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1982-08-24 - Orange Coast Pilot
IUlll CUii Ylll Hlll1'1111 llHY PR I'll ,\1,\1 /\111,11 · I : I• OHANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA l~ CFNT S Inflation cooling ~s prices restrained Interest rates cut due WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal National M ortgage Association announced today that it will lower the minimum interest requirements on newly issued adjustable-rate mortgages. The announcement followed a decision Monday by the Federal Housing Administration and Veterans Administration to drop their rates on guaranteed conventional mortgages from 15 percent to 14 percent. FNMA head David Maxwell said mortgages adjustable after six ..months and one year will drop to a 12.9 percent minimum yield effective Wednesday. Those adjustable after five years will drop to 14.6 percent. "The opportunity for the borrower to afford a mortgage is greatly increased by this decline in rates," Maxwell said at a breakfast news conference. While banks and mortgage lenders wilJ be able to charge more, Maxwell said he expects those rates to be approximately the interest faced by consumers seeking home loans. FNMA is the nation's largest secondary mortgage market, meaning that it purchases mortgages from banks, savings institutions and other lenders, freeing them to make additional loans. Currently the six-month adjustable rate mortgages have a minimum yield of 13.8 percent. down from 17.9 percent a year ago, Maxwell said. Those adjustable after a year now carry a minimum rate of 14.5 percent, and the five-year adjustable mortgages are currently 15.7 percent. Adjustable rate mortgages allow the interest rate to be raised or lowered from time to time depending on market conditions. UNDE R FREEWAY -Firemen and coroner's deputies work to recover a sports car which landed upside-down under San Diego Creek culvert under the San Diego Freeway near Irvine Center Drive. The body of a victim was Deity Not f'ttoto bf CMftM at.in found Wlder the car and the auto matches the description of one driven by a Cypress man whose parents reported him missing on Aug. 17. (See story, Page A2). Gasoline and food costs holding line WASHINGTON (AP) - Renewed restraint in gasoline price hikes held July's consumer price increase to 7.3 percent, calculated annually, the government said today. The pace o( inflation was nearly cut in half from the double-digit rates of the two preceding months. July's moderate gain -0.6 percent for the month -was also aided by a slowing of housing cost increases and by food prices holding dead even. July's increase meant that, for the first seven months of the year, consumer prices have risen at an annual rate of 5.4 percent, considerably under the 8 .9 percent posted for all of last year and the 12.4 percent of 1980. For all of 1982, economists are *** predicting inflauon of around 6 pen:.-ent. Much of the moderation, at least an July, was due to reverses an the gasoline price increases reg1Stered early in the summer. Gasoline prices last month were up only 2 percent: fess than half the 5.4 percent gain of June. The early summer increases had followed a general tightening in the worldwide oil surplus. But stocks have since risen anew. Analysts say the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries has not been entire ly successful in restricting members' oil production. Reflecting that, major refiners earlier reported wholesale price drops in the last (See INFLATION, Page A2 ) *** Stock prices up, hut Dow in retreat NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices were mostly higher early today in trading that again was extremely heavy, but the Dow Jones industrial average was retreating. Steel, mining and some oil issues paced the gainers, while drug, photography and financial stocks were numerous among the losers. Overall, advances led declines about 7 tQ 4 on the New York Stock Exchange. First-hour NYSE volume soared to 35.88 million shares, the second-highest turnover for that hour behind the 37 .02 million shares traded in the first hour last Wednesday, when daily turnover rose to a record 132.69 million shares. On Monday, volume at J 1 a.m. EDT was 25.55 milJion shares, and da1 ly turnove r reached 110 .31 m11l1on . the second- highest on record. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials. which opened at an eight-month high. was down 7.51 at 883.66 after an hour of trading. On Monday. it rose 21.88 points to bring its gain sin<.-e Aug. 12 to 114.25 points. The transportation and utility measures were up a fraction. Two maJor factors have accounte d for the market's advance. analysts said. One is the dee-line 1n interest rates, including the banking industry's adoption Monday of a 13.5 percent prime lending rate, down from 14 percent. The o ther is that prevtously hesitant investors now are plungmg into stocks so as not to rruss a major move. Stuckle to maintain custody of infant hoy By DAVID KUTZMANN Of the DMty PMot at.in Interviews with 12 medical specialists and new information from other witnesses led the Oran·ge County District Attorney's Office to abandon prosecutio n of Carla Verne Stuckle for felony child neglect, officials say. Stuckle, the mother of a 14-month-old boy whose father is State ·Sen. Joh& G . Schmitz. had the felony charge dismissed by Central Orange County Municipal Court Judge Gary Ryan on Monday. All that remains is for the Tustin woman to return to Juvenile Court on Sept. 10 I where, her attorney said, she will not contest civil charges related to the case. In return. Stuckle, 43, will be a llowed to maintain custody of the baby boy. who suffered serio us genital injuries that required reconstructive surgery. Deputy District Attorney Wally Wade said after Monday's court hearing tha·t evidence was insufficient to warrant further p.cosecution. of criminal cbarges. It was alleged in the criminal complaint filed against her that Stuckle was negligent in not seeking timely medical care for the child. whose penis was reportedly nearly severed from having a strand of hair wound tightly around it. Stuckle reiterated M onday that she was not at fault for the hair or fiber becoming entangled. She said it was an accident and that because of her ignorance "of a boy's anatomy," she had failed to seek timely medical attention. • Wade said that interviews with "local and nationally prominent physicians i n the fields of urology. t>lastic surgery and pediatrics ... " indicated t hat such injuries could be accidental and could go undet«ted. The prosecutor said he couldn't (See STUCKLE, Page AZ) Kudos for Schmitz not unanimous CARLA STtJCKLE WORLD SACijAMENTO (AP) -The state Senate is praising Sen. John Schmitz for his "distinguished career'' seven months after reprimanding him f o r an abortion statement that critics called anti-Semitic. By a voice vote Monday. the upper house approved a retirement resolution which thanked the Corona de! Mar Republican for his "many valuabl~contributions on behalf of the state." Later, nine senators, including the house's leader, tried to . Begin m eans business Israel Prime Minister Menachem Begin. with the exit of the PLO from Beirut, has shown once again he means business. Page A4. No end seen to unemploym ent High unemployment is a growing problem for industrial nations. Experts aee no easy solutions e~en after the current global recession ends. Page A5. TELEVISION TV roles bring recognition· Byron Cherry and Christopher Mayar have gained sudden recc>iUll lion wt th their roles in "The Dukes of Hau.ard." Page .88. t' disassociate themselves from the measure by publishing a letter in the Senate Journal saying the resolution was "excessively commendatory. "We are doing 1his because we were not here to establish our position," said Sen. Diane Watson , D -Los Angeles, a frequent Schmitz critic. ''We were not here to vote." Only about a dozen lawmakers were on the floor when the resolution was taken up and, in an unh ea rd-of m ove. two senators tried unsuccessfully to COUNTY force a roU call vote on 1t. Aside from that. the resoluuon by Republican leader William Campbell, R-Hacienda Heights, passed without opposition . The member who initiated the request for .a roll call, Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van Nuys, said he did so because "the man as an anti-Semite and a Nazi." But only _Sen. Milton Marks, R-San Francisco, joined Robbins in the request. Three senators were needed. Both R obbins and Senate President Pro Tem David Steeplejack on e of few There aren't many real steeplejacks left but Mickey McClure. 70, of Catalina, is one of them. He showed why during a Balboa Island cllmb. Page Bl. OCC gets gilt of yacht ' The gift of a 65-foot yacht, Alaska Eagle, to Orange Coast College, repretentl the most prestigious yacht ever received by the Calta Mesa echool. l>age A5. Money expert uses st;are tactics Money expert claims one way to ffel people to " better manaae thelr lncome .. to '1ecare I them. Pase 82. , . I I .,. • Roberta, D-Los Angeles, said they thought some lawmakers left the floor rather than be present when the relolution came up. Several senators were also at a Finance Committee hearing. Roberti said he was off the floor discussing a bill with two other lawmakers, but would have voted against the resolution if he'd been present . "It's unpleasant business," he said. A s ked about R o bbin s' comments, Schmitz said, "AU I (See SCHMITZ, Page AZ) SEN. J OHN SCHMITZ INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoscope A7 Erma Bornbeck A? Ann Landers A7 Business 84-5 Movies B6 Cavalcade A7 Mutual Funds B4 Classified C4-8 National News A3 Comics B7 Public Notices C4 Crossword B7 Sports Cl-3 Death Notices C4 Stock Markets BS &:litorial A6 Television B8 Entertainment B6 Theaters B6 Art Hoppe A7 Weather A2 SPORTS The CalJfornla Angela wtth a 8-3 victory over Milwaukee have moved two pmee ln front ln the American League West. Page Cl. Marina football previe wed Marina High ~ool is ready lor another Sunaet ~ football 1eaaon. The team 11 previewed today on :P"aae Cl. · ·V l .1 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TUMdly, Augu1t 24, 1982 Continued stories of July and the flnt pan of t. d eed, the department uld y, "Despite an 8.4 percent In the past threew months, aoUne prices were atill 7. 7 nt below the peak level of 1981." In the next year, energy prices e r a ll tumbled nearly 15 • • d up in good faith" and aak ' judge to order Stuckle to face based on the infonnation at d. It was the case against Stuckle ich led to disclosures that hrnitz, R-Corona del Mar. was e father of both her infa nt · dren. Birth records on file m ange County list Schmitz as father. , an attorney representing h mitz has appeared at a venile Court hearing for the 'ld. e Republican legislator has fused to make any public • • d say is he could not even get ird person" to demand a roll S c hm itz, wh o ran uccessfully for the U .S . t.e this year after losing his te Senate dis trict through a 1'emocr a tic r eapportionme nt fllan, was formally reprimanded try the Senate in January for i.&suing a press release which ,Wtterly attacked a bortion-rights advocates. The r elease, issued last December aft.er Schmitz held a series of hearings on an anti- f>ortion measure, labeled pro- • • peN.'ent Al for housing coats, the department said the modest 0.5 percent overall gain -half of June's 1 percent Increase -was largely the result of a 0.4 pert.-ent decline In mortgage Interest rates. the third monthly drop ln a row. The continuing falls In Interest comment dealing with the case or the issue of his paternity. Stuckle said after Monday's court hearing that Schmitz "is the one who has to live with" his decision to remain silent. She has claimed the two had a nine-yea r love affair. She said Schmitz had called her home several times over the past month "to ask how the kids are doing." She said she planned no legal action against him to seek ch ild support payments. Stuckle said that she is still in abortion rights witnesses as "bull dykes," "murderous marauders" and "queer." It al.so said that the front rows at one hearing were filled with a sea of "hard. J ewish and {arguably) female faces." Re tirement resolutions are normally passed by a unanimous voice vote after lawmakers make several speeches praising their departing colleagues. But only Campbell and Sen. Newton Russell, R -Glendale. spoke in favor of the Schmitz measure. Campbell briefly mentioned rate ht•lp ·d wlpt> o u l u O 7 pert.'ent rise In the cost of homeis the~lvea. l''ood prices, meanwhile, reversed June's 0.6 perceni gain and he ld dead even. Prices were off !or food purchased in grocery stores, but rose for meals eaten out and for alcoholic beverag~. love with the st.ate senator, who lives in Corona del Mar with his w ife Mary and several of his six children. Wade said attempts were made to contact Schmitz during the co urs e o f h is off i ce's in vestigation, but the senator's attorney said he wouldn't allow his client to be int.errogat.ed by investigators. Tustin Police Capt. Wood y Williams said his department, which originally inv~ti~ated ~he case, was not dissatisfied with Monday's court action. the abortion stateme n t in his speech and referred to Schmitz' r ecent "bad pu blic ity," an a ppare nt refe rence to news stories about Schmitz' fathering two illegitimate children. But the resolution made no reference to either the statement or the children. Campbell said the Senate bade Schmitz fare well "with a certain degree of regret and with best w ishes." Schmitz wife, Mary, was in the audience, along with several of his chi1dren. Search ends Irvine culvert • Ill Body in wreckage thought to be missing Cypress man .. ·'By GLENN SCOTT Of the o.11, Piiot Slllfl ~· Passen gers in an estimated r.98,000 vehicles passed above it every day on the San Diego .F r eeway, but n o one ever .•reporte d seeing the s mashed Datsun 280Z that lay beneath -them in a concrete cuJvert. _, , Nor could commuters on that b usy freeway have' 'suspected ··that a man report.ed missing from •Cypress by his parents on Aug. '17° most likely was t h e dead •victim finally discovered inside the car Monday afternoon -six ~ays later. The name of the victim had -not been released this morning ~Y the Orange County Coroner's .'Office pending fingerprint and dental checks to confirm his identity. But Irvine police officers who were called to the scene by an Irvine Ranch Water Dis trict worker who found the wreckage confirmed the car was the one listed in the m issing person report. It lay upside down. smashed hke a beer can. inside the culvert to the San Diego Creek just north of Irvine Cent.er Drive. Investigators for the California Highway Patrol said the car apparently veered fro m the freeway's northbound Lanes into a grassy median , where it catapulted from an earthen berm into the culvert. Marks on the culver t wall showed it struck about 15 feet from tht;! floor of the creek channel 3hd then skidded 70 feet on 1ts roof before stopping directly under the northbound lanes. An Orange County firefighter crawled through a passenger window to confirm that the victim's body was still inside. In a sad touch of irony, afternoon traffic on the freeway almost slowed to a stop Monday as the curious peered at the activity. Many were the same drivers, of course. who had passed many t imes before without knowing the car and victim were underneath . Cloudy and fair The FOf'ecast'FOf' 8 p.m . EDT R•lnmll snowrn Tuesdav Auqusl 24 -•Hi h Tem atutes Showera . Flurri.1 Temperatures Fair tOday with hlQns In mld·IO upper 70• Leta nfghl lhrough mld-momlng low CIOuda through W•dnHday. OtherwlH fair ednMdrf •tt.-noc>n. Ov.nlghl 0 low 84 to 88. Hlgh9 Wedneaday 73 to IO. El1awh•r•. from Point Conception to th• M•xlcan bord•r •nd out 80 mllaa· Horth-1 winds 10 to 20 knots """' the outer w.ttWI with 3 to 5 foot MU through Wed""4ay. L-lly light, moetly M>Y1"-tly wlnd1 In nlgM end momlng houri. beCOmlng eouthwMt&l1y 8 to 18 knot• thl9 8fl9rnoon with 1 to 3 1001 wind w•v•1 Wind• W9dneaday alt«noon IOUthwMt 8 to t8 knot1 with 1 to 3 loot 90UthwMt sw911 Low cloudl In night end morning hOura, moatty dMllng Wedneeday •ltamoon. U.S. summary flHh flood w•tchu ware IMl*I Mond•Y for p..-11 of the Soutll-t •ft&r hHvy mOfnlng ~. The w•tchH were l11ued for parll of 1outhw•1tern •nd northweetern Arizona. the mount•lna •nd de 1•r t1 o l IOUthern Celtfofnla end the S.r• .... ed •. El11w here, 1l'low•r1 end thundar11orm1 war• tc•ttered from the eouth oentrel Plalnl Into U. Ohio ValteJ. along the Gutt OoMt and -Flortde. -the e.t eo..t and O¥et the wwtern Greet LAik- ~ lklel ~Iron'\ the P11Clflc NortllwMt through the ncJl'1harn Aodli. Into tM north central Pleine end lrom the -111ef'n Pl•lna Into the tower 11111lltlpt)I Vt/Icy. T•mperaturu 1roune1 th• rwl6on II 3 p.m. EDT rengeel ~om a low of 56 daor-11 Arc•ta, Clllf ., and OlmQow. Mont •. to 1 hlf'I of t01 at f'ort Worth •nd waoo . TnH, .,,o at Fort SIU. C*1a. For today, teall&fed .__. ...S tllUndel 1torme ...,. tor-... 0¥9' the Soutll..at mou1111aln1 ~:,:•••rt1, end over tlla rn two•tlllr01 ot the *'° OWi .-1y .. of the ~ ,.. Of .. ne\forl. 8IJMY .... _. flOt90Mt .... MNI .. lll!MI09,ncl 10e -....... ,__Coeel, "°"""" ....... to .. FF . f Vlllr .... "°"' :-.... ~ .... Ulle'f ~ _.., .. .....,. .... ~ ••••• tOO dOffHe ·~ I 011•-~ ................ Ill t•e. I NATION Albany Albuque Amarlllo Anch<>rllge Allent• Aualltl Beltlrnor• ~ 8olM Boston Brown..,.. lkJffelO ButtlngtOfl CMP« Ctw1atn SC CMyenne Chicago Clndnnetl ~ Columbu9 OaY1on Denver Del Moines Detroit Dululh El Puo F9lrbanka F.,-go Fleg91&fl Hwtl«d Helene Honolulu Houeton lndMPll• JKll"1 MS Jadlll'I~ J~u Kane City Knoxvlle LMVegM t:i.:Z- Memphla Miami Mtlweutl• ~ .... OftMne ....., voni Notte* No. Plett4t Otlla City Om4IN OtWldo ~ Pttteburt Pllend. ftttMd. Of9 PrcMOenot ="City Alrlo, HI 68 89 93 67 87 98 73 90 88 94 70 9S 65 70 9t 88 79 76 78 71 78 76 84 64 89 74 !!& 7t 77 83 72 80 87 ~ 77 91 93 58 91 85 100 ee 81 89 90 78 8S 93 73 78 91 98 83 90 73 108 76 65 80 8t 83 18 101 Lo 10 57 89 87 54 67 7S 63 57 64 56 S8 78 57 S8 $4 78 !>6 Fronts: Cold ..., W&1m .,. Occluded .-r 64 87 82 62 63 S9 65 63 S8 70 52 56 58 57 50 75 80 s.it Lake 97 89 San Antonio 95 74 San Otego 8t 71 s.,-, Fran 64 54 S..1119 79 58 Siou• F1111 83 S6 St Louie 85 73 St S1aMerl9 89 47 Spoken& 90 57 Syrec;uM 69 80 TopeU 95 88 Tue.on 100 71 TulA 100 79 Wuhtngtn 78 68 Wlehll• tot 71 65 CAUFORNIA 72 8ak1t1lltld 105 79 74 50 87 85 83 89 10 79 82 59 ee 74 84 10 8t 70 " 76 81 ee 80 63 IO S9 89 54 IS Blythe 90 Eurelle 83 52 F,_.,o 101 71 ~, .. 99 78 L041Ar-83 87 Merys le ge Monterey ee '"9dlM 98 Oakland 71 Puo Roblee 103 58 A.cl 8lufl tot &9 Redwood City 78 59 S11et-to 88 57 Sellnl.e 86 52 San 0..00 12 88 San FranoleoO 82 &e Sant. Barbin 76 67 Sant. Mena 89 StOCllkton H 80 TIMlnMI 1111 a.mow H Ml ~..., 78 52 llllhop 11 86 Cetel!M 71 86 Lono 9Mctl 16 88 M~ 82 ee Mt. Wlleofl H 88 lllf RIPIRT lwf -.. .. a a .... AWf 1 , 1 .... -I a J ..... Dir • IW I W aw Newporl 8qc;h Onlarlo Palm Springs Puadena Rlverlld• San Bem•rdlno San Oabrl•I San Jote Sant• An• Senti Cruz Extended weather 73 6e 89 68 107 85 88 87 91 86 9S 68 95 87 80 57 78 65 71 58 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Night through mid· morning fOQ and low cloud• nMr lh• COlll. OtharwlM ftllr Ind I 111119 COOier. Hlgfw coutal ., ... ranging from the mkl• to upper 10. II th• bMchu to mld-llOI wwmer Inland ., .... LOWS 56 to 85 Felf In the mount.in. except I« • chance of • ,_ •ltemoon end •venlng ahower• or lhundel lflow.1 dectNllng ..,., In the period. Hlghe In the UP9&f 70I end ..... aoa. I.owe 50 10 80 Smog Wiier• to 0111 (toll frH) tor ...... IC'llOO lnfor!MtlOn: Of11nt9 County. (IOO) 4454elt Lot An9•la• County: (IOO) U2-40a2 Alve!'llda end 19'1 ..,.,_dtno oounttet: (IOO) H7~710 AOMO lptaod4I O«ltar: (IOO) 242-44MMI Tides TOOA't leoond llloll 2:0t p.m. 4.& leoond IOw 8:&4 p.m. t.7 ,...,.. .. ., ""'' ~ 2~ ... a.I'll. u lllrlt low •:uw ..,,.., ll.2 8.oclll!Cf lllOfl ':oo pm. •.r l900flO low 10:11 p.m. U l un Mt• tod1y et 1:21 p.l'ft. , ... #~II l ll 1 Lift. ~ rlMI ~at 12:02 P"'· ...... 11:11 Ill, t; DREAM BED -Dave Adelsohn (left) and worker Jack.son Reynolds look at speaker on bed Paul McCartney asked the Costa Mesa D'elt1 Not ""°40 .,, Lee .,.,.. cabinet maker to build tor ::>tevie Wonder in honor of tht?ir music hit "Ebony and Ivory." Dream bed from Mesa Rock star's gift real top of the line model By JODI CADENHEAD Of"the o.lly "°' Se.ff Paul McCartney wan ted to give Stevie Wonder a bed, nol · just any bed -but one that would lull the musician to sleep with five speakers, vibrators and gently flashing lig~t;: and c~t "more than a Ferran, aa:ordmg to Dave Adelsohn of Cost.a Mesa who built it. · Adelsohn, who specializes in unique carpentry for sound systems, took one look at the sketch submitted by the former Bealle and said he and his crew would have the bed done in 60 ·days. That was before the drawing for the dream t-ed blew away in the wind. Luckily Adel.sohn has a good memory. That wa s a l so before technicians at Chrisopher Hansen Limited of Los Angeles fell two w eeks behind sch edule in submitting drawings for the sound system. Luckily Adelsohn was able to work round the clock. The bed finally moved out of the Costa Mesa shop at noon S unday. two days behind schedule. "This is the toughest assignment yet," said Adel.sohn whose been building cabinets 12 years. "It's a 10. I submitted the bid and all I could think of is. what will I do if I get it." What Adel.sohn did was build a nine-foot long black suede frame bed equipped with speakers underneath and surrounded by light shafts that are topped with speake rs. . But the highlight of the luxury proj<..>ct is the console system at the foot or the bed -complete with the fim-st am/fm fine tuner, turn table. cassette and tape recorder OnC' push or the button and the chrome-enclOS<'d ronsole moves to the head of the bed. Adelsohn said he spent $2,000 alone designing the touch control panel for the singer who is blmd. Although he hasn"t spoken dm:.•<:tly w McCartney, the Costa Mesa cabinet builder said he was told that the former Beatie · wanlt.'d to do something special for Wonder an honor of their h11 "Ebony and Ivory ·· "He designed at ," said Ade lsohn. "But we made ii possible" Wonder is ex~ted to receivE the gift this week. School retires old buses By STEVE MITCHELL Of the Delly Piiot a .. n and 1972," Lovelady said . "It was getting increasingly more difficult to find r eplacement parts for some of the buses."' And, considering each new bus The Laguna Beach U nified School Distnct is retiring much of its dilapidated bus Oeet, opting to hire a private transportation company lo carry youngsters to Joltin ' "Joe and from school. When school reope n s n ext month , students a l the two opens fair eleme ntary schools and Thurston Intermediate School will ride to SA c RAMENTO (A p) campus aboard buses provided by Fonner New York Yankee star San Clemente-Camp Pendleton J~ DiMaggio and Gov. Edmund Transit. Brown Jr. h eaded a lis t of The trans1\ company was the 1 b h 982 low bidder, at $177,625, of three ce e rities ope ning t e 1 California St.ate Fair today. firms vying for the one-year The Baseball H all of F ame contract. star, a native of San Francisco, The company will provide its was grand mars hal at the own. newer buses, and hire some ceremonies. Brown joined him o f the dis trict's c urrt:nt bus for a tour of exhibits at the Cal- drivers to transport youngsters. Expo grounds in Sacramento. District officialS figure to save The 1982 st.ate fair runs. daily a minimum of $10.00-0 a year by through Labor Day, Sept. 6. T hat contracting for bus service. is three days shorter t han state Clyde Lovelady. the district's fairs in recent years. a cutback business manager. said, "Some of aimed at balancing the fair's .~o_u_r_l 4_b_uses __ d_a_t.e_bac __ k_to_l_9_7_1 ___ b __ u""'dget. SEIKO costs $80,000, Lovelady said, the dtstnct looked for other means of busing children. ThC' business manager said most of the savings will come from not having to keep a Cleet supervisor. as well as costs for gasoltnC', repa irs and hiring privat e buses for special eduC<1t1on held trips D1stricl officials say they'll keep most of the current fleet - at least for a while -m case the contract with San Clemente- Camp Pendleton Transit does not work out Bu l he sa 1d sevNal of the buses wall be sold in the fall, with the rest maintained for athletic <.•vents, field trips and special Nlucation e vents. Under the contract with fhe transit firm. bus drivers w ill be paid $7.25 per hour a nd the company will provide seven 79-passenger buses for five hours o n wee k days and another 79-pass4?ngcr bus for two hours on weekdays.' THE PERFECT GIFT FOR ANY T IME. ' . SEIKO Ideal for Father's Doy or graduation gitt-giving. The superb quartz reliabi lity of Seiko goes with you as o trovel olorm or makes o handsome desk accessory. World Time Clocks for the International traveler or the woll rnformed. Travel clock, $75 . Desk clock, $125. SLAV-CK'§ ,Int ......,.. Sltl(e 191'7 Whtrt r~'btst swrpn.us begin. ,lllllOn..,C714) .... IJIO·~IMcfl ' --~ ......... ·5111'*00•&.'tllltll I > Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT /TuHdey, August 24, 1982 s -'• Foreign • • v1s1tors exceed Arnericans travel abroad • in W ASH INGTON (AP) -A record number of foreigners visited the United States last .year, exceeding for the first time the number of Amer icans traveling abroad, the government said today. The Commerce Department said 23.1 million foreign visitors came to the Un ited S t ates in 1981, up 3 percent fr om the previous year. Nearly 23 million Americans traveled to other countries in 198 l, a small I percent gain from 1980, the department said. Almost half the foreign visitors -10.9 mtllton -were from Canada, and a record 3.8 million were from Mexico, an in crease of 19 percent from t he previous year, the report said. Visitors from Mexico spent the most money in t he United States, about $3.8 billion, up a sharp 52 percent from 1980, and mostly due to purchases near the border. AP Wlrepholo TWINS' TEAMWORK -l l takes two lO conquer t hirst w hen the day is h ot and the drinking fountain too tall. Veronica Flinn, 3, clambers up t ie side for a cool drink, w hile her t win b roth er, Shawn, operated the fountain's foot pedal. Both are from Redding. "A U.S. inflation ·rate about half that of Mexico's made prices of goods and services in U.S . border r egions increasingl y attractive to Mexican residents," the department said. For the first time in eight years, the number of Americans visiting their northern neighbor, Canada, grew, climbing 2 percent to 11.4 million. Some mail service sh if ting to ~rue ks WASHINGTON (AP) - Airplanes may be the fastest way to travel, but Postal Service officials say they are improving service and saving money by moving more maiJ on the nation's highways. On trips of less than 500 miles. trucks can often move the mail just as fast as airplanes. said James E. Orlando, director of th& Postal Service's Office o f Transportation Services. As a re8ult, postal officials are reviewing all inter-ci ty routes of 500 miles or less lo determine where switches from airplanes to trucks. mi~ht be made. Routes of over 500 miles will remain airborne. T h e move lo trucks was spurred last summer, when the air traffic controller's strike disrupted air transport and sent Orlando looking for other ways to move the mail. "What we round ," he explained. was "that we were able to put the mail on highway transportation .. and actuaJly improve service. "The mail originates at a downtown post office and has to be processed at that post office, put on a truck. taken out to the air mail facihty at the airport, unloaded, reprocessed. given to the air carrier, handled by the air carrier. put on an airplane, and then the same thing 1s reversed," Orlando explained. With trucks. he said, mail can be hauled directly from one downtown post oCCice to another, avoiding several steps and saVlng time. COSMONAUT -Svetlana Savitskaya, Soyuz T -7 researcher. is the second woman in space. But she must still overcome the Russian attitude of "a woman's place 1s in the home." Poll: Blacks • • • cynics, peSSIIllIStS Middle gen era tio n , 3 0 to 44, distrustful o f white s LOS ANGELES (AP) - Despite the sodal and economic progress in the civil rights era of the 1950s and 1960s. th e generation of blacks that came of age during that period expressed cynicism over those gains and pessimism over what the future holds, acc.'Ord ing to a Los Angeles Times poll. This middle generation of blacks. ranging in age from 30 to 44, achieved a greater relative affluence t h an the previous generation but is also more d istrustful of whites and dissatisfied over their lot in hfe than their predecessors. "They are idealistic and philosophically liberal, but an acute sense of pessimism is built into their lives." said Melvin Oliver, an assistant professor of sociology at UCLA. ''They still feel a sense of failure, that in spite of this great movement that achieved some very worthwhile things -like access to social facilities. equal pay for equal work -very little has changed for the masses of black people," he said. The telephone survey, published in Monday's ed1uons, conducted in May, canvassed 522 ·blacks. 216 Latin os and 701 whites. and contains a 4 percent margin of error The difference bebween blacks in this middle generation lies in their experiences during the civil rights struggle . The T imes ex plained that t he o l der generation of blacks had very few expectations of progress, while today's younger generation of blacks never experienced the more blatant aspects of racism of the past. The poll showed that there was no comparable dive rgence among whit.es of that generation from t hose older and younger than them, even though that middle generation spawned the counter-culture and led the peace movemen'\ against the war in Vietnam. According to I.A. Lewis, Times Poll director, t his group's "psyche was forged in battle." As a result of their experiences. they feel less assimilated into the mainstream of American culture and hence feel a greater resentment toward whites than older and younger blacks, Lewis said. We're Listening ••• Monoay·F,1<1•v ti y0u oo ~ h•v• l'O<" -· Oii ~ 30 0 m CAii CNtkH I 0 m and .,OU# COO'; -.It l)t' dth~tM"t S.Cu<fWf eno Sunoay 11 you oo ""' :='1r:'~ ~y .:, ~:.,.":.."': _.., What do you like about the Daily Pilot? Whal don't you like? Call the num ber below and your message will be recorded. transcribed and delivered lo the appropriate editor The same 24·hour answering service may be used to record let· ters to t he editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's on your mind 642•6086 'ORANGE COAST CleHlfi.d •dv•rtl1lng 7141942-5171 All other cMptirtmentt 142-4321 Daily Pilat Thomae P. Hol.y Pub11in.< ond Chief hiteutive Olltur Jan• Am0tl E.ewtive fd~o; L. Kay Schufta V'rea '•ftldeM Ofld Ott~or ol A<Mtnnono Mkho.I P. Harvey Olrec:10t °' Mor~tlino 10r«ilollofll Thomae A. Murphln• fd~Ot Raymond Mad.eon Conlr~ IC•nneth N. Geililanl Jr. Dnc10r ol ()peraflOftt . MAIN OFPICE •WHl .. Sl.,C .. i.-...CA. NYll edd-: ha IMO, C•te llMM, CA. tM)t C.-v;leM te 0reft0t Co.ut Plllllltlllllt '-v NO -~ lllvMrefl., .. M"erlel m_er .. vertl .. -11 MA!n ,,.., '9 ,..,_.., w"'*'I' -lel ~otc...,,..,...,._, Travel to the United States' southern nei~hbor, Mexico, was unchanged in 1981 at 3.4 million, "as increasing price levels tn Mexico and higher air fares cu t into this market," the report said. But fewer Americans went to countries other than Mexit.'O and Canada las t year, with the biggest decline reported in trips to CentraJ America. Trips to Asia rose. however. Foreign tourists spent a record $12,2 billion in this country, 21 percen t more than in 1980. An additional $2.5 billion was pa1d to American ca rri e rs for transportation to get here, the report said. Americans, on the other hand, spent some $11.5 b1Uion abroad, up 10 percent Crom 1980. And they paid $4.5 billion to foreign carriers to take them to other l'Ountries. The report also said European countr ies sendfng the most visitors here were the Unittd Kingdom, 1.2 million ; West Germany. 700,000. and France, 300,000, it said. AP Wiii.,.... The number of tourists from J apan g rew 4 pe rcent to 1.2 million Last year, and those from Venezuela climbed 11 percent to 515,000, according to the department's figures. S E W P LATES FOR STATE -Doris Alexis, d irector of the Depar tment o f M o tor Veh icles holds one of the n ew reflectorized plates that go on sale beginning today. Sen . Danie l Boatright, D -Concord. was present for the exhibiting Jf the plate along with a regular plate. Even w-ith jobs, Soviet w-oillen find place 'still in kitchen' •MOSCOW (AP) -Wh e n productive Labor," wrote Lenin, Svetlana Savitskaya floated into the founder of the Soviet Union, the orbiting Soviet space station, "to liberate them from domestic the pilot handed her an apron, slavery, to free them from their poin ted toward the galley and stupefying and humtliallng said: "Now yvu can cook." subjugation to the eternal Although made in jest, pilot drudgery of the kitchen and the Valentin Lebedev's remar k to nursery.'' the sa'Ond woman to fly in space The Soviet cons l i l u t 1 o n reflec t ed a deeply r'ooted guarantees women equal rights Vlewpoint held by Russian men with men and equal pay for -that wives belong in the equal work. According to official kitchen, not the C'OSmos. statistics. •·socially produc tive Cosmonaut SavitBkaya and her labor" in , the form of full-time sisters make up 51 percent of the jobs have been found for 86 of Soviet work force, but Lerun's every 100 w o men capable of promise of liberation fro m working. "domestic slavery" is still a Women make up 51 percent of dream for most of them. the work force, one-fourth or the Wh ile the 34-year-old Mrs. Communist Party membership Savitskaya spun around the and one-third of the national globe this week aboard the parhament. As many woman as Salyut-7 space station, most of men c:an be seen on the scaffolds her female comrades back home on Soviet construction projects, were busy cooking, cleaning and and w omen hold dangerous laundering their husbands' dirty factory jobs. clothes. But neither Lenin's ideals nor For the husbands, Sunday, for the guarantees of the constitution exam ple, was a day of rest have eradicated cent ur ies of from the rigors of work, often tradition. T he Soviet husband with the aid of a bottle of vodka. remains king in his home, and his For the w ives, it was a day to wife's place is in the kitchen catch up on household chores Articles in the Soviet press and neglected all week w hile they in specialized journals complain wor ked at jobs outside the home. that women who go into t he "The chief t hing is to get work force double their work women to take ~rt m socially load. Privately women complain that their lt vcs are a series of days at the facto r y followed frequently by abuse, physical or mental, f r om a husband who spends his after- work hours m an alcoholic haze. The first woman to fly in s pace, Valentina Tereshkov, circled the globe 48 times m three days with cosmonaut Valery Bykovsk y in 1963. She w as rewarded with a seat on t he Communist Party's powe rful Central Committee a n d t h e chairmans hip of the Soviet Women's Committee. But during a trip to New York in 1977. Tereshkova side-stepped a reporter's question about the role of women in Soviet society. She said Russian women don't need fem1n1s t organ ization s . ix'(:auS<.' S<.'xual equality is "part of the stale program" and women are "working from within" at every level of government. She later ronceded that it was still difficult to get husbands to share the housew,pr~. People who need People Thal's whet the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY Is all ll>Oull t -----~ Get a P8fr of Joyetlcu (28·3008) at No Extra CNirve WMn You PurchaM Our New 18K Standllrd Color Computer! 399!~ •ftll H•tt•n•inft••• ••a &a•M•••••••• •••m••••cs••amts -•a••m•••••• Ju.t Plug In a Progr•m Pak .. to ... It'• Al80 Ore8t for ... • Play Exciting Color Action Games • Teechlng the Famlly How to Program • Expreaa Youraelf In Mualc or Art • Creating Vivid Color Oraphlca • Set Up • Famlly Budget ... end More • Helping the Kida With Schoolwortc >turry-Offw Exptree 1130112 ~ A DIVISION 0, TAHOY COAPOAATION Pf'ICU MAY YN4Y AT INOIYIOUAL STORES A,.O OIA&.l AS SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST RADIO SHACK STORE, COMPUTER CENTER OR PARTICIPATING DEALER ''"'~°" Orange Coatl DAIL. Y PILOT /TuMday, Augu1t 24, 1N2 lb PAT HOROWITZ • O('lle o.fr ,... ..... DEAR READE RS : At a time when housing costs are becomins an Increasing burden, Californian& who are 62 years or older. or who are blind or dtubled, may be •ble to save money by applying tor housing· related tax benefita. The California Department of Housing and Community Development offers the following tips on applying for these benefits. To receive the benefits, claim fo rms must be filed by Aug. 31. Re ntal assistance is a on ce-a -year reimbursement by the state of a portion of the property taxes presumed to have been paid by rent payments. T o claim renter assistance, individuals who are 62 years or older , or who are disabled, must have received less than $12,000 household income in 1981 , and pay at least $50 a month for rent, Including utilities. The rented residence must b4t the person's principal residence, located in Ca1ifornia, and not exempt from property tax. Various types of rental residences qualify for rental assistance, including single-family houses, duplexes, flats, a partments, hotel rooms, mobilehomes. a nd boarding and convalescent homes. A married couple is considered one renter and may file only on e claim while individuals living in a rented residence with other eligible renters may each file an ass~ce claim . The amount of assistance is based on sliding income scale, with the maximum credit of $240. Homeowner assistance is a once-a-year reimbursement by the state of a portion of the property taxes on a home. A senior or disabled person is eligible if the individual owns and lives in a home, and has received l~ than $1 2.000 h o u sehold income in 1981 . Homeowner assistance payments can be as much as 96 percent of the property tax of the first $34,000 assessed fair market value for the home. R e nter a ssistance and h omeown er assistance claim forms can be obtained from the Franchise Tax Board, P.O. Box 1588, Sacramento 95807 or by phon ing (800) 852-5?1 l. The TDD (hearing impaired) number is (800) 822-6268. ... Other benefits, such as property tax postponement for seniors and renter 's tax credit. are filed at other times during the year. Free fact sheets on these programs may be requested by writing to: Tax Benefits, California Department of Hou s ing and Community Development, 92 1 Tenth St.. Room 102, Sacramento 95814. and requesting Publication No. 22. Vacation power use DEAR READERS: Have you ever returned trom vacation to find a high electric bill? If so, you're not alone, according to Southern California Edison Co. "Some people may not realize they have appliances that don't take a vacation," says J .E. Kennedy. city area manager for SCE. "The three biggest users of electric energy in the home are the heating and cooling systems, electric h o t wate r h eater and th e refrigerator. Together, they account for nearly 75 percent of the average homeowner's bill." Kennedy offers the following tips to keep your vacation-time electric bill in line: • seniors -[f you Arc aoing to be away for • lona time, clun out tht-refrigerator, unplug h, and leave the door open. -f or s horter period a away. place contalnen1 of water In the refrigeraw (to help retain the cold), and tum the eetting down to a two or three. -It you have an electric water heat.er. you might conaider unplugging and draining It. An emrty house has no nC!ed for a ateody source o hot water. When you return, remember to turn on a~hot water faucet to make sure water is in the tank. You could damage the heating elementa If you plug It In without water In the tank. -Turn off your air condJUoner, unJeu you have house plants. In that case, most wlU survive at 8~ degrees. P J material irritating DEAR PAT: la It po11lble tbat flame retardaat flnlsbes on children's sleepwear could cause sltln Irritation? Wbeaever I put new pajamas on my i on, be seems to develop a skin raab. l don't know lf the treatment given to tbe material la at fault or If It mlgbt be somettllag else. E.J., Huntington Beach Recent studi.es show that many flame retardant salts applied to durable press fabrics are acidic. This is caused by a chemical change in the salt during the drying process in finishing. This acidity can cause skin irritation, and the more severe the drying process, the more acidic the product will be. Washing before wearing the garment will help remove the acidic r esidue, according to the International Fabricare lnstitute's research department. Ivory delicate to clean DEAR PAT: A friend gave me a very old Ivory 1tatue. How 1bould ft be cleaned? I've beard Ivory mast not be 1oalted ln water, bat the piece 11 10 old tbat it'• developed a yellowlsh tla1e. G.E., Irvine A deepening yellow ti.nge on ivo~y is inevitable. Wipe ivory art obJeCts clean with a d amp sponge and dry care fully wit~ a nonabrasive cloth. such as an old T -shirt. Never soak in water because this will cause the ivory layers to separate. Another favorite ivory cleaner is milk, which often is used to brighten piano keys. Gentle cleaning also is important for marble. A feather duster is prefe rred for regular cleaning because dry cloth dus~ng may grind soil into the surface. Rubbing talc um p o wder o n th e surface is a recommended method o{ polishing. • "Got a problem? Then write to Pat', Horowitz. Pat will cut red tape, . • 1 getting the answers and action you need to solve ine quities in r1 • government and business. Mail . your questions to Pat Horowitz, At Your Service, Orange Caast Dally Pilot. P.O. &x 1560, Coota Mesa, CA 92626. As many letters as possible wil.J be answered, but phone inquiries or letters not including the reader's full name, address and business hours' phone number .cannot be considered. Destined for greatness Brilliant conductor's career cut short by tragedy OAKLAND (AP) -Brilliant, black, young, serious about conducting and exuberant about life, Calvin Simmons had only begun to realize h is greatness, 1 said music lovers who mourned his apparent death. Abo ut to begin his fourth season with the Oakland Symphony, Simmons, 32, had the attention of critics studying young conductors who seemed destined for musical immortality. He was the first black to lead a prominent American symphony (He apparently drowned during a canoeing trip Saturday in Lake Placid, N.Y .. where h e was vacationing). Time magazine critic Michael Walsh recently called him one of the fi ve most promi sing American conductors. "H e hadn't arr ived at greatness yet." said Robert Commanday. music critic for the San Franc isco C hronic le . "Perhaps h e knew better than anyone how much he still had to do. But the human qualities in the man were there, integra l with the musical gifts." Among his pursui ts were canoeing , whic h h e did "whenever he got the chance," aald Mary Maehl, publicist for the Oakland Symphony. Divers .earehed for Simmons' tall, slim, well-built body Monday In a murky pond near Lake Placid. Witnesses said they saw him tumble into the water just before sun.11et Saturday and fail to surf ace. The "Maestro Kid's" z.est for life and for music infected mu1iclaul•. who res.ponded affectionately. In rece nt ~· he abandoned h1a "Eneraetlc, feluy, goo d - humored. alway• direct. These are the qualities I think of flnt whm J dlink of what we'll miss In Calvin Simmons," crltlc Charlee Shere wrote in the QNrlend Tribune. Wrote Commanda • ''typlcaJJy, h• conducted wlt~out 'heroic ,_wra. He worked 1lmply, I ~ &he mUlidana.'' rtaJeftta •prune from "rve INdnctl, and h1a temperament FEARED DROWNED - Calvin Simmons, conductor of the Oakland Symphony. apparently drowned while canoeing on Lake Placid in upper New York. shaped them with rare d iscipline and efficiency, but they were not unique," Shere said. "But Calvin had a lot more . An unbridled sense of humor and a breadth of interests." Simmons was to start rehearsing Mozart's "Magic Flute" this week at the New York City Opera, where he flnt conducted in 1980. Hia spirit and curiosity showed as he grew up acnm the bay ln San FranciJco. His mother, Matty Pearl Simmons, a nurse •nd f o1pel singer. taught him piano." don't remember tho.e days, but my mother •till lovee to tell rJM about them" Simmon• eald In an lntervJew publ11bed In \980. "Apparently, I began telling her how the mu11c 1hou1a be played." Madi Bacon. retired director of the San Frandaco Bo)'I ChoNa. 1elected Sl.mmona. then about 9, even ~&h "he ooWdn't eb'I for an ything. But he played the piano for his own audition and I couldn't resist him." Three years later , he began conducting while a member of th e boys c horus o f the San Francisco Opera. "I was always hanging around the opera house, seeing what was going on and generally ma king a pest of myself," he once said. Simmons studied under Rudolf Serkin at the Curtis Institute of Music in Cininnati. Students recalled the afternoon master a nd st ude nt s lid d o wn a banister to attend tea. Simmons' contagious charm led. in part. to his Oakland appointment. Harold Lawrence. fonner head o f the Oakland sympho ny association, recalled meeting him in 1976 in Los Angeles, where Simmons was assistant conduct.or or the philharmonic and working l with young musicians. "I was st.nJck by the way those \ youthful players absolutely adored him," Lawrence said. "The outpouring of affection \ following his appointment was astounding. I felt it reflected the joyful spirit that Calvin brought to his music-making." Said Sinunons in an Lnterview: "Because of my being the old 'fair-haired' boy from San FrancUcc>, a lot of people have been coming to Oakland to hear us." "Nobody who knew Calvin could conceive of his giving a hoot about a 'conduct.or's image.' He was concerned about trying and leamina u many interecUnc thing• 88 numanly po11lble. living Ufe to the fullest." Shere wrote. "Hit 1011 leavea u1 with a terrible emp\lne11 •.. For a young c_onductor, he waa 1urpn.tng1y verutile. He knew OpMa and 0tth•tral mUlic and wu an ilctlve 111CC0111panllt and chamber mu.k:lan. '' Calvin'• fath•r . Henry Sbnmom. u&d, "He WU re.ally interested In youn, people. It would be nb lf that could be carried Cll\ -the e~t of )"OUnf tonductcn and Youna mUlldana. .. ' l ' ...... , ELEGANT CARS -Jim Thompson of Carmel Valley grins as he listens to the purr oC the engine of his 19 13 Overland Special Speedster u Wlreptloto which he will enter in the 32nd Pebble Beach Concours d'Ele~ance at Pe bble Beach. Begin's threats not empty Israel l eader confounds critics by his actions TEL A VrV, Israel (AP) -The start of the PLO exodus from Beirut is a reminder that Prime M i ni s ter M e nac hem Begin usually does what he promises, however unlikely the pledge may sound when it is made. Two weeks ago, when some critics saw no hope of a solution to the Beirut siege, Begin confide ntly declared: "The terrorists will not stay either in Beirut or in Lebanon. No, sir! Out of the question! Everybody should take note of this." Those who did not take note should have recalled that time and again the peppery prime minister has made what sounded like a grandiose pledge. then confounded his enemies b y carrying it out despite domestic and international outcry. He said he would make the Golan Heights, captured from Syria in the 1967 Middle Eas t war. a part of Israel. Critics said he wouldn't dare. Israel formally a nnexed the territory in December. He said the Arabs would not be permitted to have a nuclear bomb. Critics asked who would stop them. ln June 1981 Israeli warplanes bombed Iraq's nuclear reactor to rubble. 1n April 1981 Begin said Syria must remove its anti-aircraft missiles from Lebanon's Bekaa Valley or Israel would destroy them. In the first week of the Lebanon invasion this summer , Israeli warplanes knocked out the missiles without suffering any losses, a feat many believed im~ible. "There will be no more rockets on Kiryat Shmona.'' he said before last year's election. His c ritics called that an empty campaign promise. The invasion of Lebanon put K.iryat Shmona out of range of Palestinian guns and Begin now is the hero of the northern border town. As the date approached for TOUGH -Israe l Prime Ministe r Menachem Begin's most recen t actions i n Lebanon is an o ther re minder that he usually does what he promises. Israel's fmal w ithdrawal from the Sinai pe n10sula in April, Begin faced formi~ble domestic pressure to retain the territory. Many predicted he would find an e xcuse to back o ut o f hi s commitment to Egypt, but he w e n t t hro ugh w ith the · withdrawal. Analysts h ave pondered the prime minister's character since he came to office in 1977. The simplest ex planation they produce is that Begin is an old- fashioned man of his word, even when that word seems extreme and uncompromising. An eminent Israeli writer who strongl y opposes Begin feels no n eth e less that the pr ime minister thinks more like a legal prosecutor than a man of w ar "A warlike man would have invade d Be irut l o ng ago, regardless of the cost," said the writer, who ch ose to remain anonymous. "But Begin is a lawyer by training and he wpuld mu c h rath e r b e at the Palestinians in court. He feels he has a case and he would like to lay it out for the whole world in a courtroom." Begin is driven by a much deeper force t han his legal training in his native Poland. He lost most of his family in the Nazi Holocaust, and Adolf Hitler is almost an obsession with him. His publi c r e m a rk s c on t ain references to World War II. His m ind translates the war against the Pa l es ti ne Liberation Organization direc tl y i nto H o locaust te rms. PLO chief Yasser Arafat is Hatler, Beirut is Berlin. Begin loves to display his knowledge of history. and finds parallels for nearly everythmg. He let the PLO guerrillas leave Beirut with their weapons, he says. because in the Middle Ages banished knights were allowed to keep their swords. His hectoring 1mpat1ence with critics drives them to responses seldom heard in Israeh politics. Such terms as "d emagogue," "fascist" and "insane" turn up frequently. Here is Prof. Michael Harsegot. a Jett-leaning historian, on Begin: "He is not only old but senile. He is maudlin, a little infanttl e, t al k s gooe y schmaltz ... " But Begin's admirers adore his style. They see the 69-year-old premier as a stern but caring father. Most Israelis love a man who baits the outside world , which they perceive as hostile a nd a nti -Semitic. When Be gin appears in publ ic, someone nearly always starts the chant: "Begin, King of Israel!" He strokes the big stars Rock concert promoter handles power! ul egos SAN BERNARDINO (AP) - What's the hardest · QPrt about putting together the all-star bill for what may be the largest multi-day outdoor rock festival since Woodstock? Deciding who will headline, says Bill Graham, the veteran concert promoter. H e is in charge not o nly o f making those decisions for the $12.5 million US Festival upcoming Labor Day weekend, but of persuading the big name11 -and powerful egos -involved to accept them. And big names are In plentilul supply at the rockfest-computer fair, wh.lch hopes to draw 250,000 people a day on either three-day or one-day tickets. The bill includes such superstars as the B-521. Pat Benatar, Jackson Browne, the Cars, Fleetwood 1 Mac. Tom Petty, the Police and Talking Heads. "Th Is has bee n a major problem," Graham aald , Interviewed In his makeshift ·office, a boilin.I hol construction trailer eet up belund what will be 'the football fletd-alzed atage. Only 2 ~ weeb before the show, It WU •till aeveral pUea of mew rods ahtlng at one end of a , natural amphitheater covered wtth ~7 ~ of recently-eeedecl grua and 10 mllee of lrription 1plflf\I. 'Thi• ahow has many ,supeniara to the extent that on Saturday -Tom Petty, Pat BeNR.ar, the Can. the Klnka -leecll one of thme poupa could play multiple datel at the l'orum In la AnaeMI." IAld Graham. a 1VCY min wtth hue1 ~ and ,blade h.a1r o.ck:ed wttb ~. • "When you have that., you pbyiouely have pwp1 who baYe liound m.n.pment ed eound ,. IMPRESSARIO -Bill Graham, veteran promoter, is handling the US Festival, one of the largest outdoor rock concerts since Woodstock, which will be held Labor 0.y weekend. gu~. and they all uy, 'Blll, )'O'A want ua to play that day - we'll be the headllnon. we'll clOM the ahow' . . . Well. one th1n8 man hasn't 80lved yet la, how do you have Lwo b~da appeartna at lbe MftW ti.me 1l the end of the dayr' How do you tell such huae performen wt Ibey won't clme the lhow1 "You don't.tell them, you Mk them to cooakler 80lll8 90ludon, '' .. Graham replied with a fleeting smile. "On the two or three occasions when we had a seeming stJi}emate, we asked these groups who began to be doubtful to come out and see the site. And when they got o ut here they realized that it was more than another show." It does take a guided tour to realize the enormity of the US Festivel's work at Glen Helen Regional Park north o f San Bernardino. The parking lots alone, leveled by bulldozers, stretch out for acres and acres -as do separate areas to acconunodate up to 100,- 000 camping veh icles. Water fountains dot the camping area -there are no water or power hookups -and surround the amphitheater. Banks of portable toilets are crammed into nooka •carved out of hills . In anticipation of potential heat stroke problems in such a huge crowd there are open~air showers capable of accommodating 500 people at a lime. Water cannona are belng placed at either aide of the atase to hca down the audience. The audio-viaual equipment la abo unparalleled in Its overall magnitude -a very major difference from 1960'1 Woodstock featlval, which Graham attended and which he believes to be the laet similar undertakina In tht. country. The US hstivaJ mund syatem la being powered by 300,000 watts -about thrff dmes u many aa ln the Rollin& Stonea tour -and four relay towers wlll pump up the aound for apeciaton at the fart.he9t comers of the arnpblthMten. • Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/TUHday, Augu1t 2~. 1982 Al' • • Unemployment growing cr1s1s 1 for industrial nations ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Hlah unemployment la a IJ'OWIJ\I problem tOI' the indUltrial nallON that probably wtll pertlat •ftor tho current slobal A!Celllon end.a, the lnternauonal Monetary Fund WU'M. In it.a annual report on the 11t.att: of the world'• economy, the 146-natJon lending organbatJon noted that unemployment In lndUJtrlaJ nations hu been ~ tteadlly aince the 1960s dunna botbgood and b.d economic: times. Therefor e, prospects are growing that unemployment will remain high even if inflation it brought under control, the fund aald In a report releued this week. h blamed the trend on sharp increases in labor caita for employers, a lack of job retraining and relocation programs, the growth of families with two or more wage earners and overly generous unemployment benefits that discourage people from seeking new jobs. The report said unemployment in the industrial countries averaged 8 percent in mid-1982, up from & percent ln llnl~. Ut tho l.ar~t lndUJtrlal dvmocraclee, Bri~ln hu the h11h•t bt .. rate, •t nearly 13 pcn:en\ and J•pan hu t e low•t. 2.4 percent. Acoordlns tu thti most rvc.'t"nl U.S. government tlaurH, unemployment la 9.8 percent in the UnJted States, 10.9 percent ln Canada, 8.8 percent In France, 6 percent In Wett Germany, 4.7 pera!nt in JtaJy and 3.3 percent In Sweden. For many countries, Including the United Stat.es, unemployment Is the highest since at least World War U. The fund said recent rl.9ea In unemployment stem from the current recession much of the world hu fallen Into as a result of tight-credit policies imposed to IOWJ!r Inflation. However. "Unem ployment problems could remain serious even after recovery from the preeent recession," the fund said. ''Unemployment ls Ukely to remain a problem in the future even with lnf}(ltion brought under control, unless measures ha~ been adopted to deal with its fundamental cawiet " It aald. The 1MF tries lo maintain • stable lntomatlonal financial 1ystem through loao1 to '-'<>unttlet with problem. meeting their debt# to private and aovcrnment lendt!ra. Mexico, Cor cxampltt, ii currently tceklng a loan from the tu,nd becauae of aevere financial problem11. The fund obeerved that, with the exception of Japan, unemployment hu been growing In the industrial nations from about 3 percent of the labor force in 1966 to 4 percent In 1973 and 6 percent In 1979. Japan, in contrast, has kept ita unemployment rate below 2.!S percent over the pa.at decade. The fund said it would be a mistake for govemmenta to try to bring down unemployment by turning to former policies of easy-credit, deficit-spending and trade quotas. Instead, the fund suggested, unemployment could be lowered if countries changed unJon work rules and minimum wage laws that keep wages high even when company profits and productivity . ' •• a.re foiling. Thtt fund noted that ln Japan, for .: example. earnlniJ often are paid In the fonn o bonuiw. .. llnked to the profitability of each firm Tht• fund alao said Incentive• to seek jobl ahould be Increased by curbing unemploymen!'>. bcneflt.t, which htave grown in value and in labor , for'--e coverage. With tax rates on earned income alao growing, an Individual may find it makes more , sense economkaUy to stay unemployed, the fund ·, said. , The report said the fight against Inflation by industrial countries is making little progreu at great cost to the world economy, but there la no eaaler or fast.er path toward lasting prosperity. The industrial countries' average Inflation rate rose from 7.9 percent in 1979 to 8.9 percent in t980, ·· then declined to 8.7 pen:-ent last year. ·, "Whatever the cost of preventing another damaging flare-up of inflation, it would be less :' painful than the arduous adjustment process that would almost certainly follow" a surge In inflation, ·• the fund said. ., • • Alaska Eagle donated to Coast College 65-f oot ya cht donation termed 'most prestigious g ift yet r eceive d' By ALMON LOCKABEY Of .... DellJ "'°' ..... that OCC was interested in being placed on the list of possible recipients. "Alex and Mike convinced Bergt that the best possible place for Alaska F.agle would be OCC. This is the only college in the country that offers its student a 47-foot Saudade in 1976 and the 51-foot Scandalous in 1978. "Alaska Eagle represents the most sensationaJ gift to a coUege that I've ever seen," said Grant. "It's a phenomenal sloop that will provide hundreds of local sailors with great opportunities that are would give as much pleasure to others as it had for him. Grant flew to Portsmouth, England, last April for a special dinner party at which Bergt officially announced the donation of the boat to OCC. Orange Coast College has been the recipient of several large yachts but when the 65-foot yacht Alaska Eagle berths at the OCC Sailing and Rowing Base on Pacific Coast Highway it will represent the most prestigious gift yet received by the college. Alaska Eagle recently finished the Whitbread Around the World race out of Portsmouth, England. under the ownership of Neil G. Bergt, chief executive officer of Western Airlines. "It's a phenomenal sloop that will provide hundreds of local sailors with great opportunities." Ala.ska F.agle left Portsmouth June 22 on her voyage to Newport. She made stops in Madeira, Barbados, the Panama Canal, and recently left Acapulco (Aug. 20) on the finaJ leg of the trip. It is expected to arrive in Newport Sept. 4. David Grant, dean of student affairs and the marine academy at the Costa Mesa campus, was largely responsible for obtaining the $1 million yacht for OCC. "A number of months ago I learned that Bergt was interested in donating his yacht to an institution," Grant said. "In fact, the word was out that Alaska Eagle was going to the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md . "Two former OCC students - Alex Bulajich and Mike Farley -were sailing for Bergt in the Aroun d the World race, so I cont.acted them and explained full gamut of sailing experiences, from beginning sailing to ocean experiences to piloting and weather classes." The 55,500-ton vessel was custom designed five years ago by the New York naval architect firm of Sparkman and Stephens. It was built specifically for t he Whitbread Around the World race and was the first American yacht ever entered in the race. It is the fourth largest yacht to be donated to OCC in the past seven years. Ernest Kanzler donated the 60-foot 10 Meter Sally in 1975; William Pascoe ill presented the college with the "' wnphoto CELEBRATION -Christian militiamen open a bottle of champagne outside the home of President-elect Bashir Gemayel after he won the parliamentary election in Lebanon. Gemayel is the leader of the Christian militiamen. Begonia Show learn from the grower s dur ing the Begonia Society's annual show I sale at Hunting ton Center th is Sat .I Sun. Hundred s of beautiful & unusual plants on sale. Storr Taller ' Old Mother Hubbard comes to Huntington Center mall to tell fairy tale6 and nursety rhymes to the youngeter8 Aug. 27 thru 29-Frl. at 1 & 3, Sat. at 12:30-2:00-3:·30 and 'Sun. at 1 & 2:30. AN OPPORTUNITY TO DEVELOP A BETTER YOU unavailable anywhere else." Urant said the vessel will be used in the school's big boat sailing and navigationaJ classes, primarily on weekends. "She'll be a part ot our Adventures Under Sail program," he said. Adventures Under Sail allows students to sail to other Southern California ports and coves. It includes a variety of big boat experiences such as steering, heads'I changing, reefering and seamanship. The progr am consists of four successive Saturday or Sunday cruises. Bergt said he wanted Alaska F.agle to be in a situation where it An international· crew is bringing Alaska Eagle to Newport. The crew includes three Dutch sailors, one Englishman, a New Zealander and three Americans. Also on board is Richard Crowe, a marine maintenance director for OCC's sailing and rowing base. "W e'll have a welcoming committee when Alaska Eagle arrives," said Grant. "We'll send Saudade and Scandalous out of the harbor to greet her, and I'm sure there will be a couple of Harbor Department fire boats on hand. We'll escort her into the harbor and up to her berth at the dock." BIG GIFT -The Alaska Eagle, a 65-Coot racing yacht , has been donated to Orange Coast College by Western Airlines chief executive officer Neil G . Bergt. 'So .. many friends and neighbors killed' Palestinian guerrilla Forced to l ea ve his home land in Beirut BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Ali Taha was born and bred in the concre te-block bleakn ess o f a Palestinian shantytown, a child of refugees who grew up to be a PLO figher but who also loved the Mediterranean sunsets as much as other native Beirutis. "It's over now ," the 19-year-old Palestine Liberation Organization guerrilla said Monday, waiting for the calJ to join comrades boarding boats that will scatter them throughout the Arab world. Around his neck hung a siJver pendant in the shape of Palestine, the land his father fled when the state of Isr ael was fonned in 1948. On his lips are slogans of the PLO. But Lebanon is the only home he has known, and he ls tom as he leaves it. "I will miss my parents and friends," he told a reporter. "I wiU miss the country, too. I was born in it and lived in it. And I fought in it from the south to Beirut." Taha's Bourj el-Barajneh in stationed at Beaufort Castle, a south Beirut, have been flattened clifC-top crusader fortress in by Israeli air bombardments. southernmost Lebanon that had "My parents' house is like lof\R been a PLO stronghold. thls," he said, thrusting the palm of his hand down. The Israelis stormed the castle His mother, father and five on midnight June 6. Taha said he brothers and sisters were not a nd his m en pulled back and injured and want to remain in began a long retreat north. the camp although it is rwned, he finally taking a stand in the said. Three other brothers also Beirut district of Hay el-SeUum, are guerrillas, and he heard a near Bourj el-Barajneh. rumor one was taken prisoner by "One hundred and fifty of us the Israelis. were trapped in Hay el-Sellwn," "So many friends, so many he said. "Then one of my friends neighbors have been killed," he strapped explosives around said. "I cannot count them." himself and went out there and The young Palestinian, sipping blew up two lsraeli tanks and a soft drink and speaking himself." through a Lebanese interpret.er, The rest of the guerrillas was interviewed in the cool escaped, he said. shade of a hot.el patio in besieged. chaotic west Beirut. Surrounding Taha said he is proud of has streets and intersections were comrades. He said three of his blocked by flimsy barricades and squad were killed in the 10 burned out automobile hulks. weeks of fighting. PLO teen-agers roamed, firing "We learned a lot in this war rifles into the air in rhythmic _who were the cowards and the bu r sts of defiance and resignation. traitors. those who would fight The PLO is leaving because 1t decided i t did not want the civilian population to live in danger any longer. he said. . .. , . Once his unit arrives in Tunisia, its final destination, at • will undertake new trjlining and-.. stage attacks against Israel and especially agains t Palestinian 1~ Arabs who coop e rate with I srael i s in the occupied territories. he said. -,,. The vision of Palestine, of "the • return," is a powerful one for Taha, who said his father left the vilJage of Kabri, in what is now northern Israel, when the Jewish state was formed 34 years ago. "My father says we have land ·~ there, houses and fruit orchards,"·· · Taha said. The guerrilla also knows his ancestral village from photographs published by a PLO newspaper. he said. .•. •.\• Campaign funds .. -. Taha, tall, lean and dark, his face stubbled with beard, is one of about 11,000 Palestinian fighters who must leave this war-ru ined city in coming days, squeezed out by the Israeli army. Many young Palestinians a.re like Taha, products of refugee camps that mushroomed around Lebanon's cities. and those who would not.'' he Despite his youth, Taha has d SAN F R NCISCO (AP • the demeanor of a tough, saiL:k h. 1 d y C A ) -· .. ( experienced fighter. He said he 1 e is ea er, asser Ara at, Money collected by "friends Taha says the PLO withdrawal committees" on behalf of several• ~ joined Fatah , the PLO's main from Beirut is not a defeat but a elected San Franciaco officials for '·· guerrilla group, at age 13 and triumph. use at official functions are received training in Syria, F.gypt campaign funds ineligible for ' and East ~rmany, eventually "We don't have an air force or penional uae, Attorney General becoming a member of a 15-man heavy weapons," he said. "But , aquad. When the Israella invaded despite this we have stayed and George Deukmejian said in an ' Several camps, including Leban on J u ne 6 , h_e~w~~as~ihiei~~o~u~t~a~g~~~·~t~t~h~e~Is~~ra~e~~~:·~~~o~~~·~o~n~.~~~~~~~~~~:~ • r t' l•l ..... NOTICE DISSOLUTIOI OF PlllTIERSHIP PUBLIC AUCTION Ordered by the Attorney for Globe International H•ndmede P•r•l•n •nd Orlental Auge ·We have been commluloned to llquldate the entire Inventory plus others for Immediate calh. Aa per lnetructlona ALL BIDS· WILL OPEN AT .21• on the doHer, and Iota wHI be aold from the next bid on. RUGS FROM: China. Pertla. Afghanl1tan, lnctla, Turkey, Paki.tan, Romanla, Egypt, and Iran. Size• rang• from 2 'x3' to 18'x12'. AUCTION WILL TAK! PLACI ON Tu11dar, A•uet M, et • P.M. I ) HOLIDAY, INN 21ao1LAPAZRD. LAGUNAHLLI f ·~-~- Get a READY EQUITr Credit Line and write a check tor up to •100,000. You can Initiate a toan for up to $100,000 simply by writing n check If you have a Ready Eq_uity. credit Nne. use the equity In your home to establish the credit Nn~, end then you don't have to worry about approvals or processing w hen you need the money Write a check and you have Instant cash. CALL (714) 644·1634 ' Orange Coul OAILY PILOT 1Tuud1y, Auguat 24, 1992 Onofre safety debate valid concerns • raises lt mu st huve come as unwelcom e news to many south Orange County residents that Unit 1 of the San Onofre nuclear power plant was in the bottom 10 among nuclear plants for its safety record. The federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission ranked the nation's 74 operating nuclear plants, basing the ratings on both the number and s eve rity o! mishaps durmg 198 l Four ''events" at Onofre, south of San Clemente, were cited as "especially s ignificant," lncluding a cooling system malfunction and a nitrogen tank fire. Grinding th1r own particular axes, Critical Mass Energy Project, a Ralph Nader-associated anti- nuclear group which leaked the NRC study, said the report proves its contention that atomic power is unsafe and unreliable. while Southern California Edison, co- operator of On ofre, says the report was too narrowly based to judge the overall safety of its facilities. Whether th e NRC report is solid evidence for e ither position is difficult to say. The report's significance to Orange Coast residents is that the safety of these complex plantS 1s once a~ain in tht· public spotlight. Nut'lear power plants are exotic, highly intricate facilities in which nagging and uoforcsecn problems have contin u ally cropped up, despite the good (and not so good) efforts o( engineers and government regulators to ensure their safety. As one NRC analyst put at: "Clearly, if you build more and more complex mac hines, it's obvious you're increasing the odds of a serious mishap." The NRC report and the ensuing controversy don't mean Onofre's Unit 1 should be closed. It does sJgnify that once atomic power plants are licensed to begin operations, regulators and utilities must watch these facilities closely througho ut their service lives, ordering safety-related ch anges as new information warrants. (Along that line, Unit I has been shut off since February Cur seismic safety improvements ordered by the NRC.) · Until a safe, clean, relative ly abundant energy source is found as the answer to our civilization's energy proble m s and Cission power can be phased out, public safety requires this. Judging the judges The question at times is raised as to who guards the guards and who judges the judges. As for the latter, Superior Court Judge Ronald Owen of Orange County s te pped into a ticklish situation last week and handE!d down a Solomon-like ruling on who can run for a judicial post. · He ruled that no additional candidates s hould be allowed to run for W est Orange County Municipal Judge Joanne Harrold's seat in Nov ember . H e had invalidated h er June e lection landslide because he determined sh e w as n ot a legal resident of the county when filing candidacy papers. (Judge Harrold has appealed). His new ruling makes sense. The defeated c ha llengers, Dan Charles Dutcher and Ronald Nix. should be allowed to let voters d ecide which is the bes t qualified. They spent the time and money to run a gainst Judge Harrold and for this alone deserve thanks for the ir public interest. Now thar her e lection has been invalidated, the choice should be between only the two. Irvine reside nt Paul Robbins, a Long Beach city prosecutor, wants to enter the field but the judge said he intervened too late . Robbins' attorney argued that the public should have the largest number of available candjdates. If that were the case, why didn't Robbins enter the first race? And would he limit the additional field just to himself? "I think the court fashioned the fairest remedy that ll could," said Kenneth Golden, an attorney representing Dutcher. We agree. On to the special election in November. Worthy effort backfires Falling between two executive orders from the White House, the Social Security Admini stration office an Alexandria. Louisiana. now finds itself paying triple re nt for office s pace just nine blocks from its former location. The order, handed down by the Carter administration, had the worthy goal of helping to revitalize downtown areas by encouraging federal agencies to locate in "centralized community business areas." The Social Security office in question had been leasing 8 ,358 square feet of space at $3.55 a square foot, or $29,760 a year, just outside downtown Alexandria. When the lease expired, the building's owners offe red to meet the agency's need for additional • space b y leasing 10,000 square feet at the increased rate of $5.50 a square foot. This seemed reasonable, but the location didn't quite jibe with the executive order, so the agency shopped around for something in the downtown area and found it, just nine blocks away. The catch is that the lease for 10.000 square feet in the new location costs $9.90 a square foot. or $102,000 a year That's the first catch. The second i s that the Reagan administration now has suspended the o rder requiring federal agencies to help redevelopment by locating in downtown areas. But the Alexandria Social Security office is stuck with its inflated lease. And you know who pays for that. Too bad Opinions expressed in the spate abOve are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex- pressed on this page a re I hose of their authors and artists Reader comment is inv1t· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa,..CA n626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . , L.M. Boyd/Proper jobs In lta naivete, our Proper Job Club anemberahip committee is considering ! correspondent's nomination of a plumber in Liverpool, England, said to be named Luke Warm. Don't know, Clyde, am going to have to check out aource. lt also aver. Bethlee • ii a tour guide in the floly and Pearl E. Schell worla for an tyat.er company in Tokyo. You can be weat of Detroit ln f.lorlda, In the Carolinas, and In r trp\la, d)o. j Numerous writings credit one ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat architect or another with the designing of the Cabuloua Taj Mahal, but scholars now say nobody really knows who built it, Q. What's the retirement age m the Soviet Union? A. Men. 60. Women, 55. When you look at the face of a full moon, you do not 9ee as much area aa the total surface of the Soviet Onion. The Chinese wrl\e their word for "good" by combining the ideograms for "woman .. and "chUd." Thomen P. Haley Publ1thet Themaa A. Murphlne tdilOf Jene Amari htc11hv• f dl!Ot ..,...,. ICtelWch (4"QI IOI 'OOt fdllor The""" McCenn Monoo.ng Id.lot • © ' --D~ARMAMlNT ANSWERS: ( 1VRN i¥6E mlDE MtlN) SJMQLVWHlf ©~~H G) Americans aren't DETROIT -There is a "Walter P. Reuther Freeway" in this city that is now mourning the latest burst of statistics charting the decline of the Amj!rican automobile industry. The highway is a tribute lO the late leader of the United Auto Workers, a man the establishment of the industry and the city once literally tried to kill. Or, perhaps, the road is really a celebration of the struggle of American labor and the quality of lives of union members, white and black, who made the cars. bought homes and sent thelJ' children to colleges and universities. The children of th06e men and women then became executives of the auto oomparues or what.ever else they could become in the United Stat.es. IN OPPAMA, on the south shore of Tokyo Bay, there is also a monument to labor outside an automobile plant. The plant belongs to Nis sa n , the manufacturer of Datsuns and one of the Japanese automakei:s now doing so well around the world. The stone sculpture there features two carved bluebirds and the words of a fonner president of the Nissan labor union: "It is necessary to insist on one's rights. and it is splendid to fight for that purpose. But the 'bluebird' o( happiness does not alight In the swamps of spite where the stonns of struggle rage .... Mutual trust between Labor and management IS the wellspring and the pride of Nissan." There is no monument there to Sadamitsu Ada. H e was a union member, trusting the company, who impressed management last year with a small "productivity suggestion." His Idea was to put a ''Danger" sign at a sensitive spot on a huge drop-lifting machine that moved auto bodies from one assembly line to another. Ada was crushed to death by the machine as he tried to put up the sign. The Japanese, you see, usually don't s hut down machines for routine __ r;, RICHARD RllVIS 1 'i-. maintenance and repair. Shutdowns would slow down production. And production is high at Oppama. In fact, vehicle output has been increased 25 percent in the pa.st five years - without adding a single employee! The "Nissan men,'' as the company calls them, now also continue working through break periods and after their shift has ended. Those who don't, according t.o a report in the current issue of Mother Jones magazine, are often disciplined. sometimes by the union rather than by management. "Shioji,'' said Nissan chairman Katsuji Kawamata of lchiro Shioji. head of the auto workers union, "Shioji is a man · who conceives of things primarily from the perspective of management." He should. The motto of the Nissan labor union is: "Those who truly love their union, Jove their company. Wage increases shall denve from increasing productivity." The article in Molher Jones, written by John Junkerman, the economics editor of the Encyclopedia of Japan. Japanese attempts to catalog working conditions and labor-management arrangemen ts that ar e s hocking, at least by the standards of a le ft-wing American magazine. By any standard, however, those conditions and arrangements go far toward ex plaining how Japanese management produces cars at least as good as American cars for about S9 per man-hour less. BUT THE IMPORTANT reporting does no t concern the many private complaints of cowed Nissan workers What the piece does is show that American productivity problems are not going to be solved by foreign methods or best-selling books about the managerial arts of Japan. The Japanese secret is not so secret: Management can pay workers less and is still able to force them to work. under conditjons that would inspire most Americans to call a cop or a union meeting. We built monuments to men like Walter Reuther because of what they did for so many of us. He was one of the people who defined what the rights of Americans are, including the right to openly, legally struggle for control over the use of each American's labor. No doubt we can learn from the Japanese -and from oth er peoples who originally learned much about production from us -but there is no point in learning to be Japanese. They are only now beginning t.o learn lessons about the dignity of labor that Americans began learning 50 years ago, when men like Reuther were being beaten down by the American auto companies' private police forces. Letters to the editor Media portrayal was misleading To the F.dit.or: The Seal Beach anti-nuclear vigil c:ommemorating the anniversary of the Nagasaki bombing was my first public rally of any kind. After educating myself on the dangers and threat of nuclear power and anns, public action was the next logical step. I was hall expecting to be the square in a mob of hippie radicals left over from the 1960s. The photo that appeared on Page l of the Daily Pilot Aug. 10 complete with caption epitomized my expectations of the no nuke crowd. I did not find anyone c.alled No Guns simply from planet earth. I DID however join a group of people just like you and me. The crowd was made up of typical Orange County residents, suburban housewives, children, dads in Nik.es and seniors in polyester, the college student.a, college graduates, educators, clergy, punks and puppies and yes, even some eccentric hippie types. If you took away their candles and put up a marquee, the'line of concerned neighbors and friends could have easily been mistaken for a crowd waiting to see E.T. The group was a very crom section of Orange County life just like the folks in the store. When I saw the photo i.n the Daily Pilot the next afternoon, I was angered and I realized that my unrealistic expectation of the no nukes crowd had in part been formed by the media portrayal of this group. Thia la cert.ain,17 proof of the manipulative power o lhe medla. But why don't they use that power to avbid at.ere<>type9 and portrayal of a reaJlstlc picture for • change? C MlLLER Elect commission To lhe Edit.or: After l"eadlng recent articles on the propoeed Orange County t:ran.alt we, I'm left With the lmPl.""'lon th.at the leaden of the Bualneta C.oalitlon -Mean. J . Robert Fluor, Walt.er Oerkt!n and Peter Kremer -have the pow•ra ot feudf.1 barona when it come1 to Important lealalatlon. I'm aure that waan't the Intention In the •rtlcles, but nevert.hele1e, the U'l\pllcatlon la there. rm aure none of theee ,entlemeo would rellab IUCb an appelUtlcn. Howwwr, the la•l.-nted bW and MAILBOX its mt.eresti.ng sponsorship do raise some Important questions. The expected $150 million to be doled out annually should the bill eventually become law would be sufficient to significantly improve our current transportation chaos, but the real question comes down to "who shall administer this windfall?" IF l UNDERSTAND correctly. a majority of the membership of the Orange County Transportation Comm1ss1on and the Orange County District are ex-officio, that is, supervisors or city council members. Assemblyman Richard Robinson's bill would not change that fundamental fact. ls there some overriding reason why all this power should reside in the same individuals? ls there some reason why Orange County should not have an elected transportation commission? Our business leaders. including the men mentioned In the articles, have a sincere desire for better transportation, as do our elected officials. But we deserve the full attention of our tran sportation commission, not just someone making a quick change of hats. Perhaps Asaemblyman Robinson should attempt a bill more sweeping in its provisions -even if the power structure disagrees! JOSEPH A . STRAPAC More sm ears due? To the Editor. It ls ominou. news that the effon to recall California Supreme Court Chief Justice Role B'1d will be handled by ~ direct·maO upet1a from Butcher-Forde. Can we now expect another allck. computerised dlrect·m•ll ame•r campaipT Of courH, the c rucifixion of oompMlion81e peol))e II not new -It oocurred a1moll 2,000 y.en •· Sociel)' ~ yet make a martyr out of Re. IMrit for her comp.-on. but no ~ faulu her lntelllaence, dedication, bard work ~ kn owled1e of tbe law -ju1t the qualltlea we rwed ln • JL-tice. But maybe tht people want a = ~~=-~oo~'::~t~ be • IOn'Y --of affalrt: not~=-°'-;:=~ our s-t whlft the dletb pmel'Y ..,., ln wcue. and not tn the ~t -wim.. the PLO versus Israel and the IRA versus England. Homo sapicns should be advancing, not regressing. JAN B. VANDERSLOOT Consumer of I ice To the F.ditor: This is in response to those who protested the Orange County Board of Supervisors vote to eliminate the Office of Consumer Affairs. I am a consumer and a taxpayer who is proud of Supervisors Bruce Nestande, Roger Stant.on and Harriett Wieder for eliminating a department that should not be a function of government. If the protesters are so altruistic, why don't they put up the money instead of forcing me to pay (through taxes) to solve their problems? In the Office or Consumer Affairs is vital. maybe th~y should consider starting a private company t.o do the same thing. Our country is in its present economic mess because so many want government (the taxpayer) to solve their every problem . History tells u s government causes, not solves problems. DAVID R. HIRSCHLER A catastrophe To the Editor: One of the saddest and most catasirophk: events occurred on AlJi. 9, 1974. wtth the forced resignation of the free world's greatest benefactor, Preddent Richard Nixon. It opened the Clood gates to the expansion of global communiam, while eliCtlnguishing the flame of hope of millions of oppreseed people. SUSAN SPREEN lllllYlll Now that the World Barut hu found the U.S. in ninth pt.ce in world per capi\& GNP will they htnd ua 110me of OW' money beck at the low ln\etelt nate they che.rp~naUonl? 0--!. 4 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, Augu1t 24, 1982 •ANN LANDERS •ART HOPPE •ERMA BOMBECK Hurt, disillusionment reduced widow's grief DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your anawer to "Weesi'na Widow," who found love letten from another woman and lift receipta when her hu.be.nd died suddenly, could have been better. Why didn't you atve her the ume advtoe you give to women wtM. Uvina buabandt cheat? I am referring to that famout Ann Landen queatlon: "~k youneU, would you be better off with him or without him7" I. too1 found out aft.er my husband'• deeth that he bad been foo~around for years, but I dJdn't wa.te any t1me about lt. Instead, I aaw the positive aspect.a o the tituation. Everyone knows that widowhood la much more acceptable, IOCially and finandally advantageoua. U I had learned of my husband's affair when he was alive, I could not have accepted It. He would have been dead to me in either cue. Another plus worth mentioning: The hurt and disillusionment helped reduce the grief, and enabled me to get on with my life promptly. l'm = m)"lelf -WEPT, TCX>, BUT NOT FOR DE AR NOT FOR LONG: I am filled wllb a d.mlratloa for people wbo, wlMD We lwMla tb11m a lemoa, make Jem .... e. Go to tile llead of tile cla11. AIMI dlaUJ for 1ov cu4or. It Wb refrnlt1D1. DEAR ANN LANDERS: "Where did you go?" "Who did you aee?" "What did you dor· "Did be kim you?" "Did he try anythina ebe?" "What did you-do after the ahow?" "Did you go to hia house?" "Wu anyone at home?" "Did he try to callc you into anything?" "Did he try to get you to drink alcohol?" "How come your clothes were ao wrinkled?'' Thoee are just a few of the UUng. I get as"ed by my mom when I come home from a date. 1f 1 told you IOlne of the other quertiont, you would die laugtuna. I am 1~ and jult •tarted to go with IUYI th1a year. My problem U. very plain to iiee. My mom doesn't truat me. What can I do about It? -NCYr GtiaTY OF ANYTHING IN HOUSTON DEAi\ NOT GUILTY: Tna1& mHt be earaed. U yoa stay Mt of places yo1 aru•c 11ppoaed to be ta. set bome WlleD 10I alaoald H d bellave lD a rHpo11lble way -ahH)'• tratbfal aacl above- board -yoar moGer wW be more relaxed aboat wbere ro1 weat, wlao yoa 1aw, wbat yo1 did -ud 10 01. Try lt. It works. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 22-year-old woman, contldered attractive, with no trouble getting dates. The problem: I am just not a talker when there are more than two people preeent and I , ANN lAllDllS feel ltUplct in a group. Any advice? -BL UE-EYED SAL IN SANTA FE I DEAR SAL; U1te1ers are aoatbt after more titan talkera-Aad after awblle, tiey may even learn aometblD1. Doa't knock lt. Ann LAnders sho~ you how to p/JJy it cooJ without freezing people out in her bookle t, 'Teen~ge Sex -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50 c:enta and a Jong, se1J-11ddressed, st.amped envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. BoK 1199,, Chicago, ID. 60611; Vacation fun's in the planning POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT EVERYTHING Nothing's more fun than planning a vacati<-n. My dear wife, Glynda, and I have been at It since laat January. We're doing France this year and we're doing it up brown. Glynda has even been taking a French class and says she thinks she can now handle the language "trea bon." And after poring over guidebooks for weeks. she's picked out 19 "tres bon" hotels to stay at and 37 "tres bon" restaurants to eat in, too. Originally, I'd suggested doing a barge tour of the French canala. But Glynda reminded me she waa prone to "mal de mer" and we compromised on a tour of the country by "l'automobile." I GUESS THE MOST FUN was planning the route. One challenge was that the car rental agency we had finally chosen -The Mini-Prix Agence d'Auto de Fe -offered a 10-franc discount on two tickets to the Fete d' Anciens Poisaons in the quaint community of Vallee de la Pommes de Terre Froid, where the jovial villagers dress up annually aa 14th century Swias monks and play their llederhoaen while parading on goatback to commemorate the bankruptcy in 1373 of Count Rene the Rotten . .And I certainly didn't want to miss tha~. "l jamais heard of Rene the Rotten," said Glynda in mild protest. "That's what they mean when they say travel Is broadening," I said, giving her a happy kiss. The Fete is to be held on Thursday this year, • HOIOSCOPI BY SIDNEY OMARA Wedaeactay. A•p•t %5 ARIES (March 21-Apr il 19): Financial restrictions may be removed. You'll feel ~.more creative and loving. Leo, Aquarius and another Arlea play significant roles. Keep guard up for hidden clauses. Contract requires additional re\>iew. TA UR US (April 20-May 20): New approach necemary -individual who would be your partner may not meet requirements. Respect your own needs, maintain self-esteem and don't get bogged down with one who constantly complains. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Follow through on first impressions. Learn by teaching. Complete basic tasks. Check calendar for medical-dental appointments. You'll regain aenae of direction - and your composure. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius penons figure prominently. CANCER (June 2l ~July 22): Young person provides pleasure and knowledge . .Diversify, find time for recreation and show that you have retained aeme of humor. Gemini. Sagittariua natives play important roles. Pet may require visit to veterinarian. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Restrictions, delays may actually prove a boon -you'll have time to correct errors. You now will reinforce position, improve security. Aquarius, Scorpio and another Leo figure prominently. What aeema a cloeed issue will be reopened. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ideas, changes, comments from relatives dominate aoenarlo. You receive written notice. Member of the opposite aex becomes valuable ally. Focus abo on tripa. calla and map decisions. Gemini, Sagittariua and another Virgo figure prominently. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You reach 1at11factory compromise with famlly member conceming budget, financial plans. Surpriee gift is featured. You locate item that had been among the miaeing. Taurus. Scorpio and another Libra play Import.ant rolea. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Individual who attempU to mlliCU1de you falls abort. Your own cycle ii high. you take advantage of ci.rcumstancel and your t1m1ng ia Impeccable. You pin behind- acenea gllmpae, motives are dl1cerned and lc:nowledae repbaa speculation. SAOITl'AJUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You•re atven added reaponalbllity and chance for in creued compensation. Focua on production, intenaified relatlonahie and arranaemen ta for cland•Une meeUn1. Cancer. Capricorn peraona fl1ure prominently. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22....Jan. l9): Wlah cmDel true, clel'nl _.. fuJfmed md umw •) bwdln la removed. You appeal to mon peoplie, ftnanda1 picture beeomH brtib&er allCf you'll receive Invitation'° UD\.-..1.odal atf*. AQUAlUUS (Jan. 20.Peb. 18): You p1n added indeplmdence, pranodon 1n ott1na and ...-u,e .. l1lln&-You'll m.lat MW .tart md b8ve chance to Imprint your own style, policy. roew on care.-..S puUctpadon In community project. PllCD (l'eb. 19-Marcb 20): Good l\mal' Ill*' caQCQj~IDl::ta:•::E:.=~~~~~ ... cornet -toOow tJuou&h, ~ break from rou1lne s-u.m. AIT HOPPE THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER which would mean a long drive from the famed Talking Waters of the Pont du Gerbils, which only talk from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wedneedays. But Glynda wu determined to include the Talking Waters. "U they don't talk too rapidement," she said, "l think I'll be able to tranalate." Of courae, w e've had a few littl e 'arguments, such as whether you should take one umbrella or two raincoats to Europe this time of year. (We still haven't aettled that.) And I have yet to understand why anyone with two feet would need five pain of &hoes. BUT MOST DISPUTES have been quickly resolved in the aura of good cheer that unbues vacation planning. For example, I wanted to schedule the Conoonie for the trip ove.r and reeerve a table at the Tour d' Argent in Paris. Hang the expeme! But .Glynda, who's more thrifty than I, noted that we wouldn't have time for a meal and a movie on the Concorde. And she'd found a little "tres bon" Paris restaurant, the Coquille Saint Jacquea dans la Bolte, that features chien chaud avec mout.a.rd. Although I don't care much for exotic food, I generously gave in rather than spoil her joyful anticipation. Similarly, when I suggested a 120-kilometer side trip to see the very spot (commemorated by a bronze plaque) where Belinda, the third daughter of Henri the Hun was reportedly aeduoed by a bear (circa 737 A.O.), now a parking lot, Glynda quickly agreed. "Pourquoi not?" she said, knowing' my interest in antiqulties. So It's been great fun and I think the experience has cemented our marriage even more finnly. AB Glynda said last night, "C'est the tres bon-est vacation we've ever planned!" "I'M ACfUALL Y SAD the planning's over and it's time to go." I agreed as 1 headed down to the garage to strap the sleeping bags on the roof of the car. For, needless to say, we're not going anywhere near France. A trip like that would coat at least three grand. AB always, we're going up to that $175-a-week cabin we rent at Lake Byde-a-Wile. And we're taking two wnbrellaa and two raincoats because it always pours. But next year, we've already decided, we're going to plan a yachting tour of the Greek Islands. Doesn't that sound like fun? THAT'S E VER HAPPEN E D tel ... , ... ' l'4 l>o•t f• I •IW \S BURIE D SOM EWHE f~C:. THE /} P!-S:, JJ \ ) IN B u r N O r EvE~YTH1 Nc, ·s WORTH DIGGING ur AGA IN . flMA IOMlfCI AT WIT'S END Style trend • a giveaway His shelter taxing I love gray. It's a hangover from my college days when I did a month's laundry in one load. (Sometimes when 1 sat on my bed to dress, I blended so well I had to smile so people would know I was there.) SAN FRANCISCO -It's a year to pull down the yiaor. Adjust the shield. Level the lance. After putting a kilo into Mexican pesos, I invested in avocados. It was for a tax loss, said the man who sold it to me. I said: "You mean the government pays you to lose money on avocados?" Well, it's not that simple. Fact, nobody has been able to make me see what losing money does for you. I said: "fve been on easy come, easy go all my life. I can't see th.at it's done a bleMed thing for Ille." But he assured me avocados w ere the greatest thing since Carter's Little Liver Pills. I said: "OK. Go for broke." I read the financial pages and at Wash. Sq. lWK:hes I said: "rm getting a broad base on my portfolio." I said: "We are doing quite well. Seasonally adjusted, that la." You don't get that kind of chatter reading the comic strips. THE REBELLION OF THE opposite sex seems to have subsided except for a few acattered showers. ("I can't find my car keys," she wailed. "Did you take them?" "Who, me?'' I said. "Yes, you!" she said.) .-- Why the Opposite Sex I wonder? Everybody's opposite something, right? What has happened to NOW now? Whatever happened to Gloria Steinem' Women used to write me angry letters: "It is male chauvinists like you who have enslaved women, etc." l uaed to answer softly (which tumeth away wrath): ''Take off the ahackies. k.ida, and come on in. The water's fine." But the9e days the phone is silent. The mail box empty. The slaves are free. Glory hallelujah.! I read somewhere that avocados turn you on like catnip. It's a rumor I'd like to get around. Avocados haven't been doing so well. Reason Is there are too blaated many of them. The investment man said: "EVERYBOJ?Y got ' ·~.· ~ , _, .. 0 \ ~, STAii DfUPl.Allf ~. ARO UNO lHE WORLD the idea to use avocados for tax shelter last year." California was bursting with avocados. Also a great part of America doesn't LIKE avocad os. That hadn't occurred to me. I eat avocados. You eat avocados. Many people mash them into guacamole. Dip corn chips in it. People eat avocados in California and in New York. For 3000 miles between, you couldn't sell avocados at pistol point. A lady visiting from the Midwest tasted one and said: ''Ugh! It tastes like soap." IT HAD BEEN MY THOUGHT to push the sexy effect of avocados. The women's freedom people would become infuriated. Objecting to being sex objects. they resent it if men beef up the libido. Their outcries of rage would inspire women who write to the lovelorn columns: "l thought marriage wu all firecrackers. Mine has turned into a safe and sane Fourth of July. Even the sparklers don't fizz." They would stuff their mates with avocados. Gents who had been taking Vitamin E would throw out the pills. Mash up guacamole. 1 couldn't get it moving. The objectives have ceased objecting. The avocado man phoned and he said: "Don't worry. Remember, everytime you lose a dollar, the government loses one too." I said: "I don't think Reagan will like that. I don't like it e ithe r. Especially the part about MY dollar." Anyway, it seems we aren't really in avocadcs. We're just letting them grow on our land until we build condominiums. It's a Suoceas Story, give or take a little. GOREN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Both vulaerab de1l1. Opening lead: Jack of o. About six years ago, I picked up a magazine tluat had a fashion horoscope in it. Now I don't usually put too much stock in natal signs because everyone el9e gets the neat ones. Soorpioe always get the "Flutter kicks in your pool will change ~our life," and the Aquarius people are told, "Shop now for pearls that will enhance your naturally sensuous looks." Mine said. "Extra sleep is beneficial. Prop up your feet whenever you can. Invest in something gray. You will be years ahead of your time." 11 I had known how many years ahead of my time I would be, rd never have invested $154 in a gray wool suit quite that early. So forget that I couldn't find a pair of shoes to match it or a purse or hose or scarf. Just forget that wherever I wore it, someone said. "That's gray, isn't it? I wish It would come back." The point is, that gray suit hung in my cloeet for six solid years and generated all the excitement of a pregnant moth in a fur storage. Every year when I had my hair cut., I'd thumb ·through the high-fashion magazines to see if this was the year of MY suit. Oh, occasionally 1 saw gray coveralls being worn by an Orkin Man spraying b~ on television or a gray fur coat for $9,000, but a gray fashion glut never happened. Until thia year. I walked throllgh a shopping center the other day and every window was splashed with gray. Gray sults, gray shoes, gray accessories, gray coats. Of'ay d.rel8e9. Gray slacks. Gray blouses. EVERY FASHION HOROSCOPE is touting gray u the color whose time has come. Little children are wearing it with white starched collars. .Airline attendants are switching to gray. Cars, furniture and 60l'le990ries are gray. Thia fall, you will not be able to walk down the street without a gray pel'90ll crossing your path. Gray dOQI will become chic_ Gray hair will be in. Gray T"I' and gray akies will prevail. Trust me. This ia gray'a year. You want to know how I know? Four weeks ago, I gave my gray suit to the Salvation Army. NORTH +Ata 0 .4112 oau •&Qt WEST £.48T It seems invidiou1 t.o com· plain that your hand 11 too food. But that wls the lrou· ble with the ~orth·South holdlni on thl1 rubber bridge hand we klblbed. and nine• are given no value to the point count.. However, their presence can enormous- ly Increase the lrick·taldng po11ibJlilies or a boldlng. Kere, however. th. spot.a In cJuba were nothinf but a problem. On the actual holding. let's anume ll\lt declu .. r win1 the ace of diamond•. drawa trumpe In three rodftds end- lnr iii his hand a_nd lead• 1 club to dumm1'• qu .. n. If Eu1. wfM the ace, •l&Hr mu.tt rnab hb •Jul. Ha wru retun to h!. laud and fiOMR dummf'• nlM of dubl, aa· sumlns West rollowa with a lo• club. gels home if he fineHH the nine. With nothing to guide him. declarer is even money to go wrong. R•bber ltrld1• ca ... , ...,....._, .... ~ .. O.r.r-4.U ......... ......... •U + 1075 <::>Qtt• o nu o Jltl14 ~H •JU •AIU SOUTH • ICQJl4 <::>ltt O AQI ..... Tlat~las; Ntrtll lut 8_. WMt INT p.,. I • P.- 4 • .... 5 0 ..... t •PMI Pue Paa. ., Despite hl1 balan~ hand, North correctly ralted to rour 1pades becauae hlt hud. with lt.t wealth of prime con trol1. waa tuft orient.ct. Once hla partner made a alam try, North fell that thoae controls ju1llfled 1 jump to alam. Weit led the top of hlt broken diamond nqu.nce. When dummy came down. It waa obvious that declarer would have lo 1vold two club IOMn to make hla si.m. Ten.a For Instance, let'• H · chanre dummy'• DIM of cluba for any spokard held by the opponent.I. Now thtN la only one play tor twelve trlck1. Declarer sl111pl7 hu t.o led cluba lwiee from hJa hind toward• dumm1. play· inr an honor tr-om &he table each Ume unltH the act ap- pear• rrom w .. t. He mat.a hit alam if w .. t holda the IC9, but pu down lf that card 11 with Eul ( Therefore, E11t 1hould smoothly dlow the queen of club• to win. 8tran1el7 eDOQJh, thae.. doublea declar- er'• proble,... He can return to hl1 hand and lead another dub, but *btn Wat pla11 low, deduer la r&eed wlU• a pell -he '°'" hll 11&111 ii ht rt.u wl'b lhe kl.,, bul • o.u.,1uiow ... w.c,.. •••'t1 c•u tu O•re•'• .. , •• ,..oeaJ ar1•1•" wm ~,..u. .... ~ .... tacUn ef t.lala laat-PNe4 ec- Uoa pme O..t ,,..vw .. ta.. nn fw ..... 1 .. na.Mre. I'• • _,, UNI a .., ••ad. •itill H .1S a. '"Gw.•P.., Deal,'' care •f O le ...,.,...., P.O. ha at, N•Htll., N.J,t1te. 11aa. dteeb ,_,..we .. N ... ~........ . , Orangt Cout OAILV PILOT/TuMday, Augu1t 2•, 1882 Vream vacation turns to nightmare By JO VINSEL CW-..W,He41teft Vacation, 1982 la over, and 80, aadly, la my love affair of 40 yean with that romantic City by the Bay, which bowlt.s newspaper columni s t Herb Caen, Fiaherman'a Wharf. Ghlrard•lll flquare and my beloved Golden Gate. To paraphrase the melancholy ballad, we left our handbags In San Francisco and our money 111\d credit cards in the hands of st.rongann thugs and it haa left *1 ugly feeling that won'l easily to away. • Great plans were made for the two weeks of rest and adventure. My longtime friend Velma Jack.son from Little Rock -we worked a t a Woolworth 's IO<ia fountain tn Tope ka , Ka n . during \he Depression - and I decided to travel the West Coast as (Jlr north as • v i c t 0 r i a ' VIHUL British Columbia, a longtime dream for us both. The dream was to take on qvertones of a nightmare. • M y trusty Datsun, ne wly overhauled, was stocked with food, cold drinks, cameras, the olassiest o f senior citizen vacationwear, beloved books and 1nagazines, plus two days' editions of Daily Pilots not read at departure time. "You will LOVE San F rancisco," I told Velma evangelically as we hummed north. "No matter how I try to reason with myse lf that 'it is just another city,' my pulse always quickens and my heart beats faster just g etting into the vicinity. Perhaps if w e have time when w e return we can spend a little time there." Normally, I have found it faster to take the East Bay route and cross the bridge at Richmond, but it would be late and dark on our arrival in the Bay area so I opted for the well- lighted if slower route through San Francisco. All I have loved abo ut California was green and golden, it seemed. A traffic jam in the Santa Clara Valley simply gave us a better chance to sme ll the ripe fruit being harvested as we waited. ll was that kind of day and feeling. North of Salinas, the towering r ock outcropping• above Hlahway 101 were polnted out u 1poui h.lghw•ymen hid behind a century aao to leap down on unsuspecting stagecoach crews and puaengera and rob them at gunpoint. We concurred how wonderful It I.a to live In Umae in whlch we can feel free of au.ch outrage. One treasure in my pune was a packet of photogtapha aJrn08t a century old, borrowed from a friend to share with loved ones along the way. The old Kanaa.s home to wn pictur es in cluded many mutual friends and relatives. I had preferred to have copies made but there was not time. "Go ahead and take the m , nothing will happen to them . Don't be silly," urged their owner, Hazel Sanford of Costa Mesa. Th e we e k be f o r e our departure was h ectic with preparations and being on call for overtime work so by the time we eased onto th e San Diego Freeway we were jubilant to make our escape from Southern California and Its wall-to-wall people. We had just about 12 hours to enjoy before the jubilation turned to the desolation of being crime victims. People gripe about Southern California freeways but where appropriate wording and proper placement of directional signs are concerned, Cal'trans seem s to spread its ab11ndance of inadequacies throughout the slate. Approaching the San Francisco Civic Center region. the sign for my turnoff loomed, then there was the offramp. No lane change was possible on such short notice in heavy traffic. I was forced to remain in the far inside freeway lane, exit the freeway and travel the ramp to Fell and Laguna streets where the stoplight abruptly turned red. Now where were we ... ? At that moment, there was a clatter of running feet and a hoarse. abusive male shout. Something slammed the side of the Datsun. A woman's cry - whose, mine or Velma's? -rang chillingly inside the car. The door was yanked violently open. I thought I wa s havi ng a nightmare. I became vaguely aware what was happening whe.n two muscular thugs lunged in across Velma, snatching our purses and then they were gone, seemingly in vivid slow motion, zigzagging throuah l'l'Ol8-tratclc 1n front of ut. Before the lJiht chanpd, w~ heard more runnlna foot1te1>9 and 1&w two more luavtna the car that had pulled to a at.op behind u1 In apparently the eame dilemma. So quickly wu It over we had no time to think. only to form impreuiona. Flnt wu the breathleaa shock, then the exploelve ruah of blood pressure. then the lost, helpleu awareness and horror of having no punec . . . no money . . . no credit cards ... no r e raonal checks . . . no travelers checks . .. no personal identification except for my vehicle registration. The photos w ere gone. Velma was in s hock . Her eyeglasses were in her purse as well as a valuable string of pearls, her wedding ring, another diamond ring, her poc ket camera, het return plane ticket to Arkansas and p erso nal keepsakes. . We w ere daud and it was all I could do to cruise the now- siruster looking and unfamiliar streets and avenues hunting for a telephone as minutes tic ked away. I was shaking. The few telephones we saw in what seemed miles of aimless driving were d own or acr oss other streets, with signs posted everywhere w e were: NO STOPPING, NO TURNING, ONE-WAY STRE£7. My trembling friend still clutched a coil) purse she had taken from her purse to have Golden· Gate bridge toll ready, so we did have small change for a phone. We found one in a sleazy bar where panhandlers hovered around the door. In o ur unnerved s tate, I innocently believed perhaps some of San Francisco's finest would come to us -or at least escort us to· the precinct station -but not so. We had to try to find it ourselves, with their directions. The robbery was at about 10 p .m . and it was midnight when we walked into the station. "You must always keep your car doors locked," was the first thing we heard from the desk officer. It was a fact of which we were b itte rly aware, and had overlooked locking them for the first time that day when we had left San Jose after a coffee stop. The police did not bother to tell us as others have that even if they had been locked, the kind of people who robbed us have other nove l, more vlol.,nt w•y• of gettin& Into our car and aeu.lna puncs. "Thia kind of robbery t.a.ket place at that corner all aummer long," wa1 the next diacloeure whlch wu more dillconcerting. He stated that out-ot-townen are constantly forced to get off the poorly-po1ted freeway at that spot and forced right lnto the highest-crime area or the city. Apparently the young men who live on the streets, without jobs, depend on the tourists for their livelihood. "We try to keep an officer stationed at that location but when he has to leave they move right in and there is nothing we can do about it," he said. He said if plain clothesmen chance to capture one or two muggers, it ls rather like a football game. The second string comes in. One or two more come right off the neighborhood st.oops or the walls where they lounge and take their places. We did not e ncounter any particular kindness or sympathy from the precinct desk officers. No one asked if we had enough money to see us to our night's d estinat ion, or if we h ad sufficient gas afte r nearly two hours of aimless driving. We had heard they do have a fund ror that sort of thing. To the rather bored young man in blue who took our report through a telephone behind his bullet-proof glass, it was just another· routine strongarm, I'm sure. I used to watch aghast those TV commercials about lost and stolen travelers' checks. narrated by Karl Malden and wonder why people don't take care of them, how can they just lose them? I wish I could have remained blissfully ignorant of how easily it is done. UWINpfw>to BEAUTIFUL, BUT ... -Down town San Francisco is among the nation's most picturesque cities, but 1t provided a horror stor y for two unwary vacationers. Our next day was spent on the t elephon e . My friend was handicapped without her glasses and I have n ever been partic ularly fond of th e telephone. Our credit cards had to be canceled, checking accounts can ce led, travelers checks okayed for re-issuing and without our list o f travelers checks numbers which we both had carried in our purses, that was difficult. All of it was exhausting. Until it happens, one cannot comprehend how terribly much red tape is involved, not to mention the $10 charge for a ne w driver's license even i( the one you had was st.oleo. But, as my son said later Lhat put the bitter experie nce in better perspective. ··Just be gt.ad," he said, ''that it isn't wound around your head." Some do's a nd don'ts I would suggest for travelers: Keep your purses locked in the trunk. Keep credit cards and travelers checks separate from your purse. Pin your money on your body somewhere or in a money belt. Also carry valuables (i.e., jewelry) separate from your purse. I think I may carry a dummy purse hereafter and let the thugs have that. K eep the numbers of your travelers' checks in a glove compartment or at least separate from your purse, and if possible try to find a safe way through the San Francisco Bay area. On our return trip we came through Vallejo and down the East Bay s ide to San Jose. New language campus A MOROCCAN FEAST Join us in celebration of our One Year Anniversary with an authentic Moroccan dinner. MONTEREY (AP) -The nation's largest foreign language training center will begin operating a temporary satellite campus this Call at the Presidio in San Francisco, the U.S . Department of Defenae announced. The Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center, which teaches 39 languages in its headqwirten at the Presidio in Monterey, will graduate up to 600 Army students yearly in Spaniah, German and Korean languages from the San Franci8co project. Maj. Mike Mandel of the Monterey center said the temporary facility la needed to handle increasing military enrollment in language (l()l.U'9e8. Homestyle Moroccan f()O(j -Lamb. Rock Cornish Game Hen. Chk:ken, Rabbit, Cous Coue. B'slila. Fresh baked bread and much more. • Every dinner Includes compllmentary house wine. 6 Day Celebration Aug. 25 thru Aug. 3 1 (Closed Monday) Open 6 nights from 5 p.m. (Cl<>Md Monday) Reservations 840-3024 3.f.:01!'!!~'~.'!:;;:'- (ln TMttyman Center) Smoking targeted St Al (>A S I ~I { l 'RI I I ..... , ..... , I "I ~. HONG KONG (AP) -The government has taken steps to curb cigarette smoking in this British colony. The measures restrict smoking in certain sections of public areas and require cigarette manufacturers to include health warnings and tar- g ro up r atings on cigar e tte pac ks and i1'- advertisements. People who smoke in non -smoking areas will face a fine of $172, and office managers who fall to set aside non-smoking areas in designated places can be fined $862. The tobacco industry and other affected businesses have 12 months to comply with the measures. 642-3490 • • ' ' •• '~ • 'Ill : ' ' • • \111 ·1•·; ' ,. ; •. ,•, • ~ I I /\ A I ' I I•' ~ . . . ... ""' ' '·'· Call 642-5178. Put a few words lo work for ou . IF YOU COOK -YOU NEED COOK LINE . FOR YOUR FREE COPY OF ''Cook-Along'' And Information Brochure -Call (71.t) 719-1.tl.t or 1-800-3•1-2000 ' I SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAun SHUTIERS Designed, Finished tnstalled ~ 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT l'ACTORY DIR•CT PRICUI c.11(714)541 1141 or 541-1717 118 IWUll ... IC'TllT tm Pt1etntl1 Avenue• Costa M•, CA 921127 II I 13 reason~ to go out to dinner: • ew rices ma e i eas ! New prices at Spi_.C~ These special prices are effective at Spiresnrvine and Spires/Costa Mesa Rest8Ufants only. • I Friday 13 to 10 p.m.I • Monday 13 to 10 p.m.I New .York Steak $3.85 • • Y2 Fried Chicken $2.25 Combination • Seafood Plate $3.55 • Tuesday 13to10 p.m.) • Breaded Pork Saturday 13 to 10 p.m.I • Tenderloin $ 2.85 Filet Mignon $3.85 • • Liver & Onions $2.25 Red Snapper $2.55 • Sunday (noon to 10 p.m.l • Wednesday 13 to 10 p,m.l • Teriyaki Steak $3.20 Teriyaki Brochettes • Fillet of Cod $2.25 of Beef $3.35 • • Thur9day (3 to 10 p.m. l Roast Breast of Turkey $2.75 • Top Sirloin Steak $3.35 (lnctudn~) • • Breaded Vaal <Pu,.Vee1 Petty>$2.25 Al.,,,,.._ lnd&ld9 cholt» of_,..,"' NIM/, pot#lto Irvine 17901 MaoArttttJr Btvd. 11111 Piiat TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1982 I .•.• 11at1 '··········· ••••••• ~'4 •••••• ~!!!!!.······· ·····~·· n TllCDAITllDTHICDUm BUSINESS COMICS TELEVISION 84 87 88 ~ ,, •.... ~., ... , .... ~ ....... . ········ ····· ····· 1.,•• ·········· ······· More and more inve tor are turning toward rentals a where the future money can be found. Page B4. Those ch aracters set sail again OUTSIDE, LOOKING IN: One of the ways to really cover a n ews event is to hide. Don't reveal your true identity as a news hack, or editor or such . That's the way your intrepid correspondent planned to cover the World's Wackiest Navy. In this instance, the thing was probably not so much a news event as it was a happening. The sponsoring Commodore's Club of the Newport Harbor C hamber of Commerce officially called it the 22nd annual running of the Character Boat Parade Saturday in Ne wport Harbor. In order to conceal my identity, therefore, I shunned the official press boat, presided over by Jim Felton and various media troops from . ~ around the world. I got tic kets on the Pavilion .-.~ Queen. TOM MURPHINI ~~ TROUBLE WAS, the Paviljon Queen got filled up with h e r 150-body capacity before I got aboard. Somebody apparently forgot to count the fact that the United States Marine Corps Band would be aboard As a result of this, 1 got relel{_ated to a berth aboard the Mojo, a modest little craft that plies our coastal waters with its six or so staterooms, stereo, TV and hot and cold running everything. The Mojo happened to be the official craft of the Commodores themselves. My cover was blown . But it sure happened in comfort. If the Mojo isn't the most luxurious yacht ever to heave an anchor, she's got to be a mighty close second. Anyway, covered or uncove red, we got under way and so did the parade. Bob Robins. skipper of the Commodores, Looking like Horatio Hornblower. Bob Robins SJgnals start of Cha.meter Bolt Parade. signaled from his inboard scooter and Vin Jorgensen ~xplained how it was all going to work. The character boats would line up, follow the Pavilion Queen and we would parade around the harbor with the Mojo as CinaJ unit. There were supposed to be 30 wacky boats in the lineup. WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENl!:D, however, was that 4,000 Newport boaters decided to take their boats out and drift around to watch. So when the parade started. there were 4,030 boats. Some semi-official reports yesterday indicated that 2,000 people watched the Wacky Navy as it skittered ar9und harbor waters. Just counting people on the water, that would have left 2,000 boats without skippers, much less crew. ALL THIS PROVES how much you can trust semi- official figures. Listen, rm here to tell you there were at least 100,000 spectators lining the shores of Balboa Island alone. Don't even bother to count all the folks who were up on the roof of the that high-rise condo affair near the Fun Z.One. Never mind counting the squadrons of wind sailors who zipped their boards in and out of the lineup. If anybody really did the count the turnout, it might make the California Angels' season attendance look puny by comparison. SOMEHOW, EVERYBODY got back to dock after the parade for the awarding of famous trophies with unique names like "Dirty Old Manifold" and "Leakin' Timbers" or "The Loose Screw Award." Let's face it, you had to have a slightly loose screw to 'get involved in all of this. The main thing that happened was that everybody involved had a good time. The Co}1lITlodores deserve hearty congratulations. Recr eati on r evenues s hared? Fountain Valley offers 3 golf course proposals; there's a hole in one By PHIL SNEIDERMAN O(°tM Delly ll'ttol tleft Fountain Valley representatives have presented two proposals to Orange County officials calling for the city to share in revenues generated by a second golf course proposed at Mile Square Park. A thfrd proposal from the city would aJJow the county to keep all revenue from the project if it takes over the costly operation of the city's recreation complex at Mile Square. The sate of the proposed second golf course is an undeveloped 86.5-acre corner of the park adjacent to Brookhurst Street and Edinger Avenue. Mile Square is a county park within Fountain Valley. The city leases a porti on of th e park on Brookhurst for operation of its own recreation center. Last year, Fountain Valley officials persuaded the county to r ev ise ats plans for lhe undeveloped acreage to include an intermediate-size golf t.'Ourse, driving range and ciubhouse- restaurant The city asked for pennassion to oversee development and arrange for a concessionaire to build and operate the course. A 1..-ommittee consisting of Fountain Valley City Council members James Neal and Barbara Brown and former councilmen Eugene Van Dask and Al HoUinden was appointed to work with the county on the project. Scott Mo rgan, an aide to Orange County Supervisor Roger Stanton, said the committee recently presented the county with a lette r outlining three propo sa l s that could be acceptable to the city: -The county would lease the land to Fountain Valley, which would develop the project and o.ltJ ..... Photoe bJ Qefy M*- VIEWPOINT -Most of the time things are looking up for Mickey McClure, climbing Balboa Island flagpole, right. I collect fees from the golf <.'Ourse concessionaire. The city would pay an annual lease fee to the county or take over some county services, such as police patrol of the park. (The park n o w as patrolled by county sheriff's deputies.) -The city would oversee development of the golf c'Ourse Concessionaire fees would be 11hared equalJy between the city and the county. -The county would keep all revenues from the golf course, but also would take ove r operation of the city's Mile Square recreation complex, which includes tennis courts, basketball courts. ball fields and a recreation building. "I don't think we were all that receptive to (the third) suggestion," Morgan said. H e said the county traditionally has not operated SObs • poles apart By STEVE MARBLE Of the Delly Piiot Sleff "Quicky" Mickey. the elder statesman of s t eepl ejack painting, was 50 feet up the flagpole on Balboa lsland when he got cold feet. "Too windy," he yelled down to his co-workers and the Monday noontime crowd that had gathered around the 100-foot white pole at the ramp to the Balboa Island Ferry. "I'm coming down -the pole's got dryrot." he added, whacking a hammer against the wooden pole to make his point and sending splinters flying to the street below. His assistants shrugged. What the heck. The painting job could wait another day or so, they noted. Anyway. they agteed. there's no sense in rushing Mickey McClure. McClure. 70, sporting a bltte T -shirt reading "Some do, Some don't, Some will, Some won't -I might," repelled himself back to earth and took stock of the situation. "We need a metal brace up there," he said. slipping off the loops of rope he uses for his climbs. "Either that or you better be ready to catch me." McClure, who estimated he's painted the island pole at least a doz.en times in the last 40 years, said he's one of 50 or so "honest-to-goodness" steeplejack painters left in the world. "And I've got a comer on the market," he added, "because 11 of them are my sons.'' He said he got his start when he was 8 in a small town in Ohio. "They had a pole that was greased up about 20 feet and the guy who could climb that high got a choice between $25 or a pig. (See STEEPLEJACK, Page 8%) active recreation programs or <."lasses at 1t.s parks Also. he said the county Is looking for ways to offset the curre Ht $400,000 annual expense of maintaining Male Square and as not looking for a program that would cost more money to operate Councilwoman Brown said the l "I t y currently operates the recreation center at a $200,000 annual deficit, even though the facility as used by many residents from outside Fountain Valley. She said the city 1s seeking rc·venue from the new golf t•ourse to offset some o f this cx~nse Br o wn said s he was diS<.·ouraged by county estimates that groundbrc.•aking on the new golf courst• may be 18 months away. She said s he hopes to speed up the design and approval process. (The project still must be approved by c-ounty supervisors.) ----- • Ill Child No. 4 gets free school bus ride • Irvine ·AL~ ELIGIBLS -Irvine ~Schoo la Sup•rln tend en t ·Stanley Corey 1ay1 every :ftldent who purchues a pu1 ,ean board bu1e1 at regular 'lrtopi. By SANDIE JOY or.._ o.., "°' at.ff The third one is a charm, 90 lt'a said. But for Irvine families. lt'a the fourth that counts -or doesn't count. depending on how you look at It. Tranalatlon: moat Irvine families must pay for their first child to ride the echool bua. In most cases, they alto have to pay for busing the 1eOOnd and third onea, too. But, in all caaea, the fourth child rldea free. Here's the way It works, according to Florence Walt, transporiatlon dlrector for the Irvtne Unified School .Dlatrict. Students who want to ride mu.at have a bua pua purchued Cost for other off spring depends on family income between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. weekday• at the district transportation center, 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine. ' Paseee are free for all children In famllles with wtal lncomet of le11 than $14,000 a year. If family lncome ranges from '14,000 to le98 than $16,000, the dilt.rict charae-$76 for the flnt child's bua pa11, $50 for the eec:ond and the rest are free. tl f ao\ll_y income ls $16,000 to leta than •18,000 a year, the flnt child's bua pa11 la $100, the aecond la $&<>, the third it $25 and the fourth la tree. If funlly tncorne ii Sl8,000 a year or more, the district charges $100 each for the fi.nt and .econd child'• bua puses, $60 for the third child'• pus and the mt are free. The dlatrlct, which be1an c har1lna for 1chool trpportatlon wt year, expects to receive at leNt $216,000 ln bus fees JO make the program telf- aupportinl, Walt uld. That'• the same amount the district received lut year. Walt aald the dlst..rtct, which expects to transport approximately 3,500 atudenta ln 86 bute1, already haa sold 760 pMltl and given away 360. Before the busing fee went Into effect last year, ahe ... id, more than 7,000 you~tera in the Irvine district rode free. Now, the aald, moet children ln the 16,000-uudent diatrkt provide their own U-antponaUon with many elementary achool )'O\U\lltAfra ridlna bl.cyclee. ~. elJctbl• to ride the .:hool U., ahe ,.td, providing they pureh.ue i--and can be picked up at recu1ar' •tofll. Panmta pu.rchal1nc bua pame9 wlll be ulted to alp flnanclal atai.menta at the tranaponatJon bfflce, Walt Mid, "and we take their word for it regardina their income." Schools Superintendent /\. Stanley Corey suggesl«I parentt of kindergarten and fint grade students pJn a card to the clothing of thoee youngsters for • at least the flral few daya or ~ card should include the child'• name and his or her bua l •lOJ.>-• Thero are 1olng to be thouaanda of younatera riding the bueet, •• he said, ;rand thla will he!J> avold confualon . ,. ." There wtll bo no buainc for four achoo la In the dlatrlo~ Oeerti•ld Elementary, Lakelld(' Middle, Siem Vlata Middle~ Woodbridp fflah . I ~---·--- • •• Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/TuHday, Auguet 24 , 1982 ·A llttle money can compound like mad,· advises Mary Rogers who converts 'dumb spenders' and advocates a no-nonsense approach to money management. OJmDOJa~ to m~mmu~ $ecurity starts with $5 a week 8Y SANDIE JOY ()("the De1t1 PUot atett Most family mo1wy isn't managed; it's messed with. That's what financial adviser Mary Rogers contepds. Rogers doesn't JUSt criticize: shl' recommends remedies. .. My job is to scare women to death," she explained during an interview, "then to motivate them." Rogers, who's co-author of "Women and Money," a $2 .25-per-copy Avon Books paperback, advocates a no-nonsense approach to money management. "All wom~n have to assume total r~ponsibility for their financial future," she declared. "Women outlive men, H's almost guaranteed that all women end up old and alone. " "They either can end up old, alone and poor which isn't very attractive -or old, alone and t'Ontinue the good.life." Planning is nC<.'CSSary if you want to go for the good life, she said , and it's never too late to start. The way to begin, s he explained, is to set Audience sought Harbor Area residents are being invited to be in a studio audience this week for the taping of two productions o f "Citizen's Forum," an hour-long cable televtSion show aired by Group w. The first, set for Wednesday at 2:30 p.m., is titled "Getting Old -It May Happen to You" and features guests Lee McGrew and Bill Davis. Thursday at 6:30 p.m .. "Media's Effect on Politics" will involve guest speakers radio newscaster Barbara Riegle and political consultant Harvey Englander. For more information, call 642-5797 Mary Rogers wlll conduct a free, two-hour seminar on Women and Money at 7:30 p.m. Thursday lo South Coast Plaza Hotel, Costa Mesa. The seminars, sponsored by Citicorp Person-to-Person, are designed for all women who 1eek a better understanding of money management techniqu es and financial guidelines. Reservations are suggested because of limited seating and can be obtained by calling 634-0931. achievable short-ll•rm goals such as saving $5 a week and writing down everything spent. "There's a lot of dumb, wasted spending that doesn 't d o anything," she c·ontended. "Everyone 1s saying inflation is killing them. It isn't inflation. it's thei r inflatl.•d standard of living that's k1lhng them." She dcfi.nes dumb. spending as "buying a $200 machine' that slices carrots or exercise (•lasses a t $5 a whap instC'ad of mowing the lawn." Part of the• problem is learn new spendmg values. "That's not t•asv ." she said, "be<:aus<.• there's a whole reorganiuluon that has to take place And, don't allow tl•c•n-agers lo dictate spending patterns as so ofu•n happens. "I even lis t my cash purchases 1n my checkbook-Then. pcnochcaUy, I take half a day and write things down under categories to see if I'm gettmg value for my money." Money management is an individual thing, s he· said, noting shl• doesn't approve of budgets. S he does hav<.• definite ideas about spending and saving patterns. though. "To get to where you 're going." she asserted. "you have to 'be strong ... Before you buy anything, you should be able to pay for 1t." Write down what you're charging. she suggested. because 1t helps you see where the monev 1s going. • Credit card buying is an extravasance no one can afford, she contended. noting companies arc· allowed to chargt• customer intt'rcst on tht• uverage daily balanC'<'. 'fhat means, instead of paying 18 pen-ent monthly mteres~ on the unpaid balant't'. you're paying more than 30 percent. Shtc-recommendt.'<i sharing housing as a way tu save m oney. e xplaining s hared living arrangements arc becommg mor<' and more nc<:t'SSary and act:cptable for both single parents and senior citizens. She· brushed as1dt• the notion thal It's useless to save when mflat1on 1s eating away at your buying power. "There's never been a time that a savings program didn't t'Ome up with advant.ages," she dc"t.·lan'Ci, "and I'm talking pennies for starting a scivmgs program. "Get $500 1n lhe re and leave 1t for a t·ush1o n. Then. get another $500 saved and put 1t into a money tund which pays more interest than a savings a<.'l"OUnt. "It's a slow proc:t.'SS of learning what your choices are. . You can buy shares m a good s ux·k with a very small amount of monl'Y· Start with $1,000 and open up a reinvestment program so all the interest buys more s hares ... "A little mont'y l'an compound like mad." She suggested w omen bone up on money management and investment by reading books. magazine and newspaper articles and attending free forums offered by brokerage houses and ask a lot of questions. A woman should slowly evaluate her money and the risks s h e can live with in making investments, Rogers said. In some cases. 1t isn't possible lo begin saving or investing right away, but a woman still can plan for the future by manag:mg her household likt• a business and setting goals. "And, pat yourself on the back," she advised. "just for survtvmg. But start now to see what changes you can make for the future." From Page 81 Have you reached full potential? STEEPLEJACK. • • • I climbed it and then kept going and got the money and the pig." He's painted the island pole, the poles on top of the Balboa Pavilion and the 298-foot spire at the top of the Empire State Building. "The people from 'That's Incredible' have been c hasing aft.er him for a while," noted one of his sons, Dave. who said his dad doesn't believe his pole climbing is all so incredible. Someone asked the skinny but muscular climber from Catalina Island if he'd thought about retiring. "" "Did you say retarded?" he s napped and the n started laughing. "Sure I'm retarded but l'IJ never retire. Hell no. I'll do thlS until I die." McClure packed up his gear. got his sons in tow and waved so long to the onlookers. "I'll be back tomorrow," he yelled. "Sure,'' someone yelled back, "[ bet that's what you say everyday." . SOME DO SOME DONT IOME WILL SOME WONT · I HIGHT Vi e w s o n how tu run a w1lll•mphasizethat"happinessis successful life will be shared by natural" and that eal'h individual , Terry Cole-Whittaker. mm1slt•r "dcst•rves to have everything." o f the La J o lla Church o f Thl' fo rmer Orange Coast Rcl1g1 o us Sc1t'nC<', 1n a res1d l'nt t:onducts a Sunday Hun tang ton B each !>l'mt nar t<'ll'v1s1on m1mstry tha t 1s seen by Saturday. mor<.' than 300,000 viewers. Her The nationally recognized hook. "What You Think of Me Is speaker and radio and tt•lt•vision None of My Business." became personality is gearing th(: three-a lx'St !'Cller. hour session, to begm al 10 a m She also ranks among the top a t the Huntington Beat·h High 25 transtormational speakers and School auditorium. to ass1:.t1ng top 24 management consultants. participants in realmng their full For ticket information call the "In my business ," said the older McClure. "fear goes right along with respect. When you get up 100 feet off the ground, you sort of develop r espect for things." McClure laughed ana kept walking. Delly Piiot Photo b)' Gery Ambroee FLAGGING SPIRIT? -Steeplejack Mickey McClure of ____________________________ Catalina sums up his professional philosophy on his T -shirt. potential. Church of Religio us Science, Her theme 1s "Exp<'rtC'nce Huntington Beach. at 536-5150 or Heav<.·n on Earth,'' ht·r nwssa~5J(i !B36'. _________ _ \ DeltJ "°' PMtoe b)' l ..... ,_ COMMODORES' COMEDY -Was William Coulter, chairman of last Sunday's Character Boat Parade reading some clever, but otherwtse unpri ntable, boat names to Joan Diebler, Carol South and Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson? Below, Bob Robins and Walter Cruttenden Jr. converse at the kickoff luncheon at Cano's restaurant while Dick Dickson fortifies himself to serve as traffic controller in Newport Harbor. Census confirms trend School-age · children drop WA!;HINGTON (AP) -The Cens us Bureau has confirmed something school administrators have known for some time. The number of school-age children in the United States is decreasing. The bureau estimated that there were 30 7 million children between the ages of five and 13 as of last year. down 16.4 percent from 1970. That's a declme of just over 6 million young people, reflecting the decline m births folJowmg the 1957 µeak of the baby boom, the bureau observed. The 14 to 17 age group also experienced a decline of 292,000 to 15.6 million. according to the study released last week. However, an increase m births since 1975 has begun to offset the earlier decline in the under-five age group. Children in that category totaled 17.2 million in 1970, dropped to 16.3 million m the 1980 census, and had climbed back to 16.9 miJlion by 1981. Meanwhile, as the boom babies got older. the number of Americans aged 18 to 24 grew by 6 million between 1970 and 1981, to 30.4 million. Those aged 25 to 34 jumped 55 percent from 25.2 milliqri to 39 million in the same period. Other age groups also grew moderately, except the 45 to 54-year-old range. It fell from 23.3 millfon in 1970 to 22.5 million last year. This reflected the movement into that age group of people born during the Great Depression, when the American birth rate took a sharp drop. The elderly age category climbed 31 4 percent in the 11 years. Those over 65 totaJed 26.3 million last year, the Cens\15 said. These changes in the composition of age groups raised the nation's median age to 30.3 years, up from 27.9 in 1970. The median age had reached 30 in the 1980 Census. The black population continued to grow faster than the population in general, the bureau added. Between 1970 and 1981 it increased 20.2 percent, compared to 12.4 percent for t.he overall populatJon. ,; The bureau aaiCi lh~ total population of the United States aa of July 1, 1981, was 229,807,000, 2.8 million more than were counted In the 1980 census and up 25.4 million since 1970. 642-5678 Put a few words to work for you in the Daily Pilat ' A Labor -~ Day ~ Weekend Family Event The Up With People Show is an internationally acclaimed cast of more than 100 young people who sing and dance their way Into your heart, with music from home and abroad. Don't miss this chance to see this beautifully choreographed, colorful festival of music. \ Coming Sept. 5 and 6 to Orange Coast College auditorium at 8 p .m. Advance tickets for $7 available at the OCC ticket office, 556-5527. Tickets on night of performance are $8 at the gate. Event co-sponsored by Orange Coast College and Orange Coast Dally Piiot. ~---------------------------------------, : SAVE $1.00 -MAIL THIS COUPON TODAYll I I 81~ $ 1 00 over reg1111r prtro 01ar.im1u1nn11 you nurchot your llCkel In •d~•r>O• I I YOV OtY only $7 09'' I I I I Miii 10 OCC Tic~tl Of11u1 '701 re11v1~w none.I Co•IA MttP Ce ~$. T1ekt1 I I Into &aa-5527 I I I I NAME t,, I I I AO~~S I · '1 CITY ZIP PHON& --I M111t er.ell• p1y11>1t 10 O••nQt Coe•• ColHtOt' I t TICl(lfS .ALSO AV.All.ABLE .Ar T1CKC rf110N OVTLETS A'TEA .AVOVST IJ l, 1~ it• T1co11011 ~lltl •'SN •• $O•Jlh Coint PIH• ·-------------------~--------------------~ -----------. -·- Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, Augu1t 25, 1982 Ande r son mulls run in I 984 Indep enden t candidate cites 'growing sentiment' for party lndependenl 191:10 pretlde;nUal ambapador to the Organlzutlon candidate J obn Anderaoa aaya 111111 / JACll for Economlt· Coopcrntlon ond he wlll decide soon after the II I I £X>velopnwnt In Paris November elections whether to * * * mount a third-party presidential new1 media, says he Unally hlili Chwkt>n man Frank Perdue campaign in 1984. round somrone who t•un keep a Anderson said hla decision will secret. attributes has sut'Cl'llS an a fowl depend on what happens in this W e Iden b au m , whose business l e> ''hard wurk, the year's congressional electlona. resignation as chairman of the willlngnc1111 to make sac·ra fices He said he feels recent dills Council of Econom ic Advisers and attention to detail." h d But it also may have something a o w w i d es p re a d I a -becomes effective this week, sa1 10 do with all those televuuon ads enchantment with the political his landlord is "someone who a reported $10 million worth system. doesn't leak." "l think the r e is growing "More than 90 of , "It takes a tough mun w make a tender chicken." sentiment for a new party, one turned an my re& N 0 w . p e r du e is tu p ing perhaps that would enliven what notice to my Spanish-speaking commerc·aa ls has become a rathe r s terile landlord that for Perdue Farms Inc political process an this country," I was leav- the former Illinois congressman ing," Weiden-* * * said. baum said. So, Federal authorities havt• Cilc:d a Anderson said he h,as been the landlord lien on a farm half-owned by traveling across the country, knew in May author Norman Maller bt-cause meeting w Ith po Ii ti c a 1 what Presl-has co-owner used the property to acquaintances and monitoring dent Reagan guarantee $75,000 bail on drug public sentiment toward a third I earned i n WllDl!NeAUM t·harges, then vanished. party in 1984. He spoke at a July, the Detroit Free Press Mailer 1s not connec·tt'Ci to the Maine Common Cause reported. drug case, but h e s hares symposium. Weidenbaum said the landlord owne rs hip of the farm with * * * of his Washington residence Richard Stratton, one of 15 White House economic adviser might have been able to stay people indicted in April in Murray Weldenb a um, who quiet because he laves far from t:onnect1on with the seizure of ULTIMATE GAME -Navy Lt. Cmdr. Bob knows how hard it is to keep Washington. The landlord is marijuana and hashish at the Owen (right) practices combat tactics on a sensitive information from the Abraha m Katz, th e U .S . farm. NAVTAG lraining computer which behaves ,., Wlr ...... to much like an arcade video game. The training takes place at the naval base in Norfolk, Va. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~ Rodents plague route LOS ANGELES (AP) -The trouble-plagued Century Freeway has spawned a new problem: fl eas and rats that residents say flourish in abandoned ho u sing along the fr eeway corridor. The neighbors claim the pests are breeding in California Department of Transportation-owned houses that lane the proposed route. To make matters worse, Caltrans ran out of insect re pellent right in the mids t of the prime. infestation season, although a spokesman said a new shipment of spray will be received within a week . Ground was broken about two months ago for the controversial, long-awaite d project, which has been plagued by lawsuits, costly delays and urban blight. "It's a problem every summer, but this on e was especially bad," said Denice Dennis, whose 6-year-old son developed an infection as a result of flea bites. A neighbor child's eye was closed due to swelling from flea bites, she added A group of dissatisfied neighbo r s took the matter up with the Lynwood City Council, which promised at would ask Caltrans to review the situation but made no further assurances. Fleas and rats have b een a "recurring problem" along the proposed path, admitted Caltrans spokesman Rick Simon. The corridor runs through the communities of Lynwood, Norwalk, Downey, Compton, South Gate. Hawthorne. Inglewood. Paramount and parts of Los Angeles. Sheik to aid Detroit DETROIT (AP) - Sheik Mohammad Al- Fassi, an oil billionaire kn ow n for hi s flamboyant lifes tyle, plans lQ donate $40,000 to the Motor City. Currently on an eight- ci ty goodwill tour, the sheik, a member of the Saudi royaJ family, said he is giving $20,000 to the city for beautification projects and another $20 ,000 for youth programs. "I am very happy to be here," the 27-year-old sheik a.aid, adding that he hoped to Invest in business in Detroit, but did not know which business or how much money. l i .. One Beautiful Menthol:· One Beautiful Box. One Refreshing Sli11110Q 8 mg. "tar". 0 ~ mg. nicotine av per c1gare11e by FTC method. ,_ .... 9 . .. ' ·' ~ '>' " .., ,4 ~~",I .. \. .· ·. ·-· . .·.· ·:·· ·=·· ' .. ·:·,, ~: '1~··. .............. . ,_. :··.: -· . ·!· ·, . =: •• •• Orange Coaat OAIL V PILOT /Tu11day, Augu1t 24, 1882 The future • ID real estate is renting lb JOHN CUNNIFF ~fol"fl th adJu1\mcnt comes n~1e w , O arrlaan, a former I#..._ AMtJ•• -to rentlna rathflr thlln owning; n'llUnreh«!r for the F'Niural Home NEW YORK -The cconomy to no tax deductions or equity Loan Bank Board, m11 lntuln11 mtaht be enterlnt a period of ll.'88 b u 11 du p. a• w Ith h o m 1: that r~i.I rvntal cost• actulllly lnflaUon, but many lnv.:stont art• o wnl'r•h l p ; to high rents declined In thl' 197011 Wh it ~ hetUna that rents will be n themilelves -Junkin ball~V<'I upsr tment overbuilding might excepUon. Tho way they fijUN! the r e t'ould be p rolile m1. huvt· boon one of tht> cUWK'I, he H, apartm4'nl rents will r ise "poWntlally serious" onet1. clalm11 "the primary cauiH• wH aharply durtng the 1980s. And 11lwuys lurking In tht> the unprl.-ccdtmted addition ot 'l'helr reat0nlng ls as clear as bl.ickground h• the possibility of J 1.5 million owner-occupied th~ law of surply and demand, rent <.'Ontrols, which large-llCafo housing units to tht' hou1ing ,but some.-o the pote ntia l real estate investors fear und Inventory " !consequences are leas clear, and avoid , buying only in areas th~y B o th th e o v ersupply o f lthe possibility of social unrest feel are free from the threat. a partment uni l s and the trom unhappy tenants isn 't Other than for 1'uch worries, competitio n fro m home - ldhmissed e v en b y some synd1cators of r e al estate ownership have been greatly 11nvestors. partne rships, which a re sold reduced during the past couple o{ I Rents today are pro bab ly through most of the well-known years. about 20 percent of income but broke rage houses , are bullish . At the same time, Garrigan might go to 30 percent or even Some are forecasung treme ndous obse rves , the Cens us Bureau more, said Gregory Junkin, growth in the indus try during projecta a 16.8-milllon increase in executive vice pre side nt of the next few years. households in the 1980s. That, he jBalcor-American Express, whose Rtc hard T . Garrigan, who says. is a "growth o f 400,000 :public partne rs hips own and heads a Chicago-based real estate h ou seholds m o re tha n the ,manage 28,000 rental units. consulting firm, contends that unpreced ented" g rowth of the 1 "There will be a change in the h 1 g h e r r e n t s a r e a I m o s t 1970s. iphilosophy and outlook about in e v i tab I e b e c a u se o f Fortified with such evidence of :shelter," said ~unkin. "It will be underproduction of and increased n eed and demand, Balco r - .a different philosophy than what demand for rental units. Ame rican Express ls buying lpebple grew up under.'' Writing in the Real Estate h e avily , especially In the '-~~-----------------~---------------~-~ . . Suuthl'Ul and Southwt. .. l. Jn thu flrat 1ix mondu ul 11184!, the compuny rol1ed more th n $110 million tor llAI portnerahlp, o l'Ompany reot:ord, 11nd purchase 17 dovt.o{opmt·nt.11 with a total of 4, 550 apurtmt.•nll ond a valUl' uf nearly $183 mllhon The ottracuon tor Investors in p11rtner1hips -which require lnveitm.-nl.IJ of as little as $3,000, depending on the state -is not only the increuaed likelihood of higher rents. Big tax deductions (or depreciation and interest c.'OSts, and sizable returns when buildings are sold, also are lureil Rents. however, seem destined t u g r ow an impo rta n ce Lo synd1cators and to those who invest in them. ln the past 12 m o nths, said Junk i n . hi s compan y has raised re nts an average of 18 percent. So s wiftly 1s the market changing that, said Junk in , ''Right now we are not writing leases for more than six munths in some parts of the country." I Kaiser readies new building ' • • ' .. •'• .. •.• ... ... WE'RE BRANCHING OUT ••• MOSS LANDING (AP) -In the m iddle of an industrial slump that has fort:ed the layoff of more than h alf its e mployees, Kaiser Refractories has broken ground on a $16 million addition to its plant in Monte rey County. Between now and 1985, Kaiser intends to bwld a facility to mill petroleum coke as an alternative fuel for the high-temperature kilns where it manufactures brick used in industrial blast furnaces. AP Wlrephoto ANOTHER STEEL PLANT CLOSING Cull Indus tries has announced it is closing its Cruciblt• Stainless and Alloy Steel pla nt in Mid land , Pa . T he doors wil l bt· board ed sh ut CA:t. 15, officials said . Announcing the opening of our new office rn Newport Beach at Local manager Jack Elmer said using coke as a fue l will save the company 30 percent or more on its annual energy bill. Kaiser now spends more than $10 million yearly for fuel oil and natural ~as to fare the kilns. 4525 MacArthur Blvd. (at Brrch) Come rn and get acquainted Ham due with manager Bill Patterson.and his staff. They are ready to serve all your f1nanc1al needs • Our phone number 1s (714) 662·2255 and our hours are: 8 AM to 5 PM, ()R..:iE Monday · Thursday Cl1V 8 AM to 6 PM, ~N( Frtday return WASHINGTON (AP) -A Brookl y n, N. Y . compan y. Fr e d W e inkauf{ Inc .. i s voluntarily recalling 36, 000 pound s o f "deli-style" smoked ham after tests showed 1t was contaminated by a food poisoning organism. P•ld Pohtl<'.al Ad" ALLAN BEEK FOR CITY COUNCIL Pa.id fQf b't' Alt..n ~«~ I llH\ ~lftl'Otl ~r•pun 8c.c~ A double tax break for Californians only. No U.S. income taxes. TAX-FREE 11.12%* Payable monthly No state income taxes. Federal taxes. Sta te taxes. The more you make, the more they take. But, now you can keep it all. When you invest in the California Series of the Municipal In vestment Trust Fund, y ou keep every thing y ou earn. Nobody takes a penny of it. Not the State. Not the IRS. It's completely tax-free*. And the current yields are attractive. 1 J .12r1 -and that's after all sales charges and expenses. And there 's no management fe e. We think that you '11 agree that the California Series of the Municipal Investment Trust Fund scores high on all counts. All of the municipal bonds in the fund are rated m the category A or better by Standard & Poor 's or Moody's. Becuase il 's a fixed portfolio you '11 know exactly where your money is invested. And~ because it's diversified, your risk is reduced. You may redeem or sell your units at any time without c harge or interes t penalty at the then prevailing market price. If you 're a Californian in a high tax bracket, double tax-free income may give •T-.M ,,_,,,.,..,..,. ,,.,. •••-I*"'"'"' .. ~ •n~ nllrJMtN/ .n11u...I ''"°".,.., ''''""' o, ttw p•bl~ •fr•rl., tNff'•· 11 •• ,.,._ •II• ,.,..,.,.,.. I• ,.,,,.,., •r,..11•1 P•M;,. •"~'., pnr.,.., wnl' ., "•••·• ''· ,.., ;.t1...1Jai ..,,.. ,....,,..... .t ,_.._ 11.w '° pl-•U1wl"fl ,.,,.,..., •f lllJ fef • lilf•f,t llOU..JIO n.tf ••1t•W•1 "'"'""' lit •11J-.r IN l'IN'tllff•l•lt,.._ I• .... ,...,~ .,. .... ,,,., ,. ·"'' ## ... ..lifll•t,.. •' .. .,,_ , • .., .. , ., OVER THE COUNTER MUTUAL FUND NASO LISTINGS 1)1 • 1)·, P41b\tb • ' • I>< C.•l'I ~: : J~:: ::::ut 10• , 10.. Prna Ent \I'• ,q Pentat \ •1"t '1 '• P&0pE.-1J 91 • 8'-Ptttrtte 2S' • )Sl;i Pel hbOn 114. 11 Ph1t•N4l )()\.• 104• PU!'t<-~SS I Y1 II J) P1 "''"' H .. 1"'-i Pt0nH1 ~ 1•', '• , Po\\I\ l l'• p,.f\GM 111 , 1 / l . Pt\StPyn 711, ?l P109rp 11', 18 PbSvNC '"• u.. Pu rt S.n i9•, i9~ PvlOC~ 13-4. 1.;1• Out41~rCt'! I '• 1 , RaQf'n(p 10J.,. 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""""" • 11 I" l"f'r=o -v~J· J!St,.., ''"' WAii G .... ..... • -t• NL M-. • 10.M Ill\' V• I ... t.it 0._.., l" •. 0. .. , • ~L a ll(n SI.. NI,. w.111 Cl 11 • Ni: • N~ ~ .. "" N I"" .._ MO '., Nettcl " • .. -• ..N~ .... • • ~l WIM Ill< • • H~ I • NL l'IOll tUt Nl tltl ti... NL M\1111111 • OnlMe ll(Gm • .. ~I~ l'!l!'dt WO.-~ti CAI II ..... , CM s.c .... H 1v ,._ )0.41 N.l ·~ IO.ao N~ ~ti~.....!!!,• It.IQ lt.m IM ~ ~ •wt ., II HI. = 'ti 't:n m·~ 1o:t' :t j~ ?-:: •r:u ·&~ ?.;: ~u u: ,r: · m ' It" t~.:::, ,· t =.-:.-u:n =t ftlr!: Ut Ut !z1 Mt.Ill 1.M H Je-... ~ HL T lt JI I' r e 11'11 ICI !!'fi u OC~ S L HL .. r-=. ~~ :ui r::m' 11! :1. J~~~ IUS ,,,~io].· ti,\ t. = I&., ,~CK 5'1'!'.! ~., ... ''r-·~ ...,., Tr_, u •I .. L Orwfl ' 10 t ..... ·w .... HL. HHRll 14 '.. IOi;j • u Nl ...... -------.... I Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT IT ue1d1y. Augu•t 24, 1G82 s -NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ~ACTION OUOTAtlOIO lllCLUOI U•o•• ON llill .... 'WO•• ... '"'"· ,.,,.,, .... I OUOlll 01 r•O•f AND CIN(lfjN4fl noo II ac ....... , AN• 11 l'OUIO .... , ...... o AM O 111nte11' AirCal selects '" marketing firm · From Wire Servkea A1rCul, N1·wporl B('ul·h, has announced the- iwlcC'tlon o( Adm.irkt·t1ng .l'> lli. new advert111ng ugcn{'Y dfrct1v<.• m1rrwd1atc:ly "Wl• h;:iv<· lx·C'n wlk1ng w1lh Admar keung Cor st-VC'I di mm• th:. and bc•l1t•v1· thl· professionalism.. l'rcat1v 1ty CJ11d t•ff1•('l1Vt'Ol'SM d1·mons t rated bY: Admarket1ng will ht• l•f great support to AirCal'a rr111rk1·ting l'fforu.." ~ud llarry Lehr. vice president, markt•ting and buslnl'<\.'> planning "Tlw1r rol1: will lx' c-1:1p<.oe1ally important tn the new low fJrt.' lompelll1vc crw1ronmenl," he srud Lehr said Admarkl•ting wall be t:harged with the dl'Vl·lopmcn 1 of advt•rt1sing programs, including exums1vl' 'mark<'t planning, research , and m edia placement, dc1>1"'ned to strengthen AirCal's marke t position in tht: West Admarkeung, headquartered an Los Angt•lpc;, has one other a1rhne client m Long Beat:h-based Jel America 21. ,. W.R. Grace names e xecutives ~~ The appo1ntmi>t'll of R Gerald Gelinas as seruor.;:. VIC'e prl'Sltll•nt nr markl'ling for W.R GraCE' & Co ·s~:; Far West Sl·rv1cl•S unit, wnh headquarters m Irvine,:. and Donald A Mctzmk as vice president of marketm~·· f<ir Far West's f'amlly Restaurant D1v1s1on was~: annuunlC'd tod<.1y by Anwar Sollman, Grace executive:·· vrce prt>s1dent .md head uf the rompany's Restaurant.:; Group STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT Nl:W YC>kK tA"' ~u•lt'\ 4 pm pt1(:• •h<J fW"I t h.AnQ«' of tr. t1ft...-h '"Q\1 •tlt'lti N~w von. 'J.tUt ~ E:Atn•n~ '"'~"' tt•d•no nAhorw11v .,,, "'Ci't' lh•n \1 E •.on t ~\.ft qoo Ill'• ~ \-• Seer\ROt>o 1 ~)() ~ 13 ',.._ (Jftn Molor \ ' b81 bOO 411j ' • J IBM I ~\ 400 t.9.. • "• f ordMo4 I HO 100 '1 , tt'I Am.-r T ~ f I 19'; 100 S8 .. • 1'. 1'• .... (1t1e\SVCe t 181 JOO •2•• !.onv CO<I 1 109 000 IJ"' 1 dr>dV 1 010 100 11 • -7 1.-oNal Miii ~l <-00 I) .. Mt'tflll L't'n 8~ lOO lO'• • t K '"'°'' &.)t .tO() 70•· • '• XnlurnDrQ 111900 J\. •"· 0.-Prf'CO llft b(IO J\ I • t • Vf\tbre>b\dl P77 100 31 • t) • AMERICAN LEADERS NEW 'l'O!lK !Pl ~•If\ • pm dnG rwt tr\anQiir o• tht' hrn n•o\ t Amtr•l<tn Stok E ... cn•ne>f tr.td•nQ NUOf'\OHy tt1 morr """" \,I O>o.O M tP1r1 ··~100 ) .. • ~ I. (.h•mp HO 161 \CO W•nQ btJ )J/ 000 AlllOMll >II •00 thownFot a; ltM too Ht•I'-'' 1'10~ Ot•r" Atr 1 ll >00 Or1ll.,\ n 1ot JOO 1voo~Nw-.. cu )(IQ l' .... )I'.. 1) I 1•""' • ,,, l> '"• II ., . ... I . '• .. . '• owe. C0<1> Bl IOO 1 UPS AND DOWNS Nl'W YU'41C t A .. ) 1nf fOllOwH-.9 h\t \nows lrw ,....,. York SIOC k E<t,,.r>QO \IOC. .. \ ano wto rM1t$ jh•t n"v• oone uo ·~ ,,.Mt M'() C)()w" trw MMt °""o °'"' Pf" tnl ot cf\dnqe rt!!91rGl4tt" or vCMUMif' ro, Mond.ey NO \of'C.ur1t1(''\ ''"°""G below U •re ~• u~ N~I """ -<~1•00 ',.,."9<', ••• '"' d1tt .. rf'N:~ b'"lwt'fl1 ttw P't••ou~ ct<K1nQ p, 1tf' nnd loddy"' ~&;" prlc.t 1 I,.,~ .. ,..,.. u•~._ -'~~ Up Pc 11• 1 1 Rt11FnSvt 0 • I Up U 1 ) W•rt t lOI>< )) 10>. UP 1J 1 • N•Cott1tmt n ~ .. , t l. uo 7J O ~ Me>)ii(.01-0 ''• • / Vt> 11 t ~ HOll<Myln A 0 • •'• VP I/ I I Tt1t"'O ~'" t,• • • • Up It> l I Thom lno 11 • '"' VP 111 Q I-.C.•l Entro )-.. "• VP tl 4 to V•rco &..._ • '• uo u 1 11 ElllylCp e><A "'" 8 , Up 1• • 11 F•r Wf\lfn I() 1 • Up 1• J 1J K•uf 8r0ittd ~ 11 • 11 • Up 1t I 14 Nl lf'<ll1'1 18 1 1 • Up Ill I) F•nCDAm pl ) • • ... Uo IJ) to Overhc'.1 Of '' '• t •• VP 11 l II flo•w C..'M:d ~ > .. Up IJ 1 II W\tn Un•O" JI • ) Up 111 19 CO"'l>I•"" 16•· I UP 11 • 10 Enttrr•Cp 1H .. j ''· Uo u) 11 GenOata 1'• • Ut> t2 S n M•rt.MH>Gro n '11 • • * Up 11 S 13 N1tS.m1 11 I • Up 11 • 1• M<Otr 110!>1 11 1', Up 17 0 1) USGVOM DI ll J , UP 11 ' .... -' I M>~MCP pl I KC. Slhn pl 1 MonyMIQ In 4 M•tlf'J .,, ! ~:!;'f:,A/ 1)11' I fr•n. I C•li.>S•t0 9 lo\COC:P 10 PSlncl • lopl II EIMemM4J '' e ...... 111..11 ll 0YtO~lrl "Un.tOril" I\ AltPw O.p pt 1• AUTW (I~~ 11 8An(.etrr 11 M I rroGo<' I> 19 NSPw J 60pl 10 roll tno 11 AmW.i• plA 11 FldUn 811<p 1J Arvlnln 21>1 1• C••ll• Cu 11 ConlCOC>P DI 1• Ge•t>er5'1 DOWNS \.•\l llO 8 • ... ... 8 • ) ' ,, . •1•· II, , ... )'o "° 11 • •• U l, 'I" • 11 '" .. ,, .. 70. , .. ''• , ... GOLD COINS L,. utrttso , t,, Ot1 1 l , 0 11 I J .... ()fl 1' '• 011 •• •. OH •I t'• Ott •4 1'~ O tf b) •• 0 11 • ) 011 ., Otl 61 0 11 ) • ~ g:: ~: " 0 11 SI I Ofl ~ l '· Oft ~ J ' OU ) J 0 11 ) ) • Otl ) l 0 11 )0 I • Ott f 8 I Oii 4 I .. 0 11 •I ... Otl <I .. 0 11 •I NEW YORK (AP) -Prlc:u llte Thun1d•y of gold coins c:omp•rld wt111 w~·1pr1oe ICr~end. 1 lroy 01 1390 00 up •1uo. ltleple INf, 1 troy 01., 13110 50, up $1825 ...,.._., IO peeo. I 2 lloy 01. $.463 76, up ,,, so Awtrierl 100 CtOWft, "802 lroy Ol , 1370 00, up 115 00 8ourc. 0..11-,,...,.. DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW vo~~IAPI Flnel Oow.J-t ....... fur Mondey AllQ 1l • STOCKS • }() Ind 10 In 1S Ull &S SI• l ndU\ fr•n Ulil,, 6S SI~ °"" "lell ...... ,.... ~ 668,U '9ln .. 161 "1 ll+ll J?• ?I m 03 J11 92 ))7 JI • 1 1 111 oe 11• u 113 •) 1u n ·14 l3J l4 )ol) 11 llO " 141 10. 1,0 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VOR• tAPI Auo ?3 AdVIMIO Detll,,.., Ull<IMlnQf<I Jot•t t\~\ New r\1Qlh\ N•w ·~ WH~' AUl • D O IO<Sty 13n M9 1'11 1 ... 1)1 • NEW VO!lK !API AUQ 13 AOvlf"<~ °"'",,.., Un<h•llQllO t otait 1n,urt\ Nl'W hlQI\\ Nl'W tow"\ METALS loelty di llO llS ... J5 IS IJJ~ Nwoo 1t,11£100 -~ 2ID -•m 141 n NEW YORI< (AP) -Spot nonferrout melial pricea today Copf* ~70 1*111 I pound US d•tln•llons l..Md 2tr29 ceni. • pOund Z1M 40 cent1 o pound, ~ Tlt1 "' 23t5 Met ... w.-comc>oelf• lb Ahlfnlnwll 71'r 77 cento I pound, N Y. MwcUfJ $365 00 p., ftul! Plall"um 12111 oo-•2011 00 troy ounce, NY SILVER Handy & Hermen, 17.880 ~· 1roy OUn<;e GOLD QUOTATIONS ., The ~led ,,_ Selected wOt1d gold P"C* todly: London mornlno llxlno 1379 00, llP S2235 London •nemGOf'I ftxlllQ l3&e 50, 09 $2985 ll'erl• ellarnoon llxlno '371 71, "P $1908 • FrenttMt ftxlng $379 1•. uo $21 7t Zllrictl Ill• •tlamoon ftl!lng 1387 Cl>, up '33 26 bid, $390 00 -*ed H•ndr a H-Ofl only d•llY quote $386 so. up $29 85 E,...._. only di lly quoto 1388 50, tip $29 86 E,...._. only dally quot• l•l>tlcet«S $405 83, up '31 35 : SYMBOLS d New t••rly IOw u NOW ~.,ly 11¢ • Unless oll\er#•se noted "'" 01 dl•tdffd •'e """"., 0111>u<-.-11 t>•Md on ll'IO ._.. q<1afle <ly o• seMl·ennuel da,11ta llolf, Sl>flC•~f Of t•lr• dlv"'-"<I• Of peyments n4 Oe~•on~•l'd as regul•• ••• •denllllad In lllt 1011ow1ng loolnotes " AltO e•t•• °' e.lras 11 .. 1\nnuAI retl ~ stoch d•••dend C·liQUldl lln9 dlVldt f\d Of!Cl•t.O Of pe1d 1<1 l>focad"'ll 12 MOnl ... 1 ()ecle"Hl Of Pl•d eller tJIOde OMcHnd «* SPiii up I P•id lll>S y1t1, dlvl<lond omtlle4 octetreo 01 no KllCHI , • ..,.,.. •t i.11 ell~ meellng k ·O.C•arltd or Pt•d 11111 )'Mf 1111 accumult111"8 ,,_ ..,,,, 01•'41n<ll In.,,._. n N-•Hue r Oecl9'td O< paocl In ~~ 12 m0<1llll plul SIOC' CllV!Oand l·Peicl fl t!OC~ "' P'Kadlr•ll t2 MOtllht txltmll4'1 ush ••lue on u d•••~d °' ••·dl1lfltM/llofl O~e • ~ EA d•..O•ndS Of ••·•'9"'' y·E•-d•vldencl Arid Hl9S '" II.Ill r S•let In Ml Cid Called wd W'-dlslrlbutad WI Wl"lr\ •••ued WW•Wllll w•ff•n•• •W·Wllll0"1 wa1•an11 ~dlt·E><·d•tlrltM/llOf'I ! 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' .. 14" • " Wflel'I I... tJ an.+ "' v .. co !! 4 UI f::• flt w ..... llf•.., dA »"'+ 1 -ltn · tJ "°' ·" ~:~~ .a 'i; ~l! )~•1 . :·1~"',f,1,!'? l a;~"'·'~:::~ .IOjii ~*~~ . v .. cl> • 4 rn U"-+ -' ... lO!lr-Wy-~"::! ""• Vll'do If~ .~, it Wn l'.:!l IOJ 4~• " ..,... ~r.·:..·~~4Qul ~ = $tw•~l' ,... •t1U '~; ~ ~t~ .. J l'-"'~· Vem t.i 1 .._. \'II W I I • >t t ~ ~.C. I. f o V• f.Dfi i lid • t. W I ij . t• )1 +n't ...,_ l't I \iii Ve 1 ...,_ 111\ WnUll .... ~ ... + t"° • 1 -t ~= I 'tf :: ~I ~I._ =~~11.:it1 ' a 1t...:.• • o f:.1t ··u toO Y.• .~=:t_, ~· lit WIHl llf .. I -· II ~ .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tunday, Auguat 24, 1882 Iff anchester's ~ice superb l By bODI CADENH£AD 0(., o.-, ...... "•" . Say Melissa Manchester's name in a t·rowd and yoltre liable to get looks of recogn1tion11 and a foJ~rlng chorus of "Oh, yt•uh she'll the onC' that did •.. " If many people have a hard time remembering exactly .w hat Manchester has done, few will dispute that the raven-haired singer- songwr1ter has a superb voit-e. Many of her most fervent admirers turned out at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheater Sunday night to hear the lusty singer Ix-It out some of her hits, including "Midnight Blue," "Don't Cry Out Loud" and "Come In from the Rain." The titles alone ought to be MAMCHEBTUt enough to stir the memory of those who don't count themselves among Manchester's most manic fans Dressed in black pants and a silver sequin top the trim 31-year-old entertainer danced a hule and joked with the audience. "Just when you get over the hump they moved the hump," she said talking about growing up. She reached back half a century to pull some poignant Gershwin tunes, but kept mainly to her own material which is what the crowd came to hear. "Whenever I Call You Friend," written with Kenny Loggins and "Midnight Blue" written with Carole Bayer Sager both drew strong applause. Although Manchester has a voice compell:ng enough to stop you flipping the radio dial. its true artistic charm comes through only in person. It's a pretty voice w ith deep traces of what sounds like opera training. If Manchester's identity has been mildly obscured Juring the last decade, it's a shame. On stage she makes for a pleasant evening. "A FIRST RATE, BEAUTIFULLY ACTED, THOROUGHLY INVOLVING ROMANCE." -Janel t-4•i.lln, THE NEW YORK TIMES ----NOW PLAYING ---- AMAHflM Pacific's Anaheim D11ve In 879 9850 MISSIOtl YIEJO NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE WlSTMIMITfR ~dwards Newporl C1ne<1ome Edwards Cinema West Cinema 644 0760 634 2553 891 3935 Edwanls Vll!JO Tw.n 830 6990 ..0 f'Aaafl ACCll"TIO '0• f Mfl U•OAOUttJfl UAllllM Bloollhurst · 772 6446 -~ ............... ;::. •l•l!lliJ@"i MU Mann Brea Pw a S29 5339 COITA.USA (OWatdS>ia•~ '"''n 63.1 3501 9->SQl1111M1; IUEU,IM Pac1l1C s Lincoln Ol••e In 821 4070 IHIMG( Pat~c s Olanot O<ove In 558 7022 GlllOlll OllOYE Edwards Westb<OOk ~3-0 4401 I • OIW( INS ""SfMl£D "' CHJMSCO'l NOi "' >O I HO ,AUH ACCUTIO '011 THIS lllOAOlM~ Ptu• C•nnonball Run (PG) l'IUll 1941 (PQ) E-y-" Tl II EXTRA· MONTY PYTHON LIVE •I. nHRl:STHIAL AT THE HOllYWOOO 80Wl l'IUl.DH4S~'iM'I Do._n't r.1 Ptu\ Stir Crary (R) Wear PUl4S (ll'QJ NO ,..,... ~ Drive-ins Open 7:30 Nightly C h 1ld1en Unde• 12 FREE Unifi" Nott<i THE ORIGINAL IS BACK. ·~ MAM HAMILL HARRISON Fa\D CAARIE FISHER PETER CU5HING "''ALEC GUINNESS """" tit ~...o,,,"'~ *"ftl""O"w:J0wf't't"db.-JOHN WILLIAMS GARY KUfl.TZ GEORGE LUCAS "The moat exciting down-to-the-wire action since SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT end the funnlfft bunch of ra1c1l11lnce THE BAD NEWS BEARS." CORRECTION In the S.on Advtrt••ing MKtion lhol oppeortd in thi s MWlf>OfMr on Svndoy, August 22, !here ,. on odverti-.ment for on AM/FM car •ttreo wit+. couelle Theo un•I\ ore factory reconditioned fhll Uol•m•nl wo• 1nod•ertentfy omilted from the heading of ..... ~. :wti •ince rely regret ony lnc~e ftll\ Fll<¥y CO\M • , Roebuck I. and Co. • 1 "". • . -T-'"91, __ _ KDiNr llDGERSu~...,.. lVt{ffflElH COO'lJrf.R»( ,.,nm A LION SHARE PrvMtlOlt A DANIEL PETRIE rt1n1 KENNY ROGERS "SIX P1C,¥," DIANE LANE • ERIN GRAY ""'"' b'/ CHARL£S FOX l..aitM "'**' EDWARD S. ftlDMAN 1nc1 TEO WITZ£R l'tOllUc:lll 11y MIOtAEl TRIKIUS ..._ 11y t.IKE r.wrm w ALEX MATTER 0irtct111 11¥ ONtEl PETRIE o ... r ................... . ~ --·----.... ,.. llllf\t4\ I M,"i\• I ~ Good /or Ille laagb1! Caleb lbe laa wilb Bari & Dolly! •I NOllSAl-1&0 PICTI U C> ~ \M'WIM.fal OTY 1-r\IOIOe. ..C •4 TRACK MAO 8Tl!AEO *BARGAIN MATIN••I * Monday thru S1turd1y All Perlorm1ncH before 5:00 PM ( Elc1pt Sptcl1t Eng1g1m1nt1 1nd Holld1y11 lA MIVA(IA MA.&l lo Mo•OOO Ot •o••c•OM LA MIRADA WAlK·IN 994·2'00 NIONT IMln Ill htllrttfllf . ZUPID1111 a1111.1111• Al4 omcH Al40 A OINTLIMAH Ill U•H l •IO l 1H ltlO l .. H 11.T. THI IXTU TlllllTllALIN I P\111 THI ILICTllC HOlllMAN INI rllDAT THI IUH 'AIT a 11l .... 111411•••• ........... , .. .. CRTICH ' CHONO'I THIHOI I All TOUOtf ~ OVll (II ll•H 41111... ,..UI lOCKT Ill~:!. ,._~ THI "UTI MOVll INI .. LAKEWOOD CENTER WAlK IN THllHTlmLI WHOHHOUll IN TIJlAI 111 ,, ........ 11 .... 1 .. ao ITAa WAUtN I ... ....., ..... 11110l1Hl..OltU 1t>41 LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllC IN Focul'V Al Del AJn0 21)/6J4·t2f1 llX ,ACI( <N j 1 ................ ,. 121111111 ........... I ... . 'ocwll'f a t Co11dlewooo 213/131·9510 TOUNO DOCTOll IH LOVI 11) I l1H 2111 414t .... l1IO l .. lf aocn 1111N 1 ''" ........ ,,,. , .... THI "IATI MOYll IN) U1H41Hl1H ~u• NIOHT '"'"(II i.ao i.ao lflal rllDAT THI UTH 'Alf 2 tt) INH ............ , ........ ... ,.. 1 lO • I IS IMPORTANT NOTICE• CllllORlN UNO(R 12 fRU! P"-n """' ... "-.... """ frl. 1·00 • ~·' s... "'*· 1·00 ... Cll<f " SOUNO • •OO-... CAii llADIO 1$ •OU~ $1'lMVI '"NO AM CAii llADIO W!Tll -ACCUSOll• l'OSITOi --... l'O"IAIU l•AU DNf.11-QI Oli ... - .. ,__.,..,., ... ANAHEIM DRIVE IN •••••OY ft Of L.el'flOf'I I t 17t·tll0 ITAl WAlltNl '"" TAH!N l Cllll 11 JOvtoO BUfNA. "°A.lit BUENA PARK ORIVl IN lt~oln AYe •••t Of l non 121-•010 fl11tNA PA..,t LINCOLN ORl\lf IN ''"'COii\ A'f'e ••tt of •nott '121·•070 f•JUNfAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE ·IN Soft Ooeoo ,,... •' .,000....,,t oo > tU·2~11 ~pt Ctl THI NITLmu WHOllHOUll IN TIJlAl(I) CINI J1 SOU•O AH OPPICH AND A OINT\IMAH111 THI PINAL '2&NTOOWH<Nl Cn111f f1 IOUlllO l.T. THI IJlTIA THlllTllAL(N I l'llll THI ILICTllC HOlllMAN<N l JAITTIMUAT atOOIMOHT HIGH I'll l'Ull THI HOLL TW00D llHIOMTI 111 Clfltf •• 50uJIO .. 0<n l 1>0 So OI J GolO.n Glou l1ttWO• 191·3693 llX 'ACI( IN I "41 IWT MASTla !N l 1'\111 '"" NINI TO JM IW~ TMIH01N1 ___ .;..C•...;Oll;...•_1 ;.;;50\l4'~0----i----C•lfl .. - ZA'"Dltll l'\UI THINITLmLI WMOllMOUH IN TIU1c11 la HA.~-A LA HABRA 0111~1 IN _ ..... ·-~-.......... 171-1162 "' ...... \ ·' HINOI Alt r~ All OVH 11 MONTT 'rtMOH lM AT HOU YWOOO IOWL Ill U . THI IXTU ftllllfttAL IN I .... ... TMl 11.lmlC HOlllMAN !,.I ORA NGE 0111Vl IN •a!\IO A!"O f,..., t l .. •e CoH•" '.. l.. I ~ & t, MI SSION C>lll\lf IN . . _ ... _ ... ,_ ·. ·. . . WA RN t.:Q D"'"' 1N lllU ....,,... ... ""-'• 11' IUt ct•u•u t.,..,.,.c..-.~ ., .... , NOW PLAYING II T-ff•.,f\ .,.....,.., .... ' \ft \HO ----" t ........ .. f1t•tUIHOt OH-~~4L;4,1: .. ,' Oii-, ... "" 'o.:-. t;o ,. , ... lfl1 •1111111•111• t4 1., i't N•, Ill ,.. •• • 1t1 i•'IS .oh .... t ..cc.o ue ................. I ------------.. ,. Orlf\04! Cout OAllV PILOT/Tuad1y. Augutt 24, 1992 81 °i• ,,----------------------------------------------------··· TH£ t '"MILl' CIRCl:H BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) i i PEANl'TI SEE ? A 6ROOP OF COYOTES ~ROM HEEDlE5 SOO~T THE VACA~ LOT WHAl ABOUT Tl-IE DE516N ~EVIEW COMMITTEE' I ~-----' .....__--..=.;.~~ L-lloim~--..:1~ r.i:......l!MO...__ ...... ~ "Daddy's pictures will be better than these 'cause we'll b-e in them." -·:c-.. -~ =-== ~ ........ ~ ..., -: - "I c1n do without 1 g1lltryl" MARMADt;IKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum · "You can't adopt everybody!" Jt;DGE PARKER 1 .~- • ARE '1ttJ 1HE OPR:>SITE SE)( ~ IS IT ME ? n by Harold Le Ooux TON'( TOLD ME HE'Li.. eE WAITIN6 AT THE ca:FEE Sta TO 5EE YOU I [1"5 ON 'IOUf\ WAY &ACK TO TOWN! SHOE tTNIKl' "INIKERBEAN WHAT'S WRONG, NANCY'? -------~GH'f NOt>..l I'D WHEN l.X)(J ~ ~q 8E 60fNG HAVE A ~B 10 GO 10 STAFF MEETING6 10 I ~ ~"' ~GEmNG~ ~FEELA~ by Jim Davis ~ Wtx>L 10 STJVtr. OF ~IN66. ------------,.._ ____ _ GARt'llELD RATS .. .l CAN'T SHAKE. THIS C'E.E.P BLU£ FUNK J'M IN MOON Mt:LLINS B~L.OW MY MARK A~AIN·· ,AND IT ISN 1T A-J.IA ! so IT'S you, PROFESSOR~ f.VAr>o•~T·•· ACROSS 1 Fellow 5~ 10W•ctown 14 -..,,.,. 151otpUce 18 Oomlclll 170rimm WC>ftl1: 2wordt 19 loweclty I 20 ...... I ' 21 Ut*'*' 22~ 2S DeftlC1 Hllpedl 21 .... 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'iOO'\t Hf.~~ ME1'? ~ ON EARt~ CAN 'iOU C:._ll A 1"o1Al. ~'f~AN'1Eft ~ r-----. f£:H~~EAO ? by Jeff MacNelly fl a H --P ' J by Tom Bat1uk by George Lemont HMM ... wei...t.., i"HA-Y-exPt....AINS MY UNUSUAl.. CRAVING FOR e>ORRllOS .' l.OHAI AM 1-- SoMt:. KINO OF~ ~~ by Lynn Johnston I THINK I STbLe. ONE OF t'\EJ'. LINES. .. ~ . :· '• .=·· •"'. : . •·· . ,• . . ·:· .... ·~ . ~· ·~ ... . ~ ... . t .. . --·· ... ... · ""·. ....... . ·,.,. • .. .. . . ·1 II I· ... I>.\\ .. -m...o- S:IO ID e AIHALL Dodger• al SI LOYll uo1•• Hl!W9 WOMOEJ\ WOMAN D WIU>, W1U> WUT • HAWAII FM-4 • A LOVE Ct.A88: W1TI4 ~9U8CAOUA OM ot Or Leo eu.c.o11e·1 tamou• "Low" ctauM al the UnlYetelly ot Soulha<n C.iltorn1a Is r.-.nacled ID MAGIC~ OIL PAINTING "SunrlM Al The ShO<a" 9 A8CNEW8 ft Nee NEWS {C)MOVIE • * * "Orl..,..ln" I 111781 Glenn Mor1110-r. LI .. Lemole Seve<el Teu• IMn·eoet• meet durlno • night ot romance end excil_,I 11 • drl..,..ln lllealre le•lurlng •n lmprob•b .. dl ... tllf' tum CD) CLOWN WHITT J .. on. -. ~-year-old boy, find• 1111 1>41rlect teacher (S)MOlllE * * 'J\ "S..m1 like Old Tlmu" ( 11180) Goldie H•wn. Chevy Cllue A tolt·haarted l•wyer le 1orn bel-her "°'*"' ••. llu1b1nd·lurned·bank robb« •nd het upllglll prM«tl lluaband wtlo le running tor Calllornla attorney gen«al. 'PG' D MOVIE "Solo") lllneent Gii, Perry Armtlrong A llerC411y ~ ~I Auttrallllll wom· an, who worit• u • loretl ranger, ~ ln\IOIYed with 1 nra pilot 8.-30 ID FAST FO«WAAO "Buel,_ Of lnlormallon" New communlutlonl ey.. ta<Tll m•Y lead 10 doing bull,_ Without money, paper or oltlcet (II BARNEY Mil.LEA 11=.c..,lD OM 1>41<M>n '• eaperlancea wi thin Ille Unlllclllon Church are ,....,,ected 1:56. Pl.EDGE 8AEAK Regularly ec:heduled pr~ grammlng m•y be delayed due 10 pledge brNk•. 7:00 8 CBS NEWS D NBCNEWS • l<UNOFU Caine becorMe a prtia llglller In San Francieco In an etton 10 local• hi• brother. • A8CNEW8 Ill THEIWNT • JOKER'S WILD •• 8U84HE8S AEPORT (I) P.M. MAGAZINE A \llelt wttll • man wt>O may IOee Iha dl•llnctlon or 'World'• Haavlall Human"; •golden pai- ln W•t Virginia that wM built by Hara Kriahnu 9 EHTERTAINMENT TOHiGHT An Interview with J.,,... LynS-. 8 THE MUPPET'S G~t: Joel Grey (D) THE WAY IT WAS (%)MOVIE • * "Oown Argentine Way" (11140) BeUy Grat>i., Oof'I Ameche. A l>Nutlful helreu toUOW11 • WM/thy South American from N- York 10 Ar~tlna. 7:30 II 2 ON THE TOWN F••lured vl11t lhe Hem- lock Soci ety which bell8Y• death tllOUld be an Individual option, a llydr~~ driving grand· mot'*; paddle tennis D Q!FAMILYFEUO • EY£0NLA. Feetured e report on pit bu" dogs that have ~ CHANNEL LISTINGS 8 KNXT (CBS> 0 I!) KNBC (NBCI 2 0 KTL.A (Ind I H 0 KABC I ABCI c Cll KFM B !CBSI rTJ C1J KHJ·TV (Ind ) !fl) GD KCST (ABCl ( .. 8' KTTll (Ind I ll '18 KCOP·TV tlnd l .. .• KCET IPBSI • e KOCE (PBS! TRA VEJ... TALK -Part One of a series featuring maestro Artur Rubinstein on his travels throughout Europe airs tonight at 9 on KOCE (50). trained 10< llghllng; a pt<>- llle ol the world'• best known car telesman, Cal Wor1hlngton. a look et I._ tecMology • (I) TIC TAC DOUGH • MACNeL I LEHRER AEP<>fn' ID MONEYMAKERS "lnvetllng In Hard ASM1t" 9 YOU ASKED FOA IT Fe.alured: "Clrcu1 Ooee Ila Tricks" and "Swimming Pool For H0<-." CID RACE FOR THE PENNANT Barry T omplllnt and Tim McCarve< cover •II the bues leading to the 1982 World Serlel. (Q)BASEBAU Mlr..aukM 8•-· II Cal- ifornia Angela 1.:00 • (I) UHf\IER8E Waite< Cronkite reports on various occurrences and pha<lomena In Ille wot10 ot eci.nc.. G Q! FATHER MURPWY Wiii la locked In • cella< by 1111 drunken fal'* tor refuting to reveal wt.ere lie tound a nugget ot gOld. (A) D MOVIE * * ~ "Thia Sav9g9 Land" ( 1968) Barry Sulllnn, Glenn Corbett. An ootl- band ctl•Denoea • oo.n.. llMdlng tamlly. D QI HAPPY DAY8 Chactll tries 10 ptove to Howard that he I• worthy ot Joanie. (A)Q Ill MOVIE ••*'J\ "Jane Eyre" I 11144) O~ Wellee. Joan Fontaine. A young EJ>gliall governess falls In love wtth her brooding. teeretl\18 employer • THE IMMIORA.NTS The aon of an ltallan Immi- grant couple ~ a a/lipping maon11e aner hi& paren 11 die In en ewth- ~ake (Part 1) • NATIOHAI.. OEOGAAPHIC 8P£OIAL "The Sii-." Extraordi- nary undetwater lllm foot· age or llOw Shartca teed. r•I and why they attaQ pr0¥ldea • new perspec- tive on thle fUClnallng and INNM>ITle llsh (AI Q I!) NOVA .. Anlmel Olymplana" The t>eauly, endurance and ~ of animals In lhe wild are juatapoeed wttll Olymptc athlelae perform- ing laal• which have peral· 1819 In the animal kingdom (A)O (C)IQovlE ** "FNr No E\111" (11180) Stet•n Arngrlm. KathlMn Rowe McAllen. ,.,. 18- yMr-old high IGhoot tll>- dent dellghl• In decimallng hit 11om41town. 'A' CID MOVIE ,, ,, • "First Family" (11180) Giida Aadner, Bob Nawllart Tiie te•uatly rapreaMd daughter of the coun1ry'a weirdest pr..._ dentlel lamlty compllcat• her l•lher'1 aUAm9(a to conduct Ille •ttatr1 01 slate 'A' ())MOVIE • "Tarun. The 141>41 Man" On TV Z TV HBO lCinemax) CWORI NY, N.Y CWT BS I IESPNI IShowt1me1 Spolll;hl <Cablt News Nttwor k) (11181) Alc;hard Harrie. Bo Oerell A yoong woman Hatchet 10< lier mlealng lather In Iha Alrlean IOOQle where Ille enciountani an uncM~ed white man and an orangutan. 'R' O MOVIE * • ~ "Llttle O&rllnga" ( tll80) Ta1um O'NMI, Krta- ty McNlch<>t. Al summer camp, two l-1·41ge glr1t compel• to ... who wllt be the llr1t to ION her virgini- ty. 'A' UO. (I) SHE'S WfTH ME Two al1ta<1' plane to Mw afld work In San Franclaco ~awry. U QI LAVERNE & 8HIALEY Laverna taket •n untcheduled awlm when •h• QOM OUI IO dinner with • married man. (R) O ., P.M. MA0.AZJNE A v1a11 with a men who may IOae Ille dlallncilon of "World' a Heaviest Human". a goldef'I pal- m Wael Virginia thal waa bulh by Hara Krlahnal. (%)MOVIE * * • • "'Ola Flfeman'• Ball'' I 1961) JoMI s-. Merle JezkcwL Elabofata plans lo tat• their M-V'M'· otd chief •• • apeclal ball go ewry tor a group of well--lng Cnchoalo- 11aklan t1remen. t:OO II (I) MOVIE * 111 'h ''The $6.20-An-Hout Orum" ( 11180) Lindi Lavin. Richard Jeackel A divorced worltlng mother lands • job on a flC1ory'a tredltlonally all·m•I• astembly line, then hu lo l.!9_111 to keep It. (A) U ft 8AET MAl/£RICK Gutllr .. tries to ~I M•"*· lck 10 help him win Iha s-1w11er aharlH Mee· tlon (A) 8 9 THREE'S COMPANY J-i and Tern t-that Jack la altar-bound ""111 the wrong~~~ ., MERV "Mualc Ma6tere" 0-t•. Kai Rudman. 8llly l<att and hla band, A AoClt ol S..0- ulls, Nk:olelte LM9on, J«. malne Jac:llaon Ci) ARTHUR Al...aTBN "POiand" At Iha ag.a of llt, M-lro Arthur Aublnateln 1a11c1 about Ille. mueiC and people whlle traveling throughout the M9Cllter· ,.,_,and Europe. 9:o6 • THE KING8TOH T'NO AHO FAENOe: AEJMON The original Klngtton Trio are Joined by Tommy Smothera, Mary Travers, Llnd141y Buckingham and current Trio members when they perform IOQelh- er f0< the nrst 1im. In 20 yeatl •.30 8 aJ) TOO Ct.08E FOR COMFORT Henry gel• Into anot'* big tiglll with Murie!'• mother (Al 10:<!0 a a MOCl.AIN"s LAw McClain and Gat .. rMuc- lantly accept the help of 1 atreet....,.... fntonnant to nab e d~oua drug dealer. (A) I ••• HEW8 Ill HART TO HART Jonathan and JM.niter ~ 1ergaca for murder wt>en lhey llumbla upon a fortune In "°"" OOld hid- den In a aunlten yaclll (A) i MY8TEff "Aumpole Of 'Ola Balley: Aurnpoi. And 'Ola F uc::let Beut" Aumpola accepts the datenae ot Cec>taln Rex Parkin who II c:Ntged with Inciting • riot under Btll· llln'a ~ Aela1lon1 Act • (Pan 41 (A) Q (t)MOVIE • • ·~ "Cabo81anco" llN ll °'** If..-.. J-~Aneallld Meil WhO llM llMlu9flt ... lhe local pOlloe dOmlnetea • llnell ,..\Nlero ~· town during tna tM09 '"' (H)MOYll • • "OMdty B1aaa1no" I IN 11 l,_ aotgnin.. l oll lffttletOll A youno WOft\an """<> n1.err1M 1n10 a •l•ICI relig!Ou• MCI dleoov- ... &lie la Ir~ In • llv· "'.i ~,,,,.,. 'A' ll)~LOYllN THIOUNll .MO'ltl • • "S1tt1no Ouot11" (1HO) Mletleet Ernll. Zaoh Norman. fwo «lmlnal1 ~ the U.8. with a mH· Hon dollars and run Into a tr1eg In their plant. ·A' CZ)MOllll! • • "Haartbeapa" I 11181) ,\ndy Kaufman, &a1n1· dell• Pater•. "' • WOtld ot lhe near future, two com- me<<:tal robot• ••l*'lenOe lhe vlc:IM/ludea Of ltr1I I0118 'PG' 10:30. MEWi (O)MOVIE a 111 ~ "Victory" I 1118 I) 8 y1vetler Stallone. Mlcllaal Caine. curing World Wa1 II, AHi.d POWa -their ticket to lraedom In • match between the ir M>CC* team and the Get· rnan Nallonal Taam In Par- It 'PG' ())MOVIE * * "Friday Tiie 13111" (11180) Betsy Palmer, Adr1• anne King The reopening ot a aummer camp, clOaed 20 )'Mrt Nfffer aner lhrM murdan, a11rac11 a Ylndlc- llv• kllltr who knifes unau11>41Cllng IMn-aoert 'R' 10:S6. MY8nAY "Aumpote 0 1 The Ball9y; Aumpole And The Fuc19t a. .. r· Aumpote accepts the deten'8 of Captain Rex Perkin who It Charged wllh lncllUng a rlol under Brit• aln'a ~ Relation• Aci. (Patl 41(A) Q tt:oo •aawoa NEWS D SATVAOAY NIGHT Holl Walter Mallhau. Gueat. G•rretl Morrie l!I YOU ASKED FOR IT FNtured: "C•lt.. Cutting Hor-.ea'. and • 'The Ootla Are Mq'lle Star•" .. M•A•S•H Altar 1rlree daya of ,_. contlnuou• duty. Hawll· eye'• beh•Yl<>r ~ wackier than ueual. • BENNYHIU. e.nny pleya a waiter In a French hotel who get• caught In -ambat· rualng altuatlona. Cl DOCTOR IH THE HOUSE Michael and 8lngNm bOth apply t0< the aame poeltlon In the surgery department 11:30 8 (I) ALICE Mel lrlel to catch the dem- olition ~t>v crowd by keeping the dlnet 098'1 alt« midnight. (A) D Q!TOHIGKT G~ hott: Olcll Cavett. Guest •: June Ally1on, Charles "Honl" Colee. 8 (II ABC NEWS NIOKTUHE G MOVIE * * "Rock llland Trait" ( 111411) Forrest Tuckar. Adele Mara A man et~ gtae to pr-I a eta- gecoech line from opsa- tlng In hit ar-. • THE JEFffAIONI"",..,,_...,.,. George 9'lffer'a from the Mlf-lmprowmant cour.- LoulM and Florence are taking. e&AHFOAOAHDIOH A dleputa an-~ Fred and Julio a.... 1M boundary dtvldlng lhelf pr099rtlee. • CAPTIONED ABC NEWS (%)MOVIE ••~ "Laura" (11180) Oawn Dunlop, Maud Adame. A woman tries to prev1n1 a reltllonahlp bel_., • tculptor with Whom Ille had had an •Hair and her t.-i-age baliarlna daughter. 'R' t 1:40 CC) MOVIE * * "The Banlrnote Bul- let" ~ t1180) Jamee Coburn, Omar Sharlt. A amd-llrne poot hustle< must ral:M 120.000 and Win • big toum-1 before he c.r1 hew a rematch with an old opponer>t -who Ilea -loa1 at any game. 'PG' 11:46 CID RACE FOA THE P£NNAHT Barry T ornpltlna and l1m Mc:Carwr oowr all the ~ leading to the 11182 World Ser1ea. 12100 • (I) "f'D RATHEA Ill! CALM." Comedy 11>41Clal starring Gregg Berger. Frtn Oreteher. • ENTERTAINMEHT TONIGHT An lnlarviaw with Jamie ':r' Bauer • U (II FAllT~Y 1$1.AHD A alnger rlaka her Itta to mMt • mytta'1oue oom- ~. and e man trtea to TUBE TOPPERS KNXT (2) 8:00 11Unlvurae." Walter Cronkite report.I on varlous phenomena in the world of ectence. KOCE (50) 9:00 "Artur Rubinstein." The 91 -year-old maeetro tolka about. life, music and people while traveling throughout Europe. See photo, left. KCET (28) 9:0~ -"The Klngst.on Trio and Friends: Reunion." The original folk singers are joined by Tommy Smothers, Mary Travers and original trio members. KNBC (4) 10:00 -''McClain's Law." McClain and Gates reluctantly accept thP help of a street-wise in formant to nab a dangerous drug dealer. convince hi• friend• 1ha1 he la not a eowa1d (R) • MOlllE * * * "Leeve Her To Heaven" ( 11145) Gene Tier· nay, Cornel Wiide A IMlou• woman •IC>P• •I nothing 10 monopoll2e hat hu1band'1 attention • LOVE, AMENCAH STYLE .MOVIE **'A "SIUOent Bodlea" (11181) Kristan Alter. Mallllaw Goldaby A hffVV·breelhlng paychotlc kUi.t llalkt lhe lun-lo\llng 11uo.n11 of a typical Amer. lean high IChoot 'A' 12:06 CJ) MOVIE * * * "El\111" I 111711) Kurt Ru .... I. SNaon Hubley. EM• Prealey rl-from poverty and Obtcurlly 10 acht.ve terne and lor1une u a aYp«atar mualoal per. torrner. 12:15 CIDMOW! • • "Cout To Coeat" 111180) Oyen Cannon. Aot>- ert Blake. A runaway l\ouMWtfe and • acr appy lrucker haullng cattla cout lo coeat become the targac of a wlld etoaa- r.ountry ~. 'PG' 12:30 • ()) MCCLOUD MoClood , ... In low wllh the murder ~ he le IU9POMd to bring beck trom Mealc:o: 0 8 LATE N90HT WITH DAVID LETTEAMAH Gueala: Moltla Atzoerald, ~ ot a cable Tll GOOlllnQ 111ow: comedian Mark scnm. • OOUPl.E8 • LOVE, AMEAICAH STYLE "Love And The Anllloue Mama" Mra. Albano "* to get JullO IO propoee IO her dauglllet. "Low And The Aelnc..natlon" OI.,,. lrlet to get Nici< to notloa lier. (D)MOVIE * *'J\ "The Shout" (111711) Alen Bataa. SuNnnah Yortl. A dl•turMd man confined to an Institution bel....,.. he can make a "death "'°"'·" • aound thal wlll lillt. 'A' 1:00• MOW * * "8 Pa.a" ( 111411) John Payne. Gall Auaaell. In the days f<*Owlng the CMI war. 1 Tu• lawyer ~ cowra that a 8'IOW ol fore.. rather then peaceful bargaining ... the - to deaning uc> OOf'NPllon 1n the temtory. • MOV1ll * * ~ "Cyborg 2087" (11161) Mld\MI Renn ... Wendell Corey. In Iha IOCI· ety of the lutwe. Earth la Inhabited by strange beingt whlc:I\ •• hall. human. hall~lne. (%)MOVIE ***'h "Tell Me A Aid· d .... I 1980) Met~ Oouo· lat. Ula Kedr0\#11 A ""111- drawn, aldarty women, unaware that 8lla la dying. embartla on a long tourney lo reacquaint ,_..., with hat geographically and emollonally aepara1ad tamlty. 'PG' 1:1oa MOVIE * • * "Huaoende" ( 11170) Ben Gazzara. P9ter Falk Aner one o1 their dOee fnencla dtae. lh"'8 ~ aged men ta6te • tr1p lo London to eacape the rMl- lty of ltfe and death QI NEWS 1:30 a a NBC NEWe OVUNOHT (C)MOW * * '4 "Back Aoada" (1118 I) Sally Fi.Id, Tommy lAe Jonn. A hooa• and a down-on-Illa-luck boa« Maret\ of• new Mta. 'A' .MOVIE * * "Delta Fox" ( 11178) Richard Lynch. Stuar t Whitman. A profaealonal amuogle< mMI• Iii• maleh In a beeulltul woman who trapa him with 1 mllllon dolla1• In hol money 1:50 CID MOVIE * • • "Flrat Famlly" (111801 Giida Rtdner. Bob Newhart. The MllUAlly rapreaaec:t daughter of the country'• ...irdeat pratl- denllal family compllcatae her lather'• atternpll to conduct lhe affair• ol alate. 'A' 2!00. MOVIE •• 'h "Bombenl 6-52" ( t1157) Kart Malden, Natalie Wood. A commanding offl· cer r-llul of a -· geanl •• In"°"'*'*"• with hi• daughter order's him on a aecret mlulon lo IMI • new B-52 bomb« . 2:151 NEWS 2:30 MEWi MOVIE ** "Hea.-1t>eepe" (1118t) Andy Kaufman. Bema· dette Petani In a wor1d of lhe -future. two com- mercial robot• ••~ the vlc:IMlludet of first tow. 'PG' 2!36 (J) WHAT'S UP AMENCA FNtured· a humorous looll •• the ,._, ln<luttry: follow a modern-day bounty llunta<; cool oft In lhrM of Amerlu'1 tavorlte .-inn· I~ dipping holes. 2:408 NEWS 2:46. MOVIE * * • "Let'• Scare Jaeel- ca To Death" (tll71) Zohra Lampen, Barton Heyman. Earle vok:ae becllonlng from a graveyard and nallllng memonea of • tOO-yaar-old New England vamplfe --t the unity 01 a woman recover1ng from a nervoue break· down. a:OO• MOVIE * *"' "Sllwr Lode" ( 11154) John Payne. Den Duryee. M a weocStng ··~.·· an ""-'' man n..m ~ Mtf accuMd of mwder and muat nee to ex~ate lllmMlf. DMOYE * • "Summer Camp" I t117111 Jonn C. Mclaugh- lin. Matt Mk:haele. The owner of a talllng l<ifnm8I' camp decldaa ralM ITIOfW)' by holding • rwnlon fof the now-matured alumni. 'A' S: 15 ct) MOVIE * * "FNI No Evil" ( t980) Stefan Arngrlm, Kathleerl Rowe McAJlan. An 16- yMr ·old high tchool aw. dent oetlghca In dtlctma11ng Illa hometown 'A' 1:30 CID MOVIE * *'J\ "The Spiral Stair· cue" ( t1177) Jacqueline 8 111al. Chrl1topller Plummer A beautllUI deel· mute 11 ta<rorl2'8d by a my1terlou• kilter whO lurk• In lhe llhadow9 aurrouncS· ~ an e6egenl manuon. l:t& Cl) MOVIE "'* "L-"-"111178) 8 111 Murray, Ho•atd Huaeman Nothing I• MCred In this atllflcal look JOHN DARLING we HA'/E -ro REMEMeE~ °TWIT, ~VEN A1' TH16 LATE DATE, 'NESfiOUL 511L.1.. C U L-.TIVA"TE ~E'EN THE ROYI& ~~ GAAPEN.~N! .. ~,._...,..... ~ and oant• lllma ... 4:00 CZ> M0\111 • * 'Oo•n A roenllne Way" ( 1...0) h41Y 0•81*. ()o(\ A~ A .._,llM ,.,..,_ IOllOft • ...atthy louth Anl«tCen trom fltew York 10 Argenllne 4;11e MCMI ••'A "Oevll'• Own" I 1M71 Joan Fontaine, Klly Wallh Afl Englla/I ac::hool matrn lalll under auepjejon when one of her puptla ~ a NOlflc:lal VIG- llm of wltctloralt ...ao1:. • * • ~ "Woodatook" I 11170) OoGumenlaty Man~ of the 1op mualoal groupa of the I••• '80e par1orm •• Iha famou1 rock ooncen he4d In 8811\81, N.-Y0<tt, In 111611. 4:50 (J) IHOWTIMF8 8HOm flltOQ Wedne•da11'• Doydnte Mot~lft• 1:00 CC) • • • "Fii.iii Gordon" I 11180) Sam J Jonet, Max \Ion Syd-A trio ol earthling• travel 10 the planet Mono<> and t*P Ila oppt....O lnhabllanll In 1he oYet1htow or the ..n1 Em1>41<or Ming 'PG' 6:30 Cl) * * "The Man Wllh BOilart'a Fac:e" ( tll80) Robert SaccN, OllVla Hua- MY A man dec;ldea to change 1111 llleatyt. and phymlCal appearance 10 1eaemble Illa acreen Idol. 'PG' 5:46 (%) • * 'J\ "Laura" ( 111801 Oawn Dunlop, Maud Adami A woman lrlel 10 prevent a relallonahlp bet_.,. • aculplor with Whom •he had had an affair • and her IMn-age ballerina d•ugllla< 'A' t.-00 CID ••• "Tiie Hid••· wayt" (11173) Ingrid Berg· man. JOhnny Coran. Two chlldren run away from home and hide In N- York Ctty'a Metropolitan Mu-.im of Art, where they a1e befriended by a aplrll· ed reclu'8 'G' 7:15 (%)*•I "The Aaphall Jungle" (11150) Sta<Mng Hayden,Jamet Whllmore The police are battled by a crlmln•I ma1tarmlnd'a hatl-mlfflon·doll81 robbery 7;.SO CS) *'A "Up River" I 19801 M org•n Stevene, Jett Carey. A. young ~ becomae obMaaad with revenge alt8' hla wtre la kMled by a loc.i tend baron whor-11111•~ U ***"Lott Horizon" ( 11137) Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt. A kidnapped dlplomel dlacovara Iha Hlmal•yan kingdom of Shangri-La. a pl-of eternal peaoe and Immor- tality. 1:00CC)111**111 "M" (111301 Peter Lorre, Ellen Wld· mann Potlce p•ralyze Ille unde<World aa they -•ch O\laaeldorl for• ptyehotlo c:l'tlld mu<dera<. 9:18 CD * *'A "On Any Sun- day" (11171) Ooa.mentary S11va McOuean, Mart La-111 The w0<ld ot motorcycle racing le - trom varying poinll of view. e:;SO 0 * * "Nobody' a Per· lekl" ( 11181) Gabe Kaplan, ... Alea Karras Thr• unlikely '*oea Mt out to bait .. the red tape and buraaucracy of City hall 'PG' tO:oo CC)•* "Honky Tonk Fr-v" (Comedy) Beau Bridgaa, Beverly O' Angelo A ameH town In Florida IM• maller• Into II• own hande when by·PUMd by • ,,_ lllgt>way CJ)** "Penelope" Ann• 88'gman. George Muroall Two men elternpt to Mve the anoeatral eatate of 1 decedent family. 10:46 CD ** •v. "Tell M• A Alddle" (11180) Melvyn Oouglu, Liia Kedrova A withdrawn, ~ly women, unawar• 111a1 Ille It dying, tmb<lfk 1 on • long tourney lo reacquaint '-Ml' with her geogrephtcally and amollonally 11paratad larnlty. 'PG' 11:acl D * * '" "St. !vet" I 11178) Q\aflet Btonaon. Jacqu. llne 8laeet A former Cl'lme raporla<-turned-detectlve 11 hlt'ed by a -'Illy lllm fancier 10 recover a Ml or ~ino "°"'' '"Cl' , .... **'4"0.ryOn H\if M" I I MOI l«<IMlll Connor. lftlt'81 leton 1'rc>vl>le 8M -tvalon r411gn "'-lhe men'• ward erlCI the elaft In In (noltth llOePi.1 • *•·~"The a.ldlt Of l tierwood '0twt" I 1e.e1 Coniel WllOe. Anlla LouiN The son of Robin Hood gather• hie lathet'a band tOQelher to ·-the young king of lnglltld, winning • lovely maiden In the pr-. • 11 e ~ "The BIO CerN- val" (IHI) Kirk OcJuolaa, Jan alttlll\Q 1n 0tcMt 10 !>0081 hit ur-. • repOrt· 8' ••plolt1 the eufferlnga of the wtta of • men trapc>ed In a cav.-ln ct) * * 'J\ "P8')111on" 1 ta131 s1..... Moo-. O\latln Hottman A pair of Oevll'1 lal1nd convlot• apend their lime p4ennlng lhelf MCape CH) * 'J\ "Under The Rain· l>Ow" (11181) Chevy Ch-. Catt.. F1Mw The 150 midget• wt1o ara In town 10< I he IHmlng of "The WI.I· erd Of Oz," turn • CelfOI'· nla holel upside-down 'PG 12: t5 CD * * * • "The Mlt- Of Morgan's Creak" 111144) Belly Hullon. Edd .. Stadt· en When a young girl finds harMtf pregnant aft« a nlglll on the town wttll a group ot Gia, Ille I• hard· prffled 10 Identity lhe la1he< 2:00 CID * • * "The Other Side Of The Mountain -Part II" ( tll781 MarHyn Haaaett, Timothy 8ot1om1. Former champlon alcler Jiii Kin· monl. ren<lered a quadrl· pt.glc by a tragle ac:cldent. wr"llea wltn Mll·doubl when a new love entert her Ill• 0 *'It "In God We Tru1I" ( 1980) Marty Feldman, Andy Kaufman A naive monk It t«tt out Into the world 10 ralee money for hl1 lmpoverlahed monut- ·pQ' <ti * * * "The Aaphalt Jungle" ( 11150) Sterling Hayden. Jamea Whitmore The t>Otlce ara baffled by a criminal meatermlnd'a halt-mlllk>n-«>llar roobery 2;30 *'**"Tim"(1981) Piper Laurie. Mel Glbton A young retarded man and • aenllttve. mlddi.egecl woman deYe'op • ctoM rolatlon•hlp of mutual need and underalandlng th• I laacl1 to an unor'lho- do• marriage. 4:00 D • • 'It "The Butter ~ton S1ory" I t1157) Don· al~'Connor, Rhonda Flemlng Tiie lamou1 comedian beC<>me8 lhe hero of allent lllma. (l!J * * * .,.., "The Way We Wore" ( 19731 Barbra Strol .. nd. Robert Redford. A young college couple In the 19~ dlacoll8f that their political dltterencea ere 11rong enough to jeop.. ardlza their marriage. CID ••• "The Hldea· waya" ( 11173) lng<ld Berg- man, Johnny Coran Two Chlldran run •wey from home and hide In New YO<t< Clly"a Melropolllan Mu-of Art,-. they ... befriended by • l9irtt. ed tecluM 'Q ' 0 * * * "Clash Of The T11an1" (1981) Harry Harn- lln, Laurance Olllller Myth- ic '*o P8'-.il le helped by hit lather Zeut In • _. ... of dangerout tulca .. he ,,... to win the hand of • Phoer1lcian pr- agalnal Ille wtai-01 a vengetul H• goc:tdeu. 'PG' (%) * • "Hurtbeeps" ( 1118 I) Andy Kaufman. Ber· nadett• Pe1er1. In • wortd of the near Mura, two commercial robol• eapert. enoe the vlelailudea of llrat love. 'PG' 5:00 (0) * • '..\ "The lrlshman" ( 111781 A proud lr1ahman retu-to ytel<l lo progr- when "'' bual-.. • ,..,..,,., 11 ,,,. .. ,.,..., by rnotorlZed transportation. 5:SO (%) * • ''\ "On Any Sun- d•y" 111171) Oocumentary. S teva Mc;Oue1n, Mert La-Ill The Wortd of motorcycle racing la - from varying points of v- by Armstrong & Batluk Duo given 'Hazzardous' duty APMt .. •1• NBW •ouu• COUSINS -Byron Cherry (left), 25, and om.t.opher Mayer, 28, wW play two new COUllna on ·~e Dukes of Hamrd." 8 y JERRY BUCK A#T ........... rtW LOS ANGELFS -"Our !aces are now plastered on the sides of the studio, and three weeks -ao they probably wouldn't have let u 1 In the gate," aaya Byron Cherry, a new couain on 1oThe Dukes o~ Hazzard." Cherrv, 26, who hails from At.Wlta, with the drawl to ao with It, and Chrlatopher Mayer, 28, from Rtdpwood, N.J., recently were telected to play two new Duke cou1tna after stars John Schnelder and Torn Wopat qwt CBS' hit Friday llliht eerl.et over contract problems. UntU ht landed the role of Vance Dulce, Mayer w• Uvinl ln a one-bed.room apartment with hta prepant wife, wondering how to make ends meet. CberTy, who plays Coy, WM worldna Ma bartender In Atlanta. They were aelected by Warner Broa. Televlaion from among 2,230 hopeful.a after weeks of interviews and audldons ln many part.a of the country. The two new acton are such Schnei<Mr- W0P9t &ook-alikes 0 Cherry t. blond abd Mayer datk·balred - that Deput.tea Enoe and Cletua probably won't notice the difference. But how will the audience react? "The biggest hurdle we have to 1et over ll M vina the American pubUc lov. ua u much or more than 0\11' ooualN," Mayer aaya. "I thipk they~u love u1 more.'' Both MY their IJ'MWllt WW ln aettina the roJ19 ceme wtwn they c.llednome. Both are ttom 1.arp famll.i•. "I played It Na1 roof," Mayer nnnembln. "l aakl, 'You know that '1>uU." part,. and they aakl. 'Aw, you didn't~ 't.' l aald, 'Yeah, w.11. I aot lt .' The two were paired for a screen teat when the field of candidatas was narrowed to tiJc. They immediately hit It of!. "We were draWn ~thee Uke 1 team," uya Mayer. "We told eech olher that if there'• a God. we're IOlna to pt WI job. It wu llke we were brothers.. "Byron'• the you.naest of four. rm the oldett of eeven. I think that wu ta.ken Into conaidention,' he uy1. "Older brothers and youn,er brothen work better topther than aomeone the same a1e. We don't have any e10 problem., We don't worry abou1 who'• 80IJ\I to walk on the lie\ Ont or who'• aotnl to drive the General Lee." Mayer 11 • take-chara• d)'ftlamG, an eciooamka lf9duate of Collate Unlwnlty, 1 NCbY inar, arid the only one wl\b an.y .cu,.. ~. He ap.,_...a In ..v.nJ ptloG, and hla wife, Teri Copley-Mayer, also Is an actress. C h e rry Is laid bac k and easygoing. He quit collese in hi.a aenior year, worked u an airline flight steward, and for the IMt ahc years hu been a part-ti.me bartender. He'• divorced, but uya be'• only "taking a b~ak." He hu a 2~-year-ola son. Mayer deteribft hia part, th.at of Vance, as the bla brother role. "He's the planner,'lT' he~· "We work like a team~but I usually do the scheming. n'a job la to stand around look cute." Cherry laUfha at th.at. "Coy la • very, very ener~ He'1 an open fUY, and M up to hla older cousin. AU J know la rtn kJnd of a nut. It'• reelly me. 1~1 really Byron. He'1 ~ppy. ~ atbletk: and Y8I')' ~." Both emphaal1e they are plllyq new d\anctln, md not repllM:{nc 8chnlkllr and WopM. i ON TARGET -The Angels' Mike Witt pitched the Angels to a 5-3 victory over Milwaukee Monday. llllJl'lllt TUl80AY,AUQ.24, 1082 ClASSIFllD c~ , Wi~t nips Harvey W allhangers Brewers get a big hangover as Angels increase lead • • By JOHN SEVANO 1t would have been understandable it Milwaukee's 166 home runs, far and Milwaukee hitters came c lose to Of tti. o.itr Piiot aw Angels pitcher Mike Witt had opted to away the team leader ln that category in adhering to their reputation as Brian A Harvey Wallbanger ls a popular have a Harvey Wallbanger or two before both leagues (as an example the Angels Downing, Juan Beniquez and Reggie rn1xed drink consisting of vodka, orange Monday night's game against the have 141). Jack.son alJ flagged down long flies at juice and a touch of liqueur called Brewera, who 'have been known to give "Sure, I was thinking about it. I was their respective fences. But that's all the Galleano. It is not recommended that the more than one pitcher this year a thinking about it going In. But once the Brewers could muster against the drink be consumed ln large quantities or hangover. game got rolling and I saw that they 22-year-old right-hander who improved ingested rapidly because such an act will But Witt decided to forgo the liquid were hitting them far but not getting his record to 8-4 and maintained his ERA usually render its victim limp and encouragement and meet his task head them out, I felt a lot better. at 3.10. listless. on. "You could say I was skeptical before "I have a lot of confidence going for Harvey's Wsllbangers refers to the the game, but as it progressed I got more me now. That's the difference," said not-so-popular Milwaukee Brewers and The result proved to be a very and more comfortable with them." Witt, who has had only one bad outing their potent home run hitting lineup. sobering 5-3 victory for Witt and the (in his last start against Boston) since the Like its alcoholic namesake, it is Angels Monday, before a punch-drunk Which is comparable to getting All-star break. recommended ·that Harvey"s happy crowd of 35,197 at Anaheim comfortable with a den of lions. Wallbang~rs are also not consumed in Stadium. On this night, however, Wltt had the "He's on a good streak:' chimed in large quantities or ingested rapidly, "I know what they've been doing," mighty Brewers frustrated. There were Reggie Jackson of Witt. "Now he just either, for the same reason as above. admitted Witt in reference to occasions -three in fact -in which (See ANGELS, Page C3) Who's in second? Dodgers continue ups, downs ST. LOUIS (AP) -St. Louis catcher Gene Tenace gives all the credit to coming out of a recent batting slump to an unsung coacb who humbly refuses to accept the praise. "Dave Ricketts deserves all the credit," Ten.ace said of the St. Louis coach after he collected three hits and four RBI in an 11 -3 triumph by the Cardinals over the Dodgers Monday night. The victory moved the first-place Cards three games in front of the Philadelphia Phillies in the National League East. Meanwhile, the Dodgers, who had led the NL West since Aug. 9, fell percentage points behind the Atlanta Braves, who won their fifth game in a row Monday night, beating the Phillies 4-3. "HE'S WORKED his tail ofC in helping me," Tenace said of Ricketts. "I had been struggling at the plate of late. I was taking too many third strikes. "I couldn't pull the trigger. I just couldn't swing the bat," added Tenace. "Ricketts took me one-on-one for extra batting practice every day. He's put me in a good frame of mind. It's really been constructive." Ricketts smiled but refused the accolades. "I don't do anything," he said. "He does all the work. I just do the same for him as anybody else. Give all the credit to him. He plays between the white lines." Tenace, a platoon player who catches only against left-handed pitchers, admitted he went into a slump on the Cardinals' most recent road trip. BUT MONDAY NIGHT , he delivered a two-out, two-run double in a four-run third inning and later smacked a two-run single in a six-run eighth that buried the Dodgers. TENACIOUS -St. Louis catcher Gene Tenace had three hits and four RBI in the Cardinals' victory Monday. been our strong points. but now we're starting to hit." Tenace said after St. Louis banged out 13 hits against four Dodger pitchers. "Now, if we can just continue hitting for the next six weeks, it will make for an interesting year." KEITH HERNANDEZ had a run- scoring double and Willie McGee an RBI single in the Cards' third against loser Jerry Reuss, 12-10. Los Angeles made it 4-1 in the sixth on a triple by Steve Sax and an RBI groundout by Ken Landreaux. St. Louis squeezed home a run in the sixth. McGee singled, went to third on an error and an intentional walk, and scored on the bunt by Ozzie Smith. GETTING IN SHAPE -lrvine High's Gary Schester (left) grimaces while running a sprint while Woodbridge High's 0.-, Not '9lotoe .,, OMy ~ Bill Whiteside strains to balance his body. It's all part of football practice now going on at Orange Coast area schools. "I needed that," Tenace said after his big night, which raised his average to .346. "The pitching and the defense have The Dodgers made 1 t 5-3 in the eighth. Pinch-hitter Jorge Orta doubled and scored on a single by Landreaux that chased starter Bob Forsch, 13-7. Turner says Kuhn quster in November ATLANTA (AP) -Ted Turner, owner of the Atlanta Braves, predicted Monday that baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn will be ousted in November and baseball owners will have no problem finding a suitable replacement "I could be the commissioner," said Turner. "I won't, but I could. I coul~ do the job. It's not an impossible job." At baseball's summer meetings in San Diego last week, Turner and five other National LeafIUe owners were lined up against giving Kuhn a third seven-year term. A final decision was delayed until November, but Kuhn wilJ be ousted unless three of his six National League op~nents are swayed. 'TWo of the anti-Kuhn votes, Cincinnatt'a and Chicago'•· are kind of soft," Turner said. "But the other four (the Braves, Astros, Mets and Cardinals) are aolid." Whe n asked i~ he would change his vote, Turner joked. "Maybe if Bowie will let n\e manage the team for a day or two. "Maybe ru call Bowie and tell him ru make a deal. u he'll let me manage, I'll change my vote," aid Turner, referring to Kuhn'• ordering Turner out of the duiout after one 'ame ln 1977. "But l'm only kidding about ch_1__n1tng my vote. Only ld<kllrC·'· Turner would not glve hia epeclfic reason• for w•ntlng Kuhn replaced. Marina's Thompson: Coach on move Vikings' football, in the doldrums for 15 years, isn't that way anymore By ROGER CARLSON Of tM Daffy l"Mot It.ff Marina High School must have set some sort of record in its first 15 yea.rs of footbajl -failing to qualify for a single CIF playoff game. despite being one of th~ largest schools in Southern California in enrollment. Only twice in that span could Viking teams win more than three games ana the best was a 5-4 season in 1970. But all of that changed with the arrival of Dave Thompson as the Vikings' head coach in 1978. Now, after racking up a 30·14-1 record in that hitch, capped by 198'1 's 11-2 record, the Viking.'I are belng hailed as among Southern California's blue chip teams and the probable favorite (or co-favorite with Edison) to win the Sunset League championship. It doesn't take a genlu,, to figure out who is responaible. But it doea take some digging to understand juat how Thompson has acoomplished twice u much ln a quarter of the time. "I've never met anyone who works harder," says Marina Athleti.c Director and assistant football coach Andy Donegan. "He juat breaka down film after film, film after film, film after film. He's at every clinic, In the front row, o\,lr pracUces are extremely long and we're told to 'coach on t.he move.' "He doesn't 1weat the amall atuft, except in terme of c:oeCtdna." Thompeon is a dilclple of the veer offense, which he picked up from Houaton'1 Bill Youmana at a convention in 1969. "I aot interested and etudied lt," says Thomp1on, a 6-2, 200-pound ex- quar1ttt.ck. TURNAROUND -Dave Thompson has turned the Vik.in~' ship. After thr\'e years of learning the ayatem, Thompeon began putting It to work as Lynwood High's head coach and for the next sbc YHl'I h.ia teama fin.iahed aecond four Uma, including a CIF finala be~. Then to Huntin9ton Beach-baaed Marina, where ln four yean hia teama have flnilhed aecond tw1ce in the Sun.et Lea1Ue, includlna the CIF Blg Five Cd>nference eemlflnala a year aao. "I 1\111 have a championehlp to go." aaya Thompt<>n. "But I'm oot really happy yet. We've won our ehare, but overall. our ~ iln't up to the level of EdilOn or FoUntain Valley. "When we can be CONiltent year-in and year-out ... probably I'm most unhappy about myself." Despite the amount accomplished in a short span of time, Thompson considers himself a procrastinator. Combined with the time factor of coaching and personal commitments, there's a crunch on Thompson's lifestyle. An example of the Thompson method and the effectiveness of his veer offense was at the recent Orange County All- star game. Quarterback Ken Laszlo took the snap and his tailback hurdled over the right side, behind the blocking of the fullback, but the ball was with Laszlo, three miles to the right u he raced for an easy touchdown. Option football is Just that -there's always another way to go -and Thompson aeema t() have an answer for juat about every defensive tactic. Many consider Thompeon an obvioua candidate for coaching on a higher level, but at thia polnt. he appears establl&bed at Marina. "I aomettmes regret not jumping in (to t!ie college COllChlng ranla) when I wu young," aays the 38-yur-old Thompeon. "8'.&t I dkin't aodalir.e u much -I didn't make • many buddJee. I alwaya .. umect IOmebody would ooroe to me if 1 dJd • good Job ... Amona Tbompeon'a moat aatiafytna vtctoriea hu been the lu.cceel aaalnat Fountain Valley, a 21·1~ vtctor}' ln 1979 and 20-3 wtn ln '81. "That'• our favorite aame," ;&:: 'lboml*'I". 'Tountain Valley la eo ln OOIChiJ\i, lt'1 r.lly a fun pme, to tee the etratel)' aolnc on. We're jood friendl with them and w.'v. been tUdty. • "I know if I ewr did pt a coU-ae ooed\lftC Job the tint fUY l woWd h1n would· be Mike Mllner (J'ountaln Valley'• hMd co.ch). There is a lot of mutual nee~" Alth°"'lb Marina hM enjoyed auOoe. ln r«.'el\t ~ thla ii the fir'lt time ln the achool 1 20 years that there are great expectationa. , Thompeon has backed hlmeeU up with Donepn (defensive coordinator), John Seeley (defenaive backa and runnJna becb). Mark ~(line), Larry Doyle (defenalve endl and wide rece.lven), Ttm Retd and Crall Yuhu N ..tN.nta. There'• never been a brtaht.er outlook for the Vikinp, dteptte apparent lack of depth, which t.n't too blld for an old brobn down q~ who MYW eteNd • collqe pme. I ~·~~~~----~--~~-------------..-----------------.-------.... ------------.. Orang• Coat' DAILY PILOT /TuNday, Auguat 24, 1882 Hobie home after winning world title Hoblt-Al I.er Jr flt•w home to San Juun CupuHnano I.Oday with his finit world chomplonshlp trophy . Hobie won thl' Hobie Cat-16 chumpiorushap in u wcek- lona regatta at Papeete, Tah1U. Hobie has w o n national championships m aU of the Hobie classes, but this was has first world title. He be<At out Blaine Dodds of South Afrka by one point. Placing sixth 1n the regatta was Jeff Alter, Hobie's younger brother. First 10 finishers: I. ffobie Alter Jr., San Juan Capistrano, ;u 'h points; 2. Blaine Dodds, South Africa, 32 1n, 3. Brett Dryland. Australia. 44; 4. AUen Egusa, Los Angeles, 49 ¥4; 5. Ian Bashford. Australia, 53 'A; 6. Jeff Alter, Capistrano Beach, 64~; 7. Tom Materma. Los Angeles, 69; 8. Mike Montague, Santa Cruz, 70~; 9 . Jack M cCartney, Australia, 80; 10 Enrique Figueroa, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 82. Otis triumphs thl' flnt Umo • Huntington H&rbour youth h.ad cvur won the nationals. Otis sails for Alumltoe Bay Yacht Club. There were 166 entries In thia year's regatta. Second wu Jon Perntck of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, and third was Mike Sentovlch, Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. Fall Fair racing set The Orange County FaU Fair schedule of thoroughbred horse racing will open on Oct. 25 this year, a day earlier than had been planned because of r~nl action by the California Horse Racing Board. Because of the dects1on, there wtU be 13 nights of racing at Los Alamitos Race Course instead of 12 as originally expected. Jim Otis, 15, trom Huntington Harbour was the overaJJ winner of the Junior Sabot Inte rnational Regatta at Mission Bay. It was Fall Fair and racing dates will now be Oct. 25 through Nov. 8 at Los Alamitos. Profits from the races and Fall Fair are used to improve the fairgrounds and facilities in Costa Mesa. Dlllly "'°' 'Mt• ~ A*-"' l~ CLOSE RACING -Fair weather and seas are making the expected to continue throughout Lhe weekend . current series a boater's delight in Orange Coast area seas. It's Legislators rule out Wrigley night games From AP dispatches CHICAGO -The Chicago Cubs Ii apparently won't be playing anf night baseball at home in the future as a result of legislation signed Monday that essentially outlaws night baseball at Wrigley Field. Gov. James R. Thompson, saying night baseball at the National League field would unduly disrupt laves of nearby residents, signed a measure imposing strict night noise pollution standards around Wrigley Field, home of the Cubs. In effect, those noise standards bar night games from being played at Wrigley Field. The standards are enforced by the illinois PoUutiO(l Control Board, and for night games to be played, a variance to the standards would have to be obtained from the board. "NightlJme basebaU would increase traffic and parking problems that exist in an already crowded neighborhood," Thompson said in a statement announcing his action. "The problem would be compounded during rush hour when spectators would be trying to reach Wrigley Field at the same time neighborhood residents are returning from work." The Cubs arc the only major league team that plays all its home games during the day. Quote of the day "Hey, we're booed in every stadium we visit in the league. That made ua feel at home." -Quarterback Jim Phmkett of the Los Angeles formerly Oakland Raiden, in refe rence to the reception the team received upon its return to the Oakland- San Franciaco Bay Area to play the San Francisco 49ers. Rookies' first win stops Kansas City Roo k ie right-hander uave Ii Schmidt scattered 10 hits in 8 'I.I innings for his first major league win as a starter and Buddy Bell capped a four-run eighth-inning rally with a two-run double as Texas beat Kansas City, 5-2 Monday night in the American League . . Reid Nichols' two-run homer in the eighth inning gave Boston a 4-3 victory over Seattle in a game that saw veteran Gaylord Perry ejected for the first time in his career for doctoring a ball . . .Larry Herndon drove in three runs and Glenn Wilson two to support pitcher Dan Petry's 11-hitter as Detroit beat Oakland, 5-1. Oakland's Rickey Henderson stole his l l 5th base of the season , movin~ to within three of Lou PERRY Brock s major league record . . . Consecutive solo h ome runa by Oscar Gamble and GraJg Nettles capped a three-run New York rally in the sixth inning and powered the Yankees to a 4-3 win over Toronto ... Von Hayes' third RBI of the game, a run-scoring double in the eighth inning, lifted Cleveland to a 5-4 win over slumping Chicago ... John Watban tied a major league record for most steals in a single season by a cat.cher with his 30th theft, which came in the second inning against Kansas City ... Outfielder Rick Maanlns of the Cleveland Indians, hit .571, scored eight times and drove in four runs to earn American League player of the week honors. Chambliss leads Atlanta over Phlllles Chril Chambliss drilled a run-• scoring double in the ninth inning to snap a 3-3 tie ~nd trigger Atlanta to a 4-3 victory over Philadelphia Monday night, extending the s uddenly-hot Braves' winning streak to five games and sending them back into first place in the National League West. The victory, coupled with the Dodgers' 11-3 loss to St. Louis, moved the Braves into first place by p e rcentage points ... Houston right-hander Joe Niekro stopped the New York Mets on four hits to lead the Astros to a 2-0 victory ... Pitcher F rank Pastore hit his first major league homer and Dao Drieuen be lted a two-run shot as Cincinnati beat Montreal, 6-2. Pastore held the Expos CHAMaUH scoreless on six hits until the eighth inning . . . Biii Buckner had four hits, drove in two ruru. and scored three times to lead the C hicago Cubs to an 8-5 win over San Francisco. Buckner had been named National League player of the week earlier aft.er getting 13 hits in 26 at-bats for a .500 average last week. He also had two four-hit games last week . . . Slxto Lezcano lined a two-run homer and Broderick Perkins lashed a two-run single as San Diego defeated Pittsburgh 5-3 to gain a split of their doubleheader. Jason Thompson homered and winning pitcher John Candelaria singled home two runs as the Pirates won the opener, 8-6. Baseball today On this date in baseball in 1975: Ed Halicki of San ..Francisco hurled a• no-hitter to beat the f.lew York Mets 6-0 and e n able the Giants to sweep a Candlestick Park doubleheader. Today's birthdays: Chicago White Sox infielder Tony Bemazard is 26. Baltimore infielder Cal Rit>ken Jr. is 22. Rams waive three rookie free agents The Rams waived three rookie • free agents Monday. reducing their roster to 73 players. Waived were Gar y Carr, a running back from Fresno State; Fred Gomeztrejo, a safety from La Verne; and Rick Parma, a wide receiver from San Jose State ... Ben McDonald, a junfor at UC Irvine this coming season, has been selected to the National Invitation Tournament aU-star basketbaU team that will tour ftaly, Switzerland and France, Aug. 26-Sept. 10 ... Further expansion of the NCAA basketbaJJ tournament field will kill the NIT, executive direct.or Pete Carlealmo said -and he thinks the NCAA is trying to do just that . . . Roberto Duran, former lightweight and welterwe.ight champ.ion, will face Kirkland Laing of Jamaica Sept. 4 in a scheduled 10-round bout in Detroit ... Jeff Chandler plans to go ahead with a scheduled Oct 27 defense of his World Boxing Association bantamweight championship, his assoctates said, even though he is recovering from being stabbed in a street scuffle earlier this month Television, radio FoUowing are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: V' V' V' v excellent: v v v worth watching; v v fair; v forget it . n 5:30 p.m., Channel 11 v v v v BASEBALL: Dodgers at St. Louis Cardinals. Announcers: Vin Scully and Ross Port.er. Bob Welch (14-8) goes to the mound tonight to fa.ce the Cardinals' John Stuper (5-2). The Dodgers feU to second place by percentage points after losing their third straight and fourth of the lastiive games. Meanwhile,41'\tlanta has won five straight. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at St. Louis. 5:30 p.m .. K.ABC (790); Milwaukee at Angels. 7.30 p.m .. KMPC (710). Kings' J e nsen accuses coach Little League World Series under way Van Fleet gets LB pos t LOS ANGELES (AP)-Steve Jense n, a member of the Los Angeles Kings for the past four years, says he was sent to the minor leagues by the National Hockey League team last winter because he refused to be the club's designated fighter, the Los Angel es Times reported in today's editions. However, Los Angeles Coach Don Perry. who was suspended for 15 days last season by NHL President J o hn Ziegler for ordering one of his players to fight, was quoted by the Times as calling Jensen "an absolute liar." "One day P erry approached me and said, 'I heard you 're,. good'," Jensen was quoted as saying. "I said 'Good at what?' He said, 'You know, good'." WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) -The climax of the baseball season for 2.5 million youths gets under way this week in the 36th Little League World Series. Started 44 years ago in this north-central Pennsylvania community, Little League held its first world championship senes in 1947. In 1952, Montreal became the first foreign team to compete. Although approximately four of every five Little Leaguers is an American, foreign teams. particularly those from Taiwan, have dominated the tournament in recent years. In the mid-70s, in fact. the Taiwanese were temporarily barred from the tournament. But U1ose problems have been ironed out, and Taiwan teams. Newport advances in speed soccer The Newport Beach Breakers eliminated Fountain Valley from the American Speedsoccer Aaeoctation playoffs with a 5-3 victory Monday night at the Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club ln opening playoff act.ion. Newport Beach was in command from the outaet. taking a 4-0 advantage to the locker room at halftime. After the Flames cl098d to 4-3 ln the third quarter, Chris Campbell acored the final goal for the Breaker{ to put them in a second wild card playoff game Wednetday night against Orange. The playoffs continue l''rlday night with J.rvine meeting Mission Viejo at 7 and C.O.ta Mesa facing the winner of Wednetd.ay night's game at ~- The championship game will be played Sunday at 4 at Los Caballeros between Friday night's winnen. have won the last six Little League World Series. This year's Far Ea s t representative in the eight-team, single-elimination tournament is from Pu-Tzu Town in Taiwan, which also sent the 1979 Little League champions. All eight teams in the tournament are composed of l l -and-12-year-old all-stars representing their leagues. Easton, Md ., is the East regional winner. while the Pinery Park Little League of Wyoming, Mich., is the Central U.S . champ. Kirkland, Wash., which also sent a team to the 1980 tournament, represents the West, and Sarasota, Fla., is making its first appearance in 32 years of lit tle League competition as the Southern regional winner. Andy Bonc:honaky and Mike Lewis each ICOred a peir of goa1a for Newport 8"ch while Campbell added the fifth. For Fountain Valley, John Gerrard hit a pe1r and ChN Crater added another but lt w111n't enouih to overcome the early lad by the BreeMn. COSTA MESA : Ourlnc the rif:.!.:h' aeHon, Coata Mesa'• Cowboy. won the Division wtth 1rvlne In aeconct place. Millloa Viejo waa the WiMer in the Emptre Divlsion with Orange aecond. I ' 370 E.. 17th Sir~• • 6'5.&100· HUNTINCTON BEACH: 16075 Colden Wt11t St. • 847-m l MlSSION VIFJO: Alicia To"n Pita• 770-7.651 SANTA ANA : 1224 Eu& 17th St. • &47-5871 .. ____________ .. Representing Canada wiJJ be Royne, Quebec. the first French- s peaking team m several years to make il here. The Torrejon U.S . Air Force Base team of Madrid, Spain, is the European champ, and Maracaibo, Venezuela, carries the Latin American banner. The tournament begins this afternoon with games between Taiwan and Venezuela, and Sarasota, Fla., and Kirkland, Wash. The series championship game Saturday afternoon will be televised on ABC's "Wide World of Sports," the 20th year the network has carried the championshi . The semifinal games Thursday wiU be televised on ESPN, the cable s ports network, for the first time. Before the championships game Saturday, ceremonies dedicating the new Little League muse um will be held. The 20,000-square-foot museum on the grounds of the 46-acre headquarters here was started during the series last year. The "hands-on" museum was built at a cost of $1.25 million, paid for in equal $350,000 shares by the Republic of China, the U.S . Economic Development Administration and Little Lea LONG BEACH (AP) -Corey Van Fleet, athletic director at Oakland University in Rochester, Mich .. for the past 10 years, has been named athle tic director at Long Beac h State, it was announced Monday. Van Fleet. 46, will take over the Long Beach po5l on Sept. 7. four days prior to the 49ers' first football meeting ever with UCLA He succeeds Perry C. Moore. who has assumed a job in the student services division of the university . Van Fleet is a graduate of Wayne State in Detroit. Over $6 Miiiion In Gear & Wear Waste gas. waste time, waste money. * That's what you'll be doing if you drive up to those crowded l.A ski sales where you *spend more time shoving than shopping. ~ Why fight it. Wait for the best. Get big savings on the finest in ski gear & ski wear. Everything you need. Especially tha low prices. Coming Soont 3 DAYS ONLY Sept. '3, 4 & 5 Anaheim Convention Center suNCR~1)~~1~~~ "The best ski trip you'll take all year." - Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/TuHday Auguat 2•. 1082 Cl Top Orange Coast surfers compete HunUni\on &U4'h will be rep~nwd by 11 c:ompetltor11 lnc ludlng 1980 uh amp1on Bud LlamttN In the fourth annual Stubbles California &urf trlala to be huld at the Lower Trestlt!ll ntl{•r the Camp Pendleton Slin Clemente bc.>rdt•r beginnlnj Wedneaduy ond running through &turday. Prl .. ton Murr•>: and JefC Parker on the llnu aloni with' Dan Flt"Cky who finl11hc.'<i fifth lust year. He 11 one of the moet contl1~nt aurrera ln th<' meet aluna with Carl1bud'1 Phil 'l'n>lt>t'l with round sevt-n (11emlf1nal11) finding four 1urfert1 compt'ttng In twu-man hcuta. The finals will ~ bt•tween the• lOp two surten with one 30 minute he&t U.S. umawur Utlc 111 Lower T1"611tll1t in Sepwmb..r Others muklng pro dt•butll w1JI Include· M1trl' Th~odon· and Jl'lf Novak of Ma.nhau.u.n &>ad1 A tot.al of 96 entranta will ~'Ompt•tt• In the five-day tivcnt with a tot.al of $7 ,200 In frlze money awarded. The wlnm.•r wll pkk up $2,000 tor ht. efforts. AIM entr ... Inc lud ed In the group f rom HunUrvcton Beach arc Pat Allen, Scoll Banuelos, Bobby Burchell. Ian Cairns, Llamas, Dean Quinn, Chlp ltowland, Hlll Ward, Scott Waring, Steve Webb and Randy Wedeen. Thr top four finishers In the event wlll rect!lvt: tnvltatiorui to compt!te In the 1983 Australhm Stubbles aurf classic with the winner and n.mner-up getung round trip tkketa to AuitralJa. Llamas Is making hlJI flnt California appearance in ~veral months. He was on the international professional tour this summer with three other entrants, Carlsbad's David Barr, Venice's Allen Sarlo and Santa Barbara's Sam George. Opening compet11lon will find 96 11urfora l'Ompctlng In 24 hcuts of 20 rnlnut.t.'"I duration wllh four In each event Firtt And second pl~ 11urfora adv•m"t to round three with third and fourth moving to round two. The eecond round will t>t' compriaed of 16 heats with the first place rln1aher advancing to round three. Third round action will take place wilh 64 surfers In 32 heats of 1~ minutes duration with two In each heat. The winner advances to round four. The wlnnora will be dt'ddcd l>y u panel of seven Judgt.•s OurlnU u ht.•ot, rive of those judgei w ill grudc· lht.· c..-ompetitora' performonc(•. One will 1,.. u spotter and the other wlll keep count of how many waves each surfer cal~:hes. There art-five criteria for judging Wave selection , Length of ride , rru.ineuvers. llu1d1ty of stylt.' and ovc·r:.111 execution Tommy Curren, an 18-y(•ar-old standout 1n amateur c..'Ompetit1on , will make his professio n a l debut 1n the Stubbies event. Ht• c:aptu1·ed the 1981 11al Alljff1 (Huntington ~ll), SGolt 8""....io. (Huntington 0HW) K .... ln Ollly (San J""" C•P•ttrenol Bobby IWrOhofll Oiunlll\QlOl'I 8eadlt Ml~• Ctu1<;1!.ot1..,... (Dene Pcjjnl). °"11 fMIC.ll.y (CO.ti Mew). Mall 0-~ (8.,, C-Ce). JoM Goth.,d (Newpo<I ONal). LM O•oon 10-Poinl) M .. ty HOftlfl&n IMtU>on Vletol MtcnNI HOwa•O lkn Jvart C11pt1tr1no), Danny l(owc;k (Newporl B11ch), Hugh L1mebr00il (C~ltlhimo ikaGh), Bud Ll1tn1& ll1utlllnoton t:1eecn1 Al•n 100-1 111vl1l•I St9pt\en WeOD (Hunllt19ton S.•chl Sl'l\tlt~ Mel>Qen (hvilltll, Ma• Mc;Oon1IO (81111 C,.,,,..,tt). Sean Mc;Nu1ty (<..:llp•1tr1no 841ech) P1aaton Murrey (Cotti MHIO) J•ll Pe<k•• tCU•t• M ... I o.an OvlM (H<lmlngton Be•rhl Cn11-1 ROWiand 1llun1111<1ton S.ac;n), Sc;ott Ruedy (8111 Clt1n•nt•I Peta• luwn•11nd 1~ount11n VAiiey) BUI Waro !Huntington 0.Al("h), Sc:oll Wartng (HunttngtO<I S.IChl. Q.,y lll!Ql•r (Sen Cie"lente)' Randy Wed-. (Hunllngton S.ech) Fountain Valley entrants Include Peter Townsend while Newport Beach will be represented by John Gothard and Danny Kowck Costa Mesa will have ~ t I ., .. MAJOR LEAOUE 8TANDINOS Am.rtcan LNQue ftlT1!"N DIVISION Angele Kenaaa City CNC4lgo Seattle Oallltnd TeJtU Mfnneso1e W L n 52 70 54 6!> 511 59 65 56 70 •9 72 •3 80 EAaTE"N DIVISION Milwaukee 72 5 t Boston 67 56 BaJUmore 64 57 0olrOl1 63 60 New Yorl\ 62 60 Cle-.leltn0 60 80 T O<O<llO ~9 66 Monday'a Scoreo Angel• 5, Miiwaukee 3 CleYeland 5. ChlCltgo • New Yori!. 4, Toronto 3 Texaa 5. Kanut City 2 Oe11o11 5. Oaklend 1 Boston 4. Sea111e 3 T eday'o Oamee Pct GB 581 56b 2 529 6't •76 13 444 17 405 21Yt 350 28'" 58!> s•5 s 529 1 512 9 508 g·~ !>00 10· .. 472 14 Mllweukee (Vucko••Gll 14·4) •I Angele (Renko 10-4). n Oolroll (Udjur 7-6) at Oai.land (Ktt<>ugh 10.161 ChlC8(IO (Hoyt I 4. 11) at C1evotano (08<\ny 11-111. n Toronto (Stieb 13· 121 •' Baltimore 10 MMtlnez 11-10), n Minnesota (VIOie l -4) el New Yetk (John 9-9). n Kanns C•ty (Gura 15·6) at Te.as (Tanana 6-131, n Bos1on (Eckersley 10·3) et See111e (SIO<IOard 0· 11. n National Leeau• WESTIAH DIVlflON Atlanta ~~~ Sen Fr enclaco Houston C1nctN\a1t 'It l Pct. 09 68 56 548 69 !>7 s.46 66 60 524 3 6-4 62 $08 5 58 66 468 10 48 77 384 20·. EAITEAN DIVlllON SI louts Phll•delphle Montr .. I P1ti.t>utgh Chicago New York 72 52 581 69 55 556 65 59 52• 65 60 520 !>5 72 •33 !>() 73 407 3 1 1'> 1e·~ ,. ... ..-.y·e Score• St LOUii 11, Oodgata 3 Chlcego II, San Ftenclsco S P•lltt>u<gh 8-5. San Otego l>-J C1nc1nne11 6. Montreal 2 Allen1a •. Ph1leclelp'11• 3 Houston 2. N-York O Tod41y'e 0-e Oodgat• (Welch 14·11) 81 SI LOUIS (Slu!Mlf 5·21. n Sen Fronc.sco 1Ga1e 5. 121 al Chicago (Jenkins 8 13) San Oteoo lOravec~y •· 11 11 P1t1st>urgh fMcW1tt19'Tls 7-7), n Montreat (Sanderton (J 111 al Clnclnna11 (Be1eny1 II-12). n Phllaoa1ph1a (Culton 111·81 11 At1an1a (Ntelcro 11·2/.n N-YOrk (Swan 7·5) al Hou11on (Knec!Mlf 5-12), n Angele 5, Brewer• 3 CAUf'Ofltt!A MILWAUKEE abrhbl ebrllbl Oown1ng II 3 0 1 1 Molllo• 3b 4 O 0 C Carew lb 4 1 1 0 Yount ss 4 2 2 c OeCinc.t 3b 3 0 I 1 Coo0et lb • 0 1 C Re JICkson rl 3 1 1 1 Simmons c 4 I 1 c Clerll rl 0 0 O 0 <>o1tv1e ~ 4 o 2 ; B•ylor dh 3 0 1 0 Thomas cl 3 o o G Bonlquei cf 4 I 1 0 Howell Oh 4 O 1 O Grich 21) 1 1 0 0 Edwards rl 3 O 0 0 FOii aa 3 I 1 0 Gantner 2b 3 O O O 8oone c 30 12 Totalt 27 5 8 5 TOlllS 33 3 7 2 8cO<e by 1nn11191 Miiwaukee 000 tOO 002-3 C«1110r<U 100 300 10~-5 OP-MllWaukeo I, Cal1lornl1 1 LOB-Mllwaui.ee 4. Cal1torn11 7 2B-Howoll, Car-. Beylor. Simmons H~-Re Jackson 1301. S-FOlt Mllw..,11.. IP H "Ell 9980 McClure(L.9·6) 7 8 5 5 II 2 Bernard 1 0 o o I 1 C.itfomla w1111w,µ1 e r 3 3 1 8 HBP-Oown1ng by McClure WP McClure BK -M cClure T 02 13 A-35.197 Ant•I ner9991 9ATTM4G AB A H HR "91 ~t. Ro Jackson cer-oaelnClte LJ11n Oownlng 113 12 37 2 18 327 379 85 118 I 31 311 429 69 127 24 llO 2915 402 79 117 II 13 291 H O 116 132 19 54 281 40!> 71 110 30 7 7 275 107 16 29 1 II 271 Re. JICllson BoniqueT Baylor Boone 476 511 128 19 7• 21111 359 34 ll5 7 $0 2115 FOii 011C11 Fe<gvaon Clerk Wilfong 6urleeon K-Totals H ...... Steir .. WHI Tlenl A-SlllCllC lM>n l(IM>n F-" Ret\llo Goltz Tolalt 317 41 101 2 47 2111 397 S3 103 13 !>" 2611 llO 8 17 2 7 243 73 9 16 2 s 219 145 Ill 29 1 11 200 45 4 7 0 2 ,~ 40 6 4 0 I 103 4,222 1128 1, 167 t• 1 687 27• ll'fTCHINO • M M 10 W-l IU 81 43 34 24 2· 1 I 92 7 7 4 5 0..0 2 57 1421J\ 13, 43 80 9.4 3 10 22'"' 23 6 23 2·, 3 22 S2 45 23 40 3-3 3 46 ~ .... 28 42 5·2 3 6!> 1764\ 171 55 113 14·5 388 9~ eg 35 5t 7-4 3 83 1e1 1n 4! II-' 10.9 4 03 142 ..... 147 .. 71 1()..4 4 05 651,\ 117 25 36 8-4 4 55 1, 1~ 1.080 400 570 12·52 3.77 Y.,._ 4, lllua .,..,_ a Toronto too 002 000-3 12 o M-. 'I' Ol'll 00 1 003 OOK-• I 1 IAotll, O. Murri')' (8) and Whitt. a. Martinez (l)C MOtOafl, l.el'oche (8), 0oeaaoe (8) tf>O C.-W-l.aAoehe, 4-1 l -IMI. t-11. t--ao..oe (H) HAa-...,., Votl&, Oemole (16 .. NetllM (13). A-18,Mll ,,..... .. A'e 1 Oetrotl 002 010 tol-6 7 0 Olllllncl 000 000 001-1 11 3 Ptilry "'° l M ,.._rletl: Hot"9. . JonM (7) and Newman, W-Petl\', 14-7. L-Horm. ... t1R1-0etr01t, Herndon ( 19). 0 . W"-1 f16> A-2ueo. ................ ClllOllQo 000 003 0 I 0-4 • I ~ 000 102 111-• 10 0 L ~l =4'~"'12:1:."~~ AncMrW1 (ti OIVM ~ (ll llld , tartdO (II. w-, 10.T L-r-.._ 14.A-t.ec>a. 8 I "..,,...' a. 1107a1a 2 K•nsH Cny 000 OOt 001 -2 10 2 r.-.. 001 000 04x-!> II 0 Btu ... Armll•ong !71. Out&enberry (8) artd Wathen, Schmidt. 01""1n (II)·~ Sun<1~g W ~M\IOI 4 4 L Armllrong, 4·!> S Oarwln (61 HR ,.,. .. Sunobe1g (81 A 8,996 NA TIONAl LEAOUE Cardinal• 11, DodcMr9 3 LOS ANGELU ST. LOUIS abrllbl abrhbl Su2b Landreeu• cl Bau r II GUfl<•ero rf Cey 3b GeNey II) v.aoor c: 5 I I 0 0 Smtih ss 3 2 I 1 Auue4l St Reuu p Roenc:ke pn Fattier p 0'11 Ph st-•n p Becl.wtlh p Monday pn Totals 4 1 I 2 Lo Smith If 5 1 1 2 4 0 I 0 He<nenci.t lb 3 2 2 1 • 0 3 1 Heno,.cll. •I S 2 1 1 4000 Tenacec • t J 4 4 0 1 0 McGee c;I 5 1 3 2 • 000 Oberll.184 3b SI I 0 3 0 I 0 He<r 2b 3 I 1 0 0 0 0 0 ~OtlCh p 3 0 0 0 t O 0 0 Su11er P I O O O 0 000 I 1I0 0000 0000 1000 JS 3 9 3 folala 37 II 13 11 k0<• by lnnlnt• Los AnQele$ 000 00 I 020 3 St Louis 004 001 08• 11 E-Sn, Cey 2. Boker OP -Len Angeles I LOB Los Angeles 1 SI Levis 8 2B-K He<nendoz Tenece, 0'1• Guetreto Garvey 3B S•• SB-0 Smith (231 S -Reuss. O Smtih Loo A1l9alff Reuss (l 12 10) Fouler St-ert BeckW11h 81. Louie IP H 5 7 2 1 ., 3 .,. 2 A EA 99 80 • 4 0 4 1 0 2 3 4 4 1 0 2 1 I 0 Fa<s<h (W 13-7) 7' • 7 3 3 0 2 Sulle< (S 271 110 2 0 0 0 2 HBP K HernandU by Reuu T 2 38 A 2S,049 Rado" Ex-2 Monlr .. I 000 000 O:lO 2 11 0 C1nc1nna11 410 010 OOr-6 tO 0 GulllCkSOM. LlltCll (31. Scnatteoer (51, B Smith (71 and Carle< Puto•e. Lesley (9) end Van Go rder W -Patlore 7.9 L - Gulllckl on 10 10 HR• -Ctnc1nne1t Dneuen (121. Putore ( 1), Montreal, Cromat11e ( 11/ A 10,301 c.-.. <Mani• s Sen F1anc1aco 002 020 100-5 9 3 ChlcaQO 301 021 10•-8 14 0 R Mar11n, Hoflano (5), Fowlkes (7) end Brenly, B110 T1d1ow (8) and J De vii W Bird. 8· 11 l -R Manlrl !>-7 S-Ti<lroYo (51 HR-Sen Frenc••c:o C Oav1s ( 14 ) A-13,7llO Aalfoe 2. Mata 0 N-Yetk 000 000 000-0 4 1 Houalon O 10 ooo oh-2 8 o Eacllry Puleo 1e1 an<I Boctly, Ho<!oo8 (8), J m1et1tO and PufOlt. W-J N"'4<ro, 12·9 L-Zecl1ry. 6-6 A-10,683 f'l"BTOA• ..w ...... p ...... San Otego 300 000 300-11 10 1 Plttsl>Urgn 000 422 00•-8 10 1 Haw~1nt. E'Chelberger (5), Luc:es (7J 1no T l(enneoy Candelaria. Scuriy (61 and I Pen• W-Cen<Je4arl• 11-5 l-Hew111ns 2·• S Scurry ( 10) HA• PtlllburQh. J Thompson (24 ). San Diego • T Kennedy (16) 8£CONDO.U. PedrH S. f'tratee 3 San Otego 010 200 002-!> 10 I PtnsbUrgn 000 010 101-3 11 O Wel1h Lucas (8). OeLeon (8), Chirler (9) ano Swlsner, B•umoarten. Nietnann (5) E Romo 181 and Nicolle W-Welsh. 7-S L- 8aumoerten. 0.5 S-CMlet I•) HAs-Sen Diego, 1.ezceno ( 1!>) Pllltl>Urgh. Motrison (2), J ThomP•~ (2!>) A-11, 1114 ., ...... 4, Phllllee 3 Ph1IM181pl\1e 000 001 070-3 9 O Allantt ooo 201 001-4 a o Krukow, Farmer (7), Reed (9) ano B Olu, Camp end Sinatra w -Camp, 9-7 l Reed. 3-4 HR-Plllla<lelphlt Mallh<JWS ( 18) 4 -16224 TOfl 10 , .. ..., en 320 •• .. 1•) AME"ICAN LEAGUE Wilton KC Yount. Mii Harrah Cle Oare!• Tot PeclOfelc Cho McA .. KC COQP8f, "411 Hrbelt Min Car-. A~• Rtea Bsn G A.a II H ~T. 99 •.l8 60 143 33• 117 •80 94 154 321 , 111 480 87 147 320 120 517 75 16A 317 91 331 4 t 105 317 124 0 0 71 149 317 116 4811 77 149 317 108 4 13 62 130 315 101 m 111 111 .J1• 110 433 63 135 312 _,._ G Th o mas. M liwau •ee , J:i , Ra.Jackeon, Angela, 30; Thornton Cleveland. 27 OglMe M ilwaukee, 25, Harrell C-end 24. l M PetTsh. Oelr011 24. Cooper, Mllwau11.ee 24, DeClncee, AllQ9f•, 24. 11-Ballad In Mc Rae Kanan C11y 101l Thornton. C•evelano. 93 Cooper. M1h1reullH 80 G Thoma•. M iiwaukee, 118 , Yo unt Miiwaukee. 113 P'ltclllno (15 0.CNlena) Vullov1c;n, Mllweuwee, 14-4 Burna. c11icego. 13-4. z.fln, A ..... o. U..$1 Sutclllle. Clevelend, 11-•. Guidry, New Yetk, 11·5. Petry, O.troll 14· 7; C.udUI, s .. ttle, 10·6. Gu•e. l<entu City. 15-8 NATIONAL l.aAGOI 011-,Mtl Ou•llem. Chi MIOtoc:tc • PV' Lo.SmOh. St L Knighl, Hin Buckner, Chi lellef,Oodeel• Cnciepdon. Cln Catt ... Mtl Motgen, S F. GAaflH ~ 122 4114 71 160 3311 111 •38 89 137 3 14 123 4511 77 144 314 120 485 100 10 312 12• .,. 59 141 30I 128 t\11 72 •&e 305 "' qr Sf• tll ... 113 •• , 39 1 ... ~ 117 422 71 128 303 100 3!>0 S3 108 303 """"'"-l(lnQman. N-YO<ll. 30. M\lrplly. Allllnta. 30. Sdwnldt, PNlaOllPhi'e. 27, J.ThOm-. Pll11buroh. 25. O--, ~ II. .._ .. Hedin Murp/ly, Allenta, 19: OINer. Montreal, 117; Cl81k, 8an Frenc;lac;o, 84, &udo,,.,, Olllc;ege. 81, Cat11t. Montr••'· 81, .J Tho,...paon, PHttt>urgn, I 1 "teMfte n• DMNtoMl Aogera, M ontreal, 14·11: OanOelula, Pltlellllfgfl, t 1.5, Cetllon, PNlacMlpNa, 1H. 0 Aobff1Mm. Pl111burgh, 1'·7. ForMll, 81 Loula, 13·7; Lea. Montrttl, I 1•8. v .1enauet•, Dodfet•, tt·•· .MO: w ...... ~,..... From round three through six, onJy two surfers wiU l'Ompete m each heat AIM> rac:tKJ My Ouc:ne ... KOi ToY Wiii\ love ,4my, A• lml)(Mtlve, Mlrag., OOlden POiiey, Nlnky'e Rullan E .. ler Glow Ttme 1 10 M~ BICONO lllACI. II lurlonga Summer Knloht (Pletce) g 20 3 ISO 3 00 tn11en1 Oenc:.r (Oellh0u9"ye) 3 00 2 80 Random Wind (Hl-•I 3 00 Alto 1 Kaci Ramble on Jonn, PalrlOI Joa. Hot Track•. SnOO<ly Prudy, RatM A Prlie. Jualtee 101 All. Cn1111es Hal Be RelOUrcetvl. Courun Candy. T1m<1 1 10 315 t2 DAILY DOVat.I (S-81 palO $ 108 00 TMlllD llACE. 1 1118 mllot FMltler Rewerd (MGCrnl 5 20 3 20 2 80 Bad Bio Luey (Caatanede) !> 20 4 20 Pampas Cai (011.11 3 20 Also raced Palahe Fleet s n..·s A Gel, Stray A Llllle. Steante Geet, Bu111 end Run, Prim Oust Ftr•baH fluh rune 1 •3 •1S S5 EXACT A (3·61 PllO $70 00 fOUllTH AACIE. 6 lurlono• Mate Adapter (Valenruetal S 20 5 20 • 40 Rec1n<1 (P1nc;ay) !> 00 3 60 Ten Percent (Lipham) 3 00 Also raced Bk:k '1 A K:•Ck. Notth 01 like, Plaza Native, Pros.cv10r. El P•klava, HonOr Her Oller. Out 0 1 Ice. Only Ptelend Oonuntoo limo 1 10 4/S FIFTH "ACE. 1 '" mites on 1ur1 ln;wllebte LeMlet (Mc;Crn) 7 60 4 60 3 00 Rom1>4n Rude (Ve1en1ueta) 3 40 2 40 CllarQlllQ Ster (CaatanocJa) 3 80 Also r.ced: Mldnne Copper. F1butou1 Reason. Sargeant Wiison. Ta1111 Patton s LHOe< 95 U.CTA. (2· 1) paid $63 !>O SIXTM llACE. 6 furlongs Mr 1.y11e (Cap11a1no) 14 80 25 80 13.00 lndte•a Dancer (Slblllet 7 oo s 20 I m Lucky (L81'\jlRCe> 5 40 Also raced Sates Goel, Ooc Campbell. Too Teri, Bold 'N Clever. Supportive. BoldlOP. Taiwan Oe••I. Night Hand, Mighty Genet al 1 10 215 SEVENTH RACE. 11 turlOf\gt No No (Oollhouauye/ 8 20 3 60 2 60 Son of a Dodo fCsmoH) 4 60 2 80 P1eemp11ve (0t&t) 4 00 Stand Pal Fty"'g ChlCk, O.noy Wit flrne 1 09 O S5 EXACTA f4·3) paid S76 50 R PICK SIX (8-3-7-2-11·4) paid $1.799 00 wllh 39 w1nn1ng ucltets (!Ive llO<MS) $2 Ptek S" consolation paid S33 60 with 892 w1nn1no llCl<•ts (lour houes) EIGHTH lllACE. 6 lurlono• Olvma.c Mo..-1 IHawlevl 8 00 3 80 3 •o 8.,a Lass IMcCarron> 4 00 3 20 Chuck 0 l uck 1P1ncay1 3 60 Also raced. Lottie Mo, KamHa. Kippy E•PIOSI•• Kingdom, tmpelletll Laas Time 108 315 NINTH "ACE. I-II 16 mthtt 1 1116 m1IH Ag1ta1e11eu fValentuef•I 15 20 8 00 S 00 GOid County (McCerronl 9 20 • 80 HtQn CaJ11>« (Ltpl\am/ 14 20 Also •Keel A•• 1Mt OdO• Gtrl 8•11••. Lin• I. c . War AhHd, MIUtng tn Action. Spray Cologne. Marte Crowo. Angelic Native. Spotting Spirit Time 1 44 215 S5 EXACTA (•·71pll<l1287 00 Attend....:. 15.678 .cosmos MonlrMI TetonlO ChicagO NASl attindlntt (fin.I) l!ASTlftN DIVlllON W L GI' GA ·~ Pio. 23 9 73 !>2 87 203 19 13 eo 43 41l 159 17 15 64 47 41l 151 12 19 56 65 55 129 SOVTHE.AH OIV1llON Fett l aude<date Ill 14 64 74 57 163 Tulsa 16 16 89 57 59 ,162 Tampa Bay 12 21 49 86 •3 115 Jac:llr.onvllle 11 21 4 1 71 39 105 WEITEllN OfVlltOff San Diego 19 13 71 54 54 182 Vencou•er 20 12 58 48 411 1eo s.a111e 18 1• 72 •11 80 1116 P0'11ttnd 14 18 48 « 42 122 San Jose 13 19 47 62 38 114 Eomonton 11 :it 37 66 32 113 • c11nc.neo dl•tSIOn 1111e Si. 1>0tnt1 .,. •-••ded lot• regutetion 0t overtime •ICIOty Four 0otnta la< e shootout victory One bonut point 101 every go1t tcO<ed wtth a mu1mum ol three P« gam<1 No bonUI l)Olnl Is ewaroao lor overtime ot allOOIOUI goels. "8yofl01anca flRIT "OUNO (beel of ttw.e) ·~·a-. Tutu a I Coemos Fort le..,clerd•le at Mon1r .. 1 Vancouver et San Diego Totonto et s.anee Frldey'e o.m.. SeallMI at To•onlo San Diego •I \lancouver ..,,,,., •• GamM eo.<not at Tulse I UflcNy'e O- Mon1r .. 1 et Fon Lau<letdete W~.hpt.1 Tulsa II Coemoe (II necnMty)I Montreel at F0<1 Lauder~. (II~) Tetonto et s-111e (If --81YI TtMweday,hpt.t Vanc:ouwr 11 Sen Diego WOf'IMft'I IOU"*'Mnt ~ ....... ....,., Ktthy JO<O•n = ~; ... Aollleon ~outh AlrlGI), 8·3, 8·2: Cl1udla l(ohele W"I 0.rm•n)') del. AOtle Catalt (U.S.), 4, 7-5. Camltte 8-\Jamln IU 8.l Oel Iv¥>"• Maelruo•·OHH (Aro1n1lna), 8-$. •·2: Cetllerlnt TMY* l'•tn08) OM Peule 8mlttl (US I. 8·2. 4-e. 8-: ~ Mundal (8ovl11 Africa) dtl. EV• Pt•" (W•t Germany). t-3, 3 ... , 7·&, eeth Nonon (U.t) OM. Betty ltow (Nethlflano.), M. 4 ... , 8-.2, AnOtw l.Mnd (U 8.1 de! Vlrglnll Wade (QfM I lrilalOI). 7-0. 4°8, 11·4, P•"' Cante (U.8.) def. ltecy Margolin (U.8.), 0-1, &-2 Mr• ..1=o':: ~ •• , -77 llnQitre, H bMt. I ~ r7 llOnllo, llOI machtrel, t rOOll n.tl, 1 cat>uon, 4 80Mlplrl, • ~ DAVSY'I LOCKllll (Newpotl a..ch) - 164 •ngle11 3 berrac:u<I•. n 4 OOl\110, 48 calico bau. 1 l\alll>Ut 1 1•5 mac:ketel 18 roet1 llah. 111 ..,.,d b8N. 1 yeliOwllll DANA WHAlllF -157 angle<• 23 Dau. tll bonito, 4 nallbut. 276 mackotel. 08 rcxk l11h llAI. llACH -124 engleta Sil oarracude 7 l)Onllo 6 caltco bHI 7!>0 m1cke1e1 180 rock 11111 110 Hf\O but (981~) -t•• angle<• 12 bonito, 2 h•llbut. 860 mac:1tero1. 8 Hnd bua, 550 queen ll1h, 500 wh•t• croak., SAN DllGO (HAM Lending) -256 angteu ~II aJbecote Canedlan Footbd lHgue Toronto Hemlllon Onewa Mon Ir eel EASTI!llN DIVISION W l T Pf PA Pio. 4 2 1 186 174 !I 3 4 0 16'1 186 6 1 5 0 139 171 2 1 5 0 562082 WEBnAN DIVISION w1nn1peg 5 1 o t8S 103 10 B111tah Columbia • 2 0 184 154 8 C.iQery 3 2 I 137 123 7 EOmonlon 3 3 0 208 127 6 Sealletellewan 3 3 0 136 1!>4 6 Friday'• Game Calgary •I M0t1treeJ a.tUtd•J'•O..... Onawa 81 W11>111peg T0ton10 et Br1111111 Cotumblt 8und.ty'1 Game Saslla1cllewan at Edmon10<1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 8 8 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 tO •• ~~· -· NASCAR point l•eden Bobby Allison 2 lle2 Terry lAbOnla 2 912 Darrell Waltrip 2 6•2 AteherO Pelly 2.537 Buodv A1nng1on 2 !>24 Deve Marcls 2.493 Harry Gant 2 •60 Aon Boucno•o 7,389 Oate Earnl"lardl 2,38!> M0rgan Shepherd 23n ~, i.eden Oartell Wa1111p S•6t 1175 Bobby ANllOl1 422 130 Rte11aro Polly 268.840 O•le Earnhardt 266.1175 T.,ry Lat>onte 262 215 Ron Boue/\atd 274.505 Benny Parsona 218.720 Jody Rtdley 203,880 C11e VerbO<OUQI\ 178.865 Harry Gant 163 455 Monda''' trenaectlon1 .ASEBALL ... lloMIL...- CINCINNATI REOS -Traoed Jim K .. n. pl1G"9f 10 Ille Cnteeoo WhllO so~ lor two minor league pleye<1 aAIKETBALL Natlonel ..... !ball Auoclatlo<1 NEW JERSEY NETS -NemeO Jim Lamparletlo. d1rect0t of public rotet1on1, an<1 promoted Ke••n MecConMll dtrector 01 meo•• 1nlotmauon fOOTBAU IC4tlloNI ,_, ..... ~ .. BUFF" ALO BILLS -Cul Obed Arltl, place locker, Bob Oanenhauer. tlnebeclter, 1no Mike Moller. offensive tackle CINCINNATI BENGALS Cut Ken Brown. dtlen11vt eno and Oean OorHy ~teller ' DALLAS COWBOYS -Reteuoo Mike Berke< delensl"9 tllCllMI, Cnrlt Co<p w.de recal-Zac Cypen talety Steve OVrhem .,,o Veney 0111 deten11ve tecktu, Oa••<I Orellam. ClelenSlve end. Mike Muon. lac:l<le. Oavld Mone, llnabac:kar. end Oorryf Tucker 111nn1ng beck DENVER BRONCOS -Cut Tom OaY11. S111 Vetako tf\O M erk McKay, 01ttns1ve linemen, Alan Duncen. placeklcke• T1m Koegel. quenerbeck Wiilie Beeb• a.nd Jon Hoot•. running backa. Tetr"\' Cieri!., 11g111 end AnlhOny ArnOIO wlcle r~ver Bill Smtih eno Bob Overly. 1tnebacll.1rt and Steve Hetrlt, delenttve beck GREEN BAY PACKERS Cut Arlend Thompson guard, Keuy Hainer tight end. Robart P111ard puntet Oevld F1agea<g1a and Bnll Freeman. •Id• 1ece1ver1. G J Walley. delentive tackle, Merv Cn11111an, running beck, J1mu Ot•ldton and Plul Rudzln•i.I, lineblCl<ers afld Aeoote Were strong salely Ci.macs Marcus· Anci.<eon ,..;(le receiver lrom waivers KANSAS CITY CHIEFS -W9111ed Larry Brodlllty. wide receiver. Ray Crouse, runn"'g bec:k. Eric l.Ane 11nebeek., Miki Ph"llpa, light and, and S1h• Aooer1 olf&nt1vt teQ(le LOS ANOE~ES RAMS -Cut Ol'Y Ct rr. running back, Fred Oomez1rej0 safely, and Roclt Patma. ~ ,_ MIAMI DOLPHINS -Cul Mike ROO•'ijlie. wide r-ver. Ke4th Cren&hew. t tlety, 8tWI Carl Allen, oenter. NEW YORK GIANTS -~Anthony Anderton encl Mtc:11.....ri~oar•ld. r"nnl"9 becks, Ed Leoperd, · plac:ei.lcker; Chuck Corrn l. cornerbacll, Chrla Combe, llQhl end; •n<I Bobby 011)"00. wtde rece4ve< PHILADELPHIA EAGLES -Cul Rob Ttyk>r, ott.natve ledlle, B~I Stromberg. wkH receiver. Brien Franco, oleceklcller, I M Hipp and Jeff Rodenb«ger. running !)edit, Joe Hap,,., cenle•. Scott 8ufrlt, Quarel; Jetome Kina Ind Ernie 0-11. ~ beekl, Ind 0... Warn«, qu«lefbecll SAN OIEOO CHARGERS -Cul ltvln P1111Hp•. CO<nett>eclc: Auaaell DIS, running bACk. Jimmy Tu<:ker end Mttle Tcjjber1, wide reoelwra, LMry Gentry, qvarlerbecl., Oreg Byte•. tlCllle, St..,. Ooollttle, llMC>llCa•. Doug 8-IOoln. Mlely and Mlc;t\MI Browne, klcttar. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS -Cul Gary CMblon and J•y Sum/Mr .. Hneoackere. J T ....,, punttf. Detfltl HeM. corn«bec:ll, Gery WllnNne, .. lety. P .... : hffuomlnl, -'ler, M1C1 ~y Oatlellanot, corn«becll. SEAHLE SEAHAWICS -Cut Chffttt Cooper. wide ,~..,.,. ~ Aogen. quarter~_.!<_un Oen. lier. Tony Jeca-, .. ~ Pmt ~ry. ~ end: Oon s-.11. QIHWO; Mike Hlfell, futtf)llCll: AlllllOny Paopeo, Mlbactl; Ofl¥1M Oeum, otNNM tedcle lll'4S J-Tol"9tt, MV\lng llecll TAMPA IAY 9UOCAHf:EAS -Out AerQfl Mllch~_t1 cornetbac•; 1.n11 Shott, 111011 l'red4lrte11, Miiie Shtlrrod, Cllltlle WM..,., ""' Al CecM. WAIHINOTON Rl!:JSKINI -Welv.O Owy AllC!efton. olfenlll"9 O~ln; Alelly Rey, Aelph Watlllen *'° AendY Tr1&.1tm1n. ~ 11nem1n Ind Jeff OoH. llnebeoller IOCCO ~--~ WIOHIT A WINOI -Purchated Omar Oomttt. torwwd, ll'Oll'I ti. ..... Yolll A"owt and elOfl9d NM to I ,_ conttect Cou.IOI .. JAMUTOWH OOLLEOf -N1med Arthuf Jw; ..,_ llMCI .._ .. .,.. -" I.OHO MACH tTATI -...,_, 0.., Van "9et ethlelto dnctOr. AP WINptloto POUNDING HOME -Gene Tenace of the St. Louis Cardinals, scores ahead of a throw to Dodger catcher Steve Yeager Monday night m St. Louis. The Cardinals won. 11 -3. to drop the Dodgers into second place in the National West. From Page C1 ANGELS TOP BREWERS. e • has to keep it going " "I think Mike has learned a helJuva lot thlS year. Hitters like Gorman Thomas make a Living by what they do in the late innings . W i tt s h owed m e some thing when he struck Thomas out in the ninth He did a super JOb and beat a great hitter ." 'l'homas's strikeout certainly characterized Witt's performance and the maturity he's attamed m recent months. Thomas. the major league's top home run hitter w ith 32. came to the plate following Ben Oglivie's one-out, two-run single to center that cut the Angels' lead to 5-3 m the ninth inning. After getting a reassuring pat- on-the-back from Manager ~ne Mauch. Witt promptly threw Thomas five fastballs before s triking him out with a curve. Thomas. angry and beside himself for missing the pitc h , promptly swiped a t the dirt with his bat a nd then proceeded to smash it into the ground , breaking it in two, much to the delight of the crowd. And, just to let the Brewers know that Thomas' K wasn't 8 fluke. Witt got designated-hitter Roy Howell on strikes to end the gamt:. "He must have thrown six fastballs in a row a nd I was looking curve on every pitch," said a somewhat miffed Thomas in the clubhouse. "Then he threw me a slider. I didn't even think he had a slider. At least he hadn't thrown one all night. "This Ume he may have got me, but. ... " In all. Witt tamed the Brewers on a mere seven hits. lliB only difficulty came In the fourth , when the Brewen acorcd their first run, and in the ninth, when Stahler to return? N:S:W O RLEANS (AP) - Qu&.rtMback Ken Stabler wu freed Monday lo plaL in the National Football oague, cleartn& the way foe him to joln the New Orleane Salnta. NFL Commmioner Yote Roaelle l&!d he won't dlaclplin.e Siabler If he keeps hla dl1tance from "undestrt.bl elementa." they added two more to make 1t dose. Otherwise. it was Witt who was giving the Brewe r s a blistering headache. The Angel hitters. meanwhile. without a nickname. peppered Milwaukee starter Bob McClure for four runs on e ight hits through seven innings. Doug DeCinccs had an RBI single in the firs t, while Bob Boone and Downing added RBI singles in the fourth . Boone's incidentally, came with the bases loaded as he recorded two RBI And, for good measure, Reggie Jackson added his 30th home run o f the season d eep into the second deck in right field in the seventh inning. It marked the seventh time in Jackson's career that he has now hit 30 or more home runs in a single season. Despite the offensive output, though. the accolades we nt to Witt. "All we're trying to do is get as (ar ahead of Kansas City and Chicago as possible," said Witt as the Ange ls d id indeed gain another game on their pursuers as Kansas City lost to Texas. while the White Sox were losing in Cleveland. dropping them 2 and 6 'h games back. respectively. "I guess the key was I didn't let up on them. I did throw a few pitches that could have been hit and hit weU, but they didn't." Which may have been why the Br e wer hitter s were contemplating having a few Harvey Wallbangers of their own late last night. * AHQll. NOTll -,reel Lyllfn HI OUI Mondty'I geme wttll I eott ttoflt II,_ end w11 rtpl•eeo In th• lln~p by hftf-uH. LyM'I alltMnl It not oontlCMrtd ...-1ou1 and tle't t~ed b9Gtl In lhe l!Mup tonlghl . . . ....._.on lllttlng hie ~II hOme nm: "To '"" It wtlal' I really ltllpOt\ent. H1l11n9 30 It nice. but 40 " ltle ~ numtier. " '°" 1111 40 home run• lhat PfO~_O!r amount• to •bot.II 2$ v1etor1e1 on • ...eon · . . . Manaow 0-.. ..._., comtntntlno on wMtMt 1111 ~" 1n a ,... OOOd oroowe °' not: "llla l•t 11tne • t9P0fler aelll" me tllet QUMtlon we .-nl on Mel io« OA11t *' 11119 oern.. I'd retllet not M)' t_llX'Nnt rtoht now . . " 10V know wtiet 1 mMn ••• .._ on ~· 1tr11t_,,. ...... ""' mltlled •boul three Plldlea. And, If lie heO OOl'IMClted, they WOUidn't llaW .,..,, .inotN : •• Atll•I pltcl'lw &.• a..-.i..a cetebr11•d Illa Hiii blrtllda~ Wonelay. ........ ~. Ma lloWICI Ofttt -1.,-necl run ln hl1 1111 ''" 1e__.arencu 1ncompa~111111 18 .... '""'"°'· rsv;lfiii l~"t It~ lie I 1.0 Wl1'I ON ~ ... -#. I Of "" l>rllf No ..,_ --,,.... .... ..... ...... (14-4) IOllMI ............. (1C>-4). C4 Ochowicz top cycling ro LJ:ICESTE.R, Enaland (AP) Detenolna champ&on Sh•llA Youna Ochowlc~ advanced In the women'• 1prjnt at the W orld A ma t c:u r Cyclln1 c hamflo n1hlp1 by beutng aabell.- Gautheron o( Fra.rK't' 2-0. Youns-Ochowlc:t, 31 , a former Olympic apeed skatin1 atar, was joined In the semi!lnals by two o the r Ame r icans - nation al ch•rnplo n Connie Par&skev1n and Sue Novara-Reber. rtatc NOTICE lllOTmOU8 llU ..... NA• STATl•NT The lollowl"g p1,..on ta doing ~-· BUSINESS ADVERTISING & COMMUNICATIONS. 22074 El T0to Roed, El T«o, CA 02t30. Wllltc:e Edward lrlah. 2•818 L..Melle6d St., EJ TOfo, CA 92930 Thll butllnMa .. c:ondoold by 1n lndMdual. Wiii-Edwlfd lrllh Tl\lt llll-l WU ftfed wl!h !he Coun~ Cleric OI Ortnge County on Aug. ' 1082. 1'1M111 Publl•h•d Orano• COHI Dilly Pt1ot Aug. 10. 17, 2•. 31, 11182 • 3578-82 1'1Cl1TIOUIM.1 ... ll MAMIE ITATDIUfT The tollowlng per90l\I tr• doing bUllneNU: RINALDl'S CHILD CARE CONCERNS, 111809 Educltlon ~. Hunllnglon 8Mc;h. CA 02848. Ray J. 1nd Kalhleen M, Rlnlldl, 2030 Calver!, Co111 Mell. CA 92$28. Thia bu1lne11 11 oonduo!ed by hulballd 11\d wlfl. Kllh._., M. Rlnlldl Roy J. RJ"lldl Thll 1111-1 wu llled wllh !he COun~ Cl«k ol Ortnge Coun!y on Aug. . 11182. ,,._1 Publlehed Orange Co11t Dilly Piiot. Aug. 10, 17, 24, 31, 1082 $5"-82 P\B.IC NOTIC£ Otange Coat• DAILY PILOT!Tu .. day, Auguat 24', 18.82 MUC *>flCC MUC NOTICE "!n.e-r::=~= .. "°"'*" .,..... ~ ~ .. N.AM1 l"fATI_... ..... ITA~ fne ~ •tOM .,. OOfl'O ,._ IOllCllWlt ~ -OOlllt ~II bulinMIM The lollowlnt .. ,'IO,, It ootne Tlle lol101111f11t "''°" I• ,deln9 ~.. buelt_ ... llWINC C APlf Al . 16 U 1 MflA 0 Vl!ll0PMlNl I, 42H Toulwle Olrcte. Irvine. OA U 7t• =u• Orlv., lull• C, N1wport DU" flAVOAITI! THIN08 1411 t t Cl!OAllllAOOK VILLAOI! ~ 11 lfvlne C1 927" ' UTATU : 0 OAlll IAN ~LIP(, JoMpfl Peier fl"'-. tM• 1 , C. 92MO ToulouM Olrcte, lrvlne. CA t2714 Oyn1-Pl1a, l"c te C1llfornla L1mti11111 .41noOG1i 111. ,..,, ::/l~~i .. ~4·~~~~Z~'6~ Peoen51 ll'l1M,C1 91714 COATUUTATU, OCAI08AH Qlnn'; L YOllflG. 17N2 Olllrnan. ~l!IOl'll. 42., CaMCM Otl,,., IMM, 0.4 127 t8 Sulle C. Nftootl leeeh. Ce t 2MO Thllbu-l1conouc11C1Dyln 'UCA l llTATU •• I AHIA lndMClu1I " o' 1 C 10 Thie bu.U-1a GOndue1ed by 1 811ney M1ttl"· 1n lnOlvldual oeneref penner.nlp OU C1mpua Ortv1 8ul!1 C. l.MnOflOI Hancocill Ill CONCIPCION VILLA l . I A Tnla ••••-• wH tiled wtlll the SAN QUINTIN 18TATll. UU Coun1y c i.w1o or Otmnge County on ~Ct •1, flounlefn Valley, CA ~l p!.C:"B._ ~t>Y= ;-~=led by • fhll at••-• wM Ned wtth the 11m119d pertnwthlp Cou111y Clel1! o1 Ottnge County on OYNA·PLEX, INC July ~e. 1tU ..,...,.. tn Au " L • t39:J lmery Cl Publl1n10 O,.nge Con t Diiiy '7 ~C>Ur\llln ~. CA 0270I Pllol Aug 3. tO. 17, 24, 1982 Thi• bu"'-11 ClOndl>Clled by an AllQ II, t082 1'1 ... 0 ~,:~, Oe\111, Publl1hed Or•n1.• Cout ally Tnlt ,,,,_, Wit tlled wl!h !he 346742 lndMduef Pllol, Aug 10, 17, 4, 31, 1::~M:2 County Clefk ol Orange County on ---------~;...;.~1 Auou11 2. 1982 ,1..,... ~~~~~~~~~--Realll Long flt.8tJC NOTICE Thie 1111-1 WM filed wnh llWI l't8.JC NOTICE H. YIClm. •UCH8".""' INI • Att-r et Law PlCTITIOUI au• • OM Hewpert fl'IMe, l'OW1h "· HAMI I TATl•NT 1I01Dove11,..1 The followlng p111on 11 doing Hewpott .. eoh, Ce. aeeo bullneae a1· Tiii: (114) Mt•:MOt R & B'S TOUCH OF CLASS. Publl1had Orano• co .. 1 Dilly 111191 Anabel, 011den Grove, CA PllOI AIJO 3, to, 17. 2•. 1082 02843 348t 82 Ann• LOUIN FlelOhar. 1813 w H•Clend• Pl , Anll\elm, CA 0280• fUll.IC NOTICE Thia t>uatn ... I• conducted by an 1------------- lndlvldull. ITATa ... NT °' WITMDRAWAL Anna loulM Fletcher FltOM PAlnltlflltW Tnla 1111111*11 wau nled wtlh lhe ~RATING UM~ County Cleric or Orange County on FICTTTIOUI IUllNlll NAMe July 20. 1982 F1"702 Tne l ollow l ng pereon hU Publllhed Orang• Co111 Delly wt1hdrewn u • oenei•I partner lrom Pllol. Aug 10. 17, 24, 31. 1982 the par1neranlp QPlflllllQ under Ille 357&-112 llclltloua bualn111 neme of OCE ANS W EST MA RIN A DEVELOPMENT COMPANY II 4000 MacAr!hur Boulevard, Sulle 700 Nll.IC NOTICE NOTICE M DlllO\.UTIOH Eetl, Newpott Beech, CA 02860 M PAft·TNEAS.-Th• llctllloua bu1ln111 nam1 PlCTmoul llU ... H NAMI Sf A TUj!lllNT fh• followt"g perao" I• dolnO bu•lrlffau· MOUNTAIN CRE l!K II, l TO , 1200 Quall 81 • Suite 290, N-l)Of'l 0..Gh. C1. 02660 L Vln¢en! M•yell, Ina , (I Cellfomla C)orporellon). 1200 Ou111 81 • 611l1e 200. Newpo11 e.tch. Ce. 928GO Thia bull"ltl It COlldUCl.O by 1 llmltld PlllM<lhlp. l VINCENT MAYELL. INC By l VlflC411\I Ma)'tll. PtetlO..ll rn11 11111t111n1 wu 11141<1 wltn 1ne County Cletll of Orenge Cou"IY on July 90, 11182 '194400 Publllh•d Orang• Cont Dally PllOI AUij 3. 10. 17, 24. 1982 3425-82 Nn..IC NOTICE Publlc notlc;e Is hereby glYen Iha! 1!1letl*'I fOf the par1M<anlp wu NOTICf TO C"•DITORI THE EMBLEM CORPORATION. en<I ftled on July 11. 1980 In lhe Coumy M IUUC "'AMIR" CHARLES E ATWOOD. nenttolor• ol Orange (hc:a. 1101 -'107 U.C.C.) dolllQ butlneat at Tract 11.533 eaal The lull name Ind rllldence ol NOTICE IS HEREBY' GIVEN 10 Ille ol F1<n •nd n0r1h ol 60 Fwy, City o1 1ne person withdrawing U I Plf1ner Credl!Ot8 of IMAGES FOR HAIR 0t Ontlrlo County ot Si n Befnardlno, ta· JAMES P WARMINGTON, 314 DONNA A. CARA. Tr•ntfero11. s1111 oi Calll0tnla. did on 1ne 8th Buen• Vla1a, Belboe, CA 92861 whote bu1ln111 1ddreH 11 2515 d•y of Augu11 1982. by mu1uel J111191 P. Wwmlnglon En! Coeal Hlgnwey. Corona del constnl, dissolve 1ha said Robert F. Beauchamp M11. County ol Orenge, S1a1e ol partnerthlp and termlnelt their Rlehard L. Beauchamp Callloml1. !hit a bulk 1ren1ler 11 relatlona es partneta lhe<eln This a111ement wu llled wUh !he 1bou1 10 b• med• l o MARK DATED AT Anlhelm, Calllomla, County Clerk ol Orll\gl Counl)' on MCCARDLE, JAMES PANAGAKOS, Otll 20th day or Augua1, 1982 August 2. 1982 KA THY A. SCHAEFER, BRIDGETT C E. A.lwood Fiie No. 1'1411'7 NAILEfll, PAULA S. MARRALLE, Publlaned Orange COISI Dally ""OOll. l(ENOAU. • 0 0 N NA A c ARR 8 n d J A y Piiat, August 24. 1982 """"'"°TOH f'IQUEROA, Transleraes, whose 3759-82 A ProtMalonal Law Corp. bu11ne11 ado1eu la 2515 Eas! -------------I 42tle MacArthur lllvd., 8ull1105 Coast Highway. Corona del Mar. Nll.IC NOTICE Hewpon e..cti, c .. t29I0-20ll1 Coun1y o l Oranoe. Slate ot ___ ....:..;~;...,;,--..,..,..,-,-.,...---1 Publlahed Oranoo Coael Dally California f'ICTITIOUI IU ... 18 PllOI Aug, 3, 10, 17. 24. 1982 Th• properly to be !ranalerred la NAME ITATEWNT 3459-82 localod al 2515 Easl Coast The loltowfng PlflOflS are Oolng PUBLIC NOTICE Highway. Corona dol Mar, County of bu11,_ u : Orange, Sia!• of Calllornla SUN-MOON (IOUOR & JR. NOTICE OF TRUITE~'I SALE Sl id properly IS described In M ARKET, 12 t 28 Beach Blvd . T.S. No. F-o31 oenaral 11 All slock In 1tade, Stanton, CA 90880. On September 14. !982 at lO oo fi•turH, equlpmenl and good wlll or Wen-Mo Chen, 7 Glen", lrvtne. 8 m. EXECU·CORP, 81 TrullM, or thll Beauty Shop business k"ow" CA 92714. Succ;essor Trualee or SuballlulltO as IMAGES FOR HAIR end located Pl-Ian c nen, 7 Glenn, IN!ne, CA Trustee. ol Iha! cer!aln Deed ol al 2515 Eall Coul Highway. Coun1y Clefk ol 0 11ng1 Counly on Auo e. IGll2 1'1 ...... Publl•h•<I Orenge Coot 01lly Pilot. Aug 10. n, 2•. 31. 1oe2 307 .... 2 PLellC NOTICE HOTICI Ot' auu T"AHll'I" TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN NOTICE 19 Hl!REBY GIVEN to !he Credllor1 ol LOUIS S SIMS 1nd MIQUEL URSUA, Tran1leror1, wt'IOM bullrlell tddr ... It 92 Town & Country Roed, <>ranoe. Coumy 01 Ortno•, St•t• 01 c 111forn11, tn11 1 bulk tran1t1r II aboul 10 be Midi 10 PAMELA L CACACE llld WILLIAM E CACACE. Tr1n1l1r .. a, wnoae bullneat IOdreu 11 1012 Cllll 0.1,,., lllguna Beech. Counly of Ot 1"941, Siii• ol Clllf0tnl1 Tne ptoperly to be lr1n1l1<rld la located et 2820 E Co111 Highwey. C0tona del Mar. Co~mly ol Orenoe. Siiia OI C1lll0tnl1 Seid properly 11 d11c;rlbed In geheral •• lease. le11ehold fmprovem1n11 turnl!ure. llxtur11. equlpmenl, ltcenM . 111\d Ired• name ol 1n11 Be1u1y Shop bu•l"ua known 11 SENOR HAIR DESIGN end loc11ed el 2820 E Cou1 H10hw1y, Coron• det Mat, Coun1y ol Orange. Slete ol Celllorn11 The bulk 1r1nafer wlll be contummaleo on 0t •lier Ille 10th day ol Sep!emt>er. 1982. end cl1lm1 may be llled al WELLS FARGO BANK. N A .. Eacrow Oeperlmenl, Re· Escrow No. 8"3-40 IT. 880 Newporl Centet Or . Sul!e 1230, Newport Beach, County ot Oranoa, Slate of Calllornla 92860 AH clalma must bl recel~ed a1 lhla addre11 by tne 8t h d ay ol Septembe1, 1982, unteu the bulk transfer also 1nclud11 the transfer ol llquor license. In which ceae, 1ll cialms must be received prlO< lo !he dale on Wl>ICh !he llqu0< llGenee Is !ransferred by Iha Oepartmenl of AlcOhollC Beverege Control 92714 Trust 1tt.ecu1ad by J1mes H C0tona del Mer, County or Orange. PlCTITIOUI .,...Sa Thia bu"'-la conducted by an Bran"en Ill and Linde G Br111nen. Slate ol Calll0<nl1 ~IT.A~ Individual. husband anel wife, and recorded The bulk lrensler wlll be Soter as known 10 lhe Tranalereea, 111 business n1mu and llddresaea uMKI by Trtnsl«ora lor the lhrH yeer& IHI PHI ... NONE The lollowlng peraon 11 doing Wen-Mo Chen April 10, 1082 11 1n11ruman1 No consummelecl on 0t efter the 101h bu...__.. u ·. Thll 1111emeo1 was flied with Ille 3006 BooL 14016 p-.... 910 01 day ol September, 1982 at 10 A.M Oaled August 19, 1982 ..,_ Cou I ,,..._.., or ""'•""" "'~--... on 1 ' In " ' -..-' 11 SUN' •NO ESCROW SERVICES. BE BEAUTIFUL BODY WRAP, n Y vovo" ""-..,-"""'"' Ottld1I Aeco<ds of Ot1nge County, ..,... 8028 W11~ A~ue. Huntington July 27• 1982 FlM171 Cellfoml1. and pur1u1n1 10 lhll INC . "4004 Eu! Chapman A~enue, Pe"*t L CIClce W11llam E C.caoe Published Or1no1 Coast Delly Beech. Ce. 0 c 1 0 11 Qertlin Notioe 01 Oefsull th&feun<ler Sune c. Oranoe. County of Oranoe. JoyBl<rloe,8871Pelm1Clrcle, Publlahed range OH 1 Y recorded May 18, 1982 ea St111 0I Cllll0tnla Ptlol Aug 24. 1982 3757-82 YOfbl Linda. CL 92688 Piiot. Aug. IO. 17• 2•· 31• 1982 lns!rumenl No 82-171360, OI S 0 11 r I S Ii now n I 0 I h II Thia t>uslneu 11 COtldUClld by an __________ 3_5_7_5-82_ Ottlclal Rec0<1!a or sak! County. wlll Tron1ler1et , 111 bu1lness names PUBLIC "°TICE lndtvlduel. under end pursu•"t l~sakl Oee<I 01 and adelr-used by Transle•ors Joy Barrio. PlalC NOTICE Trusl Mii al publlc euc11on tor caah. l0t the three yeara lasl past are SPI 55524 Thia alalemenl wu fifed wttn !he FICTlTIOUI llUSINESI lawlul money ol Ille United S!a!et 01 Seme NOTICE OF TflUSTfE'I SALE County Clerk ol Or1noe County on NAME STATEMENT Amerlea, a cashter·s check payable Daleo ~~g~~I ~·c~~2D LE , A 5 No. 122"41 July 30. 1982. The follOwfnn ,_SOM are doing to said Trustee drawn on I 11111 or YOU A"E IN DEFAULT UNDE" A f1"'3S7 t>uslnesa as: "• """" nallonal bank. a 11a1e or federal Agan! D EED o F TR u a T DATE O Published Or1nge CoHI Dilly M. SAFA, 15315 S. Standard, credit union. or a slete or tlderal of all lranslerees DECEMIER 30, 1tl1 UNLEll YOU llo • 3 10 11. 24 1982 C ,. 707 •1vlng1 end loan usoclallon SUNLAND ESCROW 8ERVICE8 T AKE ACTION TO P"OTECT p I, ,.ug, ' ' ' . 3458-82 Sll\te Ana, 1· .,2 domlelled In 1nl1 '1811, 11 lhe lron1 t0CM E. Chpmin Avi. "C" YOU" PRO .. E"TY, IT MAY 8E -------------I Mohamed Sala, 8091 Ma™"lle E 1 E Ortn ...... , C1. r.telt PU C s•LE ~YOU Or,, Huntlnnton Beach, ca 92847 enlrance lo J1ecu1 v1 scrow ..-C SOU> AT A aLI .. • ..-Plait NOTICE For1~·~9to Avlli, 3506 w Company, 221 Soulh Ole VIiia, San Published Orange oasl Dally HEED AH EXPU.HATIOH OF THE f1CT1TIOUI llUllNt!ll Chestnut, Santa Ana, Ca. 92704 Clemente, Calllornla, ell lhal rlghl, Piiot Aug. 24. l982 3756_82 HATU"E OF THE P"OCEEDINO .. Am ITATE•NT Thie bualnese le conducted by a ll!le and lnt11rost convtyed lo and AOAIH8T YOU, YOU SHOULD I now held by II under said Deed 01 CONTACT A LAWYER. The lollOWing persona 111 doing llmlted panneuh p, Trust 1n !he propef1y 1Huelecl In said PUBLIC MOJlC( On September 17 t982 11 11 00 bullneat u : Fortuna!o Avila S .._.. F 1 HU NT 1 N 0 T 0 N w Es T Thll alatemenl was llle<f wllh !he Coun!Y and tale deac;r1.,.,.. as e m • Slallwlde orec oaure RETIRE .. ENT CONDOMINIUMS, Coun.., Clerk ol Orenge Coun!y on Lot 7 ot Traci 920•. as per map NOTICE TO COHTRACTO"S Services, Inc as duly appointed ... " 1noreol recorded In Book 423. CALLING Fm. IUDS Trustee unoer and pursuant 10 18901 Oeltwltl SlrMI, Hunllngton July 30, 1982· F1M311 pa 0 es 1 7 1 o I 9 1ncIu1 Ive School Olitrlet: Caul Cornmun11y Oee<I of Trusl recO<Clecl J111u1ry 6. e.ecn. CA 92648· 1 C Published Orange COlllll Dally Mlscallaneous Maps, records of College Olstrlel 1982 as 1ns1r No 82-003797. ol Delma Contlruc! on orp • • Orange County, Calllornla Bid Oeadllne: 2 oo o·clocit pm ot Offlc1a1 Records. execut1d by Callfornsl• corpor1•1 llo". !~8 lnl Piiot Aug 3• lO, 17• 24• 19~~26-62 The s1ree1 addreas or 01her lhe 111 Illy ol September, 11182 Robe•! O Lynch & Lorraine A Florida treat. tiun nglon .,.ac · common des1gna11on of a1ld Pltce ot Bid Reoalpl Ottlce ol 1he Lynell as 1ru110t1. 1n the ottlca of CA 92848. PllllJC NOTICE praperty 2853 I Paseo 011111, San Director, Purcnulng, Ma M•rl1n lhe Counly Recorder ot Ot1nge Thi• bullneta I.I conduclld by 1 Juan Ceplslr8no Perri"· Coaal Comm. College County, S11ta ot Calltorn11. Will COfPQratlon. IUPENOR Cou..T OF S1ld sale wlll be m1de wllhOU! Olalrlct, 1370 Adlml A~e. Colt1 SELL Al PUBLIC AUC TIDN TO Delma ConatrUC11on Corp CAL.lf'ORNIA covenant or w1rr1nly. l !lP•H I or Meaa. 92828 HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH Rob«1 J. Zlnngrlbe COUNTY OF OfV.HOE Implied. as lo lltle. PQIMISIOn or Project lde"llllcatlon Name· (p1y1bl1 at time ol Nie In lewtul Preeldenl lfl tM Metter of tM encumbrances lo 111t11ty lhe unpeld Orengt CoHI College Reroollng mon1y ol lhe Unl!ed SlllH) II This II••-• wu Ried wllh lhe ~tton of balance due on lhe nole 0t "ot• Pro;ec1• BIO ,, 1090 South Iron! ...,,,._ 10 !he 0ra"O• OOunty Cier11 o1 Or-ange County°" DIMd AntlMNlr "'9rtlnei secured by aatd Oee<I ot Tru11. lo Pl-Plane .,. on hie· onioe ot County Old Cour1nou11, clly of July 27, l082 f.OI' CMftel of Herne wtt $64,932 19, plus !he tollowlng Ille Director. John Pon ... PhyliCll Santa Ana, S111a of Calll0tnla. 111 F1M 119 No. A11"50I esllmated costs, expen111 end Feclllll•s Planning , Coa11 rtghl, lllle ind lnll(ell conveyed to Publl1h1d Ora"g' Coll! Dilly ()ROEi' TO IHOW CAUH advenoes 11 1ne lime ol Ille ln1111.I Communlly College Dletrlel. 1370 1nel now held by II undet Mid 0..0 Pll<>!. Aug. 10. 17. 24. 31. 19112 FOR CHAMOE Of' MAME put>1ic.110n ol thll No1;oe of S&ta Adams Ave., Tr•ller FecMlty, Cosle ol Trusl In Ille proper1y tltulled In "8.IC NOTICE • 35n -s2 D1vlcl AnthOny Manlnez nas lilecl $1,524.35. M .... CA 112826171•) 556-5707 said County and Slate desetlbld as • petl!lOtl ln !his cour1 f()( Ill Ofdet NOTICE TO ""o""TY OWNE" NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal PARCEL 1 FICTTTIOUI M.ISMH N.,_ITAn•NT The totlOWing peraon• are doing bull,_. u : MESA DEVELOPMENT II, 4282 C1mpu1 Drive, Suite C. Newport BMal. Ca. 112680 Dyna-Plex, Ina. (8 C8lllornl1 COfporaUon). 4282 Campus Drl118, Suite C, Newport Beach, Ce 92860 Barney M1rt1", en lndlvldual, 4282 C1mpu1 Drive, Suite C, Newport Beach, Ce. 92860 t:r1nk R . Goodm•n . en lndlvldu1I, 77900 Avenue ol the Slltea, Pllm o--t. C1. 92280 Thia bull,_. la conducted by a llmlted pertnerahlp. OYNA-PLEX, INC. Rob«1 H. Davia. Preeklenl Thia slit-! WU m.d wtlh !ho Cou"ty Clerk ol 01 llllQI Cou"ty on August 2. 1982 F1944U ellowlng peuuoner lo change his YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNOt!" A lhe abov•n•med School 0111rlc1 ot An undlYldld 2 1&72 percenl nema from DIYl<I A"thO<ly Martinez DEED M TAUIT, DATED MA,.CH Orl"O' County, Celllornl1, 1ct1no lnleresl In and lo Loi 1 ol Tree;! No 10 D•vkl Anthony Sheraton 21, 1tl1. UNLEll YOU TAKE by ind 1hrough Ila Governl"g 6027. I" the City ol Newr<"l Beach. II 11 n1reby ordered thal •II ACTION TO P"OTECT YOU" eoerd, nereln•her relerred to •s as shown on a Map 1hareol persona lnleresled In Iha mailer PROPERTY, IT MAY N SOLO AT A .. DISTRICT'', wtll reoe4ve up to. bul recorded In bOOk 310, PIOIS 19 and llOfetald eppeer belOfe thlt court PU8UC &ALE. tF YOU NEED AH nol Iller thin !he above-stated 20 ol Mlae1llan1ou1 Map1, In 1ne In Oepartmenl No. 3 11 700 Civic EXPLANATION OF THE HATU"E llme. Mlle<! blda IOI the -ard ol e olllce ol the Counly Aacorder ol Center Drive W111 . S1nte Ana, OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST oon!rac;t tor !he above projeci, aalel Counly C1lllornl1, on Sept. 15, 1982, 11 YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A Bldt enell be receive<! In lhe pilCE EXCEPT 8.11 mlneral1, orM 11nd 10:30 o'clock 1.m., and than and LAWYER. ld•"lllled above, a"d thall be me111s of every kind 1nd cflerec11t 1nere show cauee, It any they nave, DATED: August 18, 1982 opened end publlCly read aloud 11 and all co111, 11ph1llum. oll •nd why 1ald pellllon lor change ol EXECU-CORP ine abov•slaled umo and pl-. olne< ll~e 8ubs1ance1 I" or on said name 1nould nol be granled Bv-Mike Kuntt , There wlll be a S25.00 depotl1 land, but. however. welvlng and 1111 funner orclet"ed Iha! a copy of Aulh0tlted Agen1 required for each 111 ol bid relelSlng •"Y and all right ol an1ry tnl1 ord1r 10 th ow cause be 221 S Ola Vft11 documents to gueranlM their returr 10 lhe aurl.ce ol Mid property i nd pubUan.d ln The Dally Piiot. Costa Sin C1amen1e, Cellt 92672 In good condition within 10 d1yi addl11on waiving and releaslno any Men. I newsp1per or general (71<1) <192"8280 al1er Ille bid opening d111. and •II rlgh! ol eniry 10 the Clrculallon, publtlhed I" !Illa county EllCh bid mull conform and be subaurface ol Hid prop1r1y 10 e 11 11111 o"ca a week lo• l our Published Ore"ga Coast Dally rei pon alve 1o lh• contracl d11t1nce of 500 fe1t b1low lhl conNCUttve wet111 prior 10 the d1y Pik>l Aug 24. 31. Sec>• 7. 1982 documents eurlace ol Hid properly 10 • of Mid nearing 3760-82 EICh bidder than sut>mlt. on the dl111nce o. 500 1111 below lh• Oiled Aug 8, 1082 form rurnlshed wllh lhe con1rac1 aurf-by dMd recorded Aprll 8, Claude M. 0-,s "8.IC NOTICE documen11. a 1111 01 1ne p1090Mc:t 11166 In book 7895. P•o• 511 . Aaalgned1..... J Ji>udge ot subContrlCtora on this project u Offlclll Aec0td1 the Suf>erl« Couf1 NOTICE IHYfTINQ INDI required by lhe Subl11Ung and A l S 0 E X C E P T I N G W-..it C. Heflll lllD rnM HO. 511 SubQonlrKtlng Fair Prac;tlcel Act THEREFROM U"lta 100 to 112, 20 I K. VICTOR 8UCHEft, .M. Attef'Mr It Law NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thll Go-<1 Code Sec 4100 11 eeq. lo 212. 301 lo 3 12. 40 I 10 412 all AtlerMJ .C Law 2'70I HeftMf ~ard sealed propo111t wlll be rtcelved by Ead1 bldd .. mual 8'1bmlt with hit 1nclu11v1 •• shown upon Iha OM...._.,. "-· F-'tl Fl ~ t10 The Crty of Colla M ... , 10 wtl The bid carllfl•d or cnhler's oheok !Condom1ntum Plen recorded In ,_, 0... etNet C.... llMa. CA 12921 Clly Counch, P 0 Boa 1200, Co111 Ptylble to 11\e DISTRICT °' a bid b<>Oll 10736, P•g• 373 ol Oltlclll Newll«t -..cti, CL tJMO (71•) ~ Mesa, Calllorn11 92826, on or bond In the form Mt forth In 11\e Records ol Orano• Counly and Publl1hed Or1nge Cool Di lly Publl1ned Orange Coeel Dally before !he nour of 11 00 • m on conlrlC1 documentt In 111 1moun1 amendmtnl 1n1re10 recorded '" Piiot Aug. 3, 10. 17, 2•. 1082 PllOI, Auo 10, 17, 24. 31, 1982 Friday. Seplember 10. 1982 "lhlll nol IH• than 10 percent ol int lbook 10788 p1ge 929 of Oltlelal 3480-82 3566-112 be Iha reap<>nllbllt!y of the blddlf 10 mlalmum 1mount of bid 11 a Reoorda -------------\ -------------deflver hll bid to the City Clefk'I gutrlnlM lhll 1111 bldd .. wlM 8"llf PARCEL 2 McCoawta MOlTUAllH Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 HAllOlt LAWN-MT. OLIVI Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa M esa 540-5554 PIMCIUOTHUS 1&1 aaOADWAY MOITUAaT 110 Broa<1w1y Costa Mesa 642-9150 IAi.TllH•HO ... SMITH & TUTNeU WISTCUff CHAPlt. 427 E 171h SI Costa Mesa 646-9371 DlllH Nmcls Olllce by lhe proper announced Into lhe propoleO conlracl II !hf Unll 311, Hallow" upon l/\e lime Blds W\U be publlely <>e>ened 11me 11 1w1rd1d 10 him. fn fht ondomln1um Plan record1d Ir> end re.cl alOud al t 1·00 1.m .. or H evenl 01 fellure 10 .,,, .. ln10 said book 10736. page 373 of Otflc111 _________ .... _. soon thefeaf!er et prac!IC•ble. on con1r1ct. aucn 11curl1y wlll be ec0<da In lhe ofllee of the COUllty Frld1y, September 10, 1982. In !he 10r1eo. R1corder of uld County and HUNDLEY Councll Chambers, Cl!)' Hall, 77 F11r DISTRICT reserve• the right 10 1T11ndmen1 therelo reC)orded In BERN ARD S H UND Drive, Coal• Me11, Callfornl11. lor rejeci "'Y Ot ell bid• or 10 wllve eny ook 10786. pe~e 029 ol Olflclal 1.. E y . re 8 I d. e n t 0 f o'h~ NluornlHthylnDgRoAIUOLNIEC EL"fwH N7 lrregularlllel or lnlormallllft In In) Record•. In !he 0 lcA ol lhe COUlllY " " bid• or In th• bidding. R1C0tder ol said COi.int)'. Corona del Mar. C3. Passe<l MOWER. Purauanl 10 th• pro v111ona of The ttrHI addr111 and olher away on August 22. l 982. Add 111 on• I t • t • o t 'he Secl11on 1773 or Ille Labor Code ol ommon det1Qn1non, II any, of !he Bo M h 25 HHl in Rock IJ)ICtllelllona may bl Obtllned I t 1ne 81111 ol C 1 lllo r"la, 1ne r11I property deaorlb•d 1bove 11 m are • -1ne Olllce ol lhe Purcnu1no Agenl, DISTRICT n11 obtained lrom the trporad to be Island, llllnois. Survived by 77 Fair Drive, Co111 M,111, OlrtGIOr ol lhl Dep1r1me"1 ol 310 F«nando Str•t, Unll 311. his wife M axin e, son Steven C1Jlfornla. Bid• ahould be re1urned 1ndu11rl•I R1l11lon• 1n1 ge""" albol, C1Hlomle 02881 of Colorado Spr i ngs, to !he 11tenll0ti of !he City Clerk, p<evtlllng rate of per diem weo-Tl\e under•laned Tru111e Colorado Funeral serv1tel' wtlhln Mid time llml!. In • Mtled ind 1ne generll prtv•lllno r111 tor d11clt lm1 any lf•blllty tor any will be h~ld on Wednesday. ~tvetopeh , .. _ .Bldldenll~ledNu°"m~aoun~alde, .. _ nolldly i nd ov1r1lme work In !he lncotr«:I,_. of ,,,. tlrMf lddr ... .. , ,... _,, """' u '"' tocallly 1n whicti thl• work. 11 to t>e •nd other common Cleli0n•ll0t1, II August 25, 1982 at l l:OOAM 09&nlng Otrte. pertOfmed for ~ cr1l1 °'type ol any. lhOWll herein. at the Lutheran Church of Each bid lhaN lt>IC)lly MCI\ •nd worker n1ed1d 10 aitecu!e th• S1td 111e wlll b• m1d1. b11I the M aster 2900 Paclfir every Item " HI l orlh I" th• oonlrlCt, n-,.., .. are on Ille 11 wlthoul oovenanl or warranty. Ori Co' d IM 1p1clllcat1on1 Any end 111 lh• co111 Community College ••P<-or Implied, regardlno llUa, Vl:ew ve. rona e ar. 11cep!lon1 10 tna 1peollloellon1 Dlalrl01 omo. tocaled 1, omo. ot ~llOn. °' enoumbfanc;ee, lo Ca. I nterment at Pacific mutt be c:teerly 1111ecs In the bid, Phy Fee Plannlng, 1370 Ad1m1 psy the remlllnlng prlnclpel aum ol V I e w M e m or I a I Pa r k . end leltute 10 111 lor1h llllY llem In Aw .. Coat• MMe.. Coptee m•y be the no19(1) _,,ed by Mid Deed ol Newport Beach Ca. ln lieu !he .peclflcatlonl lhell be ground• obl1lned op reque11 A copy 01 Tru11, with 1n11r111 lhareon. 11 of flow era t'he f amlfy for.,~~lbldlon !'!.!.ttt, ~forth 1 ....... ,,_ rin• lllall be posted •t ,,,. ~In Mid note(•). advlll0e9, ~· .,,., -· ... ""' 100 Ille. II any, under the 1efl'l\t ol Mid Deed reque1t1 contributions bt.' n1m11 and r11ldenc11 of •II It a11111 be mendltOt'f itpon the 01 Ttu11. 11e1, oh1ro11 1nd made to Lutheran Church of peraof\I and l)lrtlet lnl .. •lllCI In CONTRACTOR 10 whom lhe ~ ol Ille Truat .. ltld ol Ille th e Muter Building Fund lhe propoH I. II th• bid It by • conu1a1 II -ded. ltld upon any 1ru111 Oflll•d by Hid o .. d OI P v M OOfl>Otlllon, 1111e tht nemee ol the auooontr1e1or under hllft, 10 pey not Tru11, fOf Ille •ITIOV,,I reuonably a clflc 1ew ortuar y o"1cert wtlO can 11gn.,, aoi_,,.,..1 ,... '"-"the Mid IC)eeftlecl ,., .. 1019tlmeted10 tie: tt».~ll.14, dlttctor'I. on bef\1111 ol the CC>fl>O'ltlOtl and 111 WOttltt• ~ by lhen\ In the TM ~ llnder Mid Deed DEATHS ELSEWHERE wtiethet mOf9 than one ~ muat ill«IUtlon o1 Ule oontrtc1. ol T!Vtt hltetofor. ••~led Ind llgn II 1he bid II by • 1)111•mlhlSI or No bidder mey wtthdr-1111 bid dellv•ted to tlle underelgned • • join! VWthn, .i11e tne ~ ltld tor • per1oc1 of torty·ftve (•GJ d9)'I wtlnetl O.C.ttton Of Dlfault and 1dd1 ..... ol Ill ganerll penners after IN daM ... '°'the opining ot Dem1nd for Safe. and • wruten ltld Join! VWft\lfeA, II the bidder 11 I bide NOlloe 01 Oetautt and 1'.leo110n lo IOlt Pf'OPl1etortfllP or rinolher entity A • p ~men t bond 1 n d a Sell. TM Unott191ed ~ Mid tNal doee bWineM Ullder I llolltloul perfo1menoa bond wlll be reqW9d MOiiee Of o.tauft end [lmcllon lo name. 111e bid tl'l•n be In Ille ,.., PflOf tp execuuon of the oontrect &ell to bl .._., In the oounty n . m. 0 I I h. I) I 0 0. r w It II • Ind .,,.,. be In Ille loml ... for'lh In wMrl the , ... propmrt)r .. looet9cll PASADENA (AP) -.~~~9<7~1f°J.~~o~J.'°4:.h=f.: 1~==t~~·.tseo of the Diie: ~'f':~~ ~~D I Vera AlMrta ~Jer 77 provided, however. "o llot111ou1 Oo\iernment Oode Of Ule 8111• o1 fORECL08U• d 1 f · L ' nMll lhlll be uMd uni-there 11 I C.alllomla, u. oontract wtll oontain 8El'MCE8, fttO· w 1 ow O Orm• r O • owrent real1tr1tlon with the Orange ovlllonl perm1tt1n9 u. ~ .. Mid TNl!ee An1ele1 Tim ea Vice count y Aeoofd.,. 111 HH of cr:; to 11111e11tute _,,"._ '°' by:lon PNalct.nt Philip Chandler, eotPoflllOM. lnClu<lt then-o1 an1 mon•Y• wlthhed by 1he ly: V Afl*o, died Wed nead a y . Her ,,.. flr..idetll, Secretary. T,...,,..,, OISTllllOT to eneure pel'form•llOe beout Vloe ~' hueband, who died tn JM&! _,~~ouriclt 01 1ne Olly of """' ~~ toens :::=. ~ WM aJilo eeneral manqer 0( Ooeta ..... ,_, the right to ly Homwl I. Wmtton H26 c.Tltom A,,.,_,. ~ nm.ii. rej!c1t any « 11 bids. eeent.-y ~. CA ~ OATEO: MIQ&llt ti, 11112. 8CJwd o( T~ 1114) ~IO Publl.n.ct l>f•,,oe Co1tt Dill~ Publl•he<I o1anoe Coaet Dilly P'ublleh.cl Ot1nge COU! D•llY Pilot Aug. :t4, 1N2 'IOt AU0 1t t 4. f-,,_,.,Aug 2•. lt, leC)t. 1, TM1 '70f-t2 • I • 1701-tl Utt-42 I 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ClASSlfllD IUl ESTATE ......... (ors~•· AP&rtrrw1u. fo.t \•If' t.~!!:r?r:''',,) c..,,.tny lZ c,,.,., ~=,,~~~'::r:'' ~·~' "''"" ..... f...,.....toN N °"•4 ll!IC'Wnlf ''°"'"' lftdlMlllaJ Pr~tly IAUto. ~t• ..... ,,.. """' Trlr t:'rh •OWttft DttHt MffOirt :t. "'.1c:;: •• t~°" Owl"' Sl•l• ~'°" ,._.,.,,....,., ,..,m• "'"'""~ Mtlil El.IM• £ar"•"'•' llleaJ IAL•lf' \l •rttff UNTALS t ...... fYrNllMd Kdw.n Uah.irnHW4 ~ f'Urn °' Vt1r Cotdomtl\hUYU ~ v ,,. C'ondom1n1w"'u l'11I T&-.n~n-rr1 Too..fthow~tt1t.:111 Oupltah "''"' 0u.,., .... l1nf Allll• f'\lrl\ A~,a Unhlrn Apu f'\un or\ tu Moom• tcOOtn • k •rd lkltth .Motela <i\W\.I HOmh ~mme• lhnleh V•«"•\M>n AcA\11• ll."91.ab lO Sher•• C •nan fot lhnt Offk't lt•n&al lk4tlftil'it A•M•I l~ln•IMc,,.•I ~~·.,! V.entf'ld Miu Rt-nl•I~ BUSINESS, INVEST- MENT, F1NANC£ t:::::~~ ::::::::::: ~':'.'.,· MOIM)' lo Lo•n MOIW)Wt..ntf"d• Mon1•1n.TO. ANNOUNCEMENTS. rusotms & LOST & FOUND AMlfNN•nwnl• r •r Pool IA:&al ~Oht·u ...._. • You.od Pt'flllOnal•• !o-1•1 Cltitt..• Tr•"rt• SERVICES lMl'lOYMENT & ,U,AHTION 111111 111111 lllOl ,.,. ICID lGIM 1a Ill» ll&)o 111"'1 1004 ICMll 1000 '""' llli1 I,_ 1011 1011 II• II ... 1• 1• "'"' 1'1 "'''' •......•......•.••••.• l!OUAL HOUllHO 0 .... 0 .. TUNIU P1lllll1lller'1 l1ttot1 AU rttll 111a1• ad11ett1Md In lhl1 new1peper I• 1uoject 10 the Federal Fair Hou11ng Ao! of 1968 which mel\H II llltQal to 1dvertl11e "any pref11on· ce. 11m111uon or dlacrlml· netlon b11ed on race, color, rellglon. U!l or "allonal origin, or any lnlenllo" to make e11y 1uch preference. llmlle- llon or dlacrlmlnauon " llllt 1:ni Thi• "-•paper wlll no1 := knowingly accept anv 1iw advarllalng lor retl es-!:l 111e which 11 1n 11101auon 111» ol lhe law l::lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil llllO nou -1400 2>00 ~ -11'00 .IQ) _, JIW ...... -)«JO :Ml) ~ UIOU: Adverti- sers should check their ads dally and report errors im- m e d I ate I y . The DAILY PILOT as- sumes liability for the first Incorrect Insertion only. ~ ................ ~ >000 noo ..... -woo -•llll> mo '100 u~ IJW U>ll """ .. JO 4lOO •W ..... - Hou1t1 /01 S•lt ···••················• GtH1'1 1002 . ...............•...•. EASTSlll C.M. .. Cute 3 Bdr on ool-de-18c al. Seller will help llna"· ce Large assumable loa". Full price $115,000. 751-3191 c::. l.,f I l ( I -1-' PW JP£ H i 1l ', Sthooh lr'1\r\Kh0ft 1GC6 JOU W entl'd • 1b1) U•IP Yt'ant.o MA ,, flOO MEJCHANOISE Anhq!H~ Db L\pplUM•l llOIO Auction ::!tt~ Metcriel~ C.mirru • E•li'•pm•nt C.u Doi• h'f'tl.o\'ow t\, ..... ,..,. c., .... .s.1. llorwo __ .,_, 'f'•rit)' ~ ..... \Ork tlfrClweH)' Mu.ttllMllOln M1w-t-11....,., "•Altod .. ¥.M<'•l IMSr-wmtMto ()fr ttt f\t," • t:Q , .. p ..... ~':~~~::~ Stool1•oc c-. ~ fltnlavralM &r ~·.r.c.~t-41r1 Sl•r"° BOATS i MAllN[ EOU"MOIT , ......... eio.u 'tt1"'4. .)iir_t~•o ao..b.N1t1M £~1p 8o1th PoiaH eoa.u flttnc Ch..nH eo-.s..1 eo.i.si • .,. °"'" ~·~.:s.1 TIAMSP'lllTA TION All"t'Uft Camptn.S.I• R""' Ci«<n< f on =·~"!:.~ Scooltn' Motot Urn.,.»lt Rfnf TrtUff't Tru•t r.:!"~·~~~"i.,., U....w'6t A~TOMOllL[ A1'ltq~• l:t .. ~1\ • "Hru !J.vn VtP,1tkt ;r:.!1 ':,~~~-~Gd\ rr.-ka Vaf\~ 1''-"t1lA:n 1f\• \W.W•l't\f!d AUTOS, IMP111T£0 c;...,,., Alih Ru....,e A..,, ..\•l1• lt~•l•t iM'fl' (41t)I'• av-°"' °"""" . ...,.,,.,. "•' II~•• ,.,.,,., ,.,_.. r.=,~(;;·· •ud• MflC'..0.-l'Hftt >IC MGB llPtl ...... , ... .. __ Ponr"• flt.MvU !loll> lloyro RO\ ff ~!~ ;:;.:,. Toyn<• Tn""'"" V'ol)1••••0 VOl\ll'U AUTOS, lt(W -., -•10 •ts •11 --.i --ml ... ---= -- car s•bikes• •skateboards· trucks.baby car riages•tea carts•trikes rol ler skates • w alkers•toys •wagons•·•• scooters•hot rods• coupes• trailer s·hard tops• convert- ibles• motor homes•tawn mowers•limos ·corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• • typingtables wheelbarrows· r ecreational vehicles•golt carts•mode1 trains•bikes •pianos•cars refrigerators ·skates•••••• If it'sgot wheels, you'll move it faster In a Dally Piiot classified a d.Call 642-S678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels Into cash. ...... ,., i.i. ..•..•..•............. ,,.,,., "" .•.................... WAITll FAMILY Velfy ~lonaoi. 4 Bdrm home, peneet tor 1n. I•· mlly erg llvlng room. lorm1I dl"lng, MParate 1amlly room. cov•red •C:tHn•d In plllO 8 1g yard Orea• for femlly •ot•r11lnlng or full plain l1mlly fun. Won'! , .. , 11 Oll• pr1ce1 $t311.llOO. 5116-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS •WITIUlllT• Nat sun PRIVATE COMMUNITY. 3&4 bdrm nomea, our SELLERS wlll FINANCE • or • DISCOUNT IO< Cathi Beller hurry on thesel S1ar11ng at $499 0001 Will TRADE fOR BAL· BOA ISLAND .. ...... , ,,.,, llHHers *171-lOIO* FAMILY EIPllllll This 1s the home lor ll>e growing family Sile, yes 6 big bdrms, 3 b8'ha. big 11v1"g room wtlh llre- plece Family room wllh 2nd llreplece. Formal di· 11lng. famlly kitchen with UPQraded range. grill & microwave Ankle deep carpetl"g. Shimmering pool and spa Gorgeous Inside and ou1. A delight 10 preview Call tor pre- view. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS STlllTEll HMH 1 Br-$79,000 Irv 3 Br-$103,000 FV/SA 2 Br·2 Ba $108,500 Irv 3 Br-2 Be $109,500 Irv 4 Br-S 114,900 C M 3 Br-$126,900 H B 4 Bt-$128.900 C M Cell us lor financing de- 1a1111 631 -7370 . 631-7088 TRADITIOUL R~\LTY LOWEST PRICED IESl YElllEI 2 Bdrm condo w ith commu"lty pool, micro- wave, fresh palnl and m1"u1es close 10 park! and shops Seller Wiii carry1 Only $89.9-00 -call 1oclay• 646-717 1 THE REAL ESTATE RS llUl ESTATt tfC we• LtCAnt• Well es1abl1shed New- porl Beacn l°'auon tor sale All replies conl•· den1111, P 0 Box 821 Balboa, Ca • 92661 LOOK For our new regular weekly IHlure BOAT SHOW- CASE Every Saturday tn lhe Dally PllOI Clasalfleds IWllOll YI MILLS lllll YA.Ill Ou1e1. park-ltke 11e!ling Am for paddle tennis and pool Gree! for orchard Cul de sac SI. 3 bdrm. lam. rm. $379,sqo. 1'4-4110 :+Av~ l . ____ --------' ll. Sll Jl&flll A l wo bedroom (plus den) condo 11nth • fabu- lous "'-ol goH oourte and greenbelt Jusl re- duced Now $179,900 U1·7HO •HYER SllHD* Thi• cullom lv1n Wells designed nome was bulll wllh Hacuuve enlerlal· nlng In m ind Oua111y throughoul from lhe so- lid oak paneled den lo the mahogany paneled 11mlly room. Some ol the numerous 1e11ur .. are: Sen11Uonat vi-ol F•- shlo" 111a"d & ocean, pool & spa w/outtlde bat. 3 car Olflge, com· ple1e eeeurlly 1y1tem and ol courM f«mal di- ning To view The 1uxu- rlou1 le•luraa of this megnlllc•nt rHldence. C911 750-1501 tor privet• ehowl ng. $1.500.000 FEE. ~ Walker & Lee ~ ::::::::::::::::::::::: ..,. . ~~~ e Dally Piiot -1&r•11a e cl•sslfltds ,.. 1 ,_ For Ad Action Cal I Daly Plot . Al).VIS(I 642·5671 Have you '"ct today'• Cl .... fted Ad11 ti floe, ~·,...,...,. ""' ..... 11.,...in. In •o.n1 • WOrtc for A l)er .. ot tr.clltlot1al l:u "'•II oounlry Ftwndl 3 bdrm. • • -3ba home with lero• 2·5'71 eoul\try llltollen. Brick e for quick pat toe MCI a11 wnen11 ... • '°' ou•ctoor 1Mno. owe c•sh Mies. 11,.t T.D. ,,,_ -and · e llUbmll. m a.ooo. . I Wi\ll Ml ffl ,Nl 1K>Ml '-a.c. > AUL.tsTA1E 6JH400 ,. ...... It.I ,,,, ..•••..........•.•••....•.•................. ,..,,,, "" ,,.,,,, IHI ••...........•••.••.••..••..••.........••••• PllllllU lllD PrUt WN1 Bey beytront. SUp for 2 baaia, remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bMth •1.200.000. Ocean & jetty vlew111. Marine room. 4 bdrm, 3 bJth, 3700 ~q. ft. $1,38!>,000. Oceanfront. Liii llLI 111111 Prime Udo Nord bayfront S bdnn. S ~ bath. ~ L.R., 2 boat aUpa '1,500,000 Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. rm beam ceilln&1, furnlahed, p.atJoe. $420,000. Liiii llLE UYFROIT i....,oon view from 6 bdrm,:; bath, playroom, dark rm, den. Boat alip. Now $1,000,000. UYlllE PUOE Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 be up; 2 hr, 2 ha dn. 2 boat spe.oes. Reduced-$1,500,000. ClllllUI GAYS Coronado Lsland cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat dock. Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/t.enns. ILIFFS COllO Single story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba on ~ greenbelt. $250,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR JJI Bay\•d•· o,,., l'oj 8 e7S 0101 Oran~ Coul DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, Augult 24, 1892 ..•.......••.......... M.~~!!!.~'.~!.•.'!....... 9Jm."1t'.!t11,11, •••• ~'.!!!!.¥~/~.'!~~.'!. •. ~.f~ .. ~'.!!!~.fM~!!.~t!. ...•••• ~.'1/J~l. ... J.l!t 91!!f.!fm ...... !~~ ~ .. '!e!.fm~ ... !.~! !!!Pt!!.~r.!!r.e.tf ~~!m~ ... !.~ P..rm .......... 1.¥.. ".rmn.fmt .. IM '1.rafft.fttt! .. 11Jf 111 •11 CHAii l!·alde C.M Tll-l>le•. MP Ytty 1725 Cul• 2 bf, oar . HOMI! 'o" RENT w .. tdltt 3 It. den, Of'ftoe. OCEA~AOH'f o.. 2-4 Bf ~ man l&LI rn«eired 111,000 OfOM. prllg. N•at Wll•r 481.1100. ,enc.cl y111d, 2'1\ 8a, 2 cw gar, ga1• ly week Of month ~atad39t2Baon •tl,IOO 1181 ,000 818·4000("-tl). 011a,ge.l<ld1&pet1wel• ner, no pell 009. 473.7173 prime loeatlon Qarag•. 1-303·881·2881. ,,,....... come 645-2000. a,gent. l.e37-l46t or 649-0029 ~-....,..---...,....--1undtc1k. pauoa. Nr No r1111 3 Bdrm home mu11 -no 1.. :I Bt. 2 8a. Winter J750 Bay 0'#1* wtll conlldw be eold CASH TALl<S 20% DOWN wtM !)Uy 3 trl-'""'•·'• Jiit Harbor Ridge. mounlaln a 2 Bt. 2 ea. OOMn lront 411 I n an 9 1 5 . 6 3 111 . FHA I V A 0 K C a I I PIUH In Co1ta MeH, ••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ••af/•f,.. cxiean view, 3 Br, 3 Ba Winter 1100. 073·62111 640•14&1 for mored•· 601 LIDO with 12~. auumable B1yl ron1 rnlnua 30', 110 .... , JU beautllully d on e . PROPERTY HOUSE talla loan• & I 1600 poalllve deg vu. gourmet kltetl.. •••••••••••••••••••••• 12400/mo Avall now. 642-s&50 '4e-1Nt JtJIJH 8lh FLOOR 1111 '83. then neat brMk 1 or 2 8t & 2 Ba, tum/ OC·RENTALS By Owner 780-1977 lt•l•Hl• 1H1 Waterfront C:Ondo even. Well located. llM.r u n turn . Y r I•••• 1·6br'• $200 10 S2000 and B •••••••••••••••••••••• ADUL'I'SONLY OCCollege&SCPlaz.a. S1 360/mo Wln te1 760-3314 epen7-dayaC3HARM.EJ(p HedVH6 J'· s i. VI QSI 64,000 Owner wlll $960/mo Opn Aug 29. car g111a,ge •-llllT OAPI OH pectaN r ew "" at 10 x grou Call 813·0433 or 558-10 10 Lrg 4 Bdr nome. 2-A Ba, 3 cuu l. loaded w/lrench Ou•lnt 2 Bdrm home ,_ l • Wm ~~~.~rvkrr 764-0609 (Prln. only) Cmr 101'1/Bay. car gar, nr b•ach & wlndow1, •kyllghta wllh huge o•m• room _ !!!~!~~J~.!~.J.~'!1 "" ac110011. Klei• & pe1 OK. s 1000/mo 840·2623, or m•k• It • large mHlllf INVESTORS l'tl4• Ottta •••• Winier rental•. quiet 881· I 1160/mo. 964-5096 833·2237 D I d (714) 71()..1900 8 unit•. All 2 bdrm• / boa loc. 3 BR 2'h ba, 3 Bedroom. 2Ba, b"' fncd -L .. -1-0•P_l_or_M_le_or_tr_a_d_e_, 4-1 1u1te ormer w n ow•. S5000 down and $200 ~ wlll call financing. n-hme. 1975 mo. Cul• ·v 3 plcllet fence. double ge· per mo. negotlva CHh Call anent 8!51-1217 1 BA & work rm, turn. yd, garage, dpl.11 only Br b • Oc•• n vu rage Excellan1 Point flow tor 8 3BR lb• tgl ..., HOO mo. 873•5389 $515 855-0617, 644-2170 1oc111on Close to bH-ramlly de latched home 630-8190 a.at F• ---------• chtl, $300,000 Owner Call Rich Ownrl 1gt OtlTA •EU C•rt•I ''' #1r JIJJ 2Br. 2Ba, pool aide llvlnl IOUI YllW will 10111 with financing 964.917 1 ,.,k Lido Adult Condo 3 20 000 IQ 11 lnduatrl•I ••••• ••••••••• •••••••• 1440 81 B • 11 Fe 8 D•luH new 2 Br 2b•. 1 ... 2 1200 Br pool, naar hoepllal. · Splll level 2 Br-den. bee· lrplc. deck, gar 6•c • • B•atl•it•• beach St46,000 Owne; bldg In convenient wMI med celling, 1705/mo 639·81110 gate Adult• One tor IHd 1040 will help. Agent 6-46-1044 ~~~oe 410u~~tl~o;ac~l;:~he~ 707'1\ Acacia. 840•8168 NR BCH. 2br wllg patio. S 8 2 5. one S 5 8 5 . PETE BARRETI ··· REALTY ••••• • ••• • • • • • • ••• • ••• rettroornt and 111 office t.arge 5 8d HOITWI coiy kttch. kid ok. S.460. 844-8722 or 642-8808 * •10,000 l .P * Ullla llWI Owner mey llnanca, corona del Mar OC-AENTALS 760·3314 3 Br 2 Ba. comm. pool 4 Br 2Ba, trplo. $109, cnarmlng cottage ...,1 1ubmll your term a . 760-8708, 876-2144 B t'-t•• 1 1195/mo 831 -1286. 200 auumable roans 1 c $960 000 •• ,.J 831-27 t 1 Fred Tenore, · huge maater eu te. o-· · Cul e 2 Br, tpl. gar. Bu.. 3141 19811 Bushatd St Bkr/ vered be1m1 & 11111 oee1111ld• or PCH, R-1 •••••••• ~!. •••.••••••• ,_llG""-1 _______ 1 Ceff•• ''' • ., IOZ2 Ownr 642-7743 throughoul • newly re. Call att 8PM. 973.3517 Seldom avellable WH-For 1eue or lease option. •••••••••••••••••••••• Itri•• 1044 modllled. New roof, new therly Bay Townhouae. S1600tmo. 5 Br .. l11ge S.lil•lt Yt1r Offer •••••••••••••••••• •••• heating. copper plum· C11l1 #1u 3114 Boat lllp, 5 bdrm. 3 be, 2 yard, achools. tnopplng Home+Guut+lncome Brand New Home• & bing. New kitchen & bath •••••00:RENTALS••••• car, 1ennla. pool. all nearby. Agent 848-1044. OWC ltt . FleK Terms Condos. no ~y down • Room to e"lar9e & 1•6br'a S200 10 l2000 appllanceal amenlllea. 509 Acacia CdM nr bell whlle they lest (714) bulld 2nd unit. 45 lot. 760.:\3 t4 open 7.daya $ 1 4 7 5 m 0 A 0 t , Blulfa 3 bdrm. 2 bl, good Spotleas Vacanl Duplex 546-9522 Agl Bay view. $800,000. Be-. r 637-0888. loc1tlon. greenbelt, Huge 5br/3ba+3br/3ba v.rly Morphy 8«-0200 A Div1s1on o w .. illde 2 Br 1 Ba. lncd I aome vi ew $1 150 440K own/bkr 645•7048 FUILDUS Harbor lnvestmenl Co patio. encled o•r•o•. Im•• 3 44 _~_4-_8_3_68_. _____ 1 FAMILY HDIE new carpets. drapes, ••••••L·~;;E•S••l•l•••••• NPT SHORES 3 br. 2 ba. MAlllOll YIEW pelnt No pet•. S510/mo. · .,.. rpl<:. patio. nr club. $875 Sausalito Lusk home on Elopanded Kensington In wtr /tt 1111 IZtlO plu1 MCUllty. 548-5442, 3 Bdrm detached homes yrty. Agt. 673·9060 "liOOD LIFE" ......... ~ P'UM: Sool•I Aotlvltl•• Olrector •F r•• Sund a y 8rundl~BB0'1• P1t1lee•Plu1 muctl more Q"IAT "ICfUATION : T en nl a•F r ee i..uone (pro & pro •hop)•2 Health Ctub1•Sauna• HydrOM88Ngr' Swlm~Gotf Driving 81AU "UL AftARTMINT8 ! Slnglea. 1 & 2 Bedrooma•Fuml-- & Unfurnlahect•No Pete•Mod•I• Open dally 9 ~o 8. lee lend. 3 Br 2 Ba 11v & the Deane Homes 4 •••••••••••••••••••••• 770-5829. In e>icenent ar••· Av•ll•· -'-...;_......;. ______ , T 10 000 .. din 'm. lo lam rm' all bdrm, 3 be. Bay win-Wll'T WTl ---------b I e Imme d I• t •I". Npl Crest view 3 Br 3 Ba. ,., • • d "' Ii I Thi 2 Br 1 Ba w/ cr~ts, drp1, ' p • $1"'00/ • ' amenities. lg tree lot By ows, ' rep aces s No qualllylngl No down. yard E/1lde 525/mo $800/mo on I year leaN. l1n ... ' mo ... gent 01kWHtl .... ........ lt.,.nle ... /11. 880 lrvlne Ch1tmlng 3 Bdrm Laurel Own 8 r S 3 13.0 00 home IS ex,ceptlonally HOO/per mo FallbrOOk 875 5oe8 Five othera to chooae _84_0_-e_2_0_8 ______ 1 ~~:n,~~~~';;!sir~~: 640-7007 , decoraled landscpa-LIH ISLE 8.6 view acres at 10% fl-__ • __ • -----• from. We're the onea to Nawpor1C:nt.2Br duplex ~AL ALTAI , llUIOI YIEW 1111111 1111.otO northeast Costa Mesa. 120 OOO DOWI ~~ld~n;u~tn s:'n:t~f~: Fabulous Mexican Ha-nan S 180.000 759-2968 RENT TO OWN: New 2Br i ie-. condo. Attach gar. dining . Fireplace. skyllght and , else 5289,900. eland• Hend painted deya. 2'1\ba, condo. Cell Rlctl. ~bridge area, pool, tennis, clbh-Olx So ol H...v duplex tllea. roof lop ~erden. • "-Owner'/Agt 984-8171 se, 17 Wiid Goose. Tl· kllchen with greenllOUMI .. , M•••t•J• .,.1111 window. Assume 1118 Only 3 yrs old. Darrell. sunny petlo wit toun-,., ' ' 3 Br 2 b• on '/\acre w/3 Re•lly conderoga 10 Intrepid to ulstlngloan and the Ownr/Agl. Re/Max r1 _~ tain.41ergeBr,lormal •11•11 1400 ca/g11 plusguesthou-SSI """" W lldgoose $8 50 , owner wlll e.:en uslat i 7i5i9i·i12i2i1iiiiiiiiiiiiil ~ dini ng room, f amlly v:;;;;;;;_;;,;;~jh~~~d~ ee. See.2530 Santa Ana .,.,,.,,, 213/891-7537 wllh financing. Call Sus-"it4f..t room, 3 cat gatage and welk 10 lltts. Mountain-DO NOT DISTURB TE-~anra Ph·>.IHlnr 3 BR 2 Ba split level, NB (at 16th) (714) 64.5-1104 ...,.,. ..... / ... 1700 16th St. (Dover at 16th) (71.4} 642-5113 Where can you llnd more? Large expanded 5 BA. 4 BA Palermo New carpet &. paint. Lovely in TrMson. TRAD£ ••• r; many extras. Price re· beck -Beat project In NAN TS. S 9 7 5 mo. lllT&LS condo. 3 g11agea. poo11. ductlon 5495.ooo Mammoth Prof. decor. 851~226 1 to 5 bdrm•. 11artlng 81 Cloae 10 Hoeg Hosp your boring Income pro-~·8600 111111 955·2236 mag, ltHL llbll H9E 1&50to11200. S785/mo. Bkr. 648-7332 GEORGE ELKINS CO oversli ed ya1d. Assume 759·9100 row lnteresl 111 TD. Ow· 1"1•••••••• n« wlll help wllh linen-ii clng tool Low down posslblel The fHIHI drew In tne West ... I Delly Piiot Clasallled Ad. Call Today 642-5878 ~•oto J:. ::'.~'!'., ~:";~: ~o;: Ji. fo de•elOf' ,,..,~\\01)~ tor l~ti"O't tt"Od~CC»'f~•J1n;10,..,_•oit1rt\ of yQM ZodlUC. l.Mfth \•Of" )Hiii .... n~···• MW·•~ .. ~ .... •'""'' ...... ,.._ .0°"'9'<•-· ...... .,c;o-_. .. ,, •lOHt• O ll"l•A ...... ...... .,..,., flt•·· ·••-"Cl tOW1•• .. oo ...... \, ... ,, ~C.-·• »-N'"l )1111'ow•..,·• 9ollooc:·•J ....... .... ...... ~~l\JU'IW' tl •11<11 IJlllll••" "'°" ..... ~w-• M Duo·-•191 ; ,, °""' ""'"'•·~···•0 ...... ,, ..... .... JIO...• ,,~ .... f1Ptu;..1 ,, .... -o • '"" ~·~·· ... ... l'fV"'! tllOft\;tltl ..... , .. .,_ ,, ... ..... _ ..... ......... . , ......... _,_._. • •• e.c .... c ......... ·~ .... (JNtun•t -:i-:i ~\\~lA-&t.trs· -... ------.. OAT a --•::-:...::--~ ::: ............... _ _..._ f RENDGE I I I I I I I UN S E E I I ~ I T I D 0 I !'I Ii; I H UGATT I I r I .. 'f .. I °"' nelghbortoood hMhh food 1e1taurant ••r••s aquun, pumpt!ln Met we· chlnl We thlntl ol It • event I•~:-.. ~'=' _ ....... i.--~J....._ rrrrr1 • ~( MOVt lllTllS lO GIT ANSWll I I I I I I llUll·LITI Aatwen I• Olauffle .... • IHI YOUCAll COUllT 011 CLASSIFIED. To help you sell items you don't need 1 To help you tind Items you'd like lo buy To help you publicize en event or mekeen -.---ennouncement f To help you Hvt money-end ge1I peny or outgrown resl-WE AlllOWIW Decorator perfect, •P•· Oceanside 3 rm w/pool, lg dance with large equl1y Hamlltalr Lake Front clous 2 bdrm, 2\liba. new patio. bit-Ina. $480. Al'rt•••I• rl•l•nldH -;;i-;;;·;,j";;;-··3;;; tor this neat rustic end 11.51tt ,. ... """'"'·.leuwir: C Cod p 1 I OC·RENTALS 750-3314 4 Bd 3 • b .., ';J '-""' w. ""'"~ REDUCED S80,000 to ape . oo. ac, rec. roomy rm ' 1 lido Realty $595,000. Owner fin. area, pvt petlo. balcony. . ...••....•.•..••..••• home with 180 deg. L•••HIHt• 1041 71 4 ·846 -3278 or wlneceltar&lgegarege. Tll IUFFS ocean view In walk to ••'••••••••••••••••••• 673-7300 0 1 all paper Spac. 4 br. 3 ba, 2200 Vrly S775. Delu.11• 2 br, gar .. prkg. NMr water. 675~000 (Brett) .. ·-en Corona del Mer 714-337-3635 Agt ecora or w • .,.... dr1per1e1 end more. sq. fl. twnhome. Lovely location $495.000 lee EIHALI llAY ~~~~~~~~ O•I •I C•••'1 s 1 0 5 o / m 0 . c 1 1 1 decor. poolside setting. 144-1211 0ce"':~:.~~N:r~. 4 3 Br 2 Ba. tam rm, pool, lt~t!f. ZSSO 548-2239, 10:30 10 5:30 ~~,~~'.;s~.1300 mo. 2 BR 1 Ba. no pet.a, yrty. lndry racll, deck, 1600. 675-0349. ba, kit. w/convenlences. many amenities. S178 ••••• •• •••••••••••• pm. •51JCAH"'5J>a~IRV• ', tam rm, lge garden, pa-000. Owner. 548-8685 WATGH MESA VERDE-3Br, 2Ba, h•I• Aa• 3U a.11.-. • • . • S850 1 t & I 1 + • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • •• ..,.... tlo, formal din rm. roe Uv. .. lllEl HWI THIS mo. • • sec Woodbridge-on the lal(e. 3 br. 2 b•. TOWNHOME, ,,.u. .. i. 3"1 rm Oulel cul-de-sac dep. No cets/lg doge Ellecutive 3 bd. 2 'h ba. nr SC Plua. AC. trpl, •••••••••••••••••••••• $812,000 By owner. BY OWNER SPACE • Avall 9-15. 751-36-42 Many Extras! S1400/mo dahwshr, refrg. stove. 2 bdrm. 2 ba newer dplx. Cort• 11111 1024 673·4411 WATERFRONT DPU( SLOCO 3 2 b 1e1 s e 5 s 2 . 9 5 4 9 . pool. spa. plus much yrly Mature non-emkre. • •• • • • • •• • ••••• • •• • • • • PVT BOAT DOCK Eutslde house br' I, S7SO )( 3 l~'X. Take over great loan, wm 2 car gar 551·2193 or 987-8857 more. No pets. 111 & last. no pets. •SSIM••LE Yll Trade or lse opt. 4Br 3ba. Cllrr". over $200,000 •HI llt•te $800 mo. 548-3561. 2B /dbl 8 G d a ea Lease. avall 911 $700. 2131799~195, 257-9792 • -$469,000 $70K equity /NO' hi II £. I. ZIOO r 0 r. oo r mo. 979. 7100 day a, or (714) 873-3988 On this 4 Bdr Colleg• 85£0517, 544 ... 170 w mont Y paymen Xt••••• E'slde. 3 Br 2ba. ram rm, S895 Avell Sept 27th. v .,.. ' $585,000.675-0852 •••••••••"-••••••••••• 111 dining m coli.c1714/272--0097 540-3261 •ves. Mlk• By Oceanfront 1 br. pert. :~rk ,,:igmw~t:n.~d~I~;~~ -C-al_l _E_m_e_r_a_ld_B_a_y_R_l_ty--l s -.-.-c-1.-.-,.-,-.--,-o-1-10;B':e3~:t s~~g~~·,?g~ Dvr~e";;; ~67 Eld~n: TURTLEROCK EXEC .• 2 _Donetl __ ..;,Y_· ------; ~%~;J~:2:..4~~.utll . financing, Full ptlce ls we'll send you a list of •••••••••••••••••••••• eqully 855 -0517, S900,642·2 191 mstrs.deo2'hba,more, B••lnf•t•l•iH•t ---------- only $132.500. Don't wall avellable homes w/ HPH TAI SIELTH 544·2170 Large 4 bdrm. 2 ba. II/Tiiiy S1350/mo 851-9350 U•l•t•ld«I JJ C.ff•• lel •r UD -call 979-5370 NOWI amenities In Emerald Bay FH llYISTHW home, llv rm, llreptace. • • •••••••••••••••• •••• •• ••••••• • •••••••••••• 494-1840 San Clemente pride ot .,,, E1t•t1 bll·ln etec1 kltch, tamny 2 ~~~y B~~S7g5:;/~o~· UM Ill! s~~.P~ T~a~r':.~. ~~n~ L••••• lll•Hl 1052 ownership modem Spa W•atH ZIOO rm a11ached to 2 car o•· BrOk« 851-8800 Beaut. 2 bdrm, 2 bath amenllles. 1825/mo ••'•••••••'••••••••••• ' • •••••••••••••••••••••• rage. Fenced yd. with home. Nice decor. De· VILLE IE CERISE nlsh style 4 unit apt Wm buy house Tur1le patio. Weter & oar"-SUPREME 3br, 2ba w/lg corator 1tyle home. $975 Daya 842-5767• Eves & Xf >Ill 111~·11 i;.if Al •' \ •'• • t • • '4f ~'' 11:,~0w11:e ~:·1~g/~~ Rock or between lhere lnct'd al $825 mo. $.400 gar. apa. bit-Ins, $575. mo. 1 yr 1se. For mo1e Wknds 63 1•8830 IE OBEA~T0IFRUL0 ~ urthl · 1 3 andooean.Mustberea-Sec. Pet on epprovel. OC-RENTALS 750-3314 1nfor. c all Steve . 2 Br2Ba,den,frpte,S1ec>a •••11a L LO L 0 every ng. on Y sonable. Private party. Drive by 309• Y•llowa-77£28"2 to beach. $1070/mo . ... • TOWNHOMES years Old & shows like Good neighbors Wrlle '" v W•••• ... ,. 3141 --""--'-----Yl LI. by Howard Mark Co NEWI New owner could ad No 1063. Dally Piiot, tone (off Paularlno) ••'••••••••••••••••••• "--~•i•i•., Oar re I I , Re/ M • x 111 8Yr% on this 4 bdrm from $159.000 occupy 3 bdlm., 2 belh P. 0 . Boll 1580. Costa 957-0701 Agt by appt EMERALD BAY. 3 Br 2 ,.._. 759-1221 home on eaat i lde of 495·3244 760-0297 c;lty & ooean view apt If Mesa ca 92826-06e0 Eutllde c1een old« 2 Br. Ba. trplc, brlell patio with Ua/.,.JdH 34ZS Neef beactl 1 er Costa Mesa with poor. I 1 IH i IHI applicable & rent the · 1 Ba. houM. $525/rno. • P • 1 1 5 o O. 2 131 L.~:~28r~:ta::s~c.·;.~;;;, Avallabte 8128 spa and many other • .'.'!r.! ..... !......... ~tiler 3 ~~rime~:·,,'~' lt•l•I• No pets. S..~80 878-2255. Vu. AC, pool, avall 9_1 720-0541 amenities St t0.000 In TERRIFIC HOIE ncome a er w e P •••••••••••••••••••••• NEAR BEACH 3 br 2 ba 3 Br 2 Ba, ocean vu. S57S mo No pets, She<· assumable loans. On a finance & SAVE buyer B 0 979 2390 cul-de-sac 1001 owe Prof decorated, warm 3 lhousands ol dollarsl B••lll f•mliM condo. gar pool, tennla, S825tmo. Arch ••en ry or onn• • Cnt•#tu uu .....•.•.............. DR F R REDUCED sell Ing price •••••••••••••••••• •••• $900 mo. 873-0612. H gt • • Av • I I 9 I I ' dys Reduced to $159.900 Br. LR., · . .. btg JtJI.--l I I •1-633-9212 all 3PM ---------Cati 979-5310 kllch . high beam eel-ol $295.000 00 Is way -I•• ~ -2 Br 2ba condo Cepe Gatden Grove. New 2 BA 1 u. 2 u. au. Newly decor. G11 pd, encl gar, dwshr. pool. bbg. Adult•. no peta. 642-5073. . \ t ~ ·/ l I tl I :· 11 '"E .:.., , '. t •••f•,•, llngs, 1rplc, plus a trg BELOW wrrent replace· c~i~·:;·,-;;;·.teAALY•~; Serles uctuelve E'slde. OCEAN AND WHITE ,.,., ba. pallo,gar.1550& manicured yard w/e 3 ment costtll Prtnclpa11 WINTER rentals Aeglr Pool. prof lndacp'g, pvt WATER VIEW 3 sun-$100 dep. No pets. car gar. A real velue at ONLY1!1 Call owner at Properties 675-4000 p 1 I I 0 • 2 car 0 a r. decks. 3 bdrm, 2'h be, 2 Craig. 545-1370. GO S315.000 and you own (714) $800/mo. 642-2137 or frpc·a $ 1125 Mo plus 3 br 2 be.. deluxe condo ~1~~~/llrlck Ten0te, 842-0138 "1.IJN 494.479 1 ~·~:SIS:<>;31.1188 Lrg. patio. pool & spe, lt•l•Hll 3101 2 Br llOUM, 1720 Orange · child o.k. near SC Plaia 3Br. 2Ba, dbl car gara~. JH JH• ;,:::_:_j~on·•1••;,1~·1;;•,;,j;j Ave. Pref. sr citizen HARBOR OCEAN FRONT $665 mo 213·964·2888 mC!8'iJl.AU 2 plllos. flagstone trplc, l011 """'"'' S450/ I 1 8 dener Nu 3200',lu~ hm on bluff. a•a•.....n.-own8f-custom bit nome C.,f!•tr••• · 2 br. 1 ba, compl. relur-mo nc~ r · 180 deg. vu of harbor. , ...... ,,. --•-••• $127.000. Owner wlll ,··6·o·o ;,,•o•••P•;:;,,~·,;tj~; blahed. Garuao1•1· ~uhledr/ Price Realty. 8-3209 aurl. mtns. 3br, 3be. ffllllil•H 35ZS Beautlfully landacap~ carry 111 roan.B -""re=n=d=N=e.._w_H_o_m_e_s_& 2B 2Ba cond'o 9'h't. VA d r Yer · t P • ·I Very nice 3 Br. 2 Ba. f.,. seourlty, 1aune, •P• ••••••••••••••••••••••1 garden •Pt• Pool & Spa. ReJ •cCar41e, llHr, Condos, no money down 10;0, asking 194.soo 997-3970. 8 lo 5. I mlly 1m, Mesa del M11. Sl995/mo. 496-7009 R1ncho San Joaquln. 1 Covered parking. No s..a•.1121 white they las1 (714) 66l 3380 £ .. 1o. •i.al gardener, $950, Sierra MOdel TownhouM In Ir· peta. _. · ''l.•U •t• ~ 'I' Mgmt Co 6-4 t 1324 Ocean view 2 Br 2 Ba. vine. 2 bd plus den, one Bach. $415 ~~~~~~~~~1546-9522 Agl. OIO •• ••••••••••••••••••• . . 800 I .. _........ I ·~10 = iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillHI• Aa1 I Em«ald Bay. pvl beacil, El.,.ant 3 Br 2'n Ba 2 1 •·., lllP9 IO.,_.,, Ill• nicest In the deve· 1 lk .... W.E 2 .. TWl.SE ••• •. • ••••••• •••••.. -• · $1100/mo Derrell, Ret 1opmen1 S 8 2 5 1 mo 2250 Vangu11d lllFFS llAllWI 2 Br 1°81 lrg lot Contact pools, tenni s courts. I atory. pool/tennis, fur-Max 759-1221 728-2148 540-9628 or 6-42-4905 with 2'111 bath•.2 car encl You own the land. 2.000 Else agt 75•1•319 1 ocean view. 3 Bdrm, 3ba ntehed $1300 Unlurn ------------------~ gar & yard. $5000 down 9,, ft. 3Br, lam rm, 2,h 662 2411 • & Ou es I house .1 11000 ICUI VIEW P•m•••H Spac:lous 2 Br. 1 Ba. $425. end pymt assisted prog-B~. wide Greenbelt. neer • S 1800/mo winter rental PROPERTY HOUSE Redec 3 br 2 ba_ 2 lrpl. n-'•••l·-1.H JSS 3 Br. 1 'h Ba. 147 5. ram Call Rick Owner/ pool. Far below market f••ti• JOH or S2200 /mo yrly 642-3860 646-1880 $1150 mo. 1422 Terrace ••• ~':!::· •• ~•••••••••• Laundry lac .. pool. Agt. 964-6171 $245,000. Wiii lease op-•••••••••••••••••••••• 7141759-0047 , LANDLORDS/REALTORS Way. 760-8378. BLUFFS 2 BR . 2 BA . TH S..8-9556 12·7PM. lion. Bier. 64~68 I IEW CllHS 2 2 view YI t 1 ' -Greenbelt nr pool. Frpl Flreplace, pool, dl ah-OCW VIEW ~~~~~~~~~~I 2 Bdrm 2'/tba low br. ba. .LP.~ reed . FHI frM tenant provl-Beeut 3br exec. home. -""llo -dbl gar. •dull•. G • • • gated comm. o....,y • deft. BEST Realty lncredlble city & oc••n ,.._ "' washer, pvt patio. X L 2 Bdrm, 2 be. condo Full SELL OR .,..IE down 1!W• ~ llnan evall. cor. Non-1moke1 No 539-e 194 1 S 15001 2807 No Pet1. lmmed -$950 -I Garden 2 Br. 1680. amenllles end sec. gete. '"" Call Rich Own81/Agt p • 11 s 1 3 o o mo v •w. mo. 6 mo or longer leaM. 557-2841 No qualifying with $6000 llUlll llllE 964-617t 497.323o. ·locc SPECIAL·3Br. 2B• Alta L8QWl8 494-7200 C all JoCerol (agl)j -----~--- down 10 7H', l oan P Iden 1 11 A w/pool, bltlna. lf'llldy yd. W fl••tl JIS 644-9060 °' 844-8300 program 11vall1ble. Call krmes~ 000 1 ~4~78615 I Ot••.r IHI 11111• Emerald Bey 3 Br, view. $475 P•Y' the rent. Hur-.. 'I.'!'!~ ... ,........... Wc:iztfleld. A Io h . 0 w n er I A 0 I . ng . . •••••• ••••••••••••••• • quiet st., S 1200. Emerald ry. Niguel Shoras pvt comm j .. rl•tatt fmraiJiH 984-8171 :1eganl 3 Br & den, C1a1tery WI• Say l'llty 494-l840 539-6190 Best Fee 4 br & famlly, 2 b•, ......... -;;............... FUllLY 1111·· HOO PEii ••· $20.000 dwn tor a 25% lnlMHI In proper1y w/llJC shelter benellta Owner occupied or Investor's position evall. Call Rich owne</egt, 984-6171 lllE FH SALE 3 bdrm, 2 ba. aeparete dining. covered pallo PonderoH St (Harbor nd Bake<). S 135,000 963-0363 WATER'S FINE No qualltylng. 1uper 3 bdrm with rock pool In country 1ettlng Mull aell Aaklng $117 ,900. Bkr. 8.48-0709 15000 MOVES YOU IN Wiii gamble with you on Interest rate lluctuallon & move you In w/15000 cull. New luxurloua AIC, 1650 IQ It. (not counting double gprage w/etectr. opener). 2 & 3/3 Ba condo•. Ne•t 10 all shopping & 111 .. tare. 631·6055 or 042·2000 VA REPOSSESSION 4bt, 3b•. pool. 18000 dn. S138.000. Agt 640-7739. 95% FINANCING AVAILABU:t Oulllty at 0.0% lnternt rate and you can buy thla 2 Bdrm holM or rent•I with yard. patio. and good location ntar bee· chee a poo11. 1m.ooo. 64+7020 L ... UAL llTATI country style home r.r...tr 1500 MewnNtf ••d 3111 1385 mo. singlet pad. atrium. 3 car gar. Pvt Jtl... Beaullful garden apta. French doors. bay win· ...... ·;~••••••••••••••• ••••"••••••••••••••••• , frpte +pool jac big yd beach & rec center lt•l...J• 3101 Patlostdectla. HMI p.id. dOWI, hrdwood floors. 3 6 graves In Pacific View LIDO ISLE -3 bdrm, lam lor P•I c a1'1 4 inro .• , s 1250/mo. 759-1465 •••••••••••••••••••••• No 1>911. 2 children wel-:~~\;:'Jw~~ ~~i ?:~ ~1~ ~. ~:OM°::~ rm, 4 Ba. 11100 mo s.at 539-e t90 F... lfllll•• Vl•J.• 311 L~. ~Z ~~~:.'~ •:im Ti>~ ~2 ea. 1685 !Ion. S179,900. Fee land. $550 .. ch, Mii 2. 4 or 6. OCEANFRONT 2 bdrm. vThll lu.11 5 Rm, 2B• •••• HOME.FOF,AEN.;-·· s32s. lndry, 111, IUI, pl 631-35~-~0f· ~2 ~-· By0wne<ll31-2134 988-1695 alter 6pm 1 Ba $700 mo Biii apllt-level hm, w/rock 3 Bdrm.&4 8drm.se95 ~.nopets873·9327. _,, ,..._..,,, 20~ ltltw larbtl 673-0519 before 6pm Grundy, Rltr. 816-6161. :;!>~·o~1.:~~ ~'~: klda, 10 1775. Fenc:.d yard• & C..11 #1u 1114 Laro• 2 Br. I Ba. with Urgent aala Condo. 2 D•1lex1t/ OCEANFRONT dupleK. 539-e 190 Belt Fee ger1g11. Kid• & pat• •••••••••••••••••••••• gera,ge, d/w, laundry rm: bdrms, 2'1\ be. Xlnt roe. U.Jtr l•t II.Ji 1100 Winter S8SO up, 1750 w•loome. 545-2000. $.440/utlla pd, 1 br, u~ 1.495 s 1 IO,OOO 512.ooo On •••••••••••••••••••••• down, 2 Br 2 Ba. lrpl, 1411 11111 Aoent. no lee 111.-. cloee to bellctl, lolll Aleo lrg 2 Br. I Ba: $490. Payments S947.50. Call SIPEl Tll lllLTll gar. S.Q..4111 Finest area. aunllte de· .___,, IH t Jiff of wndwa. bHut. aun-Av•ll 9-1. 645-662.5 owner 714-661-4918 FH 1mlTHlll IOUIFIHf /Ptala. eo<. gd '°' plant• ' kid. ..-.-;r.;; •••• !......... Mts. Sept. 10. &42-5027 Don't wait ontv 1 i.roe 3 ; Br light, brlle. Mctuded San Clemente pride of 2 11ory. 4 Br, 2•..t baths, ::n:~:a.:•·53M1llO *llUT llEITALI* BHtiaflu Br. avail with 2 ea.. Pll• 2 level Estate sire lot. ~lf'llp, modern Spa· dining rm. giant Sa.en BIG CANYON aharp & lrg t.Mt 1141 tlo, In quiet ., ... lerge shopping, school• all nlah etyle 4 unit apt. TV, hot tub, mod. kltctl. 2 Seo<> mo. 28t E. Side h9e, condo. Only S850tmo •••••••••••••••••••••• pool. 1&75. 845-3381 or ~by. Owner must NII llOUM with oc..n-hlllt & cer encl parking. Avail med A , new cpl, drps, LRG 4 BR 4 BA SPA· m&n 1."91 _8_7_5-_5_9_49_. ____ _ & wlll finance. Whet • golf courM 111-. CIOM Sepl 16, 615-7850 111 .. & decor. Garege, NISH pool home wt Beeulltul park-Ilk• aur-PINE BLUFF APlS deall Ag•nl 848-1044 to everything. only 3 B n l _1 1. b • r.: le Yd . no do O • · gerdenef, In great cond. roundlnge. Terr•ced 1 81'. with loft, & 2 Bt, 2 Pr Io• reduction. year• old & 1how1 llke •••n .,. ••~••Ill 631-90,.0 Only 1990/mo to qual. pool. Sunken gu bbq, B•. Chlld ok. on Iha S2•0.000/ make offer. NEWI New owner could ;;;•••;;•••••••••3;;j 01 2B H~B T 11 1enant. aperkllno lountalna. Blulta, patlO, view. lrpto, L.H., also may'-· occupy 3 Bdrm., 2 beth ••t ••••• 1~~B r petlo• n:~.~:· LRG 4 BR TOWNHOME Spaclou1 rooma. Sepe-encl get .. Oii stove, c1i.- 'I ff 11 d 4 b 3 b city & oceen vHlw apt. If ••••••1••1•1T•••;;•1•• l"3!· 546 9848· w/nu orpt a paint. Aleo rat• dining.,_, Walk-In hwaahar • ..,_, lndfy rm. "u 1 w an ' r. a. applloebl• & rent tl'le ,.. "' "' mo. • ' PoOf, •P•. grMn.,.11 l clONta, home Ilk• klteh-MOO t1n1llri & bonus rm. 2800 othet 3 apartmenta for Yearty·Weekly-Wlntar. 2. o7&-0600 clOM to '•tl'I. lal. Onlr. .,.. I C1blnet1. Walk 10 sP...bmo. IS1 .. 107 •Q I. End unit. Naw Income. Seller will help 3,4 8drrna. Baollt>ey, 4 Br 2 Ba, dining S1105/mo. lmmed, eval . Huntington c.ntet. thruout. S3l5,000. finance & SAVE buyer .llOlll IULn rm . lplc, lrg yard. Nu we~ m4lnY more at 1 80rm-turn,$S05 ~2 8t.28LNopeta. Ownr/Agt. 644-63&8. thOUHnd• ol dollaral orpte. dra~•. J>•ln1~ gr••t prlc••· Al•o w/ 2 Bdtm-tum trom seos Av.it IPPfOJI 8-pt. 11l Lii •• " 0... REDUCED fffllng prlc• PllP lnlld• I out. 1850 Inc. r .... optlona to pur-2 8drm-Townhoule fum. S460 · 1tO· U 11 or In an exoluatve comrnu· ntty. Walk 10 boll. E~ arneiri!ty. Mua\ NII • $86,000. Mullan Realty 540-2980 Aall lor Loft of S296.000.00 IS way ·····11111T garden«. 676-103'4 Gtl .... Call tOdly FRED trom Sl16 _6_·4_1_M_7s_. ____ _ BELOW C\lrrent teplac. ..,..... TENORE 831-12H or No 1>91 ... U1Mltlta trMI LAr 1 er 1 Ba. cts- ment coetlll Prlnolpala llM 111 Lb~·. =~.2 -c~~·d~:. 790-8702. IOt· LA OUlMTA HERMOSA lnr,y rm.' oar port. wi ONLYlll Cell owner at OC-RENT•L., 18211 P#kllcM L.n, t bite al ..... , ................... ,, 1-11. •114) • oemnoe. cant. 11r, tar-,., ~ "'"' ... .., ... .. 1 OCEANFRONT/Unf\lrn rec.. &trlum, bll.ffle, cl._ t-&br'I '200 to l2000 W. of leech, 3 bfl(8 S. 64&.MH. 142-1131 3 8t Ml on -.ter. AVllll. oar. W/opaiW •• H~,b«/ 780-3314 °'*' 7-day. of ~ ... 147·&«I. -2-IW-~-.-N .... E.-.... --, .. -I09d'"""." --------1 Sept. 15th on y .. rly Wllaon ., ... ..,9., mo, EASTBL.UFF: 38r, 2ba ... ....., a-.Ai nl tront, C\ll~MO. QutM. Sell Idle 11~1 642·&e78.~'P.!!Jm! .. }.fjf bMI• 11150/mo. ~ee __ Avllll Now.•t100/mo. : .......... ':'::"::-........ 15211 mo. (71•)&94-1et1 LOAOEO$br, 2be •I~ IM0-t01t,'31-ol3e Diii 281, btMI. tartga. no evea. 8£A8HOA!/Vu/UnfUm. petlO blt·W. now aaoo peta. 8tep1 to Hnd. -----,.--,----11. C • I 3 er In or .. t loc&tlon. OC-AINTAUJ 7~14 Pn Udo Condo. 3 Ir. 2 s 1 2 5 I'll o • ( 2 1 s } WlnUll Lato-l•lry 11250. a.. frPIC, dltWwtl'I, lndry ...._.220, ... 750. t a 2 Ir. apt• e11111 .. To~ COii)() DIVORCE SAL£ SHARP 2bf, 2be w/~ rm, 3 carporta, pallo. poo4, -. lndfy ""· no Mutt sell-owner OUl of atate. 3 ll'IONdlbi. oc.atl Ylews. '478. . '*" rrra to alnd. ~ 1 If. "'*' .. eo bdrm, 2 bath, overlooking aolf old 11me ~ 3 BA, OC-R!NTALS 7so..3a14 L. ... or ..... opcton ..,.. mo. ll 3l ••e-tuo. a er. ae11. """"""° COM/OCEAN• patio, pool, kid• ok. J7N. N1.ff22 LO lacl'lelor, lrpl01}l~'I pet., lmrned ~. , IO lemffy tlOfM Stets I o• ~ Ir. o•n•I front, ..... tlO Cell for 11111'· Ltttla MIN Mulfet ut on 8 ~ ~":~i!t!>·~~d~:;n~~~f~ .............. IN~ ~~':.~.tie-YMllY·r:,~; :::"~ llACH,,.ONT AENTALI T'81. Mofftt. ...W1n I Tullet. along oam• •I $l30,000 ""or•aage. Reduced to N1·1• 00-A!HTAA.8 7I04S1•1 S•1'°°trnotamtty.; a,11oe, 1yt7·~wi"tont or 28'1\4"no"'*-'480 apld•r &n1' read In tl'te 1 .. , •• :,, · , 70 lift 6 wttd)t. I · '" "'' n ar or fOf 2 penone. 761 W. 1 D•ll1~,/11ot c1u111ted $249,000. Will accepl ~l"I. boat., I W'll4lt • WCMldlrM WOftel '°' a -lftad M N9wPOtt lhcwte 3 ii. t'A ,._,,, 1 .,, °' 1 ~. t 1tttl tt. i*iio1 ' I =-!T~~-~:'!,·l diamond• ln trade. Broker ol tl'lopp1n1,~= ACmON a.. a bloctt• to ~.l&.ott•'Y s br, 2 oa. oer. ~WID~ 1 ~v j U l •I I 1•~...i 2a Can on 'tfNt ~ Cell a cloee to eotaoot a tilMll. I ltepe •0 ....., "-"· Ot 1•• a • ,._ lor St.ti. You can NII ~ c pa. on nv u:v. ., Y I Dally ,llot Cl .. • fled = Mt~ • unhHI\. Yrly. Oeyai r~ ~·;..,.,.. = f !~~r'utt~T~o••n~~~~~:~ v.. 9 9051 ! ~.!: "'T ~.ed. :t.ae11 ~--ci111lfliid ldlt& I ~t"'· (t 13 !, ...... ,' p*9I ·Ho,,..._ Delly Piiot c1111lllad 1 1 (ft'N DALY 3.5 & 7.9 75 • 1 ,_ -~.; •1 n. Miit deeel In IMl1· • Ha'"I ton. O.M. I Ada. e111 ... 2.se11 lllllillllllll_....,... ..... _...__._..,,...._,_..,... .... _.._~ • ~!fled "*",..,,... ..., ... 11 .Lw Ml c.11...... 141-4411 / I ' J I i ·- Orange Cou t DAILY PILOTITue1d1y, Augu11 2'4, 1982 -~~~~~!!:~.~.~": .. ,, ~"'"' ....•........•.•..•••. ~!!!t~/.~!!f!!!! ••••• llf!!'!!~ ............. ~~ ........•... ~!.!!ft!~lfr ....... . !~~~11,c~W.~~ ..... ffi'f:,'laJ •••••••••••••• ~.'!'!/~I. .....•....•... ~!~1~1A!e!~Pp~J IOt a 30 day •<I In thl l&ILY PILIT IHYIOI llllEOTIH 00 IT NOWI •••fer l11•r• YOUI 01lly PllOI ServQ Olrecaory R1preM11181IVI 141-llll, ert. U2 ~.-.~'!!!!. f !!M'!f ! ... Applied, re-epplled. guar . lneured, llc'd 41<1691 730-1900 hee estimates ~,.~~!~ ............. . Drlvew1ys, Pan11119 Lor Repairs, Sealeoattng S&S Aaphlt 631·4 199Uc OENCRAL OUSINl!8S Sl!RlllCES HelP fOf 1mall bulllnMe a pno111 cell •w•y Aeo ordkeepl11g, IU 1)110. Bua1r11u cou11•ell11g 498 12116 ~!~,~~~!!~~!~~ ..... . Cabinet• & Carpentty Smell )Ob• & Repllre Free E1t1metea 6<16·2003 f!!I!.~!~ .•...••.•••• Door hanging remodel cab1nau p111et1ng. elc P1int1ng. cement Reta Je<ry 548-o14 t3 FllH HTlllATHI Cement Ma1011ry ISl°'k Walle-Cull work lit •381057 Rob !147-28t3 DrlVM. plllOI. walka jll"ree E11 No )ob too 1m•ll &38-2607 Cuatom concratt b1ICk block wall• patio•· l o undat10 11t l lc'd &38 !IO 1:1 Concrele ·•m•ll or tge Jobs Aamo11e, rap11oa or repel! 646·8612 c•;1, c,,, .••.•••••.•........... HARBOR TAINITV PAE· SCHOOL DAY CARE CENTER Colla Mau Opening Sept 13 Full Reasonable prices. 111t. and .,.. day c11e 7AM 10 profualonal work 6PM Reg1ater NOW c:ustom work 1001 Nu )Ob Corner Baker & Fairview too small or too big! C•· 1 555.4335 or 556· 7 787 blnets, kllchen remodel ---& llnlahed carpentry E11per & dependable elect/ plumb/ cabinets/ I Child care during gra11- countertops I do every· eyard shill Lrg F V Hm, thing lrom stert to flnlshl plenly ol sleeping spac:e Call Bred a1 841-2277 (l 1C) tl 1-3210 Llc'd Daycare, ages 2·8, Cu • tom r •moo a I a fl.ECTAICtAN °"1'• M1tntenenoa Sttv I HouMGIMnJno, ••~. , .. •ddlllon1 ,,_ "' Ou•· Smt fob1/Rt p1lr1 Lie Ptumb....c:.catpentry lletllt, lnclll•h apeakll\Q Illy 2nd 10 l\Ont 6andel 233 tot·C· tO 848·6203 Painting Call 96'·8231 M_2_·6_5_2.,..8....,. ____ _ Con a I l It 4 I 8 5 10 HESID/ COMM'lllNO HIRl!D HANO ""Will liOUSECLEANER 548'427 1 :10 y11 Oo my own work tRAllELI Many dlv1t11 won a1epar. IO•m·8&m. 11.J. ll•ff•11 I 111 Uc. ?7804 1 Al 848·fl128 chOrff Wlllle 842-3491 54 1·0702/838 04 3 LtcAd3doer18.88CaAb~lna1r°• ... * •NOHfH STAR•* C~OYMAN JIM ~~'!!!~{'!!~'-········· • d E*111cal Con1r1etor Mllnl • plumb rtP.elr, PROTECT YOUR ~OMEI 846-8&88/e.45·4 44 lie New Hrvlca 220 palntll\ R .. /comm I Prof M <10, ev1ll now, C••I•• W*wikl'!f c1rcu111 24 11r 846·4174 6:18 9~1l·3684 ~1111 re•• e4 1.931e Kit·R;,;,·c:c; ··;.;,;;,~ • ,u; f~!'-'!P!!.!~'!~!!~ .... !~~!~•A.............. , .. ,, AJ' c:1blnate Can now lrM Cu1tom Aallnl1hlng.Furn DUMP JOBS ·"'••••••••••••••••••• ~a 842·088 l & 1n1arlor1·All Rapat11 & Sm111 Moving Job• Yltll Willi Otcoretor style Int, bare. Call tor 111 84<1-5294 C1H MIKE 841l-139 t FOf a frM feel llh•t. call ---I Herry Went, Atto1ney 11 m1ntel1, llbrt rlea. high Qitliaio• HAULING-GRADING Lew, 553.02go s1yle raised p1ne1 wall• & ...... -.................. aemolltlon, clean-up - celling Lie 536-2386 TREES Concrete & tree remov11 #110•!f. Oo•••llt fopped/removed Clean Ouk:k Mrv &•2•1638 8AiCttWOAK··5,;,~if1~·;; ;;KATRiN•A .• S .. Li°vE.:~N up, 1awn ·~ov 751-3476 PROF SERI/ICE Newport. Co111 Meta. hskprs. <1111u maid aerv. MOWING . ClEAN UPS Heullng . yrd clean up lrvlna Rela 675-3175 ' Quick & c:lean. Free ell oll1ce cleontng, crpl Hauling · L1ndac1p1ng 873_0548 Brickwork-small or lge cleaning. 835-21 t6 Free HI 842-9907 Jobe tOO'a local rela Jesa1e'1 Gardening HAULING & CLEAN-UP Since t969 645-8512 Yd1/garegea Prop mgl mC:i~~n~~:· "~~~~~5 631-09531631-0865 ~~!!'!f •. •••• •••• •. ••. !'.'!.'. !!~~' j ~1. •..••••• R I I . ABC MOVING • NurH• AH'I IOr ttom Diii I Painting, lnl/eat cart eYall 1mmtd • lull Ret1d/c.omml 8 yrl np Int 538-88&3 lllcklt, 6 C•t 111ea High quel ' 1-Ht 1oeo me11r1ala. LO prlc. rree NI Aele. 499-&7 17 ,,,.,,.,. -..................... , ... ,, .. PAIHTEA Nl:.EDS ••'•-•••A••••••••••••• WORKI 30 yre tap, Intl r11thl11g lntarlOf 0..lgn f •ltr Acou•llC <*lino• HANOlNO/STRIPPINO Davie Pelntlno 847 8 t86 11111-MC Scott &45-11325 Cullom work, Int .. 1xt. ASA PAPERHANGING llc'd 20 yrs In area, rel1. 7 yr• local exp Guar Hlfb (714) 5:111-8012 111 work Pr1c1e 1tart 11 5 30PM I U /roU Alec 1179-08~ L BATES PAINTING E•ptrt wallcovertng In· SPECIAL! Ext -OI $400, 11allallon Aea1 prlCee 2 1ty $560 6<15·9383 Conaullant Assignment CANYON'i>AINTING 14 581"85~-- yre In O C Satlefactlon l1r..1 l1•1r1/ ouar 494 .. 4541 •• ;·;·eRYANT·S·.;·;··· QUALITY PAINTING Wallcoverlno Removal Ext/Int, reaa rates All lypea 842-1343 lie 8348276 536-2366 -,-t J - EXTE'Ai'OA'PAINTING r.!!!!! .. !~~ .'!f • •••• • Custom work Ftff est Con1u11011on & Hand Reas + line Int & 11a1-Made Framea 40 y&ars n1ng Steve 547·4281 Experience 646-5141 t4u ber Rooll11g-all t'fl)N N--•~-deck• Uo U I 11102 548·97~ ~~.r!!l.~r.!!~~ •.... Alltm CO (Lie' Cl) 8tc:ullty ayallm• for home & t>vt1neH SK 11Urvey ' Hllmata free 845 6998 !I!!~~!!!! •••••••••••. SCRVICE: & REPAIR Va11 Op~n· S41fVIGCI Co (714) 838-4866 "'' ...................... Chuck For Tiie Work Free Ell Dys 640 5188, Eva wknd• 675-5100 Tile Install & Rep11r Guaranteed work Rel• Free est Bob 675·8595 ----frH S11-ric1 ....•.........•....... $ LOW RATES S Tree 111mm1ng & remo••I 811 t leanupa & mowmo 554-7017 I r Oan Hellberg Grading C1tMI .,, .. 1.,.1 my home. Segerstrom & & Paving Co Aes/coml .••• ~.-•• '! •• :.:......... Fa1r111ew 957-0360 Doors replaced. doorway• aOded, French. enlry, c ustom & Interio r 63 1-1528 anytime Tree trim. gen clnups, ROBIN'S CLEANING Free estimates 552-04 10 A'lllH La1•101Jl11 •• ~~!~.~~~·"··•••••• Quick. Careful Service 1 cement work Free est Service • a thoroughly Drf!!•ll Cell 549-1604 any11me clean house 540-0857 *A· 1 MOVlll * ~~.~:~·sR::~~:~~~. r!~!!!!l.~!/.~{t••••• • •• Rel Free HI S38-9898 ED'S PLASTERING Neat patches, 1ntle•t r.-.~ .. ,!~I. ............ . Mos1 subjects, K· 14 Day/eve $5 & S tOthr Mr Morgan 645-5178 Lie 397804 842· 1720 Shampoo & steam clean Chrl•H•'• SIH•rs • ·oAYWALLiAcou5T1c·· TJIE ""11irir1 SCEIE J . Cle I s lee Top quality Special care flH Pl1"1H Aestucco~ 645·8256 ~!!!!~!T! ••.••••••••.• Personalized, low cost le· gal services: Ind . family. busl. tnlllal consultation tree 553-0290 Llc'd, bonded agency ~ • ~~ oan 8 an 119 flfV In handllf19 25 yra exp 420 82nd St. N 8 Repairs, new & old 1 I Lawn·tree-shrub Install House1-Apt9·Aentata Competitive Rates C Coder's Babysitting yrs exp Bud 552-9582 Tree trim/removal Otflcea. 540-1287 No overtime 730· 1353 by Richard Sinor Uc I 28064<1 13 yrs ol happy tocal cus1omers j Thank you. 631-4410 PLASTER PA TC HING Aestuccos lnt/ut 30 yrs Neat Paul 545-2977 Agency Call 645-3746. Wall 1e11tures-Acoust1c Lawn care/Aototllllng TIRED OF HASSLES? ST A G CO EGE Hang· Tape-Steel studs Free estimate 548-6068 Quality c:lean1ng help is A VIN lL Palntl I II 1 <11 lt1•H1li•• IJ,.1ir ~!'!~!~ .~!~~'!!~1 ..... ""Let the Sunshine In" Call Sunshine Window Clean111g, Ltd 548-8853 20% Monlhly Discount Color brlghleners wht crpts • 10 min bleach Hall. 1111/dln rms $ t 5, avg room $7 50: couch $ 10, chr $5 Guar ellm pel odor Crpt repair 15 yrs e1ep Oo work myself ~!!!~!.i~A.~!'.!!~~ ... _A_e_1s_s_3_,_.0_1_0_1 __ _ C I t ,._ I I STUDENTS MOVING no our am Y ra •••••••••·''~ •• ~ •••••• •• 1'C 011, uc:•l1' Lie 389944 1·532-5549 QUALITY WEEDING & llere! Reis 960-7452 CO Lie Tt24•436 lion for over 100 yrs' 1 ... ., I I II .. ••••• • • • • • • • • • ••• • ••• Inf/ext Uc 346252 Free •• •S· es II· ••••• REMODEL/AOD-ONS DRYWALL TAPING Maint Remember lhe 3 Exper House Cleenlno Insured 641·8<127 est 661-3998 Free est Reas prices & Carpentry Llc'd 25 I All Te111ures & Acouallc R's Reasonable, Rella· Reliable. Reis I WATCH US GROW! I aual 111<erk. Lie 337169 LET US MAKE VOUA WINDOWS SPAAKLEI JAVS "SPEAKEASV" Ptol. Bartendlng Serv Any occasion Prtbl bar 1·879-7552/52t-8141 People who need People Thet's what the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY Is all aboutt A,11l•tnt1 Ualruaidtd ···•·················· Cnt1 #na 11Zf ••........•........•.• No Steam/No Shampoo Slain Speclallsl. Fast dry Free est. 839· 1582 EXCEL CARPET CARE Jack Buffington Owner /operator Carpet, uphol, area rug cleaning. Work guar Free Est 645-177 t yrs exp lrwln 548-2719 Free est Kevin 675-9088 ble. Rick. 497-3070 553-1675 , Prestige Moving Low CUSTOM PAllTl•I 645·<1010 Allll'111·Dt1ip-Re11d. El1tt1lc1I Hu'r••a LET ME 00 VOUA I retes. fantastic service 25 yrs exp Uc 40394 1 IA o o M ADD 1 T 1 o N s Free es1 Reas. prices •• ••••• ••••• •••• •••••• ••••• •••• ••••• •••• • •• CLEANING FOR YOU! I Stale wide Visa & MIC Bonded Ina Reis Color Honest.Reliable & Rele- Qual work Lie 337t69 ELECTRICIAN Priced Carpentry · Masonry CM/CdM Julie 6<11'·9087 Insured 543-8462 Cal experL 963-09 11 Al· ranees JC&B Consl uc 845•4010 rtgh1 lree es11mate on Roofing · Plumblng T • 137 124 I chard I ,,34767_7 974.7555 large or small Jobs. Drywall • Slucco • Tiie OIM.-A-MAID-Quellty & ' ------------ Uc 39662 t 873 0359 Remodel J B 646-9990 Service As Near As Vour SELL Idle llama with a Make your shopping ea-Compere before 1ou ouy Class1fled Ads. your one-• -----p h o n e . s 3 5 / s 4 5 Dally Pilot Claaalfled Ad. aler by using the Dally Class1hed makes 11 easy. stop shopping center Classlfled Ads 642-5678 Classllted, 6"2·5678 5<10-4669 !142-5878. Piiot Clusllled Ads. 6<12·5678 for your out-grown bike • DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS Sell your no-longer-needed Items for cash. If It doesn't sell, we'll run it another 3 days FREE. One item per ad, must be priced. Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads . Call today for full detalls. (Non-refundable. E1tre UMe 11.00) Salls guar 839-5337 !!~!~.!!!'!~~!!~'······ Computer word proces sing Fast accurate MH"V Aeea. rates. Notary free pkup & delivery Len, 751-13 14 !'!~~ . .'.'!!~!.~!!'!!!!.~~-'!.•J.f t.M'. •••••• !'.~~1f!!! .~. !!.-.!~ .... !~'!'! '!.•.11. .Vf !!.~~ •.• .!.'.'!f N B 3975 Birch 3660 sq. DEAREST ALEXANDRA SCRAM-LETS Aide for paralyzed young It or less MIA zone Welcome Home Sun-woman Mon-Fn. 7 30·5 Agent 5<11-$03'2 shi ne We made rt. 7 pm Must dnve Balboa ~Bsru!..Love you Fore-ANSWERS Island 675-5652 R11I Esfltfl-the Complete Orange Coast Market Place A111t•1•t1 U•l•t•idH •.••••••••.•.......... C••I• 1111• JIZf . .•................... . AJ11rl•••t1 IH•• 4000 l1•t1J1 to 8'111 4300 Ollite lt1•l1I 4400 U•l•rai1A~ •••••••••·•••••••••••• •••••••••••••········· •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ROOM/BALBOA $230 M/F to shr lge 5 br home 450 sq. ft S 1 00 per sq # t If i 311' mo. view !urn avlb 9/1 w/pool, trplc, off Back ft . <1001 Birch . N 8 •. '!!r.! ••.. !!••••••••• 11 2 3 + 'non . s m k r ' Bay. C.M. $300 utlls incl Agent 541-5032 $750 up. 2160 II lndu-•v• ~ atrial · Othce 18101 Ae-1 Gender . Ensue Arnst· PIT, tor sill\ screen dondo Circle aM & T Wiiiiam Lloyd Beck ld101 . Taught !·shirts Experienced Huntington. Beach, Happy 40th GOURD 63 1-3494 8<12-2834 Blrlhdey Our neighborhood health A T_T_E_N_D_E_N_T_o_v_e-rn_i_g-ht-. 1200 sq It .. front ofc. lge L11t IF•••' 5300 food restaurant serves on wknd $25 Assist rear door. S425 mo. 629 •••••••• ••••• ••••• • ••• squasn pumpkin and dtSablea prof woman Term 1 n a I Way. C M zucchini We think 01 11 as Costa Mesa. 645-235 7 Nice 28drm 2 ba Most 1 Br. 1 Ba on Back Bay, ulll pd. 622 Hamilton S1. pool, pvt, $400 m o. S525/mo 548·0477 646-8126 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS 673-9015 631·6220 I •HLIH OfflCH• Lg rm to rent fplc patio Female roommate wanl· From 1 room to 3 rooms. blllh $250. 1st last. H B ed non-smoker ro share From $1 16 a sq ft No 5 4 O • 9 3 5 2 d 8 y s . avant GOURD FOUND ADS Babysitter for weekends 646-0881 eves ~I Found Female. M ixed at !he John Wayne Ten· It I W. ff 4600! breed (a1rdale7) 22nd & nis club 644•6900 Westside SPARKLING CLEAN & SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Br Newly redec. crpls. drpa, dshwr. range & re- Ir 1 g e , view & ocean breezes, no pe1s. $385-$475 642-0684 & 552-9723 Eastslde, Lrg bright 2 br 1'h ba patio, avail 911 Clean 2 bd. encl gar, w/d hookup, patio. 2 people, $.475. 642-0461 t br. utlls paid. $330 mo Call at 645-7072. ask lor Joe or Debbie. AEOECORA TEO 2br t ba duplex w/sngl gll· rage. $530 559-500 1 near bch 536-7103 Irvine condo $240 plus lease required. At!) Alr-COUNTAV CLUB LIVING u11I 559· 74 16 752-9069 porter Inn 2172 Dupont IN NEWPORT BEACH Sleeping room w/patlo 1---------- A tolal environment PY1 ba entry Avail Se()t Park Nwpt 2 br, 2 ba apt, Call AM 833·3223 apartment community on t2 $250 mo 111 37th SI. N.B $3$0/mo + ''> ut1ls Eucullve o f11ce suite I the Upper Bay Private Newport 686-3592 or 760-1554 alt 12. corner of 405 Fwy. Near clubhouse and hea1t11 781-0467 Looking lor someone to Harbor Blvd Take over spa, 8 tennis courts, 7 Com pl furn. congenial locale & share apt. CM. tease 1600 sq It at 90c I pools, close to busmeas. black man Hunt Bch NB 0, CdM 631-3981 fl Call 751-6191 a1tport. Fashion Island Reasonable 536-8544 msg Fountain Valley Olllcel Conven1en1 shops on 2500 1 1 60 .!.".~'.! ••• f~.'......... ARE FREE Tustrn 63 t -5415 1----------1 Babysitter needed tor 2 yr ClllPOIUTl 1P1110.1J1 5350 old girl. Npt Ben area, lull PRESllEIT Call·. ••••••• ••·· • ••• • •• •• • • ume Mon-Fn 630-3482. COEDS • Would love to Recently molled to 1 .. 2.s.111 II party with you Call Sue _6_7_3_-0_3_2_2 ____ _ ,. u or Ka I h y any 11 me Babys111er Cahfornla desires quality ---------• 2131604.3233 Mature Wo•H ..... Furnished home tor rent LOST Grey end cream liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij ell 1 LIHA I VICKI'S My home 2 small cllll· seasonal or long term I female cat (Had yellow PHOTO MODELS d re n . 3 days I wk collar w/lag) 1 yr old. ESCORTSIOANCERS 751·5230 1n Laguna Beach. g~~~rne~yrh~a~ttbr;k~~ OUTCALL 24 HRS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii site Unfurnished bache-Next to greenbelt, pl/I ent. Penthouse nr beach. pn-spi ce. SQ L a cl lors. t & 2 bdrm apls on<I & bath, newly redec, H.8 vale ent & batll. H B a fl Good ei1posure, townhouses S250 utll pd 536-0794 $300/mo 536-0794 good parking, Talber1 & $550 640-0997. 3 Br 2 Ba, bit-Ins. lat & LUXURY COIDOS ft te le. Cst Pl11a Frplc. elegant French windows. AC. in home deposit. S650. 631-3537 Duplex. 2 br. t be, crpts. drps, oar patio. cleen Nr schls No pets $525 5<18-7234 · • Brookhurst Call Se SS40 • SIOOO WANTED Person 24 plus Resp Fem to shr w / 75t-6t91 vec-at bachelors and I 10 renl room In Cosla s ame, non-smkr . nr ---------Bdrm units leature fine Mesa Profentonal re-beech H e $220 & • ., utll 400-900 PLUS 1400 sq_ It ~~~o;1d':;!;:; Reward 497-1377 IH-0201 IEST PUT-TIME Lost white F Shepherd. J=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil JOI II TOWI Contact (714) 494-3757 vie Atlanta & Newland. 1• SUNNY'S El<ecullve Be a 1etephone promoll· security. 2Br 2Ba, tBr 1-N-r-1-81-11-1P-o_m_o-na-.-1-B-r-11 1Ba & studios. 18r & studio Incl Wstir/ Ba, upSlalrs. 0/W, car· designer lurn1ture and I'd Bea 1 view 2 rpold 536-2875 Linda Penthouse Baylront Sul- accessories Move In to· · u · Y le, parki ng patios day or reserve tor som c 0 n d ° C a 11 Am Y N B lux condo. Harbor 673-1003 mer months Smartly 559·9 4 00 days or Ridge. att'y shr, straight ---------furnished models open 63 l -8506 eves. $275 $550 752-9442, dya, Scellng Down? Start1no 2 Responsible. reflred H B 536•2287 Stress-Reduction on clerk for local new· Ad Its (MIF) lsh 10 renl L I 81 13 M S elp I t Olflra.hm-ou1ca11 spaper Pttvate desk u w os e 0 n e ~ casual attire Only requ1· Mobile Home for 6 mo Himalayan, San Joaquin 631-6377 dryr, also includes pvt port, water pd. 1 child club w/1enn1s courts, OK. no pels $450 Agt gym. pools, ta cu zz1s. ,_n_o_i_ee_54_5_·2_ooo ___ _ dally plus ,.., utll House prlvgs 640-2434 eves oul ? Lower overhead incl ma1ntaln Image. olllce al M us t a I I ow p e t His or. San Miguel Ad l~~~~~~~~~~j rement 1s a good phone 964·6110 R-ard 553.1950 1: voiCe ano lots 01 enthu· *** s1asm saunas. beaullfully deco- r atad c:lbhse & much more From $450 mo Incle most u111 too 549-3<12 t. 3641 Bear St (btwn Sunflo wer & McArthur) Lovely EaStslde 2Br lbtl. 2912 Peppertree Lane. N o pets $495 /mo. 559-4718 E'side C M 3Br 2ba con· do. Lg yard, lrplc. 2 car gar. pool/fee $725/mo. 631-7905 2Br gartlen apt No pet• $440/mo 546-9950 2 bdrm, 11~ ba. 2 story $5$0 Mo. Also 1 bdrm, t ba S360 mo Call alter 5:30 PM 2884 LaSalle 957-2740 On Jamboree Rd at Resp noosmkr, chlld OK, Regency Center. EJtec POOL AID SPA 10 sllr lge furn home. suites In Newport nr Air· San Joaquin Hills Ad Christian man. tiOn· own bath, C.M 548-2497 port, fully equipped & &••· 1100 smoker prel"d Sundeck, John stalled for 1very bus1· Vacant 2 BA, 2 BA. cer· 1----------golf course F / 28 ness need lnd1v olllees DH1 Poi•I 31tf •••................... Prof woman & 14 yr old Loll 2 yr old brwn Germ daughter wish 10 share a Shor1halr poln1er Ce<:ll & home with a reaponslble Orange. CM 642·3 t51 roomm t W rk 2 1 3 • 5 9 5 • 0 77 I • h m ltsfl leolillaH 526-4077 REWARD Sentimental p 5 o4r 2 1. 3 en 5 c: 9 7yd A$ 1 5 1 2s 6 Spac. 3 Br 2 ea tplc, gar. 851•1910 em to shr w same r mo/mo lrom $375 beach 2 blks. S900 yrty tba apt. CM Rec racll 730· 7165 No pets 645-1682 Employed. non-smoking S 2 4 2 5 0 & 'h u t 11 833·9976 I . I , / resp Fem Near OCC 831-7286 SO LAGUNA 3 Arch Bey •ll•n1/ •rtll1 value Gold Chlln wolh bu1letfly charm 494-7432 Ba•tiOflH 3 bdrm or den. 2 bath $225 $50 dep 957-8390 500 sq It with good hwy Fi•HU ..•c• 3140 Upper duplex Avail Sept • Female roommate want· vlslblllty 497-2351 •••••••••••••••••••••• Found gent's ring Vl<jlnity Atlantis Parlor Open 2<1 hrs a day 7 days a week J11cuu 1 Sauna Locals as well as To urtsts BankAmer1card. Amer- ican Ei1press. Dlnef5. All welcome 714/6'15·3433. 2112 Harbor Bl CM Hours Mon-Fri 5 30·9 30PM Sal 9 30AM·1 30PM • $84 00 ro start After ISi week, share 1n partnership profits For interview call alter 6PM S.2-&111 ell 312 •• •• ••••• ••• •• ••. •••.. 1/early 538-3600 Nice quiet home tor wor· ed. prefer etudent. Ado-l••I•••• Dover Shores. JiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ WllFFUTIH E•ecutive Condo. 1BR, king person over 32 yrs, rable 2 br hOUN on Bal· Sub-tel Ellec office 01••rl••l'lw SOOS 645-9190 UOTIC I~~~~~~~~~ Costa Mesa 548-5804 t>oa lslatid $285 mo Prime alrpor1 locale on ""'""· "· 1 & 2 Br 01sc:ount on den, ocean & bay view Bite/I .,01 .. 11 .. 100 673-6900 ask tor Carolyn MacArthur Blvd Price AR.TIST~·,.;;;a~x~~p~i~n".ir Found Cocker Spanlal In DAICEllS OAllHll IPNITllfn some models. Pool. Spa. Cath cell, lrptc, securrty ,.,, .. ,. Paysse at weterlront reduced. Must seal antst 10 do sports action Ea s I e I u It M a I e 28 openings G8}6~06.'9S.auna . etc i;':.1:1150/mo, call 9.5 ····.·:.'.·;11··1··M•D••T•E•l•••• Homes; eves 337-7238 497-603<1 figure sketches at reas. _1_s_9_.0_2_6_8 _____ l10h1lor/l1Chl· Lurn lhe field o t .. • ~ .... V1ck1 1 66 6 i marketlng·merch1ndlsln!; Wkly rentals now avail prce James 1-338 , LOST 2 boogie boards. lorette •art IS, Deluxe poolslde xtra large WESTCLIFF 1 br condo $105 & up Color TV Want resp non-smkr to •Sim IUlS* btwn 5-tO pm orange/blue, 1 pelr fins, P' 2br. 2 ba, t>ltns. dswhr. POOi. no pets S540 mo h N c d 2B + r-ard 67"'3-070 Thi Last Hurrah 673 66 o Phones In room 2274 s r wpt on o. r 0 C. Airport aree Prof LIQUIDATION DISTAIBU-"" ' Ill> miles beach. No pets , ___ • _4______ Newport Btvd. CM pvt bath $375 548-6238 environment, lull servl<le. TORS STOCK FOUND 1 oar Balboa 131-1531 $500/mo 536-8362 Walerlront/wlnter. , br 6•6 7445 I I I l::i:iiiiiiiii~ii~I .. • M/F 10 shr 28r. 1Ba apt, Of no rills. lndll/ldua o • Light Bulbs • Fluore· Peninsula 2 Br I Ba M1nu1es from $600 & $550 Days S365 mo. Incl utll & c:ar-fices or desk space. 150 scents • Commerci al 675-3070 ~~:~7~~·~r0.~~~~e~; s-:-;-~-:-~-1~-:-·-~-:~-~-:-~-~-r~-0-~0-; 8 [ A C H A R E A P°'' 675•0282 ~~'i ~~8:~~· 1 MO ~1~,~t £~~:~,~·; : 6'e~~~~ Lott M Springer Span. 11-~:;,·a"n~la~~-=~~·u~!~~ II \•171~1:1c£ $1175 PE, MONTH 720-4691 E bl 11 dbl $S4/Wk F(22·28) to shr apt 1 blk OlllCe Funrnlture • Who-ver & wht, summer heir-1 d b 20 per. est u • gar. 1 b h $27 5 c 1 cropped tail Bu meet a y etween 1m...-.01are hirlno P·--~t 3 91. 2 Be No pets 2no 1 or. frp•c:. Piil patio. pool, no pet s . Po o I 8 O 9 r 0 m 8 a c CdM dht suite. AIC. ample lesele Prices s~ard & Ellis Re;.,ard-and 40 Loves children. lor"';;ung minded"'~"';;. noor S49s+dep laundry, welk-1n CIONI. Amigos Way 64<1-7118 Aelr/gerator-Meld·POOI 575•9550111 5PM pkg, utll pd 2855 E. Ctt DISCOUNTS AVAILA 968-5726 toavellng. boating. Send pie Call Sun-Wed noon_ 540-2245 quiet $4 60 mo. Dela· USDLIFF Nwpt Blvd & Wilson F rmmte. S300/mo. utlls Hwy. 675-6900 BLE ---------pho1o. discreet. Write Ad 71 4-964-5354 ware Pines, 842·8807 Costa Meaa 5<18·9755 pd, Nwpl Shores. N 8 3 Days Only Found. Bird Parrot lamlly No 729 C/0 Dally Pllot.1---------- 3 br 2 ba deluxe condo Spacious 2 bdrm. view, vearly on the beach. hotel area. nr beach. 645-254 7 2000 l<I It Olfl<l41 space lor Auoust 241h, 25th. 26th v I c: 8 o Is a Ch 1 ca & 330 w . Bay St .. PO eo11 Carpel cleaning & light Lrg. patio. pool & spa, 2 bd, 1 ba, 't, mlle from pool, nlee area. No pell ' lse C1 • avell llOw 625 11 Autry Lane, lrvlne Edinger 846-1200 1560 Coste Mesa CA ma1ntenanC4!. Some days chlld 0 k near SC Pleza beach A vail Sept I $675. 644-4767 room, kitchen & showflf. Shr 2 br. 2 be C M. apt. W 19th St, Coate Mesa Or Cell 2131553-8595 92626 · and some eveni119s. PIT $&65 mo. 2l3-964-2886 968-4216 $320/mo plus sec de-nicely decor, fully furn 645·8830. see Mrs Found M lrlah Settflf, on ~~~~~~~~~~ 966-2531 ----------·----------$750/mo 3 Br 2 Ba en· posit. 2306 W Ocean· $250/mo + '"' utlls Northrup l•r11t•••I 8121. vie 55 & 405 Fwys 1: 1----------Eesttlde. brigh1 & cheery •AllllER'S WALi clsd garage. walk to front, Newport Beach 645-3026 111 5 0 1._•lt( SOJS Cell 548-3968 lfrllHI CASHIER/HOUSEWARES 1 B 1 B 1 al od b h d tb 1 873 •15• SUNNV Newport Beach 1•M •• ---------Sales Ex""'r pref Apply r. •· na ur wo Lge 1 & 2br1wnhse apts, esc · yar a cony ..., .. F to snr 2 br CdM hsa, Oo •••""~"•••••• •••••••• Found. orange "Tiger" $1mc11 S3f0 at Crow'; Herdwere c alling s & c abinets frplc, dishwasher. encl Won't lut, call for appt ••-•t ll•t·'• ... _ $300/mo Incl utlls + SPaullloteOf2flctS8 3 3g8 1,:.•0r. Resort condos. Bullhe1d kitten, brown collar, 81 •••••••••••••••••••••• 3107 E Cst u,.._,, Cd••· $420. 851-9522. gar Nr Huntington Her-TSL Mgmt 642-1603 ~ ............ ~ .. ~~ dep Reta 675_5838 631_1094 City. Leughlln (Colo OC College 759_9002 !!JISll ft(-.• .... 1 ______ n_-_, __ ... _ Clean 2 Br. + Fam Rm bour From $475 Chll· Easlblutt 3 br 2 bl. alngle All/If) Hunting. llahlng & l.RWL • "'u; -CLElllCll w/d hk·up, patio. 2 pee)· dren OK 840-6807 garage, pool $750 WlllLY 1mw Aoommlle wanted. furn . DESI IPAOE o• gambling. We hive rent· Found Blk lab, young Eac0r1 '°' Wom~n p i e $ 5 1 5 • n 0 pe 19 B , 6<10.6S89 Av1llable. Ag1 875-8170 2BR $300 mo. Acron Attractive ruatlc upstairs ala. SS0-70.000. PY1 par-dog, Baker/Fairview. 497.5725 (bet 8am-8pm) lmmed opening. On the 642--0481 ••l1•1to• 1 Br. steeps 4• across the from be1ch. <193-9114 setting. We supply desk, ty. (213)698-228<1 turn1d over to C _M fob trelnlnl No/or lite 3 Br 2 Bl trplc. yard. garage, $700/mo. 1 Br 1 B1. petlo. garage. $425/mo Broker 851-8300 H11IH•t 3142 •• ,, ..... YI•• •treat lrom the beach. a,, •• ,,,,,,,., 43SO apace. copier You sup-·=" ,,.,, Pound ,,,,.,, 545, ~~n~~~~1~'7 Sml B~~h~j;;C;~;·5;;;;~~ Arclle1 11 Old Newpotl S295/W1t. 87!1·5068 ••••'••••••••••••••••• ply phone, & $95 pr mo ' 50351Found· paJr of thick tens •••••••••••••••••••••• 1---...;.. _____ _ sand Flreplace. D/W, Blvd. l arge BIChetOI apt -ir••flHT Limited ICCIH, lot sto-pr desk Call 644-7211. • •••••• ~.............. glena. Nwpt Bch neer LA to Atlanta. 1st c:lass COMPANION relrl s365, t yr lae. $550. 775-1149 8\1 ~ rage only Hunt Sch 2000 .... It, comb. olfl<les I II ••m.tl pter 547-5128 Lou airline tk:ket S960 Value, Lt,,..ln. older lady to help g IM~I Pt1l ... l1 downtown SSO/mo ... • • -wOI M ii $500, c&1h Valid dress, cook meets. 11 2131592·3171alt6 S1.CJ1•1•tl 3116 2etry 4br,2'Aba.dlnlng, 960·1197 ~nd llght work shop ••'111190..lao. Found~BlefkGrea~01ne for lytar 557-7 196.Jell hsawk. Must have car $325 • Bachelor apt 333 Ll•H• lf1d 3141 ;•.;;:P~i·d;;k,"~jd'7;;rid giant TV acrean, hot tub, 1orage •ree w /lga Speclali'itng In 111 & 2nd vie. unt ngton each. N.B 548-0805 e.. 2111. C.M. Apt B·D ... ,.••••••••••••••••••• modern kltch, 2 Cit gar Slngle car garage. storage overhead door ICCess. 3 TD'a since 1g49 Call 964-1984. E. •• ••.ln •.. '!!~! .......... 1---------- "•S-&589, 845-8103 Studio. 'h blk to beach, cllarm, spectacular Aval I now to "I 15, only, Nor1h Cos1a M•H. min lrom Udo Ille. Ideal A bt S Iller NH/CM " •~ Ot1tltrs• -~---------unfurn $385 Incl utll ocean vv. Wiik 10 beaeh "' $601 546-7214 lor comb olllce/alorlQe. 0 · 8 Found Yng Golden Ae· Bil• W1atffl 1JOt) Needed for lui1ury La· lllU YlllH Le•• a 4 114 . 2 7 9 7 $495 Contact Mor at apt 875-7850 mo Cell 645·4800 Ilk for A E Broker 8d ReeltOf"I trltvef, M .. Jumlne Ctk. •••~•••••••••••••••••• 28A1',t,bl,pvtpatlo.no <193-7t37or 49.il-541 0 , C 332Enclll0Ln l1•l1J1te$h114J00 Sto11g1 g11ag1.,:x20 . VleklaOtAnnt' 842-2171 54!>-0611 8/22. NH Shelter aoootmllGEIYULI ~~~a~~t~t:,;:: te 1525 1552 Et _::::::.:...:.:~::...::::.:.:.::.:::.__1 •• ;:-::;:-,.;:-_:----;;.,,9-'AO •••••••••••••••••••••• Cotta Mall. S50 o. WIDOW HAS SSS fOf TO's 631-1030 AD AGENCY week. Contec t Mra. C.:e-3621 m. ··~r1 ,,,,. 3111 ~!!.'!.:'!!~ ...•••• !~... .., ........ 642·4907 wkd•y• 2~~0° .a~ "owb5o~I 5p\:: RE Loin•. 10K Up. No FOUND: LOVI bird, \/IC Fut-paced envlronrnenl Ve.ughall·Purdla. ----------1N••0••FE••E•1·~·P•,·.•,•••c•o•:d•o• 3 br. 2 ba. dtluxa condo. Contact largest Giy Ol'i•t lutil f .. 00 r g 's · · r Credit Check. No Ptn· 18111 & 011'<19, HB. If you have r1tated ex· 4114-4<'80 Specfoue 2 Story 2BA 1 'J'r " " 1 I •· • " •re 1 · 2 0 0 0 I m 0 11ty. Denni.on & A1toe 536-7430 pertenc:t. ei1cellent ly· EOE BA. pool, pvt, pttlo. car-rentala. 111111 Aentllt Lrg. pll 0• poo • apa, Mile Ftmela terYlce 1" •••••••••••••••••••••• 851-8928 873-7311 Pl"" skl11s & enjoy 1 lot of le 875-41112 Brotler. child ok. NNI SC plaza So. Calll. 54().8718 womn llf1'll I .... 1---------~ort. chi dren OK, no $665 mo 213-9&4-2888 IRVINE Pnona lntw•· Interior Oaa1011 firm ttaa Saclurtd dlecounted 111 Tum to today's clutJlled 111pon1lbll1ty, we nted Trad• your old 1tuft for s~!·A~:~:a~'s.~~~ ltl lflllft m A,.tlat•ll fuill••H 2=t•~ ~~;~111~; rlt1g. cont. rm, ulll pd, 400sq.f1.turn'dup11alrt ro·a r0:. ule Pvt party fo r th• beet b uy1 . you Call 979 .1000 ~:-.:.,n:,o:~.•:.:.~~8a Of 213-375-8107 NEW g111d 20 Town· D. ' •HO w/1 chlld or Ju.11 1 •dll. ectry Hrva. etc . Aleo oltlce t0•ce for ritnt In (213)898-228~ • 842·6878 (Eiieen). home Ill LLAGE COM· ., •·•n .. I 1(1 2 I I dHk •p•c• S 1!10/up Skypark .,. •. looking -' 13951mo. 1 Br. tea • .,,_ MUNITY 2 & 3 Br 2,~ •••••••••••••••••••••• bPoo1t. O 1.1b~toa1• 0 5.,.o-9746 tor competlbl• Co. for Siii S12.,,000 H O, Mort· ~:;.. __ , • V b I clad "•r•g•. lndru rm. . . IUWlll • cony w •Y v aw. Info. cell 658-2932 Hk o•o• ... Y••r• llralght I''·· ' ... ~.~ .--OU can e a ' "' d. ' Ba. 1800-1800 l<I· It Of 557·7883 Of !Mo-6339 1817 w .. tcllfl, N 8 268 for Jan. note I 2" I O t ' ~~ :!:' ~.' ""'11 pet ok, :~~! \~·~~~ryG~~~=·~ YILUIE MtF thr !>Mui Back Bay 10 4000 sq. It. 111. noor. Colt• M.u 200 1q f1 to HOOOICHh on Co1t1 1, ~.,...; WJ N NE R I TSL Momt &42·1803 mullr eultt, dlnlno N•w 1&2 bdrm. 1u1eury condo. Pool, JllD, tenni.. Aoant 641·6032 2800 rt 754 p., ·IQ M au Hou .. lr•n• , 1 '1 1560/mo. 2 Br. 1'A 81. I rooma, wood burning apte In 14 pt1ne. 1 Bdrm S300. 846-5145 rt. & u~C1H Atalonom1o: 6se-.4211 altet APM. :. I ao llrtPllCH micro-wave from S6 l5, 2 bdrm from Corp. 87M700. DO YOU HAVI a 111, :Ind 1 C Townhouae, balcony, In-ovena "'1~811 patloe & t570, TownhouN from 1Femet1 W"ttllll 1rta. 0 3 0 T o t SELL?! di d ! dfy rm,°"' !)Oft, •fl blt· ylrd•:~rdantr ptovl· $840 + pool•, ttnnla. poo l. w/d. non·•mkr., 1a1 .... lnt'1 fflf; 7~-,,~. 0 Just b y sen ng us your name a n I Ina. A\'111 Sept. d.o EMotnt IMng only wtttrfllla, pondill GH 1 S290/mo, 831·7332 ••••••••••••••••••••••. address and by watching for )'Ollr :I TSL Mgmt 842-1803 l 11l mlnal" from FUhlOn for cooking .. h•atlng Fam. IO ahr turn. 3 br I ./'~~ 1 ~ut,t1~L:x:~:,.,,...,,,,,.,./ I na me ln the c lassifa'ed ad . or th"" ' 18R $380 utll 1>9ld, car· i.land, 7 mlnutet to S.C. paid. From Sen Olego condo, '300/mo. E/Slde I "--""' ..,.. ... port, teund'Y-, no pete, P1111 or O.C.Alrport. Frwy drlYI Nor th on I C . M . A v a 11 n o w :/u, • .-pr"tlglOU• ~n °"'* h,,.,,.]1/ D ll Pll t / J H3 W. e.y, ~511S Jult eaat of Ntwport e .. ch to M0Fedd1n to 942.2225 ~,/,,_ --on Radhlll, 17 8 eq, ft. '-t, f••"' 8 Y 0 • , 6l\ld &IO of San,.,._,. Sa a wlnd Vlll agt ' , ,.-...--875·3182 lrom 10·5: ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• i · 1$25, uttllt• Incl. 8m 1 Fr w y . it 00 1 ~ (71<111~15108. ,Mala 35-U lhr Sbr, 2b• ., 644-t&3t lfl., I. ~II llll Win llckt'll to lhc c1rC'U!I. area amW1tm'tnt attraC' l bd. 1M 2 Newport Dlvd.1 1 631•5439, 2.,.7a 0r1n-•~-.. ~, hH nr 8 C.Plara/Frwy •r...oa M.... •••• ••••••••••••••••• \IOnll or :r.run11 tvl'nt" J11."t fill out lh11 i.:oupon and 1 CM ti1·1Ma ... ,..~ ,,_ _. • Spa. S225+•11•rt utlle.1 ~· hychlc ~lngt 1 I l lh I " I ,..,,.., .,...11 Mela. •••••••••••••••••h•• , $'1~913 M~ AflOweno9 l8'>1r1tual) , m111 t I ay o e 1 . , bd, 1 ba1 Refrlo Incl. 2b EASTSIDE CM. Prlva11 • . I ,.i111 or orno., 000-1200, Jack (7,4) sat-111e I .., ~ uac>IMO. lit & let. S&O~r, nHr bHcll, nice, l\irn. room & bath. UtUa, ,Oofnt).,. t>et~ you t>Yy, 1.f. 497.a1a2 I · Clll lfled Department, Dally Pilot Z • C1119nena, Mu 2 people. ., .. , turn or u11furn.1 1nc1 .. rtlrlQ., 1311l mo. ,SUL Idle'""" with . Olueln.G rna11 .. 1t Mey. Have IOfM111lnO to .... ,, 330 w. 8 &)' s, tru t. Costa M~H. CA mu I cb 0 ~ ~ -MOO/mo. 17M338. :j 873-7844 1 Da~ ~~t c~~ Ad. l e.42-~I I ~ ~t. 14Nt1~ Cl-·~:':.=~ ...... ,,,b~==:.:..:::~===~-~.._=---=====!:":'.=-==:!::=====- I Now ro1i1terit11 fOI' fall. 0 Ill PllESSltl SClll learn How to use Wang, IBM 056 & Disp11ywriter Xerox &60 c• Orange Coa1t OAILV PllOT/Tu .. day, Augu1t 24, 1Q.82 ....... TRAVEL AGENT MomJns. afternoon & evening classes. 1 CHRIST LUTHERAN SCHOOL ~1•)5568 -Tiliiltflllml .... o.,. ........ ,.ts.,. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT ---- P ac;b :Jralf,l J . :Scfw of 610 !. 17th St. s.t. AM Openings Available In New 1st Grade Session and Kindergart<-n OIUNCI COU/liTn OUMJT • '1fllln r1t1YATI JCllOOI. Grodesl<-8 UIMMOH MOMIY Become a Word Proces.sing Specialist Excellent Career Opportunities WOAD PROCESSI NG ANO INFORMATION PRE·SCHOOL -KINDERGARTEN FIRST & SECOND GRADES (7 I 4J 54 3.9495 l1te1t11.ii.4 I U J Flnnnri:JI Aid Proarams AC'rrNlll'CI by the Mrredlting <:ornm1ss1on of thr Na., tu.mal A..,soc111L1on of Tradl' & Tt>rhmnl Srhool& "A CARING SCHOOL WITH .A CHRIST ·CENTERED EDUCATION" Extended Day Care Available 548-6866 2232 S.E 8111101-s~~:l~ta Ana. <.;1 92701 FULL DAY SCHOOL 6:00 A.M.·6:30 P .M. 760 Vlctorl• Coet• Meu ··-...~·-""" In Mntf's Viar•. Mission Vltfo MASSAGE TECHNICIAN TRAINING Emphasizing Scholastic Achieve ment Skills Development Reading Aptitudes For further information regarding advertising placement in the Sehoole & ln1truction1 Directory -call Loui8e Griffith P ..& TBF :IN'DEJ\ HJ:GB 8CJIOOL PIRI PRIVATE DAY SCHOOL For career development or personal growth of Independent Study GRADES 7·12 Now Has Limited Openings For September In State approved training program by skilled professionals. "A Bftttr Etk11Jon1/ Alt,,,.,tin" Banet & Field Trips '11tlnstruct10n by 1/){IOin/ment; 1lw1ys J.J Available in Orange County by the Institute of Psycho-Structural Balancing (IPSB) *A comp/tit lndtpendent Study Pro1r1m, lt1din1 to 979-8308 545-0821 1rldu1t10n. col/frt, 'fOCll>onM /fll/llfl. * Tuto11111 umcn 1r11/1b/e tor 111 sub,« ts ftPSAT, SAT. ACT. CHSPf, 1nd CED Pfff'llllHHI Grades 1, 2, 4 Course begins late September for two intensive weekends. ft Voe1/1on1I counstl1n1. ps1cholo1ic1/ /es/int (lnfar1q·Adult) 642-5678 e x t 330 trfully crtdtn/11/td tdue1t10nl/ lt1m 211 IHtt Vista '"· Call (714) 781-4142 1.,,11 •••I (71') 111-11111 , .. ,. .... 141-1111 1~~11 ~.,•JI 2129 W. Edinger Santa Ana 92704 La Paz at lar11tritt, S.lte 201 "We ••I ..... ~ Pre-Schaal &Child Care + A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL FALL '82 HARBOR TltllTY PRE-SCHOOL Children's World Pre -School Nursery 10382 Bolsa Westminster 531-4555 SllLL WORLD PRE-SCHOOL Ac•• 2-3 ~~~ \!!!!!?) "For Active Children" Fall: After School Program 11 :30 a.m. -6:00 p.m. Bowling/Skating/Hiking Cultural Awareness/ Manners Rinaldi's Preschool Ope1i11: Sept. 1st ,,_ S 198.00 Mo. At HARBOR TRN TY BAPTIST CtutCH 1230 Baker St .. Costa Mesa •INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION •PLANNED PROO~ •AGES 2-5 ,,~Q :., 3'1t,, 7AM·6PM FuH & Haff Day Care· •FULL & 'h DAYS SSIONS I 4 rr old Cl11111 TRANSPORTATION FROM SCHOOLS ~" . -tni... .• ,. v~I f' . REGISTER NOW! •SWIMMING INST TION IN HEATED POOL •WELL BALANCED HOT LUNCH DAILY SNACKS • Ideal tor Working Famllles (Bring this ad to reg.iater by Sept. 13 and get $10 off registration) •LARGE PLAY AREA FOR CHILDREN TO ROMP & PLAY TO DEVELOP PHYSICALLY 2950 McClintock Costa Mesa 141-3177 • Free Trensponatl<>rt : ~~~~-6 (714 ) 631 -1668 0-. g 30-6 00 ""' Agel 2 • All oay-llalf oay C•tonoeo c ... ,.,IM> Prtmery lci\OOf •g•• t>et0te and aue, 'M.noof tLOUIOCI O"I I ... 8'111\110 M-5ctlOOl 5'te) -Nt• Yn lMlll llld ........ t - CALL 140-lal tr 114-4223 555.4335 556-7787 COSTA MESA ,!}I..!.~~ •••. !.l.':f !•!1..'!M'!!. ••.• !.I.ff !-11. .'!~'!!. .... !!. .• ,!.'I. .rt!~~-!.····!.~'! ,!!l..'!M'!!. •• •• !.~~ !1!1..!.~'!!. ••.• !.'.ft l!!I. .'!M'!!. •••• !.'.'.! !'11..rf M'!!. •••• !.~':f ,~llJ!f!'!!! •..•... !!. { ~ MMRll. ULL a.-a1 Help, Nm up to HOSPfTAL Hotel IWll LUI lffllDI P/thn ...... , ICTIY/IEOPT. TELIPlllE I HY APPUAICH for t .... .._0,_.,onel thel $400 week taking anap 11111111 Aggreulve Newport Supplement your Income lmmed opening. On the UYHTISI• SALIS Les 957-8133 ,,.. ..-. ··-... -ta In you ·-· '"-• u.ftllLI needed for reeort pro-Beach firm aeek• moll· by dol"" lnte<eatl"" WOfk job tralnlni . Noror lite ·'mpty d~'t ... _ t .. _ ... iu r --· """ • ··• ... For local coll""e sports o f 1 h "' ......,, .... v '"" t ptiotog aphera ,_ perty. c.JI todey. or ap-vated lndlvldulls. Te<rt-on behell of natlonel typing. Full p/tlme. Sml rl 1-. "er gerator. was er. time. end tor everyone d:; P/F 11~ no exper General office poelilon In ply at: 3 48e2 South torles open. Must ha-.. companies. S4 hr guer. SYb. chg. 631·6688 and pe orPmlTng artscpu· dryer. dishw asher & concerned with velue. .:....1 'd w It t corp. 11CCt1. recelveble Cout Hwy, Caplllrano R. E. Lie. lua xlnt bonus Incentive bllcauon · FfT sll freezer 646-5848 Flat de9lgn IM. $3 P9f sq °' -ng req · r e 0 office. Medic, al bllllng e.acto. Herbof-Peelflc pprogram. Good .,,...•kl"" SECRETARY. FANT OFC 557.9910 ••ovln . Fri lda'ire as It. w a wtll aell et cost Un!Yefaal. P.O. Box 310• pe rel d Good ..,....._ .. ., Adv Agenc Good t" ,.. g g g ....... """'-. 75 ... 1 ....... P.O. Montebeffo, Ca 90640 ex '· P · (l14) 411-11H , 955-0073 voice a must. For per Y ,. Telephone Sales d er now clean "'" 'v"' ... """' communlcetlon. math•-nal Interview call Jell ping and phone voice Earn Big Money by the ?' · ye -3Sa'f:"' Box 5120 Bllt>oa ISiand, Genetal Office matk:al end typing akllls. ltllllllAllEI Lt u PrM tu/EMrte p 8 t t •, 9 0 n 11 1 1111ent1a1. Sho.rthsnd a beach, $300-s 10001 _5_50_64_2 ____ _ 92860 ln1urenc1 egency In Muet be dependeble. Ex per. M u ll have Min. 2 yrs exper. HNvy 7141s.-s.6776. plus. Opportunity to ad-week, Call 536-7511. Soars Kenmore Washer/ II--• eo.11 M ... hu opening re• p . • a n d • e If · Supervisor quelltles. l yplng & clerical lune· vance, Sellry commen· Dryer, Almond color. al· ••-•-for energetic person to motlveted. Matute Part time. Exc8-tlons. Smell Nwpt mtg P.TillE SALES surate with experience TOPLESS MODELS most new. will 5911 for Start lmmed .. fuh or pJI handle a variety of oft~ I. RuQ 71'-M0-8950 lent pay. 9e6-l300 co S tOOO + comm. Enjoy WO<klng with kldl, Cell Carol, 10 am-12 pm. $75 DAY • PAID DAILY $395 Set. 966-1436 time. Exciting money dutlel. Must be reepon-------.---·1..::::.:.:.~'..:...:.::::..:.:::::__ ($20<>+). 851-0444. and wish lncfeued aar-557-0&42 no e•P nee • 826-2583 making oppty. No exp. slble and willing lo learn. HOSTESS lneurenoe egeocy, ~ 1 1111 t REFRIGERATOR req. For detllla. wflte to: Peld company beflellta. nll ftnee expet .. vibrant. Melntenance man II. 2 yra n ngs. u ze your ou. IEOln &llf/mC Underwriting Clean, lrostlree. $150 C.E. P\lblllhefs. 220 Nice Call •ft• 9 am. For ..,_ to help stlOW epeeteQl!er Typing a. phone. Prln exp. In construction. golRg peraonlllly. learn to C.F.O. of Npt ecn Fin. Our Growing General 642-4352 days/aves Ln #215, N.B. 92663 polntment. call Pauline. "leWPMf BHcll Execu· onl y, 1al 1ry open . water distr ibution =~o =:1~,'~8~ Svcea. Firm. Ch1llng .. Agency has an excellent I ' I IOZO 549-8909 llve reeldence to .,...,,hy 875-2300 systems. Backhoe e11tp. Reapon poslt1on Good opportunity for an ex~ IC'f!. II proepectlve t>uywS 1M2 req'd. Stert $1455/mo, 2-6PM. 642-4321. Ext. typing .. Incl. s11i1111c11I. rlenced auto underwriter. ;;,.;•26·~·;;~~··;;; lllYlll Mother of 2 would l ike to babysi l children ages 2 lh & older. Nice fenced yard with p lenty of toys. Our 4 bdrm house gives each child a bed for naps. Kaiser & Woodland schools are just 8CI'08S the street. Snacks provided. Please c a ll Ka r en , 645-4205. No expr nee. ready lor lmmed. hire . Opening B I Ir. -' llll avall. now. F/1>-1lme. Sml . !.r. .. e.~........... tub. chg. 831-6688 llAPml 1111111/ d aye wk. Brlgl\t end Legel Sec:fetery In Hunt· e11c. benefits. Apply L•· 348. EOE S/H skllla & aptitude for Must have a minimum o~ condition $50 • UYllT ucitlng pereonallty ex-lngton Beech. PIT, E.xper gun11 Beech County PIT Per'lon dr ... shop In numbers exper. req'd 2 year. axp •with non 5 celtent converaetioii.iist Neceuery. At le1tt 2 Weter Olatrtct. 306 3rd N.B. w omen's clothlng Ca.II 640-0t23 standard markets We 847-809 ,.,.... hr .. lltMf1 and .,.,_ grooming and deys • weetc. Flex hoora. St, Laguna Bead'!. exp nee 544-2470. Mar· offer compe1lllve salary. Dirt Bike Good condition . PIT,,,.,. eppeerenoe are lbtOkJ-Wiii train on IBM 01ap11y ge llORnAllY/m C excellent fringe benefits. Must 11111 s1251otrer OHi Min. 2 yr1 exper. Hiring lmmed. Days only . (7 14)553..()735 DANCERS HOO tt 11,000 w9" Full & part-time dancer• wanted for Bare Min· lmum Telegrema. Audi- tions being held this week from 9 AM lo 3 PM. AJ>91y et: Bite Minimum. 1807 w. Katena. Ste 216. Anaheim, or cell (714) 7711-&421 , ___________ , EAT-CHEAT-Be rich & allm. Earn $3000 mo. Supervisor po11t1ona avail. 831·2t01 Stat cemere t 11per . tety euentlel. Reel es-writ•. &47~4t M1lntenance/ Gardener. AdYet.IComm. dept has and• pleasant working a62·7657. helplUI. tate k . 11 htlpful, but not Legel Secretery, tempo-prefer over 40 yre. for IEAL. UTlR IAl.ll opening for expansion. environment Call Lori. -M-11-n.-s-5-.-8pd--be-a_c_h_c_ru-I· COMMU NICATION requlred.Sendrep4y9to rery.2 weetci.ClvllLltl· apt.complex,axperlenoe Need2exper.peopleln N.B F'ln. Svcs Firm. 649-9923 Mr.S22~C.llS40-5100 ARTS Dlllly Hot Ad No 1041. gatlon. Newport Cent•. necHUry. 548-9558. commercl•I end lndU· o~ typing, SIH, Eltper. VETERINARY HOSP ext 19 9-5:30 Doug fil II (714) 536-14<17 P.O. aox 1580. Coi t• non tm<Mter, fully ex~ 12-7. strill reel estete lor sue· req d. Non-smkr. Cell need• one PI T A H.T ••--MeM. CA t 2t2t rtenced only. 780-8888. M••11 ceutul end growing firm. &40·0123 and two kennel uals· SHEi Olllllll -• •-••• ....,.....,. UYI.. ... Best wortllng conditions 11-_.•y tanta Call 631-1030 NEW, S50. 673-9344 Be 1 carrier aounaelor -...... ,. Hotel ._ Must heve •X98'· Hourly In Newport Beach -·-for 1 locel newapaper. Motlva1ed atytlat needed .. .... Permanent. full time for wage neg. 951~91 7t41'46-5051 Full time for Newport WANTED ENERGETIC & IUCI Clllllfll No experlenoe nacea· to Join progreatve Alon. Bright Eriet~tlc lndlvl-mlnlm•I care of semi-"'eture ~ounter person, "EAL ESTATE SALES. 8Hch Jewish Temple, CREATIVE people for NEW. S50. 673-9344 Nry. wortt only 12 hoora Sall Comm/ Vacation. duell. Some -...--... lnvelld ttv~ Of wlltl"" .., .. n e 11 p . 6 5 t -1 2 3 4 or costumeQ balloon dali· --------s76 to tert pl c. 11 m. n. g . r. ---. ........... .•• P/T. Herbor Cleaner•. Personeble. motlveted 552-0636. very l«Vloe. Mull have I ''" 1 WMk. • us 71._&4()...1889 required. 8..-t wor1ll Im-to leern care of lleoa-16475 Hllt>or Bl. Ftn V1y Nlea people needed to t ort 11 11 Ill •I eddltlonll ltlare of part· medlltety. Good Bene-tomy. No Uftlng, no hoo· 839•2556 aam $1000 per wt<. WOf• llOllnUJ ~e;_8;~s::,, •~p~n. Cl #a,.mh 1015 nerstllp'• ptoflta. H8"dwwe Salee PIT. Mml fits. Ol'I the ooeen. C1111 aework. MI F. Referen-kl"" 20 hrL ...... ty. c1•-ta .... •••••••••••••••••••••• '"reel fun "'bl .....,_ -..-a..... .......... MED CHIROPR"'CTIC ... '"' -· E•p•ndlng CPA Firm. HW •1 /FT " ,... retired type. Apply In ,..,....,, ... .....,...., •• : -c:.. · " & training prOYlded. Dan FIT. phOnel typing die· Wented to nll speclalty • O , M~t c>pt)Oftunl-peraon. Crown Herd-So. Coast Hwy. Capl-873-2389 ASSISTANT. 1 glr1 on~ Flllily 714-720-0234. tephone, tO Key, ~ord Item, wl pay $5.00 hr, Redwood 2x6 decking. ties. Of Interview cell ware, 3107 E. Cat Hwy, atr..., 9MCtl PIT P.M. Ina. e11perlenoe proc helpful Excellent only work 5 hrs en ave. 4_20• tono: also redwood :~~~PM. 8-42-5678, CdM (l1C) -•• Cluallled Ada &42·5e78 required. Ben ellt 1. HlL ESTlR IALEI benefits. 8good tele-•a' n b I g $ $. c a II fencing. C.11 Jim or Ken ________ ,-;:;;:=:::=:::=::====J.....i---~-~-.L=======;;;:;-i 54t-4n9 w,:;r not try time.,,.,... phone voice. Who wrltel 714-676-76t8 btwn 7 & pnytlme. 77$-1491. llTl EITIJ OUll EJtpertence In video sal4M NURSES AIDE. exper. • make aome money legibly & la accur11e ,_12_A_M_P_a_u1 _____ , a-, lffl Expanding Nwprt. Bch. !_~tem1 ln,at~tan. only. IOI 3 to 11 Ind 11 lor • chenge? 75t-3191 Excellent supervision & WILIEI ~••••••••••••••••• cr~ll cerd compeny ll8S ..,..._.. wage .,... ..... · to 7 ehlfta. Competitive Recelvlnn Clerk tor retell compenutlon CdM. he , ..... , ,.._. FfT temp. poelilons avall can Valene tor lnterv\ftl ~ Hlary, excel. benefit~ clothl~ a10te. Full time 840--8110 Min. $9.35 hr. Job ivall -HOI -• for Data Entry clerks. eppt. '42-19« ( t ~ ) ) end good working con-position , Mon-Fri. now Cell lmmed. Sml Sign up nowl For Info 10,000 key strokes per FACTORY TRAINEE . _ dltlona. Conveleacent 8:30_5:3o. Exp. prele<-Senltt 11lfietl aob charge 631-6688 Cell: 847-7688 FV hr ei1per. requi red. 3 lll'llfta, ldMI I°' women llNTID Hoepltal NB. '42..a<M4. red. C ell for eppt. ATTENDANT. Full & p/ Nice woman 10 care for Shlh-'T'lu puppla. 2'h mo. Con tic t J . Ta II or over 30. No phone calla. Offlce position: Must be 844-5070 Alk lor Kille. tlmt. •P&::. Chevron ~ned lldy. Thurs. & Fri. old SH at 18811 Mt M on .-Frl. 61.m . to AJ>91Ylnperaon: experienced In corr•· Salee 1251No I Hwy, Leg lrom4:30PM to8:00AM, Colllen. F.V . Deya '' 4:3-0p.m. 7t4-759-7900. IVEAPAC CORP. epondence, bids, hiring. Ett. Salet Rep. to dlstri-Bch. call '44--4687. 962-0017: 839--9882 all Ma.&Tm UUI 5465 P10duc:tlon Dr. HS typing. ecc. ~ bu1e Tne New Europeen SERVICE STATION Gall 1 Sain _e_. ______ _ PI T. FIT, xlnl comm, .. 1111111t Pert time. metur9 gt1 tri· Enortleea Eltcerclae me· ATTENOENT ••••!I•••••••••••••••• hlM l etrlt ftf w0f1< In OC. Mutt h8W } d d d b II chine Comm Wiii treln Pert/time, evening• & If-fa .. _. • ..... _ __. ... _. You< orlglnel, flf'tl-qullllty ) ay nee e .DY 1m1 · · · · weekends. Neat appee· ~ ••• ~i:::........... t .. mo ""' ........ '""'"' :::J;.:~9color, wlll train. artwof'tl may be Uled In ( mnlg ltlop fOf llO"t offtce Territories ualgned. rence & handwriting. Haetul + stereo, bike. 631-7992, 752-0651 our netlon wide art• wonc. typing & pedtlng. 213-592""'239 Apply In person: 2690 paln11ngs. refrlge. 1202 Mlnleture Schn•ut• Pup-lllTlL &IS'l rnertteclno eiftort. Volume A . M . w • I • • c 0 . Salee; H1tdWare. lull time Newport BIVd c M D a I 0 p DI lee. AKC .-le Ch NEWPOR·T B""•CH ulea of better llthO· 7t4/851-e239. In retell herdwlta store, ' ' ' •~otn9e3g12 . n y, p ,.._. !f!P ""' rc-te our bullneM. ........__ ... ......_. a..-, ,,.. · llred. 3M/1F, 768-e-.. Ch1llenglng. r-erdlng _,_ N PART TIME OILIVERY no Sundevs M ewe. See _..,.. -.,.... career oe>Pt'Y fof 1 ma-Oii-... Caill Mr. Mar· ewspaper PERSON. 11 yr s. gd . Steve. H.W. Wright Co. ProdUC11on exper necet-#mia8'JH fm.!!.r~••••••~! tu re, energetic, expet.. tin 157.eeee. dflvlng reoof'd. Tlt-"706. 128 Rochester. Oo1ta :!a ~9':\8' Coet• ••••••O•••••••••••••• Lovat>M Ftim Hime!~. 4 111't. Top pey. Fringe Pnet .... ""' PAIT 19 Mela. Alt~ ,,,. yra , d•clawed front. ~!nkr•.l~t!~ ~,,9dya. Non-Expet prefd, IUll time. ca· rr·ie·rs fOr routes Sllel PfT AetaH Fabric SITTERS UNLIMITED •••·• siim'I••.,;;;::•• 1p1)'9d. 170-3993 deys _,, .,.....,,.., 5 ~. '*"°"· Alll tor Ev•• ""''fK weeKMdt . 8 I o' r . .An. ( 11 4 ) H•YI you had ~ --Erin Mri '-~ edulte. over n2-44i1 ~lnO with ohl4dren 1n Full 01 beautlful, rera --------Dental 21. with ou19tandlng. at-an educellon•I tettlng? antlq•. Compl. "lnlakj 16 MM. 8eln1Collle mai... Experienced R.D.A. ,_. ... • .... ..... ·,n Hunt1•ngton D--i'•h, trllCltlVe l)enelnlllU. ,0 s.-Ae91eeentatlY1 fof a SITTERS UNLIMITED, wood" bdrm ... a2a. Habrtln. Shott. Uc. Xlnl d•d for Orthodon tic 491-4<471 EO£ ~ WOfk wlln you01 (.... unlque, new rnlnl'i)OWlf the netlon't ftrat llttlng 000; oomp1. din. rm 1e4 wlklde. '42,..174 P<•Ctlce In Waelon Viejo ··-I • '-lie & Be h 10-14>. C all a -·~~ IUtfer IPOl'1 ~·· bten-fn1ncn1 .. wfllctl proYldM w/mltChlng china Cl bl-L.~B TYPE m•I• ve rv .,.., l30-310S. -·-Fountain. Vu1 y NMAMO. rt ac a..2....sat. bt. Mt. llLua •Iv• blOkground nee. "oare" for children. net ' ermOlre $111,000; lri.nd"'. Gd maM com. 1111'11. PLANT ~NANCE ••.!r' R .. um .. only. 8111111 llomee, pett I the elder• IMtnet eat• w/ll'\lichlng • .......:!, 151_ .. ,_,. - .......... P"'/tlml. 13.llO/nr. M• Pre School lno .. H t 1 M•cArtl'tur ly. d .. P.tr•t•I~ need• cl\elra & ttOCll: genuine ..:_;..;;... ...... ...;.;...'.....;_._; ___ .,.;.;,.,.......;"';......·_ .. ~-~;-Denial lure, ~ Can Mo-• llvcl, Ste 106, ... t2MO q u e I I I ( 1 d al ft er 1 . 1 e o p a r d o o u c II w I Ae.lly Q\lle klllen1, Cell ._._,,.... n1oe. &42-MCM aft. a. 111..._ . s.i. 1111111 , na..u•. ,,,...CtllnO Clhalf . 11oo1 . titer ... 641-6214. ,...., Group cot1tlnuo to -... "'"' many o01er Item•. good llOmea. ~·~ = ExpeflenOld ~ to b pr'd end/or l!.C.E LooklnQ for l1ttr1 In -naml -11184138 .._,,.,. ., 1 front omoe pereon, run 11••11 offloe-1yp1 ~ti•. l tatt Sept 1• come? ~Try Part-Tim• PART TIME. lm!Mdltte A-U&IHt •ti :17.r. ................ . eleo a chalrelde • .., ... quot-. ......, pf!OM, • Good EarnilMll CALL e::JOtonoondelly.~ ....., ~ ltW\I Fft. ~= l:n:;:H•::::,::.•::::::•••• **I BUY** terrt. Thie 11 an ~ Pf~,,.._~ pert ··~ T O ~ O.M. 54CM07o dey, t AM to 12 Noon. 1_._ ...-vn ,.nc.oo ntty 10 ~ tn a P'OO· ..,.. IMrrllr'll 1nep«t1on • Sup•r Trips CIRCULA I N I 10 12PM. APflY ftl!NNYSAVE A, -•lftlllll APPUAHCI HAVfC! Good UMd F'Ufnlture , rtMIW, lntereetlna.,,.,.. fOf .... ~ lhop. DEPARTMENT 'i PAOJlOTK>HllT. P/t6me., 11 O Placentia Ave, WI ... reooi,t., guar. ~ 1""' ... roniNnt. 640-1122 MIC*> PNoteeon t7S24 I'!!... t Pri llllJ Plat exJ* snf'd, ... 11 co..a MeM. M/11. ror Mt9. aDMM• I ~---MWOl1 oi lll.L tor You o.ntt1Ma11Unt.tu11_.,,., ~~· i.. • wrea Jel I 1116o4110eftel'M White iiSltmll fW•teei•tor .-"""' _..."""' fronl l btlCtt oMot ,_. _ .... _~~'._!t!;-!!!~~-I '1 Saute COOi!, di I 'If~· PleaHnt turr~ncllntt fOf ..... WClfU grMI • •• 1111 Ul-IUI perlell ROA x.-11o. I You OOl'l't '*"'. g&.111 to NII ttlM ~. I H y hour• •••• pm.1 AMtlnO 1190 OI .... of·~..;.;;.....:....;..~---;.;.._ .:.,...opmi,.,..,... o.tQNDIO&afl 642-•32 1 "drew feet" wMI\ you! In '*"°" et'°"°• la ~tt. No ~l '"·C a ll Darlene ,,_...""'°,...~ =:·~ e.iti .,..._ for WHrTa ~ pltot an M 11'1 IM Delly ! ~ IOO ~ I* r I r. OfltOe IOC:eted 4t24St1 OI a t ..... fl. ""'*'....,. ._. "'9 M2-IMO,.,... a wllncfll wltll e ~NI Hot Want Adi! Cell now Of. N.8. Mwt MW9 .. In N. 8. Celt ~ 1~0 1 11 ltrvlae DltiJIOtoiY 11'1 tftl 11'-8403. c.. Mt.atfl I ...... 7.. ...... .,..... ,~ p.m. C'w tred Adi ....,.....,. OA.ILV Pit.OT -· a • Or1ng• Coal DAILY PtLOTIT\leld-.y, Auguet 24, 1882 """.ftf( .. . . . . . Amw ... ,,°' .... ............. 11 ............ •2,111 THE WORLD'S FIRST HOBIE DEALER Hobie Dana Point 34195 Co11t Hwy., Dana Point (l14) 411-1211 LOOK FOR GREAT MOTORCYGI YALIES IN THE FRIDAY EDITION OF THE DAILY PILOT! \ COHHH ~ C ~fYAOL f T •.'.-1 ''• r I '.l f , ~41:.-1 200 'll Olntnl Auto, al e, am/Im, very Clean $ 1900. 496-6283 '75 Vega. 4-tpd. good cond • I 14001080 963-6018 t DUlll CUii Ylll HllUlll UllY PAPIR OAANGE COUNTY. C ALI FORNIA 25 C..f Nf S Inflation cooling as prices restrained Culvert entoHJbs • • v1ct1111 By GLENN SCOTT O( the Dal tr Pllol Ste ft Passengers in an estimated 98,000 vehicles passed above it every day on the San Diego Freeway, but no one ever reported seeing the smashed Datsun 280Z that lay beneath them in a concrete culvert. Nor could comm·uters on that busy freeway have suspected that a man reported mlssang from Cypress by his parents on Aug. 17 most likely was the dead victim finally discovered inside the car Monday afternoon -six days later. The name of the victim had not been released this morning by the Orange County Corone r's Office pending fingerprint and dental checks to confirm his identity. But lrvine police officers who were called to the scene by an Irvine Ranch Water District worker who found the wreckage coniirmed the car was the one listed in the missing person report. It lay upside down, smashed like a beer can, inside the culvert to the San Diego Creek just north of lrvine Center Drive. Investigators for the California Highway Patrol said the car apparently veered from the freeway's northbound lanes mto a grassy median, where it catapulted from an earthen berm into the culvert. Marks on the culvert wall showed it struck about 15 feet from the floor of the c reek channel and then skidded 70 feet on its roof before stopping directly under the northbound lanes. An Orange County firefighter crawled through a passenger window to confirm that the victim's body was still inside. UND E R FREEWAY -Firemen and coroner's deputies work to recover a sports car which landed upside-down under San Diegm Creek culvert under the San Diego Freeway near Irvine Center Drive. The Dtlllr Not Photo bJ ChettM ltal'r body of a victim was found under ihe car and the aute n\atches the d escription' of on~ driven by a Cypress man whose paren ts reported him missing Aug. 17. ... Gasoline and food costs holding line WASHINGTON (AP) - Renewed restraint In gasoline price hikes held July's consumer price increase to 7.3 percent, calculated annua ll y, tht' government said today. The pace of inflation was nearly cut in half from the double-d.igH rates of the two preceding months. July's moderate gain -0.6 percent for the month -was also aided by a slowing of housing cost increases and by food prices holding dead even. July's increase meant that, for the first seven months of the year. consumer prices have nsen at an annual rate of 5.4 percent, considerably under t he 8.9 percent posted for au of last year and the 12.4 percent of 1980. For all of 1982, economists are predicting inflation of around 6 percent. Much of the moderation, at least in Jul y, was due to reverses in the gasoline price increases registered early in the summer. Gasoline prices last month were up only 2 percent, less than half the 5.4 percent gain of June. The early summer increases had followed a general ughterung m the worldwide oil surplus. But stocks have since nsen anew. Analysts say the Organizatioo of Petroleum Exportine Countnes has not been entirely succ.-essful an restricting members' oil production Reflecting that, major refiners earlier reported wholesale price drops in the last half of July and the first part of August. Indeed. the department said today. "Despite an 8.4 percent rise in the past three months, gasoline prices were s ull 7.7 percent below the peak level of March 1981." In the next year, ener.gy prtces overall tumbled nearly 15 percent. As for housing costs, the department said the modest 0.5 percent overa ll gain -half of June's 1 percent increase -was largely the result of a 0.4 percent decline in mortgage interest rates, the third monthly drop an a row. Saddlehack voting on hospital plan By JOEL C. DON Of Ille Dellr Pllol St.ft Saddleback Community College District trustees are expected tonight to grant approval of a hospital project for the district 's north campus an lrvine. The action marks the first official step by the college toward con struction of the proPOiSed Irvine Medical Center (IMC). a $95.8 million facility to be located partly on SaddJeback land. The trustees had already approved the lMC concept. Tonight's meeting will be held at 7:30 in the south campus library complex in Mission Viejo. However. backers of the IMC plan still face a number of obstacles to their goal of building a major medical center in the city. The center would include a 222-bed hospital, outpatient clink and a teaching facility to serve Saddleback College's nursing and allied health care programs. Before IMC officials can begin construction, a certJficate of need application must be approved by the Office of Statewide Health ISee SADOLEBACK, Page A2) Stuckle to maintain custody of infant hoy By DAVID KUTZMANN 0( the Delfr Pllol It.ft Interviews with 12 medical specialists and new information from other witnesses led the Orange County Di strict Attorney's Office to abandon prosecution of Carla Verne Stuckle for felony child neglect, officials say. Stuckle. the mother of a 14-month-old boy whose father is State Sen. John G . Schmitz. had the felony charge dismissed by Central Orange County Municipal Court Judge Gary Ryan on Monday. All that remains is for the Tustin woman to return to Juvenile Court on Sept 10 where, her attorney sa1d, she will not contest civil charges related to the case. ln return. StuckJe, 43, will be allowed to maintain custody of the baby boy. who suffered serious genital injuries that required reconstructivc surgery. Deputy District Attorney Wally Wade said after Monday's court hearing that evidence was insufficient to warrant further prosecution of criminal charges. It was alleged an the criminal t'Omplaint filed against her that Stuckle was negligent an not seeking timely medical care for the c hild. whose penis was reportedly nearly severed from havinJ( a strand of hair wound ughtly around it. Stuckle r eiterated Monday that she was not at fault for the hair or fiber becoming entangled. She said it was an accident and that because of her ignorance "of a boy's anatomy," she had failed to seek timely medical attention. • Wade said that interviews with "local and nationally prominent physicians in the fields of urology. plastic sµrgery and pediatrics . " indicated that such injuries could be accident.al and could go undetected The prosecutor said he couldn't (See STUCKLE, Page A2) Kudos for Schmitz not unanimous CARLA STUCKLE WORLD SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Senate is praising Sen. John Schmitz for his "distinguished career" seven months after repri manding him fo r an abortion statement that critics called anti-Semitic. By a voice vote Monday, the upper house approved a retirement resolution whic h thanked the Corona del Mar Republican for his "man y valuable contributions on behalf of the state." Later, nine senators, including the house's leader, tried to B egin m ean s business Israel Prime Minister Menachem Begin, with the exit of the PLO from Beirut, has shown once again he means business. P~ge A4 . No end seen to unemployment High unemployment is a growing problem for Industrial nations. Experts see no easy solutions even after the current global recession ends. Page A5. TELEVISION TV roles bring recognition Byron Cherry and Chrlatopher Mayer have gained sudden recognition with their roles in "The Dukes of Hazzard." Page 88. ) disassociate themselves from the measure by publishing a letter in the Senate Journal saying the resolution was "excessively commendatory. "We are doing th1S because we were not here to establish our position." said Sen . Diane Watson . D -Los Angeles, a frequent Schmitz critic. "We were not here to vote." Only about a dozen lawmakers were on the floor when the resolution was taken up and, in an unheard-of m ove, two senators tned unsuccessfully to COUNTY force a roll call vote on it. Aside from that. the resolution by Republjcan leader William Campbell, R-Hacienda Heights, passed without opposition The member who initiated the request for a roll call. Sen. Alan Robbins. D-Van Nuys. said he did so because "the man is an anti-Semite and a Nazi." But only Sen. Milton Marks, R-San Francisco, joined Robbins in the request. Three senators were needed. Both Ro bbins and Senate Steeplejack one of few There aren't many real steeplejacks left but Mickey McClure, 70, of Catalina, is one of them. He showed why during a Balboa laland climb. Page Bl. OCC gets gift of yacht The gift of a ()5-foot yacht, Alaska Eagle, to Orange Coast College, repreeents the moet pnptlglous yacht ever received by the Costa Mesa te.hool. l>age A5. Money expert uses 1e11re tactics Money expert claims one W~1._ to rt people .ao better manage their income 11 to ' .care them. Page 82. , ' t Preside nt Pro Tern David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, said they thought some lawmakers left the floor rather than be present when the r esolution came up. Several senators were also at a Finance Committee hearing. Roberti said he was off the floor discussing a b1U with two other lawmakers, but would have voted against the resolution if he'd been prese nt. "It 's unpleasant business," he said. SEN. JOHN SCHMITZ INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoscope A7 Erma Bombeck A7 Ann Landers A7 Business 84-5 Movies 86 Cavalcade A7 Mutual Funds B4 Clu,,i!ied C4-8 National News A3 Comics B7 Public Notices C4 Crossword B7 Sports Cl-3 Death Notices C4 Stock Markets 85 F.ditorial A6 Television B8 Entertainment B6 Theaters B6 Art Hoppe A7 Weather A2 SPORTS The C.UfomJa Angela with a &-3 victory over Milwaukee have mOved two pmee in front ln the American Leaaue West. Pa,e Cl. Marina football previewed Muina HJgh School ta ready tOr another Sunset League football 1euon. The team ta !?reviewed today onPqeCl. Orange CoHt OAILV PILOT/Tu.day, Augu1t 24, 1982 Continued stories • • •.i.\4.lnd up in good Caith" and ask I judge to ord<•r Stuckle to fa<.-e trial based on the Information at hand It was the case agamst Stuckle which led to disclosures that Schm1u. R-Corona del Mar, was the father of both her infant children. Birth rec.'Ords on filt> in Orange County list Schmitz as the father. Also, an attorney representing Schmitz has appearect at a Juvenile Court hearing for the child. The Republican legislator has refused to make any public L'<>rnmc·nt de~lln~ with tht-ca11t-ui· the i&'iue of his pawrnlty. Stuckle said ah~r Monday'a c:ourt hearing that Schmitz ''Is the one who has lo live with" hi~ decision to remain !.illent. She has datrnc'<l the two had a rune-year love affair. She said Schmitz had called her home several times ovt!r the past month "to rusk how the kids are doing." She said she planned no legal ;iction against him to seek child support payments. Stuckle said that she is sµu an SADDLEBACK. • • Planning and Development. The IMC proposaJ will be considered among other applications submitted by groups competing to build Irvine's first hospital. Last week Dr. Stanley van den Noort, dean of UC Irvine's College of Medicine, began 'lobbying state lawmakers and officials in the governor's office to kill a special land use bill for Saddleback College. The legislation, which has been approved by state Assembly and Senate, would permit district trustees to lease l 0 acres of land on its north campus to a group wishmg to buLld a hospital. The land IS to be leased at fair market value for 99 years. ln exchange for the lease agreement. IMC officials have promised t o build a 15,500-square-foot building to house Saddleback's nursing and related health care programs. lMC also plans to purchase an add1t1onal 22 acres from the Irvine Company for the hospital s ite, n ear Je ffr~y Road and Barranca Parkway Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr. must approve or reject the special legislation by Wednesday. lMC officials visited with lawmakers and one of Brown's legislative aides in Sacramento Monday in an effort to win approval for the bill "There seems to be a lot of political pressure being put on the governor," said IMC president Dave &ker, who flew to Sacramento with Sharon Ellis. secretary. and Douglass Myers, chief administrative officer. hivt• with the 11uite senator, who llws lrl Corona dcl Mar wilh h1i. Wife Mary i.nd M'Vl'ral or hi.II lllX children. Wade satd attempt.'1 w ere madt.6 to contact Schmitt during tht• course of hi • o ffl ce 'i. Investigation, but the senator's uttorney Raid h"' wouldn't allow his client to be 1ntt'rroguu:d by irwest1gators Tustin Police Capt Woody Williams said his dttpartment, which origmally investigated the n1se, was not d1ssausf1ed with Monday's court action. "l think it's sad that the community has been caught in a political situation. l hope the needs of the comrounity are the first things on their minds rather than the politics." Though the legislation was introduced by Assemblywoman Marina Bergeson, R -Ne wport Beach, in February, Dr van den Noort said he first heard of the land bill through a newspaper story last week. Though no specific hospital project is cited in the bill, van den Noort said he opposes it because the legislation appears to give tacit approval' to the IMC project. The medical school dean has long fought for a major research hospital on the Irvine campus. UCI actually is considerinQ several hospital projects. Break tradition • ID Newport to apply for federal housing I unds 'By STEVE MARBLE Of the Delly Piiot Sleff Newport Beach , facing a lawsuit alleging discriminatory housing practices, has agreed to break tradit ion and apply for federal housing money. City Council members , meeting Monday, voted to apply for $496.000 from the department of Housing and Urban Development to institute a low-interest loan program for persons seeking to rehabilitate housing to mee t h ealth and safety standards. The city has been criticized by fai{ housing groups for not making regular use of the federa) block grant program. The city last used federal housing money In the late 1970s when a senior citizen complex was opened in Corona del Mar. But Monday's decision to apply for the funds, offered to cities on an annual basis, did not quiet all the criticism. Crystal Sims, a n attorney for the Legal Aid Society of Orange County, accused the city of skirting its housing needs. Sims, one of the attorneys suing the city, suggested that •Newport consider purc hasing land for an affordable housing project. "It 1s apparent," the attorney from Emerald Bay said, "that the private se<'lOr in Newport Beach is already functioning to rehabilitate the relauvely few units in the city which require renovation." Barney Larks. a Ne wport r esid e nt and senior citizen spokesman . said he also was disappointed. He said the federal money should be used to build housing, "Even 1f the money could build only two new units I'd b e happier," Larks said . "Somewhere along the line the city has to come to 8'ips with the need for housing." In rebuttal, council members said the rehabilitation program would encour age property owners to fix up rental housing rather than tear it down and build more expensive units. "There are a number of homes every year that are demolished and then followed by condos," said Councilman Don Strauss. "We're losing housing because it's not quite in s hape." The rehabilitation program. city officials explained, would be channeled through a local bmlk. It 1s believed 15-year loans could be made at a fixed rate of 10 percent Applicants. in order to qualify for the loans. would have to s how a total family income of $21,760 or less. Cloudy and fair Coa s tal Fair today With hlglls 1n mld·to upper 701. Late night through miel·momlng IOw cl0Ud1 through Wednesday. Otherwise fair wec1~., anemoon. C>vemlght lqw 84 to 68. Highs Wednellday 7;1 to 80. •Elaewhere , from Point Conception to the Mexlc1n border and out 60 mllea: Nonhwest winds 10 to 20 knoll at1et Iha OUt8" wate<I with 3 10 5 lfOI HH thr~h Wfldne9Clay t;ocally light, moslly southerly wind• In n!Qht and morning hOufa. ·tiecomlng aou1,,_tet1y a to us l(ftoll thts alt9"noon wtlh 1 to 3 fOOI wind wavea. Wlndl Wedneactay altwnoon aouth-1 a to 18 knots with 1 to s loot IOUthweat swell. Low cloud'I In rilght and morning hOufa, lllOlllty aleerlng Wednesday lftamoon. ., V .S. sumniary Scatlarect thuncter11orme apread acron the nation'• mldHctton today from the Aocklee. Oklahoma anCI Arkan ... to the Great L•k" 111111, 1nct Over Florlda and p1r11 ol New fngland Hftvy fllN Monctay II Uvrly, Colo., cauted mud1lld11 over· U.S. 550 trapping lourl•I• anct tNcil drivers In that ar ... One lane waa opened eerty today, offlclel• Mid. No one wu lt)jured. llglltnlng, rein enct wtnct. up to 10 mph awept the Greeley. Co4o., lrN Monday night, blacking out a third of lhe lown. Heavy relna In northtallern .llrkanau flooded homea tr P1ragould, whe<e golf-ball 11ze '*'-~· Meanwhlle, near lancuter, , ... high wlnda ewept ttvougfl • barrow Hctlon of lancatler County, uprooting tree• and flm<>llehlng t>Mnt and chlcllen ~-· Soma pc)Wel' .._ .... cut and at1emp1a were being ~ eartv today lo .. .,. .. many Of the 5(000 Chicken• at one 8k1H ware generally fair In Pm•poeel*· Mr -of tM OOUtltry Temperature• early today nged from 41 da,reea In .,que«e, Mich., to I ...,_ f«1 UMldardele. l Billings B1rmlnghm Bismarck Boise Bos1on Brownsvlle 8'.IHalo S..rllngton euc-Charls1n SC Charlstn WV Charl1te NC Cheyenne Cflic:ego Cincinnati Cleveland Ctmbla SC Columbus Dti-Ft W1h OeytOfl Oenve< OesMomes o.trol1 Duluth El PMO Fal(banke Fargo F111Q$t&H Great Falla Hartford Honolulu HouatOfl tndn9')411 Jacl<1t1 MS Jackanvtle Kana City Knoxvtlle Las \/egu Uttle Rock Louis ville Lubbock Memphta Miami Mllweuk .. Mpit..St.P Neelwllle New on..n. New York Norfolll No. Piette Okla City Omahll Orlando Phllldphla PhOlnf x Ptttaburgh Piland, fM Piiand, Or• ~ ='City 87 54 92 72 69 49 90 53 74 68 04 97 78 70 55 04 76 6t 83 90 53 92 77 07 79 68 52 86 69 79 53 65 56 78 63 77 58 91 68 75 59 t01 78 77 63 87 60 84 67 81 54 69 47 97 78 87 55 72 53 79 57 66 43 79 82 81 75 94 80 77 65 93 78 91 75 ~ 69 86 72 96 67 97 75 79 67 94 73 93 82 59 83 75 58 80 81 88 71 t3 79 70 68 87 74 57 74 100 73 84 68 90 75 77 65 100 75 70 81 87 81 92 82 73 88 88 87 79 51 Ot 02 Ot .29 02 46 .36 .0 03 30 50 .19 14 39 11 se 10 85 02 .02 The Forecast For 8 p.m. EDT INednesday August 2~ • · T atures Reno 93 56 Salt L11ke 95 63 San Antonio 99 75 Seattle 62 62 Shreveport 95 76 Sioux Fells 82 63 St loult 80 70 St P-Tampe 68 77 SI Sia Mane 65 49 Spoil-es 55 Sy.llCl.IM 77 63 Topeka 64 67 Tucaon 90 87 TulH 102 82 Waahlngtn 82 72 Wlchl1a 86 74 CALIF°"NIA HI Blk9"tfleld 105 S..tow 98 Big BNr 79 Blthoo 77 • Blythe 90 C'1tllne 71 Cvtver Clly 84 EUfeka 63 FrMno 101 long Be1ch 75 lot AngelH 53 Mon1ebello 90 Mon1erey 68 Mt Wllaon 115 Needles 95 Newpor1 8MC:h 73 Oakland 71 0n1 .. 1o 89 Petm Spring. 107 73 14 19 Ot 10 :>3 03 Pes.dena Paso Robles Riverside Rect Bklft RedwOOCI City Reno Sacramento San Betnard no San Gabr181 Sen Diego Ext ende<I weather 88 67 103 56 91 66 101 69 78 59 93 59 88 55 95 68 95 67 72 71 lo SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 80 .COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN 86 AREAS -N1gh1 lhrough mid· 5 morr:ilno log tnd low ctoudt ,_ 2 the COH1. Olhefw!M lllr and 8 SS httle cooler. Hlgllt COllltll area 115 ranging from the mid· lo upper 115 701 at the be•chea to mld-901 84 warmer Inland treat. LOW1 55 to 52 65. Fair In 1h" moun1•1na exoept 72 for a ch1nce of e •-antmoon :; and evening 1howt11 or 88 Olundeflh-• decrNllng lal9" 55 In Iha perloct. Hlghl In Iha uppe< 69 70. anct tower llOt lows 50 to 60. 00 68 58 88 85 Smog ~ ... ,.. liiiiilii.iisu ...... R_f R_IP_IR_T Where to ctll (toll lrH) tor lat•t ttnOQ Information: Orange County: (800) 44Wl28 LO• AngelH County: (SOO) 242-4022 Rlverilde and San BarNll'dlno oounu.: (IOOl lMl7""710 AOMO ~ c.t\let. (IOOI 242...eee T~ .... A_. ... A ...... ,_.. T..,._ -3 -81 1:: good 88 i.• =~ :: 1·~ ·-81 M good 81 2.:t '* ea 2-3 POOf 8! N fllr 86 8an c..m.nte Pier 1-3 lelt M Tr1f~ CT.Street) 14 lllr M r; MORROW'll 'TIDES: HfOh: 3 p.m .. Low: t:ot a.111 .• Swell Dlr9Ctlon:8fW Tides TODAY S«lollo hfOh a:oo p.m. 4.S s.cona tow •:~ p.ro. 1.1 WICMtllOAY l'lrat high 2:48 a.111. 3.8 Flfat low l:W a.111. IU hootld lllOfl 3:00 p.m 4,f hootld IOw 10:31 p,111 u 8un Mt• today 11 7 H p.111. nt. Wtdnelday •I I 211.m. Moon l'IMI IOdty 91 t2:02 p,111. Mt• It , 1: 12 ,in, A,, Wlrephoto THEY'RE NOT RA1TLED -St.even Liebenberg, 32, and Pamela Mainini, 24, show off their "pets" -a pair of diamondback rattlesnakes. They're two of the 25 reptHes who share their Ben Lomond, Calif.. home. The pair put on shows for schools on living with rattlers Massage parlor to stay An Orange County 1upcrlor court jUdge aays a Costa Mesa mas111tge parlor can atay open pending a trial on whether It's a nuisance, but o nl y if prosutullon-relai.:d act1v1t1es do not ta kC' pla<.oe ther.-. The District Attorney's Office on Monday had !!Ought closure of the Atlantis Health Spa at 2112 Harbor Bl vd ., alleging prost1lullon has occurred on the premises But J l.dge Phillip Schwab turned down the motion by Deputy District Attorney Doug Woodsmall, saying the business could rt-main open fo r the time being as long as no illegal ac11v1t1es occur. Boat burns off Newport A 74-foot yacht moored 1n Newport Harbor was damaged today when an e lectrical fire broke out mside the hull and charred several rooms. Newport Beach firemen satd. . The Mornirig Star, owned by Dove r S hores resident Harry Schmidt. was berthed in the Arches Marina where it was being refurbished. Firefighters said a 220-voh line running to th e boat and connected to an old and corroded coupling caused the 7:30 a .m . blaze. Damage to the $450,000 diesel yacht was calculated to I e $10.000. It took 19 firemen to extinguish the fire. Lagunan faces prison A Laguna Beach resident convicted of defrauding the Medi-Cal and Medicare programs out of $600,000 1s facing "a substantial period of ume" m prison when he returns for sentencing on Sept. 27. a federal prosecutor says. Defendant Alan Kmg, 45, was ('onv1cwd of 40 criminal counts by a U S. Otstrict Court Jury in Los Angeles Monday Ass1'ita nl U S Attorney Katht>rtne Quadros said King rould be given a maximum tenn of five years for each count on which he was conv1l·tC'd when he returns for sentencing before U.S. D1Stricl Court Judge Terry J . Hatter m September. ' Quadros sa id Kang w as convicted of multiple counts related to offering, paying and receiving bribes in connection with medical services for patients at convalescent hospitals. of submitting false claims to Medi- C a 1 and M edicare. and of engaging in mail fraud It was alleged that King and a former partner. who became the prosecution's key witness, defrauded M edi -Cal and Medicare through several businesses, including Robertson Port.able X-ray Co. and Inla nd C1t1es Portable X -ray Co. The (inns took X-rays of patients at convalescent hospitals. The government was billed for serv1l·cs never performed, prosc'Cutors alleged. Quadros also claimed during Kmg·s trial that kickbacks were offered to con valescent home operators in return for medical service contracts. King has remained free on his own recognizance. His attorney 1nd1cated they would appeal Monday's verdict. Countian sentenced in slaying A Garden Grove man has been senten<.-ed to 27 years to hfc in state prison for the October I 981 shooting death of a Huntington Beach hairdre sser who was alleged to be hlS <'CK'ainc supplier Daniel Lucas. 34 , was sentenced Monday by Orange County Superior Court Judge James Smith. who turned down a defense request for a new trial because o f alleged Juror misconduct. Lucas was conv1cl.t'd of first - degret> murder for the death of Charles Van Hecke. whose body was found an an industrial area of Westminster Van Hecke had been shot four times. The prosecution allegt>d that Lucas pl.anned to kill Van H~ke Masked thugs hit NB liquor s tore Two masked men , o n e dutching a shotgun, held up a PaC'1fic Coast Highway liquor s tore in Newport Beach early today and ~ped with $250 in '·ash, po!Jce reported The men, both wearing nylon s toc kings over their heads, robtx'ci the Arches Liquor, :!4bb W. Coast Highway SEIKO and steaJ cocaine from ham when the two met on the night of Oct. 10 m WesUTunster. The defense. however , had maintained that Lucas killed Van Hec"e m self-defense. Smith sentenced Lucas to 25 years to hfe in state prison and added two years time for the use of a gun Defense attorney Ronald Talmo argued that a woman juror had allegedly supplied other jurors with "outs ide" information on the case related to the concealing of a gun. tainting Jury deliberations. Hut Smith rejected Talmo's motion for a new trial. THE PERFECT GIFT FOR ANY TIME. 1' I SEIKO Ideal for Father's Doy or graduation gift-giving. The superb quartz reliability of Seiko goes with you os a trovel alarm or makes o handsome desk accessory. World Time Clocks for the internotlonol traveler or the well informed. Trove! clock, $75. Desk clock, $125. SLAVl·CK'§ ""'~~11117 Whtrt th.t 0 °btJr surpnus ~gtn. ,..,.,,, ...... ('7 ........... ~...,. Abo~ L.oeAllQllll •Sen Die9o. la ..... ( STATE New natural gas rate hike sought By The Auoctated Pre11 SACRAMENTO Paclfic Gas & Electric: Co. will apply to the state Public Utilities Commission this week ror a $300 million increase In natural gas rates, the company's chairman nnd chief executive officer said Monday. The increase would boost residential gas bllla by about 14 percent In the Call. Fredt'rlck Mielke, PG&E chairman, said the company needs the lncreaae to offset higher prk'ea for whole11ale gas supplies. lf the commlasaon approves the request, customers would be paying about 28 percent more than they paid last winter. Auto workers to receive extra benefits FREMONT -Unemployed auto workers wall receive an extra 26 weeks of benefits whale they learn a new trade under tenns of a ball signed into Jaw by Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr. Brown, v1s1ting a city where 5,000 workers were le ft jobless after a General Motors plant was closed, took advantaS(e of his meeUn~ sn a United Auto Workers' union hall to do some campaigning for U.S. Senate. Government should begin mor~ programs to "an vest in the skills of the people," said the Democrat, who faces San Die go Mayor Pete Wilson, a Republican, in the November election Unions begin talks with supermarkets LOS ANGELES -Union officials say they wall make no conressaons in contract negotiations under way wirh r e presentatives oC 2 1 supermarket chains that supply 85 percent o{ the food consumed in Southern California "W e have n o i ntent ion of making concessions or accepting give-backs." declared WORLD Jerry Veracruz. c hief spokesman for the halt- doien T eamsters locals meeting with the Southern California Food Employers Council. "l think we're going to have the toughest retail food bargaining ever ," p r e d ic ted meatcutte r s' spokesman Dan Swinton on Monday_ Sony Corp. president succumbs at age 63 TOKYO -Kazuo lwama, president of Sony Corp .• d ied of cancer of the colon at a hospital here today. He was 63. After graduating from Tokyo University's science department, Iwama in 1946 joined the French police call for PARIS -The police urged France's Socialist government to bring back the guillotine after a bomb intended for a U.S . diplomat killed a police bomb disposal man instead and critically wounded another one. "We urge the president and prime mimster to take immediate steps to end this sacrifice of Tokyo Communications Co .. which later became known as Sony. ln 1970, he directed the establishment in ~an Diego of the Sony Corp. or America, Japan's farsl U.S. e lectro nics plant, and became its presadeot_in May 1971 guillotine return policemen because our patience is reaUy at an end," said three police unions sn a joint statement urgi.ng the restoration of capital punishment. The National Assembly outlawed the death penalty last year 1n a move strongly supported by President Francois Mitterrand. Polish government protests 'propaganda' WARSAW . Poland -The P olish government demanded that the United States. Britain, France and West Germany put a slop to broadcasts which it said were slandering the Communist regime and amounted to "subversive NATION propaganda." The government also warned supporters of Solidarity. the suspended trade union, that any more d emon s tratio n s would be dealt w ith sever~ly Reagan seeks to reduce lead in gasoline WASHING TON -The R eaga n administration, in o ne of ats first efforts to tighten environmental standards. is seeking to sharply limit the amount of lead that can be put in gasoline. The Environmental Protection Agency announced Monday it wants to strengthen the curre nt s tandards instead of approving liberalized require me nts sought b y the oil industry. The proposed rule the administration finally came up wath will take 31 percent more lead out of the air than current standards over the next eight years, EPA said. Cities calls Occidental offer 'inadequate' NEW YORK -Cities Service Co.'s board of directors again called an Occidental Petroleum Corp. takeover proposal "inadequate," but then told shareholders to use their own judgment in deciding whe ther to accept the vague offer. The directors announced their decision after a 2'11-hour meeting Monday, exactly one week after they had rejected an Occide ntal proposal for a negotiated merger The latest Occidental proposal is a tender offe r to shareholders. Saudis cancel festivities to aid Lebanese KNOXVILLE, Tenn -Saudi Arabia will bypass festivities dunng 1ts World's Fair national week, carn.-eling cere monies Aug. 30 and giving the money saved to the Palestine Liberation Organization, a pavalaon official says. In a statement Monday, the Saudi governme nt saad public ceremonies, both within the Middle Eastern nation and at Saudi outpo5ts e lsewhere. are besng curtailed because of violence in Lebanon. "It is mappropr1ate that we should celebrate at this time when our Lebanese brothers and sisters are filled wath grief and sorrow ." Ibrahim Khoja. the Saudi commissioner general for the fair. said in the statement. We're Listening ••• MoncSity>FrtO"" ti .Ou clo no< n- ';O<lf -l>y $ 30 Pm Ull belQre 1 o m and rour cooy WI u btt a•tt•ed s.turcley Ind S..ndl y II yOV OD no< :::' 1r:':n '=l ~' ~o~r"'•"'C: oet1vered Whal do you like about the Dally P ilot" What don't you like" Call the number below and your message will be recorded, transcribed ilhd delivered to the appropriate editor The same 24·hour answering service may be used to record let lers to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification No circulation calls. please Tell us what's on your mind. ~ 642•6086 ORANGE COAST CIHllfled edv9rtl1lng 7141142-5t71 All other d9pertmenh 142--4321 Daily Pilat Thomot P. Ha!.y P11b111htf ond Ctll•f h ecuti•• Olf1<er MAIN OfflCE JltW•tt S..St , Colt. 'NM,CA. Melt...,....: lloa IMO, C•t. MeM. CA . .._ c....,, ..... "" 0r-. ~tt '"'*'.,,.,,. c.n.-t. ,.._..,_s. IH11tfr.tl9'!1, Mtt«le1 m.-rw-. ¥WtlM_.. lltf9lfl ..,.., M ,_.Miit .. '""""" ...-ci.t ~Mklll .. <ortrltM-r, Jane Amari Eaec:111"'• Edd°' Thomat A. Murphlne fdftOf L. Koy Schult1 Voe. """*" ond Oit.ctor ol Ac:tv.,1,.1119 RoyrMnd Mod.Hn COflftoltr K•nneth N. Godd•d Jr. OifectO< of ()pcwOllOnt Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Tue1day, Augu1t 2 ... 1982 H/F Al $1 ,000 HOEDOWN Pn:std<-·nt lleagan Jotns R oy R og c rs a n d 1.) a I (' Ev a n s f o r a $1.000-a-pla lt· dinner an Los Angclb honoring San Daeji?o Mayor Pete> Wilsm1. who~u nning AP Wlffphoto fur the• US Senall• Hl•£1g<:1n has pledged to :-.uppor•t W11-.on. pullmg us1dc· past politica l d1f l<•rt•lll't'°' --... -----_ __, Mortgage rates cut Fannie Mae joins FHA and \l A decision WASHINGTON <AP) Tl11· Federal National M111 tgag1• Assoc1at1on annoum·cd today th.it 1 l w 1 11 Io w l' r l h P m 1 n 1 m um interest requ1rcm<'nts on newt) 1i,sued adjustable-ml(· mortgage!-. Tht' announcemcmt £ollowed a decision Monday by the· 1-\-deral Housing Adm1nsstrat1on <incl Veterans A<.lmin1struuon to drnp t he 1 r r all's on g u a runt e (' d t-onvenuonal mortgages I rom I :'1 percent to 14 percent FNMA ht•ad David Maxwc•ll said mortgagc•s adJustabl1· afll'r six months and onl' vt•ar will drop to a 12 q per<:ent 'minimum yield t•ffective Wednc•sday Thost• adjustable aftt•r f1vt• years will drop to 1-1.6 perct•nl "Tht• opportunity for lht• borrowt•r to .1fford ;i mortgag1 · 1s President WASHINGTON (AP) Top administration off1c1als arl' debating th<' next U S move m the esc:alatmg t'O nfl1t·t with Frant'l' over PrC's1di>nt Rl•agan's ban on the use of Aml•rican equipment 1n building a Sovwt natural gas p1pehm• to West<'rn Euro pt• S('(:retary of Stall' Gc•orge P Shull~ and top Tn·asury and Comme rce Dcpartm<'nt off1c1a ls were meeting at tht• White House today to weigh a number of U S options after th<' French ordert'<l a subs1d 1ary of .in Ame rican company to defy the embargo U.S. offitaals descn bl'd tht• situation as "very murky " grt>atly 1m·n·a::.1·d by this cll'(.'l int· in rate•-.." M;Jxwt·l! said a , ,, breakl<1::.l nc·w!o. t'unf1•1T'n"' Whlll' banks and 1rwrlg:1gl· l1·ndl'f!> will h<' ahlt-to 1 'n.i.rg1 more. Maxwt•ll said ht· t'XJX't't!o. !host· rates llJ Ix· approx1m.H1•lv tht• intt'rt·st faced bv t·1in,unw1-. !>et•k1ng homt luan::. · FNMA 1s tlw n.it1on'!o. largt·-.t st•eondary mortgage· m..irkt>t. mt•an1ng thut 1t purl'ha..,1·-. mortgagt·s Crum b.mk-.. ..,,JVmg-. 111st1tut1ons <ind 01tw1 lt•nd1·r .... frt•emg them w makt· <1dd1uonal loans Currentlv thl' lo.I'< month adjustable rait• mortgagl':-. hav<· a minimum y1Pld t>f 1:J d pt•n .. 't·nl. duwn from I 7 !-I l')('I'<'• •nt ;i yNtr Jgt>. Muxwf.'11 -..11d • Tlmw <idJUStable ufter a year now c.:arrv a minimum rate of 1-1 ~> r<•n·t·nt. and thC' five-year 11dJustobll· mortgages a.r e • u11 Pnll'." 15 7 ix·rcent Adjustable ratl· mortgaees allow thl• 1ntt·n ·st ra te to bl• 1 Jl!o.t•d 111 lowe·rc-d from time to t1m« dc·pc·nd1ng o n market <·11ndit1ons M<.ixw(•ll said they now rt•prC'<;{'rH th rt·<·· fourths of h1 ~ d!o.S1Jltat1un·s loan t·11rnm1tmt-'nL-. this yc•ar FNMA off1l·1als 1nd1l'atl-<l that " druµ t•i J :J perc1•nt or 131/· .. pl'rC:t-nt by nC'Xt yl'ar would be a rl'asonable c·xpectat1on for l't1nvent1lJnal mortgages Askt-d 1f hE• l'OUld fores<'l· a 12 p1 •rce n t mortgage., Max well rt•!o.pondt•d thc1l 11 1~ "l·tmt·1•1vable" 1n 1h1 lutun• weighs pipe inove The F'rt• nc•h to Id 0 rc·~st• r ~·ranl'C.'. a <;ub-.1d1arv of Dressc•1 lndustr1c·s In< of )};11la~. t11 load rotor µ:1rts fm s h1pmt•nl 10 th•· Sovtl'l Unwn lot ust in the· :i.600-milt• pq:x·ltrn• Thl· <;Uh!>1d1ary thc·n annoum·c.·d Tut:'Sday 1n Pans 1t Would fulftll its l"Of'i1'\"~fct ro- d t• 11 v t• r t h <' c q u 1 pm t' n t 1 n def1am'C' of the• U S embargo Meanwhtlc•. Drc-sst •r lnclustrl<'~ asked thl' U S D1slnct Court 111 Washington l.J bloc·'r< Commen:<• Secretary Malcolm BaldngC' and others from <tttsng against tlw farm sf 1t makt>s tlw delavc.•rtl'S to ;i Sov1t'l fre1~hter a \ the FrC'm•h port of Le.· Havre Thi· U.S. guvcmment has thC' powc•r lo fmP AmN1c.·an firms for v1ol:~t1ng c-mbargoes. but 111111pl 1t·at1ng the· s1tuat1on is frunc p '-. move• lo wke chargC' of tht sh1 pmr·n~ "Lawyt·rs know how to take <lCUOll...Jgainst. a ...wrnpa~y .which v1olatt·s <i U S regulation, but tht·v art· nut 111 agr("(•ment how·io 1h•.il with another gove·rnmenl c•1mpc·llmg u l1rm to violate an C'mbargu." !o.cllcl a U S. official. 'h ho a!>kt'CI not to lx• 1dent1f1ed, Shultz wa~ briefed on the ,·anous probll•ms Monday night bv off1n<1ls who have• worked on t•mbargo 1!.Sul·s ~~~~--~~~~- I -----------~ Get a Pair of Joysticks (26·3008) at No Extra Charge When You Purchase Our New 16K Standard Color Computer! 399!~ Juat Plug In a Program Pak'" to ... • Play Exclttog Color Action Games • ExpreH Youraelf In Music or Art 1 • Set Up 1 Famlly Budget ... and ft1ore A OlVISION Of TANDY COAPORATION .,.. ........ a •••••• a••••••••••••• ··········--· e!!!i••······---- It's Also Great for ... • Teaching the Family How to Program • Creating Vivid Color Graphics • Helping the Kida With Schoolwort< SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST RADIO SHACK STORE. COMPUTER CENTER OR PARTICIPATING DEALER •1ttt TlnOy ()olp PRICES MAY VA/fY AT INDIVIDUAL STOAES ANO OEAl.£AS 't f . I ( Orengt CoHt DAILY PILOT /Tue1day, Augutt 24. 1982 H/F "' llnem-ployment growing • cr1s1s • for industrial nations I are falllng. Tho fund no~d that tn Japan, for......,. eltample, eeminp often an-peJd In the fonn of # bonwet linked to the profit.ability of each flrm. WASHINGTON (AP) -Hlah uncmploymont la • ll'OWlr\I problem for th lnduatri&l MUON that probably wUI peral1t •her the current 11lobal ~on encli, th International Monetary Fund warna, In Ua annual report on the at.ate ot the wor1d11 economy, the 146-nation lending organlz.alion nowd that unemployment In induatrial nBtlona has been n.tna ateadJly since the 1960s during both good and bad economic times. Therefore, prospects are growing that unemployment will remain high even if inflation is brought under control, the fund said in a report releaaed thla week. It blamed the trend on sharp increases In labor coeta for employers, a lack of lob retraining and relocation programs, the growtfi of families with two or more wage earners and overly generous unemployment benefits that discourage people from seeking new jobs. The r e port said une mployment in the industrial countries averaged 8 percent in mid-1982, up from 0 percent In 197Y. Of the:! l•~•t lnduatrlaJ democraclet, Bntaln h8I th~ hl&ht:st bleM rate, at nurly 13 percent. 1&nd Japan hu . e loweet, 2.4 percent. A<.'COrdlna to the m()flt rf.lC('nt U.S. 1ovemment figures, unemployment is 9.8 ptircent In th., Uruted States. 10.9 percent an Canada, 8.8 J*rccnt in France, 6 percent In West Oennany, 4.7 percent in Italy and 3.3 J>C'rot!Dt In Sweden. For many countries, Including the United St.ates, unemployment iB the highest alnce at )t'ast World War 11. The fund said recent rises in unemployment stem rrom the current recession much of the world has fallen into as a result of tight-credit policies imposed t.o lower inflation. However, "Unemployment problems could remain serious even aft.er recovery from the present recession," the fund said. "Unemployment Is likely to remain a problem in the future even with inflation brought under control. unless measures have been adopted to deal with its fundamental 08Ulel II It •Jd. Th o IMF trloa to mai n tain a a toble International flnanc1al 1y1tem through l<Mtn11 to countrlea wllh problc:m1 meeting their deb.._ to private •nd aovernment lenders. Mexico, for t'xumple. la cu~ntly accking a IOWl Crom the fund becauae of aevere flruanclal problem.. The fund obeerved thut, with the exccpt10n of Japan, unemployment hu been growing In the lndualrlaJ nations from about 3 percent of the labor force In 1966 t.o 4 percent in 19'73 and 6 percent in 1979. Japan, In contrast, has ke pt Its unemployment rat.e below 2.5 percent over the past decade. The fund said It would be a mistake for goverrunents to try to bring down unemployment by turning to former policies of easy-credit, deflclt-aperu:llng and trade quot.as. Instead, the f4nd suggested, unemployment <.'Ould be lowered if countries changed union work rules and mirumum wage laws that keep wages high even when company profits and productivity Alaska Eagle donated to Coast College 65-f oot ya cht donation termed 'most prestigious gift yet received' By ALMON LOCKABEY Of"llM Delly ll'Uot ..... Orange Coast College has been the recipient of several la rge yachts but when the 65-foot yacht Alaska Eagle berths at the OCC Sailing and Rowing Base on Pacific Coast Highway it will represent the most prestigious gift yet received by the college. _ _ Alaska F.agle recently finished the Whitbread Around the World race out of P ortsmouth, England, under the ownership of Neil G . Bergt, chief executive officer of Western Airlines. David Grant, dean of student affairs and the marine academy at the Cost.a Mesa campus, was largely responsible for obtaining the $1 million yacht for OCC. "A number of months ago I learned that Bergt was interested in donating his yacht t o an institution," Grant said. "In fact, the word was out that Alaska Eagle was going tp the U.S. Naval Academy at !Annapolis, Md. that OCC was Interested in being placed on the list or possible recipients. "Alex a nd Mike convinced Bergt that the best possible place for Alaska Eagle would be OCC. This is the only college in the country that offers its stude nt a 47-foot Saudade in 1976 and the 51-foot Scandalous in 1978. "Alaska Eagle represents the most sensational gift to a college that I've ever seen.'' said Grant. "It's a phenomenal sloop that will provide hundreds of local sailors with great opportunities that are "It's a phenomenal sloop~that will provide hundre ds of local sailors with great opportunities." ruu gamut of sailing experiences, from beginning sailing to ocean experie nces to piloting a nd weather classes." The 55,500-ton vessel was custom des.igned five years ago by the New York naval architect firm of S parkman and Stephens. It was built specifically for the Whitbre ad Around the World race and was the first Ame rican yacht ever entered in ~he race. unavailable anywhere else," lirant said the vessel will be used in the school's big boat sailing and navigational classes, primarily on weekends. "She'll be a part ot our Adventures Under Sail program," h e said. would give as much pleasure to others as it had for ham. Grant fle w lo Portsmouth, England, last April for a special dinne r party at whic h Be rgt officially announced the donation of the boat LO OCC. Alaska Eagle left Portsmouth June 22 on h er voyage t o Newport. She made stops in Madeira, Barbados, the Panama Canal, and recently left Acapulco (Aug. 20) on the finaJ leg of the trip. It is expected to arrive in Newport Sept. 4. An international crew is b ringing A la s ka Eagle to Newport. The crew includes three Dutc h sailors. o n e Englishman, a New Zealander and three Americans. Also on board is Richard Crowe, a marine maintenance director for OCC's sailing and rowing base. The fund alrto aald Incentive. to aeek joba •hould be increaaed by curblnar unemploymunt ~. benefi\a, which huve grown in value and in labor , force L'Overage. With lalt rates on earned loc-ome C also growing, an Individual may find it makea more ! sense t..oeonomicaUy to st.ay unemployed, the fund ~ &aid. • The report aaad the fight against inflation by ; industrial countries is making llttle progress at great ! cost to the world economy, but there is no easier or ! raster path toward lasting prosperity. : The Industrial countries' average inflation rate rose from 7.9 percent ln 1979 to 8.9 percent in 1980, then declined LO 8.7 percent last year. "Whatever the cost or preventing another damaging flare -l.4p of inflation, it would be less painful th.an the arduous adjustment process that would almost certainly follow" a surge m inflation, the fund said. ! • .. ~ : t , s , , ~ , ' , ' , ' '· ~ ~ .. l J ' t l l "Two former OCC students - Alex Bulajich and Mike Farley -were sailing for Bergt in the Around the World race, so I contacted them and explained ll is the fourth largest yacht to be donated LO OCC in the past seven years. Ernest Kanzler dona ted the 60-foot 10 Meter Sally in 1975; William Pascoe III presented the college with the Adventures Under Sail a.Hows students to sail to other Southern California ports and coves. It includes a variety of big boat experiences such as steering, heads'! changing, reefering and seamans h ip . The program con s is ts o f four s ucces s iv e Saturday or Sunday cruises. Bergt said he wanted Alaska F.qgle to be in a situation where it ''We'll have a welcom ing committee when Alaska Eagle arrives," said Grant. "We'll send Saudade and Scandalous out of the harbor to greet her, and I'm sure there will be a couple of Harbor Department fire boats on hand. We'll escort her inLO the harbor and up to her berth at the dock." BIG GIFT -The Alaska Eagle. a 65-foot racing yacht. has been donated to Orange Coast College b y Western Airlines chief executive officer Neil G. Bergt. ' "* AP WINptloto CELEBRATION -Christian militiamen open a bottle of champagne outside the home of President-elect Bashir Gemayel after he won the parliamentary election in Lebanon. Gemayel is the leader of the Christian militiamen. Learn from the growers during the Begonia Society's annual show I sole at Huntington Center this Sot./ Sun. Hundreds of beautiful & unusual plants on sale. Storr Teller Old Mother Hubb&rd comes to Huntington Center mall to tefl fairy tales and nuraety rhymes to the youngstera Aug. 27 thru 29 Fri. at 1 & 3, Sat. at 12:3<>-2:00-3:30 and Sun. at 1 & 2:30. 'So. many friends and neighbors killed' Palestjnian g uerrilla forced to leave his homeland in B eirut Aa p•r lnatructlona ALL alDI WILL OPIN AT .21• on tM doller, end Iota wlff be aotd from ttt. Mxt bid on. RUGS FROM: China, Peralt, Afghanl11an, lndla, Turkey, Pakll11n, Romania, Egypt, and Iran. Slze1 range from 2'x3' to 18'x12'. AUCTION WILL TAK• PLACI ON Tu11d8J, Auguet 24, at I P.11. HOUDAYINN ~LAPAZRD. LAGUNA tll.LI PrtVi.w 1 hour prlot to auotlon-PfMM attend ~ A, a A lno., U~t1ld1tan 111 -~ 1..-0...0...-. MC .. The PLO IS leaving because it decided it dad not want the civilian .J>Opulation to live in danger afiy longer, he said. Once his unit arrives in • Tunisia, its final destination. it 1 will undertake new training and -• st.age attacks against Israel and especially against Palestinian ' Ara bs who cooperate w i th Israelis an the occupied territories, he said. The vision of Palestine. of ''the 1H return,'' is a powerful one for Taha. who said his Cather left the : '<' village of Kabri, in what is now · .1., northern Israel, when the Jewish · st.ate was formed 34 years ago. ., .~ "My father says we have land..,.,, there, houses and fruit orchards," ·\ Taha said . The guerrilla also - knows his ancestral village from > photographs published by a PLO •?. newspaper. he said. '1< ,· .· .... Campaign funds You can Initiate a loan for up to Si00,000 simply by writing a check if you have a Ready EQuity credit llne. use the ~ty in your home to establish the credit line, and then you don't have to worry about approvals or processing when you need the monev Write a check and you have Instant cash . CALL (714) 644-1634 Dilly Piiat I. • .•••• ••••• ••••••••• TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1982 H ••••••• t4 •••••• ~!!!!!t ..... . More a11d more investors are turning toward rentals as where the future· money ·····~·· A rt•••'' ~11 ······•'4 ....... . ~ ...•....• THICDABTANDTHECOUITY BUSINESS COMICS TELEVISION 84 87 88 .... ········ I"!!········ ... can be found. Page B4. Thos e charac t er s set s ail again OUTSIDE, LOOKING IN: One of the ways to really cover a news event is to hide. Don't reveal your true identity as a ne ws hack. or editor or such. That's the way your intrepid correspondent planned to cover the World's Wackiest Navy. In this instance, the thing was probably not so much a n e w s event as it was a happening . The sponsoring Commodore's Club of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce officially called it the 22nd annual running of the Character Boat Parade Saturday in Newport Harbor. In order to conceal my identity, therefore, I shunned the official press boat, presided over by Jim Felton and . . . (;;, . ~' various media troops from around the world. I got tickets on the Pavilion Queen. TIM MURPHINI .~ TROUBLE WAS, the Pavilion Queen got filled up with h e r 150-body capacity before I got aboard. Somebody apparently forgot to count.the fact that the United Sta~es Marine Corps Band would be aboard. As a result of this, 1-got rele~ated to a berth aboard the Mojo, a modest little craft that plies our coastal waters with its six or so staterooms, stereo, TV and hot a nd cold running everything. The Mojo happened to be the official craft of the Commodores themselves. My cover was blown . But it sure happened in comfort. If the Mojo isn't the most luxurious yach t ever to heave an a nchor. she's got to be a migh ty close second. Anyway, covered or uncovered, we got under way and so did the parade. Bob Robins, skipper of the Commodores, Looking like Horatio Hornblower, Bob Robins signals start of Character Boat Parade. signaled from his inboard scooter and Vin Jorgensen ~xplained how it was all going to work. The character boats would line up, follow the Pavilion Queen and we would parade a round the harbor with the Mojo as final unit. T here w ere supposed to be 30 wacky boats in the lineup. WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED, however, was that 4,000 Newport boaters decided to take their boats out and d rift around to watch. So when the parade started, there were 4,030 boats. Some semi-official reports yesterday indicated that 2,000 people watched the Wacky Navy as it s kittered around harbor waters. J ust counting people on the water, that would have left 2,000 boats without skippers. much less crew. ALL THIS PROVES how much you can trust semi- official figures. Listen. rm here to tell you there were at least 100,000 spectators lining the shores of Balboa Island alone. Don't e ven bother to count all the folks who were up on the roof of that high-rise condo affair near the Fun Zone. Never mind counting the squadr ons of wind sailors who zipped the ir boards in and out of the lineup. If anybody really did the count the turnout, it might make the California Angels' season attendance look puny by comparison. SOMEHOW, EVERYBODY got back to dock after the parade for the award ing of famous trophies with unique names like "Dirty Old Manifold" and "Leakin' Timbers" or "The Loose Screw A ward." Let's face it, you had to have a slightly loose screw to get involved in all of this. The main thing that happened was that everybody involved had a good time. The Commodores deserve hearty congratulations. Recreation revenues shared? Fountain Valley offers 3 golf course proposals; there's a hole in one By PHIL SNEIOERMAN Of ttie Deltr ~I ll•" Fountain Valley representatives have presented two proposals to Ormge County of!icials calling for the city to share in revenues generated by a second golf course proposed at Mile Square Park. A third proposaJ from the city would allow the rounty to keep all revenue from the project if it takes over the costly operation of the city's recreation complex at Mile Square. The site of the proposed second golf course 1s an undeveloped 86.5-acre corner of the park adjacent to Brookhurst Street a nd Edinger Ave nue . Mlle Square is a county park within Foun tain Valley. The city leases a portion o f the park o n Brookhurst fo r operation of its own recreation center. Last year, Fountain Valley officials persuaded the c'Ounty t.o revise its plans for the undeveloped acreage to include an intermediate-s1z.e golf course, driving range and ciubhouse- restaurant. The dty asked for permission to oversee development and arrange for a c.'Oncessionaire to build and operate the course. A comrmttee coruustjng of Fountain Valley City Council members James Neal and Barbara Brown and former councilmen Eugene Van Dask and Al Hollinden was appoin ted to work with the rounty on the project. Scott Morgan , a n aide to Orange County Supervisor Roger Stanton. said the committee recently presented the county with a letter outlining three proposals that could be acceptable to the city: -The county would lease the land to Fountain Valley. which would develop the project a nd Dell)' ll'tlol f'ttotoe b)' Gaty Amtw- Vl EWPO INT -Most of the time things are looking up for Mickey McClure, climbing Balboa Island flagpole, right. I ' collect fees from the golf course c·oncess1onaire The city would pay an annual lease fee to th<> c'Ounty or take over some t:ounty services, such as polJC-e patrol of the park. (The park now 1s patrolled by c.·ounty sheriff's deputies.) The city would oversee development of the golf course Concess1ona1re fees would be shared t-qually between the city and the countv. -The county would kt.>ep all revenues from the golf course. but also would take over o peration of the city's Mile Square recreation complex, which includt!s tennis courts. basketball murts, ball fields and a recreation building. "I don't think we were all that receptive to (th e th i rd) suggestion," Morgan said . He sa i d the co unt y tradi tional\Y has not operated Jobs By STEVE MARBLE Of the Delly Pllcit Sl•tf "Quicky" Mickey, the elder statesman of steeplejack painting, was 50 feet up the flagpole on Balboa Island when he got cold feet "Too windy," he yelled down t o his co-workers and t h e Monda y noontime crowd that had gathered around the 100-foot white pole at the ramp to the Balboa Island Ferry. "I'm coming down -the pole's got dryrot." he added. whacking a hammer against the wooden pole to make his point and sending splinters flying to the street below. His assistants shrugged. What the heck. The painting job could wait another day o r so. they noted. 'Anyway. they agreed. there's no sense 1n rushing Mickey McClure. McClure, 70, sporting a blue T-shirt reading "Some do, Some don't, Some will, Some won't -I might," repelled himself back to earth and took stock of the situation. "We need a metal brace up there," he said, slipping off the loops of rope he uses for his climbs. "Either that or you better be ready to catch me." McClure, who estimated he's painted the island pole at least a dozen limes in the last 40 years, said he's one of 50 or so "honest-to-goodness" steeplejack painters left in the world. "And I've got a comer on the market," he added, "because 11 of them are my sons." He said he got h is start when he was 8 in a small town in Ohio. "They h ad a pole that was greased up about 20 feet and the guy who could climb that high got ·a choice between $25 or a pig. (See STEEPLEJACK, Page 8%) acl1vc rt.<t:rcat1on programs or da:.1st:s &t lls parks. Also, he i.a1d the county 1s looking fur ways to offset the c·urrent $400,000 annual expense of maintaining Male Square and 1s not looking for a program that would cost morc mon<'y to operate. Council woman Brown S<t1d th£ city currently operates the rt'<."rt.'atlon center at a $200,000 annual def1c1t, even though the facility 1s used by many residents from outside Fountain Valley. Sht.• said the city 1s sec•kang rev~nUE' from the n ew golf course to offset some of this expense Brown said s hc was dis<:ouragt.'<.l by t.'Ounty estimates that groundbreaking on the new golf t·ourse may be 18 months away She said she hopes to speed up the design and approval process. (The project ~Lill must be approved by county supervisors.) - ---- • ID Child No. 4 gets free school bus ride • Irvine ALL ELIGIBLE -Irvine Schools Superi nte nde nt Stanley Corey says every student who purchases a pass ~an board buses at regular ,tope. By SANDIE JOY ()('the Dell)' "°' ..... T he third one Is a charm, so It's said. But for Irvine famlUes, It's the fourth that counts -or doesn't count, depending on how you look at It. Translation : m ost Irvin e families must pay for thelr flnt child to ride the achool bua. In most cases, they al.lo have to pay for busing the second and third ones, too. But, in all cases, the fourth child rides free. Here'• the way It w orks, accord ing to Florence Walt, tranaportaUon director tor the . Irvine Unified School District. Studeni. who want to ride muat have a bus pa11 purchased Cost for o ther o ffspring dep ends on lamily income be tween 9 a .m . and :i p .m . weekdays at t.1e district transportation center, 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine. PaMeS are free for all children in families with total income9 of leas than $14,000 a year. If family lncome ranget from $14,000 to lete than $16,000, \he d.t.trict chargtt $70 for the fint ch lld '• but pass, $60 for the second and the ret\ are free. It family Income la $16,000 to lees than Sl8,000 a year, the firtt child '• bus paaa 11 $100, the leCOnd ii $50, \he thlrd ta $20 and the fourth II ftte. lf family Income la $18,000 a year or more, the district chargec $100 each for the first and a«0nd child's bus passes, $00 for th e third child'• pus and the rest are free. The dis trict , which be1an c harging for school transportation last year, expectl to receive at leut $210,000 ln bus feet to make the prosram aelf- aupPdrtlng, Walt said. That's \he same amount the dlatrict received lu_t_year. Walt 11Jd the di.strict, whkh ex pe c ts to tran t port approximately 3.~ 1tudenta ln 3!S butet, already hu 10ld 7&0 pa.et and gtven away 360. Before the busing fee went Into effect last year, she said, more than 7 ,000 youngsters ln \he I.rvlne dlat.rkt rode tree. Now, the aald, moet children In the 16,000-student district provide thelr own tranaportation wlth many elementary school younpt.en rldine bicycles. Everyone la eUatblt to ride \he school 'bua, she uld, providln1 they pwehlll i-and can be picked up al ~ 1top1. Parenta purchulna bua p..-. wW be aaktd to atjn financial 1tatementa at the tranaponation otfit"e, Walt ea.Id, "and we take their word for it regarding thelt Income." Schools Superintendent A. ' Stanley Corey suggested parents of kindergarten and first grade s tudents pin a card to the ' clothing of tho.e youngsters for at least the flrat few day• ot bualng. Eacn card should lnclude the child's name and his or her bua. stop. ''There are golnc to b ~ \houaanda o( younnt.era rldlnt the bulll." he llid, "and th.la will , help avold ainfUlion ... " . There will be no buttna for four 1chool• In the dlttrlc:t; Detttitid aa'lW\tary, '•'-'de . Mkldlt, &&err. Vista Middle and Woodbridce Hlah. ' -"-1 .................................. ...._ ................... ~------~--~---~~~~~) Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /Tue1dav1 Augu1t 24. 1982 ,;--------------------------------------------.;._ ______ _ HIF •••• ... T-hill yields continue decline WASHINGTON (AP) -Yleldt on s hort-term Treasury He\'Uritlt'11 hove fallc·n for the second week ln a row, tumbling to thl'lr lowt'tt lt•vel.s m two years, 0H1cials said. About $5 ~ billion In s1>e-month 1'-bllls were ., eucuont!d Mnnday at an average discount rate 8 988 perct>nt. down from 9 821 per<.-ent last week. 'rht• government also sold about $5.S billion tn ihrt.'t,• month bills at an average rate of 7.748 percent, off lht' previous 8.6 16 percent Mond .. y's yields. a me .. sure of the cost of government borrowing from the public, were the lowest since the 8.A9 I pert'Cnt of Aug. 11 , 1980, for i;1x-month bills and the-7.077 percent of June 23, 1980, for three-month bills S hort-term rates on new Treasury bills had been at about 14 5 pc•rcent in mid-February, then hovered around 11 percent t.o 12 percent in the spring before declining sharply in rl'CCnt weeks Fluor firn1 gets pact A subs1d1ary of Fluor Corp. Irvine, has been awarded a contract by ARCO Dubai Inc for the first phase of an 0 11 and gas processing fac1Uty at ARCO's Margham Field m Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The value of the Ca«iliues awarded to Fluor for the first phase 1s estimated to be $200 million. ARCO Dubai is a subs1d1ary of Los Angeles- hasc<l Atlantic: Richfield Co and is operator for the prOJt'C't in participation wit h Bntoil Ltd of London, forml•rly part of British National Oil Corp. Southern California . Division of Fluor Engineers lnc .. will p<!rform engineering and procurement serv1c<.'s and will develop a defirntlVt! project cost esumute. Sales carbon copy The f luorocarbon Co Laguna Niguel, has annoum.'Cd that sales and earnings for the second quarter endl:'d J uly 31 were a c.·arbon copy of the first quarter this year Sales for the second quarter this year, compared to the second quarter last year, were up and earnings were down. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS . '• ·I' • • 1 . ' . DOW JONES AVERAGES NEl'w VO~IC>IAPI Flrwl 00.·Jon .. ••9' ~'!{ocrv. "uo n Opet> "'-' Lew C .. M Oii lO "'" 868 IS "4 n a.1 61 "' 11 •11 • 20 Tn J1• 17 ))'I OJ 322 '1 331 JI, IJ,71 IS VII 11S 08 1161l 11J6S llS.n -0.14 65 St~ 3JJ 3' )43 1 I l30" ~' 10, I •.I ~':!~' u.Jn, •oo Ulll\ ~:~:= 6S SI• 19 Jn.100 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW 'l'ORK !AP) Au9 1l AChrAn<ecl Df!tl!Afd Un<~ l ot•I •\\09~ Nt w f''uC)t\\ N•w tow-s 100.y 13.IJ 349 197 1991 n1 ' t I 6 ... " . NEW YORK IAPI AUQ 1) AO .. nuo 0.<li._ Un<M"9'CI Tot•I 1\M.W~ Nt • n•9'" N•w~ ,...,.~ 0 1 llO 115 116 JS lS ~ "':f, GOLD COINS • 7'• I'• . "• '• . '• . , Pel Up 1• I Up 1J' VP U J Up 1l 0 Up 11 I Uo ti) Vo 16 J UI> IS I UP I~ f UD IS 1 Up t• • VD If J Up U I Up IJ I Up IJ) Up IJ J VD IJ 1 VP n' Up 11 • VP 11) Up 11 S Up 11) Up 11 • Up 11 O Up II• N EW YORK (AP) -PrlcH tale ~ of OOld oolne. c;ompared wllh Wedneedey'• prtoe. METALS NEW YORK 1API metal O•>C4" lodey l!O ,., n• ,. II Spo1 11onrerroua Copp•t 72· 7J cenu • oound u S oes1111a11ons Lead 26-29 cents a oouno Zinc •o cer11s a oounct. oehvered Tift $6 •266 Metala W-c;oml>Otlle Alumlftum 7f..77 cenlS 1 oound N y Mercu,.,, S365 00 Oet nas1< N ~latlnum S29 t OO·U96 00 lroy ounce, SILVER H11ndy t. Hannan S8 3 10 Oet lroy ounoe GOLD QUOTATIONS 8J TIM AaMClated p,_ Selec:1ed world l>OiO pncea 1ooey London morning liKlng S411 50. uo $17 00 , ,;o 2 n 5 don allernoon llalng S•07 75. up p.,i. allernoon 11 .. 1ng '401.H , up S 17 ~2 FretlkhH't hxlng $411 50. up $21 411 Zurich late •11.,.noon nxing "409 00. up Sl8.00 bk!. $410.50 Nlted Hendr & Harm•" (only dally quote) SAO? 75. up s 13 25 E.noelftwd (only deity quote) ...07 75, up $13 25 l!ft1ttlhetd (only d•tly quote) lablk:ale<I $421114. up $1391 SYMBOLS • Htr Or1nge CoHt DAIL V PILOT /Tuetday, Augutt 24, 1882 Alter home after winning world title Hoblt• Alwr Jr fll'w homt! to San Juan Cupli.trano toc:hay with hi& first wCJl'ld c·ham1.uonship trophy Hobu.• won the Hobie Cat-16 champion.ship m u Wet!k- long regatta at Papeete, Tahiti. Hobi e has won national championsh ips in all of the Hobie classes, but this was his first world title. He beat out Blaine Dodds o( South Afrll·u by one point. Placing sixth in the regatta was Jeff Alter, Hobie's younger brother First 10 finishers: 1. 'iob1e Alter Jr., San Juan Capistrano, 31 v, points; 2. Blaine Dodds, South Africa. 32 lfl . 3 Brett Dryland, Australia. 44, 4. Allen Egusa, Los Angeles. 49 :V.; 5. Ian Bashford, Australia. 53J •, 6. Jeff Alter, Capistrano Beach, 64 ~~; 7. Tom Materma, Los Angeles, 69; 8. Mike Montague, Santa Cruz. 7 0 ~; 9 . Jack M cCartney, A ustralia. HO, 10 . Enrique Figueroa. San Juan. Puerto Rko. 82. Otis triumphs the first tlmu a Huntington Harbour youth had eVt'r won the nntlonals. Otis sails for Alumlt-Oti &y Yacht Club. There we"' 166 entries In thit year's regatta. Second was Jon Pernlck o r Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, and third was Mike Sentov1ch, Alam1toii Bay Yacht Club F all Fair r acing set The Orange County Fall Fa1r schedule of thoroughbred horse racing will open on Oct. 25 this year, a day earlier than had been planned because of recent action by the California Horse Racing Board. Because oC the decision, there will be 13 nights of racing at Los Alamitos Race Course instead o( 12 as originally expected: • a 0 2 Jim Otis, 15, trom Huntington Harbour was the overall winner of the Junior Sabot International Regatta at Mission Bay. It was Fall Fair and racing dates will now be Oct. 25 through Nov. 8 at Los Alamitos. Profits from the races and Fall Fair are used to improve the fairgrounds and facilities in Costa Mesa. CLOSE RACING -Fair weather and seas were the highlights of the recent three-race series for the New York-36s in the Orange Coast area. Vidiot (left), owned by Phil Ramser of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, holds a slight cd~e on its rival. Legislators rule out Wrigley night games From AP dispatches CHICAGO -The Chicago Cubs la apparently won't be playing any night baseball at home in the future as a result of legislation signed Monday that essentially outlaws night baseball at Wrigley Field. Gov. James R. Thompson, saying night baseball at the National League field would unduly disrupt lives of nearby residents, signed a measure imposing strict night noise pollution standards around Wrigley Field. horne of the Cubs. ln effect, those noise staitdards bar night games from being played at Wrigley Field. The standards are enforced by the lllinois Pollution Control Board, and for night games to be played. a variance to the standards would have to be obtamed from the board. "Nighttime basebalJ would increase traffic and parking problems that exist in an already crowded neighborhood," Thompson said in a statement announcing his action. "The problem would be compounded during rush hour when spectators would be trying to reach Wrigley Field at the same time neighborhood residents are returning from work." The Cubs are the only major league team that plays all its home l'(ames during the day. Quote of t he day "Hey, we're booed in every stadium we visit in the league. Tilat made us feel at home ." -Quarterback Jim Plankett of the Los Angeles formerly Oakland Raiders, in ref ere nce to the reception the team received llpOO its return to the Oakland- San Francisco Bay Area to play the San Francisco 49ers. Rookies' first win stops Kansas City Rookie right -hander Dave la Schmidt scattered 10 hits in 8 Y.i innings for his first major league win as a starter and Buddy Bell capped a four-run eighth-inning rally with a two-run double as Texas beat Kansas City, 5-2 Monday night in the American League ... Reid Nichols' two-run homer in the eighth in1'ing gave Boston a 4-3 victory over Seattle in a game that saw veteran Gaylor d Perry e,ected for the first time in his career for doctor ing a ball . .. Larry Herndon drove in three runs and Glenn Wilson two to support pitcher Dan Petry's 11-hitter as Detroit beat Oakland, 5-1. Oakland's Rickey Henderson stole his l 15th base of the season, movin~ to within three of Lou PERRY Brock s major league record . . . Consecutive solo home runs by Oscar Gamble and Graig Nettle11 capVf:d a three-run New York rally in the sixth inning and powered the Yankees to a 4-3 win over Toronto ... Von Haye.s' third RBI of the game, a run-scoring double in the eighth inning, lifted Cleveland to a 5-4 win over slumping Chicago ... John Wathan tied a major league record for most steals in a single season by a catcher with his 30th theft, which came in the second inning against Kansas City ... Outfielder R ick .Manning of the Cleveland Indians, hit .57 1, 9l'Ored eight times and drove in four runs to earn American League player of the week honors. Chambliss leads Atlanta over Phillies Chris Chambliss dr illed a run-la scoring double in the ninth inning to snap a 3-3 tie and trigger Atlanta to a 4-3 victory over Philadelphia Monday night, extending the suddenly-hot Braves' winning streak to five games and sending them back into first place in the National League West. The victory. coupled with the Dodgers' 11-3 loss to St. Louis, moved the Braves into first place by p e r ce ntag e p o i nts ... Houston right-hander Joe Nlekro stopped the New York Mets on four hits to lead the Astros to a 2-0 victory ... Pitcher Frank Pastore hit his first major league homer and Dan Driessen bel ted a two-run shol as Cincinnati beat Montreal. 6-2. Pastore held the Expos CHAM•LllS scoreless on SIX hits until the eighth inning . Bill Buckner had four hits, drove in two ruru. and scored thre<> times to lead t h e Chicago C ubs to an 8-5 win over San Francisco. Buckner had been named National League player of the week earlier after getting 13 hits in 26 at-bats for a .500 average last week. He also had two four-hit games last week ... Slxto Lezcano lined a two-run homer and Broderick Perkins lashed a two-run single as San Diego defeated Pittsbu rgh 5-3 to gain a split of their doubleheader. Jason Thompson homered and winning pitcher John Candelaria singled home two runs as the Pirates won the opener. 8-6. Baseball today On this date in baseball m 1975: Ed Halick ! of San Francisco hurled a• no-hitter to beat the New York Mets 6-0 and e n able the Giants to swee p a Candlestick Park doubleheader. Today's birthdays: Chicago White Sox infielder Tony .Bernazard is 26. Baltimore infielder Cal Rioken Jr. is 22. Rams waive three rookie free agents\ The Rams waived thrtoe rookie .~ free agents Monday, reducing the ir roster to 73 players Waived were Gary Car r , a running back from Fresno State. Fred Gomettrejo, a safety from La Verne; and Rick Parma, a wide receiver from San Jose State ... Ben McDonald, a JUnior tlt UC Irvine this coming season, has been selected to the National Invitation Tournament all-star basketball team that will tour Italy. Switzerland and Fra nce, Aug. 26-Sept 10 . . Further expansion of the NCAA basketball tournament field wiU kill the NIT. execuuve director Pete Carleslmo said -and he thinks the NCAA is trying to do just that . Roberto Duran, former hghtweight and welterweight champion, will face Kirkland Laing of Jamaica Sept. 4 in a scheduled JO-round bout m D!trmt J eff Chandler plans to go ahead with a schedttled Oct. 27 defense of his World Boxing Association bantamweight champ1onsh1p. his associates said, even though he lS re<.'Ovenng from being stabbed in a street scuffle earlier this month Television. radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: v v v v excellent: v v v worth watching; v v fair; v forget it. n 5:30 p.m., Channel 11 V' V' V' V' BASEBALL: Dodgers at St. Louis Cardinals Announcers: Vin Scully and Ross Porter. Bob Welch (14-8) goes to the mound tonight to face the Cardinals' John Stuper (5-2). The Dodgers feU to second place by percentage points after losing their third straight and four of thl' last five games. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at St. Louis, 5:30 p.m., KABC (790); Milwaukee at Angels. 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). Kings' J en sen a ccu ses coach Little League World Series under way Van Fleet get s LB pos t LOS ANGELES (AP) -Steve Jensen, a member of the Los Angeles Kings for the past four years, says he was sent to the minor leagues by the National Hockey League team last winter because he r efused to be the club's designated fighter, the Los Angeles Times reported in today's editions. However. Los Angeles Coach Don Perry, who was suspended for 15 days last season by NHL President John Ziegler for ordering one of his pla~ers to fight, was quoted by the Tunes as calling Jensen "an absolute liar." "One day Perry approach ed me and said, 'I heard you're good'." Jensen was quoted as saying. "l said 'Good at what?' He said, 'You know, good'." WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. (AP) -The climax of the baseball season for 2.5 million youths gets under way this week in the 36th Litt.Je League World Series. Star ted 44 years ago in this north-central Pennsylvania community, Little League held its first world champion sh ip series in 1947. In 1952, Montreal became thP first foreign team to compete. Although approximately four of every five Little Leaguers is an American , foreign teams. parucularly those from Taiwan, have dominated the tournament in recent y_ears. In the mid-70s. in fact, the Taiwanese were temporarily barred from the tournament. But those problems have been ironed out, and Taiwan teams Newport advances in speed soccer The Newport Beach Breake rs e limina ted Fountain Valley from the American S~r As8octation playoffs with a 5-3 victory Monday night at the Los caballeros Racquet and Sports Club In opening playoff action. Newport Beach was in command from the out.set, takinj a 4-0 advan'-le to the locker room at halftime. Aft.er the Flames cloeed to 4-3 ln the third quarter. Chris Campbell soored the final goal for the Breaken( to put them in a second wtld card playoff game Wednesday night against Orange. have won the last six Little League World Series. This yea r 's Far Ea st representative m the eight-team. single-eliminauon tournament 1s from Pu-Tzu Town in Taiwan, which also sent the 1979 Little League champions. All e ight teams 1n the tournament are composed of 11 -and -12-year-old all-stars re presenting their leagues. Easton, Md ., is the Eas t regional w inner, while the Pinery Park Little League of Wyoming, Mich., is the Central U.S . champ. Kirkland, Wash., which also sent a team to the 1980 tournament. represents the West, and Sara90ta, Fla., is making its first appearance in 32 years o f Little League competition as t he Souther n The playotu conunue J.o'nday night with lrvine meeting Mission Viejo at 7 and Costa Mesa facins the winner of Wedneeday night's game at 9. The championship game will be played Sunday at 4 a t Los Caballeroa between Friday night'• winners. l':H:'\ COMMERP AL CfttDfT C~TION ':I~ •C:-.00...~ Andy Bonchonsky and Mike l..ewis each ecored a pair of &oa.ls for Newport Beach while Campbell added the fifth. Fot Fountain Valley, John Gerrard hit a peit and Chris Crattt Mided another but I\ w--.'t enouah to overcome \he early lead ·by the Bttakera. During the rec season, Coat.a Mesa'• C.owbo)'I won the Di~on with lrvtne ln aecond place. Million VJejo wu the winner tn the Empire Divialon with orange aecond. u-., n 000....,._ ........ .., ... "" ,....,..,t COSTA MESA : 3'0 f.. 17th StrMt • 645.3700 HUNTINGTON BEACH: 10076 Colden Wett St. • 847-7771 MISSION VIEJO; Alida Town PJua • 17°'2651 SANTA ANA: 1224 Eut 17th St. • 547·5871 ~------------· regional winner. Representing Canada will be Royne. Quebet'. the first French - speaking team in several years to make 1t here. The Torrejon U.S. Air Fort-e Base team of Madrid. Spain , is the European champ, a nd Ma raca ibo. Ve nezuela. carries the Laun American banner. The tournament begins this afternoon with games between Taiwan and Venezuela. and Sarasota, Fla., and Kirkland. Wash. The series championship game Saturday afternoon will be televised on ABC's "Wide World of Sports," the 20th year the network has carr ied the championship. The semifinal games Thursday will be televised on ESPN, the cable sports network, for the first time. Before the championship game Saturday, ceremonies dedicating the new Little League museum will be held . The 20,000-square-foot museum on the grounds o f the 46-acre headquarters here was s tarted during the senes last year. The "hands-on" museum was built at a cost of $1.25 million. paid for in equal $350,0-00 shares by the Republic of China. the U .S . Economic Development Administratio n and L ittle Lea ue. LONG BEACH (AP) -Corey Van Fleet. athletic director a t Oakland University in Rochester,: Mich .. for the past 10 years, has been named athle tic director at Long Beach State, 1 t was · announced Monday. Van Fleet, 46, will take over the Long Beach post on Sept. 7, four days prior to the 49el"S' first foo tball m eeting ever with , UCLA. He succeeds Perry C. Moore, who has assumed a job in the student services division of the university. Van Fleet· is a graduate of Wayne State in Detroit. Over $6 Million in Gear & Wear Waste gas. waste time. waste money * That's what you'll be doing 11 you drive up to those crowded L.A. ski sales where you * spend more time shoving than shopping -,. Why fight it. Wait for the best. Get big savings on the fin est 1n ski gear & ski wear. Everything you need Especially the low prices Coming Soonl I 3 DAYS ONLY Sept. 3, 4 & 5 ' Anaheim Convention Center 1 suNC~~iu5~,~~s '7he best ski trip YO'! 'II take all year." j , lllPlll DI I fllll ITll:U ORANGE COUNTY. C Allf-ORNIA t'5 Cl N rs I nflation cooling· as prices restrained Culvert entombs • • VlCllnJ By GLENN SCOTT Of the Dally Piiot Stalf Passenge rs in an estimated 98,000 vehicles passed above it every day on the San Diego Freeway. but n o one ever reported seein g the smashed Datsun 280Z that lay beneath them in a concrete culvert. Nor could t'Ommuters on thal busy freeway have suspected that a man reported missing from Cypress by his parents on Aug. 17 most likely was the d ead victim finally discovered ins ide the car Monday afternoon -six days later. The name of the victim had not been released this morning by the Orange County Coroner's Office pending fingerprint and dental checks to confirm his identity. But Irvine police officers who were called to the scene by an Irvine Ranch Water District worker who found the wreckage confirmed the car was the one listed in the missing person report It lay upside down, smashed like a beer can. inside the culvert lO the San Diego Creek just north of Irvine Center Drive. Investigators for the California Hig hway Patrol said the car a ppa rently veered from the freeway's northbound lanes into a grassy m ed ian . where 1t catapulted from a n earthe n berm into the culvert. Gasoline and food costs holding line WA S HINGTON (AP) - Renewed restraint in gasoline pri<.-e hikes held July's <.'On.sumer price increase to 7.3 percent, calculated annual l y, the government said today. The pa<.-e of inflation was nearly cut in half from the double-digit rates of the two preceding months. July's moderate gain -0.6 percent for the month -was a lso aided by a slowing of housing cost increases and by food prices holding dead even. July's increase meant that, for the first seven months of t he year, consumer prices have risen at an annual rate of 5.4 percent, con siderably under the 8 .9 percent posted for all of last year and the 12.4 pert.-ent of 1980. For aU of 1982, ec.'Onom1sts are predicting inflation of around 6 percent. Much of the modera tion. at least in July, was due to reverses in the gasoline price increases registered early in the summer. Gasoline prices last month were up only 2 percent, less than half the 5.4 perc..-ent gain of June. The early summer increases had followed a general I' tightening in the worldwide ~hf""' surplus. But stocks have since risen anew Analysts say the Organization of Petro l e um Expor t ing Countries has not been entirely successful in restr1cung members' oil produN1on. Reflecting that, major refiners earlie r reported wholesale price drops inHhe last half of July and the first part of August Indeed. the department said today. "Despite (:\n 8.4 percent rise in the past three months, gasoline prices were still 7 .7 percent below the peak level of March 1981." In the next year. energy prices overall tumbled nearly 15 JX'rcent. As for housing costs, the department said the modest 0.5 percent overall gain -half of June's I percent increase -was largely the result of a 0.4 percen t decline 1n mo rtgage interest rates. the third monthly drop m a row. Saddlehack voting on hospital plan By JOEL C. DON O('fM Dally Not Si.ff Saddleback Commun ity College District trustees are e xpec ted t onight to g r a n t approval of a hospital project for the district's north campus in Irvine. at 7:30 in t h e south campus library complex in Mission Viejo. Marks on the culvert wall showed it struck about 15 feet fro m the floor of the creek channel and then skidded 70 feet o n its roof before stopping directly under the northbound lanes. An Orange County firefighter crawled through a passenger window to confirm that the victim's body was still inside. UNDER FREEWAY -Firemen and coroner's deputies work to recover a sports car which landed upside·down under San Diegm Creek culvert under the San Diego Freeway near Irvine Center Drive. The o.llJ Nee "'9te _, Ctwtee ae.n body of a victim was found under the car and the auto matches the description of one driven by a Cypress man whose pare nts reported him missing Aug. 17. The actio n marks the first o ffi cial step by the col lege t oward construction of the proposed Irvine Medical Center (IMC). a $95.8 million facility to be located partly on Saddleback land. The trustees had already approved the IMC concept. Tonight's meeting will be held However, backers of the IMC plan sti 11 face a number of obstacles to their goal of building a major medical center in the city. The center would include a 222-bed hospital. outpatient clinic and a teaching facility to serve Saddleback College's nursing and allied health care programs. Before IMC officials can begin construction. a certificate of need a pplication must be approved by the Office of Statewide Health (See SADDLEBACK, Page A2) S tuckle to maintain custody of inf ant hoy By DAVID KUTZMANN ()('the Defir Piiot Btalf Interviews with 12 medical specialists and new information from other witnesses led the Orange Coun t y District Attorney's O ffice to abandon prosecution o f Carla Verne Stuckle for felony child neglect, officials say. Stuckle. the mother of a 14-month-old boy whose father is State Sen. John G . Schmitz. had the felony charge dismissed by Central Orange County Municipal Court Judge Gary Ryan on Monday. All that remains is for the Tustin woman to r eturn lo Juvenile Court on Sept 10 where. her attorney said, she will not contest civil charges related to the case. In return. StuckJe. 43. will be allowed to mamtam custody of the baby boy, who s uffered serious genital injuries t hat required reconstructive surgery . Deputy District Attorney Wally Wade said after Monday's court hearing that evidence was insufficient to warrant further prosecution of criminal charges. It was alleged in the criminal <.'Ompla.int filed against her that S t uckle was negligent in not seeking umely medical care for the child, whose peni s was reportedly nearly severed from having a strand of hair wound tightly around it. Stuckle reiterated Monday that she was not at fault for the hair or fiber becoming entangled. S he said it was an accident and that because of her ignorance "of a boy's anatomy." she had failed to seek timely medical attention. Wade said that interviews with "local and nationally prominent ph ysicians in the fields of urology. plastic surgery and pediatrics :· indicated that such injuries cnuld be accidental and could go undetc<:ted. The prosecutor said he couldn't (See STUCKLE, Page A2 ) Kudos for Schmitz not • unanimous CARLA STUCKLE WORLD SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Senate is praising Sen. John Schmitz for his ''distinguished career" seven months after repr1mand1ng him for an abortion statement that critics called anti-Semitic. By a voice vote Monday, the upper house approved a retirement resolution which thanked the Cor ona del Mar Republ ican for his "many valuable contributions on behalf of the state." Later. nine senators, including the h o use's leader . trie d to Dow falls 16.27 points NEW YORK (AP) -Trading o n Wall Street exploded again today, with volume on the New York Stock Exchange soaring w its second-highest level in hiswry, 122 million shares traded. But the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 16.27 points closing today at 874.90 BEIRUT, L e banon {AP) -Heavy fighting e rupted today in mountains east of Beirut as the fourth contingent of PLO fighters left the Israeli· ringed capital on a Cypriot ship escor~ by U.S . Navy. TELEVISION TV roles bring recognition Byron Cherry and Christopher Mayer have gaihed sudden recognition with their roles in .. The Dukes of Hazzard." l>age 88. ·------- I.. disassociate themselves from the measure by pubhshing a letter in the Senate Journal saying the resolution was "excessively commendatory. "We are doing this because we were not here to establish o ur pos1t1 on," said Sen. Diane Watson. D -L os Angel es, a frequent Schmitz c ritic. "We were not here to vote.'' force a roll call vote on it Aside from thal. the resolution by Republican leader William Campbell, R-Hac1enda Heights. passed without opposition . • President Pro Tern David Roberti, D-Los Angeles. said they thought sbme lawma ke rs left the floor rather than be present when the r esolution came up. The member who initiated the request for a roll caU. Sen. AJan Robbins, D· Van Nuys. said he Several senators were also at a did so because "the man is an Finance Committee hearing anti-Semite and a Nazi." But Roberti said he was off the only Sen . Milton Marks, R -San floor disc11.,.,ino a biU with two Francisco. joined Robbins in the ~-e request. Three sen a tors were • other law~ers. but woul~ ha"'.e needed / voted agamst the resolution 1f Only about a dozen lawmakers were on the floor when the resolution was taken up and. in an unheard -of move, tw o senators tried unsuccessfully to · h e 'd been p resent. "It's Both Robbins and Senate unpleasant business," he said. SEN. JOHN SCHMITZ I COUNTY S teeplejack one of I ew There aren't many real steeplejacks left but Mickey McClure, 70, of Catalina, is one of them. He showed why during a Balboa Island climb. Page Bl. OCC gets gift of yacht The gift of a 6S·foot yacht, Alaska Eagle, to Orange Coast College, represents the most prestii!oWi yacht ever received by the Costa Mesa school. J>age AS Money expert uses scare tactics Money expert claims one war. to rt people to betwr manage their Income la to ' tcare them. Page B2. , I INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoscope A7 Erma Bombeck A7 ~-Landers A7 Business 84.5 \Iles B6 Cavalcade A7 Mutual Funds B4 Clas&fied C4·8 National News A3 r Comics B7 Public Notices C4 Cnmword B7 Sports Cl·3 Death Notices C4 Stock Markets BS F.ditorial A6 Television B8 Entertainment B6 Theaters B6 Art Hoppe A7 Weather A2 SPORTS The Ca.UfomJa Angels wtth • S-3 victory over Milwaukee ha. ve moved two (ame9 ln front ln the American League West. Page Cl. Marina lootball previewed Marina Hiah School ls ready for another Sunaet League footbalf 1eaaon. The team ls previewed today on Paae Cl. t I I } Orang• Co••t DAllV PILOT ITue1d1y, Augu1t 24, 1G8a N .. .. ,. Htl \al" l'f•I ~lfl Nol kl.. H•I WIH Ht! •I,,.. C .. N CMI •I,,.. Cto .. C"t ,_I,,_, Clew C"t ,. t heh C•• .. ("f •I Nh tiow C"' P( 11H I It 10 If'• r"ll t 111 t 110 '"' • °" t•ol'lal .. t 41 '' "-§•~lno t• t 10. •1~ .. ·tr• •-t p C>ll ) IS 14 th• \t ••r. WI •t ft tll'llal ,.. I • I 1• ailtle,. 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B•llOE JIM I 111 11'•• "C~~Ol11J l It' .. CiTE 97 1 S 1• :: Je><oen IS 11 ~· o... HOo\lptllS •IS'~• Vt q&lnd lt1S It I '" To~a 11• I ":II'• ::~~ ·~:rn 1~ ~=-·:,'• ~:~1~2S~ Jn 1:~· GTEPI ~SO 1 1! 1~" "° J~'.::11 1:~~~t: n~· .. ~ s;:it:~ 'i~d~,,. '..,=~:pl ):to~:::•-. 1" ~::~: ,f~~: r:::•I:~ !:~;PIJ! •llJ il':;~:: ~~:fJ'~~ 6 ~ 1~~· :-: g:~,;~,L~ ll::., .. K0111 1~ ~ ~::. '• ~r~~ HIU rJ ~. ~ =~::= d t~ ~ .. • ~ ~::::.:;,., 110); '' e, ' .. o /,;:.,•,~enk!m ::; c,~:~GPr~}~ • ~ r."~ ~ g:~~!~ 1 : ~ 2r~u:r· :: ~:.;~, ~11~ .. ~~· S ~:~~· :.~~ 1:~: ,,, :~cEn ~ 1 ,JO., 1?~ ~; ~:;:~\ 11 ~ ~~ • J 1 • s 1 • ~. 11 CMGp Pf• !O JS Jl • :: Gurht '.16 I m ts\.• "' 11e1>Ce 100 11 fl'•. i;. HMlntS 32 • JJ ••• ... R•itPur ;; 1 2A1' ,.,,. • " Th1011.1 110 12 M oo•. :~ BkARty 1 lO ' II 1•'-• "• Conllll 2 •-I I~-•,. Gel<o I 12 I 7'0 19:lo • 'lo K•I( pl I JI SI I•'•• "" NPr>IS I JO t 101 1'"" '• Rem.a ... .... ..., H•tot.I""' US 00"> Ben!< Tr 2.0S • ... 12"-\, tonllet I St 1 )ti llt4oo '• GemC• 10 16 lJI;, Kal\<St J Jtl It"-'• NS.mi JIJ3 16~-lo RamP< I IO fJ .. '9v,. ,.,. lhmS.I 2 11 11 /JI .;io, +I'" Dow Jones Fina DOWN 16e27 CLOSING 874.90 T-hill yields continue decline· WASHINGTON (AP) -Yields on short-term Treasury securities have !alien for the se<.'Ond week in ci row. tumbling w tht•1r lowl'St levels in two years, o rr1c:1aJi; said. About $fl 5 billion in six-month T ·bills we re auction{'<.J Monday at an average disc:ount rate 8.988 pen-ent, down from IJ.821 percent last week. . The government also sold about $5.5 billion in··· three-month bills at an average rate of 7 748 percent." off the previous H.fi lfl perc-cnt •. Monday's ywlds, a m 1·asure u r lhe cost ot· ~nvernnwnl borrowing from the pulJhc, were the·· lowest sin~·t• the 8 891 pert·ent of Aug 11, 1980, for. 'llX month bill~ and thl• 7 077 perc•c•nt of June 23, 1980~ for thret··month bills Sal e carbon copy Tht-Fluorocarbon Co Laguna Niguel, has announced tha t sall'S and earnings for the second quarter ended July 31 were a c:arbon l'<>PY of the first qucsrter this year Sales for the set:ond 4uartcr this year, compared tu the second quart.er last year, were up and earnings were down STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT .-..ew YORK tA PI ~It"\ J p n1 Oflt., onef 1w1 • twru)e' o• •~ t1ttf',.n mo\t M'•"""" Nto~ VQt'll. StO<~ EH,,anQI"' .,,u--, lf41(J1"Q n.At10f\dll'f' .ti ...,(ftt "'I•" ,, f-f'"OPlf•t MIQ I C.1J CiOO 1) • !>-e•6r-.M()l)0 I u'I.~ n ,. '• ~nn., Coro 1 JI• 100 u •; '• tOM I 1"1) IC>'J Ott'-• ,.. E••OI' 1uqcxAJ 11. (.,•n MOIO'\ t 11) ~ ~ • I'• ( •l•~\~v<fl vu ,OOU H 4 11 .. ( 1t1nC:,d\ t-1 1118,}W ••• • <.,,1WnJ1+i 'f!UO@ '• • J '' ("-'rt ~ 10) I)~• • +. A•nitr 1 l T fll\() U)J )I • f • f nrdlW)t ~11 JOO "// •., Ii( ,,.,.,, /)?JOO 10"'· Avon ProcJ 1011 •00 lJ • 11. (,,'"'lfllf' #A) l I .. UPS AND DOWNS NEW VORK IA.Pl Tll~ lollow1n9 "'' \hOW\ tht Nrw v,,,., StO<lil E•<~ \t<K.tt.' •nG w•rrM'I\ lt\at "•¥• 90'M: up t"" "'"" .,.., oown ,,.. "'°'' ~'°"" on Otff..,..t ut Cf'W"Qt ,.~rdltU of VOhJ~ tor f~y No W'<:Utlfle-~ tr.011\q Miow U •r• 1nc1. udflS Npt MMf °"'<•n•~ <.h6ft9t• •'~ ,,.. dtf•f'•t""lt.e C»lwf'f"\ IM O,.tv•ous c k>\lno pt ICt' 6ncl 100.'f' \ i~,m Of'tC• Ne-I ••• Cho Pt! I C1nG 'O' \J • H Up 11 I 1 C nfon(_p Ja"° • •""-Up 19 t ~ ~:t!i:~ rr!o ·;~ l·~ ~: :: ; \ T ''l0 'l\ll t • Vo U 9 o O•C.•Ot P'l>o •• • J Up "l 1 ~n~lto pfA 10 71 1 UO t) • i Mor<N'l£nq 10~ • 11• Up tl l ., Q,.te C,.,.nf 1t>•• ]' • uo tJ 'l I~ fJ•n<1""nl U I \o Up IJ I 11 •m o (oA.m 9 • Up 1(1111 AllR<h ]DI 1 • • 1 ) '· IJ g I 0 I IJ 0()Wr{p ' 11 1 VP 10 S ,, B•noPnl nf( ,, 1 UP 10 l I\ SIP•<CP I IJO 9 I t& Atl~ tnt 'l • \JO • ) •1 l.JlfSU •'°Pt J~ t lJo t • \8 'J.l•Mlfl';Wlo \. llrt 1 •• UO Ci I to t..1t1ou tno 41 • I•• Ue> 8 9 /Ulr"'ryAJ ._ • •• VLl la l J otom.ol J • VP ~ f 11 c, .... nAM()11 /'4 ) • Uo -. ti N•"\t> DOWNS ''"' Cho I Pel Ott n S 0 11 q) I D•Pl 111 /0pf J .C.11 I otB .l (f'l•tttirC.o wt • PSlnu • )11)1 j •ntrt\t \ t Sotl•lonCO 1 GIHotlron • HKl•Mfi<I q O"aC.E ol 10 em ... 11..,' 11 ~\I J>ttMA 11 J.,nf'\RIW' IJ Coml)Uf ~' ti MOW'fllf'1t I\ Wiii-fi n '• Ou.,.• \: 11 NS-• IOpt II B"r kO PllO ~ ~~t~':P.n 1 I '> > lJ N I n ouau 1 10p4c, 7l NalEOU<(O GOLD COINS >< • ... I Ht1 • ., .. II 10' • .... •1 • ) . ••• IJ • IJ'>o 101. . ' )()•. J·· -· 0 11 , , "' ou ll P Otl I • I Otl I> t• .. ou t 4 •• Oft I 1 0 11 1 l 0 11 11 0 11 /I I •• Ott I• I Ott IO I Ott I 0 •· Off •" .... 0 11 •• , .. 0 11 •• 0 11 • ) I'• , 0 11 &O ,,..._.. '· ()11 • 0 '> H M n ... 10>,, 0 I I '• Ott '• OH s q SA '1 Due to late transmission today's listing wlll not appear in the Daily Pilot. AMERICAN LEADERS METALS .... "' I .... . '·• ol .. ,.. . .. ... NEW YORK IAP) metal onces •oaav Spot nonte1tou1 Copper 72· 13 cenls • pouno u S deS11nat1ons LHd 26 29 Cellfl 8 pound Zinc •O Cl!fllS • P<>UnO. Oel+veutd Tin $6 •266 Metals Weelt c;Qmpot<le Aluml11um 76·77 cenfl a poun0 NY Mercur, $365 00 per lleak Plelln11m $291 00·$296 00 lrov ounee NY SILVER Handy & Ha•men. l8 3 10 per troy ov.u GOLD QUOTATIONS 8J Tiie linoc:leted I',_ Sl!i«lecl ·•o•IO QOld Prices IOOey Sl~OOdon morning "••no S• t 1 SO up $t~o2115don alle•noon l1>1ng S•OT 75. uo Perle 1fl8•noon ••••ng $'0 1 95. up$ 17 52 Fr-turl l1•1ng ,. I I so llP J28 •9 Zwtd! Ille altetnoon ••••no ~09 oo op $ t8 00 bid. '' 10 50 asl<ed HandJ I Har"'•" (only daily q11otej S•OT 75 uo S 13 25 S 1~~-d IO<'ly da>ly QuOI•) S--07 75 up EngeJllard fOnly daily Quotel labri<:eted J-628 14 up $13 91 SYMBOLS o N-yea11y low v-New yteily hlQll Unless Pl"""*rM noted ra1es Of OMOtlndt .,., annu~ 01sb\/rMn1e1tt1 l>Hed Of1 IM latll quene1ly or semi.annual d ecl•r•tlon. 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