplc. enclsd palio male~ S300 I n •1ne oor. over oo 1 n g
3 Br 2 Ba. I year new frplc vaulted ce1bngs, 536 8362 Yearly $735 Mo Call ROOtM 4000, 857-9317, 559-6793 Iv. stream & lrees Bnslol LK.ilt
Close lo beach. laundry FA.MIL y A.l'TS. pool. Jacuzzi , garage 2 BR. TOWNHOME 673.2507 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mes§~e _ _ SI btwn Airport & SC
R°m. garalge. $700 s~io Sparklmg clean lrg apts J11.S. 545.3115 --Pool. park, near beach Duplex . upstairs. 2 Br. I Laguna Beach ~otor Inn. Str em pl f Shr lrg 2BA Plaza 926 sq ft SI JS per I GM 50 ~ ~
equ:rde e~s:ol2A for families with I or 2 Unfurn 2 bdrm ~o _j§l-5191 Ba. frpk. garage Near 985 No Pac1f1c Coast apt CM S2SO mcl ut1 I W11l 1mp wswl tenant a port of Yos Uh. ~n ~~ -children. Near park. rh1ldren or pets ISi. S600 Gorgeous2Br 2Ba Lidoshoppingarea S600 Hwy, Laguna B.each ' Dorothy. 979 5897 S46-9222 .. 497·~l Happy llrtlld•y
Ocean view with Heatpaid.Nopets _last,S400mo64S·0313 seperate unit . best year lease Adults, no Da•l.Y, Weekly. Kitchen ! 540·3233Ext288 CM~IAIEA HOMy! fireplace. 2 Br 1 Ba available Low wmler , -.__. 2BR. l"• BA $495 Meu Verde 2 Br. 117 ba. area, walk to bcJCh. pets Must have ref's rates 494•5294 Shr r\B Apt 3BR. 28A 2 room office. ~et bar. -
$550/mo ~~---2B'R 2 BA. '515 pvt patio. avail 11 1 child OK . no pels Avail 11 lS Drive by ----~-34 S232 mo 13 util business use only S225 Lost&Fo.d SJOO
Cotta Mela 3124 398 W. Wilson, 631·~ SS 25 mo 1552 E 1 m ~--_ 6141'1 Clubhouse Ave. Balbokal lnKn 1 shoo &. t~P lk.P 76-0-0024 aft S.2_m Mo. utils meld. 646· 1§84-'-•••. ••• ••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111 "'"' 3627_ _ Nr Hunt'""'"" Harbour 494-6303 wee Y · 1 c enne e, f-t -h b -b O ... LY l LEFT I"' .,..... u• .. -· -·---ocean Cronl. 675-B740 o s r 2 r. 2 a apl " NEWLY DECOR. EASTSIDE l Br Newly E Side 2Br. lBa, garage. 3 Br 3J, ba, den. frplr. I Br Condo, '550 Mo , - ----w view. Promontor) Pt. Offlre suiles 70< 350
I Br 1as pd. encl gar decorated Adults. no pool, pvt yd, adlls S465 ~/mo.~ Vt r s a 111 es Ca 11 Newly decorated pnvate N B $360 + II e p sq rt. & up Occupy now! fQllMn Int'
di washer, pool Adults pets. Refnge S3SS mo mo 67_3-0731 PANORAMIC VIEW 213 830-2323 Richard room & bath, frpk $28S, 675 3889. RC I . n. ""'"llSI unu NN -- -1nclds uttls. Easts1de -----n\_v,v_ ......-_ 642·5073 645·0108 __ -1 BR. deck, stove refng Large 2 bdrm 2 ba nr 2 Bdrm apt $600 yrly C.M. 645-0108 M F to shr 2br apt w A1£ FIE£
2 I r. I lo A.of PALM MESA APTS Mature adlts, 00 pets Huntington Harbour Spacious. newly de· --I pool, Sl90 111cl ullls, nr I ARCHITECTS
Newly decor. C:as pd. 1561 Mesa Dr. $3SO, 979-4410,54.9·7007 -1!40 4~ -960-4370 corated. Malure cpl. on· Female 21 or over to OCC. 645·1458 P.a.
0 k d l B f rn.$400 2Br un · -·~ l Pl o--lt ~73 1900 s hare a house 1n · -----.. .....,_...._,r .,_ • WOO encl gar., pool. dshwr r. u . . Deluxe 2 BR, Fam rm. Spacious Bachelor Apt Y aya ™ Y • New rt w/same $2.50. Female roommate want· ""' •V'll•"""· 642-5678
Gafden Ap.1rtment1 Adults 642·5073 rum S42S, Adults only ceramic ltltch nr. patio, Pool access. Mlle .from Peninsula I bdrm, steps da ~4100 ev 6'75-$209 ed BALBOA ISLAND Do yo-. need a P,lace lo ll"!""llll!!!llll!!!llll!!!~·!!W!!I!!!!!!!!!!
,..._port Buch N. Call 9·4. 546-9860. more, child OK S485 + beach. SJSO mo 1ncld lo ocean. $400/mo. Day --. -i..::.:..=--HOME. Bctnn and share work? lf so. here s whut -= 880 lrvi"e '•''~'"' llrTo.-.ame 2BR, 1'-'I BA , patio, last.64S·l~ ~ ulils.536·1$. 67J.2677;eve54Ml22 L~. rm.,anbeautNBhm .. bath S300 Noulil weotfer· Lost: Big Orange Lona (714)645·1104 Newly decor gas pd., enclosed gar Good -1 bd 1 V-.11 B h bd kit pnv . pl._. prof F. 675 _91 ... aft5PM Sttretanalserv1ce Haired M Cat. Vic . 1 1 ds h Easts1de 2 Br I Ba. Near rm · no pe 5 or ersai es ac rm 30 S22S l I "' ri I Brookhunt & Adami . NewportBuctlS. ~~~1Ja~-~.' w r Eside Loe. Adults. $450. schools. no pets. $4.25 children 3 blk from refrig. Mirrored closet ~~8242 inc . u female pref to shr JB-;: NP vatf~.Phonbuil~IJd?~ 9S4-65IOREWARD!!
1700 t61h SI ioo•et •• t6th1 646-2280 Mo. 631-6155. , beach lSt & las I + de· $4.70 Sandy 642·6149 -·-----apt nr bch over 25. must ew o ice uig (714) 642·5113 Spacious 2 Br, 1 Ba. S395 Newport Heights2 Br 117 -~it $280536-7357 VE R S A~ E S be neat 548•9816 l block off 40S fwy m CocU...s...111 .. _____ .... ! 3 Br. ll'J Ba S425 Laun Ba frpk. gar. adullS. lBR $370 Inc gas. w w ----Furn. room wanted for ------PountamValley Female Lost\0/23. Burr
--------J!r ra~.J~I. 548-9556 no pets S485 + deposit carpets, drps, bltin O/R, l"IM 3844 PEN'JliOUSE Nov. & Dec. Costa Mesa Christian female room Blueprint service OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br b d 642_5722_ fridge. lndry, close lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 2 Ba corner umt, area. Reuonable Eves male wanted, child OK. By month or lease color, 1 yrold.
Avail. Winter. Weekly/ L a r g e 1 r m bus, ull shops Quiet WOODBRIDGE ocean view. S7SO Mo 213 ,425-8525. hse-y~mo j48-8067 : 96)-1112, lob 962·3119
Monthly. 67J.7873. w1dishwasher. carport. 2 Bdrm 1 Ba. great E.side area. S58S per mo .. 2 bdnn. I 644-002 Share, Ir• sharp hse FV ·1 Lost: Brittany Spaniel, -=.!=~..=.;.=-=.==---1 ldry rm West!1de S400 location. No children 646 52112 64.S-356J b 9Sl 4543 B rd b 1 be h " male Wbt/~ eel SHORTTERMS 64S-662S ts "475 1 C 11 · a, -I te. 2 r apt c O&e to ac BBQ·Mil'rO·big screen Irvine walk w airport 2 G : · ~ sz.
Beach rentals , 2&3 2 Bt w/garage. Adults. Lid S.:Oyry. a D.aroi.t 3126 L.acJ-alMdt 3141 quiet neighborhood. R ln4BRhse N rt ON TV Male.25·3SS2'75 roo~ suite 384 s'r .. rnzly" Bae Bay
bdrma.SS.SOmo up Agt. . ..!dQ1fl67 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gar. wash 'dryr. adults. ~res. Pvt BA. t~~of 111clutil N1ck964-27~ groundnoor.~va1l ti I area . NB Reward.
675·8170 crplS , drapes, patio. 2 Br l'"l Ba Twnhse 1 Br excell cond1llon. Ocean View Deluxe l & 2 no pets. $S7S lst & last. p I & T is F So. Lag Pvt area, entr. 7141774-0100. ~543~·-7..0..362~-----
lBr Yrly. ocn view. util water pd Ca 11 I 5 ~a r . pat Io . q u I et $231. Avail Nov lsl. Br. Apls. Newly decorat· 992·0823 days, or call· oo enn . um or pool. $295 util 494-4993, ----Lost: Lrg Blk/Bm Tab·
pd. f'urnisbed. S52S mo 63626194.~~;SantaAna 5465 lifestyle, malW't' adults, 962-8840 ed. refrige, dishwasher. 645-2303eves&wkends. jln(~rn.~.645-2015 499·4712 A.VA.ILAIUHOW by Alt M. Vic. Femlear
no children, pets. $500 disposal. he'ated pool, v, blk to beach. Bachelor 1 yr old. Condo CM. S300 I to 4 rm swte. conve· <;dM 673·~1 6'7S.U07. 646-4419 667 Victoria $470 Mo. 548·54'19. Hwllltcjtoa ltacll 3140 elevator• su"bter. prkng. aJ>l, ref rig. no kitchen. Plus u11I Pvt enlrance. BA Newly ruenUy located nr 0 C Lost: l0/23. Miniature
lbr Versailles. vu or roun • 2 Br. Condo. or S.C 2 Br. 1 Ba .. pool No pets. ....................... $850& up. Call 494-QJ. _i!I Simo. 968-8263 . 548-73U redecorat1.>d 18·25. HB Airport and the pre Collie. Vic Ocun Front
lain/garden. Sl,000,~ Plaza, S.A. Pool, Spa. Savage Wilde & Co THEWHIFR.ITRH Oppositemainbeach,un· Versailles. ZBR, 2BA. HB Nice Room Block lo S2SOinclutil.SJ6..079tl __ s tigious PETER &!Jlsl NB.91ic).7gll
clubhse. sauna, poo . $48S Child OK 549.3232 642-4470, 6'7s-Qi06. Luxury Adult units al ar. obstructed view, 1 br Security Gate. No pets. Beach Jae $200. Female share rum. apt PAULSON BLDG. Ex Lost : Cocker U,•niel,
s Pa· g Y m · 5 e c SPACIOUS&SUNNY 2 Br. 1 Ba. 2248 Canyon fordable living. 1,2 & 3 condo. BalCOflY. securi· Adult.s. SO.s.5'l·l99'7 953-5766 Half rent & ut1hties. ecutlve suite services 1 gar./guard, $850. Dys 2 BR I g r upnor k'd Br. Well decorated. .. S B t ba k't ri ~rter6:3(\>m64S·47~ also avail Provided by ma e. 11" yr 0 · Male 975-0801 Tom : evs Dt W .'~ndclts.ano p;l~ Dr. New carpet. 2 's Olympicsizepool.ltghl· ty, resv'd pr .. g. 700 lay.ec..Vlew ~~t~e:very.~p·.~d~it <Fl toshare3Br Irvine the A IR p 0 R T Buffcolor97'9-75r2
631-6666 Ron S4.25 ~~er~~ ':5ii ;:95 ~:. ed tennis rourt, Jacuw. mo., util. incl.494-7754· Exclusive CliHhaven Sl60/mo. m-8699 area. YoW1g pro( pref. EXECUTIVE SUITE. Found Old English. --------•I 548·9084 scG-5446 641-1324. park like landscaping 2 bdrm, 1 ba, Ocean view. private apt. 1 bdrm, Iba u,j_L u....a...&.. ,. I 00 Call Linda 855-8065, Cont art Di an a al female, gray & white
WIMTRRBn'ALS 1 & 2 Br unootain. stove Most beautiful bldg. In S.SSOlnclutil. SSOO per mo. Days nvwwu,_ "' 951·0185. 7S2·0869 _____ Male white Lab Ihle
2 bdrm, 1 bath, frplc. Adults ~·s Couples 323 E. l8th. 2 Br. 1 car H B 64S-Z3l7 556-1774. Eve & wknds ••••••••••••••••••••••• Female wanted lo shr J CANNERY VILLAGE: Collie/Husky, red & dshwbr.~mo. preferred. $335 & $MS. :![:g;.45~~~~ao:g,:~ IMIH16l9 Mtwportleodl 386' 642·72&4 SUUIKMOTR bd hse nr S.C Plaza 4SOsq. rt officeorretail ~lhit:. ~al.~~kla·a·poo. 3 bdrm. 2 bath, bltns. 646·8727. Co 32A MA.Rlt&S WALi •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdrm. 1 ba $575 yearly Wkly rentals oow avail. .filOmo M1ke96.'J.ll825_ shop space avail Nov ac · a..-.. a llllrte.
patio, S650mo. u ..... M 2 B l Ba Apt S .164l·lb . In I d I 2 & 3 Br TownboU!e Plll .,...T lease. Open beams, S112 & up. Color TV female shr C.M. Condo lst. S4.7S Mq. 673-6522, black 's~· MaleSpr· J bdrm, 2 bath, frplc, -v o. r. . . ma I I r, s g e a u t AptJ. Palioe, single & ..-.nrUR carport lll6W. Balboa Phones in room 2274 SJOOmo I,\ util,own bdnn i ·S. inter paruel. liver &
$750mo. ~1T~a~ft'.U:~s':~~~~{ci ~n~fi~c:,i:Js~~~~6C double car ga.ragH, COUMJIYCWI (213)86s.2.S42 ::~ort Blvd CM &bath.63178.!!_ .......... 4450 ~b/S~:~.\r.c•ltl :
OK. no pets. Only l year near Hunt. Harbour. .UVM l BR-pool-I bllt ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,, h i 1 e Fem 1 I e old Call for appl. lbr E/side. small but Children OK. MO-lilm. Bachelon, l&:2 bedroom sngl adlt. $325. Uve on N~ Beach G••llU Retail St.ore -Best beach Auatra llan Sheplterd
TSLMGMT &4.2-l603 cozy w/lots or neat apts4'townbouses. 642-50m SlOO /wk Pin e Knot forll..e 050 local.ion In Newport! hi , associated
8" ) JI t_ Q ·, Ol ' I\ .. ~ g <",
J1 •• ,,.. ,, ,ff>',. "" wood. .5.51·16ro. Rtodv·Mo•t .. I From$5»$1000 &44·1900 NO FEE• Apt •-,.,_.. Motel. 6302 W PCH, NB ••••••••••.••••••••••••• S7ui Mo. 11,. 23rd St. mllt, w te 1ray. Fireplace. pool. pvt EASTSIDE lmmacu1ate2bdrm,l~ · ·"'""""o 645-0440 21arages111CdM.StOO/ "" v Newport Sheller. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!~ patio, dishwasher, on Spacious 2 br. natural b a . Hun ling ton l llOIOOMS rentals. Villa Reftlals y lY the bea hr Call 760·941S nights 675·4 l85~67J..l40l ...-&44~·3654=:.:..· -----
E.side, aU in 1-lg 1 & 2 wood ceilings & Landmark Condo. 21.AlHS 67s-m.2Brolter r~a:ms~nKilch. c& a":: M0-8950Extl23Days. RnA.LSPA.Cf Found· Wht Samo1" F r ..... ,~
"" blk rrom beach. SS2S mo. yearly lae Call
Maurffll 7:30 am to 3:30
pm (714) MN?OO ..........
U.fu 'lhd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... 3102 ••••••••••••••••••••••• QIOJbr ~at 115479
S24S H B studio 119533
$375 2br San Clem M924
S400 CM /2br plea I 540.1
S400 01111 Pt lbr "92A
$1252br w/ded •963'
'47SC•P· Bcta2br tta4
Ren m•&31·4W Fee
Trade your old atutr for
ntw Ji!dodlu with a Clut Id. I0@71
Br 1arden apt&. From cabinets, prv balconies, Washer & Dryer, 2 S67SMONTH Ocean([Otlt for. Winter $280. per mo. + $280 2 car garage ln c M .. toosq. tt.liSOmo Great Vic 15th & Newport ~~· M::::..:..7·=2.M:.:;l=-----1 utilities pd. Adults only. patios, welbat, bltln R' 1..29 S5th St. lowtr unit. Rentals. Furnished & lff. dep. 2'D W. Ocean· comp It enclosed. exposure, Harbor Blvd Blvd.
2 8 r 1 Ba SUO · S54S /mo. Please call O. 2 car gar. $575 per .dot cond. Avail. DOW. u.nfurn. Broker. 67~12 front NB JHS/mo 7S1·5266 aft Call NS-U
Matramonio con 2 ninot. ~1· 1660. mo. lat ' last + S300 sec (213)9e6-l7U. 3 bdrm oo Nwpt Penn. 873-4154 SPM. Realonomlcs 67W700 SCUIUTS
2043 Wallace, Cou de P o s i l · C a I I t875 mo UW pd Yrlv or WEST fF ARE 700 Meu 50·1546 &t-... -----•I (710759·4311. Ask for I ,.,. .... ,...... . . ' ........... 4250 Offk•R..... 44 CLI A Eutside 2 BR t~. M Blnabam Call8 s 2 Br. i Ba. Commty pool. Winter. S'J'S..-OM. ,...................... ....................... IQ. fl. rttail shop DOW A115D 63=cl::..;·Z:::::l=..:SO:.:..·-----i no pets.M25mo. .. Br.r 1 Ba Sto. v• .d/'w $750.'75-!m. Dupldex 2 tBIR !LBab~kcovr· OCEANFRONT21c4 Br. 1117Wettclirf. N.8. Want ~-v_•lulable. IU&~1t~c Uaw.t...-_,_1 _
S4Mf71 • · · ~. ' -ere P• o .,.. I r Avail. Winter. W~t•~/ financial Inst. 70008.f -""'-a Pft. N --...,....,..... C11>t1. drapes, garage EASTBLUFf Spacious l be b $550 S300"-.; Daib -~-~•uun_u l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I with washer dryer bk· Br. Pool, patio, view in ac . mo. """"' M th .m.'1111. .floor.A M1·5032. 2BR. bae •tatort at• h ·W1'E 1
APAlniefTS Lt Two•.._ up. Adulu, no pets. $44!0. 1 pleasant area. Sjnale S4l.508l ........ S.... 4JOO MIWPOIT tacbed. Zoned for small What a i.r. He-'°
Beaullflul landacaped l~lfa, 2 aty twnbte, N0-2ZI • adult, no peta. I.US Mo. VERSAILLES, 1 BR pen· ..... ,................. ~ buslneu. Remodeled. a um,wttr ••U••
Carden apts. P1tiol or North C.M. $5~ mo. Sl'AC PIMntOUSI i "4 .. m. ~~1:S sm per mo. Spacloua execultve of· 50mo.Sll·254S Mrvift ••h_..,.
decu. Bool ' Spa. cov· Ma-7214 3 b 2 ba It u hll 1 2 BR. seoo p11.9 utll. lit, "Gu Roommate ficn acl'Cll from Cit,y C • • 1r.W • dat• "1lla kta ; II· ered parklni Hut paid, •-2""'Bd"'"r.--l ..... B._a_. u-pa-ta-1-,.-.-en-c-I. cathectraJ ~~ny & dbi ! lait ' aec. szoo. eer. e. Eutblurra Townhouse ContlctSttvlces". Hall. AUaervtCftavalla· ...... 4471 Wjtl,~.. ••
AIBduRlu. ,nopeta . ...,_...,_ f!,f~•vail. ll/t •. baleoo linllel'Jdllht mu•.Af\I,.,_ apt, 3bdrm. aa, 2 car La r • • t 0 a 1 b&t 'opOonal'. Fromm ........ --.. ·-
--....,..,..,. '1f far:,\ .. retrtat. llSO 1200 aq. ft. a Br. 2 Ba. 11r. No pm. -.W/mo. Malt /Female lloom· 1q,h, up It reucmble a..lf"'1 a!:
2250Vanpard, $40.laS S. Cl eo. Dbcount ror It frptc, diaia& rm. pool. MHOIO. mite Senlte in So. rtotall. No leue re. Com..,dal lllt. 111121, a MUii' •• &a:
aBR.%8A.--ans zpr:a~.1 ~.:, Ant~ &arde.Uq. Act, Gre.. Yfl!STCLIPF. HU. 01'911Dd ,,_. 28Jl. 2BA ~ Q.~for rntal caD for ,_ • ..... JIU ::.. ...
Adlll-'-1525 M5-1JU 9171, ._ ec.do. Pool, AIMDIUel. -n· Have aollMtMla,to Mil? PomoH. C.11. II) -. "'
•W.WU., "1·• m.uir'7~l . ; WaatAdlle\?T JO.Im S!llJdlelteml ldaTI aur Rt'fell Arte. noo WJ..... ~--ltnU, .... --.... · ......... .-..
• • . . ---·-
Ora eCoast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, October 27 , 1981
~~!.~.~ ...... !?~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~.~~ ..... !!~ ~!!~ ..... ?!!! ~!~~ ..... !!.~ ~!.~~ ..... !!.~ ~.~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~..-v;;;;;·•;~°;;!
N UNO t yr old pr 81nk1n1 IUTam CUltc:Al K1lrdrt11er Modtla needed All t~pa. HC.,-.OHtST SALIS/Co_.., Tt:ACH ER·Prt School, 8td Walnut Inlay. l200. J
U\ltt Spanltl. Vic 8tarh ~AYMS Full or pitJl'M, txper'd Work Temporary Jobi Pull Hrvlct Salon 11 Mta, womtn l children. Llw firm In Jrvlneattk• full lime pref Wiii con Full tlmt. Ptrmanent. Jdul! Sffl C 87"153...L.
& '-'•m,r1 Hl\18'2 llSS COUMSILOI No n u n lon Gent'• clott to home loollln1 for tht rl1M liU.• 77'2 ttceptlonlal. l>u1Jea wlll alder part Urne Noeck llb11ral btntflta Call Afpliictt IOIO
al '''hi o" V CU-AUaa HwY.._L B 494.37j4 &ASSOC t!!1!::J --,, F 90me 1eMrl o t'C a F. 11th St CM T•"CHaA"YC"at HARBORAREA rr t La beown Slamm Markel. 1080 S Cst VICKI H~N operator Elaatllal.a f or MODB.~OITS al.lo lncludelUtfefllypCLn~j Trophy Co IHe-3141 170 Martl,yn847·~ ... •••••••••••••• .. ••••
a ' u ~ • r Be 11 ~ lh<' .. ,_ 4 A~ln em •only Fran. 833 3822 • • -llA -"' "' APPLIANCE SERVICE RE~ ARD He; rt SUVIClur. CAMllAPll50H Q.2t>n 7'!k>~..]O/~CWOO ~:~!!:e'o:;~n~l~I~~ &18Tl HCl"ITYPIST • 30 8 30 Plf, Mon· Fri We buy UMdappUancet b~. \'tuldr n'• Ptl Ex pe r'd on procua Clt,..T""9t J.'airM ll $.18«) _ MOTB. SSwpm, 11ft~l~phone Sale1 642-0C!l -Wetell~d .. euar.
l'I •It call Pl'll Allen ~=~~:~ r.,~~!tll~{trh ~~::~Y ~uiv1~""~~ ri·~1!"!o~lt~~~ ~:~.'!! Hair stylist. aubleu e & Nltihtd8kclerk m41nner. ~"" 3tarter 0 HICkOl1Y1 FAltMS r TthKoollllr'• ~d ., 11 w llanees Mt-3077 ~94·1S71 or Mr11 ells Ocun11de >'ederal male C'O benrf11.J S49-9't98 Ute lyplnai at 40 l";":~ be You r owo boas $42.~ C114 l9S7 8S07 ;uk ror ppty "' i:ourmrt f\'M' 'exper r u llUY Arrl.IAMCIS
$$l 1.n1 It one ol tht laraeat WPM, l yr txper pre Newport Surh Two N i'.:WS Ot:Lrv ERV Sam ~ 0 j ~ • & :.; fl s ~ 0 r 1 tlmt'. 10 00.6 ~ 642•0'11•1 Lea 951 81&1 ~ollftd 2 poodlr11, l Choe uvlngs & loll.nJI In the CASHlaS rmed ApplJc:atlonuow stations now open Call 2am Sam, Sun t hru RECEmOHIST f~s~i~!blandc;.0 ~ !ELErHOHESALlS Waiher ~ Gas dryer
browa temalr. l blk 11tate Th11 u pan11on ~·1u111~,r~s P::,'d:J~~ ~lD& token ~wttn 85 Chu ck 87S 2046 or Thura $100 + week. Receptaorust ntt'ded for Westcurr Plaiu&4lO'.n2 J..xcrllt•nt opportunlt> S8S both work i;ood ~:~,·,!OD PU!J~ • ..!.f\IDf, hH t'rflttd2xlnt caN'ilt fashion Island ~lorr PM al u s Rentals ~OWi for a G:..M..__N-'-B,J_rv 95380 0 print1n11 rrun<'lll~or for amblth•OUS P~!!on S48jS13ot548 ~
._ -or_,......., opportunil1ti1 In our $1m Corp HQ, 17871 Mltchtll, lleallh Club Attendant, Newspaper, p/llmt help t\b!Uly to handle bWIY with tt'lcp one CHmtnl h f 1'an f'em Cocktr Sp1;;;;l'I Juan Caplslrano olrtce F:xp preferred 111 yrs or ltvine t7!!) ~ semi-rettrtd person on weekends Early AM phone~ & work indcpen SALES exper1en<'t' No cohl ~rll Up rig 1 reeicr. runs
fo und 10 23. V1r We are cutrt"ntly seek older &t•SO'l!l ly Hrs: lMpm, Tues lnserll ng & tying. dllnlly ll mWil TypinK ORGANfIERS 1ng fulll1mw 6l part good. SlOO. 548'8513 or
Rush a rd & Ad11ms HB lll~ 11 Sa\'U\g., Counselor CASHll:ll C.O M p AN 1ON1 A fD E thru Fri. 6""*64.:.--646·0637__ 4Swpm Slurtml ~ulary $500.S I 500/wk. time po~lll~ Jva.Jlablc• 548 4.W
·.:!96 11rt 6 wllh u perienct & a MOUSIWARISA.LlS t.itehtkp~allve ln or out llome Health Aids & NurseAid S800 ContictPersonnt'I F TorVfl'ult':loppl) Jo:uelltnl i.tarun11 Kit('ht'n i\ad kDlshWa'ahedr
Found SCUNAUUR .. 1-·u11 or V1Umt' Apply 01m_o .. e. · ,...,_1 Homemakers to assist Need help w eld.irly l>l!pt Sir ~JX>t'<IY Int· ~e 1011 u 01 t ts St 1 1 St I I' .. , L time Cus t o m ~r tj4 .. "~" I II Kod k tll I balary t 1'0mm1~sron & Xlnl wor ing t'O n
t Vll'l' Ren ... "'ent1lJve b d r b ,1 nu~ e ~ SA C' M a n e~s l't' an~ · C•ll lo1den11ry Thest' are~~r !>Mi-<.:town Hardware, 1024 Comparuot1 Withe elderly & Dis gentlt m an $600 mo m~1642!N10 trl n11t1onw1 c roin 113511883 SISO
11611-SS76 lions with up wurd lrvlnt' (WestclJHl}IB M11ture Live in C:ompu 11bled In their homes uvc 1n Rrt·pt Bkpr real i·~tntr yourhumr E ~60 tl!.'ll , nlon Ho Stlkeep" P1rt& f'ulltlme 00-3.'I& 1 ff 111 t EASY EASY EASY TEL.,.H~ tnOftelk Sl50 mobihlf avail Salary CASHIER , u .. r, one gir 0 ice. e Yll a-"" Brand nt>w Frig1d111rl' 22
••••••••••••••••••••••• commen.surate with ex· HOUStw"•• s&• ars 493.7 I Wage&Mlleage NU RSES AIOI-: need~d ln11. hh• bookkt•t•r11n11 They call you <.:all Mr SOLICITORS cu fl Sidi' b) Side, thru
XI l r · ~ -, • .:..-s ..... rs n·.,.,.,ed-at-Oc1
1
636-~ tor feedmD pt1me in NR<lC J1rpor1 1ri·11 Clo:.I' <1fl('r 311111 Avp111n1mrnl •'•tt1n" d & $900 EXECUTIVE pertence n ringe Full or Pltime Apply · "'""" _, """' HOMEMAKERS ,, 675 3041, v~ " oor ice w&tt!r, * SUl'Tl * b end its pack age Crown Har'!lware, lOZA ~MllcA,,: Mon9990thru Fri COLLEGESTIJDENTS ~vpepslyfoa/on~al M~~g: 641 1130 l'url t1ml' t'Vl·nirl$61!\ & 631 5663 24 h L"'"Ol.tTS Please apply In person Irvine (Westdlff) NB -"'•-~ -. .ver y . Rt•cp Typl!>l SA.LfS Sa turd a) '\M \ . r REFRIGl,o;RA'I'OR
our""'1\;" to· Counter help&backroom Earn $6/hr housekeep 3'0Victona,C M. La111 1''irm 1-·ash1on f'ersonneededforri·t:i1I !16422Y.l Veryrlean,111l o defrus1
'5l-l_l22 _!o4C/VISA PAClflCFfl>HAL l processors wanted, no ln& in Irvine, CdM & Nursing lsliind 9 IPM SO WrM llrass Bed Store 31luy~ Tlll lW OJo' SITTI NG $155.893-9000
COEDS·Would Lo\e lo SAVIMGS&LOAM CHAUFFER & other exper.•.necessary Car & Newport.Approx lS/hn RHSUPYVISOR _S500 hr6447tl00 i_lerweek Call 6j22712 INSIDEAl.LDAPSot , Party with you. Call Sue duhes Male college stu-full l .. _ f hold week. Girl Friday Hom( eriou••h time ror sun & Kitchen A1ded1Shwai.her. O b · ~ dent, non smoker, dark ime •u:> or 1 ay Service~~J022 7·30-J 30 PM ~on fri REC./SEC'Y Salesperson. ladlel>' hi1th " S250 L1ll00 mirrowave,
or ' b1e anytime Cam mo Capistrano suit req 25-35 hrs , per per100 Apply Honey Housecleaners, SS.00 pr Strong leadership alnh Rea l estate offtrr in ra~hron slort-, Npt llch t•xcrt'lbl'' Steves Ot•Hul $250 G.E dbl oven. S300
t -953:9311;!,. --San JuanCap.,CA wk .. dayor eve drivlllg. 8,sked Hams, 19069 hr to start, must have ty Cheerful, dedicated Irvine ~omt' ty1J1ni:. area Salur) -+ !(ood mg is noVo hrnn~)oun.: Oak Kitch rabrnets,
(714)661'1200 640.5335 Beach Bl. HB - -lo good p11t1enl care. general offrt'e dut1t·~ l>eneflli. Pull ,. P time l)t'OVlt• for a hand rar S50 ea 640.55« GrtatC..-y E ualO E~er Dayhostess,3hrsprday, car.Marla !KS-~-Beach area Xlnt cau73118R8 rall6447lUO washini: :.erv1ee Wll~h Escorts Banlung S d)'JI »r wk. Apply in Housekeeper/Cook M/F benefits . Call Mrs -SAi.ES 1>051llon opc•n So Jo'erran l>. Rolls Ro> t't'~. 3 tn I unit i;mk, rt>fn)(, CHILDCARE persoif .. Sternwbeeler l·S, non·smkr, S80 per Slone. 6'2-8044_ Restaurants Mer('edr' & Por.,cht'' ~to\ e S 'x2'. 11o upper 24 lfrs 641·0180 SAVINGS _ .. U-" 737 ~ 1-·ood Prt'p & !'\\'f\ t'f C:lldl>l Plaza Mall ror jl' h I k th t•ab , $13S. 83.1 ~t p li m e ('hildc are Restaurant. Reuben E. we ............ :1 . tive ~portsmmdl.''1 IO w Ii' )OU :.l)ll ur l' Ca ... /CMcks Hf'HSEHTATIVES worker for Christion Lee t51 E. Coast Hwy, HOUSEKEEPER needed Nursing Now Hmug If you t.1fl.' h ~R ~un full or l'urt (.;ult! Westmghouse frost A• hp/MC/ViJa Experience preferred. school. 16835 Brookhurst NB. __ f/lime for conval hosp! MURSES AIDE rnendly. t'OnsC1l'nl111u"~ d 1 v M urn 1" i? r ~ trmr po,1 t1ons J\ ail lree nofng 14 cu ft Xlnt
Must be able to work XI b r 1 E:c per'd .. all shirts Dependable we11o ant)ou n~ed Call Sno11o'1en <.:&ll o31 (>!ltXI rond S250 Wknd]> eves Sats We o(fer pleasant St .._D' 962'3312 DELI COUNTBl nt e&ne u: inc A Ln Conv Hosp. Nwpt. Rl·h from 8 i\ M to 4 PM 1 Mite ~rts, MU-4717 !>46 0269
UUllll competitive salary LOAM SERVICE weekend shifts Harold ver Y anor, us ' ~·ree mjr med . den Apply in Person Stonl' SAL~/TIME Auistant Manoc)er Grt'al Rerngerator A T_...... working environment & Clerical F / l 1 m e i n c I u des slyur~ce 1 sicMpay ~O Bring your smile & JOln wkdys. No exp needed I Tronl ACJfftCY
of elms CLER., .......... £.£ 4 E l7lhSt c M Victoria, CL --lal & hfe UIS. Topsulary Mrll Terrnce Re~lauranl Needl.'d ror lrg hrane h of Xlnt('Ofldltion
EsrortstModehog COSTA MESA lmmedia~'~O:~ror Oe li v n y ·p~;son , HOUSEKEEPER Call: Mrs.Slone 2915RedH1llCM ~~:l'~'1'~~1~~ll~~1T1~~e~5 Assu{' ('archllo 'fra\·cl, John &1S-5t65
M/F&Couples Full &p1time.Ca·UEarl loan service clerk Ac· F s Live-in. Top wages. 642.8044 I 10111al1\t' & ded1cat1on 11.enmore wai.her & gas 83.S·~MC 'Visa LeV .,.~ E reeway Auto uppbes. Enolish s~~i.ina. Must RF.STAI,, RANT Cook!>. renll~ ha~ posrltons ar·e lh1• ma111 •>r•· drver Sl2.5 cu or S225 an .,....7422 360 curate typmg COU\pula· 3624.2 Avery Plew .. Mis· " ~ " N b s bo d shwa h I Jl'a1lable m 'ale~ .ii. a • ' S lio n Skllls & Va.riety be clean, neat, very a{· ursmg u ys, 1 b t'rs rt'"U1s1tl's This '"~111011 both 1146-7694 Y....t& 171.h 1 • sion ~e·o · LV.., Appl y 1n n o r~on reprhentalln• \'ou'll " "' SOUTI'COAST Sa larv S900+ C ~ll · --. uve &enJ'oycarina for 2 " ,.~ . afford'ar1 .. p•v•rtuml_\l11 Lk N Dbl . -•ati-' ' • 1>tL " 3 l 30 Con Ji NE Jedro'• B-.. 0 r 8r1•tol earn an houri.\ 11oa0 e .,. • -"" 1 t' . e11o ovl.'n )lllS • ·r -· .,£.ae/ST,..,.., children Pref. non ·l v osp ... '"" ·' "' 1?ro11o & learn an J fast S350 II ••••••~··••n•••••••••• F 111 me Ca I I JI m 64-0-~ ""!l;1IU ~ -a. M ..,,, bl area Pos. attitude, xlnt CM ~t>nerous comm1ss1on~ range . t•a 962 6451 •...a..-w............. 7075 Nevison : 549-8811. ext Clencal ----.-~nfe. x1ht benefits. smuaer. usl "" a e to -Call 95HJ6l. ext. 120<1 paced offu:e 1\ but'k after 4 nm --;o run a house cook & benefi t s. Call Mrs d :..i:. •tt•••••••••••••••••••• 62S.3200 8rist.ol ,C.M. ¥1tardC"" 2: ll::.l.49SE. d 0 , Sl~ne '"~""'"--Restaurant i:roun '"comm re GE Rt-frig Xlnl.2~r,
Dependable woman com DOWNEY SAVINGS Jd Pl C. nve. wn room, co ~-PARANS£ CAFE Sdles l wn allons "' a ~orktn1o1 I '' II r r S200 or h!>L
paniontoolderpersontcr ~a~E~erf ~l~:c:. d~ ~~n~~~~ .OEti\fALASSIST. -~a']Tfi~~:~sr~' ~:~. 06f~~e ~r~r·s,YA::•sjt~~l New lu~h & dinnt-r RECRUITERS ~~~~l~d~~il1~x:u,~~~u: 646·3190,015-3223
lake to and from Doctor, Bankrng ....., unit c# Psychiptric Dlper. Easy paced of· 642-4300,2-t hrs. Payroll exp helpful house 111 111 be act'epltn!( l!:xl.'cut1H ~t'JrC'h r1rm Fullerton Jfl'J. >.ln1 Sears Kenmore Hefr1g
errands,etc.4-S hrsper Facilitjl Handle pbone~. ~U.. Newport. Good H ou sekeep-;;~ SSOO hrtostart,ra1seml apphc:itronsforallpo~1 I seek1ni: hr1ghl Jlo! t ~alan &. l'O hcnrf11' I" icemaker xlnt C'ond ~a .675·~---TELLER 7 miscpaper worlt lllld pa ~ry. 646-54 11 1 charge, English. spe:ik· 90 days. F'T Must be lions Oct 27 2!! 29. 1?res~1ve Rl'C'ru1tcrs who l F.nthu~1a~l1t· & intcn•st Must sell 6459767
Now Enrollling Chris p rt r• I !lent request~ No typing 5594 a(ter• ing, some cooking avail m0$1 Sat from lOam Jpm AplJI)' al t'an lhtnk & l(rO\\ m·h' cd person.\ ~houltJ rnn Gas Dr) er, $75 llOl Porn!
tlan PreSchool. 320 E a • ame .. · nee but prefer som' I P e r m H rs l l 7 !H2 Call. Mary Anne. 6000 Ne11opurt {enh·r Por •.nlt>Ptt•\\ 1.ill ldrlTumm1ealK33?177 I llleurt Fngt' 18th St . Costa Mesa. cler ical or. med1c:fl s Cl I 4"' ""35 ~n 2902 I c~l 51'" S p ecia l Program ~ '\' background. Pos1 uon 0> ASSIST. -6311133 ----~ emen e ~· -Drive. Fashion hland. I u ~ Woiter/Waih-en '"' "'
646-'93 Newport Center · !S-20 also avail for Sat·Su.o Rxp. DA .preferred I JAMTOI Orthodontic ass't needed. N B I SALl':S \ppl~ bet"een 9.\M &. I licycle1 1020
• hou.rs per week. Light 9 30·6 PM Capistraio By Wan~ p/time Mon & lmmediat.eoperung ror a full ume pas1t1on, exp I TOO YOUNG Noun l'hurlll'' Ch1h. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ma lure profeliSIO!la I typing. expenence pre· the Sea . '.hurs<tonJy Top pay ' Janitor to work run time, necessar.}'.;_644-14«> I FOR AJRUN£S? 767 19th St. Uoor atul Red St'h~rnn Cru1st'f seeks career change mto ferred. Call Rick Mein· 496-5702 031·3380. nioht shift Excell rr Part.time Counter Girls. restaurant pos1t1oru. ru,la ~fo'a 2'1 ' hke new, $llS bus. field Seel Nurse, lire for appomtment at ---" ~ 9807 travel onented Flex1 tl74l64H4til DEMTA.l.ASSIST. tnge benefilS. ~or more Apply in person at the , lmmedtalt' uperuri~s for WfLD~R I
ble Beach area pre CLERICAL Exper' Easy paced or-m~o. a.nd '!'l~mew, call Tu m m Y S 1 u fr e rJ THE GOOD 15 sharp guy~ & gals to \1at·Gr~i:or'Yat•hb 18' bo)s ~hwinn bike I ferred. P.O. Box 1296, j' IMPERIAi.SiL PARTTIME ~e ln Newport Good mike V1vlan1 (71 41 Resta urant . 270 S EARTH lra\'el l'S ma)Orl'llles 11;J1Planm11a ('~t cu~t11m 6 :.pd , b4·aul
NB, 92663 k r . hd\.trs "salary 646-S4ll ~l 1616 E OA M F Bristol ~M 751 3S67 YOU \\ rlh unique bu"nl""l> 't'11ung \l(~n~l>I\\' l)l·r~on I gold ~•herSfiO 646-1!"155 w..a..w~--71f.~ E.O.E. m f h Loo mg or mleresung wltdY't ~559'\ after LEGAL.SEC'Y PARTTIME AND ... group Tr<Jn~portatwn tu l,•am 11dro 1Jus1nelo' luildlltnMateriois802S .... .,. ~ ~ wo r k' Typing , no .. 111 ,. furn1lohed. 2 wk pu1d 1 "ll , ••••••••••nn•••••• • ;111.ty sh"'°thand Office loca n · T USTIN Mature Crew Supervisors. work oftdurol or .. ngl' Co leac in.: •••••••••••••••••••••••
A · Cl k n--r_-..• CH Sh th d r d P time evenings & --t...1.......tJ 1 trainini: ~h.t.l !>(> 111 or d ('d 1 t t...10W 36'/FT ccountmg er -·---J"'--•r' t1on onP J.daysper or an preerre . c-°"· o\'er s in i:lt· 144,11 \I eoi.tor«, ... arin1: " Arcuracy a must' Work R:....-t.r........... week.Sat&Swi 646-7431 DIETICl•...a •EG. but not requir ed weekends. Superv1s1ng ,,..ilun C:u lwndih Rnd wood 2.x6 clerkmu ~ ~ ~ th d to doo I )!roomed & free to .,tart • · • ., w government com Needs hair stylists, -~-~-__ For 82 bed psych Califormaexper. noire e oor r sa es Welcoml' The Goocl ' immedtattd) For Plca!ianl \\Ork11111n:~t11' 421f long ' dlsort>d"tiod
m odity 1n ventories sh.ampoo person & ass1s· hospital in Dana Pt quirt><! No pressure or crew of younl(Stcrs Ex Earth R~taurant~ antJ per.on al int en 1e,,. t'all .\p~I) in Pt'f"l>4,'" . "t' ~
1
renrm11 Deck & fenring
'Ge n eral o f fice tants TopSalary Takefullchargeof busy deadlmes NollllRat1on cellenl earnings for BJken to SanlJ An·11 Nt·llGr<Jganli4s 41:1.ioor )){Or i. \1Jc•1 \\orld II.I 1nstallat1on U\'atlabll·
knowledge helpful Call Rive Gauche, NB Dietary Depl. incl plan· Salary & benefits open. person with dbility tu j and Ne wport lka1·h h; apph m per.on 111 Thl' H1\c·r~1dt• .\\1• \ 11 Lo~t'~t pnt't! Rudr Jim
for appt S4o.a671 ask for 54().8177 n 1 n g . p u r ch as 1 n g. 3S hour week. I girl or moli\•ate Van or large JOintng our team Jnd A 111 ·b Ji. 5 a cl n r 1 n n l 'nun!! \\Jn ron'l'll'O or kl•n dn}_ time, 646 !>885
Ginni 10~1(£29ER budgetuig &personod. frce_Pbone.731·1»S4_._ car1s neededCall l helpus brmg gcMJdfood l lla rbnr Blvd C ~I tmui.y1 \\Jlt•rl\\tt't·.~~ l\1lt'hen Cab1net!i ~mk
AIDES P111me""'. 3·4hrs. AM. We need a strong Liquor Slore.Stocking&I Medra MerJ:hants loj!oodpropll' Wl•un• bt>lwt•t•n 10/\\I &. Sl':OI I~ "\H ~I h1 tall ~l5UGasrortabll.'11\l'tl.
Weeke nd graveyard Thurs thru Sat See s uper v isor with a Cash Regist er ex 213427-Z7~EUE ,Rl\ing lh4• pubht· a ne" \Ion \\l·d 001., f'an•nl!-:!13 39411.is S:t.5 ~6 ~
shirt only Activeretire· Harold 548-3687 49SE <-··~ ... , ... ,., ... ,. *eatlve 6 carta1 at· perience necessar), ,('ho1rt!1nfam11)dinin~ I \\t•k()mc•.;11nil'nn·"~ Merchoftcis.e Comero,&
ment co mmunity Gd 7 hS C M titade.Th.iscti.llenging over l8 Applybetween8 1 PART TIME fr1·~h . whol 1·~n111l' S..,/R...,.p '··••.••••••••••••••••···' E...Wp............ 8030 f .l..l__l._. ·--pos1ti1n offers outatand-& 3 weekdays 1888 nulnt1 ou~ food prt· ..... n r. SOOS .,-.......,. bene~. N.B. 6.11-3555. [VEJINGS d h I 1 ( I 1 '' I k an•-•
Animal ~ in Costa WORD PROCE550I oppt'y for cro:-rth & dnl Liquor clerk. part time, pres cf\ ii II HS If )'llll I for '>harp fl<'r..011 \\llh ••••••••••••••••••••••• CA MJo:RA Pentax KIOOO, rfig '°"rk environment. Placent!», ~~ Me~a I pare ~•l ill I.' or no >l!\t.' opmen ~o oo In!! . .,...... •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mesa n f/time ken· • If 1·t'S got 1 Posi hOD opeo for strong bl!nefit,s. Qap1Strano by
1
ask rorSteve We are presently seek-share our comm11men1 prof ess1onal at11tudr MUST SEl.L 3 lens & accessor1e!>
1 ne l person. Mon·Fri I typist with ex~llent theSelHCJL$t -.5702~ &t2-6S37 mg adults with pleasant to wholesome food and Ca11Caro1Al7528141 Antique etching by Perl cond S325 0 80
1 Call 548-3794_. -----• handles · 1 s pe 11 in o g r aroma r --I personalities who would 11ooct health. and havr Wilham Hogarth. dated 644 Ol9S
t Apartment Complex skills. s~uld bave at 1Locker room attendent, be interested m wor\ing t he ability 10 c•nm 1 SECRETARY 1763 CancatureofJohn Cots IOlS
needs Helper 10 fulfill • YOU'ii grab ) least 1 year expen en('t DRIVERS WANTED I pvt athletic club After in Sales & Promotion I m un1t·a1 e erre1·11 q•l> I o~ 'e~retary lramt't' Wilkes Famous piece •••••• •••••••••••••••••
part time clean up & a sale on Ill 01d proce11s '" g Early morning home de· I noon-everung shift. Mon .... ,th Daily Pt lot Came rs "Ith Olhl.'r.., pleaw ('OOll' I ~~pl (enter LJ\\. nff11 e I ~hO\\ n 10 En('y\'loped1a I HI MA LA y A.'-; KITTEN
lockupdut1es.Must1Jve • l equipmenl, real estate liv ery_:" L.A TI M ~S 1 f n Neat &personable 10 to t5 years old I amllalk"1thu.' ,\,kforAprilt:i44fiSlt. Brillanrca Have $850 Crt•am pl whl ~t
ons1te Apartment value • faster in ba<'kground desirable. lt\'1~e Newport areas. j Ability to deal with peo Unl1m1t ed ea rning s We are lunng ror lht· SECRETARY ..ippra1s'll Will ~ell for papl.'r) JO ~ks s1s11
1.n exrhange ror duties Daily Pilot Dynamic wdrking en $.l SO mo Jes) I pie Ideal position for re a\allable to right Collo~ini:pos1lloni. T\pt' 1;o"pm ,\ 1111• 1S350 cash1mmt>d1ate)) I n011681i ~ue 846.CJ6l9 -• CJassifiat4 v1ronment 546· -tired m1lttary person person Hr 5 JOPM lo l~phunc· l.ttt' 111111~ ll55 2183P\e~. pp
Applicatrol!l bemg taken ~ SWITCHIOAID Driver aeeded tmmedrat· I 252 7!.195_askJqr Al 8 30P M. Monday thru •Lml• l'oi1k~ 642 1rn2 \..'>~ for Sot' or p 111 > er Pt a110 ('hr r DOCJS 8040
• ads. calt ly. Must have Valid Ca I Mechanic Priday Some Salurda} •Food Prepar.:it1nn I ·····••·•·······•••·••· for elementary grade in • OPSlATOI Orivert l...ictnse &Clean Wood s Ma rine NB ava1lab1ht> for ap-•l't1hl> Lorett.; ry"ood Rr)!ul.Jr &. 1 1\.t::E~llUNU l'uvi. ,\I\(
Chnstian School Apply I 642-5678 · Ul)4ninf on very ktive diivinf record. Apply in Mechanic Wanted No po 1 n t m en 1. ca II . •Jul('<' & S.ilad ~mkt·Trnk 40 rolls ,Xlnl Champ sm• M F P1•t.1.
Hawthorne Christian -Z·position board Must pfrsom 2431 W Coast Butchers need inquire 642-4321 . ask ror Ben l •Krlt'ht>nlMp •SECRETARIES• Condition S2:nJ E\h sh o 11o I'\ I P l 1
School. 16835 Brook· have I year current filg_hw!)'~B Salar y neg • Parts Willtams Shi twD1t Fmanrt•or 951 l!>-17 Da.}s,975 l36i 1 213 697·1345afl6pm
hurst, F V 962-JJIL -Make your advert151ng s"1tchboard e.xpenence DRY WALLER Ma n ager want ed In nddllron lo an t')I Mortgal(e ba('kgmJ" Antique round ugar l);1k I SHIH TZL pups. \II.\ ~~~r~~d~ c ~ug~ 3c~li:i!r dollar go farther! List ~i~~~:~~I working en· Musl be expr'd taping 700.~7 Ask for Rirk~ Presehool teacher want-l't>llent salary and rom mu.~I Fash Isl SllUIOO la hie. 3 leu\e:., _ \alut> S250 dnd up Cash uni\
1 your business every day 4040 MacArthur Bhd & texture 631 2004 Mech a n1c wanted. no ed for 21, yr old Class plete benefits parkage E'(p Consultant Our. SllS<l Sell SIOO 494 '~ 638 ~ ·
1 professional quality m the Classified se<'tlon Newport Beach, 92660 --tools nee Apply Shell I Exp & in e.arly childhood I wr otrer rull 1ra1nin~ I l.1 z Remde~ o\gy. Int' Antique llgar Oak rha1rs. POOOLES R' PEOPLE I'! architectural rendenst or this newspaper. (7141752_1111 RECTROHICSP/T station. 17th & lrvint>. units reqwred Hrs 8·301 with I.lay, paid \aca 402081rehl':~L·64r-:or-: beaut set of 6. \alue llome·raisedTcup Mm 1 & perspective & layout &12_·5678._ forskillt>d & semi-skilled N B 1 o I 00 Mon.Pr 1 lions. and rapid a<han Newport 833 8190 Free SJ250, ~ell $450 .&94 700I Groom & board •• 6 ., ... 8 man Salary neg Call --I .... ...,.. -------or we tr3.lll appllrants Medical 644-0232 NB Area East cement opportunit1ei. Braslo National Cash K. .
Georje 96!_9439 -. 'I a1·1y p·11a1' ...................... :. \lo good math bark· TRAMSCRllER Jlliifr --Apply between 2 and 5 Sett Recpt for new Register Obie Urnwer I AL ( l>o:y.ruppres Xlnl Automot.tve ground Calrr Air No Pnnting pm a1e1therloci1t11m shipyard Mui.t ha\C Late 1800 era SSOO ..!,_n,.es • .,.,_ou-~mpermcnt Radiology office 10 #C.J'\I ...,.. """"' MAIHTIHAHCE t1onal Guard. Prior Newport Beach. Medical FtT pressroom helper.
1
m n r 1 n t' I! x p &1 957-8170 _ ---
MECHANIC military helpful. Call experience required. Mon 3:30 pm-Finis h 3810$ PlazaDriv1• knowledgefl7s.2550 jAntique Slot Machinei. Lovrng 2 yr old I" Cle · I C ·1 n d y G e h r 1 n g Sunl<1 An(l Sht'phe rd Husky SIO Need very reliable nca ~ __ Tues 2 :.>pm Finish SERVICl,o; STATION AT., Jule Boxes Soltd Brar.s
person for mamtenance ADVERTISING CLERK 71_L979-7363 ---MEDICAL F. Isl MD Th11rs-Fn 9·S Apply 210 Newport Center I TENDA.NT I' T Eves I ~ash Registers. Misr an Doberma~~~p1es~ bred-or autos & all equip. on G•te Guard, 12.30·8.JO seeks pt lime fr. office 1660Pla_centiaCM._ Dnve I & Wkends. neat ap llques rem.1ses Must assume The Daily Pilot has an opening for an AM shirt. 1131 Back Buy p f od 1 • h d t 981 6148 981 8873 for good nature Desct-n·
rp II •-.__ 'Iii g advertising clerk on a part lime basis help. exp bkpg . ins . ro ess1onal M es with ·ewport Beal'h pearanre 1<' an ~ ri • === . dants nf Storm Red~ u respon "'""WI n w·11 f bl o( d Q.r NB 1i44:ffilO rarpln . & ~ollect1on portfolios needed for ino /\pp~ at 259111 dbl b k ht r 1 \'er1 > pu 1cal1on a venising 1n • • ,. I an ar ks Dam as 119 to wor n1g s or the Dail,. Pilot dnd issue relatl'd General 644·038_l public relations & pn nll The Good' Earth Ne"port Bl ,c M DoroM...En!tnoft& performance or duties. ' Execut ive s eek rn g work.85~3139 '"' Championslllbloodhne Apply l·n pe'"""" • ask management report ·t or 5 hours daily, MEDIC ••REC-. DOfl HolanPJ'ffeftt 848 9979, 7591045 "'"" "' hours flt>x1ble Ideal for houseW1fe or mature ind1v1duals for -. ..,.. • CorSlan Mashita ''"ch nl l Jll 1'1·1 "'"lll'I llt'I"" 1 mo·rll bus mess expansion in ror busy pediatrician P /TIME EV&aMGS An Equal Opportunity START COU£G£ I Gorgeous pair male Shih NABER~ ti42·4321 CJr.?ng~ Col.D'lty. 848-699~ Exper'd only. Front of. COlllMlftc) AHirmauve A('taon IN T\.JDEE VI'.." AD<; ANTIQUES EXPO T / u puppies A I\ C
_ fl ee Newport Center Yo.th Carriers Employer M f' Ii \ 1 nn T ~ & SAU I Shob Unusual Cham (.., \DI ( ( \ .., NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING Gr.uE• •• ~•cf 644 0970 Adults wilh outst.andmg WTTlf MORE Tht-world()( antiques tiagne color 645-l&IS ~1 .J .JI ' ~ 1U111. vrn Medic;! Orfi<'e attract!ve personaliti~ Sales in the dl5plays of Corkt'r Spaniel Pu pp). ''~-'lll.1• ,.111,,1 GRAPHJC 0£SIGN[R FIT days, must be able PT Medical assistant who enJoy worltmg with I IQ"IDWAllPAPER ' 'TliA.N $20.C:XX). IOOLeadtngDealers t·hamp lines. AK(' 1 "''·' ''°'' ,Jn 'lt)(t lO,l>pe.t.spell w /front OHice ex-10·15 year old youths. • '-Oct 29·3~31 Ho• I blark female . $250
IAIYSITTH
Mature grandmother
Nanny type exper'd in
rnfant C'are my Wood
bridge home 2 3 hr~
day 3-S days wk .\fter 4
~·9388
Babysitt e r Lig h t
H o u se ket>p rng
Weekdays 7:30 to 6PM ~ NB Home. Mr Hood.
833.29()()
Babysitter, 5 days/wk
2·7pm, 2 school age. al
my Woodbridge hm .
good salary. 551-~12
Babysitter netded-Mon
thru F~. u for 3 mo.
old. Call Natalie &CG-6139
f tiaDt1ne THELAGUHA ........
(in organlutlon > will ac
cept applicatioo.s for the
ro llowinC positions.
Bankin& experien~ es·
sen ti al. f B1BS
aoooaa
MISSIUIB
Immt!dlate open1n2 in the rreat1\ e f79..J711 -perience needed for Evenings S.9 pm. Call Sales ~nd apphC'at1on ,. A ,.. , .. ., •. ,,. .. I Thurs. Fn , Sat l lOpm 731 69<JS
services department now exists for ;. r:niliis are getting general practJce Reply 6 4 2. 4 3 2 l. ex I 3 4 3 S111olrll tram 968-&922 :., .i • • 1 •• Sunday, Noon 6 Dachshund. AKC:. rei: 3 'full time a rust Reqwrcs good graphu' ~e caripmg "bug" Dus to. PO Box 1396 NB between 2 p m. and 5 a es " "' 'tJ' "" • ... ~ In the Commerce Bldg male puppies 1100 ea
design and spatral sens1uv1tv. ability to ... ar . H you have a 92663. -----p.m.AskforAndrea Hickoryfarms "• •• "µ , • J • ' ORAMGECOUHTY CallafterSpm&tS IW
""' c•mper that's no. t get· frade your old stuff ror " ~ ' "' -" E--
spec l.v""',.some 11lustralinn or technical T'I" I P""rson for Chr1stma• •"• • !.1, .. -• F•IR,...J/)OU ... DS
dra w10 a abilit.v, knowled 0 eable 1n " R.E.IMVISTMIMT Girt Sal~ Work 1n NB '· 1 ~ • d S2 F k' ..,.~to You 1045 " " U(lg us-i. sell 1t now n•u• fioodies with a '"' • A m SO ree par mg produ('llOtl, an underitanding of retail cl'"' it ed Ad "w area. Calltng on pres1 ·1 • ' , ••••••• •••••••••••••••• advert1s1ng design. and abrhly to meet with a ass 1 · I .Qassi ied ad. 642·5678 Earn while you learn dents of Corp & purchas .. .~.... • 1, .. 1 •• I Small 6 mos old puppy lo
deadlines • H E R I T A G E mg agents Resp incl , . ~c ,,.. ~1.11 .,. gd bme Julie 962 3327 or
We're fast paced bul run lo 11oork ror 11o1th IN v ESTM ENT WI II handling establtshed ac fl.Jr ~JO c v '"f .. " SA VE THIS AD art 5 675·0!UJ
an excellent ht-nef1l IJJt'kage including le a Ch you c re a U v e rounts & creating new He•e ~ """ , , .. Alexander Porster F r e e t n y o u
dental. finan cing, 1031 Ex · ones Apply at Hickory ::a,.. r-at• ... ,, " .. tt·~ Presents I Shepherd husk) m1"C,
If you ha\·e al least on(" ~ear's expenence rhanges, investor de· f'arms. 17th & Irvine lcucati•'r ~~\WV MEWPORT IEACH I'' yr old s pay cd
in print orientt-d work and a currt>nl • velopment&counSt'ling. _West~li ff Pla~NB _ FALL AN'flQUE female Very friendly portfoho. call Carl 1't-sh1ma at 642·4321. Exper counselo rs re· Sales i''OQ'3m \.AP ,~, & COLLECTORS 644 3656, 631 1000
l 2'31 h d I 1 ceive 100% comm. The is j<'>t<'°'IT'" • "' mate ·1 ex , osc e ueana1Jpornment Eam SJ7Sto SHOW&SALE an unusual oppty for "amine;• ,l'lv ~a•f' t...,o 11 •
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT right pel'500. Coof1den· $475 kl lfll''o·arna•'r,..1mo• tobeheld
JJO W.BAYST .. •COSTA MESA.CA.92626 Ital interview. Call ~rw • Sfl•().1 T,, ... 'wu OCT.29,30,ll AN EOUALOPPOATuN1rv EMPLOY EA .• Vince 546-5880. Jorn the e citing wnrld ,J.-tl,I\< '"l' Mm., w i1i aoo & HOV. I
·......................................... of Cable TV! Work in • "JSll000~'1111.a1tuna• l·lOi>m,Sun 1 630 Daily Piiat · · · · · · · · .. · · ...... :
. . t
Field Sales SuperVisor >
Limited openV1gs available in the
Orange Coast area, for selr·moUvaled,
career oriented individual wha can
work with Field Sales People. Train.
mot1vite and get results. Station
wagon or van necessary. tx~ptional
earninas. plus job rtlaled benefits'
av11lable ror lhe right ~e. U you can produce ruults, not JU~{ talk ~boot ~t1 call 960-0894 for inttrvie,r. ~ for 1 Mt.Chanct. •
"
'
. NEEDED
Receptionist Part·time
Radiologist Orrice,
Wes lcliff 9·12AM .
Pleasant, neat. good
with patients. doctors &
insurance. No dictation
646-8964
Receptionist
Beauly Salon needs so-
meone 3 days a wffk
Tbur1 Frl&Sal. 7»-6630
Beautiful Newport ''."(' \ -.3• S20 1oc ,.. MEWPOITl:ll IHH
Bea ch • Gu ara nteed South ~•r ""··y •tw. S 1 hll . 1,;~t tl'lrt'e ~a" "' .... """ a ary W e training ,0• more at»Jt lo 1101 Jambortt Road
Ground 0oor opportuni THIS AD ADM ITS l S I "()lf\'Y'\f r""' .. '"CO...\", ty a es experienre OR MORE, ..... 2S
h I f I b II .,,r P 1' 'o t'5 \?U "°'' M e p u . ut we w1 tram for d uratioo ofsa le you! Dont delay, Call to-•, '100I ••5•' vcur IO!d
day! Teleprompter or .\'!"\ Rt'(". te· O• a
Newport Beat'h. 901 W :.·~ \ )tircn •'•t:l'!i t.•'
16lh Street. Newport IA.' '·llf'.l
Beach.~ AA.MY.
Call ":~~k BE All YOU CAN BE
SALIS
COMMllCIALU.
DEALERS. Wh olesale
Halloween special. 40'
English load on sale 6pm
Thurs Oct 29. Jonathan
Blxby's 2911 Croddy
Way1 SA~29U
1050 •••••••••••••••••••••••
**I BUY** Good used Furniture &
Applrances OR I will
sell or SELL for You
MASTHS AUCTIOM
64'·.ll" lJ..j625
llUYMMTUll
1e.L ---~7-81]3
KING INNERSPRING
EXTRA FIRM maltrtas
set, never used. worth
$S30. sacr 1$241 del.
Never used llVffft u .
worth 1391, caah only
S2l8 del. US\lllly ho~
7541350 ---
all . Pel'1Cll\MI Ortlter ~cwst
for •PPl • Tues Thurs. 330 y $treet 3.5 PM Of\b' oum
n $30-$60 per week.
~Trips & Prizes. c.11..-.
• .. SJt.0601.
Extensive oo the Job
trainln&. Must be highly
motlvaled self atarter.
lncome trom property
manasement plus a
draw while you lum.
tasta Mm 541-1121
llllltiltllktll2.a21
1mr-.im.111
Sidi .. 542-4713
2 antq short Potter bed
framts, sat. wood, ll2S !!.:J!t.14.511 m.ll
Exec Walnut/Chrome
des It w /pluttc floor
aavet, S37S nrm. , fl
walnut b oolt cue
w/moveabl• aht lves.
S350. Antiqoe .,ad 1ame
tbk W/2 chain,-· Al•
IOrted top qua1t\J IMI·
MUSTS&L
lhho-11)' Dbl. Bed
w/11\al"-~l&Ud
It ctmRr lo 1a111dl Lik•
new Ms._ to .,,_
"1dlte <w, .._ or
but offtr. •er•• u 1 nn •fl •P.• ., ForatAw-SolteAl . Co~o Mesa, CA t IO.,...--~~r ~· ....... ~~.~'.:.~ ..........
• ..
Claulfle.d Ada are t!Je
auwer to • 1ucceuful
1u11eoryud11~1 lt'1
• betttr wa,y to ten mon
tplet
AtltactlYe commlasion' You don a..1un lo
1chedule • bendltl "draw f11f' ..tin you
pecak1e olfeftd. Call place an Id in lhe Dllil.J
K•.Sf5.11'DO l>Uot Wat Mal Cab
now -to•
L-................... _. .. _________________________ _
.-'~"·mm*'• .. ~ ........... Ill .
WHUIJ~L HJH•e ...... --
8' Sora with matcbi11
love seat, good cond,
SUO make ofrtr,
IM2-:WO.
Kitchen cabinets, sink,
Port/dlshw11\tr U:S. s.g..
STUNNING KJNG8! •
WATERBED.8dwtl*'.
base, dJc wood. 4 en. •. cane accent, padhd
3 cstm bar stoots, 5'ld
oak, vinyl uphot gd
cond, S40 ea. 67S-LS7S-eff
6. --~:a..~~~~~1 ..=:::...!:..;:.c.~.=!=-~~-·
Bedroom set. ClUetn
matt. Sl65, lamp12S, cd·
fee. end tablts U O,
camper shell SlOO
675-973.S
King siz.e water bed mir·
Couch Sl50, dinnett.e set
$150, coHee & end tbles
Sl2S, dean bed SlOO.
Elect IBM typeM'iter.
S200. Owen Matk n1
skies Sl25 . Prica lelti·
Lrg 3 painting Mural, 10
ft. endan~red Hawks in
I Otb, Called "Last Sup-
per" $400. Lrg oil, SX4,
. 494-2522
IBM typewriter SUS. Not
Selectnc. Portable S2S
I COMMRl
I :~~~.~~~~\ET
• r I ·, \f ~ \.
SU-1200
OeSANFIS
CHEVROLET
et DAILY PILOT I Tueaday, October 27, 1 Q81
..........
TRIPLE THREAT Hex and \'1ck1 llunt. with help from daughter
Brandi. 2. t ake lhl•tr tnplt·t~. all girls. for a stroll in Orlando, Fla. The
family has been ha\'ing lrouhlt· mak ing e nds meet since the girls
were born in Junt-
Ads 011 stanips
pros; co1zs aired
WASHI NGTON <API Bob Aryan Jr of
Milwaukie. Ore finds thl' idea .. appalling··
Margorie P Balsor of Lexington, Mass . says
she's "all for 1t.·· Most Amenl·ans d1dn "t bother to
express an opinion
The question Should the Po-.tal Service accept
advertising to help cut deficits ''
To find out. the Postal Sen ice floc.led the idea
two months ago. asking for puhh~ rl'::.1>onse In one
preliminary t'ourl. lli3 ll'llers appro\ ed of the idea
without rcser\'at1on I Ii \\Cn· generJll) in favor
but objected to sornc aspel"I and 145 opposed 1t
More than JOO otht•r lt•ttc·rs h:H e sin<'<' rome in
The deadline' \\as :\1 on<J.i,
.. If advC'rt1sing t·o111;1 east• the burden on the
taxpayer. then '-'h.' not advt•1t1sc·•" asked Eli
Saylor of Somerst·t. K.\
"I don·t give a hoot how the) go about 1t," said
Marjorie Balsor "If 1t cuts the rising cost of
postage for loUS) serv1u: wh1rh gets progressively
worse. I'm all for 11 ··
"Among n(•gal1 \I,' n•spnnsc·s "as the letter from
Bryan. wllo said · The 't'r.' 1d~·a of adding lo the
garishness of chc•ap ach ert1c;ing 1s appalling,
especially b) a gon•rnmt•nl ag<•nc)
The Postal Service "111 stu1lv the comments
and possibly conduct furth1•1 stuJH·s bc•fore it
decides
Those "ho appnJ\ l'd of .ids in post office
lobbies. on deliven 'c•h1des .rnd lhe covers of
. 'If it cuts the cost of
postage for lousy service,
I 'm . all for it.'
s tamp books oflt•n SCJY the) want no hquor or
cigarette ads
"Please be d1screC't and use only ads that
boost wholesome' life and health ·· asked Kathy
Foster of Ro' al Oak :\1t(·h .
Others object tn ad-. fur gun .... personal hygeine
products, pornograph1t· lil1:rature and religious
and poli tical cau:.t.>s
The Postal Sen ice 1-. a large potential source
for advertis ing spat'e It owns 122.000 vehicles. has
lobby space m 39.1()1) post offi ces and sells 249
million stamp book-.. 30 b1l hon <;tamps. 42 million
aerogrammes. 511 m1ll1011 postal cards and 898
million embossed envelopt•s pt>r :.ear
Many of those "riling tht-Postal Service said
Lhey don't like tht: idea of selhng adHrt1scments
on the front or stamps fhis idea 1s the subject of
legislation by Rep. Il.lrry M Goldwater Jr ..
R-Calif.. but 1s not purt of the Postal Service
proposal. fhc mail sernce has a long standing
policy against assoc1atton with any money making
business.
The Goldwalt.>r proposal Sl't•ms lo he especially
unpopular among stamp coll<'{'lors
"I have been a philatelist since 1922 and if ads
appear on stamps. I am going to quit being one.··
said Arnold H. Baxter of Pinellas Park. Fla
One question asked b) the Postal Service that
got ff'W responses was how much rt>venue the ads
would bring in .
One who tried to answer this 1s Rick Ca mpbell.
publisher of Motorcyl'le Industry Shopper, who
said, "I would opine that 1t is certainly possible
that enough income could be generated to offset
the $306 million 1980 deficit ·
Editors opposing
info act changes
TORONTO (APl The Associated Press
Managing Editors association went on record in
opposition to proposed amendments to the federal
Freedom of Information Act.
The editors called upon the Reagan
administration and lhe bitrs sponsor, Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah, to drop support for the Tegislatlon,
and upon all U.S. newspapers. other media and the
public to joln in opposing lhe legislation.
C I ot•ll t• t 1J !. A IQ!I
School crime
hurts students
SACRAMENTO (AP> Most vlcUms of
school-related crimes in a recent five month
period were students, but more than 2,800 school
employees also were victimized, a statewide
survey disclosed.
The study by the Department of Education
expanded Monday on its recent report that there
were 105,328 crimes reported at California schools
and school events from Sept. l , 19*> to Feb. l, 1981.
The number Is less than the actual total
because J.29 of lhe 1,043 school districts in lhe state
didn't answer the questionnaire, the department
said.
The report didn't know how many of the
crimes were prosecuted.
Nearly 60,000 were property crimes, causing
more than $10 million in damage, the report said. or that total, 24,000 were incidents of broken
windows, anotner 18,000 involved vandalism, and
there were 6,500 burglaries, 5,400 larcenies and 833
cases of arsor..
Out of nearly 23,000 crimes against persons.
the report said. 19,500 were against students. 1,932
against teachers, 899 against othe r school
employees, and 340 against non-students.
Only a small fraction of the crimes involved
weapons, the report said -840 against students, 45
against teachers and 27 against other employees.
The perpetrators included 20,600 students,
1,500 non-students, 169 school employees and 453
identified as gangs, the report said.
lt said there were 1,710 crimes by students
against teachers, 727 by students against other
school employees, and 46 by school employees
against students.
The crimes reported included 11 homicides.
688 sex crimes, 11,000 assaults. 2.200 robberies and
6,700 threats.
About 2.,900 crimes against persons, or 13
percent of the total. wer e committed in
classrooms, and another 4,600, or 20 percent, in
hallways and restrooms, the report said .
Victimless crimes, also totaling about 23,000,
included 6,100 cases of possession of drugs or
alcohol, 6,300 of use of drugs, 5.600 of use of
alcohol, and 2,500 cases of weapons possession. the
report said.
The editors, who ended the ir annual
convention here passed a resolution cJ}lins upon
their leadership to request hearing on the proposed
changes and to carry the organization's poslllon lo
Reagan and to Congress
Kings Men. a 100s. B m~. "1er." 0.7 mg. nicount:
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Entry details and Information may be obtained by writing to
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Enclose $1 for postage and handling. Oil-Lease will rush official entry cards and full instructions to meet
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• • • • •
llllCI CUil YDUI IDllTllN DlllY PIPll
TUf'-,1lAv tlf l1llll I• 111 OµANGE. COUNTY CALIF-ORNIA 25 CENTS
Does 'killer satellite' threaten U.S.?
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Soviet Union h as a kille r
s atellite i n orbit capable of
destroying several orbitine U.S.
s atellites, the magazine Aviation
Week & Space Technology is
reporting.
The report, in the magazine's
O c t. 26 edition , calle d the
s atellite "an anti-satellite battle
station equipped with clusters of
infrare d -homing g uided
interceptors that could destroy
multiple U.S. spacecraft.
"Tbe podded miniature attack
vehicles provide a new U .S.S. R.
cape bility for sneak attack on
U.S. satellites," it added.
A v iation Week c ited n o
s o urces a nd the Defens e
Department said it would not
com ment on the report.
For several years. the Soviets
ha ve had the only operational
killer satellite system . It is a
payload that tracks a target
within one or two revolutions
after it is launched and then
detonates, destroying both.
U.S. obser vers say that the
new killer satellite is capable of
striking targets out to 600 miles,
whi c h mak es Ame ric a 's
navigation and reconnaissance
s a t e llit es v ulnerable .
Co mmuni c ation s and
miss ile -warning payloads are
stationed 22,300 miles up, but
CATCH OF THE DAY Jeannette Rubidoux
has he r own recourse for fi sh that a r e fresh ;
s he se lls the m . These whoppers went quickly
t hrough the scales. past the cleartinl? knife .
into wrapping pape r and out to customers at
the d ory fishermen 's stalls at NewPort Beach
pier whe re the fl eet drlivers a varied catch
e;:trly each morning .
Bomb threats plague Britain
Police fear Welsh may try to disr.upt royal visit
LONDON {AP) -Britain was
plagued today by a double bomb
menace, from the Iri sh
Republican Army in London and
from Welsh nationalists police
feared might try to disrupt the
firs t official tour by Prince
Charles and Princess Diana
s ince their wedding three
months ago.
An IRA bomb Monday killed a
police explosi ves e xpert In
London, the third bombing
victim in the city in 17 days. In
Pontypridd, Wales , experts
Autumn air
quality hailed
EL MONTE <AP) -The best
September-October air quality
in seven years bas been
recorded by the Air Quality
Mana1emenl District, officials
say._
''September and October are
tradiUonally the peak monlba in
the smog season, which beCins
in April,·• APMD spokesman
Jim Birakoa said, allribuU• the
improvement to a reduction ol
pollutant.a in the air, plus better
weather condiUona.
Since lt77 there also bu bHn
a reduct.loo ot 800,000 pouodl per
day in pollutant• from
1tationar7 1oarce1 aucb aa
rellneriet, lf1'akoe Hid.
I
defused a fi rebomb in an army
r ecruiting office near the route
the royal newlyweds will take
Thursday.
The bomb dispos al man was
Kenneth ·Howorth, 49, who died
as h e tri e d t o defus e a
five -pound bomb found in the
l adies' room of a Wimpy
ham buri er stand on Oxford
Street, one of London's busiest
shopping thoroughfares.
Shoppers held back by police
barriers screamed and ran as
the bomb shattered the glus
fro nt o r the e v a cuated
restaurant and blew a 12-foot
hole in the sidewalk.
The IRA in a telephone call
took respooslbillty and claimed
two other bombs were In at.ores
nearby. Sniffer dogs found one,
and police defused it safely, but
a third bomb was not found.
The IRA bombing ln London
began Oct. 10, a week after the
collapse of the seven-month
hunger strike by lrhb
nationallat.s in the Maze PrilOD
out.side Belfast. Police say the
bombiql are to av,enge the 10
1uerrillas who starved
themselves to death lo tbe f\IWe
attempt to win .,olltkal·prlloner
status for Imprisoned lrlab
nat.tonallata.
"We underatand they bave
decided to cause aa much
devaataUon u poe.aible," aald a
Brltlab atcurlty source In
Northern Ireland, where the
~
I RA has be en fighting a
guerrilla war against British
rule for 12 years.
Detectives of Scotland Yard's
anti-terrorist branch said the
IRA bomb squad in London "is
considered to be one of the best
ever to operate on mainland
Britain," the Daily TelelJ'aph
reponed.
The paper said detectives
believe the squad bas at least
five members, including an
e xperienced bomber and a
woman, because the wimpy
bomb was planted in the
women's lavatory .
Prince Charles and his bride
left London po Monday nlgbt oo
the royal lraln for a three-day
tour of the principality on the
west coast from wbicb they get
their titles of prince and
princess of Wales.
The royal couple were to
spend tbelr ni1ht.s on the train
instead of at the homes of local
di1nltaries, th~ usual . custom ..
Press reports Rid it was a
security precaution, but
Buckin&h•m Palace refuted to confirm &.bat.
Tbe Dally Expreaa said
counterterrort1t.1 of the army'•
Special Alr Service Rectment
would form an armed parct for
the couple. Th• Daily Mlm>r
said tbe Hcurlty operation
would be tbe tar1 .. t ln Walel
since the lnvtlttlture ol Cbut•
.. prinee 1J lean aco.
within a rew years they too may
come within range of advanced
killers or laser beams, both of
whi c h t h e Soviets a r e
researching.
The Defense Department is
d e vel o p ing i t s satellite
d estroyer , but It won '{ be
operational for about two years.
A spinning cylinder 30 inches
long, it would be launched from
beneath the wing of a n F-15
fi ghter plane and its infrared
se nsors would gu1de it lo a
collis ion with its orbitinR tar~et.
The Soviets last week cited
thi s U.S we a po n when it
petitioned the United Nations for
a treaty banning all weapons in
space.
T he Pentagon also pla ns to
test laser beam a nti-satelli te
and a(l ti·miss1le weapon~ within
a few year s on the manned
space shuttle.
Aviation Week reported that
presidential science adviser Jay
Keyworth opposes s pendln1
billions of dollars on high-energy
laser battle station$ for ballistic
m issile defense in space. The
m a gazine said this appears to
conflic t with a decision by
President Reagan to "develop
technologies for space-based
missile defense."
U.S. • to revise CPI
Smaller cost-of-living raises. and inflation rate expected
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
government announced today it
will cha nge its mos t closely
wat ched inflation measure -
the Consumer Price Index to
remove the volatile effects or
ho us e prices and m or tgage
r ates The result is expected to
be a lower inflation rate and
s ma ller cost-of-living raises for
millions of Americans.
Th e Bu r ea u o f Labo r
Statistics, an independent and
non-pa rtisa n branch of th e
La bor Department, said that
starting in January 1983 it will
revise its basic index to treat
housing costs as if the owner
we re renting the dwelling .
Although the government is
initiating t he change in 1983, a
special index that determines
3 senators
co1ne out
for AWACS
W ASIUNGTON <AP) -Three
previous l y unc o mmitted
senators came out today for
President Reaga n's proposed
AW ACS sale to Saudi Arabia,
and another s aid he likely will
support the deal, but the odds
r e m ained heavily against a n
adminis t r a ti o n vic t o r y in
Wednesday's vote.
The president, zeroing in on a
handful of opponents. planned lo
see up to a dozen senators in a
final lobbying blitz.
Meanwhile, Sens. David L.
Bore n, D-Okla .; Wa lter D .
Huddleston, 0 -Ky.; a nd Frank
H . Murko ws ki . R -Al as ka .
announted they will vote for the
sale and Sen. Robe rt Dole,
R-Kan .. said he intended to do
the same. All four had been
uncommitted.
But Senate De mocratic whip
Alan Cranston, who is leading
opponents of the sale , s aid the
a nno un ce m e nts w e r e n o
surprise.
One of the first senators to
m·eet with Reagan today, Sen.
David F. Durenberger, R-Minn .,
said alterwr ard that he still
intended to vote against the sale.
'"I'm not going to change." he
told reporters.
The latest Associated Press
tally shows 53 senators against
the s ale, plus two others leaning
against, 42 favoring the deal or
leaning that way. and three
uncommitted A majority or
those voting is needed to block
the deal.
M ean w h i l e . P e n tago n
s pokes man He nry Catto said
De fe nse Secr eta r y C a s par
Weinbe rger was also calling
sen ators in an attempt to muster
(See AWACS, Page A2>
Rain may
cancel
Series game
NEW YORK CAP> -The
National We ather Bure au's
forecast for New York today
was not encouraging for the
sixth game of the World Series
between the New .:York Yankees
and Los Angelel Dodgers at
Yankee Stadium. I
The forecast called for rain on
and off, turning heavy at times,
throughout the afternoon and
night.
The game was scheduled for
5:20 p.m. PST.
The forecast also called for
temperatures in the SOI to 80s
with sides expected to clear by
Wednesday.
The Dodgers, who lead tbe
Ser ies 3 gamea to 2, were
1uppoled to work out 1t Yankee
Stadium on Monday, but rain
canceled the practh••
a nn u al inc r eases in Soc i al
Sec urity. othe r government
p r ogra m s a nd mos t labor
contracts wi th cost-of-living
claus<.'s will not be altered until
J anuary 1985. the bureau said .
This is because many of the
union contracts do not expire for
sever al years.
T he index that changes in 1983
is called the CP I for all urban
consumers. a broader mfle1t1on
measure than the companion
CPI for wage e arne r s a nd
c ler i c al w o rke r s , w h ich
government programs and labor
unions us ually rely on.
The change in the CPI will
directly aHect an estimated 90
m illion Ame ric a ns w hose
incomes' are tied to rises in the
ind ex. About 9 million union
members are covered by labor
co n tract s t h at p ro vid e
cost-of-living wage increa ses
based on the CPI, and anothe 81
m ill ion people receive Social
Security. government pensions.
food sta mps and other federal
benefits that increase based on
rises in the CPI.
.. A growing number of people
feel that the r e is so mething
wrong with the CPI and that it
sh ould be fi xed ." Janel L.
Norwood. commissioner of the
statistics bureau, said at a news
confe rence. "In light of the
extensive use of the CPI in our
economic system. it is essential
that public confidence in it be
maintained. These facts clearly
ind icate t h at the ti m e for
<See INDEX, Page AZ)
Colossus planned
Chicago due 169-story skyscraper?
CH_JCAGO c AP J A Sl.25 bill ion s kyscr a per almost 900
f~et. higher t~an the wor ld 's tallest building is not a
pie-an-the-sky idea an architectura l firm is planning
cons truction of a 169-story colossus. according to published reports.
The Chicago T ribune attributed to so urces its story that
Skidmore. Owings & Mer r ill is desig ning a 2.300-foot
skys cr a pe r . sta nding a lmost 900 fe et a bove the Sears
To we r . the world 's tallest building
The Tribune s a id Monday that Skidmore designer of
the Sears Towe r, and the J ohn Ha ncock Cente r. at l. 107 feet
the ~orld's fifth -highest building 1s us ing construction
te c hniques perfected for the Hancock and Sears projects
Both buildings are in Chicago.
T~e newspa per re ported that money to acquire t he land
and finance the e normous s tructure may be the biggest
o bstacle m construction. saying O\'erseas and t: S. ba nks
would ~ invoh·ed in t he project.
But a Skidmore s pokes woman who asked not to be
na med denied any knowledge of the m a mmoth project whe n
questioned by Th<.' Associated Press .
The g ia nt sk~ scraper would accommodate as man v as
15.000 pe ople at wo rk. pla y a nd in apartments.· th e
unid entified !:>Ources told t he Tribune.
Diablo license
target of Brown
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov.
Edmund Brown J r . 's lawyer ,
citing des ign errors a l the
D1ablo Canyon nuclear power
plant . said today he intends to
ask the Nuclear Reg ulator y
Co m mission to revoke the
plant's license, unless the NRC
takes that action on;ts own.
g o i n g to ~ive t he N R C a
reasonable amount of time to do
it If the commission doesn't act,
we will suggest to the NRC that
it takes this course."
Brown also said the original
decision to license the plant was
a .. monumental blunder" by the
N R C w hi c h a ff ec t s the
··i n tegr i ty o f i t s o wn
institution." Brown added that it
was "clearly in the NRC's own
interest" to revoke the license.
H e rbe r t B rown . w h o
repres ents t he governor on
m atters relating to the $2.3
billion plant near San Luis
Obispo, said an "independent
audit " s hould be made of the
plant's safely. <Related story
Page A5)
, ........................... ..
The attorney s aid an audit
w o u ld lay the b as is fo r
relicensing the facility -or
would reveal any new problems.
·'The license was issued on the
mist aken assumption that the
plant was built solidly," the
lawyer s aid.
He made the comments in an
inter view fN m hls Washlngton
office.
Last week, NRC investigators
discovered that Pacific Gas and
Electric Co., the operator of the
plant , mad e errors i n
calculating the capability of
Dia blo Canyon lo withstand
eal'thquakes. ·
The first design e rror was
discovered Sept. 22 by a junior
pipe analyst who found that
wron( dlagrams were used in
the desi gn of earthquake
supports for pipin1 included ln a
secondary coolinc system.
The governor's attorney said
the audit should be conducted by
someone other than PGfsE.
"We're a11umtn1 the NRC
will revoke Dlablo'1 Uceue,''
attorney Bro• aaid. "We're t
ORANGf COAST WflTHfR
M osUy cloudy night and
morning hours with partly
sunny afternoons through
Wednesday. Highs 6S to 72.
Lows tonight 58 lo 63.
INSIOI TODAY
A teochera' wolkow h4f
angered tlw! reftcknu o/ o
Minnesota town immortcalW!d
b11 author Loura h1gcdlt
Wilder in her' ••Litt~ Hmue"
books. Stt Page C4.
11111
• ... e..-.a ,.
L ....... M ...... .., . ..... c.. .. ~ .. c.ew ..... ==-c: Ef: ~ I
••••• Orange Co1tt DAILY PILOT I TuHday, October 27, 1981
From Page A1 I
INDEX. • •
cbancina the CPI h11 come."
tr the cha.nit took effect in
1980, accordin1 to overnment
fl1urea, lnllatJon as meuured • II)' th CPI would have been 10.8 P roent; ln1tead It waa 12.•
jlercent. Slmllarly lntlatloo
"eurlnc the 12 months throueh
$eptember 1981 would have been
t .2 percent Instead of 11 percent.
' Chanaes in the lndex also ~/feet government spendlnt on
programs )Vlth automatic
cost-of-living increases. For
:ach 1 percent rise in the index,
'•ederal spending goes up about '2 billion.
· Although details still are to be
worked out, the index would be,
revised to measure housing
cos ts as if the owner were
.Paying rent. The rent would be
b#ised on the costs of operating a
:borne, including property taxes,
.J:epairs, insurance and regular
'tpaintenance.
'. Growing r anks of economists
and policy-makers -Democrats
and Republicans alike -have
f>een pressing for a change in
lbe housing cost measurement,
which they blame for
overstating the actual rate of
Utflalion.
AP~
COURAGEOUS -Mark Scott. 16. rest!> in a Green ville. Ala ..
hospital bed after virtually saving hi!) own lift> by drivin g
himself nearly nine miles to a hospital after st•vering a h a nd
a nd a fool in a farm accide nt
''!'>. However . leaders of organized
tabor have threatened in the
'.)fast to contest a change that
would treat housing as a rental
cost , pa rtic u l arly if the
long-term effect would be a
lower inflation rate and,
consequently, smaller contract
raises.
Two balloonists
postpone flight
Th e hou s ing -cost
measurement has been the focus
of controversy for a decade or
..more. but pressure for change
bas increased in the last few
ye~rs with sharp jumps in house
prices, record mortgage rates
ind the overall high inflation
. le .
One main objection with the
rrent house price measure is
lat it fails lo take into account
at a house is an asset that
ovides an owner with an
vestment gain as it increases
value. Critics contend that
· crease should not be reflected ~ a consumer cost in the index.
Hairy is sue
now res olved?
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. CAP) -
Saying there are other ways of
dealing with long hair than
lopping it off, the mayor
reversed a proposed rule that
male and female police officers
.adhere to the same hair-Jeneth
,i:taQdard.
Mayor Randy Tyree said that
i1ing hair in a bun or other
m eans of keeping it from
becoming "a safety problem"
would be OK.
' The earlier propos al said the
lO uniformed policewomen had
J.o keep their hair cut above their
ijirt collars and the tops of their
rs. The Tennessee Association
Women Police charged the
!icy was intended to humiliate
men who wanted to become
li ce officers .
een stabbed
'haunt'
•OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -A
n-ager working in a haunted
ouse amusement attraction
Was accidentally wounded by a
co-worker trying to simulate a
stabbing.
Margaret Gatch was lying on
.a table while another teen-ager
was lo thrust a knife into a
pillow next to her. giving the
impression that Miss Gatch had
been stabbed.
The other teen missed the
pillow stabbing Miss Gatch and
leaving a ~-inch deep wound on
her right s ide, said Omaha Fire
D e partment Ca pt. George
*dlacek. She was treated at a
nearby hospital and released.
.Cory seek s hike
'" inte r est r ate
:· SACRAMENTO <AP > -State
:controller Ken Cory wants a
s pecial sessio n o f the
Legislature to raise the interest
rates on late payments of taxes.
Cory issued a statement
.Monday saying it could yield the
state $125 million a year. He
said the federal government is
:already preparing to assess
·interest at the prime rate, which
is higher than rates now
;charged.
R estaurate ur· ad venturer
Rocky Aoki and pilo t Ben
Abruzzo. who completed a
record-setting balloon flight
from Fountain Vall ey t o
Millarton. N D , last April, have
postponed until December their
latest attempt to fl oat across the
Pacific Ocean.
"We've had anchor problems.
Our oxygen bottles somehow got
contaminated. and we need
helium trailer modifications to
satisfy J apanese regulations.••
Abruzzo said Sunday.
Abruzzo and Aoki set a new
distance r ecord this year in
winning the a nnua l Gordon
Bennett Balloon Race. which
lifted off in Fountain Valley.
Now the pair, with two othe r
crew members. hope lo cross
the P acifi c in a manned
400 ,000 -cubic-foot helium-filled
balloon
The Double E agle V balloon
was to launch from Nagashjma.
Japan. in early November in an
attempt to cross 6,000 miles of
Pacific Ocean lo the West Coast
of the United St a t es, s aid
Abruzzo, 51.
"Our primary goal is the West
Coast, our secQndary goal is the
East Coast and our rinal goal
would be Europe," he said.
Abruzzo and a second member
of the team , Larry Newman.
From Page A1
AWACS. • •
even partial responsibility for
the consequences of rejecting
this sale. The potential danger lo
our country is too grave ... the
risks are too great.··
Dole noted that the planes
would not be delivered for four
years, giving the president
"plenty of time to pull the plug if
something goes awry in the
Mideast ."
Huddleston told the Senate
"the prospects for peace and
stability in the Mideast will be
enh anced by the sale. With the
difficulty in I ran and the
uncertain conditions in Egypt
Saudi Arabia Is th'e key t~
stability and peace in the region .
as fragile as it may be."
Boren said, "I cannot accept
votes for the pres ident. Catto did
not say whom Weinberger had
called and added, "I don't know
if he is claiming-credit for any
conversions."
Murkowski said that "while I
s till have reservations. I feel the
president must conduct this
nation's foreign policy."
The $8.5 billion arms package,
~he bigg~stf i~ U.S. history,
includes five Airborne Warning
and Control Sys tem radar
planes plus 1,177 Sidewinder
missiles and fueling to extend
t he range and firepower of 62
Saudi f ·lS jets.
The sale has been rejected by
the House and will be vetoed if a
majority of the Senate votes it
down Wednesday.
White House aides and Senate
Re publican leader Howard
Baker and his staff exuded
confidence Monday that enough
Senate opponents are willing to
switch to give Reagan victory in
this, his first major foreign
policy battle on Capitol Hill.
. ORANGE COAST
DaHy Pilat
CIHllfled advertlalng 714/842-5671
All other department• 842-4321 , • ' ' • • • ' • • • I • ' • • •
Thomas P Haley .......,,.,-a...r-~
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Thomas A. Murph1ne
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Michael P Harvey ......._.ow-
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MAIN OFFICE U0 WHI ley Sl, COiia MHa, CA . JllUll addrff1: lo• u.o. COila Mesa, CA. 926»
Copyr11M Ital Oreft911 CNtt 1"*41111"'9 C-v ,.. _. ...,.._ .. .,..., .. ..,.. •• Mtll«lal m-orff.
..., • ......,.. i.r.lfl may tie r~ed ""'-' 9"<1el -1ftillleft Of tavtrfOf\I _,,.,.
m ade history in 1978 when they
joined Maxie Anderson. all from
Albuquerque, in the Do uble
Eag le II to become the first to
cross the Atlantic Ocean. ·Viel
helium.filled balloon
Abruzzo a nd Newman have
been joined in their attempt to
cross the Pacific by Ronald B.
Clark. an Albuquerq ue real
estate in vestor. a nd Ao ki or
M iami . Fla. a J apa nese
restaurateur .and entrepreneur.
Tt\e massive Double Eagle V
concrete anl'hor. which weighs
about six tons. must be allowed
lo set properly. Abruzzo said .
The anchor is to be buried
underground at a n asph alt
parking lot from which the
balloon is to be launched 'The
anch or is to hold the
polyethlylene balloon m place
for the launch.
Lawme n g rab
one escapee,
lose anothe r
Orange County Sheriff's
deputies found one jail escapee
Monday but lost another.
Jimmy Leyva, 28, who was
reported missing Crom the Theo
Lacy minimum security jail in
Orange on Friday night. was
captured Monday even ing in
Garden Grove. said Sheriff's Lt.
Wyatt Hart
Meanwhile, a 9 p.m . bed check
Monday at the county's honor
farm near the El Toro Marine
Air Base revealed lhal Paul
Fre d e r ic k S mit~ 26 . was
missing, saia Hart.
Leyva is serving time for a
drunken driving conviction.
Catalin a mooring
le ase studied
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The
State Lands Commission staff
has recommended that a new
lease for boat moorings around
Santa Catalina Island be opened
to public bidding and the sale of
privately owned moorings be
curtailed.
The staff re commendation
says the new lease should not
include any more coves than
those already containing
moorings so that other area•
wUI be kept available for boats
that prefer to anchor. Tbe
com mission will consider the
recommendation Friday in
Sacramento.
Can photos halt war?
H untin gto n wo man extols hu manistic program
By JODI CADRNHEAD
Of .... Deity ...........
It may not rank with the
det e nte negotiations
ma s t e rmlned by H enry
Kissinger. but to Betty Edwards
of Huntington Beach It 's a
hopeful step.
Ms Edwards, a high school
tea cher in Norwalk, is one of a
handful of people participating
in an exchange of photographs
with Russian families.
Since the program was rirst
announced at an Association for
Hum a n i s ti c P syc h o log y
con vention last month. about 40
families have sent pictures.
Explained Jack Drach , acting
executive director of the 6,000
member organization based in
San Francisco, "Maybe the
U n ited S tates a nd Russia
wouldn't be al each other's
thr oats if people knew each
other. This isn't all that earth
shaking. It's just a first step."
For Ms. Edwards it's a step
toward awa reness of social
issues that once dominated her
life "It's like we've all gathered
into our own personal lives,"
said the 53-year-old woman,
recalling her past involvement
in anti-war, civil rights and
ecological issues.
"It's especially needed now.
We have a ll accepted the
inevitability or war," she
mused. "l look al my adorable
new grandchild and for the first
time I'm thinking, l wonder if
she'll grow up."
S he and other Humanistic
Psychology members admit that
photographs passed through the
mail may not mean a lot in the
face of world relations .
"If sending a picture is going
to help, I'm going to try," said
Ms, Edwards. "It certainly can't
hurt."
The photographs are all being
sent to the Psychology office in
San Francisco, where a member
is going to hand deliver them to
DMIY l'IMC II.it -
One of the pictures Russian familtes will recewe 1s thrs one of
Hllntington Beach's Betty Edwards. daughter Lisa Tyler a11d
granddaughter .Janine Tyler
a person in Moscow who has
agreed to the exchange.
In Orange County about 300
fliers have been dis tributed
advertising the photo exchange,
according to past president of
the Orange County chapter of
t he Association for Humanistic
Psychology, Herb Newman.
"It's a way of personalizing,"
explained Newman. "It makes it
difficult to kill i:,omeone you can
conceptualize as a human being
with a face."
All photos are bemg labeled
with family members' names.
And those participating in the
exchange are urged to display
the \lussian photo in their home.
Thos e see king more
information can call <415)
528-6301.
·~-...... House Speaker Thomas P ... Tip" O'Netll. D-Mass .. speaks .to
photographers in his Washington office ... No more pictures wtth
a cigar m my mouth." urges the vetaran poltt1cian. 68 . who's
t rymg to change J11s image
World War II dead honored in Egypt
With nags at half-staff in
mourning for slain President
Anwar Sadat, the thousands
or soldiers killed in the
crucial 1942 battle of El
Alamem were honored with
three memorial services.
Diplomats and relatives
gathered at the Allied,
G e rman a nd Italian
cemeteries in Egypt to place
wreaths for the men who rell
in the clash between forces
Conductor Zubln Mebta's
controversial decision to play
the work s of German
composer Richard Wagner in
Israel h<ts brought a charge
by a government official that
Mehta forced orchestra
members to play the music.
Wagner's musi c was
e mbraced by Nazi Germany
as the ideal of Teutonic
culture and is seen by some
led by two legendary
commanders -British Gen.
Bernard Montgomery and
German Ge n . Erwin
Rommel, the "desert Cox."
Briti s h Ambassador
Michael Weir and
representatives from
Commonwealth and Allied
nations placed red-poppy
wrt:aths at an altar in the
midst of 7,354 graves in the
Allied cemetery.
survivors of the Nazi
Holocaus t as a symbol of
anti ·Semitism.
Dov Sbilansky , d e puty
minister without portfolio,
was quoted by Israel Radio
as saying he polled the Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra's
musicians and found all but
two were opposed to "playing
Wagner's music but were
afraid of Mehta.
Like other American city
manaaen. Daa McCormick
of Calumet. Mich., haa been
flahttn1 the battle of the
bud11et. His strategy,
however, la different.
McCormick has called for
his own layoff, to take effect
Dec.1.
"With cutbacks In state aid
and ristne costs. I Just looked
over the budget and knew
cuts were going to be made
or we'd have a deficit,"
McCormick said.
He also recommended cuu
In office staffs and reduction
of overtime for village
employee5.
The hotel rooms al Cancun
were crowded for the summit
conference. A shortage or
, rooms forced all but the most
senior members or the
administration to double up.
And so it was that David R.
Gergen, lbe tallest member
or the official u .S .
delegation, and Joseph
Can1erl, lbe shortest. ended
up sharing room 620.
Gergen is the chief While
House spokesman, and by
one apocryphal account, he
was kidnapped as a child and
raised by a family of
giraffes . Canzeri is a
presidential assistant known
for his wizardry at logistics.
He has been dubbed the
Italian leprechaun.
·'The tall man and the
small man." said Canzeri,
describing the pair. "The
man who snores and the man
who doesn 't sleep." said
Gt:!rgen , grumbling
good-naturedly about his
roommate's nocturnal noise.
"We thought." Gergen told
a group of reporters in their
room, "that we'd give you
the long and the short of it."
Delivery room workers
were in for a surprise when
two sisters from Coalinga
gave birth to a healthy baby
girls at the same moment.
"It wasn't like we planned
it, that's for certain," said
Suzanne Amlnzadeb, a nurse
at Valley Medical Center in
Fresno. "It just happened
that way ··
Martha Nolasco, 28, and
Alicia Alvarez, 25, were
placed in different rooms
after traveling 50 miles from
home together in labor.
Precisely at 9:27 a.m., they
became new mothers and
aunts.
Mornings stay cloudy
Coastal
Mo•llY <'-Y n19111 -mornlne
ho'"' •IO• p,onlr >unnv •t1••,_,,•
lh•ou911 W-y Co .. U.I low SI tonl91>t, •S hlQt> _..,.,, W•ter
4S
'"'•nd low U 1on19lll, n tuon
Wedf>esdilY
E•,.wrw,.... fiOltt verteblt wtndi
nl9ht •ncl ,,_"'"II l'IOun 1M<omln9 .outhwe>terly to 10 11 knots •Ith J. to
).foot wind wows Ind _,..,.,, 12 lo
10 -nots We<lnHO.y •II••-0...
to Moot sout-ter•v •-It Mo111r
Cloudy
[/ .S. s 11.nuna ry
Rein, Orlu .. -lot cl<Nlbd lM
HS tern llli,.,, of IN ""''°" tod•r, •nd tlle wet_,_, sho<ikl continue Its
hold over th• Ohio V•ll•Y e nd
mld·All•nllc coast north to H•w
Ent lend
Scetter•d snow.,, •Ito wer•
r-rt..S "'t• IN Pocllk NOl'111Wttl
•nd tale warnlnes were oosieci tor
IN co.utel ... ,.,,of wesNneton.
Sunny Wfflhe• ..,., lore<HI for
most ol tne rttl ol Ille n•11oft
California
Cloudy Skin loomed !or 111•
o,,.rnl9ht Ind earty rnornlno houn In
most of Southem Cellfornle 1111....,
WedMSd•Y. IN M•llonal WHti.r Servke ..__.
Be11oath Ille o••teHI. wnlch Is
pre dieted to 0.11111 1>reokln11 up
Wednft<»y '"""-'· l•mper•"'rH •re opected to lie mlkl. wllh hlQhs In IM u,,...raotor ._ 70s.
111 Ille dlttff1 -mo..ritaln orHs,
_.. ... ,,.. wor,..... temper.tu'"•••
••P•<tltd, olono wltll lll9h winds
oonllno to 1$ mllfl In IN Antelope
Velley end Mefev. o-.1.
Smog report
EL MONT E IAP) -Tl•• Air
Ou• II t y Manao•ment 01 •trlc I
predict• QOOd olr -Illy thr°"""°'1t
IM SCMl1ll COHI •Ir llesln lod•y wllll
poOutlon s1anderd lno .. ralll\01> ol 0 lnall•r ....
Temperatures
Albeny
Altluc!W
A..._rlllo
A.,.,.llle
Atlettl.a
AU011tc Ct-, aotttmon """I""""
Ml Le ~,, 41 ...
•1 JS
'l'O 14
'3 SS .67
•1 S4 ... ., ,. .a ... ,. ...
67 S1 I.OS
OtlllyN.tM•.,., t • ._ .......
~ ..
Blsm••O ,, )4
80IM .. :It
Botton S1 ... 0
8rown'1•11e 14 ..,
Bufl•lo ,.. S4 31
Cl\a•h1nSC '° 71 • Cl\a•lstnWV ~ SI ll c ... , ...... "' 0
CMc•oo S7 44
Cln<lnt1atl "' $3 ., Cl••··-s• 56
Columbus 61 SS IS
0•1 Ft Win .., :It flvtHH
Oen•er 10 :It llml OesMolnn S4 " .... Oet•olt H SI 4(1 ~ (•" .. ,.
Ovlutll •1 ll -= Et PHO 1• 11 S"•••" it••••"•'' Oulv4•4
H•rUCH'd Sl SI 11 mmm --· === NOAA VI 0.• .I (--..1.
H•leM •S 0
Honolulu ll 11 14
Houston .. so Weltllnotn u ., . n C•l•llne .. " lndn'"'lls SS 4' 11 Wlcllll• S6 1' L_B .. <11 ,, •1 JockSnvlle 17 6• 07 Newport IN«:ll ., '3 K•ns Clly S6 11 Oflt••lo 71 ff LHVtgos '° ff Pelm 5'w119 " S1 Llttl• Rock ... 41 07 CALI l'OltNIA
Le ~-:::::::.ulno
., 4• Louls•lll• u SI .ff Ml 13 S6 Mempt,ls SI 4S ll 8oUrslleld 71 SS Sen Jose •> SS Ml•ml '1 '° Blythe to m 5-1\ta Ane ,, ff Mllwou11M 4' ,. Eureu .. • Sent• Cn11 ., SJ MP!t·St P 52 l4 Freino 70 ,. T•llOe Veil.., u .,
N•lt!Vlll• u $3 11 L•nust .. n Sl
N"'Orl_,, n S2 LotA'>Oll ... 70 ..
N .. Y-51 S6 .20 "'°'''"" .. .. SI CANADIAN Norfolk 7S ., Monl•r•y •2 m Cet9ery 43 l4 1 16 Ottlo City "' ll NHCll .. .. m Edmonton 0 0 .24 Oft>oN SI • Ookl•nd ., 61 so 41 .... Orl•ndo ,, 70 . " PHO Robles ., S6 1MonlrHI
011e•• ... 31 I H PllllOOpNo '° ff 1J A.cl fllvfl '3 m A-elne 0 ,.
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tueaday. October 27, 1981 H/f Al .
Hospital care
South Laguna facility hit on maternity care standards ! ' ..
By GLENN SCOTT ()(, .. .,..., ...........
The South Coast M'edlcal
Center in South Laguna didn't
meet several of the standar4s
for maternity care set last year
by the Orange ,County Health
Planning Council.
In a recently ])ublished report
on maternity, or perinatal,
services offered In the county.
the council said South Coast
f a iled to meet more of the
s tandards than any other
hospital.
The report, with conclusions
based on 1979 statistics, noted
that the medical center tiad the
highest delivery costs of 19
s urveyed hospitals. South
Co ast's average cost per
delivery was $1,167.
The average cost per delivery
for all hospitals was $596. South
Coast and Palm Harbor General
Hos pital in Garden Grove, with
an average $1,085 per delivery.
were the only two hospitals at
which costs surpassed standards
set by the health council.
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach had the third
highest average delivery cost. at
S790, but that figure fell within
the cost standards calculated by
the council.
Huntington lntercom munity
Hospital wus firth with an
average $609 delivery cost;
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital wai. 13th with a $454
cost.
South Coast a lso had the
fewest deliveries of the hospitals
in 1979 with 260, which failed lo
meet the standard of 500 set by
the council. Officials said
hos pitals with less than 500
deliveries weren't offering
medical staff members enough
experience to be prepared for
perinatal complications.
ln contrast , Hoag performed
2,068 deliveries in 1979, fourth
mos t in the county. Fountain
Valley handled 1,323, according
to the council
The council also cited South
Coast for failing to implement
an active perinatal education
plan for its medical staff and for
not h aving capability or
performrn~ a cesarean section
Service held
for Newport's
Mrs. Markham
Memorial services were con·
ducted Monday for Newport
Beach resident Maziebelle
Glover Markham, a founding
m e mbe r of the California
Ep1l eps) Society, wbo died Fri·
day at age 84
A Balboa Island resident, Mrs .
Markham and her late husband
formerly owned and operated
the Smoke Tree Ranch resort in
Palm Springs where she main·
tamed a winter home.
She was a native of Nebraska
and came lo California in 1922
afte r a tour on the Keith
Orpheum Vaudevill e circuit. She
was an active member of St.
Jumes Episcopal Chur ch in
Newport Beach where memorial
services were held.
Mrs Markham is survived by
two sons, Dr. Charles Henry
Mark ham of Los Angeles and
Ri c hard G . Markham of
Prescott. Ariz., and a daughter,
M artiana Wiggins.
She also leaves two daughters-
in-law and 14 grandchildren. The
family has suggested memorial
contributions to the California
Epilepsy Society, 6117 Reseda
Bl vd .. Reseda .
within 30 minutes al utl tlmea.
The health planning council ta
a non-profit agency given mostly
federal funds lo encouraae
coordination or medical services
within areas, thus assuring
quality care at reasonable costs.
The council has no direct
authority over hospitals, but
does make recommendations lo
state licensing agencies. llS
review or maternity services is
one of several studies slated this
year to examine aspects of
m edical treatment in Orange
County.
ln a summary of South Coast's
services, ,the council's report
says: ''This facility should
se riously eva luate its
commitment to offering
perinatal services and consider
joint planning with other
facilities to improve the level of
service in its area.''
Paul McQuade, .administrator
for the South Laguna hospital,
~aid in a response to the report
,.
that the mt!dical center ttas h·~
high costs because of a larce
obstetrical unit but few births. .,
"We have continued to provj~
e,cellent personalized care t
the community. while study
possible means of reducing the
slie of th~ obstetrical unit a!14
coming under compliance witlJ
the new standards or closing lb(
unit altogether," he said . •
Meanwhile, officials for Ul~
health planning council say Ute
examination of maternity earl
already has increased th~
quality of treatment.
Said Lois Benes of Irvi.n~ ••
chairman of the council's review
com mitlee : ·'It's been aQ;
absolute pleasure and joy Ii;
working with all these hospltali'{
which showed without a shado~
or a doubt that they really care
about quality and distribution oC
perinatal services in Oran&~
County. Some already hav ~
completed th e ir
improvements.··
..
OellyPe.. ..... ~
SECONDARY RECOVERY Rig tn Huntington Beach pumps..
water into the ground to recover deep crude oil left behind b~
pas t operations when o il was lt:ss profitable. In exces~ of 100 _
tons. the 120-foot ·tall Aminoil rig on Pacific Coast Highway
near Golden West Street r t'covers JOO barreb of crude oit,
daily It's one of s ix Aminoil rigs that use watt•r flushin~
®
Can you believe •t s almost
November? If you have a
birthday gift to give next
month. you might give some
thought to a piece ol 1ewelry
set with one ol the November
birthstones. Topaz or C1tnne
6EM WISE diamond ring made by Kurt
Gaum, a very talented New
York designer
In add1t1on to sharing
November. these two gems
have many s1m1larit1es and are
often confused. They both
occur 1n a wide range of yellow
tones. f rom tawny yellow
through orang1sh·yellow to the
smoky browns Both are very
attractive gems and both are
very durable and satisfactory
for setting 1n all types of
1ewelry for men and women.
The most popul1r style of
cutting for both gems Is the
step cut. Thet 1s when all facets
ere lour-sided and In eteps and
rows above. below. and on the
gird le.
While Topu and Cltnne have
many 1lmllaritle1 they also haYe
some differences. Topaz Is the
more valuable gem lnd 11 often
called "precious Topaz" to
di1t1ngui1h It from CltrlM.
Topaz is 8 on the hardness
ecale while Citrin• Is 7. Topaz
has a higher refrectlve ln<Mx
and a hHVier apec1fic gr11V1ty.
Topaz also comea In addltlonaf
color11 the most be9uttful of
Mary Barr. Certified Gemologist
CHARLES H. BARR
C1trine is a member ol Ille
quartz family and is hm1ted to
the yellows, oranges and
browns Other varieties of
quartz have their own names.
such as. rose quartz (pink).
amethyst (purple), aventunne
(green) and crystal (col0<less).
Topaz 11 found pnm1nly 1n
Brazil while C1trlne 1s likely to
be found more w i dely
distributed 1n our earth's crust.
Topaz and Cltrlne each has
Its place in our gem WOf'ld,
however, I think it is Important
not to confuse them. New YO(t(
State recently fined a jeweler
for writing Topaz on hi• sates
slip lnatHd of Citrin. -When
• Citrlne wae what he ac1ually
had sold. Unfortunately not aft
Jewetere even know the
difference. That la one ol the
many reasons It P•Y• the
con1umer to ..-out a flml
holding memberahlp In the
American Gem loctetr.
• Requirements of ... ....., ...
Include tralnln; In ... _.11111
and edherence • ltendna. w ... ~o1oe ............. .... .,. .• ,. Oeftl..__.-.. uauc
Which are the blues and pink.a. • ......._. flf
Wt have a b9autlful blue tapaz 11....._ ._ s.cw,1
QuetUOltl •l\.'l•MO O ... , .... -.. ............
Which t bought In Germeny on
my tatt trip •nd which W8 haY9
recently mounted In a .., ...
........... ell Cllrtlle"""'7.
A·t H/F Or11noe Oo11t DAIL v PILOT/TUHday, October 27. 1981
mruu~rnm Finland's top
•
Senate panel seeks
CIA restrictions
lea~er ~esigns
H ELSINKJ, Finland (AP) -
President Urho Kekkonen. who
for 25 ye•rs successfully kept
Flnluod balanced on a tithtrope
of neutrality between the Soviet
Union and the West, ,.lgned
today because of illn , the
eovernment announced
pol itic al parties -from
Com mun1 s t to conservative.
representing 80 percent of the
electorate picked tUm u their
candidate. Only one member of
the electoral college voted
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Sen•le Intelligence Committee
recommended today tbat the
Reagan administration abandon
its plan to allow the Central
Intelligence Agency to infiltrate
and try to influence domestic
organizations.
After a one-h o ur closed
meeting , Sen . Barry M.
Gol dwater. R -Ariz .. the
committee chairman, said the
panel would recommend that the
ad mi nislration a bide by the
restrictions on CIA infiltration of
U .S . g r ou p s imposed by
President Carter in January,
1978.
All systems 'gQ'
for shuttle launch
C APE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP) Kennedy Space Center
workers have begun stowini
suits, food and other equipment
aboard the shuttle Columbia as
all appears ready for a Nov. 4
launch, NASA officials say.
"There doesn't look like there
are any problems that would
s low us down," George Page,
director of the launch, said
Monday. "If the weather is
agreeable. we ought to be able to
do something on the fourth."
Mideast policy
said 'dangero~'
WASHINGTON (AP) -The,.
chairman of the congressional
Joint Economic Comnfittee saylt'
the Reagan administration ia
making "important and
d isturbing" commitments to
repel a full-scale Soviet invasion
of the Persian Gulf oil fields.
•·The adminis tration has
s pelled o ut a dangerous
strategic doctrine, which may
return to haunt us in the months
and years to come," Rep. Henry
Reuss, D-Wis., said Monday in
releasing State and Defense
departme nt r e plie s to
committee questions.
~onday, ·with one rate b.ltllnt tu
lowest point since last March,
government ofllclals reported.
About $4.7 billion ln six-month
T-bills were sold at an averace
discount rate of 13.619 percent,
down from the 13. 795 percent of
one week earlier.
Doctor:'s acquittal
ordered by judge
MEMPHJS (AP) -A Jodge
has ordered a directed verdiet of
acquittal on three of the charges
against the doctor acctllf:d .of
prescribing too many dppen, •
downers and other narcotles to
rock 'n' roll sin1ers El.Vb
Presley and J erry Lee Lewis.
Following Criminal Court
Judge Bernie Weinman's ruling
Monday, prosecutors
unexpectedly rested their case
against Dr. George Nicbopou.los.
Ke kkonen. 81 , had been on
sick leave since Sept. 11. A
medical certificate today said he
• against him, as a protest that
the election was a waste of
money
was s uff e rina fr o m M
arteriosclerosis uni versa Us. or 0 u rners
progressive hardening of the
arteries. He has beeJ> reported
having severe losses of memory. eu logi·ze The resignation was generally
expected. and the afternoon
.oewspaper 11ta-sa nomat Muncey appeared on the street before
the announcement with the
banner headline "Kekkonen SAN DIEGO <AP) -Bill
Resigns." Muncey. eulogized as "a giant of
Elections will be held Jan. a man" and the driving force or
17-18 to choose a 301-member unlimited hydroplane raeing,
electoral college. The electors lived hls life like he raced -at
will meet Jan. 26 to elect the full throttle. his friends say.
ltew president. Meanwhile, "The motto he li ved by was:
Kekkonen remains president in 'damn it. we can do it'," Sam AP...._.. name, but Prime Minister Parisa, past chairman of the
Shutdowns ~aced SALUTE TO OPERA Mi ckey Rooney cavorts on stage at Mauno Koivis to, 58, will be San Diego racing event, told a
J' New York St ate Theater Monday night during a benefit acting president. crowd of 800 mourners Monday.
b ho ls s how entitled .. Broadway Salutes New Yo1:k City Opera... The governme nt issued a "He was 1ust a little boy who Y more SC 0 Rooney was wearing one of the costumes he wears in the s tatement in Ke kkonen's loved boat racing," said Parisa.
BAITLE CREEK, Mich. (AP> Broadway musical revue "S uear Babies .. handwriting. which appeared Muncey, 52, was buried in -Schools in the Harper Cteek very s ha ky, saying h e was Chula Vista Monday, eJght days
district may have to be shut permanently disabled and the after he died of a neck injury
down as a r esult of voter Com muni·s ts tell government "should take action suffered in the season finale at rejection of a tax increas~. for n e w elections for the Acapulco, Mex
officials say. president of the republic." Friends a nd co 11 e a gues
One district in Michigan, ih Informed sources said Erkki characterized Muncey, the
Alpena, already has been foreed Po la--J end s tri· ke Kivalo. the director of the Board winning es l driver in to close its schools this year lf.,(,L of Medicine and one of the thunderboat his tory, as the
because of financial difficulties. president's doctors. decided in u It 1 mate compet i tor and
The school district in Taylot, .a w ARSA w. Poland (AP> _ strengthening of the democratic cons ultation with Kekkonen's untiring promoter for the sport
Detroit suburb, s ays il ~l~ a~ The Polish Communist Party socialist state... other personal physician, Kentti he loved .
Nov. 13. 1 '-~ !11 • 1, .4'4!Tnanded that Solidarity cancel SoHdarity, launched during a H alone n , th at h e wa s "Ile didn't just drive his boat,
• • • ~ J'A, . • · !'Plans for a nationwide one-hour wave of nationwide strikes in the permanently disabled and could he drove his sport," satd Pat
N • t" ;;;,·.~'t'. protest Wednesday , and the s ummer of 1980, issued '• nolongerfillhisoffi ce. O'Day. a Seattle broadcasting omina r.o.n ~ independent labor federation statement agreeing to cancel the The two doctors said ID the executive and longtime friend or ~ I • cou ntered by r e newing its strike if the Communists agreed medical certificate that the Muncey. JOr ran premier demand to share in control of to its demand for a joint arteriosclerosis "during the past Prior to burial. memorial
th Solidarity-gov~mment council to few months has progressed to a services were held at the edge of BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP> -eeconomy. . s tage that it now causes M i ssion Bay -Mun cey's
Iran's President Ali Khamenei Leaders of the Communist, manage the near-bankrupt permanent h indrance to the hometown course. Similar
nominated Foretgn Minister lfir '~emocratic ~n~ Peasant partit!s economy. The st atement also performance of his duties." s c r v i c e s w e r e h e I d
Hossein Mus avi for prime i ss ued a J ~lnt statemt;nt demanded the government end The cabinet met in s pecial simultaneously at thunderboat
minis te r today and a sked Monday , s aying the warning harassment ofunionists . session and approved Justice courses in Seattle and Detroit,
legislators to give him a vote of strike to protest. food shortages wild cat s trike 5 a nd Minister Cristoffer Taxell's cities where Muncey formerly
confidence, a Parliament and alleged police harassment demons tra ti o n s' m ostl Y rec om m end at ion that the lived
s pokesman said . posed a threat t o Poland'3 protesting food shortages, were resignation be accepted. Raised in Michigan. Muncey
The s p o ke s m an, who "p o lit.i.cal , e~o nomic and reported in two-thirds of Kekkonen was first elected s pent the last 10 year:s living in
requested anonymity, told The defens~ foundations. . Poland's 49 provinces. The president in 1956, and one of the La Mesa. a San Diego suburb.
Associated Press in Beirut by ''This must be m et with best-known comments about He was an eight-time winner of Yields on Treasury telephone from Tehran that counteraction corresponding to War s aw newspaper Zycie him was written in the 1970s by the Gold Cup, boat racing's
Musavi's nomination was read the degree of the threat," the Warszawy commented : "The a schoolchild. equivalent of the Indianapolis
bl.lls decli·ne agat"n at an open Parliament sessk>n Communists and their allies s ituation in the country is "Finland is a democracy," the 500.
b S ak Ali Akb H h · said be~inning to slip out of control." Y pe er · ar as em1 · pupil wrote. "It is r un by a Jim Hendrick, the broadcast WASHINGTON (AP) -Yields Rafsanjani, but Khamenel -.nd But it tempered the threat by Thousands of soldiers wer~ preaident. He is elected every voice or unli mited hydroplane
o n s hort -term Treasury Musavi were not preeent. 1be saying that Poland's problems deployed across the country t.e s ixth ye a r . Hi s nam e is racing, told the gathering tbat
securities (elJ for the third time vote could come Thursday, the "could only be solved through a try to improve government Kekkonen." Muncey·s death leaves "a creat _1n~_t _h _e~p_a_st~f_o_u_r~w_e_e_k_s~o_n~_s_po~k_e_s_m_an~s_al_d_·~~~~~~~~r_a_t_i_o_n_a_l~d_ia~lo_g_u_e~_a_n_d~t~~-e~_s_e_r_v_i_c_e_s_·~~~~~~~~~~l_n~th_e~197~8_e_l_ec_ti_o_n~s_ix~m_a~j_or~_v_o_i_d_"_i~n thespo_rt_·~~~~~
SPINAL SCREENING EXAMINATION
GOOD THRU OCT. 30th.
The Yarwood Chiropractic Office of Costa Mesa is sponsoring A
Spinal Check-up and Scoliosis Screening program as a public service.
This service will include consultation, examination. spinal photograph
and explanation of findings. By appointmoot only. Call 646-0516
Monday through Friday.
CX>NSUL T ATION
Tiie cw•affoll 11 •-"JMd to ...... , ... ,., .. ....,
•d/w pnMtlt ,,.,,._ ..
thy ••J nl•t• to 1plHI
l•lmrlet or otller spl••I
· co.dltlo.s. l•sed lipOll ....
res.th of et. c~at'-ltie
doctor wlll ••k•
reco•••ltd•Ho111 ,....-cl ...
u••l...tlOR or referr•I te
•otller doctor.
X-RAYS •.• .,. ... "°' ..........
fer tltls acr•••l•t
••••la.ti••· Hew•••r. ... ,.... ...... .
~ ............. .....
'
REPORT OF
FINDINGS
After th doctor lies
CCNTet.lhd ,._. ft• ... I
~ .. d .......... ..,.,. ........ ,0. ••d ., ••••
pltoto9replt yoo wilt
r•c•I•• • repert of
fl•d•••• ••d
NCO I I dlftw We .....
~yow ..... c1 ......
EXAMINATION *
O..aftlce ......... .... .,,.. .......... ...
fl"C ....... s-.. ..
1t•1td•rd tests l1telode:
Ylt9.il ..... c ...... detect
ac•ll••h or pe1tor•I
probl11M, Heck Giid bada
,,_.. of 1Mtl0tt 1tudles
•d 1plHI palp.tlow to
cWect '"*" or lwfl-d
omelet, joWs w """'"-
ec• tlwHtll • .,eclol
1cr••• tltat 11tew1 •• .. ,.,. ·r. .........
p•thr• f • aplaal
con.._. lac....,at "' ....,. .......... ,, ... i.
ulah. X-lays wlll It• , •t ALLOW JO MIMUTIS
1'9C ....... IMW H MC.....,. COMMON WARNING SIGNS ;:~.~~o,c.:u•ts
OF SPINE RELATED CONDITIONS
OHladachn. Diuines• .,., ... ...., ......... • ........ /tingling legs/Feet 8Mlck, Shoulder I Ann Pmn 0 Loww ._. Pain-leg Pain 0 Hand/Ann Numbne11 or Tinging
s,...tored1y:
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L
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Octobor 27. 1981 H/F
.. ~ ..........
IN COURT D~le _A ndre Lee Everett. 8. gets a re~assuring
hug from Chnst1na E sp a nto. an a ltornev·s assistant
representing h is mother. She il a Scott. who. claims in a
la\\Suil lh~l actor Chad Everett 1s Oa le"s father The boy
appeared in a Los An geles cou r t for jurors to l'O m pare h is
:JPPt'arance with Evl'rett·~
Remap election·
target of suit
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The The Republican. are seeltln1
D e m o c r a ts i n t he a tat e to block the new districts for the
Ass embly are suin1 to halt the state Senate, Assembly and U.S.
Republicans' circulation of House of RepreaentaUves, by
reapportionment referendum o qualifying a referendum on the
petitions. ) three bills passed last month by a
In two suits filed with the slate the Democ r al· cont rolled
Supreme Court on Monday, lbe Legislature.
Democrats are also seeking to
require that the 1982 elections be The GOP, which is mailing
held in the new Demo-petitions to Republicans and
cratlc·drawn districts. seeking signatl.lres in public
The suits say the Republicans' p_laces, must have 380,000
petitions ask the signers to lie signatures by the middle of next
about where they live, and are month.
unreadable. They say the
constitution requires the use of
the new districts. which reflect
population changes in the last
decade.
But Assembly Republican
That would put the three
redistricting bills before the
voters n ext June , unless a
special election is called in the
meantime.
l e ad e r Carol Hallett of The Republicans have been
Atascadero called the suits s aying that if they qualify the
.. n o thing more than a" referendum, the new districts
e le v e nth -hour attempt by c annot be used for the 1982
d esp e rate politicians to elections. They want to use
circumvent the rererendum current Assembly and Senate
process because they know tbefr districts and have the courts
gerrymandered bills would not dete r mine a plan for t he
hold up to public scrutiny." congressional districts. because
Th e s uit was filed by California will gain two House
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown members for a total of 45 next
of San Francisco, Assemblymen year.
Richard Alatorre of Los Angeles
and Art Agnos of San Francisco,
and five persons identified as
registered voters: Victor Garza,
St eve Gu e rrero and Gene
Flemate of Santa Clara Couniy,
and Ricardo Duran and Jess
Marquez of Fresno County .
Brown's press secretary.
Bo b bie Me tzger, said the
taxpayers are paying for one of
the suits, but "private money"
1s being used for the other. She
did not know how much either
would cost.
But the s uits claim that using
the old districts next year would
v iolate the cons titutional
requirement that districts be as
nearly equal in population as
possible. The Democrats say the
c urrent Assembly districts
range from 224,488 to 530,643
population.
"Use or the old districts in 1982
would make a mockery of
one· person, one· vote," one of the
suits said.
!Jomb threat, death delay Amtrak run
LOS ANG E.LES tAP l -The
nau~ura l run of Am trak"s
1vt"rn 1g hl service f r om
t
anamento to Los Angeles was
clayed once by a bomb threat
nd again when the t rain struck
111d killed a man walking along
hl' lra('kS, the company said.
Th e bo m b t hre at w as
elephoncd t o the Southern
'al·1f1C' station in San Jose
1round ti p.m. Sunday, three
t o urs a fte r the train left ;ac-ra m e n to . Amtrak
;pokcswoman Susan Dole said
\fonday. No bomb was found.
T he fatality occ urred at
•round 7 50 a.m Monday near
Rincon Poi nt, sever al miles
lOrth of Ventura, Ventura
Nude .. . . 1nJnnct1on
rejected
I.OS ANG ELES <AP >
I With the goosebump
eason coming on at Lo~
'nge l es Cou n t)
•t•aches. a federal judge
t<'fused to bar sheriff's
leputie!> from enforcing
' county o rd inance
H~ainsl nude bathing.
I n reject ing th e
County s heriff's deputies said.
Th e v ictim. a n a pp a r e nt
transient in his ea rly 20s. was
not im mediately 1dent1fied.
Illegal profits?
WA SHINGTON <A P> -The
government has a lle ged that
in:.iders made illegal profits of
more than S5 million on Santa
F'e International Corp. common
stock, based on their advance
knowledge of the proposed sale
of thl' company to Kuwait.
The Securities and Exchange
Commission said Monday that
the {>rofits were reaped from an
initial in vestme n t of only
$34 4.691 lt said that t he
in vest o r s' identities were
"shrouded in secrecy" by a
ser ies of bank and brok<rage
accounts and by Swiss banking
laws.
Appeal due
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
a ttorney for 13 former Iranian
hos tages says he will appeal a
fede ral judge's rulina that
former President Jimmy Carter
was within his authority when he
banned s uits against lran by the
ex-captives.
U .S. District Judge William
Gray on Monday dismissed the
s uit the former hos tages had
filed again s t the U .S .
gove rnment. The ban was
in c luded in an exe c utive
agreement worked out to secure
the hostages' release .
Probe su sp ended
SAN DIEGO <AP > -the
senior officer of a fact-finding
panel investigating the drowning
death of Marine Pvt. Randall
C hris tian of Dalla s h a s
s uspend e d the probe
indefinitely.
ArW~
HISTORIAN DIES Ar iel Durant . !\ho\-\11 \\'tl h husband Will
with whom s he s h a rl'd a Pulitzl'r Prin· in li terallll'l'. ha..,
died in Hollywood al 83. The Durant!\ v. rote an 11 rnluml'
his torical series rallt•d ·Thl' Stc>r.' of Cl\ 1ltzat1on ·
Nuke errors bring
questions by panel
LOS ANGELES <API -A
second set of design e rrors
discovered at the still·unstarted
Diablo Canyon nuclear power
plant ra ise doubts about the
whole system that's s upposed to
protect the S2'.3 billion reactor
fr o m ear th quakes. a
government spokesman said
·'Our principal con cern is
whether or not we should have
r:onfidence in other work that
was done:· Jim llanch<'ll of the
N u c l ea r R eg ul ator}'
Co m miss1o n ·s San
F r a ncisco-area offi ce said
Monday "These two errors
them selves don·t appear to be
insurmountable . . but the
question we're asking is . Are
there other ones out there'>
He s aid qu a lity control
systems are s upposed to catch
mis takes and that syst em
aµµarC'ntly fail ed <.tl D1ablo
Canyon
·'The qUC!>lton 1<; what Wl're
thl• def1t1encics an that S\Stem
that allov.('d thl·st-l•rrors ·to go
undell'l"ll•d until now :· ht· said
··t ntil we <'Jn bound that
problt•m we're g1nng Ln ha' l' to
kl't'P looking Tht· answer will
ht•I p dt•lerm1n<' whC'thC'r this
rt' \ er1hcalon effort -;hould be
C':»panckd int11 other t1r1•as of the
pl ,1nt ·
l ntll such 4uestwns are
answcrt·tl . fu<·I loading and
start ·up of th<' Pae1hc Gas &
Electrae Co power plant
apµarcntly will not be allowed
The N RC authorized lov. -power
testing last monlh A full-power
operating lleense wi ll requir e
addit1on<JI le<frr al hearings
Ii.I tl'r
~o t io n f o r a
r eliminary injunction.
S . Dist rict Court
udge David V Kenyon
laid . "'The court does
ot see the urgency of
ranting a preli minary
nJunction."
Now save 40°k with ftirCals low-Cal fares.
The hearing came in a ~3 mill ion suit against
he countv. Sheriff Peter
1tchess and 12 deputies
led by two women who
we re arrested al Malibu ~each last summer for
ude bathing .
In April. 1980. county
rdinance ga ve deputies
he power to arrest nude
athe rs and provided for
hnes up to S500 and six
rnonths in jail. About 200
people were arrested at
Malibu beaches over the
~u m m <'r f o r nud e
bathing. although fe w
co n v i ctio n s h ave
resulted.
The pl a intiffs are
Ro bbe Brogna of Los
Ange les and anothe r
worn an who asked not to
be identified bec ause
she had been harassed
. ~t work because of the
"ult and may withdraw
from the court action.
~a c h w as arrested
nder the anti·nudist
rdinance. Ms. Brogna's
c ase was dismissed
!after a hung jury, while
t he case against the
oth e r woman was
dismissed without being ~rought to trial.
ln court papers filed
by attorney David S.
estenbaum, who was
rougbl into the case by
he American Civil
ibertles Union, the
lainliffa ar1ued that
he ban on nude
By Popular Demand!
Nowthru
Nov8.
i!\:::!"<S~~:t~trre! f=OUNTAIN VALLEY, SANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE,
p e e ch and 1 r • • TORRANCE, CERRITOS, LAKEWOOD, ANAHllM
11odation and la too •iiiitlllii~--.. liliiiill~!!ii!i--•-•--•-•--~-... .. iD lta .,.sm..
A1rt:a1 1s growing
again. Now the airline
that's winning the West
with stvle 1s heading
to Phoenix•
Going with us are
lower fares 40% lower
than what you've been
paying on other a1r11nes
Pick up an Alrcal
Low~ca1 fare.
From Orange County
or Ontario. we'll Jet you
to Phoenix for as low as
$36 Naturallv. there are
some restnct1ons • • But
even our unrestncted fare
offers a 40% savings
Alrt:al's evervdav. flv·nght·
away fare 1s Just $60.
A1rca1 stvte Is service.
'it>ur flight starts with
4' one-stop check in and
seat selection before vou
board. After amval, it's
swift baggage dellverv.
And Airt:al stvle is one of
the best on·t1me perfor-
mance records 1n the
industry
A toast to styte.
During November
we·re serving comphmen·
tarv cocl<talls to all adult
passengers on everv
non-s top flight to or from
Phoenix
AllROIL .
Next time vou re
flv1ng to the Grand Canvon
state flv A1rCal You II
like our stvle
For r cservat1ons call
vour Travel Agent or A1rCal
SCHEDULE TO PHOEN IX
FROM ORA NGE COUNTY
Departs Frequencv
7 ooa Sat
8 30a Mon · Fn
1000a Sun
3 300 Daily
4 25p Ex Sat
6 4Sp Mon -Fr1
6 sso Sun
FROM ONTARIO
Departs Ffequencv
8 20a Sun
10 OSa Ex Sun
1 35p Dally
•SeMce scam Noll!'mber 1
"Seats ar(' /1m1ted ~even day
aCJvance rC'Servat1ons reauirC'd
Fare and schedul<' '>ub1ect co ~-" change w1tnovr notrce
..
i
--~~-----·--~-----~~~ .... , .... --_. ........... s•2 ..... 2~t .... •1 .. :
HUITllliTON BIACH I f BUNTAIN VAlllY
Dally Piiat
COMICS
TELEVISION
.....
84
86
-
' .. .: . D Now that there is, a woman on the
Supreme Court, Erma Bombeck is pushing 0 he'r Bedroom Rights Amendment ... 83 ~
Huntington Beach tnOves to curb sex shops • . . ~
The Huntington Beach Caty
<.:oun('it took the first s tep
Mond(ly toward curbing adult
ente rtainment 111 the city b>
unani mou!!ly approving an am·
endment to <·1ty code:..
The amendment to codes that
govern establish ment and
operation of such businesses will
go before the council for fi nal
approval next week
T he council al:.o extended its
moratorium on the issuance of
licenses and permits for adult
entertainment establishments
for up lo one year. The move
was designed lo give the code
amendment lime to take effect
after its expected passage next
week
The amendment specifi cally
defines numerous for ms of adult
entertainmen t . including a
lengthy hst of "specified sexual
activities" governed under the
proposed new code.
Il al so mandates that
conditional use permits must be
obtained by any person seeking
t o es tabli s h an adult
t e rtainment business and
limits the places where such
businesses can be opened.
Existing adult entertainment
businesses must comply with the
new code. if it is passed, within
FOR LAW AND ORDER Olf!l·er Tom
Gllligun show~ how his dog P<1scha reacts to
an attacker during a da.' of -.afet~ and
seeu nt ,. dl'monstrat ion!'> at Gold en West
Collegp: Huntington Ht•ach Tht• program Wa!\
.,.., .............
s ponsor ed b~· the Huntington Beach Police
Depurtment a nd Neighborhood Watc h .
Pascha. '1 6-year·old m a le. has been working
\\'ith the department for four years .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Huntington history
detailed in book I
The l lunt1nglon Beach
I hstori<·al Soc1Pty 1s selling a
hook that recall:. the early days
o f lht' <·l·nt11ry \\hen cit y
llft·~uanb ust·d boats instead or
""' 1mm111 i:. and surfing "as
c1onl· on hl•a \ \ redwood boards
"cighmg mort• than 100 oounds
Also interviewed in the oral
h is t o r y d ocum e nt are J .
Sherm a n Denny. t he city's
unofficial weatherman. Helen
Tarbox. Be rn ice Frost and
Nevada Staines.
three years of its effective date
or discontinue operation.
The amendment atatea that
the council is seeking to pass the
co de b ec ause "adult
ente rtainm e nt businesses.
because of their very nature.
have objectionable operational
characteristics, particularly
when several of them are
concentrated, which may have a deleterious (harmful) effecton
adjacent areas.
"Special regulation of these
businesses is necessary to insure
that such adverse effect.a do not
bl i ght o r downgrade
surrounding neighborhoods . and
the p r imar y purpose of
regulation is t o preve nt
concentration or clustering of
these businesses in any one
area," the code states.
Bus inesses s pec ifica lly
mentioned in the proposed n
code include bat.h5, sauna ba
massage parlors , es co
bureaus, introduction 1ervlc
and "figure model studios."
Many of the ''specified sexu
activities" outlined in the c
were words which could not fe
found in a Webster's DictlonaJit.
Th ey in c lud e buggery,
co prophagy, coprophllla,
piquerism and zooerasty.
Endorsem_ent eyed
CRA backing in school race 'hot potato'
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of -IMlty ...... ...,,
Endorse ment b y lo.c al
chapter s of the California
Republic an Asse mbly bas
bec ome something of a hot
potato among those running for
West Orange County school
board seats.
One endorsed candidate wants
no part of the group's backing.
Anothe r is e m bracing it
gladly.
Most, however, seem to be
uncertain just what lo do with
the offer of support pitched to
them by the conservative
Republican organization.
After a candidate screening
m eeting, the CRA chapters
followed their bylaws and
e ndorsed only Republican
candidates -including several
who were not present at the
screening meeting.
Some local school officials
were critical , s aying they
resented the intrusion of party
politics into race s that are
s upposed to be non-partisan.
CRA officials in turn claimed
there is no suc h thing as a
non -partisan race, and that
so me local school board
candidates are being groomed
for higher partisan offices.
The endorsed candidates this
week said they have received no
financial or precinct-walking
a ssistance from the CRA.
Se veral said they wouldn't
accept it even if it were offered.
But one candidate, who asked
not to be identified, suggested
that puzzled voters who query
* * *
their elected GOP officials on
election day might be informed
of the CRA endorsements.
On e candidate. Suzanne
Moore, running for a seat in the
Fountain Valley School District,
fired off a le tter to local
ne ws pape rs announc ing her
rejection the CRA endorsement.
"I did not seek, openly or
otherwtse, the endorsement of
any partisan group ... " Mrs .
Moor e wrote. "On Saturday,
Oct. 17, I advised them I could
not accept their endorsement. I
arn not receiv ing any help,
financiaJ or otherwise, from this
group.''
In an interview this week,
Mrs. Moore added, "I do believe
a ny group s hould have the
freedom to endorse, but it is up
to the candidate to accept or not
accept.
"My one complaint with the
CRA is that I should have been
informed earlier about the
endorsement. I should have been
the first to know, not the last."
Other candidates had more
ambivalent feelings about the
CRA endorsement.
''I'm just going to let it sit
there," said Marlette Slates,
who i s running for the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District board. "I didn't
seek that endorsement. They
gave it to me and that's the end
of it.
"I 'm trying to be an
independent candidate."
F o untain Valley School
District candidate Bill Manes
said his literature carries notice
* * *
of his endorsement by a district
teachers' group but not the CRA
backing. .
He s aid he is in "general
philosophical agreement" with
the CRA, but wants lo keep the
campaign non-partisan.
"I'm not picking on the CRA,"
said Norma Vander Molen, also
running for a seat on the high
school board. "It's nice to know
that some people are willing to
stick their neck out for me."
She added, however, that she
is a ccepting no donations ot
money, supplies or volunteer ai~
from the CRA or any othef
group.
Doris Enderle, running for ~
Ocean View school board seat,
s aid she had no reservations
about a c ce pti ng the CR..t
endorsement.
Mrs. Enderle said she simply
presented her philosophy at the
screening meeting and won the
group's support.
J a net Garrick, also endorsed
by the CRA in the Ocean View
race. said, "I went over there
+lo the screening me eting)
b ec aus e I wanted s ome
experience in talking to people
about my campaign.
·'If I badn 't gotten the
endorsement. it wouldn't hav~ broken my heart. and gettlng
the endorsement doesn't mean
much because there isn't any
financial help or manpowu
being offered. .
'·But I appreciate the fact th~t
there are groups out there like
t his that care enough to find out
what a candidate stands for."
* * *
Tht· oral h1.,ton · abo deals
\\ ilh lhl' city s 'agri('ultural
h.H·kgrnund and tl•ll s of the oil
hciom of IH2 1. and the
carthq11<.1k l· of 1 !131)
Ocean View candidates tell positions
Delly l'I ... S\att -
WILL LF.A \ 1-: llH
June Calala1111
_ HB official
named to
Laguna post
June Catalano. 35. currently
deputy di r<>ctor fo r planning
with t h e Department of
D evelopment Services in
li unl1ngton Beach. has been
appointed director of
community development in
Laguna Beach.
Mrs Catalano wall start her
new JOb Nov. 16 She will be
filling the vacancy lrfl by the
former director. Ron Smith. who
resigned two months ago.
Mrs Catalano, a resident of
Irvine. was appointed lo her
current position in Huntington
Beach last Febr ua r y She
s upervises 19 staff members in
the administration of both long
range and current plannmg. Her
division also is responsible for
the preparation of the city's
Local Coastal Plan.
Prior to becoming deputy
d i r ec tor for plan ning in
Huntington. Mrs. Cat alano was
a senior planner for the city for
nearly two years.
Before coming to Huntington
Beach. she worked for seven
years in · planning with the
Ora nge County Environmental
Management Age ncy. She also
worked for two years with the
New Yo rk Sta t e Urban
Development Corp.
M rs . Ca t alano h as a
~ichelor's degree in journalism
from the University of Tulsa,
a nd a m ast er's degr ee in
com municallons from Syracuse
University. Her post graduate
wor~. in planning was taken at
Syracuse and at UC Irvine.
Mrs . Catalano's h usba nd.
Ray, serves as a planning
commissioner in tht City of
Irvine and is a n Instructor al UC
Irvine
,\ l!rn pa~l· hardbark with
t·af'I~ l~IO's p1l'lun•s. the book
\\a-. romptl('(I b' C<d Stale
F11llt•r1on ., or<1I history
<il'p arl mt•nt .incl i., based on
num erou" inlt•n tt'\\., of old time
c • 1 t 11 t· n., o I I Ill' <· o as t u I r it v .
111 cluding 1tw <'ll~ 's present
h 1 ., l or 1 d n D l' l be r l · Bud · ·
l1 1ggm~
The book 1s ,nail able for SIS at
t h t· month I ' . to u r s o f the
landmark :-.Ct•\~ land !louse. built
an 1>196. The tours are the third
Sunda' of t'n·n · month from 12
lo I p m on Reach Boulevarc1
norlh or 1\<h1m!'o ,\\ t•nue
'Trauma Day'
planned/or
FV hospital
Fountain Valley Community
HospitaJ will observe "Trauma
Aw a reness a nd P revention
Day" with a series of free heaJth
and safety programs on Sunday,
Nov . 1.
The exhib i ts . t o ur s,
ca rd 10-pul mon ary resuscitation
demonstrations and public
health forums will be offered
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
hos pital . 17100 Euclid St.,
Fountain Valley.
Topics will include emergency
rirsl aid. bicycle safety and
"baby's rirst ride."
The hos pit a l , which is
celebrating its 10th anniversary
in November. also will provide
free slices of birthday cake to
visitors.
Ocean View hows
enrollment drop
Octan View School District
en1 ollment has declined by
about 500 students in the past
year. according to attendance
ragures for September .
District officials say there are
10.455 pupils in the kindergarten
through eighth grade district of
23 schools Stude nts include
rt'Sidents of Huntington Beach,
Fountain Vallry, Westminster
and Midway C'i ty
Voters will go to the poUs Nov. 3
to elect three trwtees in the Ocean
View Sc hool District which is
located predominantly in Huntington
Beach. There are nine candidates.
F'ollowing are brief sketches of foor
candidates detailing who they are
and w hy t hey a r e running.
f PhotogTaph of Jim Powen not
auailable.J Sketches of other
ca n d i d a t e s ha v e a p.p e a red
previously.
Name: Jim Powers
Address: 15882 Puritan Circle,
Huntington Beach
Age: 40
Occupation: Manager of a tire
ma nufacturing ·a nd wholesale
company.
Education: High s c hool
graduate; studied al Coalinga
and Golden West colleges.
Family: Wife, Linda; two
children, one currently enrolled
in the district and the other a
graduate of the district.
Why are you running for this
office?"
"I 'm running because I'm
concerned for the future of
public education."
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and bow
would you cope with lt?
·•Proper usage of state funds
a nd direc tion of schoo1
curriculum are the greatest
concerns facing schools today.
The school board needs to get
public support for its efforts in
these areas."
Rose Parade
bus trip set
Reservations are being
acc epted now for a bus
excursion to the Tournament or
Roses parade, sponsored by the
Fountain Valley Parks and
Recreation Department.
The city department will
utili:.te two buses to carry
residents to the parade, to be
held Jan. 1 in Pasadena.
The fee is $25 per person,
which includes 1rand1tand
s eating, s u p ervlalon a nd
transportation. Youths under·
age 12 must be accompanied by
an adult.
Pre-re1l1tralion 11 talrln1
place at the ~·· recreation centel. l~ B hu"t St.
SUSAN MARKHAM
Name: Susan Markham
Address: 17251 Almelo Lane,
Huntington Beach
Age: 30
Occupation: housewife
Education: Bachelor of Arts
degree in music education from
Brigham Young University.
Family: Husband, Melvin;
five children, including two
attending school in the district.
Why are you rwm.ln' for till• office!
"I feel I'm a concerned parent
who is representative of a
substantial number of young
Ocean View parents who want a
voice in bow the district is run."
What la th prlaclpal problem
In oar ldaoola today and a.ow
woald yoa cope ~ ltf
·'The decreaain1 amo11Dt of
money to work with is the
Jargest problem facin1 public
educatlon. We need creative
ways ot spendina the money the
district does 'et from the state
to have continued quality
educaUon."
Free seminar
A three-hour seminar focualng
on wllh aod probate ls
scheduled Oct. 31 from t a.m. to
noon at Oran1e Cout Colle1e'1
Fine AIU KalJ Ut.
'
JANET GARRICK
Name: Janet Garrick
Address: 6942 Los Amigos,
Huntington Beach
A1e: 38 Occapatlon: comm unity
volunteer. former teacher
Education: Bachelor of
Science in psychology from
Brigham Young University,
tea c hing credential from
Chicago State Teachers College.
Family: Husband, Don; four
children, including three who
attend school in the district and
one in a private school.
Wby are yoa nmatn1 for tbl1
office!
"J want to have a say in
atren«itheoing curriculum in
basic academic skills and to
encourage more respect for
aulhorjty in the classroom and
respect for fellow classmates
and to instill patrlotlsm in
students and to actively
participate in determlnlna the
way tax dollars are spent in our
district..·•
What ta u.e p~lpal pNMe•
hi o.r MMol• &od.ay ... ..._
WMJd 1W e..-.... KT
''Ocean View ta an exclllent
school diatrict but lt•1 fadq
decllninl enrollmmt ud a._.
of local mitrol o..-On..aal
resources.
DORIS ENDERLE
Name: Doris Enderle
Address: 16902 Concord Lane,
Huntington Beach
Age: 48
Occupation : Retired
businesswoman
Educat.ion: Bachelor of Arts
d e gree ih public
relations/journalism from Cal
State Long Beach. Master's
degree in public
admirtlstratlon/political science,
Cal State Long Beach.
Family: Divorced; one son
Why an yoa runnlnl for uJS
otrlce?
"I want to improve education.
e s pecially by strengthen!~
instruction in basic educati~
skills. I 've been involved Ul
education at the state level bf
lobbying for different bills." , •
What la Ute principal p~
la oar acbool1 today Hd a.ow
would you cope wtm It!
"The blUeat problem In our
schoola ls a lack of discipline
and that I• renected in low
academic levell and alao la
reflected in our 1oelet1 bJ lncre..-crime and ..... ....
by ,.... ~. a.e ... .,
mite fuil6iC 11.:=rui IDUlt be ..... effectt•elJ w I ..... eclueaumi. I tull patr"rildl• _. .... , a
our atd 8•
4-¥4140: $ 3 $ ' 2 ' J a s
Orange Coa•t DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, October 27, 1981 H /f
...
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Bol..C I.'° 7 a JI • " O!~I 1• 1221 """ • IV• Mar1SNI 1.12 1 d 2 JI,,._ \lo M<Orm IAO 111• t5 •IV. Por1e< 80b • 22 11"1. • ... TlllW >AO 1 JU SJYt + " WrlolY I 44a I t :13'it'..° '~ lklrden t.OS s 20 ~· " ~ no ~ .70 s n 1Wt. ••• H.er1M .. ,, ' ,..., cor PO.JO . 10 1$o,li.. Pon GE ' 10 • IOI ""' .... TllllW pf '-40.. • 117 --1Vt Wurltn . SS o •• ~ eorow uo ' 102 -· ~ 1.10b 10 ll J.-a Hartl! A 10 u 714 . 11; O• Jlf uo . J 1714-v. Po<Gf, 2 60 . 1 1"'11 • "' Taftllnl .• 11 u 2WI • " Wy1e1.o 40 11 1 ,,,.._ ~ •cwmn• Ul . . c 2\lt-... IMY ' 13 ., sov. • !.\ Me I -I 11 11 ~ Ollfd t 11 .1 .. J.. • • POUi< ' .. 14 4 JI--. ~ Te Hey . ,.. ·"'· I.\ w ' . .. .. • ...... I.\ llotEd UO S JI n -Ill vuln • >• tl~· "' H•ll '2.14 1 JO ~ •• McOnO '·°' I 21• '°"• \Ii PclCm I t.tO 6 .., 13"• '-' Tiiiey OI I .. I 1V. ..... w~..'nt 60 , I02 ,..._. ,.... 11 .. E pf I• . rtfO S7 . . Pepp .IO 10 2* l)VJ V. Ha 1• ..... lo\<OEd t., I m >Olli• 1" PolEI pt• SO . ylOO JO • "' t Afldy 1 JO.. ~ -X-Y-Z·
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!Jrenlff ·• ... ~·· •· 1 1 -io' 1fi1 !,..._ ~ MKIM 1 SO I 1" ""°·· . liilcleen .'2 . a ~\le pp,,.ley 40e ._! 111? !~ :1 Tttllrft• t 11 I07 ..... '-t Cp l.16 4 2 22\4 . lltlgSC I.• 14 '° ..,,. + 1" Y ·~• • .,.+ ~ ~e11m' Me • JI 21Y.-\Ii llil<Lout . 41 ..... l'll'MC .., -~ " T•I<.,,.. .lil . S2 ''°' . . a 40 • :itl Jl14 + 1 lltltlM 1 ... II UI ~· ._ M~ I 1 I m~-H• nt i . I '°2 111"+ .... McNell ·'° t I 12~+ ~ PrlmMt .OJr ' 1S 14'-Ii\ Teldfft t I ... 1--.+f N 40 I 111 27.._+ .,..
llrltPt I .... I 21 JI~+ '°' ver' II ~ 21:: • MtltftC J U 12.._ v. !;Mad I 90 S SI 2~ • \le P ro<IG 4.10 tl0t3 1'Vt + t°" Tete a I 1G2 Wt ... ,. llhllll ,llO 11 •jt ""-• ~
er11wo11.20 ! • '~"' Y,:,1 :¥~'rn ~ ···'-"•""'"'·3111 1 m u l'I .... t;Metr• ·'° ·~n 1m ,... ~~.'!:",:A H 7;0,r" Y,; Ttftll<• '"° •"' ~." •'°' ,.,, ",.., ....... •11ruo t.• ~ • 2.w•" avo t '610 11 11~t;e Melml' .a u ,...,..,.."' Mecll•n .s.n * »"'• .. PSvCol 1·._, 10' 1314 , ,_,.. IAO 1 SJ -1 Zu.nl..0 120 1 n ,. ~ llllUG pfUS .. > 2S "" tar ... 9 1$ M~ + t11 MemCa n l lli-v. ¥e1Hlll "~ 6 14 -1.... 1 tf 1 1~ JOI,\ l't 8Wf1Sfl U2 S H ltfli. · ·" •I I ... S 1.-. Mell'lllK & 2 l llo t;MM lle la I UI 1'9'. • ,.,. 1 • •-a.,,,.. • , 2914-.... °'"'"•, · .. i .,. ~ • .i. Merc1111 1.0 , 11• 10-.'+ ·* .... "''• .. 111 1>14. "' "':ra2·1j • ,,00 11~· ··ij ._,..., ... 1 .. , .. 1214+1 dUPont ?.40 71064 im· "H ..... , I.'° I '° 17\lo+ 14 MerCSI t.50. " ~ v. H ... I ,,.,. • ·~ llmt'/1111 .tO I 1t.G IN + ~ c1Ul'n1 otS.SO 6 II'>.. Mff§'IOll .20 ,, .... . 1111e .. r.' I I JIJ --.... .. .. pf 1' 4 U llo II+ 8tfttll IOft.• · · JI ,. • 1 .. d\IPllt pf4.S0 S 114 \lo ttewllft 1.12 I lt2 2914 . ..._ell tiO IJ "1 9' + 'II NH pU 1' 1 ~"--.,. 8nNI* 1,. n S » · • OuuP 2 Of • I-10'!! + 14 Hewl• I t• II fU °" + Iii "W•dllll l.llO 7 • "-" t ti& vNll,\ i .. '6 72 Ii. 1
811C'1'l:r ... I MJ•U -1" Oulta pt .:1s .. l 12\"t• IV) a••cel to I• 1!20 113"' t \lt Mttrl.r t.• I 1616 »h+ '-aG 1' 4A • ICU 1 y, ·~ .... S .., "-· .. · · 0\111• pf I 20 tjtJO ~ ·~ ,.,...., JO S 21 11116 + 14 Mt.. I It U ll47 20 •I"' ptt<tO J t"' =~~1=-1J:: = n .. :J" l•g:Z:•: ~ ?~ .... : ir.=.. ,:!!1~ ., "": ~ ::::. fi:H n ~: ~ 111•:tt :·i:: n :.!'I Pan A"i earninDS 811t~ t M f !!! 17\11 .••• · I., "ij 1t ~j 4 u-. • 1'4 ~l1tt11 UO : .. ~.I"' ~· • . 12 ,.,... .... :::.ao .. dO 21\tt -1ro • ~ "ltlll. "• ,,.,,, ~····• rt I J 12--~ ..... , .. , ,74 102 ,. ..... Iii MOMl'I .>Or IJ JM ~ '-G ,,, OS 1100 JI~+ 14
Ufrllfl 2..e 1m .... ,_ pfA t ·' 114 •• H=•~ldv 110t 2 17~· ~ ,.,,. no,.,.,.....,..., Gllfs•" tJO u • v. NEW YORK (AP ) Pan 11tlf111 .JI P ~ •.. pt I I ~Heflr ·la 4 U '4 +l~~IEJlfGIM .. 1tt0 ~···u !ptt:11 ·: J m•+ ·~ "''" .. • -.. u "" "" '·U ·· I• -1'" 1141.10 , t12t 7 + "' ~f'~ i " 11'-• ;,t2.•J ~ 1~ . American World Airways reported -,........ -Pf' 1. S ., 22\CI-1 .. ="" .40 •• UI 6'11 + '--"a I.JD IO lltl!+ \'I 1111* -~ f'l ltlll4ftlS, t ~-~II.I IJ 1' t.._+ 1" ~r t M ea • Iii 1' 1·'2 1 U ~· ··· ,..,,.1. ,,,.·; J 12"'~ V. \hat I\ earned $281,5 mllllOO dU ng
C••
10 ~"' 11
" > ' ~. ••· 1511 Mii ' * ~· " T .n.-·· 2 ~ .... Piirn 1.to • " ,, -"' the thlrd quarter, up from •"4.S I m lll6'ot!• ~ -...... -u 1.14 • • • 14 UI ,,.. ' m Oh "' """""" bl • ,,,. ,..... -
Le " l• 1
1
1 ir-.. ·· · F,0 ·'° • 9 ""• " 11111 1~ •. 11• ,..-.,. "" ,... 'j4 1 '' 111 ~, I •"~ 10 + ~ million durtna the 11me pe..1.-...a •--t ... fl 0 l~ "" ,.,,. '17 1 .. v.. ~ "~'-~n I • ,... • • • l"f"'*. • m ,.._._ ... 0 Ii 7 ~. -. :rMJU ... NA ,,,. .. 1 1..... • 19le" ... 1 , • .,.. • HDWC • .,. " 1"' •"'• ~ 1~ ,.. 1. " 1 ~. " 'llf •· 11.,.. . year ......... galn was due ..... ••~-• .. to lolA I.I.. »a --1" ~9 U 2 1 at l,,..• "'"°9fll'!ll AOU at 1.._+ '-I" .a • I I~ 14 SO jj t 1' + \., • "1" .,.."'~ ... ...,
.-c,. • 1.• 1, M ~· 'h •nAlr •l'I• ¥i .,. .... 1 ... • ao i. -" lft11Ch '·" s • '"'····· •, : ~ 1 tt .~ the $500 million ule of itl hotel NII J.to 0 ..,..+" Al.wtO .. JI'\ "'Hou1l'll .» t IS 711!+... #o J1t1111 ~· 'h "-b J JC ,_.. 1 • i!I: • 11'1 "''' ttl .. J 1sl4 He1111111 tM 1 m ~. lZ l11l'l 2. I 11 1n. • .,. _ _. _ · · · c I o.
J.. J I ~ f + '" '!c'[;R'f:I ~ 1! m:" ·.:ii.ii 1190:,~':' "'I '£ 1JJf 1:~ . l:fl. ·i • 1~ l.~: l'l"" ,·l!U 1,.r ,~: t: Pan Am'• airline dlvifloa reported < " 1 ~ ,,ur. i.o 1 .. ,, .. HeuNo ,,,. J • G'h +ll.: ,..c,...' • t~.1~ -~-a:ll ..• ~ n . a pre·t.u loss of $80,2 million in Ure .... ,., , j -.. 1te0 ,. I .... H..,c)"'' ,_. .. " -" "'" l• ' I .,. .... ~ ~ -~ .• --· ... b h dl s a •11~'1111 , 11ll !!";,• :::r, "ll • f i""~:S:: ·•tt ,11 t~·-11e11~ 1 .4 1~ i !: ~ Ui .. ~·" t ree moot •en n1 ept. 0, '·,1 ·,· u..... ··=.. re,. :ft l, ~ ~ ~ t , :s Ufh ... H u !2 ••• . . lo.! _.. I ,. "" . . . c-om pared with pre-lax •anll.nta ol
' IM + vffY AO t m ,.._ " ' .» 1 ft • .. T •49 _, ~· '-$13 milli-in tbe Sim e quart•• I••• ~·.. • • r.r:. '":-9 l lltflT. ... • ~·;"' 1 ~· ~ ~ , .. ""• ~ "'" .... -•n\i: :; 1, B:;: ~ :ri:r~ 'j =~.~ :•II ,. 3' •. ~ H lat :~ .... tlemlK .:' ' If' tf'.!. ~ year.
~ McDonald's
fires ad firm
Mc Dona ld's, whic h operates the bltaeat
rttataurant bual.nesa in the world. Is bavln.g anothrr
good year (I can't remember a bad one> -and IO
what did they do? They fired their advertising
agency.
Needham, Harper & Steers, the McDonald'•
aaency for the past 11 years, was handed IU
termination notice lwo weeks ago. Effect.Ive next
Jan. 12, the account, which is valued at rrs mUUon a
year, moves t.o the big Chicago agency, Leo Burnett .
McDonald's gave little reason for dismisstna the
agency that came up with some of the classic
literature of our time: "You deserve a break t.oda,y"
and "Nobody can do it like McDonald's can." The
implication was, however, that McDonald's had
outgrown Needham and now wanted to be serviced
by one of ad.land's super age ncies .
Nol that the Needham agency is small. It ranks
20th in the business. handling such major clients u
Xe rox , Parkay margarine, V·8 juice, Honda,
Wrigl ey's ~ Spearmint .
gum, Dial soap ~' ~
a nd Busc h ~·
beer. It's also ,,6; ~
l he c r e a live •----.;:ii~iim-------{0~c: b:h~n! 111111 llll•IR
"Eala es for
Wheaties" advertis ing. But McDonald's was its
biggest account -and so it hurts.
Burnett, the nation's fifth largest agency, is twice
as big as Needham -and while you may not know it.s
name, you are surely familiar with its handiwork for
the likes of Allstate Insurance ("You're in good
hands"), Kellogg cereals, Green Giant <Burnett
virtually invented this character), Kleenex, Nestle's
Taster 's Choi ce , Marlboro cigarettes. United Airlines
(the "friendly skies .. >. Cheer detergent, RCAI
Revlon 's Moon Drops and Dewar's While Labe
Scotch.
So next year, when you see McDonald's break out
in a new song-and·dance routine on your tube, you'll
know it's coming from the Burnett shop. Agencies
pull out aU the stops in their first campaign for a new
client
This is not unfamiliar territory for Burnett. It
used to do the adve rtising for Kentucky Fried
Chicken. And even now it's doing the advertising for
Pillsbury's Steak & Ale restaurants, an account it
will surely have to drop because of the conflict wtlh
McDonald's.
Indeed, Burnett's entire Pillsbury business may
be up for grabs. Burnett handles the advertising for
Pillsbury frostings and refrigerated dough products.
Green Giant is also part of Pillsbury. Those accounts
don't conflict with McDonald's but Pillsbury also
happens to operate the No. 2 fast·food chain, Burger
King.
Burnett has nothing to do with Burger King
advertising but many clients do not like their
agencies handling any part of the enemy. That's the
way the ad business works.
McDonald's is clearly the client you want to have
in the restaurant business. There are now 6,500 McDonald's restaurants in the world, and they ring
up a total of $6.5 billion a year or an average of Sl
million per unit. Burger King has 3,000 units which do
close to $2 billion a year. Kentucky Fried Chicken has
more than •.ooo outlets in the United States but tolaJ
sales are less than Burger Kings's .
McDonald's is a phenomenon. In the past decade
its sales have increased seven limes. It's now doing
more than Sl billion of sales outside the UniU!d
Stales . It's going great guns this ye ar with additions
to its hamburger-dominated menu : Chopped
Beefsteak sandwich, McChicken sandwich, Chicken
McNuggets. If those items are not i.n your area yet.
they will be soon .
Ene•"'*": only O•llV qUOlt fabrl(attO '454 ll. otHI Jt
SYMBOLS
===-=~..i::r.,,.-....
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'~ ..,~ •te~,. ""'0 tut .... PfO
METALS
Ce'"' ""·'' <•Ill• • po11nd. u S . o.1Una1-.
Uef~cents •...,.-.
ZllM: 4 1to-4'V. c...U a pound, ctellver.O
TM l1.M0t Metalt Weelt c°"'"'lte lb
A19M'-1-c_.,b a _.,..i, H Y
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SILVER
COLD QUOTATIONS
'--41eA: ,,_n1n9 flslrlQ M16M, oH to •
L ..... : --11•1,.....VA • ..., '1.40,
"•rh: tft.,.,_,, ff•l"O ..al.U, 11P ti.ti. ,.,_..,.,Mn .... oH 12 OS
1•r'k•: 191t 11•1"11 M,._00, lllld up ".Ill,
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1...-...: fonly dellV quotel M21 tel, ..
It "°· 1...-..i: '°"'' oa11y """'•' ...,.. n . ..., " .,
Home
Delivery.
All the comforts of
home while you save.
Call ·642-4321 _today. ....
-=-----·----..,.,-·~-------...-~---........... ~~...-..llllllll!l ............. !119 ....... J.l ..... 2.2 .. 2 .. 111112111111111111111
Daily Pilat
TU ESDAV I OCT. 27, 1981 HI F
CLASSI Fl ED C4
Dml" ..... ,......, .............
Stacy Vagenas sees and gwes viewpoints from another angle to University High players
Rain didn't hamper
the Steelers
in. Pittsburgh. C3.
Uni's Mr. Inspiration
V. agenas gives Trojans' defense. an. added insight
By EDZINTEL 6t ....... NteS'8ff
There's no special place on the sidelines
for Stacy Vagenas. That's because Stacy
Vagenas is not special -in his own view.
anyway.
Vagenas goes where he pleases, that is.
where his wheelchair takes him. He has a
unique vantage point, especially for a coach.
the guy we normally see at a football game,
pacing back and forth. to and fro, screaming
and yelling in every direction.
BUT IT'S FROM this position, the sitting
position, where Vagenas "teaches," as he
calls it for University Higb's varsity football
team.
His official title is defensive line coach.
but Vagenas would easily qualify as head
coach of inspiration as well.
But don't applaud Vagenas. Not to his
face. He does not seek sympathy or the credit
he so richly deserves. In fact, the 32·year-old
Vagenas attempts to downplay his brave
achi evements.
"There are times I feel like I'm not
giving the kids as much as I could, whether
it's because I'm in a wheelchair or not," he
says. "I guess I don 't feel that I'm special
and certainly the kids do nothing to prove
otherwise."
And certainly Vagenas does nothing to
show he's worthy of special treatment.
Vagenas has been confined to a
wheelchair for nearly half his life now. Yet
he still talks about his high school days
before the accident. when he was a
three-sport letterman and had a dream of
being the "greatest football player who ever
lived ."
"DEPRESSION COMES into everyday
life. no matter who you are," Vagenas says.
"Sometimes I go from one extreme to the
other. I think about my situation a lot. What
1f the accident hadn't happened? Maybe I
could have been the greatest who ever lived.
Or maybe I'd be stuck in an office, working
8·5. with the same visions of grandeur I have
now .''
It comes down to this : Vagenas has
remained himself, even with death sharing
the same room with him during that tragic
time in his life, 14 years ago.
It was in March of his senior year when
Vagenas, his girlfriend and another young
couple decided to go out for a weekend drive
and picnic.
It was a beautiful spring day in Bayonne,
New Jersey, the kind that makes you feel
glad you 're alive, young and healthy.
The four were in a small car, the type
you got handed down from dear old dad as
your very first and the one that would get you
around during all your dOllege days.
BUT THE CAR never made it past high
school and for a long while, it appeared that
Vagenas wouldn't either.
A large family car was the force that
pushed the car Vagenas was in across a
(See VAGENAS, Page CZ)
t's the bloodied patriot vs. baseball's huggers
tay tuned tonight for the next exciting chapter in this year's Fall Classic soap opera between NY. and LA
NEW YORK (AP> -Looking like a bloodied
but unbowed patriot right out of a Revolutionary
War portrait, owner George Steinbrenner leads the
ew York Yankees into tonight's sixth game of the
1981 World Series against the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
the Yankees had dropped three straight games in
California to slip perilously near the brink of
elimination.
Cey in their starting lineup. Cey suffered a slight
concussion when he was hit in the helmet by one of
Goose Gossage's 94·mile per hour fastballs in the
eighth inning Sunday. He was X-rayed and stayed
in Los Angeles overnight before fl ying to New
York Monday to join his teammates.
m ove within one victory of the worl<l
championship.
To nail it down , the Dodgers must break a
srx-game losing streak in Yankee Stadium. Los
Angeles has not won a game in New York since the
second game of the 1977 World Series. Hooton was
the winning pitcher in that one and the Dodgers
hope he can repeat that tonight. If he can, it will
complete a perfect turnaround from the 1978 series
when Los Angeles won the first two games al
home only to lose the next three in New York and
Game Six and the Series in Los Angele~·.
Wh en two men got into a healed debate with
Steinbrenner following Sunday's 2-1 loss. one thing
led to another and the Yankee owner emerged with
Will Team Turmoil r ally around its battered
and bandaged boss. who says be was injured
efending their honor in a hotel brawl? Or will the Dodgers, baseball's huggingest
eam. nail down their first world championship in
6 years'?
On TV tonight
channels 7. 11 at 5:20
Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda said he
would use Cey as long as the third baseman had no
dizziness or aftereffects of the beaning.
Stay tuned for the next exciting chapter in this
hrilling soap opera. It arrives tonight with
ommy John trying to keep the Yankees alive
gainst the Dodgers' Burt Hooton.
a cast on hi s hand. It's a good thing be wasn't
scheduled to be in the lineup tonight. He'd have
trouble holdi ng a bat.
But outfielder Jerry Mumpbrey, benched for
the fourth and fifth games after getting just two
hits in 10 at-bats earlier, will get that chance.
YanJ<ee Manager Bob Lemon was expected to
restore Mumphrey to the lineup and return him to
center fi eld
Hooton and John were the starters In Game
Two of the Series won by the Yankees 3·0. Hooton
has not worked since and will have five days of
rest for tonigh~'s assignment. John volunteered to
go to the Yankee bullpen Saturday and pitched two
innings in an 8-7 Dodger victory that deadlocked
the Series at 2·2.
"I tell everybody I don't think back to the last
Series we played in," he said. "But the same lhJng
happened in '78, We won the first two and the
Yankees won the next four. We'll have our work
cut out Tuesday.'' Steinbrenner promises that his team will
ebound in a topsy turvy World Series that has had
little bit of everything so far.
"We'll win it in New York," he stormed after The Dodgers hoped to have third baseman Ron
Los Angeles then used consecu tive
seventh·inning home runs by Pedro Guerrero and
Steve Yeager to beat Ron Guidry Sunday an~
While the Dodgers battled t heir Yankee
Stadium hex, the Yankees had World Series
history working against them.
arathon
• winne r
• 1n protest
\ NEW YORK (AP> -Alberto
alazar. world record holder in
h e m arat h o n , in an
uncharacteristic display, has
vented his anger on The Athletic
Congress, the governing body
for track and fi eld in the United
States.
'-'I would rather get prize
money directly ·under.the-table
than accepting it over-the·table
and having to put it in a trust
fund with TAC." Salazar said
Monday, one day after setting
the world mark with a time of 2
hours, 8 minutes, 13 seconds in
the New York City Marathon.
B y taking it under ·
e -table -a l o ng -
standing practice that has been
publicly ignored by TAC and the
International Amateur Athletic
Federation, the world governing
body for the sport -athletes do
not have to put the money in
escrow or a trust fund , as some
those openly accepting prize
ney have done.
prime example was New
alander Allison Roe, women's
er of Sunday's New York
ty Marathon in 2:25 :29, a
rid mark for women. She bad
ceived $4,000 for finishing
ond in the Cascade Run·Off
Portland, Ore. June 28. The
'5-kilomet er road race was
lnder t he auspices of the
sociation for Road Racing
I bletes, a rebel professional
oup.
oe was suspended, meaning
was ineligible to participate
1 ~international competition or
I• e Olympic Games. But she
l n agreed to put the $4,000 lnto
• trust fund supervised by the
,_Hew Zealand Federation, and
her amateur eligibility was
restored.
~, M e a n w h 11 e , l w o o l her
llong·djatance runneu, Herb
4iiddaay ot the United States and
Rod Dixon, 1 native New
Ull11l1nder now Uvtn1 in the U.S.,
Jlaave llfeed to put their prise
'\(tee MARATHON: Pa1e C!> ,
...........
Conigliaro haunted
by Cey's beaning
BOSTON <AP> -When Ron
Cey of the Los Angeles Dodgers
was hit on the head with a pitch
from New York Yankee reliever
Goose Gossage in the fifth game
of the World Series. it brought
back painful memories for Tony
Conigliaro, who was sitting 15
rows behind home plate.
·When Cey got hit,
I closed my eyes.'
"When Cey got hit, I closed
my eyes," said Conigliaro, a
Boston Red Sox slugger whose
career was virtually ended by
an errant pitch 14 years ago.
"Then I could see he was
moving and was not in too much
pain. He was just stunned and I
whispered, "Thank God.'
"lt brought back memories,"
Coni gliar o told the Boston
Hera ld American. "I was very
happy to see him get up and
walk off. 1 was remembering
how I couldn't."
a pitch on the left side of the
fa ce.
"I r emaine d consciou s
throughout, but I wish I hadn't "
said Conigliaro, who now works
for a management company that
handles professional athletes in
the Los Angeles area. "I was
bleeding from the mouth, the
left eye and I was blind."
Conigliaro, 36. was wearing a
helmet similar to one Cey was
wearing Sunday -one without
the ear Oap -when he got bit.
If I'd had the flap that night,
I'd be making a million dollars a
year right now," he s aid.
"The flaps became popular
after I got hurt," he said. "At
the time, the only guy who wore
one was Earl Battey <Minnesota
catcher >. Once I got hit, the
other guys started wearing
them."
"In this case, Cey was all
right with that helmet," said
Conigliaro. "But what if the ball
was an inch lower ? The helmets
with the naps are much safer.
They fit snug and don't fly off
END OF THE LINE -Pittsburgh's Frank
Pollard is stopped after a short gain by J .C.
Wilson. a Hous ton cornerback. The Steelers
won the game, 26-13. See story, Pa~e CJ.
Although he tried several
co m e backs, Conlgliaro 's
baseball career ended in August
1967 at Fenway Park when
Angels pitcher Jack Hamilton
hit the right-handed slugger with
'•Pro athletes should take a
look at what happened Sunday
. . . that their li ves can be
wiped out in just one second."
Yankee boss now knows h~w Billy Martin must have felt
By WILL GRIMSLEY
AJ t.-ci.tt..1 J 1
Leave it to George -he had no
intention of allowing his New York
Yankees to leave Los Angeles with their
tails between their le11. He took
matters Into his own bands.
By hi.s own account, he punched out
an unorr1clal decision over two becklen
when they began saying bad tbinas
about the Yankees in an elevator in the
Los Anaeles headquarters hotel Sunday
nllbl.
tt was the only victory ln the
Yankees' "lost weekend" in the City of
the Angels.
Cell him George M. Steinbrenner IJJ,
''M " for "Manassa Mauler,"
undisputed lighl·heavyweighl champion
of frustrated club owners.
Hold the line, Geor1e, promoter Don
King calling.
Som'ewhere today. roaming lbe
streets ot L .A .• is a guy with a few front
teeth missing and a friend who might be
suffering bruises.
That ia, lf Geor1e is glvinl il to ua
straight. And we have to take bis word
for it . There were no other
eyewitnesses. The culprits, accordln1 to
Geor1e, look off like trishtened rodenta.
The hotel manager could 1dd no
detail•. The L.A. police said nothlns
was reported to them. An an1ry
Steinbrenner. It aeem1, likes no
prlaonen.
The controversial Yankee boss. a
stickler for rigid ethics codes, showed
more relish than embarrassment when
he c alled a late-evening press
conference in Los An1eles to show a left
hand in a cast, poe .. bly fractured, a
bruised right hand, a cut lip and a bump
on the head from a whack with 1 beer
bottle.
Meanwhile, the b11eball world buzzed
with mild amuaement over the Irony of
the Incident.
It was two yean a10 alm<>1t to the
day that the then Yankee Mana1er Bllly
Martin, similarly taunted btyond hi•
endurance, belted a marsbm1llow
saleKm1n ln a Bloomln1ton, Mlnn.,
hotel lobby.
Although Billy insisted that be was
provoked into the act, Georae
proceeded to fire him, saying, "I can't
put up with this kind of stuff any more.''
The Yankee boss insisted lb.al h1.s
players must avoid t he very
appearance of evil. He virtually invoked
the Biblical "turn the cheek" policy.
Bllly the Kid, wherever he la fiahlne,
m uat surely have an ioterestta1
re action.
Reigle Jackson, bearin• the ntft,
said, "Now Georc• k.nowt bow I feel."
Reigle was puncbed by teammate
Greis Nettles cturtaa • U"l\lment at
the victory party la -Oakland aft.er lbe
(S.. y AN&••· .... Cl)
Stanford's Elway expected to play
SlunCord QUlrlerback Jo~• [i]
Elway should be ready to play •D•
agatn11l W s hln•ton, dHplte a
concus11ion and Jammed nn1er lhat knocked
him out of last week'• aame aaalnet Ari1ona
Stale, Couch Paul WIUI• uya . . USC's
George Achlca, who hud 18 tackles in the 14·7
victory over Notre Damts, was named Pacific 10
de femuvc player of the week and Mlke Pallel of
Arizona State picked up offtlnsive ho nors
Winfie ld playing
unde r death threat
Ftrst year Oeorf(c town College football
co.ich John BehJID1 was fired after his team lost
all seven of Its aames under his guidance
. Fewt:r lhao 7 ,000 public pre-sale tickets
remuin for the Uth annual Fles tia Bowl, Jan. 1
ticket manager Stella Grttn says
•"'rom AP dl8palcht't1
NEW YORK Ouvc Wlnritild, the New Charges filed against Kinsella
York Yunkees· $24 m1llton outfielder who has
been a <11sapporntment 1n the World Series
against the Los Angeles Dodgers, ha:s been
receivirlg death threats for the past two weeks,
his agent. said toduy
S w1mm1n g c h 11m pion John •
KlnsPlla, a medalist 1n the 1968 and
1972 Olympics, was charged in a
"I don't think this is responsible for Dave's
s lump," said Al fo'rohman, a New York
a ttorney, who ironed out the richest contract in
baseball history "We have tried to keep these
threats from him as much as possible.
traminal information Monday with falling to file
ft>deral income tax returns for three years
Thirty three prospective jurors were
chosen fol' the trial of five men charged in a
po1nt·shaving cons piracy involving Boston
College basketball games during the 1978·79
season . The Philadelphia Phillies are
leaning "Very, Very strongly," toward Pat
Corrales as their next manager, according to an
interview with Executive Vl~e President Bill
Giles
"Some of them have come in letter form
and there have been weird calls at all times of
the <f ay and night, some of which. of course, we
could not intercept and keep from Dave.
"l don't think he has been overly upset
a bout this, think mg 1t is the work of kooks ."
T he calls began JUSt before the World Series
and have been intermittent s ince, according to
Frohman
Televis ion, radio
Quote of the day
Following are the top sports events on TV
ton lght. Ratings are: " / 1 " excellent; ' ' ' worth watching; 11 fair, / forget It.
Oodgt•t :\lan..ig1•1· Tom m y Lasorda on the
t•h .1nging fan• of .bCJscball "Today. the
tr:.111wr"" rnon1 loob likt' the Mavo Clinic We
had a tra1111•r om· time the ;mly thing he
had 111 lus N1u1 pm<.>nl bag \\as a bottle of
rubbing alcohol and he'd drink half of that by
b~' the fifth inning ..
e 5 p .m.,Channets 7, 11 ./ ./ ./ ./
WORLD SERIES: Dodgers at New York. Announcers: Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell
and Jim Palmer.
A well-rested Burt Hooton takes the mound for
the Dodgers as they try to clinch the 1981 World Series championsh ip tonight against former
Dodger southpaw Tommy John. John and the
Yankees defeated Hooton and the Dodgers in the
second game last week and Hooton hasn't pitched since that time. John hurled two innings In rellef in Los Angeles Saturday but figures to be ready
tonight. Ron Cey, who was hit by a Goose Gossage
fastball Sunday, was re leased from the hospital
and is in New York ready to play third for the
Dodgers tonight.
Kings call up defenseman Gibson
INGLEWOOD T h e Los ~
Angeles King~ called up defenseman '
John Gibson from the New Haven
Nighthawks to take the place of injured player
Rob Palme r. the team a nnounced Monday.
Palmer s uffered a hyper-extension of hjs
elbow in Sunday's loss to Winnipeg. RADIO In seven games so far for New Haven.
G1b5on. 6 3, 215 pounds, has scored one goal and
totaled 24 penally minutes. In his four games
with the Kings last year . Gibson totaled 21
penalty minutes.
Baseball World Series, Dodgers at New
York, 5 p.m., KNX (1070) and KABC (790) with
Vin Scully and Sparky Anderson, both stations. Hockey -Quebec at Kings, 7:20 p.m., KPRZ
( 1150).
Pistol Pete • IS dead From Page C1
YANKEE
Res-piratory ailment claims Dodger
PALM SPRI NGS !AP >
Fo rmer Brook I} n Uodgcrs
outf1ehJcr Pistol Pete Reiser.
who won the Nt1t1onul League
balling l)tlt• 1n 1941. h..is died at
age G2 aftt•r a lung respiratory
illness, a farntl} spokesm an said
Monday.
Reiser died Sunday night in
hi~ home near Palm Springs
sc' eral hours after the Los
Angeles Dodgers beat the New
York Yankee~ in the r.fth game
of the 1981 World Series. said
family spohsman Keith Tuber
Reiser's \\tfc. Pat. said Reiser
was aware of the Dodgers'
victory but had not been well
e noug h to follow the Series
games closet~
·He was laboring so for
hrc•ath that he missed an awful
lot of it ! lhe series I.'· she said.
· It was probabl.) lhe best thing
bccausl' lo have Pete walking
around with oxygen all the time
would havt• been dC'vastatmg.
All things happen for the best "
Tube r ~aid Reise r "had
wanted most of all to see his
grandson baptized " Peter Brian
Tuber, 3 months. was baptized
Sunday
Born March 17, 1919. in St.
Louis, Reiser led the National
League in batting and sluggmg
in 1941, his first full season with
the Dodgers. batting 343 with 39
doubles, 17 ln ples a nd 14 home
runs and scoring 117 runs. He
also led the league in stolen
bases in 1942 and 1946 and stole
home seven times in 1946. a
major league record
He played in two W1Jrl<l Series.
1941 and 1947. losing both Limes
to the Yankees Reiser reltred in
1952 and was a coach with the
Dodgers from 1960-64 and later
with t he C hicago Cubs. Hi s
lifetime batting average was
.295 10 861 gam es wit h Brooklyn.
Pittsburgh and Cleveland.
R e iser was cons ider e d a
pote ntial s uperstar when he
came lo the majors but ruined
his c:;.reer when he ran into
outfield walls several limes.
suffering serious head injuries
Survivors include his wife.
Pat. daughters Sally Reiser and
S hirley T uber and grandson
Peter Tuber.
The funeral will be held
Wed n esday at St. T e resa's
Catholi c Church. Palm Springs.
College football
SalurO.y'\ coll-fOOlbell Kf>eOult
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• •
Yankees had clinched lhe Am.
erican League pennant
Skir m is h es betwee n
ballplayers and between players
and antagonizing Cans are fairly
common. although it's rare for
an owner to get thus involved.
particularly a s ti c kler like
Steinbrenner who always has
been so protective of "the
Yankee image.·•
Steinbr enner. des cribing
Sunday's incident. said he was
coming down an elevator of lhe
Jl yatt Wils hire hotel around
dinnertime when the Lift stopped
al another floor. A man entered
while a companion held the door
open. Recognizing Steinbrenner ,
the first man, according to tbe
Yankee boss. began m aking
rem a rks about New York
"a n imals" a nd Yank ee
"chokers.'·
Steinbrenner said that's when
he reacted.
He later explained: "It's okay
for me t o c riticize my
ballplayers. because I pay lhe
checks, and we're in this
together. But when other people
ca ll them chokers. I've had
enough."
The first man , George said,
s truck him with a beer bottle .
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1
From Page ci I
VAGENAS COACHES IN WHEELCHAIR. J
four lune hll(hWa)' and Into a
parked car
Upon Impact, the back door on
tho passcnaer ai d e of t he
Va.cenu car whipped open and
Vage mu1 was nuna out. The cur
then did a tumble and when It
landed. Vaaenas was c rushed.
Dumaae done : eight broken ribs
and • broken splnal cord to
Vagenas, no injurles to any of
the others involved In the
accident, save u sore back to
Vagenas' girl friend.
For two montha, Vagenas
remained under hospital care.
No one knew fOJ' sure, not his
pa rents or even h i msetr,
whether he would ever retum to
a normaJ lire.
F inally, Vagenas was released
from the hospital and sent to a
reha bilitation center where he
would spend seven months,
learning how to make the best
of what was lert
"THE DOCTOR told me that
because I was in suc h good
shape -I was about 6·2 and 205
it saved my lite." Vagenas
said. "Anyone else, he said. less
healthy may ha ve had trouble
s urviving.·•
Vagenas s ays that upon his
recovery, he went lo various
junior colleges. working towards
a d eg r ee in e l ect rica l
e nginee ring. But he wasn't
really s ure where he was at all
or where his future was.
Where it was was in California
and with the unselfish help and
patience of his parents. Vagenas
be gan the road back. In 1970, he
and his fami l y c am e to
California where he continued
h is education at UC Irvin e.
eventualJy earnfog a bachelor of
arts d egree and a t eaching
credential.
Upon graduation. Vagenas
opened a family billiards shop.
Thal was fine, but it didn 't
provide the kind of stimulation
and excitement Vagenas was
once a part of as a year-round
athlete
VAGENAS MET up with an
old friend who once played ror
the semi-professional Orange
County Rhinos. His son was
playing on a Pop Warner team
and he s uggested to Vagenas
t hat he consider coaching a
similar team . Vagenas loved the
idea.
"At rirst , I was shy and I
From Page C1
MARATHON
m oney from ARRA races into
escrow accounts.
A TAC spokesman said the
accounts were ''between the
athletes and us. If the IAAF
decides at its meeting in Rome
Dec. 12·13 that lhe money can be
used for training purposes, then
the money will be put into a
trust rund."
Sa l azar , labeling TAC
"hypocrites and thieves." said
he wants no part of trus t funds.
··Why s hould TAC h ave
control of m y money?" said the
us ually soft-spoken Salaiar.
''They want to be like our
agents. Why does TAC insist on
this?
"I think TAC is scared lo lose
its power. They want to have
control over the athletes. They
have no right to. They're Just a
bun c h o f h ypocr i t es a nd
thieves."
wu1Sn't sure how the kids would
nccept me." Vul(enas
rem 4'mbered "But, ns I was to
find out. It W31S the adults who
reacted to my dlub11ity much
more than the children. Kldii
don't know whut adv('r11it,Y Is yet
so thty don't puy atte8 ion to
it."
V1genas dasc<>vered that alnce
he was on eye level with most of
the Pop Warner players, he had
oo tr~bJe communicating with
them. "I've never round any
hesitation bet ween m yself and
other people who know me. It's
those who don't know me und
don't take the time to who don't
understand my situation.·'
A few years later. Jim Boyett.
the head coach at Sunny Hills
High , offe r ed Vagenas the
opportunity to do some scouting
for hlm. That worked out well
too and Boyett followed by
r ecom mending Vagen as to'
Servile High where coa<'h Ken
Visser was in searc h of a
linebacker coach. Vagenas got
the job and for six years he was
a n integral par t of Serv1te's
proud and s uccessful program.
H E STILL IS. He's currentJy
t h e chairma n of the m ath
department and an associate
athletic director at Ser vile. He's
also the freshman basketball
coach and has been for four
yea r s, leading the Friars to
three league championships .
When Rick Curtis was nam ed
h~ad coach at University last
year to replace Ted MuJlen, he
c alle d o n hi s o ld Servile
colleague, Vagenas. to help him
r ebuild the school's defensive
program. lt was no s mall favor
that Curlis was asking. The
Trojans had not won more than
three games in any one season
in fi ve previous years and the
defense was always weak.
But Vagenas accepted the
c hallenge. "F'r a nkly, I was
honored." he said. "I knew Rick
had confidence 10 m e and he
needed a few special people to
turn the program around."
And that's exac tly w hat
RICK PONDER
Edison High
th y've done. Unlver•!t..y ta 4-3
and 2·2 In le:tgue play. What's
more. alter lhe halfway poinl In
the season, they still have a
t·huncc at u playofls berth,
unhcurd of u11 until now.
.. No douhl about it, we're
(•sta blishing a trudltion here,"
Vagcna~ said. "1'ht! way we
approached lhe whole thlnl was
lhat we didn't expect to 1et any•
support, lhe way It aJway1 had·
beeo. We told lbe kid.I thal we
couldn't change people and they
believed that. But some of lhe
peo ple here are now believers
a nd there's good s upport.
T he y 'r e n o t all totall y
convinced. bul we're on ou r
W:Jy "
Ou t w1nn1ng isn 't wh y
Vagenus is there. Nor is he there
to set an example of what can be
accomplis h ed . althou g h by
nature. he does just that.
"The main ObJecti ve for me 1s
to show the kids how to deal with
oil the good and bad situations in
life. 1 don 't want to be in a
situation where the s port comes
first and the kids are a vehicle
for me to get to wher e I want to
go, even if I really do want to be
a head coach somewhere."
AS FOR HIS place on the field,
Vagenas is as secure as any
able-bodied person. even if his
feet are not. He r emembers
once. a few years ago, when an
offi cial tripped over h is feet
while Jogging backwards along
the sidelines, eyeing a punt.
"The guy lost his cool and
everyone got a little upset at
him for doing that. but he later
ca m e over and apologized," ....
Vagenas said. Bul the time
spent on the sidelines have been
run a nd certainl y rewarding for
V;.1gena~
·After tht! accident. 1 had a
tough time' the first year but the
m entaJ adjustments have come
in tinw. · Vagenas said. And in
time. he's come up with the
fo llo\\1ng phi losophy on life:
· 'Tht• main thing is that life is
grt>at If you're out in it, then
) ou should get the most out of it
hy putting all you've got into it "
Edison HJgh 's rampagmg Chargers. winners of 29
straight games over a three-year period. recorded their
second shutout of the 1981 campaign Fnday night and one
or the 1>rime reasons was the superior play of defensive tackle Rick Ponde r .
Ponder, a 5, 11 , 205-pounde r . was c redited
with nine tackles a nd three quarterback s acks as
the Chargers raced to a 43·0 victory over Ocean View and
for it, he is the Daily Pilot ·s Player of the Week for Orange
Coast area prep stars .
Ponder is but one of three returning
starters on Edison 's defense (along with
linebacker Rick DiBernardo and end
Bryce Malavasi ) and in seven games
h as no~ recorded 40 tackles, five
quarte rback sacks. a rumble recovery
and four caused incomplete passes.
"He's very quick,'' says Coach Bill
Workman. "He started out as a wide
receiver and a som etimes fullback, but
he was switched lo defensive tackle in
his sophomore year.·' Ponder
Those nine tackles a nd three sacks. incidentally, were
accomplished in three quarter s of action; an Edison
trademark for its stars because of t he runaway scores in
most instances.
Stationed on the right side. Ponder's play all year ha
been symbolic of Edison 's very successful defense against
the run.
************* NFL standings ! JOHNSON & SON :
• Presents ... NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Western Division
W L T PF PA Pct.
San Francisco6 2 O 191 140 .750
Atlanta 4 4 0 222 162 .500
Rams 4 4 O 194 1~ .500
New Orleans 2 6 0 98 163 .250
Eastern Division
Philadelphia 7 1 0 183 112 .875
Dallas 6 2 0 197 167 .750
NY Giants 5 3 0 164 121 .625
St. Louis 3 5 O 158 209 .375
Was hington 2 6 0 135 191 .250
Central Division
Minnesota 5 3 O 188 199 .625
Tampa Bay 4 4 0 143 128 .500
Detroit 4 4 0 197 170 .500
Green Bay 2 6 O 136 184 .250
Ch icago 2 6 O 126 198 .250
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Western Division
Kansas City
San Diego
Denver
Oakland
Seattle
W LT PF PA
6 2 0 207 163
5 3 0 253 187
5 3 0 154 112
350 98133
2 6 0 104 171
Eastern Division
Miami 5 2 1 186 152
BufraJo 5 3 O 181 128
NY Jets 3 4 1 165 202
Ne w England 2 6 O 190 183
Baltimore 1 7 0 148 271
Central Division
Clnc lnnatl 5 3 O 194 155
Pittsburgh S 3 0 174 1S8
Cleveland 4 4 o 150 172
Houston 4 4 o 138 163
• fl • Pct. 41
.750 •
.625 •
.625 •
.375 «
.250 • • .688 •
.625 •
·433 : Peteftw'"Cinttl" .250
.125 •
.625
.625
.500
.500
• tr • tr • • • • «
tr • • iC • • • • « •
NFl's
Pickl of
Tit.Wm
SUNDAY
LAR-
o•er
DttNff • Ph Ha ....
o•er
Dallas
OYff ,.......,..
;···~··••*****************•••••• ... •'fMI••
.. Watch for ~
• MONDAY M .... sot.
: Pete's Pick at .. : Johnson & Son
41 Lincoln-Mercury
: 2626 HAllOa a.VD.
on 82's & 81 's
C•Rl's • LYNX's • LN-7's
41 COSTA MIS.A Offe r uptrea 48 htt after -tr publlc1tlon. All vthlcl• IUb~
OYW o ......
« 5 4 0-56JQ. IO prior aal•. all plu1 tax. lie
~ .....••.......•.••...................••.• ...,. ...
•. • • .. • • • I. •• •' • •l •I •• •• •i • ,..
• •• .1 ,.: •• .: .1
.............__.sr•s•r•r•; ..... •s•s•s•2 ........................... _ ...... __ ....... .._ __ . ________ ~-------
-
NF\.
Slffl•r• 29, Oller• 13
lcef'e " o.-ter'I HoullOft
""UCtuf111\
O I e
10 J 0
"ltt -... Tl·-It Pitt -Sl\'llltl .. j><tU from are-.W
ITl"Oll1 klckl
HOii -l"G l"rltsdl M 11'111 -,.G TrO<lt It
Ho11 -CHper U peu ff"Om Stel>ler
(l"rlll<ll klclll
HOU -l"G l"rlttot U
Piii -SC.11-111 • P<tU lrom Br_,_..,
lklckfelledl
Pitt --.ts 1 rWI CTrOll1 lll0 )
A -U,m
1--IMMlttic•
llUSHIHG -Houtlon, Cempeetl i:.s.,
Ste l>ler t-O; Colemen ).20. PlllJburQfl:
Herri., 11-t.I, Pollerd I~. Smllll M l;
8red1,,..,4-4.
PASSING -HOustof\; Stebler 2>-1~1·2311;
P•r•l•Y 1·1+.JI, Pllhbllrell. er_.,.._
a.14·\.tOL
llECEIVING -H~l!Clf'I. llenfro •7';
C.mp«>ell ,_,.,,,,... 1; ~ ).93; eo1-
M ; 8\IN'OUlhS 2-11; Wiiton 1-11; Armst ......
2·1' PlttJl>Urvft• Herrb 1 .. ; Smltll ~IOO;
Po11er.i >-21: sce1-... •14.
COLLEGE
Top20
Tiie T"" ~y IHtns lfl Tiie A_le..., ....... , ...... fooltliell poll, wllfl lirtl·pl-
-· '" ~-. --·· rec:onl -totel polnb.
I. "-SI. 145) J. ll'lltsbur9f\ 1101
l.Clem1on
.....
>44 , ....
4. USC
S.Ge0f'9lo
._ Teu1
1. MIUIMlppl SI. e, Alebomo
t. N ortfl Gwollne
10. Arlr-s.. 11. low• SC.
U . NebtolU
IJ. So. Metllodlst
14. Woll\lf\910fl SC.
1S.Mlclll-"· '-• 17 l"lorlCIO SI.
11. Wot/llllQIOfl
tt. Olll• ........
20.Arll-s
... , ..
... 1 ..
~I .. ...1 .. ... ,.1
... 1 ..
...1.0
S-H
~J.O
... 1 ..
~' H.O
~, ..
~2.0 ... , .. ,.,.,
~2.0
COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOG
• Golden Weat (2-4)
1 Boltersfletd JI
• SontoAN 37 31 LA Velley 1
II SonleMonlU 21
17 Mt. 5on Antonio u
12 Son Oie90 Mesa 11
Oct. JI Groumonc let OCCJ Nov. I-CAtrrllOI
Nov. 21-l"Ullerton C•IOCCI
Now. i.-or.._Coo•t
Orenae Coast 12-4)
1 Pe-l
14 Seddlea.ck 2A , ... .-.. 21
20 EI CMlllno ll
20 Ce.-rllOI It
1 l"Ullet1on )6
HOY. 7--.t Ml. $ef\ Antonio
Nov. 14-Son Ole9o Mesa Now.Jl_G,_
Nov.~W..t
Seddlebeck 16-0)
J7 V-ur• It 24 Or-C-1 14
21 LA~I J
41 iknt.._ Vellev o 41 ... _ IJ
4' Son Ole90 CC 1 Oct. 31-~ .... Nov.7~AJWI Now. 21 -.c Cllrus
NO'll. i.--llJ-~
Community college schedule
CAii..,_ et7:••·"'" ----I SA~U•OAY ~tee·•~· Gron,,_t M Golden West et Or•nee
Coe st
Son oi.ooMeuetCerrilM
Mt. Sofl M\Onlo et FUiierton
"" .... ~e SOdclltobe<k el Soutll-ern
Citrus •t Son oi.vo CC 11 JOI
lllverllde CC M P•lom•r Cl:lOI ~c.i~.
West L• Aneeles et LA Soul-. Ill Compton el LAH...-
E est LOI A ...... et LOI A .... les CC ~-~e 8•1lersllee<l •1 Long 8Hcll CC
Sent• Monk • et Pl«u
P•M-•I El Camino
.....,.,._c~e
Hencoo et S..te llert>ore
Glenclele ot Ten
Moorpetil •IV ....... •
o..rtc.ter...• SOn 8wnerdino Velley et Anlel-Velley ll;lO)
lmperlelVell..,MMir~te(l:lO)
Mt SonJeclntoet 0.Wr1
This week's Khedute , •• ,_..11:•1
TMU•SOAY ._. L.oeelle
WutmlM1w WL Edi-•t occ IHVlew~ lrvlrw vs Corona 0.1 Mer et N _ _,
Herbor
~ ...... ... -v ................... ,,.. .. .,_
T11t1ifl.,., v.=t~M9eMe .............
i..o.eVL P'tit""-....... Ck ...
R•t-VL U.Ai.m•MW .... 1'11
••tOAY ...........
••1111tolfl Ve ll•Y .. , OcH n Vit• et WHlmlfWt MariNlet~e-11 .... -.-......
l!I T-VL Cllt.e Met.a et IMWjllOl't H .... r
N-'°'1 ...,._. .,., RllUnclo et 0.-
Ceett COi ....
SeMl*'k,,... Ulll-.!ty ot Irvine ............... 51 ,...,1,,... ......... et ANMlm $1Nlllm
... c..t '-11119
Loe--..ell et ~tr-Velley
Mtui..o Vlefe et Safi c...-e
Oe ... Hlllt ot L...-Hlllt
Or .... L.Htllle Vatencle,,.. 4'Wllletm et L.e ll'elmt Pfflt
.............. L....-
Sofltl-""-L.e Ouln\e et aotM Gr-thncllO Ale mllo. wa. Loi Aml9os ti
Gerelen 0.--
C-W.,~ 0r01191 vt. C..yen et l[I Modtlle l!I Mo9NI ,,.. Sonia AIM Velle'Y et Serlto
AMllowl
Sonte...,.. VL l"ootllill et Tutllfl ....... ~
Cyprou vt. ICenMCly •t W"le"'
ICotelle VI. fl OoraclD et VeHN:lt ...........
W_... ot Qmario Cllrllllefl
811ftop Mell.,_ y et St. Frtnclt
IATU•OAY
~-..wu..,.
Gerden GtOW tt llollO Gr-
Or-.. L.--llre.OUnde et Weslem
NHL
CAMl"alLL COMPl••lfC•
....,..~
W L T-01' OA ....
f"-1°" 1 , 0 u ..... • I 0 U
Vencouver 2 j > •
C.l .. ry , s 2 n c.tortdo t . , " ...... ttDlwt.._
Ml-I 2 1 l7 WIMIPtl • 2 J l1
Clllc090 2 J • ,.,
Oetrolt J • 2 ,.
Torento 2 4 2 n
SI. Louis 2 s 2 • WA4.HCOMl'•••MCE
Patrkt!Dlwt.._ ............... 1 0 t • NYlll ...... 1 • I I Jj
PHblMll'llfl • I 2 ,.
NY ........ 1 J • 0 u
WellllnetOfl I • 0 2' AM_ot....._ -.. .... s 0 J • Botton I 2 , J7
Ouellec • 4 0 • . .,,. ... 4 , , 2' Hertford I 4 > 21
Weter polo .. ,.~
C:-M9Ut, Mia• Yleje J
,. " " • l7 ' ,. • 44 4
H II
JO 10 • • l7 • as • 41 • ,. IS
2A ,,
" 10
" • " ,
It ,,
» 12 • n
l1 II
M I
MIUlon Viejo 1 I 1 ._S
eo.te M9u I 4 1 t-t
Coate Mftct Korifl91 ........ 2, C:.tlllo 4,
H ..... I, Ure I, ll'flft I.
Croaa countiy
HIGN ICMOOt.
Ill T-•. llf-.Cla •t I M<Ccwtfly I Est.I, 16: It; 1. ,,l rleft (ET),
1t·1e; ). Lo9M IETI, tt:JO; 4. W.,... IET),
16.lS; S. 0.WfllhOm IETI, tt:•; t . ~IM
IETI. 16:4.S; 7. W..tofl CETI, 1•:52; I. 81eH
IE1I.), 11:2'; t. lloef'e CE1t.I, 11 U ; IO.
Fedkll IETI. ll:St.
Women
•1T-te.•~4' 1. llucb IETJ, Z :tt; 2. 111909,, IETI.
20. It; 1. s.... ... IEst.1, 20:D; 4. --CETI. 21:J2; I. ikdol~ (ET), 21:4.S; t..
llomero IETI, 21:.U; 7. ~ IETI, 22:111.
•. A-IETI. JJ: 14, •. 0.llndo cm .
22:50; 10. Hererow IEll.1. 2A: 10.
Grand Prht lournam•nt
·-~ ..... ..,_,, "'"' .... ....... Andrew Pettlaon det. Ho nt•J oert
Scllweler, M , W ; Jlr1 H--· Hortrnul l(lrcllfl-. 1 ...... 2; ll'wler Elter ci.t. Ull
Pl-r.~2,7.._
Hollwwood ft•rll ..... Y'1••1U'-ft , .... .,,........,__...,
Pl.IT lllACL One mlle "9<•· "•Ilk ~ IL.Kiley) UI , .. t • •1 Y.,....111eett11 •.40 no J-•11¥t1Wn ,........ 1.40
AIM rend: J 0 f.....,t, ~ Iii..,., it.ny e.,.. aye, OloMef'lt Maid, Tff •eek.
Time. J.01.0 t.a 1-.c:TA IHI Ni4I 111 tO
llCOMO •ac•. ON mllt .-<•
YN Sier C•Ofkltrl • 60 J 40 t 10
Ellk l'a,. IV .. landl"'INml 1..0 UO Our Jeff llCIMfwl J..IO
Al••-": •lo Vt4~. Mlnl1t.., Hell-.
M-t Sttr, ,,.,.. Wor11>y
Tlmet1;•4J'
YMlaO ttAC•. Ont mllt poet,
LHllt arett ltllllef I •ltcllltl l.20 t to UO
WIMleONTl-11(-er) • 40 UO
AllCIVt 9-IT••lffl 1 /JO
AltO tte>M· ~111t....-er. e.11 .. •rlmr-•
Jerry Dett "'-Ian, Andy't YIMoltlY. S-
Sue, My Trwfleert Time: J·ILO
U •XM:TA IW I i»kl ~1.00.
POU1114 aaca. One mlle tf"OL
TMllllO IWlll\«dl ) • J.to 2 ••
Hel ........ n IL.a Clelr) e.20 •AO
Snoopy .... y CCllffl UD
ikllo rect d Priority, Me"l •ll, Comm•llClle Mltlt, Asll Arnie.
Time: t:kO
"'"™•AC•. OM mlle pece.
51\y 8uclltftol 10.-> 10.20 I.GO 110
ll"'°"'l llltftlllllll 1• to lo.AO Tllllncltnlatm (Aubin) •.to
Alto rectcl. ~ Out, T0tt Lint, J eu F .. llvo l, Yeklrllll, My Olrtct Knlellt, Hlglltend Olomp Time. 2:01 4/1
U IJlACTA l .. l) pelCI PU.00
SIXTM ltM:•. One mile II«•· Super Sue ISNf,...I t .00
SUmmer Sfwde CT .. •ler> •
Ceuntry Ultlell lllMcllfordl
uo uo
S.40 UO uo , .... Alto rKtd. 8ucUue, Pinell Hit,
auwt. LoCll-N ROMS.
Time· 1:004/I.
l•YINTI4 IACI. One mile 11«e.
arii11ent JeOle ICrOQNtnl UO 1 20 2.10 , """Ii Mlllloft 04-rdle> J.. 2.•
lloecll tor .,.. Slly I lletcl!ford) UO
Also reced · Nell ... Wtrrlor, T•rtlJOrt
81o<ll., -CNft<,e, 8 C Llontl, v......,.,
Soutllwerll, Ooent st-.
Time; 2:115,0.
U IXACTA 1•11 peld1.2150.
••GMTM ltM:IE. ON mll• pece.
T"' Perc.,ttt est_,,_, •.• J.• >.to
Perll"ll IAublnl 2.to l.to
Jomes MllSlon IK .. ~> uo
AIMI recocl; Mo.lnl ~II, VulGen Bey,
Kine• Double, Dlmente Henover, Victor
Cllerles, Are .,..,,, .. , $pry'1 Best. Time l;lt l/S U l'XACTA ( l·JI pekl W0,50 .
JI ll'ICK SIX l~t..il i»ld SIM.00 wltll
14) wl""'ne tickets (six florwsl. $2 Pk ll SI• conlOletloft peld sa 00 wlttl t, !07 wlnnlftQ
llc1tet1 (five l\One\). U Pick Six w:retcll
contoltllon paid $11.IO wlltl lour •IMlne
Odets 1'-florltl, -acretclll.
NIMTH uc•. Ont mlle II«•·
H•rd'f -FMie< ISte-..n ... I
Ken•-Hoven (TodOI l3.00 :: Jt::
AnQelO K-v IG<'OndYI 4M
Alr.o reced. 8Aroneu c11r11, Enervetk Kid, Glol Frost. Brllllenl O'S-, El Rey
Ako, Onert Owls, ScoUltll 5-'.
Time: 2:011/S
JI EKACTA 1 ... 21 pelOSIU 50
TUfTH llACR. One mile s>e<e.
Plecerwllle IP......,) 3.<IO J.00 2 to
Qukll Lorry (Gn.nclyl •.OO 4.00 Mr . Joe II IKetmeler> 2.60
AllO t&fll· llerun lllck, Tiie Punll.. Time
tor Elwls, H•lc'l'Ofl Hort, O.ltt o...,.,. Time: 2:01 2/1.
JJ lfXACTA l~ll peld 12' <10
Attenclonce -t,l».
NBA exhlbftlona
-..,·.~
tao.left UD, 0.-r 112
All...U ... W-"'""°" ..
N-Y-tit ,°"'-110 IOTI
Monday's trenaectlons
MHaAU. ......... .._
CINCINNikTI aeos -Sold Nell Flel•,
lflfhtldor, lo tllelr lndl.....,..ls t•m al Ille
AmetlcM -letlcln. A-.:1 Ml-• Oowl.sa
-8recl l..elley, pl1'11en, lo their .,,_ .... ......... --· a.u.naALL " ............... , ... _.... ..
ATLANTA HAWKS -Acquired Mike
Olefin,-"'· fl'Om t:M N ... York Knklu for
• t"2 M<Gnd-,_., Oroll choice
OALLAS MAVEll lCICS -W•lve d
CIOr.<Kt IC• end 0-.y O••I•, forwotdl,.
-llr.S llfenton, 9'1Md. HOUSTON llOCICETS -Welvtd John
Stf"Ollcl, IOrwerd, SEATTLE SUPEllSONICS -Welvtd
Jociy Dorwy, lonoord
CIOU.IO•
GEORGETOWN. ICY. -Fired Jollfl ..., .. ,.., ,.... -.11 coecll. Nemec! llttt
Howklnt Interim lle•d coech end Jock
Elclltr -'•-coocll KANSAS STATE -Named Olek T-.
elllletk director
Area high school f oothall log
SUN SET LEAGUE WH1mlnster (5-2) ,. E l T°"' H LeP.una Beech (3·2· 1)
17 L• Quint• , 0 Soddl-k 3 ,, Irv "' 13
Edlaon (7.0) • Poc"u a u COJt•Mftt , 14 Elll_.a ..
22 t10orac1o 0 14 N-1--10 1 H•-1H«bor 21 ., Moonotl• 13
0 Sent•...,.. 13 10 Comi*ft 0 Oc I. Jt-CdM le t Newport ' LOI.,,,._ 1
u EIModltN 1 " Lone 8tec:rl Wll90f'I 1 ... ,_, ,, O•MHllll • .Q Mllllion 1 " Oce ... vtew 21 Nov ........ Est..cle " S..nCI-• 0
• M•twOtl 24 14 H~BHcll • Nov. t~nlwrtlty Oct. J0-.111 Cliplllr-Yelley • Merine 24 Oct. ell-let OCCI Newport Harbor (1 -6) Now. ~•Ion Vltlo ,., 0c .... v1ew 0 Now. 6--f'Gunteln Vollev Nov. 12-4.AVUNI Hiiis let MVI Oct.~,., .... CetOCCI Nov. IJ.-.Mwlne J Morine ll Laguna Hiiis (1·6 ) Nov . ._.. Huntlnet., lleocll SEA VIEW LEAGUE
1 Cy,.,_ ,. u Now. l>-Rft. v en.., ltl 81t Al 10 • ..,,.,. ..... ,. Irvine ,.
Corona del Mar (4-2·1) J COltolMw 1 • Estancia 37
u Hunll""°" aoec11 • 14 El Ton 24 1 Unl~ty • Fountain Valley (S-2) 42 Sanc1...-.a 0 10 Unlvenlty 2S IS G•,,..,.. JO
It Santo Ane V•lley 1 ,. c..,istr-Vellev • 21 lrvlne , I Lo Oulnto (-It) 0
n EITero 21 IO Uni-Illy 1 Oct. »-£1l.-.clt (et OCCI n SonCl-e 1J
J SI PMll 21 10 E~lt 10 No• . ._Secld_ll 0 Mlstlon VleJo •I
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NMI. 7-MllW ( .. ..._, 11
Orange Coast DAILY PIL01 /Tuesday. Oclobor 27. 198 I C3
Fiscus' ·98-yarder tops
Woodbridge's Figueroa had. a pair of sparkling plays
University Hi&h's Mike Flacws turoed In the
Oranee Coast area's biggest play of Ole year ln
tormll or yurdage, runntn1 98 yards wlth a ldckotr
return for u touchdown against Estancia last
week, but It was n't eno\lih to upend the Eagles .
Woodbridge High sophomore Rudy Fiauerou
clicked twice with big plays, runnlna 69 yards for
one touchdown and catchin1 a Kevin Burke pass
for a 51-yard touchdown pus pli.y to lead the
Warriors to their nrst·ever victory In varsity
competition. ,
<Last week's big plays ot 50 yard• or more>
98 -Mike Fi11cus <University). kickoff return
for TO 76 -Mark Bonda (Irvine>. TD pass from Mike
Zorn
72 Jeff Frandsen (Marina). TD pass from
Ken Laszlo
69 -Herbie Campbell (Westminster ). TD run
69 -Rudy Figueroa (Woodbridge>. TO run
51 -Rudy Figueroa <Woodbridge>. TD pass
from Kevin Burke
SO -Joel Seay c Fountain Valley), '1ass from
Matt Stevens 50 -Todd Cage
I Saddleback >. TD pa~s
from Danny Armstrong
Season
96 Mike l-'1scu~
1Univcrs 1ty 1: 90
Onassis Nixon <Costa
M e s a1 . 82 Todd
Williams (El Toro>: 79
K'c n n e d y Po I a
(Mater Dei >. 77 Todd
Wil liams t EI Toro>.
Kenned) Pola !Mater
Dct l 2, 76 Mark
Bondi (Irvine >; 75
Charlie Brown C Mission
Viejo>. 73 Scott Stier
<Huntington Beach> 72
Rudy F'igueroa J e ff f'' r a n d s e n
<Marina >: 71 Greg Locy <Mater Dei); 69
Herbie Campbell !Westminster>, Rudy Figueroa
cWoodbridgel: 68 Ron Malerslein <Marina); 67
J eff Frandsen <Marina>. 64 -Bob Critchfield
(Manna); 63 Greg Neff <Marina >; 60
Kennedy Pola (Ma ter Dei >. Herbie Campbell
1 Westminster>; 59 Mark Bondi (Irvine>, S8
Curl Wenzlaff <E st a ncia>. Jeff F r andsen
I Marina); 56 Dan Blanck <Laguna Hills). Rod
Emery I Fountain V;.i!Jeyl, 2; 55 -Damon Sweazy
IEI Toro>. Steve Patt~rson tCorona del Mar>, Dan
Thompson I Huntington Beach); 52 -Craig
Rakhshani c Edison >. Todd Williams I El Toro>, 51
Eddie Nu nes (Westminster), Beddie Arabe
I Laguna Beach>. Rudy Figueroa (Woodbridge>: SO
Fan won"t be punished
NEW YORK ( ,\ P 1 Legal action cannot be
taken against the fan "ho 1s believed to have
thrown a bottle from the Yankee Stadium
l>leacherl> at Los Angeles outfi elder Dusty Baker
during the first game of the World Series. a
Yankees spokesman said Fnday.
A number of spectators in the left.field sectjon
had 1dent1fied the fan as the offender. but others in
Kt•vin Ul'rt>i. C M1~sion Viejo), Eddie Nunes
<We~trmnstPr), Bill Hraght ((;oronn del Mar), Eric
Reinholt.: <0<'cun View >, Joel Seay C Fountain
Vall ey), 2, John O'('ullagh1m CEdlaon). J eff
Holme!! <Mtsston Viejo>. Todd Cage (Saddlebackl.
(l,ast wt>~k 's stath~tlul leaders)
Rushlnl(
1 llcrt>1t• Camphctl (Wt•slmins ter>. 25-225 ; 2.
Oamon Sw1•a1y (El Toro), 32 129 . 3 Rudy
F1J:u<:roa cWooclbndg('), 13 127 , 4 Curt Wenilaff
c f':standa >. 21 122 5 M1k<.• Fts<'ui. (University >.
23 120. 6 Thl.'o Langford ct;di!.on l 9-121: 7. Kevin
Brudlf'v 1S.1ddlt•b.H·k J, 17 116. 7 H Dave Geroux
I Edi!.0111. 22 HM . 9 Kt•nne<ly Pola C Mater Deil.
25 1();1
Passing
I Mutt St1·\e11.., I Fountain Valley ), 14-35·2, 256,
OTC>, 2 K1•11 M:aJCH' <Edison>.12·182, 195, 1 TD; 3
Uann} Ar mstrong <Sciddleback>. 10·12·0, 189, 0
TD, 4 M1k 1• Zorn ! lrvmcl, 7 20 l, 159, 1 TO: 5. Ken
Lasllo 1!\1:.mnal, 5 12 2 J.t9, l TD, 6. Tony Locy
<MJter 111•1), 11 21 0, lH, 1 TD
Rt'Cf'i vlng
I <;re.·~· Loo 1 M ;11 er Dt•11. I! 101 . 2. Joel Seay
(F11 unt.11n \.,die)>. 6 136. 3. Todd Cage
< SCJddl(l h.ll'k 1. 1, 12·1 .i Greg Eskridge (Edison> .
5 81 , ~, :\11kl' Hond1 cl 1\111e1.4-144 ; 6. Fred Tuttle
!OC't'<Hl \'tt•\.\ I R7. i Hrett Blanchard <Edison),
1 RO
Sc-oring
l Ct 1·i.: ';1·lln (Newport Harborl , Gary
Figueroa 1Woodbridge1. 18 , 3 Theo Langford
C Ed1so11 >. llerbic C:.imµbell <Westminster), Tony
Locy t Mal<'r D1·11. Jamie Aiken (Estancia>. Bill
Bri)i(hl < Coron:i d1•I Mar >. Damon Sweazy (El
Tw 11 Ken 1 .• 1,1111 I :vtanna1, 12 t!al·h.
flt>ld Goal!>
17 M ik e l>oa n < ~t atn De1 1
the section dis agreed. __________ r,-:========="'"'==~========="
Will real
·Steelers
stand up
PITTSBURGH I A P l
Nobody s eems to
kn ow who th e real
Pi Its burgh Steele rs :J re
least of a ll the
Steelers themselves.
"I hope the~e arc the
real Steelers 'cause we
sure didn't play like
ourselves I as l week.··
linebacker Jack Ham
said after Pitts burgh
rebounded from a 34-7
pounding in Cincinnati
eight days earli er to
beat the Houston Oilers
26· 13 Monday night.
The victory put the
Steelers. 5·3. back into a
first .place lie with the
Bengals in the American
Confer ence Centra l
Davi s ton . The loss
dropped the Oilers a
game back into a tie
with Cleveland
"I don't know who the
re::il Steelers are, but I'd
l ike lo think we're
getting back to where
we used lo be," s aid
quarterback T err y
Bradshaw.
H e threw two
touchdown passes , a
46-yard bomb to .J im
Smith in the fir s t
quart e r a nd a
game winning 6 yarder
to John Stallworth to
break a 13· 13 tie with
3:41 lo play.
"A game like this does
a world of good Cor your
confidence,·• added
Bradshaw. "The thlng I
was most pleased with
was the fact that we
really went after 'em.
We haven't played all
that ph ys ic al l y
offensively in a while.
We went after 'em and I
think they sensed il. We
tried to give them a lot
of different looks, tried
to attack them from au
angles and not j us t
stereotype our offense. I
think that's the way the
Steelers operate best."
''We're bAck In the
race,'' s a td Ham .
"Fourtunately, we got
som e help yesterday
(New Orl eans' 17·7
v i ctory over the
lBe n1al1). We played
poor rootball •1•ln1t
ClnctnnaU, maybe our
The
Premiere Of
NIGHT
THOROUGHBRED
RACING
Post Time
7 P.M.
Monday-~f:
Satur~ay '
Ex a etas
Pick Six
Early Bird·
Betting
11 a.m.-
4:45 p.m .
Watch With U~!
1r 1h., World litrlt• I•
•llfl 11ndttld'4, root tor 1e11r
fa•orltt tHm he" 11 th•
lr•tk Wt'll ltlt•I• It for
fllllr tl\IOJ'l!'ltnl •
..
Orange
County
Fall
Fair
October 27-
November 9
$35,000-
added
Orange
Coast
Handicap
Opening
Tonight
.LOS ALA.Ml
KA'l'J-:1.l..A t-:AS'f CW 'l'Hfo: 60/'l l"KKF.WAY =.. ..... I ........... " ::z. Olrttllaft ...... ~ .....,..,.,, IMCJI ,. .. ..... u ••• fet ll'Wtlle) ______________________ .... ..._ ....... ...,, ___________ ~, wor1toltbe year." 49fil KATl'it.l.A AVf:., l..O..q AlAMJ'f'().q, >72n • C:Cl:t} 4.tt UU ••7MI IM-llM
\
1111111 CUil
'11 I 1 11 • 1111 r. • I •t\"-4 .-~ ) ~·~·. Al I _1J1 N1f1
• • • • •
YDll llllTDWN llllY PIPll
.. •
..
.-
Does 'killer satellite' thre81ten u.·s. ? •
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Soviet Unlori bas a killer
satellite in orbit capable of
destroying several orbiting U.S.
satellites, the magazine Aviation
Week & Space Technology is
re porting.
The report, in the magazine's
Oct. 26 edition, called the
satellite "an anti-satellite battle
st ation equipped with clusters of
infrared -homing gui d ed
intercept.ors that could destroy
multiple U.S. spacecraft.
"The podded miniature attack
vehicles provide a new U.S.S. R.
capability for sneak attack on
U.S. satellites," it added.
Aviation Week cited no
sou r ces and the Defense
Department said it would not
comment 1.m the report.
For several years, t he Soviets
have had the only operational
killer satellite system. It is a
payload that tracks a target
within one or two revQlutions
after it is launched and then
detonates, destroying both.
U.S. observers say that the
new killer satellite is capable of
striking targets out to 600 mUes,
which makes America's
navigation and reconnaissance
satell it e s •vulnerab l e .
Co mmuni ca t io ns and
missile-warning payloads are
stationed 22,300 miles up, but
/
CATCH OF THE DAY -J eannette Rubidoux
has her own recourse for fi sh that are fresh :
she sells them. These whoppers went quickl y
through the scales. past the cleanine knife.
l,_., .......... ..,LH .. ..-
intO wrapping paper and 01Ut to customers at
the dory fishermen's stalls at Newport Beach
pier where t he fleet drlivE~rs a varied catch
early each morning.
Bomb threats plague Britain
Police fear Welsh may try to disrupt royal visit
LONDON (APl -Britain was
plagued today by a double bomb
menace, from the Irish
Republican Army in London and
from Welsh nationalists police
feared might try to disrupt the
first ofCicial tour by Prince
Ch a rles and Princess Diana
sin ce their wedding three
months ago.
An IRA bomb Monday killed a
police explosives expert in
London, the third bombing
victim in the city in 17 days. Jn
Pontypridd, Wa les, experts
Autumn air
quality hailed
EL MONTE CAP) -The best
September-October air quality
in seven years bas been
recorded by the Air Quality
Management District, officials
say._
"September and October are
traditionally the peak rinnnba in
the smos seuon, which t>ecln.
in April," APMD 1poll:e1man
Jim Birakos aaid, attribut..in& the
lmprov~ment to a reducUon of
pollutant.I ln t.be air. plus better
weather condltlona.
'6ince um there also bas been a reduction of 800,000 poundl per
day ln pollutanu from
s tatloDll'J aourcea 1uch H
• re,.neries, ~raltos aaid.
defused a firebomb in an army
recruiting office near the route
the royal newlyweds will take
Thursday.
The bomb disposal man was
Kenneth Howorth, 49, who died
as h e tried to defuse a
five-pound bomb found in the
I ad ies · room or a Wimpy
hambur~er stand on Oxford
Str eet. one or London's busiest
shopping thoroughfares.
Shoppers held. back by police
barrl'trs screamed and ran as
the bOmb shattered the glass
front o r the evac uat ed
restaurant and blew a 12-foot
hole in the sidewalk.
The IRA in a telephone call
took responsibility and claimed
two other bombs were in stores
nearby. Sniffer dogs found one.
and police defused it safely, but
a third bomb was not found.
The IRA bombing in London
began Oct. 10, a week after the
collapse of the seven-month
hunger s tri k e by Irish
nationalists in the Maze Prtaon
outside Belfut. Police say the
born blnis are to avenee the 10
guerrillas who 'starved
themselves to death in the futlle
attempt to w1n pollUcal·prieooer
status for imprisoned Irish
naUonallall.
''We understand they have
decided to cause as much
devutatloa u poutble," said a
British Hcurity 1ource In
Northern Ireland, where the
f
IRA has been fighting a
g ue rrilla war against British
rule for 12 years.
Detectives of Scotland Yard's
anti-terrorist branch said the
IRA bomb squad in London "is
considered to be one of the best
ever lo operate on mainland
Britain," the Dally Telegraph
reponed.
The paper said detectives
believe thE' squad has at least
five members, including an
experienc: ed bomber and a
woman, because the wimpy
b omb was plante d in the
women's lavatory.
Prince Charles and bis bride
left London on Monday ni8ht on
the royal train for a three-day
lour of the? principality on the
west coast from which they eet
thelr titles of prince and
princess of Wales .
The royal couple were to
spend their nicbt.s on the train
instead of at the homes of local
dignitaries., the usual custom.
Press reports said it was a
af'c urtty precaution, but
Buckingham Palace refused to
contlrm that.
The Delly ExJ>reaa uld
countertttrorlats of th• anny'1
Special Air Service Reliment
would torm an armed auard for
the couple. The · Dally llirror
.-id the security op.raUon
would be the lart"t ln Wales
since the lovesUture of Charles
as prince 12 years 110.
within a few years they too may
com e within range or advanced
killers or laser beams, both of
which the Sovi e t s are
researching
T he Defense Department is
d eveloping its sa tellite
destroyer, but it won't be
operational for about two years.
A spinning cylinder 30 inches
long, it would be launched from
beneath the wing of an F -15
U.S. to
fig l hter plane and its infrared
se1 1sors would guide it to a
col lision with its orbitin~ tarJi?et.
1 'he Soviets last week cited
th 1s U.S . weapon whe n it
pe· tilioned the United Nations for
a 1.rcaty banning all weapons m
,sp ace
The Pentagon also plans to
test laser beam anti satellite
a1 id anti-missile we~pons within
a few years on the manned
s pace shuttle
Aviation Week reported that
presidential science adviser Jay
Keyworth opposes s pending
billions or doll ars on high-energy
laser battle stations for ballistic
m1ss1le defense in space. The
magazine said this appears to
ronf11 ct with a d ecis ion by
President Reagan to "develop
technologies for s pace-based
missile defense."
CPI
Smaller cost-of-livin~r raises, and inflation rate expected
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government announced today it
will change its mos t closely
watched innation meas ure
the Consumer Price Index -to
remove the volatile effects of
h ouse prices and m ortgage
rates. The result is expected to
be a lower inflation rate and
smaller cost-of-living raises for
millions of Americans.
The Bureau o f Labor
Statistics. an independent and
non -partisan branch or the
Labor Department. said that
starting in J anuary 1983 it will
revise its basic index to treat
hous ing costs as if the owner
were renting the dwelling.
Although the government is
initiating the change in 1983, a
special index that determines
3 senators
coIDe out
for AWACS
WASlilNGTON <AP) -Three
previous l y uncommitted
senators came out today for
President Reagan's proposed
AW ACS sale to Saudi Arabia.
and another said he likely will
support the deal, but the odds
remained heavily against an.
administration victor y in
Wednesday's vote.
The president. zeroing in on :J1
handfu1 of opponents. planned t•I>
see up to a dozen senators in a
final lobbying blitz
Meanwh ile, Sens. David l ..
Boren, D-Okla.: Waller l).
Huddleston, D-Ky.: and Frank
H . Murkowski, R -Alas k<1 .
announced they will vote for U1 e
sale and Sen Robe rt Dot.1!.
R-Kan., said he intended to c lo
the same. All four had be• m
uncommitted.
But Senate Democratic whip
Alan Cranston, who is leadiJ ig
opponents of the• sale, said tliie
announcements we r e no
surprise.
One of the first senators to
meet with Reagan today, Sc:n.
David F. Durenberger, R-MinL'l.,
said afte r wrard that he st ill
intended to vote against the sa le.
''I'm not going lo change," he
told reporters.
The latest Associated Pr·1?ss
tally shows 53 senators agail'\St
the sale. plus two others leaning
against. 42 favoring the deaJ or
leaning that way, and three
uncommitted. A majority of
those voting is needed to bl ock
the deal. "
M eanwhil e , P e ntar.on
spokesman Henry Catto ~1 aid
Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger was also calling
senators in an attempt to mu1ster
<See AWACS, P•ge A2 l
Rain may
cancel
Series game
NEW YORK (AP) -The
Na tion al Weather Bureau's
forecast for New York today
was not encouraging for the
sixth game of the World Serie~
bet ween the New York Yankees
and Los Angelet Dodger·s at
Yankee Stadium.
The forecast called for rain on
and off, turning heavy at times.
lbroughout the afternoon and
night.
The game was scheduled for
5:20 p.m. PST.
The forecast also called for
temperatures ln the 50s to 80s
with sides expected to clear by
Wednesday.
The Dod1ers, who lead lbe
Serles a 1amea to 2, were
supposed to wort out at Yankee
Stadium on Monday. but rain
canceled the practlt·-
.Jnnual increases in Social
~ 5ecurily , other government
programs and most labor
contracts with cos t -of-living
clauses will not be altered unlit
J anuary 1985. the bureau said.
This 1s because many of the
union contracts do not expire for
several years
The index that changes m 1983
1s called the CPI for all urban
c·onsumers, a broader inflation
measure than the companion
C PI for wage earners and
c l erical wo rk e r s. whic h
government programs and labor
unions usuaJly.,rcly on
The change in the C Pl will
directly affect an estimated 90
million Am erica n s whose
incomes' are tied to rises in the
index About 9 mill ion union
m em bers are covered by labor~
contracts thal provide
cosl of living wage in creases
based on the CPI. and another 81
million people receive Social
Security. government pensions,
food stamps and other federal
be nefits that increase based on
rises in the CPL
.. A growing number of people
feel that there is som ething
wrong with lhe CPI and that it
s hould be fixed ." Janet L.
Norwood. commissioner of the
s tatistics bureau, said at a news
conference. "In light of the
extensive use of the CPI in our
economic system. it is essential
that public confidence in it be
maintained These facts clearly
indicate that the time for
(See INDEX, Page AZ l
UCI will impose
freeze on hiring
UC lrvme has Joined eight
othe r University of California
campuses in imposing a freeze
on the hiring of new s taff
members. UCI Executive Vice
Chancellor James L. McGaugh
announced today.
The freeze, which is expected
to last at least until next June 30,
was ordered by University of
Ca lifornia Vice Preside nt
William Frettcr as a way of
meeting part of a S22 million
budget cul ordered by Gov.
Edmund G. Brown Jr
M cGaugh said that the freeze
doesn"L apply to faculty or staff
members responsible for patient
care at UCI Medical Center He
a lso said exceptions can be
made if any e mployee must be
hired to preserve an academic
program
·'The hiring freeze wall be
n oti ceable by faculty and
s tudents," he said. "People will
find some offices understaffed."
McGaugh said he hasn't yet
determined how many positions
will remain open or bow many
openings will be caused by
people leavi ng uni versity
employment.
Gov. Brown has told state
agencies lo cut their budgets by
2 percent to avoid a stale deficit.
UC offi cials have discussed
increases in student fees and
hmiti. on enrollment a s options
to m eet this budget cut
M cGaugh said that the budget
cul may mean a reduction of
from $500.000 to Sl million in
funding lo UC I.
Diahlo license
target of Br.own
SACRAMENTO <APl -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr 's lawyer.
citing design errors at the
Diablo Canyon nuclear power
plant.,said today he intends to
ask the Nuclear Regulatory
Com mission to revoke the
plant's li cense, unless the NRC
lakes I.hat acllon on its own.
Herb ert Brown . who
represents the governor on
matters r elating to the $2.3
billion plant n ear San Luis
Obis po. said an "independent
audit" should be made or the
plant's safety <Related story
Page A5)
T he attorney said an audit
woulq lay thP basis for
r elicensing the facility -or
would reveal any new problems.
"The!License was issued on the
mistaken assumption that the
. plant was built solidly," the
lawyer said .
He made the comments in an
interview from his Washington
office.
Last week, NRC investigators
discovered I.hat Pacific Gas and
Electric Co .• the operator or the
plant , m ade erro r s ln
calculating the capability of
Dlablo Canyon to withstand
earthquakes.
T he first design error was
discovered Sept. 22 by a junior
pipe analyst who found that
wrong diagrams were used in
the design of earthquake
supports for piping Included In a
secondary coolin1 syste m.
The governor's attorney said
the audit should be conducted by
someone other I.ban PG&E.
"We're asaum.lng the NRC
will revoke Dlablo's tlcense "
attorney Bro1"t said . "We'~e I
goi ng to give the NRC a
reasonable amount of time to do
1t. If the commission doesn't act, 1 we will suggest to the NRC thst
it takes this course."
Brown also s aid the original '
decision to license the plant was'
a "monumental blunder" by ~
N R C which affects the
"integrity o f its ow n
institution." Brown added that it
was ··clearly in the NRC's own
interest" to revoke the license.
ORANGI t:Ol.ST WfATHfR
Mostly cloudy night and
morning hours with partly
sunny afternoons through
Wednesday. Highs 65 to 72.
Lows tonig'ht 58 to 63 .
INSIDE TOIJAY
A teachers' walkout h<U
angered tlw resiMnt' of a
Minnesota town immortalized '
by author Lauro lngoll•
Wilder in Mr-.. LUUe Houae"
books. See Ptige C4.
INDfl
.
' I
I
t
\
I
---~------~~....------~------------------2 .....
PICK A PUMPKIN -Sarah Auth of Herndon,
Va .• looks through a pile of pumpkins in an
Yule Tree Lane
dark this year
Fresno's Christmas Tree Lane, touted in its
heyday as one of the nation's prettiest holiday
displays, will be dark this year because of a \ack
of volunteers.
Only three people voluntee red to help sort
decorations. set up displays and string lights after
a call for community support. the sponsoring
committee announced.
Christmas Tree Lane began in 1920 with one
cedar tree decorated by a woman in memory of a
lost son. More neighbors decorated their yards
along a 1.6-mile stretch of Van Ness Avenue eac h
year. • The leader of a 14-member Freecb expedition
that scaled Kanchenjunga, the world's third
highest peak. died in a fall as he was descending
the 28,146-foot summit, Nepal's Ministry of
Touris m said.
The ministry identified the dead man as Jean
Jacques Rkouard, 29, of Part.. A sp<>kesman said
he was killed Oct. 15 after he slapped and :ell
nearly 1,000 feet down the mountain 350 miles
northeast of Katmandu . • Prompted by convictions of reputed Los
Angeles mobsters. New York and Chicago "mob
families" are moving to take over organized crime
on the West Coast, the Chicago Tribune reports .
The news paper said
that federal a gents in PLACES Chicago and police in
Nevada and California
verified that or ganized
c rim e fi g ures fr o m
Chicago and New York are trying to take control
of gambling, pornograhy. loan sharking and other
rackets.
Police in California s aid the attempted
takeover was prompted by a number of extortion
convictions in February, the Tribune said . • Ram and showers were forecast for Northern
California today with a winter storm watch in the
mountains.
The storm watch was issued by the National
Weather Service for the northern mountains and
northern and central Sierra Nevada . • It took two weeks for Bob Speca to set up the
111.111 dominoes in the basement or a downtown
Denver department store -and about half an hour
for them to fall.
And the event wasn't even a record.
The record, according to a friend of Speca,
was set a few months ago In London by an
Englishman who toppled 169,000 of the tiles . • Charles Sanders of San Francisco literally had
a hollow leg when it came to cocaine, but he
claimed customs offi cers shouldn't have looked in
it without a warrant.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New
York rejected Sande r s ' conte ntion he was
wr ongfully convicted of cocaine s muggling
because the search of his leg was illegal.
A pound or cocaine was found in the leg during
a search last December at Kennedy International
Airport alter Sanders arrived from Venezuela . • John Chotia, designer and manufacturer of an
ultralight aircr aft, has been killed demonstrating
his newest model at an airport near Rubidoux.
Chotia, 34, was piloting a Weedhopper JC-35
Rocket when the 153-pound craft nosed down and
plunged straight into a pasture at the southwest
end of the landing strip at Flabob Airport In
Riverside County.
* The chief judge of Syrac&1.1e City Court in New
York pleaded innoce.nt to charges that he took
transcripts from the chambers of another judge
under investigation for alleged misuse or judicial
power.
Judge Joseph Falco was charged with
third-degree burglary, three counts of third·degree
criminal trespassing, petty larceny and official
misconduct in a sealed indJctment handed by an
Oa.ondaga County grand jury.
* A natural gas leak coupled with humid
weather forced the evacuaUoo of an elementary
school in Greer, S.C., and ll fifth.graders were
treated at two hospitals, officials said.
* Slower·lhan-expected auto sales led Ford
Motor Co. to lay off 1,300 workers for three weeks
on a Mllpltu production liM started only seven
weeks ago, the company said.
A spokesman for the United Auto Workers
union said that the layoff affeds workers on lines
producing the Ford Escort, Mercury Lynx, the
EXP and the LN7. It does not affect aome 900
truck assemblers at the plant . ...
...........
attempt to find the right one to take home for
Halloween.
, .~
... • .......... • ,[>•1. '-
.....
... ..
.. f ... , ......
• n}O
1·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday, Oc tober 27, 1981 L
Bingo FREE INVESTMENT SEMINAR
t ............
~::::_:: OR GEORGE L. HAINES. leadlnm authority In
\• ... ,,,,,. real estate. taxation & lrw~stmenta tscuaaes.
,.,...,. 1-'"'" •• '""' °"'" • Four basic rules to greater wea1t
• prize :
t(aM ,.,., .... ., ... 'G¥1 ., .. ,
coe, ...... '41·1219 • President Reagan's recent tax reforms & high
... ..._...._ return investment opportunities. hous e MIHIOM Yll~t5-04C)1 -~~.... DON'T D_.Y YOUllSILITMS Of'fOITUMITY
PORTLAND. Ore .~::='::='"=-..~"""==·="::=_,::: .. ="'='~ T• .. Od.J7, 71Jt,.-. THr .. Od.zt, 7:Jo, ... <AP> What's being .....,._ Hvtilt ......_
billed as the "richest DAILY PU.bT >~~· 1700~...._.
bingo game in Oregun" CLASSIFIED ADS ~SOl'10 1v Is much more than that HITCOUIT FfHAJCIAl., IHC., t7141 t 4'·7602
tor Zidon and Sharon l jiiiiiiiiiiiim9~4~2~·~S8~7a~iiiiiiiiiiii~:::::~~::::::~~~~~:::~=:~::~~~ Whitt e m o re of f
Estacada.
Th e c oupl e are
oHering their $125.000,
three-bedroom house as
t op pr ize in a bingo
game Nov. 7.
The Whittemores s ay
they must sell 1,300
tickets at $100 ea c h ,
before the game goes
on. If fewer tickets than
that are sold, the house
and the 43 acres it s its
on will be sold at auction
Dec. 1.
They took a second
mortgage on their farm
to meet the cost of the
c u s tom-m a de h o me .
Mortgage payments are
Sl ,500 a month.
It· s the second ti me
t he Whittemores have
tried a game of chance
to get rid of their house.
P roceeds from the
game, at least $10,000
afte r the mortgage is
paid if everything goes
well. will go to Watch
Our Waves. a group
trying to build a covered
public swimming pool in
Estacada.
, . " .
BALLIDAY'S ANNUAL Sl''·E ON
SPORT COATS
ONE WEEK ONLY OCTOBER 26-31
403 0FF
TO REDUCE OUR STOCK
NowS99 NowSl35 NowSll7
reg.$165 reg.$225 reg. $195
Sorry. altero11om not included
17th & Westcliff Ave.• Westcliff Plaza• Newport Beach • 645-0792
VANTN* ULTRA LIGHTS 100S
0
on
..
L ~ •
llGllA BllCH/SDUTH CDIBT
TO \1 l'Jl/1,n I\ II.I.I \ \I I\\()/
Dilly Piiat
TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1911
COMICS
TELEVISION
/OH\ U \".\JR
More candidates' views told
Name: Tom Philo
Address: 867 Wendt Terrace.
Laguna Bcuch
Age: 38
Occupation: Realtor
Education: HA in psychology
and philosophy. Aurora College.
Ill.; master's degree in school
psychology from Illinois State
University
Family: wife. Rhea . four
c hildren, two graduates or
Laguna Beach High School. one
1n g radt• sc hool , o n e in
preschool
Why are you running for this
oHice?
· • 1 am committed to quality
education for my children and
for fu ture generations I want to
be a part of the dec1sion-mak1ng
process during these next four
years as we establis h new
guidelines for public education
in th1i. communit\" ··
Wh at is the principal problem
in our schools todav and how
would you cope with it?
··our problems are how to
meet the financiaJ deficit and
maintain quaJity education. The
solutions will huve to in vol ve
more communtt) involvement 1n
the form of fin ancial
contributions and contributions
of human resources We need to
in s pire the l'Ommunity lo
res pond a c ti vely t o these
problem s a nd se t a n e w
precedent for the future 1 am
interested 1n "'ork 1ng in that
behalf ··
.I \CJ\ \111.1.EH
Name: Jack J . Miller
Address: 716 Emerald Bay.
Emerald Bay
Age: 48
Occupation: Senior partner in
law firm, teacher
Education: RA. University of
Connecticut: .Juris doctor ate.
University of Connecticut School
of Law
•mily: Wife. Virgini a. three
children. all in Laguna schools.
Why are you running for this
office?
"I believe public school s .
including Lagana Beach. are in
serious condition and they are
rapidly declining in the quality
of education they deliver."
What is the principal problem
In our schools today and how
would you cope with It?
''The principal problem is an
Incredibly strong resistance to
change. built into the existing
school administrators and
s chool boards. They find lack or
money and budget cutting to be
h andy excuses for declining
quality of education ··
Voters in Laguna Beach. South
Laguna and Emerald Bay will go to
the polls Nov. 3 to elect three
trustees in the Laguna Beach
Unified School Olstnct.
There are 14 candidates.
Followmg are bnef sketches of nr
Name: Wilham Kadi
Address: 888 Tia Juana St..
Laguna Beach
Age: 35
Occupallon: Attorney
Education: BS in bus iness
adm 1ms tration. UC Berkeley:
Juris doctorate from McGeorge
I .ll\\ School in Sacramento.
Family: wire. Sandra . son.
Wh y are you running for this
office?
· · 1 want to become involved in
~hap1ng the Laguna Beach
L'nificd School District into the
best quality district it can be. In
Laguna Beach. we h ave a
chance to do that.··
What Is the principal problem
in our schools tOday and how
would you cope with it?
· The biggest problem is
money Thal"s the m ost
1mm(.'diate problem. I want to
draw on the resources of the
local commumty as much as
poss ible The Edu c ation
Foundation is fairly unique. I
"'ant to utilize the talents and
resources avotlable tn Laguna
Beach ..
f> .. \ \ D. \\I I-: Ui
Name: Dan Daniels
Address: 2 Bay Drive. South
Laguna
Al(e: 39
Occupation : Bu s iness
executive
Education: BS in finance.
CalState Lon~ Beach: licensed
CPA
Family: wire. Margaret ; two
children in La~una schools .
Why are you running ror this
omce?
·'There is no o ne on t he
< p resentl s chool board with
financial background. I'm a
concerned parent and I have the
background I think can help ....
What is the principal problem
In our schools today and how
would yoo cope with It?
"Th e pr o bl em i s the
availability of runds to maintain
a m eaningful education system.
I would e ncourage outside
sources. such as t_he education
foundation. T hat. plus other
governmental sources. The only
oth er a l ternative Is the
reduction or expenses ..
candidates detailing who they are
and why they are running.
Sketches of .TU other candidate•
have appeared previously . No
information WCl3 provided bti two
candidate&, Arthur Moakowitz
and Terry Carter-Hu_mphrie&.
Name: John Luna Jr.
Address: 916 Miramar St .,
Laguna Beach
Age: 40
Occupation: Safety consultant
for insurance company.
EducaUon: BA in industrial
studies, Cal Stale Los Angeles:
maste r 's ca ndi date In
management from University of
Redlands.
Family: wife, Michele : three
children . one in the Laguna
school system.
Why are you running for this
office?
"I would like to get involved
a nd hope to have some impact
on the education in Laguna
Beach. I've been concerned
a bout the education of m y
children and now I find I have
the time to devote to these
matters."
What ls the principal problem
In our schools today and bow
would you cope with It?
"I think the main problem in
education itself is apathy on the
part of parents. Finances are
more criticaJ than ever , but that
is something to be worked out.
Pa rent participation, such as
SchoolPower. is a possibility.
Fin ancia l problems can be
resol ved and alternative
solutions can be found."
BRl "CE llOPPl.VG
Name: Bruce Hopping
Address: central Laguna
Beach
Age: 65
Occupation: Executive of
Philanthropic Foundation
Educatioo: BS in liber al arts,
Seton Hall University, N.J.
Family: Single
Why are you running for this
office?
"My participation in all school
board meetings gives me the
insight into the needs of students
and raculty and the ability to
provide k'nowledgeable board
membership.··
What Is the prlnclpal problem
lo our schools ·today and bow
would you cope with UT
"The major problem is the
lack or knowledge on the part of
present board members of the
needs of s tudents and the
fac ulty, a nd the lack of
coordination provided by the
administration. l'he solution is
by talking with faculty. parents.
students and to come up with a
reasonable policy for 1uidinc us
toward a resolution of those
problems."
Police scouts to paint curb addresses
The Laguna Beach Police
Explorer Scouts. a division or
the Boy Scouts of America. are
offerln1 to paint a ddress
numbers on curbs or garage
doors In r esidential a nd
commercial areas of the city.
The project ls to enable
emergency personnel to locate
addresses quicker. Addreu
numbers will be four tnchet hlCb and painted In contr .. llna
colors.
The c.&arae 11 $t f« rMldenftl
and '1 for commerC?lal buildlnp.
84
86 I
Now that there is, a woman on the
Supreme Court, Erma Bambeck is pushing
her Bedroom Rights Amendment ... 83
D
a
Water loan 'h.est idea'
Laguna could lose $800 ,000 if measure rejected
By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. DMIY,_.._..
Laguna .Beach voters will be
going to the polls next Tuesday
to decid~ whether the city should
borrow $1.2 million to cover coet
overruns on a multi-million
s ewer project.
Initial response from some
voters might be to turn down
such a large loan proposal, but a
vote against the measure would
hurt taxpayers in the long run,
city officials contend.
That's because Laguna Beach
stands to lose ~.ooo in interest
pay ments if voters turn down
Meausure Lon Tuesday's ballot,
says Terry Brandl, La~una's
director of municipal services.
Approval by Laguna voters
means the $1 .2 million can be
borrowed at 5.5 percent interest
from the state Water Resources
Control Board.
But if 50 percent of those
casting votes don't approve the
m easure, the city will have to
try to sell revenue bonds with an
estimated 10 percent interest
rate.
How did the city come up with
s uch cost overruns?
Laguna Beach is one of seven
Canyon road
widening
endorsed
Widening of Laguna Canyon
Road between El Toro Road and
<;a nyon Ac res Drive was
endorsed Monday by the Orange
Co unt y Transpo rtation
Commission.
The group's backing means
the estimated $7 .3 million
project will be Included on
future proposals from the
transportation commission to
state age.ncies.
Construction to change the
two-lane road into four lanes
already bas been backed by the
Laguna Beach City Council.
Under the plan, a median strip
would be painted in the road but
without curbs so drivers could
use it for left turns.
The project probably couldn't
be included on the state's list for
construction until the 1985·86
fiscal year . said Ron Cole .
se n ior planner for the
commission.
He said the project also wiU be
dependent on whether s tate
runds are available at that time.
Vacant sclwol
lease backed
by trustees
Laguna Beach Unified School
District trustees have concluded
a l ease agreement with the
Capistrano-Laguna Beach
Regional Occupational Program
for Aliso Elementary School in
South Laguna.
Laguna school trustees
unanimously agreed to lease the
vacant school building to the
regional occupational program
( ROP) for $41,000 a year.
Laguna school superintendent
Bob Sanchis said the ROP will
pick up the tab for all utilities
and maintenance of the building.
The Laguna Beach Unified
School District will continue to
maintain the school grounds,
Sancbis said, Including the
playground at the school site.
Last May school trustees
voted to close Aliso because of
co ntinuing de c lines in
enrollment in the elementary
grades and budget constraints.
U nder the lease agreement,
concluded during a special
meeting of the trustees late last
week, the district C'>Uld also
garner additional Income
beyond the $41,000 lease price if
the ROP sub-leases space ln the
building.
Sanchis said 80 percent of any
income the ROP gains from
s ub-leasing which exceeds
$41,000 must be turned over to
the Laguna Beach Unified
School District.
Sanchis said the ROP would
be moving into the classrooms
immediately.
Grocery skills
course planned
The Capistrano-Lacuna Beach
Re1ional Occu.,.tlonal Proiram
will offer a free nlne·week
cou ru ln 1roce( y 1kill1
belln.Dlns Nov. 17.
Re,i.t.J'atk>n for the ctau will
be1ln Nov. 2 at the Reatoaal Occu~aUonal Pro1ram bttlce, auza !l Camino Beal. San Juan
Capistrano. •
agencies that belong to the Aliso
Water Management Aaency,
which is building a $100 million
sewer system expected to be
completed in March 1983.
When completed, the city wiU
Approv.al
means city
borrow .at
can
low
interest.
I b e able to aba nd o n its
antiquated system and use lhe
new sewer system which will
dump treated effluent off Aliso
Beach.
Problems a rose earlier this
year when design deficiencies
w ere d iscovered in the
multi-million project. To add to
the agency 's woes, storm
damage from last year 's rains
was hed out pipes in Aliso Creek.
and the seven partners in
AWMA must now come up with
m o ney lo cover those cost
overruns.
Laguna's portion of t!:e tab is
$3.4 million.
In addition to the $1.2 million
the city must borrow. a rate b.1ke
in residential sewer rates f"*
$6.50 per month to $10.50 w4i
approved recently by the City
Council. That, tied with sewe.t'
funds on hand. will make up
Laguna's share.
The only vocal opposiUon Jo
the ballot measure comes from
Paul M. Christians en, wbo
labels himself a resident and
taxpayer o n an argument
against the issue that appears o)1
a pamphlet sent to Lagu1r1
voters. •
Chr istiansen b1ames "fiscai
m ismanagement" on the part Qt
the city, and suggests tho~•
r esponsible for cost overruns
should be required to pay. ·
But city offi cials say ther\t
was no mismanagement on Ui•
part o r Laguna Beach , dii
AW MA, citing enginee rinc
design problems as the cause of
much of the cost overruns.
Brandt said those deslaq
deficiencies are being work~
out between AWMA and the
engineering firm.
Mea nwhile, h e s aid , the
deficiencies must be corrected
in order to complete the project.
LB development
director appointed:
June Catalano. 35, c urrently
deputy director for planning
w ith the Department o f
D e v e lopment Services i n
Huntington Beach, has been
appointed d irec t o r o f
community d evelopment in
Laguna Beach.
Mrs. Catalano will start her
new job Nov. 16. She will be
filling ·the vacancy left by the
former director, Ron Smith, who
resigned two months ago.
Mrs. Catalano, a resident of
Irvine , was appointed to her
current position in Huntington
Beach las t February. She
supervises 19 stalf members in
the administration of both long
range and current planning. Her'
di vision also is responsible for
the preparation of the city's
Local Coastal Plan.
Prior t o becom ing deputy
direc tor for planning i n
Huntington, Mrs. Catalano was
a senior planner ror the city for
nearly two years.
Before coming to Huntington
Beach, she worked for seven
years in planni n g with the
Orange County Environmental
Management Agency. She also
worked for two years with the
New York Sta t e U rban
Development Corp.
Mrs . Cata lan o has a
bachelor's degree in journalism
from the University of Tulsa,
and a m aster 's degr ee in
HIRED IN LACUNA
June Catalano i communicallons from Syracus'
University. Her post gradual«:
work in planning was t aken al
Sy racuse and at UC Irvine.
Mrs. Catala no's husband ..
Ray, serves a s a planning
commissioner in the City of
Irvine and is an instructor al UC
Irvine.
Laguna police give
tips for Halloween
The Laguna Beach Police
Department has prepared a list
of safety suggestions for parents
whose cbtldren will be out
tric k -or-treating Ha lloween
night.
-Know your child's plans.
What route will he be following?
Whal companions will he have?
What s upervision will he have?
What homes will he visit? What
time will be be home?
-All smaller children should
be accompanied by an adult. It
is not advisable for anyone to go
out alone.
-Children should be
especially observant of all
traffic salety rules. lf possible,
they should wear light-colored
clothing and carry a flashlight.
-Costumes should be fire
resistant and short enou1h to
pre vent tripping . Masks
shouldn't be worn if they reduce
vision.
-C h ildren should be
reminded not to enter any
stranger's home or vehicle Lf
invited.
S. Lagunan wins
teachin~ honor
John H. Weston of South
Lafuna bu been honored u an
Outst1ndln1 Profe11or al Cal
State Loi An1eles.
Weston's teachlns field ta
creative writina. Ht la lhe
author of five novel• ind
numerous pieces of abort ncUoo
ind Poetry. Weaton alao wt,
Outstandin1 Prof•aor award.
In lMI and 1• at tb• UnJ"'9ltf,
or Arlsona.
-Children s hould call at
homes with the porch or other
outside light on onJy.
-Parents should advise their
children not to eat anytbiQg
from the ir bags until a)l
inspection has been made for
suspicious items. such as can<b'
t hat appears to have been
re-wrapped, or fruit with sma11
holes or punctures .
Niguel sclw<t.l
sets carnival :~.
1:i.: on H alloweefrt
t_.,;
Cr own Va lley Ele mentart.
School in Laguna Niguel wl hold Its annual Hallowe
Carnival Oct. 31 from 10 a .m.
3 p.m. at the school, located tit
29292 Crown Valley Parkway. :::
The carnival will begin with*;
costume parade. Awards will tft
given out for the prettiea~.
u1liest, most original, scarietl.
and funniest costumes. ~
The carnival grounds w'8~
feature a haunted house, tralB
ride and numerous came ~ with pri.fel. Maslclu Art .,..,..
will appear •for two 1bowa; tit
flrat at 12 :30 p.m. aad ur.
•*Cond au p.m. . ..
Tbecanllftl11"'9Mn11111f·
lb• Crow• ·'Yall11 Pare• Teacw Chl&ll. Pra21di .Wtl beJp ,... N&wa) ..........
trlp1 ud materlala for
ldlool. TM public 11 ID.W
•llead.
IRVINI
A.'\JDREW BAR:VA JOHN FLY'J'V
•
DallyPUGt
TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1911
COMICS 84
TELEVISION 86
Now that there is, a woman on the
Supreme Court, Erma Bombeck is pushing
her Bedroom Rights Amendment ... B3
0
D
Gas f11mes sent sky bigH
Method prevents them
/RV/NG MARKS
•
from wafting into Irvine homes
By 81~D G8£1!N °' .. ..., .......
Authorities bave found a way
lo prevent fumes relealed by a
gasoline vacuumln1 operation
from waftinC into nearby homes
In Irvine, according to J im
Hu s ton o f the c ount y
Enviro nm e ntal H e alth
Department.
He said a 30-foot-bigb pipe ia
being used in an effort to vent
the fumes high into lhe air and
away from people livin1 near
the site of the v a c uuming
operation at Lake Road and
Ba rranca Parkway in Irvine.
the vacuuming operation were
causing nausea , he adaches,
stineing eyes and sleeplessness.
Hus ton , a cting assistan t
director of lhe Environmental
Health Department, said lhat he
le arned of these complaints
second hand from I rvlne city
officials.
He said the venting of the
fum es high into the a ir bas
a pparently put an end to the
citizens' complaints.
Huston said ·he is investigating
the earlie r compla ints to
de termine if a ny se r ious
sickness was c aused by t he
gasoline fumes.
Irvine hopefuls give views
A tanke r truc k bas been
vacuuming gasoline from San
Dieg o Cr e e k and th e
underground water table in the
a rea since Oct. 13 when an
underground pipe al the Union
76 service station/car wash at
the intersection was dete rmined
to be leaking. The st ation is
o wn e d b y B eacon Bay
Enterprises Inc., 260 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
O r a n g e Co u nty F i r e
Department Chief Jim Sims said
that there is no danger that the
fumes would explode or cause a fire.
Voters in lroine will go to the polls
Nov. 3 to elect two trustees m the
Irvine Unified School Dtstrict.
There are seven candidates.
Following are bnef sketches of ru:
of the candidates detailing who they
Name: Andrew Barna
Address: 76 Tangerine, Irvine
Age: 49
Occupation: Buyer
Educ atio n : Hi gh schoo l
diploma
Family: One daughter
Why are you running for this
office?
"I'm a concerned citizen who
wants to lake an interest in the
community."
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and how
would you cope with it?
"The principal problem. I
think . is a l ack o f
com mun1cation between the
parents and teachers and the
school board. If the students
have a problem there's nobody
for them to go to."
Name: Gene Conley
Address: 9 Pandora
Age: 34
O ccupation : Real estate
broker
Education : High sch ool
diploma
Family: Wife, Linda : stepson
who attends Irvine High School.
Wh y are you running for this
ofrlce:
"I'm running because I think l
have a lot of attributes which I
c a n contribute to the school
board. Over the next four years
things are going to be dircicult at
bes t and I think l have the
bac kg ro und to race th ese
problems.··
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and how
would you cope with it?
"Needless to say, the major
problem we'r e facing is the
cutback of government funding.
I believe the best ans wers to the
problems coming out of that cut
will be found through promoting
a more op e n lin e o f
c om m unication b e tw ee n
parents. students, teachers and
the school board ··
County panel
OKs Irvine
• overcross1ng
P l an s to b uil d a
pedestrian-bicycle overcrossing
at Yale Avenue in Irvine lo span
the Santa Ana Freeway was
given a $30.000 boost Monday by
t h e Or a n ge Co u nt y
Transportation Commission.
T he commission allocated the
money to Irvine as part of its
distribution of $400,600 in state
funds set aside this year for
blkeway projects.
The overcrossing is estimated
to cost about $850,000 and the
city government is expected to
pay most of the cost, aides to the
commission said.
T he 18-month cons t ruction
proj ect is scheduled to begin in
Oct ober 1982, according to
Ir vine planners.
Free seminar
A three·hour seminar focusing
on wills a nd p r o ba t e I s
sch eduled Oct. 31 from 9 a.m. to
noon at Orange Coast College's
Fine Arts HaJl 119.
are and why they are running. No
photograph ts available of one of the
candidates. Gene Conley Another
candidate. John Jaeger. has not
provided 1nformat1on or made
himself avmlable for a photograph.
Name : John Flynn
Ad dress: 22 Willow Run .
Irvine
Age: 29
Occupation: Attorney
Education: Law degree. UC
Re rketey. bachelor of arts
degree. UCLA.
Family: Wife, Susanne: two
sons
Why are you running for this
office:
·'The bottom li n e is that
people who run want to serve the
community and think they can
do better than anybody else. I
have a lot of ideas and energy
th at I c an contrib ut e t o
education 10 Irvine and that's
why I want to r un."
What is the principal problem
in our schools today •nd how
would you cope with it:
"The principal problem is the
same with every school district:
Finding enough money from the
state or federal government to
mai nta i n th e qua l i t y o f
e du cat ion w e've b ecome
accustomed to. We're goi ng to
have to support private non-
profit fund raising organizations
such as the Ir vine Educational
Foundation "
.JOHN .'W U.VDY
Name: John Mundy
Address: 7 Admiral
Occupation: Businessman
Education: Bachelor of arts,
education and finance. Cal State
Lo n g Beac h ; Ma s t er 's in
bus iness ad m1 01strallon, Cal
State Long Beach.
Family: One girl who goes to
school in Irvine.
Why are you running for this
om ce?
"l am a single parent and as
s uch I'm very wrapped up in my
daughter's life. I'm involved and
concerned with the direction the
s chool district Is taking and I
wa nt to have some impad over
that." What ts the prloclpal problem
in our schools today and bow
would you cope with lt?
·'The principal pr oble m I
th ink is account ability a s a
co ncept. Irvine h as a floe
alte r native education program
with year-round schools and
bas ics plus education . I'm
concerned the guidelines aren't
f i rm eno ugh i n term s of
education and services available
for student!!."
'J'wo other candidatu , JefJ
Winneke and Roger Denney, have
withdrawn from the campaign, but
not in ttl'M to remove their ual'l'M!a
from the ballot.
Name: Irving Marks
Address: 19 Whitewood Way
Age: 57
Occupation: Retired educator
Education: Master of arts, CaJ
State Long Beach; bachelor of
arts . English and philosophy.
UC LA.
Family : Wife , Ida ; two
children, one or whom attends
school in the Irvine Unified
School District.
Why are you running for thla
offJce?
"I 'm run n in g because
education is what I know best
a nd now that I 'm retired, it
would be my contribution to the
com munity. I began (education
career ) in 1947, so I want to give
the benefit of my experience to a
district that is just beginning to
need that experience.
What is the prtocipal problem
In our schools today and bow
would you cope with lt!
"We're going through a period
n ow wher e the di s tric t is
growing but we'r e getting a
di minishing income. You have to
realize that you don't take steps
with o ut ant ic ip atin g t h e
eventual lack of growth."
BUFF WHITE
Name : Buff White
Address: 3 Paine Circle
Age: 41
Occupation: businesswoman
Education: Bachelor of arts,
English, University of Colorado
Fa mily: six children, rive of
whom attend school in the Irvine
UnHied School District.
Why are you runnlng for this
office?
"I b ave ri ve fi ve k ids in
C Irvine) schools and want to be
one of the people who makes
decisions for what kind of
education they have. I'm also
running because I feel I'm one or
the best informed laypersons in
th e district."
Wbat I• the prtnclpal problem
In oaJ' schools &oclay alld a.ow
would yoa cope wttla ltT
"The principal problem, of
course, is money. I hope we can
make people aware lhat we have
to go to private ways to raiae
money and probably th,e best
way is through support of the
frvlne Education Foundation!'
Canyon road widening endorsed
Widening of Laguna Canyon
Road between El Toro Road and
Can yon Acres Dr ive w as
endorsed Monday by the Orange
County Tra n s p ort atio n
Commission.
T he group's backing mea.ns
(be estim a ted $7 .3 million
project wlll be included on
future proposa ls from the
t r a naportatlon com mission to
state aaencies.
Construction to cbana• the
\wo-lane road into four lanea
already bu been backed by the
Laguna Beach City Council.
Under t.be plan, a m.cllan strip
would be painted in the road.
Before the pipe could be fixed,
tho\fsands of gallons of gasoline
escafed• according to officials.
Re~dents of a senior citizens
h o m e a t 2 7 La k e R oad
complained to authorities last
week that fumes released from
State Fish and Game Warden
Mona L isa Cole said that a
portion of San Diego Creek near
tbe intersection of Ba rranca
Parkway a nd La ke Road has
been dammed to make sure no
gasoline goes downstr eam
toward Newport Bay.
She said there is no evidence
that the gasoline that found its
way into the creek caused any
significant harm to wildlife or
deterioration of the quality of
Newport Bay.
o.lty ........... ,....
IRVINE OPERATION :
T all pipe vents fumes ::
IBa~dit ~ohs lroine woman gets '
rv1ne tire ~
shop of $400 position in Laguna
A masked man armed wilh a
sawed-off shotgun made off with
$400 in a Monday evening holdup
at an Irvine tire shop, police
said today.
Described as 20 years old,
S-feet-11 with s houlder-length
curly blond hair , the gunman
e ntered Group Tir e Service,
17281 Eastman St., Irvine, at 6
p.m., police said.
He tied up the tire s hop
e mployees and then emptied the
cash drawer, police said.
The man, who was wearing
blue jeans, a green nylon down
jacket and a yellow ski mask,
n ed on foot and Is still at large,
police said .
Niguel sclwol
sets carnival
Crown Valley Elem e ntary
School in Laguna Niguel will
hold its annual Halloween
Carnival Oct. 31 from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m . at the school, located at
29292 Crown Valley Parkway.
The carnival will begin wilh a
costume parade. Awards will be
given out for the prettiest,
ugliest, most original, scariest
and funniest costumes.
T he carnival groun~s will
feature a haunted house, train
ride and numerous game booths
with pmes.
June Catalano, 35, currently
deputy director for planning
with the D e p a rtm e nt o f
Development Services in
Huntington Beach, h as been
a pp o inte d d i r ector o f
community d evelopme nt in
Laguna Beach.
Mrs. Catalano will start her
new job Nov. 16. She will be
filling 'the vacancy left by the
former director , Ron Smith, who
resigned two months ago.
Mrs. Catalano, a resident of
Irvine, was a ppointed lo her
current position in Huntington
Beach las t F ebrua r y . Sh e
supervises 19 staff mem bers in
the administration of both long
r ange and current planning. Her
division also is responsible for
the preparation of the city's
Local Coastal Plan.
Prior t o becoming de puty
di r ector for plannin g in
Huntington, Mrs . Catalano was
a senior planner for the city for
nearly two years .
Before coming to Huntington
Bea ch, she worked fo r seven
year s in planning with the
Orange County Environmental
Management Agency. She also
worked for two years with the
Ne w YoJi k Sta t e U rb a n
Development Corp.
M rs . C at a l a n o has a
bachelor's degree in journalism
from lhe University of Tulsa,
a nd a m ast e r 's d egree in
HIRED IN LAGUNA
June Co1alarw ·
communications from Syracu.s•
University. Her post graduate
work in plaMiog was taken M
Syracuse and at UC Irvine. :
Mrs . Cat alano's husban4_,
Ray , s erves as a planninl
commissioner in the City OI
Irvine and is an instructor at UC
Irvine.
.
Irvine candidates tell views .,
Five running for school board awear at forum
Five candidates for two open
seats on the Irvine Unified
School District Board offered
th ei r vie w M o nday on
everything from education and
fiscal m a nagement to food
ser vices. Candidates Gene
Conley and John Jaeger did not
attend.
The two-hour election forum
s ponsored by the Community
Advisory Committee for Gifted
and Talented Education was
moderated by board president
Frank Hurd, who is not seekint
re-election.
Incumbent Fred Gahm also ls
not seeking a seat in t.be Nov. 3
election. Two candidates, Jeff
Wlnneke and Roger Denney,
have dropped out oft.be race and
were not at lhe forum.
C andidates present were:
Andr e w Barna . 49,
businessman; John Flynn, 29,
attorney; Irvln1 Marks, 57,
retired educator; John 11\&Dd.y,
33, businessman; and Buff
White 41, a bullneuwoman.
As ked about campalan
contrlbutlona. Barna 11id be
apent $18, nynn '32'7, Marki,
zero, Mundy, $U8 and Ma.
Wblt.e, $1,400.
In an open1q atatemut f'11DD
said be believed that the k1U d
alxt.b period laat year and tM
loe1 ol mtdl• coordiutor,.....
altntncant. He aald he would
favor pay raLH• for tea~ben
and continued support for
pby1t call1 and mentallf
impaired students.
Marks said be would use bis
experience as a teacher and
administrator to help solve some
of the fiscal problems facing the
district. He proposed offering a
d i fferent gradin1 system to
e ncourage students to take
d ifficult classes tb•t might
otherwise hamper lhelr grade
point average.
Barna said be would use a
"common sense" approach in
setting priorities. He said he
favored progra~ }o support the
fine arts.
Mundy said be would use b.la
experience in corporate businesa
to help analyze the district'•
financial problems. He aa1d be
would like to see the food
services program upgraded.
Ms. White said she would live
\lP her position u a member ol
the Gifted and Talented
EducaUoo Committee (GATE).
She promised to vlslt every
school tn the dl1trtct once a
year.
Barna wu the ODly caodldate
preaent not to favor
clecentra.U.u.Uon of t.b• district'•
operatklDI. All 11ld that they
would favor relo1t1Un1 sixth
period lJ tbe fund• were
ayailable. All 1ald Ute1
supported GATE. In response to a .ct•Ptloa cone~ the lniDt ... .-.....
J'oundatloa, Marks aald ~
wbll• b• a.1p,orud U••
non-profit sro.ap 1 efforta .•
r aise funds for the district, he
didn't see It as the "salvation."
He questioned the group's UM
of the school district's address in
literature.
··I think that should be lookeQ;
into," answered Ms. White.
Board president Frank Hurd
pointed out that although be lost
bis first election bid, he won his
second with 1, 700 votes and the
third with 1,400 votes.
"To me It shows that lhere-
lsn 'l enough interest in these
elections.'' sa.id Hurd. ~ •
Iroine board
.... -' ..... ·-· .-......-
DRAllil CIAST
Dilly Piiat
TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1981
COMICS
TELEVISION
84
86
Now that there is, a woman on the
Supreme Court, Erma Bombeck is pushing
ht0r Bedroom Rights Amendment ... B3 '
0
0
...
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"I' I•
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I•
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NB referendum threatened if development · OK ~
~ :",: By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... DeMy ...........
Threats were made Monday
that approval of the 75-acre
Newport Banning Ranc h
deve lopment project will result
in a second referendum drive in
Newport Beach.
JUDITH FRANCO
City coupcil m e mbers, who
continued he~nngs on the West
Newport project until December
to give city planners time to
complete a new study, were told
approval would only lead to
greater antagonis m toward the
council
DAVID \ATKI\'
The threats were made by
fre quent city hall critic Sue
Fi c ker who s uggested the
proposed development "will
transport us into newer and even
greater disasters "
The prOJect was continued
until Decembe r lo J(ive city
CHARLIE GIBBS
officials lime to put toiether a
park s tudy . There is
disagreem e nt whethe r the
developer should be required to
build a park on bis property or
give the city a com parable
amount of money that could be
used to develop a nearby park
JOSEPll PHILBRICK
s ite In West Newport.
The council. holding its third
public hearing on the Newport
Banning Ranch project. did not
r eact to the threat s, but
Councilman Don S tra u ss
s u ggested the proposed
development be tabled untJI an
fl>RREST WEH \J-:I<
existing referendum issue ~
settled !!.
A referendum group that
gathered signatures or Ne~
r esidents opposed to anotbdf>
d c>velopment projec t -th~
Newport Center expans ion ---:-
are hopeful of forcing a citywid~
election on that issue early ned:
year :·
The petitioners. needing 4,3)1)
s i g natur es l o.fo r ce iJ
referendum . gathe red mort
tha n 7.000 s ign at ures. The
pe titions are expected to bt)
verified officially by Friday. .
Councilman Strauss said th~
Newport Banning Ranch projec!(
shcJUld ~ delayed "until that
e lection is behind us T be
election probably would sh~
lig ht on what direction citizens
want to ~o ...
Council members said they'll
discuss Strauss' s uggestion in
December.
Allan Beek . a Newport
planning commissioner, said the
citv should bankroll a city-wide
sul"vey to see what citizens
want.
Newport-Mesa schoo~ hoard candidates tell • views
The Ranch project, filed bN
B ceco Ltd a nd the
Newport Mesa Unified School
Distract. w ou ld a ll ow
con!>truction of more than 200
houses and 730,000 square feet of
1ndustnal and office space.
The 75-acre development site .
of which the !.Chool district owns
12 acrei., as located inland of
Pacific Coast Highway and west
of Superior Avenue Name : Judith Franco,
incumbent for Trus tee Area 5.
Address: 202 Via Palermo.
Newport Beach
Age: 44
Occupation: Homemaker .
Education: Bachelor of arts in
hi s t o r y and e ducation, UC
Berkeley.
Family: Husband. John; three
s on s attending o r g raduated
from Newport-Mesa schools.
Why are you running for this
office?
"I believe the district faces
the challenge of cr eating an
educational program for the
changing 1980s. and I want to
continue to be a part or that."
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and bow
would you cope with it?
"ll 's the changing financial
s itu ation . and I believe the
dis trict is coming to grips with
that problem in the formation of
the Educational Resources
Adv~ry Committee.
"I'm not going to offer any
solutions un til I h e ar the
r ecomme ndation s o f that
committee a ppointed by the
board to study the question."
Rites s lated
for ex-Mesan
Manuel Muniz
Funeral services will be held
in Orange We dnesday for
former Costa Mesan Manuel
Muniz Jr .. who died Sunday at
St. J oseph's Hospital, Orange, of
cancer.
Rosary will be s aid for Mr
Muniz at 7:30 t onight at St.
Norbert Catholic Church, 300 E.
Taft Ave .. OranJ?e.
t"uneral servic es for t he
former athlete are scheduled at
the c h ur c h .f o r 10 a .m
Wednesda y with interment to
follow at H o l y Sepulcher
Cemetery, Orange.
Mr. Muniz was named to the
Southern California All -CIF
football team in 1942 . the year he
graduated from Newport Harbor
High School. He played tackle
and end for the Sailor s.
He served in the South Pacific
with the U .S. Arm y during
World War 11 a nd returned to
the Stales to attend Arizona
State University. He graduated
in 1950.
He played ta ckle for the Sun
Devils for four years. earning
placement on all-conference
teams and selected in 1950 as a
New York Giants draft choice.
Mr. Muniz is survived by his
wife, Betty , of Orange; two sons,
Jimmy of Orange, and Ron of
Si l verado Ca ny o n ; two
daughters. Toni Ellingson of
Eurek a a nd Jana Muniz of
Anah ei m , and five
grandchildren.
Survivors a lso include two
brothers, Al , or Cost a Mesa, and
J oe, of Huntington Beach. Also,
five s isters. Carmen Saez of
Elsinore, Connie Schroeder of
La Habra, Dolores Tudor of
Costa Mesa, Josephine Kesel of
Montana and Rose Harrts of
Midway City.
Mr. Muniz moved to Orll.nge
from Cost.a Mesa about 10 years
ago. He was an operatinr
engineer.
Voters rn Costa Mesa and Newport
Wtll go tu the polls Nov. 3 to elect
four trustees 111 the Newport-Mesa
Unified School Dist n ct
There are I 1 candidates. Two
carididates, John llinaldo and
Beverly Ritch. have withdrawn
f rom the campaign but not in time
to have their names removed from
the ballot
Namt': David Nat k in
candidate for Trustee Area 2.
Address: 1250 Adams Ave ..
Cost a Mesa
Age: 22.
Occupation: Electrician
Education: Costa Mesa High
School graduate. Orange Coast
College, associate of a rts
Family: Bachelor
Why are you running for this
office?
I have a great inter est in
children and the school board
Something should be done. and
sitting around won't get at done
I think I see things I can help
with I've been a coach at
Davis Middle School and an
assistant teacher in a nursery
school.
What b the principal problem
in our schools today and how
would you cope with it?
"The major problem 1s a lack
of co mmuni cati ons a mong
students. parents, teachers.
administrators and the board.
They need to work together as a
unit and to involve industry as
well as res idents who have no
children in school
"Groups in the district need to
be pushed further ·and meetings
must be publicized more
"I'd push for mort' mingling of
school people with parents and
see that adminis trators get out
to all the cschool l sites and such "
Candidates must live in specific
trustee areas but they are elected
by d1.,tnctwide vote
f'ollowmg are brief sketches of
/we candidates detailmg who they
are and why they are running.
Sketches of other candidates will
appear later
Nam e : C h a rlie Gibbs,
candidate for Trustee Area 2.
Address: 3007 Royce Lane,
Costa Mesa
Age: 34
Occupation: Owner of Charles
Gi bb s Promotions and
U nd e rwa t e r Educators in
Fountain Valley.
Education: Associate of arts,
OranJ?e Coast College, Costa
Mesa , bachelor of arts. Cal
S ta t e Fullerton , mass
communications .
Family: Bachelor (divorced>.
Why are you running for
office?
"Because I thought it would be
a really good public service to
bring innovative ideas to the
school system ."
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and how
would you cope with it?
.. Financial problems . We have
declining enrollment because of
high property values and no
chahce for families with kids to
live in the area.
·'Every bod y wants good
education, but their goats may
be to have their own school in
their own neighborhood.
··w e might have to pic k
different configurations as far
as schools go. s uch as, possibly.
kind ergarten through sixth
grad e a nd seve n t h grad e
through 12th."
Name: Jos eph Phil brick,
candidate for Trustee Area 5
Address: 1823 W Bay Ave.,
Newport Beach.
Age : 52
Occupation: Professor, Cal
Poly Pomona
Education : Bac helor and
m aster of science degrees and
Ph.D. from Baylor University,
Waco, Texas.
Family: Wife, Wileeta, four
c hildren, one of whom was
graduated from district schools
Why are you running for this
ornce?
·'To provide a new point of
vie w and make availa ble my
competencies in solving district
problems."
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and bow
would you cope with It?
"Dec lining e nrollme nt
thro ug h competitio n with
private schools . It's estimated
that 12 to 15 percent of our
children are i n private
institutions
"I want to es t ab l is h
cooperation between private and
public s chool s th r oug h a
pr og r a m o f co ncurre nt
enrollment. That would include
a m a ndato ry f our -hour
minimum day for all kids In the
district in the public schools.
''Then t h ey cou ld t a ke
e lectives in private schools
during the afternoons. If we can
ge t f our perce nt o f ou r
enrollment back, we won't have
to close any schools or lay off
any more teachers.'·
Name : Forrest Werner.
candidate for Trustee Area 2
Address: 992 Azalea O~we.
Costa Mesa
Age: 52
Occupation: Garden Grove
U nif ied Sc h ool Di s tr ict
counselor.
Education: Bachelor of arts.
Indiana University. teaching
credential, Cal St a le Long
Beach.
Family: Wife. Mary Jane ;
four children who graduated
from Ne wporl Mesa dis trict
high schools.
Ke n Wayman, pres ident of the
sc h ool d1 s tr1 c l 's board of
trustees, said the dis trict's
prime interes t 1s an making
money and likely would lease it.
land t o a d eve loper f<n
construction of offices or tight
inrlustnal buildings
You're (Newport Beach> into
the oil business." said Wayman,
""e're into using our land."
Way man said the s chool
district is facing severe revenue
problems and is always on the
lookout for ways to make more
money He said 1f the district
sold its property. the money
would have to go into a special
reser ve fund. By leasing the Why are you running for land , he added . the revenue
orfke? cou Id go into the dis tri ct's
··1 feel I'm qualified, have the
time and have the commitment
to try and help the district "
What is the principal problem
in our schools today and bow
would you cope with it ?
"Mon ey . But I 'm not
com fort.able .:.ith the idea that if
you throw money at a probl em at
will go away
"Use of the funds we do have
available is the critical problem.
and that's going to gave us
headaches over the coming
years.
"We need to take a basic look
at cu rriculum . We want to
des ign a curriculum t o meet
basic graduation needs but also
t he needs to get students into the
universities.
"And I want to retain as much
as we can of the extra-curricular
programs that are a part of
maturity and social growth."
general fund
Se\'cral opponen ts of ttle
project. though. complained that
thl' deve lopme nt will bring
trnffic. noise a nd po llution
problems
·'It would compromise the
\H' II· bea ng of the s urrounding
co mmunit v." s aid R on
Covington, a· Corona del Mar
resident and activist in tbe
Ne wport C~nter referendum
pu~h
··You appro ve projects in
Ne\.\ port Beach a s if n o
limitations exist," he added.
··T his is a real source of
dissatisfaction."
Opponents of the development,
calling them selves the West
Newport Legislative Alliance,
propose that Beeco president
-Hancock "Bill" Banning III
modify his plans by eliminating
all office construction and
building only 100.000 square feet
ot industrial s pace
Coast cardiologi,st 's house has heart
..., ... ,.... ... '-..,..
The UJ>.'tatr~ landing ovt'Tlookt1 the living room with its wall of
gloss thaJ O/f<>rs a view from Catahna to tht mountoins.
Wh en a cardiologist builds a house. it h as to
have heart.
Dr. John Udall, whose Spyglass home perches
high on a hill, included a heart·shaped J acuzzi as
the fini shing touch to his custom-built residence.
The house is one of five in a tour to be held
from 11 a.m . to 4 p.m. Wednesday s ponsored by
the Corona del Mar High School PTA. Donation is
$10 and includes a basket lunch with tea served at
Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar. Tickets are
available by calling 640-5768 in advance or at
Sherman Gardens and the homes on the day of the
event.
The soft beiges and browns with natural oak
used throughout Udall's home are a backdrop for
his unlikely combination of Western motif and
French antiques.
Doubl e oak front doors o pen in to a
marble-floored entry topped by a 3·foot cr ystal
chandelier. A curved staircase leads up to two
guest s uites, each reflecting the separate flavors
mingled In the home.
On all levels and in aJI rooms, Western bronze
sculptures are displayed. Many have been created
by Richard Myer, Including "Eagle Horse" in the
entry and "The Chase" in the family room .
FinaUy, as with all Interesting buildings, the
house has a secret. Par t or a mirrored wall opens
at the touch of a hidden latch to r eveal a changing
room tucked away beneath the staircase for guest&
who want to take the plunge into the heart-shaped
J acuzzi. ,
Also opening their homes for the tour tre Mr.
and Mrs. Wally Working, 3100 Ocean Blvd., Corona
del Mar; Mr. and Mra. Warren Cbrlatell, 11 Goleta
Point, and Dr. and Mra. David Kaenotf, 3 Rocky
Point Road, both ln Spytlau Hill; and Dr. and
Mrs. Gerald Spear, 11 Trafalear, Harbor Rld1e.
F;agll' llorst." o bronze .~culptur<>
\l!ft'r. I~ rc~flt'Cled m entry mirror
~------
•
IUJJCI CQIT . YIUR HllOIWN llllY MR
JUf · ... r>I\' 1i1~·'fH11. • , · 1 ~H AN1-~f COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CfNTS .
Does 'killer Satellite' threaten U.S.?
WASlilNGTON <AP) -The
·Soviet Union bas a killer
satellite In orbit capable of
destroying several orbiting U.S.
satellites, the magazine Aviation
Week & Space Technology is
reporting.
The report, in the magazine's
Oct. 26 edition, called the
satellite "an anti-satellite battle
station equipped with clusters of
infr a r ed·h o mi ng guided
interceptors that coul d destroy
multiple U.S. spacecraft.
"The podded miniature attack
vehicles provide a new U .S.S. R.
capability for sneak attack on
U.S. satellites," it added.
Aviation Week cited no
sou rces and the D e fen se
Depart ment said it would not
commept on the report.
For several years, the Soviets
have had the only operational
killer satellite system. It is a
payload that tracks a target
within one or two revolutions
a fter it is launched and then
detonates. destroying both.
U.S. observers say that the
new killer satellite is capable of
striking targets out to 600 miles.
which makes America 's
navigation and reconnaissance
satelli tes vu lo era bl e .
Com munications a nd
missile-warning payloads are
stationed 22,300 miles up, but
CATCH OF THE DAY -J eannette Rubidoux
has her own recourse for fish that are fresh ;
sh e sells them. These whoppers went quickly
th rough the scales. past tht> cleanine knife.
into wrappin g paper and out to cus tomers at
t he dory fishermen's stalls at Newport Beach
pier where the fl eet d r li vers a varied catch
early each morning.
Bomb thre ats plague Britain
Police fear Welsh may try to disrupt royal visit
LONDON (AP> -Britain was
plagued today by a double bomb
m e nace, fr o m t h e Irish
Republican Army in London and
from Welsh nationalists police
feared rnigbt try to disrupt the
first official tou r by Prince
Ch arles and Princess Diana
since the ir wedding three
months ago.
An IRA bomb Monday killed a
police explosives ex pert in
London, the third bombing
vidim in the city in 17 days. In
Po ntyprldd, Wales, experts
Autumn air
quality hailed
EL MONTE <AP) -The best
September·Oclober air quality
in s even years bas been
recorded by the Air Quallly
Management District, officials
say._
"September and October are
traditionally the peak monthl ln
the srnot season, which belim
in April," APMD spokesman
Jim Blrakot 1ald, attrtbuUnc the
improvement to a reduct.loa of
pollutants ill the air, plus better
w11tber conditions.
Since im there alto bu beta
a reduction ot 800,000 pound.I per
day In pollutaaU from
atatlonary 1ourcee ucb a1
rtftllert., ~lrakoe said.
defused a firebomb in an army
recruiting office near the route
the royal newlyweds will take
Thursday.
The bomb disposal man was
Kenneth Howorth, 49. who died
as h e tried to d e fuse a
five-pound bomb found in the
ladies' room of a Wl mpy
ha m bun er stand on Oxford
Street, one of London's busiest
shopping thoroughfares.
Shoppers held back by police
barriers screamed and ran as
the bomb sbaUered the elus
fr o nt o r th e evacuated
restaurant and blew a 12·foot
hole in the sidewalk.
The IRA in a telephone call
took responsibility and claimed
two other bomb& were ln stores
nearby. Sniffer dogs found one,
and police defused It safely, but
a third bomb was not found.
The IRA bombing in London
be1an Oct. 10, a week after tM
collapse of the seven·month
hun1er strlke by Irish
nat.lonallsts in the Maze PrllOll
outside Belfast. Police 1ay U,.
bombinp are to avenge UM 10
guerrillas wbo starved
themselves to death in UM futile
attempt to wln pottUcal•prlloner
s tatus for lmprlsoned Irish
nat1onali1ta.
"We undentand they b .. •
decided to cauae 11 m ucb
devut.ation • po11lble," Nld a
Brlti•ll ucurlty 1ource In
Northern Ireland, where tbt
IRA has been fighlio1 a
guerrilla war against British
rule for 12 years.
Detectives of Scotland Yard's
anti-terrorist branch said the
I RA bomb squad in London ''is
considered to be one of the best
ever to operate on mainland
Britain," the Daily Telegraph
reposted.
The paper s aid detectives
believe the squad has at feast
five members, including an
experienced bomber and a
woman, because the wimpy
bomb wa s planted ln the
women's lavatory.
Prince Charles and bis bride
left London on Monda)' n1gbt on
the royal train for a three·day
tour ol the prl.nc1pallty on the
west coast from whlcb they 1et
their titles of prince and
prlncesa of Wales.
The royal couple were to
spend their nlghta on the train
instead of at the home• ol Joc-1
dl1nltarles, th~ uauaJ custom.
Press reports aa1~ lt waa a
aecurtty precaution, but
IJucklqbam Palace ref\aaed to
con.firm th1t.
The Dally Expre11 aald
counterterrorllt4 of the army'•
Special Alr Servtc:e )Jesiment w~Jd form an armed auU"d fof
the couple. The DaU1 Mlrror
aald the security operation
would be tbe larpat la Wales
slnee tbe lnveatlture ot Chari•
.. prince~ • ..,.
within a few years they too may
come within range-of advanced
killers or laser beams. both of
w hi c h the Soviets are
researching.
The Defense Department Is
developing its sa t e llite
d est royer, but it won't be
operational for about two years.
A spinning cylinder 30 inches
long, it would be launched rrom
beneath the wing of an F-15
fighter plane and its infrared
sensors would guide it to a
collision with its orbitini? tariet.
The Soviets last week cited
this U.S . weapon whe n it
petitioned the United Nations for
a treaty banning all weapons in
s pace.
The Pentagon also plans to
test laser beam anti-satellite
and anti missile weapons within
•
a rew years on the manned
space shuttle.
Aviation Week reported that
presidential science adviser Jay
Keyworth opposes s pendina
billions of dollars on high·enerfY
laser battle stations for ballistic
missile defense in s pace. The
magazine said this appears to
conflict with a decision by
President Reagan to "develop
technologies for space·based
missile defense.''
U.S. to revise CPI
Smaller cost-of-living raises. and inflation rate expected
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
government announced today it
will change its most closely
watched inflation measure -
the Consumer Price Index -to
remove the volatile effects of
hou se prices and mo rtgage
r ates . The result is expected to
be a lower inflation rate and
smaller cost-of-living raises for
millions of Americans.
Th e Bureau o f Labor
Statistics, an independent and
non -partisan branch of t he
Labor Department. said that
starling in January 1983 it will
revise its basic index to treat
housing costs as if the owner
were renting the dwelling.
Although the government 1s
initiating the change in 1983, a
special index that determines
a nnual increa ses an Social
Security, other government
programs and most labor
contracts with cost·of·living
clauses will not be altered until
J anuary 1985, the bureau said.
This is because many of the
union contracts do not expire for
several years. '
The index that changes in 1983
1s called the CPI for all urban
consumers, a broader inflation
measure than the companion
C PJ for wage earners and
cler i cal wor k ers , which
government program s and labor
unions usually rely on
The change 1n the CP I will
directly affect an estimated 90
m1ll1on Am e r ican s whose
incomes' are tied to rises in the
index. About 9 million union
members are covered by labo•
co ntra c t s th at provide
cosl·of-living wage increases
based on the CPI. and another 81
million people receive Social
Security. government pensions,
food stamps and other federal
benefits that increase based on
rises in the CPI.
.. A growing number of people
feel that there is something
wrong with the CPI and that it
should be fixed," Janet L.
Norwood, commissioner of the
statistics bureau. said at a news
conference. "In light of the
extensive use of the CPI in our
economic system , it is essential
that public confidence in it be
maintained. These facts clearly
indi cate that the time for
<See INDEX, Page AZ)
3opponents UC I will impose
collle out freeze on hiring
for A WACS . . . d . h "Th h.. , ·11 b
WASHINGTON (AP) -Three
Senate oppo.nents of President
Reagan's proposed AWACS sale
to Saudi Arabia switched today
and said they will vote for the
deal W e dn es d ay . Five
prev ious ly uncommitted
sen ators also announced they
will vote for it.
Sen. Roge r W. J e psen .
R ·l owa. who h a d b een a
declared opponent or the sale.
announced he will vote for it and
Sens. Charles E. Grassley.
R-Iowa. and J . James Exon,
D-Neb .. who had been leaning
against it. said they too will
support the president.
After a midaflernoon meeting
with the presid e nt , Sen .
Harrison Schmitt, R·N.M., who
h a d been co n s idered
uncommitted, said he will vote
for the proposed sale.
Meanwhile, Sens. David L.
Boren, D-Okl a .: Walter D.
Huddleston, 0 -Ky.: and Frank
H . Murkowski. R -Alas ka,
announced they will vote for the
s ale and Sen. Robert Dole,
R-Kan., said he intended to do
the same. All four had been
uncommitted.
The latest Associated Press
tally shows 52 senators against
the sale, 46 favoring the deal or
leaning that way, and two
uncommitted. A majority of
those voting is needed to block
the deal.
M ea nwhil e. Pentagon
spokesman Henry Catto said
D e f e nse Secr etar y Caspar
Weinberger was also calling
senators in an attempt to muster
<See AWACS, Page A2)
W eather
can cels
Series game
NEW YORK (AP> -The sixth
game of the 1981 World Series
was postponed by rain with the
~Angeles Dodgers leading the
New York Yankees 3·2 in the
best·of-seven set.
Gam-e Six will be played
Wednesday night at Yankee
Stadium with a seventh iame. if
ne.cessary, on Thursday night.
The baseb~ commissioner's
office announced the
postponement at 12:45 p.m . PST.
The eame had been scheduled to
be played at 5:20 p.m., but with
intermittent rain during the day
and the threat of heavy rain at
night, the game was postponed.
The last World Serlei same
pos tponed by rain was Game
One ~ the 1'79 cl&11ic between
the Baltimore Orioles and
Plttaburp Pirates. That Serles
opened ln Balymore.
UC Jrvme has JOtne e1g t . e iring reeze w1 e
other University of California noticeable by fac ulty and
campuses in imposing a ftee:ze students," he saJd. "People will
on the hiring of new staff rind some offices understaffed."
members, UCI Executive Vice McGaugh s aid he hasn't yet
Chancellor James L. McGaugh determined how many positions
announced today will remain open or how many
The freeze. which is· expected openings will be caused by
tolastatleastuntilnextJune30. people leaving university
was ordered by University of e mployment.
Ca lifornia Vi ce Presid ent
William Fretter as a way of Go~. Brown ha.s told state
meeting part of a $22 million agencies to cut .their budgets ~Y
budget cu t ordered by Gov. 2 percent to avoid a state deficit.
Edmund G. Brown Jr UC offic.ials have discussed
McGaugh said that the freeze increases in student fees and
doesn't apply to faculty or staff limits on .enrollment as options
members responsible for patient to meet this budget cut.
care at UCI Medical Center. He
also said exceptions can be
made if any employee must be
hired to preserve an academic
program.
McGaugh said that the budget
c ut may mean a reduction of
from $500,000 to $1 million in
funding to UCL
Diablo license
target of Brown
SACRAMENTO <AP l Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr.'s lawyer,
citing design errors at the
Diablo Canyon nuclear power
plant, said today he intends to
ask the Nuclear Regulatory
Com m issio n to r e voke t he
plant's license, unless the NRC
takes that action on its own.
H e rb ert Brown , who
r e presents the governor on
matters relating to t h e $2.3
bi llion plant ne ar San Luis
Obispo, said an "independent
audit" should be made of the
plant's safety. (Related story
Page AS> 1
The attorney said an audit
would l ay the basis fo r
relicensing the facility -or
would reveal any new problems.
·'T he license was issued on the
mistaken assumption that the
plant was built solidly." the
lawyer said.
He made the comments in an
interview from his Washington
office.
Last week, NRC lnvestlgarors
discovered that Pacific Gas and
Electric Co .. the operator of the
pl a n t. made e rr o r s I n
calculating the capability of
Di a blo Canyon to withstand
earthquakes.
The first design error waa
discovered Sept. 22 by a junior
pipe analyst who found that
wrong diagrams were used ln
the design of earthquake
supports for piping included in a
secondary coolln1 system. • The governor's attomey Hid
tbe audit should be conducted by
someone other than PG•&.
"We're auumln1 U.• NRC wlll revoke Dlablo'a Ueeme,"
attorney Bro4'n aald .... ._. •• "
go1ng to i?ive t he NRC a
reasonable amount of time to do
it. H the commission doesn't act,
we will suggest to the NRC that
it takes this course."
Brown also said the original
decision to license the plant was
a "monumental blunder" by the
NRC whi c h af f ects the
"i n teg rit y o f its own
institution." Brown added that it
was "clearly in the NRC's own
interest" to revoke the license.
DRANGI COAST WIATHIR
Mostly cloudy night and
morning hours with partly
sunny afternoons through
Wednesday. Highs 65 to 72.
Lows tonight 58 to 63.
INSIDI TODAY
A teachtt1' wolk01't hoa
anger~ the relidc?at1 of o
Mil1neaoto town immortaltud
bN author Louro lngoU1
Wilder in Mr-'' LiUt. Howe"
boolu. ~e Page C4.
llDll ............. ............ =-= : ==-= 1£:1
Orange Coaet OAJLY PILOT/Tuesday, October 27, 1981 N
OMPOSI T E TRAN ACTIONS
QUOllofl~· •tt<t.UOI U IAOH ON TMI ••• vo•• ¥l0WIU •AC•••c. , ••. MITOtf, Dl.TIOIT loMO Cl•C•••ATI .. ~. IJICIUl ... 11 6110 •IN•HO 11' Tiii NAtO 1o•O IMITllHT
7
Dow Jones Final
UP 7.42
CLOSING 831.37
~ McDonald's
fires ad firm
McDonald 's, whlch operates the blggest
restaurant business in the world, is havin1 another
good year (1 can't remember a bad one ) -and ao
what did they do? They fired their advertiaina
aaency.
Needham, Ha.rper & Steers. the McDonald'•
agency for the past 11 years, was banded its
termination notice two weeks a10. Effective next
Jan. 12, the account1 which ls valued at fl~ million a
year, moves to the bag Chicago a1ency, Leo Burnett.
McDonald's gave little reason for diamisstnc the
agency that came up with some of the classic
literature of our time: "You deserve a break today"
and ''Nobody can do It like McDonald's can." The
implication was, however, that McDonald's bad
outgrown Needham and oow wanted to be serviced
by one of adland's super agencies.
Not that the Needham agency is small. It ranks
20th ln the business, handling such major clients u
Xerox. Parkay margarine, V ·8 juice, Honda,
Wrigley's ~
S p e a r m l n t \:·
gum, Dial soap -:"t' o and Busch )' ,
beer. It's ~lso k ~
the c re a l1 v e •--·~--iim-------
: o~c: b:h~n~ lllTll IUllllTZ
"Eatles for
Wheaties'' advertising. But McDonald's was its
biggest accoWlt -and so it hurts.
Burnett, the nation's fifth largest agency, is twice
as big as Needham -and while you may not know its
name, you are surely familiar with its handiwork for
the likes of Allstate Insurance ("You're in good
hands">. Kellon cereals, Green Giant <Burnett
virtually invented this character), Kleenex, Nestle's
Taster's Choice, Marlboro cigarettes, United Airlines
(the "friendly skies"), Cheer detergent, RCA,
Revlon's Moon Drops and Dewar's White Label
Scotch.
So next year, when you see McDonald's break out
in a new song-and-dance routine on your tube. you'll
know it's coming from the Burnett shop. Agencies
pull out all the stops in their ftrst campaign for a new
client.
This ls not unfamiliar territory for Burnett. It
used to do the advertising for Kentucky Fried
Chicken. And even now it's doing the advertising for
Pillsbury's Steak & Ale restaurant.a, an account lt
will surely have to drop because ol the conflict wilb
McDonald's,
Indeed, Burnett's entire Pillsbury business may
be up for grabs. Burnett bandies the advertising for
Pillsbury frostin1s and refrigerated dougb products.
Green Giant la a1ao part of Pillsbury. Those account.a
don't conflict wtlh McDonald's but Pillsbury also
happens to operate the No. 2 fut-food chain, Bureer
King.
Burnett bas nothing to do with Burger King
advertising but many clients do not like their
agencies bandllng any pa.rt of the enemy. That's the
way the ad business works.
McDonald's ls clearly the client you want to have
in the restaurant business. There are now 6,SOO
McDonald's restaurants in the world, and they ring
up a total of $6.5 billion a year or an average of Sl
million per unit. Burger King has 3,000 unit.s which do
close to S2 billion a year. Kentucky Fried Chicken has
more than 4,000 outlets in the United States but total
sales are lesa than Burger Kings's.
McDonald's is a phenomenon. In the past decade
its sales have increased seven times. It's now doing
more than Sl billion of sales outside the United
States.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
METALS
<••"' 11,.. .. , <•I'll • peul\41, u.~. dHtlnetleN. &...-,....clfltA• ....,.. lt.c .. llo-49\11 Cfl'b • POUflCI, dllllttHe.
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A ....... t.acenba _.cl,N V UPS AND DOWNS
~ten •• ,., .....
l"le ...... Mll .. l19YOl .. H 'f
SILVER
H...., A HanNl'I, .._ ... ,.,trey-•
GOLD QUOTATIONS .
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