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1981-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot
' * * * * • * DRANGI COAST YOUR HOMfTDWN DAllY PAPfR T u E. ~~ 0 A y N u \/ F-M l if I~ • • ~ 0 1 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFOANIA 25 CENTS '10' to TV, hut it's just an 81/2 By FRED ROTHENBERG NEW YORK <AP> -There's .a big cover-up going on at CBS. The hit mov ie "10" -Bo Derek 's theatrical and m athemalical success -will be on network television for the Cirsl time tonight. and bikinis will be c loakin g what moviegoers saw in the flesh. (Channel 2. 8:30 p.m.) Although sanitizing sex for TV 1s nothing new, ''10 " is somewhat unique since it was originally filmed in two dirrerent ways · one ror the theaters, one for television. So in Mrs. Derek's ramous "Bolero" scene, she leHs Dudley Moore she likes to make love accompanied by a cehain piece of music.-while her langu-age in the theaters was much stronger. And when Moore uses his telescope to s noop on his run-loving neighbor. tonight's women around the pool will be wearing bikinis. It 's still very much a sophisticated, adult movie, still very much about sex, and that's what makes "10" so interesting on another level. Talking about sex, schem ing to get it and weaving plots around il -even if the on-air sex 1s toned down a bit remains a major theme of the new TV season. While some say that Jiggle 1s out and giggle is 1n . that assessme n t is merel y superficial. There is network concern over the Coalition for Beller Telev1s1on 's threatened boycott because of TV's sexual content, and there 1s th e perception of a more conservative mood an America. Bul although .. Hill Str eet Blues" had no explicit sex or exploitative bodies Thursday. half the s t ory lanes were sexuall y suggestive. Earlier that night. the themes and dialogue were more JU\Cnal e an NBC 's new s it com ... Gimme a Break. but the) wcrt> talking about the same thing Sure. the !.oph1st1<.'ated Priscilla Barnes as more subUe than Suzanne Somers in ··ThrC'e's Company," but doesn't t·ven show still revolve around ~omcthang sexual" The waitresses m .. Making a Linng · now wear less revealing outfits. but ha ve the nulle ft'male relationships and innuendoes <.'hanged that much? Aren't thcv still bed-hopping in <See '10', Page A2 I NB susp.~ct feared rooininate .....,,.. ..... ..,...,~ Beacllyoer Diane Schroder ot Tustm appears to l1at·e erperienced a tew near-misses hy tlte .<ianrl deanmq machine on the Newport Beach strand Monday. Beach crowds have been sparse as cooler temperatures settle in. \\'pather of fic1als said the high at the beach Monday was 69 degrees and predict readings will smk several more degrees before the week 1s over Man arrested in Clemente slaying case An Oceanside man has been arrested in Ohio in connection with the slaying or a woman whose body was dumped in San Clemente in August. Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Harl said Daniel Ray Martin, 23, was ta ken into custody al his mother's· home in Versailles, Ohio, as a suspect in the slabbing death of 20-year-old Zaida Martin, his sister·in-law. Fog misses coast; more of same due A thick blanket of Cog that grounded some planes at John Wayne Airport and plagued motorists in inland a reas of O r a n ge Co unty today is expected to repeat its performance Wednesday morning. Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Bureau said fog covered interior Orange County this morning, while coastal areas were relatively clear. Weather officials blamed the Cog on a strong onshore flow or cool marine air which condensed when meeting up with pockets or warm air In inland areas. Officials in the John Wayne Airport tower reported a 200-foot ceiling around the airport with a one-mile visibility range. Pilots without instrument ratings were being urged to stay on the ground. A spokesman from the Orange Cou nt y Harbor Patrol headquarters In Newport Beach said visibility alon11 the coast was two miles. The fog, weather officials explained. h as a rrived hand·in-hand with a cooling trend that is expected to drop daytime temperatures to the low 70s in inland cities and lo the upper 60s along the coast. Wo01an friend testifies By GLENN SCOTT Of, ... Oelty '1tet "9fl The girlfriend of Newport Beach psychologist Telford "Tim" Moore testified Monday thal Moore wanted to marry her but was mortally afraid lo cross his homosexual roommate and the man he is accused of killing. Stanley Espinda. Glory Lane. the girlfriend from Laguna Beach, told an Orange Counly Superior Court Jury that Moore lived in fear of the tempestuous and dominating Espinda, who had befriended Moore 18 years ago. In a candid and detailed description of their relat1onshlp. Ms. Lane said Moore became increasingly disturbed about his relationship with Espinda in the weeks preceding the Nov. S. 1980 shoaling in the roommates' exclusive Spyglass Hill home. She said he often broke into tears describing lo her the retribution Espinda would take against him when he learned that Moore had been seeing her. Two days before the kilting. she said she surprised Moore in his school psychologist's office at Fountain Valley High School. and he burst int o tears repealing: .. Please don 'l stop loving me." Despite her urgings, however. she said Moore refused to fight back against Espinda's beatings. believing that any aggression would only incite more punishment. After fi nding .deep scratch marks on his neck one day in October 1980. s he said she angrily scolded: "Have you ever in all these years fought back?" He told her he hadn't, she said . She said s he was rarely invited to Moore's home and only when Espinda was gone. When the two were in bed at her home, she said he never fell asleep, claiming that he was worried that Espinda would find them and hurl them. Al one point. she said. Moore spotted Espinda 's red Porsche c ruising past her home and <See MARRY, Page AZ) Hart said investigators determined that the woman was slain in Oceanside while her husband, Kerry Dean Martin. a Marine, was on duty overseas. The woman's body, Hart pjd, later was dumped along Avenida Pico near San Clemente High School. The body was discovered by a jogger Aug. 13. Mrs. Martin was reported missing by relatives Sept. 22. It was a distinctive tattoo of a butterfly on her shoulder that led to her identity, Nancy: Get tOugh on drugs Hart said. • Hart said the slain woman's brother.In -law was arrested Saturday. Two investigators have traveJed to Ohio to return M artln to Orange Co unty for prosecution. H a rt said it was his understanding that Mar\ln would waive extradition. The motive for the 1layln1 hu not yet been determined, Hart said. First lady urges parents to become involved · WASHJNGTON (AP> -Nancy Reagan has all but blamed drug addiction on the nation's parents and advised them lo get tough, even If it means "loelng your child for a while." The first lady, e mbarking Monday on a n a n ti-drug crusade, labeled addiction "the most democratic illness there ls," because it cuts across racial and economic tines. ••I believe parents are the answer to it all.·· Mrs. Rea1an declared durtn1 a meellnJ In the slate dinlnl roc>m with about_, members or the NaUonal Federation or Parents for Drug Free Youth. ·'I thin k for. a long time parents weren't involved," the Cirst lady said. "They shilled It to the schools or the police or the government, a nybody but themselves. because lt took lime, It took effort, It's not pleasant. "Sometimes you run the risk of losing your child for a while," she added. "You have to be tough and you have to learn to say, •no.' You can't only aay 'yea.' "It's areal to be your child's friend and pal," sbe said. "But sometimes, you've got to be the Ir parent.·· Mrs. Reagan said s he has believed "for a long time that parents have not been involved the way they sbould be. I think that in the final analysis It's the parents who are goin g to tum this thing around. I think they're the most potent force there ls.·' S he said drug and alcohol abuse was "one of the moat serious problems our country faces." • 1Dru1 abuae will be Mrs. <See DlltJGS. Pafe Al) Hufrl111q \<111111111ri1 t•1 lu1x111 rrr1• \m1•rt1 rin ''1111/111111"'' ·r111n /e lt 1 R()c ::11 .\111;1 H1111 r·inr· H1•11 \ 1r11~~" ''"" l.ur• 1 \,.,, •111111 t Balloonists head i across the Pacific NAGASHIMA. Japan (APl The Double Eagle V floated over the Pacific today toward the West Coast of the United States. but the helium filled balloon lost some altitude. a spokesman at lhe balloon ·s tracking slation here said. Though skipper Ben Abruzzo a nd hi s lhrce c rewmen remained confident tht'~ would reach the West Coast. the ground crew here said the balloon was riding air currents at about 13,000 reel. or S.000 feet lower than originally plann ed. The balloon was about 650 miles east of Japar:i. they said. Eddie Hatta. an charge of the Nagashima Onsen Communications Center, said it appeared the balloon would not pass over San Francisco as originally planned but will float over Seattle or Britis h Columbia . To fl y over San Francisco. the balloon would need to be at 18,000 feet, he said. Halla said one theory for the lower altitude was that the balloon might not be completely inflated with helium. But he said at one point this morning the balloon was floating al)9,000 feet, which "proves it can climb up to high levels, especially when the sun rises in the morning. I don't see any problems at all." The balloon's crew remained in good spirits and was in radio con tact with the Nagashlma tracking station and with the air control tower at Narita International Airport, near Tokyo, Hatta 1&1d. Abruf.tO. a 51 -ye&r•old real esta te dev e loper from Albuquerqu4?, N.M .. aald he and his crew hoped to arnve on the West Coast by Tbund1y. If condition.' permit, they will head ' for the East Coast. cross the' Atlant1<' and make a final land1n~ near the European border of the Soviet Union. · ·cond1t1ons are so good I feel "e c· an continue on to Europe." Abruzzo said before Laking off. Abruzzo, Larry Newman and Maxie Anderson. all from Albuquerque, made the first successful trans-Atlantic balloon crossing an the Double Eagle in August 1978. Newman is Abruzzo's co-pilof for lhe Parif1c flight, and lht olher two crew members arf Ron Clark or Albuquerque and .. Rocky" Aok1. the Japanese ow n er o f the Benhih ana restaurant c hain. ORANGE COAST WEATlll Inc reased coastal low clouds and fog tonight and Wednesdau mornhg. Otherwue fair both da111 and not as wann. Higlu 6S to 72. Lows tonight 50 to SS. INSIDE TODAY • ' • ·r1s tile season /or an 1 araland1e of mail·order rntnlog11e.<1 and tlie buymy I'll hi II' IS />f!tng l4XJ merl I() 'w wn re See Pnye BB INDEX lr111a..,..._ •1 ~·= .:.; -..c-a Cl"9llnN ... c--. •• ~-.... c......... c ... C:-ICI M c ......... ........... ......... .......... IM ~,..._, .. ........... ~ 1 .. ' • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueaday. Nov•mber 10, 1981 • • ftlfflately bec1111e 10 nervoua nd withdrawn tbat he could arely talk. Durlna Ma. Lane't tt1tlmony, loore aat quietly and xpresalol\len -u he hH roufhout the trlaJ -nexJ to •attorney, Al Stokke. In previous remarks. Stokke •• conceded that Moore 1hot aplnda as the victim relaxed lhe living room floor ol their me. But. Stokke, adaptine the battered wile" delense for this se, Is arguing that Moore'a ction was the result o r f spinda's continued haras sment nd doesn 't c onstitute the Jurder c harg e soug ht by eputy District Attorney Bryan rown. Ms. Lane s aid Moore felt a .,...,..... µ,gue loyalty to Es pinda c ause his 45·year·o ld mmate had bailed him out or traumatic family life and itcouraged him to undertake hii {uccessful praclice as 4\ pychologist. Tl11 s 1s a skt-td1 n1 tile nerdy d1st:0t•ererl yell0tr rrrmterl qarrle1wr 'lOlt'erl>trd. tltnuylll to 1lt' t'.fltnt'I ft resemh/e o; a rol1111 u•1tl1 11 yulrle11 11ranye hreatll . Moore and Espinda ran th ewport P s y c hologi c a l a boratory, whrc h contracted services to several coastal hoot districts . Moore also ught classes at Orange Coast ollege and USC and he assisted counseling program at UC rvine. Tropical bir<J, seen 1st time in 85 years lMs. Lane sa id Espinda was a mosexual who, despite his ndness in earlier years, had come possessive and tried to nvince Moore that he also aned toward homosexuality. ;. She said Moore resisted and r'inally a tte nde d a men's workshop in San Francisco on sexual awareness. "He came out feeling totally hete rosexual." s he s aid. But s he said he still couldn't sha ke Espinda's strong physical control and r efused to leave him fo r her until the 18·ye a r relationship was te rminated. As ked why he didn't simply m ove out, he told her: "You don't understand. He'll foll ow us a nywhere. He'll rind us. He'll ~u rt us ... s he said. From Page A1 I DRUGS. • • Rea gan's major project as first lad y , along with her s upport for t h e fos t e r g r a ndparents program. according to her press secretary. Sheila Tate. WASHINGTON CAP> -A colorful tropical bird not seen for 85 years and thought to be extinct has been found in New G uin e a , the National Geographic Society announced today. Previously the existence of the yellow-fronted bowerbird had been known only becau11e of three s kins o f male birds brought in by Malay or Papuan hunters in the 1890s . And a series or expeditions failed to find the bird until Jan. 31. when California ornithologist Jared Diamond sighted one in an unexplored mountain range in New Guinea. S c i e nti s t s th o ught the bowerbird was extinct . and Diamond was not looking for it a t tht" Ume. · · w nen I and anyone else who g oes to New Guinea have dreams . we dream about finding the m ystery bowerbird. but my goal on this trip was simply to do a general bird survey of this mountain range and help the Indonesian government plan a ne w national park there ... Diamond said. Nevertheless, he rou11d both the bird and Its bower 1 on tbe first day of his two.week trip, a nd saw seve ral othe rs during his s tay. Diamond e s timates th a t as man y a s 1 ,0 00 bowe rbirds may live in this remote area. He nearly ignored the bird at firs t, thinking it was a related species, but noticed its golden yellow plume curved over to the nostrils. On his return to New York, he examined the skins or the 19th century birds and confirmed the species was not extinct. Male bo we rbirds build a s pecial t all nest of twigs around a sapling. Known as a bower , this nest is decorated with fruits and flowers and used to entice th e f e male bow e rbird into r omance. Late r the female builds her own nest in the trees to r aise the young. Diamond re ported that on one instance he encountered a bird courting a . female, making odd noises and parading in front of her with a blue fruit in his bill. T he bower was decorated with three piles of fruit. one yellow. one blue and one gr een. Appare ntl y that was n 't s uff icient e ntic eme nt. h e observed, as she fle w away after a few minutes. In recent m onths. the first lad y has he ld e ight private meetings with experts on drug a nd a lcohol a buse a nd has visited two residentia l treatment progra~. She asked the participants al Monday's m eet ing how s h£· could help and they suggested she s peak out publicly and visit parent g r o ups and school programs in addition to drug centers. Veterans Day rites planned on coast One person suggested she hold se minars for the s pous es of m e mb e r s o f Con g r ess , g overnors and other public officials. Mrs Reagan quoted a n old ad age .. A wom an is like a te a·bag. You never know her ~t r e ngth until s he's i n hot wate r." and s aid it applies to men as well. "We're all in a lot or hot water." s he said. "There's a danger of losing our whole next generation." Mrs . Reagan said that during her visits to drug treatment centers s he was fascinated ·•to he ar these young people talk very freely, very openly, with ve r y little e mbarrass ment. 1 which l expected. about what bas happened to them .... All of them mentioned the parents." She said one problem was that a report severa l year s ago maintained mari juana was harmless and "so ma n¥ of the children referred back to that qne report. Now that's been f!i sproved since and proved >"'rong. But it's very difficult to J(et young people to read the reports th at have come out s ince ." Although Mrs. Reagan did not ay what specific report claimed jmarijuana was harmless. her ~ta ff said the first lady was !QUOting a National Institute on ;orug Abuse rePOrt. j Or. William ·Pollio. director of :the drug abuse institute. told •lCongress last month that a study indicates that marijuana f s moking leads to cocaine and heroin use . He said that "stepping·stone hypothesis" was ·'rejected prematurely and now needs serious re-evaluation ... Ceremonies are scheduled in several Orange Coast cities Wednesday in observance of Veterans Day, formerly known as Armistice Day in recognition of the end of World War I. A veterans memorial service will beg in at kt a .m . at American Legion ,ost 291 at 215 15th St .. Newport Beach. This cer e mony will b e · followed by a lunch honoring World War I veterans. At 3 p.m. a flag retirement ceremony will take place at the post. Veterans in Huntington Beach will place flowers at the war memorial outside City Hall, 2000 Main St., at 11 a .m. In Laguna Beach, members of American Legion Post 222 and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868 will place two wreaths at the war monument in He11ter Park. also at 11 a.m. In San Juan Capistrano. the annual memorial service at the Mission Cemetery , off Los Strawbe rry plants s tolen More than 15.000 strawberry p l a n ts wer e s tole n fro m a Fountain Valley fa rmer over the weekend by two men who drove a station wagon up to a farm truck and heisted the seedUngs, police reported today. A weekend fo11eman alone at the agricultural area off Slater Avenue west of Newhope Street told police two men parked a station wagon next to the farm truck and unloaded 15 crates or strawberries and drove away before he could reach them. The loss was estimated at S570 by farmer John Kat.sul Kioka, police said. c ................ 11...u...n O .. ANOE COAST Daily Pilat I j .......... , ...... ......, llAIN OflPICa .......... c.---.CA. ..... ....., .. -.~~CA.- ~-:c-......... ~. ........... ! ............... .. ... ---... "._~ , ..... ...... , . ..,..._. Cerritos Street near Ortega Hig hway, will begin al 11 a.m. Several elected representatives a nd mili tary offi cials a r e scheduled to participate . Local c ity halls . schools . banks. pos t offi ces and county. s tale and federal offices will be closed Wednesday in observance of t he holiday. Legislature OKs we lfare cutbacks SACRAMENTO <AP > The s t a t e Legislature opened its s pecial session by setting aside its partis an reapportionme nt dis pute and c utting we lfare benefits for 34,000 families by ~25 million. · Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .. who calle d the s pecia l session starting Monday. signed it into law within hours . The bill. SBlx by Sen. Alfred Alquist , D-San J ose. won a 31·2 Se n ate vot e a nd a 63·12 Assembly vote. The R e publi c ans , who cons idered r efusin11: to vote for the bill , coope rated after Democratic leaders ass ured them that congressional and legis lative r e apportionment would not be brought up. Assembly Speake r Willie Brown. 0 -San Francisco, assured the m at the outset that his intention was to "lead the house through the thicket or the Board or Equalltation reapportiorimenl, and the Board of Equalization only. New districts for state Senate, Assembly and U.S. House or Representatives have already been pa s sed b y the Democrat -dominat e d Legislature. and the angry Republicans are collecting 1lgnatur~ to take the Issue to the voters next June. The we1fare blll Wit required, officlalJ said, to conform state re,ulatlon• with those of the Rea1an admint.tratlon. Later Monday, Assembly and Senate commit.tees apprond 1imllar lllUIUf'el to lmplement otMr federal cut.I, H•lni lhe Rate about• millloa . • Victim's mom testifies Freeway Killer jury told how she discovered son missing By JACKIE HYMAN ._ ........... ..... Jn on cmotlon·choked voice, the molhc1· oC a 16·your·old Freeway Kiiler vlcllm told a Jury Monday a t the trial of Willlum Bonin how she Celt when 11he discovered her s on m issing April 10, 1980 ·'I k n e w i;ome thln g was wrong. l went Into his room and he wasn't there." said Barbara Biehn of hllr return home from work on that night. .. His jacket was there. his driver's educa tion book wa s t here. I knew he wouldn't go anywhe re without lhis j acket. It was cold al night." lt would be four days before she learned that a body round in a Lon g B each aJ ley by a passerby had been identified as that of her son. Steven Wood of Be~flower. Mrs. Biehn said in a qu,vering voice. Shortly after leaving the cour troom , s he burst into tears. Honan .· <i 34-year·<>ld truck From Page A1 'I 0 ' ... "Dallas'!" And isn't Dais) Mae still lx>Uncing and overflowing in that prime example of soft-core pornography. "The Dukes of Hazzard'!" Certainly So It's not totally accu rate to say TV executives are pu rs uing ga ggl es o ve r j i gg les; th at 's a b it o f a smokescreen to keep the Moral Ma1onty types at bay. Rather the operattve progr a mmmg po licy on s e x 1s juggle and goggle Wh al you see 1s not real!) what you get As for tonight's heavier do$e of s ex. CBS was not at <(11 certain what 1t was getti ng when it purchased .. 10 " Jts deal was an e xa m ple of how networks occasionally "pre·buy" films to get tht• j ump on the competition CBS boug ht Blake Edwards ' screenpla) before any filming was done The pr e ·buy was based on cast. charac ters and story line. Ali ce Henderson, a CBS vice pres ident for program pra ctices. said the network took Edwards' sc ript a nd wrote notes a long the ·m argin. sugges ting how lhe film would 'best play on TV Ms He nderson said the language had to be bleached -in a num ber of places and. of course. the bol e r o sce ne and pools ide vo,veurism had to he c1rPs<;ed up Edwards 1s out of tht" country s hooting another film. but CBS s a id he m ade the ch a nges himself. rather than having CBS edit later. That's the-case with movies that a ren't pre·bought Ms Hende rson said CBS' onl) post·produelt0n editing involved the .. Bolero" scene s hot for T V At one point. a n ake d Mrs Dere k geti. up fro m the bed A little cuttin~. shading, a nd other optic a l wor k . a nd C BS had lam pered \Hlh perfect ion It devalued a 10 dr iver rrom Downey, Is char1ed In l~o Anj(cle1 County with 12 liluyings lhOl occurred betwoon AU(lwsl 1979 and JuM 1980, A total of 44 youna men and boy• h uve been m u r dered and d u m ped n ea r So uthern California freeways since 1972 in whut h as be en t a gged the Frcoway Kil l e r case . but in vestigators s uy t he death!! ma) not all be rela ted Bonin also faces i.cven mur der ehari:es in Orangl' County T he Superior Court trial in Los Ange les presided ove r by J udge Wilham B. Keene has heard a gory rec1tut1on of m ut1lat1on and m u rder und have been shown colo r p hotograph s of the v1ct1ms' bodies !>ince the tnal began last week. In describing young Wood's mjunes Monday. Long Beach polite homicide Officer Logan Wren said. "I noticed a bruise a bove the right eve. a !Jgature mark W"ound the neck, ligature mark• on both wriat• and • ligature murk on one ankle." EarUcr Mond1y, in d t acriblna tht' blOOdy, brul1ed body of a nother vktim. Ronald Gatlin, 18. of Van Nuya , she rltr'1 Set. Oi.tvid Ku•hner said, "There wa1 b luud that appeared to be em ana ting from the r ight ear . The re were numerous abrasions on the body.·· He also described numerous li gature m arks on the neck. a nkles and hands and added . "I obs e r ved a s m a ll p unc ture wound to the right re<,1 r portion ofthc neck " Lust week. the seven-man. f l\•e-w oma n j ur y h eard testimony from a numbe r or people including the mothers of victims Darin Kendrick. 19. and Sean King, 14 and saw a picture or Kendrick's body showing an i ce pick protruding fro m his rtJ?hl ear Music center design unveiled in Mesa 8~ JODI CADENHEAD of the D•lly fllt.e Staff The puhli c received the first glimpse Monda) at designs for the future S59 million Orange County Music Cente r during a s tud) session of the Costa Mesa Cit' Counc·1I t\rch1tct'ls a nd backeri. or the Cos ta Mes a t w i n th e ate r rcvcall'd drawi n gs a nd a scuh.·<l·down model of what will he only the third the ater in the t.:n1tcd States to orrer theater . symphony. opera and ballet. The 3,000-seal theater will o ffc•r a threl' ti er seating arrangeme nt and acous tical des ign t apable of orrering all four types of performa nces. said Len Bedsow, the Music Center cxc('ulive d1ret tor. T he other two theatt'rs are the Dorothy Ch a nd le r P av il ion 1n Los Angeles and the Jesse II Jones lla ll in Houston 'When the Orange County M us ic Ce n te r b ec om es op e r at ion al 1n earl:. 1985. California \\Ill have, three major performing arb centers to attract wo rld class a cts and uerforme rs ... said Bedsow The plans unveiled by the a r chitects of C.iudtll Rowlett S('olt of Houston 1n a 1oint v entur e wi t.ti the BICl r ock Partnership also included: A 3,000 sea t t h eater covering 200,000 square feet and est imated lo cost S34.5 m illion A second tv.o·level 1,000 sca t theate r l'Overing 37 .000 squure feet ·and estimated to cost S5.5 mi llion A 16·slor) office building adjacent to the twin theaters. No l'OS l estimated. A m ult1 .le vel park in g s tructure capa bl e of hous ing • 1.300 cars S tones roll in Hartford llARTFORD. Conn 1AP 1 Wearing white tights. yellow knee pads. red ·flowered shirt a nd blue padded jacket. Mick J agger led the Rolling Stones to the sta~e in their only sc he duled stop in Nev. England on their three-month L' S tour The Bnt1sh rock gr oup. which las t toured the L'mted States in 19 78. v.as making its fi rs t appearance in this city since 1966 for shows Mondav and tonight. The Stones play 10 New Yo rk Caty's Madison Squa re Ga r den o n T h u r s d a v a nd Frida y . J agjle r. no"' 38. was greeted wi th a roa r from the c rowd of 15.00Q as he lived u p to his prancing. provocative image D e bt takes a brie f dip ... It's time for your loyowoy I Avoid the holiday crunch this yeor bv shoppmg at Brett Welker now Let us help vou c hoose the perfec t gift tor that special person trom our selection of ftne jewelry. ond. with o smoll deposit. we will hold 11 tor you unlil Christmas tllr'---------._..------------~--~~------------------------------------------------_,,...·· ·~ ........ Philippe Junot. /orm.e r Jwsbarul ol Pnni:ess Caro/me ot Monaco. chats with Cal1torn1a model Bnyltte Lo1:tang at a New York disco. Test t ube baby coming to U.S. The parents of the first American test-tube baby will bring the infant girl to the Un ited States this week, a ccording to Dr. Patrick S t e ptoe , a Briti s h gynecologist. The baby was born last month in Gr eat Brita)n. Steptoe, medical director or Bourn H al l Clini c 1n Cambridge. England. said Sunday. He refused to divulge the identities or the parents or where they li ve. Steptoe. i n Phoen ix to address a conference. said 20 test-tube babies have been born this year , with 30 more suc h pregnancies expected worldwide in 1982. The word is passed along by inmates of Miami's jails if you're innocent and incarcerated. call Georgia J ones Ayers. She is known as "Miss Jones,'' a nd while she is neither a lawyer nor a social wor ker, the 53-year -old Miami wo man has had unique success in obtaining justice for people who had no other hope. If it hadn't been for Miss J ones. 17-year -old George Curtis might still be doing time. He was struck by a stray police bullet during a riot in 1!170. and was arrested a n d accused of be ing a sniper. Miss Jones believed he was innocent and convinced a judge lo release Curtis on her Sl bond. · Curtis was convicted on the le s timony of seve n p o li ce m e n , a n d. was sentenced to five years in prison. Miss Jones pushed I o h a ,. e l h e c a s e r e · in vestigated. Four years later. charges against Curtis were dropped when another po li ce offi cer who hadn't tes tified earlier said the '- s niper fire c ame fro m ' another building. Srnyer Connie Fra111 l'i rehearses ror lier , om11f>od; al tlit· \\'esthur.11 \lus1c ,..air 111 Sew York 1cher11 'it'Ce11 t/ear~ ayo .. ~lw was •operf atlPr a pennr11101we Prlnce11 Marl•A•&rld ol J..uxtmbour1 11 tnt•ttd to be m arr ltd to Cbr l1UH of H 1p1bur1·Lorr1I••· the archduke of Au1trl1, the 1rand duc al court has announced. The weddin1 will tllte place Feb. e tn Lu.xtmbalura. P rlncea Marte·A•trW, 2'71 la the eldest dau1hter or Grand Duke Jean and GraQd D u c ll e11 Cll arloUe of Luxembourg. A few years ago, rumors linked her romantically to Brltetn'a Prla ce Charlea. Her husband·t.o·be la 27 and works •• a banker in Brussels." He ls the aon ol Archduke Cbarlea 1Aul1 ol Austria and tbe grandson of the late Austrian emperor Karl. "History will hold the United States responsible" for a nuclear holocaust if the weapons buildup proposed by President R ea1 1 a is achieved. says the ror01er commanding general or Marine forces In Vietnam. Retired M1J. Gea. WllU•m T . Fairbourn told several hundred people gathered for ··Peace Sunday" in Seattle that Reagan's approach to peace is backwards. Reagan intends to spend 65 pe rcenl of the n a tional budget on the military, inc luding new weapons, w hil e spendi ng o nl y 35 percent on social programs, Fairbourn said. ·'Thi s ratio is unacceptable. We cannot afford it," he said. "We must first have a strategy for peace , t he n a weapons syste m to produce it ... Two tons of pape rs about 300,000 sheets in 267 boxes -comprise the legacy or r ormer R ep . Otto Passman's 30 year s on Capitol Hill. They sit in a storage room at Northeast Lou is iana Uni versity"s Sandel Library in Monroe, La., waiting for a room of their own to o~n in mid-month. The papers have been in the uni vers ity's custody s ince Passman, a De mocrat. ran afo ul o f f e deral bribery-conspiracy charges a ccusing him o f taking $213.000 from Korean rice d e aler Tongsun Park, inc luding S98,000 in illegal bribes and gratuities . Passman was also accused of failing to report Sl43,000 of the money on his income tax returns. He was later cleared of all charges. Dr. Larry D. Larason, director o f the Sandel Library, said the a ctual value of the documents - whic h will determine Passman's tax write-orr has not been determined . Dense fog fo'recast Loe•• C91nse 109 M•r ,,,. COHI Hrly todey, Iner-Ing Weclnftdey morning. OlllerwlN lelr throuoll Wednudey. OWmlGflt IOwt •to 56. Highs ,_., -w.dMldey from '7 to 77. E 1sewi.re, llOllt ••rlebte wlndS lllrougll tonight e11c..,C s.;t-to wnt winds, I to IS llnots l•I• this eltern-.. One to ).loo4 southwest to westerly •-II. Eld8'1slw night ena morning •-''°""' enct 109 with tocelly -M Mrly ,,_,.ine 1111 •tono !Pie btechu Mostly 1ur1ny tl\11 elter,._, V.S. summary Wintry weether sw ... t from 1"41 Northern ltodlles to,,,. Greet U kH on Monctey. Showerf tell In the cer1l••I Gull Cofft, lk~ -•• c-y OYn 11\e So<lthwHI end sunslllne prevelled el-•· 11 wu ,,.., frffllng In 11\e _, Mlululppl ve11.,-. -111 1"41 40s es fer 1oulll •• northerr1 Te•es. T...,-•tur'eJ ....-In -lOs 111 the nortllern ltod•lft. -from the u-Mlulul..i Velley ecrou !tie GrHt LekH. 11Hdlft9' tn the IOI •nd 70I were rePOrted In m r-southern T .. u . enct from IM lower Mluhslppl V elley lllrougll the Sovl'-"t lo IN AtlentkC-U. " TIM dtMrt MIUt-1 wermtcl Into Ille IOI, ndtd lhesou!Mrn i-tl\lreh ol fflOflde. T-nturu In Ille tot end 70t -• repwt.cl In the eldrerne Sou11'1weat end In Ce lll ornl• Elsewllere t~flures oenerelly w ... e lnlN--511.. ~ws or lltllt rain ••• comn.on In IN caftlral °"'' coast, 10UINnl FIOflcle and l1om ArlleftMI etono the Olllo ltl••• Into tl'le centr•I Appelaclll8'1s. The Southwest hed mostly <'°""Y skies, -.,,._,. Ille ... .., -motlly Mlftfly. ll•ln end_,,-. hM'e<MI tor tOf•Y ''°"' Ille SouthHsl Into IN mld,Atlenllc ll•tn. enct moatly cloucty tllles -. •-led In IM Pecllk ....,,_.. lllfouol\ Ille Ore•• L•at. Te mperature& Amer II lo JI 27 ~ AMllor ... :a2 24 AJIHtvlllo .. JO Allenta .. 4) AUamcCty .. .. •••tlmon .. • lllrml,.,... 10 4' llam•rck JI to ..... ff • .... •S 4) .,_ ..... 11 61 lllff•lo • JI 10 C...r11tnSC n J4 C"8ri.f!1WV St . ~"·· C ... yefiN " J7 ~ Clllc.., " 32 .......... , ClfKIMell " ,. @:.ill Clonlenct 4' • ...... Cotu-•S ,.~ CoM 0.l·l'IMll 11 u -Denver u =-\~·~~· NOAA VI 0~·· •• < •••• ,, •• OetMolnM .u Detroit 4' :a2 Duluth u " Ptl•nct. Ort ., '° MerysvHlt 71 • l!l l'aso .. J7 llliMct City ... 24 -la " • ..... -. ... 17 00 "-.. n_......,. • u Hartford '1 JO ltkllm-.. JI ........ "' " • Hel-w 2' Seit L!Me " •Mt.WU-" • H-iutv 15 .. S.•ttl• • a" ..... , a f1 Houston w 14 St LOUii .. 41 New!IO"I lleedl ,, SJ lndl\.eptls 4' 37 Stf'·T-., 56 0.1..W .. SI Jecltlft'flte ., S2 StSle ~le :13 n Ofttarle • 11 J-•u 4' • S.-•ne 41 JI,. ..... ~ • S2 Kent City .. " TulU 41 • "elMIM • • La•V..-,. .. w ........... .. " ~-"--1' • Little "ock 61 S2 Wlcl'lll• 0 ,, lllwrsldt IS '° LovltYlll• SS 42 ltMeMf ,, u -mplllt ., '° CALll'OtllflA ._ ...... CllY .. S2 Miami 1' 1' Ml Le .. ,_.. " ... Mllwavll• .., ,. A..-ievett.,-15 tO SallNll t7 ,. Mpl .. St.P 41 21 llakerttle4ct 7S " SM .. ,_.. • • Nalllwllle ., u llantow 11 .. s.o.... ., • Newo.-n '2 ._ .... 1' St s.o-.. " J7 NewY-., .......... 62 • SM flr...c!Ke .. .. Horio/It ., " .. .._ .. • SMJ-,. ... Okla City ... u llyltle IJ • SanU AM .. SI OMalle 0 tt Ce .. llM 10 " s-ca ..... " .. 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Ml1p•D1M numbtr for •erifkatlon. No ctrril.UO. ~~ .... •'°9r mind . • I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, November 10. 1981 Treasury bills hit low level WASHINGTON <AP> -Yields on a horl ·Urm Treaaur)' aecurltlea plun1ed to their lowest levels in more than • y.ear , government officials reported Monday. The rites have now fallen more than four percenta1e Points i.n just over two months u the natlon has slipped into economic recession. About $4.7 billion In six-month T·bills were sold at an average discount rate of 11.51 percent, down m ore than a full percentage point from the 12. 721 percent a week earlier. The government also sold about $4.7 billion in three-month bills at an average yield of 11.128 percent, down s harply from 12.695 percent. Tbe yields were the lowest • since the Sept. 22, 1980 l~vel ot 10.46 percent for three-month bills and Oct. 20. 1980 level of 11.407 percent for six-month bills. The rates had been above 15.S percent as recently as the fint week in September. But they trave fallen, along with other short-term rates such as banks' prime lending rates, as the recession has stifled economic activity. Although the recession is not good news to many Americans -such as those losing jobs - the lower interest r ates on Treasury securities m ean the government pays less money lo finance federal deficits. Beginning today, banks and savings and loans may pay as much as 13.161 percent interest on six-month money market certificates, down from the previous 13.659 percent. I n t e r e s t o n t h e $10,000·minimum d eposits is limited to one-quarter point a bove the higher of two figures : Monday's yield on six-month T·bills or the average yield on such bills at the four most recent auctions . In this c ase the four.week average -12.911 percent -was bigber. Also beeinnlng today. S&Ls may pay as much as 13.95 percent interest and commercial banks as much as 13.7 percent OD deposits in the form of 2 i,.;.year "s mall saver " certificates. Auction open to public at P e ndle ton A public auction 1s scheduled at Camp Pendleton Nov. 17 at 9 a.m . in building 2241 on the base. Among t he it ems to be auctioned off are automobiles, trailers. trucks. tents. tires. woode n ammunition boxes, salad serving bars, gas engines. office m1tchines. clothing and personal equipment. Other Items include copiers. lab and hospital equipment, s leeping bag s and communications equipment. The items are now on display from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily except weekends and holidays. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. the day of t.he auction. Bidders must be present. No mailed bids will be accepted. Items purchased may be r e moved on th e sale date provided fu ll payment '5 made. For more information call Ed Calac at 725-4331. Dlltt Het Sutt ...... ,. Boh Bngys. 8j. 011d w11e I-.11rl1a are 11nwarnrr1t; pu1m11s Hrr •111' 0 1', Costa .'Wesa . en/1s1erl m { · S \"ary 111 /1.//.1 serl'erl r/11ri111111reu1 1/1111 ep1deml<.:. Mesa couple s hare ··, 'true patriotis m ' .. By PHIL SNEIDER MAN Of .. Datly ...... Matt The American flag outside the Costa Mesa home of Bob and Lydia Briggs never comes down. It flutters in the sun and rides the night breezes by floodlamp, a symbol o r the couple 's unwavering de"otion lo their country. When Bob Briggs. SS, takes part in Vete r a n s Da y cer emonies We dnesday i n Newport Beach. he'll be thinkiog about the shipmates who served their country beside him during two world wars. Briggs enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1913 at age 17. He served aboard transpert sb1ps that shuttled American soldiers to Europe and carried wounded battle victims horne. During World War Il. he was assigned to a South P acific island, where he contracted. a disabling illness that required many months of hospital care. "I've never relt bitter toward my country," Briggs declared. "Ri ght o r wron g . it's my country. l'~e never regretted one day I was in the Navy.·· To Briggs. Nov. 11 will always be Armi s tice Day . comme mo rating the end of World War I On that day in 191,8, be was aboard the USS He nd e r s o n , tran s p ortin g' Marines home from France . As a sailor, Briggs did not have to do battle in the trenches. But the troop trans port chores were no picnic. "The bi ggest thin g I remember is the flu epidemic. when so many men were dying on the ship ... he says. "We had cer emonies twice a day and burials at sea." Briggs remained in the Navy until 1923, atta1mng the rank or @ .· chief gunoer·s male. lie waf! recalled to duty 1n 1942 While in the South Pac1r1c. ~ contracted fllariasis. a d1seasl s pread by mos quitoes th~ causes chron ic swelling various body par.ts Ile sti s ufr ers from occa s 1 0Jl~ flare-ups or the disease. I For the past 30 years. Bngt;i1 ha s been active in veterari~ or~anizations . lie is a mem~~ ,. ''Right or .. wrong , it's my country'' .• •1 or the Velerans of World War t barracks an Costa Mesa an'7 American Legion Post 291 in Newport Beach , · Il e currently i~ national chi~ "elfare director of ··40 and 8. '. honor branch of the Amenc<Uf. Legion In Lh1s role. he 1s active in many children ·~ aid µrojects, inc luding the donation of roo<:t~ clothing and tovs to youngster'4 at Orange County's Albert Sitto~ Home. " Briggs' patriotis m as shared by his wire Lydia. ,a naturalized citizen who was born in Poland. The two have fl own the flag, outs ide their home ever s ince they moved in 27 years :igo ··it symbolizes lhe freedom c1' our country," Mrs. Briggs says. ··with all the things that a~ wrong with 1t . 1t·s s till the best country there 1s ·· ' "Our flag fli es day and night,'! her husband adcts. ·'The onl\I tame 1t comes down ts "hen w\1 have to replace 11 ·· &EM WISE Is found 1n Bunna where the mines h8Y9 been nationalized and are government controlled . They are "off limits" to out- s iders. When I visited there re- cently, I was warned not to 1 make purchases from in· dividuals. Gem material can be sold only 1n the government II store. Jadeite la a aemMrensluo.nt stone and most often white, or grHn, or white with green spots. The other colors are leSs common. but IOmetlmes very lovely . The finest green of Jadeite m1y be likened to that ot Emereld, and It iS this lhade that Is often conipaied to Im-perial .Mdlt. Tz.u Hsi, the lalt l:mpreaa of China, valued Jade 10 highly thllt lhe ..;.ctad an lmpreaafvi9 diamond tlera of· fered by I fll¥Of' II II•, but welcomed • ~ wttC* gfft ... a smatl but exquisite •"'' Cle made of Mp Of'eln Jade. The ChlneH have long veneratlld .Mdlt tor its beauty and toughnea It IS 11111 h19hly A191rdeci • It ._ centuriee • and ,..,, of the ...... plecea ......... Neice of lnC'-"t .,, ... . " ........... __ ................. .. -......... .. • S Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday, November 10, 1981 Pentagon discord nothing n e w By WAI.TEil •• MEAas WASHINGTON (AP) -Once upon a lime, there was a secretary ot state who 1ot alonJ perfectly with the president's advlaer on national security atralra. No Jealousr· no backbitih1, certain y no 1uerrtlla warfare between the State Department and the top foreign policy aide at the White House. That lime of total harmony t lasted about two years -as long as Henry A. Kissinger held both Jobs. . But there was no end of friction beCore Kissinger took the dual role under Richard M. Nixon. And there has been plenty of friction since, no matter the adlJ)inistratlon or the personalities involved. So there · is nothing unusual about the discord between Secret.arY of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and the unidentified While House official be accuses o f wagin g "a gue rr illa campaign" to undercut his influence. ll is widely assumed that Haig's hassle is with Richard V. Allen, President Reagan's assistant for national security affairs. That is what they're saying at the Slate Department, although the people -saying so IEll llllYlll do It anonymously. Allen says they are wrong and that Haig knows It. ''1 know it Is not I, and Haig knows it ls not I," he said. Assuming that la so, tbere would seem to be a problem at the White House, since a bureaucratic guerrilla ls going around saying bad things about the secretary of stale and nobody seems to know who it is. Reagan's spokesmen say the president doesn't know and isn't trying lo find out. "He has put the maUer to rest," said David Gergen. It would rest easier if Haig had not sent his own spokesman, Dean Fischer, to confirm publicly that he-believes somebod5' on the White House stare is out to get him. Fischer would not say whom Haig suspects. Standard procedure for administration spokesmen confronted with reports of internal discord is to dismiss them as gossip, feigning surprise that questions like that would even be asked. Haig did not play it that way. Instead, he validated the reports which Reagan calls unfounded and potentially destructive. It is not the first time Hal1 has gone public with a complaint about the way things are being handled at the White House. And for all Rea ga n 's expressions of confidence In his secretar y of state, he has acted before to cut short power struggles among aides. That's what led him to fire his 1980 campaign manager, John P. Sears.· The latest Haig controversy began with a report by columnist Jack Anderson that Reagan was disappointed in the secretary of state, had lost confidence in him and might replace him by next s ummer. White House aides learned of the column before it was due to be publishec\. Haig and lteagan both called Anderson. The president said it wasn't so. Haig said the report or presidential displeasure was "the handiwork of a top White House aide, who has been running a e uerrilla campaign" against him since th e ea rliest days of the administration. Anderson published those comments and on Nov. 3, Fischer publicly confirmed that Haig had made the statements. Later, Reagan told newsmen that .. the only thing I can figure ON THE LOO KO UT A Nan E -2C .. Hawkey~C flies over Floncta·s kt·nnc,:.d_y Space Center as the space shuttle Columh1a stands poised for liftoff Besides traekm~ and identifying aircraft and ships which could clisrupt ~shuttle launch_. the .. llawke1e·· directs recover~ op<'rat1ons ol thl' shuttle·s rnekN boosters B-1 bomber a 'flying Edsel?' Debate over plane continues as projected cost soars WASHINGTON (AP) -The B-1 bomber President Reagan wants to build as the temporary mainstay of the U.S. strategic air arm would be a "$40 billion flying Edsel, .. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., has charged. Leahy was not present. He was thrown from a ho'rse Sunday and is expected to be hospitalited for about a week. The Air Force has estimated the cost of the B-ls at $19.7 billion. This estimate does not take account of inflation. The budget office estimate does count inflation and includes a num ber of potential additions to the airplane .that were not included in the Air Force estimate. Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah, on the other hand, said the plane is needed and its cancellation by former President Carter was "a tragic mistake" that has "more than doubled its cost." Both Leahy and Garn are members of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which must screen the $20.9 billion of military spending the administration proposes in the current fiscal year. .. Unfortunately. we cannot pay for the B-1 with last vear's dollars or build it without full equipment:·· Leahy said. Garn is a member of the subcommittee on defense, which began working on the military budget Monday. Sen. Ted Stevens. R-Alaska. subcommittee chairman, is against rev1v1ng the B-1. "The B-1 bomber will be obsolete before it is deployed," he added. .. l do not believe we can afford a $40 billion flying Edsel." Garn supported the administration's argument that the B-1 is needed unlH an airplane with radar-eluding equipment, known as Stealth. is developed. Leahy made his comments in a news release which was distributed Monday along with copies or a letter from Alice C. Rivlin, director of the Congressional Budget Office, estimating the cost' of the proposed 100 B·ls at $39.8 bit1ion. "There is no Stealth airplane," Garn said. "The ex istence of Stealth was leaked last year for political purposes in the middle of a campaign. I would be willing to bet we will be lucky to have Stealth by 1995 or 1996." Americans arrive in Egypt Operation Bright Star involves fo ur Mideast nations CAIRO, Egypt (AP> -The first contingent of 4,000 American airmen and soldiers have arrived here for this month's U.S.-Egyptian military exercises, the main part of a test of America's rapid deployment force Involving four M ldeast nations. A U.S. military spokesman · said units of the 24th Infantry Cody pressured CHICAGO (AP) -The Rev. Hana Kung, a theologian often at odds with the Vatican, Is urging liberal Roman Catholics to press Cardinal John Cody for a public accounting in reaponse to alle1auon1 that he misused church funds. Kuni on Saturday end,ol'Hd an "open letter" to Cody from a 1roup of 27 prominent Catholic activists ln CJlJcaio. Division of Fort Stewart, Ga., were flown to Cairo West Air Base Monday aboard U.S. Air Force C-5 and C·l41 transports a n~ leased DC -10 jumbo Jetliners. The airlift of 4,000 troops is expected to be completed by Thursday, the spokesman said. In addition, 2,000 more troops will be arriving in the Mideast for exercises in the Sudan, Somalia and Oman. Five hundred tanks and artillery from the 24th Infantry Division are due at the Mediterranean port o r Alexandria today , th e spokesman added. Defense Minlster Abdel Halim Abu GhazaJa, ln a speech lo a military staff colle1e here, was quoted by the official MiddJe Eut News Agency as HYlnl elahl F-16 Ci&hter Jell wlll alao be In Egypt for the exerclaea, dubbed "Bright. Star." He was quoted aa aaylnc four of tbe sophisticated jets will remain in Egypt after the "Bright Star" exer cises to train Egyptian pilots, the report said. Egypt has ordered 40 of the fighter jets from the United States, part of a $3.5 billion arms agreement that was signed along with the U.S.-medlated Camp David peace accords with Israel. :Probation given . LOS ANGELES (AP) -The former president of Provident Escrow Co. In Panorama City has been placed on lhrff yean probation after pleadln1 no contest char1es of 1rand theft ln the embezalement or f7'4,000 fro m hla comrany. Richard Domlnco, 45, o Granada Hills already has served a OM·year federal prllOft term for maklnl lahe statements on lo an document.. out about stopping all the backbiting is convincing all or you that there Is absolutely no foundation to any of these rumors." The trouble was that Haig, through his spokesman, alreadlY had said there was. Reagan also -said such reports were damaging U.S. dealings abroad. Haig echoed that in co ngressional testimony Wednesday ... Both the president and l recognize these reports can be harmful to the co nduct or our foreign policy ," he said. There were, of course, two reports: One that Haig was in disfavor, the other of discord within tbe administration. Presumably, Haig was talking about the former. But the latter dldn 't do anything to enhance the Image of the administration. Still, there are reports and then there are r eports. A columnis t 's assertion that Reagan is down on Haig is one thing. A secretary of state's claim that somebody high in the White House is out to get him is quite another. .............. After that Clap, Reagan told hi s s taff a nd the State Department that there was to be no further public debate about internal differences. The message apparently hasn't registered. SEALED President and Mrs Reagan hold a sheet ol Christmas seals presented b~ young at·tor Rick~ Schroder in a ceremonv at the White !louse The seals are sold to help the American Lung Assoc1at1on Employees, signupfor the family health and dental care program that actually provides the care. Family Health Program is so much more than an insurance company. for .your eyes for your teeth for your body right down to your toes It's a Health Maintenance Organizat ion that actually helps keep you healthy with its own care centers. We provide the dentists. The doctors, Including medical specialists. Emergency care. Hospitalization. Eye care. Preventive care that includes regular checkups. Even family counseling. Yet, FHP costs no more than ordinary medlcal insurance. And you don't pay a 20% or 10% deductible at FHP care centers. No annoying claim forms to fill put, either. Thousands of Southern ,,. FED£RAllV QVAttFIED HMO California employees have signed up with FHP-the pro- gram that costs no more, yet provides more care. So can you. Contact your Benefits Officer or personnel department now. And let us start caring for you and your family1 Head to toe. ,, .. ,, ... ... J , Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/TuHday, November 10, 1981 • Nuclear panel eyes Diablo ·plant action WASHINGTON (AP> -The Nuclear Regulatory Commission baa Indicated lt will dlscUJs po111ble enforcement actions as a result of design errors In the Diablo Canyon atomic power plant , but lt has not decided what speclflc studies will be needed before the controversial California plant can open. N RC Chairman Nunzio J . Palladino asked f o r •'clarifications" from the commission staff on its proposal for several independent studies needed at I.he plant before it can be licensed to 1enerate power. Palladino characterized the design errors on Monday aa resulting from "poor practJce'' on the part of the Pacmc Gu & Electric Co., operator of lhe. plant. T he Diablo Canyon plant, located near San Luis Obispo on the Pacific Coast, has been controversial because ot an ear thquake fault discovered nearby while the plant was under construction. The plant was alreadv licensed for testing its reactors when the recent design errors were discovered by PG&E. Palladino Ind icated the commission and ita staff WO\lld discuss possible enforcement acUons, but no daLe was aet for s u c h a m eet l pg , While enforcement actions could include many things, NRC s pokesman Joseph Fouchard noted that the most common such action was a Cine. The NRC chairman m ade the com m e n t abo ut "poor practices" after lhe chief staff official, Harold Denton, blamed the errors on "lnformallty" ln the controls PG&E exercised over lnlormation It gave to a consultant working on designs to protect the plant against earthquake damage. · "These represent more than informality," Palladino said. ·'They represent what you might call poor practice." Commissioner J ohn Ahearne added, "This kind of keeping track of information that you use is critical." Ex-border officers now aiding aliens SAN DIEGO <AP) -"Run quick, before Border Patrol car comes along." That's the advice Donald Cameron says he now gives to aliens who've slipped illegally into the United States. to stay legally in the United Slates. Al first, he said he was tempted to arrest his own cliel\lS but believes he actually is helping U.S . immi gration laws by e ns uring his clients have all t heir papers in order. Al'W'"-"9 In the last 28 years, he admits his advice was dirrerent. But Cameron retired Last J anuary a s regional chief of the U.S. Border Patrol and, at SS. has opened a private office as an immigration consultant. In the San Diego area aJOPe. at least six ot.her ex-officers or the U .S . Immi g ration and Naturalization Service have taken up such work. A few of them advertise in Mexican newspapers and on Mexican . television. A spokes man for INS headquarters in Washington, D. C .. said in a te lephone interview that he thinks a majority of former officers ··would look upon it as aiding and abetting lawbreakers." retired INS inspector at San Ysidro. Cameron said in an interview Monday that rather than help aliens subvert U.S. law "we do for the aliens what they could do for themselves if they had the knowledge and ability." Cameron, who supervised 600 people assigned to slop illegal aliens, says he adjusted lo bis new role "with some difficulty." Cameron works with William H. Tienken, former chief of the v i sa section at the U .S . Consula t e In Tijuana, and retired INS inspector Arthur Holahan. IN CUSTODY San f'rant'l l><.'O polll·(• ol l'iC'eri, eM·ort a man •. 1dent1f1ed as T1mothv Peterkin lrom the San Franc:1st·o ,. Hyatt Regent y llott'i after he a llegcdl~ look live maids •.i hostage at ~unpomt and holed up in a line n l'loset after releasinv them. pohl'e ~aul '· It's reported to be a growing fi e ld for former U .S . immigration officers to whom aliens pay up to hundreds of dollars for expert advice on how "I certainly wouldn't do it," said Bernard Campbell , a Stiff terID bill favored S A CRA MENTO <AP I -A Granada Hills man is trying again to qualify an initiative that would require longer prison terms for burglars and robbers The meas ure seeks terms of five to 20 years in robbery and burglary cases, and would bar judges from granting probation or suspended sentences. The initiative , whic h requires 346,119 registered voter signatures to qualify for the ballot, is identical to a prpposaJ which began circulation in May that failed to qualify. It is s ponsored by Alexander Bookston. The secretary of state's orfice said last week t'he new measure m ust obtain the required signatures by Dec. 3. to qualify for the June 1982 ballot. or by April 4, 1982, to go be fore vote r s the fol lowing November. Currently prison sentences range Crom 16 months to six years for burglary and fi'Om two to five years for robbery. Additional time can 'be added for use of weapons, inflicting injur y, prior prison terms and stealing something of great value. Laser suspect facing trial VAN NUYS <AP) -A young man • helicopter Oct. 28 as it flew 69C> feet who is accused· o f ~emporerily ··above· a" residentrat ··area searching blinding two police officers when his for a burglar. laser beam flas h e d into their Pilot Jim Van Biber said be was he1kopter has pleaded innocent to blinded for several seconds as he c harges of assault with a deadly looked directly into the beam. Fellow weapon. · officer Tom Brooks said he was also Michael Archer, 21, was arraigned blinded for a few seconds. Neitner in Van Nuys Municipal Court man sufferedeye damage. Monday and a preliminary hearing Archer told poUce he had not was scheduled Dec. 3. Archer is free intended to aim the laser at the on $500 bail. helicopter, but was experimenting Prosecutors said. Archer aimed a with it because he was going to use it low·power industrial laser al the to light a Halloween party. For The Orange ~oast ITALIAN VILLA NOVA 3131 W. Coast Hwy. 642·7880 All major crt>dlt cards. Italian cu1 s 1nt' O\•e rlooking ='!ewport Bay Dinner served night ly unlll I a m Piano Rar Ranquct f'ae1ht1es ALISIO'S 1670 Newport 642·8293 Master Charge, Bank of America The bes t in Italian cuisine. Live en· tertainme nt nightly Banquet fac1ht1es STUFT NOO DLE 215 Rivers ide, Newport Beach 548· 7418 Restaurant Writers· Award w1nmn1i Restaurant for lhc_past 4 years . M E X I CAN TNT T ACOS N' TEQUILA 3300 W. Coast Hwy. 548·2224 All major crflllt cards Happy hour 7 days 4 7 p.m . Sunday Brunch 10·3 with complimcnta1 y champa~nf' AMERICAN AI RPORTER I NN HOTEL Mediterranean Room 18700 MacArthur Bl vd •• Irvine Spcclalltlng In Continental Cul1lne 7 daya a ~eek Fcaturlna Sunday Brunch 11·3 All major Jiredlt curds accepted Reservetlons 133·2710 Why is this lady smiling.? Have an 8ttc~Mted ~y home party and find out 537-LADY ''Pardon us while we ~ move your money.'' Don Dumar<>. Vwr Pru 11l<'nt & Mm1<JJ(er November 16 we will be mov- ing to our new regional office in Executive Circle, just a few steps from our pre ent addres~. We are proud of our new building which provides us with the kind of facilities we need to better serve the bu siness and professional communities in Orange County. If you are not already one of the many companies or indi viduals call - ing TD "their bank," take an early opportunity to visit Don and his team of experienced bankers. Manufacturers, developers. service and retail businesses of all sizes, as well as individuals deal with TD Bank . Please let us show you why they are so satisfi ed . TD Bank. The business bank with the personal touch. We'll be open at this address November 16. A AIRPORT TORONTO DOMINION BANK OF CALIFORNIA Member FDIC Onnac Cc.nty Rctlonel Oftke; lf\linl, 9 Ea«Wi11c Ci~tc. M.in .t Red Hall StRetl • 7Ml641o0222 A wholly.owned eublldbwy of T~ ~ ..... lbnna. c...11. ~ ........ .... ~·.oao ......... 1110 ................ . ... 1 .. ·. .. • ) • Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT(TuHday, November 10, 1981 Weak comedy on MV stage a, TOM TIT'18 .............. One canaot help but 1ympalblae with the Plltht ol the Mliaion Viejo Playhoule which, alter chanctq iu name (from the Saddltback Valley Communlty Theater>, protnptly wu obli•ed to chanp lu location and has 90w mounted lu la1t three •bowt on u muy dlfterent ataaea. Tlme1 are tou1h for the Minion Viejo players, and &uWnt on productions like "The PJe11ure of Hl1 ompany" won't help the 1ltuaUon. It'• a cue of all three criUcal elemenu -script, actinf and dlrectJon -operatln1 at lesa lban peak efficiency In an evenlnt of virtually wlinterrupted tedium. Samuel Taylor's paen to the free spirit In aU of UJ wu, presumably, Intended as a sophisticated comedy cu, also, were his "The Happy Time" and ''Perfect Pifch," which also were somewhat off tar1et>. However, there is litUe sophistlcatlon and even lea comedy ln the Mission Viejo ·revival which suffers from an overall energy crisis. The story ls sUcht redirection of the eternal trlan1le, with the intruder atlemptipg to thwart an impending wedding not a love rival, but the bride's father, long separated from her remarried mother, who turns up unexpectedly just before tbe big day. Whether the girl should plunge Jnto matrimony or take off on a world tour with dear old dad i.s the cn.tx of the dilemma. The problem is that we don't really care. Even ''TM• ~•ASU•• OP Mii ~ .. ., .. A fl.y 111¥ ..._. Te.W, """'" 11y ~ ~Ill. _ .. _ tlr9<1• .._ ....._1'1. tw"MucM 111¥ Met~le McCliwMY -9 Jim LMllML .... ..,..., J-Weftl«•, ..... eM 11111111111 llJ 0,... 8MIC9ft ~ ,...._......, INMI.-...=~..,__,,...._ ... ~ .. •i• ~ o.c........ lllMC• ""· u .. t:• _, OK.Jet It• 111 .. 'w""' T....., M tfll -..i .. 1 el Alb o..--., LeellM te11..-i llNf, ue-t..11, ll~ellMt ........ w,.,.... TMI CAST ..... ~ .......................................... Otc•NM;lllllll Ket. ................................................ J-Dewl4ltell J ... tce • , , , • ••••.•.•..•••••• •, •• ,, •• , ••••••••.•• , • , •• '9YNW WelCMt .,, ....................................................... Jlll'I~ Sew ... '"I.''"""""'"''""''"""'"'"''"'' E""9~ ..... , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·.: •••••• ' ••••••• .,......... Mel( .. t"'91 •••••••• , •• ,,,,,,, •.•••.••.•••••• 1, ••••••••••••••• Atka..........., enaclln1 the hero of the theater's melodrarna last summer as the bumpkin boyfriend. Even less convincing are Ernie Slessinger as MlH Davidson's Thoreau-quoting father and Allee Johnson as the Swedish maid, both apparently uncomfortabJe in their assignments. "The Pleasure of His Company" marks the start of the Mission Viejo Playhous~'tl 1981·82 season In the Forum Theater on Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts grounds. It may not be an auaptcloUs debut, but it's the nicest theater the group has occupied to date and, with a little artistic elbow grease, the futore mar-bold promise. * •. though ~~e nance is char;aclerlzed as a bit or a buffoon and the father is charm personified, there isn't enough in' either script or performance lo impel us to take sides in the matter. SEBASTIAN'S WEST DiMer Playhouse raises its curtain tonight on the biographical musical "Funny Glrl,'1 which features such songs as "People," t'J'm the Greatest Star" and "Don't Rain on My Parade." ,. .. Dick Nicklin plays the worldly father with flashes of boldness but not enough to overcome an inherent weariness. and his downstage posturing becomes a bit tiresome. Lynne Wescott turns in the best performance of the cast as the daughter, a fresh breeze in a show that needs more of her type of zest. Miss Wescott's mother. stilJ attracted to the roving rogue, is done rather timJdly by Jane Davidson, who could wrest much more from this part. Jim Lawson is properly stiff as her new husband, whlle Thomas McKee appears to still be Cheri Eichen portrays entertainer Fanny Brice with Steve Griffin cast as Nicky Arnstein in the musical, under the direction of John Spindler, who also does the choreography. Diana Bellamy and Jere Greenberg take major supporting roles. "Funny Girl" will play Tuesdays through Thursdays at 8:15, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:45. and Sundays at 1:30 and 7:45 through Jan. 3 at the playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. Call 492-99~ ror reservations. Mafia hopefuls try out in New York By RICK HAMPSON AMM ..... ~.,._ . NEW YORK -So, Johnny, you want l<> be In the Mafia? You gotta audition· for it; join the line. On Saturday. the line stretched a~ound Fifth A venue and down 52nd Street for almost a block as would-be mobsters and their ladies, hundreds or . them, tried out for 169 speaking roles in "Mafia Kingpin." The aspiring bad guys wore basic black fedoras, sunglasses, suits, shirts and overcoats broken only by the white of their ties. The women wore st.reel clothes. One by one they came before Sonny Gibson, once the "Malia Kingpin" of a new autobiography and upcoming movie, and now an actor. lecturer r----------------~---1 I KNOB RADIO P. 0. BOX 3159, I ANAHEIM, CA 92803 I I Please pnnt I I NAME----~-~~~~~- • I ADDRESS _________ _ I crTY STATE ___ zw __ _ '• -~-PHONE(_) ____ BIRTHOAY __ I In order to bnng 1 ~of.your favor----------1 itf mttrt~1nen into 2 I your~. plfaW . ------I list thrft o1 your favorih! ~: 3. -J \..:.:---------~~-----"""' Q ...... .,,, ... ___ ,...._ Cal us. . and self-described "benefactor." The eight-hour audition, held in a bookstore basement. was just the beginning of an elght·week, 12-city tour designed to promote the book and find people who look like characters from Sonny's mostly sordid past. ''There aren't that many S·foot-8, 400-pound bodyguard types hanging around the union hall, .. explained a production assistant. . "l want it to be realistic," said Sonny. "I want this Clim to be around in 30 years, like 'Gone With the Wind.'" "Sonny looks like a nice felJow, but he was a thief and a murderer before they got him for mail fraud," said Michael Frank, who was handling public relations. NOT SINCE "DELIVERANCE' SourttERN Co1'1FOJ.\! fl ~~ r-1 lmf..,... MniNm '-'°"'IOC\.111( c..,.... tC..ll•tt ...-~ ... ....,..~ ~ ·~ .............. NOW PLAYING llWUDI IRllTOl Costa~ 540·7444 IDWAllDI Cl•MA WIST Wtstmlnstlf 891-3935 PUTT cm CDITlR Orange 034·9282 lDWA•I UDDllUCK El T0<0 581 ·5880 EDWHOI Cl•MA ClJfTlR Costa Mesa 979 4141 EDWARDS YILIO TWIM MlSSlon Vieio 830-6990 _.. leJ;MM£Li rr:~:TAIU OU.. Dlltft·IM Orange 551-7022 C.11 6 2-5178. Put • few word• to work for ou. ChaplMll 6 Santa Ana Fwy MATINEESSAT.•SUN. IC~TS p •t ~:2010:36 We'~ got the 110~ ta do 1he ttilgS yw need to do ... and al the things yoo ve been dresniag abcU:. Every day Ca111ecial Credit ~ people with oersooal and toneowner Ian ... smaD and large. They've been cnnq oo us fer mere than 65 years. Yoo C3l too. ~1 fn:l a W1:f to help. c.aa us today. ' l':J &:\ COMME~CIAL CRt:DIT C~TION a \::. ~ •Connd DataCompany • a..-•aooo.iMrn__..,, ., ............ ......., COST A MESA • 370 £. 17th Strtet • 64Q700 • HUNTINGTON BEACH• 16075 COW. W• St.• 847·1'nl MISSION VIEJO• 2'395 Alida Parkway, Suite 2E • 770.t651 AUclaTowaPIMa SANTA ANA• 1226 U.. 17th SU.• 547.SS71 ............ ~ ........ ...._ ........ .. -~~ ... ~ --~1 ~ •-,_._-~· -~ -£ --- Actress Shelly Duvall thought her new film, "Time Bandits ... would be a breeze. but that was before she found out that a g roup of dwarves were expected to do stunts and land on her. According lo reports, the s hooting went fine and Du vall played her part nobly. Sherlock Holmu meet• Stamund Freud THESEVEN-PER.:CENT . SOWTION Fro'" ""' If I 8.et·bwlllln• Noll/II Dudley Moor• Peter Cook In "THE HOUND O,THE BASKERVILLES" lpecl•I DlecoYnl To tnertock ""'" Sodety ._."'",. "Masterful" -LA Times. Shell• Benson "Wonderful" -Newsweek Megazine. Jack Kroll --:Y -c=HARI='-'--'~OTS OF FIRE -i -- • LADO COMPANY AHO WAAHEfl llAOS. IU:UAM ... --·~0·_...·\.~~ ' . --·--~--· ........ _....,.. __ _ edwards NEWPORT HUaCOAST HWY.&MACAaTHUa WCW#Oll'T. omm:Jl 644-07 60 *BARGAIN MATINEES* Monday thru Saturday All Perform1nce$ before 5:00 PM lA MlllAOA MALL LA MIRADA WALIC·IN "LOOKER"_,...., oa.111,1t, .... ..,,., ........... 'ESCAPE Ff'OM NEW YORK" 1•1 ........_, , ........... . Muoc:10 ot lloaec:1o n1 994·2400 C: .. ICIU_._._.. 1111 •tt .. •• -Cll··--..xo-"' •a:.•.t..4'1•• C:Ml:l:CM ·-·-lll-"tlll ·--_._ .......... .. •'lfntA'NITY ~,.. .. ,-,.........-·---••• ..,..,. .......... ... CAl'l80NC0PYINI ,.. .... , ', .... ·--...,,.. ,. ....... ...,. ---........... ~ .. "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" -,.._ OCl!laY tT'OlllO t1:11.1.ta.••.r.-.11c1, 'OUTLAND" 111 ,,..~-uMST01tYnc•rroum .......,., • 8 ' 111 _._ •iM. • 11' ••• "TIME BANDITS" IP'lll 'EXCALIBUR "I •t-M ,,. 1-.-.1-~' ,, ..... ••11-...0. ,_,. --1 LAKEWOOD CENTER WALIC·IN --..un.,;u;;.;;........, _,. 'THE Fl'IENCti LIEUTENANT'S WOMAN llll U M ........ 1 •,1t1t Joculty al Conc:ll••Ooc:I 213/531·9580 ._.,_ .... llA-'Olil • lt.-n ........ OHL Y WHEN I LAUGH" 1111 ,,.,, ...... _.~,-,.._.. ~ .. -.. _, ,, ....... THE BLUES BROTHERS 1111 • ,., •• ·-=- ~ --------- LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAlK·IN FocullV Al Oei Amo 'OUTLAND' Ill , ....... ~ EXCALIBUR 1111 ...... 213/ 634·9_2_1_1 --r "-~fliO'lO· ...... •au..a.• RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK ' ••• 1-.1.1, ...... , ...... -LAGUNA AllTOOIYOO..o.e-- THE LAST METRO" -11.M. I 1', 1--.. t;a. H• so. COAST WALK·IN Sou1n Coos! HIWOY ol l rooc:lwoy 494-1514 ,..y _ .. llAlll -·· _... "°"' ITll "TIME BANO!Tr lPOl lllO-·---"CONTINENTAL DIVIDE" IN! __ , .... ,_ ... ,._ ... _ • CARBON COPY" --...... , __ , ... ,_ U T -t•,ut.1-.- ... v ...... , .... e 15 •· , .. e oo \-. , ...... e 45 IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILOREN UNDER 12 FREE! Mlltlf ••••• , ....... '"'• J11 ' 30• Sal h• Heta s 30 , ... ClNH'I $01J11D •TOVA ~M CM MDIO 11 TOUll UlMOI If I«> AM CM! IUoOIO W"lll OlfllOM ACaSSOllT l'O$l'l10ll _ ..... "' l'OllTMU • 4L1 CM-II OIWMIS Ill 1111 AM Mom ANAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE-IN Jr•••Of •• 01 LemOft SI 179·9150 ..... -°' ... '"' "DEMOHOID" .. , O\.W "UP FROM THE DEPTHS "1 C•llf II SOUlOO llUINA PAllK BUENA PARK ORIVE·IN l•ncOln A•• Well OI (l\0'1 121-4070 FOU NIAIN FOUNTAIN VAWY DRIVE·IN Son O••GO 'rwy ol ••OO'"""' (So) 962·2411 Umtc•_,... ___ "SOUTHERN COWOl'IT' 1111 ... w "DEATH HUNT" 1111 • .... _,..,._llO\'U "OUTLAND" 1111 ... w 'EXCALIBUR" "'I Cl"I '' S0\1110 .,.._,..,.lf'TO- 'HALL0W£EH II 1111 11'\.119 NEW YEARS EVIL Ill ,..f O<OW'T ....... tQTOH,,,.., STOY m "TIME BAHOfTS" -...w WHOLLY MOSES!" fNI CIHl II SOOHO "8.!:B .. ;;ri6;f' J ---Ol'llCAN 'DEMONOID" 1111 • O<.W "UP FROM TH£ DEPTHS" 1111 Clhl '' $0UMO lrmtCAM-AllO-•l-"80UTHERN,..,~MF0,RT" 1•1 "D£A TH HUNT" !Ill Clllf 11 SOl/llO lA HA!lllA LA HABRA DRIVt IN _ ......... ._._ .......... 171-1162 ~J[N~ PAii• LINCOLN DRIVE-IN 11ncom "'"• ••11 01 •non 121·4'070 1...)'1.AN•,t , .. -NII -CM WY I "ARTHUR" -....w "CAl'IBOH COPY" ..... ::lllt JI SOUNO ---.... --· ...... _ 90'f\.I \ "OUT~HO" 111 "EXCALIBUR" 1111 Clllf II '°""° .,..._,ewT_ "HALLOWEEN II "'' -"HEW YlAlllS EVIL~ llll "OILIHOUENT ICHOOLOll'ILS' .. .... "HOLL YWOOO HIGH" 1111 -"GAMn-scHOOL OJRLI fll.AY SoMo Ano l rwy ORANGE DRIVE ·IN ......... _._....__ "BODY HIEAT' 1111 -"'AT£RHITY" ..... )•~ 111A~ , u•.•, r1tAlrrf1 MISSION DRIVE IN ; . . -EVENttG......;. Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, November 10, 1981 :~~·~::_:: TUBE TOPPERS bulll by Mrly Amlwlcllll llldlln&.Q • ooeMOI "The leellb<>tlt Of Nlgl\t" Ot. Cll1 l tOM exerninel ~ 1"°"1>"1 lboul IM 1*Mr1e tfw~ 111110- ry end etlemclt• to Ottl- nlle ..... ...., t0°"9 Ill. ~~ **•'-' "8wept Afty" (''"'J~ ...... o... ~GiefWN ~- ed by line~. "' orOtr to ~ on • clelefleO Meid"ttrlnMn ltll!ICI, • 8lclll4ln. Miiot end an "....,, _...... mutt MOit t• -uel Md ~lo.i diftet'tf¥lel. t:IO. 9 TOO C..Oll ~ COtoa'ORT • CBS 8 8:00 -"The Bugs Bunny Thanksalving Diet." The animated rabbit tells how to avoid overeating. KCOP.e 8:00 "Red Sun." East meets West in a movie about a Samurai sword ,1toJen i.o the. old W..est and starring Charles Bronson. CBS 9 8 :30 -"10." Dudley Moore and Bo Derek star in a movie about the eerf ect woman. NBC e 9:00 -"Ultra Qui1." Rowan and Martin host a world-wide super quiz. I.et«" ( 11141 Al'llf ..,,. c:toll. , .. ., ~ Cl) lllMIM Xlt 10tin l yner lhOwt >'°" lhlng• 1tr111iger thllll truth, MlrQ41f" then Ille, 8M uni« lflM enythlng you'w ....., ~ In IMM enoota Pl• enllttlonl lrom IM lllow• tttM lltlff• llbrety l:ao • MOVll • ~ "Arton FOf Hlfe" ( tH8l Sl.w "oellt. Tom HubberO All ll'toft geng COMM l.lno.r '"*11gellon NO{l)MOYll • • "Whll-1• Sem" K91tl1 lMMn. A mountllln men tr•WI• the NortltwMt with hie hutky ... rolling tor the II'"' White Wiier route IOUth. ·o· 1:40 (Z) MOVIE 1.-...... ''The HotQllll" ( lt7:t) Oto!Ot c. lcott, Olent AIOo • * • "Tiit w1nntno TNl!'I" ( 1862) Doti• Oty, Aor1eld RMO*l •• "" "IJIUe Flf• l edY'' ( 1971) C.lhtyn H•nitoo, Mlllll Hokltn A YoUl'IO g rl tri.. to uw • ct.nlri•· ou• "°'" from being told 10 • work f11m (Z) * •,.. "TN Shout" (1971) Alan le••· Iv.an. Nlh Yotil A ClitMbeci m111 confined to .,, ln•lttutlOn ~ he Gan mllk• • "dMlh ehoUI," I ~ lhal wltl kll •:001•· NIWt CHMUa'S AH8IU TIWAIUM HUNT THI~ au.1 Cryattl Otyte. • HAWAII flNE-0 DIM)' llll" OW< 8M 11111••~·-~ '°' ~ wtien McGtrrett It fellecl by en unlli'lown UMllant. I IUSIHESS REPORT DICK CAVETT B A D START Father J oe Parker c Rlchard Bergma n. right 1. a newly ordained priest. gets off to a bad start when he upbraids J ohn Michael Murphy c series star Mer1¥t Olsen J for pretenc1ing to he a clergyman. K~BC 14 1 8:00 . Jedlte Ott• ~ Wfltl\ the o.t. IN M'ntd clown lltt Sere 10 1 Frtneti ,_. t-lllt I~ • * 14 "Liiiie o.rtlngt" (I~) Ttt\lm O'NMI. l<fll. ty McNlcllol. Al IUmmer cemp. two tten·eoe g1111 compete to -wt1o wfll be the tint to IOM her vttglnl- Into going to • "t•t ftrm" lo help him gel Into ~ • ONe STEP l!YOHD "To Know The End" An Englllh llbr8fl1n, veceuon. Ing In I IOUlhefn French town, tor-the deeth In battle of • atr•ngw who It to bec:ome her h\lsbend. • COHTIEMPOMRY HEAL TH ISSUU "Out Of The Shldows: All•netlve F0<m1 Of Sex- ual Behevlor" CID MOVIE * * ~ "The Allin People" ( 11Hl9) JI/Mt CN n, Sflltley Knight A young won'l8ll Mii out on • cr011>COUn· try trip to ~ lhl reec>onllblNtlM of her 11111· rlege •nd Impending molh4Wt100d 'R' <1:00 0 MOVllE **'!\ "A SrnaK Circle Of Fnenda" ( 11180) &rid Dev- is, Kareri AIMn. In the 11160t. the lrlendlhlp and lde•llam of thrM Hervlfd atudenll 11 lhrH tene<I when one or tlltm la Or•ll· Id to -In Vletnem 'R' 12'.30 CC) • • • "An Enemy 01 Thtl P1QPle" ( 1977) Steve McO-. Ch•rlM Durn- ing 81M<I on ll>Nfl'• play The clllHtll OI e 111'1111 town flftl 91>Pfeud 111en petMGUle I loc;el ph)'llCl1n f()( deelerlng the IOc;al hol eprlfl09 unule due to P<>4· IU\lon, 'G' 1:28 (Z) * * "'PerlOfman<le' (111701 Jl/Tlte Fo•. Mock Jagger A llOod on the run from tha mob ntwSa 1.11'\Ctu ary In ttie llOfM of a burned-out f0<mer rock tlar. 'R' Gu.ta.: John Upclllle. JOhn i~i= IMOVIE *'~ "Blue Fire Lady" ( t9781 C.thryn Hwrllon, Merit Hoklen. A young girt trlft to NW a CMllankw· ous hOrM from being IOld to • worll fer"1. 8:30 D NBA 8ASKETBALL Los Angeles Leken va. Sin Antonio Spurs Q) WELCOME BACK, KOTTER Barbarl"o decldH to become • print 1ller hit gr1ndmot11er r~11 h on her d .. thbed. I KCETNEWSBEAT BUSINESS REPORT Q!HEWS BARNEY MILLER An hon•t citizen turns 111 • bundle of Cllh Ind Wojo Is alrtld ot flying e prisoner toClevelatld, (B)MOVIE • • "Baby Blue Marine" ( 1976) Jan-Michael Vln- ce111. Glynnis O'Connor. A young man. dllnonorably discharged from the M•rlne Corps, ISIUmet the Identity, the rote and unil0<m of a war hero. 'PG' MOVIE * • "Rustl II" ( 1979) Judy K1han. Tom Berenger. A young women in her tlm real rom1nce disco,,.,. that her boyfriend 11 "'°'e l"terntlid '" art than In her 'PO' 7:00 1J CBS NEWS 0 NBCNEWS I HAPPY DAYS AGAIN A8CNEWS m M •A•s•H CharlU assumes herOlc proponlons after reviving 1 cfy>ng patient witll heart muaege I JOKER'S WILD OVER EASY "Oepreulon" au.ts·~ band-Biid-wife ec:1lng team Hu"'9 Cronyn and Jetllca T1ndy.Q Ii) MACNEIL / LEHRER RE POAT CJ) TIC TAC OOUOH 9 ENTERTAINMENT TONIO HT An lnterv-wltn Jahn Ritter Q! THE MUPP£TS Guest Cherfl lldd CO) THE WAY IT WAS "1953 • 54 NHL Stanley Cop Playoffs Detroit Red Wings Va Montreal Cana- dlena' (%)MOVIE * • "Wonoerful Crool(" Gerard Depardleu A young, married buslneu- man 1urn1 crool( 1n order to meet the ••pen-of hll bualneas ana fells In lave with one of hi• Yic- 11m1 'R. 7:30IJ 2 0NTHETOWH ""lured Waller Cronkite tllk• lbOUt Ill• Ille and lllu1trlous car-: • tour ol New York City. I QI fAMILY F£UD LAV!ANf & SHIRLEY &COMPANY La.,.,ne Ind Shi~ enroll In • corralP()ndence mod· altng acllOOf, 8 EYEONL..A. F .. tured. • report on the LOI AngalH Police Oeparlmt nt S W.A. T. teem; • trip to OeMrt Hot Springe; 1 100k at blell· llChe CUf!I', • M•A0 S•H The doctO<s of the 4077th have more thlll ll'leY can hendla on • bad d1y In the O.R. I TICTACOOUOH MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT C!) NEWS (I) P.M. MAOAZ>NE T rlplet brotherS wtlO are IOC>-fanked 1-...ge gym- n11t1, en Interview with aoap opera ector end rock. 11er Riek Sprlngtlel<l. 9 YOU ASKED FOR rT (C)MOVIE • • "Home To Stly" ( 1978) Henry Fonda. Michael McGuire A ,_... ager llk91 her ll)irlted grandtllhef on 1 trip so he won't be _,, tw•Y to a home IO< Ille lged cm NHL HOCKEY Los Angetel Kings YI MontrMI Cenldllnt 8:00 e CJ) THE euos BUNNY THANKSOMNG DIET A"4mlled Bugs Bunny offers preecriptlons to fits lrlends for evokllng llolldey i!!!llony. (R) U Q! FATHER MURPHY An enthusiastic young prleet arrtvee to take con- trOI of the tcl'tool-or"phln- ·~VIE • • "Empff• Of The Ailts" ( 11177) Joell Cotllna. Robert Lanting 88MCI °" • tlOfy by H.G Welll. Vic11.ma ol • FIOrldl ree1-e111te ~ dter are lured to e remote 11t1nd wtier• they are 11tlClled by gl1nt, llungry 11111 8 9 HAPPY DAYS Roger Ind FOllZle unwlt- tlngty dlte the same glrl, e!WS Mtr1on teems the MCret betuno HOW8fd's old love ltllert • P.M. MAGAZINE V•all actor I writer I dlree- lor Ron How1rd. n he receives Ills a1ar on the HOiiywood Wltll of Fl"19 and lelrn ebOUI his soc- oeutul career In TV Ind film, an Interview with ~ opera actor and rock star Riek Sprlnglleld; Chef Tell prepares two cr111berry ci-ta, Paule Nelson on hOw to mek• extra money fOf Chrlstma • MOVIE • • • "Red Sun" (197t) Charin BronlOn, Alai11 Delon A treln robber II d0Uble-cro11ed by his CHANNEL LISTINGS 06 KNXT ICBSI 0 Or1 TV C!J KNBC (NBCI z Z TV 0 KTLA I Ind.I .. HBO W KABC IABCI c 1(1~m.ia1 0 KFMB tCBSI • IWORINV N '( 0 KHJ TV tlnd) ,, IWTBS> a:> KCST (ABC> ( IESPN> W KTTV llnd I $ IStlowttme> Q) KCOP TV (Ind I e Spottiqn1 8) KCET tPBSI 8 tCablf' Nf'w~ Nel-rl\I (DKOCE (PBSJ Quitting Business 50% OFF WEDNESDAY, NOY. 11 , 1981 10:00 a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. • Crocks • Kitchen Accessories • Decorator Tins • Clay Cookers • Jack Daniel Items • Handcrafted Items etc .• etc:. elc. o ' pnnegan~c:; cR.oc keu..y shoppe 471 N. New port Bk-d. Ntwport Buch CA 92663 Speci.llizing In Crocks & Distinctive Stonewut pertner. who 1111i.. a )lweled IW()(d from I J~ aneae ambUNdor aa well •• all the gold from the robbtlfy, • c:oeM08 "The ~bone Of Night" Or CWI Segan •urnlnes humell Ulought ~ the heavena throughout histo- ry 8114 •t1M1Plt, to 0<ga- ntre Whit It ...,, •bove us. (R)CJ Ill) NOVA "Anlmel Olympl1n1" T119 be1u1y. endurance and power of 111lma.11 In Ille wltd 1re JuxtapOMd with Olymplc 1thlet• perlOfm- lng 1 .. 11 which hive Petal- lels In the enll'lal kingdom. (~Q CID MOVIE * • ·~ "Th• Bushido Bl6de" (1980) Richard Boone. J1mee Ear1 J~. A U.S Nevy commander leldl I band Of A,,,_lean aallof• Ind n•llve Jap1- MM •tternptlng to recover e 1ymbollc aword ol ~n.'R' Cl) BIZARRE XII John Byner atiows you thlng1 1trenger then truth, larger lh•n Ille, Ind zanier 1h1" enythlng you've - _, In tn.e encore p1ee- antt110na trom tile Sl!OW- tirne Bizarre Nbr ery. 0 MOVIE * • ~ "Utlle Miu Miiker" ( 11180) Walter Mettheu. Julie Andrews. BIM<I on the Di mon Runyon story. A gruff, 111ngy t930s book· le's Ille la turned 1round when he 1ccept1 a 8-year- old mopoet u 1 marker f0< 1 reclng bet. 'PG' 9,30 8 Cl) MOVIE •• *"' "10'" (19791 Dud- .lay Moont. Bo l)eretl. A middle-egecl tongwrltw become8 l11l1tu1led with I young blonde 1n rout• lo her wedding eM .... out to wtn hef. • 9 LAVIAN£AND SHIN.EV La-Ind Slltf'ley dou- ble date with r.o yotJnQtr flltn encl wJl>d up et t...wJld.. college tretemlty perty. Q • ALL IN THE FAMll Y Mike lell'ns the hlrd ~ 11111 11-... llOI ...... ChUd'e play GABE KAPlAN: JUST FOR LAUGHS Comedl8n Gabe ~ II featured In th11 ac>eeltol tepid et "The l811 Sloe>" In HOiiywood 8:-45 (%)MOVIE * ·~ "The Rlln People" ( 1969) J1"1n Caan. Shifley Knight A YOUllO woman Hit out on 1 cross-coun- try trip to escape the ralf)Ontlbilltles of her m•r- rlage 1nd 1"1pendtng motherhood. 'R' 11:00 8 QI ULTRA QUIZ 't. 'R' 10:00 U Q! F\.AMINOO ~AO Lute-MH S•ndert 11 11tecked bfthl emotlotlal- ry dlst\lrbed ton ol I prom- inent Truro twnlly. I I •• NlW8 HART TO HART Two hlgh-IOciety women wtlO modeled lure with Jennifer .,. found mut· detecl.Q • PRESENTE (B)MOVIE * * 'J\ "Tile Prlvtte Eyes" ( t980) Don Knott•. Tim Conw•y. Two lxlmbllng American delec:1tv.e 1t9 called In to ln..,..tlgtl• • I KCfT NEWSIEAT CAP'TIOHED ABC HEWS CID REMEMIEA WHEN ... "The Birdt And The S-" Dick CIY9tt look1 11 the lfaditlOllS ano revOlutlOns. the rlgl<llflu end llbertlel 11\11 llllll• up America'• 1.lw•y1-changlng a .. uel lltnd8fd1. ())MOVIE •• 'A "The ChlMH Con- '*'lon" (1973) Bruce Lee. A "1artl1t •r11 eludeflt Mii out 10 avenge the d .. 111 Of hie teacher In whidl 1 rival IChool WU lnYOlvecl. 'R' "'"' ol murden In en -Ml>NIGHT-Engllsh cattle 'PG' ---- 0 MOW: 12:00 • MOVIE * * ~ "loopt\Ote" (19MJ ••th "T8tenlull" (1955) Berry SuNlven, Oofollly John Agar, M.,. Coroay Milone A blllk emp4oyee A tclentlst r-Chlng the IOCUMd 01 f)lffertng • ••oe effect• or 1 ,_ tynthetic •um of money exC>r*'•I• nuttlenl unwit11ngly looHs hlmMlt by eppreMndlng • lplMr of gf0111tle pro- lhe , .. 1 culprll. P0<1lon1. 10:25 (%)MOVIE 8 9 FANTASY ISLAND *'A "In God We Trust" Tattoo becomee the sub- ( t980) Marty Feldmen, etllull 181119' to 1 child, Andy Keufm1111. A nalw Ind 1 women bettl'es a man« It ..,.., out Into the group of men In en athleUc world to ralM money '°' competltlOn (RI hl1 lml>Ol*llhed monut-D MOVIE i 'PO' • • ''Chrlltmu Coel Mine t0-.30 NEWS Miracle" ( 111771 Mllc:hell INDEPENDENT Rylltl, Kurt Ru1sell Coal NETWORK NEWS miners try to rHCh aelety • INDEPENDENT EYE: aller 111 e•f)loslon 1n an THE YEAR OF THE unNfe mine OISA8lED PEMON • MIKE OOUOLAS G ODYSSEY Co11011: Natalia Cole .. Mytlll And The MOllM· Guest1. Freddie Roman, bulldere.. Archaeologlt11 F«na)dez. John Mallon study huge u rthen • ROOt<IES mound• •c•llered e EXPLORING lhrOUijhOUI lhe centrel LANOUAGE; THINKING, United Steta wt11c11 _.. built by 98f1Y Atnetlc8n WRmHO • lndlerlt. Q COMMUNICA TINO cm M0\11£ • MOVIE * ** "The I.Ong Riden" * * "The Vlalt0<" (19781 (1980) J-end Slecy Mel "-· John Huston. KMch, o.vkl end K"1tl An Mdlnl trM! 8 dlltMI C.tradl11e. Tiie ,,_ geluy --lo Earth to J--cole Younger 98f10 dMtroy en evil l-lf98'-old ... ..,.. • trtll of emptt.d girl wtlO I• delllned to be banll1. plundered ate-the rnothef of a ~. gecollCtlM end deed bod· tnlllevolent raoe. 'R' IM In ttt"'.tllke 81""1M' our---12:os9 (I) MOClOUD . lew. ride t~d tMlr fine! 12:1l(DJMOVIE enowdown. R • *"' "The Double Expo-11:00 8 8. Cl) 9 8 sure 01 Holly'' (1980) NEWS • SATVAOAY NtGHT Catherine Earnlhaw1' A young wile llU a --ot Holl Fr•n T1rkenton. to¥e alfara. -ol w'1ICh Guell. Leo s.y.. ~ In , cue or blec:k-1 PAUL HOGAN mall .;•Inst hef by hef lo\l- THE J£FFE"80NS ., 'R' When George • forget• CZ> MOVIE Mother Jellerton • birth-• * "The w onderful day. LoulM Nvea the d1y. Croolt" Gerard Oeptlrdleu • IEHNY HIU A young, married bus!· Ben"Y preeent• his own MSsmen turn• crook In version 011 pop l•llvll. order 10 meet 1he • DICK CAVETT eKpenMS ot his buslnfts Gllesta John Updike, John •nd 18111 In love with one of Cheeve(. hie v1ctlm1 'R· (t)MOVIE •••'A "Bel-The 12:308 QITOMOAROW LlnH " ( 19771 llndaay Guesta' he8f1 trensplent Crouae, Jeff Goldbluin. ~ Or Chrl9tlelll Bet· The at•ff meinbett of 1111 nerd: Oevld Brenner; "underground" Boelon llUlhof Albert Goldman. • * "Hopsootcl1" ( 1980) Waner Matth•u. Glende Jeck10n. A IO<m« lntelll- gence egent la lldeCI by II\ old flame In dodging the KGB •IWS lhf CIA. who lte trying to prevent him from publllhlng hla memolra 'A' .1:00 m MOVIE * • ~ "Olernond Heed" ( 11163) Chtrlton H•ton, Yvette Mlmleu11 • INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS (C>MOVIE • • "Big Wednetday" ( 1978) Jan·Mlch"t Vin- cent, w11111m Kall Three Cellt0<nl1 boys enjoy the IUrf Ind land unltl they begin to •ftllze that thet• 1 more to Ille thlll WUitlg dOwn lllelr bOerdl. 'PG' 1:t08 MOVIE * * '"' "Belch Btenkel Bin· go" ( 19155) Frenkle Av11on. Annelle Funk*IO (II NEWS ,:25 8 MOVIE •••11t "Harvey" (t~ll James Stewlrt, JOHPhln1 Hull. 1:30 II) MOVIE * ·~ "Man In The Mid· dla' (19641 Robert • Mitchum. France Nuyen MOVIE * * .. HumenOlda From Tiie Deep" (1980) Doug McClure. Ann Turkel Loatllsome creatures from the ocun'1 depths attec:k a Caftlornll coeatet town, k11t111g the men end rap1ng the women 'R' 2:00 0 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT An Interview with John Ritter Q!NEW8 .MOVIE • • Terr0< Train" ( t980) Ben John.an. Jemie LM C\11111 A COiiege frateml- • ty't New Y-'t mHquet• 'tide l*"IY tumt Into • nightmare when • vlndlc· tfve ~· .. .,,. klhing off the party-goer• 'R' (l)MOVIE * '1' "In God WI Trull'' I 11180) MtrlY F•IC!m1n. Andy Kaulm1n. A nel\19 monk 11 _,, out Into the w0<ld to r•IM money '°' his lmpov«lttlad monnt- 2:20 i N~S ~ 2:30 NEWS 2:40 8 NEWS 2:'5 ~MOVIE • * * '' "Swept Away" ( 11175) M1tlengel• Mel•to, G11ncarlo Gl1Mml Olrec:1· ed by Lin• Wenmuller In O<der 10 suntlve on • deserted Mediterranean Island. a SIC11l1n 11llor and an 1tall1.n toelallle must settle their sexual and potilicll dllferenoes 2:55 8 MOVIE *•"Ride The H)Oll Wind" (1968) Oerren McG1Yln. Mat!• Pwtchy 3:00. MOVIE • • * 'The Pumpkin <1:35 8 VOYAOE TO THE (lOTTOM OF THE SEA "Tile Prkle Of Doom" <l:.<15(t)MQVIE • • "Meteor" t 11179) Sellll Connery, N1t1lte Wood. Amertc.n 1nd Ruulen tcl- ene41 expena join '°'°" In en 11tempt 10 ward ott • glint meteor from outer ~. which le on a dlrsct colllllon course with E1rlh. before m1u dlHater strlk•. 'PG' Wednesdat1'• Dat1f ime Movie• -MC>RtH----- 8:00 • * ·~ · BhOW1n1 Junc- llon" (1956) Av1 G•rdn•. Stewert Grtnger A11 AnglO-lndlan girl IMng In Pa~111an uperlences an Identity crisis u ahe strug- gles to sort out her nation- al toy1tt1es 0 * * "My1tery llllnd' Four children strende<I on 111 Island ara Chued by e hermit Ind discover • case ol count8ffel1 money ·a· 8:30 CC) * * *'It ''Thi Bad AnO i:30 Cl) • * '" "Bhow1n1 June-• lion" ( 11188) Ava G1rdnet. Stewart Gr1nger. An Anglo-lndlen girt livlng In Paklti.tl 11peri.ic.1 en Identity Clll!I It Ille SINQ· glee to aon OU1 her nttlon- at loyal11M 2.-00 0 • * * One On O!'e (1977) Robby Benion. Annette O'TOOle A l>Oy whO QOM to college on 1 beslcelb1ll tctlO!arlhlp II 1bu•ed by the coech, ICOm9d by hie tutO< end used by Ille IChOOI IO< ill own purpo ... 'PG' 2.:30 Ct)**,_., "Vltlt To A c111ers Son" 1111741 Rich· 1rd MulUgen. Johnny Sek- ka. A ltther Ind IOn ITWlll· ege to r..olve the dlffer- encet bet-lrtem wh9rl they embartt on 1 aal1r1 through Alnca 'G' 3: 10 CZ) * • • 1~ "Gimme Shel- ,.,. (111701 Rolling Stones. Jetter.an Alrpl-This docul'lentary of the ROiiing Stones· 1989 A"'9rlcan IOU• Includes tcenel of the rioting end murder at 111 Altamont Sl)eedw1y tree concert 3:30 D • • "Adventures 0 1 The Oue«1' I 1975) Roberl Steck R1tph Bellemy •• w1111ew11er Swn" Ketth larMn A The Beaullluf' (11152) Kirk mount•tn man trivets Ille Douglas. Lani Torner A Non"-t w11n 1111 hUSky cold·hHrte<I HollywOOd searching lor the great produoer 1fft1C11 the lives white weter route south or several people pursuing 'G' 1t1rdom <1:00 CC) •*'""Bliek Beauty' 9:30e **'"'"Ghost • (1978) Edw1rd Albert, Ch,_, .. (11151) Bowery Glynnis O'Connor BIM<I Boya. Lloyd Corrlg•n. on tile story by Ann• Trying to ••poae a fake Sewell. A prouo 100 1we- splrltu11111. the Boyt get somely b .. utltut norae ~Id experiences men dl- 10:00 Cl).*.* "Ofdlnery owne<• People" (t980) Mary Tyler 0 * * "Duke Of Weet MOO<e, Donald Suther1and. Point' ~ 11138) Rlcllerd A gutlt-rl<lden t--.ger camon LOUii Hlywerd A trying to put 1119 lite beck young, cocksure w .. t together •lier hit bfothef't Pooni cadel gets CY1 down deeth end hit own Mlicicle to alz• wt>tn hi teaomt tbat •llempt ,.__,_ out to hit nls -1th Ind lnlluenoe complacent father Ind llll don't v.enipl him from cold, r.erwo mother. 'R' dutlee Ind r~11lon1 10:30 a> * t,; "lucky Textn" <1:40 (%) *·~"In God We Trust" . Wl:t4.J JQt>n.W.,JJ.._. .... ._-jl--'( t9&0) Marty Feldl'lan. Hayee. A cowboy tries to Andy K•ufme11 A naJw clear hit 1ldekl~ of monk 11 Mnl out Into lhe chatges ot 1rrned robbery. wol1d to relM money tor Ct)••• "Thi Pree!-n11 lmpover11hed ITtOnast- denf'• Mlstrns" (1978) !!}' 'PO' Beau Bridget, Keren Gfu-5:00 {SJ • * • "O..lgmng IHI When a courier '°' en Woman" 119571 Gregory AmerlCltl MCUrrty agency Peet!. Lauren BacaJr A too ln\'fttlg•t• 1 report that d,.H <1aa19ner 111d I Ills Ml• 11 a Soviet spy 1portswr11ar leer the he encounters 1 1lnlater strains of"''"'•' blisa force ooer•thlQ behind tlle 5;30 ~ • • * ·~ The Bid And 9Cer'les The Beau11tu1 1111521 Ktrk 0 • * ·~ "The Spiral Douglaa, Lana Turner A Staircase" (1977) Jecqu• cotd·he1rte<1 Hollywood llne Bisset. Chrlllopher proouce< 1ttec1s the llvfl Plummer A be•ulllul deal-of several people pursuing mute is terrorlzad by a stardom mysterious klller who turtts CID **'• "Toby Ana Tile 1n tile Shadows surround-Koala Bear (111811 Rolf Ing 1n elegll'll "11nslon Harris Live acllOn and anl- 'PG' mahon combine to ten the 11:00 D • • • ·~ :·1>ey1on ,,.. of • young t>oy end 1111 P'-" (P•M 2)(t9571 Lana pet kotla In Au1tral1a1'1 Turner. Lloyd No4tn. lronlter days 'G' In the first ol I IWO-per1 tptCiel. cont•ta11t• In • super qutz 1re ...,, com- peting In mental and phY91- cal gemet In varlout loca· tlont eroulWS Ille glObe; Oen Row1111 and Didi Mar - fin host (Part 11 ~ hl \19 Ytnoue roma.ntlc atld )ourn•llat14: 1nCOUnler1 with eactt other Ind the IUbjeclt Of ttleif JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batluk 8 9 THREE'S COMPANY Larry tlnally gets a date With his latest lnl81uatlon - T•ry 0 D YOO ASKED FOR IT Featuted. "France's 881119 Of The Bulls' atld "Grand- m1'1 A High-Are Diver " I MEIN ORIF'FlN ODYSSEY "Myths And The Mound- bullOe<t" ArchHOloglsts ttudy fluge eart hen t10<1ff 'R' 11:30 8 Cl) ALICE Alloe'a old t>eeu •rrlvu anxloua to continue • romance broken ott yeara before. (RI D Q!TONtOHT Holl Johnny Carton Gu.II Oevfd Nlver'I, Bet· befl Mlnd•ell. 8 9 A8CNEW8 NIOH'TllNE I IE.ST OF OAOUCHO THE 000 COUPLE Olclr tell Fellx tllk him Mondav-F1 iday OPEMDilLY 6 A.M. Breakfast • • • • • • S)95 s21s Lunch ...•.•..•• Dinner •••••••• s42s Order Fresh Baked Pies For the Holidays 530 I UnlYwsffy, l"hte ...... , ....... s. • ., ... c..hr' 552-3270 i H 15 HAS E3EEN NIGHTLINE Wl'TH -reo KOPPEL ! r-~~~~~~~~~~~~-.:.. 1'M GOI NG 10 BE ON VACAllON NEXT WEEK ... ~ BEGINNERS WFLCOME! REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Capades Skating School Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated tn your llf ~ one of these classes Is for you. CO~TAMESA ICE CHALET 270 I HARIOI ILYD. eoSTA MISA, CA. 979-8880 START.-MOW! II Wiii CLAS SIS • TOTS 4 To 5 IASIC I We4., At 4:41 ,.M. • AGES 6 To I IASIC I T ..... At l :Jt ,.M. • AG ES 9 To I 5 IAStC I T•1 .. At l:JO ,.M. • ADULT IASIC I WM.. At 6:i1 ,.M. PUBLIC SKATING EVERYDAY. ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAY! PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Sa v ings, Complete Stocks, Local New s and Sports, and Adver tised Va lues. ,· •• READING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEilK In the • .. "• * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/fuHday, November 10, 1981 Airport committee wanders off track There have been some prett\' novel ideas over the years about ways by which Orange Count~· governme nt could solve the Problem or m eeting its regional airport requirements. Studies have focused on locatln g such a Los Angeles In t.e.rn a lio n a 1 Airport· lY pe f ac1hty on a man.made island offshore of Long Beach. at the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base, in the Chino Hills on the border between Orange and San B~rnardino counties. a nd. most recently, in the Santiago Canyon area east of Orange. Studies are being conducted by the Southern California Association of Government s. a regional planning agency. and a so-called blue ribbon committee formecl h\ the county Board of Super\'isors.' The latter g roup raised some eyebrows a week ago when 1t called for cost benefit studies of relocating the three military bases in Orange County all s ites for aviation acli\'it,· to the sprawling Camp Pe.ndleton base. What does relocation of the bases have to do with developing a regional airport".' That's a good question. and one for which the committee didn·t seem to ha\'e a full answer. Some members seemed to suggest that relocation of the Marine Corps air stations at Tustin and El Toro to Camp Pendleton would free up airspace and thus r~duce potential conflicts with jetliners that would fly to and from Santiago Canyon. ir it were picked as the regional airport site. Then there was some talk about converting the Arm~ reserve air base at Los Alamitos 1 for use by pri\'ate aircraft. Whatever the reasons. the purchase of the bases and relocation of their operations outside the count v hardlv seem rea-sible. One ·immediately wonders where the billions of dollars necessary to accompli!ih s uch a move would come from. Beyond that. there·s been no hint tha t the military is ready to pull up s takes . In fact . j us t the opposite appears to be the case. Through it a ll. it 1s clear that the airport s ite co mmittee. composed or many pr our leadm~ executi\'es from the pri\.·ate sector. has been handed a task that Orange Count~· go\'ernment has been unable to sol\'e O\'er the past 20 years. Committee m embers thus mig ht find 1t to their aclvantage simply to study and recommend a s it e or s ites. rather than 1m·olving the much mor(' chffu:ult task ol militar.' hase relocallons Gift for everyone Outlook for the Orange Co unty Musi c Center. n ow scheduled to open in Costa ~tesc.t 1 n 1 9 8 5 . '' a s o n l" l' m o r t' brightened last week when the Hoag Foundation pledged :'I million toward construction ol the SS9 million facility from South Coast Plaza. This. according to a mus1t· center s pokesma n . puts the fund -rais ing e ffort ·..-1ght on target .. at nearly SIS million. with S32 million the target fu:?Ure ror September 1982. The Hoag Foundation. es - tablished in 1940 by the Hoag ram1ly. has made man~ grants to community organizations m the county. but this will he its larJ,!est single gift to an~ organization o ther than Hoag Me m ona l 1 lospital in Newport Beach. Plans for the performing art:-.' t·o mplex call for a 3.000-st.•at multi -purpose th ea ter lor symphonies. opera. ballet and musical perf orman<·es. clue for completion in 198.'>. c.i nd a S('('ond 1.000-seat theater to he huilt later. Total cost of c-onstrut•tion for the complex 1s t.>st1 mated at S40 million. and endowment C"osts for both theaters will he '19 million Impetus for the pro.1ect ha~ heen boosted b~· gifts of :56 million from the Segers trom I amll ~. which also donated fl\·e acres ol land fo r the theaters: SJ million from the Jame s lr \1 n e Foundation . :52 million lrom .Jim Bentle\ and Sl million from the I larr.' ·c Steele Foundation Other ma jor g i fts ha\·e 1 n c I u de cl : s 6 o.o . o O o r r o m Times-Mirror Co ... ~500.000 trom Robert P Warmington : '.500.000 lrom The Register: SJ00.000 lrom .James and A I Ba lei win and SI00.000 (rom Cc.trl Kan·hl·r Enterprises Inc:. These. alon .S? '-'Ith man' s maller g i ll!'.. l'O nl1rm lhl· g r o ,,. 1 n g e n t h u s 1 a s m I o r .1 lo ng -needed performing arts la c 1l 1t~ ol aclequatt> ... 11<.• to an·ommodate present <1t 1on:. for wh1 C'h Orange Count 1a n~ no" mus t trek to the l.o-; .\n1.H.•lt.•:- e1rea Censorship in disguise For som e years now there has been a movement afoot among C<'rtain members of the United Nations Educational. S c ientifi c and C ultural Organization 1CNESCO 1 to establish a so-called .. new world information order.·· The purported goa: would he to enable de\'eloping t ountries to obtain communications fac1lit1es approaching those enjoyed h~ the developed countries. Advocates of the program contend that a s mall number of developed countries pro,·ide mos t or the world news coverage. entertainment and ad\'ertising. and that a handful or multinationa l news agencies control the world's flow of news. These agencies. they daim. tend to focus on sensational and di s astrou s event s i n th e developing countries. while ig- norin~ more positi\'e e,·ents. To a degree this is true. and the United States last year introduced a UNESCO initiative to establish an .. International Program for the Deve lopment of Communications.·· That was not regarded as an adequate remedy for some of the "new information order .. advocates. They want to see the licensing of journali s t $. • inte rnational codes of journalistic ethics and extended government control of the press in order to limit information coming in a nd out of their countries . :"'ot s u rpris mgly. the Sm 1et Cnion s upports these propq .... d<i. The United States has maclc its pos ition on news 1·011trob quite plain. declanng 1l to he inappropriate for an~· agent·~· of the United :'ilat1ons to be used for the promotion of restrictions on lhe press. Specifically. the t; S. has supported a sta te ment issued in France this year by 62 members or the private m edia from 21 de\'eloped and de\'elop1ng l'Ountries decrying censorship in a ll form s and describing the proposed licens ing and other g o ,. e r n m e n t c o n l r o I s a s ··damaging a nd impractical 1n a world of d1 \'erse news and communication policies.·· This is as it s hould be. :'ilo doubt assistance in impro\.·ing their communications systems would benefit the developing nations. But this should only be undertaken with the c lear understanding that the facilities would not be used to impede the rree worldwide fl o w of information. Opinions expreswd In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex· pressed on tnis '1age are ttiose ot tMir auttle>rs and artists. Reader comment IS lnv1t• ed. Address The Oaitv Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Pnone 111•> 642·4121. ORANGE COAST lllilJ Pilat Ugly role for Americans WASHINGTON -American mercenaries rePortedly participated in the takeover of Chad by Libya's radical ruler Mloamma r Kbadary. In one operation, they helped to ransack the hastily abandoned U.S. Embassy in Chad, intelligence sources beli eve. Highly classified documents and coding equipment apparently were delivered into Libyan hands. Th.ls was the conclusion of a team of U.S. agents who slipped into Chad last December and checked out the embassy. "TJIE SAFE and vault areas had been peoetrated. ·' reported Donald Norland. the last American ambassador to Chad ... Papers were strewn around ... He assured my associate Dale Van Atta that no important secrets had been stolen. But intelligence sources said the e mbassy had been picked over by professional expe rts "with internal. in-depth knowledge or U.S. Embassy workings and classified intelligence procedures.·· One source compared the looting to the work or a professional jewel thief who knows the most valuable jewels to steal from a sare. The takeover or the U.S. Embassy occurred in Ma rch 1980. It attracted little attention at a time when the world was absorbed with the Iranian host.age c risis. But the Am erican personnel vacated the embassy abruptly to escape hostile invaders. '"Our people got out by the skin or their teeth ," rec alled a State Department official. Declared another: "'They left the embassy as If it were a house on fire ... ln a telephone interview, Ambassador Norland said the embassy '"was not JACI 11111111 defensible ... He got his people out with French help, he said, to safety in Cameroon. \ THERE WASN'T even time to carry out a JO-minute emergency drill they had practiced to dispose of secret files. Everything was left behind, including the most sensitive documents and • equipment. Intelligence authorities in Washington are convinced that Ame rican m e r cenaries, some of them with backgrounds in the CIA and special forces. assisted in the expert looting of the embassy safes and tiles . Witnesses have identified fugitive ex-CIA agent Edwin Wilson as the man who recruited the mercenaries. He now operates a worldwide exPort-lmPort business from a seaside villa in Llbya. His lawyers say he recruited some mercenaries for Khadafy but had no control over how they were employed. T H E WITNESSES claim that Wilson 's mercenaries conducted more than one operation for Khadafy inside Chad. At least one commando raid was attempted against the main airbase at the capital city or Ndjamena. The mercenaries rePortedly swept into tbe base aboard an American-made DC3 b1.1t were driven off. One of the mercenaries is quoted as saying he new into Chad several times aboard a DCJ, ferrying cargo and troops to the battlefront. He described the miss ions as "black " -an intelligence term meaning they were highly secret and strictly unofficial. He told of being captured once by Chadian troops, along with four ere• members. Th ey expected to be executed. But. unaccountably. they were released after three days to fly back lo Libya. In exchange for Libyan petrodollars, these American soldiers or fortune have served not only Khadafy but other anti-American dictators, including the Ugandan despot and mass murderer, ldi Amin. Maureen's qualifications doubtful All that is new about Maureen Reagan's declaration to run for tbe U.S. Senate is that it is now official. She had s tarted rumors and speculation over her Possible candidacy nearly a year ago. But announcing one's candidacy for the Senate is a long way from being a U.S. Senator. All she has done to this P9int is increase the number or likely candidates for the GOP nomination next June in an already overcrowded field. In the first place the incumbent Republican U.S. Sen .. S.l. Hayakawa isn't about to bow out. He has vowed to fight lo the finish to keep his job. Then there is San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson. steered into the race and away from hjs original intent or running for governor by the Los Angeles kingmakers. UNDAUNTED by the adamance of Hayakawa in resistance of pressures lo step down or the machinations of the moneybags in their attempts to call the shots. Congress men Pete McCloskey, Barry Goldwater, Jr., a nd Robert Dornan aJJ say they are running. So, too. does state Sen. John Schmitz. And Congressman J ohn Rousellot may yet jump in. As the saying goes. the more the merrier. If Hayakawa has any kind of a corps of solid supPorters, and given the incumbent's usual advantage of about 20 perce.nt of the vole, he may yet show the Republican doubters that all those stories about him being asleep al the switch are no more truthful than was Goldwater's fabrication about him. . RePorted.ly Maureel) 's candidacy is not only ~ltt\ollt tbe supPorl or the .. ' IARl IATIRS President but against his wishes. Sbe, like young Goldwater, and Jack Ford who says he will run Cor State Controller, are obviously attempting to do what Jerry Brown did in wiMing his election to governor seven years ago, trade on the names of their more famous Cathers. T HE U ·YEAR·OLD President's daughter has little else to qualify her as a candidate. She bas been somewhat of a drifter, playing bit parts in pictures, working as a TV announcer, and more recently as a salesman promoting foreign trade, a job undoubtedly handed her be<:ause or her father's pos1t1on. In between s he has been thrice married. her late.st husband stiU in his 20s. That alone is bound to become an embarrassment to her now that she has entered the political arena where things can gel pretty messy during the heat of campaigns. As to the. knowledge-of .state., national: and foreign affairs one supposedly is expected to have to aspire to the Senate, she probably knows no more than the average citizen. Certainly her background doesn 't indicate any experience to provide s~cb knowledge. AT F I RST BLUSH it would not appear that Maureen will cause Hayakawa. muc h worry . Taking a stance as a champion of women's rights and supporting ERA, which her father opposes, she may attract some of the women voters. SUJJ, women often resent a pretty face seeking ofCice and Maureen retains all the good looka she inherited from her father and her actress mother, Jane Wyman. Ir she should surprise everyone and win election she would be only the third woman in the nation's history to be elected to the Senate without fint beinC appointed, and the first woman Crom California to serve in that august body. Tiine for doctors to examine those pills I think we in America probably have the best doctors in the world. in certain r es pects, with two lamentabl e deficiencies: they don't know anything about nutrition, and they know too little a bout the drugs they so freely presci:ibe. The first deficiency is the fault of their medical training. Nutrition Is the IYlllY HARlll ~ ~-~ ~ sad. little step-sister in almost every medical school curriculum. with perhaps one slight course devoted to a cursory g)ance at the field. YET W£ RAVE been leamina. more and more. over the past few yeara, how centrally important proper nutrition can be, and how the convenllonal wl1dom about lt Is often mlsleadln1 and perfunctory. Moat doctor• mumble aomelhint about a "balanced diet" and l.t lt to at that WbJle thls 11 the respon1lblllty of the 1~hooll and collegee (aft.er all, medical , s tudents can 't s hape their own education>. the relative ignorance about drugs is a serious charge against the profession It.self. Many. if not most. doctors lack the time, the energy or the will to investigate the properties and side ·effects of their prescriptions. They are bombarded weekly by the "detail men'' sent out by the drug firms, with their glowing brochures and • lavish saml)let. It is eslimated t»t the advertising a_nd promot10n monef spent b1 one drug company alone may 10 as high as several thousand a year per doctor. This coaUf seduction bears fruit in most cases: 1t aids the doctor In making speedy decisions more than lt may aid the patient. • AND EVEN when the drues are eff ectlve, physiclana are too often remiss ln explatnin1 to patient. both the potency and the llmltatlona ot tbete prescriptions. I know Hveral men wbo have '*" takln1 hl&h blood ~ pllla for yelU't without havln, btlD tlllN by their doctors that thlt mldlillll reduces the llbldo and prolltCMI .....a impotence. Patlenta don't llaow wlaa& &Mr are taklna. and realb Mie "-"" or rlndlnl out. rr ta. ...... ~lllllillf.. .. I Orange Coast OAltY PILOT/Tuesday, November 10, 1981 ~erobic dancers throw themselves into fast-paced exercise routines. Some call it dancing and others call it exercise. M ost of the 2.5 rn class call it a gnod way to lose pounds y1..erobic dancers get kicks Daily Pilot Photos by Ric hard Koehle r Some call it dancing, Others say it's exercise. Whatever you label it. aerobic dancing definitely looks like fun. At a recent class i n Huntington Beach more than 25 women kicked. str etched. jumped and clapped through an hour of fast-paced routines that would leave many a high school cheerleader puffing and envious. or the women between 30 and 62, there wasn't a bad pair of legs in the group. Said Mollie Th1rion. the senior of the group in her fifth year with Aerobic Dancing, H.When I fir:;t .s_tarted I was such a klutz. It keeps me healthy. This is my only outlet." It's hard to believe that the spunky 62 year old wasn 't born knowing the steps to a "two step s hutout " or a "four step pushover" or a simple "arms over." In less than 60 se conds in s tructor Peggy Denson shouted those three steps and four others. Miraculously it seemed. no one missed a beat or a kick to the popular blaring of Dolly Parton's "9 to 5." By the third class of the 12-week session, everyone knows the routines, said Ms. Denson. That seems a little hard to believe. No less hard though . than the fact that Ms. Denson claims to have weighed 185 <down to 125) before she began teaching the class two years ago. She carries around a picture of her former self in a two-piece bathing suit to prove it. "It's a fun way to get exercise," s he said. "My husband used to badger me to jog when I weighed 185. But this is like cheerleading." Aerobic Dancing, Inc. was founded 11 years ago and combine s dancing and c on t inu ous movement to strengthen the heart and rirm the body. The classes are taught nationwide, with more than 20 offered along the Orange Coast. For more information call 964·4616. •. ·---· \ .. --~----~~~-.::-.~~----~----._. ______ ,,_.,~-·,~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tu11d1y, November 10, 1981 THElift. ~t:-. ~~ . I , ************* ************* Make Citizens Your Tax S in Your War • Headquarters Income Tax. ~Tax Relief . c . ' IS onung. Tax Relief is Coming!" Go1~xl news! Ch<11"'C from rwo rc:~olu· 1ional') reuremenr accounl~ 1ha1 pul mnre of )'V!Jr pre· ciou~ earning' under 1ux 'heller! New! Expanded IRA Account! Larting January I. the new tax law mak~'"'it po!'i..\ible for at~1·rme who is employed 10 have an IRA account. 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BUSINESS 86-7 Winners and losers share 'new' Atlantic City · Gambling influx enriches many lives, ruins others ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . (AP> -On the Boardwalk, crowded with flashy hlgh -rollers , nickel-and-dime gamblers and sleaiy quick-buck artists with all the angles, Frank and Bobbie DiCerbo are among the quiet winners. DiCerbo, 27, was an Atlantic City policeman until a year and a half ago. The seven-year veteran left the force to join Ramada Inns' $330 million Tropicana casino hotel as captain of security. He has 320 security guards under him, protecting construction equipment and furniture and fixtures for the rising casino hotel, and more officers than the entire Atlantic City police force. He won't say how much, but bis salary is more than if he stayed with the police department another 10 years. His wife, Bobbie, 28, has returned to nursing, after caring for their 2-year-old son. With their combined incomes. switch from hospitals to culno hotel first-aid rooms. Teachers become dealers. Bank tellers become change-makers and counting-room clerks. A survey by th e state Department of Labor & Industry notes short-order cooks eam 76 percent more in casino hotels; chefs , 64 percent more ; carpenters , 54 percent ; di s hwashers, 34 percent ; switchboard operators, 26 percent; computer operators, 19 percent ; .and cashiers, J6 percent. · Social service officials see positive and dramatic changes in the area's needs because of casino gambling. County welfare rolls doubled between 1971 and 1976, before gambling, when it stood at 20 times the state average, says Abe Narkunski, county director of social services. But the number of welfare recipients has been dropping about 5· percent a year since mid-1978 and the de~line is An old hotel uxzs nicknamed "the home of the newly wed . and nearly dead." DiCerbo says, there is little tRly cannot afford in time. Five years ago, Atlantic City's Boardwalk, t he herring-bone wooden way of old-time fun and frivolity, was fading fast as its grand hote ls s tood empty, bankrupt and crumbling in the sea mist. The big conventions. the city's economic salvation during its long and lonely winter, had followed more affluent tourists to sunnier climes. Baltic Avenue homes bad fallen to below Monopoly board prices . An old h otel at Boardwalk and Park Place was nicknamed "the home of the newly wed and nearly dead." Even a new Miss America would skip town hours after her coronation. The casinos, it was predicted, would be a boon to everyone. There would be jobs for the poor, new homes for the aged, money to bail out the city and the state. A lot of that has happened. A lot has not. Th& seemingly never-ending boom foreseen in the heady days after Resorts International Hotel Casino opened in May 1978, has been tempered by the realities of competition. skyrocketing construction costs and industry claims of state over-regulation of their businesses. · The Tropicana, costs of which have nearly doubled since its inception, is expected to open as the ninth casino in December, but no more gaming palaces are under construction. Major hotel expected to continue, Narkunski says. Still half the population of 40,00<> receives some kind of public essistance. "On the whole, I look at casino gambling as a plus, maybe a plus-plus," he says. Minority leaders argue that many new casino hotel workers are white, middle -class carpetbaggers from northern New Jersey, New York , Pennsylvania and Maryland. They charge many of ttie city's chronically poor blacks and Hispanics are still without jobs and those who are working get the lower-paying positions as chambermaids and janitors. A state study round the city bas a hard-core "underclass" of people, mostly minorities, who seem to have been conditioned by time and local economic nuctuations not to seek work. Estimate s of ghetto unemployment start at 20 to 25 percent. Minority leaders also charge that the 'government and the nsrno hotel industry have"Oeen slow to provide housing for the poor and senior citizens. By far most of the area's new hou s ing is middl e-to uppe r -ipcome s ingle-family homes in the suburbs -and those prices are soaring. A three-bedroom rancher built for $26,000 five years ago might sell for $65,000 today. Few units have been built for low-income and senior citizen residents, who depend on an aged housing stock largely '' . the casino indt1istry, . almost singlehandedly, jolted this . area's economy out of its tailspin.'' firms such as Hilton, Holiday Inn, and MGM Grand have been turned off by the cost of borrowing. Meanwhile. the existing casinos say profits are down as they compete for the whims of the 60 million people who live within a day's drive of the Boardwalk. The gaming industry has added 29,000 jobs, nearly $1.5 biJlion in new Investment and an expected 18.5 million visitors this year, more than Las Vegas. The job boom clearly ls affecting southern New Jersey's unemployment rate. Atlantic County's jobless rate is off from a peak 12.2 percent in 1976 to a recent 6.9 percent -and aver14ge income in the city jumped 16.4 percent to $12,016 ln 1979. the biggest increase in the nation that year. "It is not immodest to assert that the casino industry, almost single-handedly, jolted this area's economy out of Its perennial tailspin and put it back in the right direction," says William J . Downey, executive director of the Atlantic City Casino Hotel Association. The industry also la blamed for jolting some of the area's best and moJt·e.uerlenced workers out ofl'exlstln1 businesses to ta.. •Utter and hi1her pay at culfto hotel•. Area police departmentl ••Y veteran offlcer1, like DlCerbo, are lured by more· money lo casino hotel security. Nun" created for summertime visitors during the '20s and '30s. The casino hotel industry said it would help to finance new houses required by state law. But the industry points to its low profit margins for their failure to help with h ousing immediately -some casino hotels are expected to lose money this year. To make matters worse, the com munity leade r s say, long-time minority and elderly residents are being pushed out of the city. The city's population -about half black and Hispanic -is down 16 percent from 1970, but mostly white suburban communities have grown 11 percent in the same period, according to state and federal counts. Dr. Joseph Rubenstein, an anthropologist at nearby Stockton State College, la directing a research project on Atlantic City's social chan1es. He blames the caalno hotel industry for failln1 lo spread some of the bounty to businesses around town. "We don't see the 1plllover into town very much," Rubenstein says. "We think the casinos are in dlrect confilct with the city u far as attractiq customers. The alm of tbe caslnoa la to keep their customen on the Boardwalk. They don't want people IOIDI out to reataurants and ban and boutiques." By far, the group affected the ... most I.a senior citizens, many of whom were attracted to the seashore by memories of earlier vacations and usually low rents lo the 1960s and early '70s. Because senior citizens are -least able to survive aoclal c hanees, their numbers in Atlantic City are declining r apidly, according to Oscar Ernst, district manager for the Social Security Adminlstration. The number of Social Security or Supplem e nta l Security Income recipients is down 10 percent from 1977 in the city, according to Ernst. "It's very definite that the working of economics in the community has resulted in a loss of senior citizen population,'· Ernst s ays . "And it's a continuing trend." The county's violent crimes increased by 32 percent and its non-violent crime increased by 37 percent from 1979 to 1980, considerably ahead of the rest of the state, according to the state police. Pros titution ·r em a ins a problem in a city where it always was. Casino guards keep prostitutes out of hotel lobbies and away from gaming tables, authorities say, but they prowl Pacific Avenue on all but the coldest winter nights. But the glitter of the casino generally dissolves into a monotonous routine quickly and many dealers find themselves in a fast-lane of overnight shifts, alcohol and, often, drugs. Dealers, law enforcement authorities and health officials s ay alcohol and drug use. particularly the use of cocaine, is clearly on the rise in the Atlantic City area. Assistant County Prosecutor Joseph Blitz says the increase in drugs is not necessarily tied to gambling, but more likely to a higher number of working people with higher salaries. ··If a factory opened with 30,000 new workers, and the salaries were as high as in the casinos, and the workers were as young, you'd also see a substantial rise in cocaine use," be says. ''Casino people have problems unique to them, mainly a lack of time," says Dr. Murray Gegner, a psychologis t in nearby Margat e . ''Valium , tranquilizers, marijuana - people develop a chemical dependlln~e on them to cope with the pressure." Marriages are often strained by the new way of living, although the state Supreme Cour t reports no rise in the county's number of divorces since casino gambling began. ·'The lawyers have noticed what we call ·casino divorces,"' says attorney Charles Middlewortb Jr. "A husband or wife gets a job in the casino and it changes their whole lifestyle around." What Atlantic City is realizinl is that there are going to be winners and losers. Among the losers may be the city's young people. Scbool officials say the rise in real estate prices, generated by casinos, makes expansion of the city's dilapidated schools too expensive. In addition, says school superintendent Jack Eisenstein, "We now have to deal with issues that three years ago didn't exist. Kids gamble, their parents gamble ; drugs, venereal disea se and employment problems." The city hoped to be a winner with the resurgence of the convention business to s mooth out the slow winter slump that has plagued this resort since the 1800s. ·'The potential for new conventions is staggeringly good," says G. Gerard Kauper, president of the Convention and Visitors Bureau. But to realize that potential means more new hotel rooms, and the casinos in place can offer only 5,000 -hall what was expected. There is a $200 million renovation slated for the mammoth Convention Hall, which ls the sixth largest in the country . Without those renovations, the ouUook for new conventions is 1rim. There are a.laQ changes at the city's Rescue Mission, where the Rev. Rex Whitman says the number of those seekln1 shelter has risen from 12 a day before the culnos to more than 100 a day. Many have been drawn here without meana, with only hope. ''They tblnk there mu1t be easy employment ln Atlantic City," the Rev. Whitman 1aya. ''They're alway• lookinl for that pot of gold at the end Of the rainbow." Altwtu;I 11C Atlantic CitY is not.allfla&hy new casinos .. as this street scene indicates. Crime has risen dramatically· since gambling came to town. · Frank DiCerbo, with aon Nick.and wife Bobbie, enjoys.a better lifestyle since he left the life of an Atlantic City policeman to be~ coptam of security for.a camw hotel. Agencies disclose college tests WASHINGTON <AP > -A truth·ln-testtn1 bill, creatina ·'nothing short of a minor revolution,'' is promptlnt major testtn1 agencies to provide more Information about their standardised exams, the bill'• sponsor says. Nevertheless, Rep. Ted Weill, D·N. Y., aald that be would continue to seek puaa1e ol hil bill. ltl pmapectl appear ~m, bow ever. At the 10th day of bearlnp on the meuure ln tbe past two years, the nation'• bl11eat teat-maker, EducaUonal T•Una Service, said it is voluntarily m aklna test questions and answers available for at least some forms of all its major allmisaion:s tests. Rep. Arlen Erdahl, R-Minn., told Wells, "lt aeema Uke you have struck the fear of tbe lawatven into the heartl ot the teat1ivera .... They .... ID have net•ted the real or Im.,.. need f« your bill." ETS President Ore= L Anrl1 Jo'Md o8kdllll tll9 rinl Amerte• Clllll Tlllllm Prosram..a.-Amerle• Medlal .. arguing against passage or th• Wei ss bill. Dr . J ohn A .O . Cooper president o f the m edlca colle-ges• group, said the blll' call for mandatory diaclo.ure wat qUlllloal ud anawen "ia eluale e .. of kllllnt fteu wl a •ledll bammer." l'H .... Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT (Tueaday, November 10, 1981 I COZY MOMENT Motht!r Etika serves as "pillow .. as her new sea otter pup naps while they float m a Seattle Aquarium pool. Arter RUFFELL•s U'HOLSTERY ............. s... ltU HAllOR ILVD. COSTA MIS.A -541-115' • AUTOMOTILE ACCIDENTS • CONSTRUCTIOO ACCIDENTS • PERSONAL ACCIDENTS The Law Offices of A. Steven Peters emphasizes in the handling of Personal Injury aaims. R. Steven Peters will make sure that you obtain all that you are legally entitled. Call for a Free consultation and determine your rights against all parties. Housecalls or hospital visits can be arranged. 834-0133 LAW OFftCE 24 Hrs. of R. STEVEN PETERS, INC. 60 I H. Park~ Dr .. Santa A11a PRICE •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE "" ........... the pup was born. the two were placed in an isolation tank to reduce d1stratt1on from other pups . · ::: PROFESSIONAL '"'ACTING CLASSES = '9.SO WEE:klY w ...... ..._.... ·= ,.., of ......... eel ... ........... fllllll. • hgll'IMrt wtkoftw. : AH ••/tYPft. : l-::============~!9 IS,.C. chi Ii•'• clonJ.e NEWPORT-PACIFICA : (71•) 957-0282 : Call 6.U-5678. P!,11 a few words to work for ou-••••••••••••••••• r··-···-··-1 I LINGERIE 1 PARTIES I I If you haven't had a pleasure party, you have I I missed a truly exciting expenenoe I I At one of our rela1ung patties You will be introduced I lo a vanety of lovely lingerie. loving dev1c,es and I , ... ,,... tasteful treats I I Over thirty (301 different styles of beautiful. I tantalmng, affordable lingerie to choose from I Dltt1Ma 1·,,_._... I I BOOK YOUR PARTY NOW-I I BEFORE THE X-MAS RUSH! I 1 THE PLEASURE COMPANY 1 I CALL 17141 551-9799 I -··········· In keeping with the Thanksgiving spi rit, Holiday Spa Health Club is giving you something to be thankful for. Now both you and a friend can enroll in a special non-renewable one-year membersh ip for Yi the price of our regular annual plan. Or join by yourself on a specia l non-renewable one-year membership for Y2 the regular price . Either way, you'll get the finest progressive physical condition- ing equipment available, like Nautilus; Dynamics: Paramount• and Universa l ~ Plus steamrooms, saunas, whirlpools, jogging, hourly aerobics dance exercise classes for women and more. Call or drop by for a free guest tour. But hurry, it's almost over. , Valium 'changed life' DEAR ANN LANDERS: Having terrified thousands. if not millions. of regular Valium users, do you 'now have lhe decency to print another patient's side of the story? I refer to the lady who called herselC a zombie because she had been taking S milligrams daily for 17 years. I came out of World War II a nervous wreck. I went broke pay ing hills to psychiatrists who tried to take me out of acute anxiety and depression. No help there. So I started to d rink. My wife was about to leave me when a doctor s uggested a new and successful drug called Valium. My whole life changed. J quit drinking and was able to relax and handle the pressure of m y job a nd family . T he children are grown now and my life 1s good. None of this would have happened had it not been for Valium. which I still take under the watchful eye of my doctor. Jt is unfair for a person as influential as you to print just one side of the story J am sure you would not recommend takmg insulin away from a diabetic. Well. Valium 1s just as vital to m e . NO '.'JAME IN CANADA DEAR CANADA : I cons ulted with Dr. Daniel Freedman, chair man or psychiatry at the Unive rsity or Chicago Medical School and a pioneer in the rield or drug use for mental illness. Dr. Freedman said the woman who described herselr as a zombie arter l7 year s of daily doses or 5 millig rams of Valium may not have given us a complete picture because (al 5 milligrams would not produce oversedalloo; Cb> she m a,· have been drinking along with the drug; (c> she may have othe r psychiatric disorders along with acute anxiet)·. The key phrase in your letter was "under the watchful eye or my doctor." Valium is generally prescribed as a s hort-term drug to r elieve anxiety. This means weeks or months -not years and years. U your doctor has kept you on it for this protracted period or time, you must be a m ost unusual case. Dr. Freedman hope1' there were periodic re assessments. q .Al#I W4DflS For those who are hooked and want to get otr, write to Valium Anon)·mous, Box 404, AJtoona, Iowa 50009. This g roup was rounded In 1978 by Leland Ahern. and new ch apters are springing up all over the co u n tr)'. The)' re p o rt I' h en o m e n a I successes. DEAR ANN : Tell the gu~ who felt sorry for "lhe ugliest girl an lhl' da!'l!'I ol '55" not lo waste his time When I was m high school I "i.J!'I UJ:?I~. too In fac:l. I ne,·er had a elate. but from age 17 on tnangs changed When I returned for m\ 20lh t'las:. reunion. nobody recogni7.cd m<.• Thl' UJ.(h clu<'kling .. had turned into quite <.t S\\ an The high sthool beaut1e!'I hore llllh.· resemblance to tht.>ir former st·l \'t•s .. \fo..;t of them were overweight and frows' The\ didn 't know how to <Ires!'!. and lime hail done them no good. As for the former loothall and haskethall heroes. the' wcrl' mosth· hald fat and out of shape · · · So tell the Jerk I ha,·e a mes~a~c tor him ... Eat your heart oul. f abo' · ANGIE DICKI'.\ISON'S DOL'BLE I ~ ~E\\' ENGLA."'10 DEAR A~G I E'S OOl'Bl.E: Time ripe ns some fruit and rots otheri,. There's a lot to be said ror sta.' ing in shape. How nice that ~·ou did. Con/used ahoui 1t'l1at s riy11t unrl what .~ wrong m todays neu.· moro11tr/1 ~·J)u re not alone. f l you want lwnesl . rlQwn·tu-eartll mtormat1on on your se.r questmn.~ rear/ Ann Landers· new hook/et /11ql1 Sc Ji(J(>f .'ie.r and /low to Deal \\'Ith f l -,.\ Gwrle rnr Teen.~ nrvt Tl1e1r Parents·· Send .511 t'ell/.~ plw; <J Ion'-' sta mped .. <;e/f -addrt>s.<;1>d encel11pe llJ A1111 Landers. P () Box 11995 Ch1tay11 Ill l)tJl)J J Child-proof a fantasy Afte r years or sc1ent1f1c· research. marketing and testing. it has finally been revealed that children can open c hild·proof caps on medicine bottles faster than adults. In a significant number of cases. 1t was confirmed that the c hild·proof caps could not be opened at all by adults and caused headaches for which there 1s no known c ure. The message to me is quite dear .. Child-proof" is a fantasy word that was invented to gi\'e mothers hope like .. wrinkle·free .. and "one·s1ze-l 1ts ·all · They're catch~. hut the~ don't mean an ything. THE WAV I FIGUR ED 1t out. 1t s Goa·s wa~ of propagating the s pecies. We need kids. We cannot function m this world without them. As lo ng as t here are hermetically sealed combs in packages. c hildren will always be with us. To them. there is no place in this world th at is "out of reach.. a nd no package made that cannot be ripped open by them in 35 seconds. They can take the bell out of a ball when they are 3 months. fmd the end of the toilet tissue roll at 6 months. and scale the top of the refrigerator b~· age 1. By age 3 they can operate a hpst1 c:k tube. by age 4 they can find the beginning of t he thread that is pasted under the label. and by 5 can disconnect the T\' and instal I \'ideo games. ERMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S END # THE WAV TllE WORLD 1:-. !.!oing. I don't think it's loo unreaTistH· to cons ider rent-a-kids for people with arthnt1s "ho ever want to get s ht'ed ba('on o ut ol i.l pat kage m their l1tet1me Or ho" C:thout .1 woman with Ion~ fm g('rna11~ who has ne' t•r heen able to use a s hopping <'4.ll'l hN·auM· they are all welded togethe r and C'a n onl~ he separated b~-a pre.schooler" \\'omt•n c limbing. the corporate ladder would '"' well to rent a kid to take alon_g on business trips if only to open the bal! of airline smoked almonds. Sometimes I fe e l pa c·kaJ.!e manufacturers don't kno'' children <1 t all If you want to keep c hildren out ol something. what <10 ~ ou clo" You put a t Utl' little duck on the side of the packC:tge and the words ... ,·itamm enrichl'<I · Then the mother puts the bottle or jar within reaC'h of the child with the lid nfl <rnd sa,·~. "There 1s not a da' goes h\ that I dc)n t want you to ha,·J onl .. 01 · thl''l' ll l•lp rnurself .. · Trus t me. thl• hottl>e "ill ne,·er hl• touc hed. Cronkite broke news Q : Who was the first network newsman to announce the shooting in Dallas of President Kennedy? A: Walter Cronkite. via CBS. Incidentally, Walter sent his letter of resignation to Pan Am Cha irman Edward Acker because. h e wrote, he h ad anticipated "a somewhat different relationship than that which was finally establis hed upon the completion of our negotiations ... He rurther noted that CBS News felt it necessary to remove hi m from further coverage of t he space program -a conflict-of-interest situation with Pan Am and NASA. Q : Who were the celebrity guests on Johnny Carson 's ver y firs t ··Tonight S how"? --L.B., Ft. Pierce, Fla. A : Groucho Marx. Joan Crawford, Me l Brooks, Tony Bennet and Rudy Vallee. Q : Do the U.S. diplomatic missions overaeas mjoy tbe same dlplomatlc 1tatus as ls accorded their mlssloM In the U.S.! A: Not exactly. For example. it was recently revealed that the Cuban mission used its U.N. diplomatic status to run up ..._ __ ..... _ Pf ISONAllTJ Q.&A. BY MARILYN AND HY GARDNER 5.888 unpaid parking tickets in 1980, the most of any miss ion. Runner s -up wer e Nigeria < 4,016 I. followed by the Soviet Union (3.968> and Egypt 12.4151 .. Could that be called "scofflawlessness'"> Father Don Connolly lost his health wh e n s tricken with a s troke several months ago but didn't lose his sense of humor . Finally, he told us at Casa Santino in Miami the other night. there's proof that Christ was J ewis h : He immediately went Into his father's business: he didn't leave home until he was 30 : and his mother' thought he was God. , • .... ~ PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna Beech. .... ..,...__~"" _..,._ ~ ~ '"Q.-~ ........ ..> I ! Consultation • a necessity DEAR DOCTOR: '.'ty husband has terrific pains in his legs from hips lo knees. Doctors say it's due to bad circulation in his arteries. After reading a column on Buerger "s disease and the bad effects of smoking. I wonder if my husband will ever improve. He smokes at least two packs a da~· --has been doing so s ince his teens. :'lilot once has his doctor told him to quit. What shall I do? --'.'IRS. \". DEAR MRS. Y : As k for cons ultation• immediately. Don't be afraid to hurt your· doctor·s feelin~s. DEAR DOCTOR : I have a coronar~· condition. :Wy chief complaint is getting angina attacks when I'm at rest. I used to take nitrate drugs and propranolol to relieve the s pasm in my coronary arteries. But the~· haven't worked so well recently. ..\ heart specialist has recommended a new dru g called nifedipine. Have ~·ou heard or it? -:WR.~. DEAR :vtR. ~.: This drug work~ a~ a c:alcium inhibitor It ha~ been e rrecttve in man ~· patients . According to a stud~· h~· .Jerrre~· W. )loses. :vtO. and associates or the t;niversit~· or Penns~·lrnnia School or :vt edicine • -1 81 1. they conclude · \\'(' t he rerore conclude from the prt>se nt pr elimin ar~· stud~· that nifedipine ,.is u potentially promising new therap~· fo r pallt'nl=' "-1th reC'UITl'n t re-;t angm<i anrl nhstrut·tin• ('oronan art<.•n <lis<.·~•"l' DEAR DOCTOR : Thank you for downplaying the virtues of jogging and intense exercise. My rather was a doctor in Newark, S.J., and d.ied at the age of 84. He never encouraged anyone to engage in extreme exercise. Going up and down the stairs and walking moderately every da~· was enough for him. Incidentally, he also forbade me to become a sun worshipper. He used to say, "Never ~it out in the sun between the hours of noon and 3 p.m." <That was long before people were warned against getting skin cancer and perhaps too many wrinkles. l I think m y rather was ahead of his time. -MRS. S. 0 HERB CABI OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO City by bay not moving? Ain"t -it·the-truth line Crom Anne Nilsson. quoted in the fall issue of Anne Herbert's Rising Sun newsletter, published four times a year in Sausalito: "The trouble with San Francisco is that anything goes but nothing ever moves forward.. . . . Anothe r compelling thought Crom a different source: "She used to taJk about the crane effect. That's where you wake up in the morning and wish a crane would come into your room and take the other person away" ... Slight rewrite of somebody else's line: ··What we need is an animal that can tame - people··· ... An Anne Herbe rtis m : ··Governments are what we have to keep from noticing that we can work it out just fine" ... And: "lt·s important to s tay confused. It improves your hearing."· BEFORE SOV I ET Oep. Cons ul General Alexander Potemkin spoke al the University Club, Host Jac k Aldrid~e asked : .. Any subjects taboo? .. Like Afghanistan?.. No . .. P o land ?.. ~o . "Is r ael?·· No. "Only s ubject taboo.·· said Pote mkin, "is sex. because its lunchtime. Sex okay after dinner:· As he rose to speak. Potemkin grinned "Nice to see a nother minority h ere ... looking al De mocrat Paul Pelosi. squirming in a sea of Repubs . NOW THAT THE Gerald Ford Library in Grand R a pids and the Nixon Columbarium at Duke University are all set. prelimmary planning is under way for a Reagan Me morial Librar~· tn Holly wood. According to information rec'd by Stuart Mc Kelvy from the Washington samizdat . the a rchitecture will be Hyatt Regency Colonial around a lone redwood tree. the one that afte r you·ve seen it you've seen ·e m all. Inside. no books only cassettes. Western films and fi ve-by-seven cards. Admission will be free except for senior citizens and the une mployed. BUTl'ON UP your overquote: Doug Ferrari. whose parents work in Silicon Valley. says "their stand on abortion is that it's not alive until 1t"s employed at Intel" ... Ronnie Schell to his wife Jan afte r returning to L.A from a job here: ··At the S. F. airport. I was mobbed by seven teen-agers.·· Jan: "'Who did they think you were? ..... A postcard from N. Y. Life's Vernon Lane. vacationing in Germany and put off by those heavv down comforters: ··It's like waking up and finding that a heavy unattractive blonde has passed out on top of you in a taffeta prom dress" ... J ack Green explaining supply-side economics to a big·eyed blonde lady. "'AS lonJ? as you keep me supplied l"m on your side. · POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT WHEN YOU • LOOK DEATH SQUARELY IN THE FACE, YOU MAY F'INO TM£R£•s NOTHING L.OOKING SACK. Scorpio: Time an ally Wednesday, November 11 ARJES (March 21-April 191: Focus on home repair, investment in safety devices. improved security. Financial windfall is on the way. TAURUS <April 20 -May 29>: Initial setback is followed by surge forward. Accent on initiative, new starts. timing and correct judgment. You'll have opportunity to define terms. set policy and rectify past mistakes. GEMINI <May 21-June 20 1: What had been reason for apprehension could be transformed into positive factor. You discover hidden allies. You 're asked to participate in private conference. CANCER <June 2l·July 22 1: You·11 complete longstanding task. Love domin ates scenario. Feelings ere expressed in mature. meaningfuJ manner. LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 : New approach brin1s desired results . Superior wants to make room for you. Independent associate offers encouragement. but is en\'ious. Highlight creativity. confidence and charisma. VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Good Moon a1pect colnclde1 with direction, lmtruetion. lan1ua1e. principles and travel plan1. Intuitive Intellect i1 on target. reachln1 and learnln1 processes are ltlmulated. U8U (Sept. 23~0ct.. 22>: Knowled~e liOIOsCOPE BY SIDNEY OMARA gained regarding costs. future JJlans information is cause· for optimism. but reevaluation may be necessary. SCORPIO 1 Oct. 23-Nov. 211: Play waiting game -time is on your side. Applies especially where legal affairs are concerned. Permit partner. mate to show wares, express \'iews and suggest policy. SAGITTARIUS I Nov. 22-0ec. 21 1: Emphasis on changes where basic tasks . e mployment enter picture. Focus on those who rely on you. performance. statistics. time.and-motion studies. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan . 19 1: Important domestic adjustment indicated. Accent also on change. tra\·el. variety. children and speculative ventures. AQUARIUS IJan. 20-Feb. 18 J: Foc us on land, real estate. territory. definition of terms. You are on solid Cooling, despite doubts expreased by relatives. Pisces. Cancer. Virgo natives tlgure prominently. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20>: Older relative diacunes tript, calls, messages and po11lble •tock purchases. Your posit.ion la strong -know it, ref use to be lntlmldated. u u :: a -- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, November 10, 1981 •a I SHUTTL! VISITORS Doyle Brewington. u Texas millionaire (standing>. is shown s h aring some pizza with a group or Latin American students he brought lo the United States to view the s pace s huttle launch. The venture. ·~ expected to cost ! Brewington about 5150.000. began after he heard the son or a Central Ameri ca n a ssociate r e m ark that the U.S. space program w as a Hollywood gf mirk. Good. meals. Good deals. ---------------• • 1--1--1--··I I $1 na .... , I~: ftft.._ 1$7.r aftrJ111 z -1.77.... ~77rr.A ,,..,ND!. 0 ~ ~ ............ ")lllcy. ~WWII I Goud"' ..... of~. P*' .._ I ......... '*"" ... Cll!Y'-*....., g => ICllllllcly FriN Cllctln. llJlws.......... I IClll!wc*y F1iff Clldtft, witll IOtlr rlll1, • I willl litttell ,i.c.. of t*J ...... lllllwll ~ 8 of Clll• lllW. •slle4 ~ NCI trlYJ, ltr .. ~ole alrw, a lllfl 1111111111 potatoes ICl!Qcty Ffloll DllclM l.lllil tw1 .,... ~ 111111.,.. Lillll """''""' '""*'' •IMI I Nlh\llll fff't'f Ulllll IWO 011"1 pt! ,ef,wdlual eo.,. .... ..., .. ClllllM-1 c..,.._ .... ...., ,., --..-wllil•' I purdliM e-..on tOOlll °"'"' COtllllNtlDll I -""*' wllttelu.t .,.... cat.Ir ,.,, I ~ °'*'1 Cl!~ peys 111 1pplicelll1 w111t1/dllt "°''' CustOIMI p1ru11 1pptl· alt 1pplic11Me ul" 111 I ulea tu. I cllll1 ulea tn I Oftlf •Xllim N0¥11111hr U, ltl1 I Oftw..,.,.. lio¥tlllMI %2. 1111 01111 Uflllll Novetlllltr 22. 1811 Pncel _, QIJ IC~~ l ~~ wwy 11 ~ 1 Pric:ea llllY •lllJ 11 plftictpttlllt loc;1llOAl. I COlltlM .... ..., ill s..ai.m-Cllilelllll I I Ir.II~~ -C..,.. ,...... -1 Coupoo fOOd 1111} 111 So<ltlltta CllllOIM .. s.dlefw 'tllil-I ---I --COUPON -1 _____ _. • ' . • ' .tlicky Fried Obicken. .. I Now save 40% with ftirCafs low-Cal filNs. A1rCal 1s growing again Now the a1r11ne that's winning the West with style 1s heading to Phoenix Going with us are lower fares 40% lower than what you've been paying on other a1r1ines Pick up an AJrtal Low-Cal fare. From Orange Countv or Ontario. we'll jet you to Phoenix for as low as $36 Naturallv: there are some restnct1ons~ • But even our unrestricted fare offers a 40% savings. AirCal's evervdav: fly-right· away fare 1s j ust $60 Alrcat styte ls service. 't>ur flight starts with one-stop check in and seat selection before vou board. After arrival, it's swift baggage delivery And AirCat style is one of the best on-time perfor- mance records in the industry A toast to stvte. Dunng November. we·re serving compllmen· tary cocktails to all adult passengers on every non·stop flight to or from Phoenix Next time you're flying to the Grand Canyon state. fly A1rCal You'll ltke our style. For reservations call your Travel Agent or AirCal SCHEDULE TO PHOENIX FROM ORANGE COUNTY Departs FreQuencv 7.00a Sat 8 30a Mon. -Fn 10 OOa Sun 3 30p Daily 4 2Sp Ex. Sat. 6 45p Mon.-Fn. 6550 Sun. FROM ONTARIO ' Departs R'eQuency 8 20a Sun. 10.0Sa Ex. Sun. 1:3Sp Daily ··Seats are l1m/ted, seven-day advance reservatJons required Fere and schedu~ subJect to ~--.:,change without not1Ce .. • ,I , Oraogt Co11t D'AIL Y PILOT /Tutaday. November 10, 1981 THE f ,\MILl' c1acts by Bil Keane 81GGIE8aGE J J 1 by Virgll Partch (VIP) "George, how would you llke gum·to-gum 1talnle11 steel?" ~AR~ADl.:KE by Brad Anderson DEl\:\IS THE MENJ\CE Hank Ketchum "Oh, dear ... I can't find any candles for your birthday cake!" Jl'DGt: PARKER G\Rt'lt:LD IHO ACROSS 57 P1t1111e 1 CNlr perta 58 T 9W 5 Mini Iopa 59 Prepoeitlon t Loettllr 81 Arrow pollOl'I 14 AFTRA'a 82 Frwy .,,...,....,.~ pr~ 83 C.d Dl'M 15 Gt9lk let1• 84 Fondle 18 Poetry~ 85 Germent 11Hit111rd ee Wen• 18 Cherge 87 SupeNtt.... 111 AttOtMY -endltlQll 20 Mongolien 22 Procllctl DOWN 24Gued 2e Torrent 27 Auellln IWM 29 8111• wtefl 30 ''Plflawf'' 33Tu,...... 37 MllCUllne 31 Aed lfledl 3t Tiny 40 -~ 41 TV tube! SUf. 42 C"Y "Toot 450...... ~ .......... 47T""""" t Standaup 2 K.y 3 PtrlOM non one 5 Pleet e Spece 1 &r1ft IUPPM• tFtrtllllltt , .. _,,_, ~·· 10A.,_ 11~ ... 12And .... Lil -~ ao.-e \ tiCMrMll I ~ "Yeah ... I guess 1t wouldn't do much good to be able to write if ya can't read ... by Harold le Ooux IF MIKE 6UTLER HAO TO DECIDE RKitfTNOW MlWEEN REPl..AC· INC, YOU ~ RANDALL FOR&E5. YOV'O &f 1'HE ONE HE'D SAY 600D&Y6 T0'AN0 eELIEVf ME ... l 'M (;IVIN6 YOU NO JIVE! by Jim Dav is by Ferd & Tom Johnson AREYou,A -rouCH 1YPISTr H~ WoUlDN/T PARE' ... f Tt'M BLE" EEDS SHOE I'M GOINO 10 VISIT ROLLO AT HIS ESTATE YOUAREN~ DRESSED PROPERLY .;PIJFF ;ie.ASP~ JVE OOT TO Fl/.10 A LES.ii ICE:71'~!CTIVE1 LE5S ~TIU: E:/.NllU]l..Jw=.vrl' 11-10 by Charles M. Schulz by Tom K. Ryan by Jeff MacNelly ------------------llml:I FOR ONE THING YOUR PANTSDON1T MATCH YOUR COAT ,_ __ I• 4 I -""'' --,- by Ernie Bushm1ller by Tom Bat1uk Fl:Nk l ' 1'1NKERBEAN -~ FAMOUS COM POSERS - Chapter Ten -Claude Barlow Claude Barlow's father was, of course, a musical genius! Thus Claude was living proof that the theory is hogwash! It has often been speculated that musical talent is hereditary. •AB8LE v ess1R, 'f'Hese OV C01"1"0N t>Al-L-S 'f'He t:>OC KeePS 1"HROWIN6 AWAY A~f!! A ReAL. FINI:'.' by Kevin Fagan Orange Co 11t DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, November lo. 1981 Bl Biblical lake polluted Sewage threat to Sea of Galilee provokes uproar •• * TF.L AVIV, Israel (A~> -The Sea of OalllM, where Jeswt be1an hls mlnl1try. ll faclna an onalauaht ot aewaae lhal bu provoked a national uproar. Ecoloalsll have Iona feared for lbe lake's survival as pollution lncreuea. and they have taken elaborate precauUons over the years. But wben the lakeside town or Tiberias started pouring untreated 11ewa1e Into the Galilee last month, alarm bells went ott around the country. The Tiberlas municlpall\y says It had to divert its sewage lnto the lake to carry out a TO-day drain repair project. The Health Ministry clalms the municipality failed to take precautions such as chlorinating the waste before lt opened the floodgates. Professor Baruch Modan, director of the Health Ministry, has ordered the populous western shore of the lake off-limits to swimmers. Some Tiberias residents have started boiling their drinking water, and Kibbutz Oinossar, which operates a prosperous waterside hotel, is serving its guests bottled mineral water. Modan also has asked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to send experts to investigate the crisis. "It is unthinkable, that we shall allow our water to be gradually poisoned and our only fresh -water lake to be destroyed for reasons of economy," he told the Jerusalem Post. The Post backed hlm in an editorial, ll)'lna Mod1an'• warnings ahould "shake the authorities out or tbclr overlong torpor, rather th10 herald catastrophe." But Modan also has been accuHd of overreactlna. N'lr Ben· Meir, director of tb• Agrlcullurc Ministry and a former water commissioner, claims Modan has created panic. He insists the pollution level ia well under control. The Galilee, or Klnneret as lsraella call It, is a reservoir for roughly a quarter or the country'• drinking waler. Although It does not carry the same reU1toua signiCicance for Jews as it does for Christians, Israelis celebrate Kinneret in song and poetry, trawl its waters for the succulent St. Peter's Fish and rlock to lt.s 32 miles or sbore for holidays. The Health .Ministry says the bureaucrallc infighting over the lake la one of the reasons tbal Modan ap51ealed to the Americana for a dispassionaij? assessment of the situation. Even wilhout Tiberias' 4,000·cubic yards a day of sewage, the lake absorbs a powerful jolt of trash daily. Farm waste, fertiliiers, pesticides and chicken droppings washed south by the River Jordan contribute 5,000 cubic yards a day. A nearby hospital has for years been pourint untreated bacteria-ridden waste into the lake, accor~ing to Israel Koenig of the interior Ministry. THREATENED Sea of Galilee ·-.,aYNA ' Country club sued by woman REDWOOD CITY (AP> -A country club's decision to revoke the m e mbership of a Hillsborough woman following her divorce has resulted in a ssoo.ooo sex discrimlnallon suit. Mary Ann Warfield received the club membership, valued al more than $6,000, as Lawmen lwnored at GWC Oftlccu repre1entln1 ·10 area law enforcement a1enclea aa well u non·afflllated students were honored durtna sraduaUon ceremonies at the Criminal Ju1tlce Training Center Course al Golden West College In Huntington Beach. Among the police department s represented by students were those from the cities of Costa Mesa, Fountaln Valley, lluntlnfton Beach , lrvlnc, aiuna Beach and San Clemente Students completed nine months or tralntni ln areas such as law, first aid and firearms requirements. Dam (ought by Berkeley BERXELEY (AP) -water-power project The Berkeley City near Yosemite that Council has voted to would flood a family ft ht a San Francisco summer cam . THE VOYAGERS CLUB AHO WESTERN CRUISE LINES INVITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NIGHT 'fHURSDA Y \t)\"f;\IHf;U J!t/1 I~': 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. Al RPORTER INN, IRVINE Admission Free-Seating Limited /)ro wing for FREE CRt'ISf; 1111 SS 1\ZUU; Sr:1\S RSVP HA .. 80R lltA~L -&11-1311 MESA VERDE TRAVEL -556-e311 ANCIENT MARINER TRAVEL 131·9780 TRAVEL COUNTRY OF IRVINE ~51-2929 Santa Cruz headed to left? part or her divorce ~i!!!!!!!!!!!!i!i!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i~~~~~~~~~~~ settlement in February. 11 But the Peninsula Golf SHUmRS CUSTOM QUALITY SHU 11 ERS SANTA CRUZ (AP> -With left-wing city councilors in the majority for the first time in Santa Cruz, the conservative minority is worried where "socialistically·minded" politics will take this middJe-0f·lhe-road, beachfront city. Two progressive candidates, wbo got 10 percent of their votes from UC Sa.nta Cruz, won coun cil seats a week ago today, joining two socialist-feminist councilors to outnumber conservatives 4·3. and Country Club's board or direc tors ,___ terminated the membership under club bylaws allowing it lo cancel a membership awarded by a court to th e wire of a male member. Food fight spurs sale of T-shirts MURFREESBORO, N.C. (AP> -Officials of Chowan College, a s mall Baptist school, were not amused when a food fight broke out among 600 students in the cafeteria Oct. 28, resulting in 10 arrests and causing $3,500 worth of damage. And they don't like it a bit that T-shirts commemorating the event have gone on sale. S. Bruce Hill , owner of Hill's Pub, said he began selling the shirts recently, partly in retaliation against college officials he said had implicated him unfairly in the rood fight. The front of the shirt says, "l Survived the Food Fight or '81." But school officials protested the message on the back -"Hiii's Pub and Chowan College.'' ' Hill, who said he had sold more than 100 shirts by Thursday allemoon. received a written protest from Chowan Dean B. Franklin Lowe Jr. saying the use of the college name was improper. But Hill said he would continue selling the shirts, noting that other Murfreesboro merchants market Chowan souvenirs. "I'm concerned that they're very liberal, socialistically-minded," councilor John Mahaney s aid. ·'The political direction of the city . . . wit~ be different . . . this group represents a radical departure," said Mayor Joseph Ghio. And Spiro Mellis, the third minority member, predicted a "substantial and unknown kind of change." . . Despite yea r s of ca mpus rad1cahsm . grassroots political agitation and the city's honky-tonk boardwalk atmosphere. the politics of this city of 42,000 have long reflected a deep-rooted conservatism. ··We'v e been a middle-of-the -road community," Mahaney said. "We're hoping it isn't going to change much, but I'm a little uneasy." The newest council members are John Laird and Mardi Wormhoudt, the two top vote-getters out of rune candidates, with about 7,500 and 7,200 votes respectively. Mellis won re-election with about S.400 voles. Ms. Wormhoudt said she and Laird represent a broad-based coalition of groups for women, the elderly, tenants, laborers, environmentalists and neighborhood activitists. In a lawsuit filed Wednes day in San Mateo Superior Court, Ms . Warfield alleged tha l the San Mateo club's policies violated her civil rights. Ms. Warfield's lawsuit alleges her membership was revoked on the basis of her sex and asks SS00,000 in damages and a regular family membership issued in her name. Six win suit SACRAMENTO (AP> Six Mexican-Americans have won a $31 .300 out-of-court· settlement or their brutality suit against Sacramento County s heriff 's deputies. Students said plans for the melee were announced at Hill's Pub, and college spokesman Phil Royce said the pub bad broadcast the pl~ns over its public-address system -an accusation Hill denied. "If I'm going to get the blame. I might as well gel some benefits from 1t," Hill said DEATH llDTICIB asks Ex-military man why he can't find job BUCCIABELU pa1nlinj! contrar tor for the C O A C II T 0 M G past 30 years. h<1\'lng h' ed BUCCIARELLI Friends 1n the harbor ..re.i 'iince request that friends and 1938 lie 1 sun1H•d h y h1i. acquaintances gather for a wife Lucile He 1s prerl'(led memonal service al Riddle in death b' his son Fred Field in Laguna St'ach on A Is o s u r ·, 1 v e rt b ~ h 1 s Tuesday, November 10. at d a u g hter El11abeth R SPM Tatum of Santa Cruz. l'11 . 2 GOLDBERG brother!>, I s111ter and 5 LOUIZA GOLOBERG. grandchildren Gra\es1de resident of Fountain Valley. services 1A e re held on passed awa} No\' 7 She is Monda'. No,·ember 9. 1981 survived by her husband al 9.JOA M al llnrbor 1.a'An Mordec hai of Fo untain Me morial Park with Rev Valley. sons Boat and Dan Don Kutz of the Corona del Goldberg. daughters Onlh Mar Conttregat1onal Churc h a nd Galia. siste r Ruth offic1alin~. Sen ·ices under Unger. Gr.n·eside serv1C'es the d1rect1on or llarhor were held Sunda}. Harbor L a w n :\I o u n I O I 1 ,. e Lawn-Mount Olive Mt•monal Morluar~· or Costa Mes a . Park Sen •1ces under the 540·55:>4 dire c l 1 on or II arbo r NEl"MAN La w n . M ou n I 0 I 1 v e OLGA NEUMAN . rcs1denl Mortuary !'>40·5554 of Cosla Mesa. C"a1 Passed SHANNON .t"'a' on No,·emhel' 5, 1981 MALCOLM J . SHANNON. She ·has been a member of resldent or Coronadel Mar. the Newpo rt lla r b or C A P asse d a w a} o n Lutheran Church smce 1ls No\'ember 6. 1981. lie was a int•epllon She is survl\ ed b) -----------. her daughters Clara Lutz. ,_.Cl laOntaS SMITH$' MOITVMY 627 Matn St t'\lnt~ach PAC#llC YllW t•IC)9941 PMI Cerretery Mortuary Chlpel-ctematory 3l500 P~1flc View Oitve Newport Beech 644-2700 Dorothy Schhchenmeyer and Ruby Southworth. son1> Marlin Mark and llarold Neuman . a l so II g randc hildren and 11 great-g rand c hildren Services held on Monda). November 9, lial llAM al the Harbor La ~emor1al Chapel with s or Roger Berg or the N rt Harbor Lutheran Chu~ l fHlc1al1ng. Services unde#Jti.e direction or Harbor l.a\f9•.,ounl Olive Mortuary. dotta Mesa 540-5554. l ARNOT L HENmdN By JOYCE L. KENNEDY DEAR JOYCE: I have been unable to secure employment for well over a year following my retirement from the Army after 20 years. A military career is not filled with saluting and parade field hup·tWO· threes; my years have been filled with assignments involvjng logistic planning and operations. 1 have set up airfield operations from the ground up to runways, towers and the full scale of flight-line services ; established depots for sup· plying entire continents with food, clothing, build1ng materials and the like : formulated plans for the evacuation of American citiiens from such hot spots as Beirut ln the mid·'70s ; and written, revised and up -dated war plans fo r the distribution of logistic assets. Grantl'd . some of these ex· periences have no direct relation lo commercial enterprises. But certain· ly some credit should be given for an individual 's adaptability, a documented history or accomplish· ments and productivity and the un- ques tionable maturity one must have gained in positions of responsibility. Yet my appUcations for employ· ment fall on deaf ears. I had a pro· fessional resume service prepare mine. No success. I have applied to companies in dls· tribution, warehousing, aviation, trucking, electronics, chain stores and others. I have yet to be called for an interview. I never get past recep- tionists to see the persons in charge of hiring. My age is clearly staled on the re- PUlllC llCIRDI Births CAREERS sume as 42 . In contrast to the "Sarge" of Beetle Bailey cartoon fame, I am in excellent physical shape, a devoted long-distance run· ner and a mountain climber. I have a bachelor's degree in marketing from an accredited college. I was honor graduate of a six-month course in materials management. But after well over 300 applica· tions. it seems there is a commonly held negative view of military peo· pie. Would you please provide me with the insight as to why so many employers refuse to hire former military careerists? -J.S .. El Paso, Texas In the hiring relationship, you can't change the employer but you can change you. Reflect on this simple but instructive concept. Based on your letter I conclude: -You have solid skills to sell. Among them: planning, organ1zing, coordinating and writing. You have high value. -You apparently are not com· municating that value on a civilian wave length easily understood by re· sume screeners. Have you tried a functional resume -one describing four to eight competencies -rather than a chronological year-by-year approach? -Since your routine search ls not working, let's Hsume you're open to other ways or looking. Mr. •M Mra Henry PeolerMn, Irv..,., .. ,. Mr. e 11• Mn. J•,,·Etlll ~•Im, Designed, Finished Installed ...... ... ---I 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or548-1717 HEJllW80D MAIUFACTOIY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 PUlllC MOOCE 'tCTITtOUS aUSIHaH MAMa STATIMaNT "ICTITIOUS austN•U "ICTIT10US •use••• N.U.ITAftM .. IT MAManATUAllln Tll• lolloWl"I '""'"" It dol"O bu1lneue1; Th• lotlo•I"• P•rtO" Is OOlftO Th• lotlow1 .. , ......... I• ....... -lnfflM: ..... _ .. : WEST COHSTltUCTIOH, 100 W Vlctorle, UNt C·1. C:O.te ~. CA mn. AM ERI C AN MEltl TI ME IAl.aOA EDITIONS, UOO EHl COMPANY, M.17 Vie ()clor1o, •JOO. Oct_, 9Nd •PO .... 11'1, ....... CA WARREN E . WEST, TOO W Vlctorl•, U"'t C·1. CCKla Mew, CA nm. Hewpen llN<ll, CA tJ!6tl. '2661. Mtcl'Ml91 .... 8•uc.e. 1221 w. Coelt J . Royce ltldl¥d, lfOO E ~ H•Y • 110 • ......._, ll•ah, CA~ 91VCI .• .., .... CA ftMI Tlllt -"-" 11 c-.cted 11y -Tiiis .,....,,.., 11 ,_.,.., lly on Thh l!Utl_. II <-..Cl.., lly en llldlvld ... I. l"dlvlclu•I. llldlvl-..i. Mlc1-I 1_, llr..c:t J. "'°Yee ltlOlllnl Wtff«t E W.St Tiii .. Ra ....... ..,., Iii.cl •1111 IN County Cltnl of Or-C-ly Oft Oct. ». , .. , Tlllt 1t•-1 wel Iii.cl wilt> ltw Tiii• SIM-•• tlltcl wlU. .,.. c .... nly Cltnt o1 Or-C-y °"Oct. c-ty 0..-fll Or-C:-y Oft Oct 16. 1'11 2:1, IWt. ,.., ... "'",.. "11.-S P\1011-Or ..... OMll Dolly Pllo«, ~114111-OrMii <:.-DoflY' Piiot. Ocl 20. 11. -l. 10. "" 4111~1 0c·1. 11, -· J. 10, "· 1"1 _., Pwllll-Or ..... Goell Dolly Piiot, Hov >. 10, 11. t•. 1''1 411 ... 1 f'ICTITIOUI WSINaSS '°ICT1T10US aUSINllU NAMll STATllMllHT HAMa STAT•M•HT T ... lotlowlno P•rton .. Oolno Tiie lollowl"I "'''°"' ere dOl"9 ~slrwst u : bullMHel" A STONES THROW, J«IOW. Coelt AHOOVER ASSOCIATES, NI Hlgllwey, Ho I, He•porl Buch. Do.,., on .... Suitt 14, ......,.,, e.ec11, C.lltornl• fZMl CotltoNlle fMJ Ker., Anti Golc!Jtoln, 32U Ciey J-l"r-k M<IC-, lCMJ2 s.Me SttHI, 9 , ....._, k.ch. C.llloNlle AM A-• .,,.. Mo. n. Sallt• A,,., t2Ml C•lltorlll• '2107 Tiiis °""""" Is conct..c:ted DY .,. Herry LH O••nsoj, 1106 llldlvlduel. NOlll"91\em Roecl, NtWPOf't a .. c... KM .. Goldl< .. ifl C•IUorNe ftl60 Tllll _ _. was lllN wl111 IN Tiii• blnln .. 1 II COfldllCIN lly • Cou"'y C .. n. of Or11ft911° G°""IY "" ..,,.rel~~. OcloOtt It, 1"1. J .... F. Mel(.,,. ,..,,_. Tllk .-1 wn Iii.cl wl111 IN PublllfWd Or ..... 0Ms1 O.ily Pllol. Go1111ty Cltrll of Orenoe G°""ty Oft Nov. J, 10. 11, M. t"1 416'~1 Oc-rJQ,1 .. 1 ""..,. Pullll-Or-Coesl O.lly Piiot, HOV J. 10, 11,74.1 .. l 411CM1 ----------- Piil.JC MOTM:E .. ICTIT10UI au11••H IUMa STATllMll•T Th• loll-1"9 PClflOf\I tr• dOl"I P'ICTITIOUS aUM•US bull~I :o A N D F II A H C E NAMa STATllMaNT ENTERPRISES, JIS7 81rcll SI . Sull• Tiit followlllt '"""" II ....... UI. Newport .. Kii. CA-· llullNUM: ROBERT L. BOIES, 1 .. 1 Mesa ED'S DISCOUNT JEWU.E"S AND Drlv•, L·S, s.nt• AN, CA '21111 ACCESSOltlES, lltS4 er .. kllunl, KENNETH T. FltANCE, IUS '°""'•'" v111ey, CA"*· Mesa v..,. Dtlw Eesl ..... ,., coti. """M. E'-~ '531 Zo41-Or .. Mase, CA tit» _,.,,.. .. ....,,CA... Tllh llvlillHS "cotwluct ... Oy • Tiii• ...,_ I• cCMMklettd "' •" oen•••I pe~111p. IMlv""*. R--1 8oiM MIM E'-I Tiiis N-t wn """' wllll ttw Tiiis .......... -'"'" .,,., ttw c-•Y C1tr11 o1 o....-,_, ... Oft 0c1. c:-ty Otr11 el Or ..... County .... Ocl. .10, "". D.t .. I. "°" f'0-4 Put>llshld Or-. C...11 Delly Piiot, ~llflM Or.,.. ON .. I Dolly '"'~ Nov. J, 10, 11, 1•. 1"1 •nJ.11 ()Ct,"· ..... J. 10, "· 1"1 *Mt f'ICTITIOUS IUSIMllU PICTITIOUI au11 .. e11 HAMa ITATllMENT ....... TATaMllMT Tiit lollo•l"9 perlOf\S .,. c101 .. , Tiit ftlltwl,._ pen ... I• •tll'll llvllMHM: w.1_. .. : Cel HOUSEHOLD, GAltAGE SALES CO VIDEO MIMOIUIS; (ti w. DlltECTOltY; (Ill HGSO, SJ14 W. llST eHTl!lt~ltlSEI, --1 CW"CIM F1'9111 A-. Sent• Ana. CA til104, Or M191Mft Vlt)t, CA ftttl It I C H A II D F It E 0 E It I C IC ...... a.st Let 111 U, CWllM MAltTIH, UI• W. ,119111 Ave,, .... ...._ ""-It, CA Wt Senta AM, CA '1104. ""'·• Ml•u.,-. .. I . It 0 e E It T J 0 S E P H ..;;.~~-t <Oflllllc1..i lty 111 l"ltASCHETTI, 1711 811r1v,,dy, W. 9"t Let Ill lw<H ... CA ftO'M. Tiii• ............. -" ... wltfl "" This IMlllMH II <Ollclucl ... by • C-ly Cl«ll ol Or.,,.. c..unty tn oerwrel :-:.:..~~Menl" :xt. *'· ltlt. ~o-. This ~ -111ec1 ""'"' tM "'*lllflMI Or ..... CN•t Oolty ~ G°""'' Oerll of Or .... COUllty °" Ocl, OC1. 17. Now ... It, 11, '"' .,., ~., .. I. ,.,., ... , PYOlltllM Or ..... Coell Delly l'lltt . Nev. S, 10. 11, t4, , .. , OIUI P'ICTITIOUS aUSIHUS NAME STATllM£MT Tiie ro11owlno person IS dolnq busl,.ues M ~ R MAINTENANCE GO . ITJJO S.ft Nleteo • •. "-'-in V•ll•Y. CA 92109 R-r1 L Ma-,fltld. 11130 Se" --• •. F-t.ln v.i1ey, CA f21'0I Tiiis 11\&1,,.H •• c°""uct• Dy en llldlvlduel Rot.n L Mayfield Tiiis stet_. •el """' wilt> .,.. C....,,1y Cltrll ol Or-C-ty ""Od , •. "''· ""~' PYllll,_ Or-. CoeJt 0.lly Piiot. Ocl JO, V . "°"· l. 10, t"1 OlWI ·~ l"ICTITIOUS aUSIHllH MAME STATaMllHT Tiie to11-1,.. "'"°"' ••• dO!nq buslMHM SPECIALTY SPACE RENTALS, l.,'2 Coftstruc:llcn Circle Eesl, lr,.lne Celllornl• '1714 D••ld J HYette. "' H PIM Piece, Atllhtlm. C.llloNli• ~. Cllerln Mll1l•I, 2151 Clulll>ouw Orlvt , Calle Mew, Califon>!• tit2' Rotief1 O. llriWS. No. SI 8H<On Bay, H---1 llffcll, C•lllONllt 9>MO Thh buslrwu I• conclucl ... by • ll"Mtel~p 0.vldJ.M-Tllls ..__ we1 filed •1111 Ille County CIH11 of Oro~ County on Oclotltr 17, 1 .. 1. roan Pullllu.ct 0r-. Coell o .. 1y Piiot, NOV. 3. 10. "· 1•, ... , 07MI PllllC llOCE HENR1 0 &ON , or Huntington 1 eech. passed away Nov. &. 1181. Survived by sons Oliver R Henrickaoo. ol Sao Marino and Thomas 0 . Henrickson of Canyon Lake , 4 grandchildre n . 4 1reat-1randchlldren. 2 sl1ten AUeeti Ireland and Oerlrude Winston both of Long ~aeh. Mr. Henrlckaon h1u bten a resident or Oranse Coun(¥ since t923. Durio-the early llMO's he served on the Huntlng1on Beach City Council and Hunlln«lon Beach School Bo1rd, durtng WWII wtth Ills late •Ile Evatnt they were actlvt In Civilian Defenae and the USO, He ls a former memkr ol lht Balboa Yacht Ct-at,, At a boy ht Uved tor m••Y )'Uri In Aluk• Ntrnortal tcrvica It AM, Tllftday, Nov. 10. PaclJlc View Memorial Park .... "'1 INOl,elrl -----------1----------- WTI •••oet ............ ~CMAllL 4!r1 E 11th It. COiii .... ....-11 , ~pet, i•urnment Paclllc Y •• Memorial Park . clllc Vitw Mortl.18r)' ~ - Mr. 111• Mr-. Sttvtll M<ICt,,llt , Mvllt.....-9Mcf\. .. r1 Mr. •• Mn. ~....,. Molly, c:.r-... MM, etr1 ~" Mr, I M Mrl. Ot11"I' Je,,111111•, HIHlt ........ 9Mdl. tlrt Mr. tl'I• Mr•, "•lttrl "•••• M1111ll1191M IMcll, tit! Ort" Mr. •1111 Mr1o UNn1 Orltt, """11N Hi.-1,My Mr. 9"" Mr'L Wlllllm ~ INIM, • ., °""" Mr, .... Mr'L Dellltl Neri-. c.• ....... _,_, ____ - .. Orange Coalt DAILY PILOT(Tuesd y, November io, 1981 The WJrst ' weve ever .done isWo ayeat Each January, Hannes Tulving selects a li1t of \mderrated silver dollars. In 1980. while 1ht· hul11on. StllCk and rt•al 1.."i1at1..· mar· h•ts Wl'nl soft our lbt ~1111 mana~J 10 .1ppr1..•(1atl' i2'',. Wc'\'e J1 inc ~·nt·r 197!fs liM appnx-1ntl•J 11 ~" ... 19N·:-. a rcmarbhl1..· HI".. n1· ... ,.; t1n1..• ~(.'(JT Ewn mt1rt• rt•mark:ihle, is the fact that 1978's liM ha~ ;ippr1..'C1atl·d. to J<•IL'. 4&~" .. Comp:m· that u1 any l!t~r }1 2 year im·1..-stmcnt Hannes Tulv1n~ is l~ne of only 18 rcwsim:1..•J experts on Morgan anJ Pl'3Cl' silver Jullars AnJ Hann<.'S Tulving R.m·Oiin lnw~t· ments 1s tnc only rarl' wm firm m the U S thar J<.·,1ls exclusl\'c:l}• wnh tn\'l H1rs Ewry rare win Wl' rec· ommenJ comes w11h :i grade guarantl'e anJ our 60-day m<1ney back policy For more inf ormauon on our personal rare crnn portfolios anJ rare c111n backeJ IRA. Keugh or pen· s1on plans JnJ our 1981 list. ~ve us a call Or. return the coupon below for a free cnpv l,f 11ur newsletter complete with updates on our "UnJer- rated Otillars" lim for the past rhrec years .. And.do it soon After all. at 988'',, liver }I 2 Yl'ars. imagine whar you're losing eac~ d.av you Jday ~ I.HANNES 1ULVING I I ~ I I 4400 MacArthur Blvd I ~ui\e 320. Newport Beach~ I CA 92660 171~1 851-8202 I I J REE NEWSLf1TER I r Please send me II free I I copy or your mont hly t I n~wslet11>r I I I I 'I.... I I A.Wft., I I Col) I I I I s.... ·1 I ftp I I .._ PNitt I I i1IMN "1lllf D""' J' t::~ ___ .. ___ _ ................ ==:z::.:::;. OC population ~ ... ~,..-.... ::~~~ data available NOW!! thru Nov. 11th · 12.9°/o C IMARRON ot ~ COSTA MESA (714) 540,.9100 The latest edition or 'the Oran1e County Pro1ret1 Report Is on sale for $10 at the county's Hall of Administration In Santa Ana. Amoni the demo1raphk information based mainly on 1980 atatlstlcs avallable In the 18th volume or the publlcallon are such facta as : The natural population Increase -the difference between births and deaths -was 10.1 persona tor every l,000 resident.a. -Another 13,336 people migrated into the county during the 1980-81 fiscal year. -There were an average 47,300 unemployed workers, and the une mployment ·rate waa 4.3 percent. -Taxable sales amounted to s12. 7 billion, a 9.3 percent increase over 1979. -The dollar volume of construchon declined tor the third consecutive year from a peak or Sl.81 billion in um to $1.45 billion in 1980. -Anaheim. with 221,847, had the largest population of any city in the county and Villa Park, with 7.137, had the smaJlest. Here'• a great gift for work or play! Comes complete with 12" video display. Hand· aome, one-piece deak· top cabinet. Learn to program with our easy-to-read manual, or add an optional caaMtte recorder to use ready-to-run programs. ·For Home or Professional Use • Set a Home Budget • Store Personal Malling Llata • Play Gamea with the Whole Family • 18K Memory • Later-Add More Memory, Dlsk·Drlvea ¥ A DIVISION OF TANOV CORPORATION SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST RADIO SHACK STORE, COMPUTER CENTER OR PARTICIPATING DEALER PRICES MAV VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES ANO DEALERS lllCTITIOUS IUSINIU l'ICTIT1out llUMMaU NOT I Ca OI' llUUC TaAMSPa• NAMa STAT•MIMT MAMl ITATIMI NT , ...... ,., .... ,. u.c.c .1 Tiie tollowlno p.,90,.1 ere dolllO Tiie foll<>Wl"9 P9tWllS •re dOlftO TOWHOMITMAYCOHCE'-H: ...,slneu n · llVllMUn: Notice 11 hereby give" lo Ill• EL DOftAOO PARTHE'-S. LTO., VALLEYCAEST LAND COMPANY, CredllOf'I of UNIQUE HOllOAYS, llOff C•lle A•'-<. S..I• c . s.r. Jvo" 117 l ido .. _ Ortwe, .--1 hocll. INC • y,..,,,.,or, whose llVllll•U Coplstreno. CA ~s. COii'°',... '26loa. ---.. 17U4 511_.. 9Mt .. 111119 H u H T E " I! H E It G y Vel Viste b!MH. lllC: .•• Ceftfomto no. ,, ...... c-ty "'°'-·Stole of CORPORATION, • Cellfornl• corporation. 717 Lido Peril Drive, Cellfornle, IMC• llulll 1t0f\1ler ts corporellon,>304tCelleAw._.S..,ll• Newport8Mcll,Colllon1lo~ •II o u I to b • mad• to C, S.n J....,. Coplstr-. CA t2'7!. Tl'lll b"'llMSI IS conduclltd by a C 0 H WAY · GE HT It Y , I H C ., ltALPH E. PHELAN, J lt., J30ft cor-alion Tr•nsfer ... -boislneu -•Uh Celle Avl.-, S°"lle C, Sen Jvoll Vel Vlslo EsYIH, Inc. -.S GrOl\llllOlft4 L.one. '--llo Pelel Coplnr-.CA'16JS J-L Cwr<I Veron.~ of LIN~ Seo. Tiiis .... Slftftl 11 conduct.ct by. V.Prft,MSls.<y ofC•lll-.. llml'9<1 ,..,,,."""'-Tiiis llel--flied with IN Tiie -"' to be lrM&ferrod la HUNTER ENERGY CORP. COllftty Clerk Of Or-c ... n., on IOC•led .. in .. Sic--....... S..11• a,: Relpfl £. Phel•"· Jr. Now.•. 1911. -:?:,·,::,"11";:· C-'V of Or.,.., Stole Of Thll sto._I wn lllMI with llw N--.o,--r• -c -ty Clffl< ol 0r.,... C-1y °"~I. A""'' , I Cer111r..._ Seid.,,_,,., 11 Otte"'""' lft .... , .. JO,"'' A..,_Yt•ll.aw u : All 1too 111 trade, t1xt11ras, .,_ ,...,. o.tw _,P..,_ _.,.. wlff OllO -r•t"'° l"l7-.U PeetOfftc:o._1111 Supplles a llrocl\..,res ol tl\a l YATaS -NIUEN • ~, ..... , ... c-.w ...... An OltNEYSAT LAW •N-MeMSt..M•1• M..,....t ....... ~ ,,_, Wllo4uole Trowt """-Y IMnfMU 1'17114' kllOWft 01 UNIOUE HOLIDAYS elld '"""".,_, 0r.,,.. CMll Dolly Piiot, louted el tn 44 Sic~ 111,,.., S..lte s-~~11 ... ca. t21'1 Nov. 10, 17. 2•. 0.C I.,_, mMI no, Irv ..... C-ty of Or ..... stete of Colllornlo -------.-.-~-----Tiie bulk lre 111flr w lll be .,._ I~ COflMlfl'llftOIMI .. °" ellw"" JOel .. y PUblllNd Or-'91 (:0 .. t Dolly Pll<M, How >. 10, 17, 14, I., cn~1 ------------llf Novo,,_,, I.,, -clelms nwiy lie STATU!laNTOl'AUM~MllfT flied •I WELLS FARGO BANK, HA., 01' UH 0 1' l'ICTITIOUI f:tcrow Oepor11Nnt, Re: Ew.-No I USINISS MAMI '43·"'9, ... H~ cenler ~IW, l'ICTITICIUSI USllfllff Tiie following peraol'll he ve I .. It»,....,..,, 9ood\, Cel,tftly of .. ,... STATaMSMT •llollldOMd tllo ..,. of 1M Fktltlovs lllomle, stet• of CalllorW•. Tiie 1011-1,. peflOftl .,. dOl"9 '"'llMUN-: All ct.in."'-' lie~ .. -ot ""' -IMSlot: A & T EHTERPlttSES, 7:154 hlao addreH Ill' CM 11'ttl doy ol ....,._,, ENGLANDER APARTMENTS, un A .... Wffllftlnster, CA'2ta-ltll, ..,,,1.,. , ........ k 1 ....... , .... E"91•"d St., H""11ngton .. ocll, CA Tiie Flcltllo"'s a..,1lfte11 Heme lftC....._ ... tr-'ff of 1a.-"-· ttMI. · referred '° ebow wos fllMI 111 or.,... In wl'llcl'I CH•. ell cl•lm1 m111t be Oewld o . Mocl•chl•n , 101'1 c ... ntyon11.,..1. reulve<1pr1<1r10111eoeteonWl\klllfle Br-view Pl., S-• Alie. CA n?OS. P•ul T"'1orlce. I S-Mr, lrwlne. lquor lie-Is tr_ler,..., by 111o Doft•IU H. MacLocllleft. l6Ul CA t1411 Deportment of Al""'°ll< .... ,~ 8rwdWl-Pl.,SonleMe,CA•710S Len AllW'Kllt, 1' Solefto, Irvine, CA trot. Tllll ""'SIMU Is COftCl..,CHO Dy 'nns. Sol•rotir.-tot11otr8Ml-.,e 11 hutlllolld-wlfe. This _.,...s wH c-led by• llMSs,..,,._ ___ ,,,_by Om\MdeH.Me<l.Mllf.,. generel ,..,,,....ltllp, Troftsleror I« Ille 1.., .. , .. ,, lost Tiii• •lot-I ••• 11*2 wtlll lllo Paul Tortorice 11, II dlllerent from ,,,. -..... ,., Cou111,Ci..1lolOr-C-yo110c1. Tlllt 1telenwllt wM llled wltl'I 111o ONE. 12. 1''1 c ..... 1y c1er11. of°"-c ovnt, °"Oct oeted. - •. ''" 1'17i. JO, ltll. COHWAY-OENTltY, INC. .... bllsftocl Or .... Co.Ht Deity Piiot, 1"1-•Coll-<°'110tell., Ocl. 20, 27, How. l, IO.'"' un.... p,.114,_ ()renge COHI D•llY Pltol, Anne-· Coftwoy, PVlllC NOTICE HOY J, 10. 11, tA. ltl1 •n MI ~I l'ICTITIOUI IUSIMIU MAMI STATIMINT Tl'lt IOll-1119 petlOllt .,. dol"11 .......... , .. , WHIRLIGIG. IOI W 9Mier, Coste Meao,ee ... ,. ROC>ert IC. M<Adel'M, llOJ Colle d•I lot Al-, Soll Clemoftte, Co . n•n Elaine McAdotM, lt!U Colle del L• Al•'"°'• Soll ClemeMo, C•. f'l472 Tiiis bvllrless II cOftdu<tecl Dy •" ll>dlwl..,ol R-1(. McAdefM. Tlllt ll0-1 WOI fifed WIUI the County Clerk ol Ore,... Count, °" Nov.'· 1"1. l"vblllhed Or..... CO.st Doily Pl lot Nov. It, 17, 14, Doc. I, I_, -..., l'ICTITIOUS I USIMISS MAMI STATEMI MT Tl'I• followl111 P•UOft II dol"' INllMtSH. T,.tiE STORK'S CLUll. 21 Pelos, lrvW\e, CA '271S. Mart'" Attet11Nry Oons, 21 PalM, 1rvlne, CA mu. Tiiis llVll"9U 11 condu<tacl 11¥ on llldlvldllOI. MorlY!IA.OotU Tl'll1 stol~ wn llled wlll'I Ille C°""'Y Clet'k of Or..,.. County Oft O<t. S, ltll l'ICTITICIUS IUllNISI l'tCTinOUS IMllf .... •Milla ITATIMllNT IUMa ITATSMm•T TIM lollowl119 persona ••• "'"" Tll• follow1111 ,.,_ 11 ··'"' liolllllltU ft tutl-et! JAN PAltSON PHDTOG•APHY, UNITEO MM:HINI SHOP, '111 , ... Old ~ Blvd., Coale Meao, ,,__.Aw., C... Mftl, CA. "'27 CA 92627. It_., LM0y ..lellMl'9ft, lllS SMiie Je n Per9Clll, 212 0.001. IOI• hlelld, A"° A,..., C-. llNM, CA. ""1 CA "'62. Tith ....,_ It ~tell ft 811 C:::t.CMy, JOI OHi, ... _ lelo .... !Mlot .... -.,_ L • .,..... J ... Pr-Tlllt .......... -fMM wMll .. "" .. \Otl'leM ... flied •It C-ty a.ti f/I Or ... ~ 811 on. 1118 C8'fflty Clerll al Orallfl M OCI. 16 II, 19'1. ",_ ltll. 1'11 l'l*ttllllf Or .... c..e Oelhr """"· ""911 ... Or ... CeMI Dolly ~a.t. 0c1.11. Mt¥ ...... 17,"" *Ht ~I •. '1, ....,, a, WI, ltl} 4521 .. E. E. Ganlry, Vice Pl'ftldellt Mk l'IHI E. C-•• ltlel\erd E C-e,, T_, J..-.. L. Gelllr,, s.<relort Pvbll-Or .... C491t Dolly Pllol, owember 10, ,., •t2+tl Emul.ex Corp. posts 40% • • increase in revenues 1 .. -r· -..... 1.-17.1% 17" J 1 J 1 A 1 S 10 1 N ttl1 DIPPING A 17 r e r c e n t p ,. 1 m e ending rate. 1s spreadin g through most of the industr~ a ~ mo s t of the nat1on ·s ha nk s m atched a half.point c.·ut begun l ast week Interest rate dip predicted For the Clrst qu1rter of It.a 1982 llscal year, Santa Ana·based Emulex Corp. recorded a 40 percent lncrease In revenu«is lo $2.8 m11llon, vs. S2 million for last year's first quarter. Net income for the three·month period ended Sept. 27 was $402,813, an increase of 62 percent over last year's st48,93S. Earnibge per share were 18 cents on 2.3 million common and common equivalent ahares outstanding tor the quarter. compared with 15 cent.a a share on 1.6 million like shares for the first quarter a year ago. The per share figures amount to an lncrease or 20 percent. • Ultraayatem1, an l rvine·based engineering and construction firm. has been selected as the worldwide licen see by the New Zealand government for its advanced technology wood·to·ethanol process. The process has been under development by the Forest Research Institute of the government of New Zealand during Uie past five years. Tfie wood-to-ethanol conversion process utilizes an acid hydrolysis ICI 11111 technlQue to extract s ugar from waste ~ood materials. • Dacatron lac., a Tustin ·based manufacturer of computerized video editing systems. microprocessor·based Integrated circuit test equipment al)d panel display components, announced an operating loss of $200,186, or 8 cent.a a share, for the first quarter ended Sept. 30. Company president, S. Lewis Meyer. blamed the loaa on research and development costs, increased expenses and substantial non-recurring engineering costs. • E .T.C. Carpet Miili, Ltd., based in Santa Ana, has purchased a majority interest in the common stock of P restige MUia lac., and has taken over the operations of that company. Prestige Mills is a Tustin-based man ufacturer of nylon, residential carpeting. NEW YORK <AP) - The chairman or the President's Council of Economic Advisers said interest rates will continue to fall and the economy will rebound "in the middle of 1982 IC not sooner." Autos report backlog Murray L . DETRO IT (A P ) -The worst October sales rate in 23 years swelled U.S. automakers' inventories to a record 1,480,600 cars -an 81-day supply -on Oct. 31 , according to an industry journal. Ward's Hsted 10 full-size and luxury models with inventories smaller than a 60·day s upply and only one with a backlog of more than 100 days. Weidenbaum also said h e expects "severa I more months of bad news " in t e rms of economic indicators. The unemployment rate Ward's Automotive Reports said the month·end backlog, a record for Oct. 31, was substantially higher than the 69-day supply of unsold cars on Sept. 30 and the 57·day supply on hand Oct. 31, 1980. The smallest inventory for any of the domestic s ubcompact models however. was a 65-day supply for the Rabbit by Volkswagen of America and seven subcompacts had backlogs of more than 100 days. which rose t o 8 percent last month - "very likely will rise a bit more." he said. Ironically. the cars with the smallest rnventories. in general, were the fuJl·size and luxury cars. Automakers generally like to keep a 60·day supply of cars on hand. Chrysler Corp. had the largest inventory, a 9l·day backlog or unsold cars. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW Yc::.JAI") ""CIH -!0\4 lweS.UI 21 21-1"9'PE•P NASDAQ I-mlSN IM 1'\I> J...,111¥ 17'4 17\lo Petrll s tllowlnt ~I ... mwTel • 1....., U Jerico 1 ti-21\lo Petr...,, encl IOwftt ....... Ill' onPap 16V. 2'lllo Jlffyl"d 11-14 1).11 Pfll eNel nwirut ......,I.... dis 1714 1711> J•fy11 I ~ t7 Plffc•SS M811d•Y Prl<H dO c:,.'7.!..': I 1r\'t I~ 1tet1SI ,,. ,...., fo Plf*t111 ;:.o~,~=~I'::,:!!!~ 51!~°"s I~ I~ ~=~I ~: irn :::c: or commln lon for De,tM 1 16 "" Ke7'yh ...., 50 :~M -·· D ... r "' ~ Kt..,flel 23l,Co 2W P"Steyn Stoo Bid A.Iii DelllbA' ~ r7 Klmbell tt-\4 ~ Preerp AEL llld IM u DelCe11 11 11~ Kl1191111 I~ 1-PllSvlilC AFAl"rot 11 I~ Deweyll J ll4 KIOOIG t7\lo J7lf. Pllfl9eft AVM Cp Wt ~ Ol.Cry1 21 tt¥t ICMt19V IN. 1S ~-~~ A<c..,r•r ._ Miit DlanCrv ~ J7 ltret.-N IOlil -rCll AMIMIW 10\lo I~ Docllll s a'4 ,._ ICVlkU U V. I~ lt ... ftPr Adwltou ~ ~ DollrG11 I~ U LMKelft 2A'li ts 1te,cllm All9111 1 ~ 21\lt DoylD9 s 1'11> 17 LlllldRet S S'I' Re,mlld AIHAI.. 2t\lo 2'Yt !HlefCll ~ ~ LeneCo C) ~ RMVe I Allc<>lnc 4.511> 4'Vt DullllD s 1411> 14~ Lflftws 22.-. D'I' I NclEa An.. JV. ~ Dvrlm 1 1"4 14 LlclSlor IS\lo 1~ "-.¥y Ameru tll't 21~ Eet11V1>C 12\lt IJ\4 Ll11But :IS »Yo R-lon Al"""' ~ 4~ ECOftLetl It I"°' L ... lrll 14\lt 17 ROllM AGr .. I IA!. 17~ EIPHEI 11 .... 11\lo MCIC ~ 1214 s.dfler AlllGP s U\4 U V. ! .. ~ .. I 1SV.1~ 1•1V. ""°" 0 s 119' 12 s.tec:<> AMkros n-. :n~ .. "UC -~E IM 1.-$1He1Gd ANellM l>t\ 14 11 ....... I Dll> 24'11o Me .. l.., 714 W. Sll"•vl AO\oelr 17" 1"4 EnrDew IM I~ ~mP "4 44 SulpH ' All•Mo II 11\lt 1!11r~ , ... "' M• Rt 414 41.': AWeld I ~ 24 ElllUw IM I~ Me 11'1 I JI All<l41t• 1 714 E11twltll I t Merion s 1\lo 1"" :"'~d = = ~.,_Jl1L :" :ra =~P = • ~~~ 1114 1• ... ~ " 7·1• MeyllOll II~ II AP14M I ""' '~ ..... n "' 4 MCCetm IN 19'1: ArdeflGp 4 ~ FermGP ... 2t Mc"•'' IN IJ AMIGOI• 4114 41~ Fldlcor 24-.., I"" McO\ley IJll!o 14 AllGtLI '~ '"' FtllllSys )$\4 • MeyerF s~ 5211: Allonlts 211 ~v. Ftlloslll •v. ..... MldtaW 1'14 17 18elrdCP 1 ™t FtEm,S lnl 1114 MdldCoo WI .a.1<1t1 I S )~ FIWft I" 4 4111 MlcllRu I I 1·1 lloutFr 14Vt 1.-. Floe911.1 2.-... 1414 Mld19k• JS\4 Boylt.* ,__ 10 Flkllor 19"' 1~ Mllllpr t7\'t o-. B•llM 711> IV. Fl•NFle f1 17\.lt MlasVIG ISl4 I .... 11"1 2 ).16 214 "l11n1<ll s 7.-. I Molea s 4' 9ftlll t «2\\4 0 "Of'HIO .,._ _. MoftlCol ~ ' 9eb •II J9111 .O Formlt ll 214 ~ Moft..C 11'11 1 11tvMf1 1~ I~ Fr•nllCf • 10 -reld 24v. lllbeleo 11 ltV. Fro!lllE 17Yt II Mortltet M 4 l lrdSOll l llt N F,..SG ,. ,.~ Mortlll Ni 91r1d1F ' •14 Frffllnt s I~ 1.-. MotCI~ ~ 91yw-11flo IM FvllrHll 2A U Mwller ,,.,,, NASDAQ SUMMARY 9efl0ft9 • l )II~ 311~ &::~~s ~ ~ NerrQCp s » 21 ft "'"'°"' ~ .. NDte I I~» ewo-10 I~ G111tlE1I IS 1' NJNGes .,._ 11 :~:!S m: = ~:t:.."1 2:~ UV> NYAlrl • '"' CH.L ~ 2 2\'t G,.MM 12 12"" =~=~ 1 ~ IS NEW YOltK CAP) -Moll Kllw ow .. Cl'T I ltllt ll\ltl~•YAAIV 1!~t t: NlelMI A 4' Ullo IM<-er t llllrtl --'led Cly NASO. CelWl$w J) ,. r.!"'"lsl .... Nlehtl • -. °" H-v.iwne llld AIUf a.a. CoMOOH M N 1GyrodYt1 .-. /~ NoC.,Ga I~ 1 US MEa 4'1,Jlll I 1-IO I >-» +~ C.E" I S.1' I\.; HemlP I 14 • Nof:"''° I 14\lt 17\11 "'-Ullllld ~~ ~ 2" + " Cet1Sw 1 Ullo IM H.,_lle 2" ~ NwtNGa n~ IM MCIC . . • . tft:.. ~ J211t +I e.1""1' ._ .._ Hrpltow llM ~ -~..,l.M> 161',-11 1~ + -~er.C: 1"'-1111\ Her..01' IN ~wit.-.. IS\li 1~ l'KPI 1.SAOO I >I•· lllt . -1·" ... ,,.f,, • Jt HertfNI 2111• It,\ =:~~ 1 ~ ~ OC .. • • U1,11D 1"6 17~ + "" lltmS t JM e~ Hecllfte I It._ ltlo!I Nvl'1Y 1 1...., al4 1'"'41' • • • ,U... 10 1014 + II> CIW1Hou I 1'* ... lmlf,PIC ..:::. ~ Sit·-... .-. ANetPI .. io.-1'-Iv. -"' QlmLH 11 Heflrf.-....,. -lftG-. fS.-,..... 14'4 -\It CMIUI IS\.; 17V> -~ ~ ~ = ~ C..Tc ""· fl-I'°" I-+ "' aw• "" ,... .._., 4v. ~"•"o i.v. 1.---c1r11,. • •\'> H«I•'-• M lorTI' 17¥> 17~ AftetKMI . . . • .. •. • .. .. . . • m CIUS.0. t M Mr1111111 -:io-. CA Int ~ r Ooctlfted .. . . • . . . . . . . . . . .. . . d CIUUIA .,_. )4\lt IM l"I U Ullo Pelllt9 I~ I U11<"°"91d . • • •.. .... .. . . . .. 2,., c111ute ~ JOllt ,,.,,.,,.., '"' I P«)e R ""' n Tole! •-. . .. .. .. .. . . . . . . . • . >.Ml Cle '1l.IL 2' ,._ lnlel 2'llt ~ ..... leyP !Pio IO N-11.... ............. ..... ... jl C-Cp Jflo , ..... l"lr<E"' ™i 714 ,._,Ml IM IW. N-Iowa · ·· • ••• ....... · • · · · » CelrTI• 11'4 11'-llltmlOI ~ ·~ P9lloE11I IM 12-Tout ..... .. ... ............. Jl,211- COIOGH S.16 7·1' 111911_'.#lll llM IC* ,._lelr ti? ~ 1 2 1 4 s • 7 I ' 10 II II " I• u " 17 II It 211 JI u ZJ 24 u MUTUAL FUND UPS -Ult f °"' ... 11¥> ldL.Alel< wt 1'-Cl\mlnw 1 1-. Uftw"wts 1" EleN..cl 11~ SOcllGo IS Fr......C s Lief"'"" ""' Avtze • 1'11l I 2 GeldFlb • l(f-f I ~ll 2 I 1 ... 1111> ~" 4 .... D WI 414 l"lott!ITll , .... Dbl":&. •11> AS r 211. ~~ 214 2\11 114Slvr 21' Kerci.r 11\lt Tylon II ... -~ -"' -~ -¥> -J -1V. ~ ¥> \It .... \It 14 .... 16 -1\lt "' ¥> ""' -"' " "' \It -lit -1 .... ~I. u11 ,u u11 .., Up D.I U11 IU u, 17.1 Up 17.A Up 17..C Ull 17.A Uo 16.( Up IU Up U .! Up 14.! Up 14.J Up IU Up 14.J Up IU Ull IU u11 tt.J u11 n .. J • Up IU U11 11J Up 11.s U11 11.S Ull 11.1 Up 10.7 PU. Off >I.I Off IU Off 11.2 Off IU OH IU OH IU °" IU °" IU Off 11.1 g: ti.I 11.1 fJ II.I II.I II.I on ... , °" 11.S Off 11.S Off M.J Off IU °" "'" gi; , ... IU Off "'" g: "·' tU -- ' • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ffuesday, November 1 O. 1981 s ------------------~----------------------------------------------..., J ~ Trivia now a top business Our appeute ror lrlvla Jffml lntaUable -and lhere are plenty ot publlthert around ready and willing lO feed ll. The latest uddltlon to thla 1enre la "The Butbroom Almanac, .. an overelzed paperback Ju.tt issued by frederlck FelJ Publuhen at.$10.t5. 81lled as ··the ultlmat., trlv-ia book ... the uthor Is 30.ycar·old Ous McLeavy, who ls reported by h1a publisher to be working hls way acrosJ Ute country In a Volkswagen camper to hls new home ln Seattle. McLeavy beg(ns r ~ hiti almanic Jan. 1 \'· t the birthday of Paul )' a- Rev ere. J . Edgar ~.... ~'· H oover. Xavier ~~ Cugat and J .D _._....,_..__ ____ _ Salinger. among lllJll 1a•-nz others) with this UW quiz : '"By what ~ names are these people better known? Walter Palunuik. Dorothy Rothschild. Lester Pollus. Sarah Cannon, Maria C~rtas." The i\nswers (given upside down on the bottom of the page) are: J ack Palance, Dorothy Parker, Les Paul, Minnie Pearl, laabel Peron. And the almanac ends 384 pages later on Dec. 31 <the birthday of Henri Matisse. Odetta. Sarah Miles and John Denver. among others> with these two quotations "End of journey bring sadness." <Charles Chan > "I hate quotations. Tell me what you know." (Ralph Waldo Emerson). In between, for each day of the year, there's a back·lo·back compilation of outrageous items. leavened by a strong helping of Charlie Chan one liners . "Fortunately. assassination of French language not a serious crime." "Man who flirt with dynamite sometime fly with angels." Under the June 2 entry, for example, McLeavy reports that in 1948 the wife or Clark Tibbetts, director of the Institute for Human Relations at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, sued her husband for a di vorce, claiminf.! that every time she burned lhe toast. Tibbetts entered a note In his little black book Then there's the story of J .P. Morgan ordering a beer in a bar near Wall Street. announcing. "When J .P. Morgan drinks, every body drinks!·· After finishing his beer , Morgan slaps a dime on lhe table, announcing: ''When J .P. Morgan pays, everybody pays." And there's this great Theodore Roosevelt quote: "A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car; but if he has a umvers1ty education, he may steaJ the whole railroad.'" "The Bathroom Almanac" is new, but back again for the 20th time -an impressive testimonial to the appetite of trivia eaters -is the "Guinness Book of World Records." Sterling Publishing Co., has dressed it up for the first time in a dust jacket while miraculously holding the price at $10.95, the same as last year. This is, of course. the hardcover edition, called the "1982 edition," out just in time for the Christmas trade. Bantam's paperback ver~1on will not be out until next spring Here's a book that was originally issued by the famous Guinness brewery in Ireland as a onetime promotion to help bartenders settle disputes. They had shipped 50,000 copies to the United States. placing them in the hands of the importer of Guinness stout. David Boehm. who founded Sterling Publishing in 1949, saw the thin volume in a Boston bookstore in 1957 . He got the nghts to produce ao American edition in 1960. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES + "' + " _,.,.. + .... • 114 ..... +2 + .... -1'1 -14 + "" + ... + 14 • 1 _, Due to late transmission today's listing will not appearintheDaily Pilot. WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VOAI( (APl NCW t AOl<ellCICI Oe<llrwd Un<llef191'1 Totel l_. Nrw lllQM Ht# IOWl WliA T AMEJC DID r-.;, ... 111 1~ .. 21 NEW YOAIC (AP) No". t METALS _, p,... ~T, ... -1tf7 tA II Ct1>,t r l1 't1·14 ctnh • 1>t11110, U S "'""'''-...... • cenb • pouncl. llM ....,14 c.n11 • PQUr>d. c:ltllwreo. Tift M.2°'1 Mttel1 W•k com-ltt 111. Al•"''-16-40 <MIJ t POUl'CI. H Y Mtrnrt ~ 00 per llMl . .... , ....... 1-'11 00 lroy N , H Y SILVER U.10 pef lroy -.., H_., & M-. only CltllY OUOlt. GOLD QUOTATIONS ,,._, l..._: ,._..,,,,.11 .. 11111WJO10.111111 IS 1.. ..... : efloff-llllll'lt $41' fl. W SI.Sill. "•ria: •111tmoof! flalno ~-"·on \I It ,,_..,., 141 ...... $1.'4 l•ri<ll: UI• flslno '429.Cll, D'-.,. SS.Cll;I Mn.Cll ttll.O I l M•••Y & "•'"''"' only Cltlly ql>Ote , S4tt.7S, 111111 511 . Heme ! Ama11IM 2 G'"' Retra ...... &BJ 4 ~ryl(ey I : om·:r 1 '"'""""' I R ...... Opl t ,,.,,..._ 10 '"',,,...,. 11 Wll•ll• u ... ,... •• ., II ~tCllyPrep l• Ill .... " J "'-" Sfeordk wt GOLD COINS NllW vo•ic IAPI -~lcH 1411• l'fleY .. ... Cl <91" c.,...t'Hwlll\ T...,_....,,, ~ ",....,........, ,,..., N ., IUOJO, w u.•. ~..., .. ,,.., .............. ., ... Mn"-• ,.... 11 t""' or•. ~ w, • .,, ... ,.....,.._ •<-. ·"°' .,.. ••.. ~ -.u.to. S...rQ·0..411t,..,• Stl.. Nol I> C "" Ciot. Cl'lt •.. u ~·= j ........ I Oftly °""' ..-. "'"·''-.. il.50. I • ._.....,,., only 4tlly quote 1-k -S4S1.U. llO Sl.'9 SYMBOLS ____ , ___ , ______ ....__. --~.......__ __ Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTueaday, November 10. 1981 .............. CONCRETE CROC A youngster nonc:halantl.' washes her hand!> 1n crocod1le fountain in chitclren 's pla.'g round at :\l a nll\.l ·~ R1 ,rnl Park. The Philippine park pro\'1cles 20 painted structures. mostl.' pn•h1 storit "monsters." ror chtldrt'n to l'roltt on Aladdin tower OK'd in Vegas LAS VEGAS <AP l -The Clark County Planning Commission has approved an amended plan for a 28-story, 1.068-room addition to the Aladdin Hotel. An addition on the north side of the hotel was a pproved this year but the latest commission action approves a switch of the tower to the south side or the hotel. Aladdin representatives had said they could proceed with the project as soon as they received the county approval. The commission gave the hotel one year to begin the project •• ••ort• e4ul•••ntf Renington, Russell, Heikka Bronze Exhibit FNClmir~Ad ACTION Call Exclusive Helkka collection showing dunng Huntington Centers Great New Mall cetebrallon today thru Sun Check the comPUter tor 2000 winners of S12 Remington Art Prints plus grand pnze of s 1875 Remington famous Bronco Buster bronze /I. DAILY l'tLOT 11.D-VISOI DR. GEORGE L. HAINES. leading authorit y in real estate. taxation & investments di' scusses: • Four basic rules to greater wealth. • President Reagan's recent tax reforms & high return investment apportunilles. DOM'T DIHY YOUISILf TtH OPt'OlTUMrTY Tw .. "°"· I 0, 7:30 P-"'· TIMr .. Mo•. 12. 7:30 p.-• ......, ... Griswold'• ... JUI .... St. ISOOS.~A••· C..MeM ~ lll'OHl!OflED I Y lllTCOUltT FIMAMC&AL, IMC .. 1714t 946-7602 THE MEDICAL CARE CENTER TIEA TMEKT FOR: •INJURIES •ILLNESSES •ACHE •ALLERGIES •DIET •CHECKUPS 17672 IEACH H••""9' ... 1e9cti [:~!:IUff HIJ KELLY COMES TO YOU!!! HOMEMAKERS • NURSES AIDES Local interviews on Wed. 11 /11 10am-2pm Thurs. 11 /12 10am-2pm Kelly Services off ice 27957 Cabot Rd. Laguna Niguel 831-0542 • IAIH EXTRA $$ FOi HOLIDAYS full & pit hours-flexible assignments in your area. for more info caJI 17 141 956-9660 ·~~ 1126 No. Brookhur1t Sutte 109 • ANhelm 92801 Mail order problems prompt education drive By tbe Allocla&ed Pre11 From the simple to the splendid. CbrtstmH catalop are be&lnnlnt to arrive lo homea aero.• Amerka. but consumers who do their 1hoppin1 by mall need t o exercise ca ution to avoid disappointment. · Several thousand companlri aend out millions ol catalo1s during the holiday season. Annual catalog sales total over S40 billion, according to industry estimates. • Despite the popularity of s boppint by 'mall, there are problems. A study by the General Accounting Office late last year found that consumers send more than 100,000 complalnta about the mail-order business to the Federal Trade Commission, the Better Business Bureau and the Direct Mall-Markelina Association every year. The Federal Trade Commission luued a regulation ln 1976 to protect mail-order buyers, but the GAO re rt said some postal om cials believe "there la 1ub1tantlal non-compllance wlth the rule." In a recent move, the FTC Joined torcea wltb the Industry ln a campalcn to educate the publlc. The aaency and the Dlrect Mall-Marketlna Aaaoclatlon are di1trlbut1n1 a new pamphlet. "Make Knowledce Your Partner In Mall Order Shopping," which Uata rules consumers should follow. The pamphlet I• available, at no charge, from the lndu.stry aroup at 6 E . 43rd St., New York, N. Y., 10017, or from the FTC's Public Reference Branch, DCE, Room 130, 6th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. N. W., Washln~on . D.C. 20580. If an advertisement says merchandise will be shipped or delivered within a certain time period, the company mu.st llve up to Its rromlse or you can cancel your order and get a fu1 refund. If no time period ls mentioned, the goods must be shipped within 30 days of the ctate the order is Box· 8mg TWENTY CLASSA CICARETTCS More ·--··· __ .. -· -·--..-- received . If the company fall• to meet the deadline. It mu.st notify you of the delay and Ht a new shJppln1 date. You can chooee t4> accept the new shlpplng date or you can cancel lhe order. again getting a full refund. You can minimize r11ks by following a few basic rules. Check a company's re.turn policy BEFORE you place your order. Read the rlne print on the order form . Does the company. for example, reserve the rl&ht to send a substitute color if the one you ordered ls not available? IC you won't accept a substitute, say so. -Keep a complete record or your order . If you pay by check. note the number. date and amount. If you use a credit card, stick a piece of paper with the pertinent information with your card receipts so you will recognize lhe charge on the bill. NEVER send cash. Jlohts mos ItS moreYOU. regular 8 mg. "ti(. 0.7 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method. "'...-.\: t • .. c.~.· •• .......... t\'lf ...... , W~rnrng: The Surgeon Generet Has De11rmmed That Cigarette Smoking Is Oangerdlls to Your Health .. ••• .. Daily Pilat T UESDAY, NOV. 10, 1981 Joe Lara's 76-yard touchdown reception was the bi g play CLA SSIFI E D c4 of the week. See C2. This Eillery isn't bored Fountai n Valley back is i n the mold of Willie G i ttens ~ By ROGER CARLSON Of Ille Delly PllM SUH Maybe the Barons of Founta in Valley need to be investigated -surely ther e must be some sor t of law regarding monopolies When W1lhe Gittens ran roughshod over the oppqs1t1on for three years it was felt t h e B aro n s h ad o n e o f those on ce in 1:1 lifetime tai l backs. showing speed. the rl uid m oves. dexterity an d ab1 lit) to punch at out As a result he was named Cff Di\.'is1on I Player of the Year. That \.\as the 1976 77 78 era and now. JUSt thr ee years later . the Barons feature · another back in the sam e mold one Rod Em er> At 5·9. 170 pounds. with a d1spos1t1on similar to Emile Harry. Cl F D1v1s1on I Player of the YIO'ar an 1980. Emery gives you the same look. Just a very nice kid Do n ·t . however. try to sell t hat lo opposing linemen a nd defensive backs. Nol after being run over to the tune of 1.133 )ards on 17 1 carries 16 0 yards aver age 1 and 23 touchdowns in a span of nine games. "llc's running tough and making some unbelievable plays," says his coach, M1k.e M ilnl'r .. A couple of his cuts an the open field rcccnlly have just been phenom<'nal. ··Rod's rcall~ improved in just the last three to four weeks a nd he·s getting the tou~h 1ns1de yardage we need ... Emery was a reserve as a j unior . although he saw considera ble action Even then. however. he was hardly concealed Despite the fact he dtdn t sta rt. he was a second team All-Sunset League choice by the D<1dy Pilot a year ago. the onl} player ever lo be recogn i7.cd in that manner and catching 24 pass~s for 265 yards. But agains t Edison, Friday's opponent m the Sunset League s howdown at Ana heim Stadium, he was held lo only 41 yards on 13 l·arries an two games. Emery figured to be the Barons· top runner this year. but only in the recent weeks has he sudd en ly em erged as a ·Jes a great compliment to be compared to \\'illie Gittens. /Cs somet hing I really en)oy. · quahl) blue C'hap athlete. scoring four touchdowns against Lakew ood. ll unt1ngton BcaC'h a n d Ocean View hl'lore hi tting paycl1rl for five TDs agains t Wt•stminsler last week. Suddenly v1s1ons o f W1ll1e Gi ttens running amok for the Barons are recalled · ll s a great com pliment t o b e l·ompared to W1lhe Gittens." says E mery. "It 's something I really enJOY .. What Emery is accomplishing doesn 't seem lo raze his coac·h. Milner "I thought an1t1a lly he wa s capable of cloang what hes doing now." says Milner "We designed our offense around him and the faC't he has these capab11it1es ... The Oarons have instilled a UCLA type running offens<: an term s of patterns and blocking S<.'hemes. to supple ment the r'ass1ng game of Matt Stevens. which resembles pass happy Stanford and Cal. defensive backs, m akes him a leg1l 1matl' major college prospect. E mery says he surprised himself with h is (ave touchdo wn e rro rt against Westminster Anothe r dazzltng run for 71 yards was nulhf1ed by a pen alty when hl' dad one of those Jim Thorpe runs (runnan~ through the e ntire de fense). ··I h aven 't patterne d m yself a fter anyone." says t he Fountain Valley senior .. But I watch Ma rcus Allen a lot and one of my favorite pro ba cks 1s Larry Brown <Washington Redsk ans 1 .. lie <Brown I JUSl «Appealed to me as a great runner .. While Emer y does the running, there are others doing the blocking. and he is quick to single out his ltnem en for their rollO' "Greg Rolin. our tight end, a nd our pulling guards <Greg V1ctor1no and Freel Uranca) help m e a lot," he says. T he quac k p1l ch is becoming Founta in Va lle} ·s bread ·n· butte r r unning play. ano 11 has developed into Eme ry's favorite play. but he's a lso a threa t as a receiver. <:specially coming out of the backfield As a receiver he has caught 19 passes ror 225 yards. includ ing a 56-yard scoring Jaunt. Going the distance seems a habit for Erner) among his 22 touchdown runs are dashes of 75. 71. 46. 36, 32. 29. 23 a nd 13 )ards. And 1t 's not just speed that's doing at t::mery 1s also showing the ability to break tack les a nd power his way m. which really defies his casual personality O.Uy Piie! SUH P ..... As a junior he carried the ball 153 tim es for 674 yards (4.4 average1, scoring 6 TDs \\'1th -I 6 speed 1n the 40, Emery 1s not tons1dered super fast by any measure. but h1::. moves and ability lo simply get into t ht· open. then run past bewild e red ··He has great acceleration and ven good v1s1on m the open field. says Milner "As for has fancy moves, they're primarily ncitur al. but offcnsi\'e ass1stanl coach Je ff Fou111am I 'c1//!'1/ "Hod r: 11wr11'"11wA·1111/ 11 d111111h/1•\ '..'.' "JJ/Jtm1•11• , 1,.,,.,,.,,., <See E~1 E RY. Pa ge C21 Magee --no one's calling him a hum UCl's All-American ov ercom es doubts of ot her s, no longer nee ds to prov e hi m self .... Block guys always try to be black. And white guys always try to be white. Why can't people ju.at be themselves? -Kevm Magee When Kevin Magee left his hometown of Magnoli a. Miss. l o pur s u e his fo rtunes west. his own townfol k called him a bum . When Kevin Magee e nrolled in UC Ir vine, after spend ing two years at Sad dlebac k College. agai n t h e non behe\'cr s laughed ··Kevin Magee at UCI? You've got to be kidding ... they said ... He's not sm art enough. Academically. he'll break like a twig." JOHN SEVANO athle ticflllY a nd a cade mically . He to achieve if they achieve them at reached his c urrent s ta tus through hard a ll. work. perseverence and a dedication to As a soph o m o r e at Saddlebac k , show those who had writte n him off for Magee was chosen a s the state's best dead ... that he was n 't. baske tba ll player. "T hey said because I had dropped out As a junior at UCI. he was not only of college I at llouston 1 and gone to ·chosen as the PCAA ·s best, but Magee workthat l wouldnt•vermakeanything was a lso selec t e d firs t t eam of myseir:· Magee reca lled Monday as All-America by Associated Press a fter alone. Magee was determined to prove he a te his lunch of a cheeseburg1:r and a season in which he was lhu:d in the the doubters wrong. fries 'The) said. at the time. that I nat ion in scoring (27.5). second in the Well. it's been a little more than thrlO'e was nothm' but a hum na t ion in field goal per centage (67.U 'ears now since Magee left Magnolia . "Now I go back there (to MagnoltaJ and fourth in the nation in reboundin g a s ma ll town approximate ly 10 miles and they practically pull my clothes 112.51 ll1s feats were suc h tha t nobody n orth of the Louis iana border. And if off .. ' 10 the history of the game hus' come there's one thing the 6·8, 224-pounder Indeed, Kevin Magee has come a long close to duplicating them. has accomplished. it's the fact he's got way from those so-called days of being Finally. this past s um mer. the muscu- nothmg to prove to anybody any longer a "bum .. l.ir l't'ntt'r grabbed more headltnes whale Magee·kne\.\ wh at peop le were saying about him. him maO\ had \.\rtllcn him off as a lost <"<lll!'l' ,\nct on that basis Magee has not only made himself a The credentials he 's acquired in three in Huc·harest. Romania . for the World success he's a big success. both year s usually ta ke a life time for others <See KE\llN. Page C2J l\er 111 \luyl'e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~-"-~~~~~~~~~ Rainb o 1vs find g old with top 2 0 ra ting llONOLl'Ll' t1\P1 B' tht> time the l'n1,1:rs1t' of lla\.\a11 R a1nhows get throu~h heating ;1 v1s 1t1ng football team on a Saturda~ night, lhe Suncl;1~ newspapers anoss th(' Cnal('(I States alreacl) are bl01ng delivered That's '' h\ mul'h of the nation may not ha\l' noticed thJt H awaii has bt•a ten se\en straight oppon('nts this season. exte nding the sc:eond longest winning streak 1n the ncitaon to 11 games. On Monda~ lla\.\-a11 gaint•d nationa l alll'nlmn. takin!( ovlO'r the 19th spot 1n The Associated Press Top Twenty . It was the firs t lime s i nce mov 1 n~ lo D1v1s1on r sax years ago that the Rainbows have been m the Top Twentv. \\ l'Sll•rn Athletic Conference by ,. h,dl ,l!amt·. t•ntc>rta1ns BYU in an 1111p11rlant con rere n ce 111.1tl'ht1p that has been switched t rom ,1 night ~a mt• to a morning ~a nH· lor re!!1onal telc,·1•;eon pu rp11-..1•.., I hl' H.i1nho"'" \\all he facecl "1th stopµang the sensational pa..,..,1ng of Mc Mahon. who fired sC'\ l'll to11 r hclown strikes a nd passt•cl for 538 yards an a 63-14 rout OH'r Colorado St a te last Saturcla\ For t he season . '.\l c :O.l .ihc1ri has connected on 215 of J31i llaSst•s for 2.721 yards and 20 l'lh llawt111·s offens ive s uccess this ... cason has been built on a "ell d1sc1phned ground attack guided by JUntor q u arterback Tim Lyons The leam 's leading rusher. senior Gary Allen. has gained 718 yar ds on 144 carries. T h e defen se mi n ded Rainbows. who have a llowed oppo n·ents only an average of 11.1 points per gam e. will gel their loughesL t est of the season Satu rd ay, a gains t Brigh am Yo ung Un i ver s it y's aerial circus, led by the nation's No. 1 ra nked passer, J im McMahon . Hawaii, aver aging 30.8 points per game ond le adin g t he Also in the Hawaii backfield arc Junior Anthony Edgar . who ran for 153 yards in Hawaii's 35-7 victory over T exas-El Paso last Suturclay. and senior David Toloumu, who gained 118 yards in t ~e 5 7 ·2 1 ro m p ove r Neva~a-Las Vegas the previous week, LOVING SON S pe<:1a l team pl a~·er Ma r k Stewar t of the Uni\'ers1ty of Washington had a m essage for his mother during APWI,..._ Saturda~"s game with UC LA. The messuge on tht• 10\H'I laskd the l'nl 1rc ga me . hut thl' I l11sk1e ........ 1.11ntna d1dn t. a-.. thl'~ lo~\. :11-11 Bills disappear • Ill Texas' Bermuda Triangle IRVING. Te xas <AP> The BuHalo 8 1Jls were s ailing a lo ng toward a National Football League victory, then d lsapp.,ared in three m inutes in a s t adium toist becoming t he "Ber muda T rian gl~" or tho National P'ootball Leag ue. The Da lla s Cowbo)'t. who have won 15 con1ecuuve r ·HHon games In Texas Stadlu I t the Billa 27 14 Monday nig ht a aam e vital to th• l:11tem dh11I or the American and Na ti on al t"Ollf e rences l>allu as a-z. tied with P"ilHetph1• In the NFC Dll and 8ullato ii e ... a 1•mt and a half behind Mia mi in the AFC Eas t . Buffalo was a head 14-7 with fe wer th1m 30 seconds left on the clock j n the fi rst half whe n rook ie Mike Oowns intercepted quarterback Joe Ferguson ttt lht! Dallas 12. On the rirst play of the second half, qua rte rback Daony White flipped a fthort pass lo tailback Tony Dorsett, wh o t u r n e d it i n to 1 13·)'Ud pass·and r un touchdown. W ith t h e 11m e lied, r ook ie cornerback Everson Walls lntercepted t'trlluaon a t the Bullalo 44. Two play• la te r. tht' Cowboy1 hoodwinked the Biils ' on a 37-yard Wh1le·to·Tony Htll flea flicke r. Turn out the lights. In less tha n three minutes the party was over. "Oorsett's play got us back in Lhe game," sa id Dallas Coac h To m Landry. "If I'd been Buffalo I would have come out in the second half pretty confident "Dorsett's tou chdown shook them up. Wh~n things s tarted going-our way. their conrldence broke down." "The pass to Tony really got us tired· up and back Into the ga me ." said White "He ma de a great run on a routlnr play and 1t eave us a great lift. ''Th~n whe n w cam e back and took the lead it r eally put us on the road ... "ll 's one of our standard plays, .. Dorsett said. "We ran It earlie r and the lineba cker came over and knocked the heck out of me. So the next tim e we ran at I saw him coming a nd hooked lnllde or him ... Danny dumped it ofl and I JUSl started running ." Dorsett. who r ushed for 117 yardl on 28 carries and Joined the l,000.)'ard rus hing club tor the fifth C!'GllMCmlft year. hod a big hand la the ftea.fllcter to Hiii. Oorattl took a then tu.med al'OUlld bac k to him. Pfe iffe r s, N e ths win in-Baja ENSE~ADA . Mexico Kl'nt and Scott Pfe1ffrr of Costa M<'sa rodl' their Yamaha motorcvde to third place overall and first in their div1s1on this past weekend tn th<.' annual SC'O RE BaJa 1.000 off road ra1:1: The Pfeiffer bro t hers com p leted the course an 19 hours, 27 minutes a nd 41 28 seconds Dan Ashl-rafl of Huntington Bcal'h along "1th Mark Miller or Tempe. Ariz . was fifth on a llusqvarna an 19:39.54.22. The top fi ve places 1n the ovt•rall compclit1on went lo motorcycle riders with Scot II a rden of Las \' egas and Brent Wall1ngsford of Yor ba L inda winning the race m 17 : 14 :05.81. Bobby and Tom Neth of Costa Mesa drove their 1,600cc single seal VW to fi rst place m that d 1v 1s1on wi t h a 2 1·40 :16.32 clocking. T he Neth brothers are sons of Costa MIO'sa police chief Roger Neth. Bob DeNault of San Juan Ca p1strano drove his Chenowth lo \'tctory tn the l.200cc stng le seater d1ns1on m 25:08:45.32 while Doug Armfie ld of Seal B e a c h t e ame d wit h B i l l Ballester of Eugene, Ore . for third in the two-seat unlimited class with a time of 23 : 28: 11.99 ln Class IJ for unlim ited VWs. Dave Ha rshbarger o r Ne wport Bea ch and Tom Perr y of Costa M e s a t eam ed together and p laced fifth In their Che nowth. T he only ot.her Orange County driver to win a clau wu Slan 0 llbert ot C1preu autOIQOb&._ _,.,_ David Hall , ... ,. ~O•"t . -. --------.----------.................... ~ ............... ----.--.... ---... ~----.... --·- Orange Coast DAILY PILbT/Tuesctay, November 10 1981 .... --------~~~-------.. Allen. Nelson tabbed 1n Pac .. i O Marcu Allen of USC and Darrin s Nel11on of Stanford, hare th Pac·lO C t otceruuvc ploycr of the w k award Yank want to know: with UC.:LA nose guard Karl Morsaa named tkfenslvi' player . . Fresn o State quurlerbuck Jeff Tedford a nd Puclnc nose .cuurd Gt'()r(lt Dunlap have b<lcn honored a11 the PCAA pluyers ot the week . . San Jose Stall' and Nevt1du Las Vegu have been added to lhl' future Orc1:on State Un1vcr.s1ty footbull bC hedult> Backup quarterback Cliff Stoudt of Pitls burgh l>rokl' his right urm. while riding u rncl'lluntcal buc:klng bron('O in u Sealll~ Lounge ml rcsltturanl a.bout midnight uft r the Steelers' toss to Seattle After u dismal pt•rformance against Mmnesota, John McKay said he's losing confidence in his Bucs, but has n ·1 written the Tum pa Duy team out or the playoff picture yet .. Pal Haden says it was tough s1ttu1g on the bench Sunday "It was tough on the s idelines.·· he s aid. "It hurt In fact. it hurt every duy during the week " Who' on first? t'rom AP dispatches NEW YOHK Tht• time·honorect ii question 'who'lj on first••· could be un swered in :.urpnsing fashion in the Ne11. York Yankl•cs lineup next ~ear with Reggie Jackson liis agent. G<ll'Y Walk<'•·. raised that subject Monday. Sa.> ing he had d1st·ussed the PoSs1b1hty or Juckson's move Lo first ba1:1e with other clubs and would talk uboul 11 with Yankees owner Georg<.• Ste1nh1 t.•nner. The Yankee~ still 4·ould sign Ja('kson before Thursday al m1dn1ght. lhl• deadline for a team lo sign any of 1ti. players who has declared for el1g1h1lity an Friday's free agent n• entry draft Thl· Aml'1'1<:an Le a~ue t·hampaons l'Ouhl have as man' a~ r1 ve frc(• c1J,!t.>nls in Jock.,on the cl rail \\1th the add1t1on Monday of oul11clder Lou P1mella lo the list or those who hu\'l' declared. joining Jac kson, Bobby Mun·t•r. jnd p1lch1.•rs Ron Guadr~ and Oa \'C La Rorhe Quote of the day "If Tom Paciorek "111 guarantee his performant'e. we will guarantee has contract .. Seattle Manners O\\-ner George Argyros. turning down Pat'aorek 's demand for a gua ranteed thrce·year eon tract Quarterhorses open at Los Alamitos The s:w.ouu adtlecl lnaur!Ural lland1tap. l':<peC'lcd lo feature th<.• \'er) quaek Taml' To Shu anti M1si. ~ Triple Dial. \\ 111 headline tonight s opening of tht.• 10th jnnu<il llorsemcn's Quarter llorSl' Rat•ing As:-.n ml'l'tang al Los Alamtlos The 5~ ni ght winll'I' quarter i.eason is coming on lhl' hl'l·ls of thl· Orangt.' Count~ Fall F'u1 r thorouJ?hhn:<I sea,on at l,01:1 r\lamllo::. and \\di run through J;,anu<1r~ I~ Po::.l time opening night 41nd ('\ l'I ~ n1ghl .\ton<la\ through Saturda~ is i 15 p 111 Tfll'rl' ''ill he no raC'tng on Dett'mh1;•r 2-1 From Page C1 Owners get time to sign free-agents Major league teams have been given an extra 48 hours to try to sign thc11· own players who have declared • for free agency. officials said Monday Bobby Wilkerson made a dnvtng layup with four seconds tcrt to boost Cleveland lo a 102·101 win over Chieago 1n NBA action Rrothcrs Anton. Marian and Peter Stastny eac h stored once in the first period lo lead Quebec to a 5.3 victory over Detroit an the NHL Dodger s hortstop Bill Russell underwent sur.l!er) to repair a crack to the small bone under lht• big toe of his left fool Anti will be in a cast for six weeks . The Olympic Organizing Committee will s pend SS00,000 lo improve E xpos1t1on Park, adjacent lo the sate of the 1984 Opening Ceremonies and some SPorts events at tht• Coliseum. but no parking will be added Telev1s1on. radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: • • .. • excellent, , .; • worth watching; • " fair; " forget it. [-) 6:30 p.m .• Channel 9 ' .. ' NBA BASK ETBALL: Lakers at San Antonio. Announce r s: Chic:k Hearn and Keith Erickson. With Kareem Abdul-Jabbar moving into third place on the all.time NBA scoring list and Magic Johnson starting to score more points, the Lakers could have things turned around after their disappointing start ( 1 ·3). But San Antonio, with a 4· 1 record, won't be that easy, especially at home. RADIO Basketball Lakers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m ., KLAC (570); Hockey Montreal at Kings, 7 :20 p.m ., KPRZ (1150). KEVIN MAGEE UNCHANGED .. • LJ n1\'ers1l\ Gaml':> "'hl'n' 1n lhl• finab. he.scored 31 points to ht.'lp the United States beat the Russian:-. ancl bring homt• thl• gold medal. Thos<.' arl' ~ome ktncl or accomplishment:. for a bum And yet. through 11 all. Magee has n 't changc•cl Oh. he s llll remembers tho:-.t' "'ho lurnt•cf their backs on him But ht• .ibu remembers thoH• "'ho ha' e helped him out Th<.· acdaam. th<.· suc·ress. the pubhc·1t) it's all been ntl'C but '.\1 age e has n l forgo l l c n h 1 s -pr1orit1es "Yes. I've h1.·cn s uetesslul.· :\1agce ''11l lcll )ou "But I c·o.rn't afford tu let that ... 1uff ~o to m) head Whal If I '' ake up one morning and a true!.. run., mer me. I hen" hat ''oulcl I do ' · \\'hat sense I'> there to hra1!'' Thos<· that no U'>Ual I ~ <Ion l produt·c St n cc ht gh Sl' hoot . tt•a ms Magee has pla) ud for have compiled a stl·rlan g IG2 37 re co rel There h u \'C been ft ve league or conrerenC'l' titles during that ~pan and l\\tCL' his 1 t-.1 m-. ha' t• rt•at'herl tht• !>late ll11al". onh to lo:.l' :\I agl'l' <ind tht! Anll'alcrs wall :.la rt the11 ~econd ii ea.son togl•lhl•r '.':<" IH when the~ open thl• HIHI 82 t•ampa1gn a~aansl the English :'-h1t1onal team at L'Cl 's Cn1wford Hall. This ts a y(·ar Mageu has been "a1tang a long time for to arn\'e ll s ha ... senwr 'car one that he ho pl·~ \\ 111 t•nd \\1th i:I PC' AA t'h:1mp1un!>hq)and a playoff lwrth in t•llht•r the :'>/IT or NCAA. .111'1 11·, a .\e<ir which "Ill end \\ 11h h1~ -,1gnaturt· at thl' bottom 111 illl "\B,\ <·1rntraC't. II !') a :.t•uso n . !\'la gee t•\pl.1111t•r1 . in" hach he will have ln µl:.1' l\\ ll'l' a~ hard a!> before tw1 .. 111"l'' a • all eves \\Ill be '' .11 t·h1ng h1 m . b 1 · he doesn't w<.1nt peopll! tn thank he's going to n·st on his past laurels I m going to have lo pla} hard l'H'r) night." he salCI ·Tm guang 10 ha\c to gave 100. no. 150 pt·rtent c\'er) time I walk on the floor . I 'm going to have to rl'l111und. I'm J!OIOg to have to makl• hellt'r passes. and l'm going to ha\'l' to score points "\\'e. as a t~am . arc going to College football S•lufO.y \COllPQO loo4b.111 w;"""u't WIU Ar iron• SI ••. UCL4' al Coh..,um (' lOl USC al We•lllnQ!on Cel v• Wa.IUnQton St •t Spo•ant !Channel 7 at 12.•S p,m,t Or~ et Sl.,,loro Arizona et O.~ St Frnno SI •• Lon9 Buer. St a• 4'-lm St.alum 11 JOI BYU 11 H-•11 Sao 01990 St 81 N• .. 0• lo V•91' n Cel luther.,, al A111u Pa<1flc Pomona Pllrer al l• Vtr,.. R.cll•!>CI• ., Cl•r•mont Muc!O u. of San Ole90 at St MUy \ Wlllltltt at OcCIO.nlll C•I Sl1te Nor1,,,.109f •I Po•ll""° SI Cel Poly (SLOl el SO.H St UC 0•YI$ et Cal Steff H•YWi'CI S•n Frencl1<0 St at Cll"o St Sacramento SI et HumbOICll St Sanl• Clere •I ""9ft Sound ROCKIU• Noire o.m. et 111r F0<u H•w Melll~o el COIOf'-St U lall SI. at 10.ho St . n Soul hem llllnol\ •I Htw Mnlco SI Cal Poly (~I w\ NOrt,,.rn ArltONI ti Tempe,n SOUTHWIST RIO 11 .. ytor To.a•Te<llalSMU ArUntti at Tu .. Al.M TCUelT .. u K•n•ti SI. •I Ol<lehom• SI SW Louhl..,eal L•m••, n Mc HMM St ... TUH Arll'"!lon n Tulu 11 w ... 1 r ... , St MIOWIST 111e11 ...... lltlnol• 1-eetWhCOfl\irl Mltlltoen"' PurOW No•tll-•lt<n •I Of\lo SI Min ... ~ .. Mldwoen SI Colo•-•l IC•nw1 Oklal'IOm11 al Mlt'IOUrl low• St ~ Ntbr•ik• L.oullvlllo at Cir1<lnntt1 lf>dl.,..SI MEHlornllllnols Bowll"9 GrMn •I E••l<"rn MIClll..,. Or•U •I llllnol\ SI Norlll•m flllnoh •I Miami. O Wetle<n MICNoen •• ONo u lttnl SI •I Tol- Hortnl'm MklN09f\ •I Wl<n11e St SOUTH Meryl-•I CfflnS()n Norlll C-oll,.. SI •I Oullt 1C1ntuoy •t Ftotlda Aubvm•I~• Nlvy et G.Of'Ol• Tf'<ll T11l•n• al "'9mpf\ISSI V1r9tnle Tech., MIMnl, Fl• W•~<" "°'"''•I Alcnmoncl Mtolulppl •I Tennusee N0<tll Carolina el V1rg1ni• Furman.tVMI WOllO<d •I Tho Cll-.MI w1111...., ~ Mllry et E .. , CerollN App•IKNan St. 11 E•il T-es-St., 11 Soulllern Mtululppl ti Flor Ida St , n Mlu lntppl SI •I LSU," Aikens~ St •I LOUltlana T1c11. n WUlfm C..n>h.,. et Mllnl\•tl Nortll Tues SI al NE l ovltl ... •, n IAST Army •t Pill Alebema •• P,,nn $1 !Cl\ln,..17 at t •.m .1 Auto•" •I WH( Vlr9inl• 8oston Coltl9' "Syr..:u~ Cotumble •I Corntll 8rown et OM1moutll Ptnn •I Herverd Coro••• et Holy Crou Y tie ti Prlncoton ha\ t' to t'ome out L'' t·ry mghl ~ind kel'P up our inkn~1ty A lot of teams loSl' bel.'aust• they look ahl•ad to their rW\I J.(ame \\'l' l'an l do th.at ·Last ~cur pt'oplt• didn't think WI! wl'n' ror ·rea l This year thev ·11 ha\'e to take into t·onsiderat1on that we a re .. Opponent:. \1.111 ha' 1• to behe\'e t Cl 1s for real bec·aust• ~1agee 1s for real 1 lls pla~ on tht• eourl s peaks for 1tst'll und ht!> studies an the C'las.,roum do too . for that malll'I · Thl'.' don t gave ~ou anything here." .,a 1<1 Magee of l'CI''> tough al·adt•tn1C' standards !ht• t·urrentl~ ha!» a 2 7 g1>a 1 It \.\US hur<l amt u t·hallenge ul first. hut I \\anll'd to show m~ s1.•lf I could do 1t "I don't \\ant to be ltke some l>I those olhl•r pla) cr s \'ho drop out of sl'h1x>I \\hen the <,eason 1s over I "ant to fan ash I knew what I c·ould do despite the fact people always doubted me. "Sure. I'm proud of whal I have done. hut I've sltll j!Ot a lot more to do · Magee·-. some hum. huh? OUTSTANDING VALUES! IRAHD HEW 1981 vw DIESEL RAHIT FACTORY STICKER $7670 DISCOUNT $975 SALE PRlbE 56695 (2983)(177663) IRAHD HEW 1981 ISUZU 4X4 rlCKUP SALE PRICE s7295 (1272)102088) 1980 VW DASHER DIESEL WAGON 4 speed 1ransm1ss1on. AM·FM stereo & a sunroof (149876) SALE PRICE ONLY '7995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN-ISUZU 11711 llACH llVD. '------==::::::::!.HUNTINGTON llACH CALL 142-2000 Lara on the loose! His 76-yard toychdoum reception was big play of week Corona del M ur Hi&h ·s Joe 'Lara came up ,.-Ith one or those big pleya when it w11 really on Ute hne Fr1dav night. his 76·yurd touchdown pass trom Quarterhu<'k Eric Woods wos the key to the Sea KiOl(l!' 27 14 Sea View l.euaue football victory. It hdpcd off11et u 74·yard touchdown PHI play by <:ostu Mesa's Onassis Nixon. who combined with quurterback Steve Anderson lO help gtve Mesa a !ihOrt·hvcd 14·0 lead Among the big statistical leaders -Fount1ln Valley's Rod Emery srorcd five touchdowns and raced for 211 yards and Newport Harbor's Rob Berry added to his school record with eight catches for 1A8 yards. giving ham SO catches for the year, good for 735 yards. a 14 7 itverage gain per catch <Last wt>ek's big playi1 or 50 yards or more) 76 Joo Lara. Corona <Corona del Man • 76 y ard TD pas~ from Eric Woods 74 Onassrs Nixon <Costa Mesa>. TD pass from Steve Anderson 58 l lcrbie Campbell <Westminster J. TD run Season 96 Make Fiscus <University J: 90 Onassis Nixon <Costa Mesa>: 84 -Dave Geroux <Edison>: 82 Todd Williams c El ToroJ; 80 -Lance Marlin <Corona del Man. 79 -Kennedy Pola (Mater Oe1 I . 77 Todd Williams (El Toro>. Kennedy Pola <Mater Oe1 1. 2; 76 -Mark Bondi <Irvine). Greg Loey IMater OeiJ, Joe Lara (Corona del Mar 1. 75 Charlie Brown ( M1ss1on Viejo>; 74 - Onassis Nixon 1 Costa Mesa>. 73 -Scott Slier <Huntington Be ach I, 72 -Jeff Frandsen Marina>. 71 Gre~ Lor.> <Mater Dell, Rod Emery ! Fountain Vath~~ 1. Rudy Figueroa (Woodbridge>; 69 llerb1e Campbell (Westminster J. Rudy Figuer oa <Woodbridge>: 69 Ron Malersleln < MarinaJ. Ken Lai.zlo < Marmal. Steve Svitenko <El Toro>. 67 J eff Frandsen <Marina>. 66 - Mark Bondi 1lrv1ne1 ; 64 Bob Critchfield (Manna>. 63 Greg Neff (Marina); 60 - Kennedy Pola (Muter Dei1, Herbie Campbell c Westminster>. 59 Mark Bondi <Irvine>: 58 - Curt Wcnzlarr < Estanc1a1. Jeff Frandsen c Marana I. Herbie Campbell <Westminster I. 2: 56 Dan Blanck I Laguna llills1. Rod Emery (Fountain Valley J. 2. Ken Laszlo (Marina>: 55 - Damon Sweazy (El Toro1, Steve Patterson 1 Coronj del Man. Dan Thompson <Huntington Beach 1. Gil Ward <Newport Harbor 1. Kevin Brad le~ <Sadddle back >: 54 Joel Seay <Fountain Valley 1. Kevin Beres I Mission Viejo>: 52 Craig Rakhshani c Edison >. Todd Wtlhams <El Toro>. 2: 51 Eddie Nunes < W~stmmster>. Bedd1e Arabe I Lag una Beach 1. Rudy Figueroa I Woodbridge>: SO From Page C1 EMERY ... H,., burn has brought him along. lO<l .' Kevin Beres (Mission Viejo>. Eddie Nunes I Westminster>. Bill Brigbt <Corona del Marl. Eric Re inholtz !Ocean VaewJ, Joel Seay <Fountain Valley), 2. John O 'Calla~han <Edison >. Jeff Holmes <Mission Viejo>. Todd Cage <Saddleback). This week's statistical leaders Rushing t. Rod Emery (Fountain Valley), 28·211 : 2. Damon Sweazy (El Toro1. 24·166; 3. Herbie Campbell <Westmmster). 26·142; 4. Kevin Bradley <Saddlebackl. 17·128. 5 Tony Valente (Marina>. li·IOO Passing 1 Greg Selby <Newport Harbor 1. 18·36·3, 263 yards. l TD: 2. Ste ve Anderson <Costa Mesa1. 16-26·1. 211 yards. 2 TOs ; 3. Ken Major <Edison>. 13·19-l , 204 yards. 1 TO: 4 John Heinle <Ocean V1ew 1. 15-37·2, 199 yards. 1 TO. 5. Jtm McCahill 1 Estancia). 14-26·3. 163 yards. 2 TD Receiving 1. Rob Berry c Newport Harbor>. 8·148. 2. Abel Cachola < Estanc1a1. 8-120: 3 J eff Clensse I Ocean View 1. 6-53; 4. Onassis Nixon c Costa Mesa>. 5-101: 5 Gal Ward cNewPort Harbor1. 5·68. 6. Greg Eskridge I Edison 1, 5 56. Scoring 1 Rod Em~r} <Fountain Valley). 30: 2. Damon Sweazy <El Toro1. 18: 3. 1t1e1 Theo Langford <Edison 1. Tony Valente <Marina ). Onassis Nixon 1Costa Mesa1. Brett Schumm c lrvmeJ. 12 each. Field Goals l Zoran Kac I Huntington Beach !. 46 yards: 2 Ray Ber~ <Westminster>. 41 yards. Emery says the b1~ difference 1n his aha lit) no"' as opposed to a year ago •~ that as a junior he hesili.l Led. "This year the timing seems l0>bc there ... he sa~ s ROD EMERY Fountain Valley High As for tangling with Edison and tlS 31 game wanning-streak, whi c h boasts u formidable defense. Emery says he doesn't feel any undue press ure bet'ause the Barons · pas:.ing game has not lived up to 1980 laurels Fountain Valle\ enters w1lh a 3-1 ll•agu(' reconf :.ind 7-2 overall mark The league record was marred b~ Manna Hag h's 20 3 triumph but Emen says that's not a f<.actor "The Marina loss does n't reallv affect u:. We know if we had pla~ed well we would have \.\On We 're going into the Edison game with just as muc h opt1m1sm. ·says Emery. ReC'alling his efforts against Edison an last \'ear's Cl F title gam e <won by Edison, 14·0. with Erner~ held to 12 yards net>. Emery s ays: .. Edison ·s defense seemed tougher and quicker off the ball tha n anyone we'd seen. It was kind or a shot'k. first being there just playing against a team supposed to really be good." With back-to-back 200·yard games 1nclud1ng nine touchdowns. Fountain Valley Ha gh's Rod Emery as the runaway choice for.Orange Coast Area Player of the Week honors following Friday's explosion against Sunset League rival Westminster Emery a 170-pounder on a 5·10 frame. ripped the Lions with five touchdown runs amidst h11 21 l yards on 28 r arrtes as the Barons prepared for this week s s howdown with Edison at Anaheim Stadium. Emery now has 23 touchdowns for the season to become Orange County's most prol1f1 c scorer of the 1981 campaign and an mos t cases. it's with a rtaar. Emery doesn 't just run fast or hard. h e shows you the moves that put derens1ve bac ks on their backs. a s he did agains t Wes tmins ter "°1th an assortment "Rod's getting the tough inside yardage that we need, too. · s ays Fountain Valley Coach M 1ke Milner Emt!ry The s hck tailback has also ~n a sohd pass rece&\'er this season. catching 19 Jor 225 yards. includmg a 56.yard pass play for a TD. Amon~ his touchdown runs this season has betn scoring jaunts of 75 and 11 yards Last \\eek's bundle rncluded rutls of 46. 32. 29. 13 and 1 yards *************: : JOHNSON & SON : • • • p ' NFL standings NATIONAL CONFERENCE Western Division W L T PF PA Pct. San Francisco 8 2 0 225 168 .800 Atlanta 5 5 o 277 189 .500 Rams 5 5 O 227 214 .500 New Orleans 3 7 0 129 217 300 Eastern Division Philadelphia 8 2 O 249 139 .800 Dallas 8 2 O 241 195 .800 N.Y .G1anls 5 5 0 195 173 .500 Was hmgton 4 6 0 210 243 .400 St. Louis 3 7 0 189 303 .300 Central Division Minnesota 6 4 O 230 228 .600 Tampa Bay 5 5 0 173 163 500 Detroit 4 6 O 241 223 400 Green Ba.> 4 6 O 196 232 400 Chicago 3 7 0 152 231 .300 r . -,. -....... AMERICAN CONFERENCE Western Division • resents . . . • • • « ~ Denver San Diego Kansas City Oakland Seallle W L T PF PA Pel. « it: 7 3 0 196 149 .700 « • 6 4 0 292 247 600 • • 6 4 0 240 201 600 • • 4 6 0 141 167 .400 • j 3 7 0 152 226 .300 • ~ Eastern Division • it Miami 7 2 1 243 189 750 • it Buffalo 6 4 O 217 168 600 • it N. Y . Jets 5 4 t 232 223 .sso • Pete Ht. ......... it New En~land 2 8 0 234 240 200 « it Baltimore t 9 o 112 339 .100 • ...,FL's ~ Central Division • " 1' Cincinnati 7 3 O 268 193 .700 • Pickl of Houston 5 5 O 176 213 500 • The W Mil Pillsburgh 5 5 O 209 199 .500 « Cleveland 4 6 0 183 217 .400 • '• • • • • • • • • • • • • « • « SUNDAY ChtciMatf OYH L.A.R- D ....... O't'ff Ta""" toy -Oel ,.1,.,...... 1• 21 llllltfte....,... 1... "·"' ....... 'tordt --111.wni .,.,. to .. .. _ 2o.U.. t.1M Seel<•_,, ,.,, 14 "11119 • 7->S ..., ,............ J.I ~· "-IU..,.,.. 1.... MO Tl-Of l'MMMIOll U :Ot J4:ff .................... lllUIHIHG -hffelo, .,_ Wt, crltlllt •lt. Dal .... DwMll a-10, ...... IMS, 0. •tto 4-S, ..._. f.1, ......... M . .. AUING -._.... .. ,.,.,.. t'Mt+al, CrlMe 1.1..,. Doi..., WNtot.17·1·11'. lltllCEIVIHO -8vflalo, 8ullar f.111. Lewie 4-71. ~.m-r a.a, Crli.t J.2', J"'I• I_.., .,_ '"· Dellos. QtlNa Ml OU .. ,.. .... Darwtl HJ, Hilt 141, ,...,_ i-14.~t-S. COUEOE Toe» 20 no Tap ~, IMmt 111 h •-lolied PrHs collo .. fooaloll poll, wltlt flrtl,.._ ..... "' ........... -·· r'OClOfW ... ~lpMtb: I. PIHMwwll UJI .... 1,)0 2. ci.-en ,.... 1.m a. use 111 ••.o 1.m .. Gowll• •1.0 '·"' s. ~SI. 7-1.0 ,..., 6. AleMrM M ·I t111S '· ""'... 7-2-0 ,,.. •.So......... •1.0 "' t . Arl-54. M.0 711 le. To.. ..,., 7W ti. Mk....... 1·2.0 78 12. MIOlftl, ,..._ .. ,_. '10 n. Norlll ~-M.O ., ... So. Mltlls4ippl 7.0-1 4U IS. OflloNMo S.l•t m 1'. AMI-M.O JU 17. Wollllflllell St. 1·1·1 m 11. UCLA .. ,_. t• It. Howell 74-0 117 20. ,.lorldll St. W.0 Ill Community coll999 schedule (AM...-.C7:• ... ,.~ ........... > IATU•DAY .... c...e~. Soll Ol ... MINll Or ..... C-1 Galdoll Wlltt M c.rr1 .. ()........,. .. ,.,...,_ ---~· P•9-otS.. Dll'9 CC Cl:JDI CltrvsotS.....AN 1111 ......... ~~ ..... Cat~ EottLos.,.....MLA~CI) L• ....... CC•~ c.,,,.. ..... .._ .... bi~· 1Elc;_...ot'-""'8Mc"CC ,......,_ot,._ce ._....... .. 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Allo rO<Od: Joan's lA<f't, lltOd 11telsl11, CHO Eslrallo, Cout11y c..-. Sall SN SMll._ allttw Scllrll. Time: 1:04/S. U l!XACTA 1 .. 71 polCI 111>.DO. llJITM llAC9. t ~mil& Z-flltr'llll(~'tO) ......... . "-JCIM CGlll ..... l 111 JA Coltk Wenllll' COllY-1 J..a Al .. ·-: -""-· ,.,~ ,. .... , Cll•rt• Ae<ouel, Tu1ca11 ICftllllt. Nes .. tr-. Tllfta: 1:al/S. HYearnt lltACa. 1 lw ..... A,._...lftT1,,_ CDal .... •1'91 1M UI UI p.-0..... (VoMNwlo} .... 2A Ml""911C MtN 1 "'llUTI !. It AIH •o<•d: Cl11npo, MOtl•r JOllO, oc .. .-Daller. Time: 1:222/S. N •XACTA 11..JI polCI ..-• P PICll II• C .. l+S.11 "'4 114,615.a """"lb Wllllllllt tic ..... C•I• --). u l"k1I Sia ,.,,_ polCI a...to wtltl t• wl"""" lkkot. Cflw ..._,. IEIOMTM lllAC&. lllo mllft Oii turl. II Tiii• .. So CSillllllol to.a S.• ,. ... ,_,~, .... ...... ,1-IMcGarn111J Ull uo uo Aho •K.cl: P•rtoul, CreK..,I. Gemmel•. RH Tim•: 1:S7 JIS. NINTH IUICL '"'mu .. Oft turf. WlldSllrl C..-..,1 11.• 7.JD 6.00 Woodland Laci (DNfloulM"tOI UD 4.JD Trv<k'-IWlnlandl UO Alto r«Od: R-111-i, Mo~ SPOtt. Alway1&1t.~o. TlllM: 1:• 11s. U EICACTA c .. 11 pel4I $211.• . All•-• -20,616. &..oa Alemltoa MOllOAY'S •uu1. n , ...... .,, .................... , APf>Al.OOIAS r PllllST ~·'"''°""' Mr Sii< CJllll 10.00 S.40 a.. At•mor't Ille flled (Hartl IJ.11 U0 U11loll lltOlld C AQulftO) t.• Alto r-: WffllW< WM<ll. Apl .. be T..,.11, Doutll• II Plenvra, Groftlt Girt. Curlo11s 811bble, Doubt• Back, aotCI Ll9'1lnC119-Tlme: I: U l/S, U EiC ACTA 11 .. l .,.Id 110:S.OO. $ TNCMtOUM ..... POU•TM •&el. 1 1/16 "'llOI. 111 • ......,..,.,.-ClllM11ro11 4• ltorll11t ltev COllww•I ,,. l.» ...... Wiii. It Clltllllltll Alto rua-t lm•rold Clllaltalll't ~. Tlmo111• 111, t• ..... o ... , •• .. ll'TN•ACe.•l..wkllllt. Dll'tll l~trl ,, ........ .. u.,..r 11:• COllllworo.) tt.• 1.• 11t11lors ~ ClltoNll I.• A ... rec.N, ONlcelff In.....,,,........, wa1111, 1.1111• Kerot, L•nf """'*· -.. , A<tv.11~. OI-Hoc*,.....,. Jolwl. TlfnO; i ttl llS. tt•XACTA 1•101 flltl4I""··· SllCTN llAC•. 1 1116 ,.. .... Trowollllt Gnulldl lllteu9'11 •·• t.• MO 111 Cwrt IMllCffol t,• IM .. ,.., 0 ,..,_ (l"rollor) Ut AIN rtcod: Klee Hal, P fll lloer(M, A l"te le OMMI. Kurr~ Carrie, lltec•lor o.fll. Tl-: 1:4S2/S. HVl.nf ltACI. 7f\ir._... ~ottell Scott (S*llal ... ... ,... T_..,.tll..tNr(PitVCIMJ to.ot Mt ,.OMy 0vy (S114ncor) I• AIN ,_,; 1111111 ... ~ TltM~, Do* Orocta, Mlty hty. DHuwllla 0-, ..., Tetle,Woll ~. Tl-; 1115.0. '9 l•ACTA , .. ,, POld 111SM. •t•NTN lltACa. t 1fl611111ot. O...Cyn Titn CMeflol 4.• t... I." Perry Caelll (Horrl6) tAt I.It 81e0 Svlptw ISlllllle) I .. AIM rKed: Ascoftdar, Soft OollOlll. Time: t:Ol/S. NIMTN llt:AR. I \'o mllft, Dofteld (Mtllo) J.40 ,.. 2.a Hi ii Clle Ccn..J t... 1.a Old Ace CSlllll!a) t.• Afllo ~OCN: Lou'• Dorlly One111, Houtlllw. K'I \1111411ce1or, StlOa 111, llel\tllllll al ..... Tlmt: 1:St all. .. IXACTA C1·4l pekfSl..,O, ti f'ICK lllC U •t ·s-4+11 pelCI llMt.JIO • ... u .. llN .. lkkall Ctl11 llOrso.) • ., ,erll .. ,.,..__paid ................ l'llliltle llcUb (flft,.,_), Te MTN lllACI. t Ill• mlltt lltock Softly ISHICUel 7M >.• UO DemH ,..._...,, ,,_ t.a Table Twdl 11:ia1_,...,., lAI , Alto roced: L-•llYfll"" Dvsty Huie, H• ...... 111 c-.tl'. CCormwo OM, LA 111--. Oul<kllt-14111. Time: 1:4 2/S. •LIVINTN lltACll.11/"mlles. Fablllous £ddlo CSllllllel I.to SM U0 Hold Y-Lolo ISCalll"Oll tUt \IA l11tenll-i ,. ..... co .. u ...... 1 ... AIN roeo41• Prlllce Ttfl ,.IM, Tri Olit ...._ Tosllnlmo, GI.., o.i-s. Point Y-,., ... Or Mina. Time. t:4S 4/S. JI IX ACTA CM I ... Id ... 40. •tt~-·.,, .. Stoctthotm Open l .................. , G-Mrle• ·.:.rs:.:-.. ..... M , .. I. C0011• Ml.,., wlM sa.-, ~ ,_,,.., wl111att.ooo1. .,_.,...... St.,,a DofllOft.ICwlll C..,... 9f . ...,,._. Steworl·Pardl• Tey""· 6·7, •·•. •·•· 10.n~ICllffSll,•J. Telpel lntemettonel <•T....._T.._I 1"'91,..... ....... P•t 0... def. Kim Wonnca, H , 1•; Tim Gulllll-def. Ill-ICrltMM, 7-4, U, w. Mika l!lt ........ ~ ~ .. ,. w. 1·S, l.MrT Stet-I def. -llwy, 1·S. 1•; P~I MC...,_ Clef. JIM 09leMy, .. 2. H ; Cttrlt ~elf. -~ •t . .a. ~one .. VOii WWblly dltf. Mirtt ll~ M. .. 1. M CWllllttlly-ltt-.1 o... ...... Cl1rl1 Dun•<11rl1 Mol'Olt• 4191 . ., .. Drawert·Mortln Davis, M, '"'·· .................... W•nctY Tumbull del. S..... Mlll"1 ..... .. ,, .. o. ...... ~ ...... "'"" Kn--•~ Wollll ... "-L-Anna-. .. J, M. Monday'• traneacttona J.AMUU. ,,_... &Miiie TOlllOHTO 11.U• JAYS -A-Oii tllal Dole Murray, Pll<llor, .. ,.., to COlllrMI ....... ler ttte 1"2 --· ............... PHILAD£LftHIA l"tillllt:S -$ltMf ......,, w1,., coocll, to•._.,..,. ceftrat. e.uaneM.L ................ _ ...... CHICAGO 8ULLS -Walwcl S..... H--. c ... 1 .. Area high school f oothall log SUNSET LEAGUE 14 Oc-Vlew ti Newpol't Herbor (1-1) " DaMHlltt • Edleon(M) 14 HuflCI,...... l!INtll ' J Ma ..... u " S.11 ClameMa • 0 , Edi_, u 1~ ~.=:...., H II Calll1tr-Vell.., a tt AIC>erlldt IO ,........,Velley ., 14 0 Ml .. loll Viejo • " S-C.AN IJ Na¥. tt-Mer'IM J eo.i.Meu , No ... 12-UOUN Hlffl (9' MV> JS 11--... , 14 EIT-24 ., MllllNll 7 SEA VIEW LEAGUE 10 U11lwnlty u L99una HHla (M) • llMtlr091 24 • Mar'lfte 24 Corona del Mar (1-2·11 21 lr¥1M , 25 '"'IN • 7 ••tanc:la " • IE1tanc:le ,, ., Oco.,vi.w 0 14 HllMl ....... 8NCll • 10 s-aew, 20 , Unlwnltr • as ... ~ , a .... °°"""" 0 No...1>-<:dMlatDCCI 1S GanotM • M Hllfttlllllloll llHcll J 14 C-''W-V81tey • 1 LaOulm. Cftffoltl 0 N.,,. 1>-A\. VMley lat 81f A) 1f Ulllwwllty 7 Seddleback (1-3) 2J Sa11C..._.,.• 1J IO IEtWICle " Fount.In Valley (7·2) IO ~-14 , ._ .... • 0 Mluloll Vlt)e •1 16 SM\aANVMley , 14 II Tn 17 0 MIMIMV•tt , 2' DaNIHlllt • a l!IT-u IJ ,,..,,,. • 21 LAH*a ,, 7 c.i>t1tr-va11.., ,. J St.~ 21 17 C..UMIM ,. 0 llllMcle JI NOY. 12-UllWN 8-Clt(lltMVl It S«vtte 14 N.,,. 11 lls•"41Cot0CCI J ''"'Illa • M I.Ml ..... ,. 14 c-••-" Mlaelon VlefO (1-o.1) lid H~llM<lt • C0MaMeH(2·1) .. C..UMeu • t1 Tldtlll 7 I MeflM lt It 14 u111--.y ts 1 ~· • 0 Oc-V-• t S-.AN !ON~..__, IO 7 IEIT-• II .... , .. Mr 10 21 ~ • N .... I -€1 T-ISA ._II • lllOllCllO ·--7 ...... ,,_.._, , ..... "'' 16 L .. ....._ " " ,,.. • , ..._....,_ J Unt"'1lfty (5-4) 7 ca.IM-VMley 7 7~ 14 • ., L...-Hlllt 0 Hu~hMtl(M) , , ....... 14 ...,_. • • T .... , ., s.c--... • • eer-. ..., 14 ' su•a•u• • • L~llMCll • • llOW.-11 t EITW. 14 • Ufl!NHllll , H.,,. 11-0Me Hiiia ti LM.,...... ,. 1• <:.-..... 17 7 c-.. Mor ,, 11 ..... °' .... • ..... ,~ .. , .......... , 14 c-.-.. 7 17 s...a.--• ts .......,..._ 10 Ian ca.tM"4• (1-1) t ~YOIMY as ,l!Tore(M) " &tallc1o as 7 ,..,~ .. ··~ •• " IS f 18 l I c• 14 0 cw-.. -.. . ...,.... " C .. I WVlllsr 11 7 l!IT-• • 1•1-.IO • I • .._ .. ,, , ...... v .. ..., • .... ....... I"""' 1 ........ 14 ...... l>-om."""' • M9""",,.... , • H.,.,..,.......,. t7 I! '""'-• IOU1M COAST LIAQUI 11 L4llllN Mint u ..... ( .. 1) ........,....., 14 • L41111NllMCll , . 7 ....... .. cw•...., v..., <•2-1) • Ml ..... Vttjo 41 a ·ce.-c.._., • 17 =--=·.., .. t7 ,... .. I• 0.-.""'9 • IC° I .. • : &.-::J: ... 41 """·'~-v...., • •UM__, 1 14 14 ...... " .... lJ ........... ::-• • , OTHIRI • l••,.....CM·t> 7 ...... "" .. 7 Meter o.t CM> I '1 .7 0-.HIMI • 1 .. ·s~ • :~ ... ,. c; ...... • •• • ...... llllCll 11 ,: ~=I· u . =Oll'Mlm • .............. 7 • -~ I llk • N ... , ......... c.......... c c .... tt tt? .. I -~ " :: ... • .. t4 7 11 ..... , ... , " ""' " :1 • ,, , HM.~ .. ~ ==-' ~== II • =:AINlt t; .. • • , 1*1111 ..... ...a.ea ..... , ........ , • ..... , ............. ""'""'' ,. ti • . , ... ,, . ........... .. ., ~ ·=--' • f E s ... • .... ....:.: -. H '=-.... ; tt=-. . lif:~ , ii:--·· , ii .. 1 • II tt ==~ ; , , Y•:J!c=: ............ ........ ....... ; SI ·- Or•nge Cout DAILY P9LOT/Tuelday. November 10, 1981 ... _ MOTteaoou-.~MeAat•TO • " -•• ' •• c .... ., • • NOTtc• OP D•ATH 01' NOTtC• Ofl NATHOf' ~ ~:~"'~,!:~= w.:::u1a, uon u SUSAN O•RTRUD• fl•ANCll •l>WA•• ON .,, ... LOCAL C•AIUL lllCMI~........ ACK•RMAN, .... IUIAN K•LT••· .. ftllAMCll HOOUM MD ffNUM. ~ •.e. .... 0 . aAaCOCK, AND 01' • . K a L T • a L.1J • AM .. 1*9 .. T •01t Ttfe MUA .... -.u... " • T I T f 0 N T 0 PaANCfl K8LT81111 • CHICA SU.NT OP, ... NCNtTM ~ ...... ._.,_ N cOA1TP\ANN1NOuNcTOPTM1 .,.,,,,., •• , cA•• .. •· AN00MtN1sT•• asTATao" ftaT1T1•o•T T! OlltANelCOUNTYt.OCALCOMTAL ............. • A·110911. ADMINllT•• • A 5 P11tOOAAM CLOt1-11. H••••••T• ••••••• •· t o a 1 1 h • I r 1 , HO. A·11"17. t!:!: ~~-.:_~~..:. ==.,,.,...LVLAWI btntflclarles, creditors T o • I I h • f r 1 . a., 1t11.l • ~ ., "' ..,.... .. CAie .,...., ...,. •nd contingent creditors of b•n•flclarlH, cf"eitllOrs .. u.,.,,_,._ ....... .,.,~ mnc11 Su Lan G •rt r u d t and conUngentcrMttortof :Ct:~~:~~ ... '7:':: ..!':.:,..-._~::'.:= Aekt~n, aka Susan G. Francis Edward K .. ttr 11111ectr,.r11 ... ,. .. •1111111 1... ~ ...-,.. ........ """"' • Babe , and persons whO and ponon1 ·whO may be c .. ,,., z-. 111o or-. c-•Y •n. ,. ... ..,. ..,,. •ii "'"· m a y e o t her w I 1 e otherwise lnttt'"ted In the ..._....c:.,.,,..,""'.._...-C tt..,.....,. .. _. .. ...,., ... 1ntel't ted In the wilt wllland/orestate: ::'~ "c.:r .::..:"':".: =. ": ;::-,.,:-,.:: !: and/o tate: A petition hat bMn flied ... .. C1t1Ce ....,_.., .. ...,... ,......,..lf...,,,~ .. , ...... u-. A petition has been flied by Crocker Natlonll &aftk, r-•1 "-Ille IJlllt ., "" 0r-.. uu.-... ~: .! • -1 by Mary Joenne McVlcktr Wllll1m Francis Ko•ter, ' ":::" C:. T'~Q..~ .,.._. ,,,,,..,• •* :.• u~ ...: In the Superior Court of end Shawn J~ Kttttr ._. _. _.. _. ... 9lllldl wttt ..._ .. o --... U4. ,,..... Orange County requestlnt In the Su_,.r'lor COUrt of ........ , .. .,, •l•"'••u •• "'• .....,. • •--. LN • .....,_ ... 1 h a t Ma r y J o a n n e Orange county r.C.uesttno 1 .. ,:,:::..-:;::-:::.<=:: "':: ...... ._ .. c.io•tt• McVlcker be appolntH as that croeker Natfonet i..-uw .. cw..._ • ........., 1111 ..._.. "' .. --. • ...., .. personal representative to Bank, WI II lam Francis TM 11Wrt111ry ..._ ......... M<•rl• ,__.. ... _ ... • "'' administer the estate Of Kelter and Stwlwn Joseph ••u ht• ... 11t cue11u •• ~~ i:-.: =:'; ~ Susan Gertrude Ackerman Kelter be appointed as ...,,111<".,.1111-:=...*'~~~~ .....,.., (under the Independent personal representatives 110 •• •9'•t•• ,..,, ..... , ,, 1iw '·TO TH• 11tftllOH~NT Administration of Estates to administer tht estate of .,,.., ~.:_•1&°! t.= ,.!c"'.,:;::: ,.i:,,: ~ ::',': ~t) j T~ pe~ont is set for Francis Edward K.elter ,. .., -•1t1e CMtt H..,...! .,, ... .._......,..~.,.. ar no n ,.,..,.. • No. 3 at (under the Independent .... ......._ ..,...._.. .... .._ • -11 ..,_, .. 100 Civic Center Drive, Administration of Est.tes *"...._. ...,... ... -.. -. r:· ,.. ..... _," .... ..., West, In the City of Santa Act) The petltfon 11 set for ._.-:.::.,,-:: :;-::.-:•.--:: ~,:::• ;::•:, :.!.,~ An a , Ca 11 for n I a on hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ,.....,.._eoedl...,....,.. ..... clftcor111ee ... 111• .. ., ... 1'1.,,J November 25, 1981 at 9 :30 700 Civic Center Orl'lt, _....., ._. ... ~ <Ni. c..-.., cM .. a .m . West In the City of Santa .J."~":::..,~._"'Q .:"~~~=.~.:: IF you OBJECT to the Ana', Callfornla on .,~ c-t. TN••"""""" °' ...... granting Of the petition, November 25, 1911 at 9:30 "'° ......,.-..,_ •• 11• ..-111e ......... .......,., ... ..._ you should either appear a.m . •• M. .... -................. cwnov••m•ONCll .... ,....,.1 .. at the hearing and state IF YOU OBJECT tb the =:,::::,.:""'"'.;-::;_...a:;; 'T.'i110 ..... n,,..,, your obJectl~ns or file granting of the petition, ... " °' .....,....,....,.. 1ocMc e..-LH A. •~CH. written objections with the you should either eppear .. 1.,., S-1• Me, co1H1r1110. "'" ~T 111 court before the hearing. at the hearing and state :'::::.::-'-""'''""•....,. ~ UNVC>M, Your appearance may be your objections or file COM ,LIANC r w1 TH 'H • .._..._.0r.,.c..toa11y Pltot, In person or by your written objections with the CALIPOlllNIA CNVllllON¥1NTAL """· "· "· M,"" 471'N1 attorney. court before the hearing °':.~~1~~;101 .. ,.,,.,.., .,. Na19'1C( C RI FE 0Y 10 U AR E A Your appwarance may ~ •••111tor11, ... "''"'""' caoA T 0 R or a In person or bY your nci111relll0fth IMI, .. ..,, 10 s.cu... •cnw.,....• contingent creditor of the attorney. t':;<a°'C'..:.-:'.!!;.:!...~.:-'~ __ ,_,,_..., decease1 d1, yo1uthmt,,.u_st fl!! IF YOU ARE A ..,. •u ___ , ._...,.,....,.. "" .......... ...-wo ..... your ca m w '"" cou. • c R E o 1 T O R o r a ,. ""'..._ oik • ...,_.., ... ..._.:. or present I t to the contingent creditor Of the ""'11 coou '"'•. ""'"' ue11 011d ... "~.-..n 1!0fMTI -~~·!,!!~ personal representative deceased you must file ..... ro1 ..._, "'1••1-• • ..,,_ .. -. -.... ,,,_ •p'"' I t d b th t ' .., •"""-"""" •"'M<ft tf "''' ......, CA. .. .-o n e Y e cour your clalm with the court ! ~t. , •.D. JMlll ~AICY, INC., within four months from or present It to the ... '*'---. -.. .,..,,.... =:::::.:,•7:f'A'.~~·=• the dat9 of first Issuance personal representative C:,~1= ': =:,.: .::= MW0t.c.a'.--.ea..... ·of letters as provided In appointed by the court fMteAno.c.1Wom1amw,..1er ... w s.111n1 "°"""-•· LIMI ... Section 100 of the Probate w ithin four monthS from ot '°"'~ °"· w. s.....,. .. ..-.r • .,,. c:oJwledl .. • ..._. Code of Callfornla. The the date of first issuance ::i:.11::_11oor1.,. •• •• ••1ttu-1 ~= ---.. ........... wt time for filing claims will of letters as provided In ,.., ,,..,. 1 .. ,., ... ,11 ... 0111"1 .. ,.,"" ,.'"'"• Cor"rot1•. not expire prior to four Section 700 of the Probate t••·~ ... 1111111 cPr•Joc1 P1a11111e1 L1"'"., ... ",.'· CA co111or1110 months from the date of Code of California The D1w1e1 ... 1. •11 "°""' • .......,, s..to ~..=e•>. • ......._ ........ he hearing noticed above time few filing clalm·s wlll ::_-~•111••111•· T•1•,....,,. 1710 n 11 .._,s11 ~.., • YOU MAY EXAMINE not expire prior to four .._1_ 0r..., c.st Deity., .................... -... he file kept by the court. months from the date of ....,.m.., it,"" ,;n,., ..,: M.D.,,... "°"'"""'· If you are interestH In the the hearing noticed above. lec.,uw ... ~~ state, you may file a YOU MAY EXAMINE HTta TOC .... TOCH TO THI! Clltl!OltotlS ~ *ILLIAM «. l!LllO\Htl TlllMfS,lllltOllt. ~IO SoctJ.-•ttS IN •107 of ._ Uel!onft eon-re ... CltiOa, .,_ era ll•rtflly 11ollflH u folJowt : T•ANSl'ElllOlll Is .-.,. le !Miio a tr ....................... ....,.... •• TlltANSl'blltEU · Ill _,. ... W o •utlllenllol ,..rt o4 ttM "'•l•rtolt, IUPPll••, ,,. .. , ..... dlH or olltor l11vafllory, •NI_....,....., Of tllot Certelft llrlclM .,_ liutlMI&, .._ °' ..,.., ••• 8rtllol "-otl Oii wllkll .. to<e• .. llllt •• 17111 strM4. Coolt ~.c-.ly.,Or ..... ~ .... ,......_.,_.,. ...._..-..a-of .. Tr•tfww ... T,......__, Wit"-I . Elloieuri, 2'0 I . 17111 ~. c.ta ..... GlllfonN ...,, Tr_....., KIHt H. _,. Ill* H • ._, 11111 D11e4la111, M••lltt1to11 •••ell, '91tfonlllflMJ, Tr--All ol-lllVSlllOH lle"'U 01141 oHY•s ... --,, lM TroMferor •'""" .. ...,. ~ .... .-t •• , .. .. ~ .... ,,......__:_. T"o fllwlk tr111•f•r h to •• ,_,.... .. .._Olicw......, worto, nao N. °'--. ~ AAe, c:-ty .. ~ ......... ., GelNwMe. ... oflOr Otco'"'9r '· ""· Tito I ... •r to ..,.., cl...,.. lft "''' oterow 11 No¥0fl'lllW .. 1"1. Do-...._.... s. ,., l(W1H ....... 1111\oH ..... Tr....._ ...... .... Or .... c-.t Dolly ... ..., ............. , .. ,.., """' .......... request w ith the court to the file kept by the court. C-::'0:::-~C:.,W:~ recei ve special notice of If you are Interested In the n, 11111. he Inventory ot estate estate, you may file • ,..,.. ssets and Of the petitions, request with the court to .. _.-.1.,... c.r-.. t:eest Dolly ccounts and reports receive special notice of ,.....,0ti.17.-..a. "·"·'"'•IMI escribed in Section 1200.S the inventory of estate Nal 1911( f the California Probate assets and of the petitions, -----..------Code. accounts and reports described· in Section 1200.S Jon J . Visel, Attorney at of the California Probate L•w, 400 West \oth St., Code. Suite 203, Santa Ana, Ca. 2701 ; tel: (714) W...1'J6 Keene & Dion, AttorMys at Law, UIJ W. CNtt Hlghw•y, Suite 411, Newport Beach, c.. '2663; tel : 645-4044 141 ...... CIOUln' l'0'9 TNe ._TAft Oii CM.1~114 Nit ..... CIOUWTVOP__,..I l•h...._ .......... ko\ ...... : ! I • .. ... ·~ >: .1• -I (' '7S.J41 I CHOICEIUY! • SI 04,900 Highly upgraded 2 Bdrm, Irvine Condo. Beautiful wall cover lngs, levelors, drapes plus pool, spa. rec room. Take over existing financing. Call for d~ tails ! 646-71 n THE REAL ESTATS:RS DECOIATOlt CONDO -SIS,000 Former modt'I condo in mint condition Hosts views or greenbelts and swimming pool Owner Will carry financuig w1Lh low down Call no~, @ SEACOVE PROPERTIES I 7'4-631·6990 4 IDRMS POOL-5PA Lovely 2 story home on . quiet cul de sac 1 I Eastside Costa Mesa Secluded master suite. I covered patio. Custom designed pool and spa Great assumable financ ing' Only $169.900! Call to see, 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATS:RS STEPS TO OCEAN LOW DO~ Owner will carry financ ing on this 2 story Spanish Villa Try 10', down on th1b one fountams. Sparu5h llle and charm !L's all here' Call now. only $449,000 @ SEA COYE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 CDM STARTER OML Y $240,000 Recently reduced S20.000 for rast sale ' As sume low intere:.t Isl and 2nd Motivated owner' Cozy firepla ce. Sparking lulchen Walk to beach! Call 673 ~so THE REAL ESTATS:RS $98,950 COSTA MESA Owner will carry rrnanc· ing with 1mall down ! 3 Bdrm. Well maintained Great bargain, iict now! 546-2313 SIS0.000. 20 room brick church. 10,000 sq rt. In· door basketball court. excel! condition 15r, dwn, 1211'( int use as heallh & fitness spii. llk1 lodge, condo conversion or magnificent home. Near Alta. Snowbird. Park City 11k1 resorts 1n H eber . U t a h 213 443 8262 o r 213 79 7 SO I O & ~~ llSTIUY Beautiful, 1mmaculale, nicely landscaped 4 bdrm home on cul-de· sac. Spacious rooms. View or golf course from properly Owner will help on finandng. Only $139,500 Call now '79·5370 ALLSTATE AfALTOftS MOW ts THI TIMI for job Hiiien to c~k tht 0•11 ly , Ptl'' HtlJ> w an&H c~ltioft rr tM job YGU wlllt ii DOl '"" ~ 111i111l t0'9· ·•••r: .,,.,,.. '°"' ~ wt< lft Id. n1. h b waaud Orang Coast DAILY PILOTfTuttday, November 10, 1981 THE REAL ESTATS:RS a~ COSTA MESA DUPLEX Great in\'estment -2 units -both 1denllcal. 2-Storv. 3 BR, fam dining. step-down ·LR w beaulif ul fplc. Close to Beach. S275,000 218 A & B Palmer. Na talie Benjamin 752·1414 11531 LEASE OPTION IN UNIVERSITY PARk 4 IR Exeter model a\·ailable on LEASE OPTfON. Th is single fa mily residence has a high loa n balance & low down will buy this home. Recently appraised at Sl6.5.000, it is priced to sell quickly at Sl58.900. Scott Alston 551-8700 11541 tE llDBll ILlllS ca. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE HEW OH THE MARKET Vou r Be droom. Three Ba t h parkling Clean Remodeled Home In Wcstcliff. Call For The Best T('rms In Town. Lease Option Po~s 1ble. $284.000. HEW WOODIRIDGE LISTING l-:xceptional Three Bedroom Home On Choice Corner Lot. Great Location In Beautiful Area Near Park & Co mmunity Pool. Master Bed room Suite With Mirror ed Wardrobes. Select Landscaping. Only $172.000. 'G) --·~·-. . 759-9100 #2 Corp011otertGG Newport CMtr • Low rMh • 0 Voc-.cy • Waltf.t Utt • UttftHtt ........... & ha wrlt...H. Fors.t..,c.a 714/760.7292 ..,. ... . LUXURY CONOO'S NEW! ~ rooftop ...... ,_., .,.. wfth a.y & Oce• vu· .. FWtt -•• a fWtll cMtolls. $369,000 -$439,000. 631-1400. BALBOAISLD.LOT-+-PLANS Dri .. by 309 S•pW.e wt 'caM for detolls. Plona for shtc)le f•. llomt apptoHd Ir ,..ody fo bllilcl. $345,000. WATERFRONT HOMES.INC. REAL ESTATI S...R..u. ......... ~, 2436 W C-Hwv 31S Mir1N IM l'Vwpor1 Bech a.. lllllnd 6Jl0 l4M '7Ufll BEASTS Of BUROEJI D 0 V R 0 A E H D E Y R 0 0 U T R I N K 0 l 0 l M T 0 E H R E S B M K E A l 0 P E A A A l R P 9 A Y B 0 0 0 M J H Y E B A F L £ A L Z D X H T l H ~ M R H R J B F L l T B A E X H A A K 0 E A A X 0 U U U l R W 0 M 0 F R S S E R Y A J B MLB EASTS 0 F BURDE NJG K B N X R l 0 B T A R H H E H N H R £ M M 0 W E Y 0 N B B 0 H K J A G 0 N l E UB MTBGAAOCAE EROAFB l K A C A Z R Y B V Y R 0 S Y Y F J J Y C I R W A K T N A H P E l E U A 8 V L E A U C N R E U N 0 R A 0 8 T 8 l K A C Q H 0 T S Q A P C J C T I R G N R C $ 8 0 A H T J R E N R E 0 M N I A E -: ..,........ . -.1, ""• dolMI or ~. flfld Md! d boa It tn. ,. Ya O.n W..~~ c.i.i McNw ,.... " Husky U-a..-t ~ Cantleo lllllt .,._ 00ftkey 01 D""'*Y T OlllO"VW: Alli FREE 1982 ROLLS AOYCE • TO THE NEW OWNER OF #41 LINDA ISLE . • #I Wates front Home on N•wport Harbor Pric.d for 91ick S•le •t • U•Ut•altle $800,000 BELOW mai appraisal Vacant -6500 sq ft. Waterfront Mansion will accommodate two 90' yachts. Indoor/outdoor pool and spa with sunken swi m·uP bar. Huge master bedroom commands breathtaking view of entire channel and John wayne's residence. Marble. mirrors a"d l olld wetnut wood throughout. Separate maid's Quarters . R••trding enterta inment and investment et•. 24 HOUR GOARD GATE in$ures 100% security .,.. .. privacy.~• Hice staircase "below waterline" teadl ~" large Wint cetlar and/or vault that will hold 60 CINI of ,..ne or G01.0. Seller must sett • -II carry 1H flntnctng With low down payment or Will take 2nd TO for._ payment, Or'trldt for income prOptrty. Once In• lifeline oPoortunttv lo own a "one in the wortd home." Stell I llilt:I of Newport S.ech. I WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 2 I I I SGf'I Jooquift Hilk Rood MfWPORT CENTER. N.I . 644·49 I 0 *WA TaRONT HOMh Detached 3 Br Com- munity tennis & pool ' Owner will CllJTY 121''. l$l T.D. $230,000 FE E. Walker &lee Real lstate 7S•·•SOI For Classified Ad ACTION CaJla Dady Pilot AD· VISOR 642.5618 RESIOEHllAl REAl ES TAT£ SERVICES CAMEO SHORES CORNER Overlooking Arch Rock & Catalina w/wh ite wat er view. Elegant 4 BR. + family & Dining Rms. + Exercise room off M BR. POOL & spa. Remodeled kitchen Security system & dog run. 3 t ar garage, too. $3, 750.00Q. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 ':~:ii' S©RotllA-~£~~· ::: l~ 1ry QAY • '°lWI ---- f n°tF1 I I OPATA i ·J _ I I I' I . ~ ZACER I!_'.' _I I I I . 01ppe1 Oan lool(lng ov.r a not to 1m111 d1t1Mr. "Tiit!'• a rtal 01 ht'• w11rlno, IA.It It'• a I,.. _0 _E_R_l_I -0---.f -· -~suit." I' I I I' I o ~Ti.:::-~~:~'::: You 6-IQll """ ..... ~ J beloiw SHAR, IASTSIDI 6-PUX OM&. Y I So/o DOWM Owner will finance ~o qualiried buyer. Well localed, good lookln& e units + 4 car garage + ample partJnr. Below 11 timesg~. Call nowMHlll , ! • ~~~,'!~~.~ I - ' Redh ii I~ f<t_·.1hy I ;7 :-; ~: ;111 I VILUULIOA Young people · pool your resources Ideal 2 bdrm villa for your first home. Fresh 111 a datSy. Ol>flls onto rlagslone patio. SJ48,000 assumable al 12'1 2nd Is available Price .S24UOO • *-Cote Realty & hwest mtnt . 640-57 77 • SJ0.000 DOWN, ~ per mo Gradouss BR. 2sly. Back Bay area Or, tue over 8Jo.' I.st payable S790 per mo. Asking 1260,000 6J1 ·72JS ·. 0 PPP 0 Q LA,&$£ ii& a 3 5 a I JS .... "" ---. ,....._ . ........_ ........... ,.. ............... OIMilell... ""'"U• •••• "-"U."8 J1hJ ._ JIA1I rlf lwet•-Afals11h...... ... .................. .. ....................... ....................... ...................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ...................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ro11D11 ... ......s. ,..,, Or1ng1 Co11t DAIL. Y PILOTrrueeda , November 10, 1981 ~~ .. !~!-rJ:•aa ,, ............. 7 .. ~W. JJl4 ............ JU ... ...,.._. JJffMIWNVflliill J76'ce.t..._ hl4MI•,......_. IUt l•alt,••!!'!!.:~ hi * 1..,111 ·~ • .. .............................. ~~ ............ , ...................... , ......................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.cl .................. Ill t..t-T ,,,, .............................................. W11l1lde 2 Ir. l la. 28Jt Oteaa View 21R, WSI ... CAHTOM Ocean .... 2bf'. I ta • I Br 2 81, baJCOfU', frplc. v g Jl s A J a. L E s Cll. PoS/mo ti. cut•:, a-. a bl la •q fl PAUllOOI • n clad I.,• I a ' newly rtdet l700 ht 11.200 Mo. 3 Bdrm a v • i l n u " iance. laundry tacit • PlfnHOUSE Aull Imme a 11200 mo Jll.000 dn. 0WM11 WILL SanLW.Rtr~ wHbtr/dr1er ert1, Commully. 4H 0201 1ownbOllH 011 aoll Wa•klty/mo. whaler iduli.•. nu pelt 149~ 2 Br. 2 Ba. carMt un11, Jbtlle)', Ml 816' or '111 lll·lm C•Y On GOii CourM. a bdrm flDCtd ~ yard MIO ot II _ courv. 2"' 8a "' DR. ral., 7 540@ ouan view S'1$0 Mo 1N•;.i:==------ Eu1 to bu latt IMdtl t ba, pool, apa. uau.ma' Mo. +MCUri\y 541-5'42 Lovely Gardtn home, New c.,,.._& paint OC£ANrRONT 2' •Br 2 Sr enclad l•talt . • Dn• rt. all; llA. llel 311t, 28• fam.U,y par\ ble lol.n at lK. ms,ooo. U7 &al.. 3W, tba, walk to pvt w.-M. TMlrC... Av~ll. Wint«. w ldy / Adulta noptts smtmo NO FEE! Apt 'Coodo Wbt II. \!uJ Intl • l.Jl Owne.r will hefp JOU ll Offer E11tt1de 18R bu. beach, tennl1, pool, Rea'tore~IO Moolhlv m.'7171. T7lW w' l ... _ 631·~--ntaJt VlllaRenlr.lt. &lu&.~-.,,-~---ltl '" with )OW•IOW soaoo Secure, jac. yrd. No 1uard IOIT)' no pett ---L ---~~ '"""!!"· ·~ • hcue Nwpt r down tSJ_,), ........ Ptta. Sln< only. s.150, '8(l0.all·23Z713M213 's.teA. UIO EASTSJO£ I Bt. Newly S75-4N B~r -Mt>!"':'>' fi I .::0 MUUtl.dM .... ...__ ••oo 211Sle•te. M. 11 T-n-hie .. b-r 1u.. ba ....................... ltf.• ts11h derorated Adult•. no Oceanfront for Wh!~te,r moa~~ r. Pi. ••.uwa -~ -"" .. ' " ' '"' 'a 8 2 Ba Trt-levtl Im· Uafw '* ~ pets. Re!riae. ABS mo Rental.a. F11mJ1 "" -.,,., ---·-• ....................... 4BR, t•nbou1t quiet Nl1uel Shores, 1ate m!culate' VIiia e Walk ............ ••••••••••• S450t()jJ, unlum~.rrs-e12_ , .. le/Female roommate ......._.._.,... Nelchbothood. ff~ mo. 1u1rded eomm, rec • ~ --- --p to abart I bdrm. 2 ba '7 I 4t 527-StOO UAVE PROPERTY? 831-1132 fee. Vl btaeh.•t~l ~i~:.h:::rllt. '1.!ic& ~!~ ..... ?~~ N~=u~'!:::=· v~:~1:~r~':!.' Av:n home In Cotta lfeu . WANTYACtrf? Nt1iw twnbae, 2Br 2ba, 2 Mlt.._Ylefo 326 aec.S§HllOevn. 2 8R S400. fl l Br l3SO evnorweelcends now!J760.8'15<37 ~m ·7113 H ~VEYAC'..... car l•r, I Ir Jae. •••••••••tt••••• .. ••••• 11t_ ........ L -J-6 Stove & ,..,4 UUI pd. E-uld 8BR2 8~ 2 BR 2 0. condo newly Share lbd 2ba apt, non " na 1 ~o 875-7083 HOMES FOR RENT _,. .,.. 69 Yrl.y &42-1334 851·118811 " • a, • y, iC J. 1rnkr pool, or S.C.P. WANT PftOPt:RTY? 3 B~ 2 Ba, xlnl faml'u a Bdrms . S850·$fl75, ........................, encl p11llo, 1600 mo. painted1 cp(I, fp • 9QO • ~+'•!50 . 754-'7028 SteP rltt.LN M OJ Fen ced ardi & Laguna Bcb. Historic .... , ..... ll07 ,!4;9-0991 ~I~ .NS-1528 ~ 114~7 nbrbds en Vtrde 1•111ee. Kfi:ta It pots Soc. House for lellle, 2 ....................... 2 Br. 2 ba rondo near So 2 Br 2 Ba. D/W, relri&.\ Female to tba.rt ff.Bch 1600 I ).UIO area. maU lenced fn we:lcome. 545,2ooo. bd. atudlo 2 ba .• den. Lux. 3 br. 2fuU ba, frplc, est. Plaza,S.A, Prof, de frplc, no pet& 11125/mo. Apt. $100.~~ble. OCIAMNW ....................... Exch. El Nlfuel Golf con· ~ lll'a "'°· o,vid, A ent no fee. ~In., Uv. rm w/ fp. llOO. beamed ctlllnr· Yrl)'. cor. Pool. sp:a, sauna. 979-8574 dya, &4MUI c--CNd••W-/fow• d f 1 I ""' Id 2B R d '•Exec ...... , view 4bd 1nc. gardener wa.sh/dry, ·l'4l 71 .»!5. Deb,540-C702. ev 6AY 1001 IU.TI ~ I ...___."--·..a:... 1700 o or ncome un l• • ., • e. ,y ' car, .,.3ba, A1c' •.· _-......... fam' din·. no util. No kids/ pell, by c.._. .. ..._ JIU -.u., 2 br, adul•·. ~,. -t·. EA.STBLUFF lbr •• pool, CONTACT:' ·-est Gay Beaullful Vtrnll u _. _._ equity IUS.000 princ on-patio, "85 Also Bach. ,..... owner 49'-7'18 or (213) ._, "' "" ..-"' --• Penthouae. 2 bdrm, 2 ....................... ly, 6"·7917 1375 utll pd. Kids, -pets? Lake riv . 581-2493 """030l ••••••••••••••••••••••• car. Eul.Side. Water pd. quiet area, suwe adult, Ihle/Female Service ln baUi O wtU .... u... A llil -""'" 2 Br, 2 ba, btaut. view ol 548-9441, MHlU no I.I mo. M4-476'7 So . Ca I. C . R C . lJtT'o WJICI" Urry ...,.. • •fflht• @!:..'320 • · ~IMdt l26t Wttt•.-.r l2tl bay, private. Oaraae. Newer l Br & aara"e 21J • SZ!e.SOO. Waterfront community W.ttct • 2900 3 Br & detached I& rum· •••••••••••••""•••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Refri1. $900 mo. . " •. OCIAtROtfT Y --rl-y-. N..i:e~a:!.tcM::::/:;:iF=a;:::hr:.:......3B_R_, Redhill ~~f{c.1lty I;~.·: ; : :1 I() i~~~ ~(~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pus rm, 18 baclt yrd, Ltase exct Unda hie 6 HOMEFORRENT .Ml:2086· Adults,nopeU.$380/Mo Avail. Dec.lit.Spacious 2~BA Condo in NB • • · Will buy your Npt ff.CU or clote to tthls. Stable, Br S Ba, formal din, 3 Bdrm. ts25. Fenced 2 Bd, steps to beach, 1695 IKS·M77 4 Br 2 Ba. Upper, frplc, w /Boat Slip. S400mo s~me loaJJ & owner as· Costa Mesa property mp. famit.y oo1y Avail F.R., guarded gate, ten-yard Ii carage. K.uls & Ask for Darrell, act meat;BJllf washer/dryer, 1ara1e SlSl finandns. Res •fl direct. No cornmw1on /mo. 665-1809--i nls, Mach, room for 2 lrg pets welcome 545-2000 S3H26S Submit on children & Encl 1ar. 2S-40 Afler ~la.!_~asz72. -Curt,642-55$4 3BR w/decks 3BA 2 boats.~ pr mo. Bob A&ent.nofee. TOWHHOMIS pets $1500/Mo TSL SPM.'7S.Xl.3 '!ll!!l!l•M•R•!!!!I ONLY $10,000 DOWN. -· frplc. encloaed yd, d.blel o7.r;, o22ovte Koop. agt Lg-1 Bibouserearbouse. Nice . clean 1 Br .• NEW CONDO FOR Pro rtle .. C-1603 NB. super creat view. IN HY HOMES MacArthur Villaee. 2 ll.... gar, lyr oldcommuruty, _.1 1 (2 on lot) 13913 Bush enclosed garage, patio. RENT 2 Br. t Den, 2\.t 1375 mo. Matun adullJ, rum. 2bd .• 2 ba. bou&e $235 000 bd, fuU rec .. l2Y,<:\ •s· ....................... pool/apa/track. Near WESTCLIFF 3 bedroo!1', $3SOtmo.~l.Ol14 t~~/~o M ! r5le!:r~t~: Ba. S695/mo Obi gar. no kida. Qwet & secure. Prof. male . M&-BQS.S On r land •wtll lo ed sum able. Own~r wlll tto.Mtfw h .. d S.C. Plata. S850. mo. I story with pool, fam1ly -frplc, poo1,spa 1991 N~wporl Blvd. Male to lhr CdM home. exc'f11ni hoJe ' carrysecond.Pnv Pty ........................ IM-2882 room.Zfireplares,din-Ho.MIFwlll•dor _548-2778. 668W.18th. 645-2739 646.8373 myhldeawaypad.2 Br l ManlAured 1-....a·Aap•Ra ·• Call 540.8100 -..._ ,.._. 3106 LUXURY 2 Br 2 Ba ,..__ ing room, 3 patios, etc. Uwf•"' h• llOO 2 Br. 2 Ba. Cloaeio beach. Full "'·c. lBR. Versailles ba all the aoodies. Short. ~ cu.u~ u•e ~ • . '-""' .. A ....... .,..0 ,,."' ••77 ....................... 1 year old. $700/mo. 411 I D I "" 1.. b h 1335 su1Toundin11 private spa ••• ....................... do, frplc, garaae. pool, '"~· ,..._,,.. ._.._ · p . ti C 11 J k' Eastside-g 2~~ natura Condo. Includes D11 wa • lo c · · off master bdrm. Very • 1100 Large 4 Br 3ba. $1400 mo. j a cu z 1 I . S65 0 Imo. omset ~· a ac ie w o? d c e 1 .11 n 8 s & hwuher, Frid&e, Bit in ...::873""'·._·"53.;;..-."-------convenient to commW1i-........ , .. -............ I bllt to bay. Bllins, 642-5290. llG CANYON leecJi Sptdlllh al67S-0124. cabinets, ut11it1es pd Bar. SSSO Mo. Roommate needed for typool&greenbelttrea. IHFLATIONAGHTll! W/D,673-6163 3 bd rm, 3 ba bl·level Luxurious. Three SUMM•·WINTll CoatoM... 3124 25 mo5SJ.1660 752·23UIDays. pluah new duplex on ~kaboutthesellersas-l2 Units, Costa Mesa. Caplatr..oleodl3111 twnbme, upgrade, priv bedrooms. Two baths. YEA•LY·COMM'L •••••••••••••••••••••••Clean 2 Br t. Ba, &ood 1 br apt w/at.ove, refrig. Ocean Front Balboa s1sta11ce on fl.nanclng. Assume contract S370M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• d. r c. . 8S1·9980 . Richly decorated. Muted NIWLY DlCOI. E.s1de location. newly prkg. on Peninsula. Call Peninsula. Yearly ren- 752-1700 14 yr1 lO"/o. $12$M dn. Duplex /guest hse. Jbr,2 ba.BeawruJ,com· tones. 3000square feet. 1 Br. gu pd, encl gar painted. $475 yrly No 67S-06l2art. m. tal,1367mo.673-1732, THE REAL ESTATERS Owner 631·2150. _ Pansades. 2BR, lBA. pl. redec. home. 894 Overlooks 10th tee o! d/waaher, pool. Adulta ~ts. Call ~6'!1.Q 3 Br. 2 Ba. Garage. Year Luxurious Laguna home/ IKOMProperty 2000 ~5eg3:;t(B~~· ~~ey~ Wilson. ~.55001 golfcourse.$2100month. 642·5<n3. COZY-BRITE lBr nr ly, 2 blocks to beich. non-smoker/ claulcal ....................... 661-6258 (Gwen} Charmine 2 Br, Eastside, l~!~~Y v!T:.e~ :i:;: 2 Ir. I la AM stores & bu.~. Adlts, no 673-2571. music. P50. '94~ll6 MAKE AN OFFER! i...-Jl .. 4 Mamed ceillnas. fen~ed day 1.5_ To see call COIMlo•I d 8 Newly decor. C:as pd. pets $33S,64.S-78J6 . -. -s..c....... 1176 4 bd. 3 ba .. to abate w/ 2 --------I"-.. yard, pet & child 631.7300,Realtor. encl aar .. pool, dshwr. New Bachelor. Es1de. ••••••••••••••••••••••• others on Bal. ls. $225. HADY MOW 3 ln"ome Propert1'es ........................ welcome. S0·7855, u .. t .... d 1425 Adults.642·5073. Quiet, patio, workmg 2bdrm. l ~ba, ocean mo . u t 11 111 t & Moverightintothisim-East;ide Costa Mesa Wooclwidp 831-6814. . 2 1. 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• gentleman S3SO , vlew,frplc,laundry.no last/sec.dep . 675-maculate 2 Bdrm, den 20"'r down. Owner wtU Townhouse, furn for 3 br., pool Mesa North 4 Br . ..., Ba. Yeary, a HOHEOF 31rTo•a•• 5,48-0908__ II 75.493-2710 6782/Blll.67~S1'90wtt. condo A one owner unlt carry. lease. 3 bdrm, lu ba, ~/mo. 1182 to move ~a~~i~~ ~~a 'J:~ THILUCIYFIW ~:~IY111~~poolr. ~':s.::~: JBR. IBA, Patio, new 2bdnn, Iba, ~an vie14 • F to sbr beaut.-decor. with cathedral cetlinas pool, jac, tennis~ per in 631.6994or6'2 5497 Brolter 67S-49l2. Rent in Costa Mesa's d carpet, lots of Glass laundry, gar. No pe~ 3br, 2ba home, nr OCC. andlike·newappliances J mo. Avail 11/lS Call LovelylBr.famrm,Sol NEWEST gated 20 A ullS.642 50'13. Upstairs Avail 12 15 .c9J..2'7tO. J.J.966-8410,76'-SlO Owner will assist In NEI&5f.R11.1 I SS2-4399forappt Cst Plza area S7SO, LUXURYIAYAlOMT Townhome VILLAGE Spacious 2 Br, I Ba PIS $310 .r_......,, Jll-6 WiU shr 2 br 2 ba lux financing. 'call Jackie ll-3 Br 2 Ba. with boat slip. COMMUNJTY. 2 & 3 Br. 3 Br, 1i,., Ba k25 Laun-_ ~ 64().858S ___ _,. L091'9 Nwet apt ;,/matur~ Penney LCICJ9MI leodt l 141 966-2754 or 833-8686 2n Ba. 1600 -1800 sq fl dr f ac. S48-9S56 .. ••••••••••• .. •••••••• 1 -642 5200 •••••••••••••••••••••••Mesa VerdeJB.:-iBa. Avail -now Many ofpurel"'"'""',Carages, D .. PoW l126 Oceanfront Sml lBr emp woman, -1mo. • aJJfij.llfHJ) B(. Cozy Laguna Beach 2 Fam Rm 2 "'-k's, 2 amenities S3SOO Mo -~, Fireplace. pool. pvt ....................... stove & refrtl 14 fum.M0-88113aft.9a.m. j PETE ' BARRITT bdrm, 2 ba ~ avaiJa-' '., Broker~-hydro-tubs in master pa ho, dishwasher. on 1 BR t Ba. D/W, ref rig, aara•e. MCA/-~st l5t, FUm 3 BR Home ln CdM. TI~ ~I 0763 car ear Gardener $1195 suite, formal d1n1ng E.s1de, aU In x lg t & 2 " • .,_, "'"'-"' 29b College AH• ble for rent Furn. close Sierr a Mg ml Co.' rooms. wood burning B d pt.s Fro bltna, 1395. 1 BR I Ba, security a2951 S350 mo. co,ta Mei.a C \ to downtown & near 641-1324 OCEAHFIOMT flreplaces, micro-wave ~g::7 :.,a m $3!!0mo. 951-7630 • ...,... ... ,_.IMd u 780-Clllllu .. REALTY IJ!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ml!!!!!!!!!!!! I Sf.-Ulffs •-------• i' Only $95.000. 2 Bdrm & l Bdrm unlts. Owner will l.clttlor c.do, r finance at low tnlerest Newport Beach locauon, 1 rate. Owner mot.iv1ted ~K down. assume low I Make an offer. interest loan. Communi-. ly pool, spa, &: sauna. I Asking S99.W> ~~~;fl.o,~ow Beach. B:Joro JZJ2 HOME ovens. fenced patios & 2 Br 18";" S4SO . l..,tiiw)toalletd 3140 """';;u .. fwW.thd 3900 F shr 2BR CM Apt ....... ~•...--&. 316t •••t•l•O•M••E••ro•••R••R•E•NT•••••• 4 bdrm , 2 bath, com· yards Priv~ .. eleganl Matramoruocon2runos. ••T•H•-;,•••.,.••;:-;,:,.::;,.:•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• J0.9P~~ .. .,,-,.,. .__,...... • .....,. pletely remodeled, living oo.t.Y L5 minutes 2043 Wallace, Costa ,.,w ~ '"""' S E A WI lli.J D ....,.._, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm '675 Fenced bltM.frplc,SlSOOmo. from Fuhlon lsland. 7 Mesa 548·1546 & LUJturyAdullunlt.sataf-" Prof. F 27 yra. w/son LIDO ISLE charming 4 yard & garage. Kids & LIDO ISLE minutes toS.C. Plaza or 63l-21.SO. fordable living. l.2 & 3 • VILLAGE seeks nice resp. M toshr bdnn,2~balh,lrgsun-pets welcome. 545-2000 IA.TRONT oc Airport.J11.1lea&tor STUNN ING I rge 1 & 2 Br. Well decorated New 1&2 bdrm luxury apt1hou11. I have au d.!c:r'at::d ;~;,~ ;;~: Afent, no fee. 3 bdrm , 1 blllh, frplc, New~rt Blvd. & so. of Br 2 Ba C~rden Apt Olympic sifA! pool, light-adult apt.sin 14 plan.~ 1 fumishin 842·5008 Yearly . Bill Grundy, 2 b4rm. 2 ba. 2 car gar, bltns, SllSOmo. ~an Diego~rwy. Sta~· Pool 710 w 18th St · ed tennis court, Jacuizi. Bdrm from $490, 2 bdrm rem to shr w/same 2 air cond. Stove, fence. ine 81 Sl a mont · ---· -· -· -park like landscaping from $570 Townhouse Br/Ba, MicAJ'tbur Viti. 675-6161 S52S Condo 631·5439. 2473 Orange NEW BREED APTS. Most beautiful bldt! in from 1640 '+ pools ten $%75 + ulil, 21.30966-0588 Want something xtra Days~D-&74~~~ Ave.,C~ta Mesa_. _ I BR with LOl"T & HB. Generous rent. al-ms. waterfalls, p;,nds' s peoe i al in a 2 Br. -3 BR Bradford. hot tub, BACH from $3.50. Frpl~. lowance. Cu for cooking & heat-Female pref. 3 bdrm hH, Townhouse, completely Fo.tel• Y.., 3214 view, 2 car gar. II'> ba, rec room , pool, Jacu~u. 846-0619 Ing paid'. From San ~:~': J~~P~~~~ fum?$895.Mo.76(>.9117. ....................... pool.S62Smo.Nolsere gas & water paid DiegoFrwydriveNorth 1-.--------iPark·like Setting. 3BR, Lid 11 o ... # l aBR JDL 957_51B7·SU.662:2 Adults, no pets. 393 MARINEISWAU 00 Beach to McFadden Bch. 957-0720, eves 1• 2~BA, Tiburon Con· o s e '-l'ron -.=.i..:::--H!mlllo.n... ~~· 64.5-4411. 2 & 3 Br:. To~house then West on McFadden 848-7902 Jim or Bret On 8ay28r2ba dominiurns. New Paint 4ba.den,attacbed3car To...a.OttM 323 E. 18th. 2 Br. 1 car Apts. Patios. smgle & to Seawind Village RespF/rmteshr3bd2ba Sl200monthyrly & Carpeting. Family garage. Pvt. beach. U•f•m.:d 3525 icarage 2 lads OK no double car garages, I (714)193-5198. NB apt nr Bch 1325 mo. IY OW'HEI On Waler2 Br2ba rm, Patio. 2 Car Car & $2000/mo yrly. Pvt pty. ....................... pets M25 Sierra Mc' ml near Hunt. Harbour. --642-7504or726-2091 9••'t loan oo contract Laguna Oceanfrool ear .. adwu ooly, Stt -·----••••••••••••••••••••••• -.~ 612Cal~Campana,San 2Br2ball000/mowinter l ... tis:gl•IHda 3240 .5 ateCallPaID-&19-0068 Unfurn 2 bdrm No lHdy·._.•l.l La unaBeachMotorlnn. tor•• 050 4·Plex . S2L200 lncome. SllOOmotomo. Pooi.962•7470 548-8221 3 br, 2 ba.~.wasber, enc Co 141_1~ · Cblldren MO-ala7. lloo.t 4000 Clemente. 4200 sq ft Waterfront Homes, lnc ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIWPOIT tfG.H1 -children or pets Isl. Adult over-«> communl ~ No Pacific Coa~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• _!?49,,500. 714'498-5007 _1 6l1·1400 HOME FOR RENT I Llke new, custombalh fbuilt113 • .....,...,... ,_.shed last, f.40!.mo6'S-03_Q _ ty. Immaculate 2 bdrm, Hwy Laauna Beath NEWPORT HEIGHTS 4 Bdrm 1615. Fenced bedroom,2 ,orm ...,.-~ 1 ~, ba Huntington · lfiO/MO. SOHIMCtyDph 1-----.----1 yard Ii cara&e Kids & dlll.ing room home. Eat· 1·•••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdrm. 2 bath wtpvt L1ndmark Condo Daily, Weekly, Kttr~n 64.S-5UD E 11 t d a. --- ---•• lcom S45-2000 I rno area I.JI latchen Bay IGIMHI klmld 3706 patio. Earh bdrm w/pvt W h & D 2 available Low Winter [)N\.lll~" xce en con on •LIDO 3 br. den. FR .• 2 ~';n~:ofeee. . vi:W SISOOmontb Year •••••••••••••••••••••••!sink Laundry hook-up :s erelb :1rerR& rates 494-S294 Office•~ 4400 ~ arres.$14.5,000Assuma. ba,longterm.S.1800. I 1 lease 6317300 2bdrm,lba,Palio.park No pets. S<l75 769 pa1os,w ar. in Newlyde<'01"11ledpn1 11te ••••••••••••••••••••••• RE~ l T 0 R S ble 1st 169,000 at 81 '»'· in-LJDO 3 br, 2 ba, Lrg 4 BR. 2\.iba, 2 stry, 3 car 1 RY 1 · · mg no pets Ai ail now to llam1lton Rear unit 2· B 0. 2 car gar ~7S per & b th r 1 S28S 1617 WestcllH N.B. Want PICTUllEPllRCT teresl. \707 )887-7652 -patio . Sl3SO Agt, gar, avail now. Walk to l fl wr Ju~e 15th $450 mo lmmed ocrupanry mo lst&last + S300sec ~~s u~11s' t1csts1d~ financial 11151. 7000s.f. 1 24 Units 0 C. 23'l down 1673-9060. bch. no pets. $800, 20271 675_0349 963 8112 d e p·o s 1 t . C a I I 1st. floor. A&enl5'1-5032. Pr 01 e s 5 1 0 n a 1 Y equals positive, 8.S X gr ~=c=..:..._____ Brentstone Call Stan lASTILUFf -----(114)759-4381 Ask for C.M. 645-0108 landsca~ front & rear I John646-1600 a nl \u---· U....,.IMd 968-7307 I 3 bd 2 b h Costo Mftoa 3724 2bdrm twnbse. mature Mr Blr!gbam Call 8·5. C.M bdrm, pvt bath, kit HEWPOIT Very pnvate entertain ---~ ---rm , a ome, ••••••••••••••••••••••• :idults only, no pets. ------priv M or F S2L5 mo PEMNSULA mg patio and pool area 3 TllPLEX ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• New 2 bdrm, 2\lt ba on I g1rdener 1ocluded SHOO 1 .. .._1 :...t...• 5425 mo 7M w l8th St Unrum1shed I, 2. & 3 br rt S overslied Br & 3 Ba Newport BchCliffba\'en G..,... 3202 lagoon 21 blk beach. mo dnys 759-9065 . ___ ,., .. ., 6469~7 I ASPEHPACIFfC 631·0261a · m. Spacious executive·of. arge 1tc en am1 y area,3BrJ..2Brun1ts.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,......,.,~.....,.........., .,.. -·-" 1 _ ~ 1111'""' ~ L k. h f I II a•" """'a. a"" U>fon '"0 9019 .o.aft.. N1~n Bach Apl for I J '2j lt 5 .. 9L7~0~--Room and bath. S27S in fices acrou from City room . Owner w1 II w,garages. pallos, )'ds. RENTALS •CLOSE TO BEACH • Lido IM AMbcasodor I• Adult No pet. Ut1ls inrld Deluxe poolside xtra cludine utililles Hall. All services availa- flnance . Slll,000 Older but very well Yearly-Weekly· Winter, Exec, 3 Br 2ba. fam rm. 4 bdrm. 2 ba, newly re-Frottl $95 wNt&Jv gas & water. Frplc & large Zbr. 2 ba, bltns. 7SO.IBIJafterS ~!~it:o~~°'!~·~~a: D.M. ManW Rttr ma1nt. 1225.000. l,,ease 2,3,4, Bdnns. .!!P.!_~ntr!J .. 1'..m. 963:.Sl!U modeled Lease. d a Continental breakfast j patio S380/mo Call dswhr. 1•2 mJles beach Fountain Valley home, rentals. No leue re- 760.0135 h<!!_d Bkr/owner646-•~ JACOBS REALn HOME FOR RENT 556-2075. ask for Debra. M-F. recreation room, Ii t w n 9 AM · 5 PM Adlt5, no pets S4SO mo kitchen pnv Bath, pool, quired, call673-JOOZ s..toAN 1010 LohforS. 2200 PROPEITYMGRS ed rd & . --Maid service and . --call PM. •DELUXEOfRCIS• 5 Bdrm. Pool. $950 ev&75-l692 pool: TV, laundrymat. I 64.5·6404. ~!!362 _ _ sauna. S25()1mo. 963-1512 - . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67~6173 Fenc ya garage 3Br.2L2ba,poolandrer kitchenette available Es1drupsta1rs2Br1Ba. 2BR.TOWNHOME &b 1 413 Nol I Lake Arrowhead lob For Kids & pet1 welcome area Newport Terrare. Great conv location. 2277 S425 1ut1I p~. sgl car Pool. park. near beach FP~~. ~v~s~ry , aki~~~ ql.~lred~"!!i. Ajerpoasert':;. Y OWNH/$90,000 inf 0 and maps ca II Back Bay on Granada 5"5·2000. A enl no fee. ..till.Lmo. CaU64.S-S41J Harbor Blvd. 64.S-4840 gar~e. I child OK 169 91l:t5191 . W lk t OCC ,_, ~g B.~a~db,a,s~~~~hrt'::'!: o< 7wln• elr9/6b3r-02 kl 8e 8r I wM· odaye/n r':ty~ i,.,12.b~ 2 bd .. 1 ba., dbl gar .. lS Harbor View Homes. 48r PRIVACY Comfort 2BR Ek dalnut 540-3666 dys., PANORAMIC VJEW prt~;,,o :..,.~ . S~~e\J~-9-12.B h So p ., min walk to ocean. No 21,\ ba. 2300s /f, $1295, lg f C · -smk w n_!.548-4471 __ Large 2 bdrm, 2 ba, nr · · ., p. un t. c . patio. 2219 . arton . .!_213~---sq.ft. lot, $1100 mo. lS. .964-228.1_ yard Gardener, sec. ~· pl .n ~2323 2 Br I Ba. encl gar, l Huntington Harbour Prof. person, refs req Carpet, drapes, air. Call6Gl·HXl9afl m. 4 acres of land Newpor1 .:64S-:!!:..77:..:.!::83:..i~M2-=.,.,l.366=---4BR. Ba"', Pool. tennis system, 2 fireplaces. -clean, quiet.,adulu only I _!4<H970 96<M370 pooFu'f. J!~~yr:. wp,~klg, 1730l Beach.842-21M. Beach OK for Condos lcAooP..-.... 3207 Court. 2 mi to Beach. _lmmed.~up.644.:i966 LocJ-o leadl 3741 279 W. Wilson JtD , Oceanfront vu. 2 BR. im-.. 17TH~ Otlwr Rtal lstafe OffiAe 'or MediAal Bldg' C und Ki"· OK e..iCJ11 ""<l819 667-6096 836-81184 Dme • ·-• ~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Play ro · U3 Beacon Bay. 3Br 3ba. 18 •••••••••··~··••••••••,• ~mo~---mac. sunny, bltns. cpl3, • ' COS,. ... ..-.r.o. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 641·0763 StepstoBea .... Cute,lBR N ,..... U.. d Luxury studio spa T\ E SIDE C M Ver• ,,,......_ ~,.,_ 0 ""-"'new msi e fl dock. tennis, 2yr lse · · ' ' Utt 1rff. A.try drps, lndry. sWldttk, clo ' 2 or 3 room office suites. ~sit!-' 1100 VISTA-2 5a('re Viel4 Sile Duplex. Ubl paid Yrly 531-2545 I SISOO mo ~17 maid service, phones. t • 2 BR' l gar M amed cpl, no spacious! Very pnvate' A/C, plenty of prt~Ulil Zon__. 10 uru'ts acre OK 210 '4th sl SS30 mo 3 Br 2 Ba Condo Ill xlnt -JU5_wk 499--2227 o r h d I a Pl s luds .,..ls SS20 536-2131 Own entrance Homey 111· cl. Av'""'l now. C ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""' 1 XI 673-79S4alter3PM EXECHOME BeautJJullyfum Swte 2 w cat era cei ing. -~ -=---1 w/frplc Cal pref S300 •• 0 CE A~ FR 0 NT SPR or Twnhse . n1 AvailNovStb. loooc m~l.~i"lties HAllOIYIEW Br 2 Ba. Spa, Sauna, frplc. gar. pool & spa. Cu1elbr,~blkstobeach., lst/last req 6463315 Realonomics 67~ LAC UN A SCH, new Investment. Will ~~II •WALK TO BEACH• 4 BR 2"'i ba. family rom. Sa lei I ite TV. maid Audults, no pets ~ & StS325.,Jn.,~re al S04 Mam wknda/e~ Share 2 ofc suite in pre. from S29.900. rent $400 w terms or trade 1 P Coro.ct., Mii' l2ll . S p . ~ C sUfious airport area. 375 mo 499-3816 559·9265 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br for quiet single, din rm. 2300 sq.ft SJ.275 service 1000 'mo 549-1.447 L b condo b I I Rm in lge house nr ()(,' .,, ft . For dft.a.ils caU mo. Dnve by first 1806 499-2227. -----ae 1 r · a c.. for resp empl non ""' Viking Mobile Home * MEWPOIT HACH CDM Meariw Mew carpets, drapes, stove Port Abbey, call 752-6499 ....... .............. 37-69 28r, ulll pd, $420 mo. pool. sauna, DW No I s m o k er N ' < e _,&:.;1~-6226=:.:.·-----<doublel. 24XOO. 2bdrm, Residential loc.s. L4!1el 2 bdrm, 2 ba, ~car gar $350 . 421 Lake NO -----~ .-w,.rt--... Quiet adh over 30, no ~· $425. 842·700 · hborbood ......,. 1 NEWPORT BEACH 504 f b I I 1700 DOCS """'""""". OCE ....... &MTYU •••• •••• ••••• ••••• pets. 3•3 C1br1llo. • -neig ....., inC' No.Ne--Blvd.180to 2ba , upgrades. Palm ready to bwld From pc, a cony, se '7<14'",._ "'" .. tt.t-.... ul ~7 8390 -..-· Desert '65,000 Beaut $130,000 ea wJterm~ &. mo. Ml·4693aft6 New 3 Br. Condo, beach New deluxe 2BR. 2BA 5'8·9516 H "?if'OI' 3142 u s __:__ 1500 sq n. avail. at~ a park on Hwy 74 Great some subordination Co. New 4bdrm.2'hba. Wallc a re a . 17 50 Mo Great deck & yrd. Ser Westcllff area, Cozy •••~••••••••••••• X.blnal lone &H 0 roo,.m.M14 pnVot sq fl. Sierra Mgmt Co view of Mts & valley Op Bkr 714 1851 1~38 to beach. seso. Fridge, _2_131865_..:,4180 gate 1950 Adults. Bach, upper at 1285/mo. 1 & 2 Bdrm apts, near k't'h r 64&,1o3s ..;;64;.;..;;..1·""1324=------ Encl with lost of days . 6 4 0 -035 2 eoclgarage.7ii0-0909afl 1"-. 3244 1·830-6934, 642·8808, utilsincld. Huntington Harbour _!L_en. · DANA POINT 250 ' I a n d s c a p i n g _.e,m_Lwknds -"s______ ....................... IWHl722 Charming Duplex 1 Br. 13751 $49S. 84().l460 Room in large house. 1175/mo. 500• S350/mo. 0 w n er I A 8 1 2bd · t' d ""·-home.new3br,3ba. Nwpt Crest rondo, 3 br. frplc, patio, beamed l"IM JI .... C.M.lmllefromO.CC 34210 Violet Lantern ( 7 1 • ) 5 5 I . 0 1 8 8 . Mowltain. Deterl, rm. gsgan IC en. • .. n . I .... 10 mo tw.7 39M .. Resort 2400 frpl c, 707 Acacia 1· p k I 2~ ba. 6 Kamalii Ct. ceilings, ut1ls inr d. ...,_. 975-1120 (71.)S68 .,.,,,4 pa 10. gar. ar , poo . ....w: ••••••••••••••••••••••• N' f -'·hed 1 ~"""""-=------.. ;_R• . ....................... ti!!"'/mo. 84().81117. ac 75 mo ID3 9067 ~mo. 962-0778 ..,.. .. /mo. I-"-2 ........ d ., tee U1111'> room . n N~ me 511 ~ -' · · 64S 1439 art6 ""'e s..,.,, en um · private home. Costa ""' --------Custom Home-Joshua JAS MINE CRE EK Woodbridge dbl 1ar, 3 br. "••port Shont YEAR-ROUND FUN: ·---· --Lofted bdrm. 1 ba. Up· Mesa. Call after 6i>m Luxurious 383 sf o(ftce ASSUMAIU Tree 1300 sq 2BR, 28A. guarded comm. ocean 2 ba. Adj/pool & park. lmmac, 2 bdrm. den. 2 Social Acli•ihes 01 2 Br. upstairs, stove. grades, prtv patio. pool, 5'8-6892 avail. for sub-lease in BANKREPO-Lowdown Terms. ~5.000. Eve, vlew,pool,tennis $1750. 75.768-77'44746. ba. Priv tennis, pool. ~~~~~F:~~~~a? adults, ref's, couples tenniupa.$525.731-4010 oneofNp\s.exculstveof- to good loan. low pay· 1-~ .,:)640-=-=12::12:...... _____ Rancho San Joaquin 3 fpc. SHOO mo lse. ( (213 ) P1r11es •Plus mor~ .,.P!ef.!.~/mo.846-872'7 home, 732-9588wort Hohlt, Motets 4100 flee compltJtea. Ajrport ments 2Br. 2Bn late Viking Mobile Home FronlHouse.2BR,1BA. bdrm , 2~ bath s . SllS-5646 OREATAEa!EATION: EASTSIDE-2BD,IBA 1--•--.1. Jl41 •••••••••••••••••••••••close. Includes . model dbl wide Great d bl ) ~·v60 2bdrm c A ail n... 1 · ln DUPLEX ......--._ Uve on Newport Bench R 1 / h I ou e • MA • • ar space. v ~ . fl replace, vtew, x t con· Harbor View Homes renn.s •Free Leuons •••••••••••••••••••••• • It • e c e p p o n e park.MISU~~..... 2ba , upgrades, Palm S600 mo. t.st, Last. Sec. dition. Adults, no pets. SBR,JBA,3carGar. 1p10 & p10 shop>•2 Fireplace. built in gas Ocean View. Deluxe 1 &2 ~00{~ ~n~1~n~l~ •Utilities •Janitorial .,_" Desert 165,000. Beaut D r i v e by . 7 0 6 mo. 9293 Cul·De·Sac. S1400mo HeatthCllJbs•Saune kit., one car enc. gar. Br. Apts. Newly d~at-~:.,. · • 100 free copies/mo. IWTOIS park on Hwy. 74. Great Marcuerile. Call for Days.~9362 • Hyoiomassage • Super sharp! 2QIOSanta ed. refrige, dishwasher. 0 •Amp le pa rli.1n1 U....&..lll-Ll--Di•. view or Ml.I. & valley. Annt.9'55-0.9Eves. 5llDIOOM Eves,832-11644 Swimming • Goll Ana St Drive by then d'•""•al. buted pool. Yearlyonlhebuchfum •Kilthflt •Sed'y serv -.._ I ~ b I f i:.c: ..,,,·ttl ........... Hl• .. 1ands · 0,'1111\9 Rent~ 11 r ~r-1 t ... ,...... K h •· 8 II C II •-·-·-f7 I JJ SZ7 S900 Enc-wit ots o , _______ •u ~ .,.. bd ca oran1~1men . eleva.tor,subter. pr\ng room1. ttc "' a 1v1 a :........_ ~ • I a n d s c a p 1 n c ., Sl700mo. Newport Heiiht.s 4 rm. IEAUTIFUl APTS: ~SO plus sec Avail. mo. -r mo + S280 97S-0740 C-A....1 u-GOLDEN 2 ba. huge yard, 1700 mo. S•""IH 1 & 2 BtO Ir \I ·Call 4i4-..a. ,.- •EXCITING* ~Wt Wilb or withou t furniture, Ux64 Green- brier Home in Laguna Hilb olcest 5 star park. .,.. .. .,, ... leautilul ZOd.1 Lancer Home · 2.Br, 28&. This Ls the Beet Buy 1n town. .... ~ ..... 8eaut1t:Bllia1r Mobile Home w/(ront kit U'x 11' Liv Rm. 12' " 101 Muter 8dmL EncloHd patio. Near Hoa g Hoepital SZ3.*· CWSIC MOIUHOMI WIS Z70l llaltJilr, Ste zot.A 14N9J1 0 w n e r I A g l ----... 11-19. 957-0701-A&enl sec. dep. 2306 W Ocean-~ n M v rd < 1 1 4 > $ 5 1 . o 7 8 a . ~I PROPERTI ES Drive by 3S7 La Perlt' Pl. •ooms • Furn1111tc1 -Mtwport IMdl 316' front NB _, sq. . esa e e (71'>568--:117~•·'----£!Uoy pnvate beaches 7~1.W do not dlSluri> tenant.. &~•Adlift EASTSIDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-4l5' •rea. •-··--and btautlful sunsets in then call &1-6226. L•••no • Ho Pe11 • COU ....... Y WOOOS PAii flllfPOllJ _.... ..... Woodbridfe. 38R home. Mootls OP.n 01•ly ""' • Yee ......... 4250 this 4 Br 2 Ba home. 2B1, fa m rm, frplc. 5 Br oceanfront home, 910 6 Country Woods, 2 Br 2 Avell1ble for yearly palios,LaJce. Pool, Ten-$7SOwinteronly. Oekwood Ba. Ion. large patio. No COUMTIYCWI OWofC~ ,,..,...., 2550 Prim Mlt M IAc. leueatSUOO/mo. nls, prlv, $900 mo. ~3447 children or pets . UYIMti COHDOllADY D.M.W..1••ar M0-1SZ'7, SSMlM, Otnce H.-borYlt4wt a.den ~IMnta IS7S/mo. 180 2lJt. St. Bachelors. 1&2 bedroom 140 Income units In 764MIJI 7511.e.517 Ex.,. Po ... .Jlno m· Pb"•e Newport IMell N. MG-1184 days, 645·9543 IPU & toW'llhoules. Oceanaldt $1 500 000 .._••••••• ~ 1w11 -8801~1nt 1111e•M eves l' ooo '44-llOO Cash will hancile. Bkr. I'! New park.front condo. 2 Ill. FABULOUS VIEW! (714)6-45-1104 ' ..:...=.ro;:;..::m==-~~~=.:.1 br, 2\.\ ba. Nr UCJ, No 4 bdnns, exp ram rm, THE SEVILLE 2 Br Wtlfclff B(Y714o)~~ne~~Land Con-CU11&CO%Y ti. ·•• I encl entr)', CHARM. 11:i:O: ,=,~~1M wd/11~~· ne~!Y ddecor. Large 2 Br. Pat.lo. Pool. .. CuleUttletbdnn.bome HerltaeePattCondo Gardeoerinc.$1700mo. (7H)642•511a • u ... crpi., rapes, Newly decorated . tract /Ltue Option. Etc. wi·tb ~ace llld palio. 2 br, 2~ ba, 2 car encl. I Call .Joann Alcerm1n bll·lns, pat.lo. Cill btwn 4BR. l ~BA. nf'e ds 15-.ll> AdullS.&4Ml52. 12:5.000 Cuh to Reto<:ate. Conven e~l location. 1ar. frplc, pvt patio, a/c. Aat. 67S.6870or67S-'7fllJll aBliT' Santa Ana '465 1 ... y--- "" N Walkint distance to ..mqJmo m..11153 I w ho , o 70 ,.. ""'_..' 197,000 Total. IW ea. t bopprna. SlOOpermo. · Lovely estcUff me. a WIMTlll9ff ALS 187"G 'Y a Lux 2BR. 28A. Xtra Lr& 1·7& . E ~.._. l241 Br2ba, famrm.,aerv.or. 2 bdrm, 1 t.Jh, frpl<'. l JR .,,,.,., •• rn lly llv rm. Overlook in a l..cMt.,..._ ....................... 1 c h , ore, dbl 1ar. dlhwhr,$S50mo. 11lct w /bltoa . Bay.Sec bktne.Under- 6,.,.. Z700 OC!ANFRONT Mobtl• 1 wtr/1arclnr lncl. 11* I bdrm, 2 bath, bl&na, !ASTSIDE D5, adlU, f1'0Qnd pllti.ftl. Adult&. Hometfroml500toS1000 i rmo. rUo.-iao. ~.rrNm lOOO mo S'TUT1$ '•mt. 4 Br. I ~ Ba. Back Bay bdrm, 2 bath, t,.,lc, llel rullerton. l Bil, 11eat Duple1, tapttalra, 2 Br, l ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Approx. hoo n otfict space. Pruli•loua Newport Beach loc.UO.. C0tne aee it llOl91 Mtwp!!lt Alctla/ • , .. fiiW~ Call: fora OMCISPACI POILIASI TMICOLOMY MO 8~. W,uu Buch. C1ll Aant ffHMr. Oll·ltte mtr, ...... • J210 cul de sac. no peta, a-rs mo mo. It tltH. -. ldlta, no Ba, fr-pit, pnat. Nw ....................... Inc Id 1 11 rd t n tr Udo_.....,... area • --~--•l!f!i•-.~• •:;1:= leutJf1l Cooclo avall -4'41 1ear &.-. Milla, • ~ IMS. J Ir. 2 Ba. Lodry Get GREEN cull peta. 111111 -. ff11. A Dtvis1onof rm. U lmo. lit 6 Wt• SELL Idle 1"1111 with1 forWHm....._ Avail U/ll llW9.::'I llarbor ln\'t5tmenl Co + .. MC. •Ult. D•l!1!Uot Clwlfltd wttJu a..ifttd Ad "'" *'*'' ~•~ W•M ..... Hia7! Ad·~ ~lllilil•==il":il ~ ..... 4400 ~.!'!=. ... ?!!~ ~.~.~ ... !?.~ ~.~.~-... !?!! ~.~~ .... !'!! ~-~~ .... !~ ~ . .-:.."!. ...... -'!.'! ~~~ ... .!!!! ~~~~.".?!.~ ~~ .... .?~!! ....................... u D--t • youwantanc&1Eltate Found·GreltDue Blwae ..-.111•1'ft POUND· Dot '•11fu· COBDS·Woald Love to Attr 1A6I wllo lb to BOOUEEPEJl Near So. Coast P.lua, Loan at BELOW . Poodle d . , LOil. Larae Wbt Ihle A..UI• .... s.M. . l'Ut)... e.u .... 4uu. Hit ID Soe P'ULLalAllG2 ...... ] .... perfect for boutique, MARKET RATES call Mer~ellriide Ta' ';>' Grat Pyw. Nr E. lllllW -~-=--9atlr11l dance dub. For Comtnctloo Co "" ti• beauty ahop or olflces. p r I m e FI oa n c I a I w /Rive p . er· U t b I 0 r u I e, C Ill . ,....._. POUND: D l • llb.. · Poeeiltle to .,. 11000 Coaltndioa nee · Needed ~ to lOOOsgft.541).W Servlca rler 1111&, Blk II. Gl=fllO Veador -Adatt-malt •le Ba•ll,oa/ ... ormore.PT.KrEI· (Tlt)..-:Z ere•t•• lllW *9art· .. 127•3477 Sbepberd llllll, 1D01tly LOil: ~ thalky. 1 Cra1e -IW6-Wallace.._ Aa • liaNMNI _ mftlt -fir • fr"i•I "DIC.~ . I tan, ~· 2 Allo 2 cat.a. •kl old .... Blk/Tan CUP-ON • •..-r•• CASHIR·matutt up. ··••u• shed nu; lnNnport.b.Mtwowm· w..,w.... SOJO Tortoue abel1 Mau • marklDIS Lost l D D DH lookilll FOUND· .... ..... recilter penca..... MIW . dow officea avail im· ....................... LoDI haired wbt II. Albertaoaa Putiu lot. apper ot so smart ut vl~ D/lril Cdlll Rn AUTO DlfA&IMa for bolicS.1s 1tartl111 ~~ S: med. 175 It 1IO aq ft.. $50!000·$100,000 from &M-315e Newport Beach Fr I · It b. Irv f II e . :.:. ~'Tblt'1 a real MW1T2 Wore tor atl )t Nl.fllO 9teve'1 J>e!a!Mq needa Nov. D . C&ll: SDowdeG-wlrr h or•ered in from$415.Recept.,~ pravate party, well Animal ShtJler. Found REWARD!i3Mr7t Uelle's'ft.rini,butit's lOPM .. ~~ hardwortinl,cltan~ut, Ki.uSporle.MM!11 Jaauary <.-t likely ference rm incl. Sec 1 1eeuttd by Or. Ct,y real Altered M Siamese Cat 2 CUP ONault P • ... -..., , .. _ ener1etic aetaller for Casbltr /,Ut wrapper 1 DEC laard av.au. Nr 0C Ain>ort. utate. Real estate wits a10 Npt Area. Lost: F. lr1 Friendly a · · 1111• 'I. _, lft'1D ealllloymellt up hlpful Cali !::!-::: ~#-' LisaaJ.11'11 broker/owner Ast for 541-137'7 Siamese. 11-t. CDll. Female Nia.a.puppy .... ~ .. -torNaUlllr•w.,. .._!!lla&etr.lll-410o ....... 1to.lP1ua ..., 1 • • NOWAY.AIL.AIU Sunny Webber: 544-3175 Found: FSiawmtan ~a~yt. REWARD! ~OUlld Fri. PM. -Olalt --.-..... •1 Stne. • ant. AMoPartl. . . CASHIO . = a .... ~,. .. ,; NEWPORT BEACH or SO.aMl w /black awtinp, Yftl. 'ffY. NMl• !Oew mco1t9 · EQ Auto Part.I CCRmter ll•t be IMt to wol't ab ll i lJ' us ea tl a I. COMMERCE CENTER Mort1111'" T,... 631·5070. Found: Wbll~ kitten. . ).I A T-...1. Ptnon. Be. aeon Auto s..t. Ir SUn. Other hn to Pre.-. ~ a · EXECU'l1VESUITE Dei4i 5035 SeillbiopfutwithDaily BecenUyllNa'ed. Hne aollMICllllal to sell? ·-Put.a. be arraopd. Apply in perieue ..,_.,,and Handaomeolficea, fW'D· ....................... PilotWaatA.da. iS4'1I ClauifieclRj!lt!!!ll. WutAdl CalllOMTI ca.a.. 410N.Npt8lvd.NB. person: Kerm Rima bewWp fl nMUmen- /noo furn. avail : Prol s.ttllf>MM C.. •• • • • •• • • • •• • • • • •• ••••••• •••• lacorta,...._. ~UD Hardware, Jiii Hartlor tary pro1rammln1 sec serv., copy mach. All types ct:.J estate . 11/16-Babysitter ....W. HB Bl•d .• ColtaM... would lat ~. Tbts a.a11erv,PUJSPLUS. lnveatmea&uincelM. • • --~ ana, pref. elderty, yoar Clerical/ Word pro· depariaut wlll be "'-t>arttnixlntacceu S,•cl ...... 8 DAY WEEK s•ECI ··L .... oroan.•ZBlaft CtsHr, NB. CPA l'inD cbar1ed •It• tlae Cell Mew 17141 wTDI e • I"" A • ~: 11 t seekln1 responsible I rupoui,_!.lity t o 752:7191 • I ..... -pencm. Wllltnlaasw. operate, m ·-• and . '41·1171 54f.Otl I e I DIJI • 3 Linet • I Oollart ................ _, ... _ Salary commenaurate ~alr ~nt.a of 3: 'ii~i4~lf1~c~~~ Widow hu money ror • ..... , ..-ec1 for 2 elslld.nn. with up. Call J[athy t be s 1st ea w It b fumiabed ton T.D.'s. sio.ooo up. No • It's easy to place your 8-0ay Week Classifted by mail. and rt llBI C ,_ Ale.=~ Mesa '151-05U al11lmal ani,atance area, _.,_ .. ,_.• ie 'aeditcbedl:,nopmalty. • t . t $8 h . I d I d I T ' f • -••• .. •---from the ...... Reply space av .... ""'. s:D-3361 Call Denison Auoc. cos s JUS -t at son Ya o lar a ay. o Qualhy or this • "" lartllllll: ams. BABYSITl'Ell toJeff Werr, M-F m.nu e special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering u.. Pre.edlrll. • E. T\tea ~Sat •:»s:• ,c~~ ONlpC.-BA YFRONT Want fut deal. Wk a yr, e merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the prrce must e _.. St., c.1.1 .... '°"· m.um -· ·--~-,... Primumce. 'JeO.MtO. opportunity, "3.ooo 3rd •. be rn your ad. The cost stays the same whether your ad e ~11 Pr••ram ...... ,..!...--._._ ~f ~~'1:';'.'U:~ ,._.~~8-Y.c.fliam -t...--~ 4.o11r.A TD. $)(),000, 163 1nt. 18 ---·-• ...__ .. _~ I-... ......... --•-,._ mos. Prime Newport. needs eight days selling tune or just one • Pree 11t ..._: apert lbcellent opportun.lty -Ula..... """'•· ('114)NMIZ1. ....................... XJntpayor.811·2980 • S..alst./ftwb hltOr! for e'J{~ penoa tioll oa Pal,_.,. per Tbe DailY Pilot ii an .,.,..,_YIELD • • ll•a v .... Kt.em iD atlndift SPtllp • weel,Satlr&m.fM.1Gt Equal Op '°rtunity UT ... •••ct ••,. Use one word rn each box About 4 words make one <•i·-> __ ... E 1 w d -.-A SU,IOO invested earns • -Loe.a. J•-•n open-mp yr. omen an lZIO sq. ft. Barbor Blvd. 21~ 00 DJK TD. weu e classified line of type M1n1mum ad rs 3 ltnes. Please pnnt .,_.. ._.. wDl a · m1etrernariedcluUeu. Cl.CAL mlaorlti• de0Ura1ed :~::!°°~oo secured. $100,000 equity • plainly e claH~IOM wttb ~ci:,: :ri-.:.:i: Work Temporary Jobi toappty. protection In cu1tom • --~.IJS.T7M cloMtobome. •••••••• -------1 bomt w/ptd It bones. • r:-----------------------------, Saturday• llJIUI lpm. VJCKIH!STON Gardener w-.t. Sant.I Store or Office. 13.'iOaq. ft. Lacuna Investments. • !~?~~ .. .?!~ Call Lblda at 'lK-lJOL •ABX. Au w.tdlla. M hn per MesaVerdeArea bllr,161.fl43 • I .. 1 1 1.0 .1 . Open1:»S:IO~ Wbcl. 1ri* rome Es]>. ZI .-·-· .......... b ~~~ 1'100Adaml,C.lll. ~ 5641Z3 2nd Tnaat Deed for uJe. • I : llSll ORANGEOOASrS~L . Cl---M •. Ot.lar. mo .... ., """'~ Y I CPA r&tl ... HM i.. ....., Tobueo tbap, Hpm·S 'it::/."" .. / choice HI.Ill. Bch. P~ • I • ...._...,.....,_. -·-daJt.tt5£.lithSt.C.lll. Generap l •-perty.M0-1957Broker. • i .. hlclHl ct .. trlDI ·~ Aakforff!rold. rofe11kwaau seeking •••••••••.............. I •. e • a I I 1 a 1 i a • Newport olf1ce seeks C M• additloaal Income . .... ,.. • 11•c ts/ e I ••t•••tt61._ Jlrerid. hdl·U.. Teller t mo. -1 --('714*9• O,•• Wtr SOOS ''"11•/ e Ille•= lrN9 SAL or bankiAI up. w• 111 Gift Wrap •••••••••• .. ••••••··~·· Lett & ,.-.. e I •· te ell• eleMel pre1nnc1. ror 1urt1wr needed for new tiowliDI teeeft ,__ LOSING LEASE, qwt· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • I Dat c-. ~ • laforeatloD and lD· center. NJ Ume ana SU,.mA. eoordlnat.e tin& bum., selling out Lolt & ,._. 5300 1 • wert enlroament. terYlew caD: Brian Ta1· part time. Call ..... i.11 ol WdQ lift ALL IU~el IJld fill. ....................... • 11· PllWk ............ exp. ..rt .... '11115 IST·lllM pa~b. Fla hn. Will =~~c ::r waiting • • a.I rtaw' CIMaified WdiaM COOi Lralll. Weatcllrr Plua. !OO• cbalra, Beauty I e #~;~.~·cs:' ... .J!!l!&,"'Lo•... ~cb.=:ne=to . ,..~~-....... ..; ... :talon bainlryen and fftl .. A1$ e I Add 12.IO for each 1ddttlon1I tine for I tlrnet mn.-a -·-• _.. .-nau11.__. __... ... w .. d li .. _,_ aur· UVIW • -=="'-'=----ttCorpirlt.eP\ua llnt benefits. Call followial oalJ. Villap :n~!be~e!'=s~tants.· A1£ fE • I • Mer1at1 ...mble, ac· CoaatBwy.,N.B. 1'7S-'1Zll.btwD1Mfm. Fairllall.4M-18 Allo, make-up, shampoo • I eo.at: = = EOE 11/F OOOK, aaute, line up. Hotel anctht.u=o, 641l!71 e I Publish my ad for 8 days starting e ::C. N,tMlocatile. ~~~.App~ ~:::=.ue:' atters.-... e l Classification e ~~·:.,'~'~ ML.AeUMA CoWlter be~. Mature ,.,.. ... a. -------tFOUND: Bei&e" wtalt.e • .... t.: 111: ADller'aoll IAMIMA peno;n. PIT, llloo-Frt. ... ......... ..... ......,, male cat, recently • Name • inr RiHralde. NB (In or•uhatloel will 8:g •Deli.CoMtHwy.. .... 41 yn a inniM!f 1ialer. neutert.d. Near 20tll Ii • Ma acftlll .... cadca for '75-Zltl. KUil lie aWe to wt a ToplocaUoa.acU1ceotto Moarovla,c.o.ta M•a. • Address e ACCOUNTS thepoliticaof Dental Ortbo Rece_P.· vutable lllalA. Call Cin· .Balboa Pavilion. Good U1·2t'13 COt I •CIAL Uoaiat, ...,.... reqain!d. dJ at....,. or lll9lr at tease. For Information r o u ND : Fem a le e City Zip Phone I PAYAILI LOAMIKllJAIY N ••port Bea ch . 155S So Coast ·11w1. call. Shepllenl, could be mill • Dltall mlldrd penoa to l&perieee DaCell&l1 NZ·-· l.qaa 8eb. r.ai ()p- MEL FUOIS, breed, fold cir. vie • Check or M.0 . enclosed 0 • nu aecomta payable lattlltat Hlary • .4 ...... Ctall1tlll prt-1ly I Ilk>•· REALTOR Harbor Baker, CM. • = ~ ._, ~ -.nta. Pte.e contact froet aid a.ct needed HOUSICLEA'.NDS m-mo ~ Charge my ad to: • e, .. r, ,a1!bi!· u : ~~ aftleer for.,. for new snta Ana ~_l!.rl'_t~~ t'_•···~P'· IAlt: sold rinl In shape • peritate ....... 10. .,._.__.. Grouf practice. Good """' .. ......, --,.... ElldtiDI IRI opportunity of "£", vie. Balboa • 0 # Exp • .., -, tmd, -• ' 4Mot471 btH u1 and ulary. pref., but wlU train. Obie. your lac:ome PIT. Ja/NB/ln.17W721 ' ..... 'l.mll& fr11ap •t r.n.t Aft, &dte Al Kiaimlllll t 1D011tb1 a · ...... ~. MMI• towlD .. at.7»'1S5l. REWARD: Girta&retQS • • • MHflt1. Call •n. ...,_._.,_l J!!.P..,_cd_, ........ .... •u••• f: blke, ~ nrc Sr. • 0 # Exp e ..,.11Ml11 ma •If Dma1a,,._.. Lift·••· Ap,..ffiaUve O,,s hzll IOll 01era dell. M. . • ~ coommcA'l'OI Coascltetlous l en· ~:!11....:.,~:lt.ea . ......... -........ :tbir!.~~:.U~ • L-------------------------------1:u:!:e .... •lllPI ti =·~1:~ •• ,s. uked. Sentlmentll • r·----·-· WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE ·····-·--'-., . • "" ..... to '=f'..: .mm YU ta th• Du ta I~ "' .. • ' t" T I I ~ i l ) ........ 2.,..., ..... ._..,.......,... ,,.... Ml "'"'" "' "'" • """ •11,000 • _.. wit In lit I yn. ,, .. _llNlllr .......... ...... ,. ............ .... tllff ., z.ooo--. " ........ Callf71•t 79'-2012 ~ .. """ value.@l·lm 1 · I • ~ •IP. n ~...U Praetlct la L111u 1 _..iiiilii • ._ ~~~~~~-: ! 111111 ~~~;::v£ I ! • .. •• "i:,;,w r.,:r Gitea: = Nlpel. --1 PMf ... ...... • ' '',NMAtlTHE(O I : . •• u.a. t.r.';.. ,... ~ .... Uclb • ,1 .. , ........ , . IAt med.11. hli. clot"' i I g ..... ,.... ' ,... .. . ... ... Call SSl·llTI. Army :::. ~==-~ I 1 UNITED STATlS ,, • ~ tD .. m DU· r.~u:.~ :r.a.m: ~ • .. JW tut vtc "aim.w ' ..., e BUSINESS REPLY LABEL • e M"i'•'°c. .. ma. autt ··---- CallMS-SJGtor•si•t • • •• C"""T .. ,.... & • IOATMICMAllC lllW'!W_. roucl br/"'4 Spria .. r • s , .... fCLAH,HMITMO u ..... ,. ... _,CAL"Olt .. IA ' " .... ,., .. u .... 111,1 ··-·· ...... .. SpM..A~l/moOld, • i ~ I • .... ... ~ ,,. ........... . II, Vic. IDdJ. 6 H• POST MK WU. IE PM> I Y AOOAESSEI'; '""· Wlll wort .. •w1 t =-·rrt. r;,;.a.1...,,or 4 Or1ngeCo11tD11ty,llot ~ft{.~:-~-•--~~'--- ! llllJPlll t!ICt••• ,,,_ .. It~ I lo11llO aaow.1er•· ~--• 1 Coltl lltN, CA 12121 · ... • •••• ~ • ' r Oronge Coast DAILY PILOTrruesday, November 10, 1981 ----------------- 559-41 50 I AEROBIC EXERCIZE CLASSES To meet every srhedulin~ nt.'l'<L New 6: 30 Morning Classt>s. Call for CompUmentary Class student Improvement Center TUTORING DIAGNOSTIC TESTING INDIVIDUALIZED PROGRAMS Reodmg Compiehenslon Grammar Math Algebra Study Skills 642-9088 Retraining In LITERACY BASICS 11 our speclatty. MANAGER Pr ivate community. Send resume to Three Arch Bay, 5 Bay Dr . So. Laguna, CA. 92671. MAMAGBt for sailboat rental operation m Huntington Harbour. Thorough knowledge ol boat re- pa ir I maintenan ce, fiberglaasing, r1ga1ng necessary. Outboard engine repair helpful. (213>Z71·2677 - 10 Management Trainees to distribute a new skan care product. Call for appointment Wed & Thrus 8 to 12 only 842·9096. -----Matu;e woman. care ror 2 boys 3 & 5 yn. Room & boa rd + salary &41.: 705_1_ MODELSJESCoaTS Attn FemalesonJy --953-0171 -- HCl250 OPEIATOlt Duties will include post- ing o( daily sales. light office & phone work. No experience necessary, wiU tram. Xlnt company benefits package. Con· tact Mr. McDermott· 1714 )644· lJMI. SLAYICIC'S JEWBSS Fashion Isiand OFffCI..,. H.B. Mfg. Company, (71') fM3. 7907 __ OfACIMH. Cosu Mesa Marina bullde{ n~~s OUice Mgr. lntemhng work that wlll allow you to grow as we grow. Plfue call . Tom, 66-2142 EOE Schools anCI Instruction This Yarittj of flftt schools coulcl Introduce SCHOOL FOi IASIC OfACE SKIUS ,,..Mllh.: Two, two-hour WOftlshopl °" Offict Co!MlllRkllffoM '": S 11 Pff ,.,_,., wor41.ai., Sl.'hool ~·or Bibi!• Ofract' Skllh• Prt'Sl'Ob T1,10. t't\O hour "t1rk~ho1i.. on Office Communrc•11t1on11 ~\'t! SI~ pt'r person. per workshop. y• to o new tomorrow r •BALLET • TAP .. lluw To l '!il' Tht> 'l'l>il'phunl' Effertl\l'I) Tut•i.. Nt11 Ii, !I um or Thu~ . No1 1!1, I p.m • JAZZ • TRIM TO RHYTHM• AEROBICS • CHILOOEN • IEENS • AOUL TS · llo" T11 Updall' Your Wr 11l1'll OHltl' Cummunh:utaoni. ... 'l'Ul>t> .. No1·. 24, V am or Wed . lkt· I at Ip m For further illforMotio.. Call 1714> 641-0678 ............. - Cla11t1 '] 3400 '"-AYt ., Suitt 207, M.I. "" y...... .... ....':t::.,,, ..... .A.l!W ol~ne111usi..1,,.,.,_ NOW in HUNTINGTON BEACH WeshMtster Montessori School AG ES 2V2 thru 6 hMll•ldMI Att.tttiotl Cllildrft ,,...,.. .. ot ...V •-,_ hi o.., ,,...,._ •~Tllitloe Dfl'f c-7: IS _, P"' 5172 McFoddeft A•e., Huntiftc)ton lt«h llttwttt1 l ohe CWco 9ld GN!loMI Coott U.. Cu•-itv c.-..c.,... lobiilwood ~ Ctwttr -962-5440- PBX Operator The Dally Pilot has an immediate opening for a PBX operator. Experience preferred but wlll train. 20 hourS per "·eek1 s days a ~eek. t'or 11ppolntmcnt for 1ntcrvl1•w call: 8'2·4321. AdvertiDlo sales - Call 642-5678 Louis• Griffith Ed. 311 JOLEE MILLER VI \l .\I 11( \l .... l'\1 I lll Ill 1"1 llas openings for students of all a,:!e s a nd leve ls . Gradu at e Westminster Choi r Co ll ege, Priraccton. N. J. 63 I -2789 t:11per. Rt'WllPl~-;:d~~llY JIUfl'liptn!Oll to h1ndlt kl·.~ llt'<'ounl' for Oran.Kt l'c1,l\l Dtttfy-Ptfol SalatT, rmnmr!r!llon and t•~llent bt-ncflt" Gn1wth opportunrlu.>~ • Good Earnings CALL CI RCULATION DEPARTMENT ror per•nn With raiwr 11mh1t1onll S.·nd l'Ompif'lf' "'"'mf to M1th t'<'~I. PO IOI 1•. Coeta Mna CA. !GS3S No phont ull1. pluu. An t:qu l Oppor· bd1 Emptorn • OMNll COAIT DAILY PILOT : •W.MYlf .. •.COITA MllA, CA. n121 "• .. ...._~f\IMfYUll'\O'rlll ,' ~ . ··•·•····•···•····•·······••··•·········· • Super Trips • Great Prizes DailyPilll • 642-4321 FOR SA.LE! Cooktop tsurlace ran11e. bu1lt-1n stylel. 'mooth top coman11. 4 buml'r & LIKE Nfo:W!'.! ONl.V SIOO' Call 714/631-0171 HARRORAR fo:A f\ rPLIANCt: SUVICt: We buy llMd •antta WtMlll'fNM. ..... ........... MNln ........... al. "" • Or1nge Cout DAIL V PILOT /Tu11d1y, Novtmbtr 10, 1981 ~.. IHI ... Ill ~~ AlteStnia,,n Atte1W ... Hto ...... 1•••"114 .,.1,l•p•rltd ..._.,e.,1PW ...... u .... •••:.;•· .. ::•••••••• 11111 1 t• IOll 1 1 t tOJO I Ace---. 9400 ............................... • .............. •• ..... • ............................................................ . I t ·~· ...... tooll. ....................... .... .................. ....................... WllUY IMW 97 12 Mtt'c.tdtt... 9740 ,........ 9770 C ... Y,.. 9fJO :..;1"C' ~:Jlbl. Alto Hit; lkln6y mo Dia'"" t•nw-•-~ Ztl Saddle tanb ; t'llltOm CL••llo.lc••s ........................................................................................... . l'tt ""' . PtrfK.t hom for bt1ln· ... ~ ---· p made for tarly 'hort SAn ""' n................. SH us Mm l.ovuut, lhtt'bln1 ntr. Xlnt lont/tond lv':o,I Qaotor, oar1, -tllbua Dodi• lNtk.I AMDTIUCKS P___.Of--.Y-•Ml,,,...,• ·n Bill Mtdl ptrffft Wt havuaood~on mo old t halr,dttlltrtdtua'a l anr lkt new. ll>O ..J100pr ~ ..., ---4M.a•• Nduomt bd)'Wk 11.IOO. of JUl W It U ED llal• Pully AK C'd chair. Call Terry o f lDDLlu '$U 6bplll0fn1 IMW,.s•••Or ... .._ .. ~ .. _: a.evrulltl! '°'"'" Oteal do11 l~lttJ&onThur __ GoodCondilloll 90 9CMO rt.tnnJnlDIO ' L ... C:..Wlt .......... , y .. ,~f3!UnOnMA tt: '*"*· To tood ......._ 1060 _1111 ......... •••••••••••••• $t0-1<m Mclarw IMW!I Compare HoUst ol Im "' , "--C~MH.l CHfVROlET -9Dl:k1~.o nl y . llOO 'oit"LEAS•E·t~~··;;;• O~~:,~ Good M ~~:t:"tm I ~=--..... j ~!!s~l~~l~p~~l~ '75 VW :::00. new ltrla .. r Span!tl AKC lboro1.11bbrtda both ln C U Me-2382 maculalt. Loeded 1130 A TTIMTION f 0 I a I 2 I 3 o r llrH. excellmt bod)' ')\.')lit.,, .. j•, ""•l\\tt-..1 ~ Blatk and wb.ll• j ralnln Oevn . I( .;. -mo lnelUdf.nC N8 •&,-•· 2TONN~1ov£RS H,.HIUYll _17 l 415l2:_5Jl3 714/M ERCJo:OES i. 213 9'1711819 ale. I yur old • Jtwttry 1070 with bo:" Cd cood ~d~.M!:.! Fits MG't, i1 lhru '81 Top dolJan '"' Sportt OIAMGICOUMTY'S orjJ4/fl3'1-2333 VW Paru Bua Bua Type '&a Cbt'Vfllt MaJJbu. IZ50 S4 .. I 200 1 ....................... ady to pllJ. $450 fir!': m• Trojan{ 1 tK!rm. Iba, Never usect.s'15ra Cara, Bu~. Camprri, CK.DIST ru En~IM, body paru or Dflt &42-321118 artu 4 frttc...1.9 2SALVAOOREDAU 47 . . furn.!.. w lh Vlt W, AS Marla431·7m lvemi111 tl4'1.AudJ. &... s t;LLING YOUR MB' miac ·'100.~1411'1 11 Capr1re, 4 dr claUI<', II.Iv, rema•-I "r old. Ul.hoa· 8 Morill u•i.~ SUM.r; 10.5% LOAN A•kf""U/CMCR " • WIP"Y '79 Con""'rt ••co ml I d s29co .. ""' , l"'llor'trade.'"c u..!'""'· Trombone, Pan.Am, Much, much better than JIM"'....,,.••HO " "' .. v.. n Ct con , " . i::,~tblldren, aood ... Vh•·-GoldedlUon old be t """"" TOPDOUARSS AMI F'M T1p1:. Ma@ 7$10205or831·5347 ""'.11.11.,,2442 M -----' au Y new. P/P. (7l4 l446-8115S AaltotforS. VOLICSWAGEH Call Jack Bacon Whlt1. Mlllt Cond Red '681MPALA WAGON o ~-.... ,.., I071 ~53M646 uk for Mrl. Sales Service.Lea8ln11 SUMON w /tam el top. 11000 Don RUNS GOOD S500 ~~Jtion Puppies. it:d··:;~·~~·;··b;·.~·d· y . T a ha 0 r a • n IDM.P. ii\Vo1vo vs .••••• iMPORT~NT..... lS7l1 Boacb Blvd JIM s Pett!john. 213·al8-1801. • . aoo.m. new, never us.!d. $300. w/Rnylhm acces, new fresh water cooling, NO'MCETO HUNTINGTON BEACH f{)f CARVER IMPOITS 714-559-71.39 &46-WTT ,,.-~-,.m:.1387 Cirmll40-2250aft.6 rood.~. elereo, ful & beautiful, RF.ADERSANO 142-OOO ICUSRJtCE·BMW NE~~'rr~~~CH -.77CONVERTIHLI': ClwyWr ttzs ,. I041 ----H er. 50.6'13-51S7 AOVERTlS.l!:RS WIHIB) t:MOJN«IQ!fll0~01<!1• While "on whlte, icreal :•••••••••••• .. •••••••• aik't;• .. •u•uuou .. Misctl•1-1010 Acouallc Guitar. i.ike Sea Ray 225 Expreu , The price of items . YOURIXOT1C ,.~iua.11w1._,°"" 833-9300 body, SSOOO IOBO 11 Chryalrr Imp Le N ......... b, all aboc.al lie, i.osiNo°LEASE••••·1~~ new w/case. 1175/0rm. Cruiser. ;•.1 123'1 Perfect advertised by vt'hide & HmSHC4RS ms BMW 20Crl, 4 spd, ·11 .....,. ... Colorado be1'oe 497 4278 Baron, 4dr hdtp, vrry ~ 11 yd &r chi dren • qu 6'5· cond w/trlr dealers 1n thll vehicle new BlauN•nkt am rm ......,.... 11 -clean, reg fllCI, many SS . Ung bu1inas,1e1Una oul · ~ r-• Xlnt condition days, T ... ..--. epla"emenl Item& .,, ALL auppUts and fix· Offk• F9111wt & ~m.1 classified advertising ~nn stereo casselle, sport 979 9930 ask for Elaine. ,..,_ r ~ ~•meu, 3 yr old neut lures lncludinf : l•if••Af IOl5 IMh. I•/ columns does not in· I LW~ steering wheel, new .l!:vtninis, 759-906.S '73. white Xlnt rond Super work cu $600 JD•11~~ Perf tor elderly Display cases, waJlinc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cll...,. cludt any applicable M radials , 66K Ille ~ 760-8636 080 ~·?322 . ..... 1.9173 room ~hairs, Beauty EXE c . o E. s K +. 9050 tun, hc"1.'!le. transfrr 875PAEI Call mommg~ 11170 Mercedes 280SL ·71 VW Va11, new eng. CorYtfh ttll 1t:: · "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• fee f h C'oov and Hardtop ........ t IOSO Sa loo hairdryers and credenza, sect I desk, h1 a, 1nance c arges. or evf'~ 673 0930 or new trans, new ttres, ..................... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• hydraulic chairs, mar-qual, perf. cond. Sac! HOUD"'YP"'.,...IS fenforaar pollul!oncon-3100.W Cout Hwy 642·0138 llm rm rlldlo, new l•rH sharl> 64S-&29 Sam aays "dnve a hUlc. * * I BUY * * rors, shrives and planu. · 833-3ll7 ,. -•' trol device certifications Nrwport Brach C.-i 9715 Allk for Lee 979-2(!67 ·7~ VW campmobile, xlnt sue a lot ... on new SI AJJo, make-U&>. shampoo Answering Machine w. WH y NOT TAK E A or dealt'r documentary 642·9405 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1979 300 SD Turbo Oaesel cond eng & body. S4000 Corvettes equipped '-''•th Good "•ed F\lmiture • d h · rod BAY C RUISE Ca II preparauon charge:. un -.78 CAPRI 11 v ~ Dark brown Melwlllc. 631 .... 9 4 d L .. 1 .. A~Utnces--OR I w1"'11 ao 11r P ucts. remote, brand new, eo5l Vachllnf Con1ulL1nt1 less otherwtse specified WA ..... ED.I .., .... spee or llU um .. " Call 631·9754 or $250, aell '150. 957.2997 (714) 67S.-N 8 b h d rt I 4 spd $2400 Call John sunroof. extra fuel tunk MUST .ra • ' Lr1nsmasslOl'I se or SEU. for You after& a.6809 -· 11tia venaser. ___ Lale model Toyotas and 642 9690 6J&.90l9 ~ .... ~. 644·~ ......., Ul5636SILVER M4ST8S AUCTION Canadian Red Squirrel A~-~ Ge..rol 951 O V o I v o s C a 11 u s --1969 280 SEC Reblt traM '73 Suf:r BettJf. l'UJlJ 105497 DARK BLUE · 4 6 llJ..9625 F St I Ilk "50 " .. _._... IMh. W 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOOA Y 1 ~ ~ Dot._ 9720 A 1 cond Pm-ate Part> great oolts good 11700 104964 BRONZE 77~~e. e oew. · La n i er 0 M N I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jfo~t:PS,CAKS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S11 .5001offer 6406990. 546-4351,~ llUY MNTUU · Transcriber with fool hdl099torTNdt l'IC.:KlJPS OUR AIM-957·0877 '56 Bug Convert Recenl ',Lts 957-8133 Lo.,...._ peddle, bear set and 2 25 ft u lll>oat Newport Frum ~ Available al YOUR ·79 MB JOOSD lurbo Paanl. Newt.op& lnt 800 DeSANFIS CHEVROLET KING INNERSPRING Helium Bou9uets de· vest pocket secretaries dock, a lps S·heod· local Gov't Auctions. TOYOTA.VOLYO SATISFACTION diesel. must seU. Bestof ma on compl recond ):XTRA FIRM mauress Ii vered. P.etfeFct rfor Sacrillce 000. 644-2260 galley·4 whl trailer for ~or D 1 rertory "u 11 "•~.~::=.!1"' Salei1·Sfrvlce l..ewun1e rer ov~rj;!S.._OOO 731.~2 ~8001HPNeng.pp~•~nd llet, nev~r used, worth every occaslOll. WI or Comm 'I Draltina Table motor holllt!or ? 494.6648 Surplus Date Center ""' .... , l OJt.s•o.u u •79 M BZ 6.9. black on ~ _ ej. "'"""~' 401 S. £1 t:ammo Real ~!:e'r u.c!,; $24S del ThanksgJ~!19 Orig. $4~.; as1~7ing Sl50. LIDO 14 4l5 l:J0..7800 T Do • bhick. J6.000 mt, Euro. '74 BrfUG1, mint New tires, 831 ~n Cleme_n~:2.8500 v u""" queen sz, ,,,_. "" FLHTMASTERS Op u ... r pean hght.s. Blaupunkt pe ec pamt, smo11 cert worth 1399, cash only 2 pc. Sectional $200. S' Sec'y desk, L shaped. Excellent cond. $2100. C'ONSUMf:R U 3001 radio. llarns Alpha !2450_,_661-3982 ·77 ·vette, auto, all eic •$218del.Usually home. Casl lronTubS75.Both locking, gd cond, + J!!.ce ri&&ed.~·48118 BUYING&LEASING I Pid 'DATSUN Vll F' phone $55.000 '57VWSafanBu.s.clean. tras. orig.owner, very 754.7 itemu lntcond. swiv. armchair 759·°'58 ltll ...,_ 16 SERVICE J For Your Car• '759 9490 classic. opening frnt low ma . 6 mo. warranty Bunk bed; solid wood. 499-3l~ . P.ts 1017 colored aail, comp Inc All makes & models. 1 JOHMSON & SON "81 300 SD Turbo. I\ Ory windows. runs great '980Cl OBO 770.8758 handcrarled, outstand· 30 yrs A~cumul ataon ••••••••••••••••••••••• trlr. 847·50'l3 Leos~ any 1981 S200 dn 13731 Harbor Blvd w tan ant loaded, onl) 979·2133 ONE Of' A KIND '! io1911ality SUS. 536-4926 MUST GO. Offer. Sl·SlS. Baby Yellow Naped talk· SA BOT Naples Class gets you into.any make L2626hlc~H rbo 8 Garden Grove 80 m1 534.000 644-11253 '70 vw squarellat·k . rom • '80 VE'ITE • 20 sofas. New. 118. Lov· ••S48-98J2u iog Am azon Parrot Needs Work.$2Z. CAllNOW' HarborBlva Seeo!lFnll 6 pletl'orparts Blk blk lmeron Pnt eaeala $88. Sleepers. Persian O~aental run· w/wrought iron Cage ~1·3098 675·9153NB83S ~A-Cost~ Mt!!a_ 540.5630 554-9000 C.Onvertable 067 250 SE 548-0045 fo~\·ery OptJon Avail anrl ltt.FACJ'ORV957·S108 ners, (21 9 '1X2"2.100% 00.64~·5960 23 ft sailboat VHF radio A.ftff ... / Wt P!L. Sacrifice $15 .00IJ '65 VW . runh great • Glass TTop Ext warr Custorn lwtnbed&com· wo~!i ~ cond Pi..os&°"Jmts 1090 2 sails. N~ rosmet1~ cicuJcs 9520 OVER I 61J.70Slor975-0142dayh Needs work on body ~~t~~~N~o~~a!~~I~ Pinion 3-drawer wall un· · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• wk. 963.37177 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.._ looli ,67 320 s.d S850 da~ 661 7030, eves OHer Refused :;,:~:i~er. Bedokt for M~sn':v~~=· 40 reg, WwtiturPi..o Lido 14. 2 yrs old l.1ke rUTTIEST For YourGOUd I Whit e, blk IOtt'tlOr I K3l·9917 .. 67~3218 .. • oo r & or wa er · 64()..7814 ~2735 New S2300.AlterSPM '57T.allD VW,Porscheor Aud1 Comp reblt eng Tire,, '70YOUCSWAGEH '68 S1her C.Orvette IIT. ·~IS. I 631 ~ I 1u TO_, I trans SJ.400 Xlnt cond S2(XX) t Black NI"'" Sola ..,,, R o I I e r r ed u c • n g Electric Portable Piano. ---.:.. " ""! ... *HICK m ru an 390 HP 4 spd fil -_, od I mo , ...... s•-1 IESTOffB! ~~RSON 64>Ui66 ~ AC, side pipes. new eng. cl.~i~er .~7~brome I ~ssager. spa m '. 842.srni Dodi• r-90701 (OQ5UKZ) MG 9 7421 '77 Rabbit, xlnt cond, brks $6900 orrer ..;:;;;=-===.::='-----' S4C>-3790 Oak . ..,.t . N ••••••••••••••••••••••• VW PORSCHE AUDI ••••••••••••••••••••••• brwn, 39.000 mt, auto SS2 ~ Rm. dlvideror bookshelf. · upn"'' piano. ew Newport Boat SJ w t 445 E Coast t1Jw11y '7• M" M d ,... loolcs st•reo •• ..,,,. 631 ""71 c-9933 a k Fulllengt b m1rror fm.mustsell SH?S d f o ·o'P a2o ; ~." i""eog I " .,.._""' --"lJ-· ar oak, xlnt qua I 1 1 h • 548-12'72 e 0 r a y s al Bays1df Orl\e good M usl sell S2SOO •67 Bug w snd. new ••••• •••••••••••••••••• bst ofr. 847-7271 spec1a cut g !ISS· eavy. sailboat. 857-4891 ~ewpol'!_ Be_a~h 67J.0900 '77 Outsun 8210 $2900 OBO S48·3S4_6 'I;!! 3 engine & brakes. 11600 .68 C r Cond Double drop·end Vic· ong. $200, wtll sell $75. S.willg Moclll II I0'2 --• Premium pnces L<>w m1 Ong <>14-ner 545·1561 ougar air tori. of ...,,,. p lJ 494-7004. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT SLlPS FOR RENT 642 1102 Need Body v.ork Run~ n s a, .-vu. a o 1 . V"· . NPT BCH 20· 25• ..,.. paid for any used car I .. ~~ · 7 1 v w c t Good $500080 SS7 1800 table, SU . B273S Carpet. Nr New. Bro. ...Ing sewing machine , · · · • · -• ( "'1 1 u•" """ on v e r ·_ ----Over 2SOyrds.S2.SOyrd. w/altacb. Late mdl. 35 .&42·4M49-5!'M 1ore1gnordomesl1c1 SA.LIEOILEASE! MG'S F:veryth1ngrenewedbut OodcJe 9935 911 .Sofa. Yelow Tufted I Still instaUed.8SS-20l3 Retail -11400. will to.ts, Speed& ·52 MG TDClus1c Runs ing~~~~ 1980 280ZX Luxur) I 2TONNEAt:COV ERS the body, lhe frame & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~'ri::,d Velvet. 1200 srll-. 494-7004. Ski 90IO Good'~~ Packaje. (714lSS9 6330 Fits MG's, lrthru ·81 the beep• Make Offer '79 Omni 024. low ml . 83U48S YIDEOl'!.•a...u1s c-.,fi Goock 1094 •••••••••••••••••••••••!. '79 Datsun 21lOZX 5 ~pd Neverused.S75ea. 67~·7311 looks hke new, 4 spd I( i JI ll SI z e B e d •-...-11MJ '79 jet skis gd rood $1475 , S2 MGTD. cream and i\1C beige tmmac lo I Maria 631 7797 I e msg vo1·,0 9772 $4900. 548-2310 _ Frame.Mattress, & Box Asteroids, etc. Below •••••••••.···~·.••••••••• orbstorr.' · I green Xlnt rond SS.000 ma '19195 7s9-0244 ;.,.e , · v ••••••••••••••••••••••• •68 Charger, runs good. Springs Good Co nd 'wholesale.6.11·2473 Sodlo Flex.ed. ~aruPIGym as 846-81144 1·66Hl693 '79 .Datsun Z*JZX S spd IMGI 9744 61 000 . b 3 8 · a vert1z m ayboy & · *I YOLYo-·•,.. . m1.ps,p .a c. 1 642 31177 ---4 WL-A C, beige, 1mm11r, I<> lf ~ · . Jack La Lanne Gy m Spo rts lllislrated. S32S loatt, Staragt 9090 -et Dri•et 9550 l tQ19~ 759 m44 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• IN ORANGE COUNTY~ eng, '800 SS1·5822 Kini siie walerbrd, good b . OBO 545-8354 •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111 ""' • · e\ '76 MGB. mmt cond. blue. '74 Dodge Dart. S"'1nger -nd e t $100 mem ersh1p . 2 yr. · '7• CJ• J....n vs•· ·so 21os1 h t hb k w .. n w ma ·· Worth S399 . sell for $225 Surfbo ard. 8•, fl Rick " " -~... "' many · • a c a c custom hardtoP 494 3874 SA.LIES, SEllYtcE special cpe econ 6 cyl 3 67S-6986all.6 494-7004 James/ Bill Stewart OIJSTMlf'f xtras 'Hll8ll.11IM•1 lll11t auto.lom1,1mmar Like aft630PM A.MDLEASIHG spd dean & run~ Couch, brown and beige -Xlntcond,$yo. 7S4-687S UKM 84().7800 1 ,.,1,, '1'''' •111111~1 new ' S5800 Rarhel 7S Great l'llnd. low mt . O\'ERS£ASOELIVERY j perfect $1975 64~8614 plaid. Goodcond. S200or cootw... Surfboard. 7'2. Small Monthly boat & RV Trvcks 9560 WEIUY 556-7267 on~ µamt l..ook.:. lie'-'. EXPERTS IFord 9940 t ofr. 848-2757 20 pc stnless steel set. Face Good Condition storage for any siie. 24 ••• ••••• ••••••••••••••• USED CARS & TKL'CKS '77 Datsun 810 Whitt $3000 fH4 0443 •••., •• ............... . Sofa~ft9Clf The, very best Ideal Fairly new Leash. S6S hr security, r r ee '56GMCSl3lO COMEINOR Good Gas Ma S3500 Porsch~ 9 7501 EA.WIKE '72 Grande Tonno. gd Christmas llt! 957 8309 c.o_.722_ lau.nc. bing & wuhin11 Best oHer wtll Lrade c u, FOR SS6-4~ YOlYO runn•ftg -" wlnt. ures. ~ropical · . SlOO. ""° I N 1u.i.. •••• • ••• • ••••••••••••··1 I u• ~..,..., " 642-18 Pool ta ble with ac-pnv1 eges ewport I 848-Zm FRHAl'PIAISAL Ho.do 9727 , '81 911 !iC Tarit.l New, l966HarborBlvd $14000 B 0 4!n·5624 cessories. S300 Stor., list_._,, Dunes. 1131 Back Bay COST Traditional Solid Wood 631.~ lw 1095 Or. Newport Buch l I 910 DATSUH Corm1er·Del.illo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plat Met . Lealher int A MESA 79 ra1rlane Sta Wagon Mabo1any Table. 62x42 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-0510 KIMGCA.1 CHEYIOlET VISITYOUR P-7's .ilarm S:ll ,500 I 646-9303540.9467 P8. PS. AC. AM F'M. in. ? ext 6 chairs & John Wayne Tfl\lllS C~ub LOSING LEASE. quit Air. radio. chrome bum 18211 BEACH BLVD ORANGE COAST 544 0614 wkd)\, S4J.OJ69 ·so OL. O\etd~ve. sun Tan 31K ltll Sharp Pl' Cbina. $950. 838-9427, ~lyed=~er;~~· LLngbusiness.sellingoul I pers EXCELLENT , HUNTINGTONBEACll HONDA .!,\es&wknds I roor am rm cass.11.000 I S3600 Cash ~7211 &&>ml r 0 · ALL supplies and fix· T • rfllll I CONDITION 18647 1 847-60l7or "Porsrhe911S,1mmac m1 Perl rond l9300or Mo•~riek 9947 RCA Color l9in TV mo 64<Hi080 ---bures mdudi.ng: . .!'::.!.~ .. :!:': ........ 1 THIS WEEKS SPECIAL 549.3331 HEADQUARTERS rond. !ounroor am rm best orrer 1324 9513 ..................... .. ,Endbl Tables,~ Coffee ASea~c~,~~::~no:o·th r:,:,~aycbca8f::.· ::~~~~ c~ Wt/ ,. s DD-L : ssns I -TODAY!!! ~:s~:So aP~.~~ '>el' '64 PllOOS 'iS :e·s~ A~~ ~~~t ta e, S80. Microwave. 96J..dlO Sa loo hairdryers and Rtilt 9120 A DLBA.CK IMW Alltos, haport~ UNIVERSITY Xlnt cond RUM well con $140. Freedom Phon.e. Great Buy! Must Make hydraulic chairs mir-••••••••••••••••••••••• 131·2040 49S.4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES&SE:RVICE Rare 1975 548 5206between9 5 i68 422i U SO. Card table & Space Available an rors.shelvesandplants Overhead camper f1t.s s· ,.69 Che\ El (;ammo 350 Aatdi 9707 OLDSMOllLE rorsc~CCl!rftf'o ·79 265 GL Waaon 27.000 Merciwy 9950 Chaidrs, 170 Infi nity Warehouse.Need tosell Also.make-up.shampoo bed,slove/s1nk$2SO 700 AutoTraru.&.Alr.Sllk)(l ~··•···~··••••••••••••• H--• One nr J'JS manura c m1 Loaded'"lmma!' sl•:••••••••••••••••••••• llea Stereo. Sl75 Boxes 12XIOX6 Also andhair products W.20thSl ~ll...f M 548·8425 78 Audi S()OO I owner --'"' lured ln<ha Red. black rvl S88SOftrm fi.o1Sll641 ,4 Capra automat1r. l~l:~ECORATlNG 14',X9"•Xl6'•· From to Call6.11-97S4or 12'Ci\MPERTRLR '78 Datsun p li Long ~e,ry E::1d~ MSU~~ ~~a!~~.~ :~~1 oB~ackRl:!t~e:o'~. ~ 24S2 . ~.~'~1.apem a~'ws~~~eo)I 25' to29• pe r Box after 6,~ Stove.sutk.slps4 bed camper shl air SEI L .... """ F \' ' ('OSTAM"'"i\ Sq. glass top coffee -. _E50 631·01.29 · · , ! ..,"""' 1rm en «:,;) Blaupunkt cassellestero roor . $1 .SOO PP table.stereo console, ~·7!!.0. _3 DisplayCases.Custom · --shks.4 spd.s:B><lorbe~t 1 fair PP 6408246 540..9640 w1thDolbpn!lpu.shhut AMto•,UM'd 6316039 1S0.&42·9T72 JACUZZI Built. Formica. New Mm1 truck camper shell orr 661·1009art6 U I' Messages6ll 7032 . , I toms sele<1 Sunroor i\ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• Never used. Glass Goodcond.$200 .55 Che\y Run.s good 77 CVCC 4 i.pd . blue l'ondatmnmj!, elect wm AMC 9905 '67 Parklane 410 \'8 I'~ PPerlach aSon~ Brown Fl~ral Xlnt cqf wp. 2 yrs old. shelves with drawers. 842-3115 Rreat work truck $4~ · I '78 Am 5000 ~atchba<·k. $2100 d:1yi. l do w 5 . a 1 a rm~. el\' ~··•••• •••••••••••••••• 0p Bb0a968c .~1 good S3i5 nl a w/malc me {1800/of e!:_ 7~0895 Gius Front. $800 OBO Motoriaflllliits 91 40 67s-7696 · 1 4 ~pd. air. stereo tape I J4~4~82 e\eS 12131' Outstandmg rondatrnn 74 Hornet Sportab<>ut """ ~~Cback chairs ~ Mlero Ca 1¥ ... ~-4636 ....................... y Xlnt cond lll!OOOBO I throughout All ma an V 8 PS. Ntw Bks MllSIOMJ 9952 3 pc Sectional couch soo. Glass lop coffee table 00 548-82'2 All types d fumllure, all lood cond. Reasonable. 875-3816 or67~ 8' Hardwwod Framf' Coittb. Floral Pattern Need Upholstery S75 ·~100• N'EVER USED: Sofa & loveseat $300. Dinette S170, Qn Bdrm~. Mal· lresa/box spnngs On $130. full teo, twin S80 MORE!! 710-0901 Kini Site bdrm set. triple dresser w/mirrors 2 niaht s tands , head bo1tda, incl mattresses. Paid 11200. sell $675: allo king Dakot a bedaprud and shams. Paid 1225. sell SlOO. Like oew. 645·2444 or 720-1170 &emodeling Sale Medlt Uv rm furn S300, dinette -8213 fecan low chest 1150. Mab dble bed, dresser & mirror Sim new · sell llSO. Faberware Rotes $20, antique wicker bookshelf 1100. All m xlnt cond 963-4090 7' bm. leatbe~lr sora. lood cond SlSO. '31·9132 Kial size waterbed, good COftd. 175. Brown and belle matching couch and lovesol, good cood. ooror r.5C7·184S 8unl bt'ds with mat· ll ..... da 861-7030. •etl31·9917 • in1 set. 7 pc. wal. 72" lble~to96" pad! in· r~ Use d equipmen t ' '77 XR 7S Honda runs •• 9570 I 857-2426 '80 4 dr i\crord. be11(e, teoanre rr<'eapts $33,000 •~l966• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co"'ltlbk Remodeling SaJe! perf.S3SOrirm.ca·ll Art ~M.Ch~:~;·\;;;;M·.;;;;;1j" A.usHn 9709 xlnt , loma, K trk ster oc best pp l 7J•>. '77StauonWagon "66 con\ert Pony mtr Ww..__.. ..... ___ TaylorFroslie Freeze.2 759·8043. "ake ff . 136000 •••••••••••••••••••••••Must i.ell' S7300 ofr I 9964SS4or~_ 504 SSOOOBO Must see S5000 Days ""-~ t b H 'It Be h l.. o er . m1. Gail S36·9875or847 3358 ,. .. 8300 581 ,..,,u W d l .. ....... u_ e. anu on ac Honda Express. runs clean549·7966 '66 H_., CClltY '74 911 Taraa Blk w ~hi 673-~ """'' ~ e\'.!!S . .....,.,., or s ar ... · · · ....... Muer mounted on com· great Needs clran up. . ~ '10 Ho.dol.c ord " '68 Fast back, 302. good MailMerge'" . . . SISO blnatio Milk/I e bo 66 Dodge Van. 225 6 cyl Blue. white mtenor. new e mt 30K ma Loaded di tt IO WordM aster'" . SISO B ~ 1112 c 0 x. S2SO. Gd e ng & headers eng. brks. S2500 4-dr Aulomal1c.,tOK ma I Xlnt Cood 545-7164 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rond . needs some work roas er · eep da661·7030,eves831·9917 f ssoo' 645.:,1666 S7300orbest ·77 924. 4 spd. sunroof, ·~ Buick RHena, xlnt Jl800 fl40.2250alt 6 F'or 1nformauon send · ~~=~ S~~r.W~~~· Black PUCH Moped ~:~j sunr · IMW 9712 . 497·l981 • <·assette xlot cond I rond Best orrer Mu)t 66 Mustang VS. auto. air Company Name & ad· fer. S7S--4'T34 or come to Must sell. Runs well ••••••••••••••••••••••• 80 Honda p~ 18 ooo ma $6900 631 2991 j see 644 &5S8 ' cond. PS. restored. hkt dress, city, state. zap and Greenberg's Dell. 704 E l2S 644-5215 9590 l98I BMW 17500 orrer 1146 28SS. 1961 CABRIOLET Cadiloc 9915 new' I 533-4242_ phone no. to Balboa Blvd 2Honda mm1 trail bikes 2 A.lltos w~ CLOSEOUT 645-0546 I bod'. onJv. $600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '66 289 S32al PS. PB. AC D'"T'" IU•l'!.ES w addl d d ••••••••••••••••••••••• J \ p ,. "'-• TV Rocio. Hlern s es g con JtwHft 9732 642 2.15.) COHTEMPLA TING r uto I rans ~e"' amt 1~~~~6 HIFi, Steno 1091 846-JSSSaft 4~m G~~~~~!a! SAVEii ••••••••••••••••••••••• Porsche 928 i9 Blk I CA.DfLUC? ~~~~ ,T:~e .!01~ '"lrademartc of M1cropro ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motorcydft/ Anything considered. • • SHARP metlr. lealh mtr, lo ma. We llpec1ahtc an leases Ste\ e International Corp. San Bfautiful Color TV, 2 yr Scoohn 9 I SO 1971 Lhru 1980 C0tt• H.-dtop 'lnl cond. polished al ' for the business e' Rafael.Ca wrnty. Free delivery ....................... Sales and l.ras1ng at '73 JfttMll~ lo)<;,makeofr?'89721 I ecuthe&profess1onal .65 Collectors Mustan(i! 2 wrought 1ron gates ea 4• 48 646-l186 -1977 Puch Moped· good ~ competitive pnces Ex Must sell , best offer over Rolls Royce 9756 Lor"¥ StltcffCllt ~P~r~e':-51 \'.8 eng x s·. sso. or BIO 493-6135 Sylvania 25'" Console cond. 14~7-8393 k cellent service and parts S4SOO Churk Perry ••••••••n••••••••••••• Of Hew 191 I SS2·336.S aft 4orwkends w/remote control. gd . . dept. 956·1281 "l DCALER IN U.S.A. C.tlacs '68 Shelbv GT <N\ X'lnt cood. S300 /bst oft 72CL350 Honda 140k M1 tr.a--L , JVV • Stamp collectloo evaluat· 847.7271 Superior Cond. ~ , Good selecuon of pre-Kanitmt1t Ghio 9734 JO' CARVER How 1R ~1 cond . senous buyers on ed. Reasonable fee. S 9 1 d 63l l093 VlOusly owned BMW & ••••••••••••••••••••••• '.TABER~ ly Jl2,ooo ns.noo Dave C 89f.9S07 ;~tr!n. c~/ ~ ra~k ·79 OT ;1s'Se99 other fine cars in eic '74B~~~~~~a ~ I015-~ L ~ ., OldtlftClbilt 9955 Sw.cltll Crystal, o. 673·~or 548-0682 Imm aculate cond. cellent condition. Priv P\y 760~ "":.,';:" ~~~ ··~~~·..!Z.~' ( .1\0I lJ ,,1\ ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• h,and blown lead coll~· RCAConsoleSlereoC.Om-751·5368 .72 KarmaM Ghia convt ClOS£D SVNOllYS "•K•H .. ,, 1~,. '69 Olds. new tires. auto. lion. All for SIMJO or w11J binalloo. Good Cond . ,74 8SA-{;()()cc We also have a lease Gd cond .... 200 offer , \\.,,, .. 1, ,,. ps, pb, air, pwr wndws. sell sep ~ 0 1 1 ___ .. company that leases .., T t 97 $450 642 3338 . $125. 76().8636 r g. X nt L..,.iu. $500. other makes of autos, 494.2034 or 494-0788 oyo o 65 . . Co lor T .V. Antenna ZENITH 25" color TV, S48-27(M trucksandvan.s.For ad· Mencia 9731 ....................... '79Atttwood rlnto 9957 VHF /~HF SJ.SO Garden 135. Good condition. Call <2 l '74 Hondas. 12Scc ditlonal information on 19711 Toyota Ct'hni (;T ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fur niture S42S Pwr Tri'als bikes, rru'nt cond, ••••••••••••••••••••••• hftback 18.000 mt Air Brougham 26,000 mi FOR 5•• ir. · 646-7230 evs. or 64$-1039 leasing plea5ecall Suoroor Sharp tx{'ellent -.. mower 3.s hp Sl 20· days. ea.548-2708 7141972·1270 7141661·9611 !~I rood · PS, PB. rac cond Must Sac No 71' Panto, clean, w air 966•27~, 7~ KRAFT3Cbarmel Radio '75 Honda CBS50. Lo Ma. ~. ~~~;c6~3.~:4dial tares. paym'l hi '82 Take cond 111on1nJ!. l(OO d Alan. V1~ Game. for RIC hobbies. Good Cond. 9650. For a good dfal and good WE'VE I over lease Chuck Perry transportallon car $1000 "u...,1,u 175 ~ ••~5318•• aftersalesserv1cesee: '73 Coron:1 Wal(on. SSK. 956-1281 OB0642·1570Ju1Je '""" ..,,, ._......._ & .....__.__ '77 HD Spt. t2M On• MOYEDI ........ \'e r Y c 1 ea n · " C' •CAD ·74 Eldo Convert llL---. 99 ... 0 PING PONG TABLE -. ,.,.._ " Q AM FM Sl400 ORO • '1_,.,. • 1 E d ...a Owner. l(X)"T,, spk. $2600. 079-739s tClass1cl 64.000 ong m1 ..................... .. Fold·up.xlnt cond.SSO ••f•U 673-5477 STIPIT&Ynn• .. -~851·9541 ev ·74 P lymouth Station !l68-955l ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Honda sso A·I cond. ~A<llml Volisw.,.. 9770 -Wagon. gd cond . eni: 1n Collectors ltemlTancan Gt•NI .;-9010 l7 000 · xt l SALES-SERVICE-tEASING SH ....................... 73S.-S.Yilt xlnl shape. new tires. of Billy ~. Xlnt cond. •••••••••• .. ••• .. •••••• stt 1~'e..:i:· mus 2oe7w14~1at. SAHT1A71ANA ,.g: ·ro. 'SS VW left & right Run~ good Asking $750 rrame hitch for pulling Cold s:ilJO.Off YOU• door, '73 left door ISO _548-QOl big t railer SI 295 er HAV.E YACHT' ....,.....__H_ tr...a..~ CLO EOSIJNOAY_ M·?o·•. h w 997 -SS2-336.\ ' '"""""'"1__../u=:.:..-I 60 A "' ~.. eac . estmi stylr whl •79 Cpe Dt Yilt .,,.,,., Ke nnedy mac hin ist WANTPROPERTY? ,._ ...... .,. For tbebestdeal51n --· •• rims for Super Beetle l::xt Blk w/blli:nn.ral"". PCMIHoc 9965 r o 11 a w a Y too Ibo x HAVE PROPERTY' R•ENT~ii~;i~;;h;~ WE PAY Soul hem Caliromia • • ea. 548-17'4 ~ Blk lthr int Cust A; ..................... .. w/loob.lndicalors.Sac. WANTYACHI'? alps helfcont.$Z95.wk TOP DOLLAR ComeSeeUsToday "H•R, '79conv,red wtwhitetop cessoma. Orig ownr '69 GTO Pont.Jae Cone,... .::.::;. m See Pn111-lld + hL . ,...,.. FOi USBI CAllS . & . "",.. "·""'"" "'"" lmT.b~ .,\:"..,;• "·"' :l,::l m I SI o ·'°' ;;:'~::..-.. ,,, W..ted IOll 714/'7J..2tl0 TraMen,T,_... fl70 ALAMMA&MON M....ti '739 '71Bug.Mecbxlnt. c__..-9917 Sl800 f'IRMS48-9956 •••••••••• .. •••••••••.. ~··•pj•••••••c .. n·t••• POMTIAC~AJtU SADDLfiACK ••••••••••••••••••••••• P v•l Ply~• . •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• "77 Jo'irebird Formula Wanted. The Letter "A" T~x Deductible dona· 71 ea.sure ra enl I 2480 Harlior Blvd. OIANGI _., Blk/blk lnlr. A/C, Pwr For the Pepsi Challenge llOOS. Boats, planes, car. trailer, Ult Jone. xlnl I COSTA MESA IMW COUNTY•S 196' c .... 107 wlndowt & dr locks, rear 77 i aa. aquarium, rully Game <Under the Caps Please call213f!»~ fond ., jleepe 8$tus~oa 549-4JOO 149·1457 28402 Morf:rite Pkwy. UCWSIVE The B(aat Mericetpltce New enaine. Excellmt' window dff'lt. Am f'M equipped, salt/fres h Of' Soft Drinks) Wlll pay 13' Bolton Whaler. 20 H ~~86'7~ mes ' · PO A~Els~yoop~ M • e.~ •Tl Oft tllt Orwlpeo..t rond ~ besl ofr. cass. rally whls. New cl'd. S700 ~34&5 watfr .963-9682 1100 lo the peraon who Mettury.$2000 , I RSCHES "'~ DAI y -640• Pvt ~ Strlea 60 llrts S46SO. lindsone.491.5372 •54141425• LO·LlNER21',aell cont d w•a..191!A (EXITHWV.I DE··-SHIP L: PILOT c.......... "20 673-9143 Mutt Sell! Queen Mat. 8 1 -L-Arittocral seldom t.IHd. I """"'RI . a~ I 2040 491r. .1949 "'a.al CLASS FIED treu"Box.~080. Uy DI World War ti lolh.M--buut shape Many ' Allowuatheopportun1ly ~ • ..... We'll dtbver anywhere I ....................... n.~.rWr4 '970 147.2791 Souvfnin . Cash paid. ••••1.t fOJO xtru ·incl roof air I totonaldwlhepur<"hu e CloieiSund!l•--lnl.heworldl •os * Cewn .. '10 ...................... . Oil b. V 1 Sof (E1 p eclally want ....................... l2950 Localed at 2Sa9 t or tnde·lnofyour clnn llACHIMPOITS A Maats,.t~ '85 T Bird. Convu t. SllS~.~WO:, ~~nlc ,:: Germ n ~cs S.U'4M4 Zodiac·•· DlllJh1. MIO. Oranie Ave a7HS72. 1 Porat>be. Oleck with Us UsHhe Dally Pilot 1480ovt~ ,.,, Can w It, find "· EtonomlciJ 4 cyl , au&o BfautlruUy monct Wht bit , l$O Antique Blk Wani.d llMd Porta Crib 1Ylbp Jollnton 08, '350. a · '' Today! "f ast Rt'Sull'" •trv1cf 71i.o900 1,..11 Wrlfl 0 w.t 64 \rant •• air t'Clftd., ett top YtUowExt. 8500 Cb 1 150 or 1m tnb or play pen. '31·20f.t. dirtttory y lte9~81 d (lABRDI. m.-.. t:~~~~ ror'sk Cali Ur tnt.tMal t ft wbilt inflalablt ,,....,......, fllO ser-vlctisou~r 6J •7170v . [842 58781 Otl.Y•JH ,... H74 u i.aos. Dana Polnl Clualfled Adt, your dlns bf. 2 aeat1, mtr ~·;;:·;~;;~·W. .. xi:t 1 • HOWAIDQin.. .. ................... .. a. ont ·ltop 1b oppln1 mowat .~ eoocl. New u,.., sa50, apecla 11 Mah 1ovr 1hoppln1 00.1JQul6ta.. 'It Nova, 2 4r. A1C C!f•IWAdl ffHfII m1wr Want AdHefp? MW MMIU Call8'2-5478 u t.322 u1ier b1-.UMDaiij NBWPOlt'l'llACH a.an -m.4maftS ~ llftide, • t ( ••••• ·' . ro . . UH ANG f. COUNTY , C ALIFOHNIA 2 ~ CENTS First Lady wages war on WASHINGTON (AP) -Nancy Reagan has all but blamed drug addiction on the nation's parents an~ advised them to get toueh. even if i\ meaQs "losing your child for a while." The first lady, embarking M on<lay on an an ti ·drug crusade, labeled addiction "the most democratic illness there is," because lt cuts .across racial and economic lines. "l believe parents are ~he answer to it all," Mrs. Rea1an declared during a meeting in the state dining room with about '° members of the National Federation of Parents for Drug Pree Youth. "I think for a long time parents weren't involved," the first lady said. "They shifted it lo the schools or the police or the government, a n ybody but themselves, because it took time, it took effort. it's not pleasant. "Sometimes you run the risk or loslna yoor child ror a whUe/' she added. "You have to oe tough and you have to learn to say, 'no.' You can't only say •yes.' "lt 's great to be your child's friend and pal," she said. "But sometimes, you've got to be their parent." Mrs. Reagan said she bas bel.ieved "(or a long time that parents have not been in\'olved the way they should be. l think that ln t.be final analysts lt's the parents who are going to turn this thing around. I think they're the most potent force there ls." She said drug and alcohol abuse was "one of the most serious problems our country faces." Drug abuse will be Mrs. Reagan 'a major project as fint lady, along with her support for ...., """'*.., u. .. ,.. It's a "Log" j am at the nortb side of Huntington pier as four wetsuited surfers take off on thick wave. Man arrested in Clemente slaying case An Oceanside man has been arrested in Ohio in connection with the slaying of a woman whose body was dumped in San Clemente in August. Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Daniel Ray Martin, 23, was taken into custody at hjs mother's home in Versailles, Ohio, as a suspect in the stabbing death of 20-year-o&d Zaida Martin, his sister-in-law. Hart said investigators determined that the woman was slain in Oceanside while her husband, Kerry Dean Martin, a Marine. was on duty overseas. The woman's body, Hart said, later was dumped along Avenida Pico near San Clemente High School. The body was discovered by a jogger Aug. 13. Mrs. Martin was reported missing by relatives Sept. 22. Il was a distinctive tattoo or a butterfly on her shoulder that led to her identity, Hart said. Hart said the slain woman's brother-in-law was arrested Saturday. 'Pwo investigators have traveled to Ohio to return Martin to Orange County for prosecution. Hart said it was h is underalandinc that Marlln would waive extradition. The motive ror the slaying bu not yet beeo determined, Hart said. Ceremonies .slated on Veterans Day <.;eremonies are scheduled in several Orange Coast cities Wednesday in observance of Veterans Day, formerly known as Armistice Day in recognition of the end or World War I . Also in observance of the holiday, city halls in Huntinf'lon Beach. Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Irvine and Laguna Beach will be closed Wednesday. Public schools will be clos~. along with county. state and federal offices, post offices and banks. Rep. Robert Badham , R-Newport Beach, will join other elected officials. military representatives and religious dignitaries at the a nnual memorial service in San Juan Capis trano !lt Mission Cemetery, off Los Cerritos, near Ortega Highway. The event begins at 11 a.m. LocaJ veterallS will conduct another memorial service at 11 a .m . at American Legion Post 291 at 215 15th St., Newport Beach. This service will be followed by a lunch honoring World War I veterans. At 3 p.m . a flag retirement ceremony will take place at the post. Veterans in Huntington Beach will place Clowers at the war memorial outside City Hall, 2000 Main St., at 11 a.m. In Laguna Beach, members o( American Legion Post 222 and Veterans of Foreign Wars Poet 5868 will place two wreaths at the war monument in Heisler Park, also at 11 a.m. 'Cover-up' at CBS Bo Derek clad for TV version Fog plagues OC's airport and motorists A thick blanket of fog that grounded some planes .at John Wayne Airport and plagued motorists in inland areas or Orange Cou nty today is expected to repeat its performance Wednesday morning. Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Bureau said fog covered interior Orange County this morning, while coastal areas were relatively clear. Weather officials blamed the fog on a strong onshore flow of cool marine air which condensed when meeting up with pockets of warm air in inland areu. Officials in the John Wayne Airport tower reported a 200-foot cetlinc around the airport with a one-mile vlslbtlity range. PiJot.s without instrument ratings were being urged to stay on the cround. • A spokesman from the Oran1e County Harbor Patrol headquarters in Newport Beach said vbibility along the cout was two miles. , Tbe fog, weather· omctals explained fus arrived band·lD·band with a coollng trend tbet ii expected to drop daytlme telQp«atures to the low TOI lD inland clUes and to the upper IOll aloq the cout. . drug abuse tbe foster grandparents prctiram, according to her press secretary, Sheila Tate. In recent months, the first lady has held eight private meetings with experts on drug and alcohol abuse and has visited two NSidentlal treatment progr~ms. She ·asked the participants at Monday's meeting how sh( could help and they suggested she speak out publicly and vial~ parent groups and acbool programs In addition to drug centers. · One persori suggested she hold seminars for the spouses of members of Coneress , governors and other public offi~ials. Mrs. Reagan quoted an old adage "A woman la like a (See DRUGS, Page AU BalloOnists . .. .. .. .... ~ -. head toward .. . 1 •,• .~. West Coast NAGASHIMA. Japan <AP> - The Double Eagle V floated over the Pacific today toward the West Coast of the United States, but the helium-filled balloon lost some altitude, a spokesman at .the balloon 'a tracking station here said. Though skipper Ben Abruzzo and his three cre wmen remained confident they would reach the West Coast, the ground crew here said the balloon was riding air currents at about 13,000 feet, or 5,000 feet lower than originally planned. The balloon was about 650 miles east of Japan, they said. Eddie Hatta. in charge or the Nagashima Onsen Communications Center, said it appeared the balloon would not pass over San Francisco as originally planned but will float over Seattle or British Columbia. To Cly over San Francisco, the balloon would need to be at 18.000 (eet, be sajd. Hatta said one theory for the lower altitude was that t he balloon might not be completely Inflated with helium. But he said at one point this morning t,tie balloon was floating atJ9,000 feet, which "proves it can climb up lo high levels, especially when the sun rises in the morning. I don't see any problems at all." The baJloon's crew remained in good spirits and was in radio contact with the Nagashima tracking station and with the air control tow er at Narita International Airport, near Tokyo, Hatta said. Abruzzo, a 51 -year-old real estate developer from Albuquerque. N.M., said be and his crew hoped to arrive on-the· West Coast by Thursd~y. If Suspect due in slaying of girl, 12 Thomas Francis Edwards, the 37-year-old former Co11ta Mesa resident accused in the shooting death of a 12-year-old Lake Elsinore girl at a Cleveland National Forest campground, will likely be returned to Orange County from Maryland on Thursday. Orange County Sher iff's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards "probably" will be arralped Friday on murder and attempted murder charges In South Orange County Municipal Court. Edwards , described by authorities as a "mountain man" and "gun bu((," is accused or shooting Vanessa lberrl and Kelly Cartier, both 12, of Lake Elsinore, at the Blue Jay camp1round on Sept. 19. Mias lberri died two days later. The fomrer South Cout Gun Club employee eluded an extensive manhunt in the forest and other Southern California locaUoa1. He •u arrested nine days foUowlna the abootiq ln .Maryland, where be bad aerved a prison teteMe on a robbery ,:har1e. Edwarda initially rer...ect to walve otradiUon to California for p~. He cban1ed hll ,mind and decided to retum late tut week, Hart said. Two 1berlff'1 department lDvnttaat.on. James Sldebot.ban and David Mann, are In ••r1l.cl and will accompml7 ·Kdwarda to Cautornla, llaA ..... .......... , ..... . .,. ror the East Coast, cross the Atlantic a nd make a final landing near the European border of the Soviet Union. "Conditions are s.o good I feel we can continue on to Europe," Abruzzo said before takinc olL Abruzzo, Larry Newman and M axie Anderson, all Crom Albuquerque. made the first successful trans-Atlantic balloon <See BALLOON, Page A2) Killing suspect's fear told • 2 ' I , a • .. ' By GLENN SCOTI' Of-Oelty~ ..... .. The girlfriend of Newport Beach psychologist Telford "Tim" Moore testified Monday that Moore wanted to marry her but was mortally afraid to cross his bomosexuaJ roommate aoa the man he is accused or killing, Stanley Espinda. ·' Glory Lane, the girlfriend from Laguna Beach, told an Orange County Superior Court Jury that Moore lived in fear ol the tempestuous and dominalinf Espinda, who had befriended Moore 18 years ago. In a candid and detailed description of their relatiooship, Ms. Lane said Moore became increasingly disturbed abo~ ms-- relationship with Espinda id the weeks preceding the Nov. 5, 1980 s hooting in the roommates' exclusive Spyglass Hill home.· She said he often broke into tears describing to her the retribution Espinda would take against him when he team!'\ that Moore had been seeing her. Two days before the killing,' she said she surprised Moore in his school psychologist's office at Fountain Valley High School, and he burst into tears repeating: "Please don't stop loving me.•· Despite her urgings, however,-: she said Moore refused to figb~ b a c k a g a i n s t E s p i n d a • s' beatings, believing that any aggression would only incite more punishment. After finding deep scratcb. marks on his•neck one day U:i' October 1980, she said sh$' angrily scolded: "Have you eve~ in all these years fought back?" He told her he hadn't, she said. She said s he was rarely invited to Moore's home and only wben Espinda was cone. When the two were in bed at her home. Rhe said he never fell <See MARRY, Page A!) IRAllil ClllT WIATlll• Increased coastal low clouds and fog tonight and , · Wednesday morning. Otherwise falr both days ,. and not as warm. H11hl 6S to 72. Lows tonieht 50 to 55. :1 llllDITIDAY 'Tis· the HG8I {or an ovalortche of mat -order c:otalogue1 and the btly1ng public 1s being worn«J ro newore. See Page 88 11111 ·,· l • ••••• OraT Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueed1y. November 10, 1881 . ictim 's mom testifies From P@ge A1 @AL1'00N ••• reeway Killer ~rY told how ahe dilcovered son missing crJ.u., ta the Doubl• Baste In A&1&• ll'JI. I N•wman le Abru110'1 co-pllot tor the Pec61lc fll1ht. nd the otber two cr•w m1m1Mtr1 are aoa Clark or Albuquerque and- .. &ocky" Aokl, the JapaneH owner o r the Be nblhana reataurant c hain. Aok i 11 Cinanclnt the ~.000 venture. IACKIS BYllAN • I ......... ' In an emoUon·chc**1 voice, • motber of a ll·JHf·old rteway Killer victim told a ry Monday at the trial ot llllun Bonin how •he reai when • dllc:overed her IOn •lMinl prU 10, UIO. ''I knew aomeChl•• •H ,_. I went 1a&o hil room and. wan•t then.'' Hid Barbara lebn of her return home from ork on that ni1bt. "ffi• jacket •• there, his driver's educatioo ok waa there. I knew be ouldn't go anywhere without bla JHk9'. It w11 fold at .&lht." It would bl tour da)'I btlOre lbe l•amed tbat I body found in 1 Loa1 Beach alley bf a pa1Hrby bad been ldnWled .. that ol her eon, Stevee Wood ol Bel.,._.r, Mn. Bletaa •aid Lo a quaverlq voice. Shortt)' after le1vln1 the COW'lroOm. •b• bunt IDtot.an. Bonin, a 84-year·old &ruck drlv•r from Dowoey, 11 charsed in Loi Aqelet Count1 with 12 alay!Do that occurred between Au1uat im and June 1•. A total ot 44 youn1 men and t.oya have been murdered and late solons eut 4,000 on welfare SACRAMENTO (AP) -The ate Legislature opened its ciaJ session by setting aside s pat'tisan reapportionment spute &nd-c uttln1 welfare nelits for 34,000 families by million. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., who al led the 'special session artlng Monday, signed it into w within l\ours. The bill, SBlx by Sen. Alfred lquist, D·San Jose, won a 31·2 enate vote and a 63-12 ssembly vote. , The R epublican s, who 'considered refusing to vote for From Page A1 DRUGS. • • tea·bag. You never know her s trenatlh until s he 's In hot water,' and said it applies to .m'en as well. "We're all In a lot of hot water." she said. "There's a danger of losing • O\Jr whole next generation." Mrs. Reagan said that during •Jier visits to drug treatment •:;Centers she was fascinated "to t~ear these young people talk !•. ery freely, very openly, with .:: ery little embarrassment. • · hich I expected, about what j)as happened to them .... All t' Qf them mentioned the parents." ,:· She said one problem was that . ·a report several years ago ~a intained mariiuana was -harmless anti ··so many or the ch\ldren r'ferred b,ack to that one report. Now lbat's been dis proved since a nd proved wrong. But it's very difficult to gel young people to read the reports that have come out s ince.·· --Although ~-Reagan did not say what specific report claimed • ,marijuana was harmless, her tioi taH said the first lady was ritQuoting a National Institute on Drug Abuse report. , ~ Dr. William Pollin, director <'f the drug abuse institute, told ,1 £ongress last month that a study -indi cates that marijuana ' amoking leads to cocaine and 1 h e r oin use. He said that ;·stepping.stone hypothesis" was ,r·rejected prematurely and DOW needs serious re-evaluation." I b-~:~ tones roll .,:in Hart/ ord •' c HARTFORD, Conn. IAPl ,~earing white tights, yellow _,.'knee pads. red·flowered shirt and blue padded jacket. Mick Jagger led tbe Rolllng Stones to , the stage in their only scheduled · 'top ln New England on their three·month U.S. tour. The British rock group, which last toured the United States in 1978, was making it s first appearance in this city since 966 for s hows Monday and ( onight. The Stones play in New York City's Madison Square Garden on Thurs day and : Friday. • J ag1er .. now 38, was greeted : with a roar from the crowd of J•1s,ooo as be lived up to bis ; I prancuii, provocative image. Resolution OK'd UNITED NATIONS <AP> - ' The General Assembly's committee on decolonlzaUori bas approved a resolution. 73·7, endorsing the right of the people or the Western Sahara to independence. The Alaerian resolution was approved Monday. ... ~.:Jim ...... a-,..N. .... lllir"A.1111111- the bill, cooperated after De,mocratlc leaders auured thel'(l that conaressional and leelslative reapportiooment would not be brouaht up. Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, D·San Francisco, •asured them at the outset that his Intention was to ''lead the houae Vlrough the thicket ol the Board of Equalization re~portionment, and the Board of Equaliutioo oruy." New districts for state Senate, Assembly and U.S. Houae of Representatives have already b e en p • s s e d b'y t be Demo c rat .dominated Legislature. and the an1ry R e publicans are collecting signatures to take the issue to the voters next June. ,..,e welfare bill wu required, omcla.ls said, to conform state regulations with those or the Reagan administration. Later Monday, Assembly '8Dd- Senate committees approved similar measures to implement other federal cuts, saving the state about S6 million. Parent-child issue eyed by high court WASHINGTON <AP> -"You cannot destroy a famUy forever when you're not C9Qvlnc:ed it'• the right thin• to do,·• tlM U.S. Supreme Court wu told to4Q. . New York City laQer llartin Guueoheim urpd t.M utiaD'1 hi1hest cwrt to impoH a more strin1ent standard fer what evidence a state •••d• to petmanently take chUdrea from their parents . "We want the finder of fact l usually a state Judie) to be convinced," Gu11en.beim •aid. "It's the obligation ol Jud•es to be sure M their result." The Ulster County, N. Y., case is giving the justicea their second chance ln a year to 1tudy the constitutional protection give n to parenl ·child relationships.~ co•rt ruled by a 5"4 vote in May that penniless parents facing termination of parental nghts have DO right to free legal help, as have penniless people facing imprisonment. Ulster County welfare officials in 1979 won a court order terminating the parental rights of John and Annie Santosky, proving by a "preponderance oC evidence" that their three children -Tina, DOW 10; John, now 8; and Jed, now 7 -were permanently neglected. That standard of proof, u$ed ln most non.criminal cases. essentially determines a winner by deciding whether it is more probable than not that certain facts exist. Essentially, evidence is weighed and Sl percent or more wins. Aside from New York. the "preponderance" standard is used in such parent-child cases by Arizona , Colorado. Connecticut. Delaware, Indiana, Idaho, Kentucky, Maryland, M assacbusetts, Ore1on and South Carolina. No states am~ on officials seekin1 to end earent·child relationships the more stringent sta ndard or "clear and convincing evidence." Two states, New Hampahire and Louisiana, require proor of neglect or abuae "beyond a reasonable doubt" -tbe standard usually reserved for criminal eaes. dumped near Southern CaUtomla freeway• 1lnce 1972 In whal baa been ta•1•d th• Freeway Killer cue, but lnveat11ators say the deaths may not all be rel1ted. Bonin aJso faces seven murder cbareee In Oran1e County. The Superior Court trial ln Loi Anfteles presided over by J\,ldge Wl lam 8 . Keene hes heard a gory recitation of mutllaUon and murder aod have been shown color photo1raphs or the victl~' bodies since the trial be1an last week. In describing youn1 Wood's Injuries Monday, Long Beach police homicide Officer Logan Wren said, "I noticed a bruise above the right eye, a ligature mark around the neck, ligature marks on both wrists and a Jigature mark on one ankle.·• Earlier Monday. in deocribing the bloody. bruised body of another victim, Ronald Gatlin, 18, or Van Nuys., sheriff's Sgt. David Kushner said, "There was blood that appeared to be emanating Crom the right ear. There were numerous abrasfons on. the body.·· He also described numerous ligature marks on the neck, ankles and hands and added. "I observed a small puncture wound to the right rear portion of the neck.'' Last week, the seven-man, five -woman j ur y heard testimony from a number of people including the mothers or victims Darin Kendrick. 19. and Sean King, 14, and saw a picture or Kendrick's body $howing an icepick protruding from his right ear. From Page A1 ........... ,.B1rlctmy Sayor1ara to Japan are Amem·an tJal/om11sts · rrom lelt 1 Rodi'/./ Aoh·1. Ron, Clark. Ben :\hruzzo anrl /,arr.11 Xe1c111a11 Tropical bird seen 1st time in 85 years WASHINGTON (AP > -A colorful tropical bird not seen for 85 years and thought to be extinct has been found in New Guinea , th e National Geographic Society announced today. Previously the existence of the yellow.fronted bowerbird had been known only because of three s kins of male birds brought m by Mal•Y or Papuan hunters ln the 1890s. Scie nti s t s tho u g ht the bowerbir d was extinct. and Diamond was not looking for it al lhP time. MARRY. And a series of expeditions • •---failed to-finct-thei>lrd until Jan. .. wnen I and anyone else who goes t o New Guinea have dreams, we dream about fi'ndlng the mystery bowerbird, but my goal on this trip, was simply to do a general bird survey of this mountain range and help the Indonesian government plan a new nationa l park the re," Diamond said. Nevertheless, he found both the bird and it~ bower on the first day oC his two·week trip, and saw several others during his s tay. Diamond estimates th al a s man y as 1 ,000 bowerbirds may live in this remote area. asleep, claiming that he was 31, when California ornithologist worried that Espinda woul~ find Jared Diamond sighted one in them and hurt them. an unexplored mountain range At one point. she said, Moore in New Gwnea . spotted Espinda's red Porsche cruising past her home and immediately became so nervous and withdrawn that he could barely talk. During Ms. Lane's testimony~ Moor e sat qui e tly and expressionless -as he bas throughout the trial -next to his attorney, AJ Stokke. fn previous remarks , StokJce has conceded that Moore s.hot Espinda as the victim relaxed on the living room floor of their I home. But Stokke, adapting the "battered wife .. deC,pa Joi this I ••It! la aatfUlnl ~ .. •~·s acffon was the result or Espinda's continued barusment and doesn't constitute the murder charge sought by Depnly District Attorney Bryan Brown. Ms. Lane said Moore felt a vagu~ loyalty to Espinda berause h is 45 .year -old roommate had bailed him ,out or a traumatic family life and encouraged him to undertake his successful practice a s a psychologist. Moore and Espinda ran the Newport P syc h ologica l Laboratory. which contracted its services to several coastal school districts. Moore also taught classes al Orange Coast College and USC and he assisted a counseling program al UC Irvine. Ms. Lane said Espinda was a homosexual who. despite his kindness in earlier years, had become possessive and tried to convince Moore that he also leaned toward homosexuality. Mom: Brooke shouldn/t be ashamed NEW YORK lAPl -Brooke Shields has surrered "the utmost. humiliation" because she posed rq1: nu~e photqgraphs 'at age 10, but the pictures' are ·'nothing to be a~hamed or:· her mother says. 1 "I know that I'm a good mother," Teri Shields testified Monday in state Supreme Court in Manhattan ... I have her interests .al heart. I know I've made mi.stakes." The 16·year·old actress is suing photographer Harry Gross in an effort to block him from further commercial use or the 1975 photos. originally taken for a Playboy Press book .. Sugar and Spice." The teen.ager has testified al the trial that the photographs now •·embarrass" her. She and her mother claim further use of the pictures will cause her irreparable !)arm by damaging her professi~oal image and therefore her career. Mrs . Shields, weeping, told Justice Edward Greenfield that her daughte r had called her from school Monday "very upset" about the publicity the case has generated. He nearly ignored.the bird at first, thinking it was a related species. but t'loticed its golden yellow plume curved over to the nostrils. On his return to New York, he examined the skins of the 19th century birds and confirmed the species was not extinct. Male bowerbirds build a &Pf Ciel tall nest of twiltf around a aaplin1 . The crew is carrylni • 30·du supply of food, With the 1ondol• and ropes, the craft I• a1 tall .. a 26·1tory bulldlna. From Page A1 '10' ... same thing. S ure , the sophisticated Priscilla Barnes la more subtle than S u zanne Somera ln "Three's Company," but doesn't every show still revolve around something sexual? The waitresses in "Making a Living'' now wear less revealing outfits, but ha ve the malc·femaJe relationships anct innuendoes changed that much? Aren't they still bed·hopplng in "Dallas?" And isn't Daisy Mae still bouncing and overClowine in that prime example or soft·core pornography, "The Dukes of Hazzard?" ·certainly. So it's not totally accurate to say TV executives are purs uing giggles over jiggles; that's a bit or a smokescreen to keep the Moral Majority types at bay. Rather, the ope rative programming policy on sex is juggle and goggle. Whal you see is not really what you get. As for tonight's heavier dose or sex, CBS was not at all certain what it was getting when it purchased "10." Its deal was an example or how networks occuionally "pre·buy" films to get lheJump on-t.he..competiUon. CBS bought Blake Edwards' screenplay before any filming was done . The pre·buy was based on cast. characters and story Une. Alice Henderson, a CBS vice president for program practices. 1 said the network took Edwards; script and wrote notes along the ' margin, suggesting how the film would best play on TV. Ms . 'Henderson said the language bad to be blt?ached in a number or places and, of course. the bolero scene and poolside voyeurism had to be drei;sed up. Edwards is out of the country s~ooling another film. but CBS s a i d he made the changes himself, rather than hrnng CBS edit later. ............. She said Moore resisted and finally attende d a men's workshop in San Francisco on sexual awareness ... He came out feeling totally heterosexual," she said. "Weren't you aware when you brought the lawsuit that all this was going to be publicly aired?" Greenfield asked. Mrs . Shields did not respond directly. Tlus 1s a sketch of 1l1e nerdy rl1S<:ocererl qel/ou:·tronterl yarrlener howertnrd. tllouyhl '" he ertm,·t It resemhles a rohm w1tl1 a 11olde11 orange hreast But she said be still couldn't shake Espinda's strong physical control and refused to leave him for her until the 18-year relationship was terminated. Asked why he didn't simply m ove out. he told her: "You 1 don't understand. He'll follow us anywhere. He'll Clod us. He'll hurt us," she said. PUC hears gas rate bid LOS ANGELES <AP> -The state Public Uti lities Commiasion has begun hearings on whether' to grant a S790 mlJllon rate increase tbat has been sought b y Southern California Gat Co. since September. The bulk of the rate hike, $572,416,000. hu already been eranted on an interim basis by the PUC. The hearing• which began lilonday la the com minion's .Los Angelea courtroom before Administrative Law Judie James D. Squerl will cover ar1ument1 oa the remamin1 30 percent or the lncreaae, uid PUC apokeawomao Carole 1 · ~adier defecl8 P~WAR, Paktataa <AP> -&a.~ army~ ~M-11 .. Piki1taa wtt11 JO .. , ... H's ttme for your layaway Avoid the holiday crunch ltiis yeof by shopping ot Brett 'M>lkef now Let us help you choose the pelfect gift fOf that special person from our selection of Tine jewetiy. and, with o small deposit. we w~t hold It for you until Christmas .... - .,...._... ., ....... .,.. ... ,,.. ol Lua1._,.1 la lftlll .. to bl 111rr'8d to Clarl1U11 •f 81p1•ur1 ·Loru lat, tbt archdukt of Au1trl1, tbt 1rand ducal court h11 announced. The weddln1 wUI take place Ftb. I ln Luxtmbour1. Pr..._ ••rte·Aa&rN, n. l• the 1ld11t d1u1hter or Gra .. Diiie• .leaa and Grud D •c:la .. 1 Cla arleUt or Luxembour1. A few yean 110. rumora linked htr romanllcally to Brltaln'a Prl•ce O..rlel. Her huaband·to·be is 21 and work• a1 a banker in BrusaelJ. He ta the son ot ArclldUe Claarl• Lo•I• of Austria and the 1randt0n or the late Austrian emperor Karl. '·History will hold the United States responslble" for a nuclear holocaust if the weapons buildup proposed by Preald e n & R e a 11 n ts achieved, says the former commanding general of Marine forces ln Vietnam. Retired MaJ. Ga. wu111-. Philippe Junot. former liusband of Prmc:ess Carolme of Monaco. chats wrth California model Brigitte tovtang at a New York dis1:0. T. Falrbourn told several hundred people gathered ror "Peace Sunday" ln Seattle that Reagan's approach to peace is backwards. Test tube baby coming to U.S. The parents of the first American test-tube baby will bring the infant girl to the United States this week, according to Dr. P atrick Step to e, a Br i ti s h gynecologist. The baby was born last month in Great Britain, Steptoe, medical director of Bourn Hall Clinic in Cambridge, England, said Sunday. He refused to divulge the identities of the parents or where they live. Steptoe, in Phoenix to address a conference. said 20 test-tube babies have been born this year. with 30 more such pregnancies expected worldwide in 1982. The word is passed along by Inmates of Miami's jails -if you're innocent and incarcerated, call Georgia Jones Ayers. She is known as "Miss Jones," and while sbe is neither a lawyer nor a social worke r , the 53-year-old Miami woman bas bad unique success in obtaining justice for people who had no other hope. If it hadn't been for Miss Jones, 17 -year-old Georce Curtis might still be doing time. He was struck by a stray police bullet during a riot in 1970. and was arrested and acc used or being a sniper. Miss Jones believed he was innocent and convinced a judge to release Curtis on her Sl bond. Curtis was convicted on the te s timony o f se ven police m e n , an~ was sentenced to five years in prison. Miss Jones pushed to h ave the case re· in vestigated. Four years later. charges against Curtis were dropped when another police officer who hadn't testified earlier said the s niper fire came from another building. Sinyer Conn i e Franct!I rehearses tor lier c:omeho.d; at the \\'esthury .'Wusu Fair in .\'ew "r'ork where .. 'leren yea rs ago. sl1e U.'Cl!I raperl a1ter a periormanc:e • Reagan intends to spend 6S percent of the national budget on the military, including new weapons, while spending only 35 percent on social programs, Fairbourn said. "Th is ratio is unacceptable. We cannot afford it," he said. "We must first have a strategy tor peace, then a weapons system to produce it." Two tons of papers about 300,000 sheets in 267 boxes -comprise the legacy of former Rep . Otto Passman's 30 years on Capitol HUI. They sit in a storage room at Northeast Louisiana University•s Sandel Library in Monroe, La .. waiting for a room or their own to open in mid-month. The papers have been in t he university's custody since Passman, a Democrat, ran afoul of federal bribery-conspiracy charges accusing him of taking $213 ,000 from Korean rice dealer Tongsun P a r k, including $98,000 in illegal bribes and gratuities. Passman was also accused of failing to report Sl43,000 of the money on bis income tax returns. He was later cleared of all charges. Dr. Larry D. Laraaoa. di rector oC the Sandel Library, s aid the actual value of the documents - whi c h will determine Passman's tax write-orr has not been determined. Dense fog fore cast 51 at .. .. .. .. 1' • " 6S JI .. n " S1 .. .. .. 4S ,, 63 4 .. 1S .. 11 " " IS " .. • .. .. 74 u " 61 n • 41 67 72 63 '1 • 4S 12 u ts .. " ~'·-...;;;.;~ NOAA U I D••• •I C••••u•. CAU"°"NIA '2 .. .. .. " • .. lt1 JI 11 41 .. u "' IS 7S 1' 76 u .. IS 1' 63 n n • • . ..,., ...... ,.~ .. n ...... -. ... JI........,., ......... 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November 1 O. 1981 Treasury bills hit low level WASHINGTON <AP> '"7 Ylelda on 1hort-term Treaaury aecurlties plun1ed to their lowest level1 In more than a year ·Jovernment offlclal1 report Monday. The ratea have now fallen more than four percenta1e polnll ln Just over two monthl u the nation has slipped lnto economic receaalon. About $4.7 billion in six-month T·bllta were sold at an avera1e discount rate of 11.Sl percent, down more than a rull percentace polnl from the 12. 721 percent a week earlier. The government also sold about $4.7 billion in three-month bills at an average yiel4 ,of 11.m percent, down sharply rrom 12.89S percent. The yields were the lowest since the Sept. 22, 1980 level or 10.48 percent for three-month bills and Oct. 20, 1980 level of 11.407 percerrt for six-month bills. The rates had been above 15.5 percent as recently as the first week in September. But they have fallen, along with other short-term rates such as banks' prime lending rates, as lhe recession has stifled economic activity. Although the recession is DOl good news to many Americans -such as those losing jobs - the lower interest rates on Treasury securities mean the government pays less money to finance federaJ deficits. BeginnJng today, banks and savings and loans may pay as much as 13.161 percent interest on six-month money market certificates, down from the previous 13.6.59 percent. Interest on the $10 ,000·minimum deposits is limited to one-quarter point above the higher or two figures : ¥onday's yield on six-month T·bills or the average yield on such bills al the four most recent auctions. In this case the four·week average -12.911 percent -was higher. Also beginning today. S&Ls may pay as much as 13.95 percent interest and commercial banks as much as 13. 7 percent on deposits in the form or 2 YJ -year "small saver" certificates. Auction ope n to public at P e ndle ton A public auction is scheduled at Camp Pendleton Nov. 17 at 9 a.m. in building 2241 on the base. Among the items lo be auctioned off are automobiles, trailers. trucks, tents, tires, wooden ammunition boxes, salad serving bars, gas engines, omce machines, clothing and personal equipment. Other items include copiers, lab and hospital equipment, sleeping bags and communications equipment. The items are now on display from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. dally except weekends and holidays. ..... Regist.ration will begin at 8 a.m. the day of the auction. Bidders must be present. No mailed bids will be accepted. Items purchased may be removed on the sale date provided full payment is made. For more information call Ed Calac at 725-4331 . .................... Boh Briggs. 85. and w11e Lydia are unwaeenny patriots Bngy!I. 01 Costa Mesa. enlisted m t · S .'iat·y 111 191.1 .. <>er,.erl rl1mny qreat tlu ep1dem1c:. Mesa couple share 'true patriotism' By PIUL SNEIDERMAN Of .. Deity ...... a... The American flag outside lhe Costa Mesa home of Bob and Lydia Briggs never comes down. It flutters in the sun and rides the night breezes by floodlamp, a symbol of the c ouple's unwavering devotion to their country. When Bob Briggs, 85, lakes part i n Veterans Da y ce remonies Wedne su y in Newport Beach, he'll be t.hi.nldng about the shipmates who served their country beside him during tll'O world wars. Briggs enlisted m the U.S. Nuy ih 1913 at age 11 . He served aboard transport ships that shuttJed American soldiers to Europe and carried wounded battle victims home. During World War II. he was assigned to a South Pacific island. where he contracted a disabling illness that required many months of hospital care. "I've never felt bitter toward my country:· Briggs declared. "Right or wrong, it 's my country. I've never regretted one day I was in lhe Navy." To Briggs, Nov. 11 will always be Armi s t ice Da y, comme morating the end of World War I. On that day in 1918, he was aboard the USS Hen dersi>n, transpor(i ng· Marines home from France. As a sailor. Briggs did not have lo do battle in the trenches. But lhe troop transport chores were no pi cnic. "The bigge s t t hing I remember is the flu epidemic, when so many men were dying on the ship," he says. "We had ceremonies twice a day and burials at sea." Briggs remained in the Navy until 1923, attaining the rank or @ CiiEM WISE chief gunner's mate. He was recalled to duty in 1942. While in the South Pacific, he contracted filariasis, a disease s pread by mos quitoes that ca uses chronic s welling of various body parts. He stilJ s ufrers · from occasional flare-ups or the disease. For the past 30 years, Brigp has been active in veterans organizations. He is a member ''Right or wrong , it's my country" of the Veterans of World War I barracks in Costa Mesa and American Legion Post 291 in Newport Beach. He currently is national child welfare director or "40 and 8." honor branch of the American Legion. In this role, he is active in many children's aid projects. including the donation or food , clothing and toys to youngsters at Orange County's Albert Sitton Home. . Briggs' patriotism is shared by his wife Lydia, a naturalized citizen who was born in Poland. The two have flown the flag outside their home ever since they moved in 27 years ago. "It symbolizes the freedom of our country."' Mrs. Briggs says . "With all the things that are wrong with it, it's still the best country there is." . "Our flag flies day and night,•· her husband adds. "The onJy time it comes down is when we have to re lace it." Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/TuHday, November 10, 1981 CITY IN A FOG Orange County was not the only area of the West Coast troubled with fog 'today. Seattle and the Puget Sound ar ea have been fogged in since Sunday. Photo taken AP ........ from 35th l'loor of Seattle·s Rainier Tower shows top of taller buildmi?s in sunshine as fog blankets downtown streets. The condition was expected to last through today. Israel, Saudi event common U.S. confirms report Arab nation's airspace violated RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (APJ -Saudi Arabia accused the Israeli air force of invading its air space, and a U.S. military source said the Israelis do it frequenlly. A Saudi communique broadcast said "aircraft or the Israeli enemy violated our airspace in the kingdom's northwestern regions. Our righter jets intercepted them and as a result the enemy planes returned to occupied Arab lands,·· meaning Israel. Is rael refused to comment. But U.S. officials in Washington said Israeli reconnaissance planes made two flights Monday in the vicinity of Saudi Arabia's Tabuk air base, 130 miles southeast of the southernmost tip of Israel. "They operate there lots or times," said one American official. "It is common knowledge that the Is raelis fly across the border to check things out." The reports received in Washington made no mention of interception by Saudi planes or of any firing. Nor was it known if the Israeli intruders were detected by the two U.S. AWA~S radar planes stationed in Saudi Arabia since the Iraqi invasion of Iran to monitor air traffic along the Persian Gulf. Israel's military chief of staff, Lt. Gen . Raphael Eylan, said in a newspaper mterview last month that Israeli planes were flying over Saudi Arabia ·•for intelligence purposes." Israeli planes also flew over northern Saudi Arabia going lo and Crom the attack that destroyed Iraq 's nuclear reactor June 7. The Washington Post said a high Saudi intelligence official told it that vulnerability to Israeli penetration was one of the chief reasons his government was so insistent on buying A WACS planes of its own from the United States. The deal squeaked through the U.S. Congress last month. but the advanced electronic warning and control planes won't be delivered until 1985. Meanwhile, the Isr aeli govt!rnment kept up its clamor against U.S. arms saJes to Saudi Arabia and the Reagan administration's encouragement for the Saudi peace plan to create a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital. Defense Minister Ariel Sharon accused the United Stales of wavering in its support of the Camp David peace process and of endangering the lsraeli·Egyptian-U.S. negotiations for Palestinian autonomy in the occupied West Bank of the J ordan Rive,and Gaza Strip. "It's very hard to sell the Saudis to us." Sharon told a news conference m Tel Aviv ... They a re the biggest supporters of the terrorists after the Soviets. . . . Israel will treat the. Saudis exactly as we treat every confrontation state." Snyder quits 'Tomorrow' show NEW YORK CAP> -NBC's .. Tomorrow Coast-to-Coast" is being bumped to a later time slot, but host Tom Snyder isn't going along. He's leaving the show after J an. 28, just before NBC moves the show from 12:30 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. to make room for "The David Letterman Show" at 12:30, the network announced Monday. agent, Ed Hookstratton. said the decision to leave "Tomorrow" was "strictly Tom's." Hookstratton said Snyder still has a year remaining on bis NBC contract, .. and we're now searching for other avenues with the network." Letterman, the Emmy.winning comic whose morning show on NBC fell victim to low ratings, will make his premiere Feb. 2 in the late·night slot after "The Tonight Show." NBC indicated .. Tomorrow Coast-to-Coast" will be continued after Feb. 1 with a new host in the later lime slot, following Letterman. Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC's en t ertainment division. wh o made the announcement, described the new show as .. a free-form talk-variety show." Both announcements had been anticipated for some time. Snyder was known to have been displeased with NBC's plan to stick Letterman's show between his program and Johnny Carson·s , and his Letterman's morn ing s how on NBC was canceled by the network in October 1980 after less than five months on the .air. Letterman , however, won an Emmy as the season's top talk show host. Mondale raps 'R~aganomics' NEW YORK <AP> -1"ormer Vice President Walter Mondale declared Reaganomics a failure today and said the president's record tax cut should be scaled back to avert a return to record i nterest rates and economic stagnation. "The cur r ent econ om ic program was billed as a painless penance to reduce inflation and spur gigantic new growth,'" M o ndale said in a s p eech pr epared for delivery to the Columbia University Business School. "ll is a radical program whic h has not worked and instead m ade everything worae." U.S. troops set for Mideast test CAIRO , Egypt CAP > American airmen and soldiers have arrived h ere for U .S .-Egyptian military exercises and a test o f America's rapid deployment force. A U.S. military spokesman said unJts from the 24th tnrantry Division of Fort Stewart, Ga., were flown to Cairo West Air Base Monday aboard U.S. Air Force C·5 and C·Hl transporta and leased DC·lO jumbo Jetliners. Chief pro1«uior fired in Poland WAUAW, Pelud <AP> -Poland'• Commuallt 1owera•••t fired tu clll•f proHe•lor I• •• appareat eo11e rd• • ... .,., ...... . ...... ..... ..... ... ... lite .. NIWSBRllfS independent labor federation on the economic crisis. Provincial officials, meanwhile, delayed an agreement to end one of two remaining wildcat strikes, by 160,000 workers in Zielona Gora. Saudis sign oil pact with U.S. RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (APJ -SaudiArabia has slgned a Sl billion agreement with two American oil companies' subsidiaries to build the world's lar gest lubricating oil refinery and a lubricating oil blending plant, th e governm e n t announced today. T he refinery agreeme nt between the Saudi national oil company -Pelromin, Texaco and Standard OU ot California was aigned Monday , the 1overnmenl said. Karpov acore•, near1 victory to c hie f umpire Paul Klein before play resumed. Diablo Canyon action studied WASHINGTON (AP l -The Nuclear Regulatory Commission agreed to disc u ss pos - sible enforcement actions against the troubled Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. But the panel, meeting Monday, held o rr o rdering specific studies expected before the California plant can be licensed to generate power. Plane recording device sought ZIHtJATANEJO, Mexico (AP> -Searchers combed the Sierra de Guerrero mountains near he~ today for the recording device of an Aeromexico jet that eitploded and crashed, killing all 18 people aboard. The DC-9, on a flight from Acapulco to Guadalajara, exploded Sunday night shortly after the pilot radioed tha{ he was losing cabin pressu.re and would try to return. Winner• hail Trinidad vote PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad CAP> -Car bona, aire.ns aod ....a Nnd9 bland tbrouchout 11111 Cil'l'lilll• Capital today u ao••r•••at ••pportera ..... eaDHCutlYe ... ~,., .......... Inflation rate • rises Hike biggesf since spring, increased car prices blamed WASltlNGTON (AP> -Rlsln1 new car prices booated Inflation at tbe wholesale level to an annual rate or 6.8 ~rcent last month, th• bl11eit Jump 1lnc:. the aprlnc. Ule 1ovemment aaid today. Prkea for rood and enern dropped last month, Hid the Labor Department. With only two month• to 10. inflation for the year waa almOIJt certain to come In under the 11.8 percent wholesale 1vera1e tor 1990. For the rtrat 10 month• of thla year, inflation et the wholesale level w11 runnJn1 at a aeaaonally adjust~ &nn\411 rate of 7.5 percent, department otflclala aald. T he dep1rtmfn\'1 new r_,port 1ald Ila measure or wholtiaale prjrtl for tlnlahed lood• -the Produc r Prk fodtt>t WH up 0.6 percent last month after "H1onal adjustment. U October'• r1l1 held for 1a 1tral1&ht months, the Increase would be 6.8 1>ercent, the department said. The departmont'I monthly rate 11 rounded off, whJle Its annual rate 11 computed from a more specltlc monthly calculation. The October lnc r eaae wu ahtad or the previous five months' fl1uro1 and the l1rl(t11t since the 0 .8 percent of AprU. In September, the monthJy lncreHe was 0.2 percent, down from the. 0.4 percent originally reported, the deparUnent said. The acceleration ln October was attributed to higher prices automakers are char1tn1 for the newly introduced 1982 cara. Pa1111en1er car prices, on the average, rose a sharp 4.2 percent. ··In addition, the October Index no longer reflected the liquidation allowances that had led to a drop In the motor vehicles index In September when domes tic producers closed out the I98i model year with across-the· board dlscounta," the report ~aid. The report also said food prices fell 0.2 percent in October , alter no change in September. Beef and veal prices fell last month after advancing in September. Pork prices were off Employees, signupfor the family health and dental care program that actually ~ the care. more than ln the orevlOUJ monlh:lhe reoort aaid. Price declln• were al.lo rttarded for treeh and dried ve1etable1. peuut butter and rlee. But prices were up for lreah frulta, e111. soft drlnks, tlsh. coffee and 1u1ar. Energy prices dropped 0,4 percent lut month, compared with a 0.8 percent rise in September, the department said, without o((erin1 any explanation. Home heatlri1 oil prices were orr 1.4 percent, the fourth straight month of decline, But 1aaollne prices were up 0.4 percent after droppln1 for the previous rive months. Capital equipment prices rose 0.9 percent, largely due to a rise in motor vehicle coat.a , the report said. All the increases are adjusted for seasonal variations. In alJ the unadjusted Producer Price Index stood at 274.0 In October, meanlnc that goods costing $10 at wholesale in 1967 would have cost $27.40 last month. In advance of today's report, economists had been expecting an Increase ahead or September's small advance. But they also predicted abundant supplies of food would help keep inflation at the wholesale level running at a modest pace for the rest of the year Donald Ratajczak, director of Georgia State Un1vers1ty's Economic Forecasting Project, predicted October 's increase would be 0.4 percent after adjustment for seasonal variations. "Commodity inflation should remain in the s percent vicinity <at a n annual rate) for the remaining months of 1981," he said in a recent newsletter Inflation at the retail level. as measured by the Labor Department·s Consumer Price Index, soared to a 14.8 percent annual rate in September, the most recent figure available. CPI figures for October won't be out until later m the month. for your eyes for your body right down to your toes • Family Health Program Is so much more than an insurance company. It's a Health Maintenance Organization that actually helps keep you healthy with its own care centers. We provide the dentists. The doctors, including medical specialists. Emergency care. Hospitalization. Eye care. Preventive care that includes regular checkups. Even family counseling. Yet, FHP costs no more than ordinary medical insurance. And you don't pay a 20% or 10% deductible at FHP care centers. No annoying claim forms to fill out, either. Thousands of Southern A FEDER All v QUALIFIED HMO California employees have signed up with FHP-the pro- gram that costs no more, yet provides more care. So can you. Contact your Benefits Officer or personnel depart~nt now. And let us start c.ring for you ' and your family. Head to toe. t,,., .... .. Orange Coaet DAILY PILOTfTuHday, November 10, 1981 ~lMU~ Warn labels eyed Fraternity suspende'il I a/ ter hazing. incident LOS ANGELES (AP> -A UCLA rraternJty baa been suspended from partlclpaUnc in IOclal funcUons and seeking new members after a hailne in which a dued 1ludeot with brulled ribs was left outside overnight In Palos Verdes. northwest of Ventura, authorities said. The blue near Conoco'• RJncon tract that broke out Monday was ~ doused by 10 engine companies and 1 the Ventura County oil fire la1k force fi shortly after noon, said county fire dispatcher Debby Meade. However. r Non-prescription drugs targeted SACRAMENTO (AP' -Gpv. ~dmund Brown Jr. Is uslnt "his admlnl1traUve PO\Vers to require warnlng1 to pregnant and nursing women on non -prescription medicines. Mark Ugoretl, ~ lawyer for the Proprietary AHociatlon, makers of· over-the·counter drues. said the group will decide in a few weeks whether to sue. The compimles say the label is unneeded and would be The suspension of Beta Theta Pi by the lnterfraternily Council, the student group governing fraternities, marks the flrst a~ch suspension In 10 years, sald Peter Weiler. assistant dean of students. gas llnes continued to burn Into the . afternoon, spewing flames about six I feet Into the air at several points. .\ Firerighters were hampered by · , lack of water and helicopter drops were used to extln~uiah the brush fire. expensive to consumers. Ugoretz added, "Tbeae p.-oducts Pair charged If hls inove s urvives an anticipated court challenge by the drug industry. It could mean warning labels natlonwlde -despite there being no federal requirement. Dr. Alan Slagle, drug program coordinator for the' state Health Services Department, said Monday that state officials had tried for years to aet the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to require warning labels on over-the-counter drugs. have been on the market for many years. u there were a dancer. it in eagle killing Druu task ~orce .. would have come up." o J • The Democratic governor's legal AVALON (AP) ~Two men have arrests 13 swnectS t! affairs officer, Byron Georgiou, said been charged with violation of the r , he expects a suit. state fish and game laws in the SALINAS <AP> _Thirteen alleged i State officials say experiments on killing of a bald eagle on Santa tieroin distri.butors were arrested r animals, and other medical research. Catalina Island tut summer. after a three-month lnvesligatlon by lf 1 : 1 have raised suspicions about the Charged Monday In Avalon Justice a joint Lask force, the state 9 ttorney So the state health department went ahead and wrote a regulation requiring the warnings in California. But the Office of Administrative Law. which operates directly undet the governor, rejected the regulation in January and again in September. possible effects of common drugs on Court were James Patrick Barino, general's office reports. the unborn or newborn. 22, of Westminster and Michael Alan The statewide drug ring, wt\ich i Georgiou, in 4 letter to the OAL, • Crane, 18, of Pasadena. The bird was investigators said netted S3.S million : · .. said stat«: officials who iiathe.red one of 11 reported to be on the island. to S4 million per month operating out , information from about 300 doctors, of Monterey County. was broken with nurses. public health officials and O · 1 J · ld 1· the arrests which began early '-others. were persuaded that "there is •~•..._.. l ie ire Thursday in Madera County, the a strong likelihood that many OTC HIS GAIN RO<lne,· Denton . 18. ol Salinas chars J 0 acr,es state said. Brown used his legal authority to override the OAL. Beginning in November, 1982, the label, "Caution: If pregnant or n ursing a baby , consult your physician or pharmacist before using this product," would have to be on all over-the-counter medicines that are absorbed in the bloodstream. < over·lhe-counter > dru~s have holds the s ize 52 p)ints he wore helore losing The attorney general's office said harmful effects on unborn or nursing 138 pounds on a self-presl'nhe<.I dtt'l of 500 VENTU,RA <AP> _ About lO acres Monday the arrests mark only the · babies." c alories claih in si x month:-.. Dl'nlon :-.hrunk near an oil lease field were scorched second time that a statewide task Ugoretz said if the requirement is from 318 pou'nds to 180 and now ha:-u :M·tnc h · by a fire in natural gas lines that force was formed to target a major upheld,themakersmightputspecial waist ignited dry brush in an area narcotlcsorganization. labels on products destined fbr '9i;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;iiii1i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;miimiimii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ca lifornia , or use the labels I I nationwide. Slagle said products like skin cream and hair shampoo would be exempt. but cough drops that contain ingredients to prevent coughing would have to have it. So would aspirin, decongestants and hundreds of other medicines. Slagle said nationwide labels would be far less expensive. The U.S. FDA holds that labels s hould be required only when specific hazards are proven. Proof is difficult because scientific tests of drugs and birth defects cannot be conducted on human beings. $22~3 million savings plan outlined by UC BERKELEY (AP> -University of California officials still hope to persuade Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to reduce the university's share of slate budget c uts , but in the meantime they have ootlined a plan to save $22.3 million. ln a Monda y letter to the chancellors of the university's nine campuses, Acting President William B. Fretter announced measures including a S25 student fee surcharge and one-time cutbacks in some research programs. More than Sl7 million will be lopped off funds already allocated for the year, Frett.er said. The $22.3 million reduction in the university's 1981-82 budget was ordered by Brown as part of a plan to cut spending for state operations' by $70 million. The UC Board of Regents protested that the university was shouldering too much of the state's financial troubles and asked for a meeting with Brown. If a meeting is held. said Fretter, ··and H we are s uccessful in pers uading the governor to lessen the university's share of the state's necessary reductions, we may be able to provide some relief" against the measures he outlined. The student fee surcharge, to be applied in the spring quarter, ~ill raise S3 million, Fretter said. Another $200,000 will be saved in a one-time cut of research programs involving studies such as medicine, space science and electronics. A systemwide hiring freeze was ordered on Oct. 21, and campuses have been encouraged to close buildings over the Christmas holiday. Last week, UC Pres ident David Saxon. presently on sabbatical on a fellowship at Oxford University in England, returned to Berkeley to wrestle with the budget cuts. RESTAURANT DIRECTonv · For The Orange <;;oast ITALIAN VILLA NOVA ALISIO'S 3131 W. Coast Hwy. 642-7880 1670 Newport 642-8293 Master Charge, Bank of America The best in Italian cuisine. Live en· • t e rlainmcnt nightly. Banquet facilities. All major ~redlt cards. Italian cuisine. Overlooking Newport Bay. Dinner served night ly unlll I a.m. Piano Bar Banquet Facifilies. STUFT NOODLE %15 Riverside, Newport Beach 548·7418 Resl•urant Wnters ' Award winning Rell.auranl (or the p.a.st 4 )'Ul"L . MEXICAN TNT TACOS • N' TEQUILA 3* w. Coat~. 548-2%24 Ml ••Jor c em,. Happy hour 7 days 4 'l p.m. &Inda)' Brunch 10.3 "Ith complimentary chiimp11M -'"' Why is this lady smiling? Have an 8ttc~oofed ~y home party and find out 537-LADY • FREE Gift for Booking a November Party ''Pardon us while we move your money?' D11n Dammo l'u,. Prr<1Jr111 & ftl11no11r1 November 16 we will be mov- ing to our ne w reg ional office in Executive Circle, just a few step s from our present addres~. We are proud of our new building which provides us with the kind of facilities we need to better serve the busines and professional communities in Orange County. - If you are not already one o f the many companies or individuals call- ing TD "their bank," take an early opportunity to visit Don and his team of experienced bankers. Manufacturers, developers. service and retail businesses of all sizes, as well as individuals deaJ with TD Bank. Please let us show you why they are so satisfied . TD Bank. The business bank with the personal touch. We'll be open at thi address November 16. TORONTO DOMINION BANK OF CALIFORNIA . ,. •' ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. November 10, 1981 H/F •t Biblical lake polluted ·-.1IYNA I Lawmen honored at GWC omcera repreaent1n1 ·10 area law enforcement a1enciu u well u non°11fClllated student.I were honored during 1raduatlon ceremonies at the Criminal Juatlce Training Center Course al Golden West College in Huntington 8eoch. Founl1ln Valley , lluntlnaton Beach , I rvlnc. Lacuna Beach and San Clemente. Oradua&o repreaentln1 local pollc uondes lncluded: Sewage threat to Sea of Galilee provokes uproar ·~ '?........ ,,,.,.....,, J, C:ltNr e!M MkNet J, .... .-.: "-Vel•y OW6 •,_r:H~ '"'" -.11 ........ ···•Clltl,.... Heetller 4 . Dreyer, ICe t lly l T-11-.,.,, ,__,.. M. ~. lrttl11e -~es.-....1;~ 9"<11 -f~y M. 111191trlM; elWI Sell Cl•meftl• Jl•,11•11 ' .._...,_,.,.,, TEL AVIV tlrael <AP> -The Sea of Gatliff, where Jeaua bet•n hl• mlnlatry, ls faclna an on1l1uaht or aewaae that hu provoked a n1tionaJ uproar. Ecolo1l1U have lont reared for the lake's a1.u·vtval u pollution Increases, and they have taken elaborate precaullona over the yeare. But when the lakeside town of Tibertas started pourtnf untreated sewaae into the Galilee list month, alarm bellJ went ocr around the country. The Tiberlaa municlpallly says it had to divert lta aewaae Into t.he lake to carry out a 70-day drain repa~r project. The Health Ministry claims the municipality fa~led to take precautions such u chlorinaJlng the waste berore It opened the rloodgates. Professor Baruch Modan. director or the Health Ministry. has ordered the populous western shore of the lake off-limits lo swimmers. Some Tiberias res idents have started boillni their drlnktng water, and Klbbull Glnoaur, which operates a prosperous wat.eralde hotel. la aervlna its auHt.s bottled mineral waler. Modan also ha• asked tht U.S. Environmental Protection Aaency to send expert.a to lnvt1Uiate the crlsls. "It Is unthinkable, that we shall allow our water to be eradually poisoned and our only rreah·water lake t~ be destroyed for reuons or economy," he told th Jerusalem Poat. The Post backed him In an editorial, .. yine Modan's warnings should "shake the authorities out or I.heir overlon£ torpor, rather than herald calaRtrophc." But Modan also has been accused of overreacting. Meir Ben·Meir, director or the Agric ulture Ministry a nd a former water commissioner, claims Modan has created planic. He Insists the pollution level ls welJ under control. THREATENED ea o/ Galilee PUlllC llCIRDI Births Among the police department s represented by students were those rrom the cities of Costa Mesa, Stud nts completed nine months of tralnlnt in orea1 such 111 law first aid and tlrearmi requlrementa Dain fought by Berk ley l BERKELEY <AP > water.power projec The Be rkeley City near Yoeemlte lhak Council has voted to would flood n f8milf fl ht a San Franci1co as urn mer cam . THE VOYAGERS CLUQ AND WESTERN CRUISE LINES INVITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NIGHT THURSDAY Finder hopes he'll he keeper HOAG MaMOAl4L HOl'ITAL ... H.YTaa1AH Oct.. Mr a11e1 Mr• Cr•lt 8otllwtll, Ora119t,110y Mr. •ncl ""'" p..,., Antlrvt. ~uune 8te<ll,..., \O\'f:.\1Rl-:U /:1th /!IX/ 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. Al RPORTER INN, IRVINE Admission Free-Seating Limited Drawing for f'REf; CRt'ISE on SS AZUlf: SF.AS Motorist waits to see if anybody claims $100 ,000 Mr end "'"· Ger11are1 L•"•· N•w-1 liMctl. tlrt "''· •M Mn....,,.""" L-. coeu. RSVP From AP Dispatches Whoever lost $100,000 on the Interstate 5 freeway in San Diego on Thursday never called to claim it, and the motorist who found it may eventually get to keep the cash -if it wasn 't illegally obtained, police said today. Serial numbers are being checked to see if the money might have been s tolen or embezzled. H the owner fails to claim it within 120 days, police said the money will be returned to the man who found it. They refuse to identify him . police Lt. Dave Worden said . * A popping, crackling noise that one poli ce officer described as "sounding like a pistol shot" interrupted U.S. Supreme Court arguments in Washington, D.C. today and sent security guards rushing lo the justices' bench. After about a minute of tension, it was determined that a Hght bulb had fallen from a courtroom fixture and exploded when it bit lhe marble floor. "We have a slight interruption, counsel ," DIATH NOTICIS UPDIKE No,·embt•r 11 , 1981 .it CLAUDE ARTHU R 1.00PM at Harbor La"n UPDIKE. born in Cle\'eland. Memoru1I Park with Re\' Ob10 on Seplember 19. 1909. Aaron Bubier pastor of died on November 4. 1981 Harbor Trintl) Bapll!.l lie 1s survived by 3 children. Church. 0Hic1ating Services Betty L. Johnston. Jack E under tbe d1rect1on of Updi ke and Robert N llarbor Lawn-Mounl OllH• Updike Arrangements b' Mortuar) of Cosla Mesa Neptune with burial at sea · 5-10-555-1 VODER OSIER DEBORA J YODER . GERALD JAMES OSIER. passed awa) on November resident of M1ss1on V1eJo. 9. 1981 al the age of 24 She Ca for the past 8 years was a resident of Newport Pa!!sed awa) on NO\'ember Beach. Ca She is surnved 8 . 1981 lie 1s survl\ed b' his b) her mother and rather \\ 11e Carol~ n and daugh1e1 Patricia Yoder and Donald Lisa. bis parents Gerald anrl Yorler or Newport lleacb. ;\lanon 0:-.1cr Sc·rVll'l's wll Ca . s 1 s t er a n d he held on Wcdnesda' brother·an·law Pam and No\'ember 11 . 1981 ul Shawn Lyons or lr\'llll'. Ca . 3 30P:'tl al the 11.irbor LJ\HI s i ster Jud\ Yoder or Chapel S..•rntes under the Newport Be a c·b . Ca ,d1rel·t111n ol llarbo1 paternal grandparents Mr Lawn-Mount :'ttortu,1n ol and Mrs Frank Yoder of Costa Me;.a :>40 5:>54 Newport Bea e h . C a . OLNF.\' muternal grandparents Mr F R AN K 0 F: N M A N and Mrs :'tt J . Reynolds or OL;'ll EY p<1ssst.>d awa~ on Lancasler. Ca :'tlemonal ~n,·ember 8. 1981 lie mo\ ed ser vices will be held on to Lai:una Bear h. Ca H Wednesda~. Novemher 11. years UJ.tO from Woodland 1981 al 11 OOA M at St ll1lls. ('a lie was a memher Andrews Presb\ terian of lbe South Coast Liter.it'\ Church w1lh Dr John Council . Na11onal lluffman. Jr offic1<1tmg_ In Assor1at1on for l.1ler:iC\ lieu of flowers conlnhut1ons Ad\'ance. F'riends or •'tl' ma' be made to Sl L1brar~ of Lajtuna Bearh Andrews Presb~ ler1an .incl L'CI. a member or the Church L eu kc m 1 a C.:ommunl1\ Pres b,·ter1un Foundallon or lbe Western Church of -Laguna · Bearh Medical Center. lnlermenl Sun'l\•ed b\ h1~ wife Jean. 2 at Pac1rir View Memorial 'ion s N1cbolls of San Park Pa c 1f1 c Vie" Clemente, Ca ancl Da,·id Mortuary directors. Denman of Van Nuys. Ca . 2 RIEBllOFF brother'> Edward or Oakland M A R G A R E T H and Wilham of Rolling Hilb , RIEBHOF'F. pas~etl .iwa~ 1 SISier;. ~1arjone D11"1eld or on November 7. 1981 She h \\'ashmgton. Loss Clark ol sur\'l\'Cd hy her sister• Long lil'al'h. Ca Annl' Elizabelh Moe anll Rull' F'mnei?an or ~1~smn \'1eJO Madsen both of Santa Ana Ca and \'1rJ(m1a llernck of Ca., Ella Evans of South of San J ose. Ca Memorial Gate. Ca and numeroul> ser,·1n•s "ill be held on nie c e s ancl nephew., Sunda~. ~o,embcr 15. 1981 Gra\'es1de sen ·1t·el> "'"be at The Commun sl \ hl•ld on Wedne s da'. Presb,ter1an Churc h of -----------· -Laguna Beach. 41 5 Forc11t. ,..Cl MOTMllS SMmtS' MOITUAllY 627 Main St ~nllngton Beach 536-6539 rACtAC YllW MIMORIA.L r.ta1 Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1f1c View Onve Newport Beach 644-2700 LaJ(una Beach. Ca. "llh Re" Arthur J Tankersle' ..., offlc1allnl! lnurnme nt to foll ow at R oosevelt Memorial Park. Gardenu. Ca !fbe Cam1I~ requests in lieu of Clo" ers. friends ~ho wish ma y make contributions to lhc Restoration Progam of the Community Presb> lerian Church or Laguna Beach Ra)' Family Mortuar ~ directors llORNSBV SAL L.Y MAR Y McC:oaMICK MOlTUAlllS Laguna Beach •94-9415 ll O R NSB Y. res ident or Newport Beach. Ca Passed awa) on No\'embcr 8. 1981. S he 1s s urvl\·ed "' her husband J. Scoll Hornsby. 2 sons John Casle r ol Modesto. Ca. and Charles Caster or the Virl(m Island!-. dausbter Marylee Chipman or Burbank . C a . 2 Laguna Hilla 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano •95-1n6 KAl90I UW~MT. OUYI Mortuary • Cemetery cr.,.,..tory 1625 Gisler AWi . Cotta Mesa ~555-4 rmc1110THms lllLL •OADWA T MOITUAH nOBroadwey Costa Mesa &42-9150 step·daughters Daryl K111g or Palos Verdes. Ca. and Christy Kinney or Santa Clara. Ca und her sister Margaret Crilly or Novato. Co Mass or Christian Bunal will be at 10:30AM on Wednesday, November 11. 1981 at Our l.11dy Queen or Angels Catholic Churc~. Visitation wlll be on Tuesday~ Novem~r 10, 1911 from 6 OOPM tn 9.00PM al r ac1r1c View Memorial Park. lntermcn\ at Pac:lf'lc View Memorial P11rk. tn lieu or (lowers the ramll)• suggeat.A conLribuUons to th4' A m e r I c a n H.e" rt AaaoclaUoo. Orance County Chapter. 1043 Civic ~nter Dr.. anla Ana, Ca. 92103 . .. ~ .. P1clflr View Mortuar~ '---------" . dlrectort IA.LR ... OM ~INTMU MSTCLWCHANI. 4Z1E. '7th SL Colt• ..... ~71 Mtte,tlfl Mr. •ncl Mn. Jeff"'Y Oyer, '"''"•· 9lrl Ocl I HARBOR TRAVEL -875-1311 MESA VERDE TRAVEL-SH-6311 ANCIENT MARINER T.AAVEL W ·l7IO TRAVEL COUNTRY OF IRVINE 551·2929 Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said in a steady voice as security officers, some with hands on guns, quickly s prang into action. * Canton, China, has agreed to resume Mr •nd Mrt. Jt••Pll UrlClll ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ H1111tlt\olort BMch, olrt Mr end Mrs. Thomas NOrlllrup, NtwPorl &Mcll, boy negotiations with Los Angeles to establish sister city relationship between the cities. Tbe New China News Agency said in Peking that Canton decided to begin the talks that were broken off a year ago when Los Angeles joined in a PllCIS flag .raising ceremony for Taiwan. The news agency said the City Council's subsequent ban on Clying any foreign flags and Mayor Tom Bradley's recognition of Oct. l as the national day of China 'figured into the decision. * French Trade Minister Michel Jobert said today In Peking that Chinese·French relations cou ld be damaged by the two-year labor sentence given to a Chinese woman who lived with a French diplomat. The two were engaged, but not married ·'This problem could have an adverse eHect on the atmosphere of bilateral relations because French public opinion is very sensitive on this case," Jobert told French reporters after meeting China's lop leader. Deng Xiaoping. * Drug agents shadowed a twin·engine airplane from the island of Blmial and seized 500 pounds of cocaine worth $125 million when it landed at a ~ecluded ranch nfar the Florida Panhandle community of Mossy Head, officials said. The seizure was the second largest in stale history, officials said. Walton Cou.nty Sherm Quinn McMillan said a U.S. Customs plane followed the twin·engine plane from West Palm Beach to the ranch and blocked it from taking off again in a heavy rainstorm. • Aft.er the start of a Detrolt shopping mall gave members of the National Organization for Women a copy of the mall's policy against gathering petition signatures, NOW took the case to court. A suit filed in Wayne County Circuit Court by the Dearborn NOW chapter c harges that m anagers al Falrlane Towa Center in Dearborn violated NOW members' rights of petition, assembly and expression by refusing permission to gather petition signatures on mall property. * Puerto Rican-born Mayor Maurice Ferre of Mr. eno Mrs. Tllomu Keeha n, NewPof1 &Mell, t in M r ano Mfl Wltllam c111vers, lrYIM, llOy Mr. anO Mrt. Jo1tph AnoelO, ,...,po,, 8Hctl. olrl Mr a"" Mn. Alben Mo«•, c ... 1. MtM,boy Oct., Mr. and Mr1. Eu119ne Wlt1lno1, Cott•-.tiov Mr eno Mr· Joupll Prolenlc, HU11llnvt-8-:11, 9trl M r. eno Mn Jamu Haydtll, H11nllnoton kach, boy Mr. ancl Mn. J ... n s.ndoval, eo.i. Mew.boy Oct.4 Mr. •"" Mn. ~llm.,. ... '1kOYll•, Cotta Met.e, 91rt Mr. and Mn. Donald Kena, Cotle IMW,boy Od..S Mr a nd Mn. J tltrey 8urCllcll, lrvlne, boy Mr •110 Mra. Donald Lowe. Hunllnoton llaech, boy Oct.• Mr encl Mr .. Ctllft Cooponteln, L .. ...,. BNdl, tlrl Mr allCI Mn Werren v~. Ir.,.,,., boy Mr. anCI Mrs Tlloma1 Strouo, Huntln91CWI llakll, boy Mr. and Mrs. Robert ElltwOf"tll, Soutll L-. boy Oct. 7 Mr. and Mrs. Tood Stopftlk, Huftli"OICWI 8Nd\, 9lrl Mr anCI Mr1. Wiiiiam Carnley, Hunl1"91or1 e..oi. 9lr1 Oct.• Mr. •"Cl Mrt. Semue t D•vlt Fownl•ln V•ll•v. 9lrl ' Mr t ftd Mrs H•rvey GolClln9, N•w-1 8e«.ll, 9lrl Mr anCI Mr .. n.om .. Smllll, Ct&U MtM,boy Mr. •llCI Mn. T~ Glolno. c..i. Mtw.01r1 Mr. allCI Mn. J -RyMI, S... J ... n Cac>lttt-. olrl Mr. and Mn. -Y Petersen. lrvlN, olrl Mr. a nd Mrs. Je•,.Erlll Palm, Ntw-1 9Mdl, efrt M 1 an• Mrs Slaven McKen1lt , Hu11tlf\9I011 8Hcl>, 91r1 Mr enCI MrL EOward Hqlly, Corona Cltl Mer, olrl Ocllt Mr and Mr-1. O.nnls Jennlno•. Hunll...,..._,,,91rt Mr . and Mrs. Robert Reoo. Hunllnoton a..ch, 9lrl Ocl t1 Mr. ano Mn. EOwerd Grl1t. uov ... Nl9 ... l,boy Mr. tllCI MrL Wllll.,.,, Men, lrvlne, boy Ort. It SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTTERS Designed, Finished ~ Installed - ~ ------· et 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY .•. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call(714)548-6841 or548-1717 HEJllWOOO MANUFACTOIY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 ..ICTITIOUS 8USIN&SS NAM& ITAT&M&NT Tl\e tollowlnt person It dotno Duslneu ti: WEST CONSTaUCTIOH, 100 W. Vktorla, Unit C·I, Costa M.Ha, CA 92611 WARREN E. WEST, 100 W Victoria, Unll C·I, Cosla IM .. , CA .,.,, Thlt Dusl1,.u 11 <OftdV<l.0 by t" lnellvld...,, WtrrenE Wftl Thia stat-I ••s 111.0 wlll\ Ille Cownty C..,... of O<-C-ty 011 Oct J0.1 .. 1 .. 17_ PUO!l\hecl Or ... Coell Dally PllOI, NOY l, 10, 17, 14, l"I 471MI ~ICTIT10US 8VllN•SS .. tCTtnous •u•o•H• HAMii IT4T&MaNT M4MI! ST4T•MaHT Tl\e tollowlno per .. n ts dolnt Tiie lellowl"t "''Oii h 410 1110 DutlMH et• ........... •: , AMERICA" MEltlT I ME ilAL•OA EDITIONS. IJ4'0 EH,L COMPANY, Mn VI• ()POr1o, • 104, 0ce .. 81...S., p 0 ... m ... I_, 0 ,..,.po,, llHcll, CA "*1 '2161 Mic .... , , ... 8rUL•, lttl w. Cotti J . ltoYC• ltlc .... CI. 1500 E Oc-H•y • tlO, ,.._, 8each, CA fMJ. .,..,., • Bela, CA.,.., Tllit llllslnes.1 Is <_,eel bY Oii Tiiis __,MIS Is ~ ... by an 1..0lwlO...t lndlvl- Mk'-' ,., Bruce J ~ Rld\anl Tiiis K .......... WM lllecl with the Tiii• ··-.... ,,_ wllll "'" Cown1, CleR of o....,.. C°""1Y o" Oct. Cotinl'r Clettl al Or ..... C-ty Oii Ott "· '"'· n , 1"1 PuDllSlled Or-C:0.'1 Oall~I;=. P .... 1_ 0rw'9i C-Ootll:'i!t~ Ocl 20, 11. ->.to,'"' 011 .. 1 Ocl. 21. Nov.>. 10. "· '"' .,..., Mia ml is trying to fend oCf a runoff challenge today from Manolo Reboso, whose campaign to become the first Cuban-born mayor of a big U.S. city brought him within striking distance of Ferre last week. Mr end Mn . 0..1 .. Nan...,., c .. u. MHO. boy 1-----------.. ICTITIOUS 8UMH•SS ~ICTITIOUS ilUSINESS NoUlllE STATEMENT Election officia ls predicted the vote would be split along ethnic lines. with Cuban-Americans supporting Re boso and most whites and blacks supporting Ferre. * A Sl million fire at a Stockton elementary school probably started from an electrical short, mspectors said. The tape of a sound-activated burglar alarm system had no sounds indicating anyone broke into or was inside the gutted wing al Martin Lather King School, said Capt. Gary Collins. Oct. U ~ICTITIOUS 8USIH•SS NoUll• STAnM•HT Mr •"" Mn. Terenc:e Crotl>y, Sen No\Mll ITAT•M•NT Tiie lollowlno Person Is doing Cl.,,,tnle, boY' T ht lollowlft1J P9rSOflt are CIOiftO buslntU ti M r a110 Mrt M lcheel Ro,, b<ltlneu .. · A STOHESTHROW,2GW Coe1t Huftll~on8e«.ll,glrl ANDOVER ASSOCIATES, .. , Hlg ..... , No '· Nt•POrt Buell, M r anCI MrJ Ktlln Lumplll"· Oo•tr Drtw, Suite 14, N..,or1 .. -. Calllornla fMJ N..,_. llHcll, boy Ctlllomla nMl Ker.,. Ann GolOs .. ln, nu c1.., Mr. and Mrt. Ml<llatl OIOmtn. Jo/VI l'ranc:l1 M<Kune, 20&12 S.nte SlrHI, B, N.-..por1 lkKh, Callfornla HUftllnotCWI 8ffc'll, boy AM A..-, Apt No. u, s.nta Ana, .,.., Mr and Mn. s.cr-IO v.,00,, CelllCH'nl• '2707 Tll11 -'""' ls conducted D' .,. CO$t•Meu,glrl Harry l.•• Ow e11sD,, t tOl lndlvl-1 Mr. e11d Mrs M l<h••I Giii, Nottln9llam R-. Newport 8aacll, KaranGoldSteln Huntln9'0ft a..tcll, boy Calllornla nMO Tiiis fl.t....,.I ••• 111.0 wllh Ille Mr. and Mrs. Guald Head, Tiiis bllslneu Is conoucteo Dy • Co11nly Clerk o4 Or•,,..·Couftty °" H111111ft91on BNdo, glrl Ot'le••I P«tnentllp. October 12, 1"1 Mr ..... Mt1. 1111-ICI NICl'IOIS, lrV\M, J-I' Mel(-.. .,,... bO' Tiiis ~-• was fltacl wltll lllt Publl-0r--. Coefl Dally Pilot Mr, ancl Mn. Demi• Bucher, Coti. County Cieri! of Or•nee County on Nov. l , 10, 17, t4, 1911 47tNli Mew, glrl October JO,'"' Mr. alld Mts. AIM Wltlle, NewPOrt Bff<ll,glrl Mr and Mrs .M.arll Lycf•r. Irvine, girt .. 114'$4 P11blllhecl Or ... Coast Delly Piiot, HOV. J, 10, 17, 14, 1 .. 1 411CMt ----------- PVIUC MOTlCE ~ICTITIOUS 8USINIE.SS MAMa ITATaMaNT Ex-military man asks why he can't find job .. ICTITIOUS 8USIMaU MAMI! ITAnMaMT Tiie lo11owl119 """' h Clol119 t>utlneu .. : EO'S OISCOUNT JEWELIEaS ANO ACCESSORIES, l"S6 •r .. kflurt1, fount•I" va11.,, CA t'l10I. "'"" M. El-I. tS11 z.tl-~ .. HW11l1"91on BN<ll, CA '264. Tlllt tiw.1-t Is ~ondu<t.ci by an llMllv141wl. Tho foll-Int perMlftl are Ooln9 blltlneue LEO ANO FRA"CE ENTERPRISES, »:57 Blrcl\ SI., Sullo UI, Ne--1 Beach, CA 9M60. R08EltT L. 801ES, IHI Moe Or Ive, L·S, S-a AN, CA 92701 KENNETH T FRANCE, ISSS Mew Verdo Onve EHi. •'-A, c .. i. M•M, c•m• This b1111,,.., h conclutt•d Dy • 11.neralpertnenlllp R~8olM By JOYCE L. KENNEDY .,...E ...... 1 Tlllt .....,.._ ., .. filed wilt\ IN c-ty CIWll 111 Or ..... County.,, Ocl . Tl\ls dat-1 .... 111.ci wltll Ille County Clan of Or•nve c ..... 1., on Oc I J0.1 .. t. The lollowln9 person 11 oolng i...s1,,.ua1 M & R ~IHTENANCE CO , 17J;Jt ~:°' 'lot!M90 •4, Foum.ln Velley, CA R-rt L. -ytltlO, ITJJO S.ft Met90 •', l'°""ta1nValley.CA'110I Tlllt bOISlntll II <OllllU<t.0 Dy •~ ll\CllYl-1 ROWr1 L Ma'/fltlcl Tiiis ttal-t wot llltcl wllll tho CowftlY Ct..-ii of O<anoe c-tv on Oct "· 1•1 ,17JJll PubllJhed o.-. Coe1t Dell' PllOI Ocl. 20, 17, Nov. 1, 10, '"' 4UM ; Ns.eJ72J ~ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAM• STATEMENT TM loll-Int 1>9rsons .,. dol"Q b<ltl11e11 .. SPECIAL TY SPACE RENTALS 1'3n Con11rl1<1lort Clrc le EHi, Ir YI"• Calllornla '271• D••ld J Huertt, 617 H Pin• Pia< o, A..-im. California 9*S CherlM Mark•I. 21.SI Clulll\CNV> Orlvt, COJU Mua, C .. llornl• ntJl R-rt 0. 8'1~, Mo, SI B•AtCH\ Bay, N-1 Btach, C4111omia t1'e(. Tiiis bvsl11eu II concluclod h • -••1-1noolllp 0.vid J Huerto DEAR JOYCE: I have been unable to secure employment for well over a year fotJowing my retire ment from the Army after 20 years. CAREERS u , ""· This tUll-nt "°' 111.ci wlll\ tM County Cltrll of Ortf\90 County on .. ,,... Pl1 October '11, ••• l"vllll-Or-CMst Oally Ptle4,, P11bllllled Ortn0t Coetl Dally Piiot, 't74* A military career is not Cilled with saluting and parade field hup-two- threes; my years have been filled with assignments involving logistic planning and operations. I .nave set up airfield operations from the groP.nd up lo runways, towers and the CuJl scale of flight· line services; established depots for sup- plying entire continents with food, clothing, builcUng m aterials and the like ; formulated plans for the evacuation of American citizens Crom such hot spots as Beirut in the mid-'708; and written. revised and up .dated war plans for the distribution of logistic assets. Gr anted. some of these ex- periences have •no direct relation to commer1:lal enterprises. But certain· ly some credit should be given for an individual's adaptability, a documented history of accomplish· ments and productivity and the YD· questionable maturity one must have gained in poslllon,s of responslblllty. Yet my appUcatlons for employ- ment fall on deat eara. 1 had a pro- feaalonal resume service prepare mine. No succen. I have applied to companies In dlt· trlbutlon, warebou1in1, tvlatlon, truckln1. electronlcs. chain stortt and others. I h••e yet to be called (Of' an lntemew. lfoever 1et P•t recep- Uonlsts tA> '" the peraont 1n c.bar11 of hlrin1. My a1e ll de.rJy atated oa UM re· sume as 42 . In contrast to the ··sarge" of Beetle Bailey cartoon rame, I am in excellent physical shape, a devoted tong-distance run· ner and a mountain climber. I have a bachelor's degree in marketing from an accredited college. I was honor graduate of a six-month course in materials management. But after well over 300 applica· lions, It seems there is a commonly .held negative view of military peo. pie. Would you please provide me with the insight as lo why so many employers refuse to hire former mlUtary careerists? -J .S., El Paao, Texu In the hiring relationship, you can't change the employer but you can change you. Reflect on tbls simple but instructive concept. Based on your letter I conclude: -You have solid skllls to sell. Among them: planning, organlzint. coordinating and wrltlnt. You have high value. --You apparently are not. com- municating that value on a clvtllan wave length easily understood by re· sume streenera. Have yov tried • runcllonal rtsume -ODe dacrtblnt four to ei1ht compet.encle• -rather thin a chronolo1lcal year·b) .. YHJ' approach? -Since your rouUne search lt not worldnt, ltt's u1ume you're open to other ways ol look1n1. Oct. t1, Nov. I, It, t1, ltll -.el HOY J, 10, 17, t4, lttl •n2 .. I Publlstwd Orenvt COHI Dall, PllOI Nov. J, 10, 17.14, .... 4'1MI .. ICTITIOUS ilUSINESS .. te:TIT1out aUllHHI NoUll& STATaM&NT llAMa ITAnMattT Tiit 1011owlno P9rSOfl1 ••• Clolno Tiie followlno .,.,..,. It •olne l>ll•l11eu ... WM-.. : I•) HOOHHOt.D, GARAGE S4LES (11 VIOIEO Ml!MORIES; 12) W. Olllll E CTORY, lbl HOSD, Ut4 W 81EST •NTEa .... ISE$, llMl1 Oort .... Fll9hl •-. Seftta AN, C4 92704 Or., Ml .... VlejO, CA'2*tt. R ICH4RD I' REDER IC K Weller 9"1 lM 111, ,._, cwtlfte MARTIN, U14 W. flltlll Avtnua, Ot.,MlwlenVlete,CAt:Mtl. SaftleAM,CA'2704. Tlllt _,_ It cetMN<ted tly an R 0 8 E R T J 0 S E .. H .,,..,'4flNll, l'AASCHl!TTI, 1711 l11roundy, _..,._.\.Miii Leo.<aella,CA'2C4. Tiii• ........,. -flltd "'"" IN Tiiis busl""t Is <tfldu<ltd by a C_,ty Cler1t o4 Or.,,._ County Oft general partNrsl\lp, :>ct. U, "'1. Rlchlwd F. Mertl11 P11_. Thlt stntmeftl •• filed <lltltll 1,.. ~· ... Or .... C..St o.lly ~. c ...... 1., Clwk Of~ .. ~.,, Oct. Oct. fl, ....... a. It, 11.... 4661~1 •• , ... . .. ,, .. , Publl.-Or ..... C.O.st Dally 'Piiot, Nov. J, 10, 17,14, l .. I 471MI I I 87 H Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Tuetday, November 10, 1981 .,.. __ O_\l_O-r-,T-loet_l_l _lifc_L.ll_D_lf-.-.. o-9-o-.M-n.-... -r-.-9-.-•. -... -!-~-n-.~-AC-1 ,-IC-.r-... -R-.~-A-o .. -N-Ol-•• -o-.. A-... -oc-,-.• r-... -,-.P-l tt_OC-_N__ ~~_ ....... --•\\ ~ .................. ,,-- ........................................ ~' '~ ~In .... Min ,..,, ...... N•l !Mlt\ ..... '-'" N•I Pt.,., Clo\ot ""' ,.,,..., c-,... ttt,l'ld\ Clt\ot C"9 PC .... t.+..w C"O ,. .... Cl~(,.. Tr1·v1·a now '-";:.' 1:~ J J: Im • Iv 1 'I .. ·, 1U l!-. " ::11 :H tff; • ;J::.:..; · ~::":" 1 ~ lf ,l J::. :? ~o • • I "~7 ~ ira .-, »! "' ~ . '' . It m ft~· "' 11\ilf. Jt 11 1:t-'~ ~~ , ei • ,., '4"'• ~ ••Ilk , , 1 if-.-~ .. c~:'c1• .. ;~ I'·· ·: 11, t:.;-~ ~:iM iii Im';: Sbh~:os :+ : ~11 7 = " u·il ''~ it~:-~·~ ~~r.~f: 1J 1m:·~ b . "·~··1 • ·Me ... f~ ........ iii'1iit •. " -· .. ,., •. • " -" "!! :n:. ., •ll't "o· .,. tt4 ··~· ~ a top us1ness .. ~" • ... -~""''"' 1 1•Yo ••••• "'Is l •" H~ .1 ft U11t•~ _,_,_ t, 1 g;+ '-.... ~ -1-1 -= M • 1 + " U 1 a, I)~• \It JliO 111 • ti ... 14 !lt.1~l1· :~.ft [~ ... ~ l:~~~·.,91. • ~ !~J::O,, l~ ~·~ ;:: S :t!!J" 1. ! l:t! S ~ ~~:ji ;'.~ ~!,tt w '~: ,:: ~-· ~ Our appeUt~ for trivia 1eem1 lnutlable -and e11e1l .. ' .. ~~ Hi , .... ; 1t1Acp 2 ! / .:t .. 11t. 141 MIM<h , ~ J ,J l._. " i!.l'l·u • U\.lo. "' f:w pf "411 • ~ 1n "" \•'" 2 111 • ••• • ,1J 11: • ~ ;;br t:!l ii .·.~ 'DA'" ,·,, Jf I"'• ~ :f:M' "J , 't! ,,..,. "' v o J:..-t ,.,.. • ~ t .• irer. • ~ 11 .: 't~. i.; there ara plenty or pubU1hen around ready and .:.: r~.:1' t 10.... 41 ... ~~ t? .... ~. ·~ ' n"' lu 1::. I.I • I a-·.sc.. :i~:c~ ~,II 1 , :T-..: ·~ I :u.I :.' ;n1y,:-t~. l:1::: .. I , J::• "' willing lO teed it. ~I,. i-111 -·.··~ • ~ ··~ ft~! ... " ·a 1 : 1u1111f 1 •. 1 11\io• ~ ...i.-.i"c' ' l' •11t• 111 ~· ·~· 11o t.,.., t ,, ,.,. """ v. The latest addition to thl• 1enre iJ "The ~ , ;; , ..... • • • • .. , • 1-.... 1.... , ,. 11-.. "' ""ff 1.., , • •1111. 4 • •In TW:'' ,, • 12141 8 h 1 . d b k J t Hi '"'1 '· t nu 111erd• 1: • " .. 11 1.111 1 'l 211"•1 Me v 111 • t 1014• " • • 11 n:· tc 1, .11 4 7~ , ...... ,,_ at room A manoc," 1U1 over11te paper ac UI . • • " t roCO I • -I ntrce " + l't ld .. IT .. '1 ·~ 14 MtP ,.,,,., • 1•141-14 . 1 ·.fl .. t T rfl• I 11 ,,. SI.... ! d b F ed I k F II p bll h • $10 ... e111-..a 2 ·' ! i .,l;,:' ,:J : -J u~. · .. · nttr• 't ·+ v. • "" lll"••wr t .Jll r '" to • " M=i"•'" '" ti • '" ~"' ~ .. i1 .... ,t"-re1<tm »I if{ ,.,_ ·• " llUIUe y r er c e u s era ••· .-. ~ ~.. -• 2111~! ~ i" ' • 1 • v. '"'"' ,..,,,, · Q•o " • ~ 1 • 1 • 1•1 ""• 14 , ··' ... • ~ Ttld.,.. • • 't , ..... " a s ·'the ulti mal" lri via book," the author t. •rl' pf 2,6, ·· -.. < , I ... I'"'"' fJf2.» , nOO llY> • Ill IH )0 ,.._. llo •t! .-.+I Ttlu 7 I • "' I. It ~'•f, 2.IO • II -.. 27~ s u -.. TW 1.w t II ,.... "'='' •to = l014t 14 "'* ru 'la ': Ten110 uo '101f JI--30-year·old Gus McLeavy, who is reported by his l ·::.: a~ I J :tl't. \Iii .. -~1 4'--"' "''1~p .... '° 1714 • " t.! tt 1"-"" ,. 0 I I 'hnepr II 1' n.. .. publisher lo be working his way acroa1 tbe country In '·. i -; rlWI 40 7 SI I0\.'1-IQ :ra; n~ ~ ~ ~: ~ ~<t:0., 10 • .., ::n· ~ =0• 11 :;: mt ... ~ ~" • ' 0 0 s ~ ~ m "'I•M J:' MO i' 11; ~"'•I a Volkswagen cam~r to h.ls new home ln Seattle. I ' 1·." 1 1 !f1~f ':t t ~ ;~:·::: .);,.. !;. .. 1 I s.1.1o::1'.: 1~1:2 :11·~ •. ,m r. · .. =~~ :; • : ::t . ~ Eos~tm '1·" ' 1~ 11~·. ~~ t,::..:~. 40 .. 4 " 1~~ ; M e l .. •vy beafns ~ a to ·~~ ~= ~ ~ =~ "' :%:!'?..: l 1~11=:.~ l~M pf2.tj . IS ,,_ ... yt ~ii~~ =-: ,:r.~ .. f:10' l1 :ttt:•. "'. t::'<o • 3 f ,.,: fl~.'.'° ""'" D rn ,!ID .~.,:.• 't c~ ... ~ E:li~re 1·f: 1i: ~· ""l~~'1·~ i ~ mz·: =~ ,i: ;,~ u:~ ~t 1)1 1 1 1 fl"' ··~;::i':: ~:': ~ ~~· t ~:~e ~11~~~~ ~,8~.u~ ~; 0 .2 tnCf II lO 14 -14 venP 1.1017 J1 ti ..... ~ ::: ..... 1:tt 1 tidl ... :"' SI I... 0 it~·\) llU :tol1 ,.:~ ~ ;::J.rtth u ::~:: R evere, J . Edgar \ ~' ti ... ·" . 6J u-v ... pl I 40 .. u s . 14 IM.Ct ' " In t•lu .... NIONY ·"' ' 4l ~..... •lot " .,.,. • 14 f t1llld ... 1 IJ lt\\ " I r, A ,, . tllSoW 'ti . 121• 1·,._ \lo •C••. ·~ • .. ~-.. 1n~•R ,: 1 ii) S6YI -11'1 MoortC I" ' J0"1I-.... al PIA 2 . . ••VJ .. "' Tu I Nit J IS lff 13 ~ " II 0 0 v e r • x a v i e r ..... ,~ .. • •· 11H!l4! J S 13 7fti.. •. <ltr I, .. 20 I"• I.\ ipf t. I ~ NlorMt ... S M Jt • ~ ·-Te•I-'• ~ 71• •·~ .... C ..-A • lli..t 1 • ,. it • we11 ' ua ~· 1 .. 1 t< . 1 1 ...._. v. ""°'•"" 12 11 11 '°"• " "i',.. 1,,. I sro t NM· 3 °'; ,o ii;-... u g at a o d J o -----.i---------~ f· ··: :~ "ltl:!ui ::.:: :1 l'MC 1:.0"~t:atti.. .. I~."~ ,~J 4~~·i..MO~:,ng;~:~.:~:~ ... a:.,1:~~1;~TT:oo,.:, 11!','??!""•11~ Sal inger among ••••••nz ~ '10 ; ; i =~· .. ~ ~.1Jl 4~ m:: I* =~et ·-13 t ·~~ ~ :~'~S:o 2ilOO!. • ~ ~~-~ :rv:~n.: n 'n ~'-_:I~ =t~ pf >.:_: t J ~~' :.; ~~•I,,; 1,IO io 2-7 UV.+ '°' q U j % ' " 8 Y W h 8 t j ~ II '· II ~. flSoY• .... ~ lllo\+ .. rchd .ea ) U2 ii.--.... lntrlk 2. 4 s ~ I.\ Mw11lrd '°' t 41 lllo\• \4 RTE 40. 17 7\.. 14 rmE" 1• n ,..,.._"' names are these p eople better known? Walter ~ 5t • t11!tl 1.10 '1124 »14+ I r<• r~pt >.60 •. 21 11.-... IMAlu 1 I05 12v. • "' Mlllll pf .«> 1 •"--WI 11 ltl"\I ·1• 11111 IH~ ... TlllOkl ' 1.1011 • »OJo-\lo p I S A cv'"""' s ,. 1~. Femo11 ,,. t 1 12--.. "-,,..,. J44 u100 »'-•1 Mun""' i. IS • '· • • ... 111nee11t2n • u~. v. a unu1k, Dorothy Rothschild, Lester Pollus. arah 1 · l js : ~ 111.~:S1?i:: 'ft !!~,:.:··· =~ >:y~ 1~ ~~:::I~~" .. ',. Ml~~ n~. t: =:.-:. u.911 2 ',r, ~14-~ :c~ ;I;. g ~.,..·~~for:· I .• ~.~ r:~; ~ other s) ~Ith this lllT ~ ~--·• .-.. ~ trot Ml 214 n • FMtA '' U2 12"'• 1"' 1111F•av · 1 ts 13 21 · MllrPllC 1 • • 11 llY>• "' ll11°am~ 1 •ll,... 504s> •, · · ,;_ TMm•" MO 1 u 15111 • "' Cannon, Mar iu Cartas ." The an•wer.• (g iven upsl"de .. · . ..,. ~ trtn ,.., " 111t ll!Htf• • ,. n.-"" ln!R•'" •1•1>1•• 1v. M11ro0 11 1 201 ,. ..., " ~ 'tq"' , 11-· .. T11tnMd11 • .sd10 .,. .. " ,. ~ l:ot :, .! , ~s~·. ~ enrtv,111 (40 s 11, ~-. 'i4 Feoieo 1•30 '° ~ " -" " r pf t7' ·· 46 '"' ... Murrvo 1·20 • 210 ,,..., .. "' 11:~~ '602 u '' ;·v. T~lt1v .eo 1 51 12""' • 14 d o wn on lhe bottom of lhe page) are: Jack Palance, A ... M .. .. etct ,tip IU• ..... ==m 20 j ~ + 1-. n 111 UO i 161 12~. . MutOm I.st .. 31 11\,\-.... Roymdl ' 1 " 20"• , v, T Ctr• I 20 S 1 I ......... Al • 1 I Jt~···v; ~""' :. ·; n a~-fltc1N 1·f 1 11 ~ • "' I"~" t.441 10 11 • • Mv•••L .10 .. .. 1114. v. 11av1111 12011 47• c T cl•tr 1011 103 41" • 1 Dorothy Parker", Les Paul, Minnie Pearl, Isat>el • P~l 405401 ~:.., 11mr1n 1•tnc1220w.. F ·•· -l.\111Paprt..t0 m4IY>•I"--11-N -RHO&•',,,.,~ ...,T ••n "'*"-"' p dth d t 0 '.7{ •• '11". " ttm,..r; ".:ii m ~ .... f= I 1· !2 : j ·~~ ~ IH"l~F 1.5 •, .J ;r. ~ tlP" 1.0I J ~ g\11 ! = ~'~~ ~,o!! 1 ft '1~: I~ ~11:::r~:c. ~" ::: :'~ .. I~ ~ron. An e almanac en s 384 pages I a er on ec. ~ 1f ·; B "': ~ rlCo I .. l!.3 10 • 'i4 redOSt 1:;Q ,g , ... ~. ::? pfJ • 7 46111 -"' NCH n 7 SJ " llt<11E I ~ ·~ T matM In II IH 41fh \4 31 (the birthday or H e nri Matisse, Odetta, Sarah I -~110] II>• v. 11enw1 . 11 5"'•.,., ~i'T ';: ~ 2!~· v. !n~ • .. 3 0 • v. NCNB • ••JtO 1• •" •aom11q ao11 ,:; .. "" "'Tlmkn '·40 ' '.iv •• " Miles and John Denver, among others) with these ~,., • 10 -"' hoFd dit ·· 1 1""-""' ~ u.'11 t '¥ s 12 U.\4• ~ 111Nrth 2.l2 ' 192 :rt44 14 NL ind• 1101011 41"'-1" 11 .. vse 2'52 s .. '''-v. Toilnm • .u 1 Jt 10~. lwo quotations : . pU. ,. •• ......... i10 ·•-se~"" rt 60~ !l fl.,.:~l~l~::·:g: ;~~~""·~NLT l.J271tl2~-"'ll•lc11Cll '41 s ••1111o+ir,TolEdl12.>1•11101~..... 'Ed r · b ' d .. C h I Ch ) Ir I • i " l\tr1 Pl I 65 SO I~• \\ r " ' •· "' ~~• J<N S ' 4 UV.• .,., NCR t JO S 171 41 " ,. .. ,. 60 17 ..... 14 foCISllp I I lt4 J014 I :.. • • •I I ~. 11. ..... 1111"° . . 1 u _ "' F ll'l•Y · ., s.e I till'w 1 ., , ll 1,,_. ,,.. NVF 15' 1 1u , "' 11e1Gp > 1 ,., ~ ~ To1Ed ""» 10 ISi.\ "" • n o Journey ring s a ness . I ar es an . ~~ 1111 3 .~• ~ ,.,.,."'us .. N »WI ..... F..C.Am • .,.··s 161 m:."' ~Pwpft.'21 .. LSOO"w.! '" N•btel IAS 1 291 ,._ ·• ._.,Gpt 2to n 11~· ··~411~clllf2.!!_ 1 " !!.~· ~ ··r hate quotations . Tell me what you know " .... .... .... " • " 7lll + .,.. FllSatr ·"' 1 ~ ..... ·-•El ' 72 7 SI n~ \. Nbt<9 pfJ.lO •. di JO">• I"' "'""pf 2.61 I " . Ofl •CP ,,.,. ... .... ... .!t 14-14 11mNv > ... s Sf't tt\lo+IWI Pt111Fec1 .>SI •• o 16\'t .... 1ow11G 2.20 s I• .. ;;; • .,.. Nalco 211 u u • .,. Rtt1AI• .io 10S •"--·~ Tr0toco uo t •4 •1"' t R alph Waldo Emers on) ~--l 114 ~~-t l\NV llfl 11 SO ~1 ~ Flrtllll .'°9 • 2541 ~ V. !owlll of2 31 1no IS V. Napco .JJ 10 2 I~• V. ReoCp .llO S II 21l• • V• OKO 1• t2\'J • I" ~. · •:ii -.! ,n hesPn 1:u ici tolO u..-Y> Fl.4111111 1.12 • • 21"-~ low•PS 2· 40 ·7 35 1,.,,. NaplFd .IO • , ~~ ..... R•i>f:ns 1.20 • IOI -•1o TTow•1• n "' 1 211 11?~ • "" In between, for each day of the year, the r e's a , ' 17 I ...._ ~ NW 11 1 SI 2414+ y. ftChl'I .to . 1'5 12 V\ 1oweAt 1·12. u 21" \lo Nerco lie» 21 l>Yt "11 lltt1HY 1.10 • U J~+IV. owe pl "' ,.,, I'll b k b k ·1 · ( • , • • 11 , 1 ~'"' 111¥1• " ., w.,.._"' Ftfc111< 1.20 i 101 ·~-v. lpcoCp •20 11 m s • Nu11-.. 1.60 • • ""'· • RHv PIAJ.u 11 211._. "TovRV • >• ,., >• v. ac -t o · ac comp1 atlon o outr ageous items, wt .. 'a J ...... ~ hlNI pf .• t ., -.... F19Ta t 1.0t t ... 31 "' rvaek 3.~ s 56..sl"';i' NalCan I • II ,,,,_. ~ lltp$ll 2 2 .. Uh· '·Tracor. n" JS 2•11> \lo le avened by a s trong belping o r Charlie C han M llf '·n . JI lG. ,. .., ..... T 2.. .. II -"' FtClly 7 ' ·~ "" li.llCp .>Oe 17 w Ul4. ~. NC11vSt -II l ""'· •. Rtt1Tea 1.40 1 ,.. 4.J'l't• " I••M I JO , ,, H in. " Al~ 'J ff 1 • 11o 1'1111 .4020 .o 12-.+.,.. F1111t1 1 1.10 1 .,, :rtv.-v. -J-J -H••O••• uo • 111 1,_._.,.. ttepT•o12.1.1 • 11~·•• TWcp "m 111-t."" o neliners: "'F o rtunately. a ssassinalton or French A • . 149 ,.. • .,.. OWl•C" 1.521,. 17 JI-. • .,.. Ftlnkp 2.°' 11Q ~. v. WT. I 4A I .. Ith-~. NDlll prl as l ""' Rtl!Cot .32 • 17 12 ..... TW"" 20 '". v. A e1 • 110 -v. Chrom• 1.10 • is 1t -11t FIMlu .1n •1 1s'9-VJ ll'lfff 1:to n u " ..... NetEd111.'ui ; • " :... ~ •av~o' .76 IJ 6J ,..,., v. TWC pf 1.t0 . lS 11vt .. lang uage not a s erious cnme." "Man who flirt with Ai ·1 ' 1 lt\1.-.... Clvy&lr .• lll • -.... !'.t1~9o 1 so ' 7t ... 7"1o ~ l'a Rvr. 40 • .. I~ " NolFG t to s I) ,....,._ --ltevrre ,>Of s j ,. • 14 TWC pf 2M .. • 1J 'II • • rt . h I .. A . • 1 H + \It """'wt . ,.. tei. ..... FN le11 2.'10i> • • u • v. ams• '.n • IS "'--~-N••Gyp 1'• 1 " 1,_. " 11R•"'°" 1 ... 1 ,,. 11ro-~ Trentm 1.40 1 ,,. 2•-". v. d y namite s ometime y wit a n ge s AA !!. 2.. t. t··I~ CllrYI Of •• u 414 l'tl • ltt ,...... -F '01• 20 tVJ . v. NIHom u 2\l'o Hll•m .to 1 Ula. T••nlnc: 2 12 21 IS''> .,.. u d th J 2 r I M L ,.. t .. ,,,.,,Cft .. • 51 ,._:... • ~ Fil.Pa_. '° "".1.JZ •ff Piii ·1.s2 • JO P h , ~ NMdC• , .. 1 ., ,~ • · i.; Re•11rd 1.0• 1 40 is"'. v. Tre11aco 1 ta ' Sol5 U.\.o . "' n er e une entry. o r ex amp e. c ea vy A trY •1 Is ~ 1 •• c111ee11 '2'.n • s1 21~.1 Ftf'tMI ·02• l4 n 1" •• pf 4 • 1100 u NMdE•u 411u 124 ''"• "' :!"~n ~1: ~ ·~ r'""' •!:Tran.ten 1021 > s.. '• reports that in 1948 the Wlfe of C lark Tibbetts, A °" i' S 7 I P .... • 14 ClllGE t 10 1 211 "14 • '-FIU11R •I ~ IO ts ls.lo pf t .3' . 11110 52 NMl"'S 14] J2 I) IJ\/t Y · • TmtOll · · oll 5"' • V. ~ IPw ·.!?Ii·-•, ""• 14 ClnG pl . 4 •• rlOO ~. 4 F1V•Bk .SS l H Pio . .... • pf •. 12 .. dC)jO ·~. ?~ NPr ... I u.a s • "*:: i4 :·<,.,~0k :-... JO 111 ·:01 ?1~" '. TAi.nv • 6 •lll director or the Ins t itute ror Human Relations at the ~ E•1 .. ...... ~· Ill Cl11G pf t JO r200 Ml + 141 F WIK ? • 3 Jt • ~.. c pf 7 .... •100 .., NS.ml IJ IOSI tl\llo-" c c . ' ~ TrtnWy I.lab 1 ., 22~ ... ~w.~r. ·i 151l •s:--v. ClnG Jll .:n I·: 110 " + IY> F KhO 1 • 11 M>M + .... re pt II .• JIOO 61'1a. "' NlSvln I J2 ' .... 11'--" :::r:'T ';~ ~ n ~·4 • ~ Tr11vlrt 2 .... 402 .... • .... univer sit y of Michigan in Aon Arbor. sued h e r A~s I -••tA.""U ClllMll n 2 2tO ,, + ""FltllFds AO ' •• ""'" ... re pt l .11 10 It"• ~ NSIOlld I >410 2 " RI ••,,!l ''° 1•• • TrlCOll L 7.. • .. 20''< hus ba d fo a d " ore I . . th t t h A , 1:, Jt -i ! 4; c111c111 ,·s. .•"21 27\l'o• v. Fl.,1£11 .»JO "' 1• .. "' .,..,, 11• s 14' ,. v. keusu · 2 , 1., ,. _WI 1111._: ... .,. ,2 ... JO tl:Z-,· TrlC~pt >so • 1 1•\.· .... n r 1v e , c almin~ a everv 1me s e A ~ t' 1 2 ,. c111sv< uo 1J 211lS s1" "~'"' '·'' 1 1 zs • .,.. IC pf • ,. N 1T n '" .,.. • --·· • • tnSo•n J ttn J'~ burned the toast, Tibbetts e n tered a n ote 1n his little A C 1' . 41 i.~ "'ii. Cltylf.v UO 1 110 ~····· Flt•IV-.IOU llJ 11\U 14 l<r 4 II ''" • '" N:1~· 1111 : m tl'll • ::::::,:·~ t ~ ~~ • ~--Trla llld 40 • J IOI.'\+ lo AHtrtt .n ·i to~-' c11y1w1 •. •d1-a1-ii.J2 F1u1p1 •.o• .. it '""•"' 1111J11 • ·•••-.:z lS'oi•..,, NetmPI ·, .,, Mv.:...·-. 11001,., ·,.., 44 "" ...; Trl•Pc 111 •" " black book. Then lhere's lhe story of J .P . M organ Afet 112 s " ·~·v; CllYl"flf 2 :. 1 JS¥. ..... FHtiSt. ·1•» ., 31"•.,. ..J! » 510 1•~· ~ NevPw "" • 14 ~-"' llocllG i'ta s n ·~· v. TT~<"'' ·411'•1~ .,, 12'~ ~ order1·n g a beer l'n a bar n ear Wall Street , ... • , ;1 116$ 34¥a .. "' Clilblr' ... • f1 ,...._. .... FIOlllP" )I .,. ttf\-" . ._.. I.JO 1 II "" ,, NevP Pl I ,. USO 11..., ' llo<llTI I "14 I 11 11V. v. .. co. . s 4 t ..... ~ A IP u 11 1 1"' 11v.-"' Cl••kE uo 1 m ~ ~ Y> F••EC ' .•o ,, 20 20\\+ "' °"1..011 • .O» 114 '~· "" NevP p11:tS :: > nto~ 11o ctoc11w1 1.s. 1 4'S aov.:..; TT'1"1l .so 10 ••)4• "· announcing: ''When J .P . M organ dn'nks. every body AMI • .5' 11 1422 21"-.... ClvCll uo • • 12VJ-v. Flt PL J.04 t m J0'4. • . . otta". .M • IO •• v. HE111tE• 2" • m 25\lo. v. •orvnH 2 '° • n ~. ~ llU p 1.12 1 l1' 1111'>. '"' AmMolr .. 1u 2>.1. c1evE1 J.Oll ""' 1~ • " F••Pw 1"' • cv " • " ..,.,. 1•40 1 '"' ~. ~ NYSEG 1 • 101 ISll'o 1tot1r1n • • .., 1~ ·~ T••11C>t 1.io • 2 ""' • '• drinks!" After finis hing his .. beer, M organ s laps a ANt1R 1.44 • >IS J7"" Cltvepll 60 1 U .._ • \.\ FlaSll t 10 • JO 11"-• Ill 0 -It--, NYS pf J 1S 1100 ?1 ·+ f 'tollr pl J ll 4 U \'J ly~ l.40 6 ~ v-. .. I'> A~Fi. S. 2• 10h-. '-''°'°" ... •1m 11111. v. FtwGen 12 1n t6"•" J,. 111 2: ~ ~~ • Nvs111 LIO . tSO ny, • ..., ctolll11u :s.11 37 111~ ••• T~,.,.g> .u ,: m =:-:."' dime on the table . a nnoun c ing: "Whe n J .P. Morgan A ' · s J:J 12 -"' C111e1lf' •7• • 15 uv. .. "'Ftvor ·• 12 "" 31 • "' IC m•rt ... 1 ,., t•w "' Nvs P1 t.12 · 12 1114 •I 'toimcp 1• " ,.'-"' -U--41 -pays e er body pa s " A d th e ' this g t Am Id ), • l2' 27Yi + 1 .. CllMll PI I .. I I~\.\ ,004tC 1 • 10 ~t lft ICalarAI 1 .0 J S08 IS l4 Newell ,911 • 2 IS"1o ..... 'tontOll ti J\l'e, .. UAL. tJ 120 !91' .. V• • V Y Y · n e r S rea AS .. •h . 10 :iot 114\• v. cooc11m M » • • 111 FordM 1.20 · 11• 1~· · ·· •l•<A 1 40 , 11 21 Nw11t1 n 11 rn ll"t• 11o 'toC>tr .to ·1 " 1111. • .. uGI 1 • • •s 21 " Theodore Roose veil quote . .. A man who has never ~fff'I!!\!. s"'°.si '. ~ 25'1!. .•... CoHIAI .40 •• «>I ,._ ._ ForNIK 2.24 9 10 •111+ "11 •.It.St · f 120 '5\lt···~ Newml UOe 11 360 41'-+1" 'tor.r ... 10 4S4 17'0 ..... UNI~ 1·20 1 l1 I~ ~ .. ... • v ..... ""' coc.aci 1.12 • os JSYi• .,.. Ft0t•r 1.» . 1tJ1 M• "' •neM• 21 1 14 nv.. 14 Nwperi. 1> ,, .... ""•1\lo 11-•" ·°' 1 111 1•'-UM T t * , ~ ,,; gon e to school may s teal fro m a freight c ar: but IC he : Pl s.40 7 m27 ~-"" c1c1wek 1 * 11 4'"'• "' FiH-• ·• 12 •1 llS • ,... oneo 111 11 111 ,.,._ ~. ,.., • .,_,. 1 M • 174 " · Re C.c>• 1.04 • 71 11 • "· UH .-., s st 7"" has a un1vers1·ty educat1"on. he may steal the whole • . )On-"°> Nt .nit J ~ .•..• FotlWfl .... 404 1.-.,-CtyPL2 .. s Ill~· ,,. ... 1.MplJ.40 tlSO,. . RoylD lt . .Z•. JtO »'•-"UN .Hj . J 1 :nr.r,PI '°16411 ••• lOU • ~o s SI -.,.. FMtml t2 .s 1~· "" ~PL pf4°JS lllOOO 21 -"' Nl•MPI l.'11 l200 ,. ..... llllbOrm 1.0l IS II ~. ~ USFG CP 3 20 1 u Qll'J Vt railroad .. -.2 ..... COlemn I 14 ti u • -FOii•"" t2 In 21'oi + -PL pf2':t0 • 9 IS Hl•Mpl 4.10 . l200 )1 •IV. 1l111Toa I s 1S IS UlllHV l.t .. t 3 61 • v. . AW , I.Gt • 17 I ')'lo ...... ColaP•I 1.20 I M7 !M-v. Fo.dlP ... s I ,,. • 'la ., p 2··· . . 2 . Nlat;lpl 121 .. 1160 XI • '4 ~''"" 1.30 13 Sl 19 .... UC~mp • a ,,, •sv. . 'The Bathroom Almanac" IS n ew but back =~sl'.~ : 1o} fl~· ~ COIOP pf1JO .. USO JO +IYI Fo•llro 1.40 IJ 121 Sllh .. •· " s..Ll' . .,. 'i I$ n14• (t. Nloiml 1.10 tlOO Jt\11+ lft R,d4trS I Oii> t 101 JJV. Un erll 3, S 421 ~ ' + COlfAlk .n 1 4' 10\lt• .,.. FrOtNlc -'O II 1312 27'Jlo• " OftGE 2 II' S 1'2 I~+ Nia h J .. 17 ""' • .. -S-5 -Un omr e S IOV. again for the 20th time -an impressive testimonial =tk 112 SO 21 -V. CollnF l 1 >I 1?141 .. Frl9tt11 .41112 ISi 2IOf\-" OftN · '1 · v.· HI II 2M 1 I" l3''•"' SCA 15*11 IU I~ UnlonC itt 1 ti 4-.,' '" ~p6f11 :·:: 1t t?: ~· ~ CotP.., 1.4111• llf 19't• "11 FNflll >.411 I :m Jnl.... Pet n: ': 11! I"-• NoolA t u 1> 214 111 ....... SC.NI 2 S 12 Ullo• tlo U11Ele< 1.S) • '11 11'4 to the appetite o r trivia eaters -iS the '"Guinness a-" .-·.,. f ' ' • CO!Got t .711 • M JI • 14 FllCIV• ... II IJO '""·· . •PL -'2 l l•Yi ... NorfWll 2 60 • S11..SI ........ SFN U• • 4 ""'. "' UnEI pf J.SO •• l200 UI~· Book or W o rld R ecords .. Ste"rl1"n g Publ1'sh1'n g Co has ~·-0 • ·-I 11 dl~l't-:: Cot11PCI .60 10 U 41 \l'o-YI FllQa pl I.JS .. S I~• I.\ etyt11"'.. 4 11 j2 : :t\ Norll11 1' 11 IS + h SPSTt< .n S n UV. . U11Ernl 6 . ..0 .. t llOO Jt\. • "°> · · • ~Tr: ! '°"" -Ctm11111 1.10 • M• n • "' -G-4 -eu1ar u 12 11 1" Norr•• 1.A?e 11 21 ""' • " s.01ne .» m • •1-'-UEI L. 1 110 JO • '"' dressed it up for tbe firs t time in a dust jacket while AIM~tr"l· J l~ l~ ·;,.. CmllEn 1.60 t 116 ii~• Yo GAF M tl II IJ\'>-14 ~ltr 030 7 7 101/\.. Norlltl .OI S •7 I.,_.,.. SIOC18aa 1J U t U.\4-14 ~n pf 2.1) . 21 l•V• • " A"'-'" i 1 63 J:M1o -14 comd.u .2114 11 t•11o-~ GAT• 1.411 • " 11v.-'4 1<e 10110 ,·40 , ,., 1 .. .,...;·v; NACoa• n» , 2111.-11. siociS< u tt1 1"' U11 •pf 1.n • •• • •11 miraculously holding lhe pnce at Sl0.95. the s ame as Anal-•. » 31 17.\4-CmSwn ,.,, Q --.... GCA• .>Oii,.. 21-... 14 htilr 40!0 IS 10 • "'NOAPlll 1:10 s 12 ..,._"' SIQdSott . IO ,... .... IC•• It "3 a t. "I I ea This . ( lh h d ed't Allc:,;o; 1 » • • ""'' ·.-Comdr• u 2t0 """-"'Gov • 12 JO • "' Kt11tl ·TT • 25 it11ot .... "'"''u' 1.11 11on ,14• 14 Sol••• 1 • .0 • m ~ • .,. u11f'1rac 1.ta" '"' ,..., as Y r . lS, o course. e ar cover l 100 • .. ..,. .. w 1 :io • ff 1121 • o.. cmwE > • 7""1121Yl• "' GEico ·• 1 s• iM. · · ,.,.. 11 " 2>4\• .. NCetSl. 111 • '"'-"' s.o.c:,. 44 • » 11 • "" U11 ov• • " "' • " called the '"1982 ed1't1·on " out J·u st l·n ll. me for the A'ftlenc :. " Jeu23\lt• I~ C•E pf 1 911 . IJ ., ... 14 G~O" ... Ill JOI -· " Y\lth 1:1 • Ml " ..... NlllCIPS uo 1 IOI ""• " SIJ•L.P ,,,. s ' I~ .... U11wyt pf • 010 ""· " • AM0111 1 n t ,,. 421-• "' C•E pf 1.. Jt ,, • ""'GF Ew 10. • a >"'.... '"G•.1 "' •. m 121-+ Yo NoSCPw >.sa 1 m 1t • "" SPa111 •.JIO •• .. ""• "" unernc1 ·'° 11 .. t¥t• '' Ch r is tmas trade. Bantam's paperbac k vers ion will 4nl•tr t 1' 11 15 u CwE pf Lll . 1420 U ..... GtlHow .411 t U JI"'• ~ orG Df t..70 •• 1 1~. 14 "'I,.. pta. ... 1100 26 -" 5111,.P 2.14 6 m J:H\ + I'll U9rd pr 1.20 .. • I" b .,,.. n :n i 19 17._. .. cwE pf 2,31 .. , '"'··-,. G•-" 1.n" ta "'-•'"' ,..,,. t io SJt 1~+ l't S Pw pf4.• .. t200 21v.-1iw. s.1en1 .lDl n '°' 11"1!-"' ucoTv ".n,. m u·~ • " not e out until next s pring . A....,,v .44 1 1 ......• c-.e pf 2.11 . 11 1..-... °'""' .44 1 1 1,_• "' er•M'WI .. J • • " ,... llf•,!O •. ••oo 77Yi•I s.m-·· "'° 2~"' UnEnro 1·" s 100 40"-• "' H ere's a book th t · · II d b th ,._., 1 .t.4 1 191 1,.,... ~ we pf 1,411 .. 1100 SM ...•. G•IS¥< 1,a • 16 '~····· •WCI! s 1111 11 + Y> 1,.......,. .. • 41 •1" SDl.O• ._., , se• '""• "" u111111~ t·."1 s ,7, !!"', " a was ongma y issue y e ~ ""n . 2' lA'o+ .... ES ••• 1 17 15"11 + "'Gfffflf .a 11 DS 2S • 14 .;...-. .• • • 1411'>-"' "'~ ....... 000 .. .. . SJ-• ..... -·~·-·· 0 II ... ~ ... "" fam ous Guinness brewery m Ire land as a oneti me ,._ "'·' •10 so -\~ omwt LlOll lAI ~.2\loGelCO 1\,1' J "12-~ 111 • .• ,. Ill; -14 ...... 7 •·11• .Slit-Y> !J~RIUkt1,•JOJ? .... ~m:-= '·': ~~· ~ promot1"on to help bartenders settle dt"sputes. They ,..,,,.., ,,,.. dO n _, •PIYC .41111 ., ~ .... a.n-ce n ,. • • .. 2 s as • ll't -Tef II I .. ., 4SV.+ v. __ ,.. ... .. JI .... ..•• Ollltlftd I iO IS 3S • I "'1Pw 1112·'1 ., • 11 • l'I ..,.,.., .o11.s ., ""'····· GA•n• .,....l, • ~·"' 1 199 ' ''° \ti+ll't t1illtHt1 ·· t1 5"'····· SIA"'"" ue 1 ., •Po. ..... •~Y, -1 11 ·-· .. had sh1'pped 50,000 cop1'e s to the U n1"ted States. ApptMg > SO U'-.... CompS< lO IJI cllJ\lt-V. OAlftOfl .-1 II• J1 • I' d .'2ff II Jillll+ "Hott'"' 1.1111• 01 JOV.+4 SFelftd a I 1 -2214+ Y> vm•"" '" .. YI Arute 139 tx15' l3\/o•"' PIVll'lt »•• Jt + "G11eca11 ... j I tltli•"' -I 20 *!t l4 t1w.it.lr ,IO,. m >114• II'> SF•'"'' .tlOISICJl -·~"u'"IJ!l.I>•.,, 12,~ ... ~ placing them in the hands or the ··mpo rter or Areal pO. I• . l'2 :M • '" ConAar .a I 21 11'4 •••. GClflm ... 11 1117 uJNo + l\jt or-t • l U1 -lo. Nwl9(p 1,M S at Ull'o + " SOIWel I U S • II tdM 4 '1 ~ Ar~110 1.1~ 713'3 11v.•" -M• >.20 s > ~ . GO•te" 1• • 11 ..... '-• 1• • 1 • N'"1E1 1.JD • 1eo HY>-" So411AE .tot• > ~ . VflPkMn ff " '"• ',• Gu1·nness st o ut Dav1'd Boehm who founded SterlUl. g ' .. :11'$ ?.ft• "'6 1111'>+ '-' -Oft 11• I U I "311i+I GflOrll n10 tll U\11+ \It r IO ., * ~14+1 NwE11flf1.1' .. Jllli SawA$tp IOt t Ill IO*li UiFo$212e 12 -· > • ' ~~Tst IO J s',, ·~· "iA CnnNG 110 s • It-... Qe11EI i :io '''" 5'\'I+ v. ~ 111 ·: no JAl'I = Nwtllld Utl 0im2 Ull'o• ·y; s .. EIP i.a I .. II ..... u ~Pl?: J m y:~· ~ Publis hing m 1949. s aw the lhin volume in a Boston Al'kl.G ,.'°II 4l .... + "' OflrK IO" s ?>*... GllFd~ I.JD 1 "" ~· "' """" •• 1$ IO • 14 NwMLI I.JD • " .... .. So•E "" I.a s ~ u cm ,. 1 ... 141-). "' books •o r e ... 1957 H g t lh . ghts t od AnnRty 4 9 1 ,.. MEd 1. .. s 1ou -· .,.. GGl!t .... 112 >-1 .......... tc:_,. n, 14 12 %7.._ -"'Nws1w t.JO 1 ao 24lll• -!Mwln .M . 1• .-. . uf'"d ,. 17 ,.. • " u• · . e o e n o pr uce an A'"ltCI• J ..,.._ v. CME P1 • •· 1 '°' ... ·· GnHMt ·• ·· 12 1' ····• IC;'° M • ,. 1011<.. NOl'I°" 2 • m 4111-. ..... S.•on .~ t •• s + " u L•.. ta 1 ., u·,,· :,; Americ an edition m 1960. A'"ICO I IO ·; :Ml 2111• ..... ConE pl •..S •. d20 '1"'• 14 0 'i:?l t . .Q 1•1 "' :=--~ -I.~ -..... NorSlm I.Oii 1 .. ••v.-14 IChrP ....... -,..... .... u II ... .io." IS l1"-,,, The "Gu1'nness B ook or World R ecords" IS a A pf 2·10 3 .,.. CMl!PI s 1 lS • \Iii Gn .... 111 ,_.. 271 "LflE tlllj Navo11 12 M ~ • ..., 5<111111 1'111 ''"-"' ~~· • A~~ ,.1 •°1s · · 110:, ,! • '"' MFth l. ,, ·• 441 11 • '"' o0~ ..,,'Ulllas •4' SS m.-• "' ~~0 • \S J jt""· · -Nucor A 12 ,., uv.. 14 S<111m11 • .ID I> 1511 s.v. • .. ~ 5..,.~ 1 1~ ~ ~ = bl· h . d b · If Id h ,.,..,,1111 , 40 • " ,.14 F pf •.so . t 1111t+> ...... ,.... .. 11 •.• P flf 1 v. -o-o -$<tA11 .10 XI 110 JJ • ~ Toec , 40 10 17 45 "' pu 1s mg recor y 1tse . ll has so more t an 42 "'"'w'" 1:10 1 >n 1~ • "' c115Fr1 u2 • s 40v.-14 GNC' 0411 11 '"'-"' · ... ,, 'i no • "-7 .,.. 0 ... 1" • ,. u .. ,,...,. "' Scoo _.. 11 •• 31" • "' u11Tec11 2.40 • S1• ... 111 • ., million copies in 23 languages. making it the w6rld's At-Ea .~2I IO 14 CntNG l.52 I 11 47 -~ GflPort I It 49 U14 +1\'I I. pf S .. I 41 •• Occ1Pe1 MD J l'J 14~ ... , kotFet 1 fO I 11 ~ • UT~llfl l .SS . 15' ""'• " Artre 10 lS m-. • .., ~·-t.>t s 7"I 1n.. .. " GPU 11 asi • -"' LQufn1 • " 4 1t•1+-v. Oc<j" llfUO • s ""'···00 ScouP ' • m 11• .... vnrre 1 .. , m 2m all tim e bes l -sellin g c opy righted book <th e Bible. Arvin 1: I 1 S 14'"' Pw Pl•.SO .. llOO 2' ..... GfflAe 1.7. 10 m en.+ " LacGas t U 1 S It t 'II Occ P pf1,11 · It ISV. + 14 Scot In .n t ' lf!/e + ~ Vnllrd t 'z.s IS It 21'-"'' Awr<o 1 •o.1s 132 ,.,,. Pw 1111.41 •• 1110 ~-v. GnRtlr .. M •-" LMnSo• .as1. " •V.• "'Oc<IP pf2.JO . s "" .... Scovlll 1 n • 41 17Y>-v. Vfll.,.r ., , 24 12.,, • .,, remember. is not cop yrig hted>. Theo years ago ASJllOll 2.40 ... 31~ Pw pf7 n . 11160 .m. '" GnS1t11• 1-'0 I ,.. ~· "' ~·y I 10 • J """' •. OulP pllU2 . 7S t7 • "' Sclldd4tr n 256 .,.,.._ "' UnlvFd .. I s 14"• ,.. s 1· Id ()() ()()() . ( lh h d d " . AtdDG 110 1 •• ts'•• '"""p11.11e . 1100 n v.+ivt a 11s1 .. 1 ... 10 * 11\l'o .... LMtltr, :M '° ,., ""' ... ooeco •IO , n 1'11. .... s .. c1p11 • • "" • u11t..ea1 1 51 • 11 n • ,, ter mg so 1 . copies o e a r cover e 1l1on: AMID pf •" • • ,... pr>.H • t 2•h • ~ GTE , ... I tm..,.. • .. l••"n' 12 u • 11v. • ·~ 09lltn '• • J2 ,,,,.._ 14 s.ec i pf 2·10 n .,,._ "" ~Joi\" > 10 i.1 ,,.,. • '· r1· ve years ago sales were 240,000.· las t year they were A.M9d" 17 ,. 12~ ' -pr2.SO ......... ,. GTE .. J~ t ti ....... pt n 1' lO ~. 'Ao OliloEO I,. 1 I» IJ • "' Su Conl ., • St 17 "' u llFE IO , DI 2•1'11. '· • AIC.YEI 2 12 s 197 17"•. Pw pr1.2J • "'-· ~ GTFI pf us . rlOO ~. . . LMl'Sa 1.40 1 .,. JlVt.. . OllEd pf •.40 . l2SO 2'\I'> • IYI S.•fll '·"' • '" JI • v. u LF ptt.U • 2H". v. 400.000; the initial printing this year is over 500.000. AllRl<ll 2 20 71101 .. ,.., :t\ Pw pf2.43 . 10 16 • 'It GTlr• I .• I M ~ • \lo t..swyf'r I.SO I > ~ + v .. OllEd pl 4.6" 120 ,..,, t lll'o S.aorm I«> 6 4911 SJ •I Utllelnc .'M 2S 116 • 11. Al'"' pl ).IS.. 110 JI~. IV. !Air • . .. I ... Gtne•co• IJ )IJ 114• v. LMElll 1,0l 11 , 11 • OllEd pf 4..51 ao 17"°>-2'4 S.orm wCI ~ u" • '"" Ul•PL 2.20 m 111t • "• Bantam sold m o re than 3 million copies o r the 1981 Alllc pl2.IO . I Ill~ ,.,. ICOfl .64 . ? sv.-• .. GnAitdn °'" ti 13*+"' LtePl•t .M. ,, .. .,,. "011EdPl71'. 1,100 '3•11-" s .. a111 10 411 111 .... 14 UIPL pf 290 II 20111•" paperbac k ed1"t1'on. AlluCp • 1.Q II ntl(p 2.40 6 144 27' • GtMt t 1..IO JDI 10'Ao + -., l.AtllVal I S llli OllEd pf f.111 dO SO , 1 SufAlr 60 10 27• 2'"-• I UIPL pf ? W 10 20~• • ~. Await 12 lO .a 1''• • "• 11uGrp 1.ta S f l JI Gtl pf 1.61 . I 17.,.,• I L.efltnn ?.7.. • 1.-.,, V) OflEd pf 1.IO J 11-'i. • .... S.tlPw 16" I 2 nv.-\lo UIPL pf 2,. I 1•••, \, Aut'Dt t 4ot It 141 :rt I G9 1114.SO .. 50 >1>, Ge""PI 1,14 11 21• ~ .... 1,.....,., t 20 1 45 141'>• OflP pfGt 71 . I 1~-.,.. Starl•G .l.2 21 ,... D UIPL. pf 1 ~ JI I• • ll'o AvcoCp I 10 S 15' ~ • I'll 1111 ) • 11.0 J1'-• '-Ga Pac Ull 10 MM I"'• ""' ~ I M f 4' ))'lo, OflP p10J " al1llO ,,...__ ~ s. .. , I.,. 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'f~n..flfrP.11. ,.... ...... ..., ....... 11. ... 11.n • ........... 1.1-... ............ ... .. ,,, ----~-...., .......... ... .,. . dtallnetl- U tll •cent>• P8llnCI ~llK -v. c ... o • "°"""· dtll.,.reo . Tiii M.totl Mttals W-~-II• lb, 41-'-7 ... ,..,Is t _,ci, H V M•rc_., ~.00 Ptt fl-" f'la11Mooft$o117.00tro.,o1., H Y SILVER ••.10 Pf< troy-·"-· .. "-· °"'Y dally quol• GOLD QUOTATIONS ( o zssoss 0 • • • • IUlll ClllT YIUI HiMITIWI DAllY IVll. . /, ' t ..; ' I 1.: I I . • I Reagan: no .40-day. econo011c · cure ) . WA SHINGTON CAP > - President Reagan said today that he ••stands ready to veto any bill that abuses the limited re'i'?urces or the taxpayers," and sa1<1 a balanced budget remains his eoal even though be cannot predict when he might achieve It. Acknowledging that his goal of balancing the federal budget by 1984 h a s become "an unlike lihood" b ec ause or conllnuin g inflation , the president said, •• 1 wouJd hesitate to make . . . set a date when a bala nced budget would take place." "l think we're goln1 to have some hard limes the next few months,•· Reagan said when asked about recent pessimistic statements 'by some economic advisers. "Our program has only been in effect for some 40 days, and you can't c ure 40 years or problems in that short a lime," Reagan said in a slatement he read to a White House news con r erertce. . His theme was a ta mlliar one. The president said that since the day he took omce • 'our top priority has been to rescue this eco n omy rrom years or government mlsmana1ement." But he said that even with the $35 billlon In spending cuts Congress has approved, federal spending is rising far too rapidly. "This government rnust stlrten its spin~ and not throw In the towel on the fight to 1et federal spending under control," he said. Reagan said Congress has not sent hlm one appropriations bill tor the bookkeeping year that begaq Oct. 1 -and the money m easures pending would exceed spending targets. • '1 stand ready to veto any bill that abuses t h e lim ited resources of' the taxpayers," he . a.Mr NII""""' LM ,._,,_ It's a "log" j am at the north side of Huntington pier as four wetsuited surfers take off on thick wave. Man arrested in C l ement e slay ing case An Oceanside man has been arrested 'in Ohio in connection with the slaying' of a woman whose body was dumped in San Clem ente in Augu~t. Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Daniel Ray Ma rlin. 23, was taken into custody al his mother 's home in Ve rsailJes, Ohio, as a s uspect in the stabbing death of 20-year-old Zaida .Martin, his s ister·tn·law. H a rt said in v estigators determined that the woman was slaln in Oceanside while her husband, Kerry Dean Martin, a Marine, was on duty overseas. The woman's body, Harl said, later was dumped along A venida Pico near San Clemente High School. The body was discovered by a jogger Aug. 13. Mrs . Marlin was reported missing by relatives Sept. 22. It was a distinctive tattoo of a butterfly on her shoulder that led to her identity, Harl saJd. Hart said the slain woman's brother-in-law was a rrested Saturday. Two investigator s ha ve traveled to Ohio to return Martin to Orange County for prosecution. Hart said i t was his understanding that Ma rlin would waive extradition. The moUve for the slaying has not yet been detertnined, Hart said. Barry resting afte r hip surgery PHOENIX (AP> -Sen. Barry · Go ldw•ter, R ·Arlz., was reported In satisfactor y co ndition and restl n1 comfortably following surgery to replace his left hip. The oper•lion Monday nl1ht took about an hour and the 73·r.ear-old senator responded we I, said Dr. J01eph DuPont. Goltlw•ter had his right hip repleNCI two yean a10. , , Ce remonie ~ slated on· Veterans Day Fog plagues OC's airport and motorists Ceremonies are scheduled in several Orange Coasi cities Wednesday in obser vance of Veterans Day, farmerly known as Armistice Day in recognition of Lhe end of World War I. Also in observance of the holiday, city halls in HunlinJ?ton Beach. Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa. Newport Beach. Irvine and Laguna Beach will be closed Wednesday. eublic schools will be closed, along with county, state and federal offices, post ofrices and banks. Rep . Robert Badham , R·Newport Beach, will join other elected officials , military representatives a nd religious d ig nitaries at the annual memorial service in San Jua.n Ca pi s trano at Mi ss ion Cemetery. off Los Cer ritos, near Ortega Highway . The event begins·at 11 a.m. Local veterans wlll conduct another memorial service at 11 a.m . at American Legion Post 291 at 215 15th St., Newport Beach. This service will be followed by a lunch honoring World War I ve~erans. Al 3 p .m . a rtag retirement ceremony will take place at the post. Veterans in Huntington Beach will place flowers at the war me~oriaJ outside City Hall, 2000 Mam St., at 11 a.m. In Laguna Beach, members of American Legion Post 222 and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868 will place two wreaths at the war monument in Heisler Par k, aJso at 11 a.m . A thick blanket of fog that grounded some planes at John Way ne Airport and plagued motorists in inland areas of Orange Count y today is ex pe c ted to repeat its performance Wednesday morning. Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Burea u s aid fog covered interior Orange County this morning, while coastal a reas were relatively clear. Weather officials blamed the Cog on a strong onshore flow of cool marine air which condensed when meeting up with pockets of warm aJr in inland areas . 'Cover-up' at CBS Officials in the John Wayne Airport tower reported a 200·foot ceiling around the airport with a one-mile visibility range. Pilots without instrument ratings were be in& urge d t~ stay on the ground. A s pokesman from the Orange Co unty Ha r bor Patrol headquarters In Newport Beach said visibility along the coast was two miles. Bo Derek clad for TV version By FRED ROTH ENBERG NEW YORK (AP> -There's a big cover.up going on al CBS. The hit m ovie "10" -Bo Derek 's theatr ica l and mathemaUcaJ success -wlll be on network television for the first lime tonight, and bikinis will be cloakln1 what moviegoers s aw in the fles h. (Channel 2, 8:30 p.m .) • Although sanitizing sex for TV Is n othing new, "10" is somewhat unique slnee it was originally filmed in two different ways : one for the theaters, one for television. So in Mrs . Derek'• famoua .. Bolero" scene, she teUa Dudley Moore she likes to m•ke love accompanied by a certain plece of music. while her lan•u.,e In the theat.en wu muth 1trons.er. And when Moore uae1 hit telescope lo s noop on bis fun-loving neighbor, tonlsht'1 women around the pool wUI be wearlns blklnl1. It'• atlll ver,1 much a t sophisticated, adult movie, still very much about sex. and that's what makes "10" so interesting on another level. TaJklng about sex. scheming to gel It and weaving plots around ll -even lf lhe on·alr sex Is toned down a bit -remains a major theme of tbe new TV season. The fog, weather officials ex plain e d , has ar rived hand-ln·hand with a cooling tre nd that ls expected to drop daytime temperatures to the low 70s In lnJand cities and to the upper 60s along the coast. While some say that Jl11le ts Debt takes ouL and giggle Is ln, that assessment la merely s uperficial. There Is network & brt• ef dip conce rn over the Coalilion for Better Televlsion'a threatened boycott because of TV's sexual W ASIUNGTON <AP) -The content, and there ts-the national debt, which pa11ed the per cept lo n of a more trllllon-doUar mark Oct. 22, bu conservative mood ln America. fallen below uaat hiatorlc level to But althou1h ''HUI Street just under Mt billion '-but Blues" had no Hp11clt aa or Treasury Department offlclala exploitative bodln Tbunday, say lt won't 1tay that low for half the atory llnea were Ions. aexualJy su11estlve. Earlier &bat The IO'"mment finances the night, the themes and dlalope n'lll llon•l debt by l11uin1 were more Juvenile la NBC'• Treuury bllla. not.ea, bonds MCI new all·c:om, "Gimme 1 llNU,'' other deb~lnatrumenla, wllb hut thev were talkllll abaat the various Interest ratH and c ... •at•, Pae Al) . maturity daUla. ~ I said "It ls ironic that those who would have us assume blame Cor this economic mess are the ones who created it." In answer to other questions. Reagan s aid: -He .. would be just as disturbed as you are and just as confused" about r eports he e ndorsed the idea or a limited nuclear war. Reagan said his comments to a group of editors about the threat of nuclear war later were taken out of context and asserted : "We have no plans to put Americans into com bat anywhere in the world." ''The most reallstic approact\. (to peace In the Middle East) is the one we are' taking" thr ough t he Camp David peace process. He sald an eight·polnl pl an offered by Saudi' Arabia implied "recognlzation of lsrael's right to exist, one oC the sticking points in the Arab world. That's why I've referred (See REAGAN, P ase A!J • Balloonists head toward ·· West Coast NAGASHIMA, Japan <AP> - The Double Eagle V floated over the Pacific today toward the West Coast of the United Slates. but the helium.filled balloon lost s om e altitude, a spokesman at the balloon's tracking station here said. Though skipper Ben Abruzzo a n d his three crewm en remained confident they would r each the Wes t Coast, the g round crew here said the balloon was riding air currents at about 13.000 feel, or 5,000 feet lower than originally planned. The balloon was about 6$0 miles east of Japan, they said. Eddie Halla, in charge of the Nagashima On s en Communications Center, said it a ppeared the balloon would not pass over San Francisco as originally planned but w\11 float over Seattle or British Columbia, To fly over San Francisco, the balloon would need lo be a l 18.000 feel. he said. Halla said one theory for lhe lower altitude was that the balloon might not be completely infJated with helium. But he said al one point this morning the balloon was floating alJ9,000 feet, which "proves it can climb up to high levels. especially when the s un rises in the morning I don't s ee any problems at all." The balloon's crew remained m good spirits and was in radio contact with the Nagashima trac king sta tion and with the air ('On t r o l l owe r al Narita International Ai rport, near Tokyo, Hatta said. Abruzzo. a 51-year old real es tate dev e l ope r from Albuquerque, N.M., said he and his crew hoped to arrive on-the · West Coast by Thursday. If conditions permit, they will head Susp ect d ue in s laying o f girl, 12 Thomas Francis Edwards, the 37-year-old former Costa Mesa resident accused in the shooting death of a 12·year·old Lake Elsinore girl al a Cleveland Nalional Forest campground, will likely be returned to Orange County from Mary land on Thursday. ' Orange County S h e riff's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards "probably" will be arraigned Friday on murder and attempted murder .charges In South Orange County Municipal Court. Edwards, d escribed by authorities as a "mountain man" a nd "gun buU ." is accused of shooting Vanessa lberrl and Kelly Cartier, both 12, or Lake Elsinore, al the Blue Jay campground on Sept. 19. Miss l berri died two days later. The former South Coast Gun Club employee e luded an extensive manhunt in the forest and other Southern California locations. He was arrested nine days CoUowing the shooting in Maryl&fld, where he had served a prison sentence on a robbery charge. · Edwards initially re fused to waive extradition to\ Callforrlla tor prosecution. He chan1ed his mlnd and ~lded lo return late last. week, Hart.1a1d. Two 1herltf'1 department lnve1t11atota. James Sldebothal\ and David Mann, are In M atylaod and wilt accompany Edward• to Callfornla, Hart 11td. Edwardl became• auspen ln the 1l1yla1 ••r autborltltt were abl• to trace a ••hlcle llNnH plate number proYided :~.:.--to the unpro\'Obd • for the East Coas t , cross the Atlantic a nd make a final l a nding near the Eu ropean border of the Soviet Union. "Conditions are so good I feel we can continue on to Europe," Abruzzo said before laking off. Abruzzo, Larry Newman and Ma xie Anderson , all from Albuquerque. made the first s uccessful trans·Atlant1c balloon <See BALLOON, Page AZ ) Killing s_u s p ect 's fear t old By GLENN SCOTT OftMDaif\r~MMt The girlfriend or Newport Beac h psychologist Telford "Tim" Moore testified Monday that Moore wanted to m arry her but was mortally a fraid to Cl'06S his homosexual roommate and the man he is accused of killing, Stanley Espinda. Glory Lane. the girlfriend from Laguna Beach. told an Orange County Superior Court Jury that Moore Uved in fear oC lhe te mpestuous and dominating Es pinda, who had befriended Moore 18 years ago. In a candid and detailed description of their relationship, Ms. Lane said Moore became increasingly disturbed a bout his relationship with Espinda In the weeks preceding lhe Nov. 5. UR> s hooting in the roommates' exclusive Spyglass Hill home. She said he often broke into tea rs describin g to her the retribution Es pmda would take against him when he learned that Moore had been seeing her. Two days before the killing, she said she surprised Moore in his school psychologist's office at Fountain Valley High School, and h e burs t into t e ars repeating: .. Please don't stop loving m e." Despite her urgings. however , s he said Moore refused to fight back a g ainst Es pinda 's beatings, believing that any aggress ion would only incite more punishment. After fi nding deep scratch . marks on his•neck one day in Octobe r 1980, s he said she a ngrily scolded: "Have you ever in all these years fought back?" He told her he hadn't, ~he said. She said s he was rarely invited lo Moore's home and only when Esplnda was gone. When the two were in bed at her home. s he said he never fell <See MARRY, Page A!) BRAIGI COST 1111111 Increased coastal low clouds and fog tonight and Wed n esday morning. Otherwise fair both days and not as warm. Highs 6S to 72. Lows t-0night 50 to SS. 111111 TIDIY ·r;s· the se<Uon for an avalanche of mail·ordu catalogues and the buying public 1s being warned to h<>tuart. See Page 88 . , .•. ........... ....... ..., ..... c-u c..... ... I •••• Orange CoHt DAILY PtLOTfTut1dey, November 10. 1981 1 1 iCtim's mom testif~~s F:reeway Ki ller jury told how she di scovered son missing I>' I ACIUI! HYMAN ~---.... ....... • In an emoUon·cboktd volce. t.fle mother or a ll·year·old itHway Kiiier vlctlm told a ry Monday at the trial or llham Bonlh how ahe felt when I he dlscovertd her t'On mlaalng prll 10. 1980. I ·'I knew •omtthln1 was rong. I went Into his room and I e wasn't there," said Barbara lehn of her return home from 1 ork on that night. "Hls jacket 1f'as there~ bis driver's education ' ,ook was there. I kne)V he ouldn't go anywhere wtthout J, his Jacket ll wu cold at nl•ht." U would be four da)'• before the leaJ"Md thal a body found lD a Loni Stach alley by 1 pauerby had bffn identilled aa that of her son. Steven Wood of B llflower. Mrs. Biehn Hid ln a quavering voice. ShorUy after teavtn1\he courtroom, she b\lrat Into tears. Bonln, a 34-year-old tr uck driver from Downey, la char1ed In Los Angeles County wit.ti 12 1layings that occurred between August 1979 and June 1980. A totul or 44 young men and boys have been murdered and '· (State solons cut 134,000 on welfare I t • ! SACRAMENTO CAPl -The {lte Legislature opined its ecial session by setting aside s partisan reapportionment 'spute 1rnd cutting welfare nerits for 34,000 families by 5 million. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., who a lied the special session arting Monday. signed it Into w within hours. The bilJ. SBlx by Sen Allred lquist, D-San Jose. won·a 31-2 entale vote and a 63-12 ssembly vote. The Repub li can s, who considered refusing lo vote for From Page A1 REAGAN • • • to it as a hopeful sign. It indicates a willin g ness to negotiate ... -Worldwide, "Our goal is peace. it hal'I aJways been ... fie QOted the United States wall begin negotiations with the Soviet Union shortly and hopes Cor "a reduction of nuclear v.•eapons" in Europe. 1 -The United States still ~opes to help restore order in El Salvador. He said he is ··hopeful 1still that we can bring about the tdea of an elec tion and a peaceful settlement .... The guer"rillas have failed miserably an attempting to bring the population over on their side. The populace is still in support of the government.·· Stone s roll in Hartford HARTFORD. Conn. I AP1 - Wearing white tights, yello\\ bee pads. red-fl owered shirt and blue padded jacket, Mi ck tagger led the Rolling Stones to he stage in their only scheduled 'i top an Ne" England on their fhree·month U.S. tour · The British rock group. which last t-oured the United States an 1978, was making its first ~ppcarance in this city since l966 for s hows Monday and tonight. The Stones play in New York City's Madison Square Garden on Thursda~ and fo'riday. The teen·age night manager (or Edwards Cinema theater 1534 Adams Ave . Costa Mesa, ·gave up a bank bag containing about S300 late }donday when a man intercepted him near a B a n k o r A m~e r i c a n i g h t depository. Pohce said the 17·.year·old theater employee was ready to 'put a green bank bag containing lhe funds into the depository at I '.~.Harbor Blvd. at about 9: 15 .Ne told officers a black man rdered him to hand over the money and he did. He said another man, hiding in nearby bushes, then joined the assailant in fleeing south on Harbor 1Boulevard !s trike blocked f RAMALLAH. Occupied West Bank (AP> -Israeli soldiers · patrolled lbis restive Palestinian $town today in a show or sthngth I that blocked a planned business strike'. the bill. cooperated after Democratic leaders assured lhem that congression al and legislative reapportionment would not be brought up. Assembly Speaker Willie Brown . D·San Ftancisco, assured them at the outset that his intention was to "lead the house throuf h the thicket of the Board o Equalliation reapportionment. and lbe Board of Equalization only." New districts for state Senate, Assembly and U.S. House of Representatives have already been pass t d b'y t h e D e m o c· r a t -d o m i n a t e d Legislature, and the angry Republicans are collecting signatures to take the issue to the voters next June. The welfare bUI was required, . oCficials said, to conform state regulations with those of the Reagan administration. Later Monday, Assembly and Senate committees approved similar measures to implement other federal cuts, saving the state about $6 million. Parent-child issue eyed by high court WASIUNG1'0N I AP> ''You cannot destroy a family forever when you're not convinced it's the right thing to do," the U.S. Supreme Court was told today. New York City lawyer Martin Guggenheim urged the nation's highest court to impose a more s tringent s tandard for what evidence a state n eeds to permanently take children from their parents. "We want the finder of fact 1 usually a state judge I to be convinced ... Guggenheim said. "It's the obligation of judges tc be sure of their result." The Ulster County. N. Y .. case is giving the justices their second chance in a year to study the constitutional protection g iv e n to parent ·child relat1onstups The court ruled by a 5.4 vote in May that penniless parents facing termination or parental nghts have no right to free legal he lp, as have penni less people facing imprisonment. Ulster County welfare officials an 1979 won a court order te rminating the parental rights of J ohn and Annie Santosky, proving by a •'preponderance or evidence" that their three children Tina, now 10 . John. now 8: and Jed. now 7 -were permanently neglected. That standard of proor. used in most non ·c riminal cases , essentially determines a winner by deciding wbether it is mo~e probable than not that certain fa c t s exist. Essentially . evidence is weighed and 51 percent or more wins. Aside from New York, the .. preponderance" standard Is used an such parent-child cases b y Arizona , Colo rado . Connecticut. Delaware. lndiana, Idaho. Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts.• Oregon and South Carolina. No states impose on officials seeking to end parent-child relationships the more stringent standard of "clear and convincing evidence." Two states. New Hampshire and Louisiana. require proof or neglect or abuse "beyond a rea sonabl e doubt" -the standard usually reserved for criminal cases. i ORANG£ COAST 111111 Plat CtatellM .. 9111 .. ,. 11"42-M11 .. ..., .. , ...... ........, ' dumped near Southern Callfornh• freeway• •Ince lln2 "' what has bun ta11ed lbt' Freeway Killer cue, but investigators say the dutht may not all be related. Bonin also faces seven murder charges in Oranee Couoly. The Superior Court trial In Loe Angeles presided over by Judge WiUiam 8 . Keene has heard a gory recitation or mutilation and murder and been shown color photographs of the victims· bodies since the trial began last week. ood' In describing young W s lnjurle Monday, Long Beach police homicide omcer Logan Wren said. ''I ooUced a bruise above the right eye, a ligature mark around the neck. ligature marks on both wrists and a ligature mark on one ankle." Earlier Monday, in describing the bloody. bruised body of another victim, Ronald Gatlin, 18, or Van Nuys, s heriff's Sgt. David Kushner said, "There was blood tbat appeared to be emanating from the right ear. There were numerous abrasiohs on the body.'' He also described numerous ligature marks on the neck. ankles and hands and added, "I observed a s mall puncture wound to the right rear portion of the neck." Last week, the seven-man, five -woman jury heard testimony from a number of people including the mothers of victims Darin Kendrick, 19. aJld Sean King, 14, and saw a picture or Kendrick's body showing an icepick protruding from his · right ear. From Page A1 MARRY. • • as leep, claiming that he was worried that Espinda would find them and hurt them. At one point. s he said. Moore spotted Espinda's red Porsche cruising past her home and immediately became so nervous a nd withdrawn that he could barely talk. During Ms. Lane's testimony, M oore sat quietly and expressionless as he has throughout the trial -next to hts attorney. Al Stokke-. In previous remarks, Stokke has conceded that Moore shot Espinda as the victim relaxed on the living room floor of their home. But Stokke. adapting the "battered wife" defense for this case. 1-•arguing that Moore's action was the result or Espinda's conUnued harassment and doesn 't constitute the murder c harge sought by Deputy Dislncl Attorney Bryan Brown. Ms. Lane said Moore fell a vague loyalty to Espinda berause his 45 ·year·old roommate had bailed him out of a traumatic family life and encouraged him to undertake has success ful practice as a psychologist. Moore and E s pinda ran the Newport Psychologi ca l Laboratory. which contracted its services lo several coastal school distracts. Moore also taught classes at Orange Coast College and USC and he assisted a counseling program at UC Irvine. Ms. Lane said Espinda was a homosexual who. despite his kindness in earlier years, had become possessive and tried to convince Moore that he also leaned toward homosexuality. She said Moore resisted and fjnall y attended a men 's workshop in San Francisco on sexual awareness. "He came out feeling totally heterosexual," s he said. But she said he still couldn't s hake Espinda's strong physical control and refused to leave rum for her until the 18-year relationstup was terminated. Asked why he dldn 't simply move out. he told her: "You don't understand. He'll follow us anywhere. He'll find us. He'll hurt us," she said. PUC hears gas rate bid LOS ANGELES <AP> -The st ate Public Utilities Commission has begun hearings on whether to grant a $790 million rate increase tl\at has been sought by Southern Californ ia Gas Co . since September. The bulk of the rate hike, $572 ,416,000, has already been granted on an interim basis by tt)e PUC. The hearings which bega n Monday in the com mission's. Los Angeles courtroom before Ad minlstrallve Law Judge Jam es D. Squerl will cover arguments on the remaining 20 percent of the increase. said PUC 1pokes~voman Carole Kretier. Brigadier defect~ PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) -Aa Mib•n army br11ad1er ~ to Pakistan wlth IO ---· l .. ,~ 81drlmy Saumzara to .Japan are American />0/101!111~111 .Jmm /ell Hocky i\cila. Hon Clark Hem Ahri1tzr> amf l.urrq \etr111ai1 Tropical bird seen 1st time in 85 years WASHINGTON (APJ --A colorful tropical bard nol seen for 85 years and thought to be extinct has been found in New Guinea , the National Geographic Society announced today. Previously the existence of the yellow-fronted bowerbird had been known only because or three s kins or male birds brougtll in by Malay or Papuan hunters In the 1890s. And a series of expeditions railed to find the bird until Jan. 31 . when California omilhologist J ared Diamond sighted one Ul an unexplored mountain range in New Guinea. ·Mom: Brooke shou ld11r 't be ashame d NEW YORK IAPl -Brooke Shields has suffered ·'the utmost humihat1on · because she posed for nude photographs at age 10. but the pictures are •'nothing to be ashamed of,'· her mother 1says. "I kn0\4 that l ' m a good mother." Ten Shields testified Monday in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. "I have her interests at heart I know I've made mistakc:s ." The 16·ycar·old actress is suing photographer Harry Gross in an effort to block him from further commercial use of the 1975 photos. origmally taken for a Playboy Press book "Sugar and Space.. ~ The teen·ager has testified al the trial that the photographs now "embarrass" he r She and her mother claim further use of the pictures wall cause her 1rreparahle harm by damaging her professional image and therefore her career. Sc ie nti s t s thought the bowerbird was extinct, and Diamond was not looking for al at thP time. .. w nen I and anyone else who goes to New Guinea have dreams. we dream about finding the m ystery bowerbird. but my goal on this trip was simply to do a general bird survey of this mountain range and help the Indonesian governme11t plan a new national park there.·· Diamond said. Nevertheless. he found both the bird and its bower on the first day or his two·week trip, and saw several others during his s tay Dia mond estimates that as man y as 1 ,000 bowerbirds m ay live in this remote area He nearly ignored the bard at first. thinking it was a related species. but noticed •ts golden yellt>w plume curved over lo the nostrils. On has return lo New York, he examined the skins of the 1'9th centur> bards and confirmed the species "as not exunct. Male bowe rbi rds build a special taJI nest of twigs around a sapling. From Page A1 pALLOON .•• cross na In the Double Eafle 1n Au1i1u t 1978. Nt!wman l.s Abruuo'• co pUoc for th Pudflc fUJChl, and the other two er w memMr• are Ron Clark of Albuquerque and- .. fto('ky" Aoki, the JapaneH owner ol the Benhihana restaurant c hain. Aoki 11 rinanclni the $250.000 venture. The crew is carryln• a »day supply or food. With the gondola and ropes. the craft Is as tall as a 26-story building. From Page A1 'l 0 ' ... same thing. Sure. the sop hi sticated Priscilla Bames is more subtle than Suzan ne Somers in "Three's Company, .. but doesn't ever)' show sltll revolve around s9m ething sexual? The waitresses in "Making a Living" now wear less revealing outfits . but hav e the male-female relationships and innuendoes changed that much? Aren't they still bed-hopping in "Dallas?" And isn't Daisy Mae s tall bouncing and overflowing in that prime example or soft-core pornography, ·'The Dukes of Hazzard?" Certainly. So it's not totally accurate Lo say TV executives are pursuing giggles over jiggles : that 's a bit of a smokescreen to keep the Moral Majority types at bay. Rather, th e operative programming policy on sex 1s juggle ·and goggle. Whal you see is not really what you get. As for tonight's heavier dose of sex. CBS was not al all certain what it was getting when 1t purchased "10." Its deal was an example of how networks occasionally "pre-buy" films to get the jump on the compeUUon. CBS bought Blake Edwards' screenplay before any filming was done . The pre ·buy was based on cast. characters and story line Alice llenderson, a CBS vice president ror program practices, s aid the network took Edwards; script and wrote notes along the margm. suggesting how the film would bes t play on TV. Ms. Henderson said the language had to be bleached in a number or places and. of course, the bolero scene and ' 1>oolside voyeurism had to be drPsse<l up. Edwards is out of the country s hooting. another film, but CBS sa ad he mad~ the changes himself, rather than having CBS edit later. -,~ .· ~~· Mrs. Shields, weeping, told Justice Edward Greenfield that her daughter had called her from school Monday "very ups el.. about the publicity the case has generated. -. . '"'ti,.i.;if! . .,....." ........ ,.,._...t.,,..,....-............ ,....,... ··,. 1111Cf.~ • . ' ..t.~·~ ... .~'O~'iJ ·~.ib:...:...-:-:·~ .. '. '~:· . r~~:~~:'"~~~ (I 4-I I f "• • ~ • • ,' ' f • • ··weren't vou aware when you brought the0 lawsu1l that all this .,,.__.. was going to be publicly aired"" TlllS is 0 skt'tc 1, "' llw 1tt•trlti rliwoi t't1!d l/t'lltm -tn>ntt'rl qarrle11er Greenfield asked. l><lt"t•rhtrrl. '""''"· 111 111 111, er111ll'I 11 re.<;emhle" a rohm n•1tl1 a Mrs Shields dad not respond < ,. d1rcc~l~l~:__~~~~~~~~~~-·1~o_lrl_e_,_,_"_ra_r~1g~€-'h_r_e_n_~_t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .......... ~~ ... It'• time for your layaway Avoid the holiday crunch this year by shopping ot Bren Walker now Let us help you choose the perfec t gift for ll'lot special porson from our selection of fine jewelry. ond with o small depqslt. we wm hold It for you until Christmas· 1 l I . . . llllll lllCH /llUTH CDllT D1llyPllDt TUESDAY, NOV. 10, 1911 CAVALCADE COMICS OBITS BUSINESS 82-3 84 BS 86-7 . . . . .. . . Packagers can't fool kids. See Erma Bombeck's column Page B2. D 0 A~tendance, betting dip at Fall Fair Attendance dropped nearly 30 percent al this year's Orange County Fall Fair thoroughbred horseracing. meet that closed Monday at Los Alamitos Race Course, and those who did attend bet less money. officials reported. The 12-day event, staged for the first time at night opposite the daytime Oak Tree meeting at Santa Anita, drew only 6,974 spectators Monday night, said Riley OK after eye • operation Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley returned to work today following s urgery to remove a cataract from his left eye. "Everything went perfectly," said Riley aide John Schade. Riley entered Hoag Hospital, Newport Beach, on Friday night for pre-s urgery tests. The actual procedure was conducted Monday morning. Riley was discharged Monday evening. Open house set for LB youth shelter The South Cou'nty Youth Shelter will hold an Open House Thursday from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at 508 S. Ann's Drive in Laguna Beach. The youth shelter is a 24-bour crisis intervention facility which provides residential and non-residential counseling to youngsters in the south part of the county as well as their families. Tours of the facility and an explanation of the Youth Services Program will be offered visitors. For additional information, call 494-4311 . Saddleback slates play . ''The Revenge of the Space Pandas" will be presented by Saddleback College's Theater Department in its Main Theater in Mission Viejo beginning Friday. The play is a comedy a~'Out three friends who a;e transported beyond the Milky Way by a time clock. General admission is $4.50; $3.50 for students and senior citizens: and $2.50 for children. For ticket information and reservations, call the theater box office at 831-4656 or 495-2790. Lagun0r's city hall getting net(] carpet A Costa Mesa carpet firm was the low bidder for a contract to replace worn carpeting in Laguna Beach City Hall, police department a nd two fire stations. The Carpet House submitted a bid for $9,052 for the work, which was several hundred dollars less than a second bidder for the project. Council members awarded the bid to the firm for commercial grade carpeting. More jet noise due near El Toro Residents living near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station can expect to hear an Increased amount. o( jet noise from Nov. 29 to Dec. 7, according to a spokesman for the air station. During that time period, Marine pilots will be conductin' flichta aimed at tralnln1 them how to land on aircraft carrien, the 1pokesman aaid, adding that on 1ome nl&hta the noise will lut untJJ 11 p.m. ExalD8 scheduled Free physical examinations 1ponlOl'ed by the Lasuna Beach S.alor Citizens Club will be available to La1una 8Hcb Halon tbi1 month and la Detember. To make an ·~ caU Kit Drolllftler •l 49'7.JMJ.. Fair Manager Kenneth Fulk. Total attendance for the flfth annual Fall Fair session was 103,262. It was the lowest figure recorded since the first meet in 1977 when 115,352 daytime patrons passed through the turnstiles at the popular Cypress track. This year's bettors spent $17,265,798 on win, place and s how tickets. compared to the first year 's "handle " of $16,405,233. Last year, daytime fair race visitors totaled 146, 176. They forked out $26,6d,882 in bet tickets. Attendance this year was down 29.3 percent from last year and money spent on race bets over the 12 days was down about 35.1 percent. Fulk earlier had estimated this year's handle, lbe amount bet, would drop about 10 percent because the California Horseracing Board bad ordered It staged at night -the lint nlght thoroughbred meet In stat~ history -on the same days as the Oak Tree meet. He said he did not foresee the impact or tbe televised last game of the World Series, wbic1l dropped that night's attendance to the lowest in history, 3,875. Also taking a toll was rain, Plans were revealed in Costa Mesa Monday for the Orange County Miuic Cent~. Sixteen-story office building adjacent to theaters, is depicted at left. Three-story , 3,000-aeat main theater is shown in foreground. At its rear is smaller. I ,OOO·seat theater. Music center design hailed Model of $59-million complex unveiled; Mesa cultural hub By JODI CADENHEAD Of .... .,..., " ... ~ Costa Mese is destined to become the cultural center of Orange County, Mayor Arlene Schafer said today after viewing designs for the future $59 million Orange County Music Center. The public received its first glimpse Monday of plans for the performing arts center during a study session or the Costa Mesa City Council. "It's an international flavor," s aid Ms. Schafer. "The Orange County Music Center is doing a lot as far as letting people know Costa Mesa not only exists, but is alive." Architects and backers of the Costa Mesa twin theater revealed drawings and a model of what they said will be only the third complex in the United States to offer theater, symphony, opera and ballet. The 3,000-seat theater will offer a three-tier seating arrangement and acoustical design capable or offering all four types of performances, said Len Bedsow. the Music Center's executive director. The other two complexes are the Dorothy Chandler Pav1J1on 1n Los An1eles and the Jess H. Jones Hall In Houston. .. When the Orange County Mu s ic Center becomes operational in early 1985. California will have three major pe rforming arts centers to attract world class acts and performers," said Bedsow. The plans unveiled by architects Caudill, Rowlett, Scott of Houston in a joint ve nture with the Blurock Partnership of Newport Beach include: The 3,000-seat theater covering 200,000 square feet and estimated to cost $.14.5 million. A second , two-level 1,000-seat theater covering 37,000 square feet and estimated to cost SS.S million. A 16-story office building adjacent to the twin theaters. No cost estimated. -A multi-level parking structure capable of housing 1,300 cars. Both theaters are scheduled for completion in early 1985. The office building and the parking structure will be open in 1983, according to the plans. Still to be ironed out is the finan c ing of th~ parking structure, which will be built in conjunction with the city. Costa Mesa officials have hired a financial consultant to study the feasibility of the P.roject said to cost about SlO million. A report to the City Council will be presented Nov. 16. A massive fund ·raising campaign led by the Segerstrom family, who have pledged S6 million and the five-acre site along Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway, already has raised $18 million toward the construction and lhe endowment of the-two theaters. Endowment costs are estimated at Sl9 million. Four other donors have pledged Sl million or more toward the Music Center, including: S3 million from the James Irvine Foundation, S2 million from Jim Bentley, Sl million from the Harry G. Steele Foundation and $1 million from the Hoag Foundation. ~ ---------'·--==-===---------.-/ SUllfl.OWER AV PARKING GARAGE SOUTH CO\ST REPERTORY THEATRE wind, c hilly weather and Halloween. he opined. "No one really knew what to . expect, though," Fulk said today. "Several things tended to detract from the number of people wbo attended and the amount spent. Big gamblers were going to Oak Tree and not com ing down there at niihl." Fulk said he had anticipated earlier that the falrgrounda would receive about $193,000 8Jf Its cut of racing proceem thl$ year . Now, he said, he haa no idea how much wiJI be gained. ~· The Orange County Fair Board uses funds Crom the a nnuaJ fall meet to expand and renovate the fairgrounds i12 Costa Mesa, scene ot the aMual Orange County FaJr each July. • ·ottsted Church group to meet delicatessen · • in By JOHN NEEDHAM OfblelHltY .......... Founding members of the Church of Religious Science in Laguna Beach will be holding their Sunday worship service in a Laguna Hills delicatessen until the courts decide who owns the Laguna Canyon Road sanctuary. Mainstream Religious Scientists at the church suffered a setback last week in their legal bid to wrest control or the chur ch from the followers of an Indian guru. -In a seven-page order issued by Superior Court Judge Edward Watlin, devotees of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, known as "orange people," were permitted to keep possession of the five-acre church site until the matter of ownership is resolved. Suean n e Lewis , a spokeswoman for the founding members of the church, said for the present an Alicia Parkway delicatessen, owned by a member of the Religious Science congregation, will serve as their church. "We are thankful to have a place lo meet and regroup," Mrs. Lewis said. ··Judge Wallin's ruling was a large setback. But we expect a favorable ruling when the case comes to trial." The two lawsuits that have been filed over possession of the church are expected to be heard In the next few months. Wallin has indicated that a trial could commence in early 1982. Control of the multi · million-dollar church prop- erty has been in dis~ute since the former pastor. Henry Gerhard. visited Poona, India, three years ago and adopted the philosophies of Bhagwan, a 49-year-old former philosol>hy · professor. Civic leader Mrs. Ritchie dead at 67 Marka Ritchie, who wrote several cookbooks and articles on birds, and was a civic activist for many of her 67 years, died Saturday at her Emerald Bay home. Mrs. Ritchie and her husband, Ward. owned their home in the Laicuna Beach community for more than two i:lecades, driving down from Pasadena to spend weekends. The couple moved to Emerald Bay permanently about eight years a10. Mra. Ritchie graduated cum laude from Colorado College in Colorado Sprinj{s where she was a member of Ph i Beta Kappa, the national academic honor society. She later served with the Assistance League, the Florence Crittenton Society. Planned Parenthood, and was a docent at the Los Angeles Zoo, and later, the Hortense Mlller Garden ln Laguna Beach. She wrote many cookbooks, including "Elena's Fiesta Recipes," and edited such books as "Italy on a Platter" and "I Love to Cook Book." She also wrote many artides on birda and conducted bfrd walks throu1b the Audubon Soclety and at the Hortense Mlller aardena. In add1Uon to her husband, lln. Rltcble leaYea three IOU, Dr. Mark Detrick of Laluna Beach; Dr. Jan Detrick of Men~.wt,...DllrSllllf AptOI. Prlvmte burial •r 11••• have-.. ..... n....,,MI IUl~lted •t•••I• OOlltl ...... llWlr ...... i Upon his return to Laguna Beach, Gerhard announced hip new name was Swamit Bodhinitra, and launched J campaign to c hange the Christian tenets or his church to the teachings of the Eastern mystic and s piritual master. The balding swa mi 'll teachings are described as a blend of Eastern mysticism and contemporary encounter group activities, with disciples, known as sannyasins, urged to live fuJly and not to sacrifice themselves. During the s hift from mainstream Christian doctrines to Eastern religious precepts, most members of the Religious Science co ngregation , numbering about 600 , lef't. the church. A year ago, Gerhard retired and moved to Northern California. Before his departure, he turned over control of the church to the Bhagwan group. The name or the church was then changed to the Rajneesb Meditation Center and Religious Science worship services were suspended. But on Sept. 3 more than 100 Religious Scientists forced the re sig nation or the Bhagwan-dominated c hurch board during a tumultuous meeting at the church. At first the Religious Scientists convinced the church board to resign when they threatened them with a lawsuit because of their decision in August to turn the c hurch property over to the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh Foundation. A llorneys for the Religious Scientists say the origin~ bylaws of the church call for the property to be used for th~ practice of Religious Science. But the Bhagwan followers say they are n ow duly authorized to control church property and affairs. In his ruling, Judge Wallin said the resignations or the board members were invalid because they appeared to have been "coerced as a result of the presence of a large crowd and fl very hostile atmosphere." Wallin's order has the effect of overriding a temporary court order that had permitted both the founding members and the Bhagwan devotees to share the church grounds. Jackson at first? It's a possibility •·r.om AP dJspalches NEW YORK -The hme·honored • question 'who's on first?' could be answered in surprising fashion ln the New York Yankees lineup next year -with Reggie Jackson. ms agent, Gary Walker, raJaed that subject Monday, saying he had discussed the pouib!Uty or Jackson's move to rirsl base with other clubs and would talk about it with Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. The Yankees still could sign Jackson before Thursday at midnight, the deadline for a tea m' to s ign any of ita players who has declared for eligibility in Friday's free agent re-entry draft. The American League ('hampions could have as many as five Cree agents in Jackson the draft with the addition Monday of outfielder Lou Pinlella to U'le list of thos e who have declared, joinln1 Jackson, Bobby Murcer. and pitchers Ron Guidry and Dave LaRoche. OL:oia of the day "We're not gonng gave up that home field advantage. Maybe we'll get a big refrigerator tr:uck and s tore up the snow and pile it on the sidelines." -General Manager Mike Lynn of the Minnesota Vikings, who are preparing to move from frequently frozen Metropolit.an Stadium to the controlled environment of the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. Quarterhorses open at Los Alamitos The $30,00<>-added lnaugaral !!I llandit:ap, expected to featur~ the very quir k Time To Shu af:d Mis!I Triple Dial. will headline ~onlght's openin• of the 10th annual Horserrien's Quarter Horse Ra('ing Assn. meeting a t Los Alamitos. The 59-night winter quarter season is coming on the heels of the Orange County Fall Fa ir thoroughbred season at Los Alamitos and will run through January 18. .From Page C1 Allen, Nelaon tabbed In Pac·10 •une A&Jee ol USC and .Banta Ell N..._ al stanlord, lbare tM Pac·lO t t ,na..aw player ol &he wtek award with JJCL.A nou 1uart llarl •r1aa nam.ct deteHlve plar•r . • . Freeno State 4uarterback l•I T .. ford and Pacific DOH tv1rd Georle DeaJa, have been hOnored aa • lM flCM playert or the week . . . San J01e State and Nevada·Lu Ve1u have been added to Uae future Oregon St.ate Untvertlty football acbedwe . . . Backup quarterback ctUf S&oMt o1 Pltllburab bro6ce his rl1ht arm, whlle ridlnl a mechanfcaJ buckin1 bronco In a Seattle tAu.ae and restaurant about rnldnilht after the a"len' lou to SeatUe ... After a dismal perfornaanee aiainat Minnesota, Job Me.Kay · aald be'e loeln1 confidence In· hla Buca, but bun't Written the Tampa Bay team out or the playoff picture yet . . . Pa& Had.ea says it was ~b altting on the bench Sunday. •·It was touh on the sidelines,'' he said . "U hurt. In fHf, it hurt every day during the week." Owners get time to sign free-agents Major league· teams have been • given an extra '8 hours to try to sign their own elayers who have declared tor free •1ency. otficials said Monday . . ,.. Bobby Wilkerson. made a driving layu~ with four seconds left to boost Cleveland to a lo.2·l01 win over Chicago in NBA action . . . Brothers Anton, Marian and Peter Stas&ay each scored once in the first period to lead Quebec to 'a 5-3 victory over Detroit in the NHL . . . Dodger shortstop BUJ Aa.saeU underwent s uraery to repair a cTack to the small bone under the big toe of his left fool and will be in a cast for six weeks . . . The Olympic Orgaru1ing Ootnmittee will s pend $800,000 to improve EJt.position Park, adjacent to the site or the 1984 Opening Ceremoni~s and some sports events at the Coliseum •. but no parking will be added Tetevision. radio FollOwfnV are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ ' ' ' excellent; I ' ./ worth watching; ./ ./ fair; ./forget It. m 6:30 p.m., Channel 9 v' v v NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at San Antonio. Announcers : Chick H earn and Keith Erict<son. With Kareem Abdul·Jabbar moving Into third place on the all·tlme NBA scoring ll st and Magic JohnlOl'I starting to score more points, the Lakers could have things turned around after their disappointing start ( 1·3). But San Antonio, with a 4·1 record, won't be that easy, especially at home. RADIO Basketball -Lakers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m., KLAC (570); Hockey -Montreal at Kings, 7:20 p.m., KPRZ (1150). KEVIN MAGEE UNCHANGED. • • University Games where. 1n the finals, he s cored 31 points to help the United States beat the Russians and bring home the gold medal. Thos e are s ome ki nd of accomplishments for a bum. And yet, through it all, Magee has n 't changed. Oh, he still r emembers those who turned their backs on him. But he also reme mbe rs thos e who have helped him out. The acclaim, the success. the pu bh('ity it's all been nice, but Magee hasn 't forgotten his priorities. "Yes, I've been successful." Magee will tell you. "But I can't afford to let that stuff go to my head. What if I wake up one morning and a truck runs over me. then what would I do? "What sense is there to brag? Those that do us ually don't produce." Since high school. teams' Magee has played for have co m pile d a s t e rling 162·37 r ecord There have been five leag ue or conference titles during that s pan·. and t wice hi s teams have reached the state finals, onJy to lose. Magee and the Anteaters will start their second season together Nov. 18 when they open the 1981·82 campaign against the English National team at UCl's Crawford Hall. This is a year Ma1ee has been waiting a long time for to arrive. It 's bis senior year ~ one that he hopes will end with a PCAA champions hip and a playoff berth in either the NIT or NCAA, and it's a year which will end with his signature al the bottom or an NBA contract. It 's a season . Ma gee explained, in which he will have to play twice as bard aa before because: a) all eyes wlll be watcMng him ; bl he doesn't want people to think he's going to rest on his past laurels. ··I· m going to have to play hard every night," he said. "I'm going to have to give 100, ho. 150 percent every lime I walk on the floor. I'm going to have to rebound, I'm going lo have to make better pasaes, and I'm going to have to !!core points. "We, as a team, are going to College football Set11rCS.y't <oll-lootbell Kl'tedult: WEST Ar l1on<l SI n UCLAat Cotlse""' (l'.JO) use et W•""nill°" C•I ., W.sllinql.., St. •t ~ ... cci..-• 7 M 12 Op m.) Or~at $16nlor4 Arllon<l M Qr_, St FrHno St. "' Lo1>9 lkadl SI. at -Im Stacll11m (71301 8YUelH-•ll Sen 01990 St. at Nevacl•Lu Veo-t, n Cal Lultleran et A1uw Pacific Pomona·Pllarat Le V•-Redlancls et Claremonl·Mlldd u. 01 S.. oi.oo at St. Mary's Wlllttler al Oe<lctental Cel State Nort,,..tclge at Porll-St Cel Poly CSLOI at llolH St. UC Oavl1 at Cel Slate He.,__ Sen Frendteo St. M Ollco St. S.<r-St. at H-t St. S.nta Ow• at ""911 SOIMICI ltOCIUH Notre 0..... at Air Fon• ~ New Meldco at Coloredo $1. U l611 SI. at lcWlo SL, n So11ll1trft llllflolt at N..,. Meltlco St. C•I POiy (Plllmona) n . Hortllem NU-at Tempe,11 IOUTMWHT Rl<a al Beytcw TnH Te<ll at SMU Arllans• at T .. H A&M TCU at Taut KanM& St. at Qlllahoma SI. SW LoulllMa al~. n McN-St. .. Ttu...vllll(!Mfl, II TlllM at W.t TtUI St. MIOWUT tlldt-•t111nei. ·-•atWl-.lrl MICllieMM Pw-. have to come out every night and keep up our intensity. A lot of teams lose because they look a head to their next game. We can't do that. .. Last year people dido 't think we were £or real. This year they'll h ave .to take into consideration that we are." Opponents will have to believe UCI is for real because Magee is for real. His play on the court speaks for itself, and his studies in the classr oom do too, for that matter. "They don't give you anything here ... said Magee of UCl 's tough academic standards (he currently has a 2. 7 gpa >. It was hard and a challenge at first, but I wanted to show myself I could do it. "I don't want to be like some of those other players who drop out of school when the season is over. I want to finish. I knew what I could do despite the fact people always doubted me. "Sure. I'm proud of what l have done, but I've still got a lot more to do." · Magee's some bum, huh? OUTSTAMDINS 'VALUES! IUMDMIW ,,., vw DtlS&UllfT FACTORY STICKER S7670 DISCOUNT ,975 • SALE PRICE 56695 (2983) (171.,). SALE PRICE 17295 (1272) (02088). t 910 VW DASHa DllSIL WA,OM 4 •peed 1ran1mlllt0n •. AM·FM 1-.0 I a eunroof. (14H78) Lara ' Corona def Mar ffl1h'1 Joe Lara came., wlth one ol thole bll plays when lt wu really • tM Uae l!'ridav nl&ht. his 7f,.yard touchdown pau from q~u•rterbeek Eric Wood• wu the key to tiie S.a Kln11' 2'7·14 Sea Vlew Lea1ue football vletOI')'. It helped offset a 74•)'&rd touchdown PHI play by Co.ta Meaa's Onasalt Nixon, who comblnetl •kla QUrterbeck Steve Anderaon to help 1tve Mesa a •hort·llved 14·0 lead. Among the big atatlsllc:al leaders -P'mmtata Valley's Rod Emery sc:ored five toucbdo.U and faffd for au yards and Newport Harbor't Rob' BtTry added to his ·fcbool record wllh elgbt eatcheJ tor 148 yards, givin1 him 50 catches for the yew . &ood for 735 yards. a 14.7 average gain per eatch. (Lal& week'• big play1of50 yard• or more) '• -Joe Lara, Corona (Corona del Marl, '26-yard TO pus rrom Eric Woods 74 -Onassis Nixon (Costa Mesa>. TD pass rro111 Steve Anderson , 58 -Herbie Campbell <Westminster>. TD run Se Hoa .·~ -Ml~e Fiscus (University): 90 -Onassis Ni'Jton (Oo6ta Mesa); 84 -Dave Geroux (Edison>; 82 -Todd Williams < EJ Toro); 80 -Lance MartiD <Corona del Mar): 79 -Kennedy Pola (Mater Dei > ; 77 -Todd WJlliams <El Toro>, Kennedy Pola l Mater Dei), 2; 76 -Mark Bondi (.Irvine), -Kevin Beres (M1sslon V1eJo>. Eddie Nunes (Westminster). Biii Bright (Corona del Mar). Eric Reinholtz (Ocean View 1. Joel Seay (Fountain Valley ), 2, John O 'Cu ll u~han (Edison>, J eff Holmes (Mission Vie JO>. Todd Cage <Saddle back J. Thi week's s tatistical leaders Rushing 1. Rod Emery <Fountain Valle)>, 28·211 ; 2. Damon Sweazy (E l Toro1. 24 166, 3 Herbie Campbell (Westminster>. :!Ii M:!. 1 Kevan Bradley (Saddleback>. 17·128. 5 Torl\ Valente <Marina>. 17·100. · Greg Locy <Mater Dei), Joe Lara <Corona del Mar>; 75 -Charlie Brown (Mission Viejo); 74 - Onassle Nixon (Costa Mesa}; 73 -Scott Stier ( li&&ntington Beach); 72 -Jeff Frandsen Marina); Pass ing 'lf·-Oreg Locy <Mater Dell , Rod Emery ('tountaln ValJey), Rudy Figueroa (Woodbridge): 69 -Herbie Campbell (Westminster>, Rudy Ji~u._,oa (Woodbridge) ; 69 -Ron Maleratel.o , ( arklal, Ken Laszlo <Marina>, Steve Svltenko ( TGl'O); 67 -Jeff Frandsen (Marina); 66 - Mark Bondi (Irvine>; 84 -Bob Critchfield (Marina): 63 -Greg Neff (Marina); 80 - Kennedy Pola <Mater Oei), Herbie Campbell < W~stminster>: S9 -Mark Bondi <Irvine>; 58 - Curl Wenzlaff <Estancia >. J eff Frandsen (Macina), Herbie Campbell (Westminster>. 2; 56 -Dan Blanck (Laguna Hills >. Rod Emery (Fountain Valley>, 2, Ken Laszlo (Marina>; SS - Damon Sweazy (El Toro>. Steve Patterson <Corona del Man, Dao Thompson <Huntington Beach), Gil Ward (Newport Harbor), Kevin Br'.adley (SadddlebackJ; 54 -Joel Seay (Ji'ountaln Valley), Kevin Beres (Mission Viejo>; S2 -Craig Rak,hshani (Edison), Todd Williams <El Toro>, 2 ; 51 -Eddie Nunes (Westminster>. Beddle Arabe (Laguna Beach>. Rudy Figueroa < Woodbridge); SO 1. Greg Selby <Newport Har bori. 18-36·3, 263 yards, 1 TO; 2. Steve Anderson <Costa Mesa >. 16·26·1, 211 yards, 2 TDs ; 3 Ken Major ( Edjson >, 13·19·1, 204 yards. 1 TD: 4 John lleanle <Ooean View), 15·37·2, 199 yards, 1 TD. 5 J im McCahill <Estan~iaJ, 14·26·3, 163 yards. 2 TD From Page C1 EMERY ... Reyburn has brought him along, too." Emery says the big difference in bis ability now as opposed to a year ago is that as a junior he hesitated. "This year the timing seems to be there," he s ays. As £or tangling with Edison and Its 31-game winning streak, which boasts a formida ble defense. Emery s ays be doesn't feel any undue pressure becaus e the Barons' passing game has not lived up to 1980 laurels. F ountain Valley enters with a 3· l leaeue record and 7 ·2 overall mark. The league record was marred by Marina High's 20·3 triumph, but Eme ry says that's not a factor. "The Marina loss doesn't really affect us. We know i£ we had played well we would have won. We're going into the Edison game with just as much opUmis m," says Emery. RecalJing his efforts against Edison in last year's CIF title game (won by Edison, 1-4-0, with Emery held to 12 yards net), Emery says: .. Edison's defense seemed tougher and quicker off the ball Ulan anyone we'd seen. It was kind or a shock, first being there Just playing against a team supposed to really be good." Receiving 1. Rob Berr}' <Newport llarbor'1. 8·148. 2 Abel Cachola <Estancia>. 8 120 . 3 J efr Clensse <Ocean Vie w), 6·53, 4. Onassis Nixon <Costa Mesa>. 5·101, 5. Gil Ward <Newport llarbor1 568, 6. Greg E skridge ( Ed1soni, 5 56 Sroring l. .Rod E mery I Fountain Valley). 30; 2. Damon Sweazv I El Torol. 18. 3. ltle) Theo Langford (E dison 1. Tony \'alente <Marina), Onassis Nixon I Costa Mesa 1, Hretl Schumm (Irvine>. 12 earh Field Goal' l Zoran Ka(' I Huntington Beach 1. 46 ) ards; 2. Ray Berg I \\'estmmster J. ·11 ~ants ROD EMERY Fountain Valley High With back-to-back 200·)'ard games mdud1ng mne lou1:hdowns, Fountain Valle) Hagh's Rod Erner) 1s the runaway choice for Orange Coast Area Player or the Week honors following Friday's explosion against Sun!-.N League rival Westminster. Emery a 170-pc>under on a 5 HI frame. • ripped the Lions with five touchdown runs am111st his 211 yards on 28 carries as the Barons prepared lor this "'eek s showdown with Edison at Anaheim Stadium Emery now has 23 touchdowns for lh e season to become Orange Count) 's m os t prolific scor er or the 191:11 campaign and ID most cases. 1t s "'1th a Clair. Emery doesn't Just run fast or hard be s hows you t he m oves t hat put defensive backs on their backs, as he did against Westmins ter with an asaortment. "Rod's getting the tough ms1de yardage that we n eed, too ... sa~ s Fountain V~ltey Coach Mike Milner f:mery The slick tailback has also been a solid pass receiver this season. catching 19 Jor 225 yards. 1nclud in~ a 56·~ ard pass play for a TD . Among his touchdown runs tha:. season has been scoring jaunts of 7S and 71 yards Last ~eek ·s bundle included runs or 46. 32, 29, 13 and 1 yards ************* NFL standings : JOHNSON & SON ! • • • • • • • • • • • it • NATIONAL CONFERENCE , • Western Dlvlsloa W LT PF PA Pd. 8 2 0 225 168 s 5 o m 189 5 s 0 227 214 New Orleans 3 1 o 129 211 ' Y Eu&ern Division Philadelphia 8 2 0 2~9 139' D,u.. 8 2 0 241 195 N. Y. Giants 5 5 0 195 173 Washington 4 6 O. 210 243 St. Louis 3 7 O 189 303 Central Divlaloe Minnesota 6 4 o a> 228 Tampa Bay s s O 173 163 Detmtt • 6 o iu m ~r.!_D Bay 6 0 198 232 r"''ago 3 7 o 1$2 231 , . 800 .500 . 500 .300 .800 .800 .500 .400 .300 .60Qi .500 .400 .400 .300 AMERICAN CONFERENCE : Western Division • Denver San Diego . Kansas City Oakland Seattle W L T PF PA Pel. -tr 7 3 0 196 149 700 • 6 4 0 292 247 .600 • 6 4 0 240 201 .600 • 4 G O 141 167 .400 -tr 3 7 0 152 226 .300 .. Eastern Division -tr Miami 7 2 1 243 189 . 750 • Buffalo 6 4 O 217 168 .600 -ti N.Y. Jets 5 4 1 232 223 .550 -ti New England 2 8 0 234 240 ..200 -tr Baltimore l 9 o 172 339 100 • Central Division -tr Cincinnati 7 3 o 268 193 . 700 • Houston s s o 176 213 .500 • Pittsburg11 5 s o 209 199 .500 • Cjeveland 4 6 o 183 217 .400 • • .. • • ii • • • • it • • • • ti Presents ... it • • Pete tM ''Greek" It MFL's Pleb of The Week SUNDAY ClncinMH o••r L.A.R.,. " San Frcmclsco o .... ,. OYet" Tampa lay. MO .. DAY Son Diego .. .. .. • • * • • .. • • • • • it • .. • .. .. .. .. .. • • .. .. .. .. • • ,. 111111 Dally PHat TUE SDAY, NOV. 10, 1981 CAVALCADE COMICS OBITS BUSINESS 82-3 84 BS 86-7 Packagers can't fool kids. See Erma Bombeck's column Page 82. , 0 0 Attendance, betting dip at Fall Fair Attendance dropped nearly 30 percent at lhis year's Orange County FaU Falr thoroughbred horseracing meet that closed Mo11day at Los Alamitos Race Course, and those who did attend bet less money, officials reported. The 12·day event, staged for the first time at night opposite the daytime Oak Tree meeting at Santa Anita, drew only 6,974 spectators Monday night, said Trash pact eyed in Irvine Dewey's Rubbish Co. should get a five -year, six -month extension on the contract under which it picks up trash in Irvine's residential areas. the city Public Works Department will recommend to the City Council tonighl. Public Works administrator Harry Ehrlich says in a report to the council that the contract should be renewed and not be placed open to bid because: Dewey's has been giving the city an acceptable level of trash service since December, 1976, when it was first given the contra cl. A change of contractor co uld cause scheduling confusion and problems during the c hangeove r to a new contractor. -Dewey's has bought the proper equipment to keep pace with the growth of Irvine·s residential areas. Also before th~ City Council tonight is a ·.recommendation by the Irvine Youth Support Team that the consumption of alcohol be barined in city parks. The Irvine Police Department is against this recommendation. The City Council is also to name officers for the city's Industrial Development Board. Also to be considered by the City Council is a request by the city animal services department that City Attorney Roger Grable draw up an ordinance prohibiting the feedi ng of coyotes, which have been wandering into Irvine's Turtle Rock area. - Irvine crash hurts three county women A 78-year-old El Toro woman suffered a punctured lung and two other women received minor inJuries in a two-car traffic collts1on Mo nda y afternoon in Irvine. police said today Elsie Hein of 24001 Muirlands Blvd .. Space 349, was listed in fair condition this morning in the intensive ca re unit of Saddleback Co mmunit y Hospital. She was a passenger in a Chevrolet Impala driven by Lelia Zangl, 78. 24001 Muirlands Blvd , Space 332, who was treated for bruises and released from the same hospital after the accident. Collen Stevens, 28, of 965 Sonora Road, Costa Mesa, was treated for cuts and released from Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after lhe accident. I rvine police traffic investigator Mike Ogden said the collision occurred in the intersection of Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road about 3 p.m. when Mrs. Zangl allegedly turned left in front of Ms . Stevens' car. which was going north on Jeffrey Road. He said Mrs. Zangl will be cited for failure to yield to oncoming tramc. Riley back a/11!;.r surgery Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley returned to work today fellowing s urgery to remove a cataract from his left eye. "Everything went perfectly." said Riley aide John Schade. Riley entered Hoag Hospital, Newport. Beach, on Friday night tor pre-surgery testa. The actual procedure waa conducted Monday morning. Riley was dt.charged Monday evenJng. Fair Manager Kenneth Fulk. Total attendance for the (i(th annual Fall Fair session was 103 ,262. It was the lowest Clgure recorded since the first meet in 1977 when 115,352 daytime patrons passed through the turnstiles at the popular Cypress track. This year 's bettors spent $17 ,265,798 on win. place and show tickets. compared to the tlrs t year 's "handle" of $16,405,233. Last year, daytime fair race viJJilors totaled 146 , l 76. They rorked out $26,642,882 in bet tickets. Attendance this year was down 29.3 percent from last year and money spent on race bets over the 12 days was down about 35.1 percent. Fulk earlier had estimated this year 's handle, the amount bet, would drop about 10 percent because the California Horseracing Board had ordered it staged at night -the first night thoroughbred meet in state history -on the same days as the Oak Tree meet. He said he did not foresee the impact of the televised last game of the World Serles, which dropped that night's attendance to the lowest in history, 3,875. Also taking a toll was rain, Plans were revealed m Costa Mesa Monday for the Orange County Mtaic Center. Sixteen-story o/fice building adjacent to theaters. is depicted at left. Three-story, 3.000-seat main theater is shown in foreground. At its rear zs smaller. 1.000-seat theater. Music center design hailed Model of $59-million complex unveiled ; Mesa cultural hub By JODI CADENHEAD of-OMly ..... SWf Costa Mesa is destined lo become the cultural center of Orange County, Mayor ~rl~ne Schafer said today after v1ewmg designs for the future $59 million Orange County Music Center. The public received its first glimpse Monday of plans f~r the performing arts center dunng a study session of the Costa Mesa City Council. ""lt"s an international flavor," said Ms. Schafer ""The Orange County Music Center 1s doing a lot as far as letting people know Costa Mesa not only exists. but 1s alive." Architects and backers of the Costa Mesa twin theater revealed drawings and a model of what they said will be only the third complex in the United States to offer theater. symphony, opera and ballet. The 3,000-seat theater will offer a t hree-tier sealing arrangement and acqustical design capable of offering all four types of performances. said Len Bedsow. the Music Center's executive director. The other two complexes are the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles and the Jess H. Jones Hall In Houston. "When the Orange County Mu s ic Center becomes oper a ti onal in early 1985, California will have three major performing arts centers to attract world class acts and performers." said Bedsow. The plans un veiled by architects Caudill, Rowlett. Scott of Hous ton in a joint venture with the Blurock Partnership or Newport Beach ihclude· The 3.000-seat theater covering 200,000 square feet and estimated to cost S34.5 million. A second . two-l evel 1,000-seat theater covering 37 .000 square feet and estimated to cost $5.5 million. A 16-story office building adjacent to the twin theaters. No cost estimated. A multi -level parking structure capable of hous ing 1,300 cars. Both theaters are scheduled for completion in early 1985. The offi ce building and the parking structure will be open in 1983, accordlng to the plans. Still to be ironed out is the financing or the parking structure. which will be built in conjunction with the city. Costa Mesa officials have hired a financial consultant to study the feasibility of the P.roject said to cost about SlO million. A report to the City Council will be presented Nov. 16. A massive fund -raising campaign led by the Segerstrom family. who have pledged S6 million and the five-a cre site along Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway, already has raised $18 million toward the construction and the endowment of the two theaters. Endowment costs are estimated at $19 million. Four other donors have pledged Sl million or more toward the Music Center . including: $3 million from the James Irvine Foundation, $2 million from Jim Bentley, Sl million from the Harry G. Steele Foundation and Sl million from the Hoag Foun"dation. SUlllF\.DNER AV .('-t:_ .f' .(' ~e~ I , ~ I ~ .. JI : PARKING ~ ,1, r wind , chllly weather and Halloween. he opined. ··No one really knew what to expect, though," Fulk said today. ··several things tended to detract from the number of people who attended and the amount spent. Big gamblers were going to Oak Tree and not coming down there al night." Fulk said he had anticipated earlier that the fairgrouo<la would receive about $193,000 a.s its cut or racing procee<b th11 year. Now, he said, be has no Idea how much will be gained. The Orange County Fair Board uses runds from the annual fall meet to expand and renovate the fairgrounds 10 Costa Mesa, scene of the annual Orange County Fair each July. Horse trails plan lauded b • • by commission By RICHARD GREEN 0( IN Oelty I'll« SUit Irvin e Transportation co mmi ss ioner s have recommended City Council adoption of a plan for development of more than 40 miles of equestrian trails in and around the city. In a unanimous vote Monday, the commissioners supported with one exception a system of trails following the perimeter of the city and crossing the city east to west in the northern and southern foothill s and the Southern California Edison Easement north of Irvine Center Drive. E limin ated by the Transportation Commission from the proposal. was a fourth east-west trail that would cross the city along the so-called activity corridor, an open space area running along the south side of Barranca Parkway in central Irvine. This proposed trail in the activity corridor is the most controversial portion of the equestrian trail proposal backed by the Irvine Equestrian Committee. a citizens group. The Irvine Company has opposed this particular trail on the basis that it would be located too c lose to Woodbrid ge residential areas. Irvine Company Director of Planning Warren Roche has said that residents living in the vicinity of the activity corridor might be troubled by odors and flies associated with the horses. He also has contended that an equestrian trail proposal in the activity corridor could conflict with bicycle paths in the area. Representatives of the Irvine Equestrian Committee have said that an equestrian trail in th e cor rid o r would be compatible with Woodbridge residents as well as bicyclists in the area. The Irvine City Council is tQ. consider late this year whether the plan for equestrian trails should be included in tbe city general plan. the document that sets the broad outline for growth in Irvine. Laguna chore~ now 01eeting in eatery By JOHN NEEDHAM OftM~ ...... Mlfl Founding members of the Church of Religious Science in Laguna Beach will be holding their Sunday worship service in a Laguna Hills delicatessen until the courts decide who owns the Laguna Canyon Road sanctuary. Mainstream Religieus · Scientists at the church suffered a setback last week in their legal bid to wrest control of the church from the followers of an Indian guru. In a seven-page order issued b y Superior Court Judge Edward Wallin. devotees of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. known as "orange people," were pei-mitted to keep possession of the five-acre church site until the matter of ownership is resolved. Sueanne L ewis, a spokeswoman for the founding members of the church, said for the present an Alicia Parkway delicatessen, owned by a member of the Religious Science congregation. will serve as their church. "We are thankful to have a place to meet and regroup, .. Mrs . Lewis said . "Judge Wallln's ruling was a large setback . But we expect a favorable ruling when the case comes to trial." The two lawsuits that have been Cited over possession of the church are expected lo be heard In the next few months. Wallin has indicated that a trial could commence ln early 1982. Control of the multi - million-dollar church prop- e rty has been in disP..ute since the former pastor, Henry Gerhard, visited Poona, India. three years ago and adopted the philosophies of Bhagwan. a 49-year-old former phllosophy professor. Upon hts return to La1un1 Beach, Gerhard announced bis ne\Pi name waa Swami Bodhlnltra. and launched a ca mpaign to chance the Chrl1Uan tenetl of hi1 chul'cb to th• teacbit.11 of the Eaatem myatlc and •rlrituaJ mast.tr. The ba dln1 1waml'1 teachln11 are described 11 a blend ot Jtutem my1Ucl1m and contemPor•fY encounter lfOUP acUvlUel, with dt.clplft, known as aa.nnyuinl, ur19d to Hve hally and not to aacrtnce tbemHl"8. Durln1 tbe s blft from mainstream, Cbriltlan donrtael to Easte rn religious precepts. most members of the Religious Science con grega tion . numbering about 600, left the church. A year ago, Gerhard retired and mo ved to Northern California. Before his departure, he turned over control of the church to the Bhagwan group. The name of the church was then changed to the Rajneesh Meditation Center and Religious Science worship services were suspended. But on Sept 3 more than 100 Religious Scientists forced the re sig nati o n or the Bhagwan-dominated church board during a tumultuous meeting at the church. At fir s t th e R e ligious Scientists convinced the chur ch board to res ign when they threatened them with a lawsuit because of their dec ision in August to turn the church property over to the Bhagwan Sbree Rajneesh Foundation. 14 appointed Music Center fund raisers Fourteen men were appointed to the newly created Center Endowment Fund Council to raise $19 million to operate the future Orange County Music Center in Costa Mesa. Carl Mitchell. chairman of the council, said the funds woul\t be needed to ensure the quality of programming and maintenance of the future S40 million twin theaters. To date $18 miltion bas bee!\ raised toward the conslructioq and endowment or the performing arts center alonlJ Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway, schedul ed for1 completion 1n early 1885. . T hoae appointed includ attorner• Richard Col~e Mlchae Get'DHL!•me MacDonald, Joltpll Ouqa, P Marx, and Jamet Humpbri!1. Jr. 9'..--•i Trust officers Include -~ Caall:ey, DoUI McClelland. Doe Ferauon ancf Vance Slmoedl. ThOM repnHDllfts IC~ tlrm1 Included RJc6ard Ne&aoa. G11ford Hinton and Boben Rouaton I , 111111 ClllT D1llyPllat TUESDAY, NOV. 10, 1981 .CAVALCADE COMICS OB ITS BUSINESS 82-3 84 85 8 6-7 Packagers can't fool kids. See Erma Bombeck's column Page 82. t. Attendance, ·betting dip at Fall Fair Attendance dropped nearly 30 percent at this year 's Orange County Fall Fair thoroughbred horseracing meet that closed Monday at Los Alamitos Race Course, and those who did attend bet less money, oCficials reported. The 12-day event. staged for the fi rst time at night opposite the daytime Oak Tree meeting at Santa Anita, drew only 6,974 spectators Monday night, said Schools to study pay hikes Pay raise~ for management personnt-l and proposals for eventual use of 40 acres of school-owned land on the Upper Newport Bay go before the Newport-Mesa Unified School District's board of trustees at 7: 30 tonight. Proposed for m anagement emplo.yees are raises totaling 12 pe rcent. 4 percent of tha t amount retroactive to last July 1 and the remaining 8 percent scheduled to be paid beginning Jan. 1. Also to be considered at the meeting in Harper Community Center. 425 E. 18th St., Costa M esa, are raises f or the district 's t o p fo ur administrators who work under individual contracts. They include Supt:rintendent J o hn Nicoll . Deputy Superintendent Norman Loats, Assistant Superintendent Kevin Whee l e r a n d Classifie d P e r son nel Director Bruce Hayman. The board also is scheduled to review a presentation by Newpo rt Beach arc hitect William Ficker on plans for a 40-acre plot of district-owned land at Jamboree Road and Bri stol Street 1n county-governed territory. The land, declared surplus, is expected to be leased to the highest bidder next year. Ficker represents a group of developers 1n terested in converting the property to both residentia! and office building use. His developers are supported by a group or Santa Ana Heights residents who claim jet aircraft noise from plan es leaving nearby John Wayne Airport has ruined residential li ving 1n their area and want to abandon the neighborhood to commerce. Other Santa Ana Heights groups have formed to maintain the a r ea as a residential neighborhood . Unite d Way rally to11ight A United Way campaign rally is scheduled from 6 to 9 o'clock tonight at the Marriott Hotel in Anaheim A progress report 1s scheduled in which more than 85 human service agencies can learn how close the United Way of Orange Cou nty North South is to reaching this year's $12 million goal. The rally also will feature a Gong s how. Judges will be Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Jerry Reuss and Dodger bullpen coach Mark Cresse, California Angeles first baseman Rod Carew and Los Angeles Rams tackle Doug France. Riley back a/ ter surgery Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley returned to work today following s ur1e r y to remove a cataract from his ten eye. "Everything went perfectly," said Riley aide John Schade. Riley entered Hoag Hospital. Newport Beach, on Friday night for pre-surgery teats. The actual procedure was conduc ted Monday morning. Bloodmobile visit planne d at college Tbe · Red Cross Bloodmobile will ~ on the Oran1e Coast Collet• campu1 in Cotta Mesa. Nov. lf.20. The bloodmobile wlll be located on the c:olleae quad. It wtll be open from t :ao a.m. to 2 :30 p.m. Monday throu1h P'rlday. • Fair Manager Kenneth Fulk. Total attendance for the riCth annual Fall Fair session was 103,262. It was the lowest figure recorded since the first meet in 1977 when 11 5,352 daytime patrons passed throu gh the turnstiles at the popular Cypress track. This year 's be ttors spent $17,265,798 on win, place and show tickets, compared to the first year's "h a ndle" of $16,405,233. Last year. daytime fair race visitors totaled 146 ,176. They forked out $26,64~,882 in bet tickets. Attendance this year was down 29.3 percent from last year and money spent on race bets over the 12 days was down about 35.1 percent. Fulk earlier had estimated this year 's handle. the amount bet, would drop about 10 percent be cau se the Callforn la Horseracine Board bad ordered it staged at night -lbe first night thoroughbred meet in 1tate history -on the same days as the Oak Tree meet. He said he did not foresee the lmpact or the televised last game of the World Series, which dropped that night's attendance to the ·1owest in history. 3,875. Also taking a toll was rain. Plans were revealed in Costa Mesa Monday for the Orange County Music Center. Sixteen-story office building adjacent to theaters. 1s depicted at left. Three-story , 3.000·seat main theater i3 shown in foreground. At· its rear is smaller. 1,000-seat theater. Music center design hailed Model of $59-million complex unveiled ; Mesa cultural hub By JODI CADENHEAD Of .. 0 ... , l'IMt s..- Costa Mesa is destined to become the cultural center ot Orange County, Mayor Arlene Schafer said today after viewing designs for the future $59 million Ora nge County Music Center. The. public received its first glimpse Monday or plans f~r the performing arts center dunng a study session or the Costa Mesa City Council. "It's an international flavor," said Ms. Schafer. "The Orange County Music Center is doing a lot as Car as letting people know Costa Mesa not only exists. but 1s alive." Architects and backers of the Costa Mesa twin th eater revealed drawings and a model of what they said will be only the third complex in the Un ited Stat es to orfer t h eater . symphony, opera and ballet. The 3.000-seat theater wlll o ffer a three-tier seating arrangement and acoustical design capable of offering all four types of performances. said Len Bedsow. the Music Center's executive director. The other two complexes are the Dorothy Chandler P avilio n 1n Los Angeles and the Jess H. Jones Hall in Houston. "When the Orange County Mu sic Ce nt e r b eco mes op erational in early 1~85, Ca lifornia will have three major performing arts center s to attract world c lass acts and performers," said Bedsow. The plans un ve il ed by architects Caudill, Rowlett. Scott or Houston in a joint venture with t he Bluroc k Partnership of Newport Beach include. The 3.00v-seat theater covering 200,000 square feet and estimated to cost S34.5 m illion. A se cond , two -level 1.000-seat theater covering 37,000 square reel and estimated to cost S5.5 mi llion. -A 16-story office building adjacent to the twin theaters. No cost estimated. -A multi -level parking structure capable or housing 1,300 cars. Both theaters are scheduled for completion in early 1985. The office building and the parking structure will be open In 1983, according to the plans. Still to be ironed out is the financ ing o r the parkin g structure. which will be built in conjunction with the city. Costa Mesa officials have hired a fi nancial consultant to study the feasibility of lhe P.roject said to cost about SlO million. A report to the City Counc il will be presented Nov. 16. A ma ssi ve fund -raisin g campaign led by the Segerstrom family, who have pledged S6 million and the rive-acre site along Bristol Street and the San Diego Freeway. a lready has raised $18 million toward the construction and the endowment of the two theaters. Endowment costs are estimated at $19 million. Four other donors have ple dged Sl million or more toward t he Mus ic Cente r. including: $3 million Crom the James Irvi ne Foundation. $2 million from J im Bentley, Sl million from the Harry G. Steele Foundation and $1 million from the Hoag Foundation. /:'---====------------ Schemotk drowfng11howithe propoNd ~ o/ $5' mUUon Oronot Count11 Mutk Cmtu. PlbM wtrt made pubilc at Ca.Ca MtlO CU11 Council ltudJI HHion. " • wi nd, c hi lly weather and Halloween, he opined. "No one really knew what to expect, though," Fulk said today. ··several things tended to d e tract from the number or people who attended and the amount s pent. Big gamblers were going to Oak Tree and not coming down there at night." Fulk said he bad anticipated earlier that the fairgrounds would receive about Sl93,000 as its cut or racing proceeds this year. Now, he said, he has no idea how much will be gained. T he O range Coun ty Fai r Board uses funds from the annual faJI meet to expand and re novate the fairgrounds in Costa Mesa, scene or the annual Orange County Fair each July. NB referendum vote delayed · by city council By STEVE TRIPOLI Of Ille 0•1, Pol ... SUit A referendu m on the co nt roversial expansion o r Newort Center probably won't get to the voters until June at the earliest after Monday's action by the Newport Beach City Council. The council voted to continue action on the referendum until its first meeting in January. By doing so t he coun c il look ad vantage of an upcoming change in the stale Election Code that allows for a delay in the vote. But the council decision didn't com e without debate, even though Paul Humme l and Donald Strauss were the only councilmen opposing the action. Hummel. who. along with Strauss. backed a motion that would hav e brought the expansion plan to the voters in February or March, accused fellow council members of "turning your back on the electorate" by allowing a delay in the vote. Strauss said the vote should take place soon, and in a special e lec t ion , because the issue should not be on the same baUot with other races for elective ofCice, as it will be in June or November. But the fi ve-member council majority that voted to push back the referendum date a rgued that more voters would get a voice on the expansion plan if the issue becomes part or next June's primary ballot or the November, 1982, general election ballot. because more voters turn out for major elections. Election laws whi ch wilt change at the end of this year are s uch that the council would have been forced to repeal its a pproval of the expansion or set the referendum within 89 days if members had not postponed consideration of the measure Mohday. But alterations in the code which go into effect Jan. 1 allow for up to a year 's breathing room in selling the vote if the r eferendum measure, which went to the council after more than 7,000 city residents signed petitions, 1s considered after Jan. 1. Council members or iginallj approved the Irvine Company project saying it was in the best interests of the city. Supporters on the council also said an Irvine Company commitment lo more than $30 m illion i n r oad improvements that is part or olan is good for the city. But council detractors and backers of the r ererendum petition said the expansion would c reate new traffif probl e m s a nd erode the residential character of the city . . Laguna church noW • • • • Dleet1ng 1n eatery I By J OHN NEEDHAM OfU.l)elly,..... ..... Founding me mbe rs of the Church or Religious Science in Laguna Beach will be holding their Sunday worship service in a Laguna Hills delicatessen until the courts decide who owns the Laguna Canyon Road sanctuary. Mains trea m R e li gio us Scientists at the church suffered a setback last week in their legal bid to wrest control of the church from the followers of an Indian guru. In a seven-page order issued by S upe ri or Court Judge Edward Wallin. devotees of B hagwan Shree Rajneesh, known as "orange people," were permitted to keep possession of the Cive·acre church site until the matte r or ownership is resolved. S u ea n ne L e wi s, a spokeswoman for the founding members of the church, said for the present an Alicia Parkway d e li c atessen , o wne d by a member of the Religious Science congregation , will serve as their church. "We are thankful to have a place to meet and r egroup," Mrs . Lewis said. "Judge Wallin's ruling was a large setback . But we exptct a favorable rullng when the case comes to trial." The two lawsuits that have been filed over possession of the church are expected to be beard in the next few months. Wallin has indicated that a trial could commence in early 1982. Control of the multi· million-dollar church prop- 1e rty has been In d ispute since the former pastor, Henry Gerhard, visjted Poona, India, three yevs ago and adopted the philosophies of 8ha1wu, • 49·year-old for mer pbllelopbJ 1 proteseor. Upon hie retura~La Beach, Gerhard Ml ln •w name ••• aal Bodblaltra. •1141 l•••L c•mpal a te 1 Ch~ ' the teachings of the Eastern mystic and spiritual master . Th e ba l di n g s wam i 's teachings are described as a blend of Eastern mysticism and contemporary encounter group activities. with disciples, known as sannyasins. urged to live fully and not to sacrifice the mselves. During the sh ift fr om mainstream Christian doctrine$ to Eastern religious precepts. most members of the Religious Scien ce co n gregation . numbering about 600, left the church. A year ago. Gerhard retired and m oved lo Nort h er o California 14 appointe d Mus ic Centei fund-raiser s Fourteen men were appointed to t he newly created Center Endowment Fund Council to raise $19 million to operate the future Or a nge County Music Center in Costa Mesa. Carl Mitchell. chairman or the council, said the funds would be needed to ensure the quality of pr ogra mm ing a nd maintenance of the future $40 million twin theaters. To date $18 million has been raised toward the construction and endowment or the performing arts center along · Bristol Street and the San Diego · Freeway, sc h ed uled fqr completion in e~y 198S. Those app nted lnclu t at torner• R rd Col Ml~1'•• Otrtner, Jam MacDonald.,,_.. <>bell. P Marx, ud .i ... Jr. ,.. rut '.~fi AV . NOVEMfH Ii Ill l'l!ll OAANtjf COUNl ~ r A1If11 1 ·"P" l'l C f NTS Reagan: no 40-day •• ecQnom1c cur~ WASHINGTON C~P) -' President Reagan said today that he "stands ready to veto any bill that abuses the limited resources of the taxpayer11," and said a balanced budget remains h.is goal even though he cannot predict when he might achieve it. Acknowledging that his &oal of balancing the federal budget by 1984 bas become "an unlike lihood" because of continuing inflation, the president said, "I would hesitate to make ... set a date when a balanced budget would take place." "I think we'fe going to have some hard times the next few months,•• Reagan said· when asked about recent pessimistic statements by some economic advisers. "Our program has only been in errect for some 40 days, and yqu can't cure 40 years of problems in that short a lime," Reaaan said in a statement he read to a White House news conference. His theme was a familiar one. The president said that since the day he took omce "our top priority has been to rescue this economy from years or government mismanagement." But he said that even wlth the $35 billion in spending cuts Congress has approved, federal spending is rising far 'oo rapidly. •'This government must stitren tta spine and not throw In the towel on the fllhl to 1et federal spending under control," he said. Reagan said Con1re11 bu not sertl him on~ appropriations bill for the bookkeepln1 year that began Oct. 1 -and the money measures pending wouJd exceed spending targets. · 'l stand ready to veto any bill that abus(\s the limited r~sources of the taxpayers." he It's a ··tog" jam at the north side of Huntington pier as four wetsuited surfers take off on thick wa.ve.1191tr"91 ...... ..,'--,.,.. Man arrested in Cle m e nte slaying case An Oceanside man has been arrested In Ohio in connection with the slaying or a woman whose body was dumped in San Clemente in August Orange County Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Hart said Daniel Ray Martin, 23, was taken into custody at his mother's home in VersailJes, Ohio, as a 'Suspect in the stabbing death or 20-year-old Zaida Martin, his sister-in-law. Hart said investigators determined that the woman was slain in Oceanside while her husband, Kerry Dean Martin, a Marine, was on duly overseas. The woman's body, Harl said, later was dumped along Avenida Pico near San Clemente High School. The body was discovered by a ·jogger Aug. 13. Mrs. Martin was reported missing by relatives Sept. 22. It was a distinctive tattoo or a butterfly on her shoulder that led to her Identity. Hart said. Hart said the slain woman's brother-in-law was arrested Saturday. Two investigators have traveled to Ohio to return Marlin to Orange County for prosecution. Hart said It was hi s understanding that Martin would wajve extradition. The motive for the slaying has not yet been determined, Hart said. Barry resting after hip surger y PHOENIX <AP> -Sen. Barry Goldwater, R -Arlz., was reported ln salllfactory co n dition and re1tln1 comfortably following sur1ery to replace bia left hlp. The operation Monday nl1ht took about an hour and the 73-year-oJd senator responded well, said Dr. Joseph DuPont. Goldwater bad hie rl1ht, blp replaced two Jeart •IO· .. Cerenwnie slated on Veterans Day Ceremonies are scheduled in several Orange Coast cities Wednesday in observance of Veterans Day. formerly known as Armistice Day in recognition of the end of World War I. Also in observan ce of the holiday, city halls in Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley. Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Irvine and Laguna Beach will be closed Wednesday. · Public schools will be closed, along with county, stale and federal offices. post offices and banks. Rep. Robert Badham , R-Newport Beach, will join other elected officials, military representatives and religious dignitaries at the annual memorial service in San Juan Capistra n o ~t Mi ssio n Cemetery, off Los Cerritos, near Ortega Highway . The event begins at 11 a.m. Local veterans will conduct a nother memorial service al 11 a.m . at American Legion Post 291 at 215 15th St., Newport Beach. This service will be followed by a lunch honoring World War I ve~erans . Al 3 p.m . a flag ret1 rement ceremony will take place at the post. Veterans in Huntington Beat:h will place Clowers al the war memorial outside City HaJl, 2000 Main St.. at 11 a.m. In Laguna Beach, metnbers of American Legion Post 222 and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868 will place two wreaths at the war monument In Heisler Park. also at 11 a.m. 'Cover-up' at €BS Bo Derek clad for TV versi on By F,RED ROTHENBERG NEW YORK CAP > -There's a big cover-up going on at CBS. The hit movie "10" -Bo Derek 's theatrical and mathematical success -will be on oetwork television for the first time tonight, and blktnla will be cloaking what moviegoers saw in the flesh. (Channel 2. 8:30 p.m .) Although sanitizing sex Cor TV Is nothing new, ''10" ls somewhat unique since it waa originally filmed In two different ways: one for the t heaters, one Cor television. SO in Mrs. Derek's famous "Bdlero" scene, she tella Dudley Moore she likes to make love accompanied by a certain piece of music, while her &ancu.,e ln the theaten wu much stroaaer. And when Moore UHi ltls telescope to s n oop on his run-lovln1 nel1bbor, toaiabt'1 women around lhe PoOl wlll , be wearlni blktnil. ll'• st 11 very much a sophisticated. adult movie, still very much about sex, and that's what makes "10" so Interesting on another level. Tallt.ln& about sex, scheming to 1et It ancl weaving plots around It -even lf the on-alr sex ls toned down a bit -remains a major theme ot the new TV season. While some say that Jillie la out and gl11le is in, that assessment ls m erely superficial. There le network concern over the .eoa.UUon for Better Televlslon 's threatened boycott because of TV's HXu.al content, and t here 11 t he perception of am-ore conservative mood ln America. But althou1b "HUI Street Blues" had no explicit ta or exploitative bodl• Tb•...S•Y. half the story llDH were HHally sua..Uve, &arlter abet ni&bl, t.be Lbem• and d'8lalue were more Juvenile la NIC'1 new •It-com, "Olauae a laNU," hut Lbev ..,. lal..._ •'*-tile C ... 'II', P Al> I Fog plagues OC's airport and motoris ts A thick blanket of fog that grounded some planes at John Way.ne Airport and plagued motorists in inland areas of Orange County today is expected to repeat its performance Wednesday morning. Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Bureau said fog covered interior Oran1e County this morning, wblle coastal areas were relatively clear. Weather officiaJs blamed the fog on a strong onshore flow of cool marine air which condensed when meeting up with pockets of warm air in inland areaa. Officials in the John Wayne Airport tower reported a 200-foot ceiling around the airport with a one-mile visibility range. Pilots without instrument ratings were being urged to stay on the ground. A spokesman from the Orange County Harbor Patrol headquarters in Newport Beach said visibility along the coast was two miles. The fog, weather officials explained , has arrived hand-in·hand with a cooling trend that ls expected to drop daytime temperatures to the low 70s ln lnJand, cities and to the upper 60s along the coaat. Debt takes a l>rief dip WASHINGTON (AP) -The natlonaJ debt, wlUcb f*ued the &rllllon-dollar mark Ott. 12, baa fallen below that bi1terlt level to Ju1t under ... btlllon -but Treasury Department otncials say It wcn't 1tay that low for loaa. Tb• pemmeat naaane the aatlo••I debt by l11ulnt Trea1ary bllll, notee. bo9dl Md Otlter debt lmtnamen\I, wltll various lntere1t rates and maturity clatel. J said. ·•rt ls lronic that those who would have us assume blame tor this economic mess are the ones who created it." ln answer to other questions, Reagan said: -He •·would be just as disturbed as you are and just as confused" about reports he endorsed the Idea or a limited nuclear. war. Reagan said his comments to a group or editors about the threlll or nuclear war later were taken out of context . and asserte d: "We have no plans to put Americans lnlo com bat anywhere in the world." ''The mos t realistic approach Clo peace in the Middle East) ls the one we are taking" through the Camp David peace process. He said an eight-point plan offered by Saudi Arabia Implied "recognizalioo of Israel's right to exist, one ot u,e slicking points in the Arab world. That's why I've rererred <See REAGAN, Paie .U> Balloonists head toward West Coast NAGASHIMA. Japan <AP> - The Double Eagle V floated over the Pacific today toward the West Coast of the United States, but the helium-filled balloon lost some altitude. a spokesman at the baUoon's tracking station here said. ' Though skipper Ben Abruzzo and tiis three crewmen remained confident they would reach the West Coast. the ground crew here said the balloon was riding air currents e at about 13,000 feet, or 5,000 reel lower than originally planned. The balloon was about 650 miles east or Japan. they said. Eddie Hatta, In charge or the N~ga s hima Onsen Communications Center. said it appeared the balloon would not pass over San Francisco as origlnaJly planned but will float over Seattle or British Columbia. To rty over San Francisco. the balloon would • need to be at 18,000 feet. he said. Hatta said one theory for the lower altitude was that the balloon might not be completely inflated with helium. But he said at one point this mornihg the balloon was floating alJ9.000 feet, which "proves it can climb up to high levels, especially when the sun rises in the morning. I don't see any problems at all." The balloon's crew remained in good s pirits and was in radio contact with the Nagashima tracking station and with the air co ntrol tower at Narit a Internationa l Airport. near Tokyo, Hatta said. Abruzzo, a 51 -year -old real estate developer from Albuquerque, N.M., said he and his crew hoped to arrive on-the · West Coast by Thursday. H cpnditions permit. they will head S u s p ect due in slaying of g irl, 12 Thomas Francis Edwards, the 37-year-old former Costa Mesa resident accused in the shooting death of a 12-year·old Lake Elsinore girl at a Cleveland Na lionai Forest campground, wi It Ukety be retulited lo Orange County from Maryland on Thtp"sday. Orange County Sheriff's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards "probably" will be arraigned Friday on murder and attempted murder charges in South Orange County Municipal Court. Edwards , descri bed by authorities as a "mountain man '' and "gun buff,'' Is accused of shooting Vanessa lberri and Kelly Cartier, both 12, of Lake Elsinore, at the Blue Jay campground on Sept. 19. Miss lberri died two days later. The former South Coast Gun Club employee eluded an extensive manhunt in the forest and other Southern California locations. He was arrested nine days following the shooting in Maryland, where he bad served a prison sentence on a robbery charfe. Edwards initially refused to waive extradition to CalUornJa for prosecution. He chan1ed bis rnind and decided to return late lHt week, Hart said. Two aberiff's department lnvestl1aton, James Sldebothan and David Mann, are In .Maryland and wlll accompail1 'Id w ard1 to CaJlf orala, Hart Hid. BdWll'dl ·~3-1~·e11.~~ ttie~~I~ re for the East Coast. cross the Atlantic a n d make a final landing near the European border of the Soviet Union. ··conditions are so good I feel we can continue on lo Europe,·· Abruzzo said before taking off. Abruzzo. Larry Newman and · Maxie Ande r son, all from Albuquerque, made the first successfuJ trans-Atlantic balloon <See BALLOON, Page A2> Killing s u s p e ct's fe ar told By GLENN SCOTT OfltleDelfyPIWIUft The girlfrie nd of Newport Beac h psychologist Telford "Tim" Moore testified Monday that Moore wanted.to marry her but was mortally afraid to cross his homosexual roommate and the m an he is accused of kiJling, Stanley Esplnda. Glory Lane. the girlfriend from Laguna Beach, told an Orange County Superior Court Jury that Moore lived in fear of the tempestuous and dominating Espinal, who ttad befriended Moore 18 years ago. In a candid and detailed description or their relationship, Ms. Lane said Moore became increasingly disturbed about his relationship with Espinda in the weeks preceding the Nov. 5, 1980 shooting in the roommates' exclusive Spyglass Hill home. She said he often broke into tears describing to her the retribution Espinda would lake against him when he learned that Moore had been seeing ber. Two days before the killing, s he said she surprised Moore in his school psychologist's office at Fountain Valley High School, and h e burst into tears repeating: "Please don't stop loving me." Despite her urgings, however. s he said Moore refused to fight back against Espinda 's beatings, believing that any aggression would only incite more punishment. Arter finding deep scratch. marks on his•neck one day in October 1980, she said she angrily scolded: .. Have you ever in all these years fought back?" He told her he hadn't, she said. S h e said she was rarely .invited lo Moore's home and only when Espinda was gone. When the two ·were in bed at her homf'. she said he never fell (~e MARRY, Page AZ) DRAIGf COAST llATHll Increased coastal low clouds and fog tonight and Wednes day morning. Otherwise fair both days and not as warm. Highs 65 lo 72. Lows tonight 50 to SS. 111181 TlllY ·Tis' the . 1emon for an avalanche of mail-order catalogues and the buying public 1s being warned ro howare. See Page 88. 11111 l OFF 1.23 CLOSING 853.98 ~. Trivia now a top business. Our appetite for trivia seems anutlable -and there are plenty ot publishers around ready and willing to reed it. The latest addition to this genre 11 "The Bathroom Almanac." an oversized paperback just issued by Frederick Fell Publishers at Sl0.95. Billed · as "the ultimate trivia book," the author Is 30-year-old Gus McLeavy. who is reporte<I by his publiliher to be working hjs way across the country in a Volkswagen camper to his riew home in Seattle. McLeavy begins r ~ his almanic Jan. l , (the birthday of Paul ~; o Revere. J . Edgar '1 "'' Hoover, Xavier A'i.. Cu g a t a n d J . D . ___ .__..;;m;i_.._ ____ _ Sal i n ger, among ll(Jll llllNIJZ oth ers> with this q u iz : "B y what names are these people better known? Walter Palunuik, Dorothy Rothschild, Lester Potlus, Sarah Cannon, Maria Cartas." The answers (given upside down on the bottom of the page) are: Jack Palance. Dorothy Parker, Les P aul. Minnie Pearl. Isabel Peron. And the almanac ends 384 pages later on Dec. 31 t the birthday of Henri Matisse, Odetta. Sarah Miles and J ohn Denver, among others) with these two quotations : "End of journey bring sadness." t Charles Chan>. "[ hate quotations. Tell me what you know." (Ralph Waldo Emerson>. In between. for each day of the year. there's a back-to-back compilation of outrageous items, leavened by a strong helptng of Char lie Chan one liners: .. Fortunately. assass10atton of French language not a serious cnme." "Man who flirt with dynamite sometime fly with angels." Under the June 2 e ntry. for example, McLeavy reports that in 1948 the wife of Clark Tibbetts, director of the Institute for Human Relations al the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, sued her ' husband for a divorce. claimin~ t~at everv time s he burned the'toast, Tibbetts entered a note in his little black book. Then there's the story of J .P . Morgan ordering a beer in a bar n ear Wall Stree t, announcing: "When J .P. Morgan drinks, everybody drinks!" After finis hing his beer, Morgan slaps a dime on the table. announcing: "When J .P . Morgan pays. everybody pays." And there's this great Theodore Roosevelt quote· "A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car; but if he has a university education. he may steal the whole railroad." ''The Bathroom Almanac" is new. but back again for the 20th lime an impressive testimonial to the appetite of trivia eaters is the "Guinness Book of World Records ... Sterling Publishing Co., has dressed it up for the first time in a dust Jacket while m iraculously holding the price at Sl0.95, the same as last year. This is, of course, the hardcover edition. called the "1982 edition," out just in time fo r the Christmas trade. Bantam's paperback version will not be out until next s ring. STOCKS IN THI SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS METALS C••••• ll'tt·•• <tnll a pound, U.S. OHtlfletlons L• ... <..,Ua- Z.llK _.... < ... ". pound, ,,.., .. ,"' T'* $1 1"3-elt W .... <-ht tb ....... ._.., ... (..,I\ a POUNI, N y Mercwy Mn oo per ll<Kll "1•1"'-1"41' 00 lr'Oy CM , N Y SILVER